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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-19 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • Las Vegas Cover Stor_y ~...._,.' . 1'.'~'\.; .... • •o I . : Skeleton • ID Mine S1nut Proposition Linked to Laguna Defended4' Fought 'Antismut' Bid.Object Of Debating By JOHN ZALLER Of h o.ll'f '1111 S'9ff A debate on Proposition 18 -the anfi. smut tnitlative -focused Wednesday night on tl>e plight o! pei>ple who might enjoy pornography. "I believe aociety has an obUgation to protect its weaker individuals from themselves," contended Stuart Waldrip, a Mormon lawyer from Santa Ana, 'at the debate sponsored by the Huntington Valley Young Republicans. "Ir material appea1s only to prurient or warped Interests, it ought to be banned," Waldrip argued in support of Proposition 18. "I object to the term warped," replied an tmidentlfied man from the audience~ ••t own some stag movies and sometimes '1'ter the kids are in bed, I like to get them out. · "I wouldn't ask you to came see \hem but I don't want you to lak"! them away from me either. I don't think they're warped at all." Proposition 18 will appear on the Nov. 7, General Election ballot. It is designed to tighten up the state's anti-pornography Jaws, give more control to local com- munities. and to make it possible for any book, newspaper or movie containing ob- jectionable plctureS to be confiscated. "Propositkm 18 has a kind of reverse sex obsel!don," said Ken Grubbs, the antl-18 speaker and editorial director of the Anaheim Bulletin. "People who would go a r o u n d ecstatically pointing at dirty pictures ought to be laughed back into obscurity," Grubbs said. Grubbe a1so argued that "passage or Proposition 18 would lead to immorality because morality is based on an in- dividual decJsion.'' By removing the right of the individual to chose or reject Pornography, morality ls removtd as well. Waldrip countered by arguirig that J)Ornography is having a drastic effect on American ramily Ille. 111bere Is no way to messure how many families l•ll aport !rom the dl>partty between the lo!ty ttpectations !or -you get !rom pomogr1plly and that really happens ln marriage," Waklrlp said. He lurtl>er defended Propollllon 18 Crom charges that IL would have pro- hibited such movies RS "Love Story,•• "Pat~on." and "M•A•s•H." "Certain oblcfnltles would be allowed In movies If they were e.xclamatory," he said, "but not If they were dlr«tly con- nected with 110JCual actlvlly," • RenlJeteel Model displays Emilio Pucci's pearl bikini with b 1 a c k and white sponge cape at fashion show in Florence, Italy. Tliree's a Crowd But All's Fair LONDON (UPI) -The judge made Vernon Smith 1roml!e not to bring girlfriends home after 10:30 p.m. and not to make love to ones he brings home before that hour. But SmJth's estranged wife Hyacinth lost Wednesday on her request that the court ban him from bringlng any women visitors at all to the home they still share. "She ts divorcing hbn and I am not here to protect the wife from the pangs of jealousy/' Justlce WUUam Brandon said. 20 Held in San Diego SAN DIEGO {AP) -Twenty perl'Ons were arrested In drug r11idt throughout the San Diego area Tuelday. Police aald small quantities of marijuana were found. .. In Heated Debate ran ur ' Ull-aisers' Alibi Offer At Niguel Trial Told LOS ANGELES -A suspect in the $5 million Laguna Niguel bank burglary of· fered an inmate at Los ~ge\es,county jail $30,000 t() help cover up his alleged role in the crime, it was testified in a federal court here Wednesday. Amil Dinsio, according to FBI agent Paul Chamberlain, was willing to pay the amount jn return for falsified rec6rds which would show he was in Las Vegas ()Ver the weekend of March 24-26. the weekend the burglary took place. instead of California. The records. said Chamberlain, were to be supplied to Dinsio by Richard A. Gabriel, an inmate in county jail with Dinsio who had an alleged "contact" in the gambling mecca. Chamberlain's testimony came Wednesday afternoon during hearings over th~-admissibillty frl 't!OUJ't ·of tapei recorded telephone conversations betWeen Dinsio and Gabriel, In which the defen- dant asse.rted1y revealed a plot to murder a key prosecution witness. What Dinsio didn't know was that Gabriel, a police informant, was in con- tact with the FBI and was supplying the agency with information on the defen- dant. 'The content of that information has not yet fully been released. Gabriel. a thin young man with long, busby hair. first met Dinsio In Madule 2500 of the county jail - a cell block known to be reserved for "high powered" crime suspects. Gabriel testified that after he rteeived information from Dinsio. he contacted the FBI with the assistance of the Los Angeles C.OUnty Sheriff's Departmerlt. Chamberlain testified that Gabrlel was lmtructed to provide the.-FBI with· any information Dimio might reveal, bot to never attempt to "pry" Information from the defendant. The FBI agent stated th..'lt Cabrlel told him of Oinsio'a d~ire to have an allbl ~t up and inlltn.1cted the Informant to make the necessary arrangement.!. These Included teCUring a false motel regi~trbtlon from 8 La; Vegas hotel and hiring a "prostitute" to testiry during tha bank burglary trial that she w11s with Dtnsio during the wetkend of March 24- 26, Chamberlain told the court. 'Ml.ls would have coontered testimony from Tustin resident Earl R. Daw90n - the target ot·tbe alleged murder plol - lhat Dlnslo. along with detendant Charles IS.. AIJBl, l'agt l) • Smuggling Rtng Skeleton Found in Mine Linked to Laguna Man? By BARBARA KREIBICH Of 1119 l><llly l'llot Sl1tf A skeleton found in an abandoned mine shaft six miles east of Elsinore is believ· ed to be that of a Laguna Beach man. Warren Buro lfudSon, a JI e g.e d I y' murdered in 1968 after double-crossing his partners in a narcotics ring. Hudson's death was the subject of lengthy .trials in Riverside last year, leading to the conviction or three men , although his body bad not then been foWld. A fourth suspect is believed hiding in Mexico. ~ According to Laguna Beach police records, Mrs. Penny Hudson, then living at 990 Ocean Front in Laguna Beach, ap- peared at the police station on Oct. 29, 1968 to file a missing persons report on her husband, saying she feared he had been invalved in some sort of narcotics acttvlty and might ~Ye been the victim or foul play. Mrs. Hudson told local police he had not returned home following a boat trip and she understood he had been seen in the Riverside area. According to police records. be was last-5ee!l aJive in the vicinity of a Riverside motel, from which it is believed he was lured to his death. Laguna Beach detectives Nonnan Bat>- cock and Alex Jimenez interviewed 18 pe.rsons during t)le search for Hudson and checked out at least two unidentified bodies, neither Of which tuiiled out to be that of the victim. He was believed to be involved with ·a drug·smuggling ring that operated in Ult Lagµna Beach, Riverside. Newport Harbor and Long Beach Harbor areas. Riverside county sheriff's department Capt. Russ Hawk said today that positive identification of the skeleton, found Sun· day by three prospectors, will have to await the study of dental charts which may take several days. However, said Hawk. "at this point ~·c feel quite sure It is Hudson." Iden- tification, he said, was made from jewelry found among the buried bones, including a medallion made from a $5 gold piece and a $1 gold piece made into a ring worn on the litUe finger. A chipped tooth also matched the mis8ing persons description ·of lhldson, he""Scrid. Durlng the trial it was alleged that Hudson tricked his dope-smuggling partners, Lawrence Fassler, 30, of Ari7.ona1 who was convicted of first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder; Gerald° Lawrence, 30, of Arizona. convicted of conspiracy to com· (Ste SliELE'l'ON, Pagt l) Telltale Spot Police Hold 'Helping' Pickpocket LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Move over Sherlock Holmes, make room for Myra Spauldlng. Mrs. Spaul4i~, e.!J, ~k""'"' aa a legal secretary, loat $1M to a pickpocket. So she went out and tracked 11 •~pect herself. A woman approached ht!; on the street about two weeU ago, she said, and polnted out.that there wu a white spat on her dress. Tbe beJpfUl woman autsted in cleaning It oft with IOml facial Ussut. Whllt the spot WU diaappelrlnc, IO was the money in Mrs. Spaulding's pune. She took. the dress to 1 cleaner and told lhe clerk what happe~. 1l1t dork recalled other customers with the same lale -the white apot1 the helpful woman, the dlsappearln1 money. Mrs . Spaulding found the. otbe:r victims and got their atorles, puttlng together a file on tile pickpocket's modus operandi. The woman belleved res pons I b I e usually worked the downtown area I>aween noon and 4 P,lll,.¥"-Sll8uldin~ reported. &Qd spottea her victims clothes with toothpaste or while glue . Using Mrs. Spauldlng's material as a ba!e. police inspector Otc.r O'Lear of the pickpocket detail took up the hunt. He. said ne watched a woman matchillg Mrs. Spauldlng's profile make five at- tempts to pick women's purises MoDday, but she eludC!d him before he could arrest her with !iul!klent evidence. Uslng Mrs. Spauldlng's timetables he found the suspect again Tuesday and followed her on a bus. O'Lear said he arrested Leticia llern&ndez, 34, as she allegedly squirted while liquid on a woman's dress alter working the ploy unsuccessfully on a first victim . • Builders 'Pressured' By County By JACK BROBACK Of "'9 l><lllr ~1'9t Se.If Architects. engineers and I a n d developers who do business with Orange County are being pressured to make <Xln- tributlons to t .h e campaigns of suf>er\tlsbrial candidates,· they charged '°"ay,. :o. • The Orange Counfy Grancf'-Ju.ry issued a warning to· members or the Board of Supervisors two weeks ago after receiv- ing complaint from the cotmty chapter ol the American Institute of Archttects I Al A I. Spokesmen for the architects said, "the jury should be aware of a practice which seems to be taking root In Oran_p COlln- ty , one which we believe is cotttrary to public interest and which could lead to the development of a 5)'3(em or patronage in county government. "Architects and engi neering firim con- tribute substantial sums to ~idatt.s fqr business l'fl:!SOns," said David Klages, pftsident of the'A.IATchapter. "Those who won't buy tickets to $100 a person rocktall parties won't g.!t county contracts." The arthitects' letter lo the Grand Jury. signed by Kl81i:'e1, said ln "part. "Vendors, architecta, engineiera aod land developers who do bruilness with the county are being 'invited' ·to IOclal af. (See PRESSURE, Page Z) Ornnge Co••• We•tller The storm cloud.• are dlaappe:ar. ing and mostly tunny weather Is expected for Friday. Tert\pel'atures wiU range in u.e ,1111ddla to ~ 70$ wilh the ~ tmlght 58. INSIDE TODi\11' Court order1 tunn ~tar-old girl4 bt plo<td for adoption bt.' ca1ut thrir mother ha.t tueh· 4 low IQ that 1he can't giw them prttptr core. Ste 1torw, Poge 2f. LM, Im It c........... l 4 c......... 41 ... ~1 ti -~ a.Ill !Htkft IJ 14111111'\M ,... • llllfl'Tl lllftMl!I ..., ........ M-M '"' 1111 *"'""" It -" AllJI L..._1 II ,.... ......... 11 -.. -MwtNI .. _.. ,. ""'""""' ..... .. . Or-C..., It. 11 ,_,. D-41 -----. --..... -. .__.. ..... ».al .............. ' ' • 2 OAIL'I' PILOI s Trt111'1do11. Oc-tcber 19, 11172 -- Arms Talks Continue Reds, U.S. Agree to Geneva Discussion WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States and the So\'let Union agreed to open the second round of strategic of· tensive arms limitation talks in Geneva on Nov. 21, the White llouse announced today. The new set of negotiations will seek a pern1anent treaty to follow up the in· 1erim t'urb on offensive nuclear weapons signed by President Nixon during his tiioscow summit in May. The brief announcement of the date for resumption of the talks was made simultaneously in \Vashington and ft1oscow. White House press secretary Ronald L, Ziegler said ambassador Girard Smith. wbo beaded the U.S. negotiating tean1 in Prison the first phase of the Strategic Anns Limitation Talks (SALT), will continue as chtef U.S. negotiator. "Pursuant to the agreement N!ached during the summit meeting in MOM:Ow last May to continue active negotiatiollll for limitation of strategic offensive arms. the governments of the United States and USSR will resume talks on this subject on Nov. 21 In Geneva, Switzerland ." The talks will focus only on offensive weapoos. A permanent treaty covering delenslve missiles was signed by Nixon in Moscow and ratified later by the Senate. Congress also approved. after ex- tensive debate, the in terim agreement freezing the bulk of both countries' arsenal! ol loag-range nuclear missiles Beeord Killer Receives 3,000 Years DALLAS (AP l -Terry Eugene Culley has been sentenced to 3,000 years in prison. the longest term ever assessed by a Dallas jury, for the m\U'der of insurance broker Jean Geron. The jury of nine men and three women in Judge James Zimmerrnann's Criminal District Court No. 3 fixed the penalty Wednesday for Culley, 21. after deliberating two hours and 10 minutes. Culley pleaded guilty but chose to have a jury set punishment. Defense lawyer James Martin said the sentence will be appealed. Ceron was shot Sept. 24, 1971, when Culley, JXlSlng as a policeman, and a woman entered the broker's North Dallas home In an attempted jewel robbery, according to testimony. Jury foreman R. E. Jones said, "It was the <:1lnsen.sus of the jury that the pWlishment should be very severe." Culley sat passively, looking down as the sentence was returned. Under state law, Culley will be eligible for parole within 20 years. J\.fartin Erwin. another defense attorney, described Culley as a "man-child \\o'ith a 21-year-0ld body abd the mind of a fi..t.CJ..8-year-old." Surprise Testlmo11y Turner Calls Himself 'Retired Motivator' CLEAR\VATER. Fla. (UPI) -Glenn W, Turner. describing himself as a "retired motivator," took the stand in his own defense today at his securities sales violation trial and said he wanted to "tell it Uke-it is." 1). .- In a surprise move, the 38-year-o\d Orlando millionaire promoter was the first witness called by the defense. ~ Wij5 asked '1'~~orney J-llllls Whal hi< and sjid:-'tflin ~ired. F Ir 'rch. Jo.st ca.11 me a· motivator. J OWn. several companies and T go around the country makini speeches ." Prosecution attorneys objeeted fre· quently throughout his testimony as Turner attempted to tell about his Dare to Be Great philosophies. After about 30 minutes, Judge Robert L. Williams sent the jury out and in- structed Turner n o t to discuss his background or his philosophy. Turner. whQ,said he conceived the idea for Oare to Be Great "back in 1959 when From Page J SKELETON ... mil murder; and Edward L e r oy ChandJer, 35. of Texas, v;ho pleaded guilty to tieing an assessory after th<' fact. All three are now serving prison terms. A fourth suspect, Ken Oldright. believed to be the ring's trigger-man, remains a fugitive. Trial testimony contended that fludson made a deal to sell a load of the ring's marijuana to a Northern California Hell's Angels motorcycle club, but sold the drug to another customer for $16,000 then rob- bed tbe cyclists club of $64,000 they had paid Cor the delivery. I was washing diapers" said he didn't know how to answer the questions. Then, with his temper showing, he said : "I don't understand why the state didn't come to me and we could work this thing out and not even have a trial. "lt looks like the government is sup- posed to help business not knock it down." With the jury back in the room, Turner told of how the Dare to Be Great pr<r gram was begun and how he got his points across. Turner said the salesmen in the pre>- gram are "independent businessmen who ha~ their own licenses and are paid strictly on a commission basis. No work· ing, no eating." Asked how commission checks are distributed, he said: "I believe the home office mails hiin a check direct. but I'm not sure about that.·• Turner was called to the stand after the judge denied a defense motion that the contents of the Dare to Be Great pro- gram be placed back into evidence. He ruled Wednesday the contents and philosophies were not at issue and ordered any reference to them stricken h"om the record. QUAKE RATTLES SAN DIEGO AREA PASADENA (AP -A light earth· quake was recorded in an area 45 miles east or San Diego early today. A spokesman for the C a 1 t e c h Seismological Laboratory here said the quake, measuring 3.5 on the Richter scale. hit at 6: 26 a .m. and was centered 10 miles east of Pine Valley. for five years. At the Geneva talks, the United States ls prepared to press for a permanent curb not only on long·range missiles but also on other categories of nuclear ~·ea pons. Ziegler said Geneva was selected as the site for the talks because it was ·•in· convenient and expensive" to alternate the negotiating sessions between Helsinki and VienDa, as was done in lhe initial SALT talks. He said Nixon hoped the talks could begin in October, but cited congressional delays in acting on the arms accords as the reason for the later start. ft1id-November was selected as a target date when presidential adviser Henry Kissinger was in Moscow Sept. 10- 14, Ziegler said, and the date of Nov. 21 was agreed upon when Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko conferred with Nixon in Washington Oct. 2. Ziegler said other members of the U.S. delegation will include arms control agency official Philip Farley, defense department adviser Paul Nilze, and Air Force Lt. Gen. Royal Allison. This ~n­ tially is the same delegation which handl· ed the first phase of the SALT talks. From Page 1 PRE~S URE. • • f!lirs honoring some county supervis· ors ... the price of these invitations has been $100 per person or $125 a couple. "Invariably, the invitations are follow· ed up by a phone call reminding the recipient of the social event. Understand- ably, the invitee feels compelled to at· tend or at least to contribute fearing that if be does not his ability to compete for county jobs for contracts will be materially affected. "We believe that such practice is an abuse of the public trust and should be discouraged," the letter concluded. tampaign parties are not a new development in the county and have been used for years to raise campaign fund s. 'They are also widely used throughout the nation . Klages, feeling the pressure v.•as becoming too heavy, decided to speak out because he does not do business with the county. He said about a dozen complaints have been made to the architects' group tell- ing or pressure being put on them "by pestering phone calls a,n d requests for money." One Santa Ana architect, Ralph G. Allen. said his firm had r«:ieved as many as six telephone calls in one day asking for support for Robert Battin the First District supervisor who is in a iight campaign to hold his job. Ironically, it is Ba tin who has been presuring the supervisors to adopt ll strict lobbyist law which would require all firms doing business with the·county to account for all money spent to gain business contracts. The G r a n d Jury's letter to the supervisors stated, in part, "it has been brought to the attention of the jury that certllin practices· in the se<:uring of cam· paign rontributions In supervisorial races could be detrimental to the best interests of Orange County. "The Grand Jury recognizes the need for monies to finance a campaign but would recommend that each supervisor instruct his campaign manager not to ex· ert undue pressure on vendors, land developers and professional people or citizens which might cause them to <:1ln- tribute for fear of losing their right to compete for county jobs or contracts." The Grand Jury letter was signed by Foreman Otto M. Schmidlen and did not state that the jury was launching a full scale investigation of campaign con· tributions. · In addition to Battin, Third District Supervi50r William Phillips is engaged in a tough campaign to hold his job with challenger Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton. Battin's opponent is attorney William Wenke of Santa Ana. DAILY PILOT TM~ Coat OAILY PILOT, wltl'I ""!di II CIOmblMd tlM H-Presi. IJ Pllblllhtcl bV t1W Ofl!IOI' C..st Pllbll.tll<lg C-IJl'. 1409> riti. .:Ill .. 1111 (1111)1111\ed, Mont•V lltr'OilVll ,.,....,, tor (Mii Mtia, N ... lltff •eacl\, Hunllnflon 9tacl\/'"-"111 \f11i1y. Lill""" &MCI\, lrvlM/s..«fllll>etll en4 $11'1 '"'""'"''' '-" Jwan C.Ph.lr1no. A 1rno1• r"IJloo't•I edlti.t 11 publ11Joed s~turd•'f5 1fllll Swnct1"'1- T114 prfflclPll pv11u,ri1na Pi.I'll b ., lXI Wttl a.y SlrMI, (Ott1 Ma., C11llofni._ nt:M. Fears of Litigation Ro!.ert N. W1.J ,.,. ..... nl Ind 1'111111"°"' J1c~ It. Curl1y Ykif ,.,..ld_..I Ind Gtnlt'1I ~ l11011111 K11•il l.dllor Tlio11111 /14.. M11rphln1 M ..... lftt h i!• C\1rf11 H. lcrot Ricli1td P. Nill Malltanl M1.,.,lng E4110t'I ........ COtfl Mtu: »o w .. 1 l•r ''"'' ........, llld'I• :Ji» ,...,,.,.,.. lloull Vlfd utuow ... di: m ,_, ... ......," MW1111ntllrl lllCll! "''' ••ell eou1ev1ro J1fl Clilf!lll'lte! M ,_ortll II C.mlflo ltMI Tfl ...... f7t41 '4M12t c ................... '41-1671 ,,_ CllM ............... "' LllfMI ... di 4ft..44JO r"""...,. .,,._ ~ ~1t1a .... 1111 °"""''· 1m. 0t1• c-• .-,,.11t111ir. c;.r..~. ... !WWII ''°''"· h1.,.,,., ..... -·~· fir "...,.,,_" l'lftllfl llWY • ~lfll wlfPllWI 'llftlil ,.,.. "'"""' ., afltt'lf'tl ..-. Stoefld CltM _,.., ,..Id It Co.ta #441, C:.llfem... ~f'l"IOfl Oy c.arrtw o ... =:.~~ ~ u~"~~tt.,.,.....,.,., "'nir.rt Bridge Collapse Reasons W on'tBel(nown Publicly PASADENA (AP) -EV<n Jr in- vestigators find out what caused a sec- tion of a Foothill Freeway bridge under construction. here to oollapsc, killing six workers, the public will never know, say:ii n spokesman for the state Division of I lighways. "It Is somewhat doubtful whether wt ever will find oot the cause and even U we 'do, it won't be released to the public OO<:au,. o! Ultely lltlgatton," Keith McKean, uslst.ant district qtncer in charge ot constructJOO for the Division of mghways. 111d Wedne>day. P'@dtra.I and ltlte a9encl11 l1unched an lrivcstlgatioo 1rteT the 81).foot mlddle RC· lion of the 580-foot-lons bridge fell IO feet Tue~day, killing the workers and lnjurtng 21 others. As the Investigation opeM.d, ac· cusatlons and denials concerning the dlJo.ster were made. Nick S11!emo. buslne~:i1 agent of the Ct- 111cn t t.1asont Union whlch rcpre~nted • workers on the bridge, said it was built too fast . "Push. push, push -that's all they thlr1k about." Salerno said. Richard MAicoim, manager of Polich+ Benedict Coniit ruction Co .. one of three contractoni involved on tm! bridge, snicl his fi rm WM working according to a ~le drawn up by the at.ate and was not going too ta.st. AuthortUes uld the bridge fell after metal support_, and scaffolding:, known as falsework, appttrtntly faUcd as wet con· crete was being poured on the bridge. McKean said If the f1ilure. was In the falsework, Invtstlgaton may never find out what h&ppefled . "If the rroblem Is In thf! foundation or in the sol It might be possible to come up with a detennination." he added. 011rnage was estimated at up to $400.000. The f1llure. authorities said, could cause a three-month delay in a 1.2· mile segment of the freeway scheduled for <:1lmpletlon In April . DAIL 't PILOT Sit" l"Mi.> R111111er R1111rtin9 \Vho is this man? Where is he running? Why? Co u 1 d you keep up with him? To find out, see Page 15. Rent-free Home Offered After Eviction Learned WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UP!) -A group of real estate dealers has offered rent-free housing to 75-year-old Mrs. James Moffett. 011ce considered one of the world 's richest women. The offers came as word spread of her Impending suit for eviction from her $150-a-month apartment by the building's owner, millionaire John D. MacAthur. who heads a banking, insurance and land development empire. Peter Penrose. Mrs. ft.1offett's al· torney, told \Vednesday of the financial status of the \vidow of the board chi:.irman of Standard.Oil Co. He said her sole income ls a $132-a-montb old age t:heck from the state w e I f a r e department. ~ Penrose denied reports he said had been circulating that f.1rs. Moffett had antique furniture and other personal ef- fect& valued up f9. $!00,000 stored in a warehouse . An oHicial of the local office of fam ily services appeared and . verified that Mrs. ~1offett gets the $132 welf4re check each month. Boggs Hunt Resumed In Alaska ANCHORAGE. Alaska (l\P) -Taking advantage of the best weather since the i;earch began, 73 military ana civilian aircraft renewed the bunt today for a light plane missing since Monday with House Democratic Leader liale Boggs and three others aboard. Coast Guard cutters and a team of mountain rescue experts also joined the intensified search along a rugged, 500- mile stretch of coast between Ancho1·age and Juneau. Broken to scattered clouds hung over most of the area and an Air 1''orce spokesman described the weather as "the best we've had since the search began." ··tt could be a mali:e or break deal," he added. ' Planes new over the entire area, but the main effort was cen~ around two areas -the Portage Pass area 50 miles southwest of Anchorage and mountain areas northwest of Juneau, about 500 miles to the southeast. The overnight temperature in the Portage Pass area .¥as reported to be 30 to 35 degrees and was expected to be 40 to 45 during the day, the Air Force said. Fog, rain afitt-generally poor nying \\'eather prevented all but t~ brieCesl of visual searches over the two areas Wednesday. About 40 planes took part in the hunt. The missing twin.engine Cessna 310 left Anchorage Monday on the last leg of a whirlwind campaign tour by Boggs on behalf of Alaska's lone congressman, Rep. Nick Begich. It bas not been beard from since. With the 58-year-old Boggs v.·ere Begich, 40 ; his aide, Russell Brown, 37. and the pilot. l)on E. Jonz. 38. of Fairbanks. · Canadian Bani~ ---· ~- Robbers Sought TORONTO (l\P) -Canadian police pressed a major search to- day for five masked men who got away with $261.900 in a commando- style precision raid on a downtown bank. The operation was completed within seconds shortly before 2 p:m. "Wednesday at a branch of the Ganadian Imperial Bank of Com- merce on downtown Front Street. It was the biggest recorded cash robbery in Toronto's history. , , Police said the gang is ~lieved lo be from Montreal. Tbe five operated with lightning speed and wore wigs and Halloween masks covered with silk stockings. Nobel tt'inner West German novelist Hein~ rich Boell is winner of the 1972 Nobel Prize for literature. !lee story on Page 5. From Pagel ALIBI ... Mulligan visited him during the same weekend. Dinsio, CJutmberlain asserted, was willing to give Gabriel the $30,000 io stolen stocks and bonds in return for the false documents. The FBI, Chamberlain furthe r testified, was prepared to pay Gabriel "a sum of money" if he helped authorities locate property stolen from the bank. To date. Gabriel has received "$1,000 to $1,200" from the FBl for his services, Chamberlain told the court. U.S. District Court Judge William Mat· thew Byrne, Jr., was expected to rule late today whether the alleged con- versations between Gabriel and Dinsio may be entered 8$ evidence in court -later -this week:--------- Victor Sherman, Dinsio's attorney, is challenging admission of the statements on the grounds that Gabriel was working as an agent of the federal government, in violation of the so-called Massiah ruling. That Supreme COurt decision holds that federal agents can not infringe on a defendant's rights following his arrest. When the alleged murder plot was revealed late Tuesday, Dinslo, who had been free on $250,000 bond. was returned to Los Angeles County Jail and is being held in lieu of'$750,000 bond. Oinsio, who earlier this week appeared cheerful, sat sullenly, his eyes ca.st downward. during the testimonies of Gabriel and Chamberlain. T1le 36-year-old pinball company owner from Boardman, Ohio was arrested in connection with the Laguna Niguel bank burglary Jwie 26 while driving down a street in his hometown. Special Promotion • • • 10 DAYS ONLY Chair or Siv iuel Rocker froni t.his Handso1ne Collection Values fro m 199 to 219 Now 149°0 waceful in design an d superb construction and are beautifully enhanced by meticulous tailoring to give you lavish comforL You May Choose Fro1n A Wide Selectwn Of Beautiful Fabrics H.J.GARRETI fURN\"fURE • a; ...=.i. 60-0275 Building Surge Tied _To Prop. 20 '• By JOUN VAL TERZA 01 Ille O.ftr f'IMI lt•lt ·~ San Clemente's director of building :•nd planning is convinced that a strong ·concern by builders that the Coastal -.;Jnitlallve will pass has caused much of :~the surge ln construction within the I,~ ,.yard. coastal sector proposed for strict ·...controls. ·: Richard Ahlman said today San ~Clemente's 1,000-yard coastal strip - ""Stretching from the beach almost to El Camino Real -has experienced ex- tensive development in recent months. "At a recent conference of people in my profession in Kansas City I noted that other cities' building directors were saying the same thlng. ''I round that Santa Monica and other Los Angeles area coastal areas are feel- ing the same surge in the strip, and their people believe that much of it is an at· tempt to beat election day," Ahlman observed. Proposition 20 would create a statewide coastal conservation commission and six reg ii .al commissions to control develop- ment in the coastal zone and submit to the legislature in three years a con- servation plan. Development in the in- terim would be by permit. Building permit valuations this month in San Clemente brought the total for the year to an all-time high -$16 million. Much or that valuation was related to major condominium projects on bltJ;fftops of the city's pier area where venerable Spanish-style houses have been razed to make way for expensive housing pro- jects. That very situation has caused growing alarm among the city's lovers of Spanish architecture. Ahlman said the situation will grow as taxes on the landmarks increase. - OAILY ~ILOT Stiff l"IMl9 SHE WAS CALLED "LA GRANDE SARAH" BY COUNTRYMEN Harry Bowers Looks at Lithograph From Bygone Era Sarah Re~alled Elsewhere in the 1.000.yard proposed coastal strip, vacant lots have been fill· tng rapidly with duplexes and triplexes. Yet an6tl\ef" sub]"ett-of-concerrr by·many---y- residents and officials. LU au nan Acted With~Leiiaing Lady The market for condominiums, Ahlman u said, appears stable and busy. For ren- tals, however. the market is somewhat unbalanced. with newer units attracting tenants at the expense of older, establish- ed rental units. Capistrano Beach's Palisades as well Ue within the proposed strip proposed for strong development controls if the in· illalive passes. And there -as in San Clemente -va- cM1t lots are being filled with rental and lease units. At least one multimilHon-dollar con- dominium project could face hard times because of lhe initiative as well as a mounted attack by property owners who contest the ownership of the land. The Balboa PacUic Development Com- pany of Newport Beach opposes a lfracre condominium complex on the last re- maining acreage offering a wide view of .Dana Harbor and the coastline. County Supervisors will consider final approvals for the controversial project next week , but the residents in the area have vowed a pitched battle for more time -banking on the passage of the in- itiative. Although building officials seem con- vinced that the ret'etlt surge o( coastal development is keyed to the fears of the initiative's passage, some local lending institution spokesmen do not feel as strongly~ Ralph Klaasen, head of Laguna Federal Savings' branch in San Clemente -an institution which in recent months hl'IS been lending $8 illioo a month for coastal projects -said he ha! sensed no urgency among borrowers. "lt':; just been such a steady boom up to now , and we haven't seen a last. nJnute surge in loan applications," he said. But for some reason, Klaasen added, the boom In borrowing has tapered off. "It ~ms like this month it's begun to slack off for a while and maybe It will reach another plateau. We were really wondering how long it would really last. '·The latest one has been going on since early last year." be elated. South Viet Paper Publishes Nude IGssinger Photo SAIGON (UPI ) -A South Vietnamese opposition newspaper today published the head and torso portion of the Harvard Lampoon 's centerfold e-0mposite photo of a nude Dr. Henry A. Kissinger. The photo atop the left side of page one of Dai Dan Toe (Great People) was cap- tioned. "Kissinger has no more secrets." Earlier in the day, the Vietnam ediUon of the U.S. Army dA.ily newspaper, Pacific Stars and Stripes. appeared with a giant centerfold blowup of the Lam- poon com~ite. Another Saigon newspaper publisher "I am very tempted to print Kissinger's picture In my paper tod&y with the title 'Kissinger comes to Saigon all nude.' But I nm afraid It would be ronfi!JC11ted. Peo- ple here do not have this kind of humor." A U.S. Embas!y spokesman said he did no! know whether. KL!slnger had seen the photo. Apollo 17 Tested CAPE KENNEDY (UPll -Eng\nec,., put the Apollo 17 n'IOOnship through it! Inst romplete eletlrlcal test today in a major 11tep tow11rd lls night launch to the moon Dec. 6. Apollo 17 Is tht flMI ex· 1)C(lltlon In the naUon'!I moon landing pro- grfln1 By JACK CHAPPELL ot n.. 1>a11., P11tt ''an She was called "La Grande Sarah'.' by her fellow French and she was the type of woman to whom men lhrow flowers. Another Thursday 56 years ago, Lagunan Harry Bowers was a spear car- rier in a production of Cleopatra starring Sarah Bernhardt. Then handicapped by the amputation of one leg in 1915. she played the Egyptian temptress from a divan. And. men threw flowers to her across the footlights of the old Niton Theatre in Pittsburg, Pa. She was that kind of woman. One bouquet fell off to the side at Bowers' feet. "I picked it up and handed it to her," Bowers recalled. "One bud fell off, and I've kept it all these years.'' The rosebud, now faded and frail is pressed in a picture frame together with a scrap of paper on which Bowers recorded the lime, place and circumstan- ces. Now, 75, he remembers that the great French actress did a series of plays at the theater. playing for a week there before the American audience. It was the last tour of America she would ever make. The power of her acting was such that although it was 11. week night, the theater was jammed. "She got a very good receptlion, of course," Bowers said. A contemporary theater critic said of Mme. Bernhardt's perfonnances: "Her voice is languishing and tender1 her delivery so true In rhythm and so clear in utterance that never a syllable is lost, even when the words float from her lips likt: a caress.'' "She had a lot of gestures, as I A ROSE DID REMAIN Memento From Patt remember," Bower.> said. He was then a drama student and attended Carnegie Tchnical College. Mme. Bernhardt was bom in Paris, Oct. 22, 1845 and began acting training at 13 years of age. By 1877, she was ettablished as the greatest French ac- tress of her time. She had always thought she would die young, and during her early career, would travel with a coffin. She died in 1923, just after becoming engaged in film production. They don't throw bouquets at a movie screen. Pentagon Papers Figure Addresses OCC Audience By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ,,.,. ~"' ~ .... ll•ff Pentagon Papers defendant Anthony Russo Jr. said Wednesday in Costa Mesa that anyone who votes for President Nix- on "has blood on his hands." - Hi~ remark was greeted by loud a~ plause from 900 students tn the Orange Coast College auditorium where Russo appeared. He bad just Tetumed from a trip to Copenhagen where he participated in a civilian Inquiry Into American "war crimes" in Vietnam. Russo. who is expected to go on trial later thi!I month with Daniel.Ellsberg. his former RAND Corporation colleague, said bill statement is based on !inn con- victions that anyone who tums his back on the American involvement i _, "complicit in tMse crimes." "In spite of all the peace rumors nnd Mr. Klsstna:er's trtpl!. lhe bomblng Is stUI going on today," Rus50 told the students. But he also said he "hopes to God" the peace rumot!I are true. During his stay in the Dahlsll capltaJ, Russo said he saw films of the destruc- tion of entil'i! towna and the leveling <lf villages. "Most or the destruction has come down on churches, tchools and hospltafic," !!Aid Ruroo, llnklng the Nixon Administration's war pollcy wlth Arab terrori11ts. "Thera I!! no difference between the policy of Mr. Nixon and the Arab lcr- rorlst.s. 1bc U.S. has held an entire na- tion hostsge and peno111 are bein& killed off one 11ftet another." Further, Russo asserted that the e1:· plosives being used by Arabs In their let- ter bombs are the same that were in- vented by Americans for gravel mines used in North Vietnam. "These are tittle balls and if you step on them, they'll blow your leg off," he told the students. These and other anti-personnel devices ust.'. in the war are not aimed lit the destruction of buildings and armamenl!J but for the killing and maiming of people, according to Russo. "Some of these are designed to make It maximally difficult for surgeons to work on the wounds," he said. Fragmentatloo weapons Mve been "improved" to lhe point of using plastic instead of metallic pellets. making t b e m undetectable lhrouRh Xrays. Striking a comparison between the klll - in1 of Jews during WW II and the killing or an estimated 4.000 civilians In the Vietnam W!llr, Russo said there Is no dlf· ference between "what Hltler did tind what the U.S. has done In Vietnam." "We have created a generation or monster& in Vietnam," said tM Pentagon Papeni defendant, asserting that half of the six million tons of bombs dropped on Vietnam have been antl·personnel e1:· Plosives. lie cited asserted cases hf bumM children, <lf persons disfigured by t.1:· ploaklns, and of deformed b8bles born by mothers who bad been exposed to htrblcld<'S used to dc!ol1Btc Junftla artas. s CAIL Y PILOT 3 Colosseum Deal Fails Italians Turn Doiv11 Laguna Man's Offer By BARBARA KREIBICll 01 1M O.llW' Plltf Stitt Laguna Beach real estate woman Fausta Vitali is back home, looking for another "fixer-upper" for her ('Jient, y:ealthy investor Thomas Merrick, whose offer lo buy Rome's C.0106seurn for $1 million was blocked by a law baMing sale of the cl!y's antiquities. "We didn't get the Colosseum," said, Fausta Wednesday, ·'but we certainly shook them up over there. In fart. just before I left a very prominent Italian • government official was quoted as saying 'We had to be shamed by an American offering to help to finally get some action.' " The Colosseum, she revealed, has been re-opened for public viewing, with large nets strategically placed to offer pro- tection from falling rocks. Scaffolding has been erected and restoration is moving ahead, she added. The C.Olosseum saga began earlier this month when Merrick, who is of Italian desct:!nt. ·made his unusual offer through Reef Realty of Laguna Beach, where f\.1iss Vitali, a native of Rome, is employed. Handing over a check for $10,000, the ronner owner of Laguna's Pyne Castle, once touted as a possible site for the Western \Vhite House, propooed buying the 2.000-year-old monument for $1 million. Distressed by news stories announcing it had been closed as a hazard to the public, Merrick proposed raising enough additional fund s to rehabilitate it and running it as a tourist attraction, split- ting the entry fee with the city of Rome. Since the Colosseum is viewed by an estimated 3.5 million visitors annually, he fjgured it would be a profitable business deal. Miss Vihtli was dispatched to Rome, check 1n hand, to carry on negotiations. The startled Italians were first shock- ed, then !COMlful or-the-proposal, but some papers used it as a basis for criticizing Roman officialdom for taking such poor care or its monuments. Besieged by reporters and phot<r graphers when she landed in Rome. Miss Vitali said sbe fin.ally convinced them the offer was serious . "I explained that Americans would think Romans' at- titude toward their Colosseum would be the same as the Londoners' attitude toward the London Bridge -and they sold that to us -even let it be shipped over here, which Mr. Merrick certainly didn't want to do with the Colosseum." But the plan was stymied by Article 24 of the Rome city code, adopted in June, 1939. "ll wa• read to me by the director general or government properties,'' says Miss Vitali, "and it states very clearly that title to the Colosseum or any similar Wicks 7b8y say it's falling down .· OAILY PILOT ,ltolt llY ~~ti"'• C-IK OFFER ON COLOSSEUM BROUGHT ACTION IN ROME Law Forbids Its Sale But It Has Been Reopened to Visitors antiquity cannot be sold, transferred or used as security in any way. So that was lhat ! " She also talked to a woman professor in the government archaeology division, who is In charge of the restoration of Roman monuments. "She told me there is no problem with the Co losseum, that il is not going to fall down, probably ever, and that it was all greatly exaggerated in news stories," Miss Vitali relates. "She also def!ied there is a problem with money to restore the building, as we had heard, and said money has been allowed for restoration which already has started." In addition to the scaffolding and the nets that appeared during her l\\·o-week stay, she ?.dds. the city has banned traf- fic from the rol'ld encircling the monu- ment to reduce danger from vibration. The falling rocks, she noted , arc loosened by weeds which have been allowed to grow unchecked In crev ices in the building. But other ancient Roman monuments are in even worse shape, ac· cording to the Lagunan. Miss Vitali brought home a bundle of Italian newspapers and magazines car- rying stories of the Colosseum offer. many of them skeptical about the motives of the "American millionaire." .. But finally the atti~ude of tTl()St people I talked to was 'Thank Cod someone did something to shake them up and get them started doing something,' "she con- cludes. Regarding her next move in behalf of client Merrick who likes to buy "odd pieces nobody else wants and tum them over at a profit,'' Miss Vitali says, "I guess I'll have to find him aoother fixr r- upper. But first I'll have to see if I remember how to sell a regular house." DAILY PILOT Slaff"""" LOOKING FOR FIXER-UPPER Laguna's F1ust1 Vitali BEING SINGLE SAVES SI0,000 DALLAS (AP I -Police reported that an attempted extortion at the Vil.lage Bank failed Wednesday . A switchboard operator said she received a call from a man demanding Sl0.000 for the safe return of the wife of a bank vice president That particular vice president Isn't married. Wav down deep inside, everv woman dreams of a carpet like thi9 ! 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MAIN at Edinger· SANTA ANA· 547-3993 ' • .J DA.ll Y PILOT .Jus~ ~ Coast1Dg ,~ J '•; :@ with Tom arphine Tax on Smog From Caltech • I tl~I T..,,.._ PlE IN mE SKY DEPT. -The latest ei:ercile in damn foolishness on the smog control front emerged this week from the unlikely confines of the California Institute or Tecboology. an institution in Pasadena renowned for good sc)ence and lousy football teams. Everybody ha.tee sm~. You can prob- ably travel all over Orange end Los Angeles counUes like Diogenes and fmd nary a soul who will defend the stuff. REP. EMANUEL CELLER (0-NY) BIDS CAPITOL GOODBYE 84-Yeer..Old O..n of HouM Wa• Defeated in Democratic Primary Oh. there was this one chap, Dr. David Challinor of the SmJthsonian Institution. who came out to San Francisco and said smog is good for you because it screens out sun rays that could cause skin cancer. But he's the only smog defender around in recent times and you get the notion that he hasn't breathed toomucb of the stuff himaeU. Congress Spurns Nixon Spending Lid, Adjourns WHICH BRlNGS us back ro Caltech, wherein the noted scientists have WASHINGTON (UPI) -With a warn· establl.sbed this Environmental Quality lng by President Nixon that their actioo.s Laboratory which has been looking for mighf cause a tax boost, lawmakers head- aires to smog. ed home today after rejecting Ni.J.oo"s Just the other day they published this request for emergency powers to cut gov· report tilled. ''Smog. a Report to the ernment spending. People." In it, they make a lot of scien· In adjourning the 92nd Congress tHic recommendations for autos like ex-\Vednesda.y night the Democratic major- haust systems, evaporatiOn controls, and ity abandoned C'ompromise efforts and conversions to natural ()r propane gas killed a measure to limit outlays this year fUel.!1. They also talk about smog controls to $250 billion. The bill would have given on fixed-Oase polluton. Nixon power to make cuts as needed - THE MOTOR CAR, however, ap-estimated at up to $10 billion -to reach his ccooomy goal. parenUy proved a real vexali()n for the Some Democrats wondered in doing so Caltch smog fighters. So, in their report, if Nixon needed the issue more than 1he th~y moved !>ut of the realm of .pure bilt Speaker Carl Albert said the final sc1e~e and into the arena of pohtlcal-------ven!tct-Oft"'tllat·,v;u not be in Wttil elcc· taxation. tlon day They suggested, in essence. that the In a ~essage to-the Senate before the goyernment ought ~ tax the hell out of crucial vote, Nixon served notice he would drivers who potentially make the most consider a vote against the ceiling a vote smog. , . . for a tax boost next year. Earlier he had . Alas. m .making this move, they looked promise to make the spending-tax issue lik_e ~ecb s football teams, i:>Oted for 3 major factor in his campaign for elec- be1ng 1n the clear when they tripped and lion of a Republican Congress. rell . . . Although denied emergency cutting The proposa.1 was. in brier. that the powers that would have enable hlm in ef· governments. tn ~rang~. Los Angeles. feet to rewrite major benefit laws, Nixon San Bernardino, Riv~rs1de, Ventura a~ sent ,vord to the capitol \Vednesday he Santa Barbara counties Should levy thJS smog tax. still \\'OUld cut where he could and try to hold sQending to $250 billion. Rep. Wtlbur D. Mills (0.Ark.) chair- man of the \Vays and l-.feans Committee and chief architect o( the defeated econ- omy bill. told the House that Treasury Secretary George Shultz assured him the administration y:ouJd hold down spending. 1 n I 1vo years the Coogress had lowered the voting age to 18, outlawed discrimi· nation oo the basis of sex, boosted Social Security payments by more than 30 per- cent, and launched a historic plan -prlr posed by Nixon -to share federal rev· cnues with the cities and states. It had killed Nixon's welfare reform plan; including-21-$2,.400 guaranteed an- nual wage. And it had four times raised the limit on the national debt. the latest time Wednesday when among its last acts it fixed a new limit of $465 billion. In other action Wednesday, Congress completed the process of passing over Nixon's veto a $24.6 billion program to right water pollution. Republicans deserted the President in droves during the vote on the veto over· ride. The Senate vote was 52-12, while in the House the vote '''as 247 to 23. THE WAY IT WOULD work, you get taxed the most if you drive an older car and the more miles you drive, the more you gel taxed. According to a table they propose, for example, a guy who owns a 1972 Whizzer could drive more than 15,000 miles and he's pay a smog tax of about $100. On the other hand, the chap in a 1966 Clunkmobile would pay $112 ir he only drove 5,000 miles. Lord only knows what he'd pay ror driving the same distance as lhe fellow in the 1972 Whl.xzer. l{issinger, Thieu ~onf er; Reel Coalitio11 Rejected What it boils down to is soaking the poor -who can't af£ord a new car every year -while the affluent with their new can get off the hook. And it's most likely that the working man. who drives the older model, has to travel a lot more miles each year to grub out a living for his family and to pay that smog tax. Indeed. it all sounds like something that might come out of Pasadena. FURTllER. 1 DON'T think the Calt('('h boys have really proven that the 1972 Bloatmoblles, with their huge engines and power assists on everything but the cigarette lighter, produce less smog than. say. a 1966 Peanut Four with an engine about as big as a sewing machine. Jn reality, it seems the Caltech boys got frustrated in their efforts to find a ready solution to smog, so they turned to taxation. Maybe you can't blame them. Everybody else turns to taxes. One or the Tech scientists did caulion in discussing the smog fighting report, "\Ve'll have to ease into all this ... " That may be the understatement of the century. From Wire Services SAIGON -Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger held two rounds of private talks with President Nguyen Van Thieu on ending the Vietnam war today and as they met, the Saigon government re· jected a coalition with the Communists as a peace condition. The South Vietnamese Information Ministry is.sued an unprecedented state- ment reaffirming Thieu's opposition to the C.Ommunist-proposed three-part coali- tion. Nonnally, official stptements on talk! between representatives of the allies arc issued jointly at the conclusion of the conferences. The statement was delivered to the Vietnamese press before the end of Kiss- inger's 31h:·hour morning session at Independence Palace. Kissinger, Thieu and U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth C. Bunker held a second 11,z.hour con· ference later today. No statements were given lo newsmen by participants in the discussioos afler either of lhe meetings. Kissinger re· turned to Bunker's villa after the after· noon session. Kissinger arrived in day, a day after his Saigon \VC<ines- latest round or secret peace talks in Paris witlf North Vietnamese negotiators. On the war front South Vietnamese troops clashed sharply with Communist rorees In a new flareup along Saigon's northern flanks. Field reports said the battles continued at midaftemoon at two locations. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Ottlvtry of I.he Dally Piiot Is guarant.tt<t Monday.Frld•yi If )'(If.I oo not i.Ye your pell'r Dy ~::ID p.m., t•ll lllO \IDVI' GQO¥ will tt broo,ioM to vou. t:•lll; •no t1ke11 t11111l l :Jl p,m. 5!111rdl'I' '"" S11nd•Vt II VOii 00 Nil l'tCllYe vour tllll'I' Dy f 11.m. S.1uns.y, or I 1.m. Surid1y, all •nd • toPY Wiii be DtOllgl\I '' you. Calli ••• •~eti un!ll 10 1.m. TelephO~s Most o~•nGe Counrv Arff11 ....... "41-4721 No••r.wn ! Huntlnq10n &flld'I •nd Walmins•v , ............. Mf.1nt loin Clemeflt1, Cllplli'"'-IMCll, Si n J\llln C1pls1T1no. °""' Ptll11!, ~OUlll LIOunf, UOUM Nlowl •••• 92442(1 Cold, Rain, Snow • Ill U.S . Numbing Air Cliills Most of NationAs Winter Nears California • • ltciOl\d IM •• " , 1:11 O.!'rl. D., ... IOAY lllr•I l\ltll • . 1:#11.!'rl. 51 flll'tl ... 1 '° 1.m. '·' $teetld: lllftl , , , , I '6 1J. rri. 5.0 StcOt'\llf '°"" .,. . 1:17 p.m. 0.1 '""" •1ttt 1·°' 1.m. ..,, •: •~ o.m. M• .lMt 4:U 11 m, $ftt 3·"6 1.m. CJ.S. So1111111or11 If Tllil AtMt11tM flrtn Ut11'1Mo1\l11111 cold. re ~ 1110W ~ "= ~'r l:.T.' ~"-~ ' I lfCtMlt•----~ ID!lt~IN ~lMOW r:mw.owtu ~ ,~:;. IK llanl or"" F1r WMI . T1mper111i1r11 loooll'd to rtcord lowt '°' ""~ 1erou 1"41 Mldwf1t 11 1 ..... ""' I,, Cll!lltd mot! •• , •• trom ··woe v MOvft!tln1 ro 1111 Al111f111C 11. T~~•ft.t!IM' CHY, ~rl 1111 llff " ff wl) ..,,,,,,..,, "''"' !h<t "Ji,'' • tt It ••I ll'IQ, 0,kolll Ind Mhl~I• !l~d •oo ~ n Ille lffl'J, Ind !ht 1" l)l'"nl II '•r Mltlll •U IUnMI '"'° ., lit NU .. lllClllfll, flrttlPHlts':i."' ":5-¥ !tom fol .... """"''l.K l II lflll l'IOl'l"°'tn Ttot IC ' _...,, '""" Spy Case Figure Tied To McGovern SANTA MONICA (AP) -Donald H. Segrettl, named as a key filure In on alleged Republi<iD spying and .. bolllge compalgn ogalnst Democrotic preo!den, Ual caodklates, is listed he.re as a volunteer for George McGovern. Barl>ara llenneU, IDIDliU ol tbe McGovem-Sbrlver c a m p a l g n bead- quorters showed newsmen Wednesdo)' tbtte ind« conls beorlng Segrettl's name but indicating be bad never taken part in any McGovem-Sbrtver rallies, canvasses or other vohmt.eer wort. No one at the Santa Mmica office could recall ,..1ng the man identifying himself as SegrettL Miss Bennett .said however that volunteers sometimes appeared at rallies and other events without s i g n l n g themselves !n and therefore she could ~t say categorically that Segretti actually never did any campaign work. Ed Finegan, one of the workm In tbe McGovem-Sbriver office, said a man identifying himself as Segrettl bad telephoned several times to do wort. Finegan said the man had a "very positive" attitude because be always promised ro si-up. But Mbs Bennett repeotecl tbat there was no record the man ever did any work or picked up any campajgn moterw.. On Oct. a, sheSaicl, Segretli'• cards were trao.sferred to the "leu ac> tlve volunteers" fiJe . Miss Bennett said she recognized Segretti's name after reading it in the news earlier this week and went to her files v"here she lound the listings. Earlier Wednesday the New York Times joined the Washington Poot and Time mogazlne In publlahlng •tori., link- ing White House &Ide Dwigbt Olapln to SegrettL Tho '!'Imel aald It bad learned that at leut Z1 <Olis made ln>m Segreltl'1 bome telepbooe and charged to his cndlt om! were directed to the White House, Qlapin's borne, and ro the bome and Of· flee ol E. Boward llunl Jr., a fonnu White Howoe coosultanl Indicted in the FBI Probing Gemini Sales LsMARQUE, Tex. (AP) -The FBI and Justice lleparlmenl ore lnvestig•Ung ,the sale of space Jtems and t.eclmicaJ m a t er I a 1 relaUng to the Gemini 7 space flight. according ro the Notional A e ronautics and Space Admlnlstrallon. Glen V. McAivoy, regional in- spector for NASA, sold Wednesday that the ll<lns hod been advertised by a Dea market In this Gulf Coast town. McAlvoy sald the Items Included a dalll cord. mouthpiece and tecbnical boob and lapes relative to an experiment aboard the Gemini 7 cooducted In 1965 by astronauts James A. Lovell \Jr. and Frank Borman. Office June 17 break-in al Democratic National headquarters. Time magazine said this week that it was Chapin who hired Segretti as an undercover agent to •·subvert 8.l'd disrupt Democratic candidates' campaigns this election year" and that more than $3$0,000 was passed to him thnMJgh Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, President NJion's personal attorney. Segrettl, 31, a registered Democmt and former Treasury Department. attorney, bas been unavailable for comment since' Oct. 10, when he was first linked in news accounts to alleged operations by the GOP to disrupt Democratic campaign. Efforts to reach him Wednesday night were unsuccessful. The address and telephone oomber for SegreUi in the campaign headquarters• files are the same as those 1isted for the attorney by the california Bar A.ssoc::ia- tion. Segretti lives in suburban Manna del Rey. _ Miss Bennett said her files indicated that the man calling himseU Segretti first contacted the office on June 3, tlree days before the California presidential primary. Copies of the three cards bearing Segretti's name show more than a score of entries. On June 3, Segretti offered to join a bicycle parade for McGovern. That same day be offered to canvass a precinct in the nearby Venice area. On J wte 4 he promised to help distribute leanets. On Sept. 17 he offered again to canvass a precinct. 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Sibley, a former Navy pilot from Stateline, Nev., was found guilty here Wednesday o( commandeering a United (IN .SHORT ... ) • ~ i'-l ' '· L (· • i- ' • . ' ,. ~(-r· , . . , • : ... ' 12 ' l• • "~ • • ,. .. • •, -.. -· • Ii:. !• • •• r .. ~· ' .. • I. .. r ' ' : 9, • • • • ' r " • • t· I .. :. " ' • • ' • . • ' ' ' ' i ' l " Vega is the kind of car that responds with pe.rceptible enthusiasm whenever you nudge the accelerator, turn the wheel. or step on the brakes. Vega enjoys being driven. Therefore you'll enjoy driving Vega. Not just back and forth to work, but even on weekend and vacation trips. Even on turnpikes, winding backroads, around sharp bends, up and down hills. Wheeeeeeee. Vega's low wide stance and independent front suspension help it hug the road and stay relatively flat on turns. v~"rt's sizeable-though-economical over- J Th• 1913 V..;a Hatchback GT Coupe. head cam engine makes for respectable acceler- ation and easy cruising. Vega has 10-inch front disc brakes. big coil springs at all four wheels. and a matched pair of comfortable tront bucket seats to slip into . All standard, mind you, on even the most inexpen. sive Vff!!Ja. Enjoy a Vega now, at your Chevrolet dealer's'. Regular. Or GT. Go ahead . You can handle it. JUST BECAUSE IT'S B,ETTER DOESN'T MEAN IT'S MORE • ' [),"'L' YILOr 5 McGovern Holds Televised 'Person -to -person' Session. he purposely puts through the ones that deal with problem issues. The object is to con· front troublesome topics. in hopes or putting to rest some on administration or jo1nin1 with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Senate Finance Committee lo "cheat American workers 1>1.1l of pension reform " (cAMP AIGN '12) * Patented 1.'Built·ln" deep cleanser re1tortp1 and preserves today's modern dffp..toM colon in ONE QUICK EASY APPLICATION. Made with 100"1 Pure, Imported Carnaubo Wax to give your car the most beautifuf, longest lasting, hardest finish known to science! 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Consists of 8 ea.: dinner knives, forks. soup spoons, teaspoons, salad forks; plus hostess set: cold meat fork, sugar shell, pierced tablespoon, 2 tabltspoors • • I I DARY PILOT ED ITORIAL PAGE • Proposition 1-Yes Orange Coast voters \\'ill have an opportunity to \'OtC: in fa,•or of a real bargain in education on t;ov. 7 , Proposition One i.s that bargain .. It assures our community colleges -Orange Coast, Golden West and Saddieback -will have room to offer education to our young people for the years immedi.ate- ly ahead. What Proposition One does ls provide more than $2 in state funds to go 'Nilh each $1 of local taxpayer:,' fund money used in the construction of buildings at the community colleges. And. since the bond funds authorized will be state general obligation bonds. they will not be paid·for from property taxes. The money for the bonds will come front the existing state tax sources -banks, corporations. gifts, cigarettes, liquor, horse races, income ta.xes and sales taxes. The bond funds cannot be used for supplies, sal- arle! or the conslnlction of such things as student unions or dormitories. They can be used to construct buildings that provide classrooms, laboratories, libraries and administration and services -and for remodeling of existing facilities and acquisition of sites. The bonds would not be a blank check issued to the community colleges lo use as they see fit. Authorization for community college building programs must be based on demonstrated growth. The decision of the 1ocal com- munity college trustees to build or remodel must be rat· ified by the state on the basis of demonstrated growth. In the Coast Community District, for example (Orange Coast College and Golden West College), growth has aver aged something like 15 percent per year in recent years. academic education for students who \vill go on lo state colleges or universities. Thus Proposition One is in fact a n1oney-sav1n g opport unity for local taxpayers by providing $2 for building funds for every $1 that the local taxpayer spends. A YES vote on Proposition One is one of the best decision s Orange Coast voLcrs can 1nakc on Nov. 7. Like Her Gra ndfather It is an old saying that nothing is sure but death and taxes. In Orange County there is another reasonably sure bet. That is that each year along about now, Joan Irvine Smith \\till return here from her residence in Virginia and. in her capacity as the largest individual stockholder in the Irvine Company, create a considerable stir on the local scene. A year ago now she \vas battling with might, main and press conference to prevent the incorporation of the proposed new city of Irvine. This year her attack has been focused on how much the Irvine Company is worth \Vhatever the object of her attack, the underlying objective r emains the same: Mrs. Smith \Vould like to gain control or at least much more substantial direction of the Irvine Company. She believes it should be making a lo t n1ore n1oney for its stockholders. I ' ~ ~-s ~- Community coUeges are directed by law to provide vocational education as well as the first two years of \Vhether accelerating the money-making develOJ> mcnts by the Irvine Company coincides with the best interests of the people of Orange County is something that can and properly should be debated. But it must be ackno\vledged that Joan Irvine Smith-even from Vir· ginia-is, like her grandfather before her, a force to be reckoned with in Orange County. 11 ... I HfAR HE Ml6H1 EV EN rur IN fOWfR ggAKE.S1 Humans Not Like Other Animals 1 always knew that the female lion did lbe hunting for the family, but I never knew until now that the king of beasts is a social parasite who hangs around mainly to get a free meal ticket. In his latest book, "The Serengeti Lion.'' which I have been browsing through, George Sc.haller r c po r t s first hand on the bunting habits of lions, much oo the order d bis trail-breaking "Yeor ol the Gori!· la.'' which punctured a lot of myths about our large primate "°"""5. Actually. A pride of lions is more a matriarchy than any· thing else. It ;, the - lionesses who constitute the core of it, in remale family relationships lasting a lifetime. Tiie males are only casual bangefl-01\, euept during the brief courtship period. The females do the actual stalking and killing of prey an imals, while the male! skulk in the background to protect the cubs from attaclt by other predator._ But this is oot. inspired by any paternal feel· mg : the lioM get to the carcass as fast as possible, while many cub!! starve to death because not enough Is left over for them to eat. I CITE ALL THIS expert fiel d observa· lion not because of any overwhelming in· 1.,.est in the hunting habib of the lion, but simply to remind people that we have Dear Gloomy Gus It's irol!Jc that John Schmitz has taken a position against abortion when -he himself is one of the big- gest living arguments for it. -G. W. T. Tl'llt t.•tvni "1ttch rt-n ' "tws. not MC.nMrl1Y lhtM Of n.. NWlll•Hf'. Sen« ,_ ""' """ ,, GI_., GUI, Dally f'llol. to be extremely careful in making ~mpUom about human behavior that are based on animal activity. One of the best-selling subject.s in re- cent years has been the "territoriality" aspect or animal life. with numerous popuJar writers Uke Audrey suggesting that human beings basically follow the same instincts and patterns of conduct. This over..,,implified view is then used to explain, or explain away, war and human aggression. BUT WE ARE, in many ways, more different from other animals than we are Ukc them. It i.!1 the male human who does the bunting and the providing, and human parents feed their babies while they themselves may go hungry. Many of the lower species even eat their own young. Other anlmals have a "nature"; man, as Ortega lw suggested, has a "history." We a re culture. bound creatures and most of our evils (such as war, which other animals doo't have) arise not because of \\'hat \•e ARE, but because of what we try to do to preserve the future. Man is the only animal that makes mistakes, because be is the only one that has creative or destructive op- tions ror bis own evolution. To blame our aggressiveness on ''animality" is to understand neither animals nor man. A High Greek Under Fire WASHINGTON -The governor of Greece's statKontrolled development bank, who was recently praised for his good works by Vice President Agnew, has been accused by an American flnan· der of beating him out of $80,000. The disclomire comes at a lime when the Greek dictator· ship Is wooing other American business· men with tales ci in· vestJnenl opportun· Uy. But Joh n Van~ Kirk, ~t of Kirk lndustrt<s with headquarters •• R<d Bank, NJ.1 wjshes he bad neeaed the o d' Bo ti> "beware fl G re • k ' bearinlJ gUts." Paul TotomiJ, oo A t h e n s mar.- about-town, olJered to help untangle a multimillion-dollar buslnes.111 deal that had become snarled In Greek red tnpc . TOTO~flS JfAD the connt-ttlonfl to do It. Not only WU he ll: former cablntt mlnilter ln the junta, but he wu a crony of the dletl!ortllip's two deputy prime mlnlstenMo~ Plluk"' a n d Nkholu . -·· 118 exlmded .... to the Unlled Slatol wbU'e one ol bis powerful i-is 11 the Gnd< --tycooo and 1UCat dadd)r of GOP ca...,., Tom Pap- pas. No lea !ban $plr!> ... had • kind 1"llrd to U9 about 'll>tomla, aJ!bocJab • ~ \elll UJ the Vlee Pr.,.fdenl didn't !mow 1atomll pmonaU, but "In a routine way" had merely wrtUcn a "pro ronna, CW'IOfY message." VIII Kirk, with '°""' other lnY<llon , hod bullt a plan! In C-to oonvert ci- ty prbaae lnlo lertlllur for the coun- ' (JACK. ANDERSON) tty's Impoverished soil. But the odorou!!I enterprise had run afoul of even smellier politics. TO JIANDLE TIIE problems, Van Kirk retained Totoml! a.s managing director of the fertilizer company, which was known as AEVOL. Totomis drew $25,000 lhrough s New York bank account. The amount grew to $80,000, which ttw hand.some Greek entrepreneur collected without giving any re:&! accounting. The details •re spelled out ln a stale- imnt by Van Kirk , which he bas offered to back up with his liWOt'Tl testimony. Copie:i of check! ~n our files confinn many of the payments. 'fotomla was supposer! to U!\e much of the money, except for his $1 ,(1(1()..1:1-month 811\ary, to pay company debts. But the bills went unpaid and the Greek tnx authorftlea threatened action. At this point, V~n Kirk got rid of Totomis who immediately c:omplalncd to U>e Greek authoritiea. Van KJrt says he wu blocked from leaving Greece for five daya and got out ooly lhrouRh tho In- tervention of U.S. embassy official!:. TUE FER11UZER plant, of coune, falled. But TotomLI, wbooe lnfluence with lhe Junta booles and charm with their ladles ii legendary in Athen.1, turned up aa governor ol the •tate-controllcd Hellenlc Joduitrial Development Bank. This was founded, in parl., wUb U S. lupa)•tn' funds ctven to Greece to '°" coura1e lnve.atment from abroad. Thorny, Cmnplex Details Still to B e ll'orked Otat No End~ to War Before the __ Election \VASHINGTON -An "agreement in principle" has been reached on ending the Vietnam v:ar. It is a poli tical settlement. v.•ith thorny and complex details still to be worked out. lfo\v long that will take only tin1e will tel I. It will not be ~ fore the November 7 election. Neither side bas any intention of an- nouncing an under· standing until after the U.S. balloting. But that is definitely probable by the end of the year. The "in principle" formula negotiated by Dr. Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Due Tho prescribes five basic measures: I -SETIING UP an interim govern· ment in Saigon preparatory to holding a national election. Nature of this tern· porary "neutral" government and the time of the election is still to be determined. Discussed by Kis.singer and Tho was a four-power international corn· mission (U.S .• France, Russia and Red China) to supervise the interim regime and the election. 2 -A cease-fire. 3 -Lifting of the naval and air blockade or Haiphong and other North Vie tnam ports and rivers. 4 -WITHDRAWAL ot llll "foreign" troops (North Vietnamese as well as U.S.) from Sout;1 Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. 5 -Exchange or all prisoners to be handled by the International Red Cross. A revealing straw of the momentous nature of what is in the wind is that it is (ROBERT S.ALLE~ very unlikely those protracted P<t ris sessions bet\~cen the U.S. and Com· 1nunist delegations will be resumed unUl after the U.S. election. ALREADY TIDS week's meeting is off, It's not impossible that last week's semipublic deliberaOOns (163d), in which both sides were signi.ficanUy temperate and uncommunicative, may turn out lo be the last. It's a safe bet the consummation of an agreement ending the war will not be proclaimed ln Paris. THERE JS CURIOUSLY unwonted drum-tight secrecy among McGovern in· limates as lo just who authored his na· tionally-televised Vietnam speech - which cost $110.IXX> and has been sternly criticized by some of his strongest press endorsers as a "surrender to Hanoi."' Some insiders tag Frank Mankjewicz. long-time Kennedy zealot and powerful McGovern kingmaker, as the principal author. Chief basis of this theory is: The harangue ts a pa&e-up job of statements, press releases and other ultra-dove preachments is.sued by McGovern in the past several years; glaring and astonishingly Ignorant misstatements of fact One striking in.stance: "In 1954, the people of France chose a new president, Pierre Mendes-France, to achieve peace in Indochina , which he did with a pro- gram very similar to mine." TlllS IS TOTALLY untrue. T.he Anomaly of \VAS~ITNGTON -Ralph Nader comes as close as we have to a unlversnlly trusted public figure. In a Washington during a time of graft, Nader personifies 1 he honest man. Ai embers of both parties have confidence in him. It is a rema rkable position of respect and yet nll of Uris support., concurrence a n d approbation converts i n l o a dimini shing po\Vet to get much done. Nader, whose char· acter is more hon- ored than the Presi· dent's, has I~ ef· fectlvo clout than the meanest \Vhite llouse aide "'llh fl gun In his attachc c~ :ind a wellct full of hot ~1txlcan mooey. Partly th\~ is because Nader Is the s11 prt me nonpolitician. lie rc\lcs on facts, rC"nson and 1he pursuit of truth, but there is no schmooze in the mnn. I le J11cks oil nnd the den1ocra1 1c affnbl\lly we c:all the art. o( compromise. TIIE ANOMALY OF Nader's posllloo Is i.mdcrscorcd by the publication of his ~roup'l'I lntcst erfort ("Who Runs Congress?" by ~fark J. Green. James M. Fallows, D11vid R. Zwick, Bantam Boob, $1.96). It'll 11 solid. competent work, ii good one-volume compendium of what goes on under !he gren1 domr. On tile , de:bU. side, they hnvc:n't put any n<'-w shockt rs ln It -and \\'C do like to be entertained with frf.'sh rli rt. Congress Is a very old scnnda r nnd thil'I lm't • season or much Interest tive:n In new ones It could be that N;idcr Is soing ( VON HOFFMAN ) out of fashion . Muckraking has had Its ups and downs bdorc. It was · a hot. highly saleable commodity at the tum o[ the century; you couldn't give it away in the '20s ; it came back in the 30'& and died again in the Eisenhower period. Whether or not Nader is about to go out o( style, he does have other pro- blems, the biggest being that his op- pooenl.1: are learning how to deal with him The young Nader who took on and beat GCJ'.lcral ~1otors may have seemed to prove tht proposition that the truth will mnke us free, but in fact the monster manufacturer creamed Itself. TT COUNTERPUNOllED, and by hit· ling back in n variety of Idiot ways, not only mane Nader a public figure but also made him a plausible one. The running controversy fired up enough beat, dran1a and pressure to get some automobtlc· safety Jcgislallon on the statute books. Subsequent Nader targets, many of whom arc fully R., lnjur~ to the com· monweal, weren't so eager ta do themselvei1 tn. It occurred to them th11t Nader had very llttle second-lj:trike capability, as they like lo say nround \Vashlngton. lie could do the pr('ss <:<in· fcrcncc. Issue the dnmning rerx>rt, but then, If the objects of hi!! eicposcs lnid .low. hid out Rnd snid nothing. the mailer \\·QU!d sink fmm public Htlcntion NHder has hRd no way Gf hitting a second time on the sa me people. no way of making Mcodes·France was ne"er president or France. He \\·as chosen premier by the then National Assembly. There is a vast difference bet\\·een the t\\'O offices. It is true th ere is some simila rity betv·ren \1·hat ti1endes-France did in Indochina and v.·hat McGovern proposes. The Frenchman ended the war by c:ipitulating to the Communists. and th at is exactly what the South Dakota radical. in effect , says he would do. And to leave no doubt about that, there \\"as not one word in McGovern 's haU- hour spiel about the Communists' bloody and iron-fisted dictatorship, the in· numerable atrocities and horrors they have perpetrated throughout South Viet· nam , and their bald and devastating ag· gressions there. THE SOUTH DAKOTA leftist had a lot to say about the violence, bloodshed and "immorality" of the U.S. and South Viet- namese. but he \\'as as silent as a tomb when it came to assailing the Com· munists. He is not an exception in that all ultra-doves arc similarly mute. It's a universal trait among them. As far as McGovern's fWld-raising whoop-de-do in St. Louis was concerned, his running-mate was once again Sen. Thomas Eagleton. There was no sign or mention of hur· riedly su~Ututed Sargent Shriver. F ArmFUL DD10CRA TS attending the affair were surprised to see giant blow-ups of McGovern and Eagleton. But no picture, large or small, of Shriver. And that wasn't all . Never ooce throughout the evening was he men· tioned. For this event, Eagleton was oace again teamed up with the standard· Nader's his opponents stand up and fight. Outfits like DuPont and First National City Bank of New York have been able to ride out the scrutiny of Nader's people without trouble. Congres!: will be able to do likewise with even less exertioo. NOT m AT THE SUGGESTIONS of Congressional improvement in. the Nader document aren't worthwhile. They are. But Congress is what il is not through ig· norance, but by intent. The senlority system and all the rest that Nader and so J many others complain or could be abolished by a !limpll'.l majority vote on the first day of the 93rd session of Congress next January. That majority doesn't exist and the pu blicotion of "\\'ho Runs Congress?·' \\'on't create It. The Nader people recognize this sad Utile fact by inserting 11 weak and sulftring \ittl r chapter ctitled "Tn.king on Congress : A Primer for Ci tizen Action. 1' 'This i::hnp1 cr. whlch few citizen.'! ore going to find very useful in taking on their COngressmnn , Illustrates the diffi culties that Nnder und his people face. It begins by giving a fe\v examples of minor·lcaguc Nadcrs "·ho by ptrs\stence and a gttat deal of luck have ~n ahle to gtt a few good laws passed. ~101'! in· structlvc wou ld be a few case histories of wou ld·bc Naders who got nowhere, with an explanation of \\'hy. With 1h\s comes much materi al about~t 1nccbnnics of innue n<'ing lcg1slaUQI( nll useful to kno w if you have something besidts your O\\'n n:ik<'d bndy to do your Influencing with. SINCE NADER JIAS HITRyed hi m~lr itA;Rinst money l>O"l'r. lhc only other 1001 bearer who had unceremoniously booted him out. Remarked a cynical newsman as the party broke up. "Talk about credibility gap! You have to have the gall of a brass monkey to pull orf a twe>-timing stunt like this. I guess McGovern was trying to make up for that statement of his that he v;as · 1.000 percent for Eagleton.• 1' ADDENDUl\1 : On the same day }.1cGovem self-righteously told a Portland, Ore., audience that if elected President he would limit campaign con· tributlons to $.50, his campaign head- quarters in Washington proudly an- nounced it had received two cootributions of $100,000 each from unnamed donors. Further, McGovern's statement was sheer demagoguery. The President bas nothing to do with determining the sli.e of campaign contributions. That is solely a Congressional function. EVEN DE1tf0CRATIC members of the House joined in the laughter at this ooe: The chamber was considering a number of minor measures lDlder the suspension-<lf-rules procedure. One of the bills dealt \\rith the importatioo of foreign-made bows and arrows. Up rose Rep. H. R. Gross, R-lowa , onetime newsman and sardonic wit, lo ask: "I wonder if by any chance this measure could be the defense program of a certain Presidential candidate?" TAKE THE WORD of form e r Democratic National Cb a I r m a n Lawrence O'Brien, now "campaign director" for Sen. McGovern, there is a special significance to the polls being published this week. Says O'Brien, "U McGovern ts slill trailing President Nixon by 15 or more percent by the middle of October, he hasn't got a chance." Position or innuence is large numbers of people who, of course, must be organized. There are a few pe.rfeclly worthless pages devoted to telling the reader how to do that. Here you can find out not how lo organize your group, but that your group shouJd have a "coordinator" and a "pro- ject leader." It's too much to expect Nader to know how to organize gobs of people. He and his associates have done far more than their fair share, so unless someone figures out bow, Nader is going to lack that second punch. Withou t the power to compel the government to act. most of his work will be food for ti.shes and historians. Nlcholas Von Iloffmaa OJtANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. lVecd~ P.t1bli.tl1cr Tllomos Ke.evil, Editor Albtrt \V. Batt"s Edito rial Page. EditOf' Thf' f'dlh:irll\l 11o i:r or tkc Dft\ly Pilot M't!kl lo infonn And sllmu· lat r l't'ad"rs by pr'l"knUn1: thi~ nCW11PftPf'r·1 011tnlon, •nd com-mentAry on t.oplr.-of lnter~t aOO !IJ;:nl!lcan1~. hy prnvldinJC ll fnrum f.,r the f')(flfl'll~lon of nur n •11d,•f'5' 01,lnlons, l'nd by pTt'M'ntln' !hf' div(•n<' \•h•"'JXllnl'i r.of informf'd oh· ~<'rv••ni And .1111Qk\'51nrn on loplc, 11f tht' day. Thursday, October 19. 1972 Net" Life Hortencia 'Tangee' Al- varez, wife of first American pilot shot down and captured by North Vietnam, bas re- ceived a Mexican di- vorce. She is remarried and living in Alameda County, acquaintances say. Financing Of Parks Announced \ SACRAMENTO (AP) - Park grants totaling $6.1 mil- lion for 29 local projects have been announced by the State Department o( Parks and Recrea tion. Biggest single grant is $1.4 million to Los Angeles County for land acquisition at Abalone Cove Beach. Grants for park I and purchases include $773,911 to the East Bay Regional Park ~OUTDOORS) District for Point Pinole, $765.000 to Ventura County for Mandalay Beach and $759,000 to the city <lf Monterey for East Monterey Beach. The grants are from the state's $12.~million share of the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund. • f,c111d 81111 OAKLAND (AP) -The East Bay Regional Park District announced it will buy some 1.000 acres of shoreline at Point Pinole f r o m Bethlehem Steel C-Orp. for park use. Richard C. Trudeau, district general manager. said the land. which includes rolling meadows, eucalyptus forests and long stretches of beach on San Pablo Bay. will be purchased for $6 million. Ile called the purchase "the most important land ac- quisition in the history of the district.'' However. the public may not be admitted to the park for 10 months to a year \Vhile details are worked out, Trudeau said. eParks D11e SAN DIEGO iAP) -A developer will turn over 80 acres of open land for parks a n d a multimillion-dollar damages suit against him is being dropped, a judge says. The agreement announced by Superior Court Judge Louis 1\.1. \Velsh apparently resolves a Jong dispute between Leadership llousing Systems, Inc .. and some buyers or its homes in Scripps Miramar Ranch. • Tmo Sites WASHmGTON (AP) -The \Vhite I-louse announced that another 33 parcels or exgss federaJ land are being turried over to state and local governments for park and recreation use under the legacy or parks program. This brings to 200 the number of propertie8 transfer- red since the program began 18 months ago. Califoria projects are: Burney administrative site. Burney, Shasta County. one acre, estimated value $'7,000; Lewiston government camp si te, Lewiston, one acre, estimated value $2,000. ePlan Nixed Capilol News Service SACRAMENTO -Shasta- Cam:ade Wonderland Associa- tion has gone on record op- posing a f"ish and Game depart1nent proposed angling recommendation to extend lhe year-around salmon c\ooure on lhe Sacramento River from Redding to Keswick Dam. "The department has not come up with a biological reason as to the need for the closure," according to John f", Jleginalo, general manager. e Salet11 /t~ark SAC RAMENTO 'Callfornia's hunter !I a f e I y training program had its big- gest month In hlslory during Septcmtx-r when I 3 . 2 5 7 persons, 5,203 or them adults, romplcted the 1.'0ur$t, the 11epurtmcnt of Fi$h and Game reported. • • United makes it easy. And inexpensive. You can choose from hundreds of low-cost vacation packages. Round-trip airfare, hotel. and exciting extras may cost just a Mini· Waikiki Welcome. A weekend in the Country • 4days and 3 nights in Waikiki. Starting off with an Aloha lei greeting. A Pearl Harbor Cruise. All the while enjoying Hawaiian hospitality at the Waikiki Surf. Tra~sfers, tax and$26286, services mcluded . (IT·TW·UA-310-M) Chicago Happening. - A weekend in the Country. Whirl around fhe Windy"City for 3 day s, 2 ni ghts. Make the rounds of the North Side with dinner and show at the famous London House. Dance with your wife on a nightclub tour that leads to a sizzling steak. End the evening at the elegant Palmer House. .Includes taxes $ 24050 • and hp. (IT-UA-CHl-AS-2C) • DIJL V l'ILDT 1 little more than regular Coach fare alone. See your Travel Agent or United. Here's a sample of what's waiting for you. Capital Invitation. The Great White Way. A week in the Country. 7 days, 6 nights in magical New York. Catch a Broadway show from the balcony. Cruise around Manhattan and wave to Miss Liberty. A great choice of tours. East side. West side. All around the town. $3312S * (ITUA-AMF-122 modified) A week in the Country. Come to the Country! Arrive like a dignitary for 7 days and 6 nights in Washington, D.C. Select 3 tours of our nation's most important and historic halls. Admission paid to every feature you select. What a week! $29640* Clip the coupon below and send for all the great details. Or call your Travel Agent. Or United at 482-2000. ,, (IT-UAAFW-2 modified) ... ;• .. I:? • .,, -----, ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thanks forlhc invi1a1ion. Send brochurl'S for lhe following Weeks and Weck.ends in 1hc Couo1ry to: [l New York (ITUA-AMF-122 modified) 0 Chic:aco ( IT-UA-CHl-AS-2C) 0 \Vas hincton {IT-UAAFW-2 modified) 0 Hawaii (11'-TW·UA-J IO·f\i) N•mc•-----------------Strttt ________________ _ • • • lip • • • City• _________ _,,tatc ___ _,. Fl.ythe friendly skies of United. My Travel Aacnt • Send to : Uniled Alt Lines : Your land is our land. lllN.C.naJS<.,12th~ 016 ' • Chicaao, IMinois 60606 NPOC-1 : . -·· . . ............................................... . •An prices ahown are based on per pcraon, doubJe occupancy ind include 1pec::1411ow round·lrip Coach air fare. These farts do not apply 2 PM. Mldniah1, Fridays, or Sundays on the New York, W11hlnacon and Chkaao vacaliooL F« Hawlil. lica• onFridly,rttuta on Mooday. I I DAIL v PILOT ears SAVE SJJ.82 lo SJ6.82! Animal Kingdo1n Bedspreads SU:f" R egular J\'ow Twin $:l9.98 $33.66 }'ull S:>l.98 843.66 Queen S0.1.98 $53.66 king s;4.98 863.66 Similar savings on red and silver for, mink and lynx looks. Draptry Dfpt. " ~ ( -71~ ;--- 1·-........ - Misses' Easy-Wear Corduroy Dusters Sears Regular Low Price 136 Corduroy dusters or poly- ester and cotton, Button- fronl , side pockets. :r..tachine washable. Colors. Sizes 10-16. SA VE ' 13! Men's Electronic Movement Watches ~~'is 3666 Day and date electronic watches in white and yelk>w gold. Dress styles and blue dial divers models, Lum- inous dial. J,w,lry Dept. Boys' Perma-Prest Sport Shirts S.ars Regular Low Price Short sleeved shirts in wov- e n fabrics. As:sortro pat- terns and colors. Sizes 8· 12. Boyt' Wur Dqt .• Misses' Acrylic Fashion Sweaters Sears Regular Low Price 566 Washable sweaters in popu- lar colors. Ideal for gifts. Sportnr,1r Dtpt. Misses Double-Knit Pants Sears Low Price 366 Two-way stretch nylon. Straight leg s tr,linfij Snappy co ors. · sses' sizes ' 10-18. SOUTH COAST · PLAZA ONLY! BIR1111Dk Innerspring or Serofoam Mattress Innerspring Mattress ••• 3510 Regular $39.95 coils in full size, 360 in twm size. Serofoam Mattres! ••• 5-in. polyurethane foam-quilted , floral cover. Full or Twin $ 39.95 Foundation •••••••••••••••••••••••. $29 $119.9~ Queen Size Set~ •••• , •••••••••••••••. $99 $149.95 King Site Set 'Fa:Bil•rt:Dtpt. • •••••••• ,,. $119 - ' l':'.\, \V SAVE 'l to '16! Women's Shoes Regular $t.99 to $1G. }66 466 666 and . pair Dress heels, casuals, flats and boots. Many styles and colors. Sizes 51/i -10. SboeDtp1., Men's Stretch Crew Socks Surs Low Price 4 pain 166 Assorted color• plus while and white with stripe. Oae size fits 10-13. M,11•1 P'lrai11lb1p CUT 'Bon3! Knee Socks Look Panty Hose .Wer•$t.19pr. 3palr 66¢ • Sporty look of knee socb with comfort of pantyhose. Were$Sto$7 Body Sblrts •••••• !.6' HOIJ,ry Dept. CUT'3 to '5!Dresses and Pant Suits Were'6.91 lo$8.99 366 Penna-Prest polyester knit. Assortment of styles, colors. LitUe girls' .size!: 3 to6x. l11f111t1'.clrildre•'• w~.r CUT*7! Men's Double Knit Slacks • Were$16 897 Assortment of dou- ble knit slacks in solids. Assorted Men 's sizes. Mr•'• Canal Wrar SAVE.t35 to$45! Men's Suft Assortment Were $75 to $85 3988 One and two pant suits in polyester, rayon and wool blends. CUT -tB to$10 on 3! Men's Sport Shirts Were $3.99to$4.99 3 for 466 Short sleeved ·Perma-Prest• shirts In trim, regular or full CUL Solids, prints and fancies. Men's sizes. SAVE *200! Electronic Organ Regular $399.95 Five voices. 17 Pre-19966 set chords. Play by num set chords. Play by number or by note. Bench Optional •••••• U .95 ftH.le, 1VDe Drapes-Free Perma-Prest• Lining Regular $.!yd. 3~? '4 Danforth, Shasta and Marlow Ca!ement weave fabri cs ••••••••••••••••••••••••• $3 yd. $2 Soufle Sheer ••• ; •••••••••••••••• , , •• , l.50 yd. ' Dnpery Depe. Most.Items at Redn $ 69.95, 9-in. Black and White S (2 Only) .....•••.••••• , ••• 49.88 $ 94.95, 12-i n. Black and White $ (2 Only) .........••••••••• 59.88 $119.95, 16-in. Black and White $ (1 Only) .....•••••••••••••• 74 .88 $389.95, 19-in. Co lor TV $ ( 1 Onlv) .....•••••••••••• 289.88 $299.95, 15-in. Color TV S (I Only ) ....••••••••••••.• 189.% $354.95, 19-in. Color TV S (1 Only ) .................. 259.88 $124.95, 16-in. Black and White TV s (1 Only ) .....•••• ·,., ........ 89.88 $389.95. i8-in. Color TV (1 Only) .....•••.•••• , ••••• 274 .!15 $389.95, 18-in. Color TV $ 12 Only) .•...•••••••••••• 299.9; $389.95, 19-in. Color TV $ (!Only) .•..••••..••.•.•.. 264 .88 $579.95, 25-in. Console Color TV $ (3 Only) ••.•...•...••• , .••• 399 .!15 $579.95, 25-in. Console Color TV . $ 12 Only) ••••..••.•• , , • , ••• 379.95 $579.95, 25-in. Console Color TV $ ·(J!·Only) .•.••..•• ,, , n•~~J59.9,;. - NOW $3«.95, Lady Kenmore Washer Sears Best 2 #22906 ( 1 Only) .................... 269.88 · 179.95, Gas Dryer Automatic Temp. Control z 173621 (1 Only) •••••••••••. · •••••••• 149.8' '1 151.95, Elec. Dryer Safely Start Switch #636%1 (1 Only) ••.•••.•.••••• , • , •• , 129.88 %99.95, Auto Washer with Knit Cycle 1?%801 (1 Only) •••••••••••••••••• ,. %59.SI %34.95, Elee. Dryer bas Knit Cycle t 628lll (I Only) ..................... 189.8J 339.95, Lady Kenmore \\1asber Sears Best 622901 (1 Only) ••••............••••• 269.88 %79.95, Lady Kenmore Gas Dryer Scars Best 171900 11 Only) ..................... 229.88 %39,95, Portable Wasber2 spds. 3 Cycles 117911 (I Only) ••.••.. , ........... ,.189.SI %49,95, Auto Washer, 2 Spds. 4 Cycles 123&?611 Only) ................... , • %01.88 %19.95, Gas Dryer with Wrinkleguard 173641 (1 Only) ..••••..• , ••••••••••• 139.88 339.95, Lady Kenmore \V asher Sears Best 122901 (1 Only) .•...•...••...•••••• , %69 .88 Was $459.95, 17-Cu. Ft. side-by-side 161034 tl Only) •..••••••• , •• , , • , 359.S.& Was $3().1 .95, 15-Cu. Fl. top freezer #61511 (1 Only)., .••• ,,, ••• , •••• %49.88 Wu $404.95, 17-Cu. Ft. top freezer 162712 (I Only) ••••• , • , • , •• , •••• 339.88 Was $40fi.95, 17-Cu. Ft. top freezer Was $389.95, 19-Cu, Ft. sid e-by-side #61021 (1 Only) •...••• , •••••••• , 3,9,88 Was$4M.9Stl7-Cu. Ft. top freez er 162744 (! Only) •••. , • ." •• , ••••••• ; 39!.88 Was $36f.95, 17-Cu. Ft. top freezer 162m 11 Only) ................... 29!.88 Wat $199.95, II.Cu. Ft. top freezer 191810 11 Only! ................... 179.88 Waa $479.95, 19-Cu. Ft. top freeze r . 162941 (1 Only) ................. 319.88 Was $711.95, Z0.6-Cu. Ft. si de-by-side 162086 (!Only) ••••••••••••••••••• 6.19.88 Wat $339.95, 14-Cu. Ft. side-by-side 161110 (1 Only) ................... 299.88 "Bonnette" Bedroom Furniture French provincial with antique white finish with gold-color accents. $79.95 Full or Twin Size canopy Bed (mtttreu, box spring, bed frame not Included ) ~ta.tor i\p tr $79.95 Single Dresser Base Your Choice $79.95 Studenl Desk $'79.95 Lingerie Chest $79.95 4-Drawer Chest $71.9$ Powder Table ·5966 ea ct Otlttr Af1tching Pitt'• AJ.0 S.le Pricell! F11rni1111' De t. • SOUTH COAST PLAZA ONLY Sears • • 3333 South Bristol St. Costa Mesa ? • ' • • '' • SARE - d~etl Prices $629.90, 25-i n. Console Color TV 9.88 (I Only) .•.. , ............. 379.99 $629.95, 25-i n. Co nsol e Co lor TV 9.88 ( l Only) , ...... , .......... 349.95 $629.95, 25-i n. Co nsole Color TV 4.88 12 Onlvl ................... 379.95 $629,95, 25-in. Co nso!e Color TV 9.88 12 Only)., ................. 419.95 $669.95, 25-in. Console Color TV 9.95 14 Onlyl ................... 419.95 S 99.95, AM/FM Radio Turntable with 9.88 2 Spea kers I l Only) .. , .. , •...• 39.89 S 99.95, AM /FM Radio with Tape Recorder 9.88 (6 Only) ................... 59.88 $399.95, Electronic Modern Organ 4.95 . (3 Only) .................. 199.95 $249.95, Chord Organ 9.95 •· 12 Only) ... , •••••••••••• , .174.99 $284.95, 9-in. Color TV .88 11 Only) ... , .............. 229.95 $459.95, Stereo ~- FRIES BURG~R66t • 'IJAPFY = B RTHDAY Octobel," 20, 21 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21st IS 'Ill " mu rma11 11 --11 11 Ye l>u&L1c house DAY AT SEARS SOUTH COAST PLAZA FREE PIZZA* 10:00 A.M. lo 5:00 P.M, •HONKY TONK PIANO MUSIC •LOTS'AFUN Join Us In Our Pizza Parlor On The Lower Level •Limit one pizza per person FREE DISCOUNT COUPON With any purchase made in Sean South Coast Plaza d. u r Ing our Birthday Sale enUUts you to receive a discount coupon good for $1 off the regular price 0( a family-aize pi..Qa or~ oil the regular pr¥;:e of a doubtHil:e ptua from · -SBIEEn r1zurwa1& YE Pu11l1c hOU5€ COSTA MESA 9.95 (2 Only) ................. ".199.95 sJo9.95, stereo . FREE One Carat 9.95 · (2 Only) ••.•••••••••• , ••• 199.95 · • $289.95, 15-in. Color TV Diamond 9,9.l·--·-(-l-Only.h-.-rn-·-~-~-~2l!L.""--t--·----- [)~\Jli W A~HEK 8:~:VALUES NO\Y 59.88 49.88 39.88 ' Was$459.9i, 17·Cu. Ft. side-by-side #61030 (1 Only) .••••• , •••••••••• 359.88 \Vas $334.95, 15·Cu . Ft. Top Freezer 162526 ( 1 Only) •••••••••••••• • •. %19.SS Was $604 .95, 21-Cu. Ft. side-by-side #62064 ( l Only) •••••••••••••••• 539.88 Was 289.95, 14-Cu . Ft. top freezer #6Zl42 ( 1 Only) Repo •••••••••••• 2(9.88 \Vas $189.95, 8.6 Cu. Ft. top fr eezer #90820 ( l Only) ...••••••••••••• 159.88 Was $424 .95, 19-Cu. Ft. side-by-side N62401 (1 On ly ) ..•••••••••••••• t99.88 Wai $334.95, JS.Cu. Ft. lop freezer 662524 11 Only) •••••••••••••••• %79.88 \Vas $364.95, 11-(;u. Ft. top freeier - 162724 ti Only) ................ %99.88 \Vas $459 .95, 11-Cu. 1'"'1. sid e·by-side (reezer ~61030 ti Only) ...••••••••••••• 3.59.88 No Purcha se Necessary ••• Simply Deposit This Coupon In Our Jewelry Department And You May Win A Beautiful One-Carat Special Quality Diamond. HEY KIDS! Meet Miss Mary Ann of K.C.O.P.'s Romper Room School Miss Mary Ann Will Be In Our Tov Depart- ment Saturday Onl y. from 10:30 A .M. to 2:30 P .M. FREE McDonald 's Hamburger to Every Child that Visits Mary Ann Saturday. TWODA·YS t • FRIDA·Y-S~ ·URDA Y SA VE$70 when you buy both! Color TV plus B/W TV Regular $69.99 Black and White TV Regular $234.99 Color TV Buy Both for 11-in. diagonal color TV. 9-in. measure B/W TV. • HIAVY DUTY MOIOR Oil measure 23466 diagonal TV 0. , SAVE'35!Gas Cooking Grill Regular$94.9li ---~6~- Cast iron 11H'' burner. Stain- less steel cook grid. Easy- to-clean. Major Appllnce Dept. SAVE'l4! Movie Camera Regular $t6.95 1266 Super 8. Electric eye for perfect pictures. Fixed focus lens. SA VE'2. 70/per Case Motor Oil Regular $9.H case 666 i~aart can• -Sll.71 &.Gal. Cue AD·WtsU1tr llWJI 00 , .• • • • •• • •• l .M C.H "114.11 I-Gal. C.te Spectnim llW41 Oil ••.•.•....•••.•.... 9.&ICaH •Based on 1..qt. tan prices Automoth·t Dtpt. 8~ #6523 CUT *60! Garage Door Opener 1971 Model Was$199.95 Sears Best model! Depend-13966 able. Convenient . Other Garage Door Openers Also at Fantastic Savings! B•iWlq: Mattrlal1 Dept. #6532 SA VE ·'20! Disposer Waste Regular $69.95 4966 Kenmore. Stainless steel grinding chamber. Quiet, easy operation. C..storn Xitchtt1 Dt SAVE '33! 11 Club Golf Set Replar $99.9' 6666 SA VE 83<' ! High- Power Flashlight Regalar $Lit 66 ~acb Your choice: 4 • cell float- -ing lantern of 5 .. cell flash· light. "D" 1l1e Batteries 10 for 66(: Eltttrbl Dtpt. SAVE '2.63! Vertibird Replar $10.!9 766 Helicopter set. Throt· tie fast or slow. High or low dives. Toy Dtpt. 319.88 399.88 299.88 ll9.88 319.88 659.88 299.88 Was$444 .95, 18-Cu. Ft. top freezer .. -----------------1 SA VE i J JO r F t lO di g N61844(10nly)Repo ...... , ..... Ul.88 . , ron" a n SA VE *33 ! Automatic 6-cycle Water Softener ajar Ap lll'IMI Dtpt. tad , SAVE '3.'l.95i Hollywood Bed Set Regular $99.95 S 6 6 Colonial sl\'l1ng. Tnne rspring mattress and matching roun<lat HJn ·~1cta l rramc . Mapl e finish headboa rd. $Jl!f.95 llolly"·ood Bed St't ... , ••••••••••••••. $89 i%'99.95 Qu een Size Sola Sleeper •.•••••••••••• %09.88 $329.95 King Size Sora Sleeper •••••••••••••• !%9.88 FREE! Six-Foot Winnie- The Pooh• Bear fll.A.."1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ADDRESS ............................................ . CITY: •••••••••••••.••••.•••. PHONE. ............... . Re&flttr f• Olr ~ll4lru'1 Dtpm.meM -Wall Disney Prod1teUOM Portable Dishwasher Regular $309.95 19966 Choice of 15 cycle options; dry time. Lighted control panel. 2-level wash with roto rack. . •·. ' .,: .. , . ··~ ~'t" " , .. ) i ' Regular $199.95 166 66 Saves on soap. 15,000 grain capacity. Fully automatic six- cyc I e va lv e. Model 3486. ~I Cn&om Iltnn Dtpt. P'111111M•1·Reath11 Dtpe . ·1.-______________ ..... ________________ ...... __________________________________ ~ HURRY! SALE ENDS SATURDAYNIGHT, OCT.21 r Please, No Phone Orders on These Items Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans I SPECIAL ICEE DISCOUNT Thia Coupon Good for 5e Dlscounl On Any ICEE Drink Durtn1 Sears, Soutb Coast Plaza's Big Birth· day Sale-Oct. 11 tbru Oct. 21, 197%, One Coupon Per Drink. See The Famou ICl!l,E BEAR Saturday, Oct. %1 la Our Store From ll:MA.M. to 4:00 P,M. ' J()~LV PI LOT QUEENIE . .By Phil lnlerfancli .. As I w.:1s ~aying about the une111ployment situation, ll a"1kins, kct•µ slaring at my secretary and come J\.tondav vou 'll be an authorily on the subject" L. /f'I . Boyd 'Call tl1e Other Tl1ousanclsJones' Test s 1nd1r:a te !hr \ 1sion of brown-eyed drivers is just a little better at dusk than the vision of blue-eyed drivers. \\'ORLO'S most dt>dic;itcd golfers today. I'm told, are the Japanese. \\lith so1nc 4~ courses there. Twenty years ago Japan had maybe 30. · JN THAT place long known as Latvia, married women don plain bonnets while single girls sport fancy bright headdresses. This is just alxlut al! any bachelor nn hls \'-'RY to Latvia needs to know, it's be- lieved. Q. \\'llAT'S the origin of the name 'Jones"?" A. That's \Velsh for Johnson. \\'as more !han 400 years ago tha! the Bish- op of Litchfield listed the~ \Velsh names this way: "'Take ten,' he said, 'and call !hem Rice ... Take another ten, and call them Price ... A hundred more. and dub them Hughes ~ .. Take fifty others . call them Pughes ••. Now Roberts name some hundred score .. , And Williams name a legion more ... And call,' he moaned in languid tones ..• 'Call all the other UlOUsands-Jones.' " LOVE AND WAR -What makes a lot of couples elope is doubt. Thafs the claim of one student of such matters. Says he: Many a genlleman and his Iadyfriend decide to run off in the nigtit to marry, fearing there'll be a change of mind. if 1hcy \\.iait. Our Love and War man declines to argue the point. He admits, in fact. that elopements do not work out successfully quite as often as do conventional marriages. AVERAGE woman at a supennarket will spend in 17 minutes what it took her four hours to earn ... BLUSH- ING. some doctors claims, is excellent exercise tor the heart ... YOU CAN figure the bones in a 100.pound man 11 cigh 29 pounds . . . J\.10ST EXPENSIVE perfume base OO\\'. il"s reported , is jasmine ... Al.SO. JT would lake about 1,500 firefl ies to lum on as much light as one candle. AN OLD PUZZLE. this, but still it stumps quite a many. Loo k at these numbers: 8. 5. 4. 9: I. 7. 6. 3. 2. What order arc they in~ Do not spring this query on lhc mathe- matician in lhe family. Spring it on the speller. They're in alphabetical order. Address mail to L. J.f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Ne w- porl Btocll, Culif. 92~60, Lives 011 Ranch King Vidor Had 50 Cenu, Talent PASO ROBLES tUPl l - Unheralded and u n k n o w n , K ing Vidor and his wife Florence arrived in Hollywood 1n their Model T Ford in 1915 "'ilh only 50 cc nl.'i between them . Vidor. a nalive or Galves ton. Tex .. had .!leveral s1natt fi)m credits al the time -nearly al l documentaries on small town life and all made in Tex- as on borrowed money. Vidor and Florence. hil' boyhood eweelheMl, took jobs as 11ollywood extras and he also worked as a general han- dyman as he tried ttJ sell his talenb 3! a dlreelor. ms FIRST brettk came fron1 First National Studios which gave him a contract for a simple short about an old man and a bl>y oo a Missll\.111lp- p1 sha nty boat titled "The Jack·Knire Man." From that short. he went on 10 make several silent rums. includi ng "The Wine o t \'outh" and "lfapplneu." Rut hl1 now-ramou1 1tyle of subdued rulisrn did not come out unUJ J~ "hen he made "The Big Parade.'' an antiwar movie whlch was 1 success and launched him Into tho highest ranks ar U.S. directors and producers. ltlS OTUER top mo\llCI uo- - Lil his retirement from feature films in 195!~ included "Billy the Kid," ''Our Daily-Bread," "Duel in the Sun." "Foun· tainhead." '"Ruby Gentry," "Man Wi!hout a Star.'' and the epic "War and Peace." l)n his famous style of direc- tion. he once said. "I fell dra1na would be more vital If you could believe events were real!y happening whJle you were looking at them . l wanl<'d to focu.!I on small. im- portant things. I decided in my teens to make pictures which would make people feel they were reliving their da y-. to-da y lives U1rou"h t he characters. WRERE IS King Vidor today? Vidor. 78, lives on hls t,2-48- acrt ranch near this central CalUomia city -a perfect setting for the man considered the master of the American rural film. He it ttW as fuclnated With film making as he waa 60 y~ars ago an<t recently com· pleted an abstract film or Im· age1 of nature titled "Truth and llluslon." lie also appeared at the Museum of Modern Art In New York In Stptembtr to launch JI thee -month rel.rolpttcti\le seuon of 50 year1 of hla film1. Ce•esee ..• eqlore.,. dlseover ••• tile Sltaplnl( of Amerlea at every Broadway! Fabulous fo shions and home furnishings, and these special events to entertain you .•• Amerlean Airlines Paeklng Den1ons lratlon How lo pad? What to pad? American A irl ines' Vivian Kiely, Kathy Joh ns and Ellen Broyles hove all the answers. Come watch ... and ask qu.estions! Demonstrations at 7:30 p.m., Fri .. Oct. 20 and 11 a.m., I p.m. and 3 p.m. on Sat., Oct. 21: Cerritos (Mi ss Kiley) Huntington Beach (Mi ss Johns) Del Amo (Miss.Broyles) Vogue-Botterlek Puttern•Fashlon Shows . Great American fa shion- it 's yours to se w! But before you start, see our exciting sho ws ••• Sat .. Oct.14: Orange, 7:30 p.m. Tues .. Oct. 24: Anahe im, 11 :30 Hunting ton Beach. 7:30 Wed .. Oct. 25 : Cerritos, 3 :3 0 Long Beach, 7:30 Th urs .. Oct. 26: Del Amo, I I :30 I the moeeaslon «!log Wolk into these and +he living is easy. Part sof t comfy mo ccasin, part slip-o n, s!ip·off clog! For racing around o r taki ng it slow. The kind of shoe that becomos a steady companion. In camel colored leather. By S.ndler, 18.00. Young Shoes, 75 • • ... ~~~~~~~~0 ~~mtltlfu®IDIBID~&y ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTO N BEACH ORANGE. Mill ol Or11191 CERlllTOS 444 N, E.wclld 171 41 5)5-1111 47 F11hio 11 lt11nt:I 171 41 644-11 1? 7777 E.cl in91r Av1nu1 171 4) lt2.)))I 1100 N, T111tl11 Slr•1I 1714) ttl-1111 500 Loi Cerritoi M1!1 1111) 1110-041 1 SHOP 10 A.M. t• t 1JO ,,M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATUllOAY 10 A.M. i• 4 P.M. SUNDAY 11 NOON I• S P.M . • • Divinity Degrees $50 Eacn NORTH MERRICK. N. Y. (UPI) -A Jewish state assembl)llll8n ordained twice as a Protestant minister by mailing SSO checks to two out- of-state dlvinlty schools has been defrocked. Republlcan As!emblyman Milton Jonas, chairman of the Joint Legislative Committee ( RELIGION) on Higher Education, received l'A'O doctor of divinity degrees when he investigated the mail order schools. Jonas said he learned that ooe of lhe "bogus degree mill.s " the "Life Science Ch~ of Illinois" went out or business recently, He then received a telegram from Calvary Grace Church of Faith, Inc., ()f Rillton. Pa., telling him !).is license had been suspended because 0 of your lying and mlsrepresen. ling yourself." e Bishop Cited FRESNO (UPI) -A Roman Catholic bishop \\'ho helped med.late settlement of a grape pickers strike has been lauded by Pope Paul VI for defending the rights of fann workers jn California's San Joaquf n Valley. Bishop Hugh A. Donohoe of Fresno received the letter commem()raling his Oct. 7 silver jubilee as a bi.shop. "You have striven lo protect the rights of fann workers, in- deed most vigoromly and without compromise,'' the let· ter said in reference to Donohoe's role on the U.S. Bishop's ad hoc committee on farm labor. eNo Action MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) -Statements dealing with the need for quality education for children and means to control pornography and obscenity have beeri bypaS!ed by the American Lutheran Church convention. Delegates voted here to refer the questions back lO the church's Commission on Church and Society r o r distribution to congregations for reaction. R e v I s e d statements are e~ to be taken up at the biennial con- vention in 1974. A committee or &0me 100 delegates which . reviewed the commission's stand made the recommendations to the con- vention. It favored more grassroots input. e Speeches 01d SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (UPI) -The century1)1d Mormon Tabernacle, where many presidential hopef\11.s have spoken beneath Its silver dome In quest of the White House, has closed Its doors to speaking appearances by can-- didates. A church statement said that with the availability of a nearby arena, which seitA more than the 8,000 who could squeeze lnto the tabernacle, the tabernacle will be used °"' ly for worship service:s and some cultural events. Dwight D. Eisenhower, JohTI F. Kennedy, Barry Gold water, George Wallace, H u be rt ~lumphrey and Richard M. Nixon have spoken ln the 1abemacle in past political campaigns. ecar Rites PORTLAND, Ore. iAP - Portland churchgoers w h o dislike dressing in th1lr Sun- day best ()r sitting on bard pews can attend IM!:rvicet in the comfort of their cars. The Rev. Didi!: El G"\town•· of the New llope C0"'""'1'nl! DAILY PIL OT J f pre-veteran!Js day 0 b)J1D®®nsnll~ angora-soft ribby turtle 12.99 \ ********************* famous young junior separates 5.99-6.99 ; houele tops, knit pants 8.99 each Reg. $18. Ribby, soft sweater in I ambswool- Qylon-onqoro in S.M-L in assorted colors of white, ·P.ink, blue, green. Oth~r styles in the collection. Moil ond phone orders invited. Misses Sportswear, '10 Reg. $9. Orlon® acryl ic long sleeve ribbed turtleneck in junior sizes S -M • L. In foll colors, 5.9'1. Sketched with reg. $I 0 jac- quard low-cu l pants in acrylic , 28-inch ~ore, junior sizes 5-13. Assorted patterns, 6.99. Reg. $12. Acryl ic boucle knit tops in assorted styi'(S and colors. Ivory, pink. blue, green, orange, lilac, S-M-L, 8.99. Pants in pullon styles in acrylic or polyester knit. Assorted colors, 8-18, 8.9'1. Street Floor Sportswear, 65 fmnouos maker knit tops 6.99 Reg. $12 . One shown from on e"it- ing group of knits for M:tive wear. White ond brights included in the group. Sizes I 0 to 18. Top every· thing w;th them. Sorry, no moil or phone orde rs, Street Floor Blouses, Shirts, 66 HI Deb Shop, 52 wool-polyester knit pants 14.99 Reg. $18 . Assorted postels end foll tones in a super pants style. Hand wo sho ble blend of wool-polyester ;n misses sizes s· to 16. Meil end phone orders invited. Active Sportswear, 78 the active shirt-Jae 17.99 \ Reg. $22-$26. Handsom e !orion plaids in acryl ic and solid colors in flonnels. All with button fronts. Some w;th be lts and so me with sh irt .ta ils. Sizes 8-16. Sorry no meil or phone order s. Misses Sports.we ar, 81 .Junior pants, tailored shirt 4.99 10.99 Cot ton-polye ster print s.hirt h)s a navy motif on w ~;te backg round . S;zcs 5-1 l . '1.99. Knit oc ryl ;c pull on wid e pants in navy. brown, hunter green, berry. block. powder blue , 5-13 , 10.99. Moil and phone orders invited. Junior Sportswear , 97 Church rented an 8()0.nl1cr 1-------------.-.i drlve-ln theater In aoulheasl P()rtland. Mr. Galloway, who prevlou"°" ly served In Ohio and Kansas. says the dr\ve·ln church b nondennmlnatlon11il and In· I erde.nomlnatlona I. ANAHEIM 44-4 N. E11c!l4 (7 141 IJl.1121 -. . . ' ' HfWPOAT HUNTINGTON IE.A.CH ORANGE, Mtll of Oro~lli '47 Fo1hl•11 1.1.114 (71 4) 444.1212 1111 •~ultf., A 1'llllt0 (714) ltJ.)))I JlOO No. T111tl11 Sthtt 17 141 ffl 0 IJI I CERRITOS 500 Loi Cenltoo M•ll 12111 1"'°4111 ' SHOP 10 A.M. to t 1JO P.M. MONDAY THROUWH FAIDAY, SATUlDAY 10 A.M. to 6 l'.M. SUNDAY ll NOON to .I P'.M, JZ DAILY PILOT Fo1· The Rec or d Birt h s "'")"' CO,.jf COMMUN TY HOSPITAL S111tem ... r U Mr. '"° M11. Mir~ Edwin fl•lro. 43 Moni.r.v Or , L-N fie.Ch. olrl Sfftem-,, Mr. 111d Mr"L HOWll'd Trvmtn Fol_,,, lOO Vlt11 Suwlt M__.1 llMCll, boY Mr •nd Mr1. W'1tH1m J~ C11>lll, 7H1t L1vl~l1 DI' .• Mlulon Vl•!o, bov 5"Mmlllr 1t Mr. 1nd Mrs. ~ 1MJ1, •n ~ (Ol•I Hlahw1y. l.01•-&..ch. OOV iw. Ind Mr•. 0on . s-v1111. n, ORI llllXllO. Aol. .• Sin Cllmenlt. al rt 5"Mm"'"1" 2t Mr. 1~ Mrt. &rl•n 9. Holt, 131' 01.t"' nll'>CI r.. lrv;:..::~~ girl Mr. ""° Mr1. '.fotin 811<"r1v w111, ll611 c11 .... n11. Mlsdon v1110. air! O'l'-.r I Mr. 100 Mrt. Jll<TM L•pe, ISi W 'l•lt• Qlill1, "ol. A .. S... Cl...,.nlt. r:.ov Mr 1M M•i. Jerrv W1vne FO!fl, 121 Avtnl<11 Vlctorl•. 51n Clemente. olrl O'l'l-1 Mr. lflll M". JOMPh Slt'ven C1rntv, mJS Mll.,.uerhe P1rkw1~. Mlwlon Vlelo. bov Mr. 1!>d "'"· Wlltt1m "•Y Moon, 2'711 VII "1<.111, Ml11lon Vl1lo, qirl O'l'i.ar7 Mr. end Mrs. J1ll'IW E"rln.,. JlmtMI, 7'11112 Pr11ron _pr ., 1.a<1un1 Nlouel, ... Mr. 1"0 Mrt. Welllor. Lvnn Wrl11M, 1513·8 Proil)l<f, Pl1een!I•, bOv Dissol11tiotts Of Marriage G1llaohrr, P11.ttln' R 1nd llobert J Wllmert, Miry """ and Jtmes lH L1ncl-o, Jot.fOll 1nQ Lind• Ann T ...... 1111. Oonn1 R;,e 1nd NorM<1n ...... Por!Pr. A.,._t1 Eldftn 1!>d J1mrs Wtblltr l(n1e-1. M1..,.lne 1n11 H•rrv Godin. C•rol M11rl1 Ind Rlc,..rO JDffP'I Hll-3"n. Cvn11'11 "· Incl Edwlrd 0 . G1MI. Edwin! All&11 Ind S•r1h Lindi flol11~r. Mlll111 k. """ T,_..e G. Ao1m1. D11nn1 J•aMlll 1nd Raaer! Gl!OO'll' 81.trry. 8rJ1n LH 1nO l(rl1tlr>e KftV Mnlllor, M1rn•1 """ 1nd Ge<lr;e L1wr,nce Burnell•. "•~nklon Willi•"' J• ftnd !ne1 Grah1m, Ellfn !Cay and Marvon T. Ba;nol!. II~'' E. lnO luclllt A Stevens, Isaac and Judv t<noq, Haiel E. ~nd Jo~n T HOPk1ns. Jinlcr ind Rov Cllllon Pu,ke!!, TttrV E <1r>d OM>ra J. Gambrel, s.,. T. 1nd RObort L. Slr .. r. Jo Ann and J1mr1 C Oollm. Arnold Ptter ind t.fvada JPr!!"" Erk:klO<>, Carol• L. Ind Grin! T. Dent.h Nolires W~LClf Jotln Gl/Y Wilch. MM 71, of 12572 Orwev Orlvt, G1rc!en Gro..... Date ot dl!at~, Oct-r t7 19n. Survlvt!d bv wll!. M1ro1rel. Servle••· F"rl01v. Oc:b!Mr 1(1, ~:30 PML P~k F1mllv Colonl1I F11ner1t HMW. ~•mllv IWOftll lh!ls• wl•h!m! "llV mi ke memorl1I (ontrlb\,tlloM to tlMP 1-11111 FunO. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFt~ MORTIJARY m E. 171b Sc., Costa Mesa -• BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOJ\1E Corona del Pltar 17~9458 CAsta !'itesa '46-zc.t • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 118 Broadway. Costa l\1esa L1 1-3433 • t\lcCOR!\flCK LAGUNA BEACII P.10RTUARY 1'105 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-&415 • PACIFIC VIEW t\1El\1t>RIAL PARK Cemetery l\1onuary Chapel 3500 Pat lfic View Drive Newport Beech, California 644.2700 • PEEK FA~llLl' COWNIAL FIJNERAI, RO~IE 7301 Balsa Ave. Westminster 893..3525 • S!\fJTllS' P.f ORTIJARY m l\laln St. Runtlndnn Beach S3M5.!9 La. .... 1 , ........ MtN ,.....,. ................ . ................ , •• ..,. fM ................. And lhn r<Gd Bon<1"1 Ark In tht DAILY PILOT Sundau comic<. - Politica l N o tes Chamb er Panel Urges Voter s RIGB1• NOW! ToDoHomew or konProp.20 By O.C. HUSTINGS Ot llM IMlllY PllOI S111t A Newport Harbor Chamber or Commerce con1mittee that is bucking Proposition 2.0 has launched a drive to get as many voters as possible to read the controversial in- itiative before the Nov. 7 elec- tion. Co-chairmen of the com- mittee are Dr. Nolan Friuelle. a. NeWJ)Ort Beach optometrist. and Dick Sle\'ens. president of the Balboa Bay Club. ORANGE COUNTY Thev are urging all Orange CountY voters to read the in-'-----------"' itiati\~e. second longest on the Nov. 7 ballot. either in lhe booklet included with sample ~~~~b1e0~h:~ug~ ~1~frr !:~~ headquartered at 2166 E. Coast ~ligh~·ay , N e w port Beach. Placentia Lake Park Plan Aired SANTA ANA -The latest county regional park plan to surface is a proposed 38-acre proje<:t In the north lo be known as Lake Placeo!ia Park. The subregional park is the brainchild of three north Orange County cities and Supervisor \Villiam J. Phillips of Fullerton. The proposed facility lies hetween Fullerton, Brea and Placentia and would center (In a JO-acre Anaheim Union \Vater Co. reservoir. Three cities presented the plan to the county and the Board of Supervisors asked concerned departments t o develop land costs and project use figures on the site. Estimated cost, by the cities. is $1.6 million. Scout-o-rama Sc hedu'l,ed l n Anahei111 ANAHEIM -Srouts \\1ill display their projectS and participate in a parade during the first annual Scout·O..rama to be held rrom 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. New. II at the Anaheim Convention Center . The parade will begin at 9 a.m. on Convention \Vay between Harbor Boulevard and West Street, led by 11obo Kelly as grand marsha\l . Scouting skills, such as leathercraft. first aid. camp cooking. survi val training and a speciaJ cook'1Jut by chef Mike Ro y will be demonstrated. Sponsored by the Orange County Council of the Boy Scouts of America, more than 42,000 scouts and ex plorers are expected to participate. For more infC)rmation. call the cit y or Anaheim at 533- 5551. H u1iting to1i Man Suing Over Arrest SANTA ANA - A JJun· tington Beach man who claims he was falsely arrested in J.C. Penney 1s Huntington Center store and forced to submit to a public search ha s sul'd the company ror $200.000. John Joseph Jump claims in his Orange County .. Superior Court lawsuit that company employes seized him April 30 on suspicion of shoplifting and subjected him to a humiliating public search. Jump states he was lodged in Huntington Beach city jail for eight and one-half hours before the charges were drop- ped and he was released. Summaries offered by the Orange County Committee Against Proposition 2.0 include the entire text of the measure \\'ith an analysis of its poten- tial i1npact. YOUN! volt:Rs 1:r the re- election of Assemblyman Bob Burke (R-70th District) will \\·ash your car and fill your head with information about their man Saturday if you drive in to Ed Olsen's Chevron Station. 2303 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana. The hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and' the price is $1.50, says Carolyn Jensen, who is organizing the event. Proceeds go to Burke 's campaign cof· fers. Helping Carolyn are Debbie Brenton; Patti, Ron and Terry Pryor; Jeri. Jennifer and Don Hawkins: Sa ndy Hoover, and Kathy liayas. * * * NIXON BACKE R S in Laguna Beach will g e t together next Wednesday at GOP headquarters, 397 N. Coas t Highway. The rally gels under way at 7:30 p.m. City chairman Gene \\leaver says J\fr . and Mrs. Victor C. Andrews, Mr. and Mrs . Richard Jahraus and Mr. and l\1rs. Jack Linkletter will head the list of GOP notables on hand * * * A CANDIDATES night for state and congressional office seekers is planned n e x t \Vednesday in San Oemente by the American Association of University Women (AAUW) alld the League of Women Voters (LWV). It's scheduled for 7 ~30 p.m. at San Clemente High School. * * * ANOTHER LEAGUE or Women Voters-sponsored can- didates night is set for 7:X> p.m. Oct. 26 at Foothill High School, Newport Avenue and Dodge Avenue. Santa Ana . * * * LOCAL Pt1E!\IBERS or the American Association o f Retired Persons will gather in Newport Beach Oct. 26 to disruss the v a r i o us pro- positions on the Nov . 7 ballot. The meeting will be al l p.m. at the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church, 798 Dover Drive. It is open to anyone 55 years of age or over. STEi!. slrrootAL 0 r Anaheim, state fair employ. ment practices commissk>ner, will be honored Oct. 26 at a GOP dinner in her hometown. Principal speaker will be Benjamin .J Fernandez of Chatsworth, chairman of the National Hispanic Finance C:Ommittee for the Re-elecUon of the President and finance co-chairman or the National Committee to Re-elect the President. The evening will begin with a reception at 7 p.m. followed by dinner at 8 p.m. in the Monopoly Room of the Royal Inn. Black tie is optional. says dinner chairman James H. Miranda. Tickets are going for $25 per person. Reservations can be made by calling 558-0262. SADDtEBAtk: Cit°zens for ?\-1cGovern a·re planning a cocktail party starting at 8 p.m. Oct. 28 in the home of J\1rs. Doris Jewen , 25411 Remesa Drive, Mission Viejo. The public is invited. Tickets are $'2.50 per person. Call 83()..1847, or 830-5406 for ad_- dit~~I info*ation. * ON 25" SOLARCOLOR TV (di19. me1s.l Mod1I SL54Ql.W Admir1I Sol1rcol· or brightnl•t in dr1 m1tic M1di+1•· r1ne1n 1tyling with o .. k v1neer fini1h ind hidden e11t1r1. F11lur1s Admir1I "Color M11t1r" eontrol for pulhbutton A1.1tom1tie Fine Tu n· Ing !AFC!. "1 n1t1nt Pl1y" ch111i1. SAVE $7000 18" SOLARCOLOR TV !di1g. m111 .l Mod1I tlTSl2lC/Th1 D1kot• In· culd11 "Color M1,l1r" Autom1tic Fini Tuning l·AFCJ, Son1r Remo!• Control ind roll·1bo1.1t 1t1nd! w .. 1. nut Ojlt1 in1d finish, Admir1I Sol ••· color lleck Metrix color pielur1 tube. ONLY 23" SUPER BRITE COLOR TV (di1g. "''''·' M11del lC359l/lh1 Prihetl!ln Sl11k eont11T1por1 ry con1ot1 i" W1hiul gr1in.d fin<sh. lookJ good i~ 1ny room! Admir1I "l111!1nt Pl1y", A11tom1tic·Fr1queney T11n1r !AFC!. ONLY 12" PORTABLE TV !di•'il· m11,.J Mod1I 12 P47 Thi P1r,0111I Pl1ym1tc1. Comp<1el, c1uy-1lon'il model in rich W1lnut gr•inad fini1h. Pow11ful "ln1t1nt Pl1v" eh11,i1. 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Cnoice of antique gold or silver casting. 88 Co llege Names Student Host OUR REGULAR LOW PRICE 39.88 C•ut11t .. ~uou• ttlotr fltMS OUR LOW, LOW PRla • Steven Richard Durling.ham. a rreshman major ing I n religion at Bob J o n e s University in Greenville. South Carolina, hu been chotmt 11 student host at the achoo111 Collection or Sa.....S Ari. lie Is the 8()n or Mr. tu1d Mrt. Frank Burlingha m of Corona dcl Ma.r, Tht coll~lson b ont of Amcrlca 's Jargt1t univcraity art g1Utrie1. •WDf#TIAi lltfll lOlf HAS A OAftlUNI UGtmNO ''''"'' OISrur • OHi 0, ffff IAIGffT ,., 1Hl WISTI HSIKlll\,tl. 11111+111 lllf Al l&Sf l.l, Hff(ISlll. 1.U.(ISl'llll H RIUll STiii i COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. S.n 0 1 .. o F,..way 1t Britto( ..... STO .. NOU•S1 DA'T •nd SATURDAY 10 AM te t PM SUN. 10 AM te 7 PM (Jllll1s11• Ga~s 'tits•• ti T111Ursl l -- • WEEI(END BONUS! 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DIASONAL ALSO 1M STOCK WHY BUY FROM ABC? 1 1973 25'' XblOO 25'' OIAGO~Al • Sol id St•'• e Walnut C .bin1t CONSOLE BEAUTY e SwlNI a.. letMte Co11fr11I $649. An Exc eptional Value Complete wit h I Year Homa Service, e MODERN DESIGN WITH BLACK GLASS TOP ER-'4 7SW $ THE ARGOSY $ e Automatic Fin e Tu ning e Automatic Tint e A utoma t ic Color The Slim Line 19" Solid State e Automatic Fine Tuning e Automatic Tint e Automa tic Color 00 I Year Parts a nd 3 Year Picture Tube Werrenty 1973 Super Chromacolor 19'' FAMILY SIZE VIEWING . . . DIAGONAL =~~!!~ !Jill~~T PRICED FREE I YEAR HOME SERVICE $ e+s will not l ast long at th is price ······-······-·--·--·······-·· ~l!!I!L ~~LOR' cHROMACDI ..... W•Mvt CN!Mt Wiii! ZMfltl'I 111 -CllrMMlk -~ ""'lftt STORE HOURS: MON.·TUES. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. WED.·THURS,.FRI . 10 a.m .. 9 p.m. SATURDAY 10 a.m.-5 :30 p.m. SUNDAY 112 1.m._· 5 p.m. 23'' SUPER DIAGONAL CHROMACOLOR ALL ZENITH PERFORMANCE FEATURES • SPECIAL PURCHASE CALL FOR SPECIAL PRICE 1-4 DAILY PILOT Safety Rules -Cited FAA Outli1ies Criteria irt Crasli Probe SACRAME!\'TO i AP l -The Administration has no air saft"ty regulations aimed at protecting the safety of 1>ersons on tht> ground, a.ri ac- cident inquiry pa n e I in- vestigating lots! n1 o n t h ' s Sacramento ice cream parlor plane crash was told. Furthermore. th e FAA has no authority lo enforce !he airport obstruction safe t y criteria it does have on the books, a federal official told the National Transportation Safety l>oard Wednesday. mE FAA sets sa fet y criteria only for landings, but not t.akeoffs. said Paul \V. Robinson, the chief of the f' AA 's air space obstruction branch. Under questioning by safety board members, R o b i n s o n sa id the Farrell's Ice Cream Parlor \!(here an F86 jet crashed on takeoff killing 22 1984 Near -Schmitz WAYNE, N.J. (AP J Rep. John G. Schmitz. of Tustin, the American Par- ty presidential candidate. says the U.S. is "marching toward a 1984 Big Brother situation'' because the federal government is overstepping its bound. "\Ve have rnoved f:is!er tow a rd tota!Harianism under Richard Nixon than at any other l i me , ' ' Schmitz said in an addre~s here Wednesday to studenls at "1ayne /·fills High School. CALIFORNIA • persons was not Cilnsldered an air safety hazard by FAA standards. 'fhe 5.000-fool·long runway v.•here the Korean War vintage jet attempted to take off Sept. 24 pointed dlreclly at the ice cri:!am parlor, just 700 feet from the end o[ runway pave- ment across a four.Jane street. Even if the shopping center housing the ice crean1 parlor had been C11nsidered a hazard to air safety, the FAA could not have stopped construction because the FAA airport hazard orders are on I y advisory, Robinson said. "THEY ARE not en- forceable. They are not bind: ing on the people 11·ho receive them. We do not have authori- tv 10 deny or halt con- s.truction." he said. Roblnson was the last of 23 v•itnesses called in three days of testimony on probable causes of the Sept. 24 crash. He told the panel the ice cream parlor "violated the air space requirements" f o r visibility for landings on lhe short runway. but !hat a rev[e\v before consln.if!tion Conspiracy Charged By Judge in Ouster LOS ANGELES I AP) - f\.tunicipal Court Judge Leland \V . Geiler, accused of vulgar Cilnduct and violating defen - dants' rights by a commi!J.'lion seeking his removal. says he is the victin1 of a conspiracy by his former clerk and depu- ly public derenders. - Geilcr's claims are included in a lOO-page petition filed ( BRIEFS ) Wednesday with the state Supreme Court in an effort to block his removal as recom· mended by the state Com- mission on Judicial Qualifications. e He'll Stay BERKELEY (APJ -Dr. Richard Foster, the 54-year· old school superintendent who gained a national reputation as an early champion of school desegregation, has reversed a six-months-0ld decision t o resign. Dr. Foster told Berkeley school board members he decided to retnain because his resignation would do nothing to eliminate factions which have split the board. " . lt·s ob\'ious the board is not going -to come together, so we'll just have to ·Uve v.•ith certain divisions." he said. e Derailed BAKERSFIELD !AP) -A railroad line which carried from 30 to :JS tr.ains a day was closed \Vednesday when heavy rains washed out the tracks and derailed a we stbound freight, injuring three men, authorities said. A dispatcher for the Santa Fe Railroad said four diesel un its and four boxcars left the tracks, flipping one of the engines over at Beena, 15 miles east of here. About 400 feet of lhe double track were reported lo be lorn out. e Retraetlo11 SACRAMENTO (UPIJ The California AFL-CIO was asked today by leaders of its political arm to retract a resolution urging the defeat of President Nixon. The executive council of the state AFL-ClO's Council on Political Education (COPE) made the recommendation to the COPE membership at a special mee ting called to con- .sider a directive from AFL- CIO President George Meany to rescind the anti-Nixon resolution. Don't Miss These Ft-ee Lectures /eeaf ~fafe Jnve:Jfmenf Sene:J ·Oct. 25th 41~faximum Return on a Minimt1m Investment" Lecturer -Fred Becker Nov. 1st "Advantage of Real Estate Syndication for the Small Investor'' Lecturers -Phil McNamee and "Cap'' Bl:ickburn Nov. 8th "~f,ital Conservation Through Exchanging M'inJDWng Taxes" Lecturer -Bruce Howey "Talloring Your '73 lnve~tment" Lecturer -Randy Mccardle TICKITS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR EACH SISSION MEETS 7:30 • 9:30 P.M. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE Sorin C""f'Onsorod ly Or•nte Coast • Golden West OAIL V PILOT College Huntl119ton llM<h • Founllln V•lloy lolrd of RMltor1 d('lermined thr buildin~ 11.•as not a haui.rd to air safety. Under questioning fro m board member~. Robinson ad- ded that the obstruc1ion Safety rules ··address themselves to the safe and efficient use of oir spr.c.e" nnd contain no criteria for t.'Q nsidering the safety or persons on the ground. "CERTAISLY \\'E are con- cerned 1vi!h lhe safety of peo- ple on the ground," Robinson said. But ~·hen asked lo cite regulations \\hich w o u Id authorize him to aet if he determined a project might threaten the safety of persons on the ground. Robinson replied, "I cannot cite you any, sir.'' Earlie: he had testified that he could issue no air hazard report "that docs not have a basis in regulations." 'Judge Sets Bail Airing For Corona FAIRFIELD (AP) -The judge in the Juan Corona mass murder trial has scheduled a puhlic hearing Friday to COO· sider a bail molion and to air controversial secret sessil)n remarks a ne\VSpaper article1 attributed to the jurist. Superior Court Judge Rich- ard E. Patton sa id the hearing will cover remarks carrjcd in n Los Angeles Times story which quoted Patton as saying the .state's murder investiga- tion was "inept, the prepara- tion inefficient and the pros- ecution inadequate." PATTON SAID 'Vcdnesday. "\Vhatever appe.-ired in fha! Los Angeles Times article wiH come out in court Friday. \vhich will be in a public ses- sion." The trial has been recessed until Tuesday when the jury of JO men and ty,·o women 1vill return to hear more testimony. They will not be present Frid;i;y when defense attorney Rich- ard llawk argues for Corona's release on bail . Corona. a ri.1exican national labor contractor. is charged 111ith the hacking deaths of 25 itinerant fann workers, round buried in crude orchard graves along the F'eather Rriver in the spring of 1971. TJIE NEWSPAPER story quoted Pa1ton as saying the murder probe "outraged" him. "because of the prosecution's attitude and procedures. . .it has been most disturbing to me ... it Ls an absolute out- rage." (Earn $61.80 on each $1,000) You can earn this high interest on $5,000 minimum two year certificates. The first year your $5,000 certificate will earn $309.15, and more for each consecutive year that interest is added to the account You can earn $59.17 on $1,000 rninimumoneyearcertificates,and as much as $51.26 on a regular passbook savings account of $1,000. More interest than banks ... more certain than stocks Plus free services ... safedeposit boxes, notary service, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services are avail- able when you have the required minimum balance in your account at THE BIG M. Plus personal service ... experienced and con1petent sav- ings counselors in eac h office ~~ r , ' .. ~ ii THE 816 M to assist you in planning your sav ings program. Robert D. Aston, i'1anagtT MUTUAL SAVINGS Wu have an Announcem ent for-yo u Star-\"ing -this S UNDAY QTOBER22 -Doors Wi 11 be opeh Hig h Noon · ~ · to 5P.M. SU N DAY • ~ our-from Ye s i he_ T rane \SCah Rooh1 w1 \I be.- open fora dc:l1c1ous SUNDA y HUNT BRUN c H -1n a -r in c I u d es, oRANG-E =r uic.E 0 5 CRAM8LE))EG-G-S LITTIE Pl& S'A\J5A GES 0 B AKE D C H IC KE N -\--i A S.Ht:D B R-OWN POTATOES ~CAN ~o JJ-S And BL.JlTE ~ COFFEE • "TE.A 'OR MILK ADULTS \,qq ° Cf-!JL])RE"N l ""} •09 OPEN I ;}.:oo To 3; 00 °R'E\vJfMBt::R <;()NJ)Ay st\6f'F'1NG S171l~i5 CCT'OBCR. .:2.:L .:BUFFUM S' FA5tl ION \SL.AND ONLY NEWPORT• 'I FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER• •••·2100 •MONDAY & FRIDAY, 10 :00 -9:30 •SUNDAY 12 :00 -5:00 •OTHER DAYS 10 :00-S:JO l\len in Service Airman ~ J. DolU, "°" of Mr. aild Mre. Jooepb G. K!Wll ol 1J072 Hanover Lane, Hunllngton Beach, haJ been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., afttr completing Air Force baslc tr1iining. 1Jurin8 hll alx weeks at the Alr Tralnlna: Comm and 1 1 Lackland AFB. Tes., he studied the Air Foree mlulon. ..-ganl7.allon and -and received !pOclal instruction in human rtlatlons. The •irman has bflen assign- ed to the Technical Training Center at Sheppard f o r a~lallzed training In the civil •llllM8fttli ltliilllliilftl lljlll electrlcal lleld. Stall g:eanl R..-1 r. Ball, • ~ MHrliiMI Vz N~, ISl 81\10 Bird Lane, H~. acb, has receiv- ed tl1o iJ.( Air Fon:e Com- mendation Meda1 flt Mt. Laguna At; Force Station, Cali!. Sergeant Hall, a space systeme cofftmaod and control operator te@hnjcian, WU cited for bis mefttoriowl aervice at Mill Valley fJr Force StaUon. He D0\1f serves at Mt. Laguna ~ a Will of the A~ fense Command whlcli • Is the U . S . agalmt • · e aircraft and m.sn... Navy Seaman Jact R~ ,.,, or Mr. and Mn. James ll. Houston of! calll: Mll'llt C8plstra.no ch,-bii ftlum. eel lo~ ach. Calli., from a seven-tnMitq deployment to the West.jib Pacific aboard the d~er escort USS Badger. Marine l'fc. K-L. Dant. of t2:01 Santee Ave., Westmlost«, was meritorious- ly promotfd to his present rank upoft graduation from basic traiftPig at the Marine Corps ReN"ult Depot in San Diego. He r.cejyed the meritorious promotion In recognition oLhls oulstandlnf per!-•-Ill all phases of recruit training. Navy ErmlP. S1e*9 M. Roece, bull!olid ol tllo ,._, Miss DlaM jl. Newland o! 3130 Kerry J..a.Qlt, Costa Mesa. was designated 1 Naval Flight QI. fleer ~ completing basic Jet Navidllon Comae al the Naval Air IJtaUon, Glynoo. Ga. He now wm be assigned du- ty as a hlJfnbardier·nav igator aboard Nnal jet alreraft. Navy ""ty O!!lcer Second Class S&efllt:n D. Norton, hus- band of the former Miss BeverJey J. Arrance of 3113 Taft Way, Costa Mesa, has returDed to long Beach, CMU., trorp a seven-month deploymeftl to Ult \\leitmt Padlic aboard the destroyer e9COri USS Badger. Marine Cpl. HoDlllld R. Bron, hqband of the former Mis!: DelUBh G. Sawyer of 1817 Anaheim St., Costa Mesa, was promoted to his present rank whl1t serving al the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro. Airman Gary E. Sotloll, !On Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Sutton of 1351 Athena Drive, Hun- tington Beach, has graduated at ShePPltd AFB, Tex., from the U.S: Alt Force psychiatric ward speaiallst course con-:l the Air Training The airman, trained In """" Ing toclmiquea ol men\11 and physical lllne-llld com- rmmlcatlonl -117 Min meeUng lhe patient's nee<b, Is being aaalp!d to March AFB, !or duty. Huntington Man Given Year Term SANTA ANA -A Hun- tington Boach man who ad- mitted taking 1'15 al gunc~ from. I ftllmt hU ordered to &ene one yeai· ln Orange County Jall and n .. years probatlon. Superior Court J u d 1 • WUUam Murray impo se d Mnte~ on Stephen Lawrence Arebalo, II, of 6071 Kimberly Drive, alter the defendant pleaded pUty to fi rst degree robbery. Arebalo WA!J Arrested Aug. 17, 1'71, ahortly after I.he holdup of a Garden Grove market. David Alona, 21, Wtltmln$1, his accomplice ln the robbery was recently aentenoed to slJ months to life In state prison all<lr being taJ>. bed .. u.. cunm&n ln the rob- bery. Aftbalo otrered hi• iUllly plN alter 11ndlr10illl • M1 1t1"1)1-II Cbloo GuldaJ>. ce Center. • OAJLV PILOT 15 Lunchtime Olympic County Groups Receive Awards Technician Trades Thermos for T enni.es ' By '!OM BARLEY SANTA ANA -Lanky, long legged Al Nestlinger l.s a long d!stance namer wbo'a never lontly. He couJ(fJl.°t be. in the unusual arena of his choice. For Al, 35, daily pounds the pavement in Santa Ana's civic center, often cheered by hun- dreds or lundl hour oolookers from a. &rowing cluster of city, county, state and federal bulldlng.s. ?.tANY OF THOSE workers spend their noon hour break in the garclons dotted tlrougboot ~~~ ham sandwich Is raised In oalute aa the ploddfng, llCDlliMI li~l't IN!f' 111.t way along hb C I r e;l-u 1 lj calculated three-mile course. "l get a jeer or two with the dleers," griNI genial AL "But that doesn't bother me. It's pretty good natured ribbing and you'd be surprised just ·how many people are in- terested enough to check my daily lime." He recalled the elderly lady who told him some mooth.ol ago: "Young man, I edmire you. I know you're going to do well at Mwtich." Santa Anan Faces Trial In Tot Death SANTA ANA -A man -· .. l1lllrdlr .,.. hours alter hll girl lrlend's fn. !ant daughter died from head and lnlemal Injuries bu been ordered to faee trial Dec. 4 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge William Murray set the trial date for Oiarles Edward Helton, 19, of Santa Ana. He is accused of the kill- ing of 17-montlKlld Melanie Lynn Williams. Helton, recently pronounced sane after eumination by a team of psychiatrists, was at· rested July 29 at hJs home on initial charges of chlld abuse. Tbo6e charges became a ...... allq1Uoll •'*' "" ~Ille girl died """· day In Cloltnly "' • d I c I l . Is lle14 In oeunly Jail with bail set at $100,000. Sentencing Scheduled SANTA AN A A Westminster man charged with murder after his wife was found fatally shot in the family home has been found guilty of reduced charges in Orange County Superior Court. Jud&~ B)'l'On K. McMlllao found Antoolo tuna, II, guilty of Involuntary manalaugbter alter 1tudylng the tranacrlpt OI the caae. The ddendanl will be .... teneed 11 ... !&. Luna was arrested last March 15 after police sum- moned to his home by a neighbor found Mrs. Bonnie Sue Luna, 20, dying from a gunshot wound. Police said Luna told them he had been "fooling around" with the weapon and showing his wife his fast draw when the gun went off. He told poliet he was under the impression it WM not loaded. CIUJ.Se Case Suspect ·· Sentenced ' SAN"I' A ANA - A man who leaped from his car and led police on a wild foot chase alter striking several vehicles -among them a Fountain Valley potrobnan'• mot01' cycle. Cortez was arrested on l.abor Day on two felony and five mlldemeanor counts, all stemming from the high speed chaae that enipted when he sought to evade poHce in Fountain Valley. Cortei was captured on foot in a resldentlal aru a few -11 lfllr Ill lrllf IO Nn down tl1o motoreyde ofllclr ~~ acapo roula. else physically able to uodergo tbe same regimen," , His three-mile course -his best time. thus far is l8 minutes. 23 seconds -Is bas-. ed on the "Aerobic" program outlined in Dr. Cooper's "The New Aerobics." •1IT'S GIVEN me strength, speed, endurance and an in- creased tolerance of heat stress," Al said. "And I'm J!OSltive that I have f.ar fewer colds and minor ailments than I had prior to starUng this program." And the Orange County ~l'drg!9sf technician firmly liiiiii~-lllJ ~ Ital! given hhb mental toughness. ''l>IY l!rlving force Is that not one PmJID in a hundred can lllii u Jil ilil is laat ~ I can," he said. 4 4 T Ji Is "It's gltlen ;te st.-engt11, s pee II, endurance 01111 an increased t o l fl r • ance to heat stress." 2•1 ff·l·IJ.E 11 rao:s FASTBAK CLASS-BELT 2: s25:'!.. ....... fltf1 (IWl I) .. 7.U.14 (0'1114) 7JS•l4(F71/14)liilll 7.7hl S ('7111S) ... &.ll114(C71114)11 l.J5i;1S(G7L1S) 1 US114 (M71114) , · UStl S (M71115) Sl '-' television program a n d cbalrnuln or the Easter Seal tund-rals.lng drive in the coun- ty Jut year, received the EaJter Seal CampoiW1 Award. Freedom Newspapers, Joe. rooelved o Special Service Award, and Orange residents Joanne Hutchings, Beverly Kelley and Kathfeen Harkins each reoeived an award for their volunteer services. Scott Elmer of La llabra received the Patiem. of the Year award and the Fullerton chapter ol the NaUooal Chari- ty League was awarded the Continuing SuPPort Award. --SERVICING i ·~~!r-illii\:· e rNOI MAINnNANCI e " UUI SllVIC I 0 A$ "llPID 'Mlt1hn11m l lOCI ~r.ol\lll 1cooun! Hop in your car and come as you are! The Imperial folks are waiting for YQU I ~IBank Costa Mesa Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive (7 t4) 979·1000 2+2 Uniroyal W-1-D·E 78 SEBIES Choice of Sizes! Wllitewalls TlJBELESS Choke of Low Profile Sl%es .... H7BJI4 J7BJI4 G78/I5 • CREVIES •FORD *WHEREVER WH EEL.WELL <:I.EA RA i'H:E AL 5M.1tlS SM.1tJI f .... IJ 12.~ .. ,,,. ..... ~- *That eeUI fit many ••• • MERCURY • PONTIAC • BUICK • FORD •PLYMOUTH •ETC. t I 'J'V8£LE81 A TVBlr ..,,, ..... ~""" •.10•1 :S t•'f&ll I) .i.IOal I ~····· · ••••••• 'J2 95 .. ,.. •r • .. (F78/14) (G78/l4) (1178/l 4) (J78/l4) I • (E78/15) (F78/15) (G78/I5) IR701.14 •... 132•• . f170/1S • ., •3-.·~ fl70/14 ••• '3C" G170/IS ••• '37" .• ,,, (ljt," '1•111 • 24'$ r 1•11• 1,ow PRICES! DISC Al.I. ,f WHE I,.• RE6()1,._,!J,,, DRIJ/lf nrrE Gl70/14 ••• '37" Ht1011S ... '39" H170114 ••• '39" 1170/1 s ... '"4'' '"""'II.Joi IOIU.,..._._ ._..,__ New Batteries -.................... -- 12 ~~1::.~ C..•- JOOI "-'-""'· (Qr"' .... & .. .,..., •n•1 111 .. 000 --··--fCW. llf WMllftlMtw a • l'Mll:l'lttnl) (7f4l IJO.JJ:OO ... _ HOO --lClr. ¥ -~=I ··~·J"'6 ~,..,,., • ••7" 5 7111• - ff7•1f I 111911• ~:t. ICWtf '=Ii. .:nu. IJJ:I s.. 1 .. 11; (I ...... "' ........ . ..,., t7t4, 17M1M BR.4M.f. JOB LMf"'°'_.__ ··-'""-'"""-· -·-·-·-' ntllT-llJ ~""''"°'I.Ul t ... ~ I, ftH All I-lllit( Ill-:.::.:. I, Hflo(I '""' ..... _ L -.t'l'Mil--._,_ .. ..,,.,.._. .. :::::..·---.. ::---.. -.. _ 1•U "' ............ --..... "' .......... -•1n1-••-....... •--"" -'" ... ·-· '"'• '·Al< .... Mi ~ ... r.-IC'f~ --L-ltf _ ..... ..... ...... _...... _,.,._ ... .. 1,(9'(11_.... ......... -~ Ta.::-9*=-3,. ·~2~-9m·3;:. ·-·------·-·-·-... i--.......... ·---.......... * t"ftll .\LI. t 'l 'l.L Sl7.t: l '.S. CARS. ..,,, Mli ..... J. HAlft \I, 11 ''' .. 1111. •19'n MIC(..,__ wtu.•tM U'U TIMI I Ull MAii• ··"·-.. _ ..... __ .. ___ _ ·-:i..:.'":::;" ....:;-::: .;:: ..... _ .. __ _..., .. __ ,,_,.., ... ..-... _,....,..._ " • I • • • • A CHILL CHASER! SPECIAL SALE Thurs.·Frl.·Sat. Only· HOODED MELTON COATS N•vy Blue with Pl•ld Lining 7.14 REG . $23. 4-6 REG. $19. We have • wide selection of other styles in children's coats. "-Sltlpntetlt LOW RISE JEANS n-WESTCUFF PLAZA Storekeeper 642-70151 ...... Suits, sport.coats and trousers made to your exact specifications. Offering the finest domestic and imported fabrics in a great array of colors and patterns. W~tcliff Plaza 10 -6 Dally CLASSIC WAX DEMO SATURDAY ONLY RION HARDWARE WESTCLIFF PLAZA OPEN EVES. & · SUNOAYS ·~ ~ Haooa Halloween luippening Halloween Parties Are Fun & Easy When You Use Our Hallmark Party Accessories. PAPER· UNLIMITED 548-7921 SENSATIONAL SAVINGS THURSOAY THRU SUNOAY IMPORTED CANDY IUY 1 LI. 2ND FREE AT tic .................................................... LI. CHEESE BALLS ·~G. SUI ........ ·········· NOW $1.69 HICKOlY FARMS HORSERADISH SAUCE • OL uo. ••• ... -·· ................ NOW 45c ff f ttdf'1 t41!~r. OPIN: MH., THrt., Fri. ~n t p.11t. S.•. 10 •·"'· • I P·"'· WESTCLIFF PLAZA •one-stop' shopping a.t its finest! OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EVENINGS 7ll 9 HAIR 49~ SPRAY ...... . ---=~ Choose Your F•Y"orite Formula- Every Day low Price b~c Open 9 1.m;· 10 p.m. 7 days a w.Mk BULK CLEANING !CLEAN ONL YI . . . . . . . . . . . . .. • . • . . . . 8 LBS. HOUSEHOLD !BLANKETS, SPREAOS, ETC.) .......... : ... . 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NeWpOrl 8e1ch e N•W'°ll:J' •IACH • It l'ASHIOH SOUAll:• 341 VII L.ldo Strite Anl SPECIALIZING IN SHAG HAIRCUTS OPEN SUNDAY ~~g~011 17th & IRVINE • NEWPORT BEACH • 548-0460 • • • ' l b T ' a c s j N c· r r c a • di di i lo si .jn It ar SC VO • Pair Protnoted Two lluntingtoo Beach men have been pron1oted by the Los Angeles City Fire Department, John F. Kirkorn to the rank of captajn and Robert S. Roy to auto-fireman. The two men placed high on a recent tivil service examination. Kirkorn has been ~ with_ ifie department for seven years and Roy for three. • Public' Bus Service Set for Huntington Public bus service will Fielding added that South return to Huntington Beach in Coast had already phased out 1973 with two routes supplied the single route it had in Hun- by the new Orange County lington Beach. Transit District. Citv Administrator David City councilmen signed a Ro'n·lands outlined a system of route agreement "'ilh transit bus ro:.ites for councilmen authorities this week. but "'hich \\'ould more than double criticized the district for not the local service offered by supplying the C-Ommunity with the tra,nsit district. nlore routes. "We wil l F.ue these extra ·~:m a little concerne~ that routes with' the trans i t there is more emphasis on district." Rowlands. assured Ne rt Beach. Irvine and the council. Santa Ana," complained Coun-The first C-Ounty route, along cilman Jack Green. "Your . Adams Avenue. probably down routes tend to exclude flun-Main Street to Pacific Coast tington Beach and Anaheim." Highway, is scheduled to start "The South Coas t Transit in February. Co. already existod-.in-.1hose..-_ -.'J'he----seoond-route, down areas," Dr. Peter Fielding. Beac h Boulevard to Pacific director of the county transi t C.Oast Highway and over lo distrltc, explained. ' ' We Newland Street, is set ror bought it. Since it was already June. Fielding told coun- in operation, v.·e would have cilmen. lost patrona ge by stopping." ltov.•Jands· plan utilizes more north-south routes. which he says represents the mass movement in H u n t i n gt o n Beach . Huntington Performers -To Travel "We'd like to connect the major shopping centers. the hospitals. the college, the civic center and the_ .~'!~own/' . .., Rbwlands says. The Huntington Beach High School drama d~rtment will betome a traveling troupe the next two months as it presents six plays 411 various locations .in the county. All of the plays, which are free and open to the public, are part of an cfrort by the school to become more in- volved with the community, according to principal Larry Lucas. Here is the schedule : -Thursday, '!Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs'', 10:15 a.m. at Mary E. 7.oter Elementary ScbooV S e a I ,,.Beach. -Oct. 31. "The Monkey's ::; ~:·rt h a~,e~e~:i,y School, Huntington Beach. -Nov. 1, "The Invention." 1 p.rp., Rancho View School, Huntington Beach. -Nov. 15, "The Imaginary Jnvalid", 2 p.m .. Rancho View School, Huntington Beach. -Nov. 17, "Snow White and the Seven pwarfs", 9:30 a.m .. Creative Nursery Center, llunt- lngtou Beach. -Dec. 6, "The Little Match Girl", 10:15 a.m., J. H. McGaugh Intermediate School, Seal Beach. • -Dec. t5, "The Wall'', 7:30 p.m., America11 Legion Post 131, Santa Ana. Wl1eelchair Kids Leah1 Bed Making :r~ .., city administrator .tfould also like a dial-a-ride system (now experimental in La Habra) and a beach shuttle service. Fielding said the county is studying the feasibility of a seven-bus system just for llunti!lgtc;n Beach, but in the distant future. Referring to the district's countywide goals, Fielding said, "In four years we think riders will be able to transfer all over the county for 25 cents. Such a system has to be convenient, comfortable and sale, or people won't use it." He said buses would be run- ning every .,30' n(imUes or al least every 6(1 nunutes. Row1ands said his staff \viii develop specific proposals this week for additional b u s service and be will continue to push the county for greater Huntington Beach priority. 1'We need the north-south movement much more than we need east-west routes," Rowlands said. 2 Drivers Charged In Mishap -Two allegedJy drunk drtveni had a meeting of the fenders Tuesday night in front or F'rancois' restaurant in Hunt· lngton Beach. Police said Emmet Leonard Neil. 50, of 8041 Newman Ave .. Huntington Beach was making a left hand turn into the restaurant parking lot at 9:50 p.m. when he was struck from behind by Dave Ernest A class of elemen tary school Lindsey J r., -47 of 2520 chi 1 d r en co nf I o e d to Delaware St., Hwitingt0f1 wheelchairs will have a Beach. chance <to learn the art of Neil told police that he had tnaklng a bed thanks to a re· stopped in the left Jane to turn cept contrlbuUon by the Foun· into the reStaµrant when he -·~~.J::'~''X~".'pter or ·~--~-~~;~~~f'N~id, __ The Army recenlly gave a pulled iQ front 1.ot ~him just new bed ...,,mplete with sheets priof to ·tho"'<onfiion. and plllo'f' to the Plavan Police noticed strong odors "8chool in the Fountain Valley of alcohol coming from both Elementary School Distrk:t. men and administered field The bed will be used as part sobriety tests to them wbicb of a ••SklJb or Llvlng" class to they both failed . teach crippled children how to The two Huntington Beach become more self-sufficient. men Wtte !hen both taken to Plavan la a recently opened police headquarters and given school w1th special facilities breathaaalyzer tests which for handicapped children who showed tbat each had an t:Qmpasc h8Jf of the student alcohol blood content of .Z2 body. pfreent. The courts recognir.e The '75 to buy the single bed .JO percent as the legal level and accessories was raised of Intoxication. fk'om the Salvation Anny's Both were Ulen charged with Chrlstma1 Kettle drive and drunk drl\'tng. Neither of the United Crusade allocatlont. men wwe injured . . , ' OA.ll V PI LOT '' I The Treatury is here to sav~ you ~ on jac~ets for FOR GIRLS : .. 6.88 sizes 3 to 6x 7.88 sizes7 to14 A. Atl 100% nylon .. Machine washable. Bright and dark colors. Reversible. Print to solid color. {Not shown.) Quilted style. Solid colors. (Not shown.) Hoodless "low coat" slyle. -. 12.99 sizes71o14 B. 100% nylon cire. Tow coat styling. Machine washable. Red or navy. 11.88 sizes3to6x 13.88 sizes7to14 C. 100°.4 acrylic pile, ra yon taffeta tining. Pebble, red, gold, or blu_e, FOR WOMEN : 24.88 D. Look of pony fur . Rayon pile, acetate laffeta ti ning. Shiny gill buttons. Black, brown or grey. Misses' sizes 8to18. 14.88 E IOOo/o ocryhc pile. Acetate h111ng . Gold tone bull cns. Novy, beige or browri. Mis~s' sires 10 to 18 14.88 F. Ribless collon corduroy with qu il ted ace1a1e lini ng. Silvery antiqued.buttons. Fall colors. Misses' sizes 10to 18. • ©RQ)~~~~ JCPenney 123 456 789 a 9 MODll'lti SHOPPklt _,,_._._ . .....,.._ GRANADA HIWI 18000 Choll\VO~h SI. W~ HIWI 21500 ViCIO<y Blvd. RIVlllSIDr 3520 Tyle< SI. SANTA ANA 3800 Soulh Brlslol St \ womeQ and girls. • Prove it yourself. VERY SPECIAL VALUES. ,ff!_---- " '~ ,,, ,,, ' the reasury family store and food center TORAANCI S.pulvitd1 Ind H1wthorn• UKIWOOD ClflOn St· 1nd Paramount Blvd. IUEHA ,ARtc: Beach and Ot'lngetho,pe ORANGE G1rdtn Grove Blvd. ind M1nche111r lAO l1t ' • • I ' l I • BIMBO JR. ACCEPTS PEANUTS FROM ·AQMIRERS San Clemente Jaycee Circus Scheduled Saturday South Coast )ayc(!es Slate Circus .Shows ~1cmbers of the South Coast Jaycees this week launcht'd their ticket sales fur the second-annual edition of the DeWayne Brothers C i r c u s scheduled as a run:J·ra iscr in Educato1·s To Appear . On Campus ~-Two prominent educators u·il! appear on the Saddleback College campus next week, 011e in a publ ic lecture. the other conducting a workshop for mu~1c studPnls. On Friday, Oct. 'n, at 11 a.m. zoologist Ba yard H. Bratlstrom, prof pr at Cal State Fullerton, . ...XU lecture on ''Environmental Awareness. or HoW~a Hu~an Teacher." Dr.. ls an honorary rest aseociate. in herpetology and vertebrate paleontology at the Los • · Angeles County J\1useum of . ·Natural History. His lecture, ·: sponsored by the college's · community services, is open to the public/ free of charge. On Saturday, Oct. 211, Dr . Maurice Alfard, professor of voice at UC Irvine will con- duct a workshop for Sad- dleback choral students, sponsored-by the fine arts division of the college. San Clemente Oct. 21. The proceeds from the circus will be used to help the J a y c e es' install.!1.tloo of landscaping and sprinklers at Linda Lane Park. The rircus will present an afternoon and e \" c n i n g performance in one of the last remaining cireus tents in the nation . The circus grounds will be located along Camino de !os i\larrs across from the San Diego Gas <Jnd EI e c tri c storage facility. Jaycee spokesma n Chuck Bartok said the show will seat 1:oo:rpers6rfs aurirlg each sOOw. Tfrkels will be on sale by Javccc members this week as we'll :1s the box office on circus day. Animal a c Is. aerialists. acrobats and. clowns will be in- cluded among the attractio ns. "Bimbo," the circus elephant also wlll }perform. Troop 440 Gets Leader Donald Elwell has been seleca as th.e new scout- maste for Foun tain Valley Boy ut Troop 400. ElwE11, who bas two sons in the tr_cf'.Jp. plans to en1phasize camping and hiking activities. A pr<1gran1n1er for McDonnell Dougl'fS Corporation in Long Beach1 he has been active in scoutiag for several years. 2 Planned Communitv .. Issues Face Council1nen The issue of planned com- munities popped up twice ~londay night for llunlington Beach councilmen. In one case. councilmen :iir proved planned development zoning on the Ellis Avenue b!ufl to prese rve a live-acre archeological site. Jn the other case. they ~decided to let a moratorium on all planned developments < eipire Jo'riday, LOOugh it may be re-established Nov .. 6 The arclieology site lies in the middle of 29 acres on the bluff, where a developer wants to boild homes. To save the site from destruction. and also to preserve a tall stand or eucalyptus trtts, the city has agreed to allow the developer to build more homes under a planned development concept. With PD zoning, homes can be built on s maller kits, with some of the excess acreage assembled into open space packages. TI1e city also plans to buy some 11creage on the bluff for a park. Counc!lman Henry Duke, howe ver. warned the de\'eloper !Mt the rules for planned developments mi~ht Change in the future, which could cut the potential number of homes. i1>e moratorium decision is tied into the potential rules change. Councilmen establish- ed a building ban on all plan- ned developments Aug. 21. In the meantime. plannlnR staff was to study the planned development ordinance and councilmen would consider revisions in It. They were told this week the study is not yet complete and the moratorium ends Friday. Councilmen were also told by the city attomey they could not renew the moratorium without a proper public hear- ing, which requires 16 days advance no tice. -"- Councilman llenry Duke suggested that when the moratorium is reset, probably at the council's Nov. 6 meeting. he'd like to see it established up to Jan. 30. Mayor Al Coen at first oir posed such a long extension. saying, "We seem to be using the moratoriurn more regular- ly and I don't like to nrbilrari· Jy use it so frequently ." When it was pointed out the moratorium could be stopped more easily than restarted, Coen agreed. Planning Director K en Reynolds assured councilmen th8t no applications for .a plan-- ned development cou ld be pro- ccsed before the Nov. 6 meeting. even without the moratorium. •t60 IMtt Aff. (It l/nce1l11J IUfNA PAIK • t2t-3t20 • . .. I ~ \ The Treasury is n·ere1 to save you , on jeans and ' ' ',,jackets for rnen ano boys. Prove it yourself. " -20%off. 4pays only, Thursday through Sunday. Ribless corduroy rancher jackets 1\il 1chir.t> \'l,r·.~~,J~,1.'. < <11ton corduroy. w=irrnry 11n!..'d v..,!h polyester p.:t?. SiJ~h poc;.,r t.;;_ nolci1Pc! r...ol . .ir. For boys b10\vn or u:onzP. S·~·es 8 to 20 NOW 11.97 reg. 14.97 save S3 For men Sr :~n or 1.'.l'' .'· S-'.I l-XL. NOW 14.30 reg. 17.88 save 3.58 -----·------- QRANADA HILLS t8000 Cf>lltsworrh !/t. · WOODLAND HILLS 21S001\11c1ory·Btvd A(V~RSID.E 3S2q Tyre, s 1. ' 1 S~NTA A~A 3900 Soul Bnstol S1 I' ~OR~AN C E Seplll..-ed.i and Mawlh o1ne tAKEWDOD Carson Sr and P<1ramoun ! Bl..-d BUENA PARK Bet1ch .ind Orarigethorpe ·OR.ANG£ G,1rrten Grove Bl..-cJ a an chester Thf'st ~aluts at all a Treasury storl!l. · ·, •.; .... ' 1'"' ... ·• T ~• trie •" ~ '• , .• ·, : ·'t r · : .. n ~~ rr· '·. • •.' • • • , .: • · rt ' "1 I '" ,~, .· ,· Open wee kdays 9:30 to 9:)0 S~nday1 10 10 7. I ' ' The111e Girl Julie Ann Thon1as , 3, has been chosen theme girl for the Southern Orange County United Way's Sl.315,000 campaign no\v underY.'ay to aid 52 agen- cies. The Campaign's theme -"Thanks to yo u it's work'ing -the United Way." '"Operation ID' Police to Expand Program A pilot program to comba t residential burglaries i n Ney;port Beach has been so successful that police are ex- ploring \.\'ays to exp.and it to the whole city . One way to do it, say department officials, \.\"OUld be to establish a paid police cadet progranl in the city. City Manager ltobcrt \\'ynn said tod3y the pilot proj- ect. ··Operation Iden· tiricalion". carried oul during the summer on Balboa Peninsula Point, has already cut the burglary rate there dra stically. "Even in th is short time. Operation lD appears to have significantly reduced rcsidcrl- tia\ burglaries in the tar~el area," \Vynn said . "'And the reduction will proba bly con· linue." The project, conducted b~ J>olice Explorer Scouts and police officers working in teams, included informing the residents o( the burglary pre» Jem. engrav ing property \\'ith driveni license nu1nbcrs and marking houses w h i c h Upper Ba y Tours Slated By 'Friends' Guided tours of the Upper Newport Bay \\'ill be offered again this year through the Friends of Newport Ba y and the Sierra Club. participa ted in the program. \Vynn said the burglary rates over lhe lhrec summer months "'ere compared to the previous summer and to the three months before June. Fig ures showed only two bu rglaries in Peninsula Point during the summer as com- pared with IO last yea r and l2 during the months of April· June this year. "Ne ither of lhe two residences burglarized in June p..1rticipated in the program." \Vynn said. .. The po I ice department believes the initial success of Operation ID warrants its ex- pansion to the remainder of the city," he Said. But it took exp lorers and police officers nearly 300 man hours to canvass the 30~ ho mes on the Point and no\v the Explorers are back in school. Wynn sa id. Aa a result, the politt department has suggested the possibility of starting the police cadet program. "The cadets would be run- time coUege students who will work on a part-time basis dur- ing the school year and full · time during the summer," Wynn said. "One of their primary responsibilities will be the ex- pansion of Operation ID to the rest of the city," Wynn said. Officer Stan Bre ss l er, department community rela· tions officer. said plans call for five cadets who would be paid between $2.35 and $2.85 per hour . "But we are going to have to v.«lit this out until lime for the new budget," he sa id. \Vynn sa id the cadet corps \vould also serve the function of attracting co llege students lo law enforcement careers. 1'he nrst day of tours will be Saturday. Speakers will give short talks on nature subi ects. including the fish, bird and micro-marine life which in· habits the Upper Bay . , Toor.s v.•111 start betwt:en 9'----------1 a.m. and 10 a .m. at the in· tersectioo of Eastbluff Drive1 and Back Bay Road. f or further informalion call 494-4161. Optimists Hold Sale l£T'S B£ FRIERllLY II you ha va nc\v nt!lghbors or know ot anyollt" moving lo our area. plee..se ll'll us 110 tha.l \.\'e may 6\t!nd a rricndly welcolll(! and ~Ip them to bet:ome a~ualnted In their n<'w surround inp. So. Coast YISitor 4.!0579 4f4.t:l61 Harbor Visitor Orange Coasst 0 p t ! n1 is ti Clu b members will sell new 11weaters al their Oct. 22 , Family Sweater Sale to raise1~""""""""".""'4""'-""0""1""74"""""""""!"'! funds for mats for their juclo1~-- program. From 1·5 p.m. at the tlarbor Area B-Oys' Club, 2131 Tustin Ave. in Costa Mesa. sweaters will be sokl at less·than-whole- sale prices. '47 Graduates To Dine, Dance Alexinr:ler Hamilton IUgh Schools' 11147 graduates will hold Its 25th dinner-dance and reunion Nov. 11 lit the Beverly Hilton Hotel In Beverly l{ills. Frank Sciarra nt 874 No . Tuslin Ave,, Orange, con be ron!Reled fll ~12·6797 or 639· OOO• See the brighter side of life along the Orange Coast in (~:r:.r:astJ One of the features tMI mak• Sunday raaaAr in tho DAllY PllOT .. \ .. _ .. I \ \ \ Women's wet.,look crinkle vinyl front ~ txx:ts NOw4.78 Reg. 5.98 Save 1.20 Rayon jotsey lining. Steel shan~ Blacl<, red, whitll, brown S-5to9. 10. lt111~day, O<.tober 19, 191.-DAIL V PILOT J 9 Men's harness boots " .... I Now12.78 '.r----.r--...----. I Reg . 15.98 Save 3.20 Rugged western look with harne6S tnm sty11n9. Smooth brown leather Composition soles. Sizes 7 to 11 .120. Boys' sizes 3112 to 60. Antique 1 brown. Aeg.12.98 ....... NOW 10.38 Save 2.60 j Jr. boys' size 8 ~2 to 30. Ant1aue j brown. Reg. 10 98 ...... NOW 8. 78 Save 2.20 Tcx:ldlers' sizes 6 to 80 Anhque brown. Aeg.B.98 ......... NOW 7.18 Save 1.80 ' . ' 0 Men's side zip leather boot .... . _,.., .. ' ·, .·~·. ; ' •• • . ~ ... ,. I ·,.· . ... ~· '·: ~ t . Women's wet-look cTinkle vinyl side zip boots Now4.78 Reg. 5.98 Save 1.20 Glistening bools with a smooth .. ~eek fiL Rayon jersey lining. Steel shank. Black, red, wh~e, brown. Sizes5lo9,10. GiMs' sizes 9 to 3 Rog. 4.98 ..... NOW 3.98 Sawo$1 NOW11.1a - Reg. 13.98 Save 2.80 Side zip insures good fit. Soft leather boots have flexible soles. Black, brown. Sizes 7to 11, 120. 0 0 0 .. ". ·:, ... ,~n· ':~. • ·~. , 4 days only, Thursday 200/0 off \ through sundaBoot f~hions .. - '.\ \I ' .... ~ ._ ~. '• .. ...... .,._ ' .. ~ 1",--~· I!: •• \ ' • • \ ' -· \ I~--.--,]'(, . -. .--· '-.. -·--- ' ' for the whole family . The Treasury is here to save you. " ' Prove it yourseH. J1'111e v1lue111 •II I Tre•suty 1lora1. T nf' f '·ITIO.Udfl~f' ~.~1 ,. I''•,···<; 't5t"n •'" onti)•h.rtc,tv -.or< ,.,1 "''""· l<H thr 4 r>rw ftf",1·.ur y ~?"•"· ,. I pr1c"1 rt · 1111r.11un<; r •I th,. 4ts!ab1 • "" lre.ts111~ s!o•es.. .... .,...... // _.,,...,.. / -. / . . --·-·-~ ---------- -· QftAHADA.HILlS 18000 Chalawo~ft SI. WOODUND HIUS 21500 Viel"')' Blvd. lllYlftllDI 3520 Tyler SI. I TORRANCE S.pulv<d• and Hawihcrne LAKEWOOD Cal'IOft St. 1nd Paramount Bl'td. IUENA PARK Beach 1nd Oranoethorpe ORANG£ Garden Grove Blvd. Ind Manchesler c.,.., -•daya 1:30 i.t110 SuM1ys 10 to 7. SANTA ANA 3900South 8rlllo1 St. I l t • %0 DAll Y PILOT Thlnd<1f, tk:tobtr 1q, 19 7. >'=- Marines Put on Show El T oro A-ir Sta.tion to Open Vp Gates The t.tarn>e Corps. A J r Station, £.I Toro will host a spcc1sl open house Friday highlighted by the lifnrine Dn1m and Bugle Corps and S1len1 Drtll Team Cities League Nam es Me llon San F'rancisco's chitf administrath·e ()fficer, Thomas J. Mellon, is the new president of the League of California Cities. Other officers include A-1ontclair Mayor Hamid Hayes. first vice president. and J\·lodesto Mayor Lee Davis, second vice president. Re-elected directors were Long Beach Atayor Edwin Wade, San Leandro J\1ayo r Jack D. l\1altester. Oakland l\·tayor John H. Reading, San Diego J\1ayor Pete \Vilson and Los Angeles t-.1ayor Sam Yorty. from \Vashington1 D.C,. and featuring ai:rial demoos1raitons and a1rcrt1ft ex· hlblts. The baSf will open its gates to the public at 12:30 p.m. f>'riday \Y1th Military Police directing traffic from the main gate to designated parking an!as. ACTIVITIES WILL get underway Ylith a performance by the Third f\1arine Aircraft Wing's band at 12:45 p.m .. follo'A·ed by aircraft flight demonstrations by an F-4 Phantom Jet fightcr-anack plane and a C·l30 transport aircraft. At 1:30 p.m" the El Toro Air Rescue Team will present a crash-crew demonstralion, followed by a sky~iving exhibition by fbe Camp Pendleton Sports Parachute Jump Team at 1:40 p.m. THE UNITED Slates h-tarine Drum and Bugle Corps and Silent Drill Team perfonnances will follow . The Ma rine Drum and Bugle Corps has received national and international recognition for its outstanding musical • capabilities, perfonning at a varie ly of social and civic affairs, sports events and historical celebrations. IN TIJE NATION'S capilal, the Silent Drill Team represents the Marine Corps ln Joint Armed Forces "full hooors" ceremonies for visiting dignitaries of state. v{ten appearing at the \\'bite House in this capacity. A static display of Marine aircraft will be available for publ ic viewing until 4 p.m. Gates will close at 4:30 p.m. OEO Cut Off Funds RI VERSIDE (AP) -The Office of Eccnomic Opportunity has cut off fwid- ing to the OEO of Riverside County, saying the local organization has mismanaged funds. 'Ibo mas H. P.1ercer, OEO regional director, infonned EOB of- ficiala that their request for $576,000 for next year was being denied. I UPIT ......... T hat'• E'uHH!J Sen. Ed w a r d Kennedy, (D- Mass.) wipes bis eyes as he joins other legislators in laugh- ter during luncheon in Wash- ington. e reasur IS ere osave oucas .· on a more cooru I rove1 ourse .. ~· .·· r.:.:... : . ' ·: .• ·· .. · .. . . ' . .. .. . . · . •'' .• . ' . . . .. ~ .. --.-.. " ........ .. • Thffe v1l11t111 111 I Tr1•1ury 'llOfe.. ' The comp1r1tlve site prices listed ••.• 1re ln1roduc1ory sp~clal offers !or,,.,. ; •• 4' new Tres1ury slores ind price,, .. • •. duclion1 lor the 4 es!1bli1h1d Tr111ury stores .. .. .. . .. . . ' Legislawr Campaigns • Hard in 80th- LEUCADIA (AP) -A !avol!lo of Par- ly leade,., AssemblynWI Jol!q~ Ibid. be ls working harder while blS ~ ponent campaigns leu' md IUi ~ Soulhern California 's w, .. 1 district. • A fourth tenn seems 1 .-1n for t.be hulking Slull, who is. ~·•• a possibfe Republican candidate f o r governor in 1974, according to observers. MEANWIULE, ROBERT Garvin \"YI he has been forced to curtail cam· palgning because of hls (amlly and lack of money. llis total funds amounted to S5()0, lhe 22-year-old Democrat reported. The money being apent by Stull is estimated at $7 ,000 by the retired Navy commander who wM majority whip of tbe Assembly in 1969-70. Now 52, Stull is the caucus chairman of his party. Stull represents the sprawling 80th District which covers about 80 percent of San Diego County, except 'for the im- mediate metropolitan area of San Diego as far northeast as Lakeside. OUIL TEO HAMPER 999 D••rtamperwith quilted vlny covering. White, green, gold or black. WALL-TO-WALL 9.99 Nylon polyester pile. Non -skid back. Gold, blue, pirik, avocado. Ma1c hlng lid cover . In 1970 be WU rt-ele<:l<d IO, t lhJrd lmn wllh 72 pMoenl Of lhe le\aJ VOie . Today 102,132 Republicans and 73,911 Democrats are signed up to vote, along wilh U,lllll lndependeni.., 836 members of tbe American Independent party and 166 as miscellaneous. A GRADUATE OF of the University or Iowa, be retired from the Navy ln 1963. He and his wife Babble have a daughter who teaches school in sacramento. Garvin was student body president of Palomar COilege in San Marcos and a Political science major when be won the Democtatic nomination in June. As Stull Jtepped up an ac:Uve campaign of speeebel and public appearances, Garvin dropped oui of JChool in order to work. He and hls wife expect a baby in December. "I sllll try lo speak and campaign as much as I can but la,tely time bas been almost nonexistent," says the blond, baby-faced Garvin. 2-PIECE BATH SET 2.98 Rayon pile rug wilh matching lid cover . GltANADA HILLS 18000 Ch1i1wortti 51. I WOODLAND HIU.S 21500, Vlclo1y Blvd. AIYERSIDE ~20 Tyler St. UHTA ANA 3900 SOulh Brlslol St TORRANCE Stpul....01 and H1wth0rnt1 LAKEWOOD Caraon St, and Paramount Blvd, BUENA PARK 81ach and Orangethorpe · ORANGE G1rd1n Grove Sl'id. and M1nche•ler .,,... .... _.*''"'*'th •• nc1."",. .. '1. e ' ' Bot1ab Shelter Two ·North Vietnamese children stand in their shel- ter in Hanoi in this photo taken by CBS news cor- respondent John Hart during his recent three-week assignment in North Vietnam . Times Change Paswrs Plagued By Job Sho'rtage By LOUIS CASSELS u,-1 11.i111o11 Wrtfer Ten years ago, Protestant churches were worrying about a clergy shortage. To d ay , in many denominatiqns. the problem is just the r.everse. ~1 o r e ordained ministers are seeking jobs than churches can afford to hire. This doesn't mean there is a clergy surplus. In terms of needed minislrie~ -of work that ought to be done churches still suffer from insufficient ntanpower. 1l is only in terms of effective demand -the number or pay:ng jobs available -that the current supply o I ministers is excessive. TIIE DISTINCTION Is or lit- tle comfort to a young man \1·ho has £inishcd three years of preparation at a seminary. and ·now cannot find a pastorate. lt is even Jess consoling, perhaps, to elder clergymen who are pushed out of their jobs after long years of service to find themselves with no place to go. Thousands of ordained clergymen, including some v"ith exceptionally h i g h qualifications, are supporting themselves in secular occupations because they can't find church jobs. Teaching seems to be the most popular alternative for unemployed ministers, but many also go into soc J a I work or government jobs. As a byproduct or the job shortage. clergymen who do h11ve pulpits are tending to hang onto them much longer thah they were wont to do In the past. And l h i s is creating problems too. It is considered axiomatic by many church leaders that overlong assor.iation is apt to be demoralizing both to a pastor and to a Congregation. "An'ER 10 VEARS famili· arity begins to breed con- tempt," an Episcopal minister explained. "J know it's lime I was moving on. But I can't find any place to go." The problem is compounded by the fact that most Protestant bodies have no effective method of matching available men with available jobs. Job-hunting is on a h e I t e r·skelter, hit-or-miss basis. Several factors have contributed to the rising incidence of clerical unemployment. Partly because of the vigorous erforts churches were making just a decade ago to recruit more candidates for the ministry. and partly because ministerial studenls are exempt from the draft, seminary enrollment bas soared by 50 percent during the past 10 years. !\.1EANWHD..E, and partiCU· larly during the past five years. some large denomina· lions have suffered decline.s in membership and financial contributions. There lately has been evidence that t h i s "religious recession" may have bottomed out, but its impact, in terms of shrunken employment opportunities, is just now being fully felt by seminary graduates. Surprisingly, job prospects appear to be bleakest for clergymen in denominations that are popularly regarded as relatively wealthy -the EpiSIC{lpal Church , Uni t e d Presbyterian Church, and the United Church of Christ. Don't Miss These Free Lectures Rea/ ~fale J.nvedlmenf Seried Oct. 25th "ll-faximum Return on a Minimum lnvestment1' Lecturer -Fred Becker Nov. 1st "Advantage of Real Estate Syndication for the Small Investor" Lecturers -Phil McNamee and "Cap" Blackburn Nov. 8th "Capital Conservation Through Exchanging Minimizing Taxes'' Lecturer -Bruce Howey "Tailoring Your '73 Investment" Le<:lurer -Randy McCardle TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 • 9:30 P.M. GOLDEtl WEST COLLEGE Serl11 Co-sponaor.d By Or1ng• Co1st • Gofffn Wnt DAILY PILOT , Coll .. • Huntington Beach • Fount•in V•flrt Bo.rd of RM1ton Rear baby seat Reg. 6.47 Save 1.70 (, NOW 4.n Guards and chrome bfaces. Padded seat AMures bN:Jy's safety. &iy to install. ._:·\·:'.:~:··r·.:·:·. ....... : . Blo-mOlded plastic trike tor the 3106 y9al old. Low slung stabl!lty. Scoop coo tour seat, lull rum Iron! Ion<. :J'.>" long, 19" high, DAil V PILOT 2J The Treasury is here to save you a bundle · i on bikes. ~rove it yourself. 26.99 20" Hi-riser bicycle Banana seat. Chrome fenders. Hi-rise handlebar. Coaster brake. Reflector pedals. Boy$' or girls' models. 39.97 26" lightWeight Huffy for men or women Single speed bike With coaster brake. 26" x i~'BM tires. Diamond frame. ~added saddle and reflector pedals. All BICYCLES IN CARIONS Directional taillight with arrows Reg. 1.17 Save 40f Nown¢ Remote contra !fWllCh on handlebars. Arrows 1nd1c:atn nghl or left tum. Extra heavy duty lock & chain Reg. 2.37 Seve 60f NOw1.n Extni sturdyc:ombination lock. 36~ hnk <IM-wffhvinyt- 59.98 26" 10 speed Huffy racing bicycle Racer·styled taped and plugged handlebars. Rear hub is factory adjusted. 10 speed dual !ever conrro!. Rat trap pedals w1fh reflecto rs. Racer's saddle. BloCf< genera1or set with extra large 2" taillight Reg. 4.57 Save 1.BO Now2.n Meets BMA-6 s.pec1hca110ns. Easy lo tn91all Auto bike rack Reg. 8.97 Save 2.20 Now6.n GRANADA HIU.S 18000 Chatsworth St TORRANCE Sepulvtc11 •nd Hawthorne WOOCK.AND HILLS 21500 VlctOfy BJvd. LAKEWOOD C4rson St. and Paramount Bl11d. RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyler SI. IUEHA PARK Beach and Orangelhorpe Open wttkdayt 1:30 101:)0 L..~~~~~~.!'.:....~~&j!IA.6f!~A!J3~'""JW'""''-"'~~-''--'""'A~HG.,,.~E...,a~rlI!ln.l.!1''"ll""''!ll.""'LlM!!J!n"""h""~r~~~S~u~nd,,.,•~·~·1~0~10~7~,~~~_.... , • " ,, ) ' 22 Dlll Y PILOT Buzzing From Buddhist Chants Fills the Air We took him hostBglJ lest Y8ll'" and he refuS<Js to /IJBVIJ!' Trash Pickup Monday The t\1onday Veterans Day holiday v.·ill not be observed by Laguna Beach !rash collectors. a city sJ)Okesman said today. Trash pickup in the Art Colony will follow the usual Monday schedule. . ' :~ SANTA f\IONICA (AP\ -Buning, bt:u.1ng, buzz.tng. "We art! saying ·Nam t\lyoho Renge i\yo' Vt.'ry fast over and over again." somoone whispers. Buzzing, butting. It is the chant of the Buddhi$l Sf't't, Nichiren .ShoAb u. Sixteen people are sitting on the floor of a fasblonnble Loa Angeles apartment, facing a sn1al\ scroll \\'ith Oriental characters. the Gohonzon. A bell sounds. Everyone stops. Thrl'e girls leap up and begin singing "Yankee Doodle Dandy." Then another young girl bounces to the £root of the room. "TlllS JUST really blew my mind,'' she says. ··1 "'anted a brand new car and I didn't have any money and I didn't know how l was going to get tlilil: car, so I chanted for it." She takes a breath. , "J have this friend in Korea and he \\rote me a letter and asked me if I would drive his new ca r fo r him that he's paying for back there and he's going to be there for 10 months and I got to drive a new car!" NOW3.99GAL . TREASURY LATEX WALL PAINT REGULARLY 5.49 A GAL tr4iM ol rlCld~-l!lllfd colon. loty to cpp1y, ~ lo o praf1.nional.lookirlv -It!. lkn '""'"'in 20 ~Orr:• r.,. con bt •WJ ~ a:isr ~ .. ol tr;io1,...,,lh~ woltf. The expenences go on. A student savs he no\v love. school because his a'ttitude has complrtely ctianged. "And 1'1n no !Qngl'r Sll"UJ'lg out un dope,'' he adds casually. One girl chanted for a hutn1ning bird to feed al hrr father's bird fcedt.>r, because that's •Nhnt he wanted. He had been \vait1118 six n1ooths, but aflcr she chanted ago. and claims an American mem· ber>hlp of 300,0XI. Its chant, Nam ti.1yoho Renge Kyo, roughly lranslated ··1 devote myself to the mystic law of cause and effect," \\'as taught by a 13th <.-entury Japanese Bud- dha, NichiJ't'I Daishonin. ~1embcrs say they chant for anything that will make !hem happy. Nam JtJ11oho Henge Kyo-'I devote 11111self to the lll!JStic law ol eause and efteet! • about it, sure enough, the bird appeared, she says in a burst of giggJes. TlrE R00~1 erupts in laughter. It is a Nichiren Shoshu Buddhist meeting, one of many nightly meetings l.'.lking place in major American cities. The faces are young, black and whlte, with long hair and short. Nlchiren Shoshu is one of thousands of Buddhist sects throughout the world. It was introduced to this country 12 years ltf§I GUESTS AT THE meeting ask , "How can this thing V.'ork? You don't even know what you are saying when you chant." Nam MyoOO Renge Kyo evolved from SfillSkrit and Cftinese, a spokesman says, and is about as comprehensible to the modem-Oay Japanese as Chaucer to a truck driver in Brooklyn. "Who cares?" cOmes the unanimous reply. "Jwt chant." The sect's 4l·year-old leader in AmeMca . George M. WUUarns -former- ly Masayasu Sa Danap, uplalna the significance of the chant : ··Atthoush you drive a car, you pro. babiy don'! know an)1hill( aboul the mechanical system or the scientlJlc theory behind the car. You don't need to st udy the engine befcn-you drive. All you ha ve to understand ls that the key v.•ill start everything. N'am Myoho Renge Kyo is the key to the entire ph.ilosophy ot Buddhism." W!IJ.JE DA VIS, star 1<o All(el" Dodger outfielder, agrees. "The basic goal is world peace, but in chanting for V."Orld peace I also chant for the World Series," he says. The Dodgers finished the season well out or ..series contention. Alan ~1ack, a ff.year"1d senior salesman for IBM , is another avid adherent. "I started chanting on a whim ," he says. "I figured I had nothing to lose and everything to gain if even a small part of what they said at the meeting was true. "It was a good investment," he added. NOW 4.99GAL. NOW2.99GAL TREASURY LATEX HOUSE PAINT REGULARLY 6.49 A GAL. Or.es 1n 30 minutes to a smooth. vel...et-l1ke l1n1sh. Resists WI" al her. f)ef'hng. cracking. Easy lo apply on siding . Shingles. stucco. masonry. Clean up with warm water OlOOSe lrom dozens of colors. TREASURY LATEX STUCCO AND MASONRY PAINT REGULARLY 3.99 A GAL. For inter'ior or exterior masonry. stucco. brick. ooncrnte bloeks or !ile roots. Tough acrylic finish resists weathering and yet allows undersUrface to .. brealhe." fighting blistenng. Easy to applo/, dries in 3) minutes. WaJer cleanup. Whil8 onty. GRANADA HILLS 19000 ChatswOflh St WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyl•r St. I TORRANCE Sepulveda and Hawthorne LAKEWOOD Carson St. and Paramount BIV<I. BUENA PARK Beach and Orangethorl)t! ORANGE Gatden Grove Blvd, and Manche111r Open WHkdayo l:JO lo l:JO lund•r• 1 o to r. SANTA ANA 3900 South Brl1tol St. ''THERE RAS BEEN a steady stream ol 'coincldences' in my business We for which J can see oo rational or loglcel ex· planatlon other than my pcectl~ ot Bud· dhism." Last year Mact wrur honored for tbe second tlme u one or IBM's top salesmen. Nichlren Shoshu's leaders were im· prisoned in Japan during the war, when members numbered less than 11000. Since then, the Sokagakkal -the laymen's arm of Nlchiren Sboohu Buddhism in Japan -bas drawn 25 million followers from all over the world. Most Nlchiren Shlshu Buddhists are Japanese, where the membership ls estimated to be 18 million. The ~uddhist newspaper Seikyo Shim· bun has a daily circulation of 3.5 million there. mE PHILOSOPHY has a goaJ oC world peace through revolution -human revolution, a spokesman says. That iJ the change a person undergoes b'om chan- ting, he said. ' :Now aaa : 5 fl aluminum ste adder l· ularl O. t U.L lbted fOf-aafety . • '' . '• • "'. t i SPECIAL f . tlon~ ... ~ ~4" wal bt'Ustr and 1 v,:~ trtm bruSh. • ,. ' f~ -I' J • . , i j I ·1 I ! i . l l • l };'1'~~0[ili ~~~~ i • 1 ..,j 1""" •at-. •I •II I fr•hury ''°' ... Th• com p•r•tlvt 111a prh:t1 llated art Introductory specl11I olht1a lor the 4 new Treasury slores and price re· duc1lon1 fo1 the '4 eslabUshed T reasvry !IOf'tl. ' ~;.,,.,me a word with o lot of Ss and Xs in it. We're learning those letters in school right now.# Reagan Gets Heat State's Parole System Attaclied Capitol Nm "ervlce SACRAMENTO - G o v . Ronald Reagan may be facing a revolt in his own party soon if some changes aren't made -no deadline yet -in the state's handling Qf prison parolees. Leading the revolt will be State Sen. H. L. '' B ii l '' Ric h ardson,ArcadIB Republican, who has made public a five.month-old at- torney geaeral's report cover- ing the now-discontinued Don Inmates brought liquor, narrotics and 1oeapons into the campgrounds. Lugo work.furlough program at a Department of Ccr- rectJons facility in soothwest- em San Bernardino County. Richardson repeated a n earlier demand that Depart- ment of Ccrrections' Director Ray Procunier be fired and. added at least one underling to that list, saying the attorney general's report covers "on1y a small part" of a "clear, massive failure in manage- ment." not only al Don Lugo but also through the depart- ment. ASKED IF THE ultimate responsibility didn't rest with t h e Governor, Richardson replied, "You are absolutely right, and if no changes are made, that's right where I will place the responsibility." He added, however , that he discussed the parole situatk>n and "evidence or a pervasive philosophy condoning t h e covering up of crirhinal acts" by parolees with the "e:ii:- tremely interested and upset" governor, wtx>, Richardson feels, should be given time to further study his cha rges and to take remedial action. In the meantime, though, the hard·llne lawoQrder solon charged "our so-called model penal institutions, which suf- fered 952 adult escapes last year, have termites that are ORDER , ,. .. YOURS ,. • TODAY! caving in the foundation of law and and order in the state of California." AMONG THE charges In lhe attorney general's reports were: -A staff policy loivard prob- lems with inmates of "Do the best y()u can" and "Play it by ear.'' -T h e before-mentioned "massive failure in manage- ment. Criminal a c_t i v i t 1 e s abounded on the grounds or the camp itself with impunity, even after detectioa by the staff .•• inmates brought li- quor, narcotics and weapons into the campgrounds without detection; embezzlement of funds ," apparently by an in- mate c I erk, occurred ; '12· hour pass requirements were flouted as a matter of course . .• food supplies were purloin· ed and sold ; and escape pro- cedures were initiated only after the inmate had been gone for a substantial tlrne - in many cases up to two days." -At another facility In Northern California, "prosti- tutes were entering ... <ln a regular basis, but no action is being taken because ... plac- ing a guard at the door would not be feasible ... " -A PAROLEE employed In San Diego "had written at least 12 bad checks. some on closed bank accounts. His supervisor ... interceded with the. police so that the parolee was allowed to make restitu- tion rather than be pro- secuted ." -"A combination of a desire by department officials to rehabilitate more parolees and financial pressure by state government to reduce the n u m b e r of incarcerated prisoners has resulted in perceived pressures by field level parolee personnel to do everything possible to avoid revoking parole . . . a parole revokation action seems to be considered a failure by parole agents and an adverse reflec- tion on themselves ... " 1000 § 'eautiful Stick-on LABELS • ~ ~ Penonali1ed • Stylish • Efficient I I I I I I Order Fot Youraelf or a Friend· Mty b• us•d on envelopes as return eddress la.b•ls. Also v•ry handy •I idantlfic.etion labels for mMking personal items sueh as books, records, photos, ete. Labels stick on tjilas1 tnd may b• us•d for m•rkin9 home cann•d focd items. All l•btl1 are printed with stylish Vogu• type on fine quality whit• gwnm1d paper. • ------------------1 PIM WI 1t1i, C8"11, tli. M4 -ii witlil 11.U .. I Pllltt l"rlllt"" 1.•Mt 0!¥.,, 1".0. hi. lMli I ..,,. Mno, '"'· n•H 1 I I I I I L-~-~~L~!-~~!NJ!~~----J DAil V PILOT .23° The Treasury is here to . save you on top brand cameras and film . . Prove it yourself. POLAROID'S NEW "SQUARE SHOOTER2" 18.81 Exciting "Good Time·· camera. lowest-priced all purpose 6D·second color Camera Polaroid has ever offered. Eleclric eye exposure control. Pac k fil m loading. Built·in flash. POLA~IO C()LOR~K FILM 2a~71· Colorpack film For Sql!areshooter cameras. 4 days only. Limit"' to cu!lomer. This ad is you r coupon. oo~··c~ 61' .,....,,,..,. ,.., Pl811 JCPerney 123 456 711 0 9 Kodak pocket lnS1amatic 2ocamera outfit KODAK POCKET INSTAMATIC CAMERA KITS For everyone with a pocket. Include camera. Kodaco1or II film, magicube, wrist slrap, K size battery. Pocket lnstamatic "50" 92.91 Fas!. 4-elemenl 1/2. 7 Ektar lens. Electronic shutter and seP10 diaphragm for automatic exposures from 11250 second at I/ 17 to 10 seconds at 1/2.7. CdS electric eye. (Nol shown) 12-exposure Kodacolor 18 C film carlridge eac h 4 days only. Limit 4 to customer. This ad ls you r coupon. ertng th is ad to any Treasury..s.llllil with one roll of 12-e>rnosure Kodacolor tilm and we will develoP. it for y.QJ.!..fil no charge, Offer good until October 27. reasury family store and food center KODAK "AVAILABLE LIGHT " MOVIE CAMERA KITS No movie lights needed. Includes camera wilh neck srrap and rubber eyecu p. A AA siz e alkaline balleries. ELA464 super 8 lilm carlrtdge, 1nstruc1ton booklet . Kodak XL33 movie kit 109.91 Au1oma11c exposu1e control. Low Ugh! signal. 2 film speeds. Kodak XLSO movie kit 119.91 AU fe atures of XL3J. plus power .zoom lens, superimposed image rangel1nder, deluxe vlewtinder. (Nol shown) New Ektachrome 160 movie film (Type A) 3.11 You get up In 4V» 5tOps more exposures with lhla th•n wati Koda- chrome ti l11m GRANADA H1U.S 18000 Chattwonh St I WOOOl.AND Hlu.121500 VlclO<Y Blvd. RIVl!RllDE 3Sal Tyltr SI. SANT A ANA 3900 Soulh 8rl11ol St TORRANCE Sepulved1 1nd H1wtl'lorne LAKEWOOD Carson SI. and Par1mount Blvd. BUENA PARK Be1ch l~d Or1nge!M>rpe ORANGE G1rden Grove Blvd. ind M1nche1ter t ·I DAILY PILOT Sterile Men May Become Fathers Again Adoption Ordered --L-Ow IQ • NEW YORK (AP) -The his testes during the vosec· sperm. tomles 2 to l3 )!tars earber. of babies having betn hO.m 1n on whom he operated. More birth control 1urgery that tomy. and did not produce All 19 had undergone vaSt'C· Dr. Jacobson said Ile kll!!W the families of four of the men 1nMy have. been bom ... makes men sterile can ap-1 _.:::::.'.:.....:::::_=~:::.....".:.=::. _ _::::_·::..:=..::::::~:::_::::.:::_ _ _:::.:._::::::::::::_:::_::::.::::__:::::::_::::_.:::::::.:::::_:::_::.:_::..::::..:::::::_::::~==-=='-'-"---"".r DES ~1011'1ES, to,111 ll!Pll -The lo1va Supren1e Court hall ruled that 4·~'1'ilt-Old tv."\n girls must be pt11ced for adop- tion because their mother has such a low IQ that she is un- able to give them proper care and attention. In an 8--0 roling \Vednesdav, the court said the parent.child relatiooship between Da1'icl and Diane "1c0oriald of Davenport. and !heir tvdris. Joyce and l\1rlissa. n1us! be legally 1r rminated. The court s:iid it m:ire the decision reluctanl\)1, with the The tnother h1u Jq of 47. lier h11•· band'• i " t " 11 i · flP'llCe If II 0 t i P II t ll"flS ft•st••rf Ill 1·1. Stanford n1edical stu· dent Randall ~torris has prevented rejec· lion or kidney trans· plants in rat by using a nev; drug -chicken serum. parently be rt"Verscd so they could father babies again, a surgeon has reported. The operation, known as \'asecto1ny, cuts the tubes. t~ vas deferens, through which spermatozoa pass. Once per· formed, it has been considered to make men sterile rorever. But the tubes can be re· joined in surgery perfor1nNl under a microscope. Dr. JuHu8 H. Jacobson of ¥ount Sinai School of Ptfediclne in Nen• York told a conference !'ednesday in Vienna. Austr,a. THE P.OCROSCOPE vi!!iOn makea the tiny severed tubes appear ts times larger than they actually are. Sol the surgeon can sew the ends together agaln and make sure the tubes are open once 1nore, he said. Speaking to the Interna· liona\ Sympo s ium of i\ficrosurgcry, Dr. ,•ar'lh~on Silid he has done lhE' reversal operation on 19 men. Eighteen becan'e able to pro <I u c e 1noti\'c or acti\'e soer1n on ejaculation. he said. The other man had suffered damage to \\·c!f<i'"e and best interests of the children its primary con- cern. "THE ST A TE has a duty to see that el'ery child within its borders receives proper care and treatment," the court said. Last oi Kind Unloved An-An Dead The mother, '"ho the e<>urt said came from ··a 1·erv cruel and immoral homt'. '' has an TQ of 47. Her husband's in· telligence quotient \\'as tested at 7-1. The l\\·ins "''ere born Feb. B. 19611. when Diane \\'as JR. The court cited no problems but the mother's "verv lO\\' IQ.'' ll said that due to her 111ental s Io w n es s, ~frs. -i'.tcDonald did oot ha1:e Jhe abilitv to care for the children or the cauacitv of a person with nonnal intelligence to Jove illld sh-O\\' nffrct1rin. 'IOSCO\V (UPI ! -An-An, Europe's only survi1•ing giant panda whos(' unrequited love affair v.•ilh the London Zoo's panda Chi.Chi made them \\"Or\d celebrit,ies, has died, the direct(lr of the Moscow Zoo said. ile v.·as 15. 'The black and white furry An-An died Sunday, three months after Chi-Ch\ 's death in I..Oodr,nr dir.ector_ .Js::ot..P. Sosnovsky, said Wendesday. "Death was from natlll'ttl causes," he said. SOCIAL \\'ORKERS •and I · TllE ANU\.1AL'S bodv was nurse s rcpor!M that c unng tnkrn from the f e i1 c e d repeated ''i5.1ts I" t~ horne enclosure next to the :wo's they found the child ren pale. sick!v and unresponsive. pond to the. Zoo ~fuseum at Ex"pcrt witnesses testified t\1oscow University. The during a lengthv coort battle carcass will be studied and that they believed the eventually stuffed, as was Chi· children's condition was due Chi's, Sosnovsky said. chiefly to "lack of stimula· The only surviving pandas lion" and because they v.·ere known to be outside China. "in n~ of love and af-their native habitat, are the feetlon .'' pair given President Nixon by The ("Ollrt said ti r s . Chinese leaders during his McDonald exhibited ''a visit to Peking last February. .'ieneral lack of concern" al.10ut The Chinese recently offe red lhe twins. Her husba nd 9.'as tv;o more to Japan following inlerested and con c err. e tl Premier Kakuei Tanaka's visil about the children, the court last mor.th. An·An with Chi-Chi. an at- tempt to produce the first pan· da outside China. \I' a s chronicled by the worlds media in the mid-I960s with an intensity usually reserved for film ,stars. AN·AN WAS more than will- ing, courting Chi-Chi i n Moscow tn-1968 with caresses and a chittering milting call ·never fieRM"""""btfore-by-scien- tists. All he got was a paw on the nose. 'l'hc attempt in the Soviet capital lasted six months but el"ery time An·An shuffled after Chl-chi, she scurried a\\'Bf. Both Russian and British . zoologists agreed the failure was Chi.Chi's fault. "An-An has what it takes,·· one said. "The trouble is due to Chi.Chi.,. In 1967, the scientists tried again, flying An·An to London v.•ith a special supply of his favorite bamboo shoots to try his Russian wooing technique in Chi-Chi's own cage. The story was the same and after four months the attempt was said. and made attempts to The unsuccessful mating of "coach" his wife in proper .-----------=------------! care. ·•Although considerable im· called off. I provement has occurred In her ability to keep house." the court said. "there still re· mains a serious doubt as to Diane'!! ahility to cope with lhe situation req u iri ng guidance and to perform those thin~s a mother must do ill raising children.·• THE COURT said the twins responded almost imm~Uatclv to the stimulation which they needed when pli:1ced in foster homes. The court said lt was "rrluc· tantty eonvinced" that Mrs. McDonald could never take proper care of the children •'or at least provide them with I.he slimulallon in the Mme that they must have to .'i'"OW and develop into nonnal heallh\l' children. "Altliough the father is ahle to do considerably better." the coort ukf. "the best interests / I See by Today's Want Ads e LIKf. LAGUi\i\~ LiVt' rhrrr in !hi!' apartment over!ookini:: 0t•c:111 & vii· !ai::c. 1 n1inu1r 10 !llOrt.'!I., lht' 1i'nt inclurlcs uHlilies.. e TURN ON THE llEAT this 1••tn1er 1yirh 2 electric ho! \\"ntcr ht>alrr1. One is 10 gnllons, onr. is 15. Borh 1 IOV. L\ke nc"·· e PRt\'ATE PARTY Y!eks hOU_!;e \n Corona de\ l\lar in 540·~ or a duplex in S.:Xrs. l'r!neipals only. of the twins requlm a tennin-1,__.,_ __________________ _,I at ion to trla: as well." 1• BUYI GETIFREE iLi· EI~ 1696 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA 1951 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA II 1111 HAS THE BEST TILE SELECTIONS IT'S COLOR TILE! 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COLOR .;D"'""• TILE ; CINTll '-•io .WIUO" z ·- Mosaic Tile Excitint colon and pattemt for Roon, walls and countertops! IEosy-•iMtoU. ,..._ mounted theett, GJIP'OL 1 tq. ft. -. AS LOW AS 59cSHEET Tile for o 4x4 ft. entry as low os $9.44 Nylon Pllo Shag Carpet Tile Install it yourMlf in 2 houn for a seam-frff look without waste! tiles with thick foam C SQ. '"" in. Ml~"kk 5 7 paddi,., luiu.trio...dy FT. thKk"'°""a •. Tilo lo< an 8x10 ft. room ..........• $45.60 ..... ~ ~''· Prefinish.d Tiles ~ Oak Parquet O.~ Genuine wood tiles give floors a wafm, mellow look:! Light and antique tones. :~~ ~nch°:i~ft, on~ 1 4 JJ. lull 5/16 in. thick. " EACH Tilo lo< an 8X10 ft. aroo on1y ........ $38.24 Jumbe 12•12 inch tiles; lu.,uioutly tup- pM and "'Y to instoll. Tilo lo< an BxlO ft . ..,..,, so. FT . $24.80 «):~~~" Ce;~·~i~itlile O~ Bright glaze tiles are permanent, ~ waterproof and easy to install! 4-1 /4x4·1/4inchtiln 3 9c wilh ea•y wipe.d .. n ,Q. 9la•• finish. Fl. Tilt for a tub aroo, 4 ft . high .......•. $15.60 STORE HOURS: 01ily 8 to 5:30; Mon . and Fri. 8 to 9 Open Sunday 11 -5 COSTA MESA 2221 HARBO R BLVD. Phane 64 s. 11 26 •. .· .. " " . :COLLEGE CHIEF . J1me1 G. Bond •, New Post ~1~ed Up ~y Black .. S!CRAMENTO (AP) James G. Bond, the first black named to head a large university in tbe West, will flnd·ricial troubles in his own back yard. But he says militants will have t() learn greiit social changes often take time. "I ,think my own minority backgrowid will aid me in being sensitive to the· needs of people -particularly those like ·the minorities that have suffered," the round-faced, 4S..ye&r-Old psychologist said. But Bond -who hears many1 stale jokes about his narri:e being the same as the '1"11 own back~ gronnd 1Cill aid me In betng sensl- ti1'e to the needs of others.' hero of the Ian Fleming spy· novels -wu not speclfiO when asked how he'll deal with ·racial problems ~ presi- dent of Sacramento State University here. LAS!' NOVEMBER, I h e 17,500 student. treelined cam- pus in the flat, largely rural Sacramento Valley, was thrown into a frenzy over the a~ of a speaker blac!!) labeled as a racist. >J n.e speaer. 11o1>e1 P(lzl>. winning physiciSt Wllli8!11 Shockley, stalked off the stage after black militants took over the podium and refused to allow him to speak. 'Ille' Stan- ford University professor, citing itatisUcal studies, con- tends blacks may be in· tellectuaUy inferior to whites. The school's dean o f students. Nonnan Better, said the incklent woold have been soon:forgotten on many of the othei 18 campuses in the stale university and college system ' _ nOt to be confused with the nine.:campus University o f California system. But charges and counter· charges followed the Shockley incident and emotions were high on all sides, he said, with the incident still much in the minds of manY students and faculty members. "WE ARE USUALLY a very quiet campus," said Be~ter. "but.<_ this issue has remained with us long after it hap-' pened." Bond a vice-president of the Bowllng Green campus of Ohio Stat!i University, was ap- poinf.ed to succeed D r .. Beriotrd L. Hylnk who is retuiiting to teaching. . The Shockley speech ~1g~t have turned out better 1f it had ~en set up in a deb~te fashion , BQnd said, adding "When you have a con- troversial figure on campus, you ~hould have both sides presented. I don't c~re who the ia>eaker is." A~ HOW HE will deal wltti--tnilltants who press. for hlgti!r minority admissions quOtli't. Bond says be backs awafr from a quota system of anv ;JQnd cause that "puts us in ' the pattern we worked long to get out ot" Currently some 800 stu'denb at the college. are black. ~ T~ the students. who want change immediately, Bond cautiOns : 1'Everyooe wants the~ problem1~BOlved .Yellter- day.IJlut it may take 1 gen~a­ tion ~to get llOme Of these chatites." . , A l;Jaativa ol' t.ora1n, Ohio, Bonlf.and ·h11 •Ue have three chU~n ranglni from 13 lo 20. •• • Cied Honored Jeione McKinney, dadgbtct ol I.fr. a~d Mrs. Wllllam S. ~1cKthney, 16352 Duch ess Land; Huntington Beach, has been honored as a Pomona College Scholer for earning an A·mlnus avcl-age during the 1971-72 acodcmlc year. bring in ·your old camera receive 5.00 whe_n yo"-buy politroid's square shooter 2 less trade-in 24.95 Now, for a limited time, you can trade-in your old camera -any make, any co ndition, and get 5.00 off the price of the Square Shooter 2 ... takes brilliant color prints in 60 seconds! polaroid , guarantees each picture you take with thi~ camera . You 'll receive o booklet of coupons when you purchose your camera. Each one entitles you to replace your Colorpack Lo n'd film if you judge the pictures to be unsotisfoctory . ANAHEIM NEWPOA:T HUNT1NG1'0N IEACH 444 N. fwtlld 17141 5l5-8 121 47 F•thio" l1l•"d (71 4 ) 644·1212 7777 Edl"9•r Av1"w• 17 141 1'2·)))1 rhu~y. Oc.to~r l9, 1972 DAiL V Pli.OT f5 dashing IO-speed raeing bike g.e. built-in dishwasher Powe r Scrub cycle ... cleons po+.. pans and casseroles. N o r m a I , rinse and hold, ond short wosh push-button selections. 219.95 g.e. family-size dishwasher 2 lull roll-out rocks, removable silver basket, 2-level wash. Tuff- T ub interior resists stains. Soft food disposer. 1~9.95 kltchenaid dishwasher Built in model with powerful Gold Seol motor. Forced oir drying, 7 c y c I e s. Automatic detergent, rinse agent. 9-position upper rod. 319.95 Moior Appliance s 80 Convenient terms available. Pri ces include front panel. Change-out installation at reasonable prices. ossembled 7 9 .99 Getting th ere is half the fu n on one of these deluxe 27" I 0 spetrds. Shi~ano derailleur gears, spoke and gear protectors, gumside tires, chrome kickstand. stefil shifter, quilted saddle .ond comb ination chain lod. Boys !shown) with center pull brokes, girf~ with •ide pull brokes. Why miss out on the fun ... ride o bike todoy. Sporting Goods. 43 l.oy-41 .. y now. 5.00 d•posit wiU hold 't~ Christm .. CERRITO~ 500 lol C•rrito1 M•ll 121)) 160°0411 SHO P 10 A.M. to ':JO P.M, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 OltAN&f, MALL O" OR.ANGE 2100 N. Tu•tl" Str 11t 17141 ••l·IJI t P .M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M, •} 'Maude' Bumps 'Bonanza' Again By JAY SHARBUTf KE\V VOHK (A PI -The national N 1 e ls e n lelev 1s1on ratings for lai.1 v.·el'k arr ul and they show l'Ontinued woe for NBC's durable "Bonanza.'' The program was smote by CBS' "Aiaude" for the third straighl wee.k. follawing week, according to Nielsen figures. "Bonanza" rcg1s1ercd n mild comeback last week "'hen it was seen in n('arJy 11.5 miUion U.S. homes, according to rating esti1nates, but this wn s a far cry frorn !he days ot the show's peak popularity. "f\1aude." ""ho s tarted strong, still is. lier television debut ranked 11th na tionally tage of how many telev1s10n sets in use around the nation are tuned to {I given show al a given time. The national "share" helps advertisers and n t t w o r k s measure how competing shov .. s are doing -as in the case of "Bonanw," .. Maude" a n d ABC's "Temperatures Rising" on Tuesday night. ··~1nude" has gotten the largest shl'lre for the past three \\'eeks. But NBC .and "Bonanza'' advertisers still rould decide tbat their set'Ond· place share contains enough. viewers to keep the show roll· ing on and on. ONE SllOW that is causing nG worry - at least for CBS -is ''Bri dget Lovell Oernle." II hasn't dropped below sixth place in the national Nielsen standings since Its debut on S.pt. 16. The venerable NBC western began its 14th season las t month on a bright note. It came in fourth in tile national ratings and was seen in an estimated 16.2 mi\ lion households. But then 1 t falleftd. and she has yt>t to drop out ol ~--------------------~ the 20 to1>-rated enlertairuncnt shov.•s, according to th c Nielsen estimates, The show is good, but it also gets a lot of hel p from the fact that it appears on Saturday night between "All in the Family" and "The titary Tyler Moore Show." In that time slat, even a rerun of the world chess championships could make it. "Maude" picked up steam the next week and the estimated number of households 1vatching I h c Cartwrights dropped by nearly five million. fl dropped "Bonanza'' to 39th place in the week's national rankings. ANOTHER 8-t2.000 households apparently defected from the sho\v the Does this inean !he men of the Ponderosa finally arc beading for the last roundup? Not necessarily. "Bonanza" ah1·ays can be moved tn a new hour and evening where the competition isn't so stifr. BUT REGARDLESS o f ""'helht.r it stays pu t or backs a11·nv. a cri!ical factor in its eonlinut:d life "'iii be its "share of audience .'' Thnl's the estin1ated pcrccn· 'Dude' Crashing Bore As Rock Fad Musical By WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK IAP1 "Dude," an attempt at l':\ld musica l novelty. is rude and crude an d, worst of all, a shrieking bore. • '"Family~ First Two-·week Survey Bared CHICAGO (AP) -"AH in the Family" topped te levi· sion ratings released Tuesday by the A.C. Neilsen Com- pany. The ratings were based on a l\vo-week survey that ended Oct. I. "All in the family" had a percentage rating or 32.6 <ind 11·as seen in 21.120,000 households, the rating showed. ''TIIE ABC Sunday Night Movie'1 1vas second with 31 pereent, followed in order by 'Marcus Welby" 26.2," Brid- get Loves Bernie" 25.8, "The NBC Saturday Night Movie" 24.8, ''Maude" 24.3, "The CBS Frjday Njght Movie" and "Sanford and Son" each 24.1. "Hawaii Five-0" 23.8, "Flip \Vilson" 23.5, ''Ironside" 23.2, "The NBC Monday Night h-1ovie'' 23.L ''Gunsmoke" 23.0.'' "Canoon" 22.2 and "Tbe NBC Wed· nesday Night Mystery Movie" 22.1. ~·laking the top 15 for the first time were "Bridget Loves Bernie" and "Maude." C01\1PARISONS with the prior two-week period were not vali d because of specialties. Olympic coverage was No. 1 in that period l'>'hich also included the once-a-yea r ··J\-fiss America Pageant" No. 4. Olympic-type programs 5 and 6 and "Zenith's Anniversay" Show" 7. Of the regulars in this period , "Marcus \Velby" was No. 2 ... The ABC Sunday Night Movie " 3 and "All in the Overall. there \veren't any surprises in the national ratings for the fourth week of the new season. "All in the l'~amily" and ABC's "Marcus Welby'' continued to get high marks. coming in first and third , respectively. Bob Hope's first NBC special of the se.ason ranked second in the standings and was seen in an estimated 20.8 million homes. Euphen1ism HOLLYWOOD (UPI/ MGM has come up wlth a new euphemism for non--network television series-prime-time access series-which it app lies to "Young Dr. Kildare," star· ring l\fark Jenkins and Gary Merrill. Where To Go Looking for somewb-:re to go. something to do? No one gives you better tips than the WEEK.ENDER . It's publish· ed every Friday in the DAI· LY PILOT. The production. at the Broadway Theater. is a rcduc· tio ad tedium successor to !lie rock-fad triumphs of "Hair" and "Jesus Christ Superstar." cpisadcs. These are carried ouL by a huge juvenile and grown·up C'Otnpany. Clad in everything froin old fashioned drop-seat drawers to shim· mering metallic robes, they race around upper and lo"•er road""'tlYS t h r o u g h the auditorium. squinn up and down aisles in some of·'==~=================~" presumed mystical. breathless symbolism. As people. they are amazingl y unattractive: This circumstance shouldn't and most of their costumes surprise anyone, for camposer are ugly. -----Galt MacDermot and Gei:ome. _____ S9\!er.al~allegorjcs--1iecm to Ragni, half the authorship have been pasted togCther team of th~ hirsute hit. and h el t e r -s k elter for the Tom O'Horgan, wbo directed premiered collage. The key both those shows, are chief performer, who enters in pepretrators of "Dude." galde n coveralls on a trapeze An unusual amount of huff. that descends from a hole in ing and puffing turmoil was the ceiling, is cryptically nam- reported during preparation ed "No. 33." He introduces an and preview. Players were ultimately a band one d se- hired and fired. Lines were quence about Adam and Eve, swit ched. O'Horgan was later: tussles with someone drafted belatedly. At one nan1ed Zero. an inca rnation of point, someone thought 800 but-evil. terflies would help. Later on. someone remarks The only nonhuman person· "lire is the theater of the nel now surviving are three damned," so let that suffice for hens. a depressed cockerel explanatory of all subseq uent and a bl'!by pig that managed carnival·nlood irrelevancies. to emit one "oink" more or less Part of the show's $700,000 on cue during a brief livestock t'ost is earnulrked for restora· turn. tion of t he playhouse to The predominantly human 11ormal proscenium form . It efforts com prise a sequence of should be ready for recon- frantic, loosely related song dilioning soon. deJ br@ahfast- Everytgood hing ~ ak. mommg !$. •• Orange juice, cofice and a p111ing hot Dani .. h ... ~11 on a non-5pi ll tray. Del Breakf.1sl ... the non-stop bre:ikfast now being served at all Dfl l "ACO drive·lhru rest.turants -it only takes a minute and its only 69¢ NOW SERVING 7·11 AM ~ , NEWPORT BEACH Bristol (Palitades) at Campus SANTA ANA 4th St. and Newport Fwy. TUSTIN Red Hill near Senta Ana Fwy. •• , •11d •"-' Orollf• Co111ty loc.otlo111. Hu1ll$hiss NEW! 2640 Harbor Blvd. - COSTA MESA . "~ '. ';"' ft'.4-"'"~~· I .. • ,j ~ 1 ~·-, ..... ,, ·-.:.--'~ OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 SUNDAYS 9 to S GROW QUICK ELECTRIC SOIL HEATING CABLES THEY'RE NEW and WE HAVE THEM ~tiil I /eating Cabll·s. I.rt's you grow planl!I from ~f'{'d and cuttings like a profcsional ~rn\\"1·r. EASY TO INSTALL ••• Cabll·s ar•' installed in bottom of flats, sashbros or \\"indow boxes. Built in ther· mos tat al'livatcs cable 'vhi>n soil tempera· tur~ guC's bC'lo\v 74 °. {Bux not included.I Cables are available in six sizes, starting a1 3.95 AT LASTI Now the home gardener can have a headstart on the regular growing season. 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Reg. 2.95 SPECIAL 1.98 FULL BLOOM 1.79 each Sp.clol prkn tood thru Octbet-25th AN ADVENTURE IN BONSAI ' ·A~,t;-~ 'C.-. ::J; From This •••••• TO THIS We ha"Ye what it takes to get you started in this FASCINATING hobby TRlES th•t Bon••I .... 11 •'••I Sun1 ,t'1 BONSAI llool. 11 1 on1v 79~. CONTAINERS F:n:,h1ng louch111 •uch ,, of 1111 k:nd1, round. 1qu6re, rocks, ICw&n Y11n li9u•e1, oblong, etc. Som• only 99('. '"I.uh" ! "brid9e~." W1 11110 h•v• elr11 .. dv-pl1nl· 1d BONSAI in tredit;on co11- te:ners. Priced from $7.00 We'll 9ive you a BAS IC BONSAI Instruc tion Sheet ., • Have We Got PUMPKINS? You BET! 8ri111 ill• l!i<h in fo ••• our TERRIFIC dhplav e~d ltt fti11m pick out lh•ir Yery ow". HulliWs PHONE 546·5525 FRo~ Fash ion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR I .. j§:oper•• Stars .. ., ..... • Thu!"lday, Octobtr 19, 1971 DAJLY PILOT 27 BEAUTIFUL anti EXCITING THINGS ARE HAPPENING AT .•• e • NO GIMMICKS. • • JUST OLD-f ASH ION ED LOW · RICES! I • ® -~Judy Edgerly, a UC Irvine graduate now studying ·~at UCLA, performs with Tom Oberjat in the UCLA ·~Opera Workshop and Chamber Orchestra produc- ;li'! lion of the baroque opera ''Orontea.11 The opera ~ give a stngle -performance Saturday evening at j 8 o'clock in the Village Theater on the UCI campus . . ~ -·4 --· -----~-·--~Sweetened Laugh Track ·FIRST· COME, FIRST SEBVEDt SALE STARTS TODAY 10 AM i Needed to Spice Show By JAY SJIA RBtm' • NEW YORK (APl -•·'f'op : i>f the Month" is a ne\v : eJevision series of nine ha!£-• . • r musical comedy shows. :ifbe first three ha ve a lot of :~ ppy patter. singing, dan- : · g and "sweetened" laugh : cks. • • Pro::lucers sweeten a laugh ack by dubbing in recorded buck les when the audience ; sponse isn't exactly boffo. ~d "Top of the Month" may •. · that kind of sugar . It : e doesn't have the spice ; et. Not even with a fine : egular cast headed by Tony • dall. ~ A pity. too. because the >: hows, bankrolled by the Long .• ·stance Division of American ~ elephone and Te le g rap h ~ mpany, are a valiant effort brighten local television ' rogramming. . • AT&T's aim was to offer the 'nee-a-month minispeeials to al stations for use in the 30 ·1:.·nutes of prime evening time Federal Communications mmission has taken from ~e networks and returned to "' al broadcasters. ACTING IN association with Bell System's 23 regional mpanies. AT&T offered the hows free to local stations on ~wo conditions: Z -ThBt the stations would how them during prime view. lime at night. vdlh the J! hoice of time and dale left to he stations. 2 -That only four paid com- ~ercials -two frOm AT&T, ~o from the local Bell system ·would be permitted while ~e show was on. • The theme of each show is a vcn month - tober through June -and ents we associate with that th. The theory was that ory would be presented song, dance and comedy skits. In practice, the presentation burped fell down and died in the o(>ening show. which checked out October with the help of 'Bonanza's Lorne Green. The show appears on an1 estimated 110 stations this month . TOO BAD. The writing was feeble, the comedy sit.its weak and the singing of costar E. J . Peaker fiat. She's an ex- cellent performer and the vocal woe wasn't her ·fault. The problem was that it was her third "Month" segment in as many days. She was lucky she could talk. An AT&T spokesman said the shows, about October, November and December, all were taped from a busy Fri- day through a weary Sunday. October was the last in the series and Miss Peaker was pooped. The spokesman for the show said the tight schedule was tailored to accommodate the free hours of the guest stars. Greene, for examp l e, couldn't do his bit until Sun- day, the spokesman said. Resting on the seventh day would have been the wiser course. The writers put Greene into pantaloons, disguised him as Columbus discovering America instead of India and gave him Jines like, "Ho boy, they're-a gonna call m e wrong-a-way Columbus!" THE NOVEMBER show was much better, only because of the comic timing of guest star Bob Crane in a funny Thanksgiving skit about In- dians, Pilgrims, P I y m o u t h Rock and all that. December's offering was memorable in that one rarely sees John Forsythe trapped In a spangled heliotrope jacket, leading a 1957 rock 'n roll group in an assault on "Earth Angel." For the past five springs. AT&T has1 presented such memorable programs as "From Yellowstone to Tomor- row" with George C. Scott, and "The Record Makers," will! Flip Wilson. The new shows are a radical, innovative departure Crom that one-hour. once-a- year concept. 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Thurmond and his \Vite Nancy also have a daughter, age 2. GI Gets Medal --55 Years Late From \\'lr' Ser\•ices An Army band thumped away. the ROTC stepped out smartly and a former priYa te first cla ss. llarold P. Cooper, was awarded the Purple Heart in Los Angeles. For wounds receiYed in ac· tion against the Germans. In Wbrld War I. ,Cooper received arm wounds from German iartillery at· the batt le or Chateau- Thierry in 1917. At that time, the military a'handoned awarding the Pur- ple Heart. giYi ng out ""'ound through all lhe aggravation y,·hcn it would not change anyone's opinion about her.'' her attorney. Robert Steinberg said. tier dentist husband. Dr. Gordon E. ~tiller. wa s burned to death in a car on Oct. 8. 1964, v.·hile apparen1ly under the influence of barbiturates. * Bernadette Devlin said in Cleveland that Protestants and Catholics in Northern Jreland ~re "fighting in the wrong \.ray" and she sees no solution to the strife in her country. ( ) "The violence only ser\"t>S to PEOPLE di\"ide !he \\'Orl..ing l!lasscs - "'·-----------', they are defeating their own -purposes," r.tiss Devlin. a slripes" fer uniforms instead. Later, the policy was reversed but Miller just learned of the change. * Lucille Mill er , convicted in 196.5 in California of the murder of her husband. has dropped an appea~ saying tha~ even lf it were reversed people v.·ould still feel she is guilty. Mn. Mil ler, 42, was paroled last May j\fter serving seven years of a life sentence. "She did not want to go Criminology Pro Wilso11 Dead at 72 POWAY. t API Orlando \V. Wilson. who gained a world reputation i n criminology before cleaning up the Chicago police force after a burglary iCandal. died of a stroke at his home Wednesday . He was 72, A daughter with whom he lived said Wilson had been ill in recent weeks . Wilson. a former dean of the School of Criminology at UC Berkeley. was appointed Chicago's police commissioner in 1960. He retired in 1967. Earlier. he le c tured throughout the Unlted Slates and £urope end reorganized police departments at San Antonio. Tex.: San Juan. Puerto Rico: Louisville , Ky .. and other cities. He was appointed dean at Berkeley in 1939 after earning his undergraduate d e g r t e there ln 1924 and a doctorate at Carthage Coll ege in Illinois. later receiving an honorary doctor 's d eg ree at Northwestern University. H~ also spent 10 yea rs as police chief of \Vichita . Kan. .. member or British Parlia- ment. told an audience at Car- roll University. * The Australian government is deporting British pop singer Joe Cocker and six memben or his group following their conYiction in Adelaide on drug charges. Immigration Minister Dr. Jan1es Forbes told Parliament Ill<' seven musicians had become liable for deportatlon under the Migration Act because they had been con- Yicted Of offen~eS punishabl e by two years ln jail. Cocker and the six mui>i· cians were fined a total of $2.400 in Adela ide on Tuesday for the possession of drugs. in- cluding heroin and lndian hem p. * U.S. astronaut Thomas Slaf. ford and Soviet cosmonaut Andrian Nlkolayev made a "joint flight" for an hour in a Soyz capsule simulator, the Tass news agency said. Stafford was visiting ZYezny Gorodok (Star City), the residential and training cenler for the Soviet cosmonaut corps. Iie is one or the American specialists meeUnJ.l with Soviet counterparts to discuss the planned dockin~ and joint flight of Soyuz and Apollo spaceships in 1975 . Cornet pla;r Ch a r 11 el Sllcoek gave his al! in a celebration solo in London - including his pants. At a party ce~braling his band's victory in !he National Brass Band Cllampionship. the 62--year-old musician · inhaled deeply to blast oot the final note of "Bless This House." Down went his pants. "Next time he pla ys in public. I'll make sure he wears suspend ers," said his wife 1.1argaret. Sandy Divor~ed TV Surr E1ids Marriage LOS ANGELES !AP J - Actress Sandy Duncan was granted a divorce from her husband or four years. actor Uruce Scott Zahariadelt Superior C o u r t Com- a year ngo. just as ti.11ss Dun- c a n • s successful television series "Funny Face" was In· troduct<I. 'I'wo months later, the is. yea r.(lld actress underwent surgery in which she lost sight in her left eye. S laockleg Bid -Acad emy :Tables' Heredity Study lai•, Tho roug,,, G•101c • '• WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Re•I Estate Sull'I and or lho;..t"' l" '!'!!!~!!l!!H G / Ph one for Jrt·t• fofdl·r -a ANTMONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTll 1M K•rw C...... Cttt• M-.. c.w ....... "'· t714~ t7t.JJIJ University ·proressor's theory ii tbal block!J are le• In- telligent than whit... But he vigorously denies charges oil ~~~ racism. • ' f': A spokesman for the Na· ! .. . ·. 1nlssioncr Jules D. Bamatt Wednesday granted t h e divorce, u11cont este d by Zahariades. and approved a property settlement in which lhey will divide their holdings equally. ZAHARIAOES, 26, had the lead role ln the stage pro. duction of "Jesus Christ Superstar .'' William Shockley apparently has won at least a partial victory in bls c&mpaign to get the National Academy . ol Sciences to sPomQr a study of his theory that heredity, not en- vironment, Is the 1n a j o r determinant or human in- telligence. tlonal Academy U:ld that the No other newspaper In • academy Tuesday, tabled a wotld cares about your c<tn:\ • resolution presented by munit)' Uke )'our commu Shockley, a Nobel Prize win-dally ne\YSpapc.r does. lt They have no children. THEY WERE ma,ried in Septeml,(or 1968 and separated t\iiss Duncan also nlaintains a residence in Newport Beaeh. A part of the Slanlord ner. the DAU.Y rn.OT. Rubber Gloves Handy Disposable H,ndv helpe11 ... rubber 0Jlo¥11 •re economic11I and disposable For 1l•1non9 , remow in9 p•int Stanley Spiral Ratchet Screwdriver T1 ansp•rent 1lor19e h.,nd le )-po1ilion loc~ 1wilc~ , Comr• ..,jfh lwo drill po inh ~nd + .... obits 399 • • \ • Plumbers Helpar Is lndispensible Unc.1091 1in91, +oile+1 ,,,;i., Durable rubb•r cup 9i¥e1 d1on9 111clion . Wood H1ndl1 ~ 48", Two-Light Garage · Fixture e 'Com•1 with b-11 .. ).wire cord e Id.el for li9hti119 homt or 1hop wo1k b1nche1 9aa ~!!': Rima's Prices Keep Things Cozy Glidden lnterir Wood Stain 1t•inin9 c.ebin•t1. ehairs, pic.tur• frem es, 1te. e Oil b•s• stein • A11't . fini1ll11 welnut, bl•ck - welnut, .ind olh•ri ~~ 111 • Ci • - Double Swag Lamps • Gr••• in j,•th or 11111 o~ So~ •"•n li9llt ll•c.lt ch•in A re el veluo Model 16-4 ;=>iDoorkeeper Toilet Seat • Sherp, quic.lt Garage Door Operator e Elec.tronie•llv op•n1 •ncl clo111 111r191 door. Turn• lighh on encl off, Saf•, q uit! ••1v to install ' e Y• H.P. rno+or. S•f•tv 1top e Hanel t ran1rnitt•r lla1 50 ft. workin9 racliu1 8988 10'88 Ready To Finish Ii-di' Ladder-Sack Chair e High l add•r beck e Hind wo.,•n fibr• ru11'i 1e1t e Herdwoocl con· •true.lion, smooth 11nd•d Westclox Travel Clock c.uttln9 b1ad11 e Sque,. 1li1p1 witt. lealhtrallt • E11y fo grip tl11rc:lv wooden h•ndl•• • H••~Y d11ty • Convenitntly locottd .•. Eosy lo Reach! 2666 HARBOR BLVD. -IN COST A MESA HOURS/WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 TO 6,M eel• e l uminou1 110111-doh e With •l•rm • Stor•1 c;om• pec.tly ·- Lighted Handle Mercury Switch _ e Sil•nt -bv GE e Fils 1tencl.ird boxe1- no 1p•ci1I wiri ,.q e lworv color•d I I I I Tree Pruner and Saw Set e Cornpl•t•lv 1111mbl1d e ll•d11 r11i1t rust e E11v lo u11 Bar Stool e Popul1 r 1lv!1 in du••ble h1rdwood e P•inl o• 1+•in e G.+ • 1•! encl •••• 29? ... Stanley 2 4 In. Handy Level e Riqicl •luminum fr1m• e King 1i11 ~ia l1 ire •••v to repl1c1 Priced ror (O\ll Ml\& • Pupils' Hearing Impaired Smallfry Start ' By ALLISON DEERR ~· Of ""' 0.11' Plltt SllH Six new students at Bay View Elemen· tary School have adjusted quickly to the daily routine of classwork , recess and naps. The four boys and lWD girls ride the bus to school each morning, the ypw1gest all the way from San Juan Capistrano to Santa Ana Heights. They mingle with other youngsters on the playground and take home daily projects to mom and dad. But these are very special students. All have jmpaired hearing and are from 18 months to three years old. They are the first class in a pilot program ~ begun this fall by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. The' class is designed to give children with bearing impairments a head start at learning. Previous programs began at age three but educators feel children should star11 as early as possible. "Children with severe hearing loss are delayed in their development, especially in the area of language," said Mark Hansen, director of special education for the district. "Language is the key to in- telleetual and emotional development. LOSES TIME "'The child who does not speak because he cannot ·hear his parenl.i Wst. If we wait until he reaches normat'School age, he gets farther and farther behind. "It is easy for the child to become frustrated," Hansen said. "and develop emotional problems as well. He can't compete in the classroom or on the playground because he can 't understand the verbal directions." Hansen added that educators feel that something should be done as early as possjble to give these bard-of-hearing chUdren an early start. They feel school is the appropriate place for it. Main ob~live for the pilot program is to help the students develop speech and language. the ability to lip or speech read and ba.Sically improve communication skills. NO SKILLS ',I'he hearing child, he explained, begins the receptive part of languag' at birth and by age one has a several-word vocabulary. Most children with impaired hearing have neither the understanding nor expressive skills of language . Denise Bielamowic% talks about· pets to sm!lll students I left). Above, hearing impaired pupils pr!lctice what they've learned about cats. School Teaching the class is De n i s e Biclamowicz, an attr8Ctive ·bfonde wilh a background in Spanish and art and a credential fpr teaching dear and hard-of- hcaring from Cal State, Los Angeles . Everything done in the classroom or on the playground is geared to give the children visual and verbal input. The day's regular routine is a loo! to develop and reinforce language skills. When the children arrive w i t h sweaters, coats and lunch boxes, putting their things away is the first opportunity ~for verbal input. Each child has a hook for -his coat and a place to store his lunch box.· VERBAL COMMAN DS The labels on cupboards as "·ell as b!nnkets, painting smocks and chairs, are part of sell-eoncept, she explained. Another technique was the drawing or life-size figures of each child. Each day a feature of the face, part of the body or article of clothing was painted by each child -at the same time verbal input, visual in~t and a lesson in self-concept. (See Sl\IALL FRY, Page 30) ' ' Daily Pilot Photos by Patrick O'Donnell Stacy DaKides I at right) discovers telephones. Below, Eric Hughes at naptime !Ind self-concept poster. • • • ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tl11,1nc1•r, October ''· im "'" If 30 DAILY PILOT Thul'\day, October l'J, 1Q72 ' Your Horoscope -__ ... Aquarius : In 1v1 ua s Figure Prominently Fresh Fillet of Sole • . . $1.79 lb. U U D PISH WITH MUSHlOOMS ' .. """' .... '\ .... ~ .. .. ii FRIDAY OCTOBER 20 By SYDNEY OMARR ' , ., .I. \' ·= ' . Roman Holiday Decreed Mood for Roman Holiday luncheon and fashion show Saturday, Oct. 28, in the Disneyland Hotel is set by the Mmes. William Carey (seated) and Charles Bl om~ quist, members of the sponsoring Orange ~aunty Auxiliary, Myastheni~ Gravis Foundation. Fashions from county shops will be modeled and the Bernie Perry Duo v.•ill provide mwic. From Page 29 The late Charles "Sonny" Liston, who was heavyweight boxing cbampioo of the WQrld, was very cautious where astrology was concerned. Be broke training once, in Las Vegas, to "escape" a pifblicity confrontation, during which J "'as to tell him something about his horoscope. Former lightweight champion I k e \Villiams of Trenton. N.J .. had much the same attitude. This folio~ my pr~iction that another champion. Bob ~1ontgomery of Philadelphia, Pa.. would knock him out. Montgomery followed through, scored the kayo and became a friend of astrology. " ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Go your own way at your own pace. Others may mean wen, but they tend to interfere. Key now is to be analytical, to be a self-starter. Exercise caution where goals Md contracts enter picture. Depend on your own judgment. TAURUS (April 20-May 20), Direct results may be delayed. Key i.s to outline plans, prepare format. Those who are impatient should be ig- nored. Obtain hint from Artes message. Look behind scenes. Find answer. Base in· formation on factual material. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Ftiends may m_ in_ pec11liar maruier. You may be right, ..but 119t n~ily popular. If you want to win popularity contest, you may have to forego principles. Choice is your own. Review hopes, wishes. CANCER (June 21-July 22): • • • Smallfry Shining at School Denise speaks more loudly than normal to her pupils and waits for eye contact with -~ one before repeating simple commands. tutor children individually." The parents, all in their 20s, are an asset, she added. After- noon sessions in their homes -for mother = ·for iron.ing--out problems and sharing ex· periences -will begin soon. Denise feels she will be able to reinforce what goes on in the classroom. future. Principal Bill Kapele said that the parents were en· thusiasUc about the program. One reason may be that many more children applied for the program than could be ac· cepted. Comparison studies will be made at th e end of the year, he said, but results are already visible after only a few_~Qfogram. One child, who-wiSlif.' troverted and shied away from activities the first week, now is as vocal as any other child on the kindergarten playground. "I talk to them in complete sentences." she said. "except for simple commands like 'come' or 'push' which are normally one word. "The children already have learned the daily routine, after only a few weeks. They now anticipate what comes next in the day." REPETITION Mothers continue classroom activities at home so the pro- gram is a continuous process. Monthly meetings which will include the falhers, also, are scbeduled to begin in the near Hansen said that educators have round a big difference in children who have been in· volved in some kind o( pro- gram before entering school and those who come in cold, with no preparation. Denise admitted working with the school's smallest students is challenging, ex· citing and rewarding. And half her class is still in diapers. Sbe incorporaies continuous ·and repetitive input into every .. -------------------------:::--::::-----:1 activily.Thedayincludesnap-FALL CLEARANCE time, recess and snack -all of which are used to introduce new words and reinforce already acquired vocabulary. ent'1re ·inventory Daily special activities may mean a field trip. For ei:am- ple, a unit on animals in· d d I eluded a filmstrip and a trip re uce . to a pet store. "Eventually," she ex· 100' of y I I plained," they make a con-• a ues. nection between m y ex-i Bookcases free standing Re9. pression, the sound and the word or thing J want them to say or do. Later comes the es· pressive side, actually saying W /Top & bottom cabinets 3Sxl4ll'75 high, antique lemon yellow. the word." 7 only ··········•r•··--··························· ....... .......... .. . $249 Panon console tables I 8x5"4x29 high, finished in teak & black ¥inyl. 4 only . Glenn bedroom sets, 5 pcs. . .$12' 7 SALE $99 $69 Washing their hand!, open· ing the door to the playground and finding the right chair for game time are important, she said, because these children miss the normal everyday commands a hearing child gets. Severity of hearing !cm varies with each child, so she adjusts her teaching tecl\. niques to each child's needs. Dresser, 2 nite stands, king headboard, mirror, oak finish, 4 onl -···--·········--·····················-············ ... $795 1395 "We plan to have one of the mothers In the cla!!room every day soon. Eeach mother and my aide, Bobbl Albllz, will work with the children on games and puzzles while I lamps, pictures and atcessories, up to 30 % off during sale ' ;;;::========;II .. • . • Little Marcy NOV. 4th HUNTINGTON CENTER Aw1r4 wh111i1141 chllcf r•c•"'l119 1rtl1t Mari::y Tl9ner a114 pupptf 'Uttt1 M1rcv' wlll •PP••' 111 J 11¥'• 1how1 011 our l'l'ltll et 12 t.M., 111 J JI.Ill., aMI will 111t09rtph 1lb1111'1t. Her 1llow 11 1po1uorecl by n. Falftlly look Storo ait4 olb11ffl1 aro on 1al1, H1111tl119tofl Con .. r, lo1c.h •t Ecl1111., A S•11 01990 ,.,._.,,. H.I. l,J.0556 , ' size •• shown i1 IO'x8' -• 1111• .. 1111 I ....... I I 11111 l11ll• .., ______ .. __ . ,.. ___ .. ..,._ .. __ ... ,.. --"'811111 .. --··-Reg. $749 SALE$ 5 4 9 . choice of colon & fabrics dony 11·9/sat. 11 -6/sunday l.S •phone 5-48-5518 •toll free 5'1().1262 Set sights on goal. Accept respomibtllty. Relationships are intensified. Nothing now is apt to occur in lukewarm manner. What does happen is all or nothing. Know It and be prepared. Pay heed to older, experienced individual. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Social contact can prove meaningful. SAGJTl'ARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): U you build oo solid base, success is assured. Aquarius and Leo individuals are involved, Don't permit emotions to overwhelm logic. Avoid basing actions on bn- pulse. Opportunity is available. Grab it! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Element of tiinlng favors your efforts. You overcome \Ii C. RMli. ""'"., 1 Ca11 wlltt. rnvtlll"M""'' llr•in,.il 1 T, II'""' h11t1 ' ....... t111M ""'""" ... ,,11111 l"lkl llM "' • ........ hklllt di-. Clil"MIM eAI ...,.. .. ,. uc.llt ,.Jl!'lk•, allll .-r l'tltr tlNI, •K• i. ,........ - JM d19r-. fir • mlnultt. 5'wflllUI ,.,....,. l'IM' fl"' """-.. \\ ' Dielwy ........ ltOcb. c ... , .... "-....... 6H WI.. .io.. wlttl ittfrier fl• Coll,.,_.. -4 IM,.netl W-. 2800 Lafayette -Newpqrt Beach· , Health improves. Confidence in basic abilities is on UJ>" swing. You gain 8l!I more per- sons become aware of inte~ tlons, abilities. Take special care with correspondence. Don't promise more than can be delivered. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): obstacles. What appears lo be l1l"lJ451., 545.u11 0,.11: •·• Moa,-S.t.1 t·S:JO '-•· roa~block is merely a tem-lj~~~~;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~-·~~~ porary delay.' Know It and re- spond accordingly. Be ready Take care with asse~; avoid extravagance. New deal, fresh contacts, novel approach - these would be desirable. Let go of outmoded concepts. Move with tide. Stress in- dependeoce, o r I g i n a l ap-proach. l.IBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Lie low. Get second wind, Look to futwe. Don't brood about "what might have been." Prospects are brighter than you might imagine. Be aware ol. public relations, feel- ings of mate, partner. Time is on your side. ·SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Horizons are broadened. Ideas can be developed. B a s i c chores are emphasized. You ca.n clear away emotional debris. You will see more, do more and perceive potential. for change, short journey and variety of experiences. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Postpone journey, if prac- tical. Source or information may not be reliable. Review of goals, directions is necessary. Take nothing for granted. PISCES (Feb. 1 .. Mareh 20)' Some or your natural qualiUes surge to fore -and are ap- preciated. You gain; assets could multiply. Key ls to perceive and to act on inner feelings. Maintain aura of mystery. IF TODAY IS YOU R BIRTHDAY you are sensitive, able to feel pulse of public. Change made this month will prove beneficial. Obstacle to progress is due to be removed. You hannonize especially well with C'.aneer, Pisces petBODS. preview opening sale ! ! The Moment is Here Tlte /lloment is J\'010 T he Mo ment . , .. P ar is b as P a ul Maris and so do we Wash and wear for the Career Girl. Knit pants, top5, lon9 and short skirts. It's your choice to mix 'n match. this 11 the Moment 512 30th st. 673.2777 aewport beach BONDED MOAl,LIC Groat flb~e for 111111 hlllllJ •ant11. II'' wldL S•llll col1rs ... II b•ll•. 15" •1111 II" 1nylle. Pemet for 011111111 •• 1111tms.IOO" 1011111 bad< ~~D~ Half-Sizes Sim 14'" to 24"• is a glrt'1 hell frt.nd. Loob great, w.an beaufffully, woshn Ilk• a dream. COIM and .. thrl wond•rful group at Half-Sis• Shop. """' $21 .00 Sunday Shopper? full•rton & Huntinvton &Heh Open 12 to 5 Ella. . Simi! ..... MliclWll• fl! 'Stedl Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP COSTA MESA 1 IOS N...,_, llH. I Vi Moel •Ol'ttl of 1 ltti St .1 HUNTINGTON llACH 14 H11•tlflttoai CHhf °"'5ldll tM Mell ••• lN•rttolotti• .... I FULLllTON-224 Oro'"Jdair Moll, at~ & Harbor UM yotir ~ard or M•ter Clta,.e 01 bollll BO" wldo, ad lft" 1111111 lllttd wlfll 105" IWJlll kill taeo. Tretnlftffn 11110~11 11 all eolors-llpto, darl:1 ad , .. 1111. POLYESHR DOUBLE KNITS S..utiful doublo-lcnlt1 - Everyon" f1vorft1 -Good selection of colors, a nd in 1 wide verlety of stitches. 60" wido. Designer lengths. WOODEii ASHION • DECOUPAGE BOXU .-<: A IHI II I llflll• Yilttl •11 Jll eJ• Wll 'I •• , " ..... Srtl111 fl't• "" tl " n "' Fllllt n ltll•llll• •••• bolt • . wood 1nU1•l1 II HWJ blL RIPlll ~ 99 Y1l111 11 H .N 11cll. RIP.IAT 01 A SILLOUT II.CK llO" 1117110 -· IOilll HllOI •adl:, d '' wife, 11111 01 IJOll&. Wndllflll H•rltlmt of col1rs- •t11, wllltl, "'''' •• ,,., peJ', 'Ink •• , ...... ~ 99 ·~YD. 110" POLYESTER WHITE&COLORED THREAD Wbltt, 11r1ct nd 1u1rt1d e11 .. oro. ""' . pol,11111, H Jlld 1po11a. C1m1 stoek •P n1w w~llo 1111 prleo 11 low. 3~~~·1oe fabrifie 11 Mc-i ..._,,,.,. 0c..a. lftlrl th,. Octobef 24th ABRIC CENTERS .. NOW IN COSTA MESA 841 W. 19th at PLACEHTIA COSTA MESA e PH. 645-7832 • • • • DAIL V PILOT 31 Melv in . Be lli Headl ines Speaker List Homemakers Holiday Glamour the Wrap Around Way will be the topic ol Mn. Milite -when she speaks before members or The Happy Homemakers during a luncbooo meeting Friday, Oct. 27. The demonstration w j 11 begin at 10 a.m. in the Foun- tain VaJley Community Center. Reservalklnl may be made with Mrs. Lee Weight, Mrs. Merle Breiter or Mr!. Paul Hope. 5aturday, Oct. •· lllJ topic will be lnternaliooal Law and How Jt Relates to United Statea Cltlzens. the Saddleback N•tlonal Horoe demonstrations in schools, Show Nov. 4-5 at the Peacock donaUns toothbrushes and Hill Riding Club, Tustin, a pn>vldlng filllll. benefit for St. Joseph Hospital, Dr. Sidney Garfield, author Orange. of the book .. Teeth, Teeth, next meeting of the Torana Art League. The group will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 25, in Bowers Museum, Santa Ana. SC Juniors The party, under the Me-~.. or 'th r--st chalnnanship or Mrs . Edward Teeth," will speak r... the Workshop nW'IC: oou ......... Kravitz, also will raise funds Dental Health E d u c a t i o n rtSellrch, Orange County School Board : Dr. John NlcoU, superintendent ol the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dhitrict, and ~trs. Nancy Plamer. a teacher at AHao School . A pub lic meeting to heir the pros and cons o( the 22 beJlol measures will be presented al 8 p.m. Ptfonday , Oct. 3(), in the UCJ Social Science Lectur1 Hall. Junior Woman'a Club will at· for the hospital. luncheon Oct 29 A demonstration workshop tend the Area Conference in ' · · on "contrived" flowers will be\;;;;;;.;~~;;;;;;~;:;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~~c::d'd~~~ka~1si.~; Dental Auxiliary Garden Club ~'"';.~M~daui~ ~;,!;;~ D'l'ER! president, will speak. Members of the Women's A Halloween bridge lunch· Garden center on the Orange eon will be staged by the County Fairground!'. L A . Auxiliary to the Southern as mo gas Calitomia Dental A!sociation Laguna Beach Garden Club •t V noon Tuesday, Oct. 31, in the oters Dancing, games and a lavish will attend the American Den-Woman's Clubhouse, Laguna YWCA western.style buffet diMer ta! Association convention In Beach. Mrs. Irving R . Orange Coast League o( will set the mood for the sec-San ~--· Oc -N Westwood is accept ing Women Voters will hear a AIR STEP -BERNARDO -MR. KIME L SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS MAGOESIAN -MISS AMERICA VINER CASUALS -LIA Edw.rd1 -Gerb.rich -llobin Hood PF fly•r1 -U.S. IC.01 -S11lflm•r1ttM C1~•io D1nc1 Sho11 01nc1 Weer by 01111k i11 c. ........ SMes .... Clli. .. An evening of roreign food ond SaddJeback Go Iden ricul\;lSCO t. ~.,.. ov. 2· reservations. panel of educators at the next and entertainment entitled Horseshoe Casino and Dance taking with them a booth meeting planned for 9:45 a.m. Nowhere cruise . will be Night in the Mrporter Inn, depicting their activiti<s. T orana 'lbursday. Od. 26, In the Com· pr~ by the Santa Ana Saturday, Oct. 28, sponsored These include helping with mwUty Ch ur ch Congreg.a- Pair Sets Nuptials YWCA from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. by Las Amiga!I de San Jose. clinics, raising scholarship Manuel Edward De Leon, tic.na.1, Corona del Mar. Friday, Oct. 27. The party will begin at 7:30 funds, pre1e11ting puppet -and educator, will give Speakers will be Caroll 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA lncluded will be Mexican, p.m. and herald the arrival of shows · and dental h e a l t b a lectw-e demonstration at the Creighton, d I r e c to r of 5 4 a . 2 7 7 a 'lbe engagement of Debbie Anderson to Robert E. Dilani bas been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken~ neth W. Anderson; Balboa Island. Her fiance's patents are Edward Dlfani, Costa Mesa, and Mn. Charles Dole, Middle Eastern. Samoan and • IANKAME••CA•D . • MAST•• c:'MA••• • European!ood.TiclrelsareSO ! -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_'.'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:-'. cents and are available at the 1- Riverside. A Feb. 17 wedding in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Owrcb, Newport Beach is being planned. YWCA. Del ph ians Melvin BeUi, noted lawyer, lecturer and author, will be guest speaker for the fall assembly of the Delphl•n Society in the Newporter Inn A KT&duate of Olatsworth1----------I Higb School, Miss Anderson Is a senior at San Diego State Universlly when! !be al!illated with Alpha Chi Omega. Her fiance, a graduate of La Mirada High School, attended Riverside City College. Golden Year Marked Eight children , 30 grandchildren and four great· grandchildren were among more than 200 guests at- tending the dinner party marking the 50th anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. James F. Lit- tle or Anaheim in s t . Joa c h i m's Catholic Oiun:lt, Costa Mesa. Mn. Vincent Qiok of Costa Mesa. the honorees' daugbter, was hostm for the party. eo. hosts were he!-brothers and sl!ters. Assisting were the Mmes. Simon Gassman , Anaheim ; Frank Hall, Alhambra; Robert Jones, sacramento: CarlCall, Southgate and sons James. Anaheim; Patrick , La Puente, and Michael, Mlssloo Viejo. 1be couple were married June 1, 1922. Teenage grandchildren or the couple entertained with guitars and voca.1s. Guests traveled from as rar as the East Coast for the event. Perfect beauty-maker the 'MAT CHMAKER' 'O'LACE' Vassarette· ..., • Cups contoured With Dupont Dacron• polyesterflberfiff ••• for the soft heavy er sllghtfy m1·nus bust. lmproved lightweight underwi rlna: eliminates poke through. Lycra• spandex back. Style 4325. B,C32-38. Your faYOf· ltacolorl. 6.50, D·cup 7.50. •OBE5 LINGER II Glass Dryer 1 .._-.;::~~ In the absence ol lintless I 01•0L11 clothes, use newspaper to dry ••As glass -windows, tumblers, 2737 E. Cootl Hithw•y crystal chandeliers. Coro11• d.l M•r-.Ph. 673-1950 • ltnkA.....,klnl • MlttH Ch•rt• 24 YMn Ill St1'119 Ll(:llfk>fl The Page is Ba ck! Go touslod or •leok. curly or stroi9ht, cosu•I or sophisticotod. Our holr ••peris will creoto just for you tho po90 stylo you lovo. Page Cut and Style from $8.00 F•l1 11 th1 perf1ct till!• to 1cqu1h1I youn11f wlffl our lu11ury IOf'¥1t•• ••• 1..d It ,,.ci1f 1-ptlqa YOll t•11't 1ffe1d te p••• upl M.tc"" .••. 11 .00 htRc9N ..•• 12.00 It••• Atlli ••• , S1 .SO I er.Tl. eEAurv sALoNs . ;,7 -AND WIG BOUTIQUE IOUTH COAST PU.IA 1100 ,,,,. ~'"' the M1y C..I APPOINTMENTS NOT AL AYS NEcESSARY 26" x 37 Ft. * .. Jumbo Roll , · Giftwrap 94¢ , 80Sq.FL ' • ROLL -* 26" x 12 Ft. ~ .• Embossed Foil 94ci:ROLL Fou r Rolls 30" Embossed Foll Glftwrap Pack $119 Pkg. ol 4 (25 Sq. FL) ' ~ ~ . . 19" American Ceda r Wreath $34A9 Worth $10 E CH . 16" Boxwood · Wreath "Imperial" Slip-on Reflecto rs Reg. 79¢ 59¢ Pkg. of 50 Replacement Bulbs ~~ci:Pkg.0110 9 Ft. American Holly Garland with Cedar Sprays • $6-$7 Eloewhere . 1· $349 .. ...,. EACH '. Fou r Rolls *. ·" -.. . . . . ' 8,000 unusual hon day items ••• many you've nGYer seen before. So many beautiful ideas, you'll warit lo get started right away. Your free Sale Catalog Is wailing for you at our store. Just fill out this coupcn and bring it in to get your copy. But hurry. This catalog promJaea ·---------------- t.HWlffll .. • "'•tribe• •I tht 0. ... ,.1 Miia& ·- to be our most J>Ol'lll• yeti llTOAEHOURS Monday thru Frldrr.10;0Q..9:00 8alU!dlly: 9!00•8:0b Sunday : 12:00-$;00 lt4-JJl4 •• ' All 0VT THIS COUPON ANO BRINO rT TO ~ fQt '(()UR FREE CHRISTMAS CAT ALOO... • ·~ • . l~ .. ... \ . •. ' • " ' " • • • !• --• • \ :J.2 DAILY PILOT Everyone LUVs a Party A festive supper and ttse.rved seats for the Fifth Forum International Horse Show were enjoyed by guests at the LUV-IN party sponsored by LUV !Leukemia Oltimate Victory). Discussing the horse show are Oert to right) Mrs. Clinton M. Hoose Jr. of Newport Beach, Mrs. Allen E. Neil or Rancho Santa Fe and Hoose, who were among guests. • fl , f;'1' /!,ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ol..ucct ol.Jl'li RESTAURANT 8911 Adams at Magnolia, Huntingion Beach, O••"' lfl• 11r~HI OtU OIKfll-• iR (lll!Of"lf. Stilt In Gtnl .... -ll re•t• DoUy 10.a: frl. 10-9; h11. 10-4i : CIOIH M-.19•1-44'' IMl"OllTio --,yr,,, l"iK•1U. tr Mert ROrf.AiiO ::::.:'~,,. Sl.89" HARO •t<J. •LN E1Plre. 10/U SALAMI s1.&9" ITALIAN'~C~A~N=N=o~L~I ~o=R--.-... ----4-,-99-. CHOCOLATE ECLAI RS »c _.,ft Kltmel New crinkle patent with dress heel and handsome clip. $17.90 Sln1 1.10 Brown Sii&1: S-1 0 Widths: lA·EW FUNI Scotty'• a casual new fan shoe. nd 1!'11 so comfort able! Just one of the -~.,;/. exciting, col.orful new Heel Huggers ~ • Fall collection. See them ell, And walk softly iD faahloa. Si111 5.to I h1 AA·D KOd lt1ffi1r •11d 111ecf1 comblnet/011. W idth1 AA·O Cri11•I• P1t111t S11ecf• co111bi11•tio11 $17.90 Color1: Ten/lrown Fresh young Spring styling in smart Crinkle Pat~nt. You1\ walk softly in fashion when you wea.r Heel Hugge rs. We've got a big selection of styles and colors for you to try on. • Comt' i11 tod.ly. _()_ • 2300 HARBOR • COSTA MESA HARBOR CENTER • 546-6775 Open Sun. 12 'tll 5 !!!! - Wheels Gone But ... ALL I tESE MACHINES ON SALE! SAVE95°0 OPf'..0.HIK:ll GOU>(N TOUCH l SEW· le"'"'9 mtCh•nt w·i~. ~•t· 1n.e1. E1clut1Ve,PuSh·bunon. drOO·•f\ lront ooao n , 10 s1re1ch·st1!Ch~s. ou11t .. n bu11onholer 1t11·:ouch 11oric teed 1y•1em. E1eg101. conte1T1oc.u·1 "E'&~t••· i+e!d" ca1Hn1t SALE13500 SALE 68°0 "9g.79" lleg.1411" l!ILll1: llftlC""•'*'"-"• .... , ....... l•tl•t• .. ,,.,,., .. lr<>~I -··· *-ilf'1"9 !I"<' .... !~•t1'--•llOl'IO, qw ~I !w l1·•(,•••1 "'0•t"'fnt L Q~'•t QM ............... Nl01 fASH10H MATl• zr~ZIQ ..... ,no rn1Cn1ne. S."" Doift- llOlt~ t11.1non,, mer.c:11 Iii""''"'' wil"°"1 1111e,..,..n1 .. E•,1<4"'t' 0•01)-"1 ltOM DObD•" Ind r~ C)fHHI btir ,on1•0I !tJI • u11•tty ol 180flt w..gt\tt. Rolls Along Suspicion FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON FALL FABRICS ASSOITID By ERMA BOMBECK I don't know what a new bike did for the kid who stole ii from my son. But I know wbat it is doing to me and I don't like it. I find myself looking with suspicion into the eyes of every child who rides a brown SchwiM !~peed and thinking Ir I stare at him long enough he will "break." I find myself rehearsing speeches in the bathroom mir- ror that Pat O'Brien as an Irish priest gave to the prison inmates 21> years ago. to see if it is still where you left it At least three times a day, 1 check the bike to see if anyone has been tampering with the tires. stolen the light, lifted the gears or swiped the book rack ot the basket U there is no moon, I bring it into lhe house and park it by the dining room table. If it sleeps out in the garage, il is secured by three chains and two locks. The other night u I was oil- ing the bicycle locks and testing them, my husband said, "Look, we've all been pretty busy and under a strain lately. Why don't we grab a "'cekend and go camping?" "And who is going to bike- sit?" r asked. AT WIT'S END a couple of tires held together by bolts and nul!I, rust and chrome.'' "That's better," he said. "Let's go in the ~ and plan our trip." CORDUROY FABRICS SALE 97,yd. ~~:9 A l111h t rt'•Y of pi11wal11, thic• '11' Hii11 •nd ••Y•tt-w•le cou~11roy1. 100~ tot• ton. 44/45" wldt. MACHINI WASHAILI AND DITAILI ....... ~ .............. ,.._...., Slt!Q§R --- COSTA MESA Bristol and Sunflower South Coast Pla:r.11 540-263) .... ----•A,..,...,.... olntE llHGE'fl aMIHMf. COSTA MESA 2300 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Center Kl9-1195 Ml I heard my son drive the bike into the garage, 1 ran to the door and yelled out hysteric a 11 y , "OON'T\l.,"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~"""""""""""""""j,jl FORGET TO LOCK YOUR T s ..J -' N Q . 8~~~:~~ it. n Just takes ry aturuuy s ews uiz time. I accost perfect strangers in the supermarket and on buses and without to much as an in- troduction say, "~1y son had his bicycle stolen," and launch into the entire sordid story of how he got up at 4 a.m. every morning to deJiver papers and how he now gel!I a hernia irom carrying them on his back, etc. etc. etc. "Maybe the Walthers could,,_ ______________________ ;;;;;;;_;;;; ______ ;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;_;;;; __ But worst of all. 1 find myself guarding the new repla<:t!ment bike like the con- tenlS of the Louvre. ~1y hus- band compares it to the new baby anxiety complex where you ge t up five times a night keep an eye on things," he of· fered . "Hah They don't even bring their bicycles in when it rains. Not on your sweet tintype." "You can't go through life mothering a bicycle," said my husband patiently. ' ' T h e s e things happen. You are begin- ning to regard that bike as something human!" "Don't be ridiculous," t said. "To me a bicycle is just Peering Around MlSS JAN Harrod, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. L. liarrod of Corona del Mar, will leave in January to study at the American Fashion College of Swi tzerland . VACATIONING for a few days in Santa Barbara were Newport Beacb residents, the Messrs. and Mmes. Herbert S. Sealts, E. J. Wilson and John H. Porter; South Laguna, Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Smith, and Huntington Beach, Mr. and h1rs. Jerrold Block. ICE /~ SKATING IS POISE &. POSTURE An Ice skating course of l9SIOM with the famous, Ice Ca pad ea method glvee you or your chlld polae and posture tn1ln lng, rh)'1hm and coon:Unatlon. REGISTER NOW MESA VERDE SHOPPING CENT!R 270 I Herbor Blvd. at Ad•m•, Costa Mei• 92616 T tiephono 979-8880 THE SEMI-ANNUAL LA·Z·BOV SALE RECLINA·ROCKER SALE NOW, SAVE FROM s35 TO s70 • ••And enjoy the famous La-Z-Boy ~ecllna-Rocker of your c.holce. Any style on this page, In any Of rna_ny t:'brlcs or~lnyls. All In~ brilliant range of colors. Only La-Z-Boy gives you this faultless comb1nat1on o! recline and rocking ease -Just lean back Into the relaxing angle of your choice, er use as the finest platform rocker. Now is the time to enjoy this often imitated but never dupll· cated combination of luxurious comfort and ·carefree good looks. Quantities are limited so be among the first. · ' reg. 159.50 ... YOU SAVE 51.50 reg.199.50 .,. YOUSAVE41.50 reg.199.50 •.. YOUSAVE4l.50 • 1865 HARBOR BLVD. Downtown Coda Mesa Phone 548·5131 ' Nurses Answer By LAURIE KASPER Of .. Dellr fllltt '"" NUl'lel In the 0 r a n g e County-Long Beach ar<a feel the n«d w learn matt about emergency measures a n d crislJ lntervenUon, according to a aurvey conducted recently by tile Regional Medical Programs, Area VUI , based at UC!. "My guess is a lot of nurses feel itiadequate 1n this," ex· plained Naomi Payne , coordinator of the continuing nursing education program. emersencles ln the home and neighborhood ti well u the hospital. Mn. Payne la repoMlble for devek>pina: 1 program of courses IA> fulllll tile n«da of registered nunes who will be requited by state law to have completed additional educa- tion before they can be licens-- ed In 1977. CLASSES OFFERED Although some c I a s s e s already are being o!fen!d in the community colleges, she plans to have others offered at UCJ, some through the ex- tension program, a I t h o u g b none will be credited toward a degree, by the 1973 school year. was answered by 39 percent of the 10,100 ~ it wu sent to, was en tn11.Jal effort to learn what the runes feel their educational needs ond ln- temt. .... An advisory com- mittee of nursing loaders In the area also has been formed. "Wt hope IA> tailor the pro- gram to the nursea 83 much as possible," Mrs . Payne 6.- plained. Ula Maples, n u r s I n g coordinator for the Rl\!P, however, pointed out that the questionnaire resulted in an "interest survey rather than true needs." Although little interest was expressed for geriatrics, she explained u one example, Educational Survey for nurses trained and in- terested in this area. 'Ibe majority of I ho s'e sunieyed are medic.al surgical staff t'IW'SH working In a hosplW. About three-fourths of the 2S percent who are cur- reJltly unemployed Intend w return to work. l\1ost of the nurses preferred the morning or evening hou rs of a weekday and Anaheim wu their favored location for the classes ·which might be in the form of workshops, seminars, in-service programs and' short-term and extension courses. INTERESTS Social issues, as drug abuse and relationshiP' with pa1ient and family , rated highly In terms of the nurses' lnlerest as well as areas which are ex-per~ change, including lntnvenou1 therapy and techntque, intensi ve c a r e , pharmacology and care of the coronary patient. But the runes also said they would like to have offered classes on subjects not directly related to the patient, as basics of rupervislo n, unlt management, fundamentals of tc.aching-learnlng a n d in- terviewing akills. Mrs. Payne said they att considering courses oo all of ' - the oorses' Interests as well as a course for bo$1t.d.l in-service educators. Many of these peo- ple. she explained, are oot leacher.i and don't know how to set up a program although much of the lnformalion nurses need could be provided through the hospitab. Jn add.1tion, she said, they may offer some classes for special interest groups. One she mentioned would be for 9Chool health nurses in cooperation with the Dental Society on what is good dental care for children. Other programs mentioned by the nurses ~·hich were not included in the questionnaire 'A't"re lahoratorv tests. nutr1 · 11011. prevent.alive medicine, med i ca I lru.tnirntntation. prepared labor and delivery, pediatric intcnslvr c a re , epidemiology, SpanlSh f o r nurses, community agencies and resources and the ex- tended role of the nurse. The extended role is one of the biggest things now hap- pening in the nursing field, ~!rs. Maples said. She is v•orking on !he possibility of a program being offered in cooperation v•ith the nursing school at Cnliforni a State Uni\'ersitv, Long Beach and the UCI School o l ri.tedicine. DAILY PILOT S Clinic Set For Kidney D1etitiaM, public he a I th nurses. social WOl"kttS and other persons lntttcsted in severe kidnty disease w11l con· centrale their atttntlon on the ·ream Approach to Clink'al and Nutritional Aspects or Uremia during a 'f\'Orkshop Saturday, Oct. 21. The all-day conference in Orange County ,\1edical Cenler Aud itorium \\'i ll start at 8.30 a.m. Speakers \\"ill dt.SCUss the social and emu!l00<11 problems resu lting from renal failur,, dietary and medit"al treat- 1nenlS and the interaction between ho1ne and hospital. Ahtmugh the request& for courses in this topic area suPj>risecl her somewhat. she aai'd It Is probably because nunea ar< being called upon more often to help i n The nine-page survey, which there i.9 a "tremendous need" -----"----------------------------------------------- Variety Not Spicy Love Menu Reads No Substitutions, Please DEAR ANN LANDERS, Sorry, I don't agree with your comments lo the wife who lnfonned her husband that sbe gets the most out ol their Jovemaking when she pretends he's someone else. You said everyone fantasizes to a certain degree ii.nd It's nothing to become unglued about -it's the same as daydreaming at night. If a wife has to think about Ryan O'Neal when she's with her husband the ]east she can do is keep her mouth shut. I would not be very flattered if I discovered that the reason my husband . was having such a great time was because be was pretending I was somebody else. If he confessed such a thing to me I'd tell him that it I wasn't exciting enough he could go find someone who was. \Ye hear too much these days about weirdos, switch-hitters, wife-swapping, peep shows, naked men in centerfolds and kooky sex practices. What we need in this country is a champion for decency and morality. I had hoped It would be you, Ann Landers. Sorry you let me down. -NO SUBSTITUTES NEEDED DEAR NO SUB: The bu.man mind Is sucll an Intricate piece of machinery that Pl one can uy esactly bow it operates• particularly In &be area of aexual responses. What turns a penon oo b a mysterious mix of everytbiilg be ever saw, read, beard and dreamed about. plus assorted bU• ud pieces, so private they are &bared wtlh no oae. Not everyone can tolente eomplete .,....., and frank talk. So, I agree with yoo, honey, some people SHOULD keep their m..U.. lhul DEAR ANN LANDERS' Three years ago I clipped my favorite column and carried it in my wallet until it is ju.fl: barely legible. You called it "How to Get Through the Day," and It helped me more than anything I have ever read in my life. Will you play it again, Sam? - LINDA DEAR LINDA: WIUI pleasme. Just for today I will live through the next 1% hours and n&t tackle my whole life probltm at ooce. Just for today I wW Improve my mind. I Y.iU learn sometblng useful. I wUI read something that requires effort, thought ~d concentration. Just for today I wW be agrttable. I will kick my beat. speak in a well modulated voice, be com1eouJ and con- siderate. Just for today I wW DOt fbtd fault with friend, relative or coUeacue.. I wUl not try 1o change or Improve anyone but myself. Just for &odaJ I will i.ve a program.. I might not follow ft uact.ly, but I will have It. 1 will save myself from two enemies -hWTY and indecision. Just for today I wUI e:.:erclse my character In three ways. I wUl do a pod turn and keep It a secttt. If anyone finds out, it Won't count. Just for today I will do two things I dod't want to do, just for u:erclse. Jut for today I wlll be unafraid. Especially will I be an.afraid lo enjoy what ts beamfuJ and believe that u I give 1o tbe world, tbe world will give to mt. There la a big differ<nce belween cold and coot. AM Landers shows you how to play it cool without freezing people out in her booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50 cent.!I In coin and a long, self-addres&ed, st.amped envelope to the DAILY PILOT. DON'T WAIT TILL IT'S roo LATE GET YOUR HALLOWEEN ' LAROI 'ALICTION IN OUR GARDIN SHOP JCPenn~y 24 FASHION ISLAND NEWPOIT1 BEACH ONLY This King Reg. $199.95 Wonderful, restful sleeping luxury is yours on this (iant 6 It wide and 7 ft k>ng King-size mattreS!'and 2 box springs! 0tl(able tempered steel inner· $ spring unit Crown Flex Center s~ tor added comfo1 aml beautiful =olj.quilted rovert focilUs Df111thk ... Dltb~ 811111 Unhtard of uvintJ an your, oi;i tllil <.:..-tOl'lll*I rtl IOCll'l'lf lluffft--sill 1111(. • Flfldcrest no-Wtin 111n1 ot ai-lilt top lheet • Fitldaut no-inlll K'1111 « ~ silt fitted bottom sl!HI • 2 Kin1 or ~ silt boh!er pillows • 2 pillow cases • kin( or l>Mu111 slit mtlll frame on ~ ""•• & Double Bonus kill tr btt11 Headbolrd plus qullted btd- 5Pl"ead • Twil tr f11t: Heacl>cwd lrlll lllltlf "-on etSJ'.folllllf castm ••• All this and always FREE DELIVERY! ............... d ..... _ ·-·s225 Mliioil '~ wit!L multi -quilttd eoom. ltttLlohl tH ll•Ult ltftWS! Reg. $329.95 NOW HERCULOH9 f1bric . BELAIR F• a. Sol• 11 • t.,.rly·1ttnictlw prkt. OptM • ·---... -·11a irlto Ml Jiu bid with ~ulnt Or!ho butt_. trtt m1ttress. In 1 v1.f!ty of flllflct. l lfl'· rile buyl Ako • Lo.1 Sul DI' In S4.iJllt lkt.- EDFORD "' Sin -=· """""'"""' • • """ Reg. $229.95 t1lul Sol .. ~protectld ,_ "'"' •t I '"""· ,_ "'"'""' *1 7 I 95 SUPER QUEEN SIZE The BELMONT .. ,.,_~,..-Reg. $279.95 1 ¥U••l1 of color CCfllblr\ltiom:. Ort!lo hwr· ~pr1"R 1111ttre1s, [is?-ttlt·la-cttln bee~. lllO '1 ' I 8 •n Full Sue or lovt SUt Mattlunr chair Mck I tJlnp. GelluiM OJtho matlms. Alao ..... Mlfdllnl dllir ......... In ~ GuHft sin f/11 LOIN SMt. Mltdlhlc tltlir Mi!IDIL Cllllllfllet• ... 2 Ol1tlo ~ 2• =,\";;;: ~:? = t:.:::. •11a ...,.... 2 bollltn Md 2 _ ......... ... Mlt *"" bllltl .. The nation's largest chain ORANGE FOUNTAIN VALLEY 2445N.TuslinAV9. SANTA ANA and l1cro11 froll'I Ori~ Mell l "'-· •11.0111 161 l I Harbor Blvd, l10tM1 et bU11t~I Ntrl .. 1 ... y'• ~., l :tt-'4$10 You Can Only Buy Ortho M attresses at Ort.ho Stores .'olL?llRY 1811 Wost Lincoln Ave. ltlw••11 fuclid ••1tl llroo~lrl1H 1I I A .. •111111 J111! •••• ,, F.d M•rt I pt,of't > 7l6°lltO .. ,lt.,,,, Otlu.l:e lllOCleu1 OtlllJI -now at ttla 1 ... 111p1 ' 4-ill Candlowood Ave. 1 Ca.,dlewood Shops 1.,,011 h-e"' l••••e•d C•"*••' '7ien•• 614 41 )4 OPEN DAILY I0-9, SAT . I0-6, SUN 12·6 ·FREE DELIVERY· CREDIT TER MS AUAILA OLE • BANKAMERICARD, MASTER CHARGE . . . • . ' ' • 1 ·I j -. " ., j ' • l • • • • 34 DAILY PILOT s Jobs, ln<!o11te BofA Sees 'Good' State P1~ospects SAJO: FRANCISCO 1AP 1 - The Bank of America s;a\d Califo rnia's cc on!' It\ l c pr°' spects are "very good" for 1973, with projcclM Jnc-reases ~n employment arid ~rsonal income. The Statl!'s largest t>ank forecast an 8.5 pe_rt·f·rn '"' crease in person.al income. nnd an unempl ovn1ent ';i\r averaging 5.5 J)CrCt'.lll , ;'IJ!;1 111st 6 percent ln im "SOW 1'HAT the ::lrl'O'<nacf' dustry has tumt>d the corner." the-repart s a id. ··the dominant ft~nturt'. l'lf 1 h e California econon1v Viii! hp it-. slow rate of popt1la11 nn gf'0\\-1h." Under slo\\1ed population growth and the accompanyin~ i n c r ' a s e in comJ>('titive pressures. the current rate of business formations appears unsustainable. the bank said . Next year's profit growth also \11iU bt' impeded by higher costs for money. materials and ma npo"·er . The bank said it also ex- pects most industries and ateas of California to end 1972 wilh employment gains paced by trade, services and rini!nce, insurance and real estate. "ALLO\\'ING FOR price growth, teal personal income should increase 5.2 percent in 1972, almost equalling the reeord gro"·th of 1968 and well above the 4.7 percent ave rage rate of increase duting the I960's, ·· said the forecast. A real personal income in- crease of about 4.S percent was projected for 1973, but both employment and income FORGET IT AND IGNORE IT ! ! ·!·· ·~ ' • . . . \, . by TERRY GRANT. R.Ph This l!I the wisest rule to follow whenever a weU- meaning friend or relativ~ - \\•ho does nnt ha\·e a med1ca1 degree -off{'n; )'OU some "advice" on how to th:!al ftn Illness \\'ilhout havin): to bother calllnJ:: a doctor. Such advice is ttlmost always in· correct, even thou~h it . i!I orrered \\'Ith the best 111- tC'ntion!I. By heeding a friend'!! "medical advice" and not going 10 a doctor. you could lose much valuable time in getting thl." proper treatment for your condition. Today's dod01'9 spend many, many years In ml-dical school and in in1crnships before they hf-come qualified to practice medicinl.". And unless your friend ha.& ha.d identfcal training and experience, you sMiuld forta:l't Bnd ianore his advlct> and contact a doctor 1r1stcad. YOU OR YOUR oocron CAN PHONE US \vhen you need a delivery. \Ve v.'ill de· liver promptly without ex- tra chargt>. A g\el'lt many people rely on us for thl'lr health nN'd3. \Ve \\•r lcome reQuesU for delivery sl'rvlce and charge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY 351 Hospltal RO&d Htwport IMch 642· lSIO FrM O.llvery FINANCE Tax Shelters Aren't For Everyone Are They For You? Tax 1helter 1pociali1t.. will oonduc:t. edllC8.tional and CQn• trovenial di1CU11iona pl'ffe!ltiDJ the vtried positive 11nd nept.ive 1111pecb of tu aheltArr ln•e1tinc iD Redland•/San Bernardino, Lont Bee.ch, Santi! Ro11 And Walnut Cttt.k. .. ........,. i.. tu 111e1tw .,.wi.t .... • 1""'"'1 .... 11, ,.... ...... CPA "'"'· •-lkn ., •• ttt. .n. cettte Mel ,.., _...,. .,_ .t ten t.helter hin1hll*lttl wlll ,.mo1,.... Tbt prosram "'111 cover: • What to look for In 1ood and bad propnu • 1'111:1leg{1la.tion11nd !ta eft'ed:a on 1972 tax ehelter in,•ot.rri•nla • When and why you ahould or ehollid not inveat in tax 11h.altert • Wba.t t.YP9 o! i'\VC9tor i1 quali6td- fimncil.lly Md emotinnall1 • How th• ht1b Ut d«luet.ion1 •n obtaioe4 ~ U • 110 ch•,.• for the mMthap IMia J111nOD •u.octlnr will ~i•• • tnntc:dft ot UM proenuo. MMilnp ai.. eoordinat.ed b7 Mitchum. JOI* I& T•pWtoo.lecorpon.ted,member1 of th• N...,York Stock lbchdp. Jnc. ...........,,.. .... .,.... f ...... Ocl.14 • l:JO , .. --.... -. • .....,it F• "'-9. W id.I 014J 1*WJ41 &.urTI ..... ,..,..,., "'°" l • 7:JO,.. lMdl ..... ,...... Kitt .. cw ... wr..-.i.-. .., ........ • lrlfl.: t101) f84$ UNI• aue11 T.....,, OU. 7' '~ J>M lfiNl11'olfl•~ltt'llilt ..... MOO L hcMlt C.. ~ '•~-.-~Olll5t7'4tl WAUftlT ClllU • .......,.,,""·I• J:JO , .. Oflfldl Ml-IC lv!Nl11& t Altafllld1 «"'· 0111M1 ,_.....,,wW..: (Ila) N1·110D • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST . " ~ .. • • I .. '- • " Octobtr Wednesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Kis.smger Talks Push Up Market • Complete Oosing Prices-A "'llerican Stock Exchange List DAILY·PILOT Dltl V PILOT 37 Gullett, Holtzman Duel • Ill Twilight Zone OAKLAND (AP) -The ClnclnnaU Reda and Oakland A's entered the "Twtllght zone" agaln tonight for tbe On TV Tonight Channel 4 a t 5:15 fourth game of the 1972 World Series. And because o1 It, both teams looked forward to anolher low·scoring game following Cincinnati'! 1~ tr I ump h Wednesday night that cut Oakland's series lead to 2-1. "The twilight made the difference for me," said winning pitcher Jack Bill· Ingham after gaining the victory with nlntb-lrmlng help hum Clay Carroll. "You'll see another good one tonight with Doo Gullett pitching," said Cin· cinnati manager Sparky Ander10n. "~1aybe the rest will be one-run games too," said Oakland manager Dick Williams, who'll throw Ken Holtzman at the Reda. The first two games of the best-af.7 series were played in Cincinnati last weekend, but the 3-2 and 2·1 Oakland suc- cesses were fashioned without any assistance from natW"e. When the Series switched to the Oakland Coliseum this week, the starting time for the oontest in California waa 5:30 p.m. Tbat'a the wont Ume for a hit· ter because of the fast-fading light. Clnclnnati slugger JohMy Bench, who went O.for-4 Wednesday night and struck out three times, bad been apprehensive about the conditions. "I hate to hit in the twilight in Oakland," he had said. But while it hurt the major leagues' top home run hitter, it also didn't do too much for the Oakland team. "l don't usually strike out that many bDtTurs," Slid Bllilngllam, who fanned seven Athletics. "The twilight no doubt helped me." There was no twilight, however. when Billingham tired In the ninth. The journeyman right-bander, who gave up three hits tbrougb eight Innings, started thtl n1nlh by throwing three straight balls to Mike Epstein while the crowd of 49,4t>l at ihe Coli.sewn chWed. Andenion then decided that Billingham had gone far enough. Carroll then came in to preserve that shaky lead by getting Epstein on a bouncer, Sal Dando on a soft line drive U,.I Te'"""' and George Hendrick on an easy hil to the mound. "Jack was tired," said Anderson, "1 should have taken him out when he went 2-0. not 3-0." Billingham was tired. be admitted. 11J had pitched eight strong innings already and I didn't waitt to come out of tbe game," said Billingham. "You never like to leave in a .situation lite that." But while he was in there, the right· tu.nder who has an WlSpectacular .500 lifetime record was a superman as far as Oakland wu concemed. He fed the A's a steady diet of sinker balls and allo""'ed only thrtt flies during blJ tenure. ''They took a lot of strikes low and away," he said, "1bey were taking an awful lot of them.•• The onJy hiLI that tht tall righl·hander gave up were a bunt single by Joe Rudi in the fourth and lnfield hlts by Dick Green iJ'I the fifth and pinch-hitter Gonzalo ll.1arquez In the seventh. His only jam came in the sixth Inning. when the A's had men on first and third with none out and the bases loaded with oi.e man gone. But Billingham finished off the A's by getting Dando on a rally- k11ling double play. • W as Goi ng to Quit $50 Raise by LA ·saved Billingham OAKLAND (AP J -Jack Billingham once told the Los Angeles Dodgers to fork up a $50 a month raise or he was going back to pumping gas and changing oil in his dad's Orlando, Fla., filling sta- tion. FortunateJy for the Cincinnati Reds, the Dodgers kicked in with the money, and Billingham forgot his gas pumping threat to continue a baseball career. Billingham remembers being s o nervous the day he started his first minor league ga me I.hat he became nauseated and thre w up. But, the 29-year· old right-hander pitched with poise and savvy Wednesday night as he rescued the National Leilgue champions from the brink of disaster in the World Series. ti..i;," said the happy, bot surprisingly tj'llm Billingham. "I was engaged and pretty disgusted after four years of struggling.'' Billingham gulped down a can of beer v.·hile relating the story of the incident that eventually led him to the Oakland Coliseum and the World Series. "I called Fresco Thompson (director of the Dodgers' rarm system) and told him J wanted more money and out of Santa Barbara. He said he couldn 't do it. J repeated. 'Give me the $50 and get me out ol here or I quit.' DICK GREEN STOPS AN OAKLAND THREAT IN THE THIRD INNING WITH THIS STAB AND SUBSEQUENT THROW TO FIRST. "f was playing for Santa Barbara in 1964, when I thought seriously of quit· "It was a week or so late( when a San· ta Barbara club official telephoned me and said, 'I hate to tell you this but you're going to St. Petersburg.' And I got the 50 bucks a month, too. It was all uphill from there." Sports in Brief Emerson Posts Victory; Ex-Ram Pleads Innocent VANCOUVER, B. C. -Newport Beach's Roy Emerson , playing in only his third tournament of this year'3 World Champion.ship of Tennis series, advanced to the quarter-finals of the $50,000 in· tematlonal tournament Wednesd ay by defeating Graham Stilwell of Britain 6--0, 6--7, 6-1 . OCC Freshman (Age 43) Can't Stop Running By CRAIG SllEFF Of ""-Dal" "ltlt Sl.tf When Orange Coast College won a cross country meet Tuesday quite a few eyebrows were raised. It was surprising for two reasons: (I) 'Ibe Pirates had not won a con· ference meet since 1969. (2) 43-year-old Owen Gonnan was the Bucs' leading runner. 1be Latter point was probably the most start.ling -not because Gonnan was OCC's top runner -but that he was run- ning at all. Connan, a transplanted Englishman now living in Costa Mesa, bas been run- ning the past five years and just lhis summer competed for the Uniled States Veterans track and field team at a pair of meets in Europe. And he's got a truCk load of medals and certificates earned from various AAU meets that he competes ln on weekends. But Gorman had no thoughts at all about competing on the collegiate level when he enrolled at OCC in September just to advance his education. But a professor friend of Gonnan's - Norm Lumian -suggested the idea to OCC cross country coach Jim Mcllwain who then contacted Gorman. Thus today he's probably the oldest collegiate freshma'l long distance runner in America. The transition from AAU and veterans meets to th e collegiate level hasn't been that difficult for Gorman-the big prob- lem is fitting It into bia busy schedule. A plwnber during the day , Gorman usually doesn't start wor1dng out until about 4 o'clock -about a half hour after OCC's running drills have begun. After 1-Y. hours or running (about 10 miles a day), Gorman has just enough tlme to go home, say hello to his wlf~. Jvy, take a shower, eat dinner and uy goodbye to his wife. That occurs four night.a a week when he must attend classes from 7~10. Gorman rtadlly admits that the pace sometimes can get a lltUe hectic, e!pecially after a hllrd day on the job. "But when 1 ch&nge into my nmnlng gear I fee.I llke " different person." Gorman Is curn:nUy taklng EnglJsh, history, science and fint aid. "At my age I'm 1drong on the first aid ," he says. then qu ickly adds that arter a long day It '! pretty easy to nearly fall asleep In some claMe~!pectally In English. "Tho,. damed English, I wlsh they'd never have invented It," quips: Gorman. The 35-year-old veteran th~n spoke or his age and the effect it has had on his game and lifestyle. "You know, yon !lo• down wbfn you get older." said Emerson. "I've only played in a few tournaments this year. I've been doing a lot of work at Mount Washington in New Hampshire coaching adults. I do about six hours a d&y and I'm really enjoying the change." Arthur Ashe broke the service of Australian Fred Stolle once in the first set and twice in the 9eCXlOd to win 6-4, 7.5 and advance to the quarter-finals. Brian FaJrlle of New Zealand won 4-6, 6-0, li--1 over Alan Stone of Australia and Tom Okker of the Netherlands downed Cllff Richey of Sarasota , Fla., 7-6, 6-0. .... SYRACUSE, N.Y.-Charles Janarette. a former tack)e for four professional football teams, pleaded innocent to driv· ing while intoxicated after his automobile struck and killed a pedestrian early Wednesday. Proctor Lobdell, 31, of Syracuse, was hit as he walked tn a traffic lane of Interstate Route 81 in the downtown sec- tion, police said. Janerette, 33, of suburban Liverpool, was arraigned in city traffic court several hours later and was ordered to reappear later this month. Judge Parker J. Stone set bail at $2.500. Janerette, a Penn State University graduate, played for the Los Angeles Rams in 1960. .... LOS ·ANGELES -Bill Flett scored his second goal of the night with 31 secoodl le.ft to play to break a 3-3 deadloc;lt.aod Wt the Philadelphia Flyers to a 4-3 National .Hockey League victory over tbe Loi Angeles Kings Wednesday night It was the fifth consecutive defeat for the Kings, who have won only one of their seven games while the Flyers even- ed their record at Z..2--1. ' .... OAKLAND -Dave Bristol, who already has managed ln both the American and National Leagues, is the choice to be the new manager of the Philadelphia Phillies. The Associated Press has learned. The selection of the ~year-old Bristol. was learned Wednesday. Football Odds OAKLAND'S BERT CAMPANERIS !LEFT) GETS BACK AS BOBBY TOLAN STRETCHES. Clney Steaming Rose Blames Umpires For Taking Bat Away ' OAKLAND (AP) -Cincinnati slugger Johnny Bench says the World Series um- pires have done the Reds a favor . "We gol a few cans that upset us tonight," Bench said after Cincinnati's tense 1.0 victory over Oakland Wednes- day night. "Our ball club is riled up," he said. "Now maybe we've worked out our frustrations." Bench was anything but a key factor in the Cincinnati triumph, being called out on strikes three times, once with team- mate! on second and third base. lie was particularly upset about a call at first basCJ in the Oakland sixth, when umpire Frank Uhlont !aid Bench'!! throw had drawn Joe Morgan off the bag. That play put Oakland runners at fir:st and second, but the Reds worked out of a bases loaded jam moments later wtth a double play. Bench said h1s inability to hit didn't 11tem from the pressures of low-scoring game! In whch the Reds Look to hlm for home run power. "Naturally you want to drive in men," he 6!1d. "And tonight was the first lime in the Serie! when I've come up wllh mrn on base. "Everybody'! had the problem of not dri ving In runs,'' he !aid. "We hadn't had batting pr11ctice in three days (because of rainy weather). But I still felt the big hi ta would come." L<flfleldtt Pete a.,. complained that a called third strike against him in the filth inning with two Reds on.base was down around his feet . Rose, who vigorously protested the call, said he told umpire Mel Steiner, "It was too low. "I saw it all the way," Rose said. "The way we were going, and, remember, 1 led the major leagues in hits, he's just laking the bat out of my hands. "But I'm not complaining," Rose said . "He's doing hi! job.'' MOIJt of the Reds , and manager Sparky Anderson, MW the victory as a turning point. 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"--"·"'· A's Put Rap On Acoustic s • For Reds Run OAKLAND (AP 1 -The Oakland Athletics blamed nobody. just poor acoustics, for the run that gave the third game of the World Series to the Cin· clnnati Reds. "The runner's supposed to score on that play," center fielder George Hen- drick said Wedne9day night, patiently going over his part of the ball handling on Cesar Geronimo'a game-winning hit in the seventh inning. The Red!' Tony Perez was on 11;eicond base and started running w h e n C'reronomo singled up the middle. lierl- drick. going by the book. threw toward second bMt -just before Perez fell flat or. his face rounding thlrd base. Shortstop Bert Campa.nert! took tho throv. near secood e.nd checked to see if Geronimo was lrytng to stretch the hit into .l double. '' J saw Perez tall dowtl and 1 ~lied for Campy to go home with ihe throw, bot the crowd was yelllng and be couldn't hear anything," third baseman Sal Sando said. "ff the throw had gone home right Away. he would have had him ." Catcher Gene Trnace said, "I wu yelJ. ing 'home' too, but 1 knew Campy couldn't hear us:' The shortatop eald, "When 1 see the guy. he's sliding Into home." After the 1..0 ICM, A's Manager Dick Wiiiiam! old, "We're still ahead, two games to one, and J 1Ull th.lnlt we're golng to win the World SeriM. t won 't predkt how many gama II will go. It was still a long bill for the li--foot-4 native of Winter Park, Fla. It was five years belore he made it to the Dodgers in 1968, pitching 49 times in relief, starting once, posting a· 3-0 record and a 2.15 ERA. His reward for that fine first year job in the National League was being selected the first pitcher in the 1969 ex- pa nsion draft by Montreal . The Expos sent him to Hou ston in a trade for Rusty Staub. ln three years at Houston as a starter and reliever he won 29 and lost 32. "I halfway thought I might get traded last winter," Billingham said. "I had an operation for vericose veins in my right leg and lbe Houston team physician told me a deal for me was ln the air. Two weeks later I got the call. All I asked was 'Who to?' They told me Cincinn ati and I was satisfied." Actu'Blly, Billingham was part of the biggest National League winter trade of 1972. He came to the Reds with Denis Menke, Joe Morgan and Cesar Geronimo for Lee May, Tommy Helms and Jimmy Stewart. He was 12 and 12 for the Reds h.t m, pitching extremely well in the last few months ln Cincinnati's drive to the West Division title. Billingham said he wasn't upset when Cincinnati manager Sparky Anderson came out to get him after Jack went to a three-ball. no-strike count on Oakland slugger Mike Epstein in the last of the ninth . "The idea is for the team to win ," Bill· ingham said. "We had our backs up against the wall. I wasn't disappointed." Sparky never says a thing when he comes to get you," Billingham said. "He just makes a motion and takes the ba.lL" Billingham said be profited by the N• tional League strike ume. "I was throwtng li sinker low and away and hitting the outside corner and they were Jetting it past thinking it was a ball. The American League has a higher .strike zone and there was a National League umpire behind the plate." Billingham 's toughest inning was the sixth when the first two men reached . base. Joe Rudi, a loog ball hitter, came up. and Billingham said he got him to ground out on a curve. He purposely walked Epstein, and then forced Sal Ban. do to hit into a double play. "Jt was a sinking fastball low and away that got Bando," said BWingham. Williams was hoping his team would be able to take batting practice some th ing it hasn't had since Sunday - before tonight's fourth Serie11 game. "But I've always said good pitching "''ill beat good hitting, and the pitching in thla game was excellent," he added. "We didn't hit one ball hard all night," said Bando, who hit into an inninll~ing double play with the bue1 loaded ln the sixth. Brother Killed In Series Feud ROCHESTER, N. Y. (U PI ) - Shella Stodghill and ber younger brother argued bit\Uty o v e r whether the f111mlly'1 radio would be used to listen to lhe World Serie!. At the height of the orgument, police said, MIM Stodghill, 18, faUilly stabbed her brother, Rooald. 17. Two hours after the youth had been 1tabbed In the chest, the game hetween the Oeklarnl A's and Cin- cinnati Reds w1s rained out Tuet- day night. Mist Stodghill was charged with flrlt-degree manslaughter Wectne. day. • 31 DAILY PILOT ihu~.111 CktBbt.• 111. 1~1· =~--------------- San Berdoo Ine ligible, May Ap(Jea l Edison's Blockbust er: Demetrakos Comeback SA:-J OJF:GO San Bertlllrdioo Valley College has t~n ruled 1nelig1ble t G represent the ~1ission Con· ference in the state JC football playoffs this sea.son. Ed!.soo lligh's Express has rolled lD n pair of lrvlnc League football vlctort.es and one of the big items m 1he :statx sheets or each of those triumph.! has been !he yardagt.! piled up by tailback Fred Hernandez. Hernandez and his Edison Chargers mates tackle Estancia Friday night at Orange Coast College in a crucial circuit rncowner. Both teams are unbeaten and sport 2.0 league marks. And altOOugb llemandez is obviously an outstanding runner, a large share of the credit must be given to fullback Joe sec Soe<!e r Star Dt'metrakos. Demetrakos Is a 191).pounder who can operate at 4 8 spetd In 40 yard.!!, and his blocking has been u1slrunll'OUl..I in spring· ing llemandez. on his runs over the tackle and around the ends. It's only m1dseason. hGwever, and Edison conch Vince A'3ro isn't about to gel on the platform yet for Demetrakos. But he dO('s admit, "Demetrakos plays a real key part in our game as a blocking fullback. He's the key blocker at the point of attack and he's also a fine defensive end. ··1te's strong and physically mature. If ~I i s s i o n Conference ad- ministrators r u l e d San !Wrnardino ineligible at a meeting here Tue sday beC'ause of a violation of the slate athletic code scrimmage rule limiting a team with a 10- game schedule to one scrim- ma1::e . The protest, lodged by Citrus College, was made because San Bernardino scrtmmaged three times. Athlete Recalls Times San Bernardino currently leads the ~lission circuit stan- dings with a 4--0 record, but all of lhe 1ndians games will be forfei ted -including the Nov. 11 tilt with SaddJeback -ac- cording to SBVC Dean of Students Dr. Joe lantorno. B ehind Iron Curtain '·According to conferenc·e president Dr. Roos Handy's in- terpretation. all conference teams will be given a victory against Valley College," says lantomo. An appeal may be forthcom- ing by San Bernardino. "We thought we w ere operating a junior varisty pro- gram and we felt we were within our rights to have a JV program. but the conference interprets the stale code dif· fercntly. '·The conference s a y .!I there's no such thing as a JV program. Our rontention is thDt the code docs oot point that out. At this lime we don't know if u·e will appeal it. We'd have to go to the slate athletic committee with it, b~t of course they don 't have a meeting until December sometime." The protest committee upheld San Bernardino's in- terpretation, but Citrus ai>- pealed that decision to the full protest committee. That group felt that save was in violation of the stale code. It's the second time in three years that San Bernardino has been called on the carpet. SBVC was placed on pro- bation during the 1970 football season after a neaNiot during a game with Saddleback. By llOWARD I .. HANDY 01 ''" 0•11• ... lot ,,.,. Everyone with vision has a dream and for Dumitru Cantemir Balos, a 23-year· old Romanian refugee, that dream is being lived today as he looks to new goals for achievement. Dean Balos as he is knov.'D to his Southern California College soccer team- mates. is a freshman student who well remembers life behind the iron curtain. His participation in sports at SoCal College (Costa Mesa) and his freedom to follow a back-breaking schedule of work- ing a full 40 hours each week, attending classes, studying and playing soccer is something he cherishes above all else in life. "It has been a dream for me," he says. "And it's all coming true. Only God has helped me to gel here," he says sin· cerely. For a young man, freedom from Romania and the iron curtain would seem enough of a dream to last a lifetime. Not so for young Dean. "I am a bible study major and very fortunate to be able to attend a Christian college," be says. "I would eventually like to becilme a missionary in some other country." . Would he like to return to Romania as a missionary? "Oh no," the sort-spoken, se rious young man says without hesitation. "l cannot go back there. But I would like to go to Italy or Spain." · How old was he when be decided to forsake Romania and what brought abclut the decision? "l was 19," he recalls. "I had quit high Monahan Tops Pirates At l\.ey Receiving Spot There'll be flankers, enm and backs nytng around the 1.1t. San Antonio College football field in every direction Saturday night when the J.1ounties en- tertain Orange Coast College In opening South Coast C.Onference act ion with kickoff at 7:30. Much has been written about the men on the firir.g line in what promises to be a passing duel to match the professional game. But equally important to the men who loss the football, Alvin White of OCC and Steve Myer of Mt. SAC, are the men an the recf:iving end of the aerials. Steve Monahan ls the leader at Orange C,oast in the receiving department with 2S receptions for 378 yards and three touchdowns. His longest was for 39 yards. But ~1onahan Isn't the only man White look! for in the passing patlems. He has thro'A'Tl to seven others this season with four of them grabbing four or more. Bill Kristinat is the secondary man to P.imahan with 14 receptions for 184 yards but he hasn't scored. John Fisher has nabbed sil for 141 yard!, Rick Hartslleld nine for S1 and John Dixon four for 60. At Ml San Antonio, Myer Jlkewise doesn't confine his toues to one men. Rlck Panne10n has nabbed 17 for 228 yards but hasn't scored. Don Moore bas 15 catches for 294 yards and five TDs. Then there's Ted Farmer (13 for 139 -yards and two scores). Tom Jones and Carl Neder with seven each for 143 and 45 yards. Jones has also scored twice on catches. While the passing story of these 1~·0 leaders will highlight Saturday night's contest, ii is only one facet of th& g~me that coold detennine how far the Moun- ties have come back this season under coach Mal ~too. The MOUIJties are 4-1, their best mark since 1967 when Dennis Shaw (San Diego State. Buffalo Bills) was the team's quarterback and directed them to a 7-2 season. Orange Coast is 3-1 this season. losing only to El Camino. one of lhe top football -powers in the state. Tucker views the game v.·ith mixed emotions. "There are some good things lo say about having an off date and there are also some bad thinp about it. ''I v.·ould much prefer to have had a game like Santa Ana did where we could play everybody and get in a little work. "On the other hand , it gives the kids with bruises and light Injuries a chance lo heal." Two Quarterbacks Aid Golden West Offense Havtnil two quarterbacl<J of equal abU· lty but with different styles may be jUJt what the doctor ordered for coach Ray Shacklefortl's Golden West Colltg• Rustlers football team. The Rusllers tangle wilh LA Southv.-est College Saturday night on the Orenge COlat C<illege stadium fi!!:ld with kickDfl for the So\,tt.hern California Confercmct.> U· t)e II 7;30. 11IC Golden West attack Is adjust11blc to the IWo signal callers, Bill Cornelius llRd Jerry Hinojosa. Comrllus ts more ol a passing .,urt,.baci and boldl most of tho acbool rec.uds in this department . HlnoJou: Ukts to run the ball and open.let the pau-run option play with a . srutdealolflllesse. Shackleford feelt thit is a definite assel forthellusilfn. "Both of lbHt guya have aome things lhal are llletl. Each tw his own style •nd It makes ii more. dffficull for op- ponentt to defente against us when they 111 .. to preparo for both ol them . • • "I won't be aure which one will start untiJ Saturday n1ghl.'' 1be GWC m@ntor adds. "ll depends oo how f think things have been going durinjil lbe weeJi:." Hinojosa slarted last \Vttk against East Loe AngclClll and had a good night running the ball, gaining 73 yards on 17 carr1es. lie also passed 20 times. con1- pleting nine for 100 y.:irds. CornellU.!J. on the ot~r hand, com· plcted two passes In two attempt11 and now bu hrt 3J or 75 for the seaaoti, Raining 457 yards and two toochdowns. lie hM beezl the starter moot of the way until last week's gan1e when hi! saw llmlt«t actlOfl on only two olfensive plafl. M.eanwhlle, Shackleford rtated that Jerry Leininger. a 111artlng llnebacll.er. was o~raled on far a knee injury Wednesay. lte is !he third GWC pl.ayer lo hove thl1 operation thJs seoon, the others being Keith Thornton (~rrilos scrimmage) and Oliver Grant (Orange Coost game). Lelnlnger was hurt in the LACC contest . .., school to go fo a trade school and become an electrician (he works nights as an electrician in Los Angeles). I wanted to transfer to the town where my brother was working but tbey wouldn't let me. "P.ly brother bad a friend who had come to this country before us and he sent us pictures and letters telling us about America. We decided that was what we wanted to do." Dean applied fof a passport to visit relatives in Yugoslavia and when he got there, learned he could go to Vienna and apply for a U.S. visa, which he did . Jt took about four months for the visa to come through. When he finally made it lo the U.S., he landed in Chicago and finished his high school education. He also 1vcnt to night school lo learn English. His next move was to SoCal College. Al home in Romania he played socce r since he was able to walk. But over there in order to play on a good team, you h&ve to know somebody. "I went with some of my friends to try out for the team and we did very good but they didn 't take us because we didn 't know anybody in authority." At the present, he and older brother Paul (31), a machinist by trade, are purchasing a home in Anaheim along with saving $3,000 in cash. This is another part of the 1'alos dream and one he feels will become a real ity in the very near future. "My mother and father, a younger brother (Oie, 19) and three younger sisters are at home and we want to bring them here. But we have to have a place for them J:o live and we must pay the Romanian government $500 apiece to g,et them out of the country," he explains. His younger brother Jlie also plays soc· cer and Dean would like to have him as a teammate at SoCal College before his ~nior year. At the moment, Dean is one of three foreign students on the Vanguards team that won eight of its first nine games. The young Romanian refugee is con- lident the Vanguards can win enough games to participate in the regional playoffs and perhaps get 10 tbe nationals. At f>-11, 170 pounds, he is a main cog in the .success of the Vanguards team. And that drive and determination that shows in a set line on his face that is oftentimes far too serious for a young man of 23, wHI undoubtedly result in bringing the rest of his family to this country. He's Found His Calling As a .Gaucho Versatile Saddleback College freshman Ed Call has finally found a home in fool- b.-:ill -and he's making the most of ii. Call. who \\'ill be the sta rting flank er for Saddleback Saturday night when the Gauchos engage Southwestern at Chula Vista, has played three positions in three years. As a junior at Univcr~ity 11igh, Call was one o( the Trojans· leading running baC'kS. But when University's No. I quarterback moved away during the summer of '71, Call was ~hiftcd to quarterback. As lhc season progressed call im· proved -but quarterba cking wasn't hls niche. · At Sadd lcback, Gauchos coach George 1'111rtman turned him into a receiver. He immediately became a sterter and has progressed with each outing. "He was really a sleeper whoo he came out for football ." says Jl artman . "11e nnd Bobby J-lnupert i wide receivcrl hRve really done an ouutandlng Job for us. 11\ey're tv.'o of the helter ones 1n the conference. "~le runs very disciplinrd 11ass pat- terns and when the hnll is thrown lo him. he catches it." Meanwhile, 11artmnn snys his cl ub will have lo ~top making mental mistakes it It 15 to win against a tough Southv.•tstcrn club. "We're not playing emotionnl football. The kids feel that they can Just walk on the field and win. And we don'! have any killer lo:stincl. We're only sallsfitd with winning by a small margin. J.nstead or making sure the J!Rme is won, we end up righting for our Jives. ·'Sou lhwtstem i!' the tough e 51 drfensive team we've played all year. II cashes In on mistakes and we've been mnking a lot of mistaktl." - he stays healthy and at the rate he con· -"'flCOred only once, but that's not surpris- tmues 10 Improve he should really be ing cons.idertng 13 difffrent Chargert loo.gh. ' h:tve scored in the fint rour gamts of the wason. "Rlght now he hasn't reached hls peak. F..dison figures to defend against To be a blocking fullback it takes a kid Estancia v.·llh its usual stuiltlng defense with good physical slie and speed, too.' th~t appears to resemble an eight-man As a runner Demetrakos keeps the front at times. defense somewhat honest with his OC..'-"We do a lot of stuntlng and variations casional n1ns. He's accumulated 59 yards and try to attack our opponent," says in 14 carries for a 4.2 average, which Asaro, "it's a variation of the san Diego nleans he's carrying the ball about four State attack defense." tun.es per game. Ed1'on appears to be ready for its thlrd ltemandez, meanwhile, bas romped for Irvine League test with no one on lbe io- 386 yards on 74 carries. Hernandez bas jured list r • I .y.·.~- • • • • SOCAL'S DEAN BALDS Anteaters Lose Killian Patl1 Rough Corona del Mar Rlg)l's secood hall play in the LA! AlanUtos 7-7 tie may be lhe spark that football coach Dave ItoUand has been looklng for ln his otherwise dor- mant offense. Although the sea Kings bad to settle for a standoff due to a brt1~ blunder by an official which nullified an apparent winning touchdown by John Grow«, Hol- land says he thinks hls offense may have come of age .. Saturday the Sea Kings will go back to war at Newport Harbor High agalnst the undefeated Santa Ana Valley Falcons. Corona del Mar is now 0-1·1 in Irvine League action with the Falcons, Edison and Estancia owning' 2-4 marks. Are the See Kings out ()( Jt? "No way," says Holland. "By the third week of the seoson laol year everyone bad a loss. We still think this league will be decided in the last week and that we'll be in contention at that tlrne," says Holland. One of the prime reasons for bis OJ>- limisln is the tough play of tailback Skip Lauderbaugh. Lauderbaugh, a 5-5, !SO.- pounder, appears to disappear in the backfield when he gets down in his sel prior to the snap of lhe ball. LM Alamitoo probably wishes he bad disa pp eared -be c a use it was Lauderbaugh who slashed over from JO yards out In the fourth penod on a play that Hollaitd describes as "perfect." "It was the ooJy play ot the game where every p1ayer was graded with a plus after viewing the ftlms," says Holland. Lauderbaugh was the mosl valuable player on the Sea Kings' sophomore learn. In 1971 he was a reserve behind John Miles for the most paf't, but spar· kled in a relief role against Westminster in the CfF playoffs. Lauderbaugh's work against Los Al was his best effort. of the year. In three games he's netted 14& yards on 45 car- ries. He missed the Santa Ana game because or bruised kidneys and the nu. "Skip has a lot of coorage and be has the good moves and good vision. He's able to spot the opening pretty good," says 11olland . As for Santa Ana Valley and its horde of speedy backs, Holland's major con· cern is the momentum built up on lhe crest of a four·game winning streak. ··Jt adds n lot of confidence," says Holland, "but we gained a little ourselves last week despite the disap-pointment." UCI, Long Beach Renew Cage Pact UC Irvine and Cal Stale (Long Beach ) have reached an agreement to play basketball at the Anaheim Convefltion Center on Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 and again on Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 the DAILY PILOT learned exclusively today. Contracts are expected to be signed in the immediate future after ~tion o[ lhe lwo dates has been made with the Convention Center. The lv.'O schools have met on seven oc- casions in the past with Long Beach holding a 4·3 edge in the series. This year the only time they might meet is in the Long Beach invit ational tournament in December. Don Killian. a freshman at UC Irvine and a top candidate for a berth on the Anteaters varsity basketball team this coming season, twisted his knee in early practice sessions and is sidelined for several days according to coach Tim Tift. Scott Magnuson, the S-11 renter Last season when they met at transfer who had tv.·o foot operations Anaheim, Long Beach gained an 83-32 during the past year, appears ready far victory before a packed house and after the game, Tift and CSLB coach Jerry full service with Tift putting the teem Tarkanian talked about a game this year through a IO.minute scrimmage session but couldn't agree on a date with on the third day of practice. schedule.!! already filled . ~~~~~~::=:::= • 538 CENTER ST.-COSTA MESA 646.-1919 Champion Handball Gloves-3.95 to 6.95 Handbalis-outdoor-95c-indoor· 1.1 O Racquetball Racquets & Balls Squash Rackets-Badminton Rackets Wilso~Dunlop-Davis & Bancroft Tennis Rackets Wilson-Pen~Ounlop Tennis Balls Bikes-Parts-Tires Tubes-Accessories OPEN 9 TO 6 Closed Sundays OPEN 9 to 6-Closed Sund Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Ping Pong Sets Skate Boards Footballs-Basketballs- Soccer Balls-Volleyballs 4 Square Balls-Playground Balls Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts & Shorts Ladies & Girls Tennis Dresses Adidas-Converse-lack Purcell Tennis Shoes Wannup Suits R~cket Stringing 538 Center 646-1919 •\Cid/ (J l!it.lo.r '1 ,14,, OAJL \ P1LOl At SA S tadit111i Marina Ange lus Powe1·s Collide To nigl1t w J C Gr id Sia1·s I, Injury List Growing Trojans Topple UCI In Water Polo, 8-7 bob lyman's MEN'S SHOP Unbeaten, No. I ranked St. Paul and unbeaten. No. 5 rated Mater Dei clash tonighl in the opening Angelus League football battle of the 1972 cam- paign at Santa Ana Stadium. Game time is 8 o'clock. At stake is the inside track to the circuit championship. And it's lhc 14th C<ll!ision in a bitter rivalry that has seen the two prep footbal\ powers right to a &-1 -1 standoff over the years. Mes a Hi gh Sharpens Its Attack Costa Mesa liigh School wilJ gun for its first win Of the season Saturday a g a i n s t Magnolia at Western High School (8 p.m.) and it is likely that the right arm of Steve Sharp will have a great deal to do with the outcome of the game. Sharp. whose st a ti s tics haven't set the county afire. has still been the No. J of- fensive \\'Capon for t he Mustangs and is lhe man Magnolia coach G lcnn Thomas fears most . If Sharp's p.1ss protection holds up -which it did not do last week against Edison -he could improve on his 38 per· cent completion average. The lanky junior has com· pleted 31 or 80 ror 439 yards but has had to perform with a minimum of blocking: He could have a good ni ght against a Magnolia team that is also winless this year and has given up an average or 21 points per game. Sharp's main t;irget is junior split end Bill Yah•nt ine and new Light end Brian McCormick . PiicCormick is filling in ror Mark Schr~1pp. possibly the team's be s t player, who is sidelined with a neck injury. McCormick responded with three catches against Edison last week while Yal P.ntine caught six: the week before against Santa Ana Valley. Sharp's passing game could also improve if Paul Desmet is recovered from a bad l\nee. The junior defensive star has not seen any offensive action this year. • The Mu stangs def e n s e. \Vhich was riddled by Edisu11°s skilled offensive n1 a c hi n e, may have an easier time of ii Saturday. Magnolia is the weakest team in a so-far murderous Co s t a Mesa schedule. ~1agnolia's big~est threa ts are running b.'ICk ~1ark l\li ller. back fron1 an inj urv. and quarterback John Kindred. who has ~n hampered by n steel pin in his thumb. the result or an off season acci- dent. Prep Polo Sumn1aries VIRllV k!~~~=•ch ~ ~ ~ r-•~ legvn;o !le.teh KorlnQ: Morton (1). ~Vore 1'1· Well lrv (I), Amsclft 'J), Jonnwn 1 , lledwllr C6L W•fmlnlltt J 1 1 3-10 Marin• 2 111-9 Weslmlnlle< tc0rlnci · H11el1on C9). Goldst91n n . Marine Kor!ng: F•bl1n (I ), Edw1r~1 (•lj GUQler (J). Wlkloor CU v;l;:I!'' ~ ~ ~ t:1t Unlv1rsllv ocorlttQ; G1111!1r (2), BrotMo (1 ), Cosgrov. (3). Ceo1Te Mese 1 1 1 1-1 0owneV I J $ 4--ll Casi• Mffl scoring; HoHlsllr (5). MtAnenev II). L1111111on Ill. Mission Vl1la I s 1 ?-10 Sonor1 0 1 01-1 MIHlon v1110 Klll'lna: Slural!On I"· Leal CL.oau• (JL Hudson 1l, C1mpM'll fl), Junlllr V1r1!1v Casie MMll ' • 1 ·-· o-v 1 111-~ ca1111 M11t11 Korl"1: ICane l'I· MKlNn (U, 011r1nd 7). 8r1110 1 , Gr1>tJll (1). Minion v1110 • 6 1 S-16 Sona•• 0 0 • ?-0 Minion Vlelo KOrtng: Womiv l'I' Nll>e'<:ktr l'I• Rlxlord (2f, Aull\Jrn l , Bradlleld 1 , llVV !It, l(.nlOfl (1 ). Wll'Stmlmler 1 I 1 1 o 1 0-6 Marina 1 2 O 1 0 l 1-7 We$1mln11,... 1corll · k.,,I (•l, Mer-ouarr:tt (1 ), f111rr~ 1). Merlnr K orlng: ormen csi, He1-rl1011 (I , Farrltll c 11. k:.ii"r'J..~:•dt ~ ~ g ~ ~ Laoun• 11eocr. scorlnci · 8en10n !11, M•lll>ne OJ. O'H11r1 llL ~n 1n. Hunl11'Q!on B•K" 0 0 • I).. 6 Anehe'lm 1 o 6 0-ll H11nt1noron !leech TO: Mlt1 Dovie FreJl!•\111>11 l..aQlll'llBeec11 •01?-1 ~MktleW-CI\' I l I 0-J l~ll~ h«tl xnlllCI: "'"'"'*' fj), BIA~.in!l~=:-,, ll. 0 I 2 1-' HewpOrt '"11r1'or' 0 0 0 o-4 '"11H1lll>11lon !...:;" t.eotlnG: ""->l!'f' \B: JoMson { ), Renno (0, C.,.,.me11 Unl'1rsllv 5 t 4 .._10 V1lenc:l1 0 0 D 0-0 U11l\1n l!v 11c:otl111;1: ii;~ "II Mc.Cl11Pn (11 Plcc1~ {) C•aif '"I llor•y• ( J. Anti 2), 1Hett ), HI IMl'I {~lJ lftttnl ( ,), V~O ), Mlttlon vie Q • ' 0 ~13 SonOr• 0 0 0 0-0 M\tll9!' Vl1lo ~Ina: MIHtr l•l· M\~ (J), H""" (JI, McO<lllt•I !2!. 811111 (0111 o\WM l ' ' ,__, OowMV 0 1 a 0-1 COllll f.' KOflnq! R1k;tltlf !JI, C:hacon I , w1110 n >, Rlct (1), f!o-"'"°"' ( . w:~~ "''"" ~ l l l:: g~l'l'l.\nter M:orlnq: Oold1t1ln fJ), S~1rl~J.KQtll'>CI~ l1kblr11 !,), H1rrtll Ill. Coach Marijon Ancich's St. Paul Swordsmen have v.·hi1>- ped J\later Dci the last rive times and they're favo red to do ii again tonight behind the power running of Bill Wargo at fullba ck and the deft pass- ing and ball handling of quarterback Pat Degnan. St. Paul has rolled over four oppone nts, allowing only one touchdown -and that one wa!i to Pasadena wben the latter \vas able to take advantage of a couple of l!>--yard penalties to keep its drive going. Leading St. Paul defenders are defensive tackle Mark Galindo (5-9, 195), roverback Dave Volgstadt (three in- tercej)tions), lineback Ed Sar- miento (!>--10, 190) and safetyman Mike Ferron. Ancich likes to ram the ball dov,•n the opponent's throal with the pile driving fullback, while coach Bob \Voods and his Monarchs count on the quick darts of junior halfback Jim Gardea and the effective rollouts of quarterback Steve Martindale. Gardea has ripped for 493 yards in 80 carries for a nifty 6.1 average and e i g ht touchdowns. He scored three against Long Beach Wilson. And t o balance the op- position Woods has 190-pound rullback Mark Stanbra in the backfield, who could give Wargo a run for his money in the inside game. Stanbra is also a tough linebacker for the J\'lonarchs. But if Mater Dei is to stop St. Paul's winning trend, a great deal of the difference must be applied by Martin- dale. The flashy junior possesses a fine-ai:m .• and-throws darts with a high velocity. •le's completed 23 of 39 for a highly respectable 59 percent. And that's onlv half of Martindale'! effectiveness. He's also run for important yardage on keepers behind 1t1aler Dei 's outstanding of- fensive line. His most productive night was against Lakewood, run- ning for 84 yards in 13 carries behind the blocking of Jeff Clark, Kevin Pegan and John Roth. Mltet' Dll OffenH lE Clerk " PegaM lG llo!h c Meeh1n •G Gr1e<:_,, " Al~arei " Mumlord 00 Mnrllncl•le " C.ardfa '" Vl~l•no " Stan~•• Mal1r 011 0.tlflK E S!uhl ' Ba.ct• ' Genie• • Slantlr• lO Cl1r~ lO Mttl\in lO Mecaulev •w Roth " Poenaen "' Hender!.Ofl ' Mum lard DART MEET SATURDAl' ·~ '" ·~ '" "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' '" "' '" ·~ "' 'ro '" •M •m An open dart tournament will be sponsored by the Tri- County Dart League Saturday and Sunday at the American Legion Hall at 215 15th St. in Newport Beach. Open to all interested persons. the tournament will begin at noon on Satudray. Entry fee is $5 for singles (men and v,·omen ), $10 for doubles and $30 for six-man teams. \\!inners will receive $2.500 in pri ze money. Spectators "'ill be admitted free. ' ~ ' .. , .. .. ( - PAT THORPE Golden West--Offense ED CALL Saddleback-Offense JIM POTTE R Golden West-Defense RICK JACOBS Saddleback-Oefense Sailors Ready For Huntington Don Lent doesn't think his Newport Harbor l~igh footba.IJ team has done too much wrong -but it hasn't done enough right to win. And that's the quandry Le11t finds facing him as the Tars prepare for their game with traditional rival I luntington Beach Friday at Ncv,·port. '·There hasn't been any specific problem," Lent says. •·we lost to Anaheim in a game that could have gone either way, and to Loara when we just didn 't play that well ." "We moved the ball against Loara but oouldn 't score, and played pretty good defense ex- cept for their two touchdown drives." or our two-way starters. Newport quarterback Steve Bukich. a junior, has shown signs or promise as a passer, but has been inconsistent so far and completed only nine of 43 passes for 105 yards. Consistency overall has been a Ne,vport shortcoming and the Tars are off to a 1-3 record. tht!ir worst start since 1965. which ""'as also the last losing season fo r Newport. "They're comparable to Loara," Lent says. They ha ve a young team, and they'll really have to be reckoned with in the future, but it takes a little time for them to develop. A strong USC Trojans ""'Il ler tht' J\nteattrs went ahead by a polo team nlpptd LlC Ir\ 1ni:'s gui:J.I The Trojans added two Anteaters 8-7 Wednt•s<lay in a n1ore goa ls in the fourth Injuries t.'Ont lnue to plague nip-and-tuck affiur at the °"'in-~lan:ia for the final margin . the Marina Vikings football ner'!I ho1nf' pool. .. Defensively we made a few USC ovl'rf'a111c a fou r-~oal rnistakes and they capltal1zed lea en and coach Leon \V hecl ... r effort by UC! senior Jack on them." said UC! coach Bd1 1s concerned abo ut th c Dickmann. Junior Bruck Black Nt'.Wl8Jltl. "and I was n ·I meeting with \Vestr>1inster tallif'd once for the Anteaters !:iRtisfied v,·11h our offensive High In Sunset League action while Boyd Philpott, a play -you're never satisfied Friday night after losing bOth fresh.!nan from Downey Hlgh when you lose." a..... ,....,.. ... ... tt.,..n.MC 4K.b •: JAYMAR A-1 LEVI •11d wperior Ulm ..,, JANTZE N GOLDEN BREED KNITMASTER MU NSINGW EAR School , added two goa ls. The Anteaters will resume starting offensive guards. USC took a 2-1 edge in the play Saturday, meeting Cal J'lu w • .,.,., 11 s,..""41•1• Don Spreeman suffered a first quarter and held the lead State (Fullerton) al 9 a.m. at """'lilt'" •eac1•-••1m hairline fracture in his ankle _:u~n~ti~I ~t~he~f~ou~rt~h~pe~ri~od~w~h~e"1n_N~e:w"'.po~rtt_l.JH~a~,bo~' ~H~ig~h'.:Sc§hoo~I=. J_~~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~:_ and Nick Vorono has a badly .- sprained ankle with neit her one expected to see action this week. To add further misPry to \\/heeler's problems. Prank Kalin is a doubtful starter. He has been an alternate at a guard and tackle post on of- fense for the Vikings this season. Whatever the outcome or in- juries to the already thin Vik- ings roster. Wheeler is hopeful his team can move the bigger \\lestminster linemen. "If we can n1ove their big kids, ii would help a great deal as far as keeping control of the ball is concerned. This is always a big concern when playing Westminster." \Vheeler's offensive attack is geared around a 155-pound tailback, Chuck Sliney. Sliney has been impressive for the Vikes despite a mediocre season for the team. lie didn't play against Estan- cia when the Vikings \\·ere humiliated and perharis made the big difference ot1 the scoreboard. In three games. the Boston refugee has carried the ball on 63 occasions for 'm9 yard :> and a pair of touchdowns. •lis best game came ag:'!inst Huntington Beach v.·hen he ran for 122 yards includ ing a &!- yard dash for a touchdown. Sliney j o i n s fJU arterback Greg Fos_!.er, fullba ck Robert Lopez and wingback · Jim Straube in the starring backfield. This will mar.I(: the second week in a ro'.v, a raritv for Marina , lhat the backfield combination has been inl'le'. "Westmin ster is on a par \l'il h \Vestcrn and we Jiave our bands full this week a~at:l," \\/heeler savs . "PerhaoS we can havr ou~ kids Jct the air out of the ball unt il they run out of foot.balls. then v,•e can go home_" But ri ght now it :ippcars to be a onf'-sided ni atchap 1n 1 favor of \Vestminstcr. I M-GREGOA 'SJ• GOLDEN BEARKlAUS" 12-PC. GOLF Con~ists of 8 Irons -2 thr 9~ ET elusive and 3 O 1n. ' matching W 3 and 4 . plus "Gol OOds • 1, Bag wnh Matchin:~~:r" Golf 99•;5•or <Nctuo;o SJ'ALo:NG,MEN·s "TEE FUTE'' 12-PC. STARTER SET It isn't too surprising. then. that Lent isn't planning any major changes for the meeting with IIuntington Beach. Fountain Valley Defen se : I Save on this set! 12-Pcs. include 2 Woods. 5 Matching Irons. 3 Spalding Unicore Golf Balls. Ajay Golf Towel. Bag of 50 teesl Reg. 42.75 The Tars, who operate out of a number of offensive formations. feature a sound ground attack with Kevin Reeser and Jim Swick the main ball carriers. Swick, a 6-1, 220 pounder has averaged 4,3 yards per carry and has picked up 126 yards this season. Even so, his forte is rea lly defense. where he leads the Tars in tackles as a linebacker. He's definitely a defensi\'c player." Lent says. "That's where he'll probably play in college." Reeser, meanwhile has a similar rushing average (4.4 per carry for 235 yards on the season ) but is an entirely dif· ferent type of runner. Reeser who runs the 100-yard dash in 10.3, is the Tars' breakaway threat. "We try to run tl balanced type of nttnck, and it doesn 't matter too much who carries the ball ." Lent says. "We may use quite a few people this week because we'd like to get more guys in, and spell some In Tough Again st Lo s Al As coach Bruce Pickford puts it, Fountain Valley High School 's rootball team is in a bind. The Barons are 0-2 in Irvine League competition and face Los Ala mitos (1-0-1 t F'rida y. 8 p.m. at Hunt ington Beach lligh school. "As far as I'm concerned Los Alamitos is the fa vorit(' for the league championship," says Pickford . whose team dropped a last minute, 2!>--20 contest to Estancia last week . "They're a good ball club that does more things well than Estancia. They don't have a back like Dan Prin- ceotto but they throw betlcr. "Their defense is tough. ag- gressive and fflst. and it's a good pursuing one." According to Pickford . FoW1tain Valley will have lo score at least t\VO touchdowns while putting a halt lo the Griffins' offense. rendered 24.7. The leadlng bait carrier has bee n halfback Mike Malcolm. \YhCl has gained 279 yards for a 5.8 average. He's followed by 200-pound fullback Les Becher 1177. 4.9J, quarterback Bill Hatfield 1170. 4.61 a nd hnlfback Ben Dodson !93, 6.61. But in four gan1cs so far Hatfield has completed only 25 pas.o;;es in 5!1 at tl'm pt s. although hi s completions have gone for 457 yards. Significantly, Hatfield's best games have come in Fountain Valley's two wins. Against Rancho Alamilos (39-20 win ) he cnmplcted nine of 16 for 156 yards and against lluntington Bea ch (37-28 win ) he wa s six of 11 for 91 yards. But against Edison (26-7 Jossl he could manage just eight completions in 23 at- tempts and in last wee k's loss lo Estancia he v.'as only l\vO of nine for 25 yards. SALE 33ss SPALDING DOT DUNLOP MAXFLI "PRO" GOLF BALLS 11~~ ROYCE-UNION 10·SPEED MEN'S BIKE Shimano "Lark~. 10·• gear alloy. racing saddle, durable gumwall tires. ~~,59ss Reg. 69.95 S urprising Diablos Still Must Improve Accomplishing the form er may be the easier of the two tasks. \\'ith a host of backs running out of the 1vishbone formation . the Barons ha ve averaged 25.7 points per game but have sur· Fountain Yaltev. one of the physically biggeSt teams in the Irvine League. will have a sizeable weight advant ag l' on Los Alamitos, but Pickford says : "They don'l play this game~ scales." Genuine suede leather uppers. Shght irregu - lar1t1es. Hurry. no1 every color 1n every ~,.1 ass ~1iss ion Viejo might h:i ve been counted out of the Crestview race based on its preseason results, but the Diablos find them s e 1 v es among the league leade rs arter two games. And Bob Hivner's team knows that this week's game wi th Villa Park e o u Id determine whether it stays there or not . "The kids know they're going to have to play tx>tter fOQ.tball against Villa Patk than we ha ve in some of our other games," Hivner says. "We 've got momentum all right, but Villa Park is n very tough football team." ~1ission Viejo has overcome a series of injuries to reach its present 2-2 overall and 2-<I league records, and although the injury Jinx may be sub.,lding. it hasn't ended completely. Starting guard Martin c;over will return a!ter a two-week absence with an ankle Injury, but hall'bnck Ken Robin! may be out for the season with JI similar injury. The Dlablos. °"'ho set fl single ga111e .scoring . record I r----------------------~ against Katclla whil e shuttin g out lhe Knights 31-0. produced their best defensive effort and passing game of the season, according to Hivner. "\Ve threw more against Katella than we have in the p.1st, because they were in an eight-man front most of th e game,'' Hi vncr says . "We always work on our passing, but we hndn 't had the op- partunil y to use It nn1ch unt il the lRst game.'' The> Diablos got nearly even pa ss in g gam es from quarterbRcks Randy Eck.hold! :ind Dave Schmidt against Katella, nnd Kevin Eaton established himself as the team's leading receiver in the ga me. Eaton had caught se ven pa$1ies thi:J season ror 70 yards. Bob Freed, a 8--0, t70- pound senior has caughl rive passes ror the DlablO! ftC· counting for 3S yards. J.'ive other receivers have been used by the Oiablos, who •• ,,,., }M4(' fl(J!l!l/219 have connected on 28 of 55 ~ •• , --pa~~ Attempts this season for •-•'""~' "~1 •••• ... is~1 • .,..,., • u .. M00&1.oi111u•11CCC1~'~•·"''r ... 1. n respectable .472 percentage. EXCLUSIVE SPANISH·STYLE 10·GUN-CABINET 37" x 74'' x 13'' with large storage locker in bottom. Glass doors, locks, hardware. Solid oak and oak veneer. Ideal for any sportsman1s den! 14995 STORE HOURS: MON. THAU FRl .10A.M. TO 9 P.M . LA MIRADA tHO,lllNO CfNTIJll SAT.• SUN. 10 A.M . TO I ~.M. ORANGE 19&5 H TUSTIN Phonl •3'1•1110 TUSTIN SANTA ANA Nf:WPOJllT AVf J)!I, S flJlllSTOllT, 11 FIAll STA[(T at M•cAlllTHUft Phol": 132 •198 f>hOflt &!1 1 lltl -10 OAJ~ Y PILOT Ar . ' t1sts . Big Goal: • No F11n1ll1e Attt·n1pti11g to rf'CO\l·r from lllSI y,·el:'n's 28-15 loss to Urea. Laguna li('ach ll1gh School 1.:uuld have ptckl"d an easier opponent than Saddlcback. The Artists will try to regain thei r winning 111 o nl c n tum against a team !hat is 3-1 tlus year. The c:onlest will 00 al 8 p.m. Saturday nt the &:lnta Ana Bowl. Both teams arc J.J Jn <>range League play :-ind \.nguna Beach nteds to \1 in to slay In contenlK>n. ··tf we win the rest of our games we have an exc't.·lll'nt chance to win lhc 1itlt'.01 sa~~ Laguna Bt'ach l'Qal'h 1!:11 Akins. Brea tiandt'd the Artists their first loss of I he ~ear last week. "but I don 't think they're going to go un-1' defeated," says Akins. "I · don 't th ink anyofl(' y,·ill go undefeated in this league.'1 , The Art ist.s y,•111 match thclr 1ri ple option ground attack against :.i tough S.-iddleb<ick defense with most of I.heir ,,. hopes on lhe shoulders of elusive Dave Marriner. With Laguna Beach quarterbacks passing an average of seven limes per game, most of the team 's of- fense has come from 1'.far- riner. ~ 151-pound seruor has run fer 471 yards in four games this .season for a g!il- tering 8.4 average . ~1arriner. who had lo play on the Junior varsity last yea r aft{'r lransfcrring from Heritage Higll School in Anaheim, picked up 84 yards last week even though Brea was keying on him every play. ''He's got it all, he's fast. elusive and very strong for his size," Akins says. Saddleback coach Ben flaley calls l\.1arriner one of the two best backs in the county, bur may have ju.st the man to stop the Laguna Beach sprintC>r. Linebacker Don l\.·lahaney. a 6--0. 21 0-pounder. has been 011 tile all-ll'ague lt:!am ro r lhf' pas! two years and /laity c;1lls him the t.."OUnty 's best. "I-Ir's a senior this 1·ear. thank God.'' savs Aluns .. :Ht·'s an awfully lough kid.'' Akins is l'()ncerned that the Artists mcty continue t o fumble the ball -as tiiey did seven times against Brea - and warns that Laguna ca n't <1fford that a g a i n s t Sad- dleback. SC Ga111e Clickino· ti Wi th Boyer After a 23-7 Victory O\'C'r Tust in last Wei!k, fans mi~ht have been asking wh:ft makes S<tn Clemente run ? Triton coach Allie Schaff. whose team seeks its second straight win Saturday against Katella. says lhat the time to run has finally arrived . And Jim Boyer, a senior back playing with a broken nose is making it go. "We had been getting along v;el\ with our passing game, and were a little reticent about running because we had so man y injured backs." Sch~fr says. "Some of the hacks got off the in jured list last w~k so we determined we'd estah\ish our running game. \Ve really hadn't pursued the running game that well unti l last week." i.111,Q;i,, IJo.tobcr I q. ci J ·-~ Prep MARTIN TRUJILLO Westminster RICK CURTIS Mision Viejo BILL ROBERTSON Laguna Beach BE N SHERZ ER Dana Hills FRAN K FREGOS I Costa Mesa "' D efensive KEN MORGAN University JIM MEE HAN Mater Dei TOM BAKE R Huntington Beach BRYCE COSHOW Estancia JOHN GROWER Corona del Mar The renewed em pha .. is -- madc a huge difference in the 1'l"itons' offensive balance <1nd Son ora's Secon dar)' W orries I ts Coach !he rushing game, "'hich had never accounted for more lh:in JOO vards in three prrv1011" gamCs, su~dcnly struck fur 23) yards. Boyer, a. 5-9, lliG-pound halfback who has played the last two games with a broken nose was the runniniz star for the TrtloQI. The llUle senior. whom Schaff describes as not particularly f111!\ but verv tough, picked up 133 yards in 15 carrieS for an 8.8 yard average. And ht al~ ripPtd off the Ttltoos' longest run from scrbnm11ge of the year. a 5.S yarder for a touc:Mown. AJ a result, Schaff says lht Tri.tons hope 10 rtly more on ·their ruMlng gome the rt!il of the season. "We have lhrtt or four blckt heRllhy. and we'll use lhsn all.'' &haff says. •·\ve·11 ltlJl thrOW quite a bit, but we're going to have nlOre belance between our running and pusing. 11 Hockey Scores Frank Hicks isn't about to take over Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder's jnb as the national Ot'ldsmnker. IUcks. the head football coach at Sonora lllgh has it figured that his dl:'fending orange Leegue c h a m p i o n Raiden are one point un· derdoRs to D.'.IM llills. "On paper. they 're one pn1nt be:tler than we :ire .'· Hicks !>afS. ''They lost 10 Valencia 21-7, and we losl to VBleoclD 21-6 ... Some mi ght argue with the logic of that 0nalysis, but in proOObly a more serious vein, lllcks rates the Dolphins ·a.., a potentially tough te,,t for his Raiden. "They are a well drill rd yourtf( team. doing well con- sidering their age and sllua· tl on," llicks says. "Our ~u !s rated their qua.rtcrback ns "'·ell as anybody \n the league. iutd we know lhey·ve l(O! (.:O'l<I receiver~ And a l o u i;: h OOferiiw " "I don '\ sec ilOY.' we can be worried about 0 letdown hav- ing to piny them." Sonor:i. wh ich slipped to 1-1 in Orange League play with ils I08S lo Valencia last week. showed offensi ve dlfficu\lics. and thnt i<1 Hicks' big worry in prcp.'tl':ll1on for Dana fl ills Senior .hm Pcter90n. whom Hicks describes as an ade - quate runner end p;isser, starts at quarterb.'tck, and ~vernl runrM:r1i !let action in the backfield. J-JickJ IJsls Jim F'azio, Dan Jones and Jim Scherer llS the probl~e backfield st.olrten. but adds that there may be some changes made before ~amc time . "We UIC lh(!tll all about e<111ally, and I doubt If any on<> hPll goincd 100 yards in· divl dual\y all scai'JQn ."' !l icks s11ys. "We go 10 Jones a little hit tnorc, becRU~ he ls ~I r<'lllrnet from Ins t !W!11~11n " ( • Shivelys Stars Score Big AtSACC I Women's Go lf ~{j UI SIDP Semis Matches All BIG -n-TALL Next at Rancho f'amous Ncrme Suits e Spottc081$ Sieck• e Furnishings 227 I. 17th St. Co1to M•N ·-,.,. ..... , ' ,.,.,,. onte Jtancho San Joaquin Golf 0 winner \Vith 17 followed by1 I•""-C... LI ... J>tJ Don and Wilma Sttlvely are the guys and doll s champions at Santa Ana Country Club ~fter dereating Pat and llosal!e I-fart, 4 and 3, in the final malch Sunday. c.ourse women's club wlll play Mesdames John Ordway (58/i •~,...,_,...,. ---... CIMw9I semifinal round matches in d a L p 1 581 )!~~...,~~~===== .. <111 • • e erman I • __ ~ the annual president'.! cup,---- competition Friday with the championship round set Tues- MARK DALBY Newport Harbor CHRIS HAWN Marina MIK E GOODSON Fountain Valley ED WEINBERGER Edison Uni Nee<ls Air Game If University High School is to move the ball against Valencia's football team Fri· day night. it will have to be through the air. But pass derense is one of Valencia's strong points, says University coach Jerry Red- 1nan. tle'll take his Trojans to Tustin high school for the 8 o'clock game. ''We'll have to pass because I don't think we'll be able to run on 1hem ," says the coach of the 0-4 Trojans. Jn the consolalion bracket, Ed and Marge Ethell dereated Jim and Jackie Voelkl, 3 and 2, to gain lhe top spot. !\.-lilt and Myrna Freeman nnnexl'd the first flight cr-0wn y,•ith a 1-up victory over John llutan and Al ice !!all "'hilc Neil and Slella F o s I er defeated Ned and Barbara Khorey, t-up for the con- S-Olation award_ In the second flight, John and Phoebe Conley defeated Barney and Edith Robinson, 3 and 2. for the top spo t with Jerry and. Carol Ann Ruoff defeating John and Margaret Neal. 5 and 4, for lhe con- sola tion. First round match results in the annual High-Low tourna- ment have been recorded. Here's the way it went over the weekend with second round play to be concluded by Salurday: Dick ~fcCoy and O. Z. Robertson defeated Ed Elko and John Rutan, 10-8: Lou Clem and Don Dicus def. \Vally Bennett and Bi I J Buckley, I-up ; Jack Wilder nnd Ken Lewis defealed Ernie Ainslie and !\.like Stewart. 6-2: Bill ll ulrhens and J\.1 a x l\.1cClain def. Jim Voelkl and Phil Sheehan, 11-10. Bill Dennis and G e rr y Knutson def. Charles Bonnett and Milt Freeman, 1-up; Ned Khorey and Duane PedJar def. J ohn Irvine and P e .t e Treadwell, 7-6; Bill KQCh an9 Orma Crank def. Fred Walker and John Knox, 3-2; Ed Hayes and Lloyd Stocker def. Don Kennedy and Lee Ritter. 3-up. Fred Werder aad Jay Hev.•itt def. Bill Foole and Bert Smith. J and 2: Les Boyle and Ron Price def. Kirby Day and John Gabriel. l-up on the 21st hole : F.d Could and Larry Ridgeway def. Art Nisson and Herb Ren- free. 3 and 2; Part Hart and Ed Ethell def. Stan Woods and Roy Crank, 4 and I. Charles Hester and Vince Hogan def. Dick Aubrey and F'rank Wilson , 1-up: Merle Boyle and Rupe Hendricks def. Bud Talmage and Hoggy Evans. 3 and 2; Don Smith and Ed Sylvester def. 1-lesrch l·loopengarner and Rudy Vaughn. 3 and 2; Jim Duggan and Milo Tedslrom def. Flovd Weaver and Russ Hughes. · 1- up. B ig Cnnyon Qualifying rounds continue for the Big Canyon Country Club men's club championship in Its second year of operation y,•ith closing date Wednesday . Over the weekend, the an - nual high-low tournament was held \\1ith 118 player s participating in the lwo-day event . F'irsl place went to Elton Hallett and Paul Kiely with a t"'crday best ball total of 125. Second place went to Maynard Franklin and Guy Claire with 126 . In third place were Dr. David Barnes and Carl Quinn with 127. Three teams tied for fourth at 128 with the place- ment determined by matching scoreboards. Soccermen Down Foes day. In the president 's night . Dorothy \\'right will meet ~faiint Strick/and and ~farian Keeler wiU meet Vi vian Trout· man in tAe semis Vice president 's fl 1 g ht ma1ches find Sally O"'·sll:',V facing Lil.a Sindorn1 and ~fargaret DeBach p 1 a y i n i:: Phyllis Stafford. Beverly Cornwell y,•(11 mee! 1 Betty Seiersen in one rnatch of 1 the 9e('retary's flight with Kay[ LeulweHer fa cing Z o I a Bartholomew in the other. rt will be Toddy Broon1 I against VI Saxton in one match of the treasurer's flii;:ht and Rae Harbereiter y,·ith C:in- ny Pepin in the other El Niguel Esther Nugent. y,·omen's club champion. was Io w medalist in qualifying for the aMUal president's cup cham· pion.ship at El Niguel Country Club in Laguna Niguel. Mrs. Nugent fired an gg for low gross honors and "·as one of 40 players surviving firsl round action early this \vcek y,·ith the seco nd round carded toda1• . Co<ln /tles11 Members of the \\'Omen's club at Costa Mesa Golf C.ourse staged a black 1narks tournament this wee.k v.•ilh Barbara Morton winning A flight with a 72 followed by Lucille Wilson (75). In the B flight competltk>n, Rosemary Ski.Ilion was the winner with a 76 followed by Irma Havens (79) and Carole Ros.5 (80\. It was Ginny Stasko the win- ner in C flight with 85 followed by Elise Stipes and Vonda Adams. eaC'h wi1h 88. Failyn Brooks y,·on the 0 flight award ~·ith a 72 Nor ine Grady second at 79. B. J. Newland and Ruth Schilling tied for third place with 81. Mesa Verde Afembers of the women's club at Mesa Verde Country Club staged a hom&and-home better ball or foursome com- petition with members or ihe Los Coyotes Country Club in Buena Park recently. On the winning team from the Mesa Verde CC team were Phyllis Liken and Barbara Pegg. Their team was 26 under for the two-day affair. On the second place squad from MV were Erny Burckle and Brenda Ronald.son (24 under). Ty ltamano and June McConnell were members of the third place team (22 under). A tie resuted for fourth y,·ith Verda Shirley and Chris iloup on one team and Yolanda f\1eserve and Arlene Verfurth on another. Their learns were 20 under. Mary Singer and Doris Buckles were on the next squad, 18 under. /tl eadotvlnrk It was a ones tournament at Meadowlark Golf Course this week fqr members of the women's club. Winner in A flight was Dot· tie Mulligan with 3llh rollowed by Betty Briley with 34 ~ and Cori.me Richardson with 35. In B fligtil it was Kelly Geiger (31), Fiona Moore (34) and Chari Thayer and B. J. Wieland tied at 36. Dottie O'DeJJ won the C "But their secondary reacts Golden West and Southern flight with 33 followed by Gail Stinson with 37 and Florence Eichhorn with 37 1h. very well. They keep Ute ball California colleges each won inside and make you throw ~occer games Wednesday. I rvine Coast: short against them and they Golden West beating Biola 4-2 Irvine Coast Country Club do a good job of rushing the and Southern California com-women golfers staged a three passer.·· ing from behind to down blind mice tournament this University's offense. if it is host Northn1p Inst itute of week with Mrs. M i ch a e I to generate any, will come Technology 8-6. O'Brien and Mrs. Fred from the passing arm ' of SCC fell behind 4-1 and then Schneider the A flight winners junior quarterback M i k e lied the game at 4-4 behind with net scores of 56. O'Loughlin. Jan Hethcock's go11l late in the Mrs. E. H. Newland and A stocky 5-7, 165-pounder, first ball. Hethcock broke the Mrs. Ji. E. Whiteside tied for O'Loughlin has \•:inged the ha.II tie with a penalty shot in the third place with 57. !15 ll mes th is season. con1-second hall and went on to In the B flight. Mrs. Walker pleling 39 for 513 yards. kick two more goals. Smith was the winner with 50 <>'Looghlin began !he year Enrique Gnecco and Adolpho followed by M es d nm es as a fourth stringer llhrr Ramo!! each scnred 11 pair or Everett Morris with 52 and C. tr.1nsferlng to University a! go.its for the host Hustlers. Da Ros \\'Ith SJ the end of last year. Golden West expnnded a 2·1 In the C fli ght, winncrll in- "He was slowf<I up ~.11 11 halftime lead to 3-1 on ~ chest eluded M!sdames WatTCn Gih- knee injury and the nu during shot by Ramos, and after n1-boos (53). W. C. Jennison (~) two-a-day drills," says Red· ola pulled lo within one Gnet'-and Ben Jlazewinkel {551. man. "and he's stUJ got a k>l ;;;'°;;;;;;iiadi;d;;iedi:;;;h;ii'.;;fin.;;•l.,t~n~ll~y----~ii1r.,sii. iiRo-laiind;;;;;;Piiaiiriiis;;;;;;wiiamsiil"ihe of things lo learn about nin-11 nJng the offen.-w. "We recognized his ttblllly to pass the first time we saw him 1hrow the ball, but ii jUJt takes a llttle time.'" Other than O"Loughlln, University's attack has been ineffcetJvc .. "Onr .()rftnslvc line is no blnc:klnJ:t." "YS Rtdman. "11 ii 's not improving. Our ttchni- qur i11 not good and our ablllty to mov,e mCtl out or the wny is !ll\t ton jlOOd '" GRAND PRIX s113~!~ MO. Air tMC,. .....,. w!Mewl, lilt wfll., ""YI Mf. AM·l'M ''-• r•lfy ... 11., wtlO', ._,. tr bMl!tt tut1. ,. IM. '"" 9NI Nstoll ..., ......... drlw"" ~t T a L.. O'*r MW tw .. ,.11 .. 1 ff11¥t.,.. IHC L.UO INO I/JO .... Ml. W4flfl41<1tT DA VE ROSS rONTIAC 2410 H.,._. It.ti. _. .. h Dr .. C..t• M"• LIASI 01•1cr -fACTOlT AUTHOllllO DU.Li i ......... flrl. l :H " SiA e S..t. £ •w..,11191 IT A,,t. ,llD DOIAN-146-t017 ' ...... lffttctl •• "'-•·· Oct. It .. ,. S.11., o...u . . Giant Ski SALE I "OLYMPIC 72" WOOD SKI ~,,..,..--' Wltb Purchase or s3490 • Marker Standard Toe • Marker Telmet Heel at Reg. Price FREE • lntlailatlon Included Total Package Reg. fll.to OS200 PLASTIWRAP SKI • Marker Standard Tot Reg. $87.50 • Marker Telmat Heel s5590 • la.stallaHon Included FULL FASHIONED FLORAL JUMPSUIT • Ortgnal Bslk Skiwear or Austria 48% Virgin Wool, Reg. 60.00 48'}0 Nylon , and 4% Span- dex s44ss • Over-the-boo I Style ; Cen- ter waisltd bell and buc- kle: nylon snow cu(fs. Ex- citing Fas hion Right Col- ors Reg. 58.1111 FLORAL BIB OVERALL 5 BUCKLE SKI BOOTS Leather Lined a.g. $60 Reinforced Epoxy s34ee Parallel Soles Llmlled Sizes WOMEN' "INSTRUCTOR" PARKAS lllgh Fashioo Nylon Two-y,·ay Front Zipper Polyallm lnaulaUon ASS'T. COLORS & SIZES YOUTH PARKAS Water-repellent Two-M'ay Front Zipper Nylon Outer Shell Ass't Colors & Si?:et Were Z!.tl SoJ599 Reg. IUt SCJ99 .. 40! YOlFTH WIND PANTS . . Reg. 10.99 Now 1.• MEN'S & WOMEN'S "SAPPORO" PARKA lnstructor Styled Bright Bands of Nylon Cire' Red-White-Blue MEN'S & WOMEN'S SHORT CIRE PARKA Fasb'6n Right Exciting Colol'5 CHAIR COATS Extra Length f'or Extra Protection a.,. !S.00 s1991 Were Z6.tt s1149 See Vs A t T he Ba lboa Ski Cltcb Or ange Co1111 ty S k i Slaow S11nday,No vember5 Ne1Vp0rter In n COMPLETE RENTAL PROGRAM Over 200 pair of skis and boots a va ilable. Skis, boots, and pales. AS LOW AS S4 PER DAY 10°/o DISCOUNT To Ski Club Members !Sears/· Sout h Coast Plaza 3313 Bristo! Street Co1t11 Me~a 540.3333 u,. s..,. 1 ... tT1"" c~, • - DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS YOIJ'lfl! PLAYIN&11-IE l.fAP ?! f>'UT.,,fjUf ~OU CANT TllUll MUTT AND JEFF DRIVERS ALL OVER TH~ifR~~c: CRAS~ING INTO T~EBACKOF MY CAA! FIGMENTS NANCY rM 50 KEVED•UP ABOUT . 'TOMORROW'S . FOOTBALL GAME l CAN'T SLEEP l DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWER I ACROSS 1 Piece of wood 6 Hard of hearing 10 Pound down 14 Asian city 15 And other1: Latin 16 Russian moun1ein . range 17 Praying figure 18 Plant of eastern N. America 20 Feeling of emo11ona1 dislress 21 Forehont 22 Author Hora110 ••··• 23 Scold 25 Family members 27 N. Americ1n na1ion 30 Strict observance olword usage 31 Join together 32 Acuess •••·• Berger 33 Female animal 36 Sel1es 37 "And·-··· tha!l" 38 Collegit 1uhiect: Abbr. 39 Tre• " " lO " • 40 Certain lilaments 41 Within: Prefix 42 In 1 three· told manner 44 Shorellnes 45 Ruinous 47 Flavor 48 That which it d'awn torth 49 Evil 50 Met11! bar on house door S4 Holiday greeting 57 President of the Republic ol Te11.as 58 -··· lacto 59 Direction 60 Sculptured hkeness 61 Fox 1101 or walli 62 Grat -: WWI banleship 10 Time and tide 11 Wheel 111eightening job1 12 French pain1er 13 W11e1front 111uc1ures 19 Feminin1 name 21 Byw1yof 24 American 63 Literary work DOWN humQfiSt 1 Machine ··-25 Plays in 34 Protuberance 35 Greek leuers 37 Forbidden 38 Certain word games 40 Weighty 41 Charged particle 43 Trim again 44 Unprincipled m'" 45 Simuel F. ··-: 192ti Pulitier Prill winner 2 Sca1lett's 1 1 home ootbat 46 Very skilled 3 -· -instant ~~ ~·~er o_f -~-person 4 "W 11 d 1... . emrsp ere 47 A sense 1 one · nation 49 Kind of metal Informal ·28 Literary 51 •• SS f I "···Corny 6 ' .et 0 100 5 collec11ons as K1nus in ir.ture 29 Ho1piu11 August" ti~nsfer employee 52 Legend 7 Kind of colla1 JO Rob1trt E 53 v · . B Indian · 1ct1m mulberry ····-:Arctic 55 letters 9 Common . explorer 56 Survey sickness: 32 c~1nlval 57 Tell an lnfo1m1I employee untruth 10 11 12 1.1 • ' . iHATWON'T WORK-'rLL. TRY' SQ\1ETHINC3' ELSE PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH I I ! • °fO'l'URE ftl~LINE' 1·~f~s Mf.~ICA 111.nr ~r.f PERKINS by Chester Gould by Tom K. Ryon NO SW'f3A"f. I an MY SOLIWQUY 10 AN ARClt Of AN l'Y!OllROW. by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller " • DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS -IFE!L~I ~F>~iN-. GORDO lhu~day 0!10.ber 19, 1971 !'~it FALL TO IFO!<fi, YA FALL-f l?OWN. .,.\!:::~ --6? ·• . .....,;,a; G~•. ··-·a DAILY flLOT 4J by Roger Bradfield l l l t f l j I ,,,~, ~ by Gus Arriola C(}l<S 15 7111 ONL'/ mtJL'Y ORSANtC AR.CH t'TECTtJl<F:· __..-'--. m-~ DOJ' C tNtNe, EXPOUND ~ WIT# • Y'MOUT!l ---FUJJ./ ...., ..... )) r,..;J .I'--' ~ .. -"' • .. ~MwM ____ .. /ttY JICVs/l IS 'OJR lllJt.JM -~~-· -~&> ~~if.---~ ... ----: MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ~ .•. ,. by Charles M. Schulz ~--~~-~..;...,!' ' '---"' ll !! by Harold Le Doux I DECIDED I DON'T NEED AN ATTORNEY, LIEUTENANT ••• UNLESS 'J'OU DECIDE TO ARREST ME! >.ND IF YOU PO ARREST Mr!. YOU'D' SETTER SE REAL SURE YOU'VE GOT A. CASE! by Mell by John Milfl by Ferd Johnson by Roger Bollen ' ' THE GIRLS 111;,~ l(>-19 "All ltl1 IHe lae'1 Ud dlis wonckriul 1lft ror mUlq frkltds." DENNIS THE MENACE 'I.ET TOIMIY~ rT FIRST: ~IS 1)\\) IS A DfJC1Qll !• • . I f J , ' 4• DAIL V PILOT ltu.1'\dJ) OCtot>tr Ill ii.11 -'='--~~~~~~~~~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOl'ICE HOTIC • 01' MAHM.aL'1 IAle-• -l'ICTfllOU'S a USlllllU knmlot 1tetr19"f•ll011, 1"' • cor lllOY1'CI TO CllOrTOl:I 111°""1 \T.llltl!Ml!WT e<><••lon Pl•JMU! .., ,&rmur ,,...,., t Ul't•tOtt COUllT 01' TMt l "' JOI'°"""" ..,_ 11 IMli~ ~ ~I ~O. OD61. I Y ~!•I ... o4 •n t• $lATI Ofl CALl~llll& flO • It IK"''kwl l•Mlt4 Oii )wl ... ·tio'• 1 1~'2 "' '"" THI COUHT't Ofl ORAJllOI Ol!LlA Awt-llNOS • ACCllSiOl'llS, "'....Utl"I (00,l<I, ot C1llfot11!1 c-h UI .... A·JO.. 1n1 fl•~ c1.,i.. """""''°"' IM(ll LC.~ ~Ill O.it J...OK:ltl O•>lrk• £•••••"' JON •1CHAllO MACNAI. ·~· l lWll fowl lrvtl\, 1n1 ,. ... Ctrt:M, ~"'-Cit CtUIOrrllt. -I 1we-1 M:!Cll MA(lllAI , o.c .. -. Mllllll"tt.ln lwcn ...... '° 111 ·~WO< 61 knMla! Rtl"9'fr'11on lllOTICf IS HEllE.IV GIVEM lo '"' '"'' 111tt1 .... , ,, Mll'lll toN!ucltiO lrJ .., ll'IC , t\ lllltQmefll (ftdllor •...;i -Jmt c• ... lklr• 61 Ille M>oYe nil'Mod Oec.0...1 1,...,1w10..,..1, Artl>llr Clll\.ef'I I\ hlG'1'1'fJ"'! llN'.)10• )flOW 11111 •H --. 111'11119 d•I'"' ~11111 !ht l...,. If lrwll lno • Ml IMl•t1Ct gt tl,31)1 !7 .c•u1ll• """ ... 10 ~' ••t r.,q111reo to tile ll*'f'I l'hl1 •I•'•'""" rn-.t °" ••Ill IUOO'"""'' 111'1 the 1111• O! llw wltll "" ...C.IMf'I' _,.,.,,, Ill IN ottle# Clwk ot Or• .... C-IV Oii Q(1 ), 1tn. l•tlH'ICt OI Mill ••K<lllOll. I n ...... !••'" (II , ... (l"'IC OI 11\t ·-tflllllaocl """''' "" Ir ltllY J. l•rplff'I, ~Ir ,_IV 11C1011 111 ,,.,. '''"'' tt111 ,,,., ''"tre11 01 10 •-• tti.rn. w1111 l1'lt __ ,11,.,,, Cltn. MIO lllClgmtnl Oeblot Ill lftt llt-•ty 1 .. •WCl>f.,, to '"' ........ lfl*I •I -en\ct fl·JOSO ,,,. c ...... ty (II o ...... !ltlt ol Ctll"'-1111 of .... •llor,...,., c . f>AUL DU 8015, m fllltlll'lllH °''""' Co.11 o.nv Pllo!, OetcrlDeo •• IOllOWI: D<hlt f Otl.,. NtwPOrt IMCll C lltot I OClllM' 5. 11, If, H. 1912 267'•12 Lot 11, Tr ?fl4.S, Cl!y Of Cott• M•l<I wtild'I It tM pl~ Of tNtJ.;..,: o1 ~!;;(-------------- Co. ot Or t,., $1•1• 01 C•ll•or11•• •• P9I u1111trtloiwd 111 •II ,,..11..-. ,..1.1n1"" io PUBLIC NOTICE M•I> •woroeo 1,. II~ t), '"'''' d •l'ld 4i .... OI MIKI, Mtflt 111 '"" olOt• ot ,,,. (o !tit ftf•lt Of oald ,0.C.0.nt, wltt\111 IOt,ot.(---------------1 R«OI'""' of ""o coull1y 1~11 commonlv :'::':~.· inor lN 1"'1 l>Ubllcttlc.n ol lllh PICTITIOUS IUSlllllEll ~nown ••· ml (.ornl'll 0•1 ~'' Cci.l• Otlecl CXIOMr lO. 1''1 111.t.M• iTATI M•HT M••~. c 111•0..n11 TM follow•l!ll ""'°"' ••• NOTICE IS H€REIY GIVEN tllaf Of' MAii.Ti-iA ANN MACNAll bll$lr.eit ••; F••O•W· O<l-• 11, nn .• , l DO o'c:IO<• E•KUlrl• Of '"" will THE $, H. RUSH co .. 306 R1mon1 IP M. ti Or•fl!ll' c-ty H1'1»" J<IG~l•I or lllt -· n•Mod d«l<H!nl Pt.ct. Cotl• ,,...., Cfl(t. f16J7 0 1ttrlct ~I J•-Ao.tel Clly ot C PAUi. OU aOIS L" Jullu1 lloKf\, :JOt R1mon1 PllKt, N~ BMd1, Cwnty Cit Or.;., Slll9 W °'"'" °"" • Co.I•-· C•lll. 92'27 ot C1llfo<nl., I wtll Mii ti PtJtlllc 1ucl\Of' "''""'°"' IMCl'l. C•llferftll Stelli ANM llosc:h J()6 lill"10ft<I Pl..:1, •o 11'1e hlOhnt ~. tor c:•lh If! ltwlvl T•h 0 14) ............ Co.I•~. C•OI. ~7 """""''!' DI 11\t u .. u.-1 s11i.t. 111 IM rl911t, All-t IW lf•kVltl• Tnl• ou1I~• 11 Delnfl conducted Ill' • 11111 .,,., ln+tf'nl ol f.llO llJdllmtnl ~OI' Pvtlll~ OnllDt (o,ul OlllV Piii)!, Hutbl...S It'd WIHi. In l!>e •l:IO•t l\lmecl P'-'Y• or to "'<IC:ll C)(IOllfr 12, It. li •n<I No•ffl\Otr l . L" J . JtOKll 11wrw.o1 t s m•v °' .-'""'"' 10 ,.11,,., *'n 1151.n T11t1 1ttt..,,.,,1 lfitd Mii\ '"' coumy w ld t"(«uTlort, WIT~ .Cttued l11ttr••I Ind Clt•k "' Dr•"9• Coun!y "'" CX!Obe'r 3. t°'h. 1tn. WILLIAM E. ST JOtlN, COUHTY 011.0 •' N1-I Be1cft, C1h~r1111, PUBLIC NOTICE Cl.fAK, lrf &.tty J. a.11111911, Otw!V. Stpl1mt1et 21. lm. Put1UMMd Ort• Cotll Oallv Pllol, ~;~~o 0. Wll•ORSOlll, f lCTITIOUS •ustH•ss Ort<lt>e• $, 11. "· 26. ltn • 26J't.12 g-::.;.iNt~'· 11tr11er Tl'le to11!~E ~~~~=!; 1>on1.,..1 PUBLIC NOTICE Jll<lic~ Dhlr1c:I II. flCTITIOUS IUlllllE5S Bv Ellr!• M . Elfllr, Ouwtv POT-LIO HOLOEll, °'1 S<lton •o-1. HAM• STATaMIENT A. L. "'""°"' Jr. P ~· I DK. A,$. ltvl~ Ctl. '2-. TM tollOWlllll perlDI\\ ire oolfl9 f'lllflllll'I Allor•"' *"' c ... l 11llt e.o.. mlth, '362 bl/M .... I II: 3'J1 C•l'INV l lvd. StlDll A-. lnll'lt Cit '2U4. GREEN RAIN SAN CLEMENTE. LY'....oool. Ctll ...... lt ,.,., Thi• bullflonl 1• btlng c:-UC'ted tr'( I 2-2 C111lll1 ltne. Mluloll 111•1<>. nus. PuQlllMd Drtl\llt Cottt Dilly Pllol, Pir1~nlp. Oof\lld C1r1 Emory, 202 C••llllt Oct-rs, 12, 1f, 1911 26'4·1' Rot.en C. Smflf\ UM, Mlllf.IOlt Vlelo tM1S. ----------------! TM1 1t•t-1 fileo wllh !ht C_,r DAILY '°llOT Stiff fl'tlole Clerk of 0••1'1111 c.,.,ntv on. Oct, 3, ltTl, 5,..,... l . Chftbro, 14131 C11lltl1 PU BLIC NOTICE Wiiii E ~ ( line, Mlulon v1110 t26)$, •m . ,,t Joh,., CDtJn1y ltfk, by Btt· Tnli 1x1sltM1U 11 f/efnfl condvcted bv " 'C A-D I" ' Drattlfl From Tl' Irvine Gists 'Dem~ F1iends' The Irvine Comm u n It y Noel Flllame, pmident and Tom Tltw wtu direct lhl Theater has llllllOOOOOd the aecretary, r<spectively , of th< !CT production and ifso ls cas< for Ill st<Ond production Irvine group. Both renewed designing the .. 1. Titus ls tak · of the 19'11-73 seftJOll, Regina.Id their association with com• Ing his third d Ir e ct or la I R o s e• 1 d ram a • • O ea r munlty theater earlier UUs year assignment with the Irvine Frlendl," which wUI e>pen a in ICT'1:1 "You Can't Take lt group, having staged "You three-week e nd run ln With You." Miss Fillastre'• Can't Take lt With You" and December. daughter Lisa will appear as "Light Up tho Sky" earlier The play, first procfuced oo their Bttle girl. this year. l<fevtsloo's CBS Playhouse In Playing the scrapping couple Jorry Rafyn wiff be sf age 1967, deals with three close who conceal their distaste ror mnna~er for "Dear F_riends," couples y,·ho attempt to recon· each other in public will be \Vith Suzanne Parle as assls- cile the separation of a fourth Alan Levy and Barb a r a tnnt director, Chuck Benton as pair only to have the Garlich. Levy, ICT's vice presi-technlcal dU'eclor and Cary wtaknesses of their own mar· dent. is taking his third Analota heading the set co& riages revealed. straight role at trvine while st ruction crew. Gary Saderup and Barbara Miss Garlich is active with "Dear Friends" will open on Waburton \\·ill play the various Orange Coast theater Saturday, Dec. 2. at the UCT divorcing c o u p l e. S.derup grooJ>'. lfumaoltle! Hall PJayhouae and performed in four coosecutive Paul Steele and Shirlee will run for three weekends, JCT prod uctions las t year, Roberts will enact the older l<Tiday:s and Satu rdays, wlfb while ?-.1iss Wa rburton is a couple trying to stay young. an 8:30 curtain. Reservations former professional actress Steele is a veteran county ac· are being Laken at M&-.3111. appearing In her first com· tor. while Miss Roberts has1:;;::0::=="=======; munity play. appeared in musicals and The host couple will be children's product.ions. portrayed by Bud Knapp and i=:~~~~~~~~ --,- 0 ,-,-,-,- 0 c,-.-,c,-'"-,-,-.,-o,c,-"--ll'f' J . B•r9ilen Dtpu•r fl ttSM 11er1,..r1hlp. Ollle .,,., ftj• tftfl I • "'I -,, o c I Dontld C Emory •-:J Oon S~IUlld Int .. doing bu1 "fH •• ""' '" t•ngt 0\1$ D11ly Pllol, Thll il•ttmllfll filed wilf\ ~ County ' Co.ol! Gener~I tlrt . P!a!nll!l "'· Wllll•m CX!Dber S, n . 19 u , ltn 1611·n C\9flt Of Or•not COlmtv on Qcl. 3, 19n. Dy Mark Miller reacts a b1't dazedl y a s •• ,,· Furtner MtC1r!hr, OllO""il"! No. l1 59S. 9f LAI ~do u1r 1ue or •" , .. .cun"' 111U1<1 or1 s"" PUBLIC NOTICE '"IV J. B•r'9oi.n, Dtp.ity Cwllir c~~i."\u leads him inside in this scene fro m "Me and Thee," "A MASTERPIECE!" •~mf/er 16, lt!1 bV 11>11 Sm•H Ct1lm1 f'utlllllltd Or•T. Cot!.! O•llv Piiot, th d f C M ,. court. o••nve co11n!'i H••t>or J\161c111 ..... .,, ,.., n e new come y rom th e osta esa Civic Play-'IHI -··o.·----FIRST RUN 0,.,,.~1 C°""l'f' ol Or•,..., Sit t• of Fl(TITIOUS IUSllll•SS ....,,1-S, 12, It, 6, 1 · _., -,,;:;;;.:; c .u1om1 •. u(ll)l'I • IU011me<1' ..,, ... td 111 NAMlf sTAT•M•NT PUBLIC NOTICE house, opening Friday. IAWOf' of [)on Swe<!l......t Inc .• dolno The lo110WinQ per.on 11 dalftll tll.IJlllft1( ___ _:-=.=::..:c::.;:.:.:;::c_ __ l------"---=---.:._----------------ll 9·-......-tu.Cl-• .. -......... U.. W. -OI. HIM The Fimf!y Show- Orson Welles Mark Lester bwl...,1 ., Cc•nl ~ti Tlrt IS 11; ,ICTITIOUS l\aUCfSS ~& 1\ld'il"""'I crtdlfo< t...S .,,,.1,.st Wllll•m PEARL MUS I C CO., St,, NAMlfSTATaMfNT ----liil Mc:C•rlftr 11 llld<!..,..,t _.,,,,, IMwiftll • We1tmln&l1<, We•tmlMt.r, '•" ttlo&J. The fol1owl"9 pen.on 11 dblt><i M lntn ....... ..._ l!!J Warr•n Beatty nel !Mllt llC• of ll09.XI •c:1..,1nv o"" on M IO J01t9h J. M•r11n, 16'1\ 1o1 .. o Lant, 1s· cA D II ........ -~,,__ f D lud'il"""' Of' '"" <Mitt ol '"" luu•nc:• of HvnUnolon Bffc:h, Cal. . THE MOMENT OF NEWPORT • T. . ......... -...-•ye un1w1y Mid ••.Cuti ..... I hlwe l••I"" -•II""' Thi• bu1lr>e•• II Doting cond!Kltd by •" I EACH. 512 :t:llfl St~ NewPOrl llMC h.. e ova 1me"" ·''Bonnie arnl C~de" rl;f\I, 111\t .,,., 1,.,.,..,, of MIO \UCl!lmfnl lnOlvldlMt. t26ol0. _ detl~ In ""' pr-1¥ 1 .. ltw C"""'ty of Jotefll'I V. M1rtln Penny Aid-. ltU SM llr'lll'IO.. ·•-·111 .. (GI "TREASURE ISLAND" Or111119, St•!• of Ct llloml1, OeM;rlbtd 11 Thl1 $llloment Hlo!d wllll 11\e C°"""1 Newpot'I htc,,, (•. t2660. -.e .tM ~ (l"GJ follow·., Clerk of 0<1,,,,,e c.,.,,.1y on: Sept. 21. 1'71. Thh bullnoeu I• bel!'llJ cmOucltd 11\1 •n U,m ~2. SI M ~·--- Tt•cl s2n. Lot 11. A. p , 1•1"n'°" -By 8-rlv J . Mtddox, Otputy County lndlY!d.ial. Barman Calls Grid Games ~ ev• c~-· .... "KING ElEPHANT'' com-iv •-•" 2t10 s ... Jv.n Clerk. • '"""' Aldln1 Jacqueline Bisset L111t. Cl!Stt Meil. C1Ull'>rnlt. p 1M$S Thh altlt<Ml\I ftltd Wllh lhe (.,.,,,ty K1 NOT ICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN 111.!I GI'\ Pvbliohed Or1f19e COIJt 01lly Piiot. Clerk Cit °'~ Counl'f' ori· ~I.!)', ltn. ('·~ 1. F<ld•Y• Oct--11. 1n2, 11 2 OD o'doc:k S.oitmbtr 19. 1111t OcloD« 5, n. If. WILLIAM E. SI. JOHN, COUNTY CLERK. fr ... _.llllll_" ''BOfGitt" P.M. ti Or•• C!lllnl'f' H•rDOr Judkl•I 19n 11U·n tr'( a-iv J, MMclba, Oep.ilv. By JAY SHARBtnT thing ITO(ng r-h;m. He '13 •11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!'!'!'!'!!!!!"!!!1!'! c .. tt ..... ,,...z,.-. Sot ... ktl ... MM. ••at•lt ~:1111 J•ml><>•ee A°"'"· cnv of F·*" I!> ..... N . leKh, C00,1nlv al Or1fl!ll', !l~te PUBLIC NOTICE P11bll'1'otd 0••-Co•ll O•llY P/lol, 1\'E\V YORK (AP) -An old co-owner of Kelly's Korner oi Ctll ,.11, I will M>ll '1 Pllblk 1..,.;llOl'I S.p!tmber 21, Ind O<li:>btr S, ll, 19. lo -hl9M1I blddfr, '"' c:•lll 111 lawful FICTITIOUS I USINESS Im 2S96-72 American tradition each fall and as such receives much """"Y of lht UnUeO Still~. •II !flt r!qnl, HAMf' STATf'Ml!HT data about footbaJJ from lltle Mid lnttornl of IAld ludQm8"1 OtDIOlr Tht loUO'Wlng perKrll Is doing !MJSIMH PUBLIC NOTICE demands that the boys ad· In !ht ll:IOYe Oescrlb!'d prQflfr!Y. or IG •i· , --------------( patrons 300 players alike. nwcll tl'wreof •s tl\IV be nKtHary lo • PANCHITA CO.. 14921 ChMlnlffl· joUm fo the neighborhood ••ll1ly w ld exKullOI!. with ICCfUeO In· Slrttl, Wtslmlnsttor C1. '2613. STATEMfHT OP AIAHDOMMfHT How did he get t n t 0 ''D!i~nd ~~1 ae..:h, C•llrornlt, 1 ~w••:_M. ,"",!,.nv t t1a,,.P•11eHhntl..,;."'· fl1CTITK>8: ~~13:ss NAME tavern on Sunday, watch pro television? Simple. A friend , Otlober l, 1,n. ~ · 1111 ,.,..or1 TM 1ouow11111 .,.._ 1111 1bfll'l<ICJlltd fht foo+h..11 on television, get KMOX spo~-~-Bob n .. -k OILl.AAO O. WllK!t=ISOll. Hi.-,·C•. f2649, VM of , ... lk lltloul bllllnts1 name Siii ·~ 1 ~""°' ~ • M•<ln•I Thl• bull-Is belrig tondllCltd Dy .,, SPEEDY INSTANT PRINTING .:ENTEi'! sloshed arxl criticize the game stopped by t6e tavem one M1111lcli>el Cou<I, lndlvlO~I. 11 iWt No. &<"Ndw•V• S..nl• Ant, Q I/I. night afte r w<rk and °"•-O llOI c 11tv H••bOt C>1w11d M. King tmll at hand. w ....... J~lcl•I 01°'.itr!ct This slallll'Mfll w11 llltd with "" c........ T~ ncflllout 111111""1 ,,.m1 ,..,en"ICI to was a discussion about the Bv i: ...... M, E ....... 0-1.r "" Cltrk of °'"""" Courtly on SIPt. 2'6, •bOW Wall flltd In Or ... (Ollftly Oii J-'n!eir expert observations °" SWtdlllllil ,.1.iritiff nn. 15, 1m. quality of spo;r:b broadcasters. HI •. '""sf., Publl~ Or•"Ot Cotti o.1iv' = SklP!lff' R°'"'''· 1Q6 a.rt11M ''" generally ha~ been confined "Buck and I were .... 11 ... ~ .... c..,. M... , .. '"'"'' $"'1llfl\tll'I' a nd Oc!Obllr • n ,, flt ...,.,..., '•111• '1107• t the ha 'th -.. Putlll~· Orft ..... C011ll Dally P!lol. '"' • ;o, .~,,.~ Thi• llllll111u .,.,, coMucted bv en o r -some say Wl about the s tereotype ..... ... 699-11 ... " ll'ldlvl4u•I. ood B I thl the o c1obtr 5, 11. ''· 1,.1 l "'PPM" Aostkt r g reason. u s year spcrtscaster and I was kind of ---~P~U'.'B~L'.:l~C:' ~N~O~T~l~C~E'---11--,P;;UB'>nLI;;;;;CnN~'OTI;;;;;;C;;E< __ I Publb'*' or•"lle c~st 0111y FP~ saJoon critics briefly had one critical about some guys do~ FICTITIOUS IUSINEJS StpltmDtr 21, Mid Ot~ S, 11. lt, of their o wn in the broadcast the game," he said. "So Buck NOTICf OF TRUSTEE'S 5ALE MA.Ml STATl!Ml!MT l•n 2 ... 72 booth Ho. 11.1i11 Tn~ 11)!111w1ng ~ 11 doing butl111n • says. 'why don't you try it if o.. HowmDtr 1. i•11, •t i~ oo A.lo.\., "'' PUBUC NOTICE It happened in St. Louis, you know so much ?" IMPERIAL c 0 R p 0 RA T I 0 N OF ROBERT T. PUGH A.5SOCIATE5.(---------------I he KMOX TV took b' AMEA1CA .• C•lllo<11l1 COtrPO<"•tlon •• 1670 Santi A"• AW., Cos•• Mew. '1611. P:ICTfTIOUS SUSIMfSS w r e -a ig 1'1le gauntlet was p"cked •ul>11hulf<I !rll)tff tor LIOo ln1u<1,.tt R-r1 T. P"'ll"· 1'70 $anl1 A"• AVf , lll&Mf STATfMElfT chance and tiired 0 burly I Up. Allfl'IC'I', •s Trvilee -· Ind ~nt t<> CllS!a ,.,.....,., mv. Trw lollowlng ptrSOIU ••• dolno boNl'IC9' 1~-----J~-J M Maho llfcMahon, wOOse on-air ex· 1 deed of ••u•' de1~ sep1e.,.11er ''· ltf>I, l l\l1 DUSI-1, 0..1,,.., cone1ucttd br 1n ••· ll:.l..LIUdll, ui11.1 • c n , pen'ence w as Jimited to Ills f~l'('UI~ by MORLEY A. FAEO 11111 tnctlYidutl. • Ml(.HEl.INf 'S CREATIONS, 21'00 to provide color conunentary OAllLENE LllllDA FRED. TMOtnd 11111 Aot>Prt T P1t11h Ptltnon Pl .. Col•• MtM, c.111. ~ ~ f1've St. I __ ;_ "---ll--1-ex-sstint in the Army, would up wife, •• Tnrstor. •lllt recora.I ~ 1. Thll st•--' flied W'lth !Ml c_.tv z .. 1410 Kowtc\c, 2700 PetllrKll\ Pt., tu. .....,..... ,._~ ·t-.. 1..-l.l.. Buck f 1~ •• Doc-t No «n. a-11731, c1en. of Or•not '°""IV oro: s.ii.mbil• ''· '°''' MeM, c1111. '2'1' hibitioo games. 11 .... 16 ~"'" or the -m o1 Olfld .. R~Ot"d\ 1n 1M Otfl(9 ~~11.::''-i!;.'~.!... 5~· =. ':'..:!; M1cM11111 Kii'~. uoo Pttenort PL, "All In all , 1 had a helluva Cardinals' f Ir 8 t e xhibition of ""' ll«orW OI' Or_. County, .., '7 • ' ' Cm.I• ,.,,_., Ct lll. HUI .. 1 .. .- Clllklrnl•, wlll Mii II put>ll,IC •.iclloll to " JMM good "--." Mc"-~ ~.·d in game aa~ Buffalo. TM ~lthHI l>l<kto< tor c•lh IPIY•t>I• •I l'IJOllJhed Or•-Co•llf Dally f'llol. Tiii\ bllllnt11 II btlllll ~ by l ft Lllln:: JOL<llNU ~ llmt of N it In 11"0/M ........,. of 1M UnlltO Sl¢tmlWr 21, •nd C)(tobtf 3, !2, lt, lndlvkWtl. a '·'ephone intePOh-direct Sl•lnl ti JJDO NewOOtl Beien &ouleYlr<I. lm ?SU-n z. Kow..:k loe1 •• _.. THE TECHNICAL crew had T~lt 111temen1 111ect wtlfl '"' '°""IV from Kelly's Korner bar, N.wixirl BMdl. C1lllor11l1, In !ht City oi PUBLIC NOTICE C!trtl ol Or•-Countv 1111: Ott. t , l•n . a -•"" tim Som kid ~ NtwPorl BffCh, C011ntv of Orll\09. S!t!e WICCI E lT 'O"H "UHTY CCER< Which (S '-ted 3 "-k from ~""6"' e . e S .,.()J)-of C•lllMlll•, all fll•le. llllt encl l"lertit Nit. ' J n ' """ ' IU\:<1 UIU\.O ed the broadcasti nd - '' ..,_,, ', ·-· -·· Busch ·--~um m· downtown ng van a conv"ed lo 1no new held DY 11 11 t•IO HOTICI! O" MA•SHAL'S SAll! .., ~ "' ....,.....7• '1171J .::>l.olfUJ dftd of Ir~!, !" tilt real pr!)ptrty •lluettd T R A Ill ~ C 0 N T INENT AL CllEOIT PllClllMd Orlngt Cont OiJ1y Piiot St Louis damaged the instant replay I" t.110 Countv tnd Steto cl~\C•lbtd ••: SERVICE. INC .. Pl1l11tl!! 111. JOHN ... (k!olltr 11 It ,, •nd NOYtmber i . . disc. But McMahon insists he Thtl pertlon of Loi TOO OI Trld Ho. SWEENEY, Defe<ld1,.t, No. t' 011 1'12 ' ' 27CJ.J1 , .. l'f'6, 1 .. IM '-IV ot O••noe. S!l\9 of &r vl flllf of ... e~$CUllOl'I I••~ Of'•t-----------.:...'--1 McMAIION, AN insurance tiuffered no mike fright when c .1u ...... 11. 11 P9f m1p ••torc!td 111 -Ottobef l. 1912' br '~' M1111lt1Ptl court, OT! the -•--w ent on the 8 ; •• 21 0~ is o1 mtsceu•neou' mto1.1n "" Or•noe COt.lfllY Harbor J oo1c1.i1 011••k!, ~UBUC N CE broker, is of course an avid :..i:111" ., oi11c1 of n.. countv rKordtr of t.11d '°""IV 01 Dr•o;ige. s111e 01 ca111o<nlt.(----=------------I football fan . He has ---"--But then, he has no cause c01mty, Oeo<rlbed I t ll)!lows: 11par1 • l~t 911!t•fd In l1wor of 'ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS dllVYL:\.I. &.olnnlng 11 1tw "'°'' no<!l'lfl'IV tor· Tr1..sconUr>ettflJ Cr.Oil SH'oolce. l'lc. •J NAMI! STATl!Ml!MT for any kind Of fright · he ner Cit Mid Lot 100: ,_, MllllM•slt•· l.ido..,...t crtdltor 1<>11 ~l11st JOl\n e. Tr.. lollowl1111 PtrlOtl It 11o1no blll>l111s1 ' IV •'°"9 11\t normta1l1r1V tine o1 MIO '-11 llJCIOrtltnl debtor 11.Mwlncl 1 •s: Stan«b 5 feet }Q, \Ve i.ghs 220 lot 1f'O.OO '"' lo • polnl; ltitnc. M'IN~-of ntt." k!u.llV clut Of' N iii ACCENT ALLOY!, 2526.t u. Ell•.cl• c s ..... .-15 and did some semi-pro Mt\ll'hWftl..ty 111 t dlrKt lint to 1 point ~I 1111 !tit dtlt ol llM l1tu1nce o! Ori.,., L19llflt Niqutl t:16n oncert et ..... -ln 1M _,,.rtvtlM of Mid lol, ulcl pol"' ... kl lllCl,lllofl. I hew lt!vltd UDO" •II""' RlcMl"tt U. $waM'f, ll:M! l.e Esll'f!<M boxing in his youth and during Dflf>il uo.4 '"' -.ihttsl...,_ llf 11w rigtit, 1tn1 111<1 1 .. te•es! of .. 1c1 ludo"""' O•lw, L...,.,. Nivuet mn his Army days. He a•--used mot! Wfllo<ly cor"" ol .. 10 IOI! lhtf>Ct dltlfOI' 111 IM prooerfy I" lht Cou"ty of Trt+1 bu1Jnna II Dtll'lll c:ondlJC1MI 1rJ tn l.:.v rior!hwnttr1v 11o119 Yid -lerly 11111 ol Orwoge. St1i. of Ctlllor11!t, cHK•lbed •• !"'11vtdu... B s to play Army football . ,.,., '°' 100: .,,., ,~ .... ,e11, n ... of to1io.n= •lc::Mrd u. , .. wwy y trauss Mt .. o.tw, 1xi.a '"' 10 ... io .._, Loi 16. TrK'I' 200t, ~ 11oo11 11. P191 Thi• •'t'-' flltd w1111 thl C-ty He got Urougb the game wnrerly cor~r. lfle't\Ct Nll'll'lffslerly 34. c°"""""tv ,._, 11 "' C1brlllo, Clen. o( Or .... COUftf'f' or1: Oct. :), 1911, tlon9 Mid l>(W'lf\WeJlnly 11 .. , Of 111d kit CO.II Mew, c..111om11 WILLIAM E. ST JOHN. COUlllTV without verbal disaster, "and tl St I-ft•. mor• OI' 11111. IO IM point .,; T~tl (~ "" homtsletd of record Ill CLERK. Bv &evortv J. ~. Of'Pl,tty 0 h y,•hen we did the seeond, the 1>t9lnlll"9 AUOllSt 29, 1972. l'-ifm re estra Mort c....:....only ~-111: 2061 Mnt NOTICE I~ HElllEI Y GIVEN "°'!t °" Ptlblllhtd Ortn0t Co.st 0 1Hv PllOI, Kansas City game, J 'm DrlYI S1n!• Al\I C.illornl1 FridiY. Nottmbet" If. Jm, ti t :OO oc:toc:~ OctOber U. 19, 26 1111t Nowmber 1. I d etefa • w1 • · P.M. •to.-c ...... tv H•rW Mun1c111t1 a rea y a one-game v n Tht Ml• 11 t1t ,..,_. "'111tOU• '11""'1111 c1111<1, ClOl J•-.. Ao.od. c11V of '"2 'l1ss.n · An ens em b t e wh1"ch wi'" all kinds of confi•--. So or w1<r911ty •191rOl""1 !Ille. ~tlOf' or N._.., Btte:n. C•Hfomll, Countv al "'' Ut:U\."C: enc:11m1>r111t11, 10 u1111r •h• o1>1~11om Of••· s1111 °' c1111om1•, 1 w111 Hit ,, PUBLIC NOTICE duplicates the instrumentation I really cut loose. IKll"'OCI tr'f .. 1o cltfd ol lr"'''· Pllbllc 1uct1"" to -hlQ!lff! bkkltr !o<l--------------Notlc• ol Ott1ul1 • ..,, fltc:l!on ID 11411 , .... 111 lewtul .......,. ol IM Unlltd Sl~lft JltCTJTIOUS llnlM•ss or Johann Strauss Jr.'s first "It got us a few bad letters M id r.•I pr_..iy ul'IOtf" ,.!d OMd or •11 tl'w rl9ht, lino •"" !ntwnt o1 w ld I hes d be the ,,..,,, w•l ••ordtd Ju1r s. ttn, •• aoc..,. ~ dttltclr" ir. n.. abow c1ncri-The HAMiii: STAT MINT ore tra an ars name for some things I sakl. Like t ....... 1 No. '1S17. 11oo1t t020t. P'llt no o1 tile proptrtv, or .., "'""h 'lltr90! •• ...,.,. t>t o i lollowlng Ptt'llOll 11 Oolna bl/Mr.tu o f the Viennese composer 'vill 'd of ho mad 01nc111 A1a1rd• 111 ""' 0111ce 01 tho nllC'ftUrY N MlllfV Mid "9C:V!I°" w1t11 sa1 one guy W e a RKordtl' ol Mid Cowltv •1111 $!tit . KC""" lni.rnl 1tld c:-10. ICltN E NTERPRISES, 1 Hert>or Open the 1972·73 seasofl of the t-r"1'c pass ca'~, 'he can O.ltd Oc10ber ~· 111111!1, NtwPOrl 8tldl, Ctlll. "'66 ..,. U U..'11 : "' 1t n 0.1'9d 11 H~ 8HC!\, c.11tom11, ""'"""' R. NorTDn. 1 H1rllDI' 111en<1, Laguna Beac.h Community catch a ball bet'"r w;th one '"''*"•I Coriior•tlon of ,...,.rrc1, 0t1oe. t, Im. Newport r.11en, Ct lll. t'1660 Oc 29 · ~ •• T'"''" OILU.Ro o. w tl1C l1tSOH Concert Association t. m hand "·n "· ,~ o! those l y: Cl•lolllll MKMlU111 M,t,Jt$t4Al Thll bull-It bel!>ll (Ol'ld'uc;:l9d tr'( Ill he Be h Jj' h Sc"·-( "~ U~ _,, AW•'•"' Stcr11ery M~ court, er-. COlllllV 111111•khHl1 I Laguna ac ig .._ •rvu clowns can with two." Sf'S'"" He!1IOI' Jlldlcl•I Ol11Tkl K""""" R. """"'°" auditorium. P11blltMct Dr•"Vt coe11 otlty P!krt. 11r e-,.,,, e1c1or. °'Plttv c~' .,:•:.;,.-:;:' ~ ... ~:;. ,~oi:;i!, Strauss works and music hy "After a while, l think Y'OO 0c1-n. 1'· 211. •rn m1-12 Ml• H•,. e 8 ., really ~me •--of fol of f'1a1"""'' AtterMv v ""'1Y J . Madder-. OelW1V c00,111"' Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and l.IC'.>ll " ... "' PUBLIC NOTICE 11s-c I'. c ... "'*'•••Uit ci.r•. rwinJe are wa•~1 ..... and it':s ------------I ""!WtM, C•N1ent1.t Fmis Schubert will be In the 8 p.m. r-""1" ....... '6 HOT1CE Ofl MAltSMAL'I SAL• Putllli.l'Md Orl>llOI Coos! O.ilv Pilot. oc'::lhtd Ortnot C0tsl Ot!IV P!lol, p...-..rram offered hy t ti e not lite Silting in the stands, BOl!ded A111111trnt111 a .... Ro11 o 1 Octobltl" 1•· ,. ..-Id N\'IV9mtier ,, 1971 1m n . i t, 1' •"" "°"~' 1' J~~ Strauss Ensemble of glvtng your buddy a shot in CeUl'Ol"lll•. It!(., • C"'1JOl'•l!Of'. Pl1l11ttll 7fll1' l?C./1 the ribs and saying the things "'· J•"'" o. C••-•k• ii ... c~'""' No. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE the Vienna S y m p h '1 n y 1100 ot. Br ¥1..W. 01 •11 ••ecu11on 1 .. u..,,1 ___ _:_:::::::..::::_:_::'._ ___ 1 __ --;;;<TI;;;o"-o;;;;;;;«---I yoo usually say." or1 St¢~ 11. lf1J ov !he M>mlc:IPO!J Orchestra. Ccvrt. l05 "11111:141Jii. Judltltl Obl'rl<1 ,ICTrTIOUS IUSIH•IS fllCTITIOUI llUllHfSS The 12-member orchestra c.,.,..1y al Lot "'"lltle\, Sttre oi HA.ME STATaMaHT HAMii! ITATIMIMT 00 he think f c 111tor111•. -1 l\ldQI.._, '"'~•f'd 1.. Tn. followlng ptr$0r\S ... , doing t>W""u rw"S!eu ':,~ ""'°'" ''' dOlng will be under the direction o f WHAT ES O ••vor ot lll"dtd Ad\""u""'t lu~•u of 11· ['ll'S( vi o 11 n I :st Walter Howard Cosell? 1be genial 42. Cell-•, II'(;' • Co<POl'tllon -l l . COMTEC ECOHOMATION. ms Wt\I THli! FOXV LOOK 80U'TIOUE, m 8. IU011.,..n1 crfdltor .,,., ~1ns1 J•,.,.... 0 W!•,_ Ave.. SM!t• AM, ciu1o,.,,;, 1Ci1t1•• Aw .• °"1fllll'· C••U. Puschacher. Its combination year-old s a 1 o o n k e e P e r C•r.o<> .i<• Jim c • ._ •1 llldllll'lt!lt dtbi· t21!)6 UYwl'lol lJt!tyofl, 01 Alllfltr•, ""'"1' · tins ho d'---~•y ducked the issue. O< 1"""'4!>0 I ,.,., 0..1•..C. of 12 ...... lt IC' w.m .... o. &ffVOI', 1StSI ~-'· '""""' lttcti c.111. of three VIO ' two m s, ~ k 111•11r ""'"",.,. 1"""""'1• .. ""41'-of o,_ Mrs~ v1t1o. C•llfortllt 92615 Al!M Eric:t1a. 1014 H.imbOft, Lot flute. oboe, bas.!. clarinet, He aaid Cosell's sldek:ic • es· '"' ,.._, o1 .. io ••«vtlof>. 1 h•vt s1~r1 011.....:. 'sun Montt veroe Al•m.tos, Ctlll. ~-k D 1w1tt1 vpon .. ""•IOllf, 1it1t _ 111i.r111 er .. i....,... NklVfl, Cal1'°'1>ll '»n Thb lllNlln• 11 Mlf\O ('Onducltd tr't' • bassoon. viola and cello is Cowboy quarte1 uac o n "' .. 1c1 lud9"""'• Otbklr '"the pr_.tv 1" Tnh tiu.1MS1 1, btlr111 coMuci..t irv t "'""'""1P· Identical to the orchestra Meredith, is his favorite 1111 County ol Or•-· 51811 of C1lltorlll1, Gtllet'otl Pert...,.INp, l t Vt1'11'1 L•ft'l'Oll f d•K•lbed ,, 1o11--. wmi&111 D. Bttver t1111 1111-1 1nec1 with 111t COIJl'!1Y formed by Johann Strauss • r. network sports man. Lot " l r.i;1 Nl,OOO'OM• t, M-.. Booll. ,, TN• '"'-' llltd wllh "'' Cl;!U'lty Clerk Cit 0<1"91! Cwntv on: Otlober '' • l844 ba k hOt ' •r>d c-•v •,_11 •l ll.5 c•~t of Dr-.e County .,,. oo 16 nn im nr ll!vtrly J. M.tdtklx, ~r in · What did the boys C at H1..,1uor1. c o.t• MtM, c1111or"11. WILLI™ 1:. sT. J OHt.i, cou111TY c Le1uc'. CDtJntv Cl•••· All 12 musicians are full Kelly"s Komer think o I NOTl(f rs HEllEIY GIVEN n.-1 M Bv B.....,.,,. J Mtddoi DtPlllY l'HJl7 be f h VI Fr141r. Oetl!Nr 11. 1m, tf ::oa o'cloct • • · ,.,.... Pllbl111wd O••r>Ot "'"'' Dtlrv Pllor. lime mem rs o I c enna r-.1cMahon's efforts in the Jive P.M. •t 0.•"90 Cou111r M1•bor Juc11t111 Pul>lltlltd O•tnQot ,01,, oeur Piiot, Octotttt 12. n , ''· •n<J Ncwtmbl!'r 1. Symphony Orche11tra. games he covered'. O"-hlCI, ncn J1mb0r1t R-. City OI' Octl)l>e• 1• 16 V'llt Howmbt 7 t 1•71 214"12 _ __;_,;.__;._ _________ ' Ntwporl Bffdl, '"""'r 61 Or•l'!Of, S11i. 1tn ' r · ·•------------'--'-"! I the ., 01 C•llfornl•. 1 w111 Mii t t 1>11bllc i11Cnon 2ru.n1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "I didn't get near Y r1ir to'"°"'"'°'' tllddt•, ror c•"' 111 i.w1111 PUBLIC NOTICE l --~,.::::::,:::_:,:::'.'._ ___ 1--.;;;;mo.;;-;;u,;;;;;u---bl 1 "-·""! I'd get '' he monev of lhO IJ~ll(ld ll•tn , 111 !ho right, fllCTITIOUS SUtlHISt ng UIUUfill • 11111 .,..., 111t«nt of Mid 11111omtn1 11tt11or fltCTITtous au11N1s1 111....,.1 ITATIMIEHT said. Ile alao praised KMOX's '-" !hf ... ~ ... • dn(rlbtd pt'OIMWly Of ICI "',"'',",",' ,., ... , •• ,s1 Tiit lol'-~~M· IT•T•,M•lllT Tht tollowlrt"1 .,..._. •r• tkll119 ""''rage lo hiring him : ''They ""'' •1 mlJ .. llKK&t"f lo AM A M N ovw•t>Q ptrlOrt I clolfllll llllllfin1 b\n.lf'!ffl •t: "'"" M"•fV Mid necvtlon. Wllll .caved .,,. TN lollOWlf19 Pl' ...... II doing 1Mn1 ..... It: OEI. MA• N>Cl81LE E~TAT6:$, 1Qf1 shot craps with me, no ques-'""' •"" ~r.. tt: HAil f'JtOOJtAll\NlllNG lllltYIClil , ,,---o1, HVllll-BHcn, (1111, Doted II Ntwplrt llMcl\, C•llkln'll•, ll EMIRAMDT'$ AUTO PAINTING ~ Sl'2 Cl'lllbllt Cir .. 1rw1,.., Ct!U. '211151 ..,........... lion." Or:!-r 2, 1'71, DODY. 'ffi' W. 11th St., (111!1 Mt11, P.O. lo• ... frvlnt, Ctf/f, fU.50 . E<k M, H'"'M'111 1!1C1 Lll(V J-11,,. DI LL.AllO 0 , WllKl•SON, C1llfornl1 "617 H1rry A. Aoteh. Sl'2 Clltl!U' Cir., tioro. 1732 Pol•lli °'" N-<I 8e1cf\, ,.._.rdlo\I J-WllN11, l12' Corti Lint , Cotti lr\'llW, C•lll. '710S Celli, '2UO Mllnkt,_ (Mt ~. C•llfotnt• Tl!ll 111111 ..... ,. Mino c:onductod 11'1' '" Tftlt bo.ltlMH 11 .,....,,, cOl'IClllCl'td ...,. °''""' C-IY TN1 INllMU It btl ... COlldll(led hY •n 11!dlwld>u1I. '"'1-bl<'ld •nd Wlft '-" lr1 ~. HlfttW' Judl<i.I Dlllrkl l!'ldlwldutl. HA•rv A llo.<:~ Erl( M "'-'M<lll a v ·-"" llotr. °""''~ Jtmei H. WffSOll Thlt tl•t9"ltlll !tied with !t>t ,_ty Thh •It""""• filed '""'"' ,,,. CO\ll'lly ~lllhll A. DIR Tl>h tllttfN"I fl1otO wllf\ lt'O' CP11n!y Cler~ Ill Qr1ng1 (Ol.lf\ty ""! ()ctOMr t , Clt<tl ol Dr..-(-ty on· ()cl t , lttf :"',.",",lf!.",~ Cltti< 61 Or•-c-tv on Ocl 16. Utt. !'72. WILLIAM E. St JOtlN COUNTV wn .. LtA.M I! ST JOHN COUNTY CLEll\C .- ..... ,,, , .. -.. \\Ill.LIAM E. ST JOllN, COUNTY CLERK. CL&lllC , Ir et""'"' J, IHIMc; Otpuly ft II I 'J ~ Dtoul • "' ,...,. l y Blvt•IV J, M..tcl<IO•, °"""'Y· ' '""711 W frtr V ' ' y. l'l'llll ~wailtl'ttd Or-CO.ti 01lly flllM fl M4lll PlllllhMd O C Octoblr s, l:t tt, 1tn MS-,; f'ue.ll11wd Ori,.,,,. COid o.i1v -,.lktl Oc•-r u ,~). ':' ,,0•11¥ Piiot. Putlll\Md ()t .. Cont Dtlty PllOI, .:CC'-------'-------'-'IOc!OM< It, lt •tld HO'tembtt L t'. 1t/l . ' ' 1 owml!t'I' J, Qcctobtr 11, It. ,. Ind Nll'Y«ffl""° 1. PUBLIC NOTICE "" ,,...n 11'°"11 ,,,, lib-ti P\JBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Organist Plans Concert in LA British artist Gllli:in \':eir will be at the keyboa rd No\•. J2 when tile First Cong· gre511ional VChurch of L o s Angeles opens Its J972-73 organ concert serlea. Mist Weir. regarded A!l one of the world'!! foremost tx- pooeni. ol t h c work Ill MeMAlen, wlll l-'clude works by that con1poscr In her 8 p.m. recltol. lier program Is the rlrst of sev!'n organ recital!! to be delivered by intcrnallonall y nrclalmed nrllsts ln the tm During "Pooh For President Fun-Days:' October 21, 22 and 23 at Disneyland. Hem's what Pooh has planned for you. • Free"Pooh For President" po.ten, buttons and colorlng kits tor all boys and girls under 12. • A lrM Pooh movie, •wtnnlethe Pooh and Iha .... ....._ Day." --· • A huge PocJh.Rade JOU can r..a, mm ch In. • The "Pooh Review" whh the Disney Charactwa llld the Dllneylud Band et 1:30, 2:30 8lld 3:30eachdl!J on the Tomorrowland Stage_ • Aglant Pooh-Utlcal rally, whentJouc:anmeetWhlle, Tlgger and Eeyorw eYaty "Fun-Day,• at noon. 1rs all happening at Disneyland, and it's all for no extra 0051. Be sure to oome. II promises to be the best Pooll-Utical P!Vly of the year. Disneyland ~9AMlo7PM Oct21 tnl22. 10AM to6 PM Oct. 23. ....... 73 leMOn. ·--------------'----.. • TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening OCTOBEft 19 l'n WORLD SERIES IASEIAU 1t • Stti , .... h lllCISlllJ 1t win 111 "9M S"-1 lt tOl'ldldlH 011 MIC. '"' cmillllnr fl'Olll 1pin1hri1tttr 1'11 • 11N ii l!Mltftnltt 1t prlSI tlN. H llM Mtwort Han't tttd nru11rty IChflllld lll'OlflM, ttlla thl tilH wilt bl Mid bf • """' •nd local ""'1•111ina. , .. ooomm•-o"'"""" "Sprinitlmf" (j) ,.t S.11t 0 Wiid Wiid Wiil m·Tht f1111tstoMt QI -"" USllC iBl ""'' • Ml Dultt [••mo• ft! Modppod&• L.Mp 9 M1rberry llfD 6'i) LI Strundl llpou m Thrtt Stoopi 1:30 (j) Hofa11'1 HetoH 0 Ml'M; (C) (90) "Esape Frt11 Fort lnvo" (w11) '53 -Wlll11m ttold111, Be1nor P1rter. CIJ KIWI W1lftr Cronkitt m...,, ..... (!I Clllip•'• Is!* !RI CAE: ()pin U11htnity Mt\11 fD Astrtllo.., I m Jotn11e C.no1 Sllow Qt;rttll AcrH Eii) Ttle·lrmtl J1hnlc.1I a') Dot4Z ,,. EE Littlt hsc:1ls ,.,.orn .... e llwllftl fll' Donln Cl) Tnrttl ff Co..-q•n• (jJ a-kl11 Mwntutt "Clnoeln( 0 Wbet'a My LIM? m'""'""" m I Dr11111 oC .... nit @ SlllOt 72 fl) M0\111: (?fir) "littlt Cilnt" (di1) '33-Edwerd G. RobinM>A. 1:10 0 Mo'llt: "S.V.11 0111 la Ma," (dr•) '64 -Burt UflCISltr, Kiit Dollglu. Ftedrlc M1rch, Ava Gardntr. Thl!t AppreJ.INte. Movie fOllOwl World Series 81seblll. m Miry Crtlfi1 SbOw , ... 0 (I]... """" _, (t} (Dr) "Tht Llft'Mll If l7l1ti Cln'" (dra) '68-l(i111 Nowak. hter A1tll, Ernest Bor1nl11e. ~ Brlnkmll (Mtu NmkJ, • rounc actrm. 11 c1$l by director Ltwlt brUn (Finch) lo P<>rtr1J ly11b Cl"'8, 1 S.1tndlty SCfetft $tlf who died lr11it1Hy while 1111kl111 1 lill'll for tht now has-bfft'I dlrtdor. O C1llll ®""""-"" ... men! Yltnna "Hot PWto" J1k1 Web1ter tries dt\Mlrin1 1 v1lu1bl1 microfilm to his boss bu! 1ets In· ~olved with a kidn1plni. m1yt11m and 11n1sters. Gutst stars 1r1 Johll Ireland and Skrt Aubftl)' • ®J ltt's Make a De1I EE UR Ynno Pat11 Recordar tJ!.) tOl lntem1tl011ll Ptrfomanct "lch1ikonk1/W1aner Concert'' Charin Dutoit leads the French TV Jrlstworil Orthas\11, with his pianist wife Mutlla ArgeOch as soloist, lft Tduikonky's ~Plano Conc.erto No. l ." AIM> music trnm tl'lt de1tll sctlll of Wqne(s "lrW•11 1nd Isolde," C!IJ"" ...... m,,_ t.lO D .._. Adill Torn l(ellf rtviews tile OcL 15 ltuns n. Ea11a 111111 pl1yed in l't!Htdelphi1. OMews ®I Mtn Griffin 10:00 o ·m CD Mews 0 rJJ @ Cl) OW.I MltlluiA "Thi Trouble With Ralph" Owtn M1nh1\I defends 1n old fritl'ld ch1r11d vritll 11ij1cld11t1: I plllll, Who is posltivllJ ~tilied by wltnesm. 0 Boris liftoff Pftl8lltl tltrilllr EE c.. JIQfld• .JI)]j) Worllll l'reu el""'"""' mi lJldll Ub11 m KlnJdtll or tM SUi fl)JllMS E .... Qllam fl.I l'll Chi ai• .. IE £l AlW T\eN C.. lilt l111jer 10:30 0 Till lldl a-, ltl .,. .. ,,_. m .-"""" m $pelllll •-m (iJl ™rtr llinms .,. • • • 7:l08Y-r Die*" Udlrt "'1ht ®Nollt: "TM li1 Cilcn'" f(lrf'll Df the lnllnl" Throurf'I I Ion& fE O.tdtof $tlOlbUI llllM. l(lld1re trill to dilrnoM the ll:GO O .. O ft'I "' r.!:'I News »wt11 KlntSS of 1 JOUlll (lr1, ind -U01 u:.i ~ deal With lier t mtic: mother, I CI) Cl} Qgl ftN5 swin1in1 divorCff, Clorit letchrn~n O Ont Stlp ltyond &un!s. . (jJ tihnh•I Dillon It 111"!': (~) ~I) "City leHtth (:J Movie: "Dllnto~ (dra) '51 - the SH (SCl·fl) 71-Rabert W11· Jelf C::J'a ler, Joanne Dru. net, Slu1rt Whitman. @ Te Tell th1 T~ m f • Con5111uences (j) ~ SurpDfl GJ Movie: (C) "M1mm" (ldY) (:J Million $ Moffl (C) (Zhr) "ltt· '!'>6--01n1 Clark. Junes Cu!1. t.r 1 W-ldow" (com) '6'-Yimt Usi, (jj) lelliftd tie li1111 Pettr Mctnery. EB C11111f Telll Armtronl m Hopn's tkroes mo:\ f"ri ,, __ (D (J)DrlrnJt ~I Ml """' £IDF11sl of U11p1i-"Henry IY, tl:l5@Di;lnema 34 Part I" m Rollin' 11;30 0 C!J CBS late M0¥11: (t) "Sid- a!) Proluor S&1it.ni1 die tbe Wi11d" (wes) ·~ -Rober! a') Police S1111eo11 Taylor. Juhe Londo11. mAdd11111 Family O ®lmlollnny CMSM Joey 1:00 0 (])TIN W11to!\s Gr1ndp1 Wal· Ion sen 1 "stloolinr strr" just as 1 P1in hits his chW cnrrvlncW.1 Bish04! is s11lntitut1 hml o oo Ill m ~"' ..... m Te Tell tllt Trutll Mm lie has rec~ived • si1n . from 12:00 0 Movie "'O.S.S.. 117" (drl) '63 h91Yt11 that ht t5 1oln1 to die. -Kerwin Matthews, N1di1 Sanders. 0 CI) (j) m Mod Sq111d "[yes ol m Mo'lie: (C) °1111 Outlden" th• Behold1(' Hie brothu of 1 lu1 (•"ls) ·50 -J°'I McCre1 Men« thief is out to &et Piie, btlitvinc Oihl. ' him responsible lor his brolher's1 11e1th. 12:30 (E) Country MllSic: ®l .... mn1t liilrl 1:00 CIJ O 0 ({)Men ID loxlnr ''°"' !tit Olympic l:SD e Mrwie: ''WMft Wlllit Co11111 tl) Kerm1no1 Cor1j1 M1n:hin1 Home'' (d11) '50-Din £ID tlJl Advocltes "The Economf Da!l!y, Corinne Calve!. ltlcGovern's or N1•on's7" til Premier Movie m La lnolvld1bl1 3:00 f) Movit; "G1mblin1 HouH" (d11) ·~Ttrry Moort, Victor M1ture. lZ:OO U ''t1n111" (d11) '33 -Ronald Friday Colman, K1y Francis. 0 ~c.sfl 1111 Denl1nd" (!ltl) '67- Peter C11$hing, Andr1 Morrtll. DAYTIP..,1E r ... -1._-:; 1;00m ·rh1 Dllt Mirror" (dr•) '46- f'.DO m "Cry tll• l•lo¥td Country'" (dri) Dl1vi1 de Kft~l1nd. 'S2-C1111d1 Lee, Sidnry Pollitt. l:MI 0 "l uff1lo. Gun" (wes) '62 - W11ne Monr.;. l :lO O (t) ''Tiit li:itnft Mllltr Story"'i l:OO (fl ~Th1 Thiel" (dra) '52 -Rlf (mus) '!>4-James S1ew1r!. June Al· M1l!and. Rt11 Garn. IJ!On. ®'l (C) "Yl)Jllt to Bottom ,, Se•" IO:CID (J)"lhe Girl In l~I Krtmlin" (dra)1 (!.tl·hl '6l-W1Uer PlditOll. '58--lu Z11 G1b111, ltl Barkei 14:00 IJ "For1 AJ>1ch1" (wes) '48--.lo!ll O "City Wllheul Mtn" (dr1) '43-W.1y11e, Henry fonda . Unda Da1n1ll, Mrchael Duane. 4:30 (}J S.mt 11 lOAM li1tin1 --· To~Bearers by GEORGE KELLY ni. Director of "S.•-.t '4Z" Rebert M11lll9•n bring1 yo11 thi1 v••t't fop 1111p.-n10 thriUor - "ntE OntER" .. .. At11drey tt.pb.int "WAIT UNTIL DARK" letti c•ler -f PG) IOlllT lllfHD • (- "'TMl (,\NDIDA Tl" (l'G) •t•• • 111(11119' SAllAZ• ,..._SlAICHlrtlACr''"1 ·-~ fll'IE ~· "CAIKn MT l:.'s-llSllVA tlotr'" ~l • t•',_ KH.IMlU.llCASTlt ~ ..,.Allll ISCOMI•" II'~ --St.ti ..... ......... _ WOOOf .t.u••<Ol .. "l\'tflT'nl .. TM AlWATI •Ull9 TO lllOWAllOITIU •TwtH · -lllf'&l!l'llo;m. m ·· ..,...,, .. ,, .. w111o•-1 ........ ....-. ....... .~ ......... 11l·Ullt l«Dlf llAWll AU COlOI SMOW! -.1ntlflllS All flll"'(Kf ,i.. ... .i .. '"GUMSHOl" (PG) ll llllllOI Of ..,l l(llO" TO. IUYI •OTMllKi TO LOU: Mil TOUI MIMD. "ASTlUM"(,51 • '"ltU IUTCMll" (~I -··-.. a.oo .. It ' -·~ 'WWOI --"'1 .. uu lWMAfftt,...ltt •(9"< NNOT •OI" (I I -. .. 1110 Utl" Ill -WOOl(O llMllATION" CJ! ........ , .... ,, •• 1,.,, .. -,n 11\ur~)'. Octobtr \9, 1971 Dl!LY PILOT -13 Black Finds His Niche With 'To rchbearers' When ""1be Torchbearers" opened at South C o a s t Repertory in Costa ~1esa at the end "' September, It niarked the fujfillment or two ambitions far its director, Bill Black. Black not only made his directorial debut at SCR with the play -he flnaUy got the chance to bring a work by It& author, Goorge Kelly, to the public eye. Black has been fascinnted by Kelly's work every since be \vrote a master's thesis on hhn while attending t h e urnvers:ity of ca.lifornla. al Santa Barbara seven years ago. He was amazed to find that Kelly'll playa tall written in tbe 20's) were not "dated" at all -and decided that he'd direct one of them someday. George Kelly got his start in vaudeville in l9L2 as an aclOl' and comedian. Soon he began to write comedy sketches - and they became very popular with the audiences. One of his sketches, •'Poor Aubrey," stayed on the Keith and O!l>heum Circuit for over tv.·o years. Another sketch, "The Flat· tering World," went ov~r ~o lhlnR! and couch 1t all in tim-South Coa!t Repertory 8eeM well that KeUy rewrote il into 1ni;. '' to bear him out a three-act play, renamed 1t A Ith o ugh •' T h e "The Torchbearers" cn11 be ''The Torchbearers" and il Torchbearers" wns wrl1ten SC!en (or the nelrit two weeks opened on Broadway in 1922 tt1 b..1ck Jn 1922, Black ((!t~ls th:lt with performances :ll 8 rave review!. this v.·aeky come<ly is stlll as o'clock. Wednesdays throogh Black feels that the works 11£ fres h and funny today as h Su ndays. For tickets or season Kelly are "deceptively dtf· was then. The roars of subscription lnfonnatlOft, call ficult t.o direct" but t.hat he laughter that have been filling the box-office at 646-l:la:J . "loved the challenge and the·1---''---------"--'---------- chance to tum 1972 audiences on to a classic American com- edy. He says that "comedy Ls really tragedy from a slightly different angle and should be approached like a serious play. To dj.rect comedy one must be picky about technical --· --:i;:..:o E•dtnl<I• l!.!lf._.,.,..., H-"' R"'°n.:I '1•1• Wiii-.t J llC-"'Y A•am "f'lDOL.EI OH THE lt00"" Pirandello Play Given Off-Broadway Revival STADIUM , I ii.' ·~=- - --:;r;.ir. STADIUM ,3 \'I Mar .... flrl-II "THIE GODFATHER" (I I • "'0l"T eU"K" !II ''TIEASUllE ULA"O" IGl • "kl"IG IEL-EPHAHT" !Gt l lia Mlnt lll "C.t.IARIET" IPGI • ~~~:......J:. JOE DALLESANDRO AND SYl VIA MIUS IN ''HEAT'' RATED X •ll&YS'-&.• SIT...._&-.,,......_. WE lKDAYI •:45 H1w1llanl-1 Hl••l~:IJ SAT, SUN. & MON. lt:U H1w11ia-1 a 11 M1..,.li-4:45 & t:U CHARLTON HESTON . -" ' •, .. TllE HAWAIIANS" Andy Warhol Pr111nts WEEKDAYS 6-8. 10 SAT. SUN • MON. 2 4 6 I& 10 By WIWAM GWVER NEW YORK (AP) -Long before everyone started talk- ing about it, the credibility gap was Luigi Pirandello's dramatic thing. Reality versus illusion, fact versus Uction and, most of aJJ, what is truth? were themes of his mirror melodramas. One of the most succinct, "Right You Are," has been revived with effective bravura at off. Broadway's Roundabout Theater. The repertory e n s e m b 1 e plays the Italian master's piece with an uncomplicated thrust th.at is pictorially rein- forced by austere setting-and- costume contrasts. The crux of the conflict is stated early by the skeptical bystander who is Pirandello's proxy : "What can we really ever know about other peo- ple?" Amusedly he watches as a group of small-town snoops pry into the private lives of a newly arrived civic employe, the wife he keeps sequestered ana his inOllier iil law. TWo ' -· ~ dllE DAWiSAllllRIJ AllD SYbUIA mil.ES "HEAT" RATED X NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED ntE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE I *ONE WEEK ONLY * ... _ ...... ~ "SWEET CM.1.ltlTY" totally contradictory versions emerge of the reasons for their strange meange. Which -rME "sw cE"Tu•1o"sH 111 is truth? w1111 a....., c. s~•" ·'~ The cast handles the con-"'LAY MISTY ,.o• MIEN 1r11 trapuntal intellectual tease un-l _ _'~O::'.=:::::'.~=:::C:~::~::::~:::::'.::::::::~~ der Gene Feist's stylized Matinee Mond~y All U.A. TheatreJl direction in welcome, direct fashion. The feeling of a philosophic chess game is furthered by the satiny white garb provided for the in· quisitors and the funeral black or their prey, all the work of Mimi Maxmen, and the gilt, geometric decor of Holmes Easley. As the ancient who may have created a fiction to preserve famil y s e r e n i t y . Vfteran Dorothy Sands uses her SO years of theatrical craftsmanship lo create a credit-!e portrait or annored vulnerability. John LaGioia doe8 well as tl1e badgered spouse wbo may have invented opposite fantasy to protect her. 1 William Shust depicts with amused verve the man who · acei!pts truth in opposites. The enigmat~wife 111 the f!1i ddl! is played for her one short scene or final irresolution with apt ir1scrutability by Susan Johnsor.. A Hal Wallis l'rodlil:lim ·-...... Rcdgra"" • j acbon \f,11 11 ()1u·1·11 ul S1111-. Cewri .... s. ............ 2:00 40 YEARS AHEAD OF ITS TIME! . "Fontosio" is on unporo l· leled mosterpiete, and slonds os one of the oll·time great clo!sic'; it blends Ion· !O!lic onimolion and lruly mognilicent music io!O CJ realm of expres1ion of lotol involvement, Originally re· leased in 19<10, "Fonto1io" took over -4 yeorl and 1000 people 10 mok.e. More than bO animators were used. under the guidance of 30 oriists, and o mil!ion 'epo· rote drawings were used in "Fanto1io". "Fontosio" is ot Edwards Newporl Cinema Theatre one week. only, ood it1 its original and uncul ver· 1ion. It is the ultimo!• in vis· uo~enchontment ond li.ien· ing pleoiure! PLU~ WALT DISNEYS ::~~: Hdl 0 ...... 1 Jnl w-.1 :;:;: M.Alt\.OH .:"t.:> ;,7T~~E~g.~ATHEI"· .::_:~.·­ UA S0\111\ C011t Ch•1m.1. .... 1 ,)0 " A Wlldl~ ,_. llMvlf,I •klllrd M, Dl•Oft a• t "llCMAIO" -~ ............. "APll~ "COLS" !PG! l•lh In 11;011r •etti kl C9fffl (II H1MI Ove<"I tth ,., .... W-• "M.AIJOE!'" . _, ..... 11met s1-1rt Shirk)' Jone~ "CHEYIEH"IE SOCIAL CLU•" IP'GI D91dliK TUn Or;u11l.1t "•LACULA" . ---~ M•,.. Her,...! Rly MlllMllll "Fl005" .... '" c ..... , 4'GI New Tll,.. T...e•r• "GO"E WITM THIE WINO'' ifl C11er1 (01 WM, .... ,, A SPKI -" ~-,._......,.­/\ }t.frilllD. llK". ,.,..., ... ..BAD COMPANY" ·~~JEFF BRIDGES BARRY BROWN .flM ll'vtS M\'111 HUDDIE!:oTflW ,,.,..,,4 loo 5'...&q R.jJk l• .. <"'41oo M...bn1 ~ -. ....... o. l)ooood N.,..._ • ...i Aokr1 a-- 1 1oo1 .... -t.=i:=.c:.:; '"..., .... ,.,_·~-'.liilillillliii,. ~GL:-~: ' :..· •:.J ,,~~. STARTS FRIDAT · OCTOBll 20 • • • • S-Oilfo FNY. M Broold'lunt fOMrtUin Y .. ...,. • 962-2481 ~llC'l'l,N • .._. ::::: :\:r ·::::: .•.·• ::::: :.:·: I • • • • • • ~;: "BEAVER we Dare y OU ,, •.• , ..... ,.~ ...... 111•s ••• Tr y Saturd.ay's~N~e~w~s~~Q~u~i;z~~~;.,~·~~·~~~~~:~::i~f~:;~1~~;<~,H~~;,~~~~~~=~·~c~·o~·A~~~:~:~~~~~~~·~·~~~~·~:~:~~~c~!~:6~;~~4~u·~~~78~l~i~0~·~·~~~~~V~A~L~L~E~Y~'~'~:__ •aEOBCEC. •SCOTT ··;:r.. ~:".. .• :t':I," • • • MICllAI 1 -''""l ) 1/-llM!I "~~'!"! • Sl.llUIED fM.. ,_ ..... "'1·· .. -·--i:•J• ,., -.a. ruu+ (-0-"'* .. OLD AND MAUDI" STUTS FRIDAY OCTOlll 211 ··BAD COMPANY~ .11" 11111•.t:t /WRUN " WHEN THE LEGENDS DIE '" '""'"' •sTACY • BEACll • AAOBERTCHARTOFf. PNtol VYNQER PRJ0t..CmN • THENEW • CENTURIONS • •----lio.JOSEPHWJ.•.,.A>..., .. lRi-·~ • • • • • IN THEA T!if I• • • DUSTIN HOFFMAN : • ANNE BANCROR THE. • • • • KATHERINE ROSS • &RADllAff I -• PLUS ·. A\~ MACIRAN -RK~ARD B£NJAMIN ' . ' - ' • tj OAILV PILOT l fi1P'\day October }q 11172 National Park .System Spans Explorers of Yellowstone Started Movement in 1870 fror11 Yrllou•sro11e to /hf 1sla11d '1a11011 elf 1'ouya 111 t/1 1' Pacific, !]OV• er11tl11!1tts are st•f!iriy aside national park11 for people to e11joy: 1,422 parks ar "cq11i1X1le11 1 rei;erves" i11 101 11a· tions ot last eo1r11t. The nature, a11d the itnp/icotions. of thi s dramat ic orowtll are outlined here by the lil o111tor's e1tviro11ment editor. By ROBERT CHAN Christiau Science lilan11or Seroice YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK. \\Iyo. -On a chilly September evening, huddled by a t'ampfire where the 'Firehold and itCibbons Rivers now together . a small band of men talked about the marvels they had been ex· pk>ring: high mountain habitats, rivers cascading hundreds of feet into ochre- walled canyons. mullihued pools and caJdrons, chemicals bubbling up from the earth. They had even seen a giant geyser sµOut hundred·foot-hig h fountains of steaming water at almost hourly in- tervals: they were later to name it "Old Faithful." The explorers. mostly prominent Mon- tana m~n led by Henry Washburn. In 1nany <'Wies parks have 11ot been able to ab- sorb the lide of v isitors without da111age. surveyor-general of Montana Territory. had come on a month-long trip to con- firm and chart phenomena described by earlier adventurers. TllE DIARY OF one of those men records that around the campfire C.Ornelius Hedges, a lawyer and writer, suggested public rather than private ownership or the su rrounding public lands. The men agreed to work toward -haVJng lhe area set asidC as a na1iona1 park. Although historians lack other delails about !his campfire conversation of Sept. 19. 1870, it helped crystalize the idea . Quickly it gained momen tum. In ~farch. 1872. President Grant signed inlo law an act of Congress withdrawing fede ral lands near the headquarters of the YelJowstone River from settlement. occupancy. or sale. The area was ded icated ''as a public park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people." Thus was designated the world's first nati onal park. Cllrl•lla11 klenct Monitor PIHltoJ JASPER NATIONAL PARK IS PICTURE OF PEACE, SERENITY Canadian Park is one of 1,422 National Park_s in .101 Nations Togo, they v.·ere to be together for eight days. AnrJ so the phenomenon of national park~ has beco1ne a vital concern not only in highly industrialized nations but in det"vloping rountries as well. Many large and pD\\crlul nations that have thought only in lerms of economic development over the past century or two have come 10 reahz.c in recent yea rs that part oC their v.·eJl-being is to prolect the few re- maining natural treasures which can help give their people respite and peace. w i I d I i f e management, environmental education, marine parks, population and economic pressures, and the universal conflicts of parks and people. rlnter renamed Kings Canyon) in California; Mt. Rainier in Washington; (,'rater Lake in Oregon, Mesa Verde in Colorado; and Glacier ln Montana were set aside as national parks early in the 20th century. Meanwhile, the roots were laking bold abroad. The fJrst time tbe words .,na- tional park" were used In the body of legislation was when Australia establish- ed what is now Royal NaUOoal Part near Sydney in 1879. Canada created its first, Ban!{ National Park in Alberta in 1887, and established a National Park Service in 1911, five years ahead of a similar U.S. action. IN SOlTl'B Al\IERICA in 1903, Dr .• Francisco P, 'Moreno, after being given 18,000 acres by the Argentine Govern· ment as a reward for exploration, gave the land back to the government for a , national park, Nahuel Huapi, which Js now the largest and most popular in Argentina. Even before that, the first private donation specifically for national park use was made in 1877 wbeo an association or Maori chiefs in New Zealand gave the government land which became the basis of Toogariro National Park. And in Africa, one of the world's first large-scale efforts to have a national park with major emphasis oo scientific research was made in 1925 with the establishment of Albert.National Park. in the then Belgian Congo (now Zaire). By 1962, when the First World Con· ferenc:e on National Parks was beld in Seattle, a United Nations list of national parks and equiv~lent reserves showed 81 countries meeting criteria established by lhe IUCN. No later examination was made, however, of whether tbe countries were following the criteria, or even bow many listed parks met the standards. TIIE l'AS'l'.-10 -YEARS Jia ... seen lhe greatest growth and the greatest dif- fjcult.ies for natiorial parks. In most of the industrial world, e~ally in the United States and Japan, the tide of visitors has -surprised officials. In many cases the parks llave not been able to absorb it without damage. The United States, after creating rew national parks in the two decades prior to 1962, set aside five major new parks -Guadalupe Mountains in Texas, CanyonJands in Utah, North Cascades in Washington, Voyageurs in Minnesota, and Redwood Park in California. Sea, " l ""'"' ~ J. lt A: Century • ' • • \ • .. • ' OLO FAITHFUL IS ONE OF YELLOWSTONE'S TOP ATTRACTIONS Geyser Spouts 10()..foot~igh Fount1ins of W1ter Almost Hourly Skip a century and leap an ocean. The place is the kingdom of Tonga in the South Pacific. The date May 13, 1972, King Taufa'ahau Toupou TV looked down on a big crowd that included American visitors Charles Lindbergh and Laurance Rocke fell er. Solemnly the King dedicated four areas in his kingdom as national parks where people could "go and relax and enjoy." Thus Tonga became the newest of the more than 100 nations which have established a park in the Yellow· stone tradition. For the developing nations, the need lo set aside natural areas poses a conruct of priorities when they debate opening up large land areas for national parks while facing urgent pressures for more farmland, housing, and jobs. In ancient China and India certain lands \\•ere prot{.'('ted for wildlife ; in many count ries royalty reserved lands for hunting. Occasionally the royal preserves were opened to the public. Many cities throughout the world developed landscaped town squares or large urban parks. But the idea that took hold with Yellowstone was that certain large areas should be permanently set aside and supported by n a t i o n a I governments. Such uses as lumbering, farming, mining, and grazing. as well as human settlements, would be banned. Visitors Can Be Too Much ON SEPT. J9 hundreds of del egates from more than 80 countries gathered here for lhe Second World Conference on National Parks sponsored jointly by the U.S. National Park Service, the lnterna· tional Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), and the U.S. National Parks Ce ntennial Com- mission. From Aus1ralia to Zaire, from Switzerland. Chad. Chile, T ri n id ad , Nepal, Iran, from the Soviet Union and ''ET TIIOSE POLITICA L leaders \Vith vision. and a growing number of ordinary citizens in these countries are looking beyond the immed iate demand for economic gain. They see a time when thtir people might need the solace or natural areas but find none. And some countries. such as Kenya, where touri!m is the second-biggest industry, are realiz- ing that with proper planning, conflicting priorities could well be reconciled. Opening sessions of the conference u·ere linked lo the rededication of 'i'el\o\vstone and its ideals for another 100 years. Then the scene shifted to nearby Grand Teton Nationa l Par k for six days of technical sessions on such topics as THE NATIONAL PARK idea was by no means universally popular or speedily adopted. The Yellowstone bill would un- doubtedly have been defeated or delayed had stockmen coveted Yellowstone's meadows. But the reg.ion was too remote for logging and mining. and the presence of hostile Indians in rugged country caused v.·estward settlers to pass it by. For several )'f!ars Yellowstone had no budget and little protection. Though it was not yet legally a "national park," its first superintendent, Nathaniel P. Langford, one of the 1870 Washburn party, was called "National Park" Langford. But gradually the park concept caught on with the American public; Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant CONllllVATIONISTS ARE SOUNOING THE ~RM ABOUT PARK OVERCROWOING _ This 11 Whit Fisherman's Bridge In Yel lowstone Is Like on Bu1y Day ..,.. ' ' . . . Crowds, Crime, Pollutio11~-Just Like tlte City Much thought is being g i v e n aTound the world today to meeting chall•nges to the unspoiled beauty of national par~s. Some answer.! aTe emerging and others remain to be found, as this article shows. Christian. Science Monitor Service YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. -Parks face problems. in rich and poor nations alike. And delegates here for the Second World C.Onference on Na- Uonal parks often found themselves with a close--up view of most of the major challenges fa ced by rich nations: -Hordes of vi!ilors Yellowstone is a big park -2 million acres. !Jut 99 percent or the 2\.2 million visitors this year are jammed into the developed 8 percent of the park, and almost all of them arrive in automobiles. To take care of the visitors requires 2,100 buildings, 30 sewer systems, 10 electric systems, 750 miles of roads, and more than 3,000 campsites. Results: mass crowding at central tourist attractions throughout the swn- mer: air, water, solid waste, and noise pollution ; crime; traffic jams -all the nuisances most park visitors come here Lo avoid. -Wildlife vs. people · Most of the black bears that had become panhandlers along the roads causing "bear jams," have been moved to the back country, to the dismay or many tourists who may no longer see them. NOR DO GRIZZLY bears and campers mix, especially when campers fail to follow regulations; this year a grizzly \cllled a visitor camping in a forbidden area. The park has management problems, too, with the northern elk herd. It.s migration route cut ofl outside the park because of hunters and fences and Its predaton curtailed years ago, the hero has multlplJed too fast and overgrazed the tange. The Park Service has arbitrarily reduced the herd and now has runher plans which include encouraging predators, especially wolves and moun· taln lion•. -Asoorted other problems : How to control use of snowmobiles ln winter; what to do about bark beetle tn- festatlon of logepole pine (let lt run Its coonie, or cut the trees?); aaltly or,. vllltoro around gey..,.. (do }'OU have to put fences all over the park?): power boats and nsbenncn on YeUowstooe lAke {should they be curtailed or banned?); What to do about nolsy overflights of commerctol aircraft ; how much. of the park to protect as wilderness; whether to wktcn roads nnd expand campgrounds and aewage l)'lltems to accommodate the new clw ol camper-vehicles vi.lltor; whether to build more ~lodges and cainpbrounds inside the park or outside, or none at all. MUCH OF THE dialogue during tbe in· ilia! session of the parks conference in- volved a just-released report, "National Parks for the Future," commissioned by the U.S. National Park Service and car- ried out independently by citizen task forces under the direction of !he Washington, D.C.-based Comervation Foundation. Among its recommendations for Na- tional Parks are: Phasing out of automobiles inside parks: shifting the management 0;r park fa cilities from private concessioners to nonprofit quasi-public corporations; pro- hibition of luxury hotels, golf courses, clc., within park boundaries; making it essential for citizens to take part in plan· ning and managing National Parks, and forming or a citizen's advisory com· mittee for each major park. Although 90me U.S. park experts were In YelloUlstone, 99% of the vllltors ., ram into 8% of the total area. apologetic because the first two days of the world conference had an American focus. most or the foreign visitors were delighted . They were keenly interested in how the U.S. is dealing with its problems. "WE ARE PERUAPS 20 years behind you, and we feel this Is good," says Dr. Donald F. McMichael, director of the Na· lional Park and Wiidiife Service in the state of New South Wales, Australia. "It gives us Unie to plan our strategy and learn from your experiences." Background papers prepared for the rive days or tedmical ses.!1\0ns held when lbe conference moved to nearby Grand Teton National Park Sept. 22, and talk! with 90me of the participants. indicated that most de1egates want to bring their park problems into view ao.,that ex· perlences can be shared in a field where the problems seem to far outnumber the !OluUom . Among the richer nations, Japan may have the most difficult situation of au. Yellowstone'• crowds cannot compare ~~t1~bosePa~~ ~=n~ok~~I·~~~: , bu more than 72 million visitors a year, Only three of the 23 Japonose Nallo0al Parks have fewer than a mlWon vlsltora a year. Nor is much of the land within Japan's Nntlonnl P e r k s government-owned. IMtcad1 the Japanese Oovcmmtnt at· tempts to control \18e mostly through a pennit system. So clUe.1 and resort towns, religious shrinea, and numerous commercJal actJvlUcs are inside the parks. many of rhen1 established long before the parks were proclaimed. YET, ACCORDING to a report by Michie Oi. counselor to Japan·s Environ- mental Agency, 970 development within National Park boundaries included a number of new roads (348) tramways. skiing grounds, a golf course, and several large resort hotels. Japan's population pressures are also felt in wilderness areas. Tetsumaro Senge, chairman of the National Parks Association of Japan, reports that vegetation su.ffers heavy damage under the feet of the 500,000 hikers a year who visit the roadless wilderness within Nikko National Park. Senge also says that a road built seven years ago on the side of Mt. Fuji has greatly damaged spruce forests in the subalpine zone , and should not have been extended beyond midslopc. Many other industrial nations are fighting varied battles to maintain their parks agalnst development pressures. Canada was able to stop an attempt to place a $30-miUion resort project at Lake LA>uise within Banff National Park after a fierce controversy between Canadian conservationsists and local developers_ The federal government received several thousand written protests from c\tizens. Rejecting permis si on for the development, Jean Chretien, Canada's Minjster of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, said: ''Where there is room for doubt, priorily must be given to park values; we must err on the side of protection.'' IN f!ALV'S ABRUZW National Park, extensive land sales to p r I v a t e ~velopers, wildlife poaching, and pollu· hon have brought demands from Italians to give the park better protection. A proposal to remove 6,000 acres for a major sports-resort development In .\lkoise National Park. France's first, aroused a eonservatiollist uprising so unexpected and so demanding that the problem went to President Pompldou himself, who decided in favor of the park. Electrto-power projects have made in· roads in !Orne pa~ks. In Australla, the Snowy Mountains scheme, :i vast hydroelectric pro}ect, hais done con· siderable da.m1ge to the scenic and wildllfe values of KO!'Ciusco National Park. A threat to Lake Manapour\ In tnc center of Nrw Zealand's Flordland Na- tional Park has become a major Issue in November's election. The government It under lnteme citizen oppos!Uon bccau.sc or an agreement to allow the lake to be raia«I 17 feet In order to supply power for an aluminum·tmelting plant · ' DAIL V PILOT 45 Everyone Has Something Thal Someone El•e Wanh DAILY PILOT CL1'SSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ac! The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results .......... u. Gener el Ganer al General ·, ·nera) G•Mr•I General 1-------------1~============1 * * * * * * OUTSTANDING ON OUTRIGGER This 3 bedroom Lusk-built home is in beauti· ful condition, \Yith lovely wall coverin~s. patios, a sunny breakfast nook, handsome dining room afld one of the nicest ladies in Newport Harbor. She has \Vonderful views on )ife -and her home has a wonderful view of the Pacific. CONTACT UNIQUE HOMES, CORONA DEL MA.R-4.75·6000 U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S REAL ESTATE HARBOR VIEW HILLS Price just reduced ... on this lovely SAND- CASTLE home. 3 Bdrms. & family rm., with many deluxe features. Xlnt view or th~ can- yon ... with plenty of privacy. New price $67,500. BAYSIDE DR., CdM I.IKE NE\V dream home-3 bdr1ns. & fam- ily r1n . -overlooking \vide beach & the blue, blue bay. $l59,000. TAYLOR CO NEWPORT HEIGHTS -VIEWI Designed for full advantage of magnificent view of lights, bay & ocean! 3 Bedrooms, formal dining rm, 3 baths. Entertain on the huge deck & enjoy the sunsets. $97 ,000 1 '0ur 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road . NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General General BAYFRONT NEW LISTING -BAYFRONT l'!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll• jConvf'nien t par kt ng -ee.sy to be I! 'l "DHC1P-IN" at Bay & Beach Really General Go """'!ra1 'lia Lido Saud , \Vith nice beach. 3 Bdrm. low- er plus 2 bdrn1. upper plus guest room. Just completely remodeled. Ne\v carpet. Mission tile roof. Itnmacula.te condition! Owner will include furnishings in the downstairs plus guest room in the sale price ! $197,500. Owner will consider trade or co'ndominiurn. LUSK 5 BEDR OO M BEAUTIFUL EASTBLUFF Privacy is a feature or this large home. Rear yard large enough for 2 pools. Near to Ne\v- port's fip,est shopping; in CdM High School Dist. Offered al $61,900. CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS 644...U62 General G eneral PREFERRED LIDO LOCATION 836 VIA LIDO NORD PIER ANO SLIP -J & DE!t&~GAROEN .ROOM · :;ALISBURY REALTY 673•6900 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND ·;,e neral LITTLE GEM \Vell built starter home; newly decorated. Nr N'pt. f.lghts. Only $22,500. BROAD Beautiful Broadway SL Xlnt e stabliShed neighborhood. Lge. patio w/brick BBQ for outclo9r living, 3 Bdr~s .. Gener•I BAHAMA ·BEAUTY $295 ODO family rm_ & frplc. plus BEAMED CEILING ' alley aoce'" Only $31.500. and W'1 Ba• in the Paneled 20'x30' NEW LISTING Exciting new listln,g in ?itESA VERDE -3 broroom, 21f: balh luxury home located on a qaiet cul-de-sac streeL A pool-size yard wilh a large covered patio & sprinklers front & back. 1-~irst person \\·ith $51,500 can own this hon1e>. R"mP'~ Room. Good >ire<I BONUS ROOM DAVIDSON REALTY Ne., N'pt Hgh1'. 3 "'""'" 2 Kitchen \.\'ith Dishwashl:>r. 4 5801 W C ba., frpl. plus scp. playroom Ntwport Bedrooms, 21.~ Ba t h s. sitting on top or this In\ l'h • oast Hwy., N.B. 64(;.7761 w/frpl., BBQ. All I his on an F'ireplaCf'. Shake Roof. No 3 Bdrn1 . 2 Mlh lw1111>. ().hci 3116 Newport Blvd., N.8 . 673-9060 R-2 lot. Only $34,500. •• Fairview Down to QualiliC'CI Vctf'rans_ ftaturf's include sl1•1>·llo\\ n '?""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'\ CALL ~. 646·1414 Huntington Beach. Offl'ral hving rn1, ht>a\J' shake roof, t Gn at Gene•al 9 ~, for $34.950. Call &t&--055.l. 2 fire11hu~s. block wall 8 er ·•19 1~ p fence & nice cul-de-snc lo-'W ....._. 64Ul11 (•ny!lm•) Drtd+il c~:io~-~e<l :~;~;;:> c:7:.~~~~5~s ~:~l~~B ""' "~=;:~~ ortk• ~~1~~~~:' ,., • .,.,.,. '"' ""~" oo, t§llhlb![I An:~"f,;~~"~b\:"' COSTA "Mc~E=s=A7"'-'I HIGHLANDS I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!L..!!!!!A!!R!!!!!G!!E!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I Cameo Highlands REDUCED PRICE Choice Newport Beach tami- Whlte Elephant Dime-A-Line Tastefully derorate>d U:ively 3 BR, 2 bath home. ly neighborshood. Convenient COVERED PATIO! General • ,.;. ·neral Sunny breakfast Itl"f'tt Owner being transfe~ & to Mariners School and park A home that sparkl('s anxious to sell. Available and \Veslcliff shop pi n g, $29 ,500 ! I I OWNER HATES TO LEAVE This lovely 4 Br. 3 Ba .. f?Jll. r~. home. in \Vestcli!f area. They'll miss thctr pools1ze yard, too. Out of state nlove forces sale. Call Bud Austin JUST LISTED Lusk popular Burlinga1ne \V/6 bdrms ... 4 baths· sharp house v,1it h 'valnut paneling; prof. 'landscaping. Choice buy Jim Muller A REAL VOTE WINNER! Magnificent University Pk. townhouse; .2- sty. 3 BR., fam. rm., 21k ba. Near tennis, pools. schools -choice ... for details call nchuck" Lewis. BIG CANYON-"BEST BUY" Compare! Choose this borne now! Com- pletely lndscpd. & decorated. Poolsize yard. 2 Frplcs., wet bar. 4 BR. $ll5,000. Fee. Call Paul Quick LARGE FAMILY HOME Immac. 5 BR. President home. Lge. famUy rm. w/frplc. Formal dining rm. Beautifully decorated. Fee land. $92,500. Eileen Hudson HARBOR VIEW HOMES Spotless 4 BR., 2 bath home. Sunken liv. rm., fam. rm., din. rm. Cov'd. patio w/ firepit. Bar. Many extras. $61,900. lioward Wells SO. LAGUNA R·l LOTS Loe. on So. Coast Hwy. Terrific ocean view. Steps to fine beach. One whole block. De- velop ho1nes or condos. $286,500. George Grupe LOT IN BIG CANYON Thinking or building? Choice view si te over- looks greens & fairways. Priced to seU now! Bob Yorke YOUR CHOICE ON LIDO ISLE t. lmmac. & charm. 4 BR., den ... $85,000 2. 70' St. to St. lot & 3 BR. D.R . $91,500 3. Neal 4 BR. nr club & tennip . . $76,500 & is an exr"rptlonnl 1 .,1 go• Cookl Charming three bedroom, 3 bedrooms, dellu<e bui lt-In Value a! $6!),500 now a .,... · ""· e flvo bath with large added All''son «u235 (J 20) appliunces inc I u ding ...u--.. · -' family room with fireplace. INCREDIBLY dish"·asher. den, fireplace Uardwood Doors, secluded lends added charm lo BEAUTIFUL front courtyard patio, quiet gracious living room . Enter 'lhru private gates of street. Shown b Y ap-Hand90me bre<Jcfast, bar COMPANY· REALTORS SINCE 1!!<14 the Big Canyon C.Ountry poilltment. Large covered patio, boat Oub. Thrill at the towering C f Colesworthy door thru rear of garage. entry & LR of this 6 month • • You can assume VA Joan old Versailles model con-& Company \\'ith tow do\.vn payment and 673-4400 dominium. Circular garden 640 0020 monthly installments are kl!chen, 4 BRs. 4ll baths. • less than rent! Brk aID-1720. ,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' ! Prof. decorat<.-tj w/finestl•--------- Three Uttle Words ~~ ,-";:,::. '"'~~1rr.'O': WILL MOVE FAST I M Ve d (J19l. n esa r e NEWPORT BEACH Charm. warmth and comfort describe this 3 bedroom CONDOMINIUM home on a quil't i;tree>! in First time offered! Beautiful Mesa Verde. Featurl'i; Jove-3 BR • 2l~ bath con- ly rarpetin~. drnperirs, clominium. l~rofession:illy covered palio, park like dccoratNI. Nr\V e opp er yaM with many trees, plumbing, D.\\1. & kitchen sprinkler systen1. d('fached IL"Xtures. Electtic garage ~arage \.\ith roon1 for door npener. Beau!ih1Uy camper, boat or trniler in landscaped. ~e secludl'd drive\vay. Pri<'C $31,900. pool. Unbelievably priced at Please phonl" :i-16-2313 for $44,500. (J22l. additional information. CAMEO HIGHLANDS Strikingly beautiful 3 BR. 3 Owt'K'r says PRICE IT TO SEl~L! See this new listing today. Corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, com- pletely fenct>d, I r a i 1 er storage. As little as $13.50 down. JCa,,.. co:Ts ~WALLACE REALTORS --ooMM,...141- (0pon Evonlngsl THKREAL ESl:A.TERS OP£N ~IL 9PM bath home. 30' f\-1asfer suitet-:;:=~~~~~~; \.\'/fireplace, floor safe ·l·- mirrored dn>s:o;ing -roon1. Roman bath. Gorgeous pool NEWER 2 BEDROOM EUREKA~ Con1e discover your UN IQUE HOME, 3 years ne"''· 2 11 u g e Bedrooms! Ideal for small family, Cht'erful Ki!chen, bonus cab1neL<1. Ea s y maintenance play y a r d . Darkroom in double gani~e. $1325 Initial Investment. $:5,t:m Value .•.• HURRY~ Call 646--05."n. Immediate Possession & jacuzzl. Ocean vic'\v. Elaine Svedet'n, 642-8235. (J23). Don't touch a 1hing -?ifove right in. Sparkling 4 bdrm & family rm, 10x18 enclosed patio, all built-In kitchen w/ new vinyl floor. Close to schools & all major .1hop- ping. $30. 750, For detail.!!. HELP! OWNER WANTS OUT Call 54().1151. Open Eves. --. ~.· HERITAGE REALTORS d&il Thi• '""'"'"' 3 bedroom, ' RANCH • BRICK bath. home featureS'°a large 'Vll~lDIAR1 0, IHI COIW!LL CO. living roqn1 that has a $12,500 ! FOURPLEX TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa. Mesa Cinderella Home College Park Seeing is believing thi!I; 3 bedroom, likl" new, home. Beautiful \\'a 11-to· w a 11 carpeting. New lush drapes. Rect:!ntly painted. Dwner has just spent over $1,300 replacing plumbing wi1h all copper and over $1,000 in drapes. The yard is a park that you would be proud to have. Priced at $32,500. Call 546-231 3. (W~WJ 2 GARAGES 4 bedroorm, 2 baths, huge added family room v.'i th beamed ceilings & large brick fireplace. T W 0 separate d o u b I e car gara,ge!'I. All thl• In Costa Mesa for only $32.500. FHA or VA terms available. Won't last a Wl"ek • Call ua quick for full details. call 54&-58fll f Open eves..) .$ i.-HERITAGE ' • REALTORS Assume FHA $46, 700 . Payments $446.09 P I T I . Incomt> $6.10/mo. Owner will take $-1.lm dO\.\TI, c-arry BahnlC(' on 2nd nt 81.l<t,, Pr\~ $5i,j(J(I or make cash nUr:r. huilt-in bar. Professionally Mini-ranch • 18 tn.ilt ltcell! decorated '-'~lh wallpaper ALL BRICK HOME! ct and sparkling clean. You'll ment drive, REFR.IGERA· enjoy lhe peace and quiet In TOR, STOVE INCLUDED! I !!""'!""'!~""'!~~'!"!~"" this charming cul-de-sac Investors delight Act now -2 BR • 11..IPLEX strert SuJ>('r large lot. Total cllll 645-030.1. $77,500 price $31,500. Call 847-0010. • THBRRAL ES 1:1\TBiRS OPEN Tl.. 9PM . . -I OHi \I I. Ol \O\ "i A, '<I' Htte'a your opportunity to own 1he11e line triplexes In Blue Ribbon Corona <lei l~ar. 'rv.•O btJdl'(l()ffill (!RCh, private l>fl..lconi~s. qunllt)' General General , Gener11I ----------, 9UAINT, COIY, 1;1.,,,-G'J'~tu-Slllfd CONVENIENT Th1s older 4 hcltroom, 2 soory hon1e on a B-2 tot is Ln AllD~ITES ('orona del ?i--lar. so off of 1hc high1v(i.y has. great in-REALTORS \'PSt111ent poss1h1li11cs for -.A. • .-.-future ck>Vl'lopmenL Jr 2828 EAST~• HIGHWAY rcatu~s a lari::c lo! and tht> CORONA DEL ~CALIF. house is built on beams. Thi;' tl\.\'J)(.'r anxious ff)r quiC'k 644·7270 ~;ile. Has reducetl lhc price, Now only $56,500. Call 673-85:"-iO. HARBOR AND OCEAN ..•• .•• VIEW Enjoy it all from this 3-bedroom. 2 bath home with 2 fireplaces (1 in living room. 1 in dining room), builtin kitchen. See harbor lights at night from your o"'n gar d e n patio . . . .. .. .. . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . $64,950. HUNTINGTON BEACH , ... .... T~IPLEX AL\VA VS rented because of the location. This triplex has 1-'2 Bedroom and 2-1 Bed- roon1 . For the smart investor at $38,950. e O~EN HOUSE e e (5 BR & FAM.) -1306 W. Bay Ave. (Waterfront), Balboa Peninsula. Sun. 1-5 . Genero11 eflnJa })j£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Linda Isle Drive Beautiful new 5 BR., 41h Ba. home. \Vater- front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled fam. rm., frplc., wet bar. Large l!l.iS.1.el: .. s.uite....has irplc. & cozy lounge area. View of. Bay & the mountains. $179,500. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GltUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 I General THKREAL ESTA:r&RS OPEN 'Tit. 9PM SUPER SHARP MESA VERDE i\lriun1, f;1n1ily room. dining 1'001n. and ·I hedrooms. Lots llf lovely \.veil-kept house on eul-dr--sac lot. LC'! us sho""' yoo this beauty. $42.950. Red Carpet Realtors, 54&-8640. EASTSIDEI POOLI Great area and a charming house that's fun '" lh•e in. Can you in1ag1nt"! $35,450 for a pool home \.vith 4 bfoflrooms? Gn-ar house for f'fJlertalning. Red carpet Realtors. 546-8640. -Barn-Style Home Earth lover'lil kind nt hvin'! \VanTI frplc.. kids rms., !arm kitch. $30.900. Da\\•g fricndlv! REAL ESTATE TREASURES 1831 \\'eslcliff, NB . 645-6770 CLEAN AND SHARP! Good starter home, good as,.,umable loan, go o d oeighborhood. H.ard to bl!at price of $23.990 ror--1n· Dedroon1 cufie. Red carpet Reallors. 5-16--8&10. Realtor loit -You win rrom O\.\·ner custn1 golf· CQurse vi('\.\' home. 3 BR + ~lurly, 3-ear gar. 2400 s.f. Open daily 10-6: $.'.19,900 .. 2~1 Pinnfort•. Laguna Ni~cl. 830-5660. OWNER WILL HELP YOU WITH THE COSTS -,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; I Bi\.LBOA CO\'CS, N . B . • 'vate-rtroht. Private ramp & SPYGLASS PLAN 74 float: ri1octem 3 br. S77,500. O"'•ner wants out of 1his 4 bedroom, 2 bath home'. It's a cozy, warm home \.\'ilh a fireplace, fantastic location near schools and parks, shopping and heachl":'!. This home is beautifully decorated thruoul. Vels try $500 total mo\!{' in L'OSIS. Prt<·ed at S34,750. Lall 847-6010. THKREAL ES'lATKRS Of'EN 'Tit. 9PM HOMEABILITY SOLVED 3liOO plus sq fl in this 5 bdrm, Call owner, 675--0111 for 4 ha, plus bonus rm home app't. Princip3l!I only. on a V.l.P. locnlion. Central air cond., intercom & built· NF:\V DUPLEX · · · -· .$48,950 in record player. No-1\•a.x l-2BR & 1-JBR apt, b, E. vinyl, shag carpeting, \.\•al-Bay, Costa 1'fesa. ~2-4837. nut cabinets in kitchen, pool· • Sell idle ilt>ms .. 642-56~ l"IZC'd lol & brea1h-t11.king \'lei\ Clf ocean & coaslline. Yo:-rA11 celebrate the ho1i- dav~ rn your nr1v hon1c. Call no"'' $150,lm i11rluding lt1nd. Classif.ed INDEX Advertising e red hill [Cl::;,·:;::• IOJ.~ REALTY Univ, Park Center, ln,ine Call Anytime, 833·'.J.~2!) Office hours 8 A1\1 to 6 Pr.I [ Mobil• H•~· I~ Spoclous 3 Bedroom Honie in Huntington Beach. 2 Baths,),.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.. Re.i E1t1t1, [jj Gener1I family Room. Plenly of Room to store a Boal. Clo:o;e to Schools and .Shopping. Of- fered for $34,950. Call 6l&-055i>. d&il SUll5•0111.llT Of IHI COlWlll CO. * 3 BDRM near ocean . $26,900. * I ri.r tit AC air·Mnd, 3 BDRM, assume $230 PITI. Mission Viejo ...... $.18.900 * 4 BDR?i-1 ncnr ocean ... $54,900 1733 \Vestcliff Dr, N.B 645-7221 S24i950 3 BEDRM • 2 BATH NO DOWN TERMS °"';irr extremely anxious at- tractivl" horn~. E I e g a n t fireplace in gracious living room, built-in dream ki!- chf>n. Ne11.· covered patio. \Virle t'Oncrefe drive\.\·ay. Near all schools & shopping. Brk. t'"rcshly painted ex- terior. ~l'ral. TARBELi,; 2955 Harbor. Costa :i.rcsa BAYCREST BARGAIN Over 2.0CKI .'IQ ft of luxW')' in a 3 IM>f'room, 21.i. bath, fem · ily rflOm le dining area. Bonu!I of a sparkling pool & lo1v 11111.ln!cnanre 75'x110' y1n-d . All the usual Bayf'rcst f1~atuN's. Full pri('e $64,950. u:'.d nn auun1able Joan of approx SS0.000. Call M0-1151 Open D.·e>s. ~~ Clai,ification 150-184 ~·~_'"'''_' __,]ti] C1ossification 200·2b0 """"''"""" J[~J Classification 300.J:iS [--. ....... ]~ Classificatio11 lb0.)70 ~[ _ ..... _,. _,]~ Classifi cation 400..-445 __ ,. ]~ Clessification 500.510 ~"'"-'""_• __,]~ Clasiification 525-535 IMt ... ,_ )!SJ Classification 5SO .£i55 I '""""'""" I~ LEASE/OPTION . .0 ~.s -HERITAGE ' . REALTORS' Mesa Verde Classification 57S.580 4 Bdrm, formal dlnina:. lan1.-j ,....,..,...,...,...,...,...,..,,.. I ]~ lly roon1 . Available Novem-A Trip s..nc.. and It.,.. Iler 1st at $400/mo. . . GINNY r.1or.n1SON Into Space Clas1ific•t1on bOo..699 '* '***• -REALTOR-'9 \.\'hrn )W !'nlrr ! h Is lilJ :l'.M~vc~~~~C:.t. ~:!~~r t!,~1~0,:i1~ 1 ;~~{~ ( ~,,,...t ] f J *~• ~aMeu. I •-·1 · *•• •* r:.:~7 '!30 expo!K'I: wm1 Y room . Cl ·r· t' 700 71 D --.. 13t"11utllully a('('f'n!i'fl h y as11 IC• ion • ~ Fc111u~prof1>11.~lnnnl lilln:.hlrndk• · Charlene Whyte 120' YACHT SLIP AVAILABLE Cnrner house with bu~tness & livina. EMtside Costa M~. Call now lo 8Ct' thls $.1i,500 beauty. ronstntdk>n, wall-to-wall 6 Un its • Secluded * Sexy Spanish * car!iell '"" drapeL You• Ba lboa Peninsula co~ an:1 11tt this sMrp 4 mont"y Invested in lhlt ln- !Open J.~wnin"!l I vh\Yl "''"llPflJICT' tl\.rol11.,rt'ln111. I 1 I[~ I ll1.ndae11ptng. Bcau!lful bllth room& nnd privnlf' re.'lr y11.rol Cla11ifl,•tion 800.810 Eoch 2 bdnn• .• fumi!hed. 6 bedroom, 2 b<th 1,,.,,. ""' rome property will .. tum GARAGES SALE GnMISfett. Loe. on 2 Iota; sip your t~uU11. In the llOft YoU a Wbe:t.anti81 dividend. 5 of them + c;11rport1, IX'at'- heatcd pool, l'ICJ)5 to ocean. warm 6:1ow from a beautiM ca.II now Jor detail• and new 3 bedroom home. ldf'itl I ](B surrounded by the only 5llU'lfl of ll'f'CA tn mllfl!I. Prittd at only $52,950. Call now. M2-2l3Q. For your boal & for you, a superbly de- signed 5 BR. home. Mstr. BR. suite, mag· nificent di n. rm.; many more features make this property the "Champagne or Cali!. Homes." Bill Bents 833-0700 ~ Coldwell, Banker ~ 644-2430 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. 646.J928, E\'<'I. 838-9068 Lachenmyer: Realtor 4 UNITS. EXCELLENT RENTAL HISTORY All roon1y 2 ~roon1~. C.ood kltrhert!' nnd tinn't net'(! much to ketp them In ROO<t rentablt' lhape, A good bu.,v ot $56,500. RM C.,,,.i Retllors, ~. Xlnt. 11un1mtt/\vintcr ttnt· Spe.nish fU"eplace. Price on-1howlna. 6'13-&550. 0 n I Y tor ear buff, boater or ""'Md Siwitt ~ t1ls-, $1115,000. ly" '>£f!!.'S:l. Call n OW tn.500. tniVt'ICr. $58,~. . Calk 673"'63 64~2253 E .... 84r~. ~--..,...-=------~ PETE BARRETT THB JtRAL~ c1 ... m •.•• ; •• 850-ISI ~ THBRKAL~ =~ -REALTOR-B&iAT&RE I -lGI B&J:A:JLZRiiO ~~ 642..SHO @"li 1™ -·-=-~ ~!i!!!!~!!!!~~!!!!\:1·:iiiii~\l!'f~~~"j~L~IPMr.:i·~ C associated ! LARGE I. LOVEL y Chrlj!'"H ~ ~":J:.. E.:i -'""' I ~•u;f;caHon 900.1-912 PRICE REDUCED! LARGE -I BR, den, llv. Comlt111I V"""'· ,.., Good Jooklog ~"1'0l",lable. •Lob of T._,..i.. - Ownrr li•nvlng arra & must rm/trpl &: kltch. 3\' cat Move tn b@fort' Mlldays. 4 houM In tine rcaklentlaJ I~ •nd ouUlde. . . _ .. 11£'11. J BR ., II,; haltu1; con· srar. Added altnl.d\onl tn. bedroom•. i ~ths, ftedi U"tL. 4 btthOOIDJ and hup $30, In Cotlott Park fOf a Cl•ttifica~ion 9 15_949 BROKERS-REAL TO RS 202S W l o1b oo 671-1••1 vrnlent loc. Neat• 110me comt Imm ~. pr1v. BR palnt il ~ e:ltan kltcmn: lor euy lM,.:. ~ 3 bedroom bcNR on a cltonh'li:', but .)'OU CM aet apt .• Be1utltully lhdacpd. Cozy ' tamUy ~ ~· *29.950 for tMt ~ ~ ~ac! $lre.. We'll -.. I J§J a barx•ln on thl1 nice hOmel ck>9I!: In $13,150. au a::boola. Jlurryi On )'Mt ofd, ftcd Ca r p • t )"U'L Roel Clrpel Reallon. Alllt ..... l""".:l MORGAN REALTY BALBOA BAY PROP. 133,000. Call RM!Jcn. s-.i. -· · . _ - 67U642 675""59 * 642-7491 * SOUl'K COA5I' Rl:Al/IORS Wu• .. .....i ..... ~ NHd \"Pad"! Pia.a an [Mii I O•uiliulMln 950·99G r ' 4.6 DAI L V PILOT ---I~ [ ---I~ I ---1~1--- Genera• Balboa l1lend SUPER DUPLEX Pr1te rfl\Juced to $i9,!l:.O bv an onxloui (lWner \l lK'.I 11o1ll L°OllS.ldcr a l1.•a....,.•-0p1wn II• pun-hallf'. V1•rsar\11· noor plans. !'I JWc\roou1. 4 R11lh • I Rltchl'n areus. •I 11tl1~1dc• «ntran1't'-"· Hkr li"1':1 7'.L''i. Balboa Pentn1ula DllPLF;X. :; BR. up. 2 dn ~.000 Nt·.-.t tu lx.o11.ch. AGt:NT t.';'5-0111 Corona del Mar SEE THE SU NSET 111 \{M)) \\'l11 t1• S;uh<. ~ BR .. !an11\) r111, horn<·: lg<' .. \111, $69.~ OPEN SAT/SU N. 1-5 1000 WHITE SAILS Costa Meta THE MOTHER SAVER ·ni:~ l"'·;iu11tully <li>rorntl'\I 3 1:. .. 1n...111 hf)rnf' ha~ a lJ~" fln1'1t\NI "BONUS R()(J,I'" !or the C'hlldN.•11 10 pliiy - 11i.·lud1r})); lJ,\J) ~ llh lus pool 1,11Jh· 11ad lt•a"'c )OU 111 fM'<11't' A MCHlF:JlN. 11rll o~nn1ail k1tcht-n. L •. u1;:c h;~·ky.ll'tt, and the ebUdron 1·JH1 \\;•lk rv s.·lx1ul Clot.c to tlll!Jl}r stf.>11'1>Ull,; Thl'll CMta \lt••q )~1!TI•' 1" 1l!·11t'f"f at a !11JL~ l<'JJ~.;l 1l' pr11'i" (Jl ~.l:;.500. t:all llt.•"'' 61t;.-71TI. THE REAL J!S'X:ATKRS OPfN 'TIL 9 i:.JI l'fl()L llomf', pnN' rt'Cluttll Fountain \/alley Huntington lkach Huntington Beach PARK THE BOAT r11r qu1c-k sale IJy o>Anet. -IHR, l11!wd l.loon;, new 11hag ~·1·111, lrt'sh paint. lo nn1\nt. N~Cn.~t:i n.lesa $ 3 2. 9 0 0 . ;,11f-·:::1.1 .. ~ """~==~-- --MESA VERDE MONEY ROW n11 n1·r . I hr. l:un rn1. ~ hn . ' LJ"w"• ""~~ !! talirs l'Omt> position in lifro ninny x1r.<:>. Set ·'"-"' ~wJ ff ~ ••. 1;y owf"l('r 3 hr. 2 ba. frplc. '.! 1 Huge bdnns .. family nn. ll;ih•ar11. Ur., 5-19-:.rro·-1. • lo a o,-,,, u 1lS home, but if . .. •. , you quality, you 1l<'M'l"\'f' it. l'ar f:ar. $26.900. iv/fir. lo ('('ii. frp!c., forn1aJ THE HOME OF A '" 540-5567 • t •. R .• ~ r!ining. mxJ SQ. Jo't. FRIEND? East Bluff _____ fr nf luxury living. A st1•1tl at it'.-; nu·i· 10 i•fti·r this 11 r11 1-----------BIKES & TRIKES $49.900. Also. hnve 5 Br . * Tl!,,· nL"f"f"S * lo I · I I ""'>I home •I l 'l.000 Calf k4'JI\ 'l nn -+ 1h•n eornf'r "' u '-' < t 111.~ 01-,.'" ,~ u horne for i.alr. \'ou n1ay By 011nr r,:: Bi· .• 1''! Ba. nrighborhood. \Vhy txil" ".1 for d1'tn1l~. kflO\\• the o11·ners H so you'll Lo maint. a.rea. $.33.900 Big Bdrn1s., block ivall CALL R-12-14JS kllO\v $49,950 is a n1on.· S.IO--Olf,6 * 610--02'l7 aft 2:30 frnC'f' ,r,,. ready fo r your • •Am M than fair prier-. Sh<M'n by El Toro 1 family. l a1k to cll'in. WAUCla • are'.t. 1-----------srhool. Only $~.500 at Hp· •N.•SWI University Realty VA REPOSSESSION rraii;nJ. 6:i:il \\'11l1on Dr.. 17171 Beach Blvd., H.B. .'\001 E Cst. Hii·y. 671.6510 $27,500 F.cllvarrls at Edlng-rr. Op<>n'liiiiiiiiii ... -..-...iiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiol HIDEAWAY'S 4 bN:lt'OOm, 2 balh home fl'a-Sun. J~ALL 842-1418 SPIRAL On sweet Begonia lut"f'S largl' l'Ountry·~t} ll' STAIRCASE Nl'at 2 BR. homC', l·BR. unit. kiT Chl'n. Brick fiN'plaC'I' k -"~A"lKmE• M All on ground Door. l'Xtra-lnrgc fcncrd rear • "' ... F'RAN('T~AN" }~UNT/\INS $56,SOO yanl. CJo:;e to ~ade school. IWiL•tW• B\' THE SF.A. Executive 2- Toral !101\ n "'lyment only inn °-·-h Bl"' fl B 1 •-h h • University Realty in "'"-""~ ¥"" · · s ory .,.·ac ome. ., $1175 & nmn. paymt•ntJS of Ju. I -I I I $21,500 SINGLE STORY 1llage Real Esta te TOP EXECUTIVE IESTATE Practica lly on lhe golf COIJNl(' and CC livin11: 1n this beautifully appointed home n1.'ar th£" beach. $41,000 lull pri<'e. 10% do11•n will do ii . C WALl<lR & LH Real I ors 842--4457 Open Eves. O\~ER transf<'r ed, 3 separate baths, 3 oversized bedrooms, <'le~ant fireplal't" in bonus roon1, slumpstonf' fireplace and n1 i r r o r e d walls. Delux~ builtin kit· Chen, dish1vai;her . Lovt>ly patio overlooks beauti!UJ brick planter s, exquisite landscaping. Prime loca- tion, Bric, $."'A.900. 962-Sll65. 3001 E. Coast l!li-v .. Cd:.J S"" ,.< 11...,n1. ar}!e am1 y room 671 1. 1 J ~Ii (':Lii .'\.17·MOO. 4 BEDROOMS + 1ll'n. ~~onnal dining room . OWNER rl e s p er a I c. 3 -----~-5_0____ 1.-ATEl.J.I\ RF:ALTY Shu•\s like a n1odcl. Most spacious bPdrooms, 2 baths. OPEN HOUSE Fountain VaOey $301900 rlrsirahlf' fl oorplan. Prit'ed etrgant fireplace lends ad- /\nd anyone can as~'\1m1· lhe right. Call 968-14j6. dc'd charm to gracious liv. DAILY MARK SPITZ $164 tolal monthly payrnt•nt •• ing room. Builtin dream k i!- 1..Dvely 4 Bcdroon1 B111: Can-l)r gl't llC'IV GI LOAN. chen, even a dishwasher, 5 yon home in a grC'al lOC'a-GREW UP WITH I Convenien!ly lorall.'d to ' yrs new! Vat'anf -move tion. al Royal St. George . A POOL lrwys, m11.jor sh op p i n i: right in! $26.950 Br k , Bkr. 61:r722i . , . and so can )OUr ctul· 1 crnt ers & schools. \\'r \~·i ll l"""~~~"""'""""""~l-~R4&-0604~~~·~===~~~ e DUPLEX -rxccl JO<." & rlrcn Ser this supt>r 4 bed· take 3 !'!mallcr home ?1 ZONED FOR REPOSSESSIONS --•. 2 Br -I ba ea. CQl\1· room 11·1th fan>1lv ITIO"'l "n<I TRADE. ~ '-'""' " ... ENTERTAINING F'or information and location PARE. Owner. 6/:,,.-1934. C'OVCl'f'rf pa!IO Sol Vista for or these FHA &: VA homes, z BR., 2 Ba, Irpl. Rt>model· only $44.750. Roomy & ready. hugr •I contact _ • ed. R-2 lot. C.H. RohPrtson BE A WINNER Hl'alton; &12-4·Ei7 bf'ciroorn, 212 bath. F"l'e~hly "-a!1 c JI ,.,..,_""'"" 0pr -.:· p:1inlrd. 111 n10vc-1n con-KASABIAN ·-===°'~·~'~'~'~~·~~N_. __ ,Elci::a:11 4 bt'.'dl'oon1 2 ba!hj ..,iiiiiiioiii•"""'~·v~c~'·iiiiiiiiiiiiol d" d •· 111on. Loa s of upgradin~ R I E 96, ,.., Costa Mesa \1·ith f<1mily mon1. covl'red thniou!. Ovrrsi7.cd cul-elf'· ea state -'-~- an1l f'n closecl patio. lush car-$600 DOWN s11c 101. pr ivnry fenced .• Jus1 CUSTOMIZF:D 1 bl'!droom Mesa Verde pcli; anci cl rapf's, nc11• sparkl-] bl'droom, t bath, 900 sq. !!. lu;!ed at $19.900. hoinc . Vloo<l h urning ing pool. Near rverylh111g. Electric huilt-in range & CALL !'i12-1118 fireplace + eatin.c.: bar. Ad· First 1 i m r-arlvertiseci! ! ! Semi-custom 4 bedroom. 3 bath. 2-story, just off golf course. Plu~h carpeting. beautifully ciecorated & te~s than ;; ycar:i; okl. Don't bC' last -$6.i,000. Call 54;r.M21 SOU TH C O AST REALTORS. Only $46.500. oven. Includes n-frii;::erator, • PAm • d cd gas built·in.<;;, cozy fami- WIOE OPEN SPACES \\'asher & dryer. F.A. hl'Rt, WALK.El' ly room, unu.suaJ dMign & Lot!! ol glass wall.s, cathedral w/w ('arp!'ts & cirapes. 11'.'n· 1w ll5UJ1 location. Bkr. 962-5.ill. ceilings, sunny kitchen, nis courts, pool. \Valle to 1TI71 Beach s :vd., J-1.R. O\\'NER says, · ' SE LL ' ' , screcnerl·in lanai, 3 bdrn1, major shopping cent r r. 8 VACANT HOMES sparkling clean 4 BDRM on 2 ••• 11 All h' d P ayme nts ll'SS than rent. huge lot. . $28.500. a t ap.. i.m 1. l is an a cornl'r ' 3 ~ 4 bedrooms in good a rea. praisal. PATTI WALKER HARLOW HIDES lot for nnly $36.!"HXI. I Son1r w1!h pools. All r,vpt.•S llEALTY 842-1418. CALL 545-04$8 financing. S400 lo S2000 total ~,. ,61-4471 ( ::J 546-IJOJ do~·n & rrnt !il cs<'l'OW PRF. TICE 2700 sq ft. 4 AWAY • rloses. Bkr. 962-5511. BDRM, 2 BA. Fantastic. s.19,900. PATTI \VAI..h'.ER lfarlo1v·s Haven -8' rl'lll'P \'n- r!()S('S :ID's srylc !"f'ar yard \\'eeping 1vil!01\', ferns, :l month old pool. 3 BR hirll'· a11•ay has frplc, ccrami<' tile kitchen + 2 po1Vdl'r rooms. U N I Q U E . Call 962-5511. BYOK \\'11nt arl n'i':UlfS ... 612-56Tit REALTY, 842-1418. Bring your own kids -Thislr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 N~EW~~3J;b~,':-;ho<;;;m~•~. ;w~a~!~k;;i,~g seller needed 5 bedroom<;, dista nce ocean. $.17.000. 11·1' sold htm one and he's CLASSIFIED * 968--0407 * STATELY TREE-LINED anxious to rn<11·c. An extra-HOURS nice 4 bedroon1, 2 bath. On- STREET Exquis1t<'ly panelled fam ily & living room \Vilh hru·k fir<·Plfl<'•'· 1\lt this fln(t 4 bedimins & !·', hath~. s:u.!15(1. ~fESA VE:RDE. By Ol''nr-r. Prime location nea r Balneric school 2260 Ml rr. 4 Bedroom. Master bedroom down. Larg:l' family room. Corner lot. Sllo>A'n by appt. 1llage Real Es!J te ,"".,.~~1~m~·~···'"".,.~~"~ ...... .,..,..1 lT * F.H.A~PO * 531-5111 < :::1 531-s100 !~~~....,....,...... 3 BR. h<:>rn,. 11·lhtt1:-" l\'allcrl OWNER Sacr ifice the rort. yard. $2:!,000 Sl,150 Dciiin. g-ilt of privacy in the park Payn1t"'. of $141 1110. like 80x120 rt . ground!' • Authorized Broker lat){l!>Capc>d lo pi c 1 u re * 548-6570 * Jll'r[ecl perf€'C'tion. l(ini:.: s1z- !,v steps lo school. At ap- praisal, $28,!lOO. llurry. Call for inspection. 8-IZ-1-11& -.tffl'... -• --II. 17171 Bt>ach BlvrL, 11.R. EXECUTIVES: Prestige living is yours In this 3,000 ~ It 4-level hornc high on a hilt . 4 hedrooms. :l harhs, forn1al rlin ing & 2 hug<' family rooin~. Patio parties arc a natural 11·i1h 1 thl' cuslon1 landscapin~ g, utmost privary. The finul S\f,'Jl up. Call 968-4456. •• 1•d bt>drooms, 2 lovely haths, CHARMING & f\'ODERN 1 family room with in5piring bPdroom harm' in c'Xet>llrnl fireplace. Built-in drenrn al't'a. All builtins, !'!unkf'n kitchen .. Patio parties, huilt- liv1n~ room, ('o r n (' r in BBQ for those cook outs! fireplaC<', and prime c:ond. Walk to schools, shopping Prier s:r:.000. Client \\'itl ex-churches lrom this at- rhangf' C"quity for triplex or tractivf' home. Brk. $32,ooo. I ~ ...... ,.,....,..,..,.,...,..,.11 f I C '1 C 11 •~2 1''13 0 \VNER \l.1ust Sell . primed ourp <''<, ·" . nrea. a -,,==-~~=i--·-~-~-~-r.Ar. "'?1 °"Ulll COA"""" , for immedlatf' sale! 4 ,,.,_.....,,~-• • .,._, .;i' O\\'NF.'R Jlll.'<iOU$. '.t sp11cious REALTORS bedrooms, 3 baths. firepla<'e broroomi;, 2 '--ths. family -""' in SC'Cluded rear livin~ LOVELY LRG :! sly 4BR, room \1·1th el{'J!:anf brlek room, all electric "Awarrl" home, 21 ~ ha, f-rplc. bltin fireplace convenient to lhc buiH-in kitchen. dishwa.stwr. gas kitch 1tsh/w~h. ~Urn. builtin kitchen. Plush cloud Loads of dr<:kinR . beautiful Huge yard. R p r i 11 kl Pr s sofl ca.rpeting, drape!!. NCI\'• patio, lush low maintl'llancc $43,000. Own<'r. !~7G flcnvcr ly painted inside & out. Jandscapin~ and a gorgeOtJs P rime location near · 1 BrL-$.18 900 Dr., C.~1. ~l'llr2442. 1•verything. No down GI ~;.~1~ ! "' ' . HOME & INCO~fE -Sparkl-terms . low·IOW do\\'n non· "'=c'=-"'----~---11 ing new duplex s.lS.!r!O. vris. Brk, Sl),750. 842--fi69L l!OUSF: rn('(>!s m 1uiremf·nts 0 -,ut·'ul • hd-m n,..., of prof. f' n I e rt a 1 nrors, oo: u ·• ' ,,\.,~·rs BY Owner; Choice 4 Br + U"•'t + 2 hd 1-• Ii Garden kllchf'n 1ncludr$ " rm rcn..., un · fam. rm. + 2 ba + f""'l". Xl•t 1-1· 1·1 E B · ,. ' c<'ramic Ille rountcl'i:, seU· " .,._a \On. .J •• ay Nr Mlle Sq. Park. 11'2 Yr~. St C \1.1 642-41137 clran OVt'll, huge punt!)'. ·• · · · old. $.''llOO ilmvn. 'f.0.P. V,\ 11·11.lnut cabinc!11. Opl'n * REPOSSES.;;;fQN It 5~1 P ITI. R13-110:l. 1vravr druiw.•rics ,r,, sharlt~. Sha~V11cant-undror 2:i\1 -~ AdvPrti!'L't"S msy pltlt'e thf'\r &ds by telephone! -l:OO a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monaay thru Friday 8 lo noon ~turday (:(J$TA -P..1ESA OF'f lCE 3..10 \V. Bay 642-5678 NE\VPORT BEACl1 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-567H l lU:-ITINGTON BEACll 17875 BcuC'h Blvd. 540-!220 LAGUNA BEACl·f 122 Forest Ave. 494-9466 SAi~ CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY di11 I free 540-l:.l:.!O CL4SSIFIED DEADLINES Di•adline for copy&: kills IS 5:;l() IJ.rTl. thl' day ht'>- for publication, f'Xt~·pt for Sunday .l ~l onday Editions when dcodllnc is Saturday, I2 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERR0RS: AdvertlsC't'!! shnuld cfleock th<'ir a ds JtJlly k rP.l)Ort rrron1 lmmNiiatcly. T II F. I /\11.Y PILOT a .-<.'>unlf's li.Ahilily for lhi· fir~\ ln- 1·nrrr ct ins('rlion unly. br-bE'aut sha~. f(lr inro \'all Var-a11cl1•s L'OSI money! B.,.n! 1 forn111.I dining & hvin~-546-your hou:I<', apt., ~!ort• Sl.'paral<' ramlly r o o n1 . Bkr • 7739· hlr!.i:-.. 1'1C'. lhru a Daily r•ilo! Prestige locnHon. Under CANCELJ..ATIONS: IN~ce<=f~•="~P=•=d':'"::P:l":'':':'"'::':"':':::f:1:•:~~:l:l':"'::A:•I:. ======"'='~'·"'°~=· :":";;';"='=-;,;~-~l~f.""=oil \\'h1•n killini;: an Ad I)(' • """" lo ml\ke a n"t·nrd .. r the KIU. NUMBl-:H r. C.~-04{1}.I\. [/,£7faS9 i:iVf'n you by your ad ~~ :L'--1 lRkf'r a!I receipt nf ynur ' ' , • .,.,.nation. This kill Tht> Puu/e with the Bui/t./n Chuckft1 · "umhe< m""t be ••·•· smlcd by the advM1.l5cr O ReorTOnQe letter!. ~I 1he -in case of a dlnpute. four xro.,,bl<td words be. Jaw to form lour ~.mple word1. CANCEU..ATfO N 0 R COT<HECTtON or Nfo~\V AD BEFORE RUNNING: ~vrry effort i• mild" "' kill (Ir corrl'Cl A n1•w nd t hat has lx'f•n onh•r1'11, hu1 \\r• c1mnot J:t,it'rl\n• '""tu rlr• so until tl11• nd hn~ 8111W'1lT«d in l h I' l"'llf'r. l"H f\.1~:-A-L.l!'<E ADS: Thl'lr """ 111'1' iitr!ctly t'R'lh In 11dv11n('(• by mA.11 nr nt 11ny on<! of ou r of- fl<'l'!I. NC I ph•!nf' 1>1'1len1. TllE DAIL'( PILOT re· lttvl't the rlgh1 le> clns- !ltlfy, ("(lit, ~n!IOr or ~ ruse any advet1iJ1emt'nt, And to ChAnR:o It,: rntc·s &. reaul11.tlon1 wl!hOul prior noth."t. CLASSIFIED MAILING 4DDRESS p. 0. Box 1560, a.ta Me.a 9'll:is Irvine Elegantly Decorated With custom draperies. wall· paper k upgraded carpet- ing: lovf'ly landscaping complimcnls th<' quiet sel- ling & lge. patio. Only s:11.ri0 (ired hill !!EAL T"\' Univ. Park C••ntl'r. Irvine C<ill ,\ny!im(', 83.l0820 Offlre hour11 R A~1 lo 6 PM ' 4 Br. In Irvine'. Screened patio, frplc., cpts & drps. Only $1,JOO dn. $29,900. or ;\ssume ei.:isling: VA loan. Standard Rt:'al Es t a t e 963-5538 or 8'.tl-2'6:l9. SPACIOUSNESS .. unllmilNI! ·rhls ('hl'l'rfu! 4 bdrn1 plu"' hon1r, offrrs , hrau1iful ocran & tanyon 1·1C<1\·s. lmn1a<'ulri1r 1>0nrl1· 11011. /\mplr roon1 [or rxpan- ~;ion . Lo.'nted in drlightrul, rozy nrlghbol'l1ood. ~c Earl \Vatl'rbury lor 1norc infor- mation. $.i9.!ljl), ..A-6/an REAL ESTATE llllO lilr nneyrc ~t. 494-~73 :..lfl-0316 MYSTIC HILLS SWIM POOL BEAUT. J Bl!. 2 Ra . on cor- TK'•r lot. l.4'1' 4lin. & fam rn1s. \l'/tx>nm ('('il's., a v1rw of both t'.)('('Ull & hills. Custom designed. Ht<!. &: flt. pool. An ~exC{'plionul plt•(;e of property at SG:i.000. • 4~2800 • •~ ~ -11(1. tJlo.iT t<W'( ICIJl1< Ll~ Ciiia ,..._...._i;._. EMERALD BAY FINEST LOT VIEW -$55,000 TEO HUBERT and Astociates :: 171 ~j~i~· NB OCEAN VIEW GAZl•J \f) l BR, den. 2 baths Slule f'n- try, l\lnkrn llv. m1., !pl. Jil pellktld c.•11., open beams, glas11 J{ablc• UHn kiU:h~. A prlJ.e wlnnl.'r al s.~.s.oo:>. \llMlon Rf'11lt y 4~·0731 PORTAFINA LAGUNA Cm1on1 hulldlng s11t·~ Ii l101Tl"8. l..crr on N}1'l PlaC(' 10 entr1u1<'"· SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS IN CWSIFICATION 800 ~~~~~~~~~.1·"'~'~·~"~"~·~ll<""•~·~"---"""""·~9'~"'- r , • Are You Letting Cash Slip Through .Your Hands See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 2. Guitar 3. Baby Crib 4. Electric Saw 5. Camera 6. W•sher 7. Outbo1rd Motor" 8. Ster.o Set 9. Couch 10. Cl1rinet 11 . Refrl~er"ator 12. P ickup Truck 13. Sewing Machlnt 14. Surfboord 15. Machine Tools 16. Dlshwather 17. Puppy 18. C1bln CMJiser 19, Goll Cart 20. Barometer 21. Stamp Collection 22. Ointtte S.t 23. Ploy Pon 24. Bowtlng Ball 25. Wotor Skis 26. Freez.ar 27. SultcaM 28. Clock 29. Bicydo 30. Typowrltor 31. Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedia 33. Vacuum Cleaner 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. S.d"'°m Sot 41 . Slide Projector 4'2. Lawn Mower 43. Pool Tablo 44. Tires 45. Piano 46. Fur Coit 47. Drapes . 48. Linens 49. Horse SO. Airplane SI . Orgon 52:. Exercycle 53. Rare Books 54. Ski Boots 55. High Choir 56. Coins 51. Electric Train 58. Kitten 59. Classic Auto 60. ColfH Tablo 61. Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Sot 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Watch ,7. Go-Kort 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer 70. Antique Furniture 71 . T1pe Recorder 72. Sollboot 73. Sports Cir 74. Mattress Box Spgs 75. Inboard S~boat 76. Shotgun 77. Soddlo 78. D•rt G•me 79. Punching Bag 80. Baby Carriage 81 . Drumt 82. Rlflo 13. Doslc 84. SCUBA G.or These or any other extra thinqs around the houst> can be turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD So • • • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 & 1 5 .. DAIL V PlLDT 4 [ ....... w. I~ [ l~I Condamlnlum. Condominium• for NI• 160 for HI• .-i P . nt1.1rn. 345 Apt. Unturn. Pre-Grand Opening Sale! :;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~~;I H~o~u;••~•~~:.:";;fu.;.;..'".;;·c__.:.30.:c5c/LH~ou~s~o~1-UHnfuITT;;~'--".;.·_'-305""' Apt1. Fu•n. ... A t u Gen•r•I L•gunt Hiiis Balboa Peninsula G1neri1I nerAI ~ • LDvely 3 BR. Z Ba 2 llll , 11, HA 1)k!l11, ti;il1·uny,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1iiiiiil ·-$48,HS --- CONDOMINIUMS Lolty living awaits you! Ac t swiftly to select your own Newport Beach condominium. Vis!l lhe temporary off ices <>f \he Newport Crest Information Center. ' conveniently located at 2400. West Coast Highway Suite B. Newport Beach. Open Oall'f 10 a.m. to sunse1. 1714 1 MS-6141 = STOP PAYING RENT!!! Take Advantage of Our "NO CLOSING COSTS" SPECIAL EXPIRES OCT. 31st • Minimum $950 Moves You In. • No Closing Costs. • Immediate Possession. IN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, l'A & 2 baths, built.in raz:ige, oven, hood, dish- wa.!he r, d isposal, individual laundry area, en~ closed private garage, private entrances, choice of carpet color, cable TV, swimming pool, gas J3.J3.Q & park-like recreational area. AJl this for as Jlttle as $207 per month, in· eludes everything, on our least expensive unit. PRICED FROM $18,950 TO $23,450 dupl<?I" \\•/el~t". bhn." & J l5 E. Bay. S:?:°"J(l 1no "11 vrl \ El CORDOVA APTS. a.ir/cond. New crpt'.: & lse. lllll at Apt (' ti7'\-1521 dri»i. Al1ra1:t1ve n>dwood or ~ll-ml From $14S lcllce(I patio. Call t-vet1 tZlll 1 & 2 Bedroom1: 3!13-7070 or Sat. 1 7 I<) Corona del Mar ll I h · W lk · Ct~ 5S6-3S!!l(. I!-> l~vasher • s ag Ca rpeting, • a -1n uii• OCEAN Vi('w, 2 B!k~ 10 t11~ ~ts. J.'orced Air 11cat -f;xtra L3r~e Rooms - C'nrona, 2 Rr. $220 ut1I. r,I. Reaut1{ul Caine ftt'lofn . Jleateci Pool -BBQ's· t.UW.lllhCOITAMllA Laguna Niguel Thr~t' i\rt:> Ju~1 4 r""' of ~PAC. 4 BR, $70,000 homf', Our .\!AN\' REN TALS .. Nr. beach. Rent $150 mo. Yi•arly. /\dulls, nu 1:.·1s J·:nrlo.c::cd Gar~1oes. Quiet. surround.Jogs and 61.-..-11;?1 ... (']u::;c tc1 :-.hopping. i ~r Jl arbor & ilamilton St) * lte.~p. purty. e 831--0588. :! Blks t{l Big Cornria. B;~1·h Adult Living. No Pets. Sl:'JO u111. pd. Yt"nl'lv. l A1tul1 . no pe111. &15'-Jti21. 2077 Charle St., Costa Mesa 642.4470 $115 -i1INI llonlf' l Bit ~ side. Tot .ik. Vacant. Mesa Verde * $135 . CAN '1' &>a!' 2 Br. Bunga!0'>1 Pa110. Kids/pet ok. RENT h...e. unfurn, 6 Br .. 3 ha. w/crpt. YC':&r lease, dt:>posit. Avail 29, Ckl. $475 mo. 557-921C9. Costa Mesa Casa del Oro ALI .. l 'TILITll::S i'Alf) * $150 . DOLlJIOUSE 'l Br. 3 BR CONOO.Doublt:> garage, Compare hcfor.• you rC'nt Gar. Bltns. Fncd lor kuis. new crpls/drps. S '.! 2 ::i. Cus1n1n df'~l~"J11·1!, r1·1llur1nJ,! * Agent. 5-*-1151 . • Spaciou-. ld!!•ht'n "1!11 111 HACIENDA HARBOR From $150 DELUXE I & 2 BEDROOMS Furnished & Unfurnished lleated Pool -Garages -Sha~ Carpeting Dishwasher -,-\II Utilities )Jaid . Adults Only . No Pets. 241 Avocado St., Costa Mesa 646-1204 $165 -IN LAGUNA! I Br. 3 Br., cpts, drp6, CO\' patlo, 2 j d in><'! ligh!in~ F\Jm. Cottage. Gar. t.lature car gar., fncd yd., nr schls. • Separalf' rl 1n·~ .1rr.1 VILL-A-M°ARSEliLES adults. $245 mq. S-\!.)-S396, • llumc·llk1· !lloragC' * e Pn var(' pat io.~ SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. $209. rAMlLY or Singh.•s! 4 Newport Beach • Closed ga1'1tj.(L" II stor agr Furnished & Unfurnished Hr, 2 Ba. Fncd yrll. Gar. EASTBLUff e fllarhle pull111.111 Adult Living r•et ok. • Kinp;-sl B('!rn1, Dishwasher color coordinated a ppliances LANDLORDSI • Pool . Barht'qui'.~ -sur-Plusb shag carpet -mirrored \vardrobe doors· FREE RENTAL SERVICE 4 SR /FAM RM/VU round1 ·d 1\ilh plui;h land-indirect lighting in kitchen -breakfast ba r · BEACON RENTALS Unfurni.~he<l at S:2..'i per ~raping. huge private fenced patio -plush land scap--* 64S..0111 * ni(Jnth. A prime pt'Ofl!'t·ty in Adu lt living ot it!! best ing ~ brick Bar-be-Ques . large heated pools HUNTINGTON Beach iu·cu. outslunding iu·ea. Nt-al'by j Lill'J;t' 1 fl H $!/;(), & lanai. Air conditioning. Sharp 3 hedroom DutC'h schools . park, n~arkeL Vu-Nu Pe1s JIOI 5 B · I 5 5 A 557 ~oo Haven honic>. New shag can1 . C'lcan & w:i11lni:;. Call . ;~li.'i \\'. \\'il.<><•n 642_1!)71 o. r1sto t., anta na -01. • ·1 t h 1 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. carpc"s 1.1.·1.1 rna c n)?; ~~ -WEEKLY-MONTHLY drapes. Spurkling clean. ::...,:.c.,,. MANAGING AGENT !tent is $230 per n1onth. \ Executive Suites I!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!\ 3 bedroom. 2 balh Co•I• c:,.,( "'-·,'.\, ~J3tf/ 208D Newpo•I Blvd. I' Melia area. Double garage, or..., "' . J Costa M... Apts. Furn. 360 I A!)t. Unturn. 365 covered patio, n<!W paint, / 642-2611 fenced yard. For rent or op-:: ........ realty Newpon Beach Corona del Mar Santa Ana F\vy. to Culver, right about 1i4 mile tion at sm per month. Call ~,.. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S 1-'==_;:.o.;.;;;.:. ___ I to \Valnut (1s t road on left), left 1 mile to •FREE l.i nC"ns \\'('have \Vinicr r.cnta.Ls l BR & den dupl<'X, 21 ~ ba. <rdulls. tJO prt.'i. $325. lrasi• _ ln11. 617 lns. ap1 A, Cd ~I 1\va1t. Sov. \'II. fr.14-7l.".i.t 2414 \'1s1a dC'I Oro e FREE Ulihties \\'11! Take Students "\\1alnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to Nc"·port Beach e 1'~ull Kitf'hrn Also 1>reantron~ avail. il · Realtors 545-9191 G4·1-ll33 ANYTT:'\t F: Culver, left about 3 m · es to \.Valn1,.1t, right to • Heated Pool 1 BH. :.! B1\ ........ S325 135(l L 8 h Open Eves. $17'.;, nl'w l br, nr heh, bltns 'I BR 2 l'A I"' aguna ••c "\Valnut Sq11are" or call 714/o'>'l 9670. • Launchy Facil ilirs . . " ............ """' °"""" * \VHY RENT? \VP ttave gar. nice. T I BR l B • !I-~ Costa Mesa * BRANO NEW! * )~\!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! houses avail. for nolhin~ $250, 3 br, 2 ba, frpll', gar. • V & n1 a.id scrv av1ul 3 llR .. I ,., ............ $,_::: l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Mabil•Homet l::m:ll · 1 'Id/ k • Phone S<'>tvicc . JOme ... ···•·· "' "'" 6 Beautiful unit!!, whilC' \i'a,er """"' do.,.,·n to Vct!I & 5% down to patio, c 11 pct o · 2 BR 1 o .. P•no'•t $''"" A ocean vie1-1"s: 2 spacious 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;~ Income Property ~------anyol'l<". Call any ti me. $300, 2 br, 2 ba, dhl frplc, * $27.50 WEEK & UP . c':U..:"6n.366:!'" --N NEW NEW NEW BR., 2 full ba's. l'ac-h; 11,ood I INCOME UNITS SCOTT REALTY. 5.16-753'.I. bltns, pvt over gar. e Studio ,t, 1 BR Apls burning frplcs. Util. roon1s . Mobile t-tomes NU·VIEW RENTALS •TV k l\1aid SC'r.'il·r Avail VILLA PAULA F'irst user deprcciatioo. A For Sale 1'25 2 hoUS{'s, '·~acre $51.000 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;.iiiii~I C~o~•o~n~a;.;d~e~l~M~•~·~:-;;,-;;~f,73-1030 or 494-32-18 • Pho11t· Servir·i'·llld Pr•il terrific deol~ 1-----------3 BR duplex S.'{11,000 I 3 Br., den, 2 Ba, FIA ht., OCF:A~fRONT 1700 sq._ fl. e Chilrh'<'n .~ Prt SC'l'lion JUST FTNISJ·tEn MORGAN REAL TY 1973 OIAMPION Sl2.23& Duplex & hach unit $41.~ Businlll lnimac. $350/mo. 4 2 9 Luxury 4 SDRt.1, archJ!~;-2376 Nl".vpoM Blvd., CM Nl!:AR SClfOOLS 673-6642 67.s.6642 24xti0. 3 hr, 2 ba. fan1 rn1 . 3 house's & duplex $67,500 O i 200 •leliotrope. STS-4651 o r tural showpla~·~_Ne\Y $."iii 54S~!l75!3 or 645-3!167 Familie1 We lcome! eppl's. cpl, drpd. Hut ch. i ~ CALL 642-lm pportun ty 675-20ll7. 1110; yrty. 494--061:1, 675-1972. SIOO month & up. OCEANFRONT romer 1 br, (lO 2 BR., 2 FULL BA.) Lido Ille landsrpd, Lived in onl~· a Ontu • Steps lo bch & bay. * SHADY ELJ\lS . POOL * 2 ba. bltn kit, upper dplx. En\•rtainin" i1·ill bt• a fl'I\' mos. Prt~ incl. exlra U il In Id e Ad 11 p I 'd ll''n Crptldrps. \\>'inff'r $375 mo. ~ b * REDUCED * " Liquor Stores -SSZtM-$150~1 Costa Mesa Spacious 1 br. t c · u s 00 si e ""up 5011 ~ashore. (7141 642-00i!l pleasure. Dccor:iting will be por.ch, a\.l.·ning, ca rp or l . Beauty Shop _ $4,500 1----''""-----$125 e Childrrn nt•x t block. Spacious 4 BR. 4 baths: farn-kl 1 "·t -21 '· F F • Pl 121.1 f.98-6012. a JOY· s r mg. "'"' up on crnr. J ~· Dry Cleaner -S-121\1 e Family \Vanted! 2 Br., ALA Rentals e 645--3900 ree urn1ture a n • SIX'<"ial eah1n<'I spaei." ily nn. wi!h \.l.'C'l bar, Frplc. slar pk. S.A. No pets. $2800 BulchC"r Shop -Nets S177'1 encl ftll.T. Kids/pets $135. lTi E. 22nrl St., Cl\! 642-3645 * Balboa Penin. 3 BR. 2 BA • Lock 1:taragcs w/lg stor in mfl.51er suite. equity. Take over IOI\' ALA R I e 645 ~ e " U • 2 B I h 0 b Crocker loan. $9435 at enta s .,..,.""" .... ea y. r.. us 2 BR. UTIL PD $175 over garage .. n? ay • Brn C't'il e Lnclry & PRlios NO\\' S.~.500 $lZ2.Zl mo. 6 4 G _ 2 5 8 G : HOLLAND Bus. Sales crpts/kids/pets. Ulil incld. Allrao.:. furn. ll!rl pool, ,\dlt s \v1bt>ach. Ut 1I paid. $350/mo. e D/\V-Di,;posal e Drape& -iaw-JR. 557-5326. a Deluxe Units 1716 Orarn:c. c .:-.1. 64:HI70 • Can't be beat, 3 br. S200. No j)l'lS. ~Infant okl 213: 62(}--7233 collect. • L)c(>p 2 colvr shag cpl'> MaltoA BV th<' Sea. lOxSO ~\BC 2 Bdnns C"nch. All on ground BARBER-Style Shop. NB kids/pl'ts ok. Ulil inc ld. ALA Rentals • 64S-l900 642-95'.;n :.! AR fur~ apt a\·ait Nov. 1 to \: f:'~~ ~j~~~~~~~ 1416 Via Lldo 6~ w/r'\~~....io. C.<>~rt. patio. floo r wfpvt yards & 1:tar-loca11on. $3.50 haircut, A$Ll50A. R I I e 64,3900 \Valk ocli'an or bay 2 Br, ut1l * $25 PER WEEK * July.I. :: blk. li•_nccnn. Uhl l·lnrhor Bh•d. ' h~m ~1·-~1 'd 1 ""''· Choi c " location. S.18-1346 eves. 633-1402. en a 1 ~ _ rl(!. 2 Ra. fncd. Vacant. & U p . . p11. S2l!i. No children or \ c·•s 11 l c· c· k • * CHOICE * s L"us. ,~,. "so l ea ....,., ... ·, p. ool & n1a1d SC"r.•1ce. ,-~ '"',.,) ,,., l'a .• a~ oo 1~t. l I tr,,.1., 20' C"·a $132.000. S'.!2.000 do\\n. fi. 3 Br .. 2 Ba., lam. rm. hltns, Hri n~ kids pets. . pC'ls. 1.~.,. I \VATER All Patd N rd c L r&\"t' " " · •IL' P M.oney to LCNin 240 rctri ba h R t A H 979--1430 l{1tcheus av:.. L l\lotel 'falllll. -. ~'°' · · o orner ot rt'nt. See spare n at m nancing by owner. g. r. 6 ag, ~;,;: en· • ovse 11 1 & V 1 . $Zi0, FURN. 2 BP., l.o\\·er Apt $190 5 Bdm1s., 31~ balhs plus din \ViLo;on or call 54:7-3618, Roy Mccardle Realtor 1st TD Loan· S bale., patio. pool. ,.u.v. BLUFFS_ View 4 BR. 2'h tomf'r ar l(lr icorr:i. 3104 SEASllOR•~ DHivt:. UpfX!r Apt SIBQ rm. plus lgc. sundeck. 548--8117, 536-8679. Also '61 1810 N""•""'rt Blvd., C.1't1. 968-2647. Twn'--f CHAlt~tll\G I RR . furn. * 673-6:-178 * Month In 1't1onth ·~ 000 --~...-Ba '"""• am area . ..,..., traVt'l Kencraft 20'. $1..200. 548-7729 Singles tCpls .. vacant 2 Br, PoOt. Cu.stom. $ 3 9 5 . duplex, l'K'w crpts, drps & YEARLY ISi!. 2 doors frorn 61.1. Hamilton, CM LIDO REAL TY ~space 51, 311 \.Vilson. 1 .,...,!!!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!"!"~I 6o/4% INTEREST $135 Gar K1ds/pe1.5 644 .. -0275 paint. Lovely garden 11ur-bch. 2 BR, part. turn Crp1 s, So>e Mgr-Mr. & Mrs. Hoban 3377 Via Udo, N'pt. Beach 1 CoRONA de! Jl.1Rr 4-Plex. 2 d TD L Rent.A.Hous~ 979-8430 ~=='=·=="""~""'..,-roundings. $135. Mature drps. $2i0/n10. 642-3443. S48-2062 * 673.7300 * Contempo-Laguna Hiiis Below H\.I."'. ('.!) l BR, (lJ, 2 n oa ns \.VATERF'RONT 3 BR, lge adults only. ~-"'UR" 3 f,R 2 "-t 1 ;;;c:I Only 8 spaces left! Adult "' CLEAN 2 Br. duplex, encl patio, dock avail, sun deck, ,. "· -, · uct., s epc: 0 LIDO MANSION park, adjacent to Leisure BR &: {ll l BR. all gar, & yard. Some crp!s. gar. lmmac. $300. 67~2124 BACHELOR. 1 & 2 Br. upts. bf'ach. Ocean Vu, Agent, , B" Ex-home 0 .. ,, w/frplrs. Prine. only. Lowest mtes Orange Co. .n"°4Cl"m=•·~""1'-6680'-":::::·----I ~"'-'-"'===~::::..==-Encl. carports, htd pool. 67~>-4630. New •New e New " n.. ....... • DIV< World, 23301 Ridge Route $1/l).000. 642-55.11 f!ves or "WE BUY TD'S" -University Park Arllts/no pets, $120 & up. , space. Playroont. Lari::c Dr., (off Moulton Pkwy.), \\'knds. 2 Br, I ba avail Oct. 21. 853 Center SI 645-8965 4 BH., 2 BA on BC'ach. Avail patio. Propf!:rty beaulitully Laguna Hills. 714/8.10--3900. Sattler Mtg. Co. $155/mo. PRIVATE HOUSE . · ' nn\V thn.i June, 1 9 1 3 .1 VILLA CORDOVA maintalnedG. SE7"M.soo. Mountain, Desert, 642~2171 54s-o611 ~-~_:64:.:' '-=-""'==----1UNTVERSITY PARK AREA V~~c~. n~~. JbyB~ar::~~:: GIJ--0245_ or ~7-9726-Bob. I 1·ncSJ1.coi\>lFOR:TABLI:: ---:llll---1971 Vlkinf::" Brettwood, Pvt Resort 174 Serving Harbor are .. 21 yrs. Oan·a Point 2 bdm1, 2 baths plus den or Ad!ls over 30. No pets. OCEANl-.RON'f ba;h apl QUIET-SAFE 1610 \V. Coast lhyY .. NB Pty. Upgraded. In San .Tuan _;:;:.:::~-----= ;::::;:;:...;c:,::;;_____ library. Enclosed yard and $48'-I021. $100. Ulll. Paid. Yearly rl'n· 11\i•:ir Ba rk Buy) REALTORS 642 .. 1623 C11pistrnno. Finest adult LATlGE \Vatertront Lo!. boat * r.tONEY to loan on real 2 BR.. family rm .. 2 frpl cs. coveretl patio. All lalr~t la!. Call 673--1211 40 Unit Adult Complex o"""~':.:'~·_:4~93-4="='·=-~---dock, CANYON LAKE. 2.61.i f!slate. Reasonable rates, or Ma~niriC<'nt ocean VlC\V! f<'atures. Adults preferred. l br.,:~~ ~~~shed. J BR S2:'i0 i1o. Bach.Sl:l.1 :\lo. (1) 2 Br. Left! Newport Beach 2-t,'60 WestemE"r, like ne\1•. 2 Ae. View Lot, Lake \1•ill buy your T.D. $250 Month. il·l6-329::_ Lea.<W, $310 per month. Call aft<':-9 am AlSl,1 yl!arly 11 vadablc F,ntr•rl aunn~ 1viH ht· 11 SPANISH Br., den. 1vet bar, ail' cond. Rivenide. Sell or exchange * BROKER 642-7491 * Fountain vanev ~C"'-=·==·'""'"=&-~3688=.'---1 -~---"-''--'c""'"-=--=--IABBE' REALTY 612-3!\50 IJl l'llSUf"l' J)('('OJ'a!Ln~ "'ill Ix- Across st. from b ch . for 1-'lke Tahoe. SPARLING \VE arrange 1st & 2nd RE Condominiums Furn •• Bach. & .1 Br. Ex-1 BR. fu l'n, <Jpt. Kn childI'<'n u )')y , SPLENDOR 536-4876 or 642-7521. I ~ VE S 1' MEN T Rltr. loans. Also purchase TDs. 4 B;. Green Valley condo. Unfurn. 320 cept1onally n1cel 2110 nor f>l'I.~. 21051.;, £'. J6th St. e ~JX't'ia l <"11hillf't ~PlH'f> TRAlLER home & eabana. 833-3S44, 64&-8320 $27a)mo. lse. Clubhse. pool.1 ----------Newport Blvd., C.M. NB. G~G-16&1. •Lock .i;:nr11grs 1.1./I~ stor If the comfortabl<' but lux-"Trad<' \Vind VillaRe."' LOT in famous Lake Havasu, Bkl". 492-8332, 492-0424. patio, dbl 11:ar. 61:>-3439. Co sta Mesa e Bn1 Cf'1Je l.ndrye Patios uriowr life Is what you're ,.,...,. E J 5 •TROPICAL POOLe Jooking fOl" In lhe Spani!lh \..Ull•a Pt1'e!l8. · · mallcy. home of the world famous Mortgages, Huntinqton Be•ch 1 Br. Furn S14S. Gae; & \Vtr San Clemente • DJ\\'. rlisJlOsal decor, we have it_ and "·ilh ~Sp~S_. =64=2_--0234==·-----London Bridge. L.ocaled Trust Deeds 260 ---.;....------·INE\V unf. 3 Br. condo, pool, e S111'c1:1 I !IOUndproofi nc. over 2700 ll<JU&re feet in-8x40. Real good cond. Part. close to all schools & city. _,:..:c;:.:;_;:..;.;;.;;.;_ __ = VACANT-3 BR. 2 ba. 60x100' play ground, cpts/drps. Nr. cP=d=-='='='=E"'-'l=Slh='-5'=S-=U=68=·-.it BR. apt.. incl. l1rrns. \\talk • 11N>p 2 o.ilur sl\ag crpt~ dudlni;:: 4 Bedroom~. furn. in C.~t. park. f>.18-2734 $9000 or will trade fc.ir Costa $.';.100. lst TD, $5.'l. Per mo. fenced & landscaped lot. 6So. Coast Plaza. 544-8116 all l Br $130 & $140 Adulls only. to bch .. 262 Victoria. SC. 1 • J)r<iJl('' separate FamUy Room. 548-3063 ~lesa or NeWllOrt Beach In -Including 9".'·I> due 3 yrs. Dversized double garagt> -S/Pool. Ideal for Bachelors By 0"1X'r. 493-3.\i.15. GAS & \\'ATER P ,\ln Dining Room. Utility Room oc · 644-1687 Covers $10,lOO Laguna w/room for boat. Elec bltn1H""-u-n~t~in-g~t-o-n-=s~.-.-c~h---I 1993 Church st. MS-963.l A 1 U 1 .,5 Mo. to Mo. $17• and p h h 12x60 EXPANDO, !iv rm .. 2 come prop. . Bench ocean vie\V lot. $2800 ranire & oven, new \V/\V -1--'='-'~-"'-"-;_::_"-'="--P . n urn. .JU z::z: Elctrn A~ .. CM \Yorkshop.o t OJ::~ t if~ 1 Br., 1~3..,~ ~~l~397park, nr bond paid off . 10% discount. shag carpets & drapes. 2 BR: condo, ftdlt I i v in Ii:, CLEAN 2 Br, clO!W.! to Hhops. B Ibo I I nd -32 Spanish Tile Roof + tnany _OC<'=='~"·'-"~=~·_:~=-==· __ , Real Estate {714l 493-1154. $225/mo. l.Juntington Boy. swinuning Arlults only. no pet<i. lllf]uire " a s a extra!. in a great 11.'cv.·port l0x5J KIT w/cabana, 28R, Exchange 182 Village Re11I Estate pool. recreation, { r p I c, 1191,\i Rochesll"r, cr-.1. • C _, ~1:<1 """ _,,.... "'"'nd Adlls H I Bch • ....:c:.:o;:;;;;,:;.. ____ o.;. 962-44TI '''"s h••ld-r, •lov•. , _,,.,,, .I Rr .. 2 ba . frplc. an furn. location and OruY ~..,,;Ml. iu._,,, "" · • an " " •J~ " .....,...,,._ l BR Trlr, $110. 2 Br. trlr Pl"l'lt:>r vrly. $.mcl/mo. 1171~ 646-1171. $4250. 962--0179 Start Your )I 11!!1 ] S200 mo. 968-2290. · $120. Util incl. No pets or D1amorMr. 6T."r '.\1X.'-t Investm ent Program I HouMsfsRlrlt I Bedroom, new carpet.~ 1 BR condo nr Beach & chilrlren. &16-1809. 642-3.17'.;. ®TllE RE.AI. Attrac. ~ acre view lots ~mmmmmiiiiiiiiii~m.: 2 Bedrooms • ALI elci:lric Atlanta. frplc, retrig, dhl FURN. 2 Br. apt tn """'I Balboa Penfn'lula EST.•R....,.RS •--• £1•.... I~ / 'ty t 'thin J mt'le Best local. uar w/!'l-t door opener. ,.,.~" ,..,4 a ~-v.• ci wa er. w1 " '"· ~crea. Waler ~ gas pd. $150. e OCEANFRONT 1· 0 \Y n . OPEN 'TIL 9PM of multi-million shopp'g Houses Fumlshed 300 Call i1.n1. Segner 962_2936 St 7o. 962-7265· .•12-3379 c>r S:~~8919. h.iuSt' 1nntnsti1· v1Pw .J BH, center, g<1 lf course & ----------or Mrs. McLey 962-4471 Laguna Nlgu~I 2 Bil, 11,:i Ba, cpls , rlrp11, f11r11 ~n1 . :; frplcs. · 4 Ba . Walk to Beach fl'('(!\vay, S500 Down, $50 IX'r Costa Mesa r1•frlg, C'ncl. pntio. garai.:1·. :MOO ,..1. rr. $T'~r mo. l'rly. C Apartment1 mo. Full price $4995. Sellers ~~~-~--~-~· 13 BR. 2~~ Br\ in Sea Terracl', No f)("ls. $1C(J. 642-21)51. fiD·till'!i l·Sty. 3 BR .. l~ ba. IU'Jl., For Sale 152 need b k will trnd FURN. J0x40 trailer & 4 B!ks fron1 Ocf'an 2 Br, h11..'i ocean view c-pts/drps. c:irpl!, frpl .. h!ln!I. TC'nnls, tax rea • c cabana. Adults only. No. ll everythitlj.!', Kids/pel!I ok. Lease $400 rnc:i. Inc. A!l.Sll 2 J.,\J{G E Br apt, I c!11!1! jJk, 3 Rr., 2 Ba ., YEARL"{. Cpts, pools nearby. $.12,900. NEW 5 U AT BEACH for local income property. RoUing Hon1es, 197 3 Rent-A-House 979-8430 dues. 213: 322-558.5. Eve. Jlftrtly /urn. $140. rlrps. hllln~. Avl:1il. f'>ov. 1. CA VWOOD REAL TY 8362 A!lanta, HB. 539-6779 McNASH REAL TY Newport Blvd. $125/mo. 3 BR, 2 BA, walk to bi!ach. 213: 32'l-2202. 646-2'170 Nr. Bch. fii;r-2281 f'ves & * 548-1290 * Commorcl•l 642-8400 6i5--0ll6. $250/mo. Lease w/option. D~~1 -~Fo----~.=•s Huntington Beach I\ knit~. WATERFRONT home, fac-Property 158 Reel Estate Wanted 184 Laguna &e•ch Avail Nov. 15. 5.16-8470. up exes urn. -:orona del Mar ing South. s BR, 31.:i ha. I--'-="'-,,_ __ -* "'ui'ck Cash * Sl25 Ulil pd, trg bach, full 3 BR. Max. 3 children. No"N.:.•:.;w;.cpo::.;,:rt_;llo=•c:c.,.h ___ LaQUINTA HERMOSA Liv. nn. \V/vie"' of water, F'OR Sale or lease 1~. 4 unitl'l, ,.. kit, pvt patio. pet.<i. 18421 Beach Blvd .,-Span\11h Country E.i;tAte Liv. din. rm., upp(!'l" view porch. 1.00J sq. ft. each. 1865-71 Will buy your properly. All $185, lrp: 1 br, w/frplc & gar, Close to shpg. \VATCl1 the sun IK'I ovt'I" th!' Ing & Spacious Apls. Ter· ~~ - Prlv. beach. tennis ct. + 2 Park Ave .. C.P.f. Do not cash within 72 hrs. Call nicely furnished. * 3 Br t'ONOO, crpts, drps, ocean, from you~ baJoony. 4 meed pool ; sunken gas .,.. BR apt. over dbl. gara~. disturb occupants. Phone $200, Util pd, 1 hr sepr cot-pool WMher/dryer R/0 Br.. 2 Ba, niCf'ly furn. BBQ. Unbelievable Living • Park-Like Surrounding QUil·:T DEl.UXI': 2 & 3 Bit APT!'. Pvt P11!11"1S * ll td, Pool!( Nr Shop'g * Adull11 Only Martinique Apts. 1777 Sanh1 Ana Ave., C.1"1. l\l~r. ApL 1 1:~ 646-fi54.2 3 BR. 2 ba 1 ri -ple .'C . Crr1t/drp<i, quiet. nd ul tll, no Pf'!'>. $200 mo 22'11 Fo!"ll- h:i m [)l\ys 646-1689, 1-.."ve!i 6lG-4939. l'PPER. Lt\RGt; 2 Br. 1·nC'I g:ar Nr {)("(" & icho11'g Adulls, no j)('lli. 2'lS4 Royal Palm Dr. $1a2/nl0. 61:)-3515 nr ~7-l.172. .........-S!::AUTTF"UL I & 2 BR. C-on11.1mpon1ry C11nlen Apt. 1':11\a~. frpl c.. pool. $155-13 BEACON BAY 673-8203 owner. 830-7651. Courtesy to lfll!t:> iv/pool. Ocrorator rum. remg, $200. 5-18-1405 ' Suitable for 3 or 4 tenchers Only bkrs. U VIEW RENTALS oi;: students. Thru June. $300 ON TEN ACRE Sl~O. C:i ll 5'16-al6.1. Owner Sacrificing N • 3 BR, 2 BA, bltlns, fenced mo. (2131 431-2406. 1 BR. FURN. $175 1 -Cond I • ~· ~ B Apls, lurn./untum. U!tse -e TltOPICAL POOLe Large, near new Duplex. om n1ums 673-'1030 or "P"t-.u4 children ok. $270 mo. JTnl 0 1 Unf 350 2 BR. FURN. $210 F I I II 116 000 OPEN f I 160 -1 Ot2 '827 up exn urn irep!a1·t>s I pr1v. patkls. 2 Rr StudJO, 1': B..'l. f11>I. l'lpr ?-lust se . . · or la e cu~. l B0 nr beach. Util. •~ caM-: .., · ' • Al .L trrlLITIES PAI~ C < "E 126 4• 1 SI NB 'r. ·~ '' Pools TC"nni8 Contn!'I Bkfsl. i>ll"t~l·•·. Sl!f,/n10. a<i .-HOU.-,, ;ill .,.. hll id. 11 45. No pC'ts.1,..... Adi 8 "181168 * Call 6-12-85ro * CONDO SPECI1\LTSTS 2°!3-2<1-4--a\.'16. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;J~C:o:;r~on:::;e7~:o~I -:M=e~r:--'.:-:'.:::'.:" u I!! No pets !JOO Sen Lai1C" Crll\I 641-2611 \\'Ir pd. 14.i ~'. 1 th" · BLUFFS • View 4 Br, 2~~ 1-fAVE ONE TO SELL? \VE BROKERS INC. • l\1ru:Ar!hur 11~ O'.>a 51 ll\\·yl R!tM:n Ill'" 2 hr a1)t. Cpl . CAN DO IT! \VANNA RUY 9 NewPort Bea ch VJ.:s, 1ve have N>n!als. r-.1ay ROOMY 3 Bed~m, 2 hath. !4 hlk• S. ol Snn Dlei(l 1'T\vy•1~"'l!~~!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I rlri1~. bl 11nc; CIOll<" in Ba. Twnhse, flUll att>a. ONE? WE'VE GOTTEl\f ! 62•1851 11·e lw of !lt'l""i1·e lo r o u In 1:trnunrl fl~r. S,150 pr. month on TJr ni·h, l t1lk \V. on Holt!' i.:;1 ra.t"<i. $18'.:! 91"i>l--0·107: aft Pool. Cust. By Owner VA, FHA 570 2, 3 & 4 \VANTED! Bac-h $12!i: Studio baylront, your housl"" nl'Clis" plus 11pac10U~ 1 bedroom to 16211 Parkside Le.ne.) Cl_IF.ERV 2 hr. up<ilair.: 0111 6. ~i l'+-00~~<1. $'• 9= ....... ........,. BEDROOMS IN r 20 l l"'l'. Drca1n Cottage lncd . ...., · up11talra with private en-I II •pt I • d~ Q 1•1 ·• . .,.,, .,......,,,.,..,. · ALL Up lo $1,000,000. Pre f!t .,. 1714! 841-54·11 'u y ' ' "' 'I-"-'' u ,. -, & 2 RR , .. /luru av&1 I. Hid AREAS SUBMIT OF'F~s nits 1 1 2 "'· sn"l!!flan1 ok. trance. $225 pr nlonlh. Both rrnr "'/Jivt l"nlr. ll•c ol ' INCRF~E your incomt". , . • ,-.. ~ . u or n1ore. i; ores or o -" 1 11 ,1 I i•~ "'"" Nice 3 br hotls(?. To be mov-larwln really, Inc. 968-4405. fice bldgs. C011ta Mesa. Rent-A-House 979.&430 unilfl next to park & tennis, ,,, _ 1(-ll', \\'i>h r, dryrr , $21.i rY'Ln pno · ? & up. Al. u ""· °""' I $~~ Newport n.,.h H B ,,-., call Bailey 673-8550 Alti. $14;:1 · Slfi.i \VU" pd. Yrly bM~. Afl 6 1,m Crntrr SI. G<t:i-R!m. ed to "''"r ot. ,1,JoJV, lncomo P•o-rty 11.1. <>'<' .. • • • " * 2 BR furn house, on o . hol • t Ult 1•-, .. -~ -I d K I t l wu<' or "" · pa....,,.. & \\'kr1d!1, G7l·O:'-'\:I ·~~73. pre1e~. . nves men 11, ... -ach, ,_ Ju-1 , t r I · · 11'1J""., 644-4072 ui.; .., '"' rp c "'· pr1\· gurai..,·s • J & 2 RR. c;aro..-11 Apt!!. Pool. JJ~h"i;hr. Utpl 1,,.1. SlfiO up. 321 F.. Z)lh ~I., 64.7-'1761. THE BLUFFS-PLUSH 2 Br $.100/mo. 646-9291 or 540-~ 11~1 Div!dN:I hn th Kr lol.!I (lf 2 bf-1lroon1<; car·h. Binns. •'<H· Hplit level near Corona de! NEW DUPLEXES PVT. Pty seek.• houl!C in "846. APM11MntiforRt'l'lt ..... clo!1el11. Rl'c hsll. pool & pets & dr111)f·~. •·lt01ci' 11~·;1-Mar Hl-$34,500. Aalc for $40'~, or duplex In $.'iO'H. In "SINCE 1946" pool t:ihlr!t, 11:i unrt both!!. tlon. IA!'llll'" $200 11r 1n0111 l1 [CJ·: 1 Br , ponl, nr shop.'!. Jack Peck Agt. 545--0465. Cd~f. PrinclP1d8 on I y . LRG Nt:\V 2 story l~~ btt, ll'lt \VC!!tcm Runk Bldg. Sri• !or y011~1l r 17301 Cnll fi7J.R5fil HLTR. i\dll ~. no Jlf'l'I, Ut ili pd. U!s.t BUiWER SELLING NO\V. 673-8455. Calallna Vu, 8Cl"OS5 trom Univt:>ndty Pane, trvine Apt1. Furn. 3M Kt"f'lron Ln. II hlk W. ol 2 Bit 2 B11., UJl~ta1r~. 1h"1n· 1\l('lnrov1n 54&-Q3.16_,,==~ Newport Heights $45,950 restaurant, shops & beach, Days 552•7000 Nightsl·G..;_-- 1 ------&-och, l l•lk N. or Slatl"r~. ~11'1rl:. At1rnr1, 11pt S\\'1•1!1,-J1 -3-BR-:-lBA-PATIO. $rluth of Adllms on Hu nling· $450 w/le&.9('. 6T.H'X172. e nera R12~7MS frplr 64 141110 d:1)'-; NEAR NEW. IN C.M. ton Slret'I, H 8. J! • l Sngl~ $95 Vlt.('81\L Wall< ~ 1 .::=:=:========I:'.:~:.'.!!-_::---:'.''.""".""-~ 2 RR. U/)!lnlni, t'rplll. ii~. 673-4607 art . 6 p Ill 11 70 :\Tr~;1 cl! I 1'tlar &J.5.120\ 3 BR. 2 ba.. 2 trplc. + 53'-llU °tNndal 1v1r $125. On thr-\vlr 1135. 3 BR. 2 "-lhs .....•....•. ,¥, $125 -nw. DI" it1nti , honir. 2 J h Id 11~ -E -51 OE 2 BR. $150 al I 20xM .,.. .,. ~' hl t1nc;, 1vi fK'l'I. f' 1 ""' * Cl{l·:.\T VlE\V, . 2 BR + form d n. rm. + + Util pd, 4 BP... 2 M!h9 ......... $.'\.50 bedroom comp. furn. lltrl R-tr.-nTI oft '1. Fri.it(' .. IJl ios. ~undttk!I, l""ICll 1\lirt"' 11 w 1h~1X1~111 Pnol ram. m1. $41 .900. Beach Dupl•x•i Rent-A-Hou•• 9)'9..8430 3 BR . bonus nn ...... $400 p(J(ll. Atlu~L~ .. -~~ pets. 23.'>9 L----.-;... $Jll) ui•. 6 11-G:U~. 60·3:·'t'• 1\dul!"I, no 1,,-1s. fi.t2-~. Call lor App't Ncv.')Xlrl ~ aguna DW "" ----------- Ty S1'\\' <k·llL'!l' If br 2 ha, & 3 Business i ed h 11 ' · '.l Hrt 111,1 11vail Nov 1-it wa ll\ I 1 nH. 2 UA, ShAI? crpt. dr'J)!I. LIDO REAL b1', 2 bo. ench. $73.500. Call OpPor tunlty 200 ~-------.Jl e ] r •• Ba lbtM l•l•nd I.tVE in hL-.:Ury fmn1 $4,l wk lo ho -:11·h, :i.duH~ .• SW:i I ("al'fJflrl nr acc. U~l!lln. 3377 Via Llrlo. N.li, 613-7300 Don Th0n1j)8011 &16-7414 or or $160 mo S1~1e$ l'lr Kn-1~7\ or 546-4 1:11. Sllrl/1n•l. ~,2~ • .,.,. ,,.,..., ONLY wlf,..shop In ' ....... no. ..,_........ N"EARLY new 3 UR, 2 BA, llc ho I • I 11 . - By OWNER -V'l\M,IJoW. ~" I ll 1 '.u •. :i l'•• fXWl • ml!I { 2 RR '"""· d~• -1 m11"r t ~ 2 IHt A1lultt. no , .... ts. Fe••I Walker, Re•ltor ~eh 11ak!. Ttnn11 comp· turn. A e eel kl!ch.. ""rvi<'t' litundmmat vu•--""' ........ ·~ .. ,... J Bdr .• 2 D-thl. Beautiful REAi TY ~ BBQ • -. ' . ._ ... $1R.3 '"'·ISi' M fM'l!l/Chlld . BAY ~1F.ADOW~ APT'S . .,.. avall. Principles only. • 1111\<". pfttlo. · '"'"'"se Inn 494--9-136 ~· .,A,,.....- kitchen. larsrc ma 8 t" r INV'f"..sJ'ORSr Brand new 1 ~4:;:......,:,,:;=-""'-';S3:::l,_:-<l456e.;:::.·...,,=-~s Univ P~ric CentC"r, Jrvll\f! Sept.June. 6J8..S470/$..~88ll. · ' L\J~i lti11i; Nov. l. 644~31Ci 3.Q'J' w. Bay St. 01: V'IV"'Vll•.1 bed room w I pr l duplex, fully rented. $4S,950, 1 H.;;.:.ou..;.:.so;c•;....;U;..n~f..:u.;.mc.·c__,:._,;,.. Cflil Anytlm• °":\.().'(20 OVER.LOOh.'INC ~rtn .l c~ \ 2 b d 1 -r h 1-' • ~·-$)0 000 •--7 SM. I BOAT man •-~·•-Mold! ' ~ 2 Br U II~ Prkl ·"\In"". I ml". 1-•-. .narm ng r up t'K. SPA. ba<" t &pt. nr IC' u1' or bl:lth/dres1inK artll -vw11o:r , ...,..... . -f'J oan. u1.111:•w •-·e· • Office hO\lrs 8 Al\1 to 6 f'M · 1 • ng 1•.:.,. •· 1 1'""'1 "'•_TV.• N1•\vly df'I'. $2\0 mo. shnrplng No pl!'t!I, Sl:ll mo. $38~.~).JM"; ~~: =nii:~si ~1~ St, ~~ :h, :1~~=m~ 1-'G..:•..;"°;;.:..'°;;.1c...-----Lagun• &each t!,~~-~JS){)· 200~~ c~hie~!~1%,1~c · 111 I. CA.II 11ftn-5, 67~10 ~~Ca.II 979-0134. 5 I A • C.M. 64$-4337. •tructkm. 54M>518. LANDLORDS! 1 =~~~~~---liii:a;jlii;bo;';e;'jP,;o;;n;.tn;;,•~u~iaa--RACH . nr hrflch. $1S5-$1.5ti. • t'orulido 2 nr ,, Jt,.. ~ •• l Br., p11.tio. carport, In • n Col. T\'. ,,. N. C"'-(. Pool. 2 ('Ar pl'I< g. $210. llf•\\ cplti 4 dtt)ll .. SUS. Furn INVE.c;-rons 7% DOWN ORY CLEANING .• LAUN· w~ SpectaJl.ze ln Newport $1.'iO Victoria Och., ll"K 1tudin, ---·----.>J ........ ll \•t11l ~t-llSOI' 3 llR. 1'4 ba. encl, pntk> No Rrnnd new• plex, Htg Bch. ORV AGENCY. FULL 13e11.ch • Cordna del htllr • ()(.•1tn vk>w, full kit. e s.z; Wk A: Up On Ocean. 01>en l'W'!I. 61 ~·<1 3 ,7 ; &14-AAl4"ar li1r~lm. down S185 mo. $2fi.500. 1234 Bttln11, cpt, c~ ln gar . PRICE $500. I: LaatI Our R $2"n, 2 hr. bltni, crpt/d1Tlf!, Lovely Bach-t Br-Roonu 4!»-:liO!l. a.fl •· 2 brlnn "Pl wltrplr & 2 JJR. utll pn.ili, $170 roo. no s. Shawnee, 007-1410. Wt8t of Bl'!~<'h Blvd. Jllllt * Mti-6912 • na. ental Ser ()('f'an vtcw 11;ar. M1dd Strvke • 1"M1 · Utn pd Newport Beech g11ra~e No pt"l.I. $1)11) m11 fll'ts. 12'17 l\tap4e St. V11canelP8 COftt monry: Rl'nt $G4.9!'i0. 9684i07. OISTRIBtrroR, wholmlt vice 11 f"REE to You! Try s.m. 3 br. 2'1>a, 2 lrplc1, aar •Call 6Th-8740e 673-918.l afl 4rin' -~==' fi48-6!)13 * Nu-Vlriwl Q' d k I -~ ,, •• ,::---2 OR • )'!'Mir houRff. apt.. ittort The l8JJlf!11I dra.w In lhe West. hlcytle l\cet'!l!IO'r!c1. GoOO f~ · Ct' , pat O. YEARLY I 2 IU'ltl 3 llR ri07 1 Br. tum-pool-I blk lo l BF:DROOMS, 1 hllth, }\W DllPL1•.,-\ • , unn1m. hldR., etc-. !hru t1 Dn11v Pllol . , 8 D11Jlv Pilot CIMslflt•11 opportunity. $3:i00. Alt a. NU-VIEW RENTALS N ·VIEW RENTALS F.. BAiboa. Blvd . 8"!boo.. occnn-&inRI" a<!ll. S14i1. yrty, l'l"dtroN11t'd. $ 21 0 Im a . r.11ou11• Quiel. No dGp 1'1' ClnMi nf'rl Arl. Gt2-~ 1v1_i;_1_2~~-' _. __ ~~_::i _ li'n <J(l"O °' ~ 6'13-41'm or '1fl.l-.l2411 ~·~73~-~-~·:.--------, fiT.H>"!'(IO..:.J1~-~ ~"'"' Rl•l\l!•)r, r,1..i-rno 1nntori'Y•·lr1. 5"8-7ral. _ ' • 148 DAIU PILOT I ... ....,......~ ..... ·-~.---;;,~.1:;! -~"';;;"""~l!tl~l ~l _b ... ·--l~ .___! _ .... _ .. ~1~1 1.___~ .. _ .... _, ..... ~J(g] 1-•Rtptn I~ ;;1-;;·;;;•;;1~~:1~1 _ ...... _ .. -~J[j]];J1~ !_.--·"~"'" ~J[j]]~JI Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Vnturn. 345 Apts., R•nt11lt Wanted ,.460 Found lfrw adtl SSO ~ -'lrJ>tt '•ervlce :,.H:;:°":::'"'=.:;IH::;::n::;l"8:.:!, ___ , J:.:H::•;i1P:,_W:.:,:•;:nl:,:od::::,_, M:::.&::..;F_;.7;,:10 Help Wenttd, M & F 711 I::?:.:.:...:.:.:;.:;.:;.:;. __ _;,.;_ Furn. or Unfum. 370 .:.:;:;,:.;.::;.:.,.;;;.:,::::.:;. _ _;;;: Costa Mei• Huntlnqtor h•ch L•a1•LeaM Option POUND: Youna blk ml doc ATIN. Rug Sha.rnpooera. Rainbow Window Asumbly Trainee CAPTAIN wanted 11~ HARBOR GREENS Fuml,h.cf & Unfurnl1hed From $130 to $21S mo Bochelort e 1 Bdrmt 2 8drms e 3 Bdrm1 11/2 or 2 Full Botht !\taster su~ bedrooms w/ hh:h beam ceilings. lart:;e living room w/i&' or v.·ood burning fin-pla~. ConvenlE-nt laundry atta oil kitchen. Enclosed pa· tiO!I. 2 swimming pools, sauna, recreation facili· \ic!t, Security guard. No P<'ts. Modols Open 'Iii 8 pm .• 1700 Peterson Way, CM nr Harbor Blvd A Adams 546-0370 DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond . rrpJc's . 3 Sv.•\m. ming Pools HeaJlh Spa. · Tenni& Courts . Game and BiUiard Room. l BR, F"rOm $160 1 BR. & Den Fron\ $185 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.~t 1714) 557-8020 RJ-::NTA!. OFFICE OPEN 10 Ar-.! to 6 Ptil west.snu21 2 Bedroom, 2 barh , ..•• S205 3 Bedroom. 2 !><1th ..... ST.'~ I Be<troom ............. $160 r Bt>droo1n, furn11m1.-d .• Sl!XJ Be-oullful new apt.s. v.· /pvt potio8. garage, pool, spa. t.ush gardc-n :setting, Adul!s, no _ _pets. 151 E. ~lst, C.!1.1. 646-8666. BEAUTIFUL spacious 3 Br. 11.:i Ba, new shag apt, bnck snack bar, lge balcony, \.\-alkin~ distance to shop.. ping center, ·school bu;<1 sh)J>S at door. Childl't'n 1\-rk'Ome. Only lst mo. rent. 3JI Victoria. * * $180 * *I J Br., l ~ Ba., nev.·ly painted. Blltr.s, crpl/drps, o:>ncl patio. Nr schls & shop'g. Children ok. No pet.~. 880 Center St., CM . Call aft 3 pm. wkda.yA. ·i ~Al~J!..!!tfay"'-~W~knd'-"'~·~'42::;:_·~83<""'0~.- NEWLY DECORATED 2 Br w/gar fncd yrd w/pacio. Wlr pd'. Call bfwn 1 & 5. 636-4120. 2724-A Placentia A\·e. ~Bernard $145 $135 Hunttngton S.•dt £).:l::'f'Utlw transltt'n'd tron1 w/1l'bt .star on cbelt A v.'hl E®ip. used onoe. Holt 18", Maintenance To S2 Per I-lour. Day & Niie Sail~! with mt><:fWt NE\\', 1 BR, $1*5. 2 BR, Stn. i:::-0 ... r ---t ,.,,.,,. •5 9 .. •· right tront paw, Vic. Dana I bp 'hampooe_r & bnis.h. a~:... ....Ut exptnence. lol' cbarta ln B'-· i.~ -r.-. ......... •K: ... .. • "' • ....,, N .. ,~ Comtnercll.J·~nlial "'' . NO FEES "anama, Sa!Ali"-' & ah&re -& ...,..,... uvm ocean. !-IUNTlNCTON Cat<lt•n11 famnnoratudy,lkc ls• (Vint Aw, (714) 496-0019 •. ,,u. o._.s v.oet vacuum, G7""'~1o ,__ PPS " ., L36.7678 A .... H 'I 1 Bo'-· ~·a •-·~ ~tru ttl\ "'A"' ft\l\A ""'""' r Ciluu .. te • • • proflt.s. ao.~ 1913. N"' Beh, "' ,..,.., ct a ........... uc 1n Nwpt/Cd.\i area. Call ~tr. c'::.":<Y..:•~···------.......,. """" , .....,, ~ r Laguna BMch 8-1&-I.m. C'..omp:u-e • ~ Palrlck, 213/552.2010 days; FOUND set of ~ys 10/15 -'='='"'"--'''-'°'"-'wknd:::::::;"---Dedicated Cleaning P•cif ic ,__0Co:'ao:h::.f. ________ 1 v.·hat YoU'r<.' missing. t"'r. 213/592-2336 eve11. vicinity Trafalgar & Ola • WE 00 EVERYTHING * Personnel Services CLEANlNG v.'Omen f or -e VIEW • Sll0-$21iO. -E=.,.,=P'-'L=.=.,=1'-. "b"l"'dg ___ boe_t_ln Vista, SM c I e m en t e . Ceilings Refs, l>~ree est. 646--2839 ll2 No. TOW"r Newport Center oUjce bldg. OCEA.\'f'RONT DELUXE, Apl-priv. patio. C.hl. \Vant to rent quiet l-,-4o=9&-=°"7t122~ . ..,..,,_~o---•SPAHKUNC \\'llfrF; HOUSE OF CLEAN Union Rank Square Nltc work, bondable. pd. 1 RR, 2 BA. Lease.,.•11nturc n1u~11·. 6 pools Mpuns,1tcn1ndls, honit. Call Da\Vll ~fort' I.GE' white G er m a 11 N . U J."'IOOrs, wlndow.11, err!::.. '.''ail5, Orange, Cnlif. r~~C'!!.,io14n. & ins. 40 llrt. wk. ,\tll1J1. ... nr1 llf't11 .. 1•v111or SllJ. Spacklu5 °0 s tl 5:00, G42-G4.41. Shepherd. Torn ear. Dr. A~;tl~:.u~~:~::· Syn. in•rea.&t2~4. 547-6446 1-'~"'"'-'.'.:...-~--~--1 in •~·••"h. l'ooL Sccur1ty .• !"~ .. ~~'.".l~ow:'.,'1~150"'-~'~'i6-0co::25~9:::__ $ kt ~1050 •-f Cl!Rf~• •s •10,.~ • S•••t S."'·~ ~vi'. ,,.. · · ·I BR. J ,1y hst. nr Adams or toe on, ,,,.,,... '"' ol't' * •1~r1 has ,._ · ht .,,, • .,.. " ""J ""' .. ,., · ~·tfa * """ o uru n g i\i;k for Raehel May •am'"" row f"ll or p/tlm< JITj.S Cl')rfl.sl lt"·y, s J,.ag-un11 Laguna Beach ~tt'sa Verd<' &ehl. l child . ..:."~':;::Y~·;_ ______ Cement, Concrete Wd Jlllll Jor you ..... .. -&~2S:l:> Call Z13: 633-18al. YOUNG male c e r man .:..:::...::;.;.:;::...::;;;::...:::.:,.__ 0 Call 83&-<lti4s. ASSEMBLERS_ 3CMlng Chf'Wmu· Gifts for NE:AR Beach, tov.·n. Adu1~. -EXE=~C~UT=-,VE=~w=i=th;_fam--if-y-of Stwphl'rd Ill corner of Irvine CUSTOM CEMENT WORK p I C ..,... Cl I Jg! &: 2nd shift in electronirg prestige nat'I lirm. No In. Loguna N igUet no f)E'ts. 3 nns., 1 Br. $17-1. 4 wants home overlooking & 2lst, Newport BcnC'h-Drl~s. WALKS, patios, ro • a.,..... Hn ng firm. No Exper. req1.1irl'd. \·rst. Hi potential e~. 464 Park A\l"!., 497-1120. 213 82&--8350 &1&-7285 eves or earl pool decks. Don. 6'2--8514 Al!O wlndows & Ooor care, Apply ln peraon, 9 thru 3. For interv1ew call Grayce, LAGUNA NIGUEL ocean. : · y a.m. PATIOS.PLANTERS Cl!.11 Dutch 537-1508, 8am-6pm Pottt':r & Brum.field Div. , o:""::""="::·~-----I A I I GARAGE for storage of F'OUNO-YeUow/green Pet AMF I ....,..ra1ed •· CH Cu ·~· U · por men I ~ household effects. N . B . • bird. Vic Placentia & All C.Oncretl! worii:. Brick, WOMAN wish~ day v.'Ork. nco.,.... . CHUR swuian -time 1Br.,1 Ba.: $185 • 2 Br., l [ I & CdM, C.M .... -. Hamilton, C.M. 642-8l3l or stump&ton<' wk. 894-35l3. Good and reliablt> Refer-26181 Areopuerto Janitorial/some repair , !lr 2 B fttntlll ,-. JVV"•u;;rt. ence. Phone 541-8029. San Juan Capistrano Exp. H. &h. 84.2-f461, ;1!~. $225. e 2 ., a.; "54:.:::.&-~85~"~·-------J>ATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, J It I I A~n"-'eqijua~lfto~p~""fii'['jm~p~l~M"'-IF'-10::'4&-:.3~127~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii•I _ ~ break, I't'move & l'(!place an or 1 ASSEMBLERS Incld Cns. TV Cable & \Vtr Rooms 400 I I lost 555 concrete. 548-8668 fur est. FuUy crptcl ~ drpd. Rec '-r'IClll* -------~~ J eff's Cleaning Service For small electro 1nech. Clerk Typist BBQ OCE N V h h l :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:·:.~ LARGE Gomon Setter, blk Id Residential -Commercial. .manuf. <:o. Perm. & (/li n1e. Jacil. 1-\ld Pool. area. A u on ca e , w/brown mkgs. 1 brown Chi Care • * 64&:6384 * Must have gd dexterity & Salcit Order Dept. Accura!e mu Aloma Ave. SMroom \Y/sPparate bath ~~,...;:--'-==o...:;_ __ I vlGlon. Non-smoker I'l'Q'd. typist 60 w.p.nl~ ~le<:~•e 400-z.m or 495-527<\ & entrance. $75. 494-3126 aft Personals 53Ci ~:i::"tc~t ~ac~'?e0fb~: COSfA MESA PRESCHOOL, _'.\_a_i_n_l•_•_•_n_c_• _____ 1 No exper. ne<:. Neat small lypcy.-r1ter. E."per. 1n b1ll- M V d 9 pm. ..Tip." Vic. Laguna Nim•el. l8lh & Monrovia. NEW TflOROUGH f' bi co. to work for. CaU 642-8584 Ing or sales dept. helpful. ese er e ROOMS $1& wk. up w/kil. • lfrNDU SPIRITUALIST * Vt>ry close 10 family, pk~ JI OURS 6:30 am-6:30 pm. , :re ia e, exp. lor appt. S. R. Engineering, Cal.I _for APf!< S30. \\'k up Apts. z:i76 Let thl! 8d change your f..fusic, stories, art. Reas. By job or wkly. Painting, 834 Production Pl.. N.B lndus1r1al Relalions 2 ,.,!1'1d~','. "No V5~~gt•·."s'11195"' N"~·t Blvd C •• whole ouUook on t"• tor '"-"r'u8rn. 495-44n::.~.~rk7dam & Rates. Llc'd. 642-1050. Eves. dC<.'Oreting, repair, clean. ... ,.. .,.. ... '""' 51~. .• . better Profession:i ... advi; at pm. ".ru-w 'v ays. 838-5237. . 5-19--0530. ASSEMBLERS (7141 494-9401 rno. 96J.-4()22, Ill L' R d' d ·1 $30 REWARD for return of DEPENDABLE Child Care 1.andscaping ElectI'OlliC GENTtEMAN, ma 11 I er on e. ic. ea mgs at y. female cat. Gray coat fleck-• Circuit Boo.rd Newport Beach bedroom. refrig, TV. Beach JO AM-10 PM. 492-9136. <" w•'th o-nge, num"-r tat-in my home. • iv· · & Sold 1 & P C t H •;:u:. 851~ 49~-34 312 N El c · "' '" uo.: Harbor/Baker/Fairview area COMPLETE landsc,aplng & ll'1ng . er ng A SENSIBLE ac. oa!i wy. r=· '· "--;,u • 0 anuno tooed ln ear. Missii:ig froo1 rrorn Rgl's 2 and up. installation State licens1~d. A really nice plaQe to 'vork. Lovely room. Pvt home. Real, San Clemente. n1y home in San Juan Call 546•4145 Conlm Industrial Apt. E}....PAC INC. PROPOSAL FOR EMPWYED GENTLE~tAN. I D~E~B;:;T;:;S=W;_,=O;:;R,;.:R~Y'-Y=07U=? Capistrano since 10/U/72. 5..l4-4sit. ' 3131 So. Standard, SA TELONIC INDUSTRIES Lagune Beach SINGLE LADIES *$65. 5-16-1713* Do you gct threatenin,,. let -Phone Jill at 494-6583 or YOUNG Set School · open 6 p I 1• & 979.4440 n-an v•'•w 2' 1~ur hou•" ROO' r t Ed' • 493-"·""' days: 5:45-7:30 Pli'l. 2~ to 6. a n 1ng T 'I r-ual Oppo•· Employer ...... .,,. • "' "' =-.,1 or ren nr ison 1ers'! For a leJ,ter that \Vil\ ~. Prof('ssional teachers. $20 Astistant a1 or 1,.,.~.;,..,,,;,;,,,,.· ..,.;,.;...,,.J security. a Par 1 men t.s plant, ll.B. For-intervie\\', "i't ""U sym-fhy from ""Ur NEUTERED 1nale cat. Short ......, Poperhanging Ex & II'~" de~1.........1 with a h1aster s """"-"""-.. JY ,..... J¥ h . whit •--& weekly. &16-31uu. I---'----"--''----per on coats pant!!.. If;" to~'.""~xclusive club ~th J ~~~~·~·"~:=· ,_ __ -:-c-=-cc::-l'redltors and laughs from air, h eBfu~-s, cu~-:t• & Contractor PAINTING: Int/Exler. Neat. class mens store. Apply in Uni"'"' Aquabar. fountains PRIVATE roon1 & entrane(!. your friends, send $1 to stomac · c • grey <'lea n, fasl, courteous ser· person to ?-.fr. Nelson, aft ,,. U·· or TV. "-'boa Pen ... Qn ••Letter,·· Box 1747, T ... ~·na brown strip('d. Lost in Cd}f 'd 9 30 Ph lph ., and lo-al ganlens All = Da.J ...,.,. .__.... J 'CK Taul•-_ ""pair vi-. Refs on ....... l.ic , : am, e s "eager, pa.rt of"lhe South CWt's mo. 673-4419. Beach, CA. ~2. ~a1024aro_ und Oct. 11. " ""' ~ nc f;; est. Estab. ·;i~ice 1955. No. 8 Fashion Island. N.B. Full management responsi- r. t t rom Pv ba <>'..,... r emod .. addit. 20Co ,.,.., . exp. 847-4128. AP•RTMENT cle·-·. "'·-bilitil's for offset compog-1nes! a par men · Deluxe. t entr & . EASY IYORCE Lic'd. My \Vay . 5' 7-<Xl36. c:::.::ocooc_ _____ ~ " "''"' vwo Ing dept. l.H iliie .YOW' dia- COMPOSING MANAGER munity. ?-.1aid service. No smokers. D Bl.K l.abJlrish setter, 9 wks Additions * Remodeling PAINTING & PAPERING, trans. Start $2/per hr. play advertising koov,1\edge. 1 lledroom/stud~ fr 0 m 6'r".J--0310: 548-7197 r.fod('rn divorce laws are Vic: lBth & ·Newport. $tS ~ Gerwick & Son, Llc'd 19 yrs. in Harbor area. l.ic 962-5290 Rough oopy from Mies to 119J. Jte"U•ard. 642 -1064 / & bond d R~' f 2 Bedroom from S295. 415 sin1ple. Step-by-step, con-213·596·1212. 673~11 * 549-2170 c · ... s um. Automctive finill.hed flats for camera. Guest Home fidentiaJ instruction, ma.kc G d · -642-2356. AGGRESSIVE', ambitious r-.tnil responsrs to P.O. Ba.x Deluxe 3 bedroom 1;;::.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; it possible for yau to handle • MALE Golc'len Retriev('r, I ~~·~•.:.:•~n~tn~g,,______ INT & EXT painting, paper new car salesperson for one 755. Cosia Mesa, Ca. h1odels OJX'n 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. your own divorce without a 5 yrs. old. Needs medica-d O[ !ht! 1 .. --st F d VERSAILLES * Pr1'vate Room * la1"""r. $24.95. 544-2482. lion. Vic Calif. lfomes, AMERICAN gardener. Tired hanging, natural woo . ........"" o r CONSTRUCTION Secretary .,, 1 · REIVARD "AA .,.,~A of "Grass cutters" doing finishing. 548-7905. Dealersh1pg U1 qr an g f' experienced. • on the BLUFFS PAU.t & CARD READINGS rvine. ! ..............,. half a job? For estimate 30 Day Special, tllter/Exter. County.. Progressive f>!lY 97S-8200 bet\\>ern 9 & 5 I NEWPORT foe •t p 1 1 & J 1 LOST male Irish setter, has call Custom Gn...Aener, John . l' , --al Is L'• 'd plan, lrtSUral"'IC(', etc. Ex· • . . a Ambulatory Lady or ·an as• prcsen · u ure. scar on side. Needs medica· "'""" pain Ing. ~ re • c perience preferred. Se{' COOK, matun! ind1vldua.I From Newport Blvd .• turn at Good, nutrit\:ius Foor!. Advice & help in many mat-lion. Vic. NB. 979-9158, ,_,M~o="'="'=·'-'"~5-'-"2658=~· ___ ms. Chuck. ~. Don Crevier. previous f'Xperience in Hospital Road 11 block Nice, chrerful atmosph£'tt'. ters 213· 694-1250 Fully Ile E>..'P. lla11.·aiian Gardener. No W··•-g THEODORE ROBINS health field pre (erred above Pacific Cnast Hwy~ a.I * CaU 548-4753 * La H. b . Calf f ' 1 . . LOST Fem. Siamese, lite d .... , .. , · a ra. or app . beigo, 2 vr. old, Wes1m,·ns1er Complete gar en sf' r v · * WALLPAPER * FORD Small. acutl' care hol'lpltal. Lido Isle) to entrance. Ka lJl. a I an i, 6 4 6-4676, Wh 11 "M .. \\lri!e, classified ad No. 494, 90J Cs.goey Lane, Newport \'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' PROBLD.1 Pregnancy. Con-area. Rewanl! 897-9963. 642-1337. 548 144f you ea S:.lnt mJ Harbor Blvd., Daily Pilot, P. o . Box 156(), Be a ch , ca. 9 2 6 6 O. fident, s y mp a t he t I c SM,\U. all white female cat, -Costa Mesa Cosla J\ff'sa, ea. 92626. Telephone: (714) 615-0060. Rentals to Share 430 pregnancy counseling. AOOr-blue eyes. t-.iesa Verde area. EXP. Japanese Gardener. PAINTING -Honest, clean. " COOK-rrrtME PARK NEWPORT :..::;.;:.:;;.o..-'....:c;;o;.;;_-'-t.!_on & .adoptions ~-.AP· 540-J.459. C1 ompletc hy ~ ~n-guaranteed work. Licensed AUTO Over :n · · R.oommste tl.eferral Service c:ARE. 642-4436. 1-'==oc=-~-~,.-=-"~-enl't.nce, s ru .......... ,r, u=S. & Insured. 675-5740. LOT MAN APARTMENTS Find Thee Ideal Roomm~~ EUROPEAN PSYCiflC * r-.~:t~SS~~t!t~e:llO~:ri~; 1'~rce Est. 645--0347. PROF. painter, honest work, light mechanical work O\\·n lro32 Beach Bl., Hunt Bcll Screened lnts CTI-&) 533-0 $25. R.eward 645-2288. Bj;B~~::~~G rerui. Uc/ins. Int/ex:t. free tools. good opportunir}.. Ap-DEBTS WORRY YOU? Oft the bay \\'ANTED: Ba c h e Io r in-Appts. avail. thru Oct.&: Nov. I ~==='--o.,...=-""=--~-Irv'-fndustn'al est. Refs. 548--2"ta9. . . ply alter 9 AM . Do _,, g·t t"-•l-'•g l•I· terested in sailing to share 2 i7141 '"" .,56 WST Man.IC cal. grey; short '"" & JY " 1u-..· ........ Luxury apartment liVing O\I· ;.u..r<U. tail Vil'in(ly Palizada San Complexes. FOR Cll'an neat patnlJnJ?, -SU---·•" ,._,_,.._.:.a 11'ts! For a lo:>tter that wlll erlooking the water. Enjoy br apt nr bch. 673-3508 BOB • Call •·Larry" ;r 3 Cll'~rnte. Call 492-4581'. 557-4299 after 5pm. ln~erior. reas. rates. Call '~ '"'°"°""° gi't rou sympathy from your STa0.000 health spa, 7 S\11.m-Garages for Rent 435 Stooges. lmnortant. * LANDSCAPING * Dick. 91i8-4065. 465 E 17th Costa l\lesa emlLtors and laughs from n1ing poo~. 7 llghted ten-* 642-4781 * N 1 5 · k 1 PROF. Painting, also roofs, · · your friends, St'nd $1 to · --I 11 r [ ]~ C\V awns, Pr 1 n er 5 ' accou.<1:. Ceil. i nter/exter. AVON CHRISTMAS EARN· "Lc>rtrr." Box 1747, Laguna n1s rou. "'· P U.'i m es o LRC. 2 Car gar .. Jor storage S\\'lNCTNG Singles call Jim Instruction IS decks, cleanup. State lic'd. Lie/Ins. Free est. ~5-5191. JN~S can help nlake I.he B('uch, CA. 92652_ bicycle l:rii.ils, putting. shuf-in the renr of 6S7 \\". l!ilh 2-8 p.rn_ . _ ,....,... [).16-1225. holidays happier for your Deboard, croquet. Junior l's St., C.M. $30 roo, CALL 539-3122 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;-GARDENING Heavy or Hie EXTER. Complete 2 <'08L<;, 1 entlt'C' family! Ifs easy sel!-DEL!VEllY of o At Ly from $174.50 monthly; also 1 494-1719· Al..COHOLI CS Anonymous. • hauling, grading, clean up. slory $2fiO. 2 story $320. ing, fi ne Avon produ<'IS ror Pll..OT, SUNDAY ONLY, to and 2-bedroom plans and Phone 542-7217 or write Schools & :\1 as on a r y, 5 3 6-2 3 9 4 N(':tt work. Roy, IMW-5058. our ltreslstible Christmas ne\\-SpaJX'r carriers. Re- 2-story town houses. Elec-Office Rental 440 P.O. Box 1.223, Costa Mesa. instructions 575 anytime. IN'r. Apt. painting carpt!t Cat:alogue. Call Now 540-7041 qu1tl'S the use of a Statitm trlc kitchens, private patios ""' EX p ER r J 'a pane 8 e sha.mpooing. Suns\\1?pl Bldg. BABYSITI'ER, Penn Is . \Vagon or Van. Contact Mr. or ball'oniea, carpeting, dra-DESK apace available _, COUPLES PARTIES call PIANO or voice, m)"bome or Ga rd e ner. Complete Matnt.. 842-1996. area, )"O\l1' home. 4 & 6 yr. Jlarry &-eley, 330 West Bay peries. Subternnean park-mo. WW provide furniture Phil 2-8 p.m. youn;. 20 Yrs. exp. Master Carc'lcning Selv:ice. NB, QM HOUSE painting. int/ext. old (Daily-5 day \\'k). St., C.Osla Mesa. log with elevators. Optional :~ar::. ~chTi~ 5J.9..3.1-H SJS in music. 833-2321)~ ..::""=a~54&-=..:1'94::::~·-~~--accous. ceilings, reas. Free 6'r.'t-8809. DENTAL rronl ofc, prior ex- mald service. Just north of Huntinglon Beach. &t2-4371 Social Clubs [ !!!!!"""""~ AL'S Landscaping. Tree re· i'st. 7!4/536-5857. BABYSITTER: 3 children. per pref'd. Appl. making, Fashion Island at Jambortt I moval. Yard remodelin~. TllE Hangman, 've sell too may live-in. Contact Mr. filing, posting, typipg, etc. d Sa J I H'll Ro d DESK space available S50 FIND YOURSELF" s.mc....rReplifs Trash hauling, lot cleanup. one stop price & pattern, for Coleman, 847-4359 aft 8 pm. as backup to ofc. m~ . • Sl!ADY EL', <S -POOL • an n oaqu n I s a . \"ill id fur ., -;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii ·-. . kl -u66 I I "7 58'0 s I • ·-1 ,.. "'"! -" T I 714! 644 l.'lOO mo. '~ prov e ni u." lN SOMEONE ELSE. '""pair spr1n ers, 11 •->-• iomc app .,,,.. · ..,,, BABYSfITER my home . a ary open,;,'. ru y . .....,..._ • 'dulls Pool·•·~-11•0 up e ephone f • t « A · I ' ' d 54•24,-alt 6 " "'.... ...., 1 lnl 1· a .., mo. nswenng serv ce J A p ANESE Ex""rienced Pla~ter, Patch, Repair days. 2 PN!·SChool agr! ay!!. \I" => • • Ch'.ldrrn n1>xl block tor renta orma lon bl ~ F A DISCOVER B b 'II' •-availn e . .._,; ores! ve, a ys1 1ng Gamencr. MaintenanCe & 1-------'--'--I ehildrfon. 540-9251 eves. * DEN'rAL secretaiy-bkkpr. Free Furniture Plan P R 0 FESS I 0 NAL L V Laguna Beach, 494-9466 DISCOVERY Cll'anup Work. 842-6581. * r~i\TCH PLASTERTNG BABYSITTER, my home, Also chaitside assist pos1- 1n E. 22n<l St., CM 642-3645 · decorat<'d condo. 3 BR. 2 BAY VIEW OFFICES 714183..'HlBKi 2131387-3393 PROFESSIONAL le ache r GARDENING SERVICE All types. 1'l'ee estimates Corona del Mar, Mon-Fri. ·':o'':::"~· 54G-:c0'.:::'""°°"'''-----1 SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up. BA, frplc, pool, dhl ~at·., \vill babysit nites & wkends R bl "·i· bl Cal! 540-6825 11 30-S 30 R 1 "'""'"'D -1 1 R . . '-I t " ·1 t bch Dt•lux!', Air-conditioned i ho N ·-·-1 easona e -"""1a e ; : · es . .........,,_,. en a eceptionist-Ass,,.. Pool. ~ti"-. bltns, kids e cc opener. ~ m1 e u . n my me. o Inwn s. * .,~=• * Pl b ' 1 0 .. Pi . El -....... " $.125 Sm\ pet ok. 645-23<\6, Rederorated. Lido area ! [gJ Reasonable. &&-1057. ,,..IJ"""U(>.U. um 1ng Barmaid, no exp net', ran . <:J>"p. time. TOftl, ok. 11 N 5 S42-7n35 -"~"'-ll~O~. ------~ RealonomicA, Bkr. 6T:Mi700 lost Md fOWldl I DAY Nursery, babies to 3 EXPERT Japane se Drains unclogged _ $7.50 Queen Bee, age 21-35 I..a~una Hills, 831)-.1130. 2206 Co egc o. .•• SEACLIFF l\1a.oor Apts. 2 OF.FICE-STO~E ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;.~ yr.;. $1 8 per v.·k. &16-5788 or gardener. knowhow, upkeep, Sewer line to 100· -$15 e 646-9935 e D EN TAL ~tary-Npt. 1996 ?o1aple No. 1 · ... &U-3813 C d &15-430'2. plant, pest, trim, cleannp. •BEAUTICIAN WINE.4.T orthodontic ofc. Age 25-45. "~ "'" 50 Br. $164, Pool, rpts, rps. 52.1 sq. ft. Util paid. Oft sl. 968-3486. -=~*=-'5'>-""'~2302~~·~=-c-·I Dental exp pm &'~'" t & 2 Br. aplc; . .,&M.>. ........ . bl•-, g•~. dispt. 1525 ""'"" N -COLE PLUMBING APPEARANCE, FOR · · ..... --. d ~-d u'" ,-u park'g . .<.uJ.£ ewport, cor. Found (frff ads} 550 G I S i DEN AL F~hly painte · ... .,..,,,, rps, Placentia Ave. Ask about of Bay St. 646--1252. Carpenter enera erv ces BUSY SlfOP. 548-9919. T assistant \vanted, hltn~. cv'd car Po T t . our discount. 548-2682 -......-.0 ____ mal ___ b_ ~2'~h'~·~'~'~'"~'~"~"~=~6'5~l_lC16~1: \ "~B~O~AiiT"jRijE~PiiAifl~RC'iM~EONM o:>xJl('lienced. 1 s:-irl office. El Children & small pets OK. 2 Adjoining ollices. busy in-.. ~ UNO: Young c ta by lndus/Comm'l/Resid HANDYMAN • All kinds of PLUMBING REPAIR , ~T~o~ro~a~...,~·~-..,.el<l<h50e:::~10"---J 830 Center St .. 548-4014 BAYFRONT Walk lo Beach. tersection C.r-.1. $90. Utll'g cat w/flea collar. Vf!l:y All !ypes work. Renlodcl, work, small jobs a No job too smaU Mum have experie:-icei· l .R~.E~.~A~L:O::V~o~iu"c~' "-c~,.=,-,,=.~,.-,,· 1 Lrg 3 BR, 2 BA. partly furn, inc., adjoining 1 BR furn. friendly. Vic. l\11'sa Or. & alternlion, finish, Iran\e, specialty. 956-9374: 546-9723. * 642-3128 * 11•a,l'rfront boat repair yard. Designer/ d~hv.•!!hr . ......,..1. QUIEI' 2 Br. or unlurn. Util pd. Crptd, apt avail. 642-£560. Irvine. C.M. 642-4846. bcfor<" pnn cl, elc. 962·1961. 1-IAND Yt-.1AN • Light Plumb----~/-"'-1 '--"""-"----l l-fnulouts, hull & mechanical E • • 0 .,.,., draped dock avail Adults G. d El Sewing A terati?ns rl'pairs. Good jobs for top ng1neer ~· ~!~:~i~ X~.l.ts~~· $365/mO. Y('arly. 6'15--5934. · BUSINESS suite. Campus rND: Grry & 11·tiile semi-\YO R L D • .s BE s T ~~~ai \~~~~~.}\'6. CC'· SEWING.DESIGNING men. Blackie's Boat Yard, ~1anlr.d_ to fill perm. J)osition "-2 BR 2 Lrg BR, Nlil Rm, frp\c., Dr. at MacArthur. N.B. Ap-J:T01\TI 1na1£' cat. Very af-CARPENTER 2414 N('v.·port Blvd .• N.B. ~n ~neering dept. Exper. NE\V s .. ,.g crptg. • 1 h h ha&:" nd k pro:<. 400 ~· ft. 54(1-4752. fr(•honate. \\I/red flea ro\. Small Jobs e Refl'!rences Ha uling r.tenl!Vomen. Reas. Rates * 673-6834 * in drs1gn & mfrng fibe?"Rls bltm, refril?.. child OK. < s,.1"', • ·' 1 'L.h.su •~~· PH.OFESSIONAL Suite ready Jar. Vic. Roxburv Rd., (7141 6-t5-7588 $10 min. Call 846-7•150 Bookkce""r di<'sel powered yachts ......,.c'I. SlJ.i. 571 Joann St. 646-:F.?7 pa'°· min. 0 (J\; _.. 'J TREE Work. Garage &: yrl ,.... d ·~.., or 646-2039. Mr. Dietzel 832-3580 e 1-8 go go. Heil at Bolsa Chica.1 _c~a~m~oo::o:_~SOO'-"'re-"-""~"::::::t-86:-"""~,1~--CARPENTRY, Additions & 1 ?-.I & h ul Ask 1 Alterations-642-5845 \\7e need one Automotive A vanC<'ment oppor. + xln'I pm. _J~lc.R~-...::IZ7::::5i~m~o~._64&-::;::~13=23~.~o I FND prescrip lion glasses -repair. 20 years Harbor M~up. sJ_ve403 8 • or Neat. aeeurate. 20 years exp. Bookkt'Cper \Vith OMV ex-co benf'fits. Send resume to 1 Br. \l'ilh garagf". \\'tr t.: ~~----~-~-~ S · ed area. 646-21J5/6T3"'6294. T. 1 · perlence. Send resumE' to JtE.J. Poole. gardenc:-r furn. $110 mo. SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1 blk Business "ental 44 lint -r.Ionday at Big 1-"="'-..:..o"-'=="-'='---YARD, garage cleanups. Tile Bo)( 501. clo Daily Pilot. Columbia Yachtt Adlts only, no pt>l.s. 54R-6954 . 10 bay, 1 blk to ocean. c,7o~ro~ Frames engra..W. Carpet Serv•'•e Remove ~s dirt, ivy ,~ \""'' Bay N--1, r ... 1, A Div of Wh>'t·"e c Yearly. ~1rno. Bk r . Contemporary 1.c.c'r'-="="· ------.. ' · CERAMIC tile new & o>.J\I ·Y" .::.u ._ ...u::; ...... r orp. 2 B" a 1 n.. -·1 ~1 -0 1 . --"--------DrtveW)'!L, grading. 847-2666. '"mO<lel. ~-'''· Small M~a. Calif. 92626, 275 McCormick AV('. "· P · 00-·am .._,., ·• ,....... , 675-49ll. Sp 'sh l:~ UND: Male nsh setter ~· r ''= Cot M C II carp, drp11, bltn11. No pi?ts. Gnl \\"/silver <'iloker vie Bol.sa & JOI-IN'S Carpet & Upholstery YARD & Garage Cleanup. jo~b~•~w~•=loo=m='~-=5=3"-~2~4=26~-;_-, Bookke('~r Eq 'i 'o ""E • 1f. 92626 1 r 0 i, s1-~ 642 ~2 2 BDRM l'" Ba f•pl" Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· Free est. 7 days. Call = \l'e n··" one Au to-1,·v.. ua ppor. mp oyer J\f/F nant .\. ·""· -;in,). •• "' .. • ,,., C •I &nch, \V-eslmlnstc r T t •I g ~~ "-• pnllo, lge. back yard. 1 blk ommerc1Q guard (Soil Retardants,. unytime, 548-5031. u o. n Bookkeeper with machine DRAPERY Workroom. Pd CHF.ERFUL. a\ry, nu 2 BR. to ocean. ~. "'"\y. 4:115 I~"~·~,..~""'::::::~·-~~~---Degreasers & all color E T h b rl Send vac & hol"d ..,.. .. 1 ha apt. Arlults, no Pf'!S. -J• Property FOUND v\c 22nd &: Tustin G N. Hauling. reefs ru CREDF..NTlALED teacher . L"tpe _en~. . re~e to : 1 ays. c..o:J)f:'r. or 54.~-<lrol River. 675-3906 after 6 pm. A" NB fml kitten, long ha ir: g~ghte'tts 1& 10 minute trim. Gar & yd cleanup. Est great interest to h (' 1 P Box 5(11 c/o Daily Pilot, l30 iDrainee euttcr. _B e a c h I BW-k I 2 BR 2 This I.<: R Ir~ standing 22..., t hi k & h" e R c or w hi l c 8.19-Z:iOJ. 557-6904. "hildren w/readlng prob~. \\'r~t Bay. Stl'C('t, Costa rapery, 900 \V. 11th, 0.f. 2 BR. urstairs. bltn.<:. crpl1', ,-0 ocean • · square foot build111s;: \\ilh oran~". an. Ii<' \I' 1tc. rarpt!ls. Save y<>ur money by .. Mesi c 11 92626 d-.. SJ""lf' r11 r "''· $140 bn., hmnd ne\v $275/mo., 642-t6'9a. SKIPLOADER & dump truck Afr school or eves. 641r-1094 • a, a i · · .,... ·~'12"""" "'., .. AJ"'"" yrly lease 847·8531 agent. nmre !hen an1ple parking 1-::.::..::::::,_______ saving me extra trips. \Viii V.'Ork. Concrete, asphalt, M~. Grupr. Bookkeeper ,,. r mo _ .,,,,Qi flT' ....... '""· on Bakrr Slrct'l ln Costa SMALL black male Bull dog clenn living rm., dining nn. ~~-~db~~k~-~~·~46-~TI~l~Od ~~~~~~~~~~~/\Ve neffi one Rutomollvc Electronic Sllti 1 Bdrm. $195 2 Bclnn, t.11'!1a. Owner l\'\11 lea.<:e \\'/\\•l11lf' marking. Found & hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, i""'l\\'lng, rea ing. -· Bookk('f>pcr. Send resuml' A bl Dana P t:o!n' hlg modern yrly. Dave building as IJJ. !or beauty \lis!a Shopping Ci:-nter, C.l\1. rouch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs Like to trade'! Our Trader's [ I! i J l 'o Box 501. c/o Daily Pilot, ssem ers >194-0615. fllS.1972. salon or 1\'il1 ncgotiat" lease 642-R4n. exp. is what counts, not Pnradise co lumn is for you! ,.,...,,_tt 330 Wf'flf Bay Street, Coota OCEA...,. Vle\v. Spac.lllus 2 5 J C • t for other !ype busil')('ss, Call mc.'1.hod. r do work myself. Sell idle items now! Call , hr .. 2 bn., 1\in n.rca. hltns, an uan •P•• rano 546-lGOO. INVESfi\1ENT FOUND: Beautiful grey & Good ref. 531--0101. 6'12-5678 Now? MeM, C&llf. 92626. Excellen~ long lerm tPmpor- ""' cpli'I & d ....... Blllcony. DIVISION. '"ilite half-grown Tom cat. BOOKKf.:EPER . Xln't Q•.. 111_)' ~ss1gnmcnt on Printed -~ 3927 -.::;7·__,1.,.. 2 BR, d·\\'llhr, refrig, sfla~ Vicinity Mesa Verde golf rt -1 C 1 A ,..-Circuit Board! 6 Ma' to 1 SI....,.<>->•-: 0 .,. "'· 1\0 /\\', cust rlrp'1, pvt paUo. 2 .,A Job WanteC:, Mal..1 700 po uru y. al n n e, · s • ....,_ R"' • 9 course • .,.,s-JUO. * * * * * * 531-00.W after G:lO pm. yrs cxprr desl r:tble. Should Huntington &each ~9sg:;_ ~~~~'}~Dana Pt. .1. n.D .a..rl.A.o FOUND: Male y 0 u n .I? SUCCESSFUL sales oriented B bo rea.d blueprints & have OVF. IN TO ES"l~TICRS S~a1nese. Llghl colored-Seal· l\IBA·lS desires ition . us Y knowl~i;:r of color coding, • M$t3' A M8.AY * Apts., ()PEN Tll 9PM Point. Vic. ?.fesa Verde leading. lo 0 w n e rs h i p run t1mr, m~t !y day~._ ~n'I soldering, Pll'hrmatics, l'IC. Furn. or Unlum. 370 C 1\1 "'1'5978 •-.. all \\"t 1 p 0 Bo pay, . 11•ork1ng conri.1tion.i;, Apply In Per'!l(Jn Spae. 2 &: 3 BR in 4-ple~. ' 'T It E FACTORY". con-· · .r .,... · """ Y· tie o . · · x brnrfirs & opportuniiy hi Seveml avnll. ALL EX· B Ibo p I slitting of 32 uniquf' boutiqur FOUND 0 n Catamkrran Trader's Parad1"se 513. c. 0 Druly Pilot. P. '?· learn rrstauranr bu!line.~~. TRAS, Pool. rrc bltig. Kids • 8 •nfnau a iJhopg. has 2 openings in the Cd1if. -\\1rlstw&.tch • 01vner Box 1560, Costa Pi1esa, Ca.hf. Apply 9-11 am or "4-{; pni . welcome. J."'rom SU9. See DEl.UX 2 BR. fu rn, or un· mall ranging from $80 mo. irlcntlfy, 6'14-5092. 92627. Woody's Wharf l\<1gr, rr.m Kttl!<ln "B". I furn. I~ hlk OCC4'ln/hl.1.,.v. C•nl. IOhaC<.'Q & Y, ardoo-c F"'OUND: Boxer on r alrview , ,. nes Job W•nted, Female 701 2:\tS \V, Newport Blvd., NH blk V.'. of Bet1ch Blvd. otf r"W:'. A,...,, ,.,. C•l o 'd ti! Slater. Q68..7510 or 841-4~. i\l(i'nt, ~•....-ro.lV. ghop1 esp. wanted. 425 ))th . . wner I en Y NO FEE t M St •• -B h 01&-7308, ,,,..7739, GOOD TYPIST BUYER S--'a•ulor Bay V•'tw i.os a ••• " .,P............ ~a c ' Will d I t •"I ..-· • ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 673-!MiOG ;'&.lz..85al. FOUND: Puppy Newport t"• mes o your typ ng a •a" n;.: np111\c·a.Uons Kelly Girls Pvt beach, dock. l unrun1 llclghts. her home Will rlckup . 9 A."1·12 noon Only 2 br, 2 turn Dt unfum bat"h· COMMERCIAL unit on No. 548-2591 • d I ' B Ne\\'PC)tl Besch financial m. e-lon. All with crpts, drp!!. * * * * * * Coast H'A')'. suitable for -----'-==---·and •Iver loco1 H •• , stllutlon has immedlate 2061 Busine Ct D bltns. it~. refrlg, dis· boutique shOp oc gRIJ~·ry. PARAKEET, vie. WeslcLiff dollars F .V., West, 7Sc per pg. opening for a professional Irvine ss .33., 44 r. 1 poult. 673.-%162. IA COSTA APTS. s:ns mo. ll'8.St'!. 494-7518, Dr. &. Dover area. or wlll work by hour v.·t~tronit e<penence. You W•LK TO BEACH Cood Real E.statl'. 96S-6925 coll 847 •-5 \\'Ill purchase oWce sup.. -- A FND •t I ~1 .._7 • pll('oe, auto fieeb & oltice-iiiiiiiiilliiii New 1 &: 2 BR. cpt/dt'p!I Sh1AU. Ottic:e &: Shop SJ>ftce, · . in ature 2J'CY 1"""' e equipment. ELECTRONIC dP'lhr. 31616lh. 536-7465 or 1 & 2 Bedroom nr. Mlc.~n. Jn San ,Junn rnalr! v1c. 2Znd & Santa Ana NEED help at bomef \\7e ASSEMBLERS e Btu I e $'-•... b c 1 t no $75 ""t o &=Av•~·~· ~C~"~'~· ~64&-,:.:..1~715=·---I TRADE 5 ac~ corner ol YOUR cnr C'an he lv;ed n.~ have i\kle11 Nu r 11 r s 8.f'l...1957. 1 t· 1111 •-.; Clll"J)e np !I ru · ;) .~ m ~ 5"Clion. Rood on 3 side>_., d"·n pay nt f!r 50 ricrl"s or Ii ~ ' Co lo '\l'e wlll con.itidP-r only np. • Drapes • W~k In cloltu up 493-llsit. St.1ALI.. black fJUPPY vie. .,1 "1 1 0 1 1 ' o u se"t'l"'!'I• .m~an ns. l>licnnts \\'/a proven recQI"! A!l~mhll'... n-~., ,,, ~ % BLOCK TO' OCEAN e s I I Pool ' lluck Boy Rd !lcnr v ctor.,tl l" or range lrnv 1)rlC'M npprt'c:iat. lnd. Jlon f>niAk('r U P 10 1111 .,. • ..,,.,.,., '""-2 BR. ApL Crpt.t, drps. w mm na 2 BR. Duplrx. Ideal for oom· 614_1120 Coun1y property. \VARHEN 1-1. BflO\VN S-t7~1 s · <•r the hli;::hest inteitr!ty & bo:ird 1.t. Mlf:lr.ring exper. N..,~de«lnttd. $166/mo. • Bar·lrQ\.lt'lf rncrtlnl $150/mo 114 6 e 544-4294. e RJrr, l-:X!'hngr e RJ:.141432 · honi>sty & v.·ho eas~y gnln n SotTI•· rr11lrwco /)(l~tfion1' opt'n or 5.1&-9!1.!9 • Enckilled GB.rag f)ra nitl" Ave. $411-1168 f>~UND, large black Lo.b, lo=~=--=-'C'-"."---HolpWanted, M & F 710 confide-nCf' ,~ nrin11r1t1lon t>f Prrn\. i'n111loymrnt in 01 ... : ' · All Utll1't1'es Pa1'd 450 1 a1 1 s 1 ~a1 • S75M <'<l!Y on 950 ucrc!I nr. J=>RJME Ind. bldg, N\A Nut. mana-moot & v"ndor• ·-lndu-strlal Rental cni c, v c pr n,,;u ~ °' 0 • " • nut 1111rmunrhn1:,;. BEA..,.lJ!.102i!_!t-A2BAll bl·u~',,'", nrnr \Vnmer, l~.B. 846-09:).;, Yuld•,~· &,~I. $4001.000. Int. TNoN~aNnt, 131 yr 1$11. ~.00'1000 ACCOUNTING, bookkl't'plnjl;, ,,._ BLO"' .... E r 1 El on Y ''" anta.•I c vii.'\\'!!., .1 . • nc. Trndc $1~. Secretnry. WhY drl\lt' 10 LA Sen<I l'e',-umt' & . s a J a r 1'_' H~ er.mer, flM). Mntun! adults, no pr.ls JUST COMPLETED •u.r cma C! puppy, h\1111, valleys, Fm' Inc. prop eqty fCJf' lac apt~ or con1· nr 1..8" Ch.a.llenain11; In· hl."Jtory_ ln eonf1de:nce to. !M8--'m0 \Vnlklna dLstAnce lo 1600 to 3300 Sq. Ft. Tiiro nren. or 1 Bkr. 547.$469. rncrclaL Bkr. 5'17-646.9. · tJo .,.. • Cl:a.ulfted ad no. 52S, c/o • BEACH8LUFF Apts. llhoppl~ center. 83'7·5161 $lX>,<XXI l'tJI)' In SSOO,IXX> IUVli:RSJDE. l acre, t BR tcresUng, pm.I,;· f\'.ma.l e, Dally PUot, P.O. Box 1S6CI, 2 • S BR. hot. patio 354 Avocedo St., C.M. Nl'W \~t~l~g A~1~hnrp, GR.A Y A while female' cat bldg Portland, cm. MA cottf\le, overlonklnt La ~;:~~=le ~ oW~ ~~Po;'-1~:;!;, l).whr. 8231 EUh. 80-4893. 642.-9709 crpld. paneled otflct'I & "-'t'IU'inJt nca collar. Vic. N11.t1onal Tenant, ()n N.N.N. Sietnl, nr lg Mppg lll'eS. education &: exp. 548-887-4L.,,..,!!,~;,;;,,,,,,,;,,.;,..,,.\ EX'tM lge 2 'or, utlll pd. 11!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!1••• I 1 10 r a 1 e me i 111. n I nc A\/Oel'ldo, CdM. 6'1r8998. Zl yr I•. Wan1 prime Bhopg lcl~AJ for t"tltre. Tritdc for for Jppoint. l" Carpenter 'pt 11 overhead loadin( doora, ll().. BLACK & Wlilte kiU~n wear-cntr or !? Bkr. 547-M69. CM property, 646-0571 da,y11 ACCOUNTS p bl t Cpb, drpa. do. "° pe<a. LA MANCllA m-3 phluie _ _pwr. Ina collar. 546-1308 flt CANYON lake lot, ROif ('.t's(l Llkl' 10 ltAde"! Our Tradf!r'i l'hN:I. ~ In~ mfg: 11: Marine Mech• 1 nic lOds Olt 1185. 53S.Ql.Zl Brand New Delwce Unit• HUNSAKER DEV. CO. 54:}-118.\ vitw, nr Jnke. und. utll . J=>~adiff' column Is tor you! nccl.R. dept. tor a aharp in-Mo1rlne Electr clan Call f'or Appt lnduRlrlal Rel.ition~ (714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTltlES Laguna Beech • 1 2 BR. 1_.IJl;J, ~ .. fP~ ~t:W Jf!w: 0flnj 546-.$460 f'ND J0/16/71 SmAll ring, $10,00'l ~ .l clear. Tradt 5 llneg dlvkfua.1 wlaccta. th1..'0ry & Mu11 be e>:JWrlet11'E'd to 1mrk E 1 0 drpe. f,_., pr. uwu ....,._ mo'• tree rent. t BR. 1 BR I R Soulh Ba.yfronl, Balboa Is. for Income property or ':? 5 da)'~ e>:perlcnre in a heavy on ntw 1tlcscl po\vr recl bnt1( 1~~·',.',.'"'"!"~"~"".,.'..,;;E~m~p~~~Y~"';..,f JU\ mott7. 4 dell, 2 BR't " 3 BR's. V~~ ~t ":';.)'! ~ c•e:•::ll_,&"-"ld::.en"'t::ifY,:;·c.:675--4~."-"':n:.!:::<.'--I Bric. 547-6'169. for 5 bucks. \-Oh1n11! situation, &1~-7~. Pacifica by Klpptr lj'UI a lltl~'loo!" ln yOur SPACIOUS 3 br 1181 Avail From Sl$ l>lhwlhr, encl bldg., rh::. thru a Dally Pilot J-"'ND ,\.fal~ f:h<x.'Olate poodle * * * * * * Ukl' lo track" Our i'ra~r'H 162fi l'!t1~e'l!ia, C,\I Uiv\-11,.u ltlO•I' baub!ta for """'· AU xtru. Kid• pr, twhn'1 POOi. ~·a. Cluslnt!d Ad. Stll Idle Items pup. vie Bristol k. GAf'dcl.n Pnradlse oolumn ts lnr yo111 • fi~;.-55?0 • "bur1r11 ·-, Call Oa.u:ltled ..etrome. 118t-'151D, UP~. MH'33 118 Scott Pl, CM now! Call "2-5678 Now! Crow Blvd., S.A. ~ I•------------------· ~ Hn!!t, 5 di.)'$ lor 5 bucks. Sell ldlr llem11 . , . 642-5678 c64"2'-"'6=7!t::. ______ J I r .. A A G r M ,, E h v s 4 Ii A Eq G' n Ii D p 5. l.il VO 2- N H • 1' A HC • ··~~=~~~ J[Il]I '---_L ... _ ..... _J[Il] I ~,, .... Tllul"\d.tj Octol»r' l 9i l '1'12 DAILY PILOT 4/1 ---------1 ~~~~~ !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ][Il] I .......... ][Ill [ L........ ][Ill c -I[§] I ...... .. I[§] I -][§] [ .... --][El E..-,1w Help Wonted, MI. F no Help Won ted, MI. F 110 Help Wonted, MI. F 110 He lp W o nted, MI. f' 110 H elp W•nled, MI. F 710 cA_n_tl-'q"-"""-''----..:IOO:.:; J ewelry 115 Pl•nos/Orgons 826 .Joqs I 1154 HOUSEKEEPER kr con· Fee Pa.Id va.lesct.Dt hol:pital. 1 4 -t .l Conatr. &IPtrvlM" $1500 Superior, Nf'Y.iport Beach. LAUNDRESS. tull I I 1n o , Mei& Verde Convt1let11--ent ~1 Center 51 .. C.M. Printing Pr•s1 Opr Say the \\'Ord • \\'t' n(.-ed a printlna: prea OPf:ralor exper an AB Dick & tlele, Secretary SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Wf.:ODl.NG ntllfs-man B.· "·om1:1na l'i('f, , t· El r a t diamond. Pd 13al. ~n $12.i. 548-1383. ORGAN HOBBY * *' \YANTt:'D: f'ri1irldb' klvln.v honlt' for darlln& female Silky Tt'rrler Pl1Pl- llou.aebmk1•n. All I h 0 t II ~Just wll hnmcld 83}-83.13. Adhni~ Se.lee Rf'fl $11K A/P-Const.ructlon $600 H~keeper, p/Urnf!. Gt>neraJ Ledacr A('('! $700 Pnrlc Lido Conv. Ctnttt, LVN'1. relief. Part-TinW! lrvlne 540-44SO cc"-'="------___ Uon't buy any organ unUJ you DIA. Sol. npprox. 1 t'l $3jll, can play! Non-rl1Jyer1 wt'!· A quaJ: Sot. i"arr1ngs 1 ct runH" to aurud fJ'('l' "ork F/CBkkpr/Sec'y S700 ~~-~~--"~~--t Exec. Sec'y to ~s to $700 HouHk•eper, f/tim• Nurses Aldet It Lauocl~ Anaheim 533·2322 Hf!lp. ~it'w Conv. Ho.p. Nf.VE:B. A J. .. EE ,\T TE~1PO To Manag•r Of Quality A 11u ronce Bottll' -C\JNl' -llaven -$295. ,S..111 B<'ach fl'l'>t'1tt _ Jo'EET \\11':T i2lll 4ll~t9'l 1 "1ll11.1f1. fo'or 1n.Jormatitiri Hor••• 156 (if'ner11.l Otrlcc $450 54S.3061 Sf'crctarle.11 ~ ~-T<>1n1>0 Tempoi•ary Hel p LVNS EXPER. PUMPislandSalesman, Unkind rt•rtuirk ov1•rhe:ir<I I M . 11 Ill Co111ai:t: Toni J)11•!1•1·u·h ,;l,..111! 11 fat ltnly: "\\'lien shr lsce anttOUI 642-2851 NF:\\' lllOl"C lo K'rve )'OU'I" ' Enlitll&h & wemern riding needs: Horse Wnrld, Tfl\l.'11 ~ Country Square. 18582 Bf·ach Blvd., H.B. 963-3900. llORSE BOARDING. Back Bay areu. fll'a!IOnahlc. i\lrMf'nl{er S350 lt.1MEDIATE openings avail. Travel Pi1anager $700 in Lido Isles m o s I & NUI'lll!'f Altlt>s. 549-3061 CdM. ~u. 5 Dllys. 50 hrN. MACHINE PARTS Niie shift. Top wagC'!i. ~ Year1 secre t a r· ial •xperi•nc•. Type 60 w.p .m . & ta ke sh 80 w .p .m . Prefer experience in a Qua lity As surance Department. tnkr~ u ~hOl\f'I' ~h!' t111:-< Coast Musi c Service !•'Oubll" grtting hrr 1•1<.:t:.~r Giant Nc11por! Blvd. 1tl llarWr Le-gal Secretary to '$650 fashionable ladia dt"l'S$ A!JK> Fee Positions . fi ll()(>. Exper. pret'd. No Phone 67J.-.88l8 for appt. . INSPECTOR . RHI Estate Sales \\ll·:r." Cos1a r.lesa NEWPORT nltt'K. 5 Day wk. Call Collect Carl Jones, 2l3f195..582l. Personnel Agency * INSPECTOR * ?>11n. 2 yrs exper. lnsJ)C'l.·t1,11g FREE 1una1J machined pfl.l'ls lo 2 Antique r-.finic Oriental Chairs & End Table. "Best of Everything" PIANOS -ORGANS Ham1nond, \VurlitU!r , many othl':rs. 1~r~·11eason llPfCllllll, model clo1e-0ul.!1. Plano & Organ rentals. ~toney sav. Ing bargains are he.re rlghl * 557..&42 • * 64-l-5965 * 83J Dov•r Dr., N.8. Exper. w/machlne parts & 642-3870 plastics. very (~ tolerance. Some knowledge 6: iraee cal1bra· lion d~sired. Ple&M' Apply, CULTON INDUSTRIES llcenn Training WANTED. Large ch! II a cabinet. Real!lonable. ........... Sale. 12 Yr. uld Mare, gentle. I-las \\'ln ribbons In Cyn\CIU\.!l. $22J Tack. 962--102'.i F iberglass Tooling APPRENTICE 642-0512 Equal Opportunity En1ployer FRY Cook, f/llme. f2.SO prr hr. to start. Chanct' for ad· vancement. Cottas:e Coffee ~tv.ip. 562 W. 19th St .. 01. GELCOAT TOUCH.UP MEN 4 Day work wk. Gd bl'nr- fits. Bonus incentive p!an. Apply Mon thru TI1urs. Colurnbla Ya chts 275 McCormick Ave., CM Equal Oppor Employer 1\1 'F GENERAL office. full lime opening In Seol BC'nC'h of. fice. 1 pe~n of fi cl:', Diversified duties. !\tust hi• capa.ble of ilealing v.•ith public & type, Call 213· 598-5556 Teleprompter • An equal opportunity employer. GENERAL OFFICE Lite bkkpng, pleasant phone voice. F/tlme. Apply Thurs. 2-5 pm, Carpt'.'teria, 1714 Newport Blvd .. C?-.1. GOLFF.RS . cam $6().$100 wk Comm, pt-time. !\tr. Daniel; 541--5304 or 558~2773. HOTEL. Dip front df'sk clerk/cashier. '.\1ust knov.· KCR 4200. Apply in person. Airporter Inn Hotel, Irvin('. HOUSEKEEPER. pru1 thnt', vlcinl!y Newport Beach, 64Xffl9. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Apply in penon Edler Industri~. Inc, 2101 Dove St. Nl'.'\vport Beach !Across fron1 O.C . .'\irport1 INSURANCE: P/tin1t', ex· pt>r. CdM ins. agency. t;d salury. Send l'CiiUDlC p 0 , Box 8, Corona del f\1ar. Ca 9'1&25. INSURANCE girl, exp'd, For busy Doctor's ofc, Ne"''l:Klr1 Beach. 646-3903 822 ProducHon Pl. Ne\vport Beach 642-0163 P.IAlD w'Orlc In exchange for motel Apt. 2376 Nev.·port Blvd., C.M. 5'"-9T:Xi P.fAINTENANCE Mechanic lor rental yard. Some delivery work. Applications accepted daily 7 arn-5 pm at Hartley & Nixon Rental, Inc., 2862 Barranca Rd .. Irvine. 510-5185. MAINTENANCE Man Residl'nt for Lrg prestige IJlMNE PERSONNEi. apt. comple':IC. a t least hvo CCD\R(E$a.•r-<•V-V. yrs. exp. ref. n.'q. cxrcl JU"\.)' 1 /"'\VU""-I salary & bene!lls. 64rr.8358. F'n:oe & Fee Positions Maint. superintendent Graduat• Att'y $12K Bldgs, grounds & equip. Out- J Ycur \Vork Experience side \\'Ork. 644.()510 for appt. Salesman to $11 K Exp. •·ltiot n1elt ndhesivr MAINT TRAINEE Secretaries to s,s:;o Bldgs. grounds & equip, Qui· Secretary, no sh to S575 side \\'Ork. 644.ffitO for appt. Clerk Typist to $475 MANAGER, ~ unil!r. C.M. Recept/Typist $450 Rallable, exp, non drinker. Sr. Acctng Clerk $550 Refs req'd. 644-1060 for appt L imitMI Tim• Only Famous license course now avalfable thru T!ll'bell C.On1- pa11y. Applicants fully re- imbursed upon quaJificallon. New or experienced sales propll'. Openings availabll'. Complete training program. t~ulure management oppor- tunities. Call P.1r. Sloan at 832-5440. TARBELL REALTORS REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL Salesmen &: brokers! The o~ portunity a here! You are nl'f!ded tmmedlately for our rapidly expanding n ea I Estate division. Positive op- portunity for advanrement. Phone. IBM Composer Opr $3 hr Sat & Wed. Figure Clk/Career op $400 -::===~=====~\-~~~~~~~~~~ P l Rt'cept/Typist $2.50 hr • <Ill E. 171h 1'1 Jovioe) c.M. MATH MAJORS R.E. Broker/Snlesm•n 642 1470 Apt. developer needs sharp • pl'l'SOn to handle "in-house'' ~ sale!I, rental'!. land purch. JUNIOR Salesmen: 10-15. Earn SW-$40 r>Cr l\'Cek get· ting nl'\\' customers for the DAILY PILOT. This is not a nt'wspaper route and doe5 not include collecting or delivering. Transportation is p1-ovided. \Ve work four hours after school and 8 on Saturday. \\'e have openings for Fountain Valley & South Huntington Beach areas on- ly. You must be out of school by 3 PM t o participate. ExperienceJ NE\VPORT BEACH Financial Institution has Im· mediate opening for n1anagcment trainee. MlNIMU?-.1 QUALIFICATIONS * College Degree * Ma.th Major * li,) YMI. Work Expcr. Only those with t h e s c qualifications need apply. ~lust have proven managt-'- m<"llt exper. as '"ell as good sales ability. XJnt income potential for an ambitious hard v.·orlter. Not a 40 hr per v.·eck job! Reply with resume including age and past & present income, to Classified ad No. 515, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. REAL ESTATE • Two ex- perienced salesmen needed. Largf!r commission split, bonus plan. Call Ginny, 557-4130. Apply In Person 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Calif. ''Le Bon March•" Appliances 802 t'1'1d:iy, OcL 20 O/\'L\' 10 an\· 00\Y a~: • RECOND. trad <'-l n ap-i rn' at Nf"V.p.lrl 1111rhor Wal/1chs Music C ity 1ihances & TVs. Dunlap's, Art Mu~um. 2211 \\' Balboa South Coast Pla~.a 540-2830 l8lj Newport Blvd., C.M. Hlvd. $1 adn1isaion. An· '"'"'"''"'c'..~.-':~;:: :;.is-r.so. 'ique!, c:lo1h1ng, pa1n11ngis, *PIANOS.ORGANS* 11-IOROUGJJBRED, 8 yr g(>ldim:. All 11ho!s. S350. 536-8531 1-'0XY antl all tae'k. Phonf' 642-9180. Ask for Liz. $100. sporting goods, rurniturc>. Golng Out For Bus1nt!l9 I celesCo > Re nt Washers/Dryers acc'C'S.SOrici;, book ... plants, Best qua.Jity . prices. serv. II-C l' • _ . $2. Wk. Full maint. hand-m~le . onginals, goor-Kawal-Stelnway-Bald1vin, etc 11 loets Md * 639-l202 * cl specialties, ete. Bent'· Pia~'er Pianos & Rolls . ~Equipment fit ror NC'\1'port flarbor Ari Ren•-• 11. B o.u ~;jj;jj;jj;jj;jj;jj;jj;;;jj~I ,,,,,,,.,,.,1!8 OVER 200 washers. dryers, MU SC'\lm . . w..iS •·••••••· c uy-.:io.· refris:-crators from $39.95. Daily J(}.6 Sun 12-5 CA Div, of The 545--0780. Ill" Jig Auction FIELD'S PIANOS Boats~Marlne Susquehanna Corp.) 40" elect Hotpolnt st<M>. 7:30 PM-OCT. 20 COl!lla Mesa {714) 645--ml Equip. 904 Equal Oppor. En1ployl•r 1 old A ~ 2 yr · \IOCauu, ovens. Spanish furniture store quits! CABLE-NELSON PLAVF:R l\-l1\l'tJNE Dk>sl'I eng, 2 cyl, SEC •-~~$250=~·~51::;:5-~3~109::...__ New tx..:inx>n\ S('\S, divans, PIANO Collt'Ctor i1t•n1. !\lint 1-f('rculf'!I, w/hcat f! x r h JU..'TARY: Crowing ., • ., architoctural firni needs e NOHG f.: \VASI-IER I ORV-lovr seals, chniri;, t'O\'klall cond. V'tlr3497 ~after 4 pm. $.r,(Xi, 210 S. Flo\\·er SI, S.A. 'harp . 1 / . ER COP.IBO. $1 30. C<ill Con · tablt's, l'Omn1odt•11, l·hescs. • 513--9788 appearing ga w nice nle. 846-6878. lan1r>s. wall plaqut>!I, l1·n TV , Radio, HJfi, ----------·! r>Crsonality. Some exf)f'l· in 1 .c~,.:.cc.c=c...-----I 1 1V bookkeeping a plus. No sh Ke nmore electric dryer N) or ' Sl'ts, $lerl"OS & ap-Ste.-.o 836 Boats, Power needed on this onc. On ly 10 mos old $110. pliant•es, plus unclain1ed I -..:;;;_~_;;_ ____ _:::; 906 'vork 7 hours. Start S580. * 5.16-8464 aft 5:30 * storage fron1 Doo Martin'5 1973 RCA & Zenith TV S('ti;. Call Linda Ray, ~.55. Storage. Sealed boxes. dish AIJ 11vaih1ble mOOPls in sfO!"k Coastal A1o:ency, 2790 Harbor GE Refrig. packs, furniture & misc. & priced less than !he dis-- Blvd., C.M. Good~ $50. WINDY'S AUCTION rounte~ 3 Y' '"""" 1"~'. 1 yr parts & service war. SECRETARY · Recl'pt!onist. • MAYTAG \VASHER S5Q. ranty. Terms or 90 days Hntg Bch. Xlnl typist. To 2 SPEED. l );'R GUARN. 0Jl\1E BROWSE AROUND samf' as cash. Free color SfiXJ. l n le r v i f' \vs in GAS DRYERS &~177S. 2075;! Newport Blvd. antenna with all consoJE'!<; Lake'Nwd (213) 531-74M. BC'hind Tony's Bldg. ?-.1at"ls. purchased thru 24 Oct. ABC SELL FAMOUS h"NAPP Furniture 810 Coi;ta Ml'!AA * Mfi.fl686 Color TV, 90'Z1 Atlanta, SHOES P a r t • t i m e or HAND paintC'd oriental Bar STEREO 1971 G a r r a rd Huntington Beach, 968-3.129. Full-llmf' Knapp Salespeo.-od I I I d t II I WO. Oriental triple d_...,..,..,.. nl c . !JYS em lC u llU 0 PACKARD Bell combo -lo· pie Earn More Because •...,,,,.,;• b A>l!F•I t cu ' ,.,_ & nlte slnds. SS.'i Go!d lf'af c anger, 1 1 s crro TV -stereo ....,.an 24" ....... mmissions Are Higher d' RCA 1 k I · ..,....,, ' Than Ever. No fnvestinent! chf'st, $40, Veh•et chr & ot· rn 10· :ape c cc Pug screen, Garrard re c or d Free Equipment! r r cl' torna11 $40, Blk vi n v l In type jarks. A Ir changt>r , $300. ~185 Trainini;:-pr 0 gr a 111 ! rC'<'Hn<'r $40. Ot!oinan sio. suspe_nsion !;p('akers. Slill ?-.1APLE console .!i le re 0 , interested! Write R. A. Playp<'n $10, Rolla1vay hf'fl new 111 box & gunr. \Vas left A!\1/Ft\-1, l'\'COrd plnyl.'r, OiMarzio, Knapp Shoes, $2:J, Sll'rt'O & Stnd $35, T\vn unclaime<I_ Now $75. Cash tape deck. Excel rond. S.l.25. Brockton, Ma11.<i. 02401. hd boards $8, TV $25. or pnyml'nt.!i. Layaway &12-3201 a fter 5 pm. LIKt: Nf':\V Fa.,t•)l)' Ouilt. dl'C p hull, non- si11kahl1· 10 ft. bout. 5 hp n1otor w1approx 35 h1'S USf', 41~ ~al ga!:o ean. padrllc & drslgnC!d for oars. All fo r onJy S250. No! cvC'Tl the rost of motor alone. Ca ll 538--0J.'W nft 5 pm. "1971 SEA RAY" 455 Olds, Paclc-a-jet. 20', 200 Serif's, Equipped for \\"atrr Skiing & fishing. ta.nden1 trailer. Call after 12:00 noon. fTI41 830-6482. l\1UST SELL! \\I ANTED. t );pC'rt Bo at Builder to convert fishing vessct to plcagure cruiser. Contact Jules Lan~, 673-Jlf.6. SERVICE Station In Org. Co. 6'14-GlS4. Dept. 714:89J-050T. MAGNAVOX 23" color TV, nel'ds dependable people'. Rf\\'h/Blu lovcseat. $SO · FRIGIOAIRF. Bot. freezer walnut cabinet w/swivel Attf'ndants, drive w 3 y Gr/Bl cut velvet S' curved $1 25. 5 pc nep.rly nu Br. St'!I, base. $175 or oiler. 673-5806 salesman & m ec hani cs sofa SlfiO. Pr. Fr. Prov. orig. avocado finish, S250. 2\ii'i"i'iiamii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiJ14' Boston \Vhalcr, '71. 40 Hi> w/Class A licenses. Gd. op-f'~rhvd 101s w/mble tops, 5 orange club chrs, $35 ea. Evinru.dc t'll'C star t. New pty for right Pe o P I c. din. nn chrs/wh. w/cane Blue chrs $.15 ca. Blue -mr-&:-gein-;-Xlnt-mnd1 Daytime operation <lnly. backs $15 ea. Oval Mhgy !avC"ndcr sofa $90. Lrg _830-9Z12=~~·------- Boats, Rent/Chart•,. 908 boys given prio r ity. 968-9641. submit resume w/sala.ry re- quirement in confidence to: 1711f 83()-4750 bt?twn 8 &. 7. Vici. lhle, Anlique, best of· \Valnut cocktail !bl sso. [ l!S Ask for Frank or Charlie. ff'r. Lamps, . pictures, f'tC. Console TV $.\1. All Xlnt free lo You - RE T · B ,_ HH, nr Brksl & Ham. cone!. P.lisc. this, l•mps etc. · . ramee. r .... -& SERVICE Stati<ln Salesn1an· '""' ""-'rY\ 3 L. 2 T . $2 DO ,,,,,.,...,.IVU. 557--0442. 1n•s, 1mes, • 5"11 idle items . . &42-5678 developer will train & f.fechanic, ex[X'r. on I ':f • .:C::C.:C:::"-------•••••••••••••••••••• Oa.sslfi~ ad no. 532 c/o Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Co!lta Mesa. CA. 926ai. Equal Oppor. Employer sponsor for lie. Call ben,·een F/timC'. Lie. prcf'd. Neal in \VHEEL chair S50. Con1mO<!e \VASHER. xlnt rond. cop. •••••••••• J0am-3pm. 545-1124. appearance. Apply Al\1, 2.300 chair 5'10. Commode seat pe:tone,. $40. Stove,. \''hile, BEAlITIF"UL Shf'ph!'n:I I Ne\\·port Bl CM extendl'r $1 2. \Valking airl gnll. rotisserie. broiler, STJ. Dolx>rnlan mis: pupftiC's r, EXP'D Charter S k I p p e. r • C.G. lie. 5 yr.s. In Kona, 11:1'\'a\i. \Van! to leRSe .(0 lo ~iO ll. Sportlliher. \Vr1te P.O. Box, 1564, Ka.ilua, Knna. Hawaii or call BM- 372-2174 for more 1n- RECEPTIONIST: Friendly R C .• . $12. King heel sprin~ & !!-,,w~h£; G.E., gd rond. $40. l•m•le. , •>al•. llELP outi;i:olng gal gets this plush SE VI E Sta. Allendnnt frarnC' \Y/quilt(tj spread $35. ~ ., " , spot. Greet & dil"C{"t eye Full or pt/time. E."\'pcr. Ap-\\'Rlnu l dble bl'd & sprg~ · 536-1796. level ~ccutives. Go 0 d PIY. in person. Brown's w/<\uilled spread s 2 :, . S\\IIVEL ROCKER. TO 1~--\ · hou Sc-1 -E C BLACK NAUGllAlfYDE. o u=-coupe or v.·it t fyj}lst & ~Pliitie -mifuicr. -<= • =.J • st. llwy., \Vestlnghousc 220 volt dryer chldn. Older long hair fonn11.tion. A CONVENTEtn SHOPPING ANO $£WIN(: GUIDE f'OR THE r-.1EN ovl't' 25 need('(( for ear- ly mom. n.ewspaper ~eliV('ry. Perm., pt. time. Pref:-R:B:: F.V: res1acn1. 847-8979 * MOLDMAKERS * Plastic & die cast. Top men only-refs. Air cond, well lighted duplicator shop in Org Co. 546-3030. Salary lo $475. Call Ja n ~N~.Bi;;;. M'--=:::;:::::-:=:=:c=· I c~S»~-~546--0327~~~·=------1 AU.lOST NE\V. Chihuahua, feml. Uives af· Page. 540-6055, Coast a I SEWING machine operators. l\.10VJNG. Bargains. Maple _2512~~~~~$80!'v~;,~Se~·~ll~;"~;.,,~·d~'--\i~(e~ctlo=.;n~.~83()-i"'-~1!151=;· -c;;;:;::;: Agency, 2190 Harbor Bl., Single needle & overlock. desk, round table, buffct & TO good home. Gennan 14' Aqua Cat, rncing sails trlet, 1 hp out b oa r d, 846-6391 or 2t.1-59'1-3:22"J all 6 pm. c.Al. ON THE CO. !Jli!;.l[;J;j! CM. Experienced. h~adbds; Walnut console * NEW MA GS * Shepherd pup, 7 w k s , REFINED Mature h e I p , TOP DRAWER stereo. $50; J.pc sectional: 4 4 us 'l 4 L L female For en ad In Women's World Coll Mory Beth 642·5678, ext 330 ( --•· > nt SWIM WEAR · · " ags, ugs, ugs. · non-srnv"~ wa ed for chairs, $5; avocado rehig, Caf>S. $70. 544-7613. Ask ror * 5'fS-5o184 * exclusive Fashkln Island 3700 C11.mpus Drlvt' S.50: king size bed, toys, Boh. ;\!ALE & FEt.iL l<TTIENS. . ~tore. A little sewing & !!ell-Nf'\vport Beach 5'I0-84ZJ l{Brden tools l'tc. 3 16 USED BICYCLES nox TRAINED. 1972 Venture 24 LoarlC'd w/xtras. Gt'JlOll. . hcttd. Ell'Cl ~ysl. $3900. Chemise Returns! Jiffy Afghan ing exper. helpful. (714 ) Broadway, C.M. 642~ * 962 397., • _&~M~-~~l~f~o~c~a~p~p~t. ____ , S~~?~~. 0ot:a~~(:tll ~aurnh~ FR I G I DA I RE upright All ty~ &12-l-27'2 11-IREE · ~-11 -2 nl HOBIE CA'r 16 ~uper Trav. 968-L196. } 9027 ·SIZES S.20 r.., 11T":';_ 11T ... -r ... N<>west now! Cheer the return of the chl.'1nisc ~ thot t.>asy, unwaisted fashilrn that does the most 1sli1nmlni.: things fnr all tlgu.reti. Send now! Printed Pul!cn1 9011; NEW l\lisSf's' Size!! 8. 10, 12, 14, 16 18 20. Size 12 (bui;t :\4) takl's' 2 118 yards CiO-inch fabric. NY.l 'ENTY·YIVt:; Cf.l'nl>< for each pa.Item -add 25 cents for cRch pallem for Air Mn.II and Special 1-llU\dl· Ing; otherwiae Utlrd-class dellve:ry will takr three' weeks or more. Send lo Pilarian Martin. thto DAlLY PILOT. 442, Pallem Dept .• :02 Wt'!ll tSth s~.. Nev.• York, N.Y. 10011. Pr1nt SAl\:JE. ADDKf'.SS v.·lth ZIP, SIZE arid STYLE NVMBER. SF.E MORE Qu ick Ft1.shlona and choole ono pattt'm free from our Sprlng-Summ~ Catalor. All A11.e11! Only 50e. INSTANT Sf:\VING f'OOK ~w loM)', ~ar tomorTOW. $1. rNSTANT J.'A S lfJ ON RC)()K -llundrerls n f fa11hlon facta. $1 , Like to 'fradr'!' Our ~r1cr'11 rnradllf' Cllh1mn l!l for )'OU! 5 11ne1, 5 rflly11 for ~1 bl.1cQ . ~~ * We are now a ccepting applications for - BUS PERSONNEL Nites-Over 18 Pica~ Apply Betv.'rl 8 & II am & 2 & 5 pm 185<12 J\;facArthur (Across ll'Om o .c . Airport) New-port Beach Equal Oppor. Employer RETIRED Mall" p/timr. Club. Wed thru Sun, aft !:.!. frc<ezer, Frigidalre dbl dr. AU1'Ul\fN l·r:i.z<', long fur 1 r 1 tiny 1 ens, "1' c. Custom Tnnp, VMg, Adj1;1 . l'al'ly morning, mechanL:al-rel'rig., Ampex AM/FM coat. Condition excellent. <'nut('. -tiller. No trlr. $ I 3 5 O, !y inclined. Mowing, V.'afrr· SOLDERER radio phono. 1'1'ak breakfa~t s.n-3909. 5s7-7339 ~fHi.~. ing, etc. Apply Fair din tbl & 6 chrs, red velVl't Walch Rolcx GMT Muter AFFECTIONATE g rown t --.-1~3-. -LO~N~E~ST=A~R~.-· Grounds Golf Range. JOO 1~:d~· ~e~a~XJ>C'~~d wing back chr & various Stru,.;less, like new $175 black mall:' cat. fiberglass sloop and trailer , F"air Drive, Cosla ~lesa. module. Must read resls!or household furniture . -~C~al~\~64&-~~7~445'."':_.2Roo~~m:..!'620._. l;-m;;;;'C*-:64&-0:=.C::U~l::;*=:::--; $3!15. 49z..79&t . * RN's * TOP QUALITY EXPERIENCEO Pos1tioM available In ail areas. Aii shirts, xlnt in ser- vice program. Career ad· vancement opportunity. t'<l· Ul'alionaJ reimbursement. Jo'ull rringe benefits. Paid in· !fllrance program. capacitor diodC' cOOc. &l-i-2069 * PRIVATE tennill club SIOO t.t!XEO poodle puppies, 6 'T=H'Cl~STL=~Ec.c~2"-~,-~lc-~.l-I Please Apply ?-.IUST SELL: ~foving! Nice be hl f & onl l lO \\'ks. All color!. · :;e "' o 1 9""o'· CULTON INDUSTRrES li ving rm. fum. 5 pc. dinP.ttc !m~e~m~~..,~~p~ee~--'_JF;i:F.Fc;~51<)-5;;;;;1~04i-;;.;~;;;;; spinnaker, tralll!'r. 5 . 1 TV •-1 ) per mo. 673-5711 . &12-3496. 16-14 Whillil'r Ave .. C.M. SC' , "" s el"i'O, amps, FREE puppies, 7 wks old. co'c=~=oo--=o--,,:--:-:--1 642-2400 etc. 313 E. 17th Pl., Apt F, CARPET FOR SALE fat & healthy. SACRJFJCE 23' Albatross AITRESS 2 Costa Mesa, 642-9852. by Carpet Layer. Call '--=~*o=&~t6-6755="::.:;.=*'=~-sailhoat. 2 '5£'1!1 MIL111. OUt \V , e:cper. owr 1 . .,.::::::_~;::~=:..::=---• rn 5745 • "'..,.. _.,1 side slip. $700. 673-3817. Apply In person, Love's \VEDGE\VOOD gu stove wf J"IO-........-~ FREE PUPPIES BQ B kh & d ~ddle. $10. "Daveoo" ._ _ _, FINN 15' \\'/trlr. Perfect R , roo urst A ams, .,. · '""'' 2 Electric hot wat('r hcale~. 5 ,,·ks. mixed. 645-3119 H.B. rlivan, $10. Lee's carpPlinl!, 1_10 gal, 1013 gal. Both llOV·.1 _::...::_:::c.::==.::..::,=;:.:::._ rond. &-st offer. $.1:i. All in good cond. Like new 962-Z737. BLACK Siamt>~ Kincn, 211/467-24.12 \\'AITRESS, Cotta,gc CoUre ,,..,.._......,., ·""'"-'"-''-"":...:::'."----1 free to a good home. Sho ~2 \V 19th C?-.1 Good I .~0";:.·~·:::.:•~c.,.-~-~---J-"Jy1n1t Du I chm an 'ill' p, · · · ..,vim·L ROCKER. S' Pool table. Que stick11 & 8 ''"lu! old * 494-2115 /•-Ile• SI~ Ex-I tips. Exper. net'e5.!iary. All -=>• v~ I alls $50 Good cond v.· "'" •· ·"""· ... ,., shifts. ULACK NAUGHAHYDE. ~-. . FRE'E Lab. Rctr. fi.1ale pu1>-mnd. 638-4100. Al..MOSI' NEW. PY· 6 Wt'ek~ olrl . '•~--~t~"S"li~/"Doc.--,k,.-1-9"'1"°01 WAITRESS.Food & rocktail Paid $80. Sell $."JO. RA IT AN chairs, t a b I c 5, * ~16-676!1 * 000 1• pt exp. Blue Beet. I T I . M t & 673-9904 a f!er 4 pm 542-1734 eves & wknds • a~nese. a ~2 a s 2''1 Year old female Jri~h BOAT g\lp avail. 12'x.1R' 40'1' KING sz. bed & double exo c cunos. · &>tier. champ blood line F:. Edg('water. &tlboo. S100 WANTED-Polish & drtail d · 11 ·11 2 AKC ..,. .......... 1131 2131 mo. 1213) 697-13?.G Nes. The New & Expanded man. Exp. Colta Mesa Car rcs.'!Cr, inc ts Plows, Mlsc•ll•neOUI 11~~~·~-~~--~-~~-~~-~~ MOTHERS PALM HARBOR Wash. 645-1030. sets s~ts. elec. blanket & 525-1.15.1 il8YI'· N GENERAL HOSPITAL spread. $175. 548-7286 art 5. Wanted 120 BOAT Slip for rent, Avail. eed money for Christmas? IA'eldcr CUSTO 1 hal l 11~1 fm mM. until July I. Up lo It's 'vaitlng for you at Exp. Welder for 90 day proj-M C ub C rs, gre\'n **WANTED ** hbtnd Supplln ,"=,"-'-"=--.,.,--=..,,, TE!\IPO. l"""" P•lm ~ .. ,, C'r1 . Applv. Del M•r C•mp. l<'athC'r l;f'ats. St a c k c d F~ ti J · hO f 3.1', G73-3259. ~ ""--'~ ,, washer & dryer, misc. ,,~nr Y. ov1ng me or l ~mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ II 2()-26' e Clerical Garden Grove 537-5160 7130 Jo'enwick Lane. 5&7_054,1 adorable Silky Terrier fr-· SLIP space ava · e Keypunch -'~"~'~'l~m~l~M~·l=er~.~-=~'="=i.:i~. ~-I malt' pupJ)Y All sho!s. Ilse-Cats· 152 SnilbooL e Typist W ig Stylist, exp'd. \\IANTEIJ: Good used jr i;izr hkn. 1.:.;;.;.:c... _____ _::; e 673-fifl)f; e R.N. SuperviBor for small rontC'mporary dinette set. .11::\0-Xl\1 PERSIAN Ir: lllmalayan kit· 911 · • Assembly Call .(94-8075 for appt \\'HO WANTS TO \VORK"? ALBtl~I y,·11ntcd: T h f' tera, m1t"Y colort1, S50 & up. -'---'-'--'------~448 • Steno nursing home, beach area. 1146-2230 No wmught lron. 6.JJ-2110. Bo.ts, Speed & Ski ='"'-'-"'-"=-"''-"=~· --DRl\'E A CAB! DINETTE Sf"!, gd cone!. $25. Ran1oot Adventure on Bud * 892·2970 * 20 J-'t Sea Hay 200 i.crics. t L ~ And ?-.1any Olhen Salrs CHOOSE ~-ho··-.... -·k Black Angus oven & broiler. Shank. Wiil pay $.i. 644--0410. 12 RED n. 1 L.. year new. 455 Cl Oldsmobllf' 7\$; lr\'inc 540-4450 PART-TIME, Fm~IE .1v..... "',, .. v, like new, $3). 548-TI6S. 1 r.::"" on nlllt'tt~. k )el I-E uip·-• Anaheim 533-232'Z N t' --• ---' 1 for you~lf, be your own OITNA cablnet "r hutch, an-CFA, papt't'S, shot!I. S.\i. & pAC ·ll· c~ '"'· q ~ '8 a 10 ...... co. nn:u5 peop c lo .__ M ,.,_ .__ ***Sofa &: malchin• love . L for llshlng & water akU~. f,q NEVER A ITE AT TEMPO demo--le -·· mu, 1· c ~s en or women ........ n...., ltque or new, a r i e · $15. 54&-9965. F 11 · 1 1 d :. _ n. ,,,..... ...... · _ _. Bo LJ\ u y equ1ppe< an om ~ Tempo Temporary Help Mund. Income up to $30 per slightly handicapper!. Vt!!, scat, never u~. th Sl:-.V. Rca!!Onable. 644-4687. F"OR HaJlov.>ttn, (reE' nullv trailer. This outfi1 i!l like MO'l'HER'S J-IELPER 1m .. 1 hr. You must see & hear to retiftd. Age 21 10 7o. sup. Prlvalf'. 968-7910. WA.~TEO Loveaeat me 1efa black klttens. Box lr-.Jlnt'd. ii rK'\V. Qr\Mrud coet $9200. Add a bright, touch "'"ith .. ~ bell Ph (7l!l plement your Income. Dtive •· stude'nl) to babysit school eve. : 997-7731 .. cab 6 •-0• mo-, day. TABLES. un1~·... dropleaf hide-a-bed. wks, 962-515:J. Sftcrlfice $Sim. Pho n !hi!! n1ultiCOJOr heaUty. t 61 n.aJ & o · tri.... n fU"IO ' •~ ~"'" ~"-"•<>'> Cloud-soft wannth is just child. daily 2:15 to 5:30 ex ·.....,, er LS vulor. Apply In perw>n. Yc\IO\\' Cab th!., 1n1nk.!i, commode!!. Iron 64~ Dogs Isa KlV'V'"''· fnexible} -X'lnt pay. ~1371 Inquiries lnvitf'd. Direct C 186 E 16th St Cn'!t boiler. Office chrs. &12-ooli6. 812 CL.As.PAR 1•1'. z; llP Evin· ~;~~. Yd':im;an~ig~~s. I~= or 675-5268, ask for Lillfla. Sales Oriented. M~~-. .. a COUOi, S100. 2 end tables, Musical Instruments CERPl1AN shC'phl'rd, 3 f1l()!I rude. t:'I''" !d11rtt'll + tn ndt.'m scraps or 3 colors to crochet f\IOTEL Maids wanted. \Viii SALES WOMAN middlt>asred to hr-Ip $15. Stereo, SJO. Night 5ta11rl, CROWN mod<'! No. 485-N Sl l~·r & block, Kr 1' •• t lrlr. S·IOO. 492-S.176. strips in gaily tasseled train. Apply in Pf'l'SOn only. Esta!Jlishcd territory IYilh a in klfchcln & food catering, $.i. 84&-3130 aft !'i t'IH!l~ical ~itar w/case. w/kitfs. I !fl~ puppy sllf){~. i!!jjjj!jjjj!jjjj~~~~~~~ afghan. Pattern 7448: easy Costa Mes:1 tnn, 3 2 0 5 56 year old company. Sal-full or Pflrf 1 1 me . !>AN/Si r nit,Oern ('f)ui·h. !-:Xcel cond . $7.). &W-4700. ,Joh tTitnsfer unable ll'J l:1kf' ; I!•! clirt itlions. Harbor Blvd .. Costa r-.te1&. nry, commission + n1any llnrbnr/Baker vie. C.M. Teak w/ gold cushions. 01.l.JS Clarinel i& t.:allf'L !Ir~. S40. Dt1y~ 8.'0:-.,..HJR1 !'>.!. TraM9Crt1ti. S·•v·~·FIVE CEN~ NURS"'S Alde• (o• -nv. other benefits Experience c:.A"----•992 c· I •• 11·0 67,9108 $"' 122 1 n~k (or Bruce; 11fl G. .,,,,,,~ ··~ .:.; ' "" ln services desired, but notl-·~·~"-~·~·~·-------1 .c. co...... · . .-C'Vt'~ f~•od for student. :iJ. !•7:~214~1. ~------- for each pnttern -a.dd 25 hosp. 1445 Superior Ave., . I \VOMEN for Cafeteria illerv-* BEDROOM SET * 6<11-fi22. ·---------·1 h N.B. betwn 9 am & 2 Pm. require<. 1',or app!. cal! ' I -"-"...::::::,~~-----S\L•·y Te'""ie• p1>-. A"C. cents for ca.c pattern for 642 ~" M M i n", PI T I m c on 1 y COMPLETE Off. F it / "' '' ' .. ~ " Air MraH and Special Hand!-0 ato .,07\>,, · r. e"C'rs. laa;:n..2Pni daily. All wkend XLN1' COND * s.•" .,_976 ic• urn ur• 824 champ lll"ll"'it, 1 n11dr, 3 C•mper1, Sal•/Rent 920 Ing: otherwise third-class per n SALES Girl 21-30, exper. gift &. hnlldRf!I off . oransre · w-.i Equip. rem a I f.l 11. ~ w I< s . -" - delivery will takr three We are growing! And looklng wrapping, I/time. Newport County Airport area. Call SPANISH red&: gold brocari" 714/5:l8-228!t FACTORY DIRECT weeks or more. Send to for EXP. INDUSTRIAL SGL Center, 644-4737, Carl 83.1-8666 1.11ft 2pm. aofa A loveseal. V.-ry good BLU·Ra.y 1'16 8 1u e Pr 111 t l-'~L~A~B~R~A~D~O~R"'"=p~=-F'ullv fum r11hovcr camp.•n . Alice Brooks, the DALLY NEEDLE OPERATORS to Martha. n>nd. f150 !!rt !)62-0512. inach!ne SilS. "'Rlnut P•)rl• UPS 110 ;!min, SJL pt•r mo. Cnmp-PILOT, !(l;, Needlecraft work on custom surf tninka. YOUNG mnn lo a •!I l Rt KllNG SI 0 _ _. (rrence !able 4'x!'I' v.· gla!!A 6 \Vk". AKC, Ch, yrllo1 ... & SALESLADY · MATURE gan:!e!lf'r in Ml.Rsion Viejo ZC DL'"• lop. $95. 6'12-1788. hlt k, lrt Jtw>t 64.S-4'il<2 oft 5. er 11-h1•1!1. No down. fi.C2.S471. Dcpl .. Box 163, Old Chelsea lf >'<lU quullfy call KANVN:i For Gift Shop R~a. Part llmf' in mnrn-VC'lvrt 110ft.1 & love M"at. , Station, New York, N.Y. BY KATIN. 213-728-6230 or 616-6741 CV!'I. betwn G-S pm 2 inos. old. 543-£.147. EX:l-:C S\\'\'I chr Sl:> -23 Sl'c (;f:n~I. Sh.-.p. I\,, Ah.J.::.C., 10 Slide ln Camper Sleeper. 10011, Print Na~. AdMcll"1 714-~.-&880. inJll'I. Olli Sll-2258 brtWf"i'n J chr $8 • 18 drRk1 f\lr1 stls monii Old, Sil II". Top INSULATED. Zi p. Pa ttern Nuni~r. SAL ES?-.tAN. -Exp. office 5" 6 pm. Garage Sae 812 o"l II' 1911, ~1 "•t'.·3·~. bbldllllf>tl. xlnl t{'mft. S7S or SZ1'1 ORDERL(ES 14-i5 Su!X'rklr t f bl'-'"-.. on ..,,, " .,.., .. NEEDLECRAFT '72! Aw .. Newport Beach bet. g IJ\UPP Y or f!lltll "'Ol.."'!1 IU'· YOUNG lncapadtatcrl 82 yr, F~'R , \If ~ "· 1'1 12·2'.l·l:'I . ~~12-1n1; ~~11-21/H Crochel, knil, etc. ~ rounts In Newport lkh. old IV'Cds refined wetkend ·'"' N., IO lik w/m<>tor, Pl1nos/Ora1n1 826 tRT"11 St'U~·r Pup~ AKC", '(f,-,-F-ord. sui11•r vn··,-,_-Sl~lc-k".1 dl~tioM, 5()c. & 2. a?'Cfl. CJ.II Barry West. 714. rompnnion rook. 673-3071. chln.'l., 100·,. of i1~•j;lll. ,.flu %... tn;ililnl l'f1tcnmo )J(Hlk. PAR T-TIMF. Secreto.rial 5,;7-921 2 for 11.ppt. name it. Sat., Sun. lG-5 1717 5 Plnyrr Pin.rm. l"'hullt &: l\llln(l'ly ~r'M!'·96.:h00! & ~;'.~~ 1~'1111'ff~'~it"T2"1f' l('nl, J\M:ic, 18ncy knots. pat· "'Ork-l)ppmx. 5 hrt pt'r wk. J"l82A df'I Sur. Bal Pen rtllnL111hed, S..1!7>$1175. New ~inr'fl. ~. · 1~ ..-. tcm5. 11.00. I-In Oexlblo. Balboa llland Saw Sharpener ]JI'\. j 6T.J-'&557 an 5. '' UM"d rolls. O\IJll'N' r 111>'1-•r sn~AUZER pup5, ~11111 11 c " ~f PE~'..-!lt'l!-con1d r.n~huit Cn'N'hd Book _ resklent preferred. trrrUlS. txp'd, knowlMge (lf carbide llwdw • V nm.Nm.JR.£, cam pl n g PiAnoA. ~. 546--61~. Y'Tvt~mitl$t. !firm~. 11>'/iihQv.,•r, ~u"""-"'k. mRny Learn by picturts! Pit· PBX Openltw. Mat u r c tools, ~u Macblnc Tool . lrqul11., Pi-1 i.8C. 620 Acacia, UMd Ortans Needed 471 I\ · :mu. Best nHtt, '499-2014. trrn.~. fl.00. peT'M>n, wHlinJ to learn. Servke. 548-6227. Corona dcl Mar, 673--79-16 I-lightest SS J>aK1 tn Cash LllASA AJl!!IO f<>mall' ruP· Cycl91, Bfke1, VOlnpfete IMtant OIH ~ Able I Answfting Service, 5r.o.aA-"ftll'C!t! r l'l-'"'nl e•. IOO l~(c::S.;:;l::.;:60,Su=·n;;:.l:..·~~--Call Coll-~• 111~ ....,._ pl", ~quality, 11 wk°'. ~--..... -n -more than 100 ""'t.s p\ pi me St ""'uq,"'1 "'~ ...,........ " Antiq""'s .,.., ....,: -·-MS..r.tm aft. 6 nr wk. 1•nrl!1 ~ s1.oo. ,... cM~ ap y, '1>W enwr , I:·a::nf.aU 5li-3166 ANTIQUE ~im"l~f ~~th!!I .h a1~; KtMBAU. Conloiettl! * mtsH Selle~. 8 v.1c."' oht sf.00.plete Ala~~ .. Boot50c-P\~ 8f::'::!~.~ 1:~~~~ ~ FURNITURE =: v~i:~!!·~.~f!.~~ -;;t.ov.ty;;i;*;,-i;i:'°icondl~;i~i;i"";''"·ii~ ... ·;:;:;:\~~~KC;;39&4~""!;.· ..,· ,.l,...,m=nl-•_· _1_,_•~ml- 111 .rut1 H•~ °'"""" · · Secretlll'lel S4.~S650 DECORATOR ITEMS o IV TE PARTY WANTS Rook ol 1'1 Prllft Alcfla11!1. TAI.and. 640--0140. Mr · Par• Legal Trne $600 B·A R GAINS 0 a Io r c I PR A FU1TJ"Y Shih T'lu puppiCJ. 50c. °"'Sn~yd..-°"'~·,.---..,,,-'""',_. I A("COIJnfs Payable $000 \Vick('r, l'!rns& 1plttion1, rl11ck Indoor 1Outdoot'p1 " 11 Ill. TO BUY ,f>lANO Y.'OR Lown!. prictt nruul"Cfl {llu' Quilt Book I -16 pattern11. PERSON over 21, pttlme \OO'i'r rec Pllld By ComJ)""" rlt"C()yll , buffets, Iron I: bl'AM n114C. 272 Colla Mesa St., CASll. ~ tt'nns. ~-1007 aft &. ~-I I II -v bl'fl.-, lnhlf'!I, i;;ho.lrw, Cllh· c '1 r -•• , ·""·· C'\ltll. & /I rne "va . A_p-ply Liz R.elnder'a Agtncy int>l,OJ O~n FrL ttll 9 f .nl. •1• • ~··.:>11 · GUl.BJlANSEN p~n WEIPifAHANEft J'IUJ'IS, AKC, !\fu~111 Quilt Ronk ! -In peraon, Me N F'..d11 Pina 4500 Can!P\l!I Or 1 • .,,.. ' * 01\n.AGF: SALE * Pl\~tnAkor. t.1ko n ew, lop lhow qt~lltf. Stud S<'ic. l'nrlnur, 4l0 E. lTih St., ~2118 Newport Beach cloRN .,null!)'. V't.6'..., '· '&29 Plumn"lf:r SI. anM1tlC9. $1,005. ~. *"rvltt. Call 64t-2102. Qnllhl for Tod1t...f't11 L!Vlnir -C M Rohbl"s Antlqu~ C:O.IA M,.llL 642.f862: 1:\ beautiful n•ttem.. 5'Jr. ~·"'·....,...,,---,-=....,..-I ~ 54.1 CC'nltt St.. C.M. Don't llve up lht' Mlp! KEESllOUND pups, AKC. ,.... fQr that Item under $50, lzy A aood Wiii( ad I•. pod ln-I hlnrk N. (lf lllU'bor Blvd.' Nffd. "Plld''T Place an ad: "Uit"ll in clallitltd, Ship l'tl An •hots. R wkl. Extra llONOA S\ipr 00 • ~. Hon- da Scmrnhic.r 90 -$2i0. Doth Ext.'1"11rnl! 962-2737. ::nf1,Mldll soo·='~tou;-'-r-• ....,t.ow- n111 .. a 1 e . TW owr Jlnj'mf'nl!!.. fl63..rfl6. 1n llONO;\ l'lrlec Jlrttl biker. XI 111 r.oDd. 1900 mt• ~­Mll·<'21L . ------------the cc:...l'<!cc·"o;;"Y<.:..P-"lndler:::=·c...-....;. -~~"L------'-N'--rw=port=--'81'-"-. -"IntA!=nect='-'lo"~"-CBll IG«7S. \0 Aorl: RlluJtal &IMim. ..::"':::'•::.:::""'311==---- • • • • . .. . . -o OAIL'Y PILOT •• -l[i] [ _...... 1§1 I ---l§l ~· --1§1 I oiiiiii ---_ ,,.._ ---l§J I _...... I~ I _., _ CrcM•. Blk•s. Trucks fU Auta1, lmpomcl 970 Aut.., 1,,,,,.,_ Scoot.rt 925 --------DATSUN Autot, u.... flO AUIOI, .._ "° Autoo, U... f90 -C~A-D_l_LLA_C_ CHEVROLET OLDSMOllU TOYOTA JOtlN'S RACING CYCl.F..:S • BULTACO • 'i3s art• h,·n· Lar)(t"'l1 111 ventory o f 1notorcyclr>", 1)11.rls Sr i'll'l'f'S....:flr \\•:ot n\'RlL Ullt"J <'Y<'ll'll. sln't1 .t-tHM f::<p..'1'1 iel'\P\~ J ('I)\ I fhr><'k our "'Urr.inri1•~1. 9 10 6 1lni. lv, clo!i('(j Sun & J\tun. 2'25!'1 Jiarbor Blvd t Corn 1• r T lllfbol' & \\'tlsun 1, Cnsta Mesa. &W-4/i!i.'i l'lr £i..1&-242S. i96'7 Molorcycte, has con1- Pl<'IC' fnUTl\' & gtX1<l 111'1'"• t'lllt no cngine for $2J. 1970.. 6.X-e llnrlt>y .D&vldson, h.'1..'I n('I.\· r!'ar lire & tube $17j. '' rrul l\llllorcycle trailer, has a<ljustablf> 1ow·bar & a."le, has lii.;hts, ramps & hltch !or $200. 712 Victoria, \\'est ol Pomon.'\ SL 54R-0900. HONDA SL 35(}, 1969 7000 miles, clean, $350 * 963-.'i.512 * '1'l HOKO,\ CB 450 f\:4 Xlnt shape! 6-12-4343 A.<;k !or Bob NEAR new Sch.,.,•inn 2 spd Tandem, good condition. $75. * 646-2624 * '70 T d u mph 650 * $11.50 * • 548-3773 SUZUKI TS 90 w/Kit, n1any t·x!ra11. $295. Call Dave, 8.~5188. SUZUKI 1970 TS -250 RUNS f'.."TRONG -ASK 5450 642-2677 .o\FIER 5::l0 Motor Homes Sale/Rent OPEN ROAD ~lOTOR HOMES 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. Garden Grove ~-4479 Motor Home Rentals Available tor dalJy, weekly or monthly bas ls. 21', 23'. nnd 25' self contained Mo- '"for ·Hames, all cquipt 1Ylth generator: roor air, and many other ex!Ta.i. Alt Coaches are 1972 model;;. \Ve have the aU s!eel Amiito also. Please call 8.'\9·9560. Motor Home Rentals VANS VAN CONVERSIONS MANY MOTOR HOMES Uui:e 5Clttlion ol ni'\\' Jo" 0 R D S. CllEVROLETS. Gr-.1c·s. OODGES. \rith CONTEMPO. The \\'est'$ rnost p!Jpu!ar t"OnVt1!'5ion. Also 1973 Ptide-N·Joy. t.tany 11,101or hon1e3 to choo$(> from. All at huge dilk'Ounls Bill BARRY PONTIAC·GMC·FIAT l11t St at S.A. F'N'Y. ml E. 1st St., S.A. 558-1000 '63 Ford ¥4 Ton V-~. Air Concl, Ra(.110, Hcati>r, !lc-1:1.vy Out~· l\\'32Tl!h $1195 Prit·l" Goo!! Th1u 10·22·12. ~~N ·165 E. 17lh, Cosia ,\1esa 645-IH66 '69 DATSUN PICKUP Nrw l1n11" pa1n1, i'X('t"llf'nl ~'Orn;ll1\on !).t.jCIS $1266 You'll t:h1y /I .,Pm lfAlriA W TOYOTA 1966 llarl>or, C.M. 646-9.103 '68 Oataun Pickup !XC"J\'?281 $895 Price Ciootl Thru 1!).22-72. ~~ 1972 Datsun 1200 llndin. ti.000 ml, $1850. 548--0750 aft 6:30 p.m. 1971 DATSUN 240-Z. Exec. rnr, aulo trans, lo miles. 5'18-1944 aft 5 & "'knds. FIAT 1962 Chev. Van bakery truck. '72 FIAT complete with shelves and DE~'IONSTRATOR w I th dra;vPrs. New brakes , ]PSS than 500 miles, 19Tl stal'k:r, <'le. $650 or Ix-st of-Fiat 128 2 dr. sedan, fully fer. 7292 Toulouse No. 2. lactory equipped including H.B. S.17-8793. Art1 radio. Motor Trend '63 lnt'l travel-all panel. 6 magazine's "Economy car cyl stk. Side doors. Nev.1 6 111 I.he Year" Now on sale at ply tires. Clean. $.)5(). 21881~ Bill Barry's, Senal No. Harbor, D'I S .J 8 -0 3 2 0, 128J\Ofl64jM. VOLKSWAGEN MAZDA SAVINGS lJl65 CllEVELLE Mallbu 2 dr '" OLDS ,. LEASE SPECIAL '7? ELDORADO h.<. 6 "'~ $4(1) or oUcr. llArdlop "°"1:,· Vlnyl too '58 VW B Vinyl topl )Cather Interior. 644-t382. New '72 RX3 A• Never Bolero ug tih •t•er "" wh .. 1, AM·l'M CHRY LER full power, "'0 "' "" ron· On AH Rl!'m111nlng 't.t (Qf\G973) 1teroo niulrlplex, full powPr, S -dltlonll\r(, tilt ""·heel, J)O\\'e.i· S57 56 TOYOTAS $295 ftu:'tory air condltlonlnr. twi· ---------· 1 door locka, AM-FM stereo • llghc Rntiool, very low n1ile· '68 CHRYSLER rattlo. Fully equipped. IS.1.lr Lnadcd. ROTAnY PoWtred. ~ .. ~ age. SpotlHA. 1400794). New Vork(!r ~ Door. Tapes· Cf>XJ. $2222 3S l $8222 try inlerior, full power, lac· ! . •<ly~~j'r:rtc: c~nL.s. For r1..-sp. -t\ai.1t 1111.:.f 465 t;. I~~~ ,5,?:ta Mesa tory air cond.itionJngi push NABERS CADILLAC i v lUc,.u.n. Ull\D .........vwu NABERS CADILLAC bollon rttd\o, t.11t whee . Lell3 2060 Jlarbot· Blvd., ~ • TOYOTA VIV •n 2060 !!arbor Blvd. than 25,<XXI nules. Orie very Co!ita lttesa 54()..9100 in ROTARY'S Costa Mna 540-9100 careful owner. (XE\\19.11!. "Demo Sale" l!l66 II"''""· C.M. 6.,;.9103 "''feet rond .. No':'.:.~ $1999 ·~~~~;. ':u 1912 Corolla. Radio, ''"" many """ 29.soo rn1. Pri __ C_H_EVR __ O_L_ET__ NABERS CADILLAC 11oo1<. 1i:ioo. "'""1 eont1. 10 TO CHOOSE Only 4,300 n1iles. Bea1 offer Pty. S3000. Xi7-5280 2060 Harbor Blvd., 96.HM9. "BIGGEST SAVINGS" 1-"""-'~''~·tt50_·_._8.10-6'l97~~--1 ·" vw. "" "'" & pain" '71 El Camino c .. t. M ... ""'""' l-""""'=op"'1"'NT=o=---1 "Service is tbl!' ditfcr ·nct'' TRIUMPH A\1 /flt radio, 4 & 8 track Only 16,000 miles, automalic '68 Onysler :OJ 4 Dr HTi--------- HUNTINGTON BEACH s!ereo, really c 11!' an. trans, power steering, fac-Beautiful_ Green Finish, an· 1971 Pinto like new. dclux 'JTii:Z;;;;;;;;-:;;:;;;;;;J~&t&-8559~:""'5~~~----tory air, custom fiber glnu ""ue vinyl roof Auto MAZDA '63 TR4, lll'w tires & trans & , · 19I72C' '-"I . • int. & deoor. group, 8.000 extraB. Best ofter over $500. n Super Bug_. Swtrf. stereo, cover. · Tra.M, Fact Air Cond, PS. mi. S3XX> ca. Must sell. 17J31 Beach Blvd. 968-8150· 008-8l•IS C 1emen11 n e. .$1 8 5 0 $3199 PB, PW, . Pti~r bucket Going Into military. 979-4160 842 ' · 644-4242 I 645-1891 Mr. seats. Radial tires, Extra I=~~~=-~---I .fi666 Lease Mgr. Mr. Fry CUSTOl\flZED '66 Triumph Kearns "1 Location, 3 Great Can" low miles, looks and drives '71 Pinto XOkc tng. De!u.'( S . • Porsche • Audi • VW • like .... w, 1 owner, MUST lnt. &. ext Auto trans. Good p1tlire. lmmac. concl. $5?>. '66 vw. ~lust sell. Good '"' Call 543-'9'.\S. "'"'P'rt"ion '"'" AM /FM 0 ~ SEU.C064H64<NT. IN.ENTAL oond. Sl>OO. 63>-8116. '68 TR6 radio, big tires. S 2;; o, '71 Pinto Runabout $14!lS. 39.000 ml. lmmac ronJ. 548-SOl!I. ~ &I 34,000 mi's. :nxlcc. Aft S Sao. 11575· 6<f>.S72! VOLVO OJ' -,7-l_C_O_N_T_l_N_E_N_T_A_L_1 wkdr-8l7..fl839. • s~ ~ ~·a~~r~~ * 1----------1 ' 0$ 5:°ea~~r. v:~1 ~We~~a~ae:~:; PLYMOUTH airer 6 pm. 673-153.l SAVINGS o .. ~-p u1r co11d1honmJ?:. tilt s1eer- ,,., ing \vheel, AM-FM stereo '72 Plymouth VOLKSWAGEN As Never Before n1ultlplex, cruise control. Gran Spot! 2 Dr Hardtop on All lleinaining ,72 445 E. Coast ff'A')'. Very low mileage! <880EOJJ Auto ~s, 1o~aCtory Au'. VOLVOS NEWPORT BEACH $4999 Conti, Power St .. rlng, Pow· 61~0090 Ext 53-54 NABERS CADILLAC er Bralre•, AM/FM St""° Adventurer (Open Sunday) Radio, Vtnyl Root, on(y Camper ;() L • '71 CHEV. c~ ~8:s~ :,~~00 &100 ~~1'~'-<30'1FYA) $l39S - """ "'"'' EL CAMINO SS dlr. ~. Only 10,000 miles. Air con-WA ~Mt CORY .. 11£ '69 au ditioning. The ultimate in YQLYQ Auto trans, air oond., pwr .. V ant -4 Dr Auto d . Sir, pwr brk• landau top, ----------1 Trans., $995 • '66 Valiant cam,,.,, '"'"· S.C " ~ 66 W A ~-.. 1 Location J Great Cari;" 136801Lll62965. ' Stingray oonv. Red w/blk aaon uto in:u11~ Radio, '71 YW e Porsche 9 Audi • vw ·• 1966 Harbor, C.?i-L 646-9303 $2995 Int. 327 V-8. 4 sp, 2 tops, Heater, $495. 645-6644. 1964 Volw. Sell tor f"r" BILL BARRY AM/FM ocig 0"""'· llT>l, 1970 Plymouth Road Run,..r. ~..,_~ '9>.e ,so~ f:,:f ~~:~ELLrn~ ~~';:~~~t ·~~~~; .'~•,.o_'t'_,;e_r.·-;·:;;:·o=t Sl&-3122,.,===-'~.,."'..,~;;:· _M_ak_· GT>-3799. $59 00 DOWN '72 J\1erc<'des Benz 3j() SL DESERTED' N•ed '" w • 1",u..,,, 2 to.,, 7iOO mil.,. hon1e. Boss got new n1od<'I. f"ii ctory new. D ays, 1951 ., T. P.U. 1'50. $52.82 Per Mo. 213189!>-5276; ah 3 pm, &l">-1691 . 213/312-8413. DIESEL POWERED YES · """00 · "12 r.1ercedes 250. tiOOO mi's . . , JUSI ~-IS !he IO!al A/C ~4 Ton Chevy. 1':27·2248 do'A'n payment and only • p/s, 3 mo's old. SGSOO. SS'""' . Pvt ply 497-1132. '59 Chevy Truck * Ton Ex· .n.< is the total rnonthly -~'"-=-""'°'----- Ct'l rond. $65(11Best offer. paymrnt including tax, e 641Hl388 e J icE'11se and all finance charge,; for 36 months on '67 ford ~ T. Comp \V lO !f...i · npprovcd credit. The rash Open Road cab o v e r · I $1 007 campe'r', Both xlnt: 5'K}-J075. price .~ , .75 including tax & liccnSt'. Delerl"l"d pay- '50 ford P.U. 'h T. V-8, $175. n1en1 fJflce is $2.212.52 MG '70 J\lGB·GT. Top shape. S2423. &1;;..i;s21: 2400 ~v. Coast Hiway, Suite 3 Npt lkh. 1'131 Ce.1Tl!os Dr .. Lag Bch. ~·hich includes all finunce 494-6972 aft .. 6 pm--t:h~, salet-ta.x·& License.. _ -OP-EL.-. "1968=~c=...,,--can.,,~-.. ~ll~. _Good __ , Annual percentage rare is 1---------- '52 ZnlernationaJ 1;, con. 6 cyl. oood. St.~~-· W.25.BILL BARRY t!lf~ OPAL R.\LLYE, 4 •P<l .. tH<T"'U\IOJ R/H, lach. Xlnt tires. Very 1961 FORD Pickup V-8, 8' rlean. S$75. :X,2-7937. bed 111/IUD'lber rack. Runs Fiat-GMC-Pontiac PORSCHE good. 5<l~34.97· llst St. at S.A. f"wy .l 200'.l E. 1st St.. San1a Ana '71 TARGA 911T '1,~ '72 CATALINA L,"' '72 ELECTRA 225 '67 Cougar 390 GT. New e ng, Demonstrator um ~ntiac "\ fl Cus!om. Vinyl top, vinyl in-'63 Chevy Nove Auto trans. P disc brks. Catalina 2 DR H.T. with low . tenor, full pav.ct', firt:tory 4 Dr, Auto Trans, 6 cyl, Real Other xtru. $UOO. 557-4605. low mileage. F\llly factory 4.J? E. Coast l}11')'. air conditioning, tilt \\•heel. ck•an, iFBVJlO). DODGE equipped lncluding stereo NtWPOR1' BEJ\Cll AM.F'Jl.1 ;terro radio, \\'bite $795 ----------! AM-FM radio, P window1, 673-0090 E:xl. 53-54 side wall tires, etc. Very Pr' Good 68 P.B .. P.S. Vlnyl top, rally 11 (Open Sunday) 10111 mileage. Jinmaculate ice 111ru 1(),.2'2.'J2. ' OODGE Charger. Auto., wheEts, t. glass, factory atr '10 YW BUS roodition. (641DZZ). -W..... *'m~N pwr. steer. & brks. New condt., elect clock plus $5222 HliA ~ tires. $1100. Alt 6. pm. much much more. ~ Dark green· inl('1')or, vinyl interior, \\•ide oval tires, A~f/FM radio, beautiful cond!lion f351ART). .$1866 Sl'e ft -You 'll Buy It 465 E. _55>-,-;;14;j;15.;z:--;;;;;:==;;.J..'.N:'.o.~2L5$21MBB~DOWN· _, NABERS CADILLAC '69 Doilge Camper.-Atr. 2060 Harbor Blvd., raised roof, fully equip'd: Costa M~ 54()..9100 Xlnt rond. $2950. 615-0425. !969 Buick Skylark, E:m:::I rond. Lo mileage, Pri/pty. Call ~7-4114/979-7517. '69 CHEV. CORVETTE Both loP!I air cond., p'AT str clean, ZRRD27. $2995 i966 DODGE Dart. Excellent $118 52 per mo ttan,portalloo ear. $300. ' • Call alt 6 PM, 492-4291. Yes, just $288 is the total SALES & LEASING Good cond. $4li 642-3165 aft full service facilit)' 5: 30 pnl. :.58-1000 5 speed, alloy \\'het'ls. A:\1 1 1970 FIAT 124 Sport Spyder, f<'J\'1 sterro. lmmaculal<'. new top, A~l/FM radio, rond. 984CUV Only IUWI\ UlllO All extras -Ex. t'Ond. S~. e'f\••u Lll•~t '71 Buick Riviera -Lo mi. YOLVO 1-"'--1--"-="'"'0~',.,545-"'. ~""'147· -- FALCON down paym<ot and ooly ----------1 nJ8.52 is the Iota! month\y '63 FALCON RANCH.ERO. payment including tax, BILL BARRY CADILLAC Pontiac-GMC-Flat Rebuilt motor. lit"l'nse and all finance Danmar Motor Homes _Au_,._,_w_._n,_ec1 __ 968_ elec. antenna & mac-s. $6995 &I0-18&5 Sc-c Ir -You'll Buy It 1966 lt:irbor, C.l\f. 646-9.lO:l l----------I 646-3723 aft 7 pm charge!! for 48 monU. on flsl St al S.A. F\\')'.> ----;;:==c"----1 appl"O\'ed credit The cub 531-6800 '5' vw Vao C•mpe,. '64 '73 Cadillac: Jo.:ng. Stove.· ice box, sink, C 2000 E. lsl St., Santa And FORD price is $4876.22 including 558·100'.I ----------! tax and license. Defem!d 1972 Utooian Molor Home. z2·. slN'pS 8, Vista dome. fJK' drk, self cont. Used ~> n10. Sl0.500. 642-8722. -.NE\V LTF'ETIMEs-9 Free mi + lnsur. All op· tianal equip. $175 \Vk. Pvt. pl y. R38-0fl3.1. WILL PAY OVER Kelly Blue Boak ;De.oa Ltwi4 " YOLYO ---;,:::7"'1-=y""E"'G"""A,--'70 FORD paymem prk• I• l.lm96 COUNTRY SQUIRE which includea all finance 4 ~peed, radio, heeler, 111hile charges, sales tax and side 'A·alls. Sta. \\'Ilg auto trans.. air liCf'nse. Annual percentage ""'· "'"" "'"" s 6 " . pe De Ville ~•c;9!>-,,ll26~;;,·c;;:::-=c:--,,--I Full po'A<er, Air C:Und., Vinyl '64 V\V Bus. Reblt eng. Roof, Dual Comfort Seats, '71 Honda CSOOCHQ) $995 Grl. cond. SfiOo. Beautiful Firemist Finish. 1966 Harbor, CM. 646-9303 * 842-3779 • 6-"·ay seats, stereo tape ~ rt -You'll Buy It cond. pwr str., ?Wl" brks, rate is 10.98. 196.J S-C Conv. Original '71 VW 411 Sqbck cniise oon$trol J76 Paint, chrome Whe(!ls must Jo mileag{' . $2.100 firm • 1'Cf! & drive lo appreciarc 542~-th IGCF"!40) SJ200. offer . After 1 -=='""7.~~C--~-I per mon Pril''' Good Tin·u 10·22-72. ·71 rDF:At~ 2'1'. romptrtcl.v SIC. air. awnini::s, tub & sho't"er. etc. Si\!iOO. or offer. 64.;...3,;oo or 675-30.11. For fate model, clean, low mfle•g• dome1- tlc1, lmports1 trucks or campers. Call and a!X !or Buyer DAVE ROSS ~~ 465 E. 17rh, Costa J\le!la 645·0466 6:00 pm. Daily &ia-1146. 'fi6 VW Sqbk. Crc'am in!. 16 mo. O.F;.L. fax '68 912. 1 OWl1('r. Bahania 51,000 mi. S500 firm. Immediate Delivery * 4!J4.<;802 * LEASING gold. $3,~1855 '69 Camper/bus Red Rebtt ALL MODE LS Rent A Motor Home for your Vacetion * 139-4301 * l\folor home for rent. '72 \'Th'NEBAGO. 27'. Sleeps 6. fi40·04~2 Trail,.rs. Travel 945 1r AJJ11 19&1 fully ~II 1'0n· tanll.-..1 L1kl' nl'I\'. SI ,700 5-1:.-6.l.18. 'TI 18' Golden Nugget Tanrlf'f"I, <;elf roni'd. Xln'! cond. UtOO. ~4-1833. UT!t.ITV Trailer 2 Wheel Steel Bed 'l.i Ton P.U. Size s~. 979-4575. Auto Service, Parh 949 *NEW MAGS* 4 U S. ,\1a.l{s. 1 Lug11, l.u~i;. Ca1is. $70. 544·7fi!J Ai;k fnr lklb. l§J 953 ':W FORD Pickup truck. Xlnt rond. 19912 Ranger Lant>, 1fun1ington Beach. '36 Sturlc>bakc>r SeiJ. Compl<'lf'. $250. 2210 Oran11;1» C.Jl.I. 5-18-IJj,"iJ Dune Buggies 956 '71 vw Dunc Bu~izy 11tm•t. gnld w/hlack lop, rlll\fi)(, lmn1ac. &16-3398 art 1; i wlmd1. $1000. VW andraJI, full roll C'D£lr, •tr., brk•.. off-rood lir('!i. 1600 engtnf', nis1ny 1•xrras. Phone 642-5655. DUNE buggy w/trallc.r Beill oiler. • 64&-0:lS!! • Trucks SHORT STUFF IS HERE '73 GMC VAN, complr1ely pane.ltd Interior with c.r· pttfne. a box. aide bunk and nu ~m. Btautt· All cWtc: blot mf!taJlic with matdsing lnlnior. lmmed· •IAJe dtl!w-ry. Serial # ~-3. Bill BARRY POHTIAC-GMC.FIAT (JJl St. •l u P'1w7.) -s. lit St., -Ana 11111-IOIO • •70 Porsche 9144. Silv/blk. :. eng., new gen., brakes, Top AND MAKES ·n H nd ~ A Lo . S2900 cond. $1950. • 5.12-7484. '73's o a ear. s.,.... pp. grp. m1. . G.R~. 5'<1-4291 alt 6' fill day Sal. 'G5 ,x:. !'::ii'. jS;',((m. Southern ca1·1forn1·a ** 1971 Porsche 911-T. In1-Call 64:7-8721 PONTIAC 2480 Herbor Blvd. JAGUAR mac. cond. 91'>-3434 '70 vw Bug. "'"' rooo. 1st Nat• n I AM/FM "dio. Radial ,;,..,,, 10 3 Coste Meta 546-8017 1 ________ _ WE PAY lt>P CASH lur uRd can A trucXa, just ca.11 u, re.. tree esttmatn. GROTH CHEVROLET '71 JAGUAR V12 '64 PORSCHE Coupt', reblt $1 2.10 or best of(er. 5'i8--0'l42. XKE 2 -:.! Coup!'. \Vhile ll!OO cc cng .. ski rack. Xlnt B k L . \\·1th English N•rl lea!her in· 1 _ro_nd_._,;;;:t.>='0·21""96~af7t0'5='3t]'°'-. _ .JO l~ ~: e~;~·Ji~ an easing ler1 or. automalLt'. po'A·cr RENAULT e 646-(1388 e st<'C'ring, JlOWl:'r h1·1tkC's, fac· rory air, AM·f<'J\-1 radio. Im· 1----------·70 V\V bug. Great shal)('. f)('<'cable. !470DTZI . '63 Renault RS. Excellen! Nt"W tires. AM-FM radio. $6999 rond. 35 miles per gallon $1100. 497-2795 $195. 6~25. 1 1~9~10-VW~-8~~cl-~-1 -295-NABERS CADILLAC ug, e11n, 1~ .. 2001 l\1ichelson Drive rcorner of i\facArthur > Irvine, Calif. 9ai64 714/~ 2131627--0367 '68 FLEETWOOD TOYOTA 319 Driltwood """'· Corooa ... C"-•~ 2060 Harbor Blvd., rfcl Mar. 673-4238 Aft 6. far .--. Manaa:er Costa MC'sa 540·9100 BROUGHAM Firemist paint. vinyl top, leather interior, full power, factory air, lilt wheel, pow· er door locks, AM-FM radio, new WSW tires. Ex- tN'mely low mileage. Local 1 ownC'r, {WAJ767), :;1.,::" a'!'! 11 Jagoac V12, XKE 2+2 JUST ARRIVED! "!, ~.~,$~~~t ·-_ Red. PS. PB, auto trans .. "'·-• KI 1-Wl air. 17,000 m i. LikC' new. * T k I 1968 VW BUG WE buy an makes ol cll!'an $6700 or take over leRse. rue $, N~rls some c>ngine work used sports can. paid lor 1 "'842-o-384'7ol". =,,-=,,,.----I Body good, $475. 833--0922. or not. Pleas!!' drive ln for ·10 JAGUAR XKE coupe * CeliC3S! '61 vw bus. Nccds work. 1ree Appralsal. Wf\\'ire wheels, 4-spced. , $125. Regency red. Xlnt oonrl. 642-4:196 t1f! Gpm NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy., Newport Bead! '42·9405 ,ol,.'899""':.ocC:Cacoll7'>1,,_J.-0:!:<"""""5.~--1 * MX·6! '68 V\V. NC'l\I tires. brakes & '70 JAGUAR XKE coupe shock!l. Ne rtt lirtlc ca r for w/wire wheels. 4-spee(i. * Gari·na GTX! $82:.<i or bf'st oner. 546-1377. Re~ency red. Xlnt t'OntL 970 vw 2.~ 000 $3899~11 543--0355. 1 Sl,25(). . , 1nilcs. Clenn. .. Ja.gi.lir 1971, red, V\2 en". * Corolla's 1200' 2 + 2 seaun,, •" rond, aoto • tnn!I. 84.2-3841 '69 VW Camper, reblt eni.; .. t:i,OOJ mi). Guarantee . SALE PRICED NABERS CADILLAC 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 ~ YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC WE PAY TOP OOLJ..AR f'OR TOP 1 ISF.D CARS '66 XKE 4.2: wi~ rints,. n"""' Mich X tires. Low mL $2400 or be!ll olfer. 646-2690, $2100. Pvt. pty. 494-8697. DEALER 10 DEMOS! All Rcdurcrl lo j\1ovc. Out! If yoUr car ts extra clean. !lee IU first. BAUER BUICK :!925 Harbor Blvd. Cotta h1e.sa 979-2YX> -l ~fPORTS WANT!:0-- 0ranal!' Counoo TOP J BUYER BILJ. MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. P~. 847-&-& Autos, lmporf9Cf 9'fo A'JSTIN HEALEY 1966 Au~lln llcaly Mark Ill. 3.000. $650. 612-ml afler 5 pm BMW Vlilt our new bom~r & ROY CARVER, Inc:. 234 E. 11'tb St. Colla--'11 Dl2. Alt. Michelarui. F"M lltm!Q, $3850, 567-5770 t'XI 461) Wkd)'I, DATSUN 'G6 Datsun Rdstr. 4 1pd, !J:fu?.Sac. 1395. C• 11 HOUSE Hundng! Watch the OPEN ffOUSE COiumn. KARMANN GHIA '61 Ghia, runs good, ~!5 80me body work. S.250 • 6~1916. SEE US LAST ··· For Your Best Deni!~ .,Pm lfAlriA W TOYOTA '69 V\V Bus, good concl. Rebll Largest sell!'Ctlon of Clldll- molor. 51700. lacs In Orange County. 644-4M7 Sales--Leutng. .,Pm lfADi& ... .uy d••;2:WU BILL BARRY -TOYOTA BILL BARRY Pontiac-GMC~al 1%6 lfarbor, C.M. 646-9303 '71 CHEV. CORVETTE Hard top, air cond., auto trans., sharp car. 268CKQ. $4995 BILL BARRY Pantiac-GMC-Fiat ~Isl St. al S.A. Fwy.) 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana 508-1000 '67 396 s.5 4 Spd., PS, Facl Air, Bucket Seatt:, Beautiful Blue Finish ISXl'\1003) $1195 e '67 396 SS 4 Spd, PS, Bench, Royal Plum. Very low miles. (UUG893l. WE IIA VE LOST OUR LEASE 2014 Harbor Blwd., 64s.&644. 1970 Cht-v. Concours Estate, 8 Pua. Sta. Wan. Pwr. Stemng&b"""9, AM-FM Sfl!'roo radio, tU1 steer. •bl. Factory Air, luggage .. ack, new tires & brakes. Panel· ing. Asking $2725. 557-4861. '72 Ye9a Aulomatic Transmission, f<'aclory Air Conditioning, ~·hile side walls, Custom interior, (4.l30TA) $2395 dlr. Cati 836-6536. 1964 CHEVROLET Va n • Motor recently rebuilt - 3,000 mile!! !tince overhaul. Good !ires, gQod body. Needs pe.int. $800. Call 557-4305 anytime. '72 Chevy Impala Aulo Tran!'!, Factory Alr Cond, Power Steering, Radio, tllt w/U>el, (427DTA) S2795 rll r . ~. '68 MALIBU, 327 eng, air cond., p/s, Eng &-body In excel. cond. $1,400 or be11t offer. Call 67;,-6436 after 3 pm '68 CHEV. VAN 6 cyl Auto trans.. t'le'C' pnint, 310.'ilC. $1695 BILL BARRY Pontlac--GMC-Fl•t (Isl St, al $.A. Fwy.I 200'.> E. lat St., S&nta Ana ~1000 Pontiac-GMC-Fiat ~L":~.s~~,a~t~ . .A..sa:i~a ~a (1st St. at S.A. F,wy.l 558-1000 2000 E. lst St., Santa Ana ,69 T _ I C t $ 558-1000 em,....s us om ==-==""=-"=~~--.!Vinyl top, vinyl interior, VS, 1969 FORD Country. Sedan, 6 auroma1ic, power steering, pass. wagon. Air, P/S, radio, heatl!'r, \VSW tires. PIB, A/T. Clean tamlly Less !ban 24,000 original car. $1675. 6 4 4 -2 7 0 6 ; miles. (433ALMJ. 54<>-'1594. SI 999 '70 E JOO V-8. auto, window van. S2100. Call \Ved, Thurs NABERS CADILLAC or next wk. 8 3 0 -6 4 0 ~ , 2060 Harbor Blvd., 493-3229 Cosla ~lesa. 540-9100 '69. Ford van. V'f!., Low 1968 Pontiac, 4 Dr. Catalina, mileage. r.ood condiuon. air cond., power windows. 673-5218 eves. extra clean. $1295. Prtv. '63 Ford Faloon-Xlnt cond. Party. phone after S. Rebuilt trans, valves & 675-5510 11 no &nSWft', generator. 548-1383. l:=61_>-.,,"100.~~....,---~- 1935 FORD TudOl" Totjring '70 Pontiac Lemans Sa!art Sedan. wgn R/H, P/S, P/B, Call 645--1.588 air/oond, lugg~ rAdt, ,64 Fo7ll Country Squire good X~~t ed. $2375 ph aft 6pm appearance, Radials. Air l.""n""". ;:84&-~oc9'=13o..,,=---·I Condltloning, $350. 833-3288. '67 Pootlae GTO, 4 spd, '66 Ford LTD 2 Dr X1 t PositracUon, mags, 400 cu. • · n In motor Toi> cond Best oond. PB, PS, Auto. $650. offer over'~ ~16.0;,.. • 54&-1281 • •JV<>. ~ ~"· '64 PONTIAC LEMANS ·~ Ford Van. Full windo~. Excellent Condition big 6 engine, Camper eqwp. 963-283.2 Eves & W~k•nd l\.1ake offer. 64&-3478. !I 1967 Ford Cort' . '70 Grand Prix, air, am/hn in~. nu tires, stereo tape, new radials' Excel mecharucal cond. $2S95. 495-4245 or 497_1394 • Cle!lll-$4~. 673-8ll7. · '69 FORD Su~ Van, auto, 1~0 Po~~ !};}00~· ~· Crpc &. panelling, SDXJ. 1028 mechn cond $295. 962--7301. · Apt C Balboa., N.B. 1 ,,;~:::;~:;,· c;=~=..:""';.I '69 Grand Prix. SJ model. JEEP Air cond .. FM stereo, mariy xt:ras. $2,400. 6'13-3331. '68 Jeep 4 whi>el drive, automatic lransmission, air condition- ing, radio, whitewal1s. very cll'an and low mileage. CXEX3161 $1895 dlr. Call &16.6536. MAVERICK '73 VENTURA 1973 Pontiac VeDtUl'8 Il with ll?S!I than 100 ml1es. Fully factory equipped In- cluding factory air rondt. T. glass, cust carpets, ft. con. SOii", vs engine, Rally II wheels, vinyl top, bucket seals, P .S., P .B., WW tire, ----'------I radio. plus much much 1970, 28,000 miles. 1 owner! more". Se ria l No. RIH, good tires. Exce 2Y27M3Lln5276. ~m!,1250 o' Best oiler. $282 DOWN MERCURY $98.1 B per mo. '10 Mercury ~fonten;-y 2 Or HT, v-8, Aut Ye.s, jusl $2.52 Ui the tot11l down peymont and only TrA.1111, PoWtr st e. e r In R , $98.18 is thl' tl)fll! nlOOrhty Radio, lleatrr, whitf \\.'Alls, pa)'ment Including t fl x whcd rowrii, A very nlre lictme And all flM~ car CTI6CTO) $1995 dlr. Call cliarirta for 48 montM on ,,;-~;:::;;.·;;:,-.,,,-.,.,---,.·I llPPl"O'\.'t'd CT't!diL Th! cash '67 Mere Sta Wgn. Air cond., P!'tce Is S40S2. n lneludlng PS, PB. boat hitch. Oayii, tax • lleeiw. Deftrred pay. ~ ext 394; eves, ment Pf1ct' is $4994.&f which ~---lneludea all finance ctwic1, '69 01EVY M411bu CJ>o, 3"' t'ng., Arr. PIS, AIC. vteyl top, UCC!ptionall,y clean. Beat ofier. R42"'9714. 1965 BEL Air Station Wgn. Good mcchanlCl\I c o n d • Noodl body WOl'lr. $275. 64.~ days, 642--0452 eve. '68 IMPALA 2 door h.t., fU.11 PQWl"r, a.Ir, 37,<nJ ml. OrQi owner $1700. 673-'038. ,.,, Weis tax and ~ An· 'o.& Mercury. Xlnt mcch. nual perccntap rate ii oond. s:m nnn. 10 96. Cl-IEV, 1968 wa,gon, 1'11 lttl:· lru, good condition, fl!XXI. Phone64~ *** 4!*-1235 ..... . 1963 MERCURY s ... wan. BILL BARRY Rectto, air, P 'S. -I door. 1225. or offer. 64H38:1. Pontl•c-GMC-Flat MUSTANG-Oot SI. at S.A. f\yy.J --------~·I ~ E . .ill SL, Snnta Ana '6T Muming, 390 CT 4 1pd, --~;C~'i'.S.':l':OOO~=--·I I'S, Mu" S.11, sii!i:' • '61 VALIANT Cougar 4 Sptl, 289 Engh"'•l'.".'-------·I Lnw Ml1(1S. $1 095 • '65 'l)lo: \' .. 11··•\f, •I 1lr, 6 <'VI nuto, l\tustang. 289llll'ld. lmrM<' ~ r.ir r. N' ne1• tires cond. M11st ~11. 64.'Hi611. _ "11, <.:-w :.:: ,. 11~._·J < 17 San Clemenie Capistrano VOi,. 65, NO. 293, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972 Today's Final • N.Y. Stocks. TEN CENTS Would New Airport Gore San Clemente's 'Ox'? By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. Dtiltf Pli.r Sllft "When )'OU start talking about solving the airport problem, you start talking about whose ox is being gored." Peppery Bob Bresnahan, Orange Coun- ty direct.Qr of Aviation , was talking to members of lhe Saddleback Area Coordinat~ Council Wednesday night, and it was their ox, El Toro, they were interested in. Bresnahan, at the dii:cction of firth Developers , ~ Say They Feel Heat . By JACK BROBACK Ot ._ Dallw P'li.t St.tt Architects, engineers and I a n d developers who do business with Orange County are being pressured to make con- tributions to t h e campaigns or supervisorial candidates, they charged today. · Tiie Orange County Grand Jury Issued a warning to memben of the Board of Supervisors two weeks ago after recei•· ing complaint from the county ch&pter or the American Institute of Architects (A!A). Spakesmen for the architects said, "the Jury Mould be awa re of a practice which seems to be taking root in Orange Coun· ty, one which we beJleve is contrary to public Interest and , which cou1d lead to the development or a system of patronage in county government. "Architects and engineering firms con- tribute substantial sums to · candidates for business reasons," said David Klages, president of the Al A chapter. "Those who won't buy tickets to $100 a person cocktail parties won 't get county contracts." The architects' letter to the Grand Jury, signed by Klages, said in part, "Vendon, architects, engineers and land developers who do business with the !See PRESSURE, Page Z) Former Hospital Official Admits Taking Kickback By TOM BARLEY Ot -. o.~ Pli.t St•ff Former St. Bernardine Hospital con- troller Robert Machan admitted late Wednesday that he received a total of 13%,000 in what the prosecution has label· ed "kickbacks'' shortly after hi s employers approved a $500,000 loan to a combine headed by Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney. Machan, 50, testified as a prosecution witness ln Orange County Superior Court that he got a $15,000 check from Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive, Hun- tington Beach, within one week after the loan was granted. He testified that he got a further $17 ,000 In checks from Riverside broker Wendell Warren Austin, 38. Both men, with Machan, Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via Cascadita, San Clemente, and Jame!I ShJpley, 38. of 169511.Alwell Circle, Huntington Beach, were indicted with Mrs. Marlene Dulaney, 32, on charges of grand theft, fraud and conspiracy. Prosecutor Stuart Grant ha! dropped all charges aga tnst Machan In return for the vet.eran accountant's cooperation as a prosecution witness. Machan will go back on the witness :stand 'l'ue!day efter a five-day break in the "T1J Mahal" trlal to resume his ac- count o( an 11deged conspiracy that ended with the hogpltal'1 lhret: directors -all Roman Catholic nuns -drawing $500,000 from ihelr reM:rve acwwit. Machan agreed with the nuns who preceded bim on the witness stand that promlst! by Dulaney and Shipley to ln- crea~ their lntettst rete from flve to 10 percent bad a great deal to do with that declslon. The loen rtmalns unpaid today. And t.he 1tocks handed to th6 nuM by Dulaney'• World Securities operation - 250,000 shares cf Azalea Mob!le Homes - stands condemned by the prosecution as worthless collateral. district. county supervisor R o n a I d Caspers, is embarked on a special study to investiga te the location of a con- unental airport on Camp Pendleton. The Marines haven't been much help, he said. "They won't• even let me 1n the gate down there to study it," he said. Bresnahan also cited citizen opposition in San Clemente to the Caspers' p~ posal. "We did meet with 300 people in San 0 Clemente who were against it, well anyhow, 299 were. "The city council took the position that 'we don't know if tbe airport would be good for us or bad for us, but we don't want to know,' and they went ahead and passed a resolution opposing it," Bresnahan said. Two locations were undei-investigation for a possib le location of the airport n.;nways, one about four miles north of Oceanside and the other in Hidden • 1ew Council Refusal Valley, l ~~ miles from tbe \Vestem White House. The proposal for the location of the airport runways in San Diego County bas not been favorably received by officials there, be noted. "They weren't even polite down there in San Diego when ther_ told us to go back up and solve our oWn problems, '1 he said. Bresnahan pointed out that if the runways were located there and the Firm Loses Race For Buildings • < , Na}iet 'Winner llfl'I T ....... West German novelist Hein- rich Boell is winner of the 1972 Nobel Prize for literature. See story on Page 5. A development ftrm lost its race r against the possible passage of the Coastal Initiative Wednesday when San Clemente councilmen refused to allow the company to rush through a con- dominium project on land where last week a seaside mansion was razed. Spo~esmen !or ,the Aries Development Company argued 1n vain before coun- cilmen, flatly admitting that they feared passage of the Proposition 20 initiative on Election Da,. '!'he. ballot proposal coold cause massive headaches with the $1.8- million project along Pasadena Court. Councilmen yielded to city staff recom- mendations to hold off, however, because the project launched seven weeks ago still has no environmental impact state- ment. (Related story Page 3,} C'lemente Mayor to Set Revenue Bill Signing San Clemente Mayor Arthur Holmes won permission from three of his peers Wednesday to take a junket later this month to Philadelphia to watch Presi- dent Nixon sign the revenue-sharing bill which will yield $127,000 to local coffers. One member, however, cared little for the Idea. Councilman Thomas O'Keete's sug· gestions that the .nayor's expenses come from city promotion funds turned over to the chamber of commerce died on the vine. O'Keefe later cast the only dissen- ting vote. The expenses ror the trip t o PeMsylvania by Holmes will come out of the city budget. Publicity, the assenting councilmen agreed, would be the goal of the Mayor's trip. Councilman Wade: Lower endorsed the trip and added that the occasion In the East would mark "a milestone in our hiStory, the start of the New Federalism we beard about at the Republican Convention." which has grown steadily in recent years, said be has heard that •;picture taking and other publicity activities would mean we could get some coverage from this." The exact cost of the mayor's jaunt to Philadelphia was not disclosed . "It would sure be nice if you (the mayor) could come back with a check for $127,000," Councilman Cliff Myers quipped. QUAKE RATTLES SAN DIEGO AREA PASADENA (AP - A light ·earth- quake was recorded in an area 45 miles east of San Diego early today. A spokesman for the C a I ' e c h Seismological Laboratory here said the quake, measuring 3.S on the Richter scale, bit at 6:28 a.m. and was centered 10 miles east of Pine Valley. A sectindary technique to win "ad- vance" approval of a statement to be fil- ed later lost as well. Nert week's planning commlMion meeting is expected to produce all the definite guidelines needed by the city to cope with the all-bnpartant impact re-- quests. Until then the city will not ap- prove any major land-use issues. Wednesday's unusual presentation by Aries spokesman Ed Darrow was the first open admission by a coastal developer ln the area that fears for the passage of Propasition 20 have sparked a matSive rush ln approvals for major proj- ects. "We came in seven weeks ago and laid out a precise schedule for this project," Darrow said. "Our project stands in tremendous jeopardy from the Coastal Initiative. We had hoped to have the project well under way before election day," he .said. Darrow hastily emphasized that the project's density had been pared down in recent days thus allowing SS percent of the land area as open space, instead of a previous percentage of 40 percent. tn a lastditch effort to win approval before Nov. 7 Darrow offered one sug- gested solution to the impact statement Impasse. tt failed . He asked council men to approve the tentative: tract map for the project with the condition that a statement could be filed and approved by the city later. He added that his finn would issue documents holding the city harmless of any liability. City Manager Kenneth carr, however, In a pointed re:comme:ndation urged coun· cilmen not to tamper with the issue at this point. "It seems apparent that the city might face some extremely serious con- se'.quences if it makes poor decisions on the statements at this point." he said. Carr added that ii any present city ac- tion were later deemed improper, "many projects might be halted In midstream with serious consequences." "We've done everything in our pawer to do all that the city asked us to do ," Darrow said later. The firm last Saturday rar.ed one of the city's most stately Spanish mansions - the Larry Mansion which occupied a !See ARIES, Page Z) Holmes was ronnally Invited to the bill-signing ceremony by White House aide:s. Councilman Paul Presley, close to the Presidential entourage in a relationship Heist in. Niguel Makes Entrv New Annexation Attempt In Palisades Area An~ed . w ln Record Book By FREDERICK SCROEMElll. Of 1M DflllY l"ltft lt•ft A world record, albeit a foul one, was set over lhe weekend of March 2-4·1' ln a Laguna Niguel ahopping center. ll occumid when a tearq of bur1lars blasted their way Into the v•ult of United Callfomla Bank's Monarch Bay branch and methodically punched 4M safety deposit boxes. The spoils of this "Ml11ston Impossible" triumph over sophisticated a I a r m systems and concrete and steel rein- (See RECORD, Pa111e !I A new annexation attempt In the estates area of the Capistrano Beach Palisades · was unveiled before San Clemente city councllmen Wednesday - an 86-acre proposed merger that might yield yet another huge townhouse com· plex In the area. . Spakelmtn for the Grant Corporation in Anaheim requested the annexation would effectJvely bring the city's boun· dary to Camino de Estrella along its Cull longth. Recent annexations have cau~ flur- ric!I of controveny a1nong residents In the county portion of the Palisadea. The latest request Involves acreage starting at the corner of E.~trella and camino Capistrano running to acreage behind Grant's Plua ahopping center. Spokesmen ror the finn said that the specific plans for the major townhouse project would come later -after the an- nexation Issue is rHOlved . All of the city•, annexaUon actlvltl<I In recent years haa ta.ten place in that aame are11. A re<ent shltt in Jurlsdlctlon yielded about 20 acres more lo the city and t.:aat property, too , will eventuaDy be developed for coodomlnlum uses. Sarr Cle~ente · already lw declared that setlioh within lta annexation sphere of lnnue.nce In a map filed with the local A8tncy Formation Commission. The, latest annex attempt a!' well must PflSS that ume county commission before it becomes reality. terminal facilities further north In· Orange County the t~·o would be con- nected by a high speed ground transporta- tion system. However, the economic base generated by the airport would be centered around the terminal, "and that's devious , as you can well see," he said. Bresnahan cited a study on air transportation needs within a IQ-county area which said that if quiet jet engines were available by 1985, El Toro would be ' ' OAllY lf'tLOT Iliff P'Ml9 Runner R11nnl11g Who is this man? \Vhere is he running? Why? Co u Id you keep up with him? To find out. see Page 15. Gh·l, 2, Trapped In Washer Dies · A 2·year-old Buena Park girl who was found Tuesday locked in a washing machine with her four-year-old brother. died Wednesday at Orange County Medical Center. Little Kelly Ann Ray of 7075 Hoover Way died despite efforts of doctors in the medical center intensive care unit to revive her. Her brother, Steven, 4, was also trap- ped in the washer but recovered after being glve:n oxygen by a fireman. The mother of the two children ~1rs. Catherine Ray was aleeplng at the time and w's alerted to the plight of lhe tots by another son, John, I. Slight Dribble Causes Problems Wednelday evening'!! brief showc.rs yie lded only thfee.bundreths of an Inch of rain to p()rtiona of the South Coast, but the dribble was M10ugh to cau9e 90me problems. Soon 1f\e.r the rain started to fall San Clemente Police noted two automatic ala.rmt-0ne for Ore and the other for bur1lars -lighted' up at private buslneses. Rain caused both problems. At •bout the same Ume electMcity went off In the extreme northerly area of the city and a few minutes later patrolmen dlscovered the source. Rain apptrtntly cau9ed arcing of wires oo a ullUty pole at Boca de la Playa, set· Ung the post ablo2". UUllty CrtWI quickly "'paired the damage. !he better or the two locations ror an airport. Tu·o cvalua1ions were made, the "Systems Concept," which considers airport development under conditiorul of acceptably quiet and clean jet engines, and lhe "Alternative'' plau which con- siders airport location under the absence of acceptable equipment. Pendleton was not recommended under either of the two criteria, while El Toro (See AIRPORT, Page Z) Park Report To Be Heard At Hearing By JOHN VALTERZA ot ltllo D•llY P'llel lt•ft A major master plan showing hlllldreds of campsites, bicycle trails and a special surfing beach at San Onofre State Park will come up for a public hearing in Los Angeles Friday morning. The bearings. conducted by the State Parks Commission, will examine pro- posals which were prodded on personally by President Nixon earlier this year. The chief executi\•e has become chagrined at asserted slowness tn developing the six miles of beach and 2,300 inland acres be granted to the public last year. The proposals, a complete plan for development or the park parcel, will be aired at 10 a.m. in the bearing room or the state building in downtown Los Angeles. The plan calls for construction of campsites ranging from group ac- commodations for 100 persons to single, rugged camp areas accessible only to hikers and bicyclists. The most primitive camping areas will be clustered deep inland at the norther- ly portion of San Ptfateo Canyon. Picnic areas will be developed at the downcoast edge or !he upper canyon along the shores of San Mateo Creek. In the coastal area of the canyon, S30 mere campsites are proposed. Much of the remaining canyon acreage will be retained as an agricultural p1 eserve to be fanned under leases: already in effect. On the actual coaslline wrested last year from Marine Corps control, the former San Onofre Surfing Club beach will be opened for surfer.i only with park· inc area sufficient to hold 550 cars. On the bluffs above that beach more campgrounds -150 of them -will be developed as well. The beach downcoast where public use already is pennilted will be !he least (je... veloped . wilh blufftops remaining in their natural state and access to the beach af- forded through steep foot trails. Jn some small beach terrace areas. primitive campsites will be offered to lhe more hardy or beachgoers willing to haul his gear on foot up and down the arduous trails. State parks ofliclals. retp0ndlng to the prodding of Nixon. already have set aside funds to bring piped water to the total park acreage. Sanitation services apparently wUI be se rved by entities outside the city of San Clemente. The city will sell the potable \.•:aler, however. Ornnge Coast \\'eatller The storm clouds arc disappear- ing ond mostly sunny wealher is cipecttd for Friday. Temperatures wlll range in lhe mlddle to upper 708 with the low tonight 58. INSIDE TODJ\Y Court orders umn 4·utar-old girl.J bt plGcrd for adoption ~ cawt their mothtr htU nch a low IQ thoi 1he can't gjt:1e them proper care. Ste story, Page 24. LM. •m t• C•ll"'"'la U (........ ... t-IH 41 c....-ni 41 O..lfl ~lk" n ltll9r .. I """ • .Rltl'll""""'"' tt•4J '1n•nee ,..,,. '""' .. ....... lt "--1t Allll L•IMI.,, U ... WW. ,. -.... Mm.-1 P' ... art N•li.MI ..... 4.1 Of..,. c....tY U. IJ ._ -tfMll ............ .,.....,... . --.... ·-. w-••....,."41 WWII..... t, I 2 DA IL Y PllO, 5C Oktoberfest~ Tavern Di cl11 't Watcli Clock A susr1crous trYtne oUicer raided a tsvem AftB 2 a.m. dosing Ume, \\'hen sounds of 1nerry !!iDng and cllnii.lng glasses suggested a bol!U.e.rous but ~·erbolen <>ktobertest 111i1.:l1t be roar1ni; along Inside. ln\'l'st1~ator-: ~.'.lid tot.i:i~ that I atrolman Harry EbrHch wu routlocly r:i!l ilng lockl•rl <h"ir .. lr1 a shopµ111g cl-ntcr at 2·45 a.m .. when loud nol.se at· 1r11c1cd In ~ ::it1C'n1ton. ··orF;;\1 l'P I\' tllE 11:1mc o! the J~n1 ," l.l· h.'liled, or :i.omcthing to that el· f Ct;'L Of.1rer J·:r.r~,,h cl:ii1-:1N U,e L(l\t \.\:t!; unl.'.lt<'heri by a young maiden 11 it h bf>er on h,•: U~,Jth :1:111 ht~ t'11ntroot tJ ~C\Cral Qlh!!r persons, \\hOm ht de· &.nlwr. u~ •1,r1Uu<s !Jut ~Ull rath~r rela.\cd. "L\~l'~CTIO~ or t"o ,,f the rnu~s present rtvt>aled residue of 'luke-<."Old' bec1 111 1hc hot;l1rn ,'' hl' alle;:ed, suggestmi; U1ty b.1dn 't bet>n emptied long. Ii .-i~s..14.LI :l 11amc1; -in c-asl' thrv simply for~ot to 11a tch the clocl-. - but fori\:ad,·t! •• lvrm.JI report to lh~ st.ite's A1L'OhOI Bcverai;e Cootrol Board. Surprise Testimo11'' Turne1· Calls Himself A 'Retired Motivator' CLF..\R\\'.\TEI\. Fl1:1 tl'PJ) -Glenn ,V. Turne1, cl£>scr1bing himself as a "rt'tirl'd motivator.'' took the stand in his o\\·n defense today at his securitie:; sales \;iolation trial and said he wanted to '·tell it like it is." In a surprise move, the 38-year-old Orlando n1illionaire promoter was the first witness cal led by the defense . Turner \\'a S asked by defense attorney J11mes Russ what his occupation \.\'as and said: "! am retired. I retired in March. Just call me a motivator. I own several companies and f go around lhe country Reinecke Says State to Delav • , ln1part Enf orring Lr. r.ov. Ed Reinecke announced that the California Supreme Court has agreed lo delay for one week enforcement of its decision that private construction firms must make environ mental impa c t statements on new projects. 'I'he announcement was made Wednes· day in Sacramento at ii.ale Attorney Generl!J Eve\le Younger met. in Los AnPlti toda y with county coWmels end city ilttorneys to try to clirify the decision that has brought new con· , struction to a virtual halt in the state. Reinecke expressed hopes that the ~gislature would a~~kly to tjarify wl'ich ~IOll p · neel! lo h>ve impacl: statements ind t.rhi,t.. those statements must contain. Ugislalors are scheduled to re4'fti to session in the capital Nov. B. , He sa id the court agreed to wait tm til Oct. 27 to vote on a motion to rehear the case. The delay of the vote means that . the decision cannot be enforced until the , justices decide if they will hear the case again. A source in the court said today that il is not likely they will rehea r the case "'hich was brolight before the court by lhe F-riends or J\.1ammoth and the Sierra Club over const ruction of condominiums at ~1ammoth Lakes. As Reinecke made his announcement in Sacramenro Wednesday. Younger ap- peared before the Assembly Local Government Committee which met in Anaheim as part of the Calffornia League of Cities conver.tion. · He said his sla ff is seeking a stay ()f the Mammoth decision so that local governments can have the lime to v.·ork out procedures for the 1 m p a c t statements. Younger. \\'ho said he "applaud s thf' court's decision". said he has asked the governor's fJfficc of Planning and Research to accelerate ils work <ln statewide guidelines for preparation of the statements. He said he a!SQ plans to ask for some legislative clarific<ition of !he revicv• power of the court on the impa ct statements. Oti.HGI COAST IC DAILY PILOT T~t1 0.•fl9t C1n1 01\ILY PILOT, ,.;111 ""'"(." I• conu1uwcl 111• N1 ... 1.Pr1,l. fl pVOllMM by ~ Or•t>Oe c°"'' Pw1>1l111l/\ll com...,ftY. ~P. r.i11 M l110r11 l •t po,obll""9d, M ..... •l' ""'°""' l"r~•v. tor (0111 "'""· N-rt ••Kft. tt11r1llft\'l!(ltl . llt..::~'F-t1in V•ll•v. L••ll'I• ._fl, l• .. -IS-lobi><k •!Id .!.t n (~..._,.,,, $an J....,n CIP<ll•t no. A lll'Qlt rtv11>Ml tdlllo" !'I w111111>ed .!.e!w•dtv1 •lld -.!.uno1vl. TM prlf'ltl.-1 lllOClll1hlft\'I 1111,.t 11 ti l)(I Wtl l aty SlfHI, CIN!I Mtw, Ct lllor11I•, t.-.M. ltoborl N, W11d P r"'ocl ... t tl'ocl Pt,10lhl\W J ee• JI. c ... ,1 • ., Viet l"re~t '"" Gentr•I Mtll*Qfr Tl.011111 ic.111 .. il TI.011111 A. Mwrphin• MtMVl"'9 E"''°' Ch1rlo1 H. Looi lticht•d 1. N•ll Aititt,.,1 M1.w,1nv ec111ori S.. CleMHte Offke 105 North El C1mi110 11:.,1, 9167? .,_ ,,_ '"'' Mnt : lJD w~~ S•••t• 1'lfWJ*t ••tdl: DJJ H eou,..,.1,0 llllll'ltMOHlll aucti: lfl1S ... ~ Mul""•r• L..-~i m """' "-, .. .,.._ 17141 642 ... Jl1 a..MM ~ .. '42·1•7• s.. c....,. .. •• o.,,.rt ... ~ y,. .. , ..... -4t1-44Jt ~. lfrt, Or...... c.... """"'"" .... CMi"""f, Nm ....., ......... ll1v.lf'•llo"6, .... ,.,... ~ " "'""'"'-,.... ..... fNf 1111 ~ wrfloolll ..-,i.1 •r· Mlt•illl 9f , .. ,...,,, -r. ~ ctot. ,...... •llf 11 Couo Mew. COllltMlt. ~"'°' 1IY uitri9r "-'J _,...,.,, "' -" •J,IJ ,.,....,..,IVI ftllflf1rr *tllllflioflO "'"' ll'IOlltftl't. • making speeches." Prosecution attorneys objected fre. quently throughout his testimony as Turner attempted to tell about bis Dare to Be Great philosophle$. After about 30 minutes. Judg'! Robert L. \Villia ms sent the jtiry out and in· st rueterl Turn<'r n o t to discuss his background or his philosophy. Turner. \\'ho said he conceived the Idea for D<1re to Be Great "back in 1959 when I \\'as washing diapers" said he didn't know how to answer the questions. Then, with his temper showing, he said: "I don't understand why the state didn't come to me and we could work this thing out and not even have a trial. '"'lt looks-like the-government is sup- posed to help business not knock it down." With the jury back in the room, Turner told or how the Dare to Be Great p~ gram was begun and how he got his points across. Turner said the sales men in the pr~ gram are "independent businessmen who ha~ their own licenses and are paid strictly on a commission basis. No WQrk· Ing. no eating." Asked how commission cbeck'I are distributed, he said: "I believe the home office mails him a che<:k direct, but I'm not sure about that.., From Pagel AIRPORT ... was sugg~ted as a con1inental airport under the quiet engines planning . Factors favoring El Toro were said to be o -Location to high air passenger de- mand. -Joint military and civilian use could prolon g the life of El Toro as a military base. -Existing facilities make it the least expensive to develop. -Air traffic control problems are "more solvable" than at other locations. -Ecological Impact would be less there than in either mountainous or coastal sites. Factors against use of El Toro are reported by the study to be : -Continued noise probleJru1. which the report says would not be a factor if quiet engines were developed. -New runways would be required for ro mmercial operations. The report noted that "significant orgAnized Qpposition to El Toro exists based <ln the environ ment a l in-- <:ompalibility of the airport aod local residential neighborhood." Camp Pendleton was not favored by the report because of acceS! transparta· lion cos ts, because of the length of surfa ce transportati on time required to reach the site, engineering. cos t !lx>t~·c<'n $500 million and $1 billi<>n ). and mi\it :iry reluc!unce to release the facili· \y Thr report comments that airport developmenl would force high intensity dl'velopment and high inLensity ground transportation. "Substanti al transportation jams ex· ll"ndlng from Laguna Beach to San Clemenlr <ire foreseen ll.S a pos.<1lble con-. S«quence of development of Pendleton unless comprehensive planning ls ex· 1'Cl~1ed and followed," it stat~. ~ 11ctors favo rinti Pendleton were low lnnd acquis ition cost.• location bet"·een Los .Angeles and San Oleg<. for joint air servt<'f! and control of lnnd use. Brcs n:i han empha!;i1.ed that his office did not formulate the n:pa rt, It was drawn up by a COnJrultant for the Southern California Association of Governments. , 'fhe . S.1ddle~ck Area C'.oordinating Coonc1 I voted to mobllize <lpposlHon to the j<linl use fJt El Toro and authorized a letter be 11ent to Cespua backing his Carnp Pendleton plan. From Pagel ARIES ... scenic spot on a point <lf land overlooking tht city pier. Scvtral local clll7.t:ru dlstr~ ~I the IOAS of the landmrak allcndl'd Wednts- da y's meelln&, bul did not address 1he council. Candidates Can.adi.an Ban1.: $30,000 Otter Address Educato1·s Robbers Sought TORONTO (AP) -c:a..dlan police P""sed a major search lo- d.11y (or rive masked men who iot away with '2$1,900 lD a commando-- style prtelsion raid fJll a downlown bonk. The operation wn!i completed \\'\tilin Sf'Cond5 shortly b<'fore 2 p.m. \Vedne.'iday at a branch of the C.'lnadlan Imperial Bnnk of Com· n1erce on downtown J.'ront Stret>t. It ~·as the biggest recordt"<l cash robbery in Toronto':; history. Ali·hi Try Told ~,At Niguel Trial By JO,\l\'NE RE\'NOLDS Of ... Ot lho ,~ 11•11 ~lort lhan 150 sc!~ool bonrd 1nrmbers and school nd1nmist rators heard JO can· dtclafe') for lour Asscmbh• se<its and n s!ale Senate seat discuss their views on educat ion during a dinner meetinJ: \\'ednesday in Santa Ana. The candidnte forunt \\'3S J1eld by the Oranr;c C-Ounty School Boards Assoc ia· lion. !i1ost of the men st'.'eking offiei! favored Propos11ion 5, v.·hic-h "·ould increase the power ot local school boards. and op- posed Proposition 14 . the \\'atson tax in- itlative. Here in capsule form is What the can· did.ates had to say: Police said the gang Is believed to be from Montrtal. The five operated \.\'ith lightning speed and \\'Ore "<igs and Halloween masks rovered "'1th silk stockings. City League Goes Against Coast lssiie -Robert Badbam. ReJ)'Jblican in- cumbent for !he 71st Asscmblv District noted that "there are only ·so m.any dollars that the people of a 90Ciety are \\'illing to pan \\'ilh for the betterment of that .society. It would be easy for me to teU school adininistrators that you'll get Newport Beach's reso lut ion opposing every cent v.·e've got, but that's jl1St not Proposition 20. the coastl ine initiati-ve on so." the Nov. 7 ballot , \\'On approval Wednes· Jn answering questt0ns from the floor, day by League of California Cities he said he ls opposed to Prop. 14; favors delegates meeting in Anaheim. The sex education and venereal disease educ.a· League is an association or city officials lion \Yber. its controlled by local school boards and parents have. access to the fro1n throughout the state. mJte:ia\s: \\'ill no1 vote to reduce the 66 Newport "-1ayor Donald Mc 1 n n i s pcrcrnt \'O te needed to pass bonds and sponsored the resolution which eondemns tJ:; O\'errides and does not support col· Proposition 2-0 as "an im proper attempt lectl \'e bargaining for teachers. to usurp the authority and right of local -Jim Thorpe, the Democrat opposing go\'ernm ent to plan and control land use Badham cited his experience as a LOS ANGELES -A suspect In th< 15 nul llon Laguna Niguel bank b1u-glary of· fered lU1 Inmate at Los Angeles county jall $30,000 to help cover up his alleged role in the crime, It was testified in a fed~ral court here \Vednesday. Amil Dinslo, according to FBI agent Paul Chamberlain, was willing to pay the amount in return for falsified rerords v.i'lich wollld show he was in Las Vegas over the weekq'ld of March 24--26, the weekend the burglary took place, instead of California. The records, said Chamberlain, were to be supplied to O!nsio by Richard A. Gabrie l. an inmate in counly jail with Dinsio who had an alleged "contact" in· the gambling mec1.'1!. Chamberlain's t est Imo n y came \\'ednesday afternoon during hearings over the admisslbility in court of lape recorded telephone conversations between Dinsio and Gabriel. in which the defen· dant assertedly revealed a plot to murder a key prosecution witness. \\'hat Dinsio didn't know was that Gabriel, a police informant, was in con-- tact with the FBI and was supplying the agency with information on the defen- dant. The content of that infonnnlion has not From Pagel RECORD ... h development 'vithin its boundaries." teac er at Saddleback College and as a councilman and mayo1 of San Juan By a roll call tally of 121 to 74 the forced vault walls totals an estimated $5 Capistrano. He said he would like lo see delegat~ voted to express the league's million. a bedroom tax used to help growing opposition. It is the largest amount of loot ever districts pay for new schools on the same The initiative, if it becomes law, would stolen from a bank, according to law en- basis lbal cities pay for parks. create a statewide Coastal Zone Censer-forcement agencies and world record Thorpe said he opposes Proposition 14; vation Commission and six regional com· keepers. favors.the setting o! minimum sta~ards missions which would have regulat r Up ~ March 28, the W<lrld record st;itewide for-sex---and-vene~ --_ . ___ 0 Y _ ho]g~ '!! the bank burglary category was education: would vote to red uce the bond control over alrcleVeropment m coasm a break·in al-lhe Banque d'Algerie in and override majority to SO percent and anas. Oran, Algeria. A total of $4.77 million "unless something midway between what The vole or the delegates on the final was stolen. we've got now and collective bargaining day of the 74th annual conference of the The crime was committed in October. comes along, I'd vote tor collective 1962 ·~y 150 "plastiqueurs" -terrorists bargaining for teachers.·· league went against an ll-8 vote of know for their use of plastic explosives- -Robert Burke, the Republican In· League directors last month in support of following collaspe of civil order in the cumbent in the 70th Assembly district Proposition 20. African counlry. said his prime concern is the conflict In its winning effort, Newport Beach The w::irth of the toot taken from the between equalizing education throughout had the support of alJ Orange Cost com· deposit boxes of wealthy south coast the state and local control of schools. munit.ies except Huntington Beach and bank customers was revealed in a Los "Proposition 5 has a lot to offer as far as all but five inland cities. Angeles federal court several weeks ago the way I look upon education in Supporting Mcinnis was Mayor Ed before the opening of the trial of three California," he declared. Wade of Long Beach who called the in· Ohio men charged with the crlme. The incumbent from Huntington Beach itiative a "vicious measure." Some of the The value of the stolen property was said he also opposes Proposition 14; other cities aligned with the anti·Proposi· reported by Earl Dawson, a Tustin resi· thinks sex education is strictly a maUer tion 20 measure were San Francisco, dent. to whom the crime alleg~y was for the local board to decide; would not Santa Barba1'8 a"'1.0ceanside. admitted by defendant Chari~ Mulligan. vote to reduce majority ~ to Los Angele&, Mrt' Diego, San J ose, Dawson, a longtime friend of MuWgan. pass bonds and overrides and opposes Stockton and Sacramento opposed the asserted he was told that $5 mUlioo was binding arbitration or binding contracts Newport Beach measure .and the two taken, but that <lnly 13 to 18 percent of with teachers. other large cities, Fres~ and Oakland that figure was actually realized after -Terry Mosbellko, is Democratic con--ab.stained. securities and other property was sold. yet fully been released. Gabrlel. a thin young man \.\'Ith long, bushy h1.1lr, first met Dinsio in Module 2500 <ll the count y jail -a cell block kno"·n l<l be rtsc-rved for "high powered" crime suspects. (•abriel testified that after he received information from Dinsi<l, he contacted the f'BI with the assistance of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. Chamberlain testified that Gabriel "'as instructed to provide the FBI with any information Dinsio might reveal, but to never attempt to "pry" information from the defendant. The FBI agen t staled that Gabriel told him of Dinsio's desire to have an alibi set up and instructed the jnformant to make the necessary arrangements. These included securing a false motel registration from a Las Vegas hotel and hiring a "prostitute" to testify during the bank burglary trial that she was with Dinsio during the weekend of March 24· 26. Chambe rlain told the court. This would have countered testimony from Tustin resident Earl R. Dawson - the target of the alleged murder plot - that Dinsio, along with defend ant' Charles Mull igan visited him dW'ing the same weekeod. Dinsio, Chamberlain asserted, was \l:illing to give Gabriel the $30,000 in stolen stocks and bonds in return for the false documents. The FBI , Chamberlain f u rt her testified. \.\•as prepared to pay Gabriel "a sun1 of money" if he helped authorities locate property stolen l'rom the bank. To date , Gabriel has rceeived "$1.000 to $1,200" from the FBI for hi.s services, Chamberlain told the court. U.S. District Court Judge William Mat· thew Byine, Jr., was ei:pected to rule late today whether the alleged con- versations between Gab:iel and Dinsio may be entered as evidence in court later this week. Victor Sherman. Dinsio's altomey, Is challenging admission of tbe statements on the grounds that Gabriel was working as an age.nt of the federa l gove rnment, in violation of the so-called A-1assiab ruling. Thal Supreme Court df(ision holds that federal agents can not infringe on a defendant's rights following his arrest. When the alleged murder plot was revealed late Tuesday, Dinsio, wbo had been free on $250,000 bond, was returned to Los Angeles County Jail and is being held in lieu of $750.000 bond. Dinsio, who earlier this week appeared cheerful, sat sullenly, his eyes cast downward, during tbe testimonies or Gabriel and Chamberlain. The 36-year-Oid pinball company owner from Boardman, Ohio was arrested in connecti~ with the Laguna Niguel bank burglary June 26 while driving down a street in his h<lmetown. tender attacked Burke, saying he was "politically and philosophically out ()f step "an ertremist" and claimeC that his voting reeord is "an embarrassment to the people of the district." Special Promotion • • • Frot11 Page l PRE SSU RE. • • coun ty are being 'invited' to social ar- fair1 honoring some county supervis· ors .•. the price of these invitations has been $100 per person or $12S a couple. "Invariably, the invitations are follow. ed up by a ph<lne call reminding the recipient of the &1Cial event Understand· ably, the invitee feels compelled to at· tend or at least lo contribute fearing that if he does not his ability to compete for coun ty jobs for contracts will be materially affected. "We believe that such practice is an abuse ()f the public trust and should be discouraged," the letter concluded. Campaign parties are not a new developme nt in the county and have been used for years to raise campaign funds. They are also widely used throughout the nation. Klages, feeling the pressure was becoming too heavy, decided to speak out because he does not do business with the county. He sa id about a dozen complaints have been made to the architects' group tell· ing of pressure being put on them "by pestering ph<lne calls an d rcquest.s for money." . One Santa Ana architect, Ralph G. Allen, said his firm had recieved as n1any as six telephone calls in one day asking for support for Robert Battin, the First District supervisor who is in a tight campaign lo hold his job. lronically, it is Bntin who has been presu rlng the supcrvi.'IOrs to adopt a sufcl lobbyist law which would require all fi rms dolnR business with the county lo riccount for all money spe nt to gain bu~ine11s contracts. The C r a 11 d Jury's letter to the 5upcrvi!Ors stnted. in part, "It ha!J been brought t<l the attenUon of the jury that certitn practlcet in the securing of cam· paif!:n contribuUons In supervlaorJa1 races could be detrtnwntaJ to the bt8t intttest# of Orange County. "The Grand Jury -nlzes the n«d f<ll" monlel to financt1 1 campaign but would recommend that each aupervlaor Instruct his campalgo manaeer not to ei:· ert undue pregure on vendors, land devek>pers 11nd professional people or citizens which might eaUM them to con· tribute for fear of losing their righl to compete tor county Jobs or contractl." The Grand Jury letter was signed by F'oreman Otto M. Sc:hmldlen and did not state that the jury was launching 11 full rcale tnvestlgatlon cf can1palgn con· tributions. · 10 DAYS ONLY Chair or Swivel Rocker froni this Handso1ne Collection Valu es from 199 to 219 Now 149°0 graceful in design and superb construction and are beautifully enhanced by meticu lous tailoring to give you lavish comfort. Yori May Choose Front A Wide Selection Of Beautiful Fabrics H.J.GARRETf fURNffURE PROFESSIONAL INTEP.IOR DUIGNEU Open M011., Thur,. & Fri. Ev•i.. 2115 HARBOR 8LVO. COSTA MUA, CALIF. • .. 34 CAil Y PILOT SC Thursday, Oct.oblr 19, t'n Jobs, ltff!onae BofA Sees 'Good ' State Pro.spect s SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The BanJc of America said California's e c o n o m I c pro- spects are "very good u tor 1973, with proje<led lnc<ooset ~n employment. and peraonal income. The stat.e'1 largest bank. forecut an 8.5 percent In- crease ln personal income, and an unemployment rate averaging 5.5 percent, agninst 6 per«nt In 1972. "NOW TRAT the areospace dustry has turned the corner," the report a a Id, "the dominant feature of t h e California economy will be its slow rate of population growth.'' Under sloWtd population growth and the accompanying i n c re 11 1 e in competitive ~sures, the current rate of business formatioos appears unsustainable, the bank said. Nut year'( prcrit growth alao will be impeded by hlgber costs fo r money, materials and manpower. Tbe bank ..id It also ex· pects moet industries and areas of California to end 1972 with employment gains paced by trade, suvlces and finance , iO!urance and real estate. by TIRltY OAANT, a.Ph This is the wisest rule to follow wheMYer a well- mcaning friend or relative - \vho does not have a mediC!al dE'gree -offers you some "advice" on how tG treat an illness without having to bother calling a doctor. Su.ch advice is almost always rn- corrcct. evron though lt is offered with the best in- tentions. By heed!rtg a friend's "medical advice" and not goi ng to a doctor, yol.l: cou!d lose much valuable ume in getting the proper treatment for your condition. Today's doctors spend many, ma~ years ln medical school and In Internships before they become qualified to practice mediclnt". And unless your friend has bad Identical tnllning and experience, you should fot"iel and Ignore hls 11.dvlce and contact a doctor Instead YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you nl'.!ed a delivery. We will de- llvef' promptly without ex- tra charge. A gieat m,a.ny people rely on WI for their health needs. 'We wt:lcome requests for delivery &ervice and charge accounts. PARK LlllO PHARMACY JSl Hotplt1I RNd Newport IMch 642'-1 SIO F ne Delivery Tax Shellers Aren't For Everyone Are They For You? Tu ahelt.r speciau.t. will eonduct oduce.tional and con· trovenlal di11CU.Uioa.1 present.Ing the varied poaitive and neptive ,.spect.s of tu 111helter inveatinr in R.tlands/Su Bemardh10, Long Buch. Santa Rou. and Walnut Creek. M_.,.tor k • ta tNJttor 1f4C.Wllt wftti • let9ntcltlo••lty p,_1 ... 1 CPA firm. P~htl ff .. tM .ti, uttle nd ,..I ....... er.-et ten Wltw hrNttMHts wHI ~I,,.... The procram will co••r: • What to look for In JOCK! and bfid prom.ma • Tine leJisl11tlon &lld ite ~ff'ect.s on 1972 ' tax 11\elter inve.etment. • When and why you ehould or 11bould not jnveet In tu: •belt.en •What tfpe otinv .. tor i• qU&lletd- flnancialb' u.d emotlogll,y • How the hl&:h tu dedQCtkml a.re ~ Then Y a •10 ch&l'I(• for, tit• m.eed:np Each J>e1'90D attenilioc will receive • tnucdpt. of the P1'0lf'Ul. Meetlnc• er. coordinated bJ Wtchum., Jonu ff: Templeton, Incorporat.;!. member's olth• New York Stoek Exclwlfe.lnc. llDLUtot/IMUDAlnMJllO T--"', Oct. 24 • J:JO l'1' Y~tlll' 111111111 Mfttell 11111 •• ff....., 10 ,., 11.-.. DI''"'°·= 014} 79W'ffil ......... tlllndtif, "-'· 2 . l:Ja,.. Rapdt holll • (Mll!p "6NI c:w.•1111ndr.,......., ,. ...,,._., krft.: oan....,,,. .......... ThnM,, Od. 21 • 1:a!I"" AMftl ,._. • [....,.l•lf'rtttH~ MOO L ~ CettC fflelrwtt (Ot Ramv.wlllfo.: 12111 $17·1461 WAUtUT ClllD "---"·!tow .• • 7:JO"' °' ...... fll•IOltlCl1tlUllll •• N!1tlll.k ll$tolll, l>l'M• r• llllln. • I"'-! (411) IJ7·llOO OVER THE CO UNTE R NASD Llsll"fl fw Wod....Uy, Octobor 11, 1972 • ' <.:OMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST .. -... t"'*-1 ........ CIM C111a ~ ... 11 _., .... u:•+ 1-i 1~1:2 ... • • .. • • • • • - Nurses AnsWer By LAURI~ KAS',1-:R Of .. lHllY ,lltl Ii.It NuntS in the Orange 'County.Long Beach area feel the nfed to learn more about emergency measures a n d cri&.s intervffition, according to a Sur\'ey conducted rectntly by the Regional ~1ed 1cal Programs. Area VIII. based at UC!. "h1y guess is a lot of nurses fee.I inadequate in thi!'," ex· plained Naomi P a y n e • coordinator of the continuing nursing education program. emergencies In I.ht home and neighborhood as well as the ho!pital. lttrs. Payne is refX)nsible for devek>ping a program of COi.i~ to fulfill the needs or registerOO nurses who .,.,;11 be required by state la11i· to have rontpleted additional t"duca- lion before they can be licens- ed in 1977. CLASSES OFFEREll wa:c; answertd by 39 percent of the 10.100 nunes It was atnt w, was an initial effort to learn what the nunes feel their educational needs and in- terest! an. An advi9ory com- mittee of nursing kmders ln the area also has been formed. •·we hope to tailor the pro- gram to the nurses as much as possible," h1rs. Payne ex- plained. Lila flfaples , n u r s I n g coordinator {or the R~1P, ho~' ever, pointed out that the questionnaire resulted in an "interest survey rather than true needs." Although HtUe. tnterest was expressed for geriatrics, she explained as one example, Educational Survey for nurses trained and in- lert8ted in this arta. The majority ol t h o 1 e surveyed are medical surgical staff nurses working in a hospital. Aboot three-fourths or the 25 percent wbo are cur- remly unemployed intend to rewm to "-ork. Most ol the nuroes preferred the morning or evening OOurs of a weekday and AnahC!lm "'a• their favored location for the dasoes which might be in the form of workshops, seminan, IIHH!rvice programs and short-tenn and extension oounes. INTERESTS Social Issues, as drug abuse and rtlatlonshlps with patient and family. rated highly In 1enns of the nurses' interest u well as areas which are ex- periencl~ cbonge, including intravenou.s therapy and technique, JntensJve c a r e • phannaooJogy and care of the coronary patient. But the oo.rses abo said they would like to have offered classes on subjects no t dlrectly related to the patient, a.s basics of supervision, unit management, fUndamenlals of teaching-learning a n d ~ terviewing ski.lls. Mn. Payne sald they are considering counes on ell of the nunes' Utterwta: u well as a course! for lmpltal tn-.9ervice «lucators. Many ol l1-peo- ple, she eaplalned, are not teachm and doni know how to set up a program although much of the infonnatlon nu,... """1 could be pn,.rld«I through the hospitals. In a<lditlon, ahe .. 1d, they may offer some Claues for special Interest groops. One she mentioned would be roe achool bea1th nurses i n cooperation with the Dental Society on what is good dental care !or cblldren. Other program« mentioned by the nursies which were not included in tM questlormaire were laboratory te3tl, nutrl· lion , prevent.Btlve medicine, m e d i c a 1 instrumentation, prepared labor and delivery, pediatric intensive care , epidemiology, Spanish f o r nurses. community agencies and resources and the ex- tended role of the nurse. The e:rtended role ls one of the biggest thing• now hap- pening in the oonlng lield, Mrs. Maples said. She is working on the possibility ol a program being offered ln Coopel atlon wt th the nursing school at California Slate University, Long Beach and the UCI Sdxx>I o t Medicine. 041l Y PILOT 33 Clinic Set . or Kidney Dietitians, public h e a I t h nunes, social workers a1Ki other Po...... intemted in severe kidney disease wlll con- centrate their attention on the Team Approach to Cllnlcol and Nutritional Asped8 of Urem.ia during a wor}ah)p Satunlay, Oct. 21. '!be all-day conlettnee In Orange County Medical Center Audltorlwn will start al 8: 30 a.m. Speakers will discUss the social and emotlooal problems result~ from renal failure. dle<a<y and medical tr.a~ ments and the intm1ction between hOme and hospital Although the requests for counes in this topic area surprised her some\vh&l, she said it is probably because nurses are being called upou more often 10 help i n Although somt e I asses already are being o(fered in the community colleges. she plans lo have othtrs offered at UC!, some through the ex- te nsion program, a 11 hough oone will be credited toward a degree by the 197:1 school year. The nine-page survey, whkh there is a "tremendous need" ---------------------------------------------------- Variety Not Spicy Love Menu Reads No Substitutions, Please DEAR ANN LANDERS: Sorry. l don't agree with your comments to the wife v;ho informed her husband lbat she gets lhe moet. out of their lovemaking when she pretends he's someone else. You said everyone fantasizes to a certain degree and it's nothing lo become Wlglued about -it's the same as daydreaming at night. If a wife has to think about Ryan O'Neal wben she's with her husband the least she can do is keep her mouth shut. I would not be very flattered if I \ di.scovrT'ed that the tea!!IOO my husband was having such a great time was because be was pretending l was somebody else. If he confes.5ed such a thing to me I'd tell him that if I wasn 't exciting enough he couJd go find someone who was. \\'e hear too much these days about weirdos. sv;itch-hillers, wife-swapping, pttp shows., naked mm in cenlerfolds and kooky se:r practices. ~"bat ,_.e need io this counlry is a champion for decency and morality. I had hoped i! \l"OUld be you. Ann Landen. Sorry you let me do1'n. -NO St:.BSTITUTE.S NEEDED DE.AR ~O SliB: ne human mind Is such a.a in&ricate pie-ct ot machiner)· that .... cu .. ,. eDdl7 bow h operates· particolar!y In Ille ..... of oeJ:aal reapoaaes. WW tlll'1ll a penon oa is 1 mysterious mis GI ~ M ""' aa", read, lloonl ud drumed -~ p1., -blU ad pi<cea, to pri-llley are sbred wUll • .-.. Not e1r:t)1Ge can Werme cem.pletr: .,..... ud frank Lalk.. So, I agree wtdl roe, boar:y, IODle people SBO\JlD koep lilelr moallls lilal DEAR ANN LANDERS : Three years a&<> I clipped my [<11•orite column and carried il in my wallet until it is ju.st barely legible. You called it "How to Get Through the Day," and it helped me more than anything I have ever read In my life . Will you play it again. Sam? - Ll.'.'iDA DEAR LINDA' Willi pl ....... Just for today I will Uve through tM MXt 1! boan and not tackle my \I~ life problem at onct. Just for today I wiD Improve my mind. I ...W learn IOlllethbc uehaL I 1'llJ read 10methlng 1bat "t'f!ffulttl effort, thought and conceutrJlt.kla. Just for today I will be agreeable. I will look my best, speak ln a well modulaUd vok:e, be cwrteoas and con- 6idera!e. Just for today I wW oot find fault with frirnd, relative or colleague. I \l'UI not try lo change or improve anyone but myself. Just for today I wlO have a program. I might not follow if Cx.actly, but I will ha\·e It. I wW save myself from two enemies -bll1Tf and i.Ddecisioa. Just for &.oiday r will e:r:ercise my cliaradtr in I.Vee ways. I ril do a good turn ud keep ll a aecreL lI aayone Dads oat., Jt won't COUllt. Just for today I wUI do two things I don 't want t.o do, jast for uercilr:. Jllll for today I wlD. be unatmd. Espedally will I be IUIOfrald IO eojoy wbat b be8atful and belir:tt that as I P,. IO Ille world, the world will give IO .... There is a big difference between cold and cool Ann Landers shows you how to play it cool without freezing people out in her booklet, "Teenage Se:r -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50 cents io coin and a Jong, self-addressed, stamped envelope to the DAILY PILOT. 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SANTA ANA and I 1cro11 fttrn °''"'' M 1111 ~0111 •17·0511 16131 Horbor Blvd. l1er111r of ldl.,.111 N•irl I• lotly't llt!o11•1 1Jt.o4S 70 ....... "71-11 ............ AtJ ~~E'.'M 1811 Wed Lincoln Ave. l1tw1111 Eue.114 •M lroo•hu1tl ""''""'' Jui! 1111 of Fed M11t "'•11•1 7, •. ,,,0 Ml!lble. Dlllo:t llbCltf1I dHllPI --at bil urintll I 4433 Condlewood Ave. Cendltwood Shops ( IOJI from l1•ewofll C.<1t•r1 Pho11e1 6l4-41J4 50 Stores to Serve You LOS ANOlllS IAN ,l:AMCISCO OAttLANO SAN JOSI IACltAMll'llTO STOCKTON MODl!STO ,l:ISNO ...... 01190 l"MOllNIX , ..... "'~"'" OPEN DAILY 10·9 •SAT. 10·6 ·SUN. 12·6 ·FREE DELIVERY· CREDIT TERMS AVAILABU · BANKAMERICARD • r~ASTER CHARGE • ' • • • ! • • • • ' • ' • • • • l • • l • • -t • f . . l , . . . . • , • . • • . • ' • : I I I l • I • • 1 . . • l • . / .. .. .. ·• '• .. . , ·l ' " .• :1 :1 .: . • • • ~ • i l ·1 i • ' ., ·. :· ' • ~ " ~ l • • • I ! I I I l I I I l I l • • No T1·end Shown By Stock Market . NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe stll(k market puttered m neutraJ gear Thursday. . . . There ware no new reports to spur investors' ~opes of a peace settlement, and the announcement ef the gross national product's growth rate for the third quarter fell below some expectations. (See otory. Page 5). Aloo holding hack the market was a report ot a 4 percent decline In September housing starts compared to Aul(Ust, Which was termed "de!Jnltely I negative" by Charles Lewis of Treves & Co. · Lowis also sald some disappointing quarterly earnings reports from brokerage lirmo caused con· ,. ~m among some investors. l ~utM!ity, Oct.obu l •, 1•11 SC D>Jl Y PllOT ;JS O l\'f!ttl Pre51df!tlt SAN FRANCISCO - Richard C. Van Valer or San Jose, president and owner of Van Vleck Realty, has been elected 1973 president of the California Real E 1 t ate Association. The directors also elected • first vice president. C. Larry J{oag of Downey. during the closing session of the 63,000 member group's annual con- vention here. , ..... -tlle&.J "~ """ a-Dig. ,• 38 DAILY PI LOT 1nur1d11y, Octobtr 19. l<Jil Street Losing Power 1971 W ~a Very Bad¥ ~r-· Ask Any V olkwagen Officiat Politics Not Influenced by 'Fortiuies' By DEAN C. l\11LLEH -... pubhc op1n1011 as "·e ll as cam· f\;lcGovt"rn suffered in the ln-(~f'11tt.11 kltMt MIMI/"' Sfnokt EDGARTOWN, Mass. went back to work. "It was the toughest ~·e .. r we've ever bad," sight stuarf PerkiruJ, presldenl of Volkswagen of America, Inc., NE\V YORK -\\'all Street long has been crC'dited v.·1th the power to rnakc and break presidential candidates. pa1gn money. They a r e vestment conlmun ity bl.>eause respected today Just as the in-oi a "lack of interest in and nuenlial Wall Sl:reeter "'as kno"·\edge or ' !hat area. He Don't give a I().count to the Volkswagen. For the last 12 to 14 monthll the West Ceman automaker has been taking a severe drubbing in the U.S. auto market. -Take it on the chin as critics slam-banged 111way at the purported u~re ~tntus of the cars it was selling. respected in the I9'20s. • also thought ~·I c G o v e r n ' s official importer -and he 1neans ii. ONCE ACTIV E Den1ocrats, emphaslS on "t.a x justice" rather thnn "getting the That no Jonegr IS true, ac- <.'Ordl.Ilg to .John L. Loeb, Jr , co-managing parlner of Loeb. Rhoades & Co., New York . And he has the credentials to make such a statement. Loeb, Rhoades, a large invrstmc11t banking and brokerage house, acco unte<.1 for 4 pe rcent of the New \"ork Stock Exchange volume last vear. And h;-~ granduncle v.·3s Herbert 11. Lehman, Democra tic governor a nd sena tor for the slate of New 't'ork. the Loebs now are heavil y in-economy moving" had turned many business. fi nancial and 10\•estment leaders against hi n1. -Face up to a mojor onslaught by Detroit automakers as they unleashed a flood of low-priced m1nicars after the imports. led by Chevrolet's Vega and the Ford Motor Company's Pinto. In 1970, the lasl full~alendar year before President Nixon's FINANCE Phase 1 respoose lo the bn-'----------ports in mid-August, 1971, VW "FIFTY YEARS ago \Vall Street ct'rtainly did influence politics." said Loeb recently <-1t his garden town house in f..1anhattan. "You then had a few men '\•ilh en o r 1n o us ''Fifl!I ~1ears ago. 1fnll Slrl'l't t'l'r• IRiHI!/ tfill inflH• e11ee polifif's.'' fortunes on \\'all Street. They had a Tight hold on industry through investment and con1- me rcial banks. 'fhey had in- fluence .. , But the StrC"et hos changed. says Loeb. a tall. da rkly handsome man of 12. \Yeatth now is in the hands of in- stitutions. such as mulual funds. not i n div id u a I s. Business , in gC"neral. does in - fl uence po liticians. as Loeb sees it. But it's through in- dlvidual business leaders who ha\'c the abiliry lo generate Fi11ance Briefs e Bid Q11nshetl -' LOS ANGELE S -Talks concerning a possible merger . between Ramada Iruis, Inc., of Phoenix, Ariz., <1nd. Recroin Corp. of Los Angeles have been terminated . The announcement said that voh'ed in Republican politics. 'The Loebs r£Cen1ly hosted a fund-raising banquet for John Connally's Democ rats for Nix· on campaign. After suppon ing Lyndon Johnson in 1964. John Jr. !urned 10 the Republicans, probablr ix-cause of the long fnrndsh1p 11;11h N e 1 son ltockerfeHer. the !\e\Y York (;ovrmor. "Since the inv<•stmcnt com· munity is involved in govern- ment, and thal means my fainily and I are. I decided to get act1vf'ly in\•oh·ed." said Loeb. ··So I asked Mr. Hockefel\er ho\\' I could help. Th:.it's how I bcca1ne his special1s1 on a ir and water pollution back in 1966 "'hen the \\·ord 'ecology' hadn't even been invented." The exact title of his job is Chairma n. Governo r's Council of En\•ironmenta l Advisers. To help lhe council. 1.-0eb set up •·a little fou ndation'' and hired a professo r \\'ho had taught hin1 at llarva rd to assist in ad ministrati\e details. LIKE !\IA1''Y young men born to the political arena. Loeb likes the practical side of politics as "·ell as I he idealistic side. Four years ago he was fl delegate lo the Re publican N a t i o n a I co n- vention. This yea r he agreed to ser ve as an honorary rather than regular delegate to open up delegation space for more \\'omen, young people and me mbers of minority groups. Asked \\'hat he thought <1bout Sen. George McGovern 's thances in November, Loeb said he respected !he senator fo r \\'inning the nomination by "sheer effort and image" but doubted that he would v.•in "one out of 10 \¥all Streel votes." He said he thought REFLECTIONS bv Sheffer Reyn ~1. William Isbell , president or:1~---­ Ramada , sind D e I be rt Coleman. a pr i n c ipa11 stockholder in Recrion. had broken off talks concerning lsbell's reportedl y planned purchase of Coleman 's 15.4 percent share in llec rio n. e STOL S!l•ll'm PALO ALTO -Short take- off and landing (STOL) air- craft being developed can help reduce projC"cted air traffic congestion at major airports in the 1930s. N:itional Aero- nautics and Space Admini slra- tion researcher.> told a STOL Technology conference here. A STOL system. operating out of many sn1a!I airport s. can be less costly lhan a congested con v e n Ii o n a I aircraft svstem. L con a rd Roberts Oi NASA's Ames Resea rch Center in nearby "-fountain Vew told 3 O O representatives of airlines. aircraft manufacturers. and the military. e Purl Bo11tl SAN DIEGO -The San Diego Porl District h as refi nanced $22 million in bonds at the new rate of 4 91 percent co rnpared with 6.5 percen t ac- cepted in 1970. A group headed by the First National City Bank of New York and the United Californ ia Bank submitted the lower bid. "Th• greatest pleuur• I know Is to do • good deed by stealth •nd h•v• it found out by •ttident •.•.. " Ch•rlu L•mb '.\!any of us ha\'e had this ex1)(·1·icncc and Y.'C know rxactly \\·hat Lamb means. \Vr clid, not "do our good d1'C'd by stealth•' "ith any hnpc of pe rsonal glory. We Y.ere motivated by a sincere desirf' to ht>nefit someone and fl'l t thRl keeping our idf'nt ity !'<'<-"n·t \\·ould make 011r f'On lribu tion easier to l:H'C'f'pl. Th<'n, Jhrough ~onH.' acci· drntal mf'ans, ,,.v arc un- rnnsk•'d ;is 1h•· author of the i.;11od dN'd. \Vr may perhaps ht' d1sappuintc>d that our s'u b.- 1i•rfu~,.. failed. hut isn't it a 1ilraSfl.nt f<·elin~? Ther!' is a 11iu·adox h<'re. hu1 it is cer-tainly n \'l'ry humn " trait. 0ur di'rp undrrstandin g or h11m0n nN.•d in timC's of i:::rru t rn1u!i .. nnl ~tree:~ l'nah]f's us lu ~l'l'\'I' you b('l1 f'I'. ~H€FF€.R molltTU.1..KV LAGUNA BEACH 976 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY 494-1535 SAN CLE MENTE 15l l NORTH El CAM INO REAL 492.0100 BOUTIQUE Cl .. EANERS AL TlllATIONS & R.lSTYLING FOR. PAlTICULA'l LADIES War11er·Dale Ce11te1• Corner of Warner & Sprinvdale, Huntington B•ac:h 842-2050 HIGHEST CASH PRICIS PAID MYpbe BUX ~~!ffS lllver OOlllN•. . · Ult OlD COIN SHOP 11.00 GOid •••. 35.00 "" a22 r:ore•I A••· 12.90Qotd •••. 21.00 I.IP Le9un1 Bttell ss.oo Gold •..• 30.oo • 111•1 •••nn ,10.00 GOid ••.• 2s.oo • C•tl colt.ct 120.00 Gold . ' •. 75.00 llP p:i.oo Qohl .• 11000.00 • llly•r coin fl't. Over PICt '9'• -""11 ... •fllHll ... o ~lld e ft->ll•lltflo t i ale .......... •1•119• 111.lk I ll 00 .. 11 0.000r,••f• ....... ••.,. .. •Id 111'111•11 H••d p.-nnl••· f)l.,al •• •. latol111 •''" el lof lle!'I ot.:. •••A prtU•I• Yet despite all that was thrown at it, the compmly is still on lt.s reet aod selling its cars in droves. sales in United Slates hit 569,696, an all-time record. Fields Grow "Ills viev.·s." said Loe b. "hark back to the ~fiddle Ages whe n lhe church v;ould ex- co1nmun1ca!e a man if he 1nade money fron1 money. Such an attitude is coun· terproducti ve to our system.'' Loeb believes tax refonns are needed but thinks they "'lttMMth 'NO MORE POWER" John L. Lotb, Jr. should be revi ewed "after the eleetion" to avoid emotional decisions. Consider the [acts. The C<>m- pany ·has had to : -Survive a two-coast dock strike, the first in at lea:il 2Q years, which bottled up tens or thousands of cars and took many months to uncork the pipelines once the dockers -Price its vehicles so they incli.Jded the 7 percent federal surtax, now ended ; and . worst of all ... -Adjust its prices steadily upward to reflect the joint Oo&tings of the U.S. dollar and West Ge rman ma'rk . But io 1971. they wut down to 522,000, and were selling la3t December at the raLe or 27 ,000 a mqnth, a sad figure and significant drop from the' earlier figures "'hen \f\V momentwn was still picking up. LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) ~ The govecnmeAt armoWlCed a program to. expand 18 airfield$ in the country and to mak~ two of them, at Lagos anQ. Port Harcourt, able (o handle · jumbo jels. ' 6% . terest • and 16 Free Services! Come to California ' . Fede Savi 1igs. 60/ Certificate* /OAccount $5,000 minimum deposit. Terms: 2 to 5 years. 5 "Y~% Certificate• el :J 0 Account $1,000 minimum deposit. Term: 1 year. 501 Passbook* /OAccount .Deposit any amount. Add or withdraw at any time. •Annual interest. Corn pounded d~ily. AccounU imured up tG 120,000 by an ugcncy o! the United States GovernmeDt. FREE 0 Money Orders . with $1,000 minimum balance. 0 'fravelers Checks with $1,000 minimum balance. [lJ Notary Service with $1,000 minimum balance. ill Trust Deed Note Collection with $1,000 minimum balance. W Photocopy Service for important d ocuments. Wi th $1,000 minimum balai1cc. ' .a. COMMUNITY EVIllN1, .rs~ CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS f,•o LOAff A••OCll•TIMt NATION'S LAllGEST f [O[IU.L COSTA MESA ARTIST OF THE MONTH OPTIMIST CLUB lltltpll H ..... .....,, • rttlttftt .. Ctf11 M... hr "" Piii •ltf!MM 'l'tffl. w•t Mn kl """""' Ill~. tft -..i WITh 1111 11m1tv •t • ~1 "' "' "trill-'"' Preunt1 ..... ..,..,, 1tt rteeiftilll 111i .. 111:1 1111. 11th ANNUAL OPTIMIST CIRCUS HARBOR SHOPPING CEflTE~ 2300 HARBOR SATURDAY, NOV, 4-1, 4, 1 P.M. "''-llt111tt9tr, • -~. 1t11111t11 1111tfty ""4ltP Mr. Jtflll II""'. 11•1 .... 111\dt II • ,... ,.,_,._,, '"ltW•"lt .... I tMlltllef, Atl l'!Hlllltll •rt If lllltrttl 19 lllM. Mt k llM•"'-tlli, IK/lllca alllll dl*rcMI ltlttdlei, Mr. llt11111tw ha1 ~ ... .,.... .. •11t1n1 •~ ~It ,.-.f"' Mn .. I IMllldlfll llllHt-. Mlt th~ttr lllk fltN .,,., ...,.., tl'lf ,..,.,. 1rc~11ec1, .1t1. Jtftt.r 111 1'111:-, il,rlt'"•· ltalp!I •Ml ~II wife, L•ll .... INllll•lll • .... .. fltli.t.M • FREE [!] Save-by-Mail Postage [1] Exchange Checks [!] Savings Banks [!] Monthly Money Plan ~ Payroll Savings Deduction Plan @] Check Holders · for gift checks. .yRooms tor charitable and educational groups. Where available. ~ Loan Counseling and literature on home, pool, property improveme11t and mobile home loans. ~ lnterbranch Deposits and Withdrawals ' at any of our offices. ~ On·line Electronic ~tant Service Costa Mesa Office: 2700 Ha-Boulevard 646·2300 Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euelld Avenue ne-2222 Orange Office: 4050 Metropolitan Orivl' In Clly Center 639-3033 . . ' . ' " ' 7 1 l 7 I I • Lag1111a Beaeh Today's Final N • .Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 293, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS Niguel Banh Haul Said W orld~s Biggest By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of lftt OlllY Piiot SllH A world record, albeit a foul one. was set over the weekend or March 24-26 in a Laguna Niguel shopping center. It OCCWTed when a team of ·burglars blasted their way into the vault of United Callfomla Bank's Monarch Bay branch and methodically punched (58 safety deposit boxes. The spoils of this "Mission Impossible" triumph over sophisticated a 1 a r m systems and concrete and steel rein--(:( * * ' Co11ncll Report forced vault walls totals an estimated $5 million. It is the largest amount of loot ever stolen from a bank, according to law en- foreement ageocies and world record keepers. Up to lttarch 26, the world record holde_r in the bank burglary category was a break-in at. the Banque d'Algerie in Oran, Algeria. A total of $4.n million was stolen. The crime was committed in October, 1962 by 150 "plastiqueurs" -terrorists * * * Thalia Traffic · Travels 50 MPH The average speed of cars traveling on Glenneyre Street is 4-0 miles an hour and descending Thalia Street it averages 50 miles an hour above the Glenneyre. inter· section, the Laguna '.Qeach Ci\.y Council Jearoed Wednesday night. The figures came up during discussion of proposals for improvement of the Glenneyer ·Thalia intersection, with realignment involving the purchase of a 'Small parcel of property on the northwest corner. The intersection now is controlled by four-way stop olgns and the TOPICS traf- fic study has recommended Installation of traffic signals but this idea was not well·received by the council. Although the comer is difficult to negotiate, said councilman Roy Holm, the stop signs do bring speeders to a bait and any accidents are minor. "The more I think of traffic light s, the Ethel I. Mal1er Services Fridav "' Funeral services will be held Friday at 1 p.m. in McCormick Laguna Beach Chapel for Ethel I. Maher, 390 Mermaid St., who died Tuesday at the age of 70. She is survived by her husband, John F. Maher; a son, Robert La Bonte of Mission Viejo ; and two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth l\1cManus of l\.farlboro , Mass. and Mrs. A1ice Robinson of Westborough, Mass. Mrs. Maher, a native or Massachusetts, had lived in Laguna Beach for the past fi ve years. The Rev. Henry Gerhard of the Church of Religious Science will officiate at the servi~. Entombment will be at the Hollywood Mausoleum . Wo111en less I like the idea," said Holm. "lt cer· tainly could increase the capacity of GleMeyre, but it also could lead to serious accidents wilh spcedi11g cars zooming through trying to beat the lighls." However, Holm said, he would favor realignment of the intersection, with or without lights, and joined fellow coun- cilmen voting to authorize an SRpraisa\ of the parcel needed to straighten out the roadway. Councilman Phyllis Sweeney cast the single dissenting vote in the action, agreeing with the majority Planning Commission recommendation that the re- alignment will not increase safety at the intersection. Other council members accepted the advice of Public Works Direttor fu Thea! to take steps to protect the right-of-way for future realignment before the land is developed. Michael Sohley (If the Citizens' Town Planning Association urged that criteria established in the TOPICS report are not necessarily the most desirable for com- munity living. "The initials stand for Traffic Opera- tions Program to Increase Capacity and Safety." said Schley, "but there's definitely more emphasis on increasing capacity." School Sit-in Ends NEW YORK (UPI) -More than 30 v.thite parents seeking to pre\'ent the enrollment of black children in a Brooklyn junior high school voluntarily ended their thr~ay sit-in a t the school early today. The parents -peacefully and without comment -left the school. JHS 211 , as about 20 policemen and 40 spectators watched. Arising Laguna Gals Hear NOW Officia.l By JAN EDWARDS Of ""' D.lllY l'llot llltf A group of 16 women and two men in- terested In fonning a Laguna Beach branch of the National Organization of Women (NOW) were told Wednesda y evening "we have spent most of our lives waiting ror other people to do things and find our own Jives have passed us by," The speaker, Ramona Ripston , ex- ecutive director for Southern California for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). said she believed women had habitually stepped aside when in a posi· lion to compete with men for jobs since Wcrld War II. Waitlng for marriage, waiting for babies, waiting for children lo finish school and grow up, she said , has been women 's traditional role but has never flt her. Now mam1ed for the sccond time, a mother of three and, "enormously suc-- cessfuJ" in her career, MID Ripston sakt "I have spent a great deal of my lire being sorry I was a womnn. I have spent a great deal ol my life oot going out of my way to communicate with women." Tbe meetlnn wu caDtd by LagunA Beach artist Dolores F'em.11 who hoped to provide coestAI residents with a NOW meetinJ closer than the Orange County IS.. WOMEN, Pago !) ' DAILY l'M.01" la.ti l'Mtl WOMEN'S TIME IS NOW Spe1ker R1mon• Rlpston know for their use or plastic explosives - £ollowing collaspe of civil ()rder in the African country. The worth of the loot taken from the deposit boxes of wealthy south coast mink customers was revealed in a Los Angeles federal court several weeks ago before the opening of the trial of three Ohio men charged with the crime. The value of the stolen property was reported by Earl Dawson, a Tustin resi- dent. to whom the crime allegedly was admitted by defendant Charles Mul1igan. * * * • • Daw son, a longtime friend of !\.1ulligan, asserted he was told that $S million was taken, but that only 13 to 18 pe rcent of that figure was actually realized after securities and other property was sold. A source close to the FBI said it was his belief the Laguna Niguel take was a criminal record setter. He appears to be right. The largest burglary on record before the Algerian caper took place occu rred in New York's l\.1anha ttan Bank in 1878. * * * • when thieves made off with $J million 1n cash and securities. The Laguna Niguel job far surpasses the 1950 holdup of a Brink's Incorporated armored truck in Beston. The tru ck was carrying $2.78 million, of which $1.22 million was in cash. The only robbery that stares down on Laguna Niguel is the thefl of $91878.400 in gold bars that were stolen from the Ge rman national g~d reserves by a com- bine of U.S. military personnel and * * * German civilians in 1945 No one twi eve r been brought to trial° in that case. A statistic that underscores the size of lhl! Laguna Niguel burglary is the fact the $5 million stolen surpasses the $3.89 n1illion lost during all the bank burglam during the :year 1965 throughout the United States. That figure com es from a special state Depa rtment of Justice report "Bank Hohbery in California,'' prepared in 1966. It has not been updated since the time of the original writing. u -tr * I I I e Developers Say They Feel Heat By JACK BROBACK Of ~ Dlll1' Piiot Shift Architects. engineers and 1 a n d developers who do business with Orange County are being pressured to make con- tributions to t h e campaigns of supervisonal candidates, they charged today. The Orange County Grand Jury issued a warning to members (If the Board of Supervisors two weeks ago after receiv- ing complaint frpm the county chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA). Spokesmen for the architects said, "the jury should be aware or a practice which seems to be taking root in Orange Coun- ty. one which we believe is contrary to public intenst and which could lead to the development of a system of patronage in county government. "Architects and engineering firms con- tribute substantial sums to candidates for business reaS<lns," said David KJages. president of the AJA chapter. "Those who won 't buy tickets to $100 a person cocktail parties won't get county contracts." The architects' letter to the Grand Jury, signed by Klages, said in part, "Vendors, architects, engineers and land developers who do business with the county are being 'invited' to social af. f11.irs honoring some county supervis· ors. , .the price of these invitations has been $100 per person or $125 a couple. "In variably, the invitations are follow- ed up by a phone call reminding the recipient of the social event. Unders tand- ably, the invitee feels compelled to at- tend or at least to C1Jntribute fearing that if he does not his ability to compete for county jobs for contracts will be materially affected. "We believe that such practice is an abuse of the public trust and should be discouraged," the letter concluded. Campaign parties are net a new development In the county and have been us~ for years to raise campaign funds. They are also widely used throughout the nation. Klages, feeling the pressure was becoming too heavy, decided to speak out because he does not do business with the county. He said about a dozen complaints have been made to the architects' group tell· ing of pressu re being P.Ut on them "by pestering phone calls a n d requests for money." One Santa Ana architect, Ralph G. Allen, said his firm had recieved as many as six telephone calls In one day asking for support for Robert Battin. the First District supervisor who is in a tight campaign to hold his job. Ironically. it is Batin ~n has been presurlng the supervl!Ors to adopt 11 strict lobbyist IAw which would require all finns doing busints5 with the county to Account for all money spent to gain business contracts. The Grand Jury'11 letter to the supervisors stated, in part, ''It has been brought to the attention or the jury that certain practices In th(! securing of cam· paign contributions In 1upervlaorial races could be detrimental to the best Interests of Orange County. . ''The Grand Jury recognizes the need foT monies to finance a campaign but would recommtnd that ea~h supervbor Instruct hl1 campaign manaier not to ex- ert undue pressure on vendors, land developers and professional people or clllzeM which might ceuse thtm to con- lr1butc for r .. , ol loolog their right to compete for county jobl or contracts." Tho Grand Jury letter was signed by Foreman Otto M. Sdunldlen ond did not CS.. PRESSURE, Poge !I Gift For Park DAM.. Y PILOT Still PllClll Mayor Charlton Boyd of Laguna Beach, right. and Jack Eddy are framed by Ficus Nitida, laurel trees. Eddy is vice president of Kee- Jine-Wilcox Nurseries, Inc., East Irvine. His firm is donating four of the large trees to the art colony for use in landscaping its Main Beach Park. Laguna Council Refers Artists Zone for Study A new zone designed to accommodate the needs of local artists "who feel like getting up and painting at three o'clock In the morning" was considered for adop. Former Hospital Official Admits Taking .Kickback By TOM BARLEY ot Ille 01111' """ ... ,, Former St. Bernardine Hospital co~ troller Robert Ma chan admitted latt Wednesday that he received a total ol S.12,000 in what tht proaecuUon has label~ ed "klckbacks" shortly after h Is em ployers approved a $500,000 kian to a combine headed by LAguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dul11ney. Machan, 50, testified as a prosecution witness tn Orange Count.y Superior Court that ht got a $15,000 c.heck from Daniel llayt1:s, 40. of 82ll Snowbird Drive, Hun· tln~on Beach. within one week 11fter the loan ~·as granted. ' lfe testified that be got a (urther (Set DULANEY, Pl<• Ii tion by Laguna Beach councilmen Wednesday night, but shipped back to the Planning Commission for m i n 0 r clarifications. The council continued lti public he:ir- ing on the M-IB farts and cr11fts manufacturinR) zone to ita ne:ict regular session after spot! lnsi: some discrt>pancics in its residential provi5ions. The zon... would permit all cuslomary R-1 1sin.-ile family residcntlnl u~PS I nlong 1<iilh such in~allations as artist's ~tudio!I. eabinet shops. glass. textile, leather and other era.ft manuf:icturing. It was specifically dt'signed to permit artists and craftsmen tl'J .malnt:iin their residences on the same property \Vhcre they work . llowever, the: council dl'CidNI :i dlscrepancy in wording m!Aht le:ive !he door cpen for 8n ownE'r to build his own residence, along wHh a number of artists' atudlM on the !l.llme property, which could dtJtat the intent of banning mu.ltiple residential use in lhc zone. The ordJnance al$0 w-ould ban ret;i\I lllet In tbe new zone. which is lnttnded rcr application in the Laguna Canyon area north of Big Bend . lt wu oonceded th:it occaslcnnl salts o( lndh1duat art work• would not come undtr thl1 regulation, which Is aimed at prevtntlhf e1cealve traffic In the wnto • Niguel Case Defendent Made Offer LOS ANGELES -A suspect in the '5 million Laguna Niguel bank burglary of· fered an Inmate at Los Angeles county jail ~30,000 to help cover up his alleged role in the crime, it was testified in a federal court here Wednesda y. Amil Dinsio. according to FBI agent Paul C."'hamberlain, was willing to pay the amount in return for falsified records which wouJd show he was in Las Vegas over the \Yeekend o! March 24-26, the weekend the burglary took place, instead of California. The records, said Chamberlain, were lo be suppUed to Dinsio by Richard A. Gabriel, an inmate in county jail with Dinsio who had an alleged "contact" Jn !he gambling mecca. Chamberlain's te s t i mo n y came \Vednesday afternoon during hearings ove r the admissibility in court of tape recorded telephone conversations between Dinsio and Gabriel, in which the defen- d<lnt assertedly revealed a plot to n1urder a key prosecution witness. \\'hat Dinsio didn't know was that Gabriel. a police informant. was in con- tact with the FBI and was supplying the agency with information on the defen- danl. The content of that infonnation has not yet fully been released. Gabriel, a thin young man with long, bushy hair, fi rsl met Dinsio in Module 2500 ()( the county jail - a cell block known to be reserved for "high powered'' crime suspects. Gabriel testified that alter he rece:ived information from Dinsio, he contacted the FBI with the assistance of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. Cham berlain testified that Gabriel was instructed to provide the FBI with any information Dinsio might reveal, but to never attempt to "pry" in fonnation from the defendant. The FBI agent. Sta)ed that Gabriel told him of Dinsio's desire lo have an alibi set up and instructed the informant to make the necessary arrange ments. These included securing a false.motel rf'gistratinn from a Las Vegas hotel and hiring a "prostitute." to testify during the bank burglary trial that she wa s with Dinsio during the weekend of March 24- 26. Chamberlain told the court. This would have countt!t'ed testimony from Tustin resident Earl R. Daweon - the target of the alleged murder plot - that Dinsio. 11long \vilh defendant Cw-Its Mulligan visited him during the tame CS.. AUDI, Poge Z) OrnngB Coast 'feather The storm clouds are dlsappear.. ing and mostly sunny weather 1a expected for Friday. Temperatures will range ln the middle to upper 70s with the low tonight 58. INSIDE TODAY Cotlrt ordtrs ttoiri 4-Vftr-old girl.t bt pl-Octd for adopUon be· cau.tt the ir m.otJ1er h4a tuch. a law IQ th.at she can't give ~ prope.r cart. Set .stor11, Pope, 24. l .M. Int 11 C1ll"'"''-u (MulllM ._ (-1« •1 ,_ .. Dtolltl ffftkft IJ ••ltwMol p-' ..... ,AlllfllMI o.• --.... .... IM llMW'5 II --M """' L .... WI N ' I ' ' . I LB 711ur'4ly, Cktobff J9, 197Z Coa~t Rape Case Probe Sl1ow" Site Continu ing in\ICStigation by Laguna Beach police into the rape of the 1J..year- o/d girl abducted from a city frontage street has narro\\'ed the location of the sex crimes to the Sycamore Hills area. Det. Alex Jimenez said today that of. ficers now believe that the girl was taken by the tv.·o men to a. site somewhere between the El Toro Road·Laguna Can- yon Road inl ersection and the Ne\v \Vorld developnient area <>n Rossmoor Corporati<>n property. Officers have also local"!<! a hamburger stand v.•here one suspect in the kidnap, rape and robbery of the young girl "'as dropped off as the victim was driven to the Hollywood area follo"•ing lhe crlme. The giri from Covina '''as visiling Laguna Beacl't relatives ~·hen the kid · naping occurred. She had been v.•a!king to the Canyon Acres home "·here she and her mother were staying v;hen an off-white car iden- tified as a Ford Falcon stopped and the passenger exited, grabbed the girl strik- ing her on the face ""ith a large rock and pulled her into the car. The alxiuction took place at about 8 p.m. Sunday in front of the Boys' Club area. Carole Hanson of El Toro, \\"ife of \\·ar prisoner Stephen J.lan so n and outgoing president of the largest organization of :\.merican PO\V fam· ilies, says she's endorsing President Nixon for re-election. Mrs. I-fan· son says she's ··disgusted'' \\·ith Sen. George tt1cGovern's plans to end lhe \1>ar. Suspects are described as about five feet. nine inches tall and weighing about 150 pounds. Both had dirty blond hair. about shoulder length. and were belween l6 and 20 years old. according to police. St. Mary's Cl1apel Decisio11 Delayed 60 Days in Laguna From Pagel WOMEN ... headquarters in Anaheim. She welcomed the men and women, saying: "we'll be glad to have you as sisters ••. we will bring to the attention or the city ratbers of the city of Laguna Beach the fact that we are here. S: 'lary's Chapel should be given anotbe r 60-day stay of execution. the Laguna Beach City Council agreed \\'ednesday nigh!. Reinecke Says State to Dela)' • I Impact Enforcing Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke announced that the California Supreme Court has agreed to delay for one week eri{_~rcement of its de0l$!<0 tbot j>livate ~~ l!nns must make -envlronmeMal tlft. p a c t statements on new projects. . The announcement was made' W,ednes- day in Sacramento at state Altorney General Evelle Younger met in Los Angeles today with county counsels and ~ city attorneys to try to clarify the • decision that has brought new con- struction to a virtual hal t in the state. Reinecke ~pressed hopes that the Legislature would act quickly to clnrify which construction projects need to have impact statements and '~1hat those statements must contain Legi slators are scheduled 10 rC'tu m to session in the capital Nov. 8. He said the court agreed to Ylait until Oct. 27 to vote on a motion to rehear the case. The delay of the vote means that Ille decision cannol be enrorced until lhe justices decide if they ·will hear the case again. A source in the court said today that it is not likely they Yl'i ll rehear the case which was brot;ghl before the court by the Friends of Mammoth and lhe Sierra Club over consl ruction of condominiums at Mammoth Lakes. As Reinecke made his announcement in Sacramento Wednesday, Younger ap- peared before the Assembly Local Government Committee which met 111 Anaheim as part of the California League of Cities conver.t1on. OIAN&I COAST LS DAILY PILOT 'nl• Or ..... Co11.1 l),liJLY PILOT, will! """!{I\ lo umbl!lld !!>e N-J.P•f:ll. I~ publllh<'d bf -0r....,.. (Mii Publltllln; COlnlMnY. St- ,.,. ldfllont 1r1 pUblllh~, MDrldll' lllrou~ll Frld•I', for Ctn!I Mttl, Ntwiiotl lie.cl\, Hllr!ll"°'""' llNCl\/Faunt1ln V•llrt, LIOIJfll •Nd!. lrYlnclS.odl ... ck 11nd Stn C,...,..,te/ Sift J11111t Clp~tr1110. A. 1!1111le "'lllc>nll edlllo!> 11 Pl/b!lsl>ed S1!urcU~1 ind Sut"U )'S. T ... prin(lpll P11t>U1lllf>O Pllnl It 11 lJO ~I Illy Sir"'• Ca111 Mfla, CalllO!'nl1, f"». Rolr1,f N. w,,J Pruldent Af!d Pubn~ J1t.• R, Curl1y Yke ..._ld.,I Ind Getttr•! Ml'ltttr Thom•• IC11 ... a e.cnrot Thofll'llt A. Murpliin 1 MIMlllllf l!d!llH Cherl1-1 H. Loot Rit.li1r4 I , N 111 ANli-Ml11tlii'"1 1!41'°" Lat ....... Offk• lll for11t A"fftv• Mei1rn9 Ad'r•1t1 r.o. 1011 '''· tl6Sl --C..t• M ... : m Wftt ..., Str• N=lfldl1 lUS H....,_, ...,..'"' HIJll'll ~: 1117$ •11<11 llOVl .... 1'11 JM! Ml as Jrtwnl l!I ~ Jl:MI Tt1 ... •1r1 CJ141 64l-4J21 Cl•"'-4 .4'""'91 .. Ml·1671 ~ ........ .,.,.,._...: TaN,••• 4f4·f4U °"""""''· '"'· Ortfltll co..i l"llbfllfllna (;ompMV ~ '*"" sfffln. 11¥tlfl1'-· •illlrlll '"""""' ... ,..,..,,,,"""'" llt'f'flfl ~y .. ~ •ltrlout ..,.Ciel .., • ...at ..... ~__.. i«d Cl.-,..,.,, .W Al (•II MfM. """'°'"\t. ~-'!wt "" ''""' 11." -ltlll'J iw NII u ,1J. mont111Y• mlllrlrv dlflt!M'*-'1116 """"'IY· J A public hearing on the city's latest at- tempt to abate the chapel as a public nuisance and safety hazard produced a consensus that the building is indeed dangerous. But senior warden Jean Bedell assured the cotuicil engineers that geologists have been hired to examine the structure and a solution will be proposed as soon as their reporta are completed. The hearing was continued to Dec. 20. The chapel behind St. Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park Ave., was spotlighted as an Art Coklny landmark following publication of news that the city was seeking its demolition, and attempts have been made by the Laguna Beach Com· munity Historical Society and others to save the quaint structure. The posaibility of receiving any govern- ment funding for its restoration is "very slim," Planning Director Wayne Moody told ~h~ council Wednesday. Builder Bernard Syfan, a member of the church vestry, said he had followed the chapel's problems very closely. The plaster walls. he said. are bound together with horsehair, which seems durablt enough, but the major problem is sli~ page of the foundation. "r inspected it the morning after the earthquake and found a number -0f cracks in the ceiling but no real damage. Still, I wouldn't want to be in there dur- ing a quake," said Syran, adding that he does feel the chapel ca,n be salvaged . Bedell said his engineers have betn digging around the foundation seeking the cause of the slippa ge, which he fears may extend to other structures in the church complex. "We plan to drill ror bedrock.'' Bedell told the council, 1'and if it's more than five or six feet down, we have an enormous problem." Building official James \Vin ter. who issued the abatement order. said the Buildi ng Department was foll-0wing legal procedures by calling the pul:>lic hearing. "This building was in trouble back in 196.1." he told the council. ''The city ha s been involveU sioce 1970 and no work at all has been done . My conversations v.1ith engineers and geologists confirm that a dangerous problem exists. and it prob- ably extends to the rectory as v.·elJ." The chapel , built in 1925, has not betn used for the past 10 years. Church :i uthorities have considertd dismantling JI by hand and resl-0ring ii on the site, but 1t is eslimated this v.·ould be as ex· pensive as demolition and t o t a I reconstruction. "We are not going to be ·a bra-bum.mg group· . :-: ~we --irave~more · important things, to do, some deep thlngs we are trying to accomplish," she added. l\fiss Ripston told them her experiences and what being a woman in 1972' meant to her. "I now realize most women of my generation ... feel the same things and ha\·e thought about some of these things. J go out of my way to spend time with women .'' Atiss Ripstco stated. "I was consumed with guilt when 1 began v.-orting after my first child was born, so I stayed home. I was unhappy and unable to ve~ that unhappiness. r was very resentful of my husband when he "·ent out in the morning." Her guilt subsided, sbe recalled. when she took a job over her husband's ob- jections following tbe birth of her third child and .. found I was capable of sup- porting myself and that I bad the energy needed to carry myself through." The::..; experiences have shown her that being a woman has helped her in her career. She chose to compete against 25 men for her present job with the ACLU and claimed "the ACLU is far beyond the consciousness ol the average company" in its fairness in considering women as employes. A woman, a black or a Chicano was sought ror her position, and t.liss Ripston said she-was chosen because she had more experience. Being a professional "sometimes means making. choices" between working and carrying on women's equally· legitimate roles as wife, compan}Oo and mother, she declared, urging the Laguna group: "do not restrict yourselves to that." "The responsibility for rearing children must be divided among the people - women and men alike." she said, adding "there is nothing that will help (this decision-making) more than day care for children." Have direclion, get women to run for as many o£fices as t>OSSible ("until there are more ~·omen legislators, we will not see many revolutionary I e g i s I a t I v e changes") and communicate rather than compete with one another were S<ltne goals Miss Ripston suggested to the new group. "Hold onto your gains ••. and do no! slip back," she added. The women discussed how the m«iia treats women solely as noor·scrubbing. beauty-conscious beings, the Equal Rights Amendment now pending in state legislatures and the lack of young, ~·omen legislators acr~ the country. Laguna Council Action llere, in capsule form. are lhe major actions laken by the Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday night : NE\Y ZONE: Continu~ a hearing nn estnbllshing the new ~1·18 (a rts and crc1fts manufactur ing) ione pending cl11riflcat.ion of residential provisions in the zone . ~ . ~'OOOLANO : Adopted ordinance amend mcnls restoring residential zon· 1ng in the \Yoodland Drive area. ~PEL: Continued until ~-20 a hearing on proposOO demolition or St P..tary s Chapel to perm.It dlscus.•uon of restoration plans betw('('n church and city officials. CORNER : Aulhoriud appraisal or hind 1t the corner of Glenncyre and ThaJla Streeu considered fol' acquisition In re-aUgnln1 the lntcneetion. SUBSTANDARD: Pa&'Jed to !JeCond reading ordJnance amendment.,, requtr-- ing owners of adjacent substandsrd lots to comblne them into conforming building sJt~s. / ALARM: Aulhorittd establl!hment of an txpendcd burglar alarm monitor- ing !iyslem In Jhc police department. · MVENUE: Set a Dc!e. 2 study session lo di5CU1s disposition of Federal revenue sharing funds due the city. Political Gifts $4 7 ,500 Donated By Lincoln Club Nobel Whu1er West German novelist Hein· rich Boell is 'vinner of the 1972 Nobel Prize for literature. See story on Page 5. Frona Page J DULANEY ... $17,000 in checks from Riverside broker \Yendell Warren Austin, 38. Both men, with Machan, Dulaney, 38, o! 26.11 Via Cascadita, San Clemente, and James Shipley. 38, of 16951 Lov.·ell Circle. Hun1ington Beach. '"·ere indicted "·ith ~lrs. ~!arlene Dulaney. 32. on charges of grand theft, fraud and conspiracy. Prosecutor Stuart Grant has dropped all charges against ri.1achan in return for the veteran a('countant's cooperation as a prosecution \\'ilness. The current popular Orange cOun1y ga1ne titlt.'<i '•\Vho ls Giving \Vhat ~loney today with the disclosure of legally 10 \Vhich Political Campaign?" continued required reports to the county Registrnr ur Voters . The Lincoln Club oC Orange County grabbed the spotlight with the admission that they have given $47,500 to four candi· dates and five political action groups. Candidates them.5elves are required only to rue individual contributions of more than $500, aceord.ing to the law. First District Supervisor Robert Battin lopped Ille supervisorial candidates with contributions totalling $22.900 to date. ~Is opponent, Santa Ana attorney \Vil· hatn Wenke, listed only a personal loan From Page I PREfSURE. • • state that the jury \Vas launching a full scale investigation of campaign con· tributions. In addition to Battln. Third District Supervisor William Phillips is engaged in a tough campaign to hold his job with challenger Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton. Battin's opponent is attorney William \Vt>nke of Santa Ana. Phillips and Diedrich have not used the cocktail party method of raising ca1n· paign funds but Diedrich \\!ho received 10,000 more votes than Phillips in the J une primary has boasted of "drying up Phillips' money" by warning his sup- porters in previous campaigns that he would be unhappy to see their namts on Phillips' campaign con t ri b u ti on slatements. of $5,000 to his campaign. Third District Supervisor Willi am Phil· lips of Fullerton admitted receiving $4.671 contribullons -0{ more th an $5 each inclu'd· ing a $3 ,671 donation from the Orange County Committee. for Good Governme nt. Ralph Diedrich, Phillips' opponent llsl· ed but three contributions of more than $500. They included the Rossmoor Corpor· ation, developers of Leisure World , $1 ,000 : Morri! Silvennan, SI,000, and ShapeU Jn· dustries, $600. Batun said hb list included funds raised at two teslimo.nal dinners. Other contri· butiOW> included Dr. Louis Cella, $1,200: the doctor 's Santa Ana clinic, $2 ,500: f\.1ission Community Hospital, $1 ,000: Fred. Harber, $1 ,000 ; Orange County A-fedical Supply, $2,000 and the Central Orange County Taxpayers Associali-011. $1 ,500. Dr. Cella and Jtarber have been identi· tied as Battin's political mentors and the scrca \Jed taxpayers association is headed by Cella. The Lincoln Club gave $9,750 lo Wenke: $5,000 to state Sen. James Whetmore: $5,000 to Phillips and $20.000 to Republi- can a~bly candidate WiUiam Danne· meyer. Moot of the Lincoln Club's donations \vere given before the June primary and so are not listed on the candidates' state- ments filed Wednesday. Wenke said S4.000 of the $9.750 reported by 1he polilical club "·as received before June 6 so was n<it reported this time and that he had only received $1 .000 or the balance. The supervisorial candidate said he "'ould not accept further contributiOM rrom the club because its method of re-- porting confused the public in that it did not sh-Ow a breakdown between primary and general election donations. ~1achan will go back on the witness stand Tuesday after a five-day break in the "Taj ~fahal " trial to re sume his ac- count of an alleged conspiracy that ended with the hospit.al's thra. directors -au Roman Catholic nuns -drawing $500,000 frorri...J.hei1: ... I~~rve .account. Machan agree0With~tne-nrrn:r~116 preceded him -0n the witness stand that pron1ises by Dulaney and Shipley to in· crease their intert>st rate from five to 10 percenl had a great deal to do with that decision. FronLl'.ag~e~A~- ALIB 1 • • • --G-~l,--2, Trapped_ In Washer Dies The loan remains unpaid toda y. And the stoc ks handed to the nuns by Dulaney's World Securities operation - 250,0IXl'shares of Azalea t.1obBe Homes - stands condemned by the prosecution as worlhless collateral. Clock Goes Berserk KENDAL. England (UPI) -Villagers who keep their lime by the town hall clock have become a btt confused in the last few days. One broken peg in the clock's liming mechanism means it strikes 36 times at breakfa.&t time -and 63 times when the hour comes to stop tor eftemoon tea. v1eekeod. Dinsio. Chamberlain asserted. \\'BS v.•i!ling to give Gabriel the $30,000 in stolen stocks and bonds In return for lhe raise documents. The FBI, Chamberlain further testified. "'as prepared to pay Gabriel "a sum of money" if he helped authorities locate property stolen from the bank. To date, Gabriel has reeeived "$1,000 to $1.200" from the FBI for his services, Chamberlain told the court. U.S. District Court Judge William Mat· lhew Byrne, Jr., was expected to rule late today whether the alleged , con- versations between Gab;iel and Dinsio may be cnlered as evidence in court later this week. A 2-year-old Buena Park girl who wa! found Tuesday locked in a washing machine with her four-year-old brother. died Wednesday at Orange County Medical Center. Little Kelly Ann Ray of 7075 Hoover \Vay died despite efforts of doctors in the medical center intensive care unit to revive her. Her brother, Steven, 4, was also trap- ped in the washer but recovered after being given oxygen by a fireman. The mother of the two children Mrs. Catherine Ray was sleeping at the time and was alerteU to the plight of the tots by aoother son, John, 6. Special Promotion • • • 10 DAYS ONLY Chair or Swivel Rocker from this Handso11ie Collecti-On Values from 199 to 219 Now 149°0 .. g-aceful in design and superb construction and are beautifully enhanced by meticulous tailoring to givo you lavish comforL Yo11 lllay Choose Fro111 A Wide Selecti-On Of Beautiful Fabrics H.J.GARRETf fURNffURE • r • • '• ' Saddlebaek TOday's Finni N.l!. St.eeks VOL. 65, NO. 2'13, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS Irvine Coalition Formed to Defeat Z,one Bid By GEORGE LEIDAL Of Ille O.llY Piiot Sl1ff A new "Jl?litical action" organization -Irvine Citizens Coalition -announced its formation today and vowed to seek a referendum to reverse City Council residential zonlng of the 70-acre Harker- Rlr.ker Development Company parcel near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Charles Huegy of 18112 Mann St., University Park, said members of the group are "still not certain how Irvine Developers Say The y Feel Heat By JACK BROBACK Of llM CNlllT Pl"' 11-ff Architects, engineers and I a n d developeh who do business with Orange County are being pressured to make con- tribuUon9 to t h e campaJgns or su~isori.al candidates, they charged today,--, The Orange County Grand Jury issued a warning to members of the Board of Supervisors two weeks ago after receiv- ing complaint from the county chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AJA). Spokesmen for the architects saki, "the jury should be aware of a practice which seems to be taking root in Orange Coun- .ty, one which we believe is contrary to public: interest and which could lead to the development of a system of patronage in county governmenl "Architects and engineering firms con- tribute substantial sums to candidates for business reasons," said David Klages, president of tho AJA chaptor. "Those who won't buy tlcketll to $100 a person cocktail parties won't get county contracts:." Ttie architects' Jetter to the Grand Jury. signed by Klages, said in part. "Vendors, architects, engineers and land develope rs who do business with the county are being 'invited' to social ar- faln honoring some county supervis- ors .•. the price of these invitations has been $100 per person or $125 a couple. "Invariably, the invitations are follow- ed up by a phone call reminding the recipient cf the social event. Understand- ably, the invitee feels compelled to at- tend or at least to contribute fearing that if he does not his ability to compete for county jobs for contracts will be materially affected. "We believe that such practice is an abuse ot the public trust and should be discouraged," the letter concluded. Campaign parties are not a new development in the county aod have been used for years to raise campaign funds. They are also widely used throughout the nation. Klages. feeling the pressure was becoming too heavy, decided to speak out because he does not do business with the county. He said about a dozen complaints have been made to the architects' group tell- ing of pressure being put on them "by pestering pbone calls a n d requests for money." One Santa Ana architec t, Ralph G. Allen, said his firm had recieved as many as six telephone calls in one day asking for support for Robert Battin, the First District supervisor who is in a tight campaign to hold his job. Ironically, it is Batin who has been presuring the supervlsars to adopt 8 strict lobbyist law which would require all flnns daing business' with the county to acrount for all money spent to gain business contracts. The Cran d Jury's letter to the supervisars stated, Jn part, "it has been brought to the attention of the jury that certain practices in the securing of cam- (S.. PRESSURE, Page!) Councilman Henry Quigley will vote" on the Rinker zoning issue. Tuesday, Quigley gave every indication he would reverse his vote on the Rinker zone change. While he voted for the zoning to place 500 homes underneath the east:west runway or El Toro just 10 days ago, Quigley now is expected to contribute to the zoning's defeat wben the council acts Tuesday evening. Nobe l 1l'inner \Vest German novelist Hein- rich Boell is winner of the 1972 Nobel Prize for literature. See story on Page 5. Su perinte1ule1it Gets Demotion, In Sa n Jo aqui1i By CANDACE PEARSON Of tlM Dalh' f'llllt Stlllf San Joaquin School District trustees \Vednesday night after an hour-long ex- ecutive session demoted Ralph Gates. the first and only superintendent the district has knO\\'Jl (or almost 't:J years, to a pure- ly nominal status. Trustees named Gates. 62. who was alret dy scheduled to retire in June, ''Superintend~nt Emeritus." They then promoted A s s o c i a t e Superintendent Richard Welte, who has been with the district less than six months, to Superintendent. There had been talk of giving Gates. who began in 1945 as the teacher-prin- cipal-superintendent of Irvine School, the honorary title after he retired. But the action at this time came as a surprise to a few district officials con- tacted this morning. One source said that Gates mJght not have known about the action. He has been on vacation in Boston for a week and isn't expected back for ty,·o more weeks. Welle's promotion will bring a raise in salary to the fonner Inglewood school district associate superintendent. How much is not known. Welte was not in his office all morning. Gates, who watched the growth or the district from ooe school to tht! 18 which it will have opened this year, has been working closely with the two new unified districts this year. I~c bas attended board meetings of both tbc San Joaquin and the.Saddleback Unified Districts to answer questions and cffer advice. It is expected that he will continue ln that role and remain on district payroll. (See Gl\TES, Page !) Oktoberfest? Ta ve rn Did1i't W £Ltc 1i Clock A SUSPICIOUS Irvine officer raided a tavern after 2 a.m. clos ing time. when soWJr1~ er merry song and cllnk.inlf gla15e3 suggested a boisterous but verboten Oktoberfest might be roaring along inside. Investigators said today that Patrolman Harry Ellrl!ch was routinely rattling locked doors In a shopping center at 2:45 a.m., when laud noise at· tracted bi s attention. •iorEN UP JN THE name of the law," he halJed, or llOtnethlna to that ef. roct. Officer Ehrllch claimed the bolt was unlatc:hcd by a young maiden with beer on her breath and he conrronted several other petlOQS, whom be ~ tcrtbcd as nervous but 'still rather reined. "INSPECl'JON OF two of the mugs present revealed resldue or 'luJte..a>ld' beer In the bottom," ht alleged, sugg..tlng the1 h•dn't been emptied Iona. lie lllUed a warning -tn case they 1fmpty forgot to watch the clock - but forwarded a formal report 10 Ille llate'1 Alcohol Beverqa Cootrol Board. Nevertbelw, coalitk>n members wOO said the Rinker issue speeded up organizational efforts cf the "large, grassroots group"' continued to promise referendum action, shou1d the council give the zoning a favorable second reading. In a press conference today in Santa Ana, Huegy said the Rinker parcel would represent a "clear departure from good land use planning" a goal hereto!ore to have been assumed to be shared by the council majority. Both Henry and E. Ray Quigley Jr. were named akllg with Councihnan John Burton as, members of the cooncil seem- ing lo favor the Rinker zoning which coolitlon members note Vrill subject future l'C$idents to M minutes a day cf jet noise. Huegy repeated today his testimony presented in the se<.'Ond ponlon of the Rinktr :rone bearing, noting that the 110 decibel level of jet noise for 6$ minutes a day Is sufOc:lent to cause "permanent bearing lou." 'lbe coalition vowed that •1JnJess the city council reverses its position (denies) the Rinker zoning," petitions will be circulated. 1be coalition noted members are "not contemplat.ing a recall action" and that any resident of the city would be Invited to join in lbe citizen action oo the zoning. Coalition leaders noted I .SOO signatures \.\·ould be required to call an election, and a spokesman optimistically notes that \\·ere the measure to be put on a ballot. ·votes to deny the zoning \.\'OUld outstrip those favoring it by a "10 to l margin." Officers aOO directors of the newly formed group are: Dr. Arnold ,Blnder, Huegy, Joseph E: Ball, William Lit- tlefield, Mrs. Nori.ssa Brandt, Kei1b Nelson , Dan Lorti, Dr. Irwin Alben, Ange1o Vassos and Robert Smith. Engineer: Ease Growth Supervisor~ Tol,d of Flood Dangers From Land Use Unless strict controls are placed on land development in central Irvine "devastating effects of flooding" will be felt throughout the cily or Irvine oorth or the San Diego Freeway, Orange County supervison learned Wednesday. O:>I. H. McKay Roper of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wednesday unveiled the long-awaited study of the Irvine _.Ranclt _Qood _pla.in._ Th41 are~ is the San Diego Creek waters1ied aiid ft s tributaries inctuding ~er.r Canyon Former Hospital Of ficial Admits Taking ~C~ll.ck "' , .• j i.,: • ~ By TOM B.!ti.BY . Dt llrt O.llV Plltl S'-'t Former St. Bernardine Hospital con- troller Robert Machan admitted late Wednesday that he received a total of S32,000 in what 1he prosecution has label- ed "kickbacks" shortly after his emplcyers approved a $500,000 Joan to a combine headed by Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney. lt1achan, 50, testified as a prosecution witness in Orange County Superior Court that he got a $15,000 check from Daniel Ha yes, 4-0, cf 8211 Snowbird Drive, Hun~ tington Beach, within one week after the loan was granted. He testified that he got a further $17.000 in checks from Riverside broker Wendell Warren Austin, 38. Both men, with Machan, Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via Cascadita, San Clemente. and James Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington Beach, were indicted with Mrs. Marlene Dulaney, 32, on charges of grand theft, fraud and conspiracy. Prosecutor Stuart Grant has dropped all charges agalnst Machan in return for the veteran accountant's cooperation as a prosecution witness. Machan will go back on the witness stand Tuesday after a five-day break in the "Taj Mahal" trial to resume his ac- count of an alleged conspiracy that ended with the hospital's thret. directors -all Roman Catholic nuns -drawing $500,000 from their reserve account. Machan agreed with the nuns who preceded him on the witness stand that promises by Dulaney and Shipley to in- crease their interest rate from five to 10 percent had a great deal to do with that decision. The loan remains unpaid today. And the stocks handed to the nuns by Dulaney's World Securities operation - 250,000 share! cf Azalea Mobile Homes - stands condemned by tbe prosecution as worthless collateral. Floods Threaten Oil Spill Crews MEXICAN HAT, Ulah (AP) -Crews manning draglines and booms across the San Juan River near Lake J>owell in southern Utah looked to the ski~ today ~1hlle rain continued to pelt the area and raise anew the threat of nash Ooadlng. The National Weather Service l!J$Ued a f I a s h · flood warning late Wednes- da y. ma.inly for smaller streams and washes in Washington, Iron. Garfield nnd Kane ccwnlies where radar showed area:s of locally Mavy rain wolch could produce local flooding. Workmen reported extreme difficulty handllng: the swollen river while trying to rid of It of the oil and debris ca.UJed by a major oil spill last week. 20 Held in San Diego SAN DIEGO (AP) -Twentr pe~ were arrested In dn1g raids lhrOUghOut the San m-.o ..... 'l'lteldaY· Police Aid amall quanUUes GI nw1juila ftR found. • . ) wash. heavy pressure for development," the can oceur in the future." Falling within the heavy damage prone engineers' finding ;-eads. "The The corps report cautions, "Solutions area in the.event of a major flood is the devastating effects of flooding will con-to flood problems are not provided but entire northern half of the city, Peters tinue to increase unless action is taken." furnished is a suitable basis for the adop- Canyon and the Marine Corps Helicopter Suggested are effective regulations tioo of land use controls to guide flood station, Santa Ana. such as zoning ordinances. and building plain development and prevent heavy 1be report obsttves that the flood codes to prevent increased f I o o d flood damage." plains of the creek and wash are "lightly damages. The report was prepared at the request developed with many open areas It is pointed out I.bat lands along San of the Orange County Flood Control upstream ol. Upper Newport Bay, into Diego Creek and Peters Canyon have District. wbiC!fllie"cr"k"flows. .. ... -suffered-majot-··floodo .. 11>-lhe-past, .. "but .. Col. lloper..said_ "Dood pnioJin11'.' ~ "'Ibese fiood plains will -come under studies indicate that even larger floods (See DANGER, Page!) M~k Exercises Newport Police Overlook Irvine in Traini.t1g Plans OAIL Y Pll.CIT Ill" P'l!l4lt Runner Ru1n1l11g Who is this man? Where ts he running? Why? C o u l d you keep up with him? To find out, see Page 15. NewPort Beach Police Department tac- ticl In ,..king a location !or Special Weapons and Tactical (SWAT) training in the new city of Irvine came under nre today as officials first learned of the pro- posed mock e1.ercises planned for north Irvine. While Newport officlals wert laying the groundwork for a moclt tear ga!I battle in the orange groves near the Racquet Club. It appears no one thought to contact the new city, a city with a brand-new law banning the discharge of firearms. Newport councilmen last week ap- proved an agreement with Leadership Housing Systems that relieves the land· owner of liablllty fer possible damages or injury that might result from the training. Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn today said other cities Including Santa Ana had used the remote north Irvine farm buildings for similar ex- ercises i:n the past. "We frankly overlooked the nece ssity of contacting the c:ity of Irvine about this. "U the training Is contrary to the ordinances of Irvine we would.,'t pursue holding them there. although the site Is ideal because it Is close to Newport Beach and Isolated from residences,'' Wynn said. Irvine Councilman Gabrielle Pryor said, "lt's weird" Newport officials would approve such a program without Bresnahan T ell-8 Pros , Cons , of Airport Sites By JACK CHAPPELL Of ._ O.ll't' Plllt I~ "\Vhen you start talking about 10lvtng the airport problem. yoo start talking a boot whose ox 1, being gortd." Peppery Bob Bresnahan, Chtlg_e Coun- ty director of Aviation, wu talkJng to members of the Saddltbaek Area Coordinating Council Wednelday night. and lt was their ox, El Toro. they were Interested In. Bremahan, at the dlrcctlon or filth district county supervtlor R o n a I d Casper1, is tmbftrktd m a speda1 atudy to ll1Ve$tlgnte the location of a con- Un<ntal airport on C.mp Pendleton. The Marines havtn't been much holf>, he said. ' ''They won't even let me tr. tht I a t e , down tbt!re to study 11," ho lfld. Brtmabin alto cited dtwil opposition In Son Clemeota to the Calpen' pro- posol. • "We did meet wllll 11111 DOibolt lo Son Clemeni. who were aaainloi I~ well 111YboW, 1111 ""fO. "'The c1t1 -toot ""' jooiilm llllt •,.. don~ know 11 the li'1"1it -be good ror .. er bod .., .., but ,,. don~ Wllll to 1mow.: ... tllq ...... -ad . . passed a molution opposing It," aresn1h11n aald . ' Twe JocaUonl were under Investigation for a possible k>calioo of the airport runways, one about four miles north of Oceanside and the other In Hidden Valley, l'ti miles from the Wtatem White Houoe. 1'l>e pn>pC>Sal !or the localioo of the aln>0rt nmway1 In San Diego COOnty his not been favorably rec:eivtd by offldall there. he noted. "''lbe;y wert11't even poUte down there in San DiqO when they told UI to iO bllck ap mf IOlw our own problema." he .. Id. llrelzlaJwl Pofnled Oii\ !bat H the nmwoYB wera lotaled !here RtJd Ult tmnlnal -furtllc< north In <>nos• CGll!ly Ibo ..... -"" -oocted ltS' • bllh apeod P'Olllid trw-llou.,...... "°"""''· tba --s-roted 18 Ibo airport would be amlend lll1IUlld tie ............ thlt'• derioul. u you ... ...a-· be llidl 811 .... -• llud)r Oii aJr ~~ ... within. lkounly -lltlldo .... 11111 If ll'llol jel qblel ' (!!Ill AlllPOll1', Pqo II contacting Irvint o{ClCials. She noted the city's ne.-law banning the dlscbarle of firearms would likely restrict such a training erexcise, unless city councilmen in Irvine okayed an e1.- ceplion. Acting City 1'i1anager Paul Brady agreed the new law would be violated were Newport Beach officers to fire even blanks r;ince the law prohibit! the "discharge of any firearm" within the cl· ty limits '5f Irvine. Obset"YeNO note, had the Item not been notice4' by newsmen Irvine officials migb( not have learned of the proposed trali\ing. Had the exercises been started, north Irvine residents surprised at the sounds of arms and smell of tear ga:s wafting through crange groves mJght well ha"e called Irvine Police -The Costa Mesa Police Department. * * * Newport So11ght Irvine Location For Tear Gas Use Newport Beach Palice Sgt. Ed Ci~ barelli today said "mock exercises" planned in north Irvine were to involve training of 22 Newport poUcemen In tbe use of tear gas. Noting the Newport City Council ap- proval of the Habilily agreement was a "preliminary stage" of tbe total otay of the program, Cibbarelli said Costa Mes. Irvine police offic:ialJ "certainlt would have been notified before we startl!d." The tralnlng might or might not ln- v°'ve the firing of blank ammUDJtion. fSee GAS, Page !) Orange Wea tiller , Tho storm cloudJ are diuppear- lng and mostly sunny weather la .. peeled for Friday. Temporatl8'0I will ran1e In the middle to upper "IOI wtth the low tonight 58. INSIDE 0TOO-'li Court cm1<n hDI~ ~ glrll be placd for adoptiol< fH. eo-usl! O..ir mother has tuc:,.. a lotD IQ lllal the CG!t't glw !Mm proptr core. Stt 1corv. Pave H. .......... C.-H ·-... -" -q DMll..... n: .,, ............ ...... e-a -.... .......... 1t ...... ~... . --.. ... . ..,.,... . -... --. ................. OP-.~h.U ,_. .. ................ ,_ .. -... -. ............. .......... .. •' I Z DAILY PILOT Candidates Address Ed11cato1·s By .IOANNE REYNOLDS ot .. 0.1/'f "llof Sl•ff \1orc thon 150 school board 1nC'mbers and school administralorii heard 10 can· didal es fc>r four Assembly seats and 11 stale Senate seat discuss their views on education during a dlnner meeting \Vednesday in SJtnta Ana. The candidate foru m wns held by the Orallie County School Boards Associa· lion. Most of the men seeking office favored Proposition s; which would increase the power of local school boards. and ()~ t>osed Proposition 14, the \Vatso n tax in· itlative. Here in capsule form is what the can- didates had to say: -Robert Badbam, Rep\.l bli can in- cumbent for the 71st Assembly District noted that "tht're .. re only so many dollars that the people or a society are willing to part with for the betterment of that society. It would be easy for me to tell sc-hool administrators lhat Y<JU'll get eve ry cent we 've got . but that 's just not so." In ans'A'cring questions from tbe floor, he ~id he is opposed to Prop. 14; favors se.x education and venereal disease educa- tion ""hen its controlled by local iChool boards and parents have access to the materials; will not vote to reduce the 66 percent vote needed to pass bonds and tax overrides and does not support col- lective bargaining for teachers. -Jim Thorpe, the Democrat opposing Badham cited his experience as a teache r at Saddleback College and as a councilman and mayo1 of San Juan Capistrano. He said he would like to see a bedroom tax used to help growing districts pay for new school s on the same basis tllat cilieS phy ror i,arks. - Thorpe sa id he opposes Prorosition 14 ; favors the setting of minimum standards statewide for sex and venereal disease education: would vote to reduce the bond 'and override majorit y to 50 percent 311d "unless something midway betw~n what 'A'e've got now and collecti ve bal"gaining comes along. I'd vote for cOllective bargaining for teachers." --Robert Burke, the Republican in-- aunbent in the 7oth Assembly district said hls prime concern is the conflict between equalizing education throughout the &tiate and local control of schools. "Proposition 5 has a lot to offer as far as · the way I look upon ~ucation in callfomia," he declared. The incumbent from Huntington Beach said he also opposes Proµostt1on 14; thinks sez education Is strittly a matter for the local board to decide; would not vote to reduce majority becessary lo pass bonds and override~ and opposes binding arbitration or bindlhg contracts with teachers. -Ten-y Moshenko, ls Democratic con- , tender attacked Burke, sayillg he was "politically and philosophlcaQy out or step "an e"ltremlst" and clahnec!. that his voting record is "an embarrassment to I.he people of the district." He said he favors a school lax levy of $2.88 per SIOO valuation. sta'tewide, as proposed by state controller 1-louston Flournoy. Like the other candidates he said he will vote aga in.st Prop. 14; said "yes on VD education and yes on sex education"; said be would vote to lower the bond and override majority to 60 per- cent and would also vote in favor of col- lective bargaining for teachers. -Ken Cory, th e Democratic incumbent lrom the &9th Assemblv district he sees "perilous times ahead in education." lie also said he believes that "local control of schools can go hand In haOO wlth equalization.'' In ansy,·ering ques tions. Cory said he is opposed to Proposition 14 ; th inks VD and sex education should be included as part or general health education; would not \'Ole to reduce the bond and override ma- jority and has suppor ted and will con- tinue to suppo rt collective bargaining for teachers. OIANGI COAST 11 DAILY PILOT ,,_()I' ..... CHt.1 D41LY PILOT, wllf'I wllkfl It ~ lfl.t Hewt-Pr"t. ~ pUtlHJllld 1W ftlt O.-•no• CM1t Pvblllhlno c-nv. S9"· Ale •111111 ... ert OUl>ll&Md, Mondfl' lfll"llU91'> fl"tWIJ', fot COiia Mht, HltWPOrt Reid!, HWl"nttM 9•..,lllF'ovnt•ln V1!1•1, LIQU'll a.tell, lrvllWlk#lf.Mc' ...,,, S•11 ci.,,.,e111t1 So.II Juatt C1plt,,a110. A '!llfllt reti~I 9dl1lM 11 J11Ubllllltd S•llmlays 1nd Sundoy., TM ,..ir.c•r ""'lilhl"<! pl1n1 ;, •I lJO ,,....,, lfJ' $1rMt, Ct\11 Mt\I, C1llto<11i•, tle16. lot..rt N. w,,J '°""lhfTI efOd P11Dllt!Mf" J1ck R. Curl1y VD ~ Ind GIMr1I ~t Th•m•• K,..,;i £oltot Thofllltl A. M ~rphin• M.,...1"9 fll!Or 0.rlH H. Leet •iclt114 P. N1U Aulllllnl MflNOlftt Etll!Ort; CMlt ~-: )JD W.t1 fl•Y Slf91'1 .,..,.,, ltKfll mJ .. ....., '°"~~·"' L..-... di: m P'«•I Awnw Hwntlrl!ittn IMC111 1'11S IN~ll lovl..-.•O IM °"""It ! .. filotl1ll IJ C..fl'la ltMI 'ftl ...... f714J '4J..4JJ1 ~ A"""'61 .. '42.f671 a. C .. 11 .... Al D1pw...,.:-..i , ... , ... 492-4421 ~ "71. or.,.. c ... t ..... INllO ~. ... "'" ••In. '""'"'"'"'· ~( ""'* ., .....,.....,....,. """"' Mf1r Ill' ,......... WflfWM M*lel Pff• ...... ~-. ...... 1:"'--...... CtMlt Mnt. °"',.,...,~;;-.., (»fllw "·'' ,,_...,, • ,.itll IJ,lt ~r mlll..., _ ...... a.M ""°"'lllY, '"'I Tel1p119i. Slae's fo1· Nixma CaroJe J1an son of El Toro, wife of 'var prisoner Stephen Hanson and outgoing president of the largest organization of American POW fam- i!..ies. says she's endorsing President Nixon for re-election. Mrs. 1-lan- son says she's "disgusted" \rith Sen. George l'dcGovern 's plans to end the war. Fram Pa11e l GATES ... Welte was hired last ttfay after a na- tion-wide search tor an associate superintendent and began working in the district in July. \Vhen \Velte "'A'aS hired, he was given a 1w~ycar contract , despite the fact the district would be dissolved in one year. San Joaquin goes out of busi ness June 30, 1973. The day after. Irvine and Sad- dleback Un ified Districts take over. Under terms of unification, the new districts must h i re administrative personnel in the old district in a com- parable position and an equal salary. By giving Welte a two-year contract , if he chooses to stay in this area , he is guaranteed a job in one of the new districts -now at a higher salary. From Pagel PRESSURE. •• paign contributions in supervisoriaJ races could be detrimental to the best interests of Orange County. "The Grand Jury recognizes the need for monies to finance a campaign but would recommend that each supervisor instruct his campaign manager not to ex- ert undue pressure on vendors, land developers nnd professional people or citizens which might cause them to con- tribute for fear o~ losing lhelr right to compete for county jobs or contract.s." The Grand Jury letter wrui signed by Foreman Otto M. Schmldlen and did not slate that the jury v.·as launching a (ull ~cale investigation of campaign con- tributions. * * * Cou11ty Report Airport Board Sets Hot1sing Tract Discussion Orange Cowity Airport Land Use Com- missioners will discuss two -pl-oposed housing developments near the El Toro Marine Air Base tonight at 7:30 in the hearing room at 400 Civic Center Drive \Vest, Santa Ana. A change of zone from agricullure to planned community known as the Canada Foothills project will be discussed. Part of the project begins only t'A·o miles east of the air base's main runway. If would potentially house 36,000 people. It has been delayed by the planning com- mssion until Oct. 31 pending development of an environmental impact statement. Commissioners will alJO diJcuss a ten- tative tract map for Bay Ranch, a single family housin~ development west of Leisure World in Laguna Hills and in the flight paths or the air base. The planning commi.salon also referred it to lhe land use commission for advice. Viejo Thieves Take New Ilome Appliances A mounting burglary rate in the h1ission Viejo area continued to climb \\'ednesday night with burglars carrying off a brand new dishwasher and range from a home under C<>flStruction In tbe El Dorado tract. Orange County Sheriff's olficers said intruders climbed through a broken front window at the home and left via the fron~ door with the new appliances. Mission Viejo Company officials valued the dishwasher and range at $W, Lii1col11 Club Donates $47,000 to Vote Drives The currMt popula.r OrRnge Count y game titled "\I/ho is Givi ng \Vhat J\1oncy today_ with ~he disclosure or legally to \Vh1ch Polit1cal Campaign?" continued required reports to the county Registrar of Voters. The Lincoln Club of Orange County grabbed the spotlight with the adnuss1on that t~y hnve given $47,500 to four candi- dRtes and five polltlca l acUon groups. Candidates themselves are required only to file Individual contributions of more than $500, according to the law. First District Supe.rvisor Robert Battin topped the !iupervl!Orlal candldatt11 with contributions totalling 122,900 to da te. lis opponent. Santa Ana nttomey Wll- llam Wenke, ll!ttd only a pe.r~al loan of $5.000 to his campai~n. Third District Supetvlsor William Phfi· llp!i or Fullerton admitted rectlvi.ng $4 671 contrlbution11 of more than $5 each lnciud- lng fl '3.&71 donation from the Orartgt: Coonty Committee for Good Government . RAiph Diedrich. Phillipe' oppontnt list- ed but three contrrbuUont of roore than $SOO. Thty Included the Rossmoor Corpor· 11tion, developers of Leisure World, 11.000: Morns Silverman , $1,000, and Shapcll ln- dustrle1 , MOO. • Battin said his list Included fundJ raised 11t two tt11tlmonttl dinners . Other contM· bullon• ln<lud<d Dr: Loub r~ll•. 11.200; the doctor's Santti Ana clinic. 12,600 ; ti.11.ulon Community llosplt1I. Sl,000 ; Fred Harber, $1.000 : Orange c.ot.mty Medlral Supply, 12,000 11.nd the <Antral Orange County Taxpayers Auoclatlon , 11,MJO. Dr . Cella ind H11tber have been Identi- fied "' Battln's political menton and the so-ca lled tupayeni OIOClaUon b h~ded by Cella. The Lincoln Club g:ive $9,750 to \Venke~ $5 ,000 to state Sen . James Whetmore; S5.000 to Ph illips and $20,000 to Republi- can assembly candidate William Danne- meyer. ~1ost of the Lincoln Cliib's donations were given before the June primary and so 11ire not listed on the candidates' state- menll filed Wednesday. Wenke said $4,000 of the $9.750 rcportt:<I by the political club was received before June 6 so was not reported this time and that he had only received $1 ,000 of the balance . The aupervlsorial candidate Bald he \.\-OUld not actept further contributions from the club because Its method of re· porting confused the publ~ in that It did not 11how a breakdown bctwrtn primary and general election donations. From Pqe J GAS ... That aspect or the Speel11l WeaponJ and Tnctlcs training Is less Important than the instruction ln safe use of tear gas, Cibblrelll s11id. When he last visited the alte of the training program more thin a year and a half ago, Clbbarelll said. "thete were no houses nearby making it an idtal alte to work with tear gas wHhoot annoying resldt nts." If the area near Bryan Avenue fnd Morris Street Is deemtd to be close to the R>cquet Club tract. ClbbArelll itgrttd, AOme other location far the SWAT trolnlng mi&ht be more deslrable. Butz Told Developer's Bid To Testify In Stare Trustees Ref use Opposition Vote From Wlre Servtcel Assemblyman John Briggs I R - Fullerton) may gel to meet Secretary ot the Agriculture Earl Butz In his com- mittee hearing room despite lhe Nixon cabinet officer's reluctance. A Sacramento Judge W e d n e s d a y ordered Butz to show cause why he should not tesUfy before the Aisembly agriculture committee. The order by Superior Court Judge William Gallagher ls the latest step in Briggs' campaing to get Butz to talk: to h.ls committee about low payments to farmers whose chickens have been ordered destroyed to stem the epidemic of Newcastles· disease. Briggs was shoved aside by Butz aides earlier th is month when he attempted to serve a subpoena on Butz after an appearance by the secretary at the Slate Department of A g r I c o I t u r e building. Brigf(s wants to question Butz about the lederal government's reimbursement payments to So uthern C a l 1 f o r n i a poultrymen. The growers receive an average $1.81 for each bi.rd destroyed. Briggs contends the payments are too low. He says poultrymen should have payments of $4 to $S per bird. Butz says payments may rise as high as $.1.50 bas- ed on a lormula evaluating the bird as an egg producer. If Butz ignores the court order for the Nov. 14 appearance before Gallagher, be Despite one trustee's impassioned ap- peals, the San Joaquin School District board Wednesday night again refused 2-2 to voice opposition to the proposed Canada Foothills development in El Toro. Instead they passed 4..() two com- promise mouons, one which spoke only generally or the need for proper schools. Canada Foothills Is a proposed 2,924- acre development wh.lch would house 36,000 persons and need at least IO schools all its own. Bounded on the west by El Toro Road and the south by Trabuco Road, the plan begins just two miles east of the main runway at El Toro Marine Corps Air Base. The land is cur- rently zoned agricultural. Of the 11 school aite.s suggested by the developers, six were ruled unacceptable because of noise and danger by tbe state department or aeronautics. The re- ma ining five ~ere said to be all right if sound attenuated. The state won't pay for attenuation , which in this case is estlmated would cost between $3 million and $5 million. Trustee Dennis Smith, who a month before tried unsuccessfully to rally op From Pagel AIRPORT •.• could be held in contempt of court and a were available by 1985, El Toro would be ~~~-warrant could be issued for his the better of the two locations for an Court sources who declined to be Iden-airport. tified said the bench warrant, if one is Two evaluations were made, the issued, would be effective only in 11Systems Concept," which considers California, but would remain in effect in-airport development under conditions of definitely. acceptably quiet and clean jet engines, Newcastle disease is deadly to birds and the "Alternative" pl8J, which con· but barm1ess to humans, siders airport location under the absence Butz is already in cootempt of his com-of acceptable equipment. miltec, Briggs said In a aews release. Pendleton was not recommended under __ -.eilllei...Qf_ t~ t~~ criteria, while El Toro wa s suggeste<! as a -cont.menf.il iltpdM - under the quiet engines planning. From Pagel DANGER ... not preclude boilding in the area under threat or damage if such building is prop- erly protected from potential flood waters. ''Damage can be minimized by use of th.is report," he stated. "Developers of lands in the area should be warned of the risk involved." In reply to a question from Supervisor Ronald Y.'. Caspers of Newport Beach, Col. Roper said home building and com- mercial developments increase the flood har.ard if they are not done in the correct manner. "Replacing dirt and shrubs with as phalt and roofs inc reases the now of flood waters into the endangered area.'' he cautioned. Factors favoring El Toro were said to be ' -Location to high air paiisenger de- mand. -Joint military and civilian use could prolong th:: liie of El Toro as a military base. -Existing facilities make it the least expensive to develop. -Air traffic control problems are "more solvable" than at olher locations. -Ecological Impact would be less there than in either mountaloous or coastal sites. Factors against use of El Toro are reported by the study to be: -Continued noise problems. which the report says wou ld not be a factor if quiet engines were developed. -New runways would be required for commercial operations. por!Uon, said lo allow th~ plan to go unchallenged would be "irresponsi ble," and that trustees have "no other honorable. 1noral or ethical course than to vote opposition." Fellow trustee Rev. Preston ilowell agreed and seconded each of Smith's four mot ions on the subjcct.e Tru~tees Robert oflfli:eron and Joe Peterson voted against them each time, emphasizing they didn·t want to "name names" and spclfically attack certain developers. Trustee Gratian Bidart was absent. Smith, 'A·ho sa id he could "sit here and niake motions nil night," agreed to Dameron's compromise motlons as a "step forward." The first \Vas that the school district ask the pl81Uling commission to not ap- prove any subdivisions until there are proper sites for schools to house the pro- jected population. The planning commi ssion v.· i 11 rA-onsider Canada Foothills on Oct. :n v.·hen an environmental impact statement is due. The second accepted motion \Vas to pass all information on school sites on any subdivision tha t the district has on to the planning commission. That 's a formalizaUon of something that usually takes place when the plan- ning commission requests the advice of the school district. Smith kept insisting on sending a letter of cone rn about the plan to the com- mission, and said. "whafs wrong with speaking the truth?" Dameron. 'A"ho had just niade the mo- tion about sending the lnformatlon on the sites, fumed, "11\ey (the commission) can read. Just because you're a school teacher doesn't mean you'rt the only one "'ho can read. You're just playing on emotions to get headl ines." San Joaquin trustees last month ex· pressed disapproval of the new Sad· dteback·VaHey-Hntfied-boafd!a.o>Pl'!"'!IOl•wit:1<!oo>n... __ _ to the planned community until they have a successful bond election. Dameron Blllid they shouldn't mJx with private enterprise. Smith tried to get the board to rescind that former action, but failed. Smith and Peterson are also on the Saddleback board. QUAKE RATTLES SAN DIEGO AREA PASADENA (AP - A light eartb- quake was recorded in an area 45 miles east of San Diego early today. A spokesman for the C a I t e c h Seismological Laboratory here said the quake, measuring 3.5 on the Richter scale, hit at &:28 a.m, and was centered JO miles east of Pine Valley. Special Promotion • • • 10 DAYS ONLY Chair or Swivel Rocker from this Ha11.dsonie Collection V olues from 199 to 219 Now 149°0 .. .... graceful in design and superb construction and are beautifully enhanced by meticulous tailoring to give you lavish comfort. Yori May Choose From A Wide Selection Of Beautiful Fabrics H.J.GARl\ETI fURNl"fURE PROF!SSIONAL INTWOl CUIQNERS 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. • 7 7 Hnnti11gto11 lleaeh Fonotai11 Valley Today's Finni N • .¥. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. 293, 4 SECTIONS, 50 P~GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS Pupils Tune In to Language ol Deal By JOlrN ZALLEr. CH ni. 0.11' PllM STiit The English-speaking lives of 30 llun- linglOn Beach sixth graders were in- lerrupted this week when they closed !heir ears and began speaking the language of the dear. "Young boys and girls your age who are deaf are still just learning to talk," they were told. "I'll show you what it v.•ould be Uke if you couldn't hear, either." Ready for Parade One of the Fuji folk from the Japanese Deer Park in Buena Park will be grand marshal for Fountain VaUey's fifth annual Halloween Parade Saturday. Parade starts at 11 a.m. on Slater Avenue just west of Magnolia Street Beach District Seeks Member For Commission The Huntington Beach Union lligh School District ls accepting applications for an opening on its personnel com· miujon which will be available Dec. 1. To qualify as a com.missioner, a can- didate must be a registered vottr 1n the district. Tbe three-member commission makes and administers policies related to the hiring and in-service promotion or classified personncJ -those Individuals not related to teaching, couMeling or ad· ministration. The commission meets tile !!CCOnd Wednesday of each month and oc.. caslonally attends area-wide conferences. Interested candidatts should contact Dr. William Settle, owociate superin- tendennt ·fnr operations, by Thursday. The phone number ls 536-9331. • ,, Wilh that, Carol McEvoy, the television news\li'Oman who makes broadcasts in sign language for the deaf, began her presentation lo the class at Gisler Intermediate School. "We'll do the ABC's first" she said . "Watch." She went slowly through all 26 letters in the alphabet, asking the cluldren to form them after her. In ten minutes when the children were finally able to sing and to sign the ABC's at the same time, and seemed to be having a good time of it, she interjected : "Deaf people havl!! to SJ)C!ak like this all the time." Miss ·McEvoy, th!!! hearing child or deaf parents, told the class If, as a little girl, she fell and hurt herself, she knew her parents wouldn't beer her cry. She also related her fear of a firf in the house. because she knew she couldn't yell to awaken her parents. "I remember one time I was writing a letter and I came to a word I couldn't spell," she said. "I couldn't even look lt up in a dlctkloary or &ign It out , so I a.tk· ed my father to fead it off my Ups. "Over and over we tried, tut be just couldn't make it out. When we finally gave up, I was crying and my father was almost crying. "I bet that never happened to any of you, did it?" she a.sited. She went on to show-the class band (See \DEAF, Pace !) Arms Talk Slated U.S., Russ Set Geneva Conference WASHlNGTON (AP) -The United States and the Soviet Union agreed to open the second rotmd of strategic of· fensive arms limitation talks in Geneva on Nov. 21, the White House announced today. The new set of negotiations will seek a pennanent treaty to follow up the in- terim curb on offensive nuclear weapons signed by President Nixon during his Moscow summit in fl.fay. The brief announcement of tfle date for resumption of the talks was made simultaneously in Washington a n d Moscow. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said ambassador Girard Smith, who beaded the U.S. negotiating team in the flrst phase of the Slrategic Arms Limitation Talks {SALT), will continue as chief U.S. negotiator. "Pursuant to the agreement reached DAILY PILOT s•n .,.... CAROL McEVOY DEMONSTRATES LANGUAGE OF THE DEAF At Gisl•r School, • Gre•ter Appret:i•tion of Communication Dec. 1 Start during the summit meeting in Moscow R • k T ll 1 k last May to continue active negotiatioM einec e e s w·ee for limitation of strategic offensive arms. • Fresno Official Selected the governments or the Unlted1itaU!s"11rrd1--------·-------~ To Beach Safety Agency Fresno Planning Director John H. Behrens, ta. wai named todtly as chief of the expanded Huntington Beach Building and Safety Department. Behrens bolds the dual role of planning and building directQr in Fresno. He has been there 13 years. City Administrator David Rowlands said Behrens will start work in the Hun. tington Beach Dec. 1. The new director was not among the 40 applicants for the building post, but was persuaded to leave Fresno for Hufl- tinglon Beach, Rolands said today. "l think he is one of the outstanding building officials in the state and the country," Rowlands explained. "I had to personally persuade him to t.ake the post. None of the other applicants were satisfactory." Behrens will start with an annual salary of '25,850. He is both a registered professional engineer and structural engineer, and is a past p~ ~the International COnfetence of BulJilinl Of. ficials. tlis expanded department now includes responsibilities over oil field operations, civil defense and other functions relating to conununity development, in addition IJ the traditional inspection system. Richard Jones, assistant building direc- tor under Jack Cleveland, who retired last spring, will remain assistant direc- tor. Jones has been running the depart- 1..ent for the past few months. The building department will also have some responsibility for land use studies to develop both short and long range plans for c o mm u n i t y development, Rowlands said. Briggs May Get to See Butz, Th,anks to Court From Wire Services Assemblyman John Briggs ( R - Fullerton) may get to meet Secretary of the Agriculture Earl Butz in hi5 com· mittee bearing room despite the Nixon cabinet officer's reluctance. A Sacramento Judge W e d n e s d a y ordered Butz to show cause v.·hy he should not testily before the Assembly agriculture committee. The order by Superior Court Judge William Gallagher is the latest step in Briggs' campaing to get Butz to talk to his committee about low payments to fanners whose chickens have been ordered destroyed to stem the epidemic of Newcaslles' disease. Briggs was shoved aside by Butz aidE!s earlier this month when he attempted to serve a subpoena on Butz after an appearance by the secretary at the State Department of A g r i c u I t u r e building. Briggs wanlS to question Butz about the federal government's reimbursement payments to Southern C a I i f o r n i a poultrymen. The growers rective an average $1.81 for each bird destroyed. Briggs contends the payments are too low. He says poultrymen should have payments of $4 to $5 per bird. Butz says payments may rise as high as $3.50 bas· eel on a formula evaluating the bird as an egg producer. If Butz ignores the court order for the Nov. 14 appearance before Gallagher, he coold be held in contempt of court and a bench warrant c:ould be issued for his arrest. USSR will resume talks on this subject on Nov. 21 in Geneva, Switzerland." The talks will focus only on offensive weapons. A permanent treaty coverlng defensive missiles was signed by Nixon in ~foscow and ratified later by the Senate. Congress also-approved , after ex- tensive debate, the · interim agreement freezing the bulk> .of both eounlries' arsena]s of long-range .nuclear missiles for five years. · I DAIL y ~ILOT s11n """' R11n11er R111u1h1g Who Is this man? Where is he running? Why? Co u Id you keep up with him? To find out, see Page 15. Smut Initiative Debated Pros , Co1is of Proposition 18 Told in, Beaclt, Forum By JOHN ZALLER Of th D11ty Plitt l'-ft A debate on Proposition 18 -the anti· smut lnltlative -focused Wednesday night on the plight of people who might enjoy potllOlnlphy. "I belltve 90Clety has an obligation to protect Its wetter Individuals from themselves.'' contended Stuart Waldrip, a Monnon lawyer from Santa Ana, at the deb<\e IJ)OMOttd by the Huntington Valley YOllllJ RepubUClllS. "If material appeals only to prurient or warped lnttrtsll, It ought lo be lfonnod," Waldrip argutd In suppGrt of Propositinn 18. "I object lo the term warped," replied an unidentified man from the audience. "l own 10tne stag movies and aomellmes •«er the kldt .,. In bed, I like lo gel them out. "I wouldn't ask yOu to come see them but I don't want you to tak ~ them away from me e.itbtt, I don't think they're warped at all.'' Proposition 18 will appear on the Nov. 7, General ElecUon ballot. It ls designed to lighten up lhe state's anti-pornography laws, give more control to local corn.. munlties, and to make It possible for any book, newspaper or movie contaJnlng ob- jectionable pictures lo be <0nflscated. "Proposition 18 has a kind of reverie se:l' obsession," said Ken Grubbs, lhe anll-11 speaker and odltoriel dlttctor of ti An.aheim Bullelln. 'People who would go a r o u n d ecslaUcaUy polntin( al dlriy pictures ou8ht lo he lallibod back lnld oblcurlly," Grubbs said. Grubbs also argued that "passage of ProposJUon 11 would lead to inuJl()fallty ba'rause morality ls based on an In- dividual declsion." By removlr-s: the rlgbt or Ille Individual lo ~ or rtjed pornography, morality is mnoved as well. Waldrip count.....i by argul0f1 lhal pornography 18 having 1 drutlc effect on A mertcan family II!•. "There ls no way to ~a!W'fl how many famllio fill aport from Ille disparity bel""'11 Ille lofty eXpectatioM for 1ex you get from pornography and Iha! r.,11y MPl><lll In maniag!>" Waldrip sold. • He lunher defended Proposition 18 rrom charges lhll tt would hive pro- hibited aucn movlt~ u "Love Story," IS.. SMUT, 'Pip 11 'Ecology Report' Delay Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke announced that the California Supreine Court has agrtea to delay for one week enfOrcement of il$ decisM>ll that llfivate construcUon fi.rm.s ~· oiue .livirorirnenta1 · rm pa c t .... _ ....... pn>jeds. .The annc:.mcement was. made Weclnes- day in Sa~ramento at state Attorney General Evelle Younger met 1n Los Angeles today with county counsels and city attorneys to try to clarify the decision that has brought new con· struction to a virtual halt in the state. Reinecke expressed hopes that the Legislature would act quickly to clarify whic h construction projects need to have 1 impact statements and what those , statements ·must contain. Legislators are schl!!dule<I to return to session in the capital Nov. 8. He said the court agreed to wait until Oct. Tl to vote on a motion to rehear the case. The delay of the vote means that the decision cannot be enforced until the justices decide if they will hear the case again . A source in the court said today that it is not likeJy they will rehear the case which was bro1,;ght before the court by the Friends oHdammoth and lbe Sierra Club over construction of condominiums at Mammoth Lakes. As Reineeke made his announcement in Sacramento Wednesday, Younger ap- peared before the Assembly Local Government Committee which met in Anaheim as part of the California League of Cities conver:tion. He said his staff is seeking a stay of the Mammoth decision so that local governments can have the lime to work out procedures for the i m pa c t statements. Younger, who said he "applauds the court's decision ", said he has asked the governor's Office of PlaMing and Research to accelerate its v.'Ork on statewide guidelines for preparation o( the statements. Ite said he also plans to ask for some legislative clarification of the review power of' the court on the impact statements. League Delegates Support Newport's Prop. 20 Sta11d Newport Beach's resolution opposing Proposition 20, the coastline lnltiative on the Nov. 7 ballot, won approval Wednes· day by League of California Cities delegates meeting in Anaheim. The League is an association of city officials from throughout the state. Newport Mayor Donald h1 c I n n is sponsored the resolution which condemns Proposition 20 as "an improper attempt to usurp the authority and right of local government to plan and control land use deve lopment within its boundaries.'' By a roll call tally of 12.1 to 74 the delegates voted to expres.s the league 's opposition. The initiative. lf it becomes law. would create a statewide Coastal Zone Conser· vation Commission and six reg:onal com· missions which would have regulatory control over all development In coastal areas. The vote of the delegates on the final day or tile 741h annual conference of the league went against an II.fl vote of League directors last month in support of Proposition 20. In its wlnntng effort. Newport Beach had the support of all Ornnge Cost com- munitiel except Huntington Stach and 111 but fJve lnJand cities. Supporting Mcinnis WAS Mayor Ed Wade of Ulng Beach who called the in- itiative a "vicious measure." Some of tht Chile Army Kills l SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -A 23-ycar· old moiorllt shot by a military patrol enford.rt& a aJrfew became the first f•· ta.lily Jn a nine-da7 aeries of nationwide strikes and dllturbanc.,_ Presldtnt Sal· vador Alltnde, In a poot..mldnlghl radio and televilion 1 opoech, charged that pro- fess1on1I orginilaUOn.1 were guilty of ••open uboeoge" In the labor dispute hampering Oille'1 commercial and In· duatr!JI' Ille. other cities aligned with the anti-Proposi· lion 20 measure were San Francisco, Santa Barbara and Oceanside. Los Angeles. San Diego, San Jose, Stockton and Sacramento opposed the Nf!wport Beach measure and the two other large cities. Fresno and Oakland abstained. ~fayor Pete Wilson of San Diego led the losing fight for endorsement of the coastline Initiative. lie said charges that the bill would enforce a three-year moratorium on develo pment we.re not true that it wns more like a "delay." "Time and our coas tline Are running out,·· he warned. "If we do not act here the federal government will take over ." Supporting Newport's motion were San ISt-1!! PROP. !ti) Orunge Coast Weather The storm clouds are dlaappear- ing and n1ost.ly sunny weather Ls t!xp«ted for Friday. TemperatW'ts will range In the middle to uppu 70s with the low tonight sa. INSlltE TOD-' Y Cor1rt ordtr! twin 4-11tar-old oirl1 be p/octd for adop&ion be· caiue thtlr mother hol 1uch a low IQ that she can·r give &hem proper core. See 1tory, Paa« 24. L,M. k'nl II c .... ,.... " (W.MHIH U.11 ~let 41 CNM~ 41 °"'"' .. ,kft 11 ff!Hinli! ~-• ••l.rl'91-..t n..u lllllHC.• ,,..,,. ,.., ,.,. lt.U"' " ..,_ .. AM L•l'liftn JJ • • I • DAIL V PILOT H Newport Paddler ln Miain.i P.11AM I BEAl'll j\..'J'll -L;.irry Capune of Newport Beach. Calif. y:ho paddled nn 18-foot board 2.400 miles from Boston 10 :\liu1n1 Bearh. rested in a hott'l tOOay with lot-al tourist promoters pick- 1np; up the tab. He was glad the:· were. He ended his 110-day trip Wednesday afternoon with only $~ 95 reinaining fron1 the $400 he started out \\·1th July I fro1u Boston. Explaining \1·hy he spent 8~'.! to 12 hours a day paddling and kicking his specially designed 89-pound paddleboard along the Atlantic coast. the 30-~·ear-0ld Capune said he hoped to turn kids ;i\\'ay from drugs to ad\•enture in the great out- doors. "There's so much run to be had in the outdoors," he said. "I hope lo form a 'wet alliance' or kids frorn 11to17 years old to take trips like mine. "It will show them that. v•ith. all the walls we 've built against fun and ad- venture, they can still have it without drugs ." P.fuscular and tanned, his blonde hair bleached by the sun, Capune said the most startl ing adven tures on his long trip included keeping afloat in a storm off Fernandina Beach and his meeting off the Central Florida coast v.·ith a playful shark that nudged his hand. "'Florida waters are the most beautiful and were the cleanest I saw along the v.·ay," he said. "But man, v.·hen you see some of the stuff floating off New York -and I'd especially like to mention Long Branch, N.J. -I almost had tc, stop.'' The native of Balboa Island said he drove his car to Boston \~:here he left it with other personal belongings when he entered the water for hi s long paddle. tic spent lhe nights on shore. Victim's Pastor Offers Snspect His 'Guidance' By ARmUR R. VINSEL Of n... C).tlty Piiiot Stitt ,_tinistering to troubled men is a {'()m- mandment from Christ to preachers of His gospel, so a clergyman who unsuc- cessfully worked 17 years with one finally slain in Costa Mesa is now spiritua lly counseling his accused killer. The Rev. R. G. P.iark.ey buried his former Garden Grove Sunday School pupil Saturrlay, 11 days after he was gun- ned down in a du el in a dark alley, with hints of a drug-dealing dispute. Marion D. Perry, 27, got a $275 county pauper's funeral including a gray {'()ffin. a simple white shroud and adhesive tape bandages over his bullet wounds. Returning horn from the funeral , the Rev. Markey stopped at Orange County Jail, asking to see Joseph W. Bu[falo. who had a continued preliminary hearing today. He is charged with Perry's murder. · Buffalo -an ex-convict hke his allegro victim -agreed to sec the visitor represent ing a judge whose verdict he maintains will be more final than that delivered in mortal man's courtroom. The prisoner was unaware of the Rev. ?-.1arkey's 17-ycar association wi th the fa mily of the victim he is accused of kill- ing Oct. % in a duel between a man with. a rifle who found his mark and one with a pistol whcl missed. "1 told him : ·1 just buried Perry to- day,' " says the white-haired pastor of the Flrsl Assembly o[ God Church 0£ Garden Grove. "He droppec! his head ," the Rev. Markey continued . "And then he said: 'I wished it had been me,' " 091.l.NGI COAST •• DAILY PILOT "f1le or._... CM$! OAll 'f P1lOT wlrtl which k cemlll!wd n.. " ...... ~. 1s •1w.e.t bY ... OrMDe CM•t ~lllllllfllno c°""'*". ~ ,.,. ldl1lofll ·~ Jllllbllshed, ,,..,.,...., ~ ,,,......,., for CO.II IMY, N-..orf leach, Hlllltlnftan h«tl/f-taln \11li.J, Litlll'lll auicn. trvlna/IMd~b.ldt alld S.n Cllme<1lt/ S.n Jua" Capl1trt no. A 11"1111 reqlon.I ldl!Jon Is publlil!td St!vnUV5 etld SuNl•v~. TM prltM:IPll pVOl111!ln9 plan! 15 81 Ul Wt•I h)' .11rttf, C•I• M111, Ctlllorn11. mtt. Roll••' N. w,.d Prflldent tnd Publhntf Jack R. Curl1y Viti p,_ldoMI •!'Id COtMftl MtNOtr Tho111.11 K••vil lidltor l'llorn11 /'.. M urphi~o M.IMlllll'lll Editor CHrl• H. t.•1 Ric.htrd P. N•!I ,_,tl11\I Me.-cilne Ed!!Ofl 1 ... ,., c. .. ;11, Wiii ~ C-ly Edltot .............. Offlu 17175 leech l ou1e .. aut MeUl91 A4Wre111 P.O. It• 790, •2641 --UofilMI IMdl" m For"' A-... C..tt ...... : m """ hY StrM I ......... , l ffdl: Jm N .. l)lll'l 9oul1'¥f .... kt1 ~--t JOJ Httlll tJ CtmlnO llltal , •••••••• 1714t 642-4121 e1-tfl.4 ... ~ ....... 2.s,11 ,.f'llM Mef1tl °' ...... (_,, C.-'flt• 140·1221 °"""""'' ttn. C)t-lfl09 Ctttl l"\lllllt111"o '*'""""'"· ,.. fltWf, 1torl<tt, Hl11&tr1tloM. tlltlwlel """" ., ac1 .... tbHM11., IM'fltlrl """ bt ,.,ldlJQllll wlll'IOllt NIK .. l I"'• .... It CWYftlll!I .,_.,., ..._., c.11• ,....,. Miii el C1111ta Mfta, CtftlWllle. .-,ltolltft b¥ uirrsw lt.U ....,.,.,,, W IMM U,IJ '"6flfl'tlVI mlllftn' ....,_,.,_ CM "'°"'""'· Santa A••• Itleet Menu: Hopefuls Discuss Schools Definitely a ltlis11iatch -rbe big guy in the sport coat is Bob Remillard \\'hO L<i demonstrating end play for a member of the Ti· gers. the. Pee-Wee footbal l team sponsored by the Fountain Valley Police Officer's Association. Rem.ii- lard is a detective on the Fountain Valley force. Pht'Aagrapher didn't \Vait around to see if he got away with his tricky move. ' Searcl1 Renewed for Boggs Plane As Weather Clear ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP) -Tak ing advantage of the best weather since the search began. 73 military ano civilian <iircraft renev.'ed the hunt today for a light plane missing since l\1onday wit h House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs and three others aboard. Coast Guard cutters and a team of mountain rescue experts a!so joined the intensified search along a rugged, 560- mile stretch of coast between Ancborage and Juneau. Broken to scattered clouds hung over most of the area and an Air Force spo kesman described the weather as •·the best we 've had since the search began." "ll coold be a make or break deal," he added. Planes flew over the entire area, but the main effort was centered around two Recycle Center Seeks Helpers areas -the Portage Pass area 50 miles southwest of Anchorage and mountain areas northwest or Juneau, about 500 miles to the southeast. Tiie overnight temperature in the Portage Pass area Has reported to be 30 to 35 degrees and \vas expected to be 4-0 to 45 during the day. the Air Force said. From Pflfle J DEAF ... symbols for various words, and even regional variation in signs for words. "In the South, the word for 'candy.' is this." she said. scrat~ her cheek lightly with her pointer finger. "But in Southern California, we say 'candy' like this." she continued, jabbing and twisting the same finger into her cheek. "You can see it has to do with cavities. but it can be vuy confusing to the deaf." At the end of her presentation. Miss McEvoy taught the class to say one ad- ditiona l thing in sign language. "You and I are friends ," she signed t(; them. Lectnre 'Session At Golden West Draws Big Cro1vd A tot11I or 315 persons came close to rilling C.Ollege Center at Golden West College Wednesday night before the end of the first session of the 1972 Real Estate Investment lecture series. Late arrivals for the lectures found themselves standing two and three abreast in a line th.at stretched, at times. more than 200 yards from the door and around the comer of the building. The lead-Off speakers in the series presented jointly by the Huntington Beach·Fountain Valley Board of Realtors, the DAILY PUDT and Golden West C.Ollege were Roger Slates and Gene Kado\v. Slates. c u r r e n t president of the IJuntington Beach Chamber of Com· merce and active in other civic opera- tions, has owned R. D. Slates. Realtors, in Huntington Beach for 12 years. Kadow, ov.-ner of Fountain Valley Land Company. has been active in both residential aod commercial land develop- ment in California and Arizona. The speakers took different aspe<!ls of the investment picture involved in own· ing non·managerial property. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1tM Dally Pllll 'tall ,_1ore than 150 school board members and school ad ministrators heard 10 can- didates for four Assembly seats and a state Senate seat discuss their views on education during a dinner meeting Wednesday in Santa Ana. The candidate forum was held by the Orange County School Boards Associa· tion. Most of the men seeking oflice favored Proposition 5, which would increase: the power of local school boards, and op- posed Proposition 14. the Watson tax in- itiative. Here in capsule form lS what the can- didates had to say: -Robert Badham, Rep'Jblican in- cumbent for the 71st Assembly District noted that "there we only so many dollars that the people of a society are willing to part with for the betterment of that sociely. It would be easy fOl' me to tell school adminisJ,rators that you'll get every cent we've got, but that's just not so." In answering questions from the floor, he s&id he is opposed to Prop. 14; favors sex education and venereal disease educa- tion when Its controlled by local school boards and parents have access to the materials; will not vote to reduce the 66 From Page I PROP. 20 .•. "Patton," and "M•A•S-JI." "Certain ~nities would be allowed in movies if they were exclamatory," he said. "but not if they were directly con- nected "'ith sexual activity." Waldrip said that unless Proposition 18 were passed. the migration of smut dealers 'NOUld continue witU "Southern California becomes the undisputed smut capitol of the world." FromPqel SMUT ... Clemente, San Juan Ca pistrano, Seal Beach, Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, and Westminster. Councilman Jack Green cast Hun- tington Beach's vote against the Newport resolution. The city of Irvine, ab.!tained from voting because of a policy of not taking a stand on an ~e not directly affecting the community. percenl vote needed to pass bonds and ta'11: overrides and does not support col· lective bargaining for teachers. -Jim Thorpe, the Democl'al opposuig Badham cited hi.s experience as m teacher at Saddleback CoUege and as a councilman and mayor of San Juan Capistrano. He said he would like to see a bedroom tax used to help crowing districts pay for new schools on the same basis that cities pay for J>3rks. Thorpe said he opposes Proposition 14: favors the setting of minimum standards statewide for sex and venereal disease education; would vote to reduce the bond and override majority to SO percent and "unless something midway between what we've got now and collective bargaining comes along, I'd vote for col\.ective bargaining ror teachers.,, -R.Gbert Burke, the Republican in· --eumbent in the 70th Assembly district sai d his prime concern is the connicl between equalizing education throughout the state and local control o( schools. "Proposition S has a lot to offer as far as the way l look upon education in california,'' he declared. The incumbent from Hunt ington Beach said he also opposes Proposition 14: thinks sex education is strictly a matter for the local board to decid e; would not vote to reduce majority necessary to pass bonds and overrides and opposes binding arbitration or binding conlracts . with teachers. -Ten-y Mosffnto, is Democratic con-- lender attacked Burke, saying be was "polittcally and philooophically out of step "an extremist" and claimed that bis wting record is "an embarrassnH!rlt to the people of the district." Psychic Lecture Slated at GWC A lecture and slicle show of "Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain" will be presented Friday night at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. 1be co-authon of a book by that title, Sheila Ostrander and Lyrm Schroeder, will make · tlie.ir presentatioo, o n parapsychology at a p.m. in Forum IL Admission i.s S2 general, $1 for students. Among the "astonishing" experiments on which they will report is one Involving the transmissloo or words telepathically -from bfain to brain without in· tervening medium -over distances up to 400 miles. • The Environmental Council of J~un­ tington Beach wants more volunteers to help maintain the city's two recycling centers. according to Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, president o( the Council. "I you ever see a deaf person, say that to them. They're always happy when people show attention to them. no matter how awkward you feel doing it. Take my word, they'll really appreciate it." Special Pronwtion • • • Mrs. Carlberg says volunteer groups can earn between $120 and $UICI per month for their work.. Months are open from December on. The recycling centers are located at Five Points shopping center and Marina High School. Old glass, aluminum and newspapers are collected at the center and sold to recycling firms. Volunteers help package lhe collected materials and keep the site clean. Groups interested in working at the centers may phone Eleanor Rooney at 536-5201. Smuggling Rl11g "I don 't think many o( these kids will be lauching at deal people who they see using sign language," observed teacher Dareen Yonts after the presentation. The presentation on sign language was part of a Wlit on "communications." Mrs. Yonts said the class will learn several types of written, coded, and sign language, and even invent a code language at the end of the unit. The aim, she said , is to give students a better idea of what is involved in com- munication. Skeleton Found in Mine Linked to Laguna Man? By BARBARA KREIBICll Of 11W DtllY Piiot Sltlf A skeleton found in an abandoned mine shaft six miles cast of Elsinore is believ- ed to be that of a LaE?una Beach man. Warren Buro Hudson. a 11 e g e d I y ~urdered in. 1968 after double-crossing his partners 111 a narcotics ring. Hudson 's death was the subject or \('n~hy trials 1n Riverside last year, lt'adi ng to the t'<lnv1ct1nr1 of three men, although his horly had not then been found . A fourth su~pt!ct is believed hiding in Mexico. · ACC()rdin~ lo J..aguna Beach police records. ~1rs. P('nny ll udson, then living at 990 Ocean Front in Lagunn IJeach, ap- peared at the police station on Oct 29. 1968 to file a missing persons report on her husband. saying she fenred he had bct>n Involved in some sort or narcotics actlvity and might have been the victim of foul play. ~trs. Hudson told locnl polict he h11d not returned home follo11o ing n boat trip and she understood he had been seen in the Rivtrsldc arcu. According to police Tt'COn:ls. he wns las! seen alive in the vicinity of a lliversldc motel from which it i!'I believed he was lured 1.0' his death. Laguna Beach dctc<'ti'cs Norman Bab- cock and 1\le11: Jl1nf'n('1, 1nlNviewed 16 persons durin~ the scorch for t lud.<;On and checked out at ll'nst two unidentified bOdles. neithe r of "''h1r,h turned out to ht th11t of the victim lie wa.~ ht·licvrrl to be involved with R rln1~ 'ltTIU.Rl(llng ring that operated in 1he t.11guna Uc:irh . Riverside, Nc11o'port 1-larbor and Long Beach Harbor areas. Riverside county sherifrs department Capt. Russ Hawk said tOOay that positive identification of the skeleton, found Sun· day by three prospectors, will have to await the study of dental charts which may take several days. ~lowever, said 1-law k, "at thi s point we feel qui te sure it is l-ludson." Iden- ti fication, he said, was made from )cv.·elry found among lhe burled bones. including a medallion made from a $5 gold piece and a $1 gold piece made into a ring worn on the little finger. A chipped tooth also matched the missing persons description or Hudson, he said. During the trial lt was alleged that Hudson tricked hi s dope-smuggling partners. Lawrence Fassler, 30, or Arizona, who was convicted of first degree murder and conspir&cy lo commit murder; Ccrald Lawrence, 30, of Ariiooa. coovlctfXI of conspiracy to com- mit murder; and FAwnrd Lero Y C,llandler, 35, of Texas. who pleaded R1.1Uty to being an uses!OT)' alter the fact. All lhree nre now serving pritan terms. A fourth suspect. Keo Oldrlght, believed to he the ring's trigger•mtln, remains a fugitive. Trial testimony ronttnded that tlud8on made a den! t.o sell a lot1d of the rlntfa n.nrljunna to a Northe rn Callfomla llell's Angels motorcycle club, but sold the drug to a.nother customer for SUl,000 then rob- bed the cycliJL• club of $64,000 they hod paid for .the delivery. ' 10 DAYS ONLY Chair or Swivel Rocker from this Handsorne Collection Values from 199 to 219 Now 149°0 g;aceful in design and superb construction and are be~tifully enhanced by meticulous tailoring to give you lavish comforL You May Clwose From A Wide Selecti-0n Of Beautiful Fabrics H.J.GARRETI fURNl"fURE PROF!SSIONAl INTERIOR OES IGNE/l.I OfM'I Mon.,. Thurl, & Fri, E.•t. 2211 HAR!OR BLVD. COITA MEIA. CALIF, • ' " L bl C· ., d tr ' m le j r r p a w 0 0 0 r d l a d t H D.t.11.V PILOI \J Niguel Bania Haa·l S~id World ~s Biggest • Ry f'REDERICK SCHOEMEm, Ol ttM OeH1' f'llll it1l1 A world rte<1rd, albeit a foul one, was St!l over the weekend of March 24-21 ln a Laguna Niguel shopping a:nter. It occurred when a team of burglars blasted their way Into the vault or United California Bank's Monarch Bay branch and n1ethodlcally punchrd 458 safety deposit boxes. The SPoils of th is "Mission Impossible" triumph over sophisticated a I arm sys tems and concrete and steel rein· * * * Alibi Off e1· At Niguel Trial Told LOS ANGELES -A sus pect In the 15 million Laguna Niguel bank burglary of- fered an inmate at Los Angeles c00nty jail $30,000 to help cover up his alleged role in the crime. it \\'as testified in a federal court here Wednesday. Amil Dinsio, according to FBI agent Paul Chamberlain, was willing to pay the amount in return for falsified records which would show he was in Las Vegas over the weekend or March 24--26, the weekend the burglary took place, instead of California . The records. said Chamberlain, were to be supplied to Dinsio by Richard A. Gabriel, an" inmate in county jail with Dinsio who had an alleged ''contact" in the gambling mecca. Chamberlain's test i mo n y came \Vednesd ay afternoon during hearings over the admissibility in court of tape recorded telephone conversations between Dinsio and Gabriel, in which the defeir dant assertedly revealed a plot to murder a key prosecution witness. What Dinsio didn't know was that Gabriel. a police informant, was in con- tact with the FBI and wa s supplying the agency with inf<>rmation on the defen- dant. The content of that infonnation has rot yet fully been released. Gabriel, a thin young man with long, bushy hair, first met Oinsio in Module 1500 of the county jail -a cell block known to be reserved for "high powered" crime suspects. Gabriel testified that afttt he recei ved information from Dinsio, he contacted the FBI with the assistance of the Los Angeles County Sherill's Departm<nl. Chamberlain testified that Gabriel was instructed to provide the FBI with any information Dinsio might reveal, but to never attempt to "pry" information Crom the defendant. The FBI agent stated that Gabriel told him of Oinsio's desire to have an alibi set up and instructed the informant to make the necessa ry arrangements. These included securing a raise motel registration from a Las Vegas hotel and hiring a "prostitute" to testify during the bank burglary trial that she was with Dinsio during the weekend of March 24-- 26, Chamberlain told the court. This would bave countered testimony from Tustin resident Earl R. Dawson - the target of the alleged murder plot - that Dinsio, along with defendant Charles ~fulligan vi.sited him during the same weekend. Dinsio. Chamberlain asserted, was willing to give Gabriel the $30,000 in stolen stocks and bonds in return for the false documents. The FBI, Chamberlain f u rt her testified , was prepared to pay Gabriel "a sum of money" if he helped authorities locate property stolen from the bank. To date, Gabriel has recetved "$1,000 to $1 ,200" from the FBI for his services, Chamberlain told the court. U.S. District Court Judge William Mat· thew Byrne , Jr., was expected to rule late today whether the alleged con· ve rsations between Gab;iel aod Dlnsio may be entered as evidence in court later this week. Victor Sherman. Dinsio's attorney, ls challenging admission of the statements on the grounds that Gabriel was wor~g as an agent of the federal government, m violation of the so-<:alled Massiah ruling. That Supreme Court decision holds that federal agents can not infringe on a defendant's rights following his arrest. When the alleged murder plot was revealed late Tuesday, Dins lo, who had been free on $250,000 bond . was returned to Los An geles County Jail and is being held in lieu of $750,000 bond. Dinsio, who earlier this week appeared cheerful, sat sullenly, his eyes cast downward , during the testimonies of Gabriel and Chamberlain. The 36-year-old pinball company owner from Boardman, Ohio was arrested in connection with the Laguna Niguel bank burglary June 26 while driving down a street In his hometown. Girl, 2, Trapped In Washer Dies A 2-ycar-old BueM Park girl who was found TuesdAy locked In a washing machine with her four.year-old brother, died Wedn~day at Orange County Medical Center. tittle Kelly Ann Ray of 7075 ltoover Way died de.!lplto efforl11 of doctors In the medical centtir Intensive care unit to revivo her. ' lter brother. Steven, 4, was also tra~ ped In the washer but recovered after being given oxygen by a Ureman. The mother or the two children Mrs. Catherine 1\ay was slee ping at the time and wA!I alerled to lhe plJght of the tots by Dnother son. John, 6. forced vault walls totals an estimated '5 million . lt is the largest amount of loot ever stolen from a bank, according to law en- forcement agencie1 aod world record keepers. Up to March 16. the world record holder in the bank burglary category was a break-in at the Banque d'Algerie In Oran, Algeria . A total of $4.77 million was stolen. 1'hc crlme was committed in October, 1962 by 150 "plastlqueurs" -terrorists Nobel Winner West German novelist Hein· rich Boell is winner of the 1972 Nobel Prize for literature. See story on Page 5. F ree wa y Bridge Collapse Probe Remains Secr et? PASADENA (AP) -Even if In· vestigators find out what caused a sec- tion of a Foothill Freeway bridge under construction here to collapse, killing six workers, the public will never know, says a spokesman for the state Division of Highways. "It is somewhat doubtful whether we ever will !ind out the cause and even i! we-do,-tt--won't be released to the public because of likely litigation," Keith McKean, assistant district engineer in charge of construction for the Division or Highways, said Wednesday. Federal and state agencies launched an investigation after the 60-foot middle sec· tion of tbe 580-foot-long bridge fell 90 feet Tuesday, killing the workers and injuring 21 others. As the investigation opened, ac· cusations and denials concerning the disaster were made. Nick Salemo, business agent of the Ce· ment MaSOflS Union which represented workers on the bridge, said it was built . too fast. "Push, push, push -that's all they thllik about," Salemo said. Richard Malcolm, manager of Polich- Benedict Construction Co., one of three contractors involved on the bridge, said his ftrm was working according to a schedule drawn up by the stale and was not going too fast. Authorities said the bridge fell after metal supports and scaffolding, known as faJsework, apparently failed as wet con- crete was being poured on the bridge. McKean said if the failure was ln the falsework, investigators may never find out what happened. "lf the problem is in the foundation or in lhe soil it might be possible to come up with a detennination," he added. Damage was estimated at up to $400,000. The failure, authorities said, couJd cause a three-month delay in a 1.2· mile segment of the freeway scheduled for completion in April. South Viet P a per Publishes N nde Kissinger Photo SAIGON (UP1 ) -A South Vlclnamcse oppos ition newspaper today published the head and torso portion or the Jf arvard Lampoon's centerfold compositt' photo or a nude Dr. Henry A. Kissinger. Tbe photo atop the teft side of page one of Dal Dan Toe (Great People) was cap- tioned. "Kissinger has no more secrets." Earlier in the day, the V\ctnam edition of the U.S. Army dally newspaper. P11cifie Stan and Stripes, appeared with a giant centerfold blowup of the Lam- poon composite . Another Saigon newspaper publisher .. 1 am very tempted to print Kissinger's picture in my paper today 'with the title 'Kissinger comes to Saigon a11 nude.' But I am afraJd it would be conflsc1tetl. Pee>- ple here do not have thil tlnd of humor." A U.S. Emlmsy 1pokesnlan .. Id bO did no~ know wbetbcr Kluinger had aeen the photo. know l'or their UR of plalltic-~ive - followlog coUaspe of civil order in the African country. The worth of t~ loot taken from the deposit boxes or wealthy south coast bank customers was revealed in a Los Angeles federal court several weeks ago before the 9pening of the trial of three Ohio men charged with the crime. The value of lbe stolen property was reported by Earl Dawson, 1 Tustin re.!11- dent, to wt>om the crime allegedly was admitted by defendant Charles Mulligan. Dawson, a longtime friend of MulUgan. asserted he was told that $S million was taken, but that only 13 to 18 percent or that figure was actoa.lly realized afl.er securities and other property was sold. A source close to the f'Bl sa1d h was his belief the 1.a~una Niguel t<1ke v.·os a criminal record setter. fie appears to be right The largest burglary on record before the Algerian caper took place occurred in New York's Manhattan Bank in 1878, wbefl th~ves made off with SS millklrl in cash and securitlell. The Laguna Niguel job far surpasses the 1950 holdup of a Brink's Incorporated armored truck ln Boston. The truck was carrying $2.78 million, of which $1.22 million was in cash. The only robbery that stares down on Laguna Niguel ls the theft of '9.878,400 In gold bars that were stolen from the German national gold reserves by a com. bine cf U.S. military personnel and German civilians ln IMS. No one tw ever bttn broUght to trial In that case. A statistic Uwt uodeNcores the slu of the Laguna Niguel burglary is the fact the $S million stolen surpasses lhe $3.89 million lost during all the bank burcJarles during the y'ar 1965 throughout the United States. That figure comes from a special state Department of Justice report "Be.nk Robbery in California," prepared In 1986. It has not been updated since the tirne of the original wr iting. Campaign 'Pressures' Bared Architects A llege S u pe rvisor s 'Force Contributions' By JACK BROBACK 01 flle 0.lfY Pikll Sl1ll Architeets, engineers and I a n d developers who do business with Orange County are being pressured to make con- tributions to l h e campaigns of supervisorial candidates, they charged Hospital Aide Says $32,000 Followed Loan By TOM BARLEY Of Ille ~llY Pilot Sllff Former St. Bernardine Hospital con- troller Robert Machan admitted late Wednesday th at he received a total of $32,000 in what the prosecution has label· ed "kickbacks" shortly after h is emijloyers approved a $500,000 loan to a combine headed by Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney. Machan, 50, testified as a prosecution witness in Orange County Superior Court that he got a $15.000 check from Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive, Hun- tington Beach, within one week after the Joan was granted. He testified that he got a further $17,000 in checks from Riverside broker Wendell Warren Austin, 38. Botb men, with Machan, Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via Cascadita, San Clemente, and James Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington Beach, were indicted with Mrs. Marlene Dulaney, 32, on charges of grand theft, fraud and conspiracy. Prooeculor stuart Grant has dropped all charges against Machan in return for the veteran accountant's cooperation as a prosecution witness. Machan will go back on the witness stand Tuesday after a five-day break in the "Taj Mahal" trial to resume his ac-- coun t of an alleged conspiracy that ended with the hospital's thret. directors -all Roman Catholic nuns -drawing $500,000 from their reserve account. Machan agreed with the nuns who preceded him on the witness stand that promises by Dulaney and Shipley to in- crease their interest rate from five to 10 percent had a great deal to do with that decision. The loan remains unpaid today. And the stocks handed to the m.ins by Dulaney 's World Securities operation - 250,000 shares of A7.a1ea Mobile Homes - stands corxl.emned by the prosecuticn as worthless collateral. But Machan insisted Wednesday tha t hospital administrator Sisler Mary Margaret knew of the $15.000 check given to him by Hayes -a point untouched by the c!emoted nun in her own testimony. "ll was Hayes' own money ." Machan said. "But I told Sister Mary Margaret about it and I told her is was for me." l\1achan said the $Ii ,000 in checks given to him by Austin was paid into the account of World Life Research Inc. - a philanthropic organization of which Machan is the controlling director. Machan told Grant that Sister Mary Margaret was not told about the All.!tin payments. He told the prosecutor that he did not believe his employer was aware of the ellstenct of Wo rld Life Researctt. Machan is the fourth prosecution witness in the first phase of the ''1'aj Mabal" trial -a phase devoted to allegaUons stemming from the asserted defrauding of the San Bernardino hospital. r.frs. Dulaney will be called to .Judge Jomes Turner's courtroom \n the second phase or lhe trial to face, w\!h her hus· band and Shipley. charges th11t :-1 number or investors In the World f'inanclal Trends organiiation were defrauded before the Dulaneys fl ed to W e s t Germany in November, 1969. Dulaney WAS president and Shiplty was vice-president of the financi3 I enterprise which ope.rated from offices in Laguna ll ills and Stal Beach. Mn. Dulaney acted as her hu sband's secretary. QUAKE RATTLES SAN DIEGO AREA PASADENA (AP -A light earth- quake w111s recorded In an area 45 miles east of San Diego tarly today. A spokesman for the C a I l ti c h Selsmologic11I lAlboratory here said the quake, measuring 3.5 on the. Richter scale, hlt at fl :28 a.m. and was centered 10 mlla eaat or Pine Valle y •• today. The Orange County Grand Jtrry issued a warning to members of the Board or supervisors tw o weeks ago after receiv· ing complaint from the county chapter of the American Institute. of Archite<:ts (AIA). Spokesmen for the architects said, "the jury should be aware of a practice which seems l<l be taking root In Orange Coun· ty, one which we believe is contrary to public interest and which could lead to the development of a system of patronage in county government. Donations Told $47,500 in, Club's Campaign Fu1ul Tbe current popular Orange CoWllY game titled "Who is Giving What :l\ioney tod<1y with the disclosure of legally lo Which Political Campaign?" continued required reports to the county Registrar of Voters. The Linc-Oln Club of Orange County grabbed the spotlight with the admission that they have given $47,500 to four candi- dates and five poUtical action groups. Candidates themselves arc required only to file individual contributions of more than $500, according to the law. · First District Supervisor Robert Battin topped the supervisorial candidates with contributions totalling $22,900 to date. Hs opponent. Santa Ana attorney Wil- liam Wenke, listed only a persmal loan of $5.000 to hi.s campaign. Third District Supervisor William Phil· lips of Fullerton admitted receiving $4,671 contnDutions of more than $5 each includ- ing a $.1,671 donation from the Orange County Committee for Good Government. Ralph Diedrich, PhiUips' opponent list- ed but three contributions of more than $500. They included the Rossmoor Corpor· ation, developers of Leisure World . $1,000; Morris Silverman, $1,000, and Shapell In- dustries, $600. Battin said his list in('Juded funds raised at two testimonal dinners. Other contri· butions included Dr. Louis Cella, $1,200 ; the doctor's Santa Ana clinic, $2,500 ; Mission Community Hospital , $1,000: Fred Harber, $1,000; Orange County Medical Supply, $2,000 and the Central Orange County Taxpayers Association, $1.500. Dr. Cella and Harber have been ldentl· fied as Battin's political mentors and the so-ca lled taxpayers association is headed by Cella. The Lincoln Club gave $9,750 to Wenke: $5,000 to state Sen. James Whetmore ; $5,000 to Phillips and $20.000 to Republi- can assembly candidate William Danne- meyer. Most of the Lincoln Club's donations were given before the June primary and so are not listed on the candidates' state- ments filed Wednesday. Wenke said $4,000 of the $9,750 reported by the political club was received before June 6 so was not reported this time and that he had only received $1,000 o!. the balance. The supervisorial candidate said he would not accept further contributions from the club because Its method of re- porting confused the public in that it did not show a breakdown between prlmary and general election donations. State Parks Commission To Hear San Onofre Plan By JOHN VilTERZA, Of ltl• DeHr l'llot Stfff A major master plan showing hundreds of campsites, bicycle trails and a special surfing beach at San Onofre State Park will come up for a public hearing in Los Angeles Friday morning. The hearings, conducted by the State Parks Commission, v.·ill examine pro- posals which were prodded on personally by Presiden t Nixon earlier tbis year. The chief executive has become chagrined at asserted slowness in developing the six miles of beach and 2,300 inland acres he granted to the public !ast year. The proposals, a complete plan for development of the park parcel, will be aired at to a.m. in the bearing room of the state building in downtown Los Angeles. The plan calls for constructk>n of campsites ranging from group ac- commodations for 100 persons to single. n1gge<l camp areas accessible only to hikers and bicyclists. The most primitive camping areas will be clustered deep inland at the norther· ly portion of San Mateo Canyon. Picnic areas will be developed at the doWDCOflSt edge of the upper canyon along the shores of San Mateo Creek. lo the coastal area of the canyon, 330 JTl:. e campsites are proposed. "A rchitects and engineering firms con- tribute substantial sums to candidates tor business ~asons," said David Klages, president of the AlA chapter. "Those who won't buy tickets to $100 a person cocktail parties won't get county contracts." The architects' letter to the Grand Jury, signed by Klages, said in part. "Vendors. architects, engineers and land developers v.·ho do business with the county are being 'invited' to social af· fairs honoring some county supervls· ors ... the price of these invitations has been $100 per person or $125 a couple. "Invariably, the in vitatiOM are follow· ed up by a phone cJll reminding the recipient of the social event. Understand· ably, the invitee feels compelled to at· tend or at least to contribute fearing that if he does not his ability to compete for county jobs for contracts: will be materially affected . "We believe that such practice i8 an abuse of the public trust and shouJd be discouraged," the. letter concluded. Campaign parties are not a new development in the county and have been used for years to raise campaign funds. They are also widely used throughout the nation. Klages, feeling the pressure was bec-Oming too heavy , decided to speak out because he does not do business with the county. He said about i dozen complaints have been made to the architects' group tell· ing of pressure being put on them "by pestering phone calls a n d requests for money." r 4, One Santa Ana architect, Ralph G. Allen , said his finn bad recieved as many as si:r telephone calls in one day asking for support for Robert Battin, the First District supervisor who is in a tight campaign to hold his job. Ironically, It ls Blttn who has been presm1ng the supervlJon to adopt a strict lobbyi!lt law which would require au firms doing business wtth the county to account for all money spent to gain business contracts. The C r a n d Jury's letter to the supervisors stated, in part, "it has been brought to the attention of the jury that certain practices in the securing of cam· palgn contributions in supervborlal races could be detrimental to the best interests of Orange County. "The Grand Jury recognizes the need for monies to finance a campaign but wouJd recommend that each supervisor imtruct his campaign manager not to e:r- ert undue pressure on vendors, land developers and professional people or citizem which might cause them to con- tribute for fear of losing their right to compete for county jobs or contracts." The Grand Jury letter was signed by Foreman Otto M. Sdunidlen and dld not state that the jtu'y was launchl.ng a full !Cale investigation of campaign con- tributions. In addition to Battin, Third District Supervisor William Phillips Is engaged in a tough campaign to hold his job with challenger Ralph Diedrich of Fu11erton. 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MAIN at Edinger· SANTA ANA· 547-3993 4 D•ll~ PILOT Thursday, October 19, 1972 Just /9'\ Coasting i~J ; @ with Tom urphine Tax on Smog From Caltech PIE lN THE SKY DEPT. -The latesl exercise ln da n1n foolishness on the smog <'Ontrol front en1l'rged this .,..,eek from the unlikely confines of tht-California Institu te of Technology. an institution in Pasadena renO\ll·ned for good sc ience and lousy football teams. r~verybody hates smog. You can prob- ably travel all over Orange and Los Angeles counties like Diogenes and find nary a soul y,·ho will defend the stuff. UPI Ttl.iwt• REP. EMANUEL CELLER 10-NY) BIOS CAPITOL GOODBYE 84-Year.Old Dean of House Was Defeated in Democratic Primary ' Tied ure To Mc Go vern Office ' SANTA MONICA (AP) -Dooald H. nmes joined Ibo Wuhlngt.on Peet and Segretti, named as a ~y figure ln an Time magu!ne in publ.iahina: stories link· fie~q~~r~~·ill at Democratic NatiooeJ alleged Republican 9P1loc and sabotage ~le House aide Dwight Otapln to Time magazine said tbls week that It campaign agalmt DemocraUc JftSlde~ was Chapin who hired See;rettl as an tial candidates, is listed here as ; The 'l1mel Wet it had learned that at undercover aaent to "subvert and disrupt I I least 28 callt made fnim SegrelU'• home -vo unteer or George McGovern. telephone and charged to hiS credit card DemocraLlc candidates' campaigns this Baibara BennCtt, manager of the were directed to tbe White House election year" and that more than McGove~ver cam.pat g 0 head· Cha.pin's home, and to the bome ml ()f: $350,IKX> was passed to him through qllbrters showed nemmen Wednesday nee of E. Howard Hunt Jr., a former Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, lhree irllex cards boarlng SegrelU's White House comultanl Indicted In the President Nixon's personal attorney. name but indicating be bad never taken Segretti, 31, a reglstered Democrat and part in any McGovem..slriver raWes former Treasury Department att()rf)ey, canvasses or other V()lunteer work. ' has been unavailable for comment since' No one at the Santa Monica oHice F BJ Prob• Oct. 10. when he was first linked in news could recall seeing lhc man idenlilylng ing accoonls to alleged operations by the himself as Segrctti. GOP t(). disrupt Democratic campaign. Miss Bennett said however that Gem;n; Sales Efforts to reach him Wednesday night volunteers sometimes appeared at rallies ., " were unsuccessful. and other events withoot st g n t n g The address and telephone rumber fur themselves In and there!°"' she could not I.aMARQUE, Tex. (AP) _ The Segrettl In the <•mpalgn headquarters' say categorically that Segretti actually FBI and Justlce Department are files are the same u those liSted for the never did any campolgn work. lnveotigallng the sale of ~ atlomey by the Cal~ornia Bar Associa- Ed Finegan, ooe of the workers In the items and tedmical m 8 t e r l a 1 tion. Segretti lives in suburban Manna McGovern-Shriver office, said a man relallng ID the Gemlnl 7 space de! Rey. identifying hlmseU as SegretU bad IUgbl, acccnllng ID the National Miss Bennett said her files lndioated telephoned several times to do work. A e r on a u t l c !II an d s p 8 c e that the man calling himself Segretti Finegan said the man had a "very Admin1slratlon. fint contacted the ()fflce on June S, ttree positive" attitude because be always Glen V. McAlvoy, regional 1n-dars before the California presidential promised to show up. sped.or for NASA. said Wedne!day pnmary. Oh. there was this one chap, Dr. David Challinor of the Smithsonian Institution. who came out to San Francisco and said smog is good for you because it screens out sun rays that could cause skin cancer. But he's the only smog defender aro~l!fld in recent times and you get the notion that he hasn't breathed too much of tile stuff himself. WUlCH BRINGS US back to Caltech. \\'herein the noted scientists have C'stablished this Environmental Quality Laboratory which has been looking for cures to smog. But Miss Bennett repeated that there that the items had been advertised Coples of the three cards bearing \Vas no record the man did by a Oea market In tbls Gull Segretti's name show more than a ·-re sl!ll \vould cut where he cnuJd and try ever any Coast. f ........, ,,·ork . ()r picked up any campaign town. o entries. to hold spending to $250 billion. materials. On Oct. 8, she said, Segretti's McAlvoy said the items included .On June 3, Segretti offered to j()in a Congress Spurns Nixon Spending Lid, Adjourns '\'ASH INGTON (U PI ) -\Vith a w3rn- ing by President Nixon that their actions ntight cause a tax boost, lawmakers head- ed home today after rejecting Nixoo's request for emergency pov.•ers to cut gov· ernment spending. Just the other day they published this report titled , "Smog, a Report to the People." In it, they make a lot of scien- tific recommendatioos for autos like ex- haust systems, evaporation controls and conversions to natural or propan~ gas fuels. They also talk about smog cootrols on fixed-base polluter!. THE l\.10TOR CAR, however, ap- parently prov~ a real vexation for the Caltch smog fighters. So, in their report th~y moved ?Ut of the rea1m of pur~ SClence and into the amia of political taxation. They suggested. In essence. that the government ought to tax the hell out of drivers who potentially make the most smog. . Alas, in making this move, they looked hke Tech's football teams noted for being in the clear when they 0 tripped and fell. The proposal was, in brief, that the governments in Orange. Los Angeles. San Bernardino, Riverside, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties should levy this 1mog tax. In adjourning the 92nd Congress ~Vednesday night the Democratic major- ity abandoned compromise efforts and killed a measure to limit outlays this yur to S250 billion. The bill would have given Nixon power to make cuts as needed - estimated at up to $10 billion--to reach his economy goal. . ~e Democrats wondered in doing so 1f Nixon needed the issue more than the bill. Speaker Carl Albert said the final verdict on that will not be In until elec· tion day. In a mesaage lo the Senate before the crucial vote, Nixon served notice he would consider a vote against the ceiling a vote for a tax boost next year. Earlier he had p~se to make the spending-tax issue ~ ma1or factor in his campaign for elec· t1on ()f a Republican Congress. Althoug& denied emergency cutting powers that would have enable him in ef- fect to rewrite major benefit laws, Nixon sent word to the Capitol Wednesday he Rep. Wilbur 0. Mills (0-Ark.) chair-cards were transferred to the "less ac-a ~ta card, mouthpiece and ,bicycle parade for McGovern. That same man of the \Vays and l\1eans Committee live volunteers" file. -teclmica.1 books and tapes relative day he offered to canvass a precinct in and chief architect ()f the defeated econ-Miss Bennett sald she recognized to an nperiment aboard the the nearby Ven.ice area. omy bill. told the House that Treasury ScgretU's name after reading it in the Gem1nl 7 conducted in 1965 by On JLme 4 be promised to help Secretary Gevrge Shultz assured him the ne\111 earlier this week and went to her astronauts James A. Lovell Jr. and dist~ibute leaflets. On Sept. 17 he offered administration would hold down spending. files where sbe found the listings. Frank Borman. again to canvass a precinct. On Sept. %3 In two years the Congress had lowered __ E_a.:.rl.:.ier::....;W;.;ednesda=·::::"Yc....;the:::._N:.:e::;w:::_.:_Y::;or:_:k'---'===~-~=======!__2he~~sa~id~hec..!!'~'pr~oba:.:....~bl:y_" ~woul==d~at=lmd::• the voting age to 18, ootlawed discrimi· 1 McGovern rally. nation on the basis of sex, boosted Social Security payments by more than 30 per- cent, and launched a historic plan -pro- posed by Nixoo -to share federal rev- enues with the cities and states. It had killed Nixon's welfare reform plan, including a $2,400 guaranteed an- nual wage. And it had four times raised the limit on the national debt, the latest ~~Wednesday when among its last acts 1t hxed a new limit of $465 billion. In other action \Vednesday, Coogress completed the process or passing over .Nixon's veto a $24·.6 billion program to fight water fl()llution. Republicans deserted the Preskient in droves during the vote oo the veto ()Ver· ride. The Senate vote was 52-U. while in the House the vote was 247 to 23. B1'1&TALL MEl\T THE WAY IT WOULD work. you get taxed the most if you drive an older car and the more miles you drive, the more you &et taxed. According to a table they propose, for example. a guy who owns a 1972 Whiu.er could drive more than 15.000 miles and he's pay a smog tax of about $100. On the other hand, the chap in a 1966 Clunkmobile would pay $112 il he ()n]y drove 5,000 miles. Lclrd ()n}y knows what he'd pay for driving the same distaoce as the fellow in the 1972 Whiz7.er. l{issh1ger, Thiei1 Conf~r; Red Coalitio11. Rejected UPTOSIZE&O What it OOils down to is soaking the poor -who can't afford a new car every year -while the afnuent with their new cars get off the book. And it's most likely that the working man. who drives the older model bu to travel .a .lot more. miles each year'to grub out a livmg [or his family and to pay that smog tax. Indeed. it all sounds like something that might come oot of Pasadena. FURTHER, 1 DON'T think the Caltech boys have really proven that the um Bloatmobiles, . with their huge engint.s aJ_ld power_ uiists oo everything but the cigarette lighter, prCJduce less smog than say, a 1966. Peanut Four with an engtn~ about as .big as a sewing machine. Jn nal1ty, it seems the Caltech boys got. frustrated in their eff<>rts to find a ready. solution to smog, so they turned to taxation. Maybe you can't blame them. Everybody else turns to taxes. • On~ Of t~ Tech scientists did caution ~~ _d~scussing the SJll()g fighting report, \Ve II have to ease into all this •• _" That may be the understatement of the century. From Wire Senrices SAIGON -Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger held two rounds of private tal ks with President Nguyen Van Thieu on ending the Vietnam war today and as they met, the Saigon government re- jected a coalition with the Communists as a peace condition. The South Vietnamese Information ?>.1inistry i~u~ an unprecedented state- ment reaffl~1ng Thieu's opposition to t~ Commwust-proposed three-part coali· lion. Nonnally, ()fficial statements cm talks between representatives of tbe allies are issued jointly at the cooclusion ()f the conferences. .The statement was delivered to the y1etn~mese press before tbe end of Kiss· mger s 3in·hour morning se.ssi()n at Independence Palace. Kissinger ntieu and U.S. Ambassador Ellsw~rth c Bunker held a second l 1h·hour con:. ference later today. . No st~t~ments. v.•ere given to newsmen b~ part1c1pants 1n the discussions after either of the meeting s. Kissinger re· turned to _Bunker's villa after the after· noon session. Kissinger arrived in Saigon \Vcdncs- day, a day after his latest round or secret peace talks in Paris with North Vietnamese negotiators. On the war front South Vietnamese troops clashed sharply with Communist forces in a new flareup along Saigon's northern flanks. Field reports said the battl~s cootinued at midafternoon at two locauons. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of tilt Dally Piiot Is guarant.ttd Molllt.!y-FrlCllY! " you eo llOt IMI.,. 'J'alr p.iper b'!' 5:30 p.m., call •fld y.;.vr COCt'I' will ~, • .,.. IH'qht to 'f'l)V. ".Ills •r• '8,.n UlllU ..... p.m. S11urd1v 1fld $und1y1 If yuu do not '1ClfYe your COPY by t 1.m. Slhlrd•v °" 1 1 m. Sul!dlV, c•ll Mid I COP'f Wiii iir:i brouohf to vuu. Ci lls 1r1 II'"' vntll 10 •·"" Ttltphontt Mo'! Oran91 Counry Ar•t ....... '41-4111 Nort~wut Hl.lflllngtQr. fleAtl'I 11nd wn1rn111111r ............... , •1:120 i1n Clem"119. C101,1r-llk'l'I, ~•n J1.11n C~DilfrlnG. Ofln1 Pttlnl, Silull'! l •!IUM , I.IOI.IN Ni9U91 •. , • 4'1""70 • Cold, Rain, Snow • Ill U.S . • Numbing Air Chills Most of NationAs Winter Nears California ~ '°" . P•IOAY I.SI p '"· ~.t fl'lr•I lllt'I . . . . 1•01 1.m. st l'lfJll tow . .• . • • . I :SO 1.m . '" ~ lllOl'I .... • . • l •:W P.!'11 s.o S.COM low ....... 2 ~77o.m: 01 1111'1 ltlWt 7!02 l .rn. '"' •·1• p ~. MOOl'I ltbff I : lt p.m. Ith 3!16 • m. f/ .S. Sunttnar11 ., ,,.. -'-$ .... .._ ~ c*, , .. "' ·~-._ ,. ca.,.,-l:!f': ~ ~ llGIMO----~ .... IN 1.~.e~«),MOw mJ~·'''~~ Temperature• OPENS COSTA MESA 16th and Newport Blvd. -Open Sunday, 11 -5 SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY TAILORED CLOTHING AND , FURNISHINGS EXCLUSIVELY FOR REGULARS AND LONGS, EXTRA LONGS, STOUTS, LONG STOllTS AND SHORT STOUTS UP TO SIZE 60 ••• Com6in, tryua <m for Biu ••• you'll be gkul.youdid! YOU'LL DISCOVER A WIDE SELECTION OF SU ITS, SPORT- COATS, SLACKS, RAINWEAR, OUTERWEAR, SHIRTS AND P,CCESSORIES AT ROBERT HALL LOW PRlcES ... AND, AS AN EXTRA SAVING, COMPLETE ALTERATIONS PROVIDED FREE OF CHARGE! • -' ' ' I I I ~ I ' • 7 Orange Coast. Today's FlnaJ N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 293, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU RSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972 N TEN CENTS Jet Airports: Whose Ox Getting Gored? By JACK CHAPPELL Of "" °""' "'"" srett • "Wben you start talklng about solving the airport, pro;blem. you start talking about whose ox is being gored." Peppery Bob Bresnahan, Orange coun- ty director or A,viation, was talktn2 to memben of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council -Wednesday nlght, and it was their ox, El Toro, they were interested in. Bresnahan, at the direction of fifth dlslrict county supervisor R o n a I d Caspers, is embarked on a gpecial study to investigate the location of a con- tinental airport on Camp Pendleton. The Marines haven't been much help, he said. "They won't even Jet me in the gate down tbert to study it," he said. Bresnahan also cited citizen opposition in San Clemente to the Caspers' p~ posal. "We did meel with 300 people in San Clemente who were against it, well anyhow, 299 were. "The city council toot the posltioo that 'we don 't know if the airport would be good for us or bad for us, but we don't twant to know.' and they went ahead and pa~ a resolution opposing it," Bresnahan said. Twc locations were under inve"stigation for a possible location of the airport n.nways, one about four miles north of Oceanside and the other in Hidden Valley, l'fi: miles from the Western White House. The proposal for the location of the airport runways in San Diego County bas not been favorably received by officials there, be noted. 'urbey weren't even polite down there in Sal) Diego when they told us to go back up and solve our own problems," he said. Bresnahan pointed out that if the runways were located tbere and the tenninal facilities further north in Orange O>unty the two would be con- nected by a high speed ground transporta· tio.1 system. However, the economic base generated by the airport would be centered around the terminal, "and that's devious, as you can well see," he said. Bresnahan cited a study on air transportation needs within a IO<ounty area which said that if quiet jet engines were available by 1985, El Toro would be the belter of !he two locations for an airport. TYto evaluations were made, the "Systems Concept," v.•bich considers airport development under conditions of acceptably quiet and clean jet engines, and the "Altematlve" pla1. which con· siders airport location under the absence of acceptable equipment. Pendletoo was not recommended under either of the two criteria, while El Toro (See AIRPORT, Page !) Arms Discussions Set U.S., Soviets Slate Weapons Talks in Geneva WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States and the Soviet Unicn agreed to open the second round cf strategic of· fensive arms limitation talks in Geneva on Nov. 21, the White House announced today. The new set of negotiations will seek a permanent treaty to follow up the in· terim curb on cffensive nuclear weapons ,signed by President Nixon during bis Moscow summit in May, . The brief announcement of the date for resumption of the talks was made simultaneously in Washington a n d MOSoow. While .House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said ambassador Girard Smith, \Yho headed' the U.S. ~egotiating team in the first phase of the Strategic Arms LimitatJon Talks (SALT), will continue as chief U.S. negotiator. "Pursuant to the agreement reached during the summit meeting in Moscow last May lo continue active rie~otiations for limitation of strategic offensive arms, the governments of the United Slates and USSR will resume talks on this subject on Nov. 21 in Geneva, SwitzerlCll\d." The ta lks will focus only on offensive weapons. A permanent treaty covering defensive missiles was signed by Nixon in Mcscow and ratified later by the Senate. Congress also approved, after ex· tensive debate, the interim agreement freezing the buJk of both countries• arsenals of long·range nuclear missiles for five years. At the Geneva talks, the United States is prepared to press for a pennanent curb not only on long·range missiles but also on other categories of nuclear weapons. Ziegler said Geneva was selected as (See TALKS, Page !) ~~ State High\vay Panel Ponders Gun Training Center Conies Under Fire DAILY PILOT Sti ff Pll9t9 • HERE'S EDDIE-McMAHON, THAT IS, PEDALING IN THE HARBOR Only In· Nowpott; Two· Goats end • TV PerlONllly In the Drink Wet and Wild TV Star, Goats Spin.sh in Harbor Television personality Ed McMahon and a pair of billy goats got into cold waler iri Newport Beach this morning. They all had to be pulled out of tbe bay. McMahon is in town this week filming a television ·special about Newport Harbor. The script for one scene called for him to be in a dinghy half filled with water. He -was to ball It oul McMahon leaned hi3 large frame the wrong way, however, and Into the drink he went, even though members of the crew were holding onto the craft from lhe dock al Art'• Landing In Balboa. The goats got into the water on their own -after they were pulled down from the roof of Woody's Wharf, a popular Newport Boulevard watering hole. Woody Payne, proprietor, 18.id a cook discovered them when be came to work, Orange Coast WeaC11er The storm douds are disappear· lng and · mostly sunny weather is expected ror Friday. Ttmperatw-es will range In tbe middle to upper 709 wllh Ute low tonight 58. INSIPtl T ODA\' Ccurt or<Urr twin 4-NtafloOld girls b~ placed for adoption bt· cau..te thdr mother haa .tUCh a low JQ &hac she ccn't give them proptr core. See 1tOf'11, Paoe af. LM....,. 11 .......... l• C1~ 14 MWltl 0AJ <"II.in.I ~ MlltMI ~ M ('MlU 41 Hllll'llllt ..... ... • C,.._,. 41 ar..... (...wr It, l. .,.. .. ~ 11 ~ .. ••1twlll '"' ' Ii.di Ml111ftt ... •llflfll#!Mllll 4MI , ... ~ .. ,.IMNI ~ n.tiffl 6Q ~Ir ,.,. ...... lt • ...., .. Mo~ ,. ._. ..... ,..,, Alllll. ...... n Wlr'lt ..... t.I ,, , got them down somehow and put them in a vacant lot neit door. "The next thing we knew they were swimmjDJ across lhe bay," he said. He called the Orange County Harbor Patrol, which pulled one out and found , the other already Ubore on the opposite side of the Rhine Channel at the Lido Shipyard. Payne says he thinks be knows who put the goats on hJs roof, but he's not telling. "They're going to have to pay for the boles in my roof those • • . goats: made," be said. McMahon'• encounter with Ute briny deep came after a aerie1 of water shots he's taping for a special called, "It's a Wet, Wacky World" that producers hope to sell and have on the air in February. Taping actually began last August when crews shof the Newport Harbor Chamber of Couimerce Character Boat Parade. The program, "is about the run you can have around the waler, especially Newport Harbor," said McMahon. a fre- quent Newport Beach visitor. McMahon, best known as the straight- man announcer on the Johnny Carson Show, bad filmed a number or scenes prior to his unplanned man overboard episode. He pedaled around In 1 paddleboat and then climbed into a S11Uboat that was towed at the end of a rope in front or cameras. Filming la lo cootlnue lbrough Friday and a spollesman ror tbe production com- p&Jll' Aid the ....... wm ba back lo flnlah things up late next· week. Carroll Rites Held l!Oµ \"WOOD (APi -Leo G. Carrol~ widely known for his lelevlalon ro1.. u "Topper" and as Mr. Waverly on "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." •as to be bur- ied today after a Requiem Mau al lhe Blessed Sacia-l aiurch here. Carroll, 8S. who died Mooday In Prelbyterlan Hospital, ,. ... lo be burled In Grandview Catntltty In Oltncl.t le. . ' 'Excess' ·Land FoUowinir the advice or the Slota Public WQr~ Department, the California HigbWay Commiasion Wednesday in- dicated it will proceed very slowly as It ponders what to do with its excess freeway properties in Newport Beach. Commissioners told members of the staff to schedule meetings with all the communities involved in the planned Pacific Coast Freeway to determine the best uses of the land. Newport Beach had been plugging for a staff to schedule meeting with all the quick decision to sell or fease the prop. purposes. Commissioners die!. adopt a budget for lm74, however, that includes more than $4 million to construct a 1.l·mile stretch of the New MacArthur Boulevard from Jamboree Road south to a point south of Bonita Canyon Road. They also appropriated SlS0,000 to widen th~ MacArthur B o u 1 e v a r d overpass over the San Diego Freeway and install traffic sjgnals at the onramps and offramps. The MacArthur extension project will involve the construction of a six-lane road with a 1..._foot median divider. Funds will also go toward grading at the planned Bison Avenue interchange of the planned Corona del Mar freeway . The contractor wil l use excavated material to construct an embankment for the freeway just south of San Diego Creek. That phase of the freewa y work is being done now because engineers an- ticipate considerable settling in the area. The fate of the project still hinges on the O:Jtcome of a federal aid to highways bill that failed to tn¥e it out of a House-- Senate Conference tommittee Wednes- daf, however. Spoliesmen for the Public Works Department said if those monies aren't forthcoming, the state will have to make some changes in its plans foi' next year. J orda1i' s H ciss a1t Ends Vacation On Orange Coast Crown Prince Hassan of Jordan left Newport Beach Wednesday after a vaca- tion at the Newporter Inn that included a variety of acttvlUes Dllive to Southern California. He wenl surllng In HunUngton Beaoh, water sklina: on Upper Newport Bay and Y~iled a Yuiely or local tourist al• tractlom, including Dilneyland and Uon Coontry Safari. He went to a picnic at O'Neill Park and attended a rootball game but he said Ute hlghiigitl WU I sportl!shlng trip lhol 11w blm hllld • 190-pouod marlin oland-lna Oat on deck, without a ·bame11. Officlab of Ute Newporter llm said lhe crown prtnc., Kina HuMeln'• hand-¢ck· ed IUCCt-, Wat coooJdered the Mghest l!OCUrlty r1sk ever lo aiay there. Tbere have been 12 aUtmpla on lh< klng'1 Ufe, although none aO far on the Hre or the 16-year<>id naaan. I Flags Over Harbor Newport Harbor High School's championship f1ag twirling squad in- cludes (kneeling, from left) Dawn Pease, Kathie While, Sue Murdy and (back row, from left) Lynn Selling, Jan Ryan and Kathy Kephart Girls captured sweepstakes trophy for exceUence at 1972 summer camp for high school spirit leaders. Prop. 18 Debate Cente1·s On Plight of Por110 Fans By JOHN ZALLER Of !fie D•ltw l>INI St9ff A debate on Propasition 18 -the anti· !'lmut initiative -focused Wednesday night on the plight of people who might enjoy pornography. "I believe society ha~ an obligation to prote<:t its weaker individuals from themselves," contended Sluart Waldrip, a Mormon lawyer trom Santa Ana, at the debate SpOn.!Ored by the Huntington Valley Young Republicans. "If material appeals only to prw1ent or warped interest&, it ought to be banned," Waldrip argued In support or Proposition IS. "l object to the it.rm warped/' replied an unfdentUled man from the 1\ldience. '' l own IOme stag movies Ind tometlmel arler Ute kldJ llt! in bed, I like 1o Jet them out. ul WOYldnJt ask you to come &ee them but I don't want you to tak .. them away rrom me either. I don't think ~'re warped at all." Propos!Uon 11 wlll appear Oil tbe Nov. 7, General Eleclfon ballot. 1111 deligned lo Ughlen up Ute alata'a anti-IJomofraphy lawa, give more control to Joea <Xltn-- • munilies, and to make it possible for any book, newspnper or movie containing ob- jectlonable pictures to be confiscated. "Proposition 18 has a kind 01 reverse sex obsession ," s.ald Ken Grubbs, the anti·18 speaker and editorial director of the Anaheim Bulletln, "People who would go a round ecstatically pointing at dirty pictures ought to be laughed back into obscurity," Grubbs uld. Grubbll also argued that "passage of Proposition 18 would lead to Immorality because morality la balld on an ln-- divldual decialon." By removln& the right or the Individual lo ciloM or reject pomegrapby. morality Is removed u well. . Waidrlp countered by araulnti lhal pornol!l'tphy la hiving a drutlc ellecl on American flllllly Ula. ''There II no way to meaRJ.re bow man, lamiUOI fall apart from Ute dilptrity belwoen tbe lofty expeclollona for HI JI!" gel from pornography and Uutt really hlppem In mmlage," Waldrip A.I'. . He further defended ProposlUon II CS.. MVT, Pose l) I Newport Beach Police Department tac- tics in seeking a Joc.atioll j.91 ~ Weapons and Tactical (SWAT) training in the new city of Irvine came under fire today a.s officials fir st learned of the pro-- posed mock exercises planned for north Irvine. While Newport officials were laying the ground work for a mock tear gas battle in the orange groves near the Racquet Club, it appears no one thought to contact the new city, a city with a brand-new law banniitg the discharge of firearms. Newport councilmen last week a~ proved an agreement with Leadership Housing Systems that relieves the land· owner of liability for possible damages or injury that might result from the training. Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn today said other cities including 'ianta Ana had used the remote nonh trvine farm buildings for similar ex· ercises in the past. "\Ve frankly overlooked the necessity of contacting the city of Irvine alxrut this. "If the training is contrary to the ordinances of Irvine we would.1't pursue holding lhen1 there, although the site Is ~See TRAIMNG, Page!) Fi re1n en Collect Disca rde d Goo ds For United WO.)' Newport Beach nremen are preparing for what has become an annual money· raising project for the ~(arbor Area United Way and they 're asking local residents tc help. Each year for the past tv.·o yean the department has colJected assorted old clothing. appliances and unwanted junlt lo sell at the Orange County Fairgrounds swap meet and they're planning on doing it again Oct. 28 and 29 and Nov. 4 and 5. They are asking residents to deliver anrthing they don't want off at any of the six Ne\\'):>Orl Beach fire stations by Oct . 30. There arc fire stations at 110 E. Batbof BJ,·d., 475 32nd Street, 1168 5'nta 'Barbara Avenue. 329 1i1arlnc A\'enue , 4.10 Marlsold A\•e. and 1348 lrvlne Ave. The depnrtment raised 11.200 tn lfi'O Rnd $1 ,50J last year with this project for the various United Way cbarttles. CA R ~fAKES WRONG TVRN Salvase crews were J)Ol'lderlng how to pull • car out o/ tho PlcUlc Ocean orr Ute tnd o/ Alvando Stttel In Newport Beach lhis mom· Ing. Police~ they have no Idea how the automobile got ihcre, Tbey did not idenllfY thli own<r. > 2 DAILV PILOt N 'h~, OtlOber Jllf 1972 Newport Resoltttion 'Exercises' League Opposing By Lawmen Coast Initiative Still Eyed N!!wport Beach's rl'llolution opposing Propo!i1t1on :!O thl' coa~tl1ne initiative on 1he Nov 7 b111!01 , 11011 approv:il \\'cdnes- day by Leagu~· of California C1t1es delegates n1eeling 111 Anaheim. The League 1s an association of cJty officials fro1n throughout the state. From Page 1 AIRPORT ... ~·as suggested as a continental a!J'POr! under the quiet engines plann ing. Factors favo ring El Toro "'ere said to be ' -Location to high air passenger de- mand. -Joint military and civilian use could prolong tho life of El Toro as a military baSt". -Existing facilities make it the least expensive to develop. -Air traffic control problems are "more solvable" than at other locations. -Ecological l mpact would be less 1here than in either mountainous or coastal sites. Factors against use of El Toro are rcponed by the study to be: -Continued noise problems. which the report says \\ould not be a factor if quiet engines were developed -Ne"' run"•ays would be required for commercial operations. The report noted that "significant organized opposition to El Toro exists based en the envi r o n menta l in- compatibility of the airport aod local res idential neighborhood.'' Camp l'endleton wa s not favored by the report because of access transporta- tion costs, because of the length of surface transportation time required to reach the site, engineering. c o st fbeh1:een $500 million and $1 billion). and n1il itary reluctance to release the facili· I)' Thi' report coinments that airport de.\•elopment \\'oold force high intensity development and high in tensity ground transportation. "Substantial transportation jams ex- tending from Laguna Beach to San Clemente are foreseen as a possible con- sequence of development of Pendleton unless comprehensive planning is ex- ecuted aod followed," it states. Factors favoring Pendleton were low land acquisition cmt, locatioo. ,between Los Angeles and San Diegc for joint air service and control of land use. Bresna han emphasized that his office did not formulate the report, it was drawn up by a consultant lor the Southern California Association o f Governments. The Saddleback Area Coordinating Council voted to mobilize opposition to the joint use of El Toro and aulborized a letter be sent to Caspers backing his Camp Pendleton plan. Pot1tole Repair Due for Dover Large potholes left on Dover Drive in Newport Beach by installation of a new storm drain will be permanently patched by nexl "'eek. according to a spokesman for the Orange County Flood Control District. The trenches, "'hich were dug by the county's subcontractor to connect into the main sew£'r system . have been cove red by lctnporary patches for several weeks. Car traffic has packed it down enough to create the hole. The county spokesman said work at the Dover Drive end of the drain. which runs from 15th StreE'l and behind Newport Harbor High School will be completely finished by Wednesday. He added that the permanent patch will be inspected from time to lime to make sure it has set property. > ORANGE COAST ' DAILY PILOT l1'ltl 0..,..,. Cfftl DAILY PILOT, wllll whldl .. ~lned ,,,. ,....,.Prn,, II PIJllll""" tlY fM ~ Co.11 htllltMl'IO C~llY, S- ,.. .. 1111110.. •r• Pll'blllMd. Mooid1y It!~ FrtUJ, tor C•I• Maa, H9Wll0f1 8cotdl, """""""' 9Mdl/"-1•1n V1llft, utun1 8eldl, lmri.ISaddllNcJi: llf'd S•n C""*'te/ 5-1'1 NM C.p1t1r8n0 14 .J11911 r.;loroll •tttM h pullUtMd SllVnll'l'I 8tld S\ltld8'fl., Tlte ~ publllhlfll Plllnt It .ti lJO Wn t .., lt,...., C•l1 Mtt.a, C11Uoml.I, nt.». Roltert N. w.,d "'"''°"'! 11'111 P111>11.- J.cl( R. C11rl1v ~ ,.,. .. ld..,t and Gentr.ol M•M!lt'r Thon111 Keewil IOl!tw n ...... , A. M11rplti111 MMmollll E•llor L '•t•r Krl19 ,._._, le9dt City Ed'llor N..,_, ._. Offic. 3.JJJ H1w1"ri a...le.,ard M1m11tAll'..u1 r.o .... 111s, t166l .,,... ........ a.ta "'-8! -Wiit ..., ....... ._.,.,... a.d!J m......, A-Hllll'llttttltn 11HC111 1"1S 1111ct1 Mvl.,_, 5111 C*-'1•: at Nortft IH CMNnl ltMI Tll~ 1714) '4Mm Clelllfle4 .. ...,,. .. '41·1671 C#t•,.,.,. lin. OrlMl9 CMll -"'611tllll'IO °""""''' No -lllWlft. llh.91N 1"'"'-llllll•dtl _II., W _.w.,1 .. ...-.ts ~hi _, .. ,...,!ICM ~· ....... ,... ~ .. ~""' """""· l«Ofld c:in. -1-01 ~ If C..I• ,,.,.., Cl•llfer"la. '11111itetl1H.:.1 ilr btfllr tl,U ~' _. IMP u .1 .. "*'""~' mllwrt .., .. _,.. IUI 1'!111'1111~. • Newport ftlayor Donald l\f c I n n i s ~ponsored the resohttion ~·hlrh condemns Proposition 20 as .. an improper attempt t1J usurp the authority and right of local go\·ernment to plan arxt control land use development wi1hin its boundaries." B~, a roll call tally of 12.1 to 74 the delegates voted to expr~ the league's opposition. The initi!tive. if it bectlmes law, would creaie a statewide Coastal Zone Conser- \'a11on C-Ommlssion and si x reg!onal com- missions which would have regulatory control over all development in coastal areas. The vote of the delegates on the final day of the 74th annual conference of the league went against an 11-3 vote of League directors last month in support of Proposition 20. In its winning effort. Newport Beach had the support or all Orange Cost com· munities except Huntington Beach and al! but five inland cities. Supporting l\1clnnis was Mayor Ed Wade of Long Beach who called the in- itiative a "vicious measure." Some of the other cities aligned with the anti-Propos i- tion 20 measure were San Francisco, Santa Barbara and Oceanside. Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, Stock ton and Sacramento opposed the Newport Beach ml'asure and the t\\'O other large cities.-Fresno and Oakland abstained. Mayor Pete Wilson of San Diego led the losing fight ror endorsement of the coastline initiati ve. He said charges that the bill would enforce a th ree-year moratorium on development were not true that it was more like a "delay." "Time and our coastline are running out," he warned. "If we do not act here the federal government will take over." Supporting Newport's motion were San "Patton," and "M•A•s•H." "Certain obscenities would be allowed in movies if they were exclamatory," he sa id, "but not if they were directly con· nected with sexual activity." Waldrip said that unless Proposition 18 \Vere passed, the migration of smut dealers would continue until "Southern California becomes the undisputed smut capitol of the world." Waitress Slain; Youth Arrested SAN DIEGO til\l -19 ·year. old youth from ~was booked for in- vestigation of murdering a cafe waitress whose body was found in a se:ptic tank, sheriff's Ll. Lawrence Naab said. SherilC's deputies from San Diego, a1 med with a warrant issued Tuesday, said !hey arrested Robert Gadbury Wednesday at his mother's home. The body discovered after the septic tank was drained on a tip Morxtay was identified as that of Linda Mae Osher, 24 , reported missing May 4. She had left her mother's cafe in Ramona with the day's receipts. From Page 1 SMUT ... from charges that it would have pro- hibited such mov ies as "Love Story," Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Seal Beach, Costa Mesa, Founlain Valley, and Westminster. Councilman Jack Green cast Hun- tington Beach's vot~ against the Newport resolution. The city of Irvine, abstained from voting because or a policy or not taking a stand on an issue not dlreclly affecting the community. Ne~1>0rt Beach Police Sgl. Ed Clb- b.1t'!lli today said ·'mock exercises" planned in north Irvine were to Involve training of 22 Newport policemen in the U$e O( tear gas. Noting the Newport City Cou ncil ap- proval or tbe liability agreement was a ·•preliminary stage" of the total okay or the program, Cibbarelll said Costa Mesa· Irvine police officials "certainly ~'OO!d have been notified before w' started." The training might or might not in- \'olve the firing of blank ammunition. That aspect, of the Special Weapons and Tactics training is less important than the instruction in safe use of tear gas, Cibbarelli said. \Vhen he last visi ted the site of the training program more than a year and a half ago, Cibbarelli said, "there were no houses nearby making it an ideal site t• work \Vith tear gas l\'ithout annoying residents." If the area near Bryan Avenul! and Jo.1orris Street is deemed to be close to the Racquet Club tract, Cibbarelli agreed, some other location for the S\VAT training might be more desirable. In any event, Newport Besch police would seal off the area to teep unsuspec- ting residen ts from wandering into the tear gas mists. From Page 1 TRAINING ... ideal because it is close to Newport Beach and isolated from residences," Wynn said. Irvine Councilman Gabrielle Pryor-- said, "it's weird" Newport officials would approve such a program without contacting Irvine officials. She noted the city's new law banning the discharge of firearms would likely restrict such a training erexcise, unless city councilmen in Irvine okayed an ex- ception. Acting City 11anager Paul Brady agreed the new law would be violated were New port Beach officers to fire even blanks since the law prohibits the "discharge of any fireann" within the ci· ty limits of Irvine. Observeno note, had the item not been noticed by newsmen Irvine officials might oot have learned of the proposed training. Had the exercises been started, north !nine resident& surprised at the IMIWlds of arms and smell of tear gu wafting through orange groves might well have called Irvine Police -the Costa Mesa Police Department. From Pagel TALKS ... the site for the talks because it was "in· convenient and expensive" to alternate the negotiating sessions between Helsinki and Vienna, as was done in the initial SALT talks. He said Niioo hoped the talks could begin in October, but cited congressional delays in. acting on the arms accords as the reuon for the later start. Mid-November was selected as a target date when presl~tial adviser Henry Kissinger was in Moscow Sept. 10- 14, Ziegler said, and the date of Nov. 21 was agreed upon when Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko conferred with Nixon in Washington Oct. 2. Ziegler said other members of the U.S. delegation will include arms control agency official Philip Farley, defense department adviser Paul Nilze, and Air Force Lt. Gen. Royal Allison, This essen- tially is the same delegation which handl· cd the fir1t phase of the SALT talks. Luxury Yacht Operator Charged With Forgery Dy ARTlnJR 'IJNSEL ot m. 011lr Plklt Siii! A n1ining promoll'r and pa rtner in operation of the luxury charter yacht Adven turess, ramme<I and sunk recen tly hy a freighter at San Pedro, was jailed in Newport Beach today, charged with felony forgery. Wayne R. Van der Arcle, 4R. was lured to police headq uarters on a fluke of fate, "·here he was arrested on a $15.000 ball warrant issued by Central Orange County Judicial District Judge Robe.rt Rickles. Detective Todd Wilkinson said a Van Der Arde business associate provided the fast·moving promoter's t e Ir pho n e numbe.r at a Ri ver&lde motel v.·here he was reached. He was idcntined a.!I shipwright La- mond E. Bunting, 52, of 271 Koo:.: St .. Cost.a Mesa, who had beta arrested by Detectlve Wllk!nJon earlier Wtdoesday oo a felony bad ~ charge. Buntin« claimed VNJ Der Arde could co rroborate hla allbl for a long-overdue $180 In check1t bounced by a bank due to lnlufflcient {unds. Checklng into Van Der Ar d'' s Mckground for rcllabllity as a poten11al witness In support or Bunting. Detective Wilkinson lea rned of the warrant charg- ing credit card forgery, He then conhtc:tcd the Jliuspc-ct, who 118ted his profe11!!lon 111s mining operator hut could provide no permRqent address . r>etectivc Wilkinson asked Van Der Ardc to come In and talk nb:o11t hls shipwrig ht associate's trouble. "\\1e just didn't tell him we knew about the forgery wa rrant," Wilkinson said today. Van Der Arde was placed under arrest on the charges filed by a fonner business associate who alleged more than 1,000 in unauthorized credit card charges turned up. Investigators sai d most of them were made in the Sant a Ana area, alleged ly after Van Der Arde ended hla buslne.!5S re lationship with the third party. Santa Ana detective probing lhe case then presented it to prosecutors. leading Judge Rickles to issue the warrant for his arrest. Detective WUkinson said the suspect remained in city jaU toda y. awaiting San- ta Ana police who were to take hltn to the central county court for arraignment. He said BunUng WAS freed on the felony bad check chaf11! on his own recognizance, promising to appear In court for further proceedings without posting cash bail. Van Der Ardt lt one of the prtnclpals In the operation of the yacht Adven· turesa , wtlich mistalned heavy damage three weeks •go in Its Long Be~eh llarbor collision with a huge freight er. f'lvc persons aboa rd the Adventuress hlld to leop for their lives and were rescued . from harbor wate-rS after the 11hip knifed into the charter cruiser. The salvaged vessel Is no w undergoing repairs at Fcllov"s and Stewart Shipyard. • DAIL V PILOT Stiff .... New Route for Bayside This is po rtion of realigned Bayside Drive between Coast IIlghway and Balboa Island. New roadway is now carrying traffic, although all four lanes are not yet open. Photo was taken from roof of Safeway Markel in Bayside Shopping Cenler. ConstrucUon site at left eventually will be Promontory Bay. Old Bayside Drive has been turned into cul de sac and renamed Harbor Island Drive. Howard Roberds, Pioneer Neii:port Fireman, Dies Impact Statements Slated For Commission's Review Howard L. Roberds. one of the first firemen hired by Newport Beach when the Fire Department was fanned in 1927, is dead at age 71. ?i.1r. Roberts, 288 ?i.fayflower St., lived in Newport Beach since 1925 and rose to the rank of assilitant chief of the Fire Department before he left to join \he El Toro department in 194.1. He served there through Woi:Jd War n and then retired to work as a private building contractor, He was involved in construction work until his death Oct. 13 in Grants, N. Jo.1ei:. Jo.1 r. Roberds built many of the homes on Balboa Island and a number of build- inli!s in Corona del Mar during bis career. He was also a noted sportsman and hunter and was one of the founders of lhe South Coast Gun Club in Irvine. Mr. Roberds died while on vacation visiting his grandson and great-grandson. lie is also survived by his wife, Rebec- ca, and a daughter, Mrs. Beverly Hoff. man of West Los Angeles. Services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. at Pacific View Mortuary, Corona de! ?i.1ar. 20 Held in San Diego SAN DIEGO (AP) -Twenty persons were arrested in drug raids throughout the San Diego area Tuesday. Police said small quantities of marijuana were round. Environmental hp.pact statement re- qui rements are expected lo dominate tunight's planning commission review or a number of major developments in Newport Beach. Several projects facing cunmir»ion review may be delayed by the need for statements but others, including a number of major developments, are ex- pected to move through the commission successfully despite the n e w re- quirements. The planning staff will ask the com· mission to delay action on the Shark Island Yacht Club construcUon at 1099 Bayside Drive, a planned lM-unit senior citizens home near Hoag H~pital and a 6G-unit Irvine Company condominium near the entrance to Balboa Island. 1 terns expected to win commission a~ proval are the Irvine Company's final map for the Collins Radio Property on Jamboree Road, the fmal map for the Fun Zone condomlnhnns and final map for 118 new residences in Harbor View Homes. Tbe Colllns r.quest will probably be approved even though the EIS for that site bas not been reviewed, accordip.g.,~ Assistanj C o m m u n it y Deve~t Dlreetor James Hewicker. '1 erpect the maps will be approved but we will hold up the building permit until the statement is found satisfac- to ry ," he said. Hewicker said the preeed,nt for such an action was set when the City Council last week totally rejected an EIS from the Robert Grant Corp, for their con- dominiums on the West Newport bltlffa. 1be council approved everything else but asked that the building pennlt be held up until the EIS is revised. Mrs. Le Baron Succumbs at 81 Mrs. Laurence Le Baron, 20-)'"81' Lido Isle resident and noted Newport Beach clubwoman, died Wednesday at 11. Mrs. Le Baron. 105 Via Wailen, moved to the Harbor Area with her husband following his retirement as a stock broker in Loo Angeles. Mr. Le Baron died In 1967. Tbe Cbicqo.bom Mn. Le Baron WU well mo,.. 1n lqcal club clrdes ~ been an active IQember for many years of the Republican Oub, and St. James Episcopal dNrch. Mn. Le Baron left no aurvtwrs. Memorial service> will be held Friday at ll a.m. at St. James. Burial will be at Forest Lawn. Special Promotion • • • • 10 DAYS ONLY Chair or Swivel Rocker from this Handsome Collection Volues from 199 to 219 Now 149°0 • graceful in design and superb construction and are beautifully enhanced by meticulous tailoring to give you lavish comfort. Yori May Choose From A Wide Selection Of Beautiful Fabrics H.J.GAI\Rtff fURNffURE PROF!SSION•l Op .. MM., INTWOR DESIGNE~S Thurs. • Fri. f;.,,,, 2215 H~RBOR BLVD. COSTA M~SA, CALIF. • I \ ' 't 1 7 - Orange C";oas t EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 293, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972 c TEN CENTS - 2 -Years of Tangles Over Statements Seen By RUDI NIEDZIEU>Kl Of W.. hltr PMlf Ii.ff It wW take at least two years before the Ieaal tangle aurroundlng the slate- mandlled environmental I m p a c t st1temtnta are aolved, Costa Mesa AssiJ.. tant City Attomey Robeit Hl!lllpbreys pr«llctod today. . ~I 1eat that much Ume la n<eded fer a Wt .. of coilrt decisions clarlfytng the CCID......,n.lal Friends of Murunolh vs. Mono Ci>unty decision rendered last month by the state Supreme Court. Locally, the ruling has been interpreted to require envlroMtental effect studies of vb1ually all new coostructlon projects, with the exception of single-family homes,-_ . Addr<aslng memhen of the Citizens Harbor Area Rosearch Team (CHART), Hump~ l&ld there are t w o unclarified areas In the court ruling that are the majot source of the problem. One.-fl wbetber environmental studies wilt be required retroactively to 1970, the year in vt'hich the Environmental Quality Control Act became law. The court ruling is based .on Uilil statewide act which formerly covered only public projects. The other «meerns the meaning of the word "significant" as applied to a section of the court opinion which specifies that any project having a "significant im- pact" on the environment must be ac· c ... mpanied by a study. Humphreys raised the possibility that DAILY rn.oT lllff ,._ THIS IS ARTIST'S CONC&pflOH OF 3,000.POUND PATRIOTIC CANDLE It W...W le,,,. .... by 0... Moldnt Plame Ehmal, Say• Builder Overstreot ~~~~~~~~ ..... ~~ Opinions Sought On Installation Of 2-way Road Costa Mesa poUce, fire and engl.-ing department offk:ials are being asked for their oplnions on the tnstallatioo of a two. way frontage road on the east side of the Newport Freeway extension. n.e tWO:way frontage concept is being backed by some east.side property owners and residents between Bristol and Bay Streets to promote bet~ traffic cirtu.lation. It stands in opposition to a ~way frontage plan which has alreody been adopted by the City Council. Indications are, however, that the City Council may wish to abandon its earlier plan tf agreement ts reached on any ooe of four ~way frontage alternatives that have been proposed. A detailed study released earlier this week by Trame Engineer Jim Eldriclg• cites the alternatives as "realistic possibilities" but makes oo recom- mendation. 1n his report, Eldridge points out that the one-way frontage "allows for smoother, safer, more convenient move- ment through the street network" but that II woold tend to -the in-convenience of local street users because the selecUon of routes ts Umlted. The two-way system, on the other hand, would tend to increase the accident potential because cars would move in op- posite diredions at each intersection, ac- cording tn Eldridge. Youth Projee1 Patriotic Candle On Its W ay Up Two )'OUnl Costa Mesans today served in our community, a %,000 to 3,000 pound official noUce on President Nixon that candle in the shape of an American Flag they are planning to send him a to burn eternally with the Inscription Christmas gift: a 2,000 to 3,000.pound 'Peace, Freedom, Unity and Equality for candle in tbe shape of an American Flag. all Mankind,• Jeff Overstreet and Charlie Straub, the "Accompanying the candle to Wash- two men behind the candle-building proj-ington. D.C., will be the signautres of ect, wrote a letter to the White· House thousands of young Americans affirming explaining lheir ideas: their faith in this great nation." "Our intentloo, Mr. President, is to The two business parJners claim to construct, with the help of young people have 3,000 pounds of paraffin on the way to Costa Mesa from an oil company. Bottle Blowup Brings Lawsuit A Costa Mesa bannaid who claims she may lose the sight of her right eye because of injuries inflicted by an ex· ploding beer bottle has sued Anheuser· Busch, Inc. and the Straub Distributing Company for $500,000. Vivian Morgan states In her Orange COunty SUperior Court actk>n that neglect by ·the brewers led to the e1plosion of a botfle of Budweiser she was placing in the cooler at Outer's Inn, 3023 Harbor Blvd. Mrs. Morgan states that particles of fiying g1us from the bottle entered her eye. She said she faces pos:iible blindness as a result Qf the injury. They say they will star1 work before the end of the week. "The wax should be here this af. ternoon. Mobil Oil is even talking about giving us a natio~ credit card to help us truck it across the country and one com· pany has approached us about doing a documentary on our trip," Overstreet said this morning. He added that he already has a group of 60 volunteers for the candle project and that the base will be constructed from laminated plywood by Estancia High School students. "This Is just snowballing, We've got volunteers coming out of our ears and we hope to have 15,000 signatures within the next two weeks," said Overstreet. A similar proj~ was star1ed by Overstreet In Los Angele:: a £ew years ago but the 4,000 pound waxen monument never made 'it to the White House. lt broke when it fell off a fork lift truck. all projects since 1970 may hav.e to be .avaluated for their impact on the en- vironment. "We may have to go through all of our building pennits and hope that oooe of the decisions say that we shouldn't have built It In the first place," be said. Regarding the word "significant," Humphreys pointed out that no one today knows "what is and what isn't.., Until the opinion's language In this area is cleared up, the question of semantics is likely to confuse the legal experts. he believes A conservation element ctlrrently being drafted for the Costa r.1esa General Plan will ultimately supp I a n I the en· vironmental impact requirement. Cities which have these elements in their plans are exempt under the ruling. Meanwhile, Humphreys promised that the city of Costa Mesa would "move slowly'' on any kind of project requiring an environmental impact study. Additionally , he Is convinced lhat f1nancral 1nstl!ut1on$ >1·111 take a hard look flt an.v building projects 1~·hich couJd have an adverse impact on the environment ··11 rrally is a ne~· field to all of us. We simply don't have any environn1enta l im- pact experts no11•. but I'm sure they will spring up,'' said flumphreys, answering a question about v.·ho is evaluating the studies. City Planning Director William . Dunn said an environmental impact committee iSee LAWYER, Page%) Arms Tall{ Slated U.S., Russ Set Geneva Conference WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The United States and the Soviet Union agreed to open the second round of strategic of· fenslve arms limitation talks in Geneva on Nov. 21, the While House announced today. At the Geneva talks, the United States Mid-November was selected as a Is prepared to press for a pennanent target date when presidential adviser curb not only on long-range missiles but Henry Kissinger was in Moscow Sept. 10... also on other categories of nuclear 14• Ziegler said, and the date of Nov. 2L weapons. Ziegler said Geneva was selected as was agreed upon when Soviet Foreign the site for the talks because it was "in· Minister Andrei Gromyko conferred wilh convenient and expensive" to alternate Nixon in Washington Oct, 2. the negotiating sessions between Helsinki Ziegler said other members or the U S. and Vienna, as was done in the initial delegation will rnclude arms control The new set of negotiations will seek a pennanent ireaty to follow up the in· terim curb 6n ofrensive nuclear .... eapons signed by President Nixon during bis Moscow--summit-in-May:------·SALT-talk&.---· _ _ agency_ ollicial .['hilip .Farley, .def~ns~. Tbe bri~f announcement of the date for resumption of the talks was made simultaneously in Washington and Moscow. White House press secretary Rona1d L. Ziegler said ambassador Girard Smith, who headed the U.S. negotiating team in the first phase of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), will continu~ as chief U.S. negotiator.· "Pursuant to the ogreemetll reached during the l!llJlllllt. meeliDtJ la MolcoW la.! May to -active~ for limJtaUon of strategic offensive arms. the gow:mhlents of the United States and USSR will resume tal.U OD this subject on Nov. 21 in Geneva. Switzerland." The talks will locus onlf on offel!Jive weapons. A permanent treaty covering defensive mJssiles was signed by Nixon in Moscow and ratified later by the Senate. Congress also approved, after ex· tensive debate, the interim agreemeit freezing the bulk of both countries' arsenals of long.range nuclear missiles for !Jve years. Rubella Vaccine CJini c Set Ag ain On October 27 Children who were not vaccinated against measles and rubella in the recent program conducted in the Newport-Mesa and Ocean View school districts will have another opportunity on Oct. 27. Clinics are scheduled for 1:30 at St. John the Baptist school. 1021 Bater St. in Costa ~1esa and at 10 a.m. at Lake View School, 17451 Zeider Lane in Huntington Beach. These immuniuitions against rubella, the three-day measles, and lo.day measles are free to all children between one and 12 years of age. Althoogh children may have already been immunized against either disease, the National Foundation-March of Dimes says it will not be harmful for them to receive this combined vaccine. He said Nixon hoped the talks could deparLment adviser Paul Nitze. and Air begin in October, but cited congressional Force LL Gen. Royal Allison. This essen- delays in acting on the arms accords as tia11y is lhe same delegation which handl- the reason for the later start. ed the first phase of the SALT talks. ·-. ' ..... R1111ne r Rn1111h1g Who is this man? \Vhere is he running? Why? Co u 1 d you keep up with him? To !ind out. see Page 15. Co_un ty .Sc liool Officer s fl ear Candidates By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 ... 0.11, 1'11111 Sl•ll ~1ore than 150 school board members and school adminis1rators heard 10 can· didates for four Assembly seat.s and a state Senate seat discuss their views on education during a dinner meeting Wednesday in Santa Ana. The candidate forum was held by the Orange County School Boards Associa· tlon. Most of !he men seek.in,g office favored Proposition 5, whi ch would increase the power of local school boards. and op- posed Proposition 14, the Watson tax in- itiative. Here in capsule form is what the can· didates had to say: -Robert Badham, ReP'Jbhcan in· cumbent for the 7Ist Assembly Di.strict noted that "there .. re only so many dollars that the people or a society are willing to part with for the bettennent of tbat society. It would be easy for me to tell school administrators that you'll get every cent we've got, but that's just not so." ln answering questions from the floor. he stid he is opposed to Prop. 14; favors sex education and venereal disease edU('a. lion when its controlled by local school boards and parents ha\!e access to the materials; will not vote lo reduce the 66 percent vote needed to pass bonds and tax overrides and does not support col· lective bargaining for teachers. Children who received immunization before 19&5 should be re-immunized with this combined vaccine, according to the Orange County Health Department. Pennisslon slips for pre-schoo: children will be available at these two cliniC!. For further information. call the Orange County March of Dimes at m 2270. Briggs May See Butz on Chicken -Jim Thorpe. the Democrat opposing Badham cited his fxperience as a teacher at Saddlebark College and as a councilman and mayo1 of San Juan Capistrano. lie sa id he would like to see a bedroom tax used to help growing . districls pay for new school~ on the same basis !hat cities pay fnr J13Tk.s. Thorpe said he opposes Proposition 14: fnvors the scuing or mlnlmunt standards tSee FORUM, Page %) From Wire Services Assemblyman John Briggs I R · 1be two-way frontage concept does, however, increase the deve1opment op- portunities for the east side since both sides of the rood couJd be used for businesses. AddlUonally, It allows for greater motorist freedom since It Is less rcstricUve than the one-way system. S111u1 Fans Disenssed Fullerton) may get to meet Se<'retary of the Agriculture Earl Bulz in hi s com- mittee hearing roorri dei.'Pile the Nixon cabinet officer 's reluctance . O ran ge C:Onst Alvin Pinkley, chalnnan of the Costa Mesa Freeway Committee, said be bas (See FRONTAGE, Page II 'Cosmic Ch ildren' Movie Set in Mesa A special screening of the l1l1flng movie "cosmic Children," ii aet Satur- day at I p.m. ln Costa Meaa's Eatfocta Hlah Sdlool Forum to help finance the adiool surfing team's competltloo. -'l'Jckets for the 8 p. m. ahow an $2 at lhe c1nor, occonllna to English Depm- ment Chairman Milt• Hogan whO Is ad- vlllOI' to the Estancia Eagles' 8tailng Association. The c;lub organlzetl foor YHIW ago competeo agolnlt lndlYldual llCbnoli and in group meeta. with Newport•M... Unilled 8dtoo1 District ,....muon ., •• alhleUc IA!lm. -.. .. Prop. 18 Debate Ce nte rs 011 'Weak er' Individuals ' By JOHN ZALLER CM .... a.llY ""' Si.tf A debate on Proposition 13 ...... the anti~ smut lnltlaUve -fOCUJed Wednesday night on the pllght of people who might enjoy pon>DiTaphy. "I believe IOclety h11 an obUgaUon to protect lta we.Ur lndivtdualJ from therJlseJves," contended Stuart Waldrip, a Mormon lawytr from S..la Ana. at the d•bale apoooored by the Huntington Valley Ynung RepuhlJcans. "U malortal appeals Only to prnrl•nl or warped lnlereila, tt ought to lit banned," Waldrip argued m -I of Propoaltlon IJ. "l object tO the term warped," replied an unldenllfLed man from the audience. "l own 1amc stq movlea and aometlmn alter tbe kids ""' In bed, I llM to 1et ' . l them out. "I v.'Ouldn't ask you to mme see them but I don't want you to tall:· them away from me either. I don't think they're warped at all." Proposition 18 will appear on the Nov. 7, General ElecUon hallot. It la designed to tighten up the state's 11nti·pomography laws, give more control to local com- munities, and to nmke It possible for any book, newspaper or movie containing ~ jectlonable pictures to be conllsc1ted. "PropotlUon 18 tyi.s a kind <11 revme sex obseMion, "-u1d Ken Grubbt, the antl·ll speaker and editorial dir«tor of the AMbeim Bullelln. "People who would ro a r o u n d ..,taUcally polntlpg al illlly plttum ought to be laughed baclt lntooboalricy,• Grubbt said. Grobbs also argued that "pauage of Propo1itlon 11 would lead to lnunorallty becaust morality II btNd on an in- dividual declalon." By mnovtng tho rlgbt of the Individual to choM or rtjecl pom<>tp'lpliy' moralill' la renio...t .. .,.·ell. W11drip counl«ed by arptng Iha! por110t1raphy la havlni 1 drutlc effect on American family life. "There ts no way to mt.a.sure how many famUie1 fall af)8rt from the dlsparlly between the lofty oipecllliool for au )'OU get from pomogrtphy and that really happens In marriage," Woldrlr. 11.ld. He urlher deftNl<d "'-1tJon II 1r... chargea tllat k -Id 1-pro- hilllted lllch movi.. as "Love Stort." !S.. IMIJT, P..-~I I • A SAcrAmento Judse We d n es d a y ordered Butz to show cause v.'hy he should not testlfy before the Assembly agrtculture committee. The order by Supe:rlor Court Judge WllliamJJallagher is the late.~t step in BriggJ' campalng to get Butz to talk to hlJ committee about low payments to f1rmef'3 ~bole chkkens have betn ordered destroyed to stem lhe epidemic of Newcastle.' disease. Brtg1 was lhoved 11slde by Bull aldts earlier tt\IJ monlh when be attempted to sem a subpoena oo Butz 1ncr an appearance by the aec:retary at the State Departmeat et A I r I c u 1 t u re building. Brlus wants to quntJfll &It fbout the fedtril ~-1'• ~burteln'"t potyment'a ·lo Southern Ca 11 IO r n h poultry'Mel. The-gto\W'l'I rtetlve an awage IUI ror Hc:h bird ac.rroyec1. \t'ealbe r The storm clouds are dlsappear· ing and mostly sunny weather l$ txpected for Friday. Temperatures will range in the middle to upper 70s wilh the low tonl&ht ~- 1NS1 D E TflDi\ \' Courc 0Tdtt1 ttoin 4-yea,..old girl& b1 placed for adoption be· cou.sti their mother ha.1 such a low IQ lhot she can't gfw them proptr cart. See .story, Page 24. L.M. tM Tt allftnt•• 14 CllMH*I 4M ._... ~ em....,. u DMlll llftlk>tt It ••iteriel ,_ • •11•1tt•t-1 fl-0 fllMIKe ..... ,., "" ._.. lt He-rtK.... It .,. ........,, » DA.IL V PILOT c • ¥' .J~'t( r--"' . DAILY PILOT S11tf P""9 73 Aircraft Boggs Hunt On In Good Weather ANCitORACE, Alaska (AI)) -TakJng advantage of the besl wea1her slnce the search began, 73 military ano civilian aircraft renewed the hunt today for a light plane missing since Monday with llouse Democratic Leader Hale Boggs and three others aboard. Coast Guard cutters and a team or mountain rescue experts also joined the intensified search along a rucged. ~ mile st retch of coast bet\\'ee n Anchorage and Juneau. Broken to scattered clouds hung over From Pagel FORUM •.. statewide for sex and venereal disease. education; would \'Ote to reduce the bond and ove rride majority to 50 pe.rcent and "unless something midway between what v.·e've got now and collective barga'ining comes along, I'd vote for collective ba rgaining for teachers." -Robert Borke, the Republican irt- cu~bcr_1l in. the 70th l mbly di strict s~td his prime conce the conflict bet\\·een equalizing ed n throughout the state and local con of schools. "Proposition 5 has a lot tO o r as far as the y.·ay I look upon education in California,'' he declared. most of the are'a and an Air lforce spokesman described the weather as ''the bert we've had 5ince the search began." "It could be a make or break deal " he added. ' PlanE7' flew over the entire arta, but the mam effort was centered around two areas -the Portage Pass area 50 mlles southwest of Anchorage and mountain areas northwest of Juneau, about 500 miles to the southeast. The overnight temperature in the Portage Pass area N&S reported to be 30 to 35 degrees and was expected to be 40 to 45 during the day, t.he Air Force said. Fog, rain and generally poor nying \'leather prevented all but the briefest or visual searches over the two areas Wednesday. About 40 planes took part in the hunt The missing twin-engine Cessna 310 left Ji.nchorage Monday on the last leg of a whirlwind campaign tour by Boggs on behalf of Alaska's lone congressman. Rep. Nick Begich. It has not been heard from since. With the 58-year-<>ld Boggs were Begic.h, 40; his aide, Russell Brown, 11, and the pilot, Don E . Jonz, 38, of Fairbanks. The Air Force said it found no basis to a report from an amateur radio operator in California that be had transmissions wit h the plane. ' DAIL V PILOT l"Mi. 'Y P1!nd'. O'o.-otl HERE 'S EDDIE-McMAHON, THAT IS, PEDALING IN THE HARBOR Only in Newport; Two Goats and a TV Personality in the Drink The incumbent from Huntington Beach said he also opposes Propasition 14; Ulinks sex education is strictly a matter for the local board to decide; would not vote to reduce majority necessary to pass bonds and overrides and opposes binding arbitration or binding contracts "'ith teachers. An Air Force major in Anchorage, who asked that his name not be used, said the amateur operator reported two transmissions: (1) that the plane was running out of gas and (2) that it was down . and the passengers were hurt but alive. 1 Blasting Away Gary Parness of Costa Mesa County Water District tests fire hydrant on Watson Streel Water district tests eacb hydrant in the city at least once each year. Purpose is to fiush hydrants and make sure they are working correcUy. Water district also paints hydrants white. Wet and Wild The amateur operator said the plane indicated its position. "The position was searched \\'ith negative results," the major said. "The Air Force has fully investigated the report just like any others. TV Star, Goats S plasli in Har~or -Terry l\fosbenko, is Democratic cort- 1ender ·attacked Burke, saying he was t.po!iticalfy' ana -phi!oSOphJe:ally-out of step "an extremist" and claime<! that bis voting record is "an embarrassnlent to the people of the district." "At the time they picked up the signals lt ·would ba"e been 8:30 p,m. and the plane did not have enough fuEil to be Big Crowds Attend First Telc\·1sion personality Ed Mcl\fahon and a pair of billy goats got into cri!d '''aler in Newport Beach this morning. They all had to be pulled out of the bay. Mcr..fahon is in to.,i;n this week filming a television special about Newport Harbor. The script ror one scrne called for him to be in a dinghy half filled with \\'ater. He was to bail It out. McMahon leaned his large lrame the '~Tong \Vay, however. and into the drink he went. even though members of the rre\v v.·ere holding onto the cra ft from lhr dock at Art's Landing in Balboa. The goats got into the water on their 011·n -after they were pulled down from the roof of Woody's Wharf. a popular Newport Boulevard watering hole. Woody Payne, proprietor. said a cook discovered them "'hen he came to work. got them down somehow and put them in a vacant Jot next door. "The next lhing we knew they were , S\vimming across the bay," he said. He called the Orange County Harbor Patrol. which pulled one out and found the olhcr already ashore on the opposite Fron• Page 1 FRO NTAGE. • • ;1,ked for a survey of property O\\'Tiers on the cast side to determine how many are actual\y in favor of the l'A'c>-way system. The Eastsidc Propertv Owner s Associ<ition , main force t>ehind the t"·cr \1'ay coocept. meanwhile is remaining non-committal on the four proposals. Il would he pointless now for •us to back one over the other. The y're l\eally concept ideas end not plans." the group's chairman. Bill Hoffman. s11id today. "Ou r main objective is lo see that we get the t\vc>-way fronlage on the agenda But v.·e want to le1 the freeway men do the designin g," he added "Our altitude lS that if it'~ r:;ood ror Costa ~1esa, V.'C should have it ·' OIANGI COAST CM DAILY PILOT TII• Ol'"M!Oe Coell DAIL V Pl LOT, .,.i191 wtllctl Is combin<d tt.. Hr.n.Pteo., II putifi...,. W 11>1 Or~ CO.It Pllblllhlllll COl'llOIH1¥. s.p.. r•tw cdllions 1r1 """'ll•hed. Mondi¥ fh""'llfl llrkl•¥· fof" Coll• Me•. N--1 1"9dl, H1111t1neton IMChlllount1!n v1u1,., ~un• IPcfl, lrvfftws.ddlaclt l'>d San Ctenwntel S•n Jyll\ Clp!11r1no. A 1lnql1 •Mllonll fllllllion It pUbU1"9d Sllvnfl'fl 11'>d Sllfld1.,.,, TM pr!,,.;!pel pub1l1fllno pl1nt II •t u:i w ... 1 l•"f !.trttt. cost• M-. C•l+for111•. •1•1•. Robtrt N. W11d Preldfnt •nd Pul)llltlel' J1ck R. Curl1v YI<• PT'ftld"'I Ind Oen«1! Mi!Nl'lff Tho"'•' l<•••il Ellll"' lhomtt A. Murphin1 M1"""lnl Edll'OI' Ch•rl .. H. loo• kich tnf r. Nall Alth!.t MllMtlftt Miion e.... .... OM.. JJO W•1t l1y Str•o+ Mo illftt Acl4rtt•: P.O. lo11 1$60, 92626 ..--.. """' hid!: i»i N_,orf a..lf¥1"' u.-1tK11: m ,..,.,., ... .,...,,.. Mvltllnl..,. ..-..: 1111J lttdl ~ Jtn Clt!'Ttfl'lltl :lllS NOfffl £1 C1!'f\lno Alli T .. .,.... 17141 64J-4JJ1 C:.le•H*I A4Nrtl .... 642·1671 (~I, 1971, Or..... Coe1I Jl'ublttllllle Conl••nr. No -• •tor1ft• lll111Mr1t11M. edl~i.I -llM' M' ...,tf'ftl.,_a ..,.!ft _, bt r.,,WIK.t Wltll9ut tf* .. I ,_.. mU:.lool ol cot1¥rltlfll --· Sfttrldi ctll.ll JIMI ... Hid It C.11 ~ c.u10tnlL .,._,1,11111 n t•rrltf nu '"°"111'"' 11'1' ,.,. .. u.1s monmrv1 '"tlirWY 41nt1,..11ona R.6' montril't. side of the Rhine Channel at the Lido Shipyard. Payne says he thinks he knows who put the goats on his roof, but he's not telling. "They're going to have to pay for the holes in my roof those ... goats made," he said. McMahon's encounter with the briny deep came after a series of water shots he·s taping for a special called, "It's a We~ Wacky World" that producers hope. lo sell and have on the alr in February. Taping actually began last Augu st when crews shot the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce Gttaracter Boat Parade. 1be program, "is about the fun you can have around the water, especially Newport Harbor." said McMahon. a !re· quent Newport Beach visitor. He said he favors a school tax levy of $2.88 per $100 valuation, statewtd.e, as proposed by state controller Houston Flournoy. Like. tbe other candidates he said he will vote against Prop. 14 ; said "yes on VD education and yes on sex education"; said he would votb to lower the borxl and override majority to SO per· cent and would also vote in favor of col· lective bargaining for teachers. -Ken Cory, the Democratic incumbent from the &9th Assembly district he sees ''perilous times ahead in education." He also said be believes that "local control of schools can go hand in band with equalization." airborne at that time." · While the planes and beliropters criss- crossed the 45,000-square-mile search area. three Coast Guard cutters plied the rough seas in the Gulf of Alaska seru:ching for a trace of the plane. A crack 11-man mountain rescue team moved out for another ground search over glaciered v~s and steep moun-- tainsides or the Portage Pass area. The team climbed to the top of the pass Wednesday but reported it found no traee of the plane. Two additional climbing teams were being held on standby. Crews of t w o electronically equipped search plane.s that Oew over the area during the night reported they had not picked up signals from a locator beacon reported to be aboard the missing plane or spotted any signal fires. '72 Real Estate Lecture A total of 315 persons came close to filling College Center at Golden West College Wednesday night before the-end of the first sesston of the tm Real Estate Investment lecture series. Late arrivals for the lectures found themselves standing two and three abreast in a line that stretched. at limes. more than 200 yards f.rom the door and around the ..::orner of the building. The lcadoff spe.akers in the series presented jointly by the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board o f Realtors, the DAILY PILOT and Golden West College \\'ere Roger Slates and Gene Kadow. . Slates, c u r r e n t president of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Com· meree and active in other civic opera- tions , has owned R. D. Slates, Realtors. in Huntington Beach for 12: years. Kadow . owner of Fountain Valley Land Company, has been activt in both residential and commercial land develop- ment in California and Arizona. The speakers took different aspects of the investment picture inv olved in own· ing non-managerial property. McMahon, best known as the straight· man announcer on the Johnny Carson Show, had filmed a number of scenes prior to his unplanned man overboard episode. He pedaled around in a paddleboat and tben climbed into a sailboat that was towed at the end or a rope in front of cameras. Jn answering questions, Cory said he ls opposed to Proposition 14; thinks VD and sex education should be included as part of general health education; would nol vote to reduce the bond and override ma· jorily and has supported and will con- tinue to support collective bargaining for teachers. Special Pro1rwtion 10 DAYS ONLY • • • • Filming is to conlinuP. through Frtd.ay and a spokesman for the production com· pany said the crew will be back to finish things up late next week. Sep tuagenanans Overpower Tl1ief SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Three tough-muscled old men wrestled a 21· ye~-old lo the ground and fought off hls knife attacks after the youth tried to snatch a purse belonging to one of the men's wives. police say. Police said the young man grabbed ., handbag belonging to Anna L. Omli, 78. ::1s the 1\•oman returned home \\'ith her hushand and two other couples from a S\1edish-Amcrlcan party here Wednesday night. Mr s. Omli clung to her purse while her husband Pe ter. 77, Harry Nelson, 'l'l, and c;ustav Bergman. i7, wrestled the would · be thief to the ground. From Pagel LAWYER ... composed or staff members now meet..; every Friday to consider projects of a smaller nature. Larger projects and their studies will be eval uated by the planning commission and the city council.. Also disclosed during this morn ing's CHART session was that the building permit fnr South Coast PlAUt's new Bullock's department store was held up for an environmental impact study, "We're going lo have'1.o live with th is ~itu&Uon and justifiably so." said liumphreys. "You don't have to travel around California much to aee what llrban sprawl hu done. Thls 11 going to be with us for a long time." FromP419eJ SMUT ... "Patton," 8nc1 "M•A•S•ll." "Certain obscenities would be allowed in movies if th ey were exclamatory," he said , "bu l not U they were dlrec:1ly oon· nected wilh se~ual nctivlty ." Waldrip said t.hat unless Proposition 18 were passed, the migration of smut dealers would continue until '1Soolhtrn Callfomla becomes the undisputed smut cap1\ol of I.he world ." -William Dannemeyer, the Republican challenger and a former Democratic Assemblyman, says he would support a tax reform bill that reduces residential property tax while maintaining com· 1nercial and industrial properly taxes. He declined to state a position on Proposition 14, but did say he felt that sex education should be a "local prerogative"; would not vote to reduce the bond majority and does not favor strikes or binding arbitration. -Donald Sweoson, the AIP candidate for the 69th district. read his party's state platform which strongly fa vors local control or schools, no busing, nondenominational prayer, and "tax set offs for parents who choose to place their children in private schools." Mesa Calendar TONIGHT CHAMJlER OF COMMERCE }JAN- QUET -Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club, Social Hour, 6 p.m, Dinner, 7 p.m. $6.50 per person. BACK TO SCllOOL NIGl·IT -Adams School. 7 p.m.: Bear School. 7 p.m. "RESISTIBLE RISE OF AHTURO UI " -OCC theatrical production. Oct. 18-21 . OCC Auditorium . 8:30 p.m. Admission is free. FRIDAY, OCT, 20 LE BON MARCHE -Newport llarbor Art ~h1seum's benefit sale. t.-lu!t!um Gallery, 2211 West Balboa Blvd .. Nl"wport Rea,ch, 10 a.m.~ p.m. EL TORO OPEN HOUSE -U.S. Marine Drum & Bugle Corpe and Silent Drill Team from Washington, D.C. will perform, plus skydiving exhibition, crash M'tW dernoru1tration and exhibition by F -1 Phllntom je1' and a C-130 transport. Gates open at 12 :30 p.m. "THE BIG BOUNCE" -OCC Film St!r\es, Fnrum . 7 p.m. $1.00. "tl-10NEY'S WORTH" -0CC 1..«ture Series. Fridays, Oct. 20-Nov. 17, Science Hall, 7:30·0:30 p.m. "RESISTIBLE RISE OF ARTURO Ul" -"OCC P!-Oduclion, Oct. tll-2l. FOOTBALL -Estanc!n vs. Ed ison at OCC. 8 p.m. Newport Harbor vt. Hun· tington Beach, Davidson Fle ld, 8 p.m. SPEEDWAY MOTORCYCLE RACES -U.S. Champion.shi~ · r a c e 1 : Fairgrounds, 8: 15 p.m. Chair or Swivel Rocker fro11i this H a11.dso11i'e Collection Values from 199 to 219 Now 149°0 . . 17aceful in design and superb construction and are beautifully enhanced by meticulous tailoring to give you lavish comfort. Yon May Choose Fro11i A Wide Se lection Of Beautiful Fabrics UOFESSIONAL INTIRIOR DESIGNERS Operi Mo"·• Thun. I Fri. Ev••· 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, GALIF. I I 1: j I \ I 7 • ' c ' '