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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-11 - Orange Coast Pilot• l ~;~~--9iiQ~k~r·~~ Slayer . ' . .Fears Repri8al8~ • ...... -•. • • County • • :-.. -• • WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 11., 1972 VOL. ... NO. .. I saCTtoNS, M 'f.OEI Ah., Sp~~ng! ·" . ' . . ... ,........ Sprtng LI only two days old in this, land down under, &lid-with .warm, •Jfn n y weather Jorecast, Marguerite JOed:.ts ~_eye-catching em- bellishment on the ibeacb at Sydney, Australia. ' -. -. 8eereado• ·Areas ·--. ?· , arks Panel Seeks End • NI)•-P!AMON caundlnlan, 4eocribed a-potential BY CA ~~D _..., ~ ~ -11 ......... or "kJcl. . -ot"" DlllW l'W..... ..... ...... -.... , -0.'..rce County IUl'ton. •Be~1<nlid• """' d~-::.... ,.._, Martin uaa• Pida ~ _, ,_,.. Boldwin '"" niowled $-2 that .. ...,...,,.. prollltltlklc and ---..... -r ~ (n ClOWltY -'.,_ be no •otes on Olo -1 GI liquor ~ ....._.1ed • blbltlon In OounC1 _., ' H .. J __ ' '£j0£twf s 'Slayer .... Files Suit By TOM BARLEY Of "' DMIY' .... st.w A form.er Marine who shot and killed a hijacker three months ago and today lives in · fear of what he predicts ls cer- tain reprisal by the dead man's friends and relatives has sued Pan American \\'orld Airways for $1.2 m1llion. William H. Mills claims ln the Orange County: Superior COU{t action filed Tut.s- day that the airlines action is releasing his name to the press against his wishes exposed him to the revenge of the dead hijacker's next of kin. He states in the lawsuit that the dead man•S brother ls one of several Viet- namese relatives who are currently" llDl- lous to learn the whereabouts in Orange County of Milh, his wile, 'Josephine and the couple's two children. Mllls claims in the action that be shot and killed hljacl<er Ngu Yen Thl-blnh Ju- ly 2 on the spoCillc instru<:tlorul of the Boeing '747 captain. He states that Capt. Eugeoe Vaughn summoned him to the atrcraft11 cabin ahortly after the hljo<br warned the crew during the San Frlllda<o to Saigon fllilit that he bad a bomb with him and would detooate the deYloe U the pilot did not follew his -to Dy the plane to Hanoi. Mill• said the caotaln retumed the .:1$7 Magnwn platol !Mm from him before the alrtrelt tool! off and told him to uae It when he 1ot the approprlale signal. Mllls states that the captain thon pul~ ed the lilJacl<.,. away flun the stewardess be wu holding u a hqltage. WreJlled him to' the groui>d and then told MlllJ: 0 klll the ... " Tho ex-Marine states he dld euclly thal But he -the airline lot suboo- quent -11111 bavt, lie Nld, _.blm CS.. PAN All, Pqo II TWO LINES TURN INTO BUSY ONES '3iQi a!i.r the action .,11 taken. corn-Tllo Volatud llCI Cl'loltlbltlolll wu ,. -nm wavered a little and voled 5-1 ~ .:= '!.ii!:;.."~ Two Unes al ~al "busy tct <sit let the B6anl of SUperYlaon "-drlnk!Da or lnoapOl1nl( liquor within MJ 11neo'' oa the llbone. '""'t'1 lbe *'1 of 1dilll they'd -unlll !hey droll so rtertalbl are11 ,.. pOae<I. • lhls DAILY PILOT dallllled ad: l!llirhallve law. • Thia bu ~ !Rbl<m• al ..,. ._ VW llEITIJI ~1-ltdfalac.'l.·to ... ~-at ...... --..J~ drlnl:Irc oi G<iod cond. 1$311. xu-na lijf=Nov. 14 ,...unc. wol a/l&-..l by t11e1r own-., In ca-rs or ••en In It sold the car •i Ibe flnt calle~1 but Oin1•lWNiti '"'°"""' O!Keole le·nad~·lewd-hllri>Gr-nUunnll -the~ririilnr--UU <rU)', 1Jie li&l10 perlOll wm drlrit In a recmitlon i.-. the law. -... reportt<l.if ;..•re -.. for aiei·where -mlrlct It or In ..... coaun1u-. --. the that klNI ol -· dial the "action Ilne" pi91ilbit<d by the llartJar -and moot adamant In araulng aplnst the at-, dlroct line 10 DAILY PILOT cipvnlJ&loo. :·~ IOd -bll law,• Cl8*t!ocl M>mll!ng Dfpl. :~. • allo a San Clemenle dly CS.. BOOZE, Pac• I) . . · . . Parks ~ . . ~o•n•1•188IOD Seek8 Liquor Ban Be peal • ID Co1111ty I II~. •i.,.n Man Beaten • •• ' . ' . French Mission In Front • Of Window In Hanoi Bombed WASHINGTON (AP) _ RI•"·' SAIGON CAP) -U.S. warPlanes at- tacked Hanoi today and the French said their dlplomaUc miss.ion was heavily damaged and their chief envoy wounded. In response to a French protfst the U.S. Command said Initial ._atiooal reports lndlcated that Navy . planes hit milltaey· targets 211 to 3 mllea from the mlulon btdldings. It proml9ed an ln- vestlgaUon of a French complaint. "A number of enemy smface-to-alr mlulles were fired at the U.S. alrcraf~" the atatement said. "No U.S. aircraft were lost, and the surf-to-air nlaaUea, after mlulng the aircraft, could h.'lve Im- pacted on lb> lfOllnd ... A opoke11nan agreed the atatement might give the lmpr<Slion that the deatructlon of the mission headquarters wa• cauaed by the North Vietnamese ml.ssltes. 11Je command r e r u 1 e d • however, to rule out the poalblllty of U.S. bombl 1olrc utr1y, as bu hap- pened before, and hlttint the French compound. Secretary ol Defense Melvin R. Lain! today conced<d In Wublnglon that AmerlclJl bomllo may have atrudt the French dtplomatic mluion ,but said U.S. air strikes against North Vtetnam will continue even as private peace t.alka go on in Parts. (See story, Page 4) On the basis of preliminary reporD. Laird said, he couldn't state positively whether the dam.age was caU.9ed by a fautty -b drop or by North Viet- namese antiaircraft weapons fall.bti back on the city. Asked at a news conference If he thought It wise to bomb clOM to Hanoi while peace taJU were In a delicate stage. the secretary replied: "We wUI continue the use of alrpower during thla period. The Presldenl has rtated this on several occasions and •• will continue to strlke military taraetl In North Vietnam." · Laird declared, u he has on several occaslonl. Iha! the U.S. p1-llrlke at only milllary ta!'leta ""' not .. "downtown Hanoi." Today'1 targets, be ooted. Included 1 railroad manhalinl yon! and tranublp- ment point three tltlles from the F'rencb dlplomatlc mlllllon. He cal~ them cs.. llANOI, Pap l) Plane Hijaeked Pirate Th r,otil.ed U pori Landing ""'1lldmid dlvfrllrc the plane, bu! !hen dtdded to lei It laod at f'rankfllrl. Wile<• lfJ'Olll pollce IOC\lrlty ha1 hem In °"''" Uoa llnct the Anb 1ttack on the 11.raell Olympic lnm at Munich Sept. M. A .,..._n for the huclquartm or the WOii German airline In Coiotne .. 1c1 he hearc! of the police action. bu! had no furlllor clltalll. lie said the Olcltt orfi!Nt<d In lbdrkl. but poll<o said they undentoocl the plant WM tlJ I ftl&bt from Ulbon. -aalcl they did not lmmedlattlf -the nationllky al the 1nnod man. 8at they aold k ~ ht Wll not IC· tlol a orn political mottva. l'ob -told the man tbtt•ltllld .. -up tho piano with • -b shortly allor II loft a-at I a.m. Pl7f ft lmdtd at l'nMfUrt an hour bllllnd -lo at t a.111. !ll'I'. About II ~ ermed with ....... _ lmmodla1el1 ll!mlUndttl tho ........ • prisoners held I boody shirt ool ol a cellblock window today In an u]llllloc al the Dlatricl al Columbia dly jaU. w11on 10 to IS booleg,. ...,. beld uader lbrat or death. '!be repo<la of uvagery came ~ aller noon lollowlng • 1ttemple , by authortll<S lo "'*' relatl... al r1otlnc pr!IO..,. and Inma... fn>m Ille city's reformatory In oearby Lorton, V•. In u effort to quell'1he uprlaln&. Mn. Palrlcla Gorham. who said her hu~band' ls a~ the prfnw:n in tbe cellblock where the d!Jturjlance ""*" out. said lhe saw the prllonen brine -~ "to the window end hit him "' the side of the bead. He fell 10 the floor. Blood WU guohlng OUI the back al bit head ." "They aald they were IDlnlt lo kW a man," M111. Gorham ukl. ''They hlt the man on the sldt of the held to locUcat. they're not playing." Mrs . Gorham WU aJnOn1 about JS relatives who entered the prilon yard to talk ll1rou&b windows with the lnma .... The yr11onm llnac.n.d lo kUI CIIief o1 Cori-ecllonl Kmoeth Han!J. --taken capefvt when ht and Wllbqtoa POii reporter BUI Clalhoml --in the pred1WD houri lo talk with tho IS.. UPRISING, Pqo II Or•nlfe Went Hr MosUy ....., 'lllunda1. with hlgha .. the -In the "'· .... llll1d temps wtll bl In the upper roo accordlnl 1o the -lady. Lowll<lnl&bt IM5. INSlltE TOlt.\ Y TM 1m". COftUftwtlJI~ TM- auir laWACIN'I '"' ~ "°"°" 11i11 frido¥ triU. • ..-•I "°" Hori• <Olll<dr ~1.1r11u IJp lM sq.."' St~ hunol•IMlll, Pog< 21 . LA ..... t -. ,_ . .__. .--.-. -. --. --. Ilda••• , •n ..... '"" '-.. "":"no o *41 I .... -- -. =-"' -=. ~ ll --.. ., ... -..: :=-..: =-~ --. I I DAil Y l'llOl S Wtdnetdly, October 11 , 1(112 .(;hi11a By UlliU4 Pren J11ten1tktnal I.Jo Piao,· China's disgraced derense minister ... wtm fltd the country wlw!:n hls P'°'-to usaairtttt. Mao Tl~W!g WU wt- covered, bUrned to death when tbe private plane leCn!Uy ordered by his son for the escape crashed in Mongolia en route to Ru.ssta. ThlJ IJ the ol!lclal version of Lin's de.alb as disclosed by Premier Chou En- lal in an interview wllh William B. Dlclrlnaon, editor of The Philadelphia Bulletin, and other members of the American Socle11 of Newspaper Editors -are 1"urlng Cilia. The dlspatch ap- peanod In the Bulletin today. 'Kidnaper' Used Cancer As Excuse From Wire ServlcM SAN DIEGO -A Westminster man. charged with the kldnaplng of a local businessman here last Friday allegedly told his victim he did it becauae be W8l!I dytng of cancer and needed the mooey. B)'l'Oll Fernley Handy, 49, who told police he ls from Westminster, has been charged with kidnaping for robbery or ransom, armed robbery and burglary by lhe San Diego District Attorney. His alleged victim, industrialist James "Tom" Hawthorne says he prayed for his abductor when be learned the man was dying of cancer. "He said life wasn't im- portant to him any looger," Hawthorne recalled. Hawthorne gave his account In a copyrighted story publisbed today In the San Diego Unloo. Hawthorne, 44, said he arranged by telephone for the $186,500 payoff as demanded, but Handy was arrested between that spot and a beach collage where Haw~rne wa< taken. He got several telephone calls from a man before agreeing to meet him al 5 a.m. Friday at his Hawthorne Macblnery Co. plant in San Diego, Hawthorne said. "I stuck out my band to ah.ate bis and say 'good morning," " said Hawthorne .. "He had a gun in his hand, though. He said, 'Shut up and keep yoor eyes straliht ahead.' We got In bis car and he asked for directions to my beach house in Carlsbad." Hawthorne said, "He never took the gun away, not even when I went to the bathroom." "" ldd<d: '1l'm a "ft!'J reUg\ool man ••• I alve rec:ognWoo to cm btavenly father for ·-... calm. 1 prayed !or blm. Ind 1 told btm l hoped bis plan cam> oU without a hitch • • • He waa a chnln smoker and drank only Jee water. I of· fered him some coffee and some food but he said he had stomach cancer and food and ooffee hW't him. "Ho told me lhat he had ooly four weeka to live and that he needed the money for personal attain. He said life wasn't important to him any longer. Then I lold him about my daughter LUJ.. da, wbo is a and had a malignant brain tumor removed and now was back in achoo!. "1 told him about the fean you have even now, not knowing about bow your little girl will be. This stirred a very com- paulonate note in him and he turned almost friendly to ine. 'In Ny bUaln.ess L should kill ~'.hil...llld, 'llot I doll't want to. I respect l'llV,:!llil, altboltib" I profess no reJl&ian I app!Jdate your prayers ror my laudlf:l • Afta"llia'l!'fll bid tied hlin up and l<f~ Hairthome Ulil be workl!Cf hiJ way Ire< and telepbotted Iha FBI. Dotm:,01' Rat Hole DAVENTRY, England (UPI) Daventry'• Town Council announced . Tuelday itl rodent control operator wUI receive t tl.25 to buy gl&sse1 to replace a pair he 1"81 last week whlle peertnc down • rat hole. DAILY PILOT Tells of Li11 In one segme:iif of lhe 31h-hour in· terview last wee kend, Chou gave a ~ailed outline of Lin's fate , tx'Ciflning wilh tile lllC9 Ninth Nalional Party Congres! that named him as Mao's suc- cessor. on to his doomed plan to become China's sole ruler, and ending in the Septemher, 1971, piano crash that ktue<l him and eight atconsplratora. That segment of the Interview was held up until the official transcript was available. Chou said that when Chinese officials learned lhat a plane, a British Trident , had been &eeretly ordered by Lin's son, "we issued an order prohibiting all Victory Hug plana from taking olr. '111At _. ~ very effective, and thnluJ)>oul the couo- try planes remained .,_.ied, . .AJ llOOll •• ba IOCretly ordeztd .. ~. Ille move na reported beelu.w l1 wu not In act0rda.nce with our couotiY'• normal procedurea.11 Cbou said Lin'• piano ,... oft ~ Peitalho, a ahore resort about l'IS mUes east of Peklq. -_ • "Don't you know that?" be asked his Arnerlcan lnterviewer1. "Every Chinese knows that." Here t.s Chou's account of the crash that killed Lin: "Only one piano left the CGW1try, and that wa.s a British Trident. Mmeolla can ll,1 Ttlfffltt9 Joseph Taylor gets a bu~ from his daughter, Coletta. 4, after receiv· ing the news of his appointment by Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards to Plaquemines Parish County Board of Supervisors of Elections. Tay- lor, of Boothville, a minis ter-carpenter-fisherman, was one of three new members. . From PGfle l UPRISING ... rebelllng prisoners. Claiborne, who was allo"'ed out, said the prisone.n were not demanding helter food or medical care, a common com· plaint made tn other prison rebellions, they just want out. "They said thls Is not a riot," Claiborne said. "Jt's a revolution." The inm ates -numbe ring 175 to 200 - overpowered the guards early today and broke windows and set small !lrea. Around 3:45 a.m. Hardy and Claiborne, who has written several articles on con- ditions at the prison, went inside and spoke with the inmates. Five inmates from the District of Columbia's reformatory in 1.A>rton, who recently helped medJale grievances at their own Institution, were brought to the ~ne. to provide similar heJp at the jail. .A spokesman for-the ' Lhrtoo inmates nnt en a tooet ridio atatloii · and •I> p<aled to ttlallves of 10 luders o! the rebelllOU! prlsooen to meet at a clty b1gh school for transportation to the jaU. pelbert Jackson, adminls.trator of ·LOrton, told reporters he thought the prl.sonen "would be far more rational In de.ling with their families" than with authorlt!H. Jackson and the L<lrton inmates met with ·the prtsonen for nearly 4!I minutes and Jack10n said they told the prisoners that "their actloo being taken now Is ft:Ule." He said no time limit has been placed on the negotiations and that the prisoners saJd their demand for freedam waa "non- negotiable." Claiborne said the inmates were demaod1JJa to see ~r W a I t e r W~. The mayor agreed to come to Uit ]all and said he would speak to ln- mate representaUvea outside' .the JaU. Clemente .-!lot From Page l PAN AM ... his savings and forced him to move several times including his most recent move ~ Orange County. Mills said it. was clearly undlntood at the time of the Incident that the ah1ble would not reveal the identity of the man who shot the Vietnamese hijacker. Mills states that the dead man was a J.lromlnent member of a Vietnamese anti- war movement and that many of its members have sworn to revenge his death. He states that he had been warned on man yoccasions that he, hls wlfe and two children will be put to death by the (JrganizaUon. R~agan Lasl!.es Prop. 14 Plan SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ..,. Pl:alo, ing Its thema but lllldittc lhal It "would create more ~ than. it wouldaolve," Gov.~~ today denounced the teDolj Of 1h<i Watson Initiative, the Prop. 14 ta:r. refonn packqe on the November ballot. "I find I canoot support and In· deed must _. Prop. H U I am to meet my responsibility to the people," Reagan said 1n remarks prepared for delivery before the Califomla Real Estate Association. The assoctaUon has been one of the Watson lnitiattve'a most vocal supporters and second largest" flnanclal contributor. Emergency Forces Plane Do wn on Sm all R~n way A faulty emtr1fenoy Ui1>t lhoud a hup United AlrUtleo 00.10 Dashed at IW\lel T\leeday over Memphis ctUJlng 1 San Clemente airlines captain to effect an emtl'gtncy llndlbi at an airport too small for the lar1e Oner. But once on tbe ground, capt. Jack Moody'• real problems began. 1bt plant was 10 larce Uiat during a toming maneuver on a aldnay tandlnr "rip the liner with I~ penoos and 70,000 PoUodt of !Uel aboml atuck In Ille mud. Ing light on and decided lo a!ntt dowu one of three qlnea.. Moody. who livOI at 347 Calle V,quuo then rettlved ptnnl&sion lo land ai ~1emphl1 InternaUonal Airport -a tennlnal not yM expanded to handle llte huge IJC.10 llnorl. Once on tho ift>lllld, tile piano bad to be btrned around to ruclt tha lamtlnsl. But the runway wa coo nan. Effort.a to pull the plane ll'CWld falled, ao Moody Till. _,.,. .. nd mw nrnalaed ~ Ute 1tratlded jtlllw for throa ~llllegroulta 111tKltlld to l'Cllllld . up;.,.k.-m apjlll'otllto.io..uotr tbe'!M ..Mote.bound .;:.--.=. 10·.rave ~ f4ant ..,.......~. -.. triotl lo"'"' Iba ---~. Raawa)'" tlnUllJ. "tbt -wi.iii "' ~"~ ~ lite paowlllt:.d """'.,. ombOilaitl In thud. ~ ~·11i.r lhe ~· ...... ...... 1111" APtn. '"'"°'ltudacba 'be.k ~I a...:.1 7 p.tri. wlltn MOOdy wtrledly noticed 1 wam· Md er.a frert 11111 ltY1ltc to umUck ill< hbpless craft I . Piao--Death Fro'"P .. •J HANOI .•• • o8lp1tlcant mllltary laJltU," ~""'f : i<Sttly to thll. • -· ..., It G111r then . .,.,,.,...1111 11tt•11nt1llmt.,...,,;of~ At tlte Wbtte HOUie, Pl<ll '"""''1'7, "Wlteo the plane ..! there. II fallod to Ibo 8oriel UnlOll." Ronald L. Ziegler said infonnatlo!I spot the runwsy cil the airport anti lta ~ --bfcU to aak a ~ available does not establish that It wa~ lbel was nearly esltatlllod '° It bid to .-'"11111 jlpl' pmie" when the an American bomb which caused lh'I try a forced laAdlac· It lllld .... a ..... ~ lltl<nuplld: ' ·-damai• and Injuries. Ziegler Aid( tanco on Ille IJOllDtf Jeavlq boltlnd Wf1 "What ptmle! 'l'bon Ii no JlllDle aDO<R however. lhat the State DepartlN!!ll wll\ clolr marts. II. I bave told )'Oil ovteyllllnc. It's much hi exprest11nK rtlrtl to the Freldt! "When Ille plane J4ndod. ooe, ol Ill ' deanr <ban ,... Wamn Report on the uu.u,Jt dlplomsUc c:battnell over the fn, wings flnl touched Ille pmd and .-inatlor. of J, P. K•nned)'." cldonl. I caught fir• and all the nine penm11 on a... "ttDnlO!tl up In a alngle M!lleDCe llMpondfnK lo qustlons ,_ ~egler aol4 board w""' burned to desth. the late of <OttllleMevolutlooarles such he was not aware of any comm~~ '"l'ht Mongolian a:ovemment Jnformed a• Un: between French ~ Georgerrv~ our embassy and on the aecond day alter "Once one fllel a1nad to delect to pidou and President lltxon OP tSe the Incident, our people ,..., to lite tpOt foffignen, whether ba dleJ or not, be cide!tt, but sald the President has l and were allowed to taU pbotoo anti bury will Mtnly meet with utter ruin and ....tvinK lnfonnatlon f"'m tile Na the bodies. 'l1>o -wu liter canled abao>o and Illa! la tho lnovllable end of Securjty Colllcll and other U.S. sources. , by American and Japaneee .._pen all renepdes and tnlton." "We regm any penooal lnjurY. "': damage caused In the area of the fr!ltcll deleaallon building during the alr llllllteo Newport Surrender and the North Vietnamese fuing on 1h~ U.S. atreraft," tho U.S. command ~.4-IJI ~igm, . Bookie Enf ore er In Parll, Pompldou after • Cab&l!.t meeting called the bombing " a depIOrable act.." nie French protest WU handed to U.S. Ambassador Artituf; K; Watson. .• ... · Suspect Booked A French goventmenl spokesman ·~~ the chief of the mJssloo In the North Vietnamese capital, Delegate-Gen\!:~ Piem SuslnJ, was "very serioosl~~~ jured.'' ;. While his Injuries mre not fatal, &(lllill ouffered from Joas of blood and ~ the 9P0kesman added. .: · ! ' t By AJmll1R R. VJN8EL °' ... ._, ...... A burly -ear salesman f!lllPOOled as· the ll1Ulcleman debt collector In a lucrative sports boomlaklng s1stem allegedly headed hy a Sacldleback Com- munity College District trustee sur- rendered to Newport Beach police Tues-- day. Robert E. Kelly, 34, of 83S Seagull Lane, Newport Beach, wu booked on suspicion of conspiracy to commit ,......Pflflfll BOOZE •.• couldn't swallow waiting for an alternative ordinance. Robinson wanted oaly a complete repeal like that in effect on state prop- erty. "Has the world come apart on state beaches," be asked. '1be commisskm'a action, if U ls ap- proved by the Boon! of Supervlaors, would apply to Sunset Beach, Aliso Beach In South Laguna, Sall creek, Dana Point Harbor and the unincorporated ares between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. It would al., apply lo Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley (where the golf course clubhouse was granted a liquor pennit). University Park in Irvine and O'Neill Park in El Toro. Irvine Park near Tustin has deed restrictions against tm- bibfnK. The commlsalooerl r<ally began back· pe.sanna . • .• >qanatng Ubatklll ...._ Harbor, 8eachet and.Paro llirectoc Ken Sampson said he couldn't take the repeal vote to the supervt..,. with lull support unless he had an altemaUve with hhn. '11le repeal vote · came de 1p1 t e Sampson's comment that 20 letters ID op- position to 1t, including one from the Orange County Sbe<llf's departmen~ bad been received. The meeUng was I)\t well attended. Only two women, Betty Heckel or South Laguna, and Mrs. Arthur Kazarian o! Newport Beach spoke against the action. Both Mrs. Hecl:el and Mrs. Kazarian cited the dangers the repeal might create for families and children at the beach. COmmlaaloner BaRlwln agreed, saying that ''there ought to be one place where you don't have to put wp wtlh It (dnmkeonea)." Roblnlon tlOid that !hero are laws that lake care of dllorderly conduct and ad· ded the old aaw, "You can't legislate monllty." Usab 1&1d while he c:ould tRtpport an easing of the entire prohlbltlon. be didn't want to "open up a Pandora's box of wlld orgies on the beadles and In para." Yes votes on the repeal in tddlUon to Robinaon and O'Keefe were com- misslonen c. C. "Jack" Woolley, Verne Maple and Donald FO%. •• t·1 ' ,. r ' ". ~ ~'· GEM TALK ·! ' -· TODAY by .I. C. HUMPHlllS l'ALL J I WILllY TRINDS 'nlere'1 a clusle nvtval In Fall jewalry 1tylinJI for 1172, for today'• woman Is gaiting lbe clotheto alle wantl and loves to wear. 'Ibero are wide cbolceo for Ibo woman of the '10'1. She can chooce a simple tnabnent o! gold, 1 It•· d.ltlon laden dlamOlltl ODRmble, a tallqretl look that mixes ivory wilb lfllld or a lacy ellect that mabs alamoli<b rdect 1Parltllni mom- or1 ... Penooallzld Jewelry of elesant good lalte bu ntver beeu more aC<'iltttlltla. Wbelber It'• dlalllODll1, rubltt, -..kla, IOl>llblno, JOld, sUver or plaliAum, today's Wlil1WI 11 lrte lo -bar OW11 creaUve ~i.:~"'.'M~ ber OW11 -•kine and ~ on l!,IOO ball pell!llni an Oct. II irrall"ment. "It w a a • million-to-one shot," said Vice and lalalliienco Delecllve John Simon In repid lo lite colncldmce thltl shifted 1111plclon lo K.UJ u llte $11,000+ week ring's enforcer. Saddlebact COmmuntty C o 11 e g e Trustee Alyn M. Brannon, 40, of Santa Ana, Is currenUy free on 110,0QO ball after being charged with ll7 ,.parate count.s involving bookmaking violations. He faces prelltitlnary ltearlng Nov. 30 in Harbor Judicial Dlstrict Court on 3f count.s of booknukln&, two counts of u- tortion and one mmt of coospliacy. Deputy District Attorney Ted Millard said today It Is likely Ille Onutge County Grand Jury will lasue an Indictment helort that dale, naminK the former junior college board president. 1bls would bnmedlately shift pros- ecutloa a n d defense pn>eeedlnp to ara. County &tperlor Co u r I , .-11ng a bearing at llte municipal court level. DotocllV. Simon 1&1d today that Kelly, a slx4oot, four-.lnch, ~ mldottt of Newport Beach's Oakwood Apartments sur~ on the advice of Los Angel .. attorney PetB Smltb. Kally apparently loanted he .,., wanted for q31n COllllOCllon wltb Ille -ring muled Aug. 28 when Trustee was arrtsled by viceolllcers. Delecllvo Simon declined to m>ea1 wbOl . lto!I ~ to 1~""1< Ille ...spOci u an alleled ettl...., wbo dealt with llpw.p&J bettors. Ill I Three other diplomats and (b'i mlalon'I French secretaries weft unhurt, but four Vietnamese emp!fl1H wen mt.sing. Finl to c:oniment In Salaon on,,tJ>e bombln& was Gen. John W. Vogt, c!oit!IJ comn\ander of the u .s. commMcl, -li!lll cltlel of the 7th Air Force. He ~ an investigation. ~ ~:~ ''Rlihl now, I can honestly say I JP.!o., nothing about lt,'' he sa1d. "I can't.~ aglne how It could have happened; W~'.J! just have to go into it and see what i.~ pened. We're going to take a good Mf!l look at It. What we have to do IJ J>lck.l!P. the pieces and see what the allegatio,qf are and try to piece It together." , _ ., Radio Hanoi reported that the ·""'!' \'letnamese employes and one Prencb woman wero killed. It added that ~ Albanian charge d'affaires, who was 'c3D- ing on Sualnl, also was wounded. ·• · The Algerian government said a ·~~ bomb blew . the roof off Its embOllY building In Hanoi. It called In Wllliani ti Eqleklo Jr., the to~ U.S. diplomat 1ft AJcerla, and handed him what he callecl-prolelt. ..• Presa ..,,.ns said the roof ·-destroyed hy the bla..t of bomhl falllnt on the nearlly French diploolatic .coli» pleJ:. • ; ... Ill Son Strangled TOKYO (AP) -A retired 76-yeat«j)4 gunamtth strangled hlJ Incurably i!l" . .-Z· year-oJd IOll becaUJe he could not ~ µ., .... him lying belplesa In btd, oOlti!O reported today. No charges have~;, l1J. ed qalttsl the father, Toklchl -His ... Rymo wu a vlcUm of ceil!'bt'sl palsy. . . ' " ' . Route f;losed ·-. Sudden R ainstorm Soaks R oad ·-· .. '· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -TralJlc wu balled In both dlrectJons oo the ea;.;::, shoro Freeway helween Interstate 280 and Sin Francloco International Airport ' eorly today as a drencltlnr rainstorm dumped up to 1.16 Inches In the Ba'. Area. !I<., Continued rain wu predicted through Thursday with a chance of sheweia•: u far aouth u Santa Maria and Fresno, the NatlonaJ Weather Service aald:-> .. 'l1>o California Hl(hway Patrol said Z penona died In raJn.s In Ibo atta q..,. In the Baysboro Freeway downpour, wbett wt-.. Id up to nine tncboo:r· of rain covered the !Oldway. In the city of Colma, three to four feet of w a I e r wu ttporled at llClllO • downtown Intersection Iller the ral!Hwollen COima Creek spilled over Ila; banb. ,, ., 'l1>o llonn hroqbt the ftrat 1ea10111I -aD• In Northern Ca!Hornta wtlll .. the Laum Loop oecllolt of Stal< Route 81 clotled f0< a few hour 1 'l\t~1 •. ' inornlng. ,, •. Snow levels ,..,. near 7,000 feet In Ille nortltem mountains and 9,000 roei.:· ln the IOUthem Sierra Nevada, • , ~, ~ It wkes the right kind of .money to loo k your best. ,.. ........... ...., .... .............. w....... ...... ,.... ........... . ... ,.. ... ,,.,.....,., ... .. umftM 14 • • r • t ,.W tr-. c.a. .... ..,. •:~ .......... ... .................. ...,. .... c... ......... ......................... . ... ,,. .... ......,,.. 11%1 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA . ' " . ·. ... ' . . ... · .. ., ' .... •, .: . "' But but of all, alle bu -to a world 0( .Jdeu from bu loc.1 ln- deJ*tdtnt Jewel•, wbo 11 e«n-COIMHllNT tu1u pleWy !rte lo cpvala .. be wJabtt II \'LUI IN tlil ..... LOCAllON .. , IANICA,..lllCAIO.-MAST'll ~' :!· -·~ In belptna bar. ----------- ' I I . ' p . • • . . ·,.:_·, . " fault !iue"s jolir tory ~· ~ L8rg not ~v_ed blebe man eeots no bj chlldr feel - At ·vour Service 1 •· A SUdly ud w~ Fe:•ture ::'. Of Ille PA!LY PILOT , Got a problem? Thttt writt · Pat Du•nt. Pat will cut red tape, get du on.noer1 aM action 11 o u need to tolve inequi· ties in aw- ernment and bu$'1ness. Mail JI ou r que&· .. ticrns to Pat _ Du n n I At ~Your Service, Orange C003t 7 DGily Pilot, P.O. Boz 156(), Cruta • ~i;fe,a, CO.:, 92626. Include you1' ·.telephon~ tiumber. DEIJl l>AT: ~ ~ ;took me two years to save $425 to ~ my "dream" guitar. I shopped ...,.Mly and found just the right one - &-Gibson guitar at the Guitar Center in Hollywood. I purchased it for cash on ~Ii/!" 9. Within two weeks I noticed the ioe.,ot the guitar had warped. After mpnthl of getting one excuse after another, including the strike at Gibson, tpe Guitar Center has my $425 and I have n9 guitar. I flnd It hard to believe that a reputable company like Gibson ls not hanoring Its guarantee and that the (jultar Center has so little apparent Cilll· cern over customer satisfaction. K.B., Laguna .Beach Tbt Gllilar Center clalina Gibson Is at fault for not issuing a repeatedly re- guated return autborbatloo number so yodr gallar could be returned to tbe fac- tory for evaluation. Gibson's strike bas bf:tB aettled and The Guitar Center has ~ autborlud to 1end yoar pltar to ~;, ,factory, accordiag to Kenneth 11WnJn,, Gibsoo, Inc. service department JriiiUier. Yon will not be charged for a;Dy1 ~pping costs and U yolll' guitar is ftttit1! defective, Gibson wW send a new iutrument lo you through Tbe Guitar Cfttei. ~ .. ·-. ··" ·-l)E.AR PAT, i_n a discussion at a neighborhood gathering it was found that many children had sent for "The World 's J.,argest Piece of Bubble Gum" and had not received it. The children had each ~~ eight cards from packs of Bub- bleberries bought from the ice cream man and had sent them along with 15 eenta to a Pbiladelphla address. This is rio ·big problem, but it's important to our children and we don 't like to see them feel cheated. P.R., Costa l't1esa Fleer Corp. expressed the same con- ~ a1 you parents over the mlsslng nm. Send the children's names and ad- dresses to me and they will be forwarded ht 1Fleer'1 promotion manager for im-•e.n.1e attention. ... DE,,ffi PAT ' j suddenly find myself with too much spare time now that my yowigest child is \fl ICbool. l would like tq do some Eonteer work on a very limited basis, eferably something involving office rk or typing. Do you know of a , rthwhile group needing some help? ~ S.Y., Santa Ana Hgts. ~ You wW find appeals for volnnteer Usl1laoce printed frequently ln the "You );a Help" section ol the Sunday Dally PlloL If you want to begin volunteer !!wort lmmedlately and preler typlng, the Pru1e County Unit or the American ~ctr Society in Tuslln Is appealing fC1r •etp in addressing envelopes for Its an- )lual Christmas Memorial maUtng late ln ~ovember. You c211 volunteer to serve Jllliljlg the aML iQ!![ weeks by phoning :13MZll ~EAR PAT' J" ~ w~ purchased a twc>-piece soft and Jove- ):eat from R & D Furniture in Costa Mesa on April 22. When the cushions jltai'ted to fray after three month!, I Jlecided lo see what cou1d be done under jhe' "15-year warranty on construction" written on my invoice. The store ls out or Pu~ and the Uls Angeles accounting ftrm handling its inquiries n e v e r atiSWered. my correspondence. I want to fJid out the name of the furniture ;ianidacturer and have this warranty ~ :' ; ,. K.D., Lagana Beach ~'1'oV ·warranty went out or balbtes1 i1iitrt~oloog ..ttb R 4. D on July I. Gold ~l'I I< Co., Cl'A._,lllld· w""""ty '" R I< D funlihoiii. piat be made t la e maaafadllrer. Tb e ac- flmi' "doen't k n ow a.nytblng ~ &: D'1 fonner ma.aalacturen" .. ltller .. you. Tbe only Ullng botb and N.P.', Rullllll .... B<ocb (ddu•ct i,.t Coating Co. ..tndow tlqfar h) cu do 11 to Ille compl&lncs lltll Ile 1»otlte depart.meni. ln the dtltt ,,._,. ~ nrmo aoed to o- ' -... !jEAI! PAT: .i!!~red $t5.16 worth or stam111 !tom !lo"""'' Stamps In New York •U•! tee!n& tit odvertllement In Ll1U1'1 Stantp Newa. tJy last registered ltltt• to 1Jnde1. wu liotumed "llllClalm<d." 1 have eollt.lcted !lie N.,. York City POl!al Inspector aod liave written to the advert ltlnl manager ol tbe magulne. Do I have ony f\Jrtber -....1 J .V., Ctsta Mes1 .· :· Jf )Wt ltampe do llOt antve la twt .,.... w-. Clllrlel WO-, odverllllll1 '9Ulltt ftr U...'1 Stamp New1, trfQ -Uodex • yow -· Llodeo • rtttlWid mere onltrt t••• u-............ f'f:IOf\'td .... of Ute .... .......,....,. oomplal•ll nc<J....i by t .. ....-. Wlbel uplldstd dmt INf••lll' "'""" dWen often llo(lo tloetr amoll ••In,, ... • JllU141DM t.ll ... ran llebllld .. ,,.... ... , ... .,...... 1..., • ......,., • UP'IT ........ A Long Way to Go The loneliness of the long distance crawler is re- vealed by this turtle in Reading, Pa., beginning an odyssey on the open road -a torturous trek he· may tell his children about some day. Oh , well , a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Man Arran ges For Own Funeral, Then Kills Self MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Three months before bis death, Stanley Dorbuck, 63, called a local mortuary and made ar- rangements for bis funeral. Connie Holoviak, 24, secretary at Florida Mortuary Service. said Dorbuck told her be didn't want to be a burden to anyone and "wanted to arrange his own funeral." Miss Holoviak said she sent the necessary papers to the caller and forgot about the accident. "He told me !Jis money was running out," she said. "He didn 't want to starve and that he had no one. I tried to talk him out of it, but be W@J very_m@!~ of fact. In fact, be was laughing about it. Ile had a carefree attitude and said he'd already made up his mind." Metro Homicide Detective Ddugt&s Hughes said Dorbuck shot and killed himself over the weekend after he lping his landlady collect rents in the apart- ment building where he lived. Brem er Rep or ts Inmate 'Adva nce' BALTIMORE (AP ) -Arth ur ff. Bremer. serving a 5.l-year tenn al the Maryland Penitentiary for woun ding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and three others, claims another Inmate has made homosexual advances a nd threatened him. New School Bond Issue Pends on: All-year Plan A new school bond issue to he.Ip the Capistrano Unified School District cope with explosive ~rowth is inevitable, Supt. Truman Benedict said Tuesday. But that issue woo.Id fail miserably, he predicted, unless all-year school could be launched to convince voters that the district is maximizing its s c h o o I facilities. The superintendent, addressing direc- tors of the San Cl~oh. Chamber of Commerce, presented a detailed ex. planatioo of the all-year concept for . some local elementary schools. IJ~ Pfedtcte4 °"'t trustees would authorb:t ·a ' piJOt-'-procram · 'When they meet in December to d~id~. the fate of the 4(;.15 an.year plip. Benedi~t. w!io. ba~ .Mill<:~. on the average or once a . day . Cor the past several Weeks to explain 4$-15 ·to local groups, said the onlf adverse comments received come frOJll parents who fear their lifestyle -their vacation schedules -would be hurt by all-.year elementary school. He repeated, however, that the concept of nine weeks of school and three weeks oft aU year long is flexible enough to handle specific family problems. "We also are considering using the pro- gram only in select schools where growth is greatest. "Other di stricts have done the same, reserving a few schools for the tradi- tional approach. "lf a t>Brent is unalterably opposed to all-year school, then his child could be transported to a program offering tht: standard three months off," Benedict ei:plained. The superfntendent, charged b y California) uses school buildings all year long educational benefits are abundant . vandalism to school property drops drastically and tbe district can obtain one-third m..ire use from each classroom. 1be one-third factor, be added, means lhat over a 20-year period the local district could realize a $25-million sav- ings In costs for new schoo ls. "The advantages: far outweight the distadvantages," he said. Benedict reminded directors or the oranWltJon that when 45.-15 first came up for' conakler&Uon a year ago two m<ellngs·--"1th ·teachers tbc «00- with parent.a -took place. At both those events~ Benedict said, 75 percent of the persons attending - parents and teachers -approved ol the lf>l! concept. The elementary schools which might switch to 45-15 by next swnmer are in areaa where growth is "explosive," Benedict said. Those areas are in Dana Point , Laguna Niguel, Mission Vlejo's southerly areas and San Juan Capistrano. San Clemente's elen1ent.ary school populations have remained static for the past three years, Benedict explained. \'/tdnNoday, Octobtr ll, 1972 s DAILY PILOT 3 Niguel Heist Suspect Admits ---- Cr ime to Buddy?; By FHEDERlCK SClfOEAIEllL 01 IM 0..tJ ~1 .. t Stiff U)~ ANGELES -Just minutes be(OI'(' his arrest June 2 outside a Tustin bar , a suspect in the S5 million Laguna Niguel bank burg lary confided his in\'olvement in the cri1ne to a close friend. a key pros- ecution witness l('Stltied here Tut•sday . Earl H. Dawson indicated in U.S. District Court that J\tulllgan made the statements during a qukk trip to California in early June to pick up the alleged gei.ay,•ay car -a 1962 Oldsmoblle leaded with tools -which had been stored in Davtson 's garage. "Chuck Mulligan called me at my residence about of p.m. on the second or June," Danon testffied , 11and indicated he was in CWcago and would be out here soon 10 take care of the car. He 1Bid be may be laUed aiid that.he'd tl)>la!J1 everything when he got out here." The two men met Uuit nlgbt at the Walnut Room bar in Tustin, Dawson stated. ''I asked him what was to Important and he told me he had bunchH or stuff in that car he hacl to get rid of fa.st. He ask- Murder Case Defendants To Marry A jangling ol jail keys will have to take !he place of w.edding bells but murder trial defendants Bert Lehbar and Teresa Jo Strange couldn't have cared less tcr day. Lebhar, 43, was scheduled to leave the men's jail about noon and f\1iss Strange. 24, was to leave the wo1neu's jail at about the same time. Both were to be escorted by Sheriff's depu ties all the \vay to the chambers of a municipal court judge who preferred no! to be identified a:ii the jurist who led two accused killers In the reci tal of their ma rriage vows. There will be no honeymoon for the Lehhars. But they will. as a special wed- ding girt from Orange Count y. be allowed to spencl so1ne time with the baby born to ~fiss Strange du ring one of the roost con- troversial trials fn Superior Court history. The e<1uple unsuccessfully ssked for pennission to marry before the tri.il started. Their repealed request was denied twice while the trl.a\ was \n prog-ress. Both defendants fired their lawyers two weeks a~o in the middle of a furor in wh ich the district attorney's ornce wa11 accused of using lhelr Infant son •• a lever to force a guilty plea !rem lho ac- cused couple. · They are accused of the killing of San· ta Ana secretary Janet Louise Sum- merlin whose burned and beaten body ''as found Dec. 23. 1969 out!ide a Garden Grove church. The couple was glv'n new tawy'rs and they w'nt ahead with their plaM lo plead guilty to reduced chargts. They nre scheduled to make that pie• Oct. 20 before Judge Ronald O'ookshank. ec' if there were Rny lakes around here he could dump the things ln , ., Dawson continUt'd. "I was gelling su!pi('lous and asked hun right ou t 1f he was involved In that $2 million bank robbery ln L8gUt111 Niguel. "Chuck kind of grlnnNf and said, 'Now. Earl, you kno\1' I \rouldn 't do something · li ke that ... besides it v.11s more llke $5 mill ion,' '' Dav.'SOn testified, quoting fi.lulligan . "I asked 01uck \\'hal )'OU do Y.·i1h thtlt kind of money and he said ·you don't get as much as you think ... between 13 and 18 percent,'" Dawsoo related, aRain quming ~lulligan, a friend since school days. ~ Under 4uestioning by t:.S. Attorney Jack "'alters. Dawson tes1ihed he had met with J\1ulhgan on four occasions before the June 2 encounter, They met i;ocially or. Feb 20 and on a date during the first \\'eek in J\1arch. htull igan returned on ~larch 10, Day,•son testified. driving the 1002 Oldsmobile and asked if ht. cou ld store it in the garage "for ty,·o or three weeks.'' Oa\\'SOtl then took ~1ulligan to the airport \1·herc the defendant departed for Florida. On March 26, MuWean again appeared In California, ODYi'SOn slated, and asked if the Dawson home could be used for a meeting between t'NO men. Dawson identified one of the two men as defendan t Amil Dinslo, 36, of Boardman. Ohio. The other man was 1n· dcntified as a man named "Joe." The meeting lasted IYi'O hours. while t\1uUlgan. l)a y,·son and Dawson's wife "drank beer and talke<:f ' at the Walnut IWo m bar. The last time Da,vson 58\Y h1ulligan before June 2 "'as on "1arch 'El, DaYi'llOO testified. J\fulligan, accompanied by Dinsio. '•Joe" and Rona.Id Barber, a South Gate man indicted in the crime. but still a1 large, said he was leav ing Califoroia. l\fulligan did not know II. bu t the lelephooe conversation "'ith Oay,·son on June 2 "'as monitored by FBI agents al the Oay,·son home. The agents la1er set up :t s!H keoul nt the bar where til ulllgAn w<ts arrested about I a.m. June 3. Belly Britton Bothersonie ALBANY , l't.Y. (AP ) -Tile mcdlca1 prof,MtOI\ hat! f 0 U ft d another thing to worry a"°"t -the . bell y button -and It '1 all because ot !he blklni. Or. Martin Markow!!.& of Brooklyn re ports that afte' • sum· mer of bt'&<'h watching, "A glrl does not begin to rate unltu: she c&n display a smooth, round, S)'lT1mtU1cal depression ln her midnbdomen. "This mne of •ft.irs h119 now revotutioni.ied my •pproncb of tb8 nt'wt.o m f~n le b:.hy," wrlltt ~larkowitz In !he "New York Faml· ly J>hysiclan." In what was described by state prison officials Tuesday as a "quite nonnal" procedure, Bremer's charge wUI be aired at an internal hearing at the facility to- day and then be considered by a three- man board of priJOn staff members. trusteea with spreading the message of all-year school to the community ln ad- vance or December's decision, said that Lakeview, Illinois, when! the 4>15 pro- gram was bom, is the only diatrict In the nation which bas 4.5-15 throughout it.. complete elementary program. YOUR WICKIR CINTIR IN ORANGE COUNTY "Bl't'mer accused another inmate or making homosexual advances and stating if Bremer did not receive the advances, he would kill him," said Bob Grams, assistant public lnfonnation officer for the state correc~ ~t. Benedict lltl'tlled I that-because 4$.15 (tbe only allowable • ad-ynr plan Jn Rufus· Seores Brides P urring at Lio1i Co untr)· By ARTIWR R. VINSEL Of IM a.llr ,,,... SM# RulWI 11 roarb\g and Ills pride of placid playmates ls nOw purring, producing a sexy symphony-that must be music to the ears of Lloo Q>IJntty Safari officials at the African wne" pruet:Ye In Irvine. Tbe ...._.., tif fabled -Frnsler stll1 ma!ntalni ,: rather low·k., love lira, however, <ontrary to bis pred<c<ssor who produc:ed ss·cuiai Since U... c..mtry matcl>makcn r.i.....i ...Uvo old Rul\111 among f'nster'a Widowed and ...UeA ltonwe. 1\!o wetb qo, theJ have be<ome lt>-crnstnall' frlnldly. Intimacy, ,.Y pme ,.._,,, ollk:lail, hu "Placed Jntlmldatloo In the ... 1 •• tlonshJp bet....., RufUI I nd Ida RVOD Jn. tended brldtt. Some of tbrJn marled and awotted at him dllllng Ibo Jnltlal In- troduction . ·~ Is DO!'_cohablttnc:· ... Lion CouJtry lidy •Iii Tueoaoy. . u11e•1 bred nne of the fe:m11ie:I,'' rm>arlu!d Loin Qluutry Zoological Dtrec- tor Pat Quirm, in more down-to-earth t~ms. 'l1le ocraggly rtfuget from tbe defunct Wichita, Kan., municipal zoo 1UU prcfcn privacy, however, wheo the 1111• JlleJ'g<I to emulate the late Frasier. "We'ro not J>Ullilll any ..-.ire on Ruf'ua, It .. _,. Quinn • Fruler'& 15-y.aMld repi...m.nt - thal'a tbe equlvalent ol 10 bwnan )'<an -.. ver enjoyed tttedom from <'- confinement untU be wu let -ot Lion C...ntiy. He doesn't euetly ft1joy H )'St hen on Iha Oran&• Coal!. but be'• 1eam1n1. "Re'a btclnninl to roar • Utile bit now," ,.,. Qulm, eiplAlnlq Ibis ii • pd alp tllot Rufllt la PIY ........ Oy ~ to bla 9(JPOrlutlllJ to ..... .,,. i.a "' a. floomhW wtlh tbe glrlL Illa ad)ullmeot ....,. Indeed nther nipld, llnce Rlllua' -role m!cbt be poraileled In -uporlence "' plop. pins • IW....., pltaoo lmnate at tliO op Of 10 lnlo I ......... ol.l""!'I__ --.TJ!viiitilill1.lie'1 aoliic 10 ~ GUI" thtte with a teMI 0t aeaaitJ," •1• Quinn. 1HI HIWU1 LOOIC IN W/CICll -rNE II/Ill GIOIJP" by Pacific Rotton 4 l'IKE SEATING GtlOUP ...... • 2 Cheo. at.In •Cell" T1W. I.AU NKI "" ....... s199so ... ._.._ IAU ll'IKI ..... ,, .... •109'• -- lndoot1 or out, thi1 n•• bold look In tottan i1 1ur• ta mak• )'Olilr fo '"ily ,oom, d•n or pot~ the talk of th• k>wn S l'IECI CHOW SET lW l"IKI s199so by 0-cJion de!ign Dtc:0tal• -'!h rM ffoh1-olry d•don thcrl tJ'llt whil• wick.er grovplftt bl-l"QI iftlo )'OIJr lw>M• Of Opontll•ftl. ''MaGIOIWllG .... """ un .. n .M 5249 '5 -- ' - , • : ,I DAILY •ILOT Deatlt Toll Reaches 600 EMPIR E STATE BU ILDING ---------- In lre1and . BELFAST (UPI) - A violent explosion rapped BelfasL during the night and poHct 1ald lt was caused by lln accidentul ex· plosion lo bomb factory run by the n1lli· tant Provi.sk>nnl Wing of the Irish Republicau Army. The explosion killid three penons, brhlgtng to fiOO the tleath Loll in sectarian violence in Uls1er. Fire had a\I bot charred the bodies black by tl1': time police got.to them, Uul there \Vas one clue to the premature natul'!! of the explosion -the bomb bad blo~TI off lhe bands of one of the vietims as U he were holding it "'hen It ex plod ed. Police Identified the victims ns Roman Gathollcs John Donaghy, IB, Joseph (...__IN_S_H_O_R _T._ .. ~) ~fcKlnney, 19, and Patrick t.laguirc, 23. Police also ~aid that a gunmU11 on a motorcycle had tried to kill Roman Catholic Magistrate William StaWlton, 46. as he was dri\'j..njj: ~·work, ear1'.ier todiy. . ~ Staunton wu .l\tt· Jn. the neck and ann and was taken lo a Mspltal for em~tgen· cy surgery. • ' :::: ;:::::~::::; ...!''"·.!!· - f-'o''t"'I .,! I.!! . .!!. - e L11111J C.•aeer Induced . . WASllINGTON' !AP) ~ National Cancer lnsti~ tcientisfs said today ... they have been able to caua1: lung cancer tn rats. by OXIJ!llrin!r ·tllem lo the tar prod- uct& fnm Ove cigarettes. --.· -Ul'IT~ 'I-laird Rate?-·N ever· But the scientists also said ··the development of lung cancer tu humans . requires long·temi exposure to cigarette- amoke products." .:1 New York's Empire State Building bas reigned as the~tallesl in the 'vorld (Or. nearly 40 years. but new constructions threaten to send it ~o Uiir~ place: i'lo~Yever: architect Ro~rt Jones is exploring possibil- ity of 1ncreas1ng its heig ht by 11 stories to again make it supreme. Dra,vings left and right sho,.,. proposals. The NCI scientists said they hav e developed a new testing method wherein cigarette tar is injected into the animals' lungs and released graduaUy. They :>aid Jt marked the first lime they have con- si.stenly induced "the same kind ot Jung cancer that occurs most commonly in humans." e Pr11de 111inl Slapped Nepl1ew s of Atlru1ta Mayor Arrested on Murder Count TAILAHASSEE, Fla. (UPll -Unle&S SA·VANNAH. Ga. (lJ PI J -Chatham Prudenlial InsW'ance · Co. of · America County authorities ha ve .charged four plans to pass out chips off the old rock or yoottts, including two nepbews of Atlanta ~lbral~ar, or _share its vast financi#il cm· ~tayor Sam P.iasscll. with murder in the Pl1' .with pol1eybolder1., Imuumce Co~-· .h!Wind-run death of a Savannah State mlssJOner Tho~s D. 0 Af~lley wants its· College student struck while he collected ~t sdv~1smg campaign stopped. Dllfley foi' a· scholarship fund. 0 P..taney !ssued a three·page order · "'rhe suspects were identified as ~Y sett1111 a Dec. 6 bearf!ig for I~ Richarq Solomons, 17, hi~ brother. Ralph ,giant msurance company to s~~.why 1t $olofQOns. 19. Steven Alterbaum, 17, nnd s~ nol be. orde~ lo halt 1t.s Own a ,-J.lJJian Francis Pace Jr. of Orlando. Fla. ~daof the rock oidverli.sttmerits in Police said the Solomo ns brothers and n · Allerbaum were from well·lo-do families in' Savannah. The Solomons' mother e la1fulry Blil Pus,hed Mrs. Phillip Solomons. was identified .; WASlllNGTON lUPI) -Democrats _tl\~ sister or Atlanta ~ayor Satn Massei!. are stepping up demands for an inquiry • nM:·tour w~re charged ln the d~att1 or into President Nixon's re-election cam ~~in Bostick, 22-year-old Vietnam palgn in the wake of reports thaJ an . and a freshman ~t the Republicans have secreUy tried t1' _ JP':_~in;an!l.Y black ~ollege. Bostick was diarupt the campaigns or Democratic colfec _1ng frir .the scholan:hip fund at 4l pre1ldefttia,1. candidates since mld·t971. hosy 1nl.ersect1on la~t Saturday when a Frank MantieWlci UUCal direct.o car . stopped, a man grabbed !he col- for •·· ,,.__ McGo' po bo r leet1on box and the vehicle pulled away .-.i1. ....~.., V'l-0 w evef)o d' kl tho . . I . tually out.lasted 11 candidates for the accor tng au rilles. BMt ck was run Democratl nomtoaUon 'l'uesda1' ·ght over by 11 rear wheel of the car. Hated 10 c aeparate ~\J o( al~ged , Authori!lcs .said !hey had ~nflscated sabotage that h&.8..kl "mmt have come whar wa_s ~lievecl to be the hit-run car. from the Republbni... ~ said 1~ w8.'.3 own_ed by Alt.erbaum Sen. Edmund S. Muskie said an alleged .wfkll"":'"~-h~mm1Wly ~-~~s t'~ Uthe exclusive GOP bt rf · his · 111uu• -UUWI sec ion ere su e uge aga1ruit campa1.gn i\taj. Eve rett Pric f he ·Ch tha two wee.kl before the New Hampshire rn · p . e 0 1 a m primary \\'as, H''"'true, "not a prank. This vvUJ}..tY ohce Department had assigned Is a violation of law." He sa.id Nisoo •bouid mpond dlttctly lo tbepiarge•. e &,,.Ilea B•• Protest WASHINGTOM-.(AP) -Ho;, a rd Huabei' lawyen fllve told th« Soprcrge ~a nlne-yelf<Jld $14knli1Dn -lt ~t against bi• Htighos Tool' Co. wu.toapprapri•te becaU5e there Wu no W latlon of antitrust law Iii the case. . In part, the monetary award, -use or the largest oourt judgments )n history, ruulted frvm the "'usal it the JTlUUootlre rectuJe to appear kl Cll\lft in February 11163. 'lbe lntrlc1te and lingering di.,pute btLWe<ll llqhes and Trans World AlrlineJ has bffn before tlie hi&Jl court before, but Tuesday's hcarina m""'Ji'INI tile lint lull aJrtn& of th< case. . • • DAIL.Y PILOT DELIVE~Y SERVICE Dflivery ot the Dally PllOt Is vuar1nlttd T rltpl'IOoes • 10 investigators to the case. Ralph . Solomons and Pace were ~arrested in Atlanta where they are students at Ogellhorpe College. Bostick wW be buried, Friday at Lakeland, Fla., his hometown. Buses have been chartered to take students from here lo the se rvice . Markers Retur1i To Baby _ t;;raves DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Two°""" crete headstones, a young mother's "labQ,r of love" Wr her infants who died shortly after l>ir\h, will soon be back on :tbe.. ·rchlldi'eq's • graves in Glendale. Cemetery. , The Des Moines Park Board, on an 3-1 vote, granted an exception to city policy Tuesday to allow the handmade markers to be placed on the graves of. the infant children of Mr. and Mn:. Douglas Frederick. The action reversed an earlier stand by the board's C!e.metery committee which sought lo block the handmade stones it said would disrupt the "showpl~" 81>" pearance of the cemetery. Mrs. Cynthia Frederictr:, %1, labored more than 100 boQn on the stones this summer becaDlf: she af1d her husband, who is stationed with the Amry .in West Germany, could not ~ boeb ntedlcal expenses and romrne:r6al IQ&tkers. Dock Strike;,Settled HONOLULU (UPI! -The first dock atrike in H~wali in 23 years ~"F settled Tuesday, ending two days of panic buying by islanders who aolicipated long, drawt-OUt negotiations. AMouocement tha~ the two-day strike ended fQUowed 1n- ten.<1ive marathon talks bet~een the Jntemational Longshoremen's and Warehousemen ·s Union and '* Hawaii stevedoring companies . Winter Weather · Arrives • Snoiv, North Winds Hit Mo11ta11.a DakoUts . ' -' ) • • • • McGove,rn Def ends H• • Plan-·'No Surrender. j CHICAGO (UPI) -G<ors• S . illcGo•ern· lodll)' rejected ch9'11es by J!epubllclp •criUcs that his seven-point plan to ell!! tile Vlttnam Wll'. '""' Jan-tarnount !o a attmllder but conceded that his peace program was "not risk free." Mc:Gown pointed out that if the United Slates wltlldrew all its (orteS from Vietnam 90 days after his in- anguratioo, the Saigon government would be lert with an army ol more than a million men p1u& all the equipment that the United States has provided to the South Vietnamese. APPEARING ON THE Today Show (NBC), ?-1cGovern said "that is not ex- acUy a surrender." !.1cGovern said be would not want to see South Vietnam come under a Com- munist govemment but added that, no ( CAMPAIGN '72 J matter how long the United States re- mained in lndochlna, eventually it would be a decision the Sou.th Vietnamese ~ pie would have to amke. "My proposal is not risk free -no pro- posa1 is -but there is no other way to get out," McGovern added. He said that "we have to face the un- comfortable fact that the only way we can assure" the Saigon regime the government It wants would be to femain in force in South Vietnam. But McGovern said that would mean the prisoners of war would never be freed and the United States would have to pay $1 billion a monlh. llE AGAIN CHARGED that President Nixon "has never given any assurance that he would end the war" and added he did not believe that special emissary Henry Kis,,inger could reach a settlement with the North Vietnamese withOut a prior end to the bombing. The Democratic presidential nominee , who began campaigning before dawn to- day, presented his peace proposal in a 3IJ.. minute prime time television program Tuesday night. McGovern sa id "our sons have asked for jobs and we have sent them to an Asian jungle; our sons have asked for an education, and we have taught them bow to kill: our sons have asked for a full 1neasure of time -and .50,000 of them have been lost before their time, "So let us seize the chance to lift from our sons and ourselves the terror of war and bestow the blessings of peace." · In effect, the plan was a restatement • of McGovern'• policy towar<I the Indochina conflict with two new ad· ditlons. , The SQulb Dakota senator -(or a long time cohlldered a one-Issue (th'e 'var) candidate -revealed he would send his vlce-presklent, Sargent Shriver, to Hanoi to speed the release of American prisoners-of-war and would seek to salvage U. S. military material. McGovern's seven-point peace plan : -Immediately after laking the oath or ornce, he would cease the bombing, tenninate shipments of military sup- plies; begin the withdrawal, to be con1· pleted In 90 days, of American forces for Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, and retrieval of salvageable equiRmeot. -Notify North Vietnam th a t the United States expects the release of all Dlplornatlc Buzz prisoners-of.war, an accountln' o tihe missing In action, and pledge to no l~lr interfere in the internal poUUcs °'"vr~ IUllll. "11 '•"\.' -send Shriver to Hanol lo an ~1~ speed the return or POWs. · -After all prisoner• are retdf:'=d. U.S. bases in Thailand would ~·doalli • down and U.S. naval craft lalcea ~;ol Indochina waters. ·",, -Once the political situation is ,w~'. ed out by the Vietnmese. the Q' (~ States would join In repairing wreckage of the war. ..1~r -An expanded piogram fol> ~ with the guarantee or a good job ~ fully-funded educatlon. .~·.Lo~ r:r -Amnesty, with a sugestim ·'UL6t draft evaders volunteer for two yelft•df" public service duty. Kissinger-Red Talks Extend Into 4th Day ;l f WASHINGTON (AP) -Henry Kiso inger's secret talks with the North Viet· namese entered their fourth day in Paris today. The surprise extension of negotia- tions raised diplomatic eyebrows bu! brought no official word of progress. President Nixoo's assistant f or national-security affairs had b e e n scheduled to return to the White House Tuesday night after an unprecedented third day or talks with Communist negotiators Le Due a'ho IUJd Xuan Thuy. Instead, Kissinger cabled Nixon that he and the Communists had agreed to a fourth day of talks and that he would be returning tonight. The extension was announced by the \Vhite House less than two hours before Nixon1s election opponent. Democratic Sen . George McGovern. outlined on na- tional television his plan to end the Viet- nam war. President Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler denied that the private but highly publicized Paris negotiations were con- nected in any way to the election cam· paign. ''None whatsoever," he told newsmen who asked about the timing. Ziegler and other officials continued to refuse to give details -or even hints - of the substance of Kissinger's taikf... "I can't draw any conclusioo at all or discuss the talks," Ziegler said· ..tn a variation of his earlier statement that, "I'm not prepared to characterize b\'!\'1Y way the talks that are taking place.-t' But Kisslnger;s extended stay in P«ris ~ his 19th negotiating ttip to the Ereach capital in a three-year period -~ diplomatic circles to buzz with ~a­ tion that hard bargaining was un~~ Way in an effort lo settle detalls of a·~a.">e- (ire and political solution. ""' With IGssinger in Paris for the ' first time is his chie{ assistant, newJY-~'ro­ moted Gen. Alexander Haig Jri.,.....who returned a week ago Crom extensive ta\s in Saigon with South Vietllamese PreT- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. The latest public Communist prord°al demands Thieu's resignation ..,t.P d replacement of the Thieu governm~ •by a tripartite regime made up of thQ..X/jet Cong, neutral forces and Saigon officials unconnected with Thieu. ·., . The United States. ·which publiclY1~ Jected the plan . has insisted it ,Wl)lilid never agree to any settlement that w~ld result in imposition of a Conmi¥,wst government in South Vietnam. :- "' 1)11 WORLD's OLDIST WHISKEY PREaENTS THE WORID'S 01.PIST MArt.:. AH, AUTUMN. AH, FOOTBALL ! I BET VOU THINK THE MOST SIGNIFICANT THING THAT EVE R HAPPENED iO FOOTBALL WAS T HE WEAK-SIDE SAFETY BLITZ.? CLOSE, BUT WRONG. IT WAS THE TAILGATE O N THE STATION-WAGON. IT ENABLED PEOPLE 10 RELAX FROM ALL THAT ACTION WITH A MOUTH- WATERING SPREAD AND A LIGHT, ...--:---------...:::-S-M--.OOTH BUSHMIU.S ! I WONDER IF THEY KNEW BACK IN 16oB THAT BY MAKING •ueNMtLLS LIGHT AND SNIOOTH.:THE-Y WOULD BE MAKING 8U81fMILLS THE IDEAL STADIUM COMA<IN ION ! AH, BUSHMILLS. SO SMOOTH, SO LIGH T, ,s,O.I T.f-l lNK r LL MOSEY Q\l.ER iO THE TAILGATE! .. 1A -.1 ;/ •I "' "· I it ") , .... ·. 1 ,~· I ' • .. •l ' ., .. .,, p .; . s ·"M. . " y . !he }. "" .:•Na ···" .\ " " .. cau A ( 11( ' " P!)W'Wife tJivorcing HustJamI ,,~fi!UAND, Calil. (UPI) -The wile or f •l'l*•Y ru.r, America's Ion~eat-beld ~ o! war in North Vleloam: Is seeklng a divorce despite alleged Navy ... tt<ltipts to stop her. .J·~ prttly wile or Lt. Everett Alvarez iD·fUed a petition for dissolution of mar- ~ in July 11170, but the proceed!ngs were kept secret until this week when the ~s sister told a San Francisco 9.f.llipaper. . Tangee Alvarez, 32, had been married $0t·ller huoband Ol)ly eillht months when &..wu shot down over the .Gui! of Tonkin in Augwit 1964. She told her attorneys she ,.,atted !or his return unW she felt she ~ wait no longer, Trio of Attraction~ The San Diego Zoo Tuesday announced the arrival of th r ·e e two- month-old tiger cubs in the animal nursery at the Children's Zoo. 'Ntd~, Oe.tobtr ~n:,_, ..'.'~··='========OAl=LV==fL:O:r-=s; Democrats Slap Reagan Tax Plan SACRAMENTO IAP) -Assembly Speaker Bob Morelli aays DemocratJ may draft a competing voter initiative if Gov. Ronald Reagan's attempts lo take his new fl billk>n ta1: plan to voters in a special 1974 elect.loo. In other reaction to the sweeping tax overhaul unveiled by the Republican governor Tuesday, a Republican hail~ him for "tremendous leadership" while nonparti.san Legislative Analyst A. Alan Post said he had some reservations about the plan. The six tax-cutting provisions of the Reagan proposal would: -Slash state income taxes by at least 10 perce11t. . , -Double the present $750 homeowners tu exemption. · -Give renters spetial new income l&I credits. -Require a t"·o-thirds vote of the legislature for future tax increases. On the revenue side, Reagan proposed· -Boosting the saleJ tax to 6 cent!I per . dollar to ral9e another $600 million a year . Add ing one percent to the Bank and Corporation tax, but offsetting part of that hike with a rollback in the business Inventory tax. ~mmitling most of the anticipated revenue from a pending federal revenue sharing program to increaaed state !lUP- pot't of local schools. -USING AT least $250 million of an · estimated $458 mUJJon surplus In the state budget. -INCREASE state supp:1rt of local "I tell yoo frankly if the aovemor even schools by $200 millkxt and order schooJJ taJks about going to the initiative proc- Plastic Trees D~n't Hom Up · SAN PEDRO (AP I -Some 15f,'* IQ p\aJtlc i-nnd plants whlcfl rim cmalh ~lhei here wUl • be replaced with live vegegatlon - because phlS1 ic Isn't a.111 durable as the ... 1 thing. Los Al!Jojes COunt.v &Jpervlsor • James A; Rayes t<>Jd IUpCrVlson Tuesday that the three-year-Old Im· itation trees and shrubs ""·ere not durable enough and It Is Ume that they be replaced." Nike, Titan II Test Launched VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A Titan II and Nike Aerobee "·ere lest launched down the Western lest range over lhe Pacific Ocean early today, lhe Air Force said. HER LAWYER, Myron Tower of San Leandro, said the Navy tried to stop the divorce oo gounda the action would badly hurt his morale and might give the North Vietnamese a lever to pry out in- formation. to lower property tues with the new ess, then I think we would have no other edged sword. She's a young woman who's funds. . alternative but to develop and initiate our been waiting years for a man who may -Freeze proj>erty taxes at those ov.'D plan -which would be a lot more A spokesman said a Titan 11 in· tercontinentaJ ballhitic missile (1CB~l) v.·as fired off at 4:30 a.m. "It's pretty l'OIJih rcr a man sitting In prison to get a divwce notice from his wife," the attorney said. "but it's a two never corrie borne. I don't know any reduced rates, with future increases ban-: , appealing -and let them both appear young woman who could waJt that long 'ned unless voters approved them. : .side by si de on the ballot," Moretti aald. A minute later, a Nike Aero bee cont- bination was launched. · before seeking the company of others.'' ljjiijijiijijii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Navy Says State Wants Ruling Delay It Didn't SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -permits may be issued. The state may ask the State Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Supreme Court to ease the Younger said Tuesday that he gered an imme diate moratorium in the issuance of building permits in most large cities or the state. Jolt Cl•ty crisis created last month when was considering asking the the court ruled that private court to delay the enforcement ., · ' construction projects must be of its ruling because it had THE COURT ruled that en-. .; · SAN DIEGO (AP) environmentally cleared by been so unexpected. vironhlental impact .studies ,. .. '.J jol th t ttled local agencies-before building The Sept . 21 ruling has trig-must be done for proposed '. 1,mysterious ts a ra private construction projects · !he San Diego area last week * * * * * * before building permits are .;, ll"f back again. This time the issued. Until that ruling, the :: d!l•vy says a fighter plane was 'Fri"ends' SurpriQed requirement had been """' t~flying at supersonic speeds 40 .&p sidered to apply only to public ··l .. •'59 miles offshore. projecls. ·: .. ~ 1'Ut after fesldents telephon--A R • RuJi Younger emplµ)sized that he • ,,.:.L. police to complain of slrud-t eact1on to ng had no quarrel witb the ~ court's basic interpretation of = windows and cracking ~ the s ta t e Enviromnental '·. Tue s da y, Navy ~ , LOS ELES (AP) -An ensure "a means by which the Quality Act of 1970. If he in- "(.. attorney for Friends of Mam-people in the community have tervened at all, be said, he '.· ...... ~ ) moth says the conservation-something to say about what "· would only ask the high court BRIEFS .., oriented group had in mind happens in the community." to allow. some time for the ~ good planning -not an end to He flailed the court decision Legislature to clarify the law : • a any construction -when it on the group's suit as a and for local governments to t 'l:pokesmen continued to deny went to court. landmark that should end set up compliance procedures. "·'t11At their offshore maneuvers 1be "Friends," Jed by In effect, Younger might ask ', iDUst be responsible. former Olympic gold medal careless land speculation and the court to make that section · tog ha dis · ki uncontrolled construction pro} .. ···Seismo isls ve miss-s er Andre~ Mead Lawrence, of the law effective et some · f h-ects. The ruling was needed, ed tbe possibility 0 eart leaped into the limelight Sept. he said, because planning of· future date even though the -~ \u:&Jtes and say the jolts must 28 wben the C a I i f o r n i a ficials and agencies had fallen act as a whole already has ' : tie 'sOriic booms or reverbera· Supreme Court ordered a bait been in force for more than a ; 1UOl'ls Cron:. weapons testing to a Sierra high rise apart. down on the job. year. ·!"tarried out here by unusual ment project because an en. "GOV. REAGAN has urged weather conditions. But no vironmentaJ impact s t u d y there be a moratorium on the YOUNGER SAID the ruling service or governmelll branch hadn't been made: ·d was "of historical importance ml led ,, . decision ... , " McCarthy sa1 • . prot . eat·! mi • has ad t uymg an Y But attorney John c . "I would suggest that the 111 ectmg 1 o as en-- supersonic planes or testing McCarthy tokl a news con-g'ovemor build a fire under his vironment and implementing any big guns near enough to ference Tuesday that instead own office of planning and the Environmental Quality Act the shock of 1970." ca~ s. of using corrunon sense in pro--r e s e a r c h to prepare i rt t ... · ;;-~..;,;~• ;;jt:c;ff ~ ~nvifWJrnerl*; ,S>Qle • «uidllhiils.J'cr the "~ti ·"lt,1:·11 . mpo .. an to e De•tJi fJDrufl "olficlals had •&lniply 'l!alted of environmental Impact ~"~~=· Yoo::_ M~A'17.\llllEACH (AP) ~l~perml~allO(J~.. reports by,planntng.~gencies ~~nl~· ·~'l'I~ the -.;A/;teen'"Re girl whoseJ>oc\Y ~ I'li'liallway,u p·e.:d I n 8. throul\1100t J!ie.;;•la~ -~ 'l>ui\ ii\djlstit ind the -----' rf rd some county clerk to say. he's - . . . w••dl1K.vv~ on a I egua not oln to issue any more McCarthy said the state had g~vernment ag~1es charged lofer here died of an overdose ~ g li beca se failed to carry out provisions with preparahon of t h e of tdrugs, the coroner's office mhe~anotge censes! ~"-~n· of its Environmental Quality statements. s sur.? o i.:rn: • th "As a result " Younger ad . . vironrnental mipact of the Act -which he termed e " . • • v1ctun identified as 1 th .t ,, most sweeping in the nation _ ded, our office has now been A Dawn Betty Wall , 14, of ~~':.uion d l~mmuni y, by not requiring the impact r~uested by these agencies, LaWndale, was found by a Y ec -reports. the. governor. and represen-- belch wal~er Monday. RE SAID he believed "If they had done their job tat.1v73 ~ _labor and . ~ A detective said there was overreaction is • • e i t h e r much of the u n c e r t a i n t y buildmg industry , to petition no evidence the girl h~d been hysterical or carefully design-demonstrated by cities and the court to penrut tbf: state raped as police theorized in-ed. to stir uP the public and counties would have been Legislature to add certainty !'° itillly. distort the true significance of avoided," ·he said. "It Is hard-the p~ures necessary m t the Supreme Court's opin-ly fair to ask our Supreme prepanng the statements and • Beatg In LA? ion." · Court to do the work of the ex-to allow for a reasonable time l no ANGvr ES (AP) _ An The importance of, the ecutive branch of our govern-to gear up to meet re-~ ..,. d · · he id s •· t " qulrements ' a<ttUaintance of Chino escapee ecl!lOD, sa , wa w men . · Rqnald Wayne Beaty says he sa!>' Be"'l' in Los Angeles IJllll-• T1le5day driTfng a car 'With Arizona license plates. Beaty escaped last Friday wl}en three me11 and a woman arabushed two u n a r m e d gUards from the Chino prison esbortmg the prisoner to a San ~rdlno courtroom for a hearing that hadbeen poslpon· ed. One or the gunrds was kill, eel and the other was shot and wOunded. Earlier, the FBI checked out a report that Beaty and • w4man were ~n attempUng to· rent an apartment in Scottsds!e, Ariz. The FBI W. coonted tne report, ' I e DriRI ... OK'd Los ANGELES CAP) - De!Pite more than three hours of: debate against ft. Iba City Cqunci \ voted Tueado)' "' allow ellJJloratory oil well di.OHng near the exclustve ~c1 Palisades residential ·A group Ollling Itself No Oil Irie\ 1-. llOen fighting ()o. &!inti! Potroleum CorJ>. !or more hm two years In tbe- ~~Y'• ·bid to dtlO tbe ' 'Chll• 'f'fll•ie' -~c:IW(!:NTO (,U') -dllmo that the coutal It> j ... ~Rnl!J.10, -~ ol!ed tie• Stoto Waler ProjOct .,. ·~ r111e." an ...-or tie pn>pOl81 said 'J'UeodaY. :&late sen. Larry Wllsli (R- I~ Park ) and ~blyman C.riey Porter (~l had 111d In a new releue earlier thiJ week tbat·--of p,,.p...a -attect ruture water dtltveriel 1 , Si utht'r'1 r..allfornln .CHEESE ' OF. THE ' ~K K .2.09 ... 20c aeg .. mi OFF . N 0 w OFfER. COOD OCTOlllt llTH THR.U lfYH ......... J?Sf .......... ,.... ............................... .... .. ..,_ _.. • ..,,, ,..._. ..._,.. .._ It -flf .. .....,. 12111 I I ..... ...... ••••.._ • • .._. r o-s... ._ _.. ... • • .~..,_,. ...._. ..... c-...... -... ..,. . ' flitlM'T t4f!!S · loath toast ?lUI. .,.. ... , COSTA MESI ---:-i-=:..:~~----""'~,,,N:=.-:•"" • • J 4 DAY SALE STARTS oa. 12 TOY WORLD -I '""-"' tlw , .. W-1 • • 223 r. 17th ST .. tosT~ MESA 545·7032 109' dally; Fri. 'tll t; Sun. 12-5 MONOPOLY 'WYDAZY 1188. FISHER•PRICE PLAY FAMILY AllPOIT A COil ..... pg,-ctMw fer ~ .,..,., ................ . ..... IUMILERX-3 Chopper trtb with two •P"d lfkk ahlfl. Aoot ~to 12. '2411 · Map as llKllllC CHOID CllSAll INSIMILE • a.Me's COUNllY <IMPER ••1221 !LICTRIC CHORD ORGAN HmHM.U...,.....,. ... , ...... __ ...... ... __ _ ""' """'* ............ ..... f ... .,.., ..., ... ,. '~ -:1 88 TOY WORLD HAllOI SHOPPING (INTf.I. COSTA MISA 141--5454 t-4 d•lly; Mon. •nd P'rl. 'tll t ' . SUPERSTAR Electric s*aM .;eh a bf'Qlfi - ha1 .. fight patMml. Bot-. ---!iJ. 911 ........ SNOOPY TOOTHIRUSH A ,_. flOW'M' toarilbnllh ._ ..... tust for fdch : rtO elel> ~· c:om.. with 2 ~ ........ ....,,. 2 odoptel1 .. iKe with r•flll brwe"-t. SMOpy dog ho••• hold1 ~ondbrwhM.lcJt. .................. 111 TTCO H.O • TRAIN sn ,...... c.aplW Mooed to ai. ... dWW .. ,.. teol c.oplW ,.., ..... "-'fvl ~ po-___ ...... """' ..,.. Sof'• ~ fWll ... doononcf ....... ........... .w. 888 POTTIRY cun ""'"' T.t.J. t9ft tMtMr'r whHI ......... "'... ... tefyJll• ... ~ ... _, --- ., .. .....,. ltrTllU...-.. 12"TllU.---1r ll"TllKL ••••• 12" Pun.pun railroad ' - • I e DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Jetport Oppo·sition For many years San Clementeans had UWe interest in the 'rim batUe upcoast 0\1er the use of noisy jets at Orange County Airport. Suddenly they ano digging their own trenches, pre- paring for a long ale_ge. Despite that !ee11n~. however, more than 300 local residents showed admirable courtesy last week while listening lo the camp Pendleton jetport ideas being pro- posed by Filth l)lstrlct Supervisor Ronald Caspers. He vowed never to sub1ect San Clemente to environ- men\JJ degradation. local residents obviously did not believe him. Those same individuals also cling to the hope that Pruident Nixon. who would probably live closest to a Pendleton termlna1, would never allow A1arine lands relinquished for such a use. Further, they hope that ~larines and San Diego County officials will maintain their total disfavor of Caspers' plans. Judging from the public's mood last week, it 'vilJ take more than a speech from a Newport Beach politi- cian to convince the South Coast citizenry that a Pendleton jetport will do them no harm. Vedder's Effective Work \Vhen fonner Laguna Beach l\fayor Glenn Vedder moved Into the post of president of the Laguna Beach Players not quite two years ago, he inherited a shiny new Playhouse and debts amounting to $50,000. There was a $22,000 brullt loan. a couple of $6,000 pefsonal loans and unpaid bjlls stretching as far as the eye could see. .. a firm lfrip on the p......, slrlngs, and Vedder'• conscien- tious attention to evOI}' detail of the Playhouse opua· lion were the major factors in lh4 happy solution of the Players' longstanding financial woes. Now Vedder 1s turning over hiJ post to Robert Marvin, who has been serving as treasurer of the board and should be well qualllled to keep u'p the good work. :r.1eanwbile, Vedder deserves a low bow from Art Colony theater buffs for his tireless and very elfecUve elforts. A Wrong Decision The city of San Clemente, it seems, 1s perfectly willing to commit $2.3 million in public funds to recycle with pride local citizens' sewage. But to commit 3,000 square feet of unused city ...._ property as a spot for a center to recycle the public's trash, according to a council majority, is nothing a city should be engaged in. That is the inference of last week's distressing council action which summarily dismissed the issue of city involvement in an efficienUy run recycling center. Councilmen obviously believe that recycling is nothing more than a novel toy that government should never play with. Their actlo~ refuse the offering of the patch of ground to recycling center founder Lionel Burt-will probably mean the death of the effort. Councilmen labeled the center "a private business." It would take a great stretcb of the imagination to reach that conclusion. It is a community effort based on publicly donated materials. The sa1e of those materials pays the ex- penses and reimburses Burt on a token basis for many hours' toil a week. • .. Somehow Vedder and blll new board accomplished a minor miracle and were able to announce, just 14 months later that the debts had been wiped out and the Players, for l.be first time in recent memory, were run- ning in the black. Some major financial aid !rom the Festival of Arts, Yet city government wants no part of it. S . ~ Move over, Dick, ol' buddy!' Sources of Confusion Over 'ee' 'Senator's Economic Proposals Would Bring Disaster' . • Dear Gloomy Gus Reader Compares McGovern, Nixoil. , ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ If a man who ~pes from -prison is caUed an "eteapee," why should not a man who deserts an anny be called a "desertee"? He should not because \\'e already have a perfectly good word to describe him : be ia a "deserter." But In the newspaper -ll!1d JIOPllWr 1peecli ol the near future, be may very well be turned tnt.o a ''dt:llr\ee. .. or ........ 1_p •hould change: It should grow and de- v e Jo p, becoming more prtcise and more oolorfUI and mon flexlbl•. But lt should not grow like a amoer, where the disturbed cells over nm the beolley ..... And lhil is pr& c:beJy -lo llllppeolng wtlb much of our...,._ clllllp today. TUE MODERN MANIA for the "ee" endln& on wordt bas no rhyme and even lea reaaon. A lawyer in Chicago send5 me an extract from a Jegal meeting at wh1Cb the aecretary n o t e d thert were "100 attendea." And the lawyer quite properly aw, "If we who were at the meeting wert 'attendee!,' then who, pray, were the afkDden?" In the aame way, the overflow cro-.·d at a theater ls deacribed as "standees," but they are really "11tander1." And~ pie who retlre voluntarlly should not be t.rmed "retirees," whlcb implte. they were fortlbly put out to pasture. I TlllNtt THE troulll• sprlnp from confusion with 'MOf'da ion, ln use, 1ucb as Doo'I you lhiok the DAILY PILOT baa gooe too far When your Orange Coast observer from Laguna Beach suggests Christopher Columbus ought to have had holding tanks on the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria! -L.G.A. '"'"' ' ... ..,,. ,..,... ,...... ..... "" ......_ ni.w .i .. --·-· SeNI ,_ Ht ""'' .. OllMl'I' .... ~IY Plllt. "employee,'' "trainee," and "examinee,'' where they are the agent! acted upon by employers, trainers, and examiners. But there Is no comparable "escaper" who lhow& an •ll>ff how to Dee, or any pri; leoaiooal "lllloder" who places people In "v.rtlC&I poilllon. Another source of confusion comes from legal terms, where we have the "leuee," the "vendee," lhe "trustee," and 110 on, with their conupond1nc parties to the retationtt&ip. Of aiurae we also have, from the French refiex1ve verbs. such Vr'Otds as "refugee" and "absentee" aod "debauchee," wbicb sup- ply. welui terms the Eogli!b language 111cu. Btrr ENGLISH also hes at least three IUfOxee (-er,-or, and -ht) for the purpoR or making agent.nouns. When we make a new one whose natural meaning ll the opposite (a "returnee" ahouldn't be tbe same as a "returner," b.lt tt is), we only further confound our concepts and muddle our commu.nicalion. Let us have an end k> sucb linguistic abomlnaUoos as "amputee" a n d "twardee" and "u:pellee." The upgr1dlng, vlgonlll Angk>-Sal:on folk have always valued the deer more than the sayer; but can be continue to com- mand this respect 11 our demotic Jancuqe evenlually twns him into a .... , To the Editor: McGovern tries to ezplolt oor economic igr.orance. His economic proposals would bring us disaster. Fortunately common sense tells many to reject Ml'Govem•s deceits. McGovern Implies that giant cor- pocations aren't paying their fair share ar.d should be_taxed more. ijlg ..,, .. ,. should pay their fair share. But we shouldn't unduly repress the creators of jobs just to heJp McGovern buy votes. In the last 10 years Bethlehem Steel's taxes averaged $37 million a year more than their net income. PROFITS ARE the backbone of our economic systeni. We use profits to: (t) i.o..... pri<es (a TV set cost $500 In the IMO'a. Now we get a bitter at for halUbo price). · · (2) Raise wages. (J) er.ate .. ,. pniducts and jobo (about $20,000 average required for each new .job). (4) Rew1rd stockltoldeni (who will pro- vide btlsln.....,:rpanslon end jol><:reatlng money if the pro(jt ii no more than on a savinp account?) (5) Pay taxes. MORE PEOPLE work now than when Nixon took office. But roore people have entered the job market. McGovern's pnr posals would dampen btlslness end hinder tht creation of jobs. McGovern clalma Nixm wants el• cesslve prolita for bus!ness. But Sen. Proxmln (D<m., Wis.) comoctly stated· that buslneu profits are sharply lower since Nlzon took office. Why ia this? During the lnllatiooary Vietnam War, Pruident Johr""" .,.aUy lncreaaed dommtlc spending and oventtmulated the economy. When Nixon took office, we were approaching runaway inflation (McGovern blames PflXOn for thlJ). 11 not controlled, tbls inflation would destroy our ecooomic: security and evm- tually ca"" a depreulon -wtlb 1arg .. acale unemployment. Boy s' Clubs' Great Work MXON FOUGHT Inflation Ibo llaD.S. ard way : restrict the money aupply, • This depressed corporate profils. But unllte previous receuicm, cc.ti rote. So ladomtal -llo.tew Nearly everyone has heard of the Boys' Clcbl of America. Probnbly few have bad an opporturUty to 1et at flnt-band bow tbit g r e a t character--bulldlng oqanbatlon works wttb nearly a million boys from early grede achoo! age into the tct:nl to build I Cood Jlfe for )'OUtbs Who hive Jived intimately with dlscourqement and despair. Tho task of local Boys' Clubo is 11aa· gm.,. Mone ofllciai or Boys' Ctubo or Amu1ca writes, "mall)' ol loday 's young poople have probltma of !rtghlenlng slie ll!1d compl..BJ. llecomJizlna these prob- Jana, d<llling wttb ail! ltt.lllng them. llba -. tbaa bavinl 'a letlq for boys" •.• Operalln( a llo)'I' Club today calla!« a -nstbi ol llldlls wtdch n- q-lf'Od'lmd oollai• tralDlni ud pradbl espertonce . . • ..... Boya' Club .....--. ~thin ... ,... cllloa, -ol mublplt lllllta, a membenblp ..0 .. lal<> the ...... ads, I llllf of scom and budi:ets of a million or Nb:on finally lmpoeed wa.ee-price ~ more .'' trols. This brought ereater ltlhUtty. A FEW OF THE activltios of the Boys' Otubs were higbllgbted during lht organization '• 1172 annual eonvenUon. Amon& other event.I waa the presentation of ten honor awarda and .,..ms lo especially ootatandlng projeela ol local clubo. A d..crtptlon of just one -of theM ijluatrat• what the Boys' Club move- ment Is doi"I. In tills cue, the Boya' Cub ol Nashua, New Hamplbirt, nctlv· ed an award fa< an Ol>ihe-Job tnllokla Pl'Oll'•ll! lo employ boya tn tho! ...,. structloo trade5, lo help '""1hl al,.ady coovleled GI crinlinal offensea. So far to new borDll ha•e been built under the proJ<ct'• supervision. Most or the boys panlclpatlng had no further problems w!tb Ibo law. Hero ii a """""" uampJe ol Boys' Clubo of America in opmtlon. ls 1how1 -youth Ol'(llllJllloa that _,,,. lhe lllJ'(IOrt ol the mlir< nation. McGovern II.J'S we abould remove wage-price controlJ and rely on Jaw ban- ing (Nhon tried tbls and lound 11 didn~ wcwt). We don't want 197~71 all over •pin. McGovern crttlclut Nilon l<r deRctt spendioa. Yet McGovern'• spend!., pro. (IOllll woold cost at lellll IUO billloo more. And would brtnl higher tazeo end strong lnfllllon. McGovern is lll<e tho anonllt wbo seta a fire, then blames the fira deputment when lhey c:cme lo put tt O!ll. LEONARD WRIGHT He's fer Sdt111lt:r To the Editor: BD George niat lhousan<l<lo/lar•11lste dinner roe Mr. Nlxcm Wll a dead &tYellWIY aa to the d811 ol people who will proftt -U bo II ~ Tbat'I rtcltl, the deb wW get rtchu llld Ibo poor poonr. But ckm' thln1t It will bell> a bit U ll<Go¥tnl ls elected ellber; lliat's r\trlll, Ille peor wiU lllll be PoOf end the r1c6 wUl ,. r!rJht Oii rettlnii rlcber. I pl< w1y haclI so clwti• W!LL drvp I Doo 'I you lbink thla ls Ibo bailhl o/ ,....,sand di ....... ,, CLARA Dear aan: Are ,.. objoctlrc on -•I po!nciplal or biicausflio _, splll lhe looC with you? !In thl• bwlU- you 111'9 in bo careful.) IN A WORl.D appa...,Uy 10D11 mac1; John Schmilll-lo U1 la a re!reahJnt reminder lhal tt Is stlll -illie fllr a cltlun to be elected PrHldent whbout boi"I Ille blgg.., liar Jo Ibo lend, or 1Ptndi"1 the most money lt)'lnl to rebralnwuh the already ovcr.brafnwUI'> ed citizenry as In the caae of the two fit ••ta now busily <nG•led In stabbing ,.,h I I ( MAILBOX ) Letter1 from reackrs are welcome. Nrmnally writers should convey their mes!age1 in 300 words or leu. The right to condense letters to fit space OT eliminate libel i.s reserved. All lettera must include signature a11d mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason il apparent. PoetnJ will not be published. other in the beck to win the election. WlTll NEWOOMER Jolm Schmitt as President we could be assured of several years of ~ representation before the money greedies finaJly get to him and at- . tempt to "Indoctrinate" him into a gutless wonder like Nixon, or even McGovern. l A vote for Schmitz is a vote ror America. MILT BASHAM Proporition 2 0 To the Editor: While driving down Pacific Coast Highway 1n Hwitington Beach recently, my family and I were shocked by a polltlcal billboard. The billboard said ''Pie Beach Belongs lo You • DON'T LOCK IT UP ! Vote NO on Proposition No. 20." The proviskm of Proposition 2() bave been incorrecUy stated by op- pooenl! of the measure be.fore, but never in such boldly insultiol terms. Simply staled, Proposilloo :JO Jolettds to limit coastline devtlopment lo approval by permit lltrculh aoa ol six regional commtaslollS. During the next three yean, while ruJ estate developments would be 1tabllbed, • tbonlugh study <OUld be mmpleled of the enlir< Callfomia coast. IN 117$ TUE Clllllllllissioos would ......nmend lo the Lqltlature a master plan for the ~t of the coast. niete 1ecommend•lkml w o u 1 d m. corponte the -ot the majortly ol Cl!Uomians ll!1d not JUst the lnteresta or real ,.tat• developen u ls the C8!0 at !""""I· Tho written Intention o f Propoo!Uon :JO In no way tmJ>lte. lbat Ibo acoess by Ibo public: to the &.Id! will be mtrlded. Wb1 sboold political advertising be allowed lo make such grossly 1naccura1e clalml u are CWTeDU, betDc mlde to def .. t Pniposltloo 20? Tiie Fflck:ral Trade Commlsslon It cncShlf OOwll on the Ulllllbltlntlaled ctalms ol IOOP manufacturen. 1be ad:vertialoc claims Oii propoaitiOM ailed a larp portion of the populallm. Tho outcome ol P"'i>' Dlltlom lt Cf:rtAlnly at lel!lt u Im· portlDI II the deaning <Iii~ of a partlm1ar IOOP prepatallOD. rAlll Pl.AV AND legal ,_train! ls ol> ....,ly llddns when an adftrtlslng nnn CID JD1b dalins that a"' ClOlllpletely the -lte ol the Intent of a proposllloo. 'l1le ldvet'UllllC Dnns can lit.r•i17 ••drum up" emoUonal ...,.,,, thlt the poori)"ln!ormod voter COit r e I d 11 y .. -In the polliltC booth. The DAILY PILOT edltorial stall ond olbet informed voten Wbo have l!:I· pnnod oppoolllon to i!l'oPolltlon :io shoCl!d be able to -that aucli d .. tatlons lrrot tbc upi-4 wrlllee lntoot of Ibo proposlll6o ... unla!r and should be unl&wlul. 'Ibo a~ Intent ol the a~nlstni a&eDCJ and lheit tlnaoclal bftckers ls to dec'tlve lht UQWlry YOtl!:r. As a r .. u11 ol tllil dliliOi\est advenlslng caml)allll, In spite of lntentionl of Ibo propoolllons of providing continued • .,. cess to the scenic and recreational to a position in direct opposition to ~of benerits of the coastline {or the majority mine, and I hope yours too. -_, of Caliromian.!I, a nearly certain defeat Heroin addicts who each must rai" a Is in store for Propruiition 20. community of over $30,000 each year, PAUL F. WRIGHT should first be recognized as desperately \Vhitaker & Baxter, the public ~ill ~divid~a.ls, not criminals merely for lations and campaign manageme e1r habits sake. Secondly, addicts firm reff!TTed to by Mr. Wright, was . Id. be exposed lo .the federally• exonerated of clwrges by Ralph Na· p~escr1bed methadone m~tenance pro. der that it had disseminated false and gram. No longer a .crurunal for hil misleading infonnation in its success· habit's sake, the addict c~ U~n enter ln- ft4l campaign tb defeat Proposition 9 to ~.program of rehabU1tahon ••• The tn June. The Grievance Board of tJie positive goal. Public Relations Society of America, Inc., investigated and re;ected Na · der's claims. Clem Whit.aker, Jr., president of the firm, comments, "(In view of the ex· oneration) it i.s significant in light of current charges by proponents of Proposition No. 20 that any and au argu~ts in oppo.tition to thti1 measure are 'deceptive' and 'fr-audu- ~nt.' "It is significant in light of threats by both State Se11at:or JatrU?s Mills and Assemblyman Robert Moretti to sub- ject this firm a·nd other opponents of Proposition No. 20 to star chamber p-roceedings "before legislative com- mitue1 for daring to voice opposi· tion to a ballot issu.e they happen to favO'r. "Reasonable men can differ on any ilsut, and the public interest surely is !en>ed when both sides are heard. It is a disturbing development i11 America, reminiscent of dict.atorship WHEN CHIEF KEU.Y replied, im- plying that sucll a program would give up hope of treatment, 1 feel that there was a sincere misunderstanding on his part. For methadone ii! merely the best logical first step in the treatment proc- ess. Methadone is merely replacing an il· legal drug addiction with a legal one. 'Illus giving the addict a much more positive self and social Identity. And ' wouldn't the drug dealers of heroin suffer at the hands or the methadooe main- tenance program!? Had Chief Kelly been aware of the suc- cess of methadone clinics in other areas in reducing criminal activities or their clients, I reel he would have replied otherwise, and "°·e would be t n agreement. KEN DENTON Cheelders So..le tg .. regimes, 1Dhen legitimate criticism, To the Editor: voiced in public statemenb and ad· verti.li-ng, U threatened with suppres· sion by elected official.i." • -Editor /tl usage for Caspers To the Editor: For Ronald C8spers, our representa- tive OD the Oranae County Board Of Super- visors. \have four points : I) Ali airport In Camp Pendleton should be out of the question until Southern California Is absolutely com- mitted to a rapid transit system to serve the whole area. Without it, what do I see? Ribbons of asphalt and polluted air en- clrcllng San Clemente. Is It reality to think this will not come •bout? 2) Regarding ltls support for three lobbyists in Washington for a cool fare of S75,000 a year. I say, NUTS! Orange County has two senators and several representatives in Washington plus severa1 representative~ In Sacramento receiving from 30 to 40 thousand plus frln&e benefits and now we need more rtpretentatlves! I) IS NOT THE Irvine Company development in lhe whole area breaking our e<'Ol"licat backs! II I read com!ctly some Ume ago, the company Intends to build a city of about 450,000 across from El Toro where they've been bulldlng the last couple yeari. Imagine the problems which are Ull901vable now muJUplying. The moot ,.nsibl• lhing to do for Southern Callfoml1 b, fint a n d foremost. to "''Ort with great dispatch for 1 super rapid transit system. ANTOINE'ITE HOETZI. MetlHIU llt! To Ibo Editor: During the llUl1Ull<r In a published deblte between potlco O>lel J, J. Kelly end myse]I, Olla! KtUy Nlllned him!cl! Quotes K-Wkpnua, Mallllo -''Tho ..... 1eu tltlng that ls cnatJog !emir Jn our rtt•t dtieS can be found in one word -povtrt:y.'' In regard lo the D. V. Picker letter (Sept. 'l:1) on lhe check less society, we would like lo stre.51! some other polnta of view. Even though Ud,, system is in ex· perimentaJ stages, it seems evident that this type of banking will be prevalent in the near future. It would appear this system could eventually lead to exchanging of goods by a number without the use of cash, credit cards, etc. An autbori1.ed number, regardless of how it would b c demonstrated or put into use. IN THE PROPHETIC book of Daniel and ~velatlon, in the Bible, we are told of a lime : The earth would experience vastly Increased knowledge (Daniel 12:4) end people would be buying and selling solely by lhelr own authorized number (Revelation 13:17). Jesus Christ saki the aim& generation which would experience tho re-birth of Israel as a nation (1948) (Luke 24 :33), IM reoccupation of Jel'IU!llem (1967), the "new" banking "1tl!:l1'I seems to be pointing to workl goYensment and currenl events are pre-llldin& future bbtory. ROY SMITH BOB HOUSTON Ol:AHOI COAST DAILY PILOT ll<>llcrt N. Weed, Publlsllcr T,,._ Kc<t111, Edi&or Alb<w!W.Botn Edllorlol Pllll< F.dllol' ...... ""'"'"" -., the -J>Oot -.r.kl to Inion'!\ and 1Umu- late rNdcrl by Jlttltatinl Ui .. ""'~PP.I"• oplnkuw Md ~ men~ Oft topic:. of tntermt W •llftlfflrilnoe. bf rrovtcSlnr a ta.vn r1>r~~orOW'~ ......... ... "" ..... lhltl the dl'VttMI Ylewpolnll of lnfonned • M!'Wn And apokttmeq oa Ws*t cd lh• day, Wednesd•y, October 11 . 1m ("'Wel loplni lalwa I I l L. I l I l • ~ !rten a Jl6 engln as ' A .pr 3i1reat 111mad ,~ ·O~Urln lello '""''" .,$ .,., ·" "-port ,. ... -. b ... ,1_. '. ' l·I ' ,·. .. "'41' ' ., ,, ' • .'.'_! ~ '. ._, ; 1,J1 •'.;'I ' ., . ' r ' f EENIE ,. Back 'No Smoking' Homosexual Court BUI Dismissed Sears •neeall" Massage Belt Has a Puncli CHJCHAGO (API -Sears, Roeboclt and CO. hu inued a warning that a be.lt mauager sold between December 1969 and last week Is pc;Untially UO$Ufe. Nld, ahould U!lplllg lhe unJI, verify the ~ nwnbtr m:I notify the nearest ~In 1tore. He said ll1e unit should nol b9 reconnectf.'d untll It b8I been insp<cled and modllled. SAN P'RAllCISCO CAP) -A CIJnl)&tga to enforce a sevm- ,..Mtd"" llOOklng ordinance in klcal department 1tores has calllbt many puff~ shoppers oil guard. 1be departmool olofts are lrainlng aales people to deal with arnokinicu 1 tome rs . stressing a polite but rum "ap- proach. "I'm 80rT)', Bir. the Fire Department cloeM't a II ow ....------------. smoklng lo the 1tore any more," 1n Emporium aaleslady told a young man smoking in the 1Weater depart· ment. 140b, gosh ," ht replied; "I didn't know." Gingerly holding the of· fensi~ butt, be walked to an a"'11ray, ~hed Ir, and rtluroed to hit lllopplng. Free POW On Leave "Fires otarted by ctgarerte1 . ,, or match~ have inCreaied i tg~~~§"'~-~~~~~~~=·=·~~~, ... :":l ·1remmc1ou1Iy,"' 8'1d ' UO)'ll MONTOGMERY, A 1 a . (AP) -Air Force Maj, Edward Elias, ()ne of three American pris<lners of war recently released by North Vietnam, left ~taxwell Air Force Base here Tuesday on 30-day leave. I! o lbiir'-~ ~'""",,.-If ... -..... Pfluegtr ot the aeiau Dry : "'Vfe.11, in_ my ~~.inion, Opinion ~Us ten to brilJI or.t GoodJ ~ation. Elias has been w.. dergoing med ica I ex- amination and debriefings at the base since be returned to the United States. op1n1ons 1n opuu.onated people whose opintou l dma't 11Je emotjation decided 1a1ways agree w11h. How'• !hat for an oplnionfN tblt Udl-k-Fh Prehn-! . Uon Weolt -woqld be the I ldaal ltnlO \o 11ar1 t11o ~ j L. M. BOftd I 1 Bill Stern Not ·- Always Accurate ' I Engineers tend to be a fairly sensitive bunch. They're LepL to look to their wives more as mothers than as girl- frtenm: Such be the quoted claim of one Judah Landes, a psych.iatrlc cllnic medico. He did not actually describe engineers as @Pron-string boys inclined to fee! 80l'J'y for themM!lves, but such seemed to be the implication. Harsh comment. However, it is tnowu. engineers suffer job layoffs more intensely than most profesa:iooaJ men. STATUS symbol among tbe Eskimo wives, maybe you know, is a fine cloth ooar. ~ ,. IS WINTER fast upon ua? Watch for , ·the migration d the butterflies. When they're early, it's v1sald, so will be the winter. ••• l 1 • ~.. • MOST dangerous thing you can do on a highway, evi- "1 de,ntfy , is walk on it. Mortality rate (lf the pedestrian on ~ .~ public road runs 5.8 percent. That of the vehicle 0Ci:U- :Ji31!1 is 2.4 percent. 1 'Q, "LOUIE, were you aware the most populous bird •rtift earth was some ofrspring oC the red jW1gle fowl known as the dallus gallus?" . A. Never mind all that dallus gallus stuff, however ~,correct. A chicken is a chicken, sir. . CRIME -Criminal court records show culprits have t -~ convicted on the evidence of dental Impressions, a1- f"1'flost as individual as fingerprints, in peanut butter sand- ·'·wicbes, Swiss cheese, apple cores, and in one instance, ir~ b~e Moulder of ~ feminine victim. ,.,,,, TELEVISION won't pennlt ·Ille likes of Bill stern, that :..1&reat radio sportscaster of yesteryear. He not infrequently brmade up the plays as he went along. As Red Barber re- i~: "When Stern would name the wrong b411 carrier • rrJlu.,irlg a football game, he'd simply have the ml!named fellow lateral the ball to the right man." Stngle, double and ., tPYM triple laterals cropped up in many a play during .. ,,Stern's old broadcasts. ?'···· Ad.dress mail to L. fl-1. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1815, New- ,...-port Beach 92660. " -.t. Jil'• ••! • .... .. ~.· ' ·"' ~ • ;, , !•f . . • . • ,, ,_. "'' . • ... II ·' .. , "" •. •,;•i •111 -.:-' . l • . ··~ -l TausleT• 'WIG SALE! TWO REAL FAVORITES for OM .-k only, two of fhe nicnt, loob 1ft _ ... "'9•1 ()enlo, -bed ..i~ .. ,,.... '"' il 0 1pelltlncMr '" IW'f9f'-fvM o,n.t• ....iac.yk. "--' -"'""'""liod,,,.,.. .... 2$.00, 16.tf ' T..,.lo Top, o io..olo""" In~ ..o<loaylk. !eQ. 19.9', 14.tf ... Ml.,.,., .. Wit ~ ........... ,.,....,_, ,.. v * ewport • •1 F•1hlon l•l•nd • NtWpott CMtet • 644·2200 olli1y o•d Fridoy 10 :00 • 9:10 • Olhor O.ys 10:00 °1110 paip; ' 3 n. TO 5 n. HIGH SHADE TREES •M ........ • SWMtGum • l11«1lyptv1 • lro1Hlon '•Pl"f 30GAL. PLAITIC TRAIH CAN Sturdy cen1lrvc· tien. Tl1h1 flt· tin1 lid. Nevw ru11 w llent. J °"""· IOnlt-r ..... M<IM unpl.o•nt ......... w..I •• lor..a..Q.,. Dos.. l9rp 25-tlJ. IMit• ~. .. ... 6' HCTIOlll ~;<}/CEILING WROUGHT IRON .. :~.~~~">'.''' TPANELS ~AILlllGI .:. OUllEGUU.t.. o...i......__._. . · 10" SQ. FT. •'-' ,..., •"' ..w • MOell.1'16t .. • • '1 ..... ..,.. --_,. __ ~. ~.:;;~ 1!¢ .. ,,¢ .._,°::'"' -... SQ. UN. ~...... n. · n. O*c• <If I ,.11..-..1, ~ ~"' tet11trvct~ -fiftt titiHtllty. Step lly .......... COMPARE AT 15' UN . FT . 6R . RID WOOD GRAPllTAKI FlllCI BOARDS • u the ..,....,. ,et. ~and adamantly refU8es to e1- llngulth his cigarette , ,empJoyes are advised to call a store security officer. u Ibo pulJq Bhopper atill refu!ltl to obey, the stortS have been Instructed to call for a. firemen or policeman, aald Pfiueger. However, he said it seemed unUkely that even the most shlbbom smoker w o u I d receive the maximwn penalty aliowed by law for viol1tJons of the fire code - a $500 fine and six months in jail. Women Join -PRETORIA, South Africa (AP ) -Ninety--six women have ·completed training and been assigned .. !he lint female members of tQe na- tional police· force. WASllJNCTON (API -An appeeJ designed to sanction homostxual marriages Ms been dJsmlaaed by the u s. Supreme Court "ror want of a substantial federal question.'' The case was from Min- neapolis and was brought by the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union for two homosexuals, Jack Baker and J a m e a McConnell. Their reque.\1 for a license was turned down in 1970 by the county clerk but last year they obtained a license in Blue Earth County and were marTied by a United Methodist minister. Among lbe practical reasons for a marriage license, the Civil Ubertiea Union told the court, ere state and federal tax benefits, the right to sue for a wrongful death and the ability to inherit upon the death of one of the partners. The court acted unanimous- ly Tuesday. The company said about 11,000 unlis ......, oold ol U.. model identified by a No. 499.29110 on a plate mounted on the underside of the unit's motor housing. The model is a multi.speed belt masager with a push- button, lighted rwitclt. A company spokesman said Tuesday that tests Indicate the possibility that some models represent a poten t ially dangerous electrical shock haz.ard. He said in certain units serious shock may resu.lt it soml'OOC touches t h e massager while touching a water pipe, radiator. faucet or other ground connection. Customers who bought this type massager, the spokesman IClllllD LAMP OIL HARl!OR VIEW CENTER SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ID 1 •IKll ll"t fll Madortlwr (-r F111'1i9n tUAM11 '44-tlJI NAVAL JELLY ....._ .. ,~h -............. ftfff. ..., .. _.~ """·"" ........ ........ OUI llG. 1.27 IA. GREAT IUY/ WAftR .... ':~':: .. ASPHALT ROOF COA1111G HG. I SAVI S.00 I ................ "" ""*' "'" , • ... ............. ........ '. Ill 19.11 IA. DIGITAL CLOCK CAR ~w -----........... --......... ..... _. .. _ OUI 110. ... PINIST QUAUTY FUU GAUON SIZE !I~. llONZI WEATHlll llRIPPING CBRll!PER ::-..=-=· ..... ...... ,. --""' .. ST91Y ClmllKJIM I/• .._ ..__. ow WY llU. .,..._ ,. ,... "' .. ___ ........ -:-.::r-w........ " lal I I ............. .._........ c-. --· --..... ....,, -........... .., .... -· ..... . OUlllO. !11111 10UIO~. 111 LOW,.!Cf 1.99 EACH 2.n IAOi __ ,;;;;;;;;; ____ _ OPEN 7 -DAYS A WEEK! Chor .. It ...... OVEI ,,,,,. 00-IT-YOWSIU iruu"' sroa1 • 11 t101UI ·.PO•CNI.& • SAi tmAMllD • llOIWlU ...... ~, ...... ~ ........ _. ~ ......... ·-· ... ----· .. --· ··-------·--"5AHUIHO'fl 0 IMITIMlOll llA(I ·--"SutlAIA IMUow.r-..,•n ·--ne-"",..,. ...... ..... ..... '°' _ ..... ----==-··--· --·-----• 11¥dlltf .;J•-· •ftrn• 1--ltl.UI KJ)I.......,... I ... ,.. . . ._. __ 'l''!!:rJl, --':ll&icl' ·-------IAU PlllCll DftCiift eel. 11...._ eel. ti, 1971 '----------"ANGELS SELLS fOR LESS" -- • , - • • I I • Co• Wlelcs ~ -- Birdwa1ehers 111 PlllL llAN t. c ........ ..,..,,.. • SACRAM£N'l'O -,.. ye1n ago, • ~ of women s~ rating legisl11tors ...--for !Mir VOtes on ·rnVljiON]ienliil issues. ~ '.Ibey called themlelves the Le&lslal1ve Birdwatchers -abd raistd alt k.iod of Cain in commHtee beattngs. /.I llrSt, the laW!llU .. lauped. But "when ntwimen started ~& up the ,fury, U was a differenf, matter. 1 l>lll woold be~"tled au1 or commltiee to !ht ltelsltUve -· BlllDWA'lt!llllllS pool<ed tw•y ood fina~, thia-1.!!!'. were able lO &et both legislUve hOUlel o-enact iUIM:-whereby votes tn commlttee were recorded. Joan Reiss, cbalnnan or t h e Legislative Birdwatchers, upreued,.joy and a degree OI rt1lel that la""'8ken dedd<d to go oa roconl In CGmQllt .... '"!Ills has lreeil us Imm tl\e fruSt'8ting hours of vote ca~· in eo.rnmittee IQ that ~we can concentrate oo DUbUcicina legislators' votes on ·envlrom1,entli issues," Mrs. Reiss said. c ne ay, ' . Bate LawJDakers mlttee, Kanlllan -snd<d hlCh llr'llls lloor ·-ft i--1. TOPS • AMONG Uooot1ilymen _.. Richard llay~M (ll<Swmyvale) and Jim t:halt·-_..., getter· all11 pla!Jf,.. ·,ante• tDlth .,.._",_ tietn. 'fflth 2S percellt, and Pauline Davis (D- i'ortDI>) -u pe.l'C<tlt. Sen. Nicholas Pttds ([).OU!and) .scored 100 percent with 'tbe. bfrdwatcbers In tbe llJll)tJ' house. Six ...,. ..... scored 91 perc<tll. 'nley .,. Allred .Uqulst ([). s.n-Jooe), Peter Behr (R-San Raloet), Anthony BeUemon (0-Beverly HillJI, Doaald .(lunsky (R,WataoaYille), Albert Rodda (D-Sacramento) and M 111 on M..U (II-San Frandl<o), Seo. Alfred Song ([).Loo Angeles) ra...i lowetl wlth'9•pereeot. NeJCI to him at the botioni or t~ _u,t were Sens. Lawrence Walsh (D-HUhlington Park) with 18 per- cent and H. L. "BUI" Richardson (R· Arcadia) with rT percenl 1 hear M's with • World Hockey Assocllltion team.· • ..., ._ CoriWkiff' chainneA.... kt.,. the Slate Capitol gcneraly were playing games with votes in committee meetings, end no commiltee votes were being recorded. The.re have beeo occasions in com- mittee hearings when the chalnnan call- ed for the ayes and nays, and no nays were heard and the chainnan would tell the author that his bill was dead. Or, conversely. no ayes were ·bt.ard and the Assemblyman Walter Karabian (1> Monterey Park) came lnto criticism from lhe birdwatchen for his failure to attend committee meetings. His absentee record on environmental bllls was 70 per· cent -highest of all lawmakers. :Keysor (.D-San Femanljo) wilJl 100 per. cent. Ji'lve assemblymen rettlved 9t. per· cent ratings. They were Dixon Arnett (R· Redwood City), Willie Brown (D-San Francisco), John Dunlap (D-Napa), Alister McAllster (D-San Jose) and Edwin L. Z'berg ([).Sacramento). Low on the assembly totemJX>le were Bill Brophy {R·Los A.Qgeles) with 6 per· cent, Floyd Wakefield (R-SOUth Gate) and Bob Badlwn (R·Newport Beach) .. LEGISLA11VE Birdwatchers this year followed 33 bills, according 10 Mra. Reiss. They were selected from a list ol 291 en- vironmental bills introduced ln both houses . For The Record Marriage Licenses Despite his absentee rate in com· • FALLINVENJORY D A ALLl,E~ N~L,!ttl.;~!l..f.4!:· . ; /:l,.l?,f,.f/wr·tfa,,. NEW, HEAVY, DEEP-· .• "r' . '/f /JtJ "'JM" SHAG. STYLED TO 4'' ..,,,.,...II 11~ALL. ADDBEAUTYTO /r/f//o '&'::,,., ""'J""'"' ANY HOME. D( . 5t.:f· CORATOR COLORS. · $3.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL -........ -.. -·-·-·-·····-·$7.99 1000's OF REMNANTS BR ING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS LARGE SIZE SAVINGS UPTO ........ LIVING ROOM, DINING · ROOM, BEDROOMS DACRON ® SHAG 100% DACRON® POLYESTER PILE! BEAUTIFUL NEW, DEEP SHAG WITH A. FULL DEEP PILE! MANY NEW DECORATOR COLORS NOW SALE PRICED ••• COMPARABLE RETAIL_ .. _$7.99 SMALL SIZE SAVINGS UP TO ...... -- HALLWAYS. BATH· R!>OMS, CARS, ETC. . CARPET TILES-SAYE $ 00-IT·YOURSELF • SAVE 59' FEELS LIKE VELVET -OUTWEARS 29c OTHER CARPETS. EASY TO INSTALL. Vtjfjl PATTERN AVUN® ;, • TM of 8. .. POLYESTER FMC C0<p, ~ 100% AVl.IN® p0LYiST£R PILE. EX· 599 • 12' x 12" •STAIN RESISTANT • 100% NYLON PILE. SALE PRICED EA. VI i.J' !.!!~o!c CORP. ~Tf~UJ' 100% AVLIN ® POLYESTER. BEAU· TIFUL, DEEP, LUSH SHAG . MANY 499 NEW COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALE PRICED_... 't:f· · ,COMPARABLE RETAIL .. $8.99 $4.00 . TRA HEAVY, THICK, PATIERNED DE· • SIGN. RUGGED, DURABLE AND EASY so. YD TO MAlNTAIN ••• MADE WITH NEW sAVE ' CONTINUOUS FILAMENT AVLIN® u.oo POLYESTER. COMPARABLE RETAIL ..... -$8.99 Dacron® Polyester Plush 100% DACRON® POLYESTER PILE! RICH, LUXURIOUSLY THICK PILE ••• NEW DECORATOR COLORS. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE RETAIL ... $9.99 6!! IAVE .. $3.00 HERCULON 100% HERCULbN OlEFIN PILE. NEW MIRACLE FIBER, STAIN AND WEAR RESIS- TANT. BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR COLORS. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE RETAIL .............. $4.99 NYLON Hl•LOW 100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. POP- ULAR NYLON HI-LOW THAT COMBINES BEAUTY AND DURABILITY. MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALE PRICED ____ ....... COMPARABLE RETAIL _ .. ,_,, ___ ........ -$4.99 100% DUPOfiT NYLON PILE. DEEP, RICH, DU· RABLE SHAG. BEAUTIFUL, NEW THREE COLOR DESIGNS. NOW SALE PRICED .:. __ ,,_,_ .. COMPARABLE RETAIL ··-·-···-·-·-....... $4.99 SQ. YD. SAVE $2.00 99 , SQ. YD. SAVE $2.00 KITCHiN CARPETS By Ozlte® NAME BRANDS. FINEST QUALITY. NEW DESIGNER DESIGNS. HI-DENSITY 99 FOAM BACK. SO GREAT FOR KITCH- ENS, POOL, DECKS, PATIOS, ETC. NOW SALE PRICED ••••• COMPARABLE _!l_TAIL =f_7.99 ALLiED NYLON SHAG SQ. YD. SAVE $3.00 /;1,.1?,f,.,,,.,;.f,,hM· NEW, HEAVY SHAG STYLED FOR 1 /JiJ mJ""',; TODAY WITH MANY DECORATOR ~ ,~n COLORS ...... _ .. ._ _,._ ... _ --,~ ... COMPARABLE RETAIL ...... : .... $10.99 7!?. $AVE S3.00 ALLIED NYLON PLUSH f:lt.l?,f,.r~'f/..,,· NEW, DEEP LUXURIOUS PILE 'If If,; tr1J""' ,; STYLED TO ADD ~ . BEAUTYTO 8'' ~ ~G'ft.:~.N:~~~ •••·• ,. YD. COMPARABLE RETAIL .... -........... $11.99 st~ -......... KODEL TRl·COLOR SHAG 100% KODEL POLYESTER PJLE. RICH, DEEP, LUXURIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI -STYLE DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT FROM. RESISTS DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. DACRON® TRl·COLOR. SHAG NOW SALE PRICED .......... . RITAIL ••••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, •••••••••• $1.99 SQ, YD. SAVE $3M 100% DACROR P0LYESTER PILE. BEAUTIFUL, NEW DEEP . SHAG. EASY TO MAINTAIN. MANY NEW DECORATOR COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALi PRICED ... , ......... . COMPARAILI IUAIL ............................. $8.99 • ,... MYS 111 llTIHST • Clll'llllOIT emir PUllS .. -TllllaAIAIUIU • CALlUI Fl(( ... r.-UIVIC£ .• ¥1Sn _M CISIOll IUPHY Ill'! . SQ. YD. SAVE $3.00 HOLLYWOOD W. LOS ANGELES ANAHEIM LONG BEACH 0 1007 Lourel Canyon &Jvd. 1115 N. v..,...t Ave. 11141 Wilshln 11¥1111. 649 N. luc:IHI St. 300t lellflow•r Blvd. PINING SOON , ... :, 982·2200 666-7455 4n•!l!l25 (714) 135-7674 QOSED DUE TO f1H ~ t-""'"':".v::EN:-::T:::-U::RA-:--+-T::O::R::RA"'."".".N".'.'cE:'."'-+--w~H""1n~1::.:ft:__+-..!:.,.:A~SA.::.:D:..:EN.:A:.:..._i_.,::s:A:N~c=A:..:RL:.o:s:......J MONTCLAIR 2501 I. Main St. 4236 Am.lo ll•d. 15flt I . WhlHlff llvd. 2'6q E. Colo...d• 11¥d. 9'0 11 Corwloo laal '' {li05> 648-!5041 542-6696 943.0161 • sn-1900 • s.F. (415) 592·562l -wlST COVINA CANOGA PAllK lOS ANOBIS COSTA MISA MIUIUE '111U I. W~n >We .• !NII 4471 21Nt Sh.,,. .. Woy 347.2334 171f Nao ........ d. (714) Ms:.3020 220EICo-leol S.F. (41 S) 692·2555 Open Sundays and Evenings - ol I • • ta st m (Di ' ne "' •p d ' SAYING AH -Cana- dian Pr i rn e 1t1inister Pierre Trudeau, during a campaign stop with a doctor, takes adVan- • : tage of tbe situation by sttcinn l{, out ton.gue • Britain's ,.; Laureate -'I ' ~ .. ::Angry • • ! From Wire Services ~ . ~..Sir John Betjeman became fBritain's post laureate and • promised an on.slaught in 1 r terse against the modem con- ;,.1 i'"'crete jungle . .-.! As Poet Laureate i n ;.! >::Ordinary. a 'royal orfiei! dating • the 17th century. Sir John, • · 66, will be the personal poel or -:;..Queen Elizabeth rr. .. . . j OC,_' -PE_O_P_L_E_) '""~ ' . He said he will write about ;..~ings that make him an.-"'gr:;_Y;,· I- • r--About-i:le"Velopeis and ~ : &reedy property owners," he • $explained. ~ -:-· "About saving what's left of ; England from demolition ... -~About the protection of trees ;;: ;:and buildings." ~x * -: Sen. \Vllllam t-roxmire says · he was threatend with ~ ;assassination during debate on . the: controversial Lockbecd "!~· guarantee ~!'Ind . changed ~route· or ·his morning jog lo · ~irork to avoid "an easy sniper flt:Plckoff." '.'"" Proxmire. th!!. Senate's n1ost : (amouS' · }Ogget; made the : ·disclosure in • new book in : which he crtt.k:ized alleged ";.military and domestic federal :•waste and called for an end to ( most secret hearings i n f(:ongre ss and the executive , Wanch. •, -ir : Retired ~larine Mflj . Gen . i,..Lowell E. Ene;llsh. once co m- ,( mander o( the 3rd l\1arine ~Division in Viet nnm. is the ! new director of the Museum of Man in San Diego's Balboa ,Park. J '.English. 57, will be peid 115,000 a;inually and succeeds r br. Spencer Rogers. the 2 '"Jluseum's scientific director. ~ _. who filled in since the death of ~ ~Clark C. Evernham I a s t ~~October. it ~ The votes ~ the student ~ • IK>dy of the Universi ty of .Z."I Illinois "coo\d carry the na- tional election" for S e n . ~e McGovern, a c t o r - irector \\.'arren Beatty said in rbana, Ill. • • Speaking before a crowd of • ~ ibout 1,000 at the lllinois cam- ' pus, Beatty urged the students ' \. to register to vote. , "This election ls really going "'~liO be close," Beatty said. "lf .. : you drop out now, If you lose Z' t'your courage now, you're • ioiog to be kicking yourself f Tor lou• years ... ,. * • . I • Entertainer Sammy Dav !I ! Jr. pledged a cash glft toward lii : uie United Negro College • I fllnd's 110 mlllloo goal th~ • l fear. !::, '1 At a UNCF lwx:heon in San .:, Francisco, Davis was named •l : chairman of the fund-raising .. ""· : campaign. He responded by " : pledging 11,000 gifts to each ol j .-; tJ1t ~ predominantly black :!; : colleges in the organization. -~·' * ... ' .. :: Braziliafl dlesr g:randlna!1er ::,; t Henriq• Mtethc aald In Rio •j • de Jlllllil'O M will ploy -Id •!• chess champk>n Btbb y : .. ~ • F1scber ot the Unlttd State. ~ next spring In SM P1u)o In 1 ;:1 •friendly match. •• • ·!~ Mecklng uld the cham-;.~ plonsblp wm not be at ltAU ;.;-i but thai Fl!JCMr asked '200,0001--- 'n,u.-. la too blgll bu\ I I Filch«-will ttduce hll demand," Mee.king uld. . . JUNIOa •OYS' l'AClrfC TWAIL 18436 footloall USA """"' .... ~· .. .._.... .. 2.• ···-.-..... -,.... ......... ,.,. (~ -,._..i~i. 19 .,to. Hfhtt ........ It ..... Jnii.tt. Au•t ...,;. tri.. -.... st... I r. 12 SI"' 14 r. ,. $15.00 $17.00. ' . " .. ~ PACIFIC TRAIL ~~,, ~· ·SPO'RTSWEAR c PACIFIC TRAILS MISS VALIANT C1rcoat in choice of plaids ,/,. solids: ~eville Intern. tianal's lt1ll1n wool plaid or solid heather. S"hawf collar Is Borg's crush proof pllt of Morulllfo's 100% Blue C-poly- $ 3 000 nter. Body and sleeve lining of nylon taffeh quilted to 3-c1z. polyester. Sizes 36 to 54. PACIFIC TRAIL M242TUCSON PACIFIC TRAIL M272 IVIARKSMAN Jt" bush coat of lttlYtl brushed denim. Body lining ind exposed collat of Allmac's huttr shear. ling pile. Contr1st stitching. Sizes 36 to 54. PACIFIC TRAILS M466 SUPER 10 SPEED Bicycle jacket of Travis' waterproof cir• nylon, with contrast chnt sir..,. and Scotchlitt• refl.,... tivt stripe far night-time safety. ContmtinL lin- M 400 ~d·: tow~;.J:. -... I Cancea.ltd hood. Sites S-M· l-XL . s3200 fl-~· * $3.00 Down Holds Any Jacket for 30 Days * Broken Sizes In Some Styles WILSON T-2000 TENNIS RACKETS Oii£ OF 111£ FINIST Tennis REG. $39.9S Racq••" "" d..,1._ptd t3J88 by Wilson! AU st•I in firm- flex or regular-flex. Savt • SALE OH BASKETBAUS YOUll CHOICE Spalding-Penn Reg. $7.8B-- $9.9s-$1.95 ClllSt lllWlDllS lllP lllGR WlDllS s588 U•• Your Credit 1tlh• Gron! Boy• • BankAmerlcard • Mister Ch1rgt COLEMAll UTAL1~!C H!A2TE5Raa l'M@/i! to 5000 atu od\ustab llf. 3000 Mojol •I> .......... s ' .. •.•. "'·'" ........ $3 5000 to 1000 1~5 ~~~:... .. .. . !All 1 "· """· -HEATER coLEMlll PttOPAllE CAT. $39 .. 10 000 ITU SALi :,>° ~S. .A... S4&o.10I • · ·.'.' -' • l v;ion~~Y OC.lober 11, 197? OA\l Y PILOT fj ,• Pfafd Sltfrts Strlpttcf s~i.... ~ -·-- HAVE YOUll SIZE AND STYLE AT YOUR PlllCEI ' ,. /' I I ;; j Ii \ I . \ Ad ~ Effective Thru Sat., Ott. 14th I I I.;\ UVl'Sit FOR GAUi UYl'r -IM IACltn c.1., ls "'"' hi Slat UM •10 U9MS<' PAClffC TIAIL • UoS SUZANNE c.-1, ._. • ...,.,, kt, ,,.Wl'I. ltlt.I' ""' Utt tf ftf¥•,fvtll VIKVf Ctr ... ,.., ,.., ,,.,... ... '"' .... ,.~ ..,Dt MMr. Itek :;;{-. Metil -"°'" •M kldile. SUH 6 t. 14. '4200 UYl'S" IUSH JACllT rocH&e ft.ii It ............. Ill• Mi-ML ......... 0..,." • II• .. llJI....., C.... ~ T..._. (Mt ...... . ,,..._ LIH&.11111'"°11 ....... , ..... , .......... 11•..M C.len .,.. N•\"f, llva Dtftlnt •llMI Whlt. .. , .......... ,,...... Cell. ' ........................ 111 ..... , ................. 11•.• lll4 .,,_, ............ (Mt. , ..... ,, -........ ,, .. . Slml&L LI!.,.. c..t. hMt., .... Ii. 11 •.• ,... . ... • 11lS 09 124 lJt lnll ......... C..... M1ti ~ ..... ..._.,,. 11 1-wtt. llMM t•ttto llH.M hk About Our New Grant loy's lucksl PACIFIC TRAILS YEAR-ROUNDER 26H blouse tf Klopmari's tqut Wtt fMric tf 7S~ DICf'Oft· polyuler, 15% C01Rbe4 c:ot"" -'th Scttc..,.,4". lod1 llnM •ith dNp AcriWt• pllt t.y hr .. ~ulltM •lff'ttt. ""'" Nck yoke. M-909, M-910 SIZES 36 TO 54 NOWI WOOL C.P .O. SHIRTS TIC( GRANT IOYS '" yow wlnttr heMlii!Hlftn fer 111 your we1thtr qe1r. C.P.0. shirts art oW f1111Uy ftYOrilH Md Tht Grtnt loys ha'lt l'ltry 1ln ' 1tyt1. S..Xl SOUOS. llmlftd U11 rtngt . S·M·L XL s9ts '10's WIATHER WATCHER Nylcttt 1kJ parb. Mny & t.tkk. Situ JM6 S20." Pim "''h'" -t ,..;Jt llnM. C..t lottttl>. 111 .. Jl.46 . .. .. .. 522." (M4 CNt wlflii \her,I c.lbr I llnint- T .. £ 4..t lnwa. littt JM.4 ....... ' I •11 00 PACIFIC TRAIL ARCTIC PARKA scHonaRos. a.dtw-'ilt lint4 •• ~It ,..aJ4t. 11r .. '6-50 . . ............... 15 •. 00 l"do -wilt. pilo coloo • Al .,r;1 ........ Sim "-'• •..•...... '49.tl LM"* & lw tlttnNttll ,....,._ 11.i,. wftfl kit. Sim -, . • . . . . . su.oo I l I • 10 DAILY PI LOT f'a1Hlly Clrcu# to-u ........ ~­-·--- I W~d1'etday, Octo~r 11 1~72. by Bil Keane • ¥ I ' f ! "Come on in1 Mommy's right here - in the closet." Emotio11s Cause Pl1ysical Illness By Dr. St.cincrobn Dear Dr. Stcincrohn: ~I v husband's ~1lways co1nplaininS". T'here's al"•ay s somethi ng the matter. I My to hUn, ··vou couldn't have been VC'ry sick all these vears. Consider the fact that ~:ou·re i 6. llow in the \VOrld could yo u have sun i\'t'<I this long if you were rea lly sick?" Isn't it true that many peo- ple who ha\·c sympton1s are 1101 physica lly sick at ;:ill ? - .Vlrs. A. COM:\1 F.~T : Prople aren't funny -thf'y 're pathetic. The troth is th:1! most of us <ire at DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE the mt'r<',\ or 1Jur c111ot1uns. The trouble• 1s th<1t \\'hen there's a ht>;id-on coll ision hetwecn reason nnd emotions, !he thinking µart of our brain usually takes second place. Of cou rse it 1s true th;it fX'O- ple can suffer and not ht• physically sick at all. But don't forget that they suffer. Even though your husband is 76, it is a good bet that he hasn't been on a merry voyage all his life. WHAT 1)10 llE comi)laln about~ Gas" Indi gestion'! /\nd "'ere all the test!! including X rays lll·gn11vt•' Nit ulcer '.' Ko gallbladder trouble'! lfc11rt okay? Blood pres.~urr 11orrn:11'.' And }'Cl he complained. Well. belt<'r !x>lir\'C n1c \\'hen I S.:l,V it j<; possible he h;is suffered as 1nuch, ur r11ore, than if he really had physical illness. I \vou\d only be guessing at \\hat has n1adc him the victi n1 1Jf his emotions. Jlas he wor- ried about finanees'! llave you had an early tragedy in your family? !low do you and hi' ~et ;llong ? H:is hl' lived ill a hou~e rilled v.·ith ICllSJOn UlOSI Of his married life? If so, you may find it helpfu l to read my booklet, "How To Live With Less Tension Al liome." For a copy "·rite me at this paper <'nclosing 25 cents in coin and a st a mp e d , self-addressed envelopt. DOES \'OUR HUSBAND keep v.·orrying about the children? Is his trouble due to unresolved problems that date back to his treatment by his O\\'n parents as a youngster'! Or is the trouble in his genes'! Do you sec, ~t rs. A .. how many possibilities enter th.i:; problem'! Perhaps the poor, unhappy 1nan has crept through most of his life l11bclcd as a hopeless hypochondriac. J{ow n1any have really listened to hi1n? HAve you? Have his / fri ends'! \\That's most im- portant. have his doctors? People with emotional pro- hletns suffer as much as those physically sick. Just listening to a patit nl for fi\•e minutes or so and p r e sc r i bing tran- quilizers nr sleeping pills and sa ying, "You 're all right, d<ln'l v•orry so much" is ineffective therapy. Al last, coming down to ynur main questinn. Mrs. A.: It is true that anywhere from 25 to 50 percent of patients who come to the doctor com· plaining don'\ h a ve any physical Illness. But they need more than being sent out of the office clutching a prescrip- tion or two. \Vhat 's more im - portant than med I c i n c , usually, arc I a r g c. sym- pathetic ears so the patients can spill out what's been bug- ging them for so long. llAS YOUR llUSBAND been really sick all these years'! \'ou bet he has. And probably \Vorse off than if he had an ulcer or some other physical ;iilment. I keep reminding peo- ple that <'motlonal illness is often worse thnn physical ill- ness. -------- LAS VEGAS --• ltltwlf'f Mt Mttll-Wtrt,-1 llf'ltlt-o'"' • • 1,000 llM1111 '" tllt Strl' M11t tt Iii• • • Sll1lust tt1ttl, Clrt11 Clrt11 1114 lllrim ,.,"••• • • • :Now Lo'v 1-1o0:648'u,., • '8891 • • • WiI1te1· Rates!: • • • • \ To celebrate our Caaino Expansion • • M.dw••• Sp•ii•I -Sund•y tllru Tllur,d•y • • o" 2011p•<.i•I P'OGl!lt •I low wi11t1r r•t1: • :saao s109os1290: • • .... .._. .. .._ .... ". '""" lll"tHQe, ... , Alleflfl WllTWA j I ff Abo Aw C'lln~ "''°" 1'11111, ·' t HL 1111 fM I""" • Wtdnf:SdAY, Octohfr 11, lC>72 PILOT-ADVERTISER • • •. ' Airplanes to Replace Police Copters? about II celtl ID hour lor9 plane. while tbe h<llool>tn By VlCIU E. HINES c_........,.~1n SACRA!\t f:.NTO -L.aw en- fortement officials soon will be laking a ckl5e look at a Santa ~fonica Police Depart- ment lest of a possible replacement for the oolsy, costly end some t imes hazardous poUce helicopters buzzing around the nation's cities. It's the Sky Sentinel, a specially-equipped Cessna 172. be!~ tested to see if it can do the job -and eliminat.e some drawbacb -al """"""" palrol. So far, \he propeller-driven aircr<tfl ha.1 proven quit"ter and less expensi\'e, and, ac- cording to those who have us- ed the <.Taft in patrol, &eem.! to do the job better than !he choppers. The plane W&I deve.loped by \\rorld A5sociates, a Santa Monica-based firm which rues aerial police patrols for Jaw enforcement agencies I n California aod elsewhere. The finn is headed by Hugh McDonald, a former chief of de10ctiva lor h Loo Angele< CoonlY Sherill'• lleportmeat who de<oloped tl>e nation's finf heUcopter patrol program for Lakewood in 1965. WORKING OVER a nine. month period to edapl !he plane 1o the opectal needs or law enforcement, the McDonald firm: -Added e. revolving observer's seat to the rear ol the plane. -Cut extra windows in tile lower sides ol the plane's hull to provide better visibility and then ""'tresoed tho hull to ...-9lreOgth. -Added a mulU-<hannel radio cornmunlcatlons system. -Irwtalled a high voltase electrlcal S)'l!em "' J>OWl'f the 3.$-rnlllloo condlepower Ught on the plane"s belly. -Adapted the engine and wi~ structure to allow aafe filght at siolftr 8pe"'b IO It can make sharj> turns at 50 mph withoot ""lllng. -Modified the m u f f l e r system for quieter flight. SANTA MONICA Po 11 c e Cblel Earl Rtlnllokl Is en- tbu1I••~. f1.nd.q the plane p<OYJdH ID oi--vatk>n pla> rorm tho! Is "sturdl<r, has leas vlbntUon and ellows more adUA1 alr time, " because It needs less maint~nce than cbopperl. And he's especially pleased with !he dllleren<e in coet. McDonald estimates the· op«atlng coot or tile Sky S.... tlnel L! $9 an hour, a reduction of more than 60 percent over the most economi ca l helloopter. Insurance stone costs just $! an hour to lnoure,·i.. niMed People on the .....,.t parently like It belltt, too. I Clinton Petrie 11¥.1 Barry" Barcroft, <:ttNf me-. /«• both the hellcoplm ond I Sky Sentinel, Ilk! thue lilve bttn no nolte cunplainle. • 1"i 1.-ins .• daJIJ.-. .. ~ with q,e "'-"· • And,. • ...,en1 l1lght ..... ' hlgb llCbool football ll<id f.urJ' be practice, no one ~ to notice the Pane'i -flyinf 1,000 feet ovemeact. . : • • ' SALE DAYS, THUll5., FRI. & SAT. OCT. 12, 13 & 14 WI . '' • I· • \~ .,, .. 't Pol ' • ' .. DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES @ MOTOROLA quasar color portable TY 18'' diagonal with remote control -lets you relax and change channels and vol- ume from your favor ite cha ir -insta- matic one button color tuning elimi· nates f uss and bother -matching rott- ing can included for no extra charge. Model No. TP5505JW. - 39997, SAVE $61.00 ncn 21'' diagonal color television Westinghouse @ SAVE $32.00 automatic washer anti electric dryer S277Aeg. $309.00 CHECK AND COMPARE two guys give you • the broadest TY guarantee and service. NEW TY SERVICE POLICY ·YIAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY ON ALL TV's * 5 YR. PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY ON TVs AH television picture tubes, color and black and wh ite will be replaced within five f ull years from date of purchase if defective as a result of defec- tive workmanship or materials. Such repairs wilt be made for the original purchaser with no charge for the tube. There will be nominal charge for labor. for diagnosing, installing, or reinstalling of the picture tube. •YEAR SERVICE * ON ALL COLOR /BLACK & WHITE TVs *ONE V~AR SJRYlCEQ)j_ALJ..kOLOR OR BLACK ANO WHITE TELEVISIONS •.• , Ca rry-in service on all models up to and including 18" on color sets and carry-in service on all models up to and including 21" black and white sets. SAVE $11.00 PHILCOfij) 19 lncm. diagonal portable TY ---· ,Big screen perforrilance - Compact styling-Trans- i$torized signal and sound sy stem terms for greater dependability - Front mounted controls -auto- matic picture pilot-Matching Cart included. Model no. B718AWA Whirl~gg! no frost refrigerator freezer icerna ker kit included Big value in 16.6 cu. ft. stor- age capacity -135 lb. freezer with separate cold control -lots of shelf space with door storage in both sections -Wh ite with right hand door only -installa- tion of lcemaker kit not in· eluded . . ~288 -SHARP 12 Inch diagonal "°rtable tv \ Grtat ~on .1 personal size T.V .. Li tWl!ight -compact _ Ta~111 rom room 10 room _ Split second 2l;~J:.:.~~·ll $66 Fidelity FM sound . with front 'J)eiker. Modlll 2K31. MAGIC CHEF. SAVE $20.00 30 inch gas range . ;· ... ii,.lla~\ . . A 2 year w1rranty on parts and labor on w111ttrt. ran11a. • r1tri1er1tors, dl1t'lw1tt11r1, dryers and tr1tnrs M.1ke met I P~Parat ion more pl taunt with 1 new l"Mli e. Fe1tur1s clock timer _ oven window -ovtn ll&ht. Lift top for u_sy clean up of 1pills. We will make, within two fu ll yea rt from the date of purch•sa all nece111iy repairs an'd ttplae.e all P•r1• as a re&Ylt of defective workma nship 01 materials, ''" of eharee ~o th• 01111nal PUICl\aHr. •• frtt dtli'ftf)' on ntejor1ppll1nc11 with norm1I ll\1t1ll1t lon .-- 139.~! ' I ... ! •••' I ..___.,. <••~ oo• 0110 •• e:,;!.,·, .. huntlngton beach-9882 adams street C!-::·:::~_.J -----IMond1y-thru-S..Un!t\rl o .. m-9 pm undi9 10 em 7 pm • .... ··-- ' -Mrs. 6532 Bea eight Ft. ' • ,3 PILOT ·ADVERTISER WedntS<tay, Oi:tobtr 11, 11!72 Wtdne1d1y, October II, 1q12 DAILY PILOT JI Wicks 1f the marlc9t is common why af8 we joiningr • Police Seek Cultist PASADENA -Police are looking for a 28-year-old member of a secret btack cuk believed re9p0nsible for the murde!' of two men here Friday. Pasadena police Lt. Bill Lewis said William F.dwin Maw, also known as Ali Allin Alalah, Is wanted In the slayings. Lewis said Mapp is a member of the Al Colestran rellgious sect, an offshoot. of Ille Black Muslims. .Men in Service CJl.ief Master Sergeant aaude F. Gray, son of M.rs. Era B. Sonnenbe<g, 6351'.< Plumer, Costa Mesa, will be celebrating a personal silver anniversary this year when the U.S. Air Force observes its 2.Sth year as a separate military service. The sergeant completed a year tour of duty at U-Tapao Airfield, n.anand . He also has served at Osan AB, Republic of Korea, a.nd at numerous . ' statesW.e bases. ., Anny Private Thomas C. Stacbowsky, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence S. Stachowsky, 6532 Eire Circle, Huntington Beach, recenUy compleled an eight-week cooking course at Ft. Ord. Anny Specialist Five Walter S. McKnlght,son of Mrs. Lucy E. McKnight, ~121 Cornell Avenue, Westmimter, recently was awarded the good condud medal in Germany. Spec. Mc Knight received the awvd """8 usi~ w)th • the 3 7 7 t b ,. Tr~tlon Company, 2lll(Tr1111portatlon Ballallon ol 1lie 3 7 l h 'l'rmiportalion Group. Army Dnctor (Major) Carl P. WMver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karry M. Weaver, 310 S. Esperanza, Sa n 0.emente, oompleled today the Army Medlcal Field Service School, Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston , Tes. N av y seaman Recruit Jamet S. Cll"IOD, IOD. of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Car90n ol 2101 Haven Place, Newport Beach, Is studying Naval com- munications at the Naval (bmmunioatloos T r a l n l n g Center, Peosaoola, F1a. Army Private Kmtll B. Plcblt, aon ol Mr. and Mrs. c;..qe H. Pickett, 1140 S. Main St., Mountain Home, Ark., 11 aervlng wtlb the 3rd armored dlvlsloo In Germany. A scout with -p B, 3rd squadron of the division's 12th cavalry, be waa lut stationed at Ft. Kno1, Ky. Hls wife, Toni, lives at 1870 16th St., Newport Beech. Army Private · Ftnt Claas Jeffrt:J P. Huff, 900 of Mr. and Mrs. James P. Huff, ISO 43rd St., Newport Beacb, ......,uy was assigned to the 1st annored divlJion 1 n Gennany. PFC Hull II serving .. an Jn. direct fire crewman with headquarters company, :Ind battalion of the divlskln's 52nd Infantry near Bamberl· He entmd the army In Januan' 11'1% and completed boJIC tralnlni al Ft. Ord, Calif, ,,,. prlv>Ie 11 a pduate ol Newport Harber lllgb S<hoOI, Newport Beoch. -/\lmWl lllcty A. M- aon ol Mn. Jo Frandl L. MOOl'llack o1 71)!3 Hell A 9t., HIJNinllon Beach. boo been aSllped to Chanute AFB, DI., alter completin& Air Force baSlc training. DUrlng his alt weeks at the Air Tr al n In I eommand'• Llek1and AE'B, Ta., he -lt1ldlod the-Al< Of11111uUOn and custcms and re(!olved opeclol lnalrucllon In human rtlatlool. 1l>e alrmon bu beon aulgn· eel Io the Technical Tr1lnJni Center at Qlanule f o r 1peclallzed trolnlna In olrcrolt maintenance. • • Edi son _Plan·s Swit ch By TIIOMAS D. ELIAS aad ARNOLD FRIEDMAN Early this year, I.he Sou t be r n C.Iilornia F.dlson Co. decided on the remote high desert as an ideal site for a $400-mlllion power plant. It was to substitute for a proposed plant in Hun- Iingla! Beach which Orange County ""°' llghtm torpedoed. Now, however, the utility is eyeing both spots for large generating stations, thanks to the Orange County AJr Pollu. lion Control District's reversal of its earlier ruling. TechnologiCaJ. advances in smog con- trol spurred the APCD last moolh Io scrap objections to expansion of F.di!on's Huntington Beach planl And Ille wne advances which quelled the major com- plaints about the <lran&• eounty lacllity may dlmlnisb opposition· lo· the d~ planl ·- This ls part of Edlsoo's reesoolng In pushing for ~truclion of t h e "alternate" plant, earmarked for an uninhabited area of the Mojave Desert about 25 mlles southeast of Barst:Ow. IN BOTH CASES, Edison abandoned • plans to l'uel Its plants with oil and natural giu, which are now U!ed to power mMt generating sta.tioo.s. lm!ead, the company plans to use jet engines and their exhaust to propel the turbines of Its generators -wrucn the APCD concedes would result in a 60 per- cent reductlon of the pollutants the power plants spew lonb. This meam the two proposed plants together would produce 1,.. smog than either would have earlier, Edison says mise would be no problem , because the jeta would be housed in soundproof con- crete. Ollly within the last six months, elec· trical industry aources note, have jet engines and the "combined cycle" met.bod of power generation been deveioped to the point where they can be ...eel for large power plants. TO 'EDISON, WHICH baa wamecl of blackouts and brownouts at peak Ulage times if it isn't allowed to build new power plants, the method seems a godsend . In the Je!·powered turbine•, the 5""" Plll\Y hopes It has loond the ans""' to (I I its "r1eed" or adding almost 50 percent to Its generating capacity in the next 10 years and (2) a way to resolve disputes with environmentalists. Conservatlonitts objected strongly Io both the Huntington Beach expansion and the earlier plans for the desert plant near Fry Mountain in sprawling S a n Bemanllno County. Under original plans, the Fry Mountain (sou~~™) plant would have produced lto t.oft:s or pollutants daily, more than are rurrenUy emiUed in the entire county. ' STILL, TlfE :l'fAN ""'1 tentative ap- ~~ from tlla •lall\"Pllbllc Utllltles QilDm.lssJOn and deYelopment· • w a s stymied only when the environment.ally· orteriled ~r for Law In the Public J.nterest sued the PUC. The suit claimed state law required the commiSlion itself to make an en- vironmental impact study independent or one Edison was conducting. BUJ_LD~·RS E ' ~ to Jet Engines Attorney John R. Pbilllps ol the West Los Angeles-bued law center says an en- vironmental ruling by the state Supreme Court lut montb y,·111 most likely CTH:te a precedent under which Ills suit will win. In that case, the court ruled that state and locaJ governmcnlal agencies must make impact studies beCore approving proposed private projects which mJghl haVe ''significant" effects OD their sur- roundings. In the Orange County case, the high court decided last year that APCD rttles under wbich Edison's plans were originally denied took precedence over a PUC decision to Jct Edi3on build. rr NOW APPEARS 11 k e 1 y en- vlronmen1al impact studies will be made of both projeets. Even so, the new technology will probably enable the two plants to pasa the test, says Edi.son spokei5man Robert crouch. And Crciucb claims this is vital to both bis firm and Southern California. "We're going lo need at least five million additional kilowatts generating capacity in Southern California by 1983 to prevent blackouts and brownouts," Crouc h said. . But the firm contends It wiJJ need at{ • least some of th.at new capacUy by 19711 to avtrt power failures. Its geoenUnc i .system now has a 12.S ml!Hon k.llowat&~ capacity. Edi.son views nuclear power plants U the eventua l soluLioo to all its problems. Bt.rr EVEN THE two I.l·mlDlon kilowatt units planned a.s addlllons to the San Onofre sta1ion near San Clemente aren't e1pected by Edison engineen to be ready unlil at least the early 191l!. The timetable Is so long because many tests and hearings mwt be held before they can be built. Initial hearings by a federal panel under the Atomic Energy Commission \viii begin later this month in the Southland. Other nuclear facilities would be even farther in the fut ure. iA·ith a site near Needles dcslgrulted as the next likely location. So for the moment, Edison cootends, conventional poy,•er plants are needed because tile firm projects a population increase or a million for its Jk'oun1y area over the next decade, In addition to increased use of electriclty by present customers . 0 PORIUM 4 ••• SALE DAYS, OCTHER 1211•• OCToaca 1 s, 1972 ON• DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M., SAT, & SUll. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. °""' .. ,::i:., ""r '--------~-----~-------------------------../ ..,,,'••m,,,.,,.,,.., T.M. FINISHED AND UNFINISHED FURNITURE •:"!"::'::;'.,~Z::.. lflltD;;" •t,..,. lffltz CLEARANCE SALEI ,,.,_.,;., .. :: .. , .ALL RED-TAGGID·ITIMI RIDUCED UPTO 50%11 • CULTURD MARBU BATH.YANITY 2S"x19"wrlll DRAWUS ,.,...~aa.-..... 3995 ~ GALVANIZED GUTTER 1on.u••TH ~~3~~~Get ready for the rains. Slip ~ fitting design for quick a ssembly and eosy installation. Free instruction sheets ovailoble. 88. ,, c· 'IA. • IL" 'IR' Best SUPRIMI Loaded wit h buds and popular colors ond varieties. Make your yard come olive this fall with these brilliant fl owering mums. 33~ a.Al"x60YDI. -LATO •LAT WALL PAINT MASKING TAPE 8995 :ne--CllASH HILMD Shell ii reinforc.d flber9la11 with o .contour.fitted, foam padded lnteriOr. )-101 m-1 anops fOf'f~• shield. Your Ohoioe of metal · flake colofs. Auorted . sizes. 3-ply 1to inle11 llHI bottom. 1preod1 heot evenly. Excellent for preparing delit1®1 golden ~ brown fried foodo. 299 CleaMea1lly. • Fast drying. Eo1y cleanup with soap and water. 900 decorator c°'ors to choote from. Accent colors priced higher. -· .. llLACK ... JlllASS HIMOHOODI •1·1Cal1N Beautiful block top bar wi1h controating bro11 hood and arnan blaclt mah cul'talns. 8" ............... - WINDIHllLD WAIHD ANDCLIANIR p,._,,,1xec1 windshield wosher,. ontl.-frMte Oftd cleaner. KHp yot.Jf windshield cteon f« aofe driving. HARDWARE STORES - •UUIA ""'"' U,.t IAW tYllWlf, ILT ... All..9tOUl'lft. Top quality ma1kin9 10J>9 for your do-it.yourself needs. Greot for those pointing projectL 23c 4 'x9' PlllUt•tSHU PANILING Col0<>lol Ook color. Thi1 is our popular po"•rn that is ideal for applying OYer ony solid 1urfoce.Gon vp eallly when ':.J a pplied I( whhponel I adhesive. (1~) MJ'tJ eKU llLt .,.," .... -L1111t•;_1 14&1 L CJIAHIM A'ft. c•••••••• '""'"'"· .AID•~•D.. .. , ... , .......... . • 0 0 ~ < ' • ' ~ I • • , .. DAILY PILOT Wednesday, October 11, 1912 I For the R cora· Jack BldwtU Has ... oogen r. ~ee~ing Called E ·-----~----------...... .Golden West CoUege to Map Prop. 14 Fight The Grtatftt selecti.Oft of Dissoltation• Of Marriage f'INAL O•C•ltl • •• ..,.. ,.,,. t1 .I ·~ Sclll..-ttl\, Cl••• Hiit tnd 11.lff !#~ ludVIQIOfl, Oorottv; C. ~ HM'l;lill :W, Sleln. Gerturdol Louin t!W, f<l""l ~..,. ... DOll!Mll, etttv M. t<IO H.0 H. t Lowder, Lindi WHlt" tl\d Jolll RlcUIJI Fo!llef'tlll, Eveh•,, KtY tnd TllOl!IA Wllil.... • Sc:llmldl, 1Ctr11ir111 LH Mid J~ EHltbflh Vlvltno OtvlG tr>O J1nl1 4 ' Roul, ,,,,...., LM tnd Mlchtal • I GUI, EJwlvn E!Mrw;rt t nl GNr'lll Stutr1 Mtrlln, WJIU•m 8trnllrcl • ..., GeM Vlt Vt G (udt , Jani<:• Gtyle Ind J~ Wl!lltm Grl11111. Kor .... A • .Ind Ltwll J. Anll111, 01111 A-rlt tnd JOHl)ll Vtlflntlno Ar.GerllOfl, ROYleen JO¥ Ind Ci..rl• T, 9ond. Mikll'ld M . ..ci win ... w, Ftrr«. "1<111"" Loul .. tlld Jerry Rtv J.ltuMr. Jo-11 Adele tnd John ltlchard SIVCltl'F, Nelllt Ind Kirk EdlTIOfld J.,,,.,wn, Allt M, Ind Erk L Ctkl-11, Jtnet K. Ind J-t Oonalo, "· Kl..sman, Jolln S. eM lf\"41 Tru]!llo, Sr>lrley 8 . tlld ltoberr L. Hu<1$0n. Slltrle ... Ind Elklv Wtyn41 (opp, Joi-K. tnd W11111m A, P-. S•UY' Jana and John Arnwr HulMng ... JacQUel\111 A-Incl AOMld O•vl<1 Aaull, C1rOIYT1 Ann Incl Cllllrln Au1sell C!1>11!1lc!1, Martlll L" and C11rmen OoUQl•t S!lch. K11., F•lnc:ttl •nd Oonlynn Glenn Looney, Shirl..., Ann and Bonnett Frank LiW'IOl'I. Brenda Gwen and H1111n L• ·~ K11l•n!rl1, Andre G1r1ld and Kiri J1a- G11rel•. G-o• 11'1d Sllndr1 J, HaMW!n(•tl. JICquelyn s . 1nd Jtrry tCtltll 11-. Mary J111e and Roblrt F1rnum Scruton, Jack C. and Cllilrle E. Oodson. Oonna Ell••beth ll'ld Wiltl•m Kenn.In l tl« ... Hl<'Wrl L. and F1llf1 F. K,..n1n, 01rltne M, 11'1d Allen Ingram, Raymond AH111 Ind ll11tr1ce ·~' Ft<"1nl. AHio II. and Jack11 I. F. W1lk9t'. Elalne K•lhr.,n Ind Gl>orQt TIMophllt G1r1.11. Nori Flore~ and Se!erlna sttn1, Marlene E. and Don.old o. Ll11rolf1, 0.1n and ll1rti.r1 Ann U.r1nd. Mary LOlllM and H\IOef't Port_, Routh, Mart StlPN!I Mid Cynthia l(.ly t:11ttred $1~. ,. Fr•a.... Sall., J. and J1me1 I .. 111 Walklns, M••v l<f1Clffn llnd 11\nHI! LH GIM>I. Norma EJalnt •nd wm11m Stal- "" lllHlngs, Mary L. Ind o ... ld "" C1rdl1I. llon1ld E. •nd C•rol Ann O'llrltn, NllK'f EUtn Ind llleMrd Conw1y L•urla. JGllnnt Louise •nd Angelo JOMph J ones, Edw1rd LM Ind 8onnl1 May Act1m1, Margit Mae Ind Gent J<llePh LlrHfl, llrue A. Ind Gayle M. 8~l1llumtl11r, Keren F. •nd Altl<lnd.,. •• llak .. , Diena J . and JoMPh MayabG, V!r9lnl1 L. and Wllfl1m C. M1nc•rtll1, Btrll\f F. Incl J•mtl w 11111m Ptlltl"ldfl, Crla11a 1nd Cralo L. Aben11llly, L_,.ry J, and Jl.ldJ/h L. D eath Notices A.RBUCKLE I< SON WES'l'CIJFF MORTUARY U'7 E. 17th S.., Cotta M.,. HI 11111 • BALTZ-BEllGERON FUNl!JIAL HOME Corona dtl !\tar 1'13...f4M Costa Mtu lfl..%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORWARV llt BroHway, Costa Mtu IJ S4U3 • 111.CORM!Clt LAGUNA BEA.CR MORTUA.RY 17'5 ~pu Canyo• ltd. '9t-1411 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cetoeler1 _,, CUpd • Podllt Vltw Drive N..,.n -· calllonla -• PE!J: FAMILY COLONIAL fUNllRAL ROMW '1111 BolH-A ... ·w....,...,.,._ • SMITWI' MORTUARY C7 M11ln St. HnlJfl~I Beactl ..... Ti'IO'!'I"'°"• l(flt\r/n El!111, Ind Jtll'lft -t ) 1 ..... .1.. --1 to w ... v • By o:c. llU~GS t~ona -~rs ....- s .. 1c11nG. 00rot11v Mid Fr'°"k:k '· • 1 'ofa.. °"'ity ,.1.., '"" Propoellioo 20, the coastal ln-8~:!':;1 R~~I FAl!Mtkk • .... ltlaUve, has been fonntd wo111. Morme '"" lftd HltTf L1c111 An ; unp~ecl .einergen-under the auspices ot the Elli•. C...O.CI A,* '#IHI..,,,•· • ~ ' ' of ~ I'·· W t C••'-'· Lu"-c. 1nd tt1e11Y11 F. C';( meeting >""o uc.11 ei Newport Harbor Olamber of S1r1or. Gery Warren Ind Ev.I.,. .µ, Coll~e, (ab.iltj;l\ students, ard commerce. s1~...':'.,;.,,_, 1. '•nd erlMI J . ' ":: cl1p11fled stt.ff nas bet!n ca led * * * ~~::!ie~s!;~ ~~ = ~~ ~: ' 1 fo(~hy'totf'''.1e,'U s s the THE COASTAL initiative Ad Hl;f1-lplll1r, Jo:llA W'l'lftll.•1111 C1rOltft 'i 11t ·f ave •. csinsCQµepces of HCH! COmrhlttee will try to 0 in-H;~:rrier, 1i1bll 1nc1 J11M1 w. ProposiUon 14 on oorhmunlty form voters of tbe pitfalls of ,~,,,... ,Mar!anM 1nc1 stwan H. colleges in California. the initiative'' and will lll'VV\-Lot~•••· Oene Sue and Jllhn Franklln vr-•~• 111 School officials say the e apeakei:'s bureau to make ~~=~c1j.=:1!.K~,:inc1M~,:i;~~ Paul ·~ emergency meeting is the ftrst .pnientatkms before c I v,I c Newcomb, 8tllY J. Ind (Plf,rlfl L. ~of jta kind lJ1 the history of the OWlllM. (D the are8 1 9 chamber Mclnt011>, P11rlcl1 •nd O•vld "· l ~~ T1y1or, J11n1 "L" 1nc1 Jay An1r-y Huntington Beach campus:. . t apokeeman saitl. GM•rv. sl\ll1111 •ncl JOlln Tllotna• will be •·•• at 4 pm Ul ni-a. ~·-'den f Prlu. l ynd1 J1yn1 anel T,..ry WIY'nl 1~ · • • ~ o3U!:Ven&, pr'eSI t 0 WlllO. Frftldla °' •nd P111.-i1 """ Ollmb• "Ladder Forum ll . ~"to share in-ftDlllf'r ·co1111TV. the . u .. lboa Bay Club, is Woodi. Teri 1..ucyla Ind Otrvil• A1y af~~fiii ;f folflall• ihd._ str &egy UftMal. URI I "<8 LeAnt~;e;.onY~;:."." "-''~ ,1116. Jc»Jn N. '. "k -p,. i in'~ion.,.,iO rr:: lniti~Uve ' ' ~ ~n .of the group; \Ne., Prl>(Jll.ii JS.,, aNI T.-nmy Ray eft\f Of , ffi_\.:_"·--., OdleJ' committee leadcrt: ~ Mtrrlll, L011 N. 1nd 11 .. 1p11 E. ( O -=· ]··•·• Dr Thomas ·~·-En11rtt1 sept. n chief o . the ran~ Propos. ition 14, the si>ealled • • . C l,N9'·:! • • • ~ .... ./'' w:~~n, M•rv Marl-•rid Richard County Airport traffic Watson ~tai: Initiative . munity college mov~ °' -,; plannmg COR'!llllant, fonner !lute"-'. Rose Mery 11nd John Clllrlas rontnt•r, bas a •. Nov ballot, wooJd Jncluded among ~ ,.., _Newport Beach Mayor Ed ~~.='1N:.!::1~~~!!':" H. n~,al c~· , la"'~-on property said, are the ·posetbUities Of .. lfk'.h ; Dr. Nolan Frizel~. pa~t a .... r111n<1, EW ·May Md .Jerry Lett l tntiiJor Fe ~ .,, W _.,ulr• the Legfsla-''tuition for communit .. ~e charm~n of the Califonua BOll(;l\ef',OH'(l••·•nd~JotrnH'f"' :1:'. "' '"" "" _.,. v ... ~il:!. 'D ........... lican Central Com-i~~~~!t,tc:;;::.:'O'. !~ue L. Avt:ition ~ Adm stra-hC,tto -make up the aiJference student&, •. ~~ritan OD~ -.. -,.-.. . rf B ch c·t Snow, LY'nn A,. Ind Oelr All•n tion (FAA) in Orange through sales, income and.. 1ng new f~ aod .staff, rnittee, ewport ' ea Indy SwfflllY. David 0 . Incl Cl>rl5tln1 County. other t2T-.,. -• -..... r dtastJc cute in. Jum~~..a.Od · "Jan.ager Robert · Wynn,·• ~~':~G1~::.f:i::' ;:.nc1t1~1. K. .::::::::~-~·c· •• ~ ........ "" t" Mrs~Peggy ·stag g S ·~-· . • ro;_,>~t~11 ... Jie o'ri,v-Dr. John Nicoll, superin- aaae. RoDBrl H. Ind Carol A. ' ... ;., -~L 'L....an' ~ "' .• a. ... Gol··";.n West ~. '...1i ~~N I teodent 0 r Newport-Mesa c111yton, Joanne 1nd J11mtt 5. l:IUWTII '> ~-.:: ue ~ • r"" ;:,::.<i;;W~,''",r ,.,,. _..1.A-) Be•v••s. v1,.1n11 Elllf'll In cl p .. 'l·l ;:tfu· ~ ,;··: :'h· . . c»H~e Acad~tc Senate, ilid I G!91JU"ti911 *•· . "*. '~ ·-.. ai.,NU s. . ,.,~!l:o':t c::=·~ . .,., RalPl'I s. 0 · U PFOWsftldn 14 ••Wts have, im-.. 1f-":o. "° ·* · ··, ':1 other members " the ad lodd. Kavin lutanna Ind Joi\!\ • · • rriect.i'a'ie 'and ~_r_8~e jm.1.' .. ~A ~~)'.." 'fi;.,i.,~ hoc committee include: Jack J~~T~t~''" e:n1n 1.~..,.. 'If·\ .. ·• ~.":.''·~-·pll~tftilS'"for~~~oo.n..'t Harbor~~~·~ .. 'Barnett, Newport Harbor H=~~ 11.'e: o. and W•nt Ja~. T · "·1 ! ' 1:'" J ... !'-· .,·, · · ' · ti. '.r'-. ~mber Dl§JlBger; Oierlel Jr. • • ra· ns '!:f~ l ~ · i •,'' ·• · i.'' .. ! 'lj 1.., ....:",.!;f. Cwny, Guy ~tre and James lllk1, 9""'1y M. and /<.Mr-S. -I; (~ "'-~ --"-p k attorneys· John Curci S~rd, WllU1m H. •nd lluby Ma• • " . 'r ~ ; • .;.,...... , · ~ " x,. ~ al er, • t Lvom . .• :51 .•• ,.· ".!~!'· "'t• i : .... 11 •. T~~ .. ·' { -:.· -,·~·Udo Yadt Anchorage ~· ~~;~:T"~-.·;:ci~1:;;11· D ""·· ·:1 u ;·~;,J .. , ~ ~ .. c ~ .• · • . :... . . and Byron CJ:wnberlain, ~7i·~~G~~~·::.=i~::: ~='~ er· rQ pos~~ ,~: · ·S~' ·r· 'Vii. ··so'· r ·Rebllfled. t~. ~Bill ee::,~:~ Al111~. Su••n T. ano Joton H • A --1 b • V Corslnl.Ev111111GertTllom•t QA~. A"-ANA._:_"""li.n11, r-.,'•. · • -1 ' ·.•· , ' , 4lf't 1. Y.•c 1.•S.T~n-~lf•~ tCunl-ilt•. w 11111m 11. 1oa V•t ky 1C11ll ~~·~ • 1.<'-,T~'il QI ,, •. ·• >;• , , • JorgevJeo, presiueui. •0& - Whlrt. Helen MliY' and 8ml•mln J<tmtl · A;,. n,J,_ 0 c Proposal D~~ of ·-· ...,,. ""'.,. ,.,. "'""' the Orange Coll!'!Y;&,,..,, •..-· · . · · · • owi\'od · · -Mtmorlal l!Gepltal ......,. M~~~y, ~=-1..5::: Tetrtnel ·!1:~.~~~i~tl~fJ~ . ~ . ve~.~ •·•· ~-I;\ ·, . f ~ ~~;or1:n~·~~~ builder ; John Macnab , realtor; Robert Mc Cut d y , chamber president; RI ch Stube and Tom Simandl, ac- counts: Robert Shelton, ~ llU!tanl, and George Zebol, geologist."' Repcesenling tbe u I i I ; I y companies are Jim Decker, Southern•California Gas Ccm- pany; l1dlerl Burbank and Bill · Compton, Southern Cali£ornia .Edison, and Mrs. Pat Choe, Pacific Telepbooe. Groups wisbing information about Proposition 20 can ar- range f<lr a speaker by calling tbe Newport -Chamber solid, p..+fetned & plaid doubl1 knit slack1 In town! From 1J7.00 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 of Commerce. __ .::.-~""""""""""""""""""~' INCOllE FOR YOU from a Girt ••• •You can receive a life income and immediate tax benefits by participating in one of lioag . Memorial Hospital P resbyterian's four different Life Income Gilt Plans. Write or call today for information: Mr. Thomas K. Stadlinger HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITA L PRESBYTER/AN 301 Newport Boulevard Newport Beach, CA 92660 Telephone: 548-0650-Extenelon 106 Sl1>9, 8on"le L. 1nc1 S•~ven L. ,..._ nt H J•I. n..rui~ .. n' nl Da 'd KJ ges Pleret>. earbl•• A. aoa ''m" M. tu.::: COll Y' ea •u ~.r~· """ft "' SANTA:.' ANA · ~rvisor ,but•e of PW! .orange Ccunty ta manager; v1 a , 1 __ _ ;!~~i~~.A=~ T: :~~~ ~: will be .studied by .~~~~P' W~~"~I tba&~ ~IJl"'t'Courts. He said. the architect; William Lusk , 11.,,.,. Maru1r11 J. 11nc1 P1u1 A. Superv150.rs. ·, •. , '..:....::...i· 1:! the·&Ard-10'(•~fi&~·isbrs go on ftKllee 1ftl'e williog•to C011tinue Fl11morrt1, M1ry E;llen and Oon•ld The sw1t(:h \vas pro.....,""°" 1..1v d upci v ti the the once-a-week con,ventng of M: 1 k;, C.rrOI J, •nd Allee M. Supervj.sor Ralph Clark of reror as suppor ng I a superior court in F.ullerton ~1=.r~'n!'.11~~~~"1.. :;: ~:11 i r1<J1.., • Anaheim. . ~t,f!eeni of ~'hif er/J · 'but that there was no fem de- &•uc• Jq a rprepared state1ft1i~:lt, r·· h .. .i ,1' • mand for a rt''"'"" full-tim.e M<:8rlcle, J1t1ke e. 1nd Jam'" w. kl id t' ho'nhf ~ Ill .I'· IS.._. RaldmH. cym1111 L .... 1 .. 1nc1 w1110 l'Jll COM .era ion .s · . The Fullerton supervisor court here. Hlnt'I', M1ritn1 1... and 01nny Jo. given'°· taking the .air pollution who .;s -···'·g for r~•Jectlon Hutti, RoY L. and S"l1!1 M, J F t•• ho < • wuwo •- Open House Scheduled si.an.r, Allet E. •nd H-af'd rH. authonty .. rom I i'i'!en, w . ,gnt M..J~r1 ,_m lits fellow 111'0 OPEN A DAD..Y court ~:';i;~~";:1~~;.;.~ E_t:~ ~i1~1~·m also. serve~ as Or~~ ~J.; ~ril ~entbef,;~1uand the pro-there wotlld 'Only result 'in a A El T J. Agric:ultu:al . ~ :ss~on!th posal went down the drain, 4-l. penalty to those litigants and t OTO i'.:e~=· ":':;:'. "".,:::,,""·~ · lllJ'lll" aoQ. plac;mg it in e ea Appearing in op~Uion was attorneys from other parts of ,,::~~ard 1_. and s111y 1 • deperb'nent, or ev~.!i _,8>, _ Bti..Jllil\Suinnlr, Q-l''I«! ii d i-n g--the-COWlty-wbo-WOUld--hav&-W-.\n open h;me-will be held Ak e. Ntrman 1...-' Oor1t J . ·separate agency. ~ .. 1 ~--tt ':"Tr "" • drive there to argue 'their Oct. io at the El Toro Marine "'"""<In' 1111pn Aonatd 1nc1 Zol• "It may have been fn:ie. to ' ~·" Air Station. 'lbe U.S. Marine A::,:::; &111Y 1.,,.,r .. _, Norm11n , haye the-agrlC\fltty:~I. off1~18!~ B• Deh le Sumner referred to the Drum end Bugle Corps and ~!~Ol~~;c1•":~~ 11 j1nat ~e ,froah" pq~,t~P'"ron/s w:~ 1g 8 Briggs bills (Assemblyman Silent Drill Team fr Om K•t"-'LM sm e. . m1 ~~erf t wa ' John v. Briggs of Fullerton) Washington D.C. "'iii be •-°"· 1 •• • pcmeipa ••' m ·•k ·d0 ~JI'·_, .:.l Set . one of wblch would require featured. • aC~';'.!!1111, conn11 1.ou111 ~Edwin ~Cd~. ~go,.; ·i(\~,..,...~~ lf~ that "any county with more Gates will open at 12:30 p.m. w1[1 ;::s. s1i1....., M<I., .aric1 KIMffll PorJa°~ ~~1~)oaaf"jML I-". :· ~ one million propula~n and the rirst activity will~ a T•k•s. z.i•• 11:11t11 •nd Ltwis s11P1Wn bel' • he Ith department FULLERTON -Debating adJacent to a county with ~nee by the Third ~:f:."'· s~i1~~ Je':'~.nd !-:'"~datoerr is i:~f suited f~r web work;" te&m1 from more than 80 U.S. ~ore than si.J: rniJ!ion popula-'Marine Aricraft Wing's band ~~;,:y, Alvli EitWard ind cara1 1_,n • "r -• colleges and univenltlet will Uon-mustcourts~~ branch at 11:45 p.m. 11.0Kt1,Jt.ev!TplilP.Jr.•...i0110M1..M ''ml'1, A1/moUGH,ther campete.~~ tWough Sim-~·oc · \1, ~ 1 p.m., F-4 Phamtom jet 01 "'"•-· •'1"'•.!i;,i,. '"""" bea~s'' ·~griOlllllralo""l!ill"" dey .. ti!llWState<Rullonon hlr L.islo11Vlolial.Y ~ llJli.er..,tlack Pl!'!!"! 11ye 1.!;., ;.,.;,!{ '"° ,.,men~ tory r-y, .actually holds three national rank t n t: ~Approf.. , '1cl.Y' It" ls1"" ge ~ ed.!Sitlon. A Ol-190 . H':r~ck, $1Mr• · Jo'fc• •.nd llobtrt jobs. He ts also Air .~ollutkln-·u,imf¥1y ~80 ·debatm 8nd 50 Sumner aald. ''Branch courts transport airpliane will• also 81n1rd, RObtrt wru11m •nc1 P11r1c11 'Control Officer. and Sealer of ·doa~ ~expect~ J,o parti.. may be a neces8;ity in Orange perfonn. e~;:rn,Char11uE.1rvJ111rbarasue Wcighl\'.'(irid M~sMr~·!'·•···:'., ciiaie',,fr\,:~t ~e,limin • CounU' in the fut~b\,\l the The ~I Toro Air Rescue ::;:;~;;;:. ~.;;: i~1:~· Her111rt 5. Tbe ·alr pollution chief has rounds and 16 team,fjnals. • ~ject"~ s~.fl -. . T~Will sho'f' litl work tn a 1.1r<1v, He1en M••l• •nd Jotin K••I wod widespread praise for bis Air Force ·Academy, USc, • \"fo tiaW a •ork;!>le branch 1 'o • m I'n u t e 1c r a sh-erew ~!~1~~,~~~~~~ ;~·~~·::• c. . work in the rounty Crom state UCLA,~ University of Kansai court system you must .have demonstration begiooing at woniorek. s111r1..., M. 1n11 11emard F. 11;nd redtral <lUiCta\s .. Re was a and University 'of Hooston and at least three judges sitting 1:30 p.m ., followed by a 20-:r,:,;.~~~~Y~ci. ~,'.;;d~n~i1 e. centre t·flgure in 1969 ln 'the Other hiib-r~ ~ams will there," he contlnued. "The minute skydiving exhibition Scerplna, Gt:rta L •nd c;....,.,o fl ghtagainet th• exruonsion of attend. Fullerton court proposed by the Camp Pendletpn Jump Tt>ome1, Htltn E. •M G-111 A. "f"• • Y'f I be Jd t t I ...... _,,, 000 to con1", Mary Jo and Jam11 J. the 'Ethod Col'J'1RatlY:S HU{l· Fullerton s 2,8-mem r team wou COl'J a e ..... .-, • Team at 1:40 p .m . • WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY Pl:OVISIONAUV ACCIEOITEO IY THE COMMITTEi Ofl lo\l IXAMINHS OF THE STATE IAI OF CAUfOINIA. Now o11cctpting men o11nd women for a.dmisslon to the Spring 1973 .Semester, • IF YOU HAVE 60 .a:ept1ble unlu , • 1N 2 YEARS of pirl·time 1ftw stvdy !3 d1m!S pe~ week 3 IQ· 4 hows par d111J, you un 11rn your 8.5.L degre~ "Id • IN 2 AOOITIONAL YEARS of put-lime law ~tudy you can earn yovr J.D, degrff; end becom• ELIGIBCE TO TAKE THE CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION WllTE 01 PHONE fOl INFOltMATION Ol CATAlOGUI 800 South Brookhurst Anahe im 92804 17141 635-3453 APPLY NOW FOR FEBRUARY 5th DAY, EVENING OR WEEKEND Cl./ISSES ST\.IOINn ILIGllLI fOl flOfk4llY INSUlfD STUDINT lOANJ It Alwrt. Ju110 and Mld11 ..... P1<Jlll1 . tington Beach paci~r Dp'Ji ht. w1·n n11P4injpa' te tn % 5 establish and. I do not believe The bugle ...nm.r: and drill c11111tour, Helen L"llt and Jemn ............ d f !hat ... ,. • Atl'IOVEO FOii: VETEltANS • <beer Rt!cenUy he announced that tpumaments. It 1,f'tOW ranks the county IS rea Y or team will give a 40-min ute . -----------------~~11:; .. ~:~:;::: ~':'~""l:n1.~~ expansion of Pt,e plabt flad I2:th in the nation. yel" _J""'"~~-:::e~b0g:~inru::·ng~-a:t~2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pu..,, Diane ~. 1od Stitp11111 been approved b~he district j~iiiiiiii p.m. Cl>lrlH hJ'h J~mt1.1. .. rtJ.1ndv11111<1al(•Y• unde r a,,new 'P ... ll W t . \ · .JI rl •' W•tta,,, Marti• R.11'1!1 Jo11n w. would cut' the eniiSslon Of Liq~id'l!tio·n Of .'Air , Carto c.ontract•a uxu oU, m9f'· T1G01. c1r01 J. and JamM Sco11 b 75 _) I t p • o .. .J thor ••luabl• Proti... Judith "M anc1 ""°""' Gl•M dangerou:i ga~s Y .. ,,._,~r c~pais• ine5 ers11n fl'.."'91.1nu some o JOt11•. l!le11.,. JNn -A~rt 11 <.-ent. . . ' · 'Oii1n'tal Ru9•. 1. • Karn, Miiion Jrt •1111 J.....,.111 E1llll• 1_ scr. .... 1111:<, °""' E. 11111 Marl• L. Clark, tn presentin& ~i4,~ · ExtrlllMllr -11peo10rrthaot.i Leor~. 'udV """"•nd °"" w11111m posal to the bo'ard la.,t, 'i~k bltlbftt.il, C•c•M ;:,::~~~1T:.m-..!t'~7.:PN~-:CY ... said, ''AU I want;?s: i ~bHC F11111tr1ld. CarOI Jtall 11111' R~•i. biarinl \o:deteftnme ·tt lt {Bir ....... c•L~~~ny •nd ~C .. Jr, • • pOIMiOn Control) is . in t\le A U C T I 0 IN Rtlldtrs, O.nn111rw1n Ind e11111r1ut r'ight department." I • • .,;..~'e ·1• Oamron, Jtme1 C. l)ld Elmlro J, .... 1 11,." Goldi Meri. 111c1 wnu-rn · A hCarin g was set for Oct. ERSIAN AARPll:95 ~~W~t'. :;:: ;:~~··•kl 25 et 18:30 'a.m·. ,,,.:"" ._. 'P ; • .... . ,a.•. 0er.1...-1, M'rlorla 1. end euwoo11 A. '&lpeM'lsbr Davtd L. :Baker ~\ .... ,·, 'AKfaiit ' .a. .. 'Fefti. -~r. PPllHp Ol'avory Ind K1t111 .. n h Ir II " or"" 0v • ....,. R...-11.;it J1me1 M. rtmbtded'Clark t at a po u-r . i • -~owler. llHl11« A. Incl A-Ii,, . !Ion contrdl was r 1st'ii!rlrle •&lnvl"9 h1,,..tl'rifthd hlif*t' .... llty C .. t.ctelr'. Cl,,.,.. , M1rlffl4>l, Jt•n H. and Mon11<ro1~ C. di'slrl~·. "It •an' ,,_,,. be Nfa, •hi nhaftfr'I. ''i '' Alld.--s. P1tr1ci1 J.. lt!d Mlrk Ill ..,, >. J\J ) 1· .... ~ ;. ., 11 , , !~:~. ~":;:; t.!t~ ~"..~.a transttrraS from, one depftrl-t~ 1 lf,nl~W c.tledl• of '""" .-ay ef. ,whkh .,. collec~ Ed1141y.F•...Cfl II . l!ld l.ewAttc• l. Jient to another,"''·he.'11~1!1u-~·$Ji WU .-4,....... •• J ..... k. ftrkffy ..,. ••hi.bl· Fat:obtr, Joen Carol 1nd ·~OMpll llatoert .lt.-......a .. •\•-we .Ni.~··,·~it.lng' ~ • tt ~trktlen H ,....,.,.. ef'OitWn~ "'la. lleulltl, lllclllrd I . llW L,,_ M. IWIUll IW'C ~'I': !': ...... ..I. :.:.r~ . .... ....... --_......_ ... __ ..... siewn1, 1..1n111 LM and Frink M. about removing' ·a -4'kilt _,.. • tt. u ...., , ..., r-n... MW Seti.Id. ANM and Frffl JOlftll'! '" •---.ii .u-· "':...ut-~· ... ffM Ul ·t. f9f\ ......... t .... tft9 ....... wen.sort, Junt P11nc11 -Rototr1 head. quest1uneu u1e"v111~1 "' ,.. -otl __.1.. 1__,__. tn ......, t='~"O::'~~,.::. ~~YJ~ L._. ,. , rv isor. · .i_:_.-'wency ,...,;, ,.,...:;r'"9f =t;""'~ ;:;";;. .. IM.,. Peter•, c . Din• d Mlt l\ffl 11, .•W ..... l,1Uf!,t.__.'9 .... , ........ .~ P1yn1, Ollll!IM V. lflO P~ld l- Wllllamt. ••ttv CO. Ind Ollrw•rd l . S..uMtf'1, P1lr\p61 I<· at!d Mlclllal 0. Mlflkt OION M'ld Tlleoclor~ ••t~I . .,.. "· 1N1 """ Y J. , Ntll09. FrM 'f.. 18' l..vlu Qntl ,_ 1 Tllofrie1, CNrtri l , •nd tol1nc:y M. 'YOU ·Section' 'The"''''° thing '°' vol) ln the "YOU Sect.Ion'' of the DAILY PILOT every Sund11y. Check Ill per1•>1111i appeal far you and YOl.Q"I. • ·' I IN MIMOllAM· ; 1': ;..a•lllt Ml-r . at ... -·-MA•ll MllLl91· ·j' ' • ·....,.. .. , ... ....,. .... ~, la .... Y. Oc...., u. ··"· "'!' f I ' ,.Mitty ... f .... """ ,.., "'"" ..... ,. .-11;. 1'11..il " 1'ttlf Wilflt ,Cililllf'Mt I> ' .............. '4rt11 •• l'1Mlllt9 I , ADUJ:TS $2.00 JUNIORS $1.00 ( ChtWten •ftcfer12 fl(( with •orent1 J Slit THI NfW DOlllSTtc & '<>IOON CAIS ... FACTO•Y DISflAYS...r•oro-nm SHCW. SHOW CAIS-MOTOl HOMES&. YACATK>N YlHICUS All UNDll. ON( llO IOOH ..a.t.l otSCOUNT nacns AtYO\JI FAVOllft OIANO( COUNT't' HfW CAI DCAUll ... Y~IAllll !11.llA IOA MAUll, IHllll~ o•uo llOlf.& -· -PAK "HT(l, I I I ' ! I • • • I • :, I -. ' • ·. • ., .. • ;. -· .· • • . • ·~ •.· .; ' ) • .• ti 'N I c h I II c f d s c p • -· WtdnHdly, Oc;tobcr 11, 1'72 DAil Y PllJJT J jl_ • l • ~ l ' •. ' -:. ' ' .. ., •• . ... • . -.. ~· -· Mcl(ay Ends Silence, .Rae Will Start LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mike Rae the tenlor or Pat Haden .the sophomore? To coach John Mc.Kay, there's no ques-tion, at lea.st thia week u Rae.retains tb'e No. I quarterback job on the na tion's No. 1 college fotbaJI team. As the S.O Trojans prepare to ho6t Californ ia Saturday, McKay says, "1 have complete faith in Mike. He's the So. 1 quarterback." The Trojan coach pointed out Tuesday et ~is weekly meeting with sports writers that eltber ean do the job. La51 Saturday, hOwevel', Haden played ' the aecood hall ol the 30-21 victory over stanlord. McKay refUsed to say alter tile game who would start against Cal but on Sunday ended spec:ulatlon. by naming Rae. "Pat and Mike can basically run the same plays witb·the same amount of sue. cess," McKay said. Rae wu unhappily puzzled after he was ~~ 8Jajllst Stanford but llad<n -Uy~ he's No. t. McKay notes that the ~petltl<JO can 't hurt. Rae, who aerved "as Jlmmy Jones' understudy '"' two ; .. n , has coiril>Jeted 16 ol tt _. for 1193 yards &n{I f"'lr loucb-.Haden ls ZI lor 42 fer '°9 yards and five TDs. 1be t.eam llll'"'f"• lage ~ 1'l!Dplelloos Is 59 percent. • Rae Is averaging 5.9 yards per •calry PITTSBURGH'S ROBERTO CLEMENTE (LEFT) BARRELS INTO THE REDS' DARREL CHANEY. Superstitions For Throwing Bat ~lladeol I.I. "i!ofti .fwu1eri>aekl are eood rumien but prefer to pus," MeK.,.: llJd. "llotll have ND the ball -~ oc otherwise -and when ,..; ... Jbot, ll upeett the defen.w. '.' '!'be pualQa oil-Is the blr dll· ,.....,. In USC'1 same this -· allholigh Ibo team 1!As rushed • tlmts 10< i U ' a•trlJ• u oppoeed to lll puo attempts. ·' ·~ ..~g,'' said McKay when asked what USC wu doln& dllfennUy lhil year wllh the 1..,.1rd paos. But he added : "We'n ulng the stacked I fonnaUon more tblD we were lasi year and we're cettlnc deeper throws because it is a ~ nln& lormatloo ... He trplalned that Danker Lynn Swann llnff up near the numing bac.ks and the defense plays closer to guerd againflt tile run. For l:Josi{ig w A's Fryman, Lolich Negate Excuses . • • ' DETROIT (AP) -'!'bey lllUI wtro only !IM pnii\. """"' elltnlnatlon, Detroit . Tlpn ~I"'"~ ~ to beck away from tbe ehi!lqe 'Pl'O'.Vliled by II!' Qakland Alhlellca boadloi' !Dto toda)>'I loui1h • , Ari>erlean 1-pliyolf game. 'l'rllllnc two game1 to -In Ibo best· of.ft .. oerles, the 'l'lflen got •· .........., llill&le ~ ~ -Ike BroWn ~ and a .O"'""f ........ l<ltlnC 14-- • per!~ lmn Joe Qoleman In beolin( tbe A'I J-0 'l\leaday -a r ~Cl( 41,111 al'!lier Stadluln. SlnOe the, playol! l)'St.em was adopted In ltll wheo Jhe leagues were dhided Jn. to twu dl\(ls)oal. "' team bM -fnml ,a H dairdt" and a tine pmet and the pellllllll • "We doo't bave .Jhe edge, llut II we win IAilnpmiw we11 liave the edge llOinl'lnto the llnal pme,'"J)elrolt manager Billy Reds ·Pitcher ' Ovenvhelmed By Chatioos CINCINNATI (Af')-Solt·spolren 11<ios Grlmatey gave credit to a boisterous erewd and wild Clnc\nnaU beach Tuollday alt.er pilcblng the Reda tO ~ 7-1 vidory over Jhe Pltllbur&ll Plnlel In Jho fourth game ol the Natlonaf Leque bel<llal1 playoffs. Martin said In the 111bdued but happy Tiger clubboule 'l'Uelday. He wu to MMI IOUthpaw ace Mi ckey Lo1kb qainll Ookland'a Jim "CaUlsh" Hua.tu YI today'• pme. Lolich was the loler In the II-Inning, 1-2 opening playoff game al OUland lut Slturday before Woodle',Fryman WU heat.en 5-0 by John .. Blue Mom" Odom Sunday, "No rnanqer bu an ucuse for 105~ -be bu a Mlcku Lolicb and Woodie Fryman in tblt order •l home," said Martin, who will'teod Fryman to the -on 1buraday lliould the ngera win today. "It WU beautifut," Brown aaid of the bit ... I tbiM. lt WU the biggest hit of my ca.-hecaU.. It might have turned Jhlql uound lor ua. "I t1llnk It'• p .. uy tou&Ji Jo come in and play lllre that -I dldn 'I get to play much the wt Jhree weeks of the _ .. !Imm aid. "I Jhlnk I only plnell bit Jhree tlmOs." Colemn wu another Tiger who reach- ed bock !or a lltUe elln, eslabllabing his rhythm wtlh a aood lut ball, then com· Ing In wllh his la..nte plJcb -the fork ball. Coleman, who had a lt-14 record this seuoa and was fourth 1n the league wilh m strikeout!:, bad a hl&b of 11 strikeoutl pre-.Iy this year -In an 11-inning ·game. .... "It wun't one ol my belt games, I ~. but I got out of trouh&e when I hid to," the ~year~ld ri&ht-hander said. "I qult.e ollen pitch belt.er wllh men on -· You julll bear down. You'" a lltUe lu when YoU don't have them on." 1be A '1 lllranded 10 l'Jlllllerl, wttb Coleman tn lerkw trouble 1everal Umes. ......... .. ' ..... ....,.., .. , . D•lllOll Iii ~·Show Prothro ~----~.Campaneri.s Should Be· v l""' ' ! Grlmsley'1 yeoman performance -a two-bltt.er In which he domlnat.ed Plnit.e bliltf:IT and•DUllllMDY eaatributed two of lbeJ_. 11.411>·..-._ti. -al ~2' 1be deddln« 111111 -to det.ennlne lhe Nllllonlll Leope entrant In the World ~...... t ••• OllfOI\, IS 1 0 I I 1t1i1111;H 4111 .-,J.o.-. cf .. • • 0 l!~ttln, 1111 .. • • • .......... ,. l~' t •• 0 oe-tb I 0 Q,t MlllCNf, ... I t f I KW... a t t t f ~Jlfl 1 0 0 0 .. ' ..... tt~.a • • • ................ llatl~ rt I t t ,,MNfl. < , t \ WMor .... If 1 •• NOrtflnltl, If I 0 0 MSI...,, <f J I t ~ Human Afte~all ·. • • ,_ • .. LONG BEACl-1 (AP) -If Los Angeles coach Tommy Prothro beats his hand on the bench at Philadelphia Sunday, home folks shouldn't wo rry. All will be well. "I knoc k on wood when I'm overcon- fident," Prothro admitted when asked bout superstitions. "l also won't take salt directly £rom anyone or pass it directly." So if Prothro wants the salt, put the shaker down ... it will be on the table if you ask him lo pass to you.• Another · superstition . He won't however. wear the -sitlM? clothes in Philadelphia Sunday that )le wore in the Los Angeles Col15eun( a d>u- ple or days ago when bis Rama uplef S4n Francisco 31-7. That doesn't enter into -6is superstftlion. ~ • 4 "t"t-r- F'rothro admits he moved over to the Qench last Sunday in the-mldst.. of~ the third quarter to knock on wood since_ hi_s tlnderdog Rams were leading and •llP- parently in command o{ the 49ers. A(&in be sat down on the bench because ,1'lhat makes knocking on wood less obvious." ,·~ Tlirown Out of BiiSeball '"'·::r;_::::=:: standing ovations from 39,447 C\ndnnad l"'rllsana, who went wild ....-hi.I pltclJ. When news fil tered in that Oakland's an act, Cazbpaneris deserves more Ill§ and hlttlnc feats . charter flight to Detroit was being severe handling, such as removal from 'The ovatlom · • · I couldn't believe delayed beCause of a bomb threat, I professional baseball-for life. It,'' Grimlley said. '1t WU unbelievable -they'd • that for ~" thought maybe Billy Martin's fiery _,_ _,_ _,_ '!'be ctnclrinaU dugout, a rabble of temper had gOUen too fa r oul of control. H H • W wlk:Uy-cbeertng, yelling 1 tblete1 But it turned out that the threat was a Exit: Cam~il vs DelloiL tilnJulliout tbe• ~ wu clled by hoai: and the Alhletics ventured on to Enter: McKay· vs StantOrd. Grtmaley as 1 major ~ la bit lttrl· Detroit for the ir American League Down the penfnsuJ;3. from where eam-· ing performance. . playoff series. pane<ls wU makllig ltt. llCefle, USC foot· "I wq "'1pl'lsed by the bench," he Whal wasn\ a bott ,... the Ir-·ball·coach John McKay and hi.I stanlord said. · ,:__:WASH resporioible act ol Qakland's Bert Cam-· coonterpart Jacl: Cbrtstlanaen were · "Wu I eonlldenl?" Grimaley eeboed 1 • , engased In a fiery esehange ol Word9 quelllioo In the 8'da' llOily ebi!JllCwe Saturday afternoon after SC had spardred "Well, no, l was ICUed -.u IClted u ' lhe Cardinals, 30-21. 1 ·• / """· The Stanford crybabys were gloonlng " "I've never pitched a tiett.er pme," he ' becatis. SC was trying to score once sakt. • ''rnotf"ln the cloain( ..-"" tbe game. 1 :_~. ,... the best game ol ,, USCwas accused of Uytng ,tO run up the Grtrnaley'1 career," aald Redl JDIDl&er I 'Counl. Spai11y Andenoo. ' Wllat's the difference If you lole SI~ "It mlghl even, make him lhe plleher 'or SHI? U USC ·had a 40 or 50-i>olnt lead "" Jhoucl1I he'd l>o In two yean fnml Ibero' might have been """' justlficat\oo ''"" Ht obowed a lot ol llearl." In Stanford O'Ylllg ,a little about a 1a111 Tiie 'Ylctory Wlf . .,..i '1!odleatloo fer panerts when be;threw bis.bat at ngen d!Jcb try for -poin!a. • !he'M~,Grlmaley, a~ piJcher Lerrin (4Grow' Sunday alter a But tbea wbal caa 1CJ11 apect rrom' a 2iy.,...old rtiD .......... to Jbp Rodi' I!> LaGrow pitch bad wandered erranUy and Jlehool that ptoys.aicb ""'lhl<s 11 lion dlaupolls farm ,.,_Jo lllP>-llols......, bit Campy on the ankle. · Jooe·Sta~ and Wiii Vlrslnla to Iott.en op-11111 • ~orlllclaal Andenoi1 IOI' Wbelher Lerrin'1 !llrow was deliberate Ila recml, cbangel HI' nk:INme to Int ~ llK. ~ ·WHl;fE ~ • ' •• ,-.111 J 12 CMll. Ill I t 0 MAllllffe, M J I t ~ .. t It lol61 21 • • ~-1 ••• Holtlmlllo .. 1 • • • MM911t1, ..,. • 1 ••• '~" .... IM,.. I I o I HlfM, """ 1 0 0 0 LAdltr. .. • • • • ~Ml , ••• '"" ... • 1 • ~ ==:r."j ... !.;..,T~t. t.~'1r,_,.,._°1.1rr,~~H°i ~,..,_ 1, II -M. AMv, ,_.viii. -F "· '" M a1a11to ' 4 I J I t ""'-L. •1 ,_, I VI t I """ t I I .... ..... C.....W,l.f T -lr11, A -,.,11'. 11' • • • • • t t I I I I I I I I I l-1 Gridder Collapses TUCION -Unlvel'llly ol Artaona ol· rena .. suard Dave O>urtney oollapsed durtac.foalboll practlee and WU reported In -condttloo 'lllelday night at Unl!lmJKy llelpltal. Oooeh Bob Weber said Cour1ney had COftllllalnod ol headaebel during the practlce. He ... reporled to he ......... dlal to tnltment It Jhe holpltaJ. Sper .. in Brief Agnew Joins In Homage To Laver By HOWARD L. HANDY "Orange County can become the tennis capital of the world in a cou- ple of years." 1bat's the confirmed opinion or ooe of the world's greattst players. Rod Laver. himself a reskient of c.orona del Mar,. as he was honored by the Orange County Sports t CelebriUes Tuesday night al tke Saddleback Jrm ln Santa Ana. "I would like very much to make Orange County a great teMls cam- mwlity," Laver toJd the crowd of more than S50. "To be accepted in the county is a great feeling. This ia my " permanent home." ,.. Laver was the le()OC'ld man ,, honored by the group, the fi rst being long.time Costa Mesa resi-J dent Dan Gurney. G urn ey ' preeented a check fer 11 .000 to San· ta Ana c.ollege student Warren Lucio, money put In the rund a year ago when be was named the year's top county athlete. The sports world was well represented at Tuesday's affair in· eluding Laver'• fellow countrymen from-·Atmtrelia .Roy .Einc:n:>n fnow _ a resident of .Newport Beach) and Fred StoUe. Both pros proclaimed the ability ' ol the CdM 900thpew tennis star who will return to the tour In Van-., couver next Monday. "Today WU the first lime t played any tennll for a couple o( wetks," t.aveT" I.Gld the DAILY Pl· I.OT. "l'vt been lakin& beat treat.. menta and utrelllne my back un- der Newport Beach's Larry Davis. "I'm hopeful Jt will be Mii enough for me to ga to Europe for a couple or weeks, from Van- couver." Laver 11 returning lo the World Championship Tennis tour for I.he flnl time lo several months foUow· in& 1\letday nliht'1 dinner held In hi> honor. lie 1uu been 1ldellned with the bad back . Sports celebrities alto Included Ray ·Rufllel and Terry Addi-or tennls fame : Joe ScibeUI and Marlin McKeever of the Rama ; Gary Behan, f1>rmer U C L A Heilman Trophy wlnnd'. Abo, Bob Boyd, use haa ketball CO&Ch ; Tom The td o n 1001e MeEwtn. Fouotaln Valtey'1 dra1 racing ehampton: a-se Maccau . former Dlvt.s CUp Cllptaln; Swfde Sava1e: Randy Wllllaml, Olymplc long jump champkln : Sammy t.ee; Pancho Segura and Ben Apj1nlan. A telegram from vice presldt.>nl Spiro Agnew was 11Jo read. t a· lendlnl oongntulatlont to t'tod who added: ''It'• a crea l honot 10 1 .i rt'!Ctlvt the cable from the vlce ~ president. But h6'1 not much of • tennis pla ye:r ... Tbe Rams coach could have been wor- ried about quarterback Boman Gabriel, the &-foot-4 signal caller who has been plagued by injuries lhil 1<11f. lie threw two touchdown passes aod went all the way marshalling the Rimi' forces. "We all know Gabriel haa ~y.a fine day," said Prothro. '';'"' really doo't· know what is going on in anySody ehfa'1 head, Gabe said his arm dhln't hllrt, but I've got to think be .. wu ~· Balls he Jhrew In pracllce pul\<red like a couple did on Sunday. The reuon a ball flutte rs is becaust he's not.mapping 1t embemssment to lndllns and emclooes ' HO --to llli -'"' .,.,. 5 is something no· one but be •ball ever that ridlculous '-•-haired owdln& and "«Dplled a IH mutt ~ l<now. After walehing the TV l'M1lll ol 1,,,,.,1 ...,.. ,...-., play. 'l1lt lact lhal he the throw, 1 1o11 tt waa proallly ac-,--'"""·,wees llDlll u.. "'··oil -•-c~. ' +I \I \, • • foadl. ~....... r-J ~· But Jheno was no -lhat CllJTI-·~. • ....nt.. • Severe Charley Horse off. , "He's not snapplnJ ~ oil heeaU!4! hil' arm hurts. l've got to lhlnt lt hurt in JM: game too." • ,, Prothro lndlcnted hi.I new niinlo(bock a)lgnment of Bob ThomH at lullboCk and WU!ie Ellison at h111bnek will """""'"· He 'was happy no one had Upped tbe ~ai>d . Jhot Elli ..... who sained t.000 yards a fµltl>ack last )'l!ar, WOll!d he uJOd at lial'11"'k. panOria' ·• lhrowli.!l ot lhe bot -.FOREMAN BREEZES' • 't "': ... ••-:."': .... .cteli!Jenile.Jie mould hlv. been arre111ed . • · · d l ·.,.. I I I I ID<! J.!il!cl for asaauft•wllh Intent to com; 'BUT FANS BOO ' 'tf l , , I I I mlt Diqider. ., · · J , I 'Jl: j •·imud he wos lined 111111 by ti. , I •" I 1 -ean LelJgue and "'' IUlfll!l'led I. SALT LAKE CITY -Ge o.r 1•. '" ' .. • J 1 ii j !rom the ell1'f<nl playoll1 If lht' A'a 'Fo..,fn, wlio ~ a '1IOi at Joo ,. -the World Setiet. ho~e•er:,be Ilia ,.= 1e1r~.i:i::: e ' ~. I I tile OK to play. , < kI"'\iWUI .,_. lllrl!lbd Ten'y • • j 1 ytllal II Iha~ bat --blYe hit' , -..,,. .. _ 1!111 Juste" LoGrow llllttad ol whllllq ever N1 Maotret.• ert!lil 4 .. u • _ ~ held! It waa 1.alnltnc lino ~ not fana _..uy dlll Dllt..,... t~. Jill& • simple !',*, iuid eMd 'liave ~ 1or Ibo punch lhOt ended ~ ::=t.,tojund lhe [lildlF iM I made boul.'fta .. came -apane - Ill Yft ~ -~ fJI IUCb ,and -..-.i by a clw\JI o1-. MEMPHIS, Tenn. iAP ) -Olympic ol-tablet Jhe pre-day to sleep oa W11 lleltla were juatllled in reclolminc the not -· It waa lmpouillle for -· p ld medal woo by U.S. 1Wlmmer Rlclt toblot to be .. reatst.ered 10 bJsh, • ht Demont ta Munich, 11)'1 world dru& said. au thority whe aJao Is an Ol)'mplc medical ' llemonl flnlllled !Int In Jho •- affictal. f .... tyle, bul laler WU d!Jqualllled and "He had quite a lot ol ephedrine In his deprived o1 a "*'1. urine," 1ald Dr. Arnold lltcilott of Loo-Beclrett llld IM -. al dnap eao - don, a member of the lnternatlooal be dtteeUd Ill lllllo -lor 1... or Olympic COmmtttee•1 ltfedleal ~ more daya alltt - moslioo. "1bfro 11 1ou druf tuJas Ill the Olrln- ·1'he report that stoled he had only OM pie Gamea than !hero Is In any other .. Hits UCLA's McAlister H'e sakt the aeuion wns the lftDlt splrtted pranitt he'd teen in nve "''" and loch-IWO « thr .. IJatit.t 00 the 6tld. '1'h11'1 what 11 tattt 10 •1n • football &Lmt," he 11td "You f(llla be PIYCbed up:· PHOENllt -,,., Pito<nl1 5"nt ol lhe NallonaJ BuU<boll Aaooctalkio ""'" traded •etenn 7·foot C'ff'lltr Mtl Ou'lll to Jho Pblladelphia ""'" lot Ill ""' dltclCJaed ..-.nl oJ eqh and a -.oncl- nJUnd draf1 choice. In a multiplo dNJ, U. !Ion llttn ...,, Gary Grtpr to tbe Mil-1lyc\s -Y· .... PITl'Slll/IWH -Pill llbletlc - c.nJu l()'tlinlkl -'IWoday """'" tbat -Ctirl 0.Plaoua -be llred 11e1 .. the ..i t1 !be im rooc.. ball ••••• "No. then _, be a ehanp. 'l1lat -not ""' llllJllJlol.. Ill lllld. Bui ltf11flnUJ -thal Dal'lt- quo'1 job ii In ~ altor lhe - N1lnl. ·w.· .. "" to ..-Jhe -llq." I I •• , t , ... DAILY PILO_r _______ w_ .... _""'--'-' -°'-"'-bt_,_,_,_. -"-" Injury Sidelines Estancia's Gayner Western Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO ·•-Brown. for sure unt il after you've tht.• wishbone offense and It's Estancia lligh's chaoccs ror shoring up uie v a can c Y u. 8 th(! ocly tlme the Ea .. les will J · ht est ·1n created as Fountnln Valley 's It would appear that Estan& played uiem," says rown. • a lourt I slralg L'o11qu n~rons IOOIU Friday al Hun t· c!a may ha\'C the edgt in the Brown was not satltfled with ::;ee the formation. this 1972 footbi\11 season and oa u"""ming struggle In his team's showlng against ·ieorona de! Mar'• oUeme is s1..-cond strnlgh1 In lr\'lne ington Btach High. qricluieu and s·~. but Corona de! Mar despite the similar with the triple option, Lta,1:.u e hmtilitles took a stiff Gayner has run for 180 ..,._""' triumph. but Fountain Va 11 e y 's I SS Or "-and a 4 2 average scor Brown's not buying t b a t blow v.'ith the apparent o yaru.:i · • • "We didn't execute wtll phll090phy ls entirely dlUerent. fu llhat•k Scott c:ayner du~ to ing three touchdowns to date. theory. IM II "-·Ir """-•phy la "••t to · · ed · B s his Eagl., •··ve "We've watc.b.ed F"''"'"'in against Corona de ar at a . lllC ~ J -an :.inkll' iniu ry :iiustam in ro"''n say '"' Y"'-be 1 b t t boom \/t\11 out of there . .. 1 'I me their hands full with F'o untsin Valley on film and against We'd tter pay e er 1~-thc Corona uc 1 • ar ga · 11 aglU'nst Founlai·n VaUey or we •·we won't be able to me the I• 1 Veltr)'. a tea1n Edison di.spos. othc.r teams. But you cant te ·rita\ for sure ... because that's not may be in se rious trouble,'' same defense two times in a Cua'ch Phil Brown has in· l'<I of. 26-7. row against Fountain Valley. .. I fla tley for ··t-"'our•'"•·n Valley is big and your team they're playing. say! Brown. ~r1cu 'on r ..... Estanct'a's adve ... nnr Friday We'll have to move around ~ t t•-cruc1·a1 block;•• very phys1·cal -and those are "There's only one wa y to ·-, B ,,a\'ner n 1 K ' ~oe I · t f quite a bit," surmises rown. :.inil n.in ntnf.! slot in hopts of _:1w~o~t h'."i'."ng~s~w'.'.e':_:re'.....'.'no'.'.1':..'_' _:'":''.'.''.__'.'.fin'."d'...::ou:t_:a:n<i:_:Yc:°":...:d:o:::n_:_'t_:kno=w::__:"=ses=-::.th=e-•::.rc:ip=e_.::opc_t1_0_n_o_u_o _ _:._ _______ _ l\.echter Re vitalizes \Vildcats t)\ ('r the years, the Laguna Hr:ich-Brea football rivalry ha~ been one of the longest and fiercest in Orange County. Friday night's 0 ran ge ~a gue meeting at Laguna is no exception. The two clubs have had son1e rather c r u c I a I en· counters since 1935 (Brea holds a 20-15·1 edge in the series) and Friday's t if f figures to rank high with some of the rest of the biggies. Both teams come into the ~<ime \\'ilh 3-0 records with at least a share of the Orange leadership on the line. ~iuch of Brea's success over the pnst two seasons can be :1t lributet.i .to coach Doug Kechtcr. lie becarne the Wildcats head n1a11 last ,;eason and pro- mptly led Brea oul of a live- vear losing drought . -f.i.cchter, 29, a former assis- lant at Lynwood High. guided !he Wildcats to a 6--3 record :ind a second place finish in !he Orange loop. •·I lhink the biggest reason ~·hy we have been so suc- cessful in the last two seasons is my stafi. Wo...really work together and they've all done an outstanding job," says KC'chter. Anothe r factor in Brea ·s resurgence has been the pass- ing com bination of quarterback Corey Leyton and wide receiver Dan Carpenter, both second team all-league selections in 1971. Leyton. a. e,..o, 16()...pounder, completed 11 ol 11 aerial$ \as\ week (175 yards) in a 34-18 victory over University while (."arpcner caught three passes, one going ror a SS.yard touchdown. CIJZ"J)C:Otcr is a IHJ, 165 pound senior. Kechter feels he can present a balanced attack with junior ruruling backs Steve Seeba t6- I. 186) and Damon South (5-11, ISO\. And he adds that he has lwn good tackles opening the holes in Mike Smith (6-2, 200) and Mike Hogan (6-2, 220 ). Little Hope For Tusti11 Gridders Tu stin 1,llgh School football (·oach John Pi-1urio fi11urc11 the Tillrrs must play twice as ~ood as th e opposition to win. Tustin Is wlnless this season :i~ 1t prep:ircR for Friday's 8 p n1. g:une nt San Ctcmcote, hut beinJt winless l!I nothing nt'\\' for the 1'111ers. Tustin hos lost 17 ron"Ccutive football Rt1n1cs. r..turio hopes to rC\'Crsc the losing trend against San ('lemcnte but doesn't hold /llUC'h ho~. ''San Clemente Is extremely well co.irhed nnd has n 11upcr 11uartr.rback in lllll Kcnnry," he says. ··Their Pf!Uing attack IJ vf•ry lltrong and Kcnnty Is a ~nod leader. very cun~b1tcn1 . Krnney ·s our mai n conctrn . bul we have to be oware of thf>ir running aame, too." 'l'll!ltin'3 dcfcn~lvc backrield h111 dooc a good job. but hun't really bet.n tcsled, ~1urlo say!!. "All or the lcnms we've fnc· cd have lrled lo n.in the hall on us beca use we're ~ small and inexpericnct"tl," he ex · 11loins. "We havM't seen a passer Uke Ktnnf)'." Not all oC the Tlllt-1'8 are small . Mu.Mo's top llnem1u1 Is fi.J, 240-pound offensi,•e and defensive guard Brooke Dunn. "He's about !he only good one we 've got,'' Murlo says. Tustin has been • irtrnnger peulng than running team this yea r behind quartefback Jim D<l!ord and ends Bruce Howe, Lon Brasaey and Jeff lleWeese -all Juniors. Out Murio hopes to Improve tbe ground attack. MUrio'• Immediate concern IJ to find a w1y to put 1 halt to San CJcrneote'1 balkontrm -passing 1ame. OCC'S RON MfSIOLEK ILEFTI GRABS PASS AS TEAMMATE BILL McANENEY LOOKS ON Sailors Present Problems, Says Loara' s Grid Coach As far as Herb Hill is COrl- cerned, his football team 1* "going frvm the frying pon to the flre." Hill is the coach ~t Loara I-ligh School and his Saxons will face Newport Harbor Saturday night at 8 o'clock at Anaheim's La Palma stadium. "Newport Harbor is a very physical team with some really outsta nding persormel," liill says about his Sunset League opponent. Both teams are coming off losses -Newport Harbor to undefeated Anaheim, IJ..12, and Uiara to unbeaten Westminster, 20-17 -and both teams nt.'W wins Saturday night to •laY in league con· ten ti on. "Newport llarbor i~ ~ex­ ceplionaUy well coached and pre!!Cnts an awful lot or pro- blems." continues J·WJ. "We're concerned "1th their whole offensive attack. The y have 1 very capable thrower In Steve 8uklch and lhcir passing game has improved every week. "And last week 1 think Duk ich emerged•• a runner. 1 think his speed Is dtteptlve, because he goes out on lhose sweeps and people are there and hlt him, but they just slldc off 11nd he goes up the field ." llills is also concerned with the preS<'nce of runr\lng back and linebacker Jim Swick nnd lackle Jim Neldbart. Swick, a 220-poundcr , was All.Sunset League last ytar and llill calls him o grcnt nthlctc running the bnll . block· ing. catching or whatever he's doing. "AJ a linebacker he's one o( the best around. hlA: slronJI:, a11:Hc and very difflcutt tu block." llill adds. "' "Nc~dhart It a big 11on of a gun nnd T don't have 11nyone \\'ho can block him alone," say! 11111 of the 23().pound Kutella tran1rer. ' . "We may hit him a lick but we're not going to move blm much. He really impresses me." Arter losing a squeaker to Westminster last week, Hill is wondering what his team will ~ next. "We didn 't play the same JUnd or game against Servile (21-0 loss ) as we did against Westminster. I don't know what to expect in our nert game," he says. "I do think our game with Westminster gained us a little confidence. We're p r e t t y young yet, and t · think we 11tarted seven juniors on of- fense.'' Lost for several weeks is standout punter ' R a n d y Gossett with a "fltrained knee. Go!sell . a nephew of San Francisco 49ers kicker Bruce Gossett, has ia 4 4 • y a r d average. Chargers Not Taking Mesa Gridders Lightly Now that Edi.son High School's offense has caught up with Its defense, the Chargers' football team may be doubly hard to beat. As it Is, Edison still remains unbeaten with a 2-0-1 mark after cruising past Fountain Valley 25-7 last week . The win gives Ediaon n t-0 Irvine League record . The Chargers hope to extend their unbeaten streak aga inst Costa r..1esa Friday, 8 p.m. at Newport Harbor, j 10Ur offMSC looked a little better against F o un t a in Vnllcy ," Edison coach Vince Asaro .a:ay1. "I think It's maturing a little bit. "The defense hns been ahead or the offeni.e all seallOn. but J think our offense reached a little higher level last Wetk." Dtsplte Costa M('J{l 'S 6-3 mnrk. A!Jaro i!ln't taking the Mustangs lightly. "I've seen them pla y and they have some real high JX1int1,'' he explains. "They ha\1e ~me very talenttd kids in the offetllllve line, and I'm impressed with lheir guards, quarterback and receivers. "They throw the ball a lot and they threw very well last week against Santa A n a Valley. "Costa Mesa looks like it could be a real threat in this league. All they need to do Js put It together." While Asaro is concerned with Costa Mesa's pass of. tense, he's also impressed. with fullback Dennis Delany. "Their 1pread (ormaUon puts your defense In lhe sttua~ tion of coverlng a lot of field,'' he says. "It weakens your ruMing game, but they'll llahten up oo you t1J¥1 Delany has been very impressive. •re·s a 1trong, hard-runn1ng back.'' AJaro got strong perfonnan· ces last week from fullback Joe Demetrakos. defenstve tackle Mike Brooks a n d dtlenslve end Dan Wlnchell. On the neptlve a Ide , defensive tackle Mike Domu hat1 a d~located elbow and will he l<m ror about four Wttk.!. He'll be replaced by 180-pound senior Bo!> Jorui..o. OCCBelts Fullerton Poloists By CRAIG SHEFF Of ttw O.Uy l'llot Sl•ff Orange Coest College put together one of ita top efforts of the year in rolling to a lopsided Jl--6 victory over Fullerton in South C o s t · Conference water polo play Tuesday in the loser's pool. The victory put coach Jack Fullerton's Piratea all alone atop the conference standings with a 2-0 mark and ran their season record to 10-1. The Joss was the Hornets' first of the '72 campaign after IO vic- tories. Although the Bucs scored 11 times, it was the defense that really took the spotlight - especially in the thlrd period. Holding a 4-2 lead at the hall, the Pirates limited Fullerton to just one shot in the third quarter -and that came with only 24 seconds left. And while the defeme was slamming the door o n Fullerton, the offense scored four times to make It 8-2 and for all intent and purpose it w11;s over. In !he third period Bill McAneney and Ron Mblolet slammed ln penalty throws, Mike Beal (with an nice as.si.st from Mlaiolek) added a goal and then Misiolek capped it off with a nifty shot from alx feel out. Orange Coast enjoyed a 11)..3 edse with 2.in. lflinutea to play when the Horntll rifled ln three goals in the next 60 seconds to make It a little closer. Rut Bea1 added hl! second goal 10 ticks Later .to wrap up the scoring, · "Defensively we played very wtll as a team," said Fuller- ton, "but we gate little relued and let down at the tnd." Huskies Rely on Speed EAST LOS ANGELES -It may be a surprise to coath Jtay Shackll'ford thlt Eut Loe Angeles College lluskles mtn- lnr Joo Goldin ls worried about lhe Colden West puBlng game lhi! Wttk when the two teams m.eel at Orange Coall stadium Saturday night In a Southern Ca l If o rn ta~ fertnet' game. Dut U\At\s exactly the caso and de1plte the f a c t qusrte:·back Bill Cornelius had fJye p&S!d Intercepted aailr\lt L<ls Angel" City College !all wttk, Goldin IJ very much conC>emed. 'lb< Huskles recovered from a palr of non-confemw:e defeat! to hand potent LA Harbor a 31·12 setbnck In opening circuit action lASt weekend with a speedy ND- ning 11Uack. "We felt we could beat Harbor If we could :step , ill nmnlng g11me," Cri>ltlln .says. '"J"hla Isn 't true about Golden West. Wt! aJso hive to stop lls Pl"inR game. "We are rr:ally panlt>lr.y this week. Golden Wt!t ls much I belier than !Is .......i ln- dlctles. lt ls well co11ched. have 3C'lme people who are One football players and a tailback <Rick ruoe> that 1t an out1tan- d1n8 rumer." The Kall LA colldl allo slng!r:d oul fre1hm1n defe1111ive tickle Jim Potter ms a Golden West standout. Tumtog to hts own team, Goldin 111ys the Hu1kle1 atffilith ts Ill spet'(I on of· rwe. Rod Coolty, • 1'1$-pound 1allback, ran for 107 yurds Againlt Barbor. Don Wat11, 1 lettennan In 19'7, hu rqiln- ed hl3 old ronn and It operating at rullbaclt In • starting role. Ales Guzmu, a backup qu.artd°bact a year qo, ll lbe ,11:lartlng sipal-calltr I h I 1 teUOn and nz111 tbc option play well but pr.fers lo poss. "<XfM!!lvtly, we an a lot like Gold•n w.,t," Goldin u1~. "They msy be a little quicker. But deferulvely. they Are about JO tlmea what we art" I ' &unted By Jinx Weotern lllah School roo<ball coach Jim Everett Is fearful of two lbtncs thJa week when the undefeated Ptoner:rs meet Leon Wbeeler's U!>"JXklown Marina Vikings at Westminster lUgb F r i d a y night in a Sunset League crucial. Klcilofl Is at 8. 1111 Ont fear Is the fi<ld on whlcb the team..,. playing. "We have never won a game on that field 1n the four years I have been coaclJlng at Western," Everett a&.ys. "We lost to Westtnlmter my first season heft, lU, and then lost to Marina tbe next year, 7-<J. We tlldn't. play Uiere last _ .. Everett's seoond concern is tbe health of his lllarting quarUrl>tlck, A 1.1 ·C I F .,... lender Bo!> Acoola Aoollla ls Mr. Everything for !he -· and at !he m<> ment there is nothing wrong with hla health. Everett wants It to Blay tbal way. · "He'1 the kind of guy even the bad kids like,.. Everett says by way ol aplanatlon. "He's a fine student and an ootatandlng college prospect." Back!ng the senior algnal caller are IODle outstanding lllatlstlcs. He bas attempted 411 passes In thr<e games and completed 2S fo< 28S yards and four touchdowrui. Hi5 run n l n g average against Santa Ana last week wu 8.8 despite hav· Ing a SZ.yard touchdown effort called beet on a penalty. What about tbe Marina team hls Pioneers face t h i s weekend? "Leon always gets them up for the games that are im- portant," Everett says in regards to lhe Vikings record that shows victorles over El Rancho and Huntington Beach and a OtJHlded loss to Estan- cia. '"Ibis boy Clluck Sliney is a real deceptive runner. He's always on his feet and keeps them in contact with the ground. He churns out the yardage and even w h e n Ibero's a lol of tnflic In front of him, he eeems to find the right hole." Everelt feels hls team will be forced to tll. air agalnst Marina. 0 Marina ls a good, solid defensive team and I'm sure we'll have to throw to beat them. They gave us a lot of trouble last year, too." Griffins' Secondary Hurting EL CAJON -Delemlve secondary problems h a v e made Grossmont College an early also ran Instead of the favorite in the Mission Con· ference football nag chase and coach Dave Jordan is looking for Improvement Saturday afternoon when the Griffins meet Saddleback College on the UC Irvine field at 2. '1'11.e Grlf!lns were early favorites to cop the conference bunting in some cittlea but two successive ~int de- feats Jo the circuit bave put them two games: behind George Hartman's Gauchol:. San Bernardino defeated tbe Griffins, 18-17, and Southwest won, 14-13, causing Jordan to remark : "We have to change some personnel In our """1dary. This lw been our bJaesl pro- blem all year. We have made some nal Uve mlst.akel that have been coltly. "Our S<C'"1dar)f hu been awtul. They can't tickle and their ..... c1e1.... lw been poor, We llllde one cbanr• ~ -k IJld -Ibis Wffl and I thlnlt we havo Im- proved ounelvet. Turning to tbe on ..... Jordan II much happier. "We have a pelr of real nne noelms Ind Tooy HarJ>er, our lullt.t:t:, ls a powafUl nmnu. Our offensive line II our strength and tbe btg l'OIDI WhJ ... ...,. picked 10 hJ&h. Mort of lh .. ore bl<k ftvm last year." How doea the C.-mont eooch look at Saddlebocl< Ibis wffltl Co-Sponsored this week by And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROF,rr Top Wffkly Prize In Merchandise Certificates For Weekly Second Place Winner Each far Third, Fourth and Fifth Plac:e Winnen Plus BONUS PRIZE A p.tr .t tStbt1 N ........ of ... .,..... CUSC ..._ Nett9 hfiMo) t• .......... , ...... C..,...,. .t ,_ DAILY PILOT. Be a pigskin prophet for profit •. Play the Pi~ot Pi91lr:in PICKEROO game for weelr:ly pnies. Top w1n~er ·~ch weelr: receives $25 9ift certificate from ~the sponsoring shopping center. Second plac.~ winner ge~s $10 cer- _tificate and.third, fourth and fifth place w1nnen each get $5 certificet1. Eo1ch certificate is sp~ndo1ble, j~st like money, et o1ny store in the spontor1ng shopping center. Sponsorship roto1tes with a d iffer1nt center sponsor· ing ao1ch week's contest. Po1rtici pating centers are: Westcliff Plaza, 17th and Irvine, Newport Beach: Harbor View Center, San Joaquin Hills Road end MacArthur Boulevard, Newport Beach; Eastbluff Village Center, Eattbluff Drive, Newport Beach: Bay- side Center, B•yside Drive and Je111boraa Ro1d, New- port Beach; and University Park Shopping Center, Culver and Michelson. Irvine. Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY Pl:..OT Sports S,ction. C ircle the team you thin k will win in each pairin9 in the list of 30 games and send In the player's form entry blank or• reasonable facsimile. Then watch fhe DAILY PILOT sports pages for each week's liit of five winners. RULES 1. SUMllt flw ... ,,., Menll llltlfw Ir • -bit taalmll• Ill If N 111ttr "'• ('tn1"t ... 11: .. -11 .. l~mflt"" h thflflltd •••• "•kt ...,11cak.'' Elllrlft m111t M 11n1r.rm lft •Ito •IMI all•l"I k f1ellll•t• ludflltt. ThoM Whl<ll dolr't _,....... WWI IM 1Ht11Nlltltd, t. ._ It tt1 ,ILOf l'IOSKIN PICKl!ll:OO CONTln, s,.,, 0.,.rt!Mtll. P'.O, lklll 156f, Clttlll M ... , CA. fMM,, a. Oftly -Mtry "' ...,,. Mell ....... 4.. 1!111"" """' M ll'tlfmlrbd "" lltw tllan TinrrM•v or """' Ill dtllwlll'> .. te t1tt DAILY PILOT tffko bJ' ,,m. Tllllr'Ml•Y· t. '•nklPlflnt -0."'9 Mii CIAILY PILOT ompJey'" t11id IMlr Im,_ -. .. flmlll" Ml fllllltSe te ....... I. Tll ell:IAIClll: IL.NIK MUn el ,ILLED IN Dll: E"Tlt'I' 11 YDID. •••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY Bl.MK • • Clrt .. ,._ '" ,.._ wlll wi. .. Is Wffll:'i tGIMI • • flHHM ... ii ......... listed) • • Rams vs Philadelphia • • Dallas vs Baltimore • • San Dlecja vs Miami • • • • ~ew York Jets vs New England • • Cal vs use • • UCLA vs Oregon State • • Washington vs Stanford • • • • Michigan State vs Michigan • • Oklahoma vs Texas • • Aubum vs LSU • • Purdue vs Minnesota • • Georgia vs Mississippi • • • • Penn State vs Army • • Florida vs Alabama • • Iowa vs Northwestern • • East LA vs Golden West • • Grotsmont vs Sacklleback • • El Dorado vs Dana Hills • • • • Eclbon vs Costa Mesa • • Hlllltfnttan Beach YS 'Anaheim • • Westem vs Marina • • Katella vs Minion Viejo • • • • Westminster vs Santa Ana • • Estancia vs Fountain Valley • • lrea YS Laguna • • Melter Del vs LB Wiison • • Tustin YS San Clemente • • c-def Mar vs Las Alamitos • • • • University vs Saddlebadi • • Newport Harbor vs Loara • • • • Tll lllAICll -My ..... P11 .. "'ti ........ """' tCllf1ll ..... ,__ ..... .....,. .. • • ·-• • • ......... • • • • CJly "' • • -•--... • '"Ibey are the best !<am we have f_.r with the Po14lble ncoptlon of Lotlr Belch 10-t lolt .. LBcx:, 12· 0). They have a very pd delenoe and have outatandlng rtetiW.t'I Ind a good pb!tef. They're allo •ell coached." • ._ ______ '.""' _________ ..J ................... : f - Defensive Stars PAT LYNCH Corona del Mar ERIC JOHNSON Edison El.'lWORTH EllKEY Huntington Beach CHRIS MUMFORD Mater Del Tlllf MURPHY San Clemente KELLY STROJCB ·Costa Mesa MIKE DUGGER Estancia JEFF WINSHIP Laguna Beacb RUSSEIL RIC E Mission Viejo SCOTT McGREW Univer1tty Katella Still Looking For First Touchdown To say Katella High School has had problems with its foott>all season this year would be no exaggeration. Coach Bob Lampshire'! Knights (0--3) were thraabed 33-0 last week by Orange in their first Crtstvlew League game, marking the Utird con- secutive contest Jn which they have failed lo score. Lam~lre hopes to break bolh streaks Friday night at MWlon Viejo, a tea1n that opened the league seaaon with a M win over Tustin. Lampshire, whose tetm ha! lost to Los AJamllOI, 21-0, and FUllerton. 20-0, In addlUon &o Orange, sees a niy of hope for a win Frtday nlaht. Mission Viejo, he says, Is only a fair tum. Dance Sla ted 'l11e RuntJnatOO Beach Olien boo8ter club lnYltH evt:ryone to their foll kick-off dance Sat· urday night 11 9 In C.rpenler'• !WI, Atl111ta and ll<•cb Blvd. Tkll:ets •rt '5 per couple and may be olll>ln«I by call· Ing Rolph Bn>wn at -... Jack Ftalcncu II 11&2--07117. "It looks like a fairly balanced club." he says. "They don't throw too much, but when lhey do they have a pretty (air passing game. "It looks as though they have a fairly good deferue, although like us they have a young secondary and have had some trouble there." Lampshire is taken with Dlablos halfback D a v e Caldwell . "He runs well for them," Lampshire says of the 145--pounder "They have good overall balance and he's the only Individual who ""3 stood out." Whllo Lampshire -·• r a t e either Katella or Miaalon Vle)o u league con- tenders. the Kmghls do have 90me proven pl1yer1. Middl• guard Bill Manball (ttl) has betn a dtfenai,. atandollt while the olfenot 15 keyed oround lloclcy tullbock Bob Sanchez (~ti. 200). "We're prlm1rlly 1 nmnlng team, although we'd nu to be able to pau,'' Lampshlre xays. The Knlghta ha .. llttle experience at quart.trbaclt and bl,. llad UWble "!tll bolb \Mir ofrenaJve and cltlenalve lines. STEVE MIKLOS Dana H.lUJ BRETT KILGORE Marina DICK STONEMAN Newport Harllot RAY ASEBEZ Westminster Area Polo Results \Vtdnr~~. October 11, 14172 DAILY PILOT ~!~rn;~~s Defense Ke y for Anaheim Ml San Antonio College ex· ploded for flH goalt In the ,._ cool ball to defeat the Golden West aoccer team, 8-3, in a match TuESiay at Golden West. n.ert's a d I f f e re n c e game so far bul I don 't know tc-an1 thnt bas a tWt>filatne los- bttwttn Ute ~t Anaheim how 1otJ« It 's going to last. u-ig streak. It will be the lllah School football team and "We've been n1 1ss1 n i.: C.:Olon1!r.ts' 75th homecoming put teama -it's good, but 858;..,,menl! 11nd executtng not as good -bot there's "f>-·· game. nothing different about the poorly. We're a green club. VanHoore!lt"ke, though, i'1 coach. and maybe we 'll come around "A'ary of J-lun1inJ.tton Beach The Rustlers, who had taken a 2-1 lead into the halftime break, slipped behind early In the se<Ond ball, and couldn't regain the advantage. and maybe we won't.'' I d of It's still the same Clare "and t u1t 11n1~ fcnse al\d VanHoorebeke. The line is the same one those backs they've go t who VanHoorebeke uses year after cun bust ~1 game open <Jt "We're undefeated, but we year, and, although the nnyt1me •• haven't played well," says the Colonists may not have a llc's referring to run ninr. men who has taker. the super team , they haven't Jost backs PHul Flsknes.s fi nd Kvle Colonists to 15 league cham· yet. Van Anu!rsfort and adds, plonshlps: in 22 years. Friday night at 8 o'clock "You oon1ain th~ monke vs John Quiroz led the Golden West scoring wi th a pair of goals, Bill Tracy talUed the other RWJtlers goal. Golden We!l returns to action Thurs-- day when lt takes on Cerritos "We've never been big, but Anaheim will put its streak on for three quarters und thl·n 'A'C're even smaller this year. the line at Anaheim Stadiurn suddenly they're gone. at Cerritos. Our defense has kept us in the again.st Huntington Beach, a "And the i r quarterVack ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~--'-~~~~~~~- Our4ply polyester cord. The low price will move you. only 1588 plus 1.81 fed. tax and old tir&. 87&-13 (650-13) blackwall tubele!L Ground G1ln1rf' 4 ply polyester cord tire. In the wide profile 78 series. Blackwall tubeless Tire size E78-14 F78-14 G78-14 H78-14 560-15 G7B-15 H78-15 - Price 19.88 21>.e8 21.88 .22.88 _ 1Z.88 _ 22.88 23.88 Whitewall a only 1.99 more per tire. Plus Fed. tax and old tire. Plus ltd. tax 2.24 2.39 2.56 2.75 1.73 2.63 2.81 Belted polyester. Ride on it for only 1988 plus 1.78 100. tax and old tire. 878-13 (6SO.l3) whitewall tvbel•. Ground Gainer• belled. A great 2t·2 belted tire with polyester cord. Whilewall only. PIU. Tire size Price led. tu 878·14 (735-14) 23 .88 2.34 F78-14 (775·14) 24.18 2.52 G78-1 4 {825-14) 25.88 2.69 G78-15 (825·15) 28.88 2.78 H78·15 {855·15) 27.81 3.01 Without lrade-ln, 1dd S2 more per HrL Plus Fed!tu1nd old tire • • IC reg NllzltOWlkl) II ~ ra ~t Ior a i!Ophomore and iook:I hke ht•'s gaining~ He looks ltk< he'll be good ~ they don·1 overroaeh hjm." \':1nl loorebeke has a couplf of race horse backs hlnuelf In Kirt Bethke and }Iowa.rd C.<trson, who all1..ornate al tnilback. Bethke also starts iq the defensive secondary. "\\lc're not really a running IC.Jill, though," VanHoorebeke SL1ys. "\\o'e're struggling wlt.b both and I don't know what you'd call u.~ '' More sound values for your car. r-----i I 1-2-3 oil change I I lube combination I 8499 8-tnlck tape deck. Hu bulll-in stereo AM/FM r.dlo. Ploys •II 8-track cartridges. Receives 111 AM/FM bto1dc:uts. 4995 Mini size 8 tracl< stereo tape deck. Volume. ton• and b1l- ance controls. Channel 1nd1c1· tor light. JCPenney The values are here every day. I 635 I I Ho10'1 wn111 we do luM CAt, I I ch111nge 011 11nd oH l1Hrr (~ 1 Quo111 Pooneys heavy duty 011 and otl liller 1nctudod l L-----.1 Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following Auto Centers: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON CEl'ITTR, Huntington Beach (71 4) tm-n71. ' ... • 1 " Jfl DAILY PILOT Wcdi'bdl.Y. Oclober 11. 1972 • • -CdWs Ne~'t Foe Sports Calenda1· Lions' I Worries Baldwin Fresh1nen " " Injur y Hampers Los Al Halfback In Grid Tilt I 'I'~ lhe ..,,II ell balk 6-2 51:!lup, tand &111ys it JreJtunen football tram $ After ~"I .a ~are 1ntf tr•,,polrl.,.il 11lgbrb.twt: Peen a ~· nr;f mo\'e "" w 1 from Edison, Fountain Valley, Olf. 11 rftM•" ... 0. 1 r··'ed Weotern las! dift .. -nt a•-.·· Santa AM out ol lhelr I rormatloo," wlll present some problems 'K..4 d bosl F.....U -o..,. l'fll .. 111 e:. °"'*" ,. om& "''" ""''' titarina, Wtslm111a•er an •t 1eo1 c..._,,. H'91t 1 • .... ). week, Sao.ta. AM.ha• the unen. coach Tom Baldwin says. Batdwtn • notes.. 't!fa.y Ac-ror lM iia.lnta. lluntlngtan Beach High_ SChool ~ -OoldMI "'"' at '•"1'°' ·Viable ta&k of racing No. z "OUr 1ddJ k1nd of let down · comando ls a floe runner and "You •get kind or used IQ will clash tonight 1n the !l~ ~~!ry -cW.,,.. ot1 M¥ " Westminster Fridfly. alter we missed It, ruut good pas..oter and he's goL ·a seeing them in a defense after Friendship Football Scholllr- L• Al1~1°" f~ ., CO'~ .. J G M d eight years and play ac· ship Bowl. Corona de! MM ll~b's 1972 football sealOn may be on the line Saturday ntgbt at \Vestem when Los Alamit08' Griffins supply the oppo!ltlon, Coach Frank' Do retti's Grif· nos are unbeaten wllb a flossy J--0 mark but are slight un. derdogs to Corona del Mar primarily because of the ankle injury to halfback M i k e .. Dana Hills Aerial Duo Still Tops The cofflbination of BilJ springlrian' fu.A1ark: €Jjenholm " has been the 'One qffensive weapon consist.entty successful at Dana Hills High and Thurs- ... day night's battle wlth El 1 • Dorado at San. Clemente High 1o figures to be another display i of that punch. •. Coach Tony Leon conf)rmed :'.. tha t his ace receiver. El, jenholm, will again be utilized ... to the fullest extent with the ' emph<isls put on isolating him on the defenders Jn the Orange League tussle. •·Tuey double covered him tn our Valencia game, and be still managed to gel open ... and Billy can hit him. But of , . course we'd certainly like to get some of our ot h er receivers into the action, too ." says Leon. Cl "' S11ringman·s passing stats rene<:t 435 yards gained on 29 ;~ con1pletiof'!S in 60 attempts ~. and three touchdowns -all to ·• Eljenholm. Aside from Spri ng· !" · m:in's 52 yar:ds gai ned on ~· the ground, only 40 net yards ;: have been gained running by • the ba lance of the Dolphins' •• allack. ~ The Dolphins of Dana J1ills • .,. have lost thelr first three ~ outings. but proved respec- j •• table in losing a 21-7 tiff to ~~ Valencia las& week. "We've had.a good practice .-Tuesday anc;t our kids gained a :~ Jot of confide nce despite losing ,.1-10 Valeocia. Wt founi;t out that ":. the opposition ii capable of "i! mat \tl( mistakes, too," says .-Leon .• :! A 'bloW td"oana \.J:illS' plans ,, is the probable los!I of middle ~· linebacker Bob Vandercook. a 6-1. 190-JJOund junior transfer from Arcadia. Vandercook sprained a n ankle in the third qunrter ai.:ni nst Valencia a f t er s1:iearheading the Dolphins' defensive efforts. As for the El Dorado of-" . r ensive attack, Leon say!! his main concern i!I In stopping the IM-185-pound backs ,.., e:n1ployed by the Go Id en ~' , !lawks. ,. , .. Uni's Foe .. ,. "· ·- •• Preparing .. For Pass '• .. , • SnddlebaC'k ll igh football :,.: conch Ben Haley snw the er- rur in his team's ways last ·~· 11crk and figures he bas it cor- ., rreted for the second session ... of Otange League play. ;~ Tht Roedrunners providl!: the oppo!lilion for University .... Saturday night In a game ~, !!lated for the Allssion Viejo -.• field . ;.: "\Ve played a poor game • &f(ain.'lt SonorR, especially out r .. pass defense.·• IL1\ey recal11. ,. "I think we've correctrd ~· that, ~"' and I think · u we've got a pretty good ,~. overall defemie." ;:• Haley's concern fur hi_, pass .,, defense Is underst11nd11bJe ..., since University's offeOM hna ~· been heavily paM oriented this ... -. "They &brew tht boll more thnll 3& times ag&lnst Brea. and J expect they'll be doing the same thing .agaln!!I U!I." J1alty aaya. "'MN!y're trying a lot of l... thing• to eet their offense 1!' &0ing' and even lhouflh they've Jost three times. ll'1 one·o( those games where you can't let dOWll.r You've got 10 be ready lo play foolhaU." The RoadruOOers at:trt three .. n1on IA thtlr defensive ba<i<tltlcf and have a generally •expert~ defen 1e, l'C· COl'tllng lo lfaley. Don~' I llOOlor llnebacket, leadf die no.a nm· ' hers def-, .,.i !Itkin Charlet Hatfield (fO, 1111) lo!fd -Don Garcia (f.4, 1111) .,. othe r key men. ~~Htt':;bol"S.:-~09::'. tt\Ml~:. . The two teams collJ<le ai wect~rti broke loose to score great receiver n, ary a • con11ngly," Baldwin says,. '.'I Action gets under way e.~·4! M411!11~. IC•ttll• •1 Mlu.kljl ~n•" an .. llowl t-a Suoset the winner. docki,"},V don't ttunk it'll mike any d1t-5 ·rr bet •· rd!! Vl•lo; ' E1taM1• •' Foun1.in11stiw. .r-r-.,.. •"""°' w .,. toll owing a 6: I U ween <'11,;hYi't egtt. Wf1!mlM~r ., S•nt1 ... ,... T1111rln Ii I nAm•e Ct"•'aJ for h..th. ''They're the No. I ranked '"nle)r're kind ti~ JMater ference in tlw way we TUJ1 our II lh l ams Coa h D H 11 a n d , 1 s.n c .......... ,.. S.a<il.tMKo. • t ...:.ma.. ""'"'-""" ~ Ito 'll . .,.,. '--~·e to Fountain Va ey you e , c ave o • unl...,ltt-t', 'i\'t11tm ., M•rlll8. Santa Ana extended Westcrtt team in the eountt, and lf they Dei offensively, Y"l"'t't t · t offense, we l-• imv the Junior Pre-Wee Jaguars Corona del A-1ar eleven must oot. 1~ u•r1t11v1· · to the lun· 1•-01· a 1'" !"""· Th~ are the bes t, J think we could Acco_.._o is p~bly a bet-work against it some . this • f ff h F11111a11 -Cot,t• Me .. v1 E~KJ!f •1 . ~ T"' ._, '!_,.., ""A and 1'ige.rs. win. or all two games o t e H.Wpot"1 H•rbot. tt11n11~1on ee1e11 .... Sam· ts -1·ssed a. tw-point con--have beaten anybody else the let "'"'"""' than .P110te,r: Dei's week. d 1 •-•-Le 'NIS.\t flt '"' ,,. •-e .. ·r ,. 1-h s · t Proceeds arc tickele or pace in l..lvu1t' ague cOJn. A,..i.r'" •• LA ,.,. .... , M.,,,,.. .... ver!lionJate in the ga1ne whicll wtty }'le played tha.I. nigllt." qua,rter~ck." ' Greg 1~10 1na, t e a111 s h" 1 ·" t·1 w"-• •• • • ' ' ,,,.,, •• B Id · C< lh 1 1 b ck nd the key man -llege scholars 1ps or net..'llY pe 1 on, Mi11';. vieio. •.;_.;;,~1~~j.,. ., Hniii wQuld have put them ahead, Westminster, lhe No. 2 a w J Q runes-a quar er a a '. ...v Schw.erdtf~ injured his ~it~~:OO:.~~. "~:"'.:V"r'.:..,.,~ and the, Pioneets then march-.. rank~ team in Or~e Count;' Westminster is dJverting frqm in their wisllbone attack, will st~~~~~lon is SI for adults ankle m pracU~ three day! e .. c.., M•te• o.i .,1 LOllO e~ti cd for the.winning score. presenb aome different prolr its traditional 6-I .defensive be rejoined in the backfieJd by and ~ cents for children. prior to Los A1's -21-8 trium ph ~r:\:\-~#~;~;~occ;;·~T~w~1·~"~ .. ;'~c~i-;"~"~_;·~·U~w~e~'d~ha~v~e~m~a~d~e~tba~l~e~•~-..:1:cms~~a~cco~rd~in~g~lo~B~al~d~w~in~.-·;,."~l~ig~n~m~e~n~I ~th~is~se~a~so~n~,~IO~a~~h~al~fba~c;k~Des~~ni~Sc<>~tt~. --~-:~~~~--7"--il over l-1agnolia., a victory 1 ::~.Y0:'i~i. is rot ef\tirely SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY 'THRU SATUROAY ONLY! Se habla Espanol "We sputtered quite a lot last week, and t.tike's injury hasn't responded very quick· ly," says DOretti, who is ln his sixth year as the head man af Los Alam.1t03. Taking over Sthwerdtfeger is iurifol''KeTiy 'Quaid t1601. Quaid acc;.oqrited for 57 yards in 15 carrleS: aPins.t Magnolia. , .but it's at quarterbacll: where the Griffins rely on a great ~I ol their offense. 8enlor lefthander L y I e Lansdell baa gained 124 yards in 24 carries anq ,a touchdown oi1 the ground. • In the air he's completed 23 or 49 ror 300 ·yards a00· twO 101.1,chdowns. Doretti i1 wary of Corona del Mar'.s. passing g11;me with quarterback , Joe Tosti at the controls. "He's throwlng on the money from 50 yards away and he has excelletd running speed. ''In looking .at the statiglics appears Cor,ooa 4el Mar i,s doing all its acoring from outside the 20-ya(d line," s.af1 Doretti. A lop defender for Los Alamlto& ls defensive back Dave Velarde, who has in- tercepted four enemy aerials. Jn the line' It'~ Chris Lundblad f210J who has snarked 11le La; AI defense: .-~=: -... ' The Bartons are also • irt strumental in the Lo!! Al atr tack, with Jeff (IBOJ carrying 28 times for 114 yards and twp touchdOWJ\5,. ' His brotbef, Ptt!Ke, is the it appears Corona del ~1ar is ching six for 88 yards and one touchdoWn from his wingback bertll .. MD Rival Mat°:"ing 1 On Defense J. '" • , f 1 ~ , ·'I LONG BEACH -Owen Dix- on's Long Beach Wilson team may have showed signs of maturing last wee'k in a f}-1~ upset victory over El RanchO, purticularly on defense. And It's in that afea that Dixon feels bis team w.ill nee(I its greatest effort,rr.Jday m~t when the Bruins lake oh Afoter' Del. "I don't think Uti;s tt1ater Dci team i!l es·good defensively as some or thelr, ~I teams. llut orfensively they're p~ly better," DI.Jon says. , '" "They ha'fe an exttllent quarterback and a number of good rur\ning baek!; so we'll have to be p_i;i:pared to stop them." The 81\Ufns ,deler&.i. Slopped El Ranebo'three ttmes deep in their own territory in . last week~! game and held El Rancho fullback Mark 'sailey in check for most or t}le ,game. 'the Bruin!! started the season with only three return- ing lettermen, and have made wholesale changes in person· nel between starts. That may be all over, b:>wever. "We've got good games out or t~ kids we brought up. especially Gary and Jerry Ro!ls, our twin linebackers." l>ixon 13)'!. "They 're not big. <>to. 170) but they ire hit- ters.'' One player who has been the Bruin key in tho first three gemet. Robin Holm, sustained wi lnjury against El llancho. but is expected ti>' be' b.1ck for I.he Mater Oei grunc . lto•m. n 170-po und !ll)eCdllter, broke loose on runs of 40 and TO y11rds. the l11ttcr tallc.'<1 back on a penalty, before sml:fllntng a blp point o~aln!!I El Rancho. Ir the in- jury ts sufflclcntly heated, the all.Long Beach selection will resume hi.a p!aCe DJ the man tor the Mcnon:lls to 5109. Cral1 JohNOn conUnues as qunrterb8ck for the 81\rln.!, the pivot man in thfl wishbone Jttack. Johmon ·1me been an adeqwtte runner and 1r!t v.-ttk t'01npletcd flVe of lb: J>lsst'.I again.I El Rantlio. Pro .Basketball .. -Nlo\111 ...... ~ • ll•IKIYIOl'I m. OfttlJu'IO .. All'"t• ta tllfftlt lOt Htw Vet"k lll, INtti. M (fl1c..., ts, ""1""41)1'11• " WESTMINSTER ... SANTA ANA FULLERTON 152%1 BEACH BIYll. • PllOIE &93-8544 MONDAY THRU ~RIDAY 9,00 A.M .• 9 P.M. W URDAY ···········-·······a,oo A.M •• 6 P.M. SUNDAY ·····--··--··-·9,00 A.M. -4 P.M. luicll ........., ' fwd ... "'* . ! Ohh 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS• PPOllE 547.7477 1530 S. IWBOR BOD.• PllOllE 876-0700 MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY a,oo A.M .• 9 P.M. SATURDAY .................... a,oo A.M. -6 P.M. ''"',ff, 1 ••. loo ol 11 . ..0 •o $1 .19 .i .... ~c1+"'1 ·~ .... II SUIETO ClllCl('WITH '6.oo x 13, 6.¥>x'1a AIR CLIPPJR_ TUBELES~,~., BLACKWA"-- fUl llf51 IACM Ill. Pl;ll[ f.U U.Cl'#Al PAICI ...... iw. 1.oo.1s 1344 1.tJ 7,l!I •IS .... r.~ • 14 1444 '" 1.1J .11 7.7,/6.1fl 2.IJ . " 2.13 1.2s .1' 1566 '" l ,2J •IS ,,n t 701 IJ 670.i 'IS l 7001t l6 8-17.) 100-16.S 2120' '2438 2640 3817 4047 TUllD TUlllES5 TUIED TUlEIESS TUli l ESS 70 SERIES - 4 PLV NYLON CORD 23,~~ ,:~i;~ ~;;s ·:z:"· ..!.~!!.E,. ().aiJ,'io 2645 2.6(1 .... , 1t.l1 H'~'""-4'"!:-1-----1 · TUBELESS WHITEWALLS <1~ti11.0o 2745 2.11 k">.!''1"-4'"'--1-----1 11"J:~~ 2845 2.tl • l •I I I 6.S0x 13 lUBElfSS 11.ACKWAll "•II f .... Ja1 of SI .TS SIU IACN -· , .. '. """ '" --·"· 1.00 • 13 )$54 1.•s 7.)J,, '' 1651 7.7S" I' 7.7S • 15 1.1 sn.10 J764 . " '·"' .,, 1.1) ORNELL CENTURY II THE "BIG TIRE' •SMOOTHER RIDE NO FlAT SPOnlNG • GREATER STABILITY FOR HIGH SPEED DRIVING 76 f 7 •• ,, (7.3S/100 . , .. "'' G l f 1J 111/)IO•ll Jo MON'tiisuAitiPif EE· ... .-::::: .. , TOU• Ot.D llll ACCt,flD •tOAIOLIJI OP CONDITION. All PtlCll 'l.UI PIDllAl IXClll fA.Jl & OlO Tiit, • t Cash Needed-Not Emotion Environment Bond Sala Not 'Fl.owering' Say Banks ~ ............ ...,,.. BOSTON -'!be American public'• commitment to a cleaner envlrooment Is heavy on emotion, liibt on cub. 'lbat'1 the conclusion reach- ed by the handful ol U.S. banks trying to sell .... vironmenlal bonds. TOE BANKS promise to uoe the funds they get !rom these bonds to make low·lnleml loans to polluten. Tho bargalo lntereslnteo are dealgned to encourage manufacturers to p u r c b a s t! pollutk:llH:ontrol devices they couldn't or wouldn't buy otbenrlae. Business demand for the low-coat loana far exceeds consumer willioguesa to buy the supporting environmental boods at most of the banks of- ~ these bonds. "Fe! ~ .want to put their money· ,n.ere their con- science la;" ei.plalns one bank ex,ecuUve. · TRI ·~EAJtm Bond•' ~ gram at Arlington Trust Com- pony' Arllqton, v ... la typical ol the "about 10'' IUC:b pro- gtlJUI tbe tm.nwtlonal lnltitute for Envln>rJmft>tol A!!alrs aays are currentl,y In operatlm In Iha U .8. Arllnglon Trull ollm bcnls maturing over~ and one- and i--year periods. 'Ibey eam Iha same Interest as ceriifleateo of deposit held for the same length of Ume (5.~ percent for a two-year period). Fund& ~tod In Earth Bonds are lnlured In 11!11 by the Federal Depellt lnlurance CorporaUon (FDIC) like all otllet bent depooits. Despite the fad that the Earth 1!cJnd Interest.rates and safety proYilloos sre lhe same as U-on the cerllllcateo of deposit sold by Arlington Trust, eoDSllll1erS buy mon ol the cerli!lcalel, ac<or<llng to ---ldl, tbe bonk'• martellnc dJrector. DURING TOE last two yeers the bank has 110ld only 560 bonds, altliougb demand -- bas picked up In recent monlha. Tepid demand Io r en- vironmental bcnls Isn't -llbed to Vlrginla, Tho "~ Earth Shares" ollerect by the Flnt !laUooal Bank ol St. Louil have been enjoying "not too mper" ~ ac;conHng to -spolteiman Ed Smllh. Out..r..tate polluten uklng lor ,low-<OSI loa111 uauaUY go away ,empJy~ at most of Mone. y's Worth ,. the banks olferlnt en· _ • vironmmtol bonds. The · , emphU!s , Is on Improving -COnSumer Protection: ~a:i.:ii.!i"51oe.i~ . pa,ooo !rom Earth Bond pro- ceeds. Tho majority ol the H Does N• F ? loans have been for Industrial ow IXOD are. p ollulion-<Olllrol equlpmmt, attliouih the bonk did finance By SYLVIA PORTER On Christmas Eve, lt10, the Wall Street Journal noted that after two yean ln the While House President Nb:on's proposala !or "atlflened .,,... sumer protection laws have eitherr failed to live up to ex- pectations or have never materialized." Now we are nearing Christmas 1972, and soon Nix- on wUl have been foqr years in. the packages for certain pJSSibly lethal products. But It wun't until this post ·.\ugl!lt -more lhan II -ialer -that the !lrit cbllcl;P,Ool -[>ecame a ~ on ~ contaiMB. Tbe. Toy ~ty Ad, WU puaed In, 11811. But! II '!-·11111111 throe.days before Clritmas 1970 that ~ ~"~'. ..... finally tuen olt Ille market; hun- dreds mol9 -were left m: touched until months or years tater. · White Home. AGGRESSIVELY pr o-oon- W h a t ' I the oum<r, COll\l'O'!enlal _ leglsb!- full a core -Uon bas either been shelved or card? -narrowed-down to meaninglen At Ia.st. ooe dbneMions. "No fault" auto major and imurance and auto warranty pol<nllal I y laws, clus actloo legislatlon '°ltTlla great piece Of -these are no closer to consumer protectlcn leglsla-becoming leileral s t a t u t e s tlon Is going on our lllatuto than In the late '!Os. books - a law to create an in-Yet. the GOP platform dependent federal cunmlssloo adopted In Miami pleges: with brood ..,...,. u. establish ''Tho American consumer mandatory safety lllandarda bas a right to product .safety, for consumer product. clearly specified qualities and vatues; llllDeol d~ and ~. fair ,_.. ~(Md due'.....,.. lor fraud and deception." THIS IS '(IIE sple piece cf legislation that could tum ollt to be of prime aignlfleance. to you and me, as consumers. But eftfl c:n thls~one. ther'I was a fight Until the last minute between those in Congress who wanted to make ,,,. the commlssion a n in- dependent agency and the Nb:• on administration. (The N1Ion administration favored tbe bill!s aims, but it a n d spokesmen for bu a i n e 1 s wanted the Food and Drug Adml.nl.srtatlon to have the standard-malting authority.) Tile "Buyer's BUI of Rlghts" propoled. by . the. ·Repqbllcon perty ub !or ·IUD dlsclooure of the terms of warranties and guarantees "in language all can undmtand" and lhe GOP promises: . ,. mE ESTABLISllMllNT of an lndeptndent C o n s u m e r Protectloll ~. to plead the consumers cue in. pro- ceediop before Federal 1gen- cles; aM ''Vigorous en- hlrttment" cL all CODIUDler protection laws. Perhaps we should all start U.keepscor«ards. ,. a recycling center I • Maryville, Va. mE ' LOANS mode fnlm Arlington Trust's bcnl Jlr"' ceeds go out al an annual rate enabling the honk to cover In- terest and ad!nlnl•lrlliv• ... -and·still make a nduo-ed prolll. One of the banks Issuing en- vtronm.ntal bonds charges In- ~ rates for Joana dMlgned to make Its program a non- profit operotion. Chem i c a I Bank of New York sells lls "Clean Air Shares" on thls basis. Clearr Air Shares have been m sale for a little over two yeanr. Because Chemical'• en- Yh\RDuadal -bond, low-cmt- loan progrlJll is dealgned to tnak even rather than to make a proli~ the lnl<!resl rate II pafs bondboldm Is lower lhau wbat they could get on a certlflcate ol depooit. <llemlcal'• cerliflcates pay 6 percent a year, its Cleo Air Shares 411 percent. Tile bent lithe only one survey~ which ...., bondbokleG a ~~ rate :;,·r.e.,,, -lhoOO-llOliflilJ certlllcateo of deposit. r . P)RTJ. Y Bl'lCAIJBE of' lhi Jow1 l!Mrest rates paid on Ito -. Chemical has only '400,0IO ...nb of Clean Air Shares outstanding on a balan- ce sheet totaling 113 billion. However, it has made $15 million worth of low·lnteres~ Wllllam J. -., ms join- ed stewart Tide C.mpuy. as In 1970, a special com· missloo. had urged the creeilca of an independeot agency after a twcryear study a n d estimates that 20 mlllloo in- juries and 30,000 d e a t h a resulted each year from the use of products ln and around the home. Another timlne11- sponsored study had attributed one-foorth of all household ac- cidents to faulty design of manufactured products. Japan Not ~~~~~ di5trlct sales manager for P h • Flnt· American Title ure asmg insurance T· U S J Hardman Aerospace, a o • els subsidiary o I Mocrodyne- TBE N E W Independent CllaUllon Olrporltlon. has ap- comm1ssion will have power to LOS ANGELES (AP) pointed Ttm. Ulel as vice prolu'blt the sale of products Northrop Corp. said t b e president o! morketlng. that cannot be m • d e decision by Japan not to Liies, ol Huntlnston lleacll. reasonably safe by mandatory purdwe tts Freedom. Fighter received bis bacbeJar o l standards and to hon the sale jet. would bave no effect .., IClence ~ at Son J- oi producls tbat are Inherently flf!lpioymenl or bulluess-11 the State College. un.oafe. It wlll be able to onkr CllllQmla aer_.,e plllll. * manuracturen to r •ca l 1 "It bu k>nc· beem known Ray K1aer of Hunlington unsare producls and w replace that the Ja-desire to llorl>our, fOnntr g e n e r al them or rebate the pur<MH build up It& own aJn:raft mana,.,-o1 the May <Jt... price. It will he able to Inspect manulaclurfllC -, bas _., Colla M-store, Im manufacturing cperatk:IOI, ~ been, a number ooe priority,'' been aamed uec:utlve vtce poena records, conduct com· said a NGrtlnp statement. pnoJdmt ml pllance tests. "~, any polellllal ,.._i ,_. There are 1ll(f crlmlllll Japenete purcbue of n. na c ban d 11 e penalties In the l111w for willful M9W' Included lo any of the -n~ of violators of safety 1tand1nta comp an y 'a b ••I u et 1 *·--~· and moderate clvll penaltiel __ .. May Olllr too ror "knowing" violations. Noclllrop aald It bal llrm poey Clllfor· No doubt about It. Tbll taw orders '-Ille United Statea n1a. b progress. Whal else! -10011111 ond ot11er freo Kl au:!! Otherwise, the record ol the -Id nations for the pmdlue -Jo past 1our years 1s tnduterent. o1 ...... 1han 1111 m , a ...... May c.m- To give you a sampltnc: odvanced model. Al1otetlw. ~ • ....,, u a A NATIONAL Illllltute fO< _.. aales to ......S l50 -In lt49, ha I ....,. eonsumer Justice -IOI up and to "''" .....,, U. fl.& ed lllt I lr m • l>Qyor, by lhe ldminislratlon l110n billion Dpocl GO Ibo U. S. bnntti morcbandtsa .,._, than a ytar and a half aao tD t.e1a,.,.. ol tr.lie. diYllk:Nl tDerchmdilt of study varioul me-ol deal-Japon -...,.i wlia' II* lliweor and vice pr-.i 11111 -conrum<r griev...,.. !bat k had decided apilllt t1io md I••• r al ma• I• Ille -including clsu actloo 111111 prdlase ol tlio F.QI ml F-IE _,.. el men's IDd blf .. and small claims <OUrt -.-. delplJe Mlkfl:-led -· -and -coedlnp. Bui "It lllOllllll higher -ol ........ Ill ..,..;ol. later," says the Coalumer OW'D nrjeU. ~ federaUon ol Aaalca, "the Tiii J-•Ill w.ld J-&, 'lill lllltltute hat ac:complilbed W• ll flew w of .....,.,, bNai DllDllll m.i 111 o..t ~thin& 1ub1tanllve." -r-aod ...W IOlll I 1 so r-....... En!~ ol pd lawa ...,._, U. 1av, .. lo IOlll 1-•• 1 I S .. -., .... been ...,,.tslolly -In -act. jlll n.dlln. ".. lmlta -....... - coming. lladi in mt, fw G->-::;;;.;--: bad be ID 'Jiii - -jobd ..,,pte, MlJoe .....,. Ills p111fl nl '""" lllarUiNf 1111 c.& 11111 -.. to 111'1. POllCMI PreVOllllm ~ lilllmltllon....W. "'"' bama .. lot• •-'-I ....._!_ __ , '-·-Acl. re q u l r I h I chlJd.prool ...,. -·--._.. • lk¥lprolll loom to New Yort flnm oeed1nl llmdl to bll)' pollutlot><onlrol equl_.,t .. qulttd by New Yort City slotutea, .... thouCh .... ~ bond sales don't come ci-to supportl1'g that level ol lmdiog. Demand !or the low-Interest loans continues u n a b a l e d . Between 11 million and IU million tn new loans are re- quested each month, ac- cording to Chemical's aall- tant secretary, Jolm Coot. Bl!CAUSE OF Chemical Bank's aiz.e (It ii tbe 'D.atlon11 fifth.largest c o m m e r c t a I bonk), 11 can conUeue In the environmentol • bcnl marktl despite disappointing sales. However, First Pennsylvania Bank In Philadelphia .,... finllly lor<ed out of the ..,. vlronmental-bood market by disappolnllog c o n s a m e i rapo.-. A1J a O)Dlft>erdll -11 couldn~ match thO ln-lere&I ,,_., customen could get at eeortiy savings and loau llfstltutionl, uplalns Boony Eisen!eld,· the bent'1 ln- lormaliQn-center chle!. So alt.bough its 11Eanh Bonds" paid the aame rate ol return u its certlficatea of depoeit, P1rst Pennsylvania closed out Ill envlronmental- bond program In the ljlrina ol 1971, altel-about • '!"' ol operation. Continental Telli! Record Finance Briefs P\JBUC NOTICE Wtdnts41y, Oct.oi»f 11, 1t72 Y PILOT Jl ------------. ·---t-----=,..,.....-~NlmCS Exclu1ive lmlda the DAILY Pu.or ls ----lht on.tJ.a S r I • • c 1 llooJI«. l.o4tplb -..S c:omMBdar1el f r o m Qlrlallu -- ___ ,.._ adladftl1 li ~ CUiiy by lht DAILY PILOT. • I I \ J. f • ) I I I l " ~ PILOT OCC Investment Lec tiu·es Slated \\ llluim L.. O'Bryon o! ,,.--------- 'llewpt•rt l\(<aL"h >A'ill preMlnl his Orange Const College "111\'l':Shnrnts" lecture St!tles fo r the 2Jsl ''011.'>l.'<'Utlvt ye:i r btitlnnlnJ! Ort 17. "'1th some important tips on the n1arket The fht>-p:1 rt st•racs will rnt'f'I Tut'sdd)'S fron1 7 30-9:30 µ m. al EaSUilufI Elementary .S.-·hool In :-:t:wport Beach '!'here is oo tuitiou charge and pt:rS-Ons nHay ri:gii;ter ;1t lhf' lrt·ture. Tii t-; f'IRST SESSION \vill gl\ c tips for reaJ..lni;: t.he flnun- cial 11'lijt vf !h~ da ll ,v n~·\\'SJl:-iper :iud ~·11! f'xa111111t 1 1~11.'rHtinns of a stoek (•:<· 1·h11n~e. tht 1l\cr·lht"-<.'OL1nlt'r nt:trket. the l~·pe of broker :in in\t·~tur should ha\r. nod the \'u~t s 11f bu\'ini: and St:lling , ;1 riflu~ Sl'curitit•s. The Oc·t. 24 ll'rlure will look :11 p1ttal\s fo r lh.e overage in- \c:.tor, how to 1al k with a FINANCE 1 ':it."(.'urily broker. and boy,· to ;11\<llyze the n111.rket trend fr()rn 1·111-rent economic conditions. It will also give an explanation uf the Dow Jones and other ;Jverages. On Oct. 31 O'Bryon will discuss mutual fun ds. He wlll compare funds with l h e geoere l mark et and will look at dollar-cost averaging. end tax deferred retirement in- comes. TllE NOV. 7 session will cover uti lizing com mercial banks, savings and ioniu. thrill companies, and 1nunicipal and government bond markets. It will also look ::it problems of the average real estate Investor. The linal lecture on Nov, 14 will be on short term versus long term gain, market let- lers, how the Federal B.e11erve Board affects the se<:uritit!I Divi<len(l Set Directors of B e c k m ll n fn strun1en1s Inc. have declared a dividend of 1~ cents per share. payable r\ov. 27 to shareholders of record Nov. 6. Beck n1 an n1anufactures precision a n a I y I i ca l in- struments and electronic con1- ponents for scientific, medicA I and industrial use. The com- -· pany hnd 3,584,393 shares :. outstanding on Sept. 30. .. Bite! : Long-hold = °FASTEETH ~:.4:J · H takes the worry : out of wearing denhnL . I • ' .. I • ~ ' t• .. ' VOICE OR TONE Pagers Now For Th• Plrst Tim• Covwln,_ All Of LAGUNA. SO. LAGUNA. DANA POINT, SAN CUlolENTE As Wtll Al All 9' Or•nt• County t1'.d J..iolf ol Loi Ang1l11 For lnfOf'm•tlon Call Ora•tcJ• County Radiotelephone Service tnc. 401 ~o. ~•t11• .... Stt1tt Ant IJ5·lJOS fro111 Leit111• .,.. 4f6-llll tell tr.. YOURS TODAY! Personoli1ed • Styllllt • Efficient Order For YourMlf or 1 friend Mty bt l.l•td on envtloptl t\ return tdcfr••• ltbeh. Als.o vtry htf1dy •• iclentifi••tlen l1bel1 fo r.mttkin 9 p•r•ontl lterns such •• book1, record11 pl.otos, etc. Label• 1tlck on 9les1 t nd mty be u1ed for r.•riing It.me c;tnn.cl fot.d lttm1. All l•be l art printed with 1tyli1h V09ue type on fin t 41ueUty whit• 9umm1d ptper. I l'IM ~:~;::::.;.:.:.::.7u:::---i I .... 1,i.,.,.. L.•111 DI.,.,. , ...... IMt ; ! .......... , .... -I I I l----~~~!-~R!~!!~~--~J OVER THE COUNTER NASD Ll1tln11 for Tuosd•y, October 10, 1972 '\ .... ... tllft.) Mlfll ..... Cl9M Ciiio I ., ~ N ,. g: ~ o•· 0 ... 0 • .. •• • •• •• " •• •• .. .. .. ~: .. •• •• .. .. .. •• ;• .. .. = • : •t :· • ·:· . = • .. • E .. .. .. •• Pfl •• ~ ~~ ~ ., ~!1 • ... :1 .. ~~ ., ... >: •• •• ~; •· .. :· • •• •• •• :; • ., .. ., • •• •• .. •• ... •• . , ., ' 0 i • l • ' . Oclobc• , 1'72 S C~ILY PILOT ...;.;.;___________ - ~esday's Closing Pcices-Co1nplete New York Stock Exchange List Viet Talk Bloom Beginning to Fade . NEW YORK (AP) -Hopes o! a break\!lrOugh 10 P•rls peoce tilts sparked another stock mark•~ rally Tuesday, but• ii began loalng rnomontum u the session neared the close. Presidential advl80r Henry A. Kissinger was meeting durin g the day with Norlh Vietnamese ne- gotlaLors In an unprecedented third straight day o! dlscuaslons. In recent sessions, rumors and reports out ot Ports have bounced the market around like a rubber ball. "This Ls a clear example ol the emotional pow .. er and psycbologlcal reach of this one single issue," said Monte Gordon, partner of Sartorius Co. NIW YOllC IU'11 -ntt flt ...... t11t t11tWt tlM 1fllcb NI Mw """ .. "" "*' ..... ~ ""' "*' .......... lfl'(tllt .. cMnfl "' ....... v ...... ... ~ ,...,.."" of WhllM. ' ,. .. ft pttffllt111 """' .. •r• tlW dlntrfne• MtMM ,....~ '*• ,,1e •• ,,. focl.tV'S dttlnt itrl<t. ....... , L0$1!1t$ 1 IHcl!C ltlt ~! !,\ U• 11,, 1 ~11\ltlt E" 7\~-l I~ 'utl 1 tO '1f\li • V• I'· t " Flr"!'f ,,..._. llt ·"·"11 lt,1" im I 8: ,. ~ ..., ·.u t:,~ :11: .... ,:~ h" • 8: t: 1:1: .. .;"~ ·-· .t.:r. 1 t \ti Ut . Tflor!IJW l1 U -Ni t ¥f:foC•C M" 1't+l'll r• &. I (Urtlp WrT ~~ , ~ 11.., ... i. 1. , .,.tfffl .. I"' , -,,. 11 "~"-,,. ,~ ... --• t .. "°'""' "' ,.,.__ " • • '' 'rSi...., • "j ,M,., "" ",~•,•,. 11 11 t/lf 2 .,. • I M«lron r• T..-M I.II t t ,., .. , C.,• 2'4-" 1• ,.:.., , ... ~ • 't: • \1 an~ ,,. !f!-1: 'l ., ... i:i ~· • • 1 ·---:I' ,~ .. l, =-,N l + :: ' ~'°'" ·m:.~· ll :::::z ~ l t,.. 8: ii ~. :'1! j,,._,\t • ~. ~-i ~ '4~1 _. 8: '. m I lflllrll~ 11== :i n wo r. ,:mi :: g: 1 "&: .. JeJ n..::" ll ~:~:-.s= •t ,, •• ' .... "' ..-1 I'.-='.. .. M .1• 1'-' U. t.Slf_,_ A ...-W IV.., 1'erk J5 Mest Aethie . .l!!l"~·.:·,c1;;!N,1..,..~u .. :::::: I . !. • :r:;;."r.::.... ... .... -·~ [I -.. ... '!!!! .. ...... .::·~ ......... :r.: + i b -.:::::: -"' . citr·::::: = !: ... :::::~ i a -t'. ":::::::: = - 1'.., 1'erk B.ies Vel- o -- , ...... I'!. .... , -. ..... ............ • ' fl"MI """" .... " , l ;:fJGI'"' I rMf'I ~ "' f ti!: , .................. 1Hfi·' ..... ·1·· ~ . ................. .., ,. .. ,. ""' ......... ,l.l .f t!t .. te , • ' . I ... " •; -... ..... ..... ,,_ Cllllt - Try Travel Nt:i:t best thlng lo taking a trip ls readinc about one in the lra\·el column~ of the Sunday DAIL\' PlLOT . • I TV WGWJGllTS • • . KHJ G 7:30 -''Thi )'Int ,Pantlier.'' Peta Sellm aJld P~vld Nlve.o lltar In Wi <:o~ ff>OOf ol tnternatlo•al Jewel ~ ~ laiinehflll t.h4' career of , one cl todly'1 '*OSI populii" ~~ cbancten. / . : . ~1'LA' • 8: 15 -"Once Upon a ''1\ceel· • Paul Newman' urnt .. a grand toGr of aato' ri¢lllr i. clucll!te VWta with Marlo Andreltl. a look al. vin- tage nee can and other evenb:. ' '. . .. . NBC • 8:30 -''Banacek." Georce Pe; track& down an ancient religious ~,. 'tielnl . ported· by car from Mexico to the Uol.ted' ~ta . · which· never reached Its destination. ' . ABC a · 8:30 -"Lieutenant Sch~s wire'.-• A w~man is · determined to clear her tate •Poll<eman husband, aCCUJed or being on the take.' ~ll!r he b shot In ambush. Lee Grant, Jack Warden, Dali Galloway. ·' . . · CBS B 10:00 -"Cannone" Patrick 'O'Neil guestatars as a blgb-powered'ritll•prlvate ejoe'W~o put. pressure on Cannon when It appears bis daughter is involved In murder. • .. Mwi.cians Play Bowl l~,Lagitna Musicians Laurindo Almeida 'Riv alr1' Drama New Theater Opens By TOM 1Tft15 ..,.... 11v~t~ °' ... Ofllty "" ..... ~-~~~ Ail oA: Uk• most po!lttc:al cam-~"I'=: =-l:':;· n palins, Ille hlllortcel drama ~·i~~ .. 11:: OOW going OD tt the new Cit)' :;:;:"il"...,'"j~ ~"., Ensemble Theater In Orafl8• ,_ _ . .. . ,. .. .,,._ starts out ln low gear, e~ __..._. unco111 •..•. •tvn-d ...._. le -"" j ,..._ Doulll•• ....... UMM ~JI coun rs some ........ 7 go ng «;N•~11 . ... . . . .. . 111~~~'!! early on, but when it finally ~~ .. c=Ci ·::::::::: .. MJ;r ~ oomea to o boU the citbens ---------- should sit up and take notice. didates into the lobby at ln- Nonnan Corwin's • •The terml&slon to mingle with the Rivalry" introduces the 'IX!w CTOWd, in character of course. City Ensemble group t 0 As tile run continues, they Orange County audience..t, and should grow more and more the choice of Ibis dramatW.-,adept at lhis oll-the-cwf cam- tion of the LincoJn.Douglas ~algztlng. to national pnim1neace and be wu JOOR to defeat the same Seoalor Dooglu tor the Nr Uon'a highest oUlce. Tom Triman la the llandollt of tlle small cut u Oouilu, the "Utile Giant" Whose rabidly racist views on slavery masked Ille ..w or a true patriot. Triman la the ooly cast member to auccesafully overcome the problem of youth, creating a solid and sin- cere character. His cktsJng sj)eecb to the South on behalf of President Lincoln Ls e1~ pertly delivem Raymond Nasser requires more time lo build hjmsell Jn. to the gaunt, folksy, self- depreca.Ung figure of Llncxiln. Unsure and uneven at the start, Nasser d e v e I o p s and Bud Shank, gultarist and saxophonist mpectlvely, will t~ up for a performance at the lmfne Bowl io Laguna debates is an apt one in this mE Pl.A Y follows the first election year. Unfortunately, series of political debates ever the political opponents at the thrust into the n a t i o n a I City's Commwtlty Hall are spotlight -the campaign about as evenly matched as between incumbent Illinois the current presidential can--Senator stepben Douglas and didates. an obscure former !late gradually but steadily until he "*'M...-!f,•• becomes Triman's equal on . TV o·AILY. LOG Beach on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 29, at 1:30 p.m. Director Art W i n s I o w ' s legislator named Abraham young but ambitious actors Uncoln, trying unsuccessfully play the campaign theme for to capture Douglas' seat in all it's worth -Including the Congreu. Although Uncoln tactlc of sending the can-lost, the debates thrust him in- . ..... ..,. Thia perfonnance will mark the flrlf of a series of concerts deotgned to feature established artl>U In Ille Jazz, rolk; blues aqd rqodern dance areas of Wff,liuday 'Eveni!)g .. the .1>erformlng ~ i n All ·~, rtllH4;. ~ ._Ml~ Laguna Beach. ln addition, "'""'Ill" )>J· eel ~~ , many of the promising groups 'Young Winston' Given Royal Premiere in NY : . .:It~~ .. ; :.. ~~' ~ individual artists who live By FRED \\'INSHIP --··., ln 'the Orange County area will NEW YORK (UPI) thl•nl* .. ·, ' 1 hive an opportunity to 8 WCil tl aac WM1•1'C1t , perform ln one of the most at-"Young Winston," the movie &=0088D,eeat,.._ lllllllr.ft)(llt~,.._ tractlvefecllltiesinthecoun-version of Sir Winston ())9 '1191 , tlll'• .,... (411). ;72:-u. 6'fnt.. ty. Churchill's life up to the time •....., 1 • '•11 1 ... -... Jai ....,_ Diii iil""1 of his marriage, had its .,. · a "' ~-·-.... .-.. • .;,... · • ' , "The hlgll standard or the as P IM ~ tM L.oe Ala'* La•· ..,... -:-·-, "!"""' yet unknown artiats Is going to American premiere Tuesday ers •!Id tilt limb Cit#~~ e ,,.,J•!' ~ ..-.•AltflOM" ,. iurprf.se the people in the night with the Duke and 111 01111h1. •...., fMi; 1 '*· ......,. ..., musk Industry,.. said Marc Dllcbess of Kent a n d 11lltt,_. tllO. • Churchill's namesake- ....... - ' · · • Friedberg who la promoting •~ -· .... CIJ.-~-er.i! ll)rlt 1 t11e Irvine Bowl concerts. grandson in attendance. •• ""~"° ~.,.." ,_ -" "La ft--h has bee Klleg lights scniped Ille sky 1-. --~.~ · guna ~c n bo M nha ' . .,... "'"'"'~ . recogplzed for many reasons a ve a ttan s Second C.11w 11 t i eu. ,.,....,.,...... 1 ,__ st nd . Um Avenue as Mayor John .V . • """ . ,.. _., n ·~. Ni a its e that Lind h I "' 111~ ~ say and t e British am- • .,..,.,,.,. 1....---·-~ • the grest musical talent In the .,.,.-.,._ tow1'I bad tunlty t bassador, the Earl of Cromer, CHI._.,,,.-,, an oppor 0 ex-Jed one of the m o s t 91.1-._-1:• press ltaeU," he said. •""" """!' • 8 ~oltl,flrlnp ,... • I Cliuck Flores and Buddy distinguished Cirst night film .t:JO (JJ ...,_.,...,.. * pod Ustenlni ind • Clark will accompany Laurin-audiences In years. .. -, (ID! "-·IJ"..... '6od Y11'1iliil.I• "Tllo · "' do Almeida and Bud Shank. Th< tall, athletic Kent - (com) 'S3 -W111i1m HofdM, Otto Mincit11 ·~9-'.'' · . The.flnt program wUI also first cousin of Queen Elizabeth Prtmrn11r. Doii T1ylor, ~ e llllCW l111:Aia ~-"''"' ... fea ture Laguna res Iden ts -thanked the benefit aponsor Stl"IUsstl. · Yciunama11 dola. • .COIMitr l,ol anf • Steve Wood and Beth of the of 1 the premiere, the Winston (I) CIS ... Wartar Crot1klta flof'lf!ca K1ndlcloll sl[til ~'Sovll • gri:iup "Honk." Wood and Beth Clillrchill Foundation of the Ill...,,........ ·M·I~ . . : :· will do a comblnatlon of folk-U~ St.ates, for making ::r,:':8:1., e DOU1' w-...-."e.w.~ rock blues and jazz on piano poasible his first visit to the ~11 the showing gave their loudest applause to Simon Ward, the young British actor who was chosen from 400 candidates to portray cchurchill: Director Richard At- tenborough, who gave the film an almost documentary quali- ty, also attended .. At- tenborough and writer-pro- ducer Carl Foreman based the fi!n;i on Churchill's book ""°ty Early Life." The premiere was followed by a supper dance in the grand ballroom of the Hotel Plaza with the Kents and Winston Churchill, grandson of the statesman and himself a member of Parliament, and Mrs. Churchill in the boxes· of honor . They were welcomed by Le"'•is W. Douglas, former U. S. ambassador to Britain. the podium. An Important rtgure in the careen of both men is Douglas' wife, AdeJe, who played a conciliatory role between her husband and his arch-rival. Linnea Lagerquist lacks the depth of character which the part requires, turn- ing in a flat, l ifeless performance delivered i n monotone. SOME OF TIIE better moments of the show occur off the stump when the can- didates are shown as human beings. Here Nasser is at his best, capturing the troubled heart of Lincoln the man, while Tri.man appears a bit overpompous. The finale which follows the lengthy debates finds both ac- lors at U!elr peak, and their closing speeches ring with historical clarity.Winslow ob- viously has concentrated the greater part of his directorial energies on the climactic moments, during which the play rmany emerges a s theater rather than dramatiz- ed politics. "The Rivalry" conti nues for three more weekends, FridaY,s aoo Saturdays, ai the eoT- munity Hall in the City, off Manchester Boulevard 1 n Orange. It. will be followed late in November by Reginald Rose's drama "Twelve .. Mgry Men" adapted for a mi:red casl !ljl w: Colllst:en;ff Cour. Nn 111111n111 sbiw ._Ill lA.L • and guitar. United Statts. His beauUful ·-....... ,.. -•-r-· . AW per!onning 00.'29, will blond• duchess added a regal ........ ,._....,. CttSI MMl·iw -. . • be.B•if'OUP known as James, ootetotheaffairwithherem- The movie has made Ward an International star of the first magnitude and audiences will await the inevitable se--quel to "Young Winston" inlr;; ________ _ the hope of seeing him as UK! more mature statesman. 1opr• ~" -,.. 8 CANNON 5;4R~ lltw Patrick and Jame.s. 'n>ey live plre-style white gown set off -"' -* THRILLS; sUSP.fHS•t 4 In Corona del Mar and have by a diamond mlni·llara and GI ---8 ~~" ~ trtlii'i,..,. performed on college cam-drop earrlflis. I~,"';:' •·Iii C.r 'f 1 Mo ·"' ':a.•~:iuti rMI • pui8 an!:l,on TV. They orient CelebritY fans who crowded 1 -111411.~ ·\ -.,.,,.,.,,,,_ """~ ,. ' their JllUlle to aoft folk-rock. Ille sldewalb before and after tlttMl.ttheliitt'~ f:JM! M•• • On November =:u::bl~ues=lli~~~~~~~~~ i••Cll••ll!ol , ~~=;.;;; ~U •1 artiot Jimmy w-,;.o....w 11l-• . ........ M;o;/lfllli !2P. ·the bill. A.of¥• ... 11l --8TOftY'illiCltiAdloii-Wllheupoon will be ll>Vi\1,;.. D llW>"'""' * FllAllCIOSA'W~,ltlf · Ford. .,._..., WointlritlO.''M!I t ~oo the..fll"il'lllD lrll •I -" -e •"-· "IM Aol rsil , 17,year old plarust Patric< 9 ..... ·n: T•les .. Wbtft , .,.,,. ~ '*' It . Rushen ~ Gabriel Gladstar, I:' a1s ,.. "" "'"""' """'* joipWmsoi • two ruttan and flute rrom I p--Coro....... ,, ........ -" .... 11111.1 Lagllliol Billlch. IJtMt: CC) "'f 1 dint 11 ._.,, • !""' to ~ cdrll '!' •I ·All '.-t. are reserved. For •--M1,.._ ,.. 'b ..... ..,. lnlormau.n and tlcketl, call ,... ., Ft1ndoal tCM.: , • ; .144-7C7: • DIG l ·!rii • .o.its l~~l<:r· =·:;.::·.-.==::::;;::::: * "TH~ GDLDDIGGEllS" ...... Dort -. "' • ''ifl' lllJ!!•lfl!ll•~-. I ROUGHT TO YOU '"" " "• ""'l!"o • Jstos ""If. ~ :::;ti~~... i=-.:.::=:~?S ·iaio •TONIGHT'S am m ;,:~ * ~11'<111ott1, * Adutt R-' c:.rtooli • • c.i • • .... 111 '"' ,.... 111 - -.,_ ..,,.. Alia "" " •'-• IM wttll I t•11 "'.... .... ....... . h111doab ... atrllt cntli,. • ..... (i)T•tal .. lfd; ...... ., ..... , CIJ T• ..... hir tl """' D-l-t<)t21o) -.T ....... 1· .-.. ... ~<-·11·-TM.AA '@·a .4 ~ ·-_,, ...... r. 1 .,. .. , ' "'""'"'"'"""" . . , I 111 r.•1U-I"""' '""""4 ' '", .. ......... u... . ,.. l~'r.:_,r..._oi ;iii:';~ .. ' ... ' . ,___ ~ ··-... ---' m,... a., .. u. e (!llllllt: tC> .._. tt· r kar ·--(.,., ·-·-... CIJ ·--1·""-•.C !I'~ "'·• ·,><, ••eui ri l .1 ·,.,,,,... . .. WllttlJ"' Clft::lrfi fllilW .... M11111 , • ~ "' •Id to ttieir diarcrlt. .. ...i tl9ar; 'l'V A a .... , .. ,...-... 11~••-" . . to(\111:111•....,.... .. ~Clll1l if. 1111 "" t1:J18 11la11•-•-....,. • . al'~Mr ~I Jl ll"). ...... -•1111·--z ~--llln fcrw ... ar-IMI ,.. ·-"llllJ.i.: -'IZ (#1) .............. loot WY-..... ·.-:r· lat"''". l tl>Cll il*'-. ..... fliijj ._, • -.. "'Iii!.,., -' ( ... 'f::' ""''""" -·-., ........ ~, .... ..... ' ......... ~~-· w•riilliirii.""' • we•..; . ...w." ,. ~""-"' . iii_ low al"" -l:ll(J).._ •. (J).. i .... '•11• .... , 1tll·~-.,... ....... ) '. .. ... -.... 0." ....... ~-..- . l Wednuelay • ' " t \ • ' . ,. ' .; • I f •• ALSO Ill . CUtlT IASTWOOO ,..., ........ • "TMI llAll" <NI ... ( .,,.. __ CO!iiillCTIOll" <NI " ---CIMOO.+ff ?0 1o. • • 1' I 1' t.. --C!NfOO.+ff l l '.-·. ":f I '.">' l •• ---.. St4H/U+I J . .,, . - llCHAJ:D IUITON -''BLUE BEARD'' ''Th• War Betwffn M.n and Women'' hfllCot.r llt I • • '19WTTS•l'LllS Aal l'al:I " IN, ................... ""-' l lM "P'L.t.'I' IT AMIN, SAM" .. l:U llllHl!I "CAIAll•T" CP'OI "L.AIT SU~lll" Ill) ll!D• ~ow PLAYING "THI IUTCHll" Ill , __ ,. ........ , .. - '•elne•1 •AH ....._..• hll &••'•" •21.1115 l"•cifi1'1 UMCOLM lhfw..lt e lu.•• P•rk fJJ.J2Jl P•elOc'• LOI ALTOS .......... •t e L1*f a.1111 '425-1421 P•ci n.:.-TO'#Nll e l.111 a..eh '4J2 .1221 N•tio-.1 4""''''• rox • ti-i11.rt.11 121-47'41 HUNTIN•TOM CMMA e H1111ffl'l9t.11 l11ch 1'47-t60t ,... ...... ... 11 ... -· "MAllJOIH ,.., t ~ NllU'fllOM CMl:OtUCUI" ,., ... 111C.....t SHE LOOK FAMILIAR? GUESS AGAIN Ann Lapp hnport0n1l11 Phyllis Dill.,. Phyllis Who? 'Diller' Due at Barn Sliow ••• ,........ ••• MatMe ..,..L.LO ~y .. ~,., Y. •l'"fMI!" • D. KM ..,... ........... ... . ·nc:~'" ,...., -•101 _ ... , o: ... u~ 121 .. 010 f'H MU!! iAllrt "CAIK n MT lfSll YATIOll"' 111 • '1.•llllaT L&llU.Sfll "'W'MDll lS COMIM"("I ~n 01PgO h\t . , I C&:>••lr&no on.~an111 . 12T·ll•S 'ITlllRUll ....... ,,l .. "WMfl t 0011 IJRlfr'(l l + ..,ROftKI I JMI Pill" • 111 ........ , ......... .,...\Jl \i.ilro 0.,90 i:,.·1 •1 ll rori._11.,.,t •S11.• 112-~tll Olll Wfll OILY.I· Wlltlill Of I ACAtlMY lWllDJI "DOCTOI ZMIVAIO" !Pl ) PUll/l'ATff l l U "Ml.•ATIUl'"IPI) ·~·:""""' !><1:"' n !It•<~ lll•rt. & f'•r,~· !!Iv<! l rt-111! ""'" ~~ .. lmlV.A'*'"" """""'" ... ..... , ... , .. ... ~~·-, ... ... ' OU m th er or T m SU m p ta du of ti e in sa 'in m ab pi u th 25 el un t th in bi re a a ' ed l\lovies 'In Crisis' On • eruns 'Campobello' Drama Set By ·I>.l~y~r~ , .: . . ' '!'h• • historical" · d r a II\ a , "SUnrlse at Carii.pcbeik.I" :-Mil L be the Dex! pniluctloo . ..C.tl)4i SOnta 1\rul .. <;b mm u n lt/t ' Players1 oPening Oct. 27 for a''-------..,.,.,-~::":::"::=========:-! limited run of two weekends. · 1"" Herman ~an is ,c;ijroo- ling the biographical play ba!- ed on _a period tn the life of Franklin D. Roosevelt prior to his attack of polio. The story centers on the nominating speech FDR made on behalf of Al Smith. Jay McO>nnlck, past ptesi- denl of the l.Jdo Isle Playen, will take the central role of Roo&evelt, while Paula Ertz is c~t as hJs wife, Eleancx-. Completing the cast a re Nathalie Michaud, L1 n d a Delano, Bryan Lynch,t (Mat ~cLoughlin, Ken Delano,lli.ke Hanlon, George Hanis and Don George. ' Perforrhances or "Sunrise of. Campobello'" will be given Oct. :17-23 and li~V. 3-4 oo!Y at the Players ~ter in the santa Ana City Hall armeX:, $.'I> N, Ross St., with an 8:30 ~ tliln. Tlekels may be purdw- ed at the box office. • ~ lo Thtatru ft&! GEOllOE C.~Oft. IT~V"CW 'TD llEW jJ:o ..,. • CEMTUJUOlll' . ~1 Afw. AtMl1·mr A••rJ ..... """' "l l • .. inc See Cabaret in ·rhcat.rt' 1 2 The stoty of Zhivago- a man tom bet,veen his love for his \Yife and the passionate and tender ;Lara;·· !old •pin.st the flaming .a:·•~-~ ' Hlfbor Bovh¥wct •I W11Mn ltrM't C011t• M-. • "6-0573 ' Mil "IEJTO MYOUR • R48Blf' , .... n111 Ut .... MIJ -·""' ... Theater Notes ( ' . Irvine , 11 I ,! t author. ·~·Ogborn. Suzanne 1, Park, Paul Steele and Chuck f·Bentoo complete the JCT cast! ' il<!ll9rt~le< .... u..i •"'\ 'llghtfDR ~th J oyce , Connolly stage manager, Pam Rrovis ~designer,-€&role Levy properties. aAd Barbara Garlich makeup. '"Liiht JI» ~Sl<y " will .play Fridayli ~ 'ulMJ I ~frliyl for four weekends in the UCI lhea!e< -~ith !ht • cur- tain UH~~vett ln{tl> ~l3o 'this season. Reservations 646-3178 . • REsm.m'G'. tol/IGBT lor it! third of five weekeOO., is ductioo . · flt : 'T b e Tc.-ch- bearers.". Wjlllam B I a c k dii°ects U\t-·~ge Kelly com- e:<fy. "'.ftlch \plays Wednesd&)'I thtOOgh Sunday! at the '"1.lrd Step :'J'heater. 11127 Newport Blvd., Cos~ Mesa. • Cherie Patch, W i I I l a m Brady, Elion Elliott, Rooald This Week Only! r \ ., .... _,., .. ... t' • ,. .... o:,v ' r. DAI).~ PllOT ··JANUARV THAW" TW(f'GIIlfl>SES of hl11tof'.y tinueS· 8!: the Weeti:end"'alit are being offered th.is weekend tracliou at the Long Bellcb " the ~-~iXi!: .WU, -roh· l!Jlll"-11!~-Pl'!l'I houleJ_ • uode<B:,ij; Opera Company resumeilfS t (' dirl'Cl\00 0 ames . production or the musical lain . Holf Thelson. An f;'tf:'t\·hUeF' ~he5 ~~C~n~~ ~~~e.;.11 , Jin~~y llart ~~ 1 , ,both w cas t I ,nk~! · ir P ~a h ~ O,.ailld. • '!>''. day · urday . ~ '1 Doug Lance and Lrwin lhe playoose, 5021 E. Anahel ' (.awl.on head lhe "1776" cast St. Long Beach. lleservati liltli ROI\.~, ..Jo!Jlt l\'ood,,_ (213l l33-Q?JO. ' . ·' ·~ ·• P"OSfnfl'f.T.'UIS TUESDAY OCT. 17th• ., , • •• . . -.... .. ' . .. · Being1he·crn-res of ti young man wliose 0 printipaf interiii&.: are ra~~;· ultf"a,Vf41Wj. and.B•et~•""*' mu · ·' "· "' . ..... . , • .,.,r. """" 1\ , ••• , .,, ·~ RATED"'X".. · · POSITIVll 1.-' "' ·7' ... ~O~E,,., ' UNQJR ,,_. C-AN Bl f\OMITT , • • ,_.,,...._.!!"I e1 ' •• · ... .1ir..S. .: .. ,....} .. ~.., ~ , .. ~ .....; ... ,.. .. ...,'\."•"' ;. .. ( • • 'fl ' . ' - ' .. ' I I . I ,\ I, ,, ' I l I l I I I I Jf DAILY PILOT Wflhtda1, October ll, 191t PIJBlJC NCmCll PUBUC llOTICE l'l/llUC llOTICll PUBUCNOmZ PUIUC NOTICE \ • • • Pl,JllYO.NOTICE Pl/BIJC NOTICE PIJllUC Nl'.mell PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE \._ Wadntwlly, Octobu 11, 1972 I ':i,fen f~ Wome.a' Star Obrenskl/0~ dilplays 80Dle ot .her bl!st· 19#1ing roale nude ~err. in San Franc!~. Firro · lien for Women· is Di'amalilld of tall, slim. 27·;iear· old. dark· haired be a 11 t y with. master's in. art. It la~e<j on to Bn;t Reyn~lds' (oldout ~ss alid tool ii step furtlier in name or women's lib .. ' ! •. ... • ' 'iltten ·m Servic~ Alrmat Deull J . 11-..., 1011 al Mt. aJid Mrs. 0-O. Mltthewa of 17'1 Westrnlnater A>e., WestmU....., hu bMn uslgned to Keesler AFB, MIJI., an.. ....,p1o11na A)r Force basic training. , ,,,. airman hu """" ..ill> ed to Ille Technical Tnlnlog Center 1l XHslef ·' for 1ptelalfttd trainlte DI S psaomel spectallst. U.s. Air Potte · S-t a ff Ser&unl a.ltotlJ. ~. -·al Mn. 'l'htlllll V. ltlanllall al 1-.B Jeff.-Lue. Hun- Ungton Be""'. putidpoled In I recent l78inlnl .-..... duded l1y Ille Intl Mobllt •• I .. ,, • • \ \ -,, ' • '· • " • 1: • • • • • ~ ~ • • •• " ,, c 0 • •· " ,, J c c • ' • ' ,, c c • ' ' " J c c • • ' " ' c c • ' ' " ' c c • • ' " J c c • • ' " J c 0 • ' " " J ' c • • ' ' ' " ' c H • ' ' " J c ' • ' ,, ' ' ' ' • • ' ' - ' ' ' ' ,, J ' • • ' • ' ' U OAJL Y PILOT Wtdnudly, October 11, 2972. . Expansion \ Plans Set At Havasu Alaska to Enter Outboard Regatta Tbe stale ol Alaska wm be pod by boll flom Anchorage, -•led for the l1rat time and will trailer it lo Le~e r•.,,,o •. ,. ·.. .. ONTRACTING & SUB-(C'NTR-1( TIN(; TRAINING ' ' ' • r•,.' ' Pho1,.· f,·• lu' 1,,1., In the Oulhoard World Cham-Havasu City, a total dls1ance • ANTNPNT ICllOOLS LAKE H4VASU pionshlp• at ~ke Havasu/' HA.&IOl c:a.I& Lake Havasu City n-•-~ p M~·"-~ J ol some 2,800 miles. '* "'-. c~ .nuua·• • Ul.Al.llU\01, r., race "The boat has been running c.i. ~c.'"'"'111 already the largest boa · and dlrector, innounced. PL 17Hl f7t.JJH marine service f8c!Uty , The regatta w1U be held at 92 m'.Ues an hoUr and we 1117 1, • ......,.. •. •t. 1.,,..,. Colorado RI'*, has BOAJING ' over .&he ,Th• o tag Iv l n g ·hope lo Improve that speed by .....,_ '"· - nounced plans for a tlso, ' resort. . member of the Anchorage weekend at tbe Colorado River1_Jr~a~co~Um;eJ, ·~· ~sa;ld~Tra~cy~, ~a~~~~,.~· ~17~1~4~1 ~77~M~no~~ exPan,sion that will inclul\e I 'Ibe first of{lclal entry for Outboard Power AsSoclation addition of 100 mora 1">a Power Boat the !aOJoo c1ass1c ""' that or which has j() member•. FAST AND LIVABLE -The Coastal Cruiser by Gran Merlner speed and livability in the 43-foot V hull. The houseboat type v of accommodating eight people. Westminster Boat slips. '\ James D. Tracy of Anchorage, Located less than a half-E • S a Purebsini agent for the \ ntrles et Stale of Alaska school system, mile Crom -Id-famous Lon-' ,Tracy di drive a Del Crall don B~e, the extensive \ PartldpaotJ In the secolid tunnel bull ~\ripped with a 200 marina f ac l It t I e 1 will a~ nu a 1 Power .Boe t honepower ' Mercury Twister reprewrt a total Investment ""'form...,. Trtala 1o be held eogtae . of close lo $700,000 when the at ?.oke Havasu . City, Aris!, The AlaStan has been racing announced expamk>n is com-~:..~have been officially for 10 yean lind is the state's ....... .._....~ unlimited outboard champion . pleled by the end ol the year. ~ the lll8lllfadunn His other llf>Ol'l8 Interests are George Foster, owner of wbooe ~ !lne wm be snow llkllog, .,; car radog, Lake Havasu City Mirina, evaluated . ere 1bunde.rbl.rd, sailing and Dying. said 7,%00 square feet in Door Autoooest, Sea Ray, Bayllner, Tracy, 4is co-driver. David space would be added to the Silverline, C~estliner .. Gransbury,·ZS,andthreecrew Ina sto and Ir...,,.. Starcralt, Glaslron, Chryal..-, members will fly lo Seattle C l C • v •z ~ mar re repa ... IVI'. Winner, Glasspar, Larson, where they '1'\11 ~'* ~p the oas fa f U, ise f n vei e · n!":r 0r~~i!"\,u!:~l-;;;W;;;ellcr;o;;;;alt,..and;;;;;;S;;;leel<crafl;o;;;;;o;;;;' ;o;;;;;o;;;;ra,..clng;;;;cra!;;;';;;l;;;pre;;;;yl;;i;Oll!;;;fy:;;· j;lhi;;i('l"r also would be doubltd lo ae-11 Tbe launching or Gran The 43-l~t Coastal Cruiser engine rres~ waler coollng :::'"~ch~ a~Lak:'tt':~: Para ... OVlll SpOrlS · · Mariner Yachts' latest ocean can accomlliate eight people system, complete s hag City, which has become one of Gt going vessel, Coa.staJ Cruiser with all the• interior luxuries carpeting, mahogany paneling, the Southwest's most popular {'I • • has been announced by Roberi modem boat owners have and sliding tinted g I as s resorts since the opening of ver'J h"'!''J in n---. , throughout. Londol'I Bridge a year ago. :1 DW'lie, president of t h e come to e:tpe<:t from boat\ • ..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;_;;;;;iJ) Westminster firm. manufacturers. lllr enni~ the'Ibe=~ ~~~Ji~ 'Ibe rigid hand-laminated GRAND PRIX fUTUllN• ALL TOP IU.MDS classl stylin d fiberglass construction along s'ac1AL1 c g an con-wo·th a modif1'ed v hull allow NIW DUNLO, olUST&ALtul structlon which enhance the TENNIS IA.LLS ttvabllity whether at dock.side ~Csboreex--cruofls~ witphh speed'l'wl' $11 ~7 :. =-M ':..~ ::!; ~ · S{l6 CA~L:;~ or at sea. ......... :U,.m · n .... ...met ...... 24 ..... .,.. .,.. ..._. • Boone, who r ec ent I y recessed tunnel 14tive trains PER: :::i:: :.=.,..,. T a ~ o...... -•• OTN111 111A.Nos _':'.a~~ -··-~ Gran Mariner, sa1'd reduce draft to 23 ,inches for MO. INCLUOINO Sf5UM Ml. WAllllAMTY .-~-~ . t• aJ . ab'll MOURS1 _,.., & ,111. t TO t the easy mainteoence Is one cf naviga ion mane11ver 1 ty TUES .. ••o.. TKUJIS.. • u.T. "TIL • the top features of the new in shallow waters. DAVI ROSS PONTIAC s.uNi».v t., TO ~OON • boat. Tbe all white sbell. weld-The cruiser comes i!Juipped 2411 "-""'· "',.. °'· "-..... 333 E-.. 17th ST., Costa Mesa ed stain.le!! steel railing on with many extras as s'tandard LWI DlllCT -'ACTOIY AUT.MOltlZID DIA.Lii (Behind The InternationaJ House of Pancakes) . I l ~·"rt. l lH II ,,. ~ hi, & IW• .... •Y ""'· . PHONI Mt..6116 Generatloo gap? Wenever · heanloflt. " 'IOOf' ~O!lllCKY STWCHT IOUllOll WHISll:(Y DISTllllO AltO 110nuo ''TM£ MMts'1. m• DISTllUM6 co .• ~'fRlllONT, 9£~"' lr£MTUCltY the main and upper decks, and equipmen -eatues such as FRID DOIAH-146ol017 • EXPERT STfll:INGING & PROMPT lllEPAflll SIRVICE • thee1~riorteak~iminsurea.~a~~50-~g~~~l~on~~ho~l~di~ng~'~tan~k~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:.:_::=::::::::::::::::._~ minimum of upkeep by thel· owner. 71 Co-'1lpete In Lido Isle Fall-Regatta Lido Isle Yacht Club's Fall Regatta for dinghy classes drew 71 entries in seven classes Saturday and Sunday. Trophy winners in each class were: LIIJ0.14A -(I) Lltlle Twitch, Chad Twichell, LIYC; 12) .7.om>. Herb Riley, LIYC; 13) Pbuter, Alan Ol-.i, BYC; (4) Hedlt-Up-Honey, Gani Smlth, BYC. LI00-14B (14) -(!) High Hopes, Deon Hope, BYC; (2) Mersidh, Doris Kirst, BYC ; 13) Tena<lous, Belly Brooks, BYC; (4 ) Westward HoHo, Jim Forsyth, BCYC. KITE (7) -(II Bottom Dunker. Tom Willson, BYC; (2) Vortex, Bruce Twichell, VYC. SABCYT A (14) -No. 7222, Atark AUlone, LIYC; (2) Rac- ing Machine, Mark Gaudio. NHYC; (3) Buckshot, Jim Buckingham. NHYC; (4) No. 7400. Jack Franco. LIYC. SABCYT B (12) -Ill No. 7358, Laura Sheltoo, LIYC; (21 Greased Lightning, Richard ilammond, BYC: (3) Cyclone, Bruce Crary, NHYC ; (4) Tag, Tony GoS!. LI YC. SABCYT C 1\01 -Il l Woodstock, Dave C I a r k , NHYC; (2) Nova, Jay Shelton, LIYC; (3) Puff, Unda Olson, BYC. SABCYT SENIOR Il l -ill No. 2388, Dave Tingler, LIYC. Six Qualify For Hobie Cat Ra ces Six Harbor Area Hobie Cat skippen have quallfied for the J97'2 natlooal ch.a mpkm.!hip!I for the famed catamaran class. The nationals will be held Oct. 13 through Oct. 22 at Surfside, Te1:. with more thn 300 entriel. Local skippers quallfylng for the naUonal1 are B o b Beaucham, Corona dcl Mar: Ted Hendrlebon, Corona del Mar: Cralf Bwto, Newport Beach ; Phi Bemuin. Newport Beach : John Roa.Duggan. Newport Beach, and Nick Ste- ele, Balboa. All llx will be roelng a1alns1 top Hippen from eveey lllte In the U.S., Including Hawaii and the Carrlbbean. For ' Weekender Advertising Phone 642-4321 l .._U...._.T..._ "'9 .... Ea. Tu el 11.1S WHITEWALL 13.11 8i.dlw1ll Wt!h-• ..... ''* .... . ... $11.95 $13.95 12.95 14.95 13.95 16.95 14.95 16.95 15.95 17.95 16.95 1il.95 ~ -17;1)5--19;95- I FISK FAMILY OF SHOCKS FISK SPtNONTYPE Oil FILTEI SUIDAlt lllUll llAVT nn· I~!. 3~ 4~.! &~ 36 MONTH OUAIANTll PIEMIU IAnDY 17 !~-· INnALtl: .111 BUENA r•11 .... ltM. at ......... 5301-·-523-3040 . • BUENA PAii u. ...... ...., .... All ~ """' 126-SIOO • FISK PREMIER " . •PLYIOl.YDIE~lll!R!> :11At~Da'IB , WIDE71illlf•U-. . . ·-.... $16.95 17.95 19.95 20.95 21.96 22.95 -.11 ...... T.W. ,,_,_lb. T•ef lt.71 WHITEWALL,._. ,,,,_ ""9 FM. .... h.T•• ' $18.95 19.95 21.95 22.95 ..... 23.95 .... 24.95- _..,._ .... 12" °"""" TANGLEPftOOF IOOSTEI ClllES' COSTA MESA ....... -. .. -uoo~- 141-2082 44! • U. L AP'Pf!:OVD> IA TEIY CIAICEI. 4!!. .. .. ._ ........, °"'""" ..... U?: SANTA All . ........ ...... t•••··· 546-7132 • )YHITEWAU 23.96 'I"' Fiii. (1r. T11r !ldl r. .. S1.llO 2.10 .... '·" 2.llt . 2,71 WESl-11NSTER 1'440--. .._. .... .,Mcfadd1• 192.ZOll .• f.-,- , ' ' ' ... .. I I I I •' I I I I • ' ' ' ' ' . Wrd1~ Oclober 11, 1912 . -. -. • ' '· "' ( . ' ,\ ' ' . . I FasJ{ion Island is now five years old: Come join us as 60 fine mer- , 't\ • • .. '' chants celebrate the occasion tomorrow, Friday an cl 'Saturday. See the big ait-show on the mall, :professional tennis st~rs in Stage Court Friday and an Orange c ·ounty Kennel Club dog sho:w Saturday. . , ,. See inside for full details. . I ., '· . ._c...~---- l ''Exciting to V isit -1. Delightful-to Shop '' OVer 80 -.iotft.and MrYicM including R~'I, Buflu1111', The Broadway and Penney1. Open Friday and Monday nlght1. FAS~·ION -ISLAND • NEWPQ!tT' CENTER -, Pacltlc Cont Hlgbway-BetwNn J•mborff encl M•cArthur -- • • I < DAILY PILOT -.. J I \ \ j 2 DAILY PILOT Wtdnf'~day Octobl'r 11 11J7~ • .i\rthur Ashe (right) and Tom Okker, world famous tennis champions, will appear at Fashion Island on Friday. courtesy of The Broad\\'ay department store. They'll demonstrate winning techniques from nrion to l p.m. on Stage Court and then will give .1utographs and cnat with fans for another hour. Clas sir This is the classi· cal look this fall. Greg's ensemble is · the perfect repre- sentation of Phelps i\·Jcager i m a g e. c;riece twill flannel jacket, Co r bi n plaid trousers. Ea· gle s h i rt, Alan Paine sweater vest and shoes by Tay- lor 1.fade are al I available at th e Fas h I on Island :-store. . . .· .· . . • .. 'I t ' ,, ,,.-. FASHION ISLANO SECTION 'Happy Birthday ', Fashion Island Tradillonally, the an-birthday. All 60 metcbooi. tho mall and wlU r .. ture nlvwaary...of.-the-openlng·of-are-prepered to ~at.--•~ 75 artlsts flashlon Island is a big with fine fall ~se. deinoolttatin@: their crafta event ror Its merchan!s special purchases, and begimlng tomorrow , and f<w their customers. specl.al prices ln recoani· 'Ibunday, and contiJ1.llng This year, the Newport Uon of the event. ttrougb Sattzr4ay. 1lm big Beach regiooal shopping A big OraDge 000Dty art show is r.,,. lo the 5liop. center enjoys its flflh feir will be eJftibited on Pirc public. Frld•r will mark the perlOll8 appearance on lbe mall ol Arlhur Aabe and Tom Okker detn01111lratiog the finer paints or the game of ten- nis . This will take place ln stqe QJurt in the center mall -noon and I p.m. Friday. They wW •P. pear lala' In The Broad way department store lo sign OllOOgraphs. The Oraqie Coonty Ken- nel Club will -a Dog Show Fun Maldi oo Saturday, Oc1ober It, In ll1e norl!ltaat p0rJdni lot below lbe Irvine twin iow..... beginning at 10 a. m. 'l1lis purebred dog show is oplii free ID the public and will 1 ... 1ure belt·hHhow awards. Conte1nporary Pickwick's fall co n- cept is based on, Town & Country- sophisticated con- temporary look. as seen on s tyli s h sa lesgirls Ena . Nagy and Laura Sprague. Their out- fits are featured at J>ickwick Fashions, Fashion I s I a n d. during the center's anniversary days. ' PICK A POLYESTER DRESS Have one, have another in ladylike pastels, all never-worry, wear everywhere polyester. Reg. lb.00 9.99 D•ytim• Dr1u11 MEN'S DOUBLEKNIT PANTS Have good looks, real comfort and action fit in JOO ~. polyester . doubleknit pants. Great colors, 32-40. Reg. 25.00 8.99 INFANTS, TODDLERS BONANZA Visit our potpourri of fantastic bargains on everything you can imagine for little people! Limited qu.,ntities. Special Buy .99 lnf•nt1 •nd Toddl1r5 SA VE ON MINK BOAS Natural deluxe 2 skin mink boas in Autumn Haze*, Tourmaline*, Azurene*, White at savings! Reg. 49.00 29.99 -r .M. l!.M .•. A Ml!lll .,....,. Auocllllllll. AU tw,... i.bllloll to 1hlw _,,,. II "'9111 91 1m.....-. hll'I. LADIES'CO'ITONS,JERSEYS Lovely dresses, great styles; solid~. prints. Sizes 8-1 b. Fosloion finds. R09. 30.<J0..40.00 19.99-29.99 AH1r Fi~• Shop C:O'ITON KNITS FOR JR'S Coordinate tops ond bottoms in S.M-L. 8.00-12.00 tops .. 7 .00-1 b.00 bottoms _ YounCJ C1liforni• 3.99-6.99 3.99-8.99 GWLS' JEAN BONANZA We've got button and. zi~per .pants, in d enim, and corduroy. Nary and fashion colors, 7-14. Reg. b.00-8.00 3.49-5.49 GIRl.S TERRY VELOlJRS Famous m.ker capris, shorts, tops of cotton terry velour ere machine washable, no-iron barga ins! Nautpl colors, 4-12. Reg. 3.SB-8.50 50% off 6!rl1' Shop LONG NYLON QUILT ROBES From your favorite famous maker in 2 styles; I 00 % nylon tricot, polyester fiberfill washes beotuifully. Asstd. colors, sizes 10-18. Cozy sa ;ings! Reg . 27.00-28.00 13.99 LADIES SLEEP\'l'EAR SAVINGS Take your pick of Warner's sleepwear in baby dolls, shifts, long gowns ond robes, oll nylon lricot. Orange, blue, yellow, 32-38, p.$.1\A.L. Reg. 9.00-lb.OO 4.99-7.99 GOSSARD SAVINGS IN BRIEF S~ up our discont'd colors in Gossard' briefs and bikinis. Easy care nylon tricot, sizes 4-7. Reg . 2.00·2.25 3/3,.50 I MATCHING GOSSABD LINGERIE While you're saving on Gossard briefs and bikinis, pick up the matching nylon ~ricot perts: ' b.oo V2 slip --····-···········--··-2.99 3.50 penly "<-····· .... _ ..••.. : ... -····· ····-2.25 7.00 bro ····-··-···--·-·-····-········ ........ 3.49 UnCJ•ri• •nd locly F1shions YOUNG DESIGNER BOUTIQUE Sa mple our pantsuits, daytime dresses, long evening and at home looks. Fashions finds. \ Reg. 50.00-100.00 25.00-67 .00 Young D1siCJn1r Bouliqu1 ' BOY'S FAMOUS MA.KER PJ'S All ,..rmonent press 50 % cotton/50% poly- ester in assorted prints, V-necks1 p~lovers, long legs; 8-18. Reg. 3.49 I.99 Stot• for l oys GIRl.S TANK TOPS Stock up on acrylic jacqard tank tops1 classic colors, machine washable. Assorted. 7.00 values 1.99 Glrl1' Shop MEN'S NYLON WINDBREAKER Super for tennis, golf, casualwear, with draw siring bottom, hidden hood. Pick yours now. Rog. 10.00 5.95 NEWPORT • #I FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • 1>44-22 00 MONDAY & FRIDAY 10:00-9:30 • OTHER DAYS 10:00·5 :30 1· FASHION ISU>N • ... --~ Fall Elegance Modeling long black velvet gown trimmed in lace and embroidered wild flowers is, Chris Nurches. The dress is available at Lanz, 15 Fashion Island, along with other eleg·ance fo r the fall season. Extra! Silverwoods Gata Anniv~rsary Gift to you. FREE HOLIDAY FLING FOR TWO ! 5 DAYS & 4 NIGHTS IN NEWYORK Via United's New Yorkers ••••T WIW W&T TO MAW~- ptu. •• ,t pleaatn1 a1ey tn one ot New VOrtl.'• pr91110f hOltls. PM ... ~ lo a ltlKllng Btoedwly pit'(. "-.•• lightMtlng tttps. COf'nl In. AtQlstitf FREE No pu~ ntOl!hlfY, -,• .... - silverwoods Save on fine quality double knit slacks Regularly 25.00, Annlnrt•fJ' price 19.90 Newest waffle and diamond knft designs in 1000/o polyester. Belt loop or beltless models. slraight leg or flare bottoms. Both handsomely lallored in an array of ri ch tall colors. Buy lwo pairs end save even more. 45 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH Wtdnttday, October 11 . 1971 DAILY i'JLOT 3 Remember? People's Gallery exhibit on malls of fi,ashion Island this month fe.a· lures 19th century cir· cus posters si milar to those at-right. Histor"' -!!>'_,.,_.,. .... cal significance of the "Big Top" as the father or many forms of modern entertiinment is pointed up in the 18 posters selected for scaled-down re p r o- ducUon on the p.- destr1an kiosks. ~ 8 .ANNIVEP.SARY SALE Anniversary Savings on Ban-Lon"knit easy-living sport shirts The shh1s f!Very lelsure·lovi11g man \owl; ) Ban-Lon knit of nylon yam. Machine w..11 ~-.{...-....., and dryable-keep their new look and f1l .... mOnth after month. Three ful ly fashioned knit sty!'" in navy, wine, brown, white. Collar and placket sb'I• Yf,ith pocket 7.ft reg. 12.00 Ribbed knit turtleneck l.ll reg.14.00 Ribbed knit w1lh collar 7.11 reg.12.00 I ' ' • J • I ·- r I I J 4 \ ' I ~ l~ ... •liMod• 0119 ~·~O••,_.. l«ll H<NKM' 1IN<.JOl1W01 I 0-'n l 4 Hk,HI~ IN hlWYOb. VII l nllfd\ ~ \crlmc ps••T WIW WO ..-0 NmW TOa& 45 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT IEACH • ,... . -··-.. -.. -·-· --.. -·--·---_ .... __ . ~--....... --.. ___ ....., . . . . • :· . . • • • '• :· • . l ,• \ \ Artistic Types Among artists whose work will be displayed daring Fashion Island's anniversary celebration days this weekend are Robert.a McDowell Oeft) of Brea and Eve Smedley of Garden Grove. Exhibit opens Thurs- day and will continue through Saturday. Fall Fashion Clearance SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTIONS UP TO 1/2 OFF 19 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH 19 FASHION SQUARE SANTA ANA FASHION· BEGINS AT 'l'he l:Po'k if you are in doubt drop by and see what's happening now and wish us all a HAPPY BIRTHDAY 'WS' 33 f Am ISUJO • 644-2400 'GUYS' 65 fim ISUllD • 644-6500 Maxi Is still with us and Is found in all the mute<' tones of fall's fashions. This jumper Is In grey and goes with 'Lurex shell as II they were made for each other. The en· semble can he round nt Buflllma' Fashion 1 .. land. Dogs Have Day • This scene Is expected to reP,Mt itself Saturday when the Orange County Kennel Club holds another of its semi·annual dog shows at Fashion Island. The club was founded by Lou Rwoo and Jerry Dwyer of Russo's Wonderful World of Pets, Fashion Island. The co-founders, through cooperation of their fellow merchants at Fashion Island, have been able to make facilities for shows available each March and October. For Every Occasion! AN EXCLUSIVE AT 'JACQUES' • PLEASE COME IN AND T'RY ONE ON ! STORE HOURS: 10 a.m . to 5:30 p.m. Monday and Friday I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. " • Ottr 4-in-one invisibly zip - pered nzink coat is ztn - like anything yo1t have ever seen. It is a 11Mttst See!" ONLY -$2995 TEI.Ml AVAIL.AILE M.)ACQU€-S Master Furrier Since 1933 14 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH • 644.4661 ;Ill m n 0 ;Ill 0 !" n ::t -.-0 ;Ill m z • "' • -0 • • FASHION ISLAND SECTION Extri rdinary special buys. • ' Pol~ester double knit , . s tcoat. • choose fan cy patterns or solids Wrinkle free knit slacks for men . • • an extraordinary buy on double kntt s • Penn-Prest.., 100% polyester • !tare leg, western pockets • solid colors. 30-42 27.88 • polyester for wrinkle free good looks Spec1al 899 Special499 Boys' polyester slacks are 1exturized lo give when he bends. Choose fancy patterns of blue, brown or burgundy. In boys' sizes 8-18. 1119 299 Belts for fashion conscious men. Belts for fashion conscious boys. 2 so Men's woven polyester lies in sollds 1nd fancies • all of today's styling features •a great buy, men's sizes.- Gel a great buy , pay later. Use your JCPenney charge. 499 Great.buy on boys' flare leg sl ack.s. Teaturi'z:ed polyester lo give when he stretches. Greal sohd colors. Reg ular or slim, 8-18. Special 2 tor SS I Boys' short sleeve II.nil dress snut 1~ P!!n11·P1cst tr1ace111tel ny1 o n. ChoosP. l<tncy patlerns or solid colors 8-18 JC Penney. The values are here every day. Wtdnew$ay, October 1 I 1 ~11 Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the foll.owing stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Booch (714) 644-23 13. HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington S..cl> (71<1j 8~2-7771 . HARBOR CENTER, Coil, MoY (714)' 646 5021. • I • DAILY PJL01" a I • .. • .. • • • . :· • .. ~ ... ! 1 • ' • • • • I •• • \ \ i I I DAILY PILOT At Eas e? Owner Al Douglass and Manager Bill SOusa aren't exactly relaxing as they study plans for expansion in all depart- 1nents, but the leisure \Vear store soon will be in larger and newly re- modeled quarters in Fashion Island. Open- ing for "new" At Ease is scheduled Nov. 24. Wednt'sday, October 11, l'f7l U11 your l•11liAmerl~1r4 or Milt« Ch1r91 I OOll JS AT FASHION ISLAND QNLY . l Specialist Bll1 Jdllter, 'llanlger of Nowport Ch ll d r e n's BocllerJ, flta pair ol Danllll clogs for Ann Alldenon of Corona del Mar. The Fashion ls· land shop wu establish· ed In 19G7 u the specialty branch of Westclilf Shoes. New· port Chlldren's Bootery was then, and still is be- lieved lo be, the most complete c h 11 d r en's shoe store in Newport Beach. FASHION ISLAND SECTION Columbus Day discov~ry! 15°/o off all Our smart draperies. 8~x~" Reg. $10 In addition to all this, 'Tique' draperies have an insu lating acrylic foam back. And they come in lots of terrific colors that'll mix or match your decor. Valances and tiebacks are available, too. And, If we don't have your size in stock (which isn't likely) we'll rush-order it. Cotton/rayon jacquard blend. Additional sizes are available In atock or rush order, · and they're all 0111ale l ·( Sale prices effective through Sunday• And a big sale of pillows for every size bed. Sale2® Sale$12 .. I ' ' Rog. 3.00 Standard size pillow with Rad Label potyeoter filling end blue stripe C!Jtton ticking. Queen size reg. $4, Sale UQ, King size reg. SS. Sale S4. Reg, $14 Standard size goose d own pll1o\v with cord edge. Sanitized. Cotton ticking. r Reg. $5 Standard size pillow with Dacron" polyester l 1berfi1J, blue cotton tickinq. Machine washable. Queen size reg. $6. Sale $5 . Ki ng s1Lc reg. S8, Sale S7. JCPenney The values are here eve~y day. *Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: ·~ {~ . . ! FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644·2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER , Huntington Beac h (714) 892 -77 71.-HARBOR C~NTER, Costa Mose {714J 646-50 21 . ' • ASHION ISLANO SECTION Last of Leopards . Jacques, the furrier, poses with what he believes ay be the last five matched leopard skins in the nited States-just enough to make one coat. It's all hat's left of a shipment of leopard, jaguar and heetah skins he attempted to return several years $23. The pacesetter air step. tandems If you're reofiy going places-and who bn't today?-you'U km going in this wnatile, comlorlllble Atr Step shoe. As much at home with pants as with a skirt and blaz<r. It's the kind cl shoe you'll never leave at home. 54 FASHION ISLAND Newport Center • Opp. S.O.dwey 6#-4223 -Aho Alhembre For Prllt JeaJ> Jlltebell \ldt~ .. s!Jlant manaaer ot Fublon "1and'1 Sbow Off, dltplays fall's trlglltelt new bold plaid for the appt'IJ'lai of Michelle Wlllltler. Pantsuit comes In llgllt autumn lhader. ago. Part of the shipment-and the papers regard- ing It-were stolen. He kept the spotted skins which are now virtually priceless. The government prohtbits their shipment. Laund·ry closeout! • Come in before we're all cleaned out. s153 Matching gas dryer has 4 tem- perature settings. Signal sen .. try sounds off when drying Is com plated. And cool fluff al- lows clothes to cool without dried-In wrlnkles. «;; jt *199 Melching Washer hu e hlbrtc progr1ms and fnturn 3 W11t1r level aottlngo, 001k aettlng and llquld bleach dl1p1n11r. Chooeo from 4 popular colorw at no •Xlnl COIL JCPenney The values are here every day. a., S11J f ... te 5 P.M. • ... f1l1 ........ 1 FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beech {714) 644-2313. J ,, . HUN1'1NGTON CENTER, Huntington BHch (714) 1'12-ml. • Sale 11!'L HI Reg. 14.18 'Nadia' Stoneware Is bright brown and yellow Shina Stone by Fashion Manor. Aztec· . style design. Mug type cups. S..piece completer set, r~. 9,18 S.le, 7A1. Sale 111~- Reg. 14.11 'Marguerita' a1oneware set has "ower pauern. Contemporary cok>rt ol grey, green 1nd brown. Shine Stone. 6 piece compleler 1et, r.g . ......... 7.41. Sale 1416 20pl-MI A ... 11.11 'S1r11cen' lron1tone by f:'aahlon Minor * features dtcor1tlve modern pattern In green/blaOk. Handsome, mug llyt9cup. 5 pl1c1 completer 11t. Reg. 9.18 ..... 7.41. Sale 1416-Mf . ,.,.. 11.., 'Verda' Has an eleQ&nlly alm~e d•••on 1n hght brown and green. Ourab._ FaSl'lion Manor l loncware S-p1.c.e completer set .,.._ l.N -1.A1. Sele Pf\Oee efl-e tllrough Seturdey l JC Penney The values are here every day. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. 11 the following 1tore1: FASHION ISLAND, Nowporl IHch 1714 I M4:1l 1 J • HUNTINGTON CENTER , Honllo 9I°' l uch 1 71~1 197,7771. I I ' , ' ' 8 DAILY PILOT Wedntsday, Oc.t.obtt 11, 1972 . . T he Pct11se· · · Darren' 0 Ti ge rt, illana ger or 'Fashion Island's \Veth· erby Kayser Sho~s. reaches that poin,t -aft~r Mrs. Phil Shafer·tries on new pair ot Naturalizer ·pumps for fall -when customer and salesman check to see if it's go in g to be "jlfst right." Wetherby 'Kayser stocks complete selection of men's dress and casual shoes, also. • ., ' ........ ,.. , . • A~ these special low l: . or~e~ we~exp~ct to .. ·· ... develop a-.lot of new friends. How about you? • -, .... I i •;.. . ''\. i ~ >t".\J n·" ~· •• , ' " ·, " • ,. s1 Special for the weekend! 10-12ThN 10-18 off Studio print reprints In deluxe Silk Finish from your Kodacolor• negatives. One. size only. ... Subject is Sewing looking for advice of an experienced seamstress? A piece of trim? Just·rlglit yardage for a special project? A button? All of these things are sP,'jclaltles of the house at Westbrook Yardage, Inc., 20 Fashion Island. Part of tl)e store 11 shown above. Limited time only. Wfive reduced • the prices of our big shot brand """""' ). J\ I names. Now $149 Remington 1100 auto shotgun.12 gauge Dependable gas operated system reduces recoil sensation. Pistol grip checkering. Vent rib sighting plane. Rubber cushion recoil pad. Scratch resistant wood finish. Winchester 12 gauge ahotgun shells. .. .................. 1.119 Winchester 30.06 shells. . .••. UI Winchester 22 long rt fie shells. Ao Remington 870 12 gauge pump shotgun with aolld state receiver and Interchangeable barrel a. $t1 Winchester 94 30/30 ever action rfflo, ... Remington 700 30.08 boll action rfll-. •ut 8111 pl1co1 llloctrvo lhru S.lurdaJ Opening •.• Novembtt ltl In • Faahlon X.lanct JCPenney The values are her~ every day. S~ftoclatnlnglUPPllttlfttlelt lnlil lpotUngOOodo'~ ... '• r • . . Shop Sunday noon. to 5 PM at the followlng stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644·2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunitngton Beach (714) 892-7771. I l \ ! • I : • I • • ~- . ·1 ••• I / I \j : ' . . . • . • • ' • . • • ' • i • • • • ' • . • . . . . • . . • • . . • . • . • • ' • • ' . • • t ' • i • ' • • I ' • a i • ' l • ' • ! ' I ' • • ' • I • • • • • • . • • . • • : ' • I . . • . • • • • • • ' ' . • . t • j • • • • I I • I · • FASHION ISLAND SECTION th PH~ 644-2525 ~:J-J _ ___, ..,.... ,..,-D II G E 20 FASHION ISLA"ND, NJ;WPORT •llEf<CH OCT. 12, 13, 14 SPECIAL PURCHASE FOR A SPECIAL OCCASION --::::!~-------.. ·,J, COORDINATES ,.,:~i~y,ester and w9i?.i'J>Je nd 4,ouble ~nits . .: . Jcl'e ~I for today's rayered look-skirts, pants, vests, suits. 'Patt~ms .... ,, .. ,..,, ,.. Solid~ ... ,, .. ,..,, , •. $4.44 $3.44 AQli.YLIC DOUBLE KNITS Popu~er Poriterome Stitch with th e look of wool bul machine washable . Good fall shades in plain and heathers . • ...... s~ ... ,.. .$3.44 yd. ... HIGH 'f.ASHION PRINTS . ' ' Single knit jersey of Antron Nylon . Regular $3.49 to $4.00 yd . $1-.44 .yd. 41" wWe OSNABURG tur11l ,unbleoched cotton ide. Guoranteed to s h r i n k crinkle, ...... ''·'' "· 99c 52 " end 1 . DAIL V PILOT e Falt Lineu p Highlights of the fa ll and winter fashion col- lecti on available at Buf- f urns' Fashion Island are shown .above. Left to right: gray cowhide coat with curly Jamb 1 trim, ve lvet dress and jacket in t.Ji'is season's long length and Kim· berly blue knit three. piece pantsuit. -~ T~E Wik/er. sHol! byBUSTER BROWN. From baby's first step, it 'helps guard against trouble • 0 0 Fan shaped toe ... more wiggle room for toes ... complete freedom to flex and grow. And the very softest leather ... with no rough inside seems. • Fitted by our experts, with 90 years of conti nued shoe fitting e xperience. I . COMPLETE LINE OF ORTHOPEDIC SHOES FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH • 6+4-2464 WESTCLIFF PLAZA • NEWPORT BEACH • 548-8684 • 17-jewel Seikos. . You·'re getting: a lot more .,.t f ~than just another watch. • ' ' \ 5100 StlJ wind chr'Onograph. 30 lnln. recor~r tachymeter timer. stainless steel, blue dial. .,lllf ,.,,,.i to 'r/911 555 S11inle11 steel. self wind, d1y-<11te talondar. luminous blue dlal, edjustlble brxelel. --· tu .. ,., ft. agso S•U wfnd. day-d1t1 calendar. Internal rolallf'\Q ring, "'H•rdleJt 'cry1lal, yellow dial. ""'--·· '"'1'" .... , ? ........... f,,\tl., l.1 •A -.... <l'llcl JCPenney The values ... hefe every~. 7950 Yellow top/1t1lnf,. 1te~ back, gill dial, adju1t1ble matchmg br1celel. 5950 Ytft.,. lop/ol1lnlno ''"' blC.k. bumt umblf diol,...-1rneth bfec.ltL Shop Sunday n0on to 5 P.M. 1t the following 1tores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport a. .. h (7 14) 6+4-2lla. ' HUNTINGTON CENTER, H....+ift9ton ...... (7 14) m .m1 • • \ • Looking Ahead Sno\Y season is coming -soon -and J, C. Penney store in Fashion Island is ready with its Ski ChaleL Department offers complete line or skiing equip- ment and apparel and also features cross country \ ·~· SPECIAL PRICING OCTOBER ·SALE I EVENT 1 on Fine Chinese Roseivood <uul T enk Furniture .•. and all ho11ie accessories & <le corative ite1us Complementary Int erior Decorating Serv ice Avai lable · No. 48 'P'i.4l"i\on ·T~lnnrl 10 a.tn. 10 ft :30 p.m. In th<' Norlh l\1all, Nrov.'1,.-u l Cr>nt•·r Ji.1onday A: Frida.)' Svto. to 9:30 t7l4) 644•4737 I \ Thoughts yf s u g a r· plums, greeting cards and new musical toys, like the one she's hold· lnJ. are already In the mind of Ella Macdon· nell, new manager of Batch's Hallmark, Fashion Island. Check- ing out n~w dolls are Lana Brewer and Bar- bara Letze (right), two of the "dolls" who wait on shop's customers. Celebrates FASHION ISLAND'S 5th Anniversary with SUPER SPECIALS Beautiful NOW ROBE&60WNSET $1485 Regular$38 BODY BLOUSES Regular$11 AND MANY MORE SPECIALS! NEWPORT BEACH FASHION ISLAND NOW $585 6444411 Open 1 ... -ond Thundoynights, Sondly 12-&. • OF SOLVANG & NEWPORT TO OUR C1JSTOMERS W• wish to toke this opportunity, °" our FJM AMtlwersary, to thmlk yow for yoar patrooage of our shop O,lld llope we wll be ibli to ..,,. yoo -tlmK lo ... -. sP£C\AlS I We Are Clo•e. A• Vo•r Pll•M I OPEN -Monday and Friday: 10 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday: 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. 56 FASHION ISLAND I Oppollt9 Broadway l Sunday: Noon to 5 p.m. VISIT OUR WINI TASTING ROOM NEWPORT CENTER 644.0.91 ... • ~~ •• -: . • • ~ .; . . · . • •• ' . ~­• · .. ··i .~·--~ " ·' .... ·~· . . .. .· , . '• .. ., ~ ~ "' ~ ~· ' .... . .,,. ~ ·~ •• ;::· ~: •• .•. :· .. Va Stan shoe ager fac · other stiet • · . .. l • ' • . Standing alongside wide selection of Florsheim shoes his store has to offer is Parl Shoemaker, man- ager of J-l emphill 's. "Comfort, fit and your sa tis- faction" is what store sells, he says. Stock includes other nationally known brand names besides Flor- sheim . ••••• •• • • • • • . F!orsheiri.1 • '' • • .;• does 1t your way ••• • • with fine fashion, • • sensibly priced. • With a great, unadorned boot that goes ' , everywhere, with everything. And doesn't • • • • • • • • cost an arm and a leg. Florshel m builds the boot from prem ium calfskin, styles it for your entire e wardrobe and e makes it easy on your billfold. Aren't • you better off with • c • • • f. • l!IROWN ILACIC • • ' • • Florsheim? w. c""Y 1i1•1 6 to 14 Widt~ M to EEE ••• 31.95 • .. • 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CE NTER e 644-4223 Opp. Broadway -AIJO Alh•mbra • • • • • • ,. • Wcdnnd~. Oc tobfr 11, 1q12 OAILY PILOT Jl • Treasures Ju.rt the right "ac- ' cent" for any room or group may be walling for you in what The Broad- way call5 ''The DiS: covery Shop." The unique department at Fashion Island store offers items from all over the w o r Id. SALE Opera Pumps 0--ourd-.ic Open Pump in bbdc. pooear.N..Y-. .. Camel kid. ...... , Now Krinkle Patent Boots Save SS.03 oo cheoc .,.., loolUns rronr zipper fuhion boou. Available in Black. Brown. White. Na.,., Booe:. ~ S2G.OO '14. 97 WETHE:RBY ~KAYSE:R •4Fmllloo111oM, New,.,. c ... or e '44-J441 BankAmericard 8 f\1uter Cll&l"G" e American E.xprt'U . Rx>tLMCtlrers ':>i ~ -tke.. d.o.ys of-~(. ~verct<t uJct~Olo\ ... all hQ~cr~i~e.:I I BOOTS • • . .~., '. "' :~; ,~ .. ' . . ',J ~ +"ii 7 50c.r:... "' l'IXl1 Oft" lk11t~t t~·ti l q :30 @J o@@J~@ 7 fashion island, newport center 644-5070 \ -- • ·. • . :, '" . . ·' ... .. :-:r, ?.i • ...... :~ .... . ... ·:; -··· • • I I I .I '· t Jin1 \Villian1s and Dick J\fax,vel1 examine double knil polyester-wool blend suit by Hart, Shaffner and J\1larx. available for fall at Silverwood's in Fash· ion Island. Silverwood's prides itseU on keeping one of the n1ost complete stocks of Hart, Shaffner and J\1arx n1erchandise to be found in Sou th ern California. Mediterranean lm_ports Fine Import Gifts and the Unusual 20% OFF ALL Merchandise DURING OUR 5th BIRTHDAY College Students get 20% Discount with student 1.0 . .1nytime. a , #12 Fashion Island 1across from the Island llouse) ,- t ' ' ' ! ' . . Fashion Island NEWPORT BEACH PLAIN BUCKLED LACED ZIPPERED STRETCH B®TS B®TS B®TS B®TS BOOTS ... AND MORE B®TS TO B<lDT OU• COMPLETE STOCK OF NEW FALL BOOTS AT A llG SAVING! ALL OUR fAMOUS0NAM!. BRANDS ON SALE:· CHOICE Of BLACK, BROWN, OR GREY SUEDE. llACK, BROWN. BLUE. OR CAMfL LEATHER. SIZES TO 10, NARROW OR MEDIUM WIDTHS. BE QUICK! SALE IS FOR LIMITED TIME! USl YOUI IANKAMlltCAID, MA.Sn• CHA.OE, 'AUL AU.AN Grecian 1-landmade co \v be I I s from Greece suitable for waJI hanging or patio wind chimes get special attention from UCI student ,_1 a r c y Jones al Mediterra· nean Imports. Betty CuUow, rigbt, is man a· ger of the Fashion Is- land shop . ' . ' II" ell fleeted 'l'hi s is only part of the story for those who are ··sole searching.'' t.1andel 's, Fashion Island, has all kinds of shoes -lots more than are shown here - and even features so me at special prices during an· nivcrsary celebration. ' FASHION ISi.AND SECTICIN DO SOMETHING BEAUTIFUi. When you leave her to amuse herself while you go fishing with the boys. Or, when she's game enough to go if you ask. That's when to ask her to marry you with a beJ1utiful diamond. ~t in 14 karat gold. From the left: A ... Love Sat"' ua. , solitaire from $450. Wedding sets: B. Oval. $350. C. Pear. $350. D. Emerald cut, $550. E. Marquise, $450. DMded • .....-............. Do Something Beautiful.,.. CMl'ft "'"-h lnl* -lolMf'klll lr•,,tH .... uun1r1un1 •M M11111r Ctl•ree. i.t. SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1 JBO Open Mon. end Fri . 10 a.m. to 9:]0 p.m. Will\ loc111ons of: Torr•Me, Cr•llQt, L• C:trrolot, L• H1l>r•. AllO: Sin 01990 •nd Ult Veg•s. Lik• Ro11t Lonf lll•ncl Duck -To11M.cio1 of fil•t1 v,,1 01c1r1' R1i110ow Tro11t1 w,11, 'Who clo•111't1 Tli••• •lid lftlllV othtr ,11tici119 e11tr"1 1r1 ltf'l'itd ''"'" 11i9ht1 1 w1tlc 1f lob lur111 b1t111r111t. Loc1i•d in F11hio11 l1la1ul, lob lur111 i1 fl'IOta th111 ju1! • "Sl11k ind Lobst•r" r11t• a ur111t, A 1•l•clion of tw•ntv c1r1f11lty ,r1p1r1d ·antr111-1ccolftp1nied by lob lur111 f1fl'lo111 Crttfl'I Ca111r Sal1d-will 1athfy tht ll'IOtf cU1crifl'li11ati119 p1l1f1, R11tr¥tlio111 1u9g••l•cl. Gnot 1 ...... , ...... , Ivery NltM VINA HARMER INTRODUCING • " ) THE PET CANTEEN The 'lT ClNTllN 01 lhe •nos! mode•n ond con¥en~nt Item of Iii~ on the mt1rle11odoy. Mold ed l•om h19h·den1irv, non.10-ic 13olye1hyl1ne & ttyrene moteriol, •!will no• ruS!, cortode. collop1e, 1etO+fl odora o• eosoly overiurn Tht PIT CANTlEN ;, eoay 10 !111, ond 011\He t you• p•! o conlltinl le~el ol lte1h, d egn water or oll !lme1. Due !CJ ill 1omple ond •u99ed, po1en1ed deitgn, you• 'IT CANTEIN •\ !eokp•ool ond 1,1nbreokoble in 11ormol u1oge. li9htw•itht •1ull re•tllly (llor1•~1• with o co11v•11l111t ho11Hlte, th• PIT CAMTllN c::o n be corried in your co• ondro• titled whh •Ce ~ube1 "'ho• weather. A 1eporote l<ovel cop •S p•ol<lded fo~ your co""""''"c::e. Pelt qv ... ~ly lenrri to d flnk l1om tho wide trough, ond mCJny owl'ltlll u•• two CJ• fl'O•e (•ndoor• & ou1doo•1) tor conven•ence. We hope both you ul'ld your oe•1 will en. toV th• PlT CANTllN !or yrn" to to"'"· TO fill: Hold co1111en b\I t o•ry1n 9 ho ndlt . h.rrn comblnot1on trough/fill top one 1u1n count. •r.rlockw•lt : f,H 10 brim w11h cool. t!eon woler. lill'ploce cop ond 1..,rn ono f..,N turn cloc~w·•• 10 ,,.ot, mo~•l'\9 luf• go1ke1 '' 11..,,n ond pf(lperly 1rt plote. lile•urr1 conteen 10 l/IPPIQht PolltiOI' ond ploc::• on con,,...n1 lcxo1oo". (flYI QUAIT CAPACITY) TO (LIAN AND •llSMIN: AoJ>ro .. rnotely once o week, wo1h out with o m•ld 1olution of bo'•"9 1odo ond wo!e•: ""'' •ko•oughl'( ol'ld ref,ff The PIT CANTllN rnol•' o n tdeol ond thoughtivl v•" lor ••lo11ve1, t111'\Ch Qnd ne.ghber1 wko ti•e 0!10 pet ownt•\ OllU FASHIOll SQUARE • FASHION ISLANO . At11u tt11 ""'.,.,. .,.._,, s. ...... Us.tJll '" SIOl •t ,, ..... ,, 1111 Mall Ir ..... ......,. •••••"'"'• M4..,IO ..... I ·~ , .. ,. I D Ra Ion ye off dr .-.Zal ~~ .• . • :· ~ ··-~ '• .. •'• E: • .. ;.: •• ~ :·: ... '. ·=· .. .. . , . ....:-. ' •: ' • i -- FASHION ISLAND SECTION Diamonds, Too Raymond l-Opez, manager of Zale'• Jewelers, Fash· ion Island, shows Pat O'Neal an 8-diamond ladies' yellow gold Elgin watch which, for }125, could set off the rnOSf stunning evening We a r -Or other dressy ensembles. It's only one of many watches in . -.Zale's collection. . . ~, : ~· . ' :> . . ... . . : .. : :-~ ..... . ~" ' .. . . . •• . "· .... :~ . •!.· ' •.,;- : ==~ .•. ' ..... . ' . . . . , . . . . . . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~• ) ' ' . . . . . • • • • • JoAnn Denyce & Alan WANT TO WISH Kirsten, Heidi, Patty, Evangeline, Judy & Co. Happy Birthday HATCH'S ~ presents FREE NAME IMPRIN-TING on all our BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS during October OUR '72 PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS Card Albums are now on display for your selections. COMPLEMENTARY GIFT WRAPPING ALWAYS AVAILABLE HATCH'S ~®'°""LI\ 39 FASHION ISLAND 644-2014 NEWPORT CENTER OPEN SUNDAYS . FROM Fashion Island Newport Beach • .. Boot Season The place for boots thls fall is Paul Allan's in F'ash· ion Island. Manager John Kirkwood shows one of the many fine ladies' b oots in stock. The store stocks boots to size 11 in narrow and med i u 1n v.ridthS. I Wedntsday, October ll, 1972 DAILY PILOT ' • • ·10:99 HIKER BO ' SPECIAL! 8 8 ~-.. Cobblers ''r More lovo than leather 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER Opp. Broodwoy -644-4223 Also Alhambro STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR ' • . • . • • . . ,: . . . • . \ ' I I I I ' /I J I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • ' • • • . • _, • .. DAILY PILOT Wcdnt!>day Octobe r 11. I 'I I! Alan, Denyce and JoAnn face up to Arlan Flaum of The Look (for gals) and Guys Gear (for guys. of course), who fa~s up to mirror outside his Fashion Island shop. This is where fashion begins. For 9reater l•M:Mlfioe and more enjoyment h1 readln9 yov tWly MYttpaper, one Jourwollsm profeaor ._ •YCJ9ested .•. Ten Commandments For Ne1vspaper Reader.~ Re•d your newspeper fully e•c·h day. Make it• habit. Don't be h'eaclnne f.ieppy. They •r• just t.ht menu ; you mu1t ed t the food it1elf to 9et 1 utitfyin9 rneal. ' Don't b .. pege--on. hi1ppy. Y'our most int•resting items could be on the inside P•9••• Don't b• one.subject happy. St ick ing only to sports, comics or women's news is like picking up pennies end ignorin g dollars. Be • fect-se•k•r. Get the fects from th• news columns, then reed the c.omm ent of editori•I writers and columnists. You m•y find that you are the better thinker let lee st in your OWi\ opinion I. Reed with both eyes. Note the quelifyin9 words end elso "who s•ys 10.'' Don 't teke en accusation for • conviction. rumor for feet, or confuse plens with eccomplishmenls. ·~·-" Don't b• • reeding coward. Don't be efreid to wei9 h opinions In complete con- flict with your own. Get out of any reedin9 ru t you mey have fe llen into end reed et leest one thin9 • day completely epert from your norme/ interest, It will 9i'+'e you • heelthy ment1t jog. Plan your shopping end buying et home with the help of the 1dverti1inCJ column• of your daily newspep•r. R•lex ind enjoy the fun every day. There i1 • lighter side of life tnd your news. peper coven it-so give yours•lf e bruk end join In tke enjoyment. We Mertlly ·endorM the full ll•t of "Cemmend~ Md •ut- l•t tfMre would N no better time te 1tert followln1 them then tltHlnt NetleMI New1p.1per W•k. Oct.1-14. ""' I 1E&~~11 ~l!.!Qm I ) l ' \ FASHION ISLAND SECTION Bunches of Books Kathy Rembold, manager, and Ron Chappell , of B. Dallon , Bookseller, indi- cate supplies are plentiful or current top seller, "I'm OK. You're OK." Shop also has Jots of other titles. some at the bar· gain price of "buck a book." %1fES49Tff I ANNIVERSARY EVENT Put1 the •ccent on v1lu11 for your hOln• sn ... erpl•led Gifts YOUll CHOICl By lnterneUOn•I s599 a. Round Tray, 12Yf'. b. Salt & Pepper set. c. Serving Bowl. 10 ' d. Paitv set. dish and server. tavaw'lMil Now for Christmas! · %Al[S* .-We've .,.,... the whale wOOd ~fOryou. I 7 "ASH ION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH Celebrating the Jantzen Beach Center, Portland f!o,JJ~ •• :± .. •, • • --' ' -.. .,:. ~ ~ eL po~o candLe ~& gift shoppe~ IMPOR1£D ' . H4Nl>MAb£ FLOWERS ONLY 25t Limit 4 Per Customer Oct. 12, 13, 14 Available Only At: FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER J 0 E P. • I 1 ~ Ill 5.ALONS 11· •• 70 FASHION ISlAND 6#-215 1 . , , __ •• • • ·':'- .. .: ' •• •' •! ' " • • • • . . ' . •• :~- .. I '; " :· • • . . • . . ' • • . . • • , ' FASHION ISLAND SECTION ua Award Winning Japanese Restauranti. ..• the perfect place to find tranquility for cocktoil• and dining ..• admist the calm atmosphere of authentic Japanese decor ... perfection in superb Japanese cusine ... dining at the Yamato is an enchanting experience •.• try dining in our new paito arei!I. #60 Foshion Island Phone 644-481 I for reservi!ltions H(ftHCIONfS M E TA51EFIA fO« I USNSS Ot MAW.El Sporl (oaf M .,_,., llw or Gr•r by Crl«o SJ2S.00-MtOll 0.wir. O•lotd $lw1 .,. E.,i. .s12.oo -•.,. a ri. 1>r ••• 11 . .so. N.w,.,. h e1!ri, l.ek•we ... , A••ll•IM, Wlhlilre, Sli•nw•11 O•••· '•••''"'· w,,, c •• '"'· Neu; ~ven engagement and wedding ring seu change from tune to time as Kurt Blau ol Slav- ick's Jewe1efl, 18 Fashion Island, Is happy to explain. He is shown here with some of this fall's newest d• signs. Child's View OAIL Y .. JLOT lltll ,....,_ Joanne Bernier of Karl's Toys gets down to chil· dren's level to look at shelves packed with toys - or nostalgia, depending on age of the beholder. The toy store's motto: "\Ve communicate on your level." BOOKSEI J .ER Newport Center 833-2200 Wtd11~sday Octobtr l l , 1 <J72 DAILY PILOT J .; -.... < -· E ::I <'II - - Why Not A Chamois or Leather Suit Remember! Its the Skins that make the man -- ·-l!. ... ~ ~ THE LOOK I ~:" ;!! 'b .... ~ ~ ~d' 65 Fashion Isl and _ ...... , ~ Newport Beach "X~ Yrt . t t.., .. r, ._, .--" ~ ~ 644-6500 ~"' 'l.1v ;wn~\~ 1-------------- Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers The Show -off FABULOUS FASHIONS AT FUN PRICES wide leg cuffed hi-rise • LONG SKIRTS ... • JEANS • DRESSES Bare your foot 10 11)0 breezes and discover year· round cxcltcmen1 In this lran.f;.SCS~nal sandal. w11 t) bold. i;old<> buckled str.111 prc111 ly pcrct)orJ 0 1) •• l1 ij.(!1 ~1unr0d o ff hocl. A n open and ~hu1 c:aso for 1110 finest 11·1 l:>nrc (1-t._,..hJnn • SWEATERS • CAPRIS • PAL.Ano PANTS • BLAZERS ACCESSOR IES •HANDBAGS • JEWELR Y • SCARVES •HATS $21. 54 FASHION ISLAND -NEWPORT CENTER 0f>pOlilo Br ... dwoy • 444-4 223 • Also Alh•mbt• ' I , ) I fl I DAILY PILOT The Look Wtd~sd.ly, October l l, 19fl No Gloom E.l Poco Candles is where these \von1- en are admiring atained glass pieces called ··g Io o rn chasers." F1i rker- ing candle inside each piece casts Jtghts rem1n1 scent of dancing lifhts and shadows o an open fire or fife in fireplace. Pr.Ices range from $3.:IO to $23.50. Showing what it's all about at Fashion Island's shop called The Look are salesgirls \\•ho help customers achieve "the look" of the sea so n. Modeling their store's wares are (left to ri ght) Evangeline, Beth. Diane and Patty. . ·: .. ·~· • • • • ••• ·-, . . . . . • . • . . , ·! , It has been a pteasttre seru111g )'Oft for th ese fiv e J•ear.r. Thank )1011 f or your patro1u1ge. We are too king forward to 01tr futur e at Fashion Island. PLUMMER'S #b FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH e M4.21l0 HOUltS: Mo". I fti. 10 to •1JO P,M. r .... thr111 s.1 .. 9:Jo to 1110 r.M . I FASHION ISLAND SECTION ·-- BOOTS.! 40% OFF ALSO ... SPECIAL GROUP OF SHOES ~OFF 21 Fashion Island -i 644-9948 OPEN SUNDAY :.. • .. • . ~: " .. ... • • • ~~-.• ~ ~ • • • • • + + .... + . ! + • • • • • • • • • . • • • • . .. • • . -• . _:; ---------------------------------- \ ~lP ~@~fl:\[L &lKllKl~W~OO~&OOt! u@t! ~&W~[KJ@~~ GIANT SAVINGS AND VALUES 4ijJ[tl\jjja(,ikJI ITHR U OCTOBER 15TH I ·.~ MONOPOLY G'ame THIS FAMILY GAME IS THE MOST POPULAR OP THE WORLDS GREAT GAMESl BATTLESHIP Game BATTLESHIP SETS UP IN ITS OWN PLASTIC DELUXE REUSABLE GAME KIT, NO NEED FOR PENCIL ANO PAPER. PLAYERS COMMAND THERE OWN FLEET! · REO . $4.99 +•· SWITCHER TYCO TRAIN SET SIP-ALONG SIP-ALONG SAM llfJD SIP-ALONG SUE THEY ACTUALLY "DRINK" ALONG WITH YOU1 EVEAYTIME CHILD SIPS' LIQUID GOES UP DOLL'S STRAW AND IT LOOKS LIKE DOLL IS SIPPING TOOi LIST $2.99 5¢ TOY SALE COME EARLY AND TAKE YOUR CHOICE. ALL KINDS OF GREAT TOYS WORTH MUCH MORE, NOW ON SALE FOR ONLY FIVE CEN TS! THIS IS A VALUE THAT YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS! SCREAM'N DEMONS , ,'• SALE . REG . ......:: ' J : $4.76 BEAUTIFULLY STYLED AFTER THE MOST POP- ULAR AUTOMOBILES! GREAT BEGINNERS SKATES! SALE $2.76 THANKS TO A SPECIAL POWDER CALLEO MAGIC M1X, IT TAKES ONLY A FEW MINUTES TO MOLD A CUTE,' LITTLE KRAZY FIGURE. THE POWDER ANO PLAIN WATER ARE MIXED IN THE SHAKER PAD· VICED AND POURED INTO THE 2·Ptece MOLDS. Aeo. s4.99 mm 11111111111111111 muw TRACK SALE MIX DA MATCH THIS SPECIAi:.! STRAIGHT -9" SECTIONS CURVED -18" RADIUS LIST 25' M, PLAY-DOH CLEAN, PLIABLE, COLORS BLEND AND AIR DRIES FOR PEAt.lANENT OBJECTS! CLEAN·WON'T STAIN HANDS OR CLOTHING-NON-TOXIC REG. rt' Game The Art AuC'lion Germ. For 3 to 6 players. Ages 12 to edult. 'N' GAUGE ROLLING STOCK COMPLETE WITH LIST 121.19 ""WEA PACK. SALE $12 99 THR&E CARS! • LllTtUo SALE $2.99 ea. SALE $1.47 doz. MIXORMATCH99~ • SHOP AND SAVE AT ALL KARLS STORES e All STORES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK e WESTCHESTER BEHIND RALl"H'S MAPUt[T 12!11 w. l11h 121lll70-11JI LOS ANGELES 8ROA0WA Y/CRE(l.ISHAW SHOf'l'tJ.IQ CtNTl!R NEolU' MAY CO. H14 W. SANTA IARBAfllA ll1l12'tl·ml CANOGA PARK SlARS fALL8ROOK SQUARE 11•1 FAlLBROOI( 12111341 ll12 NEWPORT ORANGE BEACH FASHION ISLANO ..... OPP051TE 8ROAOW'AY MALL Of ORANGE DEPT STOA[ 50 FASHION ISLAND Ult N, OAANCE MALL 1714l&M·OM1 171 •1 tll·llOO CERRITOS LOI CEJllRITOSCENTER IETWElN lfARS AND OR8ACHS 151 LOS CElllUTOI l:f1ll lt!·2111 • -·· ·: • ' ' ""· : •'f • WI lit ye di ' Gri Wi -nners Sommer bu ,._ apln slipped by and wives ""' ~ beginning to feel a Utile dllmayed, •Ince that Ume of the )'tar fl hen _, they have ooce again -foolboJI wldowa. Olfldal aporll attendance figures for 1971 Indicate lllat foolhaU, Including both collegiate and professional, 1.9 the number two epectator tpOrt. Horse rac- ing takes the nun)ber one spat. Actual at- tendance at football nmes last year waa 42,039,0CSS. 'lbat's a comtllnaUon which includea Ill coflegea, :n college post season games, 18 NFL team.1, NFL play-qlla: and last, but not leest, the Super Bowl. That's a lot of football any way you look at it. Whether the man in y~ life is at the game tr viewing it on 1V, you know there's one golden rule that bas to be observed while he's watching -''Do Not Disturl>!" 'Ibis could present quite a problem when mealtime rolls around and be wants to eat but won't budge from the TV. Soluijon: We all know that beer is tt constant companion of the football wattber When it comes to a beverage, but have you tried this mellow brew in your fondue? The addition of beer to the IJUll'in8de for oor beef brings out the ('ichness of the meat and to your cheese fondue combines the subtle, y e t ~lstlnctlve flavor of hops end malt. Prepare this delicious fanciue and serve by the TV. Don't forget to slt down yourself and dip and sip wiUt fotx!ue and beer -you may d..._eam to kwe ,football aa much as you do)'our favorite fellah! If be« 1s!i 't )'Olr bag, tben a hearty hamburger dish ~ In an unsliced loaf Of bread may trlng cbeers:from all tile fans. BEEF 'N BEER FONDUE 1~ pounds -beef tenderloin, London Broil or Porterhouse, cut in %-inch cubee. Marinade l cup~ l teaspoon minced onion 1h teupoon salt ' 11\ .._ vinegar \I• teaspoon lemon juice I clove mlahed garlic v. teaapoan oregaoo ¥• te~ thyme Combine marinade lngredlents end poor ov« C1,lbed meat. Soak for 2 to 3 hours. Pour _.x1ma1.e1y 3 indles salad oil btto fondue ~,and beat on top of stove. . Tranofer to fondue humor wlien oU ls hlt. Drain marinade from beef Juat before aervlng. Spear meet with fondue forks, cooking In bot oil until desired doneness. Yield : 4 serv~1. Sall<,. for Beef 'n Beer Fondue: Be.e<-Onlon Sauce : 3 tabieopoonl dry onion soup mix, 'la cup beer, 1 table- spoon prepared mustard , 1 cup IJOUr cream. Combine onion 80Up and beer, let stand 5 minutes. Add mustard and ~ ettam and heat tborougbly In 11118!1 sa~. Yield: approzimately lY.t cups. Chee.. 'n Beer Fondue: I lableepooo Oour; 1 clove garlic (halved); ~ cup be«; a ounces process Swiss -.. s!redded (! cups); 4 ounces natural Gruyere cheese, shredded (1 cup). Rub inside of saucepan with garlie, then dis- card garlic. Heat beer slowly. Mix flour with cheeoes and gradually add to i--, stir- ring comtantly until mixture ls ttllct and bubbling. Transfer to fondue pol. Dip w!th French bread. Yield 5 to I serving&. Beer-Radish Sauce: One a ounce package cream cheese, 90ftened; 2'1a tablespoons pr...,ared horseradish, i tablespoons beer. WbJp cream cheese and horseradish with be« until fluffy, Refrigerate until ready t.o serve. Yield: approximately l'la cur-. ILIMBURGER-STUFFED BREAD I round loaf (I pound) wisliced enrich- ed bread 1 pcxn>:I ground beef 1 cso (101" oonces ) Cheddar cbee>e soup 1 green pepper. diced I> cup diced celery 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon sa1t 1/4 teaspoon pepper 2 slices <lleddar cheese Cut top off bread and hollow out bot- tom half, forming crust shell. Tear enou8h of the bread thet has been removed from crust into small pieces to make 2 cur; reserve. Brown bee in skillet; mix in all ~ maining ingredients except reserved bread aod Cheese slices. Simmer 4 to 5 minutes. Stir ftrreserved bread. Spoon meat mixture Into crust shell. Ult cbee>e • .u.,.. in hall diagonally and place on top. Place bread on ungreased ba~ sheet and bake In preheated 350 degree oven s to 8 minutes,· or until cheese melts. Replace top; serves 6-8. .. ~· Obesity a Growing By LAURIJ!l KASPER • Of t111 DJfly Pllet ltatr Few Americans ever really ex· perlence "a hW'lger," according ·to Karen Owens, nutrlUonlst at the Orange County Medical Center. Rather, they have a "clock hunger" at luncfitime «" whenever dinner Is echedtJlod, ahe .. Id durlng the !Int lect .... In I UC! El<lenllon series on Controvenlal 1tSlH:I lo Nutrition and Health. ' She wu there to answer the question, "Are Americans Well Fa1?" She IA)'I lhey are, ln fad, per- bops too well fed . Nutrltloa, Mn. Owena uplllned, lo "wbot you eat and i-you .. t II." And ti> o1thqb moot peope -of.,._ cidy. belnc underfed. 1!111 ii reoll,y ..,q ... --Another lonn ol. malldtttlon fl .,..,,,..uitlon -~-And 1!111, she aald, hal -cielfcnoted .. the---f"-by Ille l'Ubllc --- Malnutrition is most convnonly associated with poverty. lt Is a problem of lhe diJtMbutlon of in· come. But it is also, she said, poor availability of water and foods , Ig- norance, polX' santt.ation. poor transportation and "In the U.S. especially, mltbeUefs and ml&- placed confidence." NO DEFICIENCIES Ytl, a 1Urvey of the ~y pocUU In 10 -did not -any nWitlonll dellclencle1. It dkl show, however. that the ldndl and dep-ee of raitrltloo varied from one ltlte ., --Foods. ll()da1, cultunll Ind 1qnphfcal upocta afiect nutrftloa u well, llbt said. 'lbt peo...ug1 of deflclen<I,. bt the Cal!fornla people arveyed _.. ao low, *' aid, -they -~--upbt•­ of tile_ ..... _ But kdld - that "44 ptrCelll of the .,.. ...S II percmt of tile -hid over • pwconl of their wei&lll .. body fa&." And thent fl, .... """· -~1n-1ow1--- Orange County's average Income, Mrs. Owens pointed out, is higher than thei st.ale average. And a survey of the public health nurses and doctors s howed "the only thing everyone could agree on was tb.nt overnutritk>n is a problem In Orange County." FOOD MEANINGS In addition to the r.flectlon of culture in food habib, she 11id, lood -take on different meai>-lngs. Food can Indicate lllqer; •U. fy"" the needl of the bod1 for pl\ylfolocleol jJWtb, malnt..,.... and ...,.,.; promotlnc friendli- and warmth; prom o t i n1 ln- 1«1>«..,.I ....,.._, 1 I• I a I llfto; brelkl"( doWn IOdll - lien; lndloltlrC --. r..iu.c -.n1y; promo11ni '"'"" ~: rtlJ..q teo1lo1; -or~: 111 a -~ of creaUvfty; l}'lllbolflmr t..tivelt and -. 11111 Ille 'l'Odflc rneonlnfl -"' lndMduals lar differfllt faodl. All football fans will cheer for a fondue spiked with beer (above) or a he-man hamburger 'sandwich-' Menace People today are Interested. ln ootrlUon. lhe aakt That wu: in+ dlcated by the clau enrollmel\i, wlllch hod reoched Its limit, as well IS 1he fact Chat Cbert are IO many "oolf-appolnted acM,...." attaining popularity kld1y. "'Nutrttloa does inllU<oc:e health but It -DOI aaure perfect hWth," a AlcL Sbe -them thll tberw la no ••aire-e.U. •• PROBLl!MS O..tal caries, '-I -Ind Iron dtfldency .re 11 lhe -ol her lilt of toda1'• outritlooal pttb- itllll. ~J fl fbt --lot-~Pl--must be flCllld, llbt AlcL But .......... ,......,. lit -'" uan. .... Olla, fl Ille "Olif-tltled, IOI!"'""" MIPI Ill nl llil dool -· Ille r1lld -*"" -· Nulrllleoll ~."""Mid, fl OllJmNdtoWllOYel'OOObillloo doUan Ir-<· "We'tl ~ to ttt bock, welt far the 1111 to talk and -llMI poillioll .. blln ...... aid. e.i bollovtl, "ft'I bilh time ,,. p GUI Ill( became a member ol the workl. .. • BEA ANDERSON, Editor w..,....,.,Y, O(MIMr 11, 1m "'" 11 Home News Schools Feeding On Data By DOROTHY WENCK Or .... C-tr MMI-. ........ _ Should schools provide food as 1o11ell as education ? This question has been debated for years, wi1h some school administrators saying that education wa!I their job, not feeding children, and others saying that hungry children cannot learn, therefore schools need to provide nutritious foods. The second groop appears to be ~ ning, with the financial help from the federal government'• ~at.lonal Scbool Lwicb Protiram. School districts which participate In the program receive a reimlu'Rment (I cecta per meal thil year) for eKh meal served. The maximum price of the lwr:h Is set bf tile governmeot. In addition, tile U.S. Deparlmtnt of "4P'1culture 1111)'1 lllld dialrlbuW foods I<> -Cll the pro- 1J'8111. Al a retult ot the conce:n for flun«er !!nd poor diets amon( low Income children, the federal gov.....-Cllso boo deve'°Ped a program wberebr tehoo1s can be reimbursed for ..mn, free ..- reduced JJrice meals to children who can- not lfford to pay the fllll price. POVERTY RATING To qualify for !Tee v -price meal.9, the family must complele 1 - IUpplied by tile school ... tiPI thllr JD. come. number of chUdrtn and .....,.. U• pen!<I. "Poverty'' 1.9 rited b7 I ICa1e developed by the gove1 m:oent.. Praently a famJly qf four with an an.- nu.al lncome of Ins than M.137 can qualify 1..-the r ... llchool IW><h. !Ma• ramllies qualify witb hiaber" lncomel. Cbfldren also cao qua!Uy for frM luncbes In the cue of I. tunliY emeram- cy such as major lllnen or temporary unem~. Reduced price tuncbn are avaUabli to famillea who exceed the poverty guJdeUne by no mote than JD percent . Jn 1plte of thJs nnanclal aulltance there 1tlll are 17 ,000 tchoola natJoowkSe: which have no achoo! food service fot thelr children. Many ol thete havti PO cafeteria f.acllltles. How about )'OUr IChool d iltrlct ! ~ It partl<lpote In the lcbool lunc:b J>l'OIP'Olll! If DOt, Wily not! UllllllY a cUatrtct which W1011 to ponJc:lpate eon OYercome pn>bleou of no food ....-locllitlel by: (I) olJta1nlnc !eden! filndl to help build them; (2) elllblilhlnc a cmnl tlldten wtwo food ~ preparod and d~trfbuted b J refrl&mted tnic:u to all -; (II contracting with 1 prlvote vendor to IUp- ply tn<als Oil I "IUiar bail, -UNIVERSAL SERVICE Several bills •re pending In the rederwt legislature which v..'OIJ!d move the nalioo towards unlvrnal 1ehool food servict. Two bil!.-l!R 529t·P•rkinl and S ,..._ Humphrey would provkto one nutri- Llonally adequate me11 I for all chlldrtn, klncfer&•r1•n through high sobool. Nutrl- Uon educatlon -..wld allo be lnt:luded. In lldditlon, 1Upplementary food could be provfd<d ~ • child wu economically or nutritionally ne<dy. n.. -of thil program •'OClld he high. but the b<ttflta might outwe41h the -· Rttutta ol the-!kt.ate National Nulrt· tlon Survey, which hive juat betn publilbed, &how lhlt ac.hool IU6Ch pro. granu were a v~ry lmprwUnt pan ol nouriahmenl for many chikl.rm. Partlcul1rty In low-lnoonw ICatn, tchool lune~ conlribuefld 1 .ubltanclal snportkln « IOl•I nutritnl tnt.ake ot. manf ICbool dllldtm. QUESTIONS W'Y, ARE ASKED Q. My chlldrtn all HI lunch II tt:hoot beau.If I lhlnk the hot lunrhrt u~y 1e• are a rol blrgaln. l·lmrf!!vrr, It upe;e1s me to ittt food ••lltd. Y.'hy do lhey INl.tl on Rrvin, lbt chUdrm foods Uk• t'OC>kf<I \tfellblel. tff.n whtn Che chlktrt'n It'll tht c1 lt1tria workm 1hat Owy doo1 want thtmt A. In otdtt to recti Vf' fundl fmm U. ledonl ,.........,. tor tbe chuol lunch Pf'OVl111· tchooll m~ "'"' a nwal which ,,_, the nutritional -ol I '1l'PO A" lunc:b Such I iuncb must lndode a bolf-plnl ol milt, ......... of brtod • lu ••altm and tidttr (II Q\lfptlfW. ~ °" ol •t • ieul t.,, ffl<llbleo Gr frulta, and I maln dilh wt1 h at fttt • kunce len'lnc o1 a pro1 in-nm 1ooc1 T1le ltd< ol fluilllb1y ol tllt '11PO A• ...... --trltlclaed, Ind ,,.-q ..... ol .... IJPOI ol lunci>ol •~ bolrc -... -,. <'-"may tab pl*S bt tlmt. M-le. why "" ....... to -dllldrta tl•t Ibey tab all lood llltnd ""' tut ti lt .. t .... bit ,,,.,, nil)' !Intl tllat -ol °"' food tllty tblnlt tho1 dlsllk• ...... pMty IJOOd. r CDiam onds ' C ut ; By JO OLSON ·rhc i:urrt•11tl~ popular shai:ies are the I Of ,.. 010.-,. ... , st.it µrar and 1narquise cuts, ~1elnick said, 'Nbat•1 the greatest occupatl(Jnal and e1t1erald cuts also arc c:oni ing back. !ha.u.rQ in,~ a diamond cutter? LIKE WOOD Getting an ulcer, according to Juck Cutting a diamond is much Hke cutting Melnick , a sofi-spe>ken Belgian "'ho has a piece or wood. he explained. The 'been cleaving and cutting dian1onds for jeweler must worry about the grain of more than 30 years in the Uniled States. the stone and any knots it may have, cut- Melnick is one of 8 dying breed of rnen. ting with lhe knowledge that diamonds in a diamond cutter who does every part n£ reality are destructible. the tedious job from start to firush . "Dla1nonds are a crystal and crystal is "Autoinath>n is taking over." hC' ex-grown," 1'1elnick: explained. The stones plained. '"lbei'e 1s no future for h"nd·cut-are cut and polished on a cast Iron wheel ting." with a mixture of diamond powder and While Btldum was the diamond center oil as the catalyst. of the "''ortd before World war JI. India The diamond is put on the grain for has be<."Om·~ prominent in the last few cutting, ht said because it will \utn grey years because of inexpen.si \'e labor, if 11 is faced the wrong way and the stoae J\.1elnick stated. will cut right through the iron wheel. ' His career began at an early age ~'hen \.Vhcn a diamond cuUer begins work on he was 8 youth in Europe. His rather and an uncut diamond. he first looks at its grandCather before him were jewelers. shape. iJe then looks for imperfections, but tht'y did not "sit at the bench." then saws iJ in several pieces. Cleaving, which is done by ha nd with a ·Ev E RV PBAS~ chisel, gels the imperfections out, · J.telnJck deCl'ded to learn every phase Melnick explained. -,.lf the trade.»0 he could be his ow~ boss, POLI SHED ON WH EEL he revealed . 1 • After an apprenticeship of three years. • . ~hen the diamonds are shaped for he worked as a cleaver fo r 15 years, finishing, they a~e rounded on a !~the "dividing large uncut diamonds 50 lhe then cut an~ polished o~ the ca~t iron flaws would be removed and the stone "·heel, examined many tunes during the could be used to greatest advantage. procc~s. After the start of \\lorld War 11, "It 1s then ready _ror :;ale, ready .t,o be ~1elnick came, to America and landed in ':"orn by all the ladies 1n the land, the New York.. There, he could not follow his Jeweler said. . . : trade of cleaving because it was not d_onc. . Why d?C.s Meln1c~ do this nerve-wrack- -in New York, so he turned to the cutting, ing precision work. . . " . -polishing and setting of diamonds. ""l. h~~e to .~ak~ a living, he ~1led . : Afte r a year in New York1 he joined his But 1t s fasc 1nahn~ too. Thaie 1s the :brother-in-law in California fu take ad-pleasur~ of accomplishment. If yo~ have :vant~e ot the sunny climate and find a certai:i p~oblem and ,700 solve 1t, you ,new opportunities have pride 1n yourself. · Happily, his wife Tony is not like the ·BELGIAN FRIENDS shoemaker's wife Y:ith no shoes. • ';lt was bard to leave the few friends "She has diamonds, cert a i n I Y,' • from Belgium who came over with me," Melnick said. "She has rin&s and pins he reminisced. with stones I have cut. and she has a dia- : Now, he hai established a small but mond l cut for my mother. And 1 gave : thriving business in Los Angeles' her a l ~z-carat engagP.JleDt ring." · caHfornia Jewelry Mart. Why docs Melnick advocate the · When Melnick works with a diamond, purch ase or diamonds? ·precision is the key word. "Beipg a "Diamonds truly are forever. They're precision job, I like' to keep it ).recisio11.i like paintings. They should',be bought as . You should do it 1li.t Ieast ·,90 tperttnt an investment and a~ a.matter of sen- right," he explained . timent. The largest 4iamond he has ever cut ''Diamonds really ,are a girl's best was •a 54-carat stone for a large, old-time friend.'' • · , Los Angeles firm, and he has cut many Melnick appeared ,at South Coast Plaza : 10-15 carat stones through the years. d~g the British ·EXJ!I?. J· . -· . • ) '4 Profit .1 In. Bag· Angela Adalll• and Bar· bara M 111 e r Oeft to right) are amon g early ~tomers for assorted candies offered for sale by Mrs. Curtiss Buttke for Zeta Beta Chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha. Proceeds will aid IJro. , ited Care Center. Arti- ficial Kl..,ey Founda· tlon, G.,-ten G r o v e, Candy Ciq' be ordered for d~ijfery Ill? time bef<a pitoween. • • • • ' ~- 1 • .., 1 on • Nerves of Steel Daily Pilot Photos By Richard Koehler I You r Horoscope Tomorrow Cutting and polishing a diamond takes '1ots of !Oot· Ing," says Jack Melnick, Belgian jeweler wbO is trained in all phases of t h e art from cleaving to setting. He shows the tiny work of art to Billy Yel· ton of Santa Ana (at left). Aquarius: Patience Required THURSDAY OCTOBER 12 By SYDNEY Oi\1 A.llR Pisces has a soft touch but certainly Is not n "soft touch." Natives or this 'l.Odiacal sign are subtle , mysterious and glamorous. Pisces is o( the water element and these natives exhibit a tendency to easily put on weight. Pisces is a~soclated wilh the number 7, is relate<! to the pl11net Nep- tune and Is the nat.ural 12th sign. Pisces persons often play nillcanl roles bchlnd the \~!net .. 'nw! women are ~ r\d UJc men hive an awo oi yl\ery. and check legal agreements. Hefuse to be painted into cor- ner. GE i\11NI (May 21 -June 2{)}: Lie loy,·. Play wailing . gam e. There are numerous barriers. Know it and examine va rious aspects of any proposal. Past commitment affects current action . Jr you don"t know what to do, do nothing. CANCER (June 21 -J uly 22 ): Ge t basic cho res out of way. Delay now could result in loss. Aries indi vidual C<>uld play 1 prominen t role. Grasp pot.en-. Ual. Don't be discouraged by, aSM>Ciate who sings blues. Obstacle can be: overcome. I U:O (July 21.Auf. 22 ) "VOWlg person may confldf problem. Don't cast firs RIES (Marth 21-April 19 ): stone. New approach I member may dl81lUss necessary. CrtaCive e!. f or i which had been blo:cked c:Wll ble Jo u r, n e Y · 'Be find new outlet. Snia greeter dlpklmallc. Compromise la In independence or thought, I ordQr. Don't force your views. tioo. By In& ~ good tiste .. r, JOU VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. ~) , ultlmatf Rain. Your own Change 1teenery. Rout.Int 1111!• proaranl ll lllbjed can become • I i g h 117 I ' • ,' ' toJcrablc. You need to let up, to rela.L Emotions may be TA US (AprJUl~l\111)1 211): brulaed. Bui you can be on Pro of eoille, jQJnt (IJ!l~ , road IO TL'COvery. IJon 'I chaie to ·domtnale. Main-lotlng . proposition. Welc::onw, Dstlc ou~. No one lure of adventure. to lie.le!,.., lftytblni-U8RA IS.pt. 2.1-0cl. 22): platter. Know lhls Relatl~ could be interfering \ in your personal life. Key is to have sense of humor but to know when to draw Line. You are not trapped. Know tt and act like you know it. Timing improves and you get pro- verbial "break." SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-Nov. 21): Conserve a n d consolidate. Take inventory. T igh t e n budget. Be thorough. Don't overloo k what seems to be mlnor detail. One who makes prorruses may be rinancially embal't'llBsed. Don't expect somethtng tor nothing, SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Rely on your OWTI: iudimonl. Othera may be committed In too lnan'y h tiOQI. Gembai and Vtrgo could be In plelunl. Stretir ' ln- d<pendellOe and perscliaiity. uae to be lied down wilh al U.glt. t . • APRICOl\N (!ltc. 22-Jan. necessary. Pisces pe rsoo plays prominent role. You gain ac- cess to infonnalion of value. PISCES (Feb. IS-Marth 20 ): You get Cavor recently re- quested. Wlth It, you alao ha\•e more respon&ibil ity. Don't ask for more lhan you can handle. Applies to personal and pro- feSsional a r e a s . CaJl'lco ra could be in picture. IF TODAY IS Y O UR BmTHDA Y you have fine sense of humor, have natural knack for e n te r t a I n l n g. December should be one of your most slgtlificant month! of 1m. Many persons mis- judge your gentle nature. ,wJien chips are dowa, you can .. loUgh. Short Cuts llomeotlc adjusjment ls turtd. Find out where it ls you want to be .,.. an~ why. The sliorl .. hort hllr coming Doc' io:_itt u !CC" fall C!CC" lhooe wbo can 1 '9' YOUnt • _,. ill 11· ·•-• an d Proptrt.y app I may be In - plctuN. Be Wary bf' one who aopbLIUcfLted. 1weet-tafka:. Look b e n eath l:ndotted by piCIHtttlng sur!ace.· ~~ K II cut to be AQVAAlVS (Jan. 21J.Fob. Q;.'b;Ci = W1" .:.~~ II): F.rl<JJd may ust .be&\'Y·. · Ult ,,..;l\ll!le~ft i. ~red to handed melh<>ch. ·Bi p.\Ucnl. liiibit r...,.arcl and .tlot. curl· Remember good limes ol pltst. loC r,.....anj over ao ltiglitly at RoailsUc allllude now Is the bottom tlf of Ille tors • • ~ . I • • .. Life Worth Living F~r Somebody Else DBAJ\ NN LANDERS: Thi3 letter ia for aU t people who are thinking of kill· lng ~rnselves -or have already tried and f11ledi. I am •tck of reading about you. I don't care how wretched your life ls or bow miseri:lble you feel. If you have no in· terest in living !or yourself, then live for somebody else. l.Jve for t~ people who loved life and died ~ )'QUllg. Live for the men who died l.n a semc1ess war 10,000 mile.s from home m 90llle damned rice paddy. Llvt for those 58,000 who were tilled in highwaY, accidents. Every one of them would lib to bt alive today. ' I ooce lbought of suicide-because I bad a crushing disappointment. I was sure life wasn't worth living. After some serious soul searthing I decided I had oo right to kill myself. I didn't give myself JJfe and I had no right to put an end to it. So I flushed the 50 sleeping pills down the toilet and went to work teaching retarded ·children. I will never think of suicide agal~ The6e kids need me. I now know wl:iat I'm here for . -Rye, N:EAR RYE;;· You've told your story to mWlons of people. I'm sure Y°'!: con- nected wUb ma1')'. My thanks and, con- gratuladda for laying It on the llDe. For someone out there -today's column may well be the mo•t Important tblog yoo:'ve read lo yodr en'ure ure. And Isn't THAT a priceless 'word? Llfe. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since in- vestigations seem to be in vogue these days I wish someone ,_.ould take a look at what is happening ln government hospitals these days. Thousands of dollars are squandered by persomel who are entertaining themselves wlth red bot clandtsUne affaln. For uample: Three years ago a married physician started lo flirt with an unmarried nune in her 30s. Everyone ia the hospital knew what was going on. The nurse was rewarded by receiving tbree promotion.!! in the Psst two years. The physician is now one of. the top mucky-mucks. 1be government pays these two creeps a total of $101000 a year. ·~ We know for a fact that at least 2.5 per- cent of their time is spent in a locked room. Multiply It by what Is going on in other hospitals and you have some neat total. Talk about clipping the taxpayers, this takes the cake. -TEED OFF IN MEMP!IlS. DEAR TEED: I don't think Ralph Nader will break bis neck rushing to In- vestigate tills lituatlon. It's a human problem that exl1ts wherever members of the opopslte sues work-and play. In fact, most people's playing starts at work.. Ann Landers discusses lccnage drink· ing -its myths, its realities. Learn the facts by reading. "Booze and You -For Teenagers Only" by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents in coin and a Jong, stamped. self· addressed envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. MRS. GERRIE . ' ' . , ,. .. ~ttdAJ. Octobt'r 11. l'i72 DAILY PILOT %7 Vows Exchanged in Fall Rites GERRIE-HARRINGTON Vicki Frances Harrington became tile bride of Wllli>m Scott Gerrie in ceremonies conducted· by the Rev, Dr. Philip G. Murray in the Com- mwlity C h u r c h Coogrcga- tional , Corona dcl Mar. The bride is the daughter of Mrs, Florence Krolak of Newport Beach and John D. 11arrington of L.as Vegas. Her husband 's parents are 1'1r. and Mrs. William S. Gerrie of Newport Beach . Maid d honor w a s P.tiss Denise Mlll1tean and brides- maids were the Misses Kathy Campbell, Bonnie Randall and Danielle Muntean. Dean Ger- rie served as best man and ushers were Anthony Paley, Fredrick De Ooedt and Danny Moore. Flower girl was Rhonda Genie and ring bearer was Steven Krolak . After honeymooning in the British Columbia, the newlyweds wUJ reside in Newport Beach. DA VIS-REESE First United f\-1 et hod is t Church. Costa l\1esa was the .!letting ror the nuptials or Kay l Rcbccea ReeSe and Roger Paul Davis. The Rev . Dr. Roger H. 11uebner directed the \'OW ex- change for the daughter of h1r. :-ir1d !\!rs. W. Cully [{etsc of Tustin and the son oft.fr. and ~!rs. 11ugh 8 Davis or fr\'ine. ~trs. Steve Maxey was lhe 1natron of honor. ;ind bridesmaids were the ~1isseJ Beth Heml<Ulson, Monica L3n· da u and Pam ~1cKeniie. Serving as best man '4'0S Maxey, and ushers were Pat Pattison, Richard Davis and Tom Spear. FoUowlnG a tmeymoon in the Bay Arca. the newly'4•eds wUJ makt! their home lrt Cosla ~ina. B o t h ar~ graduates of Co"""1 dcl Mar High School and attt:ndt.><l Orange Coast College. OWEN-WOOTON ~1rs. 1lu1h Wooton or Cos!a Mesa and Ralph Luzern~ Owen of Berkeley "'ere mar· Milestone Observed A hundred friends In civic and church organiz.1- ried dur!ng ptdcn ceremonies al her home. The Rev Loren Flickinger of the U n I t y Church. NewpOrt Beech of. tic lated. Attl!llda.J1ts "ere ~1r. and Mn. Richan! Elgenheer, Mn. Lelrtnd Yi' o o t o n . Anne J-:igenhtt.r. Robert Coons and llcrn1u11 Diehl. 'l'hc ne w ~1rs. Q\\·en al- tendtd Manhall UnJvenlty. 11unlington. W. \1a. a nd lhe National College cl Education. .. !er husband attended Cornell lini•ersitr. The newlywedJ v.111 make their home in El Cenito. relati\·es auended the and 50\h "·edding anniversary rece ption in the Peek Family Calonial Tcrral'C Roon1, Westn1instcr. hosted by ,.tr. and Mrs. Bert lfyde for her parents. Mr. and ;\lrs. ·George l\1einhardl of !\t'wport Beach. tiOfl..'I. 11ley were 1n11rried in Inglewood and he retired aftPr -- 32 years as a blacksnrith in f\tidway City. Long-time residents or Southern California. t h e Meinhardt! have been active The 1·1ydes and their four children rrom Pagosa Springs, Colo .. welcomed 01hcr oul-0f· towncrs, f\1rs. Rosina Bennett and f\1r . and r..trs. Bob Ben- nett, all of Eugene, Ore., and f\1r. and 1'.frs. J-1 arr y f\-leinhardt of f)clta. Utah. ====;,1-;=-=----==--="-'-=-=il DANCE STUDENTS ! I THE • '--" • n..,. NEW LOOK! e loflet, Tap• 1., llrlMI e Sl9tl"f O.tftts is •t ... WE HAYI UNUSUAL m l/'/J. HALLOWEEN allie j ACCESSORIES WIGS Tap N' Toe & Be•uty S•lon Bo11tique 2MM1· L 17 .. St. C.... M--Ml-l441 444 w. lfTll St .• c.... ..... 1•,,..-M•.-a NeWiMnl I• Hit.,_ S.-- JT7.l(c Slci§h HUNTINGTON HAltlOUlt CHllSTMAS WOllSHor DAILT '""9 Chrk'-C.-. h1 lrc ...... JM..-4 ,_...... Our• AloM "PAK-ETTIS" T w• u..USU"-L lit CHltlSTMeS C..ndl" & Y•m1 OHLY JS O•TS UH11L. Persian RUGS Parties, Talks Head Agendas TNl.•kt. IG :l04 '4MS4~4~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~:;:~~~~~=, PFAFF Aut+.entic Hend Mede, Imported -New •nd vinte9e 1•1ection,. THIS WEEK ONLY KASHAN 4'6" x 711" R"'ll· $550. KERMAN 5375 Penl•n Rug1 & Imports 2115 E. COAST HWY. fAIH1llll ....... J CORONA DEL MAR 675-7340 SC Juniors South Coast Juniors-of Foun· tain Valley will participaW in "II Clfnlomti. 111 TOOlr Cu..,'· • si~;~~: 1'11 E. 17111 SI~ Hlllfren Sq. M2.JUI' CHll Mae OF COST A MESA a delightful budget salon iuhere beautiful hair sty les begin . PRICE LIST MONDAY THRU THURSDAY FRID,..Y. S"TURO ... Y, SUNO"Y PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER Shampoo •nd Set ···-····· . ···················-··············· $2.50 Permanent Wave -···························-··--·······-·-··-··· 7.50 Tint ...... . ..... ·-······-············-··--·············-·-····· 5.50 Bl each Touch-up .. ·················--····-··········-·--··-...... 10.SO Frosting -···-· ·········-···· ···-·········-·--··········--······--14.00 Semi Permenent l•shes ·······-··-···-·········· ·····-···· 10.00 haircuts •t.50 1695 Irvine Ave. -Costa Mesa Corn•r of E•st 17th St.-Abov• L• C•v• Resteur•nt 645-1050 548-9986 Open 7 O•ys • w .. k and Most E venlng1 • _ "Take tloe El..-tor'' the Artesia-Cerritos \Voman's Club's Walk for Mankind Saturday , Oct. 14. at the L-:s Cerritos shopping center . Mtney raised will support Project Conc ern and the Helpline Youth Counseling in U¥.! Artesia-Cerritos area. Night Owls Newport Beach Night Owls of the Hoot 'n Holler Roost will host the San Diego group Sunday Oct. 15. at 2 p.m. in the Bethel Towers Social Hall, Costa Mesa. Hadassah Mr. and Mrs. Gary Resnick's Fountain V a 11 e y home will be the setting for the next meeting of Harbor Hadassah at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 17. Service A membership tea is plan- ned for 8 p.m. Monday. Oct. 16. in the Villa Park home of ~1rs. Bob Everakes for the Jewish Family Service of Orange County. D'l'ERY 0\111 SI El' -~l:ll NA llOO -KIMEL EOWAROS -GERBERICH - PF FLTERS ··US. KEDS Oanc• We"' bV 0..n•~•~ .. ":.tpezlo Odnce ShQes C.PT'9CllV• Slleft ler C"Udr911 225 E. 17tt. St. Cott• Mna • 541-2771 HARBOR VIEW CENTER IAN JOA9UIN HILLS ID 1 lllldl •e•t If M"CA- (-r lletlllll!I lt!U"'I M4-0IJI Irvine Women Lr.a<ling a richer life lhrou!'i1 hypnosis wi!l be the subj ect of S. H. stanley, PhD when he <iddresscs the Irvine Women ·s Club at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday , Oct. 17. in the University Community Associa tion Clubhouse. Beta Alpha Pi Mrs. Tom Prough will host tbe 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct . 17 , meeting or Beta Alpha Pi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi in her Garden Grove home. Pledge ritual will be conferred on new members. HB Junior• Provisional members of the .. luntington Beach J u n I o r Women were "k~dnaped " for the annual orientation coffee and breakfast. Symposium An open sy mposium for all women in the Southwestern Region will be hosted by the Department ur \V o m e n ' s Ministries of the Garden Grove Commw1i1y Church. Themed Roads to RadiBnt Living, the day-long event will begin with a Continental breakfast in the gardens of the church. Topics and speakers on the morning panel discu.ssion will be Dr. William S. Banowsky , president of P e pp erdinc University. Living Creatively Through Accomplishment on Campus: Harry Dykstra Jr., president of the Union Really Mortgage Co., C hi caRO. Harmony In the Executive Suite, and Robert L. Vernon, a captain in the Los Angeles Police Department , Insight! on Establishment and Youth. Ftishions by Georgia Buliock \\'ilh be shown during a luncheon. Harbor Key Provisionals ol Harbor Key, a support group of the Child Guidance Center or Orange County. will be honored during an orientation luncheon at noon Tuesday. Oct. 17, in the Newport Beach home of ~trs. Theodore Maravice. Prior to the \unC'h eo n honorees will be introduced to procedures or the thrift shop and then will tour the reuler Yihere they will meet the staff. Provisionals are the Mmes. Bruce Denton, L .. T. Ary, Phillip G. f'!tilarty, Robert Wieser, Raymond Cu 11 y , Robert Batwn, Nick Pastor, S. W. Ferber, Steven Donahoe, C. B. Howell , M. G. Dana. Richard Hunsaker. William Coulter. A. Donald Goedekc, John R. Young. Thomas Joflt!S and Sardls L. Bobo. We "Ready" Rentals e c t.•A•INO • l"•INTING e "LUMllNO e WALL WASHIHG e CA•,.•T SMAMf'OOINO e WINDOW WAIMINO wea-'& --··-,... ,._,. SewinCJ Center & Needlecraft 1548 Adams in Costa Melo 979.7944 Wftt of Horbor ltvd. across from Coco's lntourwt Daily, 10 -1; lund•y, 12·5 SEE THE WORLD.fAIOUS PUSH-BUnDI ·~1!1~1 TEN PUSH BUTTONS M•ll• every type of stretch stitch by pu1hin9 them elon• or in combi11atioft. C re e t • oYef 1,100 diff•ret1t p•tterns with c.ombin•tlot1 of pu1h buttonl. THE MATCHMAKER M•tche1 pl•ids •nd checlr:s perfectly eYerytim•. It's •cfu. •lly • second foot th•t feed• the feiH-ic from the top 1i- rnult•neou1ly wtth th• bottom f••d ••• Gre•t for lin9erie , , . On~ from Pf•ff, V15n OUR COMPLETE SAYE UPTO IENTAL READIER 645-4820 Ut W. 1tth It. CMta M ... NEEDLECRAFT Dept. ' e SnTCHDT e IM•ODllY e lfllDUPOtWT • IU• MAKING FALL IS WAITJlllG FOR YOU AT ..•. ' > . ) ~ RUG CANVAS Wm4 PUICHASE OF RUG YARN 01 OFF ON AU. MERCHANDISE IN nu STORE NII IJlllTIIYCnOlfl Offill GOOD 4 DAYS ONLY -HUllY IN! FAMILY GROUPS •• Jutt 95c for AIU A BIG 8 x 10 INCH NATURAL COLOR PORTRAIT FRI.· SAT. OCT. 13 -14 Houn: 10 to 5 95c ~ YOUN ·_,1.AND ' Harbor Cellter 0 .. ,...... ... -· ,.,_, 2300 Harbor • Costa MHG .. ·-"....,.. _, M-.-... • ~~~1:11! ms~~l(r~ ~ "..~~,.,. -~~'l·~::E? m~~~-~~~·:t.v~~IJ~.~ OAJLY PILOT S l N C Wtdoif\dly Octo ber 11. Jll7"' ~~~~..::_=--:'----=~- Membership Drives Successful IS -segin Working • EDITOR'S NOTE: A CHI· utt1n d~ t(I Newport Beach, Cotta Mcl'O, LGQut'4 Beaclt oncJ Mi.ssiu11 Viejo parettt-teac/1er organ1z11- tions wilt appear 11L the IJA/t.Y P/'WJ' eucl! ·we(•/.; lnformatWn tn1ust be rl!· ceivec! by th.t wonien 's dC'· rart111ent or Afrs. c:arecl, Smitli. 1146 Ctntelkl Place . Nct,..purt Beucb blJ 5 p .111 Tliursday for pttblica!ioJj 'r cd11esclay. Adams PTA ~lrs. WetKleU "'illlums Presi®l>t COMIN UP: Back-t<>-school night with a 11¥>rt business meeting· at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. l9, will be rot1ow1.>d by classroom vis i I n I i o n Refreshments w i l I bt.• served ... ~1 rs. Paul Kee will represent Adams P'TA at n famny life \vnrkshop . . Mrs. Robert Erdrvan 1vill chair the bicycle safl'I Y day in conjunction with the Costa Me.'\a Police Depart- ment Wednesday, Ocl. 25. REPORTS: r-.rrs. G r a n t McN iff Jr.. f\trs. Ho~rt Gianerakis and Mrs. Arthur Rosa were ratified as new I boord rnembers ell the October board 1neeling. Bear PFO ~lrs. Hobert Ballin:;cr President cori11\(; l!P: (; l' n er u I 111eet111i; at 7 p.m. Thursday , Ut•l. 19. in the 1nultipurpose roon1 \\'ill be fol!O\'t'ed b.v cl assroom visitation for all part•nts. . Volun!ecrs arc needed to \\'Ork in U1e learn- ing centC'r from 9 a.m. to noon or £ron1 noon to 3 p.m. Interested persons 1nay call .\1rs. ~1ck ~ikols al 557-1084. California PTA ~lrs. \\'llliam ctapel President CO:'lll~C \ "P: Association 1vill rncct 111 co njunction with b~n·k·to-~ch11ol night Tucs- dn.v. Oct. 17. •it 7 p.m. Plans are under way for the L"arnival to take p I ace Fridav. Oct. 20. Donations for the flea market and boutique shoppe arc needed . ~1r~. La\1·rcnce \Vardrup n1ay be contacled at 540-9323 for infor mati on or p1l'kllp College Pk . PT A l\lrs. Thurman Br1i1noou President COi\t!NG UP: Parents are Invited to attend open house al 7:30 11.1n. Tuesday, Oct. 17. in the multipurpose room. Refrcshtnents will 00 served. HEPOH'rS: \\1inne rs of the membership drive with 100 rercent are classes ur the f\1mes . Patricia 'Thom pson, r.-1arion Warmer, Nonnnn Lumi an , Belly Luer. Calvin Farner. Albert Golub llncl Murray Ridlen, along \vith the r-.1i.ss Sheryl Crockey . Mary Jane McArthur and lloxaMe Hublnger Eastbl uff PFO ~lrs. Eugene Kovach President COr-.11NG UP: Snoopy Con1e ll omc will thcrnc n1em - bership drive that begins Monday. Oct. 16, announces J\1rs. Lew Spruance. chairman ... Book fair and poster contest with the theme Winnie the Pooh 1'uesdlly. Oct. 17. and \Vednesday. Oct. 18, in the school library. Authors al}- pea ring Tuesday and speak· Breakfasting Out West On the trail to \Voodland School's Western f'lapjack Feed and Carnival is Jeff Thorp, \Vhile Karen Thorp '"orks the chuck wagon kitchen. 'J'he event \Viii take place from 8 a.in . to 2 p.111 . Saturday, Oct. 14. Co· chairtncn arc ~1rs. Don E. Allred and ri.tr s. David Robcrl'i. Ing to Utlrd grade student.I will be Terry Shannon and Charles Pa1zant. Theodore Taylor will discuss his book "The Cay" for students In fourth and firth grades. On Y.'ednesday, Alice Wellman . author of "Tatu and the l·loney Bird" and "African Tale". along with Joan Russell Picard, author of ··Adventures on the Wind" will meet with the parent! and autograph b o o k 9 purchased . Prizes will be awarded in the poster con- test and ~·inners may select a book of their choice. Harbor View PFO i\lrs . Robert Curci President C'O.\l lNG UP: Bark-to-school < night at 7:30 p.m. Wed-~. nesclay, Oct. Ill ... Volunteers are need e d for the upcoming camivt1I . Mrs. Honald Robinson , ways and n1eans chairman may be contacted at 673-8120 for further information . Harper PTA !\lrs. fWy Pfeiffer President COMING UP: Back·l<>-school nigbl at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 17, in the multipurpose room. New teachers will be introduced and classroom visitation will follow ... Rehearsals for the December PTA progran1. i\1usic from Walt Disney will Lake place each Monday at 2;45 p.m. in the m u I ti p u r pose room. Volunteers are needed as rehearsal assistants and set builders. Helpers may con- tact Mrs . Bob Den ton at 548- 8494. REPORTS : Appointed to serve on the executive board are Mrs. Bob Lindsay. historian, and Mrs. Kenneth Boheim. sec.on d vice president. . . Mrs. Ro y Pfeiffer ... end Mrs Boheim attended the council meeting reatureng speakers on the Special Education Programs ;.1vailable in the Newpor1- Mesa Unified School District. Lincoln PT A ~1rs. Deane Bottorf President COMING UP: Mrs. Willlam Wright. sixth grade room mother chairman annouifees an orientation meeting at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 18, in the gym . Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Victor MaUoff. h o s pitality chairman. .. Back-tt>-school night ha s been postponed to November with the date to be an· oounced. Linda Vista PTO !\1.rs. Richard Nlederbause President COf\1ING UP : Ha I \owe c n carnival from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28. will feature costume parade, tricycle races, confetti eggs, pumpkin decoration jind a country store. Monte Vista P~ Mrs. Thomas E. llern~on President COMING UP : Family life workshop al 9:30 a . m . tomorrow in the Newport Beach home or f\1r s. lrVlin Kempler ... back-to-schoo l night ror parents at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17 New port Hts . PT A Mrs. James G. Blain President COMING UP : Baek-lo-school night and business meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 17. Paularino PTA l't1rs. Paul Dumaln President COMING UP : Back·t .. school nigi\i )'Ill be lollowed by a =t buslnesa me eti n g T , Oct . 17. REPQ : Prizes In membe.rShip drive w e r e awarded to the classes or Miss Sally Talia and C.eorge Robertson ... Certificate of excellence wns awarded 10 Paulftlno PTA for lhc 11171 · 72 publlclly re.cord book ..• Betly Cr o c k e r coupons wUI be collt<t<d by !he studeot CQUOCll l.n onte.r to provide • kidney macblne In memoty of Carl Vrebalovlch. principal or Presidio School . • . Bolrd members ratified Rn! the Mmd. Richard Culvt:r, Dill Campbell aod Norm 11 n Polizzi • • • Chriatmaa boo· tlque Ls being organized un· der teh leadenhlp of Mrs. William Brannick. Presidio PT A l'ttrs. fluJh Tbo1np,on Prulde:nt " . '. For a Change of Pace, Make Up a New Face .., Customers at the Marlners PFO ice cream social Friday, Oct. 13, can h ave a change of face at the new make-up booth. First customers are Lisa Mc· Gavran Oeft), 'vho chOOses a Raggedy Ann look , and JiU Durkee, a clown. Airs. Newton Wayne is the art.· ist. Proceeds from the 4:80-7:30 p.rn. event, chaired by Mrs. Charles McGavran, "?ill be u~ for Scholar- ships and a sc hool gift. J • . :1 COMING UP: Back-to-school. - night and sho"rt business 1 meeting at 7:30 p . m . \\lednesday, Oct. 18. REPORTS : Mrs. Phil I\.ilmer,I membership chairir.an an·1 noun<:es that the drive l reached HlO percent. All classes will receive an iccl cream part y. Mrs. .Jor i Robinson's fifth grade clt1ss was the first lo reach 1he1 goal. A tree will be pla;1\ed for the class in me1nory uf Ct1rl Vrebalo\'ich former princi pal. Pr ince of Peace PTF ~1rs. R. l\I. Rossington President COMING UP : Back-to-school night al 7:30 p.m. 1'uesday. Oct. 17. Entertainment \Yill be provided by the choir under the direction of ~1rs. Norbert Prechel. Booster! cards will be sold . St. Joachim PG \ f\1rs. John E. Sto11cmun President COMING UP : Bicycle safety program featuring a film and talk by the Costa Mesa Police Department at 9 a.m. Friday, Oct. 13. REPORTS : Sale of safety flashlights at $2 has been ex· tended . Mrs. Ch a r I es Zamora may be called at 548-6592 for orders. Proceeds \11ill be used for the athl etic fund ... Donation of Blue Chip stamps arc needed. St. John Au x. l\1rs. Harold llansen President COMING UP: Regular monthly meeling at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Mrs . Art h u r Martinet, chairman of the annual Leprechaun·s Pot of Gold Carnival will discuss final plans for the event Fri- day through Sunday , Oct. 20-1 22, al school. Se rving on the committee are the Mmes. Gerald Walton . Jos eph Schulist, Thomas !\fatheus, Albert Roble s, John McNamara and r-..1argaret Lynch. f\1arlinez and Robles are serving on the finance 1.>ommitlec Sonora PTA Mrs, Thomas Elicker President COMING UP: Back·to-school night 'Tuesday. Oct. 17 nt 7:30 p.m. Winners In the PTA membership drive Wiii be announced at a short business meeting preceding classroom visitation. TeW inkle PTA , Mrt. Rllpli Booget Prtaldenl COMING UP: llllck-twchnol nll!ht 11 7 toni&ht A brlrr bu•s mecUnf( wlll tak,. pl•ci In l!otwell Hall and PrA membertlllp1 •lll be aold throughout the C.Vf'- nlng L lee Clpades Chalt>t 1k1tln rink -has b e f' n re~rv from S:30 lo &·:lO p.m. Fffday, Oct. 13. Victo a PTA ' l\frt. !l'om Li.ltc,avl h \>re~dent REPORTS ! Mrs. Ric~ Welt .. IK.'<.'Ond g~ade cla119 won tho Septemti.l! paper drive. A tree dootjed by llollllter't Nursery 1'ns planted on Ule l('huol grtiund" 11nd a plRque was presented ln their honor. SAVET077%0N designe.r woolen fabrics VALUES TO s15.00 s349s489 Various weights running from perfect light weight c repes lo mediun1 weight novelties and heavy weight suitings and coatings. Select from top fashion colors that have been designer selected. SPECIAL PRICES FOR ONE WEEK ONLY Polyester Knits VALUES TO $10.00 Jacquards $ 389 1 Solids in various 359 r4ovelties Stitches $ 60 inches wic>e YO. 54"-60 " Wide YO. Burlington's Best T ricot 100% Nylon Perteet Lingerie Fabrics Many colors $2.2 5 Value $115 Reg. Price S1.69 YD. ~-..:'o;';:.'"..:•;c;:nchcs w1dtl ___ __- Keynote tor Blouses Children's B t. t wea r and great linings a IS e Penn•nent Press Sold elsewhere at $1.~9 98¢ YD. "5 Inches wide Washable Woolens 54., wide s3s9 Reg. Price $4.59 , YO. Corduroy s11s I Thick 'n $195 No-Wal e YD. Thin YD. $2.59 Value 45" wide $3.00 V•lue Reg. Price $2.25 Reg. Price $2.59 Sewing Baskets-Values to $16.99 I Rog . $9.9~7 99 Reg. $10.9~899 • -. • Jell-o . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 ·~ 25' Your choice of tempting flavors! Reg pkg. Margarine . . . . . . . . . .. 29' Blue Bonnet -expensive taste, budget price l lb. Instant Yuban ....... s1 3' Hearty brew in just minutes! 8 oz. size • Coffee Cake . . . . . . . . . . 79' Sara Lee,,, Pecan or Butter Streusel! Frozen I • Choose your day to stock up on El Rancho Super-Specia ls-Thursday through Wednesday! Our Courtesy boys are ready to help yo u -from cart to car! Choose YOl.Jl' favorite 18,-er variety for th~ special treats! 611 DiDDHPS. PATIO FAVORITES • • • • • The premium pack preferred by particular people. Half-gal round Mexican varieties -4 of them .. , and each is five co~ big! . , .. - Tomato .Juice 49< ' LibJ>y's six pack! 6 ounce Cans that make just-right servings! Pineapple DOLE'S 3 ,., $.1 Choose Chunks, Crushed, Slices or Tidbit.s-No. 2 cans · Salad Dressing 39< Girard's great varieties •• , 10 oz. btles. (Caesar·.=. 49<) ·Apple Cid-er ... 33c It's time for Tree Top again! Quart. (Half-Gal ..• 65') T omalo Sauce 1 O< Yuban Coffee 89< The saucy sauce ••• rich and red and flavorful ! 8 oz. Hunt's. JnvitJ you to have a second cu p! 1 lb. (3 lb. can ••• 2.57) Schilling's Vanilla . . . . 79• Flavor won't bake out! 4 oz. btle. Facial Tissues . . . . . . 4 .. s 1 Sensational price on Royale .•• 125 ct. packagn! Orange Plus . . . . . . . . . 491 Birdseye frozen concentrate ••• Great taste ••• 9 oz . Electra sol . . . . . . . . . . . . 491 For automatic dishwashers'. 33 oz pkg. To top that pumpkin pie! 9 oz. size Cool Whip ............ 49' Zee Tissue . . . . . . . • . . . 29• Big savings on the four roll pack! Pumpkin Pies . . . . . . . . 69' New-from Sara Lee-just in time! 32oz. big • Rain Barrel . . . . . . . . . . 79' New fabric so~ener -John.son's 26 oz. Kai Kan Dog Food .. 4 .. s1 MPS, Beef Chunks, Beef with Vegetables, l4oz. lntem'I Vegetables .. 39' Johnson's Pledge . . . 79' Woolite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . s, .. Round the world favorites from Birdseye! Frozen. Choose regular or lem on scent ••• 7 oz . for woolen.!! and ayntbetica ••• 16 oz liquid . 1 Days al Super Meat Specials/ 1 Days al Pratluce Super Specials/ f~J.;!! .. '1~;~:!.!.tS · 69c,. ' . . Legs & Th·1ghs . 59c,b. R\ch, juicy dark meat from plump California grown fresh fryers! There is a differen ce! Chicken Livers , ..... 69c._ Really fr esh, for flavor you'l1 favor! Fryer Wings ..... 3 lbs. s1 So much more meaty goodness on these! ' Ground Beef ......... 99 ~. Ground Veal ........ s1o~ El'.t ra lean ... bulk or patties! Freshly ground-and veal is nutritioua! Pork Saus~ge ....... 69e,,_ El Rancho's own old fashioned .!ltyle! Sliced Bacon ....... 79t El Rancho's thicker ranch atyle 1licet! Ch&Baabriand .......... f !' u •. D.A. Choice beef tenderloin ••. naturally aged! filot l icnon SZ.791b. ' . Boneleu leg of pork ... lean, tasty! Lean •• , for1serving "aweet and 110ur!" 1 Days al Seafood S~lall ' ~!!~~ .. ~.!lt;..!~~~~i;.;;;;;;~.!~~ Cooked Shrimp s1tt. stone Clams 79t. Cocki.jl 1iie. San Francill<O atylel Pri<tt in tfftct Thur. th""'lh Wtd. Ort. 12 throu,h 18. No 1olt1to d .. 1..., Optn d4ily9to9 -Sund0,)I JO to 7 I • App I es GOLDEN DELICIOUS 5 .. ~ 1 oo E xtra fancy quality ••• the kind you expect from the State ofWa!!hington! Crisp and deliciously crunchy! · Fresh Broccoli ..... 19 ~ All green and tender from 11tern to floret ! Romaine Lettuce .. 19:.. Cri1p lea ve" ... garden fresh ••• large bunch? Cherry Tomatoes 25« Ripe Pineapple .• ·.25t. Firm and Oavorful 'en use they're ripe! 12 oz. basket. Nect-Or '"'fft. •• , from Hawa ii, vi• 1irfteiahtl 1 Days al Delicatessen Dell1lttsl Sliced Meals . ~ud~ie': •• 33c Wafer thin 1licea in your choice of 1ix varietlr11 -1moked, rtady tout! 3 oz. pacbies. Sliced Swiss .... 43' Dorman'aGrade ''A" Wi.sconsin •.. r,oi. Sliced Muenster 49c Dorman'•• Crom Witt0n1in! Crade "A'' -6oz. I 000 Island •tc Thhttm1n'1 Wharf .•• 16ounce alit! English MufflnsJJ• lloy'•-•Pll~ ready ID ,_t! IZOI. $1.00 OFF El RANCHO'S wh•iskey CANADIAN One doll1 r off -to encoura11 you to 1ry ou r own l'J'Nt brand! Quart Ronrico Rum .. s4 .. Scotch ........• '3" Choooe li1ht or dark! .•. fillli Holidl.Y "nm• rot valu1! t'll\h Gilbey Gin . . . . . s9tt S•ve 68" on the h•lr-aell on 11zf'' Petite Slrilh ••• 1271 Conconnoo'• mc:ti.nllna wiMI kb • I • I I DAJLV PILOT SUPER VITALS WITH SUPER SERVICF.S FO R SUPER PEOPLF. Real neat to find a meat loaf in ifs own foil pan. ready for the 350 degree route for ctinner .. or roll in cabbage leaves, or stuff into peppers. or make meat balls for spaghetti ... Super blend of the right amounts of ground veal. !?round pork. and ground beef. super seasoned with onions, celery. and spices known only to Richard's meat loa f mixers. Tastes beautiful! Sure-you c:1n make your O"-'n mPat loaf. Nobody can make it better than you . 1'ht're must ~ a ii llion recipes. Give the iillionth and one a trv. E\1erybody else bas. Evef.y day more and more people !\re asking for and totlnJl! hon1 e Richard's meat loaf, another ready, good . and in- st1µ1t In your freezer. Ground beef. all pattied in hall pounds. Why do people call from Palm Springs, 'ong Beach. and Azusa. '"t;'rceze n1e 20 pounds of 'Z!Ouncl beef. I'm coming to Aflop." Of course the people order steaks. roasts and legs o lamb too. But Rround beef. Why go to_the trouble of toting ground beef? Because it's super delicious. Fry il. See wha t happens. Jf you're a dripping lover, yoo're going to be disaJ>- poJnted. Taste it. Fresh, £resh, fresh .. perfect beef navor. . . So wanted by everybody, il's ground fresh every hour. BIG MAC ms TIME TOGWW You'll find an extra roey fC('ling as you squeeze a head of lettuce and find it .iust a Ullle spongy. Jl It's hard a!I o TOCk, it's too mature and will taste bitter. If It's super !IQuishy with the leaves flopping all over the place ll's too young, and you don't rind the luscious crunch with the punch lor t.he cris p salads you love so much. For lettuce that's neither too young or too old, Richard's super produce atl!wers yes. What's cozy a b o u t crunchy lettuce? The Big Mac pumpkins watching over the lettuce. Big Macs are grown especially for HAiioween up Tur l ock, Calif om la way. If Hallo- weenlng it up in grand pro- portions i! on your wltchinR horizon, Big Mac's 75 to 100 pound ·proportions will do yoo up proud. His innards . if frozen , will keep you In pumpkin pie for a year. Potato Stretcher: I b1rge baking potato, s I i c ed lengthwise in '-2 inch slices. Put on foll on a cookie sheet. Smother each sl!Cf: In Lipton 's dry onion soup mix and a dab of butter. Cov er real Ughtly wttb the foll. Bake at 450 for 30 minutes. From one or our nice people shoppers. Felt lik e sharing. MONEY ORDERS EVEN ON SUNDAY At Udo for 25 years we've caned it the lnfonne- tlon O..k. At Harbor VI"" we got fancy and calltd It Customer Service. Either place, bring cash , . money orders with a carbon . Ow!clct cashed w I t h o u t rotng through check.land•. Mtfthandlle orders tied up In gold boxes with bright r l b b o n bows. Sheet Ambroala to turn someone fooUoose t1nd money free tn a lend of prime porterhouses and l!I o u p bones, Wolferman'1 Snapper Soup and Super sugar Crbps, Anncnlan string cheese and Bar M Ho! dogs, old fuhioned buttennllk donuto ond :II brat gold cue. ChlYOJO Vodko and Murdm'I .Cordon Rouge; Pollo Sltuct Wrol>l>Od Froze Hot Tamales, and 'Richard's Chocolate Chip lee Crtam. Rtchar<l'I , the Pe 0 j) I e Swml Newport ~h. Where quality; nluc •nd ..,,,Ice to the big esperl<nce. Wtd~~y, October 11, l'fl? ----·--------- RICHARD'S HARBOR VIEW MARKET end RICHARD 'S LIDO MARKET INVITE YOU TO ..• ' •Ill •11111 ~ .. .,. bo 111 rrano1111 AIR. CALIFORNIA s~~~ Hamburger Helper ~~::rke, 39' Try 111 the flavors at this special pr ice! M.JoB~ Coffee l lb. co• 2.19 M.J.B. Coffee t lb. 83c M.J.B. Coif .. 2 lb. 1.65 Nine Lives Cat Food ,.;, OIL 8,., $1 Dash Detergent GI··· 51 OL 69' Whole Peeled Apricots Glorietta 3 for $1 ' 16 oz. Pear Halves Glorietta 16 oz. 3 for $1 Glorietta Stewed Tomatoes I!. OZ. 5 for $1 Knud sen Fir st Quality Butter I LB. 86c Sunshine Hydrox Cookies 20 oz. 49c ' Knud sen Orange Juice -48 oz. 69c Girards Salad Dressings 111 fl1vor1 10 oz. 39c Duncan Hines Cake Mixes .ti fl•vor1 r•g .1i1• 3 for $1 Zee Bathroom Tissue " PK. 3 for $1 L vsol Deodorizing Cleaner 21 oz. 59c Royal Gelatin Dessert Mix •ti fl•,.or1 J oz. 4 for 33c tfJ~- Zucchini 11011 •• squash 19'.b. Serve these smell, fender be•uties with Pa rmesan & butter. Butter. Lettuce 2hds.25' White Rose Potatoes Golden Delicious Apples ~"'•JJm Wieners ... M ·" ..... 1 lb. 79' Crescent Rolls • 01. 33' Pill1bury-try their cheese n' wiener recipe! CHEESE 'N WIENER CRESCENTS 8 wleMrs 1 can (8 oir.) PMl1bury 8 1trlp1 ~Kklf' Barrel• RelrltereltcJ Quick Cheddat ChHH CrHCtl'lt Dinn.-"°"' Prthffl OYtn to 375•. Sitt wltntrl to within ~Inch of encts; Insert chMte 1trip1. Pl.ce on wide ends of trletlilet.; roll up. Place on cookie 1heel. cheese side up. Bi ke 11t 375• JO to 1& min. ti 10lden brown. RelrlKetate an11ettov1ra. Hebrew National Salami Hebrew National Bologna Sllc:itd 6 OZ. DI.BAR DRESSINGS I for weight-watch in9 people I White Goddess or French " oz. Green Goddess or 1000 Island " oz. 59c 59c 59c • 69c 5 lbs. 29c 25c lb. WHO ELSE BUT RICHARD'S OFFERS YOU SUPERB QUALITY, ATIENTIVE SERVICE WITH THE MOST VARIED SELECTION OF ANY MARKET PLUS A CHANCE TO WIN A FABULOUS GETAWAY WEEKEND TO SAN FRANCISCO! Stay at the elegant, new, STANFORD COURT as our guest for two nights. Enjoy the sights and fun that is San Francisco! NEXT DRAWING FRI., OCT. 20 Rib Roast Richord'• Fl_, u.s.o.A. choic• 1.39. Th ese center-cut st1ndin9 rib roilsts mike 9re•t b•rbecue f•re. Beef Shorts Ribs succul••' .. 11 "' 5 9~ Try short ribs beked with sweet •nd sour sauce, serve with rice & chin• pees. Ground Beef 73~ Richard's Is f•mOUI for superb qu•lltyl Rib Roast •••11 .... 1•1 ' ''" Fresh Roasting Chickens 1.59 lb. 59c lb. fish for weight watchers ler9•, plum p Gr•d• A Cube Steaks "° •d•"·· , ...... Duck a La Orange 1'1 duc~ling m•ri11•tecl in ll.ic;herd'1 piquent Ot•r'l9• w in1 llllCI . Stuffed Roasting Chicken Rich1rcl'1 1p1cial 11vory 1t11ffin9 1.59 lb. 98c lb. 59c lb. Fillet of Sole fresh ·l.39 lb. Western Oysters 10 "oz. 89c HARBOR VIEW HAS A FABULOUS FISH MARKET ~M'J~~"' ORANGE JUICE, T reesweet 'ox. Green Giant Vegetables 1. bun ...... J 5 ki nds-Niblets Corn, Kitchen Sliced Beans, French Green Beens Mil ed Vegetables or Spinach. ' Sara Lee Pec an Coffee Cake Butter Struesel Coffee Cake Welch's Grape Bars 12 1/i oz. 12 '/i oz. 6 PIC. 69c 69c 49c Kubro Soups •" 11 ..... -" oz. Mexican Style Dinner v .. " •···~"oz. Ven de Kemp't Oi111t1t1 Beef or Cheese Enchilada 12 oz. 29c 49c 49c Appl e Spice Cup Cakes .. ,, lOc French Bread.. 44c A nic:e 1ur,rl1e for "brown b1991rt" Svperlt loof with 1p19hotti, 11litd1, ch .. 111 .• Cinnamon Oval Danish 2 for 39c Twin Cheese Rolls 6 for 4 lc Perfec:I for Suncl1 y brunc:h A 9ro1t llttle cllnn1r rall. LIDO STORE ONLY Porn Porn Chrysanthemum.s All your f•vorite colors, yellow, white, bronz• •nd l•vend1r In d1l1 y or cushion mums. Very lon9 listing In •rr1ngemenh. Reg. l .75 195 Iorgo bunch I HAVE YOU BEEN TO HARBOR VIEW.1 YET? Beefeater Gin • •'"" 14.45 67).6]60 HOME DELIVERY IN OUR AREA. PRICES EFFECTIVE OCT. 12.15 The fun pl•c.• .+ bel Re .. member Rlc.h1rd'1 is et 1660 New M1cArlhur. 11 bloc• ••st of Olcl M•~rthur l •t Sen Joaquin Hllil Rt•d. . ' .. ~ HARDOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport !leach 673-2155 LIDO CENTER 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach OPEN DAILY 9 -7, SUN. 9 - 6 OPEN DAILY 9 -8, SUN. 9 -6 •• . • •• •• • • . • p Li afte Tq hus hut Fra Fr '*"ftii!i WtdntM!4f, Ot tublr ll, \9J1 DAILY PILOT :JJ ami:> --cuTS P~ice~ -In 0-dlyo ol rl!itlg food COii•, ii'• ~enlng to know that there are many ways to pot dellc:lollt, tomptlng meals on the toble without strolnlng the food dollar. The -bomemalttt blows tbe trick of varyN bu menus with la. costijo CJll of meat, prepared and aeuooed in a tasty · lashiol1. lien!'• a dellcJously sali>- lylng ye I IJud&et.<onsclous mul '"'11fted arotnl a skillet . of -..iw lamb cllopl ond ';~ French • style tp'Oen beens. 5 Simmered ln rich, navorful condensed coosomme plus BIJ)' aauce, garlic, and mace. the chops tate on a savory new 8oodnw tbal takes tbem out of tbe ordlnary. You'U find canned con- densed 90llp.s s real flavor bonus for all yoor cooking. Being double ricb, double thick, and expertly se.asoned, they're great short cuts to tastier meals. Serve the Jamb skillet with nurry rice and a crisp tossed salad. For dessert, delight all with parfaits of pudding. ITALIAN STYLE BUDGET STRETCHER FOR NEWLYWEDS LAMB 'N GREEN BEAN SKILLET Post-honeymoon Frankness 6 shoulder Jamb chops (about 2 poundal ' 2 tablespoons shortening Brides Learn Budget V~lue of Rice 1 can (1011 OWICes) con-<! densed coruiomme '\-· 1h cup water 2 teaspoons soy sauce J large clove garlic, minced Generous dash mace Life is not all steak and crab meat au gratin. . .as a new bride will lell you. After a whirl of pre-wedding parties and meals eaten ou t during the honeymoon. the reality of a weekly budget ap. pear&: And it doesn't go away after a week or two. either. To add to the n1c of husband-pleasing (eeonomical, but good tasting) recipes, try Frankfurters Italian Style. Fraitkfurters scored part of the way through and sim- mered in a delightfully flavored tomato sauce are a~ tractive and navorful. Served on rice, this also makes a nutritional dish. And a little trick that costs nothing at all is to serve the rice in a molded form. Molds are easy to make.. After the rice is cooked ac- cording to package directions, spoon into individual molds. U:t stand a minute or two ; then invert onto lhe serving plate pnd top with frankfurter mixture. Cooked green beans complete the mee.1. FRANKFURTERS ITALIAN STYLE 1 cup each chopped onions and green peppers 1 tablespoon vegetable oil 1 can (6 ounces) tomato paste 1 ~ cups beef broth (llh cups water and 2 bouillion cubes) 1 'h 1easpoons salt . 'h teaspoon oregano ..Y4 tdaspoon each pepper and basil pound all-meal frankfurters, scored diag- onally 2 cUps hot cooked rice Saute onions and green pep- pers ht oil until tender crisp. Stir tn tomato paste, broth. and seasonings. Cook over low beat about 5 minutes. Add frankfurt&s ; cover and con- tinue cookillg until heated through. Spoon rice into individual molds ; Jet ,stand a few minutes. Unmol~ -onto serving plates and top w!Ut frankfurter mixture. Makes 4 servings at 512 calories each. To serve 12 at a party, follow this recipe uling 5 cups beef broth, 4 teaspoons salt and triple all other in- gredients. 1h: cup sliced onion 2 tablespoons cornstarch l cup cooked French-style green beans Cooked rice Trim excess rat from chops. Jn skillet. brown chops in shortening; pour off fit. Stir in consomme, v, cup water, soy, garlic. mace, and onion. cover; coot over Jow be11t 25 mlnutes. Mix remaining water and cornstarch until s m o o t h ; gradually blend into sauce. · l.Crushing Blow Knocks Out Garlic stirring constantly u n t i I thickened. Add beans. Heat : stir now and then. Serve \Vilh rice, Makes 4 to 6 servings. Butterfly Stuffed SAVORY LAMB CHANGES PACE Inside Plumbing for your Pet -By TOM HOGE AP Newsreatures Writer • For centuries, the versatile bullJ known as garlic perhaps has been used to flavor more types of food than any other seuoning, rfSpite the potent aroma this member of the onion family gives off -by scien- tific estimate one millionth. of an ounce can be detected by the human nostril -garlic is delicate if prepared properly. In the Mediterranean area where garlic is used Javlshly, cooks have discovered that crushing the bud reduces its potency. Bolling garlic also tam,. the scent. In fact kitchens in Provencal feature a soup com- posed of a couple or dozen prllc cloves, water and not piucb else. In arn::ient times. garlic You've fried fad diets, pills and .exercises. Now you're " ready for Weight Watchers. It works. Come le.tm how to Jose weight ind keep it off ••• without going hungry! Fo~~~t!l:.~~~I~.~~550 5 OPEN1 HOUSE ' NO OILIGATION. IRING A FRIEND. COSTA MESA Wel9ht w\tcMH Center •t H•rltor Sh.,plftf Centtr H•r• •t Wll1on SATURDAY, OCT. 14, t :lO A.M. • served as a food rather than a restaunnt in midtown New seasoning. York. The owners picked up Historians tell us the Egyp-the recipe in a small trattorla tian slaves who built the Great in the Milan region, and Pyramid in the Sth century adapted it for their cuisine. Clams Baking B.C., virtually lived on garlic VITEILO TONNATO and onions. 1 five-pound veaJ roast, bon-Clams go into the we!J-Place a he11 :nng tablespoon And the Roman poet, Virgil , ed :'ti tied seasoned stuffing. of the mixture on each but-- urged reapers to eat garlic to 4 cups hlcken b~h Sl'UFFED SHRIMP terflled shrimp; arrange in a help them withstand the broil-2 cups.dry while wine · muh ,.._. the l bay leaf -~-'-buttered baking pen I 13 by 9 1J11 _,,..,IS """''tolled ·In, Ii' cl hopped 1. bud 2 pound& 1241 large ~uuup, b tre1as:, -' .. c gar ic s shelled and dni!lned Y 2 ioctl es~· '."' 6 celery tops M 11 · · • bl Gar~1c also was ifsed for 2 carrots sliced l can (10~ ounces) minced e rema1rung 10 e9- medtc1nal purposes in olden Bag of mixed h ·er b 5 clams poons butler : stir In lemon days. When one su.ffered Crom (available in most food v, cup Instant minced onion juice and remaining 11 lt>US·/ a t.oothache, a silver of the store.s) Vt cup water poon salt: pour over shrimp; bulb was placed in the .cavity. Place veal in heavy pot and 8 tablelPOOl\f butter sprtnkle with pa prika. Jt ~enerall.Y was believed !n sear over hot flame. Add 2 cups aoft bread crumbs Bake, uncovered . in o pre· medieval times ~hat garlic above J.ngred.ientl, cover pot 2 tablepoons parsley nakes heated 360-degrei:• oven until , could cure dog bites, ~Ison and cook slowly 2in, hours. I teaspoon dried crushed stuffing la firm and browntd arrow wounds and the sting o( Remove from,.flre end let cool. basil and 1hrlmps are tendlr -2$ a venomous snake.. . For the sauce, place. in a I teaspoon salt to S5 minutes. ~lakel 6 to a JONNY CAT. Keeps Kitty's Box fresh and clean • At Food & Drug Store• One . tends to hnk ltah~n blender, two medium cans ~ te&spoon dried crushed Portions. food v.:1t~ the flavor of garlic white-meat twia, 4 anchovies thyme 1==-----======= and this is true of many dls~es 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard, i ~4 teupoon garliie po...'de:r -of that land, from the rich teaspoon garlie powder 1 Red pepper to taste tomato sa uces of ~lhern teaspoon each pow de~ e d l tablespoon lemon juice Italy 1.0 the tangy dishes of thyme, savory, ialt, white I,) tea1paon paprika Milan 1n the north. pepper Cut almost through shrimp Good Italian cooks are Add .4 ounces freah lemon to center lo "butterfly." careful not to ?Vcr-se~son 8 juice and put blender on low Drain clams, reserving liq· di sh o'. sauce with garhc, but .speed, adding •lowly 1 cu there 1s usually eno.ugh or an olive oil. P uid. Mix onion with 'A'aler: aroma to make 1t clearly Turn blender to hlah epeed 1 Jet stand IO minutes to detectable. minute, remove sauce to 8 rehydrate. In Naple~ they si:rve 8 imsta bowl and st.tr in four ounces In a small sklllel melt 4 n.avored with garlic and olive capen and four ouncea chop-tabklrvvvw of the butter; add oil , and bt PI e d mo n t ped paraley ....-·- IMl'OltTI0-111.•AllUI POLISH HAI .... All,.t•ll OCT, 11 U:.lt .... ". s1.11 "· restaurants feature a powerful Slice cold ·veal and place In the rehydrated ocUon and sauce known as bagna cauda, 8 shallow dish that ha aaute 5 minutes. ..,. .... OCT. 11 •;:-18• or hot bath. p s 1 In a small mlxlng bowl mlx ::..:::..;i;==-== :~=--------~ 1'1ade from butter an-cover. our sauce over meat, together the onl brt d 2J f; ITALIAN D!LI • BAKIRV chovies, white truffle; and cover and keep in refrigerator on. 8 ·n 1 REST AU RANT r 'th 11 il th. 2 days. cnrmt., clams and the reserv-., g8!"~1~rlta"t! 0 .~.e 0 . • :~ Serv!s four a1 a main ed ¥4 cup Uqukf. panley, bulJ. n11 Ad•m• et M.tgnolle, H"'1tl"ttan BHch, auu,... ive. m1ru.ure ts USl:\I ~™· Good with • chilled '' teupoon of the ult, thyme, ... "' .......... °""' ........... CA--. '"" • NfW -" ~ as a hot dlp for cold raw1i~SO.;;~··~w~hl~te~w!~ne~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~·~rl~lc~--'~~·~r~ond~~r..t~J;~-~r~.~;i;i-iii:i~1~1 .. ii'ii:' "'~·~·1-~·~·~-iiiii~lMii'ii::~Cl;iii•~··iiii:-ii'ii:'~,..-..iiiiiiiiiii'ii:ii:ii~ vegetablu and metes a · .,...w..o ,..... delicious antipasto. Ooo Of the mm dellghlful gs.rile dbhes for wh.lch Mlla.n ls nqted is Vitello Tonnato. It CODlfsts of sliced veal flAvored with garlic. wine and herbs. served cold with a sprtghtly tunaflsh, anchovy and garlic sauce. Vitello l]JOCiolly . ------. ---· · ·-· 601 IAST BALBOA BLVD., IALllOA LEG of LAMB c • RIPRIOERATID DELIVIRY SIRVICE: PHONE 67'-IJIO IHCIAU TNUUDAY, FllDAT, SAlUIDAT. OCTOIU 11·1 l·14. RUIY RED GRAPEFRUIT ~$ 00 I LARGE CELERY c A IUNCH o,_ f ....... 6-1lt ,.-. -1 ...,... • W.... W•...,... ......... M ~ ~·-•lfkoa. 0,.. t • ..._ ._ 61JI ,_.-. -1 h,t • ._. • .. • ' I I ' • HOUSEHOLD ITEMS ..-'CORONET TISSUE .... ~>\:l 35' SANITA'RY NAPKINS ."'."'."::'a"=83'· Gs (lOl;AI.) 67' ,rGLAD TRASH BA .. ""~' er ALUMINUM FOIL .. ,.'1:'~ 1.49 ,rFORMULA 409 .••. ~.'f:\: 1.35 "'"""7 .r JOY LIQUID· . • • • • . .,,,. 6' .rcoLD POWER ...•. = 1.08 COltlERS BRIQUETS ..•.. -~ 83' KEY BUY DOG FOOD ·~~-r2.~ c~ CAN ,;;} FROZEN FOODS POOR BOY SANDWICH .. ,,·~~175' MIXED VEGETABLES .•. ,:=21 · QITWlmMUSGUDl"i " 87 FISHSTICKS .......... "" ~, ' PICTSWEET PEAS ....•... u~'i44' ,rPEAS & CARROTS ..•. ;:::iw:,35. MINIJTI Ml!D 57 o ORANGE JUICE . . . . • • nm"' GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ... ~".'!".,"ti:30' ONION RINGS ....••.. s::-;::34• l.J.B. COFFEE ·:.':"" 232 •MICIW GINO'S CHEESE•PIZ"ZA •... '\:l 65" PEPPERONI PIZZA •.. ~'\l~89' Wll<lfl'WATOllll 69" LUNCHES ........... ·'""' rtOUIDY. llMIOOCl. JllllOI GI ICU DOWNYFLAKE WAFFLES ... \:l 17' FRENCH TOAST ...... :--.:;45• P~ RITZ CREAM PIES ... '':1.128' """"*· OIOCOU!li tOClllM. UMlll Oii SlU.._, RISPY CRICIEIS ........ 3.3c , .... llCI IOI • LOOI! •Oii THI KIY IUYll "Key Buys" ar• extra saving• mod• possible by manufacturers' fem· porary promotk2nal allowanc••· I KEY B UY PACKAGED GOODS HARVEST DAY BREAD '.''.":.,"'.::37' crGRAHAM CRACKERS . ,.~':".:':28' ..-'LANGENDORF COOKIES ,,,;::: 51' POTATO CHIPS ..... ~=54 ' crCHOCOLATE BITS ..... ~~1 47' CORN BREAD MIX .... ~.~~35 ' cf' MINUTE RICE ........ •,g:a?· er SUGAR SUBSTITUTE . ';!f,~~80• GOLD MEDAL FLOUR .... '~1 .20 KEY BUY BREAD .... ,,, ... 2ilJ" l•OUNCI f' LO.lf • • PET FOODS ~. Ol:IP, IUCTll: Nit INSTANT COFFEE.,..;:j:Ol .26 ,rGl!_EEN BEANS ... .:io~~ 23' .,+RED CABBAGE. .... ~31' .,+LIBBY'S SAUERKRAUT .. n,::39' ,rAPPLE SAUCE ....•. '::~:59• DEL MONTE°PEARS ..• ::"~49' .,+SLICED PINEAPPLE . ~:"r.1.:: 19 '. ,r~~~WPLE .... z"¥t1l 36' LIGHT MEAT TUNA ·. =~.':::::'~42' .rMEAT BALL STEW . ~'1,'t,'l.:71' .rHEINZ RELISHES ..•.. ~",l:32' -~•. l!Cll DOG. !Wffl ,rGRAPE JELLY ......• ':i~ 58' ,rMARSHMAlLOW CREME,~27' ,rPEANUT BUTIER .... '~':\':93' ,rBLACK PEPPER .. ~·."',':rt: 77' BOUILLON CUBES .... ~J~ 36' KRAFT CHEEZ WHIZ .. ~.~B9' UGTUt 85 ,r SALAD OIL ........ """' • ~ ~"·~&t-' lllLOX oi. 11~~1~'!',. the su:::~oN .3 c rain. ~ .• lemon, , Hord•to&ld. $ I 01 ··- ,.., " .. 4&t-1 ~-:,. \J ' TIPS _j_ Tim•·t•sted formula, -• -;f u•elul In rollo•lng 7,7- ROUllD STEAK . ....... 3 CINTI• CUT UNCOHOITIONAl.LT 9 c IONDIO P"O• QUALITY AND L• Ft.AYO• For Every Dolllr You Spend 1t Lucky . · • r:i~~~~~~~~~~'.~ __ . ____ 1ac ~~~::e~:i~~~~-~.~~-·----_ .. ___ 13c • store Rent, Advtrtlslnc. Shopplnr B11s. 3 ~( etc. tlll•--"'\·---.. ·-··-·-··-.. -···-·--···-·-·--- PalntinL R99airlnL We1r·l!ld-Te1r le t1k• ... -··-··-·-··········-·····-··· .. -··-···---··--· .. ·• Cilr. s11te end fed1r1l Tn:es . 3c take ........ _ ................................................... _ .. , ... _ Shareholders Received fM Us• ~C of lheir funds ....... -·-·-··--·-······-·----·- luckr Re11Jned In ~lness to Pl'J Debts, 1 C [J ..... ''''"'-. -. $1.00 AlfTtltWTICATCD IT NICC WATilltCMfSl•& CO. CHUCK -ROAST UNC~~~1~!t.LT63c • ' M*DIDP"O« QUALITY AND LI PLAVOR • <INTI• CUT f:k t.• " -·· BACON ~-•• GROUND. BEEF ,., .. ~·6J• FRESH LEG OF PORK SJ09 •••Mu .......... ~~~:::.':".:. c E•ory cut of'"" moot ~~fr: "UN; UNCONOtTIOM•LLYIOND•D ······•· • IONl!Ll!ll, ............................. LI KEY $2'' CONDITIONALLY BON • du ·K c•NTI!• LOtN -TUR ROAST bond Is your money back CHUCK STEA CUT 7 5c PORK ROAST IND11c·w'NITl!&Dll.MIAT,IWllll'Tf'Rl!M2..1 . guorantH of complete soti1foc- U/llCONDIT10NALl.T IONOl!D .••. ~~-.~ AVG. WT.l·flOUNOS ................... LI TURKEY ROAST s3•• •lion. !~!~~~O~Alf~.~HD•D •...••. ~~= s 1 •• ~~!!,~!~.~~ .. ~.~~-~ ....... L.89~ WHITIM•AT tWIP"T'lft•IM 2LI PORTERHOUSE "'~;~:: 5 J 59 FULLY COOKED HAM 69• LADY u EISE uHcoH01T10HALLY 10HD1D ••...... L1 ,-u1.1. 1HAHK HALP", HOCK ••Mov10 1.1 All llEAT WIEMEIS lIE,9c BLE CM 49'~' Fresh ... Oiscount Priced Deli Items ·CROSS RIB ROAST ·~;;;98' CUT·UP FRYERS 34c 112ozAlt MEA1••...,,.,1_ •• i<IPKG w ooooa-ro .......... ozPK• "" ••• ,,, .... ., •••••• .......... """'"0"'0 "AL" •••••• .......... .,-.Kun CHEESE s 1" SALAD DRESSlllG ,. STEWING BE.EF ·~;:;91• TOM TURKEYS 39• ICA1UCIAl.~laD,IWOS ...... .1~:· •<Xl'IBllHIUIE ........... 100:~:· ~ ~ ""0 "0 '"'"' .. "'°""" .......... .. ......... ,,... ................ KRAn CHEESE FOOD ~~ , SALAD DIESSIMS ,., PORK SAUSAGE 89• HEN TURKEYS 45• AMUICAll,llCllV.WllAPf'lD~ICf! ..... 79 lOO'l!OOlCJL<MORIOIOlllAlll ..... 42 ,,_, ..... "0'0 ' "' "'"·0 ".. .. ......... ,.... ................ BUDDISS llEATS l:.'\:." .. ":;:; , APPLE TURIOYERS ' , ~2!'.~.~~~.~~~~ . ,., ..... ,s 111 ~,~! Lf.E ~~C<l~ ........... 77• ru•m. oc1cmt ... m ... 1 .. ><>z :;, 39 '"""" ,..,""' ......... ,. oz ,,.53 ~~.~!~~ .. ~~~ ,,'!~~~ .. 11 • ~~~~ .. ~.~!!,~.~~~.~:,;~ 97 • ~~.'!! J!!.~ .. ':'~~ 73' ~~~~~~~s ... oz .. Ii.• CANNED FOODS .rsoY AHOY .SOY NUTS ..• '!l 63' HIRES ROOT BEER •••.• ,,,,~79' U.l.D.l fOOD STAMP m COUPONS Gladly Accepted 111 ~Van deKamp's 1.11 AN OUTSTANDING VAltlfTY Of flllSH UllRY GOODS .AvMleble ti -tlcw•• wit+. VII'! 6e K-si'•• BEVERAGE • SPIRITS PINK CHABLIS WINE ..• .:'lit 1.99 OLYMPIA BE~R ....•.• ,,,.:,: 1.49 GOLD SEAL VODKA .. : ,,m:r. 7 .11 !i'111T5 lY.lllAll! ., OUI sronswi'fMUQloOl "'''·I DlL 1091TE COJI OOlDIN 2iDJ\ <Ill• snll t" WMOll llltlll · 17·0VNCI CAJI DAIRY PRODUCTS ORANGE JUICE ....••. ~ 87' SOFT MARGARINE ..•..• ~'c\': 33' EVAPORATED MILK ..••• ~'8!17 ' PREMIUM ICE CREAM •• .=:79' c1111mEs .:~~. 3~0 CAITOll AHOflTlll JIC.1 PUIPlllS IY OAYs1 s1 18" long LUI IE lllY TElll llLL 29• to 64• Choice of pla1tk puMpkln1, all ••f to go o· haunting, come Hallowe.n. ' with 5 raclr'lg decals. ... -IY HOaMAN Orlnk1, wett, crle1 real teart • hat petal. soft 1kln like a U.S. 10. 1 lllllE IUSSET . POTATOES '.'' 1 0 ~·~~~:46 c .. P'kg of 170 double· 59c ~1trlc dl1tre11 and ~~ tip IWabt-with 1afe hyperocldlty, 12.0L 1i..1ble otkk0, -Y... z;L./ ~ ... 4s.,1 ···~.....,. ; \T.: __ ~ .-.. SCllOl 1111 4 OZ llllT 11111 -iii·" RlflLLS Fil• all bond TlllLEl'S, OISTllE OllLl'I 1111n1 OllTllE real baby. 16" size. lllllTEI S6'' INll ITIOll 37• Pus1 11n·11 F111 ., CHILD ou1DANCa 51 C Super-Dry ontl· · 99c razors; 1up•r· ,.,..,1ront . • · ... -:.. 10'1 chrom• .dge. . l:lyS.,I {)l .... 4 I OILllTE ICHICll DOuaU IDOi ,• ~ -.. TOOntPASn llZll IUIES m New 1...,nc• olff with 79c Supor<hr<>m"$ I 33 -ff-Id•. l'llO or 10 • OllST TllTIPllTE 7.outla 1'111 ,., __ ... ~ """'-· J6c ........ or Mlftt. PIELL SHllPOI Mak•t blllows of rich, C'90my 1ud1 • concet1trafed, o llttle Q099 a long way. 99' A varlefy of scary and fun-ty_,. 1ty• to delight the amlill fry .• , flame "'lord ant fabrics. s1•1 ·shodoa of old Fronkenst•ln I Monstert, ghaul1, oth•r Kary tfyl•. Flam• r•tardent. LOl8 SLEEIE l'Ol.YUTll JACQUAID The odl•lfy and 1ound1 $ J 57 ot a farm come to li fe as buttons are pre11ed. 0 SllSl·IP IElll g IY lllNN.. p PRllT lllT TIPS I 1CllLllEl'S ISSllTED OISTllES sin rr.tty pfinc ..... eft., GI well as •PoOkv and ac:ary ones. Flom• r•tardent . They top eYerythlng • pant•. 1klrt1, lumper•! 100% poly"'"' kntta: button front or pl.ocke 1tyle1 In gorgeoua new calort. s1 ... amoll, medium, klr91. No battlff'let, no track • cra1h 'em opart, anap 'em together agolh I s7111-:-· --... -.......... -·-·-.... .. , 1£ ...... w .... =aa. HMmai ·•l.'91...., ., •• Iii lllr Jll o o o WUZll ·-CtL IM• 'RRf ···-11. .. . t.AWINU •1th! k. .,. 1.1111..-.t»l. ... T_ .... ..... • tit II. ..... ( ... 9'I. GMO• OllYI • 1•1 .... •· ~I • 1Mf ,.... a... IMI ,._ • W. IM•• .... · 1• W. Lfl ,-.. .. ,.. 5MD• GIOYI • 11•1 ..... It, '"""" • ltltt ......... ht, IM'll aJIA • mt It ....... llaa • 171 I. .... ._ ...... IUJ9All • 11U W. ..... ..... lM IUO • UJl I. ...... 9', 11111'1 M..c& • »• &-.. .... ....... ~ • ... .._ M OU ... ll • 1• It. <...r Att. L l• ... II • lm L ~Aft. Mftl tlift · m1 ....._ ... (MIU , .. ' 711t .._ '''· Mtlfft&a ,, .. • IJJ •• Awt, 41 WOtlA • UI W. •:dec;1&1 MM ~ llAQ · ti II .... .._ W. (OWllA • f•,_. ....... ,.._ .JtUMTIMGTQ HAC11 • •1 ........ ltt.. MWrlMlt • IJJ •· ..... • TOllMIC'I • 1711 ,..._, C.. lhrp. '°""" · U• ,.,..._ llti. ttWITIJtGTO• 11.&al • 1 ... I.tea 01n St .... All • llt2t ....._ ..... IOll"*I · ... St ........ ,._. ........ ... .... , ................ ... WWW •lfll ... ... WIZIAIW·1 ...... 'a'" ._ , WI ELIA • ... ... ...... h ... """9 . ''"' ·~ .... ... ... ......... .... WllllJi ....... ......, .... SIOllS OPIN AT 10 AM • • ,, I I ••• '' I r--~--·-------~-- l I DAILV 111.0T 33 Casserole Saves Worry .. If Cook's • 1'. " ~·~ eootery covered 30 mlnotes. for' the tuna. Condiments may mushroomt 4 ~ S:.anuta add ~ture. Ol ~ted wW. breai\ butter J .. yer. cut.:~ cllCell in cuserole. ~· r'ra~ce, Top with condiments before be vaned to suit your wte; Chopped oliV!S (\> OIP) More ""'1'J"\powdti-mty be the breed aod e11>,lolo qubes. '°:Beat 2 •IP sllpiiy, f<I• ~. Sc. "*""ed toast cubes ~-:an~ . )lave ex. serviztg in 6 portions. also seasonings. should be substituted for the added, to taste. In a butfered C&SRrofe make tea! po o n Worcliestershlre on top; sprlnkl~ with grated 1 1'1Jlo lda 1111W VARIATIONS: Diced cook ed (leftover) diced apple with the curried Another q,ulck to r i 1 alternate layers of bread sauce, '~ teaspoon ll:l ch6ei6 ~r bad:>n-onion bits. the word often hu cream of celery soup or pea lamb or chicken may be ,used lamb or chicken, plus 1 cup casserole : cubes. and shredded sharp po"·der and l can.r. .~ .... de~ oven, a boot l,)>01fiine sinonYmous with the. l®P may be substituted fo r in place or fish. Cream ot cooked and drained peas. Hard DEV l LED HAM AND cheese (I in cupe or about 1/3 devi led ham. ~ ..-. fO dllrutes," or urttiJ knife in· i:m&dlab nieal. · the mushroom soup. Shrimp chlcken soup goes well with cooked eggs, chopped. may be C~ESE pound); resen:e some or the milk and add ,IA: lerk4 center comes out c.onv~ foods make or salmon may be substituted either meat or poultry ; also added to any ,of the comboa. Remove cn9t.s rrdjn 5 lllces d cu ~ cbeele fer top han1 mixt ure; ~~aA ·~ .flo & aervings. ey'a cauerole cookery .1.-::...::.:.:::::::..:::::._::..::::.:::::.:::::::..::.::::::....::.:::::.:::::....'.:.:.::::::..:...:..::..:..::.:::..:.:.::...;:_:=1:..::.:.::::.:....::::..::.::::~~i;.~-+.~~'"'--'----:u,.c:.::...:.::...z:.i:::::..:c:.::..~'----'--~~~~:.:..:.-"+ . .;.;.:,""--"-~""'-.:...~--,~~--=.~ even 'for the in-•11. ,., "f... • :;,. jo%pertenced cook. Hearty and ~CS:or=r!~ g;;.;·';..i. as they can be fJftpared in advance., cooked l""nd served In the same dish. ed Tuoa Ca.ssercle of. ~elty· fare for or &l!<fls. Risi lo fix. except for the toppings. both le and topp"'45 may be in advance. tradlllonal curry -used lo . ctrcl~ the toP 1of our l""""""le luclll<le sieved Cooked egg yolks, "'"1bl¥ crisp ~baCOll . (or ~on ~!!SI, aliced g\'.een lcnliiis, qaqappl~ I~ 11 Y , l turrailts abd chopped ~ ts us>d for gambh, and because the condiments ~ added in circles a ,..e4geshaped serving Includes of each. J lf RRIED~ T 'N A cABS!!lROLE s, ·~ of white bread, 4 crusts reD'J9Ved ll 3 tab~ butter or ,., argarine 111' teaspoons curry 1 can (lO'h ounce) cream of mushroom soup ~~cup millt: , 3 cans (61> ....,.. each) tuna, drained ~nd broken l into bite stze pieces 1 cup diced apple ,Q!t bread inlD cubes. Heat oWb.io!50de_.. Brown butter or margarine, powder and onion in ' skillet until onion is r but not soft. I!! a bowl, mix ""'6Dl of i1.an'h!hroom soup, milk, tll(UI, ~apple and cubes of bread; add tter-curTY-onlon mixture; •-blend well. Spoon into buttered quart casserole and bake un- ·t Persimmon ·~rickery .•. . . . A ;Treat The season ts short for the . :xotic persimmon, so enjoy '!this reckrange fall fruit while l,ou can. Almond Persimmon "'8alad is a superb way to use lit. Ripe iientmJDonS are pu- •?eed and combined with plain "fgelatin to gtve you a beautifu1- Y colored gelatin with the inc live· persimmon flavor sweet and slightly musky. Diced grapefruit, s 1 i c e d ~ery and roasted di~ed tmonds are added to provide ' avor contrasta and the lmonds and celery bring leasing crunchiness. This is riot ,an overly sweet ~d and so Jt makes a nice , accom~ent. I t ' s · ally KQCic!. we think, with ham and, !owl. ALMOND PERSIMMON SALAD 2 large, soft.ripe perslm- JJ10ns . I eovelope plain gel.itln 213 cup wattt : I/, Cl.IP lemon juke 2 tabtes&i>om sugar 1" tea.poon salt 't ll"'pe!ruft 1 cup sliced celery 1/3 cup diced almonds roosted Stllad greens Mayonnaise (optional) cut persimmons Into pleceo: n through sieve or proceu blender -there should be 1 ,persimmon pur<e. blne gelatin and water; al. stirring, untfl gelatin ts lssolved. Blend lrJ persimmon · ree, lemon Jtdct,.11,1gar and It. Coot unUI a!lg htl7 lhlckoned. 1f1ianwhile, pare. section dice grapefruit. Fold 1pefult. celery and almonds to gelati~:xture. Tum tnto to e Ind 11 moldl. Chllt Ill firm. UOmold OD plat<S llnod with ad gttena. Dollop wtth U )' o u wllh. I lo I wylntla. Re: Hash Canned corned beef buh has a surprl•tna!Y pd wey ol stuffing a gnen -· Spill lengthwtoe aild parboil ., • I I Coll ST9-1 CIO ,Mr location of dote ...ar•I y._ Coll coltw if ton · The Real McCoy o...o/ity Produclr ~~.!!.!~ ~~ .. _..!1 ".. a.el llo.:oll DOI.-. .... -·-·-··~ ............ -·-........ ....,, -· k.t :SC..,.. i.u.llOU. ••• ___ • .59c ""' amm IQ..NJS. OY.o-v...c:•l .29.. kef ~-MJL1m..·-··--········· 37c ll<lfl HOW-lNl!oT Ofrfl'I LARGE Al EG'GS ·; . Taco Casserole =--49' Parr ·Mtlll Bits ~ 2~29' ' Tamale Pie Cmertlt.:::69' Oreo Creams ""=':::-' 49' Hormel Chill ~-= 39' lllmll Rln --57' ' M-.nl Dinner --23' Tuten Choice .:::. 11 11 Frnhabyt Diapers 11• ltsllta Qulk ----91' FRUIT / Kl&S Cocktail TISSUE .. t ",,~ . ... .. ,,. . -' ,, • 1 'I Ell\~ED BREAD f Vons Roll! ~:.. ... Kl'llt Dreulni "U::: Enitl1h Muffins =.'r.'. .. . T•alo PurH ·~ . ~ French llr11d --• 36• .• ...,. ~.lot ~ ··-Vons Donuts ~-49' Port It Itani ·-·-.. ~ --Vons Capolk11 ... _. 65• Total Oma! --··~ lftlol - ' ALL DETERGENT 19' ~31• 79' 23' &I' •t Nn YON$ -tr., , "° ll\HICllo\lf IRCI: ... t ••Y.1\11,lY fil l QVT OJI t•l•Y •lMI~ ...0 Dl!l'OllT •T .. IOl. CO<f!(JT-WfOllUDolY, OCIOHll 11. """"""' MU. a ll011FU \blume5 onnc:ki 01;is ~i049C Fote•• Coft11 1 -- Colrati Teothfaste ~.":. 66' Oranit. Jllce ::.><::. :-II' Breok Creme Rinse ',~ 66' Jtrse Butter ':".:' 11• ------------lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiilll FLORIDA'S ----• . .. ---· Miry Htlstr .. Plea -,29' J1n1'1 Suck T"'1 ""!'-89' ¥111 Ifft Shw --39' ltt Cr11111 .....,..1':. -59' WHtfrtttl Water • -.\. ii' --~-ii!!~~---' • ROMAINE ~-Uk CELERY ..::.'.':':.. 19:. · CABBAGE ~-:.. Uk ·PAPAYAS -:=."' ~ SW1Dv11maa Juice Oranges 8~98c ,;-.PR. • .... .....,_.~ hr•rtllll-: .. ar _,,__ CetfJ., a.w =::. •1 r ~ ' I • YtM llleich •·•Mui Siu~ 2 medium ....., peppers. Place I> cup c:ann<d ccrned beef hash In •ach....., pep-10111 .per half; top with I> cup sru-.ddod mild p....,,.. chee,.. 34011 Bake In a shallow dbh ot 350 g dtgreH F. fOr 2S minute! Adams Ave., at Broakhurst, H1n11ntt11 Baell Doheny Pa" Drive, Capistrano lea 5922 £jnfer An., at ~ lflntinlten Bead! IJpRa His Pim. D Tn 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntif11lon Baell 17950 MafnoRa, Fountaill YaleJ • M."\ke1 2 1trvlng!. , .. -l • • '. • ~ . . " .... ' . . ' • ... --------·-·-~-----______ .,_ --~-· ·--·-------· 38 D~ll V PILOT Wedntsd.ay, October 11, 11172 PllOT·ADVERTISER Nece,ssity.-Met~er,s .(;G By JOliorA llWlll NEW YORK -"I lovt lieJ· ican food and J C6ft .ea( 11 Icr hours," Anthony Quinn u.id; he 'QS perohed iii. a dirlclor'I chair. ' ( ' ' ' "LiBleo, I •Uke hqneol.y in cookingl" he .,1d. I. I remembe.r•wbat t. ~ frlend of mine, Sir Cedric Hanlwi<:U, <ailed this CGW> try: 1be Ulliled Steaks of America. "I don't like Bleaks and chops. Most of the loods Illa! I love, I love with passion-Aul the (l(lly passion J feel 1s for ~1exitan and Italian food. I love what Italians do to their vegetables. "Outside of that I ilclo' care \Vh.at the bell I eat!" be said, laughing the distinctive laug!l that has stamped his many characterizations, his grizzled banciito, exuberant G r e e k , bumbling Italian. ~·1 happen to be a very good cook! Listen, the inte~ thing about Mexican food is that yoo can ad lib. It's all very personal, there aren't any staid recipes. "Everybody . .adds bis .... little artistic too.eh, pt4ting in more oregano or more cheese, flour or whatever it is, malting it to his own taste. So it's not like e steak, which is just a steak _and involves only three minutes of cooking. ccA~exican can lake a steak and chop it up to make .,.,·hat we call piccato, which means 'chopped.' This way, chopped meat Mexican style is a whole new experience because o( the sauce you put over it. Then we have the tortilla which can become a sandwich -and a lot of other th ings, even a spoon? "Oiinese food is the same way. In fact, Chinese dishes lire very much like Mexican dishes. Peking chefs cook very hot ~hes and they make pan- cakes which are like tortillas They even have Peki n g "1.acos" which resemble Mex- ican tacos." TOQl'. \'ltio has p I a y e d virtually every nationality ex- cept a Chinese, was born in ~1exlco lj>' Mexican-Irish parepts ..t•raisod !n-tliern CallfurniA.,j>ltiere ..lits . .fatbot was a cameraman· at the old Selig Studio. After his father's accident.al death, Tony was obUD<f to leave scOOol to help Mlpport his mother apd young sister. He bied hiS band al many jobs from si-ttlne bOy · to ca rpenter, electrician, butcher in a slaughterhouse ("failed at that, no kill~ Instlnct!"), ca bbie and cement triixe!'. Later he returned to school almost beco m ing an architect before concentrating on acting. It's no SUJ'lX'ise that this versatile act.or is an inventive cook. "Listen, once 1 invented a di9b when l was living on a lit.. tle fann in Connecticut. ~ ple used to drive out on Sun- days and visit us ttl the coun- try. Once 30 poople dropped in on ua for dinner and we didn't have enough food to · feed them. "There were a lot of potatoes around and some hamburger, ao I made the mart fanW!ic di.It of baked potatoes rdl!Ung the shells wi th mashed potatoes, ham- burger, seasoningi and cheese. It was the great.at dish t ever in vented." llle dith had np name. bat he iavented one on the spot: "Y-rTa stuffed potatoes," he Wd, laughing again. "What I re.ally like to do is <f1' a big bole for a barbecue and cover the meat with ooilop a..i tinfoil ., all the juices of lhe -i and lhe veplableo con pt tqgetllu. "You get• piece of lamb or beef and rrminate it in wtne and lwbl . ...,,,.,ndlng It wltll vegetables before rolllna: in alumlnum loll. !1'1 almoot llb e dambake. We do lhat qultl oftm at home in Rome." VIVA STUFFED POTATOES 4 baktd potatoeo l!r pound lfowld lean dlllclc Iii cup dJopJ*I -~ ...._ 11111 DO.II llelhly ground blaclc -1' t•rrton Gt'fllW 11 !*IP* tlllll•powd« !lloddod l.JledUrd\eOI•· """' ..... -. driod, prick· ed pl llP II ....... loil. Bakolo c· ,,. 400 dolr<e •••• 1 ,.. artQ "" done). . W!tll• ~ ... baklqr, brown beel and onlonl lislilly. When potatoe.t are dont, cut In halvos ~ right tlttougll foil S<COP out Jnaidel, ~well : adcheuoninjl. J To P"J'O"." .. .beef: I cup ncl wine 1/3 cup.-tinegar l/lcup- ,111 cap 1111 ..... di '>t teaopoOn garlic salt (or \I dov• p-carllc) 'tvaler, ofive oil, garlic salt (or Das!t or freollly groond """""'1 garllc), -·thyme bla<I: -\ . !ll!d chill ·to maJoe morilllldt; V. •t.oaspQon. .-id tl!yme mix we!L Poor over beef In 1/,(eupoopcbillpowder shallow dis#J ; cover , ~· ~. boneless, rolled refrigerate 24 hours, turning beef (chlll'I\ l'f nJ!VP), tied occaeionally. Sall.~~ when ready to cook, remove Dry mustafd '. ·-meiif'froin marinade. Sprinkle 4 large carrots, peeled, cut outside well with salt, pepper up and dry mustard. 3 stalks celery, cut up P 1 a c e niari.nade-eoaked 2 medium onions, sliced cheesecloth on triple thickness Cheesecloth of heavy-duty foil; plaoe meat Heavy duty aluminum foil in center. Add vegetables on Combine wine, vinegar, and around 1 beef. Pu 11 r t cheesecll)th over ~t to com- pletely enclose (t. F o I d ahmWnpn foil sectlZ'ely over meal ·eook ill closed pit or ~gij!J .. · · To j:OOI< in Pil; . • Dfg.a pH abolil I !get deep, 4 x 5 f~ long, and .3 ftlet wide. Line pit witll rocks . When ready to cook, build wood fire adding edd.itional, wood as it OOm! down. (It takes about 5 hours to get the rocks thoroughly heated.) Before cooking, shovel" out ashes and place in tub or large ESUPER· ' can. Place a layer ol, f.eml, leaves or corn b.zsks' on· the 1>oUom o1 !loo p!L Place lolJ. covered meat on top. , Cover meat with more leaves, then add.the hot .... : On top of this put a cenvaa sheet; then a cover -of earth_ Leave in pit about 5lf.i: hours. To cook in covered gTiU : I~ meat tbennometer through alumirurn foil and cheese cloth. It is no t necessary to·tum meat during cooking t11ne. c o o k ap- proximately 21h hours. _) TH SUPER __ ....... ..,....., ___ .._._ ., CES. Over 80,QOO families switched ·to .last .y~ar. w.,._.~1 s~ CondiKtM Amo~~~ • ---r.- USDA GRADf l•SOUTHERrf WHOLE I) FRYERS :~~~0 .• L INION llVfJI R.ORIDA Mi IE GRAPEFRUIT NEW CROP .14 \ ' l > , EACH • • lilll' IHOULDEB Pl.ADii U·Ul.A. CHOICE AllllllCAN DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT PRODUCE DEPARTMENT CHUCK 89 fBESH~ 89 STEAK .. • . SHOWIER ~ • 1!.•th King Slao AllMEAT . FRANKS lncll•n Rl..,-N.,.Crop ~" .73 ~=rRUIJ •K• .17 LIAtlCUPIS STEWING BEEF .... lolft 98 Hit1tDM 89 .. • · ..:eEEFROAH~ 1 · Morrd-Slk:ed Al Mell ot 83 Fltat ol 1119 S1110t1-North-11 25 Kl'!t..S~•-All•n1-c1non oktttttc• 3·20 AU. BEEF BOLOGNA 1-lb. • ~~~~ ,..1tt. • CIGAREI IES · 3.25 • ~P•trW1Cudl1ir 3.89 EU.iSPEARS 15 Oce1n Spniy-,1-0i blltle 79 (;ANNED HAM M. N ,.... • C;BANBeRRJJUfc;~ 01d~:9· _ :· "••Ptt•-Moaui~~., 115 Fr1atiPk:t«1-v1t,•t1 25 !!!!rCroc k.r-Choc.fUdge--::.~-8· -CheddarClul;»_Qieese 'Nb. •--_ R~ YAMS ,_.., • __ fROSllNG MIX-14-or.. otdpr::; .-.a -"'s1'~nAmericand1v1d1111.wr-. ,...,._ ,78 So11c1at.e" 08 ..,_.. CABBAGE ,.. .... Slr1lned -•""-or. j1r A'd ~ 08 Gerters Baby Food "" P•:O: • F1el1ehu•1ar•11n.-'Stkk ~ 43 lli~k..Y•llowM111H IJ6 DM Margm1ne ' -• BANANA SQUASH ...... . ~ ',37 "'"'""'!"""" _,,.,....... "ii ·~ ... ,jj ) -. • ' ' . . . • a KAL IY'N CAT Fuuu "~i '-~ii' 'SWED~DRli:D BEEF oo MEAT MASTBIMEATS -.. ;-!. .... 1.28 .. 1.49 ~. 1.45 ... 1.78 -.1.59 ~.1.89 -.2.49 "1;09 ... 1.19 London Grill,Steak ...,l!.ltt e.ityC~1r-L1v1r-pk1J. Id rk 3a 4-oL • !Ill ~.~f.\ ~A~ FRYERTHGHS 10. .89 CAKE MIXES 0 '"1 • a , S9f"MA~GARtNE~' a!!i .39 ~511 { '"i~( ._ .;..,...:., .• v.,.~ Brl•ket-Poln!Cllt 98 DryANorm•l-1$.-0!,bolt!e oklpr1~• 12s Pl1ln1ndAHFl1'1'0f'8 ' 55 CWBSTEAK Tc;m-51es:. .... llrloln,:O, • llNal!fast Steak ........ Bottom Sirloin Steak ........,._loln NeW York Steak a.et Shoulffr Clod-fl1l llll BONEI ESS ROAST U.1.D.4.Cholce Shouldet'*" LAMB CHOPS Ralphs Corned Beef "' , BRECK SHAMPOO '·" • . RALPHS YOGURT · ,... , ~=-..._,_,_ --,79· L''·"E-..R MINl-211>.HoAMv111111 lb. t,79 T&TH-PQPSH old pr~; .71 fllch 1nd&11tt.ry 39 ;.-:;ti~·-~ _...... B8 UI Ralphs Buttermilk . .,,,, • MIXED BOUQUETS .._ , llle.O-tlb.plrf. 87 ~-----------RALPHS BACON "· • ··~l•blt-12ot.pkg. 89 Honnel Wafer BacOn • O~bttrik'S:.usage ... 89 iiN'oRI"" 2 75 .... _,,.,... · 87 VODKA . Brown n Serve Unka ,.. , ..., p . SEAFOOD DEPARTMENT LAkESHIR'lr GIN : .... :2.89 LIQUOR•DEPARTME;Nr BAKERY DEPARTMENT ..... 22 ......... HOUSEHOLD VALUES Al11mlnum -With !1q Pop-Out H1!d9 · ICE CUBE TRAYS r~u _.99 IRONSTONE BOWLS hit.._ 1or-a.1.a. . LAMB BREAST . GAOUNDiURKEV ,.. .29 ,..89 k•ro-Jllltl'l'E11 · 59 t -Yl•rotd-S•v•:M ' ·flfttl 3 59 ASH STICKS .. , Old GlenwoOd Bourboil • "'" 1 o·a !_•.!!.dl. M..::Allllt1r-l1We.&0 4 99 PERCH Rll.ETS ,.. , :;1.;UTCH o"" , -.59 ..... 55 r .... zp With Stri,.1-Popul1rS1nt SPORT SHOES R.Pl1r oi Legal Sin ENVELOPES -.38 ... a.89 ..... 81 Ralphs combination of SIJPER BUYS and EVERYf}AY LOW PRICES is the .best way we know to keep your grocery bill down. FROZEN FOOOS Gl'HftOlenl:-Cut'9lnMllor 10 0& 33 llXED VEGETABLES "• , --WllTEBREAD ... 59 olS • ST1JiFED ChffM"' CftfM8, I p1rt 38 POTATOES ••~ • -··•t FANCY PEAS ·-· ~SOUFFLE ~OOMPUNGS ~-~~­W111TI: BREAD Pie,. .. , MXED VEGETABLES .... 4 ... Pkt. • I ,. .. 47 ...... 120L 53 .... , .... 45 .... t40.: 43 ..... DOLE ..... ~~~~~--.PINEAPPLE QIB'tdll' .llllt Ftllld8 . ":! .29 MAYONNAISE.83 TlntpOfary leductd Price. ...,loctorara S,.ciof.Allow ..... JUICE PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS ,2-. li4 . ZEe'TOili:rTISSUE '"".a& -~ ' ..... ' 12 OL 10 All !1:i~H 4tO&. • All • ~RlrtiU DETERGENT ""' • 11or. 21 o\clo9nt-.f.llON4~~1'1C-~-I~; 0• e.n • ROOM DEODORANTS · ~ .o"I lhMrllMlll1 lRIXCEREAL 'Dohl • PINEAPPLE J!JICE J1ck 6 8•1n1t1lk-GetMn Whole Kemal Com ~12 qt. 1 99 1!.oy1!1-S1111 Cclulltly IO II&. 20 ... , FACIAL 11SSUE ,.. • Mllkrnan-lr1•ttt NON FAT Mii.JC • 89ttf Crocker POTA'TOBUDS MN~r!·.~ Nlne•uv. <:. fOOll ~T!•ll• MOTTS APPLE JUICE t=~;.-.... •,:1.09 ClEANwGSOLVENT :!:.$1 •~.: .12 BOWL CLEANER "• .11 :.: .8& TERi1TOWEi.seoleta "= .41 49 '°""Qll 40t • 76 .... , BATHROOM CLEANER .: , --Eff9Cllve 0ot. 12 thrU oat. 18 1 ' ISP EVERYDAY /,OW PRICES • HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS -:: ... = . .,. FROZEN FOOD iil\r~ ~Kii ;m;;...x_. =toiH;ER. =.11 ";: A1 --T)NV•IAI ()l;l;;n"JlllCE PANTRY FILLERS ' ·-. :: .. , YUBAN COll'FEE --j";: .31 IALTINECflACICEAS rA!AD~ffs1NO 1:.es ..._ ..... c-. ':: .eo LUCKY CHARMS .. _ PILLSIUAV FLOUR ~.12 ..-YUIAN COFFEE ' ':: 2.A9 PANTRY FILLERS ' ......... -10... 8AkAD DRESSING = .II ----HYDRO' COOl<tll '= Al INi'TANTCOPfE! ~ 1.37 'mN-S~rooNI -:: .31 ---FRANt<EH8EARVCEllEAL "" ,.Q NoH'i<Tr'':trtk ::·t,OI PANTRY FILLERS -ITIWl!DTOMATOll ": ,n ...... --~--..... IALADOMUINQ: =.II --~ ~~ "!CIPIDOGFOOO -,,27 OlN/i°'iRllllAD MIX ':::: .11 li'll'A IAll\' FOR MU~ ~ .11 cm: • .w ·--.:: . t. HOUSEHOLD NEEDS --ZEE TOIL!T TI I SUE ';: .2t tlou1DDEm1QINT ::; .... o.r.:.r o:: t.14 FACiAtTI'i= . ~ M .. _ BOLD DETERGENT ~.II ---TOILnTlllUI ';::.It I I -~-----~ --- J 0 PILOT ·ADVERTISER Wednesday, October 11, ltJ72 D IRIS DRINKING WATER .:.;'.'; •••••••••• 29' D SEGO LIQUID DIET FOOD •••••••• :~0:.27' D POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL .•••.•••••• :~0.c.91' ................................................ -· BEST FOODS i GIANT TIDE QUART JAi 63c II DETERGENT 79c MAYONNAISE I 1Gl1 n llt 111Et!I' ii 1••· ·;·n D JIF PEANUT BUITTR •••.••••.•• ::<:•.66< D MILK MAN DRY MILK ... , ...... :•.'!'.12°' D SANITARY NAPKINS:·:?. •••••••••••. 39' DOWNY i CHUNK LIGHT lUNA fAllJC SOFT£NER $139 l cAfiNATION 39c 6•·0Z. PKG. I 61/>0Z. TIN D ORANGE JUICE BLEND:;~"¥ •••. !~~,~~49' D KEN-L~RATION DOG FOOD ~"!<!:! .,'':':.1169 D ,KIJff;,QUEEN CAT FOOD.':,;' .. -_, .. .15' COFFEE. i M-D ,TISSUE sMA•T & FINAL 79c I BATHROOM . 3 ~ $1 l·LI. TIN I -4-PACK R D KAVA INSTANT COFFEE r-~···~>:> •.•.. :~'.99' 0 PINK DmRGENT ~~-:n:-:L ............ 45' CHICllM Of Tt<l H.l •1'·0L 4'lc 0 CHUNK LIGHT TUNA .. ~~·;': ?':' ..... ~-.. L Thrlftimprt Is Determ1ned To Charce Lesa ·on More •S YEAR OLD• FAIRGROUNDS S!RAIGHT s 47 QUART • 80° ., ourbon ti1.scOTS MIST• 4 YEAR OLD s ~QUART•80° I SCOTCH QUARTNou $ VODKA BEER• 12·0Z. ·cANS 6 •1•• SCHLITZ •• ck • ---~--· ~-DAILY "LDT S7 ----------- W•dot$day, Oct.obtr 11, 1972 Coffee Cakes Green Giant Green Green Giant Dole Pineapple SARA LEE BEANS PEAS JUICE ~- LARGEPECAN 79c KITCHEN SLICED ·zzc ., 17·0Z. zzc ZS~ eunER STREUSEl 46-0Z. FROZEN OR FRENCH STYLE TIN 16·0Z. TIN TIN 12Y2·0Z. PKG. . ' , ~ @ ' -' ' SUNNY V ALI:.EY• FRESH PURE VEGETABLE OIL JUMBO ROLL REGULAR SIZE FROZEN LARGE CRISCO VIVA MORTON 'AA' EGGS OIL TOWELS DINNERS ' S-5~ 3ft99! ONF · 39c DEcOAAroR-z IC DOZEN 24-0Z. AND • CARTON ~ BOnLE ASSORTED COLORS @ ''Fine Quality. At Low Prices!'' "TENDER-LEE" FINE QUALITY : RIVERSIDE BRAND • FRESH FROZEN Smoked : ~Grade 'A' Tom PICNICS ! TURKEY : CALll'ORNIA GROWN 1 OVEN READY e ' I 18 to 22 LBS. I - .-ic ECONO PACK OF 3 LBS. LViR'S SLiCED BACON 79e D HORMEL'S SLICED . BACON •• FF::~: . .79' D OSCAR MA YER BACON •• iw '!?:'":""!~ .. 97' . D SMOKIE LINKS .'\!'~::;:;'. .......... 85' •. OO-~l,..lli•l ...... 41. . O um[ FRIERS =~-·"'"' 98' • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • u. e ' -• FRESH PLOWUlS ARIUVDfO DAU.Y • BEAUTIFUL ASSORTED 0 11.69 LISTERINE "??: ........... $1.09 0 99' ANACIN .................. -:·.82< D 11.09 RIGHT GUARD ~-.••• :~~83' 0 89' CLOSE UP -~~~~:'. ........... .72< •OIAC ...... ~TA INDOOR :;.";".,::."'.=.~.,.,. $287 • .~:r:~::' "°'' PLANTS ................ . Fresh Fruits & Vegetables, At Discount PurpQ'5e ~lppln Apples ' FROZEN FOODS AT DISCOUNT D SUNSHINE STATE LEMONADE ••.•• ~~~ 12< D .. 'FFIN ROUNDS ?..:..":';:;;r::.-:.~·:::r" ·-"' 47' lllUI ••• , • , , ••• , •• , • , , • , D ROUND BREADED SHRIMP • :·:!~::T'?~ .. i1" HASH BROWNS i GINO'S PIUA Ol!-IDA. 4 • ggc I CHIESf 59c POTATOfS 0 I flOZtN T2·0l. HO. R I l•OZ. ,ICG. D FROZDUNGLISH MUFFINS • ~:;;?,:: .. 49' D JENO'S "CHEESE PIUA . ~-::::1;7'.·~~; -:-.. 11" D FROZEN BABY LIMAS .~':~·:·: :·~: ...... 55' DELLY TREATS AT DISCOUNT OL' VIRGINIA FRANKS SWEET BISCUITS i KRAFT MARGARINE Oii I UnflMIUt 1 oc 1, MINI CUP 43c '1U.UURY I-OZ. TUlf I l·la. ""0 · KRAFT MONTEREY JACK CHEESE ,\J?sP I c ~. 0 All BEEF FRAllKS ~ :~ ............ 67' 0 HUNGRY JACK BISCUITS ;::(~: ••• :-:~L.24' OSCAR MAYER • SLICED BRAVNSCRWEIGER c REG. 69• OSCAR MAYER •"-' I ll. $179 HAM SLICES ................. ~~~: ON NICHA5f Of ANY J..lJ,. 01 MOii -BONELESS Beel Roast - 2701 HARBOR.BLVD., COSTA MESA ~ e 139'22 BROOKHURST, GA.DEN GROVE . e 1308 W. EDINGER. SANTA ANA 585§ WARNER. HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 !\. TORO. EL TORO ·, , I .. ... ; , , . . . . . . .,..,.._______ --· ---_..__ --- ' DAil V PILOT 11 "; Fancy Foods --VALU A BLE C OUP ON ----\/Al< ,,,l\L I t Ill I•'' '"'l -----------· I Flower 11J JEANNE LESEM NEW YORK (UPf) Consumer heels about rising I food prices apparently haven't hurt the fancy food and • beverage Industry. -------------------- BAGGIES LAWN AND LEAF BAGS REG. 69c 29¢ I I I I With thi1 eo11po11, no minimum purclt•1• r•qulr.d. l lrnit I J boll p•r coupen -oni coupon p•r e111torn•r. Void 1ft•t S1111d•v. Octob•r 15, 1971. I GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASkn -------- COLD POWER DnERGENT I I • GIANT SIZE -49¢ I . . REG. 89c . . I With t!th eoupon, no rnl11lrnurn pur(h••• fequlrff. Llrnlt I boir p., co11pon -one eoupo1t p•r cu1tomer. Vold I •her Sund1v, Oetob•r 15, 1972. GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN 1.Um • -------- Paradoxically, this industry 1---- - - - -- - -- - - - - is thriving while t h e M I I ' I restaurant business suffers. A 1 AJAX MJB CARROTS I KRAFT I VALUABLE COUPON VA LUA BLE COUPON VALU ABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON --- sp<!Cialty food trade mag.We • LIQUID I I ' ox. editor says sales of fancy DETERGENT COFFEE MORNING FRESH I SLICED CHEESE =i~~u:~:~,:,1 I GIA NT SIZE-39¢ 1, s219 ', . c~~~o 3 fr 29¢ I SHAltP a~s1¢ 1, the past three years. 22 Fl. OZ.-REG. 63c 3 LB. CAN ONION . . . . . . . R , Her theory is supported by 1 j ' j Daniel J. Carter, president of With this coupon, no minimum purchat• ••quirtd. limit I Witt. this coupon, no minimum purcha5• r•quir.d, l imit I With this co1tpof'I, no minimum purch••• requir•d, Limit With tllit coupon, no mitiimum pur<ha1• requirM. Limif the NationaJ Association for I bottl• p•r c:oupon -one coupon per eu1tom•r. Void I can per coupori -011e coupon p•r c11•tom•r. Void ] pkg•. p•r eoupon _ on• coupon P•' cuitom•r. Void l p•r eoupon -on• coupon P•' eu1tom•r, Void 1ft•r the Specialty Food Trade. who I .ft., Sundav, October IS, 1972. _.__, I •lier Sund1y, October 15, 1972. •fter Sund.y, Octob•r 15, 1972. I Sund1y, Oetobtot 15, 1972. I said the retail worth or the in· GOOD ONLY AT BARGAIN IASkET GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASllT I GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASkfT GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IA.Skf1' dustry had grown from $1.75 • - - --·-- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -~ - - - -billion in 1965 t.o $3.l billion by · last year. -· ~ j) fj: I :J ;{•] •]1!3 f-- He expects it to hit $7 bill ion by 1980 and credits both young people and the economic squeeze for the fa st growth pattern. H said young people no are established bread· tter eaters. They've traveled and tasted new foods and beverages, and want to serve them at home. They're more interested in cooking than past generations. They're advocates of natural and organic foods, a fast· growing segment or t h e specialty food trade. Carter added that t h e restaurant business is suf· fering in· many areas because even families who take guests out to eat now rtrst serve cocktails aid hors d'oeuvre at borne to save money· He sald changing mealtime habit.! allo,boost snack sales. Families who eat together on- ly once a day tend. lo snack more between meal!. '111is year's show had about MO ex:hibitors, or JOO more than Jest year. POTATOES U.S. NO. 1 RUSSETT 10 c~~~o 49¢ ONIONS 3i 29¢ TOMATOES 19~8. GREEN BEANS SNAPPY KENTUCKY 23¢ LB. Unusual new products shown included free-ze dried Chinese snow pea pods, 1lqu\d ~ina col- ada cocktail mii: from Puerto Rico, cashew cheese with pirl piri -lightly spiced cheese spread from Portuguese Eastjr..--.-.--.... --.-.--..... --..-.-..... Africa, leVenl brands ol pizza roodue, a Swiss herb beverage SNOWS mil that has no artilicial col-NEW ENGLAND orings. r I av 0 d n gs or CLAM CHOWDER preservatives, Danish cheese with Japanese seaweed and . 15 oz. CAN American-made green herb1 _________________ _ noodles. 15 oz. CAN CALIFORNIA FRESH I GRADE ''A'' SPRINGFIELD COFFEE 1 LB. CAN U.S.D.A. CHOICE 69c BEEF BRISm BEEF ROAST • " ~~ING BEEF .............................. 98f. OSCAR MAYER 89' ALL MEAT WIENERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lb ~~~ ~~i~ ................................. 69f& GRADE "A" ,RYING 9 GRAD! "A" FRYING 69' CHICKEN BREAST ...... 7 ~ CHICKEN L!GS l THIGHS lb FRESH LINK $109f. ITAUAN SAUSAGE -Hot or MRd ........... . AAKAHSAS · $109f c SKINNED CATRSH .. .. . . .. .. . .. . . .. . .. .. . .. " • ;~~H~~~~. · · ....... ?. · . · .. · · · · · ·. · ........ 98f. Fill~ 89' NORTHERN TURBOT ........................ _ . lb CALVERT EXTRA $499 THI SOFT WHISKEY llG. $5.:tt 4/5 9UART IARfiAIH IASKET SCOTCH FULL\)UAIT 5599 16 PROOF __ 111t.!llllj:ltl\l!tfl1lelt___ HEAD & SHOULDIRS SHAMPOO IMPERIAL SIZl-7 OZ. TUIE REG. 2.45 AT OTHER STORES MACLEANS · TOOTHPASTE 4¥4 OZ. TUIE RIG. SJ :Os AT SOME STORES BRYLCREEM SOF.T tlA.IR $PRAY FOR MEN-7 ~ AUOSOL CAN REG-. S1.4t Af SOMI STORES 69' 7.'1: ;----l~;l·l~~:1t·I·l·t"W~ MINUTE MAID • ORANGE JUICE • TANGERINE JUICE • Grapefruit Juice FOREMOST ICE CREAM 1/1 GALLON ROUND DOWNY FLA.Kl ROUND tunEIMILk WAFFLES 12 OZ. PACKAfiE 4/~ NAllSCO VANILLA WAFERS MJI INSTANT COFff E WILSHlll 12 oz. 10 OZ. JAR PICKLE SPEARS e IOSHIR.,. e POLISH .,. 26 oz. ... 49' Prices Effectives Thursday thru Sunday OCT. 12, 13, 14, 15 Prfcet ltoblKt to llOCk 00 -· WI GLADLT ACCIPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS I WI GIYI ILUI CHfP STAMPS COSTA MESA Pl:ACENTIA WI GIVI ILUI CHIP ST.I.MI'S 19111 and Placentia 710 W. Chapman • • " c -I d • I • d I -' Wedrit\day October 1 I 1971 DA!LV PILOT namel f.alse1y -!-------------·----------.. --- ~ . Named \ Could you 1 w~lk Into your l<ltchen or latmal')' room rigllt JlQW and swear that your ap- pllllDCe la coated wttll real porcelain ~ enamel? Ju s t because it appears to be doesn't mean It always is. You can k>ok Inside t h r e e refrigerators. The surface of the liners will look exactJy alike -hard white and shiny. -R takes a real expert to tell them apart. aoa~ drya's are 1no&ber prime eump;me. AU too often we automaUcaUy expect the critical work Arface 8Dd tbe ' .-------:-,.-,I • LETS ASK THE COOK "' NanW"r dnun to have a procelata. . enamel tlnb:ll, became in the past they always bave been. But now nearly half the models on the market have painted tops and expoxy coated drums. Often that is what makes the difference In pr1ce. Then again it mlght not. The Porcelain E n a m e I Institute feels manufacturers themselves should Identify these different I oo t-a Ilk e materials for the cooswner's benefit but many of them do not, so if you are confused, small wonder. Then. when less durable materials fall, it's porcelain enamel that gets the blame. The four basic look..alikes l are acrylic, baked enamel and porcelain enamel -plus fcrmed plastic. Acrylic is a plastic-based compound ap. plied to metal, cured by mild beat. Baked enamel Is simply paint. also dried on wider low heat (21JCMOO). Plastic ls just what its name '· implies -except in appliances It ts usually ooe of tile harder varieties such as polystyrene. Porcelain enamel, on the other t b~ IS a specific fortified J glass Which is permanenUy re- l fuled to metal (usually high 1 _..grade steel) at red hot furnace temperatures of 1 4 0 O - 1 6 O 0 cteg,ees. So bow do you tell !be dll- fereaee1' ~at'1 a toughy. 'l1le mala difference t. that, looted at from en ugle against the Ugllt, a soft bat replar "orqge peel" effect ~ be noted la pored.ala eaamel. It is a pee.attar 111~ 1Drlace opUcal masion that stem1 from firing at blgb lleaL Yoa can alJo ast the dealer polU blank. U be does.n't bow, ut to see the speclflca- tioa alteet. He sboold have H, but tf tt Isn't porcelala enamel then tee may be no mate.rial , ldmtlOcatlon at all. You wUJ ~ bow wUt It blll't even If you I don't now wut It II. Then a!k tile salesman If he • ~. would be willing to run the edge of a coin briskly back and forth against the Interior finish of the refrigerator or ~ ~ sw-face and drum of the dryer. lf it makes scratches that can't be rubbed awar. then It isn't porcelain ename . That is one of the best clues to overall quality and durability of tile .>< applianct. Porcelain enamel is allinproof, rustproof a n d odorproof ,. well as bei"i acid, alkali and heat resistant. The others are not. " Nan Wiley regrets that she eannot provide pers on a 1 answers to your cooking ques- liool, but questions cl general Interest wlll he answered tn her column. Address xour 'questions to Nan Wiley ln care "Of the DIALY PILOT. .Beans Linked Tut1 link 1a11111ea and I~ ClMed barbecue hea111 1:nab a fllvor tombo that f,._ h e 1 rt y appetites. k9'ld wttb • l&lad, c:rusty roils. ~ I fndted gtialln -. It'll wort quick meal _ ... ....,c1ay •. ln•--•llnt -(-~ _..j) 1.11tll , ..... Pour oft 11 but I tab!& ~ dripplnp; acid l/S cup :r;iu &::r. ~ .. :fa pound) barbecue boons and s ial>leapoona gnted P1rmeaon .-. Heat: ltlr now and then. M•kea 2 to I eemnp. , Now! 200 Marketa in California With the Openinr, Wed., Oct. 11, of our neweat 1tore at Alameda 8t Main in Burbank. .. rat 191."-..:;:;;~ AlPllo\ l[T.t. DllCOUllT PllCE FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY """""' """"'' "'" FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY Al."" HT.\ Dl$00UHT ""' FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY Al.rtlA 1£T.t. DllCOllflfT N IC( FANTASTIC DISCDUNIS EV<RY DAY AL~ l(TA DllCOUNT '"" ----~- .. ..Qalce ..,.._, MEllllEll E DEODORAllT 12• --------------I -Inch •.ROUl'ld Cob Pan 31 1 ·~ ,,. • 1ntlont TASTER'S CHOICE COFFEE 4...ount. JOI • trwtant 112 DECAF corru I .II ®solil°MEOAL FLOUR 551@ilOTAITTUOs""' .. , 112 ~ """""""' 'b;ii' DEL MONTE 95, ..... :u~~.~c~~Lc-28' ~~~~:=R·;~; 37' ~PINEAPPU 55' JiOiii' GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 15·0.-.. Con • W1""°"" .._to. 331 @YiEH'llA sAUs.iG[ 271 1 OS <S DELMorITT 'iiiOi LIMA BEANS 115-011. Can • ltollori Cut @DELMONTE GREEN BEANS 29-01. Cori • Y•llOW Clil'G • SIKM or Holv•i DEL MONTE PEACHES ©orrMoN'n riliuoES 11-0ur>a Con DEL MONTETOMATO SAUCE © I 4-0une11 Botti• DEL MONTE CATSUP 351 281 33' 26' 101 21 1 "'" ~~ DEL MONTE CORN ·•HOLi 19 01! r.RfA M c tJ oz "' A[G Ol~COUHT PAICf "' ~ 8-0ir. 1111. • R..f. « Mi....U. KRAFT FRENCH DRESSING @rrALIAit'oREsSiNGM'Y @ Kroft • f-O:r.. II°" ITALIAN DINNER ~ 9-01. 11o ... '-'-'• HUNGRY JACK MASHED POTATOES l'i·°'-""• 11(1.11 <'8/iuNG'RYiicK-"" 'itiii' PANCAKE MIX r.:D::::--Piiliaun 39c. © ~~~~voc ........ Pock c ~BROWNIE MIX DEL MONTE CORN 19 "~"°""' •·- J t• c1~sroKEtvfiR'El:N BEANS 221 @Pli'.rsiuvRY' 1 rRoST1NG : ;ft~ll~iU lS!Q·Oi . con , cut WD11. • l l-OL READY TO SERVE 291 341 321 51 1 . .. 531 481 I BAKERS SECRET 1 IAKEWARE .. EKCO 89 QU ALITY BAK ERY AT DI SCOUfH PRICE > '" "'' :::: STuKELY 261 ~ s ,...., '!9. SHELLIE BEANS ~ PILLSBUR1 FLOUR 231 471 1 2 ~••1 215X KODACOLOR RLM 36-Count lottlot • for Chlldr.., BAYER ~ 10 Pock AlPltA BETA CRISPY ROLLS llltll IOI 11-0ir. 6 Poet. 391 1l-OLPkg .• 12-lllCh • o-.. IU'HA BETA PIZZA ... 19-0&.Pka. • 12-ll>Ch ~Ol'll 11.rt111n1 LONGHORN CHEESE GENERAL MILLS CHEERIOS ·,. ';,'/ a1c ·.··. ~[1 lJl~C OUttl Pl!t'f "' @ifEPAPER0TOWRS~ ZirPi'Pi'RMiiiKiHs ·~ ASPIRIN \bl 29' GLAZED BUTIERMILK DONUTS @ iPPu' iuR·rrovil @W:Fti:ius£wii'1z ~ cR0Ac.KE°RBlriREi. """ 41 I 'iPiii( STICK, CHEESE · 71 I "~~:t;;t~ji;;p;;:;::--~ 10..0 .. '""·. ~ th t:P'\ 360-C-t Pixk~ ~ ZU FAMILY tlM'KINS 271 121 521 331 3 Pock \llnyl Pull on w 2 Pod!.~ 0.. GERBER VHIJll BABY PANTS 89' Pull°" BobV Shir.• l Si&91 lie • ___ .,,.......... 7-81" 36-·Count SOttl9 COPE COPE ' ---w=-•-55" .count • DlfPOlab'- PIAYTEX 971 . -aomE AUTLLS ~:~~it~. Gold Jie ~DIAL BATH SOAP •. ~ -~~-Oi. k ttle • Utro Hold 11 f •-Oir. Spray e., _.;;;-~WILIACAREDO ~-o.~<- s.oz. Regular «W/fxtra Body \b'EASY Off ~ 1'8WELIA BALSAM 1 It ~ u.a •~·wr,,_ "' 'W CONDmONER \bl FRESHABYE DIAPERS 8-0z. llottle . H«bol • f~~ACK FRESH GROUND BEEi LB. DUllUClOE'S lmA mu 1m1111 ,_ 1111 IOWI MAID UCON 67! I LB. PKG. 77c T·BONE Isa ,,..."',iT&iiA'N'11 ..,l°' s1u1 u. SAUIAOI u . IONWSS SMN1°' OSCAA llAYD • BONIUSS CllUCI IOln ~ U. HAM 1 LJ. 2°' IONIWS 111 ITIAKI rice. TOP Siii.Oii STiii . u. DOUILI --.n1 MIAN DOUMI IAVIMll AT MPM llTA ~~-...................... ... .......... ·--,,-.. ""' -.... ,....... ..,. t F' I •r ,...._ 1ll1e11•1n ,_ .. ••ofudflW• .-........ ...ti ,..... ... 10.0... il'ti.g, • btrG 91or., lk ~ • I •• ilEAi.MceoYCHILI BRICK 691 6,:::\ "·"""• c... . 41 1 •-o..itic• Pac;kOQt • Sliclld "A• '"hlrtd62~ ~ B&M BAKED BEANS IWIOIA IMPORTED HAM :Ao::ii ~ ""°""' c... 301 O'Jiic'tluic£8L(ijD 471 ~~~~~~~~~~.-- 3.0Z. Pkt. • ChiPl*I '"' OI' (8) RAGU AlPHA 'IETllcHIPPED HAM 321 ~ SPAGHITTI SAUCE 791 19'~wooi.ifcRU& cLEAH£R 1 H@A;~AiiWiiPiW 351 7of ~ ,......., """ 111 ~ o~-Oo. '°' • •w Ch>d<• 77' \b'WOOLITE LIQUID \bl SHAKE 'N BAKE . 81'©i:UP-'"""'·· 881 flll aman ram. RECIP£1 . rTtlfltl IOMIUU POlll UI HONEYDEW MILONS 3i100 @i{i'Binii'o'oMTISSUE l Poe•• A.--11111 sonwEvE BATHROOM TISSUE 221 10..C!, ~ ..... • 6 R.-1 1.IJ 15-Ct Wor.!• lloO" •I CiOJlorl •I• ~1 2.c-1111• ~NEWFREEOOM SANITARY NAPKINS "°""°""' MOtt.fll. 10 A.M. TO IJ PM. SAT & SUN.10 lM TO 7 Plil. CASABAS MELONS IUNCH WISHES lllEN 301 1vtmr1 WDI l'8 UftALUN 'W HOUND 9•c •• lu. loc CAllAH ... EVIOPEAN & ~----..... --.°"-.. -,-. ...,-, ----. IANINI SQUASH ••·"''""" oa 451 1> c.11oo fllSH 10~ 8~. 8~ 25~ 10~. 1Ck FllSH POMEGUNAIES DTOl I • hOlDI • 1 LI. IOI llUDD (8 11• SHllMP ..,...---•·-,,,..~ IUIOUI ·s.n .. ..._ 9' SIUfRI IUlllYS • ..... 7.9•-.. j. OlAHGC JUICI IS. GUIY ~iX'foevaOUQUETS 97! = :=:., 10 ~ 127 IUll .,._ -.. _ --· CAllOIS II J DAILY PILOT • irfl ina ti ng-·--c-quipm ·ent 81 BARBARA-GIBBONS rederll-~-of identity carbohydrate or lo"'l-:Jl,lllr tnd....l~ ror more lban &O figure out a way to Inject the freezer! You can UM this 1ervlnttlte envelope& of Ollcken Cacciatore. OOll qQI Yau don't need 11 kl~henful ror jams and jellies -100 diets there are substilut&-1eara wllh apparedt safely. ~ Sweetner-Into the sterilii.ed same t~ue for aa extra dlet.etio .atrawberry --1c.lat1n Vin.,-for tbe.ae __uO ~. m~h truit and not enough s\vettened dietetic jams and Saccharin, however, doesn't jars of jelly after processing, lo"A•-ealorie jim: deaert, and ltlr until conk seno a atamped, tell* of canning equipment 10 tum sugar! jellies. stand up very well to high or they'd have the problem whi~ Supr-Frte pletely dl.aaolved. dressed envelope and 25 ctntl~ out 8 few jars of the best~ver This is a case where tht » All non-nu1r1tlve sweetenen sustained heat, which accoonts ped! StrawbtfT)' Jam Whe.n cool, pour into small to SL 1 ~1 G 0 U R MET strawberry jam. Yoo don't called .. imila1 kin" is hcallluer on the market today are shnp-for the disappolntlng flavor of But the home jam maker Crush one plnl of stnwbef.. jars and freeze or refrigerate. CHJCKEN WITH A 11'0REION need a ton ol pound·provokin~ lhan the "real thing." ly various forms of the old .mosL comrnerclally·pr~ doesn't have that problem-U ries and cook them lot two Three calorles per tablespoon. FLAIR, in care of the Dally sugar, either. For dia betics, hypoglycernla standby, which has bee11 used sugar.free jams and jellies. abe makes small quantities to mbl.utell in one cup of water. PUot. 50 West Shore Trail, AU you need ls a pint of -~reren and o•~ra on low-by countless diabetics here JI the i·euy makers .could keep in her refrigerator or Now, mil in one of the tou.... cc ...... iab Arroz con Pollo, 11:.! ...... ta N J a7871 ) strawberries and a pack.age of1-------"'-~-----=--------------'--'-----'-------'-------''-----------------.,......-'--------'--..,...-'----''-·-·c• ___ . --- Jello. Sparkle, or any ulher favorite brand of strawberry gehUW dc~rt n1ix . It's as easy as this SLl1t1 GOUH~IET STRA\\'BERRY JA.\1 I pint strawberries I cup water 1 t4 servings! package ~tra\\·berry gelaJ in dessert n1ix \Vash and hull the stra\•/ber· ries and slice or crush thc1n 1n10 u saUC<'pan. Add the water . and gelatin dessert mix. Cook and stir over moderate flame until mixture boils. Simmer two minulJ!S. Allow to cool. Pour into three small jars: one for the refrigerator and two for the freezer. Ten calories per tablespoon. Ten calories per tablespoon! That's about one-fifth as fat- tening as commercial jams and jellies. They're about 55 calories a tablespoon, due lo the heaps of sugar necessary to make then1 gel by con- ventional techniques. But this Slim Gourmet jam ls sweet enough for anybody's taste, and so thick with strawberries that it's bound to become a family favorite, dieting .or not ! In our family we used to prefer the low-sugar "adult" jams and jellies. They were about 24 calories per table- spoon, but they seem to have disappeared from our area's supennarket shelves. I I suspect that most shoppers \Vere tumed off by the word "imitation·• on the label, a re· quirement because the low· sugar products didn't.n1eet the Fruit's ' Saucy Oysters R in season ... .so R shrimp and clams. Fresh shellfish sea.son in- cudes all the months spelled with an R, but frozen seafood meals can be enjoyed anytime. Grapefruit Seafood Sauce offers a splendid wa y to serve the fresh frO'len shellfish. The sa~ is actually a dunk that will do beautifully for you rownb u ff et-supper service. Prepare platters or seafood, set the sauce over a warmer, and .let guests dunk their own . Grapefruit Seafood Sauce adds liveliness, too, to just about any fish that is simply fried, baked. "' broiled. Grapefruit R 1n season, too, and your supermarket offers a plentiful supply from fall right lhrouRh the holidays. Olllled grapefruit halves are ever welcome, but the fruit ha9 a variety of other guises as well. And keep in mind that juicy broiled grapefuit is a pleasant chang~f-pace appetizer . just sprinkle with brown 11ugar, dot with butter. and broil for 10 or IS minutes. Whether you c 6 m b i n e grapefndt with se;ifood or 5erve it in any of itli rnnn~ versatile forms, it 's a real treat. GRAPEFRUIT SEAFOOD SAUCE 1 cup ('it pound} butter I 1.ablespoons I \Ii 6--0llnce cnn) frozen Florida 1:rit1>e- frult juice conccolrate, thawed undllutt'<I 1 teaspo on i.:ralt .. >d grapefruit rind 1/4 cup chopped p:irsley 2 tablespoons rhnrJM'd dlll or 2 twpoo1t'> dried dill ··· ··Weed - 2 t11blc!ipoo1t11 c h o p p e d chlveJ 14 ttaspoon !B It Oytten, clams or eooked lhrtrnp Melt butter 1n 1 m a 11 uucepen. Add grape.trult con- eenl1'8te, grapefruit r Ind . porsley, dil~ chives ind &alt : hut. Makel 4 lo I .. rvlap. l PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., OCT. 11 THRU TUES., OCT . 17, 1972. ~ .. • • SINCE CONVERSION TO EXTRA LOW DISCOUNT PRICING! i ~m~~u mffi0CTrn~ ~~mmrn~ mmw -=-= --~ 1 ~~~ Q oog~rn ·1. lfJ@Jtr WI HSllYf THI llo+lT TO LIMIT QUANllfll S. NO SAllS TO DIST•llUTOIS QI WM01.15A~ltS. HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE THOUSANDS OF LOW, LOW PRICES AVAILABLE TO YOU VICTORY HEN :i:-.TURKEYS , . ::J;. ,I~ tft~ \~~ 4 .: .. . ~ .. ',,.... ... -c;." •. ;f ""T;,,~•':Jlll!"" .• #. LI . BAG ' .. , . •• • WHOLE SUll FROZEN COllCEllTRATE • • • I OFFICIAL U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP llDIMPTION STOii ''° U.S.D.A. -CHOICE BEEF T -BONE STEAK 39~ ASSORTED M+D BATHROOM TISSUE • ' l . ti. ~ +-U.S.D.A. CHOICE IHF BONELESS STEAK ~~, TOP SIRLOIN -~·. .( ·'· . \ Ji' • • ,. • HILLCREST ~~'t , • • SUGAR . ,5 I -~I . sue" 1 :, ..... ........ _.. _::::---· l ASSORTED FLAVORS '• HILLCREST , . I ORANGE JUICE SODA POP ~ ' .. 12-0Z. CAM • • • THERE IS A MARKtT 8ASKitM·.a:·oi5COUNT FOOD STOR E NEA R YOU ... ,....,11n1 ..... ~ "'--'~111 ............. ..., •• ,Alln•11t'--·~'""-.... •....-ietua.11•-• ... ••aiu...11"1. .................... ""'"....,..'' •=11111. ............ •U-~( 1,.U.t ..._1.11 •"""IM,•Jti. .... ·-·ICll,)tMI. ............ _.......,_,, .. __ •tlt ...... UMt.r.;::;r-: .... _.,,.:r'llo~ •Mft'l-KUMA.t•'"* ... •I ... • .. ll .... il •<-..,1 .. i.-.-tio<I. •u.litll ...... IJMt-1.., •1-•1t1.Ultl........ •IM'l•MU ...... lt1Jlt --·~ • '°' •. ...._,,, .... •it.I.it ltHt......_ ... • --.1JMl ...... W19t-. o 1•1fl-.1ttt~-• ·---lltlo1.,._... • 1-llil .. t ... .._,,... 0 _..t.11.1 .. "I:-~ '• ._...:.,ir.:..::.::-._ : t:,.~~t';';",'"'::'" 0 J:-°"~1111'-... t. t Uf'I ... tllMI. tlMlo, • 1"-f)lt.-1... • •&e-•9"'MI. 11•1 ..... --.• .MYC.fln.n tt--... •Ml .... , ..... ...,_,,., • ....... 111,1 .. 1..-.... t t.Mlf&~ltll ,_'" 0 ua, M ...---. • -""'1•1J1 1,,_--,• l...._tH•............. • ~IM"llA,rlU....... • UHMC.ftll,HM41-'o-. • tMA•lftf r>Ml ht ttt • _...,lHl °"'-M • ' "-0 Mt'll,llt•~-• =.:'i"' .. ''""t•.. • 1•"'"~r,111tc..t-• u-1•l, 1n1t._., • ._-.,111tt~'-'ho· • tM11iNM.l;1uJ1....;....-.wi-• """"'-'"'·'''"'"'...,.._ • t:J:":::.t11; 11 " 1.._111. • .-&.IM..._M t . l,UI......... • lll-.111•.-IH, •U••tl,tttttl,1'...,_ ·~IH•,..__.. •PMIU~..,,.. ~lo • ..u._..:1.... ..-.... ·~.!U41t. .......... •119fU'l"""Ull' ...... ll. •_,M9tlll.f1 ......... -•1.11111\lfl.1111•.-·r ._.,, .... uttl ..... -.•P•••-.. ,,, __ , , __ ._,... 11111--. • "9fNli.!...•1•l._..._ --.... ...-...... -.......... "'n.1111'-1... • ............ 111...--. WATCH YOUR MAIL BOX ... n.... .. 1ott, ............. ~.i\twNKts,.. .. iw • -... '"""ct .. IUt .,,.. Wlll!ll ,.. ............. -......... ,.. _.... ...... ... ~-.............. ... .. .... -tti.t .... . I I ' ,, I ' I ------.. Wtdrw~day Octobtr 1 l Jq7J . • STATll llOi. CHT!Hm ... • IHCMJLDR CUT ROUND BONI ROAST 90NIU.SS CHUCK • GUAU.NTllO ROLLED BEIF ROAST • ITATD,llOS..~ .,,. OU.....HTUO RUMPROAIT1 ...... DAILY PILOT .. u75c u99c .,93c ST A TB lt01. C9mfll0 Nlf • GUAU.HTUO CHUCX IUAl(S ITATIRBROI. UANAMO ..... wa.1,.n1MMID• GU.t.•.t.Hmg RIB IUAKS .. . ... u69' "98' ' MOlllY BACK GUARAllTll Oii QUAUTY MIATI lViJV 'llCI OfMIATIS UHCOHOITIONAll Y GUAlANTRO TO PllASI YOU . , . Ot YOUt MONEY WIU llCHIEIFUll V IEFUNOEt> FARMER JOHN• FULLY COOKED SH,ANK PORTION WAU lllf-MOJT • GUA•ANftlD CLUB IJEAKS ··-- STAT•.CS.CllT1"9NO't 0UAIANTlfD STIE.AKS_.Cl9IOl-OIM nP WBJ. ~•,.....•OUMA#TllO T-Bo•snAKS "s 12• .. s12• "$149 $1 SS • " LUER QUALITY 79c SLICED BACON .. . .... LB All MEAT 5ftc MORRELL WIENERS . 12oz ;,- NOT AllS • Wal lWIMMID • GUAIANTfED PORTlllHOUSI STEAK .. s 11• .. s103 MANHA TT AN 69C ' ALL MEAT WIENERS .... ta. a.A.R-M BUlK •AlLMEAT 6ftc SLICED BOLOGNA ... . • "-;i- nAm NOS. C9'11Flll)lflf• GUAU.NTUO TOP S•LOIN STEAK LB. ST A T11 llOS. ClaTIJllD IRF • GUAIANTllO ROUND STEAK IOlllLUI ' ~SLICED SANDWICH ~ MEAT SPECIAL! ~:::;;. 2 8"' Choc;ken PK.GS. ..,- "'•• J.,. o9t (o. =~=:~~':.: ·········· LI. 6 7( Ml.4L '1MI 1-IPOUND PACICAGI SLICED BACON ROUND CHUCK GROUND 7 -BONE STEAK ROAST BEEF ROAST "73' ;;~fH RIB ROAST LUNCHEON MEATS STATER BR9S. CERTIFIED STATER BROS. CERTIFIED FRESH • DELICIOUS ANY SIZE PACKAGE STATER •Ros. CERTIFIED STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF• BONE IN BEEF • BLADE CUT BEEF CHUCK BEEF• GUARANTEED 79~ 89~ 93~ 59~ 67~ STATER BROS. SLICED 4 9 ( 8 VARIETIES AUMfATOIAUlllFIOlOGNA . COTTO SALAMI• lllf SALAMI , JIKX.ll&. 'IMl .. TO• OUVllOAf SANDWICH LOAF. ''°'D lUNCHION FUU HALF LI. CHt<XINOlntlllA • LIOtt CHUIM TUNA ' GOIDOIN•EGGMEDIUMORW'i!r 29 .5Lss 62' PREMIUM N O·DLE.a ..... . _1~:; c ~~I~1°"~~~~~~~1cKEN ·~::::~ s~11N3E$6, SUNSHINE REGULAR OR UNSALTED 3 s BORDEN~ M •• ARCLOENSARINE " 42' NAllSCO "'SIZICAN ................ 42' " . K . I SP y I .. 'STARD 5'1CYBROWN ... ,. oz. 43' CIACKllS 16-0Z. 'k SIZICAN .................. 51' mu 1SIZECAN .................. 71c . - -CRACKERS l&-OZ. GEBHARDTS TAMALES . .. JOO 33' • •• "" • , . ........... BOXES -GEBHAROTS CHILI NO •£ANS. JOO 65' BA ' WILSHIRE POLISH STYLE 39 PINEAPPLEJUICE OOC!S ... Ol 33' 1---· NANAS Pl C'K LES 32-0Z c 5-0Z. RIDDLE CUPS ...... """ 79' I ................................................... JAR. PIE cRusT Mix """"". .. oz 32' • LU~~~c::r .. p1 ,., .,, • sonWIVE 2 22< -.. 5 SC BAIHllllUE "'"' IN DEPOSIT BOTTLES ·TAB DIET . 6 COLA .. 10-0Z. CHILI W/BEANS """""" "'°' 91' PRESERVES ~~~~~"sLERRV H .. io oz sr ·cAilE MIX OR REG . MARGARINE ~~\!.l~~~'""' -" 44' 2 7 C PRESERVES ~1~~1~~~E't,.~~f'._ ;o ol. 53c FROSTINGS PKG. TASTERS CHOICE ~~~Ii~~:·.·~. 0 1 1 1.95 FRESHABYES •OVERNIGHT OR SUPER TODDLER 7 9 PANCAKE MIX r~,'.1:~,~'"' --'" 51' DI APE Rs PKG C CHUNK TUNA ~~~~'."0" ----.. ., ot. 57' ...................................... OF 1i · ~~J~~l~I~~:~!~:"" ----11 ~:~ ~r. I DEODORANT BAR SOAP I 8 EASY ON SPEED STARCH ,_. 01 65' LIFEBUOY ..... . ....... s:i~~ C WINDOW CLEANER ""o" '""' 49' JOHNSONS IMPERIAL PLEDGE DETERGENT GLAD TEXTURED WRAP ,';t\ 55' HORMEL SPAM '5SO•OLO .. -"O< 63' CARNATION SLENDER _ ., .. 87' HOT COCOA MIX , .... ,,o .... 5' Ol 29' 7-0UNCE 81 C • ., 09 JIFFYPOPCORN ~~·,'(,~~ •. -•o• 30', LEMONOR 10-POUND • AWWEETMARGARINE -"31 ' REGULAR PACKAGE APPLECIDER•TREETOP . on 39' lB. FAHCY CAlFOltHIA llO DlllCK>Us APPUS __ _ LAR<il sw1n Y'IHI .,,1 HONEYDEWS LAIQ PUSH flHDll CRISP CARROTS CHEEZ WHIZ KRAFTs54c ASST. 1.oz. ~ OVALTINE ~~g,"..., _ ,, 0 1 75' -----~t.atd{. & DW4 ~ ~ MUSHROOMS lJc:'~'." ---• Ol 46' LOMA UllDA L-.&.., ~ ';.U Ateu TOOTH YI::~• M~~= DRY MILK -3" 0 5· '!-09 u~~· CRiNKLI CUTS ~":: 49' . CLOSE-UP 65' BRUSHU COlllllOL CUltAIOUI' .. -.... 59' ........... -·-lllCH&ADAI ""~ 39'' ' !~.mr.~.5..!~.......... . .. . .. .... = 66 c .-! I • 19 rm&Rf:s~~::.~?.. " " -4' 1°:: :; ------MEllCANDlillEH -5' EDOOWAFftD . '~ 4~ :----,..,....-=-=,,,,.,,,..---,;-------1--------ISCU TS "'llltu llrt ••c; 3 Ital LOMAU•A "' • ••t.I 2 s11 °"''"""""'~,....... . 73' JIRG.ENS IHOWIR BUFFIRIN ••••·I B I o•~7:'""' •o' u ...... ans PEl'P£RONll'IUA "" lENOSPIW '"" LOTION TO IHOWIR TABUTI DIODOllA;j UMEAWAY ""°"'' · ---"0 ' 75' 7'._.5 ',OPili:i.u -·~· 29' ~ao111mu ..... 79' $ . --'1 0 FANTASTIK :::1~r ~b~~l~ --,, o', 79' c ' I 39' "' C.111•°' ~ 89' ...,.. ... 07 , .... ,. 79c 25 -i.o 0 llDRYB'""""H 109 ICEMILKIAIS ••u IUP£1Tf1SHITICKS .. ., .. , " ,_... "' ,..,.fu, C R X ~ .•1 0 1 • -· t a .:::•·OUHC==-• ~t--..--1~-::-::--:-:--.;:;_-f-lll~ JANITOR 1N A DRUM ,, Ol 85' BREAD DOUGH _ _ 4 .: .. ~: 1 GLIEM ICON BODY-ALL lflll.DIX SNOWY BLEACH OIO/ 47' .OQ' 72' LOMA UllDA u u ..... -,.. 8111 ...... 41 TOOTHPAIU MOUTHWASH DIODORANT ltADI DRY TREND ....... ,., 2.,, 01 41' IO~f13U• iC!,~~.~~.~Kn .... "J OtEflll'W ,..., ' 94 $ 19 78• ROYAL TREND 43i WAFFLES '" 18' Mii'iiiworTlllEl 43' 79' c ...... I. .;.::.. PUREX DETE!!G£m'"' .. '~::1 .09 73' .. ,, 1r ,1ii.t:AiiY';'ITila _ 63' _ .. , ..... 'PIZIAMIX . ""''' ' .U&\11 -'"' 7t ' -·----· '"· 82' ITATIR BROS. ITATIR BROI. ITATIR BROS. TEA BAGI CUANllR AMMONIA HAIJ'GALLCIN 45' . - ~"' ftH#rr'" l eodSI_,., •t A ll Stt:trf'I PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL DAYS• THURS. thru WED .. 14UI S.. •11Y1 •A• .. W• , leo 111 W• Jll ... ,_. "'"'· c.at. .... WJ I~ A,...., H...,..,_ .._, JHJ W"t k scar a 11• Stt..,, ._.. ..._ •••• c • ., ................ ..,_ l.&&t N .... ,_..a ...... 1-. "- 1 llO lett C..li1tt ,,.._. 0....,. IUJ W"' '-"' ........ We• ' Pac J4JO W"' U.C• • ._,A ...... 1611141 .... A~ S... AH 1JJIM1 ...... A....._._. ..... Ja.M w ............. ,. 1••• .. ..,.... ..... c.... ..... ,,,, ............ c... .... 1411la-'H•A ..... ,f .. l4JIJM .... A--. ..... I I 42 DAILY PILOT • Boating Careers Outli11ed By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Otar Joyce: Do. you know about )obi fixing boat motor11 in marinas? -1-1.P., Costa Mesa. Is tinkering with machinery a fun lhing for you? Do you enjoy taking small engines apart, geeing what makes (Career Corner J them \\'Ork, and putting them together again'! Are you in good physical shape? Arc you as in1c>restcd in liking your job as in getting high pay? Does boating tum you on? If your answers are "yes," you may want to CQnsider cruising into a career as a mechanic who services small pleasure craft. A high school diploma is preferred, but is not always required to enter this trade. WHERE TllE \VATER· \VAYS AR E. Mo s t of an estimaled 10.000 boat-motor mechanics exa1nine, Maintain and repair pleasure fleet motors in the shops of marinas and boat dealers. Others work for m o t o r manufacturers. boat rent al firms. and at marina s operated by Federal, state arid local governments. Jobs are found in every s t a l e , particularly along the coast in California . Fl orida, Louisiana, Ma!Sachusetts. New York, Texas and \Yashington ... and near lakes and rivers in Illinois, Indiana. Michigan . ~1innesota. Missouri. Ohio and Pensylvanni:-i . NAVIGATI NG Y,OUR F'UTURE. Advancement can be to such su pervisor jobs as shop foreman or se rvice manager. Mechanics \V it h enough money and determina- tion can s1art the ir own dealership or n1arina. Several hundred job openinp:s arc ex- pected each year through th "70s. New boats are in- creasingly equipped with con- venience fea tures such as automatic tills and power-trim co ntrols, which i n c r e a s e maintenance needs. The i.trowtb in minibi kes a n d snowmobiles adds to the need for mechanics. llowever. the demand !or more motorboats and mechanics caused by in- creases in population, famil y income and leisure time will be somewhat offset by the reduced share of recreation money being spent on' pleasure boating as camping and other recreational choices compete (or American spare time. . Shit" 11nd snowmobiles. :r.techan lc m a y specialize in ou tbo11rd or Inboard motors. but many re-- pair b o I h. Gasoline oot- boards are used in most small boats. Larger inboard engines I cabin cruisers. commercial fishing boats, etc.) are similar 1n design and operation to auto Md t r u c k enitines. Some inboards bum diesel f u e l rather than gas. In small shops, mechanics may also patch and paint hulls. repair steering mechanisms, a n d other boat equipment. In some areas. boat-motor repai r is seasonal, so mechanics may also rep a i r motorcycles. minibikes. snowmobiles, lawn- mower motors. and other smal1 gasoline cnglncs. MAKING IT JN marinas. National pay studies aren't available, but a r o u g h estimate. based on data from a limited number of dealers and marinas. for experienced mechanics ts about $.1-&-hour. ~fechanics may be paid oo un hourly or weekly basis -nr a percentage (about SO pe rcent! of the standardized labo r charg-?s for ooch job perform· ed. Shop working condllJons vary from clean and roomy to dirty and cramped. Mechanics may gel cuts. bruises and other minor Injuries. But fi)r many, the variety of work and problem 90Jvtng -plus work· Ing near water pleasure spots -add,1 up to" a happy job. Getting under wa y. Most boat-motor mechanics learn on-the-Job M trainees. As a rule, allow 2--3 years to acquire skll1 ln both outboard and In- board gas motors, and anolher yeer or so to learn dicsrl repair. Student.a may be able to get summer jobs as tra-. Uaelul high 0<hool and trade tchool COurtcl in- clude: 1111all engine repoir, auto mechankt, m a c: h I n t &hop. tclence and math. Yoo can get more lnfonnatlon on t.ralninC ind Job opportllllltl .. by checklntl with local boal dealero ind marlnll. '1'17 to find • bol~motor m<d>llllc who wtU tell you 1bolll his job. Maybe be won't mind u you quleUy Niii around r o r several days watdllng hJm wort. Even If you eventuahy decide this occupotlon harbon lltlle 1ppeal ror you. Wtdrlf'Sday, Octobtr l \, 1Q7? ---, .-- COSTA Ml:S.t. -tu I. 11"1 SI. COSTA Ml!U. -t-. ........ ....._ 11 WI~ St. 5ANTA ANA -1• W. ltilltlt Mt lfltftol SI. FOUNTAIN VALLEY -1,..... Mafllllll II, If Tl...., FOUNTAIN VALL.IT -1"41 Mirier llft. 11111 ........ "'-lOflO -Ill T-11 ltl(l(hell It ... Wedl'ltsday, October 11, 1972 PILOT·ADVERTl;ER 5 WISTMIN°STSlt -..V W•fftlllll1er 11 .._ Wtll MUtfTIMOTOtil llACM -tnn ............. ...... HUNTINGTON llA(H -''" ,,.._ tt l~t MUMTINOTON llAc:M -f:\ MMll ..... C..... MUMTINOTOM llACN-"'1 W.,_ All Stores Celebrate Grand OpenlnCJ -of Our New Store, 3325 Bristol, at MacArthur llvcL S.A. Reg. 99' Norelco Flashcubes Pack of 3- 12 .Flashes 73c Flt most of today's ~for comerosl SoYI' 36c In Sol•. $2 00 Pearson's Par Excellence Chocolates s100 Ari Qssortment of ullU5UClll y delicious melt ... in -your - n'IOUth chocolotH ftcltUring a uriique varlety of the fine5t quality dairy fresh centers ••• pure ond notural fr u it flavors ••• fresh, crisp nun , •• de- lightful chewy co- l'Omels •• , ond ex- quisite old erigli.sh. butter crunch • , , oil d ipped In the f ines t milk.and dark chocalotes. REMEMBER ••• SUNDAY, OCT. 22nd IS "SWEETEST DAY'' Jelly Beans or Orange Slices Peanuts in the Shell 39' 12·0•••• 119 Delicious peanuts Popular treats for make greot Hal• the youngsters in loween t~ats for 29' -.:'~2_:::<><;,:1,;:3,::o•:.·.:;;bo::ioi:;•-._ ____ ..:;:•;;:";.o:;:,f o ll ages. Special Sale of ~11m1 !Ill• Toiletries c_,.,. teo Otllln ~IM .. ft si-tt-IC-. Protein Shampoo c-'"',. t. Otkn s.111., • tz,Zt-1' es. Baby Shampoo CHI..,, t. otlo.n S.llllltl et $1.19-1.1 n. U.ltra Drv Anti . Perspirant c-,.,."' Otf..n...., et 11.sif-14.s ea:. Medicated Skin Cream c-p-t• 0tttens.111 ... .e S1.9t--1e-. Balsam Hair Conditioner "-.. llief ff-)1 OL Foaming Bath Oil .._.,.._, $1 .oo-lln of 44 P.cbtt Bubble Bath Tep quallty toiletries thot c:ompon to othe" .sell;,,g foi much more -now specially prlc.t In limited tt~ott.rl Fringe Purses & Key Chain Choose from the C1reat s.1ect1 .. 88c GlolTIOl'OUI ''Shinv Hairy" fabric ehonge 'pones with key dlOln Qftoched, In Green, Hot Plrik, SUver«Gold. $1995 v11ue1 Schick Custom Shaver Popular QdjuitGble cam· fort control, chn:irMd $1288 ,.,,;,,.,. • h ••• head, sidebum trJrrvT.r, on- olf •witdl, Emy.-c:leon- ltlgl •209. $1'' 60-Minute Ca~sette Tapes Pack 3 Rena 99c of fer Toke odvontao• ot_our lowest prk• ..... r «i audio mOQ1"141tlc topll with total of 3 houl'I rccon:llrio !Im&. Key of Kentucky Blendjd Whiskey PIMGe ... T•ol fl< buy at 111 1_,.tay lqw $2'' ,prlc.....now .,.aura ot ori •vtn ~- prle. In llmlt.d tllM off.,.. - I I · · · and much, much more\ S.le lhutsT.....,._ Prices o...t tkru TvelMy -. a 111 :111iiJ11111111w:1 1e 11w1a r~n11r.1 ,11 I Reg. $694 Men's Knit Sweaters r~;1 ~:w•$•' Fa 4 11 ·12 s441y1 •• DISCOUNT PRICE Honcl~me pullovers with crw, turtle- neck or convertible collars in 2-tones, multicolors, sallds--<lnd ~sic or foricy stitch cardigans. 5-M-L-XL.. 100% OCr)"lic, Men's Boat Shoes Cornpore to others ~"''.'¥ f o ' dollo~ $) 99 more, Heavy duty cotton convos up. pers, f u 11 cush- ioned insoles, non- slip soles. Choice of colors. $2°7 Value! V0-5 Shampoo You< Choic. 77c Regu1or, Dry, Olly. Leavtf hair lustrous, monoo-- oble. $3''ii~t~ Iron Tonic with I Complex & Vitamin C ltttl• ., , •• Compare t he quali ty fl price! Umlt9d tlme off« I I THR1FTY DISCOUNT PRICE Pocket big sovings on long slHVe pj's or floor length gowns with ruffled bottom. 34-40 lri a llover printed cotton ~lonnel far winter nights. Imported Austr.ian Jewelry Earrings & Pins 69! Never before such buys! Sparkling harid set 1oke gem stones with twinkling thinestonn, accented with eMme1 in fancy or solid de- signs, Fashion fovorites! s 14• Gillette Platinum Plus Blades :;;~ s119 Dou bl• Edge 794va1u11 Vaseline Balanced Care Shampoo a.I er wl1h 28C Dl1,1n11r ca, ' Iridescent Gift Glassware $ 93 • Gold or BIH Pitcber • Cllf 1111 H Nat • Gold 4 P~ 9 OL Glbltl Set • 8111 0111 Conter inf • SOl4 W .. fil( Int • Gold Candy Dlall wi~ CIHr • G~d ilYll CHter'ilnl Ye•CHlCt Repeat of a wllout! Anothtt chance for you to buy rich looking "Cornivol" glauwore lrl shimmering Gold or Blue Iridescent tones orig!nally ovailoble only in e~ive horidcrofted pieces selllrig for dollart mof'9. In cortattS r'eOdy to gift wrop. DI 11 :! Ii i'f J 11'/l I I ij jl lij Ii ij I ri f;) iji I !:I :Q $11: 4-Shelf Deluxe Metal Bookcases THRIITT DISCOUNT PRICE $593 Transform ploin walls to aNOs of~ c:on:itlve utlllty, Mlf'Ve QS room divldertl Quaker Utvirig uni!$ lrl steel "!With' .:rotchfrM ¥i'Olnut finish. Shelves ad- just 1 ~ ... 36• ._,, J6" w,11, 9Y•" ... • 6-SMlf --I H .... UOlt .... $9.93 -~ $4" Hi-Intensity Desk lamps THRIITT DISCOUNT PRICE $333 Throw a little light on the subfed' '#ith this hot·selllng 1tuclentl lamp with swinger folding-r-..ck, doubt.-.ure cool inner white metal aim. fOf' brighter, glare-free light ••• at bl sov ~98c & $1 29 P astic Kitchenware Your Choice •L.9-'"'"btl •Dia,.,., • 120-tt hlh •14Qt.W~ SJc four "hondy household helpers' In heavy' duty, eosy-to--cleori plastic In best eelllng c:olora,, • ato budget prlCL $14" Value! Deluxe Wine Fount :'1':.. Coritlna quart cNconter lri ~ dlamcni dnlgn on honckrGfted wrought Iron stand. Prec:isk>ri-flo dripper fl Ice chjller Insert induded. $699 Reg. $244 Whistling 2-Quart Tea Kettle your cup of t.o"-lt's our low-Thrifty'• bw "'"' wnl bo "Just $177 •t e .... rt Baked .name! finish on lightweight olumlnum. s3•• Decorator Mod Glass Lamps Bright ld9a In ocmnt ~! Frosl.0: Qlob9 f« IClft lighting -brightly c:olaNd base In YeMow, l'ortgefll"lll, Black, Whitt, for tocloy's l'OClrN. S2'3 s399 Value! Giant Decorator Candles $199 • (• l ' ' • • ' ' ·' • -~ --- ....,...,,..@ BE~CH-NUT ·BABY FOOD SHOP & C~MPAIE ... Proye It To Yoorseffl Just o ftw E\lefYdoY t.f,_, ~ won't tptisfy your needs & lower yout' foocl bud9d eXpellltf At SOf..WOV Oiscounl you"ll find lolw.,low Evtr;dar Prices ttvwgh- out the store ... PLUS Super Savtrsl HAPPINESS IS ... SAVING YOU MORE ... SERVING YOU. BEnER EVERY OAY AT SAFEWAY DISCOUNT "THE HAPPY STORE" •stnl1d ·fr1its. Ye11tables 1r J1ictr c -· -w~ Oct.ober 111 1tf11 EDWARDS COFFEE llcl la Ctl1olla1 CtllH DAI LY PI LOT 4:J in m pkmed II ace.pt U.1.D.L RD ITIW COUPONS . ~... "' .. ~ .... ~ CALO KLEENEX TOWELS CAT FOO.D . , . Y111r Cat Wiil lm It! c ~conAGE CHEESE L11C1n1-Hick 111 Pr1tei11 .~MRS. WRIGHT'S BREAD USDA Choice Grcule4 l •tf Flovorlul And,Juicy- ldeo l To Pot Roo st. ILi.DE CUTS DISCOUNT PllCll lb, c ' . . DAIRY -DELI AT DISCOUNT! ' Pillsbury Biscuits ·~~ ~: 10' Shady lane Butter ~':J.! 1:: 81 • Shrimp Cacktail ,,'.:';;~';::,., :: 35' luceme Com Tortillas .... 18' LIQUORS & WINES ¢ Prices Etf1cti•1 la Llc1111' S1feWll5 8.Whiskey c: .................. .. s329 ~ C >t 5 Ye<ir Old Pr111 BAKERY BUYS! AT DISCOUNT! 2 l C k ""w'"""' ,._., 'I" -ayer G 9 Oro1191 Slini1!1ne 2·l11;, F h Do t M". W6gh"• Pq. 59' res nu s Old foshionrd •11 1 Fresh !lolls ~,:..•::;:.,= ,.,,39' ~Angel Food Cake w:-::;:;, 'li:.'39' HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Mennen 's 'E' Deodorant tft G;ves Deo<1o111o1 79c * Protection-Co1nple1ety "t:~ ·~· Whiskey Fltt• ' fl light Whiskey $379 · . Bright Side Shampoo 'i;~$J 11 · """'°"'-'°'"om•• · Micrin Mouthwash 1:~'79' St~an'$ Gin ""'~~":Q',.,.,. ,,,.'3~ __ · .Ultra Brite Toothpaste':::'7i\' Kavlana Vodka '~'°~~' ., .. $329 ·Alberto Balsani::::::';,';;<:~99' la Mesa Wine ·~.~;;"'" ,,, '1" Mateus Rose' Wine lki~:! flltt '2'' Monor Ho••• Prtmium Q•alltr Young, Tender And Delicious UNDER 14-llS. DISCOUNT PllCll lb, · ·Efferdent Tablets g:::':'; :~ 88' ii Hour After Hour ... ~~"' :;:; '1" Fresh Ammton-Suv• With Mint Jtlty SHOIT SHA•I DISCOUWT Pl lCll lb. 7-BoJ.e Roast "'~~~~ i..79• Fresh Pork Steaks ~=~· ,._aa• S k SlilMt4w(•h 1.,.1.r 0-lohe tea s ::.:"~~.~ ,. 89• Fresh Ground Beef •;:·.':~':" i..69" l .. f .lb St. k ..... -,.,,.. s1 09 C d B f I I k t ....... k. 98• a s """"'"'''-"" ·~· orne ee r s e .5::.<.::r.;,'.r,, "' 1 Sii S k ._,~ $ c d , ......... lit, ,.~ · op Ir o n tea ~!".;~:!: ,. 178 anne Bams ~=.;;, 5 ·~ •• 5i• Sterling Franks flavorful a.Juicy 69C ld<ol For Cookool& 1·11. "''· Sliced Bacon Lutt'• , ..... Farms 7 9c Savory Smo!<od Flavor ~"::· B~f Sausage McCoy's R19ulor or Hot& Spicy ..... 55c "" Fresh lamb Chops '.l;;.!'rJ:.'t~' .. '1" Boneless Beef Roasts USDA Choi<• Chuck C lamb Rib Chops ~;'Ci!: ,. 'P' 9I Round Bone Roast ~ .. 79< '"•""' w 11ec1 ... Saft~ Bacop .::.-~ ::97• S-eef T-Bone St-..1..~ Pa~ :::',";;:: l:79• nu DOYer Sole Fllleh = .. 'I" ~!~':'" ..:=, ,.. $) 49 Potil Sausage 11 • ..., ho• .... ,.,or llot 93c (2·1l ,.i 11.14) .. Dover Sole Dms Mild & Otll(.Cltt Ideal to Pon Fry. ~83c ·~!~~,~!Juice 6c: 2 3 c I!~~.,~~~~~, ~ 78 c •!.~!~~~.~,~!!~,. ,~L 2sc -~~,~,~~,~ies . 1~ 41 c • Chicken Pies ~,: ':';;." 39" la_ Vegetables ~: ~1?!.":.;~ 1::c.L :J9t Scotch Treat Peas ·~,:.' 15' · ·. Libbyland Dinners ':;'.-59" .. Bel-air Cnliflower 2::-49' 'Vegetables ~~.':"'.:.':~ ·~:33' Bel-air Juice Bars ~::: 49' -.-Meat Pies b :ci:::;r':.:, ::19' Tire finest Quality fro•en 1-• at low Disc••nt Prlcesf SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS e. Camatian Coffee-Mate 'l:-79' . Macaroni & Cheese'G::'':':-19" Crisco Salad Oil ,,.,.,.. 'l:.''ln . "" Hi-C Frvit Drinks ~ 33' : liquid Plumr .=. ::' 11" 19 LARIE 'AA' EGGS di1m fU$ 1c:-39< SAFEWAY SU PER SAVERS Soft Ilse• ""'~ttd ~-:: 35' lrsel U,.hl "'C':::.... 'l.."'.' 19' . ......._,, Clalli :::. ";::'· 39' hru l.ltilld Bleach ~: 35" Ko11J T111 pans ;e :::. '1 11 ANA fllCJ llulity -Fir111 Ad h .. 11 lb. ORANGES APPLES C1ll1111i1 Y1l11cll Swot Al• J1ICJ N1rtllnst Gren •d 1r Gt"11 Dallc iu s CUCUMBERS GREEN WIAGE I ClfOPPID DAns ~ 2'o•25c -•oc-lOc -. 31 ..... $100 s.i.c..,, Or '-Sll1w ... *'°' ,.IL INDOOR PLANTS ~~~~~;4., ....... ; .. $399 • 1000 Bayside Or., Newport Beach • 211 L 1711! St , Cosb Mesa • 24 Monarch . Bay Plaza, So. Laeuna • 636 H.. Coast Hwy.,.lapna Bead! • 801 E. El Camino Real. San Cl emente • Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Vieio • Wilson & Fairview. Costa Mesa bAILY PILOT Wednesday, Octobet' 11, 1~72 Wedn~, October 11, 1973 PILOT-ADVE.RTISER ,t NO MONEY DOWN NO MONEY ;DOWN -NO-MONEY DOWN BRAND NEW 1973 On Approved Credit BRAND NEW 1913 On App~oved Credit BRA!iD NEW 1912 · On Approved Credit MAVERICK Pl.HYO WAGOM C-OURIER 1 s· PICKUP .2DOORSEDAN $ 33 SQUIREOPTION $ VI, 2 d.-.., S•dttt, Vinyl Roof, Cri1i1· o-m1tic, P.8., Redio, C1lif. Em i1- 1ion Syriem. PER MONTH Order Tours Today ' Radio, 4 speed tran smiss io n, Calif. Emission System, 2000 cc Eng ine, freight & Deal er Prep. Charge. A78x 13 Tires, FR. Disc Brokes. lug- goge Rack PER MONTH Order Tl!UPS Today Complete with radio, step bumper. wsw tires, 4 speed; fr. disc brakes. For only 41 month1, full C1sh Prit1 ii $2916.30 inti. T•x & l ie. Deftrrt4 lllJl!lltlf price b $~ 1.5.14 i1cl. Tix, lnter11t 1nlt l ic111.1. Al1111.1I P1~11t111 R1t1 i1 10.91. For inly 41 months, F•ll C11h Price is $2631.26111cl. Tax & lie. Defarnd pa_yniuf pric. Is $3271.20 incl, Tax. lntere1t it•ll licttt••· A11Hal ,1rce11t•1• Rate i1 10.91 . forealr 4l Mo11t•1, f•ll Cai• Prkt 11 $2551.51 l1tel. t•z & lk:..Dtftrrff Jtlflleitf prlco l1$3172.3211tCL Tu,r.torettucl Lk .. u.Aa•••l ,.rctsf91t late ls 11.91 NO MONEY DOWN NO MONEY DOWN NO MONEY DOWN BRAND NEW 1973 On Approved Credit BRAND NEW 1973 On Approved Credit BRAND NEW 1913 On Approved Credit - ,MUSTANG $ MACHI V-8, P.B. Rodio, Spts. Roof, Oliff. Emis- sion System. W/SW Tires. 73 PER MONTH TORINO 2 DOOR HARDTOP$ . 91 PER F250 3/4. TON Ranger Camper Speci_al $ · < • V-8 cruis-o-mcti~ radio, power S!eer-MONTH CAMPfl SPfCIAL ing, wsw tires, Calif. Emission System ORDER TOURS TODAY OrderT0111.rsTo_day V-8, Reg. Dix Tulane, Calif. Emission Sys- tem. Au~ fuel tank...70 001) bot .. SS amp alt., 8)t·Cool radiotor,-t, gloss, hvy dty springs, h!"f· dty tires.. P.B. rodio. ORDER TOURS TO~AT for 011ly 4l month1, P'Ull Ca1ll Price i1 $3047.ff h1cl. lair: & Lie. Defern4 payll'lellt priCe is $377f .04 l•cf. lox, h1tere1t and Lice•••· AMalil p1rcenta9e Rat1 l1 10,91 for 011fy 41 months, fall Cash Price is $3217.03 h1cl. Tax & Uc. DeferrH ,..,.1111 price i1 $4075.61 lncL Tax, h1tere1t anti Lic1n11. An111111f percutqe l11te is 10.91 fer 011ly 41 •otlt., f•ll Calli Prkt 11 $3131.70 i11ttl. Tax & L.ic. Dtf1tt'1111 JQll-' price Is $4759.61 litc.I. Tax, laterest aM Lkease. Aullal pert• ... • hte is lf.tl PER MONTH YOURQtOICE ,, · '19 MAC.H I '68 IMPALA STATION WAGON. YI, •uto. tr•n1., f•ctory •It, pow•r 1t••tin9, r•dio, h••f.,. IWYG.591) $1677 '69FORD Galaxie 500 4 door Hardlop V-8, O<Jto. trans:, radio, heater, power steering, foot air, vi ny l roof, vinyl interior. (ZNS567) I '71 MAVERICK > D•. DECO". Ao•-"< s1977 tr ans .. r.scno. l!ta1..-, 152 CliN , '71 DATSUN "''"'·'"""'""''·"""'· 51777 {9S4CTH) .. '68COUGAR Automatic Trom4 VS, ~& , · · ·s1477 ~~ower Sleering. 1 '72MUSTANG V8,A,~.F«1.A<.V..,,Top, s3295 P .S.. Low Milts. 08aDSZ) '71 A·1 CAPRI s2, o· ·95 4 Spffd, Radio, Hl!Oter, Spot-, ., , less. Locol 1 Owner. (899BZV) '72 PINTO '67MUSTANG ''"""kV•.---51·277 ry oir, power steering, radio, heater. (VWP 736) '70 MAVERICK 2 '"'· Doi ox• fot"i" "'' s 137 7 ulerior, rvdio, hooter, whit. walls. (ZDY6"9) ' '69CHEY . · · eeomr.o.°"'"v'·"'""*·$2'1·if. it lrW!l... radio. htoltr,.~ "' _....., foctory air, ,._. rOot,. ' mht.111f'it(46<MJSQ • '• ; , . ' .,,-J ', V< '"u FORD I ' . . ·--· : --. --------·---------- J 4 PILOT-ADVERTISER Wtdne$d1y, Octobtr 11, 1972 Wtdntsd1y, Ottobe r l l , 1~72 DAILY PILOT THE RIGHT INVESTMENT . ~ • JUST fOR YOU Is ~qual tn a lifetime of toil. Here is fOW'ichance, ai;-. only~a short walk to shoppin& In' Corona del ~ 'Qua1ity, 2 ~m~ triplex with prlva~ ~es. Quality construction. Wall-tO-wall Car· pets and drapes~vest YoUr money in this fine property and e returllll. Call (or showing at mll-8550 .. : . . nly $17,'500. t ooKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIAi:? Someone whO wanti· room to build.:-'fhis extra ilflilj~]Jot in.Corona df:l Mar,iSOUtb•ot the~­"<8.lo is your answer. Cbarming 4 bedroom; plld dep home ol!':rear of.lot, haa great potential fop lnvettors, 'or• builders. Can hold ·for even greater appreciation. Ideal summer-winter rentals ask· Ing onJy $56,500. call 673-8550. ··.1SUPER OLDER • LARGE LOT $33,500 Unusual older, 2 bedroom, 1% bath home on huge lot. Could build another house on rear. Ad· ditional pruperfy adjoining a9ailable also. This property has lots of potential. Investors ers ,_ or' family with In-Laws. Top Eastslde _:-·M'eii JOcallon. It wOfi'f lll&t can 646-71~ · ' EYE CATCHING . $34,950-COSTA MESA ~fully decorated 4 bedroom. home· ~ith 1a r tly room that overlooks a nice yard With 'i trees and a covered patio with flagstone a built·in BBQ. Children can "·alk tq.schools a big shopping ~nter ls close by. Don't mlsi lovely home. Call 646·7171. l THE . ROOM AT THE TOP • ~ CUC!Sta, El Dorado A1odcl featurinr 3 bed· oon11, ramUy room with fireplace, and formal inlng SJ-ea -and 1300 sq. ft. upstairs ready for 't-Ompletlon as huge rumpus room, additional bed.roomi and baUa -or ! Baaed on current be.se price of new onlts. Owner t:ranrlerred and ,. wW tell for $45.500. Please phone M6..2313. POOL HOME $30,500 : New England c~ w'1kJri&" d11tance to Ocean and Bay ~ches.~A JP&cloua 2,500 aq. fL family home with 4 latge bed.looms, ¥.U<Unr a huae master sulU: with· Ocean-"View ,l.nd ·sun Deek, Family Room, Shel~ Patio, Big' Country Kitchen and a well flone "no ($'(!" utro-turr (ront lawn. Sell the liwit mower and &o l&Uing. $84.'500 -call 673-8550. · · • f 'ROOM -TO IAME . MESA DEL MAR Need a large bedroom,.Jike,·20'x21' that could hold a pool table, ping ~poni' table and a king size bed? Llke a large , patio, maybe 15'x49'? \Vant a good buy? This ;4' bedroom bom~ bas Jt' · + a new 'dishwasher, 'disposal, some new car- pets, water softener and·~n:iore. Vacant A· pttced at $32,000, .• HURRY! ~7171. 4 vtARS OLD --·~$28,950 IJilll fa ~ Gne'"for You.. You must-.see. tb1a ·3 bedroom, 2 bath liome located In a great neigh· borhood on a largel.ot and convenient to scho;Ols and shopjilng. Fanfaatlb family area for your loved ones. 5% down or FHAIV A tenna. Don't wait, CaJI NOW 842-2535. A LOVELY PARKlln MESA VERDE ss-~:,900 Situated on a .quiet, cul.de-sac with great pri- vacy, this has one o1 the prettiest frQrit yards In Mesa Verde. The house features 4 bedroorM, formal 'dining room, huge family room with fireplace, and 3 baths. Very sharp and neat throughout Ready to move ·fu and enjoy. Please phone 546-2313. WESTCUFF AREA-$40,950 LAR" RUMPUS ROOM • POOL JUllt begins to tell the atory about thla·Newport Beach home, An exciting pool11ide atmosphere that flows through the large rumpus room w:lth 1lre.Pla~A:n71d71step' down ~~~ bar, Three ~~ rooms.~-. . , CUSTOM BUILT HOME • • • 2JOO s~uare feet of gractocur living ·~ mile from .oeeeii with step down llvlng room, cathedral cflllngs and formal dining room. 16x.20' fwnily 1"o0n1 with fireplace. All this -v.·lth awtmming ·p001 on a iarge ·G0x140 loot lot. You mu•t 1tt this fm· only $56,900, Ca)l 842-2535 now. VACANT MOVE IN TOMOUOW • 4 Bedroom • :i Bath • Freshly painted Price hu been drastically reduced by SUOO. ftome la vacant and owner ls tired o{ me.kine the payment.I. Bring all offers -Price $34,990. Call now. 84:i-2$35. -~ Yllll "NOITH Qt;'t,5AI ' Beautlllll • -..a.. ~ .....i. ...,,. with .,..t dann. warmtll and "-1ort. ,...tUttt lovely .-petln1, drap!!:rles ancf :.-ark llke yard. 2100 IQ. ft. of Uvtna ~. Pnlfnt O'A-'l'ler hu spent many f'Xlt'a doUan on decorating. Pleue c..11 54&-'2313 ror addlUonal lnldnnatlon or ·~ pain...... • MEDi'TERRANEANo PLEASURE Imagine yourself living in thia beautiful spacious Spanish deCor, beamed ceilings ind aeparate dln- 4. bedroom home In' NeOA·por:t Beach with love\f 'tng roo1n and family room. Utility room, !\ark· room and over 2700 square t~t ot· living space and only J years old. Only $69,500. 646-7171. HARBOR VIEW MONACO $55,900 Perfection perfect describes thit: auperb 3 bed· 1'0QD1 or 2 bedroom + den dellaht Wade throui;:h dee.P plush carpetin&',. dine in the formal dlnlni: room, anack in the eat-in kitchfn, or pl,ay crD- g_uet ·In the huge yard. No need to lift a finger, Jus t move in! Call 546-2313 for appolntmenL AWARD WINNER!! Two time winner of annual Costa Mesa Chamber Beautification Award. Very clean. 3 bedroom home near Costa Mesa'• westside, close to schools and shopping •. Big covered patio with lot.1 ot -ifOwing greenery. Automatic sprinkler sys- tem front A rear. HWTY •. lt won't lut loll&' at $27,500. 646-7171. A SUPER COSTA MESAN ! U lots of space ls what you're after -Say 1900 square feet -and a home in Excellent condition -you should really see this one in Costa 11/l'esa. Priced at only $3!5,500 -beautifully Janmcaped w:lth lots of roses. For more information and ap- pointment to see, please call 646·7171. ' SHORE CUFFS CDM's BEST LOCATION Tree lined streets. Key to private beach. a home that .ii loaded with chann. Lots of wood and used bricks, two fireplaces Cone in kitchen ) - Deep PILE CARPETING AND many· other beau· ·llful items. This home was compl.e,tely remodeled this year. OnJy, $79,900 and you own the land. Call 673-8550 to sec this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. GRAB THAT PHONE THIS INST~NT Celling us &15dlit this home may be the wl11e1t can you ever made. 4 bedrOOm. adult .occupied home. Large master bedr~16 x 24, enclosed patio, lovely £Old carpeti~·_!urry on thia one,· it wo11'ti last..:Prlced at $~ No down to VA- .,zy.....,"4T-6010. --• ' " " ' ' DESIGNED1 fOR THE · DISCERNING ' . outstanding, 3' bedroom, 2 beth home with large screened ln patio room. plu1 oovered patio. Thill home ts loca'ted In chotce Huntlna:ton Beach area. Surrounded by hornet priOl'd up to S50,000. Thill one Is a bar1ain at $29,000. CaJI 847-6010. GET OUT OF THE ··RENT RUT Buy this modern home as easy aa: renting and much m9~ ~,ardlng. Uving room,.1dJJ>ln~ room, modem· kl~. 3 bedrooms. l"· batttt.. plus 14 x 15 separate fsmlly room. Convenient cor- ner loca~. Total price S27.950. Calt 847-6010. MESA VERDE $32,999 Thi1 sharp 3 bedroom. l '6 bath home Ls Just 1 montha youn,, n'erythin& hu been done - landscaping, sprinklers and patio, all you have to do t. move in. Assume 7 9' VA 1oM with PIY· ments or onJy $219 per month. Call now for an appointment 546-2313. HILPI -. OWNER WANTS OUT 'lbll lututlc 3 --· 2 ·1>ou. -........ a tarp llvlna room thlt; bu • buUt·ln ..,.. fro.. f•lona.11)' decnr•ted wtth willp1.per an4 .,til- ing dean. vou·n ~ tlw pcect! and qute' In this ohannlnic cut.-....r streel Supe-r latwt. pk 1haptid lot All thla fOt only S.'JJ,,000. Calf now. 847-6010. ADDE!j"ON ' . LAlfGE,HOME ' This bcauliful tri-level home features 4 bed-, rooms. 3 baths &nd a sePe.rate bonus roopi for your own private hidcav.'Oy or for enter~K guests. Lovely earpcbl and dra.pes, tinted win- dow• and completely 1ia.lnted Inside and out. Has hot and cold out.side shower and In 'ol.'alking to the beach. Only $39,950. call 842-2535. 6 BEDROOMS $38,500 II you have a large family and need a big home. don't wait on UUs one. Located on a quH!t cul- de·sac street and cloee to all schools. 1bore are not many 6 bedl'OQID homes for $38,500 that 'Ai.II sell FHA/YA or 5" do\\'ll. Call 'NO\V 842-2535. MESA VERDE 1•-"·-· ....... -..n.. .... -.. fnlMlll Ml ; 111111• lft 6 .,_ ......... ...... ~ ' •• AiMrtta"' c.....,. es:••...,., -,. < I .............. ....., ~ ,,,,.., ,.. ..... Thi•. t. w,_.. '"TIM ActlM ; .. "' VIEW!! CONSCIOUS!! This lovely 3 bedroom home ls so oriented that yo\l .. have i sweeplna vtew or the brood PACUIC an<l !wlnkll9i ~ .Llght.o. CU.-built with 3 be,thl. Jf\ile ltvli:iig "??'f '>l:ith • Texu scare .F'lrrplaC*. His 4;39.c:f 1q; ft. of llvlna: area equipped Y.1th 3~ ton air conditioner , .• basemenL Alk· Ing. $99,S'.>Q. call 673-8550. COUNTRY CLUB ITS ALL ·\ Thi• 3 bedroom home lckatcd near tbe ,_I~ YOU~ l Verde Country Club has a vle\9 ot the golf cou~ ~ and lake. Featqres ,2000 aq. ft. of llvln& space, Owner wants out of thil fan~tlc 3 bedroOm, with huge living room ahd 9 car garage. Needs 2 bath. tree ahaded .home. Beeutitul landtcaptna: tender loving care and1can be yours for only , y.•ilhijture t~~· """'!• petlo with $65 950. can .~2313 for more info. .l water ~ 0~1'11 Beach s best oei&h- ' · · · ., tlor ll.clc!'. ~ i and ao near to the _ _ I tho ~ Ca.11 nov.·-842-2535. CINDERELLA HOME COLLEGE PARK Seeing is belle\ling thls 3 bedroon1, like neY.'. ho1ne. Beflutlful wall-to-wall carpeting. Nt.'W Jui;h drapes. Recently painted. 0....'nl'r has just 1pent over $1.300 replacing plumblnc wtth all COPl*r and over $1,000 in drape11. •The yarS) bl a park that you would be· proud to have. Prlct'd at ~2,500. Olll 546-2313. • ·THIS ADDRESS SPEAKS F.OR ITSELF Just listed the populn.r 1800 model In tht> most dPslrable pretitige location in lluntington Beach. Jt's the only one on the 1narkl'.'l. fl urry on this one It \von't last. Pricl-d at $43.500. ALL terms. Call 847-so,o. "": OM)IE'C~LtY -ZONED-RESIDENCE . . . Over 40 .dlff.erent bwlhM.'llAl'I are potslble In thi1 4 bedrdofu: 2 bath homo! lh We11tslde C011ta Mesa. Ideal tor the upirlng·lndlvidua.I wish.in& to atarl his own bus1neu with .-:hl' advantage ot being ilble to live at thr !'.llUll#' locallon . , . , only .~ia.950. 673-SMO. A LITTLE WHO .SAYS :''THE GOOD OLD DAYS" ARE GONE?? 4 bedroom, pool hame with 2 batba, larie Dag· stone 1•tlo. ~eel home for tablfly enjo)'Jt1ent .. NeY.' y.•aJI to 'A0all carpet. Cor:npletely ttbullt kltchrn. Thl1 ls a 1opcr 1ha.rp bofM ln e~l­ ll•nt .(.'Olldition for on ly l~.500. CIJJ 847-6010. THE OCEAN IS YOUI BACK Y.ARD Wow? Biii .(~room. 2~~ beth boaM hat a upa .. MANSION rate tamUy room to •n!ianco thlo bcouty. It bat Aa your \~~ .. 1tt!p acn:J the lhl"dhho~ of l>Hr.i complMely painted lnalde U1lll OUL Onet ror this charml~bedroom home, thry will Otihbh" tbe.-t.nllf4 _,. nffdl thl! J"OOm and llktt tht and Ahhbh: an and llJy Views. l.a!"ie pool, beach ; gfb' 1 blocb away. You. ma1 auume Corona .4eJ r ldlools, Private t>.&t'h, peaged the row (f\\erwt lo..n •.. only ~ltKI. call floon and many mof'f' cu§lom fratut"ftl, OnJ7i . 8'2-2535. $125,000. Call 673-MSO. "LOTS OF BEAMS" CATHEDRAL CEIUNGS A fantuUc Ul)Jtraded .t bodn>om, 2 bath, ~ •tory horn•. Beautiful ht!M'Ltd cclllnK wllh t.Jrony w erlooklba 1-rR" llvlnc room arft. A \1t'r)' for- mal dlntna am IUld fanlil)' area for entert&Jnlnc. Hure maawr bedt'OOfJI, wo. You mtUt Ke-Lh1t one for cnly $42.950. C.ll 842-~ SPANISH SP~H $33,900 Thi• la • bft.utlful Spantah ·~ home tn P'OU!t> Olin Valle)'. It t.twft 3 bfdm«n11. 1" t.U.. '-lot Vt"t'de nnpi.~. formal 41·,._ and much. nrueh rMn. Tite Jarp •16-)aid bu room *noutth ,;,_. .-irnnllnc• pool or .... t Pl•, Yo&! mwit .ee lt. For mor" Info call "7-Ml4l • "JC'• I'-Ce h Nlee te .... ,.,_.. • C A MESA 2790 H1rbor Blvd. 546-231 ·3 ...,.. 'Tl t HUNTINGTON BEACt-t 1793i Beach Blvd. 6014 Warn er A~e. 84Z-2535 847-6010 CORO A DEL MAR 3 3 2 Mar9uerite 673 -8550 2790 H11rbor .•lvd. Suite 201 Co.to Mow 54f>. I 600 • ----~--------.. ---·-· ffl DAll.Y PILOT ~. Ot;tobtf' 11, }fj72 DICK TRACY ·! • ~ ~ .: .•• TUMBLEWEEDS ~ •• • -. :· > ' ~ '• ' ~ ' f: ~ A A f .. ,_ _________ ""'_ , ! MUTT AND JEFF i JEFF. WE +<AVE it> •. CAl'TtlRE °lllE WOMElll; " • VOTE/ )'t)tJ KNOW-A " LOT OF WOMEN ... ) •. ' . • . ' ;· • L ' • t . • L ' ! ~ • . • • • . . . FIGMENTS : ' . -. . .. :-NANCY :· • . .-~ • • . • • . • • . • • . s • • I ~ • • I • • • 1------"-I'M GLAD' 'YOU'RE CONCERNED ABOUT YOUR SCHOOL. 'eXAMS ; I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ~ A. ~ER I ; , ~!'!.°'' :: ~~ v ....... ~Sotoltd: .. . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • ' ~ : . , • ' .• , 1 , j ~ •' 6 0p9r• 151) Dltt~ I I w.aitc1 bKlr; Ill SIMll lni!t I ~ lor\h 83 Noi t .. a1 14 fl'-of '4 "flow~lly. fl cnin. .,...,.._ .. 16 Rwcle ~ t15 Sutfui .. ...s I lt E~c:-wl!tl 91• •11111 17 Chin•.. uw-., UrinQtd 11 .&.rod lr!.tru~t __,,_ 11 COl.lnUot1 '1 l"tck1liotlii, 70 Oki • Singer 21 W0!!*1'1 -Ntllon- 22 A.QrM 81 --levt9Cll* '2:J M-iHJll!ul O..tO.O 25 Tli,iht wlt!'I • ...... Jl·J' UJ• ll·IU[l [>J! i ~lflf 1n ;.1•,111.111 ''A' J •»nr·1f'Jf1 '.•J ·J •t • 11' i.~1 1!•J ll~l~'11'1 4· l 't I• 1'1 ilJtr,R _1•11 l,l•l t.,Ju~r1r.1r1 ·J:J .I J'l•llJ!J~I IJltt~f.Jl l "l!.1'1111 J (IJl:Jnf'll f.~FIP" 111•11t1.H·l (olnnn r 1·1"1r> J l1!!1U!J 1.:JUUtJ ll•1t.t · bud DOWH 11 Ollott 4' [)ff'fl.utt V IJrc:I 1 IJ11.,,u: 12 Mff\'1 -41 N~ _, 21 C-PMt lnfoimM 11 -of fkttoneil h9f• point 2 FtltNI, Jn ColumtM: ~ Chlll con 30 AM1t1 Mtlifio AIM!r, :M F~ J Mttth.... 11 M••• n-wt.Ml .,....,. JI o;.n.y olker 24 \lfd ctwf.ct• 4 tilt¥ 2t 1n r.wrw: 31 Pll.lc:k; a..nt Ctl'IHll!t lnklrmll if NOtlll bu9ln1temM 29 PM ,A.1111riU11 I "GrH11 30 G•delltoell i;llrrlbitlt........ M1Mlolla" J1 f1ilt u Cltyln h-32 litftlm .Scollelld f II.Ind ol 3J -up:'"°"" 43 Tir. ~•t m~r1ic foot IT!Oft lf1 .......... flO "'tiontd &Z Miii -·--: Kind of r:ontMt 13 ll'llCf~ •1-•ltb 14 'ill.tl'lcitl n""°' ..... 41 lflefuif• 7 S•Nlni •-3'l Not odd ~ 45 0.. purpo111: 35 Ol90u9!"'11 ,;> 46 1'10t10Ufl Vt o, J7 C.,p1nt"I M Dlrtetiofo M Nu..-IUI P<•ll• 17 fltt·boltOIMlll .... •1 fifty 8r11itl! I W111t body joint ' Wt. flllM t t..cM Ill 31 Doc '-. .... UrM:OYt red ._..,., 40 : Mtt ,; II V.,.._ to lttM'i 41 ' k ~ f r:,-r.,,::'"l'l~- i • 1' .. fqylrte .. _ ... - I: DOOLEY'S WORLD • . \ SALLY BANANAS by Al Smith GORDO MOON MUWNS. by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS I. WISH I HAP PASSED ? INSTEAD OF RUNNING-• W~~rfug~~l. IN THE ·.· JUD(iE PARKER MISS PEACH --·----...-·-------- lfE!1I!, Ll!ITEll ! by Mell by John Miles \ by Roger Bradfield By Charles Barsotti ..-------.-----. ·-y ~ c ' by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson r Jo"41~ AT TMEll< AGE?? by R09er Bollen llf 50UNP:5 ~llCE i T>lOU«>Hr Hl6 MOUlll 15 S1UfFet:> <IOU Ne\IER: W!!H BURI.AP AIJD H llEARD 12 11/lS A BUCKU OleR OF HIM • . HIS HEAD/ ..-~,_?ID.. THE GIRLS ~.,. K>-11 ' ". . • ud on Ute ftftll we held ear bake sale wbJcll ftl a trtmmdou1 1Dettu -Uvta.g lorgotkn to 11end our aa--•i DDUCementt:, we bd to eat almott everything ourldvet.'") DENNIS THE MENACE , F • ' d •• '" '" H• " ,, " .. ~ .,. -------- l!.l._0 DAILY PILOT FREE REAL ESTATE LICENSING COURSE Sunday, October e, 1972 F•mou$ licensing course now avail. able thru Tarbell. Applicants fully reimbursed upon qualification. For details call Al Sloan, 714-842-5581 In Orange County. WALK TO ZOOY 'S $28,750 -ALL TERMS No dawn G.I. terms -low.low dawn non-wta. Buy1r ,....., llelps wllh )'OU• cost~I Walk: lo Scl\oc:ila from 1hl$ 1parkllr><;1 • bedroom home, 2 glnmll>{I IM!hs, dream k!tcllen, bu!ll-in rar191, ovll!n & dll.llW11sh1rl A •NI Wiie wver! Pall6 cwerlooks • r~t or bloaml"IJ llowe"1, !r-.S & ahn.obs. Q!.olet d1ao end 1tr&el kleal ror cT1lklren'1 pl1yt Eles;ent llrepi.ce. Rnlly • 11rut bl.iyl '62·1l7J. ENTERTAINING "MECCA" $38,5001 2SOO 1q. 11. 01 Ille very tlnat f.Jmlly llvlnvl M11ter 1J1ed bldrooms, 2 111~mki!I llUllrn.tn baths, 2 elegant Ureplaces, -wllh gas lolls l11etuded. gorgl!O<IS; lllmlly raom wllh llal'ld!~ wet ber 1nd llreplac1 -HPKf IO l>tl l'llV(ed here, Form.JI ofnlno room. Prim. loc•11on nllir ltH! De1clll Lovt!V JW!tlO 1lr condlliooed by no1urtl 1'2·2561. 5 BEDROOM -COSTA MESA -1$36,5001 Brin\) yOUr bolll or Tr•iltr 1nd l1r11e l&mlly! Jr, n1ai. or-.:ls, 1uquJ111.iv 111ne11c1P9d. l"'rnacullltt tiome wlm l HPftrltt bilm1, 1aroe 11m11v room Klr •II Ille action will! lfeo•n! fireplace. Homemak<='t''I dream bult1 In ~llchen, dlshw11ner, cr..rmlno tx!r• u!lno 1rlli. Hur •II Kll«>ls & 11'1op-plngl S.0·1770. ~c:··,.m' :··61tfi'ji'~:~q"'-'"';:;:;-'""<:;""".,~:;~,.~«' .;ic:·· FABULOUS LIVING SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO $56,000 El!lllt ~lrlld grounds wl!h • be.lutUu! 1w!m pOOll PrlVllCl' unll"'llld wl!h I fl. ctm.ril w•lls, Klno siled bedrooms, 2 1>91111, Mlrve 11rnllv room ,.,_ 10111\d"'' w\lh Vol'9""'1! flr111>1ace, c1ndlell0hl din~ ldMI ln in• f01m.-I dlnlno room. Color coordlne!ed w1U1. dr•Pl'I and toUCll, \111iric:e1 , Pttlo lurruture lllCluded. Bt1u1lful POOi. LDlds ol dld<lng. Un.l'I tow ITlfllntenan<• l•nd1c11>1no. 11).1~1. A\, HOW=G.~Rl!E•Al!ITillillTlili!ISllil li$311)11,500 -NO G.I. terms -tow-low dO-non-viii. • 1Hdroom1, ! bl!IU, ll(ffl flr1111l1ct ..,nances ct>erm ol seclll(lld ~r nvrno room, wU•s•.,.. IPvlll-1!! •CIPI .. •ncft. ln bl•ulllul -ltcMn, dlshw11hoJr, rid! Wood P9!>11l1'19, lnVlllno ..,,ry 11111. c u110m o••PH· clOud wit c••Ptttno. Nettly m•nkurld It-. 1111• fully llndK-1~ grounds. Po11ID-lt lrtller •cCa1! M -2$1 1. Since 1926 --- WAGON WHEEL CHARM -$30,500 Fun nv11111 •t Huo!lnoton BN<h In this 1ppnll119 •bedroom, 2 bath h-. se<!Uded rear llvlno rCIOm$ overlOoks ~ cciunrry bec:k yard. 1ur1ly as close to !ht garden of Ed11n w11n U lrull lrt"M, orga~lc 111raen. En<lo•ld Pftllo. 15 ti, •rN for lloel or lr1lllr. Farm slyle kitchen -llnn1 bull!·in~ vtry c:onvenllll!I. 14""691, ,1f ~ n~ ~ .. ~' ·\(;;'f4!; ~ V.l.P. PERSONIFIEDI $40,9501 Adult occupled 1nd II h11 ••t ryltilr\Q. Sure IO pleese Ille rTKKI oenicul1r pe0p•. IUng 1l1td bedrooms. 3 g1u mlng p.ittman ri.1n1, 18-ve t1mlt1 room wllh mtQn!llcent tlreplace, ... re.-i.aver bult1in kitchen, ctllhw•l.l'lt!r. Mlrrorld .,try hill, fornwl aln(119 room. All tnls plus IGM!s ol d"'klnq, c1ri.na and • goro«HJI •wlm pool! Otcor1t0<1 dream t....,. trve. ~ Y.l.P. MISSION VIEJO! $55,500 FahllStle "'Grl nldl'' l'lofN wit h 2«» "· II. of llflt•I ••K Uil•• ll•in!I .... ..,,llrt•lnlno -v1ry lrnporl1nl PtOPle •1'9 yOUr ne~bors I • bldroon-,., l b9!h" llrllt l1mllv room, 2 m1-QnUlc1nt llr11:1~. d1!u•t bull!-ln mlr•clt "Awtf'd" kltcNn, dl1hw1sl\9r, Gor11eous: """' lol -lendsc•o-d lo 01'1ur1 pertect PlfftcllOn. ll0--t060. MAGAZINE COVER CHARM -$32,SOll l"lclur .. que "rdK•Plnl, lll'lcle of owntrll!lp "°""· M•lllf 1llltl bldroo ..... 2 blltlt, llollotld rNr ll•lnfl room writ! l""lllrlllQ llri:Pltt•. oourml! Dulltfn klldltn •OPl11fic91, dllllWllher. CIOUCI Mii urP&tlng, tllruout. GofVfOUI dr1P11. L•"91 CO-Id petlo • .-..... ~ i.n.IK•pll!I ~·-Ftnltot.llC l"OUl'lltln V1l1eY llcllllll'I -nur ~I f0..1J7J Tarbell Of The Reaches 87°/o Home Buyers * 10 FULL PAGE AOS EACH WEEK. * TARBELL'S EXCLUSIVE MULTIPLE LISTING BOOK * GUARANTEED SALES. * COMPLETE FINANCING * TELETYPE SERVICE ''LIST YOUR HOME WITH NUMBER 1'' ·- CHARM UNLIMITEDI $25,5001 GrNI hotne near 11>1 bMchl S bedrooms, 2 ~tn1, •~I 1'"9[ac:t In kwely llvlng room, bulhln ••no•. oven -bri911t cllM"rlUI kite!>..,, LOY&lv llYO url*!lng, c1nHNn dr•Pf!I. o.11g1111ut Hlio for tt>ost "C-Out•." Oullldt i.r-er for I~ !>Heh crowd. Hur 111 corw.,fencn. 9'2 .... S '1\-. ~"" i: ' Miit! allrkllve ~ In •rN WL!h Vlffllroln 111.0 bedrtlOmo, 11,111 dl~lng ,,,_,., ,.. H>K lll bllncwth, bullt·lrl Orum l ltcl>tn, l•ml!y ,_.. wtlh ..,,.1c;.,. lir~lac:•. Auum• 1pr. !Qotn now on prQPtrtr •nd '"°""'ty lml•ll.....,,11 t fl llH ltwlft r..,tl t<.1·Slo66. h~· " ' ' ' ~ ONLY LOOKS EXPENSIVEI $32,950 E•>llldt C°'11 Mn.t 1Dc1tlon _, NtwPOrl 8-Mclll I "'*""""'· J bltlll•, lamH~ room co''""'"'" ofll !tit bUltlln "'Awlrd" llll(llln wl!fl •-l1f'>CI llreolltt. Ohhw•1ner fOr llddld tonw..,lan<;e, L-ly ,..no. flrlw•le c-1· y~ro "'''Y· Mtdlltrr1ne-n 1pOHI. Ptinl! c•rpetlng, drlPft. l \.i yr1, new. U).l/ln. SOUTH COAST OFFICES * COSTA MESA 2fll ....... lt.4. * HUNTINGTON BEACH ,,,,, ......... * HUNTINGTON BEACH "'' .... * HUNTINGTON BEACH 11241 ... * HUNTINGTON BEACH ttJI ,, • ...._ * FOUNTAIN VALLEY * , ........ ~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY 11941 ... , ••• 540-1720 1-42~91 962-1165 962·1373 * MISSION VIEJO ~ IJJJI II Tete 1..-* LAGUNA HILLS fl0.60JO ....... HHh ,. ... 1417t 1-...n.w * SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 493-1:141 11771 hi~ * SAN CLEMENTE 492.7210 1111 s.ec...i.. ----- •• • We Sell a Home Every 27 Minutes! • • FANTASTIC POOL PALACE I $56,9001 • • ' Ewery -· °"""" IO 1poce. -u1y, IU•U•Y .. (OmfOrl. -bMl•ODms. J ......... lot.,...I oi..i... '°""' -t.~nai.llgfl! 1nl1m111 dining or 111,,_111 F1ml11 raom, e11111nt llreolllt•, rlcn -o p.1nell1111, ~In'°"' w1llp1per K c..,,t1 lllH'Dtoin t••1>11Hno, Couny.,d ... 1.,. Lo.ob al "'"i>IV -'"°'" llondK-IP-lnll ond I OO<U-l l"'lm -It k2·1Ml. THE BIG "l " -$35,500 NO DOWN G.I. lerma -111 others ""'°"'It 10..,, -•NI •llrl 0"-111,.1 S 01ttmlrlg pun. ""'" tlllh1, 'JOit> t..,tury mooetn OU!ll-lft kl!<-., t•mHy room -.!!ti •-1-lnQ II•~•. L•"llr CO ... •ed p.o!lo.. Prl"'I """'iflG-leKll IDc•llln _, everylh"'91 '°""'!, '· BAI.CONY OF JULIETI $42,9501 ~. •lffl f!Wn Wlconr •nd """"' bed,.... ...,u .. 4 Mii,_, J Ollfl -.. 11rv-,_rv '°°"' ..,,,, ...,,,..._ 1 .. ~ .. °"'1".-. ---'"°""' Tllld .,,,., M N. Tllk k lt'9cklld to1r:1 U •Hllnt .... Ull•111 llndK•ping, _. ,.,.., ptlle, ""''-' outdoor llort!ln111 .... , .. .,. " M1t11oo! VltfDI &)D..IMt, 2IOO SO. FT. "WHOPPER"I $ll,5001 Onlfn ......... ~ ...... ., ......... -"'~ •••• -.oi ,,_ ..... , .......... J """ ....,... ,,.., .. , • 11 ..... ., ·-owl"' .....,., "~· tor '" fl'l(t llClillo\, .tc1o11ti....1 '"-.MIKI ftll>IWl(_fl , ......... Uvlfot rOM'I, ,...........,,. • 1111•, IM«il•• "'11111n •.,.i"--. olt11--. '°'""l •iNr'll '-='-... lltlflll •lie. Ill_, IW _. .. , or t•-I _,UM Since 1926 • .. I • • : ... DAI LY PILOT WeGntsday, Octobtr 11, 1~72 Wed11nday, Octobtr 11, iq7;> l'lLU r l\llVl ;;, R j $ Everyone Hes Something That Someone Else Wonts DAILY PllOT CC1'SSIFIED ADS You Con Sell It, Find It, T re de It With o Won t Ad ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642 --§678 for Fast Results General A. U,_.1001: tif)Mf: THE PEYTON'S PLACE You won't believe \vhat goes on here! In every one of the 4 bedrooms there's shag carpets of various colors. Downstairs, be- hind the big game room doors you just know people are laughing and drinking and ... Outside, on that big lot there's no tell· in~ what _goes on behind the lush trees and shrubs oC the huge back yard. And that quiet cul-de-sac location: Don't let it fo ol you, those nei~hbors are really ... "friendly ". H this entices you, you should meet the folks who live there now. A fin er f a mil y you couldn't imagine. But why Peyton's Place? Easy! It's owned by the Bi ll Peytons (he's the former President of the Newport-Mesa School Board) and their Unique family home is proudly presented by Unique Homes Real Estate at $54 ,500. CONTACT UN19UI HOMIS OF MESA YElDI, 146-5990 ONT°' OF TiiE REAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, 675-6000 • MESA VERDE, 548-5990 • NEWPORT BEACH, 645-6500 • CALL US ---------- General HARBOR VIEW HOMES We have the "HARD TO FIND" 5 bdrm. home for the growing family. Life can be eas ier if there is "elbow room" for the entire family. Other features incl. 3 baths, 3 car garage ... & a heated & fi ltered pool com- plete with Jucuzzi. Xlnt value at $74,900. C.Onvenient park!ng--easy to be a "DROP-IN" at Bay & Bea ch Realty General Genera) CHARM, COMFORT, VALUE •.• , •..• SANDPOINTE All wrapped up in this 2-STORY 4 'bedroom, 3 bath home. HUGE rumpus room that will take your pool table. 2 brick fireplaces, built- in kitchen, large yard & room lo store y'Our ·ooaL VA NO DOWN ........... $39,950. '"DOLLHOUSE" .••. •. , , SOUTH OF HIGHWAY \Vith new STRESSED garage waiting for a unit! 2 bedroom house completely remodel· ed in perfect condition. Easily expandable. Terrific possibilities for the "DO-IT-YOUR· SELFER". $55,000. Open Wed. 1·5. HUNTINGTON BEACH .... .... TRIPLEX A LWAYS rented because of the location. This triplex has 1-2 Bedroom and 2-1 Bed· roo m. For the smart investor at .. $38,950. BUILOERS ATTENTION , ..• • . . . VACANT LOTS ... in Costa A-1esa, two R-4 lots. 60' frontage, in rapi dl y appreciating area, and an ocean view too! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $32,250. WATERFRONT .... SPECIAL POOL. PIER and SLJP too. New carpels and drapes, 2 Bedrooms,· 2112 baths, \VET BAR, marble fireplace. Overlook THE WATER fro1n yo ur patio and enjoy . . . . . . $85,000. General £•rvrf7-,/"4U#-$/ltid, ~ AllOASSOamS REALTORS 2828 EAST COllST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. 644·7270 Gener•I ****** *TAYLOR CO* BALBOA COVES Attractive waterfront home for only $84,950. 3 Bedrooms, dining area & 2 nice baths. Built-in range & oven. Great area. Private pier & float. Owner leaving area. ''Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 1~1 1 --~· .j~l ' ~ ..... I~[ _ ..... I~ I -•o<U• I~ .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;,'}=-,~~~;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;11:.iiiiii~iiiiii~~ I General .; 'General ~eneral Gener1I -----,·.-------1:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! $25,500 MACNAB IRVINE OOVER SHORES BAYFRONT Breathtaking blue \11ater viow from e11ery window. Pier & double stlp w/open channel view, 4 BRs -4~2 baths. 2 fireplaces. Completely cus· ., . ~~&~~'.ed= STILL UNDER'"CONSTRUCTION Aune 642-8235. IH26) New home fallout! This highly desirable 4 WALK . . • bedroom, single story floor plan just !ell out To C.d.Af. HIGH:. 5 Bed· of escrow. You should pick it up! There's rooms, 3 baths. Family formal dining, huge family room, a service room, dining room & 3 car Ii ' garage. Room for pool, J ack porch and, be eve it or not, a 3-car garage . Howell 644-6200 fH24l Will be finished in time for Thanksgivin g COSTA MESA Dinner. Priced ot $47,650. DUPLEX 2 BR • 1 buth each, one wl OPEN TODAY (phone for directions). ANO SUPER SHARP 1101' OIT THE LISTING SHEET is this gorgeous 3 bedroom l ~ balh home in N;orlh Costa Mesa, with big double garage and large yard. Comple tely redecoral· ed thruout including NEW GREEN SHAG CARPETS! VACANT ANO READY! Terms a.slow at Sl ,250. down paymen t and pe.yments like r ent. /Oia,,, COATS -~WAL~ACE REALTORS --54166-44141- (0pen Evenings) fireplace, Beautifully redec-PHONI UN19UI HOMIS. MESA ¥EIDE, 546·5990 orated . new paint, carpets NEWPORT-- & drap<?S. 2-car garage · U ...i 161\U IF Ji() A..& IF~ 1 • .-,,. """"' 1ot m.soo. ...,. ~-L ~ L~ Back Bay Ha11i et Perry 642-8235. (Hl91 REAL ESTATE $36,500 CAMEO SHORES Giant 4 Bedroom . 21h bath, PRICE REDUCED I G-.neral General 2-story townhouse. Crackling 3 BRs -2 baths -canyon I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;I stone fireplace. FORMAL channer . A stone's 1tlrow 11 DINING! 30' enclosed patio. from private beaches, Low ~ · Sparkllng OLYMPIC SIZE malfitenance Yard. Sl4,500. of. J. j ~ POOL. Pride of NewPort Betty Kerr ~. (H34J t•n a A e Riv1era! 10% down to buy! ~ To preview call fast . ilnllll):"#; ·I PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 64!>-0303. ~DIMMl·- 1M4 ':.."?.,~.;':a SPANISH ELEGANCE 3 Linda Isle Drive Beautiful new 5 BR., 41h Ba. home. Water- front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled fam. rm., frplc., wet bar. Large master suite has frplc. & cozy loun ge area. View of Bay & the n1ountains. . . $179,500. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: IOHl\I I. Ol\O\ ,_, t A • -<' p • BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM Enjoy the carefree condomin- ium IUe in this large 3 bed-BIU GRUNDY, REALTOR room homo . 1850'"' ft. of 341 Bayside Or,, Suite 1, N.B. 6~161 dom estic sen!!1ity. Up.grad· "'!!!!!!!!"'!'""""'""'""'""'""':::"'""'"'!"""'""'""'""'""'""I l'd shag carpeting, new ::.:;: drapes and shutters through· • built-in range and oven. Con· $24,950 l BEDRM· 2 BATH NO DOWN TERMS O"'ner extremely anxlOWI - at1raetlve home. Elegant fireplace in 'gracious living room, built-in dream kil· chen. New l'Qvered patio. Wide concrete driveway. Near all schools & shopping, Brk. F reshly painted ex· terlor. 54<r1720. TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa ~1csa ~ ELEGANCE WITH A FLAIR Ct!OICE BA YCRESf COR· NER -Tru.1t•fully da"Oratcd 3 bedroom home 11·Jth large ronnal dining roorn and family room. Beaut if u I wallpapers, carpe!ing and custon1 draper ies. Slate l'O· try -designed for en· tertairtlng "His & 1-lcr " workshops , ...... , .. $72,500 PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-s200 Immediate Possession Don'r touch a thing • ~fove right in. Sparkling 4 bdrm & fam ily rn1, l Ox\8 en('lOSl"d palio, all bu ilt·in kitf"h(•n 111/ new vinyl floor. Close Ml ' schools & all n1ajor shop. ping. $30.750. r·or details. Call 54G-ll5I. Open Eves. ~~HERITAGE Fantastic four-level Spanish style lfuntington C r e s I home. is30 sq ft of gracious living . 4 bedroom 2YJ baths, large open living roo1n with flreplace, ronnal dining, si.>parate laundry room, 20' x 40' patio plus spacious basem ent family I rumpus roont with fireplace. This is a home you n1ust see to be· lie11c. Nev.• listing. 153,500. ~COATS ~wAfucE REALTOR.5 Open Evenings ~G;;•;;ne;;r;;e;;:l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;e;;n;;e;;';;:•';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I out. Fonnal dining area, gas venient, bul not too close lo I '!!!!"'!'!!!!!!~~~~"'!'!!!!!I the commun;1y pool. 149,!MXJ. I • * BROAD * REALTORS REAL ESTATE C. F. Colesworthy • 962-4454 • DEN·POOL BEACH Reduced • $42, 950 RED TILE ROOF! Just RE· DUCED OVER $2(X.JO. Bike lo BEACH! Family room plus S T U DIO DEN! SPARKLING BLUE POOL! NO 00\VN . VA! Anxious - c Ill.I &L;)...()303 . 1 lllll 'I I 01 \0\ _, , r , l • & C Beautlful Broadway St. Xlnt ompany established neighborhood. 640-0020 Lge. patio w/brick RBQ for outdoor living. 3 &Inns., * Real Estate Coreer Night * --N~EW--P~O~R~T--1 tamny nn. & '''"· ,1us •ltcy •=· Only 131.;()(). Tues., 17th Oct., '72, 7:30 P.M. Repossession cozy con AGE 0...,.n to the Public_ _ _ r-· 1 •-$1425'' BUYS IT1• Noa.-N'pt lfgh". ' &km. Come as you are ... Bring a tie'fta ' 1\'/brkfst. nook. Close l\l Ncwp:11·t . with l\.10UNTAIN shopping. Only $22,500. ~ Real opportunity in Real Estate sales VIEW! Overlooks NE\\' in the Newport Coastal •r•• GOLF COURSE site~ Hill-C.-\Ll . 0 ' '"''·2•14 to p rustic. Split rail fences. A~A ·-',AMII Limited seating - Call for reservations Brick fireplace. Large kit· n'A'f~ 1733 Westcliff Or., Newport Be•ch 645-7221 chen. Newly painted inside. Nr•r Nt•Dort Po st Oftlr • ~""'"?"""'""'""'""'""''""~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!""I VACANT! GI REPO! 5750 Gener el Gener el DOWN! 1615 CO S TS! HORSES, -'-'--------1 'iiiiii!!iij~;iiiiii!!!iiiiiiiil $30,15(}! Hurcy. call 64!>-0303 I HORSES 1• * * * * . * 1• A. A. Lauriento DOUBLE UP Tu·o 3 Bdrm hom<.'s on fuU 107 10 El Centro Ave. Large 3 bedrm home w /fire--i~ acr e. Sharp. cuslom-built, 3 Bdnn & dC'n hon1e + a Fountain Valley, Ca. place, on front of lot, and a 3 bd rnt rental. 10': do111n. 92708 cute l bednn rental on !"ear Only lllJlf"'I 211 I San Joaquin Hills Rood NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Large Covered Patio! $29,500! \'ou arc the 1\inner of of lot Present Income tromi --~==~~-- 2 tickets to the both Is $345/m o, F ull price -WOW ! ! ! CALL STUNNING NEW HOME 1215 SOM ERSET LANE -Dover/Westcli!I area. OPEN DAILY 1-5. Choice location. 3 Bdrms., 3 baths. Family & dining comb. 3 Car gar. $98,500. Mary Lou Marion SPECTACULAR SPYGLASS 3001 OCEAN BIRCH. This 5 BR. 3 bath family home has a forever view. Large family r m ., wet ba r. 3 Ca r garage. $122,000. LaVera Burns TWO NEW LISTINGSI Beautiful street in Mesa Del Mar L 3 BR., lamily rm. Corner lot $33,900 2. 4 BR., lam. rm., gorgeous pool $38,950 Carol Tatu1n LIOO ISLE A "MUST SELL" OPPORT UNITY ! Lovely 3 BR., 3 ba .. ftun. r1n . ho1ne on 2 Ige. lots. Steps to priv. beaches & club. $129,500. Edie Olson CUSTOM BUILT 4 BR . l BATHS By the present owner . Al $85,000 -il has lt all! May I show you the formal din. rm., w/sep. lam. & laundry room1? Well buill on large H.H. lol. Al Fink A MOST UNUSUAL HOME 5 BR, single atory traditional home w/ ocean view. 2 Frplc1 .. wet ba r, den & !am. rm. Lovely gardens. Adjacent to fine beach. •ll0,000 . Mary Harvey TRADITIONAL-LIDO ON 70' Showplace potential -max. privacy, on quiet 11. to st. Ioc. Cozy home with 3 BR., chormlna L.R. & sep. D.R. & country klteb. $91 ,!IOO. Eugene Vreeland lltVINI COVf VIEW -POOL AUracUve 3 BR. 2 ba., din. rm. & lam. rm. ~ome in prlv. area. Steps to ocean. Home "la surrounded with lovely treea & planta. Jl32,!IOO. Katltryo Raulston --Colctt·.111.11 ... • • ' . •aat ~ SM NIW'OttT CIHTIR DR. N.I. BAYSHORES Growing Family'? ~lnvt> !hem Into lhi.11 3 hrdronn1 home in 11 gn•ul f11n1ily t'Ommunlly Lncutcd on 1 1~ 10!1 11 ith plrn1y of t'OOn1 lo ndd-0n Nl'IV carpeUI & paint Re.iuly (or ln1mcdl11te occupancy! l''!il"" . HA1t•01t J-t ~ALTORS SI NCE 19"1'1 673-4400 "U"-RXER 2-STORY Pool $17,750! Buy 1hhc 2-111ory bru'gnln NO no\VN PAVP.l ENT OR ON!. Y S~ . whlrhrvtt way "l'OU •1u.111ify ! INO.UDF.:!ii WASll!-:ll. DRYER ANn R EFJt lGER.A1'0f-t, T 0 I> ~ Pl..U" SWI MMING POOL! ll urry lo llt't! rnll M5.0303. . -IOHl\I I Ol\11\ FORECLOSURE $24,650 Ont' n1f'n'11 l~:c ran l>t> )'1Mlr gnln. 3 B<'<lroom11 2 lw1th11, °""1'1117.t>•I <louble lt&rn!!:t'. l1r1ck fll'l•phu·<' llnd W.•'111 l'"A'l"!l•. l..Arrt> )of wl1h ron1- pl('!C pt111acy. ILIW 1m-n pn.ymt'flt. llUM\'! $46-MSO <OP<'n Evt1, 1 • .• HERITAGE RlALTORS 2 Bl.KS ta St. Je>11chlm '• C11th Sehl. a bt, 3 ha, tam nn. trplc-. torm din rm. brldllt nn. play nn, rJec. Ironic oven. Cov JMil lo w/t11te ~ !bl, Ela'l car optMT. nJdua. Owner. 139.lOO. A Som. '*"5il·I 9th Annual Or•nge Co. $29 ,500 2 houses, pine trees, lake International view, $170/mo income. Full Auto Show Newport price only $23,650. Will ta ke trade, IOIY down. car or? as at the at pa.rt down payment on S9,CXXl SPYGLASS PLAN 74 3600 plus sq ft In thla 5 bdnn, 4 hR, plus bontL~ nn home on a V.I.P. location. Central air eond., Intercom & built· In record player. N0-v.•a..'C vi..nyl, shag carpeting, 111al· nut cabinets ln kitchen, pool· 1ized lot & breath-taking viev. al ocean i: coastline. Vor can celebrate the holl· da,yr tn Your new home. Call llQ\\' SJ.50,000 lnciUdlng land, 3 brdroom!I, deluxe built-in a~lianc:..'t's Inc l udin g d11hwasll('r. Den, fireplace lcndl'I ad<l{'ll chann to JrracioUJI hving r o om . llan<l90me breakfast bar. Large CO\"ered patio. Boat door thru rear of garage. \'nu can ft~sume VA Joan 111l!h low dov.·n payment and n1onthly in~tal lmenls are h!11!1 than renl! 540--1720. ANAHEIM equity. Balence "'ith easy CONVENTION Filrvlew terms. Blg &>ar Lake. Ca. 1 ........................... 1 CENTER 646-UIT CALL ANYTIME I' t)redhill REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime, 833-0820 Office hours 8 AAI to 6 P~f BALBOA ~a. N . B . wal<"rfm nt. Private rrunp & floot. ~iodtm 3 br. S77 ,500. Ca.II owner, 675-01SO for app't. Prtndpalli only. ~II Idle Items .. , 6'2-S678 TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa NPT. HEIGHTS· 4 BDRMS ll<'re is v.·hat you"ve been looking !or. Ldvely tree i;hacled 111,...-.1. 1800 sq. ft. of romfort with 13x19 muter sull<>. Alley 11cf:es~ for boat or tr11llcr. 8'-!lf"r cheek thl1 tricllty. Ov.•Tlt'r will carry fh'llt T.0 . with no kian fees! C wt.11\IH 11111 Rt'a1tnrJ11 646-mt »13 We11tc:lirf Drive I OJ>!n 'till 9 P M October 11th thru 15th ) 646-3928, 548-3651 or P lease call 6'2-5678. ext. 314 linytlm• Eves: 548--9416 between 9 and 5 pm to claim I !!!!!!l·~~!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!JI yo"' tlckeu . (North County MINI • RANCH tr U-tree number Is 546-1220>. • • • • • $12,500 ! Lochenmyer: BAYSHORES Bullt Uke a bri<k rnnch1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii& home! A!lnl-ranch ""ilh 181• Realtor ' DEN· GUEST FRUIT TREES! Q" 1, 1. Who's the Lucky -& '"H BOAT shady tree lined street. 7 -• Plllar.d portico'"""'· Co•y One NN ·p:irt's pre1ttglous Bay· c&bln kitchen. REFRIGER· ()lyner has moved to Alaska shor<.'1! GuanSed gate entry. ATOR, RANGE AND OVEN &: must seU this sharp 3 Huge crackling ll.repltlce. INCLUDED! ConCl"<'lf' drive-bdnn &-family nn near So. Giant chefs kitchen. DEN! way. ALL BRICK 1!0~1E1 Corult Plaia The best buy GUEST FACILJTYI PRI· lnvestor'1 dream, Call fa!!I -In north Ccista l\.fi:!Sa. Full VATE BEACH! S52.o0o price 645-0303. price $29,500. INCLUDES FURNISHINGS Call 541).1151 Open Eves. plus 14' SAJUNC SLOOP! Call toda,y 645-0303. lfllll'I I 111 1,11\ . . . 101:1\I L Ol\O\ ·f,·o,.. · • -HERITAGE . • REALTORS S©\\~lA-~£~s· JUST LISTED MESA VERDE Truly 11 "Doll t!OU'-('" * 3 BDRM ne•r oceun ... 3 lldrrnio::., l bRth11. I-ltd. & $26,900. Th• Punle with the Built-In Chuckle nl'd. •"•lmming pool. Mow-* I ~t MAC alr-cond, 3 In rondtlion1 A real lx),)I at BOR1i1 , a111un1t $230 PITI. S4l ,IXKI -lfURRY? MJadon Viejo ...... SlS.000 CORBIN• •is:.~RM ~ar ot~~in ... J'm Wmtetltf Dr., N.B. MARTIN .~~ SPANISH =========ls.15,900 ·Tile roof. VACANT! Th Wh I Thi S Bedroom. 2-11tory. NN REALTORS 644-7662 e,, 0 e DIJ poln< and """'" .LOWEST hi.11 ~ m:lt'lC'Orattd, new PRICE I N l~l..Ut"J'S! $3590 rll~ll. p1tlnt, l11 nd11t.·•plng, blq1 h ! OO·~ lo6n. roRCED ,.,,.,, In this lovely 3 brom. SALE . Huny call 645-0303. IRmil)i m1. i.11 huil!lns pl~ nreplace, block Wll.ll ferdna. hte.vy llhak~ mot drftm patio, tprlnlcfh rrmt .I: rear. Rductant owner mutt IOHl\l I Ol \11\ . , . move not1h, Mawne larpl:::-=,,-=;;-;-:0"-"=" VA lot1.n. Aaltlna SM.500. WANNA BUY A l'OO'l'B,4LL C'.a.11 MO-USI Opt-n E'\lrs. FIELD! CUm'.>M BlllLT RAMBLING HOM!: ON 1/3RD ACRE. 100'Xl!i6' • HERITAGE REA LTORS UNSOl<MOLE AIOVt ttn[RS ~~ r3t E~ lO G" ANSWE• KENNEL. CRV IN AT _S_C_RA __ M_·LETS~ __ A_N_S_W_E_R_S_l_N_C_LA_S_Sl_Fl_C_A_Tl __ N_9_00_~!!v!'",..'!!.u!l"""!'l'!"!""'!"1n'!!Cluotlled!l'"'"!!"'!'•I f!'~ :.,1,,~...,~- 1 ,, I •• 20'xl0' BONUS ROOM sitting on top of this lovely 3 Bdrm, 2 bath homt;>. OtJ1cr features include step-dov. n Jiving rm, lwnvy shake 1wr, 2 fir cplat•cs, block wall fence & nlt't' cul-de·sac lo- cation. Priced only $35,TJO. Call 546-5880 !Open cv~.) --~,. HERITAGE • • REALTORS ___ , UP FOR GRABS 3 bedroom, 2 With, new shaa ' carpet and fresh paint. , Anyone can take over U1e VA lonn ancl Sl5S per montb pnys all. Gr;ilJ lh1s \Valk /., 1...ee l'Xl'IUSL\"l' 001\' (lt the pri1·r of $26,950. C WALl<fR & LEl Rc11llon 545--0465 Open Eves NEWPORT ISLANO $66,500 Cornrr lrxvme 11roperty1 ~n"at potential. Brlnlc your l1u1ldCI'" & decor&tor. Own<>r v.111 L~r trade tor ~ t1 ter-fronL a.u, 673-:1663 SMALL DOWN AMull\l'll GI bin oo thf pluAh hllle ~m 1'i lh Ihm! hul{l' brdrooms. a.II nc.,. pturnblr;ii.t and water ht'at<"r, , nnt1 big det~I doublr <' 1J rage. Paymenll of S2?l ptr mon1h Includes 111. ~\\/dl(lil ii, [:ff Realtors 646-714 I 204!1 \\.'fftcllff Drive ' 648-7711 Open l.W.. NEW DUJ>LEX . , ..•• WC~ 1·21Ut It 1-38R •Pl. 151 E. &y, coo" ~trM. ~. • 8 PILOT·ADV£RTIS£A Wtdntldty, £1ctoblr 11 , 1971 Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Hand$ See If You Have Any Of These Things-A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! '· s .... 2-Gultor 3. Bot., Crib 4. Eloctrlc Sow 5. C1mer1 6. Wisher 7. Outboord Moler I . Stereo Sot 9. Couch 10. Clarinet 11. Rtfrlgerator 12. Pltkup Trutk 13. Sewing Machin• 14. Surfboord 15. Machine Tool1 16. Dl1hwnhor 17. Puppy 11. Cobln CrulHr 19. Goll Cort 20. l•rometer 21-Stomp Collottl .. 22. Dinette Sot 23. Ploy Pon 24. Bowling loll 25. Woter Skis 24.F- 27. Sultcno 21. Clock 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Bor Stools 32. Encydopocllo 33. Vacuum C111ner 34. Troplal Fish 35. Hot Rod l•lpm't 36. Fiio CHIM! 37. Golf Clubs 31. Sterling SH .. r 39. Vlctorl•n Mirror 40. ~Sot 41. Slldo Proloctor 42. Lawn l\\ewer 43. Pool T•blo 44. Tl ... 45. Pl•no 46. '"' CNI 47. Dropot 41. Llnon1 49. Hone 50. Ah•lll..,. 51. °""" 52-·-cycl• 53. bro .... 54. Ski - 55. Hl9h Choir 56. ltolno 57. Eloctrlc Trtln 51. Kiiton 5'. c10 .. 1c """ 'II. Colfoo THI• 61. Molorcyclo 62-Accer4lon 63. Ski• 64. TV lot 6S. World1~nch 66. Dl•rtlltld W11<h 67. CJo.Kort 68. lt·- 69. Complnt Troller 70. Anti~ fltwftllvn 71. Tepe l111Ntr 72. S.11- n. "°"* c.. 74. ~lox.,.. 75. Inboard s,11ft11t 74. .......... "· ...... 7L Dort 0.- 79. l'uncllltlt ... IO. ""' c.m.,o II. 0.- 12-Rift• u. Doolc M. SCUIA 0..r THM or any alher ntra tltlap around the ho ... can be hinted Into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT·AD , So ••. Don't Just Sit There! DIAL Dl•ICT 642-5678 ' VA•PHA 5l(.. I, 3 l 4 BEDROOM O'.lNDOS. EX· Q.IJSIVE TIB U RON S, SUBMIT OFFERS. larwin reelty,fttc.- DUTCH CLEAN -SCOTCH PRICE. NEW USTING, EXCITING AREA OF CX>s. TA MESA. 3 BEDROOMS OF SUPER SHARP, SUPER CLEAN LIVING. MUS? SELL BOUGJn' A NEW ROME. SUBMIT OF· FER. $27,IDJ. ALL TERMS. larwin realty inc. 968-4405. The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace I DAILY PILOT I) Golw•I c.. ..... ,.., c .... - SEU Lookina for )'OW' n10uey's 0wllt'r must mow lo delert v.-onh? Thell * ll\1~ fine for healtb re....._ 4 BR, Hu.nd.,mn Be.m Home. 211• BA. Ira· atlng ii.te•, ~ '"' •-I Bat"-Boa frpl. l -.... yd. Good ram...,. nu111J.O, .... 1 1o-ountain Valle)' klcatioDL '*INCOME* 80mh ..oC 11.,.. Lovely 3 bdrm .. 2 batb home + •ix 2- BR. furn. untta + swim- min& PoOJ + lge. lol. 119;.000. ·-· --· *CHOICE* Storqe. tow ~I a I n I . All tama -Pr1oe oal,y G r o u n d 1 S34.9'"J:l. Call $31.950.. Ptnthouae Tripla ~ OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 416 SEAWA'RD RD. •lllSIOIAllY C/11 IHI tOl.Wlll CO. HARD TO FINDI a>UJNS Ii WA1TS, INC. 962-$523 *ClcW* Lon •t Fl.-.t Sight when )'OU tee thb DELIGHT· FUL ~ 3 Bdrm, MESA VERDE home, Owner trarlli· fm"l'd. Only $38,500. GINNY ~10RR1SON ORANGE COAST ReGI Estate ft•. * *'** • ~TORS.. ""AM* 1S1Z 11esa •.=:.t•Verde Dr. £ut. Lovel,y pool •ldc triplex of *• .. Costa M~ 2 br. townhouse delign on *** ~7.clO quld. strftt. ri~ paint and l-"'"ii(Oiipon&iiEiiv'ii"ii;""'~' ... .,. ,.,...._ Call 615-=. "-·---D 11011 Y. l'IUlllCJ.IX 'ountoln V•lloy ., .. ,_ esperate Must re11m1 to b.icaeo - I 1 ii Needs fut sale. 5 Bdnnr Kf.lcf:~ t~~:~~·*~'i ., ... : __ :.~ Can 51>-l.15L Open Eves. ! .. !.._T5:\R MARK SPln GREW UP WITH ..._.n,nn A POOL HOME & INCOME .. and "° can )'OW' chil-dren. See this 1uper 4 bed· Th~ bedroom, 2. t.th home room '•ith family ror.m and 10i·1th. Oa.gstone ~ on . comer lot South ol the hi· covered p&llo Sol Vista for ""'&)'. EZ walldne dist. to only '4;j,750. ltllSlOlilY OI lfff eot.WIU. ca. ·. HERITAGE R£ llLTORS BLACK FOREST Camahon aw.. PLUS at· BE A WINNER tractive 2 Bdnn a:araae apt. Elea:ant 4 bedroom 2 bath $14,(0) dn. Voeel Co. Real· with Wnily room, ClOYft'ed Stcluded hideaway amens a OWNER tors, mz Npt Blvd, Cr.I. and encJoaed palio huh car- tettina of hilh standlnc: f1m.. Must sell VACANT l Bdrm ~8-934&. pets and dnpe' ~ 1ptirkl- brr in tabled NEWPORT 2 belh.<1, crpts, drps, Iirepl. HIDEAWAY'S ing pool. Near nrdythin,a;. !JU d' · Pr! qp n.et ~ Only $46,500. . HEIGHTS! Feet )"O'll' warm new L"On •hon. ced Nl"al 2 BR. home, 1-BR. unit. WIDE OPEN SPACES friendly fireplace mapan-at appra.l&aJ $30..500. AU AU an fP'OUJ1d Door. Lot!l of 1taa walls, cathtdral imoUI btuttr ' NauHcal temu. Close to South Cout , $S.!il1'.I ceWnp, aunny kitchen, \\'ood ' PJ.ata. Xlnt buy· Un lty R It Abnoephere. Tute COWNS I: WA'ITS INC 1wir1 ee Y ICTttned-in lanai, l bdnn, fine food VIA Pll!llJ thru p l· 962"'5S2l ' . 3001 E. Cout Hwy., Cd.M :.I balh.. All lhla llhd 11. COl'Mr ley. Shipboanl Cowtt<r. Ap-* C le W 67US10 lot foc only 136.900. plaud •""'""" !.end..., * OPEN HOUSE DAILY CAIL - rouy MAGIC Financin&. 2 OWNER Thia beautiful 5 bedroom, 3 Bedrooms and Den. $36,950. SACRIFICING bath, tv.-o story will sell this Call ~. • l...a.riro, nroar new oupiex. week! C.Ome aee 1969 Port Must ~. $78.,9>0. OPEN Dunlroi1h 1-5 p.m. 184,950. Houle 126 4Sth St., N.8, Bier. 675-122S. II -•DUPLEX · excel loe & MOTHER-IN•LAW J.·' .· :. ~~.2eam1u'-~s.~ ~ ~~ ~. ~~M-APARTMENT .. ~-'"'""" -2 BR., 2 balbl. Remodroled. This houafo hu It! Comblnrd Top O>nd. G.H. Robroruon bedroom aittln& room, •'&lie IUut9IMTOf'nt1~waico. GREAT POOL IUY C::::M. .. call; GTr~ ~npst!~'o:!t.ai~ h~ BALBOA ISLAND This vttaatlle ~ ~ 4 Bath floor plan ha.I "4 kitch- ens and 4 ou~ entrancft. Very interesting location with a 3rd fkior' llUndeck for views ol mountains ~ har- bor. Cali 6Th-122.\. Beautilul PrHely P 0 O L bt-drooms, I~ b&UI and hom e , pto f eaionally ''NEED SPACE FOR bnck !JMc. t,resti p&int ln- l•OOar.pPd. upended aha&'. BOAT & TRAILER'' ~::e ~I'll.::. ~ = 2 larae ftftplaoes and wrot Thia big lour bedroon.1 on a hut·k yarfi. Nl'ar nrw P~vln bar. This home ha.I OYft' huge ('(lrnf'r lo! nu ronrn School. rrlced Ill only 7700 :lllJ. ft. Hurry. call tor 1t.ll O,ese thing11 plus 3 $3&,j(ij. ~ I'' -.. .. lits .... booutlflll ..... 1, ftreplace. It'a vacant A .....,,. Oroom up ,,.., .,.. ••t --,.,,., .... 1Ulmlt. but -.. ·• (l:llJ --Open Ews l')"I Sll.4DO. "''!'!f!~fl!l!! ..... -....... 1 DOCTOR'S PRE9CRIPTJON OWNER s.cnnc.. The ratt · RX -SMOG .f1lEE llUNT-R"ill of prt\lacy in tbro pant INGTON BEACH . fike 80xl20 f't . sroun(ls . SEACOAST BU I LT 4 R.ealtrn 564465 landlC9ped to p I e t u r e BF.DROOK, F ·A M I L Y 0 Ews prrfroct perfPction! Kln& lb-ROOM" MODERN KIT Pl" . ed bedroom•, 2 kwely balha, OIEN.' nJU.Y ~ IAIE FACTS lamUy room with Int- l J ED wtU. SELL ON VA Urepl~. buUIJn dre•ri1 ~,Unr'V 11uUt01••TOfTHt C0tW1U co. TER.Ms OR 'l. DO about thll omperty: Sel"n kitchen. Patio p ar t lea . ~ 1...-:.A ONLY g ~ ~: are rnovlD& io hone ranch buUtln BBQ lor u-e a:iok latwln ttaU:r 1ae. 918 Mo5. and .W h!:lp ~ with ours! Wa!Jc to 9C'hoola. lbop- LIVE FOR MOTHER NEW USTIN"'--.. GI ... ,... 1100 total Pinc • '"""""'' ,_. thl• I I~ W' ooaa. Lowly 3 bdrm In attnrtfw ~ 8 r k . .......... 'fl!-Y:lll be ea1y and pleaaant In Near N'pt. Jl&fltl. 3 Bdrm., prime C.M . aN'a. <lnl.Y Sl2,000. ~tl7lL L.~-.,:=----d· this 3 year new homf'. 2 Z ba., trpl. plua ~· pl~-$32.000 all 1erm11. 3>th St. 6' OWNER muat leave. OeJKcn r Cf.;,;;;o;;,nlfiutl=.:.:.;.:;°":.::._;_;10;.:,()..124 Bedrooms Dlnina: Room I room w/frpt, BBQ. All thhl 'Nat.In Av., C.~1. fcir IU.11\19 family llvtrw " I '. · on an R-2 lat Onl.Y $34 500 rntft'Wnllw! 2 blitha. I~ --l~·J Bath. 8/] Gas Kitchen CALL 6 · ..... J.~'41 CALL 8'12-ltl.8 family room rnhanc:led bJ . s:zs.ooo. can 646-m5.5 ~...,, m.urn-. flr'tpa.ce, wtfe.. • Ill-• Nm ...... buDl·ln ....... . Clas1lficetion 125-149 -----... _._, dl1ttwuber. Lovtly L"OY'lftd C ~IALTY = J>atlo. l -new. ' 1 ~ 1~ g1J: . +till ii?rm~;~~ l~~c; ~~B. =~=.= 0.11iflcetlon IS0..114 ~..-.I HOM E . TWIN Of' HOMES'' rront yard, Brtl 13l.?.11. I Ii] TANGLE\\'OOD, C1l01CE ~. A: L ... I SUl51DI Al't' Of ft4f (OLWIU co. RE s A L E s NOW ON Oft. hWaldl> tLtall ... tl8h .. OWNER Anxloul. J apacllNI . . MARKET INO.UOING & d&l&Y-Good rout.side G'eL bl!droom•. 2 t.thl. ~ CS.. • nil: HARD TO f'lNO Uw tn lllld 1 the room with ~t brtai affu:etlon 200.260 PRIVATE SUITE ~fONTEREY MODEL. 2 TO other A one llnd 'U:UOOi rtt"t'plac. ~ to IM [ II~ I . BEDROOM, Q u l c K All ~ .... •• bulltln ........ """" -"-fWllMt Thia cozy home hu a autte PO~N. larwtn rttJty mu. 10tl c~loc. cit'aPet. N..,. lne.96M«E. ly ...... ed '"""°I< .. of rooms with a prlv•te tn· Prtrft klcatklill .- CIMslflutlo• JOO.Ju5 ,.....,. that """"' """"' "" BUILDERS ,.~•1't,. N• ..;... ex lt.eal'°" !'~ "'"''"' [ lit] a muter bedroom or a rent· llAVE: V\f'W Joe, Nro\lo·~rt ttftl\I · ~ ,.,.. J'lflst fwlllle " al unit. Thro la.raro yard w'ilh BMcft. SZ,<m Cul~e.1&e Open Eves. Wb. Brk, $30.T~. -&arden and tru.lt tree1 and lot, Slll.SOO tKXT0R MUil' SELL. h1I BY Owner: O'*"' 4 hr. f ci...Kicotioo J60-l70 ... E.no lllWJ -. Y~exe<. .,.. lam nn. • 2 bo + "111< Nr the-CUI d Sac locatk>n an" 'IVll ~I Elqanl di rm., muter Mlle Sq. Pwift. 1 '11 Yrs. 0 o&d, I -1 ,,,,., l "'&t! Call m,nz; ti, · IUlte '1<wo -$3110D -.,. TOP VA ~ willow .r.. cabana. n. Pm. m-ucn. Clotolllwtloo ~oO-"" ~ ~ = :r.:-t ~. """'...,._ - I ,. ..... lliil') la'~ 1'~U HO~~~N liatod tod.;'f:..~~:=OWNER~· ~:.·1'b.iti .. . . , . • ~...:_.'!'_,•~r• All 0wr O~• Cowl!)'~; ~ tenna. BK R . e t ti~ ~ Clauificetloo 500-li I 0 . . ' . '75-1125 116 an . ehorm to ......... llv· su•.wou.•' °' 11 .. ccxwtu. co. ~ C'.llAIUllNG I. MODERN 4 1111 room. BuU1ln dram kf(. ........ 11·1 -·~"' 1~·1 =-OOl~~u:= ~=··~· . • ltvlna room. c or n~ r rte.ht lnl ~. Brit, Cfonifiulio• 525-SU EVERORllNS AND «!if?\ ~.,;."c!:!::"w1:i':: 14&-0ilM. J on 1 i.. .. _ ]fRl PALM TRIES ...._,., ___ ,.. ~~.~°ll'.f.."";.::!".""'ea°7i J • ..,..., ""'lolctpc -. L:1J Thia 3 e.caroo.n 11om, wlU • RDn'AL • Sbatp, ~ ~ 90t.mf COA8T on '-rze f!IO:clJJWi) lot w/ a...tffe.t• 550 1'51 wtleome a ftftl Into a.ruw.I, Newport ...... 3 REALTORS ~ to build. Good kw'aUolt '--------• owner 8R. ~ cl~ t.cb LOVELY UlG J .,. CDR QUWPIOWfl. Pl1cfd ncti:t .. " ~ a Dtlllhttlll Nrlchborhood. ~ $296. ' , • S:.1,X.. ..... I ... rrotlUrtd " P•• Ventt1 • •• MtfNI Verde ,.,.. home ... kl~ :.,:· ~~ c. J . 'i.;"l;,R.ealty ..,,,__, ___ .J. ,.....-Stone bwldt and out Move Ooodo rental , Imm • c-. . ,f-~=,,:::,::;;:.=~-1 -• -mo<ll. ..... caJ! """" ..... s •••• kl... * JUST Llii'•D * ca..Nflutian 57S..510 In and Ila.rt to Uve. Hunt1,.. s:..n ...,_., 5 4 I -111 1 , $Cl.GOO. Chmtt. t'111 D.iinver l BR. 1 bL. rm. I I ~ too Be~h. Pl.DO. cau 5'9-UIL llmill.J!· . Dr., CM. »)Ml. SbolNJNI .... l . ---.~ -* owlillR SAYS,* BY 0.-· 8wltilul 2 RR. lY••Jled.--,....s; ~--·lfl · * HSSLL HOWi '' * 1i.; 8 A . CondomtntUm "'6.nw '"" .._ ..... -wt1en 6004tt c. 4 Bdrft'I., 2 bath, blc ta.ftlly tnc1ttd i11 qWr"I r~ 011r .. WUl .... 11n • I . 0 111·1· I • rn. wor -~low adultlonlycornmun lty R .. ttw ··-. • or; , . f" El ~1~r• •h s .,.. yUd. Caod :~-.:;~nn&nt" UPOSSISllONS 0.MlllMtl.n 700.710 ~. C.... --NI ASSU1IE ... -on ·.,,..,. n.r _,_ ... IOotlllllJil r • .............. ,. don. Fa ...... 1 BR,. 1%. BA 11. ot tbNt mA 6 VA ~ I • 3 a ~ Wl\i.!At f O" flft' <OlW1U co ~~LRR •,IAL TY* Md. pool. AOL W /W ~·· cael8t.1 -. ~ ,....,,,--~---'-==1 ..,,.. """"' llY ... ..,.. KASAllAN CiOltlflceti-toO-IU BaiM ,.._. ... .-Rl•Ml~~·_!!ll!•!!..,_,..!~~ TOWNHOUSIS c.-r ......_ BY o.-: I BR. Adult ;;; - I ~ .....,... --.--x OWN'Dl _... ·'Sr: Lt.'' .... .. ...... 'Li Thlt &1yl,r> of Mm. stw. ""' Now ....... • ma Gu*el c..tt. l'rpk, ~n ~ ~ 4 BDNI' t " __. --i....-4vadable lmmlJdlald ' Oii ill tu .,,, IN dllnflhr, f/A .... tot. DUQL al Ai_._, • ~""" lell'attoa, ,,~......,. ~ lleatil'I. lrs pool a. nc rm. ,.,,._..f1utleft llO-lll rm uvtna, and tow, ktw ~ 't.toa. ~ ~ xT. tlJ,m 60-17'4. Ml ma. ~ ~'11na. w ( ...t=. ](\t!') :,e..:··~ L.= P;sl 1.et •:c:·~'~ji~ ~ .- Cl...iflc.tloo -.12 ....... IWOO. Cltll m.na OC£AJmUll(1' 4111 Hla. t"'~· ~-..... =TY~~ .... r li) · ............ t i.at.~; -m " .__ .... ..,. ......... -.-. sr.um'.:Rl ........... t ..... ,, .... °"" Llall • _ -DUPLEX s Bft. ) -. Ji BR. rrptc. P R""4 kll. xint .. ........,... Cloooiflcolloo tll.f4t -. N... .,..:i., -t'""" ID-Tn2_ ICl1IT ltEALTT, I §1 AGU<T l'THl44 IT -I "• I ba. frllc. 2 JOO OOWI< I 811. I SA. - l ... pr -""'· !Ill '"""' ,..., .... .l""'.:t Alf/dtJ ll U.Bll'l'OAYto *~* t!OW r l&....., .... -... p..-iMT Ot-•Wlll<O. ...... -l"'l.......!b_....t__ rWi aa Ml! Dol'I dda)'.,, U ldlit hml llO'lfl a.II ·:;::;:::::.- -tlO-ttO ooll ..... ..,_ -· -t -• ,_ .. .. f I . .. • • • . . $0 DAIL V PILOT w~. OcLobtr 11 , 1972 PILOT-ADVEnTISER )j ---I~ I --- BROKERS INC. LEAVE THE CAR HOME IN ADD ITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, I IA & 2 baths, 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- cludes everything, on our least expensive unit. t:i WALl<fH & Ill n.callors 54· Open Eves. * \Vl·IY It.ENT? \Ve have how;es avail. for nothing down lo Vets I.: 5C.'.. down to anyone. CaU anytime', SCOTT REALTY, 536-75.33. Costa Mesa e DREAM STUr~·! I br, Su.iness $150 • Util !.Nlid. Quiet 1 BR, sep house. Nr i.+.ops, $90 So. Laguna. Bltn11, patio. I ALA Rentals 645--3900 Oppor tunity 200 $200 -Ulil pd, North end. e Family \11antcd. 2 br, fn1;d 1-.----.--.---.--.-·l 1 BR cottage, nitcly furn. yd, encl gar. Kids/pets $140. Luc''lle Bell S325 -Util pd. \VintPr. Excpt'I ALA Rentals 645-3900 2 BR ...,./dl'Ck. Beaut Joea. 2553 Oxford Lane lion! 3BR, 2 BA. Fam. & dlnini.: ENT Ls rm. Oshwshr. etc. Re-Cost1 Mesa, Ca. NU·VIEW R A pa.inlet! in & out. Nr mkls. You are the winner of 6734030 or 494-3248 i>ark, schools, t'lc. Married 2 tickets to the epic, 1 or 2 school agl! OK. 9th Annual Orange Co. ,N_•_w-'-oo-•l_Be_•_•_h____ Mesa Verde. Responsibll" lntern•tional ,. people only. Rel.<>. please Auto Show $125 -Uti! pd. Bach. 100 yds $265 mo, Isl & last 548-7308 ocean. l)('ck. afl 4 PM. at U1e $16.'> . Lgl' I BR. Ocl'anfront. 2 BR. Gar.tge. F'enced patio. ANAHEIM \Vintl'r. Child OK. Close to schl~ & shop'R· NEW PAINT ••. :.I BR. v.'all lo "all rarJ>4'lS. I , builtins. Large (°OJ"nf'r Jut. 1 ''il<:Un<.·y for 11u1rk 0<·· i --- PRICED FROM $18,950 TO $23,450 Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about 1A mile to \Valnut (1st road on left ), left 1 mile to "VValnut Square''; or San Diego Fwy. to Culver , left about 3 miles to \Valnut, right to "Walnut Square" or call 714/83:!-9670. CONVENTION $275 -3 BR, 2 ba, Oce.inrron1. $155/mo. &15 vi c tor i a . CENTER frplc, dbl gar. 642--93&1. October .llth thru 15th NU-VIEW RENTALS e Caly Co1tage. 1 br, East- Plea.se caU 642-56781 ext. 314 673.4030 or 494-3248 side. Child OK. $115. between 9 and 5 pm to claim Bach $125; Studio bayfront, ALA Rentals 64S.3900 your tickets..· (North County $155: Dream Cottage fnttl e Rare find. 3 br. stv /rc[r 1g, t·upan<·y. Only $1.00J rlo\\'n, ~~""""'""'""'""""'""'­full prirc $19 9'.J(). CALL . 0\VNE~ n1ust sell. Primed _ • lur 1mmed1ate sale! 4 :=[§ • s.-.~,.'I o1 S.o•• ~ .... c:.-t••ri. '"' = toll-tree number is 54G-12'l0). 2 Br, sngls/fan1 ok. kids. pets, nr schl, $175, .. * * * * Rent-A-House 979-8430 ALA Rentals 64S.3900 962-88.'>l . hedroorns. 3 baths. f1replac.-e in secludC'd rear living room, all ele('lri(' .. Award" built-Jn ki1chC'11, dishwasher. Load~ of drrking -beaut!ful patio, I u s h low maintcnanee * 2 BR beach, Ull/mo. 2846. furn house, on to June I st 646-9291 or 540- Laguna Beach TOO HOT TO HOLD Mi~sion Viejo VACANl Liquor Stoh.> -$55,000 Dry Cleaners Butcher Shop 3 Br. cpl, drps, gar. Huge fncd yd. Close to schls & shopg. Qu iet r('!lid 'l street. $215 mo. 540-1\JJ: 1-726·4400. I P 166 Need Straight Bar BEAUT. ni•iv J BR, 1n I landsi.·ap\n,i:: and a gorgeous BROKERS INC. ~;2~'2561 pool~ Brk S3S.900. 1~ !his unique contemporary hninl", PR ESENTLY UNDER CONSTRUCTION. fil.:O\\'UOO J<.:XTERl(H!, \VITI! EXTENSIVE USE Out-Of·area sel!rr n1u.-;1 sell :.I Bdrm homr loeated in quil"t nr1.>e. Corner lor. Lge <.-ountry ki!chen. Total prk~ $26.900. Ph 837-9400. KATELLA REAL TY I ,;;";;c;;o;;m;;•;;;;;;';;o-;;pe;;rty;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I Hou••• Unlu•n. 305 1 --1· 1716 Orange, C.A1. 645-4l70 General gar. Good locallon. Gr:i--1849. HOLLAND Bus. Sales 1----------·1 trip ex. pr1v )·aru, pa JO, 8 Deluxe Units I;;;;=='"-=====,,,,,, _________ 3 BR condo, Bradford Place. !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~J i rvine ELEGANT !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 12 Bdrms each. All on ground SE.EKIN<? pe"!1anent assoc. !)bl gar, !)()()\/playground. MANSION UNIVERSITY PARK Be a u ti f u I Ml'dllerranean styled 4 BR.. fomily rm. OF' GLASS. }ocated in the Newport Beach ru.o:J!:ed hills of Lab'\lna·s I floor w/pvt yards & gar-with bus1nes.s ~rm ?r family. 5-14-8116 af1 G. ages. Choi c e location. Need new dlrecllon (rom Sl.32,IXXI. $32,000 down, fi -Aerospace. Educated, ex-2 AR. unfurn house. Matun! Newport Heights ·l BR :i BA , :l car gar. lrg lo!, V1\ appraisal $47.500 F-:v<'l'Y· tJ11n.i:: up.i;:radl'd, 1111 hltin cll"C appl"s. sf'p rtC'n , f1nl din rn1. llll\l'.<' firr pl. ('Xt'i'U!ive prl'S- fl~l' nbrhocxl -11· !a1'gl' dm\.·n, nssun1e 61S': F,.IA loan pay· uhle ni S'2-4·\. p1 n10. FEEDING A LANDLORD ~1l'ti8 Del ~1ar 4-plex. Room for a pool , Great financing - IO'i Dov.'n. 2 bA:lrooms, 2 bath each. Full pr \ c e S62.500. Owlll'r 1\o\ll carry 2nd T.D. Thli; won't lul. call us today! C::WALKlR & Uf home, under red rile roof. Ideal sep ar11t io n of adult-child areas. \\'alking distance lo park", pools, schn o l i;. Exlr t1 lge. wallC'd--in rorrwr lot which r-11 I -, I 1111 l'ilil. ----·1 111·1illur ''SlNCE 1946" fst \Vestern ):Jank Bldg. University Parle. Irvine Days 552-7000 Nights WOULDN'T THIS BE LOVELY? Riviera coastline. Sprawling :i BDRM. floor plan, bl.till on 2 levels. Spacious !iv. rm. has ccil- ingN of a<'OUstical. \\llTH F,XPOSf.D CROSS TIMBER S. CORNER F IREPLACE & \VALLS or GLASS \V I TH A N OUTSTANDI NG VIEW Of THE SEA. ELEVATED DINING AREA. opens Lo stepsaver k~tchen iv/all BUILT-IN RANGE & OVEN , DISHWAS11ER. GA R B . DISP., ETC. ALSO W/0- C.:E.AN VIE\V. Large ms!.r. bdrm. suit<' with attached bath. Owlll'r will install wfw carpeting thruout. in your choice of <.'Olors. This unique, cu11lom built hnn11?, i.... a "BURNlNC:. 00\VN BARGAIN" !or only $39,950 FULL PRICE MACNAB IRVINE Harbor View Hills MUST SELL NEAR NEW -IN C.M. 3 BR, 2 ba., 2 frplc. + forn1al din. nn. + + 20x20 lam. rm. $41,900. Call !or App't. LIDO REALTY 3:~77 Vla Lido, N.B. 673-7300 nancing by owner. per., adaptable, aome in-adul1s. No pets. $160/mo. Roy Mccardle Realtor vest. later. Consider all . Call 642--05..TI. 1810 Newport Blvd .• C.i\t. Box 595. Manhattan Beach. J hr + den. :.I b;1. bltins. cpl, 548-7n9 1'"'0R Sale By Owner: Mex-drps, nice yd. North C.i\1. I;!:;!:;:!:;!:;!:;!:;!:;:!:;:!:;=[ area. S265. M!>-2M6. I ican Food to go, ruJly equip- ped, in sfnall sbopping The~· AN" JWit A Ft'\\' or H1.1ntinqton Beach center. Priced at $5,000. For Our MANY RENTALS ... NEW DUPLEXES quick sale. Call 842--1311 * ALONE on lot. $135. Alc:o O"·rl('r has bougbt another & . Santa Ana SIOO STEPS 1 8 1 L walk to 11 tr. 2 s1y, 4 Br, must sell this handsomely ;-----------MonthrQSat.9;J0.-7:00pm. - . 0 ay_. rg snglsorfani. appointed 4 BR -2 ba!h • J 3 BR, 1!!.I. ba. encl. patio No BUILDER SELLING NO\V. LIQUOR LICENSE Baeh pad. U*hl pd. Child ok. Rent~A-House 979-8430 car garage home. VIE\V! do11·n $185 nio. SZ6.500 . 1234 $45,950 ORANGE COUNTY Sll" l"IUJET B.·r . r• 1 B· 10:xECU1IVE ·1BR. homo. Obse1-vation fleck! Se lf -~.Shaii·nee,997-1410. Corlluntini,>1:on/Adams.H.B.Qld style' with or without :l ->..: •• ~rc<-1 . I.~- ('leaning oven. Bar. FR. food. Courtesy lo brokers. Collage. ~asts1dc. Toi ok. Golden \\1est l'States, nr ruston1 car()l'ls & drapes. Westminster 536-8188 (213) 63'-1:Di. * Douglas. $385. 968-Sm. ~1ak l' offrr! Dona l -----------1 ..,...,...,,;;;;.;;;,;;....,,..,..,1 iO:R.~-:-C~I:E~~· .. ;IN~~·0LA~iN-S150 -YEARLY _at beach! 2 '' ~0 4 Bed & 2 ba \V 11 ~, 3 BDR!\.1S 2 baths. bl!ins. Chichest<'r, fi.1 .-.,.,....::,. Opl'n room . e ~ . -; Br Stov~ retrig gar. Va-Sun. 12·5 PM. mi. Keel Dr. cared for, paneled garugt>. VERY 1uce older 3 Br. hon1e DRY AGENCY. f UL L ca;ir ' ' Children & pet OK. $2'25. pt'r IH14l. Large patio. E--Z cure + 4 good newer rental PRICE $500. · * mo. Agent 962--4471. yards. Painted !as! yr. unils. Hntg. Beach nrOCE'an. * 646-5912 * 2 Br, 2 ba. frnlc. rondo. 19742 Close to l'.rv.:ys, !!Chis. sho11s. $63.000. Xlnt terms. Bkr. Money to Loan 240 $175. BRING your JX't ' 3 Br. ,. llrvlne J =tee:::.. ·] s,11-6412. 254~7~-"79~~!·:__~~~-~-l::'-::---:-;;---:--:~l encl gar. Kids ok. ~~;=~~~~e:~. 8.l.1-1103 ~~ :::::: * 4--pltiX nr. So. c.oa.st Plaza. s Fast Cash s $190 -SPA~IOUS 3 Br! I - * PIE -R &"""'*SLIP...,* [_, ,:;;;------~l~[·;·~-l l-'-~-"'-'.-'x~-'5--32321-'B-'_. _•w_ne_"'_"_nit. ~~.L::~~O:~;~d [or I •Ym,Eiivs;;'";;;:;;;.,;;;h;;;av;;;o;;;•"~;;;t;;;ai.;;;;;;.;;;';;;ta;;.yl I d I · I p t1 168 ""e lk> or scrvi{'C to \·ou in " us r1• rope y BORROW ON YOUR f'Rt:E RENl'AL SERVICE ProrC'llSi<anally rt("C(lrat~I ~ ~E~~ T()OA y ! G O N r, Hcaltors 5'fr949l lxlnn., farnlly roorn hon1<' · TOi\10RRO\V! Opo'n Ev('i;. \1·11h 11triu1n, 1nirrored n1as-, MISSION REAL TV Top Quality Buy ApPraisal is in at $28,500, llJ'ld 1vhal a Ony~ Sharp I large bdrm., 2 bath an<I l)flrk-like .Val'l'l 2 block11 lo elementary, newly ligled Hurry! Ca.II 842--l4.U! tt"I' l_i;1th, 1n1t·rron1: b1.•11t!ll· 191() SO COAST H \Vy . lully lunil~·af)("fl yan! 11 Ith · LAGUNA :J PQltrtS & fu"t" Pll . I.Jon"! I Phone (714 ) 494-0731 11·x1I, II t".t!l llf' )!llll'S lf>l only S.J."1.000 I END Q red hill ! 1~'~;,;,~;:,~~~~R~~~",~ "l' \I l '\. 1·ondlt1on. \\ood paneling I I"\.~, • I ' ... ·' . . \lntv. Park CL•/lt£•1', lri•1 ni· !hnu1U1. LUl'a!t'u 1n quiet GO Ft., 3 Bchms., 3 b<!Ths Immaculate! S240.600 LIDO REALTY 3:177 Via Udo, Npt Beach * 673-7300 * GET IT ALLI ,l BR <.-01Kto. Entry, 2 Ba , pv.·dr. room. Dining room, frpk· .. hlt ·ins. Pool HURRY -$32,500 -GEmM--I ('ull Anytime, 833.ox:!Q \Voodl§ COVI' :111.'8. OU~rs O!lll't• llOUMI !I. Ai\1 to fl P"T gre11r l'Xpansion polrnhal. Iilil &-ach Blvd .. 11.R. Ju.~r 2 blk11. f1·un1 the t)(-1.u·h 1610 \V. Coas1 Hwy .. N.B I TURTLEROC"K Hills. 4 Br.. & shoppin~ arras. Sr>..· or RJ.:ALTORS 642·4623 DAZZLER i--n. exec. View. Belo~ c·111J .Ju(' Tornk1n~1n. $.)!l,:iOO. Walk to Beach Mobile Homes INDUSTRIAL corner 300. l10ME·s EQUITY FOR BEACON RENTALS For Sale 125 frontage. Fully Improved. w~ir ~~~~~NTs. * 645-0111 * ---'-'--"-----$33,950. Call 548-6640 or LANDLORDS' Contempo-L09una Hills 5.17-1346 124 "°""'>. • Only 8 spaces left! Adult Lots for Sale 170 LOCAL \Ve Spt!clallze in Newport park. adjacent to Leisure COMPANY 8cach •Corona de! A1ar • World, 23301 Ridge Roule I Start Your & Lagu,na. Our Rental Ser- Dr., <oU r.toulton Pkwy.), I Investment Program! vice ls FREE to You! Try Laguna Hills. TI4/830-3900. Attrac. ~ acre view lots ALL ARRANGEMENTS Nu-View! DBL wide Great Lakes 2 hr, w/city water. within I mile MAY BE ~1ADF. IN THE NU-VIEW RENTALS 2 ba, set up Dana Pt 'Park. of multi-million 11hopp'g PlllVACY OF YOUR l·IOME. 673-4030 or 494-3248 $8950 or will trade as partial center, l,'Olf <.-ourse & dwn "°""'.,unit. ,.,..,,.,, ""'"•Y. $500 Down, $50""'1 CHAR·TER TIME FOR mo. Full price $4995. Sellers st 24x60 Wes!erner, like new. 2 need tax break, will trade Br .. den. wet ba.r. air cond. for local income property. QUICK CASH ~~ ::·642~~~. b c h . McNASH REALT Y 496-0751 l 'hJ!! b€-aut~ 11iH retk-:' )'our ;:,:r~-l~~~ ll"a!IC 81 i.17J ~ 11.s ry. A·fo'ramr. J BR., J l~ zest for hv1ng. 4 Big bed· · · I 0 I,,_,*" I Iott. Bl'an1s. bllns. TC'nn1s, L 8 e,u,, ~ TRAILER home Ir: c11bana. rms, 21: hlllh11 . fonnnl rt1n -aguna e1ch JE I pnnli; ncnrhy. S.12.900 Finn. Ing, living rn1 & St•puratr REAL ESTA CAYWOOD REALTY ~~d~~~~t.iJ.1 ~n~:i l~~'. R-1 ""-' 642 1:.°°,.,-0 .... ,. lst TD Loans THROUGH A :.~?;· 1~:r1a:1em:C1~::. 6~% INTEREST DAILY PILOT B~·u~:.u~':~~.;., 2nd TD Loans WANT AD ald Bay. s~.000. n....nn Co Call 675-2030 L.ciw~st ratet1 ""' .... 06e . "WE BUY TD'S" 642-5678 Mountain, DeMrt, Resort 174 S•ttler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 545-0611 LDT In famous Lake Havasu, Scrvtng Harbor an!. family rrn, :~ c·ar gnr. Pool Top of the World llflO Gh·nr11')'N' ~t I * 548-1290 * Sp. ri, 642--0234. I 2700 f f 1 Occan vi 1• w . Bcautlfully ,,. " 1 ,, /-co'="==~~~---lltZe OI, ' .>;lj I 0 an· n.I ..... 3 BR 2 Ba I ...... 4,,,_,,.1n 5-t!l·0 .. 1., I SACRif"TCE Llclo Bay view I I II Jt st i •• ,sc,,,_.. · · ~.... B' C · ui; II" v1n.1:: nrra. i. IJvlng rm. w/mlllllivc !!lone Laguna Niguel I Th" 19 enyon Dbl. wirte $7.995. Also 2 Br., llst<'d, only $•1!1.90U, llU1Ty · lrplc. !luge ramlly mi. ·--· ii; bt.1t1utiful 4 bedroom $2,995. Sml dn. 673-3817. CALL jj.\2· 141)( "'/slldlni.t glaM wall to NEW CONDO on E11,sl 9. home should sell! Lovcly pr1v. palio. Cheery kileht"n , \•le~· golf course, 3 Br. 2 Ba, loca1ion. Priced right at w/1':r. dining areu. Over 0.,.,,1K!r ttta-5033. $127,660 Open clai!y 1-5. 20 2.000 li'I· It. of lamily hving ' Royal St. Grorii:l'. . Bkr. Gonrl ~ii.:hborhOOd, clO"'I• lo lido ltl• .o'~75-c--m=a.-o""'-~,----i;cllonl"'. Arudou" owner Ulik· Jlarbor Vlev.• Ho 1n es L._ __ ·:.._·_1 __ .. _:"_1 _' _ _,] ~ 17171 Beach Ulvd .. 11.U your housing n<.'Cds? 'lloh"I \·!Id. ---1 ll'ultnr "SINCE 1946" lsr \Vestern Bank Bldg. University Park, Jrvinr Days 552-7000 Nights J BR. 2 baths '..! BR. 2 baths 4 BR. 2 baths ......... 1:12; ····-···-S300 ···-·-··· s:t.;o (i red hill REALTY Univ. Park Ccn!o?r, Irvine Call A11ytilnc, 833·0820 Oflice hours I\ AM to 6 Pl-I Have somelhirig )'()U want to sell? Classified ads do it well -call NOW 64Z-5678. borne of the world Wnow11,-iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil London Bridge. Locatedl1 lnl( S49.500. * REDUCED * MONACO_ 2 br & d<!n. Im-Apartment> • -t.~Z*n • ,.,,.....,.."" ~ ....... ~ Sµaciou8 4 BR. 4 baths; litm· med. Occup. By Chvncr. for S•le LL'l;l ~ 11y nn. wllh v.·~t bar. F'rplc. 644-Q49 Oally 1-5. ---------- SEABURY 3 BR-DAILY PILOT 152 Nv dl1v.n p;1yn11•nt 10 Vr1 ~ $3J.51XJ 11 l!ll \\'ilh1n Ol'W pluil, 01.·c-an & J.:<il-..ln lh1."h Sti1J. ~·rp1c, hun rm. PAYMENT STARTS ~ 1n nu1~t1·r ~ultt. BLUFFS __ View 4 Br. 21), NEW 5 U AT BEACH :,,f"u.Jf:;f::;, NO\V S~J.;!00 11:1, Twn hse. rani llrea. ~ Atlanlu, llH. &39-6T19 ..,..._..._.c:-._ ___ .. Poo l, Cust. By O"·ner Commercial dose to R1l 5Chools .I: cit)'. NEED CASH? Sl.000. Or up $9000 or will trade for Costa to SJ.000. Slo,cm and n10l'l!. Mesa or Newport Beach br See Avro Thrift for a Real come prop. 644-4687. Estale Loan. Upon approval, PALM Springs. Fairway 9. use the money however you Thunderbird Country Club. lik e. AIM ask about our Custom 2 Br. PIWI Makl's unsecured pcf80nal loans. quarteni. Choice Joi. Guegt AVCO THRll·'T. 620 Newport house. S225,000. llallmark Ctr. Dr., Suitr )01, Newpo11 INVITES YOU $125 Z.J.4 Hr Jlon1r, No down JlllYllll't\I (fov't :oi.11hsull11•11 25'k of ~11te111. Call to "''t' If yoo qualify. J im JIOIWll)', 61'5-008:! f'Altt:I. W,\l.K:t.:n. Rt•allon 646-7414 PACIFIC SA-~N~D~S­ ~&rJI 3 Br. 2 Ba Bltn RIO. S"'(, dn 11)(.111. !M"<lll'r wlll JMIY au buyers rlOllrta eo.1._ ONLY $24,SOO. Jturry on thl1 6nfJf St•ndard Real Est•t• 9U-SS31 °' 133-2639 13U'/OO OWNER lnruifl'tTf!d. l 11tparale bath., 3 ovcnt«.~t bedroom.•. r.leaa1t! fittpltu,. tn boot¥ room , .iwtlpt:lMr fireplace and mlrrorl'rl walls.. Deluxe bulltin klt- che'n, diahwa~. Lovtl)' Pf!I'<> owrlook• beaullfUI ut- rd br1ck planlt'n, ~>Cqulsilt> landtcapi,., Prtmt> Juc:.i;i. tlon, Bkr. S34,900. ~. 5 BDRM .. 3 BATH Meredllh Gardena, &!pn--Suptt Shlrp! S.a.ut. decanted. WIII aell VA or cMh ., lht to.n. !M,9!!L Stanclord Rul Etlote '"3-S5a o< IJS.2639 IJU700 PR13TJGE Homll. Prime loc. BBQ ln kltch model. l br, 2 ba. X-'t• Uv rm. frplc:. ~ -· Sj>rlnkle .... 2 .... pr. " ml ltvm belt. can AllJl.lme to..n, at 54' ~­By ,,,,,...,._ 846 ll'l22 I EMERALD BAY FINEST LOT VIEW . S55,000 TED HUBERT and Associates :M71 V1:t< l.u ..... NB 675-1500 ............. ~, ... -.alCOA S«.950. &W-0275.. Property ISi 'M\6 V\11 Lido 6n>-ot.ii62 HARBOR Vll:.\V 110~1E. Ynu don"! rll"f'fl " gun to Palermo, 4 llR, funill:t rn1 , ·--"Dr1tw f'1t.BI" w~n you ph ce Fr1t l>rollt IS Dlt[Uflttl \Vhen 'an ad HI lhe DAILY PILOT you ~·II lhrotlJ.:h n·111ull•gl'l- I Wnnt Ada! Call now • • 1 hn11; Dally Pilot C1As'!!Uil'C'I &42-5671t Art~. ~:?--!i618 I DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA Approximalel,y 6.500 aq. ft. on ont' o( Co1:1a l\.tesa'1 111aln ll"llffje ar1ttit-,. Rnd ll ft'W y11rd11 from Oranstl' Cot1nty'1 busll•ll lnttr!l~~·tkln". ltee- tnn5n1lar lot runs sirttt to ,,1rett. Crt"t1t potential In thill property. f'or morr In. fortnaUon rail !.46-1600, IN· VESTMENT DIVISION. r•m~,ea' c QP{N T\ !PM , NEWPORT BEACH 4 Unit Co1nn1t>rci.IJ Bhht f\!llY f't'nlrd Owner "111 ti- n&flCC!. Minlmu111 down. On- ttlle parking. S75.000. Rrii lonotniCll. Bkrs 675--0000 Condominiums for Nie 110 Rt".illoni. "-&eh Ph 8" "~ • 114-544-5656 • U<'." • • ................. Golfer1/ Skier1 Dream New home in C.~n Lake. • ~IONEY to loan on real 45 min. to SA. Air cond .• estate. ReMOnable ratc11, or landscaped, Sll.000 or lrade will bUy your T.D. t or Oran~e Co.* BROKER 642-7491 * 714/494-4695. BEAUTIF'UL cx<>ean view WE l.l'f'M&~ 1st I: 2:nd R lot11, S18.7:x> &: up. Terms. loans. Alto purchue TDs. Underground utllltle!J. Bkr. 492·8332, 492-0U4. • BRIA.N lll'ad Ski RC!!Ort * HolwfWRrlnl: 4g.l--9388 PORTAFINA LAGUNA I Mountain lot In Ulah. Closer·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;:;; to chair llfl. Musi 111'11, mov-11 Ing. fi4&-m a.n 5 pm, Houset Furnished RNI E>lote Wonted 114 1---'--.;.....;=;.._~ TRANSFERRED • • • • • P•t Roberti 2909 Che1tnut Av•. '':froo LA ~tt'tl ~ : cx:i Cotta Mt1e, Celif. c:&8h _ mTa.ke °'~ loan i.J1d You art tM wtnnft' 0( BV Ownel' • Bt'autlful 2 BR. pyml.t. Not nllt'r s:m. ~r 2 tickets to the I'.\ BA. Loen.tC!d In quit! t-mo. Contact A_f:.e n t, 9th Annuel Orenge Co. side 1dultt only rommunlt,v VILLAGE REAL ESI'A'l'E, International s:ll .900. ConvtnOonal financ-lil62--44n. Auto Show lnR 11.vallable, 96.,.2187 11 the Ouplexea/\Jnftt DUPLEX or ial~ltr d'4"11lllng, ANAHEIM tehi 162 cac-. to aeuhore In Wt"llt Newport. Pline only. P11v CONVENTION Es .,.,..,. Call 714 , "'"lA.18 .,. CENTER NEW DUPLEX ·. fl5.0S.TI or v.Titl' 776 s. October 111h thnl oo UUll.D~ u~,fSONC NOW. Lugo St., Sin Bt:mArrtlno. P1l'ftll: call 00-5678, t'XI , 31C or Ulte to rrndC!'f Our Trodti:r'a bf'IWtf>n 9 and 5 pm 10 claim CM llunU11Kton/Adams. IJ.B. Paradi.MI column It tor )'OUf )'OW' 1lckm1. JNorth C11unty cc-~,,-,S-3',_l,..1..,11=--=...,..-I ' 1-S -!or ~ Coll k> IOIH,.. llUl1lbt'r ~ Mll·mill. \'ou'U find II In Cla.u:lfitd day ..• IW~ • * * '*' * ) ' ' - . t;·· -....... 19 HOUHI L19un1 $225 • New beach. 123> • u !rplc, b S325 -3 ir_oce NU-V ll73-<D30 2 BR, °"'"' mo. !MMAC. pat IOI. town. aft 5. La gun SPAC. Nr. be June ls Newpo T 4 BR 2200 Sq Early kitch. thruout ~50 M 241 SHARP BR. avail. s ·1 0 0 BLUFF Ba, Pool. 3 BR, Yearly 644-72'1 Fenced, Redec. Rent· NEW patio, •"'" NE\V L i-rr. ft . 675-1 West Condo Uni Hunt I -CRPrS La gun 3 BR. 2 ocean Lea" dues. Z13: Town gar. Rltr. l\ets. Ba Ibo NEAR com pl [rplc. Sepl. ,., PMv incldg •125 Love MaXI • 2 ""' ""' cnll 9 PILOT·AllVEITISER Wtdflnda1, October 11, 1'972 Wtdnnd1y, tktoOfor 11, 1'972 ---~I Aoar-•-1~ 1 ...... ·1·-l~l -.,.,-1~ I "21 ··-·I• ,., , ...... ttl .1 ----~1 ..-.;1;1._ .... ._~l~m; I --- ·-. Untvm. :MSApt. Unfllm. :MS Apt. UnfVm. :MS Alp!. Uft1um. J6S R""'t • 400 lndustrl•I Renl•I 450 Found (fr .. odl) i:.:;:°".;M:.:;;•..;U;;n;;:fu;::.;.m.;;.._.;:305;:;: Apts. I' um. -;;..,.:;;,;'_;;;;;,;;....;.... ___ ......; _____ ~---* * * ir NEW ---·~-1~ "!.:' c Me N rt &..ch ...... ,................. ,.,..., FND .. Pank•t lbn• IP'ftD General 0Mera1 otta iiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ;.;.•;;.•,.'P"'°;rHiiiBW--Wm. N. Johnson . 121'8 1q tt, Ideal CM , bod)', aqua blue wi, ytUaw agun1 Beach 225 • Lge l Br, norlh end. New (.Tl.Ill, Redec. l blkt bl.'llCh. 235 -UW pd. I + den w/ frplc, bl~. S. Laiunit.. • 3 BR, 2 ba, ll'plc. Lovl?· I)'. ocean view! . NU-VIEW RENTALS '13-4030 OT Ofi·3248 BR, 1!( ba., q, deck, ocean w, refrif:. $250 per mo. LeMe 1089 Oro St. 96.H821. IMMAC. 3 Bdrm. l bath, patiol. G~at v1ew! Nr. town. 6'i:;r4367 or ~-~ aft 5. La guna Nlguel SPAC. 4 BR, $70,000 home, Nr. beach. &nt $45Cl mo. Resp. • 831-(l588, YRLY leaae. New 2 hr., 2 ba. On goU coune. $285 mo. Call 6T::r-2030. lido Isle 4 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, crpts, drps, Furn. available. Avail to June llrt. 673-9159. Newport Beach 2414 Vista del Oro Newport Beach 644-lll.1 ANYTIJ>.-fE SHARP Waterfront Home. 4 BR, lrg patio, gar. Dock avail. Winter or yearly. $400/$4 50. 673--0792, 613--0698. BL\JFFS -View 4 BR, 2'-A Ba. Twnhae, !am area. Pool. CUstom. $ 3 9 5 . ~. OCEAN VIEW 3 BR, 2 ba. Cll!!hnven. Yearly $375/mo. Roollor. 644-TnO. Fenced, Vacant 2 Br. $175 Redec. Ct'pl~. Drp11. Gar. Rent-A-House 9~ NEW Channel 3 Br, lge patio, dock nvafl. aun deck. gar. $300. 67°":>-2124. NE\\' Luxury Oceanfront 1700 sq. rt . $550 mo. Yrly. Dave 675-l!m . 494--0615. Westminster 3 BR. Home $195. 117""1 Costa Mesa Casa del Oro ALL tml.ITIES PAID Comp&re before )'OU rent Cu1tom dt!1lgned, featuring: • Spacious kitchen with ifl. direct lightinr • Sc>parate dln'g area • Hom~like atoraae • Private patios • Cloeed llrage w/atoraie • Marble pullma.n • Kina:·sz Bd.rnul • Pool .. Barbeques • sur- rounded with plush land· sea ping. Adult llvina: at its best Large 1 BR S1*1. No Pets 36& W, Wllaon 642-197l WEEKLY-MONTHLY Executlva Suites 2080 Newport Blvd. Coste Mes• 642-2611 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S e FREE Llnens e FREE Utilities • Fu11 Kitchen e Heated Pool e Laundry Facilities • TV &: maJd serv avail • Phone Service i iiilltiiiiiiiiiiii liiiii THI NIW 1tm Bethany 0.-lve officfl w/~al, hot wa!t>r forthead. no band on foot. I I C _,,. hll', 22l ! ..... owr, 0 h VI<: COO. M,.. (Harbor A VDSAlll E$ y!: !:' U:":.= Dl dr, AJC Thomas Ent. Adams a.ml, M)...3211. HACllNDA HARBOR From $150 pELl!JXE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS l'urnlthod & Unfurnl1Md Hea!A!d Pool ~ Garages -Shag Carpeting Dishwasher -All Utilities Paid. .Adults Only • No Po?a 241 Avocodo St,. Costo Mo.. 646-1204 VILLA MARSllLLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Fumlshotl & Unfurnlshod .Adult Llvlnt Dillhwasher color coordinated appllances • Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardri>be doors- ind!rect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio • plush landscap- ing • brick Bar-be-Que• -, largo heated pools & lanai. Air condltlontne. 3101 So. Brlatol St., Soni• An• 5574200 COLDWELL. BANKER & CO. MANAOINO AOENT ~----~-----·~ Apt1. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. -'--------Newport S.ech Coron• del Mar HA.RBOR GREEllS furnl1t*I A Unfumllhod l'rom $130 to $215 mo Bocholort • t lldrms 2 Bdrm• • J Bclrm1 II> or 2 Full loths on the ILUFJIS 2 tkbtl lo the I c-11'73"~1~11o,.1""',-.,..-,--= MALE Per• I l n : at at NIWPORT 9th Annual Or•::1" Ca. Rentals Want.di 460 w/SiamHe cotortna: A blue ~ •-.. -I Ion ey~. Otta collar, v I c • OcMn Yln, '4 , ... ID' ........., ntem.t • BUSINESS woman dellro1 Thalia • Catalina, Lq;una. eecurlty, a~tl de-Auto Show lovely rum or unturn 3 or 4 494-2541. signed with a .Muttr'a at the Br Eutblufl home, colder ..:L"'os"t="------~s"'Sl touch, exctUIJve cluli with ANAHEIM section), Leue or buy. unlquo Aquabar, -!Aini CONVl!NTION Prindpa~ only. 97HOOI: 2 0og., o..,., blk a "ht and lmnal fl&l'lem. AU CINTliR 979-9090. Cu<:kapoo, s.n DMao I"' part o( the South Cout'1 Octobn' 11th thnl. 15ch WANTED: L0C FOR LJ. Od!D., 7 mo. Ctnri&n hp., flnett ~ commlm-Please call 60-567¥, ext, 314 QUOR STORE, NEW UC. no collar. Both makl. Muter ala bedrooms WI lty, betweeniand5pmlo cl&lm ORG Clli'TY. &Tl--3372 ..:-~~18;:,·=,.,,...,--::=-:: blah beam oelllnaa. lar1te 1 bedl'aom/r.udtol trcm $195. }'OUt tickets, CNorth Counl)' 4 BR, 1 .tu h&e. nr Ada.nu $3Xl REWARD for ftturn or Uv1n1 room w/P. or l Bedroom from PY.i. •v helP In Undlne ltal.Nr wood buminl fireplaoe, Del•ov• 3 bedroom toll-tree number ii; Hl-1220). Sehl., C.M. 1 chlld. Exce.I ro;r jock.et II wa11et lost ~ ·-• I la"-•--* * * * * care. Call 213: 633-1850. 0· 1 laa~ p 0 n-....,nvnuen ....... ,.. Alft Medell open 9 A.Al. to 6 P,M. ....,..,,., ' · ~ '?fl ... kl!~_ Enclmi--... VERSAIWS UlG. Dach. 2 b1ks trom 11B. 342 Balboa 1.ian<1. ,.,...,..,_ ~· • •wu11 .... = plu. Sludent prerd, no pe11. , JI•} BURJ.IESE cat. brm.'n COil!. ~una, rfCl'ftt1on • on the ILUFFS h t A J.ut mo' a rrnt ~·d. Pw•i* declawN, lost vie o 1 ties, Securl1¥ iuard. No at NEWPORT $$6 I: $'15. (utll pd.) 5J6.-0366. ~tacArthu.r J\lvit. & Sa.11 pm. Bl d. Joaquin Rd., ~l. ~ From Ney..port v , tum at ROOMS $11 wk. up w/k.lt. eve. Models Open 'tll I pm. Hospital Road ~1 block S30, "''k up Aplt. Low PertONll 5Xl LO,:;;ST;;,..., ....,.,,1ny--;1-:,ro:::•:::~:--:pood=::;;:1e:I above Pacllic c.out Hwy, at th1 tes 2J1S Ne rt 2 ild. nr 2700 Pehrson Way, CM Lido tile) to entrance. = .. ~ 54&-f755. wpo • HINDU SPdl~~ * ~b~:n 0~· 1~~ Ir nr Harbor llvd & 900 Capey ·.ane. Newpll't Let Ulit • c._., your wish to kecf. just Wt 1.11 Adame Beach, Ca. 92660. Telephone: ~'ire %th tltforprlv ln whole outlook on We for~ kMW he'• u ;_ 497-2'281. (TI4J 660060, lady. Oote"1:; beach,~"r. betttt Protealonal advice LOST : Reading a lasses c1e n379 PARK NEWPORT 96M752. on "''· uc. Road"""' dally. "''"'"' '"'""' nr Pol-· il'IV'U OOM I k It h 10 AM·IO PM. '92·9136. tla & Poppy ,.,.., CdM. We have Wlnte?" Rentals 2 bedrooou each. Bltl.na, APARTMENTS B~,. lt de.ired,c pri~ 492-9034, 312 No El Camino Reward. &M-1851 aftft' 4 Will Take Shtdenta Fireplace, car Pet I &: , lovely arN. Ptt(. Real, SM Oemente. ~p~,m~·=-=_,,,,-,.,,-,.,,=:;:;·I Also oceantronta avail. drapes, choice l o c at Ion. DELUXI On the bay over 35. ~ PALM A CARD READINGS LO ST : Co 111 e lSPMlel. 4 BR. 2 BA ............ $350 Lease S3X> pr month. Call APARTMENTS Luxury ape.rtmmt Uvi.Da <1V" RM • pvt bOme, La.&una Put, pretent A tuture. blonde "Rocky." V1~s· * $30 WEEK & UP * 3 BR. 2 BA ............ $285 673-8550 RLTR. Air Cond. Frplc'•. 3 Swim· •looldna: the water • .Enjoy Hllh. w/pvt ba. Kitch priv. Ad\•lce 4 help 1n many mat· ~iIT~~ ~~aw~~ e StucUo &: 1 BR Apt.a 1 BR., 1 BA ............ $175 DELUXE Townhouae 3 BR, mini Poolll • Health BPI • $150,000 bu.1th spa. '1 IW1fD. Collep or wrka 6 ; atrl 1 pre(. ten. 213: SS.-1350. Fully Uc. or n"h.lm. {T14) !71.-7578. e TV & MaJd Service AvafJ 3 BR. home • , ..•...•••• $275 2i,fi BA, trpl., dswshr, w/w Tennil; Courts • Game and mini pooJa. 7 lJ.&bted ~ $95 mo. Aft 6, 830-384 · La Habra. Call lar appt. .:!!...!'.C='-""-. ~::;..=°'='I • Phone Servl.ce-Htd Pool CALL: 6'13-3663 cpts, l'iW bUu to beach. Billiard Room -•-----plus miles of a--N-Bea.ch LOST fem, lrilh aetter, 9/'rr. • Children & Pet leetion Year i.e. 67S-8369 eves A: 1 BR. ~ S1S> ~7trdi. putttna:, lhuf· ............. '3?~* ~~~I~ ~·e ~ :.: ~~ .~~·~"·~ 2376 Newport Blvd, CM wknds. 1 BR. A Den From $1a'.I Deboard. croquet. Junior l's * ~ preanancy couneelin&· AJ>or.. R ard' !157-'?0!M .....,.,,. "' 64>-3967 Coste Mos• MEDITERRANEAN !rom l1TUO moathlr, alao I PRIVATE bath. entrance. tloo a _.... rf!f. AP-ew . . Thl1 Ad Worth $5 on Rent and 2-bedroom planl and Phone. $35 wt. N , B , CARE. 642-44.16. IRISH Sette?", fem, 5 m<>1 El Puerto Mesa * * '$1IO * * VILLAGE 2-atory .... -El..,. 64;.-3143. • EUROPEAN PSYCHIC • old. \'k H•U' Bead>. H.B. B , $l30 UP 3 Br, l1h Ba, newly painted. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. trtc ldtchelUI, prtvat,; palkll Guett Home 415 . $2:1. 897...guj OT 842-9715 1 R I -SEACLIFF Manor Apt 1 Blbll, crpt/drpa, encl patio. fTI4) 557-8020 Oil b&lcoNes, carpedn&. dra· Appt1. avaU. thru Oct. I: Nov. Reward. Furnished Apts. Bachelor apt. utll pd. Nr &ehls & shop'&:. Chlldttn RE:NTAI~ omCE pertes. subterranean part.. PRIV. Room. men Io r 1n41 5l3-4156 GO~LD=c:,:..,,.,.,,,--1r~ ... -..,.i.""1.--=-~:02 .. I All Utllltles Paid U4S.50. Pool. 1525 P1acentla okCM. NCallo pets1• 81113 ~l~ St, OPEN 10 AK to I PM bl& with elevators, OptlouJ women. LovlnC ctltt. CloM FEP.tAl..E com~n tor 1 round chrntl. Bch 1 3a~3 . Pool & Recreation A k bout dacowrt · at pm wiw•Y•· maid tn'Vlce, Just DOrtb ol lo park. llbr A abopa. "'"ffk of earn , You need Mn. Crail, 5 5 '1-., , 1%9 Maple Ave., C.M. # ~a:; a our All day Wknda. 642-8340. P•rk .. Llke Surroundlnt Fuhkm Island at Jamboree 540--2562. warm clothlna: • love: of 2Reward~~!:.· -~_,-...,.--;.,,, AJ&0 p.rag~ for rent. IR. K New dup .. u1 l,QUIEr2 •~ 3 BOREL~ and San Jo.qutn HW. Road. ntE Guest How;e • tor naturoe. Leavlnc: Oct. U. LOST )'OUna: black I: t.A'hite SHARE an apt. $17.50 to US 1~~\~=i ~~I~ he d: e 2 BR • adults • $195. ALSO .::~ .. BACllELO~ •~ R Telephone (TI4) 6"-1900 etepnt llvtnc. Ambulatory, 542-170'1. mt.le cat. Very trlendly. wk. UW, phone, pool incl. Avail Oct. 16. for 2 mos. e 3 BR • 1 child • $295. Pvt. PaH:s ... Htd. Pool.a tor rental lnlorm&tk>a elderl)' Prl., It~. Now AI.L'OHOUCS Aoon)lmou.a. =! C.ft1 . are a , Men or women. 2 3 7 6 $250/mo. + de po 1 it. Beaut., new, spacious apts N Sho TRY PARK NEWPORT fore open! 54+-0158 area. Phone M2-1'217 or wrtte ~~~· ---..,.--;:;:;! Newport Blvd., C. M. &15-4242. w/fncd yards, patios A quiet r p'g * Adult• Only monthl. You wW Uke it at Rent•ls to s:t..re 00 P .O. Box "23. O>lta Mna.. L.Osr trom my homl'" 262 645-3967. .,oi:, lBR, Waterrront, Yrly prtvacy. No pets. 151 E, Bay Martinique Apts. $245. 1 BR. wondertul loca· IF p•·--tnr ci>Chlldblrth \rlctoriab SC. h!_a.!e, ~Pen/ Ian "&'am ceiling, crpta, drpll, St. (at Fullerton St.l.J C.M. l7T7 Santa Ana A C. Uon. See model 1-E. Call FM.L roommate wanted. ..,A\ Jlomt kitten, v mo, wu w Lrg 1 BR Apt. Olmpletely Sml dock, pri aunclck Incl. 2 PHONE: 642-48J·t ve., M. Jlm 213/549-4920 d a Y • ; Spaclo1.1.1 caanfront Apt. Call 548-4058 for Into. ahadin&•· Rt'W&l'd. 78. ~~l~~Ove ~h~~g. Wt~ blks to bch, 3409 Findley NEWLY DECORATED Mgr. Apt. ll3 6f6...6M2 714/83S--76'13 eves. ~ Crpt. only $12.50. Social Ctubt 525 LADIES d\ltmond Bulavll crpt•. Sl.50. Aft 6 pm wkdya, 67~ 2 Br w I gar fncd yrd w/ Dau P9lnt SEACLIJT Manor Apta. :i ,vn.1 w•tch. Sentimental 642-7973 3 BR, 2 Ba. newly decor., pe.tXJ. Wtr pd. Call btwn 1 & Br. $16(, Pool, Crptl, drpa. Roommate Referral Sel'Vice F1ND YOURSELF v&l.U". Reward! ~BD &fl $125 Mo. Dix mob hm. 2 br, w I w, d T p s, b It n II. 5. 636-41XI. TWO 1p 2 Br., nr new bltns, p.Tb, dltpl. 1525 F1nd 1be Jdeal Roommate JN SOMmNE ELSE. _:5C!p1!Cm~--.,--.,-__,.-= compl furn. Ht'd pool . w/w, drps, bltns. Chldrn I 2175-B Placentia Ave, •• n4D harbor entrance A: Dohl!n.y Placentia Ave. Aak a.bout Screened Clnts Ctt4J 533-0302 * Gn.y striped ca~ Adlts, no pets. 4 Sl'asons sm1 pet ok. 642·8520. :lmD Placentia Ave .•• Sl.35 Pk. Bch. $llll A $210 our di.tcowlt. ~ ACTIVE 21 yr. Fml student DISCOVIR whltt'I lace, neute • no l\fob. Ell. 2l59 Nwpt BEACHFRONT, 2 BR, oolor Zl.H-APla.cenU&Ave ••• $140 ~~~-Hlnquin! 10ll !oN THE BAY w/ior'l«>UI ndtl&MetoabanlBRBcb DISCOVlllV--tall. ~m~' Odd 548-63.12. 548-C Bemard •••••••••• $135 .......... ~ wy.. Laauna view twru 2 BR's. Year-duplex S'7tl. 215~ 29th N.B. n4/a,u..am 2Wll7...339J meow. · * $25 PER WEEK * TV, stere:i, d 1 h I w 1 h' phone,~. • ?")' s. G fer Rent 4J5 YOUNG O.lmalkln pu P bltim, wah/dryer, patio. e TROPICAL POOL e NEW, luxury 1 BDRM. apt. ly leue. $4~, eral" ~ Hunt, Cotilla• n ta ( &: Up. Pool & maid service. $260. incl. utll. 64&-1234 Ron. 2 Br Studlo, l'ii Ba, frpl. sprl Gn!atest view of h&rbol" en-GT.H04. THE T. 1 CAR GARAGE J[SJ Town ho u.1 ea .• ramlly Kltch1?n1 ava'I. Mole) Tahiti &. strcue. $195/mo. Gu & tnmce A: coutllne. See to 8AYFRONT Walk to Beach. Stonae only. Reu>nabl.e Lall_,...._ hMrtbrokf'n. 91>\IM. comer Harbor I VlctOl'ia. Bi!"fu. w:-~hil~:.e~e~epe:ti. Wtr pd. 145 E. 18th 548-1168. appreciate. 33881 Ptquilo Lra: 3 BR. 2 BA, partly furn, 125 E. By, Apt A. 0.t MANS Kent aold wrtat •SHADY ELMS-POOL• 2-405% E. 16th St., NB. •SHADY ~POOL• Dana Point. o=r unfumdOc~~~ = Office Rent•I 440 ,,,.._lch. Fuhlon la 1 a n d · Garden A..t•. Chldrn. $140-646-4664. Garden Apu, Chldm. rie 2BR,. $150 mo. W/W crpt, /mo' y,-~ .. .;.._, I'-·-' (~--•-) .rur. lD/5. ReWfllnl. M .......... 73. 1110 •-OCEANFRONT 3 Br 2 Ba 1110 ... drapes, stove, retrig, av, . :uy· .,,~. DESK apac. aY&tlalMI ~ -,,_ --LO. ST· 1 -1-....,.. .. tt'f'd .... ., " • · ocean w. NEW channel.front • VS.W -11 ---.. _ ... _ l '.ht-•· -,• Cd•~M •· FREE tuRNrMJRE PLAN best Joe. Wlnter/yrly. Ph. FREE FURNITURE PLAN •~7830• L 4 BR., 3 Ba. or S Br. mo. ""' .,..,...._ 1111T1......... * • * * * v. 1 Cl . Aft"&. 177 E . 22nd St. 642-3645 Bing, da)'s ~1491, eves, 177 E. 2'lnd st. 642-3645 ;fua den. Side tie avail, $425 a t Ii mo. Anl .. "IC llt"t1c9 L•rry Marthbum Rr¥o•an:I . 844-eDI alt 6 pm. ACAPULCO 675-2949. Nt:: Wspac. 2 Bd ., ocean v1e"llt'. Poto Yearly Owntr a.nllab&e. 1Tm 8Mch Blvd. 25511 McKenzie t.OS'T cat male b 1 at k * Balboa Penln. 3 BR, 2 BA SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up. 34101 La Semw.. $1901mo. 67l\-im • ,61'5-40'!3 Hun~ Baacb. 16-4321 l .. una Hiiis, (e. '2653 v.·twhlle 119'"' ciu """1T• ~~~1.8;;,:1~. ~d~is~~ over gara~. On b a Y Pool, cpt/drp, bltnl, kids Coll. 5f.9.l04l or 496-2479. NEAR HOAG HOSPrrAL DESK apace avalllbkt $00 too arw the wlnntt at 'lte~•:;·•!;"'"'1~-=-.,..--::I Condominiums pets. 740 W. 181h St., 0.M. w/beach. DI.ii paid. $35<1/mo. ~College-No. 5 ••• 642-7035 East Bluff Deluxe 2 Br., 2 ba, bl.tr., mo. WW provide tutnltun 2 Udc•tt to the • * LOST fem blk cat w/8 Unfurn. 320 BACl·IELOR,t•~2Br.apts. 213:820--7233collect. '""'"'MIN 1 .. u......... dthwahr, crpta, -~-rP..~-· at $Smo.~~9thAnnu•IOr•nt•Co. tor• Dover Shores art•-_..;....,._ ___ _,,__ ... ......... ap e o. • • • . ....---.... 1 BDRM deluxe apt. Belt Mature adufta. &p-4381. all ble m Fontt A 646-3ll05. h Encl. carports, htd pool. e STUDENTS -NO FEE e 2 BDRM apt, bltnli, -ts A location. Po o 1 facllltlea. 67J.-'1513 or 64).lm.. av a • vt, lnhrMtlonal ~Ro:EW=A:::RO:;..-·. ~y...,,--,.•--w-..,hl""t•"'•,-~ I Huntington &eac Adlts/no pet1. f120 k up. Beach n!nta1s. 3 & 4 Br. $275 hall . -... 1 AduJts $185 M+-:l30'1 t...agima Beach.•• IMS Auto Show · in.oc '"'" -RIO 853 Center St. 645-8965. Up. Abbe;Y Rlty. 642-3850. dO!rpa, rec. 1 ,NIWl~m poo • · • • SPACIOUS l Bt, 2 Ba. 1 blk •Ay VtlW 0PfllC&I poodle loal In E.uihlufr CRPTS, drps, pool, ' E'-IDE attr--. -mp! • WINTER -YEARLY • di??" coupe. 0 or Hunttnttton .... lo bay 1 blk to ooea.n. VI"' at the Balboa ~ . hrd fa clbhse 3 Br ,..,,., "'" ... v children. $150 mo. • clna. ' Deluxe, AIMlondtUoned ANAHEIM LOSl &r'ff ... ..,. .. n w ryr, re • · turn. 2 BR, 1% ba .. pool, nr 3 Br, 2 Ba, nu cl'flt1, month· dcp. 839-5266 * MO~ IN TODAY* Yelll'I)'. $2Xl/mo. Bkr. Redecorated. Udo area CONVINTION One' Gold bracelet, W/hl?art $200. 4 Br $225. 548-1405. :w;:is~~~ freeways, ~~,~~ l l/14 2 'I,! ~h: UNFURN Spac 3 BR apt, 1~ $13' A MO. 6'1H91L Rtt1onomic1, Bkr, 67U700 CINTIR du . Reward. m-aeiitil. •I Laguna Niguel 642-7&71 ba. Wflra: Jlv Rm, brick If Spac. 2 I 3 BR tn 4-plo:. NEW Duplex 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 Adjoinlns omo.., busy In-Ocl.Obtr Uth lhr\l eth ~ 2" BA In Se Terrace Furn. Bech. & 1 Br. Ex.. · 2 doo ._ paneling, tJJ &hag c:Tl>tlna:. Seve?"al avall. ALL EX· S300 mo. 3 1 [ I 3 BR . .,. a , ception•lli nice I 2110 ~h. 2 BYRI.'!'~ ...... mn. ,.:::."}, Children welcome. No petB. TRAS. Poo!.i.._~ bldg, K1da • 1%!: 39th St • tenection C.M. $80. Utll '1 Pleue t'all 64J.5678. t111. 1 ...._ _.,.... ocean v I e w • cpla/drp11. N I"' C M '-"" ..-. ... •u ""'.,.. 351 Victoria St. No. 2. we!~. rrom $139. See --.. or ........ Ulft.I Inc .• adjol.nina 1 BR rum. belv."ffn 9 and~ pm to claim . . LeMe $400 mo. inc. Aun ewport vu., · · dl1>s-$250/mo. 64)-3443. MgT 17371 Keelaon "B'" l oov-.:1'1>,).i. 0 '__,,,.. apt avail. 64)-«!80. your tk:keta. (North Count)' dues. 213: 322-5585. Eve. *Stunning 1, 2 I: 3 BR. :l Ba. DELUX 2 BR, fum, or un.-** BEAT.Tl'IFUL l ..t 2 BR. blk ·w. of Beach Blvd. 'ott PROFi..'Y. Decorated Condo. IDEAL llarbor Wvd. oUlce toll·(~ nun1btt 115«).lDJ), Babyelttlftl 213: 322-Zn2. Garden apt. Pool. 645--5530. furn, 'S; blk ocean/bay. ~':i:,mPHfY 1Guden ;:: Slalf!r. 988-1510 or 847-42!1(1. Frpl. Pool. Dbl pr. EJ.ec location, er.ta MtM, UXX> * • .. • * Townhou •• Unfurn. 335 no W. 1Bth St, CM. GT:>-4600 or &e-0123 ' r P c · • LCE. 2 BR In quiet 4ap1.ex opener . $290 + a.uoc. dues. .. .............. ... ...... -__.. \\'ILL eaJ"f tot )'OUt lnllnt or $155-n'lU. Call Mrr5163. .,Ill\ Encl •ar ..,.tlo ,.,__. 64$4346 or 64$-Ul(}. 1111 u. _........,.., .....-1-YOUNG She.,...:•u t y Pe toddle ln bomrt Um Newport Beach l Br. Sl30 le n41l. AduJls only. FURN 3 BR. :r ha.., steps to ,........,, • -• ...... ..,. EASTBLUTF 2 Br 21,t Ba. nlta lemal~. black I tan. Santa r mr · ,.._ S/Pool. Ideal tor Bachelon beach Ocean vu, 6'5-4600 ~:.E"ft.Nr~o&E i B~~~ ynl. No pets. 142-4549. Frplc. All e>ec. 'obi pr, Ol'l'ICE • STORI ~na llahll attL 540-000-t alt :1.i-~· kneed 1 •rd · r.tATURE adults. 3 BR, l'n ba. New carp, drps, paint. gar. Pool. $300. 54~ Rltr. 1993 Church St. 548--9833. or 645-0123 Adults, no pets. 2984 Royal 2 BDR. Apt. -$13S. Mo. Pool nearby. l4t--Ml5. 525 IQ ft. Utll. pd. Otr II. ro"'°UNPD'.". :,.__. __ ..._. -··· DAY NIU'Mf')', bablel '° s .... · u n.1-. 2 urn. 711 ...,.... uv or 557-3312. Lane _ H.B. 536-8S26. BALBOA Penln, Dbc new 3 · -,,_.,_., l'Or. t'111l vk!. F'Qhlon llll:&nd I ~·-,..,. ,...... _....,.,. ... BE"UT F"~~ 2BR11-,, up BR l u b'-·'· ~m Palm OT. $152/mo. 66-3515 Decorated • 17361 QuMna ~ -• N-ol 1..-.....-'""' u,.. _ .,. ,_ ..._ ,_ , __ Utll paid. Htd Pool. Adlts, no ocean. new shq crpta, drps, Br trpl patio Lrs malJ' w St. &C-tm. fAatbluft'. NB. Call after e .;;-=='------ pets. A1ao :I Br unf 642-9.%'0. gar. ~-2 BR, 2 BA. dbl gar, crpts, LARGE 2 BED R 0 0 M, ctrH.·1 in,. yiy, ic-cJ.48.' ute Me:dical or denll.I au!lt ~ ~ Ca~er e TROPICAL POOL e 3 BR. 2 BA. W/~lc, turn dlx moimo~~W,nd•1~j ~5: 84L)~, ~~.mo. lb!BR, ~--BA'~ drpt, BtauL deoont.td. V~ry HbUT N9ty cokw male !--"'--------~ 1 Br. Furn tt45. Ga.a le Wtr duplex. Ocean. WUl rent 10 645-4203 tN, c-to......,.,,_,.. nu. rent. call...,._., t.1.bby kuwn, Sold eyn, 4"~ .lndus/Comm'l/RasW I m I Pd 145 E 18th 548--1168 students. $200. &45-2964. . EXTRA tae 2 br, utlll pd. Jy. Avail Nov. t. ~2181. omCE or .un. a.,. C7Tlr. mot. Turt1ttodl Dr .• vla All l)'pft work. R.emodel. Ap1rtrMntt lorfte11t T · · · N.wport HelQhtl STUNNING :l Br., 2 Ba. Cpts, drpa, patio, no peta. l br, l\W bf!,, trple, peUO.. t Ltue In H.B. Ste ad under PaJ,itlno, llvhJe. IJ3..1T10. &llft'atk!n, nnllft, rr.me, I,;;;;,.;;;;;;;;~~~ BEAUT. 2.B.r. Upper duplex. Pool. rec. IQOlll area. Kldt OK. $1&6. 5aMn21 blk to ocean. S:l$O mo. Aft t bullhNI rantaJ, .... ~"OUND Blade~ wfwht pantl, e1c. jQ..11111. lmmac. Pr!v. pr & patio. CLEAN 1 or :I BR. Adults, no &15-5530. 710 W. 18th St., CM ... BR T-"nhouN w/•-•-, ---~· 6 ! I C RPENTRY •"'\'~-· • Nr. Westcliff. $~. 67$-1849. 2tl1 ~ .,_ ... ~ ... pm, 111r.-.uu PROFESSJONAL!u.ltere ... ,.. paws co ar . A , ,.......~. • Acts. Furn. UO pets. 1"'tt1 kit. J].35-$1!i0. ••1 BR. Stove A Refrla. wuher/d?")'er, blt·lns, pe.Uo. IO ao. IWU at Bo&N QUc:a. Y•~ Snp M.et on Npalr. 2t >"'"'" tlarbar 1;::::.:;..:,_:;,::;_ __ _;;,:;c CLEAN l Br, clole to lbopa. E. 16th St., NB. 64Er1801. $135/rno. AduJts, no pets. $185/mo. 962-6846. Newpert Helf!!! H.B. $275fmo. M&-tm. Sat, -.UM. are•. 64&-nll/m-GM. Balboa Island Adull•anly, no peu. Inquire S.n Clomonto 820 C.ntor St. 6'2-'8111 WALK TO llACH QUIET 2 Br I -·~·~ ilHIMM R-•I 445 FND: Onnra ""2 balnd cal C•rpel krvl .. 179% Rochester, CM. I I UlG, 1\1....., 1 Br, upper NEW 1 I 2 Bt cptJdrp. w .... ...,...... with I eyf'. "'c, 2lith .. NEARLY new 3 BR, 2 BA. 1 BR duplex, gar, oonven· ""'" dabwahr. US 15th; XII 16th. Oiit. drpt, pool, pr . ..sits, ''THE FACTORY'', om-Tut.In CM Vtt'/ 1riendly JOllN'S Carpel• UpholattT')' rompl. turn. All elect kltch .. Huntington leach lenL Avail. to l'ftpons\ble nu crpta, drps, bltn.9:, refria. 8'7-l957. no peta. Sl'70. g.a...eom, llattJlc cf 12 unique boutiqu9 146--lm. Mhmpoo 1 r • e ~· frplc. patio. BBQ. Lease woman or married rouple, $140/mo. 545-5210, 83S-3540. S4HB22 .-nl fSoil n..t.ardantsl. Sep<..June. 638-81101539-883!. LoQUINTA HliRMOSA 1111>.1 ~TI. ev.m....,. E..SIDE 2 BR, $150 *11.~ .,.'_~R~-~~ad... . =--~!_"':!'"'a'":'.';!'.~ "t...:"~ ~ .,.._..,. a .U - NR. New apt, 1 l.rg Muter Spanish Country Estate U.. Corona del Mlir Bltna, w/w, re.tr1.s. Pool ~.,..., ,..., .. , ... ,..._.. Aptt.., Ca.rd,-~ " )Vdap f'wy. C.M. s• •· brlcht~ntn ' lO m1.ttu1r BR. Util pd., suftdck I Ing I Spacious Apta. Tel'-AdultJ, no pets. 00.9531. 2 · ... -i--· flvm. er Uftfvm. J70 ahopl _,. wantld. G5 IOth !I gr t Mo. old m,ai. b I" a c:.... for • h I~ v.·shroom, 1 car g.at ap, Yr-. raced pool; sunken IU 1 & 2 BR w/f\lrn ttvaU, Htd BR. l sty, "T"'l""'"'""' ... .,_ St., riftport B•ac b. Colli.~ lllb. P'nd ~*._me !1::i~\\'IJI BAYf'RONT l BR, c., 0nl1 Centtr SI ~ ' . :,....,-...!:. y-r y' --~· nn. •• ~-' . A ball . A1r1 nn. f1 .50. ly. $3Xl mo. 6'13-9659. f.rpl BBQ. Un~ u.q ... ~y pool S130 It up. Adult&. 15.1 =· ~17rar· OtUd ok. S ,:•t! ba, :rs~tr&. SDJrmo 1'71-W « MMS.10, = ~ CM. :~"1. dMn rm •. dlnlnst nn. patio, patkina-.s.~.!..!" 1 BR. FURN. $175 . . DD..UXE 2 BR. li,fi ba., pvt o..y., ..__....,_; -: ~ Blvd. 'c'M. + YOUNG malt mta Lln'W. t<IUCh $10. OaaJr ~. I) yn. yrl)'. lnq, d> ~.......... 2 BR. FURN. $210 SPACIOUS b&ch apt. Nr ool· yard pr cloee to Mach. 714/l'l!lo-fQS. ....... a II• Ta sq. ft. VIC lluttt t Cardm Croft n:p. 11 wtllC t'OU"'-. ""' No. 5. ALL UTll.JTIES PAID ON TEN ACRES lqc & IOOpping. $130 mo 535--iVJg ' Cotte Mete ....... Meta. $250 mo. Blvd.. C.C. ~. llKllhod. t do wortc mywll Balboa ..... lnlUI• Adul" No .... A.,ca. Nro./Wlllmt. 1Aaeo utJh pd. m<n34. \'all !ronl/llllll mo, -· )!IQ BLACK C«bpoo '°""" In Caod l'<f. 531~WI nrtptacee t prlV. patkll. Ba~h &: :r BR Adults no pew 'SPACJO~i 3 ,:;.J_1!8 K~ d LA MANCHA Newport Bl\ld., C • M · C'Ma Mesa, f15..mt « Cem.t, C.ncrm 2 BR. 1"' 8A. pa.Uo, balcony, 14 bllm S. of San Dlelo Frwy Pooll TeMla Contnt'I Bkftt BAY MEADOWS 'APTS. , now. '1-<aJJ• Brand New Dtluu Un.Its IG-tm Ml-7308. 315 E. Bay, $250' rno. °" )'!'11 .......... __ • ---. CdM .. ~ .. 2611 317 Y+' Bay St. CM 64&-0013 welcome. d-mo. 14 · Rent now fa' )'CUI" o::in--sroiu: or oma: FNU. sec °' 1 .,_ a1 UttJ.. QUALm ~" ""· Jae. Jnq, ar Apt c 67)..lSJI on Beach. 1 l:Ak W. On Holt -~ ..... 111:1 .,_. • lagune a.ectt 1trucUon aUawance of t ~ It. n-tWWnr.-. our ~JI)' or 548-1T11.. to 1621J Parkside Lane.) M&cArduir nr Cout HW)ll :i BR. 2 blr., 11Unken Uv rm. mo'• ~ mrt. 1 BR. 1 BR 1t:'ffl,:ri:; bory "'cmr c.onin.. m.'°43 Par ttt. Cllll ~ <n<11 147-640 ft-pie., crptt, drps. $165 mo. NEARLY new 1 I 2 B1t apt.a. 6 !Mn. 2 BR01 A l 8R.'a.. {Main • Pecan. )(.&I ofi . -·--------- * * * * * LOVEL y upstall'I ~ 2 BR apt, Compl., newl)' ~-303'7. AduJtt, M pets. $llS • sm. mm s~ o.hwllrm end ' stntt '. r. I ft I • WU1 for t1'~ mature couplt. $145 • Sl65 deaontecl. Garden, l.&Wld, J 1: 2 BR. G8nlrn ApU. Pbol. 2115 S. Cout Hwy. pr. twim 1.~I.. . a. rtnrmde ta 11111 ..,_,.... * Prlv tCh ~~mo, Bachr:k>r I I BJt. pab Li's pnp. Vu Wik to Dlhwthr. \Jtpl pd. SJ.GO up. *' 2 BR. t i,.; bl, nJ mt, MJ.-*7 TTI Sooit .. CM (Ownlr). ut 1111 =·~ti!~ ur On °"'""' ~ t:,'U; r~· oi bead>. """ mo. ~-!21 E. lOth SL, --chlkln• ok. $2'll mo. v .... BACHELOR .... p. rt I' HUNTINGTON llACHll ... ---------------'"'! er-aoom. clOMtl. R.ec hall, pool & aft 6 p.m. LOF~. 1 Br .• pool , nr abopa, h~ue. 494-4.$42. film, S90. Vacant. t4dl OfcllmJ .,Pl • ~~J:.~ PQol .. U11l pd POOi t.ablea, •una bAtbt. TWO bdrm., 1~ bath , .Mils. no ·~t.1. Utlla pd. 18&1 LHUM'N'P se&wms.. rr. prt(a. Mirna.. Dot ecan 675-17409 ~ fat' )'OUTlll'ln 11301 Oreplace. 1245 11'CI ALL Monrovta. 54&-0lilt. ~ -Huntl~ton S.Mtt s;g..me_ ..,..-1 -~~~-"';!::::;;::;..,= 1<.,L..., 1.n. (I blk w. ot uUllltoa. ....,. < t I< l $1Sl ..... _,. 2BR. Irr pri U.OUNA NIOUIL ...,._ ' • 2 BR QM1' beach • ba)<. tkw:h. 1 blk N. Of Slater). 14M8J.4 or mrm. patio. Chikittn Oil .ru pct Apartment• HUm1NGTON 0 . rd(' n. WAl'fr'ED: LOC tOi lJ. CarpQt1. lndry, plS/mo. M~'IMS OK. Crp11. ~ ~ 1 Br I Be.· S1l5 e J Br l A.pl1 Heil al JlolAa <l'lk*. QUOft. fTORL, NEW U C. Yearly. m--, I BR.. 2 Ba., UP1talro. * 2 BR $ill/ * " • " ... un. c.m,.,. • ... ORO Otl'T. f!S.227' ~..!~~.Jo : ::: i.: Lotuno .. ~ ,_ M5 ..it =~~~a:r: < :f~ '"1 vai.oci., '7o.1m :ii rm, e 2 Bt., I Bo.: ~'n m-n-. filfiUIMOI -ol 4ii uiil l'IWSJO. UVE 1" __ , ..,., m-4lm alt 1 pm. CHEERFtJL. airy, "" 2llR. 1 lacld Gas. TV Cobio 6 '"" DELUXE, Ape pl1Y. pallo, JUST COMPUTlO :;11:m hN':t :r.-~ 2 KR. Ahal:. drJla, nf, ,.,.. t. apt. Mults. no pctL Fu1J.y c:rpUI l drpd. ft.ec muak-. I pooll MllM. 1t1nntt., ....tcie1a-LVllfatoi ~yr-lol',_,,.poWcblkl. ,,....,.., ladllftd"""'-BllQaNL ~~Paohlda l•to-kl't. tnn. ........... Avall NOY m: .. ~r. •2 br, SUS mo.• 291M.1 AJoma ATt-S...,,,. SU0.11142:11, IN UlfTA AkA CorORa .. Mir Trader's Paradise lines times dollars FUltHJSRED Apt • ncs utl1. peld. "' blk In ocun. No pets. z-;oo SceoNw. O:IM. Coste MeN n• ,..,. .ip. lf.1 n. Cbkll' 2°: :;*:Wrm a ,,:.th. == w~C:tat m.2m « -.err• GIUM -... ~*:'mt:"~~ TVnrbrach.lCJSllf.o..t (:rptl drJI. '*'°" AdU11I. CHT dw: J Br 21,t.. BRAND,... hzlc. cxiado.IRRlowtrdl.pa.hruadc 1Cei•1• mt11aalne.1'--------,-~~~"':',-""!~~f Ap ..... nto-.&:30»1 y-~~---LI ·1."-:-c'l' • -,._.._.~AYllw ~-~••JI.~-·-... --1»1 _., • "~" Loo .,._,,, ._, 1-~..-"" -· ~. v4• ~ -l2f.S ---· rn:PllENI w nm OOllZl?Mld•n """"' • I OR furn Jpt. Mui"'-No p.m. ~GREAT VIEW ·I BR. * ISIO.-= alt 5 p.m. 2 llr. I Ba., a&1-. Bl~ .... ~ ltUNIAKllll. DIV. CO. y Lowry ._,_, ,..,. -lo~._, pcota, IJ.,, Ill c.ntiot St. 1.,:!o 'iii "Jt.i.~ = f'rOIO., blinL-~. POOi. 2 BR., bltm. """'" carp, ~loll • 11,-dW ........ -Jtl ltM • -IRJ\18 uofu, ~~~la~to _"".:,,Air=-----~ ...i.:.. ld l110up.. -~;f'IS.3nS. *-PflL Patio. AduJtt. no •" AdlMI.. ....... ,.. .. ~..,..,, _._.. ·- fi'!l,S>. Small fum tnl~ w/ ~'iQ. D • 1' mu. 2 IJ8 apt a"f'&ll How 1st, -..lk f!l! lll\1 Mo. ..... 2414 A(t. OKNlcttcls .. t BR. f'ulft. ""*" • ·• •• ,$115 -... J\. 11-1. .. ,.... GP t ttMr' t'l'1 DD,. Di"4lK ~ Ull~ pd • .... no -~" -EN~ ~ Yd 2 or ..... Ho¥. Slllf por ""' -J BR l>lm. "-""' Ui?o ... mf -. 1 ... 1111 V. N r •f,r.itf";;;i'iiii?'firr'.~ nvJ>i J !'!,Tu ltOiii cebo.tllo, ~ . /\UH•, 1 Br Nor\b t1n4. <>c.n "'"· IO btlM:h, -ta. -~""'"' . . oDlll -= a " rt 1'"'7 DESrltT wmt -\~ POOL. 1,.11, !IM-UJ8. a.;.,» bob lo.~•-No IU-1'71_ar IMHCIL -blll~-nr S. Mooe V-J BR .. 1. Now. Y.llp ... sa . -.oo,.r • -V,oWJ11. IW --~ Utllltlft Included -...,.,..~ -A PIA& . -· I RR ""'· 2 ... "11' ... .-• WAlff CAll ..,.. I lledroom0 chld11, no --TOll. 2 BR. ...,.., ..., I eo•v I •• lr>I• DEWXJ! I • 11111., I ... 1817 --....... mo ·-•• ...,.. * ·-.... * --~ ten• n l •. 2 dean t br uMta, pakl uUJJ. ~ Pat». Siil Call g~~ iiM. zn B ed. pr. 1111 "'° Jtaltal 1 llR M'1I WlMll' •••••• .-,.._ tro m It ... ~_.. 9P"'T ... AoydqlOllltR£11TDAYIO +-.'lll!Oo-.1!¥2!r,2~,_.,.. • .,,.. _., ~-llaoa ... ••lllRtum-...... IJll ----* * * * * run '" nd! Don't do"1 .. , tho--. 1115 A '1llL N""'1 pa1-. sm -"Lbt" It In -tied. SOI• -D.\VTD90ll IUW.TY CAI.I. DAILY l'U.Df cAll lodaJ &04B1I. Need • '"Pad"T Aaot lln ad! mWi .......... 17).."'4. to .... Raallll 50-!lm. "" k& ..... . . • -w. °'Hwy. IG ... , Q.ASnlD ~------------------1 * • ·-. .. ' •• • I I " • • .. . : . • • . • :: :l . • • • . . ,. • l • • • ! • • • • 3. . :: •• • •' ... .. •• •• •• 3 •• 3 :· •' ,• • •• •• .; .. •• •• , DAILY PlLOf . '. " -. ·.~. . -.. PILOT-~OV£~1lSEJl 20 --------- r----1~ [ ---1~ [ L-' " filJ ;;;;;[ ;;L-;;•···;;;;· ;:;;:l[Ill~•1 I~[ ;;. ';;'";;u• ;;I ~·•i:.' -· ·-1; iiiiiiiii" ~lrm;;'1 ' I.-. _ ....... _,_Jl,[Il] I C ment Conemo Pointing & Help Went..s, M & F 710 HtlP u-. M & F 710 Help Woftlod, M& P' 711 HolP ,,,,-, M & F 710 lelo Wente\!. M & F 110 Help Wonted, MI F llD H•lp Wonlod. M & P 110 Ill o • P.,......ntint CUSTOM CEMUl'T WORK ------I El OON\JT ....... all "'"' lhlll GDIERAl INTERIOR Dnignen, Esp. )<ANAGER R.I".. SA1.ES ~-w •• vo patiol CUSTOM Palnti"I. 1nt1E<t Ac:counta-• '"PA A&• :z..e. No ""' -· Ap-Film. Crpta. drap<ritt, Wall Exp. "" neceuuy. Join DO IT NOW! :::.:i·~ b&u-8514 ' 11pedalist. No job too lrg or ~ Pb' in pmon. 135 E. lnh St,. paptr, lhuttttl, M5-66MI ~ cN.ln of atcctuful _.. too small. Frft color con· •z• k ' N-» ... ach financW' m.. CM ------....... -----car wubet. Mlllt have We're on the move and ~ PATIOS..PLANTERS aultlng &: est. Uc'd, bonded, Cooa1U'\lctlol1 Jlackground .HI• 'ti at tmmedlate DRILL PRESS LABORERS ·~~--mechanical aptitude, ablll· belpl If )'OU want a Profet- All Conc;ret~ ~'Ork. Brick, iaa. Won't be underWd. /\ t.1ust ope:nbC tor a professional Precb:lon ex_pe_l'. for top ~ to 1Upt'"1.tle bel~ A han· 1km&I Career • not Just a slumpt:tol'M! \11k. 894-3533. 642-6005, SJ&.3217, w/tllOl:lg experie:nt.-e. You lrvi To ,., p p s VOLT e CUJtomen. WillJna to job • f.Dd are wllilna: to make ~ 3 y Ex lence will A"''".. oWce 11U ne co. P .,..., · · · work 1onK houn. Salary Child Car9 P~G, Car~ en tr Y · ears per p1Je1, "':u~fleetS & on~ Paclttc PttlonndnlonSmri.ee!I, lnlfant -Penonnel $185. to $250. per week to a SUcceu Commlttment 1 ,.,_..,., 18 yrs. in area. $l8-$lOK , equipment. ll2 No. Tower, U Bank Temporary Service 1tlll't d epend Ina: on want to lalk to YOU! Look e CHILD CARE e Prompt auv. Call !lQb Square, Orange. 547-6446. 3848 Campus Dr .. Suite JOO background. Rapid ad· al lho benoflll. expanding [)epcndabk: llarbor/Bakcr Area 64&-6446. • • d 1 we wm C011lider cnly a_p. Ask lor Rachel May. Newport Beach 546-414l vancement, binge benefits. AU... Departmenu. PLUS 11\'T & O.'T painting, paper L11 Rein er s pJ..lcanW w/a proven record DRUG Clerk -Ex"perienced. Equal OppOr, Employer Xlnt futuro. Write for ap~ New Jto1ne1 Sales, four new hanging, natural w o o d p I A ol the hia:hest integrity & Costa Meu.. Call 1 ~ ... ""!~~"'""'"""!~~ I Chwltied Ad No. 408, 0. Y tracta! Some poaitlons Sal· 546-4145 COST A MESA PRESCHOOL, 18th & Monrovia. NEW HOURS 6:30 am-£:30 pm. Music i;torief.. art. Reas. Rates: Llc'd. 642-IQ;A>. Eves. 8311-5231. finishing. 548-79a>. ersonne 9 ency booestY & wbo ea&ily gain a 6t2-"4500 Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa ~ Co I •a 2 coo.u l oonfidence & admiration of Gen1r•I Ofc. $450 ID\M.tr l>CD<",......_tn Mesa, 9al26. ary + Commi&skml, others l:.<'l.•c.• ... mpc....-• ndo ESCROW OFCR TRNE Good Typina ill\,,YU"(t; r-Ll\.1\Jl"Cl"(~L CuarantcedDrawahlgh-11tory S2Ji0, 2 story SD). 4500 Campu1 Drive management & ve rs. --e. Ct:D\N""CC'•,ArCh.V""V MOTHER desperate need• .. --Neat work. Roy, 847-1358. N Bch .. ,2l 1B Bright quick to leam indivi-CaU Lorraine Ji.I\,)'~ """""""'-' sitter, CdM area for kin· ccnl bonll.9, paJd vacatiom. ewport ~ Send -·m• .._ s • I a r y dual de-1-.. lor ""' wi1H-.. n:o~ n-F -~ 'ledl al and • u-In-·· INT. & EXT. PALVITNG ""'"'" • ,........., ..... .....,.., n-r,..,,,~ Free &; Fee Positlons deriartener. u1r1.1U• or " c ....u: .... ance. Ho...,.. wo...... Ve..., Rea& ~ history . in confidence to: to train. Must be ambitious Personnel Agency Gred .. •to Att'y $l2K 1 ,,833--4::;-,';"°:;;::;·~==~-~ I)) It NOW! It's Your move! ...... '"' •:1 Cle.arified _.. no. 528, c/o & want --, oo-tunlty ~., w-t·lllt Dr NB -Free Est Call: &t5-854/. Administrative Daily Pilot, .... P.O. Bex lSfiO, To 1475. ~'"" M~· Mann: ..,..... ""''" ·• · · 1 Year work exp. MERCHANDISE handler, Call JACK SEYMOUR Contractor 30 Day Spl!Cial. Inter/Exter. Costa Mna, Calit 9'.2626. 83.1-7700, Dennis & Dennis '4S.2no Salesmen to $11K full time. Aak tor mgr, Mr. CALL '176-223l paint\,... t.ooal "'1" Lk'd Assistant •.,."",.;,,ual!!!!O.Oppo,;,.',.· Em~ployer~'!"'!P [ P•noonel A&•ncy or Irvin<. GIRL FRIDAY Rec.nt .,.,,_ w/hot moll Pavone. B<al'• Furniture. • SEYMOUR Additions * Remodeling Gcrwlck &: Son, Lic'd 673-fiO.ll • &a-2170 ins. Chuck. ~-I'! ~ Michelson Dr. Man a a: emelrt Con.sulta!it a.dhetllvcs. ll.00 Irvine Ave, N'pt Bch Realty &: Investment No Wasting Newport Beach financ\.al ~ Car WaM & Poli~h EXECUTIVE secretary for seeking Executive Secretary Escrow Manager ..•. to $1axl J.!UST be 18 or older. Zody's JA.~ Taulane -Repair remod-. addit. :!> yn. exp. Uc'd. ?oly Way Co. 547-ooJG. *WALLPAPER* ittitution has immediate Driven, gas men, polish l fnll time employment ln whoi.shighlyorganizedwithExec.Secretary •...•• toS650 Service Station 6962 Real Ett.e .. Sales \Vhen you call "Mac" openi~ for Jr. Management detail. Full time. 6 loca-11.B. medical otfiCe. Send outstanding clerical skills G.0 . Ins+ ~krg •..... $650+ Edinger. H.B.. ask for Steve, FREE 548--1444 646-lTil position. . ~·T<:o1CA'R wAsH resume to K. Davis, 4919 and public re lat ions General. Office •...•. to $475 6am-3PM. PAINTrNG & PAPERING, . . In Bruce Cresct'nt, N.B. 92660. personality, Ph. 644--0035. SI:· Acctng Clrk · ·' ··" .$550 NEWSPAPER Auto Route. 19.,.... ln Harbor area. Lie &: E_:~srdntia!__, reql 0"dements l J-2!liO Harbor BL, C.M. EX P E R I E N C E D .'..:.CC.~_-=-'-'"-'~~'--IFigure Qerk ..... " .. $400+ Approx. Hn 3:30-5:30 pm Gardening :1·~ 1:1U e '-"' ""C .,....._ • .,. .. rort:>nT ~ I d EXP HairdresSer. F/tlme, 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M. bonded. Ref'sfurn.&12-2356. · ~,, -··--• C=''"".............., gr n er busmen/waitresses & ~ally. Xln't p/time eam- A.MERlCAN garderx;:· Tdoi~ PAINTrNG -Honest, clean, YsT8R6N~s1nei": ~·'llr,e r. , operatoc with infeed & cashier. Ben Brow n, s ~boa Call~~ l~uty 642-1470 mgs. 540-3008, Mr. Woodruff. of "Grus cullers ing ma a 1 • thrufeed exp. Permanent Rest.aurant, 31106 s. CoRst . a on. ' · ----· -......_ •-·" a tnk? For e!illmate guaranteed work. Licensed _ _, h l1 Id llELP f -r fa t ____ _._ .. nm<."VC" aide!! • exp'd ........ -~ · ured 61 7'" b 1· & \ --·-'-employment wd yr o Hwy South Laguna See ' or .cam..... c ory. JANITORIAL • Pennanent "v·~ ·-.., call Custom G11.rdener, John c•::.::•ns:o==c:· =>-<>;· '-'~=·'----~ IT~vi~~,~~t. 't!1 ~~e ~; company offerlng variety of Miss.'McLeod between .4 & 6. Apply Mll)OIWay, 858 W. p t TI 1 rk . Day shift. Apply Dir. of Mor.uco. &&>2658. PROF. painter, honest work, compony paid be n e f l t a , 18th St. Costa Mesa. ar me even ng wo m Nurs'""'• 1030 W. Warner ard r ins 1 /00. ire 11iderstlon, please submit · ' • Orange County. 4 to 6 hours, ~ ... EXP. Japaneee G c~r. reas. ic/ · nt · e resume includmg 98..lary re-1 -='54"5--040~~1;,.:---c-,,--FACTORY Hostes5&Cesh1er 5 days a week. For men & Ave .. Santa Ana, 546-6450. Complete Yard Main-est. Refs. 548-2759. quire!11enL'I in t'Onf.idence ro: CLEANING woman t'Nice a Weekend • Niles. women. Apply at 409 N. ~. shrubbery, trees. F'OH. clean & neat painting, Class1flt'd arl no. 529, c/o wk, 4 to 6 hrs .. Newport A'pply In Person Harbor, Santa Ana. N=~e:Co~j ·Hs:~: f'l'Tf'; Est. 645--0347 . interior, reu. rates. Call Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Beach.Area. 0-.n trans. re-COLONY KITCHEN JANITORS, Waxers & s C M ~8~~3u%G 0R'o'"F· 96H065Paln. · alao c~2~a~1Qsap· ,,.· ;a1~~:r quired. $3.50 hr. 645-S275. Announcing * * * 3211 Harbor Bl, CM Maids, exper. p/time 4 hn~ '"°'J =C.::·c.n_te~r--t-" __ · _· • P . ting, roofs, .-. COCKTAIL waitress wanted, eves. Call 546-5351. -Jrvirr lndW1trial a~. Ceil. i nter/exter. apply Dana Pt. Yacht Club. HOSTESS-Cashier,, over 2t1~==~--~---NURSFS Aides, ex Per• Complexes. Lic/lns. Free est. 645'-5191. Advertising Secr.et•ry aft 12 noon, Wed. thru Sat. // /)/) 9 /. Days or nites. Apply daily, JANITOR, part time, eves prerd, Parle Lido Conv. !a?.-1299 after Spm. Plaiter, Patch, Repair Great oppor. for ambitious, COFFEE Shop Man ager J\.1:. e[{u ir 6 10:30-11 :30 AM, Mi Casa Including wkndl. Will train. :C~•~n~te~r~. 642--<044~~~· :;::;::: * LANDSCAPING * h' hi k.lled gl 1 Bralru! w/several yrs ol CJQ>er. as ii J.1exican Restaurant, 296 E . .c55&e:.:...7cc61c:6_. ------ Stow b.•-m. Sp r I nk I er s, * PATCH Pl..ASTERING . 1~. Y. s 1 r · . ' waitress & hostess for Bistro 17th St, C.M. JUNIOR Salesmen: J0.15. Office Machines • cliK:ks. deanup. State lic'd. All types. Free estimates 1n111auve & sh requtred. RestauranL Call Max, BUSINESS """--""""' 833-1670 llOSTESS. exper, over 21. Earn $20-$40 per week get· Sli--tm. Cell il'tV""UO'-' Newporter Inn, N • B · New Lite Industrial for eves. 3all E . Coa.81: Ung new customers foc the ot.'TCH prdener. o:per .. Plumbing "'"""""""""""""""'"l ,;;S#-;:;,;1"700""'. ==,,--....,,.--Division For Women Hiway, OOt. Apply betwn DA.Il.Y PILOT. This jg not a MACHINES cmplL ""-· oall C.mt.1----=-----A /P CLERK COOK TRAINEE -7 am.· 5 • 6 pm. n""""'"' rout• and do<• REPAIRMAN ~--"".,. or Ari e L. R. ~0 PLtrr.fBING N o-h 3 30 M Fri ' 0 -··0 incl II~•~ <»<r_,,, ~0 u•""' for ewport ocac l'OOSlruc-: pm, on.-· .._ ....... e ' · 1 HOUSEKEEPER Babysitter not ude co -~~"1 or 2U/63()-5463 p.m. Remodels & Repairs. Wat er tion co. Construction exper-Niguel 831-2211. fany usia:nments n the wanted Utime ' mature & delivering_ Transportation is If you have three year ex· AL'S Landsc.aP'in&· Tree heatt'1"8, dmposa\s, furnaces, ience prefrrrable for main-DELIVERY of 0 A 1 Ly Newport Beach, Irvine, San-reliable own 'transp Hn provided. We ""'Ork four perience in the maintenance removal. Yard remodeling. dshwshrs. m-3730 MIC & taini ng mu ltiple contract ac· PILOT SUNDAY ONLY to la Ana & Costa Mesa areas '. ' hours alter school and 8 on and repair of business ma· Trash hauling, Jot cleanup. BIA. All Dally P ilot area&. count_ing data. Excellent new~per carriers. Re-• Experienced & trainee ~m-d vanedChll"'~t Da!; s7. Saturday. We have openings chines, and have completed Repair sprinkler'!!. fill-1166. Drains unclogged _ $7.50 v.'Ork1_ng environment & quires the use at a Station Posilion.s. Exccllent earn· ays. ""'"'fl ...... --• • for Fo1mtaln Valley & Sooth a manufacturer's training EX p ER T Japan e 11 e Sewer line to 100' -$15 benefits. Salary commen-Wagon or Van Contact Mr lngs. \Veekly paychecks 5. All in schl. VI c: lluntington Beach areas on-program in one or more of gardener, knowhow, upkeep, * 549-2502 * surate w/ahillty. Equal Op-Ha.rcy Seel J3o West aaY Killybrooke schl dist. Call ly. You must be out of plant, pest, trlnl, cleanup. PLUMBING repairs and in-po11unity Employer. Ph: SL Cost :f' Judy at 557--0124. school hy 3 PM t o the following areas: . 540-8..Wi for eppt. • a l'Sa. ""'"'°'='='=~~~. ~-participate. Exper~enceJ 968-3486. stallatiOns, palntiJli'.. Fp.>e DELIVERY lo M---r NO FEE HOUSE'.J<EEPER. Widower boys __ iglv<n p r i 0 r i t y . EX p ER T J a Panes e Est. Call & save. 839-<!372. ARE YOU SATISFIED Service. Own ~sP.~t w/2 Gll'ls. 2 & 5 yrs., needs 968-964.1 Garden er. Con1plcte COLE PLUMBING With your present Income? know Cost.a Mesa, Corona Taking appUcutiions live-in nanny. R e fs .1-.::::::..:=::.· ------ Gardening Service. NB, Cl\1 24 hr. service. 645-1161 Opportunity to make good del Mar, & Newport areas. 9AM-l2 noon Only 548--6723. KENNELMAN· area 5'1&-IS!M. PLUMBING REPAffi money, full or pru1·time. Welo"54"2'-'-ll647'-::.· ------HOUSEKEEPER, live in, DRIVER JAPANESE Gardene r . No job too amall train you. for interview Dental 2061 Business Ctr. Or. ~g. Bch. LL>vinp: care 2 For animal shelter. Good Complete Yanl \\.'o rk and * 642_3128 * cnll; 646-5390. 646-0770. CHAIRSIDE Irvine 833-1441 gll'ts. Pvt rm .. TV. Ret, king d XI ·1 lri Clean-up .'~ dt.-~_,.-=,;;""!!:;:,;..--req'd. 494-3330. wor con .s. n. ~e 642_3102.. Sewing/Alter.etioni ASSEMBLY TRAINEE \Vl'il liked 10ca1-dcxtor wtll \li:i:=::=::=::=::=::=::= HOUSEKEEPER tor con-be~ti.ts, Valid ~ driv- For production assembly. of tr.U n cheerful bright begin-F-Paid v-•--nl -··1a1. 14 4 5 "•. lie. &: gd dnvmg rec. CROOKS Gardening · SEWING-DESIGNING , ma I J electnrmechan1cal f th. ha"· f · "" , .. """'-"" """'" Complete Gardening parts ~r Stor isod ~Calo 1c~I· Adhe11ive Sales Reta $11K Superior. Newport Beach. req d. Apply at, ......,..., La- Servtce. landscapini:: .l Men/\Vomen. Reu. Rates · P\eaAe Apply ~:::1rtin,art ~.~~. nen:.::c.t A/P-Con~truchon $1iOO * Housemother * guna Canyon Rd, La& Bch. ......t.1 .. 646-8120 aft 6PM $10 min. call S..7450 GULTO NDUSTRlES Payroll Clk-Constr $650 .. ., ..... _ N I Dl."nnis Personnel Agency of Ex Sec $650 f or alcoOOlic v.1>men's rehab Keypunc"'n GARDENING SERVlCE Alteration...-642-5845 .1644 Wh ilticr Ave., C.P.1. Irvine, 2082 Mictielllon Dr. cc. ' ·relacy hse Santa Ana. Some know!-29 O Rea.90nable -Rf-liable Neat, accurate. 20 years exit. ASSIST. trtGR TRNE DENTAL Assistant, Chair ~ge~k::1f::·yAcct ~: edge alcoholism. Rm, board, 1 perators * ~ * Til.e PART-TIME side. Exp. only. Pre"ventive Sec'y-Laguna S55(I gd s.a.lary. 5 day week. Write Need 10 operators. Register • Accounting and Bookkeep-- lng Equipment • Graphic Arts Equipment e Adding and Calculating E:qu.ipmenl • Typewriters, manual and electric WE HAVE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS license Training Limited Time Only Famous license course now available thru Tarbell Com· pany. Applicant. fully r&- lmbursed upon qnaliflcatlon. New or experienced sales people. Openings available, Complete training program. Future management oppor- tunities. Call Mr Sloan at 842.5581, TARBELL REALTORS REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL Salesmen & brokers! The op. portunity Is here? You are needed Immediately for our rapidly expanding Re a I Estate division. Positive op- portunity for advancement. Phone. R.E. Trainee. Brkr & developer will train & sponsor for lie. Call between 10am-3pm. 545-1124. RECEPTIONIST Love People? t.oca1 co. seeks happy smiling individual to train fur lhe'ir !root desk. Lot.s of public conlact. Call Sharon \l.'all. 833-2700. Den· nls & Dennis Personnel Agf'ncy of Irvine, 2082 P.fichelson Dr. General Services ---------practice FI time N Sr. Mech. Dt>signer $825 PO Box 1904. Costa l\tesa, now to r s Pe c I a I CERAMIC tile new & ~9 :30 EVES. Saturdays, $500. B ~a ch Ta.-.: Se<:rctary $600 92627. Attn: Personnel. ass:ignments. Above average SALESMAN * • • * • remodel. Free nt. Small DIVISION of i:ianuf. co. hwi area. 962-2436. l\1edicn.I to $600 earnings. 2nd & 3rd shifts. for confidential inte?View, Good Ptitentlal STABLE EMPLOYMENT EXCELLENT BENEFITS I Vlck1 McCarty jobs welcome. 536-2426. immcd. openings for young ==='-'--'=----Al!Kl Fee Positions Must have expcr. Call Nora, p h 0 n e Floyd Townsend. Call Mrs. Schmidt 30l Orchid ~~~~~~~~~~! men over 21 ~·ho need a DENTAL Assistant-with ex-NEWPORT 833.-1441 .... 9 AM-Noon. WESTCLIFF Coron11 Del Mar, Ca. ; ~r!:.n;1n~~~~supplcnicnt :e~~~:. 1abc~r~i ~"~ Personnel Agency sA1~:S~o~:~rNG Kel!Y Girl :1J ~1:e~ ~~t·B:~e~ ~er:'e~r;::iffA~~~ck You lll'C the wl.nner ot_ ~;;;;;•~u;l;J;••~.;nTil~!~l~I $4 75 HR mys. Interested ln working 833 Dover Dr., N.B. Ideal oppot"tUJ1ity for full, 2~1 Bu11ness Ctr Or. Machines Services Division, G45-2'i'ro 2 ti<'kets to the il!!J · ln Christian office, $400-vio. 642-3870 ·part time. or retired .-...r. Irvine 833-1441 County of Los Angeles, 9230 I 0 C For lnt1rvw : 547..()913 Phone 548-2886. ""'!'~!!!!!!"l"'""!!!!!!"'"~~· I ,,... SALES\VOMAN, matu r e. 9th Annua rang• o. -';i~iiiiic-'...'i;~i"-~;;;-·Joioiiiii;;iii;;iiiiiioiii~iii-J ".:: sons. Show our extensive E, Imperial H i g h w a Y • lei • B . d r e 5 5 5 h 0 P . lnternatlonel Job Wanted, Mal<i 700 A.SsISTANT Food Mgrs., DIRECTOR OF FIRE & Casualty, gen'I ofc New Llne·ol Specialty Ad· KEYPUNCH Downey, California 90242. dress/splo;wr exp req'd. Auto Show penn p/Ume wknds. $2.50 work, expcr. P/timc. CdM v-'ising, Calendars & Ex· OPERATOR incl Su FINANCIAL I ,-oeo_3165 •a • Steady part time n-lit !he CHEF. hliff ·caliber, fully hr. ~1103 before noon. oca ion. ,.....,... · ecutive Gifts to Business ORDER Takers, women.girls days f!9.Hi232. ANAHEIM "'P 1D all ·pb.uea, de1ire11 AUTOMOTIVE PLANNING FOOD Mgr., basically wknds Firms & Organizations. No Immed. opening for IBM 129 over 19, from our offire. _::oc:_c:::c==-~~- CONVENTION change. Einployed at at snack stand. $.1 hr. investments, l'oUections, opr. Good salary~ benefits P.art or full time, day or SALF..S Clerk-plumbing or CENTER 90Phlt1tk:ated country club. LOT BOY N~ Beach financial ln-838-1103 bt>fore noon. 00,_, -port• or district In our HB. locat10n. Only eve$. No exp nee. Salary hardware exp. Earls Plumt>. Avtll Nov 1, Resume on s1tuat10n has 1mmed.late --=::,,::=-==~=--q """• '" . exp, 129 oprs need apply. $165 hr. Call 894-2750 bef 5 ing Inc. 1526 Newport October 11th thnt 15th req. Paul Martin. 742-3003 Mlnwst be hato<d MworkTer. Apply opening for director of Fry Cook, Expar. managers. Spec.ta! promo-Call 842-7751 for appt. PM. Blvd., C.P.f. Pleue call Hl-M"IS. ext. 314 Escobdido pe.J110n r. -estate & busitll'lll!i plans. Ap~~ tions to help you get started UNICUARD INS. GROUP ..o..;*=--,..--.--.~-.-SALESGIRL _ Fine jewel~ . DAVE ROSS C I t h · h t AAA 1 ., between 9 and 5 pm to clalm you NG man 11 eeks o ony C en ~·11 a ow . pressure -LADY or man wanted to B. Steven Peterson store. Contact Mr. Fowler. your ticketa. !North County full/pt-time employment In PONTIAC ~!tvyh:;'~.la; ~ef':t81~ 3211 Harbor Blvd. rated firm m our 63rd y~ar. deliver envelopes, with car, 400 Onda Klrk Jew<!lers, Huntington toll-lrff number 11 !>41).lttlJ. landacaplnir: I: gardeni~. 24llO Harbor Blvd. analysis service. Prevkms Cost• Mesa Prompt, helpful t"OOperation. ll("8.! appearance. Apply at Center 892-5501. * * * * • Costa Meaa i nsurance & CLU \Yeekly commissions. Uber-2'23 Ave. Del Mar, San Newport Beach, Calif. SALESLADY for jewelry Exp. &tfr'725l. background prefd. FRY Cook, f/Ume. $2.50 per al Bonus. Write lo John Clemente. You are tne winner of store. Refs reqd. HANDYMAN • All kinds of * Exp male bookkeeper AVON CHRIS'Tht.AS EARN-hr to 1tart. Chance for 'ad-l\lcNeer,'Dept. 1890, Newton MAINTENANCE Mechanic 2 tickets to th e * 548-3402 * ~ty. •~4: ~ :m~L~~· with INholGldS oanh hc:l1~ m 1 a,ke the SaI 1 ary will •"' In a1"~,. talorw:-e ~p Sf;Jn!;., ~~: CC~flee Mfg. Co., Newton, Iowa for rental yrd. s 0 me 9th An1 nual Olor•ng1e Co. SCHOOL Ha. n d y man , in-ays app..,r o your w exper. qu 1 1ca ns. • · • · 50208. . delivery work. Applications ntemat na eluding gardening, p/tlme. Haullng entire family! ll's easy llCll· submit resume w/salary FRY Cook, Mat &: clean, Ap.. accepted 9am-12am, Sat Auto Show 3 days.per wk. $250 mo. No Job Wanted, Fem1le 702 lng, fine Avon product!: for requlrem~~t in confidence ply In Person, H. Salt Fish 10/14. AT Hatley & Nixon at the calls. Apply In per!IOn, TREE Y.'Dn:. Garage 1 yd GOOD TYPIST our Irresistible Christmas to; .Clrut~ilierl ad no. 527 c/o & Chips, 2750 Harbor Blvd., -~=====c-c~-1 Rental Inc 2.862 Barranca ANAHEIM Sunflower Early Achieve-clnup. J.1ove & Mui: Aak for C 1 C 11 N Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, CM * INSPECTOR * Rd 1-•-t ~ t ~0 W M&T. 642-1401 WUI do your typing •t ~;;;:i~u~. 8 0 w · C~2~a~bsappo' ;a~~~p'i!"6ye~ FURNITURE MFG. 1·2 yrs, ex~r. w/machinel-""'-' ::~.:,MA"::,::~·c.L~L~l~E~'~S--. -COCNEVNETNETRION S!"no~;~~!:. s.A:-' ' SKIPLOADER & dump truck her home, Wiii rlckup ""! parts. Plastics exper, help-Be Salo d S E woril:. Concrete, asphalt, and deliver loc• H .B., BABYSITI'ER for 2 yr old Production SU,pe?Visor case fu\ A I in "" n Wlg le auty n esln:s October 11th thru 15th e•m1tres1, xpo1r. q,wlng, bmkina;. 846-7110. boy, weekday mornings. orRECI'OR of Nu r l'I £!' s, goods dept., or upholstery PP Y ,,.._l"!IO • competent hair &/or wig Pl all 642 5678 314 Female. 536-3100 for appt. F .V., West, 7Sc per pt. Ute hikpe. Irv. 5S2-858t. Nunes Aides, day shift. 11upt. Ne""' Orange Co. head-Edler lndustrlc!, Inc. sty\lsts. Sal & comm &: va· • ease c -· ext. . YA.RD. garaiie cleanup!!. or will work by hour B1tnk AlllO, 2nd Cook, Apply ln quartered company. Ground 2101 DovE' St. cation. Call Cheryl at between 9 and 5 pm to claim R<Drlmow '""".·1 dl84rt7 ivy. c•ll 147-3095. ELL TRAINE penon, Garfleld C1'l l'IV. floor oppty. Call 557-0052, Newport BCach 548-3446. your tickets. (N~rth County vewys, gra fli. -2666. T ER E llQ5P, 7781 Garfield AW:. HB (Across from o.c. Airport) toll-free number is 540-1220). y~ !.1 .G~~~a'Q:ii FEMALE age 42 i;eeki.ng p/t 14500. Do you enjoy the l'l\\'t>el 8'17-9671 G~~ ;:~uD\:00.Y: Growing con-INSURANCE. SECRETARY. MANAGER * * * * • e mp. exp: 10 yn. med. or. miell of m<lfl('y'l Do you love Director of Nu rs Inn p,-nal 1•~ ex,...ri.-""' anytime, ~L fl-· fr & ha•k I It• bk ("""' mH"llng l'lf'W people? Then • struc·tion rlnn needs gal '"" u~ ,~ "'""''" p I t C t ...... '" • · .. ,~. thia b!lnk ls lf(!ell;lng sharp N.B. area. Good potent.la! for w/CON1trucUon exper. to be preferred. Typing. involelng • n er-arpen er GEN. Jlaullna. T?el!tahnab tile. Willing 10 lf!IU'l'I any In-per'IOftllblc perllOll like yoo. right indlv. Call (7141 rlghl hand to owner. Great & office routine. South Temporary, 40 hrs, g.5 trim. Gar I: yd cleanup. Eld tel'E'sling offk'" H.B. area. Call Kim Cl•"· •. 33.~00 642-2417. ari 1 Sal coast Insurance. ru Ocelln Once In A Porter 839-2303 &57-6904 Write claAA. ad No. 516 c/O '"'• n. .. , • v e Y spot. BO' to $6&(), r a ........ B L'f ti Opportunity ' · Omnla A OmniA Per118nnt>I DISPLAY Adverti!>il'J&: Sales f"ee PAirllAlso Fee Posl-Avenue • ._ .... _ each · I e ml Penn. 20 hrs, 6-10 am HoutMINnlng Daily Pilot, P.O. BmL: 1560 Agency of Irvlt1<', 21)12 J.1cn or women. E;cfl. only. tioll!I. Call Jea11 Brown, 64--1031. Interview hrs 2...fi pm R•lnbow Window Costa Mesa, cat~ Mll'hel,,c>n lJr. Call 9 •m-S pn1. ~. ~. Qlulal Agl"ncy, Fat Profit ta attained 'When We seek oulstandlng sall"I Penonnet Office M I t tUNSTR. Sec'y, Fu 11 y Banking t..evia -sell tnoee b..1ubles for 2190 H11.rhnr· Bl .. CM. yoo sell through result-get· oriented lady to manage THE BROADWAY • n en.nee qualilled P/R. P..,. ,Eal. UNION BANK ~~'. _f!U O...med HOUSE Hunllng1, Wa~ ting OaUy Pilot Claulfied TEMPO'S new~! office in TTT7 Edinger, Hunl Bch. Commen:lal-Rnlck·nllal Union reporui. Lettttl on V'M""o.IUu.. OfEN IIOUSE column. Ads. M2-5678 lrvtne, Ideal for retrultl or-Equ.aLOppoc. Employer Secretary Kelly Girls 67!>-0429 for e1Umate tape, S/H or eanwc-. fJ01 ari o~nln.-for a I•'"' W• .. t". M • F lfft l.feln Want••. M 1 F 710 H t W led M & F 710 lenled, career minded, LADY wanll houllttltanirw P I ck up -DcUvtr. 1Help CREDIT VERIFIER -;;;;;;;:;;;";;-;;;;;';;;;;;0;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";;;;";;;:;;;"n;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jJ creative gal (who likes to -.vortc. Expt'I'. Own tra111. prepare bidl ~ This job wlU allo tnvolve t,! run her own show). This Is $3.50 hr. Call 8C7~3637. 5'i3-8.1l2 be.fore nooa. loan ProceMina. Experience a responsible position with Needs your skills! Work where you're appreciated on long or short term tem- porary usignments. Worlc w/lhe top companies In Orange Co. Chooee the days. hours & locatlQ_n most con- venient for you. Excellent PARKING attendant put eamlr1'J, weekly paycheck. time, 18 or over, ne:a.t ap-No ree. Let U!I start you pearanoe. 6#-1100 ext. 55.5. w/-yoor bnt foot forward. PHONE DISPATCHER ~{Y~~:r,::~ 9ct~-NOr~ nouSECLEANTNG NEED ,,,,. tul ~r w. :,":"nb';:; T~= :~ .\~ Cramer Electron1'cs So. c.ur·. fut"' growing BY 'MIE JIOUR $2.50. have Akles, ~ U t I I t , Ni port Ce I Or N B 1l'!11porat')' help 11ervice. Ex· for long established service Irvine 83).1441 co. Permanent job for right [ "'"'"""'""'""'""'"'"""'"""'[ Rellable. 642-5.159 eves. H 0 " 1ekpn, OOftt...,..,., A~t>qwt.l O; :'or t ~ n 1 l Y Ail Electronic Component Distributor Presently Located In cellent Wary I: loada ol JAPANESE LADY TO DO Homemaker1 UP JO h n , Employer benerlt.t . penon, Apply mornings, Secretary 11 OUSECLEAN I NG. 54Hl631. •BEAUTICIAN W/NEAT Glendelo Is Movi•g To New Modern F•cilities In Irvine On NEEDSTRANSP. Elt·leacher, JO, a nractiw, APP EA RAN CE . FO R Or About December 15th. -of C -Cl AtA J.~ng. !!N!k11 iid tull-tfme BmY SHOP. s.t&-9919. Pr • •rpet ••n1ng l=')>='b"°. "'5'8""'·'"::,'::,' ""'"·•:,,· ~8-<.:,;;PM~,,, 1 Mao w1ndow1 & noor rare F01\. A PRrvATE NURSE Bookkeep('r call Dutch a 3 1 ~t~08, IN llOME, Pl-TONE ~ We ~ one Auton)Qtlve &am-Cpm. A.M. Bookkerper with OMV rx· .... _ _., __ :::i C'-onl-nt perle:nci!. Smd ph<ito I: ..,_~TM! .. Sh'"WJNG draperies I o r reeumt to no,; SOI, d o * WI! 'DO E'YERTmlNG * campen, mohllt' hom6. DaJly Piiot, 330 Y.'n.t 81.)' J~ Jllft nl. 646-2839 1tation "gn~ .. eh:. 64!>-31m. Strr-rt, C.O.a Ml'U., Calil. TOP GAL • TOP SAL. Con1pan\on/CioYmn&-.;92\26;;;::co· ______ _ ALL )lllCP'[ffO stRVtCt:S ~ tr'Rcht"I'. free to Bookk('epcr NJL AREA ....... lnlVl'I. Reta. ~1&-(Mt2 evn. we llN'tl Mf' 1utomottvt +• AJbtrtj haa n. rtebt Helo Wanted, MI F 710 Rookkl'<'Pl'.!r. Srnd phOtO 1-m.w )lft fir )'00 rca;mf' 10 Box sen, c/o Call l3f-<l5C.\. A Bettf'r Ttmpu"ar)' PoaiOon o.Uy P1_1ott 330 ~''91 Ba)' Jonltorlol Urgently N••ded St-. "'"" M-. Ca!ll Unlidll<d 92;2ll, J~• Cleon"" ......., • c•-..._ -...... Rttldtnt!AI -Cmnmerdal ~ We nef'd ~ Au1omatlv11 • fMH..184 fl • Pack9n Book):Hprr •'11J1 machine lllndtc.eplng wtlJ n-aln dpt'llWfltt. Stud )llwlk> .. rnumt to Bok 501, c/o UN01CAl'IN0 N..,...,. A, • ., Dolly l'llol, :I.lo Weot S.,, ,.... .. 1qwr • -•i...i Interim st...,., c.."' ,.,..., c.ui "1lc "' lanthati;J:ilts ea11 P9'IClllMI S.nlc• =-==---~-­l::.p1~ •Mal~~ 771 W. 20th, C.M. ~fn'::~~~::,1f~~ Co. '7t11niov.tll!W law,.. A 642°7513 ~2592 eel pltlme:. Bookket.plng ~ at thl1 tlmo." lnh•rvlf'Wt"' !J.U It 1-1 lh"' trW blll"•• 'rn1 le F!w ....._'1'229 ill S. A·l Babysitter .,.,_Id Mon. !l II n-q. Pref otet • mn• ~ "'"' Fri. 11 !q, 4 dally. i 1~, .•• "'. , •• ~..!. !!!'i!.1"'1_ • .!>'. Boy•. ~ ..t Tr -.Our Mf"l'lll "..,.. ~·· •-"'>D-."ll"O" lltlCK, ILOCK & V•nlc homo only . .....,IK1 ll•ve -IOI ,... wont to Mane wor1t., &68266 6*190:\ nfle:r 2 pm. ldJT Q1Ff!M adl • It Ci.,,usmm ••••••• iii41\ Need 1 "?ad"T Platt llh ad! wt!:H • call NOW 9Q..8fta. ' \ Between Now & The Mov1 Tho New P8"onnol Driving From Or•nge County to Glend•lo Will Bo Reimbursed For Mileage • 1 • • We Aro In Need Of 'rho FoKowing Personne l Immediately: -Connector Assembleri ---'Order Fillers & Warehousemen ---'Cutlomer Service Erpoditon --Ord ... Typist. --~Fgo Clerks ---lWX Operotor Interested ~ndidotes Please Cont•cl: Scott .Nerson Cramer-Los Angeles 608 SO!laro, Glendale, Ca 91201 1213> 245·7121 or 12131 243·6224 All EqUAI Opportu nlly Employer ) ' I . c.11 Boo, 53).2322 For Confidentlol DAVIS -BROWN Co. leg.el S.C'y Tr•lnff U1 E, 17th St. CM. 81 .. .,. ......,,r carttr .h4."f'C Ir. 646-l~ ...... --dl!ICOVft' the exc:H1ng & \\'Oil• dcrful Uf~ an attorney's 8'!'C- rt'lary leads. Plush ofc le lntere11tlna client•. Call Ue Phillps, 833-2700, Dennls & Denni• Pcrwonnel AJJ;ency of ltvlnc, D2 Mlchet80!\ Dr. SEX;R.E1'ARY: G row I n g atchtt~I nnn needt sharp appearlnl p l w/nlc-e Pf'MIDntllhy. SOml! expef'. tn bookketplrc • plus. No sh needed on thlt: ~. Only work 'l hOun. Sta.rt $SS). C.11 N""" Mt,y. 54MOSl5. Ollltal ~ncy, 2T90 llarbor Blvd .• CM. Appointment PRINTERS • P/tlme. 'Exp. °I::=~ °I::::::::::=:: AB Dick & Multi. Aloha ii il:i Printing, MARKET !l'1!M711 RESEARCH p b R-'--' ASSISTANT U • '"""OM Sec:Ntary Newport SeJch nn..nctal in. 1 .-.. U! · t l ~ slltuUon h a a Immediate ........ ,. nn u~mcn • -.• oPenlftl for a b r t a h t , r:!1:nae bro. 1•· ~450 crtttfVe lndlvictwll who ha.ti NEVER A f'Et AT TEMPO at Jeut 2 yr1. llL'lUnd hu$lne111 ex:per., •trona: aoo-Ttmpo Temporary Help ~ patttm. A good com-R.E. salea. All ~ crmCf'J>', munlcaUon 1klll&. Worntn only, Work 11.B., You will cond\ict mutu>ttrc F.v .. C.M. arta. Rl!Ct!.vt up ~1eercfl acttvUift • usttt to UO~ comm. Cd. ad pro. In m1.npowtr development. W'lllt\-Lad.I provided, No broker com,pcUUon. Cd. up Top bendlta I: unique WDric limo. Xlnl training, ~Im· f'11vlronmtnt. f' o r ~ bunt> scbool fOt thOle not tidttatton. please wbmll 11 ruaimr. includlnc 111.lary re-c. qulrem"'ll In confide...,. to: STANDARD R. E • 0...IJ.led td no. 53> C/O Call Mary 55538 Do.Uy Piiot. P.O. Boo 1!160, or Le< l:U-!100 Cole• M~IR. C.llf. ga, Raal E1t•te S•let EqU411 Oppor. \:mploytr ,...,.~~..,.~~""'"'""'[Why Ml lllll in tho "bonm-MASSEUSE lnsb'l" cltJeii In thr u .s • Good boun. XJnt 1$. llun11n.(too BMeh/rountaln ~ 10 am lo I P'!I ~jfg_·n MC"Namtt A IOOd want ad 11 • pod tn-VUlage Real E1t•te vmment. '62.+4n n n ' In n- n. ,, ., DAJJ. Y l'll.OT PU.OT-ADVERTISER w~. C>p*' 11, 1t12 J(Il] I ': I t ; I l!IlJ I •t. • e a l~I ~1 .:.I _ .... _ .. _. ~1~~1 ~1 --;;;;~1~;113 Ll::::7 .... ~!1 ;..-----~ Pl•-;~;OBBY 126 •,~•EE•c1<•.ea•1,•C"•.,~-. &-~•T'•,;,,•1 J ;:w:0'1ar ~ ~rill. 842-rm, Eve•. *=~ ~~ IN Mlsull•noous Help Wanted, M & F 710 'ielp Wentod, M & F 710 Auction I04 Auction Dinette M.-t with 6 a r e e JI SECREl'ARY • ~ptloollt. 1'ELEPHONZ Bila' Soll EXTREMELY IMPORTANT volve1 chain llll.00 CHINA mblnet"' hutch, an- ltntg Bcb, X1nt typist. Tu Soutbem Oran&:e Cow>~• EXHIBITION CANCELLED Cbest(Sdrawen) ~00 t1Que ar new. Large . Don't"""any ......... nuntllyoo Ill l20 $600. l n t er v I e w • in Favcrite Newispa,er from Chell (5 drawenl fl,0.00 n--nable. &M--t687. .,..,, -·-· • ·•-·~ 1~•) 5311431 · h "00 ~ can play! Non·rlayus Y•cl· ~---..w -• ,YOl.lt' home'. Make u muc NOW' 2 BookcB.lel !etl .... ...-u""c-n:<b Am··· 0 , SECRETARY for national as you need. Genaoua com. u c T 10 N Dbl mattreu A box r•-...:..i:;.J.r..•'" --t.'Ome 10 11.tt.:-nd r~ work wlnit conaultant's Corona. m1akm on each sale. Call A •Prln&• $30.00 !imilar. Upright or chest. shops, Fqr 111f(lm\10on KITTENS, 1 Black, while ae1r ofta' over $1 f J • paw1; I Calico. Both VU)' 8»-8333;, pn'lty. 675-QT72 Alter 6 SILKJE ~rrler Pup1. AlCC P.M. Cou ld be champ 1. COCKAPOO. •don.hie male, Odorlea ro llh~. tit4"!t champagne, 9 mo. Days: F-$175. Or best ofrer. (-q'IJ 5.58--8161, eve: 66-762). 538-22311. dtl Mar ore. Above aver. 5ST-6739. Bedroom IE."l of 1 Bookcue, 1 • 548-5692 * Contact: Tom DWtrrleh SU. t y pl D g, phone • ...;,.,..,.".,--....,.,..-,.-....,.-1 of deak, l (6 dnLwtt) chelt WANTED: Silverware. Will 642-2851 Knowledp of bk 'k Pg· T•ltphone Host11Mt wUh mirror $96.00 come to you. 548-9751 or Coast Music Service Calico &.,'-:!.'.Tufair Cals. SltOW CLASS Jo"rl. Nit.ell 1'::1> 1U11111 p.m. Tn!Ptuted! Ca 11 * 6t5-7 • P.1artincrt?sl Kenne It, helpful. 673-5972. No selling. Work for: top land · ,. ERSIAN CARPETS All In-GOOD CONDITION at --~~"---------Newport Blvd. 111 Harbor SECRETARY, Bookkeeper, compallymakingdlnnerre1-a good price. WANTED Loveiea.l size mta Costa !'o1eu Sml Medical Manufacturina ervations by phone, No ex-p S40-0lS hide-a.bed. 644-'687. ___ :::_:;.:..:,;;;:;,,.~~ Co. Call for appc 541 ..... 16. """ No ... """''''" Top Rare & Ancient Art Form Sl'EREO Im Gauud *PIANOS*ORGANS* SEU. FAMOUS KNAPP salary, Generous bonuse.1. AT model, aysteml.ied full ai7.e Musle11l lnstruments l22 Going Out 1''or BU&.lneu SHOES Part-time or Full-Interview-daily from 3-6:30 changer, AM/FM stereo Best quality· prices· aerv. =. ~pp~ .... ~~· pm, 892-'1345. BEKINS MOVING & STORAGE COJPANY r:""·~CA 1°i:.!""' x1~ c~~r.~:L ""=';.:!'"i•:t.•" 7 Mo. C.oUle/Sbepherd, Gd --~~~-~"'""',.---:-:­w/ldds. Nteds ~home. TERRJ-POO pupa. ~1486. f''rankf'nstdn, Bat ~ mlssklns Are HighL'r Than LER IUSP@nsion speaken. Still Hard to find Fender, small Renlals .......•. \Ve Su.y-Sell Ever. No Investment\ Free TEL 1535 Newport Blvd. ~in box' IUU'· Was left body claWcal guitar. Ex-0&1J,y 1().6 sun as FREE KITTENS Woll Man, Ft!rdioand. ~ 847...3002 m-1379 Equipment! Free Training Costa Mesa, California --"ent finish, M:ulptured FIELD'S PIANOS FREE KITTEN Hor1es .. ·-· Pn>gram! Interested! Write unclaimed. Otiginally ..,.v. ..-.:.u R. A. OIManio. Knapp w d sda October 11 8 p m. • Now $'15. Cash °' ..,.,...... machine ........ and new Co<la M"a (n<) 615-3250 NEW ...... to """' ~ Shoes, Brockton, Ma 11. Attractive opening for win· e ne y, , . La,yaway Dept. n4:893-«i01.. AugUStine strings. Original· PIANOS • ORGANS . FREE beautiful Germon ~.."!:!~h H&o_!'~~. ~ 02401 dow teller. Sil.vinp & loan ly acquired for $150, This Hammond, \"urlitur, many Shepherd pup. 3 month old. ,..,......,. '"" SERviCE St.atlon man experience prelerred. Viewing and inspectio~ from 6 {>.m . until * AUCTION * won't last with first $15 otbe'n. Pre-seuon •J>Kials. 536-7181. ~a~~~ .. ~!il-:J:f w/exper. for eve. shift. Age ti.me of auctioD. Auctioneer: Leib Rosen-Ftne Furniture taking it home. Call Alike. model c:Jose-outs. Piano A. TOY-Terrier mix, cam1..ot & no factor. Good pay &: IMPERIAL SAVINGS blum -Globe Trade Exchange Company. a Appli.ucel 615-1527 aft. 6. Organ rentals. t.1oncy aav· white, 3 mo1 old, female. FOR sale. St.a.ndArd ~ comm. Apply Chevron sla· ........... -, ~ .... , T.·30 p.m. 12'' •·-1 h ~-•t mlnds well. 962-3481. b'1"idlnc. 4 yn: old . .....,. & LOAN ASSN AU<;....,., .,.,......., VOX Amp, 23J watts, 2 tng ._.t>a ns are ere ._. ~~~.So. Coast Hwy., 3300 Vla Udo • Terms: Cash or Check Windy's Aucffon Barn spkrs., wheelll. $140. now at: PUREBRED Redpoinl 54~3255. -.. rt Beach 673-3130 -"· ... ft-CM 64S-8686 6G-50'13. Wallichs Music City Siamese caL Good d\sposj· Fqlstered qtr hone tUJy.. SERVICE STATION AT-•~C!wpo ""'"7W "'e"l"''" Kl CFA tion. 67>7739 or 546-T.d. 8 rftbl. $"100. TENDANT. Airport Texaco, Equal OpPQrtun.ily Employer ·--Appliance• I02 Behind Ton,y'a Blda: Mat"l ~ni:~~~ S4.5~en, ' South Coast Plaza 5-10-28.30 BEAUTIFUL collie, need• ~~~~·~-~~~·~~~! 4678 Campus Dr., N.B. TELLER: Beaulltilulf bank 1 I[ i J) w As HER s Dryer•. Baby Furniture 546-9965 5 Play<!r Piiuw:is, rebuilt & aoocl home. 67S-7739 or -•-( needs exper. te er or note . ' ndltloned $10 00 -flnllltlC'd, •""':'i-$1175. Nrw 546-7308 ~ SERVICE St.a. Atlt:nua.n' dept. WW also teach some ~ Dishwashers reco. •Pl~.............. . Office Furniture/ ., ~· l I•* iuaveyd shift. Must be ex-genera] clerical duties. A lot _ . g u a r n . De 11 v ere d D~11mg table , .• ••••• 15.00 Equip. 124 & Oiied rolls. Dupl'l'e Pl llyl·r GORGEOUS silver tabby, .::--~ 1'. per & neat. Apply, 3190 of public relations & 546-5218/839-7620. Crib &-mattress •• , .. • 45.00 1-,;;;,o.;;..:;..______ Pianos. 545-4650. ~\IHllOS. a11L'red cat. Needs good I;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:;· ;;~1 Harbor, CM. variety. Salary to $500. Call Help Wanted, M & F 710 High. chalr •········•• S.OO ANSAFONE. WW answer Store, Restaurant, horn<'. 675-7'739; 546-1'308. I 1 SHIPPING & RECEIVING: Jan Page, 54D-605.5, Coastal Furniture 110 Basl.lnet .............. lO.OO .,,.., .. phollt!, take mes&age1 Ber 832. * * Male. shaggy dog, n--'-, General 900 This fine ro. wlll train nice Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, * TYPISTS * 2 car seats . ·· · · · {ea.) 5.00 .rv-1-...:;;:;;.._______ lovable, h01.11;ebroken, 1 yr Uuti•• cleancut young man. 1st CM. * * * * * 540-8308 i play back to remote con.. HOTPOlNT G r I t I s , old. 97!r8135. Ralse ln 30 days. Day shift . .-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Register Ior Richard StrMd REFRIG. GE free7.et' top, trol holder over any phone. 21taln1eu steel s: tan d s SML blk Labrador. 1 yr ol.d. ~~n ~~:~4~.o~ Typist a teml:Jr:;3' job 9191 Half LeaguehD,Cive =~=· ~ 63U:· = c.::='c.·.:~.:;1_::=u"1'-·-.. -.-.,,=.,.-. -.. -~ ~f:erkll1'::~: ~in1~~~ ~.~ctill~ ~n. Gd SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 O lntervws: 9-12 Huntington Beac , 11• Denl~ set w/oof!l!e &: end e-cutive desk &: matching steel hood &. blov.1:'ni. Russ I ~~J~Be~au=,U,;fulc;="ki"''™":.0:::-- Harbor Blvd., CM. NEEDED We Need All 92646 tables, newly covered. $100. chair. Sacrifice both for Hamburgers, 2144 Ne\1.-p:>rt •to good hornn* SHOE SALESMAN. Part Ottlce Skill.! You are the winner of Pictutts, men &: women's $600. Phone (TI-I) 644-8814 Blvd., Costa !'oll'M, &l2-1ti16 •644-!49'7• time. Exp'd. Male or IMMEDIATELY: Equal Oppor. Employer 2 tickets to the clothing numerous misc. or &t2-3072. ~~~~~~~~~ Pock('! -GaudY -Shea.I -v l'Stry -SJ.I.AKER Female. Call for appt. Male &. Female 9th An I 0 Co items. 646-1091 .::_.:::..:::.:c_____ TV' R.clio, HlFI, Weste rn Girl Inc, nua rang• ' EXFC swvl chr Sl5 . 23 Sec Stereo 136 968-3397. Technical 466 Ma•Arthu• Blvd . International SCUBA tank&: reg., full wet 18 •-ks 1.1 ... ,...;.;.;,;.:,;; _____ _ Oxnmf'nl about It ~tripper: SOLDERER 1 Yr. Min. Recent exper. in cord\l.'OOCI or flat board module. !'ofust read resistor capacllor diode code. • ' A I Sho suit, bell, knife. etc. 1 yr. chr S8 • "'""' i es ,.,. FISHER Repro 54{}.{1325 u 0 w old, hardly been used. Must 867 \V 19th CP.t 642-3408. Statistical at the 1 d'-uJ ....... _ 1 ['1.;j .. Isn't ~· a dOll'? That j1rl ls the aall of the ('fll'1h, and i:•~'ha::::,t~a~~~·.:;tA~KE.:::;-R!~'~"~~~cl General Office No F~~stf~~~!~nings ANAHEIM ;e!s~:i:.:e ~ ~,;.; Pi1nos/Orpn1 826 POWER! to• , ho· t & •-g tem1 CONVENTION measure, l"tc. Pho n e Fisher KX·90 40 watt M1S IC:.•:.•:.:•c_ ______ U_2 e YAOfrING lfAGAZINE CQLJ..F_,CTION. 192M TO Please Anoly GULTON INDUSTRIES 1644 Whittier Ave., C.1\1 . STORE Clerk, full time. Ap.. pllcant over 21. bondable, good physical cond. Must have car, lelephone & be able to start work immed. lntereslln~ work, ltd salary. 835-7417 Tic Toe Markets. snIDEN'l'S, I d e a I pt time jobs Mon-Fri eves + Sat AM. Hrly wage & bonus. Ap.. ply 15056 Jackson, l\1'iilway City. 894-2331 Xlnt earnings -Long & short term temporary assign- ments -varied & interest· ing work • choose t h e day, hours & location mcst convenient for you. Weekly paycheck. No Fee. • • ...... Optigan Elec Organ asllignments or ,.,..,.manent CENTER , ;8372-96820:::;.·,,..--,=7'7.::= ~ SI stereo amplifier !power ,,_. 1~ new , never u~. ereo-placements. Call us now! ocrober 11th thru 15th NEW white P'eated 1bears phonic sound, $39'5. 548-8531 souree only) 1111d walnut P.P.S. Pacific Personnel Please call 642-5678, ext, 314 w/o v er drape 1. Comb. 540-1419• eaS<!. Controls Include: loud· Services, 112 No. Tower between 9 and 5 pm to claim w/hardware fur 3 wtndows. -"""-""'--------1 ncu 1..'0nlour, bl~h tilter, 4 Union Bank Square, Orange, your tickets, (North County All 96" long Width 96, 1ll, WURLITZER organ, cherry function 11elec1or, 2 ~peaker ~~hel54~~· Ask For toll-free number i.s 540-1220). 144. W<lrth $350. Make otter. wood -4500 Jn()()el, like oulputa, concentric bass & "* * * * * 64&-4200 new, aacrlfice SJ.800, cost treble, tape monitor & h1..'Bd· Hr~tALAYAN kittel\I. O"A. Blue &: sealpoint. can fl.31-2939 after 4:00 p.m. PERSIAN I: Hlmala.)lan kll· tens, many CQWrs. ~ • up. • $2970 * PRE.~T. • 836-7421 • Boats/ M•rlne Equip. JOllNSON 75 HP (l 1{, rltt 11tart, In good n,innlrii: cond • A&kinK $<(al. ~l"l!'t-36\0. Apply in Person Kelly Girl WAITER for dining room. Must be exper. Apply in person, Hotel Laguna, 425 So. Coast Hwy., Lag Bch. _ ANTIQUE Marble' To P S32.40 54&-2'759. -phone jack. Cosl $150 nl'W D-• DINING set, 6 chairs. Opens Sideboard. 36x36x18.. $13(1. CABL&NELSON PLAYER . . . wire it inlo your syit-I ::::~!!.------.:154:.: to seat 12. Pu!frlce grey Down Love Seat. $50. 2 PIANO Ccllect01'fl item. 1 • mah:>gany, I~ Prov. Club Chrs, Antique gold. $35 i\1int cond. 646--3497 tern for only $65. cau t.Uke DARLING brown 10)' poodk '17' Unlllrr CrullW'r '69 Pt'rf Boats, Powe r 906 9 am • 12 Noon Only 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. WAITRESS Exper. &: mature waitress wanted 5 days a wk. No split llhills. No Sun. \I/Ork. Uniform turn. Med &: Hosp benefits. Apply Lindberg Nutrition, (In rear of the Toy World Store on loY ... er level So. Cst. Plaza. Shop- ping Ctr., in CMJ. Ask for Al Casbara. Cost Sl,700. Sa.entice, $300 ea 4 chrs • Selem Maple 642•2765. at 675-1527 a.fler G. puppy, 8 weeks old. 6424818 rood . OJ hra, auto pilot. I.DI or m.akl? <ltfer . 3602 Marcwl, szi. S48-«3li2 -"''-"=~=~~I~--'13 ZENITH & RCA color TV day!: ~J885, aft1..-r 6 pr1:.._ SIS 2-1 channrl CB. N.B. 675-~-eves & wknds. DANISH Mod teak 5 pc Br H~JeiND~.nel, specials. 18 .. oolor lrom Si.lkY T!".~ 8 moll old. ;::~. ·,.;.;m labs. aux lu8 lrYJn• · -al).1441 WALNUT bed,. box spr & set, $95. Slip cov. aofa. $'100 flnn. $289. 1.9" Chromocolor or AKC, ChamploS:~· rank, l·h'<'t hr-ad, 1111.h equip matt., $400 DinPi~ Lounge cbn. Mbc Ibis, • 536-67S7 * Matrix $375. 21" SoUd State All lbota. $150. 1 .l liait tank, uu.triq('f'S, f111h Lamps, Sl up. lampa. Walnut Jr OR set. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS $479, 23" RCA tri.blc model! 2 Poodle pups, black min. SIO ~.etc. Very dean. Mab ~~ecorator item 1 • ~~k Many itmui ,quaJ. TO BUY PIANO FOR $399. 23" Cllromocolor from ~ ~~· JO "'""· ofter. ~Tl. •••••••••••••••••••• MAPLE set • Solid thick PORTABLE building llx18' I CASH. 835-22'1'8. $475. 3 yr picture tube, l yrAK '~C~P~~~odl;;U.::-:pu=pp::;;,.::-, -:~;;;l;;;:vt•r !\.10\IED. Musi M!ll d1np". Map I e cof f ee tab I e Wood const., 2 nns, wired, Used Ortans Needed ~ ~;;,~ ;;'1 ~~= females.. 4i,; mo., $l!IO. Call i>it"l'tnc mo1or. b" t I c r 'I, w/;,r~~ e:;t ~tiit;~ Great fur trier hie, office, Highest SS PaJd i.n Cash Huntington Beach, 968-3329. aft.er 5, 846-'M24. ~:Zll"'o:'·c.' __ -.. __ '·~-"'°-· WE need 10 lfldies to sell our A~...,:,,do, No. ll, C.M. etc. EZ to move. $875. Call Cctllect 213: 814-6762 sr. BERNAitO Pupp1rs -- Christmas line of Sarah ............. ,, ,,_,,, SOLID State 11erro caMette AKC, St.SO.·S200. 1cm1s Ill' Glas1JrU Cabin CnJ1'.,. C.OVentry jewelry. No in· BEAlFTIFUL 8' Med It. 54~ HA!'o1MONO organ nlodel M· w/FM/AM,F"M atereo ** «U-0.».1 •• l':'M1p Ev. \\'/trier . Llv•' Mil vestment or deliv. Call Velvet !IOfa, never used. BABY playpen, c r I b. 111. Walnut. Marlc pre~t & radio & r('('Ord changer. fncl ~-"-"C.,:::C::==.c"::C:-=, tank l boat cuvcr. Now m 897-3896 or 835-:?>83. $180. Loveseat $95. Cocktail typewriter & u It a r & grill. $800. Eves 673-5122. speakers & ear phona. SM. bloflde, Pttk.apoo Sli: ~rt 8\\p. 21 l-l.V.122'J. For an ad In Woman's World WHO WANTS TO WORKT tbb $50 ea. Lam P s · aurfboa.rd. A good want ad ls a good in-•1ade by Panrut0nlc. Pd ~'irk~'. ~~:~~y•: 1 Cliualfied Arlt ... Sl2-5fi7R:" DRIVE A CAB! TI4-3600. M6"'9083 vestment. S.UJ. Sell $1Th. 96.1-3128 Call Mary Beth 642-5678, •xt 330 CHOOSE yoor hours, work Cust. Contemporary 8' 90fa, .:.::===-----Motor Hom" Motor Hornet Motor HorMt fur younelt, be your own Lemon yellow/white. Nu MoJ~to~r~H~iom~to~•:._ __ ~!.'...J~!L!~=======S:•:l•:/:R:•~n;t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;S;•;l•;/;R;•;n;t.;!ll;940~~I ~S·a·l~o/~R·····t···~Mll"°' I Quick-Sew Trio Snowman Slippen boss Men or women. Can be ed. $375. Also, carved Salt/ Rent s~htly handicapped. Vts, Spanish wiot c he s t . 9053 SIZES s.18 ,,., 1ff Mi..., 1ff e..1' ... You'll brighten up the :wene ln this sunbun1t~ imntsuit or dress wtlh e grnce:fUI lcncer'a look lo It. ru11-0n (l8nt.s nave elastic waist. Prlnlt.d PoUf'rn 900.1: NEW Mlue1' $iziea 8, 10, 12. 14, 16, 18. Sitt! 12 (bust 34, pantirult 3 1/8 y11."111 ~ln1·h. ~Vll\ITY • fn'E CEN'l'S for each pattttTI -a&; 25 ccntt tJr t•cb Pl' Item for Air Mall 11ocl Special Han- dllrw; othe.mlM 1hlrd·clau delivtt>' wUJ tab thl"t'lll weeks or more. Send to !'t-tarlan Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 4'2. P1Ht~ Dept .. 232 Wal 11th St., New Yori<. N.Y. IOOtl. Print l'l'UIE. .ADDJUCD with ZIP, llZZ Uld STYLI: ?<tlMllER. JOO Top f'IU·Wlnln' Pit· terns In all·new P'UllklM to !klw Catahc1 Plm ,.~1buloua bonU1 -chooM a FREE p&tttm. 15 ttl'ltl.. INSTANT SEWING UOOK •NW tod.Q, Wt&r ii)mQfTOW, $). INSTANT FASHlON BOOK • Hundredl ol f.uhkla fActl.. IL retired. Age 21 to 70, sup.. 83&-9798. plement your income. Drive MINOLTA SRT 101 with F a cab 6 hrs or more a day. l.4 normal lens & leather Apply in per!tOn, Yellow Cab case. Alst> r 2.8 l35mm tele· Co., 186 E. 16th St., Costa photo. SZ19. Ph. 673·2384. Mesa. lo WOMEN wanted, 1 8 • 2 4 . LIKE new. Sofa &. veaeat. Training pa.kt Ph Y sic a I Yellow & wbt game tbl. therapy &: massage. 254 King bed. 3 pc corner sec, w/AM/FM 548-6347. Beach St., Laguna Beach, 21...'.'-"'='-"''-"=.c=c...,--to 4 pm. OOUBLE bed & headboard YARD MAN $10. Crlbfmattreu: S 1 5 . ANCllOR l\farine Repeir Mesh p}AY pen UO. Ski booll has an immerl. opening. 1171 1 _,m""-._,Sl>-'.0'...::;2'1.:42".----~ Back Ray Dr., Npt Bch. STAGE Coach bunk beds. (Inside the Npt Dunes). very unusual. Ne'W $250. Sell -I~ $125. Brand new cond. 673-8244. GRANOFArnER Oock, din- ing table &-chain:, cofftt &: erx:I tables, Early Amer. all :dnt cond. 839-8487. ,A:.;;;n.:;ti:,:iqc;u.:•:.• _____ 8CIO;... BEDROOM set, complete. I• XI.NT COND. RUSSlAN corner china c:IO!lel * 54&-5976 * $100. Small Oriental chest I ~50-,~.A-1co25o'.=00-ott;c•~•"'t-•"bl"'•-=ss $35. Brau fireplace fender ' U). Spittoon. Marble chest lamp S2 slna:le bed. $10. table top $45 {inlaid). 673-6861. Otain. New klngsl7.e double ANTIQUE HOOlier. braae: dreuer $50. Bunk bed• $45, bed, Old ice box. Trunks. comp. w/mattreSfles. Book-842-8786 ends, etc. Bookcase. --~--~..,-,---COI.LOCI'ORS: klrmer U.S. •*•Sofa &: matching Jove President \J . B. Lansing\ seat, never used. Both SlM!. ---1 stereo 1pea.ken1, 7 ft. ebony Private. 968-7910. cabinet cost new $4(0), M.'11 h <lr trade, hest oiler over 9' Red vel~ .:>fa I: male . $100. 494-2742. ing swag lamp. Both like new. Only $1%>. 540-5675, ("\ n. ,,,... ANTIQUE walnut drop Leaf UPHOL om. 150. I.~. HU.ct. 1.::5~ table $5.5. 2 chrs (l815l Teak mlm.lr ICftt!n. f1S. "'f wl needlepolnt $35. 9 X 12 *&0-93M* From toddlen up, children woll Bn'll r'USI'. $35. 20B2 dort' these sllpper-eocks. Malron Way, CM. Misc. Housthokl Goods 114 8 Jwit one flal piece \.1.-lth a FRENCH tnuls XVI. 50" gay snowman. plus ribbed hand c11.rved love seat. all MUST SEU.! cuU. ·Jilfy.lmit 1..'0Zles for hand done. N~ly uphol-tlou1M!ful ol Furnftuft. Good eacb younaa1er on your st!'red, C·17t!0-1900, 492-5751. m1.1c.· All R1>0Cf oondlUon. C'.'hrislmu llin. Pat n~: WANTED. J...arae c b In a i .,: .. =u."""'m-=~Zi.ll.=---= chart: direcUons chlldren' cabinet. Re• 1 on ab I e • Jewelry 115 a.izes 4-U incl, 644-4687 8JIWll'fTY·•~VE CENTI • PLATINUM Bracelet, 47 l'e<"- for each paltem -add ~ Appll•nces I02 tangle cut, jtf':nulrwo blue cent. for eacl! ptlittHTI for aar>Pblrttl (total wt. 9 • .- Alr Mall o.nd Specil'.1 ltandl· REOOND. trade· In ~P-ct.I.). 94 full cut round Int· otberwise thlrd<.io.P pllancts le TVs. D.Jnlap 1• dlamonck (total wt 4.2 delivery will take thrct Im Newport Blvd., C.M. CU.), By 8ppt. on I y , wet'ka or more. Send to ~77'M). 0492--6="";:',,,·---.,.-.,-= Alice Btooki:, the DAILY USED REFRlGER.ATOR OlA. Sol. appros. 1 ct. $3Sl. PILOT, 10$. Needl«ratl A~ me . Small A qua!: Sol . elll'f'l.rwl I ct.. Dept ~ 163 Old ~· 6w:zer .ectlon. DJ, la Sral ee.ctl. Statbi._ New' York, N.Y. * 536--2fl82 aft 4. * t21ll 431°1924 10011. Print Na.n..e. .,.,.._, Rent Washers/Dryers Mlscell•neout 111 Zip, Pat&iln NmiW. S1 Wk. PuU malnt. DINETTE let w/5 h'-t.dt Totally ~ tm 1'_.. * Qt.tm * d'latn SJ>, lAdW 21S'' btkt enft C.Woi aammed w1th MAYTAG ~Jnnan Ma SU. tm onu_. A\'f:., CM. kn.It, crochet It.yin. CTalll. waftn S3$.. to SUll). can &d-M8l, 150 dntlJ'IL FREE patte,,. lkltwr wn 'IT· 1'*"1'·2 "=-==--.,.,.--.~,-,.-a..,.... 15 -.. 113&-lm. "'-°""""· KEW1 J..CUI M...e, ,._.., OVER )XI ~ dl')lft'I. brown. 1 Rm. I .. l'IUI. t.eem to make extra doU..n rtfrisl!T&1on tn>m 131JJ5. offer. ~ aJ't U:30 pm tmm your .,.n. ........ $1. S45-C11!0. * PRIVATE te-dUb lutut M•tnme ~ •. n. MAYTAG •uto wuhtf. membel'.IWp tee A Oftl7 Jt =•D '72 DEL MAR °" • 1 .... Dodtt tMsks with ,..... ........... t 71171:Sl9} •5795 ,;, $91~~ •14 ... "' .... Cd ......... , .. . MllD.11. o.f. ,_,pt\• ii "'6'.14 Afl II t.&l" ......... ""' ,..,. AT '72 PRICES ~lASliC BUYS YOUR CHOICE PLAY NOW-PAY LATER 7 YEAIS IANK FINANCING AVALUU.• "'IOvtO (1191'f -• '73 explorer 20 fuJ1y ,.if conto!Md S«. "°· 161)71 OllLT 124~~ ..,, ... ''"'k<• .. ,. •. _, ••'"' • Jl•M 1) IHI .... ,....-, "t i l.»J .. ..,. • ... 1,. o. ........ l>'. .. .. • . ·-,f . 73 explorer 24 '9,995 73 txplom 26 •tt,995 ~explorer a .............. -· .$1. Old. !tut ...... llnt. .... .... llWTI). of _...., er.eo.t -.... $1. SZ. -= CARPET roR tlA1X ::"",..:"' .,.:;;.;;.;:::~: Wu_!Z ~ ~ .=.-• ~c.:r ':"'·:ii... . HUNTINGTON BEACH UJ~ ... u,..., .. _ , .. _ --ttl ltrty ..... a.k., ••.• :.OC ~or 171-ITU Bf!AUT. wtnt• &nldfmltJ' U Prbe ,..,.. .. a.. ... 50c O*llpql tutl'ltl!rllllr dotbtt. Iii ll·U. "' ""- --1-U .. H..., IOo R .... 121 l!Olld!t_ .. _ l lMlllACllaYO.-n.fOtlllACO M._ qr.lie ao9* t 50c MMDTil aft. I PM. OOMDO ~•I a I " 1 e • •1.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!! 11 ~ Jer T•t "°"' llOc LIM to tr9111? Ow 'hwkt"1 1tttl sink. ptbrqt. cltlp. Pandllt-., II b JOOI Ip! lioo -· SIOI. l1W4I! f " 842-8803 I •• DAILY PILOT Wtdnnday, O<tobtr 11 , 11;112 Step Up To Luxury • • Excellent Selection Of Prev iously Owned Mark Ill's and Mark IV's 1972 MARI\. IV LIKE NEW Attractive glamour ginger finish with tobacco leather interior, white Landau roof. E_guipped with the finest, full power, auto. temp. air cond , AM/FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, etc. (700 EOJ) SALE PRICED SALE! Outstanding Group Of Choice Cars! 1971 .D8'1ge 'AMILY W-N ly TlAVCO 2 tone · paint, ahag rug, tleePI 4, 127" "''hi. base, VS. auto., P.S., R•ll, raised Uberglasa roof, elec. water !l)'Stem, dull.I battn-y flY!ltem, el~. refrigerator, ga.11 range w/oven, porta l>Qltl, butane 6. water tank, like nl'W. f~llDYUI Sale Priced 1971 Buick llVllltA Like nr\\'. Attractive lime fro~t "'·It h dark gr~n Landau roof & match. In· l<•rlor. Luxury l't1ulpped. Full 'IXl\ver, f11ct. nh·, AJ\:1-FM 1terr.o, tilt wheel, t:hron1c ,,·hcell'l. 1008DBW) Sale Priced 1970 Ford LTD COUPI Cold metallic w/matching interior, hlack vinyl root. Automatic, rndlo, heater, piw.·er steertn1 le brakes, rue· tory air. (540A£Ll $2475 1972 Cadillac PLllTWOOD IROUOHAM 14,000 miles, like new. Luxury equ\p- 1.ied thru-out, l"ull power of cou1'!!e with lndlviduaily adjU.11table tX>Wfr front seats. factory air, AM-FM stereo, cruise CfJntrol and much, much more. See & drive today. (971- DZKl. Sale Priced 1970 T·Blrd IU,IR CLIAN Lit~ Ivy yellow finish w/be.ck lAn· 1lau & match. lntf'rlor. Luxury plus. full JX>Wtir, factory air, 6 \\'BY srnt, AM-fl\1 sterPo, 4 near Ill'\'' radial ply lire1. Look.II & ruM like new. t048CAXI $3175 1967 Cadillac H.T. SEDAN. l!ST IUY 8Pl~c v1i1h 1•nreh1ncnt Interior, full \JO\\'Cr, factory air rond. (1WP400) $1875 ALWAYS A GREAT SELECTION OF TOP QUAI.11 'Y CARS •.• "Oro11111 Cou nlv't Family ot Nn• Corr"' 2121 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540-6130 Home OJ Tbe New Cir "fil•lm r-C!•" • "1971 SEA RAY,. 455 Oldl, Pacll-oo-Jol, :I>', IX> Serle1. EquJpped tor Water Ski""' A filhil!c, tandom tn.Uer. Call atter 12:00 noon. cn4l ~. MUST SELL! • • ' . . . . Visit our new bom•I G Auto Servtc•, P•rt1 949 BHI•. Soll t0t I----....:.----11;==..o.:.;;;... ___ .c.;;o 11965 l'Wbu!l t 413 Oiry•l~r ROY CARVER, Inc. 24.' Cal. Challenger, n/l>, cnRine with torque flight dlnghy & Newport moorlng. transmission $250. firm. 234 E, 17th SL Costa Pileaa ~ $3150. 494-6826, 494-6214. Call 673-6841 DATSUN Cll.l 21 SPINNAKER. Xlnt COlld. Red & White, $60. l§J * * * * * • 545-6365 • Auto1 fofS.11: ~ Bob Franklin Hobi• Cot 14' • $n5 ~;;;;;;;;;i;~;; \ 6452 Solnt Paul Circle 673·2828 • Huntington Beach, Ca l. P-Cal, very faat. Trailer plus Antlques/Cl••slct 953 You are the winnet ol many extras $1800. 557-5810 ;..;;;:;.;;,.:.:;::...:=;.;;;;;;;..._;.:.; 2 tickets 111 lhe or 675-5980. 1936 FORD Jl,j ton Truck. 9th Annua l Orange Co. Boats, Sllp1/Do-:k1 910 Dealer demonstration, 39.000 International WEST of Newport Blvd. $1.75 per ft. Call 847~0 SLIP 11pa.ce avail. Sailboat. • 673..fi&Kl • Traiuportatlon orig. miles. A·l runnhlg Auto Show cond. ITI4) 644-8136, at the '31 FORD Pickup truck, xlnt ANAHEIM L'Ond. lBSU Ranaer Lane, CONVENTION l{untington Beach. CENTER '36 StUdebaker $al, O<:tobcr 11th thru 15th Complete. $250. Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 2210 Orange, C.M 548-t553 between 9 and 5 pm to claim Trucks 961 ,your tickets, {North County toll-free number is 540-1220). • '50 "Oodac dump truck. * * * * * Rebll eng. 'l Ton capaCity. ·n DATSUN 1200 f.stbk. 4 C•mpers, Sale/Rent 920 '495· 645-3992· spd. Jt&tl. 10.00J mi. Xlnt -Ga.fC '62 % Ton. V.fi. RIH, 4 nd p A! 6 FACTORY DIRECT spd. trans. eomm'I plates. co · vt pty. 1 • Fully fum cabover campen, Prlv. party. 548-6347. 646-8506. no down, $.11. per mo. camp-"·7n~T,-,~,ta~H-1-lox~P~U~.----ut *** '71 2-10 z. Redlblk int. er shelli. No down. 64.2-84.TI. cond M l II $1795 All s Tape deck. $3900. Nu · us se · ' P.1ichcUns. 673-916'7 • • * 1970 FORD camper van, pm, (213) 592-2700 flbergla."ls top ca?Tler in-'t6 INTERNATIONAL 2~ T. DATSUN '71, 240-Z. Exec c}ud. air con d \ti oner. Best offf'r Takes car. Auto, low mi. Xlnt 968-b'993 Eve1. 962-81Rl cone!. 548-1944 eves. Cab-over camper shell '10 DODGE PICKUP. JAGUAR $250 e 646-4014 aft 3 CABOVER. 6 cyUnder, auto, $1TI5. 837-1088. '70 JAGUAR XKE coupe "'/wire wheels, 4-spced. R('~cncy red. Xlnt oond . $3899. Call 54MJ.55. '69 Ford pick-up w/camper. I~~~~=~--­ Good ·coodltlon. $3,400. or offer. 586-78.24. 964 1973 Olds T oronado FIBERGLASS SHEU. FOR '68 UP EL CAMINO, $200. ,,AET,_,_~5·~~~~12611~·----I Cycles, enc.es, Factory Equipt, Full Power Scooton t25 $128.00 '70 t~IAT 8:'.() Spyder, Good l'Qnd. 32,000 mi, $15()(} or best otter 557-4816 979-1420 MAZDA HONDA 7"".i), 197'2, K 2 • Bargain buy. Only 2 mo. old. 2,600 mi. Many xtras, F'alring, rack, back reat, crash bar, etc. Owner must eell, only $1300 or offer. n<\/897-3251. SUZUKI :iocc, 1970. GD. COND. $165. * 5'16-9055 • PUSH 250 cc $180. • 847-9414 • '12 HONDA CB 450 K-C Xlnt shape! 642-4343 A~k for Bob '70 HONDA TRAIL 90 $196. * R37-1088 '69 BSA 650cc, xln't rond. $65(1. '64 Honda 90cc trail bike $75. 96.~1&1. 1971 Honda SL-100. * JUST LIKE NEW. * 58&-151& ·n y i\;\1A I IA 360 Endure. ~t1't'.:'i'I ,t, d!rl, immac., call ITIOl'ttin~~. !WJ-1173. 1969 Suzuki T .S. 250. Street legal, good cond. $315. 546-6728 or 5-16-2994. Moblle Homes 935 * OCEAN VU &. PVT SCH, El Morro Mobile Home Pk., Laguna Beach. 2 4 ' x 6 O ' Rc>rbhlre, l BR. 2 fj}.. Phone for appt. 494-71::16. Motor Home• Salo/Roni 940 NOW SHO\VlNG 1973 PACE ARROW 1973 TIOGA IMMEDIATE DELIVERY per mo. + tax 24 mo. Open End Lease LEASING ALL MODELS AND MAKES '73's Southern California 1st National Bank leasing 2001 MlchcLqon Drive <Comer of MaMnhur) Irvine, Calif. 92664 114/8.13-/iG~ 213/627-0367 Autos Wanted 968 REWARD WILL PAY OVER Kelly Blue Book For late model, clean, low mileage domes- tics, Imports, trucks or ca mpers. call and ask for Buyer DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2480 Horbor Blvd. Costa M.ta 5464017 WE PAY TOP CASH MAZDA LEASE SPECIAL New '72 RX3 $57.56 Loaded. ROTARY powered. 36 ·mo. + T &. L. For resp. ply, Trades cone. • 72 ROTARY'S "Demo Sale" 10 TO CHOOSE "BIGGEST SAVINGS" "Service ill the diffel'f"nce" HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA 'Im MGB CT, bl1tck, AM/FM r:adlo, chrome Wil"t' 11•hf'f'!.~. low mileage:. cle1U1. Pvt par- tur used can • trUckr, jult 1 __,<y"._,S2::;1:::00::.·= &<Hll'l·=:::''-· __ _ call us b tree tistlmat.1. MGB GROTH CHEVROLET AU lar SaJes Manapr CREVIER 1'2ll "'"• B<vd. 1970 MGB GT. Am-Fm r11dlo. alr/corxl., Jo v.' n1ilca~c. Wht \V/blk Int. 640-1329. MOTOR HOMES Hunlbigton 8'acb BC7-W KI t-3331 '69 MGU-GT. Radial tires. New c-lutch. AM-Fr.I rn1\io. Xlnt cond. $1875. 640-1024 "'1 __ w_. -''-'·;_· _s._A_. --"''--I \VE bu1 aJJ makes ol dean OPEN ROAD MOTOR HOMES D1 Garden GroY• Blvd. Canlen Grove IM-4479 Motor Home Romolo AvaUabJ• tor dalb, -.ekb or monthb' bU1I. 21', 23', and 25' •II contalntd Mo- tor 11om-. aU eqvlpC with KC1Krrator, roof air, and many ottwr atras. AU ~ha .,.. 1972 ~la. We have the aU •lftl Amlp ai.o. Pie .. e.U tl&-9500. Motor Home Rentals ulCd sports cars, paJd for or not. Please drive l.n for -·-NEWPORT IMPORTS !100 w. °"" llwy., N~ Beucb 642-~5 WE PAY 'l'OP 001.J..AR i'OR TOP USJO:n CARS U )'OUr car LI extra clean, OPEL '71 Opel GT 4 t1Pd, rndio, hl.'a!C'r, mllci'( renl rlght (490CXX) il'ill:i cllr. Call ~'6. '70 OPEL GT, Nu paint, Looks & runs like fl('W. i1 99!!o/b~1t offr r . M~~l&n-4150 PORSCHE lff Ut f\nl. '6:'1 Por1che 356c, R/H, Dlac BAUER OUT(){ brkll, rcblt eng, Nu \lf\lnt 2925 Harbor Blvd. RM w/hlk lnl. '2750. O>et_a Meu 979-2500 ,;"'1-<l;:;;_;oO:ll=. --.,.-~-- IMPORT! w~-'65 c couJ>I?, t.'Ol..'O brv.·n .. Oranee 0.>Wu1e1 Mlchell1U1, log lite!!, t:J(Wl() TOP ~ BUYER Ctwrry concl. Al!IO '61 Super, Btu.. MAXEY TOYOTA tunrool, $1200, fi'l'l-9167. 181S1 Beacti B/Vd. 1967 PorBChc 911, 5 Apd, E.t- H. BQeh. Pit. 84'7455! eel cond. Prk.-ed $3S50. e -Cn.11 &M--2406. SALES & LEASING TOP DO!.LAR>-0R.iiiNK OR. WRECKED CA RA '70 f'olYhc 914, 5 spd. f'Ull acrvlcc fnclllty n.. .. or nltt', 637_3_ Xlnl oond. S31!"J(l, Da M t ff ......., ,..., Jfl\Skflll Yachts, 543--3163 1111ar 0 or omes 11000 ,.,,. '&I T ' I o m p h '69 Pni"-1k\ 5 '""· new Jin•• llm-Hld. A brllln:•1. 1-tust Mitt thl11 531-6800 • ""''111 . .... .•. $4%JJ), GU-<141>1. Wonloo ~,..!.t,,. -"· TOYOTA NEW LlF"ETIMF.S-t~ wm1t1 il al fant.a1llc r1ttc1. Pvt pt)t. m.«m Tu•tln. Prlvnlr pnrty. 54,lol-7!ti1 OY Autos, h",.n.cl 970 T OT A Motor homt' t~ rent . '11 WlNNEBACO, 77'. Sleepa I.~ AUSTIN HEALIY DEMO SALE * \\'1NTEft RATF.8 * 'f'J Au.tin HH.b' :lQJ o .. 1k Mlr homer ret11aJ1. f1S!li wk + ht-Ruty. Attl#t ~ lo ap- ml. Re."'rve nn11-1, M!Mmt Prfl'llll!!. SU(IO flrm. !koU; 87"""'8, l>l&-UO!. lit12 bit tor•'"· 1'cnna wtth 1.,.;,60C'x.,.u",'7un'-"n".,..-01.~,~-=,..Mk,.,,.-~1. b'ff llpACC n!nt 111 t'XelhAJwt tor 11trvlcc~. 0111t·r c,,a cill ROO<f corwt. Xtrn nibuiJdahll' A• 2 pm ,...,, .,..,.,. Cf11· Xlm ttnn."I, 1)$1). " • .);J ""''Q, &WJ..15011. Rent A Motor Home for wuJr Va .. •t'-'66 AUAtln llcal.y 3000. ~fK Ill. ,---""" Xlnt cond. No n!U offt'r * IJ9-4l01 * .. n-o. 613-W85 l . NOW IN PROGRESS •I ~mlwii4 • TOYOTA 1966 ll1trbor, C.M. '118 Tu)'nla O\t'OM. ~111n, lllUlO '""~'-11:'.JO or IJ!'SI of· frr, 846-0003. . . . ----: .. Wednesda~. Oct.obtr ll, 1~72 PlLOT·ADVERTISER 2 CALLUSNOWll ~···· 117·9220 INSTANT CREDIT YCMllllD&IOSTIU SAYIT .. _ 1.11 you en MW ift Clfitomie 3. II you •f,.. on.,.,, ~ 2. M you "" "*"Y ot1 '(fNt 4. If you ';.!iltlt or ftO c0t crlldit ur• rn '' AllMll JM,..,, Am ,.. -11 ftllfQlllAY IMMEDIATE DfllYHY $199 DOWN $71 A MONTH S 199 it I oral dn pyml, S1111 totolmo. prml. iJKI. ro•, loc•nst 1 •!I cnrryinf $2188FUlL . . PRICE FOR 36 MONTHS ' charfH °" oppr. oedit for 31 mos. D• f•rte<lpfml prict $1755 inc) lo• 1 fi- Ctnll. A.NNIJ.lL PfRCENT.lGE IA.1( 1!.St~ 73000 2 DOOR HARDTOP full Factory Equ;pped Order Yours Now $199 DOWN $84 A MONTH J 1'9 110101 dnp11111. $14 ii to!ol rq, p~ml. ind la•, l"enu 1 oll rarryi~1 chatgts on 1111pr u·.dit for 36 mos. 0.. ten-.! P1mt. prou 11223 ~!. ta• ' jj.. ''"''· ANNUAL PE~tlNTAGE RATE 11. "'" $25 FULL PRICE BRAND N EW '73 DODGE SPORTSMAN VAN Power disc broke5, AM radio, dual mirrors, emis~ion control system, electric ignilion 1ystem. Order Yours Now FOR 36 MONTHS 9'~1SMAN Vo" 171" .,.hnl bo!Jt Wa9fn 6 pon. V-8, oulo, lrOn!., 1100 VAN. l~H <orpt> ..... pon.lonq. I kin. 3 ••T•. S~SJlf. poWll!' II""'"· rDd:o, hm1'1', k.>g-!.0!111\ ·~~. °"'"". l1•t ,_.,,, poonr 9"'11• rod .. e.89EOS l~'P•· I.,. "•In 746 7SK. $2488 $988 $2788 FUll PRICE fUll Pl lCI fUll PRIC( '70 PLYM. '70 FO RD '70 MAVERICK Bf{V(OIRE WAGON 6 Pou. v.a t DOOR SID•N. V·I, ou1n "O"I . 1 OOOI °""' 1<1111. roGoo. i>tQter. ..,to. ''""'· "'dt<t. Mater, S9 SAi. r ,awor •l•l""f & ll•nk•<. 1Dtl•o. ,..h••I (G •t'I lhi••t <h•Gmt $1088 -i'i "a9 l'IOld"'9'· ~ l 1A-'1 $788 fU ll PllCl fU ll PllCI fUU Pltl(l '70 OLDS '71 PINTO '70 PLYM . CUT\ ASS Ho<d~ t0t4lt. V 8 po'""' ?·00011. ~!t. ,,__ rudio, htoM<, """'""!·rad.,, ""11111, tu~~' •o011, ,.h<!t•oll hit<. l9S"IG. $1 588 $1088 $888 fUll ,l lCf '70 PLYM . fUl l PllCI '71 PINTO $988 PUll PI KI OPEN · 9 AM to lOPM 7DAYS f Ll ,llCf '70 DATSUN '72 DODGE fUU PllCI '69 PLYM . JUll PllCI '70 DODGE 4 °"" ~•d•~ V·f , lw!t. 1J1111,, ,ft ,.., "''"~· rH01, ~.u ... lll!\(00101671 2088 $1288 ' U tt JUll ,llCI - 23 Pl<G\' ..... DYEl!TISER Wednttda~, Octobe r II, 197! --,, .,, DAIL V PILOT !f.5 '73 OLDSMOBILES HERE NOW! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WHAT'S NEW? OM .EGA! OLDSMOBILE'S ALL EW LOW PRICED COMPACT CAR. GMC Truck & Recreation HEADCj)UARTERS • • SERVICE I ORANGE COUNTY'S N ~mber 1 HOND A DLR. WE'RE CLOSING OUT OUR OPEN ROAD CAMPER LINE ALL MUST GO AT. DEALER COST! PARTS-BODY SHOP OPEN EVERY We have The Largest Selection of SEDANS and COUPES We alsa have a complete line of 4 STAR CAMPERS SUPER SPECIAL ANGELES VAN-A-HOME SELF CONTAINED 14 ,795 Mikos. Whit• with 9ree• trim. Wedi Hctter. electro Ma9ic tolSet, 4.S c11. ft. r•• frlg«otor, IMto•t hot wcrtrer Motet, ,..,...,. or, dollbh stcaht.._ IMlb, 4 .,_, .... stoN & oy .. , etlr collClhf11t1l119, Ci.M. rodo, buc•et Melh. fG!J05Ull5302J $6495 SATURDAY 7:30 'TIL 5:30 Fully equipped including Stereo $ AM/FM Radio and Tape Player. Demo. ;AN6001051525 '69 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1969 TORONADO '70 EL CAMINO '71 OPEL GT Pow•r sMrl .. -b~llw-wt.1don-wot1 Ylityl top, air cHdlriOflli.t. $1595 Full power includinca seats & windows, AM-FM stereo radio, air condltia11in9, vinyl top, tift steerlnCJ wheel, luxury car at economy price. Trade-in on a new T0<onado. !394879M6Z0754J You 11'111\t we 011d dri•e thit beauty. 157037FI $1980 4 \pffd tro111,..lstl011, rcid10 apd lltort• 14,422 octuot mile\. !<1 16CCNJ $2093 radio 011d hffr.r. CYCM4221 '71 OLDS DELTA 88 52488 '69 CUTLASS CONVERT. '70 DODGE WAGON Cnto .. 4 Dr. H.T. YI. outo ... otic, powet 1tMrl119°brokH-wiltdows-wots. stereo rodio, cnibe cffh'•I, -ri•yl tOp. $3175 VB, automatic, rodla, •etrter, pawet' steerl119, power braktt. faerory air eoltdltlo11i119. lYNll 111 $1672 440-J i.eot wo;ago11 Y·B, awto"'orie, tadlo, heorer. power 1laeri1HJ & brokt>1, fae tory 01t eond .• $2184 Sold 6y H 11ew. l405CXWI roof roek. 1&3 2ESG I l§J I ............ l§J ~I _ ...... _ ... _ .... ~l§J I ...... ,. .... !~1 1--.... -.... -.... ~1~1 1~_·· .. _·'"_""~i§J '.I -. .. ... l•A';,-ut•-•.•,-.•-•,-,,,•-.•po•-,•-,•..,mm~•,•70• ~A;u;t;os•,•,;m;po;;n;;ed;;~;9;70~ [Autos, Used 990 IA ;;uijtijoijs,1iiiU1i...,1iiiliiiliii;;li990;;(,A~ulilliolisli, liUlisliedmm;;~990;:, ( ;A;u;l;osij,;;Uijsije;d;;;;;,;;;99;;:0 I Autos, U sed ............ 1§1 l§J I ."'....... I§' ;-.. : ....... ;,;;;;;--~I VOLKSWAGEN "69 V\V Sqback sta. "'K"· AJ\1/FM radio. average miles $1425. 642-6406/644·0219 aft 6 pnt. '70 VW Bus Cu~to1n Can1pc1-. Reblt eng.. new brks & tires. R/H. Tape, sunroor S2350. 675-2489 or 646-3792. ·n VW Bus, low mileage. Leaving country. Must sell, make offer~ 675-1700 dys. 642-6980 eves. 1965 Volksy,•rigen Squa reback. New brakes, clutch, & tires. Call 847-8'231. '59 VW bus. \'es it's clran! $S50. 36Ds r.tarcus, N .B. ·71 Volks Super Beetle. Am/ fm st c re o, many xtras. Like new. $1850. 644-6348 WANTED Old V\\is running or not. &16-1716 a fl 7i p111 '61 VW hug. Rehlt cng. RADIO. $400. •499-3-IS.5• e ·64 VolkS\\.'agcn e New paint & tires. $.)'r.l. Call 640--0327 '67 Bug. Perl. cond. &st of· fer. *** Call 646-6670 or 675-175.l. '62 vw 1500 * $150. after 3 Prn • 962-0086 '69 VW Bus, good cond. R.eblt n10tor. $1800. ..,_, 'Tl V\V Camping bus \11/IJO_ll top. BiR eng. Gm. 14.500 m1. $3!0}. 9~ NB. 1970 vw Pop Top Can1per. XL.NT COND. S2!!50 or best oHcr. Call 496-8669. •70 vw Wes1phalla camper. $2300 or best oft er. Fine cond. 4~1 '70 VW SQBK. Xlnl COil(!, New Paint & tirea. $UIDO. 968-9515. .61 vw bug, E,.;t.~I ru11nl n11: cond. MJnrf, S3fi0/bt.-sl of- fer. 615-8642 eves. vw. roof rack 4'8' .,.,.ith hul· def. new m CooW lo JO'J!I C • W. Balboti. N.B. '69 VW. 1f'm eng. RUN '-'OOd· iroot' bod)'. $1$ or make of. ler. 675--T.itl. '69 vw Bug. auto 111c thin. 14,000 ml°•. Xln't cond. Call &U-787B. fat Profit ii attained when you R ll thtouah rnui .. aet-- ting o.ny PllOt Ouatfled Ads. ~56TA I JEEP MUSTANG 990 Aulos , Us.ed 990 Auto~. UMCI VOLKSWAGEN 19.i9 VW double door bus. 1972 enginc, reblt trans., new brks. All n c w throughout. $950. <196-5687. '66 VW Sedan. $550-. eall an 5. 646-1~ VOLVO VOLVO DEMO SALE NOW IN PROGRESS at ~mle.wiA ., VOLVO 1966 llarlxlr. C.1\1. 6<16-9:1,0J CADILLAC CHEVROLET FORD OLDSMOBILE * • • * * .,, 0 "'Y 396 SS Cpo. 1 S~t. '71 COUNTRY SQUIRE ·1:~1 1 \\'hi 1lriv•-. Fil Bronc-u, I·"" 1h.,n :io.orxi n11 uni.: 11\'llr. \Int' ~..!'-llf~I al! 6 '!iii l\lu.~111n'~ I i.1hl '! IJ,\\S ·,.1 r1l•I• 't\ 1"•111~· Bob Stafford P.S. 4.1,00l n1iles. $1195 • .\IU!'!"T SJ..1.1 .' $.~iO .. i· 1 •. .,1 I :,,,,-1 . "' , ·1 1 ·,, p1 ~r. X17-4nt9_. __ --1 t-.1u .. 1 .... 111""' ,,,, 1 1331 Mariners Drive 'ti/ Clil'Vy 391) s . .::;, Fal'IOry Air Cone!., ·1 Spd. P.S .. Sli.J!1011 11a1.;1u1. \'\ nu!•I Newport Beach, Calif. Burke1 $1•11ts, B!1u• !· 1n1sh tran~. f:u·tory ;11r f"JC11\i•r I You are rhe 11·111ner of "'ilh rnalch1ng in!cr11or • 1110tlo11s 1•J11·1•1· ~11 .. ·rLflJ.:, I I OLDSMOBILE 11",\" .• ,\\l I \1 "'' ~. ,:·;':';' MERCURY 2 tickets to the "66 F.I Camino. P.S .. AT. Air fllJWi·r t;J"akt• .... ii•hi!.-. \\.ill/ ----------·1u (1111'4 :...>: 1:•1);ih· 9th Annual Orange Co. CC!nd. S995. • ~:i:1 ~hevy !it'c-s. (7.~.l{-,\K1. $:t~i'i cH1-. '70 Merc:ury 1·,0 1 1·1•-.111 '·" Pnlr•t~ International Pic~up y,•/ 71 ~iO -~ 11 In Call 11?,t; 1;;i:{;1 l\l••nl. 1 ., ~ 11r l!T \' -i A•il l\1t1.<11 t,. I I. H uni.11,111 Eng1rn.· PQ\\"l'I" (_. J I d e . . I I • \ ,, ' Auto Show '· '70 f d W Tr.u1· l''"'I s11•.-r111· viny '111 "u \i a1 the Tl1lns .. 645-{;64-t or GCJOn Ha<l1•1: l!•·11o·1< "ht11· .,.,,,1;,: ... 11·11:0. l'IS, 1•111 .. .i·, '· 1970 Cllev. Coocours E,;;t11te, V-1.(, ,\T. ~·~u·1 ury Air Cflnd. ,111,.1.1 ,.,1,.,,. \ 1,Tv 111,, I f.1-1~1.fT.!_•l•~hluo· ,,.,. • ANAHEIM 8 Pass. Sta. Wgn, Pwr. Po11pr S1·~·r1ni.: . .-~1!u1. h•«•I · (·ar 171!il.91"!1• Sl'.fl:i 1111· Ci.JI "ti>1 <1111~ 1.J:l :! 1•1'. I . CONVENTION Steering & brakes, AM-FM er. 11!llt••\\.·alt !ir1·~. 11n•i·d I lf:li-6:.Jli .o\11· c-..111!. \I 1· !:.. •, i11 CENTER Stereo radio, tilt steer. wh.t i:la..,~. t •21~'./!l2 1 ~z:~r:; 1llr ·i;.J-;,t,.nt ., 1, ·" 1. H 1·:11i.:111• ~···, • 11' 0 t"loher llth thru 15th F'actory Air, luggage .ack. t·a11 .'t:O-ti:~~' I i·orwl 1 ~,,..' ''' ·\\I · t',!!" I ulbt!>." I ·;· J Pl ·'I "•2'"7' ··1 4 -----· . · ' ., '.\ht. . 1,1 ' I! ease c<u .,.. -.JU '" C'XI ." ne\V tires & brakes:. Panel-·n.q GA! .•. A'.'\l l:: :A) fully f'tliUp I "1t'""i l."1'1 l"'lld \ll~Jll bct\\e~n 9 and 5 pm to cla1n1 ing. A ... k1n~ Sl7!"1. :i:,7-IMil . Xlnt tlJIKI. Or 1~ owr~·.-. _ •(~ 1;_,,.~. 1;7 'tl·I~ ., I I• L11 your ltckets. INorlh County .-68 r.I \LIBU U T C IA.'avin.:-("ountry. Asku1i:: 'fi'J ~11 nlt•r ·v 1 fir 1, n) 1 1 11 l•ll I • J,1' 1' toll frc numbl·· i 540 JZ.!Ot I flt'. $1~7~ 6ii;....1'lEl I. L I ' • I "11· 11/hlk v11 1 I WI I 1 • f , , tir • ',, 1 •• ' 11 ...... I•-.• PINTO ... :0-11 PLY MOUTH I' \1111 Ill 1.,i. {i'I. J", II 11 ! .. ,.1 ). ' 111ll··~ 1 " ,. \Ii.· t • • ' Juhrt<• I ~I ~ i • C 1 JJ • -· Power sll'Crini:: ,'!,, J1rakes, · · · 1 (>11t1•,. '[•lfl •old lo 1!r11•1 * * * * * air l~Jnd .. au1rn1111tw. radio, G M C ~1'1~1 ,,.II Sl 'l.~1 ur t•"?ol 0Cf1•1, .ilti·r 1· ' ·~ii 1~ , • l't .Y~I ~ 1 1· • heater, \\'S\\'. 1·u~1nn1 • • • 1;;::-... 171;~i fd t \j, 1;,_., •I l""l•I 1 1., 1.,1( r .. 1.t 1JK.. YOUR ONLY wheels. vinyl f"nl. [J'S~ 'GJ r.~1c. Jilt> l•VHI, .. ~11.i ~l Ml./:( ['J:Y \~\1;;~Ss11.-i 11 l'1•p \\ s 'M· I ti' I• I PONTIAC '69 Firebird '. \ l\ut" 11111u. Air Omd, l-"'"'t•r ~1r .. r1111.:. n.1ho , lloNll• 1•r 1~·hth• -.11.H-. \1111)'1 root, l•ntnt s;:la.'i~. "'ht. .. •1 1'(11•t>n •Yf1_,,15-lf Sl'l9J. tUr. Call ~:t,~tf, ------~· Id l 't1h1luu1 \\'aq, l,ua. rk, lo tn1" r&h. 6 pap. Pvt. l•I }. SRJI). Xlnl c on d . •111-11'11'.l 1~ 11~~"-· --·I !1"1:"T 6:> a·ro. 11ke 1ww, Al". l)Yo r. l'n1yl 11111. map. \'li t "\!. ~···r...1 t.11lt'. S1895 1·11 1 pt\ KL' 1.-m ----1 1'•,I 1• .. 1111.11· ~''•' ""'="· Pl~. l'/ll \urn ;ur/1'0fwl. Xlnl II ,, h'l I Ptl!I S!.t1 IH'l ~ N t:Vt.I~ lt!I 1111" rirlWft. '14 ~lJtl 1"11 \\ !IJr'"I", 2 l"IPW fll'TI II hr,1k•'"· 673-1748 afl 4 Autos, Used 990 I 8UICK t'ACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC ihan 25,0CXJ milrs. l ~k .. ~~·11 w/~' t·a111111·r. Sip .. 6 11,,, ,,.,,1. r<•p .• u·~ S210 lim1 ~.' ·'''' r •r ' 1. d1 1'1i11• S1 795 Pr1valf' I 11 1 Y · JHC'ks ,(· 1~101 ;ill 111·11 1n~1r1.. • •~1;! ;1·~1 • pm~ ,1 li.~, ,,,. I• ,.1 ,,If, r I VALIANT 540-699"1. Blp; llrr~. $1.'!UJ. :~1,;..;).IQ:I, ·n,e f,,,,,.,t ilr11"-In 1h<' \\ .. t-1 LJl<.1• !"II j, ,~.. :.i 1~ •·\~· ---------- '69 Camaro SS .. :MO-tON.i_·__ __ .. .i 1i:11h 1•uo1 Cla$:!Jlfk\J 1•;1r.un""·. r-r ·"·1· 1., ·~ r· ., "'".i A 1s 11-111' 1:.. .... r"f.1;;~1::!~0011 '70 Buick Custom Skylark Wht. Blk vinyl lop. P.S. P.B. R&.H., fact. air. Unt !er 30!\1. $425 under b ook . 646-1252, 644-2'228. D~~ f II v.~. Auln l"ran~. l.O•\\• I" .. 1r1•r \\'anf itd 1-.... 1111.. t.l:t-.'16~~ A<! IH:! .,.;;'i. .. IU•"I, " I II ' ·-·~ ,.,, .• 1 .. r. Sl!J ;.er-4\!iT.i ...... li 3o Pf!! Large~taeection o Cad · 1 ng:.r;uho.ht.•;11cr.111i1t1•i-irh·Aut~Used--990 Autos,U•ed 990 --I ---l---- lacs 1n Orani;e County y,•H.Jls. wh .. i·I t·"~J·r~ ~<i.'.!l i·---'-;;:::::::::;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:::;~.;;;A;u;l;•;;•·=lJ~·.·~·;:;:;:;:':90~:A:u::•::•:•:· :U:'°":;:;;:;:;;::;;;990;;;::A;u;;;l•:•;·;;U;,;•ed;;;;;;;;;;:-....:"°::/ Sales-Leasing. EVY I 11595 tll r c ':•11 X-l.tj 6.")'~i ~ --ii Nabers '69 c.,~Artc1 11T '71 R ivierJ. 20,000 n11. Full (>\\.T, AJ\.·I/fl\t Sll'rt~, l\lf , ehnn \\."his. xlnl cond. Cream w/blck inL $4(00. Prvt prly. BWI. 2 I 3 : 435-6371, Reg. 53EHi707. '69 Buick Riviera. l u 11 y rquipped, all pwr & air. Lo m ilcagf'. Bronze in l"Olor. hlk in!. S2500 days, 646-2486, CVl'S 64:t-764..1. BUICK '61 Skylark, sharp, all 11wr . radio. heater. Going OVCr!iCRl'i. Sac. $300 645-8984. 19TI Ccnlurion. all extras Nu !ires, Bcsl of(rr ov.r Sl'iOO. e 567-7CXKI. C d"ll J·;i.'Onon1y s p"" 1 a l . Sb, a I GC rylirnh·r. "1uk. 1 .1d111. 2600 HARBOR BL., heater. •'Xlr.:1 ~harp: l\lu"! COSTA ?\IESA gelJ l\lakr nff>'r, •"i.ill 540-9100 Open Sunday 557-!lfllfi ttrtrr ti::lll~. ---I '69 CllEVY J\!tllihu l'()\ll"'. 1970 Cadillac 1;n ,.111.!illl', A/T, P/S. · Cpe. DeVille A/C. vinyl 1 h Jl. •·x· Full Powf'r. Cru1-;c <:onrroJ repl.innally l"lran. IJl.'st 01!•·1 (2Z2CC,\l 1. 842-977~. $4150 -.56 CHEVY-WAGON Southern California l\i11gi1 ;ind chron11· .... 1111'1• 1st National V-8. 11uto, 1111a.·k 1n111.· d•'ll.. Bank Leising 1·1it1n1n-'I. S:t50 l'nll ;i1J..:11~11 :nJl Mlchr!Jlon Driv<' l!llH Cl)('vy \'An. Ttcbull1 !Corner of l\tal'1\rlhur· motor. ~(JOl1 tirt.'S, runs .ct•l(I lrvirtr.' CuJ1I. 9~i&I N('('(t'I paint. S!IOO. CAil 71418.1.1-8620 213.i627-0.'Jii7 557--1305 to It'\' e,ny11me. • • ·~ CJlJ.:YY r APH.iCT '67 B"k k Sportoow...,,. foll CAMARO !"M'T. i;rood corwt. Sl075 or bcsl offer. 494-68416. 1-----------1 Pl'rf c'Ond Orw-~nrr ~111'1 '71 CA1'1AR.0 Z.211, 4 ~pct. wll. 114~7_-<67.l=~· --- CADILLAC many ""'" c.u '"'" 7 CONTINENTAL pm. 53&-1805. '70 COUPE de VWe, vinyl CHEVROLET '68 Conllnrnla/ FJ:rt'I roricl top, full llhr Int. Fact nlr 1-----------1 Nl'w lll't·"· lr>w mtlf>I. SJ.IQ) cond .• illt strg whl . AM/FM '71 Monie Carkl. air rond . Qwnrr. &U-lll.13. at,n!O, pwr door lodm. p/a. Vhzyl tp. Xlnt rood. --- twilight cent., pwr trunk Muat aitll/bilt ofr. t;w11 CORVmE OJWl'll'r, dual comfort 11t1U.'I, ,.;-~=1~17~•~· ---~-~ Cruise oontrol, new tndW '67 Ote\oy lmrr.nlJI Exn-lll'nt •.XTR.A CLEAN tircl, S(lt'Cl•I L'lockJ • 11'ar llhAI"'· Nu bn1kl'11, ballf'r)'. ·~ \'ETJ'F. ~ lfMllt'T'I , lmmac cond. G~t ll!'fL KWH ""11.1=~=""m.1'11l='~~~= 1 thruout. $4500. ~. 5&-7531. l9fiS CORVF.TTE.. -c:t7, 4 sP. '6' Coup_> dt VU\f' '&I Vette 32'7, :16:°1 h11. • «pd. Xl.NT CONO. ~ Afi Rehlt ens. Ir: ~ad11, Nl"W 6PM G<IOd condition. '150. he.II. brttl, A M , r M After 6. • 54.\.m.I Jl585/0flcr ~"'"6317. FIREBIRD 'M El Dorado. Low ml. D» ovtt !Ow Y.'hl.sl. Coll Piton-'&9 c.muo. 1 Q'I. ·~1 D), ~ A.IC. 11.U1ct tran•. Sun. 1Qam.lpm 537~ Auto tnu. .. Moil, PS. Mldit-lln ~ CINn. Oril: ·n &linlal: Soda• o.Y•1e. ~~o.:1 :;;;;·,;..,..~"wo"'~=-1 ~fly. l•llll. - "'" _,,., .Atr. ...,.,,,., ·n CHEVY PICKUP FORD Int. Sll:IO ~47, fiD.-.2)33. 6 ~1 • .3 Sl)f!t'd.. S350. or trnde.1 _________ 1 '69 ronv. Suptt ~an. All 'Ill' MJ..l01 + ii t~tw'd LTU R~m hr<ury options 13.1X). Davci F1tl n....ats Al'P. juJI • phonr r1r lh1nltop. ""'Lf'+I tond 67:"1>-1!'72. 49+-(l)15. call away.~. e y._Gj7 e ' I " •' LE We have a fine Selection of New c~d u~cd Cars to Choose From -All Mod e ls - Colors -Accessories, and we have even "FINER SERVICE'"" '73s NOW ON DISPLAY! •• I • • ' ASE I 1973 MAAICIV • r ,, .. • ~~·. -~, .... ·.~ ' .. ' ' . .. .. . . • • • • . • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • . • . • • • • . • • • • ! i : j:: i : ,. • • I BRAND NEW 1973 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE--COUPE $ LOADED CHRYSLER BRAND NEW 1972 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER S.t. :: CH'4J-T2C-l91682 ......... ,... ... ........ . ,.... ...... ,. .... ,..., ... t ftlll w!Mowa, AM·PM Nliio, Nyl 1IM -.W ..... ....,,. will DISCOUNT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY s,,, .i: RL2f .CJG-104lll tfrn. f11Ctory •• ""'' '"'· •ttto • .,... Ulltrol. I FROM MANUFACTURER 'S STICKER PRICE LARGE SELECTION 1973 CHRYSLERS AND PLYMOUTHS Immediate Delivery Tlllltl to M'+'• rMllY 1m,.rt1111 "'°"'" •n tfll Polll'i:~IH 9f .... 11'1111111111 •n Chry1ler1 Ind 1'lymo11tl\1 , • • Hin HIW, FROM MANUFACTURERS STICKER PRICE A11IO<Ntlc, 11r cond., hlneM r•ck. ,._r ''"" 1119 & dlte bflkfl, flllfed ti.1.t 1n, V!tlyl .... mk191., wtlrttl w.11 fir-. ,....,. t~U Pl• Wllldow, ratllo, AU con are subject to prior sale. All prices ore plus tax M llcenae. All prlcn aro ¥Giid until 10 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 15, 1972 USED CAR SPECIALS '70 CHRYSLER Now Yorltr i4 Or. H.T., VI, 11110., 11- dio, ht1t1r, power 1!11rin9-br1k11- 111t1-window1, til t wh11I, vinyl lop, 1ir <.ond., c111l11 cnlrl .. t ic. (OIOASJJ •• $2295 '71 PLYMOUTH V11l i1nl, rtdio, h111t1r, econornic1I 6 <.ylinG1r, tl1ncl1r.f tt'1111rni11ion. ftll· CXBI '71 V.W. CAMPER Pop top, 1111.I, r1dio 1rid h11l1r. 1129· Clll '67 FORD GALAXIE 500 "4 Ot. S.d. VI, •uto., r•dlo, he1t. •r, pow•r 1l••rin9, pow•r br11k11, WSW, •ir <.011ditio11i119. IULP712) '69 C~RYSLER Newport <t Or, H.T. VI, •1110., R&H, pow•r 1t.•rin9 • br11••• • 111h • w]n. dow1, 1plit b1nch 111t, 1ir condition· ing. IZCCIJ7) s1495 '68 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill <t Dr. H.T. VI , 111lornetic, redie, heel- er, pow•r 1!11ri119 I br1k11, WSW, eir <.onditio11in9. viriyl top. !WIK159) $995 '69 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill 2 dr. H.T. VI, 1ulorn1tic, ••· dio, h••f•r, pow•r 1t••ri119, WSW, 11ir <.onditio11in9, vinyl top. IXHF21Sl '70 FORD LTD VS, •11 torn etlc, redlo, he1l1r, power 1l11ri119 I br1~11, WSW, 1ir condi. tioni119, vinvl • roof. IS27AF)(J S1695 '64 OLDSMOBILE V.1, 111ulorn1tic, r1dio, h11t1r. !OZW- 087 1 .. Wtdntidl)', October 11, 1972 BRAND NEW 1972 INTERNATIONAL 1010 HALF TON PICKUP TRUCK ••• • i • ' • • .• •• OFFICIAL 1972 MODEL BRONCO CLEARANCE! New '72 with trac. lock limit, slip axle, V-8 en~., mud/snow tires, extra fu e tank, com .. plete spt. pkg. (P37!Hl7) ~Fact. Stkr. $4703 Sale Price $3951 -DISCOUNT $772 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM! ROBINS BRAND NEW AS OF SEPT. 11th, 1972 ! OUR A· 1 WARRANTY IS GOOD AS GOLD FROM COAST TO COAST ! When you buy • used eer with the new A·I Wet· r•nly, you leeve your worri11 on your Ford Deel· er'1 doorstep. Here'1 why, For the firit 30 dey1 or 2,000 mile1 your Ford De1 ler guerenlee1 to pey I 001. for eriy mejor rep1irs. For the next 24 months, your Ford Dealer guetell· tees a 15 % diseount on rep1ir1 cover.d under the 11ew A-I Werrenly. You get A-I pro .. ction wh en you're out of town too! In every State of ffie Union you'll fincl pertiei- peting Ford Oealer1 wh o will promptly ind court•· ou1ly honor th• 24 month provl1ion of you r A·I Werrenty, Come 1ee our 1el1clion of A·I Warren .. ecl 111ed eer1 today! We're A-I Werr1nty h11d qu1rter1 In thi1 aria • , • the dee l1r1hip wh1r1 you l1ev1 your wcv{j•• f.!" ,our.,d9orJJep. ,C • t ·1 NOW! 73's IN DEPTH! NOW! SEE ONE OF THE M 0 S T COMPLETE SE· LECTIONS OF NEW 1973 FORDS -ALL AT THEODORE ROBINS' YEAR-AROUND VOLUME DIS. COUNTS. YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT TO SAVE. ' ENJOY YOUR NEW '73 MODEL NOW! • EVERY NEW '72, LOW MILEAGE '72 ST AFJ; CAR, AND '72 TRU~K NOW AT f.INAL CLEARANCE DISCOUNTS. HURRY FOR SELECTION! BRAND Nnf. · LEASE DIREO CAMPER CLEARANCE! SPECIAL PURCHASE 1972 COURIER · I. '~·f.1 '~ VANS PICK·UPS · Seven lucky people can buy a . FOR LESS new El Dorada camper for less than a dealer pays the manu· $2099 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY facturer. See our big selection of Econ· oline vans and van conver· ON ALL ONLY 1 LEFT 16129 11) sions. Immediate delivery on SPECIAL CLEARANCE ! 1973 MODELS WE WILL SHOW YOU THE INVOICE your choice! HURRY!! LOOK FOR THE CARS WITH THE STICKER T·BIRD SALE 3 AVAILABLE-'61, '68 & '71 MODELS 7 AVAILABLE-'62 to '72 MODELS 3 TO CHOOSE ROM '69 FORD LTD & GALAXIES .............. $3896 So-w/Laltdau. h· a_,le1 '71 T·lird L•· •.. , ........... . brh.. wt.cl .. -n. olr coH., klw .n.. 1125· CCMJ '65 CHEVROLET IMPALA HARDTOP YI, racHo, Mofllf', 0 11• toMOtfc, pow. .,_. .... pla toocl •II& f1 671SW I '69 SHELBY COBRA GT 500 4 lpH4. radio ad ......... ,..,., """" ........ ,.hit. ( 170. ASGI EHmplo' ''7 Sq•I~ $1096 SOO < 0.. H.T.'L YI, $15 96 10 ,....," ..... ...... '·'·· ........ . ..u ... Wttti & _.....,. l.ctlo, llMtw, o 11to • Y11yt ,.,._ fY..S771 J IHtjc, olr c_Md., ,ow· (\'11110) fZSS4JIJ •....,,..,YI, ..... •lln . IW9EIHJ YOUI CHOICI 1966 SHELBY GT350 . lodlo, .....,, -* miotk, ,_. ""'"- Co•petitlM Or ..... 1050A9JJ '66 FAIRLANE GT CONVERTIBLE YI. 4 .,_.i, N41e, Hoter. IUJH5501 '68 FORD GALAXIE 2 DOOR HARDTOP '66 MERCURY 10 PASSENGER COMMUTER ...... ,.. ,..._,, ......... ,... ,... ........... (IJflJ61 """ . ,~ .~1 , LTD '66 MUST ANG 1· j. , a•"DOOlt HARDTOP HARDTOP '70 VOLKSWAGEN WESTPHALIA CAMPEl '64 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT 4 WHEEL DRIVE ., If • I ~~~696 ~=:::: ... ~: I I~ ,. ~·'' ot z. ALL SALi PalCIS -CT 72 HOUIS AFTB PUILICATION .......... ...... ".,.. ,. flN. 1111.t.Oll t19 ------------. ~ ---- PAm • IRYICI HOUU , ..... .... , ... ,., ............ MAKE OFFER • ... ' . ' •_,§8 DAILV PILOT' • . .. .. . . . . ' ' Wednesdar, October 11, 1972 ;;¢: J f. t I I I I I I • . I C~EAR~CJ PRICfD •• :~!ND '7'2'.. ''"'o THIS·IS'NOT'A STRIPPED CAR! • . . . \ Wedne:sdly, Octobtr 11, 1972 ' PILOT -AOVE RTISER 20 .. ,,..,,.,./ ~-·~ I .. lL MODELS O.N DIS.P 'LA Y .. ' :.· . CLEARANCE. PRIC D '72 PINtO RUNABOUT • • . --LEAS.I. . ·.: .:, ~"1 '; NEW COURIER" .. ~. ; .• ~~ :' I-AJS x 13. WSW-ti(es,..rodio..«CAl-groop,...linted gJo~s.-corpeling,.. 12R10W209597) ·.~~~~ou~T~s , . ~-. DISCOUNT 4 speed transmission, l 600c:c engine-;-buck:et'ieo1s, emission con- trol. (2R1 1 W210947). FACTORY . ' -~-ft8_3_ --• .;.___ ~'ii/I '7.Per Month · 24 MONTH 01 .. EN END·LEASE I • ~!~~ORY$ .LIST , LIST COMPL•••tflf ACKAGE I ::!ND tllfO!Uit8d PICKUP I OPT. RATIO·'REAR AXLE. 800xl6.5 Pl Y H.D. TIRES, HEAT· ER. DEFROS·TER. WEST COA,ST MIRRO.RS. F258RP83793 I WITHA ::!ND 8'· D&ll»CE'CROSS COUNTRY I I I I I I I I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I '8· • I 1--.----"'---- I BRAND NEW CLEARANCE PRICED SHORTIEVAN ' '1 3 Jord E100 · ' lhe one everyone is looking for. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND CLEARANCE PRICED NEF-100 1/2 TON TRUCK IRAND COURl' IR PICKUP •• NEW FOR '72 IMMd~~~~f~ci~iii~ERY with aPERRl~.~~~~~~D~~~'~'~'~'~MPERI CLEARANCE PRICED :~~j·,;:;;~:.:, $2988 $2588 '3910GVW " • ~O Amp bonery • 35 Amp al l. • 1800 CC Eng. • Vin yl ~eat 'b00K 1 4bpr.11re~ CLEARANCE PRICED ::~Nm '72 MINI HOME $ FltfflDO ~a.o With MINi ·Home Conversion (E24GH P51937) IMMEDIATE DELIV.ERY CLEARANCE PRICED ::~ND '72 EL DORADO •Rear teat Spring1 ' Ind 1r. ~u~p. #SGTAMG16796 COMPLETE PACKAGE 18, M"1n·1 uo,me · · · • ""' : · ~ ....... -·~-· •· • · • ~~ ~' 5299 .' ·~'-Cf!' : '· :~;;,~!;~f!::.;~::::,'~oo~I~ 1 Ton Chass11 Camper Specia l. V-8 , Auto., power DOWN Pll MO """"""•·• "'"t.r..1'•"'11.!•1 '1•u .. i.1.c1 ••1f . ' •1 11 steering, brakes, fUllY SELF CO NTAINED . (E30GHP200'1) OR FULL PRICE . $64ii ~~~~~~Tl $ 1 69 ECONOVAN ·$1saa• FORD 1300 . Aulo. trarn .. 1 ton IOl!Q wheel bott, htow~ •' I .. ---. I -----'----~~ I 1~~~===----._.....,_.;._ I '68 :, .. ,, .. ~~.~,~~~:.;,;,.; .. $1 88 power ltffr~. 1od1<>. lleatcr W(R.538 .. '69 PICKUP CHIV.CUSTOM<AI v.a, rodio, lltot•. litenw No. 600S40 ' .<,fOID (USTOM s 1 ... V-l~oulO. tram .. loe!Oly ,o"" condit!Ofllna. • pow«ltttfitt,lietn'AHo..7"1HX. f . ' - ' • . c ·=- '• .. ' Sah Clemenie ~pi$trano EDITION Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stoelul - -·Y9\.1. 65, NO. 215, 5 SECTIONS, M PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WH>NESOAY, OCTOBER 11, 19n TEN CENTS -~r~s Commission Seeks Liquor Ban Repeal -t·.-.J. ,Jly CANDACE. PEARSON .... ....., .......... _llron(e-Coonty Harbors, Beaches and Piira Commtssiooers Tueaday rocolll< ~ w ·lhat an ordinance problbltlng · ~ In ccunty recreation areu be ~~the action WU.taken, com- .u,;toilon wav<red a little and voled H ttipoflel ihe Board ol SUperv18on know ,~1 lhey'd done until they draft an aJ.ternatJvt law. ' · 'l'bal new Ol'dlnanct, to be dllcussed at tho:'::tiO\'. 14; nieefu!g, was '"!iiieotecl by COiii!i1ftlon..-Thomas O'Keele to noad . -. ;..-: .~ that DO perao!1 will drink In a ...,,...llon anoa when deeds ...iricl ft or In areu pnlbiblted by the --and co~ . O'Keele; alJo If San Clemente city ~ jlt.eribed ~ potentl,al pan anc1 beach mtet aa "dry" ·or "kid- die" areas . • Commlllion dJalrman Martin Usab and commlasloner Tom Baldwin w.r. the m votes on the repeal of liquor ~ bibition in county areas. -'l'llO•Volitead aet-(Pnlhlblllon)-ns_re._ pealed natJonally In 11133, about ~ time the county • oni-.. · forbidding drinklnJ or transporlnig liquor within any recre~tion area was passed. Tbls has caused problems of en- forcement because people drinking on their own boa.ta, in campers or even in county..leued harbor restaurants are breUlog the law. c.ommtulontr Frank Robinson, the most adamant in argu1ng againrt the "bypocrlllcal and unenforceable }4w," couldn't awallow waiting for an alternative onllnance. RobinlOll wanted only a complete "'~like that In effect on state prop-erty. 'Hii'"""-the world-come apart on stale beaches," be asked. 'lbe commission's action, U II II •I>' proved by the Board of SUpervleon, would apply to SUnset Beach, Aliso l!each In SOUth Laguna, Salt Creek, Dana Point Harbor and the unincorporated area between Corona de1 Mar and Laguna Boacb. It would aJao apply to Mile Square Park In Fountain Vslley (when! tbe goU course clubbouae was granted a liquor permit), Uni'lenlty Part In Irvine and O'Neill Park In El ~oro. Irvine. Park near Tustin baa deed restrlctiom against Im- bibing. Tbe-<:Omllllsllonen rellJ!y l>egan bad« )oedallng on legalizing libation when Clemente Pilot Makes .. ,,. : ·.:.., - 'E·' . . ' ~ -~ mergen-ey ~---. . - Landi ::.~erchn;nts Hit With 'Poor' Funny Money Several P!'o!\l: '20 ·tillls described by ont bank eff!clill' aa being "a pl'l!ttY bad job·•'of counterfeitlni" maced In bulm bank depooita In San Clemente 'llt2.day. ' -11rree bogm bilb, all-.........i and Jn. 1~ aboiilid Ii> • """°"':t wear, ~ ~-.., .....,.;,..·.{ lbe Sim a_..Banko!Amor!cabnncb. ~ -pieces of -tender ...... Jlopool\ed . by ....... ol 1111!1! ~ and food '""'"•·· -~ 10lume 11· btlll: W derb some~ lneaperlenf;"d., . Mmliiser J;ee Winterton A14! llloli' the mercll8nll, ..,._ !be bank, take tbt lOu ln BUCb cases. quite accurate, however. The U.S. Secret Service,. which Is a branch of the 'l'rea8ury Department, in- vestigates cJ1..11terfeltlng cases. The; bllla: appearing in San Qemente were turned over to that agency. Apnta .,, tbe •cloiMt-"'IUlml-" In Loi ~ aaJd .. _..,..,.. ... pass. Ing Ibo biDI "1low: • rOvlog circuit, at,. ~ 111....,i tbe ...,., In - cltiel Ind ~-the bou ii -Genera117, ..-.. aid, -"aastomen" ~-lllLlll purdlaset with .. biDI al -..... Ibey be11eYe clerkl mljflll DOI notl<e the q\iatl- ty ol the· billl. A faulty emergency ligllt aboard a huge United Airlines 0010 Dubed at sunael Tuesday over Memphis cauolng a Sen Clemente alrlineo captain to elfect an wqeocy ._.... at "lll ~loo,• ___ ..__ " But ..,. ,., a. 1p.-. capi. Jact llooclyf1 real )lft>blmll ...... 'Ibo "* .... .. lull_ Dal durlllC • turning ._.. Oii • ~ landing l'.rlp the Uner wltb .°'.!::"" and 70,000 poundl ol fuel aboord In tbe mUd. ~urly Suspect f_.fi,:!Jooki:e Ring /;.j~es Himself Up French Mission in Hanoi Bombed; U.S. Jets Blamed 'lbe pauengen ... -romalned aboard the llranded jllllnll' for tbnoe hours wllile ~ mw1 b1ed to round up malrnhlft apparatut to allcnr tbe Loi AngeJe&.bound -to ..... the plane. 'lbe beadlCbet began al about 1 p.m. when Mondy assei1edly llDliced a warn- ing ligllt on and decided to lbut down one of -engines. Moody, )"bo lives at 14'1 C.lle Vaquero, then """1...S pennl-to lend at Mernphb · lnlmoational Airport -a tennlnal DOI yet expanded to handle <he huge roto linen . . ;,: • tJy ARTHUR IL VJNm, • OI 1M 01itr PW , ... i ... ., A bilrly used car salesman suspected as the musclemaD debt collector in a Nini!" toporls bootmakln( systom ~ beaded by a Saddlebadc Cnlll< '*'"llj College llblricl trustee tur-i'l\J'defed to Newport Beach polke Tue&- ~1,. ' ~ft E. Kelly, M, of .13$ Seagull Lalir: Jilewpnri Beaeh, was booked on ~ of C\lllSJ>lraey to commit ~ and moued on . .._lllO ball Jiaiillnc • Oct. II amlgnmenl. '••tt-w"11 a millkin-tooone lhot.'' said ~ • ..,.S lntolllpnce Detedlve John Sluiai.Jn nprd lo.-tbe eoll!cldence lhal ~to Ke1J1 u Ille #5,0llO+ ~·ttfir•1 -· ~ COrnmunlty Co If e I e SAIGON (AP) -U.S. warplanes at- tacked Hanoi today and Ille Frenclo aaJd =Ile mlAioo WU -Uy their cldef ftYO)' --,.._ to • French protest .Iba U.S. Command aaJd ·Initial operational reports Indicated ~ Navy planes bit military 1arge11 .111 to I miles from !be mission buildings, lt promised an in- veittgalj<in<0f a French compla!nt. "A number of enemy IUl'face.to-alr mlalles....,. flrod al tbe U.S. alreralt." !be Ila-aald. "No U.S. altc:nft wm loot, and the --nlsslles, after milllnl Iba aircraft, could have Im- Heaviest Rains In 25 Years ~ Alyn M.•Brannoil, 40, of Santa Ani~ Ii c:umndy 1ne on ••o,q · ball alJer ~ charied . ~ r7 _.1e -fl>VoMnc _.,.klnl violellool. Flood Mexi·ca11• ~ -. .,..iJmlnary bearing Nov. Ill II>~ Judicial Dlslrlct COurt oo M ~ Of lic>oknwklnl, two ccunta ol es-~. MeP:o (UPI) -Tbo inlonecowilolcomptncy. _.. ..-m.ln·lt,...,. bnlulM Dfitrk:I AtlmleJ Ted lllilanl deltrudlv9 lloodlnJ to Iba normally arid y II Ii llkel1 the 0..,.. 0ounty -....... ol lllJa Callf«nla, offlclall Jory wW -.. -aaJd todaJ--: ':''. .. -~11111 data, ..,.q lllo ..,_ A dowo ..... llial -:II 1iouno wlll>- julilijt jjlJeeo bolnl ..-.c. ad out • ...-el rood, -water .'!N.t.JllOUld lmmedledel ' tely ----...... .... !wt .... ......,, -e<lillla ·~d .... "' -_,,,_ ....... and depoolled Or-· Coar I ,. -., ..... _. 1111 Gall o1 ;· •• (lw ,J'lile II Callfordl, wwwdbil to JUa ~ : -oltbt-~ollllo t:WO UNES TURN M~=t:."'.=,""":'lnjlorles ViTO BUSY ONES 'Cu. 11oo 111Ja CaJffamla 11t1e .... and San J'olliot, • --rm.,. -di mllol lo lloo -Oii tlie ..... "' tbt pl!, .,... lloo -bl~ lfemnda oil(, • lie aolol It to • ....,.. wmo dellro'ed In ........ 'l'llo lled Qw poowtded .....,tlrtllea 'air. ""' -·· --. .....,..._ _ ............... --. __ led...,....,. ........ i.:~-....-= T."i:"'""'J!ed· ed uaUl tllll • ..... .w. pacted .. tlil' ground.. A spok!SDW' agr<ed <he statement might glVe the Im~ that tbe deotruction or lbe million headquamn WU calmed by tbe North Vlelnamese mlssllea. 1be command . r 19 f u 1 e d , however, to rule out tbe poulblllly of U.S. bombs going utray, ·as has hap- pened before, and bltllng Ille Frenc:b compound. Sem!tary of Defense Melvin R. Laird today COOiOeded In Wufttnglon !bat Amerkan bombs may hive struct the French diplomatic -,but Aid U.S. air lll'IUo agalnll North Vietnam wW c:ontlmlo even u private peace talk.I go on In Parb. (See ~.Page 4) On lbe bub ol piellmlnary ...,.,ia, Laird aald, he couldn't ""'"' pooltlvely whether Iba danla(e 'l'U caUled by a faulty bomb drop '"' by Norlb Vlet- (Seo HANOI, 'Ptte I) Once .. Iba ground, Iba plane bad_ to be turned alOlilld to INdi tbe l<nnlnal But the runway WU too omall. Efforts to pull the plane around lalled, oo Moody tried w turn the craft ca lta own power. Hail-way tbrollgh. the -1'boel of tbe craft slipped from tbe pavement and became embedded ln mud. Three houri lat<r tbe pusenpn -. 311 their way agaln. And c:rew1 ...,. lllll try1n1 to Ullltlcl< the bapleu craft. Ill Son Strangled TOKYO (AP) -A retired 7'-yearoold gunsmith llrangled loll tncurabl1 w rl· year-okf IOf'I becaUH he could not bear to "" lolm l)'ina belplell tn bed, police r<ported toda1. No cbara• havt been o~ *1 aplntl the father, Totldll Tlbne. Experhaent Proposed C"lemente Awaits Word On Pend"leton Air Test Ccouril1 ollldafi acr-atmc I jelport at Comp -..... rel to -tbt dtJ GI S. Clommto'I nquoll that fm tf:ltl "1th····~ JN bl~ In dlol above Ibo riM -w lllal local ruldenll can aarnple !be ...... . CllJ' x.._ K4oi Corr ..... lodsJ ho liubld•----the COUlllJ' --Plltll -S4qlll wlu Ronold ~ liddl Zlled !be c:oundl ---c.-aped to -tbe let· pan .. lo -that tbe CllUill)' .. ......, -·...,. ............ for tho u .. -n.t ....... Pl If I I id .., .., ODY&> cllmm Ii • ---II u .. teala---... ~pn­~.,, -... mw.....,... llrtp. Harbor, Beaches-and Park.I DJ.rector Ken Sampoon said be couldn't !aloe tbe repeal vote to the superviaors lfith full suppc>rt unless he bad an altematlve wtth him. The repeal vote cal'Df! d e a p l t e Sampson's comment that 20. letter• lo op. po1Ulon to it, including one rrom lhe Or"Die County SberUl'1 deportment, bad been recdved. 'Ibe meeting was not well attended. Only two women, Belly Heck<! of South Laguna, and 14rs. Arthur Kazarian of Newport Be.acb spoke against the action. Both Mn. Heciel and Mn.IKuarian cited the dangers the repeal ml~te for famlll<S-ana childnon at the -'-- Commil!loner Bald"·in agreed, 11yhc that "there ought to be one place whlre you don't have to put up with it (drunkenness).'' Robin9on said that there are laws that take care of dllorderly conduct amt Id-- . ded the old saw, "You can1 leglolato mor.fillty." Usab uid while be could 111Pl'Ori an easing of the entire problbttion, be didn't want to .. open up a Pandora's bo1 of wild orgies on the beaches and In parks." Yes voteJ on the repeal 1D add.U.lon to Robinson and o·~ were com- missionen C. C. "Jack" Woolley, Verne Maple and Donald !'ox. - °"'""" '"'°' ...... CHALllNGIS APPUISAL Of IRV1NI CO, STOCK AS TOO LOW MCI. Joan frvfM IMlth In IAtnt Round With Corponllon Irvine Foundation Assets Called 'Fraµd' By Heiress • By BAllBAJIA ltllElBJCll °' ...... ,.. .... An oppealaal GI -ol tl>o Jamoa Irvine Foundlllen 1tatln1 tloat lair martet value ol Ill stock In !be !:-wine Ct mpany ii f2:1,5a' 1 shire hu bHo con- demned at "fraUdulent" by"""-JMD Irvine Smith, who Wied the report "an • ..,..,n1 eumple al defiance, not ...,. pl!anco, with Ille law." The Orange 0Junt1 Tu W• ap- praisal ol tbe COt1lpanTI boldlnp, Mid Ml'L Smith, ~ pllce lllo -value al c'-r IO lllUO per obare, and ber own eotlmata ot ltt mlnlmwn pta'CUR qf .. If p)aced m tbe maritl Mlday -Id be •bout~-~ to Orante Coon(y lnom ber Mld- cflebura, VI., -II>< Iba Tuooday .......... meeting GI lrWM Compony dll-o. ., .... -,__ blr fitat cr11i.i wollq Ill tbt ""'olllfoco Mire an __ ..,.,_ ,,. • .....-ol'--1ftpal'ed OI I requirement GI tlio Tu lldorm A<t " ... ...,.._ tbt -'"""''' ... :Qled ob:lnc leasJlo7 w.......,.., -= '""' llon dlat d>arilable I-In ::::r:: rllaln Ill -· ....u Id ....... -..,, 11'11 dl...C hOllfll_...,.. .. _.,. ~ In .., -_,. and besln """"' -i cloarlta1olo -tlOlll -M .. loU-oltholr- lo 1'71, oao1 fi>cl d.,. 10 I .......,i, '"" ,,_ l"1ne foundalloa ....... M.I filftlllil GI n ine ~ -· Mn. flmlllo, p'11oclpol t o 4 I • I d u 1 I ...,., 1 If 1 owns Jta1t undtr ll pereeet ood lflt ramaJndtt GI tho -ii btld bJ --. GI tho lmns family. la It'll, the -llon'1 -,.._. •• , amomltd 10 fJ ,ttt .771. 'ijN a Id '"" .,. !Ala IWD ptn.'fOI. al dllt ••• '"""" lloldU., -lo 111-.... po I I. 11n. Smitlo palotocl ""· ...... "II tall ......_wal had Wlaaed IJllMt S ..... .... t"'1 -Id -w to ""' llltlllllfllllalo-u-.. Ill*_, 111bt Tu 11*111 ML• Al 1111 _,,... tflndon -q_ lln. -•Iii, ....,,. ~ ,._ I William B. Muon and foundation pnll- dtnt N. Lo1aU M<Uol'OJI refused lo sift ber ""'* ot the 1ppn1Al -.... dell!ribed u "a superfldal, ~ doCumentmadebyanl...._ • inf '°'"pony tn N<w Yorio." 'Moe appnlal 1pparer<l7 wu ._ IOl<ly on tbe ••mine nlue ol tbt 1.rtlna Company, Ille a id, and -not fltdtodo land hol'fnp ol the --· Tbe compo111 """' land In -and Imperial Valier. aloiic .... tbe &UOO.~ Irvine llaadl In Drance ~ t1. The loundallon'• ......... naa-aid Mro. Smltb, Wild ii-the -GI Ibo Oranae c.ount1 land at 1 1"ricUro,,_... Ii.JOO an ..,,.., wlllll In flCI h -bt awtb II teut fl ... an acre, bMool • IU -fltpu-s. -. =-"I --. ~~i ---= , .. 1 ---. :-;i...-'"': • ' 2 OAILr PllOo SC ,., ...... 1 SUSPECT ... ellmlnallnc a hearing at the municipal court ...... D I llw -aid todoJ 11111 ll:tllJ, a sbt·lilot, foor-tncb, ZIO-pound resident of Newport Beach's Oakwood Apartments surrendered on the adYlct of Los Angeles attorney P.,ttr Smith. Kelly apparently learned he \\'as wanUd (or questioning in conn~tion with the book.le ring cuse revealt'd Aug. 28 whtn Trustee BraMOn was arrested by vlce officers. Dttectlvt1 Simon declined to reveal what led investigators to Implicate the s'uspect as an alleged enforcer wbo dealt with slow-pay betton. Deputy District Attorney Don Carroll contmned following Brannon'! Aug. 21 ttrrest that a second suspect was being sought In that role, followi~ a grim "'aming to one local man heavily In debt due to sports gambling. The unidentified Newport B ea c h businessman and his wire received an anonymous telephone call one night in mid-August, from a man who suggested they go out and check thelr front door. Shaken at the sight or an elght·lnch hunting knlte imbedded in the door, the victim called police to spill his story of do ing $1,000 a week in business - allegedly with Brannon. Detective Simon said names of many local people who allegedly placed bets with Brannon on various sporting events will be subpoenaed for testimony. f\.toney allegedly exchanaed hands in gambling on professional horse racing, football, basketball, boxing and tennis. Trustee Brannon spent several days In Orange County Jail, unable to raise his original $!5,0l'Xt ball, unW it was reduced to $10.000 by llarbor J udicial District Court Judge Calvin P. Schmidt. Newport Beach Oetectlve Simon and investigators from the Orange County District Attorney's Offt~ moved ln and arrested Brannon after the original lo- rormant assertedly paid h1a $2,800 gambl~ ing debt as demanded. The transaction was a 11 e g e d I y monitored by lawmen to obtaJn evidence resulting In an arrest warrant for Bran-- non, who Is associa ted with an Anaheim business school. Since his rtlease on ball , the charter trustee of the S.ddlebaclt Community College Dfstrtct which wa1 formed In 1967 bas continued u an active member of Its board. Fellow tru!tees and Co 11 e g e SUperlntendent Dr. Fred Bremer have so far declined. comment on the charges aptml Brannoo, citing legal guldelines aglinst IUCh remarb which are followed by most school dl!lrlcts. They greeted hlm chttrily wben be al' rived for the Sept. I board meeting and Braru10n deUvtrtd hlt customary ln· vocation when the meeting convened. Prisoners Riot In W ashingto11, WASllJNGTON (APl -RI o II n g prisoners held a boody shirt out or a cellblock window today In an uprising at the District of Columbia city jaJI. where JO to 13 hostages were held under threat of death. The reports of savagery cnme shortly after noon following attempt. by au thorltie1 to use relatives of rioting prisoners and Inmates from the city's reformatory in nearby Lorton, Va. in an effort to quell Ute uprieing. Mrs. Paltlcta Gorham, w1lo aid. btr husband ii among the prisoners in the cellblock where the disturbance broke out. said she saw the prisoners bring one hostage "to the -" and btt hint on the 1kie of lbe head. He fell to the ·floor. Blood WU CUlhinl Out Uie back of his head." "They -tlloy were going to kW a man," f\.fr!l. Gorham 1ald. "They hit the man on the slde of the b~ad to i.ndicnte they're not playing." Mn. Gorham wu among about 25 relatives who entered the prison y1rd to talk throuah wlndow1 with the inm,:tee. ) OMM•I COAn .. DAILY PILOT 'n!e Or"'f' CHM Dl'ILY I'll.Of, wl• .....,. .. ~ ............. , ...... Mjltllell ... "'-°'" ... C-1 l'\lllllltllltlt ~. """ r11• H I!..,_ ltt ........... MMlloy ""'-"" r r!N'I', IW C..11 MllM, H...,.n I -". H...,11no'°" lttc:1111t-11111 v11 .. ,, L..- aM<tl, lr•lftot/..,.ltoMdl ~ s... cie-111 ,.,, .,h11n ( .... If•-A tfnOl<t ttO .... I 'ldlllon 11 MIWlet S.hlrd1~ 11111 Solnclt)'I. ri. ""'9c•1 "'*lihlrlt JL•nt It 11 nt W.M hr S•rMt, C..11 MeM, Clllltf"nll, tMJl. •ekrt N. W1-4 '"'"'""' .. l"lllNltlllt J11k •. c-,1., Ykl ,,.. .. ..,. eM o-t1I Mllllttl' Th•11111 K11•ll •.. .., n'"''' A. M11,,11r11• MANflnf 1111W Ch1rl•t H. l101 l lch1ril ft. Nill ........ .,,, ~ lllLllA ... a. .... CN&. JOI H.nlt II C:.J11l111 l•1I, t1•11 --c:.tl M.11 Jllt --:: ::r ,,,..... "...,.,, htdll -.. .........,. ............. -..Ot lNJ .. Kii ........,,,, Uo111111 hldl1 m ,.,.., ,..,_ Tel1f•111 f714J M2-4Jt1 CJ_,,,., ~ ...... '41.U71 s. er 11r .t.1 •••=• "' ''s1t 1 .,....... =""':'"f""· :i:.::-if ..:::-,":"'::'":t="'. :=i.: .. ';ii :..r= ...i..~...i~·~in ~-1!..~-~ ~a..,.,,.., Hi jac Slnyer ers Files Suit By TOM BARLEY Of "" Olltr ..... , ·"" A fonner Ma rine who shot and killed a hijacker three months ago and today live1 in fear o( what he predicts Is cer- tain reprisal by the dead man's friend• and relati't'et ha• sued Pan American Y.'orld Airways for $1.2 million. \Villiam H. lt1 ills claims In the Orange Cowity Superior Court action filed Tues- day that the airlines act.ion Is releasing his name to the press against his w11he!I exposed him to the revenge of the dead hijacker's next of kin. He states in the lawsuit that the dead man's brother ts one of several Viet- namese relatives who are currently anx- ious to learn the whereabouts in Orange County of Mills, his wife, Josephine and the couple's two children . Mills claims in the action that he shot and killed hijacker Ngu Yen Thi·b!nh Ju- ly ! on lhe specirlc Instruction!! of the Boeing 747 captain. He states that Capt. Eugene Vaughn summoned him to the aircraft's cabin shortly after the hijacker warned the crew during the San 1'~rancisco to Saigon flight that he had a bomb with him and would detonate the device if the pilot did not follow his instructions. to fl y the plane to Hanoi. MUl! aald the captain returned the .357 lt1agnum pistol taken from him before the aircraft took off and told him to use It wb.en he got the appropriaLe signal. Mill• states that the captain then pull- ed the hijacker away from the stewardess he was holding as a hostage, wrestled him to the ground and then told Mills: "kill the ••. " The ex-Marine !ltates he did exactly that. But he blames the alrllne for 1111bse- quent actions that have, he said, c011t him his savlng1 and forced him to move several times including his moat recent move to Orange County. MUl1 said Jt waa clearly understood at the time of the incident that the airli ne would not reveal the Identity of the man who shot the Vietnamese hijacker. Mills states that the dead man wae a prominent member of a Vietnamese ~ti­ war movement and that many of Us member• have sworn to revenge his death. He it.ates that he had been warned on man yoccaslons that he, hl11 wUe and two children wUI be put to death by the organliation. Public Hearing Set on Regional Sewage Question The A!Jso Wa ter Management Agency will hold a public hearing at 7:30 tonlehl at lhe Al1"' Elemeo!Bry SChool, 21!142 Wesley Drive. South Laguna. The hearing will be held to receive public opinion on the regional approach to sewage colleetion, treatment and reclamation. The $27.5 million project will link sanitaUoo agencies of the 10uth county area from Irvine throUgh La1una Niguel and featuru a large reglonal treatme nt plant at the All.so Creek area by the coast and a 7,000 foot ocean outfall. The Lotuoa Beach Planning Com· mission will render a written position on the qeoey's Environmental Impact Statement during a apecla l sess.lon at 2 p.m. Friday, 1n City Hall. Other treatment plant.a Inland may be expanded. A major aspect or the concept i.!I the maximum reclamation of water and its reuse for irrigation of golf counes, 1reenbelll and recreation areu. 1bt oullall ls capable of hand.ling the sytterns ultimate forca1led c1paclty of 55 million gallons a day. However, it would be used onty ror discharge Of aurplus m:.laimed water. primarily durln& ·.winter when there J.s Utile market for ln'igatlon water. A m1)or ponton of the colt IJ eq>tcted to be borne by federal ind state clean Wftte r grants. The plan would neceullate the cloture c,! Lo.Jun• Beach'• downtown aanitary fa cility and abandoltment of the Lel"Ufll outfall. Fo1mer Official Grabbed on Boat WOODS HOLE, Miii. (AP! -An unldtntlfied man (fibbed f o r m fl r Dtfenae Sttretary Robert S. McN11m1r11 lboerd 1 bolt bound for M1ntu1 's Vlneyard Sept. 29 and ••attemptfd to wres tle l'llm over the rail." a •poke1nuin !or the boat llne ukl todBy. 11>1 apokt•man aakt A-lcN1m1r11 "did not want to prefer 1.ny chlrJet" ind uked 0011 that "the 111111 be litpt 1w1y from him." c1ur1n1 tho rest ol tho Is. mliwta trip, . 'l1le Glllclll of tho Woods llole, M.lnhl'1 Vineyard and N 1 n l u o k • t Sleam1hlp Authority, wbo uked to ,.. Qlaln unldenttlltd1 "Id tho locldcnt .,., dttcrlbtd lo him oy penlOltltel ol the fer-ry, the MV t1land.ir. Bil<e for Two Elinor Davis of \Varrenton, N.C., takes her pet r accoon Jlachel for a bi cycle spin on her shoulders. The six-month· ol d coon \\'as a gift from her fellow employes. 5 Ne w Directors o,.i Sa11 Clemente Cliamber Board Directors of the San C 1 e m e n t e Chamber of Commerce Tuesday laun- ched their traditional fall election season by accepting five new members to the board for three-year terms. The five directors. selected on mailed ballots sent to all members of the chamber. are Dr. Robert Beasley, William Eaton, John Lowry, Mark Marks ar.d Bill Webb. The next step in the election ~ i!I a report from a nominaUng committee which will seek a !late of officers to serve the chamber next calendar year. The committee will ntum ne1t month with the recommended slate of offlcers, including a nominee to the pres.ldency wh1ch now Is held by Roy Gar~rine. Ousted Chinese Minister Died In Crash-Chou -llnpact Aides Hired.; Environment' Statements Get Board Nudge : By JACK lll09AtK • 11!118t rule oo the ..,iraomet!tal Impact it .... °"" HM "'... before we can lssue 1 perm.a, that's the prove them immediately," he stated. "U oot, we must determine if the eri- vlronmMt is affected and, if we .sb An interim procedure for handling · llw," replied the l>Ulldlng chit!. J')ivlrorunental Impact Statimeni. (EIS) McLcllao oald the flO mUJtoo backlog was adopted Tuesday by the Orange included U commercJal bundingi, a County Board of supervisors to an ctto~t dozen tract maps Md $7.5 million worth nint: for a dectslon. Th!S takes: and. determine, we DlUlt ll!nd themi.""' to clear a log jam of building projects 1n of single famlly homes. unlncorporated areas. "If the gr&dlng had been done we ap- we must speed the p~ss if the Inc industry in the county Is not to gr to • At the aame time the board voted ... l, despite vtgorowi opposition from Supervilor David l... Baker, to approve the addition of eight new members to the County Planning Department staff to process the statements as quick1y as possible. The EIS controversy emerged last month when the state supreme Court rul- ed that the Legislature's Environmental Quality Act of 1970 applied to private as well as public projects. CRerated stories, Page 5). It a development la found to be en- vironmentally , "1ignificant" it must be subjected to n!vlew by the coonty Plan- ning Commisison, 1upetviaors noted. After a lengthy diseusston, board mem· bers voted to hlr, the l!Jibt ne1t people; transfer the fund! to pay them, and in· structed Cowtty Admint.strative O(ficer Robert Thomas to explore the long railge implications of the Supreme Court decision. The motion called for a report bac k to the board by Nov , 7. Baker charged, in reference to the hir· ing of the eight staff members at a CO!lt or $611,000 that, "w e are becoming so blinded by the bureaucratic process that we arc losing sight of the goal." The supervisor continued. "We are being asked to rush into something which has not been properly analyzed. It needs study by the county administration and by prcsonnel." Baker had rea<:ted to a request by Richard Ramella, whc\ beads the county's General Planning Program, for the ad- ditional personnel Ramell a said it bad taken five full tim e people working exclusively on t-~IS reports on public projects during the past seven mont hs to clear 140 reports. Bakers aid this means that. "it takes five People one full day to analyze an im- pact · statement. If this is so, the department's procedures should be in- vestigated.'' Before Baker attacked the planning staff request, Floyd McLellan, county director of building and safety, said some $70 million in priva te 1'uilding projects were being held up pending clearing of EIS reports. . "We need guidelines now," he said. "We can't continue to hold up this many projects. II "Why are you holding them up?" asked Baker. "Because the planning department ,,. Planners Launch Impact Guidelines halt." ! Route Closed Siidden Rainstorm Soaks Road SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Traffic was hailed in both dlrecUons on tht Bay. shore Freeway between Interstate 280 and San Franciaco lnLematlonal Airport , early today as a drenching rainstorm dumped up to 1.65 inches in the Ba 'I . Area. . Continued rain was predicted through 1b~sday with a chance of ahoWers· · as far 80Uth aa Santa Marla and Fresno, the National Weather Servitie said. ' The California Highway Patrol said 2 persona died in rains in the area and in the Bay1hore Freeway downpour, where witnesses said Up to nine incho9- of rain covered the roadway. Jn the city of Colma, thtte to fOW' feet of w a t e r was reported at !IOme downtown intersection after the raln-1wollen Colma C r e e t spilled over Jtl ban Its. The stonn brought the first seasonal snowfalls in Northern California with the Lassen Loop section or State Route 89 closed for a few hour s Tuesday momlng. ·. · Snow levels were near 7,000 feet in the northern mountains and 91000 feel in the southern Sierra Nevada, .. Securities Found ht Sack. .. Reported at $1.3 Million ;',. LOS ANGELES - A burlap sack found in the vicinity of Sea Island Drive in Laguna Niguel July 24 contained $1 .3 million in securities allegedly stolen from United Call!ornia Bank Monarcb. Bay branch In the March burglary. 'lbe worth of the bonds waa made by a source close to the FBI which has been working the $5 million burglary case. Earlier estimates released by the Orange County Sbe£1ff'a office al the time the !Bek was found placed the worth of the securities at only $100,000. (See related story Page 3). The sack and It.a content.a are expected to be entered as evidence late today in the trial of three Ohio men charged with the crime. The securities the aource said, were run through a washing machine to remove fingerprints before they were discarded in the heavy brush on the hill!llde near the street end. He speculated thieves discarded the loot because It would have beeti dlificult to aclJ them to another party. The recovered property has been traC- ed, the source added, to several ~f~y deposit boxes rifled during the h-tarc.b N;- 26 weekend breakin by a team of high); experienced thieves. .• Alter punching a hole In the ban~ roof and blasting their way into t~e vault, the burglars broke into 458 of (b~ individual boxes seizing cash, j~well, rare coins and other valuables ow,ned. hy the affluent patrons in lbe Laguna Niguel, Monarch Bay, Three Arch Bay and Laguna Beach areas. Lawsuit.a amounting to more than f2$ million have been filed against Urytlid California Bank and the Oreo Al4.rflt Company in wake of the mAAstV~ burglary. ~ suit alleges neglige~ ... Op lhe part of those companies. The swts are now pending in Orange Countf Superior Court. . ' Pair in Cabinet ·' ·. Named in Stilt Study in Clemente From Page J I SWl Clemente planning comml1sioners HANQJ WASHINGTON (AP)_ A lawsuit was tonight will launch their study of rules • • • filed today against two Ni1on cabin,e:t ~· and guidelines for environmental impact namese antlah'traK weapons falllo& back ficers, charging they bead land·1r"11 statement• for new developments in tb.e on the city. university aid programs of $750 mUI~ a city. Asked at a .news conference if he year which cater to big agribusin~ spd By United Press Internatlonal The study• ordered by city councilm~n thought it wise to bomb close to Hanoi special interest groups to the detrimell:t at their meeting last Thursday, is in-while peace talks were in a delicate 0~ small farmers, consumers az:id Lin Piao, China'• disgraced defense tended to inter.J:ret the latest state st•""e, the secretary replied: · · · ~ tha -e· rrunonties. . minister who Oed tbl country when hi.I Supreme Court ecisian. Indicating t "We will contirrue the use of alrpower The suit, filed in U.S. District ~uti plot to asauatnite Mao Tte-tWli WB.I un· impact reports must be made for private during this period. The President has here, names Secretary of Agti<itllture as well as public development. stated this on several OCC'as\ons and we covered, burned to death when the Other items on toru&bt's agenda in-will continue to strike military target.a in Earl L. Butz and Secretary of Health, prlvale plane secretly ~red b7 hit Pi elude resumption of a public hearing on North Vietnam." Education and Welfare Elliot Richardson for thl escape crashed . .ln MongoU1 !n the controvenlal request by businessman Laird declared, as he has on eeveral and otb.er officials. route to Ruaia. . Richard Preble to convert a residential occasions, that ·the U.S. planes strike at Among the many demanda, the com· This is the official fe:rslon 6t ·Lin'• lot at l02 Esplanade into a commercial only m.Jlltary targets and not at plaint seeks a pennanent inJunctibb ....L __ • ...._ parking lot. I" death u discloaed by PHmier U11N !t~ Dozens of local residents have pet!· "downtown Hano · against. federal spending on the "la~· la! In an interview wtth WUllam B. Honed against the shift in land use. Many Today's targets, he noted, Included a grant complex" of 70 unlver1ltlea, Dickinson, editor of The Phlladelphla of them appeared at the hearing two railroad marshaltng yard and transship-agricultural research, experiment ~ta· Bulletin. and other member!! of the weeks ago to fight the proposal, com-ment paint three miles from the French American Society or New1paper ton plaining of potential noise, fumes, dust diploma tic mlas n. e ca em Edi lo H lied th tlons and extension service!! unW new ,.,.ho are tourin& China. The dispatch a~ and traffic congestion. "significant rni!ltary targets." operating rules are provided. peared in the Bulletin today. 1 _::~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;z~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ In one segm.ent of the 31h·hour in· tcrview last weekend, Chou gave a detailed outline of Lin'• fate, beginning ~·it h the 19&9 Ninth N'aUonal Party Congrcs1 that named him u ~110'11 IUC· ceuor, on to h11 doomed plan to become Chln11'1 aol e rulu, and ending In the 8eptember, 1t7t , plane cruh thlt killed him and eight COC0!11J>irlton. That oegment of the intervi.w wa1 held up until the offlclal transcript was available. Chou said !hilt when Chinese offttlll1 learned that a plane. a Brit is h Trident, twd been secretly ordered by Lin's son. "we issued an order prohibiting all planes from laking off. That order was very effective, and throughout the coun- try plnnes remained grounded ... As aonn as he stcreUy ordered an airplane. the rnove waa reported becauae It was not In accordance 'f'l'ith our country's normal procedures.'' Chou aaid Lin's plane took off from Peltaiho, a shore resort about 175 miles e1at of Peklna: . "Don't you mow tlla!T" he ••ked hla American lntcrviewen. "Every Chinae knowa that." llere ii Chou's account of the cr1sh that killed Lin: "Only one plaoe left the country, and that wns • Brttlab Trldtnt. MOOJ.U. can te1tily 10 th l.a. "Wiim tho piano lol tbert, JI !•lied to 1po1 1be runwlf cl. tho ~ and Ir. fll<I wu ne.trly -Id .. tt bid to 111 a lorttd landlaf. n alld .... • di• lando 1111 tho .,.....i llivlti1 "!>Ind ••ry clear nwb1 "When t~·g~ la~ °"" of ' Ua wtnp Ont ·~bed lho sround and caught nrl! and au tbl nine J,ltl'IOfll on OOa rd IA'tre burned to death, --· GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRl!S 'ALL JIWILllY TRENDS There's a classic revival ln Fall jewelry styling for 1972, for today's woman I• ge!Un1 lhe clothes she wants and loves to wear. There are wide choices for the \vo man or the 70's. She can choose a simple treabnent of gold, a tra- dlUon laden diamond ensamble, a Lallorod look that mblos Ivory with gold or a lacy tllect that makes diamonds rtllect sparkling mem· otles. Personollzed jewolry of elegant good taste ha1 never been more ucce11lbl1. Whefher It'• diamonds, rubte1, emeralds, aappltlnl, 10ld, silver or platinum, tod.a.y'I ~ 1s free to use her own crutJve Imagination to enhance her own particular beauty. Bui best of all , &he bas acceso to a world ol ldeu from her local In· dependent {•wel!r, who ts com· II It takes th e right kind of money ,., . -~b .. to look your best. ~ ,... ""' ...... ...., .... ..,. .... w ..... Lnrl'I••• c ......... , ........ . 11111 *"'t ...... ~ .... .. ,,.....,. 14 • • r • t .. 14 ,,....c..__._._ •: ........ , ........ .. ..,....... ......... . .... c-Ill ..... .. ...... ,.,....,, . .,.... ............ ....,. J .C. J.l.,tmphri e6 J e1vPfer6 112J NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINllHT TlaMl ..- r.lelely lree o operaU! as he wUIJC1 n helping her. 1i·-..-----------.....,"""==-E111---En.:I 11 ir!AlS IN tl-11 IAME LOCATION IANltAMlltCAllO-MAnta CijAlOI ' PHONI 141·1401 • I ( \ I \ I I I I I I I I I l I l ' I I I I I 4 ' t I I I I I I I I l I I I I I ( ' - William 1.. O'Bl')'Oll o! Newport Beach will pruent his Orange Coast O>llege "lnve.etmt1Ha" lecture aerlH for the 21.st consecutJve year beginning Oct. 17, with some important ti ps oo the market. The flve--part series wW meet Tuesda)'j from 7:30-9 :)(1 p.m. at EaatbJuff Elementary School in Newport Beach. There ls no tuJtlon charge and persons m•y reglster at the lecture. THE FIRST SESSION will give Ups for reading the finan- cial page uf the d a i I y new1paper and wiU examine operations of a stock ~­ change, the over-the-counter market, the type of broker an investor should have, and the c<m.s of buylng and selling various securities. The Oct, 24 lecture wlll look at pitfalls for the average in- vestor, bow to talk with a security broker, and how to analyze the market trend from current economic conditions. It will also give an explanation of the Dow Janes and other averages. On Oel 31 O'Bryon will di5CU53 mutual funds. He will compare funds with t b e general market and will look at dollar-cost averaging, and tax deferred retirement in. comes. THE NOV. 7 session will cover utilizing commercial banks, savings and loans, thrift co m panies, Md municipal and government . bond markets. It will also look at problem s of the average reel estate investor. The final lecture an Nov. 14 will be on short term versus l~ng term gain, market let- ters, how the Federal Reserve Board affects the seturilies Dividend Set Directors ar B e ck m a n lnstru ment s Jnc. have dec lared a dividend of 12~ _ cents per share, payable Nov. 27 to shareholders of record Nov. 6. B e c k ma n manufactures precision analytica l in- struments and electronic com· ponents for scientific, medical aod industrial use. The com-pany bad 3,584,393 shares outstanding on Sept. 30. Bite! FINANCE I Small Town Not Looking For Plant 'FAS~= It takes the WOW/ ~ out d wearing denllns. YOICE Oil TONE Pagers Now For TM Flnt Time C"'"1nt_ All Of LAGUNA, SO. LAGUNA, DANA POINT, SAN Cl.IMINTE Al Wtll A1 All of Oren,. County end MGM of LM Anfeln For lnformetlon Call °""'t• C-ty Radiotelephone Serwlce Inc. "' ,,_ L.,-. ..... 4f6·JZ2J ,.. "" YOURS TODAY! P•rsonallz•d • •· ' \ Stylish • Efficl•nt Order For Younelf or a FrfeM May b• ut•d oA •AY•lop•• •• return addrttt le.btls. Al10 v•ry handy as ldtntificetion lebelt for markin9 p•rsonel it •m• such •s books, rec.ords, photos, ttc. Lebtl1 stick on 9las1 •nd may bt us•d for merli:fn9 hom• canned fo<.cl Items. All leb•ls •r• printed .,.,ith styli1h Vo9ue typ• on fjne 1velity wt.rt .. gummtd p•pfr. • • • • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST ,. 11. lt'1t OAle Cash Needed-Not Emotion Finance Briefs PIJBUO NOTICE PIJBUC NOl'IClll PUBLIC N01'lCl!l PKTITIOW allllMDI PM:T1T.OUJ •USl•n& "~'W.:::::· l'M fol.:=-..!:..":'.:. Mw TIM -fol= n,::alfT.,. ..... 'f• ........ ,..._ "' .... llrMMu •i M"-•1 •1 m I 1-• "' CAl..ll'Oll.HtA IQUUTll.MI COM· OllNAll tltOlril vtlJ.A. INS Md• TOY WOIUA. • "" tr • Enviro1ime1it Bond Sales Not 'Flotfle ririg' Say Banks • • tJt1'~ '"°' Ml(W, IMta Ma. ......... ~ "112 • '-:'.:... ~.~~ ~""' &ff'Mf. • .c...n. ~ "-"" .. PW'll ...,,,. .,L Wll'l:lll ...... .,,,, ""... c-,,.,.... a.ifllrWt I =-',.., ............... IWfl, c.111. ~'?~ ~ AW.. -~---le ~ ltJ M lit- ""' ...,_ i. ..... _,,. W llr en C.... -C.. rn; ~ by • ,..... J , 1'*11 BOSTON -'n'oe Amttlcan pubUc'1 commitment to a cleaner environment b heavy on emotion, light on cash. 11\at's the conclusioo reach· ed by the handful of U.S. banks trying tG sell t!tt· vironmental bonds. nm BANKS promise to use the funds they get from these bonds to make low-interest loans to polluters. The bargain interest rates are des.igned to ~ncourage manufacturers to p u r c h a s e pc>llutiOOoCQntrol devices they couldn"l or \\'Ou ldn't buy otherwise. Business demand for the Joy,·-cost loans far exceeds <.·ons un1er willingness to buy the supporting environmental hoods at mbst of the banks of· fering these bonds. ''Few people want to put their mooey where their ct1n- sclence is," explains one bank executive. THI "EARTH Bond" pro- gram at Arlington Trust Com· pel'lf, Arllngtoo, Va., ls typical ol the "about 10" sud> pn> grams t h.e International Iomitut.e for Environment.al Affairs says are currently in operation in tht U.S. Arlington Trust offers bonds n1aturing over 90-day and on~ and two-year periods. They earn the same interest as certificates or deposit beld for the san1e length of time (S.75 percCnt for a two-yea r period). Funds deposited in Earth Bonds are insured ln full by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) like au other bank deposits. Despite the fact that the Earth Bond interest rates and safety provisions are the same as those on the certificates of deposit sold by Arlington Trust. CQnsumers buy more of the certificates, a('C()rding to Edward Schmidt, the bank's marketing difector. DURING THE last two years the bank has sold only 550 bonds, although demand !7101iey's 1fortla Consumer Protection: How Does Nixon Fare? By SYLVIA PORTER On Christmas Eve. 1970, the \\'all Street Journal noted that ;tftcr tv.·o vcars in the While House President Nixon's 11roposals for "stiffened coo- suiner protection laws have either failed to live up Ii ex· pectations or have neve r n1aterialized. '' Now we a r e nearing Christmas 1972. and soon Nix· • on will have been four years in the White llouse. What'sthe full sct1 r e- card'! At last, one ma jo r and potential I y great piece Of L"OnSUmer protectloo legisla- tioo is golng on our statute books -a law to create an in- dependent federal commission \\'Ith broad powers to establish mandatory safety 11tandards foc consume r product. TllJS JS THE sole piece M leg1Slation that coold tum out 10 be of prime significance to you and me, as consumers. .But even on this one, there \\'a& a fight until the last minute between those in C.Ongress who wanted to make tht commission a n in- dependent agency and lbe Nix- on ad ministration. (The NiJwn administration favored the bill's aims. but il a n d spoketmen for b u s i n e s s \\'Mted tile Food and Drug Adminisrtation to have the standard-making authority.) In 1970, a special C<lm- misllon had urged the creation of an independent agcocy after a two-year study a n d es timates that 20 million in- jw1e! and 30.000 de a th! resulted each year from the use of products in and around the home. Anotller business- spcmored study had attributed on6-fourth of all household ac-- cideol! to faulty de!lgn of marrufactf products. 'J'RE 1'E W independent conimi sslon will have .power to prohibit the sale or prOOuctl that cannot be m a d e reuonably S3fe by mandatory standards and to ban the sale t1f products that are Inherently. unaafe. It wUI be able to order manufacturCl"'!I to rec a 11 unsafe products and to replace then or rebate the purchase price. It wtll be able to Inspect manufacturing opemtkw\!, ~ l)Oel\ll records, conduct cmi· pli.&nce tests. pa ckages for certain possibly lethal products. But it wasn't until this past August -more than 18 months later -that the first child-proof closures became a requirement on aspirin containers. 'I1le Toy Safety Act was passed in 1969. But U wasn:t until three days befpre Christmas 1970 that 39 dangero;us Ulys were finally taken off the~ket; hun- dreds more were left un- touched until months or years later. AGGRESSIVELY pro-con- sumer, controversial legisla- Lion has either been shelved or narrowed down to meaningless dimensions. "No fault" auto insurance and auto warranty laws. class action le gislation -these are no closer to becoming federal s t a t u t e s than in the late '60s. Yet. the GOP platform adopted in Miami pleges: "The American C<lMUmer has a right to product seJety, clearly specified qualities and values, honest descriptions and guaran(~ fair CTedlt procedures. and due recourse for fraud and deception." The "Buyer's Bill of Rights" proposed by the Republican party asks for fu11 disclosure of the terms of warranties and guarantees "in language all can understand" and the GOP promises: THE EST ABLISllMENT of an independent C on !!I u m e r Protection Agency, to plead the consumer's ~ in pro- ceeding! before Federal agen- cies: and ''Vigorous en- forcement" of all conslllller protection Jaws. Perhaps we should all it.art to keep scotteards. Japan Not Purchasing U.S. Jets WS ANGELES (API Northrop eo,,,. said t h e decision by Japon not to purchase Its Freedom Fighter jets woukl have no effect on employment or business at the California aerospace plant. "It has lone beem known that the Japanese desire to build up Ua own aircraft mallllllcturlng Industry has been a number one priority," SBld a Northrop smtement. "ConsequenUy, any potential JapantM? purchase of l'"'S-1 wu nevt>r lnchtded in any of the company's busioe11 forecasta." FINANCE nonprofit loMll to New York fll'll\S no<dlng lllllds to buy poUution..,..ln>I oqulpmenl ..,. quired by New Yori< City statutes, even though en- vironmental bond sales doa'I come c1o,,e to supporting that level of lending. Demand for the low-interest Joans continues u n a b at e d . Between 11 million and $1 .5 million in new loans are re- quested each month, 8C· cording to Chemical's 8$81.$- lant secretary, John Cook. • P -·•.a-c 't:'" !ftdl\'llMI. ,.~W.:-1t nu tt•--.t •••fifed w1111 lfll CMt-• .,..~ ftlcMnl "-L..w. KwTY H. NNIM fV Cliwll fll OrMll' (GUM\' Oii OC*-... LOS ANGELES -erbtrt Tiii• ••~ t11t111 w1"' tt. CIWntY Tllb • k , ''<Ft '!fl!ll! .. cM!ltY 1tn. -·'gned CMA ot Or.,. CNlfYt11: ..... ,,...,. 1t. CIWll .. ~ ·,tit.W. ti, ltft. ~ J, Hodgson has ~ U 1971-WIU..IAM S. Sf JOHN, COIJNTY WILLIAM &. JCIHIL~ CDUN'fY ,.... ..1~-t and dlrector of CLlttK. •Y .._,,. J. ~ DtlMY• CLl•K. ty.........,, J ~ °"""1 lll,f)lt.,_ or.... cant Deity f'llet, ~' .,._ • IW1 OCtoMr n, 11. • .,.., ~ 1, e.t Industries Joe., the "'*ltMd ~ c-t 0a1tt """· ,,........ or-e..-: _., •11ot, 1m ,,,..,, Los ._ft ..... )e.baJed finance lwMl•itliw W. 17• ... Octatw ... 11• ltP'h w a. D W OdollW .. 11, '""''&'" I lfl1 ,....,, tt)I " ' S#l>12'1------------real estate and Insurance . PUBUC N011CE company. the firm says. PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICB •1CT1TtOU1 aw••u CbaJnnan Charles Offer said NAM• tTATIIM9fllT Hodgson has left the company •tCTITtoUI •Ultdtl ITATaMIMT °' Au.aGNMINT OP ~ MlloW!llt ,.,...,.. .,. ..... because It ls .. 11..-tng of Its MAMI tT.t.T•Ma•T "' u11 °" •tcT1T1ovs aus1N1SNAM• ~N•::t1 • T • u M ,. o • , ,._ -........ TM rollowlnit ~ .,. nt ......_ ._.owlllO -t1M •blilldoMd 1'" T<• Tl-L 10•-•T10N <JOO consumer finance operatlons .... _. u : • 11.t•;, tt1t *tui-busfnett _..... "" """ ......... • and "there ls 00 further need IDEAS.1 10SS u Mir-. LtOllN 11Qo$HEL ENTl•••1sies. 1 St S ~e-~~ .. MO.~aPcl'I. IMcll. C"•• t'.1•11 l"r~j11, • .,.,.,. Ptrt:, Cl.lltOriil•. SCA tl'll.,,,.t1-I ~ Inc:, {A for hls association with the 2.-. •· KPvtwl, 1os.s u Mlr.u, ,.,,. 11ct111ow ...._ _.. "ftrfM to Ott•wtir• c"'p.), 4JOO ,.mtM CM.,., company." ~ ~ic~~ciu 1.a Mir..,., =t ";:,' 1;1.r 111 ~ '-"' on = 6'0. Newport IMtll. Ctl!fO"'l• e ••rte Serelee 'rr~1ec:..:S~~"" • 0~~1:'Y'!l::y. ~~~ .,r:it.,.MI-'' conMttd w • cor-B:!~A~~(it o: the":~~~~~ WASHINGTON -Legls1• PutMr1111~• KnWt-.tt11 "" CIUlltY ci':c~:.!~:in~t.~!l11:..i.~ ~.,.D;,:'';.':.iotnt tJon to put the Container cJ::' °'•:;...':""C:,: on • ,. 1m. Thi• IMIMM ••• ~ w • Tlll• '''""""'' ..... fllld 11111111 tt11 c-fifth-largest commercial Barge Service that ca.riieswn.LtAM r. st JoHN, "coUNTYPlf'l~L.M•l'lllotl Z,..:i:'·_.:~ C•un t y on bank), it can continue in the cargo from SaCramento to San Cl.Dk. ay ._,,,., J. MMc1ox. ~ • ,..,.,, • l'llm has picked months. up in · enlal bond -··ket ,,_,_ tbe ···-'-.1: --••. , ••• ~ .,., ltubll.i.d OrMC11t COMt o.JlY f'liot, ,.. eoVlf'Olllll -.. _. Francisco uuua· Jw-UNJC· " ...,..,.. ..,.., ..... .,. • OCtoOtr-'-n. ll. u. lm •1.n ....,. c ldn4..,. recent despite disappointing sales. lion of the Federal Maritime ~ •· 21 am OCtab&t' ~:; 11:n.ni••· scNA•111a. 11:1HAL. However, First Pennsylvania · been •••••• • ••••D Tepid demand f o r en· vironmental bonds isn't con- fined to Virginia, The "Good Earth Shares" of[ered by the- First NaUooal Bank o[ St. Louis have been enjoying "not too super" demand according to bank spo1c.....,.. Ed Smitb, Out-of-s tate polluters asking for low-cost loans usually go away empty-handed at most of the banks offer ing en· vironmental bonds. The emphasis is on improving I o c a I CQnditions. Arlington Trust has lent local finns $322~00() from Earth Bond pro- ceeds. The majority of the loa ns have been for industrial p oUution-ronlrol equipment, although the bank did finance a recycling center i n ~{aryville, Va. Bank in Philadelphia was Comm1ss1on bas a~ PUBUC NO'nCE 111 1. .._,, ':'wC.':9 •it f _, f ·~-proved by. the House. PUBUC NOTICE ~ ~'~ BMn1 tau finally 011 .. ~ out o UJll: en-1be blll sent to the Senate, PtcTITIOUt aus1ti1•ts PvblltlW!f or.._. co.st o111v l'liot, vironmental-bond market by I _:__,,i • t ....u1; .... ._ ..i; •. ., .. fA PICTITIOUI IUllNIU ,..... -:.::: ":::!·'"-dolnl ~ ... 11. It. ll.. 1'11 :ws.n disappointing co n s u m e r 5 auU!l'U 8 ....... ....._ · '*"'?"""" . ._ .... !'~· n•T•~r,i; llWI-••. • . rc1-• ; over whether suc:ll l#'ftce TM ·--'*"°" 1' ......._. llo.sHEi. EMTEAP•1sEs. 111 'o PUBUC N01'(cs· response. As 'a com.me cu sbout'ci· be regulatlld ~ tb6 In-•: GOL.0. N' OU.IN. m1 w ...... Aw.. Apricot c1ra.. ~• v •I I• Y ·1----~--~----bank it CfJtlkln t match the l.n-_, hi ,_ --·latory No. F'llO, HllflllnlillOll 8Ndl. C.lff. IM.47 Ctllforfll1, L. ~I ,,,. Aptl(ot • 14>0C teresl -•-customers could tematloom s pp .... ~,..... JOllll .._tt,., 1101 Wan-. Att.. ,,~~.in v-'c..airort11• n1Dlt. 1uP•ll10S: COUltT °" na • -ency or by state or dolnestlc No. F'llt HUld\1"9lon 9tKtl, c.r. *41 ........ ·.:-i;; • " lniO ~k:Ot STAT• o• CALff'Ol:NIA P"O• get at nearby savings and loan ag . . . Qin HO'W'tlidl'll, 1101 w.,.., /i.Ye.. RobtrtO If•¥ ~ • mot. TM• COUNTY 01' oi..t.MOI . . . • 1 · nA-commerce egenc1es. • NorFUD, Huntlntton ltKll. c.iv, .""'1 orctt. Ftillrlt•ln Vtl...,, C.fffornl• -. .... ,... institutions, up ama uuuny -Thi• bullMll .. ....,. ~ ., • Thi• bu.I-Is lltlng tonOucltd by • NO'T'IC• °" H•Al:IM• PffrTION P'Oll Eisenfeld ·the bank's in-e A...,.intee . P•rtl'ltl'•hlp. • . -~J pmrtntntl~ L.. ,..,.,._11 • ot:Dll• 0111act••• cONv•,.A•c• l ti. • le hief rr-'G' Jotin HC1Wtt1Stli:-• , , Thi ' tement flltd w1111 the! Collnll' OI' •••L ••••1RJ.! orma on cen r c · SACRAMENTO '"I";' • o v . Thi. ,,.,_, flltid '111!"1 "9 '::7. ci.rk" 0: '(,,.""" COl.llltY on: ()(IOI)«" , e:11•1• °' LYlfNll CHA•Ll!ITOM, ••'° So although its "Earth Ronald Reagan has Dauled ~k :,&:: ~ ~H~TY 1'7L WILLIAMtv" ~-,r~H:epu~°"""' !::"" k:,:,···.r·l~N~HA~t~':i Bonds" paid the sa me rate of Gleeson L. Par."' Of San CLERK. tiy ·~"J. l'Mddoll. °""""'· Clirk. by 8 '"" ~ • • CHAltlEISTON, .iw ..._"LYNN Mc· ' rt'fi ( f · t l • 1 • ·' •~ ·.-ss CllHI OMI Piiot CLEAN CHAllL•STON, •lllJ known •I return as its ce I ICA es 0 Marmo as SUI e msurance; f'l.lbllshed at.not Ca.11 Dtol!'f '11of, Publl.-f11 <>r:i: l9n y 2662-ri MllS. LYNN CHAllLESTON, Otc.Md. dervv;:it First Pennsylvania commissioner ·to r e p 1 a c e Odoblr 4. 11.'1'. u. tm ' IPl·n OCIOMr 4. ' ' • NOTICE IS HERli!ll'I' GIVEN th•t r-' . . ' GRAYCE M. SMITH INlt 111..t "'"In 1 closed out ita environmental-Richards Barger, wbo qwt to 'D'I_,, NOTI,...,. PUBUC NOTICE Ptt111on JOI" on1w dlr«T1,,. con.....,.net ot bond program in the Spring or return t,o..)aW pradi,ce. r1.1~<; \;;&:.. ll .. I P,..rty rlforlnCO to wMc:h II !Md• • l!'l~. for furtMf' '*"'1'ltill•,.., • !Mt IM !Im• 1971, after about a year of Payne, 54, is presulent Ol u1c: •tCTITJOUS •USIMISS •1CT1nous autn•N'T" end Ol.c. of hNrtno "" Mm. "-• i-n operation. Founders Lire Insurance Com· NAM• sT.t.T•Ml!WT Tilt fol-=-=~!oine tMJntn ~':wt~ :J· ~~~totN~.""; ~' o ( Los Angeles. He was '"" 1o11ow1ne ""'°" 1' c1o1no tMlllHI H : .. 1c1 c.owt. •• 100 c1v1c c.n1er 0r1 .... AN INDUSl'RY spokesman ~ylounder of the Regency ••:JEWELRY cttAFTS PAllTS a. ARTS. S:~K~~,~~~ :i;:11 im. 5""'· we:;:~:!='• At1t. c.i110t1111. feels that environmental-bond Lil Insurance Comn11nv of .. Blut 51"'· AMhitlm. c.iL~~'lfor· DollON 111 Tl ....... Inc. (c..tlfol'ml) WILLIAM e. St JOHN, e r -y·,, TtlE JE#EL THtEF, IP+C.. 1-1621 Enl 17th Streit. s.nt• AM, C-ty Cllftl programs will continue to Pasadena. 111•1 _. 8h.lli st., Allllhllm c.111orn1.. C•llloml• mo1 oo•aLD J. •T•AN, ,,...,m,;N. lDltil the government Thi• !IW...a 1• Ml"I c:ondUchd 11y • Tiii• tull-'' '*"' c.cincsucttd W • 1• 1ttrtt1..,... ''""· ...._.16._... PUBLIC NOTICE e«pOl"'•tton· • Corpor•tion. """ ........, 1111 11IE LOANS made {rom gives the consumer an extra t~~E'-THIEF P1t0f'E•T1Es. Kt1tav·a. GUYEll • , ... ,,,, ... c.....,.,.. incentive to buy them. His MUMICll'AL COUllT Ol" CAt.IFOllNIA, f'tllllp 'Miii-. ,.~, Thi• ~~ .. ~~ wttl'I 'ht C-ty ~>~n-Arlington Trust's bond pro-suggestion: Making ~ couNTY o• ou.No• Thi• .., .. ,_, flltd with !ht County clerk °' OrMl!M c-rv on: Stpt. u, 1m. ..wlWltd Or.not cont o.ny Piiot, ci!eds go out at an annual rate v1r· orunental bonds tax ex-nn "° ....... T•"" .. '" !~f:~ciio. cim °'Or•• c-1y on: Oct. t. ttn. w1LLIAM E. st J~M. COUNTY a.e:1uc, 0ctttitr 10, 11. 11, 1m v.n.n -8¥ kvtrly J. Mlddmc. °'9UtY c-ity bV 9rt0t1y J, ~ Dtfil,ltY. enabling the bank to cover in-empt like municipal bonds JUDICIAL 01sT•1CT clHk. ,,_ PUBUC NO'nCE terest and administrative ex-' · cu• NUMB•• mw '*n Publl"'" Or•nga Col•' D•11Y Pilot, IU.\&MOMS f'ubllshtd Oru.ot CGlllit Diiiy l'tlOf, S"'ttn'lb« 211, 'fl, •rd Qctotltr 4 11,f--==~~------penses and still make a reduc-f'ltlnllll•: CAlllL (!, SMITH •nd Oc:!ObW 11, 11, u. •l'ld NcwMntle!i' 1, Im W7-12 NOTIC• o• MARSH.I.L'S SALi BLANCHE SMITH, vs. Dlfend•llta:_ ED lflt I 2116-n Miry LJl'IA C..rdln, Pl•1nllfl YI. ed profit. Co tin' tal TOUCHSTONe, •n 11\dlV\cMlll •11111 A.Lt. • . Mfdl.ttl Uwrtne• C•rdon, ~. No. On r the bank 'ssum' g ·-n en UNKNOWl'I PERSONS CLAIMING ANY PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 0 :u "1. e 0 s J ... RI GHT. TITL.E. Oft INTEREST IM.. THE 8y vlrtu. of •n •11.tutlOl'I lswod Oii vlronmental bonds c~rge.t in----f,ERSOMAL PROPER.TV DESCRIBED IN Stf!IOl'nbtr 21, Tt72 b¥ lilt SllPtt'lor Court. terest rates for loans designed R d ·THE c6MPu.1NT AOlt'EllSE TO PLAIN· '~'I!I~g:::~s rtCTITIOUS aus1NES ,_,., -o1-0i-•not. s1,11 of c .. 11orn1 •• T lls COr Tlll'FS' OWNERSHIP. f0U I clol •AMI! STATl!M•NT llPQI\ .J!Hltlmtnt tnl1r..:l l11 I•-of M•ry to make its program a DOn· e e To IPW dlfelld•ntl: A CIVIi c.orf'IPl•lnl The rNI 119 ptnonS .,.. ng Tiit followlllll .,...wn 1• Ooll'lll bllliMSS lllldli ~•rdtn •t l~t C!'«llfor •l'ld profit operation. che mi c a 1 hit bttn llled 111 tilt pt•lnllfb B9•1nsl bus~:~~ ENTERPRISES, 316.11\ll :!.• ••: 1g1l111t Mic.Mo! Uwrenct C•rdtn II y<N. If you wbh to <ltfend 11111 lntf,ult, COl'ld 11.,. SOuth Ugvu C•lllornl• SEV'MOUlt CELLINI LTD., 1205 SO. ludgmtnt detJlflr', 1howl119 Intl IMlanc. ol' Bank or New York sells its 'f'9ll mull "'' 1n thl• cour1 • wrtlfeorl tu.11 ., ' Euclkl. Anthelm, C.HIOl"l'lll t2'0'2 $1.604.00 .mi.Uy diot 111'1 MICI l"°llmOlll on h. p p1Mdl119 I., l"ftlllll'IM to tl'il compl1lnt (or • John F s.ytnoUr. Jr., Ge11tr•l tho d•t• of tlw l1W1iw:a ol' Mid eucvtlon, "Clean Afr Shares" On t IS assengers , "'''""" or or•I ple&dlr.g, If • Justice G. ThornQ~~-· :nt:1~ P•rtntr. 1205 SO. Eudkl, ANhtlm, I INl¥t lnlecl upon •II tho r!Qnt, 111111nd basis. eouro w1t11111 :IO °'YI •lttr tttls s11mmonr. cond A~.. ...,,.IHMI. • C•Hfoml• t21112 1n1wH1 °' Mk! 111119ITIOl'lt oniw 111 t11t Cl .. n Air Shares have been 11 MlfVtd on yau. O~M. ¥0\ll' def•Ull '2t~ L-lt Duell.., Ill P.O. Box lU, This buiJnelil It b91119 conducted bY • proptrty In lht County of Dr•nu-, !il•N of Co t. la! A' tin reco d Wiii bt oritar'ad on •pP!klitlon 111 th& SOVll'i LffUM c 111om1' tH11 llrnll.:I P•rtntnhiP· C•llio..iJ., dacr1btd •• followt: on sale for a little over twtl n men Ir es r • oi1rn11t11 .,.. "" courl .,...Y "''" • luOD-This bW-· 11111t1119 • t'GAd\IC1.:1 bY • John "· Sll'frnOlll'· Jr. , f'AltCEl. i : Lot " In elodi. ' or E•lf' Yea-. •-·ause Chemi.cal's e""-ed its highest September traf· ,,.,..,, ag•lnst '°" tar !ht ,,._., "' olhlt' 11m11-.:1 ~rtntnhlp. GOIW-' P•rlnll' ,.. c ... !"IWPOr1· •• Pit' m.p rtcDrdld 111 Book • ~ De\: u· relltf r-ted Jn th& C(lt!lpl•l11!. G. Tl'IOINI 'llonderl\eldol Thll 11•1-I riled Wllti Ollfl,, ... ,..._ 'R of' Mlk•tH•-Maipl In fl'lt vironmental -bond, low -cost-fie in the company's ~year 11 Y'll MM '' MH "".-IC11" M •1• Thi• ,,.,_, 111ec1 wtt11 "" counrv c1n °' or.,.. c-ty GR: Odobtr 5• offke °' ""'0r..-coun1y ._., . .......,. .... IN• --· Ylllil s'-141 -.. Oerll. °' Orll\OI! C-..nty on: OctobW 2. 1t71 er Betty J. 9•!'Vllell. Dtpllly C-ly P.1.ltCEL 2: ..... ••MnWll lw ••l•w•r loan program is designed to history, announced Charles A. ""'"""" • tut ,....... .......,, tt •Y· tm. 8y er...rty J. M.odoK< o.,.ty c1n •o ... rviwtY ~ owr tt11 wn1 s:m b-·k en rathe than to . ' -y M ..... "' tlrllt. Coun"' Clll't; RO•E•TSO•, MOWSlll & .,..LA '"' °' Lot 14 r,, lllodl • of E•1t •"'"' ev r Bucks, seruor vice presulent· ai.1• s.,MmMr 1. 1tn. ·• l"-2tU2 i•r1 lllCMA•D A. ••OWN· Jll.J N--1. •• -n....-l'9tOr'6ld In 800ll: make a profit, the interest marketina ltotllf'I ll. 11:111, ci.n • Pllbllsri.11 ·OrMIOe coost De0y P'\lol, U4t C•iN'W Drtvo 3, "II• 17 of Ml-llOMoUs #Mps. In 11>e rate it pays bondholders is ..... "". •r Antoinette T. Beck. °'PU'Y Octobtr " 11, 11, ,,,, 1m :w.n ...,.,.... 9Md\. ctlH. "'61 onia o1 ""'~ c.-, ll«:ardtr. Revenue passenger miles for 1,EAL> TM• ,,,,, ,..... LoulOi:I •' "' w.st Oce•ntront, klwer than what they could get GOODMAN, MlltKH•E•O a tUNO, PUBLIC NOTICE •-,. P..,...,._ H....,n a..c11. C•llfonll• the month totaled 426,MS,OOO,.,. _,._,. ·~ ' • --; p,,..2t NOTICE IS HEltE&V GIVEN thtt on on a certificate of deposit. ed .lh 372 807 000 1 s.ii. ..._ •1, ) P\diitied ~ C011.t o.aty Piiot, ft1dty, "-"*' s. 'Im. .t 1:00 o'ctOck r•-· )' r1·r· t 6 compar WI ' ' or .... ...,....... c......... .... •ICTITIOUI •us.._ .. ,. OcJOMr II 11. 25 Ind NOW!'llbe<' l. P.M. •t Dr•• eownrv Htortlor Judie.I.al ""l'gl"1ca s ce 1 ica es pay the like period last year a 14.4 T...,_., 1:ni> .,..,," NAMll STf.TIM9fff ·~ 1m ' 11»-12 Olltr1cl, oi1 J•mbor• llOld, c11y ot percent a year, its Clean ·Air , . • ...,._,. ..,. ~ Tht .ro11ow1na.. ptnon 11 tkilng !Ml"'" N""POrt 8okh. eovnrv °' °"llO'· st••• Share 4"il t 'Jb b k percent mcrease. ,.......... or.,. Cast C•llY Piiot, •t: ol' C.Hfarl'I•, I '11111 Mii •t publlc •udlOl'I s 4 percen · e an "Traffi 1 Is . ·~-0c:io0w 11, 11, 25 •lld Nowm'*" 1, AQUA BOY WATEll TltUCK REM· PUBU;. NOTICE 1o t11it NitrlHt blddtt', JOI" c.-111 111 11w1u1 is the only one surveyed which c eve since uR: 1m 2nA-12 TM., mo ••rtt HtwPOrt, NtwPOr1 "( morwr or !ht U"'ltd ,, ..... •n the! rltfrt g bo dbold I t LaQor Day holiday which hl<:h. '*fl" •nd 1111wn1 °' .. 1<1. 1uc1g'""'' Nb~· o:v:ew::i than ers ~w:~1:: normally signals the' end of PUBUC NOTICE p:~m:~:1,:,,.;-r.!°:•rt, mo SUP ..... i::~:i:,. 01' TMI ~11e1::9·== :-m: ~~ : certilicates of deposit. the SUIJ\ID.er traffic flow, have •iCTmous •usntns· .J~J':.1,.... · ~nt_.qp:iuct.a w ~"' '~'-~c::;::y-:~!r .:111mt~°"' wtih .cctlltd 111- been encouraging " s a Id NAM• nATl!MeNT T. f'. M«T~•rl 1 • ~\.\~ Dlt.t ., NtwpOrt· liMCll. c "'°"'' PARTLY' BECAUSE of lhe low interest rates paid on lts bonds, Chemical has only $400,000 wortb of Clean Air Shares outstanding on a balan- ce sheet totaling $13 billion. However, it has made $15 rnllllon worth of low-interest, t'& "and our' advance Tilt toltow1n11 119rtond • doing w.ineu . Tl'll1 ''''-"""'' rneo:1 wi111 tnt Cbunty MOTICI o, "•••INO. o• l'ITl{IOM ~ t, 1m. • 1• •1: · Clerk of Or•"9t Caunty on: OCI. 6. 1"2. '°"' flitO•ATI OI' WILL AND Dlt.U.•O O. WILKlllSON • indicate a continuing SYSTECH CQM PANY, ~ SlllNC By 8t:¥erir J. Mtddolt. °"l'ltr Cllul'l ty COOICIL ..,or ~ L,.I T f •• ' M•nlNlll • f _ _,_ I nd.. Ricki• Drl .... v oiw l:.lrid•· ~I Clfll'lt • T•STAMINJ~•Y (llONO WAIV•OI MllllldM C-r, Or«igt Cwnl avo.~' re . tliU. P*1t E1t•I• llf WILl.!A Q, HAGGARD .... o H•rbcw Jlldlc.!•I Dl•lrlct 'I' B .L • d Co tine taJ Jahn W°•YM WQn' .. I, 50ll2 ~ Publllhed ~ COfft 01tlly r1tot, kllOWft ff Wilt.A HAGGARO, oNI ., •Y l!h M f:ldlt': "--· UCll.S S 8 l n n Rld01 Drive, Yortlli Lind•, C•llfOl"lll• OctoOer n, 11, 25 •nd Nwtmblr, I, Im WILLA QUENETH HAGGARD, ()lc9U.:I, M, N, 11.1.,.,.11 ' ' ......,ty- boarded 470,517 passengers 1n ~:· bu1l111t11 I• bolllll COl'iclucttd bY •n ' 2132.n NOTICE IS tlEllE:z..G1vEr:,:;:~·,; m co-Ortva, ,...,. ' September, a 7.2 percent in-1111t1¥111~1. PUBLIC NOTICE =~d ::' .. ~/~ •nd t'Jic11 •lld tot ;=:,:=.!,. .. ""'*'' "* crease over the 437,515 for Thi• ~~1wr.-;:1 111111t1 tht county 11wenc:1 or ~....:i"::t=:~totv!:'J; Pvtlllllled °"•""" c.,, Deity Pilot, September 1971. Clltrtr. of OrMIOO c-rv on: Oclabtf' i , •ICTITIOUS •llllNDS :~a;i ~ plrtlcul•rs, Ind thlt OdobOi' ll, 11• "· 1t12 VU.12 1m, w1LLIAM E. ST JOHN , couwn NAM• STATEMSWT . ""' Hint .,.. pl..:• "' 1111r1119 -.. Mmlt PUBUC NOTICE CLEltK. 111 9WOi'tt' J . M4ddoX. ~. Thi 1-ilowl'!I l*"1'0l'I 11 doltlll '*""'-' lwt bMll Ml for OCtobtr Jl, lrn. •t t :Oll P·Wff 11: . •• • 1 rn In !ht~ of ~ No.l-;;;;;:=:-::==-oc-==~=---l"ublbhed Or01'9' Cont Dtolly Piiot, 5.1.FFAON l!TCIET'EllA, 1a L. CNfl '°' ...... CIM;f, ., Xlt CIV!c .<:.nttr Ortw "'SCHOOL •DMD •l•CTION NOTICll" OclOMr •• 11, , .. 25, 1"2 ~72 H'#Y., L-..na ae..:h w .. 1 lfl_lht CllY ol' ...,,. ""'' C.Hloml•. NOTICE IS HEREBY OIV&N to "" . Phllllp A. !ScNff, ISfG Wl1111mt SI., Dli..I ~ 10, 1972. -IUlltd lltctor. of lrvlllO Unlfllcl Sc11oo1 PUBUC NO'nCE Tuslln WIU.IM\ E. SI JOHN, District of ""' C-..nfV °' OrOnga; Slit. of This bu$11'111S I• belnt conduCIM Irr M ~<Ntk C.lllort111, th•t J11 ICCOr'd•nc-. w1ttt l•w MOTIClf TO CR,IDITOllS lndl.Wll-4. SCH00t.I ... AllO $CMOOUNCJ, In .-iion wtll bt hMd on TUESDAY,~ SUl"llllOll cou•T o• 1111 l'lllllP A. khtff Kit c..,.... ........ "" d•y °' NOYOrnbOi' Im 111 Mid nAtS O• CA.ll•OllNlA !"Oil Thhls sfllOIMrll lllMI with !ht COUllty M .......... Pwti. C.....-,... Dllfrtct, •I w111cti lltction thtr'I wtll bt TM• (OO#TV Off OllANGE ClOi'k of Or•ngt County on: Ocl. t, 1'12. Tth (Ill) ..... • IVl:lmllttd llw .-.11on of 1111111"9 .... ltll· · tt.. .,.7"" Br 8werly J. ~x. DaqufV C-IY A,.._,. IWt ~ 11'19 bends °' Mid Dl&tt1ct to tht •fMlllll l!•t•to °' VlllGINIA MAE MILLEA, Cltrk. P*6t l'vbllllwd °""' c..t Delly-'""°'·....: of •lfly Mnllon D1111m (tJDAOC!.000), lor Willi J J h bas ~-•--I t' h .....,..1_....a Dtct11td OctoOOr 11, 12. u . 1m 41S .. 4 tht P\lflllOM or r•l•llll morwr ,.. the! am . 0 OIOD J'tUt'" ~a ion as at't"Y'"""" NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 10 "" f'llbllslwd °"""'' Cotti OM~ Piiot. . " foUOWI"' ~: ed S&ewart Tttle Company . as John Swetech as executive CHClllDl'll °' tho 1bolltl 1111ined declclent OCtobtr 11' 11• 15 _. N ..... mliOi' • J;,~1, • Mnll'iCE I•> ""' Pllt'chl11,,. °' K11oo1 1o111 manager of sales. The Corona vice president and manager of =J ~~::~::11f:,m:., •Jt:11~~ ---, · PlJBUCf •ry"~• ~ ':1c11~~ 1 or pVr"Chqlng 0' de! Mar resident was fonnerly the bank's El Toro office with""' llOCHMrv vouchers, '"""'office PUBUC NOTICE u. ti• C•l ftll m.a1c1111 of •lt01"•tlon1 or ad· . ot lht tNrk ot IM •boYI tt111llltd cwrt, or MOTK• TO CllDITOl:t dlKonl lo lht ..:l'lllol bulkllfill or district sales manager for Swetech was former ly to prtMl'lf 1111m, w1111 ""' Mm:s .. ry NOTICE TO CllDITOll• SUl'••tott cou•T Ofl Tltl bulldlno• othtr thin -=11 •1 m1y 1111 First A m e r i c a n 'MUe senior loan officer at the vouct'olfn, lD tilt '*"" .... r•t mD Nt. A mu Sf.t.Ta Ofl CAUPOl:NtA Hll ntenury tor CIH'...,,t m11111at1tr.c:1, H•rbor 91Vd., lul"9 JOI, co ... MIM. SUPalllOlt COUllT OP TM• TMI COUWTY Of! ~ Opef"•llon. Iii' ...,.r ... 1 Insurance Company, bank's Los Angeles home Of• C•lll. f'l61', 'fltllch 11 the pl K l DI l!UslntH STAT• 0,-CAl.lffCHtNIA f'Olt Ml. M41D (d) tlw r'9pllrlno, ftltortno, or * f of !ht undlf'llt'*' In 111 ITllllV. Pff· THI! COUNTY 0,-OllANOa E f•I• ol' UNA E F'IEL.DS 1lso ttncr«n rt0ull<ll111 of •11¥ tcltGol bulld!ng ice. 1•1n11'111 to "" "t•ll of Mid ~"""I E1l•I• ol' OflA KLUGE BENNETT lleo •• iHA E PltlTCi.!ETT ,ii., kl'IOWfl •• do~, ln/urad, or cN1irv¥td by llrt Hardman Aerospace, 8 * Within tour mc>11lh1 '"" !ht first pllbllc.-~nown .... ORA KLUGE. 0.0..ltd. UNA EOIT.H Plll'fCHffi. Otetl.od. ... other pUb le c•••mltyi •.• ~,·d,·ary o f Ma-'y-E J•--Co " ha tlon ot thll notkL N°"c.9 If ........,.,. """" '' Cl"ldli.r. of NOTICE is HellE•V GIVEN to '"' .r!i•l ~ IUPPIXL• °' IChool bul1<1!11111 ·~"""' !..!VU ,,...-lttJllDI(: rporlu011 S Ott.cl s.pt. II, lffl lhl •bllvt n•m«I Otcltdal'll tt1M •II creolton ol' tho •bOW MmOCI 0.-.ldlnl 0 W " lvnlltur1t, tqul1>m.,,I Chalilloo ,.._at.ion. has a~ appointed Ste..lu. N Donahoe ltObtrl "· E•1lmtn POl'IOl'IS h•vlng dtolrnt .... , "" .. IO ""' •II POi'motll t.;:A,. c:s.lm. OIMlll'lll ""' or _ .. ry ·~r•lu1 of • POi'lnll'lel'll ........ ..... .,-.n . A.dmlnl1tr•tor °' "" .. ,.,, OKlcllnl 1r1 l'tcllllfOd lo Ill• llltfn• •1111 kl dlcallMt "' r.GUI"" to Ille """" MIU ... ; pointed Tom Ules as vice to bead Its eontrol Products o1 tt1t 11toM1 Mmed d6cedtn1 ""' -Ml'Y ~ 111 the! tilflca of :111 the! ~ -..rn.n 111 ""' ~ lO tnt ""'**'' """"11ltlmt"' °' tho ldenl of k ... :_ . ftlMft A. '"'*"'" tilt Qtrk ot !ht •bcwt tntllltd wur1, or of "*"' .._ ~!ltd '-' or Ktiool llf'O\llldl1 pres mar CUJ.•S· Group m Costa Me611. me H1rMC IMI. ··"'"' 1111 to Pl'OMlll ttion'! •llti "" ~ry °'"" dlrtt '""" -.:.ry Chi ttw ctfTYl1111 out or 1111 PrO!ech or Lila, of llunUngtoo Beach, h Corona de! Mar ex-c.i• ..... CA.'*' V01Khlr1 to "" _..,...,_,•I toe otlk:t ~:'.., ::i"'~nltd ., ""Dtlk• P\lrPOiH iwltiorhOd In s.ct1on u111 ot · ed h' b helor f T...,,_., 014) ....... of KAHN, ST&.llN a •U.NIY, tPSf w .. 1 °' .. , tfun.r..t: VIMMEDGE. LANCE a, ttit Edueltton COO., to wit : Pl"O¥ldlfl0 rece1v 1.s ac o eeutlve will .,"'"",,.., 1• ,.,. ""' 1181 c..,1ury lfouitytr'd.. Loe, .t.1111••••· GLi~:. '°' Ntir1tl""' Antonio•~--· " dr•lne ldtQIH11t 1a ,,..., science degree at San Joee P\1111,neci °''"" coa11 Diiiy "",1. C•lltoml• toGtS wtlldi 11 the! ~ °' Ontorto • Clllfon'I'-tl70. whld'I 1, ttM Mdf w dlNIOM fll -... ...i dr•I~ •··te College. direct activl· St¢0illllll' •· 27 " oc1o11N ;p.n l)ufl-°'"" Ulldtnlvnlcl"' 111 """.,. PiK of bus.I-al""~ in •n Y, •• .., ,.,_ MCtt llC'-4 ~i ~ lm PtJUlnll'll to ttit .. ,.,. of wld dtcldHll. ml~ ,.n.lllll'!lil to ltM ..i•i. °' Mk! _, !ht t;-"llon or r1rl1111 of •"r * . ties at the .,..thin "°""' '"°"'"'' tttw tt11 flttl PllO!ic.. oec111tnt Within 1o111: !l'IOnlhs •Mw "" r'IPI ~ 1"' w11t1 "" lni.nt to ,_ .. _ firm'• 'DA.. PUBLIC NOTICE 11~r .. "':!.=-11 I"' first Pllbi1c1111on al ttlk ""'"'· ~ In ·n: :""foe:::' Ol'~kll.-:,· Ray K11uer of Huntu'6""'" . vo.... wiU..iAM t..O.U.S KL."""""-D11tc1 OCtoblr L 1m. °""' 11u11on liarbour, former general cock Elec-NOTIC. o• l'UIL.IC HllJUM TO~ EICtCulor fll"" WIM • ._,,, ll0911lT s. P'IUTCMETT ' All °' "". tortodno 1 11 r 00 ••• manager Of ·~ May Com-··-'-Oor-M•LO IV TH• ~-·" ~ " MN 9KAOtnl EJ!oailllr "' ... Witt of __. ..... lwolll .,.. ~ 111111..:1 Miii UR:" W "'~ PLMIMI... COMllll1• ll.._ t"'"* .... .,.._,· '· llW ..,.,. -'*' cltcOdtnt Ill.ii b9 \'llf9d 11PD11 H Ont I le pany'• eo.a MMI store. bu poraUon Jn POS•D UJIO USI D 1 s I "" Wiii ClittlirY ....,.,. VIMNeDOI. LAMC• ' ...... N "°"'''°"· • 1111 pro- v! ~ M.... CHAMOIS L• ......... c.11 ....... MU '" ................ ·-S.kl borod• ~ to bt lnued ll'ld been named eiecutlve ce """"''• "11r111...i '' !ht Pftllnlno .,... lonlnO AIWMP .., •uc:111et °"'.,.., c.i...,... n1i11 tdcl -"-" M•r 1n1.,..t 01 • r•ta "°' ••· Id t and 81 wtll ll!J L••• H •~· •lld ordll" of Wit P•411\'l Tth (114)..,..,.,. uedlno -ptrClf'lt 11'11.I PW •11num Pf'I en I ~· ... -Or•lllll c.iftfy l'IOMll\ll COmmlMlon. Publlllllld or.,.. c-1 O•llY Pllol, .. """""" ... ........ ,,.... ... IMWllY '°" tho ftral ~ gC!lleral mer. aeve.ra vu..:r llOtlc• '' ""*'tD1 11-1M1 • PlbllC 11t-1r• ~ to, t7 •nd oc'-.., 11, Pllbll&flld 0r.,... COOlf Dt1t¥ l'llot, ..,._ 1w111t1 to rVfl and ""'T:.:u.uy • units of the 1..,. """ ""11t1c1 trr ..i. eomrn11"n""' • 1m 1511•72 OCtobOi" 11, 11, u. .,,. flloftnlhtr 1 • ..._""· ch a nd la e DONAHO ,..., ,.,......"' to M?ltfld THI It. TOllO 1972 '717•7' TM lllimblt' DI 'ftln !tit WllOI• or lft¥ Estcrllno CorporaUon. o•MlllAL PLAM "' ""' 0r.,.. c_.., PUBUC NOTICE ""'°'""bond•.,.. to"'" """11 "°' , •. He joined the finn tn 1960 u OtNrtl ,...,.. •• __., Or.,. c~ PIJBUC NOTICE t ... ,.....,,.,., ..... tn1 YN,. "°'" "" d.i• . of ._..,,1..,,. ty, C~Ulofnl•. ..., I\. ,_0 • lftD ol "" btllOI or "" "'" of •ny ....io. vtce ...-}dent m&r1U:1Luoe· 111111 Ol•n II MlfMIOd u ••••• ,,..T .., ,..,1-01• -· n,,re are sUfr crlmin.al pent1llies In the law for willful vlolatort of safety 1tandards and moderate civil pe:nalUes lOI> for "knowing" violations. Ho doubt about it. Thlt law 1s progrc1s. What elae'? ~I,., Ille reconl of the put four yea.rs ls lndlfferent. To~'°" a aampllng : A NATIONAL l.nllllUte for ClrllUlher' Justlce wu set up Iii 1111 administration ,,,.... U.. 1 yur and a half qo lO """'' varioul methods or deal· kC with coosumer grlev11.nces -tpcludlng class action suits llld omall d1 Ima cwrt pro- .. lnp But "II months ltW,'' 1111 the Consumer .... tlon ol Amer1ca, "the ldllute 1111 jlOCOmpllshed llGlblai IUblllnllve." Northrop .. td It has firm orders from the Unlled States government and other free world nations for the pun::hal'IC of more than :MM> FSE, a more advanced mode1. Altogtther, It ~pect.s sales to exceed l50 ind to have mort than fl .$ billion inpoct on the U. S. bolance ol lnde. manager or May eom· PllllY CalifOl'- nla. Klauer. wM joined May Coot pany u a tfatDte in 1949, b a I WV· cd the f Ir m a1 buyer, branch m<rchandl>e manager, divisional mtt<:hand1'e o l sportl\\•ear Ind vb pre11Mnt nnd I t n t r a 1 mtrebandise manager of racn'1 Md boy'• wear, mallwecu' ind Intimate 1pp1u•tl. r-* ••Nl•AL. PL.All .tM••OMllfT .. .!',•· .. • • • , ••• -....... _ ...... -SUP•lllOll coun OP CALIPOllNIA, IE.cti qu,tllfltd tlectot of Mk! lrvlrit -"' ....... lllM llM el'l.tllgm "' ,, • • ,._ COUNTY OP OltMIOI un1n• kholll Oltll1<1 llltU bt Oilllllld to Veteran onman man Yoaaa, ""' · .,.. bol.liMltd by 11111 cltftlond ..,... .,.. f= :"'c=.:•· ,. c•vk c...w--ortit ,...., """ My in tt1t ldlOd District l!'ltcilon OU f1o1M11 P"'-' Oil .... -1111Mt, Mii , hlll• ...... ca.If, PrtC1MCI of whk h ht II • '"lo.rt IS80Ciated w1tb Studlnl VNIO llonc.:h '" ""' -"-''· "" S.-n .t~~~i:..:, CAS• .. UMIU lfMll Dtltd tl!l1 7'111 ff¥ °' Auou.i, •• n. er C11lfOrD&li for 25 years bu DI ... ,,_.., ""' "" llllllhwMt .,,. i ,, .... -rmtt "' tt.t1n.-•uMM0111 •011RT "E"Tli1tSON Jo'-·' --II 11...,. n',....a. lrvlno a.widl "'"" ~. 111 ""' El ,,J'1111AN DALE "''llRll .,.~ '1olntln1 PAVL. '#'l.IT61100K. n . ~-ir lllpOl'lfttlllellnt w~ Uilll un .... on uo;;~n ,_.,.... ."""""" •"'9:11Y LEON 1111'11•1.ll Offtndtnh: CU.Ill WAINWlllCiHl. ofid ld!llatl l"..........-...v al a ltftlar wl...,f lnlll•llf "11¥1 Or"*" C-.b° l'IOIWI Tl tflt ~ dint! Tiit Pllfltt!W Mt OOl.1 I THftOOOM lit. l!lelWfW ly l'l"Oil J. ICoc:h, """''"1-"I" l'"vl-.. C~tdof\. flit( t ~ltloil ~,..,... PN'TI•· T• ti. Oa.......m: _A, dwlt Cllfrllllt;lnt °""1tf repreeentative. s.ld ~ ~ on tnt ....,. ""' V• wwr flN • """"' ,.._. .. ..,. • ..,.. .,_,. fl6lcl w, 1tw ~tt -""I Jov. ,,_ Simile. * ..... _... wMI .. IWoW •I l:W .,,.., er ., ~ ot 1tit '91' tti.t 1111 -"""" It tf 't'llU W'lltl'I to, _..,,. fllll . llwwtf, ¥W Cltf'll If !ht a-lilfttl _ .......,_,. •• ,..till!•. on TllMIM•· ..,.,... "'YDU· If nu tt• "' llllt 1 •It• fYM1 ftlt In !till _., • ~ ''"cll1111 loWd of ,,....,,... lJol Coa1117..Safar1 JJtC, D<l'lllllOI' Mo mt. \Ii IM lltlrk'll ofid ,......... wlltiln tuCfl n,_ "°""° _,..... .. ,...,_to tfll ~ Cor • wrllltfi IJlltfltd SC... t»et11tt ~-1 -"111 ,....,. ~ ,... Or ..... C:....tJ ,.._ -.. ............... "" _. '"" ......, "'.,.. ........... If • JUlltel t.Mll 'll'lfl'lln l"Willthld Orllllfl' C.1t Dlollr ""°' has madtl,. ~,...,.u,... ..., c.-.i...., cu•••inf ~. • ~ _. .. """ lf!il_... • ...... • ..,._-""' t111t. w.. tt _... Ofl ,,....,, .. 11 w OCtoMr '· \1, ,,n M...-.... G CMt COil'lor nn... Wllf, lliOOll'I IM, ..... ~ llf""9ali ti ~. Y'ii· OltiOl"WI... ~ cMtWll "'*I M mt-n Rdorcement Of iaod laws .. -1Urprliln&iy •low to ...u.,. -tn 11rro, for ex· ........ llllon llllOl<d Ille Poloool PreveotlOn l'ackaglng Act, " q u I rf n I cblkl1>rool Japan announced earlier that It had decided against the p<Jl'C!i>,. ol lhe F .SB •nd F .SE ah'ctalt, despite anUci-p1ted higher ''""' or ooildlng Ila own warjfts. 1'bl Jape.-. who In Wocld War ti new ooe of h11tory'1 most f1unous and dreaded alrplane11, the 7..ero, plan to oonstruct 68 J<t righten. If the ume number had b e e n purctw<d from Norlhrop the bUI would have been up to 1111!1 mllllon. J •met E. "'-•raber& hllJ be<:n namtd manegor ol C.ut 11M1 8aotlltm F"1entl S.YI"' ud LMe Mtot:lallon'• 11unl· lnaton Bcacli roglonal office. 1bt new nmooger joined Coo.t and ~them In 11170. ........ ""'. ""'' ,,,,.. gt ......... ot "9lktl ,.-..,. ........... """"1· tMld ~ °"" Ml ....,... .. lfiCfltlflllll ., .. --'ntlfl' .... ,-============-11MT7 JCIM'I, of Ll~8 111.,. 1t11 ,,.,....._ t1"4r .. ....,..,. er • '"'""""' '°"" c.t1.. .,,_ wct1 "" <*II"! ~ ._.... • 1-.-i ....,,.11; Be._.. who was -•tloos _,,,. ...,. ~ ....., '111t1 ""...,._ " '"""' r.11et .. _,. " .,....., "" ""' rw "" ttw _., w ..,...,. ,..... ,... WI vt""' ft ,.......... tt'ft tfiY .... ...,, ,....... ....,., ....... lfl "4 ~. manager hU bef.n jwomotecl M .-ik ,._. a. ~ tic lllil II Y'll Wftll ta IMll IM ::.: • _.,. H ...... to _. .. :-::..: • If· to ~ manq:et-of the '*'-'11'11 C•11n11..-..-i.111t "-' =: ,:-... -:, =.,_ ,.::.:. ~ .:'~ ';:..... "-,:. Onn,,-··~ part. Repiac-".?:;. """"' ~ N9tNlilll Wllill H C9'f', ~ ......... .._ ~--• .... 1,. him In tbe newly crttt.ed =~"!,-E,;=.'=':!::O:; ~IAMl.'1 '0•0•· Ot&M~~c~t~H, poilfUon of Nll.ltant lftM!r11 ~........... ..._ WllCll'tN •Y WltlleM 0. ~ f~ I... Or-' ....,,_, ~'-_..... 1111--.. • Cl* C"""" Orkot Wftf o.twtY • man11er 1:1 .-.e "-· •u1o1 ".-in w . ._ • ...,,., c.11,_.,..,, ....,.. De"""""'..,.. n . ''"' '*""" hu been med.la -nt1Uve ............ -4111'1 h on 11111 ""' .... 1 ..... (SIALl .I .... My#t ........ ............. "" ... le ~ •· 1, '"-•Jt•\.L ·~ .. r.... lot the crve. He will con-• atwirt w. 1.i:"°f. .,......,. 41 uw , .. .,..I!.,°"'*"' ..,.. •• t·--to ~1. public rel"1k>nl ....... ,.,,. Dl'9dlr .... ""' "..., ................ 111 ••;al ••1-~ ... UIU'll' lJll .... locl't'!Oi'J .. "" Clllli ,...., c.llfiCnlll .... T"I rnt) 64t-I• ~ tn h1a l\f!W' poc1t1on. ~":r"8~0~11110N '~ c.Cflll .,.,.., """· A=.t., ~ ~ COM1 o.riv ~ltt. Exclusive Inside the DAU. Y PILOT b llllOlhlr gre.11 neWIJ>lper - the Chrtstlan Scien ce Monitor. In-depth fealurts and commeotariel f r o m ChrlatlM Science Monitor H"" Servl<t uo publllhed ucluslv<ly In Or1ng• COU.ty by Ille DAU.Y PILOT. * Royal 81Ylq;1 tltr ll'M ln Mllsion vt. l't.flilltfliM Or•• ~ Den., ilflw, s..1• a lf!d ocw o l __ I, 11, a.otenw If Mil CC... 4 1"'1, i'n• and La1.n Jo. Ot...., 11. 1m ~ 1•tt n ''"" · ~-----------' I \ " ( ! { I I l I I I I I I ' I I l l . ' • • ,. ,. 11 I 't, •' Wednesday's Closing Prices-Cp1nplete New York Stock Exchange List NEW YORK (AP)-An uninspired sW<k market slid Into lower terrlUJry Wednesday alter three ses- sions of small gains. Trading actlvlty was light. In the struggle between advancing and declin· Ing issues on the New York Stock Exchange, they started the day about even, but losers gradually pulled ahead by about 8 to 5. Investors remained aware of the Vietnam peace talks in Paris, brokers said, but were unjm. pressed by the mere fact the talks went into the fourth conseculive day. (See story, Page 4). ulnvestors are awaiting something concrete in the peace talks," said Charles M. Lewis of Treves & Co. ....... .. N~!Jlw Df 1 NO!if'Qf l.llO ~.,th!Mle E ort/'lro I W1t.t.r.f .'5 Nwll1/E I• Nwsr nd .'5 a ... , nd ws I Ill pf S r.!1101 ,.20 tit111PtC s NwM11 1.clld NOWStSfl .7• NOl"lnCo l 'h Nwt Slm .:as NrtSI pf J.60 Nucor Corp NVF Co 201 Olk 11\d .16 Occk:IP ,l1h OCtldPf pt ' Occf'I~ ,J.:g 8F''~ ,·~ o E pf 3.90 Ol!..E pf ,,4 Oh E pf '..56 Oldo11GE I.~ Ole GEl)f .BO OklaNG 1.2• Oll11Corp .U Om11rk In •I Or.fi;!•L .10 Opetlk• M I ~ Rdcl 1.20 Oii& Et Co 2 CNttldM l ,Cll CMl•ICo .U Ov1rTrn .6'1 ow.nc:F .71 aw.r.111 l.•o QwnU pP ·~ O•ftdlflllll .60 .J Finance Briefs e 'l'ri-jet B1111 ST. LOUIS -Scar.dlrt3vian Airl1nes has ordered three pnny division of ftlcOonnell- Douglas r..orp. asStmble11 the rx: 10 at its Loog Beach raelhty. nddi liooal ft1c-DonneU-0ouRhl! rtcent business slump. DC 10 tri-jet :iirlinf'rs 1•aluld ~-----------, at $66 million, the aircraft manufacturer ~ys . The order announcf'd Tues· day brought lo five the num ber of OC I ls purchased by SAS, tht firm said. The Douglas Aircraft Com· Try Travel Next best thing to taking a trip is reading about one in the tra\'el columns of the Sundoy DAILY PILOT. Sll•f i'lltl ""''"' Hltll L"' C19M r;.1. KHJ • 7:30 -"The Pink P&11tber." Peter Sellen and O.vld Niven star ln-llill l:omicat spoof ot lnlernatlonal jewel thieves which launched the -ot one or today's moot popular cartoon cbancter1. K'!1.A U 8: U -"Once Upon a Wheel" Paul Newman narrates a grand tour o! auto racing, in· duding visits with Marlo Andretti, a look at vln· tage nee cars and other events. NBC IJ 8:30 -"Banacok." George Peppard tracks down· an ancient relJgious ctoss being trans- ported by car from Mexito to the Unite<! Slates which never reached its destination . ABC O 8:30 -"Lieutenant Sthuster's Wife." A woman is determined to clear her late policeman husband accused of being on the take, after he is shot in 'ambush. Lee Grant, Jack \Varden, Don Gallowa~ I CBS O 10:00 -"Cannon ." Patrick O'Neal ) guest stars as a high-po\l.'ered rival ~rivate eye wh.o put.s pressure on Cannon u1hen it appears his Pl daughter is involved in murder. TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening OCTOBER 11 W --'----'-y u.e"""' ..,.. ... .,... (..,, 9UOSM1a ·~ttt'fllClt MorpA. i.m.._( ... )'U -- OAYTIMf MCMU """' -. -. ... IC> ...... -... -I:»·-_.. t ... l 'I.I-... ( ·~--~ .. "'"""·--· -1 --··-D (tl.,,..., _ (""i '!.! ,..Joel_ .... (ti -('loo) ....... - "-· .... -· l:tl(J) (ti • ...., ..... --IC) ... , ... (ll ""9 ....... ta ,. • fir*) 1111 ..... l ...... ,".,, I (dr1) *U '51-ll• -... ~ --u.--· ,_ "- ' ' ..... '"" .... 111a1" a ''Wiii ..., ....... , ... , .... -~""M!Off. .,,..., .. ..,_ltM-lWMr;-l'°"91 ..... -• " 'Rivalryt' DNlllG • New Thel!_ter 0-pens ENTERTAINMENT Musicicuis Play Boivl In Lag una ..,.._ l u.tlll -... -,. l•lwloolo ll .. t.i. -Oii. M IM N .. ttir.T.-.My s1 TOM 11ros Of .. ~,... IQH Like most poUt1cal cam- paigns, lhe historital drama now going on at the new City Ensemble Theater In Oran&• "tans out in low gear, en- counters some rocky going early on, but when It. finally comes to a boll the citizens should sJt up and take notice. Nonnan Corwin's ' • T he Rivalry'' introduces the new City Erwmible group t o Orange County audiences, aod the choice of this dramatiza- tion of the Uncoln-DoQglu debates is an apt one in Ulla: election year. Unfortunately, the political o'pponents at the City's Community Hall are about as evenly matched as the current presidential ~ d.idates. Director Art Winslow 's yowtg but ambitious act.ors play the campaign L~me for all it's worth -including the tactic of sending the can- clldates Into lhe lobby at in- lennl>olon lo mlng)"-"Ub lhe erowd, in character of course. AJ the run continues, they should arow more and more adept at> this off-tbe-<:uff cam- paigning: THE PLAY follows the first series of Jl!!)lltical debates ever 1.hrust into I.be n a t i o n a I spolllgbt -lhe campaign between incumbent Illinois Senator Slepheo Douglas and an obscure former state legislator named Abraham Lincoln, trying unsuccessfully to capture Douglas' seat in Congress. Although Uncoln klst, the debates thrust him in- 'Young Winston' Given Royal Premiere in NY ---CIN!DDMI lD "'•·~:rlllL. ---.. S14DIU+I I .. -· ..• . ----.. SIAU/U+I ! .. -... . - "IUTTa•PLI~ a•ir P•ll" ll"OI ~ ............ "' .. -.n •• "PlAY tT A.,,tM, SAM"' llK ............. """' ......... -...s..t. Wllwtw .. I kHuny AWll'ft "lllDDL.11 OM TMI I~" Mmrltil•r ..... n "THI OODPATMll" CllJ "TMI WILD ~UMCM" II) •Ill C ... '1" • IMwt C•lll' "NICKIY & IOOtll" 1'01 • "llTUllM Of' iA•ATA,. 1,01 ---,. SIJO.'U+I J ALSO I•) Liu ~II .. ., . -"'CAIMt\T" 1 ... 1 CUNT IAITWOOD "U.IT •uMMI... 111) "PLAY MISTY "'"'' MIW et:MTU•IONI .. 1111 __ ...... lo Ollimal promlnence and be wu soon to defeat the same Stnatoc Doullas tot tbe ~ tion's highest ollico. Tom Trimao ii the staodout ol the small cut as Douglas, the "Little Glint" whole rabidly racist views on slavery ma5ked lhe aouJ or a true patriot. Trlman ls the only cast member to successfUlly overoome the problem of youth, cre-atlng a solid and sin- cere character. His closing speech lo the SOulh on behalf of President Uncoln is ex-pertly delivered. Raymood Nasser requires more time to build himself in- to the gaunt, folksy, self- depreealing figur<! ol Llntoln. ~ Unsure and uneven at the start, Nasser develops gradually but steadily until he becomes Trirnan's equal on lhe podiwn. SHE LOOK FAMILIAR? GUESS AGAIN Ann Lipp Impersonates Phyllis Diller An important figure in the careers: of both' men is Douglas' wife, Adele, who played a conciliatory role between ber husband and his arch-rival. Linnea Lagerquist Jacks Ute depth of character which the part requires, turn- ing in a Oat, l ife l ess performance delivered I n monotone. ... -..... Phyllis Who? 'Diller' Due at Barn Sh.ow An "all -star cast" of local Ellie Liebeck, Mari I y n talent will be featured at a Albertsen, Floria Mose, Nick variety show in the Huntington Mose, Fred West, Diana Beach Playhouse Sunday Hensley, -Rita Liedags and night, topped off by (would Ron Lambert. you believe?) P hyllis Diller. James E. Smith will be Well; not the real Phyllis master of ceremonies for tbe Diller, but Fang himself would evening, while BUI Moreland have a bard time picking out will handle the souud and his real mate when Ann Lapp lighting duties. The show is tramfonn.s herself into the being staged by On O>rps, the cackling comedy queen. women's auxiliary of the Hun- Tbe Orange County actress, tington Be a ch Playhouse, currently playing a featuied which will use the proceeds role in the Irvine Community for special theater project!;. Theater comedy "Light Up the Sky." wtll do-her specialty act I at the playhouse's .. Night of l(l ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥-l(ll(l)#. October 15th'' at the Barn, """"'"""'""''°""".,""" 2110 Main St., Huntington Beac.h. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. Other entertainers for the evening include B o b b i Murphy, Ron Albertsen, Jay Conklin, Nancy Wells, Ann Walker , John Hensley, Paul Sullivan, Stuart Elliott, Don George, Marty Fuchs, 'D¥Ai11tl I!! OlOl'1!Dbit llMtM ....... .. __ _ "TORA'" ..... • 7i15 .. 1y ea.t. $9.' s... ..... 2-, ... "'""'"'<.le ''""'"' o: L .. mon SI 5"5·3521 SIU'U CUil fOUI MINDI "\lllGtfll WITCH" (I) 'l•ltcOlOI -rtYS AH ltOT fot (1111.011#" (IJ 11) .... r Mo•thWltt.t•r..toll J l 1,.<:c•ln ,._..,. ..... 1 "' IC not: ·'''-'010 IH IMlf'I .. IVlllMllllAlllJ g "CAJ9Cll Mf llSllVATIOll"ft) t l.lll/lllll U.IKAIJll "VAlDll IS COMUllN f'GI :..~ .. 0""(1• I'" .. C•;•t1••"o lJn.,.,,.,, 131·03•5 t nll IHUIH .10.t.111•nut / '°'WHlll DOIS IT tlUITf" (I) ..... ,.UDltl(I & nu '"'l .. !I) '""' 11 M•ll h Wltll ''"'°' !Ill S•r1 01•a<> ~ .. 'V •t 11,rn~rfur" !SO' 9.,., •• , OIUWlll.ONlTI Wlllllll 0•1.&0DPllT J.WJ.IDst "DOCTOlf ZHIVAGO" (,G) 'lUS,..&rrT DU~I "Mf, fllATAll!" ('GI FOR M~E=·~·~~~~l -~~~~~~~~~ii~..,.~·~'"""i~· ""~,..~i..,.~~'"i'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 CINEDDME l f . .. £'-"---' • J_t.:_ ··~- WKDAYS 6;4S SAT.l.SUN.12145 ,,_ . .,.. ,_ • "THI MAN" lr•t "'THI UWUIG CONHICTION"' INI ( -....,. ... , .. ,,..,,1~ W•nw ••rty I ,. • .,. 0...W.y "IONNll ANO CL YO... I H • llOW PLAYllll "••lfit't •AM .......... hll ~.,~•M t11-l I JS '•e:ill1'1 UMCOtll ......_ e lti•11• P1tli: IJ7·122J P•e:lflt'• LOS ALTOI ~ •1 e Lo11t •••1.h 421-1412 l'1cill1.'i"TO_.!!! e U~h•e:h 412.1121 Natl•11•I 8 •11•t-1'1fi0i e F11U•,fo11121-4741 HUHTIN•lON CINIMA e H1111tl119ftH1 •••t.h 1 .. 1 •• 601 ,. I\ •• tlr"ho'lllttl llUt.&••rH1 01 .. an 1111•••11~ '"' IJl ....... , ... , ....... ,,... ...... ,, !!CAIKl\-M' lf$fl'fllUOr Ill "'""'tt• ..... .,0,. lllt' MUtDaT• l'-1 .......... .....,.,.a ht...t ... ._ I I I 1'7 } ' \, . I I I . / I ! I l I I I ) ( I ' . ._•,;; p r m ID • al l • \ I I I • • ~ .. . ' . . Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION - VOL 65, NO. 285, 5 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA r WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER. II, 1'172 " • , ...... Today'1--;FJlull ....- N. Y. Steeb-.· • ' • • llN CENTS Parks Commission Seeks Liquor Ban Repeal By CANDACE PEARSON Of lfM 01UY PIM Slaff Orange Coonty Harbors, Beaches and Parka Commissioners Tuesday reaim- mended 5.2 that an ordinance prohibiting boo~ in county recreatiol) areas be repealed. ~ut after ·the action was taken, com. n'lissioners wavered a little and voted r.-1 Lo oot let the ~ of Supervilors know •hat they'd done until they draft an alternative law. That new ordihance, to be discussed at tj\e Nov. lt meeting, was suggested by COtpniiuioner Thomas O'Keefe to read 'Enforcer' that no person will drink in a recreation area where deeds ftStrict it or in areas prohibited by the llarbo< dittctor and commission. O'Keefe, also a ~n Clemente city councilman, described these potential pru:k and beach sites as "dry" or "kld~ die" ireas. . COmmiss.i.on chairman Martin Usab and commissioner Tom Baldwin were the no . votes on the repeal of liquor prCr hlbition in county areas. The Volstead act (Prohibition) was re- pealed nationally in 1933, about which time the county oftitnance forbidding • I V.S. Blamed drinking or tran.sportnlg liquor within any recreation area was passed. , This has caused problems of en- forcement because people drinking on their own boats, in campen or even in county.teased harbor restaurants are breaking the law. Commissioner Frank Robinson, the most adamant in arguing against the "hypocritical and unenforceable law," couldn't swallow waiting for an alternative ordinance. Robinson wanted only a complete repeal like that in effect on state ~rop­ erty. "Has the world come apart 'on slate beaches," be asked. Suspect r ;,,.,esUp French Mission In Hanoi Bombed By AR111UR II. VINSEL Of ,._ CM1tY Pllet SAit A burly used car salesman suspected as the mtllcleman debt collector in a lucrative-'PO'I• ~ aystem. allegedly headed' by a .Saddlebeck Com- mlinity College DiBtrl~~ trustee sur- . rendered fo •Ne"1>oit"Beaoi!VpOIJte ,.. .... day. I. , _Rober! E. Kelly, 34, of 835 seagull I;ine, Newpc:rt Beach, wu. booked on soiiplclon' ill compinicy •• .,...mt ~ ad releued .. lll;mllleD pending lft ,Ol!I. 18 lrt'llJ!llll ..... "It w a 1 a mill~ .ebot," said Ylce and lnlcOlliienck DeteclMI John Simon in regard to the coJncldence that llblfted !!Ulptclon fo Kelly as the $2$,IJOO.a. weet rfn811 enforcer. Sacldlebodt Qirrununity Co 11 e g e ·TrQstee Alyn lo!'· !Jrannon, ~. ol Santa ~. Is cumnt)y free on 110,000 bail .iter being cbirged with 37 separate counls involvini bookmaking violations. He fa.,.. prOuminary bearlnc Nov. 30 in Harbor Judicial District Court on 34 cOunts of bookmaklng, two counta of ex· (See SUSPECT, Page I) Niguel Burglary ~ack Contained ~ean' Contents . Los ANGELES - A burlap sack found ln °the vicinity of Sea Island Drive in Laguna Niguel July 34 ~gtalned · 11.3 million in securities allegElllJy stolen from United Calllomia Bank Monardl Bay branch In the March l>Urglary. Tbe wort!J of the bonds was made by a '°"""' close to the FBI wbicb hu been vorklng the Ii mlllioo burglary cue. Earlier estimates -..leased by tbe Oiange County Sbe!lff's office at the lbne the ACk was found placed tbe worth of jbe leCUritles at only 1100,000. (See i:J)~ted atory Page '1). The llOClt and ils contents an expected -• (See SECUIU'l'IES, Pop 11 SAIGON (AP) -U.S. warplanes at- tacked Hanoi today and the Freocb said their diplomatic mission was heavily damaged arid their chief envoy wounded. -In-response to a -French P1"9tjllt the U.S, C</lJUl\lUJd ~ 'iji!Ual operation•! re!iPrts I~' tliat Navy planes hit lnilll>ry iarpta !*'In f m~'from;the mission bWldinP: It promlted an hr veStigaflon of a French complaint. "A nwnbet of enemy sw'f.ace-to-air mll!sil• wee flrod at the u.s. airerafl," . ' ". ' Sepata~ Trial For 'Taj Mahal' Defendant Set • A separate trial was ordered today for one of six defendants in the Orange County Superior Court ''Taj Mahal" trial of Laguna Hilla stockbroker Josepb Dulaney and five alleged co-conspirators In the defrauding of the St. Bernardine Hospital in San Bernardino. Judge James Turner granted a separate trial. for Daniel Machan, 50, of San Bernardino. But ·be .denied "'parate trials fot' Dulaney, 38, o( 1631 Via Cascad'ita, San Clemente, and foor others named In a grand jury indictment. His ruling f<1Uowed bl! decision Tues-- day to deny a motion by five defense lawyers for the barring from the trlal of a controversial tape recording. That recorded conversation between former deputy dlltricl attorney Joe Dickerson, defendant James Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington Beach and defeqse attorney Darrell Johnson cootinued to be a bone of contention to- day. Jobmon today asked Judge Turner to delay the trial for 30 days to 1llc.w him to file a "'1t of mondate challenging the judge's rojectlon of the motion for separate trials. Judge 'l'llmtf aald he will rule later to- day on that ........,i. But ht made It clear (Sol DCJLANEY, r.ae I) Clemente Pilot LaniIS ' Airplane in Emergency .~ faulty emergency lilht aboard a Ing light on and decided to 111111 down ooe hu1e United Alrllnel 00.10 f111hod at of thret ..,.i.... sunset Tuelclay over Memphis «Dlinl • Moody, who ll•tl at M7 Calle Voquero, Sa• Clemonte alrllnel captain to effect then rece!vtd perQllolloe to land at 111 .-..encr landlrc at an• •irl>ort too Mempllla --.i Airport -1 sO>lll for tht l&l'Jl• liner. l4nDlnol not 7tl -led to bandle the -But onco on the .,.....,, Cjlpt. Jack bu&• !ICHO u.ra. - ll!<>odY'• real prol>ltnil bee... Onca .., !bl ..,...r, !bl plane llad 1o · 'l'he plane wu to lat&• tllat durln& a ht blmod 1.....i to .-Iba lenninal. turnlni maneuYtt' on a Killll)' landl:J But Iba ruDWIJ WU too ... u. Eflorto llrlp Ille llner-frtth lot penOl1I and 'IO, to poll tba plane around failed, .. Moody PllJllCla ol tuel aboard _. In tba mud. trt..i to tum tba cnll on Ill on -. ''lllo ~ and <mr nmaJned ~---,119on1 the ltlllldld-jltllner for -~»iUaJI,,. .. --~tllo .,. wlled-.1 ...... wblle .,..,...i ...... -to '"""" Ille -tUpped "°"' the .. -ad up.makahlfl epponrtu lo allow the Lot beea-fllllledc1ed In -· · ~er .. boonil -to 111 .. u. '11na 11oun ....,. tht _,... ...... ~ on tbelrwq~ 'l'he ht-bopn at 1bOUI 1 p.m. And CftWI _.. ltDI ll')l1oc to unssldl Wben Mood1 wertedlJ uotlced a .....,. tba lllpleM cnn. the statement said. "No U.S. aircraft were lost, and the surface-to-air nissiles, after missing the aircraft, could have im- pacted on th" ground." A spokesman -•lltml t~ statement might give the impression that the destructiOD! or tbt ml.jslon i>elldquarten was• ca....i by the !\<'lb v~­ misslles. The ~mm8od r e f u •e d , however, to role out the possibility of U.S. bombs going astray, as bas laap- peoed before, and hitting the FrejiCb compouM. · Secrelary of Defense Melvin R. Laird today coqceded in Washington that Nnerlcan bombs may have struck the French dlpJomatlc mission ,but said U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam will cootinue even as private peace talks go on ln Paris. (See story, Page 4) On the basis of preliminary reparts, Laird saJd, he couldn't state positively whether the damage was caused by a faulty bomb drop or by North Viet- namese antraircraJt weapons falling back on the city. Asked at a news conference if he thought It wise to bomb close to Bil(IOI while peace talks were in a deiielte stage, the secretary replied: "We will continue the use or airpower during this period. The President has stated this on 1eVera1 OC<'ask>ns and we will continue to strike military targets in North Vietnam." Laird declared, u he has on several occasions, that the U.S. planes strike at only military targets and not at "downtown Hanoi." Today'1 targets, be noted, included a railroad marshaling yard and transshiJ> ment paint three miles from the French diplomatic mission. He called them "slgnillcant military targets." Heaviest Rains In 25 Yea rs Flood Mexicali I MEXICALI, Mexlco (UPI) -'!be wont rainstorm In 15 years brought datructlve flooding to the nonnally arid border ~Ion of Baja California, o!flclals Aid tocfay. A downpour Ula! lasted IO houn waJI>. ed out -of road, 11<111 Wiier llreamlng thtoe feet deep throup - llreell, destroying crops and deposited llJ1d In bomes near the Gall of Clllfomla, according to Juan Hemandet., head of the tourllt department of the Mulcall Qiamb<t ol Common:e. Tbm Wett no dealhl or lnjurlll 'Cu, thl 8aJ1 Cal~omla 1111o capital, and San Felipe, I fllblrc Ylllap •bout W miles to tht -oo tba lbore of lhl ..,it. .... tha 1w.tat bit. lfmlaada said. Ho Aid ill lo IO ~ _.. -0)-.d lo -· Tbe lied er.. poooldod llldM .......... m.- '1'111 _ .. -cnp. .. "-tllll faclor In tba MoOcH adonol _,,_ Wll ~...,, hortlly ............ .J:"" .:= = ~~"'11!'"":'"";:.i.~ ed until the -· :&.i.-. - The commission's action, if lt ls ap- proved by the Board of Supervbors, would apply to Sunset Beacb1• Aliso beach In South Laguna, Salt Creek, Dana Point Harbor and the unincorporated area between C«ona del Mar and Laguna Beach. lt would also apply to Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley (where the golf course .clubhouse was granted a liquor pennit), University Park in Irvine and O'Neill Park in El ~oro. Irvine Park near Tustin has deed restrictions against im- bibing. The commissioners really began back- )Jedaling on legalizing libation when a Harbor, Beaches and Parks Dlrectar Ken Sampson said he couldn't take the repeal vote to the supervison with full support unless be had an alternative witb hJ.m. 1'be repeal vote camf! d e 1 p I t e Sampson's comment that 20 lettera ln op- position to lt, including one from the Orange County Sberlfl's department, bad been received. 1be meeting was not weU attended. Only tw<1 women, Betty Heckel of South Laguna, and Mrs. Arthur Kazarian of Newport Beach spoke against the action. &th Mrs. Heckel and Mra. Kawian cited the dangers the repeal might create for families and cbildreo at the beach. .. • es1 · .... Ye"-JfOll -CHALLENGES APPRAISAL OF IRVINE CO. STOCK AS TOO· LOW Mrs. Join lrvlM Smith In Latost Round Wltfl Corpor1tlon Irvine Foundation Assets Called 'F r aud' By Heiress By BARBARA KREJBJCH Of .... Dll,., ........... An appraisal of as.set:. ol the Jamet Irvine Foundation staling that fJlr market value of lll •tock In the 1~v1ne O mpany ii $22.10 1 ,..,. bas beorl COll- demned at "fraudulent" by heiress Joan lrvlnt Smtlb, who called the rtporl "an arropot exaniple of defiance, not cam- Pi!llDCO, with the la•." The Orange 00Unt) Tax At1!t1Gr11 •Po prallll of the company'• boldlnp, u ld Mn. Smith, woold ploce the r.ock value at cloler to '92.50 per &bare, and her own estimate of IU minimum purclwe v1lue If placed on the market loclay wwld be about SIG. FIJirc to 0ranae County frllm her Mlcl- diel>urJ, Va.. borne for tlle Tueodiy """1llrc m«llnC of Jnlne Compony dlrecton, lo'• .. Smllh laWlChed her latett critical volley 11 tht foundotlon durbla an TW O LINES TURN INTO BUSY ONES I • - Commissioner Baldwin 11reed, uytng thal "!here ought to be <>ne place where you don't have to put up wtth It (drunkenness).'' Robln.90n said tb.lt there ~ law1 that take care of dlsorderty conduct and ad- ded the old saw, "You can 't legislate morality." Usab said while he could support, an easing of the entire pnihibltlon, be .dldn'.t want to "open up a Pandora's box of wild orgies on the beaches and Jn parts." Yes votes on the rtpeal In addition to RobiMon and O'Keefe were com- missioners C. C. "Jack" Woolley, Verne Maple and Donald Fos. ' Registrar~s .. Statement . ~ ~ 1t1' correct By JACK CHAPPELL Of ... .., ....... Laguna Beach Unlfled School District fteall election candidate Jl'nncts W. 0.-ii I -iJI -Viejo, and bll fOlr ochoot<t&e chlldmi attend -Viejo -•.·tt ---fo. <lay. er-, a. own1 pr0i>eny 1n i-... lleac:I\ and . lllled "' ..... If: 'llO 'CallllnO 9tnet .. bll ""'"' llallliinent f1IOd whb Orqe Cou!ll1 ~tt!t ol Vottn. :· • -of the dftllliW Ill thet ..,. -.., Ibey .,. mdlnc the property fnlm ~ Md hoV. ----tr.o months. Cnlaln•1 two eldelt children are gr1dtrala ol '--lllgjl 8clloof -one ii now married and llvlnc In Mlalon Viejo, and the other ii 1tlaldina MlcllJian stall Uolventty. crouen, a m.anufactumt represen- taUve, e1lled frllm Arli<ma when he Is vlsllln& on -In mpcr,.. to ii> qultta . The Lquna -candldata said be hu • lot In Lal'N Beach and piano 00 "'"'tructlOI I home h8" In tbt futllre, but be admitted he la pramUy ll•irc In MtalonViejo. A opotesmln fnlm the Orap County RqlltJ'lr ol Vote,. Aid tllet his ofli<e normally acceplo tho....,, ooth ol can- dldatel U ........ct and true, Ind does not normally ln.-Jpte. .. _ people ""' .. alfldll.tl under .. Ill. n -II. 1r1 ID wo btve lo IQ on." Mayer Mid. "lie would ,,, .. to be • ruldent ol the dlatr1ct to nm," M. J, Mayer, dllej des» 1Y rqiltrlr, uld. • Ho apialned thet mldenc:e 11 ...... than ownlns inperty -a pen ~ "It It where ,... IQ In boun ol ... ..,,., " he uid. 8P«fal .. ~ .,.. -for pononnel In '°""'ment who -tn io<lllOlll It tho pltUU< ol Undo Sam. cw In point ii Pt-Nboii """ -bit oflldal ..-... In !In Clementa ad --llllboallt .. In·• ond -In Wlllbfnctoa D. <!:, llXI -~ .. ---"l'JojJerty owntl'llhlp -~ aflect V<llirc richta. lt'1 where YGU .-,• I Sol CANDIDA TB, Pap IJ ....... ..... -' ==-': --. ::' -: Os t • --. =-..: - - .. ... -.. .. ... : ... ._ . c .... • DAILY PILDT LB Clemente -r Fh1ds 'Bad' I Bo gi1s Bills Sever;i.I phony $20 hilts de~nb1:d by onL bank ofrici11l as being ''a prt.!llY bnd job of count erfeiting" surfaced in business bank deposits 1n San Clemente Tuesday. Three bc>Jius bills, alt smeared and in· ter.tionallv nbuscd 10 sirnulate wenr, \1·ere dJ!'t;O\'C'rl'd by employes of the San Clcn1en1e Bank of An1C'rica branch. All three piec~ of v.·orthless tender 11·pre deposited b~· o"'Tlcrs of small 1nerrantilc and food businesses y.•hrre cu~101ncr 1olunH' is bnsk and clerks sometimes inexperienced. ~tanager Lee \\'lnlerton said that the merchants. nu· the bank, take the loss in. such cases. "\\le take the bills to tum over to the go1·ernn1ent ." he said. "and the poor guy 11•hn nccepted them has to take the loss." 1'wo of the bills. he said, came from t-onven ience markets and the other came fr om a taco stand. The bills 'vhich surfaced along the South Coast follow the slandard style or 1nodern oounterfei linP. -prod ucts of the cheap offset printing process, instead or the rradi1ional hand-engra ving technique. "Ir you look at them a second time," \\linterton said. "you can notice poor detail ~·ork and sense a different feel of the bill" The coloring ol the bogus money is quite accurate. ho\vever. The l' .S. Secret Serv ice, v.·hich is a branch of the Treasury Department. tn· vestigatcs c n.nterfeiting cases. The bills appearing in San Oemente "'ere turned over to that agency. Agen ts for the department in Los Angeles said ir. most cases persons pass· ing the bills follow a ro,·ing circuit. a!· temptin g to spread the money in various cities and disappearing before the hoax is !ii.gO\'C:re<f, Generalh". authorilies said. those "customerS" pa y for small purchases ,,·ith S20 bills at locations where they believe clerk:! migb1 not notice the quali- ty of the bills. Oil Spill Hi ts Gulf of Mexico NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Gulf R<On!ng Co. crews are attempting today to mop up a large oil spill that frngered its way into the Gull, o~ Me,xic6 {or ,an l!:mile strttch. The Coast Guard repart¢ the spill Tuesday. saying about 8.00& barrels of crude oil leaked Into the Gulf some 100 miles south of New Orleans. However, Gulf says H lost "fin unknown quanti!y of crude oil -possibly l ,000.2,000 barrels ... " Gulf reported the spill to the C.oast Guatd. saying the spiJI was caused by a leak In a pipeline in Baratarla Pass, on the northeast tip or G;·ande Isle. Marg aret Tay lor Services Friday Graveside services ~·ill be held at Ll a.m. Friday In El Toro Cemetery for filarg aret Taylor, 55, of 31844 Virginia Way, South Laguna , who died Saturday aa tl':!;resull of a traffic accident. Vi611etion l.s scheduled at Sheffer La~& Beach Chapel until 9 p.m. today and·all day Thursday. r..'1. Taylor, a 35-year resident of the Lag\loa area, served as a model for maitx_ :JOCll lartlltl and appeared in the Pa~n.t of lhe Masten for almost 20 years. S~e is surv i\'ed by her husband, Walter. of South Laguna: two sons, Ja"les McClr.lland of Oxnard Beach and Greit Taylor of Laguna : a daughter, Katli letn Mabry, of Laguna , and six grandchildren. OU.H•t COAST u DAILY PILOT lh. ~ CeMf DilllY P'IL<IT, "'1"' '#Md! I(~ lllt' N-P'rftl,, 1, PVtlllllled llY IM Qr9ftot CM., P'11llllM1fto ~. S.,._ rite fllllM ••• -41"""-M«lll•y ""~ ..,....,, I« Coll• M"'· N......... 8~11, H\lftll1191M lltt(tll l'Ollnl•lll V•lliry, LI0\.11'<1 l!lf~(ll. l•Yll'lt'/$1ck11U c0. Md )•" Ci.mtflli/ S"" J""'" C•tr•M. A 11"91• rloQ~I .di1IOll " f!Wlll1* S.!11..., • .,., 11'111 lvno•n. Tl}9 prtnclpoU ~IH "''"' k At WO ~t .. , ''"'°"• °'"' ,. .. , C.11Mrnlt, f1'2'.. ~•krt N, WeM ~r•...., •I'd "Wlltll9' J11• A. C11rl1y Viet ..... ..,_,, W 0-.I ~ no'"'' 11: .... n ...... liloi.111 A. Mv•J1hi1111 ,..,...... ldltof' CL.rt .. H. LM. ltlch1.tl '· Ntn ......... MIMl"-1 '""" --...... • 221 ,., .. t """""' "'9ill .. M4,..tl ,.0 ........ t2•11 • : --• QttJe ~1 a:1t W.. ltp Strw !:·=.-::,,,, i'ilfWP'O'f .... -.... I .. dU ,,,,, ~ ....,.... .... ...... c--. ... 1 ; , .. ....,. en•• ..... ,., 40 . .,.. ......... .., .. ,,. -.... "' ..... "t: JM.: _. "" °""""' ~ .......... • .... .... . .......... """9'91 ..... ..... " -=:t''*"' ,..,... .. ··== ..... ..... ,... ___ ..., .. __ ... ......~ . ., ..,.... P.'5 ~•1 .. .... "" -·· ....... OttlliWttm UM "*"""' · I - DAILY P'IL<IT Sl•ff PMN Baas Breaktlarougli i.1a La91rna Jeannie Taylor, bus driver for the Laguna Beach free, but must be for civic or social events -no municipal bus line, posts the first of the new 11 by religious or political ads. Commercial advertising l B·incb signs aUowed in city buses. Sign posting is sWI is a no-no. Birth<lay Son g Gr eets Jud ge In Courtrooni "Happy Birthlhsy .to you, "Happy Birthday tu you, "Happy Birthday, dear Jimmy, liappy Birthday to you." That refrain, 1ustily sung by five defense lawyers, five defendants, a clerk, a bailiff and a court reporter, opened the Dulaoey trial in sensational style this morning. An obviously astonished Judge James Turner sat open-mouthed on the bench while the traditional birthday greeting was rendered with just abstention -an equally open mouthed DAILY PILOT reporter seated in tbe first row of the courtroom. '1\Vhy, uh, thank you, genUemen, thank you,'' the red.faced judge murmured as the echoes of the heartily sun~ refrain subsided. "Now aOOut those motions. . " All tbe defense motions were denied. FromPageJ DULANEY ... this morning that it was very unlikely that he will further delay a trial already held up for two weeks by a series of mo- tions. The next decision facing the judge, tlve defense lawyers and prosecutor Stuart Grant is whetheT the trial will be court or jury. That decision will also be made later today. Machan ls the former controller of the St. Bernardine ,Hospital. It Is alleged by the prosecution that he played a major role in providing the Dulaney group with a $500,000 loon from the Roman Catholic h1stituUon. It Is alleged that the Dulaney combine submitted worthless collateral to obta in that Juan . On trial with Dulaney and Shipley in tbe first phase of the Superklr C.ourt trlal will be Daniel Hayes, 40. of 8'll l Snowbird Drive, Huntington Beach and Wendell WarTen Austin. 38, of Riverside. The second phase of the trial v.•i\1 bring Dulaney's wife ~,arlene . 32 . lo lhe cou rtroom to lace with Dulaney and Shipley charges I.hat they defrauded in· veston in the World Financial Trends syndicate of Laguna Hills and Seal Deach. Charges that led to the grand jury In- dictment of the group ~·ere iilcd afte.r n1any invest.ors -11)()8t ol tht111 residents or rctlre:1ne:nt communities In those areas -flooded the dlatrlct at· torney's office with allegation.~ lhllt the?)' had been swindled. From Pagel SECURITI ES • • • to be entered as evidence lntc today In lhe trial of three Qhjo mt•n charged with the crime. The 1eCUrltle1 the 80Urce said, were run throuah a w111hlng mac hine to remove fingerprints ~fore they were dilcarded In the bc1vy brush on the hllbide near the street ud. . He spe.:ulated tbltves diacarded the lnot became It ~'Ould have been dlfficult to sell them to another party. The recovr:red property Ms been trac· ed, the IOutte added, to Rv,ral s1ft ty depos it boxea rlfied durln1 the ~1art:h 2+ 2e "'ffke:nd brtakln by a ttam of hi&hlY txpttltnctd lhlevts. From Page 1 RECALL CANDIDATE • • • ~fayer said. Mayer said he did not know if charges could be brougbt against any persons y,•ho made incorrect statements on the affidavit. Lou Watson of the C.ounty C.ounsel's of· fice said that "residency is a sticky prolr !em" but added most interpretations o( FromPageJ SU SPECT •.. tort.ion and one count or conspiracy. Depuly District Attorney Ted Millard said Coday It is likely the Orange County Grand Jury will issue an Indictment before that date, nanting the former junior college board president. This would immediately shift pros- ecution a n d defense proceedings to Orange C.ounty ~perior C o u r t , eliminating a hearing at the municipal court level. Detective Simon said today that Kelly, a six-loot, four-tnch, 240.pound resident of Newport Beach's Oakwood Apartments surrendered on the advice of Los Angeles attorney Peter Smith. Kelly apparently learned he was wanted for questioning in connection with the bookie ring case revealed Aug. 2.3 when Trustee Brannon was arrested by vice officen. Detective Simon declined to reveal what led investigators to implicate the suspect as an alleged enforcer who dealt with slow·pay bettors. Deputy District Attorney Don Carroll confirmed foUowing BraMon's Aug. 28 arrest that a second suspect was being sought in that role, following a grim warning to one local man heavily in debt due to sparts gambling. The unidentified Newport B e a c h businessman and bis wife received an anonymous telephone call one night tn mid·August. from a man who suggested they go out and check their front door. Shaken at the sight of an elght·inch hunllng knife imbedded in the door , the victim calle<I palice to spill his story of doing $1 ,000 a week in business - 11llegcclly with Brannon. De.tectivt Si mon said names of many !oral people who allegedly placed bets with OrRnnon on various sportin' events will be subpoenaed for testimony. hfoncy :illegtdl.v exchan~ed t:anda in gambling on professional horse racing, football. baskelbnll, boxing and tennlt. Trutlt>e Brannon spent 1everal days In Orange County Jail, unable to raise hlJ ortglnal '25.000 ball, untll lt was reduced to SID,000 by llarbor Judicial Dl!trld C<>urt Judge Calvin P. Schmldt. Newport Beach Detective Simon and lnvestlgatl'lrs from the Orange County District Attorney's Office moved In and Arrested Brannon after the original In· rormnnl assertedly pnid hi~ $1,800 gambl· ing debt as demanded. The transaction was a 11 e I e d 1 y monlloreJ by lawmen to obtain evidence re~lting In an arrtst warrant for Bran- non. who is assoct1ted wllh an Ana.helm hu~iness Sc.'hool. Slnt'e his relea.~ oo ball, the charter lruft:tee of tile Sllddleback Community rollege Dl!trlct which was formed In 196i hos C'Onl1nued as nn aclivt me:mbcir of Its board . F'tl1ow tru~ttt1 and Co 11 e g e Supcrln!C'ndent Dr. Frt:d Bremer havt ~ f11r deelined eomm~ent otrlbi chargM a_gainst Brannon, citing le1al guklellntl 1g.alnst tuch remarks which art followed by moot tc"9<>1 district.<. ''resident'' have to do with physical presence In a given location. Walson sa id that a person who know- ingly makes an incorrect statement on an official swom document could he: charged with perjury by the district at- torney's office. The counsel added that suit could be lodged against the registrar's office by citizens to have a person's name omitted from a ballot on grounds that the person is not a bona fide candidate. available for quick action through tbe Superior C.ourt for such suits. Crossen termed the residency issue a "technicality" and said his qualifications should be left to the voters of the Laguna Beach Unified School District. He said he had first come to Laguna Beach in 1955, and that "it is my home and It is where we desire to live. "I have felt the problems of the school district very closely and I have followed it closely. "My pasition on recall is that it should be something available to us ... but l1S"' ed only as a la st resort," he said in- dica ting it should be used only in cases of corruption or moral turpitude. ~le said he desired to remain in the Laguna Beach election even though he and his family no longer in the strict sense "reside" In I:iaguna. "The only reason we are not residing there is that I would not want them (his four school-age child.fen) to be placed in that type of situation," Crossen said. He explained that the "situation" was a school district where there was con· slant turmoil over which elementary school was best, conflicting test reports, and a rift between the school board and the district administration. "I don't think that's a hea1thy en· vironment for children to be brought up in." he said. "I am appalled and amazed that we were not able to field more candidates for the recall election." Crossen's children now attend Mission Viejo High School, La Paz Intermediate, and Del Cerro Elementary. They wett registered last year. Other candidates in the Dec. 5 election to recall trustees Gerald Linke <Jld Patricia Gillette, are Lucille Whitaker and Michael Sagar. GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES FALL JEWELRY TRENDS There's a classJc revival ill Fall ~ jowolry styling for 1972, for today's woman Is ge{ting the clothes ahe wants and loves to wear . There are wide choices for the woman of the 70'1. She can choose a simple trealmmtt of gold. a tra- dition laden diamond ensemble, a 18Uored look that mixes Ivory wtlh gold or a lacy •«ect lhat mak., diamonds reOect sparkling mem· ories. Personallud jewelry of eleg&11t good taste .fias never been more accessible. \Vhether it'• diamonds, rubies, emeralds, sapphires, gold, 1Unr or platinum, tciday'1 woman Is rree to uae her own creative lmagloatlon to enhance her own p,artlcular boaul)I. ......... 1 mvINE . ~. 1111'1 boMlnp o! Ibo company. 'n>e company own1 land lo Moolln• and lmperW Vllley, alooJI wllA Ibo 83,GOO«rt trvloe llwll la Olqt °"""" ty. n.. !oundaUon'• appr1bll figures, aid Mn. Smith. would l'lllct lhe value ol lhe Orqe C.Ounty land at 1 "rldJcu1ous" n.!oo an acre, wblio In !act II should be worth at least '10,000 an acre. based on tax assessment figures. Noting that In 19'8, when the Irvine Company purclui>ed Irvlno alock from the Macco Corporltla.n at an evaluatioo or $25 a share, she remarked, "It is cvidenUy the Jam~ Irvine Foundation's contention that the.tr hand1)icked puppet management have been over the put re,_ years devalu.atlng rather lban in- creasing t.:>e Irvine Company's assets." h-frs. Smith's attorney, Lyndol Young, called attention at the press conference to testimony i.r. the 1969 Tu Reform Act hearings \vben Sen. Paul Fannin of Arizona, seeking tJ obtain an extension of time for the foundaUou to divest Itself of its stock, told a committee, "At falr market value the foundation should be able to realize n25 niillion or more for il~ equity." "Now they tell us the stock is only worth $103 million," said Young. He also ncted that an inventory of the estate of the late Gloria Irvine, who died in October, 1971, was filed almost simultaneously with the foundation ap.. praisal, and a1so t11ed the fair market value of her Irvine stock at $22.50 a shHre, again $2.50 lower than the $25 figure of the last stock sale. Both the foundation's appraisal and the Gloria Irvine estate inventory will come under the scrutiny of the Internal Revenue Service. Mrs. Smith said, noting that she is spending "a greatwtieaJ of time" in Washington, apparentl~1n this connection. · It is her opinion, she said, that the ms will not accept the low appraisal of the foundation 's assets and that the foun· dation, in order to meet payout re- quirements, will have to divest itself o( the Irvine·&tock, which now pays only-a 1.8 dividend and place the money in higher yielding investments, as other foundations have done. At a stockholders meeting last June, Irvine company president Mason said the company would not be able to pay higher dividends to heJp the foundation meet the new payout requirements. At the Tuesday press conference at- torney Young cited steps taken by numerous other major foundations to comply with the Tax Reform Act. The . Ford Foundation, he said, has nduced its holding of Ford Motor Com. pany stock from "l1 percent to 13.45 pet· cent and already pays out 9 percent of its total assets to charity annua1Jy. The Kresge Foundation sold 2.5 million shares of stock in the Kresge Corporation in order to re-invest to produce increased income. The Lilly Endowment sold three million shares of EU Lilly Co. stock in order to re--invest and produce more money for charitable donations. The Hearst Foundation sold all its stock in Hearst Publications. The Henry Luce Foundation sold 80,000 shares of Time Inc. stock to reduce its interest to 11 percent and re-in"'st. "The Irvine Foundation," said Young, "still holds 54.5 percent of Irvine Com- pany stock and hasn't made a move to comply with the Tax Reform Act." ln a final swipe at the foundation, Mrs. Smith quoted from a book entitled The Big Foundations. published by the Twen- tieth Century Fund Foundation. The quotes referred to the Irvine Foun- dation's "fundamental lack of character and honorable purpose," "unsavory reputation for financial misconduct," and "a philanthropic program widely regard- ed as one of the poorest In the country." The foundation, she accused now is "attempting to perpetrate a flagrant fraud ·upon the federal government and also upon the people of the state of California who are the beneficiaries of the James Irvine Foundatton.11 It takes the right kind of money . --- Hij ac ker's Slayer Files Suit By TOM BARLE1C Of 11'11 DlllY ,lltt 119ff A formei Marine who shot and killed a hijacker three monCha ago lllld ·today lives in fear of what h! predlct3 .JB cer- tain reprisal by Ille dead man's friends and relatives has sued Pan America n V.'orld Alnvays for $1.2 million. William H. Mills claims in the Orange County Superior C.ourt action filed ~ day that the airlines action is reteasini his name to the press against his wishei exposed him to the re\'enge o{ the dead hijacker's next of kin. He states In the lawsuit that the dead ' ' man's brother is one of several Vtet- namese relatives who are currently am:~ ious to learn the whereabouts in Or&n1e County ot Mills, his wile, Josephine and the couple's two children. Mills claims in the action that he shot and killed hijacker Ngu Yen 'Thi·binh Ju: ly 2 on the specific instruction~ of the Boeing 747 captain. He states that capt. Eugene Va~n summoned him to the aircraft's cabin shortly after the hijacker warned Pu~ crew during the San Francisco to Saigon flight Chai be had a bomb with him B.oa would detonate the device if the pilot ilid not follow his instructions. to fiy ~ plane to Hanoi. _ Mills said the captain returned the .35? Magnum pistol taken from him befQ~ the aircraft took off and told him to ¢;~ it when he got the appropriate signal. , Mills states that the captain then pull- ed the hijacker away from ttie stewardess he was holding as a hostage; wrestled him to the ground and then tOld Mills: "kill the , •. " The ex-Marine states he did exactly that. But he blames the airline for su~ quent actio~ that have, he said, cost him Ws savings and forced him to move Several times including his most recent move to Orange Cotmty. · . Mills said it was clearly Wlderstood at the time of the iocident that the airlioe would not reveal the identity of the man who shot the Vietnamese hijacker. . Mills states that the dead man was a prominent member of a Vietnamese anti~ war movement and that many of its members have sworn to revenge bis death. He states that he bad been warned an man yoccasions that he, his wife and lwo children will be put Co death by Che <irganization. · Public Hearing Set on Regional ··• Sewage Question . The Aliso ~'ater Management Agency will hold a public hearing at 7:30 tonight at the Aliso Elementary School, 21542 Wesley Drive, Sotltb Laguna. ·; : The hearing will be held to recf!rve public optnion on the regiaoal approad! to sewage collection, treaunent an'd reclamation. . The $27.5 million project will Jin~ sanitation agencies of the south cowity area from Irvine through Laguna Nia~C!, and features a large regional treatQlen~ plant at the Aliso Creek area by the coast and a 7 ,000 foot ocean outfall. . The Laguna Beach Planning ~~ mission will render a written position on the agency's Environmental Impa~ s:atement during a special session at .2 p.m. Fr1day, in City Hall . · Other treatment plants Inland may 'be expanded. A major aspect of the concept is the maximum reclamation of water and its reuse for irrigation of 1otf courses, greenbelts and recreation arees. '. to look your best. n. ""' .,., .. ...., ... ., " ,.., ...... &..fort ... .............. ..,.. ......... htt •l;Mllll ,.._.,,, s.t i. ,,.,..... 14 k • r • t ttW .,..... c•u. ~.,... .. : ................... ... r,,, • ..., ........ ....,. ..... c ......... ... ... , k11S11'91 .... ..,.... ..................... J.C. .J,Jumph ritM Je1vt>tr~ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD •• COSTA MESA ,. CONY(Nlffrl'I fflMI :t 2l Tl!AJIS IN fHf SAMl LOCATION IANICAMlllCAlD-Ji4ASTll CHAl51 'HONI-l•l·1401 • After punchtn1 a hole In tbe bank 's roof and blA1tln1 their wty Into the vault, the bur1l1n broke Into 458 of the fndlvlduAl boxes telting cash, jewl.'h1. r'A oolnt Mild other v1fut1bles owned by lhe affluent patrons In the l..agnnA Nlgucl. ,\1onareh Bay, Three /\rrh Bay 11ntl L.o~nn Rritrh ar('n~ 'They K"'•ted him c:htetlly when he .,.. rived for the Sepe . 1 board meellng and lJranll()n delivered his cwitomary in- 't'N·11tirin Wtw'!I \hf! mte0ll£'. 0DnVtned. But best of all , she has acctu to a world of ld'8S from her local In· dependent jeweler, who Is com· pletol y !ree to operate as he wishes tn helping her. ,,.. ' • • 17 I r ., I v !' in a I p n q • • . . . -----------·.......------. -- Saddlehaek- EDITION I Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks YOL 65, NO. 285, 5 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WED NESO>..¥, OCTOBER 11, 1972 TEN CENTS . Parks Commission Seeks Liquor Ban Repeal By CANDACE PEARSON Of fM Deity p .... lllff Orange County Harbors. Beaches and Parts Commissioners -Tuesday recom- mended H that an ordinance prohibiting booze in county recreation areas be repealed. But after the action was taken, com- nliisioners wavered, a little and voted' 5-1 (o. Dot let the Board of Supervisors know "hat they'd done until they draft an a.lt.ernative •Jaw. That new ordinance, to be discussed at the Nov. 14 meeting, was suggested by Commissioner Thomas O'Keefe to read that no person will drink 1n a recreation area where deeds rubid ft or 1n areas prohibited by the Hart>o< director and commission. O'Keefe, also a San 'Clemente city councilman, described these potenUal park and beach sites as "dry" or "kid- die" veas. c.ommission chainnan Martin Usab and commissioner Tom Baldwin were the no votes on the repeal of liquor pro- hibition in county areas. 'lbe Volstead act (Prohibition) was re- pealed nationally in 1933, about which time the county ordinance forbidding drinking or transportnig liquor within any recreation area was passed. 'Ibis has . caused problems or e~ forcement because people drinking on their own boats, in campers or even in county-leased harbor restauranta are breaking the law. C.Ommissioner Frank Robinson, the most adamant in arguing against the "hypocrltical and unenforceable law ," couldn't swallow waiting for a n alternative ordioanCe. Robinson wanted only a complete repeal like that in effect on state proJ>- erty. "Has the ·world come apart on state beaches," be asked. The commission's action, if it is a~ proved by the Board of Supervtoon, would apply to Sunaet Beach. Ali>o beach in South Laguna, Salt Creek, Dana Point Harbor and the unincarporated area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Belch. It 'll'OU!d aJ90 apply to Mlle Sq11&r&' Park In Fountain Valley (where the golf coune clubhouse was granted a liquor permll), University Park in Irvine and O'Neill Park In El :oro. Irvine Park near Tustll) has deed restrictions against Int· bl bing. The commissioners really began back· j.edallng on legallzing libation when Rinker Houses Ol('d- Co u ncil V otes 3-2 on Project Near El Toro Field By GEORGE LEIDAL °' ................ Irvine city cooncllmeli Tuesday night voted to approve zon.lng allowing con- struction of 500 hornet. just one and a half _miles from U;le~ of m;i El Toro Marine Corps Air Station jet ninway. Councilmen voted 3 to 2 to approve the fint reading of the zoning law. The mo- tion was favored by Councilmen John Burton, E. Ray Quigley Jr. and Henry Quigley. S;ecurity Guard Fells Hijacker Tn Bomb Threat FRANKFURT, Germany (UPI) - A IAll!hama seairlty offlcer !1lled up his r81ncoat and bopped Into ~n to- diri. -cl!'-wbq -i,neci to blow up a Lulth8nsa planO '"' a flllbt from ·Lisbon to li'rankfurl unlesa be were given money, FrankfUrt po~ said. When the Boeing m. with 58 pasSengers aboard, landed at Jl'~kfurt's Rhein-Main airport, anned police sur- roupded it. Capt. Heino Caesar, a Lufthansa flight security officer, managed to hit the man on the bead and police arrested the suspect, police reported. . . A Uilthansa opokesman Identified the German as Friedrich Schutz. He told polil:e he bad been apelled from Uganda and refused entry by . Portuguese authorities: at Lisbon. 1be drama at Frankfurt airport lasted less than an hour. The plane landed frow Lisbon at 4:39 p.m. and rolled to a stop at an i>olated parking place a few minutes later. Police said Schutz demanded "a fast getaway car" and "a few thousand . (See !WACK, Pace Zl Laguna Hills Building Okayed With Noise Limit A S58<mit subdivision In the Laguna Hills area WU 1pproved by....1,..tbe Orange County Airport Commlaslon Tuesday night but with two stringent «M1Dd re- quirements. The comrnisslo™", acting on a refer- ral by the county planning commission, said buyers of homes or apartments in the tract abould be warned In writing tjlat the property II Wlder the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station noise impact area, and that unlta ahould be l!OUlld proofed to blunt the noloe of jell. The property planned /or development Is located one hall mlle 'west of Moulton Parkway between Canada Road and llld&eroule Drive. A second tract In the city or Irvine was ipProved u recommended by the pla,.. liing oommlaalon. It Includes m •Ingle lamily homes located ooutb of the San Diego Freeway ln Uhlventty Put. TWO LINES TURN INTO BUSY ONES . Two 1lnet ol advertlllng-lotl of "'busy Onet"' on the p!QM. That'• the story of tlila DAI LY PILOT clauilled ad : "' vw llEl:n.B Good -· .... UZ.llD • II oold the Cir to the 111'11 Clllet, but ... phone lr'1'I "rtnlbtl like ....,., .. the idfertlatt reporled. 11 ;.u ... lllotfill lar trutt k1od o1 acuon~ dial tbl "acUon One" at MWm, direct line to DAILY PILOT ClauUled ~ Dlpl. Although be said he would oppose the Wling, Mayor William Fischbach moved, and received council. support, to require the Harker-Rinker Development com- pany to provide an environmental impact statement for staff review. Walter Frome, spokesman for the firm , said be would file the statement within the required two-week limit set by the council. . The second -final approval -reading of the zoning law is expected to come up in the Nov. 14 council meeting. The council action Tuesday caps a 10- month effort OD the part of Ute Rinker firm to get City approval of ·the 70.acre rezoning from agricultural to residential use~ At bearings both before the council and planning commission, much testimony aboilt the effect of noise from jets pass- ing near the property was beard. Further, there was much speculaUon about the possible future use of El Toro Irvine Council Action Here are !be major a¢iona taken Tuesday night by the Irvine City Ci>uilcil: JUNKEll;ZoNlNG: Approved Cit a apltt vole !be fll'll of-,..dings<( a zonlDg law allowing 500 homes to be built near El Toro Marine Corps Air sta- tion, llUbject to environmental impact statement filing. " ECO-IMPAcrfi>luf: Adopted short form q~e askin( sll <!Uff- . llbns about !be lllP~ private development may bave on !be environment Guidellnes are lo bl ·approved foJJowlng !urther atalf atudy. .. COA8TLINE OOnATIVB: R«elved ond ftled ~ molutton oppoo. Ing Proposition 20 ·tbe Nov. 7 ballot measure establllhlnt cootrola of develop. ~ near the QCeall. Fl\EEWAYS: lleaolved to support present timetable for the Corona del Mar Freeway and adopted Culver Drive interchange of the sa.nta Ana Freeway plan suggested by North Irvine study commlttee. UNDERGROUND WJI\ES: Continued for another two weeks the Southern California Edlaon Company appeal of a planning commission requirement to yndergroulld new high voltage lines In the Industrial complex. ARTS FESTIVAL: Took an advisory rather than a regulatory stand while encouraging fonnatlon of a voJuntary organization to establish a city arts festi- val to run May 12 to 20, 1973. Debt Enforeer? 2nd Suspect Gives Up In Bookma king Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... Deny Pllilt 119" A burly used car salesman suspected as the musclemaD debt collector ln a lucrative 11:ports bookmaking system allegedly headed by 1 Saddleback Com- muntty College Distrk:t trustee sur- rendered to Newport Bea(:b police Tues- day. Robert E. Kelly, SI, of 135 Seagull Lane, Newport Buch, WU booked on suspicion of conspiracy to commit bookmaking and releaaed Oil '2.SOO ball pending an Oct. II arraignment. "It w 1 1 a mUlk)n.to-<>ne lhot," aaid Vice and Intalllgence Detoctlve John Simon In regard to the coincidence that shifted ouaplclon to Kelty u the '25,000... weekring'senfor«r. Saddleback Community C o 11 e I e Tnlltte AJya M. llnMOll, 40, of Santa Ana, ii currDI)<. tne .. •10.000 bail afttt ~ c:barpd with 11 _.,ate counll inYolYlnc boolDnaldnc vtolatloal. He -tnllml..., ~ New. JO In Harbnr Judicial Dlllrlct Court on SI eounta of _...,tq, i... -. ot Po tortioo and one camt ol coosptrac,. Deputy Dlltric:t A"°'11e)' Ted Millard aald today tt II llttly Ibo Onnp County Grand Jury will -an lndlctment beth that date. namlnc the - junior coUeae board ... ..-. 'lbll ...utd Immediately lldft pn>O-' ecutlaa and defenae ~ to Onnp _, .a.poriar c •• rl ' eUmliiatims • man,. •t the municipal matlml. Dell!CU" 8lmon aald today that lttlly, • -. foolMncll; lfO.j)ollnd -ol Nawpart Bead>'1 Oakwood Aportmtnta .......... ed ... the ldYlcO ol Los Anaelet attorney Peter Smlth. Kelly apparently learned he was wanted for questlonlng In connectlon wllh the -ring case revealed Aug. 21 when Trustee BnonoD waa arrested by vice officers. •Detective Slmon decl1ned to meal what led investlgaton to implicate the IUlped aa an 1Deged enforcer who dealt with slow-pay betton. . Deputy lllstrlct Attomey Don CUToll confirmed folk.,ring Bramon'• All(. 21 arrest !hat a second IUlpecl wu belnc ooogbt ln that role, follow1n« a 8J1m warning to one loc.tl man beavtly In - dut to sportt 11mbling. The unldentlfli!d Newport Be a ch buolMllmlll and 1111 wife ._i...i an anonymouo telephone call one nllbl In mld-All(USI. from a man who lll((ested they 10 out ond check their front door. (llee SllSPECr, Pap II Blaze Destroys Gara.ge, Vehicle A In wty today deltlV)'td a - delacbld -and. tf71-la -· Ibo Oranp Counl7 ,,,. o.pon. moot ._ted. . ~ hmoG. Cllled aut at I a.m. lloltiOd Ille -ol -"l'IPa la Ille -..... bJ 1-CorJI nlia ot 11511 V01-Lw. 'lbt ...... .,.. tDCal'1 la-la n-w1i1n--.~ -" ""'""'ied the ....,.i "' -to nearby ....... lhcl' aw. Dllmlla .... eatlmat4d at f7,IOO. • • MCAS as a joint commercial jetport. Were that to happen, councilmen 1"'"' told, the runway aimed directly at the Rinker parcel along Moulton Parkway between Jeffrey Road and Sand Canyon Avenue, would bear lbe bulk of com- mercial operations. - Councilmen Henry Quigley dlsmlased the t'Ommercl1Uzatlon of EI Toro argu- ment. noling were that to happen, eo- vlroomental impact statemenll would (See 7.0N!NG, P11e Zl Frenc h Protes t, Charge. Mis si on ln Hanoi Bombed ' $AI~ (AP) -U.S. warplanes &1- t.4c1<td -today anil the Froncb aald their ~tic -· WU beavljy clamqed ""' their chief """I' 1"lOllded. . In napaille to • -protat. !be U.S. Coft!l!1and ':"Id lnltlll operational reports indicated that Navy planes btt mllltaey targell zll to 3 miles from the mllslon bulldlnp. It promlaed an Jn. vestlgatinn of a French complaint. ·••A rwmber of enemy IUl'fa~ mls!lles ..... e fired at the U.S. alnnft," the statement said. "'No U.S. alnnft were loo~ ond the surlacMHir nllslles, after mls!inc !be aln:raft, could bave Im- pacted on th< ground." A spolcesman a(l"eed the lllatement mlgbt pve the Im---thai the deatructlon of the mlasloo beadquarten wu caU...S by the North Vle!Mme. mi&sUes. The command rt f u 1 e d , , boweYer, to rule out the posslblllty of U.S. bombs 1olng astray. aa lw bap. (See HANOI, Page ZI Irvine Council Adds 14 Acres To City's Parks Irvine City ~ Tuesday night '-led the city'• totAI publk part acreqe to nu.rly 14 1CTa Ind ocmttnued options oo another IM! acru In the Greentree Homes tract. Councllmen wted to aceept dedication ot a z.~ p.rt In the p....i.y DeVelop- ment Company tract near the Ranch and Cclllomla -de'ftlopmonll In .... tral Irvine. Another ..,....,. sr-beh In the -tract allO ........ pe.d. 'lbe G-•bee -port wu IJF proved with a f1nal tract mop prvvtdlng 5 DeW relldencet la the Bren IUI> dlvlllon, but detennlnatlCll ol the -Inc of that Interior P'lrl< ol the dty lllU ii pendlnt • -ol tra<t resldenta. u ...,.. thla 7J pemnt ol the G-ilGmol Aaodltloa memberw -to accept the part u • prmte fa<W ty, Iha city will not take It u 1. public port. City A!tonle1 Jame : -ruled tbat ....-ol the outcoma ol the -" -·-the cll1 -·· -ol -y nic!>t required the -Compao)' .. build~ part u-llod. 'lbll .,._ • - --..oileylJaJI court, -.. -----"die part ... -wlll ba -flll 1111-..... bi 11uvtmc1;-..-a ca1 c•tion tl ,. __ .,.. ... 1.· 01 ·--.... -lo .....,nato 1W9 -.... lo lmpoOii Ille flodCI-.. ... part .,.__ • C1 • • 11111rY Qr'ale1 _.._the cltT .............. -" --ltt ..., --1as ..... ._. turf ..... ol u. .... ._.. port lo the -. I Harbor, Beaches and Parks Director Ken Sampwn1 saJd be couldn't take the repeal .voto to the supervlson with fUll support unless he had an 1lternative with him. The repeal vote calnf'! d e 11 p l t e Sa.mRIOD's COf!lIDeDl that 20 letters in o~ pooltlon to lt, Including one from the Orange County Sheriff's deputment, bad been received. 'lbe meeting was not well atteoded. Only two wom<n, Betty Heckel of Soul~ Laguna, and Mrs. Arthur Kazarian of Newport Beach spoke agalnst the action. Bolb Mrs. Heclo!I and· Mrs. Kazarian cited the dangers the repeal might create for families Ind children at I.ht beach. Commissioner Baldwin agreed, saying that ''there ought to be one place •here you don't have to put up with Jt {drunkenness I.'' Robin90n saJd lhdl there are l1ws th.it take care of dJ.sorderly conduct and ad· ded lhe old saw, "You can't legislate morality." . Usab said while ~ could S\lpport an easing or lhe entire prohibition. Ile dldn'I wanl lo "open up a Pandora 's box of wild orgies on the beaches and in parks." Yes votes OD the repeal In addition lo Robinson and O'Keefe were com- missioners C. C. "Jack" Woolley, Verne Maple and Donald .!'ox. DAILY PMT twf ...... CHAl.LINOIS ~RAIS.AL OF IRVINE CO. STOCK AS TOO LOW Mn. Joan lrylne Smith In Utett Round With Corporatlo'1 Irvine F oundatio11 Assets Called 'Fraud' Bv Heiress •' 111 BARJIAM nEIBICH .,, ............... An appralul ol ..i:. ol the J1111<1 Irvine Foundallon stating !hit fair market vllue of JI.I slOck in the I·vtne 0 111pany II tlUO a wre baa been COii· demned al '"fraudulent'" by belrea Joan Irvine Smith, who called ihe report •1an •rroc•nt es11T1p&e o1 deftanct. not com- pl:Jlnce. wtth the law." The Oraftle Ooun!) Tn -·• ap. pralaal ol the CC1111pany•1 botdlnp. said MJ'I. Smith. -.Id place the _, nlue at clooer to ta.50 par ....... and ber ..... est.lmate of Its minimum putthue '8hae u pI-i ., the market foda1 -bt about tlO. Ftylna In 0ran&e County IJ'Gm ber Mlct- dleburJ, Va.. -f" the TuncUy l1>Clmlnc meotlng ol Irvine Company dlroc:lon .... ' Smith lalllldled ber latest crlllcal volley at Ille follldatloo during .. atlttn0an prtu conference. 'Ibo tppralaal ol -... propared .. a requ1r.ement ot tbl Tu Rllfcnn Ad ol t•, iqlslatlon the heir!# llronliY IU. :>rted dutlnt lenatby W""1lftllon beartnp. '11'e lq1'111Jon requl""' thal cllarltable foundatlcm, In -In ..Uln Its ..... proGt IU ltalul, mull, by Im d!Y ... Ital! ol -k !loldlnp la ,..... ol JO -In all) .... dlll-1 and betln poylnJ annual --.-"-toU~olthoir- ln 1m. and ba-·-to I pen:a1. '1111 Jama Imne FOIDlauoo beldl JU Jl'ft'lll ol lmne Oomt-11 •oct. 11n. lllnltll. principal la d h I d a a I lltaCtholdor -jull -ll -and the f'l!Ninder ol the itodl 11 bold by atlw -ot the -!aJlllJJ. In 1171, die -tloa ., dlllitllblo 4-Ch• ........ &o l_J .ll.l_.771. JtpM stlS.C S. U.. two percent of tbt •• -......_ .., 111111 -af> pri'bd, lfn. --poliqd Gut. addias, "'If tlte .,...lilllla.d lollowl 1111•11 -· ~ ...w ... bid .. poy •t '" mlDlae lo -tllll 1.J -t ,.. qulra-ol tllo lfu U-Ad.• At Iha ......... -~Mn • Smltb said, Irvine Compooy ~t WIDiam B. Ma'°" and foundation -"° dent N. Loyall MclAren ,.fllled to ;i .. ber """* ol the appralaal wbldl lbe deserlbtd • ''a 1uptrl1dal, t~e document made by an lnvtstmeal bank· Ing rompasny tn New York." The ap,>ratul appereftll1 -bated aol<ly on the eamlftl Yllue of tbe Irvine Company ..... 111d. and -nol lndllde land h-"1111 of tbe company. The company OWN land In W- and Imperial Vallay. •lone with tbe 1:1.-. lrvtno Rancll In era,.. Qiun. !)'. The r.undation'• _.i..1 flcum. aid Mn. Smith. WOllld ,,_ the nlue ol the Orange County land at a 0"rtdlc11loo1"' fl.IOI an a<re, while In fact h sl1ould ba fllee IRVU.'11, l'1lp II ...... _ . -.. -I :::-: ........ .: -.. ~· :-.......... ,..... . = ---.. -....... ... . ---v c:.a11t -. =-----. --" ".. . t'": r::. ,. .......... " ·-. ....... ~~ .. -. -----. .. •• OAll.Y PILOT IS Wtd~d1y, October l\, 1971 Reagan Laslie$ Prop. 14 Plan SAN FRANCISCO (APJ -Prais-inl Ila illome but addlns thal It •Moold crtate mort problems than it would mlw,11 GM. Ronald Regan today denounced the tenets of the Watson lnitlntive, the Prop. 14 tax. reform pacltage on the November ballot. "I find t cannot support and In· deed must Cippose Prop. 14 if I tun to meet my responsibility to the people," Reagan said ln remarks prepared for delivery before the California Real Estate Association. The association has been one or the Watson Initiative's most vocal supporters and second largest financial contributor. Another Look At Vi.llage Project Set Irvine Planning Commissioners will take another look al the Irvine Com· pany's Walnut Village East proposal Oct. 19, following actlan on the matter by jrvine school trustee!. The housing project is in central Irvine. A school site, where an elemen- tary and intermediate school are pr~ posed , Is west of 1t1oulton Parkway and Culver Drive. ' In a 3-1 vote Monday, Irvine Unlfied School District trustees said they liked the locatio n oi the site, the combination ()[ the two schools and the small neJghborho<x~ parks adjacent to them. Board President Charles Boulanger voted against the concept, saying he doesn 't know if he's in favor of having bclth schools at one site or if he agrees wtth the proposed sizes of the schools. Under current plans, the elementary school would house more than 700 students and the intermediate about J,100. Trustees were surprised by Boulanger's comments because a few weeks before, he had indicated approval of the idea. Trustee Sharon Slrcello said the Irvine t'mpany told trustees lhe size or the I could he decreased. She and ee Nonn Ginsburg supported the l_fea _of making the area a total educa- ~· cultural aild ~Uonal camptu:. 1"n>ey suggested the slte could ac- ct>mmodate a library, pre-school and a. community swlmmlng pool. The school board's recommendation Villi be forwarded to the planning com· mlsalon. FromPageJ HIJACK ... marks" to hcJp him get away. "The police are after me," he told a stewardess. Capt. Ceasar and another Lufthansa pilot. Capt. Werner Utter, drove a car lo the rear of the plane pretending il was for Schutz. They tricked the German into looktng lrtto the luggage compartment of the car and as he bent over Capt. Caesar hit him on the head with the rolled·up raincoat, police said. Then , 11; dozen p0llce -armed with machine IW\I who cordoned the plane rushed In and arrested him . Schulz cho!e one of t¥: toughest alrporta in Europe to put hJ,s Challenge to polloe. Frankfurt alrport tiaa been under "100 percent" HCUrlty for week! follow· lng the Arsb attack on the Israeli Olym· pie te am durlns the Munlch Olymp,ca Sept. ~. Scores o! anned police were atandlng by at the airport to guard •R•iniit the poPiblllty of a hijacking attempt by Arab guerrtllas, who threatened to try lo free three Arabs jailed in r.tun1ch since the Olympics massacre. OU.N•I CO.AST ti DAILY PILOT 'T!l9 Dl'atWt aMt Dl.n.. 't 'IL.OT, wlltl 111f11$ .. _....... "" ....... Pt91, k ~ ..., "" °"'"" COM PlltlWllrlt CMr!Mny. S-..-.1, .. nllM -,_....., MM111y 1!'110UQ1t F'111ey, llW" a.le ,._., N-rMWt a..dl. t111<1llt'IO._. 9-~tllfOyt11•i11 \/•llfY, I - 9tKll. ,,..,""', ... .,,, .. ttf<tt ""1d s ... C.\f<n9nl1/ ~" J"''" (11ft1r1,,., ,. t lngt1 no>O!MI t11111i... is "'11o11111 .. w""'"'~Y" 9nd ,_."'° fJw 111"'"'-•• llllCllWllll9 lllM!I It •• :no wn t • .., t trMI, (Olfl M_, (:1Hf0t'lll4o, ,1',._ Relt1rt N. W1M Prulftflt .,.. N n.r-,,- Je1l I:. Cwlrt" Viet Pnt~ •.-1 Otftlf•I ~ Tli•"''' r ..... u lfttw TltoMe• "'4 M1tr•hl111e ,....,...14119 ldl!W c:Mtl .. H. l.., l leh•l'4 r. N•ll ~~"""' -'"'' ..,._, -w.I • .., '"" -rat..,, .. ...,.,-t """"~" uw. ' • """" ...._,.. Htlntlflltllt I t JJWt a-o .........,.. ... OMIM!ill ........ ai ~·- , ...... ln41 '4JAU'I Cl• .... Mta1at I '41.UJ'I s.. ~ arc M ' lt.,a1s-w ., ... , ,.J ... ttH r ·1tiiif.!fa __ _ "!'!!11!!....""'U:a. ...... ::= ~ s:E."1.:r'..:.:.~· ...... llllp~ct Form Okayed Irvine to Set Deve"lopnwnt Guidelines A simple, six-question environmental ln1pact report form which developers can complete with yes or no answers wns adopted by lrvine City Councilmen Tues· day night. The simplified form , urged by Coun- cil1nan Henry Quigley, will serve to meet the mand,tes of the slate Suprenic Court fl * ft Staff Expa1aded and allow the cl\Y to •flll'O .. d.-..lap- ment provldlnll bulldm compltle tt ll1ar to the lssunnce of a bulldlng perm.II. The un<inimous act.ion indicates c:ou~ cilmen In Irvine favor mtnlmum cn-- vi ronmental regulations be applied to developers at least until the city start prl'parl's mart precise guidelines to in· Board Okays Procedure For Impact Processing By JACK BROBACK Of ntt o.ur l"lllt t11ft An interim procedu re for handling Environmental lmpacl Statements (EIS) was adopted Tuesday by the Orange Cou nty Board of Supervisors In an effort to clear a log jant of build ing projects in unincorporated area:.. At the same time the board voted 4·1, despite vigorous opposition f r o m Supervisor David L. Baker. to approve the addilion or eight new members to the t:ounty Planning Department staff to Council Meeting Irvine's 'D-Da y' For Plan, Zoning The Nov. 14 meeting of the Irvine City Council is shaping up as a 'kind of plan· nlng 0-Day with increasing numbers of central and north Irvine zoning matters being set for resolution that evening. Tuesday night , councilmen dcCerred action on the Larwin Company zoning for a 287-home community on 34 acres. Two weeks ago, the council continued action on the Ayres Construction Com- pany zoning request to allow 150 homes on a 30-acre parcet In north lrvlne. The Rinker Development Company zoning for its 70--acres near El Toro Marine Corps Air StaUon comes back on that date for tlnal approval. The choice of Nov. 14 Is tied to pla~ ning commlls1on approval or at least a prellmlnary draft of the city'• central and north Irvine land use policies. Three other zoning cases also await completion of that policy and could come up on or shortly alter Nov. 14. They are: -The Irvine Company's proposed \Valnut Village East development or 1,691 homt's on 200 acres between Culver Drive and Yale Avenue along Mou Ito n Parkway. -Ponderosa Homes bld for a north Irvine planned rommunity of about 230 acres with a propoaal to build J.235 single family homes and 150 apartment units. -Leadership Housing systems five. acre rezoning for 3{) homes. From Pegel ZONING .•. have to be filed by the patrles seeking joinl use of the existing military runways. Other testimony recorded at the hear· ings suggested that even If El Toro rc- malM a Marine balle. jet noise affecting the property ls aufficlunt to possibly cause permanent hearing damage to t'uture ~!lrlents. Only TuC'sdsy night , prior to the Rinker decision, councllmcn heard complaints of a Turtle Rock resident about the military jet nolst which 11 stirring protests of Sierra Bonllll Community AMOclallon members. Tho!le homes are 10 miles from the El Toro MCAS. If the Rinker zoning gets the necessary couoc:ll approval following review of tht Impact stateraent , It 11 likely the t>B-rcel wt!: be the first of several n!lldentlRl rezonings to be approved by tho new city 1ovemment in coming wee k.!. Many other pattels In north ond ctn· tral trvlne have been held up by Lhe citY'I land use policy development. . Planning commissioners speclrlcally dcnlt'ti lhe Rinker rezone bid, however. bccawc of lhfl drawbacks . Among these v;ere lhe lack of acbool1 to l<'rve re1\dcnts. lnck of 11dequa10 se wers. fully improved roads, woter supply nnd the 1et noise l11sue. f\ltmbers or the Irvine Unified School board similarly unsnlmou1ly oppost'<I thl! iontna since the dlslrlct Is com.milted to nctahborhood khool.s o.nd ta n:!luctYnt 10 place a new school In an area rak~ by jet noise. Burglars Get Tools In Irvine -eapcr A carpenter 1t an lrvtne lnduttrt1l nrm quit wari TueJday after the pro- verbial another day and another dollar, ooly to l!lacoVer ·111•1 tilJ Dtll 1100 wlll .U.e to pay for tools. ~ llole 1 toolbox conlllnloa ~ lllOrlld pi..eo or eqllipm111I ~llOll In ..,,,..try 11111 motalWOllt from tile bod of hJs pl<bp trudL ltvll>I police old 'Lhe Ulllnlind tool ~. heloo1ina to Jolin A. Peclt ill Oranre, hid been left 1n p111n tlehl on Lhe 10,t At 17822 Gillette St., In tho Irvine lnduslrial Complex. process the statements as quickly as possible. Th e EIS controversy emerged Jest month when the state Supreme Court rul- ed that the Legi1IatW'e's Environmental Quality Act of 1970 applied to private as well as publlc projects. (Related stories, Page 5). Ir a development is found to be en- vironmentally "significant" it must be subjected to review by the county Plan-- ning Commisison, supervisors noted. After a lengthy discussion, board mem· hers voted to hire the eight new J1e0pl e; transfe r the funds to pay them, and in- structed County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas to explore the long range implications of the Supreme Court decision. The motion called for a report tiack to the board by Nov. 7. Baker charged, in reference to the hir- in& of the eight staff members at a cost of $68,000 that, "we are becoming so blinded by the bureaucratic process tha& \Ye are losing sight of the goal." The supervisor continued, "We are bclng asked to rush into something which has not been properly analyzed. It needs study by the county administration and by presonnel." Baker had reacted to a request by Richard Ramella, wbc\ heads the county's Ger.era! Planning Program, for the ad· ditional Personnel. Ramella said it haa taken rive full time people working eiclusively on RlS reports on public projects during the past seven months to clear 140 reports. Separate Trial For 'Taj Mahal' Defendant Set A separate trial wa.1 ordered today for one of six defendants In t.be Orange County Superior Court "Taj Mahal" trial of Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney and five alleged co-conspirators in the defrauding of the St. Bernardine liospital ln San Bernardino. Judge JameJ Turner granted a saparat.e trial for Daniel Machan, 50, of San Bema.rdlno. But be denied separate trlal1 for Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via Cascadlta, San Clemente, and four ot.hus named In a grand jury indictment. His ruling followed bis deciaion Tues· day to deny a mot.ion by five defense lawym for lhe barring from the trial of a controverllsl tape r<Cllrding. That recorded conversation between former deputy dtstrlcl 1tlwney Joe Dickerson, delendanl Jljtlel Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Cir<:le, l!untlngton B._.,h and defense attorney Darrell Johnson continued to be a bone of contention t& day. .Johnson today asked Judge Turner to delay the trial for 30 days to allow him to file a writ of mandate challenging the jtitlge's rtjectton of the motion for iteparatc trials. .Judge Turner aaki he wilt rule later to- day on that requeat. But he made it clear this morning that it was very unlikely that he will further delay a trial already held up for two weeks by a series of mo- Oions. • The next dec ision facing the judge, five defense lawyer1 and prosecutor Stua.r1 Grant Is whether the trial will be court or jury. That declslon will alao be made l11ter today. * * * Birthday Song Greets Judge I ri Courtrooni "Happy BlrthOliy to you, "Hippy Birthday w you , "lfappy Blrti1day, dear Jimmy, H•PPY Birthday to you." That retrain, luatl1y tunl by nYe defense lawyers, five dtleDdanta, a clerk, • hltllff and 1 court reporter. opened tbe Dulaney trtal In aenutlonal style lhll mornlng. An obvloUl!y ut.onlahed Judae James Turner lat optlHnOQ\hld OD the bench white th< tr1dltlon1l birthday 1rettln1 Wll rtndertd With jU!t lbtttntlon -lft equally open mo11lllt<I DAILY PILO'I' rtport•r ,..led In tbe llnt row · o1 lhe coorlnlOm, "Wiiy, uh, lhalllc you, pnd1men. thank 10U." tbe l'td-IO<ed jll<l(ie munnured u the echou of the heart111 .,.,. rtfrsln 1Ubslded. "Now about those motlona •• " Alt the dc(tnte moflons wrre den ied. terp:ret the city'• llaace on the coafusinc hllb court decillfon. • Hl\N')' QulaJey ol>sotVcd that in rtallly thtre Is no building freeze in ll'Vlm" Since deve1opcn might file impact reports and meet the terms or the court ruling. Questions about the intent of the ruling ma y be clarUled in the city'• adoption of guidelines after !urther staff study. Key legal points made by City Attorney Jame! Erickson regarding t b o s e guidelines were: -Adoption of a conservation element of the city general plan mt11bt obviate the need for the impact statement.s1 anyway. -It may or may not be legal for the ci- ty to hold up ai.roval of a building permit !or reason of an impact statement showing the development will harm the environment. -Impact statements could be a basis tor delaying city approval• of zoning, tentative tract maps and conditional use permits, but not final tract maps or building permits. -Requlrements that developers submit impact statements at the zoning ap- plication stage is legal and maY be preferable to waiting unw the last minute -the issuance of the pen:nlt to build. On the latter point. Rfchard Reese. Irvine Company planning ·director, urged councilmen to apply the EIS requirement at the zoning level. Reese urged the city to adopt guidelines as soon as possible sinee they would be helpful to the company which is preparing proposals to be brought to the city. '"nie concept of environmental impact statements Is a good one, .. Reese said. "It is a way to document information that we take into account when we plan a project." Councilmen continued to exempt as "trivial" certain projects. Among these are patios and their covers, home ad· dlttons. interlOr renovations~ commercial and industrial buildings and apartment or residential tracts which are already rough graded or approved for grading. From Page J SUSPECT ... Shaken at the sight of an eigbt-inch hunting knife imbedded in the door, the victim called police to spill his story or doing $1,000 a week in business - allegedly with Brannon. Detecti'lf! Simon said namn of many local ·people who allegedly placed bets with Drennon on various aportlnt; events will be subpoenaed for testimony. Money ullegedly exchanged f.ands in gambling ()ft trofessional horse racing, football, basketball. boxing and tennis. Trustee Brannon spent several days ln Orange CQ!Jnty Jail, unable to raJse his original 121.000 ball, until It was reduced to $10,000 by Harbor Judlcial District Court Judge Calvin P. Schmidt. Newport Beach Detective Simon and in veatlgalors from the Orange County District Attorney's Ofnce moved in and arrested Brannon after the original in- formant assertedly paid his $2,800 gambl- ing debt as demanded. The transaction was a 1 I e g e d l y monitored by lawmen to obtain evldenct resulting in an arrest W$1T&n1 for Braz>- non, who Is associated with an Anaheim business school. From Pagel HANOI ... pened before, atld bitUng the French compound. Secretary or Defense Melvin R. Laird today conceded in Washington that American bombs may have struck the French diplomaUc mission ,but said U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam will continue even as private peace talks go on In Paris. (See story, Page 4) GEM TALK TODAY ' by J. C. HUMPHRIES FALL JEWELRY TRENDS Theno's a classic revival In Fall jewelry 1tyling for 1'12, for today's woman Is aettlng _the clolhts sh• want.sand loves to wear. There are wide choices for the woman of the 70's, Sbe can choost a si mple tnoalment of gold, a tra- d\Uon laden diamond e.nsombte, a lsllored look that mixes Ivery wllb ~old or a lacy elfact that mak., di amonds reflect •parkllni mem· orlet . PerllOll8llUd jewelry ol elegant iood Uollo has llOVV beeD mor, accessible. Whethet It'• cllamond1, rubi1>, emeralds, sapllhlrel,..aolll. sliver or platinum. tciday'1 woman Is tree to U'Je b&r own orullva lmagh,,.Uon to enhanc<t her ow11 partlcular beaut.)'. But boat of all, &bAo hu accen to a world ol ldeu from her local In· dependent jeweler, who la com- plelely !rte to oJ>t'r•le as he wlabe1 In helping her. Bike tor Tmo Elinor Davis of Warrenton, N.C., takes her pet raccoon Rachel for a bicycle spin on her shoulders. The six-month· old coon was a gift fr.om her fellow employes. Public Hearing Set on Regional Se,vage Question The Aliso V.'ater Management Agency will hold a public hearing at 7:30 tonight at the Aliso Elementary School, 21542 Wesley Drive, Sol.Ith Laguna. 1be hearing will be held to receive public opinion on the regional approach to sewage colleetion, treatment and rec1amaUon. The $27 .5 mi11ion pt;0ject will link sanitation agencies of the IOUtb county area from Irvine through Lquna Niguel and features a large regional t.reabnenL plant al the Aliso Creek area by the coast and a 7,000 foot ocean outfall. The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission will rendet a written position Qn the agency's Environmental Impact S!atement during a special session at 2 D.rn. Friday, in City Hall. Other treatment plants htland may be expanded. A major aspect of the concept is the maximum reclamaUon of water and its reuse tor irTlgatlon of golf courses, greenbelts and reereaUon areas. The outfall is capable of handling the systems ultimate forcasted capacity of 55 million gallons a day. However, It would be used on1y for discharge of surplus reclaimed water, prirr1arily during Ninler when there is little market for irrigation water. A major portion of the cost ls expected h. be borne by federal and state clean water grants. The plan would necessitate lhe closure o. Laguna Beach's downtown sanitary facility and abandonment of the Lagtma outfall. Ill Son Strangled TOKYO (AP) -A retired 76-year-old gunsmith strangled hiJ incurably ill 37. year~ld son because he could not bear to soc hlm lying helpless in bed, police reported today. No charges have been fil· ed against the father, Tokichi Takane. f'rontPqeJ mvINE ... worth at least $10,000 an acre, based or tax assessment flgures. NoU"i that In ~968. when the lrvl., Company purchued Irvine Block !too the Macco Corporation at an evaluatlcir. of $2$ a share, she remarked , "It ~ evidently tbe Jam'• Irvine Foundation '., contention that their hand-picked puppet management have been oYer the pa~I few )!ears devaluating rather than irl- creastng t.1e Irvine Compuny.'s assel5.'' • Mrs. Smith's attorne;y, Lyndol Young, called attention at the pre8' C01\(erenc1 to testimony iJ, the 1969 Tax Reform Ad hearings .vhen sen. Paul Fannin qi Arizona, seeking ~ ... obtain an extension of time for the foundatio:i to dlvest itsetr c4 its stock , told a committee, "At fair market value the foundalion should be able to realize $225 nillllon or more for ilt. equity." "Now tbey tell us the stock Is only worth $103 mlllion," said Young. He also noted that an Inventory of, the estate of the late Gloria Irvine, who died in October , 1971, was filed almost simultaneously with the foWJdallon 8J>" praiaal, and slso fixed the fair mark~t value of her Irvine stock at $22.50 a shHre, again $2.SO lower than the $25 figure of the last stock sale. Both the foundation's appraisal and the Gloria Irvine estate inventory will codie under the scnrtlny of the Internal Revenue Service, Mrs. Smith said, notlog that she is spending "a great deal of time" in Washington, apparently in tbis connecUon. It is her opinion, she said, that the IRS will not accept the low appraisal or the foundaUon's assets and that the folm· datlon, in order to meet payout re- quirements, will have to divest itselt or the Irvine stock, which now pays only a 1.8 dividend and place the money in higher yielding investments, as other foundations have done. · A_t a stockholders meeting last June, Irvine company president Mason said the company would not be able to pay higher dividends tc help the foundation meet tbe new payout requirements. At the Tuesday press conference at· tome)'. Young_ clled steps taken by numerous other major foundations to comply with the Tax Reform Act. * * * Attorney Backs Irvine Appraisal Against Attacks Appraisal of the James Irvine Foun- dation's holdings was "a full and com· plete. appraisal done by experts who tflOk everything inlo account," Foundation ct~ torney Howard J . Privett sai d today. The appraisal was challenged Tuesday by heiress Joan Irvine Smith who said the stated $22.&o a share valuation of the Foundation's Irvine Company stock was ridiculously low. 11Mrs. Smith is entitled to her opinion of the value of the stock and I'd have no comment on tbat," eald Privett. The appraisal, he said, was made In compliance with the Tax Refonn Act of 1969, anj submitted to the government 'vith the Foundation's tax return. "It is now being audited by the Internal Revenue Service," said Prlveu, "and they ,..ill either aCi:ept the return as filed or disagree with Jt, just as: they 'do with any other audit." With regard to the requirement that foundations divest themselveJ of stock in excess of 20 percent in any one company (the Foundation bold! 54.5 percent~Qf Irvine Company Stock)1 Privett sal,d, "We and a1: the other foundations have 10 to 12 ye&rs to do that. The eu.Ct regulations are not out yet, but the Idea was to allow enough time to find a favorable market. We wlU have to sell the stock, but the appraisal has nothing to do with t.hat. When the time comes to sell, the price will be negotlated." The fact that other fouodations already have started to divest themselves of stock, said Privett, merely means that they have found a favorable market 'at this time. It takes the right kind of money to look your best. ,.. ........ hl4 .. ......, ... .., II t•hl c.1-. L .. tri .. ...... '""., ........... ........... .....,.,. llt .. .,.,,... 14 '. '.' ..w ..._... c.• .... ..,. •: .................. .. tw.llhn.t • ...,......,. ..... c.-........ .. ........ ,.,., ... ...,a. .. """"" ......... .....,.,. J.C. .J.Ju mpt ri.e:J (}e1v11fer:1 1123 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA . CONYENllMT TllMS IANKAMtRICAR~MA.STI• CHAl:al J.I 'l'IARI IN THI SAMI LOCATION PHONI '41·1401 --·-...-...-....... .1'.) .• I : s c 0 s If :all nan Of •bou 1hou 7'1 :nor • 1uit he >ray In II a )Ul ~le " .., I :on! N :;Jc 1ad well • ' DAU.\' PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Tell the Alternatives Passage of the record-high $50 million bond elec- Uon for the Irvine Uoified School District Nov. 7 may or may not solve the on-going probl"f" _of providing the necessary classroom space lor the growmg area. The S50 million, bond campaigners say, will go to build eight schools and demolish the substandard old Irvine school. The eight schools -five elementary, two intermediate and one hlgh school -are needed to ac· corumodate the next five years' growth, say lrvine bond support~rs. But according to current asses.sed valu~~ion fi_gm:es · and curreot speoding rules, the Irvine Uoifted District will have to spread tlje boud sales over a 10-year period. That's on the 1'surface a five-year lag between need and · spending capability and a building program con- stantly behind. A unified school district can spend up to 10 percent of its assessed valuation in bonds minus its bonded in· debtedness at one time. Current assess}d valuation figures (about $108 mil- lion) aod curreot estimates of inberited bond debt (about '5 million) show that Irvine could probably sell about $5.8 million in boods initially. Art Anthony, chairman of the bood campaign, maintains that Irvine District's plan !~ "desi~e~ ~o prevent playing 'catch up' wit.Ir growth. The d1str1ct is using Irvine Comiiapy estimate5 (purportedly including trends in housing dD non-company land) to say that in 1971 there will be 17,000 stuilenls versus the current 7,000. Anthony claims that inci"eased property tax rev- e~ue froin futijre industrial an4 oommercial businesses ' and taxpayers Will help flll!d·tlle district without gener- -..,ating the need for Diore schools. · But that is speculation. If enough such b~sinesses -. Sources of Confusion Over 'ee' ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ . . If a man who escapes from prison is ~ailed an "escaete't' .,my rshould not a nan who deserts an a.r.my be called a ·'desertee''? He should not because we already have l per£ectly good word to describe him: oe Is a "deserter." But in tbe newspaper stories , and popular speech' of the near ruture, he may very well be turned into a ''desertee ... Of course, language •bould change;'"' tt lhould grow and de- .,-e I o p, becoming :nore precise and more colorful and nore OUible. But it shoukl not grow like ' cancer, where the disturbed cells over im the healthf ones._ And this is pro- '~ely what ii ~ wltb much o1 '" language change today. ,' TllE MODERN MANIA for the "ee" ~nding on words has rio rhyme and even css reason. A lawyer in Chicago sends ne an extract from a legal meeting at 1Jh1cn the secretary n o t e d there Nere "100 attendees." And the lawyer lUite properly asks, "If we who were at :he meeting were 'attendees,' then wh>, >ray, were the attenders?" In the same way, the overflow crowd it a theater is described as "standees," >Ut they are really "standers." And pec>- Jle who retire voluntarDy should not be :Crmed "retirees," which implies they Here forcibly put out to pasture. 1 THINK THE trouble springs from :onfusion with words long in use, such as Dear Gloomy Gus 18 It true the frvine Planning Com- nli!sioo is going lo put ' a Dick Kent Ding-Dong l\larket in Uni· versity Park instead of Frank Hurd Park? -B.Q.Q. nh hlh,IA nflKTI ,........ WMWI. Mt MHUlrfW'-..,_. DI th• " ..... -. •5eftd flllr ~ ""' tD Gttonlr GVlio Dailtr Pilot. "employee," "trainee," and "examinee," where they are the agenta acted upon by employers, trainen, and examiners. But there is no comparable "escaper" who -1-eacapee how to flee, or any pro-- fdslo "stander'' who places people in •...i1o p;.;Uon. Another source of confusion comes from Je,gal terms, where we have the "lessee," the "vendee," the "trustee," and so on, wUh • their corresponding parties to the relaUonsblp. Of course we also have, from the French reflexive verbs, such words ·as "refugee" and "absentee" and "debauchee," which sup- ply J!8erul terms the English laoguage Iaoll.' • BUT ENGLISH aJso has at least three suffixes (~r,~r. and -ist) for the purpose of mak:Jng agent-nouns. When we make a new one whose natural meaning is the opposite (a "returnee" shouldn't be the same as a "returner," but it is ), we only further confound our coocepts and muddle our communication. Let us have an end to such linguistic abominations as "amputee" a n d "awardee" and "expellee." Th e upgrading, vigorous Anglo-Sa.100 folk have always valued the doer more than the sayer; but can he continue to com- mand this respect if our demotic language eventually turns him into a doee1 Boys' Clubs' Great Work Iaduaial Newt Review Nearly everyone has heard of the BoY!' :Jl!bs of America, Probably few have :iad an opportunity to see at flrst-hand oow this g r e a t cbarader·bullding qanJzation works with nearly a mllUon 00)'!1 from early grade school age into the teens to build a good life for youths who bave lived intimat ely with ltscouragement Md dtspA!r. The task of local Boys' Clubs Is stag- ;ering. As one official of Boys' Clubs of t\mt'.rlca writes, "many o1 tod•Y'' young poople have pn>blema of frigbtenlnj; sile •nd complexity. Recoplbing these prob- Jem>, dealing with and tnaU111 them. lakes more than bavtna 'a feelln& for bOys' ••• Operatlna a Boyl' Club today caJls for a ccmbln1tlon of 1kill1 which r& quln> opeclallud coll<ge tr•lnl"I ""'! proctlcal uperlence . . . some Boyt Club or1•nhltlo111, within major cltlel, consist of multlple unttl, a membership well up Into the Ulousands, a lllall of scores and budgets of a mllllon or more.'' A J'Bll OF THE activ~ia ol the Boys' Clubs ~-hlghllgbted during the organization's tm aMual convention. Among other eventl was the presentation of ten honor awards and grants to especially outstanding projcctl of local clubs. A description of )ult one of these llluatrates what the Soya' Club mov&- ment Is doing. Jn ttUs case, I.be Boys1 Club or Nllhua, New Hompehlre, ttcelv- ed "'1 awanl for an O!Hht-job traloloc _..am to employ boys in the ...,. strudlon tradei, to help YoUlhl already convicted o( crlminal of(tn1e1. So far 10 nc• homes have boon wilt UDder the project's IUp<rVislon. Most of the bo)'> participating had no rurther problems lfltb the law. Here is a coricrete es.amp&e of Boys' Clubs of America in operation. fl allows one youth orpoizaUon lllat delorvcs the support ol lbe entlre nation. -----Bfl George -----. Dffr <leor1., Illy --...11y buml me up. ~ Wbon .. ha\'1!. party he oan hard- ly wait r... tho iuesta to leave. KMw """t ht does? Tak .. an tho cushkllll Oii! of the chain and 10r11 to look !or loooo chaOI• ""'" have dropped! And he only ooys rnodenlilllc furniture that tUts pee> pie way hick to change WILL cltopL Don't you think this ls the helgbl ol amd and dlshooelly! CLARA Dear Clan.: Aro ,.. objecting on sencral princlpl«!t or bcnuse he won 'L 1pllt the loot wtth you? t ln tbll bullness you have to be careful.} would come into Irvine, what happens it the Watson Ameodment designed to take the property tax load orr such land-owners, passes on the Nov. 7 baUot? And, al· though almost no one in Irvine likes to consider the po6Sibility, what happens if School Measure K, the Ir· vine bond, doesn't pass? There are many ;,ifs" and they must be discussed openJy by the bond measure's supporters. It's time they study financial alternatives and Jet the voters know now \vhat other options are available, if necessary. Seller's Market in Homes Inventories or new homes in the ne\v city or Irvine are rapidly dwindling. New home bu yers in at least one central Irvine tract must await a March or April delivery of a com- pleted house. Builders in University Park now offer fewer than a dozen completed homes. Rapid sales in Turtle Rock have diminished the village's supply of middle income housing! Concern over the lack of schools in Irvine has been an underlying reason for the city's five-month building freeze and subsequent delays in approvals of zonings and tract maps. The result is a seller's market in Irvine when a buy- er's market prevails in many other Southern California communities. U the new city is to welcome ~pie who desire to share in the city's bright future, "it Is time to speed up the planning approval process. Reason and moderation must prevail as the devel· opment logjam breaks. Ways to phase development should be found to ease the growth concerns of the school district and other public services. Move over, Dick, ol' buddy!' SI 'Senator's Econmtaic Proposals Would Bri1ag Disaster' Reader Compares McGovern, Nixon To the Editor: McGovern t11es to exploit our economic igr.orance. His economic proposals would bring us disaster. Fortunately common sense tells many to reject McGovern's deceits. McGovern. implies that giant cor- porations aren't paying their fair share ar,d ·should be taxed more. Big business should pay their fair share. But we shouldn't unduly repress the creators of jobs just to help McGovern buy votes. In the last 10 years Bethlehem Steel's taxes averaged $37 million a year more than their net income. PROFITS ARE the backbone of our ecooomic system. We use profits to: (0 Lower prices (a TV set -1500 In the lSMO's. Now we get a bette set for hall tht price). (2) Raise wages. . (3) Create new products and jobs (about $20,000 averaee required for each new job). (4) Reward stockholders (who will pro- vide business-expansion and job-creating money If the profit is oo more than on a savings account '?) (:;) Pay taxes. MORE PEOPLE work now than when Nlxon took office. But more people have entered the job market. McGovem's1pro- posals would dampen business and hinder the creation of jobs. McGovern claims Nixon wants ex· cessive profits for business. But Sen. Proxmire (Dem., Wis.) correctly stated that business profits are sharply lower since Nixon look office. Why is this? During the inflationary Vietnam War. President Johnson greatly increased domestic spending and overstimu1 ated the economy. When Nixon took office, we were approaching runaway inflation (McGovern blames Nixon for thJs). If not controlled . this inflation wouJd destroy our economic security and even- <. tually cauae a depression -with large-- scale unemployment. NJXON FOUGHT inflation the stand· ard way: re.strlct lhe money supply. This depressed corporate profits. But unlike previous recenions, costr rose . So Nixon nnally imposed waae-prlce con· troll. This brought greater 1tablllty. McGovern says we should remove wage-price l.'Ontrols and rely OD j1w hon--Inc (Nlson tried this and foond II dldn"t work ). We don't want IJ70.71 wll over •pin. McGoft:m criticizes Nixon 10t' deficit spending. Yet McGovern 's: Sptnding pro- Pollb: would cost at least $120 billion more. And would bring higher tuet and strong 1nn.1ton. McGovern IS like the anonlst who ltls a llre, then blames the fire depanment when they come to put II ouL LEONARD WRIGlff lie'• for Sc•tttft.: Tn the Editor: TI111 !~late dlnner for r-tr . Nlxoo wu a dad givcaW1y u to the cl .. ol people wlQ wtU profit most If be ii ..... tocted. Thal'• right, the rich will fl'I richeT and the poor poorer. But don't think ll wW help a b~ ~ lldi<M!111 ii cJcc:ted elllier; t.ltot'a tiClil. the poo< will tllll bo pool" and tho rlcll will .. ri&ht ... "'""' rlclltt. fN A WORLD 1pporenUy -mad, Jalln Sdlmllt -to ..... &-...rr..hloi rominder that It ii oUD poulble ror • cklten In be •i«led -dent without b<ln1 lhe bJuctl oar In the land, ... sprnd lnR lht mo1t money 1rytn1 to r'btninw11111h t~ alr<'&d)' O\"tr-br1Jn.-a.1h- cd c1lizenry u in tbe Cate ol the lwo (al cats now bulU)' rnpged in Nbblng each • ( MAILBOX ) Letters jron~ T"eaders are welcome. Normally writers should convey their rnessages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to j~t space or eliminate libel is r~serued. Alt letters mu.st include signature and moiling addreas, but names ma11 be witl1held on request if sufficient Teason is appaTent. Poetry will not be published. other in the back to win the election. WITH NEWC0~1ER John Schmitz as President we couJd be assured or several years or honest representation before the money greedJes finally get to him and at· tempt to "indoctrinate'' hlm into a gutless wonder like Nixon, or even McGovern. A vote for Schmitz is a vote for America. MILT BASHAM Propo11tlo1& 20 To the Editor: While driving . down Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach recently , my family and I were shocked by a political billboard. The billboard saKI "The Beach Beloogs to Yoo -DON'T LOCK IT UP! Vote NO on Proposition No. 20." The provisions of Proposltlon 20 have been incorrectly stated by o~ ponents of the measure btfore, but never in such boldly insultln& term.1. Simply stated, Proposition 20 intenda to limit coastline development to approval by permit through one ol &Ill rqlonal commissions. During the llfll thn!e yean, while real estate deveJopmcotr would be stablllud, a thorough study could be completed ti the entire Calllornla coasL IN 1915 THE oommurton. ""'Id ~ to the Lea:J•l•ture • mastu plan ror the dtvtlopment or tho coast Thele ~ would IJ>- corponite the wishel Of tho majority of CalUomilns and not jmt the Interests of real ettate devtloptrs u ii the cue at ~ The wr111en 1nten11on o r Propo&IUon !Ill in no way lmplitJ that the -by the public .. the beach will be restricted. WJl1 should political advertiJing be allowed to mate suchJ,roiJSly lnaccurate cWms 11 ere curren y bdn& made to deleal """""1Uoo •1 The Federnl Trade Comm!salon ii cnclting down on the -bll.tatlated dalnu ol IOOP manuractu..... Tho ~ claims an ~lion• affect a 1.,... PortJon or tho populallon. Tho outcome of pc-op- •llkm la certaJnJy ll atu1 IS lm- portanl .. the cloanll( aflid<n<y or • partJcular ... p (ftplnlllon- P'Alll PLAY AND lcpl ralraint Is ob- vk>mlJ Jackln& whta u adwrtiJlna Orm ~-malll dlUm lhal '"' ODOlplC!tr.Jy '"" ~te of l}Je Intent of I proposit l'll"I 1\iie ad\'ertldnt (Inna CID llt,,.IJy ......., up" --! plv.-that the pocllfy-lnfonned YOtcr -r c a d 11 y -ber In tho poll ing -Tho DAILY PILOT edlto<lal IUlf ond Giber ~la!Ofmell ...... wlio ... ... Pf-' """""Uoo to "'-ltlan ID ~ be able to ... that Reh clOY!aUont frcm tbs c:qw a• ed--wrlt.tft bmt of the proposition .,.. untolt · Md thould bt W1!1w!ul . Tho -mll intrftl of the advtnltioa ..., Ind -1-.t bickers ts lo dectlve the unwary wrter M 1 result of lhis d1Jhooesl adverttsin1 campolp. in ..,.. of ...., ..... o( the Jl'Opolllloru ol Jll'"'idin1 --..,. ccss to the scenic and recrealionol benefits or the coastline for the majority of Cali fornians, a nearly certain defeat Is In store for Proposition 20. PAUL F. WRIGHT Whitaker & Baxter, the public Te· latian s and cmnpaign n1a11ageme11t firm Te/erred to by lvlr. \\'right, tous exonerated of charges by Ralph Nn.· der thot it liad disseminated false (l ttfl misleading in/orntation in its success· Jul can1paig11 to defeat Proposition 9 ill June. The Grievance BoaTd of tlic Public Relatimu Societ11 of America. l1lC., investigated and f'e;ected No· deT's claims. Clem \Vhitoker. J r., presUlent of tltt firm, comm.etiU, "fi n view of the er- oneration) it i3 significant fti Uoltt of current chaTgBS b11 J?Toponent., of Proposition Na. 20 that nny and all arguments i11 opposiiion to their n1easure are 'deceptive' and '/raudu· lent.' "It is signtficont i11 ligllt of tl1reat& by both State Senator James 1'lifls and Assemblvman Rabert /.1orettl to sub· ject thU firm and other opron.ent.s of PTopoaition No. 20 to star charnbl'r proceedif1gs before /egi.'ilatiue com· mittt"es for daring ta voice opposi· tion to a ballot i.~s11e lhey hap()fn tn favor . "Rea1onable mt11 can differ on 01111 is1ue. aud the public i11terest sMrtl.V is .served whtn bot/1 sides are J1eord. It is a dbturbing develooment i11 America. rtminUcent of dictatorship regimes, when l<"{lltlmate crltici.rm, voiced m public stat,.menl.$ and od· vertisinQ. is 1l1reatened with 1upprt1· .fion by elected official$." -Editor /tfes1a9e for Ca1per• To the Editor: For Ronald Clapen. our rcpretmta- tlve on the Orlnge Coonty Board ol Supor- vllors. I have four polntl: n An 1lrport In Camp Pendi<lon should be out ol the quetllon unW Southern Callforula Is ab!Olulely ~ mltted to a rapid tra.nait l)'Sttm to Rrve the whole •rea, Wllhout It. whilt do I 1ee1' Ribbons or n,sphalt and polluted 11\r en- circling san Clemeni.. 11 11 rcalltr to tbtnk this wtll not come about? 2} Regllrd lng !lb IOppart for Ihm lobbylstJ In Washlngton tor a oool t1ni ol 175.000 11 year . t II)'. Nt.n"SI Orante County has two 1tt11torl and teveral TtprnenlaliVC!I tn W.1Jh.lnigton pkll ~\'tn l ~~stolal1\·e! in Sacramtnlo n-celv1ng from JO lo 40 lhou'8nd ptur rr1ngc benefits uod now we need more reptttCnta.lJvtS! ll IS NOT TllE Jrvtoc Company development In the whole •~ bn!otlna our ecological bncb? lf I l"Pnd correctly ~ Ume ago, ta.!: o::imp1ny intmdl lo btllld a clly of 1boo1 450.000 M;rON from El Toro wtworc they've bttn buiJdinl the ll!I oouple years. Jmquw tbt pf"Ohkrm which •~ untolvable now mvJUplytnc. The mott lt"'nlible lhif1« lO do for ~1thern Cahfomlt Is, Ont • n d rorrmoe1. In work wuh itreut dtJpalAit lot JI ~uptr rapid lrlliftllt sr~trm A~'TOJN~:TT~ IJOETZI. Vole Tiie• All OotC To 1ht t:.d llor I I thr nt•"I a.• ptinltd it I I rue rt"nf'C.'- Uno of lhrf: mood 0( the ~ry. Ihm 7S p<n:<nl ol tl!o adult -1"1loll ii up ll&hl Quotes K .... t~ Wltpwta, Mallbe -... ,,,. 8CfUI"''"" thin.IC that IJ «naUnl ltmlr in our •rr•t olks can be found ifl one word -povrrt) about some national problem. We ha~ the middle class groani ng about taxatioe. the elderly complaining about margin.al living, the young militanl.5 againsl the war. even lhc [amed silent majorily "''hich is normally apathetic to anything except their oy,·n selfish Interests is beginning to be alarmed about rUlng prices. IN THE SPIRIT o( public harmony , I nm advancing :t solution in whJch t\·cryonc can lake a constructive part and it will not only alleviate all these and many other problem." but will actually solve most or them. All evrrybody Dffd do is vote every Incumbent out of office. Think or It for a momet'lt. If tvtry pu blic ofri~lal up for reelection this year. whether he's ruMing ror local dog catcher or President. man or woman, Democrat or Dixiecrat. II would make no difference. Any name on the ballot ac· companied by thtt word Incumbent or Inc .• would simply not be voted for. Wt: WOlJLO LOSE some good mtn: probably about l perttnt tA today's public offi d•Js eam what they take fnxn the:-public troogh. but ll would be worth that to get the rest out. Think of It, one 1imple ad.loo, vote every Incumbent out. II will itop the prtst:nt trend cf govem~t by 1pc!dll Interests for th111t Is allenaung everyone. GEOllGE BRODERICK C:httlde•• Soriec9 To the Ed.Jtor: In regard 10 the D. v . Pk:ker letttt IStpl. 17) Oil the checklts1 IOdc\y, .,. v.'Ouid llke to stress IOl'lle other point.a ol V~W. t~ven though this l)'ILem la In ~­ perimental stag~. It 1t1e:m1 evident that thl• type or banking wm be prevalent in tht near future . It would appur thil ll)'llCm could •ventually lead to CIChangq of goods by a numbu without the Ulll of cuh. credit Cltda. et.c, An authorized number. reprdlaa ol how It "°"Id b e demonatrated or put lnlo ..-. fN '11!E PROPHETIC book ol Danld and Revellltlon, in the Bible. we•~ told ol 1 Umt: The Nrth would upcrlt:nct vutly lnereutd knowle!dge (Daniel 12 ~4 J and people would be buying and 1tllin1e JOtd)' by their own aulhortud numbc-r l~tlvn 13.17l J~ Crist laid the ume lenttallon whk:h woo.Id ~ the re-birth o( lsrM>I ns a Mlkan (IM8l !Lule 14:33}. tho """"'Piiion ol J~ (1117 1. !he "new" txlnklnl l')'llem tttma to be polntlnc to wor1d 1owt1w1N and Nrrtnt t'Venll an pr~ _,, -bbto<y. ROV SMITJI HOB HOUSTON OllAHOI COA.IT DAILY PILOT /lol>m II. W•td. P.blilN<r Tllmtkl.I K ettfl, F.diWr Alb<rt W. BolQ l:clltonol l'oO< T..Ular 'nw ftlltntial ~ ttl thf" DID¥ ,,,.,,._ .,.ltl "' mr.....,,., ~ .u.w. lat~ .........,. by r........u.w UIM r.r---.f)'JJ"T'• Pl.,... .,.. COftt6 l"W'ftl•l'l (~ tnpb ol lnlffttl Md •lt:nUW.,,,,,.., by c-iwldJric • fbnam ,,,,,. °"" "''.,.,..ion tJ ""'' ;c~ •lflk\IDN.. and tir 11"19f'ftllftc the di""'"" v.,_.1-olni.a 11t lnl'omwd • 9""\""" •rid •pt>ict9mm Oft '°'*" nC lhr 4-)' Wednesday. Oc:tobor II, 1072 • - OW Wife .Divorcing Husband ' '.Of.KI.AND, Cali!. (UP!) -The wife of 1 Navy flier, America's longest-held fltisoner of war in North Vietnam. i!!I seeking a divorce despite alleged Navy ' tttlcmpls to stop her. The pretty 'A'ile of Lt. Everett Alvarez J r. filed a petition for dissolution of mar- rt3ge in July 1970, but the proceedings tere kept secret until Ibis ~'eek wPen the pilot's sister told a San Francisco ~wspaper. Tangee Alvarez, 32, had been married to her husband only eight months when be was shot down over the Gulf of Tonkin ln August 1964 . She told her attorneys she waited for his return until she felt she could y.·ait no longer. Trio of Attractio1as The San Diego Zoo Tuesday announced the arrivaJ or th re e two- rnonlh-old tiger cubs in the animal nursery at the Children's Zoo. edged sy,•ord. She's a yoWlg woman who's been waiting years for a man who may never come home. I don't know any young woman who could wait that long before seeking the company of others." HER LAW\'ER, ~1yron Tower of San Leandro, said the Navy tried to stop the divorce on gounds the action \1'ould badly hurt his morale and might give the North Vietnamese a lever lo pry ou l in- formation. "It's pretty rough for a rhan sitting in prison to get a divorce notice from his wife," the attorney said. "but it's a two Navy Says It Didn't Jolt City SAN DIEGO (APl Myste rious jolts th;it rattled the San Diego area last 1•:eek are back again. This time the Na\'Y says a fighter plane y.•as flying at supersonic speeds 40 10 50 miles offshore. But after residents telephon- ed police to complain of shud- dering windows and cracking dishes Tu es d a y . Navy .( __ B_RI_EF_S _) · spokesmen C1lntinued to deny that their offshore maneuvers must be responsible. Seismologists have dismiss· -the possibility of earth- quakes and say the jolts must be sonic booms or reverbera· tions from weapons testing carried out here by unusual weather conditions. But no service or government branch has admitted flying a n y supersonic planes or testing any big guns near eoougb to cause the shocks. e Death by Drug MANHATTAN BEAOl (AP\ - A teen-age girl whose body was discovered on a lifeguard tower here died of an overdose of drugs, the coroner's office says. The victim identified as April O;i wn Betty \\'all, 14, of LaY.1ndale. 'vas found by a beach walker ~londay. A detective said !here was oo evidence the girl had been raped as police theorized in- itially. State Wants Ruling Delay SAN FRANCISCO (AP l - The state may ask the State Supreme Court lo ease the crisis created last month when the court ruled that private construction projects must be environmentally cleared by local agencies before building permits may be issued. Atty. Gen. EveUe J . Younger said Tuesday thal he y,•as considering asking the court to delay the enforcement of its ruling because it had been so unexpected. , 'J'he Sept. 21 ruling has trig- {:{ f[ {:{ *** 'Friends' Surprised At Reaction to Ruling LOS ANGE LES (AP\ -An ensure "a means by wh ich the attorney fo r Friends of T\fam-people in the community have n1oth says the conservation-son1ething to say aOOut wha t oriented group had in mind happens in the community." . good planning -not an end to He hailed the court decision any construction -\\'hen it on the group's suit as a \\'en! to court. landmark that should end The "Friends:• led by forme r Olympic gold medal careless land speculation and skier Andrea ~lead Lawrence, uncontrolled construclion proj-ects. The ruling was needed. leaped into the limelight Sept. he said, because planning of- 28 when the Ca Ii f or n id ficials and agencies had fallen Supreme Court ordered a halti down on the job. to a Sierra high rise apart; gered an imm ed ia te moratoriu m in the isSlJance of building permits in most large cities of the state. THE COURT ruled that eo- \'irorunental impact studies must be done for proposed private construction projects before building permits are issued. Until that ruling, the requirement had been con- sidered to apply only to public projects. Younger emphasized that he had no quarrel with the court's basic interpretation of the s t a t e Environmental Quality Act of 1970. If he in- tervened at all , he said. he would only ask the high court lo allow some time for the Legislature to clarify the law and for local governments to se t up compliance proci!dures .. In effect, Younger might ask the court to make that section of the law effective et some future date even though the act as a whole already has been in force for more than a year. ment project because an en-'GOV REAGAN ha ed . tal . t t d ' • 5 urg YOUNGER SAID the rul'-v1ronmen 1mpac s u Y there be a moratorium on the .. ~ hadn't been made. cCar h ·d y,·as "of historicaJ ·importance decision ... ," M t Y sa1 • in protecting California's e& M~!rth~tt~::y a ~~ ~; "I wouldbu~l~gg~~ t~t ~e vironment and implementing ~ovemor 1 a lre u er s the Environmental Quality Ad ference IJ'uesday that instead own of(ice of platming and of ·INM.P of using common sense in pro-r esea rch to prepare' "'" tectillg the environment, some guidelines for the preparation "It is important t O officials had simply halted or environmental Impact. recotr:Uze,.however," Younger building permits altogether. reports by planning agencies said, "the decision came sud- "I'm halfway expecting throughout the state." denly and surprised the some county elerk to say he's building industry and the not going to issue any more McCarthy sald the state had government agencies charged marriage licenses because failed to carry out provisioru1 with preparation of t. h e he's not sur~ of the en-of its Environmental Quality statements. Act -whi~ he termed the "All a result," Younger ad· viroomental impact of the "'11 been he · .. most sw~ing in the nation -ded, "our office has now couple on 1 commun11y. ~y.. •'-A-A • d I ed by not requiring the impact requested by ~ut:3c agencies, ~lcCarthy ec ar . d reports. the governor, an represen- llE SAID he be 1 i e v e d "If they had done their job tatives of labor and the overreaction is • • e i t h e r much of the u n c e r t a i n t y building industry to petition hvsterk:al or carefully design-demonstTated by cities and the court to permit the state ed lo stir up the public and counties would have been Legislature to add certainty to distort 1he true significance of avoided," he said. ''It is hard-the procedures necessary in the Supreme Court's opin-ly fair lo ask our Supreme preparing the statements and e Bent !I ita LA? · .. Coort to do the work of the ex-to allow for a rea30nablr: time LOS ANGELES (AP ) -An 10The importance of the ecutlve branch of our govern· to gear up to meet re- . f ch· d•clslon he sa1·d was to ment .'" quirements." acqu:11nt;ince o 1no escapee _:::::_:::::·~·~::..__.::::::_• .....:_::.___::_.....:.::=:::... ________ _c_ __ ------ Ronald \\'ayne Beaty says he saw Beaty in Los Angele!! Tuesday driving a car with Arizona license plates. Bealy escaped last Friday \\'hrn lhrre men and a woman ambushed two unarmed guards from the Chino prison escorting the pri~nC'r to a San Bernardino courtroom for a hearing that had been postpon- ed. One of the guards \\'as kill- ed and the other was shot and woundrd. Earlier, the FBI checked out a report that Beaty and a woman were seen attempting to rent an apartment in Scottsdale. Ariz The f"Bl ctis· counted the report. e Drlfllng OK'd LOS ANGELES (AP \ Despite more than three hours of debate against it, the Cily Council voted Tuesday to allo" exploratory oil well drilling our the excluslve Pacific Pallndes rt!ldentlal ·~·· A groojf calling lt,.lf No Oii Inc. has beM Ogl1tlng Oc· cldcntal Pelrol""" Cl>rp. for more than two )'Mn tn the comP:o•Y'I bid to drtll lhe ... u;. e c1a1 .. 'Fabe' SACllAJIENTO (AP\ Clalms Oiol the coaotal I!> IU.Uve, Prop. lO, wwld 11!ect • Ute Stale Water Project ort 0 pitrntly falM:," an .uthor of tlto proposal uld Tuelday. 81ote Sen. Lorry Walah (Jl. Hunt!,.... P • r k ) and Amemblyntan Clr!oy Porter (l>-O>tnpton) had 181d In 1 _. rt!-earUer till• -k tbot pa,..go or Prop. 20 could affect ruture wattr deliveries t fir!u thf'm r..aurnrn111 CHEESE OF THE WEEK KASS ERi s2.ot LB. 20c I •99ul• OFF N 0 w OFFtlt GOOD OCTOIEl t ITH THllU llTH 'Ntdn1~, October 11, 19"72 DAILY "LOT 5 . ' PlastiC Tree.1 · ' Don't Hold Up I Democrats Slap Reagan -Tax Plan. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly Speaker Bob Mortttl says Democrat! may draft a competm,g voter ,in.lliative if Gov. \l003ld Reagan'• attempts to take 'his new Sl blllk>n tax plan to voters in a special 1974 election. -Give renters •peclal new income tax credits. SAN PEDRO 1API -Sonlf $50,000 in plastic trees and plan.ts which rim ·certain streets here will I be replaced with Hve vegcgatlon -' be<:ause plastic iia;t'l 1s durable 81 In other reaction to the sweeping tax overhaul unveiled by the Republican governor TUesday, a Republican hailed him for ''tremendous leadership" while nonpartisan Legislative Analyst A. Alan Post said he had &Orne reservations about the plan. The six tax-rutting provisions or the Reagan proposal would ; -Slash state Income taxes by at least 10 percent. -Double the prfsent f750 homeowners' tax exemption. -INCREASE state support of local schools by $200 million and order schools to lower property taxes with the new Cunds. -Freeze property taxes at those reduced rates, with fut.lire increases ban- ned unless voterS approved them. TOY WORLD ltwmtrty n.. To, H-1 -Require a two-tblrds vote of the legislature for futqte tax increases. On the revenue alde, Relgan proposed : -Boosting the s.lle1,ta1 to 8 cents per dollar to ralae another $600 mlllloo a year. Adding one percent to tbe Bank and Corpor1Uon tax, but oU!etting J>:art of 'that hike with a rollback in the business inventory tax. --O>nunitllng lllOlt ol tile aoticlpated ,revenue from a pending federal revenue sharing program to increued state mp. port of local "'hoo!J. -USING AT least $250 million of ap estimated $458 million suiplus in the ,state budget. "l tell you frankJy if the governor even talks about going t.P the, ~iative proc-.ess, then I think we would ve no other alternative but to develop. , initiate odr ··own plan -which . would ~ a Jot more appealing -and Jet them both appear side by side on the ballot,"..ldoretti said. . . . ' the .,,.1 tillng. . Los Angeles County SUperv111or James A. Hayes told supervisors Tuesday that the three-year-old ltn· Italian trees and shrubs '"were not durable enough and It is time that they: be replaced." Nike, Titan II Test Launched ' VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE (AP ) -A Titan II and Nike · Aerobee were test launched down the Westero test range over the Paeilie Ocean early today, the Air F.orce aaid. A spokesman said a Tl.tan II in- tereon~ntal ballistic missile (ICB.M) was fired' off at 4:30 a.m. A minute later, a Nike Aerobee -com- binatiorl was launched. - 4 DAY SALE STARTS 00.12 TOY WORLD HARIOR SHOPPING CENTl,A, COSTA MESA 223 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA J41.5454 t-6 dally; Mon. 1nd Fri. 'tll t 545-7032 10-6 dally; Fri. •tif 9; Sun. 12-5 WYDAZY tt~ 118.8 FISHER•PRICE PUY FAMILY AIRPORT A mtnpleta Plait ceflflff for ~ imogtnc.. lionL RUMBLERX-3 Choppet-trlka wffh twcMpHd J atldi. lhtft. Ave•3to 12. 24aa .. .•... BECllllC OIOID OllAll BISEMllJ 3911 Bcnie's COUNTllY CAMPER lncludH tent, table, 2 comp chofn. luggage rod: oitd aaa ... e. M111 ES IUCTRIC CHORD ORGAN 25 "" ... -""" atlCI 6 ~hard ~ .....,.ic: "'ck. ond OfloOff ..Mtch. Mop ""'""'"'vtk beoll. I_..- fun year wotfOfltY. #UO. 1 1911 SUPERSTAR Sec;tric pklM witft Cl brain --·----... -!iJ 911 Ke•Hr'a SNOOPY TOOTHllUSH ...... _ ............... aigned just for ldd•; no ~ """'" c-. """' 2 ....... bnnMs and 2 adopten for iii•• with refill brushes. Snoopy dog hou•• holds tootfipotte and bnnhes. Bot-** "°' lnduded. a11 ncoH.o. TRAIN SET Power cotMt detlgMd to or. low dtlW to pliot Nol coptet 11 :hlfg "" . ..._..IA a.id '°" ton ~ pro¥ide air lft and drM. sOfe f¥no fun r... ...... ..,.. ......... .-~-incWed. 911 .. .,. .. nay lO"TllU.--·· ... 12"TllU.-·-10- 1 .. tllffci. •••.. --12" PUn-Pun ·railroad ' B in a $- t'•"'oo .;:,~ Tli booil cl ·suppo ed:to. from Bauer George dissent 'K SAN ' .· --• --. -___ .. _ . Bu~•ingto11 lleaeh Fountain-Valley •• . I ' Today's~ .,.14.~ N.~Y. ·Steeb' , ; · l. oS, NO. 285, 5 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER · II, 19n ·~CENTS untington Sets Bond · Election on 3-2 Vote By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of .... Dalfy ... ,, ... ' In a S.2 decision, trustees of the Hun- . ton ~ach Union High School District led Ttie'.sday night to cal.I a $27 million · election for Feb. %7. ;SUpport for the bond measure, design- .. tq finance two new ,bigb schools, came "Trustees Denn.Ls Mangers, Ralph uer and John Bentley. Trustees · rge LDgan mid Ray Schmitt cast'the ' Ung votes. ·Kidnaper' Used Cancer As Excuse From Wire Services SAN DIEGO - A Westminster man, charged with the lddnaping of a local businessman here last Friday allegedly told bis vidlm he did it because he was dying of cancer and needed the money. Byron Fernley Handy, 49, who told puli,ce he is from Westminster, bas been charged with kidnaping for robbery or rafiSOm, anned robbery 8nd bW"glary by the San Diego District Attorney. His alleged victim, industrialist James "Tom" Hawthorne says he prayed for his abductor when he learned the man was dying of cancer. "He said life wasn't lm· portant to him any longer," Hawthorne recalled. Ha*1home gave his account in a ~ story' publlsbed 1oday In the San Dlego:.Unlon. • ~ llawtbome, 44, said be arranged by telephone for the $186,500 payoff as demanded, but Handy WU arrested llttween tllat spot and a beacll cottage Where Hawthorne wa• taken. He got several telephone caJIJ !nm a lJl4ll before agreeing to meet bllll at 5 aS.. Friday at bis Hawthome M"""'ery c&.plant in San Diego, Hawthome said. ftI stuck out my band to shake hll and saY 'good morning," " said Hawthorne. "He had a gun iD his band, tboogb. He said, 'Shut up and keep your eyes straight ahead.' We got in bis car and he asked for directions to my.beach hOuse in C.erlsbad." Hawthorne said, "He never took the gun. away, not even when I went to the ·~·-.. ~m. : 'If< added : ~I'm a very religious man ... I give recognition to our heavenly father for Jl:iving me calm. I prayed for him, 'l?1d I tqld biJn I boped his plan came off WtlhOut a hitch ... He was a chain t1rnoker and drank only ice water. I of- fered him some coffee and some food but be Aid he had stomach cancer and food &nd coffee burt him. · -•!He told me that he had only four ween to live and that he needed the money for personal affairs. He said life wasn't important to him any longer. ~ I told him about my daughter Lin· di. who is 8 and bad a malignant brain tiirno.r removed and now was back in &<Jx>ol. • -"I told him about the fears you have ~ DOW, not knowing about bow your lltllt girl will be. This stirred a very com- poaslooate note in him and he 1umed almost friendly to me. 'In my business, 1 should till you,' he said, 'but I don't want tO. I respect you and, although I profess 00. "religioo I appreciate your prayers for ~· fa.mi.11 ••.. f!oliday Slated For Ocean View . Te8cbers will be atudenta and regular ~m. will be on a holiday next Mon- ~l1n the Ocean View School D!Jtrlct. Monday has been chosen as fall t'ea<ber training day In the dlstrkl, wltb I :fujl day'• worth ol semlnan and pro- ll(ir!li designed to bring teachen up to date On the latest educational methods. ' All ' cla .... , lncludlna after«boot ~tloo ,l<OITRIDI, wll] be canctled, ~Ing lo district ofHclals, while the l<ll'J!1en .,. In training. Cl-will ~Tutlday. two LINES TURN fNTb BUSY ONES Two lints of ldvertltlnC-lolt or "bulJ Ontt" oo the phone. That's the llory or this l>AILY PILOT cl4slllled Id: "' Vlf'"BEETI.B Good Cllnd. •. ... ..... It sold the car to the r1111 caller, but !he pbontl kept "rit>glng llko moy," the advertbtr r<ported. 11 you're lookinl !or tblt kind or actloo, dial the "actloo fine" il ~. direct line to DAILY PILOT OaS!llled Advertlslnl lllpl. Trustees also una.D.lmously voted to in- clude a prol"""1 to continue the di!,lrict's '1.23 override tax for operating fwxb as a separate item on the baUot. It would be renewed for a five-year period if ,P&ssed, A , tinge of dran;la came durmg the meeting at F.di>on High SChool following a proposal by Logan that a flU million bond electlon bre called for one new hlgb school and the expansioo or the Win· tersburg Hic!>.School counoeling center. Bentley, previously a wpporter of two Ufll Tt..,...,. BlkeforTtea Elinor Davis of Warrenton, N.C., takes her pet raccoon Raebel for a bicycle spin on her shoulders. The six-month· old coon was a gift from her fellow employes. Niguel Burglary Sack Contained 'Oean' Contents LOS ANGELES - A burlap sack round in the vicinity of Sea Island Drive in Laguna Niguel July >I contained 11.3 million in securities allegedly stolen from United Cal~ornla Bank Monarch Bay branch In the March burglary. '!be wortll or the bonOs waJ made by a 5ouree cloae to the FBI which bu been working the $5 million burglary cue. Earlier estimates released by the Oran&• County She!llr1 o!llce at the ti.me the aact W• found placed the worth of the llCllrilla II only 1100,llOO. (See ttlated story Page J). '!be ...,., and Ill cootenll are expected to be entered u evidence Iota today In the trial of thrte Ohio men charged wtth new schools, appeared to be leaning toward the one school idea because of the recent defeat of a $15 million bond issue in the di.strict. "It's incumbent to come before the people with a proposal we can pass," Bentley said.. "At this point I'm un- certain whether we should go for one school OJ"t two." Mangers plead~ with Bentley to re- main Joyal to the two school concept. When have we ever wanted to com· " i promise oo educaUon ia this dlstr!ct?" questioned Mangen. "We'll be a very sorry community if we just go for one high school that ;vtll not fill our need." Logan, ·in presenting his one achoo1 plan, urged trustees to cons Ider alternaUves to new schools ~ as year· round schooling and extei>ded day scheduling. Schmltt said ' he fell the 127 million bond proposition was unreallsflc. "II the people of the comµiunlty turned us down ror on1 school how can we dou. ble It and eipect. to gain their support?" Schmitt asked. Schmltt and l<>gan would not say II they wilt support the February bO<ld elec. lion. "I'm l<>hll to have to do a lot or tllinl:· ing," Sclunitt said. tr the district can reverse its recent history or bond defeat., the 127 mUlion will buy one 8Cbool for f12 million and another, roostructed later. for 115 million. Construction or the ftrst school would begin in January 1974 with completion due In September tt'll. '!be ......i tCbOol would be started In January 1171 and flnilhed In September tm. The ta1 override LI "1lf 19 ~ In June . lJ'lf and tt It Is Doi -ied by voten before then &be district'• buic tu vote will drop to SI conll per '100 .....,. ed valoallql). • French Say Mission Hit U.S. Claims Bombs 3 Miles From Hanoi Site SAIGON (AP ) -U.S. warplanes al· tacked Hanoi today and the French said their diplomatic mission was heavUy damaged and the1f chief envoy wounded. In response to a French protest .the U.S. C.Ommand said initial operational reports Indicated that Navy planes hit military targets 2~ to 3 miles from the mission -buildings. It promiMld an in- vestigation of a French complaint. "A number of enemy surface-~air missiles were fired at the U.S. aircraft," Burke Seeks Unification Committee By JOHN ZAILER Of ,.. Dlltr .... ,, ... Assembl)'mli!I -Burte called Tuesday nigh~ for lhe. !ormatlon or an areawide II~ committee to draft a workable unlfkaUon plan for West Orange County icbool districts. ln a spirited givHJJd-take session with the Fountain Valley school board, Burke (R-Hunllngton Beach) said the cc.mm lt- tee miitht have a greater chance of suc-- cess than palt One3 because of recent California Supreme Court decisions regarding school finance. Tn.lstees of the Fountain Valley elementary district voted unanimously to support Burke's call for f u r t b e r discussions, but expressed skepticism that anything woold M!Sult. "It's pretty predictable what will be said," said Trustee Fred Voss. "Ocean View, Westminster and Fou. taln Valley (elementary achool districts) will be ln agreement on the need for an areawide property tax to equalize finance. "Seal Beach and Huntington Beach elementary will not be in agreement," Vo~ said. The cruJi: or the problem, he argued, Ls that two of the wealthiest districts In the county are not going to share money voluntarUy wtth three oJ the poorest. "l'm not so sure," said Bwte In response. "I've been in this district seven and a half years," said Trustee Sheila Meyers, "and evtry single year thls district has made a unlficaUon propoga.I and uotil now none of them bu ever been ac- ceptable to all concerned. I don't see why It should be any difftmit -. " "Becauie they have the (CalKomia Suprome Court ) sword hancing over their beldt," rel>Jtled Burke. "I tlllnk It haa chanced thtir poslUon. " In the-Serrano vt. Priest cue, tbe (S.. BURKE, l'o&'l I) the statement said. "No U.S. aircraft were lost, and the surface-to-air n..iasiles, after missing the aircraft, could have im- pacted. on th, ground." A spoke.wan agreed the statement might give the impression that the destruction of the mis!lion headquarters was caused by the North Vietnamese mWiles. The_ command r e f-u 1 ~ d • however, to rule oot the poulbllltt of U.S. bomb! go!ng astray, u bas nap- pened before, and hlttjng the Frtncb compound. Secretary or Defense Melvin R. Laird today conceded In Wallhlngton that American bombs may have struck the French diplomatic mJaslon ,but lild U.S. air strikes againat North Vietnam will continue even as private peace talks go on In Paris. fSee story, Pac• fl On the basis ol preliminary reports, Laird said, he couldni staia poslUvtly whether the damage WU camed by I !aulty -b drop or by Nortb Vitt- Route Closed Sudden Rainstorm Soaks Raad SAN.FRANCISCO (AP)_ ,,,_·waa-halled lo both dlrectloila on tbe 8-J· •hon Freeway between lnterstata • and San Jl'nnclaco lnlmlatliml Airport ~ 1oday ~ a dtencbln& 1'inttorm dllllljlM up to _L• incbel In 1111' Bi 1,. Conlioued rain wu predicted lhrougb 1borlday witll a chance of lhowm as !ar IOUth u Salota Maria and ,_,.,, Iha N1Uonal Weather Strvloa aid. 'lbe.Cllllfomla liJchway Pain>! said 1 pe-. dllcl in rainl'ln the uea llld In the Bayshare Fnenr downpour, "where wfL•••• sakl up to DIDI ~ ol rain covered the .l'OldWay. In the city or Colma. tine to f• feet of w I It r -~ at - downtown intersectloil alter the ralHwollen' Colma Cree t oplll«t ..., Jta banb. ' '!be storm brouaht the first ..aaonal mow!$ In Nortllem Calllcrnla wltll the Lassen Loop lectloo or Slate ftoota 89 cloeed !or a few b 0 U r I ~y mqmlng. Snow levels were near 7,000 feet in the northern mounlabu and t ,000 fett in the southern SJerra Nevada. Freshmen at Huntington To Get Choice Next Year Freshmen and studenla new to the Huntlngton Beach Union Hlah School District will be allowed to attend lea crowded campuses l1ell September under guidelines adopted by trustees Tutoday night. The free choice program unanirnoully approved by trusletl will allow about 5,000 IJ;tlbmen to attend the hllb schools which are. dt1lgnated u IOU! m>Wded. "II It I pn>C:6I of OlrllOlia wttll the 1tudenti flowing to the areu whk:h are lea utunted," uplatned d I 1 t r I c t AdmlnlttraUva Aaallllant Glen llyl .... r. n.e auldell-adopted by tbe bOord duri., a meetlnll at Ed\IOD Kiah School 11.so wlll permtt the olbllaO of a !roabman lo attend Iha 1111118 school. "II parenla do not Wini to -two PTAI or root lor two foolblll lNIN they can encourqe their chlldnn to att<nd tbe --. " D7IIncer 1iplalned. He did nolll that the older llblinp Wllo trans!ered to anolbe< achoo! witll tlltlr freshman brother or lllla' wwJd not be eligible to -le In Inter-achoo! athletics for one year under Clf' rults. Dyal..... wtll be 8*tlni wttb hl&b IChool principals to' dtlennlno • what criteria Ibey will -to detetmlna wt>lch IC:hools an ._. cm.met. Under the option plan, the dltltlct would Ml up a shotlla bul .,.i<m IO transport the -to their -achoo!. T1ull8e Ralpll -lllllMllialllcaJIJ IUPIJOrled Iha oplJon -· " a method to alao tmiiroft the quallty ol educatlonlntbe- .. ,,,. oplJOl1 wtD pennlt "' to - centr1la Ctrllin -at -and thus proride mon opedalllltloa lor ID- dlvl&Jal OUldleta." be -led. ,,.,,,... anlialn:ralt weapons fal1lnl baclt on the city. Asked al a news ccoference If he thought It Wile to bomb C-to - while peace talks were In a dellclta stage, the secretary r<plled: "We will continue the -ol tirpJwer during' this period. '!be Praldtnt bu slat.erl on "ivenl OCC"utonl and WI will continue to slrilte military larpll In (See HANOI, l'act J) County Vnit Seeks Booze Ban Repeal • By CANDACB Pl!AlllON °' .. ...,, ....... ~County Hart>or~ Beachtl and Parb Clom-looan 'l'uelday -mended W lliot an ard-pollllllU., booaa ID COlUll1 ,..,,..Uoa ....., be _.,. But after tbt acdon WU ta.an, eam- mlulootrt wavertd a lltU. aod -1-1 to not lei the Board " Saperrioon -•bat they'd dona antll they dTafl an alternative law. That..,. ordlnuco, to be dllCuated at the Nov. If meeting, ----by Commill-1bomu O'Koefe to raid that no penoon will clrlnll In a -areawberedeedt-ttorla.,.. pn>hllllted by the llart>ar -and commlaion. O'Kot!t, olao a Siil <Jemtfto city c:ouncllman, delcrlbed i-. poleDtW park -btaclt 11&a • "dry .. OI' ··bi- d~ areu. CO!nmillloo dialrman 11art1n Usab ind cormnlakK>er Tom 8aldwtn "'" the no -oo the ftPUI cl liquor pro-blblUoii in county ....... The Volstead ad (l'lolllbltlon) ..., re- pealed Dltlonally In 1111, --time the """"1 on!-forlllddlnl dr"1kinl or tronsportnlr liquor wttblD ..,. recnat!On .,.. wu ..-_ Thia bu callled ~ of ..,. ro"''""'" because -"' clt1Uq '"' tbeit on boota. In cunpen or -lo _,__ --.nta -bral:lot the In. Comm-P'rant --Dlt .,. adlmaot lo ll'IUIDI -Iha .. ~ aod """"'"'"111 Jn," ...... , -waltlnf !ar •• .-.. - Rct'srra .,..... mlJ • ""''''*"' ,.,.. lllto lllal la -Cll lllata Pl'Of> eriy. "Hae .. -.... ape; • *"' nre.." bt lllllld. Thi c:«oer' mn·1 ICdoft. II " II .,.. ..-., the -" ....-.. ( ... -..... 1) tbecrlme. ~ The aecurltles the IOW'C9 Ald were run 'throoah a wuhi., mach e to remove ftngtrprlntt before they . Sl.2 Million S11it ....... discarded In the belvy brush on lhe hllltlde near the lllttt end. He spe.:ulated tllievea discarded the loot becauae It wookl hafl been dlf!Jcult to oell them to anotllor perfy. '!be --...,...1, Ju been t....,. ed. the ...... added, to ..... a1 sa!ety depolit -rilled durq Illa Man:b u. 2' -k<ftd lnUlu by I !elm cl hlahly exportenced tlll-. Alter puncbln& I hoJo In the bonk 't rool and bl.utbii tbeli' way Into the vault, the bur1Jarw brolle Into 411 or tbe Individual bout Rliinc cash, Jewell, rare ooint ..nd other vllUlblct owned by the all1UMI pet.... In the LI,... NlaueJ, Monardl Bay, Three An:h Ba.y and ....... Btadl .,_ Llwlutll amowitlnl to ..... tllln as million bave -llled aplnll United Call!omla Bank and the Oreo Almn Company In w1b cl tbe mullft bur1Jar1. '!be sutt allq neclls .... "' the pert of time .,...,... .... '!be sulll are -ptndlq In Onnc• Counl1 Superior Olurt. Ex-mari11.e Who Shot Hijacker Files Against Pan Am By TOM BAllLBY ..... ...., ........ A !onner Marini wbo shot and klll<ld 1 bljad<tr tine -... ad today Uva In !tar cl whet be predlcta II COl' taln r<priaal by the -..... - and rtlaU•t1 bu -Pao Am1r1c1n ll'or1d Alnrayt I« SU - William II. MIU. -ill the·<lr-. County 8llpetior Cow'\ -!llld 'llloo- day the! Ille -Ida la r<l<Ollnc bla name II Iha,._ aplmt hie - el-' him to the ....... " Iha -~·-ctkla. -lie 111118 In the -!bat Iha dtad .............. -" -Vlt~ -.... _ •... -&:; ioUI to Jeon the _.,.... la Colalty ol Milla, hll wUe, J•phino Ind the coup!•'• Iwo cblldrtn. • Milla: "km Illa ••• " ,,,. ... -..... be .. CA<tlJr tbeL Bot be -Iha -!ar -_.. -tb&I -... ...,. -lllm bJa lfflap and -him to ..... --lodl•• Illa - -"""' lO ~ Qulty. Miiia said " -ci.11 I ,, -at tho lime " Iha ~-dill ... - -.... ...,.., 1111 *'..~-Iha -wbo llbal tho -M • MW. illlla a.t tbe --a ...... DllfllllMI If IV.Cm• .U. war --.., tllol ...., of Ill mtmblri .. ,.-,-· .. -........ dMlh. 111-tlltt ...... __ _ men =roe 11iM bet Mt wtle 9ld ""' will Ill .... -ill' Illa ......... Ila. • t -. =-"1 . __ ...... --. "-=-·! Ef..\F-:;~ m:--1 • ,. r~ l':::O:Al:l:Y:P:l:l0:1===="====Wtdnttdl1, OctoW Sl, 1~11 Prison , Rdagan Lashes Prop. 14 Plan Riot Erupt·s SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Prals· Ing Its lbme but addlnc lbat II 0 would cttate 111ore problems than it would solve," Gov. Ronald Regan todny denounced the tenets of the Watson ln!ti11tive. the Prop. 14 tax refonn package on the November ballot. Hostages Threatened; Brutality Claimed I ' "I find J cannot support and in· deed must oppose Prop. 14 If 1 !I m lo meet my rrsponsibility to the people,'' Reagan said in remarks prepared for delivery before the California Real Estate Association. The association has been one of the \\'atson Initiative's most vocal su pporters and seCOlld largest financial contributor. WASHINGTON (AP\ -RI o 1 l n G prisoners held a boody shirt out of a cel\block window today in an uprising at the District of Columbia city jail, where JD to 13 host ages were held under threat of death. The reports of savagery came shortly after noon following attempts by authorities to use relatives of rioting prisoners and inmates from the city's re!onnalory in nearby Lorton, Va. in an effort lo quell the upris ing. 1\1rs. Patricia C'.orham. who said her husband is among tbe prisoners in the cellblock where the disturbance broke out. said she saw the prisoners bring one hostage ''lo the window and hit him on the side of the head. He ft!tl to the Ooor. Blood \\'as gushing out the back of his B11rke Acc11sed head.'' "They sald they ...,. ~Ing lo kW 1 man." r.fr-:. G1am sikt 'TMy bll lhe man on the sid or the bead to Indicate they're not pla ng." Mrs. GorhafA Was among about 2S relatives wh<'> ~ tQe prison )'ard to talk through wildows with (be lnmates. The prisooer(tlfeateoed to kill Hardy, taken capUve~ be and Washington Post reporter •m Claiborne went imide in the predawn tiours to talk with the rebelling priscw.ri. Claiborne, who was allo\\'ed out, said the prisoners. were not demanding better food or mecUcal ~re, a common com- plaint made Jn oUler prison rebellions, they jwit want ou~ "They said thts ls mt a riot ," 'Taj Mahal' Suspect Gets Ow11 Trial Mosl1e11ko Will up port Unification Legtslation l\ separate trial v;as ordercrl today for one of six defendants in the Orange County Superior Court "Taj ~1ahal" trial of L;iguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney and five al!e,l(ed ro-conspirators in the defrauding of the St. Bernardine Ho.o:p1tal in San Berna rdino. Judge James Turner granted a !=.epa rate trial for Daniel 1\tachan. 511, of San Bernardino. But he denied separate trials for Dulaney. 38. of 2631 Via Casra dit a. San C!emente, and four others named in a grand jury indictment. His ruling follo'l\·ed his decision Tues- day to deny a motion by rive defense lawyers for the barring from the trial of a controversial tape rrcording. That recorded-. con\'ersation between former deputy 'district attorney Joe Dickerson , defendant James Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle. Huntington Beach and defense attorney Darrell Johnson continued to be a 'tone of contention to- day. Johnson today asked Judge Turner to d,elay the trial for 30 days to alluw him to file a writ of mandate challenging the judge's rejection of the motion for separate trials. Judge Turner said he will rule later to- day on that ~est. But he made it clear this rooniiiig "that It was verj unlikely that ~ wlY '1lrthir delay a triil alrtady held up tor two weeks by a series of mo- tions. Tl'e ll"'1 deelll""1 facing lb< llldge, flve defense 12.wyers and prosecutor Stuart Grant is whether lhe trial will be court or jury, That ·decision will also be made later today. * * * Birtliday Song Greets Judge lri Courtroont "Happy Blrthmiy to you, "Happy Birthday to you, "Happy Birthday, dear Jimmy, Happy Birthday to you." That refrain. lustily sung by five defense lawytrs. five defendantl, a clerk, a bailif[ and a coorl reporter, opened the Dulaney trial In sensational style thls mcrning. An obvi-Ously astonished Judge James Turner sat open-mouthed on the bench while lhe tradit,lonal birthday greeting was~ with just abst.e=ition -an equally opon mottthed DAJL Y PILOT reportu seated in the f)rst row of the courtroom. "Why, uh, U»nk you, gentlemtn, !hank you," the red-faced judge murmured as the echoes or the heartily SW\g rtlraln subs.ided. "Now about those motion.s .. " A.II the defeNe motions were denied. 01A,... com •• DAILY PILOT Terry Al. 11oshcoko, Democratic can· didate for the 70th Assembly District seat in November, said today he \\'ould sponsor the special unification legislation incumbellt Robert H. Burke wi ll not Moshenko accused Burke of "callous disregard" for the educational interests Security Guard Fells Hijacker l1i Bomb Threat FRANKFURT, Germany (UPI) -A Lufthansa security officer rolled up bis raincoat and bopped into submission to- day a German citiz.e1~ who threatened to blow up a Lufthansa plane on a flight from Lisbon to Frankfurt unless he were given money. Frankfurt poltce said. When the Boeing rn, with 58 passengers aboard, landed at Frankfurt's Rhein-Main alr"J)Ol'I. armed pollee llUI'· rounded It. Capt. Heino caesar, a Lufthansa flight security officer, managed to hit the man on the bead and police arrested the suspect, police reported. A Lufthansa spokesman identified the German as Friedrich Schutz. He told police be bad been expelled from Deanda and refused entry by Portuguese authorities at Lisbon. 1be drama at Frankfurt airport lasted less than an hour. The plane landed from Lisbon at 4:39 p.m. and rolled to a stop at an isolated parking place a few minutes later. Police said Schutz demanded "a fast getaway car" and "a few thousand marks" to help him get away, "The police are after me ," he told a stewardess. Capt. Ceasar and another Lufthansa piloL capt. Werner Utter, drove a car to the rear of the plane pretending it was for Schutz. They tricked the German into looking into the luggage compartment of lhe car and as be bent over Capt Caesar bit him on the head with the rolled-up raincoat police said. ' Then, a dozen police armed with machine guns who cordoned the plane rushed in and arrested him. 1 . Schulz chose one of the toughest airports in Eurape to put his challenge to police. Frankfurt airport has been under "100 percent" security for weeb follow· ~g ~Arab attack on the Israeli OJym. pie team during the Munich OlympiCI Sept. Ho Kniglithood Era Will Be Revive<l In Westmirister lCnlghUK>od and chivalry will live again ln Westminster this week as the Founder'!! Day celebralion add! a touch o! the A11ddle Ages to tho clty·s Hl2 an· n1versary. The restivitits will begin at 7 p m tonight in Sigler Park as Ml)'or Ph;l!p Anthony and Miss Westminster. l.lnda Staberry, head a list of city celebrities opening lhe rive dny celebrRUon. The highlil{ht of the festlval will he the t<ifedieval Faire featuring 100 kln•s. qul'1!:ns, dukes. barons and jesters fl'Om the Society for Creative Anachronlsm.s ~ F11ire will havt dtmonstratlona 'or calh,raphy, annourina, netdltpolnt, mt><heval danctna: and heraldry. Clad In medieval armor the knigh ts will alao demonstrate jousting, ex· ecuUont and i:ircbery. A ftw ladles In wilting are l!llO l!Ctwdullld to be 1~ ducted by the black knlghta. Tbe aMual paradt, led by arand marshal and actor Mark Sladt, will bt:gln at 10 1.m. Saturday on Westmlnater Avenue near Cfdarwood Avtnue. 't Chiklrtn'I oonlt1ll 11nd (11ets wDI be , -Id •l l p.m. Sunclay afternoon with loodt of J>flW and fun for )'OUJttlSt.,. uJ>o doi 12 reara old. A 'carnival will R•t under way tpn!gltl lffltlnlll tAmtl Ind fOOC. bootba .;italiOi ed by Jae al ctvlc organlntlona. A "Oea m1rk,et'' rummage sale wlll al.8o be open 10 the plckln1t of bargain huntm at· lending lhf' festh•1llf"l of the lfuntlngton Beach Union High School District and said he was speaking in response to Burke's "performance" at Tue~ night's meeting of the Fountain Valley School Board. Moshenko stressed, however, that special leg islation is only a short·tenn substi tnte for a thorough reform of state property taxation. Moshenko argued that the people of Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District have been "misled into believing that what is good for Fountain Valley is bad for Hunt ington Beach when that isn't the case at all. "Tbe assemblyman has perpetuated that myth and as a consequence that man who should be binding his people together is instead forcing them into op- posing camps." In terms of i;hort-tenn legislation , Moshenko said he would support a special bill mandating a unification elec- tion with a provisioo for an area wide property tax to support any newly created unified districts. "On the one hand, Burke admitted that the students of Fountain Valley High School suffer from e x c e s s i v e in- convenience due to pvercrowded con- ditions, but on the other band, Daily tells the people of Huntington Beacb and Fountaln Valley that be refuses lo act in an attempt to solve he problem," Masbenko asserted. * * BURKE ... Supreme Court ruled that financial sup- Port of schools must be made in- dependent of variations in the local tax base. IJ this principle were applied in West Orange County, it would remoe a major roadblock to unification by giving the poorer di stricts sufficient revenue to operate a unified school district. However. Burke said Tuesday that be ":>ought r~u implementation of the p~ c1p\e behmd Serrano vs Priest was five years away. Fountain Valley trustees vigorously at- tacked him on this point, urging him to sponaor special legislation to permit unification more rapidly, Burke declined, saying that a con- sensus of all Joca1 school districts was necessary before he would act. He ~Id Fountain Valley must work to make tbi.!J compromise possible, and he chided of- ficials by pointing out that 11Fmmta.in Valley is "lOt the only school district in the state." Later Burke rebutted a Fountain Valley plea for special legislation that would equalize school support throughout West Orange County in saying: "I don't know , how to provide the m1>ans (for ~uah~tl~) in any other way besides impo.smg 1t on someone else. We're right back where we started. The door I.! open. The burden is yours. The responsibility ls clearly that of the Fountain Valley School District" Burke also expla ined that the are<1wlde steez:lng committee he favored .should cons~ or two trustees each from the ~f~nllngton Beach Union High School District ond Jts five feeder elementary districts. Burke agreed to take the in- ltlntlvc In arranging a flnt meeting wlthJ11 two weeks. From Pflfle I BOOZE ... v.·ould apply to Sun?.et Btach, Aliso beRcb In South UiUJl8., Sall Cnek, Dana Point llarbor &~ the unlocorporattd area betwetn Ccirona del Mar and Llllluna Beach. It would also apply to ~Hlt Squa.rt Park In Fountain Valley (where the golf course clubhouse was granted a liquor permit ), Unlversltl Park In lnrlne and O'NeUI Park In El .oro. Irvine Park near 'l'uaUn has deed restrictions agolnlt Jm. blblllJI. The coinmluloners ~ally be&an back· i.«tallna on logallzlng libaUon when l:larbor, Beaches and Parks Director Ken Sempeon uld he couldn't take lhe repeal vole lo~ 1uporvilora with lull oupport iinl.,.. ad an altun1Uve with him Tiie peal "" eam• de, PI t, Slmpaon'a commtflt dt.1t 20 leltf'rl tn op. Polllion "'' It. lncludlna one f'"m thl Orengo Coqnty Atrrllf'1 departmem, bad bten rt.celvr.d Claiborne sald. "It's ... revolution." .'11>e lnmlt.. -numbering 175 to 2llO - ov~,.."4 the guard$ corly today and brolte windowt11 and set 1mal1 fires. Aroond 3:~ a.m. Hanly and Claiborne, ~·ho has written several Articles an COD- dltioM al the prison. went l.nstde and spoke wtth the lnn1ates. Five iprnotes from the Distrlel of COiumbia'• ..!ormalary In Lorton, illlo N1C011Uy belped medlale grlev....,. ot their own imUtutkm. were brought to tbe scene to provide similar help at the jail. A spokesman for the Lorton tnma.tes went on· a.. k>cal ndM> ilaUon and.'·~ pealed to relaUves ol 30 lea.~ ot the rebeJUou.! prisonerl to meet at a ell)' high school for transportatklo 10 the jail. Delbort J•ckson, adn)lnlstralor of Lorton, lold reporten he tholifl!>t . the prisoners .. wouJ~ be fu m>re ~ in dealing wllh their families" ll\l!n wt1ll authorities. ' Jackson and lhe Lorton tnmat.s mot with the prisonert for nearty>t& j!Unutes and Jackson said they Joki Ibo .rliooers that "their action beihi ta~ nt>W tis f..:tile." He said no time limil has been plileed on the negotiations and that tbe )iri.sohers said their demand ror frffiScrn· wu .. non- negotiable." Claiborne said the Inmates , were demaodlng to see Mayor W a l.t e.r Washington. The mayor agreed to ccme to the iall and said he would speak to in- mate represeotalim outside the jail. Hardy was reported as yelling out of the cellblock window,• ''Get back, they have a gun." Later, police reported the prisoners have a .38 caliber revolver but said they had no idea how it was' o~ tained. A prison guard lieutenant among the several guards was reported to have been Injured. Police Chief Jerry Wilson was inside the jail along with School Board Presi· dent Marlon Barry and other local of· ricia1s. Police were on the scene buf wire helng held back with off-<luly guards bclng ca1led in. About 40 inmates were reported active in the uprising with about 1:;o others merely going along with them. Corrections officials say the inmates have keys to the entire wing of the jail but cannot go outside the wing. Parents to Vielv Family Education The Family Life Education program of the Westminster School District will be available for preview by parents on ~L 12 and 19. The program will ~ ~ted thl'Ollghout lhe dlslrlcl beglljruoir In November. Children from kindergarten through the eighth grade will I>e~involved unless parents notiry the district in writing that they do not want· their· children to participate. Materials and films from the program will be available on two Parent Nights beginning at 7:30 p.m. The first will be Oct. 12 at Warner Intermediate School, 14171 Newland SL, Wemntn.ster. The sec- ond will be Oct. 19 at Johnson Intenne. dlate Sehool. 13603 Edwards St. ' Mrs. Hulme Heads Up Parent Aide Progran1 Mrs. Katherine Hulme has been ap- pointed coordinator of the Ocean View School District's program of volwiteer pare~t aides ln the classroom. The dlsLrict's P?irent aide program net· ted an estimated 5D,OOO hours of volunteer time last year worth about $150,IXX>. Mrs. Hulme comes to her full- time job from Hope View School, where she served for t h r e e years as coordinator of that school's program. She is also a former Sunday school superintendent. GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES FALL JEWELRY TRENDS There's a classic revival in Fall jewelry 1tyllng for 1972, for today's woman is getUng the clolhas she wants and loves to wear. Thore are wide choices for the woman of the 70'1 . She can choose a simple treatment of gold, a )ra· dltlon laden diamond ensemble, a tailored look lhat mixes Ivory with gold or a lacy effect lhat makes dlamondJ rellect 1partdlng mem· orles. Personali2ecl jewelry ol elegant good tesla bas never been more accessible. Whelher it'• diamonds, rubles, emerald.I, sapphinJ, gold, sUver or plaUnum, today.!.a woman is free to use her own creative Imagination lO enhance her own particular beauty. Leading Lobos DAILY PILOT IT•ll ~· Leading the cheering for Los Amigos High School athletic teams this fall are (from left) J!Qsan King, Betty Chavira, Sandy Fraser, Debbie Haye~ and Bunny BorW>d. School is in Garden Grove Unified School. · DJStnct, but serves portions of Fountain Valley. · ., Policeman's Car Struck by Youth, 15; Officer . Hurt A Fountain Valley police officer trying to avoid a careening car driven by a teenager reportedly stoned on drugs was injured this morning when it rammed his squad car broadside. Patrolman Jack Mihalik was taken to Fountain Valley Community 'Hospital following the 5:5S a.m., crash but medical personnel said l>e was released after treatment for a mttd •concussion. He and a partner in a second squad car said they bad Jutt wheeled onlo Santa Madrina streol \o lnveotigale a report or someone possibly burglarizing parked cars when the suspect's vehicle momed away from the curb. Investigators claimed the youth, 15, of Huntington Beach, was on the wrong side of the slreol when \>< ,ralDJDO<! OUi<\!T Miba!ik,'~avlng in the driver's side of die car and call!ing major damage to the police vehicle. The youth taken into cwitody at the scene is charged with felony drunk driv· ing, which applies to driving under the influence of drugs. Valley Planners Eye Rezone Bjd The Fountain Valley Planning Com- mission will rule Wednesday night on an application by the Ponderosa Homes to rezone a 50-acre site from single famil y residential to planned development residential. The application, if approved, would allow Ponderosa to build 214 homes on the property al the comer or Edinger Avenue and Brookhurst Street. Under single family residential only 197 homes would be allowed . The planned development lots would be 6,000 square feet while single family sites would consist of 7 ,200 square reet. The planning commissioners will meet at 7:30 in the CommunJty Center building. •" F1'0m Page I ... HANOI ... •' North Vietnam." · ~ ... Laird declared, as he has on 1efefit occasions, that the U.S. planes strike.'ft only military targets and not St 'I downtown Hanoi!' . : ·; Today's targets, be noted, included a railroad marshaling yard and tranSIJ~ ment point three miles from the Frendi diplomatic mission. He called lbUn "signlficant milltsry targets." ' - At the White House, press seeretiry Ronald L. Ziegler said inform3tron available does not establish that if was an Atr.erican bomb which caused ~ttie damage and injuries. Ziegler ·safd, however, that the State Department Will be expressing regret to the Frehc'h through diplomatic channels over the in- cident. Responding to questions , Ziegler said he was not aware of any communicatitwt between French President Georges Podl-p~and President Nixon on the ;i,. cldenl, bdt said :he Prelldent 1w.,bobi receiving information from the NaUodlll Security Council and other U.S. SOuteeJ.i. "We regret any personal injury, Or darr.age caused in the area of the French delegation building during the air s.tri~ and the North Vietnamese firing on :tbe U.S. aireralt," the U.S. command sai~:Jp Saigon. , In Paris, Pompidou after a cabinet meeting called the bombing • 'a deplorable act." The French protest was handed to U.S. Ambassador Arthur K. Watson. · ·: A French govemn.ent spokesman·Safd the chief of the mission in the NO'rth Vietnamese capital, Delegate-Gep~t Pierre Susini, was "very se riously ift.. jured." • ·: ' ~ ·. Fire Captain Nam~ " To Area Heart Board Huntington Beach Fire Captain Robert Baker bas been elected lo a one ~r tenn on the board of directors of .t~e Orange County Heart As.9oclation. ·, . Baker, a five-year veteran with the Huntington Beach Fire Department, will be working to finalize plans for • a paramedical program in Orange Countx. It takes tlie right kind of money to look your best. ,,......,, ....... ......, ..... ftf II ..W c.M& ~ .... ,...."" ...... . 1 .. •ll fktfrwl ........ .. ......,,4 •• ,.,,.... .,..... e.m ........ •1__. .... ,,. ,, ... ............... ...,. ..... c-......... .................. , .... ............... .......,. J. c. .JJ,., m.p/, riej !}eruPl.rj 182l NEWPORT Bl VO., COST A MESA ·. '• ... •' • But b.,.t of all, she luu acces1 to a world of Ideas from her Ioc tll In· de~ndenl jeweler, who is com· CONVENIENT ff.IMS I ANKAMllllCAIO-MASfll CHAJQI r.letely tree to operate 81 he wishes l l YEAIS IN fHE SAME LOCAT ION ,HONE l 41·l401 n helping her. r...-- AS G Pat :·-· • .You ,D . 111.e. . te '.DE.\!\ l)t buy cllJ'Of ~:lj ~~yw ~9 :i,J>; =of ~th anotbe .th&Q ~ lionor Gt.:itar cern o The fault f quest yor 1ory r beens heen tbe · f KUim manag any sh ·{.;' Center DEAR ln' ·gather cbildre ~ges not .saved bleber ml)n l"'Ol• JlO big 1'Childre ·ieel c Flee CUD gum. dress ,to Fie >Dedlal DEAR I SU Spare In SC volunt \:>refer work worth You assls ,Can H Pjlot. work I Orang Cance btlp I nual Nove ai.rln, ¥S-OZ3 DEAR We ,.., r Mesa start decid the "I "Titte busin firm answe flnd -y e lluoG ... nt llbout pd • l"I• • f,"ZJ • guara *1th t Where DEA I or Linde ; II > -,.ore ..... oonta ~ .. e:tap 'fton.d matto. 1t1t1m bu11ln bf:bln order. At Your Service A Stuolay aad Wtdnelday F<*n OI !be DAILY PILOT Cot a problem? Then write Pai Dunri. Pat will cut red tape, get the answers and action fl o u need to lOJve inequi-!1.1 in QOI> tmment and blt#,..u. llail JI 01' r que"I· tio'n.s to Pat ":..-~ Dunn/ At ~¥our S~ce, Oranae Coast ·,Daily Pffbt, P.O. Bo' 1560,' Cotta """Mesa, Ca.. 92626. lnclu.d«, JIOU1' : telephone number. llEAA PAT, It took me two years to save $425 to buy my "dream" guitar. I shopped ~y and found just the right one - ~ ~lbson guitar at the Cui tar Center in· ~ttfwood-I purchased it for cash on ~~ 9. Within two weeks I noticed the ~:or the guitar bad warped. A£ter ~ths of gettjng one excuse; ali,er another, including the sl'like at Gibsoll, ,th&.quitar Cei:iter has my $425 and I have ~"2itar. 1 fihd It hard to believe-that a ...,-ep\rtable company like Gibson is not Honoring its guarantee and that the Gi;itar Center has so little apparent con- cern over customer satisfaction. K.8., Laguna Beach The GuJtar Center claims Gibson Is at fault for not Issuing a repeatedly re- quested return authorization numbe r so yon:-guitar could' be relumed to the fac- tory for evaluatlon. Gibson's strike has been settled and Tbe Guitar Center bas bttn authorized to send your gattar to the factory, accordiag to Kenneth KOiman, Gibson, Inc. service departmeet mana1er. Yoo wW not be charged for aay shipping costs and U yoor gujtar ls 1ound defective, Gi bson wUI send a new 'bistrument lo yoa through The Guitar Center. DEAR PAT ' In a discussion at a neighborhood ·pthering it was found that many cbiJdren had sent for "The World's . ~gest Piece or Bubble Gum" and had not received it. The children had each :saved eight cards from packs of Bub- bleberries bought from the ice cream ~n and had sent them along with 15 ~ta to a Philadelphia address. This is . no. big problem, but it's important to ou r 1-children and we don't like to see them ·~eel cheated. p .R., Costa Meta Fleer Cerp. expressed the same con- cern as you parents over the mJsslDg gam . Send tbe children's names aad ad· dresses to me and they will be forwarded lo Fker'a promotJon manager for h9- 'mec1late attentton, "" DEAR PAT' I suddenly find myself with too much Spare time now that .ny youngest child is in school. I would like to do some volunteer work on a very limited basis. preferably something involving office work or typing. Do you know of a "·orthwhile group needing sor.1e help? S. Y., Santa Ana lf«ts. You will find appeals for voluntter assistance printed frequently In the "You . Can Help" section of the Sanday Dally P.llot If you want to begin volunteer work Immediately and prefer typlag, tbe Orange County Unit of the American Cancer Society in Tustln is appealing fflr help In addressing envelopes for Us an- nual Christmas Tttemortal malling late in November. You cau volunteer to serve altring the next four ~·eeks by phonlng &38-<t!.!I DEAR PAT ' We purchased a two-piece soft and love- seat from R & D Furniture in Costa .Mesa on April 22. When the cushions started to fray after three months, I .decided to see what couli! be done under the "IS-year warranly on construction" \liTitten on my invoice. The store ls out of business and the Los Angeles accounting firm handling its inquiries n e v e r answered my correspondence. I want to find out the name of the furniture manufacturer and hayc this warranty !Joncred. K.1J., Laguna Beacb :Your frarn11ty went out of bmhies1 dP& alons wltb R & D on July t. Gold ~rg & Co •• CPA sakl warranty fati;t. on R & D fandtart mast be made tltrolp c be ma1H&factlrer. Tb e ae- boantlq: firm "dotsn1& t now anytbln1 iboat R & D's former manufacturt:n'' Utd neither do you. The ollly thing both yOa and N.P., lluntlll~on Beach (defuncc E'll Glass Coating Co. window t'ln~ln,c raaranttel tan do I• to file ~mplafnl1 With tbe polke depar1mtnt1 In lhe clUes Where these firm• uled 10 opcntc. DEAR 'PAT' ..... I ordered 115.16 worth of stampe from Lindex Slamps ·ln New York after seelnfJ an advertisement In Linn's St11mp News. My last registered lelte. to Lindex was rtturned "unclaimed." I hive eont1cted the New York City Postal Inspector and bave written to the 1dvert.J.alng manage(' of the magazJne. Do I kllve any furt~r ~ae ? . • J.V., rMta Meta ; tr yo1r •limps do not arrlve a. 1 .. Y,ore •ffb, Charlu WUJot, advt:rtl•ln~ man11er fer Un1"1 Stamp News, wW •nllct l.Jftdex on your btha.lf. Uodea 1111 rectlved m o r e ordtn t ll • • ae- Dehfptt'd, b•I •a1 rttOlveGlwo ol tire rb: 1'on-dc.llvtry N1mplalnt1 rttt.lvtd by the magntfne. Wiison t:xplatnt4 tMt private •tamp dtalel'I often be&bl their 1mall bu~innte• nn • part-lime !>arts •IHI fall btblnd In processing unexpecied la11e ordrr~. DAILY PILOT :J Heiress Disputes Irvine Assets Clemente Finds 'Bad' Bogus Bills Severit pbony l20 bills described by onr. bank offtcial as being "a pretty bad joo of counterfeiting" surfaced In bu.siness bank deposits in San Clemente Tuesday. Three bogus bills, all smeared and iJ>. tentlonally abused to simulate wear, were discovered by employea of the San Clemente Bank of America branr.b. AH tJiree pieces of worthless tender were deposited by owners of small mercantile and food businesset where customer 1olu'me is brlsk and clerks sometimes inexperienced. Manager Lee Winterton said that the merchant!, nu' the bank, take the loss in such cases. "We take the bills to tum over to the government," be said , "and the poor guy who ac~pted them bas to take tbe los.!." Two of the bills, he said, came from convenience markets and the other came f1 om a taco stand. The bills which surfaced along the South Coast follow the standard style of modem counterfeitinP," -products of the cheap offset printing process, instead of the traditional band-engraving technique. "If you looli. at them a second time," Winterton said, "you can notice poor detail work and sense a different feel of the bill." 'fbe coloring or the bogus money is quite accurate, however. The U.S. Secret Service, which is a branch of the Treasury Department, in- veStigates CjlJlterfeitlng cases. Tbe bills appearing In San Clemente were turned over to that agency. Agents for the department in Lo! Angeles said it, most cases persons pass- ing the bills follow a roving circuit, at· tempting to spread the money in various cities and disappearing before the hoax is discovered. Generally. authorities said, those "customers" pay for small purchases wllh $20 bill.o at locaUom -· they believe clerks might not notice the quail· ly of lhe billt. Lobbyist Action Delayed 30 Days By Super~rs O>unty supervisors Tuesday wrestled with proposed amendments to the new lobbyist registration law and finally decided to hold off enacbnent of the measlD'e for 30 days. Supervisors David L. Baker and William J. Phillips led the attack on pro- visions of the ordinance which would re- quire so-<:alled legislative advocates to register and d.lsclose all expenditures related to their work. Baker and Phillips convinced all board members but Battin that the law, as written, was not "workable or en- forceable." Kuyper was ordered to rewrite the ordinance and to refer it to the state At- torney General's OfCiei! to determine its constitutionality. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had proposed several amendments which would have eliminated ' 'pr Inc i pa Is (corporations, individual owners of busines.ses. and so forth ) as well as city and county employes and employe associatiom from provisions ol the act. The law would have requirtd all or these persons to make completl: dl.sclo.sures of any expenditures to "lnfiuenc1!" matters before the board. Rufus DAILY l"l\.OT 11.tf ~M,. Value of Stock 'Fraud'-J. Irvine By BARBARA KREIBICH Of IN DtilY ,~ SI~ An apprais&! of asset~ of the James Irvine Foundation stating that f11ir market value of its stock In the J ·vine Cc mpany is $22.50 a snare has been corr demned at "fraudulent" by heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who called the report "an arrogant example of deaance, oot com· pl!ance, with !he law." 1be Orange O>unty Tax Assessor 's ap-- praisal of the company 's holdings , said f.1n. Smith. "·ould place the stock value at closer to $92.50 per share, and her own estimate of its minimum purehue value if placed on the market today would be about $50. Flying to Orange County from her Mid- dleburg, Va., home for the Tue.sddy morning meeting of Irvine Company directors, Y'r~. Smith launched ber latesl critical volley at the foundat ion ~uring an afternoon press conference. 11le appraisal or assets was prepared as a requiro?ment of the Tax Refonn Act or 1969. legislation the heiress strongly su; :orted during lengthy Washlngt:on hearings. cotnent1on that their hand-pitked puppet management have been over the past re~ years devaluating rather than in- creasing I.le Irvine Company's assets." Mrs. Smith's attorne). Lyndol Young. called attention at the press con ference to testimony ir. the 1969 Tax Reform Act OCarings ,vhen Sen. Paul Fannin of Arizona, seeking : .. obtaiii an extension of time for the foundatiO', to divest itselr of its stock, told a committee, "At fai r market value lhe foundation should be able to realize S22S 1uillion or more for it!. equity." "'Now they tf'll us the stock ls only "' ... :th $103 million." said Young. lie also noted that an inventory of tile estate of the late Gloria Irvine. who died in Octobt.r. 1971. was fi led almost simultaneously wilh the foundaUon ap-- praisal. and also fixed the fair market value of her Irvine stock at $22.50 11 sh.:.rc. again $2.50 lo\ver than the $25 figure of the last stock sale. Both the foundation's appraisal and the Gloria Irvine estate inventory will come unde r the scrutiny or the Internal Revenue Service, t.1r1. ~mlth said, noting that she is spending "a great deal or time" in Washington, apparently in this c<lnnection. CHALLENGES APPRAISAL OF IRVINE CO. STOCK AS TOO LOW Mrs. Jo•n Irvine Smith in L•test Round With Corporation The legislation required that charitable foundations, in order to retain its non· profit tax statl,18, must, by 1972 divest itself of stock holdings in excess or 20 percent in any one company and begin paying annual charitable donations amoortting to 4.5 percent of their assets in 1972, and increasinp to 6 percent. The James Irvine Foundation holds 54.5 percent of Irvine Company stock. A1rs. Smith, principal l n d i v i d u a I stockholder owns just under 22 perctnt and the remainder of the stock is held by other members of the Irvine fam ily. tt is her opinion. ihe said, that the IRS will not acct>pt the low appraisal of the foundation's assets and that the foun- dation. in order to meet payout re- quirements, ..-·ill have to divest Itself or the Irvine stock, which now pays only a 1.8 dividend and place the money in higher yielding Investments, as other foundations have done. Bank Burglary Suspect Jn um. the foundation's charitabie dcn:..tions amounted to $ 2 , 2 9 O , 7 7 6 • representing less than twu percent of the $103 million noldings Ii.sled in its own ap-- praisal. Airs. Smith J.IOinted out. addin11:. "If the appraisal had folio\Pr'ed assessed valuation. they \Vould have had to pay out $14 million lo meet the 4.5 percent re- quirement of the Tax Reform Act.'' Al a stockholders meeting last June. Irvine company president '-1ason said the Cilmpany would not be able to pay higher dividends tc help the foundation meet the new payout requ\rement.s . Admi~ Crime to Buddy? At the Tuesday press conference al· torney Young cited stl:ps takeo by numerous other major foundations to comply with the Tax Reform Act. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille DallY ~l'•f Si.ff A burly used car salesman suspected as the muscleman debt collector in a lucrative JpOrts bookmaJdng system alltpdlY )>tided' by • Saddleback Com· mwtity aillege District trustee sur· rendered to Newport Beach police Tues-- clay. Robert E. Kelly, 34, of 135 Seagull Lane, Newport Beach, was booted on susJllclOll of ~acy to commit bookmaldng and releued an 12,iao· ball pendhig ._ Oct. II atralgnment. "It • w a s a million-to-one shot," said Vice and lntelligeoce Detective John Simon Jn regard to the colncldence that shifted susplcton to Kelly as the $25,000-a· week ring's enforcer. Saddleback Community C o 11 e g e Trustee Alyn M. Brannon. 40, of Santa Ana, Js cul"rtntly free on $10,000 ball after being charged with 'ST separate counts involving bookmaking violations. He faces preliminary bearing Nov. 30 iil Harbor Judicial District Court on 34 counts of bookmaking, two count! of ex- tort.ton and one count of conspiracy . Deputy District Attorney Ted Millard said today It ls likely the Orange County Grand Jury will issue an indictment bef~ that date, naming the former junior college board president. This would immediately shift pros· ecution a n d defense proceedings to Orange Comity Superior C o u r t , eliminating a hearing at the municipal court level. DetecUve Simon said today that Kelly. a six.foot, fOU!"-inch, 240-pound residtnt of Newport Beach's Oakwood Apartments surrendered on the advice of Los Angeles attorney Peter Srruth. Kelly apparently learned be was wanted for questk>ning in connection wHh the bookie ring case revealed Aug. 28 when Trustee Brannon wu aJTfSted by vice officers. Detective Slrnon declined to rMeal Seo res what led investigators to implicate the suspect as an alleged enforcer who dealt with slow.pay ~ttors. Deputy Oistri~ ~ttorney Don Carroll coiifirmed following Brannon's Aug. 28 arrest that a second sw:pect was being · sought in that role, following a grim warning to one local man heavily in debt due to sports gambling. The unidentified ·Newport Be a ch businessman and lil9 wife received · an anonymous telephone caU one rugbt in mid·August, frorn a man who auggested they go out and check their front door. · Shaken at the sight of an eight-inch hunting knife imbedded In the door, tbe victim called poJlce to spill h.is story of doing $1,000 a week In bu!ine~ - allegedly with Brannon. Detectivi:-Simon said names of many local people who allegedly placed bets with Ilrannon on various sportin& events will be subpoenaed for testimony. Money allegedlf. ell.changed t.ands in gambling on pro esslonal lwrse racing, football, basketball, b6xlng and tennis. At the moming directors meeting , Mrs . Smith said, Irvine Company president William B. Mason and foundatlon presi· dent N. Loyall McLaren rtf\ded to civt her copies of the appraisal which she described as "a superficla1 , three-page document onade by an investment bank- ing company in New York.'' The api>eaisal apparenUy was based solely on the earning value of the ll'Yloe Company, she aaid, and doe• not J.oclude land ho! 'ings of the company. The company owns land in l!Jontana and Imperial Valley, along with the &1,000-acre Irvine Ranch ill Orange Coun- ty. The foundation's appraisal liKUn!S, said Mrs. Smith, would '>iacr the value of tht Orange County Jafid at a "ridicu~" $? .300 an acre, while in fact It should be v.·orth at least 110,000 an acre, based on tax assessment figures. Noting thal in 1968. when the Irvine Company purthased lrviDe stock from the Maccci O>rporation at an evo!Wttion of $25 a share, she remarked, "It is evidently the Jam'!I lrvlne Foundation's Bremer Reports Inmate 'Ad vance' BALTIMORE (AP) -Arthur H. Bremer. lerYina a 53--year term al the M•ryland Penllentlary for _.,ding Alaba.mi Gov. George C. Wl llace and three others, claims ano!l)l!r Inmate has made homosexual advances an d threatened him . In what was de1erft>ed by stale pri90fl officials Tu~y IQ n •·quite norm aJ" procedure. Bremer'• charge will be •irtd at an internal he•rin& at lhe f1cUU)' 10- day and then be considered by • lh.rff· man board of pri:Jon staff mtmberl. "Bremer accused another lnmat~ of making homosexual advRnces and staling ii Bremer did nol receive the advancts. he \\'OUld kill him." aakS Bob Grams. aubtant public lnfonnaUon officer for lhe Jlatl: corrections drpartment. YOUR WICKER CENTER IN ORANGE COUNTY JHf NfWffJ lOOK IN WICICf• \~1 Ot ovt, lh l1 n.-W i»otd ~k In rotten is 111rt to l'llOke yovr fo,..~y roo,.., den or polio the lotk of tM IO•l'I -r/tl If/II/ flf(J,•by Paci fic Rotton ... _ • I Cllew OMln • c..lfff Tobi• tALI Ntcl utT ,, ..... $199 50 ... ...._..._ I' , 4 l'tlCf SLU ING GiOUP s ,IKI CHOW srr IAUI NICI s199so BrU!-es Purring at Lio11 Cou1itr )· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... o.i1r ~"" ...., Jtufus is roaring and hit pMde of placid playmates is now purrlng, producing a sexy symphony that must be muitc to the ears of Lion Country Safari officlals ar the Arrtcan game JftH"' ln Irvine. The tuCCellOf to fabled Fruler 11. ill malntalnl a rather low·iey love Jife, however, cootrary to hi.I: ptedectaor' who produced SI cub<. Since Llon COUntry matcb-maten: rtleaaed nit.Ive old Rufi.II amoac Frasier'• widowed Ind restl,.. 11aotaet Iii woekl qo. they bave beoolno lo- crtuincJY friendlJ . lnllmacy, 11y pme pmervt olllc:fall, hu replaced lnllmlclallon In the ,.,,. tionship bttv:Hn Rufus and hi.I: MVeo to- tended brides. Some of th<m snarled Ind swatud al him durloa !be. lnllill In> troductkm . "RufU1 ii now cohabhlna," ooo Uon Cowitry lady llld Tuooday. ''Ht'• bred 10me of the remalea,'' remarked !Aln Country 1.ooloaical Dirt<- • tor Pat QuiM, In more down-to-earth te1ma. Tbe .:raggly rtfuft-e from the defunci 'Vichlta, Kan .• munlclptil zoo still prefert prtvacy, however, w~ the urge mtrgc1 to emulate the late Frasier, "We're not puttlng any ptt11Ure on Ruf111," 11Y1 Quinn. FrasJtt't Jr..year-old rtplamnmt - that'• the equivalent of 70 human ytara -never talo>~ treedom Ctom cloee conflnemtnl unUI ht wu let 1-e •l Lian Counlly. He -·· tHctly rnjoy H "' """ .. the o....-eout. bot be'• 1um1nc. "He's btclnnlnf Jo roor a Utile bit DOW," 11)'1 QuiM, Uplalninc this b I 1ood lip lhll -la Pl)"d>olGclcally "1ullllll to hla ._1 .. uty to p "'""" !ol In llio &Joominl will> lhe glrla. Illa adjuallntnt at<m1 Indeed nt,,.,. rapid. alnco Rufllt' now ..,. mlcJl bl patall<lad In latm .... ,,...-~,. plop. pine a lifel..in1 prilon lnni.ate 11 the age of 70 Into 1 commune of )"IM.l'll women. "Eventu11tly, he's 1otn1 to walk out 1hcre -:1th a tlel'\le of ltCUrily," a•ys Quinn. • IAU ,.ttf U.t 1170.00 •109•5 ~--- IHI UllOlrlOHIU lOOK IN WICKll •TNE 111/ITllCKET• by o .a,;g,, dt,iQn 01Ufote with ttie lfl;ahl-olrf det'9n tho+ llhb wtif!e •k ker 9'°'1Pif9o .,,Incl• l"to "IO"Jr ho.le ......... •J.,.. r._... ...... ·~, .. ......... w• .. ,,. ... 5249'5 -- ' ' • , I \ t I ' I ' r ' ' ' ' f " ,, • d • ' " • I I • I I , • • t f • l M '· '· DAILY ,ILOT Death Toll R~ches600 h1 Ireland BELFAST !UPI) - A \•iolenl explosion ripped Belfasl du.ring the night and police said it was caused by an accidenlal ex· plosion in bomb factory run by the mili - tant Provisional \\'ing of the Irish Republican Arm y. The explosion k.i.111.-d three persons. bringing to 600 the death toll in sectarian violence in Ulster. Fire hljd all but charred the bodies black by the time police got to them. But there was one clue to the premature nature of lhe eiplosion -the bomb had blo"''" off the hands of one of the victim s as if he were holding it when it exploded. Police identified the vic1ims as Roinan Catholics John Donaghy, 18, Joseph (..__IN_s_H_o_RT_._· ._) ;\lcl\inncy, 19. and Patrick J\laguirc. t3. Police also said that a gunman on a n1otorcycle had tried to kill Roman Catholic Magistrate \.'lilliam Slawuon. 4&, as he was driving to work earlier today. Sta unton was hit in the neck and arin and was taken to a hospital for e111erg;m· cy surgery. e Lung Cancer Induced \\r..\sHINGTON (AP) -National Cancer lnslitute scientists said today they have been able to cause lung cancer' in rats by exposing them to the tar prod- ucts (rom five cigarettes. But lhe scientists also said "!he development of lung cancer in humans req uires tong-term exposure to cigarellc- smoke products." The NCI scientists said they have developed a new testing method wherein cigarette tar is injected in!o the animals' lungs and released gradually. They said it marked the first time they have con- sislenly induced "the same kind or Jung cancer that occurs most commonly ii1 humans." e Prudential Slapped TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) -Unless Prudential Insurance Co . of America plans to pass ou.t chips orr the old rock of ;---.... Gibraltar, or sbanrits vast financia'i em- pire with poUcyhOlders, Insurance Com- missioner 'Thomas D. 0'~1alley wants its current advertising campaign stopped. o•M'.tuey issued _a three-page order Tuesday setting a Dec. 6 hearing (or the giant insurance company to show wh y it should nOl be orderd to halt its "Own a piece of the rock'• advertisements in Florida. e Inquiry Bid Pus/tell WASHINGTON (UPJ ) -Democrats arc stepping up demands for an inqu iry into President Nixon's re-election cam- paign in the wake of reports that Republicans have secretly tried to disrupt the campaigns or Democratic presidential candidates slnre rnid·I971. Frank Mankiewicz, political director for Sen. George McGovern who even- tually out-lasted I I candidates for the DmlocraUc nomination , Tuesday night listed 10 separate acts or alleged sabotage that be said "must have come from the Republicans." Sen. Edmund S. Muskie said an alleged GOP subterfuge against his campaign two weeks before the New Hampsh ire primary "'as, If true, "not a prank. This i! a violatlon of law." lie said Nixon should respond directly to the charges. e Hughes Ua• ProteBI. WASHINGTON (AP) -Ho ward llughes' lawyers have told the Supreme Court a nine-year-0ld $145-mlllon default judgment against bis I lughes Tool Co. was inappropriate because there waa no violation of antitrust law in the case. ln part, the m0J1etary award, one ol the largest court judgments in history, re~ultcd from the refusal of the mlllionaire recluse to appear in court in February 1963. The intricate and lingering dispute betwttn Hughes and Trans World Airlines has been before the high t'Ourt before, but Tuesday's hearing marked rhe fint run airing of the case. EMPIRE STATE BUILDING ..!'..!!' '.!!.· - "4""".!'.!!·.!!· - I Uf'l T ........ tto Third Rate?--Never " New York's Empire State Building has reigned as the tallest in the world for nearly 40 years, but ne\v construttions threaten to send it to third place. However, architect Robert Jones is exploring possibil- ity of increasing its height by 11 stories to again make it supreme. Drawings left and right show proposals. ~ Nephews of Atlanta Mayor Arrested on Mi1rder Count SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) -Chatham County authorities have charged four youths, including two nephews of Atlanta ~tayor Sam Massell. with murder in the hit-and-run death of a Savannah State College student struck while he collected money for a scholarship fund . 'Ibe suspects were identified as Richard Solomons, 17, his brother, Ralph Solomons, 19, Steven Alterbaum, 17, and Julian Francis Pact Jr. of Orlando, Fla . Police said the Solomons brothers and Alterbaum were from well-to-do families in Savannah. The Solomons' mother. Mrs. Phillip Solomons, was identified as the sister of Atlanta Mayor Sam Masse/I. The fo~r were charged Jn the death of Melvin Bostick, 22-year-<lld Vietnain veteran and a freshman at the predominantly black college. Bostick was collecting for I.he scholarship fund at a busy intersection last Saturday when a car !ldJ>ped, a man grabbed the col- lection box and the vehicle pulled away, according to authorilies. Bostick was run over by a rear wheel of the car. Authorities said they had confiscated what was believed to be the hit-run car. They said it was owned by Alterbaum whose family Jives in the exclusive Habersham Woods section here. Maj. Everett Price of the Chatham County Police Department had assigned DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery Of the Dally Piiot Is guaranteed M-.v.FrM:i8'(1 It vou GO no! hlVI ~11r Pl!l>l!r trf 5;10 o.m., (Ill and '(Our c1111~ will !It brOVQM lo l'OU. ••II• lrt llk1n until 1:;10 o.m. S.1ul'Gl'f l'ld Slll'ICllY• ff VIII.I lkl "°' rec1lv1 ,.our CllOY llY t 1.m. $llllf(l1y, or I , m. ~1y, tilt ~"" I tlll>'I' will b9 br~~I 111 YOU. Celli Ir. •~en ""'Ill 10 I m. Teltphonn MOU Or1190e C-'Y Area, •• • •• , MM.ttl NOtll't-.1 H\l!llllllQIOOI llMCll lllCI W.lrnlM.... • ........... , .. IHI ''R CiefPM!lll, (.1111'1'1'1"' e1ac:11, Ian JUI" Clolatr1,., o."" Po1 .. 1, Soutfl L.iollN. L..,....,... N>ouel ... ff1•U2' 10 investigators to the case. Ralph Solomons and Pace were arrested in Atlanta where they are students at OgelUlorpe College. Bostick will be buried Friday at Lakeland, Fla., his hometown. Buses have been chartered to take students from here to the servict. Markers Return To Baby Graves DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Two COil· c~cte headstones, a young mother's "labor of love" for her infants who dled shortly after birth, will soon be back on the children·s graves in Glendale Cemetery. Tbe Des hfoines Park Board, on an 8-1 vote, granted an exctption to city }Xllicy Tuesday to allow the handmade markers to be placed on the graves of the infant children of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Frederick. The action reversed an earlier stand by the board's cemetery committee which sought to block the handmade stones it said would ttisrupt lbe "showplace" al>' pearance of the cemetery. Mrs. Cynthia Frederick, 21, labored more than 100 hours oo the ttones this summer because she aud her husband, 'l'ho is stationed with the Amry in West Germany, couJd not afford both medical expenses and commerclal markers. Dock Strike Settled HONOLULU (UPI] -'l1ie first dock strike in Hawaii in 23 years was settled Tuesday, ending two days of panic buying by islanders who anticipated Ion&, draWTHlut negotiations. Announcement tha~ the two-day strike ended followed ln- lt'nsi\'e marathon talks between tbe International Longshoremen'• n n d \\'archousemen's Union and four llawaU :itevedoring companies. Winter Weather Arrives Snow, North Winds Hit Monta11a, Dakotas McGovern Def ends His Plan-' No ·\ S~render~, CHIQ,l.GO (l!PI) -George s. McGovern loday rejeclod charges by Ropubltcan «IUcs !&at his seven-J>Olnt plan to end the Vietnam \Var was tan- tamount to a 1U1Tender but conceded that his peace. )lrovam was "ool risk fr.0." McG<mtn polnlod out lbat If the Ullilod Slates withdrew all Its fOr<el from Vlelnam 90 da)'J after hla In· augurallon, the Saigon govemmenl would be !tit with an army ol more than a mllllon men plus all the equipment that the United Slat.ea bas provided to the South Vietnamese. APPEARING ON THE Today Show (NBC), McGovern said "that is not es· actly a surrender." McGovern said be would not want to see South Vietnam come ubder a Com- munist government but added that, no o( McGovom'a policy toward tbe Jndochln• conflict wllh two new ad- ditto ... The South Dakota. senator -ror a long time con.sldered a one-Issue, (th' war) candidate -revealed he would stod his vice-president, Sargent Shriver, to Hanoi to speed the release of American prl.sonert.(1(-war and would seek to salvqe U. s .. military material. McGovem's seven-point peace plan: -lmmedlalely after laking the oath of office, he would cease the bombing, tenninate shlpmenb of military sup- pll .. : begin the withdrawal, to be com- plp.ed in 90 day4, of American forces for V~tnam, Cambodia, and Laos, and retrieval of salvageable equipment. -Notily North Vlebtam I h a t the United States expects the release or all prisoners-of-war, an accounting of the missing In action, and pledge to no longer Interfere in the internal pollUcs of Vitt· nam. '1 -Send Shriver to 1.f,anoi in an ell?ci, ~ speed the return of POWs. -After all prisoners are retarnClr; U.S. bases In Thailand would be el06\!d down and U.S. naval aaft taken out ~of lndocbina waters. . -::[. -Once the political situation is w~ ed. out by the Vieuunese, the UJY"l~ Stales would join In repairing 1lit wreckage of the war. · · :.1 -An expanded program for vetmM with the guarantee of a good job Ot' a fully-funded education. ,.. , -Amnesty, with a suggestion , ~ draft ~vaders volunteer for two years. Q.f public Service duty. . . .,. (_c_A_MP_AI_G_N_'_12_) Dlplomatle Buzz '-" ~ • '. •,!· mailer bow loog the United Slates re- mained in Indochina, eventually It would be a decision the South Vietnamese peo- ple would have to amke. "My proposal Is not rial: free -oo pro- posal Js -but there is no other Way to get out," McGovern added. He said that "we have to face the un- comfortable fact that tbe only way we can assure" the Saigon regime the government It wa nts would be to remain in rorct in 5outh Vletnam. But McGovern sa.id th.at would mean the prisoners of war would never be freed and the United States would have to pay $1 billion a month, HE AGAIN CHARGED tha t President Nixon "has never given any assurance that be would end the war" and added he did not believe that special emissary llenry Kissinger could reach a settlement with the North Vietnamese without a prior end to the bombing. • The Democratic presidential nominee, who began campaigning before dawn to- day, presented his peace proposal in a 30- mlnute prime time television program Tuesday nigh!. McGovern said "our sons have asked for jobs and we have sent them to an Asian jungle; our sons have asked for an education, and we have taught them how -to kill ; our sons have asked for a full measure of time -8.nd 50,000 of them have been lost before their time, "So let us seize the chance to lift. from our sons and ourselves the terror of war and bestow the blessings of peace." In effect, the plan was a restatement l(issinger-Red Talks Extend Into 4th Day • ·: . .. WASHINGTON (AP) -Henry !GS& inger's secret talks with the North Viel· namese entered their fOUrth day in Paris today. The surprise extension of nego\ia· tions raised diplomatic eyebrows but brought no official word of progress. President Nixon's assistant r o r national-security affai rs had b e en scheduled to return to the White House Tuesday night ·after an unprece~ented third day of talks with Communist negotiators Le Due Tho and Xuan Thuy. Instead1 Kissinger cabled NiJ:on that be and the Conununists bad ·agreed to a fourth day or talks and that he would be returning tonight. The extension .was announced by I he White House Jess than two hours before Nixon's e1ection opponent, Democratic Sen. George McGovern, outlined on na- tiona1 television his plan to end the Viet- nam war. President Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler denied that the private but highly publicized Patis negotiations were cdn· nected in any way to the election cam- paign. "None whatsoever," he told newsmen who asked about the timing. Ziegler and other officiab continued to refuse to give details -er even hints - of the substance of Kissinger's talks. "l can't draw any conclusion at :GI or discuss the talks," Ziegler said tn a variation of his earlier statement tfiat, "I'm not prepared to characterize in any way the talks that are taking plare." But Kissinger's extended stay in Paris -his 19th negotiating trip to the French capital in a three-year period -c8J&Sed diplomatic circles to buzz with s~a­ tion that hard bargaining was under' way in an effort to setUe details of a cea.~ fire and political solution. : With Kissinger in Paris for the 'first time is his chief assistant, newly-pro- moted. Gen. Alexander HaJg Jr., 'who returned a week ago from e1 tenslve tiJ:ks in Saigon with South Vietnamese Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. -..... The latest public C:Ommunist p~ demands Thieu's resignation an~ replacement of tbe Thieu government. .,Y a tripartite regime made up of the Viel Cong, neutral forces and Saigon offic\als unconnected with Thieu. Tbe United States, which publicly re- jected the plan, has insisted it would never agree to any settlement that woUld result in iln}Xlsition of a Commwtisl government in South Vietnam. · THI WORLD'S OLDEST WHISKEY PRISINIS THE WORLD'S OLDEST ..... AH, AUTUMN. AH, FOOTBALL! I BET YQU THINK THE MOST SIGNIFICANT THING THAT EVER HAPPENED 10 FOOTBALL WAS THE WEAK-SIDE SAFETY BLITZ? CLOSE, BUT WRONG. IT WAS THE TAILGATE ON THE STATION-WAGON. IT ENABLED PEOPLE 10 RELAX FROM ALL THAT ACTION WITH A MOUTH- WATERING SPREAD AND A LIGHT, SMOOTH BUSHMILLS ! I WONDER IF THEY KNEW BACK IN 16o8 THAT BY MAKING BUJIHMILLS LIGHT AND SMOOTH, Tl'IEY'wpULD BE MAKING BU8HMILLS THE IDEAL STADIUM COM~NION ! AH, BUSHMILLS. SO SMOOTH, SO LIGHT, SO I THINK I'LL MOSEY OVER 10 THE TAILGATE! ··-~ ·: • DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Solve Problems Now The Huntington Beach Humane Society and its di· rector Robert Sbarter. are sitting on a municipal hol seat. The Humane Society Is the city's official dog catch· er, but city oUlcialJ: may not renew the contract when it expires in February. Administrators charge that Sharkey's operation is unresr,onsive to the needs of the people -that is, he doesn t answer complaints quickly enough and some of his men are allegedly discourteous to the public. Clty of:(lcials also wonder wh y the revenue from the sale of dog tags has steadily declined the past three y~s. while the city's human and dog population ol>- vlously has increased. There are no complaints about the condition of the dog pound, but the charges about "lazy" service do appear somewhat justified. Perhaps, however, the staff can meet with Sharkey and iron out some of the prob- lems before a contract showdown is necessary. There was a similar, messy battle four years ago and it woufd be a shame to see it repeated. Drive-in Theater Hassle Fountain Valley seems to be unable to shake itself of the drive-in theater controversy. The Syufy theater chain seems eager to pursue every undeveloped parcel or land in the city until it gets its four-screen cinema. Meanwhile, homeowners talk of increased crime tnffic and sanitation problems they feel. would resul't wil1l_ tlie tl}eater -although none of which have been seen at tho c;aty'• present drive-in on I\rookhurst Street. .. Both sides appeu to be uneompronusmg and some- what unreasonable. So now the problem returns to the city councilmen, , who have never been enthusiastic aboul drive-in lhea.· ters but supported the origi nal proposal as an accept· able lemporary use for industrially zoned property. Now councilm en must determine iC the homeowner OP.ponents speak for the majority of Fountain Valley c1ttzens and if their opposition constitutes grounds for denying property owners the revenues they deserve from their land. It's not an enviable decis ion to have lo make. Explanation Is Needed The Huntington Beach City Council has made it somewhat clear that it is somewhat clear about where It stands on Proposition 20, the proposed Coastal Zone Conservation Act. Three \Yee.ks ago, the council voted 5 lo 2 to draft a resolution supporting the controversial ballot mea- sure. The proposition could have the practical effect of delaying major public or private developments along the co'astal strip for up to four years -possibly more. possibly less -while a regional commission and then a state commission try to come UJ> \Vith criteria for land use along the coast. . Councilman Jack Green allowed he wasn't too happy with some of the provisians o! the proposition and might a stain from voting. Then he voted with the majority. Coun an Ted Bartlett first !lashed a "no" voting light then quickly switched his voting lever W a green "yes" vote; But he now says he will vote 1100 .. on the support resolution. • It seems obvious that before taking a stand on such a controversial and far reaching tssue, the city council owes its constituents a clear and detailed explanation of how this measure will affect Huntington Beach. ' • Move over, Dick, ol' buddy!' H Sources of Confusion O ver 'ee' 'Senator's Economic Proposals Would Bring Dis.aster' ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ If a man who escapes rrom prison is called an "e9Clpee," why should not a man who deserts 1 an army be called a ''deserlee''? He Mould not because we alrelfdy have a perfectly good word to describe him : he is a "deserter." But in the newspaper stories abd popular speech of the rtear future, he mq very well be turned into a ''desertee." or course, language should change; It should grow and de- v e I o p, becoming more precise and more colorful and more flexible. But it should not grow like a cancer, where the disturbed cells over nm ttie healthy ooes. And this is pre- cisely what 15 happening with much of our language change today. THE MODERN MANIA for the "ee" ending on word! bas no rhyme and even Jess reason. A lawyer in Chlcago sends me an extract rrom a legal meeting al wh1cn the secretary n o t e d there were "100 attendees." And the lawyer quite properly asks, "If we who were at tbe meeting were 'attendees,' then who, pray, were the attenders?" In the same way, the overflow crowd at a theater jg described as "standees,'' but they are really "standers." And peo- ple who retire voluntarily should not be termed "retirees." which implies they were forcibly put oot to pasture. I 'ftllNK THE troobie springs from confusion with words loog in use, such as Dear Gloomy Gu s Fantastic! Hairnet laws will now inctude male cookS , etc., in res- taurants. I have yet to see it en- forced on waitresses in this area. -B.C. Tl!lt fMftlf9 f9ftKtl ,......... "'"""' Ml MC...-lfr tlltw of llM ............. SeM ,.,r ,.. ~ .. or.-v e... 0.llY PllOI. "employee," "trainee," and "examinee," where they are the agents acted upon by e~~yers, trainers, and examiners. But there is no comparable "esca per" who sliOWi an esca_pee OOw to Dee, or any pro- f~apal "stand~" who places people in vertical position. Another source of con£usion comes from legal terms, , where we have the ''lessee,'' the "vendee," the "trustee," and so on, with their corresponding parties to the relationship. Of course we also have, from the French reflexive verbs, such words a!I "refugee" and "absentee" and "debauchee," which sup- ply useful terms the English language iaeb. BUT ENGLISH also has at lea.st three sufflles (-er,~r. and -1st) for tbe purpose of making agent-nouns. When we make a new one whose natural meaning is the opposite (a "returnee" shouldn't be the same as a "returner," but it isl. we only further confound our concepts and muddle our communication . Let us have an end to such linguist ic abominations as ·~amputee" a n d "awardee" and "expellee." T h e upgrading, vigorous Anglo-Saxon rolk have always valued the doer more than the sayer; but ean he continue to com- mand this respect if our demotic language eventually turns him into a doeel Boys' Clubs' Great Work ' lodu1trlal Nen Revitw Nearly everyone ha!I heard of the Boys' O ubs of America . Probably few have had an opportunity to see at first-band bow this g r e a t character-building organization workJ with nearly a mlllioo boys from early grade school age lnto the teens to build a good life for youths who have lived Intimat e ly with discourq&nent and detiplir. 1be task of local Boys' Clubs is stag- Serini· As one olrlcl•l ol Boys' Clubs o1 America writes, "many of today's young people have problema o( frightening slui and comple1ily. ~ltlng U-prob- lems, dealing wUh and treatinl tbem , lakes more than bavln& 'a feellnl for boys' , .. OperotJna a Boys' Clllb today calla for a comblnltlm o1 akOil wblcll "" quln: 1podalil<d ccllqo training &""! practical upertence . . . """'" Boys Club llr'Jll1hlllons, within major cllleo, _.ill of multiple unlt.s, a m<mborthlp ... u up into Jhe lhouaands, a 111111 ol score:i ar>d budgets of a million or rnort>." . ,\ FP~ THE ll<:tiVltles of lhe Boys' Clubs "were highlighted during th<> organization's 1m annual conventk»l. Amona: other events was J.he presenlalloo of ten honor awards and srant• to especially outstllJldlng projectl ol local clubl. A descriptlcn of just one of U- tllustraua whal the Boys' Club move- ment ls doing. In thit ease, lhe Bo)"I' Club of Naabua, New Hampshire, rec'-1v- ed an •ward loT an on-Ibo-job training progrllll to employ boys in the con- struction trad<s, to help youths al,..dy convicted ol criminal offente1. So far 10 oew homes have boon built unde.-ihc projtcl'o 1Upm11ion. M .. 1 of the boY> portlctJlllllng had no further problems '!11th the law. Here la a concrete exam~ of Boyw' CIUba of Amaica in operation. ,, - -youth orpnllltlon that -. .. the Juppo<t ol the entire nation . Bt1 George Dur Gtorge: My bulband really burna me up. Wbon ,.. hove a party he can hard· r1 wait for .the ,.-to 1 .. vt. Know what he does? Takes all Iha cushions out of the chilrt and .,r., to lool< for loooe chanae gu<>ts have dropped ! And he only buys modemilllc fumlture that lilt.s pee>- pie way back IO chinge WIU. dto9! Don't YOll thlnll lhis lo lhe helpt ol gMd llJ1d dlshal1esty1 Cl.ARA Deir Clar1: Are 1"I ob)Octing on aenera l principles or be<aUJe he woo'! ll!liil the toot wtth you~ (In this buslnen ,... blv. to be careful.) • ' Reader Compares McGovern, Nixo1' To the Editor: McGovern tries to exploit oor economic ignorance. His economic proposals would bring us disaster. Fortunately common sense tells many to reject · McGove rn's deceits. McGovern implies that giant cor- poratioo.s aren't paying their fair share aLd should be taxed more. Big business should pay their fair share. But we shouldn't unduly repress the crea\oa o( jobS just to help McGovern buy votes. ln the last 10 years Bethlehem Steel's taxes averaged. $37 million a year more than their net income. PROFITS ARE the backbone of our economic 1)-'Stem. We use prolltl to: (I) Lower prices (a TV set Cost $500 In the I940's. Now we get a better set for half the price). (2) Ratse wages . (3) Create new products and jobs \about $20,000 average required for each new job). (f) Reward stockholders (who \viii pro- vide business-expansion and job-creating money if the profit is no more than on a savings account ?) (5) Pay taxes. MORE PEOPLE work now than when Nixon look office. But more people have entered the job market. McGovern's pro- posals would dampen business and hinder the creation of jobs. McGovern claims Nixon wants ex· cessive profits for business. But Sen. Proxmire (Dem., Wis.) correctly stated that business profits are sharply lower since Nixon took orfice. Why is this 7 During the inflationary Vietnam War. President Johnson greatly increased domestic spending and overstimulated the economy. When Nixon took office, we were approaching runaway Inflation (McGovern blames Nixon for this). If not controlled, thi!I innation would destroy our economic security and even- tually cause a depression -wlth lar(c- scale unemployment. NLXON FOUGrrr inflation the atand- •rd way: restrict Ole money supply. 1'hls depres.~ corporate profita. But unlike pr~lous: recessions, costs roae. So Nixon fi nally lmJJOSCd wage-price con- trols. This brought grtater ttabi11ty . McGovern u ys we should remove wage--price controls and rely on jaw boo- ing (N!Ion tried this llJ1d found it didn 't work ). We don't want 1970-71 all over again. McGovern criticiies NW>n for deficit spending. Y<I McGovern 's opeodJn« pro. pasa1t would cost at least $!20 bl111cn more. And would bring higher tuea and stroag inllotlcn. t.tcOovem ls like the anoolst who ICU a .fl.rt, !hen bl ame1 the fire deplltmtnt when !hey come to put II out. LEONARD WRIGHT lie'• for Sl'flltdt: To t~ Editor: 'l'hlol I-pill< dlnn<r for ldr. Nixon WU a -ghl .. way aa to the cilK o/ people who wW pro/ll moot U be ii .-leded. ,,.., .. rl&hl. lhe rlcb will get richer Md the poor (IOOm'. Bui doo'I tlllDt it wl11 lido a bit II llcGo""' ii deded either; lfiat•o r1&bl. the poor will 11111 be poor and lhe rlcb will .., rllbt .., ll'IU~ richer. IN A WORLD a(l9lmllly pe moil, John Schmits corns to us u • ref~ reminder that ii ii llllU poeolble for a clUien to be elttted Prtslde$ without betng the biggest II.t r In the land, " 11ptndlng the most money 1ryin1 to rtbr11inwash thf alrtady ove r-braln"K1sh. ed cnlunry .as in tht c~ of thr two fat i.-als now bus:\ly tnKIRtd In 111bblnR et1rh ( MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convty th.eir rnessages in 300 wOTds OT less. The right to condense letters to fie space or elimtnate libel is reserved. AU letters must include signature and mailing address, but names ma y be withheld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. PoetTY will not be published. other In the back to win the election. \VITll NEWCOM.ER John Schmitz as President we could be assured or several years of honest representation before the money greedles finally get to him and at- tempt to .. indoctrinate" him into a gutless wonder like Nixon , or even McGovern. A vote for Schm itz is a vot e for America. MILT BASHAM Propos ltlo11 20 To t.hc F.ditor: While driving down Paclflc C<IMt Highway in Huntington Beach recently. my family and l were shocked by a polllical billboard. The billboard said "The Beach Belongs to You -OON'T LOCK IT UP ! Vote NO oo Proposition No. 20." The provlslons of Proposition 20 have ~n incorrectly stated by OP" ponent s oC the measure before, but never In such boldl~.Jnwltin& tenns. Simply stated, Propolilion 20 Intends to limit ooaaUine development to approval by pennit through one ol alx rqlonal commllllonl. Durin1 the next three yean, while real eslll< deffiopmeot.s . would be lllblllzed, a thorough otudy could be complel<d of the enU"' Callfoml• coast. IN tm nlE commlllloo> would recommend to lhe Leglslatur< • master plao for the --~ ol the cout. The:ee reccmmendatk:m: w o u I d ln- corporale tbe .-ol the majority of CalifomiMs llJ1d not just tbe inlel'eSt.s of real estate deYeloptr1 11 ls the case 11 present The written intentkln o r l'r<lpoclLloo 20 In ..... y Implies that the ""'"" by the public to the beach will be restricted. Wil)I lhould pollli<•I advertiling be allowed t.o make auch srouly inaccuraie clalml u are currently beln& made to dofHI Propolillon !Of The Fed<ral Trade COmmiloJon ii -. down OD the """'bruotlated clalms ol ooop manufactuttrs. The lldv.nlsing dllms Oii propooflJons llftcl a ilrte portion ol the popllillloa. The outcome or -- O&Jtkm ll eerUinJy at lt"ast u Im· pona u tHe cleanlnt d Ociency ot • particular IOOP prepar1Uoo. JAlll PLAY AND ie(al m tNllnl ~DI> vilmty 1.tc:klnl: when IQ ldm1ltinlJ hnn ... -dllins lhll .... -pletoly '"' -IU! of lbe inl<nl o/ a propooftlon n. ldvmlling flnns .,. Ut<nlly "drum up" omotlonal ~ that the -'i'lnformed -·Clll r e a d 11 f mnanber In the polling booth. The DAl~Y rum editorial ll.lfl ""' olher lnfonned ....,. who hlv. .,. pt ! Id oppoalUon lO • Pl'ooolltkm 20 1hould be ab&e to let thll tuth deftllkm from the uprmtd wrilttn inWftt of t.hr pn>p09ltkln art unfafr W ahouJd bt unla wful, The apPRrmt kl1eni of thr' advertilinl l&fllCY and thflr flnlnd•i baci.cn l5 to decf'tvt tM unwary .. -owr As 1 mull of lhil dilhol1ell ..i .. rt~intt campa i... In ll!lile of lntmllons ol the propositions of provldlna C'Ol'ltlnued Ko cess to the scenic and recreational benefits o( the coastline for the majority of Californians, a nearly certain defeat is in store ror Propoe ition 20. PAUL F. WRI GHT \Vhitaker & Ba.zter. !lie public r e- lnti(111s and can1paig1t management firm referred lo by Mr. \Vright, was e:z:onera ted of charges by Ralph Na· der tha t it had disseminated falJc and m i.sleadino infonnation in itJ success· ful campaign to def eat Proposition 9 tn June. Tile Grievance Board of the Public Relations Socittv of America, Inc .• 1nvtsHgoted and rejected Na- der 's cloi~. Clem Whitaker. Jr., president of tM firm. commentt, "(In view of the e:r· oneration) It la 1igni/icant in light of current charges bl/ P"Of>011tnt.! of PropMitl011 No. 20 th.at any arid all argume11t.J i11 oppositi011 to their meas-ure ·are 'dt ceptive' and 'fraudu- le nt .' "It is significa11t h1 light of t11rtat.' b!I botl1 Stale Sf'llalor Jamt1 ftfillt and Assemblvman llvbert Morelli to sub· ;ect thi~ firm attd other oppoMnt.r of Propo61tlon No. 20 lo 11nr chamber procetdings before legU/aUvc com· m ittttl for daring to voice cmposi· tion to a ballot is1ut llttll ha~n to '"""'· "Reasonoblt men can difftr on anu i31Ut. and the public inle rtlt .wrtly itr 1tn>td when both side• ara heard. It U a disturbin u dtvelcmm.ent i11 America, r tmhti.st:ent of dicta tor111lp regimes. when legithnnte c:rltlef.11n. voiced m public ~ta temtnt.f and ad· verlWng, is thrta ftttl'rl 1nirh svpprrs· sion by elected officials.'" - Editor M f!SlflfJf! fe r c .. per s To the Editor: For Ronald Cupen. our repesenta- Uve on the Orance Oounty Boord ol Super· vllor't-. J hive lour polnta: I I An alrpott lo Camp l't!ndleton ohould be out ol lhe question unUI Southern C.tlfomla ii ablolutely com-- milted to a rapid transit l)'llem to ~ the whcHe area. Without It. whlil dot ttt? Rlbbonl ol upbllt llJ1d pollul<d air "" clrdlng Sin Oemente. La It rulity to think lhil will not """' 1boul? 21 H<gardlng 111.s .. pport for One lobbybll in Wubin&1Cn l0r I cool fatt of '75.000 • yrar. I 11y, N11T'S! Orangt County hu two .maton and le"et1l reptttmllllves In Wuhtnt1t.on plus 5evtrt1I repraient.1Uvcs ln Sacramento n>eelvlng from 30 IO fO thousand ptw: f rlnge bent'.flla and now we DHd more ~tal lvail JI Ill NOT ntE Irvine Company d<velopmenl In the whole are• M!Ulnc our ecotosJ<al backo! H f read mmctly tome tlme ·~· the t'Ol'nPIUl)' lnttndl lo build a dty of about Q0.000 M1'05I from J-:1 Toro whtre they've btt11 buUdln1 lbe lall couplf yeara. 1ma1hH! lht probltm• ~·l\kh ire uMOlvable: now multlpl~. The most JeUlble 1hlnc lo do for Southern Callfomla 11-, first a n d foremMI. to work with i"!AI d~lch for 11 super rapkl 1.ramlt 1)'11t:m AHTOINE'n't: llOETZI. ¥ere Tile• AU O•f To lbt Ed llOr If lhe ne"W1i u printtd ~ 1 trut reflec- 101 ol the mood ol lht ..... try. 1'""1 7S perre111 of the ldull populalioll Is op 11gh1 Quotes K~ Wleplua, Mal.se. -1be ....,..i.., thins 1ba1 11 <TMtlnc tenor In our u-1 dt.iel c:en ht fomd In one word -povmy.'' ' about some national problem. We 1'ive the middle clasl'I groaning about taxatliin. the elderly complaining about marpb.I living. the young mllltanll'I against the v.·ar. even the htmed silenl majority which is normally apathetic to nnythlng except their ov.11 selfis h in terests ls beginning to tx• a\anned about rlllflg prices. IN TlrE SPIRIT of public hannony, I am advancing a solution in v1rhldl everyone can take a constructive part and it will not only allevlate all these and many other problems but will actually solve most of them. All evuybody Med do IJ vote every incwnbcnt out o( ofOet. Think or It for a mommt. Jr every public official up tor reelecik>n tbiJ year. whether he's running for IOCAI dog catcher or Prtsldcnl. man or woman, Democrat or rJl1iccrn1. It would make no dif fertnct. Any name on lhe ballot JI('· compt1n led by the: wprd l11cumbent or Inc., would simply not be voted for, "'E "'OlJJJl LOSE some good men : prob.ably about I percent of todl)''!I public officials earn what u~y take rn:m the public trough. but it would be worth that to 1tl the rest out. Think of It, one slmple 1teUon. vot e every incu mbent out. II will atop tfwo present trend of govemmtnt by sped.al lnteresL'l ror thal is alienating eviuyone. GEORGE BRODERICK Cltu lde•• Seelerw To the Edilor· Jn r-Tgard lo the 0. \'. Pic:ktt letttr ~Sept. 27 1 on the checkleM aodtty, •·t would like lo stress 80fM ot her polnll of view. Even lhou&h thia 11ystem Is In ex- perimental Aq ea. it lttrlll evklrnt Ltutt Utls type of bank.in& ••ill be prevalent In the near ruture. It would appear this IYflem could eventually lead to exchanalnl of eoodl by a number wllhoul the UIO of cuh, credlt cardt, d ('. An authorized numbf'.r. regardlHI of how II would b r demonslrultd or put tnto Uk. IN nt£ PROPll t:TIC bool< of Danl<I and ftl!\'el•Uon. In tht Bible, w-t •rT Wei ot a llme Thr ranh would e.1perimn• Vtltly lncr't'ased knowltdiJ:t' l f>M~l 11:41 and peopl~ woold bf> buy1na •nd 1r.Uln& IJOki:ly by !heir own authon1.rd nun1brr Cftevtl•tion 13 171 Jt:IUI Osisl uJd thr aame gft"ll'raUoo •·ht<:h would e:a:perienre the ~lr1h or Israel as 11 natkJn (1941 1 (Lule 24 .J.11 . lhr rcocc:upatNJn ol Jeraaultm i rt67•. 1hr: ··nrw" bank!nc Q'ltan llCCf1\I to be pobuq to workl z~1 aod rurrmt ('¥t'flti are pr& future hl1U1f)·. ROY SMml !IOU HOUSTON ottANOI COAIT DAILY PILOT Rob<:'I H. Wu d, l'ablilll<r T,_,.. K•ml. £dll0r Albm W, Boru /;dltonal l'oO< - 1""'" rdlt"'1al fAP flt lfWt Dan, l'lllll _.b to lnf(lftft •NI I~ !Ju,. ........,.. by pf.,..t\1lftc ttut -it1•P""""• fllltNtJN and ~ f"fll'ftlar)' nn tnpa !'If ln\"'"'I •M •'itnfflnlM'll' • .,,. ll'"O'Vtdlftc • fM\1•1 f11•· th!-~....,km nf , .. r ...,........ opinloM. 11nd by ~ti~ 1lM dk..,rw Y1••1,-r•J11t11 uf lnl omwd ph.. ..........n 11nd 1poluwncu on toclkl fl( IN day. \Yednnday, O<:\obcr II, 111'72 • OW Wife ~ivorcing Husband "" . .,....,~ -L.AKLAND, Calif. (UPI\ -The wile of a Navy flier. America's longe!lt·held ttksoner of war in North Vietnam. is ~~Plg a divorce despite alleged Na''Y IUempts lo stop her. ~rll1\e pretty wife of Lt. Everett Al varez Jr. filed a petition for dissolution of mar- e in July 1970, but the proceedings en kept secret until this week y,•hen the p 's sister told a San Francisco IW'.WSpaper. Trio of Attractions : Tangee Alvarez, 32, had been married to her husband only eight months Y.'hen ~was shot doWTI over the Gulf <lf Tonkin irt August 1964. She told her attorneys she v.·aited for his return until she felt she could ~·a it no longer. The San Diego Zoo Tuesday announced the arrival of t b re e two- n1onth-old tiger cubs in the animal nursery at the Children's Zoo. HER LAWYEll, l\1yron To"·er of San Leandro. said the Navy tried to stop the divorce on gounds the action would badly hurt his morale and might give the North Vielnamese a lever to pry out in- formation. "It's pre1ty rough for a man sitting in prison to get a divorce notice from his wife," the attorney said. "but it's a ll\'O edged sword. She 's a yoµng woman "'ho's been waiting years for a man "·ho may never come home. I don't know any young \\'Oman who could 'vait that long before seeking the company of others." Navy Says It Didn't Jolt Citv State Wants Ruling Delay • SAN DI EGO iAP l SAN FRANCISCO IAP I - The state may ask the State Supreme Court to ease the crisis created last month \\'hen the court ruled that private construction projects must be environmentally cleared by local agencies before building permits may be issued. Atty. Gen. Eve\le J. Younger said Tuesday that he 1vas considering asking the court to delay the enforcement of its ruling because it had been so unexpected. The Sept. 21 ruling has trig· l\lysterious jolts that rattled lbe San Diego area last week are back again. This time the Na\'y says a fighter plane "'as flying at supersonic speeds 40 lo 50 miles offshore. i:l-C:.fr **'* 'Friends' Surprised .~'But after residents telephon- ed police to complain of shud· .'tiering \\'indows and cracking ' Whes Tue s day , Navy At Reaction to Ruling BRIEFS ) ~'spokesmen continued to deny that their offshore maneuvers must be responsible. Seismologists have dismiss· eel the possibility of earth- .. cjUakcs and say the jolts must be sonic booms or reverbera- tions from weapons testing carried out here by unusual \\'eather conditions. But no service or government branch has admitted flying any supersonic plahes or testing any big guns near enough to cause the shocks. • e Death b11 Drug MANHATI'AN BEACH !AP ) -A teen-age gi rl whose body was discovered on a lifeguard tow er here died of an overdose of drugs, the coroner's office says. The victim identified as April Driwn Betty Wall , 14. of Lawndale. was found by a beach walker ~tonday. A detective said there was no evidence the gi rl had been raped as police theorized in· itially . e Beol!I ht LA? LOS ANGELES (APl -An acquaintan ce of Chino escapee Ronald \Vayne Beaty says he saw Beaty in Los Angeles Tuesday driving a car with Arl7.ona license plates. Sealy escaped \asl Friday when thrtt men and a woman ambushed two u n a r m e d guards from the Chino prison ~rting the prisoner to a San Bernardino courtroom for a hearing that had been postpon- ed. One of the guards ~'as kill - ed and the other was shot and wounded. Earlier, the FBT checked out a report that Beaty and a woman were seen attempting to rent an apartment In Scottsdale, Artz. The FBI dis- counted the report. • Drilling OK'd LOS ANGELES (AP I -An attorney for Friends of r.ram- moth says the ronservation- oriented group had in mind good planning -not an end to any construction -\\'hen it went to court. The "Friends,"' led by former Olympic gold medal skier Andrea Mead Lawrence, leaped into the limelight Sept. 23 \\'hen the California Supreme Court ordered a halt to a Sierra high rise apart- ment project because an en- vironmental impact s t u d y hadn't been made. But attorney John C . hfcCarthy told a news con- ference Tuesday that instead of using common sense in pro- tecting the environment, some officials had simply halted building permits altogether. "I'm halfway expecting some county clerk to say he's not going to issue any more marriage licenses because he's not sur..? of the en- vironmental impact of the couple on the community." ~1cCarthy declared. JIE SAID he believed overreaction is • ' either hysterical or carefully design- ed to stir up .the public and distort the true significance or th e Supreme Court's opin- ion ." The importance or the decision, he said, was to WS ANl)JiLES CAPl - ~pile more than three hours of debate agalllll It, the City Council voted Tuesday to alk>W exploratory oil well drltHng near the exclusive Pacific Palbades residentiRI area. ensure "a means by \\'hich the people in the community have something to say about what happens in the rommunity." lie 'hailed the court decision on the group's suit as a landmark that should end careless land speculation and uncontrolled construction proj- ects. The ruling was needed. he said, because planning of- ficials and agencies had fallen down on the job. "GOV. REAGAN has urged there be a moratorium on the decision .. .," ~1cCarthy said. "I woold suggest that the governor build a fire under his Own office of planning and r esearc h to prepare guidelines for the preparation of environmental impact reports by planning agencies throughout the state." McCarthy said the state had failed to carry out provisions of its Environmental Quality Act -which he tenned the most sweeping in the nation - by not requiring the impact reports. "If they had done their job much of the uncertainty demonstrated by cities and counties would have been avoided," he said. "It is hard- ly falr to ask our Supreme Court to do the work of the ex- ecutive branch of our govern- ment." gered an immediate moratorium in the issuance or building permits in most large cities of the state. THE COURT ruled that en- vironmental impact studies must be done for proposed private construction projects before building permits are Wued. Until that n.iling, the requirement had been con- sidered to apply only to public projects. Younger empha-sized that he had no quarrel with the court's basic interpretation of the s t a t e Environmental Quality ACt of 1970. If he in- tervened at all, he said, he would only ask the high court to allow some time for the Legislature to clarify the law and for local governments to set up compliance procedures. In effect, Younger might ask the court to make that section or the law effective at some future date even though the act as a whole already has been in force for more than a year. YOUNGER SAID the ruling was "of historicaJ importance in protecting California's en- vironment and implementing the EnvtronmentaJ Quality Act of 1970." "It is important t o f.ecognix.e, however,'' Younger said, "the decision came sud- denly and surprised t h e building industry and the government agencies charged with preparation of t h e statements. "As a result," Younger ad· ded, "our office has now been requested by these agencies, the governor. and represen- tatives of labor and the building industry to petition the court to permit the state Legislature to add certainty to the procedures necessary in preparing the statements and to allow for a reasonable time to gear up to meet re- quirements." ----- A lfOllP colling lt3elf No Oil Inc. hat been Dahllni Qo. cldentol Peb'oleum Corp. for mtre than two y .. rs In the company'• b\d to d!'lll the 12.09 LB. 20c ... ul• OFF ! '1'! Wt S. e c1.1.t•F.r.e> ~ CAP) - 11111 the .-ti II> l'roP-30, ~ lllcct u, State Wiler Pr.ojecl tro ul!'tatty ftlH," '" author of Ufproposal .. Id Tueocfay, ate Stn. Lorry Waloll (R· H ntlngton P 1 t l< ) • and A11emblyman Calley Porior ~!).Compton) bad said In' • ....., ...i ...... rller thll -k tli•t passage or Prop. 20 could arrect future wattr deUvtrles '" Southern Calilornla. OFF!i• GOOD OCTOIEl I ITH THlU llTH • -·-----' --DAILV ,,Lor 5 •Recfnt1d.1y, OctO&t-11, 1412 Democrats Slap Reagan Tax Plan Plastic T ees Don't Ho ,ld ll_p- SAN PEDRO (AP l -s..J . $50,000 ln plastic trees and plants wbicb rim certain streets here will be niplaced with live v~-~ion - because plasfiC Isn 't •} ~le., the real thing. SACRAM&NTO (AP) -Assembly Speaker &b Moretti says Democrats may draft a competing voter initiative if Gov. Ronald Reagan•s ·attempts to tak~ his new $1 billion .tax plan to voters in a special 1974 election. In other re.action to the sweeping tax overhaul unveiled by )he Republican governor Tuesday, a Republican hailed him for "tremendous l~dership" while nonpartisan Legislatlye +oalyst A. Alan Post said be had some reservations about the plan. 11ie six tax~tling provisions of the Reagan proposal would: -Slash state lnrome taxes by at least 10 percent. · -Double the present $750 homeowners' tax exemption. -INCREASE state support or local schools by $200 million and order schools , to lower property taxq with the new funds. -Freeze property taxes at those reduced rates, with future increases ban- ned unless voters approved them. TOY WORLD ftormerty ltM TtY Hou-.1 --Give renterS special new Income tax credits. -Require a t"''O-lhlrds vote of the legislature for future tax Increases. On the revenue side, Reagan proposed: -Boosting the sale!tax to 6 cents per dollar to raise another $600 million a year. , Adding one percent to the Bank and Corporation tax, but of!settlng part of that hike with a ro!Jback in the ·business inventory tax. -Committing most of the anticipated revenue from a pending federal revenue sharing program to increased state mi~ port of local .schools. -USING AT least $250 million or an estimated $458 million .surplus in the state budget. "1 lell yoo frankl)'>if tbe governor even talks about going tO th .initiative proc- eu, then I think we ¥i"OUld'bave no other alternative but to develop and initiate our own plan -which would., be a lot more appealing -and let them both appea~ side tiy side on the ballot," M~retti said. • Los Angeles County Supervisor James ,A. Hayes told supervisors TUes<taYtbat tbe three-year..-old im· itation trees and shrubs "were not durable e.noug~ and it is time that they be replaced." Nike, Titan II Test Launche~ VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A Titan tt and Nike Aerobce were test launched down the Western test range over the Pacific Ocean early today, the Air Force said. A spokesman said a Titan II in- tercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM ) was fired off at 4:30 a.m. A minute later, a Nike Aerobee com-b~tion was launched. I 4 DAY SALE STARTS oa. 12 TOY WORLD HARBOR SHOPPING CENTf.R, COSTA MES~ 223 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA ........ 9-6 dally; Mon. and Fri. 'tll 9 545-7032 10-6 dally; ti. 'tilt; Su". 12-5 MONOPOLY LAZYDAZY 11.8.8 FISHEJl•PRICE PLAY FAMILY AIRPORr A campa.t. pkry unter for yovng knaginoa • • RUMILERX-3 °'°"'*""'·---tfk:k thtft. Ages 3 to 12' ·24•• ..... EllC'llllC OIORD ORGAN ENSllWlE 3611 Barttie's COUNTIY CAMPER Includes tent, table, 2 camp choin. luggage rode. alKI i•a~ e. ••••• ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN SUPER STAR Electric plane with a btoln - has .f flight patNma. &af. teriN not Included. ~ 911 Kenner'• SNOOPY TOOTHBRUSH A real power toothbrush de- signed just for kid1; no •lec- trlcify. Coma with 2 t00fh- bru1h91 and 2 adopters for U1e with refill bru1he1. Snoopy dog hou1• holds toothpotte ond brushes. Bot- teriet not Included. 6'' TYCOH.O. TRAIN SET 12.p.c. set on .. figure a• trock. Ttffs till unit troll\ It pulled by th· 11•• popular f~9 dletel · --on·tno<k9•• '--· ..,..__ " . ' ayM•rr.y lO"TRllL--.. l:t"TRllE~--10- 16''TllKL ••••••••• 12" VERTIBIRD POWlflM' copter <Mtfoned to of. low cNld to pi'°' ...al C'OP,!er --·--..: ton octvolfy proVkHi olr lift ond drfw. Serf• fi.,iflg ft.WI • ...... Gftd ovtdoon. .......... ""'ltduded. 911 ., .. ...., Tobie top potter'• whe•I ........ ..,bet. gaa ,.,., ..,ot.cl 3. .......... ._.... ............ • I I . . . .. . 28 DAILY PILOT H Membership Rolls Carnival Booths Filled f ecUtor'1 Nou: A cohimrt Jevoted to, FoMntoin Val· ley. lll"'lil'glon Bf a c I\. Ocean Vftw and Se al Beach Scllool Dilri:t pa.-. ent-ttachn organ#zctiO'ns wiU appeal' In .U.. DAILY PILOT <OCh tolitk. In/or· mation mtUt bt 'rtctfued bu Mr.s. CUbtrt Turnbull, 5671 Mang"4m Drive, Hunt- ington Beach by 5 p. m. Thu"fdaJI Jor publication IV edneaday.) Huntingtor CounFil PTA ~!ts. Lorin Lammen President COMING UP : Getting to Know You brunch will be hosted by the oouncil at 9:30 a.m. \Vednesday, Oct. 25, in 1lle Fisherman restaurant , l-luntington Beach. Guest speaker wlll be Dennis Mangers, pres idenl or the board of trustees of the Hun· tington Beach Union High Scho(ll District. P a r e n t s from men1ber units, prln· clpals and district superintendents are invited to attend. Tickets priced at S3 may be obtained by con· tacting Pt.1rs. Dorotha Ken- nedy at 847·f>462. Deadline for reservations is Friday. Oct. 13. " • Alie PTA I\ Don SchoUner President COIG UP : Fall Roundup ca val is scheduled Satur- da Oct. 14, from 3 to 7 p. on the school grounds. F ured will be a magic show. crazy bikes, fire engine rides and games. ltefreshments will be sold. Bushard PTO Mrs. Philip P.1lgnanelli President COMING UP: Dime-a-dip din-ner will be served at 6 p.m., Wed n es d a y , Oct. 18, preceding gene1·al meeting and open house . Edison Hi PTSA P.1rs. Ver'da llinkle President ~ REPORTS: l\1embership drive~ is in progress, according: to Mrs. Robert Sch m Id t. chairman. Executive board hosted a back-to-school con- tinental breakfast for faculty and administrfltive staff members. I Gisle r PTO Mrs. Don P.lcCallum President I I COMING UP: Carnival will take place Saturday, Oct. 14, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. nn the school g ro und s. Refreshments will be sold and game boolhs will in- clude spin-o-pr izc. fish pond. spin art, high striker and dnrt balloons. Ca rnival pro- ceeds will he used 10 purchase equipmcnl for the school's learning centers ... Preparations are Wlder way for unit participation in the Fountain Valley Days celebration. To raise funds for cooking equipment and ingredi- ents, baked goods will be ·sold during Nie blas School's back-to-school night tomorro\v. The event is sponsored by the PTO. Applying math "and read· 1ng skills through cooking are (left to rf,R:htl Craig Stinson. Dean Birdsa ll and Kenny llall. r PTO . Funds Ballooning REPORTS: Ice cream sales are conducted by the unit each school day . Harper PTA Mrs. Ala n \Vessa President COr-.1JNG UP: ti.1rs. Ro!x·rt Pcstolesi, special education resource instructor, v.• i 11 drmonstrate the motor lab at an open board mceling fomorrow al 9:30 a.m. in lhe music room. REPORTS : Volunteers ha ve cataloged 34,000 books for the schoo l library Can1 pf i r c Girls anr! Rluehirds. Local rcsid('nl; interested in learning n1orl· aboul lhcse organization~ are invited to attend. Sun View PFO !\1rs. Mark Koons President COMING UP: Tea for roonl mothers is schedu!E'CI tomor- row at 2 p.m ... Unit will sponsor a bake sale at back· to-school night Tuesday, Oct. 21. REPORTS: Sale of le<' shirts , I sweatshirts a n d i.:len· 1 tification bracelC't s hei;<ln yes terday. Proceeds will he used for unit project.~. Ta lb ert PTO Mrs. Alvin Fisher President Carnival time is being called by the Talbert PTO fron1 1:30 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26, at the school. Among the many booths planned for the event is the balloon dart game \vhich interests Scott Liddell and Mrs. Stuart Stearns, carni- val chairman. PTA handbooks have been distributed to ' all parents. according to Mrs. Donald Vandemere, first vice presi· dent. REPORTS : To the End of the Rainbow is the theme of the membership drive currently in progress. Drive wl\I con- tinue until Friday, Ocl. 20, according to Mrs. John Neal, chairman. Wardlow PTO A-1rs. Carl Dode President Land PTA Black Woman's Sensitive To Needs of Minorities l\1rs. James fergusoa President COMING UP : Youth Groups Night will be presented at unit meeting Monday, Oct. 16, at 7:30 p.nl. in the 1nulUpurposc room . Youth organizations to be represented include Brownies. Girl Scouts. Cub and Boy Scouts, Indian ~ .. laidens, Indian Gu i de ~ . COM.ING UP : Unit will hos t back-to-school nigh t at 7:30 tonight. REPORTS: More than 400 people altended the unit's potluck dinner and met tbe new principal. Son n y Morpcr ... Mrs. Richard f'~reeman , chairman, reports the membership drivf' is 1n progress. Bv i\IARGUERITE DAVIS WASHINGTON !UPI\ Being black and a woman is more of an asset than a disad- va ntage in find ing and holding an important job. according tQ one who should know. She is Barbara M. Watson. first bla ck woman to hold th<' rank of assistant secretary of state. She is head of the State Department's Bureau of Sec\lrilY and Consular-Affairs. In an interview, M i s s Wat.9on said she has never fell she works under a double pre- j'"""". "A woman can bring to any type 'of work, and especially to govermnent. a kind 0 r semitlvity which Is valuable in dealing with problems . particularly h u m a n pro- ·blems/' she said . "It gives yoti • broader view. "Being black is another asset. since you are able to bring another point or viPY.', because you are in a minority as well." Expertise in a chosen field is an advantage -and here . roo. she is fortunate. !l 2r grandfather was a magistrate in Jamaica, her father served in the New York City municipal court, .and her brother is ooe of nine federal Customs Court Judges. Miss Watson also brought plenty of personal experience to her State Department posi- tion, whose main functions are to provide-passports. visas and consular services to travelers. She was an assistant cor- poration counsel in New York, then was appointed executive director of the city's Com· mission to the United Nations. ASST. SECRETARY 81rbar1 Watson In that jolt, she dea\t with pro- blems of international law. •·particularly with respect to the settlement 1.he U.N. in New York." She says s has n o J)<lrticular ambl on for a judicial eppointment. She was named to her present position by President Nixon and will serve at the pleasure of the \Vhite House. "J have no thoi«bt of what I will do wben I leave here. I like my work." Miss Watson likes to spen; occasional weekenW! iJ1 Ntw York City where she has a IO-room apartment 'on Rlverside Drive. \Vhile New York is big and bustli", she said, it has an undertone of excitement. But she also enjoys Washington. She has a house only six blocks from the State Depart-. ment. with a patio where • ·I\ spring and winter camlllas ~"ii "'··2· bk>om, and a rambler rose . • • .. , mixed with pink and white ~~ ·:;.! clemantis cover a stockade ~ ~ ' fence. -·~ Azaleas and tulips decorate lf;·. the small garden behind the ' house, and tJrO tubs or eeraniums bk>om profu~ly. "I've Io u n d Wa•inglon very, very friendly." she J.1id . ''The pace 1~ more lei11Ur°f.ly than in New York .. and the.re's a gml deal more greener~ In garden1 that people are proud or. And k>ts of social parties.'' lier work lg tl~"'1Tling. lltt day begins rlY. at 7 a.m. tometlmes. and OC· caslonally conUnues until after I p.m. Ml• WatJon wkes 1 aood many speeches •7'•Y from WuhlJ11ton, Ind Wind> her WOfk IChedule heavy. She aald ahe NII had Uttle trouble In deaUns with reKnt· ment aga.in.'L a wtman ex- ecutive. pi1rtlcul1rly rrom men Wrapped Up in Sd es who are used to ma~ bouts "You \Md but you don't t.lld, If )'Oil m,,. what I mean. Thlt taU. dO or-.1 ia great fun once )'Oil ~ )low Ill do it " l Gl<ler School croundl wUI be t;an• formed Into • eunl•al 1etUn1 for the PTO's 10 1.m.-4 p.m . fund -ra!J. in& event Sll\Jrday, Ort. 14. WtlJ> ped up In lfcltet Illes .re !ltft lo right) MJll . Ellena , David M<Clll· um and Cdlleen Knillln. • • I SAVE TO 77%0N designer . woolen fabrics Various weights running from perfect light weight crepes to medium weight novellies nnd heavy weight suitings and. coatings: Select 1rom lop fashion colors that have been designer selected. SPECIAL PRICES FOR ONE WEEK ONLY • • Pblyester Knits VALUES TO $10.00 Jicquards I Solids 11'1 Various Nov•""' $ 389 SI'""•• $ 359 601ncheaw4de YD. S<t ~-60· WidPi YD. tor Bk>use• CnU<t1en'!li wcl'I• and oreat llnJnos P"1mt1ntnl Pres• Burllnglon's Best Tricot 100% Nylon Sold 1l•whora 1111.29 98¢ YO. 4!1 lnc:hff 'MO. Perteet Linoerle Fitbrica Many colott $2.25 Value $115 Reg. Price $1 .61 YO .• ..._ _ _:109~ 1nct1" ..,.,d•:_ __ ~, Washable Woolens 54 "' wide s3s9 R...i. P rice $4.51 YO. Corduroy $175 I Th ick 'n $195 No -Wale YO. Thin YO. $2.59 Value 45" wide Sl.00 Volue Reg. Price S.2.25 Reg. Price $2.59 Sewing ~ts-Values to $16.99 R...i. $9.J 799 R09.110.tl$899 . . .. "'\ ' , ...... ~ ":;;:-"' 94 HUNTiflt6TOflt CIMTll. H"""'9eTOM MACH ......,,.,.,, "' ••""'•• .. ,. ,,w.,.1 10 eo . '"° ,_.. ~•'11"'•• •iot ·•~M: S..4.,1 tJito . •1to lt4 ·11t4 " . , • Life Worth Living For Somebody 1 Else DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is for all the people wbo arc thinkin g of kill- ing themselves -or have already tried and railed. I am sick of reading about you. I don't care how wretched your life is or how miserable you feel. If you have no in· terest in living for yourse.lf. then live for somebody else. Live for the people v.·ho loved life and died too young. Live for the men who died in a senseless war 10.000 miles from home in some damned rice paddy. Live ror !hose 58.000 v.•ho were killed in highway accidents. Every ooe of them v.·ould like to be ahvc today. I once thought of suicide because I had :.i crushing disappointment. 1 was sure life wasn't worth living. After some serious soul searching I decided I had no right to kill mysclr. I didn't give myself life and I had no right to put an end to it. So I flushed the 50 sleeping pills down the toilet and went to work teaching retarded children. 1 will never think of suicide again. These kids need me. I now know wha t I'm here ror. -Rye, N.Y. DEAR RYE: You'\'e told your story to mWlons of people. I'm sure you <'Ott- neeJ,ed with many. !\1y thanks and con- gratulation for laying it on the line. For so meooe out there -today 's co lumn may v.·ell be the most important th.Ing yoo've read in your entire life. And isn't THAT 1 priceless word? Life. DEAR AN~ LANDERS: Since in· \'Cstigatlons seem to be in vogue these days I v.•ish som eone \j,'OUld take :-i look at \~·hat is happening 1n govem1nc11t hospi1.a ls these days. Thousands of dolla rs are squandered by personnel who are entertaining themae.lves with red bot clandestine affairs. For example: Thrte years ago a married physician started lo ntrt "'ilh an unmarried nurse in her 30s. Everyone in the hospital knew what WM going on. The nune was rewarded by receiving three promotions in the past l'A'O years. Toe physician is now ooe of the top mucky-mucks . The government pays these two creeps a total or $70,tXK> a year. W~w for a fact that at least 25 per- cent their time is spent in a locked roo . ~1ultlply it by what is going on in other hospitals and you bavt some neat total. Talk about clipping the taxpayers, this takes the cake. -TEED OFF IN MEMPHIS. DEAR TEED: I don't think Ralph Nader wut break bis neck rushing lo in· vestlgate this Jltutkln. It's a human problem that exists wherever memMrs of the opopslte stxes work-and play. In fact. most people'& playing starts at work. Ann Landers discusses teenage drink- ing -its myths. its realities. LA.iarn the l<icls by reading, "Booie :ind You -Fur Teenagers Only" by Aon Landers. Srnd 35 cent s in coin and a long. st~n1pcid. ~elf· :iddrcssed envelope in care of lhc DAI LY I'l l.OT. MRS. GERRIE . ' . ' ... Wtdntsday, Octobtr 11 , 1Q72 DAILY PILOT 21: Vo~s Exchanged in Fall Rites GERRIE-HARRINGTON Vtcki·. Frances Harrington became the bride of William Scott Gerrie in ceren1onies conducted by the Rev. Or. Philip G. Murray In the Com- munity C h u r r. h Congrega- tional, Corona del ~1ar. The bride is the dau{thler of Mn, Florence Krola k of Newport Beach and John D. Ilarrington of Las Vegns. Her husband 's parents are !\tr. and Mrs. \Yilliam S. Gerrie of Newport Beach. Maid of honor w a s Miss Denise Muntean and brides- maids were the Misses Kathy Campbell, Bonnie Randall and Danielle Muntean. Dean Ger· rie served as best man and ushers were Anthony Paley, fo'redrick De Cloedt and Danny Moore. Flower girl was Rhonda Gerrie and ring bearer \\'as Steven Krolak. After hon~ymooning in the British Co lumbi a. the newlyweds will reside in Newport Beach. DA VIS-REESE First United Methodist Church, Costa Mesa was the selting £or the nuptials of Kay Rebecca Reese and Roger Paul Davis. The Rev. Dr. Roger •1. Muebner directed the VO \\' ex- change for the daughter of J\1r. :ind t<.1rs. \V. Cully Reese of Tustin and the son or Mr. and ~1rs. Hugh B. Davis o! Irvine. Mn. Steve Maxey was the ma1ron or booor, a n d bridesmaids were the ~1isses Beth Hermanson, 1'1onica Lan· dau and Pam McKenzie . Serving as best man was Maxey, and ushers were Pat Pattison, Richard Davis and 'fom Spear. Following a honeymoon in the Bay Area, the newlyweds will make their home in Costa Mesa. B o t h are graduates of Corona del Mar High Schoul and att ended Orange Coast College. OWEN-WOOTON ~1rs. Ruth Wooton of Costa Mesa and Ralph Luzerne Owen of Berkeley were mar- Milestone Observed tn civic and church organiza- tions. They were married in ried during garde n ceremonlei at her home. The Rev. Loret FUckingtr of the U n i t } Church. Newport Be•ch of· ficiated. Attendants were Mr. and Mr!. Richard Elgenheer, Mrs. Leland Wooton , Annt Elgenheer, Robert Coons anC J!erman Diehl. The new Mrs. Owen at tended Marshall University Huntington, W. Va. and th1 National College cl Education 1-ler husband attended Comer Uni\'ersity. The newlyweds will mak1 their home in El Cerrito. A hundred friends and relatives attended the SOth . \ved.ding anniversary reception in the Peek Family Colonial ·rerrace Room , Westminster, hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Bert Inglewood and he retired after ----------- 32 years as a blacksmith in Midway City. · Hyde for her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Meinhardt of Newport Beach. Long-time residents of Southern California, t h e Meinhardt! have been active DANCE STUDENTS ! • Leotonh • TJthtl e Ballet, Top • Top Skoes e Sticrtl11t Ol'tflts n HAYE UNUSUAL HALLOWEEN ACCESSORIES TopN'Toe Bo11tiq11e 444 W. 19th St •• CostG MHO (lelwMn H1r11« & 111 ... porti Tues.-Sat. lO:J0-6 645·•544 The Hydes and their four children from Pagosa Springs, Colo .. welcomed other out-of- towners, Mrs. Rosina Bennett and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ben- nett, all of Eugene, Ore., and Mr. and Mrs. Har ry Meinhardt of Delta, Utah. THE NEW LOOK! is at ... matA"j WIGS & Beauty Salon 250-D, E. 17tlrl St. Cod• MGICI -541°3446 11 Hlltqru S1111cire rrzQc g1eigh HUNTINGTON HAlllOUll CHIUSTMAS WORKSHOP DAILY lrert Clirhtttlol C•ft I• &clnhoe J•11•ol'd Topestrirtt. Our1 Alon• "PAK-mES" THE UNUSUAL IN CHRISTMAS C1ndles & Y1rn1 ONLY 1!> OAYS UNTIL lnsflh ,.... .......... ShOpJliwg Ceft!lt HUNTINGTON ll!ACH 16"1 ALGONQUIN •I WAllNli.111 ... nn Persian RUGS Parties, Talks Head Agendas PFAFF A 11+~1nlic H.ind /lt1d1, lmport•d -N•"' •nd vinl•91 t•l•clion1. SC Juniors THIS WEEK ONLY KASHAN South Coasl Juniors of Foun· lai n \'alley v.·iJI p.:irtlcipate in b 4'6" x 7'1 " R09. $550 . KERMAN s375 I Persl1n Rug1 & flnport1 2165 E. COAST HWY. (Al Hell1fnlP1I CORONA DEL MAR • 67.S-7340 I I OF COSTA MESA 11 de lightful budget salon wh ere bea11tif 11I hair styles begin. PRICE LIST MONDAY THRU THURSD ... Y FRIDAY, SATUR0-''1', SUNDAY PR ICES SLIGHTLY HI GHER Shampoo end Set -···· ............................ $2.50 Permanent Wave .................... 7.50 Tint ... _ ...... ....... . ......... 5.50 Bleach Touch-up .......... 10.50 Frosting ......................... 14.00 Semi Permanent Lashes -·-.. ·· _ 10.00 haircut s •t.50 I 1!•1•• CMr .... l'er Uftl 14 .. rl 1695 Irvine Ave. -Costa Mesa Corner of E11t 17th St.-Above La Cave Re1t1urant 645-1050 548-9986 Op.n 7 Days a WHk and Most E veni"91 Ere-tor" UdAllUICA'11 the Artesia-Cerritos Woman's Club's Walk for Mankind Saturday, Ort. 1-1. nt !lie Los Cerri tus ~hopping re 11 t c r . Money raised \\'ill .supp •rt Projec t Ccnccrn ::ind li1e Helpline Youth Coun.~cli u~ 1n the A1i esia-Ccrnto .; nr :::1 Night Owls Newport Beach Night Owls of the Hoot 'n Holler Roost will host tbe San Diego group Sunday Oct. 15, at 2 p.m. in the Bethel Towers Social Hall, Costa Mesa. Hadassah Mr. and Mrs. Ga r y Resoick's Fountain Va 11 e y home will be the setting for the next meeting of Harbor Hadassah at 8 p.m. Tuesday , Oct. 17. Service A membership tea is plan- ned far 8 p.m. ~1onday. Oct. 16, in the Villa Park home of Mrs. Bob Everakes for the Jewish Family Service of Orange County. DTEP.Y AIR S1EP -8ERNAROO -ICIMEL EDWAROS -GERllEIUCH - PF FLYERS ·-U.S. ICEOS Dine• WHr ov 01"..ic1n ,.,..,.,'° Oancl 51\on C.rnctht• lllMI l1r Cllllllf"ln 225 I. 17th St. Cost• 111-• Mf.2771 ~ children unlimited H•ir Styli"9 l Fl111 App•••I HARllOR VIEW CENTER SAN JOA9UIN HILU lD, 1 Blk:• 1•11 .. MKA"hl.lr tn .. r F••llb1 bl•M) 644-GIJI • "Take the • !"'!!!!"""!!!~~~ • Irvine Women Loading a richer life 1hrough h,\'pnosis v.·ill be the subject of S. II . Stanley. PhD when he :iddrcSS<!S the Irvine \\'01ncn's Club at 7.30 p.m. ·rucsday. Oct Ji. in the University Commun ity A s s oc i a I l o n Clu bhouse_ Beta Alpha Pi i\;lrs. Tom Prough will host the 8 p.m. Tuesday. Oct . 17. meeting of Beta Alpha Pi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi in her Garden Grove home. Pledge ritual will be conferred on new members. HB Juniors Provisional me1nbcrs of the lluntington Beach J u n i o r Women were "kidnaped" for the annual orientation coffee and breakfast. Symposium An open symposium for all women in the Southwestern Region will be hosted by the DeparUnent or \Y o m e n ' s Ministries of the Garden Grove Community Church. Themed Roads to Radiant Living, the day-long event will begin with a Continental breakfast in the gardens or the church. Topics and speakers on the morning panel discussion \\•iH be Dr. \Villiam S. Banowsky , president of P e pperdin e University, Living Creeli vely Throojft Accomplishment on Campus : Harry Dyk stra Jr .. president or the Union Realty Mortgage Co.. C h i c a g o , Hannony in the Executive Suite, and Robert L. Vernon, a captain in the Los Angeles Police Department. Insights on Establishment and Youth. Fashions by Georgia Bullock \\•ilh be s!'lown during a lunc heon. Harbor Key Provisionals of ~!arbor Key, a support group of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. will be honored during an orientation luncheon at noon Tuesday, Oct. 17, in the r\c wport Beach home of Mrs, Theodore Maravice. '\. __, Prior to the lunClle o n honorees will be introduced to procedures or the thrift shop and then will tour the center where they will meet the staff. Provisionals are the Mmes. Bruce Denton, L. T. Ary, Phillip G. Fluharty, Robert Wieser, Raymond Cu 11 y , Robert Batum, Nick Pastor, S. W. Ferber, Steven Donahoe, C. B. Howell , M. G. Dana, Richard Hunsaker, William Coulter, A. Donald Goedeke, John R. Young. Thomas Jones a nd Santis L. Bobo. We "Ready" Rentals e CLEANING e PAINTING e PLUMBING e WALL WASHING e CAllPET 5NAMPOOING e WINDOW WASH IHG :':_.ca:! ··-........... ' ~ i SewillCJ Center & Needlecraft 1548 Adams in Costa Mesa 979.7944 West of Harbor Blvd. across from Coco's Restayrant D•ily, 10 -6; Sunday, 12 • S SEE THE WORLD·FAllOUS PUSH-BUTTON ·~~!,~· TEN PUSH BUTTONS M•ke every type of stretch stitch by pushing them alone or in combination. C r e at e over 1,800 different pattltf'ns with combination of push buttons. THE MATCHMAKER Matches pla id~ and checks perfectly everyt ime. It's actu- ally a second foot that feeds the fabric from the-top si- mult1neously with the bottom feed , •• Great for ling erie • , . Only from Pfaff. VISIT OUR COMPLETE SAVE UP TO 100% flnanclnt •vellabl• NEEDLECRAFT Dept. RENTAL READIER 645-4820 e STITCHDY e IMll.ODERY e NllDLErotNT • IUG MAllNG RUG CANVAS 569 W. 19th St. Cost1 Meu WITH PURCHASE OF RUG YARN OR OFF ON ALL MERCHANDISE IN THE STORE F•ll IMSTIUCTIONS OFRI GOOD 4 DAYS ONLY-HURRY IN! FAMILY GROUPS •• Just 9Sc for Alli A BIG 8 x 10 INCH NATURAL COLOR PORTRAll FRI •• SAT. OCT. 13 °14 Hours: 10 to 5 95c .... '" YOUNGLAND Harbor Center 2300 Harbor • Costa Mesa Off S,.CNI M • fitMl1.,, Pteete, II cwtt H-.lllllf e•d Motil"' C ....... ',..,.~,~--r~·~:~'.1l .zv~:~~~~ I ) I I y I • • \ \- 1 I '· l Orange f;oa~t EDITION VOL. 65, NO. 285, 5 SECTIONS, M PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCl;OBER II, 1972 ~ Park Sites Corporation Paperwork By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. °"" ~Net Sl8ff Newport Beach councilmen Monday lllibl told City Manager Robert L. Wynn to ·prepare the paperwor~ for the crea- tion· of a non-profit corporation to finance the acquisition and development of more thAn ~ ~oien' park sites to C05t more than f:.l mlllloo. :Bui they unexpectedly cut down the ajze of the controversial view park on Cliff. Drive In Newport Heights, saying the7, weot to buy only two ol the eight . vacant lots there. '1be city bu lleld up cionstiuctloo oo all eight Iota owned by earl Arthofer for months · beCause of pressure .from Newport -Helihts ,.sldeula to pmerve the panoramic view from their homes eod lrof1I the road, Itself. Over the oppooitton of Councilman earl Kymla, "bo t!P!'<"'nts the area, they pared , '400,000 off the propoeed ae> quisition cost of the view park. That Jen $95,000 for acquisition eod $5,000 for development ol two lots. -r .enc· . --• Newport Specialist Son of Missing • ..=) Doctor Hopeful -~ _ Newport Beach physician who Y!n\Sbed eight days ago after leaving O;.inge County Airport in his .private ~ts llill-1DiaSin& today, but his soo is ~unMI he is alive. l)i'. George Peck, 59, a prominent all!i'gy 1peclalist wbo lives in Newport ~b and maintains offlcea in tM l>U<h cilil-" llld .Anaheim, ~ on a r'liul\d · trip flight last ' Tue 1 d a y i-Orange O>unty to Palm Springs anol _Big Bear. 1he· Callfornts. Civil Air !'alrOI . began aeiirehh~ last weet.-'fnr the mlaaing Cessoa 17Z In the rugged San llemardlno eod San Goqooio mountain ....., but NiRendesl the searcb Sunday because. ol adverse weather. ·' Charles Good, a CAP spoJtMfnan in West Co-said they plan-lcJ relllllle the seacb Fdday. • .Doug! .. Peck, 21, Dr. Peck's IOll, said hi. father had flown the private airplane [or jhe past three years as a bobby. "'"l' prefer to look on the bright aide," si..ld' Peck who is a fi!xtbook manager for a Los Angeles publishing firm. ''They have searched the roughest parts of the area alroady -where 1Dmebody would plow into the side of a tnOuntaln. Now they will be con- ct>ntratin( on the valleys and the f11tlands. '!Jfy father is in excellent health and be.ljsed to take me camping all the time, Jf~ntagon Papers Figure Cancels OCC, UC I Talks 'i\nthony Russo Jr., a key figure in the Pibtagnn Papen incident, bu canceled thlJ week's n>eakina: engagementa at UC lrrvlne and.. ofange Coast COilege. Russo, who was to have appeared at UC lrvlne today and at Orange Coast Colle&e Thursday, left four Copenhagen Tueoday for a cl•illan inquiry Into the U,S. 0 war crbnea" ln Indoddnl. His talb have been roacbeduled to noon Oct. 17 at UCI and to noon Oct. 11 It OCC. Ruuo was given court permllllion Fri- day to leave for the Dani.ab capital, a few weeks before he and Daniel Ellabcrg are expectec\ to go on trial in the Pentagon P~•_c!fae· · ~ Pentagon Papers trial remains uild<r a court-<>rdered postponement. The delll)I was ordered "11et> de[eane a~ lomeY• asked for I Supreme Court bear·. Ing' on allqed Ulegaf wir.tapp!ni. so he's able to take care of himself out,of doors. I figure be probably bad to aet down somewhere eod they'll find him 9000,,. Peet said.. The IWcli ii being. conducted out of Brack>ll 'fl<kl JDJ.a·Verne. · - Good aald Peet tool: off from Orange County at about 7 p.m. on what be dellC£ll>eil aa "a found robin trip to Palm ~·an•'~ liacl: to 0r-..,. Coun!J:" Tit. ' u Joaecl .. a. lllreo bOur @Igbl. Iii CAP ~said. .,,..... . •. Good IOid,..-tlill -...r. -will . of the tenllory 00 Ibo -rugbt. "We kno" the aircraft eod ranee eapabllitlell.and we know what the weather was on Tbeaday, ao we'll bue our seircb on thole factor1 1" he said. Newport Ends Marina park Site Leases The publlc will get to use Marinapark for a perk. Newport Beach COlDlcllmen M o n d 1 y night ,.fused to eztend the 1 ..... on the 59 trailer sites in the city~wned trailer park on Balboa PenJnsula. 1be·acUon,·1n effect, endorsed a Parks, Beaches eod R«:reation Comml!aion plan for a neJghborhood park an the f.M-acre site between 11th eod 18th Streets. Residenb of the park bad pleaded for at least 1 ~year eltenlion al their ieues, which expire In June, 1974, IO they would expire In 1971, when the Ameri- can Legion lease on a neighboring struc- ture nms out. '1be •,i< to terminate the priV1te uae of public bayfront property passed 5-2. Only Vice Mayor Howard ilogera and Cooncthnan Paul Rycke!I opposed the ac- tion. • Councllmea eart..x,,rua. eod Richard Croul argued ' llroq)y In SUPl'CJ'I of the park proposal. "I've been to Sacramento llWIJ times on sborelloe leglalallon matters," Croul old. "There have been ....,. pntty Ad tenna thrown at us. They aa1 local eov· emment II not respon1lble to conterV• tlon. "They 111 they CM't cmtrol accea to tbe beacha bee•-local eovernment ls under too mucll ~ (lrom loc11 (Seo LIWEI, I'll' II 'lbeji also amended the proposed changed. cooncilmen approved th e "shopping lilt" of parks sites given them following: the city Parks, Beaches and Recreation, --ClUf Drive, $95,000 for acquisition; Commission,· eli.m.i.naling $100,000 for a $5,000 for development. bicycle trail In West Newport, but adding -Cliff Drive church property, $151),000 · $600,000 for acquisition of the eight-acre for acquisition : $76,000 fOI' development. Pacific Electric righl-<>f-way in Weit -Balboa Island -church property, Newport now OWDfld, by the state.. $185,000 acqui sltioa; $63,000 development. '1be price tag on the list still totals -Marinapark, 1299,000 ror-develop- aboot IU million, divided almost evenly ment. between acquisition eod development -5eminiuk Slew (Well Newport) costs. $100,000 acquisition; $00,000 development. While stressing the list still may be 1.. • -:...COmmunity Youth center (Corona e ano1 Dream f:ome True: del Mar) $50,000 acquisition ; 1100,000 development. - Wynn noted that the lt:tUer may be one of the projects that may need an ad- justment in cost after lrvlne C«npany o[flclU Monday told councilmen the company, not the state, °""' the Filth Avenue lreeway.:right«-way. A comp&QY 1pokesman said the land devdopment firm had agreed to wllhllold the property from developaient when the Pacific C'Alast Froeway wu plamied, but that it never sold the! property, aa some city n!flclala apparenUy believed. .Matthew Collins, 5, a klndergartner at Eastblulf School, takes turn at fire hose with the help of Newport Beach fireman Bob Sprenger as classmates await their chance to-play fireman. Newport fire- men vWted the school Monday for prcJl'lm in con- necUon with National Fire PrevenUon Week. Kids are n .. er too young to start learning about fire pre- vention, say firefighters. Newport Adopts Policy Environment Impact Statement Hearings Scheduled Newport Beach city councilmen lt1o~ day night adopted an interim en- vironmental impocl statement (EIS) policy and declared there will be public hearings on all statements that are sub- mitted. Councilmen said they'll conduct the bearing& on the EIS pttpared for proj- ect. that already have rteeived plannin1 commls&ion 1pproval, but, in the future , the pleonen will get the chort of revlew- lni them. Jmrnedilt<ly after acloptlng the policy. councllmell 1llo delayed aeverwl major mjects -the lrvlne Company'• Promontory Point Apartment. and Jumlne O'eek Town-and llonafd SCbolJ'• Venalllet on lhe 81 u f f 1 Apartmeoll. 11nong othen -unw they &et Impact state111<11ts on them. But Ibey appro•ed both tentative and final lracl mapa for the Robert H. Gnnt Condominium project planned ldj1<ent to the Venallle1 development in Wut Newport even though Ibey Wll'tll'I happy with the EIS sutmltted by the divoloper. '"!'here'• 1 lot of opinion bm that'• not bacUcl up with any f>ctl," IOid eo. .. cllman Paul Ryc:kolf. Ml)'OI' llaoald A. Mcinnis and aeveral --eeboedthatopt-. But Grant olllctala ~ f1lr 1t lull cooditJonal IJlll<'0\'11. WMll to start fillni the _. -'< the county oo "1let> the EIS II approyed they can get bulldlnc ponnlbt befora the November election. 'Ibey said Ibey fear that Proposition 20. the coutal tnltladvt. wtll -and a id that wwld delay their tll...Ut proje<I II lull 1).11 montha. Councilmen ICbedulod the bearl111 on Iii.-Ind EU-. may 10 <11 trial taW this month. Ban on Booze Oppo~ TWO LINES TURN , {NTO BUSY ONES -. • Two llnn ol ldftrtlllnf-loti of "buay Mneaf' OD the pbone. That's the ltory of this DAILY Pllhf daailled od: 'II VW BDTLll Good oond, p. ..,.. .... -II 11>ld the ear to the llnt caller, but the ~-kopt """8lnl w. <:nq," the odyttlller reported. u ,.. ... looklnl for ittat klod ol ICl!on, dial the "action llne" at 6U-M1I, direct line to DAILY Pn.oT CtwUied Advertillng Dopt. • Harbor Commissioners Seek Repeal of Ordinance BJ CAND&CZ PIWISON .... ...,PW .... Ora111• County Horbon. Beadlel and Parka Comm!-Tltadly r<COn>- mandad " !bat .. ordinance .,.ohlbllln& -ID COW111 remotion 1rt11 ba '"C*1-anor lbe -WU taken, com-mlallonm wavered a UIUe eod 1•oted Joi to not lei Iha l!olnl ol SUpon1lon know •hat 111e1'd -unUI Ibey droll an allernaUft law. nit D1W onllnance. lo be dlttuR Id M lbe Nov. H -1nc. wa1 lllQflled Ill Commlll-,,..... O'Keefe to read that ao -will drlnl. in a ramaUoo ll'Olwlllndeedarestrl<tttotlnarua prolll-by ... --and cnmmilstoa. O"Keele, llllo a Sao ClfnMnt. dty ro•mcl11111n, lletorlbed theM potential part llld beach 11 ... u "dry" or "kid- die" areas. Coinmlsllon chairman MarUo Uub , Down 01'..Rat Hole DAVEllTRY, ...,... (\IPl) oa-.,.·, ,_ ~ - ~ Ila --., ... wtll ncdvt $! ... to boy 0-lo raplaca I pair bl 1111 lul -wlilo .......... .,.. ..... • • N.Y. Stoeks N TEN CENTS Begins Wynn said after the meelllll bl would have to check that out. -Corona Hi&hlands Jot, $50,000 IC• quisltlon: 112,000 development. -Bayside Drive park, tM,000 develop. ment. -San Joaquin Hills Park. ltll2,0lll development. -Buffalo Hills tennil oouris .. p,oee deveiopment. -Existing OUt Drive park, 154.llOll development. -PE riflllt-ol-way, MQ0,000 fcw » quislllon, lt00,000 for developmenL U.S. Planes Catch Blame For Damage SAIGON (AP) -U.S. ftflll.,.. 11- lacked Hanoi today eod Iba P'rencb IOid their diplomatic misllon WU huvlly damaged and their chld envoy wwnded. In response to I 1"mlcll protA!lt the U.S. Command said initial opanllonal repor11 Indicated that Navy platm bit military targets l~ to l mllea -U. mission building•. It pn>mlaad aa m. vesttg1Unn of a Fnacb cotapla1nt. "A numbtr of enemy ~ mlulln WON llrad II the II.I. alnnlt," the statement said. -11o U.S. afrcraft Wer'e lost, eod the IUl'face-ICHlr nlalJes, alt<r mllllnJ the 1lmaft, could -ln>- pactOd .. Ult ......... .. A .,te••n ..... tM •' m1at mfllil . flw Ille llJl(ll I e Got Iha deiiructfon of the mfeeW ......... . WU caw.I b)' tht HortlJ Vlt«IMC- m.Jallea. The command r •ta 1 t d • hawover, to rule out Ille poalbllny ol U.S. bombs ping l1tra7, u Im ltlp- pened bef .... and lllttlna Ibo -compound. Secretary of Def<nae MeMn R. Loin! today conceded In W1lllfn&lon that American bcrtnbl may haft llnlclt the 1"mlcll dlpbMUc -,llal lliil U.&. air -qllnJt liorth v-w1ll -even u privata -&alb &o on In Pllril. (SN story, P111 4) On the -ol pftllmUy ._u. Laird said, bl ........ , -poalt!""1 whether the cllmqo -aused by• lauflx bomb drop or by ll«tb Vlei- -antlaim'al< weapons lalllnC badt on the dl)o, All<ed at • new• -...... W be thought It wlM to bomb c1-to 1llnol wblle peace talkl wero In a dollcato llqe, !be ~ replled: "W• ril -the 1t1t ol upowa durinl thla period. '11>1 Pl nl lenl llal stated thil ........ a1 -fllld ... will -to ltrtb mllltary ta,..u Ill Nor1.b VSttnaau. •• Lain! -. u bl bu ... -.1 occulonl. that the U.S. ~ llrlb at only mUltary tarsets eod Gel 1t "downtown Hanoi." Today's ta,..u. bl aolod, IDtf!Mled a roUroad manballnc yard 11111 trm..tirp. ment point i-. mo. fnm the P'nndl diplomatic -llt aolled -"llCnllbnl military larpll.. At Illa Whlto -· ,.._ ~ lletllAHOl, ..... 11 Oraa1e ......... ~ -,,...,., -blCllt at .. --la .. Ill. 1lai laod ....... wUI bl la the -Ill ......... the •t l' .... I.owl toelllii - INlll•B 'l'Olt4Y 1"1N: ltWw Cc : 111, TJw. aiu-. ka u...- W. ~ tritJt • tttlc:A o/ llou limo """"'' ~Uo111 Up u.. ltr. • s.. i~ Pogc II. ....._ ' =--1: =---: =~. _...,_ .• -:: ..... - ... I •n..: --- • -.J =-. --' ~-~" ::,. :•:. .,,,..... = . -----. - ,. - . ... . ... 01.JLY PILOT N Wtdnf'\day, Oc:tobar 11, 1112 pact Aides Hired Environment Statements Get Board Nudge By JACK BROBACK Of tM billy ,.IMI '"If An interim procedure lor handling Environmental Impact Statements (EfSJ was adopted Tuesday by the Orange Countv Board of Super\•lsors in an eftort to cle~r a log jam or building projects in unincorporated areall. At the same time the board voted 4-1 , despitr vigorous opposition f r o m Supervisor David L. Baker, to approve the addit ion of eight new members to the County Planning Department staff to process the statements as quickly as possible. The EIS controversy emerged Jast month" hen the state Su preme Court rul- ed that the Legislature's Environmental Qualitv Act of 1970 applied to private as well aS public projects. (Related stories. Page 5). If a development is found to be en- \1ironmrn1ally "significant" it must be subjected to review by the county Plan- ning Commisi.son, supervisors noted. After J. lengthy discussion, board mem- lx>rs voted to hire the eigh1 r.ew people : transfer the funds to pay them, and in· structed County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas lo explore the long range implications of the Supreme Court dec ision . The motion called for a report back to the board by Nov. 7. Baker charged, in reference to the hir- in6 of the eight staff members at a cost of $68.000 Iha!, "v•e are becoming so blinded by the bureaucratic process that v.·e are losing sight oI the goal.·• The supervisor continued. "We are being asked to rush into something which has not ~n properly analyzed. It needs study by the county administ ration and by presonnel." Baker had reacted to a request by Richard Ramella, wt.-heads the county's Ger.era! Planning Program, for lhe ad- ditional personnel. Ramella said it had taken five full lime people M·orlting e.x:clusivf'Jy oo r:1s reports on public projects during the past seven months to clear 140 reports. Bakers aid this mean s lhal, ··i1 lakes From Pagel HANOI ... Ronald L. Ziegler said infonnation available does not establish that It was an American bomb whJch caused the damage and injuries. Ziegler said, however. thilt the State Department wtll 00 expressing regret to the French through diplomaUc channels over the in- cident. Responding lo questions, Ziegler said he was not aware of any comrollllicalion between French President Georges Pom- pidou and President Nixon ca the in- cident, but said J>e President bas been receiving information from the National Stturity Council and other U.S. sources. "We regret any personal Injury or damage caused in the area of the French delegation building during the air strikes and the North Vietnamese firing on the U.S. aircraft," th':! U.S. Command said in Saigon. In Paris, Pompidou after a Cabinet meeting called the bombing ' ' a deplorable act." 1be French protest was handed to U.S. Ambassador Arthur K. Watson. A French 1ovmm.ent gpoktsman said lhe chief of the misskl1 in tbe Nortb Vietnamese capital. Delegate-GtneraJ Pierre Suslui, ·was ··very seriously ..ifl· jured." \Vhile his injuries were oot fatal, Susini suffqed from lo~ of blood and shock, the spok~sman added. Three other diplomats a11d t h c mis.•lon's French secretaries "'er c unhurt , but four Vietnamese cmployes were missing. First lo comment In Saigon on the bombing was Gen. John W. Vogt, deputy commander of the U.S. Command and (.h.lf( of the 7th Air Force . He promised an investlgaUon. o•ANGE COAST H DAILY PILOT 'Ille: or..,,. CO.t DAILY PILOT, Mitt lilttlclt ... ~ ._. ....... ",~" " "'*'"""" ll'I' tN °'"""" c...t ,....,,,..,,, ~. s..,.. ,..,,.. ollllMt •r• "'*""'"'• MOond•" thf'OuOll •rldoly. fOr C-.• Mae, N-t ll•Kh, l'Wfol111910ft ll....,rJ:-i.111 Vtll ...... UIJVM 1MoCA. 1,...,lllltlSM!lilt'M(lr. ...:1 Stn C..,,...,1tl JHI JllM C.pitfr#lf A tlrl91• 1"W9itwwlf ..UllM k -.-1~ S.111rN.,_ •NI ~J'I.. f!w ~I .. W!ll!t plaftl ho •! .UO Wl"lt l•Y '"'"'• a.a. MeM, C• Ptwnl.t, n.it. •ot..rf N. W1M ,.,......,.,......,...,_ J•e:lt a.. C!lriey ,,_ ,.,..""". ""' 0...-1 ""*"'"' ThOM•t K.M'i'I ·-1'.M •• A. Mwphi11• ~111111 ... l-'•fer tl:rl .. ~ IMcn ('fry l dflor ...,.., .... 0..... lll1 N.w,.n ... ,".,., ,,....; .u....,. ,,o .... ,., .. ""' --..... -... -.... -' u.-._., m ,.,_f:Jt--..., ...... llWJl't 1"'5 ~ ............ ... a.-._,.. .. ~ ... T<11fst '"" MMU1 l'WcaCS 5 1••1111 .... ~ i:I..i ,,,.,, fivt p<OPI• one full day lo analJW an Im- pact statement. If this ls so, the department's procedures should be ln- vestigat.ed." Before Baker attacked the planning staff request. Floyd McLellan, COWltY director of building and safety, said some $70 million in private l1uilding projects \Vere being held up pending clearing of EIS reports. ''We need guidelines now," he said. "We can't continue to hold up this many vrojects." "\Vhy are you holding them up?" asked Bai.er. "Because lht" planning department mllll rule ... the .. ~w lmpocl bt:fore we can luue a t, that's lbe lnw," replied the bulld chief. McLellan •aid tho f70 mlllloo backlog included 48 commerclll buildings, a dozen tract maps and $'7 .S million v.·orth of single family homes. .,lf the grading had been done we aP'. prove them lmmedieitely," he stated. "If not, we mult determine if the en- vironment is affected and, if we so determine, we must ltnd them to plan- ning (or a decWon. This takes time and v.·e must speed the process If the building industry iD the county ls not to grind to a haJt." * * * * * * Irvine Council Adopts 'Si1nple' Impact Report A simple. six-question environmental impa ct report form which deve~pers can complete with yes or no answers was adopted by Irvine City Councilmen Tues- day night. The simplified form . urged by Coun- cilman Henry Quigley. will serve to meet the mandates or the state Supreme Court and allow the city to approve develop- ment providing builders complete it prior to the issuance of a building pennit. The unanimous action indica tes coun- ci lmen in Irvine fav or minimum en· vironmental regulations be applied to developers at least unti l the city staff prepares more precise guidelines to . in· terpret the city's stance on the confusing high court decision. Henry Quigley observed that in reality there is no building freeze in Irvine, since developers might file impact reports and meet the terms of the court ruling. Questions about the intent of the ruling may be clarified in the city's adoption of guidelines after further staff study. Key legal points made by City Attorney James Erickson regarding those gui delines were: -Adoption of a conservation element of lhe city general plan might obviate the need for the impact statements. anyway. -It may or may not be legal for the ci- ty to hold up approval 06 a building permit for rea90n or an impact statement From Page 1 \ BOOZE ... cou nty-leased harbor restaurants are breaking the law. Commlssioner Frank Robinson, the most Bdamant in arguing against the "hypocritical and unenforceable Jaw," couJdn't 6Wallow wailing for an aJternative ordinance. Robinson wanted only a complete repeal like that in effect on state prop- erty. "Has the world co me apart on state beaches," he asked. The commission's action, if it is a~ proved by the Board of Supervisors, would apply to Sunset Beach, Aliso l>cach in South Laguna, Sall Creek, Dana Point Harbor and the unincorporated area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Reach. 11 would al.9o apply lo Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley (where the golf course clubhouse ms gran~ a liqµor permit ). University Park in l rvine and O'Neill Park in El '!oro. Irvine Park IM!Ar Tustin has deed restrictions against im· bi bing. The commissioners reall y began back· J..edaling on legalizing Ubation when It arbor, Beaches and Parks Director Ken Sampson said he couldn't take the repeal \'Ole to the supervisors with full support unless be had an alternative with him . The repeal vote camP. d e s p i t e Sampson's comment that 20 letters Jn op- posit ion to it, Including one from the Orange County Sherill 's department. had been received . The meeting was not v.·ell attended. Only two women, Betty ~leckel of South L:iguna. and P.1rs. Arthur Kaiarlan of NewpQrt Beach spoke a11:alnst the action. Both Mrs. Heckel and Mrs. Kazarlon cited the dangers the repeal might create lor families and ch ildren at the bea(!h. Commissioner Baldwln agreed, u ying lhllt "there ought to be one plati!I where ~·ou don't h11ve lo put up with it (drunkenness)." hobinson aald lhdt there art laws that lnke cm of dlsorderlv conduct and ad· ded the old saw, "You can't Jeglslale morality." u~ab said while he could suppart 1n l'a!ling ol the enllre prohibition, he dtdn'I \\"ant to "open up a Paodora'g box of wild orl{lt!l on I h~ htnchts and In porks." Yes vo1ea on the rtpeRI in addlUon to Robinson and O'Keefe were com· mlJSi<lntrs C. C. "Jack" Woolley, Verne l\laple and Donald Fo1. Grads of 1941, 1943 Join llarbor Reunion Newport ltarbor High School graduates or 1941 and 1943 will join the 30th an. nlver11ry reu nion of lhe class of JM2 on Nov. JI. BoJlll>nlng et f p.m .. all three '""'' wtll m<el for cocllllll~ a dinlltr at 7,311 p.m. Gd a darw;e at I p.m. at tbl Balboa 1'1'11~ The bend wUI be Alutll Hlll'a Band It>! drfft W111 ~ oemH«mal. Tlc!toto Wiii be fl.JO ptr -Ind ~ can be Diido by oooloc:Uo1 the reunion committee 11 P.O. Bo> 2011, Costa Mesa. .. showing the development will hann the envirooment. -Impact statements could be a basis for delaying city approvals of zonlng, tent ative tract maps and conditional use permits, Wt oot finaJ tract maps or building permits. -Requirements that developers submit impact statements at the zoning ap- plication stage is legal and ma y be preferable to waiting unUJ the _last minute -lhe issuance of the permit lo build. On the latter point. Richard Reese. lr\•ine Company planning director. urged councilmen to apply the EIS requirement at the zoning level. Reese urged the city to adopt guidtlines as soon as possible since they would be helpful to the company which is preparing proposals to be brought to the city. "The concept of environmental impact statements is a good one," Reese said. "It is a wa y to document information that we take into account when we plan a project." Councilmen contimJed to erempt as .. trivial" certain projects. Among these are patios and their covers, home ad- ditions, interior renovations, commercial and industrial buildinas and apartment or residential tracts which are already rough graded or approved for grading. Two Defendants In Murder Case Marry in Court A jangling of jail keys will have to take the place of wedding bells but murder trial defendants Bert Lebhar and Teresa Jo strange couldn't havF cared Jess to- day. Lebhar. 43. was scheduled to leave the men's jail about noon and Ptfiss Strange. 24, was to leave the women's jail at about the same time. Both were to be escorted by Sherifrs deputies all the waly to the chambers of a municipal court judtite who preferred not to be identified as the jurist who led two accused killers In the recital of their marriage vows. There will bo no honeymoon for the Lebbars. But they will, as a •pecial wed- ding gift from Orange Co,unty, be allowed to spend some time with the baby bom to ~1iss Strange during one of the most con· troversial trials in Superior Court history . The couple unsuccessfully asked lor permission to marry before the triaJ started. The ir repe3ted request was denied lwice "'hile !he trial was in pro g-ress. Both defendants fired their lawyers two weeks a1to In the middle of a furor in v.•tuch the district attorney's office was accused of using their Infant son as a le\'er to force a guilty plea frc m the ac-cused CQUple. They are accused of the killing of San- ta Ana secretary Janet Louise Sum- merlln whose burned and be;llc n body M·as round Dec. 23, 1969 out!llde a Garden Grovf! church. The couple was gh,en nf!w lawyers and they went aheJtd with the.ir plarui to plead ~ullty to reduet<t charges . They are ~htduled to n1ake that plea Oct. 20 before Judge Ronald Ctookshank. f'romPageJ LEASES .. residents} lo O!)('n up areas such u lh .... " Cronl cited 1tnt'"'lde pr~ures f o r con~tline mana gement leglslatJon a n d didn 't have to mcnUon Proposltkln 20, the conslnl initiative, Oil the NOYfm~t ballot. K~-mla clll'd NewpoN Tomorrow, th e city'!l o"TI poHcy plan ror Its new muter plnn nnd other 1tudies calling for more pubHc acce,ss. Rogers and Ryc koff argued that l h e Income from the traller rental& the next two ,..,. would holp pay ruture part development cost.9. • Ill Son Strangled TOKYO (AP I -A ro~ 711-yttN>ld fUllllllllh 111'1ll&led his "1Qllrobl1 IU ~­ Yl!IMld IOO bedC>e be could llOI beer to a« him l1lna htlplea In bed, pollce toPor1ed today. No chargta lllvt been nl· ed •Jain.st U10 father. Toldcbl Toboe. -' . ' BlkeforTtc0 Elinor D av is of Warrenton, N.C .. takes her pet raccoon · Rachel for a bicycle spin on her shoulders. The six·rnonth· old coon was a gift fr om her fellow em ployes. Niguel Burglary Sack Contained 'Oean' Contents LOS ANGELES -A burlap sack found in the vicinity of Sea Island Drive in Laguna Niguel July 24 contained $1.3 million in securities allegedly stolen from United Calllornia Bani: Monarch Bay branch in the March burglary. The worth of the bondS was made by a soun:e close lo tbe FBI which bas been Wtlrking lbe $5 million·.burglary case. Earlier estimates released by the Orange County She!iff's office at the time the sack was found placed tbe worth of the securities at only $100,000. (See related story Page 3). , The saclt and 11.s contents are •>peeled lo be entered as evidence late today in the trial of three Ohio men ~ed with the crime. · The securities the source aaid, were run through a washing machine to remove fingerprints before they were discarded in the heavy brush on the hillside near the street end. He spe ... '111ated thieves discarded the loot because it would have been difflcu1t to sell them to.another party. The recovered property bas been trac- ed, the · llOUrce added, to several safety deposit boxes rifled during the March 24- 26 weekend breakin by a team of highly experienced thieves. After punching a hole in the bank's roof and blnsting their way into the vault, the burglars broke Into 4~ of the individual boxes seizing cash, jewels, rare coins and other valuables <lwned by the arnuent patrons in the Laguna Niguel, Monarch Bay, Three Arch Bay and Laguna Beach areas. LawS\llts amounting to more than $26 million have been filed agalnst United California Bank and the Oreo Alarm Company in v.Jke of the massive burglary. The suit alleges negligence on the part or those companies . The sulUJ: are now pending in Orange County Superior Court. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES FALL JEWELRY TRENDS Tb.ere'• a claaalc revival ln Fall jewelry styling for 1972, for today'• woman ts gelltng the clolhH she wants and love! to wear. There are wide choices for the woman of the 70'1. She can choose a alrnple treatment ol gold, a tra- dition laden dlamond tn~emblt, a tailored look th.ot mixts 1...-ory with gold or • lacy effect lhat makes diamond• ..Oect aparkllng mem· orlea. '[ PerlOllallzed jewelry ol. elegant good tute hH never been more acc .. 1lble. Wbe111er II'• diamonds, rubles, emeralds, sapbbh...,, io!d, 1Uver or platinum, t0day'1 woman Is f'rff to ust her Olf11 cre1Uve imal!lnallon to enbaooe ber own partlcular beauty. ~ But best of au, she hH aec to . ~ . . . . • • 604a1 Notic~ ' Newport to Give . • • Trailer Warning Newport Beach CO<U!Cilmen MQQCfay night said they'll gtve ownera of the several rundown trailer parks in the,city -and the residenls of rundown trailers in them -60 days to "make repain or face condemnation." Councilmen followed a 1taff rec.'Onl-- mendaUon and the urgings of Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis, who said, "Give them 60 days to abate their nuisance, bring them up to code or move out." The prtmary ~et will be S..dy's Deluxe Trailer Park, • 2912 W. Coast Highway. A resident ot ·that park ap- peared before C0W1cilmen two weeks ago and told of living cood.ltions there. . However, Joseph A. CarupoJo was back Tuesday night trying to undo some of the things he bad done. He admitted be had been overwhelmed by the reaction and didn't like the thought that he may actually lose his home as a result of his e11rlier plea for action to get city codes enforced. "I don't want to move out," he said, "I Plane 'Hero' Sues Pan Am Over Threats By TO~! BARI.EV 01 Ille Ollty Pllet ltlfl A fonner Marine who shot and killed a hijacker three months ago -and today lives in fear 0£ what he predicts is cer· lain reprisal by the dead manJs friends and relative has sued Pan American \\"orld Airways for Sl .2 million. William ff_ Mills claims in the Orange County Superior Court action filed Tues· day that the airlines action is releasing his name to the riss against his wishu exposed him to revenge of the dead hijacker's next o kin . He states in the lawsuit that the dead nlan's brother is one of several Viet- namese relatives who are currently anx· ious· to learn the whereabouts in Orange County of Mills, his wife, Josephine and the couple's two children. 'Mills claims in the actJon that-he shot and killed hijacker N111 Yen Thl-blnh Ju- ly 2 on ~the ipeclflc instructioru, of the Boeing 747 capllin. He states that Capt Eugene Vaughn summoned him to the aircraft's cabin shortly after the htjacker w~ lh• crew dlttn1 !bi $oo FrlllCi.CO .,-Ul(on flight that he bad a bomb with him and would de""18te the de-U tho pilot did not follow his Instructions. lo,.Ji)' <!be plane to HanoL Mills said the captain returned the .357 Magnum pistol taken from hlzn before the aircraft took off and told him to use it when he got the appropriate slgnaL Mills states that the C(aptain then pull- ed the hijacker away from the stewardess he waa holding as a hostage, wrestled him lo lhe JroWld and then !old Mills : "kill the ... " The ex-Marine states he did exactly that. But he blames the airline for subse- quent actions that have , he said, cost him his savings and forced him to move several times including his most recent move to Orange County. Mills said it was clearly understood at the time of the l11cident thal the airline would not reveaJ the identity of the man who shot lbe Vietnamese hijacker. Mills stat.el that the dead man was a 11romlnent member of a Vietnamese antl· war movement and that many of lb! members have sworn to revenge bis aeath. He states that be had been warned on man yoccasions that he, his wife and two cblldttn will be put lo death by the organization. It ro.kes the right kind of money don't want to move out from what could : be restored,'' : He said he thought places llk.e Siudy'!l : provide a "service to Ne~-Beaclj." : "'lbe people who ~"~ate IYve to : live 10me plac:e, "' do tile <iooU In all tbe · l'!Staurants," said the upholJterer. : "We're not In the same league wilh : Linda Isle," he said, "bot there are a : number of people who want to try lO irn-: prove conditions." · : "Our whole city Is In your debt f:or ' bringina: thi! matter to our attention,;; ... lhe microphone. ' : Cooncllmen agre<d lo give them their c:han<e, ordering buildlng inspecton lo''· fan out across the city, fmd the maj~~ violations at au 12 tra,iler parks ·. ii\ Newport Beach, tell the peopJe what to do to fix them up and make iure ft•i' done two mouths after the inspection. "' ... . ... 2 More Inmates ::~ ,. Flee at Chino; ·.: .. No One Injured ·~- , •.1· CHJNO (AP) -Two lnmales at ~: California lmtltulioo 10< Men e.ocapeji;: Tuesday night, just four days after "a: guard was killed in another escaPe~;! authorities said today. *::! AdminJstrative assistant Earl M~ said James E. McCraw, 25, ~ Heiri<; Mclnnb said as Campolo stepped (~ Rivera, 30, both of Lot Angeles, broke,J.. window in tho dining ball wbero tbq · were working, squeer.ed through, a(Kt. scaled a 12-foot wall . He said no one WaS · injured. •: Muss said Rivera bad been at the tft.' stltut.ion less than week. Rivera was coo.. victed ol drug charges; Mc<Zaw ..o;· jailed on a secon<klegree burglary ~ vi ct ion. · Last Friday, Ronald Wayne Beaty-- escaped when three men and a wornatL ambushed guards transporting him. 'l11e~ unarmed guards were shackled and sbOt. · A slatewide manhunt .lias been unde1• way for Beaty. "' '' ~' Guard.! transporting pri..,..... ""° is511ed weapons following Friday'• klllil!rlJ · Poliee Jail Man;:· ''•·'' Fi.:ut Out He's _'::: ' "H Escaped Patient ·"·' II man arr.sted wbile staggering atiil\t· tho .u.et lay passed out in the ~· Mesa City Jall drunk 1anlt for 10 bopi?' Tuesday ,_before lawmen waiting for ~· lO sober up learned be was an esca~. tuberculosis patient. ' Jailers bad been waiting until the 46- year-old man was sober enough to ~k oo lhe drunk in public charge w~ notmed he bad walked away from Loi!{ Beacb Veterans Hospital. "-;., He was Immediately taken in Oral!~<' County · Medical center by ambulano.t'· and admitted lo an Isolation ward wrtll; he could he returned lo the Long Beai:\r, VA facility. ..~.:; Police were ~le to detennfne ff·:~ is an active carrier of the lung dJse~ but U10 drunk tank was scrubbed ~ with disinfectant ~ a precaution. " Officer Richard Bowman arrested t!le; TB patient at 8 a.m. Tuesday ln the 19,91) block of Harbor Boulevard and an ~-­ quaintanc:e who suspected where ho WD· called the jail at 6 p.m. to reveal bis CO!k: dition. . ~. investigators said be was extremely Ht!' toxicated but no charges will be filed ' under the circumstances. ·• · ·. .. . -. . . . to loo~-your best. •.,: ~ r•. . . •. ............ ..,. ... ., ........... '-""' .. ..... ,... .......... . ... ,,.,,,., .......,, ... . ........ 14 •• , .. .... ..-.. c:.-.... ..... •1 1111 ..... , ...... .... .. , ................. . ..... c-...... ... ............ ,,,, ... , ........ .........,. J.C. .JJump~riej Jervp/el'IJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONYtHllNT RIMS IANKAMllfCAID-MAml CHAlSI 11 YI.A~ tN THI IAMI LOCATION ,,_.()Ht '41·1401 -· i ,, "~ ... . · ... ,···~ " I-·,o ... •• ~.:{_ ,., · . . , ':" •• .. ·: . " . " '· . -.-.. a world of ldeu I~ her loo dependtnt jeweler. who Is com- pletely free to opernle 81 he wbbet In helplng her. r..---------------------' j ' • s c If call ma "d H ,• \ --=----=-· --=.---,,.-_-__ ----~= • DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I For a Cultural Center The Irvine Company last week formally announced It will donate land for the site of a cultural center In Newport Beach. Tho land of course, will be in Newport Center, perhaps even 'the very ground that the Irvine Company had tried to sell the city for a civic center last year. That plan fell through when voters scuttled a $6.9 million bond issue. Supporters of the cultural complex vow there will be no such roadblocks with their pro1ect. tinder the direction of the Newport Harbor Foun· datlon which is sort of a coalition of fine arts organlza· tioDJ· bi the city the announcement by Irvine Company President Wlllia'm R. Mason was accompanied by the kickoff of a fund-raising drive to build the center. Alan c. Stoneman, president of th~ f~undation, didn't. say bow much money he expects it will cost to get the ambitious project built. But it will be 'a lo~ well Into the millions, before such things as a music center, a theater and a museum are standing there. But it is a project worthy of Newport Beach and !ls people. It is up to the people now to show they sup- port the project by contributing toward il Student Bill of Rights Newport·Mesa school trustees have taken the first step toward bringing studenio Into the fabric of' the general citizenry. . Jn giving preliminary approval to a Student Bill of Rights last week, they have 8hown a desire lo at least begin closing any gap between students and the rest of the working public. For years, students have bad only those rights Sources of Confusion Over 'ee' Dear Gloomy Gus hesitantly granted by administrators. Now, under this new policy, they have virtually all the rights they would have as any citizen doing any job--assembly, redress of grievances and others. The policy Is an outgrowth of a state l.A!glslature action requiring school districts to draft basic freedom of expression statements for their students. A year's work by a committee of students, teachers and administrators yielded the policy which faces final approval by the board next Tuesday. · According to Supt. John Nicoll, each school on every level will be able to expand the policy to fit it to the individual situation. The Student Bill of Rights is a progressive step in the right direction. Now it is up to school administra- tors, teachers and students alike to make it work. It would be a shame for such a policy to become a crowbar for rebellious elements on campus who would warp its meaning to get their own way. It would be equally shameful for the policy to be \Vatered down by unfounded criticism or neglect. Way to Depopulate? Councilman Paul Ryckoff, retired the past few years, has opened a travel agency on Via Lido. RyckoU says he went back to work because he likes to stay active. ' It couldn't be that the leading anti·development and anli·growth figure In town has figured this is as good a way to get the population out of town as any, could it? Even he laughingly admits he bas some qualms, putting people on all those pollution-making airplanes. Move over, Dick, ol' buddy!' N 'Senator's Econmnic Proposals Would Bring Disaster' . r ~ Reader Compares McGovern, Nixoq To the Edit~r: ; ) cess to the SCi!nic and recreational development proj~ threatened by ·i McGovern tries to exploit our economic ( benefits of the coastllne for the majority new r«.>quired environmental Im p aft lgr.orance. His economic proposals would MAILBOX of Callfomlans, a nearly certain defeat statement. .:f bring us disaster. Fortunately common i.s in st.ore for Proposition 20. According lo press reports . the Irvl:ne sense tells many to reject McGovern's PAUL F. \\'RIGHT Company is asking ror a deHnition of }I.Wt ' . • ~YDNEY J.HARBI~ Newport Beach's county super- visor, tbe Lido Bandido, was muy rapido at .' trying to extract from his mouth two very big feeto. . -D.B. deceits. \Vhitak.er & Baxter. !lie pi1blif re· what a view is . !lard to belie,·c, l~n·t It, McGovern implies that giant cor· latiom and campaign management rrom a company ""hich ha5 sold millions t. 't , their f . share Letters from readers are welcome. finn referred to by !rfr. WrinJit, was of dollars or view land? 1r a man who escapes from prison is called an ".escapee," why sOOukt not a man who deserts an ilrmy be called a "desertee"? He sOOuld not because we already have a perfectly good word to describe ltlm: he b: a "deserter." But in the newspaper -am popular speech of the near futuN!1 he may very well bi turned ioto a "desertee." or cooise, language should change; tt ohould grow and de- v e Io p, becoming more j>reclse and more colorful and more flexlble. But It should not grow Uke a cancer, where the disturbed cell!: over run the healthy ooes. And thb Is pre- cisely what la lappesilng with much of our Iqua1e change today. THE MODERN MANIA for the "ee" ending on words bu no rhyme and even less reasoo. A lawyer In Chicago ....is me an e-xtract from a legal meeUng at wtueh tl'!e secretary n o t e d there were "100 attebdeel." And tbe lawyer quite properly asb, "ll we who were at the meeting were 'attendees,' then who, pray, were the attenders?" In the same way, the overflow crowd at a theater is described as "standees," but they are really "standers." And peo- ple who retire voluntarily !Jhould not be temled "retirees," which implles they were forcibly put out to pasture. t THINK mE trouble springs from confusion with words bll in use, such as 1llls '""'" "'*" ,........ ""'"' "" ......., ........ -......... ,,_. "' ..... N OtlMIY .... DlllY Plllt. "employee,'' "trainee," and "e:raminee," where they are the agents acted upon by employers, trainers, and examiners. But there is no ~parable ''escaper" who ~•111 "":,how to flee, or any pr<> f~oi\iil 07,i " who places peoPte In v~rt!A:1I poo!Uoo. Another source o[ confusion comes from legal terms, where we have the "lessee," the "veodee," the "trustee," and so on, with their con-espooding parties to the relatlomblp. Of couroe we a.bo have, from tbe French reflexive verbs, such worda as ''refugee" and "absentee" and "debauchee," whlch 111p- ply useful terms the English language lacks. BUT ENGLISH also has at least three suffixes (~r,-or, and ·Lil) for the purpose of making asent-ooUnJ. When we make a new one whose natural meaning is the opposite (a "returnee" shouldn't be the same as a "returner," but lt ls), we ooly fUrther confound our cooctpta and muddle our communication. Let·µs have an end to such linguistic abominations as "amputee" and "awardee" and "expellee." The upgrading, vigorous Anclo-Sa:roo folk have always valued the doer more than the sayer; but can he con'Unue to com- mand this respect. if our demotic language eventually turns hlm into a doee! Boys' Clubs' Great Work llldulllrlll Newt lleYkw Nearly everyone has heard o( the Boys' Ocbs of America. Probably few have had an opportunity to aee al fifst..hand how this g r e a t tharacter-bulltUng organization works with nearly a million • boys from early grade school age into the teens to build a good life for youths who have lived lntlrnate1y wtlh dtscouragement and despair. Tho tuk or local Bo)'ll' Club3 Is stag· gerlng. A> one olflclal of Boya· Club3 of Amcrk:a wrilea, "many of today's yoWlg people have problems of rrlgbtenlng '"" and comptwty. Recopllzlng th<Se protJ. '""'· dealing lritb and 1reat1nc them. takts more than ha•(lnc 'a feelinC for boya' ••• ()pentlnl • Bo711 Club today calls ror 1 comblnltloo ol llkilla which ,. qui... opecllltzod colteco tralnlac •nd proctical ..perteaoe • . • 110111e Bo)'I' Club oqaalutlonl, within major dtlel, ccnstll ol multiple unlta, 1 meml>mblp wtU up Into the tbou11ndl, 1 11111 ol scores and budgtts or a million or more.'' A FEW OF THE aclivttiel of the Boya' Cluba wtre highlighted during the organitation's tm anoual convention. AlllOlli other eventa ,,.. the preaentaUon of ten bono< awarda and .,..i. to espec:Jally ootstandlntl projecll o1 local clubl. A description ol juol one ol ~ tllustntea what the Boya' Club move- ment 'ls doing. In thll Cite, Ibo Boyi• Club of Nuhua, New lllmpolllre, roc:oh'· ed u award for 1t1 OIHbo-Job trtlnlllc procrllD to employ bo)'I In Ibo ...,. atructlCll Irides. to help ,,,.... 11Yudy convicted of crimlnll otr1111t1. So rar 10 n<w bomea bave ...., built under the project's supentslon. MOii of the boys portlclpotJnc bod oo further probJems with the law. Here II a cooc:nte ewnple o1 Boys' C1u1>t o1 Amerlcl In opontlaft. It lhowt one youth orpnlWJ<n that delerv .. !be lupporl ol the "'tire llltloo. Bt1 George . Deir G<cr&•: Illy buoband rully buml mo up. Wben we have a PlrlY he can &ard- ty "''t for the Jll"lll to leaYe. Kmw what bo doea! Tal:ea 111 the cusldonl out o1 the chain and lof11 to loolt ror 1-cllanp ,_, have droppod t And he only bu}• modemlatlc fllrolture that Ul la pee>- plo way ba<k llO clw1&• WILL drop! Don' )'OU think ll1ll b the ~ ol tP'ted and -y! CLARA Deir Clara: Are 1"' olljt<llng on 1......i prlndplet or bocluJe he wm't ll!lUt the Joot with youl (ln this bullneu you have to bo cartful.) ' pora ions aren paymg a1r N-ali" ••-'ters should convey their -v 1r t-•,ne .. ,,·11 ••nd rep-·ntat•ves to ar.d should be taxed more. Big business u••" 0 ....... exonerated of charges by Ralph Na· '· " ""' '";yo,;, -~"d the' f . bar But messages in 300 words or less. The der that it had di.'11eminated false and our home on Bay Cliff Cin:le ln ltarbor .ul\NI PIO' 1t air s e. we right to condeme Letters to fit space \'iew Ridge, Corona del Mar, we will he ahouldn't unduJY repress the creators of 01 elimtnate libel is reserved. AU misleading information in it3 1uccess· jobs J·ust to belp McGovern i... .. , v .... -. In ''"l campai'"l to cUfeat PT"opolition 9 happy lo escort them lo the view side of ,,...~ ..,....., letter1 mUJt include si gnature and 1.. ti"' .......t All th ·11 then have to the I.~ toy··-n-thlehem Steel's •·-es in June. Tile Grievance Board. of the our Pror-··Y· ey wi -· o;;c;u .. uo:: Nlolo mailing address, but names may be dot t the ' I t .... their -s aver••ed -millioo a y1ar -·re thin · · Public Relotioti& Societ..· of America, o ge 1r answer .s o ~ ~,,~ -.... ""' withheld on request if sufficient ~v ft,, ti ·11 be ---•~ their net ~--·. Inc., •nve1tigated and rejected Na· -no ""uca on w1 1~ IUl.VUlC reason is apparet1t. Poetry will not be ' PROFITS ARE the bacltbcme of our ecaoomJc ~em. We use profltl to: ' (I) LoWer Prices (tl!'TV et -f!OO In the lMO's. Now we get a better set for half the price). (2) Raise wages. (3) Create new products and jobs (about p:t,000 avera1e required for each new job). ( 4) Reward stockholders (who will pro- vide ~Joo and jolH:reating money U the profit is no more than on a savinp account?) (5) Pay tues. MORE PEOPLE work now than when Nixon toot office. But more people have entered the job market. McGovern's pro- posals would dampen busln.., and binder the creation of jobs. McGovern claims Nixon wants ex- cessive profits for bJslnesJ. But Sen. Prounire (Dem., Wis. I correctly staled that business profits are sharply lower since Nixon toot office. Why is this? During the inflationary Vietnam War. Prea.ldent Johr.son greatly increased domestic spending and overstimulated the economy. When Nixon took office, we were approaching runaway tnflation (McGovern blames N"l:l.on for this). If not controlled, this inflation would destroy our economic security and even- tually cauoe a depr...wn -wltb large· scale unemployment. NIXON FOUGHT JnflaUoo the lland· ard way: .... tricl the money oupply. This depttssod corporate proOta. · But unlike previous receaiool. COila "*-So Nixon finally bnposed wai .. prtc< con- trols. This brought greater lllbWty. McGovern aays we: should remove w•ge-price controls and rely on Jaw bon· inC (NI.ton tried thb and round It didn't ""k). We don't want tt70-71 aU over q1tn. McOovern crttlctzcs Nixon for c1enc1t l1JOndlnl. Yet McGovern's spendinl pro- -"' -1d cost at least ftJO 6Ullon moro. And would brinJ btgbtt tuet Ind ....,. lnfllttoo. lllcGovem ts like the anonllt wbo Rt.t a lire, then btame1 tho fire d<pattm<nt when they come to put li ouL LEONARD WRIGHT B e'• fer !kl1111lts To the Editor : That thousaocklollat+jllate dinner for P.tr. Nixf;'ll wu 1 dad &fYMWl1 .. \0 the cJw of -"• wllo will prd!t -w be "' THJed.d. Tblt'• rtcJ>I, tile rlc:ll wUI pt rlcbor IDd tho --· Bui doo1 tbllllt II wUI hll» a bll U IC4r(lcrftrn II -ellber; tlill'• not. Ibo poor will llW bo -lltd the rlc:li wtll .. rtP .. ... tine richer. 41'1 A WOJW> appmnUJ .... lllld. Jom Sdlmlts -to,. u • mn.hlltc reminder tbat h II still •1>1c fOf • ctu... to be de<1od ~ witllout beJnc the blgcst liar tn tla land, or sp<ndlng tbe m"1 money trytna to rt.bra.inwaah the tlrtady over·br1ln.-asb- cd cltiunry as In the cue ol the two fit cata -bOISUy ~ In lllbbing - bl. h d der's claims. ~ pu 18 e · Clem \Vhi~. Jr., presfdent of the other In the back to win the election. WITll NEWCOMER John Schmitz as President we could be assured of several years of honest representation before the money greedles finally get to htm and at- tempt to "indoctrinate" him into a gutless wonder like Nixon, or even /irm, commenSI, "(In view of the eJ:· oneration) it ii significant t~1 light of curren' charges b11 proponents of Propositio11 No. :10 tllat any and all argument.! in opporltion to tl•t ir measure are 'deceptive• and 'fraudu· knt.' "It is significan t in lloht of threats b11 both State Senator Jame1 MiUt and A11emblvman Robert J.torettl to rub-McGovern. A vote for America. Schmltz ls a vote ror ;ect thiJ firm and other oppoMnt.t of PropoliUon No. 20 to 1tar c11ambtr MI LT BASHAM proceedinu1 before legi.tlativc com· mittee1 for daring to voice opposl· Propotltlo11 20 To the Editor: While driving down !'acme COasl Highway In HuntJncU>n Beach recenUy, my family and I were shocked by a poltUcal blllboanf. Tbe billboard said "The Beach Belongs to You • DON'T LOCK IT UP! Vote NO on Proposition No. 1.0." The provlsiom of Proposltlon 2:0 have been incorrectly stated by op- ponents of the measure be!ore, but never ln such boldly insultina terms. Simply staled, Proposition lll lntendl, to limit c:oa&tline developm<nt In -••II by penn!t throuCh -.,or a. ,..ioa.1 comm!alons. Dorine the next -yean, wblle real e1llte de¥llopmontl wwlcf be Ubilised, I tboroUCh study could be completed ol tho OJllUo Callfamfl cout. JN 1171 THE commlalool -.Id recomrnmd to the L<cialatur. a muter plan for the de.....,.,..t of the C08SL 'Ii---"'* would ln-C0<1>0nte the wlabel ol Ibo majority ol Callfornlanl am DOI )ult the lrJtmsll ol real eatate devdopen II It tbe we at = The written lrJteatlon 0 f tion I> Jn DO way lmlllla tlllt the -by the publJe to the beach will be -rlded. Wb:r lhould political advtrtilln1 be .uo-1 to malte aucb gn>11ly tnaccurat• d1fml u are curnmlly beJnc made to def .. t Prqioattlan IOI 'Ibo Federal Tndo Comnllallan It cnct.bll dowu on the -blllotf•tod clalmt of I03P mar-..... The ~ dllllll on .._tllam artect a lap p.tlon ol Iha population. The outcome ol _. -la <ertatnly .. least u In> pofUDt II tho clMniaa elfidcncy of I j)lrtlculir •P pnpll'Otloa. r.ua PLAY .U.'D lesil reatralnt i>I ol> =~=t':'..~~n: ....... ol the inldll ol I tlan. • '"""'tore """' .... ltenllly "-.., .. --piss& that tbe ... ~ -CIEi r ea d tlJ ·--In the po11.q -. The DAILY Pll.Df edllellol 111111 ond othtt Informed ..c...o .. .... ... ~ _.tlon to Pl..idon • ohould bl •bit to ... tbot -i. -.- f111i1l the u preuod wrlUtft -o1 lhl ..-1t1ot1 .... unfa!r am obould bo 1"lltowlul. The apportot In-ol the adVertblnl qency and Jbdr linlndlt btocW1 II to -the umntr7 WIC1' Aa. ruult of thb dllhonnt ad\'<rllJinl campo!IJ>, In spite ol ilteatlanl ol the ,_Jtlona of pr11¥1dlng continued ..,. tion to a ballot issue they haPPfn to favor . "Reasonable men can dl/ftr ma nny i.ssut, and Ou public 1nrert11t surety is served when both 1ide1 are hea rd . It ia a dllturblng devel~t iu America, reminiscent of dldator1hip regimes, when legilfmatt' crltfcil'm, voiced tn pubUc itotfflienl.t and ad - ver«..ting, is threatt1nerl with J'uppre1· ston by elecUd official.I." -Ed itor Me•• .. e for Cuper• To the Editor: For Rooakl Cuptn, our rtprt:Rnl•· ti"" on the Orlnp O>unty Board of Suptr· vilon. I hive rour poi.nll: t) An aJrporl In Camp Pendleton lhould be oot ol the question tmUI Soulhml Cllifoml.a la 1blolutely com- mitted to I nipld trlillll l1l*ent to ..... the whcNe artl. Wllhoul. It, whit do l lf!t! Rtbl>ont ol .. II and polluted •Ir ... drclln1 Sao Clemente. la It reality to think this will not """" 1boutl II tt.11rdlng bt1 -for throe lobbybtl Jn Wullqton 10. 1 cool fan of m .ooo • ftAr. I .. ,. NUTS! Orange County bN two 1tn1ton and teW:rtl r.,,.._iat!VH In Wuhln«ton pluo ~vt-nil represmllllves in Sncramtnlo rettl'f'lnl from al to 40 thousand plu1 fringe benefits and now •·e Deed mort repretmtatlvn t 11 Ill NIYI' nrn 1rm. O>tnpony c1e..io,.-1 In the wbola ""' b"'atinf our ecoloebJ bo<U! If I ,.ad com<tly IOn'le time ago, lhe compan1 lintmdl to build a city of about.A50.000 1iC.TOS1 from F.I Toro wbc!re they've betn bul1dln1 I.be IAsl couple Y<"'1 t11111ln< the prohltm1 whldt ... W\IOlwabt• -mlllt.lpl1Jnc. Tho -Hlllfble thin& to do for Southern C..llfomla la, first 1 n d fettmOll, 10 wort with Cf'NI dllpakh for a ..per rtipkl tl'lftlit l)"ltt,m ANTOtNETTr. llOETZJ. .r ... llN! Creek PNJttt To the Edll«: Otrlclals of tile IM>e C..,p11111 havt come up with a new l.aclle In their tffaru to speed up or "'' their Newport Beach Quotes K~~ Wlqm.li1a1 A-1.W. -"Thi -"" th~ that IJ c:rutJnt tom>r tn our CIUI dUn C1n be found hi OM won! -povmy·· NOW WE JIAV£ a great vlew of almost lhc entire harbor -but a view scbcduled to disappear (from the Edi.Ion Company sub-station south and west) lf condominiun1s of the Jasn11ne Creek proj- ect arc allowed to IX' constructed. The Planning Co1nmisaton-ordtted lowering o( the grade clevaUon alOf'llt t.targuerttc Avtnue Is of no help at all to us. The required Jruimil'MI O"-H:k te· vlronmental impact statement will prob· ably be P"'Pftr<d by "Plllladelphlo lawyers.'' 1'1ty will hive to be pretty good . howevtr, 10 d1.'flJ that U. aesthelict ol the an:a -aod lhe affthetlcs Include the vns -and the nora and faun.a wUI not be dam..ged and changed by the pr11j<ct. ft. R. M!Ll.ER Cltttlcless Socl~tir To the EdUor· In regard to the 0 . V. Plcktr Jetftr (Sept. %7 ) on the checklcsa tocttty, wt would like to 1lfeU tome other polnll of view. ~ven though t.hiJ 1ystem it in ex· pertmenUI sttjet, Jt setma evktent that lhb type of baoXlng will be prevalent In the near f uturT. It would 1ppur 1h11 IJ)"lkm could ovmtuatly telld ta eJchanatnl of good> by a numbtr wllhout the use of CJ.Sh , credtt canb, f'U:, All authorized number. recardleu o( ho"' It would b e demonstrated or put Into UH. 11'1 TflJ! PROI'1lE'11C book of Danll'I and RevtbiUon. In I~ Rlblto, wt•~ told oC a Umt The canh 11o·otdd pPl'T'~nc't!: VU07 inatastd knowledg,. t Daniel 12 41 and ptOPle wruld be buyln1 and ttlllng IOltly by their OWTI auttlorittd number (ReYtlitk.trl 13 171 J l!SU! Chr!Jt said thr ume CtMT"lltlon wtlk:h woukt erperimce the re-birth or Jsrarl 115 a n.ntton (JMl l (l..uta z~ ll). 1tv-reoccupatk>n ot J ..... lcm (11167 ). ,,.., ....... bankln« &)'Item teemt to be pc>lnllna to workf =1i.ent ind current events are pr._ future hlstO<)'. ROY SMmr llOB ftOll5TON 04tANGI CO.UT DAILY PILOT /!obnr N. Wt«f, l'•bllsMT TJlol'MJ' Kt:t't'U. l:dJCnr J\lbm w. lf<tk• l:ditoriol ,..... Edllor --.. o(U.OIJOllr f>lVlt _... Wt Mftinn .... .u.... "''" mldtn by .,...._,,Uftc lhll ,,,..,..,.I..,..• &1MlkW and ~ nlmtary CW\ 1~ t'I lntflftll;t •M .. U.""llkanl."", bY ~Ire a,__, lotl' Uw ll''Plhlliol\ of l'Ur l'M f ~ 11111n1i...., •nd ._, 1~llftir \ht d•ffl'llle vi-.-pcitn•• t1f Inf°"""' • """'""' and •Pl•k-.rnt'tl on .....,_ •If th!, dt.) Wedneld•Y· O<tobor 11 , 1971 • ' .... ·~•·l'"'l_,, • ' ----------·---·--~·---·--------·---·------------------------, .. _ -~ay, Oc tobtr 11, ~,.~,~,------'"'1f,Q['t 'Jtoi li WWife Div prcing Husband .., ~·· ~.;OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) -The wife or a Navy Oler, America's longest-held i rfsoner of war In North Vietnam, is M{!,king a divorce despite alleged Navy :attempts lo stop her. ~--: 11\e pretty wife of Ll. Everett Alvarez Jr. riled a petition for dlssolutlon o! mar· ,n1«e in July 1970, but the proceedings .ffire kept secret until this week when the pilot's sister told a San Francisco .mwspaper. c Tangee Alvarez, 32, had been married to her husband only eight monttL, when 'fie-.was shot do\\'?1 over the Gulf of Tonkin '..Jn-August 1964. She told her attorneys she waited for his return until she felt she coold wait no loogcr. Trio of Attractimas The San Diego Zoo Tuesday announced the arrival of t h r e e tw~ month-old tiger cubs ih the animal nursery at the Children's Zoo.- HER LAWYEI{, f\.-1yron To,ver of San Leandro. said the Navy tried to stop the divorce on gounds the action would badJy hurt his morale and might give the North Vietnamese a lever to pry out in· formation. ·'It 's pretty rough for a man sitting in prison to get a divorce notice from his wife," the attorney said. "but it's a l\vo edged sword. She's a young woman who's been waiting years for a man v.'ho may never come home, 1 don't know any young woman whO could wait that long before seeking the company of others." Nary Says It Didn't ::~Jolt City ~-:. .. SAN DIEGO (AP> • ' ·Myste rious jolts thnt r- >•thc San Diego area las~eek ..:.•arc back again . This lime the :~'Navy says a fighter pla ne was ~ .. ll.ying at superso nic speeds 40 to SO miles offshore. : . ·:But after residents~Jelephon· ..... ·:ed police to comptain of shud· ,.:dering wii-ldows and cracking ~!.dishes Tu es d a y. Navy .. !;;.··--------~ ~c ___ : _B_RI_EF_s ___,) : ··s:pokes mcn con tinued to deny t.lhat their offshore maneuvers • must be responsible. ,.,:·,.. Seislll()logists have dismiss. .,:'ed the possibility of earth· -~~es and say the jolts must be sonic booms or reverbera· -lions from weapons testing carried out here by unusual weather conditions. But no service or government branch has admitted flying ~ n y supersonic planes or testing any big guns near enough to cause the shocks. e Deatla bu Drug MANHA'ITAN BEACH (AP! - A teen-age girl whose body wa s discovered on a lifeguard tower here died or an overdose of drugs, the coroner's· office says. The victim identified as April Dav.-n Betty Wall. 14, of Lawndale. was found by a beach walker }.1onday. A detective said there was no evidence the girl bad been raped as police theorized in- itially. State Wants Ruling Delay SAN FRANCISCO IAP) - The state may ask the State Supreme Court to ease the crisis created last month when the court ruled lhat private construction projects must be envi ronmentally cleared by loca l agencies before building permits may be issued. Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Younger said Tuesday that he was considering asking the court lo delay the enforcement of its ruling because it had been so unexpected. The Sept. 21 ruling tias trig· {:f({:{ *** 'Friends' Surprised At Reaction to Ruling gered an immediate moratorium· in the issuance of building permits in most large cities of the stale. THE COURT ruled that en- vironmental impact studies must be done for proposed private construction projects before building permits are issued. Until that ruling, the requirement had been con· sidered to apply only to public projects. Younger emphasized that he had no quarrel with the court's basic interpretation (I( the s t a t e Envirorunental LOS ANGELES (AP) -An ensure "a means by which the Quality Act of 1970. U he in- attorney for Friends of l\1am· people in the communlty have tervened at all. he said, tie moth says the conservation-something to say about what would only ask the high court oriented group had in mind h?ppens in the community.'' tO allow som.e lime for the good planning -not an end to He flailed the court deCision Legislature to clarify the law any constnlclion -when it on the group's suit as a and for local governments to went to court. landmark that should end set up compliance procedures. The "Friends," led by y 'gh k careless land S"""""iation and . In effect, ounger'ft'll I as former Olympic gold medal ~·-the ~·rt to make that sect~ uncontrolled construction pro}-....... ""' skier Andrea Mead Lawrence, ects. The ruling was needed, of the law effective at some leaped into the limelight Sept. he said, because planning of. future date even though the 28 when the California ct ~1 already•·-ficials and egencies had fallen a as a w111.1 e 1wu Supreme Court ordered a halt down on the job. been in force for more than a to a Sierra high rise apart· year. ment project because an en· "GOV. REAGAN has urged vironmental impact study there be 8 moratorium on the YOUNGER SAID the ruling hadn't been made. d . · .. McCarth ·d was "of historical importance ec1s1on ... , -y sa1 . . Cal'! · • But attorney John C . "I would suggest that the in protecting 1 orrua s en- McCarthy told a news con-build fir nd his vironment and implementing that fMt governor 8 IT e u et the EnVtromnental Quality Act foefruence,,·ng Tucommonesday ....:..: In P~ own office of Planning and .,..u,,,. • ..--research • J? prepare of ·1970:'" tecting-the enVironment, some guidelines tor tbi preparation "11 is important to officMU.5 had simply flatted of environmental i m pe ct recogrllze, however," Younger building permits altog~ther. reports by planning agencies said, "lhe decision came sud- ''I'm halfway expecting throughout the state.'' denly and surprised t be some county clerk to say he's building industry and the not going to issue any more McCarthy said the state had government agencies charged marriage licenses because failed to carry out: provisions with preparat.ion of t b e he's not SUI'~ of the en-of its Environmental Quality statements. Act --~'ch he tenned the "As a result," Younger ad· Vironmental impact Of the WlU I th 't " most -·eep1·ng '"the nation -ded, "our offiCi! has now been coupe on e commuru y, ~.. u• 1'1cCarthy declared. by not requiring the impact requested by these agencies, reports. the governor, and represen- HE SAID he belie ve d "I( they tiad done their job tatives of labor and the overreaction is • • e i t h e r much of the u n c e r t a i n t y building industry to petition hysterical or carefully design-demonstrated by cities and the court to pennit the state ed to stir up the public and counties would have been Legislature to add certainty to distort the tru.e significanci! of avoided," he said. "It is bard· the procedures necessary in the Supreme Court's opin-ly fair to ask our Supreme preparing the statements and e Rent'' In f_,A? ion .'' Court to do the work of the ex· to allow for a reasonable time LOS ANGELES (AP ) -An The importance of the ecutive branch o( oui 1govem· to gear up to meet re. acquaintance of Chino escapee ....:d::.•c::.i•::.io::n::., .....::he::..__sa=.id::.·.....::w::.•:..• .....::'•-::.m::•n::.t:..·" _________ q:.u~ir_eme_• .. ts __ .'_' ____ _ Ronald Wayne Beaty says he saw Beaty in Los Angeles Tuesday driving a car with •--Arizona license plate~. Beaty escaped last Friday when threi! men and a woman ambushed two unarm e d guards from the Chino prison esconing the prlsoner to a San Bernardino courtroom for a hearing that had been postpon- ed. One of the guards was kill· ed and the other was shot and wounded. Earlier, the FBt checked out a report that Beaty end a woman were seen attempting to rent an apartment In Scottsdale. Ariz. The F'BI dit- counted the report. e Drllll"fl OK'd LOS ANGELES IAPl Despite more than thrte hours of debato against It, the City C.ouncU voted Tuesday to •\!OW. ~!oratory oil well dtU1i111 near the exclu"lve ~100 Plllsodes re.<ldcnUal -·. •A ll'OUI! calling 111<11 No Oil itlc. hu . been 11CJ!tlng Oc- cidental Pdrot.... C.rp. !or than two ,...,.. in the Ill''• bid to drlD "* ...... . ' , ~. ·' ~ (; ..... 'f'ffbe' iBA:~::. (Al!) .:... 'lbal Ille .... 111 Jn- .,,. JO, would tllect -W1ter Project '" ;;;,.;:,i1J1 falle," ln author or .,.......1 u1d Tuetlday. -sen. Larry Walsh (fl. ~ Pork ) and -blymon C.rley Porter ([).Complon) bid 111d In I ..,.. rei..oe earll<r t!Jlll -that pa...,• of Prop. 20 CQUld erreet future water dtllverle1 t~ SQut~ Cauromla. \I ) CHEESE OF THE WIEK • KASS ERi 12.09 LB. •••111'-20c OFF ~ .... , w I ll. O,_,El SOOO OCTOIEll: I ITH THlU llfH ' I-' It• 11 I flnl ..._ wlel 11, .... hi ....... tt It .... ...., I ..... ....., Jlt&elw.-e....,., ,.,_.....,,,.. .... lit .. .t ... 1trwt,ril" C , ..... ......_ D111-.. • • .._, D:' Ow11"" ,_ ....._ • • • .w1tM t. ...... ....._ c:-. ..... "' ...... ,.. ..... flitt•1 tc&!!S ' &oath ~ast?iUJ ,OPDDAllf COSTA MESA .. :: ...... ..:::-.... ~=~:.i'"M I .. • I • J)on't H• Id Up Democrats Slap Reagan Tax Plan SAN PEDRO ( "> -&>m• I $50.000 In pla.<tlc ll'f<I and plants which rim certain street• ~re will SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Assembly Speaker B6b Moretti says Democrats · may draft a competing voter initiative tr Gov. Ronal(I Re1gao'1 attempts to take his new $1 billion tax plan to voters in a special 1974,elfetion. Iri other reaction to tbe sweeping tax overhaul tmvelled by tbe Republican governor Tuetd~-' a Republican hailed him fot "tremeodoUs leadership" while nonpartisan Legislative, Ana1yst A. Alan Post said he had soi,te reservations abopt the plan . 'lb! sir: tu~tting provisions of the Reagan p~I wou1d·: -Slash state income taxes by at least 10 percent. . -Double the present $750 homeowners' tax eumptioo. -INCREASE state support of local schools by $ZOO million and order schools to lower property J4J.es with the new runds. -Freeze property taxes at those reduced rates, with future increases ban· ned unles.! voters approved them. TOY WOR.(D (ftrnwrty ttte Tl'f Howse) -Give renten spe¢11 11ew income lax credits. , -Require a t~tl?ird,t vote ot lbe legislature for future tax increases. On the revenue aide, Reagan pi:oposed: -Boosting the salea tax to IS cenll per dollar to raise anotMr $800 million a year. , Adding one pereent to tbe Banlc and Corporation tax, but offsetting part of that hike with a rollback In the business inventory tax. --O>mmittlng most ol the anticipated re'{enue from a pending federal revenue. sharing program to increased state Rip- port of local schools. -USING AT least ~ million of an eitlmated $458 million surplus in the state budget. "I tell you frankly U the governor even talks about goihg to the tnUiative proc- ess, then I think we wocild have no other alternative but to develop and initiate our own plan -whlch would be a lot more appealing -and let them both ap~r side by side on the ballot;" Moretti said. be replaced with live v!'i<J!ili'V' - because plastic isn't as rd'f'abli js it r tbe real thing. Lo.. Angeles County Superv!SOt James A. Hayes told supervisors Tuesday that the tbree-year..ld Im- itation trees and shrubs "were not durlible enough &nd it ls tlme that they be replaced." Nike, Titan II Test Launched VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A nun II and Nike Aerobee were test launched down the Western test range over the Pacific Ocean early Joday, the Air Foree said. A spokestiian said a Titan II in· teroontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) was fired off at 4::30 a.m. A m)nute later, a Nike Aerobee com· binatioo was launched. 1 4 DAY SALE STARTS 00. 12 ' TOY WORLD HAllOR SHOPPING C~NTQ. COSTA MESA 223 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA ~5454 t4 dally; Mon. and Fri. •r.11 t 545-7032 104 dally; Fri. 'tll t ; Sun. 12·5 MONOPOLY ~ Potbr. One of tM most pcipvb' garnn In th• world. real "tot•. 388 . .,. . ..! ... LAZYDAH .... !fer "'foll-oaJHp-40~ CIC"' tion lets Mr lie down and drop right off to sleep. 511 11.8.8 FISHER•PRICE PLAY FAMILY AIRPORT A complete plov center fOf' yowig imogino. ...... RUMILERX-3 c'-' __ ......_ ttlck lhfft. A.De• 3 to 12. 2488 ..... , ElECllllC CHORD ORGAN BISEMILE Bmtiie's COUNTRY CAMPER Includes tent, tab'-, 2 comp chain. luggage rock and fa~ 9. ...... ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN 2S ful Mu """' Q;9 ..wt 6 chord ~ MV9'c ...... ... _ ...... _ nut mutlc book. lnclvdet one ft.1fl year wanonty. #260. 11·~ SUPER STAR EJectrlc plone 'llWith 0 broin - ha' 4 flight patNms. Bot· teries not lnc:lvded. [i] 9•• K••••r'• SNOOPY TOOTHBRUSH A real power~ de- MgMd jUlt for tlds; no ~ trk:hy. Cornn wlfh 2 ~ bnnhn ond 2 adopten for Use with refill bru•h•s. Snoopy dog ho••• hold• toothpcnte and bntthes. Baf. t9ries not iriditded. &-·· TYCON.O. TRAIN SET ___ ..... low child .. pilot .... -rn11111 ..... 1Powetful t4nch,... _......., .......... lft ..... -..... flying''"' ... ........... .....-.. ........ .-~. 8'' lyMel"P9y 10"Tllll .... •• 12-11111 ......... 1r 1.-nricr-_ .. _ 12" • I \ \ { \ 17 I I \ • .. • . . -'.'.-..__ ··-----·----------------------- Orange Coast .;.J ... . . . . · EDITION ' ~L 65, NO. 285, 6 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES ORANGE COUNl'f, CALIFORNIA .. ••• . , WEDNESDAY,,OCTQRR II, 1972 ,, , . • --~. Teday's ·~ • N.Y. Steeb c TEN CENJS ~J.V atch It-You May Be B~ ling Law By RUDI NIEDZIEl1!KI --Of "" ..., "*" .... . ''J"he judge probably won't send you c!IJ:ectly to jlll, but you cooJd be In a b<ap ol tn>uble In Costa Mesa H you do PJ,.ooe 'Of the .(olJowing: " -:: 'leeA-a Rile of manure within 35 feet of, "ffAJr neighbor's window. . ~Cbanse the uil io your car while it's pat"" out In tbe slreeL • -!(eep m0re than three pets. : .t\ll.; of these acUvlties -and many . .. . _ ..... ... ~··. more -are mi!demeanor violatiOM under the Costa Mesa Municipal Code and are puntshable by a $500 fine, a!J: months In jail, or perhaps ...., both. The code, in effect alnce Costa Mesa's incorporation in 1958 and constantly ex- panded throogh the yean, ts curreotly being revised by a staff of legal con- sultanta. "Some of them are way out of date and they're simply not applicable JlllY more," saya Deputy City Attorney Robert L. . ' !f .... , .. ~ "" ; DAK. Y P OT ..... IPt ~ ._...... Qista ·Jfda Pipeline · · v • • + ::\'Y~rkmen have now closed .the big,gap on',Newport Boulevard just • 11,Qltb of Mesa Drive, coveriog dramage pij>eline designed to · carry ··1'hofflfrom Newport-Corona de! Mar Freeway intercbange now un-• 1'!1; construction at Newport Boulevard ;µi.d Bristol Streel Pipe ls ;!o; incbes in diame~r. ::? .. ~oting Prisoners Hold -. -..... . . l ostages for 'Freedom' :~ - :;~GTON (AP) -Demanding Mrs. Patricia Gorham, who said ber tfe<to'm. and nothing else, prisoners in husband ts among the prisoners ln the .... ; .. llblock rioted at the District o[ cellblqck when the dilturbanco ... ke Qiblibla jail to d a y and threatened · · ~ to hostages seiz.ed In the early out, said she aaw the prtsonen brbic one ~ 11Prlslng. hostage "to the window and bit blm oo . :~'point, the prisoners h e I d a the side ol the btad. He fell to the floor. bliioJbl'.lltlrt out a collblock window. This Blood was gu3hlDI out the hick ol hil cil!fi lhorlly after ooon, !ollowlng at· ,, ~ b1 &lltbor!Ues to UJ11! relatives of bead. l!Jol'-" and Inmates from the city's "They said they were IOlllJ to tlll a ref<tinatory ID nearby Lorton, Va,, In man.'' Mn!. Gorbam aald. "'l'beY bit the aoC effort ·to quell the uprising. ~•-ol the bead lndt ::Potat~30 of the 187 inmates in the cell-man on the DIU'I;: to cate 11¥11:ot the jail, which ha1 about 1,100 they're not playing." "~"'""'"'-•1tnra; were reported taking part 1,1 Mn. Gorham -lll1IOlll about 2$ UJO•Uprialng. The 187 doea nOl Include relatiVea who entered the pm yard to 8't0tal juveniles let out of the cellblock. talk through wlndon wttb the Inmates. ·GJioman who ldentlfled benelf as a The pr•--threatened to kill H• ..... , slitit of an Inmate said the bloodied IBU"I_.. .. ... , slllrM,eme' from the guard whose head taken captlve when be and Waahlngton 1114 blbodled. Post reporter Bill Claiborne went lnalde ·!f!.!r, Ollef of Corrections Kenneth In the predawn hoUn to talk with the Jlu\IY, 1 -· was reported to have rebelling prlaonen. cilJll'1 to the jail window with a mile at Claiborne, who --.. ~ sald hti lluoat one! yelled "we have a revolu-tbe prisoners were not dlJNllldlllc better t~ ~on our hands." rood or medical e--. a common com--fie wu quoted as saying the lnmatea plaint made lo otller prllOll rtbelJloN. -the d'11 dllturbance unit moved they just want ""'-':" ~ ,!l the jail area. ''Thef Mid., lido It 1lill . a riot," Claiborne llld. 0 It'1 • ~ ... ...... .... 'EWO LINES TURN ·.· . . IN-TO BUSY ONES .. · .tw tlnea ol -..itslng-ioU ol "busy !lid' on the phone. Thlt'a the atory of tbfirl>l'JLY Pll.OT duallled ad: ·:•: 'II VW BEBTl.S ::;:Good ooad, -IU·Dll · "Ir Gel the cat to the flnt Clllor, but tl!I!·~ kept .,.,.. like <:nq," tl)t ~reported. ifjou're ""*fnl !Or thli "-I of act.lion, dial the "act.kin fine" al'MJ.lm, dlnct lklt IO DAILY PILOT ci.mnec1 Advert.lllnJ Dtpt. .. . The ---~c 111 to•-overpo.......i the I-* -1y IDdaJ and broke -INl aet -nr... Ammd 1:41 a.m. llonly llld Qalborne, who bu writt.n -lrllcleo ....... di-ot the prilon, 1lel1t -ond spoke with the -F'lvt lnmat8 from the -., Columbill'• mormatory In Lor1m, who reoeotl)t Wped medilll .,.._ It t.beit ... inltlMloo, W9't lllouiht to the -to provide llmllar ll<lp II the jolJ. ~ ... the Lorton lmnala went oo a local rtdlo station lllld ap- pealed to nt•U¥a ol Ill ._. ol the re~ pr-.. to moet at 1 city bJcb -lor u-portatlcn IO the jail. • Humphreys. "And there are many others wblcb bave been invalidated by the Supreme Court or come within the ~ main of state laws." Clllef among these ii Article 13, Costa Mesa's ''eotertam..nent on:iinanc,'' which problbits nude peep sbowa. 'l'weoty·a!J: separate attempts to enforce tt resulted In only four "°"Yictlon.s. All four are being appealed to the Supreme Court. In ldditlon lo probibtting nudity, ArtJ. • cle 13 autJaw1 ~ bltwtell pe~ or the wne 16, llnPw~u ~ of --by..-nWllowOul\I encourap the ptbarlng ol+.bl•na llld bomoeuall. ~ ~ lfeA bu U llacl N~--with !ta ,...,...iq la"' Wblcb -atben, -...... u "evorJ -..... todgel Jo, I ~ lbop or out-" "Thil WU also invalidated by «he Supremo OJurt·for tbe reuan it waa toO vague and a catchall to pkt perlCIOI up" maintains Humpbreys. "Only t b e California lndian1 were exempt as vqroots beca1l3e they came under !eden! jurtldictloo." Other oniina..... contained along with tho-·-itatute -tho "Publk: Wellmi and Morala" leCllon moy aloo -the ICnltllly ol the codlflen. 'lbele problbtt uae ol wl1ar and pro- f-languoR' In publlc, reotlng a motel room for purpoee:s of sex relations, and belnR drunk In 1 prlvak place to the an- noyance of others. Yet other laws, which at first I~ might appear some"'·hat Wlusua1, are likely to be retained. This includea the statute prohlblU., auto repair wort oo public atteeta. ~ cording to Humphreys . "We used to have a lot of prvblernl with dismanteled autos. In fact C.O.ta ~tesa at one time had the ttpUtatkm at (See OW LAWS, Pip It F . . a1rv1e -w Pact Reached \ $4 Million Purchase of Park Site Reveawd .. , County authotj_tles have reached an agreement with state officials lo buy the Fairview Part site in Costa Mesa for a~ proximately $4 million. A ~year purchase contract for the 257..acres of wilderness near Estancia High School Is expected to be signed in January 1973. Although the county Harbors, Beaches and Parka l>epartment bas about '400,000 budgeted for a downpayment, it la unlike- Physician's Son Showing 'Optimism' A Newport Belcb pbyaiclu Who vani!bed ·eight daya ago after leaYiJC Orange Count}' Alrpoit In 11ii prlftte plane la llllll m;.lng !Oda!, but hll -lo bopeful'llW be la alive. Dr. George Peet, B, a promlnenl allergy speclallat who. Kvea In Newport Beach and malalalnl ottfues In the beach city and Anaheim, disappeared on a round trip Oilbt ·Jut T u 11 d a y from Orange .COUDIJ -lo Palm Springs and Big Bear. The Callfornta ·ctvlJ Air Patrol · be1an searching last weet for the mla1ng Cessna 17l Ill the rugged San Bernanllno and San Gorgonio mountain areoa, but suspended the oearch .5unday becaUIO of adverse weather. Charles Good , a CAl' lpokesman In West Covina said they plan to resume the seacb Friday . Douglas Peet, 24, Dr. Peck's aon, said his father had flown the private airplane fO<' the past three yeara u a hobby. "I prefer to look on the brtRbt side," said Peck who is a textbook manager for • Los Anaelea publishing Orm. "They liave searched the roughest parb of the area already' -where somebody would plow into the atde (If 1 mountain. Now they will be ~ Ct>ntrating on the valleya and the flatlands. "My father Is In ucellent health and he used to take me camping all the tllne, so be'a able to take care of hlmaelf out ot doors. I figure be probably bad to aet down scxnewbere and they'll find bJm toon," Peck said. The search II being conducted out of Brackett field in La Verne. Good lald Peet took off from Orange County at about 7 p.m. oa wblt be deacribed as "a round robin trip lo Palm Springs and Big Bear aod -to Or'- ange County." 'Jbe fllRbl WU Joaed U a ~ slgbtaeeinR fliChl, the CAP official said. Good lald thts weekend'• -will cover more of the terrHorJ' on the U...-. legged Olgbt. "We lmow the alnnft llld Its ran1e capabWtlel and n lmow what the weather was on Tuelclay 1 IO WU base our aearcb on time ftcWI.'' be u ld. ly that wort will start en the parlt wrtll 1974. "Our budgelod fUnds .. for ac- quisiUoo only and not fol' de.-elopment. There ts m money budgeted for develop- ment · at thil time," the department's chief of development, Ralph Hudson, said today. Meanwhile, coonty officials will be developing a IChematle for the overall park, tyinR in the posslbl!lty of_le11jn1 a portion to the city of Costa Mesa as a Probe Orderf!d community park. The 14 million fllure, described as only an aWoxtmatlon by county om<laJs, Is 50 percent of the appralsed value or the land. It was declared surplus property by the state' 13 years ago. Under an erlsting state pcllcy, surplus propertlea are o(· fered to local governments at b&)t ol tbe appral8ed value provided the 1inds are being uaed !or parks. Fairview Park, when coMtructed, will · French Mission in Hanoi --Bombed; U.S. Gets Blame Coast $urler Rides Kingly Wu tbot IaDJ -ol Jordan surfing bellde tile lluotfnRIGG Beach Pier --lodo1' It -· a ell}' .,.....,... -ed. And then Wll -8ecnt -.......... pollee in .... dence II the object ol tloelr inter. e11 m...,..r to set ap m hll -on • amall wave. 1 Secret Semo. agents, • tndl- tlonally -Mt bl& tollm, -eel lo·apecuiate on how loof the kllli might llonbe HW!tlngtoo !leach. ~.-.ot-­.. 1t ......... llnd II tho tJ.J. aln:raft," the llllt-aald. "Ht tJ.& - won !<Ill, 11111 thl --m.u-. af!Or m_.. tho alr<rofl, could -lQ>o pacled ....... (ln>Ulld .• A opall1-qned thl -:..-I :r...t.,a:.. ==:--:: WU -by tho North V-mJ.sallea., Tbe eommud r • t o 1 • d , tmmer, lo rule out the posstbt!JIJ ol tJ.S. bombs ping utray, u bu hap. pened before, ond bltttnc the Fnmdl compound. 8ec1etorJ of Del.-Melvin R. Laird todaJ ooucaclacl In Wulllngtoo that American bombo ma1 have struc1c the F'r9ncll diplomatic miallon ,l>at aald tJ.S. air strit.ea qalmt North Vietnam wW continue even u private peace taJb 10 on In Porta. (See 111or7, PIJ• 0 On the bull ol preilmlnlrJ repom, Laird aald, be _, atalo poaitlvely wbelher the damqe wa called by a faulty bomb drop « by North Viet· .._. antlolrcnJI ,...pona lalllng bacl: .. the dty. . Allled at a news cool.....,. U he thouibt It wlM to bomb a-to Hanoi whUe peace tafb wtn In a deUcalt stace. the _..tary ropllacl : "We wtll eont!IXIO the ,.. ol alr)>ower (See HANOI, ...,. It Tigers' Rally in Tenth Downs A:1s, Tws Playoff SI.2 Million S11it Ex-marine Who Shot Hijacker F~s Agai1ut Pan Am 11J '!OM BARLEY ............. "'former -who llbot ond kflod a bljadttr u.... -..... loc!oJ ti,. in felr cl wbal bl indlclo lo t.i- taln reprtaaJ by the deed man'• - and re1au.., hu ....., Pan - World AltwaJa 1w SI.I mllllM. Wllllom ll llllDa c:loJmo In the Or-. County looerlor OOUr1 -IUod ,.._. ~ tbat the """* attlol " , ...... .. his ..... to the .,.... 1pm.t Illa - upnoed blm to the ......... ol the - hlja-• -ol kin. He st.Ila tn the la-11 lhat the tl<ad , not f-hll -to flJ tM planl to llanol. -IOld the ..... relaoed the .JIT M-plolot -lrun ID btlort the -..... "' -llld ldm to - k -he ... Ula --.... ..... -dill tho ...... pun. eel *11' ll(jaetor -frolll thl --bl WU boldll'I •a boltafs. w.-Nm to the,,-and then told Mlllo: "1dll tho ... ' '1111 U•Marine ltalll ho did tudiJ tbtlL I servo aloo the nelgbborinR cltlel ol Newport Boacb. Fountain Valley, Slllta Ana, 100. Hunllna\OD Beach II I rtpon.l recreation atta. General feelinR locoUy II to in-rv• the land as 1 wUdemesa area. and to pro-- tect an ancient Indian burial pvund on the site. The burial ground, llC<lOrding to LonR l!eacb State ColleR• m:h<olotllst Keith Diloo, dates back I<> 150! B.C. Laa ·than (See FAIRVIEW, Pip It . County Unit Seeks Booze Ban ~ee_e'!-_i · BJ CAND.\CB PEAlllOM 04 .............. Ororc• CountJ illrtlOrl, -.... Parks Commlwl!._.. ,....., nc:om- mended ,.i that an onlleaMa poolltbltlnl boou In oounl}' recrutlon ~ ho repealed. But oflor 1111 octkJn WU tala, ...... ml.....,,..,Wlvertd.1 IJIU. llld -J.1 to not tot 1111 -ol Rrponllon -•bot they'd done untJJ they dnlt an alternative law. That new ordinance, to bl --ot Iba Nov. H meeUng, WU ........... bJ Commillionel' Thomu O'lt.eelt to read thal ao ponon wW drtnk Ill I NaUtlon area where deedl reotrlct H or lo .,.. prolllblted by the ---oommilllon. O'Keefe, olao 1 Siii Clemmie dl}' -· delcrtbed ~ polmtlal parll llld bead! alta u "dey" or "kid- die" .,_ l CommllOliln chalnnao Marllll tJsab and --m.1oner Tom Baldwin...,. the no -..ta • the rtpoal ol liquor pro- lllbltlon In _, ....... The Voiltaacl ad (Pnlllthlllon) WU .... pealed nationally In 1131, .-wbJdl lime tho ..U.11 ... .._.,. lonlddllW dtlntilnl or ~talc ,llqdor wlllilli oa1 recre.atiOn are& WU ...... Thll haa clUIOd problems o1 ..,. forcement beelUll peopla drt1lklnl Oii their own boots, In c.1mpon ot -In oounly·leuod harbor mllurants ... breetk>& the law. . Commtsalooer Fronk -._ tho mo11 ldamaot 1n =~lnlt the "llJpocrttlcol and law.'' c:oulda, inrallow nltlng fw ID altemaUVI -~ Waatod only I ....... rtpoal lllre that lo -Oii st.It. P"'P" ...,. "Jiu the Wotld -oput • •tall bead!N,. bl -. Tbt -·• oclloa, II i JI op- IJl'O"ed by tba -.,. •i-•ioors. -o,,q to --. Alloo beocli in South La-Salt Cnalr, Duo Poait ffartJor llld the umn.,.porotod (S.IOOZl!, .... lt Or•••• ..,. -' -. {;':;1--J :-. : --n --' .. " ~ ... " ---... " -. --. c:. ... =~-c ~=J· --~ .: -' . -----. - Death • uspect n Court A murdr:r mispect alren dy in jail on marijuana charge when Costa MesH ti~ accused him of the alaying th<it rred 48 hours previously "'as nr· raigned Tuesday afternoon In llarbor Judjcial District Court. Judge Everett W. Dickey refused to reduce th<• $100.000 bail set for William J. Buffalo. 32. '"'·ho faces an Oct. 18 prr- liminarv hearing at which time he may enter his plea. Buffalo. of Z56 Esther St., Costa 1'.1esa, Is accused of gunning do"'TI Marion 0 . Perry, 27 . in an alley be hind the cottage complex eight days ago. Deputy Public Defender Anthony C. Kies made an unsuccessful motion before Judge Dickey to cut the steep bail for Buffalo. an ex-convict with a narcotics record. He and his wife Sherri, 28, were ar- rested at 1heir home Oct. 2 when police questioning neighbors for clues to Perry's killing <1ltegedly caught them smoking n1arljuana. During the next dtiy and a half. a team of detectives assertedly developed infor· mation pointing to both acquaintanceship and bad feeling betwf*f Buffalo and Perry. Funeral services were still pending today at Bell Broadway ~1ortua ry for the victim. v.•ho \l\'aS shot three times with a Spanish-m.idc rifle and unsuccessfully emptied his O\l\'ll .38 caliber pistol at the attacker. Oepuly Pu blic Administrator Rodney Reighard said he finall y traced down Perry's father in Grants Pass, Ore ., only this morning to notify him of the death. He said the father is too poor to pro- vide fw-teral funds. so the murder victim will be buried at county expense. From Pagel HANOI ... during this period . The Presiden t has stated this on c;everal occ asions and we will continue to strike mi1itary targets in North Vietnan1." Laird declared, as he has on several occasions. that the U.S. planes strike at only military targets and not at "downtown Hanoi." Today's targets. he noted , included· a ailroad marshaling yard and transship-. ment polnl three miles from the French diplomatic m.is!lon . lie called them "significant milit8ry targets.'' At the Whitt .House, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said information available does not establish that it wa s an American bomb u·hl ch caused the damage and injuries. Ziegler :;aid, however, that the State Department will be expressing regret to the French through diplomatic channels over the Jn· c:dent. Responding to qu estions, Ziegler said he was not aware of any eommunicalion between French President Georges Porn· pidou nnd President Nixon on the m· cldent. but said ~he President has been receiving infonnatlon from the Na~ional Security Council and other U.S. sources. "We regret any personal injury or damage caused in the area of the French delegation building during the air strikes and the North Vietnamese firing on 1 he U.S. aircraft ,'' th·.! U.S. Con1mand said in Saigon. In Paris. Pompidou after 1 Cabinet meeting called' the bombing · ' a deplorable act." The Fr@nch protest was handed to U.S. Ambassador Arthur K. Wat.aon. A French govemn.ent spokesman said the chief of the mlssion In the North Vietnamese capital, Oeleeate-General Pierrt Suslni, 'fBJ "very seriously in- jured." · \Vh ile his injuries were not fatal, Susinl ;uffercd from loss of blood and shock, the spokesman added. Three other diplomats and t h e mission's French secretaries we r e unhurt. hut four Vie tn amese employes ~ere missing. OU.N•t COAST CM DAILY PILOT Ttl• 00• C:..1 0:..IL'I" l"tLOf, wllll wtik~ " (.'Ofnbl .... ~ " .............. h '*"""* ~ "" °" ..... c... ....... lllllnll c..mci-t. ,..._ ,.... .Olliol» -....... ,.,.,..., """'"" ' 1"•111•~. 'fW a.t9 .111 .. , N--1 ~ """"""'°" l-.tlf~•ilt V•llt"f'1 l- 8ucfl, lrv"'-ISMldMlllKll: ltl'ld S•l'I ~If/ .. ,., J11e111 G.pl1trwM-A 11,,.1• ,.....,.,., , "°hlO!I I• pl/blllh"' S.lll!"dfY\ tM SvnlU\'t+ 1'"'-llfli'Clptl pv11Utfl"'9 Olalll II 11 Ut W..I .. ,, StrMf, Clot.. #Ma, C•lffllmle, tHJll. R•'*' H. Wee-4 "'"'""' •111111 Pultthller J•ct ~ Cvrley Vke .........,_ *"' a-..1 ~ l\ol'l'!fl Keevil ..... 1\ol'fl•• A. M11rphi11e M-. ....... MllDr Ch1rle1 H. L••• R!tlt•,.. P. Hell """ .. ""' MMltlnt ........ C...M-OMN JJO Wut l•Y $t.-eet M•lll*f,.Af"tM•I P.O .... t•to. 91•1• """-......... a.Gl'l U)> N..,.... ....,_,. L.ewM •tiee91: m .. ., .. , ,,,_ M111111N1Mn ....,.1 1n1s •..c:11 IOVlie¥•nl .. ,., Ci.meni.: as Ner1'I 11 C'.ef'l'"9 .... ,. .. .,._ C1-t41 '41-4111 _ O•» ' ~''a It ' 1 '41-NJI 1 M_ 0..... ~I ..... llif .. •• T..,.. ~ lhit ........ -~'=rtf*•;r.. .. -.: .. ,. ~· . '"':."::C~ Nil Q; I _."1 ,.,. -· I "• I DAILY l'ILOT ll•ff ....,. So·111ethi11g Fro11a Outer Space Not reaµy. It's a reinforced concrete pie~ surrounded by steel beams. Both w1U support the Corona del Mar Freeway overpass now being l'on structed near Bristol Street and the Newport Fr~eway in Costa Mesa. 'fhe overpass and interchange system is scheduled to be com· pleted 1A•ithin a year. Mesa Park to Displny 50 Different New Cars f\1ore than 50 different l 9 7 3 au ton1obiles. covering the range rrom pickup truck!i to !iports cars, will be on display this weekend during the second annuaJ Fiesta de Costa Mesa. The auto show will be located at Costa ~1esa City Park, 18th Street and Park Avenue. immediately adjacent to the ~lexlean dinner serving area. Organized by the newlyformed Costa l\lesa Auto Dealers Association, the display will also include a va riety of cilmper and recreational vehicles. From Pagel FAIRVIEW ... The Fiesta de Costa Mesa, an annual charity event sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, gets under way at $ p.m. Friday with the serving of Mexican din- ners. On the menu are enchiladas. tacos, beans, rice and a beverage, Tickets are $1.75 for aduJts and $1 for a child's plate. Orv Amburgey, food chairman, says the dinners will be authentic Mexican and cooked by members of the Costa Mesa High School Football Boosters. Amburgey's mother-in·law Mrs. Bea Morales. a former restaurateur, is supervising the cooking. Standing in reserve for the three.day feast art 336 pounds of cheese, 200 pounds of rice, 200 pounds of beans, and 2,000 enchiladas. one percent of the site has been scien-Entertainment will be provided Friday ti fically excavated. through Sunday night by a 16-ride Efforts by C.osta Mesa to stake a claim carnival, bands playing "era" music, on the 257 surplus acres earl ier this vear dancers, and drawings for prizes. c:1used strained relations with Sa craffien· One free carnival ride ticket is being tn. given away with each purchased ride At one point, tht state General ticket to promote attendance, according Services Department appeared bent on to Chamber Manager Nick Ziener. auctioning the property to the high est Highlight of the three-day fiesta is the Hijacker Wounded In Germany FRANKFURT. Germany (UPI) - Police sharpshooters shot and wounded a would-be hijacker today as he attempted to escape from a Lufthansl airliner to a getaway~ at Frankfurt airport -one of the moot 1ecurlty con>CIOU5 in the world . Riflemen at Frankfurt's Rheio-,,.tain Airport hit Friedrich Schuet z, a West Germnn national, tn the chest and left arm and grazed a shot off his head as he sprinted away from security men on tbe tarmac, tbey said. Schuetz was reported hospitalized tn· seriOOs coodllion. None of the 57 other pasSengers aboard the Lufthansa 71!1 jet was hurt . police said:' Airline officials said Scbuct.z boarded ~ p)flne in Lisbon and approached 11 steWardess in midfligbt. He was reported to have said he was armed with a bomb to C[lforce his demand for a getaway car. clearance through police lines and about 2,000 f11arks (nbout $650) •t Frankfurt. Police could not tnlmecU8tely explain Schuetz'• motivation, although they ~said ht ~lalmed to be a West German national deported from Uga1.da and turned away by Portuguese aut~orities. A stewardess said he mumbled so_mething about being "wanted by· West German police." When the plane lahded at Frankfurt at 4: 39 p.m., police held it on the main strip for 57 minutes while police sharpshooters took up positions ' at the giant airfield, airport spokesmen said. Then, the plane was wheeled to the special pa.,rking area where sharpshooters and policemen w er e disguised u mechanics, airport officials said. Two Lufthansa pilots. one also disguis- ed in mechanics overalls, acct1mpanied Schuetz from the plane to inspect the "getaway car" provided. As Schuetz stopped to examine the trunk of the car, the disguised pilot - Capt. Heino Caesar, a pilot and Luft· hansa security chief--t:lugged him over the head with a wrench concealed in a pocket of his raincoat. The blow knocked Schuetz down, but he leaped to his feet and sprinted off. Four bullets brought him down. police said. Police spokesmen said they could not confinn Schuetz had any weapon but were investigating a plastic cup. filled with a brown mass and with a wick·like string protruding that Schuetz presented as hls bomb. Square Dancing Classes Slated In Costa Mesa Neavport Sunie1ader Bookie Enf ore er Suspect Booked By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL 01 Ille Dtll'I' l'llel Sl•ft A burly used car salesman suspected as the muscleman debt collector In a lucrative !(J)Ortl bookmating system allegedly beaded by a saddleback Com· munlty College District trustee sur· rendered to Newport Beach police Tues· da y. l)ohert E. Kelly, 34, or 831 Seagull Lant, Newport Beach. was booked on suspicion of conspiracy to commit bookmaking and ?<leased on $2,500 bail pending an Oct. 16 arraignment. "It was a milllon·to-one shot," said From Page J OLD LAWS. •• being a home for dismantled vehicles. "The ordinance is primarily for esthetic n:asons. People who repair cars are sometimes optimistic and never com· plete the job In a day. And the oil drip. ping on the asphalt tends to deteriorate it." Also illegal in Costa Mesa ls to place a sign on you rear advertising it for sale. "People used to drive around with painted windows and the ordinance was aimed at preventing accidents. It definitely wasn't for the benefit of the automobile dealers," Humpbrer.t ex- pl ains. In addition, it ls unlawful in Costa Mesa to fire any type of gun within the corJ)Orate city limits, to sleep in a motor vehicle other than at a cam~. to obstruct the interior of pried vehicles with curtains, sell horror comics to persons under 18, drill for oil, practice golf ·anywhere except on a goll course, stage wrestling or boxing matches in public parks, keep an excessive number of pets, and W keep manure near oc- cupied places. One of the gray areas are the statutes governing the operation of · the city's several massage parlors. It is clearly prohibited for masseuses and masseW'S to give treatments to member~ of the opposite sex, for ex- ample ... Section 11.118 further requires massage parlors to keep a register book containing the names, addresses and types of treatments administered to all clients. "This ordinaDce came up when the massage parlors hit their zenith and were nothing more than houses of pros· titution," says Humphreys. "But with things cleaned up, I doubt If anyone would take a sln>og look al i~ ~ Q\estlon it's validity aii.yway." · Still vaJid if perhaps the Jeast known ordlna(lCt of iil, the one which specifiP(J that persons sentenced to city jail" "may be required to perform Jabor on any public street, hlghway, way, building or other public work of the city." Vlce and Intelligence OMclive John Slmon in regard to the coincideoce that shifted suspicion to Kelly as the '25 •a- week ring's enforcer, ~ Saddleback Community C o 11 ~I • Trustee Alyn M. Brannon, 4-0, ol S«nia Ana, is currtnUy free on $10,000 bail , after being charged with 37 separate : counts involving bookmaking violatlom. : He face~ prellmlnary bearing Nov. )() : in Harbor Judicial District. Court on S4 ~ coont.s of bookmaking, two counts of µ, .. , tortion and one count of conspiracy. , Deputy District Attorney Ted Mlllaid , said today it Is likely the Orange County' · Grand Jury will is!Jue an tndlctme'nt t before that date, naming the former , junior college board president. ': This would immediately shift pf'Ot'·- ecntion a n d defense proceedings ~ . Orange County Sllperior Co u i: .t · eliminating a hearing at the municlnU,-'. court level. · ,· ',..I Detective Simon said today that K~,,., a sli:-foot, four-Inch, 240-pound resldtJJt'<Jt,' 1 Newport Beach's Oakwood Apartmen&i.1 surrendered on the advice of Los AngeliS:.; attorney Peter Smith. ,:--~~· Kelly apparetlUy learned he was · wanted for questioning in connection 1'itll the bookie ring case re11ealed Aug. 'lf, , when Trustee Brannon was.arrested 1if.· vice offiten. '1 ·~( Detective Simon declined lo revW~ what Jed investlgaton to implicate t&it;; suspect as an alleged enforcer who d~f·i: with slow-pay bettora. • ... ~~ Deputy District Attorney Don cartolti confirmed following Brannon's Aug1·~·~ arrest that a second suspect was titJ!(1; soug~t in that role, following a ~: warrung to one local man heavily in dtl't': due to sports gambling. The unidentified Newport B e a c Ir : businessman and bi!: wife received an anonymous telephone call one nigbt~'iri "' mid·August, from a man who rugg~·: they go out and check lbelr !root door f '.: ·: Shaken at the slgbl o! an elght·IJ!!:li'· hunting knl!e lmbedded In the door,'~~ victim called police lo spill hlJ story .'~f dolng $1,000 a week in buslness ,;..__ · a11egedly with Brannon. ·, "/ Detective Simon said names of mW,.~ local people wbo allegedly placed befs., with Drannon on various sporting events will be subpoenaed for testimony. . Money allegedly exchanged tands'1 ib gambling on professional horse rac~ football, basketball, boxing and tennis;'·.'~ .. , .. Pentagon Paper~~ Figure Cancel,s .... ~ ·:. Odd &S it may seem, tht ordinance is 'Mlere is still time to join the Tuesday belng applied widely, according to night square dance classes offered by the Humphreys. Anthony Russo Jr., .11 key figure in ·f.ht-·· OCC, UCI Talks .:·:::~ . . Costa Mesa Department o{ Leisure '1These are the jail trusties. They do a Pentagon Paperis incident, has canceled Services. lot of the painting and renovating at city this week's speaking engagements at.YP Sessions are being held from 8 a.m. to hall. Most of them are alcoholics on dry-Irvi11e and Orange Coast College. '. . 10 p.ro. weekly in the Community out time. Ru sso, who was to have appeared. ·it.· "Some of them are pretty skilled UC Irvine today and at Orange CoUl.' Recreation Center, on the Orange County carpenters and painters and the ones who College Thursday, left four Copenba~O ,' Fairgrounds. No rt gist rat Ion is are unskilled wash the police cars. If Tuesday far a civilian inquiry into l\'!.' necessary. Cost of each lesson is $1.25. they're given a choice or going to the city U.S. "war crimes" in Indochina. · • · Other classes for which no advanced jail or the county jail, -they generally His talk! have been rescheduled ::'to 1 choose the city jail and go to work. tt's a noon Oct. 17 at UCI and to noon OCt. 'tJ·1o registration is required include baton at OCC. · , · '1 • \ bidder aod forced a »day ulUmatum on Miss Costa , Mesa contest, scheduled for Costa Mesa to buy the land. 3:30 P•JI\. SuJl4ay'On, tht Wk 'ltage. Public pt1!1S11re and ellorl! b y Corren! Utle bcllder MarianDe jlergeron Assemblyman Robert R. Burke (R·Hun-.t"' Is among t.he fltld of 20'Candidilet vying linglon Beach) persuaded the General for the Miss Costa Mesa crown. Services Department to back off from its \n1n1ediate outright purchase demand. Costa Mesa expects to share some of the devel opment costs with the county. tt has been the aim of local offkials to re- lain and develop about 30 acres as a city pa rk. MESA CALENDAR TONIGHT AUTO snow -Ninth annual Orange c; o u n t y lnternationa1 presentation, Anaheim Convention (.enter. Oct . 11-15. Adults. $2: Junlor1 U..18, $1; chHdren under It. frtt. PREPAllATION FOR PARENTHOOD -OCC Evening College Lecture Serles, Lectu rer: Morjorle Pyle, R.N. Oct. 4- NO\', 8. Estancia HS Forum , 7:30-9 :30 p.n1, RJo.:DlJCL"JG 1NC0~1E -UC ! Ex· lf'~ion Lectu re Series : "SelectinR And lmplem nU ng an Effective Tax Plan." l..ect urer~: Attorney Mk:fn1e.1 Chris- Ua nl!On and Dennl1 Klarin. CrA . Newport Reach . Rm . 178. Humnnlllcs llf1\I . 7-10 p.m. Single admltsion $5.50. BACK TO SCHOOL NIGHT -Davi~ Middle School, 1050 Arlington Drive, 7.9 p.m .. TeWlnkle Middle School. 3224 N. Califomia Avt .. 7-9: IS p.m .. nnd Kaiser Middle School, 2130 Santa Ana 1\ve. 6:4!t- 9 p.m. THURSDA V, OCT. 11 AUTO SROW -Continuing throuih OCI. IS. l;OSl'A MESA WATER DISTRICT - .8'gu\ar.JQeel1Q&. dlllrlct olflCe, city boll, 'lfhlr Orlv'.;. 7:30 p.m. ALAN ZASLOVE EXlllBIT -OCC Art 'Gallery, -lbrough Oct. 'II, Mondoy-• ~·t. I 1.m.4 p.m. • •""' ORR BXHllllT-OCI Flnt Arlt Glllery, now through Oct. 21. Tueidq. !klllllaJ, '" p.m. , Dick Lane . Slated For Chamber Fete In Costa Mesa Dick Lane. tht raspy • voictd tele-· vision announcer w h o brings wresll· ing and the roller derby into southern California homes each week, will do a sUnt for the Co!lta Mesa Ownber of Com· merce Oct. 19. He will emcee the Chamber's 23rd An· nual Membenhip Banquet aild Install Gene Ber1eron as new Chamber of Com- merce president, u well u other olncen and directors. A Harbor Area resident, Laoe will review some of the expctiences ... during hit lenKtby catttr. The title of bla talk LI, ··1 Count ~ty Blcsslngl' I've had a Ball." Reservation• ahould be made at the Chamber of Commerce, 513 W. 19th St·, CO!!ta Mc!a, before Oct. 17 . The $6.SO price per peraon includes dln- ncr Ml lhe Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club, t10t Golf c..att Drive. The lallvllla ""' ldlcdttled to get under way with a IOclal hour at I p.m, Dinner will be served at '7 p.m. From P,,.e J BOOZE ... atta betw<!t!n Corona del Mar and Laguna Beaeh . It wn11ld al>o appl1 to MU. Squaro Park In Fountain Valley (wbm U.. Soll course clubhouse wu panted a liquor pennlt), University Park In lrrine a.nd O'Nelll Park itt E1 i:oro. lniae Pan Mil Tu.sun has deed mb\cllortl aptut Im· blblnJI. ' ~ C9JT1111ltllontl'I ~bell• blct-JAdallq on 1<1allllof ollOo Wiien Hubol': Buchn aod P lllrector X.n Sampooo lllid be cottldll't tau Ute rtpeal volt to tile 1Upervilor1 wltll lull IUPPOrl unltSI he had an tt.ltemltlve with hlrn . plum for them. They find life far more twirling and round dancing. pleasant there." Russo was given court permission °F'fii.-:: Baton classes meet from 3 p.m. to 4 day to leave for the Danish capital, a feW.~ p.m. Molldays al Costa Mesa Park. weeks before he and Danie! Ellsberg:ife--. Intermediate and advanced round dance Ill Son Strangled ~:,';':".!.go on trial in the Pen~°;~:~ lessons are offered from 7:30 p.m. to The Pentagon Papers trial remaiU JO:SO p.m. Mondays at Wilson School, TOKYO (AP) -A retired 76-year-old under a court-ordered postponement. The .. , and eas.ler intermediate lessons at the gunsmith strangled his incurably ill 37· delay was ordered when defesne 1&~r year-old son because he could not bear to torneys asked for a Supreme Court b~., same lime Tuesdays at Pomona School. se<. him lying helpless in bed, police ing on alleged illegaJ wiretapplng. .._;_~; Baton fees are $1.50 per session and reported today. No charges have been fil· Russo and Ellsberg may go on IDBt' the round dance feet $1.25 per aession. ed against the father, Tokichi Takane. later thla month. , i, ., ~~---~iiiiiiiijl-piii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii» GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES FALL JEWELRY TRENDS There's a classic revival In Fall jewelry ~tyllng !or 1972, !or today's woman b getting the clothes she want5 and loves to wear. The"' ere wide choices for the woman of the 70's. She can choose a simple treatment of gold, n tra· dltlon laden diamond ensemble, a totlored look that mixes Ivory with gold or a lacy ellect that makes diamonds reDect sparkling mem· orles. Personalized jawelry of elegant good taste bu never been more aceeaslble. Whether it's diamonds, rubles, emeralds, 18pphlres, gold , silver or plaUnwn, l<>clay'• WOlllllD Is free In U5ll her own creative lmaglnati-On lo enhance her own particular beauty. Bui best of all, she has access to n world of Ideas from her local In- dependent jeweler, who Is com· ple lcly free to operate as he wl&hea In helping her. It takes t~e right kind of . mon.ey ' I to look your best. TM "Pf •llMI .t _._., ,.. 4ey k .. w c .. -. 1-ffhn .. ... ,...., .............. . ... •""'"9• IWfff-... .. U9fte4 14 •• , • t .. .. ... ...... c.-..... ..... •: ""'--· , ...... ,., ... .,........ ......... ...,.. ..... e.-........ .. ....... r11 .... ~ ......... c.e1 .. .....,.. J.C. .J.Ju mphrieJ JeweferJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TilMS 2S YEAlS IN THE SAMI! LOCATION • ~ . " " ' . ... ., ' " ' •• ' ., • .. •, • · .. ., -.. lo. • DA.D,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Freeway Displacement Although crews are Car from ready to lire up their earth.movers plans to extend the Newport Freeway through Cos'ta Mesa. are beginning lo di sturb the emotional tranquility of residents at the Four Seasons trailer park. The problem ls that a free'YaY access road ~ill ~ut through the trailer village, takmg away its sw101mmg pool shuffleboard courts and other amenities. . For those in the direct path of the road, the unpact will be of less major consequence. Under the state's relocation program, they are being given generous al- lowances to help them buy new mobile homes else- where. Those left behind would like to move but cannOl, either because they do not have the financial ~esources or because their trailers are obsolete and wiU not be taken by other parks. A welcome break: for the remammg residents is state Sen. Denn.is Carpenter's decision to look for ways by which these people may also be paid assistance for relocation. Even though state officials insist that the other residents will probably have less noise and air pollution to contend with than they do now, this is purely specula- tive. The access road supposedly will carry less traffic than fronting Newport Boulevard does now and that, coupled with pladrig the freeway 25-feet below ground when it passes the park, should give them relatively peaceful environment. But the best statistical projections do occasionally go awry and it is possible that the r~sidents may indeed be subjected to as much noise, d\ISl and air pollution as they fear. In fact, taking into account the recent stat&- mandated "environmental ·impact11' rule, it is doubtful whether any freeway would pass the test. Air pollution from cars alone would also give the Newport Freeway an automatic 1'F." Meanwhile, state plans to rel ocate the pool and other facilities are not yet complete, adding further to the worries of the Four Seai;ons "left overs.11 Senator Carpenter's investigation could ease their peace of mind. Student Bill of Rights Newport.Mesa school trustees have taken the first step toward bringing students into the fabric of the general citizenry. - In giving preliminary approval lo a Student Bill of Rights last week, they have shown a desire to at le ast begin closing any gap between students and the rest of the working public. For years, students have had only those ri ght s hesitantly granted by administrators. Now, under this new policy, they have virtually all the rights they would have as any citizen doing any job-ass embly, redress of grievances and others. 'fhe policy is an outgrowth of a state Legislature action requiring school districts to draft basic freedom of expression statements for their students. A year's work by a committee of students, teachers and adm~strators yielded the policy which faces final approval by the board next Tuesday. According to Supt. John Nicoll, each school on every level will be able to expand the policy to fit it to the individual situation. The Student Bill of Rights is',. progressive step in the right direction. Now it is up to school administra· tors, teachers and students alike lo make it work. It would be a shame for such a policy to become a crowbar for rebellious elements on campus' who would warp its meaning to ge t their own way. It would be equaJly shameful for the policy to be watered down by unfounded criticism or neglect. . .u Move over, Dick, ol' buddy!' c • Sources of Confusion Over 'ee' 'Senator's Eco110111ie Proposals Would Bri1ag Disaster' l FNEY J.HARRI~ If a man who escapes from prison is called an "escapee," why should not a man who deserts an anny be called a ''desertee''? He ahou1d not because we already have a perfectly good word to describe him: he la a ~'deserter." But in the newspaper stories and popular speech of the near future, be may very well be turned into a "delertee." Of course, language should change; it should grow and de- v e I op, becoming more precise and more colorful and more Oexible. But It should not grow like a cancer, where the disturbed cells over nm the beolthy oo... And this Is pre- clsel1 wbat Is happening with much o! our language change today. THE MODERN MANIA for the "ee" ending on words bas no rhyme and even less reason. A lawyer ln Chicago sends me an extract from a legal meeting at wbtcb tne aecmary o o t e d there were "100 attendees." And the lawyer quite properly asks, "lf we wbo were at the meeting were 'attendees,' then who, pray, were the attenders?" In the same way, the overflow crowd at a theater ls described as "standees," tiut they are really "standers." And peo- ple who retire voluntarily should not be termed "retirees," which implies they were forclbly put out to pa!lture. I THINK TUE trouble springs from confusion with words k>og: in use, such as Dear Gloomy Gus \Vhy does the City ot. c.osta 1.1esa have to plftce help wanted (animal control officer) ads in a Los An· geles newspaper. It's an insult to our own fine, local labor market! -W.B.S. m Tiiis ....... r.n.m ................. ""' HC.u.ity tlMse ef .. -··••r, SMll """' Ml ....,. I'll Olo.tlly °"" Da11Y Plttl, "employee," "tra~ee," and "examinee," where they are the agents acted upon by employers, trainers, and examiners. But ti,ere 1s no comparable "escaper" who s~wa ~escapee how to flee, or any pr~ fessionll . "st~r,. who places people in vertical position. . Another source of confusion comes from legal terms, where we have the "lessee,.. the "vendee," the "trustee,'' and so on, with their correspondinj parties to the relationship. Of course we also have, from the French reflexive verbs, such words as "refugee" and '1abeentee" and "debauchee," which sup- ply useful terms the English laaguage lacks. BUT ENGLISH also bas at least three suffixes (-er,--0r, and ..Jst) for the purpose or making agent-nouns. When we make a new one whose natural meaning is lbe opposite (a "returnee" shouldn't be tbe same as a "returner," but it Is), we only rurt.her eonfound our coocept.s and muddle our communication. Let us have an end to such Unguistic abominations as "amputee" and "awardee" and "expellee." T he upgrading, vigorous Anglo-Saxon folk have always valued the doer more than the sayer; but can he conUnue to com· mand thia respect if our demotic language eventually turns him into a doeel Boys' Clubs' Great Work !Jldutrlal NeWI Review Nearly everyone bas beard of the Boys' Clt.:be: ol America. Probably few have had an opportunity to aee at finit·hand how this g r e a t cbaractu-buildlng organization works with nearly a million boys from early grade school ¥e into the teens to build a good llfe foi;,1Y,ouths who have Uved In t imately with discoUrqernent and despair. The taak of local Boyt' Clubs Is stag. sering. "" one o!flclal of Boys' Clubs of America wrllel, "roony of today's young peoplo have problems of frlihtenlng slu and comptexi\y. Jlecotlnl•lnc ~ J:! 1.,.... deaillll with and tttatlotl u • takOI mn than bavin& 'a leellns for boya' ••• Operatlotl a Boys' Club today e11l1 for a comblnatlon ol 1kllla whicb re- 9ulrt specialized college tralninll and pntctlcal uperleoce . . . IOIDt Boya' Club O<PJ!lutlonl, within major cltlos, consllt ol muJUple units, a membenhlp well up lntA> the tbousandl, a otall o1 scores and budgels of a million or more." A FEW OF THE activities of Iba Boya' Clubs were hlghll&hted durln& the organlzaUon's 1'71 annual convention. , Among other even&a wu the p(l:lleotaUon of ten honor awards and grants to especially oulltandlnc 'projecta of local clubs. A d"crlpllon of JllR one of ~ lllu.trates what the Boya' Qub move- ment Is doing. In Lhll cue, the 8o)'I' Club of Nashua. New ~. ""*Y· eel .. awanl ro ... -job tralnlnc program to employ boya In the <on· structloo trades, to help JOUlho already coovlcted ol criminal orr ...... So ru 10 new bomel have bcefl built under lhe projoct'1 .,pm>lllon. MOii of the boys parltdpotlntJ bad no further problems wltll the ..... Here II a conc:rtte enmpte ol Boya' Clubs o1 Amulca Jn operatloa. II ahowl OD< youth Ol'(lllliDtloo tbat deoen>OI the IUppo<t of the enUr< nation. Bt1 George Dear Georte: My husband mlly bums mt up. When wo ha .. a pany he can banl- 1.r nit for the J11J<J11 lo leave. Kmw whot he domf 'hket all the cushl4as out o! tho chain •od sofq to look !0< loole cban10 gu<s1> hBYe dropped I And ha ooly buJ1 modcmlrtlc fumltuN! tha t lilt.I ~ ple way beck 10 chlnae wtU.. dnlpl Dool you think this II the helcbi al creed and dilbonaly? CLARA O.sr Citro: l Art )'GU obJecllng nn 1ener1J prtnclples or btcaUI< he """'t 1pUt the tool with,.., (ln lhll -you have to be cardut.) Reader Compares McGover~, Nixotj To the Editor: McGovern tries to exploit our economJc igr.orance. His economJc proposals would bring us disaster. Fortunately common sense tells many to reject McG<ivem's deceits. McGovern implies that giant cor· poratioos aren 't paying their fair share ar,d should be taxed more. Big business should pay the.ir fair share. B\lt we shouldn't unduly repress the creaton of jobs just to help McGovern buy votes. Jn the last 10 years Bethlehem Steel~a taxes averaged $37 mllllon a year more than their net income. PROFITS ARE lhe backbone oC our economic syrtem. We use profits to: (I) Lower~ (a TV sot coot $500 lo the' lNO's. NO'f we get a better set for half the price). (2) Raise wages. (3) Create new products and jobs (about $21)1000 average required for eaeb new job). (f) Reward stockholders (who wlll pro- vide' business-expansion and job-creating money if the profit is no more than on a savings account?) (5) Pay lases. MORE PEOPLE wort now than when Nixon took office. But more people have entered the job market. McGovmi's p~ posaia would dampen OO.ihea and hinder tbe creation ol jobs. McGovern claims Nlxon wants ex- cessive proflla for business. But Sen. Proxmire (Dem., Wis.) correctly stated that bu.sineas ~lit. are sharply lower since NiJ:on took'Offi ce. Why is tlm? During the inflationary Vietnam Wart PreaJdent Johr.son greatly lncreueo domestic spending and oventlmulated the economy. When Nixon tocit office, we were approaching runaway lnilatlon (McGovern blames Nixon for this). If not controlled , Utis inOaUon would de!troy our eeonomlc security and even. tually cause a depression -with larg& scale unemployment. NIXON FOVGUT inflation the stand- ant way: restrict the money tupply. This depressed corporate profitl. But unlike prevlow: 1'8Cf81iooJ, COllCs rose. So Nlzon linally imposed Wlgfl1Jflce COO- tro\s. This brOUlht greater 1tab1111Y. McOowtm says we abould rtmove wag.¢ce coolroil and roly on j1w bon- ing (Nilan tried thia aod found It didn't wort). We don't want 197o.71 all over again. McGovern criUclies Nlmo for deficit 1peodlntJ. Yet McGovern'• •j••n•ll"' pn> posals would cost at 1 .. st liJO billion mono. And would brine hlgl1er ldrs and 1troog lnfi•llon. McGovern ii liko the ar>ooiat wbo Ids l fire, then bJamOI tho fin clopartm<nl when thq comt to put It out. LEONARD Wll!GHT He's for S_,ll•ltz To the Editor: That~ dinn<r I• Mr. NilOll was a dad g1vuwa7 u lo U. clul "' peoi>le wllo ""' prolh -11 ltt II rwledod. Tbat'I richt, tbe rlob wlU pt rtdltr aod ~ pGOr p>orer. Bui doni -~ will help • bit w lkGoftnl ii •locted either; tbal'I rfll!I, the pGOr wlD IWl bt -and the r1oh 11111 .. r1Cbl Oil 1etiu. rlchtt. IN A WOIWI -tly -mad, Jolm SchmltJ mnm 10 us u a rtli'tlhlnc ""'1odor Iha! ~ la lllJU "'*1bl< r ... a citizen to be •tttted Pruldoot wllhout balng the blgnt liar In tho tond, or IP<'ndi"8 tbe m:>1t money 1ryJna to rebralnwub th< alreody ....--bnlnwul> td citizenry u ln the <Me: d UW: IWO flt a ll now butOy en;qed 1n st1bblnc e.rh ( MAILBOX ) Letters from reade rs are welcome. Normally writers should co11vey their messagea in 300 worcU or less. The right to condtti.se le tters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. All letters mus t include signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if iufficient reas on is apparent. Poetry wiU not be published. other in the back lo win the election. wtm NEWCOMER John Schmitz as President we could be assured of several years of honest representation before the money greedies finally get to him and at- tempt to "indoctrinate" him into a guUess wonder like Nixon , or even McGovern. A vole for Schmitz is a vote for America. MILT BASHAM Proposition :lO To the Editor: While driving down Pacific Co.,t J{jgbway in Huntington Beach !'ecently, my family and I were shocked by a political billboard. The billboard sold "The Beach Beloogs to You • DON'T LOCK tT UP! Vote NO on Proposition No. 20." The provisions of l'ropo'Sition 20 have been incorrecUy stated by op- ponents ot' the measure before, but never In such bot~:'£' tenns. Simply silted, tlon 20 lnt<nds to llmll C01.SU1ne dev l to approval by pmnlt through ooe of Iii "'llonal commilslool. llurlnc the nest Ihm yem, while real -te devetopmcn11 would be stabllilad, a tboroagh study could be compltted .t the entln Ca!Uonlla oout. IN tfll THE oonunlssioos ...ud ......,,..,.Qd to Ille Lepiatutt a mute< plan for the de.......,t of the cont. Theto ~ would 11>- oorporate the wllbt> •al tho majority oC CalUomlaal aod not Juli the lntemta .t rral tttate d!velopen 11 11 I.be cue at ptH<llL Tba written lntentloo o I Proposltioo Ill hi no ny Implies that the aoc:as by the public to tho l>each will be -Why lbouid poUtlcal adve:t!Jlng be aUowed to make IUCll ..-Jy lnac<un1• claims u ""' cu!Tt111f1 belll« made lo del .. t .._itlon IOf 'l'be F<de«I Trad& COmmilllon .. -· -.. the UDIUbstaotlated datml al IOl1p maoulacWttrt, nte -.UJ!nc d•i""' 00 propllftiool ailed • ..,.. ponlon o! the popollUon. The ou tcome oC prop- -II .,.rtalnty al leNil u Im· pa<1AAt .. the deanq ellldeocy of • panl<ulat ... p proparatloo. FAlll Pl.A Y AND lepl NU'alnl Is ob- """"' lldinl when ., ad'mlillna linn --clafino that ... aompletily ,.,. llllPOlit.e al 0. illmt al • prvpos1tJOO fie -""11 flnna .., tltorotly "dt,,.m up" """'°"""' ..,._ thlt tho poorly·lnformed YOltr cm. r ~ a d 11 y ttm<mher lo the polliD& booth. '"" DAILY PILOT edltortol staff >ad other lnfonned WJ(ft'I 1fbo hl"t H • pn>UOd -'lloo It "-""' 20 should be llJle to.,. tliat Ml! devl•tloo.o trom the u iw-d m ti.n llltmt ., the proposllkln art unfa!r llld lhou.ld be Wlkwfut. 'l'be ---ol the •d..,,i.tnc _, and their finonctal bfi.ck.C!n l.1 10 decdv• the w1w1ry \'ot•r Al a tMJh of this dlsbontlt ad\"V'll.llnl camP1i1n. 111 spilt or Sntm 110D1 ot lhc propo~•tkm ol proV'k!Jn4 c.mt;ill(l(f 1tC- cess to !he scenic and recreationo l benerits or the coastline for the majority of Ca\Uomians, a nearly certa in defeat is in store for Proposition 20. PAUL f'. WRIGHT \V/1itakcr & Baxter. tile public rt· /al iO'l1s a11tl ca111paig11 n1a11agement f1nn referred lo by flf r. \Vright, wns exonerated of charges by Ralph Na· der rltat it had dis.!em hw ted fal..!e and misleading information in its .wcces s· fut campa ign kl defea t Proporition 9 iit June. Tlie Gri evance Boord of the Public Re:la!iOtls Societ11 of Americo. I 11c., invt.stigated and rejected Na· der's clalnu. Cltnn lV11itt1ker, Jr., pretident of the fi rm, com ments, "(I n trlew of the ex· onerationJ It i1 .!ignificant I n light of c11rre11t charges by proponent.! of Propo1ltio11 No . 20 that any and all argTlmenu in opposition to tl1e1r n1easure are 'deceptive' and 'fraudu. lent.' "It i.! &iU'f1ificont In lioht of threl'at..t b11 both Sca tt Se11ator Jome1 ~fill.! tHlfl A11emblyman Robert ~loretli to s11b· ;ect thi1 /i nn and other opponents of Propos ition No. 20 to star chamber procetdiri os before legbkltlvt com· mitt.its for da ring to voice opposi· tion to a ballot 11.tue tht ll happen to faoor. "Rea.sonablt men can dl//tr on onv i.tsiu, 011d !he public Interest 1u r'IV ia .served wl1en both 111de1 are lt4'arrl . It ill n dl.t turbing dtvt lomnent in America. remi11 iJcent of dictatorship rtgi1nes, wlien lt:Qitimat' crl1lcitm. voiced tn pt1blic 1tntemf'n ls atid nd· verti.tinfl, it lhreatnied 1oi lh 111ppr,:· sian by tltcled officials." -£ditor Me•••flf! f or Casper• To the Editor: For Ronald Cuptn . oor rtpresent•· Uve on the Oran1e Count y Boa.rd ol Super· vllon. t hllve tour polntl: 11 An airport In Camp Ptndleton 1hould be out d the question W'IUl Soul.hem Clllfomla b: abeol utt:ly c:om- mltled to a npld 1nn1lt J)'Sttm to RtW the whole ere•. Without II. what do I tte'? Ribbons of upball and polluted llr cn- clrcllna San Clemente. 11 It reality lo ihlnll thll will not conw about! 2) HqardinC Ills IUpport fO< Ihm lobbyiltJ In W llhinltM tor 1 t'IOOI fare of m .ooo a )Ur. I 111. HUTS~ Oranae County hu IWO 11tn11lon aod several represtnt.ttJves in W1.Jhlngtao plld le\'t.rtl rtprttenlltiVl':ll irl Sacnmellto reedvlng from 30 to 40 thousand plUI frlni e benefits and DOW we need mott repruentattves! 21 ts NOT 11111 1rv1.. eom...., de\'ek>prnfnl In lbe Mlole area breallnC our """°81Cal btckrl ti t rtld comocli1 IOllU! Ume ago. lhc company tnltr'ldl ta build a c11, .t obool 4'0,0llO ..,_ from FJ Tore 11'htre they've betll bulldklil the Im couple roan tmqloe the ...-,.. which Jl't' W\IOly1b&t now mu!~ Tho -_ .. bte thine to • (« ~lhtm Callfomt. ii, firlt a n d romno.1, co ....n •llh rtt•t dilpatc:b for a .supe r nipid tnnatt 1y11,m ANTOt,~lrrrt llOt:TZI. t'•te Tllem AU Oal To W F.dltor: ti 1ho ...., • pn""'! la a '""' ,.,,,.._ llan ., the mood ., the ....,117, then 11 pe,....I of the adult poputotlaa ls up li&ht Quotes ~ Wlit:am•11. M.tlbtil -''1ba ..,.,.Itta tlllna tbai II "1!1tlaf tem>r in our lft:ll d tft can br found It ooe -.ont -!'0"'1Y" • • nbou t some national problem. ¥le bf.'t' lh<: middle class f{roanlng about ta1.1Uit1. the elderl y l'QFTiplain1ng about mirginnl living , the young mll1lants ugainll l the v.·ar. fven the famed si lent majori1 y which is normally apathet ic to anythln~ cxecpt their own seU\~h 1nterestl!I ls be~inn1ng to Ix-alarmed 11bout rising prices. IN TllE SrlRIT of public h::irmony, I am advancing a llOlulion in whll·h e\·eryone can take a constructive par1 and It will not only nllcvlule all 1hesc nnd many other r roblerru but wU I 11ctuaJly solve most o them. All everybody nttd do is vote every Incumbent ou t of office. Think of It for .-moment It every ' public orncial up for reelecilon this year,' whether he 's rurtnlng for local dog r catcher or 11resldcnt. man or won\Jln , Democrat or Dlxiccr:11, 11 Y1ould mA ke no dlfft rencc. Any nnme on the ballot ac· companied by 1he -·ord lncumbt:nt or Inc.: would 1in1ply not be voted for. WE WOUl..D LOSE IKlmt good mqn ; probably about I pc.retnt of todll)•'s public offici11l11 enm what thty lake fr01n I.he public lrough . but It would be •"Orth that to get the m l out. Think of it. oot> sim ple action, \Ole every Incumbent out. It will !lop thfo prt!ient trend of iiovtmmtnt by spectal 1nteres11 for that 1!1 al h.•nallng cvt>t)'on<' GEORGE BRODE:JUCK Clle.,kless Sodet11 To the EJ11or. Jn regard 10 lht U V. J)1ckt'r l<"ttcr ($cpl. 27 1 on the c~kltU M>eicl). "<' v.ouJd like lo ttrcu somt ot~r points of VIPW. 1-:ven lhough thi.1 J)'Stem is In t J.- per1mental stages, It teems tv~t 1hnt thll type of banking will be pn•va lent 1n the near future. lt woul d appear this 11y1tem coul•J evenl utlly lead to exctmn1iing <I ttc:ioru& by 1 numbt:r without the use o( ca.sh. credit cardJ, etc. An aU1horir.M numhl'r. rtgardlest Gf how II 'l''OUld b C demonatnted or put Into UJt IN TIIK PROPllt..'TIC' book of 0 3f111•I and Re vclalkln, ln the! H1blt'. "" ar l" toht ol a Ume: ~ earth would e•ptrk'"'Ct' vutly incruJed kno'Alt'dll:f' (Oan.irl 12 '41 ud people •o..dd br bu)'ln« and ttlllnit mi)' b)' lhe:ir own nu1honU!d numbtr (JtttelaUor: ll ' 17 1 J NWI Chr111 u ld thr ume 1eneralioo "'hic h -.·ould rxptr1f'n<'t' tho Mirth o4 lll'lf'I 11.!I a nnhon 1l!Ha1 (LQe 24:31 1. tho-Tl'()('('Ur*liDn (J! Jtn111m9tm t lM? •. 1hr nrv. -· bonl.lnK l)'lttm IHDU Ill ~ potnHnic !() WIKld ~t i ncl C'Urfi"f1l 'v1•n1J ll rt' !)t t'• IUdial J\lture hb lOf)' JtrlY S~JTl l HOii llOUSTON OIAHOI CO.UT DAILY PILOT ICo«tt ·'' n·,,,f, l'Nb/u l\tr 'ThomGJ l\rrril, [ddor Alhr-rt ". lklff'.t 1:diwrtG1 l'-uc F.114 1or Thr f"dl!ttl'1.I l•tt" of I ~ ~ r Ul'tl ,......lu lo Inf<""" Af'd .. Jmu· i..1·· ,.~1"'" hr 1.....,.nunc 'hi' ,,., .. ,,,.,....... ntoltlll-•1111 l'Gf"· 1nrnllU') "" 1•"*31 l•t lnlr,.t •nd tl«ftlhratw~. b) ~Mlilt-c • lflf'llT' fur Ilk-e.-fl(rou~ of Ollr ~ "p1n1n"' ••Id bf. ,,,,.,.~u"JI' UM 111~ v1Mt-1.rt1n • •'It lnfotmo'd nb- ............... •NI •rlll""-Mlt oa '°"'° "' '"°" "-1 ll'ednu day. October t I. 19'72 I • OW Wife • • ivorcing Husband oc!I ~~XLAND, caur. (UP!l -The wife of i Navy flier, America's longest-held qn1ttlher or war in Nor\h Vietnam, is fSt king a divorce despite alleged Navy .8f.empts to stop her. 1(l The pretty wife of Lt. Everelt Alvarez Jr. filed a petition for dissolution of mar- -ilhi.ge in July 1970, but the proceedings ~ i..ept secret unti l this week "'hen the Pnot's sister told a San Francisco ~ .... ·~paper. ?. •• T'fillgee Alvarez, 32, bad been married to her husband only eight months when .dae 1was shot down over the Gulf of Tonkin ~b:i.Au~ust 1964.. She told her attorneys she waited for his return until she felt she could v.ai t no longer. Trio of Attractions The San Diego Zoo Tu~sday announced the arrival of three two- month-old tiger cubs in the animal nursery at the Children's Zoo. edged sword. Stie's a young ~'Olll8n who's been waiting years for a man who may never come home. I don 't know any yoong woman who could wait that long before seeking the company of others." HER L.A\\'YER, Myron To"'er of San Leandro, said the Navy tried to stop the divorce on gounds the action would badly hurt his morale and might give the North Vietnamese a lever to pry out in- formation. "It's pretty rough for a man sitting in prison to get a divorce notice from his ""ife," the attorney said. "but it's a two Navy Says It Didn't ;··:Jolt City ... ,., ':0'' SAN DIEGO (AP ) ,. -~ysterious jolts that rallled l":.'.tbe San Diego area last week l··,.gre back ag ain. This lime the ., Navy says a fig ht <'r plane was ' r n ving a l supersonic speeds 40 ''io. 50 n1iles offshore. :w.,.~ But after resident ~ telephon- .,.~Jtd police to complain of shud- "" ~ering window s and cracking •• dishes Tu e s d a y . Navy ' .. '.r BRIEFS ) '~'Spokesmen continued to deny ;·11hat their offshore maneuvers must be responsible. :-. Seismologists have dismiss· ~'•tel the possibility of earth- ;" ;juakes. and say the jolts must ·~1'be· sonic booms or reverbera- State Wants Ruling Delay SAN FRANCISCO (APl - The state may ask the State Supreme Court to ease the crisis created last month when the court ruled that private constructivn projects must be envi roMlentally cleared by local agencies before building permits may be issued. Atty . Gen. Evelle J . Younger said Tuesday that he was considering ask.i?)g the cou rt to delay the enforcement of its ruling because it had been so unexpected. The Sep!. 21 ruling has trig- * * * * * * 'Friends' Surprised At Reaction to Ruling LOS ANGELES tAPl -An ensure "a means by which the attorney for Friends of h1an1-people in the community have moth says the conservation-something to say about \11hat oriented group had in mind happens in the community." good planning -not an end to He hailed the rourt decision any construction -when it on the group's suit as a wenl to court. landmark that should end The "Friends," led by former Olympic gold medal careless land speculation and skier Andrea Mead Lawrence, uncontrolled construction proj-ects. 'Ille ruling was needed. leaped into the limelight Sept. he said, because planning of- 28 when the Ca Ii for n i a ficials and agencies had fallen Supreme Court ordered a halt down on the job. lo a Sierra high ri~ apart- gered an immediate moratorium in the issuance of building permits in most large cities of the state. THE COURT ruled that en- vironmental impact studies must be done for proposed private construction projects before building permits are issued. Until that ruling, the requirement had been con- sidered to apply only to public projects. Younger emphasized that he had no quarrel with the court's basic:! interpretation of the state Environmental Quality Act of 1970. If he in- tervened at all, he said, he would only ask the high court to allow some time for the Legislature to clarify the Jaw and for local governments to set up compliance procedures. In effect, Younger might ask the court to make that section of the law effective at some future date even though the act as a whole already has been in force for more than a year. ment project because an en-"GOV. REAGAN has urged \'ironmental impact st u d y there-be a moratorium on the YOUNGER SAID the ruling hadn't been made. M~--h ·d was "of historical importance decision ... ," l.'V<lll Y sa1 • . t . r-i·r · , tions from weapons testing carried out here by unusual wea.lb.er conditions. Bui no serWc or government branch has admitted nying a n y supersonic planes or testing any big guns near enough to cause the shocks. But attorney John c . "l would suggest that the 1n pro ect1ng \.Al hOnua s en-- McCarthy told a news con-gover:nor build 8 fire under his viromnent ·and implementing ference "''-'ay that instead own . office of plannlng and the Environmental Quality Act of u1ing ~~~sense in pro-res\; arc h to prepare of 1971>." "It ... imnn..t .... t to 4'. Deat/a by Dr11g MANHATIAN BEACH !AP) -A teen-age ~irl whose body was di scovered on a lifeguard toWer here died of an overd ose of drugs, the coroner's office ~·s. tecting tbe environment, some . guidelines for the preparation ......... wu• officials had simply halted of environmental Impac t recognir.e, however," Younger building permits altogether. reports by planning agencies said, "the decision came sud- "l'm halfway e :x pectin g throughout the state." ~~J;na a~~ri~ t ~ The victim identified as April D;n~·n Betty Wall , 14. or Lawndale. was found by a beach walker ~1onday . A detective said there was no evidence the girl had been raped as police theorized in- itially. some counl.y clerk to say he's ~~ • ,r not going to issue any more McCarthy said the state had government agencies chargei marriage licenses because failed to carry out provisions witb preparation of t h e he's not sw-.? of the en-of its Environmental Quality statements. Act which •· te ed the "As a result," Younger ad-vironmental impact of the -11e nn couple on the community," most sweeping in the nation -ded, "our office has now been ~tcCarthy declarOO. by not requiring the impact requested by these agencies, reports. the governor, and represen- HE SAID he be 1 i eve d "If they had done their job tatives vf labor and the overreaction is • • e i t h e r much of the u n c e r l a i n t y building industry to petitKm hysterkal or carefully design-demonstrated by citiee and the court to permit the state ed to stir up the public and counties would have been Legislature lo add certainty to distort the true significance of avoided," he said. "lt is hard-the procedures necessary in the Supreme Court's opin· ly fair to ask our Supreme preparing the atatementa and e R~n f !I i11 l~A ? ion." eoort to do the work of the ex-to allow for a rea!OMble time LOS ANGELES < AP l -An The importance of the ecutive branch of our govern-to gear up to meet re- d · · he ·d to t" quirements." acq uaintance of Chino escapee --'e'-c-"_'°"_·c._ __ s_ai_. _w_a_s ___ m_c_n_. __________________ _ Ronald \Vayne Beaty !lays he saw Bentv in l...os Angeles Tuesday driving a car with Arizona license plat"'. Beaty escaped last Friday when three men and a woman ambushed two u n a r m e d guards from the Chino prison ~rting the prisoner to a San Bernardino courtroom for a htaring that had been postpon- ed. One of the guard!! was kill- ed and the other was shot and V."OUnded. Earlier. the FBl checked out a report that Beaty and 1 woman were seen aUemptlng to;. rent an apartment in sqousdrde. Ariz. The FBI dis· cqunted the report. • Drilling OK'd LOS ANGELES IAPI J)e!lpite more than thret houn o( debate against it, the City Qluncll voted Tuellday lo allow e1ploratory oil we.II dftlling near the exclusive ~:lC PaUsadeti1 residential 'A group calling lt>elf No Oil loc. luls been nghtlng 00- cldentol Petn>leum Corp. for roore than two' years In the cj1mpany'1 bid to drift the ....... Cl•IM 'f' ... e' CRAMEN'l'O (AP) - di:1ms till! !Ille coutal in. jjj;uve, ~ 10. would •"""' !lie State Water Project ore ~y f11Je," an author of tJie proposal aald TuMday. JIUto Sen. Larry Woloh (II> JWngton P 1 r k ) •nd Aaembl)nWI Carley Porter (J>.Compton) luld aald In a news releate earlier thl1 week th&l pusag• of Prop. 20 C<lllid affect future water dt:ll verles t ~ Snuthl'rn CaUfornlR l f2.09 LB. 20c Re ... I• OFF OJ"~ll GOOD OCTOIE~ 11 TH THl;U 1 ITH I • II 'NedntSdty, Octobtf 11 , 1972 DAU.V PILOT 5 Democrats Slap Reagan Tax P\an Plastic Tnis '_ Dori't H<!ld Vp . r -· SAN PEDRO (AP ) '-Solle $50,000 Jn plastic tr.es and plant• which rlm certa\n at.reels here w\U be replaced with live vegepUon - because plastic l!n't as dllrab~ 19· the real thing. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti says Democrat~ may draft a compeUng voter initiative if Gov. Ronald Reagan's attempts to take his new $1 billion tax plan to voters in a special 1'14 eleclloo. Jn other reaction to the sweeping tax overhaul unveiled by the Republican govemor Tuesday, a Republican hailed him (or "tremendous 1eadershlp" while nonpartisan Legislative Analyst A. Alan Post said he had some reservations aQout the plan. The sis: tu-cutting provisions or the Reagan proposal would : -Slash state incom~ 1axes by at least 10 percent. -Double the ,present $'750 homeowners' ta1 exemption. -INCREASE state support of local schools by $200 million and order schoots to lower pr:operty taxes with the new fun<b . -Freeze property ta1es at those reduced rates, with future increases ban- ned unless voters approved them. . l -Give renters speciJI new income tax credits. /,1 -Require a t~rch vote of the legislature rot fut~ tax increases. On the revenue ~ide, Reagan proposed: -Boosting the sales te.x to 8 cents ptr dollar to ral.se ano4her $600 m,l.lllon a year. Adding ..,. percent to the BB/lk and . Corporation tax, but o~tting p~ or that hike with a rollback m the business lnventory tax. --Committing most of the anticipated revenue from a pending federal revenue sharing program to increued state sup- port of local sc~ls. -USING AT least 12511 million of ao estimated $458 million surplus in the state budget. "J tell you frankly if the governor even talks about going to the initiative proc- ess, then I think we would have no other alternative but to develop aild initla'.te our own plan -which would be a lot more appealing -and let them: both appear side by side on the ballot," Moretti said. Los Ang•les eoonty SUpervi!Or James A. Hayes told supervisors Tuosday that the three-yeeMJld Im- itation trees and 1hnlbs "were not durable enough and It la time that U>ey be replaced." \ Nike, Titan II Test Launched VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A Titan ll and Nike Aerobee were test launched down the Western test range over the Pacific Ocean early today, the Air Force said. A spokesman said a Titan ll in- tercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM ) was fired off at •:30 a.m. A minute later, a Nike Aerobee com- bination was launched. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 4 DAY SALE STARTS oa. 12 TOY WORLD TOY WORLD 223 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA 545-7032 10-6 d•lly; Fri. 'tll 9; Sun. _12-5 MONOPOLY By Portw.. OM of the most popvb-gamn In the wor'4 !'WGI ettate. 3 88 llvy ond .,11 IUM11DX-3 Chopper trlle with two-tpnd ~ thtff, A9es 1to12. 2488 Mepn . BEClllC OIORD ORGAN EllSEMBLE A new concept In organ otyltng. loa1vriog '7 ""blo Qys. 12 chord buttori1, ond on Illustrated hord cOW:r. beginner'• . mullc .book. Stock *668P 3688 lAZYDAZY HM" "'folkuleep-M>frly" ac- tion Sm her tie down and to sleep. 599 d<Op rightolf Bartiie's COUNTRY CAMPER lncl1.1de1 hint, table, 2 camp chairs, luggoge rock and aaabo~ e. ... ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN Hai 2S ful Iii• ~ k.,. oM 6 chord bunons,. tlWlk rock. ortd ~If 1wltch. ~ nvs mu1h: boM. lndudn one f\111 Y9G' WOfTonty. #360. 1911 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTE.R, COSTA MESA 541-5454 9-6 d•lly; Mon. •nd Fri. 'tll 9 SUPERSTAR 6ec::tric plan. with a brain - has 4 fllgltt poHllmL 8cJt.. ..... not inc:klded. [iJ 911 I KeftHr'o SNOoPY TOOTHBRUSH A-1 __ .... Mgned jwt for kid1; no eleo- tridty. Comet with 2 ~ brusMs and 2 adapten for Use with r.-fill· brushes. Snoopy dog house holds toothpaste and bnl&hes. Bat- terie1 not inc~ a•• ncoH.o. TRAIN SET Power~ desloned to ~ low c:hlld to JMlot real copter '"""°"'· ~· 8-iftCh '°" bl octvally pnWkM alt lift ond dtlw. Safe flying fun ln- doon ond outdoor&. ........ not lnclud.d. a•• POTTERY CRAFT ,,_., Table lop potter'• wflM' _,.., .. ..,_ 9'' tery optroted S-,.. ...,.., _ ... ...........,. _ .. _. Ride .... -tnid< 911 -~blocb 11