Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-09 - Orange Coast Pilot7 Baring NeuJpOrt Sea Be•~•e -. ' ... -.. • .lil •. ·~ - ' , . Father Wrestles ,, Ti1tress to Save Daughter!)s Life . . .. . DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * ., 'MONDAY AF.TE~NOON, OCTOBER 9, 1972 .. ,• lut(]h111• It's a face only a mother could love. Well, she's not bis mother. She's a chimp trainer at the San Diego Zoo. But that's pretty cl0<e. -Father Battles Tigress I A.fter Attack oµ, Gir~ 5 -<>MAHA. Neb.. (UP!) -An angry aimotran llgrw wblcb 1tta<l:ed a s,. yeoN>ld a1ri al tbe Omaha Zoo WH ~ down by tho dllld'I lather _.. tbe girl -IWiously hurt. John Conlntr, a -Ur. c!anp! I .....UI~ bold -,. nlcht on the -.UwMollbadlllmlllla""8hler. tlia, by .. -.. dnged lier !or *"' It tool. ,Little u. ODii lier mother, who - .u,htly lnjund -lr7lnl to bep the tlpr IWOJ from the &lri. w«t -11 • Omaba hoopltal and ...-. It tool< ao -led 20 llll<beo lo <1- LIN'1 -Mn. Cordaei-bad tine -taken In lier ann. Thi .u.--iip. leaped 1rom .JU srotto -a """'""' "'Ct" ,al the ... ' f -_.iy _. .,. ..... ...-by a ~: 'ftlO bli cat returned volun- lltlly to anotber ll'Ollo alt« btlnl sub- dued by Conlntr. Zoo olflclalt Mid tt jumped Into a tranofer <rile lowmd Into the lfOllo "lo bide... ,, Dt. Loo Slmmonl, dlre<tor ol the Rwy llool1<7 Zoo, said the u,r-wu -"' by a -villlA>r to the .... RI llld •ltl ! 11 !I reported tluit UM woman -Nvnfortunately lhe ••• -tied· -•ppareotly -lrYlni lo -a pbo!Gwrapb -bad drooo«I Imo the crotto tile tier.a -with a COlllklnblJ' older male Uger. ''!be _,.. began jabbln& at the call with lhll Ion& 111<k," Simmons Mid. "1'1111"1*1 the two call, portlcularl)' tbe (Sff TIGR.m, Pop I) ( n Five Wives Get Scot ~In Dutch' LONDON (UPI) -In 12 years, Andrew Galtraith collected five wives, fathered six children and became a two- time bigamist. 40rm no Casanova or a great Jover," protested the 31.year-old Scot before a court senten<ed blm to ta.montb Im- prisonment for bis second bliamJ of· '""""· Police '8ld the boy la b -look Ing Galbraith, a botel porter, <onfeued to tbe charge alter 1111 pMent wife ol 10 moolba, Mary Forguaoo, 19, aQIWend I telephone caD from Brkl&et Turley, """"' he man1ed lut year. Both womenrtnsisted they were ''Mn. Galt:n.ith." Pollce llOld Galbraltb flrsl c:ommltted blg1111y In till, maff1lnl faobel Lyon wblle he WU llUl wed lo Roallod Ren- nie. He -J~ for sis montm. faobel hao one clllld by blm aod Roaallod foor. Alter the hto women "difwced" him, he married Vivienne M~. They had a chill'! and were dJvorced two )'t.81'1 later. '1t doem1 IW'J)l'lae me m's takm otber people In wtth hb bli blue eyes and cbildilb .oobi'' uJd Vivienne, wife No. J, 00 learninl ol 1111 latat - RoAllno, wife No. I, dilqr<ed. "I can't aee what ........,. woold 1ee ID Andrew,"' abe llid:i''l-Cln't even ....,..bor wllat I llw In him. He'• just a -fellow and <e1ainl1 no omar Sbartf when It c:omet to klob. II Said bobel, wtfe No. 2: "He doelll't !llve a damo for all tile -bt keeps~.,. l!iidi<I. wife No. (, Aki: "Ria llfa wouldn1 be wwt!1 llYinl -If I could ( ... lllWlllT, Pap II DA. VY CROCKETT SHOOTS HIMSELF - Seottish Noted For Saving- But-Five Wives? •Mast!) Snagged Columbus Was Spared tlie Flags SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -U the original Santa Maria bad bad the trru- ble its tiny reproducttoo bad bere It probably never ...Wd have made It. The """'° WU the Columbus Doy porade. Evorything WU tolnc wtll tm• til the malmnast of the Saola Maria floot lllOl(<d Oii ID overiltad line of flap. Finl, ...,.... tried to c:ut the flag Uno with Columl>us' -nl. but the blade WU too duJL Then, oomeooe tried boklinc the 1lne up with a piece of lleel. Speclalol'I gtggled and pointed. Finally, a man climbed a ladder and bold up the line wttb 1 broom and the sblp rolled lhrougb. Aa the master of ..,..l1100l<I said, "'11111 rommltlte deals with the dllfi· <Ult lmmedlattly, and tackling the Impossible takes ooly a few mlnuteo loog«." DralllG a Newport Copter Policeman Jumps Into Sea, Saves Diver By All1'llUK R. \llNBEL °' .. Dllrt ......... A hulking Huntington Beac:b man, poralyred alter a pier dive Into ahallow water, wu AYed e1rl1 today wbln a Newport Bea<h polke bellcopter ofll<er leaped into the -and towed him 1$0 yanll to allon while blltlik>I ...,..,.._ Obael'm' Oflla!r °"'I W-WU ttedtted wltb 10V1n1 the life ol William RldeU, It, ol llJ RllDllna'<o St., Hurt- ~ --Oflloer Stan -Mid tile drunatlcalHoa-wu tt1aered at :J: 10 a.m., with 1 tr.. uc cali-fonn Karsom lluetld>. • ""'1d ol llldtll She Mid tbq wn ll10IJ!nj[ on Newport Pier Wiien lier date decided to 10 li>r a --fUUJ" dotlled -and --tile ~ Into lalrty -... !«. Autllorklos at lleol ~ Uoattal -IUdtD In ----thla -inc. debt 11oun afW tho tncedr. u tbq ·i:r· to -the ... Isl of Ill.I lad .... ln)lrlol. He baa --pcalJlll but k la not Jet.,_,, -It la 1em1*W7 or,.,.,.-. ~lo -the pltr ... "°' tlm, ... pilot 31m GCllloa -low ..... .,..... ...... In the $1'91t -u 0 Adam ODii ·-......, --.• ,.,... -. He -flootloc ,_ -. ............ "" bed polllbly cbowoed aJnod1, .., to the hellcaptfr ...... --loll to dlspoldl a palnll boat, • otlorr ·- llrlpped off bla .... -· -lad belt, c:llmbed out on one pontom and made hla !Int ........... p. Ria po-• r1n1 1owttec1 the hell<DPl<r to about 1$ (eel lbowl the Id, Wbkb WIS whipped by the "-1''• -...... Oflkor W-tool< tho paralywd leaper In tow -1111 llr·foot. foul'lnc:h, ~ -made btaYler by ... ., .. ~ dothff, .ood be«ao melbodk:ally awlmm1nc towanl ........ Polke can and an ambulance wtre waitlq and mcuen belped haul tho atrlcllm Rldtll «ii ol tile .uf lod carry blm .. a -for Ibo -10 Hoq -llol!>ltal. Newport --tbtlr polk:t helicopter equ"r: with pcJD1-In .... tldpoUoa that woold be ,.quired ror -In ........... -.. the pnclaWll (SM UICUE, hp II PIWT A.D GETS 'TONS OF CALLS' ase Driver Held For Peril To Baby Boy A man pllollDI a nllary "'line c:or et<f1•111lnlng hll blby boy and I terrlfled blac:k <II led 1dk:t 00 a 1lzzllnl, 190- mll~per-hout punWt over the 0rance Cout Sunday nlcht bdort belnc <IP- tured. Ronald R. Will, f7, ol 1111 Uncoln AYe., Hwiu.,too Beach, ....,.nedly clnrto Cll the WTOlll ..Ide ol tbe road, nn atop ..... and zlnaged Unucb traffic durtnl tbe draj!latlc -· He wu flnaily cornDed at w._ Avenue and Beac:b Beulevanl In fflml. m,ton 8eadl rotlowlna tile Grand l'rllr· 11yle perfonnanoo which Id\ two polb WI and hla 1'11 <Dmpad auto damteed Newport -police tool< Wiit lollo c:u.:oey and -blm on •...,ice ol endaJllOrlac the ftlW. ol a minor cllild. Boo1:1r.c proc:edum In Neoport -llmlt olfk:era to plaoq one ...,. -.. on a ~ hut the ~ oa.11 Dtllrtet Attorney may rue _._. c:ounlJ u investlgaton believe tbq ... warrantad. imlMtlpt... said 1'lday they - dontand Witt -biller ODii bod -blOOdinl OV« a -k QUOntl bdcn lta•ln& wltll the child and the fomlly OIL Newport 8-:h Police OOlc:et Qlri, IS.. a!ASI, hp I) Oraa .. • Z DAILY PILOT s ,_l{issinger • Ill Peace Talk ,, ..... r ... 1 -' CHASE .•• -Amie_, erJd he opotled 11111 lravellnc at high dpeed at MacArthur llouJovard IJ1d Ji:NI Coast illll>WIY In Corona de! . 1 ·~ PARIS (UPIJ -Prelldential ndvlstt Henry A. Klsl.ln.ger held a second day ol IC!Cftl negotlatlons with the No rth Viet- namese today, talks that have reached a "semltlve" stage in the quest (or peace in Vietnam. The White House said there would be an unprecedented third meeting on Tues- day. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Zieg1er refused any comment i n Washington on whether the fate of Sou1h Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu was the mair snag holding up agree- ment. 1be Communists have demanded Tiheu's ouster; Thieu in the past has refused. Fiv e Die In County Accidents A Santa Ana woman was killed Sunday in a San Diego Freeway accident. bring- ing the weekend traffic toU in Orange County to fiv e. The coroner's office reported Afrs. Esther Hernandez, 20, of 312 N. Western Ave., Santa Ana, 'A'as dead on arrival at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital early Sunday after the car driven by her bu~ band Leonard, 21, went out of control on the San Diego Freeway near Moulton Parkway, the highway patrol reported. Ronald N. Kawata , 24, of 419 A 11th St., Hllll.tington Beach, died early Saturday from injuries received in a Garden Grove accident and Kenny Medelin. 3, of Covina, died Saturday when he was thrown from a car driven by Belinda Cband1er of Covina on the Santa Ana Freeway at Culver Drive. Meanwhile, a 55-year-old South Laguna woman ped estrian who was killed Satur- day night in a Coast Highway accident near her home has been identified as Margaret F. Taylor, of 31844 Virginia Way. The highway patrol said she was struck by a van driven by Shane T. Buche, 28, of 1,24 de la Grulla, San Clemente. A WUt. wetllend. tratnc vic\lm. remains unidentified. 1be coroner's office aaid a man about 50 years old d1ed of massive lntemal in· juries after being Btruck early Saturday by a hit-run vehicle on the Santa Ana Freeway near Brookhurst Street. A coroner's deputy said there were no identlilcatlon papers on the body and the only clue was the letters "76" on a T · shirt. Fingerprints were taken to aid in determining the identity of the victim. Models Say Art Lacking in Class LONDON (UPI) -Some male students at London's Waltham Technical College attend art classes there only to ogle nude female models, a member of the district's mwrlclpal COtmCll sJ1.id. "They attend these seMiona only for the titillation," .said Councillor Charles Paley-Phillips. "They are certainJy not there in the name o! art." Paley-Phillips opposed the models' demands they be paid $1.50 an hour for posing, instead of the $1.25 the government-owned college paid. · "Wby, should the taxpayer fork out even m<>re to give these so-called students a bit or a thriU?" Paley-Phillips demanded. ( IT DAILY PILOT n. Or8n1e C.I DA.llY PILOT,..-~ lit c:trnllfflMI Ille' --~ .. ,.,.,w.. .., Ille or.,,.. OM•I PWllNI'°" c-..n,. ~ ,... ..i111 ...... _......., ,_.,...,. """"' l'rldly, fW C•ll M ... , H..--1 ._,., Hvnll•lflM ltKl'l/11-i.ln Y"'""'• let1.W1• •Mdlo lt'WIMISMdleMc:.k ft $M c_..,_lt( lfMI .llff>n C•ltlllr-A 1l11tll ""'°"'' .......... ,.,..,... .. lurdart-.,.,. '--~ TM ,,lnctllll •11111~ 11i...t 11 It DI W. .. a.y lfnlt, Cllhl M .. , C.llr.n.lil, nul Ro~.rt N. W1.4 l'r1tllent lflf ...,_,~ J1clt It. Cvtl1y Viet "9Ntnl W Glnlr.i ~ l\1n111 K•e"ll ...... Titot..1t A. Murphi111 ~llllW Ch•rltt H. loot ltl1.h1N P. Nill ,,.....J-MIMt\'ll &di .... -a-. -.: Jll ... ...,. """' ........ t.dl1 UD '""""" '-"-M ~~I 112 Jfw9t A_.._ H ......... 1Md11 17t'9 ~ ...,._. .... ~,.,--•. ~ ...... 1'1111t1 C714J MMU1 Q ........ , ' J "1·1&71 ..... Clllillll ......... u..-.... 4fM4Jt ,,.. .... ..-c.....,c-..-... _, ... ~ "'1. Orllftl9 C..tl ,. ...... "" ~.-,.. ,.... ........ 11111111"11 ..... __ ,, __ l'l'llY • •W"Oftc/ ....,. ...... ..... fMlfiMlif~'-· ...... CHM ....... ..,_ et Co.11 MtM. f;,tllflr"llfe. ~"" W um.r a.. .. 'f!tnthl'rJ " !Nil tJ.lj mMIJl/'rl iftltlt.,., •llNlltN UM INl\tlll'r, Kialnger WIS accompanied by Maj. Gen. Alexander Hai g, hls deputy who just returned from Saigon and aecret taJks there wUb Thieu. They were meeting with Le D.lc Tho, n member of the North Vietnam ruling PoUtburo, who recently visited Hanoi, Peking and Moscow, and Xuan 'rhuy, the No. 1 Hanoi negotiator in Paris. Both American and South Vletnamt•!;e sources in Saigon said Friday that a plan was under discussion wh ich would permit Thieu to atep down in favor of Sen. Nguyen Yan Huyeb, speaker of the South Vietnainese senate and a former law partner of Nguyen Huu Tho, an oUicial of the Viet Cong "provision&! government." The .soUttes said the plans also called !or total U.S. wllbdtanl; wl1J>drawal ol North Vletnamese f.,... from South Vietnam, and lhe lttelng ol American prisoners ol war. There allO would be a c.ommunist prom~ to ~ouate aerlously tn Paris, the sources s11ld. The South Vietnamese and Americans dismissed the Saigon reports a s "speculative." Ziegler, at a news briefing today. refused to characterize the Paris talks In any way and refused comment on whether there had been any change in the U.S. position. The United Slat<S bas supported Thieu and rejected Communist demands he be ousted. "We would anticipate a third day of meetings but I will have to waft to hear Tiring Competition from K!Jslnaer be&re f can "'llfinn fl," Zlel!ler said. He sak1 It was "vtrY unlikely the talks would go Into a lourtll day, meanJng that Ki8Singe.r and Haig would return to Washington Tuesday night In brief Presi- dent Ntton. Liter, It was coo!inned th4t a tb1.rd dlly of talk.s would be held Tuesday. The talks mark the 19th time Kisainger hns come to Paris to negotiate. Officials have steadfastedly kept silent about the exact locaUon, duration and content of t.be meetings, which repor&ed]y are held somewhere in the Paris suburbs. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said Sunday "the neiOllatloos wbidl are going forward are very serious, Ibey are certainly very slgnillcant. and they are very ttnsftlvt." He aald the American objective in the war remains the prevention or a Com- muniat takeover In South Vietnam. Seo. George McGovern, the Democratlc presidential candidate, said in campaign appearances durlog the weekend that he does not find it ae: cidental "lhal lhe peace rumors are flying as the campaign nears Its showdown phase •.. "I don't believe that Mr. Nixon is going to end the war ," McGovern said. "I think the peace rumors are Dying to coincide with the closing days of th1s campaign. ll 1 become the president tbere isn't any doubt at all tbat lhe war will end quick· ly." 'Dare Be Great' Promoter's Case Put Off Again CLEARWATER, Fla. (UPI) -The securities violations trial of multi· millionaire Glenn W. Turner was postponed for the second time today, waiting a federal judge's decision on jurisdiction. Later, in Tampa, U.S. District Court Judge Ben Krentzman denieri a plea from Turner's attorneys for the federal courts to take over the case and returned it to Circuit Court Judge William A. Pat- terson's jurisdiction. Patterson schedu1ed the trial to resume Tuesday. Turner and two associates are accused on 86 counts of violation of the state's securities laws. The state oontends that the sale of motivational <XJUtses called "Dare To Be Great" amounts to the sale of securities and that Turner and bis associates are not registered securities dealers. Unlike Oct. 2, when 600 women waving placards and flags demonstrated at the courthouse, today's session was quiet. Frolll P..,e 1 Mat. I lie attempted to make • traffic atop 'I. aboot 8 p.m., trlggerln> a chuc thraucb 1 and arowd two cities that covered • • about I& mtlet al 1peeds ol 100 mllei>1>er-' hour and above. ' Streaking through medlwn density .~ traffic on Coaat Rigbwry, oq.tcer Ar.derson esiJmated Witt was dnlng mor~1 ~ than 100 when he sailed across the Santi! 1 An River Bridge into Huntington Beac~ " Waiting traffic patrolmen there picked ~ up tbe pursuit, which · then veered up Lake Street lo 17th Street, wbere the suspect made a screechink" right tum to ~ Delaware Street and on to Garfleld .t Avenue. • lo•esligalo<I said Witt aped .lbroul1l , stop signs on busy Goldenwest Stttet " with si.J: black-and-white police can with t sirens screaming in pursuit, in addition to the Huntington Beach p o 11 c e l helicopter. Dtermined to halt the dangerous chase, . Patrol Sgt. Gary Kuncl tried to block " Warner Avenue at its intersect.ion with Goldenwest Street. He said Witt screeched Into a sharp • right tum -sideswiping the patrol car j with bis small car, known tor its speed, \ !:-raking ability and maneuverability -j and shot down Warner Avenue to Beach • .. &u1evard. f By this lime, Officer Dennis Metzger ·1 was hot on the suspect's tail, but Witt .!" spun a sharp U·tum at Blaylock Avenue l and Metzger -his petrol car brakes .~ burnt out -piled into the rear of the car. · : Witt gunned the rotary engine agatri :, and whizzed back up Beach Boulevard, • police said, but was forced to ~oP at a· i roadblock an J taken into custody. . n The infant child and family cat a~ parenUy escaped Injury, while dnma~e ta .I Witt's car and tt-e twt. police vehlclea ) was described as minor to moderate. """" Pflfle J TIGRESS ••• '· young r.m•1~. ' .. . ' · "I doubt that the cat could have made tfµtt jump if she hadn't been very ex-, cited. ·Animals are capable of doing a lot ;' of ........... when they are excited or -... i scared." \ Simmons .estlmaled the tlgrw' weight at ~25 pounds, but Cordner put ll at ; about eo pounds. Fresno service station operator La\vrence Banks trains for the 1976 Olympic tire moving competi- tion. The trick is to keep up with the rolling tires, while d-Odging buildings, dogs, or any obstacles. BIGAMIST ••• get my hands on him." Mary, wife No. 5 who is expecting Galbraith's child, said: "I'll wait for him and we will get married when be gels a divorce." "IL's hard !ti believe in the middle of , the United States that one can be at-~. tacked by a tiger," Cordner said. ••1 still can't believe tt." His Love for Old Train Cost Owner His Fortune LONDON (UPI) -Alan Pegler's love fo :-an old steam locomotive cost him his fortune. Pegler, SO, re tu med to England Sunday and filed a bankruptcy petition after touring America with his beloved "Flying Scotsman," one of Britain's last steam trains. In 1963 he paid $7,500 for the 46-year- old locomotive and it,. eight cars to save it from the scrap heap. Then he took it on a 12,000-milc tour of the United States. Pegler. who inherited a fortune from his family's rubber and plastics business, said he had hoped to tum the train into a rolling ex hibition for British goods and tourism. But he said he lost $1.8 million on the tour because he could not sell exhibition space on the train. · "My love for that engine has ruined me financially," Pegler said as his daughter, Penny, 19, tearfully embraced him when he arrived by ship in Southampton. "The Americans were tremendously impressed." he said . ''But our exporters and the British tourist authorities failed to realize the potenlia\ and I did not get the backing I anticipated. ''I flied my petition in bankruptcy because it seemed $Cnsible and logical;' Air Cal Ope1is Cut Rate Route To Ontario Arca Air Callfornln has announced the'.! optn: Ing or a new route between Orange Coun- ty and OntArlv and the Inauguration of a weekend cut-rate fnre . A1rllne spokesman Jim Phelan said the CMtarlo night is lhe extension of on ex- isllng route belwttn Oakland and San Jooe . "Up to now, "'e have bttn carrying pa~~nger! to Ontario from Oakl11nd:San Jooe via Orange County but we have not been able to board pauengcrs for O. t.1rlo at OrMae O:iunly," heexplalned. "This new route enables us to take on passengcn htre for Ontario without 1d- ding any flights into or out of Ort1nge County." The ~way fart for the IS.minute fl ight is $5.40 including federal lrons- portatk>n tu . The new cul nte weekend f:1re being used by Air Cal la called ~ because It of'ers a 50 pettenl fare for 2e hours hf-tween noon on SAturday and 2 p.m. on Sunday. The faJre Is avallnble for ruoncttrlps made during the tlme pcrtod. Phelon uld J>l'Mtngera using the reduced fflre will aUll be able to nuike conrlrmed rcservu, tlons and wll l not have tony 11tandby. Pegler said. "Some people creditors have been waiting two or three years for their money and I cannot keep them on a string forever." He declined to disclose the extent of his debts. He will face a bankruptcy bearing in London Oct. 31. Pegler still owns the Flying SCotsman. now in storage at an army base in California. He expressed the belief the old train will one day restore his fortune. "I'm sure my problems will be solved and 1 shall run the Flying Scotsman again," he said. From Pagel RESCUE ... incident today. Officer Webster and otbcr helicopter crewmen are also trained in aquatic rescue techniques but toc1ar,'s dramatic operation was the first one or Webster. Car Windows Riddled NORWALK (AP) -Vandals using pellet or BB guns broke or damaged about 100 car windows in a rive-square. mile area of south Whittier and La ~llrada, sher if rs deputies said today. The damage wAs done In the shooting spree early Sunday, the deputies said. Witli Friends Like Tliat ... Espril de corps among Marines ca n reach extremes at llme1. Even lf It means • broken jaw and head cuts. Police in San Clemente attested to that over the weekend when they responded to a local bar after employea rtported an unconscious palrt.11. Offlct.n found a sergemt from Camp Pendleton uncoMclous on tlte noor of the tAvem and called for an ambulance. At San Clemmte G en e r 11 I Hospital, lbe loeer ln an apparen t l~lllght came Jo. Police Wed him who WU mponslble ror the painful lnjurlea. The vlctJm refused to ldtntlfy his 1parrlng J)8rtner and declined to prcu any cbarget. Officer! said the victim gave onC!i simple reaAOn: "He'• my beat friend ." Mrs. Cordner said she was ••scared . . . lrozen stiff." Swimme1· Dro'wns HESPERIA (APl - A 32-year-0ld Redondo Beach man drowned while swimmi ng in the Hesperia Country Club pool, authorities said. Said Galbraith : "The trouble w .. I always seemed to get unsettled after. being married for awhile and I just doo't know what has made me get married all the time." A newsman who visited the Cordner home in nearby Bellevue asked Lisa, whose bead was swathed in bandages, I whether she· had ever aeen a tiger that clo6e before and wbetber she would like I to see a tiger again. To both questions, Lisa replied, .,No." Another ad was prepared for this space to· day, but we had a fire early Monday morning. PRICES SLASHED ON ALL NEW APPLIANCES· IF · YOU DON'T MIND CLEANING THE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HAVE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. EVERYTHING MUST MOVE FAST to make room for clean-up and redecorating • • •WASHERS DRYERS REFRIGERATORS TELEVISIONS • 0 STOVES T815 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COST A MlSA l 11 • • . . -· . -. ... • • " • - Murde1· Calendar Backs 10eathPenalty Argument . , By TOM B/\RLEY Of .. Dlltr ll'IMt ..... IT'S DIFFICULT to argue with anyone opposed to lhe abolition of capllal punishment when you've taken a good look at lhe chllllng statistics provided -by the -Orange .County .. Superior Court criminal c;a.tendar for Friday, Oct. 6, 1972. Eighty-lour persons were named In lhe files placed on Judge William Murray's bench. And 15 of !hose defendants wore charged with murder. Three allegedly used !heir lists and boots to finish off !heir victim. Eight used firearms of vary· ing caliber, two used knives, one used a club and another used a powerful palr of bands to squeez<! the life out of a raped woman. They're all on the calendar as 187s -the Penal Code classification included on the criminal calendar to enable clerks, judges, lawyers and nosy _pewsmen to pick out the wheat from the chaff of drug offenders, sundry burglars and as· 1A1tL1v sorted rapists and Si!X offenders. FIFTEEN ACCUSED murderers in one day is a new record for a Superior Court criminal calendar in this county. But the judges, clerks, lawYers and deputies who chatted about it Friday agreed on one thing -it will soon be broken. "What else do you expect?" asked Chief Deputy District At· torney James Enright. "You won't find a lawman in this county or any other county who will be surprised at this development.11 His office is presently working on 83 murder cases. And the vast majority of those cases have come into the bands of prosecutors since the death penalty was abolished first by lhe California Sup- reme Court and belatedly by the United States Supreme Court. PROSECUTOR PAT BRIAN Is probably lhe most eloquent and vehement spokesman in the District Attorney's office on the topic of capital punishment. 01 don't just want to see it restored," said the trier of several recent murder cases. "I want to see someone pull the switch, get these people out of here and very quickly demonstrate to lhe public that yes, indeed, the death penalty is a deterrent." It's also interesting to note that we have six women awaiting trial for murder -also lhe highest number in Superior Court his- tory. A PSYCHIATRIST, who cannot be identified because be is in· valved in one of those cases, believes this increase indirectly stems from the abolition of the death penalty but in a way that can only be applied to the feminine psyche. "Women deplore violence," be said. '1And when they do com- mit violent acts, even murder, they feel a sense of justification that is rarely evident in a man and almost always point out that they were driven to kill -usually by a man ." "Death as an ultimate punishment has always been a much greater deterrent to a woman than a man," he said. HNow it has been removed and, I think, this has added to \voman's almost in· evitable sense of justification for any violent act she commits." MALE OR FEMALE, it's still murder. And you can hardly blame superior Court baliffs for wanting to put a new sign on the door of Judge Murray's Department Five. It will very simply read: "Murder, Inc." Laguna Zone Freeze Asked A delegatioo of Laguna B e a c b Greenbelt supporters is organiiinc to at- tend a Board of Supervisors bearing at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the request for fr~ Ing zone changes and road construction in the greenbelt area. A letter from the trustees of Laguna Greer.belt, Inc., announce. that t1Ils hear· lng could be a test case for all loca1 holding actioos in behalf of any local open space effort. "It can give the real substance to the County Open Space Plan effort that Is now before all the citizens of the coun- ty," the letter states. The hearing is in the supervisors hear- ing room, sixth floor 515 N. Sycamore, Santa Ana. Mondly, Octofllr f , J91l s OAtLY '1~3 Nose Count --Of Students OA!l 't "llOT Stefl .... ,. CALIFORNIA CHAMBER SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PERFORMED FOR 5,000 YOUNGSTERS Percuuioni1t Tim Boatman GiYes Sleighbell Tl p1 to Jeff Morrow, Denin1 Wright, Biii Struett 5,000 Hear Philharn1011ic Youths Applaud Symphony Music hath channs but hath it enough charm to soothe 5,000 wriggling, giggling, scratching, fidgeting elementary school students? It seemed so as Laguna's Irvine Bowl echoed with applause from a young au- dience enthusiastically clapping for the California Ownber Symphony Orchestra concert presented F r i d a y by the Orange County Philhannonic Society. Two groups of 2,500 fourth and filth graders rrom San Joaquin, Capistrano Unified and Laguna Beach public schools as well as Costa Mesa private schools were bused to the free concert, the first or the 1972-73 season. The concert, conducted by IIenri Te- mianka was specially oriented to the young audience and mixed fun with the classical selections. One featured three students from two San Joaquin schools who played sleighbells under the direc- tion of Temianka. The Philharmonic Society hopes to bring concerts to about 30,000 Orange County students this year and will use auditoriums such as Crawford Hall at UC Irvine, the John Wayne Theater in Buena Park, and Melodyland in Anaheim. The society bas a budget of $17,500 this year with which to bring the children and music together. The reason for the society's efforts was ~ by Mrs. Edward W . Schumacher, vice president In charge of youth ooncerts: "Each year, Orange County has seen a st.eady increase in student enroUmenls at most achoola, or new schools, opened to accommodate the burgeoning n e w res.idenUal areas. "In many cases, there is very little budget allocated for music or the arts in general at these acboola," she said. "Jn these days of high-speed, ac- celerated educational programs, sometimes the really deep, meaningful gifts of our heritage must be left to fend for themselves," Mrs. Schumacher said. It is the aim of the society to attempt to fill a voki created in the student's education, she explained. The aociety raises funds for the con- certs which are all provided free to the chlldren and the scllool dl.mlcts by several actlvttles, the prtmary ooe Is the I. Magnln Fash.ion Luncheon UtlJ season schedulfd !0< the Newporter lno In Moreb. VillageLaguna WillKeep Suit Against Land Buy Although t¥ Laguna Beleh Clty Ceon- cil now is dolng "exactly what we wanted." Village Laguna will not dlsmls1 iL.;; suit to block city purchase of Boat Canyon land for extension of Campus Drive. attorney Barry Sim:ms believes. "I'm elated to learn the council Is reconsidering the purchase," s a i rl Simons. "but we still want the court to rclain jurisdiction in case they should Woman Dead At 880 Pounds MILWAUKEE (AP) -Mrs. Percy Pearl Washington. who w~ighed an estimated 680 pounds, has died of !cldney failure. Mrs. \Vashington, 46, who was about fi feet tall, had been hospitalized since July 28. She died Sunday. Her daughter, P.fattlt Darling , said her mother galntd much of her weight in 1he last four months. She said her mother's ~hvsician attlbuted most or the weight to ' ater. The heaviest v.•oman listed in the Guin· ness Book of World Records was <.n unidentified woman weighlng l50 pounds who di~ in BalUmore In 188&. dec\4e to proc::etd w\lb lt. Any ... l!>- vlronmenta 1 impact statement that might be Wued should be sub}tct to revliew by the court. I think the case might be con· tinued for a o:.uple of months, bot I definitely want to keep open." • The suit ls scheduled for hearing In Sul>erlor Court Oct. 20. A tc1nporary restraining order was Issued in August to keep the city from dcposltlng purchase funds for the 6.J.acre parcel In escrow pc .. ding the lull hearing. Wednesday nlght ctty Attomey Tully Seymour told the <OUl1Cl1 he felt there would be DO point tn spending money on legal fees to defend the envlronmrnt11l in1pact atatemtnt on the projec:t, challenfed by Vtllage Ll(una H I"· adequote,and described by Seymour " "superOcJal." The councll agreed the whole pniJect 'IH>Uld be r""""lldered 111C1. 11 It lltould proceed, a -lmpocl lllatement ~ hl•Vt to be prcpered 'J'he matter WU r<lerred boclc to t1te P1lnninc Cam- mi.Won. The previous Clty Council 1pprovfd the land purchase In JUDI, '1lhootiJI Coun- cilmen Charlton Boyd 111'1 Roy Holm, now mayor and Vice Dll)'ot ruped.lvtly, argued the road metslon probably would not be needed lo yJew of eUminl· lion of the Inland freeway route,· which Campua Drlve ww to have KrYcd u a feeder road.. Proposed A precise "snapehot" of the new dly o1 Jrvlnt's student populaticn valued at SlS.000 will be available If cotmdlrnen ok:ly a $3,500 grant to tabulate data ctil· l('eted by voJunteen . The city's public education ocmmltttt ~<'hool census is nearly complete, l1rt. ~1arian Ellis of 11162 OewbelTJ Way, U11iversi1y Park told councilmen recentJy. However. because A number of QUtS· tibn~ were added to t~· original IRUTtY \\'hlch .,.,·as to hnve been totally paid for by a UC lr\'ine Publlc Polley Returch Organization grant, complctk>o ot the study is in quesllon. Dr. \'em Tater whose university research staff ha\·e been aiding the citizen volunteers, told councilmen the s1cdy. if done professionally v.:ould 006l the city "from ~.000 to $40,000." The delays ln preparation of the survty questionnaire. Tater said, pushed the completion of the project ahead to tht point when university tabulatin& and computer staff may no lanser complete the project at no cost to the city. Tater estimated It will cost tl.200 to tabula!< the tw<><anf "'"ey when ooly one CIT was expected to have betn. necessary. Another $2,400 in wacN for the "fou; man-monl.bs of work" whk:b remain is needed. Trustees of the Irvine Unifitd School District told cotmcl.lmen the data IDIY or may not be useful to them in plaoolllc for new &eboola. Mn. .... stcoll noted tllat when the district's mui<r plan II under WIJ, tt may be valuable lnfonnaUan. CllJ plannlnc -Bruce B. w ... ren said •bout ..,. th1n1 o1 lbe in- f°"""tlan 11therod by the wlunteen .. ~ quesUonnalm was data city ptannen: onlinmly find helpful. The chief apparent benefit of com- pleting the airvey to the IChoo1 district would be the provtalon of llCCllnle eountl of 1tudenll to comJ>l!' wltb lbe t><O-J<elloos orrtvfd II by Ulle of lllle lormulu. C4uncllman E. Ray Qulile1 Jr. pralled U.e educaU.. comm-·· elloru to date and Aid, "I'd """ to -Ill pt .. cavallu with -1<'1 ellcrtl tllat we'd consider dJ.lcardln& them..'" . "lt'l 111 -b'apdy tbll .r!ort WU thrown olf lbe troc1t Md WO l»W fllld we neec1 to como up wltb IOll10 money to complete It," Qulcler llkL 'frooperTronneed In Bar Fracas; Governor Irate PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Tb e •troarmn polke ..rest of 1111 -state trooper who allop11y 1oadlo4 1 cocktail w111tren in a cenilr ctt7 bit bu been critlctzed by Gov. Mlltoa J. llllapp. The ttooper, Anthooy Ca1doaeW, D, of Tamaqua. Pa .. WIS armted 1llt ..ii: outside I.he bar. Pol~e ukt he grabbed wattrea Qirole Sammons, 20. "by her buHOc:b" twice before she called a l:lounmf. · Tbe preuy blonde Aid lhe -srab-becl by the "rur end" but didn't wmlder the ........ act1onl to be 1111 .. _,, amuil. .. Sito ......... pnlomcl cltorpo on the .....,.,,...,._ of h • r employ.r'• lawy<r. Shopp nroct • iott<r to ...,.,.. l'rlDk L. Rlmo, blasting the method In w1tlch police oonducted the ..rest of the ttooper. Sbapp Uk! there WU ••,.,, GCUll for any of the bnltol tblnp tllat 111_,..i afltt the 1111' trooper ... io.iol ..... unoor:llCloUI. te\'trely belte.a .. • •kwly in need of medical aid." 1r=Hi~y~le Boll Call~ ~!ill@I~ WINDSOR. Of MlX!CO Of SWITZlltlAND the VolksCycle Best OF GERMANY ~ CORSO • lD the OF ITALY AZllkt OF JAPAN MUNDO CYCLE OF GERMANY • O.llt. Y P'tt.OT II.ti """"' A LOAD OF HELMETS TO UNDERLINE FIRE PRIVINTION IN LAGUNA BEACH Roy Mlrcom of ExcMngil Club, Fire M8nh1f p,..._. to Make Youn9tter1 Jvnlor Firemen ATALA W C:oil .,,, Fire Safety Stressed : Fino preveotlon and nre .. re11 awlttnell lte lbe twin aiml d National Fire Prevent10n Weel: bdn1 dittctfd In !Aguna B<ach by the E~ Club and the cllJ Fire Depcnmeo~ bollmlinl to- day. 'l'hroulb tlfort1 of Etthlna• Club m<mber, RoJ Mll'CUI, aome t.-00 plutlc 1"'mln'1 hits will be own to Lqun1 Besch Unlll«I SChool D1strtct cbllct.... In klnderprten Uiroui)I tlllnl ........ '11le ball, donattd by ID lmunn<e --· wlll 11lo be anllable 11 tbe LI-Beach Fire Depullllalt Ht1d· qu1rtm1 IOI Farat Aft-. ~ 8elch Fire Manhll Jim" -will •ddrW tbe ()ct, 12 lwicheon metln1 ol 1he Exthan1e Cub at ~ Bttth ftoUse tnn on the topic of fire safe- ty. On•nce Count)' 1tatlttlies lnd!cat~ thllt a larac numbtr of gl'IN fires an tel by 1n1all cblkftn, ind thus Is one rtat0n for · the procram to ma~ tbe younplert more 1W1re of firt saltly. 1ponaora ukl. OF ITALY COMNTI CTCUNIO AC 673-5051 Open WK. thrv Mon. 9:30 to 5:30, dOMll T-. ..... • 1 "\uni ...... aw.,,. OF FIANCE IXfVIT .. All SDriCi B.alhoa 2120 west B1eyeles 1 ~c:!~~ N!:.~ • I • 4 DAILY PILOT .....,, Octobtr 9, 1•7Z Allied Yillage Held Reds Occupy Three Hani1.ets Near Saigon Just Blame It On Columbus OCEANS BLUE DEPT. -It is oom· mon practice these days for some Great Thinker to cast hls eyes upon one of our heroes of the past and then put the knock oo the poor fellow. SAIGON (AP) -From 250 w 500 North \lletoameSe and Viet Cong still held Huong Phuong village and three hamlets 15 to 20 miles north of Saigon to- day despite heavy air strl<es. The.enemy force occupied the hamlets on Friday and Huong Phuong on Satur· day, cutting Highway lS between Saigon and a big South Vietnamese military headquarters at Lal Khe, 30 miles oorth of the capital. "I DON'T think anyone regards l b e threat to Saigon itseU as significant because of the relative capabilities of the two side!," said one U.S. source. ''The South Vietnamese territorial forces and regular units have good denfensive capabilities. The North Vietnamese units are still under strength from previous combat They are stil lcapable of terror, attacks by rue, sapper attacks and perhaps small infiltration efforts, but the llltelibood of any main attack oo Saigon ls rather remote!' Other American and South Vietnamese officers thought the amall·scale attack:s might be designed to keep government troops busy while larger enemy forces sllpped past into positions for attacks on such lmportanL targets as the big base at Bien Hoa, Saigon and its Tan Son Nbut Air Base. U.S. BU BOMBERS attacked troop positions, base camp. and infiltration routes on all skies of Saigon. Some of the raids were only four miles east of Huong Phuong and o! HighWIQ' U. Despite the secret Vietnam peace talks in Paris, the Uolted States abo kept up its heavy air strikes across North Viet- nam. and the Communist forces showed no signs of pulling back from battlefields in South Vietnam. "We are continuing to carry on the Christopher Columbus, who generally gets credit for discovering the New World, has been no exception. Today we celebrated Columbus Day. We honor the fellow who found our place. So we fly some flags and a few folks get to take the day off. Beyood that. the Great Thinkers often take over and poor old Chris Columbus comes out on the short end. Crowds Encouraging Certaln of these historians are quick to suggest that Chris was a late comer to the New World., having been beaten to the mark by people such as Eric the Red or some other Viking who had stronger oarsman on his port side. and thus pad· died astray and stumbled into the New World linl McGovern Setting Sights On 8 'Important~ States OTHER SAVANTS PUT the knock to poor old Chris as being nothing. more than a Born Loser who bumbled about and got lucky. They note that before Columbus struck it rich in 1492, he got kicked out of several palaces where he was attempting to gather up some cold cash to finance his exploration. The king of Portugal, for example, gave him the boot out the front door in 1484 when Chri! came seeking some Long Green. SO HE FINALLY got 1ucky with King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain. Even then, some historians have little time for Columbus. They point out that the rowdies who feared they would ~t oU the edge of the flat world almost took over the boatl. Additionally, they note that Chris never really got Into New York Harbor anyhow. He struck landhll al the Bahamas In- stead. And od tOp ol all Iba~ they allege that Ottis thought he was really going to hit shore in Japan and the Americas just happened to get in his way. In onler to support the thesis that Columbus was just a 1tumblebum, these hlstorlana even quote the poor chap~ he wrote of hill great adventure to King Fenlinand and Queen Isabella In 1502. ln that missive he declared that "neither reason, aor mathematics nor maps were of any use to me" in the disCO"¥ery of the Americas. Be said he came upon it by prophecy round In the Bible. THUS THE ANTl-Cotmnbus types In- sist that poor old ChriJ admitted that he just flopped around the ocean aimlessly and got lucky In the eod. Well, rou can always flnd IOmebodY who wll get their ldcu by putting the knock on our heroes. Any day now, I eipect the en· viranmentaliJts will jump oo the Knock Columbus Bandwagon. 1 can just hear them-. First, they'll uy U It wasn't !or Chris, we wouldn't have all th.ls smog. After all, he practically invented the last for mobility, dlcbt'l he? People kept wanting to go places. 'nlus we invented the automobile. And after that, we invented smog. AND HOW .ABOIJT the shoreline and how It's been clobbered up with all that building? And who planted the first stic< in the land beret Cohzmbus, that's who. Tile lather ol OY<rbulldlna. U he'd Just kept his three little sailboall: away from the place, it woulcbt't be all Jammed up lll!o It is now. He probably pollu1ed the first bay, too. So lolU, tociltl' -Columbus Day. And just ttmember, if tbtre'• 111ythlng you don't like about IOdety tbeoa daya, just point your finger. Blame It on poor old CJ.rls. Everybody elle does. WAS!IlNGTON (UPI) -Encouraged by increasingly larger crowds at every stop, George S. McGovern today resumed ru,, pursuit of the presidency, embarking on a coast-to-coast campaign that will take him through the large states he must carry to defeat President Nixon. 'Ibe week.Jong swing opens with a Columbus Day parade in New York City today and ends with a jammed three-day schedule in California next weekend. IN THE SPAN of a week, McGovern will campaign In states that hold 196 eledoral votes, including members of tl)e so-called "big eight" like New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and califomia .. The Democratic presidential candidate enjoyed one of bis brief respites from the campaign Sunday, interrupted only by the taping ol a majcr television broad- cast on Vietnam. McGovern left his suburban home "' tape the pnigram in the capitol olfices or Senate Democratic Leader M I k e Mansfield. He indicated, in advance, that the »minute program, scheduled for ReC!l1Ue Pesmbetl The pilot of a luxury yacht bWlonaire Howard Hu g be s med to gel from Nassau ln tho Bahamu U> Miami described what the recluse looked llke to a Sunday Herald artist. 4,30 p.m. (PDT) Tuesday, would hold no surprises. McGovern has said repeatedly, that if elected, he would withdraw all U.S. ( CAMPAIGN '72 ) forces from Indochina within 90 days of his inauguration, with no conditions at- tached. Backed by historical precedence, McGovern feels that North Vietnam will release all U.S. prisoners-of.war once American forces are withdrawn. ALTHOUGH FAR behind in the polls and facing a financial pinch, McGovern was deeply encouraged last week by the huge crowds that turned out for him in a swing from the East to the Midwest. He drew an estimated 75,000 in . Boston's Post office square, jammed downtoMt Buffalo, packed the Livestock Pavilion in Des Moines, lured 25,Wl to Union State in Kansas City, and 30,000 more to an outdoor rally in St. Louis. Over the weekend, McGovern issued another \n a leries of position papers - this one dealing with energy and oU im· port quotas. McGovern urged an end to quotas on oil imports and recommended that the United States buy and store cheap foreign oil as a hedge against "in· temational blackmail and interruption of supply." HE ~ CALLED for phasing out of special subsidies to the energy industry, including tax l:naka, and predicted this would stimulate the development of other ~ventional energy sources. "The Nixon administration bas sought to restrict oil imports, which would aave consumers money, while on the other hand they are urging higher prices and more government subsidies," McGovern said in a statement issued Slmday. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE OtllYft')' of the Dally Piiot Is Quarantttd ~y.frldlYI It yOU 00 !IOI 111\11 \IOUf IMJIW by 5:ll0 p.m., ull •nd Voll!'" toP'f win 119 florOuOl'lt to VOii. ,..,. '"' tlkln ""'Ill ':30 p.m. $1tvrdly '"" 61Jrd9YI tf yotl 00 not ACtlW V011r (OCJV DY • 1.m. a.tunltv, °' t 1.m. lvnd•y, «ill 1nd • COPY wlll 119 DrOughl to YllU. C1!k ,._ ...... loftfll II 1.m. Ttlrphones Moll °'"'"" c-rv Aries ••.••• 60-0lil Norfllwftl H1111tlftoOIOll llld\ Ind W"fl'NNIW • , .•• , • , • , , . , • -Int "'" ciem.ni., C.llls""-ll<M<tl. Stn J1.1111 C..-lr-. OtN Poln!. loulll ~. U111N NlfUll •••• ..,.....,. Cool Wea th er Across U. S. Temperatures Dip into 30s; Sho·wers Hit Midwest u a " .. ..... .. 11 '' JI .. " " .. " " " " .... .... .. " " .. .. .. .. " .. " n G 1' G .. " .. " . .. .. .. .... .... .. .. .. .. " .. " .. ,. .•. n " " " n :: .... ft .. = : s 3 . .. "'"1!0tu.l W11tllltl MW.Ct toe1CM1 N P1ta lll 11· •· PJ ttn >O.OO , ""~ .. .. IH!tlf, Qty u .. fl'OttttM. .. "' n .. __ .,. .. ,. """-' -.. tit .. .. ...... "' " ~ ·~ <:lty. "' .. .. •• .,..,....,.. dt' " .. .. ~.dt' n .. V.8. S••••r" II. IAllb , C:tr " .. .......... ~ n • T....-.i"°"' ~1N g!• --.. .. ="':."''I: .. = .r.i; " ... ,,, ..... .., " .. r .,.,. " "" ~· r same operaUom: u we have all along, 11 aald one American BOUJ"Ce. "We haw bad no directives to do aJIYlhlng dlllermtt. There ls no lndlcatlon that any ol the 14 Norlh Vietnamese divisions la South Vietnam are pulling ou~ withdrawing or discontinuing offeoalve operat1ont.1• The BS2s dropped nearly 3,000 -of bombs Sunday and today oo munitions stockpiles, troop positions and lltPPiy lines near the North Vlebtamese c:ltles of Vlnb and Dong Hot and around Saigon. ......... 1···· ••• VINH IS HS miles north o! tho Ilemllitariled ZOne; t be raids there were the big bombers' ~ penetra- tion of North Vietnam in si1~months. The U.S. Command diJcloeed the 1oa of another aircraft over North Vietnam and two In Sooth VietDam. Four crewmen were listed as missing and one was reported tnJllftd. The Command said that an Air Force F4 Phantom was hit by a sur!-">-alr missile last Friday 70 miles northwest of Hanoi, and search operations failed to locate the two crewmen. The Conunand said this raised "' 108 the number of U.S. planes downed over the north since the start of the enemy of. fensive last March 30. A t.otal of 114 crewmen have been killed or captured, according to U .S· Command records. ln another delayed report, the corn. mand said an Air Force OVlO light spotter plane crashed. last Friday off the South Vietnamese coast 10 miles northwest of Oa Nang, and the two crewman are missing. Spokesmen said the cause of the crash was unknown. A COBRA helicopter gunship crashed from unknown causes early today in the Mekong Delta 60 miles northwest of Can Tho, injuring one crewman, the com· mand announced . South American Wearing Robes Gets Past Guard VATICAN CITY (AP) - A South American wearing the robes, pectoral cross and ring of a bishop made his way into Pope Paul's summer palace but was discovered to be a fake when be could not find the Pope's apartment, the Vatican .confirmed today. Officials said · lhe incident occurred Sept. lt at castel Gandolfo, ip the hills south of Rome. Papal guards turned the fake bishop over to the police, and the government expelled him from the coun- try. The Vatican refused to give the man's name but said he was about 45, a~ parently suffering from a mental disorder, and lived in a South American country which they did not name. Vatican officials said the Swiss Guards at the main gate snapped to attention when the man walked with assurance in- to the palace. But he betrayed himself by his obvious difficulty in finding the Pope's apartment, they added. At the time, the Pope was spending the final week of his summer stay at the palace. Officiala wouJd not say bow close the rake bishop got "' the papal apart.- rnent, but they said the man was not armed and there was no attempt on the pontiff's life. The Pope escaped an assassination at- tempt in Manila during his 1970 Asian trip when a Bolivian attacked him. The Pope was not hurt during the incident. Scare Disrupts Speech by Jane Pl'M'SBURGH (AP) :.... Actress Jane Fonda was whiskelJ oU a stage durlol a speaking engqement at the O>atham College O>apel alter IOClltlty ol!loers at the school round flvt bulletl near the ..,. trance or the building. A spokesman for the college said Ml.u l-4onda, an anUwar activist who recf!DllJ returned from a visil to North Vletm.m, was concluding her apeecb to an audience ol about 800 perlODI when the .Jkaliber bullet.I were found. Member1 of the 1ndocblna Peace Coal!· lion, 1pcmon of her tour, and. Olltbam Coll•g• accurlty pel10llllel decided not to take chanc<s and rushed Mill F-oil stage before lite llnlahed her talk, tho spokesman said. Wides I '/ do not want. talk of ... seem ;Mct1 n8gatia- tions /Hlold .••• ' ... _ Jaillaouse Drama M\· Airy •. N.C. sheriff talks to Mrs. Faye Duncan outside the sher· tf! s building where her .husband R<>y, held her daughter and six others at gunpoint Friday. Claiming he wanted to talk U> bis es- tranged wife, Duncan surrendered after police let her talk to him via mobile telephone. · Mexico Train Disaster Mopped Up; 204 Dead SAL TD.LO, Mexico (AP) . -Rescue sleeping in a car that matched the crews have finished their work Rt the site description of tbe vehicle night In the of Mexico's second worst rail disaster shooting of trooper Ray O. Caffey. and authorities put the number of ~ Caffey, 56, a veteran of 25 years on the firme:c' dead. at 204 and in~ at 1,098: patrol, was shot Sunday night, apparently Police Chief Genaro Gutierrez Devila after Stopping a car for speeding. said Sunday the teams had 3lllo collected • £ ~ •- parts or bodies maimed beyond recogni· X••Oovll Pead tion that could have belonged to 10 more NEW YORK (AP) -Prescott Sheldon victims, but he said U!ere was no way of Bus~, former U.S. Senatcr from ~ confirming this. necticut and the fat.her of George Bush, The traln's engineer, Melchor Sanchez ~.S. ambassador to the United Natiom, Echeverria, and at least one other JS dead at 77 · member of his c r e w face charges of Bush died Sunday at the Mermrial ( IN SHORT ... ) homicide. OUicials said blood tests show- ed they bad been drinking before eight of the 24 cars hurtled off a downhill curve at more than 70 miles an hour Thursday night. e Poliu Sl•11ing DOBSON, N.C. (UP!) -Four suspects were taken into custody today for ques- tioning In connection with the murder of a South C&rollna highway Patrolman near Orangeburg, S.C. Authorities said the four wei"e foW1d Family Rescued After Vessel Sinks in Ocean WES!' PALM BEACH, F1a. (UPI) - Seven persons who had spent 26'n: hours in the water were pulled from the Atlan- tic Ocean Sunday by a Coast Guard helicopter, 50 miles from where their cabin cruiser sank while on a fishing ex· pedltlon. The castaways told the Coast Guard they kept from clriltlng apart In the water by tying their µre jackets together alter the boat went doWn. 'TREY WERE CARIUED about 50 miles up the coast by the Gull stream and mrthwesterly 'litn<to before a Coast Guard search plane sootted the seven tiny doll In the water a( I p.m. Sunday, U miles at ,.. ol! Stuart, Fla. • All seven were trt.ated for ~ and -frilm Good Sauiailtan Hoopltal Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases. He lived in Greenwich, Conn. . A staunch Republican, Bush 5'rved m tile Senate from 1952 to 1963 and pin- ed a reputation es an authority on government finance aod the national economy. He waa a confidmt ti Presi- dent Dwjgtit ·I), EJsemower. e Virgilli• Flood RICHMOND, Va. (AP) _City officials say damage could run into the millions following the second flood here la ~ than four months, and residents or P.etersburg 25 miles to the south faced higher water again. Cleanup operations continued toda;y following flooding from the James River, which crested Saturday at 24 feet, some ~1h feet below what had been expected as a result or heavy rains 'll!unday and Friday across the state. e Robbers l'oUetl PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -.A warrant w~ issued Sunday for Bobby "Scarface" Stru.th, one of two men believed to bav' ~gmeered a ''Jesse James«yle'' stickup of 31 passengers aboard a Greyhound bus. The bandits got about 12.500 la the bold !OOhery, but some pas3e0gers !ooled them by hiding money la bushes and riog.s in their mouths. Five young persoos are already in Jail in oonnecllon with the robbery Friday outside Everett, Waab. They were taken Into custody Saturday afttr police said they tried to buy merchandise with credit cards stolen in the holdup. 1930's Actress Miriam Hopkin.s Succumbs at 72 They ... re tdentllled u a...., crane, 41, ltlJ wUe Mildred, fl, and theli' • NEW YORK (UPI) -Actre1o Miriam cblldren, Dllvtd, II, Stepben, 14, and !!opldm, a Ql&jor star of the I~ - &IJan, 10, all ol Hallandale. Fla.; top roles .,...1n the Dim "~ llllari>" Wllltam Pendlelon, M, a _,.,. and the B.-.Y [l<1>ductton ct ,.,,,. ioooc:!!'e ol Crane'• -Cllllmtla, and Sldn ol our Teeth," died earl~-ct Natblnlel Bethune, who wu lel'Ving u an apparent heart au.ck at 1 Mlablttan ~aptaln ol the boaL hotel. She -71. ' She came w Htw Yori< In J~ !Or a 'l'llE COAn' GUAJID re«lvell a garb!-retroopectt .. of ber 11im1 al the """"'8D eel SOii a1 z,ao p.m. SalUrY1 ~ the o1 Modem Art. cruw wu olnldng npidly. At lqt the A naUve of Baktbrldp. Ga., lllsa Cout Guard tbouoht the -I WU nan>-ltopldns bepn her ...-. --ed "Slxlb Sense1f"Or .. SlJ:pence" tilt tt 1 .... -... .. tJM ---. ·~ I.•-·-~ ou"-be "Sitt C's" for the "'" •·-!rom s,,_ u.....,ty, -1...-'w POllow1ng dramatic 1pp11rw an llx .-hen of the Crane lamlly, 0ne of 8-y In "All -'l'rll• 11" ID wbonl wu nol aboanl the crulltr when It 11131 ad "The Alllln ol -· la ADk. lllill, Mill ""'*"" -t lo ~ Crane wu alited Whal caused the Among her lltmo were "Deolcn i... U•· ftllef lo oink. lni" in !US, ·~Tino" In I .. ~ "AtlolalUddenthelronlftfttdo'!ll," two with l!slte Dllvlo, with -.lllte he oak!. '"l'!ne minutes taler It wu C1111Ced In a blgltl7 puhllciRd feucl u gone." lllm rtvala -''The Old Maid" In IDiand The bQyl said they tbouC)1t the boat ''Old Aequalntmloe" In IMS. , atruclt oomethiJ>C, boll they ftl'I Dot ... She Mo illnld Mtjcu) 11teim - Whal. .... -lo .. "lilltdllai ,.., ..... ~"In tho IM film "vtrpiia CJb.• TllE SEVEN TOOi: t"" Ille J~ .. City. -· lite -"Y-l)o4. per penon and an alr mattress oU a die" lnatead . chlllo loo!nl• when they eni.red U.. The orlaJaal heroine of tba T,__ water. • Williama Pla7 "Billie of At>(ell'' la.let The Crann said lho7 wtre unable to revlled Ind rellUed "Orpbeus llacm- keep !heir miniature dacltSlnmd, Max, dJni," M.isl Hopldno •Ito •tarred la !rom clrolflllng. BroadWIJ productions of "J-1" In A .-Ill Crane <1auabtor, ll'~ld 1w. "The Perfect M•rriqc" 1n 111t..,... MDIII, llllyed home !Jorn tba SalUr<la)I "Look Homew•nl. An&el" In , ... f~ epedlilon w' altet1d cborul pnc-Siie WU man1ed and di-lour Uct al ber )ltDlor blBh KllOoL tlln ... I • I / ·Ten Die ' _.In 3 Pliilii .Crashe s • • _,... ' Ten persons died when lhree light plaoes crelled as ~ging cloudJ '·~forced airerall to fiy c1ooer lo the· ground N,,.than usual In Southern Calilomla. ~ "The wooUJer had a lot to do ~th fr"' these crUbes," said a Federal spokes-~ · man Sunday. "The low ceillngs hive • been a problem all 'Clay.'' ' • 1n~,\clon, llboul 25 miles -of l;m;-·1 '6il!U, lour OCCUJ>'!llW of a small pri· \vale plane were tilled when the craft ·• clipped a power line ahd crashed into a ' ,,borne, ' ..... ' ~ AU1110RmES said 'the pilot may -ve become lost a·s be Oew tbrougb the. clouds 111' a ftight lrom Lu Vegas •. to Van Nuys Airport The occupants of the house escaped in· fury, officials said, adding that three of _•the victims were pinnep: in the fuselage .or the aircraft while the fourth w a a thrown to the rear ol the home, There were no Immediate identllicatioos made 'ol the victims, One witness said the plane was lly. lng "so low It caused me to duck." Held Fast _ ~ch mitz Appeal Unlike Wallace's By RICHARD HUGHES DETROIT (UPI) -John G. Schmitz lnbertted Gecrge Wallace's manUe as titular -ol the Ameliean Party, the governor'• populllt tssues and his moot ardent and consen'8tive supporters. But the similarities between the urbane. artk:ulate congressman from Caltlornla and lhe folksy, plain-talklog Alabama ·-end there. 1be comPar;son was evident this right over there where Arthur Bremer atalked Gecqe Wallace." Schmitz made repeated references td Wallace's good showing in Michigan's i. primary. "We expect to do well in - .Mkbigan," be said. "After all, this is lhe sUlte that startled tbe natkm with George w a.tlace in the primaries." RE WAS LOUDLY cheered when he af- fll'llled his oppooltlon to gun -rictions. And be again drew attentioo to his posi- ( __________ _,,) lion as stand-ln for Wallace. CAMPAIGN '72 "If I we"' ever gunned down as George Wallace's replacement," be said, "let me make this very clear: [ don't want a restrictive gun law pused u a memorial weekend as Schmitz, the American Party candidate !or prealdeot, opeood his cam- paign in Michigan -the scene or Wallace's greatest presidential primary triumph. SCHMITZ, 41, capped his nrst day or campaigning Saturday with a rally in suburban Dearborn, at a youth center where Wallace held one ol. b1a more suc- cessful pre.election rallies. to my death." Schmitz, a lameduck congressman, ls a member of the John Birch Society and the Dearborn audience wu loaded wilb persons proud1y weming the golf leaf pin that . identifies lifetime members of the grd!'p, 'Jliey more than tlll:f others could follow Schmitz's more s t u d I e d references. Mn. Josephine aia_., wlio direded Wallace's Mlchl.gan campaign and now is head of the Schmitz organbatlon in the state, acknowledged Schmitz: does not have the same appeal as Wallace. DAIL V P!LDT 5 Sliell-eqriipped .Bikes Reported LOS ANGELES !UPI) -Some outlaw motorcyclbt1 hive equipped their bites with devices to fire abolgun lbells, said Sherif! Peter Pltchess in an all-poitlla btdletln. The hulleUn Sunday warned of- ficen to g\iard against a "paulble haWdous Cllldilloo in trafllc st~ of outlaw motorcycle riders. We · have received ln(ormalion o f motorcycle handleban and foot pedals being rigged to fire shotgun shells." Search for Man Freed in Ambush CHINO (AP) -The search for a prisoner who escaped from bis guards during an ambush set up by several ac- complices has extended to Colorado, Tex- as and Phoenix , Ariz., area. say authorities. As the manhunt for Ronald Wayne Beaty, cootlnued today, fWleral se.rvi~s \\-'ere scheduled for a prison guard killed by Beaty 's liberators. Five persons were killed SUnday qlght in the crash of a Single engine Beecb- craft nlane near Beaumont. AulhoriUes said the aircraft plunged almost vertically into a sandy wash about a mile and a ball from the city's downtown area. The 127-foot schooner Shamrock IV rests on beach in Santa Cruz alter being tossed aground, The COast Guard s a id salvage cre,ws working_ since Saturday have been unable to pull it into the water.}\ windstorm pushed the Kentfield vessel and its 28 passengers to the beach, II ts the same hall where Arthur Bre- mer waited outside a wtnaow for an op- portunity to take a shot at Wallace. Bremer said in his diary two girls got in the way and foiled his intent. Schmitz recalled the incident and hinted at an alleged Jett-wing plot . "Maybe I ought to tell you about It," Schmitz said, "became as a matter or fact, I undentand, that's the window But, she said, the impartant thing \l.'aS to keep the American Party (in Michigan, lhe American Independent Party) alive for the next election and George Wallace. Authorities said Jesse Sanchez. 24, a trainee correctiooal olficer who was to reach permanent status today, was shot to death Friday when two or three men and a woman ambushed a vehicle from the minimum security California Institu- tion for Men and freed Beaty. Wounded in the ambush was George J. Fitq:erald, 36, of Fontana, who was treated for a gunshot in the hip and released. .. Check Reveals W1elfare Fraud . ,. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -state's PIO's - a task which Reagan Administration of· is now bandied by Jenkins. ficials report th e i r con-Jenkins said Saturday Uiat troversial new double-check of the oow job probabb' would go welfare recipient earnings to Harvey F. Yorke, press o[. discloses a 41 percent rate ol ( :!, =..:::.the needy BRIEFS ) The figure waa baaed on the _ flJ'SI statewide returns ol the '--------"' computerized ''earnings ficer for Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, clearance system," which president or California State cros.H:hecb a recipient's University, San Francisco. report of his pay against unemploynrent ci>mpensatlon records llled hy his emploJ"", State Social WeUare Direc- tor Robert B. Carleson ex· pressed surprise that the rate or apparent fraud was so high and said it may 11!plesent ooly the "tip ol. the iceberg.,, e AWn S•ltw SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan is remov· ing direct supervision ol the state's more than JOO public inlonnation oflleon1 from hts office in an effort to cut down pollticaJ influence over their work and careen, says James e Cultist Sought PASADENA (AP) -Police say they are seeking William Edwin Mapp, described by authorities as a "traveling disciplinarian" of a secret black cult, in the slaying or two Pasadena men. Pasadena Police Lt. Bill Lewi!: said Sunday that Mapp, 28, also known as Ali Alalah, is an enforcer for the cult identified as an offshoot of the Black Muslims. "We know Mapp was in Pasadena at the time of lhe killings and we know he was at the location of the double ooinlcide," said Lewis. , Jenkins, Reagan's s en i or e Derice Probed NEWHALL (AP) -Sher- if's deputies today were in- vestigating a "smoldering, ex- ' public affairs advise!', l Reagan plans to create a new 125,0llO-a-year post to supervise the work of the plosive device" found outside the doorway of the Santa Clarion, a newspaper housed in the same building as the of. fice Republican headquarters for Santa Clarita Valley. Jackie Storinsky, publisher of the 16,00G<:irculation week· ly, said the device consisted of a "quart bottle with a wick in it." She said the bottle was filled with a liquid that "smelled like ga sol In e. '• Deputies confirmed later that it was gasoline. e Collldon Told PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Harold Lacy, skipper of the Morning Star, has testWed he saw only the bow of the unknown freighter that sliced his yacht in half off the Northern California coast. Lacy and lhree officers and one crew man of the Norwegian freighter Evamo testified Sunday at a Coast Guard inquiry investigating last 'lbursday's collision ln heavy fog and rough seas oU Cape Mendocino, The Evamo picked up three of the seven survivors off the yacht Two children of Lacy and his wife, Clara, still are missing. Ancient Skeleton Found •• P,_Wlrt~ '•· , EL CENTRO -A person • 1· who died about 200 oenturles mE OLDEST s k e I e t o n ing lhe 'desert as a misun-- previously found in the derstood storehouse or a ''vast ~ Western Hemisphere w a s unknown treasure in an-- dated at 17,500 yards old. It Uqulty.'' •. ago and was buried beneath a pile of rocks appears to have ,. provided scientists with the oldest human skeleton found in "·· the Western Hemisphere. Mortin Childers said his ot>Rssion with ant I qui ty recently led him to a shallow grave in the Yuba Desert ol Southern Calllornla 30 miles south of El Centro where be dug up the skeletal remains of the "Yuha man." A preliminary Cart>on II ;.. dating by a laboratory In Cambridge, Mass., indlcated the bones are about 21,500 yeara old. Rnearchen at the University of So u t h e r n California, University o I ' '" Arizona and lal>oratories in " Japan ll'O studying material found embedded in the skeleton for more poaitive ' dlltng:;., __ was discovered in P e r u. A CBJLDERSON found t h e single human bone found in "Yuba man" 14 inches below the La Brea tar pits of Los the surface in a small ravine Angeles has been tentatively about a half mile from a dated at 23,00J years. highway. Childers, 54, is a realtor who 'Jbe skeleton, embedded in has spent much of his free soUdlfied s a n d resembling time during the last 35 years concrete, was taken to the scouring Southern California University of Arizona's an- desert! for signs of ancient thropology laboratory. man. uwe are trying to remove "Many of my friends can't bones from the solidUled see much value in the stuff l sands with minimal daniage to collect," Childers said in a ~ the 5keleton," said WaltJ:r cent interview. "1be band ax· Birkby, an anthropologist at es, scrapers and digging tools the lab in Tucson, Artz. seem like so many rocks to "What we hope to establish, them. The ancient implements in addition to the age of the certainly are not things or skeleton, Is the sex of the in- beauty'" d hi be divi ual. ·s or r age at "But my obsess.Ion with ear· Ume of death, measurements ly man has bee!i tremoodously and anything else 1'e can Mfilllne," he added, deScrU> learn." ='================! WE QUOTE PRICES ova THE PHONI ••• ANYTIME ..-1..--uu -.••1-_ ... , •.• -, HYQUIL. 6 et., CoW IR•li•f •••••••••••••••••••• fl.It Sl.Jt SINOKOT TAILETS, •100, tfflffo l•uff" , , , , ••• , SJ.ti tJ.4t ST JOSEPH'S CHILOIRlN'S ASPIRIN, SJ6 , •• , ••••• , 4J-S6f IAltlASOL SHAVI CllAM, 11 "-, ••• , • •• •• •• •• • ,., ff; --,,. $2.79 26c S9c • AMfU P'IBltte flt llA.t ------Cl-' .......... MI' .. 644-7575 ' ' , Remember when all you could find on the beach were shells and seaweed? And occasionally a piece of driftwood? Times have changed. Kids today find anything from beer cans to sewage. It needs cleaning up. Then there's air pollution. And land pollution. But the big cleanup is beginning. The power behind it: electricity. In the years ahead, electricity will pump more • millions of gallons of water through purifying systems. Ele...'1:ricity will power machines to recycle every- thing from cans to cars. Electricity will run new air pollution control equipment. The additional demand for electricity will be enormous, Tu meet these new demand&, FAiison must be permitted to build additional power plants now. And thetransmi88ion lines to deliver that power. Nuclear power plants are • • --. one of the ways we plan to provide additional electricity. Nuclear power plants are clean, proven and smog-free. Other ways to generate electricity are under intensive research or being developed now. Meanwhile, existing methods are steadily being improved. Electricity and a cleaner environment. Th.e two go together. E I " , I I .' DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE An Empty As serted Conflicts of interest have clouded reputa· lions of some members of the Orange County Board or Supervisors. and some of their appointees as well. 'l'he hot glare of publicity has been a restraining and <.·orrecting influence as a \Yatchdog press has repr e- 5entcd the public in its historic role in a free society. (Sec followini;: editorial.) Recogniung the board's tarnished im~ge, Super- visor Wil1ian1 Phillips recommended full disclosure of personal finantes of all supervisors annually. After long hassling about it, the board finally adopted the measure last \Veek. First reports are due at the end of next July. All well and good -but the measure is impote~t. It carries no pcna1ties for failure to comply and om its :iny reference to spending full time on their cou.nty jo~s \\'ithout outside interests which might conflict with their official duties. . Under these conditions, il may all be an empty gesture, leaving it to the press to continue as the prin- cipal guardian of the public interest where county gov· ernment is concerned. F r eedom and tl1e P ress The nation's thirty-third annual observance of News· paper Week began yesterday and continues through next Saturday, the day set aside as Newspaper Carrier Vay. . . llaving a time to pause and consider the vital role of a free press in a free society -very likely the s~gle most important element in making a democracy viable -is more than ever appropriate this year. Attacks on the media have been especiaUy virulent of late. They are or two kinds: -Charges of politically-biased reporting of the news, especiall y on network television. 'fhere have al- \vays been such accusations from both sides of the politi· cal spectrum -perhaps the best evidence that report- ing by and large is impartial. Criticism of thJs kind is healthy for it serves to keep reporters :i.nd editors on their toes and constantly examining the quality and fairness of their work. -Drives to impose censorsWp on the press ln vio- latlon of th e First Amendment of the Constitution have come from all sides -some from the bar in legal mat· ters, others from those whose understanding of freedom is so distorted they would impose their personal stand· ards of reading and viewing material on all others. (Proposition 18, the "obscenity" measure, for example.) A third form of attempted censorship comes from elected' officials at all levels of government To polish their image lo lwlp them stay in office, or for more Machiavellian purposes such as a cov er-up of graft or favoritism, they seek to control what information about their actions sbaU reac h the electorate. Some of the attempted press censorship, especially at lower levels of government, stems from simple fail- ure to understand the historic role of a free press in a democratic society on the part of elected and appointed officials. They tend to view th e press as the "enCmy" instead of the legitimate eyes and ears of a public which will have to have good information if it is to vote intelJI· genUy. The taxpayers are, after all, the employer and the public's right to know the public's business is para· mount. A free press serves many more purposes than o~ server of government, of cour&e. Amon g them are re- porting and support of community activities. supplying reliable consumer information, serving as "living text- books" fo r growing numbers of school children - and, not lea 5l, providing business experience and lessons in in tegrity for n1ore than 600,000 young carrier$, of who1n rnore than 900 deliver the DAILY PILOT. .\Ve sal ute these fine youngsters daily, not just on "their day" next Saturday. ~~\::>-..!~ "FLY, t>AMMIT! 1HAT'S AN ORl>ER!' Pro Sports: Ted Ke1111edy Ignores or Downg1·odes Evide11ce A Cruel, Ha1·d Business ~YDNEY J.HARRIS) (During Mr. Harris' vacation. we urc reprinth1Q some of the most re- 11111•sted colun111s froni his forthcorn - 1119 book. "f'o r !lie Time Being," Ill be published this fall .) "ProCta.aiooal sport.a" don't interett me, because 1 lh\nlc that the phrase is a contradiction in terms. An activity ceases to be a sport the moment it becomes professional. Some month,, ago, I noted big black headlines on the sports pages, an- nouncing the trading of a star football player from one team to another. The fans were shocked, but the coach said simply, "It's a cruel , hard buslness. But I have a job to do and I can't Jet sen· timent enter Into it." IT'S A CRUEL, a hard business. So is e v e r y professional sport -bueball and basketball and hock· cy and golf and ten- nis. lt'a mean and mercenary and basi- cally debumanized - when lbe whole idea or "sport" sbc>Wd be it! humanity. Recreation was de- vised ao lhal men could find release from the grim bwliness of making a living; IO that Uiey could glory ln winning a contest for Its own sake. The Olympic heroes o! ancient Greece were crowned with laurel and given the highest honors oC the state because they showed what mr.n could do with no l.nceotlve but victory. TAKE SENTIMENT out ol aporla and you take away Its reason for es:lstence. Remove sentiment and you have cut the loyalty that cllngs to a losing team; and llnle LI left but to raise the money that Dear Gloon1y Gus Is it true that the only lime Super- \'isor Ron Caspers opens his mouth is to change feet? -0.F.M. Tllla r.•tur. r.f!Kft; r .... r'I Vt.wl. M l llK"lerffJ t11eM .t Ill• 111w~1Hf'. SMMI JMr NI -¥• 19 Oloo!llr 0111, D1lfJ Pl .. !. c<1n buy a winning tearn. It is good and necessary that n1en should work for a living. It is a monstrous pervenion that men should play for a living. The whole purpose ()f play is to escape to a realm beyond necessity, to a glorious never-never land, ~·here the skillful and the fleet and the courageous can find a happy ending that is too often denied them in the cold marketplace. IN TRUE SPOR'l's, the contestants are ranged against each other. In pro- fessional sports, they are all ranged aga!Mt lbe pubUc. The ulUmate object Is posstble. They are merchandisers and the basic loyalty Is not to the city, the uniform, the team-even to the game-bot to the contract. Their lawyers compete as ferociously as their coaches do LET US NOT pretend that what we have here is ••sport." What we bave is business. transferred from the counter to the stadium, with a deadly seriousness that bas noth.lng to do with the pleasure men are supposed to take in their bodily prowess. This Is not to say the players do not enjoy playing, or the spectators do not enjoy watching: but their enjoyment has lost the Innocence It has for children -which n1eans It has losl precisely the healing and redeeming quality that makes ii good . As the coach said. "It's a cruel, hard business.'' SPonl began as a substitute for war, as a cleansing agent for the spirit of aggressiveness: II has turned ln· to combat between mercenaries with a job to do. Sal ety of the Tomb Industrial Ne"' Review Where rormerly the U.S. led the world In new druR Introduction. the situation has now reversed itsel£. Agalnst the U.S. record of 16 new sing~ chemical entitle!! for 1970, the 5COre for the United Kingdom wns 25. for France 19. for Ccrmany 2!1, ond for Jtnly 33. What are the reasona for the dccllne ()f new drug lntrod1.1ction in the Unlttd Stattt? The vlct president of a leading U.S. prescription drug firm believes the anrwer Hes in " .... the atmosphere or public policy and public atUtudcs In Quotes Du Ptt«u, S11 Brano -"Where .,..,, the pn>t8ten when North Vietnam .,.._....i kWllll human ll<lnV In Soutb-Vlotnlml I can't b<lt.ve sfnc.re 11wn1n11art11111 hide lln ostriches In the sand In ooo lnltlla<e and mpoad strong· b' 1n another." Hoo. W....,. D. Milli, Cllolnnu, lloo,. WQI and ~t•-Comm!Uff, Ill Com· m_.ith Clab ti c.tUonlo _..., - ·~Ufoml11 IJ numlx!r ooe In many an:11s -popul11lon, per e11plt1 ~Income, tile -but Ibo ll'obielnl and lrustratiom In m1111 c:Mtt. are ewn n»re aurav1Ung than ti.-"'1lc:b pmall In otbe< -Iona of the U.S." I '· ~·hich American drog research takes place." llE BELIEVES, "-... the truly fun- damental problem, aod a cause for grave cooctm. 15 an Apparent Jou of perspec- tive with regard to the benefit-to-rl!1k con· tt?pl OS It relAICS to t.echnologlCll prog· ress In nil fields. and par11cularly In blo- mtdlclne. Wt see a growing .societal at· tltudc that clcnrly lmplles that the only risk now acce ptable 11 no risk at all. Just as e:letrly, It must be aaJd that no ris k means no progress. If thts attitude Md J>n!Valltd during the latl h.11\I century. we would 11\ll be awaJUni the crashJeu a\l&omoblle .... " A OROUP OF leading American sden- Ustt ind un iversity admlnlttraton has warned ". . . .n change 'In· the drug regulatory l)"le:m is badly needed. The ay1tem too orten stifies creallvtty and tseal ate1 costa or research: perpeluatt.1 a continuing decline In the numbtt or new drugs enterinJr the market tn thJs country: and may be depriving the prac-- Ucing physician of agents beneflclal to J>lllient cart." CrlppUng. ove~alous regulolion is largely a product or the no-risk "MX:ietal attitude" that. In lhe words ot lhc druf:l company officia l. promises ", .. to rtplace the presenl lag Jn technok>gicaJ Innovation wllh a compltte halt." The aa ftty of the tomb i$ on unworthy aoal for the Jiving lo purtue. ' Viet Bloodbath Fear Well Founded WASHINGTON -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has embraced the anti-war prop- aganda that fear of a bloodbath in Viet- nam following a Communist takeover is a "cynical hoax upon the American people." This is, he says, "political rhetoric" clouding the hard choice we must make in leaving the South Viet- namese to the tender mercies of the hard-headed men in the North. Kennedy questions if anything very bad 11•ill happen if '""'e Jet the So u t h Vietna- mese resistance go down the drain to the aggression of the full strength of the North Vietnamese armed forces. This i! a popular academic line at pre- sent based on new analyses of well-founded information and a re-interperation of what actually did happen in the regime of I·lo Chi Minh, but- tressed by the unassaila ble facts on the terroristic slaughter of tens of thousands of government officials by the Viet Cong, and punctuated by the monstrous massacre at J!ue. THE EVIDENCE is all there. It depends on who interprets It, an obscure professor and an angry columnist or recognized experts such as Anita Luave Nutt of the Rand Co rporation, Professor N. J. Honey of London, Stephen T. (rucHARD WILSO~ llosmer of the Rand Corporation. rrcnch Professor Gerard Toogas, Douglas Pike. Bernard Fall, and President Nixon. Anita Luave Nutt has blown out of the water former Secretary nf Defense Clark Clifford 's contention that the records of the International Control Comn1ission established after the Geneva Accord of 1954 showed no record or the great repression which took place in North Vietnam. Ms. Nutt is credited wit h knowing more than anyone else cif:ibut what thls ill-fated comn1ission which was suppo!led lo supervise the truce actually did. The very least that happened in 1956 was a wave of terror that "took care of both land refonn and political opponent s." Fifteen thousand dead, or 50,000 dead, who knows? Thirty thousand jailed, or 100,000 jailed, who knows? French Professor Tongas think that enforcement of land refonn was a pretext for liq- uidating 100,IXXI political opponents. TIDS WAS THE way the government or the saintly Ho Chi Minh operated, following as It did in the steps or the governments or Josef Stalin and Mao Tse-tung which liquidated tens of millions. It ls worthy or passing notice th.at the liberal community pooh-poohed the ghastly Stalin repression until Nikita Khrushchev told all at the 20th Com- munist Party Congress. It is a mere foot- note that a certain Colonel Nam \\'ho signed co1n plaints to the ICC of Com- munist subversion in the South was himse lf wiped out by the Communists. Of the Viet Cong reco rd of terror there certainly can be no doubt. The record shfJws that since 1960 when the in· surgcncy was getting started the Vici Cong murdered 36.000 Sol1th Vietnrunese civilians. most I y officials, kidnapcd 5-1 .000 and wounded scores of thousands. SENA TOR K E N N !:: D Y apparently wishes to ignore this kind of terror as unlike ly political reprisals after a truce. He would ignore, too, the voluminous documented record of Communist tech- niques and Intentions in liquida ting political opposition. He \You\d consider as absurd , Professor Honey's projection of the ultimate Slaughter of 1,000,000 and the gruesome forecast of Colonel Tran Van Dae, a North \'ietnamese defector, that the Communists would lay ay,•ay 3.000.000 South Vietnamese. Senator Kennedy does not speak of the Hue massacre v.•hich Douglas Pike. anolher recognized stu dent. believes sets the pattern or future reprisals. First, clearing out all foreigners. especially newsmen, then the descent of a long night in which any individual deen1ed to threaten the regime immediately or in the speculative future would be liq- uida ted. SENATOR KENNED'' also follows the spec iou s line that what if 100,000 were massacred in reprisal, does avoiding that justify the total killings of 342,147 in Southeast Asia in two Nixon yean, August 1970 to August 1972, while the war \vhich cou ld have been ended was still being carried on? This argwnent \\·ould be m ore persuasive had not the North Vietnamese army in its fu ll streng1h of 13 divisions invaded the South at Easter time across the dem ilitarized zone \Vilh modem armor and eq uipment, in the process kill· ing scores of thousands of Sout h Viet· nair.ese soldiers and civilians. and driv- ing out hundreds or thousands of refugees. The arg ument \vould also be more persuasive had not the North Vietnamese army moved in strong force in Ca mbodia and renewed military operations in Laos intended to bring down the Laotian government. The evidence which Senator KeMed;' ignores or downgrades is heavier by far than the arguments ne adduces to sup- port the idea that fear of a bloodbath is a "cynical huax.'' This is why the set· llement in Southeast Asia v.·hich seems to be approA ching a little close r must be made more foolproof than the Geneva Accords in assuring that terror and reprisal will not follow again . News Both Good, Bad on Bike Boom The bicycle boom shows no sign of aba ting. According to the Bicycle Institute of America, 8.9 million bikes were sold In the United States last year, aJ against 3.7 million in 1960. For 1972, the BIA predicts 11 million sales. That's the good news. The bad news is lhAt bicycle thefts and bicycle injuries and deaths al.so are on the rise. The Na- tional Sa fety Council logged 850 bike deaths and 40,000 injuries in 1971, com- pared with 500 deaths and 27 ,000 injuries ·a decade earlier. Bicycle riders are vulnerable. or course. to crowdins by cars and buses nnd to potholes and st orm-sewer &ratings. "But remeinber, a blke is a lethal weapon. too, v is· a · v i s pedetitrlans," notes Or. Reynauld Chase, who makes house calls In New York City on his two-whetlcr. "When they zoom alona on their tO-ii:peeden at 7A> or i& m.p.h .. kids don 't realize the ~l'ght and momentum add up to 11 lethal force. And !hey often run the llghta, or cut ln and out of traffic.'' mE TIIEf'T PROBLEM ls grt.at and growing. In Callfomla alone. between 400,000 and 450,000 bicycles worth from $20 mllllon to $30 mltlion were stolen In 1971. Hardest hit "·as !he San Franclxo B:.ly Area, wbcr' 50 clllas tn nine coun- ties reported a 30 ptrcent Increase 1n bike tbcfll lince 196'9. In the natk>n as a wbole, the number of thefts rose by 57 By George --~ Dear George: What sfK>Uld I do about the blonde next door who ln&lata on sunbathlng In the nudt? UPSET NEIOHBOR Dear U N. · "Up..,et Neighbor" Is no way to 1lgn n letter like )'11UrS. It doesn't g:lve me any clue to your basic et-- Otude. Whll's upstttlng, you, sir ot madam! EDITORIAL RESEARCH pc.rcent between 1966 and 1971. Stealing a bicycle has long been regarded as a relatively minor crime. and that Is one reason why it Is ao popular. Many drug addicts have forsRken burglary for bike theft because the penally is lighter. And the chance of getti!li caught ls conalderably less. Na- lionwldc, the clearance rate for burglary is 19 percent and for autornobile thert, 16 percent. In tbc Los Angeles area. ac - cording to Sgt. Willia m Kusch o( the sheriff's department, the clearance rate ror bicyc le theft is around 6 percent. But the prime attraction of bicycle theft ts the money involved. Contrary to what some people may think, it is no nickel·and-dime undertaking. A stOlen IG- speed model in good condition has a resale value of around $75, and there are plenty of takers. An accomplished thief can make off with as many as 15 bikes a day, regardless o( how well they are secured. POLICE ARE beginning to deal with -Frank WUlia-I• llio De1r011 Free Prao \ I '• bicycle theft as a major property crime. On at lea st ooe occasion, this approach has Jed to tragedy. In Washington, D.C., n Ill-year-old boy was fatally shot Aug. t ,1·bile fleeing on A bike planted by un- dercover police. Still. the lure of the bicycle continues to cast il s spell . Numerous cities have es tablished special bikes-only routes. The Oregon Legislature went so far as to ap- prove a bill directing that at least 1 per- cent oC all state highway funds be used for construction of bicycle tniUs and footpaths. What promises to be one of the nation's most scenic and heavtly used bike paths is now being laid out on the Virginia shore of the Potomac. When completed next April. it will link the city ot Alex- andria and George Washington's home at l\iount Vernon. The route will be free ot potholes and, it is hoped, thieves. Meanwhile, the 75 million or m o r e Americana who pedal for fun or exercise would be well advised to keep thlt thought In mind : "Biker BcwRre." , ,, DAILY PILOT RobuL N. \Veed, PnbH.,hfr ThomQS Keevil, Editor Albtrt W. Bo.tea Edi!Orlol PIJll< Editor 11\e edltort/ll J~ Of lhe 0.llJ' Pilot' ~kl to l11f1mn and t1tlrn11- lalAt rNderll by Pl"f'tt'ntlnl{ I hi• '"'"t'llJlfl~ opl nloltll and «11t1~ 1nl!ntN')' on to11ks ot lntciut and 11l,.'1\lf\r9onct', by Pl'O\'kUni:-a r•1rum for the ex~k>n or 1)l1r N'ftdf'I-.' oolnJona, llnd by 1~nUni: 1he dlW'nle vlr~ lllllnt11 f'lf lnl•1rmf'd <'!h- "'"'..,.. atKI •fonkt'!'l!l!'O I'll\ IUJ~ 1..r the dn.t•. Mond ay, October 9, 1972 For The Record Dissolutions Of Marriage ,., .... ""'· " ~. 51111111 LH •1111 LoUll 'ThomU COOi!, A1111 E. •lld J-W. Jr. Con;or11n, J•~ 0..•rO l.flCI R°"tlll'lt """ Mc:Uln. Gwtrwe vtrtllll• Md Wlllltfl'I Ollv.r Wiiburn, l)orottrv ....i Murr•'>' 9tlfTll,, 8-)rt.,. E~ Md Jo An11 Sc~. R~ E. •!Id Sylvl• A. Coetw9ft, Ltl'CIV 9 ., Jr. •11111 Undli D, K•rtl't'• Eltolnt I. Mid CllM1ft A. 11.Ndlf', Fr.-Md C•rlton P•lllMonder .,...., .Judllh I(. Md .t.nlluf. o. AMYllll. ltO()tlrt D. •1111 W..f'9'*'11t D. CWlnl""*"-MlldAd 9. ¥111 CtMrl• K. C•~· JClllll W • .nd H•l'WOC» Luc:\11 FV!llwcrlh. Jlldllh M. •nd Llncel11 Btv•11 QUEENIE 8 Phll lnterlandl C.ntroll, Ame. M. •1111 J11'1'1ff L. Cufl\tlH'tMln, D.wn A. •nd O.nl.t A. Groh, INrll; L. Md Sylvl• C, Johnllon, LUU., HUOlllHn 11111 E~ , ____ • <>;;,.;;-7.:., _________ ... _..;...;;;.;.;,,a CIHford smi!;., Jo.n M9rl~ •nd MlchMI ''I'll tell yOu why I don't like opinion polls-I don't like =~.~Z:· ;:t~ti.~w.Merv knowing ever)'bod.)''a thjnking madly like me!'' JoHPh!M Turntr, Conni• 9 . •nd C•rl Edw1rd Lor1nllen, CMl'vl A. •nd Sl1nl1y J. 9ruu. c-t•nc• L •nd Robert ~Center. J•net Lynn •nd •obbY .. ,. M tr, Uric. W•YM and Lin$ k-v w~ nl.Ofl, LI~ LH 91111 0..-•ld 11.~r.~rend9 •nd urrv V•n Gordon, Judllll SllUI\ Md ~ ...... n-'"' {t-,f.'}!,~ ~ J~."'~ t"!lil .... Tl'oon\9J. Conrllt 0. •lld W•ltW C. kltn, Sun J• •nd K ...... Su A~ e11t119 or.,. n Antonio lm/ltl, \.OMld ~· Mid Suun P. (Atlrect1 l!vtc"9r, J•mn Echr•rd ...ct EH• "S!i'M "'"°"' I\, Car• LucJll• ft Alltft "'"~'· . LH , 1'ttV J.,.., •nd Adltn Odloll Tom~ n9Cll'I A~ W. Mid YOl9N19 Nr••ncMr, M'.Orrl• L-..n1, Jr. llnd Rlt• vOifr:-. D•Vkl J-•nd S.r• E•lon l"llH Oft. t l.. V1gM, 1(1y •nd 0-ld J-N...,Mrry, a. •nd Molly e. ,.. F~ller. Glenn Cr•wford La.JIY Mlldr9d Hllt>lo:•, ll•IPh 8 . 9!'ld INrltm •• M.wi, Oorrlnt A. Mid 0.n .t L. 5chw•tk•, ll•Ymond W•VM • n d IUlhlewo Vlr<1J11I• Romo, D•vld R°'*1 Mid LIMI OouQl11, Robert 5 . .nd ll• J. Roth, Ad• M•!'1M Md L•rrv Wiiiiam Mann, RolMrt t..roy ft INlllt Ger1ldlne ~•rkln, M~rv 8omlct •nd J"1111 Ch4!r1" f•'!:'. r,•ncv Arm •nd Frtnk JttY· 'e:rlev. 'JJ;;. e. ind M.trv r:. lurner, C•r1 ~rw•nl •nd a.mlc.w Con11l1 Tllorkll<1pn, Tw;l'NI• 'nd D•rol1 '"' Alte11, Ron1vne . 11111 J1..,.. P 111111 Comtrl)lo, Phyll 1 Ann •nd Frtdl1c Ell Roblrl_,, Bn.oc• All.,. ..... Ell1•btth •M lodolr, JKk Elfwlnl ~ Wtfldolyn (Pl!rkarl ~. Corrlnt. •kt 81tty C. •nd Eugeno R. Sf9erll!TI, B•rblr1 C. •nd Orv•I P. Sanders. Judith Ann •nd Dewitt Arltlu!'. ''· A1Sam1, Sl'llrltv A. •1111 W•ll.r S1i~ohky, M•-lllo M. •lld Andrww Armenl, Jiii A. •lld D9ftltl T. Cullco~. Pit.,. W. •1111 El•lnt Slmt. "'!l:r, J1' •1111 8rld~O •, Rot>ltt. v I E. •nd S•lw • FMflfr, rv Loucllldl .nd r9"1k R. H•nilJ. EwfYTI •!Id Arltlu!' ~·­SunGkYl1t, 111<11 M9rl• I~ ,..,., K•1~n. M•1dne v . Ind I Arlhl.lr Alll!IOl'I, Cll,,.. P. •nd E\1'11 t M. Smith, G4«'ctl• LM Mid 1.ar"' DH11 S11rf11C1«, DtnfM Jo.nne •nd Klrbv ''" LYons. Palrld• AM •nd J•tnfl Elmtr De Hoff, J•ma C•l1 Ind #Nrlarlt' G~'tr.oonri. LM 1nd J-WHl•rd Whllt, P•l1lcl1 L. Mid 9 111¥ IC. V11_11 l+Om. Mllfll9rtf Ii. 111111 JOtwl E1tw1rd GrfQOrV, INrl•n Eve!Wi •nd AA.turk• Elmtr Decith l\'otlc!es L. M. Boyd Woman's Tongue Muscle Stronger Amoog the hair pieces bought by men, one out of 20 is black, eight out of 20 are gray, 11 out of 20 are brown. THE PIECE WORK pay (or a l~year-<>ld child in Java theae days is said to run about 15 cents per shift. MORE MINK coats are sold in the city o£ Dallas, it's ._-ted, than anywhere else ln the country. ACCORDING to one recent poll, two out of five en- gaged \ girls met their future matri- mQO.ial mates in car pools. NO MATl'Ell what occurs ln yoo when say "chiffon," fact is It comes from a French word meaning "old rag." MVllCLE -That the sllOngest muscles ·ill a woman's body are ln her thJih8 has been reported. Still, they're oot normally as strong as the mus-- cles in a man's thighs. So is a wom- an the possessor of any muscle what- soever more powerful than Its: COW'lt.erpart in the man? Just one, says a German physiologist named Dr. Thiele. He contends the muscle in a woman's tongue -not fig- uratively, but literally -is stronger ordinarily than the muscle in a man's tongue. Stop now. Don't say anything else. That's enough. JN TEACHING a pup how to shake hands, please re- member. some canines are Jeftpawed . It's good manners to let the dog decide which is the preferable paw to shake. So reports an extremely courteous veterinarian. QUERm -Q. "Where'd we get the w o rd 'pal,' meaning friend?" A. That's from the Romany 'phal.' Romany b the old , Indic Gypsy talk, Q. "BOW much milk does the average dairy cow tum out daily?" . A. About 12 quarts. Should be noted some prize 00. vines have been known to produce as much as 48 quarts in one day, however. Q. ''CAN turtles drown?" A. Certainly can. If their heads· are held miderwater long enough. What makes this peculiar is the ract that turtles do not breathe when they hibernate. SIGN in a Georgia bar, where l&.year-olds now can drink legally: "Bourbon and Waa·waa." Quaint. THE NEWL YWEOS' first debate after the maniage ceremony is about money nine times out of 10. the record shows. Why is clear, says our L<lve and War man. Roman- tic couples share much significant experience before the wedding. But th.at s:ignilicant experience they're least apt to share prior to the ceremony has to do with money and the handling of same when in matrimonial harness. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Bo:t 1815, Nt'ID- port Beach, Calif . 92660, County Gets $211,345 Of State License Fees Distribution of motor vehlcle taln Valley, SR,2411 : Huntington license fees revenue! has In-Beach, $24,197 ; Irvine, $3,560 ; eluded the apportionment of Laguna Beach, $2,631 Newport 121t,345 to Orange County, the Beoch lt.199 ; San Clemente, state controller's office has $.1,.205; San Juan Capistrano, announced. 19?11: and Seal Beach, l<.839. Orange Coast dUes have Hall of the total distribullon ARBUCKLE A SON received. their aban! of the ex-of $5,545,782 went to the cities WESTCLJ11' MORTUARY cise tu collect..i at the rata and hill to <'OUnUes. Distribu- 1%1 £. 17111 BL, Colla 111... of 12per1100 or niart•t value. IJon II bas<d on the 1m Ill • The levy takea the place of Federal Census u adjusted to e local properly tu on motor ""1ect -lncot!>oratlons, an- BALn.BEllGERON vehlclet. neutlool, apeclll """"""' FUNERAL HOME The breakdown; end Slate Department of c-a .w Mar rrMlll li~0ootaiiiiiiiiMiiii ... iiii0 ii11iiuiiiiaii: iiFiiOW>-iiiiiiiiFtnaiiiincoiiiiii"iiUmiiiiaiita.iiiiiiiiiiii~I c.sto Meu .... -• BEIL BROo\DWAY MORTUARY ltl Bnldw11, Colla M ... IJ WCI • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY !'Ill ,_ CQreo RL -• PACIJllC VDW Ml:MOIUAL PARll: C..*'7 Mlftw7 a..,.i 1111 -vi..°"'" Nt""'1 -· Clltl .... -• PllR FAMILY COUlNlAL l'IJN&RAL llOIU 1111 ..... A ... "-.. --• SMITll.'I' MOR1'UARY en Malo 8L 81111tl1cto1 -m•• I See by Todays Want Ads e KNOW-ROW Will thll IT MmftMde "'OrJlkon hull. Bu,Y It •• • n!IUllMbh! .....,._ e PRIVATE ART COLL.EC· TION: mmd.ta (lff wne Wldr. Rm!Olda. °"'rl" Bn.p, ~Wlnnf', M~ dl!fra and mor•. MAk• o'lrr, Suspect ,..---------.. i _________ _;M:°""="'~·:°':":'"::' :':' :":':' ==:----;;;;-;:;~-OAll V PILOT 7 Whetmore In Rape Committed SANTA ANA -An El Toro man charged with rape and attempted rape after beina: idenUfied by two Laguna Beach women as their at.- tacker has been committed to Atascadero State Hospital as a ORANGE COUNTY mentally disturbed sex of. '---------"' fender. Orange County S u p e r i o r Court Judge William Pt1urray ordered the commitment of Steven Joseph Willett, 20, of 24902 Branch Ave. after reading the reports o f psychiatrists appointed to ex· amine the defendant. Willett was arrested July 5 by Laguna Beach police who removed hlm f r o m a restaurant at 1600 S. Coast Highway and charged him with attacks on two local women . A 21-year.(lld woman named Willett as the man who at- tacked her in a parking lot as she walked home from a downtown movie theater. Investigation of the incident Jed police to link Willett to an earlier sexuaJ attack on a woman who said she had been afraid to immediately report the incident. Employment Seminar Set For Veterans SANTA ANA -An all-<lay seminar will be held by the V e t e r a n s Employment Committee to discUSB the ef. feet of Orange County's economic and development plans upon the long.range employment of veterans or the county. Beginning at 10:30 a.m. at the American Legion Post 131, 313 No. Birch St. in Santa An a, the semiMr is open to all veterans. Lunch will be served and the semiMr wUI end at 4:30 p.m. Trial Set In Shotgun Slaying SANTA ANA -A burly Oklahoman accust>d of killing the boyfriend of his son's estranged wife bas been ordered to race trial Dec. 14 in Orange Comity Superior Court. Judge William Murra y set the trial date for Moses McGirt, 65. and ordered the defendant t.o be returned to his courtroom Oct. 12 for a pretrial hearing. McGirt was arrested Sept. 12 shortly after the slaying of Ronald Donald Burgoyne. 23, of Downey. Burgoyne died in Orange County Medical Center fro m chest wounds inflicted by a shotgun. Arresting officers-said McGirt was visiling his son a few hours after arriving from Oklahoma when Burgoyne ar- rived with his son's wife to pick up her possessions from the home . They said McGirt became involved In a quaml with Burgoyne, grabbed his son's shotgun and sbothls daughter- in..law's boyfriend in the chest. 11e is held ln Orange County Jail in lieu of $2$,000 bail. S uspect 111 Fraud Faces Trial SATA ANA -A broker ac- cused o( defrauding both purchasers and lending in- stitutions dlll'ing m o b i 1 e home sales bu been oro.red to face trial Nov. 6 in Orange County Superior i;ouri. Straight Is Not Tl1e Ticket, GOP By WILIJAM SCHREIBER Of IM IMllY Plltt ll•tf THE ORANGE COUNTY Republican Party has gotten pushy in its old age. Or perhaps GOP powers have grown so overcon!idcnt of the solldartty of support lrom the party failhful that they fee l they can pull the rank and file around by nooe rings. The Republican C<jntral Comm!~ tee, that lofty paragon of all that l! Republican fDd conservative ln Or· ange County, still btlleves the aver- age American voter -an independent at heart -votes a straJght party , ticket to keep the mac hine rolling. -1ctt11:••••• Somebody had better tell them about the world 1)f new politics. \Vhat has me so disturbed can only be called an un· y,•anted demand for donations to a thing called the "Ella Fund" that came in my mall a few days ago. IT AU. BEGAN with a call Crom a fast-talldng tele- phone soUcitor who explained the rund would help support all GOP candidates other than President Nixon. The solicitor wu clearly stunned when I told her I never vote straight party Ucketl, that I and probably a majority of voters in lbe U.S. regularly cross p a r t y lines and that I had no InteoUon of giving money to a list of men just because they are Republicans. Due to arrogance or ignorance. I don't know which, the GOP went right ahead and sent me a bill for dona· tioos anyway, '~1ith the word STATEMENT in bold lellers. I had a choice -to fiend either $10, $20 or $30. IT IS APPAWNG to think people today are still vot- ing-or paying for-sll'aight party tickets despite gap ing Oaws in the reputatlons, characters and abilities of some party hopefuls. That is how a man the likes of John Schmitz made it to the Congress of the United State!!!. T like to hope Orange County is the last bastion of b:lckward politics and that most voters In the COWllr)' cast their ballots f<r the man rather than the party. And to the argument that a President cannot do any- thing without the support tX a majority party, I say bog· wash. NIXON HAS done a pretty good job on his own despite a hostile Congress and I daresay any other President could do the same In that poettlon. This all leads me to one oonclusion. The Republican Party had be9t abandon the hope of straight party voting ln thlt era d. new polltles. Young voters will give their money and vote1 t.o the persons who best answer their quest.Ions and act to solve the country's real problems. They, and T, feel that !he mere title of Rtp0blican or Democrat does not make a man a leader or the best one to control our destlni~. 'Ibe Repab\\can Party lhould ~ making surt the men they put on the block at eltction time deserve the votes -and the contributiona -of people who really COO· trol OID' govemmenl Repo1·ts $ For Sewer ~EAL BEACH -~~t·der:il and state grants twve betn or>- prov<.-d tu help f1nanc1: " S4&6.000 [nlf>retptJJr !J e w t' r svstern In the west coastal af.tas of Orangt' County, llC'· f'ord1n~ lO State Sen .• Ja1nes I::, \\'hetnlOrc ~ R-t'ullcrton). l'rc~nt tn1nk se.,.,·crs 1n the \'lt'IJll ly or th1• Naval WPa1>ons Sta.lion. Sen! ik'ach and tilt! C'I· ty of Seal Beiu;h would be overflowing ""'•thin l""o years, crtattng a p u b 11 c heallh hazard, UW! sen11tor snid . The 1w-o,ec1 will also serve to chnunatc the p r e s e n t Sf'\\·agc treatment racilities at lht" na\'al in.c;1alla11on and 1n the cit.\•. V.'hetsnore rclatt.-d. ·------- 1Vhy Are l'oaa A Poor Talker A nottd publisher in Chicago re--• ports a slmple ttehniquc or everyday coove:rsatlon which can pay you real dividends in !OCial and bu:iiness advanct'- merH and works !Ike magic lo give you poise, self-confidence and greater popularity. According to this publisher. many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by what Uley say and how they say it. Whether in bus· iness, el !Odal hmclion!, or even in casual conversations wi(h new acquaintan ces there are ~·ays lO make a good impre!lsion every time you talk. To acquaint the readers of this paper with the euy-to-follo~· rules for developing skl ll in everyday conversation, tbe pub- lilhen have printed run details of their lnlerestinc self·t.ralning method in a new booklet. "Ad· ventures in Conversation.'' whlch will be mailed frtt to anyone who reque"'llS It No ob- ll&atlon. Send )'1)Ur name, ad· dress and 1.\p f!Ode to: Comttu- tlon , !i56 E, IAnRe. Dept. r.oM6, Mundtleln, Ill. tlOOIO. A poot<anl will do. Speakers will be Walter Ehlers, from the office of Veterans Administration and recipient oC the Congressional ~1edal of Honor: Herb Latham, emp'9yment director of the Disabled American Veterans of callfomia; and Lee Camp, employment representative of Southern Callfomia fo< the U.S. Depart- ment of Labor. Reservations are required. Judge Wllllani Murray set the trial date for Jarvis Edward Farley, 45, the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l._ ________ _ Contact the committee at 891-- 8548 or 531-7278. Part ol the H:iman Resources Development pro- gram, the employment offices are currenUy seeking jobs for 7,800 county veterans. County Gets $5 Million FULLERTON -Orang< County bu received more than $5 million from the state to compensate for lost income through state-mandated tax exemptions, State Sen. James E. Whetmore (R-Fullerton) announced. operator 'br Orange Comity Mobile Home Brokers in Anaheim. Farley tw been ordered to return to the courtroom Oct. 70 for a pretrial hearing. lnvestlgaton aald the arrest of Farley followed their probe of munerous complaints: flied by county residents who used his brokerage service to finance their pW'Ch8.'les of us- ed moblle homes. Farley wu subsequently I~ cticted by the Orange County Grand Jury on charges of grand theft. Newport Beach police worked with district at- torney 's investigators and agenta of the Calllomla Depart- ment of Motor Vehicles on the case up to Farley's arrest Sep!. 28. RND OF THE VVEEK Someone you honker to onchot1 Try thio. lt'I not u heavy II It looU-and 11'1 ..., mort btoutifut. Ntutlcal, nlc9- and Wligh thol pricot Ytllow gold tone enchor with chain. 110, Do Somtlhing BMutiful._ °""" t.c-. ...... -~ tr...-·-· .......... ~-SLAVICK'S Jewtlen Slllce 1117 11 FASHION ISLAND NfWl'ORT HACH -H4-ll"IO Open Mon. tnd Ftl. 10 •·'"•to 9:l0 p..m. wtth ..... " ,..,._ .. ~ u ~ .... " ... Mltl .. °""" .... ~· ¥ ...... MAYTAG HALO-OF-HEAT• Gas Dryer Salel --• 11 L s .... , ......... Si. Dilly, t -t 1 s.1. ,_. .... ,"4 n TOIO .,, ..... ,.., ll , ................. . r....,,. s •• .0.1 o.n,, 1e.t , '•'· 10 .. 07.JUO MAYTAG HALO-OF-H EA'P DRYERS Scmondl clOll!IS witll ..,,,So. -hut No hot spots, no CMt· dryiea. l'enultnt Pr ... CVclt. Fall Openlnt S1f11y Door. r,., Mah Unt f11f1t. Convtctitl Coolld Clloinlt. Mlny OU.... ...... ,.., ,,. •• ho,,,, ,, ".,fl.w 1 ... ,1 .. L.c ... ,.. I 0.1,.,, 10..•1 "'l. 10.t H1·512' IAl>IO OISPATCHID TV • Am.IANCI SllVICf l'HONI Ml-J4l7 • ' -. • . • • • • • 8 DAILY PILOT The Treasury •lore will open on Bri.tol Street and Sunflower, just north of South Coast Pl11z11, on\ W-ednes· day, October 18. The 191, I 58 square.foot store opening here, II single-level structure with its identifiable "squiggly" ·1oofline, • i• localed at the intersection of Bristol Street and Sunflower Avenue. • In keeping with the firm's plans to provide one-sto p shopping, the store will offer 11 wide range of m'itrc h11n- dise 11nd services with parking for I, I 00 cars. The Treasury's priv11te-l11bel brands will be featured in apparel and home textile Ii n es, while electronics, housewares 11nd other merchandise will feature n11tion11I brands. · The store will have 11 large supermarket, ph11rm11cy 11nd ethical drugs, dry cleaners and 11 restaurant. 10ther featured departments will include health and beauty aids, sporting goods, stereo and electronics, plus television. A full assortment of fashion apparel for the entire family will 11110 be offered. The Or~nge Coast Treasury Store will be one of the firm's four stores opening simultaneously in Southern C11liforni11. The other three 11re located in Riverside, Woodland Hills and Gr11n11d11 Hills. Foyr other Treasu.ry1stores currently operating in Buena Park, Orange, Torrance 11nd L11kweood, introduced the Treasury to Southern C11liforni11 In 1970.i DONALD V. SEIBERT, Vice President, l'lirector of Catalog, The Treasury Stores and Internatio~ Operations of the J. C. Penney Company, Inc .• will be officiating at the opening ol the new Treasory store on Wednesday, October 18, at 9 a.m. STANLIY C. IWANSON. formerly a merchandiser on the area gtaff of The Treuury Storeg Division of the J.C. Penney Company, Inc., has ~n named gaJes and merchandise manager of the new Treasury store, 0 penlng October 18. l\lr. Sv.·ttnson began his carCf'r lvith the Compa..ny as a manage- ml'nt t.rainCI'.' at lhe PPnn1•y s tore in Ventu1·a (Calif.) in 1953. He became a deport1n<rnt n1ano gcr at the Penney's in San Fernando in 1956. Hl' was pron1oted to division manai.;er, in 1969, at the CompanY's store in Long &ach and, ln 196 1, rnanaAC'd n lar.i:cr division-at the Nonvalk Penney store, I-le srrVl'd the Con1pany in th~ Los ~ group staff from 1965 to 19ti7. v.•hcn ht• u·as namC'd 1ncrchandise managt>r of the Penney s tore In Fullcr!on. In 1970, he became a merchandiser on The Treasury Store'• area staff. The qua.nlity and variety of merehandise In the new Treasury •tore ~ill require the services of t~·o merchandise managen, Ed.W. T. Grffnwalt, manager of "soft lines" merchandise, and Robert J. Kundec, "hard li nes." 1'1r. Grr<.>n\\•alt h8..!1 been a department manager at the Penney store In Lake~'O!Jd l'lnte 1966. Prior to joining Pl'Me)"11, he graduated from Lon~ Bca<'h City Collr~l'. v.·ith a degree in Business Admlnistraticm and complrtrd an 11.ccount1n1;1 course while serving a four-year tour of dul-y with lh<' U.S. Air Fure<'. MR. KUNDEE joinl'd Thr Trcnsury Division as a merchandiM?r with the Loi; An geh-s arPB staff. in 1970, following 11 ye81'!1 experience with other major n.>tall f1nns. Ii<' r£'Cf'ivcd his bachelor's degree In Buslncss Administration from Baker Un!vl'Nlity, in Baldwin, Kansas, in 19'".>8, prior to beginnini.: his Cl.lrct>r in n..•tailing. RUDY MELENDEZ Is oprrn!lons manager at the new Treuury stort>. A lO·year veteran \.\i th th(' Penrwy Company, he started working part-Urn•• ln the arf'R nccount111g office while attending Im Angeles City Col h·~r. flf' t·on!inul'CI. thf'rf', after graduating, with an A.A. degrt'<' In Accountini.: 11nd 1,._.l·amC' a SC'Clinn supervisor. In 1968, he tt'ansfe rr•'Cl to thl• co11tr•1ll<"r'" divislnn nf thl' Company and. the following year, rnll't't.-d syst•·ms analyst 1rain1ni.:. In 1970, he began training as opera· l ion." n1nnat::1'r al lhe 1'l"'C'alury i;tor(• In Torrance and wt.a named opera- tion11 n1anagrr o( th(' Lnke'l\1'.>0d Tr.:-asury store In 1971. yarns &ya~ • TRYING ON A PIECE OF FABRIC . Donald V. Selbert started with J. C. Penney Company, Inc. department store chain, at its store in Bradford, Pa., in 1947, working up to depart- ment head and assistant manager; section manager in Buffa1o,· New York, during 1952-53; assistant man· ager at both Elrpira, N.Y., 1954-55, and Rochester, N.Y., 19SS.57; named manager at Levittown, Pa., in 1957; promoted to district management in 1959, with headquarters in Minne-- apolis; transferred in same capacity in 1960 to Toleda, Ohio; came to Company 's Central Office, New York, in January, 1963, as director of plan- ning and research; appointed assist· ant director of catalog sales and op-- erations March, 1964; elected vice president 1967 ; director 1969 ; direc. tor or catalog and The Treasury stores 1971 ; director of catalog, The Treasury stores, and international operations 1972. Mr. B. Dale Smith, M!IDager of the new Treasury Store, started as a management trainee in the Penney store In his home town of Lincoln, Nebraska, In 1954, following gradua- tion from Nebraska Wesleyan Uni· versity in 1952, with a bachelor's de-- gree in Business, and a two-year tour of duty with the U.S. Navy. He rose through positions of increasing responsibility at the Lincoln store be- coming a deparbnent ~ger, a di- vision manager and, ultimately, the store's manager. In 1961, he trans· ferred to tile larger Penney store in Great Falls, Montana, as sales and merchandise manager and, in 1963, was named to that position for a group of Penney stores headquar· tered in Spokane, Washington. In 1966, he was named merchandise pro-- motion coordinator at the Penney Company's headquarters in New York City. He became manager of the J . C. Penney store In Flagstaff in 1970. Long active in community affairs, Mr. Smith is a member of Rotary Club and, in F1agstaff, was serving on the Chamber of Commerce, Down· town Business Association and Boy Scouts of America. THE TREASURY store Is scheduled to open In Santa Ana on Wednesday, October 18, at 9 a .m. The 191,158 square-Coot store, a single-level structure with its Identifiable "squiggly" roof-line, is located at the Intersection of Bristol Street and Sunflower Avenue. NEW TREASURY STORE CREATES 233 NEW JOBS The Treasury store, opening here October 18, has created 233 new jobs In Orange County In order to fill out the staff of !ti mu!U- line store and auto center. Of the 250 it will take to man the new unit, only 17 have been transferred from previous positions willt the Company. The newly-hired 11Maociate1,11 as The Treasury Divfalon of the J. C. Penney Company regards its people, receive 'utenaive training over a six-day period. Training subjoctl Include Company phll050phy, policy, mer- chandising techniques, courtesy and service to the customer. Al· though each person bu primary responalblllty for a certain d&- partment or section of the alore, lndoctrinaUon I.a given on tlio loca- tion of 811 mezdlandile in the store. THE TREASURY STORE HOURS SET B. DALE SMITH, fonilercy '.manager of the J. c. Penney store in Flagstaff, Arizona, h&s been named manager of the new Treasury store which will open on October 18. AUTO CENTIR. Shoppers at 'The Treasury store, opening here October 18, will know the convenience of one-etop shopping even on dayB when the familY car needs servicing. The reason J.g the modern auta service center adjacent to the •tore, located at the intersection of Bristol Street and Sunflower Avenue. In keeping with The Treasury store's p:i,licy of providing one-stop shopping, the auto center will qtfer complete front-to-rear .ervtce. Also featured will be wide sclectlorui of tires, batteries and aceesaories ot The Tre8.lury's private brand. Rell.Aride. 11te auto center will offer gasoline at its free..standing gas island. Service at the auto center will cover brakes, mufflers, wheel allgn· ment, tires, lgnltlon, shock absorbers, front-end work, lubrication and others. A staff of experienced servicemen will assure fut. eilicient service. The auto center, with an over-all area of 4,296 square feet. has 6 car service bays. lt will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, and 10 &.m. to 7 p.m. oa Sunda,y. Gasoline islands provide service from 7 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Mon· day thru Frlda,y, 8 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday. Mr. Dale Smith, manager of The Treasury store, said the auto cent.er has triOO to meet the needs of every driver by stocking complete lines of each automotive product. For example, the center features four types of batteries and over 60 sizes and styles of passenger tirft. The auto center's pump island service, Including proper windshield and undet·the-hood maintenance, will be supervised by highly trained servicemen and speclalbb.. The Treasury store in Santa Ana is maldng a direct appeal to fema1e motorists, according to Mr. Smith.. The new center 11 aet \ip to make It easy for the ladies to keep the family car In top shape and designed to make the -woman feel as much at home as the man of the family. · "Every effort ha.a been made to make tire purcbase:, for inlt.ance. just another shopping errand for women," expla1ned Mr. Smith. "First, the high standards of our ReliAride products assure va1ut. quality and safety. "8eoond. expert colitisel Is a.vailable to help women pick the right Ure to.flt driving needs Md budgetary considerations. "Third, The Treuucy store oilers the speed and convenience dlc-- tat.cd by the busy schedules ot.' mOdnn women. In most instances, the car ean be serviced 'and ready to gO by the time she finishes the rest of her shopping." . · CAlPORT DIUVBY A .W BOON TO SHOPPDS ~ 1J a MW 'flt.¥ of &elN'tlni;c fubrlo for the homc«Wlns: eel The yarns and )'IJ"daao •hoc» ln the n1-w Tr<.>uury 1tof't'S dlst'lo¥ fabrics In Nmplt lengtht a1Jowtn1 tht customer to hQld up the msterl:al to ICC lf It's boComlng. It:• Jutt like trytnc on a dmt ln Ult' n'edy-lo-~~J\t dc.-rtm<'nt. Another advant.,e; thct needed yardaP it then cut from " rlran. tr~h bolt which bu not berftft Ill~ jacted to balldJ,IJ\a. ln illnt with Till! TT't'fl!ul')"111\mpWlf'd pollc)', l!Yf'l')'thln(I Jnxn ptlt""9 to need] .. and. plN art carr100 In the ahol)I. \Voni'ttd and &er)"lk! prM are a~ ln a W.-rt.nl* or colors. Tho Treasury 1lore, opening here October 18, wlll op. orate from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Satlll' day and lOa.m. to7p.m. on Sunday • The Treuury store's auto center will oiler complete automotive service from 8:30 a.m. lo 9:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. lo 7 p.m. on Sunday • ,,_""'tho...,. -,.. -.... Um< _money"' dolna Ibo fUolly nwketlna ln bulk. M lMOYailm at the MW 'T'IUIU.ry •torft hel'I II cwpon dellvtf'Y. this ev1tomer eonvtnJtnce eltmlnatet pua;hlnlf a thopp1na cart back to the pa.rkJ~ lot and un106dlnt It )'OUtlelf. 1'le 111U!m IJ aimple. Whei J>9¥fnr for )'OUr order, I.he clerk glvt'I yau a cheCJt. Your ~r wtll ht Mid at. ll'le car-. port wl'M!re •ttcndMt• are ~dY to hel11 yo11 Whc'\ )lot•' " tel\dy to pick It up. In addlUon to auppl)ltna: all bMle 1ho·1 ilng l'lftd~. '1" new Trel.aury auptt-. mvket. fe•lure lntematJonal dt!Uctcl8, 1·u·1Mf'm1dr ri·A.da Md ·-..t11tt - baktd fl'tlh dlJly, unutuJ.I dttterta and a v.tricty ot d~•l .. hl~ul read)' to tttVe dlahet. Naturally, the atorM hive a wtde vu\ftty of frnh CallfomSa. fruit.I and Yf$el.ab)K. ' \ • ~ • t • • • ' • • • I • . • • -• • Clinic Schools Deaf Child, Parents • . • • . ' . l , • . • • • • . ~ • • :· '~ . : t t· I . i " ·= . : •I • • • ~ • . • • . • • ! • : ~: .. . ; ' l •':.. ; ! . • • • ' . • • t • • ' t .. > ': •• ' .. fndividual sessions wifh. }uti>r . Leslie Dixon I above) are part of program for Jodi Fields. , . • . , I I I • i ' ' ·• ' ' 1 • • r ~ l • I, I 1. BEA ANDERSON, Editor MeMer, Oc,..,. t, 1m .... t Dally Pilot Photo• By LM Payne T eecher Grace Willis I center I guides Mrs. Allen Keller end son Joey through games. At right, playroom offers tug-of-wer, colo·rful games. I By ALLISON DEERR Of ... D6llY ...... ,..., Deaf children live in a silent world. They do not talk because, not hearing the speech or others, they do not know that words and language exist. But most educatGrs agree that the years through age 6 are the greatest learning years. What can be done to help the deaf child in these preschool years? One answer is the John Tracy Clinic, Orange County Branch, in Costa Atesa. Opened in 1966 under sponsorship of the Newport Chapter, Natlonal Charity League, it offers a wide range of services to deaf children and their parents. 1be home is supported by two NCL Thrift Shops in Costa Mesa . Funds given to the mother JGhn Tracy Clinic ill Los Angeles pay the salaries o( two teachers, a specialist in nursery education and a specialist in deaf education. 1 GUIDE FAA!Il.Y The goal of the John Tracy Clinic is "to rind, to encourage. to guide and to train the parents or deaf and hard-of-hearing children; first in order to reach and help the children, and second to help the parents themselves.'' 'Their literature explains "the com- munication process, like all other learn- ing, begins at birth. Everything that hap- pens to a child, everything he feels and sees and touches, everything he ex- periences, contributes toward it. "Speech is not solely a matter o{ articulation of voice quality. pitch, rhythm and inflection: to talk one must also have a desire to talk, something to talk about and someone to talk to. One must have freedom to talk. "The Lillie deaf child in partkular needs a deep and abiding feeling of ac- ceptance, of belonging, of support and security to insure this freedom.:· DE'10NSTRA TION The little gray and white stucco house at 114 E. 19th St. provides a setting for this to happen. The home itself provides an en· vironment where mother and child can utilize the natural learning opportWlities in every home. There is a complete llving room. kitchen, bathroom, playroom and fenced backyard complete with swingset. A junior-sized freeway for tricycles has parking lots and a ''gas stalion." and is a good tool for learning concepts like stop and go, right and left. f.1other and child attend t h e demonstration home on an appointment basis in the afternoon to learn of the potential educational experience s available in every home . NURSE RY SCHOOL Momings. from 9 to noon, Monday through Thursday. are devoted to a preschool nursery . Group activities Wlder the direction of teacher, fl.1ni. Grace Willis are designed to enhance language acquisition. Regular sessions with the tutor Leslie Dixon, are scheduled for each child . Other services. through the Orange County and Los Angeles clin.Jcs, are con· sultatlon services for audiological and psychological evaJuaUoo of young deaf children. classes for parents in child development and weekly clinic days for childrtn not enrolled in the preschool program. Eight chlldren are enrolled currently in the nursery school. A six·wetk summer session bridges the long summer vaca- tion . There also is Individual tutoring for children on an appointment basis. psychological counseling ror parents and a curi ..: ... pondence course a v a 11 a b I e 1hrough John Tracy Oinlc in Los Angeles ror parenlS or deaf children throughout the .... ·orld . REVA~tPED The Orange County Branch sports brigh t yellow paint inside and new carpeting this fall. through donations of members of National Charity League and help from parents of clinic students . Anrie Louise fi.1ims, director of charities for Newport Chapter, explained that the demonstration home has always been a cooperat ive effort ol parents. members and Ticktockers, the league's teen auxlhary. Members man thrift shops at 120 E. 19th St. and 540 W. 19th St. in Costa ~Iesa. Members are hostesses for the demonstration hon1e and Tick1ockers serve a~ teacher's aides during the sum· mer session. ..National Charity League. Newport Ch<tpter donated to the wark ol John Trscy Clinic prior to 1966, when we felt y,•e wanted to become more closely in- \'Olved." said Mrs. Mims , who serves u a liaison between the Orange County Branch and the mother clinic. They began another clooely-relaled project, an annual three-day screening program (Gr hearing problems in the spring. with the cooperation oC area elemeotary schools. Activities in the kitchen show moth e r and child ways the famil y home can be used as a teaching tool for both. • , j 0 D"1LV PILOT Story Needs Repeatin g Vol unteer: No Second -c las s Ci tiz en · __ By JO OLSON Of 11\t Delly l'olOI •ttU Defulitlon of a voluntl'C:r: A littlti old lady in tennis shoes. A trust.rated housewire. A 'A'C>1n an >A'ho doesn't really nct..>d to work for a paycheck. fUghl ? All oC these are wrong. ac- cor<.hng to Loyce McDonald, dlrC<Ctor of Iha Volunteer Bureau of South Orange Coun- t\', speaker for the third lec-t l1~ In lhe Orange Coast College serh.-s W i d e n i n g \Vorld.!j of \Vomen. She opened Oie disc~lon by reading a resolution drafted by the National OrganizaUon for Women ln September, 1971, condemning V(llunteerisn1 .a!I I.he "explol.tat1on of women" which makes wo1nen the "un- paid conscience or the nation." Whatzername Wins A Letter for Effort DEAR ANN LA!\OERS: This is for that girl \Yllo signed ht!rself ··Hed·faced in Redlands.·· She v.•as t'mbarrassed because her motl"K:r got numes 1nixcd up a lot -especially the names of :ier friends who came over to the house. My mother is only 51 years old and she forgets our names all the tin1e. There arc eight kids in our family and we look a Jut alike. 11a is far from senile and I'd fight anybody v.•ho said she didn 't have all her buttons. It is very common for ~1a to call me by three names be[orc she hits the right one. I never get upset about it because it happens regularly with every one of us kids. Nobody thinks it's peculiar. \Vith \\'hat's going on in the world to- day I think most mothers deserve medals instead of criticism. I hope things straighten out by the lime I have kids. I'm not sure I could handle it. Just sign me -"l'LL NEVER FORGET GOOD OL' WHATZERNAME" DEAR \\11ATZ: Show your mother this column and tell her you wrote the letter. It "'ill be better than a medal. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I dOn 't have anyone I could talk to about this (it v.•ould be much too embarrassing ). but I must knov.• if it is possible to inherit ab- normal behavior pattern s such as Jncest. daughter. It really turned my stomach. Now I know for ttrtain (because my riance has told me) that theirs is an in- cestuous relationship and it's been going on for four years, at least. When J asked nly fiance what his mother has to say about this he replied, "Mom has never had anything to say about anything. She is like a servant in the house." A yowiger brother and sister know "'hat is going on. 1be whole thing is Wlreal. I can't believe the man I Jove was brought up in that house by those two parents. ls this trait hereditary? I know it's a sickness but what I need to know is whether this sickness can be transmitted to an offspring? I{ my hus· band ever tried such a thing on a child of mine I think J v.·ould die. Please, Ann, help me . -SCARED 11 charges that voluntttrism •·serves to maintain wome n·s seeondary status" and d o e s not promote "change-directed nctivities." The homemakers, a 11 volunteers in one area or another countered v.·ith their comments on the resolution : -"It sounds like you shouldn't do anything for anyone unless you're getting pa.id for it." -"It's wrong to downgrade women who want to give service." a.1rs. McDonald then moved into the problems of volun- teerism. which include "agen- cies that do not know how to use volunteers in an effective "'·ay" and "volunteers who think of their jobs as low man on the lcltem pole and sitip them for hair appointments. These agencies get turned off Problems Of Youth Studied \Vhere Are the Services? is the theme chosen for the se- cond annual County Coo- r erence on Concerns f o r Children scheduled for Satur- day, Oct. 14, from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Orange C o a s t Col- lege. to vo lunl.eerti." she N-'lid. Who are today·s vol unt~~ They are not "little ladles ln tennis shoes," ~1rs. fl.tcDonakl stressed. "Men and you Uta ill. gelling Involved. 11le image of volunteers is changing fast." They also are not "women who don't need the money." Mrs. McDonald noted thllt many people wbo receive ald are volunteering them.seJves, and several volunteer bureau1 have opened for minority races. Neither are they discoo- tented housewives. ' • Discontented b:>usewives make very poor volunteers: They aren't together enough to help. We need to help them in other ways." \Vhy stould a person volunteer? It "'ill fiU needs for hin1, including ac- complishment, recognition, in- volvement and belonging, and afford him l eerni ng ex- periences. g r o w I h , c~ structive use for time and social experiences. How does a person volun- teer? , "When you become involved it's important to assess yourself," Mrs. Mc 0 on a Id streMed. "Think about the demands made on you b • others and your own lntere We often get so involved in *> many different areas we don't get anything done properly. When you take on a volunteer job you should treat it as a paid job. Fountain Valley Ji'riends of the Library are co!lecti11g used books to re-sell at the city's Halloween celebration on Saturday, Oct. 21, at Fountain VaJJey High School. Thi! Mmes. Lorin I~ammers, president; Kenneth Martz and John Thomp- son, research librarian (left to right) stack early contributions. Donors may leave books in collection boxes at the library or ca 11 Mrs. Lammers for pick-up. Project proceeds go for scholarships a_nd special library equipn1ent. I am engaged to a wonderful young man. \Ve'vt> gone together for a long time. I never had much to do 1Yith his family. I met them three years ago. At that time I had a feeling there was something very peculiar about the way his dad behav,ed toward the oldest girl in !he famlly who was then 15. They acted more like sweethearts than father and DEARS.: A child bor n of a partut wilh a history of mental illness is more apt to be emotionall y disturbed thnn if bis parents were stable. This is true o( other condilions, suc h as a tende ncy toward heart disease. But a specific pattern of deviation, like incest, cannot b e ··inherited." Since you seem so co ncerned, I suggest you talk to a psychiatrist before you marry. Unless you enlfr married life with com plete confidence in your hus- band, you are going to have a &rreat 1fcal of anxiety which could ruin the marriage. The conference is being sponsored by the Children's Services Council of Orange County and OCC Evening College. All sessions will be given in the OCC science hall. Panel symposiums, small di scussion groups and a com- 1nunity resource fair will be featured. Participants will in- clude Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner; M a r gar et Crier. program chief for the probation department: and representatives of sch o o I districts, public b ea I t h ··interview the agency when you go to look for a volunteer job. Check with o t h e F volunteers there. Write up a resume for yourself. Find out-:, about training a.l varioua ; agencies. ~ "Start out in a small role. it I • you lack self-confidence. Use.;. the sk ills you already have bot ...;; have someone help you pull'! them together.·' • • The key to sucrcss in volunteering, she emphasi zed, is to ··do the thing that's right for you." Horoscope: Health Emphasized for Gemini services, area g u id an c e'\jiiiii;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ centers and the w e 1 f a r e TU ESDA Y OCTOBER 10 By SYDNEY OMARR Don't take Gemini ( o r granted. These persons are af- fable, versatile and easily bored. The Gemini child is restless and needs a constant challenge. The Gemini woman is in love with life, flirtatious and can get involved wilh more than one man at a time. The Gemini man does not want to be told what to do, CdM Pair Mark 50th ?i1r. and Mrs. Lloyd "torrison of Corona de! "1ar v.·ere honored at a ~th an- niversary reception in the Tustin home of their son, Roger "1orrlson. Sons Richard Morrison of South Pasadena and Edward :\torrison of San Diego co. hosted the t>vent attended by 10 guests who had "''itnes.st..-tl the celebrated weddin~ In South Pasadena. Miss "1arria r-.·lorrison m o d e 1 e d her grandn1olher's wedding dress . The h o n o r e e s graduated from Caltech and Stanford l'niversity. She h ii 1 been a Ht.'<i Cros~ vulunteer for 25 ve:i rs After an Insurance Career In f...(18 Angeles, he has ht.~n president of Newport !!arbor La"''" Bowlers and Americnn AssocLaUon of l{elired Persons chapter. when to eat and sleep -he creates his own schedule, be it convenient for others or not. Gemini travels, teach es, reporL'i. studies language, con- cocts advertising gimmicks and makes people laugh. ARJES (March 21-April 19): Stick to factual information. One who is in1patient should be ignored. Aquarlan could play key role. Learn rules before attempting to change them. Accent centers around investments, money potential. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Study Aries message. Don't rush decisions. Permit mate, partner to have benefit of doubt. Your own judgment. in- tuition may not be up to par. Forgive and forget. Then you ultimately gain advantage. GE~flNI IMay 21-June 20): Don't skip meals. Nothing is really w o rt h endangering health. Check medical, dental appo intments. Taurus, Ubra persons are in picture. Family member v.•ants attention and deserves it. Respond ac- cordlnt:ly. CANCEft I June 21 ·.luly 22\: Your 1•motions a1t crnpl to grull control. Gi,·e to !'Onie ex· tent. but refuse to surrl?ndc•r. Lof,:ic; docs ha ve a place. Ile rendv for revelat ion. A secret n1C"eiing i!i on agenda. You !cam under unusual circum· stances. I.EO (July 23-Aug . 22): \\'hat in•as missing is found , put In place. You know what must be done. Wllh a bit or seU-dlscipline, you can ac- complish wonders. Key now Is to get down lo business. lt.ccognize facts as they ac· ONE-WEEK SPECIALS! ONE WHll ONLY! OCT. t to OCT. 14 H.F.S. GIANOLA YH Wl• t..JU Ill 1',' ,:'.j SPECIAL 49c SONA SOY OIL • .:..:::·... SPECIAL 89c tually exist. VlllGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): overcome. You are able to make contact with one who had been inaccessible. Stress confidence. department. DTm\Y. You may not be aware of how beneficial. Leo persons arc Registration should be made far you are going. However. destined to p I a Y i1nportant V.'ith !he Children 's Services there is chance to move ahead roles in your life. Council or OCC Evening "~ 5~1~El ~~~N ... "iiAo~ in meaningful manner. Key is Discover vour love •nd monev College, 2701 Fairview Road , -GERBERICH - Settle differences with relative. Leave no lingering hint of ill will. Be frank. Forthrlght approach could ac- complish wonders. Aries is in picture. You get what you want -but you may not know what you actually nee<I . SA Gm ARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): You may find yourself going in circles. Key is to strive for self-un- derstanding. Fiod out where you are going -and why. Another Sagtttarian could aid. Don't be afraid to ask for directions. to be analytical. You do have '/)~';: 1~o1~~hd~,e~~~ l~e cS'l1t'~ Costa 1-itesa. 92626. Further in-P~~:~~!;·b~·5o,Kn~~~ a choice. Act accordingly. PILOT. ao~ :no10. Grand Cotnlr•I s1a· formation is available through _-:a11ez10 01nc1 Shoes ~., 1 ---·~-·-·~ --Chi" PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): .in~wer) In Svdnev Om11rr'• booklet, Lennis Kirkpatrick, 533--0876. Corrtc1 11 1'5' ,-.17•,,-'51• -~ '"Secret Hin!• for Mf!fl Intl Women " Your philosophy i s em-Costo M•so . 541·2778 phasized. People are in---------------------~~~~~~~~~~~-!_ terested. Realize it and ex---LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22), Bring forth your own personality. Be definite in ex- pressing views. Some of your friends will be startled -but it will be good for them. Be a bit selfish. Get what's coming to you . Don't pussyfoot. SCORPJO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Money situation is aided through your intuiti ve in- tellect. \Vhat had b e e n discouraging situation i s CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Tear down in order to rebuild. Break free from foolish restrictions. G I v e yourself a chance for hap- piness. One you are drawn to may express doubt. You can win through civilized attitude. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You are making progress. plain point of view in en· thusiastic , manner. Don ' t mince words. Reach out to those who have made in- quiries. You have a waiting audience! IF TODAY IS YOUR BffiTHDAY you are stronger than most persons might suspect. You are capable of fighting for beLiefs. I n November. there is basic change which will prove FABRIC SAL LARGEST & FINEST SELECTION OF I ONLY FIRST QUALITY FABRICS WOVEN CLASSICS MULTI COLOR HOUNDSTOOTH TWEED BACKGROUNDS COORDINATE RI BBED SWEATER KNITS The>e 100'1, ACR YLIC, MACHINE W A SH bea u. ties are speciall y yorn dye d and coordinate d to mix ~nd mat ch. 54"/60" Widths OUR REG . $3 .98 yd. • SAVE 48~ yd. YARDS $ ONLY ~~·,.;.,.HOUSE OF F ~\iii·BRICS always first q ual ity f abr ics s. ... C... ,._ -l,ftlal 11 S•tt Dl•to Fw.,. H•~ Pl9N -I 1tt. •I &r!ttol c ......... -141·1516 S..Me """ -14)·1111 0,...,.., M•ll -Ot•tt9•lho,1110 '"' H1tbo• l•N• Pett C..ter -l• l'•lm• •t Sttttlo" ,_, ...... -IJ6•Jll4 . INM Pw• -IJMJU ...... 0,....-lllfl ltoo•h11rtf l11•rl to Vott'1I -IJ0.1142 H•lqlc• c.tw-Eallttt•r •I l•ts::h 11¥tf., H ... ..,.. .... _ H7-I01J -- O ur B ea u ~y Salon s 1/2 price sale! T he No-S et Breeze Perm. /i 's short and shapely. About 2" long . Our stall is trained lo lilt, shape and cul yolir hair on the bias lo give extra body. Combined with our Breeze Perm and new blower drying method, it becomes even more bouncy and bouyant. Curls that spring into shape with just the gent/est flip a( o brush. Reg. $30 value. NOW $15 , including cul. Beauty Solon. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISlAND • 644-2800 I • ·---- •• '. ·: ' ! • DICK. TRACY ruMBLEWEEDS ( H£RE: COME:S ~e 5111-k MR.1UM~1-ewee175, 1111 ~ATING AUNT HILPfGARll! · H"1\RT! Mun AND JEFF YES-•• "1l:>Olllif IS COLUMBUS DAY! TODAY? Cot.UM BUS PAY IS "THURSDAY, OCT. 12.t!l FIGMENTS ;~ ,, ri • NANCY -rtlEY CHANGEO ITTO "TODAY! . • I WONDER WHAT'S PL.AYJ~ HM·--I HAVE ·A FEELIN'e THAT THE MOVIE ISN'T VERY GOOD I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I A CROSS If~ b •.. MayWhilfY 10 Silr"erv fish 14 /\1arble 1'> Feud 16 0 111cr !]dJITTf'HI 17 Prt!.:etlon<J i11 '"'pon&nc" 18 Par\ ot bird 19 f\1blicel n•m• lo• Svri• 20 Son of King O;,ivid :'2 L.e~v+' 1 •<1~- 11J,111 c~r ;"4 \\•Id <IO'lOI Au•1<,1l1" '.'b ~1~k~ h•Uddll :•1 Holle"" JO L•bO• 0•'1•n1t•!•u11 JI Lb!- JI Ml'd1c.-I ... ~!lhl110f1: .,,.,. 32 loutr~- ""'"' J7 BaS011b.ll! ump•1<1'1 taM :ti Nol p&rc11<1d OU\ ~nngl'y AO Mr. Durocher 4 I Mo-.t ,,.~utllul 4J N•trOW ~tflP ., ...... , .. 41 Muchvwd rbb<l'Yllilion - ir; Provoke 48 ~oundol lauol'IH!:r: V1H. Sl Aad !e51 lo ~Publ•t: not•c•s· 1.,1orrnal ~ l endencv to rrst !i8 Pre~•11C&IO• !>9 Cherged fllrl1Cle~ 61 ·····Beach 62 w~11ne• heroine 63 s~11111pe!'s potieie' fH Motl<!y fi5 Nutl'<I Ul Walrry pl1111 !luod~ 117 61111~· hom11 OOW~I ' lh~/I, ;> Soil· Cumll, h11m 3 81!u1t,.de 4 Got lo°"' s ,,. 5 Rrclul'f' Ii M1n111>111 on v,111111 7 Mohomm.-ci'J •dopted ~o" 8 A11end 111 9 li111word1n 10 S1111u~ nl • le>p KtOf 11 lh••t1G•111k gO<ldt!Mff S1turdlly·s Purzle SotYed: 1 :~ 101 idd.tion lJ C\l'-P~ :•1 Cl'l•r~CTP111.,d byU'1•!V 2J AnplltHI I lloonn'J '"'""'' 25 Oiff111oun 01 hqu•d through 1 m~mbrane :'7 S tudo0 28 T 1mt: period '" ROf\.,, Preho. J] R•<l•cal 119rton1 J4 M011 R111Wi1S 35 • ., .. i.-... 'un<htoOn ~ 11.,,1 38 Absolot1 39 01lic:•d e1 •2 Cily <111r1n 43 il&•rl'n 4!> Operiot., 47 "Th., ... Cometh · 48 '-11lOn ous •10<••• 49 Official nl anc,.nt Rom• "° f Wmg out, a~ 11 flHmn,,,. !)J K1r.d 111 JOI\ """~ 55 M11l11 i.,e byh1riil !'6 "·---• m•n • w 11h s~~en WIVf5 '' A....,m..,i h1ughhne~• IO Sling, 11 c:Old Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers I· • STUPIO/- COWMBUS IS PEAD/ by Chester Gould by Tom K. Ryon FOMOT YOORMOVf! by Al Smith +IE 15?-·- GOSH, :I OION'T , 'EVEN KNOW HE WA551CK! by Dole Hole by Emie Bushmiller •OO ooaooo oo BEST POPCORN IN TOWN • . . . • ~. I ' [ I D NEW BIG ;;;!;!!!~[{f~E-A'l~u~REj::~'-~· PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS .JHrs Cll'\"l!Rci<O'. iZi!TioN Of OUR ~RKS l'\VST STof? ... ~cff,. ;;;.--- -::::-.'" .-.... GORDO MOON MULLINS NICE OF YoUTO i~EAT, jc;A'it) ... ANIMAL CRACKERS llO DOV~ AN EARL'{ .:SPANISH D~VtCE CONTRJVEO TO AIO JN RSMOV!NIJ' 7llE ·OPPOSITION /:t.lfZJNG /.A CDNGJJ!STA! by Chories M. Schulz HI, '7WEETIE! by Harold Le Doux 'r'OU 5AV THAT SHE YOU SAY YOU HAVE fOR. EXAMPlE, WE FOUND ,,_ ! PHOTO IN &EVE.RLY'S APARTMltoil I Of TME TWO OF THEM T06£THf R. ... &UT Hf. DENIES THAT R.eruRN!N6 TO THE MOTEL, THE POLICE LIEUTE N- ANT PRE1END5 TO TAKE LEE 00R6SON INTO HIS CONFIOEN C.E CONCERNING THE SUSPECT IN THE MURDER OF 6EVERL'V ! DIDN'T TELL YOU THE RlQHT ! NAME OF THE MAN SHE WAS OATIN6 EXCEPT THAT HE WAS OLDER ... A"4D PROMINENT? A RATHER SOLJD CASE A6AIN5T THIS MAN, LIEUTENANT ! MISS PEACH PERKINS . - . • - Vis, YOU Ml~ IA ! 'YOU w,\/i; TAU{;><T EVEl<Y KO IN T><rS 5C..Wc T><E IV\£11N1Nli O F FE>i~ ! • -• HE KNEW HER! by Mell :L M>.VE Nor L.IVep IN VAIN ! l MAVI HOT 1.41/fD "" VAIN '.! by John Miles MOtld~Y. Octobr.r q 1~11 DAILY PILOT I I by Roqer Bradfield Borsotti by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson WSl.L,. I 1t> GIVE ~IMSON 1' SCALE OF 10 ... l>ll>N'r )l:><J SEE HoW He PINCHED OUl<STAAWS 5E r ~000 VAMPll<E BAT" l.005E 1.i T><E }l.)Drr=M. &au OP T~iil: 6\.IT~s AIJD SET Fl~E TO 1\lEll< H.l.111 •• WHEN HI!' HANl>lfl> THEM _...J -= IOUS? by Roqer BoUen A.LL I~ ,b.u. I WCl.lLD 4 A ,;i.~ 'i'Eq ll.IDA60CO ~~D? THE GIRLS if\\ ' ~ Lf'", ·~~ ~ ;fl 10-9 "Ci1at1o1 •IUI! Air. Walliu pndkall)' pro~ told me lk nut dmt lte marrin It's 1•t.1 to be &o lk ., ........ l)'JM!··· ' • ' ' .. • ; • • ' ' • ' , • • • • • • • • • • • , , . • • • • ' l ' , • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • • r . ' ·: • '• . :: ·: • J ~ I • • • • ; ·. • ' • ~ ~ l ' \ DAJLV PILOT Rams A waken, Lead Division LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tommy Prothro's big Los Angeles surprise wasn't suc h a sur1>rise at all to the San Francisco 49e rs even though it worked to perrection . ''I e:icpected to see Bobby Thomas and Willie Ellison in the same backfi.eld ." commentl'd coach Dick Nolan after his club had Callen ll-7 before the Rama who suddenl y regained explosive power. The win puts them in the division lead . Thomas and Ellison "'·ere teamed in Raiders Duel Oil ers Tonight On Televisio11 l!O USTON IAPl -llouston Oilers second-year quarterback Dan Pastorini could be on a segment of ''What's My Line" after some of the sackings his of- fensive line has led him in for this season. In.c;tead of being critical, Pastorini will go on national prime time television 011 T V Tonight Cha1111e l7 at 6 tonight against the Oakland Raiders and lry to prove that the offensive line and the Houston Oilers are for real . The Oilers made 1:1 tonight's feature more attractive by upsetting the New York Jets and Joe Namath Z&-20 a week ago Sunday for their first victory of the season. ' Houston takes on another first class passing team tonight in the Ralders,· who have Daryle Lamonica at the launching pad. Lamonica is the leading passer in the AFC and has thrown more touchdown passes over the pa st five years than any other pro quarterback. Pastorini is the No.2 passer in the AFC despite a bruised knee suffered last week and occasional lapses by the offensive line. While the offensive line has been the Oilers' weak ness Oakland is trying to build a defensive fron t fou r to go ~·i th its touted sc<:ondary led by all pro cor· nerback Willie Brown <'Ind safeties George Atkinson and Jack Tatum. The Raiders defense ranks No. l in the AFC in pass defense. Pastorini's cohorts in trying to upset the Raider secondary are Charlle Joiner. Kenny DwTough and Jim Bierne. Joiner is the leading re<:eiver with nine for 208 yards. Running back Hoyle Granger was erfeclivc com- ing out of the backfield against the Jets. Lamonica \YiJI counter with Fred Bilet· nlkoff. the loading pass recei ver in the NFL last se ason, rook ie r>.tike Siani of Villanova. who has caught seven passes. or light end Ra ymond Chester who has caught at least one pass in the last 30 gan1es. ... the same backfield just last Tuesday and coach Prothro tried his best to keep the new alignment a secret. He had shifted Ell ison from fullbac k to halfback and then moved in the second year pro Thomas, an Arizona State Unive rsity product who breaks out of the backfield y,·ith eye-popping quickness. Thomas \YOund up gaining 142 yards in 19 carries. Ellison gained 45 in 13 tries. Larry Smith, the erslwhile starling halfback. came on to gain 69 in two tries -one going fo r 68 and ending for naught, and the second a one-yard burst for a touchdown . Since the pre-season, the health of Roman· Gabriel, the Rams veteran quarterback, has been closely ~·atchcd. Currently he suffers from tendionitis in the elbow of his right arm -the one he uses to thro.,.,, . T \\'O weeks ago in Chicago he saw little action in a 13-13 Ile and a week ago, as Atl anta whi pped Los Angeles 31·3, he also was used sparingly. This time he \vent the distance despite cuts on both shins tha t needed stitches. Overall, he said he felt better, ex· plaining, "My arm is improving each week.'' Sno\Y commented, "Maybe Gabe didn't have some of the old zip that he has had in the past, but the ball was right there and that is what is important." Snow caught touchdown passes on plays covE:ring 45 and 57 yards in the Los Angeles victory. Snow has joined such famed former Rams as Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch, Tom Fears and Jim Benton on the all- time team pass receiv ing list. Snow caught fou r passes for 130 yards and pair of touchdowns . His catches gave him a career total or 277. third on the all·time Ram list behind Fea rs, with 400 in nine seasons, Hirsch. with 343 in nine seasons, and Jim "Ted" Phillips , wit h 333 in seven campaigns. Snow. a 6-foot-2, 190-pound wide receiver, is in his eighth year with the Ran1s. His carct·r yardage tolal of 4.992 places him back of only •l irsch and Fears and his 38 career touchdowns tics him with Fears. behind only Hirsch and Benton. The 29-year~ld resident of nearby Seal Beach y,•cnt to high school in Long Beach. and \\•as named lo virtually every All- Amcrican lisl y,·hile play ing for the Fiphling Irish. S '" F< O'lO ''<<l L'• fo r ,•~CJ Fe.,..,, • o o -I . " 10 I 11 LA -Snaw. 'S pe" ""Om C.•t>rlcl l li•Y kirk) SF -8r11d le, I run t~11tr ko;k) LA -Elli'°", 1 nin (lilV k!ckl LA -FG. R1y IS LA -s,..,w. ~ Pll,1 from GAOrlel lli•Y lt;lckl LA -Smllll, I r;on !Ra)' kldt) F ir51 dOWtll li!JillH -yardi p~,11"11 yArd1 <hn " 11·119 '" lie!urn ya•~• ' P1u H 10·1B·1 Punt• ~ -16 Fu•.,blH -lo~I O·O l'~o~lli•• -¥•""• • 11 l "div<llu•I L11d1n A1m1 n .,~, '" " n.2:i.o J.,o " •. JI li111ll~1t -S,1n f'•encl.c:o. j Tl'Klma• 3.,... Wlll&rO l·JO. V. W11lll1'gton 1-.10, LOI AR11•l11; II 1""'""'' 19·1'12, Ell!~ ll·•S. L Sml!h 1...it. 11..-t•I· ltn 6 3'1 ll Kl!~lnt -S~n Frft!"l(I\(~, J Thomn• 2·«1, Kwe1ict 1-JI, V. walll•<l(,l!Oo 2·11. Lo, A"!1el1•. Snow, .... 1JO. K!t l11 ) l-1. litnllt l 2 JO. l"•~••nt -S...11 l'r~nc<1<0. ll rCld•e 10-11·1, !JS Y•r<I~, L<n An<1flH. C:.ebror t 11·:0.0. 725 y~r<IJ Ul'I Tlltn!Mt. TH E RAMS' ROMAN GABRIEL FIRES AWAY. HE TWICE HIT ON TD PASSES IN WIN OVER THE 49ERS. Tigers Red-hot Chargers Put MartinRipsCampaneris It Together After Throwing of Bat ~~~Mo:~~~-~lt'~.:~ OAKLAND (AP) -Detroit manager Billy Martin. seeth ing at the "dirtiest thing I ever saw in the game of baseball." demanded Sunday th at Oakland shortstop Bert campaneris be suspended for throwing his bat at Tiger pitcher Lerrin La.Grow in the seventh in- ning of the A's 5-0 victory. "No doubt about it -he's got to be suspended for the rest of the playoffs ." l\.1artin said . "That was the dirtiest thing I ever saw in the game of baseba ll. II could have killed the pitcher." A La.Grow pileh hil C;i n1pancrh•" ;i n~!r 1n the sevent h. a n d Campancris lhen leaned back and threw his bat at LaGrow, over his head and to the side. Players from both teams poured onto the rield, and umpires restrained Martin from getting to campaneris. Martin angrily told newsmen. "If it h:id been one of my own men, he'd have to be suspended. Anyone throw s <leliberatcly to maim a man has got to be suspended." Of his thwarted attempt to get al Cam- pancris, Martin said : "You bet I was going arter him. I'm no manager at all if I don't protect mY pitcher. If it happened 10 Oakland manager Dick Williams, I think he'd do the same. If it had been my > .•. batter. I'd be ashamed. I've never seen a guy get hit by a i:itch, then throw the bat. .. The Tigers and A's didn't sta?r a brawl because "neither team could afford a fig ht," Martin added. "With the World Series close, the winner could go in with injuries." Martin said he was surprised that um- pire Nestor Chylak. ejected LaGrow as well 11s Campaneris. "I told Nestor, 'It y,·as the worst decisk>n you ever made,' " Martin sa id. "He said, 'I had to do it.'" Chvl;i k explained that although he didn ·l 1hink LaGrow threw at the batter deliberately, "I threw the pitcher out to even things out -to keep the fans in their seats -so we could proceed with no further incidents · in the ballgame." * * * Ca1npaneris Out 0£ Series DETROIT CAP) -The Oakland A's Bert "Campy" Campaneris. focus of a near bra\YI in Sunday's playoff game between Oakland and Detroit, is "definitely out for the rest of the playorrs," says A's manager Dick Williams. Williams said early today that Cam- paneris, stn.ick on the ankle by a pitch thrown by Tige.r pitcher Lenin LaGrow in the sevent h inning, is returning to Oakland "as soon as JXISSible" for treat· ment of the ankle. American League President Joe Croin announced today that Campaneris has been suspended for the remainder of AL playoffs and rined $500 for throwing a bat during Sunday's game against Qc. troit awhile lo get logether but we're on our way no,.,.," coach Harland Svare said Sunday aflcr the San DieJ.!o Chargers scored six points in the fi na l 2: 14 to upset the Baltimore Colts 23-20 In National Football League action. San Diego, an al»ran in the AmC!rican Football Conferenc'e \Yest f!?r the past several seasons, swung a scnes of deals that brouRht it what Svare described· as "a lot of line football players who either were not wanted or did not want to play in other cities. Balti1nore, capi1alizing on l\\'O furnhlc recoveries \Yhippt:.-d out a 10-3 halftime deficit with 17 points in the third quarter, on a pair of touchdowns by Don Not· tingham sandwiched around J i m O'Brlen's second field goal of the crisp afternoon. And when Baltimore c o r n e r b a c k Charlie Stokes intercepted a John Hadl pass at the Colt 18 early in the fourth per iod it looked like San Diego was about to go through its 13th straight road game \vilhout a victory . That's when Jones·got into the act. The Deacon pounced on a Nottingham fumble at the Colt 24 and four plays later Mike Garrett scored his second TD of the day to narrow Baltimore's lead to 2:(1..17. Another Jones' recovery, this one on a muffed handoff from John Unilas to Tom Mattee. gave San Diego possession on Ba1timore's «and set up Dennis Partee's second field goal, a 40 yanler that tied the score at 2:(1..20. A minute later San Diego had the ball back, this time at their own 49, as Rick Redman fell on a Nottingham fumble. Partee's 21-yard field goaJ with four seconds remaining gave the Chargers the game. INDIVIDUAL L•ADl!•S AUSHING -S.n OMgo, G•rr•fl 21-132, EdWards f. i~1~1hl 11...121 81IUmot1, Notl!"CIN!m. 1,45.. Mlltt ll ECElVING -San Oll!llJO, Garrlton ~-'9, Olscus 3-~ Madi.av J..3.1; Baltlmota, SOIYl"er :M4 Ml!Clltll 3· PASSING -Stn Olovo, Hldl 1!•704, UI y1rdu B•ll!more, Untras ll-21..0, 117. Al 81U1mor1 -S$,..St r.r..'9f:r• 1 3 O IJ-23 Coll• o J 11 0-20 Bomb Call Delays A's Trip East OAKLAND -A telephoned bom tbre3t delayed lhe chart.red alTplan that was to carry the Oakland A's t Detroit Sunday lollowJni lhe A's M vi tory over the Tigers In the second game of baseball's American ~ague playoffs. Tbe plane -a chartered Boeing 7111 and all baggage· was searched following the phone call to the Oakland lntema- tionaJ Airport. The flight was expected be delayed about one hour. The A's party of 84 passengers, which included press and front office pel'80nnel as well as players, waited ou t the delay in the airport termiMl . " SAN DIEGO -Hawaiian surfing champion Jim Blears. z.1, rode a custom double-finned board down rolling Pacific swells Sllnday to capture the oft.delayed World Surfing Championships . Trailing Blears, or Waikiki Beach. was ·David Nuuhlwa of Huntington Beach, followed in order by Peter Townsend of Queensland, Australia, and Larry Bertlemann and Michael Ho , both from Honolulu. Jsland teammate Sharron Weber, 25, successfully defended her 1971 title as best woman ' surfer by narrowly edging out Blears' wife, Laura, who took second in the women's competition. " BOSTON -Serge Bemier'1 third period goal lifted the Los Angeles Kings to a 4-2 victory over the Boston Bruins Sunday night, spoiling the defending Stanley Cup cham pions' 1972-73 National Hoc key League debut. The Kings, who bowed 4-2 to Pittsburgh Saturday night, rebounded on the ~oaltending of Gary Edwards. who had 36 saves . " INZAI, Japan -A short putt on a ,short hole in a sudden death playo[f was Australian David Gra ham 's undoing, and American Gay Brewer walked off with the $65,000 first prize after an even battle in golf's richest tournamen t. Brewer took a one-stroke lead into the final round Sunday or the $300,000 Taiheiyo Pacific Master Tournament and was lwo strokes ahead after nine holes. But Graham caught up, fir ing a one·UD- der-par 70 to Brewer's 71 and the two tied at 276, eight under par, after the regulation 72 holes. In a three.hole plavorr over the 16th , 17th and 18th holes, both were one over par. Then it wa s back to the J6 th. a 214-yarlt. par-three hole both had parred moments earlier, for sudden death. Brewer hit the green with h i s drive and twirpulted. Graham hit the left edge, chipped to within 4~ feet -and missed the putt. " WATKINS GLEN , N .. Y -Jackie Stewart of Scotland led all the way Sun· day and won the United States· Grand Prix road race. Francois Cevert of France, who won last year, finished second and Denis Hulme of New Zealand was third. Stewart, who won the Grand Prix here in 1968, set a record for the race with an average speed of 117.483 miles an hour and finished better than 32 seconds ahead of Cevert. Stewart, driving a Tyrrell-Ford, also turned in the fastest lap of the da~ at an average of 119.610 m.p.b., another rerord. Ronnie Peterson of Sweden came all lhe way from the 26th position in the starting field of 31 cars and finished fourth after a terrific battle with lckx, who finished fifth. Mario Andretti o[ Nazareth, Pa., came in sixth. ,.- TOKYO -Ken Rosewall of Australia, making spec tacular returns from all over the court, beat countrjman Fred Stolle 7· 5, 7..J, &-3 Sunday and won the $.13.~2 World Championship Tokyo T e n n i s tournament. The suspension, Cronin said , is only for the duraUon of the playoff championship series. The little shortstop, who collected three hits and scored two runs in the A's 5-tl victory, touched off a near brawl when he flipped his bat in LaGrow's direction arter being struck. Playen from both teams streamed out onto the tM!ld and Tiger manqer Billy Martin bad to be restrained by thtee umpires. McKa11, Christia1ise1i The bat sailed harmlessly over LRGrow's head but both players WeTe ejected and Americab League Prel!lldent Joe Cronin has said he will investigate the Incident. Williams said CampaneriJ will be rc1>loccd by Dal Maxvill and Oak.land's baiting lineup will be shifted but "I'm not sure yet esnctly how I'll do It." Wllllama said Camp•neri1 ac· companied the A '1 to ~troll but tbot the swelling of his ankle l\ad worsened tlnce leaving Oakland Miter Sunday's game. Coaches Lash Each Other After· SC-Tribe Conflict STANFORD. Calif. IAP) -()oach John McKay of the University of Southern California says he's sorry h1I Trojans didn't whip the "hot.shot" Stan!ord Cardinals by 2,000 points. McKay wal angry with evcrytb.lne and everybody -eapCclaUy Stanford -after the toi>'rMked 'll'ojano "played as poorly as we could," 11ld !.1cKoy, and defeated JSlh-ranked Stanford 30-21 Saturday in Stanford Stadium. there are no penalties called both wa ys? For a while in lhe third quarter, we kept moving backwards." ' Chri.ltl.ansen said he wasn't sure why USC went for a touchdown on the game'1 faSI play. "I don 't know 1r they were try1ng to keep their rating or trying to beat lhe (bleep) out of II.!.'' .... _ DET ROIT'S BI LLY MARTIN TELLS UMP NESTOR C HYLAK HOW HE FEELS ABOUT BAT THROWING. "He's hurting." Williams aaid of Cam- paneril, adding the player -wu forced to wallt with a "noticeable limp." The Ont big game of lhe P.aclf!Col Conference'• race to the Role Bowl wound up with the Trojans, now S.O tMr- all and U In the Pac 8, tryiRa to run up lhe ocorc on the already buten Cardlna~. S.I and fl.I . USC, said Chris. "might be a gttat football team. I hllvtn'l aeen Ohio State or Oklahoma but USC It as good 1s t've aee:1t J think it will be dlf8cult for anyone to beat lhem 11 lhey stoy heallhy . Sparky Says Reds Will Win • ID CINCINNATI IAl'l Cinciruwtl manager Sporky Andel'IOll lalka like all he tw to worry aoout iJ who will repretent the Amerle1n Lelguc In ba.eblll't World ~rlet. Andenoo'• Reda used a pair of firsl·l n. nlni tw .. nm doobt.. by Bobby Tolon and Tbn)I Pms and oolld relief pitching by Tom Riil to beat Pli11buJ1)1 Sunday ~3 •nil even dll NaUonal League's bcat-of·S pll)loll Rriol al H. n.. lhlrd game w" to be pla,.d bore )Oday. "I aid K we won today (Sunday) we ...,.W wta lllo Hlllooll t.eque permanl," said Aade:rmt, aaw 1 pfcture of coo- ~ fideoce. "I still ll11nk It wlll go five g1mc1 and ~·e'll win It ... The Clncinnnll boss added : "I'm nol being sm3rt nbout It or popping off. I just feel that w:ty. We're going home and Ul1t gives us nn aclvontaflCI." Plttaburgh manager Dill V I r d o n reacted prcdlclably when Informed of Anderson's words. "If they lhlnk they're home free, they've got anottwr think , coming," enopped the Pirates' 11klppcr. Anderson 's blgge11t move in Sund11y's victory Rt PlttAburQh wiis rellevlng starter Jaclc Biiiingham with two out• and runners 1t tlr1t and third In the llrth I inning. llnll plt rlltd 4 113 Inning s of two-- hit, o0e-run baaebnlJ to eam the victory. Vet. lf you looked 11.l I.he 1taWUe1. bringing in Jh1ll could have been d<ivastatlng to the Reds. During the aeaaon. llall httd worked rive innings agalnat Pitt.burgh and Polled an ERA of 10.43. lfe almost blew a 7·1 lead ln one game. 11nd in another one to aervc a lhree-n1n homer to Wiilie Stargell. It looked as if. Anderson w1u1 reeding the Christians to tbC! Hons .•. uh Pirates. · Cincinnati won the game 1n the flnt in- ning with a four·n•n blast egainllt Bob ., • ~foose. Pete R09C and Joe Morgan 1lngl· ed and bolh rode homt Oil Tolan'• double. Jollnny Bench doubled, bul Tolan was late 1tArtlng for thiTd and advanced only a baM!. Perez then lated a tw~run dou- ble thal kayoed M ..... Pittsburgh nollel pllchen Bob Johmon , Bruce Kflon, Ramon Hernando and Dnve Gltutl checked the Red! tbt rest of the way, except for Joe Morgan•• 10lo llome run in lbe ellblh. Tbe R<dl got three hits ind one run lhroogh nine In- nings. Thtre were no outs whtn Johnson took over In the tint, trailing t.O. ' "I'd like to hlYC be1l lhem by 2.000.'" McKay lpOUled. "They're lhe W«ll wfn. nera I've come up against. Tbcy've shown no class 1galnst us. I dOn't know bow they treat othtn." Coach Jack OlrlJll1111C11 ol Sianlord responded lhll llf. didn't Willi to pl Into any Ir.ind of a urlnlti.ng molest wlth a skunk." Sllnlord beat USC 14-14 and 33-tt en roule to Role Bowl triumphs lhe lul two ......... ending 'l'loy'• lour-yell' domina- tion ol the P1~. Yet earlier tn the week Mcl(ay publlc(y look a low·key 1pproach to tblo meeting. McKay_ wu mid at the officlat1, who gave USC lhe edl• on penallles, 7.i_ "ft 1' two tcam1 that play tbiS game. \Yhy 11 It when we play these hot aboL• I I •• "All we did 11 loae a foolball pme. We: certainly don't reel like we're: oot of It. We have six more games to go. If we go M. I lhlnlc we'll be In good ohape.'' Slanlord holla Washlnglon S.turd1y when the Trojans meet Callfornla In Los Angel ... s.nJor Mike n.. Oj)elled 1 L quarterback for Troy but he wu yanked in favor of IOJ)homore Pat Haden, who completed I of 14 pas1e1 lor fl yanla in lhe aecon<! hall. "I refUJe td announce who will tlart lhe next game." Mcl(1y .. 1d of Rae lt1d Haden. • "We had to make 10me cbanget. 1 didn't tru<a Ille out to crlUcl"' hlm.'" Rae, who bad completed hlll ol 10 f>"' attempts, was dejected: "I don'I .see •nY reuon why I lhould have -pullc<I out." , ) • • to ' b, of y d • •• d n is e r d n r II • f • t 2 ' , y • 0 t .. ' ,. '· " ... . ' .. '. ·. ,. Start Your Engi nes! WITH DEKE HOU LGATE BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah-Art Ar!ons, b bis own admission, ouUo:r.ed himself. "I built a car three years ago to set the Land S~ Record ·with," he said. "Firestone had no tires capeble of gojpg through the IOWld barrier, but I trough! when I built the car they couldo't back out. Well, they told me after I got the car built they weren't interested." Firestone could hardly be blamed. The last time Arfons atftaked down the salt here he went end over end at &10 miles an b o u r. Everybody thought he was dead. Crewmen, tears llreaklng down their faces, dug through the wreckage of Arfon.s' "Green Monster " looking for the body. Suddenly a white laced Ar!oos, his ey"' crysted with salt, poked up hia head and said, "I'm over here," before he Ueled o'er and lost consciousness? Arfoos bad survived the fastest crash in automotive history. Survive isn't an accurate descriptton. He didn't even break a bone. When be got to the hospital 100 miles away in Tooele, he got up off the emergency room operating table aod went In aod took a .OOWer. Since that unbelievable experience Arfons bas crashed hor- rendously again in a drag strip accident at Dall~. 'Ibree others were killed, and Art has retired from active' dftving. "I thought I had retired," Arfons confided, "antll I got back trp here. Now I've got the bug again. I want to nm here ao bad. I could come up here and get the record Without even a practice nm. I would run two ways and put it m the trailer in an hour." Green 1'1onster Clot!ked at %75 mph Arfons' latest Green Monster bas already ~ clocked at m mph In tbe quartermUe ln just over six second9. Ht caculaks that be could be doing &SO mph ln 14 seeoods. "It was built to run 1eve11 and a ball?' Arfons said. nat ts a fairly offhand way o( saying 751 mph. At Bo.ueville'1 altitude tbe 10und barrier is about. 728 mpb. "lf I'm in the car J would f1lD ju.st uncle!' the sound bar- rier/' Arfons 1ald. "U it goes through lbe sound barrier I would want It to go one lime by remote control to ~ what will hap-pen. , . "I'm aot too sure bow the car wru react going throu&b the sound barrier. {Craig) Breedlove and (Gary) Gabellcb don't seem to be &oo coiicerned, but I am. I've gone down to Cape Kennedy, and I've talked to the NASA people, and Oley are wor- ried about wbat might happen. "I think that the shock wave mlghl have enough energy to pick tilt car up off the salt." To Imagine wh at that means,. think of a small boy playing with a toy car. After sliding It across the Door for awhil e, he gets bored and throws tt across the room. That ts what Arfons meaDs. The shock wave would Uterally toss the car throug:b the air, end over end. crasb.lng and bouncing across the salt •.... Arfons had gone through that already. Be is not auloas to do an enCilre. If there are any potential sponsors in the a udience, Arfons aays be can build solid aluminum wheels (effectively cutting oat tbe two tire companies) and get the Green Monster to the salt for $%0,000. Gary Gabellcb's Blue Flame, whk:b set the record ·two years ago at m.403 mph, probably cost its sponsors some-- thing in es:ctss of half a million dollan. Ne1ri Personallty lntrodueed Something new happened at Bonneville last weekend. A new personality emerged in the speed business, flinging tradition out the window in the process. · Tony Fox went to BoMeville and in one weekend conquered the crusty, unpredictable salt. His Pollution Packer rocket drag- ster rang up multiple world records with such ease that Fox hired a rock band to play music between runs. Perhaps the most significant thing that happened was tllat Fox invited a bunch of rival drivers along to watch the speed show and they wound up helping his crew work on the car . John Paxson, driver of the Mval Courage of Australia rock- et car, along with jet ca~ drivers Doug Rose and Fred Sibley, hovered around the Pollution Packer dragster all weekend, help- ing with the fueling operation and packing the braking para- 1 chute. "This is what 1 like about the sport," said car owner Fox. "Here are our competitors out here.helping us. What other sp:>rt will you Se<! something like Utis?" S20 1'11111011 Worlh of Business Fox got involved in motor sport as the proprietor of a snow- mobile company he started in his garage and later sold to Stude- baker (or $3 million. He took the profit from that deal and put it into his present operation, manufacturing waste disposal equipment. In the last 18 months he has done $20 million worth of business. The namboyant speed promoter never got past the second grade. Both his parents died when he was a youngster in Joplin, Mo. and he had to go to work. Two of his brothers, who were sent' to foster homes when they were very yolDlg, joined Tony on the salt last weekend. A sister. who was put up for adoption, is still living in parts unknown. Bonneville is usually a dead1y serious place. Mickey Thomp- son has come up here for weeks and battled the place trying to set r e c o r d s. Gary Gabelich, Craig Breedlove, the Sumruer brothers, they all have sweated and toiled 24 hours a day try- ing to beat the clock. But Fox and his driver, Dave Anderson, ca.me up here with an entourage of more than 200. including a rock band hired for $1,000. They invited the public to come out ~ watch. Break- fast and lunch were served to everybody. 'Ibere were parties every night. HB Youth ·May Make Cage Trip Donny 'lbornton wW never play --II r,.. coodi Ttm Tift and the UC Irvine Antealers. But that doeon't stop him from back.Jag the teem with moral oupport and the young (13 years old) Hwttlngton Beach Yoolh that received an Invitation to accompany the UCI team to Hawaii In December. Donny suffered serioUa ~ juries including t be am- putation of hi& right leg at the knee while he was flslltng In the Colorado River. Donny and a friend were stopped at one of their favorite fisbtng hol.. oo the Colorado when a motor boat split their cnft tn two and k'lJI going. ft was a hit-and-run accident and Donny's friend was killed io thebiumi~. Now Domy la baltltng beck from the crippling Injuries and mental anguish and !w shown definHe improvement in bJs mobility and use of an artificial leg. When the San Diego Olargers were training at UCI this summer, Donny was in- vited to attend a workout and the scrimmage with the Los Angeles Rams. Since that time he has been lo the Border City to attend several games as the guest of Ray White, Mike Garrett, Deacon Jones, Dave Williams and other members of the Olarger-s team . He-has a stan- ding invitation to ·attend all workouts and practice games. Donny has al.so been given a lifetime membership in the UCI boosters club and will have free admission t.o all Anteaters athletic contests in the future. Tift made Donriy's ac- quaintance at UCI during the chargers' drills and extended the Invitation to join the team on its trip to Hawaii . 'lbe Anteaters leave by Con- tinental Airlines OD Friday, Dec. 1 and return Dec. 8 with a large number of boosters ex- pected to join the entoorage. Monti Craig of World Travel Bureau is coordinating the trip and will accompany the troupe to Hawaii. 'Ibey will spend four days at WaikW's Outrig- ger East and three days at the I.slander Inn on Kaual Tuesday night at 7:30 In the Humanities Lecture Hall oo the UCI campus, Monti will present a Hawaiian fashion show, movies of Hawaii and have Jive Hawaiia n en- tertainment at a Hawaiian HoUday party. 'Mtis evening of Hawaiian fastasy is free and open to the general public. A package price of $298 per person has been made for those accompanying the team to Hawaii and includes round trip air fare by Continental Airlines, lodging at the Outrig- ger East and Islander Inn on Kauai as well as other )and an-angements w h i I e in Islands. Area Grid Results DAI L V PILOT J :J Miami Still ~oiling -~ilot Pigskin In Pro Grid Wars PICKEROO Miami's Dolphins cooUnue with the only unblemished record (4-0) in professlonat football today following their 27-17 victory over quarterback Joe Namath and the New York Jets . '1We lhlnk we can win every game,'' says Garo Yepremian, the field goal whiz of the Dolphins. - Miami quarterback B o b Griese won his per sona l sJ»wdown with Namath pick- ing apart a weak New York secondary to connect on 15 of rt throws for Z20 yard!, in- clndtng a !&-yard payoff toss to Howard TwWey. Namath '!\~ bothered by a thn!e-mao ..,.pblns rush and an extra defender in the secondary, not to mention several dropped passes by his teammates. Namath was 12 of 2.5 .for 125 yards and failed lo produce a touchdown through the air. DENVER AT CINCINNATI -Rookie safety Tommy Casanova broke IOO&t: twice on long rWll to spark the Ci.Ir clnnatl Bengals to a %J.ZO triumph. Casanova returned a Bron- cos punt 68 yards for one touchdown and also scatr.- pered YI yards to the Denver Broncos' 35 earlier oo a punt return. Essex John.son bowled over from one yard out on the tail end of the 35-yard march with less than a rilinute left in the half to snap a nine consecutive quarters touchdown drought for the Bengal!. Cincinnati's defense. led by Wrequently used defensive end Ken Johnson, at veteran tackle Mike Reid, sacked Den· ver quarterbacks six tim~s. PHILADELPllfA AT WASlllNCTON -Larr YI Brown's two-yard s co r I n " burst midway lhrough !ht'' third period broke a 5<."0relessj deadlock and led t h t Washington Rf'd~kins to a 14-0 victory over the Philadtlphla Eagles. The Skins' other score came on a 3&-yard pass play rrom Sonny Jurgenseri lo Roy Jef· ferson. CHJCAG-0 AT GREEN DAV -The Green Bi:tv Packers blev.• a 14-point halftime lead then pul the Chicago Bears away with a 37-yard field f!<l81 by Chester ~farcol with 30 sec- onds left to grab a Z0.17 tri· umph. NEW ORLEANS AT NEW YORK GIANTS -The Giants scored two touchdowns in each of the first three quarters to smash the New Or l ea n s Saints, 45-21. In Swimming. Charlie Evans scored three TOs and Norm Snead passed for three others in the rout of error-plagued New Orleans. Gars Deafness KANSAS C I TY AT CLEVELAND -The Cleveland Browns were guilty or eight turnovers ::is the Kansas City Chiers. behind reserve quarterback Mike Liv- ingston, crushed the Browns, 31·7. No Disadvantage The Chiefs. w i t h o u t By DENNIS CAMPBEIL m · Of ... o.11Y ~lft Sllff fil:, quarterback Len Dawson, run- ning back Ed Podolak find wide receiver Elmos Wri~ht. handled lhe Browns behind Livingston's three first-half touchdown passes. Lee Anne Johns ls a com-~, - petitive swimmer and a good one.. / A Golden West College stu--· dent, she's shapely and good .. looking, with long, thick , wavy ~ blonde hair. 1., : She likes boys and datin , ·. was a homecoming queen ca didate in high school and was The Kansas City defen.<;e picked off four M{ke Phinos passes and recovered four Cleveland fu mbles. NEW ENGLAND AT RUF· FALO -The Buffalo Bills ex- ploded for rour touchdowns in the second quarter en route to a 38-14 upset over the New England Patriots. a high school cheerleader. Only one thing separates Bobo, as she is called, from the usual college girl. She's deaf. 1bat handicap qualifies her for the World Games for the Deaf in Malmo, Sweden, next year, where she's already one of the favorites in women's swimming. Her competitive marks this year have established her as one of the world's best. She bolds world and American records ror the deaf in the 100- yard butterfly (I :01.21 ) and 200-yard individual medley (2:30.11) and will add the 100 or 400 freestyle, 400 freestyle relay and 400 medley relay at Malmo. "I've been swimming since I was five," says Bobo. "but I quit when I was about 12 and I've been swimming on and orf since then. "I've kind of slowed down now, though ... but I think I can swim faster. I think I can improve by two seconds In each event." MiM Johns currently trains at the Balboa Bay Oub under Corona de! Mar High School swimming coach Cllff Hooper. "She isn't swtmmlng as fast now ~use she hasn't con- sistently worked out." says Hooper . "When you get older, though, time become more imPortant, and when a person has a purpose he work! harder. She has the ability to do it. "Potentially, she's a very good swimmer." Hooper say1. "Technically, she's very sound · and from now on, in my opl· nion. how good she'll be will depend on hard w o r Ir: , LEE ANNE JOHNS perspiration and experience." Bobo's family moved from Phoenix to Laguna Beach seven years ago and she was graduated from Laguna Beach High School last year. "It was not easy for her. but the Laguna teachers just outdid themselves for h e r." says Mrs. Joyce Johns. "She's come along beautifully since we 've been here." She oow allends Golden West. where she ma}ors in secretarial science. "They have a hearing im pairment program," she ex· plains. "'I have an interpreter rrom the college and he tells me what the ins1ructor Is saying." Buffalo's Ken Lee was one of the sparks to the Bills' defense, intercepting two Jim Plunket! passes and retumin'!' them 61 and 50 yards to set up easy touchdowns. PTITSBURGU AT DALLAS -1be world champion Cowboys edged Plllsburgh. 19- 17. sparked by halfback Calvin Hill's TO pass to Ron Seller.i. The Cowboys remain t i e d with Washington for the lead in the National Conference Ea.,t with a 3-1 record. !),.. LOUIS AT ~llNNESOT A -Gary Cuou.o of St. Louis came back to defeat his former teammates as the St. Louis Cardinals !urned back the Vikings, 19-17, with the aid of two Jim Bakken field goals. Pro Grid Standings Although legally deaf since birth. Bobo ha! some hearing. 11,,....k,:~';.,.,_. She has a 90 decibal loss of 1 .. .i h I f the I W L T~l"9C)to ear ng rom norma M1 .. m1 , , , 1•000 ,, ,.. range of 130. H..,.. v-J•1• ' 1 ' .-1n 111 H-l!t1Ql1nd ' 1 O .JOI M "' She haa been able lo read 8<1ll1lo ' ' ' .JIO " ., lips since she was two and 8111 -• c•~ .. ' • .m '' n recently I e a r n e d sign crnc1.-.1r 1 , , ,,,. ,, l• language. She speaks with the ~:~~;;',, ~ ! : :: ~ =I slightest trace of a lisp. w°""°" 1 ' ' m u "I WHO Miss Johns, who learned to .:.,..., c••1 J 1 • ·"' ,,. ., $peak lhrouj:!h a program !hat ::.~1.°.:;" r : : :: : !! Involved mirrors, vibrations o.,,... , , • no " 1• and lmJtatlon or a.n In-N•l1-4 (......._. a"' structor's Up movtments. con· w L ' "" "' Of' ·-•, ••·t •-r de,rneu is no o.ii.. 1 1 • '~ 11 .. ltalU UMI ll'lt W•~ J 1 0 t• H "I handicap in her swimming. '' Lovh ' , • • • _. Hoooer co""'•rs. H-"'"" <>1""'' ' , • ,. 1n "' Co-Spons ored t his week by And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT Top Wee kly Prize in Merchandise Certificates For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Fourth aod Fifth Place Winners Plus BONUS PRIZE A ,-lr of tkkm t. Ht. 'fOM!t •f ttie ,,_. I USC n . Narr. 0.-1 te eeitlt __.., .~. C••rttty ef tt. DAILY PILOT. Be a pigskin prophet for profit. Play the Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO game fo1 weekly pri%•'· Top winner each week receivei $25 gift certificate from the 1pon,orin9 'hopping center. Second plec• winner 9ets $10 cer- tificate and third, fourth and fifth pl•ce winners ••ch get $5 certificate. Each certificate ii spendable, ju1t like money, at any 1fore in the 1ponsoring 1hoppin9 center. Sponsorship rotates with a different center 'pon1or· in g each week's conte1t. Participating c•nfer1 ar•: Westcliff Plata, 17th and Irvin•, Newport Beach; Harbor View Center, San Joaquin Hilr1 Road and MacArthur Boulevard, Newport Beach; Eastbluff Vill1ge Center, Eastblulf DriYe. Newport Beach; Bay. side Center, Bayside Drive end Jamboree Ro•d, New- port Beach; and Univer1i fy Parlr Shopping Center, Culver and Michelson. Irvine. Wetch /or this player'1 lorm each week in the DAILY Pl:.OT Sports Section. C ircle the team you think wi ll win in each pairing in the li1t of JO game1 and 1end in th• pl•y•r'1 fo ~m entry blank or a 1te1o"able fec1imil•. Then watch fht DAILY PILOT 1por11 pa911 for each week's list of five winners. RULES 1. lulmn Ille fflllJ' Mlflll .__ •• • ,.._,... 1en1nt111 M 11 M ll'lfff Ill• (91111\I , .... _1111 IKl.l"'I .... I• ........ , NI ••eo.ICf •wotlc•l••u lnirll• m11U ff t"llllW"' Ill &IH .... "''" .. l"'il.11111 .......... TMM ... " .. ....,., c111i.r"' •~I M .i~llllld. L JIN II .,., l"llOf l"IOl•tN l"tc•••oo COfllf&lf. ,_. 0-..t'I-'· l',O .... u ... '-'" MM_., ca. nu.. l, °"'' -"'"' "' ~ _ ........ . 4, l'lllr!H nw.I M ,.._,,,._.,_.., .... i..11r ..., T"""4~ w -11 M MllV..,.. .-It"" OAtlV l'llOf lfllc• 11141 "'• n.r~r I. l'lt11(1~llftt -f'tfO-"'I• ._ OAll'Y lllOf ,........., .. , -... ,, - l ltlt llmlhft ""'"'*" II ...... •••••••••••••••••••• • ENTR 't' BL,'\J\'K • • Clr<M> ~,.. fflWt wt• .... tWt ..... , ,..... • • l"-9 ..... t«--"'-0.....) • • Rams vs Phlladelphla • • Dallas vs Baltimore • • • • San Di4190 vs Miami • • New Y orlc Jets vs New England • • Cal vs USC • • UCLA vs OrRCJOll State • • Washlnqton vs Stanford • • • • MidligClA Stat• vs Michigan • • Oklahama vs Texas • • Auburn vs LSU • • Purdue vs Minnesota • • • Bonneville. In other words, was just a lark to Fox's group. .; J " l So what happened? The sun was shining. pie s a I t was Smooth as glass. Tbe car ran straight as an arrow. Everything worked. Part of !he preparation for Dave Anderson's speed nms in- q!uded extending invitations to leading drivers like Craig Brced-pe, Art Arlons and Gary Gabellch to come along. 'They alt ac. cepted. While Fox was talking lo Breedlove he becAme lnterffied in the Californian's pl an to drive through the sound barrier next year. Fox became so interested, in fact, that he signed up as the primary sponsor of the run. Atlanta Raps Rers Call After 26-23 Setback ....... trhll«tl~ ••••n tt "lt'1 no problem al ::II. c..w11 Oef<oll J I t hl!aiu.w: o~ you undcntand r~ •*" 1 1 • h~r probltm you just enun-~=· ~ : ~ elate your words a lillle ..., ''° ,... t i ·'· ,. joO "' . ~ '"' ,, 1• 1lower, and once you ad)Ult lo u. •..-in , 1 , .n u ,, ,_ ~·-.i-, , . _.. " •l this you cton•t nollce her ... ......,. , , • ..-111 11 dea(nt1$!1 al all,'' he savs. ,..... Oi>k.,.,. • • • • ., ,,. Georgia vs Mlululppl • • • Penn State vs Army • • Rorida vs Alabama • • Iowa vs Northwestem • • East LA vs Golden West • .. , • ' What this did was end years or campaigning with the larg- ellt companies in America to rnise $500,000 for conatrucllon of tht ''Spirit of America Sonic 2" rocket car . With Fox at his side, Breedlove will probably be back up here within 12 months attempting to win back the record he haa bt.ld off aJ'fd on for ilix of the last nine ycan. Area Sports Calendar Pro Basketball ATLANTA (AP) -The Atlanta Falcon! were only 47 seconds oway from an uphill victory over the Detroit Lions when disaster struck. '"M>e lut one Is what killed us," pkJ coach Norm Van Broc:tlln of the Falcons refer- ring to a pass lnt~rftttnce call ..... aJttr the Lions edged Atlanta il&-13 SUl1day In a NI· tlonal Football LeaMue gamo. V1n Brocklln rpoke of the nnat penalty. one that -the Falconi J$ yard! and vl<tory. or IL wont I tie. 1be call was 111ln"t deft111l .. backJ °""""' Ellis and Roy Brown who tocethor with Dttrolt -"'"' Ron J-. all Weot down In a heap In a ta"l)e of lop U quarUrl>lck Crea Landry '• b> ...,,....,. -aalled out "' ,.,. ........... .......... boundi. .. , ... , .... ...,. n. oll1dal cab 11ve the '°"'* 0.M tn, °'*""' fMIAt \II Ll6ftl the ball on the IJlaQta J t "'"91 IN.Al ft, 1.-.... INUJ H and StlYt ()wflll wtm, OVf!I ~ (l~ 1111.A) , .. (=~ 'i"::1 ~1,"""" IHMI fl ~ h!n ~ 'i:.t~:: "'-"*' fHU) tfl, ,......,,. ~IAI " 1 '--from t_ llt ddlc{t to ll .. 111_.. (HU)"" l(.tftflldY f.AAAJ ..._. I 1J. I'!!".~ 1._ ..._ •••••Ill , •lclorJ with M -lei! 10 ollrll'Tlf."""' JliMJ 1a OIMifft ... play. , ................ ''I thlnk It wu a bod call," "lier tendency. as is ~ ~;::-i,:1·,,~._:., ' B Id "W ll bably the cue with most fn ..,.1..,., ,,, ,,..... v-,. .. ., rown ID · t we:re 1 thnt sltuaUon, Is to be rather 8wt1.,. • ,,..... ,,,.._ •• going tor the ball and our lop utute and ,.,. ......... live, and '-" °""" n ..,,._. • w..-e tangled." ,.--......... ""-1.ey ».. Clik_... 11 she's always easy to work °"",.,. .., "".., .. n "My move wU tor the ball with... ,... V-'> G.1 ... tt 11. """ o.r..-J1 W•w-i-h, ,,._.........,,. • and our reet got_ tan1led 11.11 he She entenod the w o r I d 11. ~ n. ""'--.. u (Jmle) moVftf to the balJ. ga-•fttr .... initlal con'•ct 0 .. , ... ''• Ill"-"' 11 -· rf ,,_ ...,, I"" LM ............ JI, \.ii "''""'-I ••K'.'tt •aa no tote l'ttr'ICe ln by lhe United Sl11e1 \\'orld ,....,.. ._ my mind,·· said Etti.a, the No. Ganw. for the Deaf Com-~ ~~ .._ I draft choice from Noire mlttte and 11-r. for one. """"'• " "" °"""" Da .....,... ..,. ..... ~ me. thJnb she'll rtpratnt ~If c.._. -M c~ ,......_. lnttrftrtd," I I Id II ~" •1 "-'-""' ••ro;1 wt ' DlllM ,,. &lft'-'9 Detroit coach Joe Schmidt. "She has a lot of 1111unl ~ 11 """_..,. ''Tblt'1 whit the man called. talent," he "l'I· ''She wu ~ _.... •• ..____. llM • ..... •' Dltll'llw He woukln't hive called It lf lt brought 10 I.hr' water young ..... ,..,. GIMh et tMt r:•-"t:• wuni lnttrftm'tt." and both the and her UICer : ...ii':' ,:_,,ww. .,._ "I don't know who lo-are well coordJnakd Jirls. Tbt • • ..t M ~ lerftred, lf ft. W'tre tft. potenUaJ )I there." ~ .... ¥~ ·~ N terlemx:o °" What." Van~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;wt Bndlln uld. "But lbry ..,. u Mil caDtd It. We wtn lleall .. a blfl pme aod lbry toot It swq !nm ua." GRAND PRIX 5111.l -Mr ..... _,...,......._ • ..._ .... -~" ....... ,..., ...... _ ..... ...... -.. .. -. ..... .._ .. _,.......,..,..,a \...._ __ --... .................... IMn'Y The Liem -11""'8 aod toot a ls.I balftlme lead on a polr cf Eat! M11111 neld .,.i. ct • aod 11 yardl and Own •·rard TO run . Diii tho -hall wu all DAYI IOU l'OlmAC • Grossmont vs Saddleback • • • • El Dorado v1 D-HID1 • • Edison vs Costa Mesa • • Huntington leach YI Anaheim • • Westem vs Marina • • K.atella vs Mission Viejo • • • • Westminster vs Santa AllCI • e Estancia vs Fountain Valley • • lrea vs Lag1111C1 • • Mater Del vs LI Wilson • • Tustin vs San Clemellfe • • • • Cor-del Ma r VS Los Alamlf9s • • University vs Saddleback • • Newport Harbor vs Loara • • e • ,, .......... -"" ........ -................. • • .... ..,_ ............ • • ·-• • • ·--• • • • City .. • AlllJICA'• with tho ....,,.Ion ol --. .... • "'* "· --D JeuSe'I t.cuchdown pu1 fnm LIAM DtllCT ~ fACtOn Aln'MOl-J:ID HAUi ,._ IN • ~ cowertnc a yll'dl and ........... •1• • •··• • ..._ • .....,. .., ,,,., • • t1ie flNI -· IL-----~·11:•:.:-.::~•:::•:"~ .. :;":,.. ____ _J.__•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_. ' i l J .j DAILY PILOT s Out By a Nose Bli1id Workers Do the Job U,I T'4~i. ... By DEAN C. MTU.Ell Ul't...-..•llltor NEW YORK Jn this er11 of mechanization, It's a happy occaslon when n.an beats the machine. That's happening In a special and heartening way at the SCM Corporatlor's Glidden Organic Olemicallj p I ant . Jacksonville, Fla. LAST YEAR the plnnt turn- ed out $20 mlllkn. of chemicals Including synthesi1.ed flavors and fragrances like lemon, speannlnt and nutme~ oi l used in !Oap. perfume, candies and pharmaceuticals. Manufacturer:i. of these pro- duct.! demand r i g i d con. sistency 1n the ingredients since consumers lose con- fidence in a perfume, a candv or a drug that doesn't look. smell and taste the same all the time. Computers are great for 90111e things. Co m p 1 e x machines like t h e com- puterized mas:; spectrometer ·and gas chromatagraphs used at the SCM ..ilidden plan can give a chemical breakdown on any of the oils. But the EXPERT 'SNIFFER' TESTS PERFUME SAMPLE Firm Hires Blind Because of Handicap machine has yet to be in- vented that comes close to matching the noses and taste buds of a humu11 being. And when sniffeMI are blind like State Tells Lo\\' l11terest Capitol News Service ·. • California ' Trea!W'er Ivy :;:Baker Priest has reported a . 'low interest bid or 4.6122 per- cent for $90 million in bonds to -finance veterans farm and home loans, state park and recreation and fish a n d wildllfe enhancement bonds. : • Low interest bid was made • Finance . \ Briefs e 727 Trijet• • the six members on the plant·s olfactory panel in Jackson· vUle, well that computer just doesn't stanc.: a chance. t LORENE ELLIS, Catherine M. Cipla, Brict Grant, Jr., Edward H. Milier, Minnie Jean Owens and Calvin Platt make up the panel that spends SEAITLE -New orders by Branifl and Delta airlines have pushed totaJ sa1es of the Boeing Tl:1 trijet past 1,000, making It the most popular commercial passenger plane in history, the company says. four hours .a day in a room specially designeci to aid their discriminating nose, already sharpened by the loss of the sense of night. 1be panel room is kept warm and moist to help the sniffers. It has ar air con- diUonlng system that wblslts away llnRerlnb odors without A noticeable draft. The room l!!I well-lighted even thou~h the panel could worl.. a; well in the dark. BEFORE ANY lemon oil. for example, I! shipped, the blind panel must afflnn that lhe ('llrrent batch tastes and smells just like every previous batch. To do that. all pro- duclion is compare<' to stan· dards. If the panel tums l'M'.l&!I down ()fl the batcli it doesn't leave the plant. And the panf>I has compiled a remarkable record in the eight years ii ha~ functioned . Not a single batch or synthesized oi! has been re- jected by a customer on the grounds tha\ it didn't match the standard. A typical test would go something like this: Each or the six panel members would receive three bottles, one co ... taining an identified standard. another an uni dent l f I ed duplicate of the standard and the third the unknown pro- duction sample. THE PANEL'S job is to tell which of the two unknown bot- tles contains the production sample and how close it matches the standard. After sniffing and-or tasting the co ... tents of the bottles, the panelist mark!> his decision on a computer punch card. SCM's blind panel was among the first group of employes hired by a major corporation because of a han- dicap. not despite it. R.P.T. Young, vice presi· dent in charge of the Jack.son· ville operation, summed up the panel's work by saying: ••Jn an age when increasing emphasis Is placed i n sophisticated technology, it's refreshing to see a vital func- tion that a machine can't perfonn." · by a syndicate managed 10intly by the Fllttt National City Bank of New York, Morgan Guarantee Trust Co., · ; Saloman Brothers and United , • California Bank. Mni. Priest • said Califor.ja taxpayers will pay apProximatel) $1 mill ion less in interest during the life of the bonds because of California's new AAA credit rating. Boeing said Delta. based in AUanta, had ordered 14 acJ.. vanced W's while Dallas - based Braniff purchased four, bringing totaJ sales of the plane to 1,005. e 1.-khef!d Bid BURBANK -Lockheed Aircraft has announced it signed a contract option to se ll an add.IUonal six of its TriStar L1011 airlinea to British Eu~ pean Airways. Money's Worth Warranty on New Cars Rates Careful Search VWRefunds $250,809 WASHINGTON (UP!) Volkswagen of America, Inc .. bas llgne<l fAl refund about 'Ibil ls "a great vote of co~ fidence" in the new jet, said Deniel Haughton, Lockheed chairman. BEA earlier had ordered 11 of the planes. e Keko Co. • $200 to each of 1.247 persons • • who purchased Porsche 911 model cars in the United States between January and March. SAN DIEGO -Boards of directors have approved the aequlsitk>n of Kel co Co. of San Diego by Merck and CO., Inc., of Rahway, N.J. The Price Commission said the agreement ls part of a price reduction plan submitted by the company. The refund will t o t a I $250,!09. Under the agreement, which comes up for a vote of Kelco shareholders here Oct. 18, Kelco shareholders would get 3.4 shares of Merck stock for each Kelco share. Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved In many CUM Proparallon H dredo of pe.tlmta ahowed thlo fAJ be ln>e In many ........ In fact, many doctors, them~ 1181.we., wie Preparation 119 at r-.nmmd ii for their tam. Ilia "-1ation H oin- or IUppoait.orim. • civeo prompt, t.omporary relief from ouch pain and Itching and actually helpo llhrink ....i1in1 of hlmonboldal u.. wee caUled by inftammetion. : ' ' • T-by-onhun- I I I I t 'eautlful Stick-on LABELS ~A1.INC~ Penonalbed • Stylish • Effldent Order For YovrMlf or • Frl•nd May be ut•d on •nvtlopt1 •• rtturn tddrt11 le.bell. Alto very handy •• idtntification label1 for m1tldn9 ptnonel items such •• l>ookt, rKon::ls, photot, etc. labels stick on 9la11 and mty ba used for marking homt c•nn.d focci Items. All labal1 are pri nted with 1tylilh Vogua type on fine quality whit .. tummtd ,,.p.,. I By SYLVIA PORTER With the '736 now crowding Into automoblle showrooms 8CfOSI the land, rnlllions ()f you are or soon wlll be shop- ping for a new car. Even if you're only a casual shopper. you'll ask questions about parts~ options, operating costs, financing charges, etc. But few of you will ask any questions about th e car·s war· ranty. You know you have no negoli · atlng power over that: you either must tak e the warranty offered with the ca r or leave It. PORTE I YET the warranty. a pro- mise of quality nnd safety of a car. can be critically im· portnt to you -for better or for worse. Jt can be worth cash In your pocket : car manufacturers estimate that lhry srend brtwren $110 anrl $120 prr cnr on warranty work over the life of the warranty. Or getting a warranty fulfill ('(! can be a nightmare of frustra· tion .expensive delays. shoddy re pairs. misunderstandings from which you r cnr (and you~ never recover. A typical auto warranty to- day covers nil parts of the car -e1cepl tires and batteries -agaimt defects of material!! ancl manufacturing for 12.000 milt'! or 12 months, whichever ('(Imes fim. Some warranties nre broader, and on tht 19738. some warranty programs are being significantly expanded. AND TllES1'~ NEW 1973 dcvelopmenlJ heighten rather than diminish the Importance nr knowing how you can Jtet the n10111t out of yo ur wt1rrnnty protN:tlon. \Vhcrever you live. shop ror w:irr:intl"s ju11t as you 11ho11 f11r fllhei mnjor fenturcs or ~ car F.x11mlne earef'Ully their \' <\ r Io u a r~ion.,, ex· c-cpt lons 11nd limitations - aru1 ln which Jook .. llke war. rAntlet actually will differ. Since the 1111jorlty o I manufacturing defec:ts will show up well berort the ex· plrntion of even the shortest new cnr warranty, more Im- portant lhan the dUl'IUon of the •w11rrent)' are the ex· cepUons to 111: coveragt. For lnstanct: e1ceptlons such as bltterles, Ures and "normal malntentince Items," 1 n d re!l'lrlctlons such a 1 rf" qulrf':ments that you bavt cer· tnin maintenance operaUOna iJCrformed at tcheduled tlmeJ In a manufacturer-1uthortzed service ~hop . TAKE A GOOD look al the dealer's service fa c i I it i es before YoU buy. You may not be able to judge a service shop, but if it is messier or dirtier than others you have seen, this may be a clue that repair work also will be slop- py. Be prepared for trouble if the service facilities comprise Jess than 60 percent if the dealer's establishment. Try to see the service manager, even If you don 't feel qualified to judge his competence. lf he is hard to fmd now, he will be equally hard to find later. Once you have bought a car. do your par. by maintaining it according to the schedule in the owner's manual. Have the shop doing the work note it in the schedule and keep copies of work orders and receipts. ( lt1aintenance steps you are typically required to take to keep your warranty valid In· elude: changing oil every three months and oil filter every se- cond oil chan~e; cleaning carburetor nir filler every six months and replacing air filter every other year. l IF YOU RA. VE a problem you believe is covered by the warrant). take the car to the dealer from whom you bought it. Get a written estimate on what mu.st be done and on whether or not the work will be covered by the warranty - before you authorize the dealer to ~· Give him adequate time to do the work properly. If you dO not get satisfac- tion. write to the manufac· lurer's "zone manaf:ler" or factory wne service manager. You can get his name and ad· dress from the dealer ( and simply asking ror this may make the dealer m o r e cooperative). OR WRITE DmECTL y to the manurncturer In Detroit If the 7.one manager doe.m't get result11. A rourteous and In- format ive letter. giving full . !lpprctprlate details. will have the best chnnct or success. Or if Available. use the manurac- turtr-. toll free "action line" for cwtomus with com· plalnla. And moat rundamen\al rule or all. choose your auto dealer unly aft.er you've checked him out with care -for prevtntlon Of trouble b 1Ull more efrcc· Ove than any other muve )'OU could possibly make. l.eam ae much as you con about the dealer's reputation for honor- ing wnrrantles befott you commit yourself Mic quct- tlons. chetk with o t h f' r cu.stamen of the dealer. zero In on lhll area of wnrrnntll!tl u carefully aa on thP more obvious ooe1 c{ the automobile l!Jelf. W al_l Street~ • • • • Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. s e e m s Ii kely greater here in the Or- and it's growing everr day. We couldn't prove it, of course, but it thcit the percentage • 1s even ange Coast area . . ThaYs why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. • Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in the DAILY PILOT plant every · trading day at the rate of more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only 12 minutes to move the entire New York and American Stock Exchange reports from the canyons of Wall Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. And when technology finds a way to beat that speed record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the first to use it to bring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that means business is the I Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! Here'• here'• her.'• CHAA\.IE BROWN ••• and LUCY ••• Ind LINUS ••• and VIOLET ••• and n1rl!'• SCHROEDER ••• atld le.It but not IM•t, he rt'• SNOOPY Pbo11e 642-4321 (Circulation Department) t o have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally. • :J~6:;;";'~1l~Y;P1~l~DT===--=:----:::~o~od"'•Y-°'1"'"o~bo"'• ._'.1lf7l11 TOMGHT'S TV IDGIDJGIITS ABC 0 6:30 -Monday Night Football. The Oa~­ land Raiders Uke on the Houst<>n Oiler.; tonight NBC 0 8:00 -Laugh-In . Michael Landon o! "Boo.am.a" ls the special guest. while Mama Cass El1lot, Steve Allen, Della Reese an d Henny Young- man n1ake cameo appearances. CBS B 8:30 -Here's Lucy. When Lucy objects to son Craig's football activity, he brings home a convincing advocate in Broadway Joe Na ma th. . KCET fD 8:00 -V.D Blues. This hour-long SP<" cia1 launches a cam paign to combat tM nationwide epidemic of ve nereal disease. Actors Jan1es Coco and Roberts Drivas play VD germs in one vignette. KTI'V m 12:00 -"Abbott and Costello Meet the lj Invisible Man ." Bud and Lou take up where they k!!t off in "Meet Frankenstein" in t his 195 1 com- ' edy. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening OCT09ER 9 '"°llO!liil1lm-8 ,...,_ "Tht M111Y faces o1 ~ Fllnd'I" D lIJ(J)tlllNR -~ ... F ..... OIU1nd Ibiden 'i:L Hovs· b:IA Oilm. 0 fill WIW Wat ·"'-·-.... USMC QI) PIOllElf Clnmle .. IS m ... hr1 Vtiwicl !Ill-...... 1511_ ... mi...,...._ mnr.. SIMI'* l:JD (I) CIS ... (11 llltn' Crfff11 Shew m WJ Cllffltb Show II) Cllllpl'1 llllftd Q1l CAE Colle11 Cl'edil Course f!l IWil1 Tlllll11 ,,.., m.._CMIOI.,. Q)Cr• Acres m-·-&J n.t 4Z,.. QJ llttll blClb Ste'll'art. Hen ry food•, lnrtr Stmra. UB.in (Fonda) lf1ds 1 bind ol !1M- bootin1 1dventure11 inlo lhe unsus- ptetina: town of FirKreek, tre1Unf trwble ind stirrlna: tempers. O Fonua loil11 @ The Aiwtnblrll o rn m"" ....., """'""' With Death" Lou Gossett runts 11 Rn. Toby .lont'S, 1n e•·]unkifi·lumed· minister, who is thwarted In his WOl'k ol re h1bilitatina: olher addicts when he Is framed fo1 • p1rt1le vio- lation ,th1rse and then set up !or 1 sniper's bullet. EE Un ¥ml'lt htl lecofdir fE I IJl(IALi VO LA Local hetl~ officl1ls. f1ee clinic peBonne l 1nd VD lduct!Oll IS$1U how widesprt!ld the problem is, whit you 11!ould know 1bout II. whert help can bl found. ot Tiit Y11a1•l11 al> Dn•• t.30 0 ()) Dtris DIY SllD'I' CJ Bennett'• dMna at winninr the 1nnual Man of th• Year Aw1rd 1s San Fund• co·s most 011tstandin1 dfutn Is In peril wlltn. durin11n 11tempt ta 1ld Doris. he is arrested by the pollc:ie as 1 peepinr lam. ([l .lobJI WIYM Thelttt om-1:t011am-illl "" "~ e ..w. <C> <Dir) ... CM....t t:45 m Sii c..ec111 rnorib wtt• Delttl" (mys) '67-Ceorp Mt· hlrb, Laur1 Dmn. 10;00 0 (i) DI IW ain tnllt' SllMI (I) WMdlh n.utN Sonptrm Diahlnn Canon, r.cmedl· 0 Wllal'1 My UH? In Marty ftldman, the musie1I m 1 LM lJICf rroup of Hines, Hines 1nd Dtd ind m I Dn111 11 ,..,.... tele\'isiofl producer Sheldon lton1nf @ a.n.t '72 1r1 Bill Cosb1's l\le!h. fD ff., DllM!le II} Dnlpet m '"*b. 0111 .... a.,. ''Wh11 b om""' Clay?'" 0 Dtpartrltnt S CE 0 a.. Tieu Ctt1 • Mui« 0 Cr11111 F111rtt11 Jad Rourlla 9 MIN: ''Whm t1M SWtw11l hosts. Altl)fllty Melvi n Belll ind fadl" crim1 lill!lers L.A. Police Dile! Cd a;) .... 11f Pini"' Davis, Cily Atlar11ey Rar11 Nnebtrah m--Rlctr Ind Special Aaent in Clll11e ol Unit· 7 : 30 ed Sl1te1 Stcret Service Robert L 8 CHEVROLET INVJTES ~i:il~~1:.! iuntt. * YOU TO SIT DOWN lilJ S.,n•• c.ont •- ANO SEE "STANO UP !ll "'"' u .. AND CHEER." IIl '""' S..b• II......., Mn1'1 StHlll u, 1114 a:> V1riedad CMer Miiton Bent 1uest1. al Sports Chllfnl' 0 TIM fhw l"rlol Is llfht Ell IUt&do• II ttll St1 (I) llMi Ptf'fllt 11111 10:30 CI! Asll the •.• D """°" $ Mnh: IC) (Zllr_) "lfl'ri.. o T•lti 1.a tatllll ti I Clllfliflttt'' (11tt) '64-(I) W11ltd O.ld If Alhl Yul Bryn111r, .ll™cl Rult. Q) Trve Mvtrituni m 9NEW"""T·l-ME' Qt """' (C) "Tho ~!Ji• q."'" • ffi42 '1111 *"THAT GtRL" !!JO""""S""'"" ID"" a1rt m0n.,.i 1t'°'BDOIIlilillill•.., Ill"""''"' rn oo ®'" ... fl3 rll QI C11'11n P09ul1r Chlntst 0 Ont Sttp BtJOftd extrt:de/spof'I mMmtnl 00 M11t111I Diiion m Tlll MflltuNt' ' 0 Movl1: ''Slndu1ry'' (dr1) 'li1- GI!) Mlpllitl W.WC llllW LM R1mltk. E!J 11le Addlm F•llr m Tnrttl tf Coftffqu111CtS 1:m 8 (() ....... ''Tiii Drummer'' ~ :~ Dam......... Mlth••I Lin· m Clf'Mf TM Amlttro111 doll (ol NBC'1 "llOUIWI") fuab II I dlr.dot gf commtrtltlL 11:15 IE blltt C:111111 m NEW TIMEI ll:lO f) (J) cas Lm ""'" (CJ '"" * "HOGAN'S HEROES" KfiHllH "lie.'" <11o11 ·12-V1ntt111 m Hll'lt'• th,_ Price, Debi• P1111. t8 T~•/""' 111nM (I) MMlt: (C) "Dllfl l~ tM Ju11r'f" fJ) ......... Cetlil (ld'f) '54 -0.111 Mdrtws, Ntnne teona'e 1udlencn. Ctain. fJll OJIHCJACI VD It. Bl'Old· 0 llSil CD JollnllJ C.non BobbJ •17 1nd film st1n Jamu Coco •ftd Ot1r1n It substi1'.r1• ho~. RoOtrt Otl't u pl11 VD rtrnn In one 0 lhbtrt "-Dtni•a SllGW \licnt"' of thll hout·lonl 10tclal (j) Mwlt: (C) '°Fli1!11 10 M111" 1tunchln1 1 l1t·n1thln1 cempal1n (Ki.Ii) ·~2--CltMron Mitchell Julia Child Out Of'Frying Pan' NEW YORK IAPl -Pl>t lhe television set back In the kitchen, molher. Julia Child will stay 011 the air after all. At least w1til the end of March 1973. the end or this month. Then previous "Cher ' e p I s o d es would be rerun until the end of Dt<.-ember. IVES SAID neither WGBH or Polaroid anticipated a financial crisis when the latter ENTERTAINMENT 1-lcr Mow , "The French Chef." just got some badly needed br~ad -about $80,000, to be exact. \Vithout it, her award-winning cooking secrets wou ld have left pub Ii c television by the cud or this December. decided against bankrolling '--------~ the show again. ·rhe n1oncy came from lhe l'olaroid Corp , which un- derwrote the show for three years before decidin~ Lhis spring it would be unable to do it again during p u b I i c television·s 1972 fall season. If s t'Orporate change of heart ended a financial crisis that developed '4'hen no other co1npany cou ld be found to un- derwrite the proceedings in the Child scullery. The money arrived none too late. "They (Polaroid) assumed -as indeed we did. too - that we wouldn't have any trouble finding an un- derwriter," he said. It turned out that many C'OOpe.rations inquired about underwriting the show, but none was willing to sign on the dolled line after au was said and done. Restrictions against advertising may have been the reason. No commercial advertising is permitted on the 223 PBS stations in the United States. Underwriters or PBS shows only are allowed to say they made them possible with a "BOY, WAS it ever in the grant. Period. nick of time.'' said David 0. With the timely arrival or Ives. presi dent of sta tion fresh Polaroid money, Julia WGBH in Boston, which pro-Child will continue her non- duces the show for the Public commercial cooking in a total Broadcasting Service. of 12 or 13 new shows WGBH He said the Pol a r o id plans to make this year. Two Encore Concerts By College 'I'bc Golden West College Singers and stage band, who received standing ovations in their spring performances of "Rock Requiem." will repeat Lalo Schifrin's stirring music in two encore concerts this moo th. "Requiem" and the 75--voice college choir will be featured at the Laguna Beach Irvine Bowl next Sunday at 3 p.m. in a benefit concert to save the renewal late last week came -~ about 48 hours before a THESE SHOWS and 13 historic chapel of St. Mary's decision had to be made on reruns will keep her on the air Episcopa] Church in Laguna v.·hether to keep the show through M a r c h. And while Beach. somehow struggling along or tha~'s going on, PBS will On the same program are close it for good. decide whether to keep ''Chef" th Ro · B Trio ·th The main probl em, he said. as a regular in the 1973 , e nrue rown , wi was not so much a lack o( schedule. Whlch means more Brown on piano, Jack Sperling cash as a question of whether money must be found . on drums, and Jack Prather, WGBH could commit already The real factor, however, string bass; and guitarists crowded production facilities may be whether Mrs. Child Herb Ellis Joe Pass and their for a show with a doubtful wants to keep on cooking. As • future. Ives points out, "Julia is cut-All Stars. ting down on her com· Tickets are $3 general ad- The station had enough re-maining to tape r 0 u r new mitments next year." mission and $5 for box seats, shows th at would last through -and may be obtained by AYI 6,45 SAT. & SUN. 12,45 Woody Allen's "E rjthing ®~~always wanted to know about * PlUS "HAROLD AND MAUDl ... WK.DAYS b,45 SAl.&SUN.12:45 IKIAIO WIDMAll "WMINTHI llGIMDS Dll" tP.G.) .... "TMI GULPIPPll c.1.m1 COMPANY" (P.I.) 2ND BIG WEEK "ISLAND MAGIC" FANTAmc NEW SURFING FILM by L JoM HttUcod: W~Allell "TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN" Aho (PGJ writing Box 986, Laguna Beach 92652, or calling 494- 9965 or 494-3542. The second appearance of the Golden West Singers will be at Magic Mountain in Valencia October 23 in a special program in observance of Veterans' Day. The choir will sing the "Requiem" at 2 and 4 p.m. Tickets are $5. llCHAID IUHON U.9Ull WILCH IN lltJ "BLUEBEARD" DUSTIN HOFFMAN ANNE IANCROFT "THE GRADUATE" Cavett Hosts Slaow VD 'Revue' Tonight By JAY SllAR.Btrn' because we 've got a VD NEW YORK (AP) _ We'U ep~lc on our hands ... and have trouble explaining this, other parts of our anatomy." but there's an entertainment C.avett wlll eUract the young viewers. Alas, the show's show oo tonight • b o u t opening skit may drive them venereal disease. ll'I\ on away immediately. lt's a long, beca$e VD is a topic most precious saga, written by parenb have trouble 9 • Jules Feif!er, about a lady plalniog to thJse v.ilo count _ who learns from her doctor their kids. that she has syphilis. And that he ga ve it to her and The program is "VD Blues." doesn't want her to name him lt stars Dick C.Svett and lasts as the donor. an hour. It'll appear on most "You said you loved me of the Public Broadcasti~ once," the healer pleads. System's 223 statiros Including "That was the once" lhe lady explains. ' KCET, et 8 p.m. and an hour It's Feiller's way of ii· earlier in Central Time states. It '11 be succeeded in at least lustrating what Cavett ex- 85 cities by follow-up shows plains in a few sentences - that explain local y D that tracing VD carriers often pM:>lems. and hopefully inform is difficult because some doc- thoae who know or fear they tors \ill'On't report them to have VD where to go and who public heoltb officials. The to call for treatment. usual given reason is that this 1be show makes a valiant violates t be doctor-patient try at oomblnlng good en-relatioo!itip. that he hacl written the whole show. lit has unoannily ac- curate eyes and eara. Aod taste. And he ha.• tt au down -the clinic closed for lack of official care and funds, the black m ilit an t s and stuffy bureaucrat arguing in tongues only television c a m e r as understand, the officious nUl"Se who turns away the scared, in- recte<I ghetto girl. His contribution ls well worth the wail. It's a shame that it arrived so lllte in "VD Blues," which a s en- tertainment ls composed of one-third brillance and two- thlrds crudity and boredom. The show, ]X'Oduced by WNET here, will anger many. But despite Its faults, it also may save Uxxsu1ds of young people from veneral disease. And that alone is ailficienl reason to osk them to watch , It. tertatnment with sound in-ll the viewers can wait, formation about VD; Its =~~~~~;:;:_:;.~Joe Garagiola theory is that the straight a~ aod "nurse" explain 00w VD • proacll usually raus on deal is -.acted, ---', what it Lea VIDg 'Today' ears and causes slumber. "¥ o;;GU does to the body and how it AND 11IE message Is alme<I can be cured. NEW YORK (UPI) -Joe at the young, entldng them '!be worst pert ol the show Garagiola, former rn a j o r with brief guest appeamnces bas actors . James Coco. and league catcher who bas ap- by members of music's young ROOert. Drivas, respectively , establishment -Arlo Guthrie cast as GonorThea a n d peared on NBC s Today Show and scruffy Dr. Hook and the Syphilis, in a 91k-minute skit since 1~7, ~nounced Thurs- Medicine Show. that is bound to needlessly of· day he 1~ leaving the show .. Cavett, who majors in wry fend v i e w e r s by its Garagiola, a World Senes comment each week night on clumsiness. hero for the St. Lo u l s ABC, stays in character for Cardinals in 1946, said be and "Blues." And he's a fortunate THE BEST segment, written his wife had "discussed lt over choice as hoot. He explains the by Clayton Riley, illustrates a tong period and decide<! I .. two biggies" _ syphilis and the real problem of getting VD simply wasn't s p e n d l n g gonorrhea -in the terms.,-tr_ea_ane_n_t_tn_the---'ghe-tto_. W_ou_l_d_enou _ _ogh_lirn_e_w_it_h_rn_.:y_r_anill_:_Y·" most people use, yet remains disarming eoough to get the message under way before the "wash-}'O\n"·mouth" cries commence. "VD is the gift that keeps on giving," he warns. "VD is the disease of people w h o love people. And nowadays there evidently are a lot of young people loving young people 2 Of TN Y..,.1 Top "Sleepen" Gl!NA IOWU.NDS "MINNIE and MOSCOWITZ" Aho -l1tell Henry h1 o new co...edy by MUo For.al ''TAK I NG OFF'' hf'li Colet -IPGl Comfortably Air Conditioned M1rt9fl ar1• -111 CCllltr fltl ''T HI: OOOl'ATH•lt'' Diiiy If It• P.M. Sit. & Stin. II t:• • S=ll · 11• P.M. ..,_, Aw1rd Wl11111n1I JI~ l'lllMUI • "KLUTI:" _...,_ "SUMMlill OF 'O" l1tll l11Cll9r Acldtm'f Aw1rd WLnn1r1 Jolln W1y111 ''TRUii: GltlT" "PAINT YOUlt WAGON" lttll In Co"r (PG) '" THIS ADVERTISEMENT WORTH .•• "IUTTIR,LIES Altl 'Rl!I" !POI GoNll M .... & lfttlrd Allllln 1111 "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" ONE FREE CARNIVAL RIDE (~ IAllRA ITlllSAID t•AM O'lllU I "WHAT'S UP DOC ?" (G) ''DO•'' srA•T Tiil llYOlU· TIOI WITMOUT Ml" tPGl 1111 COiby nd Robert C1lp I• "HICKEY AND BOGGS" 7:00 AND 1D:50 ALSO "RETURN OF SABATA" 9:00 Co1tl11u:ous Su:ndot Motlltft 2~00 ·-CINFDDMF l f · · .... ~r:::t:r= --. -.. STADIUM I · .. · .. --. ...-.-.~----.. ·STADIUM l .•.:· .. .--.i; ,.......--.. ' • --------... STADIUM •3 ·.:• .. .!:..~--~ ---~,,.. STADIUM •I .·,. .. -..· .... ~--~ IMrlM ar9 ... " "THI OODflATHl!lt" (R} • "THI! WILD OUNCH" (Ill 11111 Cl'Ay • Rllller'I Cltlll "MICKEY & M>OOS" fPOI • "RITUllN 01' SAOATA" (PO) Ll11 Mlnelll "CAllAllET" CPOl • "LAST SUMMER" tA:l "THO NIW CIKTUlllONS~ 1111 wllll 0-11 C. kotl ... "PLAY MISTY FOii Ml" IR) FIEST A de COST A MESA OCTOBER 13, 14, 15, 1972 Costa Mesa Park in Costa Mesa, Park Ave., 18th St • SHOW OF SHOWS CARNIVAL With the purchase of one Carniv1\ ride ticket, this -.d.,ertisment entitles holder to ONE FREE CARNIVAL RIDE ticket of equal value of tick1t purch1sed. Begins at 5 P.M. Friday, October 13, 1972 Opens at 10 A.M. Saturday, Octobor 14 Opens 12 Noon Sunday, Octobor lS Mexican Dinner e Rides e Auto Show e Game Booths • Entertainm1nt e Food Booths MISS COSTA MESA "QUEEN CONTEST". "The Swin9in9 Years" Americ1n Music 1910 to 1972 ~RAND PllZ! Week lo H-•ll for two OTHIR ,Rl!ES TV-STIRl,0-1D 1 .. 0. llCYCLE to camb1t th• nltlon·•ld• epldtmlt 0 Mowlt: IC) ''lht A1111t1111 Dt. AOOITION.l.L. l'R•ll ltlDI COUPONS AVAILAOLI AT TMll COIT.I. MllA CHAMllll 01' COMMllllCI :e".::':~~~· ~!:';~,':;-;.:.:;""'"'"'· STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR cm 1.1 tlllMUblt 1 , 12:00 m ....,..: "Abflltt •IMI c.nt1111 \--::~'..'....'.:'.:'.'._"._ _ _::~~~:_=_:__::_:_::_::::__:=_:::_::'..::_::_=:__.:_:_::~~=~=:.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ID Mwtt: (Zltt} ....., Dlwt" Mitt tM lrrwltlblt M111" (com) '51 (l'Ofll) '37-lnol Flynn. Kif Fnndt. -Sud Abbot. Lou Costello. t:•. IWf llffRll ... 12:30 8 H1"'"7 PM! t:OO 8 ()) ltllt'1 l.uqi Broadlt" Jot OJ Collftfly lluMc •11111111, alllll 11atr1n1 11 hhnself. 1:00 D (J) ..... croan fWOtds ""~ Luer wtltn &he obltdll to son Cnlt'• Jaoltllll tc· 1:10 (]) Mfn rhltla llld lhl Ntw foR Jib' 1111 1:15 0 J11ns ,..., bits lo mmlflc.t htf that Crlll tin 1111 atklno of • tot l:lll D Mttlr. "TIM Mn 1-."""" qlllUIMcl li&'fll"' (COii) 'U -Jtck IW!r. 0 911.llllC--ICl SMU-.ICl "-tnr tdnl (2llr) ""fftcnilr' ('m) '67-Jtf!ltl '!J-Joen Lalle. Formt l11eklr. Monday U:OO 8 ''no l rHI C.oblo" (.,.) 'Jl -4.kiflt T•mltoff, Millen 11111111. I"° m ....... (""l '50 -llo"'1 DAmME MOVIES '"'°'·""" H•Uol l:S08""' M--... ""' lltlt Tiii" <•11> '41-Ut1\ (cont) 041-ltlr 111111'-M. htfld• ........... ""' ......... Mol'IJOfL ,._. 8 (C) '"M.,.r (dra) 'S4 -B ~ *"' TMMr 1coni> ''2 DI'* G1blt, LIN Tlll'Mr. -Ru litnbon. tO;ll (I) •rn. ~,. (drt) '61 -J:OO CE (C) •-C.111¥• ltlf)'' (drl) 'M llotitfl ltyan, .W.1 OllllMI'. -Anne Btrt11, StM Cochrlft. 8 ·-lo .... !•Ill) '43-0 (t) '~•"'"" Port I !"") '" MttJ Mlfti\ Dk:t Ptrwlll -shlrifJ Mid.tint. llllthfll Ctlna. 1; WAlllL&Y --.... . . .. -·-··--------- AU WlWAMO llAUTIUll IN flUATlt 1e t'CUlllTAW"lll .... 11 -... -·--e.. -'lilciiOi. -.. . ..- IN TlllATtl 'I: ~Y. UCUlll'YI lffAtllllllT ltl TMlATIU' 1 A•O #J G&GMSC.ICOft lllKTDICll -TURW _.. -.... DAil V PILOT J7 • 1922 Goi Siari ID For the R e eord Wat.er Skii1ig Anniversary Not.ed Marriage Licenses .1.HLERING-HALL, MlchMI LOl,lli, U, of tin Pltcitntl•, COiii """'' 11!1d NltlCY Loul11, J3. of 113.S N. 11""""'6rd DrlWI, FVll1r1on. Rl!YES, JR.-OARCIA, A11111t111, '10, ol ~1'1 Cr1ndttl O•IYI, Hunttngtan ikltll Ind M1rl1 dtl S«otro v1ldlvl1, :H, of 13"2 Locust, W•lmln1ter. DAVIS-HART, J1m11 C1VWOOd, 23, ol ltU1 NMlrilnd st .. HunllnttOn &u<.11 encl ll:*'nd• M1t, 11, ot 731 Griffith Pl.ce, Ll!IUIHI IBM<h. W.1.L"TO N..(..EflLANC, GrtQOrY WIHl1m, n. of "°' Wlrllll'". Apl. 8-3'.I. Hun-tington 9HCll alld ll:ovl-Rl11, 1', of 1•11 C1mMnll Lani, Huntington .... ,. ASAWA-ELLIOTT, 11111 Tervo. .U, ot 1702 llermudl Aw., W"tml111!1r Ind NalllfM J111n, A7, of 1102 Bennudl Av1 .• W"tmln1flr. WEST.COOK, am. ,,, of 31102 Mer Vl1t1, Soul[I' L19un1 Ind JOll!lll, 20, of °' Sftl)'I. S1lbOI. °'-SEH<MARKETOS, Gto1'91 Moge111, 51, of m L-Clllf Ori.,.., L1g1.1n1 lkKll and Wtrdtlndl Voll, «t, of 1021 w. 11th St., ilnt1 ""'· BARTHOlOMEW·PRATHER, ll:l<herd E1rl, n of 1451 Jeffr-v Rd., 5Pat• 111, lrYlnt 11\d Penny Sut1nt11, :n, of 119311 Blnnfl' Drlw, Apt. 46. Garden Gr-. SEIVER-NOWAK, S~ Gregon" 211, of 1714 Ollw PllCt, COlll M~ and Shtfrl Anfl, 11, of f SI Wtll WJh.an, C011t1 Mii.a. GOODE-MOREHEAD, Jtrnts Harold, 3$, of •u w. Filth, Lo. Angel" end Linda L... ,., of 110\o'J Amt111v1t, aalb<WI lll11NI. !IAICK·BENNETT, 01vl~ LOI.Ill, JO, of GI 8um1lclt A~1., Lllf Angt1lt1 Ind Mery Loolw, 27, ol 111 Emer1ld 81y, L.lllllfl'll Btac.h. GAMILE·VIETOR, Biiiy JOI, 12. of 13101 Wlll1mttte St., WH tmln1ter Biid kiri!! Anfl, 11, ot ll691 OlympUI Orlw, Wnlmln1tw. REAO.SHAGMAN, RonntY St111ley, n of 1'60 W. P1lm Lint, Apt. 30, Anllltlm Ind Lllldl N11lr1t, 11, ol 1'101 Nll'IC'I L" Dr1.,., W•1tm1n•ler, HOLDER-GOLDMAN -M I ch 1 t I Oougl11, 25 of 2117 Harbor Blvd., Apt. A... Cotta Mna ind Sandri llu, \f, of 2211 Harbor Blvd., Apl. A- l , C:OSl1 Mn.I SALA2.AR·8VRGETT -T II o m 1 1 01111t1, If, ol 1:107 W. Hlghl1nd, S1n11 Alll Ind Lorr1!t11 V1ltrlt. lt, of 1"'2 Slclcvp L.lnt, Hunllngkln 8Hcl'I DENK·WIUGHT -Robert Ali.n, 19, of 1nt1 San Matto Founl1ln ValltY" 1nd 81rblr1 Joa11, 21, ol 620Ct Edlngiir. Apt. 107, Hun!lngkln lltach O'NEIL·POTTER -C n rl 1top lltr W11111"'' 21, of >-4152 C1ll1 Fortuna, C1p!S1r1no B1acll Ind Karen Suzanne, n. of -.CS2 Calli Fortuna, C1pl11r1no ,_, OTAGVRO.PATTE~SON -Wlllrld Shlgtkl, n, ol 17661 Srl"1ny L1n1, Hunllnqton lltach Ind B1rbarl Ell•lbltll, 26, of 1'5<13 Mount Kibby St .. Foonltln Valley QVtNN·llAEMEll:THON -P11r1ck, 21, ol 1371 lll kM St., Apt. A. Costa Mts1 and Debrl Lynn, '20, of •1~2 WlndlGIQ, L.I Palml LACK·WADOELL -Mir!( Stephen, lt, of 140.Sl Jackwn, MldlflllY Cltv Ind ~.,. Do!"tln. 11, of 14651 JKk-. Mldw1y Cltv SOTO.RVIZ -F rencl1to Gor>11t11, 51. of 11171 • 3rd. FOl.lnlaln Volley and Eudowlft Torr", 33, ol 11171 -3rd, Fount11n vallt'f' OILLMAN-llENOER -James Kurt, l~. ol im E. Oc.t1n Front, ll1lboa and Ol1nne Merit, It, of 1741 Pl1uo di! Sur, 1111-WALKER·HOWARICA -W 111 1 am Cherles, "5. of Tn6~ Santa Fii Clrclt, Fount1fn VlllltY Ind 81rtMir1 Ja-11. 44. ()# 139 N. Vin Nfsa AYI., ~11!1 '"' WO 0 LS E Y • HVNSWOll:TH, Frlftk AffT90, Jr., 21, ot 2201 N. E1slsld• AW., 5a11l1 Ano end Oeborlll Lyn, It ol t12S Belvedere. Irvine LESSARO.ECHEVAll:RIA -Edward 0m1n, J9, of 101IO Cunnlngn.am Avt .. Wnlmlnster and Noreen, 11, of 213 w. Blu<!I Dell, Ananelm SPURLIN.CONOVER -A-I Ev.A, Sol, of 2119 Juniper, Apt. 1, 5ant1 Ant 1nd Janet C1rmen, 31, of ~11t G!br11!er, CotlB Mnl KVOICK.COCKEll: -O.vld Robert, If, ot 111157 Nlcl•Oh, Apt. c, Hunllng!On llnch Ind Susan lrtM, II, of 6192 NIY•lo, Westminster SMOTHEll:S•DANES -Edward Carl, 18, ol 13701 Purdy, G1rd1n GrOU'I ind JaqUOllne Su, 17. ol 1$11 • 21•1 St., Apt, 8, Wntmln1ler POTTER·llANIC -Mlchael Genl. 21, of 3t752 C1!11 FOl"lunc. C11pl1!r1no Biid\ ~ Lindi Ell11btlh, 21 , of 2Jt AV1n1<141 Montalvo, Sin Clernt1111 SHURTLIFF-ROBERTSON -0.Yld ll:1y, 21, of 657 ~arnant, LlgUM Inch and IC1thleen LM. 1S. of Ast P1arl SI .• 1.119un8 B111ch HALVE RSON·PANICO -Olnnlt Ltt. n, of a 5. Parton, Santa AN Ind C1rlt1, 17, of IO«t WQr1lty Drtw /4.pl. A. Wn!rnl111ltr 5TEWAltT-MICFAWH -Gordon Elblt, 11, al 1611 Hl'W'llt L1,.., Ga""" Grov1 and JOWi!• D1n1111t, If. of '°n Glenwood Ori~•. Hunnng1on ·-TANNER·HART -ll1rry Jan. 33, of l6l1 M.lolitQa, 01na Point 1nd Sll1ron /4.nn, JO, of 3394 C-r Lantern, 01111 Point DELtNQ.PAll:ICEll: -Ker>1•lh John, 2$, al 2'75 5. COlll Hl9llW9y, LIOUl'>I 8tKll 1!1d C1rolyn. 27, of 297$ S. COlll Hlghw1Y, Ll!IUN IHdl OAUGHTRY+GOERWtTl -Rk lllrd G1l1, 13, of 1111 P111l1rlno, COl11 M.U alld Dorothy Sl1k1. 27, of 11' Sftlnlh St .. """""''°" lleac~ Births IOUTM tO ... IT COMMUNITY MOSP'ITAL Stt>ltmblr 11 Mr. and M•i. T..-.nc• Petrick Kyne, 791' AIPI"' W1y. L1gurn1 lle1cll, glrl Saptllnbltr n Mr. Ind Mr•. Wll!llm L" Hk lt, 1111, C1lte Sal! Remo, Sin J u a n C10111rano, bO'I' Mr. 1nd Mrs. D1vld Monro. Flll'IMll, 1?SJ2·2 Sun•-• Av1., G1rdln Grow, """ Mr. ind Mri. Dlrr1lclo v11en1ue11. 611 Sleepy Hollow, L1Vun1 SNch, boy Mr. and Mrt. llUrl<lll\ s . Wet!, 31102 M.lor Vltll ll:d., So. LIQUlll, boy Mr. and M11. Rltlllrd '°· De51\I"'• 151n Adel1nto, l..aD11111 N~, bo'I' -n Mr. 1r>d Mrs. IC.ennlll'I Lit C1rwn. 2'1» C1ltt Mtrl1, Mlsilon \l"lljo. glrl S.pttlftblr n Mr. and M.rs. llO'l"d WIYllf "''""· l.011 Slnll Cl1r1-l,, Oena Point, tlrl Ml. i nd Mrl. St. .... n Cl>lrlff ICylLI, 3:'.1910 Amber Llntem, 0 11'11 Poln!, """ M.r. and Mrs. WllUlm Tllclmll llO'l'd, 2u:u L.t Cr"ll Or .. 01n1 Pal"'· elrl f'amlltt Circus ... -~ Mr. 1nd Mn . On<llN LllY't'"' M.IC;M\Hltt, Dm Ptlo Alto, OtM P!)lnt, vtrl __ ,, Mr. ll'ICI Mr1, J1lme H...-Mn Gwr••, 33172 Cl'lrJ111,.., O.ne Point. llOV' H ... MelOOf'totl HON!ltf '-Pl ..... J, 1'11? M r, lllCI Mr1. ~ l . ROO.-, 2SH $.lnil 1'1141 A~, Ca.ti~. olrl Mc 1nc1 Mn. ~ K. Ml,lntOn • ..,. ,..YI ertoll AYftlue, N.wDOrl lttcll, s$!n..-4.1m Mr. ~ Mtr. HMtrt H. Toml1fW•, :MOJ Ptrlt Vltw UM, lol~ J.0, lrYIM, glr Mr. tnd Mrt. OONld I... SllD!I, 11)( &autll fltY Front, 1111~ l1l&nd. bov Mr, VIII Mrt. Slev1 M. HO!Mr, 1146 1'l~L1, Agl. F, Cosll Mna, 111r1 s.t•mll« s. 1tn · Mr. Ind Mrl. Rlcr.erd Kim, 1'9J1 Cvr•n 51., No. C, H1111U1K1ton 81~11. M~lr !Ind Mrs. RlcNrd J, Wllll1m1, ni v1e1or11, No. 101, Co.la Mf.M, buy, Mr. 1nd Mrs. P1l•lek 8urke1 1ll5 E. Unl.,.rtltv Dr., ..n. Mnl. l'lrlr.., boy Mr. ond M,..,,. MlllOll A, Ntfl, 11461 J..c1r1nci. SI., Founteln V1U..,, boy Mr . .,,., Mn. N1hon C1U1hen, li U 9...,n11 [loo:lntt. Corona <191 Mir, bov Setollrni.c" 6, Im Mr. ind M". John F. C11t1A11!1, •1 MclCeY Cl~i.. Anatlllm, glrl Mr. 1<1d 1Cer1 E. GI-. 40IO W. ht SI., NO. IW, S.V.ta ,t.ne, bD'1 Mr. Ind Mrs. Wftl.., E. Siu.I"'!, 21°"2 Betk-.irlll c1ri:1e, Hunllnqton at1eri.. .., s.,r.mw1, 1m Mr. Ind Mrs. R-1d J. Hl{l!,H!ra, 3l:ll er.gon Avenut. Costa Mew, girl MT. 111d Mrt. Genl A. Fre!lie\m, 3.S9:I Fftl!I, lrvlM, girl Mr. and M,... Jolln Hawrvll•-· m W. or1fl08W(l0d, No. n .c, AMl'Mlm, girl Mr. 1nd Mn. Robolrt E. IC(lplckl, i11 El ModlN, fllewparl llHCll, g1rl Mr. and Mrs. Eag1r E. wa1-..-, 1'902 W1wrly Line. lrvlnt, girt Mr. and Mr1. Vlolato M. Vapor, 2076-A M,,ple A\1911\M, Cotti Me11, boy Mr. 1nd Mrl. Jolln W. Mever, 100 W. 11111 SI., No. II, Cotti Meill, boy Mr. and Mrs. Steun w. Nanon. 25~5 Elden sr .. NO. c. COiii Mna. bof Mr. Ind Mr!.. Larry J. Voget. 139:11 TUl!ln EM! Ori.,., Tutt1n, boy 59111ffrlM I, 1'72 Mr. Ind Mrs. ClllO. R. Elfert. :Mn San Mlrlno Clrcl1, COlll Mna, boy MT. and Mrs. L"'3fWllrd C. T1!,1Cfwft, 3CD01 Gr1ncll Vista, L11un1 Niguel, girl Mr. ind Mrs. Dean V. 81rnes. 17690 van ~. No. o. Huntington Buell, girl Mr. Ind Mrs. O.vld L Petenon. lo191l Steno.al Sir~. Weslmln5ter, glrl Mr. and Mn. Jalln A. Mlddlewood, \MDI Montclalr L1rM. Hunllnglon Snell, glrl Mr. 1nd Mrs. Ronald R. Wlnl&rburn, 4545 GOrhllm Reed, CO!'W\11 dtl /<M r, .., Mr. and Mrt. Charles J . ic.llll!"g, 1•712 lluiherd SI .. No. 1 Weslmlns!1r, boy Mr. Ind Mrs. J11ntt H. Sellbo. 221'.111 Llk•llnd A ..... El Toro. boy. $t11IHr1blr t, 1912 Mr. end Mrs. Tl'!Ormll M. Sell, 11531 M1rt1ntque or .. Hunlll'l!llon Stech, "rl Mr. and Mrs. J1n O. Wldtro, 116' sacramtnttl, Or&nge, girl Mr. •nd Mrt. WllUarn T. Hewett, 171.52 Jacq\Mlyn No. o, HunllnQton 811cll, girt Mr. and Mrs. M•rtln A. ICOf'dlck, 900 Via Zurich Clrclt. Newport 81acn, g1rl Mr. and Mrs, John G. Hlbble, 1521\li Mlr1tn1r Street, Bal-, boy Mr. Ind Mrs. Roblrl W. Plrk&r, l~'h W~tmlnit.r Ave., Cothl Me!.•. glrl M•. Ind Mrs, D1Yld C. Wtblll!'r, 1M29 s1nt1 E~la. Foon11ln Y11!1y, boy. ~11,1m Mr. 1nd Mrs. Patrldl" J , Outfy, A706 Corl1x Ave., Lakewood, girt Mr. Ind Mrs. JN ry T. Ck;ero. 161'1 Art.or Clrde, Huntlnglon Se.di, boy Mr. Ind M,... Jolln A. Smith, 5071 Cnt.Teau Clrdt, ll'Y!M, boy Mr. and Mn. Rld\lrd G. MeMlllMI, 502 M.llrg~ltt, Coront dtl Mar. boy Mr. and M". Jama O. C1rd-i1. 't?S South ll:unone OrlYI, 5anl1 An1, boy s-..1 .... 11ar 11, 1f7t Mr. Ind Mrs. ll:IOUI Cabin, 161•1 Mall(ll Line, No. E. Hunlll'l!ltOll lleld'I. orr1 Mr. and Mrs. Rober! J . Marilon, 2j9 Cost• Ml-sa SlrHt. COS.I• Met.I. boY Mr. •nd Mrs. L~t M. 0 1ntln. ltC32 Sl<lrrt L1go-SlrNt, ln1nt, girt Mr. Ind Mrl. Scott M. Plnk..-tan, 2tXI $11nla: Ane A-..., Cost1 Mew, girl S911l9mlltr 12, 1m Mr. •nd Mn. Sl1n11V M. Zl9111er, im4 Caswell Streit, Los Angeles, girl Mr. tnd Mrs. Roblf't A. Strathe1rn, :zT.11 Orlan, No. I, Santa Ana. boV Mr, I nd M,.. ll:vuell W. ll~s. 731 E. lllh St., No. II, Cotti M.ef.1, girl Mr. and M,... Jolln C. Llttleh1te, ?Oi 15111 Sir"'· No 9., Hunl1119tan 11e1ct" o trl Mr. and Mr1. Tllorn11 Canion, P.O. Box 102', Sun&11t Be1eh. boy Mr. Ind Mrs. Chert" C. HPWltt, 3'0i S. T_,..,. Sh'ftl, SMta Arn1, boy Or. Ind Mri. Gent R. Pro!ant, 6Sll Britrrnpdt Street, Oall11, Tn., Tw!M, boy.glri Stpl9mllW IJ,1 1"2 Mr. and M,... Jacinto Motln, 11176 Edinger, $11nt1 Anl. boy Mr. end Mr1. James lluncll, 2'19t No. C Pl1eent11, Calta Miu, girt Mr. and Mrs. Clllrln Ro., 11Sl ll1kef" SlrHI No. /4., Coot1 MIU, boy Mr. 1tld ""'"· Alan MUI..-, 123'h Jllll Slrw!, N~ Beach. boy Mr. 1nd Mrs. P1ul Mobfr'V, -1o:in Sll1ngrll1 Drlw, H~l'l!lton lletch, girl Mr. Ind ~ Hector Por11tlo, lttn Mau1111 Lane. Hunllngtan Beach, ooy Mr. ind Mrs. ll:ow.11 Gree1>1, .UI C11rn11lon. Corant def M.lor , girl S..pt1<11W 14, 1'72 Mr. Ind Mrl. Gllbtrl Aoufl1r, 21111 Will~ Street, Co.ta MHI, 9lrl Mr. ind M,.., Cl1rtnet H1rdy. \U Fl-S"'"1, Ca1l1 MHa, boy Mr. Ind Mr1. John Jolll!,...., 11071 5haeklefwd Clrclt, Hunting!• llNCh. "' Mr. Ind Mri. ThOmal L19tr, 111'1 1Crl1tw11er Lane, Hu11tl119ton 1111cn, {llrl Mr. al'ld Mrs. Alch1rd Price, 3U1 CDrlt L1n1, CO'lle Meill, bOy S911t1mb..-u , un Mr. Ind Mrt. Frink llrl'nll, 7290 Foun- llln Wey, COlll Mesa. girl Mr. and Mrt. Rletwtrd Monies. 2416 Or11111t A-. CO.II Mtill, boy Mt. tnd Mrs. JOWfloh Vreel1nd, B31 S. Mk:helle 51rMt, An1Mlm, g!rl Mr. 1!1d Mrt. Gif11d a.-tl, .... TllUQn Clrdt, """"'•In v111ey, girl M<. Ind Mrs. MldlMI Heiring, 111111 P-A...,.ue, Co.11 Mftl, girt Mr. lftll Mr$. D.lrwln L.obdell, 21211 PlflOM. Cosll MeW, Dirt Mr. Mid """· Gilbert L11t11. sm * Ori~. Huntington llHCl'I, "°" Dissolutions ()f Marriage f'lllAL o i:c11••1 ........... Sept ........ It Lal'lolf, Albll"'ll Jtln ll'ld DonMd Lft "But the boby-iltter 1011"ight 10id we coukl Jump o.n the bed anytime if_.. toke our.,... off tint."' II'°'""'. Jwdlll'I 5. and O.vkl w. w1111.,, ctri-J, •nd JGM w. AICtlt, Ptdr• .Vnw1le tnd ~blnt 1"111'6, Jr., 111rberw •w 1od l~• Robert H1rl1n, DeY1d Ell1WOrl'!I Ind 91N'Wfl JHll .... Miiie<, l1¥trl~ J •!Id ROf\ald H. Kt!lde....,, Mtt'I' LOI.Iii.a Ind John Pl\11111) And.,_, Brooke !lt1nlord ~ H1rold l••ll• Grey, Th«ldOl"9 L. tnd Connl1 G. Tdpptl, Llrlmotl 0. II and SUilll! Ln Miiiard, Oedrl OI-Ind Oal!!IY W1yna Foot1, .,.,... E. 1nd D1vld Lynn WU11rd, Jtnt Pwull Ind Wllllur Vln- <~0 Ru»lll, Slllrrntn Glenn and Gt'l'•kll111 11:-n. O.rltnt J01nnt and Don.Id ,. Oft, Miidrid N1lll1 I nd John C, AIU.on, Siii Ellln tnd Cherl" Arlllur 011-v. Mlellltl Gltor9t 1nd 1C1tnryn CN IC1!Jfmlnn. R19ln11 Gill 11\d W1yna ·-VIU1lob09. llelfndl Ind H Ir m I n ., ....... McCullwgFI,. John J. 1!1d Lindi C. Wlr"l'ltl'", Wllllam M. Incl Vlr9lnl1 Goddard, l"l'llllp H. Ind C•rl'(lt Kouba, Mllv111 L. Ind Dorothy J. Woollttt, Edwin L" Ind Emfnl Isabel Cart.on, Effl1 M1t Ind Donald A. Glo .... r, Sheron Liit and "C" JICk P1ul, Jr. Margery F. Ind Loult M. MCAtplN fMry JIM Ind Wl't'lll ·-Kretwr. Lau~ll1 E. Ind Klllh McLlual'l~~1~,rcs~ "ferrt Ltt R•m"v t"1lr cl• Anne 1nd John ,.. Mo!!• L. incl Maxmllll111 J . A l 1rblr1 Ind Anth onv 0 fr. ~1nn1 L.oul.. 1nd Rlcherd Erk;t•1• • 'eaw1rd A.Oi a1rt:ter1 H. T.,,,.r. r.rQlyn L. I nd ~""' P.. k lk1r, audlnt E. 1 o.<inl• Mlclllel •1c11111 W•I ..... Wllll1m o,..nnd H11el A. Brew1r. Jimmy ._ nlon end St!IY Jove• CueY••· R•ml!]I ·:; JudY Artn WlllOl'I, Alll.W E.. vemon Robert Welt..,., P'1riiiil1 utl• end · MlchHI AlbPrt Tvrrell., Aulltl Wlllltm Ind Clllrl io::~rJ.nd,,. G. and John R. C•m•tr"o Wllll•m · Dunt1p 1nd Mliry Fr•ncls INTERLOCUTORY DaCRt:ES lf11tered '""'· l1 Tlmlln. Nie""' O. 1nd Wl1111m O. Remlfln, GI"' A. Ind Sherr! Ann M-ver. Marcia El11ne and Giorgi Frtncl• Andi.--, Gordon Ronald Ind Betty Gall V11tncl1, !:dw1rd 0 . Incl Pllr1ct1 A. Dulll, ll:lchenl C1rl 1nd Su"'" Ann MeKoon, Hoamef' c . Incl Sl'l•ron L. 8ol1r. M1r!t.,., I. •!Id Lto e . F1Ylf1, Tra1lll) O. Ind E-11111 F. Toe Typer WedsAide In Ireland From Witt Services Crippled Irish author t'hrls. ty Brown. who types his best sellers wit.h the toes ol his left loot, got married to a 27.y .. r- old blonde. A large aw-d of celebrities and relat.ives cheered l n Dublin as the 42+year-old writer, almost totally paralyz. ed since dll1dbood f r o m cerebnil polsy, was "1ieeled from a Roll&-Royce limousine into the Dubl1n register office . After the five -minut e By JACK WOLISTON NEW YORK (UPI) -Water ekllng devotees consider this year the golden anniversary or the sport. Although there are several v ersions concerning the origin of water skiing, it Is generally agreed that the "father·· of the sport is Ralph W . samuelson, who s t a r t I e d boaters on Lake Pepin ln Min- nesota in 1922 by skimming across the water with two plne boards attached to his feet. Samuelson, then aged 18. held a towline attached direcUy to a boat -the type or equipment and method used in water skiing today. Samuelson's skis were crude by today's standards. each being nine inches wide and eight feet long, with the front eOOs turned up by steaming in boillng water. DURING THE 1920s and early 1930s, Samuelson travel· F reighter , Light Airs Slow Race The com bination of a ed through the MJdwest and Florida giving exhlbltkw or bis skiing prowe.s,,. They ln- <'luded skiing behind an old World War I l'urtlss nylng boat and going over a flvc·foot wooden ramp. Samuelson Wll!I officially recogni1.ed in 1966 a.s the "Father of Water Skiing," and a few weeks ago he was th(' honored guest at a roor..(ia y celebration al Lake City, Minn.. marking the IOOth an· niversary of the town and t~ 50th anniversar~ of his sklln~ feat on nearby Lake Pepin. It is generally agreed that 'i\'ater skiing evolved from two different sporb -snow skiing and aquaplaning. the latter ln-- volving a tobogganl lke board that is towed by a boat while the rider holds onto a bridle. Aquaplaning became popular here and abroad after World war I. OTllERS WERE not long in follO\t'lng Samuebon's Jead and ln 1925 Fred Waller, a 11unUngton, N. Y .. inventor and l'Jportsman, patented h l s "Dolphin Akwa-Skets." These were bridled, bul Waller also came up with a pair nr bridleless s k I s similar to Samuelson's. Anolhtr pioneer was Dnn Ibsen of BelleV\le, Wash., who in 1928 developed a pair or -water ski! by steaming two ~ redar boards over a five· gallon can of bolling water and shaping lhem with the end of a telephone pole. Ibsen has been a major water ski booster ever since. At lhe same time -during the late 1920s -a number of lnventors abroad h a d their versioDJ of equipment for the new sport. Among the flrst professional ~ perlormtrs was Dick: Pope. ~ who ln. 1928 began staging ex- citing eshibltlons for famed publlcl.st Steve Hannigan et Miaml Beac:h. Pope later developed Cypresa Gardens In central Florida into an in- ternationally known water ski attraction. BOAT SHOW HOSTESS Jes1lc. Dunn AT nRST considered a novelty, wate-r siding soon became a ramily sport and also a competitive affair . To organize the competition, the American Vt'attr Ski Assocta- tlon CAWSA ) wa!I formed in 1939. Boa.t Slwtv Sc liedul,e W11Yllf', llt!IV LoulH Incl Eltx ( SlpulYldll, H-1!1 0 . 1nd Rogelio N. ) Garvin, Etlu bllll J. Ind Al V. PEOPLE Saav«lrl, Gilt Vttntne I nd F/'lddll Ulclnr Bllulco, Jffn and Anlllany J, "'"-----------' grounded freighter off Point Fermin and extremely light airs over the entire Los Angeles Harbor area stranded all but one of the 32 starters in the first race of Los Angeles Yacht Club's Harbor Series Sunday. Bob Grant's fit .foot sloop Robon from Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the only yacht capable of coping wit h the zephyrs to flnish before the 7 p.m. deadline. BOATING N o w a 10,00l}member organization. the AWSA's ma· jor function is to serve as the sanctioning body for water ski eompetitlon and to judge, ap- prove end eertlfy records of th~ orsanized sport. Announce d The <'Ompl('le lineup of a:11ll· ing expert• who will speak at the 111ghtly lecture .series of the annunl !...one B c a ch SaJIOOat Show Ms been an · nounced b}' l.1u111y Coon, show rhairmun tur the spomoring Southen1 Cali fornl:1 P.farine Assoc.'U1tion. Sora, Antonio L 1nd Marla E . Mlrk$, Shirley A. trld Rlclllrd Gerner!!. El!tn Ann ind John Rav 11:1c1. Joy Ann tnd k1n1111h Dian Mcll:1t, J•nlCt S, Ind Slltrwood II. Slmkus, P1lrfcl a A. ind Rlcl\ird J. Perlin, Dorl1 A. arid Robin L. Carr, Lucy M1t and Oonltd Eua- Colllns, Claud!a Ly11n Ind ll:ober"I wavn1 • Simons. Gloro• Elmer 1nd Miry Joenn1 Connell, Llant T. Ind Cr1lg c . Allx1ndr1, ll:Oll'l'lllry Ind Altx ll:<>1rk:k, John E. 111d Ell• L Wedi, LlllCY Elltn Ind Richard J1y H1nnegr1f1., E,,..yn J. Incl D1vld W. Woltl, Rlbtccli IMI Ind Dolllld Plul Rudi, Mk:lllel Craig 1nd Donni Lea O.Yl1, Coral Mtrllt I nd /4.bnltr G. H111m1nfl, R-t end Juun A. LangflllOlfll, And,.._ W. and UllCY J . McHugll, York llrlan and Lindi L" P l""mons. Mlym11 8. and JPllr! R. MVlf•• Christine and Roblrl R. Curtner, Ellubltt! M. 1nd Herry J. Ou F•a,.., suwon Jun and Alfred Eitward Horn, Chrl1!optilf 0 . l!ld N11'1(;\1 H. Minll, Suilln k . 1nd Mlcllltl L. BIDll!'I, R-ld W-vnt lind J1n.lcl ~­KMp. Harry Alrr.d Ind JOln F1y Wat1nebl • .511$111 C. and~ E. Sclll1nger, Cl1r1 A. Ind Andrtw McKendry, Vlolet Aelln and P1trlct Fr1ncl1 P1lldlnl, Nlrll Alt1n 1nd Arlll G. B~llran, 81!'1hl 1nd l.tobll'CIO B1rnt1t, llarblrl SUI and Robert "'°"' Marll,,.r, Arthur R. end Roulln1 II. C1ll1ghlr, Vlrol11l1 8 . 1nd M.lotll!tlfl/ l!iry1n 01wson, EIHllOI' M. '"" Nonn1n J1v Doyl1, Vivian May Ind Oonlld NHI Slock&r, Lloyd H. Ind Mlroery B. llunwp, Tllornt• Ind C.rol Elalne G19nan, Elllll Ind Lto(><lld Plerrt JOMIOl'I, Norm1 I. Ind Robert L. Pencllrgr1u, Lllllt Frl ncl'l and M1rvl11 Edwl11 Orilllo, OIOr1 J . and l'llblrl L H-•rd, J1ue w. 1!1d Donni L. L ...... s. Mlrs.111 Miry Ind Craig AllMI Htmpl\111, Ai.~1ndlr Aogsr1 and SN.t.y Jt1n Lind. 01Yld Niii and Nll'IC'I Lvnn P n•AL DICll•l!I Vin Olnler, H1rry Anton end Mtrl• LOUIN H. Ooul, E~ ind P1lrkl1 E. 81rtll. Frlncl'I JIN Ind Rl'/'!llOllCI EOW1rd McDlrrnoll, a-ti C. I nd Pltrlcll Mlt Olcki.r, 81Ytrty D. Ind 11mllll Wolle. Anlt1 R. and Dl.llne J . J Ollntan. CU!lord R1y 1nd Judith Lynn Hlf1111'", P1ullne M. lr'ld Roblrt L, A111tln, Wiiiia M. and P'rlK11!1 Ann ltlblrdl..-e, 6-1111 Ind P1lr1d1 Tllllma Otmlng, Olga Ann i ncl Mlcl'>ltl Bl1lnt L1mpn, CMryl L. and R~ N. Grunkltt, Yvon,.. J. 11'1d Orlin c. Btr91trorn, Elltatlllll A1111t ind 01vld Allin 8r11'1don, SMrYI Ly"n 11'1d Jerry Oon Olllblrg, 0.Yld Warren al'ld ll:obl11 0 111, Rotllle A. Ind Mirto E. Mtrron, ROllrlo .I., 1nd Adollo P1rsl-v, Glorll S. I nd 11111 Stnolln, St1nl1y L 11\111 El1lnt F. Ne!IOI>, Moo\& Lfnnl Ind klnnllh Ray Gtntry, JMn H, 111d lllllHll L Olwefl . Rlcll1rd "· •nd Loi• J. hr•z. P1trk:la R. Ind Alvl~ M. JICUQn, OflYI B. Ind l!-lfd J , Zlnl11. N1ncy Lucia 1!1d Jonn ,,,,_, Pldllco. Sl'llrlty Mii Ind J1mllt .l.ltlltrt Oowill, ...... ., J . Ind 0.vtd M. L.t 11:111, Ollr11 Lii .... Micl!Mt BrldY Alfnllll'l, Rldlll L. Ind IH r.i R, W1lk.,, Mlchl!lt LI Mont ....... -w--Coud\, SUIMI -Jll'llll C. R'ln. Stondrl Lit Ind !llr..t BfnOll'ftlft, " El•ll, 1111 M. 11\111 J-A. P....,...,, ,_,..., Ktthltrl,.. Biiiey ,,.. JOlfPh W1'-t H_...,, Sl'llron Al>ll Ind~ C\lftlt Hufft"lllllOI\, Adrllnl'll A. Ind E,,_1 E. SCl'lmlOI, Lrd11 AM l!ld J I"'" 11100...t Pllmltt', klrnb«IY A. lftd JOl'ln II. HUii, Ralph ~ llld De!!nl Jllft Lllwkkl, ll1rbw1 Jttn llld J-J- IClllllc, C1rotyn S-Ind 1"1111 ··-l r1i1111'l1,DougWi• ..,. Slolrltf Lii C1I, ft:10dl'J !.. Ind Mila. IQ Mldllll l(raO.!e ............ ,. OtMIO. R\111\1 C111ablth 1Nf ~rd H1•""Y ''"""""" ..:,...., I, -Roti..-1 f .. Ill ..._.,., c.oar1t1 s. 11111 11°"" e. 111:...,., J~11 Allller1 -MarllY!I Leiut .. k\llllt, JI( .............. Dlr'effly J- Or1y, Jlldlfh .I.Ill'! l l'ld C.,., Alen Liiiy, l••N<"I H, 1r'lll L-.1 M., Jr, MvrlO~, Mtl ~ _. l"rlM N. Slll'll. IMMn AlWI lfld ltONl"'I Alvfn ""'"'· .. ,_.. """-..... L.11,...,. w .... llfon, o.vt llol:lllf1s Ind ,....,.... J1 .... ~ """ ..... OWttM Lit k l(llttl, Judllfl J .... llOMM D. 1-crtkh. JIH! ..... ""rtd• II. Andd. Sllolf'lly Ind~ II, ....... s...... 1..111 -Cl\ilfla -" Of"ICI. ~ A. INI Nfrlld a&Wwln, Mlr°f Clallldltlol Ind '#..,... LI ... ·~ J...., J.,, .... 0-... L.tr-~ U v-,,_., ...., llrr· -·-MllU"-~ ~ l ft • Mir11l'l'I HM M<0\11'1t, J-....w /4.. ... ,_II °' o.--. ,.,.,..,. ......... Jtdl J\jlffl' ..... ~c. .... .,...,.. ,~ ....... "'""" ..... °'"" •. Wll'°", It.,,, J 1N1 1111111'1 w. ......... Jo A-.,.,. Trl(f 1'kMnf WIHI-. Cll,.... R"'.-11 .... llllltt l ......... .,...ii., 1uc.,.... llM ~ AJ.,.,., It Clllr. A..._ A. ..... ...., L. .U.CllMll\i R~ ..,,. .... J.,..ii ........ ... ..--.r.,...11...,..,.....,...._ WlmllullM. "-"'•" L. ..... PM* 0 I ceremony, Brown signed the marriage register with the loot that earned him a fortune. Brown's bride is Irish-born Mary Carr, a denti!t's recep- tionist wOO used to work in London. Guests at the reception in-- eluded film actor Richard Harris. The couple will spend their hooeymoon In the Bahamas. Edith Irving, wife of the au-of the Howaro Hug!les autobiography hou, says ahe is resuming bet career as en Impressionist palnlfr. Mrs. lrvl11f!, who served a jail tenn in connection with the hoax, was described by friends In Ibiza, Spain as being exuberant 6Dd eager to paint . She returned to the couple's Spanlsh Island home when a Swiss court granted h e r permission to do ao. She is awaiting trial In Switzerland in another caee stemming from the bou. Pat Nixon told Arthritis Foundation volunteers in Har- risburg, Pa. the President's late father suffered from it. "When he died, the family asked that all oonQ1buUons go to the Arthritis Foundation." the First Lady told a luncheon audience of t,200. Tbomu Dankley, 91, mar· rled Elbabelb c...... 1115, In Lelclsta', England. "When yoo are in love It's never too late to wed ." said the bride, a widow who met. Dunkley at an old folks home. Npytn Cao Ky, the rt.a~ boyalt former premier and vlre president, has virtually d i sappeared from the lrodocblne polltlcal stage. Aca"1111f! to aides, the onetime stnq; man reads novela, playa l<lm1a and from time to time flits a plane ln a nonmilitary capacity. Oad In the lmmBCUlate black unlfonn ond purple ocarf that becam< h I 1 trademark, Ky """1!td from his private We 1m month r°' a quiet, unofficial lnspectJon tour ot. the oortbem front . He made oome p<edl<Ubly \'(atriotic: remarks. t be n returned lO tbe tecluakm of hl1 rent·ftee aovemme.nt vUla at Tan Son Nb.It air bue whtre be Uves with h1I n-beluty queen wife aNI chUdttn. Carlo Go111-. the rfllUled baol of -of organbed crime, 1JU reported lo bf bl 11tlslad«7 condlllon I n Columlllll Hoopital In New York altfl' oulltrl~ 1 "ooronery lmulflctoncy.' Gombtnn,70,naW..to the hoopltal lrun hll Brooklyn home S.!un1a7. Ile bis I 1'- Ylll' hllt«1 Of hmt troublt, ""1ch II tlnw lnclpoc:ltotod blm. A ~ ""'*"""°" uld that "Mr. Gamblno ll aif· ftrlng frool I ...... k lr1 c:cindNon" mid pvt hi.a ~ dltlall bul -to com- ment -. The scheduled Huntington Harbour Race which would have taken the fleet around the oPint Fennin buoy as ooe of the marks of the ~mile course had to be abandoned because the area w a s restricted by the Coast Guard trying to free the grounded ship. The race co mmittee substituted the Sail East Race, scheduled next Sunday and the fleet encountered winds of less than three knots over the en- tire course. W elsli Posts Top Score In Podalnk Roger Welsh of Newport Harbor Yacht Club marked ~p a perfect ICOre in winning' Bahia C:Orinthian Yacht CluD 's Walter Poclalak M e m o r i a 1 Trophy for a match racing .series In Soling Class sloops. The series was sailed Fri- day, Saturday and Sunday off Newport Beach with 10 skip- 1'<" participating. Runner-lip was Lowell Nonh of San Diego Yacht Club wi th a tally of seven wins and two !oases. Third place wound up ln a three-way tie among Marty Gleitch of SDYC, Bru c e Peachey, SDYC and Tom Pickard, Long Beach Yacht Club with slx wins and three looses each. The thin! place trophy was awarded to Gleich who defeated both Peachey and Pickard in their lndlvidual matches. South Boats Whip North In Rhodes Southl and Rhodes-33 wkip- pers soundly thr8.'1hed their foes from the north Sunday to win the North-South Team race by a score of 67'"1 to 42. The series was sailed out of Balboa Yacht Club. The South platooned two teams ln winning the annual battle. Skipper• on 5aturday were John Kewell , ~1ark. Ell!wonh, B 1 a l r Barnette. Maurice Walsh and ,Gayle Post. They scored 33V• points lo 22 for the North team of Charles Thebaud, Ted McCarthy, Phlt Gregory, Larry Smilh and BUI Phillips. The South team on Sunday was composed of Bob Ket- temhofen, Bill T•ylor. Paul Marx. Bob Law and Don Murphy. They won by a ICOre or 34'1• to 20. Light Breezes Hinder Race Light wlnd8 llcn>M the Catalina Olannel S:1turday put a damper on Westward Cnlis- ing Club's lllh anm'81 Point V\cente to Cat Harbor Race. Richard Winn's Ca I · 3 8 Unger Longer wu the only one of tht! 11e.vtn llarters to llnbh the croalnc. Lilli'" Longtr checked acrou the rlnl.lb line 11t 12 :08 1.m. Sun· day The race started Satur· day al 11 :05 1.m. off Pt. Vicente, wm of Los Ange.le.s Harbor. In 1943. &>l~lon . Frrnch nnd Swiss groups founded the fl~t organi1.atlon c r <'a led to re~la te organited w a t tr 5kiing 1hrouRhout the world - the lnternation11l Water Ski Union. Tht AWSA joined the union In 1947. ln 1955. the wor ld group wnll reo rganiU'd into I he \\'or!ct Ylater Ski Union whit"h by 1970 comprised 45 federations or associations. Race Won By Parkct· Peter Parter of Newport •!arbo r Yacht Club won the Ken Davi.a Perpetual Trophy for l..chman·ll dinghi es Sun-- day in a five race striet held ot NllYC. aPrker !!cored two wlna. l'A°O aecorda and a sixth for a total of 11 "' points and became the first qualiflt r for tbt tnterclub team races in the clw scheduled later thi9 month. Runntr-up In the Davis F ries was Sandt• Beek whh ~4 points and third was Bill S\·mt>s with 2e. Bo1h art from ri;"JI YC. J ack Scholz Captures Race Jack Scholz o< the bolt club wa1 tht v.•lnner Sunday 1n &10011 'racht Club's neet ck1u11plons.hlp for the Metcllf C.:la~•. Other trophy wtnnen In ordtr C1f finl!.h ntt Jtck Croul. BYC. Mark 11.,,,... BYC. and F'ranlc P.teter. Udo I.ale Yacht Club. The clln1t.1 are scheduled l.'\'tr)' t\"tning ext"tpl SUnday during tht Oct. 20-29 run at lhe Long Beitch Artna. lncludtd among the trper1.5 an-Ad vtnlurtr Mike MJtct)ttl, mlcm;tt1oonl rncing Ind ~~ lrlf.: :tklPJ)('r .11m Kilroy, en· teruuncr Buddy Ebsen. and fonner Olympk' mtdallst and .... ·orld Star class champ&on l.owtll Nonh. All lectures start at a p.m, litre ts the schedule: Fr1day, Oct. 20 -Olymplc Salll1111. 1-;n Nor1h. Saturday , <>ct. 21. Catamarans, Buddy Et.n. Monday, Oct. 23 -Sallma.k- lng, Dick Ot't\vtr, Surke Sr1wyer. KeMy Watts. Tuf'.lday. Oct. 24 Construc-Uon, c 1 r e and rnnlnlenanoe r:J Hbef&)1.111, boota. 1181ph "•""!. Wedneoday. Oct. 2S -Qiot. inR aboonl ohip, MlU Roy. 'lltunday. Oct. •• Intmuotlo<Wll rodDc and aub· lnjl . Jim KJlroy. Frldoy, Oct. %7 -~ hand NilfnJ. Mllu! Mttdlotl. Soturday' Oct. 21 -Ouial!lll Bo)• Calllomla, Pe<e Ebtl lnR Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertisi ng Naval Architect Sees Boat Unveiling Naval Architect Bruce King. d<slgner of the Ericson tine of yachts, was on hand at the Ertcton Yachtl' plant. In $on. ti Ana. when the !Int of the new EriClon & ciime off the line and WU lowered Into the plant t.sting pool. Fully n111ed. the yacht dmr admlrtng comment! u It rtoated ... uy °" 11a tines. "The boal lhould &• well In light alt ind whm ailing 10 wtather. It ....Ul have the at1bllity ot 1 boat wtlb t lull keel" uld Klnll· Ue deslantd II for ram.Uy cruWn& u ftl1 u •fast Quarter Ton rac.w . Jt Alet IA undtt lOR nJlfll. A rttttct.able rUdder ...Ul bf 1v1ilable for thl rac:lnc dip- per. ni. ...,. yochl 1s 11 r..c tllbt·Indi<o ovmll with I :It' r..c llHnclleo wolertloo. Spm .... olumlOlllll and rlUlnc ll&lnlm .. ..i. Ind bollut .. the keel " 1,5111 pounds with ·-110 poundo lo the Cftlterbolrd. Th e keekon- morb flrlcoon YodJll' lfttry Into the tnllfnblo bolt field . Wlth tht cent1rbo1.rd rWaCta! Into lta boullDi 'With the kft(, dnlt lo -- ,, TRAIL ANO W L -Nani 111cllltect Bnica Kin ~ l"f!M!CU lhl nm l!rlc:oo&211 O{f I.be produdlon Une u It OoaU IA Ille Eriao1l Y• hi ' tutln( tank. Tbe no~ ceaterboudu la Brtcocln'a !Int eolry Into Ibo lr•JI•• oblo uJlboal lleld. 't1le -wu a1'o dealJll".d for Quarter Toa ratlnl with on lnt•m•Uonal Oftabore Rllle rneuumnen al 18 fMt. I f 8 DAIL V PllOT PUBUCNO'nCE • llOLU'flOlll MO SM ttlfOLUTICNI 0" MIAllO 01' OllllC TOlll 01' MOIJ&.TOfll llllOUll.. WAT•• Dlt'flllC'T UPt.OVllfO •IV 11 I 0 •t~T SITTIM.O ~TM CltA,.O•I\ A•D tVf'f"LIMIJlfT1 TO ..UN 01' wottlt.l ... D l lVISINO T It I anMATI °'" COSTS TMlllOI" l'Ot IJtll"90VillllllWT DtJTtlt;T MO IA A•D H(Ul.IJM IWTIWTIOM TO CHA.Hi' MIO I U .. f'Po.IMINT IAID ftU.• OP WOl:ICI AltO alvltl ISTIMATI Oft corn PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ' PUBIJC NOTICl'l llllSOLUTIOH NO 1'J ll lSOLUTION 01' THI I OAllO 011 Olltl!CTOltl OF TH ll MOULTON NIGUEL WATllll D•STIUCT Ol!CU.11 ING ITS INTllNTION TO f'OltM AH 01~PltOVBMllNT OllTll!CT WITHIN SAID OISTlllCT ANO TO ISSUE OEN l!llAL OILIGATIOH tcNOS ON II HALI" 0111' SAID IMf'RDVlfMl!NT Dll TRKT AND f'IJlil MO TIMI AND l"UCI Of' Nlaau•o IMf'•OYIMIMT DllT•ICT 1110 t.J WH£•EAS thb 9otrd ~l•I• 10 pur-11'11 Pl'OClltt 11'1' wltlt;lt .,, lmcir.,...,.,.nt dl1lrlt1 lo wu ll'lllfllV•"*'I Oh!rlct Mo • > ....,~ bl forlnlld and -•1 01>11,111"" -.:ii IU\lld .......... uNtf.r the Pl'ovltlon• of ChlPlff a.s and '""'"'' '' .,. ~. I ' of Dl\/11l!M'+ U of !hf Wtt11r (Odfo IOI' !M PllfPOM ...... ! ... ftff VI lorll\ Incl WtHIRIA.l 111 11tcord.ll'C1 with Stell"" ltJSI OI "" WllW Codi lhtre ""' -__ .,, • lll•n of -\.• -.,, ~llmalf o' !hi ,.._, Of ,._., MC:ftWf"Y la <t!W tor 11111 ~ fw wfllcll Ml4 '""""' a 1 to IMi l..wtll ..,. WHEll:l!AJ Wl4 pllll'! 04 _t, Mt - r11<el""' ..., 1111\ SOI d Ind II n11111 with , ... s.c,..i • .., of lfll• looenl NOW THl!•El"OlllE lht tOI ~ OI 0 rllCIOf'I OI IM Moulltlfl NIUUll W1'-< Dlttrkt DOIS Hri•EIV REM>LVC Ol!T'lltMINI! AND OltO@.R .11 foollowt SKllM 1 II 11 llW ln'9nllott 11'1 !hi\ flo. d lo form 11n ln\P<O•...,.,,,, <11\lrlct OI I wl!on Of ,... MOultofl NI ..... W1ter Oltl It! fl""' Oi1trlct I wtii<" l" -aplnlllft ol 11\11 ...... w!H o. -'!tM to llt!Wlr• ..,... <-"""' II• l""'llVf''•''-~ lfll "" ... .,, -u ......,,. IO !ft fht rf(llat1 ""'11114 """""""""~"""""~-­~ ilt "" ...,1 ... ...i...n ... ''""" lo ill'ld ~ I'll wld .., .... )t)'U of "" W•l9' C• 1"6 IO ruw ""'"' otlli91lloll ..,.., el 11111 Dlltrlef lllll M!lilll 11 lo'ld 1---' db,,lcl ir.t fPf«Wlh OI .. t11c11 Wndt ll'UIO M 11-IO OA• ,,. ••-tM ti \UI'." IC "" 1Jllon -conlll'IK11on In .., • ..._.1 1'111 t 'C•t'd!nQ I"-.. llm.!1 Ill lorlh lfl S.-C•lun J htrfllf 14CI ... l. 'TM ~ for ..,..1c11 lht 1>1-..cl l<nfll'o...,.,.,.1 d "'It' 11 la o-o lllflnlld •• .....,.. """' wt fOrlll In -"""'""''°' p1«1 ot -u It 10 •QUI t INll ctmtf'V(I _.lrl Mid fll(lllll!tt lor w•l9< "11ftbvtlillft ~ •NI .,.,...,. lllCNlllM ...... '""'°"' l11Cll!llt1 """' et PURLIC NOTICE • RESOLUTION HO U4 RESOLUTION 01' THE BOARO OF DIRECTORS OF THE MOULTON NIGUEL WATER. OISTIUCT DECLAR ING ITS IHT•NTION TO FOftM AN IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT WITHIN SAID 015TlllCT AND TO SSUE GEN EttAL OILIOATION BONDS ON SE HALF OF SAID IMPROVEMENT 015 TltlCT ANO l'UUNG TIME ANO PLACE OF HEARING IMPROVEMEHT DISTRICT NO WHEREAS this Board ""al e1 IO pursue lhe ll'OCISS bV wh ch an lmprov~l!fll d 11 lcl ID w!r mpr1>Yem1<U Dlstrlcl No ~A mav be tormed end II"'" al Obi ll"'tlon bOnd' Issued If•• etor un""r 1111 provlstOfl• D Chap er 3S Ind Chip~ 4~ ot P&r & ol D vl•lon 13 ol tM wa er Code lo< 11>e 11urpa•e roereln1Ur se lo h ar.d WHEREAS In acul!'d&n<I w th Seel on l62SI ct th• Waler Code the e has bttfl "'-red 1 plan ol work1 11!11 an l!il1,,,.te DI hi amount of money neceS$llfV ID r1lsr tor the 1111rP01t lo< whkh sad bands are to be luued Ind WHEREAS wld plan of wor\s has ~en received bW thl1 Boa d end Is !I ed wl h tho s.tcr111rv at t1111 Bo.rd NO"" THEREFORE the BN d QI OJ Kron ol I"-Mout!on N!ove• Water Olslrlel DOES HEREBY RESOLVE DETERMINE AND ORDER as l0Uow1 secnon 1 11 Is tho lntenrlon or h s 8Mrd to form In Improveme nt d s r ct ot • POrl on of hi! Moo !on Nlou~ W1 If District OM 0111 let J "'" h In TM Qlllnlon ol !hi• 8"" d w I><! WMtlled to acqu re arid cons! vet he 1m11rovemenl1 DtM: bed In thl! pan o work1 referred to In 1M rKl!at1 her~ which 111an 1 "" e~v dPP o~eo tl!r i n !lde<"11lon at ltlf ht1rlno htrt n1 1.,..- ret.rreo ro •'Id pur1u~n to Sii d """" IDn l61SJ ol ttw Watirr caoe and o """ 11ener111 oo 111111on bclndi of f!\co O l c I on bel>al! of 11 d lmpr~m~nr 1fl1! \(I lhe l>fOC:Md ol whlcll bond~ in1 t IN' vied lei pay Ille e•pen..,. cif IU(h •C ciu 1 !Ion Ind con,truct on n 11n lltnllllf' ) riot r•cMdll'Q lhe 11s!lm111 wr twtl! In s.<;:llon l ""' eo• S.cl..., t 'Tht DU•PCKe tor wl! ch ne prl;ll>l)M(I fnjlfOvtmr<>I lll!•t !Cl I 10 Ill 1orm111 11 more lullv 111 lorlh n h• all'QfOV\'if o 11n ol work• I• lo •cqul • al'>d conttf'l'CI work• •nd tac I '' tor .ew11oe UlfPO\•I 1r>e1 rtlat"-'!1 11r1 y t n lnclud!nQ Ct '' n oott~U •rltlt!~1 n~d acciu '1"11 h11'1d1 lo 1..r1 !I (li!\tt~r u111 commltml'llh lo Cl v oo t~ 1>1 Ht \ and DU--' OI ll>e 0" ct ( 1111• ~ I n contr..:11 lr1dur:tlnv contr1c 1 "' 1ro omit 19tt'>Cln ••11tni.H OI !hit O ' ct DU want Kl $.tctlon )61'1 ol "'' W•tlf Codt Ind ""' J11¥1Mnl ol opere <.; Ind o11W<' COJIJ of lht 0 \I r C I lo ""' t•!t-111 Plf"' ttlod bV *'-~111 of TM Walllf" Codi pr0¥1ditd '"-' tilt Cforry "9 DUI ol 1lld P<l'Pdff '""It ~fll ll'lt 11111111 wlt'lltn Mid O!'-* lmoroV1met'I cll,l•!ct IKlloll I Tht ......... " ot ClrrvlhO °"'' ••id PV po11 -wfcl plan of woru 11 HI m1tt0 to be 12 "2.000 Sacl!OOI ~ '"'""""''-tor carrylnq ovl 11lcl Pll'"°" Ulan IM ltvlltd •• C1.,,IVllV UPQn lht lndl " II d PIO. pUllld 111'\Pf"Ov-• dl\!rlcl lncludll'IQ 11n¥ ,,..,uory 11un11t0 1"'1110 ~ 1 A ....,P ._no tilt ••ltr!or '-"111rlfo ol Ml4 P'OPOllod n"1 ~~I dlUrkl to 1)11 kllown •1 llft(l!""""'I Otitrlci HO IA ol ""'°""-Hlewi W1tl< Ol1trlcl wl'lkl! m• 1"811 """'" tor •II 111 .. 4 • •• 1o 11111 ....... , Of llW 111'-" i.t-11•o""m11•U1r 1111tlrkl h "" Ille will\ If> .. S ••f'I• 1 c-!1 11111 Dhiri(! -It awa llOlt !Of In -!Ion 1W an, .,.,._ or ~IQ!ll n ........ S..:tlol! t 'f"""W&V "" 111111 d•t ~I ~klbff un 11 '"" Niu o1 J oo I o (toe:• 1' m 11'1 Mid d•v I•"" ti: ~ - It "" !!mt '"" I,._ 1'\ffll!OQ DIN;., o( 11111 'f.llf'd at (.tawft Va I•• lttm"" kMOI C1l•flllrh1m ,..,., Cr"""' v~n"I '"'"I lllfU"ll H ...... C•I ""'". • ~ ... 11 Ille pl..:11 for t htf "" bl' 1111'.1 90tllll on tlw totm1t"" ~ v" ~ 1-0· .. •+•t dltlflrt , ..... '""' ~ -pur-. •or ~" I to Ill ........._ 11111 ......it lo ll'dl wltllln "" Sl"OPtMd ~~• .,1,w1t;t c.....,.W.. ~ Mill .,.,.,.,,.... "" "''_ ... ll•HM<f illiil (Mry11>9 -MIS ~· -etW -""' rw1a11 ... '" .... 111 ,. ........ tee ... 1 Al Mid n""' INI ""a« , .... ,,_....,, 1"1.,.nl9d Intl"" ~ "'""'" _,,.,. .... 11'1 ""' Dlt'•"'' Iii' bl .... ll~l'CI ·-··"""' "" 11.-1 '""'I • r ff •NII 119 lloMrd Ind ~ ft ... P"'lf•h • ..., will a.. (-"4'..i t.tcc• I Al anf !!me '"' ,1.,. IOI 11 "" ,_. ..,..!\a60¥• \Ill ~N 'fl' lfCl\Of!t "' "" l!'--9 11••~ of -r•• Hill 11111 '""'itf'Cf °' ·-11• obllt•''°"' _.. ,,..,.,.. ....., -· tf • .,...., ll&bll It llli IUllUld l .... tfOr "'llY t'fl •• , !Wltfefl ll"lfftf llllfl .,....._, lfllll bt-It! • P\!81 IC NOTTCE ' ""' Or•nte Coa't 0• y P lo 11 lli ~n<I Oclotllr 2 t ""n PUBUC NOTICE 611 OC I' 2t:l'SI Published Orano~ Coast D.t Y Piiot .. Slt91embec 18 2~ af\d ~!Qbl!r 7 'f, itn 2•51).7,1 KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT The Newspaper .. FOR SPORTS along the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOl1CI! l'tJBLIC NOTICE PllBUC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE PllBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 DAILY "'LOT 19 DAILY Pll"'ftT CLASSIFIED , ____ .. .::::&:a_,_ __ ...,._"""..._.= ~- ( ..... .., .. TRAVEL BUG BIT OwMr anxkxa to !Ake off In hb nt>W motor hOffi(' and v.·an1.11 bit super ttuirp 3 bedroom !llmUy roo111 homf' .old fast. Shake ruof, block waU ft>nce, flreplatt and lots of Hf.rag. See thb one first at "l,9M. Ca.II 540-JJ5l (Open F.Va) · : . · HERITAGE REALTORS *BROAD*. Bcauri1ul Broedway Sl. Xlnt e9tablished M IKhbornood Lge. patio "-'/brick BBQ I« ooldoor living. 3 Bdrm&., family rm. It trpJc. plua alley tu•t•esa. Only $31,500. cozv conAGE Near N'pt. llghts. 2 Bdr!n, \111/bricf!t. nook. Clo5c 10 llhopplna:. Only S22.500. CALL · 0 . 646•l414 91~ N••r N••••rt Pe11 Offlrl Vacant I~ ~ INVEST IN Lots of Beams FAMIL y Cathedral HAPPINESS Ceilings BALCONIED U,\\'CREST A IJl'lfll!i:ti1· u~ratf<'d 4 br(l- l'tlOnl, 2 halh. 2 l'fOt')' 1.->mr Hoom for t'Vl"rything and BeauUtul bt'an1ed C't'ilin2 C'\.'l'r')'Of\l•. ,i Hedrooms. dtn· v.•itti h.-1l•~iny O\'crlorM1n1t IIlli'. room. ftunlb' room. dto. la!"RI" ll\'!ru;:" room flrf'll. A Ian;:~ lk'Wirut or hobby roo111 \'t't)' fon11:1l rl1111flii f.lttl\ anrt and pool ~ P..alliani hl'~•in$:. fum1\y urea fur l'fllcrtainine. 2 f1n.•1Jla1'C'll, J cnr j(arn,ar. Hwi:t> mutc•r lJE>l<lroom, too. ''' '' • •'. '' ' .. ' .. '. ' S!i.~.500 Ytou 1111.oJ<I 50'i.' !ht'\ OM for Pm BARREn only '"·"'-"' Call '12·'53$. ~-~-:==-~-==~~~==~~~==:~:==-~-:::! (f(lii~) FORECLOSURE Large Co¥eNCI $24,650 Patio! $29,500! One man's ltl$ ... cwi IX' yiur 3 b''droo~. d<olu"<l'i buill·in gain. 3 Bedrooms 2 blt1J1s, sppllancr.s In c I u d In R" fl\•t.'r!lilt.C'!l tlouh!c ~llr11~r·. i!L•hwaictu-r. !kn. tlJTplaN> brick flrrplnce iU"Vt llQOl:I lrnd11 addrtt ctwm II) carp!'!A. l..argf' Jot with oom• RnU~IOU!I hvini? r o o m . plMe pnv;u:y. l..crv.• rlown llanrl!lOm(' lih'aldtt.~l hAr. payment HURR\'! iA'lrC 00\l'l'rf'd 1)1!.tk), !hit 546 ~,..,.... door Um.I ttlll' of ~. ·JOOV IOpt'n Evrs.) Ynu can 11ic111uni• \'A lo.·ui • . HERITAGE with k>v.• 1k'i'<'·n p.1yrn<'nl anrl OlOfltJUy lNlll..llmcnlJi IU'e lt>N tha.11 r-.nt! MO-tm. Owner Anxious , ...,!!""...,...,~'!"!"""'"'"'' Priee drutk'a.lty reduced, 1 • ruoo ., th~ '"""'' ""'"'"' Free and Clear . . REALTORS TARBELL 4 bedroom, l-%. be.th home in N.... N N one of Huntington Beacb'1 v1 et et fjnesl &ft!U, Brin$t all offer Thrro units. all occupitd by price $34.900. Ca.IJ oow li3me long tenn tt'nant. SU-2535.. Total 11pprx. !lq. ft. 12,372. Sinl{le story. Localed in U!ll! ~THB REAL~ hear1 of l.o8 Angeles en. In· ~~&ail du11trial aren.. Annual gm111 · QP(N !]. tN mrome 15.<00. PTk< 155.lnl. " - - -. CaJl s.46-1600. UP FOR GRABS 3 bedroom, 2 bath, ht.''.1.' sh.~~ carpet and fresh p111nt. Anyon<" can lake ovrr Tht? VA k>an and S158 per month p&YS all. Grt1b thls Wnlker & Lee exdustve now 111 the price ot $26,950. R<slton >1$-0!63 Open >No OWNER~- MLL11t &eU VACANT 3 Bdrm 2 ba.lhl, Cl"J)lll, drps, fireµ!. Ukt> l'lfW condition. Pr1e«I at a ppr'!Ullll SJ0.500. All trmu1. ClOIM! to N>t11h Cout Plaza. Xlnt buy. OOWNS Is: WATTS, INC. '62-5.523 * C&W * *$26,950* 4 Bedroom. 2 Bath, 3 Blocb from Beach, AU.. bulll·ins, double car 1arage, ~u landscaped. 80-2535. INVESn!ENT DIVISION (®il!-iib) First Time listed MESA VERDE .i BNtnn, fonnal illnlna rm. farn l!y rm. bflau1tful land!lf'UPin:,:. Avollable Nov. hi. GIN~'1' ~!ORRISON ••• -R£ALTORS-.. .. • * 1505 Ml!lla • l'.M • Vttde> Or. Eut., * ~ * Own M'9 '**•'*• 551-4.UD ({)pen Eveni~I -NEWPORT llEACH· VA REPOSSESSION J Ult tt:leued • 3 Be-drm 2 heth homr on a larwe Int '41th roon1 for boat or lrlr. fo:vrr}imr llt ('ll'f:lhll" for 11l'\\' \',\ loon v.·Hh only SjjlJ, down. At $30,750. in Ncwpt. [k•h ii '<''On·1 J.a.d! CALL S«l-llSl. 0?l'n Ev-. .•. HERITAGE 29:L1 llartor. CMlD. ~tf'S.3 "U"-FIXER 2-STORY Pool $17,750! Buy lhll 2·!11ory ba.rg11u1 NO IXl\\'N PA Y~IENT OH O~l.Y s:.ioo . \l'hlt·hc'ver WIJ)' YOU qu1'llfy! lNCLUDfo:S \\'ASllF.:R, DRYl:.:R AND ltf:.f"JUGERATOR. T 0 0 ~ PLUS :o,"\\'J,\ll\llN(i l''OOL! Hurry lo M'C c11ll G4.S-OJ03. I •"' -• I Ol:I \I I Ol \fl\ '"' ~ .. . . JUST LISTED MESA VERDE Tnlly • "Doll ll°'w" 3 Rtlrm11 . 2 t1:11hJI". lffd. It flt'd, 1 .... ·immtn,. rm . ~10\'I. .. In rordltlon! A l'ft] ~ at $t1 ,(0) • HURRY! CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS 4 IEDROOM MEDITERRANEAN STYLED (•Itx4;si) Tint tlml' Off'ftd -ii tbla """"'""~~~!!!!!~'"''""'"'' rirh •nd .,..1trr11 fom1ly home $19,950 ~"':.':" = -::::.~ REALTORS OWNER SACRIFICING 8 l..araP, nf'llf" MW Dupll"X. r.1\111 llCIJ. 57$,!00. OPEN llOWi<" 126 tilh SL, N.ll, • Approx. $ ll('ttt San Juan Capo. 2 ml IO S.D, f'rw)' 1"6.:.00. c.u ..,...., * OWNER SAYS, .-* "SELL NDWI" * 4 lldrm .. 2 balh, bbl lamil)' rm • JO'x24' worbhop, low rn11 lntf'Mnce )'11ni. Gnnn CO!lta M"" loc9titln. ruu '"'11~ $30.900. •·norii ,~·n •FULLER REAL TY* !t46-0814 Anytime Bayfront Condo J flr, 2 8a, pool, "*r 6 Ill~ Dell1hlf'W S19.~ 6 EMERALD IA Y lrnmacut.l• l 8r + lam nn. V\row ~ 10 Sl29)i(JO Tod Hvllort I A1-. lCTl Vlli Udo l7.>-l500 Wa• to leach l·~)'. A·f'nlmto. l UR.. lo\ ba. Bwns, bltn&. Tnvua. poo0: ~. m.a tlnn. CAYWOOO REAL TY * 541-1290 * * HOME I INCOME l BR, fam rm. + I BR, In· t:0me unit Top Oct• Mna b' 1•bir l!t ,... ... rylhlfllr (lwN-r llnJ'icHJI, m8;y ln.dl' Kl.,,., llALBDA llAY PROP. * "2-74'1 * TIME FOR ''CHEADI£ Mnny t'Xpt>rlat\'t' .,_.tru -rPd • II,: t1lrrl roof -aJJ f'Set;tric bll-ln TEE • PEE'' 1u1c-titn. nu. 1 )l!:U" ~ honw ~ prirrd •I only ~.!ill 11 IOday'~ lop vnluc. c.u~. Added On Large Home .... brtttoom. • J t..1N . """"' ""'"' * O!:ll)' $41.stio * Ca.JI G-2.Sl:t GREAT POOL IUY 8rin1Ulul p,...,.fy r 0 0 L h t11n •'. prnl~•~ll) l•r.lv;11JINl. uPl1'Mk'd ahlJt. I 2 La.tr t~ attt ....... hlir Thlil .bonw baa ~ 2'lQl ... n. 11....,. c.u -.. ··111 ., ~··"·' , ·, •m FA .. LY HOME """'· -'""'· - PALM SPRINGS IN COSTA MESA nwu'a ~ 1H11rc )'OU 1tt 'll·t11•n )'OU appn.,.h thJ1 lfl\•r ly .l hrtm1 , Z bl.th nn:lnm '1it1UI hurn••, n im• plf'trly ~I ,. t I h m11ny pialn1 '""'' • tokd v.·IJJ lrnrt', 1.QYf'ly pnllm, mii'll:1murn prlVJil")o •11d 5ow ma1111M1anr• J'TI,,.,,I to aft) ., $45.!fll Call ~ /(}pm f:¥n. l '· HERITAGE REALTORS 2 IR-TRIPW $77,500 Ill.old b 1hlli1 ntlny d&_)o. Quallly built -urMt -Ill ~ rorooa ri.-1 Mar ~ tinn. J HR eadl. OWlt W'i It-. C'ht"fl 111 Uh dh1h•~ .... ul'llt ,... fl~ Md 114 i.1.1w.. ~u,,. wtw c,t. a °'P' • CU.UM! ._.,,. .,1t1nc •n.xn a.n 1ar det~l:I lf1J..BIO. QUICK CASH ?·~~r:.:,.:.7= THROUGH A ~L .. ~~e,. .. DAILY PILOT ""NT AD 642-5671 Lochenmye . ''",I tv, Don'1 riw "P aw Jtdp' "U.C" II ill -.... to ..,,.. RMllttl tQ,..$IS1I ... -., ~···· '"f' l""11 • wO ti.:--~ lor "111.da'"'. Olll M>-NM. . . .20 DAIL V PILOT Mond.tiy, O<.tober 9, 1'72 Everyone He1 Something Tho! Someone Elie Went. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED Y ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With o Want Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results _,,,.. l~l -"'Mo I~ I _,,,,. J~ I -·-I~ I -· .. w. I~ I -·--I~ I -·-I~ I -·-I~ I _,.Mo I~· General General A UNIOOI' tlCMI' IF IT'S A VIEW YOU WANT A view you'll get! The Harbor, the Pavilion, the Ferris Wheel (sob!), the Turning Basin and even a glimpse or what's going on at Woody's Wharf. It's all visible from this immaculate, original Harbor View Hills 3 bedroom, slightly adult home. Beautifully maintained courtyard entry, easily main- tained back yard patio (with the aforemen- tioned view!). And catch a glimpse of this price : $69,500. PHONE UNIQUI! HOMES, NEWl'On IEACH, •45·6500 U~l()U~ ti()M~S REAL ESTATE oflnda Jd/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 101 Linda Isle Drive Lovely 5. BR., 4 ba . home \vith downstairs waterfront n1str. suite & lge. game rm. or study rviexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality constructi on. slip . $155,000 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, PleaH: Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 General 'l•ral ****** *TAYLOR CO* CORONA OEL MAR "OWN-YOUR-OWN" On the water ! Fantastic view & pride of ownership bldg. Private marina, pool,· jacuz. zi & security guard. Adult occupied. 2 Bed- rooms, 2 baths. Call for brochure. $89,950 "Our 27th Year" Ge ne ral MACNAB IRVINE ·----·---· LIKE AVOCADOS ? ton11• pk·k your own .... and libs 100, In th!• barkyard flf •his 1l('1o1.• 3 BR -~ sq. 11. l'!C'nuty. Large FR. -formal DR. Self-cleaning o v e n . Heavy shake root $53,0CK>. U11rh1.1ra Aurl(', 642-8215. 111131. BEST DOVER SHOR ES BAYFRONT 101!1.\I I Ol\O\ ""fAl'O"I\ General · G eneral Oenerel * * * * * Henry W. Douflas 507 Traver1e Drive Costa Mesa, Calif, 92626 You are the winner oI 2 tickets to the 9th Annual Orange Co. International ~uto Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER October llth thru 15th Please call 642·5678, ext. 314 between 9 and 5 pm to claim your tickets. (North County toll-free nwnber ls-540-1220). * * * * * Born-Style Hom• Earth lover's kind of llvln'? Warm U,Wc., kid5 nns., farm kltch, $30,900. Dawg frlendl.J'' R~AL ESTATE TREASURES 1&11 WmdlU, NB. ~O BalbH Penlnsul• OCEANFBONT, 4 BR, ~Ba., tam rm., wet bar, elegant 2 stcry, Ph. for appl 673-6892. Coror.. del Mer SOLD OUT! ~~~~~~~-1 "NE ED SPACE FOR BOAT & TRAILER" This big four bedroon1 on a huge comer k>t bu room for all these things plus 3 baths and a beautiful stone fireplace. Ifs vacant & .ready. Dream up your own te.nm and submit, but hur· ry! $29,450. a :.:,tl\IH ,~ llf Realton 545-()165 Open Eves. PRETTY BABY Huntington leadl $140. PAYS ALL See this freshly painted, 2 BR. 111 BA, n i cel y decorated condo ho m c . Price of $22.~-inc wshr, dryr, refrli: plus crpts & drps. Seller "'°'"' to 1'1ex· tco. wry ftJL'riou!. Don't rnia this beauty. I' rll3ge Re,11 b t~te Ul·5111 <=1 531·5111 FEEDING A LANDLORD Mesa Del Mar 4·plex. Room for a pool. Great fillanclng · 1ot;~ Down. 2 bedrooms. 2 bath etlCh. Full p r i c e $62,500. Owner "'Ill carry 2nd . T.D. This won't last, call us today! Real tot! 545-9-191 Open Eves. TWO BEDROOM OPEN HOUSE DAILY East Bluff $19,600. FP. lrg 00~100' !ncd &: lndscpd lot, oversized dbl gnr, elec garage door opener. S 1 O O O _ down w/paymts leSl!I than rent. c.omp1. redee., elec bltin RIO, FA ht, crpts, drps, patio, pymts less than rent This beautiful 5 bedroom. 3 * THE BLUFFS * bath, two story will sell this Owner 3 Br l 1i2 Ba '>''eek! C.Ome see 1969 Port By ' ' • Dun! 5 ,,. 950 lo maint area. $33.00J eigh 1-p.m. """' . &40-0166 * 640-022'1 Bkr. 675-7225. BY Owner, Lusk 5 BR, 3 BA, * DUPLEXES * For din Rm, cul-de-.ac St. I' t6Z-4471 ( ::::.154+-llOJ Several new ones to be built Xlnt cond. $72,000. 644--0866. So. of l-lwy. Plans avail. Fountain VaOey Take a look & choose your I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. ~~~~!!!!!~~~~!!!!I colors. I ' DCX:l'OR'S PRESCRIPrlON MORGAN REAL TY MARK SPITZ _ RX_ SMOG FREE HUNT- 673-6642 675-6459 GREW UP WITH INGTON BEACH . e DUPLEX • excel loc & A POOL SEACOAST B U I LT 4 cond. 2 Br • 1 ba ea. COM-.. and so can your chil· BEDROOM, FAMILY ROOM, MODERN KIT-PARE. Owner. 6Ta-1934. dren. See this super 4 bed· CHEN, FULLY UPCRAD- Costa Mes• room with family room and ED. WIU. SELL ON VA =\VAll<lR /loo 11 l Realtoni S<lf>.9491 Open .,,,.. covered patio Soi Vista for TERMS OR 5% DOWN. only $44,750. ONLY 6 YEARS OLD. BE A WINNER Iru-win :realty inc. 968-4405. Elegant 4 bedroom 2 bath JUST REDUCED wilh lamily room, covered Owner gotta go and has and ~k>sed patio, IU5h car-reduced price $1000 for this pets and drapes, new spark[. lovely 3 BR home on extra ing pool, Near everything. large lot w/access for o ly S46 500 boat/trailer. Beaut. lndscpd wioe OPEN SPACES ;iit':~ 0}1Y ~~lk :~ Lots of gl.ass walls, cathedral Ooug:la11. ct>illngs, sunny kitchen. Reliable Real E state screened·in lanai, 3 bdrn1, 842-6323 eves 846-3391 days 2bath.Allth~andaromcr ONLY $2lS. k>t for only $36,0C(). CAU. ~ Assume thi!i 6* % FHA !00.n. 3 BR, 2 BA, crpta, drps, bltins. Only 4 yrs old. $29,500. KASABIAN R.E. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors l ........................ --.1 2111 San Joaqu;n Hills Road SPYGLASS PLAN 74 REAL ESTATE * Immaculate air-cond 3 BDRM Aegean Hills, can assume FHK $230 mo P.l.T.I., Mission Viejo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $38,900. BARE FACTS about this property: Sellers are moving to honie ranch and "ill help buyer with cos!~. c;t buyer $100 total costs. Lovely 3 bdnn ln prime C.M. area, only S32,000 all terms. 20th St. & Tustin Av., C.f\1. DRIVE BY 962-6644 Eves 962-5.119 PACIFIC SANDS Sharp 3 Br. 2 Ba Bltn RIO. 5% dn total. Seller will pay all buyers closing costs. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 3600 plus sq ft In this 5 bdrm. 4 bn, plus bonu~ rm home on a V.1.P, location. Cenlrnl 9109 PeHcan 4 BR near Magnolia and Ellis. Priced right a I $33,950. Xtra. xtra sharp house in quiet, convenient nbrhood. Liv rm. & lam rm have lovely "'OOd paneling, enclosed front patio for privacy and st'eU.rity. Laun- dry rm. ha.s outlets for gas or elec. CaH us after you ha\>e driven by. Ganer111 1-------------------·I air cond., Intercom & bu1l1- ... l!lllll .. 9111!"' ..... 11l! In record player. No-11·a:c * 3 BDRM. near ocean ............ $26,900. * 4 BDRM. near ocean . . . ...... $54,900 . vinyl, shag enrpellng, wal· nut ca binet s In kitchen, potll- e LICENSEO SALESMEN e '11 .. '11~-~~jllli .. I 11:!zed lot & brcath·tak1n;; . vie"tA or ocean & t:oasUine. Yo1· can cclehratc 1he holi· 1111 .. illll .. W .. illliiilil r1ay1 ln your new home. Ca ll \Vant to talk about a real opportunity in Real Estate sales in. the Newport Coastal area? THBRB:AL ES'l:A-r&RS OP£N "Toft. 9PM CALL 842-1418 STUNNING NEW HOME 1215 SOMERSET LANE -Dover/Westctiff area. OPEN DAILY 1-5. Choice location. 3 Bdrm&., 3 baths. Family & dining comb. 3 Car gar. $98,500. Mary Lou Marion SPECTACULAR SPYGLASS 3801 OCEAN BIRCH. This 5 BR. 3 bath family home has a forever view. Large family rm., wet bar. 3 Car garage. $122,000. LaVera Burns TWO NEW LIST INGS! Beautiful street in ~1csa Del rvtar 1. 3 BR., family rm. C.'orncr Jot $3.'J.900 2. 4 BR., lam . rm., gorgeous pool $38.950 Carol Tatum LIDO ISLE A "MUST SELL'" OPPOllT U~IT\°' 1..ovt'lv 3 BR., 3 ba ., Cam . rm. ho1n e on 2 lge. lot S. Steps to pMv. beaches & club. $129.500. Edie Olson CUSTOM BUILT 4 BR . 3 BA THS By the present owner. At S(G.000 -il has it all ! May I show you the formal din. rm., w/sep. Cam. & laundry rooms? \Vell built on large H.H. lot. Al Fink A MOST UNUSUAL HOME 5 BR . single story traditional home w/ ocean view. 2 l•rp!cs., wet bar, den & lam. rm. Lovely gardens. Adjacent to flne beach . $110,00Q. Mary Harvey TRAOITIONAL-LIDO ON 70' Showpiece potential -max. privacy, on quiet st. to st. loc . Cozy home wlth 3 BR., cllarmlng L.R. & scp. OJl. & country ldtch. $91,600. Eugene Vreeland VIEW -POOL Allractlve 3 BR . 2 ha .. din. rm. & ram. rm. home In prlv. area. Steps to ocean. ~l ome ls surrounded with lovely trees & plants. Jl32,600. Kathryn R.nulslon ~ Colch.wll,Bnmr ........ SJO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. or Action ,. •• Call 642-5678 Jllease drop in or call 1733 Westcliff Dr., N.B. 645-7221 now $1 50,000 Including lnnd. I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I 7 .nt-ral G e ne ral ~red hill MESA DEL MAR $24,950 \Wi BARGAIN! REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytlml.', /lU.O!l.211 OflicC! houni 8 AM 10 6 PM Wokin1t for features? Look 3 BEDRM ... nt this! Originally 3 ~'l'.lrooms & l"IO\V 4 by con-2 BA TH vc>rtlng the Original garnste into a huge bedro om . NO DOWN 3 BR + R11mpus Rm. $23, 900. HURRY to this nice 3 bedroom home on a QUTET TREE LINED STREET! Separate l&'x20' panelled rumpus room plus double detached garage-a n d Doui;::hboy pool all add up to the BEST BUY IN TOWN. NEWPORT riool tahl<' & ping pong sell. OJ Another DBL garage added Q\\'IV!f extremely an,'l(ious l HEIGHTS 1\·i1h rclocutl'tl water heater atlrncllve home. Elegant ' WALLACE ·~· 1nn Beach Blvd., H.B. Feeding A Landlord Mesa Del Mar 4-plex. Room for a pool. Great financing - lOo/o down. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths each. Full price $62,500, Owner will carry 2nd T.D. Thia \\'On't last, call u11 today! I' 1llJge Re ol Est1tc 531·5111 I l:J 531-5111 IRoon1 for king size bed & TERMS ~ COATr $3 0 & v.•asher hook up. This fireplace In grac\ous living REAL TORS 4,50 hon1e fealurcs II 15:c49 room, bulll·l11 liroam kit-Realto!'ll ~ This Nc.,,,'J)Ort Heights cul!e 1.'0V('red patio & I~ home f'"hrn. New rovered patio. -SU-4141-O['Cn Eve11: =WALl<lR Pl LH OWNER Sacrifice. The rare !{ift of privacy in the pfll'k like 80x120 ft. grounds - landscaped to pi c t u r e perfect perfection! King siz- ed bedrooms, 2 lovely baths, fe.mlly room with Inspiring fireplace, builtin dream kitchen. Patio p a r t i e s , bulltln BBQ for ttiosc cook outs! Walk to schools. shop- ping & churches from lhis attracUve home B r k , $.12.000. 962-1373. w\11 not lf1Jl1. !oiunuuncit."<l by ha!ll l"K>avy duty wiring as a \Vlde ronCl'C'te drlvtl\\'ay. (Op1n .Eveningsl saf<'ty feature. Some ocw Noa' all 11ehools k shonpm, . ...,..,..,..,,;,...,..,..,..,,I LOVELY LRG 2 11y 4BR. OWNER must leave. Design for active family l.iving & entertaining! 2 baths, large family room enhanced by dulrmtng--~ace. wife• saver built-in kitch e n . dishwasher. Lovely covered pa.Uc. 3 yrs. new, 5 bedrooms. expensive thick padded carpeting, custom drapes. Exquisite terraced front yard, Brl< $39, 'rriQ, 962-6566. beaullful, fully 11prinkl l'red ._, J 1 dd~ ·11 •· ~ I I I . 1 1 suaR u.s a = WI l new Brk. Freshly painted ex· C 2 borne, 21Ai be, frp c, bJtln anc i;cap1ni::. ront & rear ~ 11·iuher & disposal coming . lt>rior. 540-t73). • gas kitch d&h/wsh. Furn. IJti.s highl)' u1>1:r.td!XI 3 r,rtOI~ "~~11''11.$.12,000. Call HOTl.tE & BUSINESS fgr .lbc H~ yard. SP r l n kl.er s hr-tlroom home . You'll i::et n ,., O'f<T"" •A~ 0 ~ lngC"nkius ('Ollp\e Close to or>->.000. wner, ;io•u Denver IM'W 11hng carpelini.:, ,,. lll'W .. ~A .. 111.~1W'IAAI, l'W'ar new kit-~THJE REAL 171h' Orange, c.~1. $33,750. Dr., C.M. 540-.....,..._ <·l11·1Hud cllnhwlLllher and ~ESTATICRS 2955 Harbor, Cotta 1'1eu furnished. ''TWO LinLE ~1ov1• with u111om11!1c l'!Vtn. OPfN '!IL l!f'M BALBOA Coves, N . B . 400 E.17.t FOR All HOMES" Stt it ar)lj ~ !!tlll won't 11•atertront. Private ralnp & C 11 AllAS bcllc\'e I!, Coll 646-7171. ~>~:l~V:D~U~P~LEX~~·~·~··~··~l48~.9""~1Ll"~"'~'~· ~M~od~o~m~3~br~.~S:77:,500:·1~·;llL~!ll!i!l-lll·1-..:1•~; on a hlllakle clun & fresh a1 1-7BR & 1-JBR apt, L11 E. Call owner. li75-07SO for ~ 11. dal11y. Good easta1de area. (9, TllK RJCAL~ ~Costa ~tesa . &12-4837. app't. Principals only. ---• --Live In one and rent the · ~~1¥RS other. A nre find at $31,500. OWNER Anxk:lWI, 3 spacious bedrooms. 2 baths. family room with elegant brick tlreplace convenient to the bulltln kttchen. Plush cloud 10tt carpeting, drap('S. New· Qff.:N Tl!. !fM All temu. DOUBLE U Lllr'Jl:f' 3 beclrm hon1f' 1\•/llN'· pluce. qn front of lot, nnd 11 rute 1 bt'<h'nl r1•11tal on N<HI' of Jot. l"l"l'M'nl lnco111e rro111 bolh 111 S34.51 mo. Jo'ull pricl.' - $29,500 Newport ... F1ln'9w 646-1111 tenytlmel DESPERATE TO SELL Ow~r must nKM! lo dt!IC!rt fM lw'llllh ~g'°n~. 4 BR. 211 Oi\, lr.11:. t'lltlng nre11, frpl. It •tra Ira. )Id. Cood Fountnln Vulley klc811ons. All tcrn111 • Price only $.'U,930. COLLCNS & \\'ATTS. lNC. 962-5523 * C&W* $©\\~~-LG'E!rSe The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle I ( r 0 1T 1 c 1 1 I HIBAT I ~,· . I I I 1 I . I DOFIR I' ~-r1 -rJ -r 1 .-, - 1 .---1 •· Old you hear the one about the stripper who gave up th• ..._...__..._....__,__. business because ah. couldn't I BALHEC · I I' I' I I 1 --7 , •. , 0 ~Dia'• fh• chotile quott4 by fllllnv In the mil&lllQ WOl'dt ~'°" dev.lop from step No. 3 below. ..:'\. PRltli NUM8[1!f0 Ll TllRS IN ~ THESE SQUARES ., 1JNSCt 1'M.8lE lCTlllS TO I I I I • .:...!.!~;_;(Tc..A°'N;:,~l!W:.!l.ol ___ .....1.-•. -\>--. _.._. --~ SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCATION 700 =\',i\ll<IR I\ Ill Re&Jlm'I ~ ly painted Inside le out. Open Evet. Prltnc loeaUon · nt'ar ~·No down GI DUTCl·I CLEAN • SCOTCH tenns • low-low-down non- PR1CE. NEW LtSTlNC, vctA. Brk, $30.750. t::XCIT1NG AREA or co~ ''NOW SEE THIS" TA MESA. 3 BEDROOMS OF SUPER S 11 ARP, ~ 4 Bdnn, dlnint; SUPER CLEAN LlVING. rm hOme: w/sunk llv rm, ~IUST SELL BOUGHT A lam nn w/wet bar, Roman NEW HOME. SUBMIT OF-bath. Priced to tell S4l.!MXI. f'ER. $27.000. AIL TERMS. L' Jt.e.-Jt.D[AN RE larwln realty Inc. 968-M05. """wnu ' · 96Ul644 .,,,.. 96Ul889 OIARMING A MODERN 4 ~ home In e.x~llf!nt 1-t•,..,tlnqton 841.0. IU'ft. All bullllu. Mmken llvinf ro:wn, c o r n e r HUNTINC'tON Crnt. tn. fl~piatt. and fl"'l.me cond. level, 4 br. 2~ ~-OwneT. ~ Clltnt v.·111 tt-aew mrict s 5 1 . 9 0 0 . equity pin e< 116&-3'55. ' C.M. 111~8-C.ll PRESTIGE 7100 1q n 4 Lii>RSS()l1'11I COAST DOR.At, 2 BA. F1U1ti.'ltlr . .. "9.000. PATTI WALKER A~ llE 6'i., \oln on arp REAL IT. 342--141~. ~ 3 BR. 111 BA. la. 21/i BLKS TO BEACHI hid. pool. AEK. w/w crpts, d ••• _ B J!?,950. Cu" Little llouoe. fl'• . ....,...-. Y owner, xtnt ne-1Jthbnrhood. ~"8-~"l'~'°-·-~-==-.,..,..,, I SCC1lT REALTY. !llf-ml BY Ownm': 2 BR. Adult NO OOWN 3 on_ 2 BA. ,., I C.rden CondO. frt>lc. blin frple, prl patio. pool, t nnl• KU ldl, nu dlh'ohr, >~IA courta. EaA)' tcrma with beau,., Jrs J)l)OI A ft!t! rm. down payment. 97'J.:11184. SUl,700 845--1734, ~. Nelld a "Pad"? Aid •n ltd! ONLY $24,500. Hurry on this o™'! Standard Real Estat• _963-5538 or 833-2639 OWNER transferTed, 3 separate baths, 3 oversized bedrooms, elegant fireplace in bonu.s room, slumpstone flref,lacl? and m I r r o r e d 1o1.·al s. Deluxe buillin kit- chen, dishwasher. Lovely patio overlooks beautiful us- ed brick planteI'I!, exquisite landscaping. Prime loca· tion, Bkr, $34.900. 962-8865. OWNER must sell. Primed for Immediate sale! 4. bedrooms, 3 baths. fireplace in secluded rear living room, all electric "Award" built·in kitchen .. dlshwasher, Load! ot decking -beautiful patio, J u s h lov.• maintenance landKCaping and a gorgeous ~ln1 pool! Bric $38,900. OWNER rl es perate. 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 baths elegant fireplace lend!!: ad'. dr!d charm to gracious llv- ing room. Builtln dream klt- chen.-"ven a di11hwasher, 5 yrs. new! Vacant . m~ right ln! S26,950. Drk, "46-0004. 5 BDRM., 3 BATH Meredith Gardens . Super-Super Shai-p! Beaut. d«'Ora~. \Viii 11ell VA or cash to the loftn. $53,950. St•nd•rd Reel E1t•te 963-5538 or 133-2639 * JUST LISTED * 3 BR, 2 be.., f&mlly rm .. In Shorcctt•t West. Complete. ly walled, llhaded rear yard. Assume 6!4 "'..t 108n. $38.~. George Wllli•mson Re•ltor S48-6570 REPOSSESSIONS Jo'OJ' lnfonn•tlon and' locttkln of lhCIN' f11A It VA bomca, rontael - KASABIAN RHI E1t1te ~ ·u -VACANTH OMES 3 It ol Hcd"'°'n• In IOOd AJ"PU, JIOm(! with tlOOl-. >~llA .11nd GI flnandna, MOD tu rum tot.II dnwn and "'nt 'Ill nmJW c~ C.11 now BKR 90-Mll. nv Ownm-: Cholfc' a l\r., :t It... S yn. O&d. Diil-. SprlnkJ". S2'.l,200, l'IOO/mo. am dn. m-11m. "" I0-2312. OWNER~' 'S ELt~·'. 1p1rldlnar clr"n 4 DORM nn hu.. lot. ll!l.!00. ol op. f"'lllML rAT'fl WALKER _fil:\l.TY ~WI. Ful f'HUlll •nt Jutt a pbone call aW11. IUMStl- Huntlngton lkadt BAYSHORE TOWNHOUSE Closeout• Low Prloe Only $19,990 The~ new homes are located 10 n1lnute11 from ti\e beach • & close to major shopping & schools. Your choice of carpeting also including dishwasher &: builtins, 5'i~ Down w/paymenls leu lhan S200 mo, Th.is Is a must see for those wanting lots of luxury for 11; modC'rale price. Call for information, 962-5523 Or Stop By The Saleii Office Lor..-ated on Newland, Be- hind Slater & Talbert. COWNS Ir: WATT-S, INC. * c & w * ~ .. NO DOWN • NO CLOSING COSTS JUST YOUR GOOD CREDIT A ('07.)', warm hOme for the holidays can be yours. THINK ABOUT IT What could be a nicer gift for the ones you love, they . deserve it and so do you. 3 Bedroon1 s and I a r g c family/dining room, w/1%. baths. Fully bullttn kitchen, 2 car garage' and to add to that \Varm touch a t Christmas, a fireplace for the kids to hang their stock· in~s on. You will Jove the neighbon;, they're o u r irit'nds. Don't "''ait. let McVay sho\\' you the way. CAU. 893-8533. Newport S..ch Newport llMCh I Pre-Grand Opening Sale! ·-$48,ttS t!•<tilelll Ceftvent1911111 l'lflllKlfll CONDOMINIUMS Lofty living awaits you! Act swiflty to selec1 your own Newport Beach condominium. Vis1t 1he temporary offices of the Newport Crest Information Center, conveniently located at 2400 West Coast Highway Suite 8, Newport Beach. Open Daily 10 a.m. to sunset. 17141 645-6141 = .. : t ~~' 1---=== ..... C. __ ~ ~ 1 !::!n• ~rt Beach • " " .. : . • • • • • . ~ ' ' I I I - I I • I ' !· I PARK THE BOAT right Ueside this immacula1e 2 story 3 bedroom, 21 ~ ba1h bt'~uty. \Va lk lo beaC'h ;ind park. l'u.!I p111cf' .only $39,950. NEW LA QUESTA SAM MIGUEL CornC'r lot, jlOS~iUle boat ac· cess, 4 bdnn, 3 ba!h, 3 car ~aragc , sha1•p, C']ean and u~radcd lhruout. Only $43.900 ... !!URRY! CALL 545-0~58 •• 6 Bedrooms $38,500 If you have a large ran1ily and need a big home, don't \\'ail on this one. Located on a quiet cuJ-de-sac street and ck>se to all schools. There are not many 6 bedroom homes for $38,500 that will sell FHA/VA or 5rt,, do1vn. Call n ow 842-2535. ®THE REAL ESTATERS OPEN 'lll 9PM Top Quality Buy Appraisal ls In at $28.500. and wha't a huy! Sharp 4 large bcl.rm.. 2 bath and park·likc yard. 2 blocks to elen1enlary. newly listed • 1-lurry! Call 842-1418 • ~Am. WALKER IWUTA.Tl 17171 B<'ach Blvd., H.B . @ THERE.AL ESTA:l"KRS ()P{fll 'Tll 9PM Irvine' TOP 0 ' THE HILL lmmacul•1e 3 bdrm. Pre11._ dent Romo on lnl'Jl:e con>C1r lot. Lovtly lnlf'rklr &: pro- Jcuional t.nd.:'aplna wtth Ui:hta, $68.500. red hill REALTY Univ. P&rk Ctnll!r, trvtrw C&ll Anytime. m-M20 Omc.boun!AllllOBPM SrU lM old •tuft. au, the ntw ltUIJ. JUST WAIT Til you see the home "'e have for. you in beaullful University Park! 4 Bdrms., 2\i baths: family rm.; 2500 sq. fl. of GREAT fan1ily Ii,,_ i11g. Shag carpeting, upgrad· cd appliances, n c \I' l y decorated thruour. Orte.red FOR $54,900. INCLUDING THE W\NO! Owner has bought another home -bring all oUers! 'll11l1 'I\ Iii! . ---'j, 1•1illur "SINCE 1946'' 1st Western Bank Bldl(. Univcn;ily Park, lrvinr Days 552·7000 Nights TURTLEROCK Hills, 4 Br., FR. exec. View. Below markel Also lea&e at $475 mo. 833-1710. ,; Laguna &Hclli j DIGNITY .. and charm, all in this 3 bdrrn. + home . Im· n1acu1a1e!y lands(:aped. SH· uatcd on large lot. Of!ss vaullerl ceilings le much, niuch n1ore. lvlust~ aeen lo bi> apnN'Ciated. ,Ask for Rosir Robl"rts foi;-further inforn111tio11. S97.500. MACNAB IRVINE * PIER & SLIP * Condomlntum1 , .... 1. HO Condominiums for Ml• STOP PAYING RENT!!! Take Advontaqe of Our "NO , CLOSING COSTS" SPECIAL THAT'S RIGHT, NO CLOSING COSTS UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE • Minimum $950 Moves You In. • No Closing Costs. • Immediate Possession. 160 JN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, l'A & 2 baths1 built-in range, oven, hood, dish- washer, disposal, individual laundry area, en· closed private garage, private entrances, choice of carpet color, cable TV, swimming pool, gas B-B-Q & park-like recreational area. All this for as little as $207 per month, in· eludes everything, on our least expensive unit. PRICED FROM $18,9SO TO $23,450 ::ianta Ana F\vy. to Cul ve r1 right about v, mile to \Valnut (1st road on left), left 1 mile to "Walnut Square"; or: San Diego Fwy. to Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to "Walnut Square" or call 714/832-9670 . -- ------oAI': v PILo r ZJ ---]lt! 8u1lne11 Opportu,,lty Houses FurnlshM 300 HouHs Unfurn. ioo1.;.;.;;,;;.;.:.:..;;...;.;.;.....:;.:.:......:.;..; Newpart S.•ch Irvine 305 Townhou.• Unfu rn. '35 Newport Beach • * * .. • George Angle mil · Utll !Xf. hua:e 1tudio, 12.S Ab.alone bc11ut furn. Righ l on pr1v. pool Balboa lsl•nd, C11. 92662 $Uf0 • ci:.t l Br. 1''rplc. ear You are lhe winner of 2 tiekels lo the apl. Gar & da.;k. 9th Annual o ... ~. Co. $2';;, • 3 Br. 2 Ba. Frplu, dlil gnr, ocl'anfront ~ lnttmatlont NU-VIEW RENTALS Auto Show 673-·IO.~.o or 494-3248 at fhe ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER \\'a1k to '41r. Bat·h S.'lS. ?o1obh!- S1<U. Dplx SI«>. Uttl pd. Rent-A·House 979-1430 Oetober llih thru 15!h • 2 BR runi · house, on to June 1 111 &16-9291 or 5'IO- Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 beach. betwttn 9 and 5 pn1 to claim $300/mo. your tickets. tNorth County __:2846:..::;·c_ ____ ~- toll·free ruzmber is 54().1220). Houns Unfurn. • * * • • Liquor Stores Dress1 Shop Bakery Beauty College HOLLAND Bus. SalH 1TI6 Orange. C.~f. 64>4170 -I --- J BR. 2 bath ...... 4 Ult., 2~ bl., lam r1u 4 BR .. 2lii ba, lam n n 'll11l1 -, \1llil, ---.-l{Pultor .. SINCE ISIG" l'l"I \\ C'litern H;uU.: BJ,h..: U111\!1•nu1y Park, lrv1n1• Days 552-7000 N lghts ----lttATURE adultit. 3 BR. 2!-!t ba. New carp, drps. 1.1111111 pr. POC>I. nio. ~ Rltr. ')u.,l•~•s Unfurn. 350 2 BR. II,., be, <:t'J)tll, drp!I:. I Nfrig, encl pelkl, giir, No ~ll. S160 mo. 642--2$1. Huntington BeaO't NE\V 2 0llh'4T, Br. PMv. yard. rrpts/drps. ~·nr. .>36-7633 or Sl7~/n)I). 3 HB.. 2 bnlh~ ..•..• , , • s·::!!:t ! ;;J6-26)Z :l UR. l bulh~ • " ...... S.'\1,0 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[ 4 Bil. 2 bath11 . . • , $.'.l.;'l(l I (ired hill REALTY 360 f\!lts. Furn. f2 DAILY PILOT [ ._ ... -1~ ( -.---1~ , ,... ..--.1~ I .. ____ lrtl !iiiiil --~~1~!1 ;' ~-~--·~~l~~I'~ -~--;;:1~:1:1~-~-:-~'~~I ·· ••••••••~I 145 R.ntats ~ SMre QO Personals 530 Cement, Cor..c1ete P•intlnt &. Apl•. Furn. 360 Apt. Unlum. 3'5 Apt. Unlum. l45 Apt. Unlurn. 365 Apt. Unlum. Poperhongl"! I-'-------Roommal• Referral Sttvk:• * lllNDU SPIRITUALIST* PATIOS-PLANTERS Costa Mew General Gen1r1l _H_un_t_l""'~-~°"-------i Newport S..ch f'lnd 'lbe ldefJ Roommate ~t tblr ad change )'OUI' All Concrete work. Brick. No WA1nne liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * MOY£ IN TODAY * St:ACUF'F P.1anor Apt.ti. 2 Scre<-lled Clnls <114) ~ who.le outlook on life lor the llumpatone wk. 894-lSJ3.. * WALLPAPER * * $30 WEEK & UP * Spac. 2 & 3 BR In 4·pll•x. Br. $164, Pool, Crpts, d~ MATURE male rooTnmatti: better Professional advJce Ch Id When >"011 Clli "M1tc·· e Studio&: l UR Apts HACIENDA HARBOR &vt>rttl nviill . Al.L E..''<· bltM, garb. dlii:pJ. 1525 wanted 10 abate 2 Br. apt on IUe. Llc. Readings dltlly. 1 Care .>43-1#1 &46-17U •TV & r.takl Service Av11U From $150 TH.AS. Pool, rt '<' hldj:, Kids Plnc.'Cnlla Ave. Ask a.bout Po&I. $80. 547-6791. JG AM-10 PM. 492-913G. e CHILD CARE e PAINTING & PAPERJ'"NG. • P!JOnl' &-rv\ci··llld Ponl OELUXE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS y,•t•lromc. Fruin SJ:l\I. Set' our d iscount. 5'18-2682 Office Re ntal 440 492-9034, 312 No £1 Camino 19 yn In I-larbor area. Uc A •Children & Pi·I M:.'<.'llon F_urnished & Unfurnished "1gl", lT.t?l Kcelson .. n ... 1 2 1 blk ReaJ, San CJemente, ~ndab1e bOn-'--', Ref's furn. 642-2356. Z37G Nrwpnrt Btv<I. Cl\! hlk \V. of Beach Blvd. (lff SPACIOUS 2 Br, Ba, DESK spa~ avtulnbte $.SO If rbo 113 k A ~,.,... 548-97~i& or 64~39li7 I li.:ated Pool -Gar;ij!e:-; -Shag Carpeting Slater. %$-7510 or 847-4:f..il. to buy, 1 hlk to ocl'an. mo. WU! provide furniture JIAVE TABLE, Wt LL a r a l''r n>ii, PAINTING • Honest. clean, Dishwasher -All lJtilitics Pnid. EACH 1 1~ Bk TRAVE' F t 5 4 6 41 4 5 k L'---·" This Ad \\'orth S5 on R•'nt WALK TO B Yeary. ..,../mo. r · at 13 mo. Anawerug geJ'Vlce ... otrner Pro • guaranleed \\."Or . ..;o:n...:u Adults Only · No Pet\ NJ::\v t & 2 Br. cpt/rlrp, G7:r<l911. available. 17875 Beach Blvd. wrestler now taking appll: Co"tri11ct r &. Insured. 67s-5740. Huntington Beach 241 Avocado St., Costa Mesa 6'6-1204 1l~hwshr. 125 15th; 308 llith. $~if.o rno yrly, 2 hr, 1 ba, shag Hunlinglon Beach. 642-u:lJ for ~ massage. Your1----•-------IPROF. pninter. honest work. x..i7-:t957 · t•rpt, lowrr kar, ,'l'plc, bltns, I DESK space ~va.ilable. $50 home ot mlne. Call ~7-9186 • Addlllof\11 * Remodeling f'l'A..'1 , lie/ins. tnr ll ~I. .. free LaQUINTA HERMOSA Spanu;h Coun1ry Eo;la1e l.lv· 1 ins &. Spn('lOU~ A[1l'I. Tt'r· r&l'ed pool : "-Unken i::,1s BBQ. Unb('llevnble Living • on:y 1 BR. FURN. $17S ,\LL L:TIL!Tlf,S PAll 1 A.dulls No pc!! l•I l)lks S. 01 San Diego t"'t\1'}' on r"':u:h. 1 hlk \\1. on !loll to 11:1211 P:1rk~ule l .. 'lne.) 1714) 8~1-5441 VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Furnished & Unfurnished Adult Living Dishwasher color coordinated a ppliances Plush shag carpet 4 mirrored wardrobe doors· indirect li oht ing in kitchen • breakfast bar · hu ge pri va'te fenced patio · plush tandscai> ing • brick Bar·be-Ques -large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557-8200 COLDWELL. BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT ; LgC' 2 BR. just p:11n1!'<1. 11f'\\'IY dl.'l'or. 1 ~ blk heh. 1no. Will provide furniture \\'kdays bhvn 8:30 & 11 :30 Gerwick & Son. Lic'd est. Refs . :>48-2759. ~~~7~~0!' no'>'', 847-81'19 or 67S.10Gli. 673-~. , at S5 mo. Answering service ~·~·7m7.""'""""°'°'"=""== 673-001 1 * ~2170 FOR clean & neat painllna:, PHOFL'\' decor. rondo. 3 I nvall.nblc. 222 Forest Ave, PAL.M & CARO READINGS JACK Taulanc • Repair intl'rior. reas. rutes. CaU 2 BR, l sty, 4-plcx, l·rp1s. Ba'., 2 ba, lrplc., pool. Dbl Laguna Beach, 494-9466 Past, present & future. remod., add.it 20 yrs. exp. Dick gs,g...4(165. Urps, fncd, gar. Child ok" gar. F.lec Opi'lll_'r. ~!I mi. to BAYFRONT offices. Approx. Advice & help in many mat· Uc'd. P.ty Way Co. 547-<mfi. "=oc''--,~.----,--..,--1 Sl 2a. 828·5417. be" ~= 64-2346 64"UO l JOO ft N rt Be h ters. 213: ~-1350 •""ully Uc.. PROF. 1~ainttng, also roofs, '" ~. :.--; · · · sq. · ewpo ac La llabra. Call 10; appt. Electronics accous. ceil. inter/exter. 0~;~~.Bc~~1~l'lh:~a~'.~~ Newport Heights ;;1'1:t~. $340 per DlO. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-COMPLETE electronic serv. Lic/lnR. Fl'N' est. &15-5191. 5..'lG-'.1029 QUIET 2 Br \vi sundeck. BAY VIEW OFFICES fident, sympa thet ic colorT.V. Hili, auto. stereo. Patios Leo 2 BR · 1 1 "I·< Crpt, 1lrps, pool. gar. adlti;;, ""-lux•. Alr~ndJtln-·• pregnancy counseling. Abor· Cal lie. Pacific ElectninicslG-RE--EN--T---C--,--.-tlo--1 ,,.~_ • 111 11u11• · -,, .... .,.... ... """ ''" ... "' tion & adoptions ref. AP· Co .. Dana Pt. 496-3233. rtt ons .... c n Sl~~> l'.:rK·I ~<Jr, p..111(), fncd no pets. $170. &12-800l , HNIC'oorated. Lido area CARE. 642"4436. Co. Spectali~s in \\'Ood yril. No pcti;. 8-\2-t'l--l~l. 5'J~49n. RBalonomks, Bia. 615-6700 * EUROPEAN PSYOIIC * Gardening patio covers & lences. Local 2 BOil. Apt. -$13J. t\ilo. Apts., 2 Adjoining offices, busy in-$25. rel. Bill Fulton, 547-5846. Dt.'<-·ora!Ctl . JT.~1 QuC'cns Furn. or Unfurn. 370 terseetion c.M. $90. Ulil's Appts. avail. thru Oct. le Nov. 8;;B~~~G Eves. 54~1407. 345 1 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Lane -H.B. S36-852:6. 3 Br, 2 ba, ull bltns. $..100/mo inc., adjoining 1 BR fum. __ <TI4) 523-4:156 Irvine Industrial Plaster, Patch, Rep•lr LARGE 2 BED R 0 0 r.r • \vintcr: $375/n10 y r l y. apt avail. 642-6560. Al..COl-IOLICS AnonymOu s. Complexes. S\'1.J . Slfl1 Bachl'lor .t 1 BR, puti01'l. Apt. Unfurn. fn1le's. 11l'I\', i:arat;"~S Divided hath & lots or clos..•1s. H.1'C hall. pool .V pool l1,1hll'?'l, sauna bRth!'i. ~ f•)r yoUrsclft 17301 h:rel~n Ln. ! I hlk \\I, of Bea('h, I hlk N. or Slulcrl. R.12-7S4R .--~,~u~n~·N T s H: r: D BACH ELOR UN I T. S\00/mo. Cal! :117-:=.6h'7 Laguna Be,.ch Corona det Mar I Costa Mesa carf)l'ts, drapci;, $l3.1. mo. Days, 213/li9&1:i736: 1vknds, OFFICE and/or desk space Phone 542-721.7 or write 551-4299 after 5pm. * PATCH PLASTERING i iiiiiiiii;;;::"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim I R42-1'118, Eves, 842~·105. Alt types. Frt?e estimates 7l'l/li7~. avail. now. Handy to San P.O •. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. * LANDSCAPING * Call 54Q...&25 EXTRA lge 2 hr, utils pd. ~--c---07'"-----Diego Fwy. Locatai in S I C b 535 1-----------. -I HARBOR GREENS Cpts. drps, patio, 110 pets. _c_._•_•_a_M_•_•_•_____ Laguna Niguel. 83l-l400. oc1a lu s NC'\V lawns, Sp rink 1 e r s, Plumbing ~ J{ids OK. $165. 536--0121 LA ~!ANCHA IDEAL Harbor Blvd. office FIND YOURSELF decks, cleanup. Stale lic'd. I"-"-'-'-'-"::...---~· I Furnished & 2 BR Tow11houi;c "·/frpll'. Branrl Ne\v Deluxe Units location, Costa Mesa, lOOO IN SOMEONE ELSE. l~S36~·~-J~2'15-,;;.;"·-,==c:--:==-L.R. OTIS PLUMBING 111L.;hcr/drycr', hll·illli, pa1io, Rf•nt now for your con· DUTCH gardener, exper Remodels & Rl!pairs. Water ON TEN ACRES Unfurnished S185/n1o. 962·6.~46. s1ruclion allowance of 1 sq It. 548-5.554. 548-7398 DISCOVER cmplt. ser ., call Geml' heaters, disposalA, furnac-es, Apts. furn./unfurn. Lca.o;;e From $130 to $215 mo Laguna Beach n10'11 fl"C<' rent; 1 BR. 1 BR I •"~;'~','·:-:--"<'-:--:--~ DISCOVERY 53~2300 days or A r i ~ dshwshrs. ~3730 MIC & Fireplaces t priv. parioi;;. &· dl"n, 2 BR 11 & 3 BR's. Business Rental 445 1141831)-6885 2-13/387-3393 21J/630-546J p.m. BIA. All Dally Pilot areas. Pools Tennis Cnntnl'l Bkfsl. NEARLY ne1v 1 & 2 BR apls. From ~55. Dshwshr, encl 1-----------PLUMBING REPAIR !KIO Sea Lane. Cd~I 6-1~·2611 Bachelors • 1 Bdrms Arl~lt,<;. no pets. $18:> -S27:>. J ~~~~·1n\·~~1~i~.'"Cr.1 , , T 1-1 E FACTORY", cor.. ]~ A;~v~Y?..!i~~ri~g~ No job too small r.lac,\rthur '1f Coast lhl'~·~ 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms 217.> s. Coasl H\\')'. • Sisting of 32 unique boutique Lost ....... • &t2-3J2S * s110 ntf). up. ~tl 11k. Colnr lllJ!lll•ll!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!'l!!!!!' 1112 or 2 Full Baths Laguna N 'oguel Laguna Beach !llOpS, has 2openings in the lndfCU'ld 'l'rash hauling, Jot cleanup.~-~-~--'-~-=~ TV nr bc>nch. Jl:ti N. Coa~I . mall ranging from $80 mo. ~------~ Repair sprinklers, 673-1166. Drains unclogged -$7.50 ,\pis ofl("n to ~1"t'. ·1::lll 1•l 9 2 1~ dronnis C&l·h. Bltin~. Alaster 1ize bed.rooms .,.,., LAGUNA NIGUEL I f:lR IOW<'r dup]ei.;; Fantastic Card, tobacco &. yardage Exp ER T Japane se &-\\·er line lo 100' -$15 p.m. f 1n·plan·. 1· :I r Pr ' s .~ high bewn ceilings. Jar~e view. Ga1'8.ge. Ulil. pd, S250 shops esp. wanted. 425 30ch Found (frH ads) 550 Garden(' r . c 0 nlplete * 5'L~2502 * 1!n1pt'<;, i·hoi1'l' Iota I i o n. living room w/gas or Apartments mo. yrly. 494-2742. SL, l'lewport Be a ch , Gardening Service. NB, CM COLE PLUMBING l BR furn . aril. SI!'~!. Al.:o • ~:,~ $200 pr month. C~ll \l'ood burnin<> tirepla('(', 1 Rr., I B:i.: $11\5 e 2 Br.. N rt 8 h 67" -64" "~ TAN I 0·1 & '" 1 .. 1 pd PrP! 1.;e ~ ewpo eac ....-"""" or ..........,~"· puppy w w 1 e pa~ area ~1894. 2' hr .. _rvi..,. ''""US! studio . ._... 1••; s · ffi:;...l(.·i;;o RLTP.. Convl'nil'nt laundry Qt't'a R;i : $tl5. • 2 Br .. 2 &1.; 625 Sq F 36, F'ro11 neck. Wearing Dea oollar. , -"--·----·-·----~~~1 satariC''I n ' f' r niai:. -r.· nff kitchen. Enclosed pa· S2'.~':i 2 BR. fum. Winter ....•• Sl.95 · t. tage Since 10.3 • Vic. 20th s, EXPERT J a Pane s e PLUP.IBING repairs and in· '1!M-~l70. !)ELl:XE TO\\'nhousC" :: B" tios. 2 S\vlmmin:; pools. lnl'ld Gas, TV C.:ihll' & \\ltr 3 BR furn. Patlo. Liclo ..• $750 on Newport Blvd. C.M. + Orangl'. C08ta P.lesa, 200 E. gardener, knowhow, upkeep, stallalions painting. Free 1 B No 11 1 ! O ' n v1 •v. 21 ·· HA. ri·pl.. r1~11"!-ohl'. W/\V sfluna, recreation facili· parking lrg. 725 sq. ft. ov. h s ,.05449 1 t 1r· I • r_.i ,.1 ''1'· \·i;i .•,· ,.,,-,,.,''-·<•I"-''' '·••·J>. Fully erpld .::C d,.....,.l. Rec 3 BRnnf New Yrly $350 •to--bldg. 1250 mo . .wt t.,......,.... . pan. pest, 1m, ceanup. E,t,Call&·•···.0~0372. Closl' to hc.h '~ sh011111~1i.:· Nu I Y<·,ir Jsc. 67;_~9 c~ci;; ..• ~ tit's. Securi!y i::uard. No rac:il. lltrl Poot. sBQ~ area. 2 BR ~n r: 2 ba.' yrly . : : :$275 fro~l/$100 mo. storage. 2490 CALICO kitten round vic,_968-==34=o;=.==~===~ .,...,. °""' chldn. 110 P':i~. •l!ii-73 • .1. j 11 kr="=''=· ~--,~-,_---,.,-prls. :l!JIM I Alon1a Ave. 3 BR furn Winter •. , , ..• $300 fJe\\'[JOrt Blvd.. C. M · Magnolia & Talbert. 2 lo 31· GARDENING SERVICE ~~~'!,'~~~ ............ _ 2 C'lean 1 hr 11n1 1-;. prnd u111~ Tl\'U tidi·n1.. 11 t u u r h, Models Open 'tll 8 pm. 4~2277 or 493-527'1 2 BR furn Winter ....... $250 642-1220. ~:~'.wearing flea collar. B.easonable -Reliable SEWING·DESIGNING + eahle. m Gaviora. ny ' f1n•pl:it'-" S21~1 illl'! AL I. BHAND new lux. condo. 1 BH. furn \Vintcr ...... S175 HUNTINGTON BEACH * 646-6852 * !\.fen/Women. Reas. Rates !he oc't:'an. $17:i & fl!IO. 1 t,1tili~i1"~. ~!_ionc., C 71 •I J 2700 Peterson Way, CM Fair\\'llY frontage & view of DAVIDSON RF~ALTY Vacant. 14x24. Ofc/Sml shop FOUND vie. Fernlca! & CO?\fPLETE L aw 11 & $10 min. Call 846-7450 Newport Beach fd4·XX14 01· 1115·17-7. nr Harbor Blvd & La.i..'tH1a Niguel golf course. 5801 W. Cst H.l\'.Y. NB 646-6007 Free prk'g, $95/mo. 504 ~:~~~~hu~hor~~!~r ~~~~~ Gardening service. Iiauling Alterations-642-5845 I'· "It., 1 n:1., opsr<iH·o,;, Adams 2 Br .• 2 Ba .. air/t'Ond. Bit· Main . 536·2224, 536-9689. 64._7213 & cl ,. 540 ••= I I I " " '"'· G•ll & t"nnis club · · can-up. im O"'Vf\IJ• Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. \\'(' h:11"' \\11ntf'r {i •n ;,i '> i],.11 n.~1a1r.:. A!tr:u·t. :•pl · " ~ WAJ\'TEO: LOC FOR Ll- \\'ll T k "r I r I I '1 t • 1· I u 546 OJJO Jinv1ll'"C's avail. Arlults on-I~ BLACK & while Tmier vie JAPANESE Gardener. Tt'le I U e "ur t.'n ~ :">V.('t ish fql '" "'' -·1 ' " _& QUOR STORE, NEW LIC. /\lsri 01·t•anfronls avnil 1 dJ1vs: 673-!60'1' aft 6 pin. • 1.1'. Con1plction e!'it. early "wit11& ,,-. ORG CNTY. 673•3372 Fnirvif'1v, C.r.1. S.IG-7308 01· Con1pletc Yard \Vork and --------- Nuv. $3jl) per mo. 831-9936. . 675-77:?9. Clean-up. t'ree est. 642-J102. CERAMIC tile nc\v & •I BR. 2 BA · .......... · $.~.,.';tl,_ 2 B,l_t. shai.:. ilr'J)'l, r1•f, rail.I!•' lndustrt'al R•.ntal 450 :i BR. 2 BA ............ S~·~·' SlK1 yr. isl'. no JJC'CS/ctultl. e Rooms COO 1-----------J .. ne ral S.ervices I M e.a Verd Lost SSS ren1odl'1. Free csL Small J BR .. 1 BA ............ Slil 1\\'a1! Nov !;..1. ~irl:< pr1•t. DELUXE OF.LUXE 2 .,, BR 2 Ba -,--,.-...,---,---0-JUST COMPLETED 1 -:-;:;,~;:=~~;-·1~JO~· ~b,~w~•~l~co~m~•~·~s.1&-~2~426~·~~ ::BH.honie ............ S27j 1 1.;::•:: Iris: ;.:;11"; G4·1·1:~i0. _ APARTMENTS " ·' &~:: ·· · * * * * • LOSTl\-1ini.fl'ml.blkpoorlle. * * * * * C LL 6-"'" BR ·1 N' 1 I lk A C I ,~ I . 3 S -I L'l1c1. gar. sw.;1 up. Rental Rog•• Colleck 1600 to 3300 Sq. Ft. \\larner & r.tai:::nolia ania. Larry Sanford ,, : /,}'"''"'"' 2 a11t aVaJ ov s . \Vi\ . Ir 011{ . l pc l> • 11•1m· or ~· '' -A·-fill c ~"" a...... ..... JN SANTA ANA Red collar. ' 'Sus I e . ' ' I J tn hl·ach. adults, S225. min~ Pools . llcallh Spa · 546-i034. " 205 15th Street .1 4872 Lori Ann Lane r ;' > IC3-14TI or 5-16-4431. Tennis Coun1' · Gan1c and I Huntington Beach, Ca. New Wt.up bldg w/sharp, Reward $l5. 8 3 9-3 2 2 9 : Irvine, Ca. 92105 l'-------- 2 BR w/gtK'sl bilrn1 & hath. Billrarcl l!oon1. Newport Beach ___ You arl' tht· \\·Inner of ~7~d; a ~~e 2°:1!,~i n ~ ;--;o83>-=l~4'~9=an-:-s~p~m----;. --,,---,--~ You arr lhl' winner or associated BR OKERS-REALTORS 1025 W Balttoa 67l·J66J SEACLIFF ~1anor A fl t s Bachelor apL util pd. S14!1.50. Pool. 152; Pla('()111ia ,\ve .. 11;;.k about our di~unt 5.IFr-2682 Crpls, drp~. patio. Adults. l BR. From .S160 THE NEW 2 tirkcts lo lhr nv('rhead loading doors, 110.. 1.0ITT from my home 162 2 tickets to lhc I Joh w .. nte ci, Mal.! 700 \'1•arly leas<>. 673-?Ji.~7. I l BR. & [)1>11 F1"0111 Sl~(I VERSAILLES 9th Annual Orange Co J'lfl.:: shai;c flWl'. \'ictoria, SC. r.1atc. J'crsian 9th Annual Orange Co. ------'-----·I c~1~f?,~~~~'.,~~,~.'~,;: • MED~l~~:~~EAN ·~t t~~:~~~~S l~~~fai~:::I . : ::A~=E:I:: 17~~\:~~~=~~~·~~; __ '_''~"'~'~~;~o~'"_'~· "~1~~';~.,~1·1~::~!~'. 'r;::;:a~~:':I SCRAM-LETS +GREAT VIE\V .• 2 BR. '* 2-100 Hnrhnr Blvd .• C.lil. ) Ocean view. 24 mur house ANAHEIM oHi cc, 110-230 V. N r . LOST fem. Irish setter, 9/27. ANAHEIM ANSWER 'S Frple .. hltns. sundeck!:, pool. 1714) 557-8020 security, apartments rll'· CONVENTION Edinger & Newport Frwy. Vic: College Park. CM. 1 yr CONVENTION _s210 up. r.46-£314, 67:r1~1~1 RENTAL OFFICE i;;i)"!ncd with a Maste1·'s CENTER 675-2601. old. Wht spot on c~t CENTER [)(>tach -1-labit -Fiord - Costa Mes• OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM tnuch, Pxclusive club \1•ith Octobc>r tlrh Uiru 151h UNIT, 500 sq. ft. $65. W. 16th Jlcward! 557-7094. October Uth thru 15th Bleach -BARE IT New duplexes & uniqu<' Aquabar, fountains Plrasc· call 642-5678, ext. :~J ·I St .. N.B. IRISH Setter fem 5 mos Plea~ call 642-5678 ext. 314 Did :i:'0'1 hear the one about •SHADY EJ...f\1S.POOL• and fo rmnl gardens. 1\ll 646-1724 . . ' ' 9 5 • 1 . thc str1p!J('r 1vho gavr up the 1 BR. Apt wi!h a ll fa('llllics. Grounrl floor. Avail. Oct. 11i, -----------1 10 Df.c. 1. ~)() 1ll'r \1•k. + !lrposit. 645-4242. Just N. Iii Hoag flospltnl. Z BH, 2 b:i w fqJl l', r1·ln~. 1 i blk to bcal'h J';\rtl~ lu1·n. $2'..0 nlO. M1ke 6'10-1500 1·~1 :'87 1 day~; ("\'('S. 497-'2Xlfl. :1 RR. 2 Bl!. rlr\Vly decor., 1yf w . 1lrps, lil rn s. w/\\', drpi;, hllns. Chldrn sml pet ok. &12·8520. BEACHFRONT. 2 BR. color TV, slt!l't"O, d sh I \\ !th, bllirn;, wsh/dryer. 111111n. $260. 1n<'I . util. 64&-1234 H.on. Rll. LIR. k1l1•h!'ne1i.• & ba th. fl,11 chi\l!n•r1 nor fll--'l s. 2\051,,. E \{;th St., Nll. 646--1001 -------OCEAN\o'H.0:-\T :1 Br .. 2 Ba. li.•st lor. \\'Jnlt•r/yrly. Ph lhni;::, rlnys S:kll-1491. eves, !i7:".,..2!H~l. • &lbon Pl'nln. 3 BR. 2 RA over gnrago. On h n y wllx>nrh. Urll pnid. S3!'i0 n~· 213: 620-7233 collect. G C Id ,1.. triplexes between 9 and 5 pn1 to clu im old. Vic J.lc1l & Beach. H.B. bchvecn and pm to c a1n1 businl'ss because she couldn't nrdcn Apls. 11 rll. ".,(). e 2 l~I{. :uliilti;; ... 1 ~5. purl of the South Coast's your tickets. (North Coun!y Rentals Wanted 460 897-8119 or 842-9 76 5 your tickets. (North County BARE IT? S17D. I ~ fl11cst apartmf>nt con1n1un· II bcr · "'" J2201 1~~~--------1 FREE FURNlTURJ·: l'l.AN • :: Bf~ J child • $29!'1• ily, tolJ.rrcc nu1nber ls 540-12201. BUSrNESS \\'Oman clesire!I Reward. In -freC' nun1 1s ......,. • y 0 UNG m 11 n s c e k 8 177 E. 22nd SL 612-3&1;:-i 13•,ill!.. nvi', spnc·ious al)ls 1 hcdroom/s'udios Crom $195. • * • • * lovely furn or unfurn 3 or 4 LOST-Lge male Siamese in • * * * * lull/pt-time employment fn SPi\(" 2 & :l Br npl Sl '10 UJl. \\ fnf'd yurds, 1mtio~ & 11l•iet 2 Rl'drooin from $295. BDRM w/kit privil in Ix-st Br Eastbluff home, (Older lhl' at'C'a of N. Laguna. Hauling landscaping & gardening. . fH'l\f\t'y. l\'11p1·1 ~.1 51 E. Ba.v hi ""·-I Htg Beach area, y,·oman r""Li·o,). '·a•• or b••y. Reward for Information or Exp. 646-7251. Pool, rp1ldrp, bltn!I, kids '-"' uxe " "'-'room =... JJC ,._ " SK PLO DER & d tnJ k :-it 1a1 Fultl•r!nn St.), C.r.1. ~fod 1 9 AM to 6 p r,1 only, $90 mo. Also 11:" Bdrm Principals only. 979-909!: return. 497-~3 or '194-2918. 'I A ump C J b W • -1 IOI ok. l'llONE: 6'1t-4SJ7 ' c !I open· ·' · · · / vt bath ltabl f 2 \\-Ork Concrete asphalt o antea, rema e 2206 Colh·~ l\'o ~' .•. 612-703.l VERSAILLES w P su e or 979-!KJ90. BLACK & While 1niniature ·~ breakin<.' 84fr7UO ' 1~ r.1apl~· N<L 1 .•.. li l:.!-:!81'.J Park·Like Surr ounding girts, $70 each. 968-4914. \\'ANTED: LOC FOR Ll· fox terrier, female. "r.1in· snivi g, "' ' GOOD TYPIST 2 " I~ 11 QUI ET DELUXE on the BLUFFS LRG. Bach, 2 blks from HS. QUOR S'fORE. NE\V LIC. ni<'". !»5--0739. )'ARO, garage ~Jean~po;. Will do your typing •t or \ . ..,/mnri 1 I ? !:. ~ llR l'T at NEWPORT pil'r. Stud"nl p-rd, no -r·. ORG CNTY 67"3372 Remove trees, dtrt, ivy. h h Wiii · k Cu!tom rlrps, d1i;hwashcr · • ' " A s. " "" "" " · .,.. REWARD: Femall' white toy Orivewys, grading. 847_2666. er ome, pie up \\'tr pd no childrcn/riets i\L"'> t'UR:"i BACHELOR t~1;::;/pi~~w~~n~lvd;·1 tu~::;~ !~~ .~ .,'!~.'1~1 °1.1'<pd· '.·c1n~ .. ,.~~.· poodle lost in Eastbluf! Cl and deliver local H.B., ~·s A 1 N • Pvl. P11ti011 • ll!rl . Pools ...,._, ,,,., .. ~ area. 640-0928. YARD & Garage l'anup. F .V., West, 7Sc per pg . " 1 v64'!",_"_' .• 0 19.1 1 · 11 • 1 Nr Shop'g • Adults Only allove Paciric Coast lh1')'. at JI ,..-CJ Free est. 7 days. CaJI •11 k b h u L!tk'I lslel to f'ntranl'f'. ROOMS Sl8 ""'k. up wfkit. ~1 r.1ANS Kent gnlrl wrii;t ti 54S-503l or w1 wor y our • • BE/\l!TIFUL t ,r,, 2 BIL Martinique Apts. 900 Cagfl(>y .ant', Nl'\\'flOrf S:ID. \\'k up Apts. Lci\v \~atch. r~ashion Is I an ll. any me, · call 847.3095. Contemporary Gnrdl'll, Apl. 1m Sant.1 Ana Ave .. c.r.1. Bl'ach, Ca. 92£r60. TclC'phonc: monthly ralrs 2376 Ne1vport iliOi/5i.iiiRiowiiiordiii.i 64iii4-4liii7isi. iiiijG~~1· ~:u~· Y~~~:i:P~ f'EMALE age 42 Sl'<'king p/I l"ftllo:1. f 1· fl I r . , pool. ~11.,'1'. /\pt. 11.1 6,IG-5.'i-12 17141 645-0060. Rlvd., Of 5'18-9'r.")j, Announcements 500 E t · 83S-2J03 557~1. emp. exp: 10 yrs. med. of· s1 :»-s17o. c.:a11 ~tG-5tG.'l. aa.ea--nnuzo PARK NEWPORT c~~~~rrign1a;:t~r * • * * .. I . j[C] H '· i ,· fi cc rr&.backLltebk.type, UPPt~R. LAl{(;f-: 2 Br. ••n1·! -u #'9 Bcai·h &_ Pac. ~t Hwy: David Howard Semen and~ ~ ousec ean ng filc. \~illing ~ learn any In· ~11r. Nr . ClCC !o .. st,~~-~>'J.:I, Sparklin~ N1•w /\dull /\pill. ' APARTMENTS 5.16-l-:51R. 2016 E. Ocean Blvd. '.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.;;;iiii;IJAPANESE LADY TO DO l('l'l_!Sllng orr1c{' H.B. ar\'"8, Arlults, no pcls. •"'"" n.oya I Hit, 1··,1n1 Sl(j() 1 h ba • H OU SEC LE AN ING. \Vr.ite c~"· ad No. 516 ~lo P11[1n Dr. s1;i:.11rno. 64~r35l!'i :.! Hll I" n \ unr si!ll:i I on t e y BF.DR()()~ w I k I t ch c n Balboa, Ca. 92661 Babyslttlnn NEEDS TRANSP. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 or ~'57-:tl72. 2 BH·, l I~ 1~A. Furn silo Luxury apartment livlng ?V· ~~J'.s lo~t"lyde~~:.· /r~~ You al'(' the winner of -~--·~··-----·I :>4&-072-i Costa Mesa. Cal 92626. 2 BR, 2 RA. dbl gar, crpb;, Pri..,uic patios, lush forest crlooking the water: En)Oy over 3.i. 536-61Jll 2 tickcti;; to 1he cos TA MESA PRE-•--.,.-.,.-.,,------0..-.----:-• NEED help at hoine". We 1lrps. bltn~. di; w sh 1·, •1r"' 000 h Ith pa swim 9th Annual Orange Co. SCI oo JS h & M I "P I C t Cl a 1ng scttim:-. Carports, ~as pal1I. • ',"'' ea s. , ' • R N~vport Be 1 • i L, I onrov a. ro • arpe e n have Aides Nurses ~~~· 1'•.-iiil 1U12 5 · 114 E. 20th SI., C.i\1. 5-18--0137 n11ng pools, 7 lighted ten· 0001 '$3. \VEEK ac 1 International NE\\I H'Ol!RS 6:~ am·6:30 Al~ \\'indo~s & floor care H 0 u sckprs,' Conipanions: · ~·c·-~~-~~-ni11 courts, plus miles of 64' • 3 3 · Auto Show pn1. Music, ·'"'· ries, a_rt . Call Dutch 5.n-1508, 8am-6pm llom•.n>ak··rs u P ,. 0 1, ,, . e STUDIO:NTS -NO FEE e STUNN ING 2 Br., 2 Ba . * * $180 * * hicycle trails, puttlni;:-, shuf-* :.--14 * 31 the .. !3<'11ch n•ntnls. '.! & ~ Ur; S275 Pool, rt"C. room area. :: Ur, 1 i;, Ba , 111"1vly pain1t'fl. !lf"board, croquet. Junior l's #I ROOl-1 • ANAHEIM ~C'ns. ~~•c d. 642-4050. Expert Housecleaning c54~H_"1_1_. -------~~Vt~+r~1t'~Y\·~~[~~~· • I G-1;,..;,.·~'iO. 710 W. IRt h SI .. C~I . 1!11n~. 1·111ttrlrps, rnrl 1~t10. from :i;174,50 monthly; al!IO l FOR LADY TION ves. · By Day. Refs. 836-0648 Gd. care in a happy home Nr sC'hl.~ & sl1n11'1:. t;hildrrn n•d >-~"-m plans nnd IN n.N.'S llOMF. 64fi.-TI66 CONVEN DAY Nursery, babies to 5 Dedicated Cliening for your little one, Npt lits. 3 Br. 2 '' .,,, n•• 0 ,-1,,,, ,00"111 ~l:A.c 3,Br. p11tio. Y.ur\I. s.21~. k '' ..... ,, .. "" -S CENTER y-118 per wk •= "788 or R--· 541'-7649 .. I 'l-n \ I ( \1 :.!I' o · No 111'1:<. AAO Ccn!<'r ~t. 2-•lory Jown. ho••••s. Elcc· Guest Home 41 .•• . · ~ * WE DO EVERYTIUNG * """"· · lv . 202'~ 4 211 d SI .,' r .!' "nClll: , ,· ~ .• ; "'1 C II r ~ u""' October 11th thru 15th 645-4ID2 ...,_ t he 30 Jira · S265/n10. I~ tilk l>ch. ~;!<.lt-.iz~, or ~l-!l'l.. _ '·" • 11 11 1 " pen 11·kdrtyl'i. trlc kltehens, private patios · · Refs. Free est, 646-2839 ""'' eac r, • a ctivc, 11 S • n 1 · All day \\'knds. r..i'J..!(.140 or balcont'••. ··-ting. dr•· PRIV. Room. me n Io r Pll·lt..~ cM.U 6'12·5678, ext. 314 C pe t MA Eng M.>ek9 gd full·llme 642-767!. I** 1 ! t. · tt>w "" c ni: ...., ...... ,... wonK'n. LovtflR: can.>. Cloee bct\\.'t'('n 9 and 5 pm to claim a r n •r Expert Housecleaning Job. 543.{635 M·I-' 8-4 P:-.1 YEARLY I~. 2 d0<1r:i> hvni Sl '.:.~1/1110 Adul!!', no pt:•ls. NEWLY DECORATED pl'rir.11. Subtcrranl!an park· to park, Jlbr &. shops, your ti('ke\s. <North County ~lJNOR home ~pain. Plumb-B~Y'-fi°'~'~Y;· .=Re!~'~·ini'sz~8.1&-06490h~=l,;';;•;;;o=W=•:n;••;;o::·:l:;~;;: .. ;F::;7;1;0 1 . :J~.2 :i,/~0~·6'12~~11~11>1~' j ~ ~:;~~~r ~'.;11~,l~-~-.,-.'-.-,-pc-r 2,!;icl~.., ,:,rJ!~. d;1~·~),:~ 11\';, :~~~vi;~;:~~7:t ~:n:: 540-2562. 1~1-fre~ num~ ~!I !4°'1~1. ing ·f' ca~~~1~ntlng •. Hau&eeleanlng $2.~ h~ ~. 2 BR. all ulll 1111 until 1111 rrp111, 1lrps, hltns. rrfrlg. 5. G.~l'JJ. 1-·n~hlon Island 111 Jambo~ COMF. !ICC', liaw your pal'l"l'lt -roo ing. · Newpor1 Bea.ch area. Acoounting Fee Paid July 1. :1701 Sca11hon· NR , 1 Sl'10lnio. ;i.1~5270, 81'\.3.')-W. 2J7f,.B Plncentin /\~·f" .. S14fl llnd San Joaquin Hlll11 Road. cam:I for as )'OU v.oold do, "Us!'' It In clusltied, Ship CARPENTRY, Additions & lMl/\11. 673-2418. Bookkeeper $600 673-6j78. -E -SIDE 2-BR. $fSO-2192·1> f'l11N'11tin A\'" .. s1:t'J Telephone (7141 &14·1000 lime permitting. 642·9778 10 Shore Remits! 642-5678. n>pa.ir. XI years llarbor LAL>Y "·ishcs days Y.'Ork Capable of F/C ,r,,_ a variety 256frA ()rnnJt•' 1\\•1• •••• Sl40 l!'IT' rental lnfonnallon nrea. 64&-2ll5/~2!M. Good & reliable, Refs. of accounting duties. DELUX 2 DR, fum. or un· 1 Bl!11~. ,.., "· 11•fni,::. Pool. "·~ r-o-541 8029 A/Payable ~UM\ I • blk Iha "'""'"" o.·rnl\rd ......... • Sl3.'i EASTBLUFF * * * * *' * Carpet Service . . ~ "'4600um. "¥"' G<>Ol230L't!ttn )' A1lulr~. 110 ~·•~ 1~12·9520. LADY y,·anrs housecleaning Heavy ex)X!Y'. Cod I n r . -121 1 HJ{. nuplCXl'!i, IK•wlv v ·11 G d A t Co -----,-,-, I'll II I II> I • 1 a rena a P s. JOHN'S 0 --1 & U11hol•le~ week. Ex""r. Own tram. nstMJcHon helpful. • -· \\' urn aviu · 1 derorrth'i'I. Crp!'i.:; thru-0ur, e -~c T 1 ~~ ., ~ 7 °~ F F1JRN 3 Bit, 2 ha .. 111i•ps !P beach Ocean Vu, 67:'>--160!1 or 645-012'3 pr.nl s1:•11 & 11v Arh1l1s. S:il r,,,.,. lITIVF: • own IOU!le /'-------------------,1 Dti·ShOmpoo free Scotch· $3.50 hr. Cali 84 ·.'°"1 rec & F'ee POllltions ('1•11\l'r St, r .. ~,. rlri'" ,t. frplc. Cornpl<'fl' . Spocious 5 BR., df'n, 3 Ba.. w.1ard tSoU RetardanlJI). Ja"ltoriel RUTH RYAN AGENCY 2 Br furn mobil l' homt·. adull1' only, no pct 11 . Sl601mo. Pool. 613·1 3~1 prtvary W/M>.p. t-nlry. Ynnl frpll'., '>''ti bar, attached 2 Degre 9C:T'!I & 11 lor 17931 Beach, •l.D. 841-9617 2-Blt. JI ~ BA. crpt11, drps:, & 1:11r(1.i{l' Cnnve11l1·11 l t•1 1·11r garngc. 2660 1'(). It. Trader's Pa"ad1'se b"ghlc·-... & 10" m:"nute Jeff's Cleaning Service 1793 Newport, C.M. 64&-48S4 pool. Ut1I pd. A cl u It 11. pfl.rk & Nhop·~. /\vf\ll. in1· 117• I 1 '' '"" "'--Ide ti I Comme I·' .1, blench for \Vhlle ca-ts. IW>I "• ~ •• -~. * re~ Sl60/mo. &12--21'19. rnrrl. on lt•usi" Sl70 per 1110 . • Pool Fncllith·~. ·..-~ Pr•t,11 "''ri<.'0111,. ror Info rflll Nr. Cd.ti·! !llgh School 1• &lve )IOUr money by MlvlnKl:---:---"-7c;::::.__ __ _ Admlnlstratlv• Assistant 2 Br. I b:i. ~ti1V1' n>fric, l'p!, Newpor t Height• 11trps. SUi0•11111. \\1111cr paid. CLJ-:AN 1 or 2 BR. Arlull11, nu -'-'1_,.__,_rn_I_. ---- pets. La;r kit. $1'.tS-$150. ii21 1 A'rTltArTIVE Ol'W ~ hr, 1 hr• E. 16th St .. NB. 646-1~1. .1111. Nn t•hildn.-n/1){) lll'lS. A t U t :MS $1@. :>IR--OAAI P · n urn. SPACTOU.t:-t,;3C'jl';11~N~- An•helm IC'll\' & &hnppl~. S130 rno llARBOR l\elelltt 111'\'a 3 Br 2 Ba. Bltln5. Pntiti • Ex· tnu! Ph. 714 : S.l7-87+1 . B•lboa 11tanct utlls pd. 9'7!HJ134. • * 3 BH .. 2 bR apt. Cpt. itrpt. 251:. Omni;:". Sax! 673--0tXil 6nl'h A 2 HR /\rtull1, p.~ LOE 3 BR. 2 1>.1. trplr, BAY MEADOWS A . I I~. N 1...... 387 W. hoy SI. Ci\1 64&-0073 stOYt' rt • ,... r so. vov. $300/mo, 117'1ii Oiomontl, 2 BR. 2 00 • .unkr:n Uv nn. G'&-32118. frplc., crp11.:, 1lrp11, i16.'f mo. '6?-:1037. B alboa P•nlnsul• 1:.""NCl.DSED flll'l'I, 2 BR. 2 BA.l..BOA Bayfronl Prl bc?a('h &... IO"A-tr. C= dtp!l, bit· Dock avail. 2 Br, 2 Bo .. r.tllr', Int. Sll!O. 54!;.. • trpJe. Yr\)' lease. 673-2162. • Bt>nut. l BR. El('(' ki!C'h("n, t11.. crpfK. 01,,.. I~. YEARLY : 2 Br. SIOVt", \Vkdy!I ilrt '1, ~'46-l l;·a. reft1&. On:r, Atlulta. no pm.. =. 6'T.MilM-, 1173"'8224. Fat Proflt Ls attaJned whl!n you ecll throu1eh rHull.gct· Uke to trade? Our Trodrer'• Un~ Dally' Pilot Cla1•ltied Panldile ootumn k tor you ! , ;;•dl.=.:&.::!Ui611_::.;;c_ ___ _ 5'10·Jt!l.l.1 ~t°) AnilJ:Qll \V:\y, NB r~l4·2991 Ines IM extra lrip1. Wiii clean landscaplnf J)El.1°'1;"11"r"r"u71.~2~1<"11-. -.,1-.,-•. -.. Yrly. Ralbou R-cntiils-liV.Oi rm .. dlnlna: nn. Ir. -• LANosCAPING · n . '' V I t • hall $15, Any rm. S't50. I ..,.-1nr't /•t;a ('l"f (' nn•n. 2 l~trin ., 2 J\11\h s:rin I mes couch $10. Chair $:). JS )'no For un~quc ... pt~al U'(I NeWJM.!rl &!"C'h tlnancla.J In. Tf't"(·~. Bl!--ln11. Encl srn r. 2 Bdrm .. 2 BAlh $265 exp. 1111 Y.'l\tl.l ooun~. not 1tylc 1n J1u~11et1p1ng call 11t!tut.l()n h 111 ln1medlttr 1\1tult11 <1nly Sl-t'>. ~1 3 »Urm., 2 Ba th S275 method. I do "MJrk mylC!l!. J anlei.: C. F.Jmer . LAnd· QPC,n~ni for Jr. iltanagement 111rkory. A111 o 646-Ji27. 4 Odrm .. OcfoMtron1 S5SO dOl lars Good 't(!f. 53'1..0lOt. i.cnptna: & r.trumcnance co. poe:inon. ---.-.rnor1c;1\1. 1"00ce--IJMvr. 67:)..1972 or 49l~15 "ltcnovat~ la\\·n11 A nl'· 2 Hr Studio, JI~ !in, frpl. sprl TRY PARK NE\Y-POr.TfOt6 Ceme0n_t,,.,.C~onc--~-------I ceulty at OIL~ tim~ ... F'ref> ~~~~tla~'Ol~~u!~;~~ r1 s•rt.'11..,, Sl9'Vn..,,. Gns & months. You will llkl' it •I "'--------------------" ! PATJos-smEWA.U<S HI. 646-7729 llfl 5. )fff'I . b;talnt"l!I c x p 11 r ,. "'Ir prt. 145 r. l~h ~Ul-116,t $2.(;. I BR, wonrlf'rlul locn· UPIUGllT fretztt, L~t l'U llAVE duplex, Colta MC'sa. CEMENT CONTRACl'OR Masonry STit01'1iG lll;\lh 11h\1lty. lil)n, ~ rnnct.•I l·l:. Otll fl, runs lx!nut, kloks bHiut. IJ\•c In ooe, rent the other. Dana Point J1r11 213/~ d n Y" ; Tnide ror Vf'l\lf'I Sp.:.nlsh or \YMt fbttt-UPJM!r. N'pt, -Ocr -·-------71 4/S.,,,..7673 ews. ~!edit 11y\e 501• It lovncat. CO!llla Me.u. SlS.000 Equit)' T\\'0 lat" 2 Br . nr rte\\' NEW Duri1•x 3 BR , 2 UA, Si&-2159. Balboa Ba.y Prop. MJ.74.CIJ h11rbor f"n1 r11n('f' & l)i)hf"ny $JX> mo. Pk. Uch. SIOO & $210 e 123 39th St e "/vi~ 1tx1uln• H\.10 ~. r.o-363:1 or ~ l-'flH!lt llwy., Lt11111n11 or =====-=-""-:,.,.-= phr>n1•, <l\M-&:'48 EASTBLUF'F 2 Br. 21~ On.. OCEAN v~~·. !q>flC' 2 UR. 2 ._.rplc. All eke. Dbl aar. 81\, 11unk"11 hv rrn, dlnlr!JI Pool nrarby. &t-i--640.'i. DANA l>t, 11t'luxr hr:1ui11>, 3 U'V(•l'llizl'fl RR, 2 Utt. J.j' Hv ITl"I, bl"11m reHlnp, vlrw, $37,500. for 4 pll!X V1111 NU)'I flt-eA , Act, 496-4004, RADIO·TV Tt•st l::q11lpn1ent Nu/UJC(l01ube•oompo11"n 111, realJIOf'll, cnpacllnr11, •lor· l\Sl'C «11bine1•. tool• nl\JI(', fol' lmt or cyl'h•. 5''8-9832. tin·u, hltll.'5, l'rp111. drps, BALBOA Pi:•nln. 01.x Ml'w 3 patio &. ynrd, $100 n10, Br .. frpl, patio, lq::, m111r br. 8.1'1'·3927 rir ir.:37 [1 1~1 tll'('*"'M nn. Yrly. 1142--8148. Nl·:\V, IUAUf)' I ODltM. opt. CANAL 3 Br. ntw 11hn_g, ~ti (;rc11te111 view of harbor en· flf.lll, llUn tlk., dol·k t1vt'lll. trn.nN! It l"OflJl'Ulnt. S.0:f" to ) riy or ! UXl. 615-%124.. * np11ffi'lt1tfl. J.1881 Pequ!lo * * l'enn 111.ilnt CLASSTnED will •D ff! "-'""-'="-------' I Wl.Ll. trf.de ~ A pt.tttls Elko, Nl'V, r'tC?UtioMl land nr r.itcCuJloulth Sprilli: Crttk dcv. for ~al e.tatc or 1 ol eq w.lue. 847-6941. (iOLFERS/Skicn Dttam • New hon1e in Canyon Lake, U mln to SA. Ai r ('On(I, landlll!. J,13,00> vlll trade fl)r 0rq, Co. prop. -· * * * call M1ur ** 64t-0087 REPAIR& plantmi. bli<'k, ToP bfMfill Ir. unique work CUST'OM CEMENT WORK block, etont, Quality work. tnvlronment, For (Ol)o Ori~ WALKS, patkla. Ken. Pb. R.e1k1. ~lt70. sldl'f'fttloo, plC1'M' submit --i ~ "--ea'I r11r14 ~'i'C:i"''=-'i"':O.:.=c:.;=-1 n!t1Umf' lncludlnst flll..l11ry re. .,........ ~ ""''" -Palntl,. & qulremtnts In t,,nfldf>nct llD: TIME FOR Paporh•nvlnt O.ultled ad no. 529, c/o Onfly Pilot. P.O. Box UGO. "UICK CASH EXTER. Complete 2 cnats , I Coel11 MCM. Call!, !1'2Q;. .,. •!Ory $1!0, 2 llory ~120. Ettu•l OpJ>O•. r.u1p1<>yor Neat work. Rey, 847-1358. l"l'~~~:!Jl!l!!l!!!!l..,!'!'!!I THROUGH A rNT. ~ EXT. r/IJNTING ADM ASST liiO Honcst work. Vrry ~It.A. 01\'. of ma,Jor ru1l'I ptopl!M)' DAILY PILOT .-.... &•t. C•ll --1 d"""1°C'"'"' -· ....... "' °"1 Sped.a.I. rntt:r/Ex1rr 1,r~,.,. nowk• 1R.!:;.1 tax<o. WANT AD r.:.inhn1. Local ttl.i. Uc'd 'A" llo'Or e c, '\I" oppor. 10 j(lln outrhtndlnic firm. na. Chudt, 66-C.fll!f. AbiR"all Abbot Pttllonnd '4Z 5678 Acri)(')'. ZV> W. W11rntr. --.,."--·----CLASS1ni:o •.•••.• Gl2-66711 '"'"""'"-'-'='°'·-"":.:A:__ __ -' Moncb:Ji, Octotitr 9, 1972 ![Ill ...__[ _r. .. _ .. -_j[Il][ '---_-_-·_![}] .__I _ ..... _. ,_J[Il] ~, ~-~·-·~l[i]~1~l ~"'~ ...... ~ •• ~]!Il)~J [ l[iJJ I [ D•ll V PILOT 23 .. 0 •• ]~[:... _ ........ __ ;;;;l~;;;~ Ailji Wont.;a;-M'"& F 710 Holp~onml;'M-1. F 710 olp W•nlod, M & F 710 Help Wan...,, M & F 710 Htlp W•nttd, M & F 710 Help Wtnted, M & F 710 <•lo Wonted, M' F 710 Auction 804 Auction 804 j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I a"'""" 12-2•m, Mon thn1 Acfv•rtl1lng Secretary Fri. $2 hr. Great oppar. for a.rnblHou11, Dick Churches Re1t. h!Khly ak:llla:I gfrl. Bralns, 26!L.ll Newport Bl, CM initiative & sh n_>qulrtd. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO j FACTORY help. M1.chlne opr. Exp belptul. \VUI tl'llin. Youna:. mature w o 1n a n ~~· Call Doris llope, 833:1670 Fee Pakl ADVERTISlNG G J r Is. Nt-wport Beach financ.lal in. Sr. Accnt..CPAtConstr $15K Wo1nen 1-'/Pitrt tlnie 1loing i;titutJon ha s l..minedlate Mech. Designer $82:\ BUYER pleasant tl'Jepl1onl;> wrk In opening for a professional Exec. Secretary $700 our office. Guam salary It w/1trong experience. You Payroll Cleric Con11tr $650 eenerous bonuaeli. Call will purchase office su~ AP Bookkeeper Conslr $000 96.l-S886 plies, auto Deets & ollice Sales Rl.'p /Adhealvcs SllK · equipment. Tnx Secre1ary to $61).J APROPOS, 29 Fa s h I O n Adm Mt/ Acctng S800 Island, N. B. Intelllgenc We wtll consider only ap. A.1edlcal Assts tn $450 * INSPECTOR * 1·2 yni. exper. w1machlnl' part-.. Pla11t:k·s e.1tper. help. ful Apply In pcrton, f~lcr lndu11tri,•s. Im._ 2101 Dove St. Newport Beach (Acl"08& fronl O.C. Airporl) INSPECTOR . TRAlNF.E, lnprocess iru;pection, wUl truln. Apply In pert0n btwr1 !I .~ 3 at SAE Advanced P11ckaging, 2165 S. Gran<! AYe, Santa Ana. An equal opportunity employer. ~'Oman uware of hl-taAhlon pHcants w/a proven record r lor sales. Exper. hetpful. No of the highest integrity & Also Fee PosltioM ~ "''•phone calls please. honesty & who easily ~ain a NEWPORT j0\111'1C DCt>C,....lldC! confidence & admiration of Personnel Agency "Y 11 'tL r L.1',..}\...11 'ti 'tLL MASSEUSE Coed hours. Xlnt S$. 642-0450 10 tUn t(l s pm M.An.IRE MAID. $2.25 hour. L.aguna LklO Apt1. Call 499-2835 ~1 ED J C AL As.SISTANT ~ Reputabl~ doctor ncedi1 1.1 rcspon:otlble gaJ w f g o o d bff.ck offll..'(' exper. Salary lo $425. Call Linda R a y , 54o-«J55, Coaslal i\gt'ncy, 2790 J-fnrbor Blvd ., C.M. A1EDICAL Secretary I RL'- t:eptionist. Good typist. Exp only. \\' /90n1e knowledge of back offi~. P I F'ul.ltime. Busy GP 1-1.B. area. 847-2547. M E RCl-lANDISE handler, A/R CLERK management & vendors. 833 Dover Or., N.B. SERY1CE5•AGENCY Must be alert. Highly pro-642-3870 full time. Ask for mgr. Mr. licient on 10 key adder. Send resume & s a 1 a r Y '""""""""""'""""""""~I Free & 1-~ee Positions Pavone, Bea1's Fumlture. See Penonnel Man~er history in confidence to: Elec. Engr BSEE $15K S.lboli Ba y Club Cklssilied ad no. 528, cfo FOOD li>fgr., basically wkuds F ield Serv. Engr Sl3K 1100 Irvine Ave, N'pt Bch Daily Pilot. P .O. Box 1560, at snack stand. $3 hr. MTIST Operalor for N.B. 1271 W. c.o&.st Hwy. Costa Mesa, Cali.I. 92626. 838-lJ03 be!ore noon. 1-leavy travel requiremvnt law firm. Call S.10-5400 for Newport Dcach Equal Oppor. Employer Mech. Engineer to $900 ASSISI' ANT CASHIER : I "~""~~~~~~!!!! j Fry Cook, E x per. 3 Years experience ••"PiiP•l.iiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Great boss needs your Car W ash & Polish Appl.f The above positions. requirt' outgoing pel'90nality & big Drivers,. ~ men, polish & Colony Kitchen high power solid s1a re elec· smile for this front desk derail. Full tinie. 6 Joca. 3211 H arbor Blvd. 11-onic equip. Ex.per. No spot. Salary to $550. Call lions Good l?R C M acrospru..--e Helen Hayes, 540-6055, ME.TRO cl R WASH osta esa . Coastal Agency, 2790 FRY Cook, f/lime. $2.50 per Jr. Application1 H-~--Blvd .. CM. ~="'="'~';o'"=""'='-'B"''""-'c"-.M=. ~I .... uu. ;:: hr to start. Chance for ad· Engineer $12K ASSISTANT Food M ........ , CLERICAL, par!. !!me, 1'~ vancement. Cot1"""" Coffee C 11 d d ... -dny, 3 or 4 days per week. ""b'* o ege gra fno exp 1'!<11!·_ pern1 pftime wknds. $2.50 Flexible schedule, lite lyp-Shop, 562 W. 19th St, CM. Adm Assistant ~ hr. 838-1103 before noon. ing, answer phone, filing. FURNITURE MFG. R.E. J-lelpful, n1ui;t Hire ATTENTION !'lmall office, New P 0 r l Production supervisor ca~e flj:Ures. Saleswome~ & Men Beach. Call Sharon 673-7384, goods dept. or upholstery Gra duate Att'y 8:30 to 5. 1 Year work exper. $25,000 to $50,000 COCKTAIL waitress wanted, supt. New Orange Co. hl.'ad· Sale1men to $11K Glamorous, exciting, adven· apply Dana Pt. Yacht Oub, quartered company. Ground Recent exper. w/hot meJt turow: ules career with alt 12 noon, Wed. thru Sat. floor oppty. Call 557·6052. adhesive!! Clubpacifica !lying all of Exp required. Escrow Manager , , .. to S1:a'.Xl U.S. &:: Mexico. No age bar· Color Coordinator $433 1 m..Oiiii .... iiiiii&iiiiiiiiiiii;;;; F.xec. Secretary ...... to $650 riers. Earn as you learn. Nice personality. \Vo r k GENERAL Sec'yfReceptionist ••• to S600 $12K NEW FACTORY EXPANSION $458 , $640 Ptr Mo. As Per Written Agreement Full Time Young 1nen -mechanical aptitude hl'lpful, but not required. Must be 19 or over Able to start work bn- mediately, If accepted. For Job Information. Call Tuesday 10 a .m •• 4 p .m . 776:8S51 RMI E1tm s.1 .. FR.EE License Training Limittd Tlmt Only Famoua licuse course now avaiJablo thru Tarbell <.:om· Secretary Kelly Girls pnny. AppUc11.rtts luUy re-Needs your akill1! Work lmbuned upcm qualitlcatlon. '~·tw•rc you 're approclated on New or ex-rie~ saJ Ion~ or B~rt tcnn tf'tn· i-:-ea porary ass1gi1m~·nt1. Work people. Openings available. w/lhc top rompnn1cs In C.Omplete training program. Or-;u1tr.'t' Co. Chootlt> the dllY5. Future rnaJlaiement oppor-houni & \ocuUon most con- tunities. Call Mr Sloan nt venk>nt for you. ExCellent 8'2·5581. rarninJ{s, 'At'\'kly pay<·heck. TAR No lt>e. IA>! u11 start ,you BELL wtyour be!lt foot forward. A_pply 111 p.~1n. 9 am·Noon. REAL TORS 2~1 Bu•intu Ct•. Dr. -~o.:.c::..:.:.:..==---1 lrvlne 133-1441 REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL SERVlCE STATION AT· TENDANT. Airport Texn.co. Salesmen It brokers~ The op-4678 Carupus Or., N.B. portunity Is here! You are SEWING dri!pcor1ei; (or needed lmmedia~ly for our campers, nl()hile homes, rapidly expandmg Re a I statio n \\"gns., etc-. Call Estate division, Positive o~ 645-8875. EXTREMELY IMPORTANT EXHIBITION CANCELLED NOW AUCTION of PERSIAN CARPETS Rare & Ancient Art Farm AT BEKINS MOVING & STORAGE COMPANY 15JS N•wport Blvd. Co,ta Mesa, California Wednesday, October 11 , 8 p,m. \:'iewlng and inspection fro1n 6 {l:.m . until lime of auction. Auctioneer : Leib Rosen- blwn -Globe 'frade Excha nge Company. Term': Cash or Check portunity for advancement.L.:';S;:;T"O:<;R;;cE~MA"""N"'A"G=E"R°'S'""I Phone. 1 m m e d I a t e pog!Uona avallabl• ;n Conitos A r-1 --J[fllJ [ ][§] South Coast Plaza. Cnsta [ ~t ~ V A Mesa. Pttust have prt'Vioual 'iiiiiiiiiii I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~· 1~ won1en's a ppnn_•I gpeclaltyil 11 shop l'xp. wtth f u 11 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Antiques too R. E. SALES knowledge of handling all 1----------1 Earnings or $1500 or n1ore manager detalb. Call Mr. VIETNAM VETERAN . * OLD STOVE * per month is easy the B. 213: 747--0571. Start a managenK'nt C'l'ln'(r ~1nulll"r 0111 "ood bumlns: Larv.1n way. \Ve furni1h ---In local branch of R 'na.· 11tovt•' 2 h<1!1•!1 on tl)p. front l. t. • II' f !;flTDENTS. I d e a 1 pt time Uonally lmo~'ll ro, On the •~ N ·-" is UJgs °' se .1ng tract re er· jobs Mon-Fri t>ve1 + Sat Job lrnlnlng. Eam y,•hile )''JU t ... 1r • t.,_ .. ,!I Int~ of v.ork ral leads. High advertising AM. 1-lrly waee &: bonua. AP-learn. Approvt'(i GI job hut •'f)IJld hf· n.o:tl nter v.•hrn budget, lots or Door time. ply 15056 Jackson, l\tldway tralni.ni'. To $7.500. Call f1n1J1h1'<I. I 11tartrd mnding bonus program, monthly City. 894-2331 Helen lia,yes. 540-6055, It. l)ut d1rln'1 flnW1,..., 11·11 rontesls, mediC'a1 insur. STYLl~i' WANTED. Coulal Agency. 2 7 9 0 qu1 tto MJ.\h~I A SIO !!Anrl· ri.tr. McDonald withe public. 60 w.p.m. & Girl Friday ........... lo $550 5.57-4751 good phone Manner . Prnd. Control Cleek .... $500 I :==::==:=:=:=:=:=:=:~ I RUTH RYAN AGENCY LABORERS G""''"' Olfk~ . ··.···to $475 paid. Call (or app't. Lou Exp in 'A'i.g\ets, cucade!l . .le Harbor Blvd .. C.M. l•l1t,11n~ .l(!h "oulrt to.kl' Sangermano. synth <"lic wlJ(ll, X1nt sal8 WAITRESSES c•nrt• Of lhll1 , 11 "\Mil(! make larwln realty inc. opply. Call <;beryl. 54&-3446. Skfa Blue Bttt 613--9004 u ru11• p1ru111•r; 11r as " c"On· AUTOMOTIVE 17931 Beach. H.B. 847.9617 >tgS E. 17th la! Ir.•ineJ c .. l\f. NURSERY LOT BOY 1193 N•wpo'1. C.M. 64&-4854 VOLT 642:1470 PRUNER 1Iu.st be hard worker. Apply Instant Pe rsonne l ·-~-~-$-~-$-~:;-;:-~;:-;;~-;:-;;$-~JNow expanding ornamental ,.,._ (25 Ho"-) l'i1allies WSaoglon& Beauty \'1'1"5Ullon Ph,~,...,.n t•ntl lublf" ~=,:,,,~~-....::::..:.::.:-:..:::" I \\'E nre.l JO ladie• to It'll our ,-----==-----! a · 1o1 ith a rna~iuln;,· l<"di::r. J RF.cEPTIONISI'-Week nlles TELEPHONE Sale1· SeU inlllma.s line fll Sarah paid S.'la for \l ·makr utlrr. in person to Mr. T. DEUVERY of DA IL Y ~ tree gro~·er seeks pruner. DAVE Ross PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to Temporary Service IR\'INE DCDC"r"\to.ni..rn Re<iuires min. 1 )'l'IU' ex· 12 am.S am. The l1unl· So th ,..__ r:_._ , Coventry je\Oo•clry. No in· ington, 18851 Florida J-f.B. u em ..,.,_,.e '-"Wity 1 w1tn1ent flr d•'liv Qi.II ~17·1731 1•vrJ1 llntl \.\'rt•krnd1. bo R . 3848 Campus Dr .. Suit<" 106 ' Ll\,..J\.Jl"fl"'tCL per1ence. ExceUent wages & PONTIAC newspaper ys. equ1res Newport Beach 546-4741 SERYICES ... Arc ... V"'V benefits. 842-TIS8. ' Favorite Newspaper from S97...J896 or 835-~. t-1tENC.il Loui• X\r1, !"a?'' RN Supv.11-7, exper. n-q'd. yoor home. Make u much WOMEN wanted, 18 -24. hand t'R r.-ed 10\•t' iieat. ell Ariply Dir. of Nursing, 10.10 as you need. Generou• com-Training JIB-Id. Physi c a I hand dolw. Nf"'A•ly uphol-the use of a Station \Vagon """-..IQ"l\.. J Call Sheila 2480 Harbor Blvd. or Van. Contact Mr. Harry Equal Oppor. Employer Free & Fee Positions Costa Mesa Seeley. 330 \Vest ~ay SI., """""""""""""""""""'I Escro\v Manager •• to Sl.2JO Weekdayi betwn 8 & S * * * * * Ex Se I 551-2642 \V W A SA min:k>n on each sale. Call therapy &: rnass&Kt'· 254 11h'l'Nl. (;.1m-1soo. f92 57~1. . arner ve., . . ~T..:6739 Rf'o h St Lagu Ik' h 2 ~==~~-~-~-546-6450. · to :C'pm ·• na ac · "'ANTED. Lo.rgt' c h J n u. Auto 1 ;;C;;o;;sroiiiiM•'•"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;; ec. ere ary . • . • to $650 I""""""""""""""""""' Import car salC'Sman. Orange I' G a ry Lundquist Sec'y/Receptionist , • to S600 Countys most establishert DIRECTOR OF 23952 Sprig St. Girl Friday .....•••.• to$550 NURSES aides · exp'd req. Telephone Ho1te1ses · rnh11X'I . Rc11 .~011ablr . *·SALES. POSITION No ,.,lllng. Worlt lo• top !Md TIME FOR 6l.J-46R7. deaJers. FINANCIAL Mission V iejo, Ca. Prod. Control Cleek •.•. $500 Day shift. Apply Dir. ot Occidental L1fl' 11'! Newport company making dinner res----------- Beach has a JX>t:ltiO~ open t>rvatlon." by phone No C!XP QUICK CASH "r.lir.kr-noo1n t'or Daddy" Fritz Warren PLANNING 92675 General Ottice ..•.•. to $475 Nursing, 1030 W. Warner SPORT CAR CENTER You are lh<" winner or Salesman Adhesives to $12K Ave., Santa Ana, 546-6450. Newport Beach' financial in. :! tickets to the 488 E. 17th lat Irvine) C.M. NURSES Akles. exp er . for an enthus1ast1c in-• dlvlduru with '"'" t'Xp. nee. No ag• bttn-1"· TOI> THROUGH A Position otters managerial. salary. Generous bonui4'5. . . . clt:in out the g:arqe no E. Isl, Santa Ana 5-17-0'lM . 9 h A I O C 642,1470 situation has immediate t nnua range o. prefd, Park Udo C.Onv. new commission contract Interview dally from ~-6:30 DAILY PILOT . . I urn lha t junk lnco cash AVON CHRIS'fMAS EARN· opening for director of International ~ Center, 642-$)44, INGS can help make thc esta!c & busine11; plans. Auto Show JANITORS, \Vaxers & that is tops in industry. pm. 892·'7345, WANT AD Jnltlal financing & direct •i th a Daily Pllot Cla.ulfied holidays happier for your a: the l\laids. exper. p/time 4 hrs entire family! It's easy sell· i\1ust have law degree & eves. Call !14&-5351. Office Machines mail Pt'llgl'am. Dtll •"-642·567B Dtll 64"'671. Freundt al 6#-5600. The Irvine Co. S<"ek1 ----------heavy exper. in tax & estate ANAHEIM ing, fine AVQn products for analysis service. Previous CONVENTION JANl1'0R, part time, eves BUSINESS MACHINES REPAIRMAN SALESo Sporting good , . An lndlvlduru to tunctlon u t••••• •••••••• e ••••• wholesaler of c amp In 2 CLERK TYPIST in our •c· equlpment + 1porting goods live penionnel office. Rttent IC'eks exper'd salesman. exper. prefern.od. our lfTesisUble Christmas insurance & O..U CENTER including wknds. Will train. Catalogue. Call No w . background prefd. 5J8-7616. 540-1041. October llth thrn 15th Salary .,,..ill be in accordance P!eall(' call 642-5678, ext. 314 BABYSITTER , light Yl/exper. & qualifications. between 9 and 5 pin to claim housekeeping. 7--1:30. 2 Submit resume wfsalary yow-ticket s. (North County hon, 3 & 5. Blulls area. noquirement in confidence toll-free numbl'r is 540·12'lllJ. 640-1158 after 5 pm. lo: Classified ad no. 527 c.fo * * * * * BABYSl~n t-• 'I Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, ••eon. wan cu "on. Costa Mesa, Calif. 9))26. GIRL FRIDAY Wed, Fri. My home. Own Equal Oppor. Employer li>f an a g ement Consultant tran.sp. Call aft 6 pm, SC<"king Executive Secrotary stS-7592. Director of Nursing who i!S highly organized \vilh BABYSIITER, p It i me, N.B. area. Good potential for outstanding clerical ski lls Tues, J'rl, \Vkends. 1 Infant. right incl iv. Call l714l ancl public re r n t i o n s 642-2417. 673-5109 pcrsonallty. Ph. 644-0635. Do you need xlra xn1as money? }IANDYMAN, Over 40 Work from home. For inter-Laguna Lido Ants. Banking UNION BANK Has an openin~ for a vicY.·, Call 842·9218. ~28l5 CREDIT VERIFIER EARN 500 Blue Chip llANDYJ\1AN . P.41NTER. This job will aJso Involve Stamps-Have a toy & gift 51 Units. SlOO orr rent. Call loan processing. Experience party in your ho m e • 642--3645. de1irable. Pica.CIC apply in 979-430'1. -=~~----~--pen;on to Teresa \Va1as 610 lfELP for camper factory. Nt'\.yport Center Dr. N.B. Electrical Designer Apply Majorway, 858 W. An equal 0 pp or tun i l y Exp. Power. Illumination. c1~8~1h"""S~t.~. =C=o~"'~"-''~'=°"="~·-~ Employer Commercial, Industrial. HOSTESS-Cashier, over 21. BARMAID -Personality a buildings. Excel oppor.. Days or nites. Apply daily, must. Appl y before 4Pl\1. bcnelils. 1'>1r. Karjala. 1~:30·11 :30 ~f. loli Casa Knotty Keg, 2125 llarbor Store, Matakozich. \Volfberg l\fexican Restauranl, 296 E. Blvd, C.1'>1. Corona de! 1\1.ar 675-7131 17th St, C.li>f. •BEAUTICIAN W/NEAT I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;; I HOSTE&<;, exper, over 21. JOBS URGENTLY NEEDED • Secretaries e Keypunch Operators • lndustJ:ial • Billing Oerk Typist lrvine M0-445() NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Tempo Temporary Help KENNELMAN1 DRIVER r~or a{lin1al shelter. Good 1~·orking ronds. Xln't fringe hcnefils, Val.id Calif. drlv- cr·s lie. & gd driving rec. rf'q 'd . Apply at, 20612 La· guna Canyon Rd, Lag Sch. Keypunchers 129 Operators Need 10 operators. Register now for specia l Assignments. Above average C'arnings. 2nd &: 3rrl r;.hilts. Must Mve ex.per. Call Nora, 833-1441. ... 9 AM-Noon. Kelly Girl 206 t Business Ctr O r. Irvine 833-1441 APPEAR AN c E, FOR Escrow Officer1 for eves. :ran E. Coos! "'""""""""""""""""'"'" BUSY SHOP. 548-9919. & Hiy,11y, CdM. Apply be!y,•n LEAD cook to supervi11e E1crow Secretaries 5 & 6 pm. meal preparation & service Bo0kkHper to $600 ri.1ust have good exper. Beach HOUSEKEEPER, Babysitter In P.M.'s The Huntlng1on, Thru T.B. w/small growlnli!:' al'ea. Good administral.ive ~·anted fftin1e, n1aturo & 18851 f"lorida, JtB. 842-7788. co. Lois of Pressure. use al.Jlllty. reliable, own transp. 1-lni LVN·s, F/T & PIT, 3 to 11 pegboard a cc o u n 11 n g Girl Frlday1 Tam-varied aft Hr s . system. JO key adder. Gd w/figures • \Vkdays. Children ages 9. 7, shift. Co<I. start y,•agc. Exp. RUTH RYAN AGENCY NIGUEL 5. Ail in schl. vi c: pret. Appl y Director of 17931 Beach, l·l.B. stT-9617 Per1onnel Agency Killybrooke M:hl dist. Call NurslnJ.I'.. 10.10 \V. Warner, 1793 Newport, C.M. 64&-4!15-1 27635 Forbcs Rd. Judy nt 557~124. San!a Ana. 546-6450. La Ni~-• LVN or NUllK' w/VenipunC'· BOOKKEEPER-Senior. part· ~1477....... HO USEKEEPER, live ture exper. Work in modem time exp'd to trial balance. I ~""""~"!'""""""~~~ in w/gd family. Pvt rm. lah. Newport-Fashion Island. Salary open. Relall sales. Xlnt "'kg cone!. Rl'f..~ req'd. Call 64CHl140, m 31. }f.B. area. Submit rt'sume Exec. Sec'y $700 831-9678. to Classlll ..... Ad No. 512 cto Top Skills. Local LVN'S EXPER. .. -... C II l.orrai HOUSEKEEPER, hve 1n. f1 & Nurtlts Ajdfo,;, 549-3061 Daily Pilot P .O. Box 1560 a ne day wk, f1VI nn & Iv Sptin· .-..... \VESTCLIIT · h -•·· -'-"'·J6.19-11 f\1ANAGER for nearly ,..., VoJflta Mesa. Calif. 92626. Personnel Agency 1s SfX..'nAL11~ ...... .r '" a 1.11 ti. apartment bou9e, Laguna B 0 0 KKEEPER!Secretary-2013 Westc 1 Dr., NB To inlerior designer, ncoed· ==~~S<=.;,-'m""o,..,.___ 1-lOUSF:KEEPElt, \\1\dower loll<iiia;;c;;h;;. ;;"""1Dtiiiiiiiiial;;t;;°'iii'· ... ., ed pttlrne. Bookkecpini:; EXP. Needle point canvas wt2 Girls. 2 & 5 yn .. nl.'<'d!! thru trial balance, typing &. 1 1 Must do need.I . 1 live-In nanny. R (' f s. SIH rcq. Pref over 30, C'all pa n er. epmn 548-6723. Intt'rkn By Uncta. a40-f728 =-"="'~""°"=c=-0'~641Hl1'1'1=""°=·~--·ll'~o~u~s~~..,="vo=n=K~. -pa-rt7-~H-m-,-. "'> for lntf'rvlew. EXP ER I ENCE D con-day wC'l.'k. Stt'acly )lb. Own MARKET RESEARCH ASSISTANT Ir )'OU have three year ex· perience In the maintenance and repair of business n1a· chillC's. and havt> completed a manuractu~r'!I training program in one or more or t~ foUowing arerui: • Accounting and BookkN'p. ing Equlpm('llf • Graphic Arts Equipm{'nf • Adding and Calculaling Equipment • Typewriters, manual and electric WE HAVE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS STABLE EMPLOYMENT EXCELLENT BENEFITS For ronrldenlinl lnlendrw. p h o n e Fklyd Toy,•mcnd, (Z13l 923·7721. ext. 2001 or send resumes lo Buaineu Machine• Selvlce1 Division, County of Los Angeles, 9230 E. Imperial lllghway, Downey, California 00242. OFFICE Clerk-Telephone & cnsh regialt'l' t'Xper. Thf• Earl's Plumbing. Inc. 1:>31 Newport RJvd, CM. Operations Analysts Dynamic young orxanlz.aUon has openJng for lehcdule Ir opt>ratlorui an;ityisls, UnJ1'r dirt'ctlon of o p e ra t lo n • managrr, plan, locate. 4 11ehedule routes. Ch.n Ir ackifl' v."Oril: a c h e d u I f' ll . As!l11t openUor\11 m1u1avr Ill daily •ctlvitiea. BA Ol' BS in Jluglnt-!J.11.. Economkll or Transport111Uon. ~nd 1'<'5llll\C lncJ. 11.'\lary fP. (JUlrtm~nt11 to OieMtfk<d Ad No. 514 C'/o 0..lly Pilot. Start $650. Call Do n Jackson, s.tD-605.i, Coastal Requ1reA tact, p I r a 1 inc Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., personality, IKIU.nd jud~ CM. ml'nt. Typir111: 5().f,(I w.p.m. SALESMAN Good Potenllal Call Piini. Schmidt WESTCLIIT Personnel Agency :nt3 \Vestclilf Or., NB 64fr2770 Xlnt ~·~ condltiont It l.'Ompany benefits. Coll 644 33" Between 9 am I 12 noon TRAVEL TRAINEEo Do you SALESWOMAN, mature . llke to y,•ork w/thi' public! 11 .B. dres s s ho~. Good typl~I can adv.nct' to dn.'s!SfsptsY.T exp req d. tun ngc'tlL This Us not Just ,. Steady part time incl Sun. Job. bul a career, Start $450. days 8%-6232. CH.II Nancy P.fay. ~. SALF.SGIRL . Fi~ jl'Welry Codtal ~ncy. 2 7 9 0 !!tort'. Contact A1;, Foy;j('r, Harbur Bt, C.l\I. Kirk Jl'w~lers, Hun tington T pl t Center 892--5501. Y 5 Seam1tres1, Ex per. Fem11oll". 5.1&-3166 for appt. SECRETARY: Grow i n ~ manufacturing co. ~a ~I NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: for marketinR depL Not J~ Technical a B('crelary posiUOn but will be right hand i;:al tn 91!Vt'ra.I Repro mt'n. Salary 10 $700. r·l"e Statl1tlcat Paid. Also fre pOliUons. 04tneral Offlee Call Jan Pag"l', 541Hi<65, Coaatal Agency, 2 7 9 l'I Xlnl «:a.ml~ • L<inc ' ahort Harbor Blvd .. C.l\I. tronn lt•mporllry •NIK"· SEC'Y-EXEC. n1,.nt1 . ''Ar1Nf Ir lntr~•I· Pn>stige spot. &-adm. ru111t. tng Wl)l'lc • ('tJotla;e I h r to mgr, of ft1mouJ01 firm. dfty, houl"!I I location ITIO!lt Aleo. SUJ'f'rvbcl p!'Tl!Onl'l(ll. l'OnVf'n.koot lor )'00. Weekly ChaJlcnJtifllol'. & n ·!lpon!lihl•• PA.fC:hP.ck, No l"ff. posiUon; Lovt·ly Of('I. & lOJl Appri In Pt!l'llOn hrnefit!I. Abi1t1til A h b 11 r K I G• I ~e.~n:,e~~~~·s.~ \\'. e y 1r SECRETARY-Receopt. Mt:PM .. Hi·~ ofc. Stal typing 9 111m · l:Z Noon Only rt"q 'd. Sh BO, t)'l)e 70 Ph: 2061 8u1lne11 Ctr. Dr. """1501. . I.vine IU-1441 BOOKKEEPER needed in stn.ict ion secretary. cH.r. Call 644-?Ut. 1m1all offlC'l'. e:xpcr. in AIP 979-8200 between 9 &. S JIOUSEKEEPElt. llELPE:R & payroll. Start S3 hr. Apoly EXP. Saleslady for jewelry for wldowrr. Pref studt•nt. Dlva~x. 1513 E. S 1 . lllore. Refs reqd. Ntl11:port Brsch tinol1C'i.'I !n. 1Utulion h 11 11 in1n1Nllnl<" P 0 . Bo:ir 1;m, COft111 Ml'M. openil¥{ ror n b r i a:ht, Calif 92$21. l>r11idllnf' erf'ftflvc individual who M• ="~'~"~'~"~·~EO_E. ___ ~~ Certrude, S../\. 8:30am-Spm. * 548-3402 * 84&68.'°JO. BOYS 121 16 iiiiiiiiiiiii;l;i;;l;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiii HOUSEKEEPEI<, cttolt. 12 Join Top Crow !1Clllng Orange FACTORY noon -7 pm. Alon-TI1un:. SS0 Co"t's ln"1trlle Ncw•papt'r. wc<k. f..,._.163 olt 6 pm. \Vork 2 evcnlni;s l\nd Sll.lur-JIOUSEKEEPER warlll'd day. Gcnerous Comml!slon * * * Oldl'r J.ll-'f111Cln pN'lr:rred. and UonlJS. ~fake Money Announcing ;,u..1.35.1 and Keep up \vll h School,· ~'Ork, too. 557.6Tl9. novs: 10-15.. Eam S~$40 ptt week Kt'lting nN' C'~t<nnen fO'r' !he DAILY PrtDT. This It not a MWSJ>ftper route and dorll no( lncludr ~llf!C"tlnc; or delivering. Trtl nsp(lf't nrion II provided. Wt> ,..'\'ll'k four houn 11.fter rhool 11.nd 8 ~' S.ttn'tk)'. \i."e h.!tvt optnl~ for f"ount11.ln Valley &: South lfuntlrwton {Jj?l\Ch &rt'M on- 1¥· You must hr out ot M:hool by 3 P~t t n p!&l'tlcll)l.lt·. ~r.rirm'f'll ~r.wn pr orlty . llOYS °'R" 10.14 'I) MhWr Pllllifln ln the Dana Poln1. SA.11 Cl+ mtilte areu. DAILY PILOT - N<"w Ute lndmtnrd Oivlakln Foo Won.1<"n • Many aujgnmentl tn th<' l'\e,..•port Bcarh, lrvlnt, S11n- ta Ana " C.O.ta ?it.:s:.i arcu • ExptriC'.nced I: lralnt't' Po!litlon!I. E:iC"C'f!llMJt ""m l~s. "'C!Ckly s-Ychll!dc# NO FEE Ta.kin& 11/'Pli<"alHnn• ~AM-12 naon Only 2061 8u1lne11 Ctr. Dr. Irvine 8)3.1441 IMMEDIATE SALES OPENING hl<'ltl opportunity for lull. PHJ1 timt', or ~llnod ptor- llMI, Show our l"JCIC"rwtv• NrYI lJnt' 6f Spt"Clall)' Ad- ~rli.:lrt,K, C&Jendlln &: Ex· N-ullv" Clll• lo Bu~.h'll'•ll r1mu1 1-Orpnlutirlns Nn lnW!4tmttnl•. rnllf'f"llorur, qUOIAI, ttpor1• (It' dit!rlc;t nta.rwten. Sr.ll'cllJ 1ioromc> llonl 11) h4olp yl)U 1trl llar1f!d with • low pr'f'tllillre AAA, I ra.1ot1 nrnl in ovr 6Jnt f1!llf', Prompt. bt!lplul niopm111ti.n. \\rf!f'ldy «11nm1Mkml. Ubrr· uJ Honut. Write to Jollft "lrNt'fT. Oi:'pt. Ul90, Hl!Wlon ~ltg,. Co, Neo&·too.. lllW• so:m. I ' at least 2 yn:, IQ1"d ORDERl.V. P'lrPf'T pttt·d, bu.•il"K.'M E";llpt'r., ltrol'ljf ~"-'" Park Udo O>nv. ~t~r. CC'" pet1ttn, A JiCOOd oon .. n1Unlcal'ion 51c:iUa. &12-8044. PHONE DISPATCHER You vdtl conch.H~I m1rk1Jtlnc; for Iona Mtabl~ ~ rf'!leltrcl! ftCtiV\llt!J It ftl!llbt SECRETARY 111 niiuipoy.·er de'llt-lopimttt. ('O. PLTTnatw":l'.ll ~ for r\a:hl J)f'rwon. APIJf.y momlnp, T°'' M-Mfilll Ir unlq~ v.'l'tf'k OAVI~ -RRO"'"N Co. N~-,,ort Bnrll.. Th· ln•11'1t' Pnv1ronmt>nt. F o r ~ 411 E 17'" ~ C"~ enmi-.ny ~ ll"'t'l"f'tAry • ui ""'" .... w/mJn. 2 '"· n .... r_ l'i•11w• Mr1'1ltion, plMM!: icubmlt 646-Jsiµ .-~me" inc"Judlng Mlary ~ rdlqtt or b1.111lnr. N'l••ll •JUll'f'mentJ tn confidMlct' lo: R.f:. Sakil. AU nrw ~ P""~ TrPU. 71'1 • P m CWr.1d~ Id no, 536 <"lo V.'om~ only. v.·nrlf 11.0.. r~~~t ~~~t~ ""'' Ptkit. r.o. 0ox 1580. ,. v 0 ·-R-,. •• ... ~· · ., ..... -~... ..~... ty I: •m.dly ao ,_..,.,. * llrllsual * * Opportulity * c~ M~ Calif. '2tD6. to oo·~ c.umm. c.tt ad pro. •lbu!d~ , mll'll F..crUAJ Oppor. f;mplo)Tr Vftm. u.dit pt'0¥1dai. No Ab ili t y l o 111f'c r plAMAJOllAA\'lNr.~AID,A..~ broker mmpetlUun. Gd. up ""JIOftllblllly • •trl ln TIME FOR QUICK CASH T ROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 !!mt' Xlnt lnilnll'lll'. ~Im· rk"pendentt,y Xlnt wortdn:i: A . ...-r111c.on •,." 11 ' pm. l'IUnf' Khool lor ltclM Mt cond11;,n, 6 <'O brnt'OIJI f,...lonlll •Mkvlatr ~ U..· Call 644 lllf tor tWI or pm.1fnW" ..n In STANDARD R. E . Betw"" tam I 12 noon the .o0rtta1lion of •~rip Call MAr1 99J.J6ll •miu,..• >~« an lmmN!Jitr or """' m.r.oo Secretary MOO tnt..n111••.. J"twwt 1 J 11 t fLE. TralJw. Dl'lcr ' r.,. r.111. Lnwl)' ~ltJy m-mJt nr .,,.,, Ahn. 1t. ~lofln' will tnlft a tot podtton •" lll'('l'W!1ary In spos.,,-tor lie. C.11 between \' P. St lat It 1110'1 1yptna BryJioo. r 0 . llml llloni-~pm. !IG-1121. oldll>. ~-Ca imu ,...... • Y~\' Pmiltlont "· -"Wl'!C!(! 11 I JU-.p" RUTH RYAN AGENCY r •• , rrwll.1 •"91 ,..~•. >"Wlm fl"f!llllUn!I ,,, truh 1793.1 Aracb. 1111 ,,l-!W\17 ~~ .. )'. '~· tum lbetn Wo c:utt ll'll N'~. CM fHft.-416.4 CALL DAILY PILOT , ................... --JllOU.SE llW'lllnf:! W•l~h tlw CLASSJ•n:D '4J.?m Want ad .,..,.'--• , , &O.Sl1-OPr.N HOOSF. ~WU. • I I For an M In Women'• World Coll Mory Both 642:5471, txt JIO To Slz• 50! Th• Vnt is Tops! ' I I t I 7039 ~j.} t..,Q(k '8. ... 8. -.,op ddru. panl&. drftRI "Uh lhll vtvtd ...._ l"'stftntt1• prid1•! ()Q('hrf thll l~l:+ii ...,.... rllll)' all In •lnille &I'd (hubW tTOC"trt. L°hooM' a lrilhl or l:a.llC" 1'dr.ll' In kn11tln1 won:tf't'I Piii 7mt .11 .. I0- 1.1( lrachaiw.t M \'UC'TT·nVZ Cl'Jn'I tor r..ach paU.-n -lldd 'ZI n!flllt kw t>M'h ~nu kif A.Ir ttl•U and SpK-ltil llMdl· ll'lr, othf'l'Wlu lhi.nk:&u. ddJVf'fJ' Wiii laM dnf ""4ll 1Jr "'°""· Scod IO AJltt Bn..... lbt' DAILY Pl.WT, ltr.. NM!l'llta"IJt O.pt .. Oa1 l&J. Old QiroliRll StaU., N"' Yartt. N.Y. u1n1. Pr1r11 ..... A,...__ ~. ,.. ..... "' ...... . Totally H-1.m Jll ..... ,.,..n Olhlllll cramlMd IJ'trh knll, aodMrt ..,...... crall&. I» dtPcM. TllEE ,.ttcf91 ,._,, ~ ....... .w..,.., .... LNm to mu~ "'"rr. dcll&an fftlm )'O'l9' cn!lL •••••• -SL ......... ~ ..... l1. ........ .,.,.... -! .11. ........ a.-. ....... n. ....... °"' ............ n. ~ ............ 11. .... 11 'ln1 tLtap ........... ~ lJ PThe Ale-.. ....... 5Gt: QailK ..... 1-.ll pallft'DI 00.:: M-CllllH .... 2 tJ -... ._ -1'flt: ·---.. 24 DAil Y PILOT [ ..... ,, \[§) [ Mud ., RUSSIAN corocr chh\.'i cblet $100. Small Or1en1a1 1•tw1tt ~. Braa firepln<.-.• h:ndt·r $3>. Spittoon. Marble cht•l'it table top $45 linlnid!. Chal1"ll. New k1ng11ize doub~ dre.-•r S.'lO. Runk beds $411 romp. w/n\(1t!l'ri~S . .Book· ••nd:s, etc. Bookcrt111•. COu..ECTOR.S: fnm1er U.S. President ~J. ll l...an!Jing1 11ten!CI spe1tkt1rs, 7 ft. ebo11y cabinet C011t new $4000, st>ll or tradt>, be!i"t oUer ovt'r $100. '1.<M-2742. Appliances 802 WASHERS, Drye r s, Dishwashers l'l"COndlHoood, guarn. 0f'!i\lered 54ft.,j218/S...19-7620. RECOND. tr ade-I n ap- pliances & TVs. Dunlap·~. 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. 5-18-7780. USED REFRIGERATOR Apartment sizC' -Small frel!zer section. $20. * 536-289'2 aft 4. * Rent Washers/Dryers $2. Wk. fo'uU maint. • 639-1202 * OVER 200 washers, dryers, refri~er11.tors from $39.95. 545--0780. J\.fAYTAG nu!o washer. Old, but works fine, 125-!168-T.!2'1 Cameras & Equipment IOI Rental Dark Rooms Special student r a t " s , DAVE"S CA A-1 ER A EX- CHA.llJGE. 474 E. 17th. C.1'-1. 646-2136. Furniture 810 TRANSFERED. Liv R1n furn, Color TV, King Sz Bed, etc. Top c o n d . 548-£347. STUDIO &dsel, Almost n<:'w $75. cost $300. Chair $5. Cof- fee table $5, Night stand $5. Call 673-6&11 vAr..tlLY Bn'ak llfl Evt:'rylhini;:: must ~ - llou~1·ft1I of lu I' n i t u r C' . 61;,-:>974. r.1 INOLTA SRT 101 "i1h F l 4 normal [(>tis & lcall'H.'r ('8Sl•. Also P :.! .~ l:t:"imn1 lf'le- photo. S219. Ph. 673-2384. ANTIQUE Hoosier, brass bed, Old let• hox. Trunks. R42-llmi *••Sofa & matching love seat, never usrd. Both Sl50. Privat{". 968-7910. Garage Sale 812 Ill Planos/o.,.n1 • * • * • Ttd Sohll ORGAN HOBBY 1Bll4 Polmetto Fount•in V•lley, c •• 92708 You are the Wlnnl"r or 2 ticketa to the • Don't buy u.ny organ until yOU ca11 play! Non-playc('j tA'f'l- l't.lme t(I att{'nd fl'ff' work shops. F"or infonna!ion Cor11u..;1: 1'otn 011."tcrich 9th Annu•I Or•ng• Co. lntem.aitklntil Auto Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER October llth thru 15th Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 between 9 and 5 pm lo claim your tickets. (North County toll·free number is 546-12201. * * * * • * OLO STOVE* Smaller ol.d wood burning stove! 2 holes on top, Jtont door. Needs Jots of \\'Ork but could bl-real niee when finished. I started sanding it, but didn't finish, so it's quite rusted. A $10 sand· blasting job would take <:are Of that. It would make a cute plan1er; or as a ron- ven~ation pic.'Ce-an end table with a magazine ledge, J paid $35 for it-make otter. 642-2851 Coas t Music Service Nf'wporl Blvd. at J-t&rD.ir Co11ta l\tesa *PIANOS*ORGANS* C.Oing Out r~or B~ Best quality • prices -scrv. Kawa.i-~'te1nway·Baldwin, etc J>layer PLaIIOll & Rolls Rentals ......... \Ve Buy-SeU Daily 10-6 Sun U.5 FIELD'S PIANOS Costa l\tesa cn4J 645-3250 PIANOS • ORGANS Hanunond, WW'liUer, many others. Pre-season specials, n'IOdel close-outs. Piano & Organ rentals. ?.loncy sav- ing bargains are here riJ:tht now at: Wallichs Music City South Coast Plaza 540.2830 WURLITZER organ, cherry wood -'1500 niodel, like new, sacrifice $1800. cost $3240 54&-2759. 542-lT.'A eves and "''~kends. PRJVATr: PARTY \VANTS STEREO 1972 Garr a rd TO BUY PIANO FOR model, systemized full size CASlf. ~2Z18. Boats, Pow•r CHRIS 'Sil, 36' n ·l cabin. Cusl'Omlzed. Xtru. Ideal live-abrd. $2•1,000. P v t • 530--6048. OPEN ROAD GM 471 two lo one teduc. MOTOR •IOMES Never fired. Since rebl.t. 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. Need larger eng. Must sell Garden Grove BSt-4419 $2.500. 673-5822. 548-4428. Rent A Motor Hom• "1971 SEA RAY" for your Vacation 455 01.i., Pack-a-jet, 20', 200 * IJ9-4301 * Series, Equipped for Water ~-'"-..:.:.:.c=.:....=-~=• Skiing & fishing, tandem _T_,_._11_._,..;•_T_••;..•_•_l ___ _ trailer. call after 12:00 noon. cn4J 83()...6483.. MUST 'TI Golden Nugget 18' tan· dem, aelt-contained, Excel. SEIL! $2,400. Owner. 644-1833. Z1' Unilile Cruiser '69 Perf Auto Service, Parts 949 rond. 450 hn, auto pilot. 101 :.;;:.;,;;..;..;.;.;,,;::;~;..:;;,;.:..;..;.. watt S/S, 24 channel CB, 1965 Rebuilt 413 Chrysler f alh, Trim tabs, aux fuel engine with torque 01ght tank, cleet head, fish equip transmission $250. firm. Bait tank, outriggers, fish _ Call-'673-6841 bags, etc. Very clean. Make Auto Service, Perts 949 offer. ~IH3577. '-, 18' Glaspar Cabin Cruiser CHEVY 23.5 ·motor, $85. 67 75hp Ev W/trler Live baH Chevy 250 motor, $125. '64 · · Rambler V-8 wgn & '63 tank & boat rover. Now in Buick Skylark pa r t s , Newport slip. Zll-355-1229. 543-9291 or 838-4589. S...11. Sell 909 LUDERS 16, No. 1l Bandit. AvtostorS. 11 ~ l Full race. 5 sails. 0-B. " for used can I trucks, j\!91 call U, lie-ftte e&timalH. GROTH CHEVROLET Allcbllal .......... l82ll Beaeb Blvd. Huntllqrton Beach If? .Q'i' KI 9-3331 *CASH* Wanted cars needing V.'Ork. Private party, 548-7859 Autos, Imported 970 changer, AM/Fl\1 stereo I ,H~A-M=M~O~N~D~Org~a-0-.--=c°'-J-,& radio, RCA :ape deck pJUg Lesley speaker. in type jacks. Air 847-TI43 Possible slip. $ 1 8 0 0 • I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 7"64;,:H5!>!~ . .....,,---,,.--953 AUSTIN HEALEY UDO 14 with sailing gear, Antiques/Clas1lc1 suspension speakers. Still ney,• in box & guar. \Vas le(! HA..\1'.MONO organ. model M· unclaimed. Originally $270. ill: walnut; Mane preset & No\\' $75. Cash or payments. [ grill. $900. Eves 673-5122. Laya\vay Dept. TI4:893-0501. EVERETT STUDIO PIANO trailer. Good cond. 649-2469 eves. 24' Col. Challenger, o/b, dinghy & Newport mooring. 1936 FORD 1% ton Truck. Dealer demonstration, 39,CMXI orig. miles. A-1 running corul. (TI4) 644-8136, '61 A.H. 300J. Reblt eng & trans. 0-D, W/W. Convt HT. Make offer. &12-9490. BMW *AUCTION* Fine Furniture $300 or best offf'r. 5.16-87'75 TV, Radio, HIFi, Stereo $3750. 494-5826, 494-6214. Trucks f62 Boats, Slipt/Dor.ks 910 1--------....... '70 Chevy l/4 Ton & Appliances Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m, Windy's Auction Barn FISHER 136 2075% Newport, CM,....,,. POWER! Beh1nd Tony's Bldg Mat'! Fish£'r KX·90 40 watt Rl\1S ATTN: Carpet & Drapery steroo an1plifi<'r ~po"'er Shoppers. Nylon, tweed, source only) and wklnut shug S:.!.49 yd. Linen texture ca'IC. Controls in~ludc: loud· \VEST of Newport Blvd. $L 75 per ft. Call 841.mo SLIP space avail. 20-26' Sailboat. • 673-6606 • Boats, S-& Ski 911 draperies $1.80. F 1 o Y cl 's ness con1our, high filter, 4 llrttJ r~loor Covering, 534r2901. fun!'tion selector. 2 sJ)('aker ~ . PORTABLE building 12x18' outputs, concentric bass & '--------' \llood comt., 2 nns, wired, lr£'ble, rape moni!or & head· Great for trier hse, office. phone juck. Cost $150 new e!c. EZ to move. $875. . .. "'ire it into your sys- !'1'16-6856. te1n for only $65. Call 1\1.ikc Miscellan.ous at ST:>-1527 altl'r 6. Wanted 820 I '73 ZENIDI & RCA rotor TV specials. lR" color from a-tINA cabinet or hutch, al\. $289. 19'' Chromocolor or tique or new. Large. Matrix $375. 21" Solid State Reasonable. 644-4687. $479. 23" RCA table models WANTED Love.seat size sofa S399. 23" Chromocolor from Campers, Sale/Rent 928 1971 FORD Econoline Camper Van, Bubble top, seU contained $4850. Finan- cing available 830-8036. FACTORY DIRECT Fully furn cabover campers, no down, $31. per mo. Camp- er shells. No down, 642-84TI. Pick-up. Custom cab, VB, auto. trans., factory air, power steering, radio, heal· er ,step bumper, mirrors, low miles. (37693F). $3195 dlr. CnU~ • 1950 GMC truck, good run- ning cond. Body needs work. $175 or best offer, * 64&-0388 * '70 Ford % Ton E340 Super Van. V-8, auto trans, Pass seat, tinted windshlds, H/D radiator, springs, etc, Xlnt. By owner, $2195. See at cor- ner of Victoria & Canyon. CM. 835-ll33 Cd a y s l 542-6346 (eves). Auto .Leasing 964 1973 Olds Toronado Villi! our new home! & ROY CARVER, Inc:. 234 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 5464444 FASHION Carnival -Oct. 10. hide-a-bed. 644-4687. $475. 3 yr pictuJ"C tube, 1 yr Factory Equlpt, Full POYl& CORTINA $128 00 -.68--CO-R_Tl_N_A_4_""' __ , -lo • mileage Clean. S 6 2 5 . IOAM-5PM lloo" Ito s P. n & · 00 11 ,., [ii] • Mu11'cal lnslM1menls 822 pa s scrYJce a 11• I Conference Center. Ladies ........., ti rh • ~ Teenage FllShio:lns. Nl'w ---------ABC CO\ol:' TV,""'.._.. A anta, T,....Ulio. Mii ~1d5C, Latest Styk'i. 257.,. FENDER Huntington Beach, 963-3329. ';;;;;;;;;;;;~-~:;;: 50'~ disoount. BankAmeri-CLASSICAL 8' Stereo col\IOle, 1% yrs, I earrl. ?i1asler Oiarge ·Per-!lard to find Fender, small old. $200. Xlnt condition. Cyclet, Bile.ti, per nio. + tax 24 mo. Open End Lease LEASING sonal Checks with JD. l>'ree body clas1ical auitnr. Ex-call 673-7737. Scooters 92.5 eoff<'f' & l'OOkil'S. cellent finish, sculptured liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _;:.;:;:.:.;;,;,;:,_ ___ _;.;: All MODELS AND MAKES '73's Jewelry 815 machine h<:'ads and new 'TI HTI Yamaha 90 MX New Pl.A TINUM Brac:t"ll•t, 47 !'('{'· tangle c..'1Jt, genuin(' blue sapphires l!oloal 1vt.. 9.4 r'IS, ~. 94 full cut round t11nn1onc:\s {tolnl ,,.,.,, 4.2 rt~. I. By a1ipl. only, 4!l2-5751. Miscellaneous 818 AIRLESS Spray gun. Com· plete gun, tips, gas f'ng. 50' ~-'550. Frigidaire RC'- frtg. 675-3901. 2 Room~ of v.-/w shag C'Hl"p!'llllK. Onlni:e. t::old. hrtw.'tl. 1 Rm. likf:' nu. Bes! offer. 5'!0-4032 aft 12 :30 pm. * PRl\'ATE tennis club $100 membership f('(' & only $10 pi•r nlO. 673-571 \. \\'ASHER $75, T"·ln hcd S;l, bookcase S..i, stovti $40. 651 B Victoria, CM. 64G-U76. CARPET fOH. SALE by Carpet Layer. Call • 546-5745 • 540-20Afi DOUBLE DOOR relrii;:-cralor 138 F.. 1Rth St., C.M. • 548-4485 • Augustine strings. Original· I __ ''" __ to You _ _J{ '-=~ Xlt:riin:~; co~d. ~~on~~'<!~~~ ~.~;h $~~~t 1~ $300. 644-3401. '72 lfonda 350 SL Kl. Xlnt taking it home.. Call Mike. 3 lines, 2 Times, $2.00 cond. Filtrons. Chrome 'IT Southern California 675-1527 aft. 6. pipes, Megaphones. $595. 1st National Bank Leasing Office Furniture/ Equip. 824 ANSAFONE. Will answf!l' your phone, take mes.sages & play back to remote con. trol hold<'r over any phone. S2'75. 847~. NEW "'ainut 44"x82" ex· ccutive desk & matching chair. Sacrifice both for $600. Phone (TI4) 644-8814 or 642-3072. EXEC swvl chr $15 • 23 Sec chr $8 -18 dr~ks files lrtls R67 W 19th Cl\1 642-3408. FREE KITTENS 847-J002 PET rabbilt needs a good home. Wcll bit cage incl. White. 2 yna, Male. 557-7386 1'~REE COCK·A·POO PUPPIES. Call 962-7470 Sfl.1. blonde Peekapoo $35: Sm Cockapoo $15. Days: 642-4111B; Alt 6: 534-3885. I~ P i•nos/Org•ns 826 Cats ,;;,;,,,,,;_ _____ _ 852 Used Organs Needed Hi1thest SS 1~airl in CUh Call Co\lf'ct 213: 874--6762 Sell Idle Items .. , 6.f2...5678 HIMALAYAN klttenl'!, CFA. Blue & ftealpolnt. Call 5.'il-2939 after 4::.> p.m. Dogs 154 847-lll91 1988 KAWASAKI 350CC. Like new cond. 3400 mi. $450. 644--2647 2001 ~tlchelson Drive Motor Homes !Comer of MacArthur) -..:S::•;..l•::i..:R::;on::.:.:l ___ ,;,940.;.:: I Irvine, Calli. 92664 n 4/83.3-863l 213/627-0367 Motor Home Rentals Avallable for daily, weekly or monthly basis. 21', 23', and 25' selJ contained Mo- tor Homes, all equipt with generator, roof air, and many other extras. All Coaches are 1972 modela. We have the all steel Amigo sac. Please call 839-9560. Motor Home Rentals Autos Wanted ffl WE buy all makes of clean used sports can, pa.td for or nol Please drive l.n for fr'ff Appraisal. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 w. Coast ~lwy., SALES & LEASING N""'°rt Beach 642-9405 full sef'Vice facility 0 M t H WE PAY TOP [)Ou.AR anmar o or omes FOR TOP usrn CARS II your car 11 extra clean, DAILY PILOT INVITES YOU • • WANTED: Jo""rlendty, loving home for darling f<:'male Siiky Terrier pup. llousebroken, All JI h o t s . Best oUer over $ l 7 5 . SJ0-8333_ BASSET pups, AKC, 6 wka. $50 ea. 531 ·6BOO "' .. """· BAUER BUICK NEW LlFETIMES-the works 2925 Harbor Blvd. &: at fantastle rates. Pvt Cns:ta Mesa 979-2500 pty, 838-053.1 Tustin. IMPORTS w~ Motor home for rent. Oranae Counties 633-3337 or 538--1044 M1\LE Y.'hippc•t puppy. Sho"' qunlity. • 8"&-9781 '72 \VINNEBAGO, '11'. TOP I BUYER Sl~PI 6. &40-0482 Bn.L MAXEY TOYOTA * WINTER RATES * 18881 Bead! Blvd. Mtr home rent.ala. $165 wk + H. Beach.. f'ti. 147~ ml Rnerve now. 546--0291. TOP DOLLAR FOR JUNK * Golden Retrll'ver pups, SxU trlr for !lllle. Tenns with OR WRECKED CARS. AKC, 8 wk11, show & Held, fn~ apace rent In exchange Day or nlte, 637-~ 5''6--2889 aft 5 and wkends. DATSUN 'TI DATSUN 1200 fstbk. 4 spd. R&H. 10,000 mi. Xlnl cond. Pvt pt;y. Aft 6, 646-8Stl6. JAGUAR '70 JAGUAR XKE coupe w/wtre wheels, 4·speed. Regency red. Xlnt cond. $3891J. Call 543-0355. '70 FIAT 850 Spyder, Good cond. 32,000 mi, $1500 or best otter 5574816 979-1420 MAZDA MAZDA LEASE SPECIAL New '72 RX3 $57.56 tDaded. ROTARY powered, 36 mo. + T & L. For resp. pty. Trades cons. • '72 ROTARY'S "Demo Sale" 10 TO CHOOSE "BIGGEST SAVINGS" "8f!rviC'e b1 the ditterpncf'" HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA 17331 Beach Blvd. 842-6666 Lease Mgr, Mr. Fry -~1,, •"' pty, 5~fi687. fO'r 11ervlces. Older cpl call .. ,., Aft 2 pm. &.~5266. Need a "Pad'"!' Place an ad! Sell Idle items .· .• 642-5678 AKC SHIH-TZU PUPPIES, 1.::=::;:==:====~========"-=====-==== " • $US. 8.12-1007 aft 6 &. wkndi. KEESHOND, n1alf•1, 4 !ll(lll, old. Int. Champ 1ln"<I. AKC rt$[. ~hol!I. 714 : 96&-2543. OLD En,11;llsh 11hcc!p 1ioit, n1ale, 11\,'l'. 14 mo, AKC - l1.1ve11 f'hlldren $100. 54&-2759. l\KC SI. Bc.rrv1_J'!f_puppk!1. 96:1-SMI Hor HI llOR.<a.: Boantlnlt'. &ck Bay l!UTll. RettJl>nlblt'. • !!67.fil.U • F'OR R.'\le, SIAndftnt hm1 l'l"ldlna. 4 yn old. mo. S49-325.S. I~ I Botti, O.norol 900 e V A~ilTING MA&AZlllE t'Ol.LECTION. 111211 TO PRt::SF:NT. • R.1&-7"21 • 'ioo'tl find II In C111111.rif!d I. s .. Slit." rh oc+.zJ~~ ,_ 7- • • DEALER PORSCHE Larg"t aeleetion ot C8dll· lacs in Orange Count.y. '65 Porsche 3.'16c, R/H, Disc Sales·Leaalng. Station wagon, VB, auto trans, factory air, power windows, power steering, power brakes, \Vhite wall tires. (732CAK). $3395 dlr. Call 836-6535. brks, reblt eng, Nu paint 8 Naben Red w/blk iot $2'roll. C d'lla 548-4020. 0 I C: '66 Ford Fairtane Squire \\1agon V·8, AT, P.S., R.H. 1967 Porsche 911, 5 spd, Ex· 2600 HARBOR BL., fl.lake ofter • ee l cond. Priced $3850. e COST A MESA '67 Ford Squire 10 Pass · ·C=•~ll~-~~-~-c,,,.=~--11'54-"0-"-"91'ioo~.,.;O::"'iT.i":::s="":::d::8Y:c1 wag 0 n, Air. AT R, H, ' -1970 C d'll P.W .• Root Ra~k $7S5 " TOYOTA a 1 ac '68 Counb-y s e d a n Wagon TOYOTA DEMO SALE NOW IN PROGRESS at Cpe. DeVillo Air, AT, R. H. Full Po""'er, Cruise Control 2014 Harbor 64.5-6644 !222CCML '70 Ranc:h Wa9on $4150 . Southern California VS, auto. tra.ns., factory ~r, Jst National power steenng, radio, white • walls, wheel covers, luggage Ban~ leasrn~ rack. (#218991) $2495. dlr. 2001 Michelson D11ve Call 836-65.lS f\ lllit.:t (Corner of Aiac:Arthur) -----'------1 - toJL (AllVJ IIVine, Calif. 92664 '70 LTD Country Squire 8 TOYOTA 714/833-8620 213/627--0367 passenger Wagon. Fact ,70 COUPE do Ville, vioyl Air, Now tires. low mll•aP- 1966 Harbor, C.~1. 646-9300 top, full llhr int. Fact air Many extras $3295. 83&-ll57. I-~~--'--,.-~~= rond., tilt strg whl, AM/FM RANCHERO 1966, 6 cyl, lm Toyota Mark II. 4 DR. stereo. P"T door locks, Runs well, nu tires. Radio / healer. Air I cond. twilight cent., p\vr trunk 6'13-4280 New tires. $1900. 962-1464 . opener, dual comfort seats. 'TI LTD Wag, 9 pass, ps/pb, TRIUMPH Cn1ise control. new radial AM/FNI stereo, air, 2'2,000 1----------1 lin.•s, SJ)('eial shocks & rear mi. Below hook. 968-355.5. BARGA.IN -$695/orfer. 1967 load levelers, imn1ac cond. Reel Tr. f\.IK If Spilfire hard 1 _ih_ru--=ou~L~$4'=500=-•--==~· --I & soft top. R/ll, O/drive. CHEVROLET '61 Ford -Best Offer. Running Condition. Call aft 4 pn1, SJG.9764 Needs n1inor n1echanical.l----,,;.,:_;_ ___ I 847-6215. JEEP 1970 Chev. ConCoun Estate,,1----------1 1970 Triumph Spitfirl?, Excel 8 Pass. Sta. Wgn. Pwr .. 1943 \VILLYS J eep. Reblt cond. All main! rerords. Stl?l!ring & brakes, AM-FM trans. Nu tires. r.m Finn. Red \V/lar. int. 22,000 n1i. Stereo radio, till stf!f!r. whl. 545-4358 SlfiOO. Pri/pty. 714--AoJ0.1764 Factory Air, luggage .ack., '69 4. Whl drive, Fd Bronco, less than 20,000 ml. Orig Ownr, xlnt! 548-1464 aft 6 VOLKSWAGEN "''" tires & brak•'-Paool-ing. Asking $2725. 5.57-4861. • • * • * D avid H etes 309 B Cabrillo Ave. San Clemente, Calif. You are !he winner or 2 tickets to 011? 9th Annual Orange Co. International Auto Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER '71 MALIBU MERCURY 2 Dr hardtop. 4 speed, fac·i----------1 tory air, p(Jy,•<>T sieering, '69 Mere Colony Pk sta wag. radio. ( •2107081 S2475 dlr. Loaded, on warm. 1st Call 836-6535. O\\•ncr. ~st offer over '72 MALIBU $2!XXI. ~or 642-9955 . PoWt'r steering, power '64 AIBRCURY WAGON $100 brakes, AM/FM radio. Needs repairs $2600. 979-4130 or 640-1546 • 642-7150 • eves & weekends. MUSTANG '69 CAMARO HT Economy spec i a I . Six '67 Mustang V-8, auto, P/S, t'ylinder, stick, radio, P/B, Good cond, $950. October 11th thru 15th heater. t>>.1-ra sharp! Must e 979-Z'/41 e Please call &12·5678, ext. 314 sell -Make oflcr, calll---''-'--'----- lx>l.ween 9 and 5 pm lo clain1 557-9046 aflt>r 6:30. OLDSMOBILE your l it•kels. (North County '70 CHEVY Kings\\'ood, 61---------- trU-frce nun1bcr is 540-1220). pass. 400 cu, in. V-8, auto, LUXURY PLUS * • • • • air. pi s. p/b, clean, radial EXCELLENCE 1959 V\V double door bus. 1~5· 4.1,000 miles. $2,5CKl. '70 Olds 98 Coup. 1972 engine, reblt trans., 53&-l609. GOLD/wht vinyl Io p. new brks. All new '56 CHEVY WAGON AM/FM stereo radio &. throughout, $950. 496-5687. l\1ags and chrome \\'heels. tape. Air, Pwr steer, pwr LEAVING: Pretty good '70 V-8, auto, 8-track tape deck, brakes, pwr windows, radial V\V Westphllia cam per curtains. $350. Call SG-3691 tires, 38,000 mUes. Best of- y,•/Pop Top & tent. Best of: 1964 Chevy Van. Rebuilt fer. Call Mr, l\f as on. ler ST;,-8683 eves. motor, good tires, runs good. 546-9263, aft 5 Call l\tr. '69 V\I/, 1600 <:'ng. Runs good, Needs paint. $800. Call Lohr 644-1375. good body. $925 or make of. 557-4305 lo see anytime. '61 OLDSMOBILE fC'r. 675-7513 ,57 Chevy Van, paneled, New tires and brakes, power * '70 VW ~~· new tire~. crptd, Best offer. Aft 4 pm. steer., po"·er brakes, po'A'.· good cond1tlon, $ 19 0 0 . 833--C;-;52 er windows. Runs good , , • fHQ--0439 $250 Phone 5'13-3691 '69 o/W BUG 1960 CHEVY Impala. Good -. -'----'----- sum. or offer. 67:,...mt running cond. $195. 67 Olds 98 4-dr Luxury 645--0559 w/all the goodies. Ivory 1965 VolkswPgCn Squarebttck. . w/b\k vinyl top. $1200. Call New l;u·akes, clutch, & tires. 1965 Bel Air Wgn. Runs well, after 4 64(H]148. Call 847-823l ne(>{!s body work, $275 . .:;:;:...;._,• ::,::c;::_=.~-~-1 ~~="C,.."--,.-'-~-~--1 64fr8000 days; 6 4 2-o 4 s 2 '70 OLDS 88 Roya le 1970 VW Pop Top Camper, evE."!. CLEAN SPORTY COUPE XLNT COND. $3295. Bamboo/black vinyl top, air, Call 496-8669 CHRYSLER AM/FM stereo, pwr steer, 1970 VW bug. Xlnt cond. pwr brake1, radial tlres. AM/FM radio. Sl •KJO. '69 New Yorker-P/S-P/B. 40.000 carefully d r Ive n 644-0620 btwn 8;30 & 5:30. Power windows. Electric mil~. Be&t affer. Call Mr. '59 V\Y bus. st>ats. Po\\-erantcnna. Air. Mason ~. aft 5, Call Yes, it's clean! $S50. H.adia1 steel tires $2700. Mr. Lohr 644-1375. 36111 Martus, N.B. 531-1255. '69 Old1 Cutlus. Excel cond. '71 Yolks Super 13<'('tle. Am/ ·lli Clu-ysler NL'\VJ>Orter Xlnt Nu tires, Pwr .. Air con- Fm stereo many xtras rond. thru-oul. Very clean. diUonln<r. 644-2252. . · -,~,750~~673-~2734~~~---l-iifi'iii·;",~ii-"r:F;;-;rrAic Like t1e1v. $1850. 644-6348 I· ' ' '68 Olds 442 2 Dr HT AT '70 VW Bus Cus1on1 CAmper. COMET P.S., R, l·I, Alr Cone( Re'.. Reblt eng., new brks & built Engine $1695, MH&t4 tires. R/H. Tape, sunroof '62 COMET 4 dr. 6 cyt st:kk.. PINTO $2350. 675-2489 or 64&-J792. 7,000 ml. on eng. Gd. cond. Baja Bug, FASI' $275. 54&-0318 1--------- BEST OFFER CONTINENT Al 19TI 2000co <oa. dloc ~~~ Call evrs aft 5 557-7592 ~:W:w cond. Nu un:a. w ANTED Old VW1 running '68 Conflnentlll. Excel cond~ PL YMOUTtt or not. N1•w lirc1. low miles. Sl,!J00.1 __ _;,_;,,;,;;...:,, ____ 1 64&-4716 aft 5 pin Owner. 644-1833. PLYMOUTli late • 6 9, '61 VW bwr:. Reblt eng. CORVETIE Roadrunner 4 apd. lo mlll':s, ltAl>IO. $400. Clean, MUBI Rt"! Johns *499-~* EXTRA CLEAN Arco, 646-5558. V\\' '65 R/11. Gd COll(I, Ne"' 'GS VETI'E Ll'.)SS Plymouth St a t Ion paint & f'rui;, Orti;c ownt!r, 67:1-720'.{ ., l II ..,.... "'~ .,,.,.," W1V1. Good cond. Auto. Good " "' ., _,, -DODGE lnlMportOlkm. l3<IO ""'' ol- '70 V\V bua. 28,000 m L 1----------1 fer. 962--1939 lll'ter 6 pm. Cd s~· ~urld. 100.'il V·R Van. 11,llll mllrK, PONTIAC . --~:=;o~"-'=~-si:;oo or ot/ct. Must ~U! 1----'-'-'-----1 e '64 Volluwagen • .,.,,,, 7903 Now polo!•""'· [C''-"""'=~·-',·-==--·I '67 BONNEVILLE 1'1'!1. Call 640-0327 FIREBIRD Automotk:, laolOry alr, ..,.,.,. VOLVO I·.,..-. :r.o __ PS....,, -.-/C-.-,-.,-.-""-,,.·.I atct'rtnc:. pow•r brakts. ----------1 Mlc~fin d~. Clean. Orla ":'ldk>, . heftltt, whlfl' wall VOLVO pvt pl)'. $1400. 968--4628 11rn, tinrtd glaq i\VHED82) DEMO SALE -m; ""'· ·~· TIME FOR '64 CatallN Wai<. '-· "'- NOW IN PROGRESS at ·~fAA ltllli4 W YOLYO 19l'lli ll•rllt, C.ltf. Cluttfted Adt •• . fle2-M11. kJ ml'• rll:h, 6 Dia. Pvt. pt.y, ~. Xlnt cond; QUICK CASH -111111,JOpm. PONT '89 G1"1 like otw, THROUGH A AC. pwr. vlnyl (Op, m.,., A)1/f"M. 1ttte0 blpe. $1895 Prvt ptr 332 .. 1597 DAILY PILOT WANT AD ron SQle. 1~ Pontl•c, $150- Alr/«>n<I. Rotllo/lo~ Pl! 645-0415. ------~Dwfll ..U HI ' , San Clemente Capist!9'!~~ VOL. 65, NO. 283, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAG~ EDITION ORAN~E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Final N.V. Steeb MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1972 TEN CENTS 'Mexican-Americans Demand Caspers' Ouster By JACK BROBACK Of _. 0.IW f'flfl Steff ~dm Of Orange County Mexican- Arfwican organizations today vowed ~Ir followers wW pack the Boan! of ~lsors' bearing room Tuesday and ()emaDd removal nf Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach u bqard chalnnan. aMcano leaders, meeting Sunday In SlDli Ana with about 200 members, Pwihed through three motions without a ~Ung· vote. 'l'tiey Included, In addition to Caspers' out? as board clJalrman. a demand for ' With Friends Like That •.. Esprit de corps among Marines can reach extremes at times. a public apology for b1J H Adelante ban- didos" remark last -and Uuil the ~ remove tHeMnrm.auve Ac- tioo Program (APP) from the county personnel department and place ii In the county adritinistrative office. It was the AAP that started all the furor. Two weeks ago, the board approved the new progr4m by a 4 to 1 vote with Caspers the only dlsaenter. It Is designed to gjve minorities and women better county employment and promotional op- portunities. Newport -Drama Officer Last Wednesday Caspers, grumbling ov~ the ~000 cost of the program_, referred to an organiiallon of Mexican Ameri::1n county employes, Adelante as "bandidos." Tbe employe group later protested Uuit they did not approve of the cost of the program either but were positive of its need. Mexlcan·Amerkan leaders S u n d a y cautioned against militant action In reference to propoaed picketing of the county administration building Tuesday. res Rescues Even if it me~ a broken jaw and bead cuts. · Police in San Clemente attested to that over the weekend when they reSponded to a local bar alter employes reported an uncooscious Paralyzed Diver patron. . Offkers found a aergeant from Camp Pendleton unconscious oo the floor of the tavern and called for an -At San Clemente Gener al llDspltal, the loser In an appannt listflgbt came to. Police asked him WOO WU, responsible· for the painful !njwies. The victim refuaed lo ldentilf bis sparring parWr and declined tq press any cbar ..... -Ollieen said the victim gave one limple reason: "He's iny best friend." Capistrano Board Chief to Tell All-y ear Plans Members of two sepante chamben of commerce early this week will bear presentations on the all-year ICbool con-. cept presented oy Capistrano Unified School District :lupt. Tntman Benedict. San C!emente's chamber of commerce will meet Tuesdsy noon and among the afternoon buslnesa a~ Howard Jolmon's Restaurant will be an ezplanatlon oo the 4$-15 concept of all-year school which loCal lnlBteea wW cooslder lonnafly In December. , Members of the Capistrano Beach chamber wW bear the same pr<sentatlon W~esday noon at Pete and Clara's Restaurant in San Juan Caplstrano. Benedict said several days ago that h1s calendar for such appearances tbiB month is booked soUd. The lnformaUoa campaign was ordered )11 -wsteea as a ._, of aampl!ng public opinion oo the all-year coocept u ,.it u lamiliarizlng the commlllllty with proposal. · Local trnsteea ... amldering the plan fl a means of coping with nm&.., pewth In student llOl>ulatlom. Tbe p._t calh ·1or keeping cblldren m 1ebool over a 12-mantb buts, iDltead ti 'the tradltlonal nine months. The all-year plan would have children attend nine weeka of school and then llay on vacatkln for three weekl, then repeat the cycle all year long. Thus far, Benedict ha! said, he has heard no aerious advene comments in 1everal appearances almllar to those aet for early this week. . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. D11tr Ptllt SSlff A hulking Huntington Beach man, paralyzed after a pier dlve Into sballow water, was sived early today when a Newport Beach polk:e helicopter officer teaped Into the sea and lowed him 150 yards to sbOre wbile batiling curreots. Ol>aerver Officer Dou& 11'.ebater was credited will\ saving the life of William Rldin, 29, of 212 'Hunttniton St., ·Hun- tlogtoa 11eacb. Cammually IWations Officer Stan Breasler said the drsmatlc aiMea rescue was tr1ggered at ~:10 a.m., with a fran· tic call form Margaret Muench, a friend of Rldell. Sbe said they ...,.. lllrolllng OD Newport Pier when her date decided to go for a IWlm -fully clothed -and dovo from the structure !ntq falrly aballow water. AulborlU.. at Hoag Memorial Hosital listed RldeD In aertous conditioo this morning, elgbt boun after the tragedy, as they attempted to determine the ex· tent of bis neck and l!pinal Injuries. He has suHered IODle paralysis but It Is not yet known whether It Is temporary Cyclists Crash On Hilly Road; Each Breaks Leg Two young motol'C)'tllsts from San Clemente ran tnto each other at an old cycling park in Inland hills Sunday. They each wound up with a broken leg. Police said they were summoned to the hllla, which once formed the Seab...u Motorcycle Park, at about 1:30 p.m. by -· deputies. Along a hlllalde they found Lee Evan Hench, 18, of IOI Calle Dorado, and Robin Paul l4oc!Mt1m, 18, ol Mii S. Ola Villa. Another cydlst WU odmlnlst<red lint aid -the patrolmen arrived "' the park Inland of ·the fr<eway. The youth& were taken 1q :;.. Clemente General Hospital where their fractures were aet. Hench, police uld, llUllered a com- pound fracture -more rerloul than the aimple break suffered by Llndekens. The part, although cloeed for aeveral yean, still Is used on occulon by cyclilt1 able to fJnd acceu. Snagged Colurnbus Was Spared the Fla gs SAN FRA!IClllOO (UPI) -U Illa arfPial Slnta llarla had bad the lzoo. bit lb tmJ r.,.-UO. had i..e tt llftlbabl7 ..... W<lllld have.made ll The -WU the Cohtmbul DOY porade. £ftl'1lhinl WU pins ...0 Uflo til the -ol the Santa Marla Ooit ..... ed .... --lino of flap. Jl'tnl, -tried to cul the Ila& llDe wtth Colllmbua' -. bul Iha blada ... loo *'°· ' Theo, -• tried boldin& the llDe 1p w1ffl a piece of lleel. Spectators iliiled and pointed. l'lnally, ..... CUmbed a ladder and beld up the line wtth • broom and the ahlp rolled tbrouP. ' At Ille -" -Aid, "'Diii cornmlttee deall wtill the dlfll. cull -tetr ........... In( the ...... laket only.,... mlnmes loapr." • or pennanent. Dispatched tq hunt the pier dlve vlo- tiin, helkopter pilot Jim Gollos zoomed low over oflshore swells In the chopper known as 43 Adam and Webster spotted Ridell about 150 yards oflsbore. He was Ooattng face down, indicating (See RESCUE, Page Zl RecycUi~ Vnit Has 2 Offers For Property San Clemente's bomeJess recycling center bu bad two oilers of property, Its founder said today, and instead of foundering, it mlgbt be able tq ccotloue. Llooel Burt, who last week COlldemned city coundfmen for dealing the oenter "a death blow," said ooe of the pan>els Is In San Clemente and the other Is In San Juan Capistrano. Ht did not llP'Cif1 which spots are being considered. It was the futile le8l'Cb for a permanent borne for the succesaful center that caused fears last week that the effort woold die. Burt uked San Clemente councilmen for the use of 3,000 square feet of fallow land at the eity reclamation plant. But councilmen insisted Uuit the recycling center was a ' ' p r i v a t e l:.uslness" and government should not become directly involved. Buri has Insisted Uuit the center Is a commun.lty effort which relies only Cll donated materials for reclamattoo. At last Wednesday's meeting of the councll Burt said be planned to move out ooa men trallerioad of baled newsprint and c1ooe the center forever. The cmter this week llill Is operating out of lis old quarien, put the - (!lee BECYa.E, PqeZl Scot Sentenced After Becomirig Doub'le Bigam is t LONDON (UPll -ln 12 years, Andrew Galbraith oollected live w1 .... fllthrnd Ill cl:dJdreu and became a lWO- lime bllamlsl. •Tm no Cwncrta « a rre•t lover, .. proteoted the Jl·,....,id -before • courl --bbn tq a_,u, .... ~ for bito -........ , of. Polleo said the bo1l1h -lookln1 Gallraltb, • hotel ........ --tq the clmll alter 11111 .,.-..Ua ol 10 -Iba, _,. ,_ 11, ... _ed • te,..,,_ call from Brldcel Tur1oJ. wbom lit -lalt ,..,., Bot.II --u.., _,. "lfn. Gallnlth." --Gallnltll !Int~ blpaoy In -man1'lll llObel i.,.. wliOa ba -..in ftd tq Rooalind """ nle. ii. -Jalled for a1z montht. laollal baa ... dtQd bJ him and 8-ID! lour. An. Illa two -"dh'oroed" lllm. (llee llGAl!llSI', hp I) " One spokesman put it this way, "Noth!m:; ~ hurt our ca~ mo~ ~ a demonslrJtion on the streets wbk:h could be the spar!;; that would lead to violence. "If we react with violence we are Jess than Mr. Caspers and we can on1y lose," be warned. Supporters of Supervisor Robert Bat· Un, who Ul engaged in a bitter battle to retain his 1eat on the board in the Nov. 7 election, took advantage of Oaspers' em- barrassment. Bill Meyer, Battin's chief aide ap- · lut Chum• peared at a "fexican-American meeting Friday night and said his boss would de- mand that Caspers apologize for bis ban- dldo remark. Today, Meyer in a less militant stat~ ment sakl Battin will uk for a "clarification" of the board cba.lrman's remarks. "Caspen had a leglUmate compl;Hnt on the cost of the minority employment program," Meyer explained ... He tbould have focused on that. The $200,000 for the first year Is only the beginning. That's 11 • I It's a face only a mother eoald love. Well, abe11 not bls mother. She's a chimp trainer at the San Diego Zoo. JIGt tllat'1 pretty close. Councilmen in Capistrano To Weigh Park Fee Plan San Juan Cl:,lltrano c o u n c 11 m e n tonlgbt will consider a much tlg)Jtened venk>n of tbe clty'1 park fee ordiMnce · -propolins a 1100 tab for the builder of each linale ...identlal ll'dt u • """' trlbutlon to the parka developmeot fund. Councilmen two -ka 11• approved the lint mdtnc of their reviled parka lee onllnance but lefl the actual dollar •mount• blank pendlnjf lllrther lludy by the dty pianntt. Tonight'• vtnlon of the code will have 111 the f ... piuaced 1n. In each caae, the lund:I '"'"Id be charied If the developer ol the propmy c1-not to donate !sod far parka to """" hla lndJTidual project. Tbe ..... code for the ftnt lime 1<11 a PILOT A.D GETS 'TONS OF CA.LLS' The DAILY Pn.Of _, aell od- nrtlalni ._ .. by the pound, but the -""° plaood the lollowN .... -h pt .. _ of calla." °'""" tlila: * • YEARLY. 2 Ira 8dnu. .... ---Cal¥ SZiO. Call xu-mx. Tltrte -., adnltJaiol. -of calla ml the Pl-11 w11 l'IDll:d on tho aec- ood da;y. 'Illa!'• the ..., of !bit - -ad. How DllllY "pounds" •I -do )'QU want. Call -and we11 dolt..... similar rule for tbe bulldtt of sln&le bouaes. Besldto the 1100 tab JO< the 1lngle private proj<ct, U-other parka fees are •llo propoaed: 4125 per unit for new duplextl. 4150 pu uni. ror mulllf1mlly rtt~ till unill (lrtplu otructureaor areaterl. --4100 I*' hoUle In a ltlid. -4125 fOf' each motel unit or 11\<'bllebome pad. -Five ctn1.1 ptr IQWlre foot ol noor 1rea for any new commercial bulldlnt;. Councilmen °'*t'td 1hc r e v I J ~ d ordinance Jn an C!flort to JPf't:ld lhe responslbllitJ among devtlopel'I f0< ad· ding to the fund calculated to PIY for new parka and their devtlopmonL. Councilmm In ndahbortnl S • n Clemonll are euminlnl the ame .,.. ot ........ onllnala. 'l1lelr ..-it codo ""-,... onlJ whee actual IUbdMlllan mopa art Ried. oot wben permill for IPOdflC proJ<cta .... ----ol Illa d!J'• blc.d -111bdMded ,.... ap. Ban a..-•1 code bu not Jl<ldod much ......... lo< parka developolMI. Teen Held in Death million In five years and $2 mllUon ln 10 years." • The aide said Battln's stand was to be "fair to Adelante but to remain con- cemed about the economic colt of gnvernment.'' Caspers was in his office today for the first time as far as anyone could dettrmine since last Wednesday but hil secrttary said be was "In conference." The board chalnnan was not available for comment to the press nr to the public either by telephone or ln person. • I Saves Girl From Teeth Of Animal OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -An angry Sumatran tigress whlch attacked 1 5- year~ld glrl at the Omaha Zoo waa: wrestled down by the child's lather before the girl wu ssiously hw1. John Cordner, a carpenter, clamped a ..,..,.ling bold Sunday night ·on the an1mal wbicb bad aelzod bis daughter, Lisa, by the bead and dragged ber for about 10 feet. Little Lisa and ber mother, who WU allihtiy Injured whUe Irylnc lo bep the , llpr away !tom the &!rl. _. U..lld al an Omaha hoopltal and releued. It look an eatlmated IO otitchea tq clole Lisa'• -· llln. Cordner bad three lllto!Jel ta.ten In her mn: The llx·mooll><>ld Ugrosa leaped botn Ill grotto -a "barlesl cage" at the ., -apparenUy all<r beln( proYOl:od by 1 bystander. 'l'be bl1 cat retumed.vofam- larUy lo another grotto all<r belnl ~ dued by Cordner. 1.oo ofllctala said It j umped tntq 1 tran1fer cr11e lowtted tnto tbe grotto "lo hlde." Dr. Lee Stnunon., dltoctor ol Ibo Henry Doorley 1.oo, uld the llQ8I wu angered by 1 ~n vllltor lo the mo. He llld "It"""' reported that the wom1n -"unlortunlttly st. w11 unidentififd" -apparently wu trylna to recover a photogniph wbJch had dropped into the grotto the tlgrosa lhared with 1 considerably oidu male tt.aer. "The wunan began Jabl>tnc at the call with thil long stick," Simmons uld. "Thil uptlOI the two call, partlcularty the young female. "I doubt that the cat could have made th.ti Jump IJ the h.tdn't been Verf n· cited. Animals are capable or doln1 a lot of thlngJ when they are eaclted or teared,'' Simmoru estimated the tlerea' fti&ht at IO-U pounda, but Cordner put It at 1bout IO pouncls. "It'• bani lo btlleve In the mlddla of the United Stata that one can be It· tacked by a tlpr," Cordner uicl. "I alW can't btJ ltvt IL" Mnl. Conlntt aald Iba -.. _ . .. frozen ltlfl" A nnrtman who vlltted lhl Cordner borne In ... ,,,, O.llevue -Uaa. ISoo TlGltl';M. Pare II c. ... ..... -• ---.. -" -" ,_ • --• -WM -·-' .._ " -·-·= -" ---' =------= -·-• ._ .... , I " -" ~ ... , -• ._. ,, 71 --·i: -I .. -- DAILY PILO. St Five Die In County Accidents A Santa Ana \vomnn \Yi'.lS killed Sunday Jn a San Diego F'l'C'C\\'ay accident. bring- ing the \'.'eckend traffic toll In Orange County to riv«.'. The coroner's office reported r..1rs. Esther llernandez:. 20. of 312 N. \Vestem Ai.le., Sanla Ana. was dead on arrival at Costa ri.tesa ri.temorial 11ospital early Sunda y aft er the car driven by he r hus· bAnd Leonard 21. v•cnt out of conlrol on !he San Diego Freeway near Moulton ParkY"ay, the highway patrol reported. Ronald N. Kawata. 24, of 419 A l lth St.. lluntington Beach. died early Saturday from injuries received ln a Garden Grove accident and Kenny lo.1edelin, 3. of Covina, died Saturday when he v.•as throv.n from a car driven by Belinda Chandler of Covina on the Santa Ana Freeway at Culver Drive. Meanwhile, a 55-year-old South l..agun a woman pedestrian who \vas killed Satur- da y night in a Coast Highway accident nea r her home has been identified ns Margaret F. Taylor, of 31844 Virginia Way. The highway patrol said she was struck by a van driven by Shane T. Buche, 28, of 124 de la Grulla. San Clemente. A fifth weekend traffic victim remains unidentified. The coroner's office said a man abou t 50 years old died of massive internal in· juries after being struck early Saturday by a hit-run vehicle on the Santa Ana Freeway near Brookhurst Street. A coroner's deputy said there were no identification papers on the body and the only clue was the letters "76" on a T· shirt. Fingerprints were taken to aid in determining the identity of the victim . 01amher to Tell Election Winners In San Oemente "Officials of the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce will announce the names Tuesday of five directors elected recently in annual mail balloting by all chamber members. The five mc.Q}bcrs of the board will be installed early next year at the chamber annual banquet. The se\ecUon ot the lint group of d.irecton ls the first ol several (unctions held in the fall to select a chamber leadership for the coming year. Other ltem• s,t for action at the noon meeting at Howard Johnson '! . restaurant will include appointment of a corarnittee to select San Clemente's new citizen,: of the Year; appointment or cban:lber residents on the city's standing cornmitlee reviewing sign matters and iinaJ discussions for an open membership meeting Oct. 12 at the San Clemente lM. Youth Arrested After Accident A 19-year-old Dana Point youth was ar- rested by Laguna Be:ach officers after his car struck a utility pole, skidded &5 feet and flipped over, finally coming to rest on its roof on South Coast llighway by Nyes Place. Timothy Charles Caldwell of 24691 A Cordova Street , was taken to Orange County Medical Center for treatment Of a cut above his left eye and then booked in the county ja il on suspicion of driving under influ ence of a drug. Witnesses of the Friday accident tolll officers the Cald11i•ell vehicle was travel- ing along the hi~hway when il jumped the curb and struck the pole. OlllN•I COAtT K DAILY PILOT Tt!e °""'"(Mel OAIL't l"ILOT, •1111 ~ h ~ , ... H.-..lt• .. l. k ..,el•-" ,,,. er.,... c-..t ,,,.....,,"" ,_ .. ,. ,_ ,." •nloM a•• ••lolbO......_ ~r ""-" l'"rlll•y, llH" Co,I• MIUI, Nt...._1 It.ell, H""'llntMfl l•tc:llll'-•t!" \lf!My. LtllUll• 1.ffc.11, lr-..IM/ .... lt~ .... :M" C""""'lt/ St" J-~Ir-A l l"91t , .. -+ """" k '*91i.Md Stlllr41p 1'111 ,....,. • .,.. f,_ ,,li>CIHI •UtllkW '411111 It 11 1JO ~I ll'f Slr"1, ( .. II MtUI, C111111 .. 11, tl62'. l11b1rt H. W114 ................. '""''1111« J1ck It . Cvrlty \llcl ~., ........ °"""'' ""*'lfW lh111n11 IC11•il ..... T'lleinll A. M11,.,hl1111 MtlWllillf l•lW Ch1rl1s H. Leot •1th1rtl fJ, Natl AM!ttllll ~lfllf llfl ..... s. ca ...... OMc• JOI H•rth ll C1111l1• l11I, •Z•72 --°' .. ,_., ut w.::;:r '""' ~ ~.Ol SW H .... ...,,,. Hlll'll .... ._ -....i 1111S -.Cl'I ...,....,... ........... .,_.., m ...,_ ,.,,_ , ...... t1141 '41o4Jll Cl•dn-4 ,.,..,.. .. 641·••71 s-eta ,. Al hp••= ... : .,. .. ,. 111 4flo44n • ~·· tf7I. o...... , ... , ,..lt1'1"'9 ~. frll -oWllt Hklttf•tllofll. .. 1 ...... ,.. _,. ... ..,,,....'""""" ,..,.,." "''I' 11t r~• wllf'IWt ..-IN ..,. MlnlM .. ..,...,.. '""'f· ...... ~ .... .-w " C"etrt ~. '"'"""'... ~"'"" .. ,........ u •• ~, .., -u .,;,;, """'"'"' tfl'lltft ... , -'1MI .... •M f!Wl'll~. Asks C0t1rt Action Briggs Pressures Butz to Testify From Wirt Strvlct!I Assemblyman Jo:1n V. Jlriggs (Jt. F'ullerton ) wants U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz to testUy before his Assembly Agriculture Com1nittee Tuesday in Los Angeles. If Butz doesn't show , Briggs said in a telegram to the ca binet olficer. he will ask the Los Angeles Superior Court to ccmpcl his attendance. Failing that , he \\"ill ask the sergeant-at-arms to bring Butz in. The warning to Butz 'l.Y Briggs follow· ed a scuffle Thursday in Sacramento in \\'hich the Orange County legislator al· tempted to serve a subpoena on the federal official. But Briggs was shoved aside by Secret Service agen ts, and the subpoena fell to the floor . Claiming thA' Thursday's ac- tion const it utec. a se rving of the sub- poena, Briggs added. "It is a dark day y.·hen a California legislator cannot talk to a federal official. From Pagel RECYCLE ... given by the landlord. Eventually, the sit..: on Los l\.1'Jlinos is slated to be developed as industria l rental units. Burt said that until one of the new sites offered is used. the center v.·ould v.·ork on an interim basis, Collection bins stiU will be serviced. but materials will not be processed locally· Instead, the 'raw materials will be load· ed locally and shipped to manufacturers elsewhere. "This is our way to try to take every effort to keep this thing going," he said. "If there's one option left, then we'll try it." For the past year Burt has operated the busy center with equipment donated by recycling firms &nd even the city "'hich last week turned him down. The center has rented for $1 a year a surplus forklift and for $4 an hour has had the use of a city truck and driver to service bins located throughout the South Ccast area. But the prospect of providing a site for the center on city property was rejected by councilmen heeding recommendations by City Manager KeMeth Carr who said he disagreed strongly with so strong an intervention by city government. FromPqel RESCUE ..• he had possibly drowned already, ac- cording to the helicopter crew. No lime was left to dispatch a lifeguard patrol boat, so Officer Webster stripped off his gun , holster, shoes and belt, climbed out on one pontoon and rr1ade his first rescue leap. His partner £1rst lowered the helicopter to about 15 feet above the sea, which was whipped by the chopper's rotor wash. Officer Webster took the paralyicd leaper in tow -his six-foot, four-inch , 2~pound frame made heavier by water· soaked clothes. dnd began methodically swimming toward shore. Police cars and an ambulance were waiting and rescuers helped haul the stricken Ridell out of the surf and carry him on a stretcher for the race to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Newport Beach ordered their police helicopter equipped with pontoons in an· ticipation that it "'"'ould be required for use in sea rescues such as the predawn incident today. Officer Webster and other helicopter crewmen are also !rained in aquatic rescue techniques but today's dramatic operation was the rirst one for Webster. ··1 am also amazed that secret service agents \vould be instructed to physically prevent me from pursuing this oon- v<.rsalion. Mr. Butt will reel an obllgaUon lo appear, as I am sure be will not put him.self above California Law," the Assemblyma11 declared. At issue is the federal government's controversial poultry eradication pro- gram designed to prevent the spread of Newcastle disease in California. As cbainnan of the Assembl y Agriculture Committee, Briggs wants Butz to attend the Los Angeles meeting which Is being held to air poultrymen's complaints that they are not receiving sufficient compensation for their nocks \vhich are being destroyed to check the spread of the disease. Briggs said he e:rpected Butz to an- nounce a new federal guarantee of $3.50 per bird destroyed at a press conference last Thursday. "When the conference had concluded, it was apparent that such an announcement v;as not forthcoming," the Assemblyman said. "This left me with no other alternative .han to serve the subpoena as l had forelvarned l(State Secretary of Agriculture James) Stearns and (Direc- t("ll of Agriculture Brunel) Christenson I \\'OU]d." In addilion to what he calls the poultrymen's "justified" request for higher compensation, Briggs also claim· ed that federal agents had paid more than $100-0XI to owners of illegal fighting cocks that had been destroyed in the pro- gram. Briggs charged lhat the fighting cocks were being allowed to move freely into and out of the quarantined areas. "The lack of control by the task force of birds in the quarantine area, plus the ease of movement of the virus and the many cases of inequitable treatment of those in the poultry industry, continue to raise questions in my mind as to whether the proper .approach has been to.ken in controlling this virus," he said. Tuesday's committee hearing will be held at 10 a.m. in the Old State Building, 217 W. First St. in Room 115. From Page l TIGRESS ••• whose head was swathed in bandages, ~'hether she had ever seen a tJger that close before and whether she would like to see a tiger again. To both questions, Lisa replied, "No." l972 Campaign 'Dirtiest Yet' WASHINGTON (AP) -The Fair Campaign Practices Committee said today that the 1972 political campaign "will be the dlrtiest in recent years." The committee is a private, non- partisan organization. lt receives com(Jlaints of violations of the 20-- year-old Code of Fair campaign Practices traditionally subscribed to by political leaders and many candidates. In a statement, the committee said it l1andled "more complaints aboul dirty politics in the first five weeks of the im campaign than were handled during the com· parable period in any year" since it started keeping statistics. Rotru·y Cai· Driver Leads Purstters on Merry Whirl A man piloting a rotary engine car c1·nt.alnlng his baby boy and a tenified block cat led rollce on a sizzling, 100. mlle-pcr·hour pursuit over the Orange Coa~l Sunday night before belng cap- tured. Ronald R. \Vitt. 27. of 300 Llneoln Ave .. lluntin,1i:ton Reach. rcJA>rtedly drove on the y:rong .. Irle or the rood, r:1n 11lop slgn!i and zigtngi;ied through lraf!ic during thu dr3mnllc chose. He "'llS finally corralled at Warner Avenue and Be.Reh Boulevard in Hunt· lngton Beach following the Grand Prix:· style pcrforman~ Which left two police cal'! and his 1972 compact auto dAmagOO. Newport Bench police took Witt into CU$~ody and booked him on s:U!plclon or endangering the welfare of a minor chlld. Soot.Ing procedures ln Newport Beach limit officers lo placing one single charge on a .!lllpecl but tht! Orange COW\ty [)\!tr1ct Allorncy may flit addlllon11I counts If investlg111ors be.hevc thty arc warran1ed. Jnve.~tig:itors pid tod11 y they un- derst11nd ¥t'ilt was hitter and had bwn b1 oodlng o"~r a domtsllc qu1rrcl before lt~avlng w1th the child and the family cat Newport S.och Pol ice Olflt'er Carl AnderMJn s:-ld he .!IJXllttd Witt lravellng at hi~h 6Pffd' at MncArthur &ulevard a11d East Coast lflghway ln Corona de.I P.t11r lie nltempted to m11 kc ti traffic stop about 8 p.m .• trlg1tl!rlnJ, a c.ha11c thtough and around two cities that covered about 15 miles at speeda of 100 ml1es-per· hour and above. Streaking througi1 medium density traffic on Coast Hlgh~·ry. Officer Ar:.derson estlmaled Wiit was dolna: more than 100 when he Mlled aCl'OS.! the Santa An River Bridge into HWltlngton Beach. Wailing traffic patrolmtn there picked up the pursuit, which then veered up Lake Street to 17th Street, where the suspect made a scrtechinb Tight lum to Dclaware Street and on to Garfield Avtnue. lnvtJtlgators said Witt sped through stop sign.,. on busy C,oldenwest Strett wit b aix black-and-white pollce cars with ~irens screamlns In punult. in addition to the Huntington Beteh p o 11 c e helicopter. Dtennlntd to halt the dlngcrou1 chsse. Patrol Sit. Gary Kuncl lrltd 10 block Warner Avenue at Ill lnlerstctlon wllh Goldenwest Street. lie said Wilt sc.reeched into a sharp ri~ht tum -sideswiping the patrol car with hts ~smalJ car. knol''R for Its speed, ~raking ability and maneuvt>r1h1llty - and ~hot down Warner Avtnue to 8eac:h f'oulevard. By thla time, Officer l>ennll Meb.gtr was hot on the 1u1pect'1 1'11 , but Witt spun 11 11Mrp U·tum at Blaylock Av,nue and Metzger -his petrol c:a.r br"'k" burnt out -piled into the rear of the car. 'Divining Rod' Artist's drawing shows how electronic beams of Apollo l 7's lunar sounding system will probe the moon -down to three-quarters of a mile -to aid in developing subsurface geological maps pinpointing possible metal deposits and water. His Love for Old Train Cost Owner His Fortune Kissinger's · ; Peace Talks : 'Sensitive' 1 l I PARIS (UPI) -Pmldentlal adviser Henry A. Kissinger held a second day or J secret negotifltions wllh the North Viet· - namese today~ talkl that have reachedl a ~· "sensitlvt,. stage In the quest for peace ~· in Vietnam. • The White Itouse said there would be .!' an unprecedented third meeting on Tuta· ; day. , Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. 1 Ziegler refused any comment 1 n ~ Washington on whether the fate of South 1 Vietnamese President Nguyen Van ThieU ) was the mair snag holding up agree-· ment. J The communists have demanded : Tiheu's ouster; 'Mtieu in the pa.st bas l refused. I Kissinger was accontpallled by Maj. \ Gen. Ale:rander Haig, his deputy who just / returned from Saigon and secret talks 1 there with Thieu. f They were meeting with Le Due 'Ibo, a / member of the North Vietnam ruling l Polltburo, who recenUy visited Hanoi, f Peking and Moscow, and Xuan Thuy, the • No. 1 Hanoi negotiator in Paris. .t ,· Both American and South Vietnameie ~ sources in Saigon said Friday that a plin. f was under discussion which would perm.it l Thieu to step down in favor of Sett <· LONOON (UPI) -Alan Pegler's love money and l cannot keep them on a Nguyen Van Huyeh, speaker of the South ~ fo.· an old steam locomotive cost him his string forever." Vietnamese senate and a former law 'i fortune.. He declined to disclose the extent of his partner of Nguyen Huu Tbo, an official of : Pegler, 50, returned to England Sunday debts. the Viet Cong "provislooal government."·. and filed a bankruptcy petition after The sources said the plans also caUod .J touring America with his beloved "Flying for total U.S. withdrawal; withdrawal of } Scotsman," one of Britain's last steam FrOtll Page l North Vietnamese forces from South · trains. Vietnam, and the freeing of American ) In 1963 he paid $7,500 ror the 4&-year-BIGAMIST prisoners of war. There also would beo.a ;,, old locomotive and its eight cars to save • • • Communist promise to negotiate seriously I it from the scrap heap. Then be took it on in Paris, the sources said. • a 12,~mile tour of the United States. he married Vivienne McGuire. 'Ibey had The South Vietnamese and Americam 1'" a chi!<! and were divorced two years d' · ed th Sal rta Pegler, who inherited a fortune from ismiss e gon repo a·a !_ later. "speculative." .,1 his family's rubber and plastics business, "It doesn't· surprise me he's taken said he had hoped to tum the train into a Ziegler, at a news briefing today,"\ rolling exhibition for British goods and other people in with bi!. big blue eyes and relused to characterize the Paris talks in ct tourism. childish .ooks," said Vivienne. wife No. 3, any way and refused comment on t. on learning or his latest conviction. whether the-had been any change m· ' Bui he said he lost $1.8 million on the ''"' : lour because he could not sell exhibition Rosaline, wife No. I, disagreed. the U.S. position. The United States has i space on the train. "l can't see what anybody would supp:irted Thieu and rejected Communlst l . sec in Andrew," she said. "I can't even demands be be ousted. > "r..1y love for that engine has ruined me remember what I saw In him. He's just a "We would anticipate a third day of~ financially," Pegler said as his daughter, wee fellow and certainly no Omar Sharif meetings but I will have to wait to hear ' Penny, 19, tearfully embraced him wben when it comu to looks." from Kissinger before I car.. confirm it,"(. he arrived by ship in Southampton. Said Isobel, wile No. 2: "He doesn't Ziegler said. : "The Americans were tremendously give a damn for all the heartbreak be He said it was "very unlikely the talks'; impressed,"lw! said. "But our exporters keep:: causing." would g int fourth d •••'"" lhal " and the Br!tl·sh •-··ist authon't1'es failed 0 0 a ay, m~UU(; wui Bridget, wlfe No. 4, said: "His life Kissinger and Haig would return to; to realize lbe potential and I did not get wouldn't be worth living now if I could Washington Tuesday night to brief Pres.le the backing I anticipated. get my bands on him." dent NiJ:on. ( "I filed my' petition in bankruptcy Mary, wife No. 5 who ls expecting Later, it ~as eonfinned that ·a third7· because it seemed sensible and logical ," Galbraith's child, paid: "I'll wait tor him day of.talks would be held Tuesday. .: Pegler said. "Some people creditors have and we will get married wheo be gets a Tbe talks mark the 19th time ~er~ -be<!_n_w_a_it_;n.;:g_t_w_o_o_r_thr_ee....:y_ea_rs_f_or_the_ir __ d_iv_o_rc_e_.'_' ___________ _:h:.:•::.•.:.co.::m=.e.::t•:_P:_•::ns:.:':.to::.:n::•!go::U::•::"'::· ____ .• Another ad was prepared for this space to· day, but we had a fire early Monday morning. PRICES SLASHED ON ALL NEW APPLIANCES IF YOU DON1 MIND CLEANING THE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HAVE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. EVERYTHING MUST MOVE FAST to make room for clean-up and redecorating· •WASHERS • • • 0 DRYERS REFRIGERATORS TELEVISIONS STOVES ----.. Dun(<W , ,, .,,, ... ,., i •l1 •~·: ','4 ~ . . .... ' ,,, .... ' 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COST4 MIS4 • .; . ' • • • ; T l I \ • ! I I I I 7 l ·' Jf OAILV PILOT SC .. Ut'I T~hl EXPERT 'SNIFFER' TESTS PERFUME SAMPLE Firm Hires Blind Because of Handicap State T ells Low Interes t Capitol News Service • · CalUornia Treasurer Ivy · : Bater Priest has reported a : · low interest bi-I of 4.6122 per- cent for SOO r.lilllon in bonds to finance veterans farm and home loans, state park and recreation and fish a n d wildlife enhancement bonds. · Low interest bid was made by a syndicate managed jointly by the First National .. City Bank of New York, . , Morgan Guarantee Trust Co., ; · Saloman Brothers and United : · California Bank. Mrs. Priest said Califor-..ia taxpayers will pay approximate!) $1 million less in interest during the life of the bonds because of California's new AAA credit .ralilljj. .. VW Refunds . $250,809 : -wAsllINGVJN (UPI) - . Volk!:~:QI America, Inc .. . haS a . lo refund about $200 ;to ~cb of 1,247 persons . . wtic>:'ptp"tbased Porsche 911 · ipodel. cars In the United .stat•' between January and . March. . The Price <:ommission said : . Ute agreement is part of a price reduction plan submitted by the oompany. The refund will t o t a I $250,809. ~-M._ ........... ~ -;. Finance Briefs ' e 727 Trlfets SEATI'LE -New orders by Brrulift and Delta airlines have pushed total sales of the Boeing 71:1 trijet past 1,000, making it the most popular commercial passenger plane in history, the company says. Boeing said Delta, based in Atlanta , had ordered 14 ad- vanced 7'1:1's while Dallas - based Braniff purehased four, bringing total sales of the plane lo 1,005. e Locldaeed Bid BURBANK-Loe kb eed Aircraft bas announced it signed a contract option to sell an additional six of its Tr1Star LlOll airlines to British Euro- pean Airway,. This is "a great vote 0 £ COil- fidence" in the new jet. said Daniel Haughton, Lockheed chairman. BEA earlier had ordered 12 of the pl&nes. e K~lco Co. SAN DIEGO ·-Boards of directon have approved the acquisition of Kelco Co. of San Diego by Merck and Co., Inc., of Rahway, N.J . Under the agreement, which cotneJ up for a vote of Kelco shareholders here Oct. 18, Kelco shareholders would get 3.4 shares of Merck stock for each Kelco share. {AclftrtlM-11 ... Tormenting.Rectal It.ch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved .. .lli nWiy""""" Preparation H '.lfya prompt, lmlporaryrelief .lrOm such pain and itcbina ;ind actually help... ehrink ·ij;e!ling of hemorrhoidal tlo- apes caused by inflammation. : .Ttota by -Oil bun- dreda of petienta ahowal thla to be true in ID8DY QLll!l8. In fact, many doctors, them- eelvee, UM! Preparation 119 or -ii for their fam. iliee. Proparalion H oln- or IUppoeitoriel. TODAY! 1°"0NLY~ $126 .. · ~·INC;J .. ~. Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or • Friend ~•Y be used on el\velop•s •s return addre11 la.bel1. Also very hendy •• identification lebel1 for m.,.•in9 person•I Items such •• boolr1, records, photos, ate. lebels 1ticlr on 9111-1 end mey b• us•d for merkin9 home canned focd Items. All lebel1 er• print•d with s!yli•..h Vovu• typ • on fin• quel ity .,;hit .. gummti:I paper. . ---------------------1 , I 11111 111 ""~ ~ ..... d ie "'' _,. ""I* ''"" Mi I P'llll P'1tlllffl UM1 Olw., .,,0, ..... , ... , : c.11• M., .. Ctltf. nm 1 , I I I I I I • I ! L-~-~~L~!-~!~J!~~--~J Out B y a Nose COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST Blind Workers Do tlie Job $•1"!bdtl Hkl!I L0w L••I C.t ... =-MY4J . .. NEW YORK tn lhl1 era of mechanization, It's a happy occasion ""ben n.an beats the machine. That's happening In a opecW and heartening .. ,y at the SCM.CorporaClor 's Glidden Organic Chemlcat11 p l a n t , Jacksonville, Fla. LABI' YEAR I.ht plant turn- ed out '20 millio1. of chemlC:al!J lncludJng synthes.lzed flavors and fragr~.! like lemon, spearmint and nutmeg oil used in soap, perfume, candies and pharmaceuticals, Manufacturer:!. of these pro- ducts demand r i g I d con- sistency ln the ingredients since consumers lose oon- fideoce in a perfume. a candy or a drug that doe&n't loot, smell and taste the same all the time. Computers are great for some things. CO m p I ex machines like t he com- puterized mas:-spectrometer and gas chromatagraphs used at the SCM Jlidden plan can give a chemic~! breakdown on any of the oils. But the machine has yet to be in- vented that comes close to n1atchlng the noses and taste buds of a humi.n being. And when sniffer.--are blind like the six members on the plant's olfactory panel in Jackson- ville, well that computer just doesn't stant. a chance. W RENE ELLIS, Catherine M. Cipla, Brio. Grant, Jr., Edward H. Mllier, Minnie Jean Owens and Calvin Platt make up the panel that spends four hours a day in a room specially desig~ to aid lheir discriminating nose, already sharpened by the loss of the sense of -;ight. 1be panel room is kept warm and moist to help the sniffers. It has ar air con- -AA-.,, d·,;,.. .. i th AOl!Otll. l.IO 1114\• nh 14\o' 1"' ~ >.1u 1...,."'ng system at whi sks _ .. na ut • ~t~ !'"' 11... "-"'~ M« "'~~ liO lk .... ·-. '. ,,.._ .2t away Ungerln{. odors without a ~DI ~11 1~ v ... f'"" •1 ... ~ '-·"° noticeable draft. The room 11 =~ffu.~ !; 1:;: i~ 1.''"::.. ~!c~hmN /f, well-ligh ted tve .. thoui:th the =~ ~ ~ ?".\: ftC f:t: ~ 1~ cr:-111 11 1t.0: p.:inel could worJ. a; well In the =~i 1~ 11: t'~ tt tt 2: ~~ ~..:le':. 'r' dark • Ane<ffl ll'ICD ':1 ~ .... ·1 l~•T 1. II ,._ • •Jr PrCI 3W 'lo 61!.lo f!!)'o lltltl d U A <CO .liO.:I ~ \) It.,_ 'i~ I• 11 ltlct NW BEFORE ANV : lemon oil, ~~,r~ !~ ti~ fU:+ 11. l~" c~~O:, for example, ls shipped. the ....... 0,' ·~'· 'I , ~ iosw ,1r-l.; c~i:,. 1 bllnd panel must 11fflrm that ~r:ic•m Rt! \;!. ~ ~,.. w1 the current batch tastes and " . IS Bi; + c II r~u''li smells jUSt like tV"'1' pr!ViOUS ~ ~ fl ... ~ e i ~ 11 0.. I b«tch. To do that, a11 pro-'"'" Jli .~ ~5 I ~ j!ii, ~ ,~; .i~·~ ductlon is comparec.' to star.-~J~P.~1oa 1li, 1' 1: a , ~; ~ ':Ll":t,. dards. U the panel turnt ..,,,.. ...,,;r;;i;. .J ~ ·-, down on the batch It doesn't ~111 ~'.:t T1 : :_!. t i?:,ftYt .. n 1eave the plant. And the panel ~~\~ .!s.. ll! HS n ::-+ ~ ,,:: :: • .,, ha.! compiled a remarkable .-.i14Prri 1.-: 1: ~111 29~ i~+ t: l;:1 1..:J~ record in the ei,i!'.h~ yea rs It ha5 ~~:.,.:, ''U ~~ S:t": ~~~..,. w ~l::::'b~1 1~ functioned. Not a .!ingle batch ~Jr~!f'o ·~ 13& ~2t: lj; l~~t ~ el~~f i# ~f synthesized oil has been ~ :li:li pt ;:U " n· ~ ~ . ~ 11~ fl:~= ;·~ Jected by a customer on the AtM!Slt l " bh r1o<->. r:(. 1 •mbk • U C"t""!I P 'O grounds that it didn't match AriwM: f 22 2l n -~ r'4• F rn .~• th st nd rd '• t:• pl I I 12 ~4'~t ·· C~A pl la.TO e a a • Am H1.11 121 o&Sl'I o&S..,_ :11o ,.,.~·• s1 ut A Hu of ..., l JIU ICJ + ~ r 11sn"' l.lf A typical test would go AmA1rFI .., •r »11o JJV. 1:1'1"'"'"' ,.ocM"o1 1.'-' Am .A.Ir l >o J ~ I + t. l"r>eaSoft .1'1 something like this: Each of AmB•k • ~ " JI' Jl'I-1a ,..,1c1w1 Brit.• th · I be uld A BrnCI 2. .,.. II" '1<+ l o roi.eot11 .Ot . e six pane mem rs wo A ere" i. 11.,.. 12'h 11Vt-" ,.,,,, .. ~ 1 4' ' thr bottl .A.m Bldll .:LS 't\1 ~.... 'tl'IT I• l"atoP li'f i \' receive ee es, one co~ Am c .. n 2.20 n • .,.. JOW '°"' .. c""'"llo: " d Am (.em It 1 .W 61/o 6'"'-~, l"!lll(r> li:Mflft talning an I entifled standard, A c!\M 2.l2C1 :u t..~ ,,.._ t,..,,.+ 1. r .. 1 i-.... 11 .Ts another an u n Iden ti f I e d ~~~~1"1 .Ji U m; ~ n,.! l: ~~:~l:l 'l.J duplicate of the standard and~ o::i1111'i 21 t. .... W' t~+ .~ ~olt~~nCI 1.~ the third the unknown T\rt\-ADlllT•I . .u 11 ~..... ~\lo ~+ 1. c II s M'ef ' ,... ~ .._ ou.1 .llD !\o "-""+ "' r .. I ~·1 1 a du ctlon sample. AOy1 p1 ·""' 2 1 1-a i~h 1~'• .. l""o P1t111r-1 AmElec l.11 J)I 21'N U \., 21\. t ft r:_,b E '·~ Am EJIPO<• u l \• J l . rots Ol't 1 . ..., THE PANEL'S V.b is to tell A• o..e, 1.1>:1 ~ l',,.. 211'• JI""+ I• ,..., S.-IY ., 1v GCY Xld ~ tW 21).\io ~-\1 Cmw~d 1.,., which of the two unknown bot-A c;.111"" .)2 11 11w 11• .. ui..-11 CCllT'ECI"'" ' u t · th rod ti A Gn Pi 1.Ml il tj'n )Ho fl~•+ lo ''"'"'ft"' 111'! ~cs con a1 ns e p uc on AmH0111 i'~ 3, 111.,.. 1B" ill!:+·•~ ~:'!!Wd ':..~ sample and how clase it :::::::, .21 ll " ''"' 4 1•-t-1~ rome:d awi matches the standard. After :m~k1 ~~f ~ ~ !r" !r.:+1 10 ~=fl1 ~1 sniffing and-or ta.sting the cor.-~.~1'1°.'.Z ;: ~i": ll\.11 ~!!: ... ' ~::::;;;::.tr~ '•ts f th bott! th ArNr MOICt :UI 9\.'t f t~o + ... i'-vo•>.ll!tt l l.C"n o e es, e AmNGs 2.m v J1 J6.l'o 11 +o,..c I "· hi d . . s.. n 1 11"'1 11.,, Ill'>-i,. ,..ntWlf I.ltd pane ist mar...:. s ec1s1on on :~sr.1:1 .'°ii 2 29 u:i.. 29 ... l'O ""r....-c .M t h ard .. 'I l.lG 70 ll'lo 1, 11· ..... ~""Eel 1.ID a compu er ~nc c . AmS""i, .10 21 .,,,.. 1 v. .;,_ ..., "'""dot ~ SCM, bl nd I w " 5 1111 ...o 1ot. lDl'I 1~ 1~ ,,.., c-ea ot 5 s 1 pane as A~m tJpt 4'1o 12 1 · .s.~ 51 + ,,.. ... ..,.. f'CI 114 among the first group of 11rll .j1 .. : r r,14 :""= ~ ~=~~ ~ I hired b · Am lo T 1.tG ~ lol'!i lot ft ~ v. Clllfl 1.wtl1111 empoy~ '---y a1 mhaa]Or :~\\\Dt.,J "' 1.;. 1 l1-t ..... ,,..•NG 1 .t~ corporation ~ause o a n-AmW••• ·'° 11 utt 11"" 1 ""+ "Clllfl1m Pw t di tdes i'•'t AW!r:r l\lo 1140 lt\'a 111'1 lt-1 .,.l""fl Pr>f,,..., cap, no p u: I • AWi• D IA ''l, 20 :io 2G -... Clllfli9 ot J.J't R P T v ·•-I Ameron .U I'"' It'll 1'-">-" ('...,p ..,, • . .n • · • i OUDg, VI\.~ pres -Ametelt Ml. :KM JIM Zl.,,+W Clllfltt Alf l11 dent in charge of the Jackson-AMF In I°' 1S ....... """' '9W+ "" -.. CMI ,_.., Aml.c: .ao i. 11 1t111o ~-, i.. c"" c"""" ville ~tion, !Uillll1ed up ~'-' Inc M 111°"""4! 1~ 1C4\o+ 1.,. r,,..111 11& ..._... ..... -!': , '"' Rt ''-""' c""" c,,... 1 the panel's work by saying: ~~ cor: 1~ i!:Z 14""' Ji:+ ~ ~:1'Niti ~ "In an age when increasing .t.m11rpf1.1'0 : ,~ 2:"' ~+·v.<':;~7Yl1'.~ emphasis Is placed in~~::~ 1n·'f l' a,,_ •l'MI c.,,..+1~ ... ...,,, N1 1v. 90phisticated technology, It's ~=·20 J J~ if: 1~\lt ~~:~~\"'J fr hi l'•I fu Andlol' Ho 1 11 .._ 21111 M+ \.It r 1111t Tiit . u re es ng to see a v .... nc-An...orP .1110 1 '" t'MI f14t+ 1't .. ...,,,t o~·· t. that chin 't And Ct 11,1 I .. \t ·~ .i1;, Conwd l till ion a ma e can Ar>0111~ · .1 11 .o•.:. .ol.\ '°...,_"' ~ ..... ~ 11., '41 perfonn." A,~l~ .. 70111 ~ ~+ ""c-1ne1 ·111 _.,_ .l:t 20 ).I 'I:>~ '" + \lt,._l•ll i.!-1 !::.OOll .!ti ~ t~ t~ 2rit+·l.\ >-Tr .JM A p L CD!'"' 6 10 19'-~ -"" !IOI! Df 1111 APLpfC 1.06 2 1''4 lt V. \lo-,_.. 'apetnd .Ml AppPpf 1.12 llO lo.lV. lOlV. V.-1\lo s-:S~-r; .-,,.c1!1N .II M .i4'io IS + \'II • "ll'"' Money's 11' orth :rl~ t.lJ ,n 11"' •r.~ 1.a v.:;,: i-:: ... a ,""• ArW!"01'111 I \lo~·~ C Arcilc Enlo SJ I'll :i. 21"'i "' ~~ 1.70 Warranty on New ars ~il...:·~.;.;v il .i .i:: ~i ~~~'i ~s112.1J ff = ~ I:~~ =I R t C ful S h $~fl ::i E"" e: t--~* ~~ a es are earc ~~: ·"!'·" '1 It" ~ ~.~ ri;J: : .. By SYLVIA PORTER With I.ht ·"13.s now crowding Into automobile showrooms across the land, millions Of you are or soon will be shop- ping for a new car. Even If you're only a casual shopper, you'll ask questions about part!, options, operating costs, financing charges, etc . But few of you will ask any questions about the car'.! war- ranty. You know you have no negoti- ating power ov er that: youeither must ta k e the warranty offered with the car or leave it. .. OlltT.t:t. YET the warranty, a pro- mise of quality and safety of a car, can be critically im- portnt to you -for better or for worse, Jt can be worth cash In your pocket: car manufacturers estimate that they spend between $110 and $120 per car on warranty work over the life of the warranty. Or getting a warranty fulfilled can be a nightmare of frustra- tion ,expensive delays, shoddy r e pairs. misunder!tandings from which your car (and you) never recover. A typical auto warranty to- day-covers-an-parts or the ct\r -except tires and batteries -against defects of materials and manufacturing for 12,000 miles ur 12 months, whichever comes flf'St. Some w1rrantles are broader. and on the 197Ss, 9(1me warranty program• are being slgnfficantly erpanded. AND THESE NEW 1973 developments heighten rtther than diminish the Importance nr knowing how you can Ret th<' tno!'lt out of your warrnnty prnttttlon. \\'htrt:vcr you Jive, shop for warranlltt just as you thOp fnr olhcJ" major feature• or ,. car. Jo~xamine cartfully their v a r Io us restrictions, 6 · <'tptlons and Jlmltat1ona -areas in wbJch Jook.alJb war- ranties actually will differ. Since the 111a)orlty o I manufacturing defects will shaw up well bffore the a · plratJon of even the tbortest new ca r WDJT'lnty, more Im. portant 'han tbe duration of t~ w11rranty are the tr· ctptklns to II.II coverage. For tnsuince : t xctpOons such as bR!tffles. tim ond "normal maintenance lttlTl.!," ;ind r'"tricllons auch " t re- qulrrments ttm1 you hlvt ctr- 1oit1 malntenA.DC'e operation& performed at tcbe<klJed tlmet In a manufactuttr .. utborized l<rvk:e shop. Al'Yln/nCI . f 1 U\11 21 2• . urrllTll~ Miii 011 l.20 lf5 ~ 2t\4t 2'111 +v. $ Auoc: 9,...., 2l 1-\t IYt l 'h-WI TAKE A GOOD 1ook at the .... orYG 1111 u u1>1 ,.. '+.1 . , =W• • A1 Spr J.20g 11 ).I ~ ~ • 1 21 dealer's service f a c i I i t i e s ,""°', .. , __ Tr.•111 10 lo"" tt~ 10...,_ '"' vc .tu ........ «lg 1 '"" ll 13 -l4t """'Ml l before you buy. You may not ... ~, 1, 1.na z. ,,~ 21.,,.. ti~ .. be able to judge a service .-i·'i:~1f ri' A" &\'I A\+~ shop, but if U ·ls messier or ~:'M~ :1 l:m 'r, !ltt :ft? If~· .... dirtier than others you have :¥&-inc~r · ~ r' ~-· ~ ~,,., seen this may be a clue that A11tom o.i. 11 tol4t '"' ~~ ' Allioml Inda 15 .... ~ .,. repair work also will be slop-:vco c cOfll '' If\ ';:z ·~~· ~ py. Be prep&red for trouble if A:::~ ri: 2t " «Rt. ~ . the service facilities comprise !-:1':7~ .~ 13 ~"' ~" I tha M f th AVMI nd ~ 11= 11~ 11\11 " .. ess n ou percent I e A'tCll'IPCI i.1$ ,. 1~ 112141 ,,, .... +'* dealer's establishment. Try to MK 011 ,. ~ ~ u u.v.--. see the service manager, even B•b&w11 ·fl ., ~ 2• t•l4 -'a, If you don't feel qualified tol:~'" :1!'1 .,»n,. ll.,,.n'-•111 filllY 1 judge his competence. lf he is ::=• 1:R 1l :: I.~ 11~+1 11 gi Q hard to fmd now, be will be 11:~ l~ 25 25~ ts isv.-"' 011" 1::: eqW1lly hard to find later. ,,•,.-,, ,/', ~ ttU ~ ttL+~ ~\3 '·11 NY J 711'1 2114 11\6 . 1 OI ~·•I Once you have bought a car, :.~tit.. il 11: :Z,,.• :f' :1 + 1 01 ;, do your part by maintaining it :~u'11 ': !:"" ~: ~ t 0t11''io/i.1 · according to the schedtlle in e1re1ctt .1J 34 ''""' "" !!141-·111~• •11n.i.: the owner's manual. Have the l:~~ .1-:3 1~ J~ i~ la~"' =~ -f shop doing the work note it in ::~111•2~ l ~ ~.... U....:: t= ~ ;,,;,_ the schedule and keep copies :!~:::Ot :~~ 1r, ::: !:~ :t ~ ~t~l!eol of work orders and receipts. Bl.,., .. ,,_c, ff, J u .. 11'111 "'* . ~ ,..,, .., (M I •• I ... 10 "* 4 43 -· '"" pfA ' a nl.C"nance s eps you are au1 Fd 1.1• •t JOI.'! '°"' JG\lo+...,, 111,... ot\,..t typically required to take to l::o ~,g ~ !:~ :1: ~ 1.: ~~~ '·* k t lid In 81tcM "'°' t 15'4 ~ is-.... 14 1'11111,,.. .Gld eep your warran y va · e.1coP11 ·• .M I• ,)'Ill 4 +"' r>1,111~ .11t1 elude: changing oU every three t=:i ~ a: ~ flt: gfts\41-:: ~V'e i.i mondths a1nd ohall tilter ev1ery 1se-::::,~~! ~ ~ ::: = .! ~ ,,:Orff :.., con00 01 c. n10ge; c ean n1g =~· Pf,1 1j ~ :!~ ~ c:;::i~1 ·'~ car retor air ter every s x ""c11 1.10 •1 H"" ~ tf~"' ~iv •• months and replacing air filter =";1 l.~ J ~ 11114 ffli::i:JI.~ ~ ... .R.1-!- the ) hft ...... Inc; t1 -flt ~ ,_., ,..,.;.,.,.(' 10 every o r year. 8frk., p11e 11 n,,., ll" !!tt+ 4 rio..t•C• 11 Stift Ill 1,:JO tll it" -. , Dow ftl I Ill IF YOU J:lA VE a problem ll!Jl~ ;~2 s! 1:r' ~ in + " ~'"° l\~ you believe 1s covered by the ei¥ J11 ... ,. '"" 1~ l,14-"' ~ l! warrant~, take the C3I to the ll:;L.f~1n .,! 3*,. ;; 1,a ~ i} S:r . .J dealer from whom you bought tcit11 ..r. 1;,: ,. !~ I Ge wrl . ....... < ... ,:. .. • ..; ,; J ,. •• ""~: -t. t a tten estlffiale on SOI" c .1,.. •~ .,.. ·~ 19 .... what mu.!t be done and on :c'M 11~: J ,,"' J~ lt~ ~ 11 10: .~ .. whether Or not the WOrk Will =.. 'i~.~ U Jt" i!a f" 4 " P::t ,£:, be covered by the warranty -!!:~ 111 • ,,.. ... •~"~~,I}> befu.re vnu authorize the ~a 21~ U 't11t m: ~ • El:; l:;r ,. "I \.,.. ,, ,, . .\ .. ".....__ .. i: dealer to proceed. Give him t"=:"t~ U\11 Wt er" t lit ~. ~ adequate time to do the work~,:.· ... '~ :i; n ... """ ~+'lit ~ .tf profpe:rly. do •• _. r.:.r::.1~ r. l~ ~ ~t -;,i;.. ·rt: I you not get u u.,ac-8rc.o. 01 .n 13 71'' t\ ·~ " ~ t lion, wrtte to the manufac-1~ ~o:!. 7 fr • • ~·,~ turer'1 "mne manaa;er" or ;;o;o.i, 1l2 i ~ ~ ~ • :.£ I fll'n ""9 .01 lft ~~ 2St' '4'4-llio J~ rActory zone st:rv ce manager. :;: ·" 11i "" -.. t:''+ • &--gc ·ll You can get hll name and ad-.,,,....ii! ·~ 1 • l~ l'~ f"°!: ~ A-rn drea from the dealer ( and e ,,... JI , .. 2" irt ,lit t~ almply •sking for thlt: may =· ·~ 11 ~ ""' r :i: v. 'r. "".,.:ft make the dealer more ::,.:\ 1'.:z j fcl t! ~t :: "~l cooperative). t::''t.-1..,. io ..,. ,._,.. ""' 1 l '"""-oil ll't I 11 n Jl 1~ . OR "'IUTE DJRECT'LV lo ::1 \:'0 '~ 'j, ':t. ~ r;a+" :::r:l'1 · the manufacturer In ~roll lf .,,.,,. ., tl ', ~"' ~ ,. + "' -=b:.:J• the zone manager doesn't &ti ..... 11 _ ,.,_ ,,.,... :::::i~ results. A courteous and m. c. ,. -if ~ SN s~ • ., formative letter. glvlnf full. -/" ~ ~ ~ h. I • "': 1 d I•• u ha • .. "• ... ::J ... ~ 11pproprtate eu u.. w ve • ••"", ~ ~ f l?1 !;t:"' 11, .. 3 .. 1 the bei!:t ctianoe of succe11. Or -\ 1 ,J • -" ,. --. lf avaJl11ble, UJf the ma.nuf~ ~ M !" ~ ~ ~1°' I tum:'a toll free "action line" '"£ -1 1:-. · t :! :=toe 1 for customers with com-~11 ~! E' .. ~ ~ plalntl. •• •J "!! i .-~·~.'II And most fllndamentll rule ""'°"'" 'l r 1" 1 of al!, .-your 1uto dttla ~ I " "' ~ i only after yog 've chtc:lcl'd him ~ . ~ ,. ""' ~ · out with ctre -for preverttlon •J. -. 'c~ r t!? ~ ;: • ;.;:.. . 0( trouble b JtJll JMrt effee· ~ 1 c,.""r: ) ,~ 1R; ,~t t _.:: · ,. tlv• than any othtt muvc you c. · , I !:: =. ~ ~ • "" • coold possi bly makt. L<am., &::::I "' I '-~ ~-£Ji .. much as you ean aboul the ~1"( • ~ "' , fi"~ " ~ • dtalr:r'! reput•lkln for honor· ll"' 1 pl ~ • • ~ :: -~. Ing wurmctla b<fort )'OU "' ' \·! \I • ll:: ~ • 11"1 comm I• youneu "" q... l~ :i ~ n· 1r ! " .. ·· tiONr.. chtc:ll: with o t h t r .,... ;. 1t jt\~ ~ ' 16 "' .. aatomm of tho tkal.,, "'"' &::.'c> '~:' ~ Ir.\ , 7 •• "' •i;:; In on this art• ot wnrrRnlk-1 S!'i!: ~ ,1 ~. r,~• •·. • '' '·~· u Cl'rdully 1.11 oo Ole more olnioUI one1 al: the automobilt 11t " " " , 1 ltaeJf ~ \ t ~ i,i.f" I •I; "' ,.j " ' " ,,....,, .. . " . ' - Start Your -=Engir-.es! WITH DEKE HOULGATE BONNEVlLLE SA l.T FLATS, Utah-Art Arfons, by his own ru:lmission. outfoxed himsi'lf. "I buill a car three vears ago to set the Land Speed Record with," he said. "Firesloiic had no tires capable of going through the sound barrltr, but I tllou,::hl when I built the car ~y couldn't back out. \Vrll. thl'y tol d inc after I got the car built they wer~·1 in terested.'' . Firestone eoold hardly be blamed. The last time Anons streaked dOYi'fl the :;nit here he \vent end over end at 610 miles nn h 0 u r Everybody 1huught he was dead. Cre,vme n. tears streaking do"''" 1ht-1r faces. dug through the wreckage of Arfons' "(ircen !\1ons tcr" look1n~ for the body. Suddenlv a ''hile faced Arfons, his eyl'S crusted with salt. pokt.'d up his he:id and said, "['m over here." before he keeled n\'er and lost C011sc1ousness? Arfons had survived the fastest C'r:.ish ln automotive history . Sur\'ive isn"l .:in accurate description. lie didn't even brtak a bone. \Vhen he gnt to the hospital 100 miles ~nvay in Tooel~. he got up off the emergency room operating ·table and v•ent 1n I1nd took a sho\\'er. Since th.it unbelit'vable experience Arfons has crash<'d hor- rendously again in a drag str.ip accident at_ Dalla_s .. Three others were killed. and Art ha s retired from active driving. "I thought I had retired." Arfons confided. "until I got back ep here. Nov.• I've got the bug again. I want to run here so b~d. J CQUld come up here and get th e record without even a practice rwt I would run tv.•o \\'ays nnd put it on the trailer 111 an hour." Gree11 ilfn11•ler Cln .. ked nl 27;') nip/a Arfons' latest Green J\;Jonsler has already been clocked at 275 mph In the quartermile in just over si.'\: secunds. lie caculales th:it he could be doing 6SO mph in 14 seconds, _ . "It was built to run se,·en and a half," Arfons sa id. That IS a fairly offhand way of i;aying 750 mph. At Uonne\•ille's altitude the sou nd bnrrler i!I ahoul i20 mph. "Jr rm in the car I "'ould run just under the sound bar- rier." Arfons said. '·If it goes through the sound barrier~ "·oald want it to ~o one time by remote control to see what will bap- ptn. · the "I'm not too sure bow the car will react going through sound barrier. (Craig) Breedlove and (Gary) Gabellch don't seem to ~ too concerned. hut I am. l'\'e gone do"'D to Ca~ Kennedy, and I've talked to the NASA people, and they are wor- ried about y,·hat might h:tppen. "I think that the shock "·ave might have enough energy to pick the car up off the salt.'' . To im ag ine \\hat that means, think of a small boy playing with a tov car. After sliding it across the fioor for awhile, be gets bared and thr11ws it acrnss the room. That is what Arfons means. The shl'lck wa\·e would literally toss the car through the air. end o\•cr end, cra.~hin~ and bouncing acr~ss the sa~t. .. Arfonli had ,::one through that already. He is not anx10us lo do :in encore. J( there are an~· potential sponsors in the ~udience, .Arfons sayi; he fan build solid aluminum "'heels {effectively cutting out lhe l\\'O tire co mp::inies I and get the Green l't!onster to the salt for $?0.000. r.ury Cabelich's Blue Flame, wb1cb set the record lwo yrars ago at 622.403 mph. probably cost its sponsors some- thing in excess flr half ::i million dollars. 1~f!ll' P1•rst111alit~1 l11tr11d11ced Something ncv.· hapjX!ned at Bonn~vllle la.st ~Yeekcnd: .A new personality t•mergcd in the speed business. n1ng1ng trad1t1on out the window in the process. Tony Fox \\·ent to Bonn eville and in one weekend conquered the crusty, unpredictable salt. His Pollution Packer rocket drag- ster rang up multiple ~"Orld records with such ease that Fox hired a rock band to play music between runs. Perhaps the most signilicant thing that happened was that Fox Invited a bunch of rival drivers along lo watch the speed show and they wound up helping his crew work on the car. John Pax.son. driver of ~ rival Courage of Australia _rock- et car, along with jet car drivers Doug Rose and Fred Sibley, hovered around the Pollution Packer dragster all weekend, help- ing with Lhe fueling ope ration and packing the braking para- chute. "Th is ii; \Vhat I like about the sport.," sa id car owner Fox. "Herc are our competitor s out here helping us. \\'hat other sport v.·ill vou see something like this?" 8211 /Hi/lio11 lt'orl/1 nf ll11•h1e•s Fox got in\"nl\'Cd in motor lip()rl as the proprietor of a snow- mobile company he sl<irted in his garage and late r so ld 10 Stude- bake r for $3 milhon. He look the profit from that deal and put it into his present ripcratKln. manufactur ing \Yaste disposal equipment. In the last 18 months he has done $2() million wonh of business. 1'he Oamboyanl speed promote r never got past the second grade. Both his par('nts died when he was a youngster in Joplin. Mo., and he had to go to work . T\\'O of his brothers. who were ~nt to foste r homes v.·hcn they v.·ere very young. joined Tony on the salt last weckenr!. A sister , who was put up for adoption, is still llving in parts unknown. Bonneville is usunlly a deadly 1'rrious place. "'tickey Thomp- !IOfl has co1ne up here ror Wf'cks anrl battled the place trying to set re e or d s. (;:iry Gahclich. Cr:~i i:: Rrecdlove, the Summer brothers. they all h:ive sv.·catcd and toiled 24 hours n day try· ing to bc::it lh<' ('lock But F'ox and his dri\'Cr. D:"lve Andl'rson. came up here with nn cntnurage of l'l\Orc than 200. includ111!: ~1 rock band hired for $1.000. They invited lhe puhlir In ro1nc out and watch. Break· fast and lunch wen• scrv~d to evC'ryhody. There \\·ere parties every night. Bonneville. in other \\'Ords. \\'as jll.'d a lark lo Fox's group. So what happened? Tht• :sun \\'<Is shining. The s a 1 I wa! !lmooth as glass. Th e Cllr ran straight as an arrow. Everything worked. Part of the prrp:irntion for Dave Anderi;on's speed runs in- cluded extending invitations to \ead1nj'.t drivers likeeiCra Jg Breed- kwe, Art Arfons :ind Gary Cnbehch to ronte along. They aU ac- cepted. While t'ox was talking to ArM.'dlove ht• bl-came Interested In 1he Callfomian's plan 10 dri\'C throu~h !hr sound bnrrier nO,ll:l yea r. Fox became-so lnlere:;tcd, in fa ct, that he ~igned up as tha primary sponsnr of thr run . Whnl this did was end yl.'rirs or can1pnlgning "'ilh the lnri;i- est companles In J\rncr\ca to rlll$1.' $500.000 for eonstruction Clf Ole "Spirit or Anlerfea Sonic 2" rocket car. With Fos nt his sldr.. Hrecd\o\'~ \\ill probnbly be back up here within 12 months nll cmplini: to \\•in hack the record he h1t11 held off and on for six or the lu!it nine years. " Area Sports Calendar • Ar .. llel"' 11 l• P11...... M•tl"" Y\ WM'"'" Al W .. IMl".r .. , IC1!.tl1 •I Mlt.\ICWt Vltlo. w.u,..1,.,1,, "' s'"'' A,..., l!\l•n<I• "' F-!~1" V1Jln •t H""llf'IOIOll ft-tt. II••• 11 Ltflln" 8'-Vh, #oil!"' [)o-1 Yf l-llMC" Wll-11 OCC. '"'"" "' s.n C'-1• 1111 11 11 Cro.1 rwrtl..., -Miit• Dtl If S..vlte ti 1n o ....... , ro..1 ,, ""''' Aruo. Goidlft Whl 1t LI M.ort)(w-, Slddl~ll; "'" .... ,,.r11i"O '1 C!lt'A 1111 11 l lOJ Pro Ba skcthall "'"' tflllll!NH l'~llllllllOI' .. ,.,....,., •tw111 &o.IOOI IN!IA IU, All.t11l1 (NOA ) 101 CM~ !NIA) '1. l11!1•l11 !N!IAI 1' k•~NI (llv()!t>efM IN!IA) 10~. (lfY911<1d (N8A) " PO!llMllCI (NJAI 111. St•!!lf IN3111 r.> .. ,,..,,r. 0~&1') ITI. lndla111 (/IRA)" nll!flll\Ot'f jNJAl t), kl"'l!llC'V (A9 ... ) rtil-h ~ Ill._°"'""' !A8 ... l ltl A ~Nl!lil) IJO, (;;ojci.., Sltlt IN Al 11 • HB Youth May Make Cage Trip Donny Thornton wlU never play basketball for coach Tin\ Tift and the UC Irvine Anteaters. But that tloc-sn't stop him from backing the team with moral oupport and the young ( 13 years old) Huntington Beach '\'outh that received an invitation to accompany the UCI team lo Hawaii in December. Donny suffered serious in- juries includin~ the am· pu1allon of his right leg at the knee \1•hile he "'as fishing in the Colorado Hiver. Donny and a fr iend v.•ere stopped at one of their favorite fishing holes on the Colorado when a motor boat split their craft in two and kept going. It was a hit-and-run accident and Donny's friend was killed jn the bizarre mishap. Now Donny is battling back from the crippling injuries and mentaJ anguish and has shown definite improvement in his mobility and use of an artificial leg. When !he San Dieg o Chargers were training at UCI this summer. Donny was in- vited to attend a workout and the scrimmage with the Los Angeles Rams. Since that time he has been to the Border City to attend several games as the guest or Ray \Vhite. fo.1ike Garrett. Deacon Jones, Dave \Villiams and other members of the Chargers team . lie has a stan- ding invitation to attend all workouts and practice games. Donny has also been given a lifetime membership in the UCJ boosters club and will have free admission to all Anteaters athletic contests in the future. Tirt made Donny's ac· quaintance at UC! during the chargers' drills and extended the invitation to join the team on its trip to Hawaii. The Anteaters leave by Con- linental Airlines on Friday. Dec. I and ,return Dec. 8 wit h tt large number of boosters ex- pected to join the entourage. ~tonti Craig of World Travel Bureau is coordinating the !rip and will accompany the troupe to Hawaii. They wiU spend four days at Waikiki's Outrig- ger East and three days at the Islander rnn on Kauai. Tuesday night at 7:30 In the J.tuma nities Lecture Hall on the UCI campus, Monti will present a Hawaiian fashion show, movies of Hawaii end have live Hawaiian en- tertainment at a Hawaiian 1-loliday party. This evening of Hawaiian fastasy is free and open to the general public. A package price of $298 per person has been made for those accompanying the team to Hawaii and includes round trip air fare by C.OOtinental Airlines, lodging at the Outrig- ge r East and Islander lnn on Kauai as well as other land arrangements w h I I e in Islands. Area Grid Res ults Miami Still Rolling In Pro Grid Wars Miami's Dolphins continue with the only unblemished record ( f.-0) Jn profess!onal football today following their 27-17 victory ovtr quarterback Joe Namath and the New York Jets. ''We think we can win every game," says Garo Yepremlan, the field goal whiz of the Dolphins. Miami quarterback B o b Grlese won his personal showdown with Namath pick- ing apart a weak New York secondary to connect on IS of 27 throws for 220 ya rds, in- cluding a 16-yard payoff toss to Howard Twilley. Namath was bothered by a three-man Dolphins rush and an extra defer\aer in the secondary, oot to mention several dropped passes by his teammates. Namath was 12 of 2.S for 125 yards and failed to • produce a touchdown through U1e air. DENVER AT CINCINNATI -Rookie sarcty Tommy Casa.nova broke loos.e twice on long runs to spark the Cin- cinnati Bengals to a 21·20 triumph. Casanova returned a Bron- cos punt 66 yards for one touchdown and also scam- pered 11 yards to the Denver Broncos' lS earlier on a punt return. _ Essex Johnson bowled over from one yard out on the tail end of the 3&-yard march with. less than a minute left in the half to snap a nine consecuUve quarters touchdown drought for the Bengals. Cincinnati's defense, led by infrequently used defensive end Ken Johnson, at veteran tackle Mike Reid, sacked Den- ver quarterbacks six times. PHILADELPUIA AT WASHINGTON -Larry Brown's two-yard s c o r I n g burst midway through the third period broke a scoreless deadlock and led t h e Washington Redskins to a 14-0 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles. The Skins' other score came on a 36-yard pass play frorn Sonny Jurgensen to Roy Jef- ferson. CHICAGO AT GREEN BAY -The Green Bay Packers blew a 14-point halftime lead then put the Chicago Bears away v.·ith a 37-yard fi eld goa l by Chester Marcol with 30 sec- onds left to grab a 20-17 tri· umph. • NEW ORLEANS AT NEW YORK GIANTS -The Giants scored two touchdowns in each of the first three quarters to smash the New Orlean s Saints, 45-21. In Swintmning. Charlie Evans scored three TOs and Norm Snead passed for three others in the rout of error-plagued New Orleans. G.al' s Deafness KANSAS CITY AT CLEVE LAND The Cleveland Browns were guilty of eight turnovers as the Kansas City Chiefs, behind reserve quarterback Mike Liv- ingston, crushed the Browns, 31-7. No Disadvantage The Chiefs, with o ut By DENNIS CAt.WBELL ~ ·'"'-' Of Ill• O.llY ,.lltf '"" quarterback Len Dawson, run· ning back Ed Podolak end wide receiver Elmos Wri.ght. handled the Browns behind Livingston's three first-half touchdown passes. Lee Anne Johns is a com- petitive swimmer and a good one. A Golden West College stu- dent. she's shapel y and good looking. with long, thick, wavy blonde hair. She likes boys and dating, was a homecomin g queen can- didate in high school and was a high school cheerleader. Only one thing separates Bobo. as she is called, from the usual college girl. She's deaf. That handica p qualifies her for the World Games for th e Deaf in Malmo. Sweden, next vear. where she's already one Or the favorites in women's swimming. Her competitive marks this year have established her as one of the wOrld 's best. She holds world and American records for the dear in the 100- yard butterfly (1 :01.21 ) and 200-yard individual medl~y (2:30.11) and will add the 100 or 400 freestyle, 400 freestyle relay and 400 medley relay at Malmo. "I've been swimming since I was five," says Bobo, "but I quit when I was about 12 and rve been swimming on and off since then. "I've kind of slowed down now, though ... but I think I can swim faster. I think 1 can improve by two seconds in each event." ~1.iss Johns currently trains al the Balboa Bay Club under C.Orona de! Mar ltigh School swimming coach Cliff Hooper. "She isn't swimming as fast now because she hasn't con- sistenUy worked out," says Hooper. "When you get older , though, time become more important, and when a person has a purpose he works harder. She has the ability to do it "Potentially, she's a very good swimmer," !looper says. "Technically. she's very sound and from now on, in my opi- nion, how good she'll be will depend on hard w o r k , LEE ANNE JOHNS perspiration and experience." Bobo's family moved from Phoenix to Laguna Beach seven years ago and she was graduated from Laguna Beach High School last year. "It was not easy for her. but the Laguna teachers just outdid themselves for h e r," says Mrs . Joyce Johns. "She's come along beautifully since we've been here." She now attends Golden \Vest, where she majors in secretarial science. "They have a hearing im- pairment program," she ex- plains. "I have an interpreter from the college and he tells me what the instructor is saying." The Kansas City defense picked • off four Mike Phinns passes and recovered four Cleveland fumbles. NEW ENGLAND AT BUF- FALO -The Buffalo Bills ex- ploded for four tou chdowns in the second quarter en route to a 38-14 upset over the New England Patriots. Buffalo's Ken Lee was one or the sparks to the Bills' defense. jnterceptiniz two Jim Plunkett passes and returning them 61 and 50 yards to set up easy touchdowns. PnTSBURGH AT DALLAS -The world champion Cowboys edged Pittsburgh, 19- 17, sparked by halfback Calvin Hi!J's TD pass to Ron Sellers. The Cowboys remain t i e d with Washington for the lead in the National Conference East with a 3-1 record. ST. LOUIS AT MINNESOTA -Gary Cuozzo or St. Louis came back to defeat his former teammates as the St. Louis Cardinals turned back the Vikings, 19-17, with the aid or two Jim Bakken field goa ls. Pro Grid Standings Alth'ough legally deal since Hi<L birth. Bobo has some hearing. Amerlc•" c ... flfw11e• She has a 90 decibal loss of E"' W L Tl'ct~IOI' hearing from the normal M1 .... r -' o o 1.aoo ,., ~ range of 13Cl. New Y1111c J•h 2 2 o ·"'° 172 111 N-E"'Ofllfld 2 2 O .500 '6 l U She has been able to read au11e10 2 2 o . .500 " '2 lips since she was two and 8'11iom~ ,..,1~113 0 .2.so 7• 71 recently l e a r n e d sign c1rte1,,N111 3 1 o .1so 13 ~ CltV91al\d 2 2 0 .$00 11 IO language. She speaks with the P111.oorgh 1 2 o .soo 12 10 slightest trace of a lisp. Hou''°" 1 ~ o .m u u Wttl Miss Johns, who learned to k e11w1 cuv 3 1 o .1so 10. 61 speak through a program that ~!~1.~eo11 ~ ~ l :: : :~ involved mirrors. vibrations Otnwr 1 3 o .no 11 no and imitalion of an in-Hitlon•1E~:."'-,..11e• structor's lip move ments, con-w L T "''' l'ts o,. 011!11 l I O .7!o0 11 .., lends that her deafness is no w1shl"llt°" l , 0 .1so 15 55 handicap in her swimming. si. l.olll• ' 2 o .SOD 51 '' Maw York G!111t1 2 2 O . .SOO I= N Atlanta Raps Rer~ Call After 26-23 Setback Hoooer concurs. P1111.a.1ptr1a o ~ o .ODO » ,. "lt'1 no problem at all. ctfl1r11 O.lrolt J I 0 because once you understand Grett! e-.., l 1 , he.r problem you just enun-~=· ~ ~ ~ ciate your words a UtUe Wttt .1SD llM t7 .7JO 7, '° .1!o0 " " .l:tl 75 lDI slower. and once you adjust to L,. A"llt'I" 2 1 1 .w 11 1i Sitt Ft•llCISCO 2 2 0 .SOD " &l Lhl.J you don't notice her All•"'' ' 2 o .sot 111 11 dearness at all ,'' he says. New onet,,. o • o .ODO s. 11' . ATLANTA (APl -The Atlnnln Falcons were only 47 seconds away rrom nn uphill victory over the Detroit Lions when disa ster strurk. "111e last one ls whnt killed 1111.'' snld coach Norm Van Brocklln of the Falcons refer· rin~ to a pnss Interference call soon after the I~ions edged Atlnntn 26-23 Sundny In a Na- tional Football 1.A'.!ague gnme. Van Brocklin 11pokc of the rinal ptnnlty, one that cost the Fnlc0n1 35 ya rds and victory, or at worst a tie. The call was a g a I n s I dcfensh·c backs Clarence Ellis and Rav Drown .,.,.ho togetht'r "·Ith Detroit receiver Ron Je!.•lie. all went down In a hcl!p In a tan~le of legs as qu.11rterbn<'k Greg Landry's In· complete pa ss 511iled out Clf bounds. The official call gave the Llom the ball on the Atlanta 4 nnd Steve Owens went over ror hl!I 11eeond touchdown on the next play, .. nc11ng the Uon.s from a 23-20 dellelt tn victory with !I seconds left to piny . Slltlda¥'• ltHllll• "I think it was a bad call," "Her tendency, as is pro-~~~:'8~11~1 '31?~;:..!i 1 II bably the case with most ln M11m1 21. N..., Yor11 Jtt• 11 Brown sllid. "We were o thnt situation. Is to be rather 1111111111 ll. New Ef'IQl1<1C1 u going for the ball and our legs nstute And perceptive, and ~;!!1•r..,'ii.•c1~:': ~ wl'.'lre tangled ," she's always easy to work 0e1ni11 ''·All•"'' n "M f the ball N-York GI•"'' ,5, New Or1111111 21 Y move was or with." w11s111rie10l'I ,,, Pllltade\11111• o rind our feet ROt tnnglcd ns he She entered the w o r J d s1, Lou111 1•, Ml,,_,• 11 (J · l ed t the ball o,u,, 11. 1"1111bllf'oh ,, ess1e mov o a games after an Initial contact Loa Al'lfllu 11, ''" 11r111e1Ko 1 There wai. no interference h~ by the United States World T••1111•1 Olfllt my mind." Mid Ellis, the No. Gttme!I for the Deaf Com-O•k1•11C1 ;~~~on.,,_ t draft choice from Notre mlttee and HooNlr, for one , An~n1• •1 ,,,..... Ori••"' Y "' Bv!f•lo ., O.Ulll'IO Dame. thinks she'll ttprtscnt herself C111c..,, ., Ct•"4'1•1'od "They Interfered,'' s a Id •·ell. CIP'!C•-" '' ••-c11y 01lln •I 11.i11-. Ottrolt coach Joe Schmidt. "She ha! .1 lot or natural H.,,,1<rr1 •' """"""' "That'1' what the man called. taltnt," he says. "She was ~r,.:::1-;, ~ltde•Olll• He wouldn't have called It If It brought to the water young N• Vwti c;1""' '' 1111 •••11Cl.c. wasn't in1erftre.nce." and both lhe and her lister = ti'i~ ":'Ji~:""'""'-" "l don't know who In-art woll coordinated girls. The w1t111M1oW •1 11. 1. .. 1, I ... ~ Mll!INY. OCt. ,. terfered, If it were In-potentill Is ul'CJl:'-" Grttit ltt •1 o.tr.11 terferencti or what.'' Van'1fii;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ill Brocklln said. "But they sure as hell called It . Wt. were ~tealiTI,fl a ball ~ame and they took it aw:1y frorn us." 1 The Uon1' started 1'tnmit nnd took a 13-3 h a If 11 mo lead on a pi1ir of Earl Mann field goals of 39 and 37 yards and Owens eight-yard TO run. But the SKIOnd hair was all Ath11nta'11 with the eitceplion of Jessie's touchdown pass from l.andry coverlag 82 yards and the final ...Onds. DA YI lOM l'ONTIAC 24M.._..,ll\lll,.t ........ C....M ... LIASI DlllCT -PACTOIY AUTHOllDD DULll ~ .... ,., ,,,. .. •1• • '"· • ''""""' •r •..i. fllD DOUH 546·Hf7 ·-· DAIL V PllDT J ;J Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored this week by And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT Top Weekly Prize in Merchandise Certificates For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Faurth and Fifth Place Winners Plus BONUS PRIZE A poh of tid.ts to the '9-. of "'9 .,._. I USC "· Notre Dtamel to He. weft's wll!Mr. Courtfty of Ille DA ILY PILOT. Be a pigskin prophet for profit. Play the Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO game for weekly prizes. Top winner ·~ch week receives $25 gift certificate from the sponsor1n9 shopping center. Second place winner ge~s $10 cer- tificate and third, fourth and fifth place w inners each get $5 certificate. Each certificate is spendable, just like money, at any store io the sponsoring shopping center. Sponsorship rotates with a different center sponsor· ing each week's contest. Participating centsrs are: Westcliff Plaza, 17th and Irvine, Newport Beach; Harbor View Center, San Joaquin Hills Road and MacArthur Boulevard, Newport Beach; Eastbluff Village Center, Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach; Bay- side Center, Bayside Drive and Jamboree Road, New- port Beach; and University Park Shoppin9 Center, Culver and Michelson. Irvine. Watch for this player's form each week in ths O"'·fl Y Pl!..OT Sports Section. Circle the t!Jam you t!Uilr: will win in each pairing in the list of 30 9•mes •nd send in the player's form entry blank or a reasonabU,'facsimile. Then watch the DAILY PILOT sports pa9es for e•ch week's list of five winners. • RULES .. , .. 1. S1111m11 Ille Miry 1>111111 Dllllw or • ,.1se1111111 l1<1lmlt1 ti JI,• fftl•r int c1111te11. "Rt~liOMll .. flulmltr" Is d"l11MI •• .,, "ullC\ 1Miik11•." E11trlt1 "'Ill! " 11nltorm Jn Iii• Ind "''"' lo flCUU•rt lllftltlf, 'ti!OM-.W.k!t CIO!l't corttorm will bl tliJ<lllll)llM. " l'.i·; t. ~ If to: l'llOT l'IOSklN fllCkEROO CONTEIT, Sport °'"rfment, l'.O. (101 U611, C01 .. Mts.1, CA. t'UU. "! J. OnlJ ont enlry Hr Plf'lllll 118Ch wnlf. 4. El\trln m1111 "' ""'""rktd not l•ter !Mn TINttdlJ.,. m11tt DI t1ellv1r· ed le ftle DAILY PILOT effke 11V a p.m. Thlll'lodly. I. l'•rtkl_.li"O m.Hcllanh ill'll DAtLY PllOT 1mplolytt1 11'11 thalr Im~ lli•l• l•millfl neu 1lltlbl1 M 11111r. a. TIE BREAKER al.AHi( MUST IE FILLED IN OR ENTRY IS VOID. •• •••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • ClrcS. t..-Y" ,. ... wt• wl• ttllh weff't •-• • IMIM r... h Meod •M U.Mdl • • Rams vs Philadelphia • • Dallas vs Baltimore • • • • San Die«Ja vs Miami • • New York Jets vs New England • • Cal vs USC • • UCLA vs Oregon State • • Washington vs Stanford • • • • Michigan State vs Michigan • • Oklahoma vs Texas • • Auburn vs LSU • • Purdue vs Minnesota • • Geargia vs Mississippi • • • • Penn State vs Army • • Florida vs Alabama • •· Iowa vs Northwestern • • East LA vs Golden West • • Grassmont vs Saddleback • •• El Dorado vs Dana Hills • • • • Edison vs Costa Mesa • • • Huntington Beach vs Anaheim • • Western vs Marina • • Katella vs Mission Vieja • • • • Westminster vs Santa Ana • • Estancia vs Fauntaln Valley • • Brea vs Laguna • • Mater Del vs LB Wiison • • Tustin n San Clemente • • • • Corona del Mar n Los Alamitos • • University vs Saclclleback • • Newport Harbor vs Laara • • •. • fll ••l•Jtl• -lill¥ ........ lflt ~ ~ M ........ M ..... • • ........ _ ........... 14 -. • ·-" • • • .... ,... • • • ...... ..,. • • • . -... • •••••••••••••••••••• _,, l l • I I \ \ l 7 J i I • Mond1y, October '· 1•1Z SC Monday's Closing . Prices-:-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .. Stocks Rise; Fall As Talks Continue NEW YORK (AP) -Th e stock market con- ~ .tinued its advance Monday, spurred again by the • continuing private Par is talks on Vfetnarq. But languid trading because of the Columbus Dat boll· ~ay kept the rally from maintaining !ts morning • peak. . . Pres!deottal adviser Henry A. Kissinger met again in Paris with North Vietnamese negotiators, boosting the morninf Dow Jones average nearly 3 points. But the Dow ell back in the absence of any government comment on the talks, other than Mn- firmation that sessions would be extended a third day. .... ... cw.JN-~a..ca,. {l if-. = :t::t :! Finance Briefs e Ret11rblsh SAN FRANCISCO -United Air LW. Is ,..rurbishing 31; of lt.s jtll at an tstimated cost of S3S million , in ~'bat one of- ficial calls "the I a r g e It rtfurblshing program tver un- dertiiken by any a1rllnt in the W<>rkl.'' Ralph Glauon. UAL 5tnlor vlct prtsklent. said tht com- pany hid already recalled to its maintenance bllM al $Jin Francisco lntematlona1 Airport some 200 mtth..1n1~ -.·ho were furloughed during a e Kal1l11 t:rop FRESNO The natural "nx>mpson Raisin crop this year ~·Ill be the smallest in more than hall a century. the federal Rai1en Advisory Board predicts. The boanl .. 1mt .. °" lfn crop will be 91 ,w.i -. !he sman .. t since UH. IM tho price to erowen ls upecttd to be the hi gbeal ever. .. ,. JltT ton. e Ph••"" 011t YREkA Some 100 employea al 1 lumbtr plant •·hich is the only Industry In the llny town or Jlllt. north of here. ha\•t bttTl tokl lhe pl1n1 Is closing and thfy will be out of jobo<. E1npk>yts wtre handed form lttttrs s1gntd by J . T. NK:keJl, ..... J prtskitnt or rrull GroweMI Supply Co .• saying the uwmill .and k>gg1ng operaOon will be phased out starting earlfer /'IC)(! month with final portl0113 of t~ plant closlnc by August uf next year. Co1nplete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List S1te1 Net lllots,J Nlfll Ltw Clffe l;llf. II... NII (llft,t Nlfll L-("M Cht. fllff NII l,,.1,I Nltll Uw c-.. Cltf. SIMI IOI t~,1.I Nifft Lew (llM (ftt , • • ,. ,,._' ''"" .,,, t1111.I Hlf• L ... C .... et-.. ,, . ,.. ... U J U.l1 l~·ll )!.• ·~ ''· "' , .. I II'< 1• \,liO,.-' I'. l''o 11·- I J . J'• v .. + , 11 t(• •••• .._ '• I 1•, I._ IW • It It lt I •, I I I I " ',!'• 11 .. ,.,,."' ,., ,: , .. 11 '1 ,~ .. '• '/ . . J'-.. )0 "'• (, .... • !¥!. "~ ~ ~ tt:~ ~' -~1~ ti . ,.... ,.... ... " ,t ~ • \ 1-.+ • ' 11... "" 11v. IJ ·~ ''• "°'°'" '• : 1:'" i .. ,,~ :: , 11·1 'I~) 1,l'J.., •• ,. • '• 1, ··-'• -vv-J ,.. "-• ,,,, ., ' n 1, "'• r 1-,, 1 ;1\ :~: ~~ ~ •'• ,,, ,._" U II'• lJ'o 1,·. '''•J 'oJ>o l lll,.•tt•1 I '• I lr l)IJ 11 U>o '" :.. J', •lo s•, "' '• ' n, ' ' -'• J .: ... Ji~ J'-: '.: .... ., ............ .,, '" ;·, , .. I ll'l 1 •o It'-lo I I t t • '• t 111, U•Jr ll'r 0 "" ''• , ..... J ,.,, ... ~ lf\-'• I t I s-. I , I ll'o ltto 1..._ 'o l , ' , • '• 1 J J I , -··-' l'o •'• A I 11\o IM. 1'\o-• J)JO..~•'-• ,... ,,, ll:o u h'o " \roW-. 1"' """ fH1 " '• ,r I 'j!: i~ :: .b' ••• •'• ,, 1,1, 'I ,.., '' l\o J•o "••·•• I •• • 'l'' l '!'• .... ~ I '• f'~ '• -'• '! I'• 41tlo '"'"" lo tot. 1ot. tr,: f ,c~ ,f!" ,it ~: • 11. ii·-·· n ,...,_ '• t't ' •••• •'•.I•, J lf'~ , .... '"' .. -'• " "• ,.. ,...:,. \to I >9 I IV, I ,J4 ~··4 J •~·•V.8 ., ' .,,. 1 ~.'* • :1\lo 11<.o lf:1 ~= I ' ·~ I •" I l .. I 'lo °'" \lo ,, ,.. y, r· n , ... "'· ,.._ 't :ti ··~ .... "-' • Ji't 1''4 , ... ,_ '• 1 ... "-"'t " -:llYJ-1! 'r.: 't,, tt ~~ r.: ·~a ' Finance Briefs 5AN F RA NC I SC O ..;. Callfomll ·c • n n e r • •ntf Orowtn, the na1ion'• llr1r.11t cooperatl10'tJ)'-ow1 eel fnilt •od •t'Jl~•We clnlW:r. hi• .,..; nounctd nH tartnat of 11 ' mllllcn for fitcll l 11171 -71-<lp ii perttnl lrom thfo """'louf )"Nr Sa~ volume ret1t:i.d 1114 s mllllcn. f'nlld<ftl R. ~ ; 0-llllOllUll<td, )ult and•~ "" ·--llJtlll. . ' e Netctpafltt' ••11;: SAVANNAH, Ca. -M<lrT" Newtp1per COJP • .,aXIGlnd I~ hai JM<-the Villa. c.tlf; l'Hoo-O>urier PvbllJll~ c. .. Ind Ill fk<e MWlptpen. ' 'Ibo YllU nrm P'ibi'"* the, Vl111 l'Tfta, Ille S.. M......: f'rllo-Oourior. !ht Y 111 e y· C<nler l~r. the; Not1ll c-ly ~ and the Fol-"'-: C0Urtor -Ill WH'17 pubilc ... tlaoa Uttf>I fer Ille -11 Vlata pope<. wlllch lo 1 lff. Wffkly. -. < . ., • • > )• ,, " • ' - t .. ' , "' ~I • • •• -' ·~ ' 1 I .. '· ., ,, " >ft TOMGI IT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS ABC 0 6:30 -Monday Night !'ootball. The Oak· ~ 1and Raiders take on the J·Jouston Oilers ton1c ht. NBC 0 8:00 -Laugh·ln. Michael L.tndon or ''Bonanza" is the special guc~t. \\1hile 11·1a1na Cass I Elliot, Steve Allen, Dell a Reese and Flenny Youn g· man make cameo appearan~s . 1 t CBS tJ 8:30 -llcrc'> Lucy. When Lucy objects 1 j to son Craig's football ac tivity, he brin gs home a J .. convincing advocate in Broad"A·ay Joe Nan1alh. '! KCET !D 8:00 -\'D Blues. This hour·long spe- cial launches a campaign to combat the nationwide j epidemic of venereal d isease. Actors Jan1es Coco an d Roberts Drivas play VD gerins in one vignett~. KTTV m 12:00 -"Abbott and Costello Meet the /j Invisible ri.Ian." Bud and I.JOU take up \Vhcrc they left off in "1deet Frankenstein" in this 1951 con1- edy. TV DAILY LOG Mondoy Evening OCTOBER 9 Stewart, Henl")' Fonda, 1n1er Steverrs. L1rk1n (Fonda) leads a band ol lrMI· boot1n1 1dventu1ers into lhe unws· pectin1 !own cl fhecietk, ct111Una: llouble and stirring tempers. D Forum Borina: &:DO 0 0 ®l ID ID '"' r6l The Adwenturer 0 (I) ffi The Roakitt "Caven1nt Wi1h Oe11h" Lou Gossett suests as Rev. Toby .kines, 111 e•·iun"e·tumed· minister, who is thwarted In his wOfk of rehabilitating ollier 1ddlcis when he is f11111td !of a parole Yio- lahon thar1e and lhen st! up lot' 1 sniper's but1el. D P1ndt1tu "Th! Many fiK!S cl Gideon Flinc~·· 0 (J)@ (D NfC Mondlf Night Footbln Oakland Raiden vs. Hous· Ion Oilm. fJ Wild Wiid West ID Tiit FilltstoMS I!) !;omer Pyle USMC (jj) P'ltOll[RE CllTISCGltndtt W Rosu P'1r1 Ytr011it1 ED Htdaepodge lodKt ~ Ml)'berry RfD m la Stpnda Espou EE Thre1 Stoo1es EE Un Yer111C1 P1r1 llec«d1r f]) I IJIC1AL! YD LA Loc1I heillh olflci1!s, free clinic pe:110nnel and VO educate~ assess how wldespiead the prob!e111 rs. what you should know lbOUI It, where help c1n bt lound. 1:30 (J) CIS Nnn Of Tht VirJini1n OQl Mtl"f ;ritfin Stiow Cl!J Oum• m Alldy Crilfith Show m ;1rn11n's Island t:JD 0 (}) Doris Day Show Cy BenMl1'1 (ij) CA£ <:olltge Credi! Cov~• chance 11 winnin1 the 1nnu1I Min fI1 Makill Tbinrs ;109 of the Year Award as Sin frtncb· m Joann• C.DOfl Siio• co's l!IOll outstanding citizen Is in ~'rt•~ Acra peril when, durina an alfempl to 1ld (El hognr11 P'~itii1 Doris. he is arres!ed by the pallet ffi Dot 42. PM IS I peeping !om. JEJ) little Riwils CI! John WaJM Tbt1b1 OaJ News 7:00 IJ 0 m News (fi) Book Sett B w.rie: (C) C2'trl "A Cowtn1nt 9:45 fl) Sa Comed!1 Fnorib Wltll Drl1tll" (mys) '67-Geo111 Ma· haris. Lau11 Devon. lO:DD ft()) The Ntw 8JH Cosbf Show (l) Wild lift Tlleatn Son pt fess Diahann Carroll, comtdf· O What's My U.e? an Marty Feldman, tht musltll ID I Un \JKJ 1roup ol Hines, Hinn 1rld Oad ind CE) I Dr11• of Ju1111kl television producer Sheldon Leonard (ljJ a.not 7z 111 Bill Cosby's 11Jt$b. m frlJ !Mttlin. rn 0ta1net m ,,._..., K11ni ind t1•r "W1111 h o m ""' Cl~' 0 Dep1rtmtnt s ID 0 Allor TltM C.11 o. Mujtt" 0 Crl1111 f11httrs lKk Rou1ke ', ••• 1 Qt Mevie: "Wiim tM SWnr•lli hosts. Attorney Melvin Belli 1nd Eadl" trilllll li1hter1 LA Polic.1 Chlel [d EI:) lw. ltaf Pizz1m 01~i1. City Attorney Ro1tr AmeberP '1) Speed b eef ind Speci1I Agent in Ch1r1e ol Unit· ed Slates Secret Servit1 Robert r 7:JO ... O CHEVROLET INVITES Powis 1ie tonight's 1ues1s. I I CE) Bill Cosby Shaw * YOU TO SIT DOWN !f~ Sl.lpreme Court Rhin AND SEE "STANO UP fII Firin1 Une AND CHEER." tt!Luci1 Somb11 0 )o~MIJ Mtftll'S SI.Ind Up 111d CiI!) V1riedld Chffr Millon Berle gue11S. (D Sporb Cl'llllen(e Q Tht NIW Pric1 Is Rii~l (f) J.lngdom ol lhe Sta (f)ThtP11tnt;1me .. lO::SO (})Aslltht ... 0 llllllkln $ frikorie: (C) (2.tlll hni· 0 T1" Bick blioti ta I ;unfl~M'' {WH) '64-@ Wanted Dl•d Of Alivt Yul Br,nner. J1rliCI Rule. (E) TM Adtlnture 9 Wild ll•1doll -• . . ..... ......... " -· m NEW TIME1 ""11 °"'· ( .. , .... " II • G!)42. Plus * "THAT GIRL" m Outdoor S9ortMn1n m T111t c.111 Q) Dnantt 11:00 6 0 0 ttl tD fl) Nm ED Cl!npirlte (3) CiJ ®l Mnn fEl r1i Chi Ch'uan Pop11\tr Chlnne 0 Ont Step Btyolld e•11dS1/soort moYement. (i) M111h1I Dillon @?;) Tiit Advlnturet 0 Mh'lt: "Slnctu11y" (dn) '61- (il!) lllpelhl Valtltl: Sllow lee Run1 ck. EE 1bl ""'"' f1111lly m Trutll tr ConwqueMt• , , m Motlt i:OO 11 (I) G1111MU 'The Drummtr' (fl! Hrth•JOP Q (lji?;)lau&ll·ll MichMI Un· ti};lflltf ltd A11111tron1 don (of NBC's ··Bon11l'J1") IU!Stl 11 1 dlm:tor of commtrti1ls. 11:15 €D ~ C1111tt m NEW TIME! 11:30 O Cl) CIS I.ti• Miwlt: (C) ''Tiii * "HOGAN'S HEROES" H1unttt1 Palaa:" {hon '72:-Vl11e1m m Mo1111'1 HtrMt Prlct, Otb11 P11rl. «D Tellfun /hll} Mno1 ())Movie: (C) "01111 In tlll Juntll" fJ) Hen11111011 Cor1}1 (1\h) '54 -01n1 Andr1w,, l•1nnt teen•fj,tfl:~jnces. C11ln. m OJ) w llvn Brotd· D ID m JoflflllJ C.U'Mft BobbJ w1r 1nd film stirs l1111ts Coco and Darrin is 1ub111tutt ho'1. Robert Oti¥1s pllJ '11) 1t1m1 In ont D ltobtrt l. Domin SllOw vl(Mttl of tl'lis llollr·lonl IJllCll! (I) Mtrit: (C) "rli111t t• Min .. lliinc:htna 1 far.111eh1n1 um111!1n (ttl·ll) '52-C.u1111on M!tchtll . lo combat th• n1tion.wicl1 19idtmk 0 frikool4t: (C) ''The lutlRI DI'. of wntrul d1M111. Ii." (1ch) '66-rranco frandll. CIJ ._. • C1l1 m Te ltll tltt Truth a!) la 1.llOINlbll " ., IZ:OO m ~: "Abbitt 111d testtlll fE llloN: (Zhr) Aftttlltt D..n Miff t11t lrwlllbll Min" (com) 'SI (rem) '37-[nol rtrnn,,,.., fr1nd) l:JO m Mtrv lrifflt .. -8ud AbbOt, Lou Co~!tllo. ll:lO 0 H!1llway P1WI ..00 IJ (J) tltrt's Lucy l rotltw1r )De CD Ctuntl'J Musk 1'lm.lth, 1mt stll11n1 •• hln'ISlll. l:GO B ([) """ crOIMS JWOrds •ilh lll(J wtltFI she obtKtl to son Cr111·1 IOOlbaH te 1:10 (])...., llvlties 11111 tl'll Mtw Voit Jeh' sllf J:l5 0 11tn ,..., triH to conince 1t1t ''"' J. Crlfl his lhl aUil\tS ot I IOf' l :JO fJ .... : ''TN Htf1 lllwl It Mlt-q~ · iqM" (tom) '45 -JIU 1t11ny. I I , I • • O lllllD•IC -_, (C) 1:00 8 -: (C) ....... '""" l*o) (Zltf) ·~ l•) '6?-J1111ts '53-Joln Llslit, for1tst Tutktr. Monday OAmME MOVIES ll:OO 0 ''Tiit Crtll C.111blnl" !l!l)'S) '37 -Ai.Im l11nirott, Mtuan Mt1'1\ . 1:00 m "Allb""'' (wt\) ':ill -Aoblrt T 111111, »Pl• ttocfl1\. l:JO o """ Mnb1114t Ntcma,.,r (com) '4Z-lltJ M.1lluM1, P11tlcl1 MonlO!I. tM • ..., Cltl Till,. (111) '41-UIU l'ltfll!lf, $911 Wll\lllllbt. ~.»D IC)_.,... ("1l "' -• a1tt .-... lnl ronw. 0 "Thi ff•m Tllltw•" (com) 'fil -At' H1111son JO:ll Cl> ""Rte c ....... (dft} 'Ill - -llJl• .... """'" • • ·-.. Liiio'' ("'") ·u-... ,, ...... Dlci ,_.II, J:OO (I) (CJ "ten1i.11 S'°'J'' (dta) '!14 -Annt B1lt11, ~lmi Coch11n. !fl IC) ''Cllltitt" Part I (CGlll) 'Iii -Sllltle, MWIM, MlchHI Cllfll. Julia ChiUl Out Of 'Frying Pan' NE\V YORK (AP I -Put the televi~ion set baek in the kitchen, rnothC'r. Julia Olild will st<1y on the air after al l. At least until the end of ~1af'('h 1973. lier show, "'l'he Fre1u:h. Chef," just gol some badly needOO bread -about $80,000, to be exact. \\'ithout it, her award-winning <.'Oi>klng secrets would ha ve lcfl p u bl i c television by the end of this December. The money came rrom the Polaroid Corp.. which un· derwrote the show ror three years b<.'(ore dt..'<'iding this spring it would be unable to do il again during pub I i c television's 1972 fall season. Its corporate change of heart ended a financial crisis that developed when no other company could be found to urr derwrite the proceedings in the Child scullery. The m<lney arrived none too late. the end of this month. Thc!n previous "Cher' e pl s od es would be rerun until the end of December. rvES SAID neither WGBll or Polaroid anticipated a financial crisis whcrt the latter decided against bankrolling the show again. ''They (Polaroid) assumed -as indeed we did, too - lhat ~·e wouldn't have any trouble finding a n un- derwriter," he said. It turned out that many cooperations inquired about underwriting the show, but none was willing to sign on the dotted line after all was said and done. Restrictions against advertising may have been the reason. No commercial advertising is permitted on the 223 PBS stations in the United States. Underwriters of PBS shows only arc allowed to say they made them possible with a •·BOY, WAS it ever in the grant. Period. nick of time," said David 0 . With the timely arrival o{ Ives. president of station fresh Polaroid money, Julia 'VGBH in Boston, which pro-Child will continue her non- duccs the sho\.\' for the Public commercial cooking in a total Broadcasting Service. of 12 or 13 new shows WGBH He said the Po I a r o i d plans to make this year. Tenewal late last week came 1 about 48 hours before a TIIESE SHOWS and 13 decision had to be made on reruns will keep her on the air whether to keep the show through Ma r c h. And while somehow struggling along or thars going on, PBS will close it for good. decide whether to keep "Chef" The main probleni, he said, as a regular in the 1973 \.\'as not so much a lack of schedule. Which means more cash as a question of whether money must be found . \VGBH could commit already The real factor. however, crowded production facilities may be whether Mrs. Child for a show with a doubtfuJ wants to keep on cooking. As future. Ives points out, "Julia is cut- The station had enough re-ting down <ln her com· maining to tape r 0 u r new mitment.<; next year." shows that would last through ~~ SAT.~0tuYNS ~'t~s 2ND BIG WEEK "ISLAND MAGIC" Woody Allen's ·_*''Everi.thing :Di }'OU a.Jways wanted to know about * M.US "NAIOLD AND. MAUDE" WKOAVS 6:4S SAT.&SUN. l2:4S I KltAID WIDMAll "WMINTMI l lllMDS Oil " (P.G.) WO "TMI GULPIPP'll CA.TILi COMPANY" IP.I.) (~ I AlelA STlllSAllll I llYAW O'•llll 1 "WHAT'S ur DOC?" (G) "DO•'T ST &It TM( llVOlU· 11011 WllllOUT Ml" (Pt) FANTASTIC NEW SUIFINGo FILM br L. Joi!• Hltchc:ocll 7:)0 l t:JD EACH MNING lido Woody All•n. "TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN " AIMI (PGI 1111 Cosby Gtlll Robert Culp lt1 "HICKEY AND BOGGS" 7:00 AND 10:50 ALSO "RETUR N OF SABATA" 9:00 C0Mh1uon Su•day Matl- 2:00 ENTERTAINMENT Two Encore Con cel'ts By College The Golden West College Singers and stage band, who received st.anding ovations in their spring performances of "Rock Requiem," will repeat Lain Schifrin's stirring music in two encore concerts this month. "Requiem" and Uie 75-voice college choir will be featured at the Laguna Beach Irvine Bowl next Sunday at 3 p.m. in a benefit concert to save the historic chapel of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Laguna Beach. On the same program are the Ronnie Brown Trio. with Brown on piano, Jack Sperling on drums, and Jack Prather, string bass; and guitarists Herb Ellis, Joe Pass and their All Stars. Tickets are $3 general ad· mission and $5 for box seats, and may be obtained by writing Box 986, Laguna Beach 92652, or calling 494- 9965 or 494·3542. The second appearance er the Golden West Singers will be at !\1agic ~1ountain in Va1encia October 23 in a special program in observance of Veterans' Day. The choir will sing the "Requiem" at 2 and 4 p.m. Tickets are $5. llCHAlD IUltTON RAQUEL WELCH IN IRI "BLUEBEARD" DUSTIN HOFFMAN - ANNE BANCROFT "THE GRADUATE " Cavett Hosts Slamv VD 'Revue' Tonight By JAY SHARBUTI' becawit wt'Vt got a VD NE\Y YORK CAP) _ We'll epidemic on our hands ... aod have trouble explaining this, other perts of our anatomy." bot there's an entertainment Cavett will attract the young viewers. Alas, the show's show 011 tonight n b o u t opening skit may drive them venereal disease. lt's on away immediately. It's a long, because VD ls a topic most precious saga, written by pareots have trouble ex-Jules Feifrer, about a lady . plaining to tbooe ,.no c:oont _ ..no learns from her docl<lr their kid!. that she has syphilis. And that he gave it t.o her and The program is ''VD Blues." doesn't want her to name him It stars Dick Cavett and lasts as the donor. an hour. It'll appear on most "You sald you loved me or the Public Broadcasting once.'' the healer pie~. "That was the. once," the System's 223 stations including lady explains. KCET, et 8 p.m. and an hour earlier in Central Time states. It's Feiffer's way or 11- It'Jl be succeeded in et least lust ratlng what Cavett ex-plains in a few sentences -85 cities by fonow;up sOOws that tracing VD carriers orten that explain local VD is diffJCUlt tx.>c.ause some doc- problems and hopefully infonn tors won't report them to those who know or fear they public health officiab. The have VD where to go and who to call for treatment. usual given reason is that this The show makes a valiant violates l h e doctor·patient try at combining good en-relation.ship. that he had written the whole show. lie has uncannily ac- curate eyes and ears. And tute. And he ha8 It all down -the clinic closed f<lr lack of ()ffk!lal care and funds, the black militants and stuffy bureaucrat arguing in tongues on1y television c a m e r a 8 understand, the officious nurse who turns away the scared, in- fected ghelto girl. Hls contribution is wtll worth the wait. It's a shame that It arrived so late in "VD Blues," which as en- tertainment is composed of one-third hrUlance and t-wo- thirds crudity and boredom. The show, produced by WNET here, will anger many. But despite its faults, it also may save ~ of young people from veneral d.ise;ase. And that alone is sllflclent reason to ask them to watch it. tertainment with sound in· If the viewers can wait, formation about VD; its =t:';1~"J, ·~~:;::.!Joe Garagiola theory is that the straight a~ and "nurse" explain how VD • proaeh usuaUy falls on deaf is contracted, spread. wbat it Leaving 'Today' ears and causes slumber. does to the body and row il AND THE message is aimed can be cured. NEW YORK (UPI) -Joe at the young, enticing them The worst part of the show Garagi<lla, former m a j o r with brief guest appearances has actors . James Cooo . and league catcher who ha5 a by members of music's young Robert Drivas, respectively , P" establishment -Ario Guthrie cast as Gonorrhea a n d peared on NBC s Today Show and scruffy Dr. Hook and the Syphilis, in a 9'h·minute skit since 1?67, ;u:mc>unced Thurs- Medicine Show. that is bound to needlessly of-day he IS leaving the show. Cavett, who majors tn wry fend viewers by its Garagi<lla, a World Serles comment each week night on clumsiness. hero for the St. L o u I s ABC, stays in character for Cardinals in 194&, said he and "Blues." And he's a fortunate THE BEST segment, written his wife had "discussed it over ch<lice as bosL He explains the by Clayton Riley, illustrates a long period and decided I "two biggies" _ syphilis and the real problem of get~ VD simply wasn't s p e n d t n g gonorrhea _ in the terms,--tr_e_a_tme __ nt_in_the __ ghe_llo_. _w_ou_I_d __ enou_c.gh_ti_me_wi_·lh_m_,y_f_aml_..:ly_." m<1st people use. yet remains disarming enough to get the message under way before the "wash-your-mouth" cries commence. "VD is the gift that keeps on giving," he warns. "VD is the disease of people w h o love people. And nowadays there evidently are a lot of young people loving yollllg people • GENA ROWLANDS ''MINNIE and MOSCOWITZ" Aho -l..U HHrJ ht o MW cornffy lby Miio Fonnltfl ''TAKING OFF'' '°" c.eor -( l"G) Comfortably Air Conditiolltld M111H er1• -111 Col!H' l•l "T H £ GOO~ATH &•'' Diiiy .. •:• 1'.M. S.t, .. Siii!, If t :• •f LlS •I :• l".M. AcHemy Awal'll Sllewl J-l"OftlN "ICLUTIE" "SUMME• 0 1' '"2" 11•111 I• Celor (Ill Atad•mv Aw•nl Wlnnerl John W1vn• "TRUE G•IT" "PAINT YOUR WAQON" Niii Ill COlllr (1'01 • ''iAUI U•G CONNl!C'TION" J111M• Stew1rt ""DOLS ,.ARAD£" •0111 111 Color (l'GI GtDtt• C. Scott • "THIE HOSl'ITAL" (1'01 M011,../Lam1M11/C11rtl1 "SOM£ LllCIE IT HOT" THIS ADVERTISEMENT WORTH "SUnlE•l'llEI AltlE l'"•IEE" 1"01 Goldia HI"" & l!Clw1N Albt" lko "l'LAY IT AGAI N, SAM" ONE f REE CARNIVAL RIDE --. -·.ir. STADIUM " I .''.' ·~~ ---·'' ·STAOIUM •l ;.· ... ~"1"f':lr..Jr."" - --_,.-... STADIUM "' ::. .. -..•.!< "I:"W~ E•clu1lw1 E111•1-t Now HO •ltMIVld 1 .. 11 WlnMt' el J AcMmly Aw•nll "FIDOLE• OH TNE ttOOF" M1rtoll I r....,. n ''Tlolll GOOl"ATHE•" l•l • "TH£ '#ILO SUHCH" Ill) SIU C..ity • RM«t Culp "HICKl!Y a IOGGS" tPGl • • "RETUltN 01" 5AI ArA" (l'GJ Lll• MlntlH "CASA•ET" !PO) • ,.LAST SOMM•lt" (Rl "'THE HEW CENrUIUONS .. flt) wlfh o.;e, c. Sain "l'LAY MISTV l'O• ME" c•I FIEST A de COST A MESA OCTOBER 13, 14, 15, 1972 Costa Mesa Park In Cost• Mesa , Park Ave., 18th St • SHOW OF SHOWS CARNIVAL W ith the purchase of one Carnival ride ticket, this advertisment entitle1 holder to ONE FllEE CARNIVAL RIDE ticket of equal value of ticket purcha sed. Beg;n1 at 5 P.M. Friday, October 13, 1972 Opens at 10 A.M. Saturd ay, October 14 Opens 12 Noon Sunda y , October 15 Mexican Dinner e Rides e Auto Show • Game Booths e Entertainment e Food Booths MISS COSTA MESA "QUEEN CONTEST" "The Swinging Years" American Music 1930 to 1972 GRAND PRIZE Weelc In Hawaii for two OTHIR PRIZES TV-STERE,0-ID SPD. BICYCLE STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR AOOITIONAL Jflt!e lttO• COUl'ONI AVAIL.AILE AT TM! COSTA Ml_. CNAMS•ll 01' COMMa•Cll .-•. ·-. . . HAll!L&Y -ICUM-·1 ---.. ·---·-----·--"~==-~ ll<I TMfATll#t @~ llClUSIY( lllG"tlMIMl liltMll.111.S• lAMD•I .,_C.ICOTT n&e:TKUCa 'i!;!:.'~m""°" _,. --. -...·ww :.:00;· SNOW IA.TIO m "llJC](E\' " BOGGS" tOlOllt ,.,US •lll VAN 0 1(, "1tJUell 0' , ...... , ... ' J 7 • Lag1111a Beaeh_ EDITION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 283, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1972 TEN CENTS Festival, Laguna Map New Irvine Bowl Lease By FREDERICK SCllOEMEBL Of ... DMty ,. .... ,,.,, llireelors of the F.,tlval of AN -and members of the Laguna Beach Oty Coundl sat down lo the drawing boon! -Y momlntl ancl started lo !ketch a """ leue on the Irvine &..I Park. · · Couocllme• wero told by director i!lilarl Durkee the F..Uval II no longer In a pooitlOn to offer the city !'I percent of ~ ·groa revenue or S155,000 yearly, ~er Is less, in return for use of the Jilk. . . <:' '/t7ewport Drama . . I Officer DurUe aald JO pmenl mlgbt be of· !.....t, u opposocl lo tbt 1711 pereent now paid 8l>nually. taat ye.,. thll amounted lo 188,000 to city coffers. Tbll money is used lo belp pay the city's debt service In Main Beach Park. Negollatlono on a new leue begsn more than a year ago w~n the Festival board made the 27 percent oiler and ask- ed ill , .... be extended through 1998 - the year 'the Maio Beach bonds will be paid off. The city councll countered the proposal Rescues Paralyzed Diver By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... DllMr ...... , .... A hulking Huntington Beach man. p8.!8lyzed after a pier dive inta shallow wijer, was saved ·early today when a No.port Beach police belicopter o!llcor !elced Into the .... and towed him l50 ;aids to ibore -batlllnl c:ummtl. ~ Officer Doug Weblter' was mdtted with saving the Hie ol wpuam 111c1e11, •· .of IU lluntl'!&fm SI., - tJni!on Beoch. Community -OWcer SW! Bresoler said the dramatic aiMea ,_,,. "f'll lrlggered at :2: 10 a.m., with a Iran· tfc. call !onn Marsaret Muench, a lrieDd .. Ridell. She said they .,.re strollln& on Newpnrl Pier when ber date decided to It' for a nim -fully clothed -and -from the -· Into laid)' lhallow waltr. Autllortlles at Hoag Memorial llolltal 1lsled Rldoll In -condition thll morning, elibl """" alter the tn11ec11. • they attempted to determine the ... lint ol bis neck and spinal lnjurits. He bas auffered llDDHI paralysis bat It la not )'ti known whether It is temporarJI or pennanenL Dispatched lo bunt the pier dive vio- La guna Schools ~t Open House Rites This Week Back to School Nights, an opportunity file publlc and parentl lo moel ad-Dimlstraton, teacben and aee new od>onl procrama will b: beld tbla -1114 noxt In the Lai'"'" Beach Unified ~ Dlllrlct. ' ,,,. blgb -wlD bold Ill Bad: to .'$ctiool Nlgbt beglnnlnl at 7: Ill p.m. Tllel-. ..,a.y. El Morro ii eel for 7:30 p.m. Weclneoday and Aliso II oet !or 7:111 p.m. 'l1>urldaY. ·'lllunlon Intermediate School wW boid Ill program at 7: 30 p.m. nest Monda)' (oCt. 18). Top o! the World Scbool bas lield !Is night. Back lo School night at the high ICbool will be preceded by an open bouoe starting at 7 p.m. In the lchool 'l"lltorium. Slides will be lhcnm and """111 wlll !ollnw 1 llludont'a dally otbec!W. °'""'Ill ---..Otl will be ........S by Ille PfA. . PIWT A.D GETS 'TONS OF CA.LLS' 'l1le DAILY PILOT -~ ..U ad-=.ro:~ theu:=..: ~ said tt gol -ol calla." a..dr this : + * TI:ARLY. 2 ir11 - !rplc, -...... - Only -CaD """'""""" 't!lr'te 11net o1 ~. tom ol calls ltlll the property WU -m Ult -ond day. '!bit'• the ..., of _tldl - ClulUled 9d. How ma., "poanda" ol -111 do you nnl. call -.... we'll clelMlr. .. ... tim, helicopter pilot Jim Gollos zonmed low over offshore swells In the chopper known as 43 Adam and Webster spotted Ridell about l50 yards ollsbore. He was floating face down, Indicating (See llEllCVE, Pqe ZI Latfn Croup Plans Attack On Caspers llJ JACK BROBACK Of .. D91W Pllll II.rt Leaden of Orange O>unty Mexican- American nrpnlzatlom today vowed their !ollowen will pack the Bom:d of Supervilon' bearing room Tuesday and demaM removal of Ronald W. Caspers ol Newport.lleach u boon! chairman. Cblcw 1-., meeting Sunday In Santa Ana wltb about 200 members, pushed through lhn!e motions wllbnut a disaeotlng ...to. They Included, In adilltlon lo Caspers' ouster as boant chairman, a demand for a public apology for bia Oj Adelante ban- didos" mnark last -k and that the supervisors remove the Affirmative Ac- tion Program (APPi from the county personnel deportment and placo It In the county administrative office. It was the AAP that started all the furor. Two weeb ago, the board approved the new program by a 4 lo 1 vote with Caspen the only dlslenter. It II designed to give mlnoritlea and women better county emp~ and promotional op- portunitlea. Last Wadneoclay Caspers, grumtllng ..... the '200,000 cost of the program. n!erred lo an nrpnlsat1on ol Mexican AD*i::rn county employea, Adelanle u "bendldol." '!be employe ,,...P later prnlellod that Ibey cllcl not approve of the COii o! the program either but wen posltlve ol Ill need. Mexican'Amerlcan leaden SU n d I y cautioned agalnol milllanl llCtlon In re1.,.,,.,. to pr-..,....i picketing or the county admJntstratlon building Tuesday. One 11pokmnan put It tbll way, tiNotblar can hurt our cauee more than a -.tlon on the -which could be the spark that woold lead to violence. .. If we react with v1olenee we are lea (See CA8PSRI, ..... I) County Horse Thieves Sought Bono <bleY• wbo IDI) bavo driven ol! • milalac '"'1ml1 In a tmler an belnc -todal by Oranc• Oounl1 -. -In tlia Lqlma Billi ..... Deputieo lald • bon4 belonClnc to wwi.m HITold -· •· o1 -Lapla Clo'°" i1old, WU taken from the Rodwood 8tablea at that -by unbown lntrudm. Deputlel -· the t-""""""' the bone from an unloOed paddoc:ll. ltd htm down tile lll!llrby river bed and Into a we111n1 bone trailer. 'l1le animal II •almdatMlt. ' askinC !hf lease be extended . through 1980. Coorii:iimen argued that any longer lease WOUid not be a good financial ar· rangement because of inflationary fac- tors. '!be present 1711 percent !we runs through 19?5. NegotiaUons were stymied by the wage and price freeze, but recently reopened. Durkee said the Festival reduced !Is oiler becaUJe of hlgber production cosls and the need for more money in future years to maintain and replace facilities. res Winning Wlcleiap Even with a propoeed lncreue In ticket prices !or the Pageant o! the Masters llJ1lOUlrtini lo m,ooo !or next ....... the Festival feell onl,y JO perceot could be of· !er<d, Durkee said. · Cooncllman Corl Jnhmon suggested a lea!e might be -keel out In wblch the city would get a perce:itage of the Festival's gross revenue' and a perceo.- tage of Its net revenue, following ez. pe ..... Director Psul Griem said this method was used several years ago and finally dropped because the city, on certain oo- cask>na. tried to control aome of the Festival's expenses. ''The city aod the Festival should not be par1nen h profit sharing. We got rid of It years ago to everyone's 1atisfac- tion," Griam said. Jolwon admitted be had not known profit sharing was used In the put and sald he appreciated the Grlam'1 oom- m<nts. The only agreement reached Saturday was to schedu1e a aecond r o u n d of negotiations llOl'lletime after t h e • I DAILT PILOT._ ....... This fine• structure might not m e e t the JAiuna Beach building codes but It was built without ..... flt of modern tools or manmade matertalll. It was part of Thurston lntermedlilte School'• annual proj- ect to emphasize government and history. Young- sten from homerooms buDt the Indian slru<\Utts from materiall Ibey could find. Tb<!y also ,.t up government and chooe Jelden. Homeroom E was the -of belt·wtcldup judging. · Aliso I mpact Stntement H eld Over for P lanners The Laguna Beach City Council agr«d Saturday morning to delay action on the Al.lao Water Management Agency's en- vironmental lmpacl statement unUI II II reviewed at tonight's meeting of the Planning Commllsloo. 11le llatemenl deals with AWA'a pro- -1 ....... reclamation systom to aervtce !or Laguna Beach, El Toro, Laguna Hllla, Irvine, Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel and SOuth Laguna. It cslll for espamior of ~ number of Inland aewage treatment plant.I. with u!e of trtaled waste water for Irrigation. Water that cannot be ....,!aimed will be transported lo Aliso Beach and dlscharg· eel Into the ocean via a 7,00!Moot·iong ouUall. Councilman Roy Holm pointed out that the AWMA project II designed on the basil that all of aoutb Orange County will be developed. "It all bolll down to the !act that damn few Lagunans want lo -the billt back there with people on them. !or economic and other reaaons, •• Holm aid. Councilman Carl J-sugesled that the AWMA llai.ment be crttlclaed on the bull that It did not nplort le'Wlge diJpopl allemaUVtl hued OU towtr populatloo delllitlea In aouth Orange County. Johnson pointed out that the size ol system A \VMA plans to build would allow !or two million people In the SOuthem Orange Cout and Inland artas. tlolm was prepared to mate 1 motion that the statement be crttlclzed but Johnson said tho council shouldn't act W> Ill the Impact statement la reviewed by the plaMlng commllllon. Plannen wDI d1-the Imped llat&- (See DELAY, f'aca I) •Mast" Snagged Colu1nbus Was Spa.red the Flags SAN FRANCISOO (UPI) -U tba ortplal Santa IWla bad bad tha ti.. Ille Ill t1oJ ......,.iuct1oD bad bere II prcl>lbb' DIYtr -.Id btrff -IL 'Iba --the Columbul n.y pandt. Everytltlna wao golal[ ...0 ..,. Iii the --ol the Santa Marla &at _.... ... Ill .nr1leld llnl ol 8- Ffnl. *"-tried to cut the 0., line wllll Columbus' .-d. but tlia blade WU too dull. 'l'ball, -trted boldlnJ tha lJna up wttb I pi-. of aleel. SpecU .... llllled and pointed. . ~ --• ladder aed beld ap 11111 llne wllll • broqm llld the ahlp tbnJudL ,.. the -al -said. "'lllll <ommhtee dellt wtlli the dt!IJ. cult -tel!. lllld Wklln& the bllpGllible takeol cnlJ a few -loqtr." ' • . • Laguna Pioneer Mrs. Marie Ropp Dies at Age 76 Marte Ropp, Laguna B<ach pioneer and co-founder ol the Paaeant of the Mutora, dlad Satunby In the Lapna Beach Nunlng Home ari.r 1 lllrft.-ii lUneu. She •u 71. Prtvlla wvtc.a wUI be held 11 &m- ll)'lide Manaoleum, Loni Beocb. !or Mn. Ropp. wbo II oumv.d by I .... Macauley Ropp ol Lquna Beach, and I •Iller. Ame B. John of PIAClena . lira. Ropp and her huaband , Ray Ropp, came to Lapna Beoc:ll In 111!1 and lotlether •tarted the !!viii( picture preoentatlona that developed Into today'• fulJ.«:ale Pageant. She did the picture raan:b and wrote comnwntariel thlt were UJed f\'lr many ...a:ealv1 pro. ductlons of Uw PagW>t. trave!Jnc to and !rum Iha Huntinctoo s..cti Library by bul to pther material !or ber acr1pta. Adi" In Girt Seoul --lo Oranp Coun!J, • ""'!'did the !lnl Girl Scout troop In ""'1ml lloach and the !Int _,, -·-·--oltha 1--,..,i.t w-.·, Qub and ol the 1--Art ANOCI• -lira. Ropp -nwmd to Palm --..-Iha-..... l!MlllJ'• !lrll art p1l<ry and ... -ad ID 1111 ao w-.. Woman ol Iha Y-. Iba alon .......W Iha Uttlt Gall..y ol the Dwrl lo Dwrl Hot lli>rlqp and. In Ull, --ed It 0 llarll Ropp NiJlll II Iha Sllodow ~ Qub. IJllorollmldtolA--- ,..,. .... l>a -"" -mU:Ins"" -at.-,. n.malntnl actlff tllllll bar -· .... halpad ...,.... illo Lq\lna -°""-., -•I ~and.111-~W­~ I illalory ol the J'tolkal ol Arta. November J3 annual mee1ing of the Festival of Arts. By that date, director William Martin said, the matter of t1cket price increases will be hammered out and the Festival will be in a better p<lll.- Uon to know what l\ can offer the city. Mayor Charlton Boyd termed the morning meeting "a wonderful OJ>' portunity to identify mutual problem. ln more detaU." . • "We seem lo be lallting In the vicinity of a 20 percent lease," Boyd added, noting, "I'm glad to set us dlacuss tbls calmly and even wlt.b a few smlles." • I Saves Girl From Teeth Of Animal OMAHA. Neb. (UPl) -An angry Sumatran tigre&a which attacked a 5-- year~ld girl at the Omaha 1.oo wu wresUed down by the child's lather before the girl was seriously hurt. John Cordner, a carpenter, clamped a wrestling hold Sunday night on the animal which had oeized his dalllhter, Lisa. by the head and dragged bet for •bout 10 reet. LltUe Lila and her mother, wbo WU aupuy lnJur<d while trying 1o teep llJe Uger away from the llrl. W... tftlalod al an Omaha boapltal and ftleued. It look an .. timated Ill llltchel lo dole Usa'a woundl. Mrs. Cordner w · - stitches taken In her arm. '!be alI·montb-<>ld tlgreos leaped from Its grotto -a ''barlesa cage" at the mo -apparenUy after be.Ins provoked by a bystander. The b!J cat retumed voJun. tarlly to another grotto after being .. i.. dued by COrdner. 7.oo o!ficlall said It jumped Into a transfer crate lowered Into the pvtto ''to hlde." Dr. Lee Slmmnm. cnr.ctor ol the Henry Doorley 7.oo. said the ..... WU angfnd by a woman Tllltor to lhe a. Ile said wl-nporled thet the 'A'Omlft -"unfortuMtaly lhe ... unidenUfied" -apparn!J -~ recom-• J)hotofrapb whlcb bad Into the grotto ilie UIJ'Oll shand a conaidttably older ma Se t11er. "Tbe wom.n becan Jabbing at the call with thll long lllck.'" Simmons said. "This upeet the two call. porUcularly the youna female. "! doubt that the cat could ha .. made that jump II oha hadn't hem _., U · ciUd. Animals we Clplble of dolnc 1 lot or thtno when they 1n1 uclled or .ared.'r -ell!matod tho uer-· """"1 al ~ pounds. but Corel.-put It at about IO pounda. "11'1 hard to believe In tba mlddlo ol the Un!Ud lltaleo that -CID l>a at-tocked by I tl&<t." Cordner llid. "{ tlWJ can' bel!rte It." Mn. Cordner NW lbt Wllo ..,artd !Seo TIGllEllS, PICO 11 UL -J -" -. ---" -,, ........ , --. -·? I .. ....... ,.... ,.._._.,,ff .. • _,,_ .. ::.-'! =-· -.. .. ,. ..,. __ ..,,, ·-.. r • , --· .. --. ' . I ' • ' ' " • • , , ~ lo ri. ., ' - '· ' " ., ,. ,• . , ' •' .. .; ' '• r ' •· .. "' '" ,, " "' , •• ' 1 .. JO.J "' . , / .. , '~ h •A f DAJL Y PILOT LI 3rd Day Set Kissinger, Viets Talk Second Day PARlS (UPll -Presidential adviser Henry A. Kiss inger held a second day of !ecret negotiAtions with the North Viet- namese today, talks thal have reached a "sensitive" stage in the quest for peace in Vietnam. The \Vhite House said there would be ;,n unprecedented third meeting on Tues- day. PresiJential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler refused any comment i n \Vashington on whether the fate of South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu was the mair snag holding up agree- ment. The Communists have demanded Tiheu's ouster; Thieu in the past has refused . Kissinger was accompanied by l\1aj. Gen. Alexander Haig. his deputy who just returned from Saigon and secret talks there with Thieu. They wer~ meeting with Le Due Tho, a mc11"1ber of the North Vietn11m ruling Politburo, '"ho recently visited Hanoi, Peking and Moscow, and Xuan Thuy, the No. I Hanoi negotiator in Paris. Both American and South Vietnamese sources in Saigon said Friday that a plan was under discussion whi ch would permit Thieu to step down in favor of Sen. Nguyen Van lluyeh, speaker of the South Vietnamese senate and a former Jaw partner of Nguyen Huu Tho. an o[ficial of !he V"iet Cong ··provisional government." The sources said the plans also called for Iota! U.S. withdrawal; withdrav.•a\ of North Vietnamese forces from Sooth Vietnam , and the freeing of Amerk:an prisoners or war. There also v.·ould be a Communist promise to negotiate seriously in Paris, the sources said. The South Vietnamese and Americans dismissed the Saigon reports as ''speeulative." Ziegler, at a news briefing today, refused to characterize the Paris talks in r.ny way and refused comment on \\'hether there had been any change in the U.S. position. The United States has supported Thieu and rejected Communist demands he be ousted. "We would anticipate a thipi day of meetings but I will have to dit to hear from Kissinger before I car confinn it." Ziegler said. He said it was "very unlikely the talks would go into a fourth day, meaning that Kissinger and Haig would return to Washington Tuesday night to brief Presi- dent Nixon. Margaret Taylor Killed by Auto Funeral services are pending for Mrs. ' Margaret P. Taylor, a 35-year resident of the Laguna Beach area and a model for many of the Art Colony's well-knov.'n artists. Mn. Taylor, 55, died as a result of a t.affic accident late Saturday as .she was crossing South Coast Highway on foot near 4th Street in South Laguna . Mrs. Taylor Jived at 31844 Virginia Way in South Laguna. She is survived by her husband, Walter; or Sout h Laguna : two sons, Jame.s McClelland of Oxnard Beach and Greg T a y I o r of Laguna : daughter, Kathleen Mabry of Laguna ; and six grandchildren. In adiilion to modeling for area artist!. Mrs. Taylor appeared in Festival of Arts Pageant of the Y..1asters pro-- ducUons from lhe mid-IMOs to the early 19605. P er sian Rug Stolen 'Mle my.sterk>u~ disappearance of a Persian rug valued at $500 was reported Friday to Laguna Beach police by 1bomas Cairnes Finch, ol 2260 Glenneyre St .. Laguna Beach. Officers said tbe rug, 9 feet by 12 feet was taken from the unlocked house. DAILY PILOT TM O<'•-CN1! DAIL'!' ~ILOT, w111t ~ Ja ~NII ltle NfWl·~rtt1, It •tlloetl 1W 1t1ot 0!'111199 CM1t ~111>111111r1t c.......,,r. s.... r1t1 ldltloflt ••I ....elw..d. M..,.11' tt!'WC!ft f'rtdty, '°"° (°'" Mttt, N...,.,t ftMd'I, Huntlt111M ll11<fl/l"01.1•U•I" v.n...,, L•O ...... ·~· lrYl!WISMldl•do """' ,,,, ci......it1/ S... J~..., C•l'ltl.._. A 1!ngl1 "91oi'lll Mllllll It ,.ublitfttt. $1h,1"1tl'l't af'ld Sll"ldlfY'. Ttt<I prlrKIPll publ!Jlrllnf .i.m rt It 1)0 ._,,, •• , '""''' C-1• M9H, Cliillamll, ,.,. •• I l o!.e.+ N. We.4 p,_ld.rlf 11111 PllblWMr" J1c:k l . C11rl1y Vice ,.,_IMll eflld ~I M....- Titem11 K•1vll ..... Th•l'I•• A. Mr.irpllol11e ,,,,_..,,. l!Oltw Oerln H. l••1 llch1r4 '· Nell MlolWll ~-ICiNft --°""" JJJ Nr11t A•.,..11• M•lh., A.Ur•••1 ,,o. ••• '''· tl611 --CMte M .. : .. w.:.::r $~ ~~Im H .......... ..... 9-dtl l lWJ a.Ui ............ 1M at~&IC ..... llMI ~ '" ,, en•• MJ-4J11 I Cla1fif*I Mvarti .. '42·f671 I ............. ..,_,_...t I Tals,11• 4f4.W6 I°""""""' '"". °"""" Q.111 ~ ~ ......... '"""'-lllvstrtlltnt. .-.... ... ,,., .... ....,.,~ ...,..... 1""81 lie r~•tHf ...._. --~ ,.,. .... ., ..,,.,""' .,,., . last ,.., ... •1111 .. ( ... MtU, c. ~r.rt• w Wt'llf a.ti IMOlllPI 1 W ""II ta.ls. "*'"'"' mlllflt'I' .... SIM"'*'"'"· Later. it was confirmed that a thlrd day or talk.! would be held Tuesday. The talks mark the 19th time Kissinger has come to Parts to negotiate. Officials have steadfastedly kept silent about the exact location, duration and content of the meetings, which reportedly are held somewhere in the Paris suburbs. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said Sunday "the negotiations which are going forward are very seriou.!, they are certainly very slgnilicant. and they are very sensit:ve." He said the American objective in the war remains the prevention of a Com- mufiist takeover in South Vietnam. Sen. George ~f c Govern the Democratic presidentlal candida~ said . . ' 1n campaJgn appearances during the weekend that he does not flnd it ac- cidental "that the peace rumors are flying as the campaign nears its showdown phase ... " Laguna Casts Vote Against Watson Bill The Laguna Beach City Council voted unanimously to oppose Proposition 14, the Watson Property Tax Limitation in- itiative, after learning it \\'Ould cost the city $16.5,SOO the first yt.ar in cancellation of the transportation grant for the city bus line. The initiative, City Manager Lawrence: Rose told the council at its last session, "-"Ould repeal legislation that provides for allocation of municipal transit grants from gas tax funds. Vice Mayor Roy Holm commented "I don't know of any school district Of' ~ity that is supporting the initiative. It's a drastic measure, not much different from legislation that was defeated in 1968." In its resolution urging a No vote on the tax measure, the council agreed that its enactment would "provide windfall benefits to real estate speculators and large landowners of commercial and in· dustrial property, but would hann the in- terests of the average businessman and homeowner.'' Frono Pqe l RESCUE ... hr. had possibly drov.'t'led already, ac- cording to the helicopter crew. No time was left to dispatch a lifeguard patrol boat, so Officer Webster stripped orr his gun, holster. shoes and belt, climbed out on one pontoon and rriade his first rescue leap. fUs partner first lowered the helicopter to about 15 feet above the sea, which was whipped by the chopper's rotor wash. Officer Webster took the paralyzed leaper in tow -his six-foot, four-inch, 240-JX!UOd frame made heavier by water- soaked clothes, .and began methodically swimming toward shore. Police cars and an ambulance were waiting and rescuers helped haul the stricken Ridell out of the surf and carry him on a stretcher for the race to Hoag Y..1emorial Hospital. Newport Beach ordered their police helicopter equipped with pontoons in an- ticipation that it would be required for use in sea rescues such as the predawn incident today. Ofricer Webster and other helicopter crewme n are also trained ln aquatic rescue techniques but today's dramatic operation was the lirst one for Webster. Three to Exhibit At Laguna Gallery ':'hree Lnguna Beach artists have con- 1 ributed pa.ntings of scenes in Laguna Beach, California and Europe for the October dlspht)" In Ilk! Lagunn Federal Gallery, 260 Ocean Ave. The Captain's t:ou!'.C a.1~ other rovorlte Laguna subjects are captured in oils by ?tiarie \Vere , IS.year ex hibitor in the F'cstlval of Aris and life mt!mbtr or the l.tguna Beach Art Association . Virginia Huffman and Paul Fort, both Arl ·A-Falr exhlbltor1, dlsplay, respec- tively, watt!rcolors of Callfomltt acenes and landscape1 In 011 painted In Europe . A cast .,f pottery by FemlvaJ exhibitor Virginia Lilllejohn!, pelntlngs 11ind crafts by laf!llnl Btach High School studenl> and an exhibit by the Lagun1 Beach Stamp Club complete the October 1how, which Is open dally during hlal.nt::ss hours. From Pfllfre I TIGRESS .•. . . . frozen stiff." A newsman who visited the €ordntr home In nurby Dellevue 11ked Lisa, whose he•d wu awathed in b3ndaaea. whether she had ever seen a Uger that close before and whtther ahe would like to see a tl«er aR:aln. To both que~tions, Lisa replied, "No.·• • DAILY ,IL.OT Stiff P~ .. New Funds . • • For Laguna ; ~ I Announced i .· Federal and state grants totaling ; $152.960 for interim Improvements to lht ·'1 Laguna Beach sewage treatment plant ~ have been approved in Sacramento • Assemblyman Robert E. Badham an: '4 OOUllC<d today. >_ At the same tlme, City Manager ( Lawrence Rose noted, the city has been , ordered by the s1a1e to tear down the ~ plant by 1975 and join a regional sewage ~ treatment project. 1' ' The new funds, under the Clean water LATEST ADDITION TO LAGUNA BEACH MUNICIPAL FLEET IS SHINY NEYf SLUDGE TRUCK The 2,SOQ.gallon T•nker Will Haul Waste to Drying Bed; It Rtplac~ 1956 Rto Grant program. will enable the plant to ; meet 1975 federal standards for ocean • discharge, Rose said. However, initial improYeme:llt5 at the p I a n t under an earller grant, already -~ have brought the plant up to a pojnt ,: where its ocean discharge no longer i.s : daogerowi, he said. '. Bargain FestiYal Opens in Laguna On Wednesday The frost isn't even on the pumpkin yet but some far-sighted folks are look ing to Christmas as the 22nd Bargain Festival at the Neighborhood Congregational Church gets under \\•ay Wednesday and Thursday in Laguna Beach. Handmade Christmas ornaments at bargain prices are just a few of the items to be sold at the festival where 16 other departments will uffer books, clothing, toys , antiques, baked goods a n d furn iture. Hours are from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thurs- day. Hours Wednesday may be extended to enable working men to attend th e sale. said Mrs. Delores Haggard, festival chairman. Lunch will be served from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. both days. Proceeds from the festival sponsored by the Women's Fellowship will be used in charitable causes such as the American Field Service, Laguna Beach Boys Club, YMCA and the Mustard Seed. a summer program for children of lm- JT1anual Church near Watts. The church is located at Glenneyre Street at St. Ann's Drive in Laguna B<acb. Policemen Chase Huntington Man , Infant in Ar.JtO A man piloting a rotary engine car Cl•ntaining his baby boy and a terrified black cat led rolice on a sizzling, 100- mlle-per-hour pursuit over the Orange Coast Sunday night before being cap- tured. Ronald R. Witt, 27, of 309 Lincoln Ave ., Huntington Beach, reportedly drove on the wrong :.ide of the road, ran stop signs and zigugged through traffic during the dramatic chase. He was finally corralled at Warner Avenue and Beach Boulevard in Hunt- ington Beach followin~ the Grand Prix- style perfonnance which left two police cars and his 1972 compact auto damaged. Newport Beach police took Witt into cus:.ody and booked him on suspicion or endangering the welfare of a minor child. Bool-:ing procedures in Newport Beach limit officers to placing one single charge on a suspect but lhe Orange County District Attorney may file additional counts if investigators believe they are v.•arranled. Investigators said today they un- derstand Wilt was bitter and had been b1 ooding ovt!r a domestic quarrel before leaving with the child and the family cat. Newport Beach Police Officer Carl Anderson s~id he spotted Witt traveling at high speed at MacArthur Boulevard and East Coast Jlighway in Corona clel Mar. He attempted to make a traffic stop about 8 p.m .. triggerin~ a chase through and around two cities that covered about IS miles at speeds of 100 miles·per- hcur and above. Streaking througi1 medium density lraffic on Co11st Hlgh~·ry. Offlcer Ar.dcrson estimated Witt wos doing more than 100 ~'hen he sailed across the Santa A11 River Bridge Into Huntington Beach . Walling trarrtc potrolmcn thf!re picked up lhe puniuit, which then veered up L:.kr Street to 17th Street. where the su~pect made a screcchlnt, right turn to Delaware Streel and on to Gnrflt!ld Avenue. Investigators said Wltl aped through 11top 1\gns on busy Goldenwetl Street with 1lx bh1ck-:1nd-whlte police can with sirens screamina In pursuit, in addlUon to tht lluntlngton Be1ch p o I I c e helicopter. Dtt.rmlned to halt the danaerous chase. Patrol Sat. Guy Kuncl tried to block Wamt'r Avenue at Ill Intersection with Goldenwest Street. l!e said Witt scrtteh~ lnlo a sharp right tum -11klesw1ping I.ht patrol cttr *1th his small car, known for It~ speed, t'Tnking ability :ind mRneuverRbtllly - and ahot down Warner Avenue to Bench J\oulevard . By thi.s time. Officer I>cnnJs ~feh~1er was hot on the aU11pttt.'11 tall. but Witt &pun a shArp U·t.um at Blaylock Avenue and Metzger -his patrol car brakes bu mt out -piled Into the rear of ttie car. • Laguna Proud City Acquires New Sludge Truck Total cost of the additional Im-·{ _. provements will be $191,200, of which the t city's 20 percent share will be $38,240. \ Like all proud owners of shiny nev.• vehicles everywhere, Laguna Beach gathered its municipal bucket and wa sh rag to clean and polish a spanking new sludge truck . The 2,500-ga\lon tanker carries sludge from the city sewage plant to a slurry drying bed out on vacant ranchlands. Sludge is produced in the treatment of se"·age. The $25,868 truck is painted "Laguna Blue," continuing the "seaside resort im- age" se t when the city's fleet of vehicles was painted the light baby blue color a year ago. The truck along with some othe r equip- ment for the sewage plant was purchased with a feder&l grant which pays 75 per· ce nt of the cost. It replaces a 1956 Reo truck that can· From Pagel DELAY ... ment tonight at 7:30 at City Hall . Councilmen did act to a d j o u r n Saturday's meeting to Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. to review the planning commmion's recommendations. A representative of the council is expected to appear at the A WMA public bearing Wednesday nigbt at Aliso Elementary School to present the city's feelings. City Manager Larry Rose suggested the council also make its feelings known before the Orange County Planning Com- mission Oct. 17 when it meets to discuss the impac~ statement. tankerously broke down on its last of- ficial trip to the sludge beds. The Reo, purchased new by the city !or $9,456, started city service as a trash truck. was converted to a dump truck and then to a sludge truck with the &d- dition of a 2,000 gallon tank many years ago. The Reo is orange. The truck hauls the waste from the sewage plant to the disposal area about ftve miles away about four to six times a day. The greater carrying capacity of the new truck should prove it more economical and may improve the odor situation at the sewage plant, a city spokesman said. The new truck is capable of traveling the greater distances which may be necessary if the city runs out of local sludge room, said Clyde A. Sweetser, parks superintendent. Should the city sewage plant be aban- doned with Laguna's entry into the Aliso Water Management Agency, a regional sewage treatment and water reclamation project, the truck could be sold to the agency, Sweetser said. The International truck is power.?d by a 22.8 horsepower diesel engine and sports a vacuum suction pump which can be us- ed in picking material up from manholes or from the plant's sludge digesters, he added. "It's something pretty exciting for the city to get," Sweelser commented. Another employee gazing at tbe big blue truck observed, ''You know, it's almost too pretty to put sludge in." '_'The ironic part of the whole thing," \ saad Rose, "is that we are practically .. ordered to go ahead with these lnterUh \ improvements, and at the same time, we : are ordered to cease operation of the ·• plant by Dec. 31, 1974 and join tf\e .> regional system. ~ "We suggested that since the trh -: provements made under the first grant : has produced very satisfactory results, ft ·,. might be advisable, under t b'e ': circumstances, not to make the ad-·• ditiooal improvements, but they told us 1 to go ahead with them." , The contract with the state bas been ;. signed, Rose added, and bids for the in-L terim improvements' will be soogbt im-• mediately. l • Fro1n Page l ~ ' CASPERS ..• ) than Mr. Caspers and we can only Jose," : he warned. : < Supporters of Supervisor Robert Bat· : tin, who is engaged in a bitter battle to •'.. retain his ~ton the board in the Nov .. 7 •\ election, took advantage of Caspers" em-': barrassment. . .: Bill Meyer. Battin'• chief aide ap-• peared at a MeDca~Americao meeUog £ Friday nig!tt and sald hls boas would "'° l mand that C8spers apologize for bil ban-> dido remark. .. . Today, Meyer in-a lea mllilant state-'... ment said Battin will e!k for ·a .~ "clarification" of the board chairman's \ remarks. ; I " Another ad was prepared for this day, but we had a fire early Monday space to- • morning. PRICES SLASHED ON ALL NEW APPLIANCES· IF YOU DON'T MIND CLEANING THE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HAVE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. EVERYTHING MUST MOVE FAST to make room for clean-up and redecorating •WASHERS • • 0 .. DRYERS REFRIGERATORS TELEVISIONS STOVES • 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA .- • . 7 I I \ I I ' l ' 7 •' I • Saddlehaek Teday'8 Final EDITION N. Y. Stocks V.OL 65, NO. 283, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1972 TEN CENTS Briggs Tells Butz: Be at Hearing Tuesday From Wire Services . Assemblyman Jolm V. Briggs (R- l'Ullertoo) wants U.S. Secretary of Apiculfure Earl Butz to testify before ht. Assembly Agricullure Commiltee Tueaday In Los Angeles. U Butz: doesn't show, Briggs said in a .. gram to the. cabinet officer, be will Ilk tbe Los Angeles Superior Court to ccmj>el liJs attendance. Falling that, be will 11t "tbe sergeant-at.arms to bring Bulzln. •lust Chums The warning to Butz by Briggs follow· ed a scuffle Thursday ln Sacramento in wbio;h tbe Orange County legislator a~ tempted to serve a subpoena on t h e federal official. But Briggs was shoved uide by Secret Service' agents, and the subpoena fell to the floor. Claiming lhll.' Thursday's ac· tion constltutec. a serving of the sulr poena, Briggs added, "It is a dark day when a California legislator cannot talk U· a federal official. "I am also amar.ed that secret service DAILY 'II.GT ,.... llt' l"eMO: O'o...tl It's a face only a mother could love. Well, she's not his mother. She's a chimp trainer at the San Diego Zoo. But that's pretty close. Rotary C~ Driver Leads Pursuers on Merry Whirl ' • ""·A man piloting a rotary engine car e<.nlaloing bia baby boy and a terrif\ed black ca't led ~<>lice on a slzzling, foo. mUe-per-l)Qur pursuit over the Orange "Coast Sunday ntgbt before being cap- tlired. Ronald R: Wttt, 'II. of 309 Lincoln Ave .• Huntington Beach, reportedly drove on the wrong ..Ide of tbe road, ran stop signs ar.d zigzagged through traffic during the dramatic chase. He was finally corralled at Warner Avenue and Beach Boulevard In Hunt· 'fiigton Beach folloWlna tbe Grand Prix· style performance whlcb left two police -..... and bia tm compact aii!il diinaged. Newport Beach police took Witt Into cuMdy and booted b1lr. on suspicion of ·eodangerlog the welfare of a minor child. lloo~lrg procedures In Newport Beach limit oCflcera to placing one single charge CM\ a wspect but tbe Orange County optrlct Attorney may file additional eouilta if investigators believe they are •arranted. Investigators said today they W>- 1derstand Witt was bitter a.nd had been bsiood1nl ovt:r a domestlc quarrel before 1.av1ng with tbe child and tbe family cat. Newport Beach Police Offi'"1" Carl AnderlOn srJd be spotted Wttt traveling at hlaJt lpeed at MacArtbur Boulevard and Ellt Coal! llJ&l!way In Corona del Mar. PILOT AD GETS ''1'0 NS OF CALLS' • The DAILY PllDI' dotm't aell 16- ,.nlllng -by the pound, but the advorttaer ~cod the followlnjf ad Mid It IOI .. _ ol ca!Ja." Oiedt tbll: .. • • YEAJU,.Y. 2 tra Bl1nm.. fr!llc. par1ly """"· -· Onl1 -Call ... .-. Tine I-of advertlatnC, -of <Olla llld the~--.. the-..., ""'1; 'li>at'I tbe llOl'J of tbll - clllllfled llCI. -· -"pounds" of reiulta do you want. can -and "1J deli-. • He attempted to make a traffic stop about a p.m., trlggeri .. a chase through and around two cities that covered about 15 miles at speeds of 100 miles-per- bour and above. Slreating tbrougii medium density traffic on Coast Highv:t y, Officer Ar.derson estimated Witt was doing more lban'JOO when be sailed aetosB the Santa A... River Bridge into tlt.nUngton Beach. Waiting traffic patrolmen there picked up the pursuit, which then veered up Lake Street to 17th Street, where the 11U1J10C1 made a ocreecbiOj. rlgbt tum to Delaware Su.et and oo to Garfield Avenu~. lnvestlgaton said Witt aped through atop llgn3 on busy Goldenwest Street wilb ab blad'*8Dd·whlte police cars with sir~ screaming in pursuit, ln addition to tbe Huntington Bead> p o 11 c e helicopter. Dtermined to bait the dangerous chase, (S.. CHASE, Pqe ll 'f ustin ()f ficial 'fo 'fell Results ()f Investigation The resultJ of an lnva:Ugatlon Into a charae of tdmlnlstr1Uve harusment of teacben will be roported In uecutlve awton to Tustin Union High School Dlttrfct tnu-tonlaJtt at 7,30 at 'l'ult1n llilh School. Su~ Jack Schumater baa been looking Into charg" mad• Se!>I. II bf '11111111 8econduy Teachan -. tloo pr-Jim Weban. 'If-datlna that a dlatdd » mlnlllrator Mid tMcbon who ban - -· In tbe -wwld be pllaaad out of employment In tbe .... , new unlflod diatrkts within two )'WI. Under temll of """"'"""1 Ulllllcatlon eledlon Ill( June. 1'11tln Union HIP Diatrlcl wW be dillolved In July tm, and '1'w1t1n. lmlll and Saddltbac:k Valley Uolllod Dlalridl wW Ilka over . agents would be loJtructed to physically Jin. vent me hom pursuing this con. vt..rsatlon. Mr. Butz will feel an obligation tc appear, as I am sure he will not put himself 1bov11 California law," the Assemblynuu. declared. At mue ls the federal government's controversial pouJtry eradication pn>- gram dealgned to. pr<vent tbe spread of t-.ewcastle disease In l.. Jmia. AIJ cbalrman of the A s s e m b I y Agriculture C.Ommittee, Briggs wants Bub to attend tbe Los Angel .. meeting which ii being beld to air poultrymen'a complalnta that they are not receiving sufficient cunpensatlon for their flocks which are beinII destroyed to check the apread of tbe dlaeaae. Brigs laid be eapected Bua to an- nounce a new federal guarantee of $UO per bird destroyed at 1 preoa conference lut 'lhunday. "When tbe con!.,.... had concluded, H was apparent that such an announcement was not forthcoming." lbe uaeinblyman said. ''Th.ls left me w J t b oo other aJtematlve .ban to serve the subpoena as l bad forewarned (State Secretary of Agricultur< Jamosi Steams and (Dlreo- !oi of Agriculture Brunel I Chrtatenaon I would." In addlUoa to W h I I be caill the paultrymen'1 "juat.llled" request. for higher compenaatlon, Brtgp alio claim- ed that federal aietita bad paid "more than $1-lo owners of WOJ•I fighting cocks that had been destroyed In tbe pro- gram. Brtgp charged that tbe flgbtlng cocks were being allowed to move freely into and out of the quarantined areas. ··Tbe lick ol control by tbe luk force of birds in the quarantine area, plus tbe ease of movement of the vlrua and the many cases of Inequitable treatment of thuse in the poullry Industry, continue to raise questions ln my mind a1 to whether the proper •PP.""Oach bas been ILten In cootrolling tbil virus," ho aald. Tuesday', comr.11ttee hearing wUI be beld at to a.m. In the Old State Building, 217 W. First St. in Room 11$. Copter Leap Saves Life Beach Man Paralyzed in Pier Dive Towed Aslwre • By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ... Dllltr ........... A bultlng Huntington Beach man, paralyzed after a pier dive into shallow water, wu saved eai'ly today when a Newport Beach police helicopter officer 1 .. ped Into tbe ... and towed him 150 yards to shore while battling currents. Observer Officer Doug Webster was credited with savlng the life of William hldell, 29, of 212 Huntington St., Hun· tington Beach. C.Ommunity Relations Officer Stan Bressler said the dramatic aiJ'.sea rescue was triggered at :2:10 a.m., with a frazi.. tic call fonn Margaret Muench, a friend o• Ridell She aaid Ibey ..... alnlllln( .. Newport Pier when ber date decided to go for a nrim -fully clothed -and do.. tnm 111e -. low fairly shallow water. Autborltlea at Hoag Memorial llollW fisted RldeD In aerioua cooclftloo tbll morning, eight houra after tbe tragedy, as tbey attempted to determine the-••· tent of bis neck and spinal Injuries. He has suffered some paralysis but It is not yet known whether It Ls temporary or permanent. Dispatched to hunt the pier dive vlo- Um, bellcopter pllol Jim Golfoa IOOIJMJd low ---In the dlopper ltnowu u 4S Adam and Webater opotted Ridell about ll!O yudl -· lie WU flootlnc lace down, Indicating bf> had -9>11 drowned alrudy, 10- con!Jng to tbe bellco!>ter crow. No --left to dilpatch I lifeguard palrol boat, so Offleer Webater atrtpped off bia gun, bolater. aboes ·md belt, climbed out on one pontoon and made bia flrlt ...... leap. HJs partner flrat lowered the bellccpter to about 15 feet above the aea, which was wfllppod by tbe chopper's rotor nm Oftlcer Webater took the paralyred leaper In tow -hfa sbl·fool, """'Inch, Chicanos to Seek iMast!) Caspers' Quster Snagged At Tues(Jiiy '·Meei · ~-~ , · · MK~ !tlPn -If tbe ........ -lllrll had 11o11 !1te .... lly ·JACI BROii~ bit lfl'lll1 ...,..._ ...... ll "!!Mllb --bava ~IL QO "' .... -"'" 'Ille -WU tbe Qllnmlq IJl7 poroda. Ew!r7lhfnC Wll &olJ'I w.11 Ull-Leadera of Orlll(e CoUnty Mezican-· tll tbe mo-Gf Ille Smla llarla float ~ on an overbeld Uno of fllo. American organhatiom today vowed l"lnt,. -tried ID cut, tile Ille Uno w!tll OJlumbua' IWOrd, but die their followers will pact the Board of blade wu too dull. ~emandpervlaon,.;..,.~ =.i 1;°'1~!-~ 'lllen, .......... tried boldq the IJne up wltll I pleoe of Ike!. Spedatora ~... giggled and polnled. of Newport Beach u board cbalrman. Finally, a man d lmbpd a ladder and held up the line with 1 broom and Chicano leaden, meetJng &mday In the ablp rolled °""""'" Santo Ana with about ZGO members, Ao tbe muta-of .,.....,. laid, "Thia oommlttee deall with tbe dl!fl. pushed through tine motions without a cult Immediately, and lactlinl the ~le Ultel only 1 few mlnutet loo(er." dlssentlng vote. -. 'l'bey Included, In addition to ca.per,• '--------------------------' ouster as boanl chairman, a demand for a public apology for bis "Adelante ban- dldoatt remark lut -and that the supervison remove the Affirmative Ac· lion Program (APP) from tbe county personnel department and place It In the t'OW!ly admtnlstraUve office. Teens Caught With Car, - It was the AAP that started all the furor. Charged With Burglary Two wee.Its ago, the board approved the new program by a 4 to 1 vote with Caspers the only dissenter. It is designed to give m1ooritle1 and women better COWlly employment and promotional op- portunlUet. Last Wednesday Caspers, grumtllng (S.. CASPERS, Pqe Z) Omaha Zoo A trio of teenagm allegedly eJalmlnc tbey had only liopped to beJp I atnnded -"" In Orani< ewnty J.....U. Hall today, on chargea O! burglary and dru1 poaaeulon, after beJnc captured by Irvine poll<e. Father Rescues Gir~ 5, From Tigress' Attncks OMAHA, Neb. (UPIJ -An angry recover 1 photograph which had dn>ppld Swnatrao tJgrta whl<h altacked a 5-Into the grot1o tbe Upoa lhlrod with 1 year-old 11r1 at the Omaha Zoo "aa COOJiderably older male ttcer-. , wrtsUed down by Iha chlid'1 father "'Ibo woman btpn JabblnC al the cats before the girt WU aerloully hurt. John Ccrdntr, I carpenltt, clamped I with thil loni llict," -aaid. wresUin( bold SUDday night on the "Thia upael the two c:t.11, portJcatu'1 the animal whld! had aeJud bia daugl>ter, ,.... female. Lisa, by the -and drqged her fo< "I doubl that tbe cal could htft .- a~o ~~and her nx>tber, who -that Jump If Iba hldn\ -.., ... si1'hltY Injured wblle try1na to kaep Ille died. Anlmata ll'O capabll of clnbli I lot tiser away from the 11r1, ...,.. truted at of thlnp -tbq ""' adtad or an Omaba boaplW and rileaaed. IWld." It loOlt u .umatacl 20 llltcbel to.._ -llllilnalad the U,...' wetCbi Lisa's -· Mn. ~ had -ot »II poundl, but -put II al llltcbea Wteo In ber """' ·-• --'• The ~ tip-. leoped !nm .-- Iii t:ro11t -I "bar1<tl cap" at the 100 "lt"a bord to ballnw la the -al -atll>lnllllY -~ --by I the ~ -that - -ht at. ~. 1"o 1111 ntllllloed .... i.tW "1 I Qpr," -llltL "J alfll = to _.. ... Wits ... cln\ llllfrN ii.. 7AO ~Oaid II' lalo a llrL CGr-. llltl .. -·--em. low11..i the .,.a. "10 • , • ,,_ 111111." hide• A -wllo .WW the Ool*-cf Let-of the _ln__,_ ..... u.. n...Y lloorioJ 7.oo. the ~ --llaod -,.,ctoed 111 -..... q-"11womu .... IA>tbt-.. , whtlhtrlbaW...,.-•t!fw~ He 1116 wt-~ tbtl tbe dttoa _. ... ftoGlar ... -- WOll\U -"uNortual<ilJ .• WM to .. I Upr apla. .. ., ..-itlod" -apponittllJ -1rJlac to Tt btMll CfllOllloal. IJll npiled, Ill. ' " Irvine Patrolman em eecbtel sue · gelled atrtpptog tbe vebk:k: of tu tape deck. air .'leaner and other acoeuortes failed to •pport their clllm1 of 1kUn1 1 driver In-. OfO-Bechtel laid ho found .. lp- pue>tly abondooed <ar re11attred to Lany R. w-. 20, of 1711 New llam1Jlllin Clrde, c..ta M .... parted In farmland •l R.arvard Avenue and Bar- ranca Rood SaWrday. -ht_,.-w-by plQM flillowtnc the 1,30 p.m. find . he ....i to L.a home mid !°""" no -tbe<e. bul -told bf ndChllon thal ,,_. cor had IWlod P'ridlJ' 11 Dyer Rood l :id tho Newport l'ntwl1- Nolq that locatlon ii two mltea rmn wbera be later found Wooda' car, Officer Bec1MJ ret:imed to "H at 10,JO p.m, and Cl!>lured the ISM a!Jeced ur atrt_.. daimtnl they tried to lie· on !oat when htarrlwld. llnis pllla found II the ....., led to the addlllonal cbllp aa•INI the boys, onr ll and two II, pollcx laid. Proposition 14 Discussion Set 240-pound frame made heavier by water- aoaked ck>the1, dnd began metbodkally swimming toward shore. Police cars and an ambulance were waiting and ...,.,,,.,. helped haul the stricken Ridell out of the surf and carry him on a stretcher fo!" the race to Hoae Memorial Hospital. Newport Beach ordered their police helicopter equipped with pontoons In an- Ucfpation that ll would be required for UM: In sea rHCUeS such as the predawn Incident today. Officer Websler and other hellcopter crewmen are alJo trained in aquatic rescue techniques but today's dramatic operation was the first one for Webster. Quig ley Seeking Stronger Impact Curbs on Building Irvine Cocmctlman Henry Qulcley 111d today he "°"id aeet QJUJldl appnml Tuetday night of envtronmenW Impact guldtlinu that would iO beyond m e r e ralllng of questlrins to •tell' to 91feguard the ecology of the new city. Henry Qulgi<y list week joined with '°"ncllmen E. Hay Quigley Jr. and John Burton to delay for onie week the council consideratlon of ftliff p1-oposed guldellnb.s to iMet 11 reeent state ~preme Court mandate. That court doc:talon eztended the state'• trro Envlronmtntal Quality Act to prtvate devtlopment u well u public constrvctlonprojecta. Last week, the Irvine plannl111 com- mlak>n t'ndoned a 17.pqe f1IOOm- mendltton tnciudJnl I 1onfI and I abort form Impoct llltoment que>ttonnalre. Commllalonen uried council approval of the controv....W doc:ument and -11ested that all denloper> -plete •t !See IMPACT, Pace Ii Airline TooU>ox 'Hijacked' in Irvine Irvine poU« loged I bursJ.ar7 roport Sond•y I ln wtuch ID alrcrtft CGml*U' empJoye aid perlORI unknown bljadced h~ ~·udl Arabi• Af<llna toolboa out of bis pr11(1. JoOepli E. Wallter, of 1 .. 1 Whlewood Way, told Irvine Police Offbr Ed Sutton the mttai tit <OllWnacf I ftrlely of wrencbn. pllen and -liens, pl .. aquatic IPNr'IUrl -'«El Lfl 18. "lbl tool idt bHr1 I Saudi Arabia Alttbl - and WU nrtped durtni Ille ·-· Walker 11kl. ...... --= =... ---- ,: ~ . --.. , ...... .,_c..., ' 11 ..,,.....,_ W 'J :::.· ...... :;: ·-" -.. -.. ........... ........ ----------~ ( ' ( . ' ,., s t I j ' f DAILY PILOT lS Tax Panel Selected A ~even-membE!r revenue and tax ation p;inel lo examin<' and recommrnd tax policies to the Irvine Cit)' Council after next April I. has been na med by Mayor \Vi\liam Fischbach. The commlttee will research sources or city revenue and w1P report after April I on all possible alte n1atives for collection. allocation and expe nditure of public Iunds. Mayor Fischbach said. ~1embers of the study eomm iltPe are : Lyon P.1uUaney, a housewife from t'"'e Racquet Club, "'ho is president of the Irvine Jaycees· wives club. a member or the parks OJ\d open space advisory com- mittee and the South Coast Republican l-'orum . ~lrs. Mullaney hold s a degree in English from Cal State Fullerton. Barbara Wiener of Turtle Rock, a marketin~ representative with IBM in Los Angel es. A graduate of Vassar, ~trs. \\'il'ner has done graduale work in business administraton at UCLA. Paul Johnson of Turtle Ror:k is r.hief of staff of the dental facilities at UC Irvine. Dr. Johnson earned his dentistry rlegree at USC after con1pleting a maser of business administration dP.gree there, and a bachelor's degree frorn Cal State Loni; Beach . Charles Cleminsha~·. president of the Greate r · l rvine Industri al League, is a vice president in the aerosrace group of Parker Hannifin Corp. in Irvine. He is a graduate of Cornell Univernty and holds a masters in business administration from the Harvard Business School. Thomas C. Wolif, Jr., prPSident of the Irvine Industrial Complex, is a graduate of Duke University. lie is a trustee of Loyola College in' Baltimore, Md., di.rec- tor of the National As~iation .if l ndustrial Parks and a membe r of the ln- rlustrial development council of the Urban Land Institute. Irvine Trustees Support 'Paper' 011 LocaJ Schools The Irvine Unified School District believes in neighborhood school s, com- munity use of facilities and in keeping school sites away from airport flight pat- terns. according to a "position pape;" drorted by trustees for input •into the city's general plan. Irvine city manager William Woollett has referred the trustees' document to the planning commission. City and school district officials are en- deavoring to work together Jn matters of mutual Interest like school site planning. The document lists eight concerns or beliefs held by district trustees. They are: -Neighborhood sctools improve com- munity identity. -Citizen use of school facilities should be encouraged and use expanded to in- clude libraries, music and art faciHUes. A balanced land use policy is desi red. -Placing schools next to ctimmercial site, major arterials and in noise polluted areas is not in best Interest of children. -Schools should not be next to railroad track or in night patterns. -Public transportation systems are a means to transport students to and from school above the elementary level. -Neighborhood parks adjacent to schools are favored. -~1ost sites should be nea rly rec- tangular and not front more than ~wo streets (the state wil! on ly pay for tv•o lronting streets). -Safe pedestrian and bicycle access shou ld be assured. -Emergency access should come from at least two location11 . -Drainage, ulllily and electrical sources should be reviewed as to impact 011 the site. OIANel COAST 11 DAILY PILOT n. Ot•flfl CM H O-.IL V PILOT, •lfll """""' la ~ .... N.._Prni., la ~I....., b., 11\t' 0.t"ff C.11! ""4111"'1nf C°""llM'Y. Sf!N. n'4' .-11i... ••t ~!•!led. Mond•r ""~ fr~J, for Colt• MtM, N-POrl k~, """'11,,.IM lttecll/IO_.,~ ll•lltr, I -ovn1 h~. lr¥lntl$1tdleMU •"Cl $on Cle-It/ ,..,. Ju.n C•pl1tr-. (< •lntlf •f'OIQro•I .:1111on i. Plfbl4,,.,, "'"'"''"' •nd Sund•v~ 1119 prlnl;\1NI pultjltl\i,,. pi.111 I\ ~I )JO Wl"\1 ••r ll•MI. Cosl• M-, CtlllOt"nlol, tM't, llobtrl N, W,fll P1ttld'""1 tnd PV&il\llw Jtclc It C11rl1y Y-"'9 ""'Iii.,, •Old ~ti MM9W Tltelfttt K•••il l clllw Tltofflts A. Mr.1rpfii"e Matlel'"' 14!tw Ch•rl•• H. L•ot llich•rd P. N•ll NMNM M ...... C4n•n. -C..I• MeM: iJI, Wftt ..,.. $""" N.....,-1 ••Kii: »l2 .. ..,..., ltl,I~ uvi-9Hetl! m hrftt ,........,. ._,..Int..,. lffdl: 1117S -..C.11 ._.....,,, t.tfl Cie.-1t1 )K NWlll Ill C..W.. llMI Tel.,._ (7141 '42-4121 Ow.,_. ...... ;t I "42-1671 S.. C' , .. AW D1,aellfW .. t T11a,1 •• 4t2-442t °"""""' ma:. °'""" c:Mtt ~ ........ -....... c.rr.tri1. ... ....... '"".... """'"' ...... ... !i#ltf INtfft et" .._,l_ft ,_.,..... _, .. ,... .... w!ll'Wi .,.,.., ,,,,,. ......... ..,,.,,.. """*" ......,c:, .. ,...... ..... c..,. .... Cell~ .....,........ "' c.l?lw A6I ~:u... h' NII .,,If fMllllll~I 111111.,,. .... llM 1N1llltlJ' ' . ........ ,. ... 1 . IMPACT~ .. lust Ibo lllorl t;:.J:--up on1J QI llalll In Wlaw. Olbtt _,,,_ ""---Ille pactaae ~: -That Ill Jancual• be ll&!l-.¢ ,.., brood. --""review by alah ot lM...,,. pleted sllor1 lDlPld statemmt, 1 o m • projects mlghl be requlred to complete the. long form . Hospital -Gets 3-ye-a.F- Approval -Patios and their covers milht be ex· The medical staff at Mission Com· empted 11s "trival." munlty Jlospltal in Mission Viejo has -Without a conservation element or a received a three-year vote or approval general plan, tlle ElS procedure is from the cautomia Medical Association critical to lhe new city. (CMA). -A two-way appeals process is in· Holpitals mu.st be In operaUon one hertnt in the proposed evaluation year before they e&n be evaluated by lhe system. Whether den1ed or gronted, CM.A. The Uf.bed Mission Community project statemCflt decisiol\1 ol. staff or !Jospital opened in August, 1971. commiss)on might be appealeci . The endorsement is not necessary to -Adoplion would end arbitrary, sub-cootinue operation, but is considered as Jective decisions on de·1elopments. recognition from a "prestigious pro- CoWlcilman Henry Quigley said today. fessional organization." said Georee L. however. he would seek an erleosloo of Ollendorf. ~ital administrator. the Supreme Court's intenl, allhough he 'Ibe CMA survey team, headed by Or. con!inues lo feel the court entered a Bert L. Halter, wrote that the hospital's legislative field by its rnviroome.ntaJ im-staff offers "an inordinatny high level ot' pact ruling. medical care." "The burden for creating legislation Halte1 comrRP.Dted that the medical that will truly protect the environment . staff bas auth.>rity to make policy and not just raise meaningless questioo:s -changes, that medical meeting records about endangered species, is this coun-are kept in tabloid form, that continuing cil's,'' Quigley said. medical education ls offered and that Once it is learned a development will geoera1 practitioners are involftd in \\'ipe out the homes for wildlife the staff appointments. responsibility for protecting those homes Hospital officials say they plan to in· rests not with developers but with the ci-crease the facility eventually.to 425 beds. ty, Quigley explained. A st-bed increase which ·would primarily Just requiring a developer to state the invoJve special care areas. so far bas problem wilh no indication of bow it will been denied by state hospital planning be solved either by denying his proposed authorities. project or approving it, doesn 't protect The CMA survey, Ollendorf said, in- the environment. he noted. dicated that the need for expansion bas Quigley's stand may be expected to arrived. spark further furore at the council OUendorf said the endorsement is meeting Tuesday night. '"\•ery gratifying on the one band. and a Some members of the council have in-challenge to maintain and constantly te preted Quigley's negative stand on the strive tv improve our statu.s on the court decision to mean he has abandoned othe r." his interest in preserving the en- \'ironment. Quigley today denied that he has switched his position. Rather, he said he would support a revised procedure that brings meaning tv the information and the decisions that may or may not be based on that infonnation, now required of developers. Regardless of any furth er delay in ap- proving an impact statenient policy, Quigley added, "there is no building freeze in Irvine or any other city lo the state. "The court stated very clearly that a developer must file an impact staernent. He cannot blame the city for a delay should he choose to wait for us to draw up specific guidelines. He can submit a statement as required and we could ap- prove it or not, before letting him go ahead ,'' Quigley concluded. Air Cal Opens Cut~Rate Route To Ontario Area Air California has announced the open- ing of a new route between Orange Coun- ty and Ontariv and the inauguration of a weekend cut-rate fare. .A.1rline spokesman Jim Phelan said the Ontario Dight is the extension of an ei:- isting route between Oakland and San Jose. "Up to now. we have been carrying pa~~ngers to Ontario from Oak.land-San Jose via Orange County but we have not been able to board passengers for O • .:irio al :::>range County," he explained. '"This new route enables us to take on passengers her<. for Ontario without ad· ding any flights into or out of Orange County." The one-way fare for the l~minute flight is $5.40 including federal trans- portation tax. The new cut rate weekend fare being used by Air Cal is called 50-26 because It of'ers a 50 percent fare for 26 hours bE>tween noon on Saturday and 2 p.m. on Sunday. The faire is available for ruondtri~ made during the time period. Phelan said passengers using the reduced fare wUI still be able to make ctinflrmed reserva- lion." and will not have tony !tandby. 7 Irvine Students Win Merit Letters LA!tters of commendation for high performance on a National ~1 er It Scholarship qualifying test have been nw11rdcd to Sf'Ven stuJcnt! at Unlverslty ltir;:h SchOOI In lrvlne. The !tuclents are Eva M. Breuer . Kee fe F.. Connors, David A. llollls, Nancy F.. l.nsa tcr. Nancy L. Morgan, Jolm I'". Parchcn. and Lori M. Wick. The National A1erit S c h o I a r s h l p Corporation hall named 37 .000 com· mend(.'(! students in the U.S. They nrc among the upper two percent of t~ ~·ho wU\ graduate In 1973. Their name3 are reported 10 colleal's they li.!ted as thelr nrst and 11eCOnd choices when they took the lest In October, 1971. i\lachinists OK Pact SAN DIEGO (AP \ -Mathlnlsts at the F.1ectro Dynamics Division of General fJynamiCj voted to return to wort today, endlng a 27-day strike and •r.provlna the rompany'1 C'f\nlrlct proposa . Under the pact, ratified SAturd"11y, about 1&0 members of lbt lnternaUonal Auociatlon of Machinist. who averaged '3.96 an hour uoder an explrtd contract will 1et 1 is. cent hourly raise the flrst Yt•r of a thrtt·yt'ar contract. h'Vine School Dedication Set For Wednesday Rancho San Joaquin Jntennediate School in Irvine will be dedicated and presented to the public Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at 4861 Micbe.Lson Avenue. The 67,400-square-foot intenned.iate school opened at its present site last September. The year before it was located behind district offices at 14600 Sand Canym Ave .. E. Irvine. Rancho principal John Del Monaco stressed that the evening is not an open house, which is usually reserved for parent!. This dedication, featuring a !hort pro- gram of speakers and a walk-through tour at 8 p.m.. is for the entire com- rr.unlty, Del Monaco said. The 20-acre site includes athletic fields, 19 clas.vooms, 11\Jrary, science labs, arts and craft.s rooms, Y!ood and metal shops and music rooms. Refreshments will be served Sn the quad area at 9:30 p.m. The Honor Choir of Rancho will s.ing at the ceremony and Boy Scout Troop 36 of Irvine will present the colon . l'l'Olll Page l CASPERS ••. over the $200,000 cost of the program, referred to an organl!ation of Mexican Ameri::Pn county employes, &Selante as "bandldos.'' The employe group later protested that they did not approve of the cost of the program either but were positive of its need. Mexican-American leaders S u n d a y cautioned against militant action In reference to proposed picketing of the county administration building Tuesday. One spokesman put it this way, "Nothing can hurt our cause more than a demonstration on the streets which could be the spar!> that would lead to violence. "If we react with violence we are less than Mr. Caspers and we can only lose," he warned. Supporlua of SUpervllor Robert Ba~ tin. who ts eqaged Sn 1 biller batUe to retain hi! 1eat on the board In the Nov. 7 election. took advantage of caspers· em· barrassment. Bill Meyer, Batttn's chlel aide ap- peared at a P.fexk:an-Amerk:an meeting Friday night and said bis boss would de- mand that CUpm apologtu ror his ban· dido remark. Today, Meytt in a lea militant state- ment said Battin wW aak for a "clnrtflcaUon" of the board chalrm&n's remark!. "Caspen had a legitimate complaint on the cost of the minority employment program," Meyer explained. "He 1hould have focused on that. The $200,000 for the first year 13 only the begllml111. Thal'• St million In five yean and S:Z mllllon Sn 10 years." The aide &aid BatUn's ltlnd wu to be "fair to Adelante but to nmaln con- cerned about the economk: cost of govtmment." Ca'P'n WU Jn hll oll!CO toUJ ror tho fin! Ume u far u IJ1YOOO could det<nnlne since lut w~ but his .JeCretary aaid be was "ln CIQftfcnnce." The board cbalnnan WU not tYtUtble for comment to lhe preu or to the public either by ttlephone « Sn -. Swimmer Drowus HESPERIA (AP) -A SS.year-old Redondo Beach man drv""8! whUe awlmmlng tn lbe Hesperia Oluntry Club PoOI, autborttlt> uld. -- 1972 Campaigii 'Dirties t Yet' 3rd Da" Set --1 WASl!INGTON (AP) -'""'l'llr Campai,o Proclloel Cammtttoe aid todly thlt Ille !'71 polltlcal CAJllpolp ''w!B be Ille dlrtiest In recent yearw." Kissinger, Viets The committee ls a private, non- parti.!an organiz.ation. It receives complaints ot violations of the ~ year~ld Code of Fair C&mpal1n Practices tradillonally subscribed to by political leaders and many candidates. Talk Second Day In a statement, the committee said lt bandied "more complaints about dirty politics Sn the first five weeks of the 1972. campaign than were handled during the com- parable period in any year" since it 1tarted keeping statistics. Crandall Named To Water Board Directors of the Irvine Ranch Water District (ffiWD) recenUy named a Newport Beach securities administrator to the unexpired board tenn of Max C. •loeptner, who resigned. Elwood A. Crandall of Turtle Rock will ftll the vacancy on the board of the public water and sewage treatment agency. Crandall manages the Newport office of '-lerrill Lynch, Pierce. Fenner a n d Smith Inc. He entered the securities business after three years in private law prr.ctice. Crandall and his wife. Michel, have four children, David, EI i z abet h , Catherine and Laura. He is involved in the education task force in Irvine, is a member of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and the Greater Irvine Industrial League. Tavern Remains Men's Bastion, BUFFALO, N.Y: (AP) -The owner of the Silent Woman tavern says he plans to continue his policy of banning women from the barroom during the day until he':i ordered to .:stop. Owner Joel R. Frank told a state Division of Hum.8n Rights hearing, "This has always been generally a men's bar and we intend to keep it that way." Three women fded ses discrimination complaints with the division after they were refused service at the bar. The wo~ said they joined their husbands for cocktails at the tavern about 6 one evening last spring but were told they would have to sit ln the Nick dining room. PARIS (UPI) -Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger held a sbnd day of secret negollc\tlons with the North Viet- namese today, talks that have reached a ••sensitive" stagti In the quest for peace in Vietnam. Tbe While House said there would be an unprecedented thlrd meeting on Tues· day. Presiuentlal Press Semtary Ronald L. Ziegler refused any comment 1 n Washington on whether the fate ()f South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu was the mair snag holding up agree- ment. The Communists have demanded Tiheu's ouster ; Thieu in the past bas refused. Kissinger was accompanied by Maj. Gen. Alexander Haig, bis deputy who just returned from Saigon and secret talks there with Thieu. They were meeting with Le Due Tho, a member of the North Vietnam ruling Politburo, who recenUy visited Hanoi, Peking and Moscow, and Xuan Thuy, the No. 1 Hanoi negotiator in Paris. · Both American and South Vietnamese sources in Saigon said Friday that a plan was under discussion which would permit Thieu to step down in favor of Sen. Nguyen Van Huyeh, speaker of the South Vietnamese senate and a former law partner of Nguyen Huu Tho, an official of the Viet Cong "provisional government." The soun:es aid the plans also called for total U.S. withdrawal; withdrawal of North Vietnamese forces from South Vietnam, and the freeing of American pri!onen ol war. There al5o would be a Communist promise to negouate seriously Sn Pam, the sources said. The South Vietnamese and Americans dismissed the Saigon reports a s "speculative." Ziegler, at a news briefing today, refused to characterize the Paris talks in 2ny way and refused comment on whether there had been any change in the U.S. position. The United states has supported Thieu and rejected Communist demands he be ousted. "We would anticipate a third day of meetings but I will have to wait to bear from Kissinger before J car.. confirm it," Ziegler said. He said it was "very unlikely the talks would go into a fourth day, meaning. that Kissinger and Haig would return to Washington Tuesday night to brief Presi· dent Nixon. Laler, II was conllnned lhlt a third day of talU would be beld Tuesday. Tha talU marlc the 19th time Kts$&er has come to Paris to negotiate. Offkials have steadfasledly kept silent about the exact location, duration .and content of lhe meetings, which reported!~ are held somewhere in the Paris subur~ Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said SUnday ''the negotlaUons which a" going forward are very serious, they are eertaln1y very significant. and they are very sensit:ve." He said the America n objective in the war remains the prevention of a Co~ muriist takeover ln Sout6 Vietnam . Sen . George McGovern , the Democratic presidential candidate, said in campaign appearances during the weekend that he does not find it ac- cidental "that the peaet nimors are flying as the campaign nears its showdown phase ... " "(don't believe that Mr. Nlzon 111 going to end the war," McGovern said. 111 tblnt the peace rumors are flying to coincide with the closing days of this campaign. If I become the president there isn't any doubt at all that the war will end quick- ly." Front p .. ., J • CHASE .•. Patrol S•I. Gary Kuncl tried to block Warner Avenue st its intersection with Goldenwest Street. He said Witt screeched Into a sharp right tum -sideswiping Ille patrol cal" with his small car, known for lb speed9 1'raking ability :md maneuverability - and shot down Wanter Avenue to Beach J\oulevard. · By this time, Officer Dennis Me!zger was hot on the suspect's tall , but Witt spun a sharp U-turn at Blaylock Avenu~ and Metzger -his patrol car brak~ burnt out -piled Into the rear of the car.· Boy Makes First Kidnap Comment OAKLAND (AP) -"You won't le! the bad man get me, will you?'' The question 4-year-cld Raymond Luco asked his falber Sunday was among the first references the boy has made to bis three days as a kidnap victim. The boy was di!covered W-y in the Oakland hilts after 1 playmat< llid he dlsappearid with an u yel unideJ>. ti.fied man in a car. , . He was treated at Children's Hospital in Oakland and released Friday. Another ad was prepared for this space to· day, but we had a fire early Monday morning. PRICES SLASHED ON ALL NEW APPLIANCES· IF YOU DON'T MIND CLEANING lHE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HAVE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. EVERYTHING MUST MOVE . FAST to make room .for clean-up and redecorating • • •WASHERS DRYERS REFRIGERATORS • TELEVISIONS 0 STOVES 1815 NEWPORT Bl VD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA • \ { ' , \ I J ' } • , • • I ~ \ ' \ r ) 1, [ l { • • ~ ·I • • ·f ~ ~ ' ..: l • • ) • l . ~ • \ J ~ • ' ' I l • • . • ' • l • . ' ' .:• ., " • ~ ' ! ' r • • .• ; .. . . ( ~ ' . ; I l .. } . . • . . \ \ l { ) 1 • I I I .. Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley T .. ay's F1na1 N.Y. Stoeks YOL 65, NO. 283, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19n TEN CENTS . Mexican-Americans Demand Caspers' Ouster By JACK BROBACK Of .. DllW PIM le.tt L<aden ot Oranp County Mellca1>- AI1'erlcan organizations today voWed their lollowen will pack the Board ol ~'·bearing room Tue.day and den\and removal ,..f Ronald W. caspers of Newport Beach as board chalnnan. Cltlcano · leaders. meeting Sunday In Sula Ana with about 200 membets, pushed through U... moUons without a dlilenting vote. 'l'bey included, In addition lo Caspers' T r as board cbairmao, a demand for ... • a public apology !or hll "Adelanto ban. dtdol" remark last week and that the supervilon ·remove . tbe. Afflrmativ•. Ac- Uon Program (APP) lrom the county penonne1 department and place II In the county ldmlnlllrative olllce. II was the AAP that alarted all the furor. Tilv -qo, the board approved the newp!'OCrllllbyaftol•otewith Caspen the only dissenter. II ls designed to give minorities and women better cowity employment and promotional ~ Portunlties . 1cer I IOO·MPD Pursuit Huntington Man ' Nabbed in Chase A man piloting a iotary engine car C<•nlalning bJs baby boy and a lerrtiied black cat led 1--"0llce on a sizzling, 100- mile-per·bour punull over the Orange Coast Sunday night before being cap- tured. ilmaJd R. Will, 'l/, ol 309 Llncolo Ave., BQlillngton Beach, reportedly drovo on .; Pacinc' s Beach Evaluation Due By First of Year State aulhorities should detennlne the vaiue of Huntington Pacillc Corporation'• 2.5 miles of private ocean front by the end of December, according to Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hlll>- tin«lon Beach). Jluntlogton Pacific's strand II the only privale beach In Huntin«lon Beach, and the state appralaal II necessary before the stale Parka and Recreation Depart- ment can begin negotiatins for purchase of the beach. Burke introduced and helped win special legislation to authorize the ex- panditure of 110,000 to get the appralaal done this year. Burke said this week that William Pena Mott, Jr., Director of Parks and Recreation !or the state, usured blm the appraisal is underway and would be flnlsbed in December unless some emrgency came up. State officials announced earlier this yw that purcba!e of the private beach -1d be a top parka jfepartment priority. 'Stale purchase of the beach would oet- Ue a long standing legal battle between ttil city and Huntington Pacific Corp., ,.,.., public access to the beach. Girl Swallows 176 Goldfish DELAWARE. Ohio (UPI) -Franclo Thompson, only girl in a field of 10, won a camJ>U! contest over the weekend by swallowing 176 goldfish in 11 minutes. the wrong :ilde ol the road, no stop signs and zigzagged lbrougb traffic during the drtmatlc chue. He wu finally carralled at Warner Avenue and Beach Boulevard In Hunt- ington Beach lullowhJg the ·Grand PriJ:- style ~ ·whicb 1efl two Police earl and bia Im coiupllCI auto damaged, Newporl 8::..ft" 10!>11 .Will-Into cus:ody ad blm m .....,..... ol ...... ing lbe ..... ~.!"i!,."': elllld. -.. ~Ip Beach llmll oft!cen to plliclJW one ringle charge on a llllpocl but the Orange County Dislrtcl ,Attomey may Ole addlUonal counla If IDveatlpton believe Ibey are warranted. lnvestigaton aald today Ibey un- denland Will was bitter and bad been hloodtn( ...... -quanel belol't leaving with the cbltd and lbe lamlly cat. Newport Beach Pollce Ollicer Cart Andenoo srlcl be spotted Witt traveling at blgh 'POed at MacArlbur Boulevard and Eat Cout ffigllway In Corona del Mar. lie attanpted to make a tralllc stop about I p.m., trlggerlni. a chase through and around two cities that covered about 15 miles at speeds of 100 mlles-per- bour and above. Streaking through medium density traffic on Coast lli(bny, Officer Ar.dmon estimated Witt was doing more than 100 when he sailed across the Santa A.1 River Bridge into ffldltington Beach. Waiting tral!le patrobnen there picked up the pursuit, witlch then veered up Lake Street to 17th Street, where the 811Specl made a acreecblllj. right tum to Delaware Street and on to Garfield Avenue. lnvestlgatora aald Witt sped through stop •""9 on bu!)I Goldenwell Street with lb blsck-and-wblte Police can wllb alrens 1Crea111lng In punull, In addition to the Huntington Beach p o I I c e bellcopter. . Dlermlned to bait the ........ chue, Patrol 8(1. Gary Kuncl tried to bloct Warner lvenua at Ila lntenacUon with Golclenwest street. ,,-. He aald Witt ~ Into a llbarp rlibt tum --ping the patrol car (See CHASE, ..... l) Service Last Wednesday Caspers, grum~llng over the aoo,ooo cost of the program, r.eferred #t.o an organlzailon of_ Mexican • AmerJ.:Pn county employes, Adelante aa "band.idol. rt - The employe group later protested that they dld not approve of the cost ol the program either but were positive of lt.s need. Meidcan-American leaders Sunday cautioned against militant action in reference to proposed picketing of the county administration building Tuesday. Ooe spokesman put It Ibis way, 1'Nothtng can hurt our cause more than a demonstration on the streets, wbJcb could be the spar~·that would lead to \'lolence. "If we react with violence we are less than Mr. Caspers and we can only 1-," be warned. SupPorWI ol Supervisor Robert Bat- tlo, who ls engaged lo a btller battle to retain his ..e1t on the board in the Nov. 7 election, took advantage of Cupers1 em- banassment. BW Meyer, Battlo'a cblel aide ap- peared at a MeJdcan.American meeting Friday night and said his 00.. woold de- mand that Caspers apologlu !or bis bal>- dldo remark. Today, Meyer In a less militant stat~ ment said Battin will uk for a "clarlftcation" of the board chairman's remarks. "Caspen bad a legiUmale complaint on the cosl of the minority employment program," Meyer explained, "He Ehould have focused on Uuat. The $200,000 for the lint year Is only the beginning. That's ll rom * DIAY PM.OT .......... COLLECTOR WOODS DISPLAYS CAMERA ONCE MOUNTEl> IN JAPANESE WARPLANE Surrounded by Wall to Well Cernere1, Fountain Volley Man Talia About His Pe11lon Valley Man's Calling -Collecting Cameras By JOHN ZA1LER Of .. Dl>ltr ......... The true calling ol J. Aleundcr Woods did not reveal itself until he was over 50. When his family was neart:v. raised and his career seemed well established the Fountain Valley man turned to collecting old cameras. "I'm not aorry I did it," he says today, afteJ nearly 15 years ln the buslneu. .. But there were Umes when I spent time and money I really abouldo'I have." 1be fndt of bit labor ls contained In a den al bb trlcl home -a ll1Ulll room llierally ntI to ntI with lllO cameras, lllDll ol willch llill lake pictures. Another. hundred or IO are lo boxes in the garage, wattlng !or the band ol the master to make them worlc again. "Getting these camera! was no e:hy thing,'' be admonilhel the visitor. "Wby take this one," be says, remov- ing a gleaming hos camcn lrom one of hl1 shelvet. "I was up in Eureka for a weekend, and l thought I'd just put .. ad In the paper to eee what l could come up ,witb. And look, a real beauty.'' The camera wai comtructed from atn- ulne rose....t, and Ill bellows was made ol Imported llulllan leather. '!I later found out tbtre were five other camer1 coUecton . In Eureka." Woodt continues. "You might aay I pulled lbll one right out !ram ......, tlletr -. " 1111 collectlon -a J-machtne .... -!ram World War II, uled lor PIVYina alrcnft k1III tn combat: an tll'I clete<tiV.. camera wtllch he says IS.. CAMEllA8. hp ll Center Studied Trustees Study Plan Allowing 'Free Choice' A system allowing freshmen and new students to pick their own campus will bt propooed Tuaday nlch: to '1'lullees or the Hunting~ Beach Union High School Olstrtct. 'l1>e "Ir« choice" plan ls expected to ea.te tome of the overcrowding at Foun- tain Valley lllah School. or 11t least ait down -Ual complalnll. Tnltteet meet It 7:30 p.m. In the Edllon Rici> caletcrls. Glen Dysln(er. a d I 1 t r I c t ad- mlnUlraU .. aalalaot, Ayl the choice l)'ltem ii Dot IO arbltnry u 1 musJve lhUI In diltrlct bo•nd11riea. In 1111 cue:, ft'a conslde~ 1 tem- Po'"'Y me...,. mull the dlltrlct ,_ • pe"""""'I llllutlon to ill OY<rCn>wded .. _ Moot ol the atientlon b .. been Jocuoed on the Fountalo Valley ca.It' beautt. with about 4.D lludenla, It b the blpdl hl3t ICbool ln the ...... Crowded clJurooms lltt -.IJO • prob- ~ at Wntmtmtu. Edllon a n d M•rlna. bch llC'hool la OYtr Ute S,000-llllde>t capacfly lor wbldl It wu bullL million in five years and $2 millioo ln 10 years." The aide said BattJn'• stand wu to be "fair to Adelante but to ttmain con- cerned about the economle -ol government." Csspers was in hL!i office today for the fll'!t time u far u anyone could delennlne since last Wednesday but bis 'secretary said he was "In conference ... The board chairman waa not available for comment to the prea or to the public either by telephone or In penon. Huntington Man Saved After Dive By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. o.tlr,. ..... A bulking Huntington Beach man, paralyzed after a pier dive into shallow water, was saved early today wbea • Newport Beach Police helicopter officer leDped into the sea 1t11d towed him UO yards to shore wblle bottling currenta. Observer Officer Doug Webster ns credited with saving the life of WUllam kldell, 29, of ZtJ Huntington SI., Hun- ' lloCtan Beacb-Communlty Relatlom OUicor Stan Breultr Aid the dramatic alr«e ,_ was lliagtred at :t : 10 1.m:, wt th • h'an.- 1 tlc call lonn M.araaret Muench, 1 tnmd o' RldolL She laid Ibey ,,.re 1troDlng m Newport P1er when her date decided to K<.o for a 1wim -fully clothed -BDd dove from the "ructure into fairly ahalJow water. Authorities at lloag Memorial Holltal listed Ridell In .erlous condltioa ~ niomin1, e/gh( hours alter the trqtdy, as they attempted to determ.lne the 11~ tent ol hlJ neclc and splnal Injuries. He bas aullered oome parolyals but M ta not yet known wbelber It 11 temporary or pennanent. T- D!Jpalchod to bunt the pltr dive YI<> Um, belJcopter pflot Jim Golloo - low over alfahoro aweilJ ID the cbo!ll>« known u 43 Adam and Weboler spollod RldeU about 150 yards CJlllboR. He WH lloltJnc lace down, lndlcatlllc "" had poulbly drowned already, ~ cording to the heUcopter crew. No lime was !ell lo dlapatdi a IJJeguard patrol boat, ., Ofllcer Webster stripped all hit (1111, bobler, -and belt, climbed out on ooe Pontooa aad rr1ade hlt nnt rescue lflp. Hil partner fint lowered the bel~ to about 15 fed 1hoYe the tea, which was whipped by the ~r'1 rotor wulL Officer Webeler toolt the panlyied leaper In tow -hll m-toot, lour-Inch, 240-pound frame made buvler by nw- aoalied c:lotbrs, M1d bepn methodlcallY lwimmln&towanl.-.. PoUce cars DI • ambalmcoie wer. walllna and ,_.. helped haul Ibo llrlcken Rldlll out ol Iba sf IOd carry blm "" 1 -!or Ille nee to floq M.-W Hoopltal. N-rt Beoch onlered their pollco f llot llDa/E, ..... ll Miss Thompson, a lreahman drama student at Ohio Wealeyaa University, aalll she enlered the campw1 coot.st llOcause ol the 1100 flnt prize. wblcb she needed ''very badly to gel to ~· (bor home town) to -my boy !riml." Committee Attempting to Revive Community Unit 111e onlJ"campw1 DOI puWd to Ila Juli limlla II lluntJnctoo Beocl> lflclt. whon! ...-r.blo .-ructloo -.It II - In J;;f- PILOT AD GETS 'TONS OF CALIS '""' DAILY PIWf _, aell ad- ....Wlng ..._ by Ille pound, but the adYertlser ..... plaoed the followlnl ad oaJd tt Sol ·-ol caJIL" a.ct tbll : * * YEARLY. 2 trs - lrptc, port4' rum,. -Only mo. Call U:X•JIXIQt. Tine tines ol adverUlillf, -o( c:aJll aod the property was ttllted oa tbe lf!IC'o ood day. '11Jal'I Iba IC°'1 ol tlU -clauUled ad. Haw maey "pounds" al l'OIU!ll do you wanL Call MMm and wt'll deU-. A special ad hoc .....Uttee ll at- temptlnf to nYive the dormaal Hun- llnatoo Beach CommunllJ Cenl<l'. lleaded by Len Ewen, youtll aervfces -with Iba b1lh -dlalrfct. Ibo ........itlel II plmmtnc a tr.lb ap- proacb to -the •arlety al probleml -baNW by tlto old community -· 1'0w 11n1 lob II to -Ibo -al the -•llJ," EWW1 uplalal. "Olloe .,. .., uU down the -, wo'lt be nadJ to --~ for a ... ....,. . ha and about ........ lndl•lcluall hope to -blllb .. mnbrella otpnb.o- dml wbldl DOI oaly ut1al1to opeclal ii> --ol lbe '"""'1unlly, u the old -did, but mlsbl allO lnvol•e I nrtetr ol """"1 ..-ta al Ibo ...,,. IocatW. ' ' ' ' tradltlonel melbod re. llllwtnr Ibo ptGIJlerll .... .. arllltrary boundar7 ---ai""11 -becam1 M wu arl>ltnry," o,.lnpr a· plalned today. "But w .. sM pooplo Iba -al al· tendiat a 1'"' <IOwded -lbeJ cu •1 really mmpfala," ht •kl ,.,....., and .... -"111 ..... the --1"" -1 ._...i te -~ ....... al1'c1ancl .. a -· ,,,., -· bowevtr • .._a -more aowded .111111 Iba -lber -aonnallr auend. Dr~r Ald Ille -lntber « -a -mJclll --.. atlmd Ibo --.. Ille ,...,.., a1t>liol. W Ila or • - Tllo -polellll11l1 IOUCllr -· alhlotlcl. ... -deond lhnluP the Co1llonlla lnlmd>ol11tlc Fadtrallaa 1 ... CAMrtlS, hp It ..... _ , r=-.. ': - - .._. " t111 • " --, --. . .,.,., '' -.... ......... r.v " =..~ : --. --, ........... ,. --................ == : -. -' ....... --. • " ¥ondar, Oet«ier t, lt12 UP'I Ttlefi!Mll9 Tiriiig t;o11ipetitio1a Fresno service station operator La~rrence Banks trains for the 1976 Olympic tire moving competi- tion . The trick is to keep up \Vith the rolling tires, \Vhile dodging buildings, dogs. or any obstacles. From Pagel CAMERAS ... takes pictures of the sa me quality as today's Instamatics; a ten pound brass and glass.}'rench lens from 1855; and the fi rst K8d'ak box camera, "the one that slarted everything." One ot his more notable cameras - though it is not especially valuable -is a small. very lighlv•eight movie camera used to shoot the classic "llunchback of Notre Dame" in the 1930s. "When the hunchback went crawling around on top of the steeple tops, !he hea vy old cameras couldn't get up there," \Voods explains. "So they used this old Sept,'' he con- tin ues. removing an unobstrusive little box from an upper shelf. "You can see it's real light and though they had to reload it fairly often, the steeple jacks they hired to shoot those rooftop scenes got the job done real well.'' Another unusuaJ camera. however. re- m.aim the 80rrow of Woods' latter years. "Before I got started in this col- lecting," be says, "I once passed u~ a chance lo buy the camera that Admiral Byrd had used to make his first trip to the South Pole. Boy, if l'd only known what it would be worth because \'OU know, I could have got Jt for only $25.;. Mooey, in fact. isn't the biggest prob- lem in buying old cameras. Locating them is. At the height of bis camera collecting days, Woods often rose at 5 a·m. and spent bis whole weekends going to swap meets, pawn shops, antique dealers and junk shops. ' ''You never toow where you 're going lo have luck," he says. "I've been known to 10 around just knocking on doors if the house looted old enough to have some good cameras In It." Woods says that cameras are getting harder to come by as time goes on. Neighborhoods like Bunker Hill in Los Angeles, ooce kieal for odd finds:, are slowly disappearing, and others like them are getting run down. Also, be says, "there's too many amateurs. people v.·ho just want to talk about them. 1bey're not serious, like I am." Car Windows Riddled NORWALK IAP ) -Va ndals using pellet or BB gum broke or damaged about 100 car windows in a five-square- miJe area or IOUlh Whittier and La Mirada, sberifri deputies said today. 1be damage was done in the shooUng 1prtt early Sunday, lhe deputies said. OUHI COAST N• DAILY PILOT 'Tt. onir,.. c..t DAIL 'f l'tU)"f ""9t ~ .. ~ h H-.l't11Sa,, II "*"'*' .., ... Or ..... CMtt l"vl!lllMflt ~ . ..,.. f111t «111 ....... -'llMll· ~ ~ Frldrt, ,.,. Coll• M .... , H"""'°'1 k~, H!Mtl,,._ BMdl/l'~•ln V•lltoy, L"'- ~ frvlM/J.afllll~ Mrf .St" Cll'nw11rt1 $IN' J-C..Oltll'-A tl!ltl,. f-Oillnfl Hltlon ~ M llMM 1.elurdtY• •rw:I $\l'>dt~1. Tll9 Jllf'tMIMI PllltlWllrll ~I It ti la wnt .. ., $trRt, ea.ta Mw, C•HtDmU., nue, lt•Mrt N. W • .d P'Tinl!Hnt ... l'll&lllfltr J•cli •• C11rley VQ '""""" -0-11 Mell9tw Tiiemes k'11•il ...... n...,,,, A. Mvrphiit• M-tM1'"9 Mltw C\erl11 H. &..e1 •ic.lt•r4 P. N•n ANkfMI AUlwllnl IEllltton 1.,,., c • .,;u, w... 0,.,.. """"' ,,,,.. ............... Offktt 17111 ••• , ....... ,,.,,,., M1UI .. ~,. •• I r.o .••• 7f0, 92641 --~ hltfl· m ,.,. .. , """"""' ~ c..i. .-...,, :aa •,::!;.~r ,,, ... ,.,,..... 9"cftl .. twlftoard '9lt c.n.ttl at NW!tt I C.fftlr4 ill ... , ... , •••• (714, '41-41!1 C._WW A"'•l'hllll '41·1671 .. ,..., ,..,. ..... c..ty c.~ .......... -!Ht QIJff.. tm. ~ CIMtt "'*""' ... ~. "" ............. '""''"''""" .......... ........ tf ...,.,.IHl'Mrltt. IWrftl !MY' ....................... ..... ,,,,... of ~ ""'*'· ..... ~ ...... ,.... .. Cttt• .w-. C.llWtit. ...,..,..... W . Cln"ltr IJ,61 """""""' ., 11\e!f ..... ~ "'"'"" ................ Mlllltftll'. • Air Cal Ope1is Cut-Rate Route To Ontario Area Air California has aMounced the open· ing of a new route between Orange Coun· ty and Ontariv and the inauguration of a \\·eekend cut·rate fare. Airline spakesman Jim Phelan said the ~n.tario flight is the extension of an ex· 1st1ng route between Oakland and San Jose. "Up to now, we have been carrying pa~st!ngers to Ontario from Oakland-San Jose via Orange County but we have not been able to board passengers for 0 .• lrio at Orange County," he explained. "This new route enables us to take o'n passengers here for Ontario without ad- ding any flights into or out of Orange County." The one-way fare for the 1.S·minute flight is $5.40 including federal trans- portation tax. John A. Hoist Rites Wednesday Funeral services will be held Wednes- day ~or John A. Hoist, a long·tlme Huntington Beach resident who died Fri- day. He was 57. Mr. Hoist had lived in Huntington Beach city since 1940 and worked as a sel!~mployed carpenter. He is survived by his sons, Carl J ., Scott V .• Paul A. and Mark J. Hoist ; a daughter. Nancy M. Harper. all of Hun- tington Beach, and two sisters. Irene Bellar, of Lakewood and Atadellne Cash of Las VegM. · Services will be held at ti a.m. at Smith's Mortuary Cbapel, Huntington Beach with intennent to follow at \\'estminster ftfemorial Park. From Page I CAMPUS ... (Clfl. Dysinger said. There is no problem for freshmen athletes attending a schoof when they don't live in its boundary. Upperclassmen cannot transfer without sitting out of sports for a year. Dysinger said the district would have to develop careful plans and guidelines to insure that it does not appear there Is any athletic recruiting involved in .any of the frosh athletic choices. He said the district would work out ttie transportation System when school starts next £all. The preliminary plan is to bus students from their "home" campus to the cam· pus they choose to attend. From Pagel AD HOC ••• p.m., Wednesday, in the conference room at Huntington Beach High School 1be committee has sent letters to 30 or 4-0 local residents to ,.. who mighl be In- terested in helping with reorganization. A survey, listing potential needs of the (.'()mrnun.ity, has also been written with the hope residents will fill It out and In- dicate what they would like to see the center accomplish. Other committee members include: Nancy Noble, Orange County Day Care Center; Jessie Martin, Read Start; Hayward Parrish, from the £onner com· munlty center; Jim Tenu, Orange Coun- t) Drug Abuse Program; Dr. Eric Auerbach, t.be coanty mental health division. Also, Ann McClean, county Probation Department; Myrtle Stinson, from the former community center; Lorra!ne Adler, county Child Protective Services: Kathleen Hudson, c o u n t y WeUare Department; Laurie Peck, resident ; Vic Subia. city Fire Department, and Bruce Willia ms, public relations for Golden West College. Going Vp--ala, Dow1a !he Twin Towers or "Torres de Colon" are two new skycrapers t>e.. tng constructed In Madrid from top to bottom. Tho contra! part.! ol ~h• buildings, which will eventually house the elevators, were built 1n lhe normal way, but now serve .as towers for platforms which wUt descend as the work progresses. .. -1';'." ---· -.. . . ·-- Khrushchev Daughter. Succumbs . By HENRY SllAPERO MOSCOW (UPI) -A chance stroll In J\1oscow's elite cemetery, the former Novo-Devichy (New Maiden) convent, has disclosed the previously unannounced death ol the youngest daughter of the late Soviet pnimier, Nikita S . Khrushchev. The daughter, Elena N. Khrushchev. 35, died three months ago without recognition and unbeknown to the overwhelming majority of Soviet citizens who never heard of her even when her father was the supreme ruler of this country. My confirmation or her death came by chance during a walk in the cemetery. The crude, flat stone on her grave told a simple story. "Elena Nikitlchna daughter of Nikita Khrushcheva. l!m-1972." She died July 14. Elena was the youngest o ( Khrushchev's four daughters. She bad studied law and journalism. She ap- parently never married. She was almost totally unknown to the Soviet people. flad she or any of her sisters or her brother, or even her mother, Nina Petrovna, walked across the Red Square-few if anyone would even have blinked with possible recogni- tion. The families and the private Jives or Soviet leaders are not known to t h e Soviet public. Elena 's death was not reported by any of the Soviet media. Nor did any of the media, with one exception, report the death ol her lather last autumn. It lfas not known previousJy but ft has since learned that an American doctor, Pro!. A. McGehee Harvey ot Johns Hopkins University, aecreUy came to Moscow some time before her death to treat Elena for a disease that could have been cancer. Although Harvey stayed with the Khrushchev family as. a house gueat for several weeks, his presence here ap- parently was not known to the U.S. em- bassy. Front Pagel CHASE ••• with his small car, known for its speed, l'raking: ability and maneuverability - and shot down Warner Avenue to Beach Jloulevard. By this time, O!flOO' Dennis Mebger was hot on the suapect's tail, but Witt spun a sharp U-turn at Blaylock A venue and Metzger -hia: patrol car brakes burnt out -piled Into the rear of the car. Ul'IT...._. "Divining Rod' Artist's drawing shows bow electronic beams ol Apollo 17's lunar --"> sounding system will probe the moon -down to three-quarters of .l a mile -to aid in developing subsurface geological maps pinpointing ~ •. possible· metal deposits and water. ) Wife Falls Under Husband's Auto, Crushed to Deatl1 A Sunset Beach couple 's evening of cords with friends ended in tragedy over the weekend when the wife apparently fell beneath the rear wheels of their car, Orangt. County Sheriff's officers said. Dorothy Lucille Randall, 60, of 16.512 23rd St., was pronounced dead on arrival at Long Beach Community Hospital shortly after being struck by a car being backed out of the garage by her husband, Neill Edward Randall, 57. Deputies said the Randalls were leav- ing the home of friends esrJy Sunday and he went to start the car while Mrs. Ran· dall was delayed in a discussion. Officers said Randall told them he looked behind him as he backed the auto down the driveway but could not see his wife. He said be felt a bump as be reach- ed the road and found his wife under the car when he got out to investigate. IJllipntians Plead NORWICH, England (UPI) -A am· vention of lilliputians: appealed to fellow Britons Sunday not lo call stunted people "dwarfs and midget"" They lald they were fed hp with being reg~ed as "something out of Snow White." With Frie11ds ' { Like That ... ; ' I Esprit de corps amoog Marines."; " can reach extremes at time.!!. ..:. ' Even if It means a broken jaw \ and head cuts. I' Police in San Clemente attested 1 ( to that over the weekend when they ) ~ responded to a local bar after • .r employes reported an tmCOOSCious ) patn.n. Officers found a sergeant from ~ Camp Pendleton UIJOOl1lclous on the t Door of the tavern and called for an J ambulance. ~ At San Clemente G en e r a l ~, ! Hospital, the loser in an apparent ! , fisUighl came to. J Police asked him who was respansible for the painful injuries. ! The victim refused to identify hia·: ,( ' • ' sparring partner and declined· to press any charges. -~ Officers said the victim gave one~ simple reason: .. "He's my best friend." Ff'OtllP .. eJ RESCUE". .. .. .. i ~ ' ' ' ~ helicopter equipped with pontoons in an-. ticipatioo that it ~'Ould be requittd for { use in sea rescues such as the predaft incident today. 1 ·:l ! Officer Web,,ter and other helicopter {' crewmen are also trained in aquaUg rescue techniques but today's ~a~ operation was the first one for Webster. • ~ , ) : I I I I ' I Another ad was prepared for this space to· day, but we had a fire early Monday morning. l ' ( . " '• ' ( PRICES SLASHED ON ALL NEW APPLIANCES • IF YOU DON'T MIND CLEANING THE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HA VE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. EVERYTHING MUST MOVE FAST to make room for clean-up and redecorating •'WASHERS • DRYERS 0 REFRIGERATORS • TELEVISIONS 0 STOVES 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA ·' " • " , l ' ' \ , ' ,... "· • I •• " 'I \, I ( j .f '1 I ( ' I I DAILY PILOT Briggs Tells Butz: Be at Hearing Tuesday From 1llro -Nlomblymaa John v. Bi1IP (JI,. Fulltrtm) wants U.S. Secn11r7 of Agrlcullln Earl Bull to t.otlly btfcn 1111 A8embly A¢cullln Qirnmllleo 1'1ood'1 In Loi ........ II Buts -1 lliow, 8rtQI uld In a teiecram to Ibo cabinet ofllcer, be will ask the Lor Anl•la SUper1or Court lo compel his atlendance. FallJDi that, he will aat the ser1eant·at-1m11 to brfna Buts In. 'Ille ....... to -.., Brtaa lollaw- ed. -Tbundq In -In wlllcb u.. Orqa OollDt1 ..., .. _ at. templed to -a aJbpoeoa .., t b e federal --But Brtaa .... --.., _ -..-. and u.. ...._. feD lo the ·0oar. a4111 ti.r. '111undaJ'• ac- tion CClllllltutec. • aenlq of tho -poeoa, BrlQI added, "It II a clarit day when a cautcrnla le&lllllor ca-talt II· a federal official. "I am alao amazed that secret aervice agents woolil be lnltruct.d to ph)'llcally pr<vtOt ... from -1"1 thll - VU'lltlon. Mt. BuU will !eel on obUptlon to appear, u I am sure be will no1 put hlmlelt a b o v ~ Calltomil law," the Aalembl)'lllalo declared. At iAue II the federal govtrnmen1'1 controvenlal poultry eradication pro-- gram designed to prevent the spread of Newcastle disease ln C:. .ornla. AJ chairman of the Assembl y Agriculture Commlttee, Briggs \vants Butz to attend the Los Angeles meeting which II belnl held to air pooltrymen'• complaintl thtt they are oot rec:elvina suttlcitnt compensation for their flocD which are beln& deatroyed lo cbect the spnoad or the dlseaa<. Briggs aald he oxpe<ted Buts to an- nounce a new federal guarantee of $3.50 per bird dtlttoyed at a preas confertnce last 1bursday. "When the conferen<e had concluded, it .,.. .• ,apparent that such an announcement wag not forthcoming." the assemblyman said. '"l'hls left me w i I h no other 1llemative .han to serve !he &ubpoena ait I bad forewarned (Slate Secretary of Aa:ricullure Ja~sl S1earn! and (Direc· tot or Agriculture Brunel I Christcn!Ol1 I wr.u.ld." tn addition to w h a t he caJls the pou!trymen's "Justified" request for higher compensation, Briggs also claim- ed that federal agents had paid more than tI00-000 to ovmers or illegal fiahling cucks that had been destroyed in the pro- gri;m. Briggs charged that !he flghnng cocks ·.,~re beln,l allowed to move lreelY hllo and out of the quarantined areat. "The llct of control by tbe wk force of birds In tho quarantine aru, pilll the ease of movemtnt of the vtrul and the many ca.1e1 or Inequitable trutmeal or thoae tn the pouhry tndUllry, cootinue to raise questions in my mind u to whether the proper •pp:-oach hat be<O tt.t.n tn controlling this virus," ti.! •Id. Tu esday''! comn1iuee hearing will be held ol 10 am. Jn the Old Stale BuUdJna:. 217 \\'. First St. Jn Room 115. Kissinger • Ill 'Sensitive' Peace Talks ·Mur der Calendar Backs ~Death Penalty Argument Bv TOM BARLEY 6t .. .,.,,, ......... , IT'S DIFFICULT to argue with anyone opposed to the abolition j>f capital puni!bment when you've taken a good look at the chWlng Statistics provided by the Orange County Superior Court c:rlmlnal palendar for Friday, Oct 6, 1972. , Eighty-four persons were named in the files placed on Judge William Murray's bench. And 15 o! those defendants wtre charged : with murder. ; Three allegedly used their fists and boots to finish oU their victim. Ei~ht used firearms of v,ry· ing calibe£,'lwo used knives. one used a club and another used a po\verful oair of hands to squeeze the life out of a raped woman . They're all on the calendar as 187s -;-.the Penal Code classification included op the cr1m1nal calendar to enable clerks, judges. lawyers and nosy newsmen to pick out the wheat from the chaff of drug offenders. sundry burglars and as- a.tJU.aY sorted rapists and st!x offenders. FIFTEEN ACCUSED murderers in one day is a new record for a Superior Court c:rlmlnal calendar in this county. But the jud_ges, clerks, lawyers and deputies who chatted about it Friday agreed on one thing -it will soon be broken. • "What else do you · expect?" asked Chief Deputy Dl!trlct At.- lqt'ney James Enright .. You won't find •a lawman in this county or any other county who will be surprised at this development" His office fs presently working on 83 murder cases. And the vast majority of those cases have come into the hands of prosecutors sjJlce the death nenalty was abolished first by the California Sup- t.!me Court and belatedly by the United States Supreme Court. • I PROS ECUTOR PAT BRIAN is probably the most eloquent and ffhement spokesman in the District Attorney's office on the topic qt capital punishment. • 111 don't just want to see it restored." said the trier of several ~ent murder cases. "I want to see someone pull the switch, get lbese people out of here and very quickly demonstrate to the public Oiat yes, indeed, the death penalty is a deterrent." : It's also interesting to note that we have six women awaiting trial for murder -also the highest number in Superior Court his- tory. : A PSYCHIATRIST, who cannot be identified because he Is in· v.olved in one of those cases, believes this increase Indirectly stems from the abolition ol the death penalty but in a way that can only be applied !<> the feminine psyche. , "Women deplore violence," he said. "And when they do com- JJlit violent acts, even murder, they feel a sense of justification that is rareJy evident in a man and almost always point out that they 't'ere driven to kill -usually by a man ." , "Death as an ultimate puni shment has alwa:vs been a much creater deterrent to a woman than a man ," he said. "Now it hN been removed and, I think, this has idded to woman's almost ln· evitable sense of justification for any violent act she commits." • MALE OR FEMALE, it's still murder. And you can hardly blame Superior Court ballffs for wanting tc put a new sign on the door of Judge Murray's Department Five. It will very limply read: "Murder, Inc." Great Seot ·Double Bigamist Gets 18 Mo nths LONDON (UPI) -In 11 years, Andrew Galbraith collected five wives, f11.thered 1i• children and became a two-- time bigamist. "I'm no C&sanova or a great lover, .. protested the 31.year-old Scot before a oourt ... -him to Iknolllb im- prllonment !or hll ......S blpmy of· f ..... PGll<o aald tbe boyllb·lookin1 Gallnltb, a hotel portor, -lo the cbarp after bll .,.-wife cl IO moatbl, Mary FttitMii, 11, amweted a t~ call -llrldpt TarteJ, .....,. be mmied lut .,..,, !kith W'OIDal !Misted tbq wt!l"I UMtL Galbnlth." Pfllce 11id Gallnllb !Int commillod bigamy ID Jtll, l1ll"1iDC laobtl l.yan wbllo he wio atlll wed lo -liod -nte; He WU Jalled for Iii -be laobtl hau..,. clllld 117 bbn and -IDd lour. Aller the two womtn "dlvorctd" him, he 111arrted Vlvtennl ll<AAdn. 'l1loy bad a <;bll•i and ,,... divorced two )'tarl i.ter. "It doeln'I aurpriM mo be'• tabn otlMI' poople In with bll bll blue -and chi¥11b -... aald VMenM, wlla No. S. .. loarnlnC of bio latlll --Uoe, wif• No. I, dlnP'ffd. "I ·can't aee what anybod1 would see tn Andrew," she nld. "I cani even rtl"l'lember what I NW In him. He's J\aJt a wee fellow and cert.inly no omar Sbarl! when It comes to looks." 8aid llObel, wile No. 1: "lie doesn't give a damn for oil the hwtbr<al< he keepc c.autlng." Bridget, wile No. 4, aaid : "Hll life wouldnl be wutll livlnl now ll I could get my bandl OD blm." Mary, wile No. 5 wbo II -1111 Galbrattb'a cblld, aald: "I'll wait for blni and -wUl pt manled -be pta • divorce.." Said Gallnftb: .,,,. tnable -!' 11...,.. -lo 1et ~ -beJns manled for a-and I Pl ... , --.... macil ... pl manted all the time." Son of ~layor Slain M!!lCIC.W. -lco (AP) -Mnican autboriU.. ,..... boldlllll today a aell· employed --In tbe atsytos ot tllt -cl tho .,,_ cl Mabll, lllll<o. Offldala llid i!undl1 tlltt - -"'-•• -o111.,..--. 11aoo Nor!op, -abot cMotl lo blo cl· 11c:o at U.. 11-Allwlcan Ollbnl RelltloN lnlttlulo of llllldl be .... tbe director. Gir l Saved By Father Fro m Tige r OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -An angry Sumatran tigress which attacked a S. ye&r!<>ld girl at the Omaha Zoo was ..,..tied down by tbe child'• lather befon! Ibo girl WU l<l'iollsly burl. Jolm C4rdner, a carpenter, clamped a wmtllnl bold &mday night OD tba an1mal -bad -his daughter, Liia, by the bead ond dragpd ber !or about ID !eel LiWe Lisa ond her molber, who was alighUy injured while trying to keep the. tiger away from tbe girl, were treated at an Omaha hospiW and releued. It took an estimated 20 stitches to close Lisa's wounds. Mn. c.ordner had three stitcbet taken in her arm. The si.J:-mon~ld tigress leaped from its grotto - a "barless cage" at the zoo -apparently after being provoked by a bystander. The big cat returned volun- tarily to another grotto after being sutr dued by Cordner. Zoo officialt said it jumped Into a transfer crate lowered Into tbe grello "to bide." Dr. Lee Simmona, director ol tbe Henry Doorley Zoo, aald tho tllJ9I WU angered by a woman vlaitor to tba IOO. He aald wlblesaes nporled that tbe woman -"unfortunately lhe was unldentilled" -apponntty wu trying to recover • pbotograpll wblcb bad dropped Into tbe grotto tbe Ugress abared with a considerably older male tiger. ''The woman began Jabbing at the cats with this long stick," Simmons said. "This upset the two cats, particu larly the young female. · "I doubt that the cat could have made that jump if she hadn't been very ex· cited. Anlmala are capable of doing a lot of ~· when they are excited or scared.' ' Simmons estimated the tigren' weight at 20-25 poundt. but Cordner put ii at about 10 pounds. "It'• bard lo bellev1 In the middle of tho United States that ooe can be at· tacted by a tiger," Cordner aald. "I atlli can't believe It." Mrs. Cordner 18.ld abe WU "scared ' • • frozen ltiff. II A DeWllllln wbo visited the Cordner home 1n nearby Bellevue aSked Lisa, whose head was nratbed in bandages. Vi'hetber she had ever seen a tiger that close before aDd whether she would like to see a ttaer again. To both questions. Lisa replied. "No '' Five Persons Die On County Roads During W eekend A -Alla-.. W11 trued SU!iday In a Sao Dleto ........, acddent, bring· Ing the weebnd trafde toll in Or1nge County lo ftva. The ooraner'1 office reported ti1n:. Either Hernande%, 20, of SU N. Wertem Ave .. Santa An•. WU de•d on •rTIVlll at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital early Suodly after the cir drivep by her hu11· band Leonard. 21. went out ol CQl'ltrol on the San D~go F'reeway near ~1oulton PtrtwaJ, the hlghwlly pat'ttll reported. Raoahl N. Klwata. !4. of 419 A I Ith St .. J-luntlngton Bt~ch. died early SaturdAy from injuries rtttived Jn 11 Garden (',rove acddent and KeMy ri.1edelln, 3, ol Oovtn..a. died Saturday when he was thrown from a car driven b)' Belinda Chandler of Covina on the Santa Ana Freeway at Qalvtr Drive. Meonwtine. a ~ye•M>id Soulb i.o,una womao pedestrian who was killed Sltur· day nllht In I Coa•t IUiltnY acddeot nur her home ba1 beta Wtnlified 11 Martll'tt F. Taylor, ol 11141 Vlrllnts W11:y. 'Thf hllh'l\'IY patrol Pld lbt WU ltruck b) 1 v11n driven by Shane T. Bucbe, 21. of 124 de le Gn11!1. San Qemeate. A finh "..tend tt1!11e '1cllm mnalnt ~kttatUied. The. corootr'• offk» 11W a man about IO yean old died cl rnuaiw lotomal In- . juries after bel"i llnlCk tul1 Satw.sa1 by a blt·Nl ftllide on tbe Slota Ano rrMWIY Dtar BrookhW'll Strttl A _,., depltl' Mid tbue ,..... no ldmtll1catlaa popen ... tba ~ ond tho mill' clua -tbe lttlln • .,. ... I T· dlir1. ,,...,,nits .... taken to lid In dttormllllna tba idendl1 cl tbe rictirn. lust Chums It's a face only a mother could love. Well, she's nol his mot.her. She's a chimp trainer at the San Diego Zoo. But that's prelly close. His Love fo r Old Tr ain Cost Oivner His Fortune Speculation Has Thieu On Way Out PARIS (UPll -Presidential adviser Henry A. Ki.sslnger held a second day of secret negoti~tions with the North Viet- namese today. talks that have reached a "sensiUve" st.age in t.be quest for pea~ In Vietnam. The Whitt H-aald Ibero would be an unprecedented lblnl meeting oo ~ day. PnoiJenlial Prell s.cr.tary Rooald L. Zl .. ler r<luled any COIJllllall I D Wubington on whether the fate of South Vietnamese Preskient Nguyen Van Thieu was the malr snag hole.Una: up agree- ment . The communists have demanded Tlheu'1 ouster; Thieu tn lhe past has refused. Kissinger was accompanled by lotaj. Gen. Alexander Haig, his deputy who just returned from Saigon and iecret talks there with Thieu. They were meeting wilh Le Due Tbo, a member or the North Vietnam "'1In& PoUtburo, who ,....uy vllited Hanoi, Petlng and Moacow, and Xuao Thuy, the No. I Hanoi negotlalor In Patil. Both American and South -sources in Saigon Aid Frtday tbat I plan was under discussion whScb would permit Thieu ta step down ln fator cl Sen.. Nguyll1 Van Huyeb, --of U.. - Vietnamese senatl and a farmer la• partntr of N(UYtn Huu Tho, an omct.al of the Viet ConJ "provtskmal row:mmenl" The IO\lrtel 18ld the p11n1 alao callad for tot11 I U.S. w:lthdrnw1I: wttbdnwal ol Nonh Vletname:x fol'C6 from South Vletn1tm . and the frttlnl of American prlsnner11 of "'ar Tt>cre also would be a Com munist proml!e 10 ner<>tlJlte aeriousty in Paris. tht sourtts said. The South Vietn.ameu and Arnute1na dismiastd !he S.la:or reports 11 ··spcculati\·e. ·· Ziegler. 111 a news brte:nna ioda.J', refu~ to c.harncte:rize the Parts tllb In LONDON (UPI ) -Alan Pegler's love But he said he lost Sl .8 million on lhe ;ony way and refused comment on tuur becaule he could not sell e.thlblUon whether there had been any cblnce in lo;· an old steam locomotive cost him his the u .S. position. The United Ste* bu f space on the train. ortune. "My love for that eqtne hu ruined me supported Thieu and rejected C«n""'""* Pegler, 50, returned to England Sunday financially," Peeler uld u bll daqhttt, demarlil he be ousted. and tiled a bankruptcy petition after f'enny, 19, te1rfll.Uy embraced him when "We would entlclp1te • third daJ ol touring America with his beloved "Flying ht-arr ived by ahlp ln SOutbampton. meetinCI but I wW ha .. '° wait to bfar' Scotsman," one of Britain's last steam "The Amerlcam were tttmeDdou.sly from JC1ainCer before 1 ~ mnf1rm U." trains. impressed," he Wd. "But our uporten 1Jecler said.. In 1963 he paTa $7.500 ror 1ne 46-year· and the British tourist authorities falled Re Wd It w11 °very unJlkety the talb old locomollve and it:: eight cars to save to realize the potential and J did not aet would go Into " fourth d1y . me1n1n& that it from the ~rap heap. Then he took ii on the backing J anticipated. Klulna:tr and HaJa: would return to a 12.(1()1).milc 1oor of the United States. "I flied my pet!Uoo 1n bankNJ)tcy Wubln&ton Tuelday ni&ht lo br1ef Prell· Pegler. "'ho Inherited e. fortune fro1n becau&e It ectmcd sensible and loalcal . ' dent Nlion. hi: f;imil y's rubber and plastics business. Pegler sa.ld. "SOme people credlton ha ve Later. It wu tonfinned lhlt I tbln1 sai<l he h11.d hoped to tum the train into ft been waiting two or three ytan for their day of taJU ~Id be hekS Tut:may. 1 ollin1 exhibition for British i!ood!'i .and money and I cannot keep them on a 11tt talta man the ltlh Ume Klsllnett touri::.•m::.· __________ _:•::.•ri::."i~lo::.reve.:::.;::;r._" ________ ::.1w=.::;to1::.m::.1e::.to_P_1_r1a_to_nqotla_::; __ to_. __ _ ~Bieyele Boll Call~ ~&J@fJ@ W I NDSOR. or MlXICO or SWITZIRLAND the Volk~C~c le Best OF GER MANY • CORSO ID the OF ITALY AZllKt OF JAPAN MUNDO ·cYCLE OF GERMANY ATALA West -OF ITALY OF FRANCE liiPiir .. All Siii!Ci 673-5051 Opolt We4. tl>N -t:JO 19 5:30, ~ T-. e r•r ,,.., • .....,a..- Balh oa Bieyeles 2120 W est Ocean Front I lllk. Wnt of Mow,.., ,._ • • I I i I I I I I I I ... • , -iJ DAILY PILOT -I I I I I Allied Village Held --R eds Occ up y T hree Ham"lets Near Saig on Just Blame It On Columbus OCEANS BLUE DEPT. -It is com· moo practice these days for some Great Thinker to cast his eyes upon one of our heroes ol the past and then put the knock oo the poor fellow . SAIGON !AP) -From 2IO to SOO North Vletnan><>e and Viet Cong still held Huong Phuong village and three hamlets 15 to 20 miles oorth of Saigon to- day despite heavy air strikes. The enemy force occupied the hamlets on Friday and Huong Phuong on Satur· day, cutting Highway 13 between Saigon and a big South Vietnamese military headquarten at Lal Khe, 30 miles north or the capital. "I DON'T think anyone regards t b e threat to SS!gon it.seU as significant because of the relative capabilities of the two sides," said. one U.S. 80Ul'te. "The South Vietnamese territorial forces and regular units have good denfensive capabilities. The North Vietnamese units are still under strength from previous combat. They are stU !capable of terror, attacks by lire, sapper attacks and perhaps small infiltration efforts, but the likelihood ol any main attack on Saigon ls ralbu remote." Other American and South Viemam... officers thought the small-scale attacks might be designed to keep go"'1!1menl lroop.'I busy while larger enemy forces slipped P'l!t into positions for attacks on sU<:h Important targets as the big ba,. at Bien Hoa, Saigon and Its Tan Son Nhut Air Base. U.S. WI BOMBERS attacked troop positions, base camps and inflltratlon routes on all sides of Saigon. Some of the raids were only four miles east of Huong Phuong and of Highway 13. Despite the secret Vietnam peace talks in Paris, the United States al.9o kept up its heavy air strikes across North Viel· nam. and the Communist forces showed no signs of pulling back from battlefields in South Vietnam. "We are cooUnuing to carry on the Christopher Columbus, who generally gets credil !or discovering tbe New World, has been no exception. Today we celebrated Columbus Day, We honor the fellow who found oor place. So we fly some flags and a few folks get to take the day off. Beyond that, the Great Thinkers often take over and poor old Chris Columbus comes out on the short end. Crowds Encouraging Certain of these historians are quick to suggest that Chris was a late comer to the New World, having been beaten to the mark by people such as Eric the Red or some other Viking who had stronger oarsman on his port side, and thus pad· d1ed astray and stumbled into the New World fll'St. McGovern Setting Sights On 8 'Important'. States OTHER SAVANTS PUT the knock to poor old Chris as being nothing more than a Born Loser who bumbled about and got lucky. They note that before Columbus struck it rich in 1492, he got kicked out of several pala<:es where he was attempting to gather up some cold cash to finance his exploration. The king of Portugal, for example, gave him the boot out the front door in 1484 when Chris came seeking some Long Green. SO HE FlNALL Y got lucky with King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain. Even then. some hi storians have little time for Columbus . They point oot that the rov1d ies who feared they would float oft the edge of the fl at world almost took over the boats. Additionally, they note that Chris never really got into New York Harbor anyhow. He struck landfall at the Bahamas in· stead. And on top of all that, they allege that Chris thought he was really going to hit shore in Japan and the Americas just happened to get in his way. In Ord'"' to support the thesis that Columbus wu just a stwnblebum. these historians even quote the poor chap when he wrote of bis great adventure to King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella in 1502. In that missive be declared that .. neither reason, nor ma.thematics nor JD1111S were of any use to me" in the discovery el the Americas. He said be came upon it by prophecy found in the Bible. 111US THE AN'n-Columbus types in· sist that poor old Chris admitted that he just Dopped around the ocean ai.m1essly and got luclty In the end. Wen, you can always find somebody who will get their kicks by putting the U.Ck on. our heroes. Any day now, I expect tbe en- vironmentaJists will jump on the Knock Columbus Bandwagon. I can just hear tbem now. First, they'll say if it wasn't for Olris, we woUldh't have all this smog. After all , he pract1cally invented the lust for moblllty, didn't he! People kepi wanting to go places. Thus we invented the automobUe. And after that, we invented. smog. AND DOW ABOUT the shoreline and how it's been clobbered up with all that building? And who planted the Ont stick in the land here? Columbus, that's who. The father of Overbuilding. If he'd just kept lib three litlte sailboals away from the place, it wouldn't be all jammed up like it is now. He probably polluted the first bay, too. So follls, today Wal Columbus Day. And )Ult remember. U the~• anything you doo't llke about society lheoe dlyl, just point your linger. Blame tt on poor old Chris. Eveeybody elre does. WASillNGTON (UPI) -Encouraged by incttasingly larger crowds at every stop, George S. McGovern today resumed lib pursuit of the presidency, embarking on a coast-to-coast campaign that will lake bim through the large states he must carry to defe2t President Ni.tm. The week-long swing opens with a Columbus Day parade in New York City today and ends wilb a jammed three-day schedule in California next weekend. IN THE SPAN of a week, McGovern will cempaign in states that bold 196 electoral votes, including members of the so-called "big eight" like New York , Michigan, Pennsylvania, Illlnois, and California. The Democratic presldentW candidate enjoyed one of bis brief respites from the campaign Sunday, lnlemlpled ooly by the taping of a major televlaion broad- cast on Vietnam. McGovern left 1115 suburban home to tape the program in the Capttol offices of Senate Democratic Leader M l k • ManSfield. He Indicated. In advance, that the ~e program, scheduled for UPI TtlffMI• Ret!ltue Described The pilot of a luxury yacht billionaire Howard H u g h e s uoed to get from Nassau in the Bahamas to Miami described what the redUS<! looked like to a SUnday Herald artist. 4:30 p.m. (PDT) Tuesday, would hold no surprises. McGovern bas said repeatedly, that II elected, he would withdraw ell U.S. ( CAMPAIGN '72 ) forces from Indochina within 90 days of his inauguration, with no conditions at· tached. Backed by historical precedence, McGovern feels that North Vietnam will release all U.S. prisoners-al-war once American forces are withdrawn. ALTHOUGH FAR behind in the polls and facing a financial pinch, McGovern wa> deeply encouraged last week by the huge crowds that turned out for him in a swing from the East to the Midwest. He drew an ..tlmated 75,000 In Boston's Post office square, jammed downtown Buffalo, paclted the Livestock Pavilloo in Des Moines, Iur<d ZS,000 to Union State In Kamas City, and 30,000 more to an outdoor rally In St. 1.rois. Over the ....,kend, McGovern Issued another In a aeries of pos!Uon papers - this one dealing with energy and oll im- port quotas. McGovern urged an eod to quotas on oil imports and recommended that the United States buy and store cheap foreign oil as a hedge against "in· teroalional blackmail and interruption of supply." HE ALSO CALLED for phasing out of zpecial KUbsidies to the energy industry, including lax break>, and predicted this would stimulate the development of other non-cmventional energy sources. "The Nimn administration has sought to restrict oil imports, which would save comwners money, while on the other hand Ibey are urging higher prices and more government subsidies," McGovern said in a statement issued Sunday. DAILY PILOT DELI VERY SERVICE Dtll¥trJ of tht Dalty Piiot b vuarantttd M...S..,..,.rll:lllv• " you ., Mt ,.,.,.. ywr IWIMf tv •iao p.m .. c•ll •nd Yol/f copy wHI lie IM"WQM to """ l"1IJ. In flkltll 1111111 1:• p,m. S1ivns.y 1NI lurdty1 ff 'f'OU do 11111 r.alvt \'11\11" COO'I' ti'/' • 1.m. a.turOliy, or I 1.m. SvrM:11y, etll •NI 1 C09Y w!ll tM1 broV1J1!t tu vou. C.tll •r• ..,,In untll " 1.m.. MOii ~ CWrlty ........ •• . .. •• '°"4Jn Nlll1flwMt H_...!nv* ~ • .,,. ..... """"'... . ................. ,nt '911 ClllrMntt, CHltfr-9Mdl. '-'-c:a.tlll' .... 0-...Pellll, klvlfl UfUlll ......... Niimi .... tfMClt Cool Weather Across U.S. I I J I I I I I I I I ! T emperatures Dip into 30s; Slio·wers Hit Midwes t Tftllperatures IU1l!OttAI Wf&1Mt MW'l(l f0tt(.U1 M PAM l i1 ... •• f ) " .. n " .. " .. 11 "1~ It n " " .. .. ., " .. .... .. ,. . .. ,. ., .... .. .. .. .. " .. " .. " ,. ... ... " " " . u n " .. .. .. ., " " .. " .. " .. i; ;: : : • :l i : .. " " .. I "'"::tc ctt l"otlt ore.."' ~IM..c.ay Jt.W City, gty .. kM!orld. cir tt. L!Ml. Cit a.nu.: .. ~ a.~cdY ... -... " • .. .... 9 .. • ,.,,_ .. • ....... cdY .. .. n " _.,. .. " .. " 'T..,.._ dr t) .. .. " WMl'lf..-,dr 10 Q n • . v.s. s ... ..,,, ~ •• n • ..::::;..~..:'!?'IJ'3. ft n ., " " r.:t • .:... •• ~= ~ -- same operations aa we have all along," sald one American aource. "We Jllve bid no dlrectl""" in do anything dillerent. 'lllere It no. lndlcatlon that any ol the 14 North Vletpamese dMslonJ In South Vietnam are pulling out, withdrawing or diseonUnuing offensive operationa ... The B52s dropped nearly 3,000 tons of hombs Sunday and today on munitions sU>ckpUes, troop positions and supply lines near the North Vietnamese cities of Vlnh and Doog llol and around Saigon. VIN1I IS 141 mil.. north of the DemUltarl..ted 1.one; t be raids there were the big bombers' deepest ~·­lion of North Vietnam in six months. The U.S. Command disclosed the loss ol another aircraft over North Vietnam and · two in South Vietnam. Four crewmen were llsted as missing and one was reported lnjuttd. The Command said that an Air Fon:e F4 Phantom WU ·bit by a surlae&-to-atr missile last Friday 70 miles northwest of Hanoi, and search operations failed to locate the two crewmen. The Command said this raised to 1!18 the number of U.S. planes downed over the north since the start of the enemy of- fensive last March 30. A total of 114 crewmen have been killed or captured, according to U.S· Command records. In another delayed report, the com- mand said an Air Force OVIO light spotter plane crashed last Friday off the South Vietnamese coast 10 miles northwest of Da Nang, and the two crewman are missing. Spokesmen said the cause of the crash was unknown. A COBRA helicopter gunship crashed from unknown causes early today in the Mekoog Delta 60 miles noribwest of Can Tho, injuring one crewman, the com- mand announced. South, American _W earing Robes Gets Past Guard VATICAN CITY (AP) -A South American wearing the robes, pectoral cross and ring of a bishop made his way into Pope Paul's summer palace but was discovered to be a fake when he could not fmd the Pope's apartment, the Vatican confirmed today. Officials said the incident oceurred Sept 14 at Castel GandoUo, in the. hills south of Rome. Papal guards turned the lake bishop over to the police, pnd the gOYJ!rnilllint expelled bim from the coun- try. The Vatican refused to give the man's name hut said he was about 45, ap- parently suffering from a men tal disorder, and lived in a South American country which they did not name. Vatican officials said the Swiss Guards at the main gate snapped to attention when the man walked wit.b assurance in· to the palace. But be betrayed himself by his obvious difficulty in flJlding the Pope's apartmeo~ they added. At the time, the Pope was spending the rinal week of his SllJIUDer stay at the palace. Officials would not say how close the fake bishop got to the papal apart- ment, but they said the man was not armed and there was no attempt on the ponlill's life. The Pope 6caped an assassination at- tempt in Manila during his 1970 Asian trip when a Bolivian attacked him. The Pope was not burl during the incident. Sc are Disrupts Speech by Jane PITl'SBURGH (AP) -Actress Jane Fonda wa.s whisked off a stage during a speaking <0gagemenl at-Ille-Chatham College Chapel alter security ollicers at the llCbool found five bullets near the en- trance of the building. A spokesman for the college said Mis1 Fonda, an antiwar activist Who rectnUy returned from a visit to North Vietnam, was coocluding her speech to an audience of about 600 persons when the .22-<:allber bullets were found . Mtmbera of the Indochina Peace O>all· tlon, spon90rs of her tour, and Chatham College security personnel decided not to take chances and rushed Mia Fonda oft stage before she finished her tlllt, the spokesman said. I 'I do "°' want talk of SflClflt pellCtl negotia- tions /Nl<B</ •••• • .Jailhouse Drama M\-Afr!. N.C. sheriff talks to Mrs. Faye DunCltll outside the sher- iff s building where her husband Roy, held her daugliler a n d six others at gunpoint Friday. Claiming' he wanted to mt to his es- tranged wife, Duncan surrendered after police let her talk' to him via mobile telephone. Mexico Train Disasrer Mopped Up; 204 Dead SALTILLO. Mexico (AP) -Reocue sleeping In a car !bat maldted the · crews have linlmed their work et lbe site description ol ·tbe.-·""'lltt'ln· ~ of Mexico's second worst rail disaster ~of lnloper Rey o. Cal!oy. · • and authorities pit the numbec of con-Caffey, 56, a veteran of 15 ;oar. ·oo tht firmed dead at 204 and injured at 1,098. patrol, was shot Sunday n1g1t1, _.....ll¥ Police Chief. Genaro Gutierrez Devila after stopping a car for speeding. said Sunday the teams had also collected parts of bodies maimed beyond recogni-• Ez-soloto ~ lion that could have belonged to 10 more NEW YORK (AP) -' l'rtsootl Sheldoa victims, but he said there was no way of Bush, former ti.s. Senator ·from ·eon. confirming this. necticut end the la-of ~rge Bush, The train's engineer, Melchor Sanchez U.S. ambassador to the United 'Natiom Echeverria, and at leas t one other is dead at 77. ' member of his c r e w face charges of Bush died Sunday at the Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Dileales.. He lived In Greenwlclt, €oon. ( IN SHORT ... ) homicide. Officials said blood tests sh:iw- ed they had been drinking before eight of the 24 cars hurtled oU a downhill curve at more than 70 miles an hour Thursday night. A staunch Republican Bush lem!d in Ille Senate from I~ t~ i91i am. pm. ed a .l)!PUtation oa. an ~ 00 govemmenJ fmance and . the national economy. He wais a mn6dent of. Presi- dent Dwi.ght,,,.D. Eirrii&wer. . · e Politt Slat1ltlfJ e Vi~;"'"4l . ~, RICHMOi\'I),' Va. (AP) -City olllciall . say ~· oould nm Into the mUlionl DOBSON, N.C. (UPI) -Four suspects following the eeoonc1 flood here in lea were tak<n Into custody today for. ques-.. than four monlh.s and -of tioning in conneclion with ~ murder of Petersburg 25 mil~ to the eouth faced a South C'.arollna highway patrolman higher water again. near Orangeburg, S.C. Cleanup operatlom continued tod · Authorities said the four were found followiQg f1ood1ng from .the James RIV: which crested Saturday at %4 feel, sornf Family Rescued After Vessel Sinks in, Ocean WEST PALM BEACH, F1a. (UPI) - Seven persons who had spent 261n; hours In the water were pulled from tbe Atlan- tic Ocean Sunday by a Coast Guard helicopter, 50 miles from where their cabin cruiser sank while on a fishing ex· pedition. The castaways told the Coast Guard Ibey kept from drifting apart in the waler by tying their life jackets together aft.er the boat went down. THEY WERE CARRIED about 50 miles up the coast by the Gull Stream and northwesterly winds before a COast Guard seareh plane spotted the seven tiny dots in the water at 5 p.m.. Sunday, 13 miles at ,.. off Stuart, F1a. All seven were treated for exposure and releMed frvm Good Samaritan Hoepltal. They were identified as Harvey Crane, 41, lib wile Miidred, :n, and their cblldren, Dovi<!, 18, Stephen, 14, and su .. n. 10, all of Hallandale, Fla.; William Pendleton. 54, a busineS9 auoclate o( Crane's from CalJ.fomia, and Nithanlel Bethune, who wu serv~ as captain of the boat. 11IE COAST GUARD received a garbl· ed SOS at 2:30 p.m. Saturdll)' saying the cruiser was sinking rapldly. At fil'll the Coast Guard thou•ht the .....i was nam- ed "Sixth s.n;.r .. "Sllpenco" but It later turned out to be "Sis c•1t• for the ah --of the Crano family, -of --ao1-t1tac:nn-wbal1t sank. Crane wu Wed what .....i the -tollnt. "AD of a ltlddon llto frobl -clown," he aeid. •'Tine mhwtel later it WU gone." The boys oald Ibey IhouCftl the boat struck somdbing, but they ...,. aot ,.... whaL TUE SEVEN TOOK two !Ue )acltets per penoa and an 1lr m1itrns off 1 cha1'e Ioonge when Ibey enten!d the Wiler, , The Cranes said they were unable to keop !heir mtnlatun dachshund, Max, from droWlllng. A second Crane d1ugllter, U.yoaMld Mona, stayed home Imm the Saturday flshina epedltlon to •tt<nd chorus prac- Uco at her Junior high llCbool. 31> feet below wilat bad been·expected •• a result of heavy nins 'lhlI9day and Friday """""' the -· e ·RofJfH!rs FoUecl PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -A wwranl was issued Sunday for Bobby UScarface" Smith, one of two men be!Im>d. to have eng:bleered a '1 J e 11 e J~le" stickup of SI -ent -a G<eybound bu& The bandits got about $1,SOO in the bold ~. but 90l11e pallllell8tn fooled them by biding money In bulbes and rings in their mouths. Five )'OUDg persoas are alreacb' tn jail in coonection with the robbery Friday outside Everett, Wash. They were laken into custody Satw-day alter pollce said they tried to buy merchandise with creclli cards stolen ln the holdup. ' 1930's Actress Miriam Hopkins Succumbs at 72 NEW YORK (UPI) -Act"91 Miriam Hoptlns, a major star ol tba 1'3111 ~ top roles wett tn the rum "Bed;y Sharpt' and the Broadway p!'.Oductlon of •'The Skin of Our Teeth," died earl!> today ot an al)plrcnt heart attack at a Manhattan. hotel. She was 72. She came to New York in Jul)r for a retrospecUvt of her.fllma at the MUleum of Modem Art. A naUve ol llainbt1c11•. Ga., ·- lloptlna bepn her ..... --lollo• Ing gradualloo from Syncule Unlftnlty, Followlng dramatic• a~ e11 Broodway in "All A-=-Ill !tie , and ''Tiit A1!.11n of • ID 1~1, Mill liol*lnl ml,lo ~ ~ her.lllmo ~"°'"""'forµ., llig" in 1131, ,.,,,_ 'lllna" ID }ill, ad t ... wlth Bette Dotb, wtch ....... llba eng.,..i it • ltlaltlY pdtl'cl .. ·-• film-mall-'".lbe Old Kaid" ••• and "OldA~"-lMl Sbe aloo plnod ....... _ ... _ she rell....J lo aloe "lbrdq ,,...... ~" In the ltlUUm "Viqltlla Qty.• City. -. Ille -·y-Docl-dle •• lmteld. The orlatnaJ hervine ol the -Wllllama piay "Battle of Angell" tat. l'fViled and reUUed "OrpheUI 0.-..- dlng," Miis lloptlM alto llamd ill Broadway produ<tlonJ of ",,.,...i" In II», "The Ptrlec\ Maniqe" lil..1111 lilll "Look Romeword Ancel" in 1•. She liltls mo;;:/.d and dll'0""'1 fu llmtl • • • .. I ~ I Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 65, NO. 283, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • Today's Fl••I N.Y. Stoeks MONDAY, OCTOBER 'I, 1'172 N TEN CENTS Mexican-Americans Demand Ca·spers' Ouster By JACK BROBACK Of ftM Dll" Plitt IMH Leaders of Orange County Mexican. •American organ17.ations today vowed tbetr followers will pack the Board of &Jtoervlsors' bearing room Tueoday and demand removal nf Ronald W. C8spers of Newport Beach aa hoard chalnnan. Ghlcano leaders, meeting Sunday In SMta Ana with about 200 members, pbihed through three moUo"" wllhout a dlssenling vote. They included, in addition to Caspers' ou~ter as board chairman, a demand for ·-· _,. ..--; -.... Council Polq? a Jllhllc apology for hll "Adtlante ban. didol" -lut -and that the supervlaon remove Ille AlllnnaUvo Al> t1oo J'roCralll (APP) !nm tho county penoanel deportment and ploce It In the county>adminlltrattve olflco. II waa the AAP that llarted Ill the furor. ,.,...,_ ago, Ille hoard •pprvved the new pn!ll8ID by a 4 to I vote "'.Ith Caspers tho=y dlaaonter. 1111 ~ to give Ues and women better coanty emp oyment and promotional op- portw:lities. _Impact Reports Debate Slated By WILLIAM SCHREIBER night strongly recommended adoption of Of ... 0.llr Ptt9e Sl•ff a policy prepared by city planning staff Creation of a policy r e q u i r l n g members. devek>pers of ''significant" conmuction 'Jbe policy follows the lines of the projects to file e'1Viromnentll Impact Envirorunental Quality Act of l970 the statements will be considered by California Supreme Court said must be Newport B e • c h City councilmen Tues-applied to both private and public proj-day, eds. ~ commissloners Thursda Y Interpretati o n of the term ~~ .. ~,.ii Pini locll aomwut 'Policemen ·chase ~~they~~ywlththecour1 Huntington Man, Infant in Auto A man pUoting a rotary engine car c1·ntainint his, baby boy and a terrified black cat Jed lOlice on a sizzling, 100- ruUe-per-bour pursuit over the Orange Coast Sunday nigbl before be1n( cap- tured. Ronald R. Witt, 'lT, of 309 IJnooln Ave., fluntlngtoo Beach, reportedly drove on the wroog ..Ide ol the road, ran stop sips &M zigzagged through traffic during the dramatic chase. He was finally corralled at Warner Avenue and Beach Boulevard in Hunt· Ington Beach followlna the Grand Prlx- sb'le performance whlcb left two police ~ and his 1972 compact auto damaged. Newport Beech police took Witt Into cus~ody and booked him on suspicion of ' (See CHASE, Page !) Wilt Arrives lri Laker Camp "At tldi pin!, oil n can 111 II !hat "significant' ii anytblQg 'nonotrfvtal','' Richard H o g a n, oommunity develop- ment director, aald.. Guldllnes for llljpllflcance of the proj- ect 1n r e g a r d to the environment in- clude: -A c1-e In c1tar11C1er of the lm- medllte SUl'l'Olllldlnp ol a project by a difference In use, abe or conflguratloo. -Subltantlal grading or excavation or alterallon In 1-&pby. -Signtflrant effect on the Dora or fauna " tho location. -Sign1flcant effect an bay waters, bay surroundings or dnlna1e systems Into the hay. -Slgn1flcant effect on llllmlUDding !lructDre9 by alteraUon of traffic pa~ terns, alleratlons of utility systems, creation of UDUSUal or prolonged noise levels, interruption of views or creation of other serious detrimental effects. Planning Commissioner William Agee asll<d Hogan lut 'lbursday who would have the power to determine what Ls slgniflcant and what II not. "I will, with the power <lf review or ap- peal left to the councU and commission," Hogan replied. . Hogan aald It would have to he up to him to ietermlno the w bjectlvo cutoff point between tho slgnlllcant and trlv1al projecte hecauae of the cunplexlty II> volved. "After-the ccnncll, It -dkoctly to th~ courts," Hopn Aid. 1togan said tho Ila-requlremenl would he o1 areat benellt to Ille private (S. DlOLOOY, Pip I) Last Wodneslay Caspers. grum~ling over the ll00,000 cost of tho program, refmod to an orglllWIUon of Mexican Amorl"n cowily omployes, Adelante "" "bandldos." '!be employo group later protested that Ibey did DOI opprove of tho cost of the pn!ll8ID either but were pooltlvo of Its need. Mexican-American leaders Su n d a y cautioned against militant action In reference to proposed picketing of the county administration building Tue,,day. One spokesman put It thls way, • '"Nothing can hJrt our cause more than a demonstration on the -which coo1d be tho spar.. that would lead to violence. 0 U we react with violence we are Jess than Mr. Copen and we can only Jme," he warned. Supporton of Supervisor -Bil-Un, who II engaged In a bitter battle to retain bla ... 1 on the hoanl In the Nov. 7 elect.k>n, took advantage of CUpen' em- ba1Taament. Bill Meyer, Blttln's chief aide ap- pean!d at a Mexican-American meeting Friday night and said his boss would de- mand that Caspers apologize fa< bla ban. dido remark. Today, Meyer In a lesa militant ata~ ment said Battin will ut ror a "clarification" ol tbm board chairman's remarks. "Caspers had a legitimate complaint on the cost of the minority employment program," Meyer explained. "He thould have focused on that. 'Ibe '200,000 for the first year Is only the beginning. That's Sl 1cer aves Te*J.er for a Dafl Dr. John N"icoll, superintendent of the Newport- Mesa Unified School District, lectures at ,Estancia High School· Nicoll spent today aa guest lecturer In the high school's careen development course. He talked, as admlnlstralive chief of one of the Hllbor Area's Ltrgest employers, about what employers ••- pect from employ.._ Weather Forces Delay fu Search for Dr. Peek The search for Newport Beech physi- cian George Peck, missing ln his single engine Cessna ·~ taking off from Or-ange County Airport Tuesday evening, bad to he IUspeaded loday due to poor weather, according to officials of the Walem-Alr-llescue Coonllnatloo Cenler at Hamiltm Air Force Base. Dr. l'e<t • promlDent ..Uergy spectaJ- lat w11 belieftd to be alone In hII four pa-"1' plane when he toot off Oil a 8cheduled three.Jiour lllght letlng Olght. He was not seen nor was be beard from at any time after the 1 p.m. takeoff. Offlctell of the Federal Aviation Ad- mlnllllratloo aaJd the llW'Ch wlll he - tlooed u -.i as the cellinc Wll. The Civil AJr Patrol II ~ tho aem:h and olllctell --the--.ntfn! Southem Callfomla .... from north Loo -County IOUtbWlnl II beinc -.red 10< ....,.. ol lhl plane. Wynn Asks End To Assistant Chief Position Newport Beach Clly MlllUll!" Robert L. Wynn today tJn>l)Oted the elimination ol the position ol asitslant chief of police, the post laat held by the late Harry Nelaon. He wID ult ctty councilmen Tuelday to create the position of adjutant to Ibo chJef wllldt. In effect, would mate a aeventb lleutenancy within lhl deport- ment. .J.OS ANGELES CAP) -WI It Qiamherlain joined the Los Angeles i.aJren at practice today and a l!j>Hesman for the defeodlni Naticnal lloskethall A>sorlatlon champlom aaid •'....-ything's been reoolved Involving the bM center's contract." · ,-'Jbe Lakers open the regular seuon Wednesday nigh! against tho KaJ1lalJ aty-Omaha Kings In Omaha, and coach BUI Sharman Is on record 81 saying: Real Shutterbug W)M bad been maklnl! • -4r-offort to cut tho a1ze of tho dty'• poyrolI 10< the put yur. F0< .....,pie, w1len former J!ln O\lef R. J. "Jan" Brtecoe mtr.d earlier this year, he promotod Doputy O\lef Loo Love to the top lpol but eliminated the oecond-U><ommand post. "'"U Wilt shows up, he'll start." The 36-yel.r-old Chamberlain, a veteran of 13 NBA seasons, had refused to report to .the Laker1 while he attempted to ~ negotiate his exlst.ing contract for more ..... y. Without <llamberllln, Los An&eleo _, L' lbt of Ill exhlhltloo games. PILOT A.D GETS 'TONS OF CAL~ the DAILY PILOT _, aeO ""' vertlllni ._ 111 the pound, 1lul the odvertller ..... pla<ed the lollowllw ad nJ4 It Fl .. _ ol clllt." Cboct lhlo: • • YEARLY. 2 1rt - ft!>lc, -....... -OniY $2!JO. Call :ax.zxxa.. Three 11-of advertlslof, -ol - Md !he ~ -1'Dted ... the -md day: 'ftiat'1 tho lf«7 ol !Ml -cl&olOed ad. How many "poanda" of ro&ults do JOU nnl. Clll -...S ""'ll deliver. Valley Collector Boasts More Tha1i 200 Cameras By 10llN ZAU.ER ............... The !roe calling of J. Aleund..r Woods did not reveal ltlelI mtll be wu over IO. When 1111 famlly wu Delrlr rafled and bla ....... -""° ........... tho l'Olllteln Valley man !urned to collectlnc old cameru. "I'm not 1«ry I dJd II," he :i:::s:, •ftef -ly IS ,.... In the I "But then _.., Ume1 when I apent time and -I reall~'t haft." 1111 lndt Gf bla II -·-In a den Gf 1111 tnct --a mwll room llterallr ..... Will wtth --_., wllldl lllll take piclllr9. --a.i ..... 111-Inlhl-. ........... bmdollhl-to ---...... ''Geltlac --· WU DO - lhlnC.". --lhl -· "'tilo' .... 11111 -·" ba 1111. -............... ___ of bb*'- "I -ap In Ell"ta for a --. and I thoqbt I'd Just put an Id In Ibo -to• -I oaald -up wtlll- And look, a real beauty." Tbe cunen wu ..constructed from ~ Uine rotewnod, and Ill bellow& WU made of Imported Rualan leather. "I later fomd oat tbere wtre five other ellD!l'I. eo0ecton in Eureka," Woocll _! .. ,.. "You mlaht aay I pulJad tbla -"""Giii ----· Hla--·J--pn....., rr.m World w .. 1~ -for Pl'O'lnl -li1111 In -; an 1• cletectfft wa 'llllldl ba 1811 -plctm• ol tho -qaallty .. today'• -· ..... pound -and .... Pftadl .... -1116; and lhl ftnt JtodU ba CllDlfi. 1"tbe .. that ..,.... 1•m1nt1" °"" " blll ..... ooCelt --....... llllDOl~-bll-1"• .... ""7 1:'" ,,.. -...... ---.,..._., NolnDoma"IDlhl!Dlr. "Wiim ... --cnwtlol -.. top ol Illa ..... topl, the .....,. old ........ _, c<I ... tbert,"' Woods npl•D. •ao 111q uaoc1 wa old Sept." 11a - I ttnues, mmMnc an mobltntstve little bo:a: from ID uppn-lhelf. uyou cm tee lt'1 real IICbl and lhqb they had to rdood It !alrtJ Gllm, lhl 111..,,i. jacU they -.. --IOOflop -Fl tho Job -reel well." ADotber .__., etlDa'I, ho--¥6"', .. maim tho -ol ,,_. latter~ .,_.. 1 pt ~ ID tllll ool- ledJac," ba 1111. "I -.-od 19 1 -to 1*7 ......... °"" -87"1 bad -to -1111 flrlt trip to the -... ea,, If I'd ..., - -kwmJdba-h M,JW bow, I eauld-ptll lorGlll)'Slt-" .....,~ .. , lhl blaM ....... i.m la old.._ ..... lllem IL ~ "';.~..! ~·.-: ~~ .... ltln ....... --........... , -.-......... -.and ..... "Yoooewr __ ,....,..,.... Io"'" hid!," llo 11J1. "! ... -.....,. to ID w..t l:oi~.,.--H lhl (lea I) SJm Uar m o v e 1 •·ere rnadt In other departmellll. In a repcw1. to councllml!n, Wynn ea· plained bla -. by aytna the uolltant chltf'I po1IUon WU cruttd "It • Ume when the eq>a lence leftl In tho deoori- mtat ..... atremtty )Ow and ..... ti· llled for --""'"' ad coreful dlroctlon." That -In the ~ fllcll .,... 1'adlJ, ,,,. .w. "tbt deplrtrnlat .. • -hall -• polo& ol ... 111111, .. that nat ol ___ -bad -....... to tho --palb dlllf .., _, ban -cllldl...., -byflladl __ ....,., .. Wym oald .... P'oi-l ldjut>at - act for Illa dllll aad bl -ldl -lion bat ........... w. ~ . ,.,.. "'11 till --.-It In • ....,,. ....... ol .... lldl llilal\ -· Sign Kills Wom8J! PROV!DEllCE, R.L CllPI) -Mro. Vlrtln1a IWlco, II, ol rr .. -. - klllod wheel llil -1* bf I ...,..lime 111!1-••i>Y·--. milUon in five years and $2 mllllon In 10 years." The aide sakt Battin'• stand was to be "fair to Adelant.e but to remain con- cerned about the 1•:01>1llnl< -of government." Caspers waa In his offko today for the first time u far as anyone could determine since tut Wednmay but bla secretary said he was "in conference." The board chalrman was not avaUable for comment to the ptts1 nr to the pubUc either by telephone or In penon. • 1ver Makes Leap Into Water At Newport By AR111UR R. VINSEL °' .. or.lfll' ........... A hulking Huntington Beach man, paralyzed alter a pier dive into sbaDow watey", wa.3 saved early today when a Newport Bea~ police helicopter ollker leaped Into the sea and towed blm LIO yards to shore whUe battling CWTt!Dta. Oblerver OOicer Doug Webster na credited with savln1 the We of William hldell, 29, of 112 Hwitlngton St., Him- ~ Rellllonl Ofllcer -Braaltr said the dramatic al..._,...... was trtuered at :2: 10 1.m., with 1 fl"8D- ttc can ·limn Marpret Muench, 1 friend .. Ridall. She uld they w•"' llMllln( 1111 Newport Pier when her date dedded to l'tl for a swim -fully dothed -and dove from the ltructure into fairly aballow water. Authorities 11 Hoag Memorial lfolltll lilted Ridell In .. rtowi condition tllla morning, el&h1 houri after the traply, u Ibey attempted to detennlnt the ... tent of bla neck and lplnal lnjurla. He baa llU!fered aome paralyala but It Is DOI yet kMwn whether It II tempo<arJ or permanml Dilpatdled to hunt tho pier din rio- tlm, belloolller pilot Jim Golfoo ....... 1ow .-o11111oro....na In lhl~ known u 4S Adam and Webster apolted RJdell about LIO yards olfahore. lie WU Ooatini face down, lndlcatln( ho bad poalllbly diowned alraody, ..,. cording to the helicopter crew. No Ume WIS left to dispatdt I IUeguaM patrol boat, ao Offloer W-r stripped off his gm, hoiller, .-and belt. cUmbed out en one pontocn and rrtade bit first racue ltap. H11 partn<r nnt lowered Iha belloolller to about 15 feel ·~ tht ""· whldl wu whipped b)' the ~r'I rot« 1"11111. Otlioer Weblttr toot the poralyled !<aper In tow -bla llh·foot. lour-Inch, ,.pound fnune made he.1Yler bf - lllBll<d clothes, .Ind bqan aitthodJcaJJy IWimfnll)j towaM -.. Polk:e can and an ambulanoa wen waitlni and ,_.,,.. balpad baul tho ltttc:ti.n flJdelJ out ol the lllrl aod WTJ blm on a atmdler for lhl ,_ to Hooe Memortal Ho1pl11L Newport B<llCb -red their polloa tSee~Pqoll Ora•te ---. ::. .... '1 .._.~ t =-,. ......... ::: ~ = -. ....... ....... --. ' % 0"1L Y PILOl • Kept Quiet Khrushchev's Daughter Dies BJ Rl!Nl\Y SHAPIRO MOSCOW (UPI) -A chance stroll in J\1oscow•a elite cemetery. the rormer Novo-Devlchy (New Maiden) convent, bu diaclosed the previously unannounced death of the youngest daughter of the late Soviet premier, Nikita S . Khrushchev. The daughter. Elena N. Khrushchev, 35, dled three months ago without recognitk>n and unbeknown to the overwhelming majority of Soviet citizens who never heard of her even i,i,·hen her rather was the supreme ruler o( lhls country. A1y confirmation o! her death came by chance during a walk in the cemetery. The crude. flat stone on ber grave told a simple story. "Elena Nikitichna daughter of Nikita Khrushcheva . 1937-1972." She died July 14. Elena was the youngest o r Khru!hchev's four daughters. She had studied law and journa1ism. She air parenUy never married. ~..,. loamed lliat an Ammican dQc\or, Prof. A. McGehee Harvey Ill Jollnt Hopkins Univenlty, !IOCtelly came to f\1oscow some time before her deoth to treat Elena ror a disease that could have been cancer. Although Harvey stayed with the Khrushchev family as a house guest for several weeks, his presence here ap. parently was not known to the U.S. em- bassy. The authorities apparenUy think highly enough of the Khrushchev family to have offered the burial ground at the Novo- De\• ichy Convent Ct>metery, Moscow's most prestigious pantheon after the Red Square. The body of Elena ties a few yards from the grave of Stalin's wife, r\adezhda Alliluyeva, in the older section of the cemetery. lier fa ther, y.·ho fell almost entirely from public view and became a "non- person" after his overthrow in 1964, is buried in the adjoining, newer section. OAIL Y PILO,. lt•ft ll'M:M f're•P.,e 1 CHASE •.• .• ondan&Ottna the weUar• ol 1 minor child:. Booti·s procedura In Newport Btacb llmlt ollloen to placini ooe a1nale elm&• on a ompoct but the Oroolo County Dlstrlct Attorney ll'4Y file addltloa.i COUDts if iDvesUgatora: belleve they art warranted. Investigators said today they un- derstand Witt WU bitter and bad been b1ooding ovor a domestic quarrel before le•vlng with the child and the famll;y cat. • Newport Beach Police O!llcer Carl Anderson sr ld be spotted Wiii traveling at blgb speed al MacArthur Boulevard and East O>ast Highway In Corona del Mar. He attempted to make a traffic stGf about I p.m., trlggerl!Ji a chase lhrou(il and around two cities that covered about 15 miles at lljJeeds of 100 ~ hour and above. Streatlng tbrougiJ modlum density traffic on COaat H11h.->y, 0!1ice< Ar.dersoo estimated Witt was doing more tban 100 when he sailed '""'°" the Sall!a . A.1 River Bridge Into HunUngtoo BeaclL ; ' l She was almost totall y unknown to the Soviet people. Had she or any of her sisters or her brother, or even her mother, Nina Petrovna. walked across the Red Square· few if anyone would e\'en ha\'e blinked \Vith possible recogni- tion. 'Dare Be Great' Promoter's Case Put Off Again COLLECTOR WOODS DISPLAYS CAMERA ONCE MOUNTED IN JAPANESE WARPLANE Surrounded by Wall to Wall Cameras1 Fountain Valley Man Talks About His Passion Waiting traffic patrolmen there plclced' up the pursuit, which then veered up~ Lake Street to 17th Street, where the ~. suspect made a screecbint, right turn to; Delaware Street and on to Garfield;. Avenue. . ; : The families and the private lives of Soviet leaders are not known to t h e Soviet public. Elena's deatti was not reported by any of the Soviet media . Nor did any of the media, with one exception, report the death of her father last autumn. It was not knov•n previously but it has Air Cal Opens Cut-Rate Route To Ontario Arca .. Air California has announced the open- ing of a new route between Orange Coun- ty a111d Ontnriv and the inauguration of a vieekend cut-rate fare. Arrline spokesman Jim Phelan said the Ontario flight is the extension of an ex· isling route between Oakland and San Jose. "Up to now, we have been carrying pa..~gers to Ontario from OakJand-San Jose via Orange County but we have not been able to board passengers for 0 . tario at Orange County," he aplained. "This new route enables us to take on passengers here for Ontario without ad- ding any flights into or out of Orange County." The ooe-way fare for the 15-minute flight a $5.40 lncluding federal trans- portation tax. 11le new cut rate weekend fare being used by Air Cal Is called 50--26 because it of.'en a 50 percent rare for 28 hours between noon on Saturday and 2 p.m. on Stlllday. 1be faire is available ror ruondtrips made during the time period. Phelan said passengers using the reduced fare will still be able to make confi rmed reserva- tions and will not have to fly standby. Chiefs to Speak At Harbor Meet Harbor Area Coordinating Council ~1embers will host Newport Beach Police Chief James Glavas and Costa Mesa Police Oiief Roger Neth during a noon luncheon next Wednesday al t h e Newporter Inn. Both will address the council on the topic, "The Police anj You as a Team." A short question period will follow . 'Ibe t"OOrdinating t'OUJ'ICil wu formed to make orgainzatlons and clubs aware of services ln the community and to avoid dupllcalJon of efforts. It also tries to ketp the Harbor Area informed about vital problems. For reservations to Wednes· day '• luncheon, call M&-7741. OU.NH COAST " DAILY PILOT 'nM 0.-.. C-t Oll.ILY f'ILDT, wtl'I .,_. .. _...... ... "-..,,_, ii ~ 1W ... ~ OIMt ............ c.,...,.,.,..... n• .,... .. •n ...-ii....._ Mon!Ny ~ f'rtdty, IW CMI• Mea, N_.t lludl. HtM!SM* llHdl/J'"tMtl•lll Villr/, UOUN ~ ,,..........lfW« ... '" ,...._., ........ ~ ....... ,..... ........ i. ................... ,.. ..i SvN • .,.. Tll9 ,... ............. 9llllt la 11 D Wn l .. y "'--Clll.. M-, 011"""11. ,,.,._ ....... N. We.4 ,., .......... l"lllllltlMI' J•clc R. Cu,l•Y \'b~• ... 0..W .......... n ..... tc..rit ·-n..n A. M.,.,Wite ~-lfdltor L r.1., Jtrl .. ...... 9-ttQty l:-. .......... o... JJJJ ...... ,..,. W..41'4 ........ ~1 P.O .... 1171. tJ6') --a. ... 1 •~ur•• t..-~1 111,._.A_ llllCll ... ....,., ,,... e..tfl ..... ,,. a. a..Mttr at ...... 11 C:.,,._ ._. .,.,.,.,. cn41 MiMJJt Q 11W Mozlt I I 64J..1671 CIW•""'" """ °'"..... C...l ll'l*ldtN ~ .... -........ ltlw.,....... ....,... _..., .... nw"•'" ....... .... __ .., ............... _ ...... ........ " ..,,.. t"""'· ..... c-. """"' .lid at c.. ""--Gltllwllllr. ....,_..... W cerr..... UM ........,, tr NII .u.1• .......W1 dlflfY •.. . .... ,._.,..,, CLEARWATER, Fla . (UPI) -The securities violations trial of multi- milliona ire Glenn \V. Turner was postporn!d for the second time today, y.·aiting a federal judge's decision on jurisdiction. Later, in Tampa, U.S. District Court Judge Ben Krentzman denie(j a plea from Turner's attorneyo for the federal courts to take over the case and returned Jt t.o Circuit Court Judge William A. Pat. terson's jurisdiction. Patterson scheduled the trial to resume Tuesday. Turner and two associates are accused on 86 counts of violation of the state's securities laws. The state contends that the sale of motivational courses called "Dare To Be Great" amounts to the sale of securities and that Turner and his associates are not registered securities dealers. Unlike Oct. 2, when 600 women waving placards and flags demomtrated at the courthouse, today's session was qulel School Lunches Rules Changed Children not now receiving lunches at school tree of charge or at reduced prices may be eligible due to a recent change in federal law , according to Newport-Mesa district officials. If the gross income of a family Is between '222 and $6'ro per month, depen- ding upon the number of children, free lunches may be served. And children of families with a gross monthly income between $223 and $804 may now receive lunches at a reduced price, depending on the number of children in lbt family . For more information, ;>arents may contact their school principal. A~ plications for lunches must be renewed each year. l\1achinists OK Pact SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Machinists at the Electro Dynamics Division of General Dynamics voted to return to work today. ending a 27-day strike and approving the company's Cl'ntract proposal. Under the pact, raWied Saturday, about 750 me1nbers of the In ternational Association of Machinists who averaged $3.93 an hour under an expired contract will get a 25· cent hourly raise the first year of a three-year co"ntract. Sea fltaeens From Pagel CAMERA S ... house looked old enough to hove some good cameras in it." \Voods says that cameras are getting harder to come by as time goes on. Neighborhoods like Bunker Hill in Los Angeles, once ideal for odd finds, <1re slowly disappearing, and others like them are getting run down. Also, be says, "there's too many amateurs, people who just want to talk about them. They're not serious, like I am." Free Restrooms. At Beach Await Newport Action Beginning a year from Tuesday -if the Newport Beach City O>unc.il gives its approval -beachgoers will be able to use the stalls in public restrooms free of charge for the first time in nearly Z5 years. Public Works Director Jooeph T. Devlin bas strongly recommended an agreement made in 1948 with Pacific Nik-0-Lok Corp. to provide and maintain pay toilet locks in eight city reStrooms be terminated. "Total city revenues Crom the stall locks amounted to $3,925 In 1971-72 and total identifiable expenses were $1,968 for the same f1scal year," Devlin said. The city receives 60 percent of all pay toilet receipts and Nik-0-Lok receives the other 40 percent of the profits. "The staff feels that the apparent net income of $1,957 is more than offset by increases in vandalism and general restroom maintenance caused by having locks on restroom stalls," Devil in said. The eight restrooms "·hlch would be affected by the action are located at the Newport ocean pier, the Balboa ocean pier. Corona del Mar City and State Beach Park, the 15th Street beach and the Washington Street beach. Devlin said the contract, which automatically renews each year, expires again on July 12. 1973 but any action by the COWlcil would not be effective until a year from the date it is acted on -in this case Oct. 11, 1973. "It is believed that the termination of the agreement would reduce restroom maintenance costs, decrease vandalis1n and improve public relations wltth no sacrifice to the city," Devlin added. DAILY f'ILDf SI"",..,..,.. Singing lhe pr•I••• of Corona del Mar High School Sea King athletic toams !his fall are varsity •ongle1ders (top, from lell) Lisa Reedy , Karen French and Thea Nlbblett and !bottom. from lei!) Jennifer 8-0oky, Libby Regan and Holl y Anderson. Boys Club Gets Flag From U.S. Capitol Oct. 25 From Pagel ECOLOGY ... consultants who ·will bear t h e primary burden of preparing them for developers. "This will be a bonanza for them," be said. Investigators sa id Witt sped throu1h ; : stop signs on busy Goldenw est Streett : with Six black-and-white police cars with ) · sirens screaming in pursuit, in additlon\ · to the Huntington Beach po 1 ·1 c e ! · helicopter. .. ~ . Dtermined to halt the dangerous chase, J Patrol Sgt. Gary Kuncl tried to block\ : Warner Avenue at its intersection \fith; · 1 Goldenwest Street. I •. · I \ i I I A U.S. Flag that has flown over the C a p i t o 1 of the United States will be presented to 1he Central Branch of lhe Harbor Arer Boys Club Oct. 25. The presentation will be made by the Henry Bowen Society of the Children o{ the American Revolution in observation of Patriotic Education Week, Oct. 19-25. Commissioners briefly toyed with the idea of stopping all of the $30 million wort h of building permit applications now under review by the city to determine if they require impact statements. "If we did th,at, most of them wouldn't beat the upcoming effectivness date of the height limit law," said Agee. He said Witt screeched Into a sblrp ' . right turn -sideswiping the patrol car': · I with his small car, known for its speed,\_" I l-raking abWty and maneuverabllity -,.·' :~i~!t~wn Warner Avenue to ~? : 1 1 , 1 . 1 . By this time, Officer Dennis Metzler ; • was bot on the auspect's tall, but Witt~ . spun a shatp U-turn at Blaylock Avettue j · and Metzger -his patrol car brakes-~'-:··.. 1 , j 1 l burnt out -piled into the rear of the ci:'r. ·. The Flag will be turned over to the Boys Club at 4 p.m. by Miss Lynn Dugle, president of the Newport Beach-based Henry Bowen Society. It will be accepted by John Dunlap, the Boys Club Boy of the Year. Participating in the ceremony at t h e Central Branch• c o r n e r Center a n d Anaheim S t r e e t s in Costa Mesa, will be Jack Hammett, mayor of C'.osta Mesa, and Boys Club aecutives Joe Flic:ken- stein and Lou Yantom· Lilliputians Plead NORWICH, England (UPI) -A con- vention of llllJputians appealed to fellow Britans Sunday not to call stunted people "dwarfs and midgets." 'Ibey said they were fed up with being regatded as "something out of Snow White." But the commission agreed that since the deadline Is only a few days away (this Wednesday), there was really no need to make such an effort. Man Bolts, Seized TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Eugene Fire Sims, the father of an infant boy alleged- ly swapped for a used car at Immokalee last month, escaped briefly during a courthouse bearlnj; bere even though he was hampered by a broken leg, police said. Maj. John Salla of the Hillsborough COunty Sheriff's Department liaid Sims, 24, was apprehended by deputies two blocks away within five minutes after.bis escape. • Oarsmen Leave ' Again for Hawaii '.. . HALF MOON BAY (AP) -Oarsman ; Pat Quesnel is carrying a well-traveled·. coin he hopes will bring hick In his llllrd; . attempt to row a 22.-foot dory to Hawaii. ~ : Quesnel, 23, and John Martineau, 30, a c · · Redding truck -er, sboved off Sunday: · from Half Moon Bay with hopes of lr·r · riving In Hawaii In about lll days. · ' But before they tell, British oarSll)lln! · John F~~ ga,ve Quesnel, of Duval,~ Wash., a five sbllUng coin be toolt &¥>og: when he rowed the Pacific to Austtillia 1 last year with Sylvia COOk. ' ' ; I ' t --' ' t -' _, Another ad was prepared for this spac:e to- day, but we had a fire early Monday morning. ~ PRICES SLASHED ON Ill NEW APPLIAN:CES IF YOU DON'T MIND CLEANING THE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HAVE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. ' EVERYTHING MUST MOVE FAST ' to make room for clean-up and redecorating " ' •WASHERS L • DRYERS 0 REFRIGERATORS • TELEVISIONS G STOVES 1815 NEWPORT Bl VD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA I • l \ 17 I I .. I ' I I I I ( I I '17 I ) I \ 'I Orange Coast EDITION Teday's Fbud N. V. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 283, 2 SECTIONS, ·24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19n c TEN CENTS Mesa Readie·s Law to Bo.ost Park Facilities By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lfte Dlllr !"Utt Sll ff Co.ta Mesa's city park program today is far short of providing enough open park space for each of its residents, ac- cording to accepted standards. The city planning staff Is pw;hing le< improvements whlCb. would help the city achieve its goal of providing every 1,000 residents with 2.5 acns of par~. Cur- rently there are 1.5 acres of parks for every 1,000 Costa Mesans. Meeting Tuesday Tonight, staff members will forward two new ordina.ocee t.o the plaimlng com- mission that woold lorco apartment developers to ...ontribute more park a<nage and park fees. "The present fee and dedleallon stand· ard does not raiae sufficient revenue' to provide pa!k faclHU.. I o r additlooal residents," 8ccordtng to A:SSi1taJJt P~ ner Douglas Clark. 41In addition, the · present system e~ cou'.rages apartment development, while Chicanos to · Ask Caspers' Ouster FACING MASS PROTEST Board Chairman Caspers Sign Kills Woman PROVIDENCE, R.J. (UPI) -Mrs. Virginia Manco, 58, of Providence, was killed when she was hit by a n~parking slgn knocked over by a station wagon. By JACK BROBACK Of t1M Oallr P'lltt Sl.tt Leaders of Orange County Mexican- American organizations today vowed their followers will pack the Board of Supervisors' hearing room Tuesday and demand removal f'lf Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach as board chairman. Chicano leaders, meeting Sunday in Santa Ana with about 200 members, pusbed through Uiree. motions without a diqenllo( --They included, In addition to Caspers' ouster as boam ~ a demand for a public aPQIOU for hll "Adelante ban- dldos" remark lall week and that !be supervtson remove the Affirmative Ac- tion Program (APP) from Ihe county penormel deparlmttlt and place it In tho county adminlstratlve office. It was the AAP that started all the furor. Two weeks ago, the board approved the new program by a 4 to 1 vote with Caapers Ihe only dissenter. It i.. designed to give minorlttee and women better county employment and promotional op- portunities. Last Wedneoday CUpers, grum1:11ng over the f200,000 colt of the program, referred to an organization of Mexican Ameri::l'n county employes, Adelante as "bandidos." The employe group later protested that they did not approve of the cost of the program either but were positive of its need. Mexlcan·American leaders S u n d a y cautioned against militant action in reference to proposed picketing of the county administration building Tuesday. One spokesman pol It this way, "Nothing can hurt our cauae more than a detMnstration on the streets wbJch oould be the spar~ Iba! would lead to violence. "If we react With violence we are less than Mr. Caapen and .,..~ only lose," (See CASPERS, Pott Zl di!couraglng the single f a m ii y residence." 1be caoditloa la caused by a dooble standard which allows a p a r t m e n t builders to pay less than their fair sbare fer park!!, according to Clark. He explained that the vast difference ln fees may elm be mponalble for the absence of new towphouse developments since the , lower park fees encourage builders to ieek multl-famlly permits in- stead. •• While IOltle authorities .suggest tbat there should be 10 acres of parlu: for each 1,000 rttidents, Clark would be bap- PY U Ihe city met ill l.."-acre goel. A study of Ihe exltllog fee and donatlo!> policy diacloees that 1 1 n g I e • f a m 11 y bullderl oclually pay a dilproportlooate sharo, Clark pointed out. An ezamlmtion of the Vlata del Lago apartment& on Mesa Verde Drive and Adams A..,,..; for example, abows that Ihe Interim! Company paid Ill.MO for park comtruct.lon. Had the 468 Vista del Lago units been part of a sln&le-family development, the company would have bad to pay f71,496 In park fees under existing formulu. Jn Huntington Beach, the fee would have been even higher, with an $80,173 charge for open space. Taken together, Costa Mesa during 1971 was paid tl9,W in fees by apartment deveJopen:. 1be same units, lf built in Huntlngton Beach, would have been 1cer aves Teaeher tor a · Da11 Dr. Jolin Nicoll, superintendent of the Newport- )1.esa Unified ScbooJ Dls1rict, lectures at Estancia l;llgb School. Nicoll spent toilay u guest lecturer.in the high scl!ool's careers development course. He talked, 11 admlnlstraUve chief ot one of the Harbor Area'• largest employers, about whit employers ex· peel Crom employes. DA YY CROCKETT SHOOTS HIM SELF PORTERVILLE CUPD -D a-v Id CroCkett, tracking game in the Inyo Na· tionaJ Forest ot/er the weekend, ac- cidentally shot blniself. He wu reported in good condition today. Sherill's deputie.s said the 38-year-<ild Torrance man was buntlne Saturday in the mountains west of here when he stumbled ml fell , dlacbarfllng tho pistol stuffed Into his trousers pocket. Mesa Store Swept by Fire A Costa Mesa police.man on predawn patrol di.covered llDIOke ml llama pouring from a downtown appliance """' today but 110,000 damage resulted bde<e flromen extinguished Ihe bl82e. Offlctr·Don Casey radioed the alarm at 3oC 1.m., wbee he lpolted Ihe blaie 11 Dunlap Appu.nc.s, lt15 Newport Blvd., Just around the comer from a branch fire station. Smoke damage to •boul Ill tol<Yltloo sets lmlde the 1tructure owned by WUliam H. MallO<y l«Olln1ed for the majority of the loss, lnveet!gaton aid. 1be building Itself llUllalned only about Sl ,000 tn actual structural damage before the fire wu controUed and finally es· tlnguiabed. lnvt'St11ators slfUn.g rubble f« clues to tM fire'• CIUJe teMttvely blamed It on an electrical llhort, ac<ordinl to fire department lpoRsmea. Early Learning Two .Mesa Programs in First Ye ar .. D4ft..Y,..,..,. ...... COSTA MESA 4-YIAR.OLDS GATHER IN CIRCLE TO WARM UI' FOil ICINDEROARTIN At Vlctwlo and C.n-11-ntary Sct.olo, • RU11n1"' Starl at ._ I • assessed $l(Ml,472. "In other words, Costa Mesa lost between '85.000 and "°·000 in pos!lble revenues for parks in 1971 alone," Clark malnaim. The new fonnulas worked out by the plaming staff would do away with c:osta Mesa 'a double standard of assessina dU- ferent fees for apartments and 1lngie family homes. SuggP.Sted to replace It is a 11ngle, !See PARKS, Pa1e ZI • 1ver Makes Leap Into Water At Newport By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 0t ,._ Dllff ..... Miff A hulking Huntington Beach man, paralyzed after a pier dive into shallow water, was saved early today when a Newport Beach police helicopter offioer leaped Into the sea aod towed him 110 yar<lJ to shoro whil< bottling ClllT4llla. Obsierver Officcr Doug Webster QI credited with saving the life of J~.'lllam Ridell, 21, of ZU Huntington ~Hun- tington Beach. -- Conununlty Relatloaa OflPr - -11ld tho dramatic -,_ wu trligertd at :J;lO a.m., with a tr. Uc call fonn Maraaret Muench, a tnend of IUdeU. Vf'' )/ I She llld Ibey wero ~ fll{o Newport Pl<r wbeo ber da ' iod l'o g<1 for a swim -fully cl · -and dove from the structure iii-ta1rty shallow water. Authorities al Hoag Memotlat-Bomtai listed Ridell In terloua condltloo lhll ntamlng, eight hours after the trapd.t\ as they attempted to detennine tbe n• tont of hil neck and spinal InJurlos, He bas sulfer<d aome paralyW but H Is not yet known wbelher It la temporary or perm.anent Dlspltd>ed In hunt Ihe pier di•• Ylc- tlm, helkopttt pilot Jim GolfOI - low over offshore ....U. In Iha ~ known u '3 Adam and Weblter opotted Ridell about 150 yanb olfal>orw. "' -floallni face down , ladlcalinl "" htd po11lbl1 drowned already, ac- (See RESCUE, Pase ZI PILOT AD GE TS 'TONS OF CALLS' The DAILY Pilm dotmli ,.u IMl- vertlllng "SJ>Ol'I" by the pound, but the advertiser who ploced the followlnr ad uld It pt "tom of callt." Q,eck lhll: • • YEARLY. 2 lrl Bdrm&, ""'· -ly lum .......... OnlY S1'50. Call JDCX•llXICX. Three Una ol advert11In1. tons of caU. and the property WU rtnted OG the tee- ond day. 'l\tt's the 11017 ol this one cl.auUled ad. How ma,,,. .. pounda" of mull.I do you wanL Call MJ.a7I and we'JI dtliVft' . Oraa f e ...... -' :=... ·: --._ n ~ • ti --' --. ..... , I '' ....... ...,. ........... ,.,, .• -" :.~ : ,...... .... ' --' ·~..._ M -.. .. .... ..._ ... " ·-.. :; I';''' ': -----. -- 9 DAILY PILOT c Snagged Colurnbus Was Spared tlie Flags SAN FRANCIS<X> (UPI) -JI the original Santa Marla hid bad the trw- ble its tin)' reproduction had here it probabJy never would hive made tt. The scene was the Columbus Day pa rade. EvttYthinC WU IOlq: wtJ.I Uft- tll the malnmast or the Santa fo+laria fl oat 5:"sgg~ on an ove~ad llne of n.,:1. First. someone tried lo cut lhe flag line vn th Columbus sword, but the blade was too dull. Then. someone tried holding the line up with a piece of steel. Spectators giggled and pointed . . Finally. a man climbed a ladder and held up the hnc with a bnxnn and the ship rolled through. . . As the master of ceremonies said, "This committee deals Wlth the dWi· cu.It Immediately, and tacklin£ the Impossible take s only a few minutes longer." Two Fail to 011tru11 Mesa Police, Wind Up in Jail A pai r of men "'ho assertedly tried to outrun a powerful new Costa Mesa police cruiser in a 1955 clunker weighted down bv a heavy air compressor protrod!ng tfom its trunk v.·ound up in jail Sunday. One v.·as taken into custody at gunpoint ix'fore he could get out or the vld sedan . v•hile the alleged driver. who screeched to a halt and abnndoned ship. was cap- 1ur<'d hiding on a nearby patio roof. D~vid C. llollenbeck. 23 , of 145 E. Fro1n 1'09e 1 CASPERS ... he warned. Supporters or Su~rvisor. Robert Bat· tin. v.·ho is engaged 1n a b1t_ter battle to retain his leal on the board 1n the Nov. 7 election. took advantage of Caspers' em- barrassment. Bill Meyer. Battin's chief aide ap- peared at a Mexican--American meeting Friday night and said his boss would de- mand that Caspers apologize for his ban· dido remark. Today. Meyer in a less militant state· ment said Battin will ask for a "clarification" of the board chairman's remarks. "Caspers had a legitimate complaint on the cost of the minority employment program." Meyer explained. "He should have focused on that. The $200,000 for the first year is on1y the beginning. That's Sl mi.llioo.m.Jive years and $2 million in 10 yean '" -~-· ~ ~ Battin's stand was to be "fair t.p 'Ad~te but to remain con- cerned ahiAlt the economic cost af government:"' Caspers was in his a{fice today for the nrst time as far as anyone cou\d det.nrnlDIY slnce last Wednesday but his sedt:t&T 1~ was "ln conference." fM!"l::klar( · l.rman was not available fofl'<:omnlet:tt t> the press ar to lhe public eitber b>':P.#.~P,hone ar in person . .... '·~ 'Ba111.acle' Paper Now 'Coast Lines' Jouma1ism students at Orange Coast College have broken a 25-year tradition by renaming their campus newspaper. The weekly paper, formerly knawn as "The Barnacle" is now being cirrolated as "(;()ast Lines." It is different In sir peuance as well, the former tablaid size h.11ving been abandoned in favor of a full page format. lnd.ications are that the students were unhappy with the old name. The Coast Lines staff defines barnacle as "a pi1rasitical creature" with several at- tributes "the chief of which is commonly called apathy ." Students voted on the new name in Don Jacob's journalism class. Other names which were advanced were simply "The Newspaper" and "The Voice." The new paper carries six columns in- stead of the previous rive and is 21 inches in length iMtead af the former 16 inches. t DAILY PILOT ne or.. c-.1 D.All'f' "'lot, Wrlll Wflldl 'a amblflcd .... N-Pl"fti.. I\ 1111&11"*1 W """' °"""" C-0.11 "llbll•~lnt Co...,,,.n'f, S.,.. nt. edit...,. .,. ~""*· M-..l•'f It!,..,,.... ,.f ... 'f, ... c .. 1. M.na, N--1 S-91, l111nl ... 10n &ftCl'llF011M1ln V•ll•y, L,.11_ 9wdl. lrvlnt.'141dd!m.d! Mid s~n C...._,!e/ 5111 JllM C1pl11r-A. 'lnQI• rt01GMI -.,fl._ II MlkMlll Mil~ lftO Jy.,d'"' T"'9 Jlf'IMIMI ""**""""' ~ It et DO Wftf •• , s.,.., 0.1• M9e, C.ll!Onllt, t1'7'. lo!.trt H. w.-' ,.,_*"' .... ,.ul:ll~ J••• a. c.rt., VJte """"'*' .... 0-........,. lMfftet K•..U ..... '"-"••A. M~11e ............. Qa.t. H. LH1 Alch•nl '· H•ll ------JJI W ... ky Str ... MellllltAiUrt.t1 l.O. ... 1160, t 2616 --........... ltMftl aiJ....,.., ....._. UfWllt ...a: m ...,.,, ..,_ .................. 1.-c:Jll :::!:. h«ti '91ioi.r-t•• 1111 C..,,_..I -II ~ lie.ti T••r•101 lflCt UJ..CJ11 a tft::A Alctr" h i MJ·U11 °"""""''· :ttn. 0,.,..,. C.f-1 l"vM!t111"9 ~. ... ..... ...... H~l ... !IMI, ......... ....., ., ..,.,,...,_.. '*'"' _, W ~ WI ...... .-Cllll ,.,_ ....... ., dlJ"(t1IM .... . J"'9flll <'-' "'*"... .... "' C.hl Mall, Oi....,.,.,._ ~-ty UtT"lfl' CUI ~ .. -11 11.1• .....,,, Miik..., .. _ ...... , ... tlM """'""· Wilson Et., and stephen P. Smith, 22, af m Joann St., both C<>sta Men ad- dresses, were arrested and booked on suspicion of burglary. Officer Robert L. Crogan said he sj.Xrt· ted tbe car with the campressa r stuffed in the trunk and the lid tied with wire about 1:30 a.nt. and became suspicious. He said he followed the car on Bay Street to Harbor Boulevard, then east an 21 st Street, claiming the driver gunned it when he signaled the vehicle to stop. Officer Crogan claimed he skidded to the curb at 21st Street and Orange Avenue and ran \\'hen it became evident escape by car was futi le, but later Of· ficer Leo Jones arrested Sm.Ith on the patio rooftop a block away. Offker Crogan said he suspects the air compressar may be stalen due to the odd hour, the way it waa loaded and the suspects' alleged escap. attempt. So far, no one bas reported loss af an air cbm· pressor. Mesa Committee For Bicentennial Meets Oct. 20 Costa Mesa residents with • sense of history are inVited to attend the ltrst meeting Oct. 20 af th~ newly farmed U. S. Bicentennial Committee. The committee, now 36-members strong, plans to celebrate the country 's 200th birthday in 1976 with a aeries af special events. Mrs. Beverly Carey, appainted tern· porary chairman by ~tayor Jack Ham- mett last manth, says suggestions will be received during t }, e ocganl.1atkmal meeting slated for 7:30 p.m. in the fifth Ooor city hall cont:erence room. One which has alreudy been advanced is constru~tian af a permanent memorial, such as a large statue ar perhaps even a building for public meetings that would also include a museum of RevaluUonary artifacts. Others include lectures and displays on Independence War history by experts in that field, early American contests such as tug of wars and greased pole climbing, and a grand" costume ball. Retarded Dance Programs Open Costa ti.1esa's dance program for the mentally retarded will open Friday with the first schf'duled dance of the year al the Cammunity Recreation Center at the Orange County FairRrounds. The dances, which are sponsored by the city'g Department af Leisure Services. are open to all mentally retard· ed people. There wUl be live entertainment and refreshments at no cost. The openlng dance will have a Halloween theme. All dances for the mentally retarded are held the second Friday of each month at t,he center from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. For fW1her information call 83.f.5300 ar 634-$391 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Cltief s to Speak At Harbor Meet lf~rhor Area Coordinating (',ouncll ~1embers will host Newport Beach Police Chief James Glavns and Cotta Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth during a noon luncheon next Wednesday at the Newporter tnn. Both will address the COtJnCtl on th< topic, "The PaUce an:J Yoo 11 a Team." A short question pet1od will follow. The coordlnatlna council wu formed to make orgainzationl and clubs 1w1re of services ln lhe community and to avoid dupHcaUon of efforts. It tbo trlet to keep lilt Harbor Area tnfonned about vtt.11 problems. For reservations to Wedne> day's luncheon, call 64&-7741. l\'facbinists OK Pact SAN DIEGO (AP\ -Machin!Jla at th< Electro Dynamics Dlvlllon of General Oynamlcs voted to return to wark today, endtn1 1 21-<la,y 1ttlke and •P9">Vt"' tho c<>mpany'1 ~ntnct proposal. Under the pact, r•tifitd Saturday, about 750 mem~rs of the lntemallonal AMOCl1Uon of Machinists who averaged $3.05 an bout" under an expired contract will a:et a 25-- ctnt haurly , raise the flr1l year al a th~e-year contract. l'NMP ... J LEARNING •.• tlleir llldeo,-pmnla, • nurto •• lcl100l poyd>ologlll, a spee<h therapist all help !be cb!!dttn overcome lllY pbytlcal, < .Ill!, aoclal or per<eptual probleIDI they IDl)I hi•• binderinJ them. ,,,. ~ la ''nol IO ~ lllem bow to be brlPI ~tfttlet't llut )ult to !Ind out how they ore fubcl1oolnC and to do what we can to prepare them far the future school experience,'' stated Janeen Bedard, member of the d.lstriol'1 Early Childhood EducaUon Study cammittee and instructional resource teacher. ~1rs. finch and the many parents and resource peaple tnvolved with the pro- gram keep records af each child's abilities and progress In order ta use this apportunlty ta fully test the effectiveness of early education. " She likes the fact that parents are scheduled to help her at each sessian and have proven "willing to give hours and hours of time." Thil help allows mare ln· dlvidual attention for each child. Colar-matching and oounting and puzzlr are used by the pmnla aDd staff to test eacli child, creating a cbeddlst of their abll!U ... In tbts way, Mrs. Finch has found, "we will find any problem aret.s sooner because of the ntio of peo- p]e." 1bere are no Jessons to learn but the children are learning to play together. "Because it is unstructured, they are free to mave from one activity to another and choose which they want to do. They are learning to complete a task and take responsibility wbieh is an advantage for a f.ycar-old ta learn," she continued. She and Mrs. Kratzle both pointed out the children's rapid transition from playing individually to playing as a group. From "doing their awn thing," J\frs. Finch recalled, they have progressed to "imaginative play." She cites days when tl:ey modified the adjustable teeter.totter and rocker toy and attached their play telephones to it, preteodlng it was a fire engine. Anc: lat.r they wore bata and pretended Ibey operated a police car. Ft'Olll P-.e 1 PARKS ••. more camplex formula which lakes into accaunt the relative density af each new develapment. The amaunt of land to be dedicated is computed by multiplying tbe number of dwelling units by the density factor taken from the census, multipl)'lng thal figure by 2.5, and dividing the whole by 1,000. Clark explained that the 2.5 figure and the 1,000 figure repmenl the city's goal ol 2.5 acres of part land for each 1,000 resldenta. Tbe density factor, according to the 1970 census, Is 3.4 per90DI for single family homes and 2.4 peraoos for aportmenla. U tbe developer -to pay fees tn lieu of dooaling park acreage, tbe result of tbe formula ...Wd be multiplied by $40,W>, the estimated value for each acre of park land. Clark predicted that t h e subdivision fees would nat increase substantially aver the present system. "The added revenue would come from tbe apartment develapers," he said. 'Ibe current assessment method far subdlvil!ioos employs the League of California Cities "sliding scaJe." This in- volves computation af density units per acre and looking up the fee on a chart. For apartments, the as.9et8Dlent i! a flat S25 for each ooe bedroom unit, '40 far each two bedroom unit, and $S5 tar each three bedroom unit. Even with the suggested changes, Costa Mesa would fall short by 7 .5 acres in meeting the 10 park &<'res per 1,000 residents standard recommended by the Southern California Research Council a11d the Natlanal Research AssociaUan. "In reality, most citi s fall far short ar this ratio, and aim for a mare r ealistic standard between 2.5 and four acres," ac- cording to Clark. "Today, Costa Mesa has an ap- proximate ratio of 1.4 acres per 1,000 population. Tbe current fee and dedica· tion structure cannot lmprove the stand· ant and cannat keep up with proj~ted population growth." Frot11 r-.e J RESCUE •.. conllng to the helicopter mw. No tlme was left to dispatch a lifeauard patrol boat, so Officer Webster stripped off his g1D1, holster, shoes and belt. climbed aut on one pontoon and n.ade his first racue leap. llJs partner flnt lowered the helicopter to about 15 feet above the 1ea, wh1ch w11 whipped by the chopper's rotor wash. OCflcer Webster took the paralyied leaper In tow -his 1l1·foot, four-lnch, 240-pound frnme made heavier by water- IOaked clothes, and began methodically awbnmln& toward shore. PolJce can and an a.-nbulance were waiting and rescuer. helped haul the 1ttlcktn Rlcfeli put of the lllJ'f and carry h1m on 1 stretcher for UMI raoe to Hoa«i Memorial Boopltal. Newport Beach orderod their poli<e helicopter equipped with pootoons In an· tlclpotlon that It woold be r<qU!rod lor ute in .. f!!ICUel such a1 the predawn Incident todaJ. Officer Wehater aod other helicopter crewmen are also trained in aquatic rearot ttchnJqueJ but today's dr&mBUc operation was the first one for Webster. Lilliputians Plead NORWICH. England JUPll -A """' ventlon of Ulllputi1n1 apptaled to fellaw Britons Sunday not to cali stunted peopi• "dwarf• and mld1111." They 11id thly Wt re fed Up with befng "'Clrdtd JS "something out af Snow White.·· DAILY ,-ILOT ltaff PIMta Prettier By The Do%en 1\velve of the 20 candidates in Sunday's Miss Costa Mesa competition practiced their routines at Costa Pi-fesa Park over the weekend. They are, from left, (top row) Karen Ca rstensen, Misty Lee, Diane Espin- oza, Dawn Evans, Mary Stoltz; (middle row) Patrice Eisner, Frenda French, Pam Amburgey, Becky For~ stadt; (bottom row) Pam Griffin, Deanna Delgado, and Mary McDowell. Mesan Stabbed In Marital Tiff; Wife Arrested A man was stabbed between the ribs with a hunting knife Sunday in an in- cident Co.!ta Mesa palice tentatively at- tributed to tarnished marital bliss. James A. McCall, 40, af 162 E. 18th st ., was listed in fair condition at Casta Mesa Memorial Haspital today follawing Sun- day night surgery for internal stabbing injUries. Tee~Caught With Car, Charged With Burglary A trio or teenagers allegedly claiming they had only stopped to help a stranded motorist are in Orangr Caunty Juvenile Hall today, on charges O.'. burglary and drug possesslan, after being captured by Irvine police. Irvine Patrolman Bill Bechtel sug- gested stripping the vehicle o~ its tape deck, air .:leaner and other accessaries failed ta supper. their claims af aiding a driver in distress. Officer Bechtel said ho found an ap. p1srently abandoned car registered to Larry R. V/ood!, 20, of 1786 New Hampshire Circlet Costa Mesa, parked in farmland at Harvard Avenue and Bar- ranca Road Saturday. Since he couldn't I"f:acb Woods by phane follawing the 5:30 p.m. find, be \vent to 1118 home nnd founU oo ane there, J ' ' I " ( '• ' I '• • • t ' • • ' J ·( " ' ' . -. -. .. -. . . • Officer Harry Hogan arrested bis Wile, Donna A. McCall, 33, at the couple's home after arriving on a family disturbance call and finding her the vic- tim clutching his bleeding side. Car Windows Riddled but was told by neighbors that Woods' .l car had stalled Friday at Dyer Road and the Newport Freeway. A large bunting knife found in a closet waa taken as evidence in the case against Mn. McCall, a fivMoot, three-inch redhead who remains ill Orange County Ja11 today, charged with assault with a deadly weapon. NORWALK (AP) -Vandals using pellet ar BB guns broke ar damaged about 100 car windows in a fivwquare-- mile area of south Whittler and La Mirada, sberlfrs deputies Wd today. The damage w'~ dP!>< !n the shoqting spree early Sunday, the deputies said. Noting that locatian is two miles from ." where be later found Woods' car, Officer Bechtel rel'Jl'lled to It at 10:30 p.m. and captured the three alleged car strlppen;o • cWming they tried to n.,, on fool wbea ( he arrived. ::- Drug pills faund at the scene led to the '1 addJtional charge agaimt the boys, ·ane 1$ i and two 16, pallet said. 1 Another ad was prepared for this day, but we had a fire early Monday space to· • morning. PRICES SLASHED ON ALL NEW APPLIANCES· IF YOU DON'T MIND CLEANING THE SMOKE OFF, YOU CAN HAVE A NEW 1972-1973 APPLIANCE • AT USED APPLIANCE PRICES. EVERYTHING MUST MOVE FAST to make room for clean-up and redecorating •WASHERS •DRYERS REFRIGERATORS TELEVISIONS • • 8 STOVES , ~-... _ ... DU/UM' ·. .. ~ , .... I • ll\ ' . . . .. ' ... . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA . ' • -' . . . ' ' . ' I • . . ,. '• '' -· p I a