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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-23 - Orange Coast Pilot• ,J L, . " ' • • CdM High Sehool Man Killed Aiding Pair Ping Pong Vieti1ns of Crash To World Beeord On Coast Highway DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * M,ONDAY AFTERNOON , OCTOBER 23, 1972 ---. DollLY,PILOT Steff ,,_,. MRS. JOHANSEN REMINISCES WITH COPIES OF O~D NIWSPAPER ,Costa Mew Wom11n Rec.Ill•. t:tow Veterans Dey Got Its-Start · . . Vets Day!) 1921 W W I Widow Recalls Celiebration By RUDI NIEDZIEl.5KI Of .. o.ltw p~ ., ... To many Americans the meaning of Veterans Day ii obscure. It has become one of those "bonus" RENTAL AD HAS l)RA.WING POWER Oteck lhls ad for its "quick draw" power: PRIV i nR. 2 Ba, patio, tncd by yet, trplc. Wlk to heh &: shops. $250. per mo, Jse Oct.June. xxx·XXXX wtc daf•, XJCX>JOOCX wknds. The •d rented the house to the !Lrst pel'900 to re~pond the Drst day It ap. peared II\ the PAILY PILOT. The ad-vertiser, of oou~ was "very hop pf." The DAIL V PILOT wanll the opportun- ity to make you happy lhe same way. Dial MU878, th• dlre<t .line lo resulll. holidays everyone loves beca111e tt stretches JWt-the weekend. It'• a :ae~~";' h!f:~~v:OO ~m~~-:ie:. rands. Nobody celebrates it very much except for the American ~gion or the Veterans of Foreign Wars. . The 00\Jghboys who helped . n>UI the mighty German anny 58 years ago look- ed at it ditferently. To them it was a vic- tory to.end all wan and they celebrated It on Nov. 11, the day tke ArmJst.lce was signed In 1911. Mrs. Janie Johanaen, a Costa Meaan, would just as aoon go on celebrat!Dg It on Nov: 11 because It ha.a more meaning to her. "! lived on a farm In Oklahoma wllto the war ended,'' Mrs. Johansen, 61, of 989 w. 19th St., rt<alil. . "We had a bell outside wilh·"'hich we used . to announce dinner. When the phones •tarted ringing all ovor that tbe war waa O\ltr and Ill the trainl started tootlng real loud, I just ran out there and y (See VETERANS, l'llO I) • • eace ces j- •Let New Citizens Vote!) County LWV Filies Suit Over Legal Technicality By JACK BROBACK Of Ille 0.llY .. 11111 llaff A group of 142 persons who became United States citizens on Oct. 11, three days after the deadline to register to vote in the Nov. 7 Genera1 Election, should be allowed to cast their ballots, according to tht Orange County Chapter of the League of Womeo Voters (LWV). The LWV has filed a class action suit on behall of Elizabeth Ann Roberts of Brea which will be beard Wednesday in Heavy Fog Cause Of Car Pileups On State Route CORONA (AP) -At least one person . was killed and about 25 injured in a series of pileups on foggy Riverside County roads today. The highway patrol said 40 to 60 cars era.shed In pileups on the southbound lanes of the Riverside Freeway: Later, about 10 vehicles piled up on the oorthhound side of lhe f,..way.;ntluding a gas transport truck which overturned and dumped fuel aCl'08I the pavement. '!be freeway was cloaed. In both direc- tions. A third pileup Involving about1 five cars waa reported oo U.S. 395 at North Perrla, about 10 miles from here. Don ShiUer, driver of the first am· bulanoe at lhe early mulUple crash, said, "A semi blew up and there were people all over the ·place. People were trapped in their cars. It was just terrible." He said he drove eight persons In serious condlt.i.on to the Corona Com- munity Hospital. Five other persons were taken to other hospitals. Shlfier said visibility In the fog when be arrived at the accident was one or1tw.o feet, and said <tscuers had ln>Uble una- ing the victims. A highway patrol weather report said visibility in some areas was zero. Sheriff's depulin aald the fog waa in patches, so that driven were traveling at a hl&b rate of ljl<ed wheo they eo~red tho fow vlslblllly ln!U. Thd ldenllly of the slngl• known la!All-ty waa not Immediately 1val11ble. The victim reportedly burned to d•ath lo bis car. Fog in the area· has caused several ,.rious l<Cldenll In the pis!. One penon died In a llkar cotlillon In the an:a In November 1968. Orange County Superior O>urt. Mrs. Robe.rt.!, a former citizen of Great Bri· lain, was one of the 142 per9011S sworn in an a U.S. citizen Oct. 11. "If we win our point, Mrs. Roberts and the other 141 new c!Uzens will be able to vote on Nov. 1 for president and vice president," said Mrs. Jeannette Turk, president of the county LWV. Two of the gioup tried to rtgister after the Oct. 11 ceremonies and were told that they would not be eligible to vote No. 7 Still At It by the Orange County Registrar of Voters office, according to Mrs. Turk. Shirley Price, vice president of the county LWV, announced at the ceremonies in Santa Ana that the new citizens were eligible to register and vote Nov. 7. She said she had been told this was correct by a member of the registrar's staff, Later, Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock said the in- (See RIGHTS, Page %) 2 CdM· Students Break Ping-Pong Piny Record By L. PETER KRIEG Of tM D.ity "'"" 11.tf Two Corona del Mar High School sophomores this momlng broke the known world's Plng Pong marathon record and then kept right on playing. Mark Gadarian and Dan Paulson pass· Man Dies While Aiding Victims Of Coast Crash A 20-year.()ld Whittler youth wu drag- ged lo his death Sunday night when he was hit by two cars while trying to aid the vk:tims of another accident on Pacific Coa!l Highway near Warner Avenue ln Huntington Beach. Police said James Anthony Doerr, 20, slipped and fell •bile trying to dart across !ha buly highway at 10:15 p.m. and waa struck. by a car driven by Jose Agulm Jllvera, 18, of Long Beach. Doerr was dragged 10 1 .. t under Rivera's car and then wa1 run ovet by another unldenUlled car which pulled him for another 20 feet, police said. Police said they have been qnable to Identify the driver of the other car which my1lerlously slipped 1way just aflu the 1ccident. . FrlendJ or lloerr told police he w11 running to akl the vlcllma of 1 van whlcb had just spun off lhe road on the mrth . ·'(See DRAGGED, 1'110 I) ' ed the 60-hour milestone at 5 a.m. today but were unsure whether they 'd make It W!lil 5 p.m., their declared goal. They we1e still at it at 10 a.m., though. Playing continually with five minute rest -periods each hour, the two l~year­ old' have been virtu.ally without sl~p even longer, since they both attended school Friday, before slarting their en- durance match at 5 p.m. that day. "How do you feel ?" someone asked earlier this morning. "Feel what?" came the reply from young Paulson. "We go on streaks of tlredness." he said. "Mbst of the time now we just don't know what's happening." "People try to come up and say something, we jusl look at them strange- ly. Finally we bear them after they shout a couple of times," said Gadarian, son of Newport Beach boatyard owner Anene "Blackie" Gadarian. The two youths have had live witnesses through every minute of their gamt, Some 23 different persons have signed 8a official observen with Mrs. Gadarian, Paulson'• mother, Mrs. Darlene Paulson of Eastbluff and Paul!On's grandparents Mr. and Mn. George Brousseau of Garden Grove, putting in most of the wit· neu Ume. They Yr'tre all up all SUnday night,. alternately encouraging the boys to give up and then talking to keop them going. Grandpo \offered the most stayJni power. "He brough bis tape recorder and plsyed sports<astor." 11ld Mrs. p_.,JIOll, "then he kicked· us out of the garaae aod (See PING PONG, Pig• II I Dow Jones Jumps 9.40 By Midday From Wire Services NEW YORK -Continued speculation about peace In the Vietnam war boosted the stock market sharply higher in early trading today on the New York Stock Ex- change. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 12.19 at 955.00 by 11 a.m. By noon, It had dropped to 9.40 a head. By 11 a.m Standard and Poor's 500 stock index, a broader indicator, was ahead 1.11 at 110.36. Advances led declines, 1,014 to 75, among the 1.398 issues crossing the tape. Volume amounted to around 3,110,000 shares during the first hour. There were Indications presidential ad. viser Henry A. Kissinger's talks in Paris and Saigon may have been fruitful, and hopes for peace encouraged many in- vestors, analysts said. The stock market has been !ensitive to peace rumors the past several months. Many glamour stocks and electronics and computers were big gaioers in the rally. IBM, Burroughs, Texas Instruments, Motorola and Walt Disney all galned around 4 points In early trading. This came on the heels of a lO~lnt ri!e Friday which analysts said was also (See REPORTS, Pap Z) Orange Coast We atbe r Low clouds and fog 1loog the roast will cle1r by noon on rue. day, according to the weather serv- ice, with highs of 71 al the beaches, rising to 77 inland. Lows tonight 13-54. INSIDE TOD-' Y y °" can get 4 divorct '" cai. ifornia for onlv 144 tmd<r th• do-it-yourself plan. Or Ott a complete divorce kit for ~., than 1100. S•• •lm11 on Pogi 5. • • DAil • PfLOl • Nixon Issues Warning ..,..,,.r ... 1 REPORTS .. . prompted by oncouraalnl ._ia about Vietnam. Vows Fight Against Congress' Spending Trading Wll VlrJ brialt, despite Ille Vetuaos Day holiday. Lale llSI week, I Fr<nch .._ reported that I c:.-ease-flre WU expected by the end ol lhlJ month. Since lheo, new r<ports have bololerod Wall -hope1 ol an apJll')lclllng ~ In Indochina. WHITE PLAI NS, N.V. (AP) -C..Ung the Democ:ratlc..controlled congreea as vllllin, Pruldent Nlxoa said today "The time has come to stand , up to the big Spenders" who, he contended, threaten to cau se "higher prices or higher taxes - or both." lie said he will fight excess spending with vetoes and fund holdbacks. Nixon released a statement on arriving at Westche.ster County Airport near lhl.s New York City aub\lrb al 10:15 a.m. PDT is be begao a buay ball-day ol motorcadinc, nllles and rectptlons in lhe.,... He Rid: "'!be abject lailur. ol lhe 92nd ~ lo bold a responslbla level of ~.casts a long shadow over the glow of a resurging American economy." Nixon said lhe economy probably will grow thls year at a rate e1oeedlng the Administration 's 6 percent e1Umale. Hti laid claim lo cutllng Inflation In ball aod asserted the Admlnlatrotlon It .. .,..,1ng more new jobs than at any time tn more than 16 years." • llowever, he said. Congress has recently embarked on a "spending spree" and added : ''Today, I have some news for the big spenders . . . "I"m. going to uae every weapon at my command to bold spending ln th1a fiscal year u close as possible to $2:50 billion -ao that we will not have a new wave of crippllfli inflation and there will be no need for higher taxes." Nixon continued: "During the coming week, there wlll be Sear~h Begun WWII Holdout Soldier Sought LUBANG ISLAND, Philippines (UPI) -A combined Japanese-Pbillppine search party widened its hunt today for one of two holdout Japanese soldiers authorities say may have killed and wounded 130 persons in a 27-year..old pri- vate war. The defense department said ln Manila today that despite this, it m.jght forgive the man lf and when be is captured. His comrade in the jungles ol Lubang IBl&lld died Thursday in a clash w!lh police. "World War II would have ended for both men on Thursday, but one man got away," said Lt. Col. Pedrito de Guzman, chief of the national police on the island. • AUtborilies tentatively ldeottfled tbe lllrVIVOI' otlil llgbting the war wllh a Japanese army rifle URd 11 generation •go a.a 2nd U . Hiroo Orloda, so. He was listed by authorltes as the lut holdout of the Pacific war which ended officially in 1945. Searchers stepped up their hunt on the 102-square-mile is.land 75 miles southwest of Manila by bringing in helicopters to track down the man. From Page I ·PING PONG. •• began telling old sea stories!' The youths started out with a total 0£ .49 ping pong balls. They were down to hall that number This morning. ''There's Ping Poog ball! in every cor- ner of our garage," Mn. Gadarian said. During lhe day tbe lwo youths would -play in lhe alley beb1nd lhe Gadarian ' borne al 610 Begonia A..,,ue, but at night when temperatures dropped Ibey would move inside the gatage and close the door. The boys ban attracted an endless stream of visitors and well wishers. "Poeple even stop us in the grocery store and ask us bow they're doing,•• said Mrs. Gadartao. The boys' mothers and grandparents all said they thought the whole thing is wonderful. · "We've promised them each a gilt of $100 if they make Jt to 72 hol.i.r!," said Mrs. Brousseau. Grandpa made the otter a little easier on hls pocketbook when he Stumbled on a $20 bill while pacing the lllley in the morning light today . _ "I think It's grut," said Mn. Paulaon. "I think Ibey needed something like ... .. ...... . "They showed that they could do it," ~rs. Gadarlan said. "Many times we suggested that they ohould give up, but µiey just look at one another and teep on playtng." .. The boys stopped k .. plng ocore alter the 120th game. "When everybody got tired of keeping track," said Mn:. Paulson. · The event bu less than Uckled Mark's father. · • At the outset the older Gadarlan said be guessed they would last "about two hours and 10 minutes'' but this morning be would only say: "Well, well, U the trend catches on, we've found a way to .,cut the crime rate." ~ "We'll have half the kJd& In Corona del : pt:ar In somebody's garage playing ping : o,xmg, and tlle other hail driving around : ~ one game to another seeing how ~ ~·re doing." '' J :~ ' . .. OUHH COAsr IT ~. ~ 'T'9 DrWlll C.... DAH.V PILOT, wl9 .... ~ .......... the Nt4Mi ... Ill ..... "" DAILY PILOT ::~ th9 Or'"9e o...t l'Wll-"'"' ~ ...... "',. •111ont ............ ,,,.,.w ..... ,.,...,, ,., C.le ...... ....,.,. ..... : ~ Ht.tillltltNlt ~-V.llty, ~ • I" a..dl, tNNIMddi.dl 11'11 a. a..ri.ntw • " SM 11'111 C...i.tflill9. A .m.1t ns-.. : ~ .tlHli!I It ...-ii..-. .. ,.,,,..,.. .,.. ........... 1\ TM ~ Mllllll'"9 ~Ill " M l:IJ w.t : '· .., '""'· a.t. Mea. C.llfranllt. ~ : i R•••rl N. W•-4 -• "-Idem ... NllltftW ; ~ JHI It. C,.1.,. :.· ~ Yb PNIMnl w 0.--4 ~ ~ n •• , ec...n • fl ''"" • 4 1 · 1ff11tH A. M.,,,.,,.. ;~ _ .. , .. ·~ Qui• H. lfft ll1Mr4 P. N•ll .. --...... :~ -"I °'919 M..,: Ut W'tM 1,., Sttttt ~ ~'-dl1 UH......,l .. il1•I ~ ~ htdt1 "' ,...., ........... • ..._""'9fl hlcll1 11111 ,_. 1-.iiM .. • .... °"""*'* * Ml1ll II CllM'a ll..a ;, • l. •• •• ' '""'''' C7t4> '4M111 a.NW A•1atf1l11 '414171 ,,.. ......... """' ................ 4tJMn ,,_ ....... °'i; ~Ct I 11111 '"" 11H ' Viejo Girl, 15, F oUs Rapist · ln Laguna Beach A quick·thinking 1S..year-0Jd Mission Viejo girl hitchhiking: in Laguna Beach over th:e weekend averted possible sexual assauit lbat_ bu_ befallen other young women recently. '!be girt thumbing a ride lo Laguna Beach High Bqgp!, was picked up by a southbound caAaiven by a man. After getting Dito the vehicle, the young girl told the driver she wanted to go to the high school for a football game. 'Ibe driver continued south alq Glen- neyre Street, and ':egan to perlonn a lewd act, police said. As the car passed a large group of peo- ple at the 1000 block of Glenneyre, the girl shouted, "Stop, there's my family." 'Ille car llopped aod . lhe girl jumped from the vehicle, and flied a rtport with police. Sbe bad hitchhiked from M..laslon Viejo lo Lapia·lleacb. Recently, an 18-year-oid hltchhlklng girl was kJdnaped and raped by a driver w.ho ~sertedly used an ice pick to force his VJctim into submiss1on. Anolher kldnaping aod rape look place when a 13-year-old wu seized as abe walked along a Laguna lide street with her 11-year-old coual.n. FromPageJ RIGHTS ... formation had been ln error. .The suit will be argued for the LWV !Jy Richard Petberbrldge, president of the Oran~e County ACLU before presiding Supenor Court Judge Bruce Sumner Wednesday. Joan IUddle, voter service chainnan of the LWV, said the right of new citizens to vote for president and vice president is being areued on the basis of a California election code provision which states that If a -bu lulUllled all rtqulremenlt other than that of re&ldenct before an election dol<! Ibey shall be allowed lo vote . "Tblt portlcular ·clan ol people mt being excluded from thlo right," Mro. Riddle said loday. "ll Ibey bad become citizens in another 1tate and moved to C.lilornla thlo week they would be ailbw- ed to vote under the code. "We feel It ls unfair to nclude theH people jun becauoe tbey have lived In Orange County rather than aome other 1tate,'' ahe argued. Mrs. Riddle .. 1d the Callloinl1 COde which appll., only "' voting for president and vice president II In the 1tate election ltw; lo coolonn wllh fedora! rt11U11Uooo .. CANDY COUPONS AT HALLOWEEN? CLIFTON PARK, N. V. (AP) Concttned 1bont the poulblllly ol tam pend Cllldy, the Jayceeo •nd Joyncees ol lhll community .,. urglnJ homeownen to dlq>en&e ('QIJpoN rather lhAn lhe lradlllonal treall t h I 1 llallowoen. "We have teen too rnany thlnp In. the • papen •bonl peopll who f.UI lhina• In clndY on Hallow... night, ' Mro. l>ean W . .Burrows, pruktent of the Ja)'tffl 11ld. ''The coupons wUI 1alve evtryth1na. 1'he younpten can r•m ~ coupons al lhe store ind pl~ oul the candy they want." a number of vetoes. If there are big spending bills wblcb I must aJgn for policy rusons, t also promise to exercise my lull Ieaal powers lo hold down lhese ' appropriations, or reduce otben to make room for the new programs." The total Impact of actions by the just- adjoumed Congress, "I! Jett to stand, ( CAMPAIGN '72 ) would be higher prices or higher tues - or both." be argued. Leaving much or the campatgniqg to "surrogates"·-mainly members of his administraUon speak.Ing for him -Nixon has made i vowedly political appear~s in just six states since bis renomination. May and Decetnber UPIT ....... . He WU accompanied OD this trip by Mrs. Nixon. Louie Nine Pipe, 74, a Flathead Indian married Vivian Rice Red Wing, 23 , ~f Bristol, Eng .. , in bis home iown , Missoula, Mont. They n1et by mail two xears ago af~ Miss Red Wing saw bis picture on a record album. Before leaving Washington, he con- ferred with his chief budge't and econam.ic-polley ad\lisen: on legislation pas.sed by Coogress before its a d- joumment Wedne!day. Followlng a motorcade journey today through almost a dozen communities in Westchester Cow;ity, N.".(., Nixon was to attend a recepuon for GOP leaders from ll states at the home of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller near Tarrylowlf. Pair Rob Laguna Motel After Tying Up Manager J From Page I VETERANS. • • Two men, one claiming to have a gun, robbed the LaiUna Beach's Beach Motor IM of $102 and left the assistant manager hog-tied late Saturdoy night. rang that bell as bard as I could. tt was Glenda Carol Sulllvan, n, wu unin- one of the big days in my life." jured in the incident which left her bound Mrs. Johansen, just 14 at the time, bad hand s-to-enkle. She told officers that in not yet met her first husband, Grayson response to the night bell, she had QJ>ened M. McCarty, a sergeant in the Signal the door ~o tbe motel's office, 985 N. when the June 23, 1919 edition announced Coast Highway. day, Nov. 11, 1921, when be marched past One man entered, and admitted her <l_uring an Armistice Day Parade. another man through a back door. "I 'Ille men were described as about 20 years old, one five feet, 10 inches tall with black hair and the other five feet, six lncbea tall wllh blond ha~. 2·month old Tot Bitten, Battered To Death in NY When the war ended, McCarty was ln have a gun, sit down and !!hut up/' the Coblenz, Gennany, a beautifuJ Rhine woman was told, officers said. NEW YORK (UPI) -Police said a· It tt' No gun was seen aa the man bad a hmnan bite marka and lacerationa edtv~~-c Ay, l'"rf mg out a newspaper call-brown cloth jacket draped over hJ.i arm covered the body of a two-mootb-old boy um me can Anny of Occupation the woman said. ' while his family, reJaUves-a n d friends (AMAROC) News. A printer by trade, he After rifling the cash drawer, the men wbie his faqWy, relat:!_ves and ·friends had them bound in two volumes -one cleaned the woman's purse and jewel box were cele~l.ng his chriatenlng in covered with his outfit's insignia _ and of cash. The woman's quarters are con-another room. gave them to his wife. nected to the oftice. The infant, Hector Rodriiuez Jr., was Mrs. Johansen maintains that tbete They then lied her WiUi a pJaStiC rope ~U::~~~tu~vy@l.mg· A~t~G~ _1.. and Ded. The woman acreamed until-a r--,.. are .,,,,, three other sets In ulattnce. ··•~· arrl ~ ••• ber Officials classiled lhe dead boy "' a One llelongs lo lhe Nalloaar YMCA, nei,..... •~ ~ cut -lrae. "battered child.~' anolher lo lhe Hoove< Ubrary, and tbe Police questioned the perty jiUeiti al M• • B F d tbe local statioo house shortly alter lhe third lo lhe former editor, Guy c. Stal-issmg oy oun deolh WU reported. No arrMlt or Klsslnger left Saigon for Washington today after the most Intensive peace talks of the Indochina war, and the U.S. Embassy said p<OJIFOSS bad been made toward a aettlement. . But ll lodlcaled that the V.S. and South Vietnamese government 1Ull dill'• on some points. "We have made progress." sald an ezn.. bassy statement. "TalD will contlrue between us and the government of Viet- nam . It Is not in the inler..t of necolla· tions to be more specific at this time." Kissinger new home to report to NiJ:on after six m~Ungs wtth President Nguyen Van Thieu. Asked at the airport il bit vlsij bad been product.Ive, Kissinger replied, ult always is when I'm here." Three hours after Kissinger left, the U.S. Army chi el of stall, Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, left for Washington. Re spent six days in Saigon assessing the military situation and the Vietnam17.aUon program, and sat in on 90me or Kia&- inger's meetings with Thieu. · Although Newsweek arid T 1 m e magazines repcrted that the Unlted states and North Vietnam agreed to 11 siet- tlement that would include a ~. there was no confirmation from either U.S. or South Vietnamese officlala ln Saigon. South Vietnamese sources s a id , however, that 'lllieu issued orden tblt junior military officers -lieutenaOts and captains -should prepare to take .aver the functions of civilian village cbtefs in the event of a cease-fin!. 'Ibis 'f'U inlended lo lnsuro that lhe Saigon government had a ftrm. bold on the populaUon and the government machioery should a selUement come, tbe sources said.. For two months, government workers have been painting South Vietnamese Ill.&• oo lhe doors, wailo aod gatos or homes IJ1d other buildings all over lhe country. 'Ille flags, whtch began ap- pearing more than a year ago, have often 11een· delcrlbed as a sbow..Ueglanc< In . thi·~~t of a ctase-ftre. From Pege I DBA,GGED ••• lord. SUlpeCtl """ repor\!d and all were The small daily paper, now yellowed OAKLAN:> (AP) -A pclice search for releued. 1'1 aide of the bigbway. with age, is an alnazing sourcebook on a 6-year-0ld boy missing since The baby's' body was dl.ICovertd by his 1'1le driver of the van bad lost ecintrol the aftermath of WW I. Tbe tint edition, Friday's World Series g8me here ended motber,~Mn. Delarel Rodr1gut; 21, In f of ~e .. ~lther the driver br hla published on April 21. 1919, announces Sunday when the yoongster w a :.. its bassinet tn the !2rid story ._pirbrient p1..a11a:t Wtl'llinjured. that It's "All Quiet After Violent discovered safe and sound in the borne of of Lindsay Housing Prow.t located in R!veta told police he was pa.!13ing the Fighting." a new friend. Elroy N. Pavis, son of Brooklyn. ("""~ · van when Doerr suddenly appeared in But there were 'tlots ln mOl!!t of Louls and June Davis of Fairfield, was The cblld's father, HeCtor Rodrlluei froht 411 ltit and he was unable to stop Germany. Munich was in a state of turned in to pclice by Jean Logan after Sr., Z2, a clerk, old be had no Idea how before bitting the Whittler youth. anarchy, and elsewhere Red Gennan she heard radio repcrts about the miss-the infant died. Another child, 2, w a s No charges are pending agalnat partisans had taken 100 persons hostage. ing boy. unharmed.. Rlvq, acc;ording to police. There was a continuous threat of ren.ew-;--=--'-------------====----------.::.:::.!'..:~~~~."".'.~---­ ed bostllitles until the peace was fo1mally signed. "It covered what was going on there and what was going on in the world and I think It did a pretty good job," Mn . Johansen says about her bound treuw'e . One ol tbe stories publlsbed by tbe AMAROC News tells of a yoong man wbo chopped off bit baod lo avoid lhe draft. Anolher reporl9 lhe cruise or two dirigibles loaded wtth mochlne ~ and bombs over l<t Kiel, Germany • until the algnlng or rejectim of the peace treaty." On the lighter aide was the eecape at- tempt of two German girls from a local hospital, both wearing Am e r l c a n uniforms, "one riding a horse and the other astride a cow wt~n apprehended." McCarty .dso worked on the newapaper McCarty, who put his printing ix- tt.at the "Huna" reached Paria to sign the treaty and a day later when headlines cried out "War ls Over, Peace is Signed" and "Treaty to Lay Foundations for a Changed World." Post Auxiliary Unit 499, wlll celebrate perlence to use when he returned home by publishing the Altadena News with hls wife, died long after WW r of bleeding ulcers he contracted while engaged in battle. But his books and his uniform remain behind lo remind otben of lhe ortgln of Veteran's Day. "We always Uled lo celebrole It on lhe I llh hour on lhe lllh doy ol lhe lllh month becaus. that'• when tbe llrtng en~ed." says Mrs. Johansen. "It's only been a few yean since Congress changed the date . None or I.he vets like the new date." ' Mrs. JohaM(!n , president of the Gen. Douglas MacArthur Americau Legion Post Au1klluy Unll 499, will celebral<! Veteran's Day with her friends at 8 p.m. Thursday In Collta Mesa's American Legloo Hall. Horse's Tail Cut in Tustin Ontnge County Sherlll'1 olllcon ,,. loday inveot11atin1 '" Incident deocrtbed by them u an "unusually callous'' act of cruelty dwing the weekend in lhl 1'lstin area. lnlnlden at 1 Brier Lane corral CUI oll lbe lhree-loot tall ol a bone owned by 1111'1. Anna Berptrom ind le« lhe anlmol bleedlna IJ1d di•~. deputlet .. Id. "There could ha~e been no other reason. than to tnOlc:t cruelty on a lrlendly animal thot obvloully trusted the penoo who approached hlm.''.an tnve.liaator u.td. I CONVERTIBLE OR BUILT·IN! DISHWASHE Conw!1lble Dllhwaeher wtlh Hlndlomt TtxtOflte" Top ......... hlll:iltolt ........... .... -' ...... .,__ ............ ...... ,,.. .. .,. ... .__.... ... ... -· .... .................... ........... ...,._ ....................... -. ,......,_ ......... "'"''""' -·-•MT• ..... Sound-lnoUlaled llulR·ln D!Mw-glvet OuaUty "9rfonnlnce-0Ultlry • ,._._tdlel--111111 .. -·-. ,..._"''"_ .......... ... ........... .................. • .w..tll lil .... li'" ........ "' ........ ..... ,...., ................... 8 ..... ,.... • ...,i...,... .... --""' "' ....... ,181 S Newport Clwd. Downtown Coot1 Ma11 Pho111 548· 7738 OUR NO. 1 GOAL: TO MAKE GENERAL a.ECTRIC THE BEST BUY MEMBER OF CALIFORNIA'S LAROIST COOPERATIVE BUYINO GROUP WITH THE VOLUMI BUYING POWl!l OF 110 STORES 60 Miiiion Dollor1 In Buyln9 Power We .,. · '" 1uthorla4 GENERAL ILICTRIC Molor Appllan,. and Ttl9vf1lon Strvlce C~ttr Lo YI Re sta ba Co an bi ra le A A di bo .le SU lri di "' I tr c c 0 w -. -· -- Mondaf, October 23, 19n S DAILV PILOT 3 Propositions Bringing • Ill Rivers of SACRAMENTO (AP) -A river of cash meuuted In hundreda of thousandl o( dollars ls flowing Into the Nov. 7 ballot bllttle over three lnltlatlves -coastal conservw.tion. fann labor and the Watson tax limitation, a survey shows. Prop. 14, the tax Umitallon proposal by Los Angeles COunty Assessor PhUlp Watson, leads the money sweepstakes. Reports filed with the secretary of state's office showed Friday that backers, listed as the Tu Umilatlon Commilt~. had $690,598 ln contributions and have spent $G5S,138. Opponents, banded together as C&illornlanl Against Higher Tues, show contributions of $374,469 ana expenditures of $311,283. * * * State Elections Wauon'a proposal woold clamp a llm~ of fl ptt $100 assaoed value oo properly taxes. Jt would boost a variety of state taxes to ottset the revenue Jou. Real estate associations are among its chief backm and opposition comes from In· surance, liquor and tobacco Interests. Farm labor lnitltiatlve supporters reported contributions of ~.s~ and BX- pendltures of $299,20L. Opponents, ln- cludlilg the United Labor COmmlttee to Defeat Proposition 22 and Cesar Chavez' United Farm Workers union, report con- tributions of $%4,684. , ·The farm labor meMW'e would allow secret bal1otlna ror W1lon representation Bigger Campaign ' Supporters, Told By DOUG WllJJS SACRAMENTO (AP) -Some of the biggest spenders in California legislative races are school teachers, real estate in· terests and insurance companies, a survey of recent campaign contributions clisloses. For instance, 54 Assembly candidates and 17 State Senate candidates have received contributions from the Associa· tion for Better Citizenship, an affiliate of the · California Teachers Association which goes under the name ABC. The California Real Estate Political Action Committee Is backing 6 1 Asserribly candidates and 18 Senate can· didates and has made contributions to both sides in six races. Another big contributor to state . legislativ.e races is the AS&OCialion or callfomia Insurance Compmties. The in· surancemen's political fund reports con· tributing to the campaigns of 35· can· didates for the Assembly and 17 Senate candidates. State election laws don't reqUli'e any of those groups to tell how much they con- tribute to any candidate -just which can.dida.tes they a,rt SUQPOrting. . But the candidates in their individual campaign contribution statements are required to list all contributions of $500 or more. A survey of those statements - which have been pouring into tbe Secretary er State's office for the past Watch the Girl ' ' From Ipanema RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -A %4-· year-Old Brazilian fashion designer says she will go to court to get permisslen to sunbathe topless en Ipanema Beach. Rio 's pclioe department, prepar- ing for the coming South American summer, hu warned women here they will be arrested if they wear European·style "monoldnis" in public. "I don't consider a naked breast obscene," said Beatriz Sidou, who asked a lccal lawyer to try to get the police ruling <t v er turned . "Nebody can be forced t.o dress the way the police want." One newspaper illustrated the story with a cartoon showing a policeman talking to a sunbather wearing only the top part of her bathing suil three days -gives an indication of how muc.:1 money special interests are putting into the 1972 legislative races. 'Ibirty of the 71 candidates on the teachers' list report ABC fund con- tributions totaling $81,000 with.individual contributions ranging frcm $500 for Democratic Assemblyman K e n D e t h h-teade of Oakland up to $8,000 each for Assemblyman Alister McAlister (D-San Jose), and Kenneth Maddy (R·Fresno). Three times as many Democrats are on the teachers contribution list as Republicans, and about 90 percent of the ABC money is going to incumbents. There are more candidates ·on the real estate fund list, but the average con· tribution is Jess than half the size of tbe average ABC contribution. Tbe real estate fund is also giving most of its money to incumbents but it is hedg· ing its bets, and bas made contributions to both candidates in five Assembly nices and one Senate race. A sketchy report from the insurance f\md shows it is making contributions on· ly to incumbents. It lists contributif.>ns. but oo amounts given, to the campaigns of 35 incumbent assemblymen and 17 senators, including one midterm senator -George Moscone (D-San Francisco). who is not running for re-elect.ion this year. But while the big givers favor in· cumbents, many incumbents in relatively safe districts are using' large sums of mooey contributed· to their oWn cam- paigns to help challengers attempting to unseat members of the opposite party. Reports show money being funneled by both parties into about a dozen key districts where party leaders believe con· trol of the legislature will be decided on Nov. 7. Tbe first batch of reports suggest Republicans are raising more money fo state legislative races. No Smooching In Uniform CLACTON, England (UPI) -Head· roaster Ralph Smith has banned boys and girls at Clacton County high school from kissing, cuddling and holding hands together while wearing the school uniform. "It's ridiculous," said one 18-year-old student. "It seems we are old enough to get married but not to hold hands. •1f<tlons but woold curtail tile type of constn:ner boycott Chavez used to organ- ize Callfomla ta~le grape industry work· ers. Two contrlbutlons of $50,000 each from two land companies -the Irvine Com- pany of Newport Beach and Deane and Deane of Half Moon Bay-highlight the financial report from apponents of the coastal Initiative, Prop. 20. Citizens Aaainst the Coastal Initiative reported contributions of $435,493. The Coastal Allianct, spearheading the drive for Prop. 20 approval, reported con- LributiOJ11 of $33,187. Pacific Gas &: Electric Co. reported a $25,000 contribution to the campaign ag1Jnst Prop. 20. Vice president and eomptrolitr F. A. Peter added th.ls statement: "ln addition, PG&E reports that It has lncurred coets on and made expenditures for ns October. 1972 edltlon of PG&C Progress, a section of which might be in- terpreted as .:ontalnlnt an argument against the above named prop()Sition. Slnce distribution of that edition is now taking place and an bills pertaining to it have not been received, PG&E is 1.1nable at this time to report such erpeodltures on the editions as may be a.ppropriate. Such expenditures will be reported later." The PG&E Progress pamphlet Is distributed with utility bills to PG&E customc.rs. Here are some financial reports for other Nov. 7 ballot propositions : -PROP. 18, the antiobscenlty in· itiative, has drawn $35.114 in con- tributions while opponents, including theater and magazine interests , have put up $89.377 to defeat it. -PROP Zl, the antibusing inti.ative backed by Republican Assemblyman Floyd Wakefield of South Gate, reports $13 ,833 in contributions, includ ing $$00 from famous cosmetiC.!I manufacturer U,I T1i..tiole 'BATTLING BUNNY' JO MATTHEWS BACK IN THE HUTCH IN DETROIT AFTER COURT FIGHT Union Activity Ag•inst the 'Bunny lm•ge' But She'll Get Job and $15,000 in Back Pay Slain Louisiana Sisters Bunny Wins way Into Hutch-Has May Have Seen Execution Image, $l5,ooo MIAMI (UPJ) -Police said that two Louisiana sisters, both beauty contest winners and professional models, a~ parently were slain because they wit· nessed the execution or the boyfriend of one of them in a posh Miami apartment. Police also theorized the slaylngs of sis ters Denise Herthum Underwood , 20, and Diane Herthum, 18, of Baton Rouge, and Jackson Harvey Smith, 31, of Miami, might be linked to a $750,000 drug raid in nearby Hollywood. The sisters were from a politically prominent Baton Rouge tam i I y. Investigators said the older girl bad been married but was sepat"aled from her hus· band. The younger girl was visiting her sister hefe. Detectives theorized Smith was slain because he shared a t~bedroom unit in the Tanglewood apartments with Charles Bennett, a man being sought by police in connection with the drug raid in Hollywood that netted 1.000 pounds of marijuana and a large quantity of other drugs. Police said Smith and Denise bad been going together for some time. The vicUms bad all been shot twice in the head. They were found in the living room and two bedrooms of ·the $345-a- month apartment near Miami Interna- tional Airport Thursday evening. A medical examiner said be believes the three were murdered Tuesday. Exchange Club Gives Alisos School Trees El Toro's Los Alisos Intermediate School will 9000 have 18 new trees donated by the members of the Ex· change Club of the Saddleback Valley. The tree donation plan first took root at an Exchange Club meeting when Joe Peterson, a trustee of the Saddleback Valley and San Joaquin school boards, re.marked on tbe lack of greenery on the new school. Quickly, 18 of the club members each agreed to finance a tree for the school. safd Bill Kohler, club president. Pat Bushman, a new Exchange Club member, and Aliso Intermediate prin· clpal, lauded the group's community dedication and involvement. DETROIT (UPI ) -Jo Ann Matthews, the Playboy bunny who hopped the wrong way and round herself outside the fabled . liugh Hefner hutch. has not only won her job back but also $15,000 In back pay as well . Fired three years ago because club of- ficials said she "had lost the bunny im·. age," Mrs. ~1atthews, then 23, turned in her ears, her v.·hite fuzzy tail and all the other trappings associated with the im- age but not her unbunnyish spirit. Jn a t.f..hour hearing before federal arbitrator M. David Keefe Aug. 10, Mrs. Matthews gave evidence of possessing enough image to convince him that her firing was keyed to union activity, "not for reasons arising out of sex . . . or age." "That her physical attributes withered overnight so as to mark her apart from the other 29 bunnies . . . is un- beHevable," said Keefe. "Inevitably, she was discharged beause of union activity," he decided. Mrs. Matthews had been elected steward of Local 705 of the Hotel and Restaurant E m p I o y e s International Union shortly after she and her hutch· mates voted to affiliate with the union. Money WOiiam Pen Patrick of Su RalMI; Of>' ponents, Citiun.s Agal1111t U n e q u • I School!. 11't 14,150, Including $1,45C from the American Civil Llbertles Union. -PROP II, the Initiative to legalize private use of marijuana, reporta: con-: tributions of $82,520; People Oppoeln& Pot has raised $1 ,025. -PROP 17, the move to restore the death penalty in California. ba.s f7,e3 in contributions to the California Cor· rectional Officers Association, chief backer of the initiative; opponents report $9,822. She Makes This Tra gedy The Last One CHICAGO (UPI) -Mar ie Ann Dujka had faced tragedy before. In 1958, her 11· month~ld daughter died of spinal men· ingitis. In 1971, her 17·year-0ld son was killed when his car rammed a truck backing intc. the street . And when, only a few months later, doctors told Mrs. Dujka th~t her only r~ maining child, 7-year-old Mary Sue, v.·as dying of cancer, she carried on, seeing that the litUe girl got the love and care she needed. Friday, however, htrs. Dujka's hus- band Rudolph and a neighbor found the mother and daughter in a car parked in the family garage in s u b u r b a n Crestwood. Both died from carbon monoxide poisioning. The ignition of the car was on although it bad long since stopped running. A small mop had been wedged between the seat-and·tb&·gas pedal, police said. Dujka told pcllce his wife had become very despondent since Mary Sue's con- dition began deteriorating about three weeks ago. The child had lost most of the hair on her head because of medicine she had to take, had become very frail and spent most of her days propped up in bed. watching television . Planners Vote 'No Action' On Impact Bid The Orange County Planning Com· mission has voted to take no action on a request by Laguna Beach to require the Rossmoor Corporation to prepare en- virorunental impact statements for two tracts within the Laguna watershed. The unanimous vote ca me last week as the commissioners were infonned b)' county planning staff that Rossmoot would have to provide such impllct statements prior to issuance of gradilll or building permits. . The Jetter from Laguna Beach MayOT Charlton Boyd specifically asked for tl-e impact statements prior to the issuance of building ~ermits. The two tracts are located in the uppet end of the Laguna watershed, one strad- dles Oso Parkway westerly of El Toro Road and the other lies on the southerly side of El Toro Road , west of Moultoo Parkway. · Many Lagunans have expressed fear that the increasing development of the watershed area will prevent natural absorption of rain waters thereby in- crea9ing flood potential through Laguna Can}on and into the city's downtown area. "You're right, lady," the pcliceman says. "It's the other wey that's against the law." "I don't see why we should behave like strangers just because we are wearing our uniforms." Detectives believe the girls were killed because they witnessed the gangland· type execution of Smith, whose nude body had been severely beaten. ~~ .. .. That's All, l' olks ' .:.. Where w go from here is the p r 'o b I e m of Mr s. Claudia Hilt of San Diego, wbo swerved orr a rain· U,lTt ....... sllcke<l fr e e way, smashed lhrou&h a fen ce and stoppea In this unusual position in a drainage ditch. 673-5051 Open Wed. thru Sun. 9:30 tO 5:30 T_!~.,., .... A.-ric-4 • ..... C""9 Balboa Bieyeles " Italy's Lar9est and finest manufacturen of tourln9 and competition Bicycles. Priced from $99.95 to $400. EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE 2120 West Ocean Front 1 Blk. Wfft of Newport PIO< ' I I DAil V l"fLOl ..... /9'\ Coasting,~, Republicans Move Soi1th lllDl~C THE GOP: As Orange County girds lor the Nov. 7 presidential election . Registrar of Volm Pave Jiitchcock has just unveiled rinal tabulations lhat declare ...,.e now have 79-1,174 Orang e Countlans eliglble to vote this Ume around. Pondering the list. you are abruptly jerked by an odd reality. Where did solid Republican Orange County go? Republi- can Orange County hat aJways been thouaht o( M places like Santa Ana , oor bcJoved CoWlty Seat. Or, when national political wags refer to Orange County. they likely flap abou t Anaheim and Dianeyland and solid sol d RepubUcanism. · Hl'rCl:fCOCK.'S FIGURES, however, c:learly illustrate that all of UUs is myth. Santa Ana stands solidly in the Democratic camp with SJ,781 Demos to only 28.440 GOP registrants. And in con- ~rvatlve old Anaheim, the Democrats edgr: ou t in front of the Republican registrants 41,287 to 39,848. Shocked by all this, you look iideways al the figures again. They are still the same. Further, you note in Ille clty.oby·ci- ty ""'1J>ilatlons tha.t IJt addlllon 1o ~ Ana end Anaheim, places I I k e Westmi111t.er, Loa Alamlto1, Cypress. Stanton, and Buena Park fall into the Democralic camp. Yes folks. even Buena Park, where Walter Knott holds forth, is regiatered 15,359 Democrats to only I O , 7 2 9 Republicans. ALL OF THIS 11 enough to draw cold sweat from lont-time Orange Countians. Desperalely. they must sc an do"n to totals at the bottom of the registration lists. There, ln the final tally, they find blessed relief. In tol{jl. Orange County still stands comfortably within the GOP rank s. There are 394,9" with the GOP and onl y 337 ,279 with the Demos. A Republican marsin of 57,656 registered voters. SUH, wlth places like Santa Ana and Anaheim over in the Democratic camp. you arc left wondering where hide all tho:!e Republlcani? Analysis reveals they no long er lurk in the central hard C1lrc of Oranae County. They have migrated into happier climes right here along our Orang e Coast. IN S~CLEMENTE, for example, you could fi cannon down El Camino Real and the c nces are 2 to I you won't hit a Democrat. In Newport Beach there are 25,5.37 Republicans and only 10,5'13 Democrau. To Und a Demo in Newport. you have to ahoot up a flare. Additionally. the Republicans prevail nicely in Coit.a Mesa, Laguna Beach, Seal Beach, Irvine, San Juan Capistrano and just about every coastal locale ex- cept Huntington Beach whtre the GOP 1Ult bolds the lead by a couple of thousand out or 68,074 registered. Among all citle1, however, the GOP margin i1 only 31 ,~ or Je11 than JO per- cent or Orange County's registered voten. SO YOU MIGHT still ask, where is the Republican margin? Well , it's ou t there In unincorporated territory by a 2 to I edge. lh\JJ means coa!ltal placea like Mission Viejo. Laguna Niguel, Dana Point, El Toro, Lake Forest, Lellurc World Laauna Hilla, Capistrano Beach and Doheny Pallaadel. Jn thtN placet, the Republican• lead the Demos I0,123 to S3,994. Clearly. Oran,e County'! solid gold Republican no lqer coqhs in the smog of downtown Sant.a Ana or Anahebn. He has moved out for a breath of frelh sail air. U.S. Downs FcutM IGs Over Hanoi SAIGON (UPl l -U.S. F4 Phantom jcl righter-bombers hive •hot down thttt Russian-built MIG21'1, the fasttst jeta In the North Vietnamese air arsenal, In a d<>1fight ovtr the H1no1 area, the US. comm1nd 11id today. No U.S. planes were damaged In the fight. the command said. The aerial blt- t!e O('{'Urred Oct. 15, but the !ltory was released only toda y because "we just got confirmation" of the ~11G kills. the com· mand said. A command spoke.Iman 11\d he had no expl1n1tion of why It took so long to make the conlinnlUon. Jn the ground war, fJeld repcll'U 11ld Viet C.Ong commandos launched a futile auack on the vllllae of Suol Glua only 11 mllea north of Saigon before dawo today and were btaten orr by government troops. The report.a said two CommunlatJ: were killed in the righllng . The U.S. command 1ald BU bombers early today pounded Communist posi- tions 25 miles northeast of Saigon to thwarl another shelling of th'e big Bien Hoa air baae , where two civlllan1 were killed and 41 other persons -lncludln& 18 Americans -were wounded or ln- jured in a Sunday attack. EARUER SUNDAY, field reporU aald government ll'OOPI drove Viet eona eoldlers from Bung Cau, a hamlet only 16 mUes north of Saigon ovemm by the Communflll Friday. The Saigon com· mand aald North Vietnamese sunnera In the Central Hlghlanda shelled a govern· ment ranaer force near Due Co, 250 miles north of the capital. and fought two other sklnniJbes with. another ranger element a few miles away. The fl&hting left 63 Communists dead at a cost of five South Vietnameae killed, seven wounded and eight missing, the command said. • ln. the.air war over North Vietnam, the U.S. command said tactical jet fighter- bombers new only 140 sorties (one flight by one aircraft) in the 24 hours end ing at 5 p.m. Sunday -fewer than h a I f the usual number. Military sources blamed heavy thunder!ltorms . About eight U.S. Phantoms took part In the Oct. 15 dog fight against four MIC2l 's, mili tary sources said. The phantoms used 20mm canoon and Sidewinder heat-seeking missiles to bring the MIGs down. U.S. pla nes have shot down 177 ~1IGs in o\igbt years of air w/ir over North Viet· nam. command records showed. com· pared to 71 U.S. planes downed by MIGs. These figures inelude more than 80 MI Gs and about hair that many U.S. jets down- ed Since President Nixon ordered resumption of the air war over !he North April 6. Singer Gets Sendoff MELBOURNE. Australia \UPI ) - Hundreds of teen-age rana and scores of policemen s.aw English pop singer Joe Cocker leave for Britain Saturday after an abbreviated Australlan tour marred by two amsta and one deportation order. Cocker told an airport newt conference he was warned Australia was very 1trict about drugs but said he never ezpected "to get busted." To y Studied For War Use WASffiNGTON !UPI) -Over a period of four years, the Navy spent $375 ,000 .tn a scientific &tutly ot Frilbee& to see if the fll1ht characteristics of these plastlc toy1 could be adapted for warfare. But It was no go. F'rom high atop Hurr\can Mesa In Utah, scientilt1 lf!nt Fri1bees, and clay pl1eons as well, splrmlng inlo the air. Track ing camera s manltored the flights from lhc. 1,000.foot.-h!gb clill. The results of the tests were reported in a paper entitled "Adap- tation of the Frisbee Flight Prin- ciple lo the Delivery of Spe<:Ial Ordnance." S our No te John Mac Enully, tubaist of th• St. Louis Symphony, had to use this battered instrument at a weekend performance be- cause his pr 1 zed tuba wu stolen from his suburban s~ Lou!B home. Trio Perform . Scientific Ghost Hunt LITCHFIELD BEACH, S.C. (UPI ) -A Parapsychologist, a pract!Cing witch doc- tor and a psychic n!searcher spent the weekend at a "haunted" plantation in an unsuccessful search for a !riendly gbost. The three gathered to make a pre-- Halloween check on the ghost of Dr. John Hea m 1Ucker. but the spirit or the kindly old doctor failed to materialize. The get-together was arranged by an Atlanta advertising agency handling the promotion for Litchfield. which ia being turned into a resort. Legend has it that Tucker, who died in 1797, upon returning to the plantation late et ni1ht from house calla would rin1 the bell at the gale so the servants could prepare his bath and be ready to tend his horse. llE SO WVED Litchfield that he did not "'ant to leave, even in death, and ac- cording to the 1tory still roams the stairwell of the great house. Each time before he appears there is the tinkling of a bell to announce that he is "home." flans Hol zer .a parapsychologist, spent Friday night at Litchfield. He said that he didn't hear or see <mything that would lead him to believe that Tucker was still around. But Holter allowed that he milht have been ''too sleepy" and continued the search along with J. T. McTeer, who says he is a practic ing witch doctor , an d Peter Calhoun, director of a psychic in· stitute. The three never did see Tucker. McTeer, a soft·spai.en 69-year old fonner sheriff of Beaufort County. claims he is the most famous of South Carolina's numerous witch doctora. "Voodoo and witch doctors have been here for years and yean," said McTeer. "But now it's arowing in popularity three times a1 fa1t with the whites, all cover this country rrom Te1a1 ' n d Pennsylvania to the Cerolinas.'' Library Crack Probed AUSTIN, Tex. IUPJ ) -Workers wUI start Inspecting the travertine marble "akin" or the Lyndon B. Johnaon Library today to see what hu caused some or the factn1 to crack, loosen and fall off the 18- month-old building. Th!rty or 40 slabs of the beige marble wtU be taken from the Rlant bulldJne, 10 University of Texas ol· Iictals can detennine how much of the facad e wUJ have lo be removed and reset. Mississippi Valley Soaked Midwe st Throu gli Was hingto n Shivers in Drizzl.e Coutal We ather • I v.s. s11.,.111aru • ....,.. r«il-. WHl~r lor.c:111.,1 11f. Vklcrwi 1,_... tl\O thv!!Ov1torm KtfY!ty ff'Wtllll 11'11 Mwtr Mltlltllool ~'~~~~ 'i:!~ J,'fu1.wor.:i ..... lou11I~. Ml1tl1slll!ll '"°'l9CI t •IM .. mw• 11\fft Ill Inell I" """ "teel. r1~ ~~It i:mr .:::= Canipaign Twilight · · McGovern 'Would Rejoice' at Vi.e t Peace WASHINGTON !AP) -Sen. Gtorge M<Gov.m betliN !he !all two Wttkl of his long campl]gn for Ille White House today, dec:laMna that he would .. ;o1ce at a Jll"Hlection puce settlement, and quotlJtg South Vleltwnole Prufdent Nguyen Van Tbieu .. Ay!ng he would resign .. if we reduce American military and ecooom1c ald." The Democntft pnsldelltial nornlne<: planned to campaign In l'lllladelphla ond New York with much of hll day devoted to polltk;af television. Befort be set out, Mc:G<wern W8$ to tape for broadcast Wednesday night a 30- mlnule speech on tlWII!l)i, corruption and the AmerlCln l)'llem. McGovern Aid 6"nday be bu no doubt that If' Ille Unlled 8tafel withdrew Ill!>' Port from Ille cumal 8llion 1ovem- ment, u he advocate.I, 1'bJeu would re- sisn "within a matter ot hou r1 ..• :· "HE TOLD ME dlrectly when I vill!N with him lalt September that even 11 we ...Sue<d Amerlcon mllltarY end ecoaomlc aid lhat bt'd ttSJani'' McGovern aald on lbe ABC-TV Interview prvsram "INues and Anlwen." "And I llllnt ,.. ot111ht to let. blm up on that offer," lbe Clndklllte lidded. MclloYern found hl-11 oonflonled on tha """""' with a qu-be -told was submitted by the White House. 'l'be questk>n rt1ated to McGovem'!I com· parison of U.S. bombing ln Vietnam with Adolf flitJer's policies. , "I think this is really an interesting developmen' here," McGovern replied," that J could come on a program to be in- terviewed and have questlau oubmlt!N * * * * * * Ex-Yorty Aide Says GOP Supplied Data on Muskie MILFORD, N.H. (AP) -The man who ran Loo Anaele• Mayor Sam Yorty's UlllUCCtllful campalcn In Ille New Hanilllhlre DlmocraUc prlmlJ1I llYI he got lielp from the Republican National Committee In preparinl lttacb on ·s.n. Edmund S. Mlllltle (O.lo!alne). Robert D. Philbrick old SUnday he was contacted by John O. l.4fton Jr., editor of Ille o!ficial Rtpubllcan newslel· ttr 1•Monday," near lhe end of 1974 He 11ld Lotton sent him lnforrn1tion to be used aaalnlt MLllkle "about once a week tor two or three monlhl. And there were many telephone calls offering to helu UJ l•ther 1ny informatlon we need· td.r. CONTACTED IN Wuhlngton, Lofton confirmed Phllbrlclt'1 report. He w d the purpose or the of!er was to cause clilseDJian among the Democrat.I. He 1aid that was a "justifiable cam- paign · tactic." Lofton said all of the material he sent was on stationery bearing the Republican National Committee letterhe ad. but Nixon Committee / Official Okayed Bug, Time Says NEW YORK (API -Time magazine reports that Jeb Stuart Magruder, a deputy director of the Committee to Re- elect the President. ia identified in Justice Department files a1 the man \vho authorized expenditures for wiretapping the Democretic National Committee headquarters last June. The maeazine reported Sunday that Justice Department attorneys 1 a I d Magn.ider approved the use of up to $250,000 for what they called "political ( 'JN SHORT ... ) intelligence operat ions." Time iaid it "·as not known whether the entire amount was spent. Philbrick Aid other than Ille fint mail- ing the maierial came 1n plain envelopes and there were no m&rkina:• oo the 1t1t- ~brkk said lhe first mallln& he rece.ived contained a personal card \den- tifylJtg Lofton as a!Ollated with Ille GOP committee. Muskie wa1 the N~ Hampshire primary in a close contest with Sen. George McGovern, the e v e n t u a 1 Democratic prC:!identlal nominee. PHU.BRICK SAID Lolton told him the GOP committae had CO-ler In- formation on Mualde which the Yorty campalp milht be ahle to use. Philbrick said he wu turprbed by Loi- ton's fU'st call, 11but I told h1rn to aend me bis infonnation and I would look tt it. I told him I ..., nol going to clooe my mind and WI to any leg!tlmate In- formation." The most useful piece ot information . Pbllbrick said, was a 20-page .,Muskie Myth." document wbich, he said, ''con- tained statements Mt11kie hid mede ovtr the years, taken out of the computer. "We did use aome ol the JegjUmate in- formation," he aaid, adding that all the material was checked out with b1J own source1. "It was correct, and It saved us a Jot or research time." HE SAID HE was not offered ln- formaUon on McGovern or the other Democratic caodjdat.ei in the primary. Some of the information u~ by the Yorty campaign forcei, he 11id, "w:as statistical evidence on the employment rate in Maine, which we und to attack Muikie'i statement that he was a friend of labor." Philbrick said he also used inrormation on "Muakie'1 abientee votlna: record in the Senate." "There were many pleca of fn- formation wh.ich we consktered personal in nature which. we did not use," Philbrick said. He cited a section in the 20-page report which covered Muskie 's "temper outbursts, !he times he had blown his top." Philbrick now is working f or McGovern, stumping the st.ate promoting , the party'1 nominee. Lofton said be aupplied Information on Muskie to other OemocraUc contenders for the nomination. lncludlna Sent. Henry M. JacltlOn ol Wuhington and Huber! H. Humphrey of Mlnne&oll. fly th• White House. "ISN'T IT 1Jttereot1Jt1 that Ille Pre1~ dent hlmself Is afn1ld , apparenlfy, to come on this proil'Btn with me or tit come oo any other tclevltlon oro.rani: and ni.se bi& own quuUons. ,He kDOWl. l would have...,. to Uk him." McGovern, wbo vialled South v1etnanl ( CAMPAIGN '72 ) io Sepl<n>ber ol 1971, wanll to cut oU all aid to the "'"''It Sa!ion gowmment an4 withdraw American forw within 30 days. "We ought to maie clear that we would li!te to ... Political groupings come into power ID South VWnam that \vant to settJe this war," McGovern said. . McGOVERN SAID he hope1 lhat lhe negotiations and conferences, 1n Paris and Saigon, invoJvin1 presldentfal ad- viser Henry A. Kllsin8er 1Jgnify tha.t a1 settlement is close -but added thai h doubts it. .. That is the line he has taken on cam- paign platforms since the helgb.tenedi peace apoculotl<lrl bepn, "'""lin& at' aome 1top1 that Killmaer'1 travell wll~ he incrtuJni u electloo day draws, clooer. ,. M<:Gc>ftm Ald iJ he fhou&ht bit ca- didaey bad put seWement PrellU.N en) Pretidenl Nlxoo, that aloae would make it worthwhile. He bu been campaicningf as a declared presidential candidate • since Jan. 19, 1971. "If Mr. Nixon can end this war on the) night before the election, I'll rtJoice. alone with all other Americans."· McGovern &aid. "No matter the polJtical impact." 011 A rr ival A whooping crane known as Lonesome George arrived in \ Austwell, Tex., from Canada • recently to tab up winter res-' idence. He and three others ' are the first of up to 80 expec-i' ted by biolog!Jts, . Jn Washington, ~ spokesman for the commlttee restated 1ts denial that anyone Jn authority at the committee, In· cludina: Magruder, had any involvement In the wlrotappfnC «nd break-In at the Democratic ofllces in Wtshlnaton's Watergate compJex. R e,,eb Put Down ·u.N. Workers in Asfu ! i ' ' • MANILA (API -Phlllppine troops pul down a wc~end uprising on the southern island of l\1indanao and President Ferdinand E. Marcoe vowed the govern- ment will deal aeverely with. the rebela . He called them i•Mao.itt MolleD1.1." lllltll'pllcy II punllhablo by death, either by flrinll oquad or In the electnc cbatr, under tnartlal !Bw docland by -ftvo ....U op to ttavo oil what he called a Commuoltt U....t to over· thro\\' hla pernm"1t. The Deportment of Publlc Informotlon, announclt!a M.....' declarallon, wd about 400 anntd anti well or1anlled r.bell "lied Marawl, about llOO mllea oouth ol Manila ond kllled at leall nine enll1tod men In 14 bouro of flghtfnl Saturday ond Sunday. 11 St1rtlltle Craah ATHENS (AP) -'l'hert wto l!tlle bo(1< of flndllw any p IUl'Vlvon ol the Olymplc Alrwaya plane which ciruhed In- to the "a Sotunlay nlfht near Atheno with 61 penont abol!<I, olllclalo Aid I<> day. Seventeen pl!TIONI, lncludl"I at lee1t two forelinen, 1wam the MIO ~rd1 lo 11fety alter tha pllhe cruhed durlnl a r•ln storm u It prtpered to land on a m1ht ,,... the Wand of eortu. Two Americana, ca..Jlne C.11• and Helen 0"1\urwell, wtrt liated amoni tha -~· Greek pollet Aid thay ...... amoni tht IUl'Vlvon, l>lt the U.S. £-111 and alrllnt oflJclala could not ftntl them. • A11dtt ltt 801 ...... KAllPAU, U1anda (UPI) -Pml· dont Id! Amin of Upnda entartd 1 holpl!ll today for "a compllle Nil" on doctoni' ~. official 1ov1mm.int radio 11Jd. It quoted a ho."ipltnl bulletin ssying Amin was admitted during the momlnR. but gave no further details. The radlo said onlr. Amin 11bl1 been ordered to t11ke • comp ete rest by hl.s doctors." Attacked; 1 Left Dead , \ ' \ WASECA, MIM-(UPI) -Dave and John Kunlt ware 11tht type to think of adven!Ure • , . Dave would Ir)' to think ol what he could do that othel'I couldn't do." Spealtlni wA Al Kunll, father of Ille two men who llmott two ind a half yeara ago ut out from th1a IOUthem Mtn- esotA commwilty to walk l"OWld the world on beball ol Ille Unlled Nationa Chlldr ... ' Fund. It wat Sunday aft.trnoon. Only a few hout1 earlier. Dtve'• wife Jan received a call from Ille l\lte department lnformln1 her thal the brothm had heeo attacked by bandllt while camplna near Sll'Obl, Alllhanlllon. John Kunll, I.I, had been lhot and kill- ed. David, SS, had been wounded. 'Ille WleJu I 1llta department llld . David WU in) eatlafa~ cond!Uon at 1 U.S. Alloc1I for lnlerttatlonol Development Mlufoo iii Kabul, Ille Allban capital. • I THE 81\0TBERB had camoad Baltir· day nllht alOll( 1 ruued sectfon of road about SO m.Ue1 eut Of Kabul, where, lC· eordin1 to a etate department epoltetman, bandlll have frequently preyed on travelers. The hrothera, wbo be1an their )Ounley June 20, 1970, had palMd Iha hall\fay mart and w ... e°'"ute fnim Paklllan to Ute People'• RopubUc of China. David'• wlle waa Informed ol tho at· tack about a a.m. llttnday. The brothers' parenta drove up to JO(!\ her and her chlldran -• Daniel, · 1, Bradley, a, and Dlbhla, lli-lloni their own home 1n aear Lab, Iowa. 5pukl111 calmly to the """"""" who had come to Ille wa-rtaldeoce, Al Kwm •Id hla eona had kept the family "pretfy well IJtformed" ol th a Ir wberuboutl IDd ldventure1 on tile 16,00l).mlle trlp. "'Thoy lndlcaled tboro wm aom1 bUarda." he aaid, 11but JOl.I alway1 kaep boolaa thal maybe 1haU9 """"ond ll·wlll """'out oklQI." . . Kl1NIT llAID thal onoa he ltnlw IOtll .... ....... aboul Ibo trip, 11btcbd tbmu Ill the "8,)'.11 " Ian KUNI •id tho ''hafdul D1t1 la Witt~" for flu1har tllWI o( Mr .... band.' 'Wa'N atlll ltlnd ol -b about th whole thln1. In a couple ol daya It'll ptol> ably be worse lhan II l!I right now.ff Tn a ltltemtnt to newsmen, the family ,.Jd. "We hava no hate In our htarta. We 'believed In wh11t tbf! brothers we.re doing, working for world peace and un- tlerstandln1 throoQh UNICEF." - • h J · B' f!.hil lnterfandi ••This is your downstairs neighbor. I "ant to congratulate you-one oC your plants bas taken rooL" L. !ti. Boyd ·Michael Remains Top Infant-Name , ' Monday, C\ctobtt 23. 1~72 DAILY PILOT $ -Get -Divort!ed-Only 544 LOS ANGELES (AP) - Oalllorniano _,..uy are tW11lnc In tncreastoi numbers to a new-do-lt-youraeU proj- ect : dlvorca. While statewide rlgurcs are not avallable, San Diego C.oun- Ecologists Seeking Controls SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The sierra Club has appealed for national controls on the production and use of all t)'Jl!E!s ty olflcla]J estimate that 11 -t ol the al'P"'xlmately 1,000 divorce fill.ngs each month are made without a lawyer. In Los Angeles County, about 7.8 percent ol the llli"l!s of energy including power plants, transmission 11 n e s , dams, oil and gas pipelines, strip mining, and storage of ~ -- radioactive wasles. '-,: In a naUonaJ board of direc- tors meeting that concluded. late Sunday, the club issued a ( BRIEFS ) policy statement urging that nationwide energy and land use planning be Implemented to ' ' a v e r t environmental disaster". eProfSuspeKded SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Cal Stale Uing Beach pro- fessor will lose about $10,000 in salary under a six-month suspension upheld by the State Personnel Board. this year ba\'t been "pro per" -without 1 lal\'fer. Four years ago only lour penons in a thousand flied without legal repmentatlon. T II E ATTRACTION ap- parently Is ..-y. Lawyers ~Y charge ~ Or more for handling a simple divorce. Without 8rt attorney the cost Is just filing fees -M4 in Los Angeles, for example. friendly m&Mer." Some lawyers and Judge.. an more wary. ''PROPER divorces are like a pain in the aide," says Wil· liam P. Hogoboom. presiding judge of the Los Angeles Coun- ty family law court. "Only an expert can tell whether it can be treated with an aspirin or by surgery ... CALIFORNIA Oo-l~yourselfism WM made poosible by the Famlly Law Act of urro, which changed "divorce" to "dl.ssolutkm" and eliminated tbe need to prove fau1t. If one partner sa~s ir- reconcilable .differences exlst, di.ssolutJon is simply pro lorma . "Most of these cases are so '---------"" simple that they are not A woman who said her hus- band deserted her alter ~ days or marriage recently recalled her first ~ toward dissolution:-"I picked up legal papers from the county clerk for 56 cents, and they recom- mended I read what to do next in the law library." SOME LAW librarians report that the most thumbed book in the house is "How to Do Your Own Divorce in California," by Berkeley lawyer Charles Sherman. He advises, "This book is not written to replace an attorney but to help you decide whether you need one. " Vicky Willi ams. a Los Angeles-area housewife who is divorcing her husband pro per after more than io years, says, "I would recommend do- it-yourself divorces only to couples who have no small children and who can settle community property in a economically feasible for en attorney 10 handle, but you never know if you have a simple case until an expert looks at it ... Do-it-yourself dissolutions may be something like the do-it-yourself wills which were supposed to sa ve clients QlOO.ey, but eventually created more business for the attorneys than they saved." Aaron Moss, chairman of the San Fernando Valley Law A.w>clation, says t.hat without help laymen may make costly errors in property division. lN ADDrrlON lo various books on filing for dissolution, there are complete kits selling ror about $75, One person who se lls them says the kits may even have a use the makers don't intend : "Spouses either want to figure out how they can stop a divorce action started by their s}X>use, or they buy the kit to scare their husband or wife in- to thinking a divorce Is oon-- templated." Irwindale Blackmail Witness Shot in Eye Home Fire Kills 6 Children SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A fire that killed six brothers and sisters was touched off by candles used to light their ~me because the electricity had been shut off for non- payment of a $28 electric bill. officials say. The !ire started shortly after midnight Saturday on the ground floor of the home and flames swept up a stairway to the second floor where the young children WtTe sleeping. • Killed were Shirle y Bates, 15, Philip. 11 : Connie. 9; Darrel. 6; Catherine. 7; and Norma, 5. Shirley Owen, the children's mother, was at a pool tourna- ment when the blaze broke out. When she returned to find Most popular flnt names for grown men nationwide are not the same as the most popular first names for new- born boys, That ·Michael is No. 1 Dow among the infants bu been reported. 'Ibe next 11, ln order, are David, Mark, Jason, James, Scott, Christopher, Adam, Matthew, Stephen, Thomas and William. That's one re!e8J'Cher's report. Other names rapidly rising t.o the top, he says, inclilde Zachary, Aaron and Jeremiah. BOW I0111C.it. tal!et a bookkeeper to finish the dal".!_: work depends somewhat on how many Umes the figure 5 turns up. That's the single-digit number-which requires I.he most time to write. Prof. James H. Noguer, a Spanish professor , was suspended last spring by col- lege president Stephen Hom for · giving ·a woman student :'1Nt ~~r-tootw:_:lurses sheto <lithd Sf'!'eadi~ t~~ 11' ~d --- oguer "' n s case e , persoMel board after his J .. C. ~oswell, lea~er of a ba.nd of 'Jesus People suspension was upheld by picketing a. Cann1chael1 Calif .. topless-bottomless, state university and college tavern, reads a verse from the Bible to one of the LA PUENTE (AP) -A key nection at all between the her· children dead, Mrs. Owen prosecution witness who had shooting and his being a colla~ and .was taken to a not yet testified in the trial of. . 1 hospital suffering from shock. three meit accuse<f of tryfrtg to witness in this case 15 on Y a -Her only child not killedbY - blackmail the mayor o f connection made by specula-the ftre was Teddy, 8, who had nearby Invindale was shot and lion." gone fishing with friends. wounde:l at his home here, The three men currently on ;:::::=========. authorities say. trial and two other persons Ronald Calmelat was scheduled to :stand trial in system Chancellor Glenn s . dancers at the bar. Bosv<'ell and his followers are Dumke. picketin~· the bar in an attempt to stop nude danc- DEVELOP POISE & SELF-CONFIDENCE BECAUSE of the sun's intense gravity -it's 28 times that of the earth - a 160-pound man thereon would weigh over two tons, briefly. e Crash Probe _i_nc:.g_a_t_t_h_e _t_av_e_r_n. ___________ _ SACRAMENTO (AP) -.A reported in satisfactory con-December are charged with .nee"" ....-11o1 ••111i.. ..........,.i. dition Sunday with a bullet drugging Diaz and later trying !!:".:' ,.= ~.,:,.. "::t."::! wound in his right eye. He was to blackmail him with DALE CARNEGIE COURSE NOW about that bank credit card: The money boys say it costs the average bolder about $43 a year in interest.. whatnot. QUERY -Q. "Ast your Love and War man who should get up Orst 1n the morning, the husband or the wife?" A. Most matrimonial experts believe the wife should , ari!e first to gel breakfast slarled.· i;;xcept cm dairy farm•. on these, however. the husbaod' lboa.ld be upected to nap twice daily. Besides a brlef anooze after breakfast, a slightly longer siesta Is w~alter lunch. -PECUIJAR .thing about the duck hawk. Its nost rils are equipped .with a set olLbafOes. So the wind velocity in a 200-mil~per·hout dive won't blow its brains out. This ~is the fastest bird that Oles, please note. Other fowl are not so endowed. .. PIANO -In exactly one out of every 6.3 households nationwide stands a piaOO ..• ESKIMOES have 15 differ- ent vrords for snow ... EXACI1.Y why seamen came to call any little iceberg a "growler" I do not know . • • EVERY lotb new house now is a 'prefab ... RABBfl'S are born blind and naked. Hares are born-wide-eyed and fully furred. ON THE ISLAND of Sicily, archeologist.s dug down to the remains or a huurious villa, which dated back to the ancient Roman empire. They dusted off a mosaic on the floor of what most probably ages ago had been some fam- ily's gymnasium. It depicted eight girls, semmingly swim- ming un~erwater, as in an aquacade. What's the Latin word for bikini? That's what they wore. SwimSuits ident- ical to today's scantiest. Pretty little things. WHAT world-fa mous fellow , besides Joe Namath. has green eyes? 'That's what I asked. Several, turns out. Sing- er Tom Jones can Ukewlse be so described. Swimmer Mark Spitz, too. Who else. ELDDT brother of that famous fighter Sonny Liston was named War. Client inquires if that's a common name among blacks in the South. In the south of Africa, it Js. Fairrly. And another fairly common name thereabouts ls Famine. /Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Boz 1875, Neu>- ,,._port Beach, Calif. 92600. legislative hearing is to be held next month on the Sacramento jet p I a n e -i c e cream parlor crash in which· 22 persons were killed. Assemblyman Edwin L . Z'berg CD-Sacramento), said in a statement Saturday that his Assembly N a tu r a l Resources Committee w.ould try to find out how the ice cream parlor happened to be located near the end of an airport runway. The hearing will be held after the elections, he said, "to avoid any possible political overtone!!." e Prison Death WEST COVINA (AP) -A teen-ager hanged h i m s e I f within 15 minutes after being booked into the West Covina jail for investigation of armed robbery and ass&JJlt with a deadly weapon on his mother, police said. Shawn Dee Otterbeclt, 18, was arrested Sunday night after his mother phoned police and said he bad held a knife and broken bottle at Mr throat and demanded money, off leers said. His mother was not in- jured. Two Honored By University · Capitol News Senlce DAVIS -Agriculturalist Richard E. Rominger, cl85!5 of 1949, and dairyman Robert E. ·Osborne, class or 1926, have been selected as the 1972 reci- pient• of the University Service A wards to b e presented at the annual Alum- \:-.,,,. ....... _....,.._...,.,,._.;jiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~imi" iDaiyiiiDinner et UC Davis. I , ,Olympics' :Unit Urged .. Capitol News Service Rep. Bob Matlllas ( R • Tulare) has Introduced a bill to create a commi!sion on the Olympic Games. A two-lime Olympic decathlon. winner, M8thlu said the comtniSl!lion would "reevaluate the ·role of the U.S. Olympic Committee and determine the most e!fecUve • way the United States can 1>Brtlclpat• In the Olympic Oam'8.'' ' . ". ' \' . CONTRACTING & \UB CONTR ACTING TRAINING . . .. ,, ,• . ff,,,,,,. ~or f r.'• f ,,/rJ,•r " _, • ANTHONY ICHOOLI ~. · HAllOI Clllm SMH...WC...... ii j 1 ce... M..-. Ctll+tf'llU. ., /! "'· 1114) t7....,Jll '"' .. ,,...._.,, 11. ~Clll,NM '" ..._ c1141 nw• COSTA MESA GRAND OPENING . ~ OFF ON ALL ••• Carpets and furniture cleaned WALL · Im TO • WALL CARPET CLEANING * NEW CARPET SHOWROOM * CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS A REPAIRS * FINE UPHOLSTERY CLEANING * COMMERCIAL & INSURANCE WORK ( 714 I 645-3708 King's Carpet Co. 225 W. Wllt0n St, Cfffo M,iu, Call!. ~26 'Spirit' Healing Case Scheduled for Appeal i 1 .EL CAJON (AP ) -An a~ . the escape Qr spiritual energy. peal is planned for the Rev. Houston was practicing the Dr. Francis M. Houston, con-tenets of his church. using vict~ .. by a. jury of ~racticing spiritual energy from God and medtcme without a. license.. not claiming cures, Link said. ~ttorney _Frederic L. Link As long as healing is said a plastic device allegedly . . . . . . used by Houston to heal was sp1r1tual, Link said 1t 1s p~ applied to the body to prevent tected by the 1st Amendment to the U.S. Consti tution. He -shot -late Saturday night when ..,.,, ken whit he ~ ...... ~1t1 1w i.hnMllM he opened the door to his photogra.....,. ta e . ~,.._.-'" 11:1111 • A.-.i.1 ... .. ~w~as~seda~~ted~·~~~~~~============!. heme in response to a knock, sheriff's ddputies said. t.vv.,,..._o CALMELAT, zt, was named What do doctors recommend by the Los Angeles County fi tie ts • • ? Grand Jury as an unindicted orpa n ID rnnn ro<:onspirator in the alleged . . . JIMU• • plot to blackmail Jrwfndale · • Mayor Richard Diaz tnto Doctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000 voting . for_ legalized card of these tablets to their patients each vear parlors m his community. / • Calmelat was a principal 'fhere are man y medications a ton recommend moat than any prosecution witness and. was 11hyaician or dentist can pre-other leading tablet. to have begun testifying ~es-&eribe for pain, Some are nar-Headache and dent.al pain is day, Deputy Dist. Atty . colic, ma!'Y. are avai lahle. only "relieved incredibly fast: minor Thomas Elden said. He said on.Pft!SC!lption. B~l there _1aone pains of arthritis are depend- Calmelat had turned state's J1:81n ~h~r. available ~1thout ably eased for houn; even the Nixon Bill . Jil'el!Cnphon, doctors dispense nchea and pains of cold.I and fl u said the decision will be a~ W~ and was gran~ Im-again and again ... Anacin. respond to Anacin. So the ten- pealed. mWllty from prosecution but Each yYr, doctors give over sion and depreseion that can be The 65-year-old defendant would not say what rela-50,000,000 Anacin tablets to caused by auch pain will be re· tionship Calmelat had with the tbeir patients in pain. If doct.or11 Iieved too. And millions take wps ordai!led by the UnJversal case. think enough about Anacin to Anacin wiLhout atomach Ul)Mt. Church of Matter in San Jose, diapenae all these tabletl, what When you're in pain, why Criticized and is minister of the Church EIJ)EN s A I D he thinks better recommendation can you don't you lollow the practice of Cal uk when you are in pain? so many doctors and take the PHILADELPHIA (AP) American Party presidential candidate John Schmitz of Tustin has criticized the revenue · sbaring bill signed here by President Nixon as , 'the "coop de grace for state and lqcal governments." of Contract Healing in Guatay melat will still be able to You aee, Anacin <:on ta ins tablet a doctor might give you in west-central San Diego .t~es~l~Uy~~and~~a=d~ded~~t~h~a~t~mo;'"::::::::";l;t;he::::::::p•;in::::::::re;l;ieve::::::::r;d;0<:;·~;in;h;ia::::::::ow;n;offi<O::::::::::::::::' 'Thl<::::::::;';A;"""'::::::::.";'~·, County, Deputy Dist. Atty. 1~'whether there is any con- Rep. Schmitz said Friday revenue-sharing is a step t9wards totalitarianism be- cause Washington will control the ways in which state and local unils' spend the $30.2 billion. Roland Haddad said. No complaints a g a i n s t Houston came from the public bis attorney said. Hacldad told the court an undercover agent complained to Houston that she had a chronic ulcer and kidney problem and that be touched her with a c !ear, plastlc cube containing herbs and told her she was cured. Her confidence in you raises your spirfta . When 1he looks at you. you'rt ready to climb the highest mountain. You feel her whole-hearted approval. Ask her to marry you with e beautiful diamond IQlltalra. Solitaires illustrated priced from $600 to $1000. a.,... AlCIMltt ...... -'"'*"1cAlll .. .... a..M-"'"" Miii ..... CM ..... -. SLA.VICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPOltT IEACH -6<44-1380 Opt• Mon. ond Fn. 10 e.m. to 9:30 P·!"· Wllll •tW "'' 1".....,.1; °''""' I.II """"'' LAI ........ Miil I.ii o._ l!ld Lit .,..... spectacular llfe-eolor., our professloaal cltlltlren's photograplter will be at hroadway•hnntlngtoa bench this week only Monday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday tllrn Saturday 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 21ue color., portraits only 2.99 • one SJ"'rkling 8 x I 0 and one 3 x 4 • no handling charge • extra prinh ovoilable at reasonable prices • no age limit • no appointment neceuary Dynamic color fidelity at • dynamic low price. Add to this tho fact tho! our photogrophor is • whit 1t capturing the radiant, expressive poses of childhood; ond you reaUy hove on unbeotoble offer. fitt9~ antt ttTio.ce IlorP<JRBllcilman~ \ Porlfalt Studio, I 1!. noor Huntln91on IHc.h • -I ( • " .... • ~· 11 DAILY PD,OT m ITOBIAL PAGE Make P ot Legal? NO Sympathy and support for the marijuana initiative 1~ropos1t1on 19 on the Nov. 7 ballot -appear io have been a rou~ed among many non-pot smokers sin1ply because penalties for possession and use of the drug do not fit the rr1me. 'I'hey are much too severe. n1aki.ng <'r11nh1JI S of young people for mere abuse of their own health. ~ 1'h1s is ltue. But the core of the argument goe.; much deeper ... Supporters of the initiative contend that no solid medical or scientific evidence exists.to deny their clain1 th;1t ca11nabi s is not hartnful to the smoker. This may h.ave been the case a fe\V years ago, but no longer. Dr. Olva Braenden, director of the United Nations Narcotics Laboratory for lhe last 16 years, has given top priority to the study of marijuana and ils effects for the last six years. His group has colJaborated '"it11 research workers a11 around the world. 'l'cstifying before a congressional committee, Dr. Braenden said, ".-\mong the scientists working in the fi_eld, it \vould seem that there is a consensus that can- nabis is dangerous ~ opinion differs on the degree of danger to the individual and to society. In my opinion. it seems that as progessively more scientific facts are discovered about ca nnabis, the more one beeomes a\varc of its potential dange rs." More specific \Vas the finding of a team of British researchers that a group of habitual marijuana users between the ages of 18 and 23 were suffering fronl cerebral atrophy, or irreversible shrinkage of the brain tissue. Abuse found tbnl, from the public health point ol view, an occasional clgaret of marijuana will not cause pubUc health problems. But the commission did not say nolh· ing is wrong with j>Ot. It did say jail sentences for Its use are too severe, but that doesn't mean legalizing it or condoning its use. Citing legalization of alcohol as a reason to legalize "less harmful marijuana" is using a faulty model. Laws governing the manufacture and sale of alcoholiq bever-- ages were intended to cut down the excessive use of alcohol and to stop youngsters from using it. They have done neither. At least the user of alcobol knows what results to expect. And he can trust the brewer and distiller not to surprise him. The pot smoker can't predict either ef· fects or quality. Abuse or alcohol produces tragedy on the highway, on the job and in the home. Why compound the prob- lem by legalizing and institutionalizing marijuana? One aspect of Proposition 19 little known to the public is the special interest !uncling it. Amorphia Inc. is a California-based corporation engaged nationally in the sale of the ''Acapulco Gold" brand of cigarette papers. They are sold for use in rolling marijuana dg· arettes. Amorphia's top executives form an interlocking dir· ectorate \vitb California Marij uana Initiative (CM!}. CMI claims sanctimoniously that it has no paid staff \VOrkers but its top leadei:s are on the Arnorp b1a payroll. Proposition 19 ls written to give possession and use of pot more legal protection than possession and use of alcoholic beverages. Governments and individu als would be denied protection against a pot smoker until be is legally "under the influence" and already "engaging in conduct that endangers others"-a condition lasting four to six hours or longer. / Denial that use of marijuana has any connection with moving on into harder drugs \von't wash, either. A Los Angeles Police Department in-depth study of all juvenile arrests for possession or use in 1960 and 1961 showe_d that one of every eight had been re-arrested \Vithin five years for use or possession or heroin. A \videly misquo ted (by n1arijuana adv ocates) re· }>Ort by the-National Comission on Marjuana and Drug I The Legislature and Congress should make penal· ties more realistic but legalizing this kind of drug use \vould be a serious error. Vote NO on Proposition 19. •CATHOUCS .• !10TESTAHTS .. .THEY1RE ~~klN' ME GLAt> l'M A HEATHEN:' Village Hall Is Also Scene Of Ch ica nery ~YDNEY J.HARRl0 Having been a resident of the greal city or Chicago for nearly 50 years, J am under no illusion about lhe kind of politics that is played £or keeps in the big city machines. Manipulalions, evasions, corruptions and connivances are such a (;,mi/Jar story lliat hardly anyooe bollr crs to listen ;i.ny more. But, just to re- dress the record a litrle bit, it must be pointed o u t that while the big city gets all the notori· ety. · lhe small lO\\TI and rural county are far from the models of propriety and honesty that are perpetuated by our national mythology. MAN FOR MAN, offict! for office, aod dollar for dollar, I am persuaded there ls just as much chicanery and hanky·panky played in the village hall and the county courthouse as you are likely to find downtown. It is all on a smaller, quieter scale, however, so headlines are rarely made when Al slips Jim a fat road con- tract and gets a lovely bit of loot in return for the favor. It could be argued, in Jact . that political dishonesty is more serious in the smaller cornmunities, bcc<1use or their peculiar demographic and geographic conditions. ~t me explain what I mean by this. A BIG CITV IS diverse and heterogeneous, made up or many levels of population. and both parties are represented in large numbers. Thus, there are two principal organizations Dear Gloomy Gus There are no longer bicycle "acci· dents" ... an accident is a "hap- pening not expected, foreseen or intended." When 80 percent of the bike ride.rs not ooly _ignore ihe laws but actually challenge car drivers and taunt them, the results are no accident ! ·-L.F, TlllJ 111._ ,.n9Ch "'"-"' YI-. not fll(ISHorlty tllotl 11 the ~. SllMI your pet ,..YI to G4oomy °"" DlllY Piiot. locked in combat, each one eager to disclose the peccadilloes of the other. They act both as a check and as a spotlight on their mu tual evil-doing. lo a small town, or a rural county, there is usually one entrenched party that has run things for 20 or 30 years without elfective oeposition, because these areas tend ~ be m o r e homogeneous and stable and remain comfortably ''Repub l ican'' or "Democrat" ror long periods of time. BECAUSE OF TillS continuity of monopoly, there is nobody around to throw the rascals out. The party in power stays in power, rree Crom lbe scrutiny of a large, militant opposition ; thus, C<lr· ruption can become embedded in the very process of local law and J:M)litics, with the same group shuffl ing around dif· ferent candidates to do their bidding. The big city machine, however venal in spirit, is forced to watch its step and £rom time to time make at least nominal concessions to decency, or it will Jose its license to steal. No such threat hangs over the monolithic area, where the safe majority or citizens would continue to vote for the entrenched party if a purple- tailed baboon were nominated for office, Chicago gets all the publicity, but the Gulch Center Coorthouse doesn 't have to stuff ballots to ensure that the booty will keep rolling in. Punishing for Excellence By P!IJL JORDAN Capitol Newt Service SACRAMENTO -While this nation struggles, with something less, so far , tt1an great success, wtrh its balance or payments problems, more and more bu.stnessmen are wondering ii the government's tfforts aren·t s c 1 f. dereating. A fine eumple or what appears to be n M:ff-defeating move is the court su it Jllcd by lhe Justice Department to break up Jnlematlonal Busme5S Machines. l nt·. 1be fJrm -Uke other (l.rms with llimilar records -Is in effect to be punished for excellence. It didn't after all, attain Its position In the business world by pro- ducing Inferior product.!. For if the admitted giant of the corn. put.tr field (aod computers are an Im· port;;i;nt liOUrce ot foreign funds, bnlan· clng Art'u?rican purchases from othef na-- Uont) is broken up Into a number of competing firms, what will be the effect on our payment.II' balance? A number of firms, perhaps. bidding each other down In tbttr attempts to sell overseas? Could be ••• most likely will be. A GOOD ARGUMENT cnn be made OW cooditlont have olmnged dr1stlcaliy 1fnce tho days of the "robber barons" and the antl·t.ru&t laWI thl:lr bUJ.lneas prl<lloea brought about. Anolhi!r Cood argument Lt 1hat It Is time ror govt.mment 10 r.tconsider its attilude toward busltreu, particularly tn a nation of wlll<h Ille Prtsidont • ..,. bo""ted, "'""'!nation's buslncsa Is buslnru.''-. ~ Must government and business be - alwaya -adversaries? An appeal for change was voiced recenUy in Loa Angeles by Robert Anderson, p~ldent of North American ltockwell Corp .. who warned that tbe law must be changed to allow American bu!lnessmen to form overseas trading firms similar to the cartels of other oa· UoM, or eli;e this nation's industry will "<.-onllnue t.o be passive spectators" in world trade. OUR ANTl·TRUST LAWS, Aoderson cMrged, have caused U.S. flnns to sutler huge overseas sales losses to foreign Urm11 in recent years, and that such laws ari! "a major bar to America's ability to ~mpete" in world markets. The usual example given 'Of success in world trttde ls .. Japan. lnc." trs no joke to American busiOC!ssmcn who have lost wles ifl third naUons to the ultra--ruccessful Jap:tnese, who h.ivc lhe :idvantage! nf "cartel" trading firms Amerlcam, under penalty of law, cannot form. .. Agrteing wlth Anderson is oor own Socretary ol Commerce P eter C. Peterson , . . but, given· our antl·trust laws, there ii; little the cabinet member can do, no matter whal his feelings. HE ~UGOT TELL this nation's huilncssmen -and lawmakers -or the clo.~ rcli.10onshlp Jn Japan between government, finance and bwdness. the lhrte are clostly united, particularly w~ It tomeit to expert sales. .rrhi!I country could do the same .. Nixon's Allied Services Aet ls One Answer R-epai~Fin=g-Co mplex Well-are-System By ELLI<YI' L. RICllARDSON Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Something has gone terribly wrong with the way we try to help our fellow Americans. It isn't that we don't care. And it isn't that we don't try. One of the very best things about this country is that we ha ve never lost that willingness to lend a hand when a neighbor is down or hurt and honestly can't help himself. But more than time separates us from the day when helping out meant rebuilding a man's barn, It's gotten a lot more complicated. The person needing help today might be an isolated old person , without Eriends or ramily; or a child in an inner-city slum. His ~ are likely kl ~ many and interrelated - things like the wrong kind of food or not t>eing able to read or write, or a crippling disability, or alcohol or drugs-all com- pounded by a &e:Me of complete hopeless- ness. And tbese problems can get tang!· ed together in one person like a ball of fishhooks. IT'S A SITUATION which crept up on us over the years. As things got more complicated we kept trying to take them apart and make them simple. What happened was that as people's problems became more com- plex, we bcgy producting specialist.a in (GUEST REPORT) problems but very few specialists in people. Take HEW, for example: eight of every 10 of the men, women or children who need help from us need more than "One kind or help. But we go at the job "program by program." We take ,people apart and try to make them fit into all the various titles and acts of federal Jaw. 'Mlis approach bas never worked well and today, wbeo awareness or human prob- lems is so acute ·and when so many potential solutions are at hand it has become tragically inadequate. REW JS RESPONSIBLE for more than 270 l!peCialized programs of human assistance administered by dozens of state and local agencies. Hwnan beings get lost in the process, if they can get in it at all. Today people are demanding a change. Proponents of change include the people in my department, social service workers, health and e d u c a t i o n specialists, government leaders, and peo- ple in need. They all agree we have to go back to viewing people as whole in· dividuals and treating them in a way which eliminates waste and duplication and still gets the job done. 11lE PROBLEM DOES NOT lie en· tirely or even prilncipally with the pro-- fessionals wbo are trying to help, The doctors, the teacbern, the soclaJ workers wOO work within the system are Crustrated by it, and the better and more caring they are, the more frustrated the y are. The problem is the system -the laws, the rules, the regulations, the tradi· tions which have grown up over the years until they have become an impenetrable thicket. It's the system we must change. I would commend one proposed solu· tion for your consideration. It is a begin- ning. HEW bas sponsored, and the Presi· dent has introduced, a new law called the Allied Services Act. It would take this approach: It would help states and local com- munilles pay the costs or deve_loping total and systematic approaches to the delivery of human services. It would give Governors the authorily and the tools to lead the way in building strong statewide service systems. rr wom,o ENCOURAGE stale and local agencies to develop new approac'hes (or linking up diagnosis, referral, treat .. ment and followup. And it would pull together the front o!riee managem~t of social services to make it more effective and Jess wasteful. Specifically aimed at HEW's vast ar· ray of "programs,'' it would allow states which have done the necessary planning to shift up to 25 percent of HEW runds out or the old narrow specialized chair ne\s to match them up with local resources and local needs. WE HA VE LEARNED a lot about bow to help our fellow citizens. We have created useful agencies, institutions and programs to work on problems. But to really help people get back to in· dependence we have to get these specialized agencies and programs to work together to treat the whole person. 1be Allied Services Act is one proposed solution. Jt is not the only one or the final one. But as the Congress, the federal government and your state and local governments approach this complicated and important problem in the next few weeks and months, I \Vould hope that all or you as concerned citizens will study the issues involved and insist that we begin the job of repair and reconstruc. tion. It is too important to be left to specialists. 'Death Penalty Is Not a Deterrent' To the Editor: Proposition 17 on the November ballot wi ll attempt to restore the death penalty in California, though it has been ruled out by our state Supreme Court. \Vhy resto~ it? Its deterrent e«ects, say proponents. Yet it has been demonstrated again and again that there is no significant change in tbe capital of· fense rate with or without the death penally. In one Jnstance a poJJeeman who worked hard to get the death penalty restored killed his wile 10 days after it again became law. SAVE TOE SfATE money, say pro. ponents. In actuality, the expenses 0£ killing a man are more than those or keeping him alive the rest or his natural life. Who gets the death sentence when there is an alternative one? An tigh~ year study of California juries showed 42 percent of blue collar workers, and only sini percent of white collar workers were condemned to death. One Ottio governor, Dlsalle, noted that death row people had common denominators: low mental capacity, little or no education, few friends, broken homes, but mainly the col)demned were pennlleM. THOSE WHO FAVOR the death penalty should be able to view an c~· ecutlon with no qualms. Few can. Whatever the method of killing e man, it is :i horrible sight. Killing, adminiatrative or otherwise, Is lowering ouraelve., to commit the same act all aoclety con· demns. rt only reveals the depths of man's inhumanity to man. The death punishment Is imvocable, and lhere are many ca~ of condemning the wl'Qng,man. UnUI human Judgment is irifallible, t appeal t.o you to vote against the death penalty. RUTO R. DABES ~--B11 Geo"fle ---1 CONFIDENTIAL TO G!ORGE McGOVERN: O.K .•• put oa your llt'Xl blinding burst or 1pced. ·- [ MAILBOX Prop. 20 Supported To the Editor: ) l disagree with the editorial position of the DAU. Y PllOT on Proposition 20. I feel ooastal clUzens have much to gain from a Yes vote on Proposition 20. Under this proposition a balanced coastal developmtnt plan will be formulated dur~ ing lhe next three years, and while thi!: comprehensive plan is being devel<>ped for the entire catHomia coast, a permit prooeduro will bo followed to insllre that environmentally harmful projects are not allowed to be built. Anyone wishing to proceed with major construction within 1,000 yards or the mean high tide line would have to apply for a permit to do so. The burden would be upon the applicant to prove that his project would not have any su~tantial adverse effect on the environment. Homeowners would be allowed to make repairs of up to $7,500 without any more pennlts than are presently needed, as well as to make emergency repairs up to $25,000 without compliance with the permit procedure. TN TllE SAN FRANCISCO Bay area, where a similar permif procedure is followed for development surrounding It Is Not Inevitable l odQltrlal N.,.. Service llespito the wld~ belief thal some form or governmebt health in· surance is lnevltable, there al'f! still those who question the advisability of this type o£ government intervention In med,lcine and refuse to accept the pttmiie tbat it 11 .. Inevitable". One or these ts HAIT)' Schwartz, Ph.D., medical writer for The New York Timea. , Or. Schwartz comments: ••Given governmental blunders tn so many fields andtttts gaps between promises and perlonnance, and slveo government's curnot spectacle of disarray, why, tllen, should government take on t h e respomlblllly of providing m e d I o a I .rervices?" Dr. Schwartz wo.med against "entrapment by cllche and stereotype, as In the oft·repeated charge that there lJ a 'crlais' Jn health care." RE OBSERVED THAT one en· coura1ing sign ls the recent publication by the liberal BrookJngJ Insti tution of a study of major !Ocl.al programs of the 1960'1 that concluded that le.'5, not more , government Involvement may be In· • • dJcated in many cases. Dr. Schwartz comments, ". . . We must be more cautious ln undertaking major &OCial pro- grams; 90metimes a new program can aggravate the problem it seeks to solve." For a long lime, the public has been mesmerized by the Imagined ability of government to solve vlrtually any social or economic problem. The consequence has been the growth of a morass or pro- groms restina on an impenetrable maze or bureaucracy. Medicine is one thing that must be kept tree ol lhis 1wamp of (allure.. THE MEDICAL profeBSlon bas pro. posed a number of w11ya In which govern· ment can !Acllllato broadenlna the base , or bJ4h quality health care -wilhln th• framework of the free chol~, volunlAry \ system that has brought wltblo the space of a comparatively few years the greatest medical advances the world has ever known. These measures: should be constdcred on their 11\<lrit, by the publlo and by lawmakers. They point the way to continually risln3 health standards If we can avoid the trap of the govemmenl· oari-do-overythlng-t>etter phll°"'phy. San Francisco Bay, 90 percent of the permits applied for have been granted. Clearly this is no virtual moratorium, as the opponents of Proposition 20 so loosely claim. Rather, this pennit procedure would be a tremendous safeguard to the public. I feel that Proposition 20 is a carefully constructed Initiative. Very similar coastal legislation has been passed by the California Assembly the last two years, but special interest lobbies have killed the bill in a Senate comlnittee. Therefore, supPorters of the concept ror wise management of the Calif'ornia coastline had to take this deciston directly to the people. Now is our chaoce to protect our coast. RHODA MARTYN Letters from reader,, a·re welcome. NornUJl.ly torite1s should conve11 their tnessages in 300 W()Td$ or le!s. The right to condense letters to fit space or el1mt11ate libel is reserved. All letters must include signature and. mailing address, but names may be withheld on reque.1't if sufftcient reason is appartnt. Poetru wilt not be published. OllANGI CO.AST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Verd, Publisher Thomas Keeoil, Editor Albert W. Battt Editorial Page .Editor The editorill page of the Dilly Pilot lftlu to Worm and aUmu· late rffdcrs by prnerutni 1hl1 n~Pf\Pf'r'• oplntr1111 and com. mrn• ' nn toJ)fes of Jnt<-rt>Sl and t.l1:ri. ,11cc. by providing a rorum for u,. cxprtUlon of our rt'&dcors' nplnlon1. and b)' ~ntlnK tho dlVf!m vlmvpolnts of lnrormcd ob--~<'tvers and apokrsmen on topl" of the day. , Monday, October 23, 1972 1 \ IV Uni mill co lo the nat dev ' In I " the trot tha ore "th and use. T m sys der plai lmn gen soci A tra sev lac the the me a I A sup phy re tho. ent ma for int d• COil fa sa dis req w pl p ' " .. MiJJions . ..~. . ' Co• lo , .. Great h•pkl1 Palcll al any offic~ of Wnl1111 Federal aid 101'11 • 1H nl fo r a HappJ Hallowm. W1'll etea gite yoa a copJ of The Hlstorr of Hallowm, incl1diag 11ggnlio11 for some new wap lo cane 1 jack-o·lantern. CWllll1 qaanlitln last, and llmlled lo roaagsl1rs accompanied bJ an ad1ll) Wnt1m Federal Is, of coarse, 11ore lllu 1111mpkla patch. We're a satings association that k11ps its promise to git• Joa 1111 most for yo1r satiap dollar ••• c1rre.nllJ from 5°/o to 8°/o, wllll safelJ i11ared. lo SZO,•. Come in, we'll make JOI a 11er11t1r. Wester11 Federal Sa.,;ngs Hugi! Ewa111, .1r., Prtsldelf. • ,, • AIMii ow• 1300 11llllon Hud Offjce: 8111 11d HUI Str11t, Dow1tow1 BeterlJ Hiiis: 11 tltt BettrlJ WllUir1 Hotel Larchmont: First I Larell11011, Los Angeles Panorama CilJ: Roscoe al Yea 111111 Inglewood: 366 E. Ma1cllnter Torrance: Del Amo F111ncial Center CilJ of Orange: 2233 111. T1slin Ate. La Hora: Fanion Sfi1111 USC ll'llCll: 11 OT W. Jeff1rsoa Hollrwoo4/Y11111ont: 1725 111. Vermont Ate. 0 £. Devices 1·ust about everything but the kitchen Spiced Up • · . . • ii::;~:!2:~d~; knife lree_ at Western Federal SaVIDgs Corona d1I Mar: 2744 E. Coast Hwy. colors to Asia and Africa In the expectation the unusual nature o( the birt~ontrol devices will spark new interest · in their use. Besides red, white and blue, the U.S. Agency for Interna- tional Develapment Is pro- vidJng the prophylact:lcs in black, green and pink In packages beanng a legend in- viting the user to "embark on a new adventure." Dr. R. T. Ravenholt. AID's director of the Office of Population, says the use of colore:d condoms is neither frivolous nor an attempi at being cute, but a serious at- tempt to promote birth control in the hi gh-population areas of -the-wor:ld.-------------- "WHILE THE pill remains the most powerful birth-con- trol device available and one that will be u s e d In- creasingly," Ravenholt said. "there are serious cultural and practical obstacles to its use." These include rudimentary medical a n d distribution systems in s o m e un- derdeveloped countries, he ex- plained. Condoms, on the other hand, are easy to use and generally accepted by most societies. AID HAS distributed the traditional gray condom for several years, but with only lackluster reception. So, whtn the colored variety came on the market during the sum~ mer the agency decided to run a test program. Amrican missions were sent supplies of the new pro- phylactics and R a v e n h o I t reported the distribution in those countries brought an enthusiastic response. HE SAID a recent trip he made to the Orient showed foreign ofricials "much more interested in the colored corl- doms than the gray ones. You could see the interest in their races," he said, "when they saw the many colors. The displays brought smiles and requests for some sampl~ IF you really want to lose weight •.. but you enjoy good food and a rot of it .-.:::;..,) ... you'll love Weight Watcher~! The Weight Watchers program offers you an endless varie1y of delicious foods, including me.ii, fi!.h, fowl, s;ilJds, fruits, veget;ibles, potaloeo;, p.as11 and wonder• ful d~~rrl~! And ii re.ally \Yorks. Over 4 million happy people have lost wc1~ht with Weight W1tchers. So why wall I Come leilrn how to"'sltm duwn s1fely, M?nsibty, enjoyoibly. CLASSES NOW OPEN Newport Beech W1ll11e1ffy, 7100 "'1"• Park New,ert F.OR INFORMATION AND FREE BROCHURE CALL : 835-5505 WEIGHT® WATCHERS. ~itMWM<hmo<'lll·~·lftMll•-•Ut>I w.111o1w·~--'.111C~C.."'*"k.1t•. Celebraiing Our Ne~ Corona del Mar branch! The-Greai-Pumpkin-Give·A~y · Sta1•ts October Z3rd ; • • I I 8 DAILY PILOT s In B l g h Gear Opel ~lanta Makes Debut By CARL CARSTENSEN ot 1111 0.111 l'llot Stftf The new !l.1anta series ln- trodue<d by Opel thiS year · seen1s to have created a new- found enthusiasn1 for Buick dealers carrying this popular European import. A new tw<Hioor sport coupe, with customized color and trim features plus the adap- tation or the ''!l.1anta'' nameplate for the U.S. ~arket highlight the introd\!ct1on of the '73 Opets. THE COUPE, called the ~1anta Luxus, will h a v e carpeted trunk and package shelf, come in three specific exterior colors and have coordinated brushed corded fabric interion. A manually operated steel sun roof is op- tional with either the regular or vinyl top. The 1900 Sport Coupe and 1900 Rallye will also carry the new designation forl973 . being caller the Manta and ~lanta Rallye, respectively. The Sport Coupe series features basic semi.fastback styling with new ornamen- lLtion . This includes l\1anta and l\fanta Rallye nameplates on the decklid and Manta 1900 lettering on the lower front fenders. Remaining models in the 1973 line-up include the 1900 two--and four-door sedans. 1900 two-door \l:agon and the E1nplo yers: Deadline October 31 All California employers were reminded this v.·cek by A.P. Spittler, Tax Administrator for the Strte Department of lluman Resources . Develop- 1nent in Santa Ana. that Tues- day, Oct. 31, is the deadline date for filing California U n e m ployment Insurance wage reports and contribution returns and Report o f Personal Income Tax Withheld for the third quarter of 1972. Penaltv and interest will be charged if the report is filed Opel GT in its classic Gran Tu rismo styling. RETRACTABLE headlamps and sculptured wheel wells produce au uncluttered look in keeping with the o v e r a 11 design of the sports car. The short deck rear end and large, round taillamps complete the impression. Rear quarter win- dows swing out. Wheel trim rings are stan- dard equipment on both sedan and station wagor. models. Good visibility is assured by the large ventless side glass area and thin roof pillars. · FOR TIIE 1900 station wagon. a roof luggage rack and wood--grain-.applique on side naneling are available as deale·r installed options. Manta and Manta Rallye in- teriors provide ' ' c o n t r o 1 center" instrument grouping. Full front and rear carpeting. a deluxe console, and glove box are also standard. All models will come stan- dard equipped With the Opel t.9 liter, cam-in-head engine. four-speed manual transmission and power-assist front disc brakes. A three-speed automatic after l~c -cte11dline. ~-----------, Spittler also stated that in- forr•1:J1inu :ivaifab/c at the present time shows the follow· ing-~·1i1'1 rf'e:.iirrl to unemploy· ment t.'lxrs in California for the year 1973. -Tht' taxable v.•age base for umemplovment insurance will remain $4.200. The taxable wage base for disability in- surance will increase to $8.500. -The high rate schedule provided for in Section 977 of the Unemployment Insurance Code win be in effect during 1973. The rates in this schedule range from 0.7 percent to 3.1 percent. -The balancing account tax provided by Section 976.5 of the Uxlt: will be increased to 1.0 percent in general. but new employers and employers whose base payrolls have in· creased 25 percent or more will have a 0.9 percent rate. Emplc.yen who oeed help in preparing their returns and wage reports or wish In- formation about the 1973 tax information may cont.act the Employrr.ent Tax Office at 1619 West 17th Street, Santa Ana or te lt!phone 543-0111. Securities Talks Set The second of five lec- tures on the va rious aspects of the securities market and the economy will be presented Tuesday evening at Eastbluff Elementary School. William L. O' Bryon, originator of the course 22 years ago, is well known as a lecturer and in· vestment consultant. The course, offered as a cOm· munity service by the adult education division of Orange Coast Co 11 e ge , serves as an introduction to the basic fundamentals of investing. Lectures are s I a l e d every Tuesday through November 14 at t h e school, located at 2627 Vista Del Oro, Newport Beach from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Registration Is at the lecture. Don 't Miss These Ft'ee Lectures lea/ ~lale !Jnve6lmenl Sem6 Oct. 25th "Maximum Return on a Minimum Investment" Lecturer -Fred Becker Nov. 1st "Advantage or Real Estate Syndication for the Small Investor'' Lecturers -Phil ri.tcNamee and "Cap" Blackburn Nov. 8th "Capital Conservation Through Exchanging A-finimizing Taxes'' Lecturer -Bruce Howey "Tailoring Your '73 Investment" Lecturer -Randy McCardle 'l"ICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR EACH SESSIOlll MEETS 7:30 • 9:30 P.M. · GOLDElll WEST COLLEGE ~ Serl• c...,....sorod By · Orange Cot1I . e Gelden WOii DAILY PILOT Colltte Huntington Buch • Fountain Valtty - Board of Rotlton • t.ransmlssion and dealer-In- stall¢ air conditioning will be optional across !he board. A semi~losed cooling system is included with a i r con- dilioning on 1973 Opels, except the GT. The system collects overflow coolant into a plastic reservoir during normal driv- ing operatic.n and returns the fluid to the radiate.I as the engine cools. THE OPt:L is produced by General Motors In Europe and distrlbu\:?d in the U.S. through more than 2,200 Buick-Opel dealers ... * * * Just a reminder -In ad- dition to turning back your clocks <.1ne hour this coming Saturday night -you'll have to aPjust your driving habits slightly too. In a recent statement, Auto Club of Southern California Public Sa£ety Manager Robert Cheney warned that, as a result of the end of Daylight Saving Time "many drivers will find themselves returning home in the dark (or the first time in months." CHENEY STRESSED that "nighttime driving b r i _n gs dangers of headlight g~e through careless use o.f high beams. It brings increased hazards to Youngsters in their way hOrrle from school. And it brings a decrease in visual perception -particularly of colors." The Auto Club executive concluded that you should favor slJwer speeds, more space between cars, and "a reneweo determination t o driv.e · defensively at a 11 times." Money's Worth 'Card Carriers' Don't Like 'em--But Use 'em By SYLVIA PORTER Do you have at least three credit cards, most or then1. good only at a particular store or chain of stores? Do you use at least one of these cards regularly? Do you think of your card or cards prim- arily as a source or ~redit, and ~ m only a S e C 0 ndary POlllT•R ,.. way as f convenience? DO YOU WRITE more checks than you used to, desflte your use of the cards too . Do you ha_ve a basic, nag- ging rear that credit cards make It :00 easy for yoll to buy things you do not really want or canoot honestly af- ford? Do you, as a result of this basic rear, tend to think of your cards as .an evil. - a neeessary evil, but still an evil -and not a good thing? If you answered yes to every one of these probing questions, you are typical of today 's credit-card user, according to the fll'lt comprehensive study ever made of "Credit Card Use in the U.S.," soon to be publlsheJ by the University of Mich!ga& Institute for Social Research. "Few Americans tend to think of credit cards as a good thing, whether they use Utem or not," says Dr. Lewis Mandell, who directed the !SR study. "Fully 75 percent of all respondents .said that credit canb made tt too easy to buy thinp:." · NOW CHECK where you, a credit card owner, fit in the wide ranse of users analyzed. • If you have a higher than average income and higher than average education. you're more llkely to bfJ a card U!er than those with lower Incomes and educaUon1. "Income Is 1he major determinant of credit.a.rd uae," Mandell con- cludes. • If you are 1 yoong family and hbve children, you are n:.ore likely lo UH cards than other i'OOPI and more likely to lncur debt on your cards than olhet grwpo. "Another determinant of cfedlt-card use ii related ,to the age or th• !tmlly hel!d." • It you Uve ln the 1uburbl, it'• probable lhat you are an active crtdlt card .uacr, while "families living ln central cities or rural 111rea1 are leaJt likely to use such :ards." • If you use your cards to boy clothing more than any other category of gOods, you're typical. On both bank and store credit cards, clothing is the most frequent type of purchase. - •And if you're in any income group below the vef"y top, you use your card to obtain credit, and this is the most important use you make of the card. You see your card as another in- strument tor taking on in- stalment debt and you treat your card debt like an in- stalment Joan -paying a little each mont.b, generally the minimurr. allowable monthly payment. • BUT IF YOU'RE in the highest income group, you use your card as a._ convenience- and whatever debt you incur on the card, you attempt to pay off as qUickly as you can. • And no matter what your special grGUp, you wrlte more checks th:in families who do not use cards. What are some of the fun- damental implications of all tbis? One prime implication Is Iba~ although all credit cards are substitutes for money or checks In transactions, they are not pushing us toward a "checkless society" -as was so widel}4orecast and ls still so widely believed. "The most remarkable fin- ding is that families using credit cards tend lo write more checks per month than families who do not use such cards," emphasizct MandeTI . "This obvious contradiction is substantiated even when ad- justments are made for age and income of the credit card -user. Thi& finding belles .the notion that we are moving toward a checkless soclety as lhe-result of CJ1'!dlt card use." ANO'l1IEll PRIME Implica- tion Is that our consumer debt pattern Is beina changed by the addition of credJt card debt to other types of consum· er debt. . The use ot credit card debt IJ most pronounced among higher income famlllts, which often have no other coniumer debt and certainly could bor· row at lea than an 18 percent annu•I rate. But th e a e !amlltes .,.,,•t tatlna on 1on1- term debt; they're · ullng the ct.rds as eonventtnce and they pay oil .he debti qultldy. And 1 thin! tmpllcatlon ta that most of )'OU are using your eminent common aeNe In handllng your credit cards -reco111111n1 their dangers 11:1 well u their allure. MOit ·Americana are Indeed their own bell money m1nagera . ' - Wall Street • • • ., ~ .... ~ > '*'·· .Ji Fifteen out of -every 100 Americans today own We couldn't prove it, of course, but it seems stock. likely that the percentage is even greater here i'1 the Or- ange Coast area . . . and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stc;>cks today" via super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. Wall Street's computers "talk to" com p u te rs in the -DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate of more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only 12 minutes to move the entire New York and A111erican Stock Exchange reports from the canyons of Wall Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. And when technology . finds a way to beat that speed record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the first to use it to bring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that means business is the DAILY PILOT '• I I I I I I I l I ' ' I t ( t ' I J I • • I • t I I l I I I • I I ' • I ' ' i ' • • I • I l i ' • I : • ! I • • I • I I l I t I ' I ' • • I • I ' • I I ' ' I f ' I ' l ' I I , ( ! I ! • I I I • I • ' • • I l I I I ' ' I I • I I ' • I I • ' I I r I • l l ' I I I • I ' • I l t l I l l j r ' ' ' •. ' ' I I l I l ' ' t i . I l I ' ' • Sundly's DAILY 'PILOT ••• It's a ·Rather Special Package • • . ' • Some Of Its 'Only on Sunday' Features: SPECIAtS From the front page-topping Sunday Special, itself, to other me· jor stories of and for the Orange Coast, the Sunday • d it i o n abounds with special news end 1port1 stories told 111 only DAILY PILOT staffers can tell them. OPINIONS Columns by Barry Goldwater end S. I. H11yekew11, editorial car- toon by Pulitzer Prize winner Jeff M11cNelly , 11 weekly report on C111iforni11's congressmen end on what's do i n g in Sacramento. That's just Page A7. Greet commentary by great journalists ap- pears thro ughout the Sunday paper. BUSINESS From Orange Coast real estate to New York's Well Street, the Sunday edition really means bu•ineu. The DAILY PILOT covers it all. "D11y-11head" market news includes 11n11lysis of the past week's ups end downs, volume, trends end new stocks on both the Ameri- can end New York exchanges. PEOPLE The focus is on you .end your neighbors -on all kinds of people -through several different kind• of "only on Sunday" fe11ture5 , People/Quotes, Good Deed People, At You r Se rvice (the column that fights City Hell) end each week's variety of feature stories about people you know - or wish yo u did. THE ARTS From the irreve re nce of Rex Reed's cele brity column t o the com· prehen•iveness of community theater end live e ntertainment r~­ ports, the Sunday entertainme nt pages I plu s other features scat- tered in other parts of the paper) pre sent lively coverage of the lively art•. TRAVEL • At least one page of eve ry Sunday'• paper is devoted t o t ravel, at home end abroad. Stan D'elaplane's column can take you any- where in the world. Storie• by local reade rs often take you along on 11 "favorite vacation ." Eve n the a ds a re fun to read. PLUS, OF COURSE, COLOR COMICS, BIG CLASSIFIED AD SECTIO.N, TV WEEK AND FAMILY WEEKLY MAGAZINES ' Sundays a.re special for reaclers of tl'te .• DAILY PILOT •• • l DAIL V PILOT •-.. °'''°" n , 1972 • Wild Scene After,vard By Champs CINCINNATI \AP) -Oakland's Dick \Vi/Iiams, \Vho virtually \\'Ore out a pair of spikes in the World Series. had lhe last laugh Sunday when he said sa rcastically , •·t overmanaged." The A's manager went against the percentages time and lime again in the seven games with the Cincinnati Reds - and he always seemed to be right. "It was beautiful." he yelled in the A's happy clubhouse after the 3-2 seventh game victory over the Reds. Williams' last managing decision of 1!112 was to change his mind , he revealed. With two outs in the bottom ol the ninth inning, A's reliever Rollie Fingers hil pinch hitter Darrell t'haney. bringing up Reds' star Pete Ro.se. "I went to the mound to take out Rollie," Williams admitted. "But my catcher (Dave Duncan ) told me, "He's throwing the tar out o( the ball. Leave him in.' '' Williams, who said, "l think I only went to the mound IO limes today," said okay. Fingers rushed into the clubhouse yell- ing, "Where's the champagne ?" a few minutes later, after getting Rose to fly out. WHERE'S MY CHECK? Vida Blue, who would have pitched to Rose if the manager had his way, shouted, "Where's my check?" 1llen the green bottles -matching one of the A's wiifonn rolors -began pop. ping. Owner Charles 0, Finley wept as his baseball players laughed and sprayed each other. "Greenie went nine! Grecnie went nine !" a group of players chanted as- they drenched second baseman Dick Green. who usualJy P.lays only a tew_ in- nings be.Core being replaced by a pinch hitter. "l'm not used to going all the way. That's why I struck out my 1ast two times up," said Green, who totaled six bits in the series. Williams threw a new lineup at the Reds In the seventh game because. after Saturday's 8-1 loss. he decided, I just had to get some punch in there." The drastic move was to bench lert- handed cleanup hitter Mike Epstein, even though. the Reds were starting right- hander Jack Billingham. The first baseman was O-for-16 through six games. "Mike said it was all right with him, so long as we win," Williams said. STRATEGY MOVES William s' against-the-book moves Sun- day included removing starting pitcher John ''Blue Moon" Odum with the A's ahead 1-0 in the fifth inning. The manager had lifted Ken Holtzman with a I-() lead in game No. 4. It was no surprise," said Odom Sun· day . He's the manager, and he was right. We don't worry about getting taken out, because we've got a dam good bullpen." '.I / - • PETE ROSE RUNS OVER A'S MIKE HEGAN. UPI Ttltttltttot 25,000 Out to Greet World Champion A's OAKLAND (AP)-Cheering and chant· ing "We're No. !," an enthusiastic crowd of 25,000 Oakland Athletics' farus clogged freeway approaches to Oakland International Airport and spilled onto the runways ln a wild welcome to their World Series champion.1. The chartered 7rl1 jetliner carrying the team taxied to a remote section of I.he airfield Sunday night while airport security men and other law en~orcement officials sought to control the massive tangle of people and cars. "We put OakJand on the map," A's owner Charles 0. Finley told his players aboard the plane. "We brought the San Francisco Bay Area its ftrst world's sports championship." Al one paint, Finley seized the airplane public address system and sang several verses or "Sugar in the Morning" before telling the A's how proud he was of their accomplishment. The A's, who defeated Cincinnati 3-2 in the deciding seventh game o( the series, arrived an hour and a halt late after a four-hour night from Cincinnati. But many or the players slept for most of the flight after enjoying a victory din- ner of steak and lamb chop!!, Calilomia wine, and butterscotch sundaes for dessert. The A's were advised to travel the re· maining mile to the tenninal by bus because the jet coold not be brought sarety to the unloading ramp due to the size of the crowd. Despite tbe delay, fans inside the tenninal witited patiently in muggy heat for a glimpse or their returning heroes. Scme searched for lost children and relatives separated in the exuberant stampede. Tbey roared as tad! player WD> in- troduced and tnado llrief r<marb. Most p111"'·ohyly ra1sod lhtlr hands, grinned and echoed the crowd's dlant of "We're No. l." But a few, swept up in the excitement, took the occasion to make champion-size predictions of the future. "I think the World Series trophy is going to stay here the next two or three years," said Pitcher Dave Hamilton. And fttsl baseman Mike Epstein said, "We'll keep !hi! trophy for the nezt JO years." , Catcher Dave Duncan recited a poem to the throng, which ended, "We're world champions now, and as you can see, we're as happy as can be." "Who thought another baseball team wouldn't work in the Bay area?" pitcher Bob Locker asked, referring to criticism that the A's shouldn't have transferred from Kansas City to Oakland because the· National League Giants already had a franchise across the bay in San Fran- cisco. And second baseman Ted Kubiak !old the happy Oakland fans, "You're the greatest and we're the greatest." Finley dr&w cheers when he raised the large gold World Serie.s trophy bearing pennants representing major league teams, and drew boos when he held a Cincinnati Reds' cap aloft as if it were a hunter's pelt. Many of the fans sportesl the A's col· ors, yellow and green and some carried green and yellow balloons or banners. Clncy Reactions ''Rain or Shine, We'll Beat CincinnaO All the Time;" "Tenace the Mena<!f:;" and "Big Game llunter," read some o( the .sjgns. A band entertaining the fans before the team arrived broke out with a · cla$SIC Duke Ellington swing number from the early 19408, "Take the A Train." A ckl\vn named ~o accompanied by a man playing a eel drum led lhe crowd In singing.' ake Me Out to ~ Ball Game." After the airport celebration, A's fam streamed into the city's Jack London Square, a collection of restaurants and night spots on the Oakland-Alameda &tuary leading Into San Francisco Bay. r.an dragged up and down the street, horns blaring a n d occupants hanginj from windows, their arms raised high with one finger pointing to the sky to signify No. I. Police were present in strength but most ofllcers appeared .to share the jubilant mood of those celebrating. Hundreds of young people roamed up and down sidewalks drinking beer and wine but causing little disturbance. Some pounded on car fenders and waved ban- oers to dcmoostrale their enthusiasm. Middle-.aged fans clustered around pianos In bars, raising their voices irf loud, and sometimes off-key, victory songs. --•rt•s a h"appy crowd,'' said Oakla~ police Sgt. Barry WysUng, "Kiild of lik& New Year's Eve. They're waving ban- ners, drinking drinks. cheering." Still ahead was another outpouring. of OakJand's enchantment with the team - a par e to city hall scheduled today with al the players riding · ii open con- vertibl . Couldn't Get Big Hit, Moans Reds Manager CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cincinnati Reds, their Big Red Machine dismantled by Oakland's shaggy Alh1etics, joined in a quiet tribute to their conquerors Sun-_ day but were divided as to who is the best team in baseball. "I guess Oakland has to be the best team this year," mumbled manager Sparky Anderson, puffing a cigarette in his small office in ruverfront Stadium. "They won the Series. and you can 't take that away from them. "We got beat four times by one run. We just couldn't gel a big hit. and they did." Bobby Tolan. the Cincinnati center fielder whose first-inning three-base er- ror on Angel Mangual's line drive led to Oakland's winning margin, contended the Reds are baseball's best. Left fielder Pete Rose sat at his locker stall. partially hidden by a stand that ' would have been filled with players for television Interviews had the Reds won. He moaned over a lost chance, noting his long drive to center field on a Jim Hunter fastball in the fifth inning with two men on. "He shouldn't have thrown a ball like he threw," said Ro.se. Hal l\i cRae. the pinch hitter who drove in Cincinnati's first nm with a bases loaded smash to deep center just before Rose's long fly ball, said: "I was just hoping it would go out." McRae had stomped Riverfront Stadium's artificial turf in frustration as center fielder Mangual hauled in his towering fly ball near the wall. Tolan. his leg in pain from a muscle pull suffered as he raced for Sal Bando's deep drive in the A's sixth, blamed himself (or the Cincinnati loss. "We've got the best pitching staff in baseball," Odom added, and Rollie Fingers is the best relief pitcher in the world." It was a pitchers' series and the A's hitters were the first to admit it. "\Ve didn't exactly overpower them," third baseman Sal Bando said. "Their pitching ·was good, too. But they didn'l have to face Reggie Jackson . lf they'd held us down with Reggie in the lineup. J'd be willing to give them more cred it'' •ANS JAM OAKLAND AIRPORT TO WELCOME HOME THEIR WORLD CHAMPION ATHLETICS. "You've got to recognize Oakland as the World Champions," he said in a clubhouse populated by C i n c i n n a t i players slumped on locker benches, pondering their Series near-miss. He was pulled from the game after the sixth, and pinch hitter Joe Hague was us- ed in his stead when the Reds had two men on base and none out in the eighth. Hague popped up in the inrield. Finley. who bought the A's 12 years ago in Kansas City and moved the team to Oakland in 1968, was red-faced and hoarse after the seven-game ordeal. "He wished me luck before the game and told me he wanted the championship badly," Odom said. "I told him we'd get It." OAICUNO Cll'ICll'INATI .. • ,. .. • ' . C1••11..,rl• ti • ' I • Rote II ' ' I ' M1nvua1 ct • ' ' 0 ' M~ll 7t> ' ' ' ' ·~· " ' ' ' ' Tol•11 cl ' ' ' ' T..,a<, " ' ' ' I Fot .. r rf ' ' ' ' L-1• pr ' ' ' • Jl~lff ph ' • ' ' H491n l b ' ' ' • "'•Qut rt ' ' • • ....... • • ' ' B..-.:fl c ' ' ' ' M1I011 11 ' • ' • TPtrlf " I ' ' ' ovnc1n c ' • ' • (;1.-onlMO rl ' ' • ' oo-" • • ' • M111kt lll • ' • ' """" . ' • ' • Conctpen .. ' ' • ' Hll[lltr p ' . ' ' (111111191\m 11 ' ' ' ' Holl1m•n ' ,,, ' ' M~ltt9 .. ' ' ' ' Flll09'1 • ' ' ' ' ,,_. ' ' • ' C•rroll • ' • ' ' Grlmtl1y 11 ' ' ' • Ulll11ndr 1111 ' ' • ' ~•ll • ' • ' ' Cflarwy p11 • ' • ' , .... " ' • , Tol1I ~ ' • , ....... •m "' ...._, CIPCIMttl ... '" . ._. e-Toi.n, C~llCJCll. ,,,,._,.11. OP-0.tlt,,., 1, LOl-Ollklltlld t. .Cln¢rwl~I t. 1&-T". Pl!'rti, T..,. '°'' ,..,.., Mor1M. sa-.•~11. s-M11101111, c1m11-1,.,.11, SF-M<.ll:M, T. P1r1r. .,, t+ R••••so C)lom 4\"111 141 H11nler W, ).0 7\\ I 1 1 1 1 Hall~n o 1 000 0 "'""'' 7 00 0 1 0 1u11.--'1 1 0 14 lortlOll l.. 6-I •'i J J 1 o o c..-..,,ir 10 0 011 OrlfMlrt •1 o 0 o 1 1 H.it 1 IOOO J s.-Fl"t"rl ,, HIP~ Fiflttrt ((flt""'> '#11',.._HllnT.,. f-7:JO. ·-~.o«i. TenaceUnlikely Choice -But He's Series MVP CINCINNATI -For Gene Tenace, th e 1972 World Series was his showcase. Tenacc. the reS(!rve catcher who took over regular duties the last two months of the season :ind 111enl on to become the hero of the 1972 World Series ror the vic- torious Oakland Athletici:;, had nothing go "'ron g for him during the scven·ga1n11 struggle. Tenace v.•as named MVP for his four home runs and nine rbi fo!lo\111ng 011kland's 3-2 victory Sunday . Tenace, \\/ho hit .225 in the regul ar season with five home runs. dom innted the Series. He had eight hits in 23 at bat s for a .348 average, slammed four homers and drove in nine of the 16 runs scored by the A's in the seven games. Me had 31) Iota! bases. "I guess." h·e said , ";inythin~ can hap- pen in a short series. It's one or those things. Fortunately I ROI hol like J did . l'm just very fortuna te. I hnd no idea thnt I ~·ould be the guy \<I pick up this club after llcggie Jackson got hurt.'' Jac kson, the A's slugklng outfielder. tore up a leg In the flnal gnmc or tllc AL plnyoffs and mlsstd the SeMes. Ten ace. 2fi. was !he catcher in 1hc first SIX K<IIDI;!:'\ or l hc Seriqs, Mana~cr Oi1·k Will iams·told Tenace Saturday night he \\·ould play first base in the seventh i:arnc. It di dn't .Phase the young man from Lueasville, Ohio. "I was 1ust happy to be here," he sa id in !he rol licking, champagne-pouring A's dressing room. "I pl!1y where the 1nanager want s me lo play. If he has r nouRh ronfidcnce in me then I go out thcrr. although I would rather catch." 'fehace singled home the A's Hrst run Sunday 1n the first .inning. and after he doubled across another in the sixth, \Vil\iams lifted him tor a pinch-runner "I was surprised he took me out ," Tenace said. "I hat·e fairly gOOd speed. But that is the way we 've been playing 311 yc.ar and it got us here. I guess he was going to f\iike Hegan for defense at fi rst in the seventh anyway." Tcn11ce, who playt>d first base In only about 10 ganlcs during the· regular sl·ti~n. and didn 't. take over regular c<1lching duties until the last two months of the season . recalled that during the season he became discouraged at his utility rol e. But he said A's captain St;I Sa ndo. his roommiite. told him to kee p ht.!ii hea d up, his chance would come. ''It surP did ," said Tcnacc. Lakers Defeat Bulls, 104-99 LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Jerry West scored 23 poinls in the final period Sun- day night as the Los Angeles Lakers held off the Chicago Bulls 104·99 in a National Basketball Association game at the Forum . West tallied 35 Points and Gail Goodrich added 21 and Jim McMiUian 19 as the Lakers ran their record to 4-2. The Bulls were led by Olet Walker with 22 and Clifford Ray with 20 but were hit with five technical fouls and lost guard Jerry Sloan, coach Dick Motta and assistant Phil JohnSC1n when referees loosed th~m but. 1"he Lakers led Into the final period 76- 67 but Chicago slashed away at the lead behind .Walker and Ray. West was the only Laker to score in the first 61f.t minutes of lhe Unal stanza. LOS AHO•LIS 114 . ' • •• ••• ••• 10 1·2 13 ... ' ., o O·O ' .. 1-0•lrttn NlcM!!tn Cflmbl•n Goodrlcfl W••I Pr Jc~ E!!l1 -E:rlc~•oM CHICAGO tt T • F T 12LO'l'e I 2·2 1' l•W•lto.•r 1 M n llll1y • ,..s "' 21V•11 Li.or $ 0.0 10 S5Slot11 1 0.0 2 (W'•!t• • 1·2 • OKl>!O S 0.0 10 PHt1rd 4 0.0 • lr,wuy o 0.0 o Gt rit ll O 0.0 O Te'"'' '"'''"° 4• 16·1110. lot•+• t.4 11·17 tt 11 76 1l :n--" Lo1 A"9tltl "' " ,. 1'-10. "°"~ O\lt--nor>t. Toi.ti loult -CftlC.tfO 15. L01 Artt<!lti l! T«flnlct1 fovli -Cfllttll'O • .Slo.n 1, Colld'I Mona, tultltnl ~Ottfl JOflnwn. A-B.nt. Chargers Find · Solution Too Late DETROIT (AP) -San Dl<go coach J{arllnd Svare compJalns bb teani "can't get It together." But Detroit coach Joe Schmidt 's team didn't have any trouble "geUlng It tosethcr'' In SUoday'a S4-20 NaUonal Football League victory over the Olara;ert. 1bere wert lndlCBllons In the final quarter San Dle&o mlsht have found the aolutlon, but the 1.Jon1 had too big a lead 10 loll compleUly apart. The Llotll our,..i to a 3U l••d by tar· I ly In the fourth quarter. scortng nearly cvtry time Uwy Col the ball, then watch· ed San t»egd 1COre h'o tOtJthdowm on John Madi to Gary Garrl90n posses. "Worried? Sure 1 was won1ed," Schmidt said or the late Chargf!r resurgence. "But our ball dub never lei s down." "We continue to bent 'Ourselves," of· fered Svare in the dej ected lose rs locker room. "That's whal "'e'vc brt•n doing all year. We find all kinds of ways lo ,bt:ll ' ourselves. We have a good team, but can 't get it together." 'nte outcome pushed Detroit back Into a lie for first In lhe Nallona.J Conference Central divL11ion with Green Bay, a t0-9 loser lo Atlanta. Both tho Uon.t and l'Ac::krr$ hove 4-2 record!, while San l>lego 1s 2..j..J In the American Cort- fcrcncc West. S.1n Diego lost.one fumble th.al led 10 a louchdown . got an Interference penalty 1hnt '1e.t Dt•tro11 up for a 1'0, and lost a 50-yard kickoff return opening !Ml game bec.1usc of a cli pping penHlty Fir'\! Cl<rwn' llllll!H-• ... llt P•-.lnt Ytrih Rl!Wn Yaf111 ,_ """ '"'""bin-IOI! P1N1flle-'1'tnl1 S.n Oln9 0.r.'011 CIM .... r• " ... "' n u-m ..,, ••• ,., , ... • .. ,~ •d ' ,,.t41 ,.., ., . •• ' •• 0 ·~ f , 14 ,_,. "I'm not degrading the Athletics," Tolan continued, "because they're a great ball club. But I Still think we're a better ball club." Relief pitcher Clay Carroll, the goat of the Reds' 3-2 loss to tbe A's in the Series fourth game, refused lo c on c e d e Oakland's superiority. "I sure don't," he said. "We've got a whole lot of teams in the National League who have more power, but they -the Athletics -do bave a great pitching st.all." Slugger Johnny Bench was asked if he conceded the A's were best. "They 1'-'0n," he replied , "As far as I'm concerned." Tolan said. "there went our World Series chances right there. "I feel it was my fault. I let the fans down and I have no excuse." Tolan said Mangual's first-inning line drive "just took off on me. "I tipped it with my glove. I play~ lbtt ball like it was sinking, then it just took off. . "This is two years out of three we Jet the fans down," Tolan said. recalling the Reds' five-game Series de~acle against Baltimore in 1970. "I apologize ror that.'' Did Mental Error Do It? Rams Get Last-second Win· LOS ANGELES (AP) -Quarterback Roman Gabriel thinks the Clncil;inati Bengals could have made a menial error In thooe final secood! wb'2l the Les Angeles Rams came on to win IS.12. ''I don't think they thought we'd run twice with the ball with the lime running out," the veteran signal caller mused minutes after David Ray's 32-yard field goal at the gun brought tbe triumph. "Those two runs by Ellison caught them off guard.'' Taking the b311 on their own 13 with 21 secol'tis rema1ning. GRbriel sent Wlllte Ellisd°n up the middle twice and each time he gained 15 yards. "T called the pass to Rentr.el In the huddlC. a Z.square pattern nnd it wall the (irst time I'd called It all day," Gabriel continued. Rentie! zigged and went down the mid· die to catch tbc pass and gain 17 to the lJenials' 40. Jack Rtader, ooe of the offlcltlls. deleribts the next move -one that put the Rama on the Cincinnati 25 and let up the li<ld gool by Ray, who had be<n wor- ried au ,...k about the health of his rather who had 1ufrerect a heart attack In Phenix, Ala. Said Reader, "I~ \VII fl personal foul penalty oo No. 66 <Jf Cincinnati (0111 atrgey), The penally was called before the romplcted paA and on pcnonal foul • penalties, you just tack the 15 yards onto the gain." Said Ray : "I had been calling my father au week. about 10 times. Saturday ntgbt I told him I'd sure try to do my best in this game. Anything 1 can do to make him !eel better, that's what r \\'anted.'' !laY had seen Cincinnati's soc cer·styllf kicker Horst Muh!mann miss three field goal atteo1pts frorn short range in the fourth period. "I was confident when J went 1n," the· Rnms· orthodox kicker said. "But I do think psychology was working against Horst on lhat third kick. Arter you m\s!ll two fi eld goals. the. pressurt is really on you ." Tlfuhlmnnn's kicks !hat faUed wcrt from 18, 21 end 26 yards, usually a !l\flp for a kicking spc<:lnllst. rne sccontt hit the upright to the left, the others \Wre wider. ttftoll•ll R•l'M U M "., ..,.,n 1.Q 142 n I 11.,,.J 1,.,.., .., ,.., ,., t·I , ... , ... s upoe Reds kuoc cha 20. ' ,P ~ .. - I ' Mondly, Ocl.Obtf 23, 1972 DAILY PILOf JJ Suncla" FootlHIU , Wave of Upsets Sweeps Pro Ranks A Trip Down Memory Lane With Ex-coach Bierman The wave of National Foot· \1&11 league upsels conllnued i>h It• weekly balls Sunday 1'1th sbocken at Kansas City, Oakland and Washington D.C. leading the w1y. 'Philadelphia's unher1lded Eagles unleaded on a n llfiSuspectlng Kanaas C I t y Chiefs eleven, 21·20 Denver upset 08klaod, !M3, and tho Redsklna of WasbJn1ton knocked off the Super Bowl t"'plon Dallas Cowboys, 24- , i DAU.AS AT WASWNGTON -Dallas blew a pair of 13· point leads u coach George Allen's lle<lsldns came back In the final qnarter lo put the CCwboya a game o f f Washington's pace. ,, Charley Harraway's 13-yard scoring dash ll1'0W1d the right side gave Redskins a 24-20 v1e-. ~· Then the Redaldrul uaed a_palr of interceptions to stave oU any comeback threat by the Cowboys. ,PH.ILADELPRIA AT ¥ANSAS CITY -Pete Liske caqte up with three touchdown passes to provide t b e IUliladelpbla Eagles with a 21- 20 victory over tbe Kansas City Clliefs, banding the Clliefs their aecond 11reJcb1 loss. Two of Llske'a touchdown passes were to H a r o l d Jackson. 1be Eagles, after five losses in u many starts, scored all three Tlla In the first haU for a 21-3 hlllttme lead, then held on for the triumph. over O..kland in re gu I 1 r ""'°n play alnct 1982 and the ftrsl trtumph over a West Coast eleven in 20 tries. The Broncos raced lo a 24-3 halftime lead. Floyd Utile ""'8d on TD, passed !or another and mate Jim Turner klclced three field IOI!• lo join Johnlon in pulling off !he upa<t. BUFFALO AT MIAMI - The Mlaml Dolph!Ds remained unbeaten liter alz games with a 24-13 vlct«y over t1le Bul- fa!O' Bills. Garo Yepremian kicked a 5f. yard field goal, his lolli..t ever, and Mercury Morris ran for two touchdowns. The Dolphlnl trailed 13-7 at the haU despite dommatthg !he stattstlcs. Larry Csonka, who gained over 100 yards for the third time this year, ni& ed around left end for the go- ahead score in the third period. BALTIMORE AT NEW YORK JETS -Joe Namath connected with Eddie Bell on an BS-yard toocbdown pass with 1:03 remaining lo carry BERNIE BIERMAN SHOWS STAGG AWARD. By HOWARD L. HANDY Of .,. D9tlr '"" ''*" Bernie Bierman la Ulvlng with blJ memortea In Laguna HUis' Leisure World and the ~ former Unlverslty of Min- nesota football coach can spend the roat ol b1s life re- counting tho thrilla of Satur- day llltenmn W.y Including • boot of All-Amertcam -came under b1s tutelage - and neve< recall them all. Biorman and b1s wife Clara hive lived In the area for three years and as tho Hall ol Fame coach aays, "I'm ju!t doing a lot al loafing and a u~ ile swimming and hiking." Bui getUng back to Memory Lane. Bierman began his career at the Univarsity of Montana (1919-21) then moved t o MisslWppl A&M (lll'lS-28), Tulare (1927"31) and the University of Minneaota (1932- 41, llHHO). With his last year in 1950, bow does he look at modern day football and the plaloon aystem? "It changes the game," be says after a moment of reO~ the New York Jeta to a u,20 -------------------lion. vktory over Baltimore , rulning the dtbUt of Colis coach John SanchWcy. With lea than two minutes to go Baltimore quarterback Marty . Domres lo8sed a 13- yard toucbdown° pass let ·Jim O'Brien to give the COiis a 20- 17 lead. Nainalli got the Jets in the winning column two plays later with his pus lo Bell. Fourth Gear RUDI NIEDZIELSKI "But I can' see any of the teams these days being able to handle the running game ol our teams In the '30s. "! think the biggest change baa been In the ~ game. It Is heller and more intricate. "But the running game is cOOi1ng back. A coople of years ago it was at a pretty low ebb." DENVi:R AT OAKLAND -Defender Oiarlie stuk .. ill>' TliO:NiiY.er_Bi'Oncoc.Nde_ tho~Piii M tlieBa1~ ,_...;..., _______ ~,3'il~..,.j What about the defense? _ ·~The average team spends a --lot-more tlme-on delei"se or _ air waves to a $0-2! victory 35 and Bell, not even break:tng'- over Oakland'• Raklera as stride, snared the ball and quarterbaCk Charley Johnaon sped the remaining distance completed 20 of 28 pas1<1 f<>< before 62,948 fans. 361 yards and two touchdowns. · • running and pass ing~ • One of the encouraging magistrate that the shooillli dlvldually theoo daya. 11 Is things about the newspaper folrowed an argument with bia more of a consolidated, buainess, from a rider's point wife over the motorcycle'. specialized thing. of view, is that we have been _ 'Ibe charges were dismissed "I hear these announcerS 11 waa Denver's fin! victory Vik.es Test Chicago In TV Tiff NEW ENGLAND AT dlscov....t by the wire by Magistrate Robert Dauer, ·• t•--all P IT T SB U R G H -The senices. who said Zelik had inflicted no ~.:.~~.Thi!°.::... PIU.burgh Steelera sacked We still get dispatches and harm. . he bas played about 25 or 30 quarterback Jim Plunkett six pholol ol the lateet adventures * minutes, usually. He has harti- umes !or 72 yards In losses ol Sonny Barger and Eve! Somehow H's easy lo forget . ly had lime lo warm up. with a fUl1ou.s de fens iv e Knievel, but the wires are also UW Europe dill esllb wbta "I don't think the average charge that sparred t1>em lo a clacking out lqiUJDate stories we ICU tlle llsl Of lllOllrcyde playOI' today Is in as good a 33"3 rout of the New England about motorcycling. mualadoren, J•pu con-oondlUOn as they used to he. Patriots. In recent weeks ,.. received -to domlnat< the world Free subltitution and big Plttaburih'• Roy G •rel a • story about an 11).year .. ld w~ Europe -etpedaQJ aquads can keep fresh men in kicked lleld goals of 19, 22, 35 11'1)' in SL Petenburg, Fla, Britain -appeoll to he wt.. the game all the time." and 35 yanls as the Steelm who still rw.. a BMW. There dlll -ffll -c,.ie-Wbat aliiiort a compari!Oll amuaed ~ aecQnd blgbest Is oothlni new and excllinC'<_.~· · . betr<ffll the Bit 10, Pacific-a Int Iota! ol the Year and atiout Iha~ ao yoo haven't Of -. tldll lsll't -and the Blg~ conferences? 1 CHICAGO (AP) -The Mln-1 New England tta · seen it ln tbe paper. bec1111e t11e European com-''They are a little stricter on uesota Vikings, faVOHCI to . Oui\h loss against two Wins. Other olferlnp In the ,.uie pules -..W., more bltel the regulatklnl In the Blg 10. r~at as champions of the ,.. categuryincludeaplctureofa dtuibey"'-'tf'.dklbefere.Bat But red-shlrtlng iJ the main Central Division of the Na-ATLANTA AT GREEN BAY monoooque cbua1a being btillt It Jul seems that way beooue thing. know U you can say they ar. the best In the country right now. But they do have a chance to win against anybody." Bierman's Minnesota teams played a g a i n a t Michigan's Tom Harm.on. can be make a comparison between Tom and bls son J.fark. now a quarterback 1t UCLA! "They are so far apart ." Bierman says in a reflecti ve mood. "The boy (Mark) i~ JUSt Jl~ttlng Stsrted. "Tom was bigger and more powerful. And Tom played both ways." lie· also adds that his observations of young r..fark \ have been on i.-only while he wat on the 11deline1 to watch No. 98 ol M.lcblgan (Tom) in penoo. Witk that the 7J.yea.r~ld former coach whose name ll linnly <tched in tho Hall of Fame, was off to the swtm.. ming pool for a swim and a bit ol relautlon. DAILY PILOT" ,,.... W Pd'tl;t O'DmMI LAGUNA HILLS' BERNIE AND CLARA BIERMAN REFLECT ON PAST. '34 Minnesota Team One of Best Ever How Pros Ar~oing tional Football COnfer<nce, -Bob Berry, ·converllng 11 of In San Franc!B<O, ~ pholo of a you ,.. --J-bikes "Out here and in tbe-Bi1t-8 will be fighting to stay out of 18 third down plays in a Hodaka parked against a farm oa.& OD tbe roed1 tbaa aD tile they have five years to com-Bernard w. Biennan spent ha1£back in 1952.53 w 8 s • ..,. Hf A,...._. last place when they face the steady rain, directed a ball fence, and yet another show· Earopeu. maeMaa combined. plete their eligibility with the 31 hin f tball h d recruited by the long-time :t1an11c 6...._ ('.hica1gTVo Beanfintballton1'!1~'s na-cooAt1~~ aFttaalct ~ ralf!"1 :a lng..,18 blkea parked in .two u!'~p;,. ~-:!':: aidhll of red-Jhlrt program fo~~~~l gC:mpio~s~p mentor. ~:.!onvw1c t fL 1ji· ~· The Vikin&s have a 2-3 tory over the Green Bay This week we received tbe rotary DIRoa eqlDe 11 shirting P111t.c1e1DJ1i. t ..,. •~ Uona pro oo _me. io.uM1 cons a '" c-par .. ng spaces. "'-.. w e the Big-10 bani red-teams , a host of At 1-In addition lo four national euu.10 tt"" • record and a loss to the Bears, Packen. something over the AP wire eollft!l1led. ti )'Oii wot te uu we could have had those Americans: playing under him team championships, t h e c...tn1 Dave Hampton returned to out ol Pittlb\qh. and It WU bow wUt tM9 wm do for kids we bad for an extra yeer' aFndootbahalls HbeeallnofnamFamede. to the Gophers Dnished in the top 10 ~!1?-· ti I~ haunt bll old teammates at really news. It'a a story about motorcydlq, Jut aU; uyoae we would have bad better foot-three other times u n d e r c••vtl•lld w tw. • :ii ,.... OR 'l'V TOlttgllt Green Bay, rushing for 93 a guy -killed his motor-who bas drtveo a Wukel baU teruru, loo. He began b1s caree1' at Biennan. In 1937 they were """"'"'~ 11 _ C'llatutel 7 cd 8 yards ln 30 carries. ms cycle an dia: printed below in engine car. "Then, too, there'• the legal the University of Montana fifth; 1938 they were 10th; and "-n1.1s c1 2 relentless drives in the mud, full : . B&-Trfampb is reportedly scholarships. Tbey C8D ilave then moved to Mississippi 1949 they were eighth. lfk.olfu l"ttlfk 1 m saddled with 1 l-S-l mark, without fumbling, and Berry's Creeping around outaide hia worktq: on RCb a ult, bat more of. them oot here tti.an A&M, Tulane and finally to Bernard "Bernie" Bierman ~.s'''-• j' j· = 1u 14 pass completions in 25 at-home wJth bis .357 m&gnlllll the Uttle BtrcaJes factory In they can back there. At one lhe University of Min.ne90ta was never named coach of the ~.....,... would dropdltheml into t tern"'• for lU yards made tbe pistDl ,sWl sn>oklng, Ralph Nurembeq, Germuy. U. Ume when 1 was ......... ,. .. 1 ....... we where he gained his greatest year but his cohorta through Port't:.i f 61 i pl~ ls f:.:!1~ by one difl~nce. Zelik bumped lDtO two already ILad one operational were limited to aO~'there fame from 1932 through 1950 the years included Knute Mn-.rti ~.; Green Bay's ch e 1 t er policemen. since 11?'1. and moet. other conferences w11itdhutytlme. out for World War Rockne, Lynn Waldorf, dark i:,i:.:f 1 . :_,llM t~::m,. are coming olf Man:ol, who kicked field goals He figured the best thing lo * could have 45 per team. Shaughnessy, Frank Leahy, °"' · T vlctorl.es. 'Ibe Be a rs posted of 44, 32 and 35 yards earlier, do was confess. A second generation "Another th t n g, our Bierman doesn't pick any Amos Alonzo Stagg, Earl '"~1111c1t•Dftl• •1 !:' • ..,. their flnt triumph under missed a 39-yard attempt with "I just killed my motorcy· Hercules, Prototype, with a scholarships actually covtred one year or any one player as Blaik. Fritz Crisler, Bennie °"'" ~i:i: MOCICIY coach Abe Glbron tut Sunday 1:55 left. cle," 1.ellt, 34, admitted. Wankel engine was unveiled in our expenses and that was it. a standout but his 1934 Min· 0 o st er baa n and Bud ::; when they blanked Cleveland Nearby lay the cycle -with Cologne a few weeks ago. It The 18.!t I knew of it, that nesota squad mWlt be among WUkinJOn, to name a few. o.troit '!' ~ ~ ':: ~~ •1~ lf-'l. The Vikings pulled out a ST. LOUIS AT NEW YORX five slugs in It. may soon have the meant nothing more than tui· the top teams he has coached . His ls a name and a football •vtt•to s ' i 11 • 11 •• 20 dec•-1•00 aaalnst Denver GIANTS -Spider Lockhart At a hearing Thursday on reciprocating piston enalna ion, board and room. The Gophers won the first or legend thal will live for many MoolltrMI ' 0 3 11 " 11 -~ • ard h ol f'·---· I ilnna ... -her · th he b1s w.v ... .,...-" ' a 1 ' :w :u in. the closing seconds. scored on a 28-y pass in· c arges u~u1s v10 a scoffers eating their rings. "Some of the ot con-four national titles that yea r years m e sport gave v,ncou_. a ' 1 1 2' '5 The game figUrea to be a tercepUon to l.grrlte the New and intoxlcaUoo, Zellk. told the Unlike the earlier venlon, ferencea had a Httle ettra for under Bierman with the others life to during hls active work-~:'.. ~ ! ; : ~ : duel of quarterbacks -Fran York Giants to a 27-21 victory It's a handsome unit which lncidental expenses such as coming in 1936, 1940 and I~t. Ing years. A name that fits ln w.v. 1 .. --.. .___~1 "' • • 10 '' Tarkenton ...Qf Minnesota and over the St. Louis C8.rdlnals. lea.lures up.-to-date Oriental laundry, etc." His 'M team had four All-perfectly with those mentioned Cl\I~ -5 , 0 10 25 1, Bobby Douglas! of. the Bears. p G •d styling. The engine dl!place s How cklle 11 Bierman to the Americans in the lineup when above, all of whom galned. '"'"*"'" "' , • • • n Tarkenton 11 the No. 4 NEW ORLEANS AT SAN ro n 250 cc and whirs out Z5 hp. Minnesota rttuatlon these players Wf'nt both ways and recogniUoo as coach of the ~~,::4.J:I' ~ ~ : : ~: N n ...... " in tbe NFC. Douglass' FRANCISCO-San Frand.sco's This may not seem like much, days? played 6(1.mlm.1te football. year. Att•n1• 2 1 1 s 11 • ~ th B ~--•t ed the •~-~· th Ge le d be ' I' II t loo I In luded I the . st. ~ 1 1 1 5 '' 1' name ts bard to flnd in e ruce ~ sav 'S=-t s s ding uu~ e nnans n to ' m rea y no c ose c n group were An honor denied him but t.ot A,.... 1 • o ' n " passing statisUct. However, from an embarrassing defeat tan • S conservative with their power anymore since I moved out Frank I.anon (end), Ed deserved according to all who C•l11'ml• ~ ~..!.~ 1 n 11 the Bear strongman ls the Sunday, kicking a !&-yard field figures. here," he says . Wid11.P.th 11;:ickle), W 1111 a rn knew and played under him at c111~" c.11~. 2 NFC's No. 2 ruabu with 409 goal with three secoQ.ds left to The Sachs engine ls coupled Does he get to watch many Bevan <r· ard) and t 1;1nc;J the Univenlty of Mlmaota :-r:.i •. 'T~ •:~ 1• 11' yards, ranklag behind Larry salvage a 20-20 tie with the to a six-tpeed gearbox and games in the Coliaeum In Lwi Lund (balltack). and way pclntl on h1a climb up vlf"I(~ s ....... "' Brown of Washlngtoo, who baa wlnleu New OrleanJ Salata. re s ts i n t h e fr a m e Angeles and how does he rate Here'• at leut a p111 ti ,: list the coaching ladder. ~":.!;.. "-~ sA.yarda. G....u'a kick followed an longitudinally. II doetlll't inok tho Nebraska le•m that is ol All-Amerlcano lo play under.--'--"-'-.::....-----'-===-=='--- Douilasa bu completed but eight-play, 16-yard march by anything Uka a current bike lw<>(lme defendlni National Bierman: Tulane: 1929 - 24 paasea In fl attempts for the 49""', who had fallen engine .and In shape Is more champion? WU!ia Banker, halfback: 19111-'liii yanla. Four of bis com-behind for the fin! time In the reminiaceot of a minlaturt "f get up there a couple of 31 -Jerry Dalrymple, end; PJetlons have been f o r game when Dave Parts grab-Pratt and Whitney jet enpte times each ~ar but l catch 1931 Don Z I m m e r m a n , touchdowns. bed a 30-yard touchdown pau j\~nn;:" than aJl1tbina elle. It'1 not moat of the gamts o n halfback. i"Ibat's not bad," aays from New Orleans' Archie c~ ugly, but deltnJttly diffel'fJlt. television. I'm interested but t Minnelota : 1933-34 -Frank Qlbron. "That means he ha9 a Manning with l:M left to play. "'°"'ton Plans are to sell the don't a:et to see too mAny of L.artoni end: Franclt Lund, touchdown for every alx com· O.kl•M machine 1n Gmnany for ap-them. halfback; 1934 -Bill Bevan; plet10111. He drives me nutl. CLEVELAND AT HOUSTON :::1.1~,~ty proxim.a=tely fl 300, which ts "Nebraska? They have a l~ -Ed Widteth. We work on h11 pauin& all -CI eve land quarterback o.n-terrJbJy ve for a 250. very &ood team but r don'.t tackle: 1935 -Richard Smith, week and when the came Mike Phipps scored on a 01\6' Maso n, hopefully, ta<kie; 1937 -Ray Kiili, end; starts all he does ls nm." yard plullie with 1:311 left ta will bring the price lnlo line. 1918 -Elmer '!'Wedell, guard; At the rate he'• going! play sun day, o .. roomtng If not, the l n t ere• t Ing Cross Country llHO -Urban Odaon, tackle: Douglass probably w 11 touchdown pasa pliya ol llO machine from Bavaria wlU CJeorCe Frlnck, ballback; !IHI beoome the National Football and 51 yarda by HOUJ1on'1 Dan become an eaglneerlni ex-•--Richard WUd11111.,,tackle: • ·-~•e'a !Int quarterblck lo Paslorfni u the Bl'OWlll = There •-•--•y j.""'" """'"·"I""•'""'"· n--Smith 1111~-... ..-.,.. Orwn 1!1~ • .,"' ~ ,_fllorittr\4(M\I),11:02, t. V.n ~l n u.i""'~ , llMI rush for 1,000 )'ardl ln a =a 2.3-17 victory over the o.ir.11 llnp about a rotary c .. ,. " '"'"'' CVPJ, •· 1111'1 "'• lM&-49 -Leo NomeUtnl , ·-OU Ml....... 1•---··-·~ f ft.NI.VJ, 1, ~\ IVM)\. .. IC!fll (\/Pl. 1, 9 Cl seuon. ' ;nun en. Chk... p awu -..-uu.e r 0 m F::::W {M~ \t.~tV~~~Vl. '· tackl&-gUArd ; 114 -ayton SUJuki, the Oriental Wank el '"~.!"" Tonnemaker. :: :: -· 'iiJ.r..rl"'tif.lT:'J .... , if.-: .... ,. Although he didn't play 1as 10• Ja.ptnHe: machinery l t ''WI~ c-'.'1~ 1:n.i-1.r~r.t. Wider Bierman, Paul Glel, a ou\ltllinc every Germ1n 'cWi'." '· c-1e11v cw1. "· t~ All ~Amer lcan ~ mo1or cyc1e,.1i;iiiiii;iiiii ... ;;;;;;;; ..... ;;;;;;;;;;ii~;;;;;o.;. .... ~1 tho BMW, It Is quite le that Herculet will .... at!ll, ti not ...,,.l)elmlna u1M -petition fr"11 ~ In the rolll7 -marlolt u I well If tho price Ia not 10 ... red. . GRAND PRIX 5113t~ Prep Football DAVI Ross PONTIAe ~.\t"PJ:"' · 'I I I ~! ueo -"""· • ""' o.. -. 11-~ .. ~~....!~;.,/!!fi• WI· LIA.II DlllCT -PACTOIY AUTHOllZID DIA.Lii ...-n;n:·v-.r~.,t t • l"1!. Mefl,...ftrL t 1M M 11.M •ht. • ,...._If A•. W_,,lnilMIW t 0 t 0-0 fl"OUl!tlln VALLl!Y TDll: 1..1;...,. 1n., _______ .......... "°_•_A ___ ,_ .. _u ______ _., Tr•lt "I• u...-cu. " ' LONG BEACH ARENA DCT.20·29 SHOW HOURS, WEEK DAYS, 5-11 PM SAruRDAYS, 12 NOON ro 11 PM SUNDAYS, 12 NOON TO 7 PM ADU lll $2.00 • CHllDl!N UNDll 12, $1.0tl • UNDI• t Plfl .. I I D OAILY PltOT For Tl1e Marriage Licenses lllV'411t<OVNE -Jldl RoHlft, •· "'61 Ledl st,, 5an 0!110 •"" 11:111 M1• ""'""' a, 1'222 Hcinolu+v L.,.., Hulltlftlllolt 1Mtdl. l'ILTON.CJlAVl!!I -•""'11 Garl1rld. 31, 201 Nulty St .. 111~ hl1fld -011,,.,. 1111""""•· JI, ~ll 011\Ha, cor-1111 M•- Fl.ORES. JR.·ESCOBAlt -Frint! R.nteri.. "' un B•k., s1., cost• Man Incl M1,.., Alie .. tt. 1l2l B1Qf St,, Cotte Mtw. PHii.LiPS-NiELSEN -Jlanald OU!t, 21 , •1'2 ~rid, H~ &Nell end K111'11e L...,., 10. IU1 I.I Z-, F-leln \te118y. Jl'llAHl(4TANllOVlctl -Mk!IMI J..,, 2l, 1"1 Jt.oll.it-1 Low Orlw, Hun- tlM!wl kacft and Gell Merit, 28, n.n JullttM Low Ortw. Huntt11111m1 ....... llUELL, JR.-MARlltTt -Jloy ~. 11, !lt]l ltktorlltew ClrtS.. ~ ll'nDtoll BMctl Mid JleMCU LYM, 20. MOl C>wrllnd Ori.,., Hunl1ft9'°'1 ·-(ANAOAY-GROSI -Chr1• Elwood, 26, 2152 OuPonl Orlw, """"'°" INdl •nd Jo """· 13, 3IOO P•rk111tW LIM, Apt, 32-A, lr\11"41. THOMEN·STltAOER -Jerry, )I, H•S SMl'lll9f«I Pltct, NIWPOrl aeacll end Jac:Quell.,. lt1t, .Jt, "21 Orillll Orlv1, HUl'lllnglon BNCl'I. l+OLME!.-Hf.ATON-llrlan °'"'111, 20, »131 Et .v..r or1 .... Ml11lon Vl•lo •rid J1111, It, 13155 MlrflM Clrci., ,..,_ BROO K HA RT · Pl SE I( -Min: Oel.ormt, lt, "'7$ MllllNI Of., Ml .. lon \llllCI and ltl!1 A<IM, U, 202 C...rlllo Or .. Mllllon Vlollo. LINGElt.ffEWCOM9E -l.1w~ Ectwanl, 21, a Mtnl-W•Y• Apt. $4. C'blll MtH and V.S. MM, IS. IM 1'111 St,, ,...,_., e.td\. FOi.LiS, JR.·SINES -Jllhrl ~. !S. •1•2 w,,.,... AVI.., Apt. P...1. Hurt- llfl!Jlml 9"cft and ,....r1_ Mtrit, !1 , •M· Wtn11r·-Aw'~ Apt' "'3. ~ 11~hacll. CHARLEs-t.FnMANN -Jahr! O~. 11, 2521 S...ta Aftl Aw .• Apl. ,., Cotti Moe11 Mid •-Jean. U 251' S..1tl1 Alll A,..., AP\. A, c .. t1 MHe. TRIEVINC>"""'50H -P811 f4kholn, II, 2620 Engl1nd St., Huntlno!Clfl kach lrld P•mtle AN\, It, illlDi MllM'O, Hunnt111tCW1 11.ffch. JONES-GltlGSllY -Jln'Wnl• N•V• 13. 111a1 Huntl1191«1 Ptac1. Apl. t -0 , Hunlll'l;kwl had! lrld OClflftl JeM, 1t, 1tl•1 H\lflllnglClfl Pleet, Apt. f.0, Hunnnaton &Heft. . JACOllSON·PRO .. HET -JOl'on Clllrle1, 25, 217•1 S. llrooll.N.lr1t, Apt. C, Hllfto fll'GIOft llHC:ft llftd C-t.nce P11rict, 22, 211'2 S. l~I," Apt. C, Hun-llng!Clfl llNcil. COi.LiNS-GAViN -Fr1nces Rkllenl, Sl. 2270 w. Stpi#llffe, Tornnc• and _C11lr...Jllane.J1._30Sl_ctJib_~ Rd., C111ot1 ...,,.,.. REBER-MIDOl.ETOM -MldlMI Ly!•, 21, 1)45fl HM•nd, Apt. 1'·11, G1rdlfl G....w. and VMl!11 Lyl'lll. It, 1001t L,. Coyllln C011r1. f:ount1ln Viii..,-. OEAN4TOHE -llruai Arldr-. It, 11111 ao1 .. Chlc•. HuntlnglClfl &Nell l!"ld R"'*11 Anl!, la. UtS1, G1rc1tn Gr.,..... BETZ.JONES -Lelllt ltn-mond, '24 E. B1lboe BIYll.. Alll. A, N-1 Buch and \.lndl Al'lfl, 21, "ff F•I Orl\19, Apl. Y-102, Cosll Me>M. IAIC!!R·TAOEMA -c.lvin J1V, 20, llltl 20fll St .• WHfmlM!er 8nd N111q, lf, lln Blacld'IHtfl, Wntrnln1I•. RIOS.VAN SCHAACK -MlctiMI 5.......,, 17, 111f'I Mlr'ktn. Hurrllngl(lll kacfl 8ncl K1•m Anne, IT. 11111 G~lf, Hlll'lllf'llllO!I &aid\. 1£ LL-KOTI -DIMl1 WayM, :D, lUlt E. OllMI Ori.,., Arudl• lftd Kathi"" EUaMlh. 20, Hn ....,., ~ 0!1 .. , H\111111'1gton &wet\, HAGGElllTY<OOK -J1mM koll. 21, '2'2 WlfnM" ........ , HU01l1nt1!CW1 9eKll •ncl klltta"IM laol•, ZI, 1:W11 I~ Muon, Belttlc>w8f'. Death Notice• Supervisors 01( Ai1ti..crime Bid By JACK BROBACK Of 1M Dlliy l'ltlf Sttff ORANGE County Supervisors were given a choice. Should they approve spending less U\an $1 million of tax money to be matched by more than $2 million of federal and state fUnds to fight the county's growing crime rate? They lmmtdlalely end unaoJmously approved the pro. gram offered Wednesday by Keith Concaonoo, eiecutive officer of the Oraoge O>unty Criminal Justice Council, '"in i:r1nclple." Bow much money they actually 17;;1!-~;:! spend i£1 fighting burglaries, drug pushers, rapists, and holdup men will be decided later when specific pn> jects are offered for approval. Wbat it amounted to was a case of saying the county's law enforce-ao AclC meot people are doing a good job, better in most cases than the rest of the state er naUon, and they should be encouraged to keep It up. CONCANNON had some convincing figures. Crime in all its forms eost the taxpayers $88.4 million last year. or $58 for every resident. More than 89,000 people were aJTeSted in 1971, an average of one booking every six minutes. The fact 1l1't Orange O>unty had one burglary every 20 minutes; one auto thelt every hour and 38 minutes; one assault every fJVe hours; one anned robbery every six lioU1s arid 25 minute5; one rape every 21 hours, and one murder every 10 days, was bad but bettei-than ~ rest of the U.S. Nationwide the.re is a burglary every 13 seconds, for example. The coonty murder rate is 2.8 homicides per 100,000 persons, but the national average is 8.5 per 100,000 and California's, ,8.1. BIS FIGUltEi on narcotics an-ests showed Jight at the end .of the tunnel, also. Although there were 16,000 arrests _Jast year fpr __ such yjoJations, the increase was only .5 percent, "compared ID a jump ol 45.5 perC<l!t from 19'/IJ ID 1971. Concannon's report strongly recommended the hiring of a drug abuse coordinator under the County Administra. t,ive Officer. Currently the job is under the Mental Health Department's scope. "Huntington Beach leads the state ln narcotics arrests per 100,000 residents," Concannon said, "and the county has one of the highest rates of narcotics violations in the state." The 600-page Criminal Justice Council report covered a wide range of proposed projects ranging from a $200.000 SUperior Court information system to a $10,500 police training program io HW!ting1oo Beach. OF THE $88.3 million spent in 1971, or $511 for every resident, police work took $48.2 mlllion, the courts, $7 .8 million, correcUons another $18.7 million and related ac- ttvitfes (earing tor abandoned and neglected children, the public defender, district attorney and jails) the balance. PVBUC NG'lldl Issues in County Meetings Politicians, Stars to Push ·-~-::.='i .met: '° caaonolt'I "" ......,. .,... if ....._. 1n"'.:.·-... ~'!""'-T :r.i:: •:HOME l~ln', 1?11l TN• COAJifY Of' CMWllff ~ ctrct.. fn4M._ (_Iii..,. nJll' 11t1. A Hitt 11"""1 C#1 ........,, 11)1• Ml. N~ Et; ...... EDOlll; MIYOJI ocrMI ,,.. lt .. """"''"' ~. Ct&!..,. ~ ltMWl'i K iDOle IKEMI, ~. Tllll ~ II lllinu ~ .,.. Ill NOTICE 1i HEitl•V GIVEN .. ffw llldh'ldull, CfWl!ort • ti. ....,,. IMflWd ~I ltolllrf Car1 ~ By O.C. HUSTINGS Of .... Dall~ P11of ltlff flt! .. , ..,... fltVl"'O dll-...i111t tllt 11111 1lattrl'l«ll lllecl Wlttl t11t 1t-1.,,• Nill _....,. _.. ,......,, "' flit !Mm. C'8rtl et Or111t9 C81/fttY tfi Od. ... • .Beach. -'"' ,._ ~ ....-..n. 11t 1111 dlkll ILLIAM I , IT JQtlH, COUHTY Cl.IAK, 'Mle d.Jrmer ii ICbeduled for • • dtfll ., •...,. lflltfftd twrt. • •r a.wrty J . ......_ o.vtY· •-. .. ...-.m """" ... "' "" ,.......,. Andrew HJnshaw, GOP can-the EmpU'e Room of the~ to ttit ~ •t uo ,,_1.._ Or'"" cllHI o.nv l'llol, dtdace ror ~ In Orange Edgewater a,att HOUI&. Din-::r-r:n. Tt::,· ~'i:':itt ~~ W,,lobW ''" ii. '° "" N~#; County's 39th Dlstrlel, is ner wW be served at I l:i!'r n111. 111t11c11 i. t11t 1111C1t of tM11111t 11 aft ... ·a -•-~ --'al ""' wnlMtt!O'*' 1;11 111 ...._*''" Pttt•lnl1111 PUBIJC NOTICE scheduled to speak Tuesday at ...... nu.::1, ~ t1 tt11 tfflll OI! Mid .-...it. wtltlln ,..,,,, ____ =====--Oranae Coast College in Costa beg1nnlng at 1 p:_m. . ~ .,.... "" """ ~lc:tlfelfl of ltilll· fllCTITIOUS •ustM•I• M Chayes, a profeaor of Jn. "°"o!:it OttlW to, 1m fll.t.Mt: rTATRMllllT :·talk " set for 11 a.m. in ternatkml law at Huvard ~-,.·~_:1:;, ":'"'''r•lftit iJ.i~ 1:~f"'1"' PlrlOfll •N clol• lh F Unlveni"', wu a 1 ...... 1 ad~ .-..Nl'l'llMi ~ t1tAIMA1t DfV&LO".M&.MT COM-• orum ., ._., Al. -n•N••• !'ANY, .. tlfllfl'll Dr.. "--' · viser to the State Deplrtmtnt :,~ • .: ;.;.,.. 1.,... hktl. a.ofort'lla .-. Another office-seeker, Jim during the K en n e d y ad-•••i ....., c......,... rmt N!!"i:, ~~=:':..~ st .. Thorpe of San J u 8 n min Is tr at lo n . He Is I...._.4:'~:!1.u Mtl>An L. Mt!'tMr. •1• ~ st .. Capistrano, will speak on the McGovem'• chief f 0 re I In i:=: or.,.. ,_. o.i1y P11o1. N~=k~ \"~,m-...,._ OCC campus Wednesday. The ll d·.iAA• 0o;i°"" 1'• a. » anc1 "~ " 0rH "*'-0.111, ce1110tN1. ~----· andidale r b po cy 1 .. ~. "" mt-n Tiii• l:Mll'llll •• '*"' CONfUdld "' • ~-"Ile c or t e Reservations for the dinner ~P. ' 7lst Assembly District seat ORANGE COUNTY can be made by cont.acting by PUBlJC NOTICE TM• 1,,~f51~: ~,,.~'= now held by R e p u b 11 c a n Long Beach McGovern-Shriver Cllf'k .. °'"""' c-r, ~."'"c"ou•"rv" Robert Badham, is slated to ffi tel Id.A-434--9981 ADVQTtsUtlJfT l'OI. llDS WILLIAM I!. ST J ....... talk at 11 a.m. in the camnu• o ice, e.,.._... . ....._ .. c.INCttrt .CLERK ay atwrty J, ~. °""""· r--* * * Nottal .. ~ .. -"""tl'llS8ft.. .. .... free speech area. cruin ktlocll Olttrk:t wm ,...,. IDld:I ,. hblbMcl °'""" CO.ft Otlty '11ot. * * * the Yes on 18 drive. SFATE SENATOR Dermb twllltltlna • tMot _. tntNl1tf tor "" OcldW 23. "· end Nf7<tmbtl' " 1'· * * * Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) ~ Cillll""""°" • t11t ta11o9i\"' 1tn 1MW! ACTOR-SINGER Pat Boone McGOVERN ADVISOR Al < will speak •t Friday's ladles ~ •• COMOITtOIUNO AODfTtolllt PlIBIJC NO'l1CE and his family will give two -Cha 'II be the . 'pal d I h t•·· I the RALPH .... OATt:I.. . ----===:::-==c:---- rf W-·nesd ' yes WI pnncl ay unc eon mee u.'6 0 • Ol.lllEWOOD alw&MSJllTA•Y SCltOl>U FICTCTtoUS •USlfilllU pe onnances eu ay in speaker Wendesday at a $25-Orange County Shrine Club. E.c11 bid w11 o. In ~ w1tt1 NAMI nATIMlfllT Orange County to benefit the ..... r.plate "Professionals for -..A club meets at noon at the ""' dr•w1110t< 10«llk8tkim 8!'1111 ott11r Tiie toHowtne ,.,... is t1o11t1 wa1111a · f p ·1· 18 r-1 m: contract dor;l,lflWlll -.., fl• lit tlle of-n · campaign or roposl ion • McGovern" dinner in Long Revere House in Tustin. f1cl of IN. ••x.. S, Mtti-. Alllsl•fll . OAVIO G. MILLEA .. ASSOCIATES, lhe anti-smut measure on the SUpWll'll9tld8nt. "" J....,1r1 $CflOOf an C•o1CIUI' Drlvt • "''" 11" MtwPort N 7 ball 0111r1ct. l~ sou~t Slnd CIWIYOfl a.actt. c.llfornla ,,_ ov. ot. PRIME R•l SUBDIVISION LAND •-· '"' '"'M· .,.,,..,.,.,.,.'""" """' G. Mlllw. ""..,..,,,,.co .. Boone, his wife and four otflw o1 '"'*"'11111 and MOCMIY. Art111Met. N.wport &McJ1 daugh'ers. WI.II be joi'ned al "' Colortdo aou1 ... 1rd, Loa ..,......,,, This DllllMK 11 conc1wct.c1 by •n In. 4 6 A Cal!fomta, fOIMl. 81d!W1 !MY IKUl'e dl~ull. lhe Dts' neyland Hotel fund • cres coPla °" "" dr•wllllll •nd lptdflcatloM Dtvld G. Mlli.r 1l Illa office of 1111 Ardllte(I Upoft tM Tlll1 1!11-1 w11 llltd wlfll tlw COVIi· raiser by the 41)-member E1t1bll1hed High Quality Huntington Buch ArN posllno ot a prantH c1epos11 ef sso.oo tv ci.r1t °" 0ra1111e c-tv .. Cd. 4. 1m. Grand Land Singers group. Bushard/Hamilton Streets ::;.,. us,::. ~t!:' :':!~ ""!: ~ '"*'"" v1c1i11or, IJIL "*" The shows are set for 6:30 Clos• to Beach -Schools -sau.-condfllOfl wllflln ft .... cllYI •fl•r ,,.. trldl MM Wl!llllN '""'· end 8 30 , ... ,.., .,. 01*1t11 uc;.,t lhllt It 111 bid I• Mo hliwly Hiii&. Cl. p.m. ' p.m. SEALED BID SALE mlllod, .. _,, ,, -.... ~ ... ,., "'" ...... Ticket; are prictd at $7.50 plMS .,. Ntllr'Md 111t no) •11 IWtor ti ,,.. ~r person. They can be tlld 8'Mlllnas. P'IA:lll•llld Ora• co.st OlllY l"lkf, ~ $1 "0 000 Min1"mum COlllrK!on or tfttlr ~lllt-Octob8f' D. :II Ind Jrk1¥1rnbtr 6, ll, ordered through the Com-~ • may onl.T v111t 1ti1 11!9(1> o1 ttit -" ..., 1tn .... 12 mittee for .Yes on Proposition Builders Info. incl. Soils Report -$10 :C!i~ta~w~An~:,! -PUBIJC NOi-tCE 18, P.O. Box 4245, Pasadena, Philip F. Bettencourt, Newport Buch City Hall "'.it n. '1'*' '"*' "-l'l'IMI bY c11u"' "":r--~~~===,..,,=-Calif. D11trld omc., (110 5"--11'°, Otlke of MOTtCI Off T11UST•l'S SAL• 3300 Newport Blvd. :... (714) 673-21 10, ext. 205 Facmt ... p1-1,.. T L,... n"'51S Boone i! state chainnan for ,:.. ~ ... ~~~,w1~: =., ~ 0n NwwNiir L 1m, .i to;ot A.M .• ~ u, 1m, it l :JO p.m. II G8tft P'E.OERAL NATIOHAL M 0 It T GAGE THE STORE THAT BROUGHT LOWER PRICES TO THE BEACH AREA ·PHARMACY WE QUOTE . PRICES OVER THE PHONE •.• ANYTIME -CKECI THESE surEI SALE SPECIALS-svn ..... I our ltN. Pricl I CONT AC #10, Cold C1p1ul•1 ••••• , , , • , • , , ••• , , , • $1.69 S1.2t 100 VITAMIN ··c" TABLETS. 500 m.g .•.•••.•....• $1.98 S1 .St OLD SPICE AFTER SHAVE, '4 01 ••••••••••••••••• $1.75 SI.JS HEAD a SHOULDERS Sh1mpoo, '4.l 01. T~b• ••..• , $1.65 S1.4t s ... Prlelo 89<: $1.09 $1.15 $1.15 2700 l Coast HiD!wav. at Femleaf, Corona del Mar • m AMPLI PAlllN$ IN 911.&R H11r1 -t:JO • 6:00 Dolly Closffl SHdoys ad HolSdcryt 644-7575 Sdlool; nwv1nt1 to CMl'llW'OCld SdloDI at AUOCIATION II dUtY '"'°'mad Tnll'" J·:IO pm Ulldtf' and pwMllllt lo battd If Trvst 0£.d. bid lfllll tie Pftlde out on ffw 1ortn dli.I Auowt ,, lf10.-"' Augu1t 11, provided for tMI our,,.e It 1M11 M lt7D>. •• l~t, ~ "1$, In bClolc ,,,., P9J41 '"'Id •rid lllH wll••>Mr. Ru s. IMrlMlll. 14, of ~ ti:eionb lfl IM lffkm ol AMl•l•nt SuPtriflttridttll ol TM "" J-~ County ll-.S.. of DrU!llt c-1y. .. lft SchoCll D11trict 1.t6do ~I $8nc1 Stl .. of C.iltornl8. ClllV91 A-. &~ti lrvlne, C.Ufomli, W14..l SEll AT PUILIC AUCTION TO llllforl 10:30 8."-:f"PKlflc Slllldal'O Tlml. HIGHEST lllOOER l'Ofit CASH (ptyabl• 1111 ~ 31 1m -wm tie ~ •' Htnt of MJt In .. Wflll INllll'I' f/11 tM lf!d flld 11~ lfl• pubilc llllll'llldl.I_, Unllld St1lfl} at ttlt North fnlllt 1J1lrlllt9 ,,..,..tltr to 1111 Or•ll98 CDU11ty c~ 1oc1t.c1 Ektl l)l(i 1t1WI M aa:orns>tnfllll by • •I 700 Cl'tk; Ctnter Or'lw Wnt C"'-riY ~.etllfllld QC...Y.Jb..lti:'J c!Mck o.· ~ W. llft St.), lfl fM ClfV ol Sin!• A111, llOfld 1""911·6' • -etY ~ ~ -Cetlforrtle;-et1--r1tM,-.tllt....t-~-­ crMi1ec1 by the ·B°'rd of TN•'-for not ........., '° and -!Mid 111 11 Ulldlr Mid 1Q1 thin ""J*Unt (lO'llol ef t11t •Id.. TM o..d of Trwt lft 1111 P"ll*fY lllwi.I In chick sl'loulcl tie lft8cll s>tYlbll to 1'111 .. Id COU!ltY 8ncl Sl•t. daerlbld 11: ontrtt of tht ao.nt of Trusf'11n;. Lot 1• ., TrKI No. tnt. .. w """' Tllll 1~tloMd chick f/11' blddtr'I t'KOfdad hi 8°'* SO. "9" » IOiJ&. ln- tiond 1hllll M lllVtn 1s e IWI'"''-ttwol Clu.IW of Mlsetll1-M""" 111 '"' tM blddlr wllJ mlw Into contrld If dllc• of" tM '-"" ~ o1 Mid 1w1n1«1 fll• wort.; or any part tllenof aftd Ora11g1 Goutity. wlll M o.d..-.d forl91ted II flll 1ua:n1ful Tllt slt'Mt lddrtU l!ld Dfllort tommon blOd« reflJMt to *"'*' Into tor1trac;t 1ttw O..ltlllttoft. It tny, Df 11'18 Nel oraperty btlng NQUK'-11 to do llO by fh9 ~ dftO'lbtcl •blr'<'t 11 pWpOl'ted to M : 201't Olllrkt. ,,tllcllftt 1'1«:11, Coll• ~ CatifQrftl1. TIM wcce11f1A bidder wlll be requtnd Tri. ~11111 tn1111t dhd•lms any 1o fumlll'l 18bor and materlll 110f101Jn 111 Lllblllly for..., 1!1eor1•"-ot ftll 1trWt •mount ~I lo -llundnd Pl'l'(MI MClrlll 8ncl DIW c:omrnllft -...n.... If OCIO'll.I of ti. a;1r1tract pr1ct IWld ftltt!fl.tl IM'. aiowft ._.n. PM'for'manc. bondl In .,, amourit ~ 10 S.W .... win M '"""" Wt wllllolrl -l\lilndtwd P8fCl'nf (lOM!oJ ol fhl ~ COWl'llnt or _,.,..,,..,, .......... or lmslllecl. trKI prtn. 90l'ldl 11M11 bt WW1c1 bY a rwotrdllng llHI. -1n11eft, flt' -~ COl'l'lfllflY or ll/f'9ly ~ Clilmbrll!Cft, to NY f!ll NINlftllle ,..111- .. flsflefiorY to ffw Bowel of TnllMI.. ~ wno of 1t11 "* ...:wM ll'f MW 11 lll\llt DI rntlftlNtory llPOfl 1f19 C:C.-0...:t of Trull, '°""': Uflnus,. wtlll !ft. lr8etor to wtiorn • tol'llrlcl 11 twerdld ,_, tTMr-... as ~ lfl Nici l'IDtl, lfld upor1 .. ~lr8Cforl: ........ f1Jf11 to -..-. If ~' llndlr 1111 Nmw ell Mid HY not i.u tiWI lfil (ltflll"lll ,,...811"'9 DMd ol Tnnt, '-. dlal'98I ..... aper!WI rite of P« d1-"-" to all -"""" ol tilt "t,.,.... Md of ft. trwts -""" ~ lfl th9 11ttcvllon of tM COlllrld. 111 ...., 0-. -' Trwt, One or the programs suggested of interest to residents of Orange Coast cities is $00,750 for support of the summer beach patrol to plaee young officers on the beaches to head -o1r-jJr'oblems""be!or.-llR!j'tiR<lme bigg-er-problem" 1'-' to Ill UM< Colle ol 1111 St•le TN llll'iend«y uncllt° MW ~ Df of C1lll(lml1, 'till llOAF'd Df TfUI"" f1e1 Tn11I llotrl!OfilN ftKUtlcl Mid dlllWf'ed •actrf•llllld thl ll'll'llf'ill '"°"'"""' ,, .. of to 1111 ~ • wrl""" Otdar•llon w..,.. lor Htfl cr•lt or tyl)I of -kfNn Df Olf81111 and Ot""'rld for 1811, incl • lltldMI lo mtlCllll lllt COO'llrKt wlllcft wOI wrltt.,. Notlu Df Ott.ult 11111 Ellc:llon t. bl 1-rded ll'll MJC.CKSful biddef and Sell. Tl'll ~ CIUNCI Mlcl Nollet th4w prr.-11111111 r•'" ,,.. on fll1 Md ,,,_., Df Otllllll Incl EMetlorl lo StO lo k )l~~~;:;~;;;~~;;;~~;;~;;;~:;;:;;;:;~;;~~~~~~~~=:;:;;:;;;:;:::;::;:=;:;:::;~:i M r•vf1~ al lht otflc• of TM Aul1!1n1 tlCOr1k'll In !ht COU!llY 'll'hlr• 1111 ,.., ·Sl/lltf~ lll'.OOVly •• ...... • Tiit 0-r -ttie rtgflt to 1'9fKI D1i.: OdoMr 4, 1972 eny or 1n llld• Ind to walvt ,,,., In-Fedff81 N1tlollll A.RBUCKLE & SON WESTl.'LIFF J\tORTUARY U7 E. 17th St., Costa J\1esa ""41188 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del J\1ar $73.9450 Costa ~lesa , f.M.UU • BEIL BROADWAY MOR'nJARY lll BrNdway, Co!ta J\fes1 u W4l3 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MOR'nJARY 17'5 La1ana Canyon Rd. C94-1415 • PACIFIC VIEW ft1EMORIAL PARK Cemelery MonCWJ Chapel 3581 Pldflc View Drtve Newport -· Ca!Hondl ICC-mt • PEElt PAMJLY COLONIAL FUNERAL DOME 7111 -A ... Westmlm1ultH5?5 • SMJTllS' MORTUARY 1%1 Mala SI. e·anthlctna 8e1ch AUllt • PUBUC NO'llCE , Trial Slated Suspect in Robbery Found Sane by Judge SANTA ANA -An accused Plumley also ,escaped fro m gunman who once claimed Westminster !\luniripal Court that an Orange Conty Superior· prior to a preliminary hearing Court judge and prosecutor and was one of three men who branded him as a "neo-Nazi threw pepper into the eyes or and a member of the Aryan jail deputies escorting them to Brotherhood" has been found., __ a_Su__:pe_n_· ,_,._eo_u_rl_a_ppeac:.__ra_n_c_e_. -1 1 sane and able to face trial on escape and armed robbery charges . Superior C o u r t Judge James Turner issued the ruJ. Ing that will put Douglas Plumley Jr.. 30, of Long Beach, in Judge Robert Corfman's courtroom Oct. 30 for trial on the multiple allegations. He ordered the trial after studying the reports o f psychiatrists who examined Plumley and who scanned the records of several court ap- pearances made by tbe elo- quent defendant. Plumley'e last court ap- pearance led to the in.•tallation o f electronic surveillanct1 systems now widely used by tbe nation's airports and the mounting of special guards by the aheriff'a office. (P'tlcl Polil1C11 Allv1tll1•ml'ntl CUT rAXES YES ON PICTtetOUI •us1M•s1 It wu pointed oot that "" 1o1.:i".:9 =~~::!.a tMtntM Plumley wu the reeiplent, 14 .. l HOOK .,. Nll!Dl£s si.o"t 2517 while lad.Ced In the cunty jail, r-c ~ 0r., H-1 11Ndl, of a weapon smuggled Into the ~lol,.;,. ~· aw1tlk1, "'1 ll•r• facility by a visitor who ln- •rn11 •• .. '"""'· C..flfllnlla '*" l~Uy handed the gun to con· Tftlt IMllltM •• Ml"' to11CNttW try 111 yjcted killer W 111 i a m lftdl~llM. . lln rJ Krep rh Pm (utl ,.. • Anta111•0• c. .,.., We~ood "'Ibe M a n ' ' T"1' •t""'*"' ..... ~ "" Clunly M~-11an. ,..., ._ ~ """" Ha,..,1c"'' "" .. Qtf1I of Or1t111 c-ly 811 Od'. 10, 1'71 .,,....,.. ... ,. If 1 .. 1 ...... WILLIAM I , IT JOMM, COUHTY•l-----------------'---"-'-'-"'---- Cll!Jll: ly .._.., J, ~. °"""'1· IM'*11-il October Sale Frigidaire Flowing Heat Gas Dryer BIG 18-LB. CAPACITY Does a large load or klng .. lte sheets, yet lt'e only 27" wkSe. Easy to load and unload ttirough huge door opening. P.rc;'idea thorough, gentle "op91t air' drying. Cooktown perJod and Cycl&-end Signal help keep laundry wrlnkles from setting. Air bedding, fluff plllows on No Heat cycle. No pllot to llght; automatic electric Ignition. lorm11tlly Clfl • bid. Mor1-AllOdallon No bldld8f' m•Y wlttlclr•• ft!1 blcl for •• siilci TnnlM. forly.fl... dlys Mtef "'8 4119 Ml for 8y lr.w &tl•SCO 111*111111 of bldt. Aulhorllld SltNf\lr1 0•19 octobtr' 11. 1m. ,_ IOARD DF TaUSTEES Publllhtcl Oranee cont Dilly Piiot, By R•:.c s. Nerllon 0cto111r 1•. n. a, 1'71 2J2>.n Tiiie A""'°"'tld Alil'"i Pulllllhlll Orl"!M Cont O.lly Piiot, Octobtr 16, 23. 1m 277)-n PUBUC NOTICE SU,e•IOI COUltT OI' TH• PUBUC NOTICE ITATI: Ofl CALtPOa•IA '"'* THa COUWTY Of' OILUf9a MO. A-14'tl ,ICTITIOUI IUSIMESS NOTIC• 0, M-..019 Ofl 'ftlTIOH tu.Ma STATl:M•MT l"OI NOl.ATI' Ofl WIU. AND l"Olt The fallowtftg peftof1 Is doln; IM.osl1M$1 LEn•llS T•ITAMlllTAaY ti: E11•'-of PHY l LIS LOA.ETTA SEA KEG, ln:I Mcw'OYlt Uni! C. DILLER. DkffHd.. C«lt MtM, Cafffllwftie nll7. NOTICE IS HEltE8Y GIVEN · ftlel llobert V. IC.,,..,,9, MG Sl1rtJng.. ,._ JKk Wtllac. N • fllecl fllnl" t petl- ltln 'lttlll'J', C.lllomlt nl'OI. lion for ProbaN of Wiii _,. fOr I•-• Thl1 bullMU II betng cOflduttld "' an of ~ T..t-t.,Y ti) '"-""-• ll'ldl~. l'1ti'tt"1nc• to Wfllcfl 11 ......,. for further Robtrt \/. Kotnl9 PM'lcllt•'11 IN tt'Mlt the tlnw •nd ~ Thll 111'-f flltd wlttl tfle C-ty of .... t!Plg fM MllW 11M bMl'I 1tf for Clri "' Or•• County Oii Od. "· 1'72 "~ 7, rm. •I , .•• '" In ""' WILLIAM I!. ST JOHN, COUNTY cour~ of 0eptrtm91i1 No' j' Df Mid CLIEllK lly a.v..rty J . MMdoX, o.ciuty, ~. •f )DO CIY!c C8nl81' Dr"'9 W.t 111 " 9"fl tl'lt City of S•nl• An•, C•Ulornl8. ' Putlll111ed Or•ncM Coast O.Hy Piiot, D.lt.d October ''· 1"1: ()o;tobfr 2:1. lO •nd Nowrnblf '· ll. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN 1,n :IUl).72 Covn1y Cltflc ' \1-------------111011111., A. 1!.UTMAN A"'"'8yetL .. PUBUC NOTICE me N..-, atvti. 111-------------1 C•I• Mew, C8llfemf8 Ttft (Jlt) MMQt rlCTITIOUS lUtlNIESS A"'"'8y ,_, Nl"'- NAM• STATl!MaNT Publlshld Or•ng• c~., Dall, '''"· Ttl8 fdlOWl"9 P8f'MIN .,. doint1 Odob8f' H, 12, 2', 10-butlnes1 as: '' 2U7·11 NEWPORT INDEPENDENT p VOLKSWAGENS _. "'0 R s c H E UBUC NOTICE REPAIR, 2')t Welt to.It Hwy.,,1--::CC:C"C'"-------N....,,ort a..di, Ca~lornll nMG. I Er1cf'I Kl•n, 1605l , .. It,,, ~. Hunt-SUP'•••Olt COVJIT or Ttt• '""°" 8Mdl C.llfoml• nM7 STATI 0, CALl,OltNIA ro1t Conrld o....r. Sift R•iiti-1 Dr1w ntl COUNTY or OltNIM Hvntlngton a.at;!\, C•ll"'11!. n"1 • NO • ._,._ Tl'll1 bl.Ill-11 ri.11111 ~ ·..., 8 NOTtcl 0, NlARlfilO Ofl P'n'ITlcSlt s>trtn«slllp. "Olt l'ltOl.t.Ta OP' WILL AND l"Oll EIUCH KLAN LnTa1ts TlnAMaNTAJt'f (IOftD Tlll1 111'-t nllfd wtfll no. County WAllll!O) C .. rk or or.,. Counly.., Od. ». 1m:. ,..!•t.tt,.. Df RUTH RAMONA DORT, By 11-ly J . Ml4dox, o.outy Gowf\I ....,.N ' Ci.rt;. NOTICE IS NEltEllY GIVEN tt.tt .__ . "·1'ta Moor• Dart ..... fllftl tMnift • """'loft PuolltftM Or1not COMt 0.lly P'\lot, for l'T\ltr.8t1 ol WlH • ._ tw Lttt...I Oo;loblf', 2'. » •nd NovtmOw a, ll. ,..,''"*"'MY 1o "-'"'-!bond wirv-1m •~n HJ, ~ to wtilcft 11 l"l'IHe ier PUBLIC N-CE fur11'181' P8rtlcu1..,,, and "'" "" Hme .,. VII . Pl8Ct of Mering"" ....... 1'111""" HI ll------------for Nllft1'l'IW 1, 1'72, •I t :OO 1.m. 111 1ftl , courtroom Df DtHrtm.nt No. 1 f/11 .. Id l'ICTITIDUs IUSl•ESS court, •• 700 Civic Cll'lter Dflw WMt '" NAM8 ITAT•M•MT ,,_ City ot Sant• AM, C•llfllml1 ' TM fdlowlnt per-It 40!1'19 IM!llftl 0.f911 OciODeor :lO. lt'Ji • ••: WILLIAM £. ST ~H HEWf'Olll:T YACHTS, '"' llfey.tt. c_,,-Clttlt ' A ..... Nlwport hadl. C•llfonH 9*. 'AllC81, MILLIKIN, l:ddlt W. Zl«tltt, :mi E, Ocffn ICOHLMIJllll, CLAllC j O'HAaA llvd., hlDOt, C•lllomll 9*1 A""-9 11 U. TM1 bullMSI II lltlf'l:9 COlldUdlld try In 6M OllVI ll'Wf ,~lvWutl. IM Metftl. C:aHfltnWI "''4 Ed lltrMr fth UI') m.Mll Tiii• "•'-'*" flied '#Ifft fht C-'Y A,..,..,.. frw1 ~i-r :~~:~~a~=~ ~t~=~: ~~ ir.~..J°'" 0.lly ::.o;; Frigidaire ,..,,_ "'-c-t """ ":,:, ___ PU_ll_U-;:C=N,-O'll_CE __ _ Octoolr 16. :D, :IO, Mid NOWf!'IW 6q Matching Washer im ms-n NOT1c1 ~*:'10111Ht1 Ft1t1llv 1111 l11b holcfl 16 lb. lo•d. $ 96 PUBUC NOTICE SUl'latM: COUaT Ofl' TN9 tt eel 01t, •ulorn•tlc tO•lt cycl!• NOTtcl Of' OISSOLllT... TNI COUNTY Of' OUJll .. Proptr c1r1 for to41y'• f•bric1. lid N-.. IW4111 ·-~~ ~ c...i 0e11y "'°"• Oc""'8t .. .. ... N--. .. ,,, 1m aM-n J 1 199 · ITATI O" CALll'OaNl,t, ~Ill I ' 01' l'AITM•llHI" l1!e'9 of IN.MA ll!LK -Wh t Do M D to U 1o+r11stio1t 1lp1 yo11 11t1tch ••l•r ~le Mtlcf 11 ~ tlvM fhtl HOT•<• • a any OC rs Se t ' ' I d llDWAltO C. HOOl"ER. •ild OAYLCMIO IS ltl!lllllY GfYIJll fll tti. •1t1p•t•lut• tlH11!9 to Wll O• • I . TOHILL, JR .. M11ttfel1 ...... =''=°'-°' Ir. ~ ,.._,"°' - Wh Th Suffi """"-""°"' .... ~lkMn fltlft -M¥111f ""' ... ,,., en ey er P<>;n llM tf't'tt ti TOHILL&. HOOtl'llll OVA.LI•=~ -,...irw II fli. "*"' Q.I. TY l'RINTl:lll. et 1"1 ,......., "" " ..,...c .... &•lr'f ¥0UCNr:t. 11'1 h ... , Of H m lwlw~ 1"'"9 •• ,,.., of Celt• .... .. "" ...... lfllMW f'~Al.U::£: emorrho1"dal Ti ? C"""7V Cit°"*""'' St•fll of C81lftnl•, Clld cwrf, or "' ......,,, ttwm. lflfltt !flt ~ ' .. -- • L_.____ ssues. ,.......... .. -• .., ............ ""' .., ""::nc.VllllCflen. ,. ....... .,,. .. "' --·-·--mvtM1 c.Mftf, ........ 1M ...,_ ni. ol 111'1 lttonwy, ICHUIMCHllt "11w1'"*MIN'TAI. Mlo•KITIMO Exclutive Formula Civa Prompt, ;f en:spore'I ReJief :"':,',= :,:,~t. "* '*"-t..=:'A~fw':,T':.t =~· :'"::; ~ .. ·•-LTAN,!.!-.J!! .. c.ui_..,,.... c11111 °'" ln MSwany Cue. from Such Pain. Alao HelPt Shrink oil" "-•r• of l11t-1rltt1 •lltl D-pe-·.aa•lll'• "'1c1 ...,.._lit tM..,,.,,...,"' ~ ~ "' 111111 ..... ., ""' IMdtlaftiltl In _.. _,,,........, -11!n•olS .. -•T: .... -Duetolnlect'-. ,....,. •~ · .,. ~ .._ • dVt1td.,, •ow•rd c. ~.·WllO ""111 111 "'!c~,f.";'•'1'11"' "'""' "''"'" lt~cl tlrt'-«1,.: eount,., Ck* cw • ""'" -rv11 MY ..., •1KMr91 •It llM!tltt" n llllDI• .,141 • Mfflln ,_. "'°"""" tftw f'",.;; :....-.:·~",::. ~"f:.., "' In• turwy, dodon were ..ted ~ny CbM Crom pain. itch.Inc COSTA MESA EL TORO HUNTINGTON llACH ~=-:r:_ ~~ rtoet4w 11 "'°"'" "'6.:!' &::'~ f:,,'!"' llOllttl IJMll~kfllnf C.-.ltrllln what th.ey U9t to nilleY* •UCh In hemorrhold•I ti11tUN. And it HAllOI .AllA II TitN ..... ,,......, l'llrtl!w llOlk:9 ,, l'ltnlby """" ttllt ttlt NAltltV JlllOMI DILLOH. p1infu1 •YftlP~ Manv of Lhe aclu•ll" heli>o l h•o'nk pao'nful 411 1 le • 5 fOUNTAIN Y~LU'f' ur*lllOMd wtlt llOl M ~!bit, f'rol'li lf11~ Df ffw wm ot !fie tDDW ""' ... ~ fllH wi ... 1M tMltlty d to 1 I'd h , ·••••••? '· tNnt .. s.. ... 1 .... .,. .. hfltt• t1111 d~~ "' ~1 *''"''kw inc"'"" ,..""" cMHtfll, CllFW .. °" ..... c-tv .. ~-I>, tf12. oc t• repOr •r. •• I ., n•lllnc of 1uch ti11uc11 whM ~ IN '-"-.... IW °' •. Totlll , Jr,'"' I'll• Cllfl'll "'"" ICMUMACJilllt .. MIHYAIO WfLUAM •• It JOHN, COUNTY CLtRIC, ellbeT 1199 Pnt~raUon H lhtm· Infected and lrafta~. J1111l ace Daly1 ,.,,. s.t. '"' hltrt 10.9: s.t. 1M ... t• ., M J or In lllrnt °"""firm. .. , .... c.....,.,. .... '' '"'"1 J. M1M11c. oe,vty. telYM or in lh01rodlee pr.ct.Ice. Jt doctor·ll!I~ Preparation H• o.tt,1 l04l M. 11-t OAT•D AT H~ ._"' C..llfornl1, Orlflll, ClllhniNi nwe '"'*"'* Ot""' e-1 0.11, "= Preparatioft H live. prompt.. doeen't help )!OM. Oi~t or 646-1684 837-3830 962 5528 11111 19"'~:=,v.:: ~:s!! im !~~1 :~~ ~ ,._ u, » ..., N~ ._ temporary relil!:f (or hourt In 1upJ)Ol!litoriet. • O..;tord 1 . Tafiti, Jr. ,.ullUtfttd Ot~ COMI Dally ...,.. lt'I m•n1------------------------"-_.,...,,,....,,..,,...,_.,;...,,,...,.,..,..,.,..,,...,_"'!,..,,....,,..,,...,_..,..,_..,,..,../I ~llflld Orlfllt CMJt 0.lly Piiot. Otto08r u, w Nowembtr 1. 1, 1J, 1t7i . -Oc!OM<' ». 1•12 1M1·1' *''" r .. ·i· 1 ·. • " • ·- '.· A TIMEL 'Y TINT · Women's Lib Pictured By LAURIE KASPER becauae, "t.be more you are stimulated, .,.. °' ~ o.ur ,.... sttff the less it ls possible for you to be Mnst authors hope their books are well sallsfled cleaning toilet bowl,: making d peanut butter sandwiches ... " . rea · Although .ahe has three children, aged But Doris O'Brien and her Ulustrator. 4, 6 and as, she was married eight years Carolyn Schilling, hope theirs 18 well before having the first and tbe only times c., red ... and blue, pink, green, violet, she hijsn't worked was Wbtn on matemi· brown ... whatever other colors the kids' ty leave. She has taught at lmlg Beach crayon box still holds. City College and Calllornla State ThDirs Is a colorlng book being sold by Univenlty at Long Beach but is now the American Association of University teaching ~ part-time at Santa Ana Women. Newport-O>sta Mesa branch. College. But It's not for cblldren, primarily A woman should s t r i Is: e a balance because it doesn't whitewash their theme, between work and the home, she said. '"Up or Down Wlth Women's Ube.ration." And, she should respect her husband 's Although the book is not a serious wishes. U he wants a clean, neat home, treatment of either side or the feminist she said, ••she shouldn't live in a pig ... movement, -Mri. O'Brien said, "It -takes pen." on the male chauvinist and the women's BOTH SIDES libber." Sbe feels ber coloring book also says ROSY PICTURE "there might be something justified and 'ftie book introduecs Mommy in her there might be something a little insane rose colored glasses ("Now color the =\.~th sides (of the femlnist move- whole picture rosy") ... Daddy with his Origin. a"•, the book was to have a last green money and Mommy ''green with ~ envy" ... the stereotyped liberattonist, page with only the caption, "Draw your Marian ,wlth her blue stockings and black own conclusion." But the finished project shows the Bern-Berns, "Tweedle-be and (burned) bra. ·.and Daddy's secretary, Tweedle-she," patterned after a Stanford a "shrinking violet." It also smacks a bit at commercialism couple who even1y split their time be- -with Daddy flying Cleo to Cleveland and ~;:t :r:oo ~~~home, and asks, Mommy needing help because Daddy's shirts are not "whiter than white;" the She thought of the book after an AAUW wax on the floor bas yellowed and the state convention where sbe beard about , kitchen cleanser is turning blue. And it women's liberation "until it was coming pictures an R rated movie . . "Color the out of my ears." But she chuckled and blood red. Color tlle lagBl!"g• bl~' said, "My husl>¥d'• sure he is the in· spiration of. it ... But that's the male Political figures too flDd space on the chauvinist in him." pages. The First Lady should be colored She suggested that the AAUW, of which "true blue" but Shirley Chisholm she is president, publish the book kl raise shouldn't be colored at all because "She money for the o~anization's national is colored already." fellowship fund. AA'flw, she eiplained, is · Some of the women's liberation groups, one of the few organizaUons she knows Mrs. O'Brien said, may think the bOok of which aid women working on ad--· two frivolOW1 but then she feels, "You vanced degrees. : have to have a sense of humor aJ>out Ile women's Jiberation." Unless people can And other than the. Wellesley CO ge laugh at themselves, she thinks they lack alwnnae association, she bBongs to no •. the proper perspective. other wom~'s group .. ~kly1 they are Doris O'Brien, who conceived the idea for 11 coloring book, 'Up or Down With Women's Liberation,' hopes the book i• well 'red.' • • And .__ •'-=-t.R , l'be t'on very petty, she explained. She believes _ ~-2IWA:IJ womens _ 1 ra 1 . _ ~~fin!il so;nethipg__motre.. ___ _ -needs io . De !rep! Iri .iSOrspoctt.-o:-She-,tlinutatln("tinWlliin "fiofflng·up rosea-doesn't think the publicity over the bum-for luncheons " ing of bras is doing any good for the · movement. "fODERATE GROUP nrscfmPANCIES Considered a ·"moderate" women's But she' does feel there art many organization, AAUW gffers study groups discrepancies. Men, she said, have told on various subjects, including education, her that women are hired to do the same preschools, books, investmenlS and job as a man but they are given a dif· ecology as well as spe'akers on different ferent title and pald less. · topics. Her husband has just one "hangup," "Up or Down With Women's Llbera- sbe said. "lie really thinks that womeo lion" 18 tbe rum colQring book, In fact ha.. a pretty good deal" and lliat "the the llrsl boolf. the branch bas publlsbed, world of business is not as glamorous as Apparently It ls ~by:· the members. women think." An even 100 ~ ~ within an . . But Ml'll. O'Brien, who bas a masters jiour and a hall alter \hey went> oo sale. degree in speech, feels an educated Members will be 'i"!ll"i the book for ·:. WGman c:au1d get Ver/ bored! at ~ '"1,f~.50 a c;wi. · ..... • • •• .. .. ' • 11" '-'ti'.~ ·~ ' .. 'I 'Here is 11 bunch of men joking about women's liberation. Color their jokes off-color.' l ~ ' . Saying 'Uncle' :Not Funny • : ~DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hat is off ·-ur you ror having the courage to speak :Out on su bjects' that most ·people would just as soon duck. I refer to your column on "funny uncles." · I didn't have a "fUMy uncle" but I had a stepfather wh6 took Indecent liberties with me for about four years, starting when I was 6. I didn't know what ,It was 'Ill about until l reached my IOtb birth- .d&'Y and was put wise by a playmate who t·was a couple of years older than I was. -Her lleplather was "funny" with her and she wrote to )'OU about It. You told her to telJ him If he came near her again she would go immediately to her mother and ruin him. She took your advice and be hever bothered her after that. ~... r decided to do the same with my step- :iather althougb I-was IC8red to deatb he ·.illi&J!t give me a beating. Well, Ann, that •Wat the lut time he tried to act funny , wllh. me. Although this happened I )'eMI "'"'" think ol It nearly every day and I ~runember JOU in pniyen every night. '~ie1e lorgtvo me for not writing to say 'tlianb -until now. -ONE YOU SAV€D , 'DtAll ONE: No apoloSl<t a r e nece11ary. Your let&er ctvu me another .,.,.,rtanlty to !di all my yoans ruclen tbat If a rer.Uve, friend or ntl&tibor 1e&1 '.~funny" they tbMakl not 6e afraid tt II,)', " y ?4• .t4"""" •• )' "lf you come near me again I'll tett miy Mom iactDad." Then do it U I.be warning Isn't enoagb • DEAR ANN LANDERS: If Y<>U print th is letter for a few days before Halloween, it could save some young lives. We often speak oC how the world has changed. The fact that I am wrlling ll· lustrat.. one ol the IDOi! dramaUc changes in our IOdety. A petlOn baa to be Biele 10 put r"'°" bladel, l.'lD or anenic in Halloween· candy or caramel apples and give them to lnnocenl cblldn:o wbo are out for a oiglol of IUD. What a &bamdlJI thing that )'OUJIJsten can no longer aalcly accept Halloween treat& offered by kind nelghhon wbo !or many years prepared sactts of goodies, baked cookies and 'candy for this lradl· tioual bolldfly. But that'• tho way ll ls. 'l'bis year my children have lnvlled a few friends in. They will play games and we hive prlzeJ for the belt costume and ' • , .. I the funnle!t pumpkin. We will not allow the children 1to go trick or lrtating because it is no longer sale. I hope you will warn other parents who have not yet caught up with the fact that 1972 isn't 1952. or even '62. -SAD REALIST DEAR. REALIST: Here's yom' letter and my tllanka !tr bavln( wrltl<n lt. l ae<ond !be -· Smoll Balloweea par-tin al bome are a lpleecUd Idea. Parenti wllo allow IM!r ~ to p !nm door .. ___ ad_ top ONLY lb -::fl'*' -'llioy bow ,..._a, to acctpl _, from 1trt.qer1. · A no-nonsense approach to how to deal with life's most dlWcolt and moot rewardln• arrangoment. Ann Landen' booklet, "Marriage -What IO Expect," will prepare you ·for better or for wone. Sen<! Y<>ll' request to Ann Landoni In care ol tho DAJLY PILOT encloting 50 cent.t in coin and a long, stamped, ielf· addresatd envelope. • ' ~ A 'And this i• a lady executive. She is equal to Daddy • He says she is the 'token woman' among the execs. She has a key to the executive washroom. It doesn't fit.' / 6men. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Me!!Ur, OC:IMff n. 1m ""' n EXECUTIVE liJASl-/l?.00"'1. " "• ' ' 'I .. • ! I • I • r , t !- • Potpourri Solves Everyone's Gift List Problem St. John the Baptist Altar Society will sponscr a Potpourri in the school hall. Costa i\1esa ~rom 9 t.m. to, 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 29. The M,mes. Helen Orth, Marilyn Zeal and Nellie Sawka Qeft to ri ght) fill their gift list with items which will be featured in the Trinkets and Treasures shop. '(our Horoscope Virgo: Detour Ahead TUESDAY OCTOBER 24 mitments. Take nothing for granted. Attend to important affairs in person. CANCER (June 21-July 22 \: may be going through emir tional crisis. Know it and be patient. Money question arises in connection with joint ven· ture. Check with Pisces. SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22- Dee. 21 ): Study Scorpio message. Sense of liming may be slightly off target. Take lime to line up sights. Accent Concerted Efforts Agendas Set to Music Philharmonic oolOlogy center, will dlscuu Irvine Terrace PhJlharmonic the latest research flDdings Associates will sponsor 1 with members of the Trojan benefit dinner beginnlng at 7 Guild of Orange County at p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28, in l a.m. Thursday, Nov. 2. Jn El Adobe Restaurant, San the l r vine home of l\ilNJ. Juan Caplstraoo. Larry Robinson. The frvine Philharmonic Committee of the Orange Church Women County Pbllh.armonlc Society Coming of Age is the theme will sell coffee and eold drinks of the Church Women United's Muslc Tucher1' Association of C.llfornla wlll presenl Dr. Malcolm Hamilton in a series of three lectures on Johann Sebutlan Bach on Nov. J, 10 and 17. An authority on Ba· roque music. Dr, Hamilton is on the faculty at the School ot Music, University o! Southern Calllomia. during the intennlssion of the celebnll.lon or World Com· 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; conctrts a.t UCJ. munity Day at 9:30 8.m.I• RTO Tea Friday, Nov. s. in the First Christian Church of Cosla OTERY The Orange Coad.division of M the Retired T e a c h e r s esa. Organization will celebrate the The Rev. Edward P. Allen, "~ s~.!:'EL ~~t.t•:> 25th anniversary of the na-Episcopal Chaplain at UCI, will -Ge•eE•KH - Ilona! association with a tea at be the Jeatured speaker. ,.~:~!;·~.So.".!.': 1:30 p.m. fl.fonday, Oct. 30, In Music Series CwNctt\'t l~·:., 0:,:- the Neighborhood Congrega. The Orange Branch of the m L 1 M St. tional Church, Laguna Beach. con M.-• Ht-ml Speaker for the event la Dr.1 ;=========~======::::::=;~ Robert Gillingham. r Following the tea, Flo~ Clark of the League of Women Voters will conduct a non· partisan study session of ballot proposition!. South Coast A talk on Adventures in American History by Rose Dorrance will be featured when the South Coast Club Of Laguna Beach meet.s at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 1, in the Irvine Coast Country Club. FV Newcomers TheaMualchampagn e luncheon and Christmas Bazaar of the Fountain Valley Newcomers' Club is scheduled for Wednesday, Nov. 1, in the Fountain Valley Community Center. Garden Hints The Monarch Bay Home and Garden Club will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 2, to hear Joe Littlefield speak on Coast Area Garden Hints. Trojan Guild 'WHAT CAUSES PrrnN'G AND BLACKHEADS IN YOUNG PEOPIE? llis peubMI" is COUl8d by an -~ of deed sldn that b&odcl in impuriMs. NotO th. cnm of a mall'• face wt.iar. he shawl. You11 iea no .larve pons at """"" -.i.aw.o --.... -oldn_ iaiw· Now isufh.ms' ii introducing Peel 0 Mattq. cnom becA11••, a nor..obasiw procaoss that tifik> .. s·ttia dry lkin _ on_.,_ gently ond qu;ddy. Cea r, ... .._ -By SYDNEY OMARR Slatistics indicate t h a t Scorpio women show a strong preference for younger men. These women also appear to be more divorce-prone than those born under o t h e r zodiacal signs. Thes is ac· cording to a study made in West Germany by Prof. Rolf Denneel. former director of the 7.oological Institute at Bonn University . You receive offer. It may gli.1· ter but requires more effort than is at first distef.nible Don't expect something for nothing. Sagltlarian could play key role . Go behind scenes. Search for truth. Dr. James A. Peterson, director ol liaison service, University of California g is on seeing clearly. People NEWl"O•T • ,, FASHtOM l!.LANO • Nl!W'°ltT CENTEll • ""',,. MRS. PERGRIN MRS. BURGER Couples Recite Nuptial Vows . PERGRIN-BORCK Jn a single ring ceremony Katherine l\1arie B o r c k became the bride of John William Pergr\n Jr. The Rev. G. J . Busdiecker officiated at lhe ceremonies in the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. Parents of the newlyweds are ~tr. and Mrs. Paul R. Borek o( San Jose and Mr. and ~lrs. John William Pergrin of Cost.a Mesa. Mrs. R. E. Steliga and 1bomas LaShell were honor attendants. Ushers were John F'ry, Paul Fuller and Richard and David Borek. Miss Mary fuller was bridesmaid. The bride attended California State University , San Diego where her husband graduated. He also attended Orange Coast College. They will reside in San Diego. BURGER-SNIDER Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana '4'as the setting for the mar· riage of Diana Lynn Snider and Stephen Paul Burger with the Rev. Charles Smith of· ficiating. Parent! of the bridal couple are Mrs. Barbara Jobbins of Costa Mesa; Robert Snider, Newport Beach, and Mr. and Mrs. John Burger of Costa Mesa. , Miss Sheryl Klemstein was the maid of honor; the Misses Susan and Linda Snider were bridesmaids, and Robin Snider was the flower girl. Robert 1\1ueller was the best man; ushers were John Burger Jr., Steve Kraus, Richard and Mac Harris, and Kirk stone was the ring bearer. The bride is a graduate ()f Newport Harbor High School and now is studying at Orange Coast c.ollege. Her fiance, also a studeot at OCC, is a graduate ()f Costa Mesa High School. He also is serving in the Army Reserves. They will reside in Costa Mesa. WILLETTS-SOWERS Marcia Sowers and Brian S. Willetts exchanged vows in Peek's Wedding Ch a pe I , \Vestminster. Their parents are Mr. and ~1rs. Orlan P. Sowers and J\1r. and Mrs. Har· ry Willetts, all or Midway Ci· ty. Bridal attendants were the Misses Janet Cu mm ings, Sheila Holloway and Leslie Walters, Dale Willetts, Roger Sowers and Kevin Willetts. The bride is a graduate of Fountain Valley High School and attended Golden West College. Her husband attended FVHS. ONE-WEEK SPECIALS! OCT. 23 to OCT. 28 VITAMIN c _ ... .., .. 100 Tablet• \ 250 Tablets Ret-.ilar Mc ( R91-.ilar S2.2t 79c > '1.85 HAIN SAFflOWEI MAIGAllNE '.'~.l!~ ::-1 SPECIAL 39c 400 1.U. VITAMIN I. D'AU'HA ~::.:::-~~. SPECIAL 'S.49 ADILLl DA VIS llCll'! GIANOLA '~~.\!~ ;~1 SPECIAL 69c Coastl in e Health Foods TUSTIN 1094 lnolnt llwd. NNr Saw·On 544-7U4 ' . • ' COSTA MESA Hlllfr•n ~,. 210 I. \1th .,. -fQ7 ARl'ES {March 21-April l~I: Communications re q u i re double-checking. Reservations, directions tend to go astray. Relative at a distance could garble message. Ask Ques-- lions. If answe rs don 't make sense, ask again. TAURUS (April 20.-May 20): Get ready for new challenge. One who made money prom- ises comes up empty. Situa· lion is only temporary. No need to be discouraged. You are learning lessons. Apply them in future. Take in- ventory. Insure valuables. GEMINI (May 21-June 2{1): Cycle moves up and your irr tuition is on target. Mate, partner may be concerned about nothing. However. you should be aware of legal com· ' There'$ Nuttin ' To Crack LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ob- tain hint from Can c, r message. Some of your hopes, wi shes may be revised. You get at facts by studying details. What you learn may not be pleasant but L'Ould prove profitable. Know it and respond accordingly. observe and ask questions. Be aware of public relations. Get '-==========="°"==·="=·='="'="'=v=·="='...,='"=•='=""=o=A=Y·='=''ow='"'=·=·='=""='=•=·=v='="="'"='=;'" expert counsel. Ir vmoo (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Be ready for change of plans -and scenery. GtmlnJ plays important role. You are in bet· ter position than might be assumed. What appears an obstacle is merely a challenge. Family member is sincere but could be misinformed. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Domestic adjustment is in pie· ture. You could be recipient of surprise gift from family member. Accept this as con- cilatory gesture. Long-range plans are subject to change. Be receptive. Happiness is du e. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21): Choose with care -don't rush decisions. One you care for CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You get recognition for past efforts. Be grac ious even if someone asks, "What have you done for me late1y~" Display maturity. You are gaining valuable recognition. It will be worth putting up with some catcalls. AQUARWS (Jan. W.Feb. 18); Creative forces are ac- cented. Express: yourself and imprint your own style. Young person may make outlandish request. Maintain balance, sense of humor. Avoid tempta· lion to be extravagant. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mareh 20): Don't neglect home duties. Basic responsibilities a r e spotl ighted. Thorough ap. proach I! necessary. Complete projects, including h o m e repairs. Older family member will do you a favor. Show ap. preciation. Orange c,unty Adoptive Parents Association Is con- ducting a nut sale which will end Dec. 20. Mrs. James Guile Ocft) and Mrs. Ron Carr ,display pack- ages which may be ordered now. Deliveries will be- gin the first week or November. Proceeds \vill help the program of hard-to-place adoptable children. LARGEST & RNEST SELECTION OF · ONLY FIRST QUALITY FABRlcS . . ' SB% Rayon-30% Polyestor-12 % Flax PERMANENT PRESS - NO IRON APACHE PRINTS Guaranteed Machine Washable. Maa:imum Shrinkage 2 to 3 '/.. 44 -45" Wide ¢ yd. uilted fabrics JERSEY PRINTS Bold designs, vivid florals, popular paisleys, sow right for colorful robes, house coats. Reg. 2.98 yd. acetate ribbed tricot • ' 47 42"/45" wide hand wash yd. II HOUSE OF FllBRICS alway& first quality fabrics ' S.11tfl c .. , Pin• -lrl1h1I ~t Ss11 Dls90 fwy. Hell« rtne -I 7th ti l ri1tcl C•thl M,-. -141·1116 Sate A .. -141·1111 Oro111•hilf Mall -Ortnltlhorpa tncl H1rber 1119" Pflrtt CtttMf -Lt Ptlfl'lt tt Stsnton ,....,.,. -26-2114 -..... ,.,. -1114J1) ..,... .,.,.._ 12111 lrookh11r1t lns•t to 'Von'1l -f'>0·114l H•fltl ... C...... -Ecll119sr tt lsteh l/vJ., H•tltllttfolt IMc.ll-lf7·1011 • .. • I 4 ••• DICK TRACY -'·' _lfl, ...... , .6 .. l 4.I •a TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS ~ ll fr .... NANCY !DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS ... African S•tu~• Puule Solved: ' Farm 1nim1I .. Rid• unm1r• 4 Region ol cifuQy : ancil!nt S•ng Mesopota· " Cash mia; Var. C01'Ulifllf • Shullle 1h1 .. Fish teet 50 E11ptosive: ,. Black bird Abbi. " S1ult Ste. 51 ··-· gin ~---52 Vell•vs " Golf 54 At that nickname "-17 M11surlng 58 -vk:tu1": devices Woe to the '19 Gnatlik• fly conquered Most dog "' Noted .. Fruit • "You 1r1 violinist coocoction ,;ghtl" or Cit 21 Pert of "ro " "Ona ----" • Penian own•• .,. .. 62 G1rni1h-• Dairy 37 Mann1t 22 Comp tu men ts product "' Founteirl point .. MlsceHany 7 Mm11rv employee 2l Kind of ol e11t1'11 le lion 42 Establish opening .. City of •• Teller ol a ;" lntellig1rit Ohio • Merited story 67 P11ewff-: 9 Identical .. Rely on for 26 Feminine Clima11et nlm• Former lO support Dodger 11 Placed 53 Ent1rt1inet: ,. Muticat beneath Informal in111uction1: .. Min of the Abbr. law: Abbr. " Fruit .. PertullnlJ 31 ClimbinlJ 69 lntervanirig: 13 Profession-lo hours ple'lt L•w al ch1rg1 .. Related 32 Sloppy 70 Island in 18 ---of maternally G•-""""' '7 M1kn a person 3J Aulhor 71 " -· 24 Fat-90Nbi. ..... Truma11 ·-··· Miserables" org11nk: 59 Lowly Anglo• 38 Skin layer: DOWN compoulld S111on Suffl• ' Bqok units 25 RuthleK ., "It tuits m• 38 S11n1a ---, 2 AH •• ···: rulers to - ---" • C11tilorni1 T<1king 27 Nickel alloV 62 Teke it on .:is Jacks or everything 28 Downgrade the ---better 1n10 account 30 Article 63 Prealdential, " Flowers 3 Mechanicel 33 G1rmentt nlckneme 43 Man·1 device: " Calendar .. Supetlativ1 nlckn1mt ...... '""" -~. ' ' '~hf • • 7 I ' 10 11 ' 11 " ' 1$ . . ' • , .. . ~ " " lO I ~ n " ;•, " " ,. l7 21 ~ p ;· ., " JO t;:1P• ' » " " • ,. " " .. ;, " .. " .. u~ v -• .. .. -., .. ' " -" • --la-1 N -. -.. ' --•• .9 8UTHOWDO YOIJ~+'t:JI( I FEEL? by Chester Gould by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith :t DON'T, EllJr YOU \\AVE 'THE RAZOR! by Emie Bushmiller OKAY-LET'S MAKE IT A QUICK GAME PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER UPSET W\IEN ME OISCCN!RS THAT TANYA HAS LEFT THE POLICE STATION, LEE BOR<:iSOH WAVE.5 DOWN ACAB! MISS PEACH I PuruR!O 1'RAIN- $URGEON7 Of AMERICA MftT ~'RE PERKINS ' • • DOOLEY 'S WORLD ' -aMIPANY. •• ,(J£Ql.<f&NT:. [;fV!S/oN. •• SALLY BANANAS P~.i.6.ai ~ ~. GORDO -IB<Rr ,,,., ''"' oveq1 MOON MULLINS .. 1-•~T •• .,,,, ___ _ ------' ------ ANIMAL CRACKERS ~STERD/>11, ALL l. DID l!lA5 6RAZE ... -------..,.., by Harold Le Doux I DON'T KNOW! THE SAME THINC::I PLEASE, LEAVE FOR YOUR HU&6AND? ME ALONE! by Mell -00 VOJ MEAN ,.0 THINK WITH, "" 10 WOftK ON? b John Miles Moooay Octobc.r 23, 1'1/2 DAIL V PILOT J 5 -'~~~~~~~~~~~~= by Ro9er Bradfield ..------- by Gus rriola I by R09er Bollen THE GIRLS "The ditt rm on I should be out tbert with them." DENNIS THE MENACE ' I I ' ' I SAW nus /KJll(; ~EN I w.4S )tl(IA' Jl6I; .'. l -' .. DAILY ,lLOT TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS KTLA o 7 00 -"1\ Lion is in the Streets." Jan1es Cagney as :i po\\'erful .pallti~ian in this 1953 \ movie. Barbara Hale, Anne Francis. NBC o 9:00 -"They Mi ght Be Giants." George c. Scott and Joanne \Voodwa rd st ar in thls 1971 movie about a former j u dge who belie ves he's Sherlock 1-lolmes. ' ABC O 9:00 -The Rookies. Willie Gillis sweats out an investigation into the death of a colleg~ sturlent during a search for pro1,1,.\ers at the uni· versity. KHJ (J 10:00 -In Search of Reality The !\111erican lnchan. 1\ doct?n1entary on the American India ns o f Southern California and their atte1npts to adapt to urban \vays a nd retain their heritage. Jay Silverheels hosts. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening OCTOBER 23 ''"00 ®l ID !lJ ,.., O '9ilde11se "01y GI Thi Or11on·• 0 (])CJ) CiE MO!ldl1 Ni11rt "' Foolb1U M1nnesoll Vik1nliS vs. Chi c110 81111. 0 Wild Wild West m Thi Flintstones m S-11 Pyl1 USMC {ij) C.mKOMnd1s fB Ml Dllkei b 1morld1 m Hod11pedp loci" QJl M1,0.ny IFD 1 a:> LI Slpnd1 [lpesa EE TJirt1 Stooc1s &:JO (I) cas Ntws (1§1 Mtri i;r1tt1n Show m And)' ;,!ffilh m CllH1111'1 bllfld (ij) CA£: Usina T11ts lntelli11ntl1 £0 M1kin1 Thlnp ;rew m Jottne C.non Shtw a c.--Acra a!) ,.. .. r.lklll m o.t 1.2,,. m Little ••tuls aauom..., I 0 M-.: (C) (Zlw) ..... li1111 Is Int tht Sblftl" (dr1) '5l-J1mes C.1- ney, B11tJ.r1 H1l1. Annt Fnncis. (!) Wild llf• Thi.tr. "Thty live by Wtler·· 0 Wllll'1 MJ Lin17 ffi I low• Lucy (!) I Ore1m ol Jt1"nll \ •• 811101 '72 Et) Fray Ol1bllllt E.T) Whitis, Kilns 1n• C11y "Porct· 1 ~1n" I rn [I Allllf TI•M CM• .. Mul•r I Q!l MowM: (C) "flti&ht r.Gpll" a;) Rew. lq f'lwrr. w ..... - Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES - A tormt1 Judie believes llinutU to be Sllerlix.k Holmes, m1inlainint a police l1bol1tory in his New Yori! 1partmen1 ind drnsin1 in the m1n- ntr of the famol.ll fic:tio111I sleuth. His scllemina: brother &ets the judrt's behavior as the perfect tlCUMI !Gr havina: him committed, thereby 111mn1 COfl\rol Ill the hm- ily fortune. 0 Forum k•in1 t6J Tht Ad .. nlurtr 0 CIJ CiE TIM Rooliies "The Be11 That Didn't Get Up" Wiiiie Gillis (Mkh1el Ont~ean) SW1ats Gut an in· westi11tion into th• dtllh of 1 col· 1t11 student which occurred durln1 1 se1rth for prowlen 11 ihe uni· wersity. llQ) Mo.it: (C) .(Ziii') "TM Clla111- p1p.1 MunNrs" (du) '68-Anthony PeA.i11$, Mturice Ronet. m f'tl) Tetefun ffi U11 Yer1no hn Record11 9 The Yi11inl1n al) Dr11111 1:30 U Cl) Doris D1y Sl!ow Oous t1ies to colltct an Gld debt in 01der lo saw Mr .orhUy aoods and her job. A roun1 married couple "del1ull on ii lo.in Gn which Do1is was their CO· s11ner ind she must 111se $1100 1a pay off lhe lo.an Of !>tt her pos- !>tuions 11t1dled. (j) )11!1 WayM Thtrtrt "Tiie M1~ Frtim Utah'" om News (j)leoll l•rt EID TllirtJ Mi11uttt Wlttl ••• 1:45 ffi Su Comedi1 FaVOfitl U:OO 0 ~ (l'lyi) '!14 -DIM Cl1fl, Belittdl LH. l:IO • .,_.. Mtlf" (dr1) '56 - Dttlllk O'KrMf .. , ... O'ltkll. ''"m""' "" _.. <..., .,._ J•mn MllOl'I, Cl•lrt lklom. '"'8""" -" ....... (WI) '51>4'1Mtftt P!b. El1t11 Dl'fll. "......,.,. .. (•dvJ ·•1 -,,,,. G11dMf, f rtd M•cMifr.,. t:IO 0 (C) "lt'dltr If flltltnl" (dr1) 'Ss-Gl11k Glblt. Slnln H.,.,11d. 10:.0t (I) "All'nst All f1•'rs" (ld'v'J '52- tmil rlrnn. M111t1t~ O'H111. • '1,111 ''* 1MI~" (lllfli} "?.~I Jltl11 1r1l1n4, Honor Blttltl'l•n, 3:00 (Cl ";oodby1 Cll1111t" P1rt I ('0111) '64 -Ton1 C~1t11 (fOi (C) ''flit 1Mp1I H11llllrtll Milet" (d!t) '67-DoY& McCl1111, • DAILY ,,Lor Sttff .,.. .. 'Take Me Away ••• ' • Bit Jtlaclaitae ~putters Simon's. 'Prisoner' Confined by Script By TOP.1 Trrus New York oewscaster relating °' n.. 011r,-,.not ,,.,. "THI .:;:.q:~~lf~.f.· s E c 0 N ° f the latest local disaster, such All right, kids, b r a c e it '!r.'-,f:tr=-~1~mi:!· ~~ as Governo r Rockefeller be.Ing yourself; time for a UtUe sha t· c y1,M 111v A~ne": svil:i-:1~ ,,.._:i· mugged or a P olish (what tering of some old cherished ,,Y:i,11v 1111:.at MOnd•v lflr«l!lh Nov.,u e'""1) ahlp cr .. ""1 .... into the 11 !M AlunlMOll lhel,,_, In Ille Of ~ _... .. image11. You've been through A~•• Mi;slc Ctnllr. Jt""rv1t1011• Statue of Uberty. $anta Claus and the tooth ~~!E•;nn.TH• usr Art C••11ev It is Somack, boweyer, who fairy already, right? Well , now Edn• e~on t11rt1ior11 ••rrl• sums up the whole thing when Id bell lh l N ·1 Hirrv EdllOl'I Jae~ Soma<.k · will wou you eve a e1 Peirt Jt ur11 '•roolow he breaks into a ess argu- Simon is actually capable of ~~7... Aosiv~"'Ai~::~~ ment among his sisters and writing a bad play? remarks, "I can't believe what No, no -nol just a he loses his job and his I'm listening to.'' Welcome to relatively weaker play in com-upstairs neighbor treats him the club. parison to his string oC annual like l.Alugh-ln used to treat 1-';~jliliiii~~---~ Beth Tit us conjures up visions of lea ving the theater to go duck shooti~g. \\'hile husband J ack Ogbor n beams his approva!: in this seen~ from the Irvine Co1nmunity Theater comedy "Li ght Up the Sky, on stage Fridays and Satur- days through Nov. 4 al the Jlu1nanities Hall Playhouse. comedy hits cun up over the Judy Carne. All of this results I past dozen Broadway seasons, in a typically upbeat Simon but a real. honest to goodness finish, you might imagine. clinker. It's called ''Th e Wrong. He winds up with Prisoner of Second Avenue" a nervous breakdown and and it's oo the Ahmanson $25,000 in debt. stage in Lo.s Angeles through Some fun, huh? Well, for a Nov. 25. while it really is. since Simon It's difficult. if not im-still stands as the master of possible, to imagine that Neil one-line gagsmansltip, such as Simon could actually be Carney's retort concerning uneven, pedestrian a n d burglary Insurance: "You get Two 'Occasional' W ester11s downright tedious -even if he robbed and it C98ts twice as wanted to. But "Prisoner" is much to protect half of what all that and more. If it had you used to have." That's the been written by an unknown old Simon shining through. playwright, it wouldn't have THE" WHOLE play, in fact, lasted two weeks in New York. might heve been sa]vagable Worth Viewing This Season ''PRISONER" IS Simon's were it not for the I~ noble attempt to write a black terminable second scene of the comedy, to encroach on ter-second act in which Carney's ritory a lready staked out by brother and three sisters come the likes of Murray Scbisgal. to reluctantly extend a helping It succeeds only in resembling hand. Jack "Spicy Meatball" what might have happened to Somack has some c u t e "J .B." if Arehibald MacLeish moments here, but the Ude's had decided to get a few running against him. JOE DALLESANDRO AND-SYLVIA MILES IN ''HEAT'' RATEDX By JAY SHARBUTT NE\Y YORK (AP \ -Tv.·G new television Westerns are 1-1.•cll 1-1.·orth inspecting this }ear. but you'd better have a friend addictt'<i to checking program listings. The shows aren't weekl y events. The only thing one can safely say about ' ' H e c ftamsey" and "Kung Fu" is that the former appeats once or twice a month on Sunday at NBC and the latter once a month on Saturday at ABC. The networks say four •·Ramsey" and three ';Kung f"u" episodes are finished. But ABC says no dL>Cis1on has been n1ade yet on Fu's future. NBC is wailing to see if "Ramsey" s111 r HiC'h:ird Boone wants to do more shows and if the ratings warrant it. The indecision is maddening because both shows are preuy good. "Kung Fu" checked in last Saturday night. It starred David Carradine .as R wan· dering Western mystic whG carries a week's supply of pro- fundity but no pistol. CARRADINE IS "Caine" - Kwau Chang Caine, a half- C hi n es e, half-American graduate of a Chinese school where kung fu is taught. Kung fu is a blend ol philosophy, judo and karate. The students :ire told never to use il except for peace of mind or dire emergency. 'Forty Carats' Cast Listed for Fullerton Orange County's third pro-Ga ry Domanski. duction of ''Forty Corats" this "Forty Carats" \vtll open season wlll be presented next Nov . 10 for three weekends, month by the F u 11 er ton playing F ridays and Saturdays F'ootl ighters. who have an· at 8:30 in the Muckenthaler nounced the cast for the J ay Center, 119 Buena Vista Drive. Allen comedy. \jfF=u:n~";':•n;.~:;:~~~~;=j\ Directing the play will be MitcheJI Sanford, who left the lead ing role of the La Mirada ~mo production of "Forty Carats" to fill the directorial shoes left vacant by Tony Brandt. (San- rord 's replacement in the La ~1irads show, which opened last weekend. was Ron Filian. a v.•ell-knov.•n actor al t 11-•JAOl -••-i.1....._ I.II• hlo -OI. S41!G Co,,ta Mesa and Huntington Warren Beatty Beach playhouses. I Faye Dunaway Paul Nelson heads lhe "Bonnie and C"'de" riullerton cast as the fortyish IJ divorcee pursued by a young also frGl man nearly half her age. Steve McQueen \Vllliam Bergman. Stanley Jacqueline BisHt Scott and Betty Stromquist In also are 1 .. 1ured. "Bullitt" Completing the Footlighters' 1:~~~~~~~~~~~ cast will be Sandie Brown, Lisa Wolf, Skip Ne I son. Florence Ehlers. N a n c y Callaci. Nick Bonaker and Thi Oir1ct0t of "S11""""' of '42 .. Rob1rt M11lliq111 brirtqt wo~ •hi• w••r'1 top 1u1p11111 fh rill11 - "THE OTHER" oJY ,_ ...... Redgrave • Jacloon \f,1111 f)1u•1•11 of S 1111 .. ,1,.1»1no1 111.U)t 'ltcllf'l(ll.llf• • fA~.l'fNOl'I • ..,_ Showtlme: 7:00 p.111 . -olM- Caine has come \Vest with a price on his head -$10,000 alive. $5,IXXI dead . The bounty \Vas posted by a Chinese emperor angered b e c a u s e Caine had to kill a royal nephew in self-defense. He meets a young boy whose fat her has been slain by marauding Indians who also carried off his mother. Caine and boy run into baddies on the trail who suspect they are carrying cash. laughs out of it. Barbara Barrie as his sym- SouU1ern Californians will pathetic wife is the epitome of love it, however. It paints a what Simon obviously had in gruesome, frightening picture mind for the play -a real of that Devil's Island call ed person reacting nonnally· to a Manhattan -sort of a sequel real situation. No separations to Simon's movie "'The Out of and last-act recoociliations, Towners." giving the native but a human being with New Yorkers their turn in the character and empathy. Well barrel. done. But as a piece of pro-BlIT REALITY is forced to ••• ,.,1 .... ,. ,.,,, ................ ,. WilKDAYI 1141 H•w•U•111-J H-n-f1U H-1H•111-l II 11 H11wll~;41 II t14I CHARLTON llESTON . '!· 1\IE HAWAIIANS" Threats emue. Caine could kung fu them, but a film flashback brings the advice of the headmaster of his old school: "The supple bough does not contend against the ~torm. yet it survives." And so fo rth . Tt sounds just a\\·ful. but the show has a stately. stilted Oriental charm about it that works if the viewer is willing to accept the mystic spirit. fessional p I a Y w r i t i n g , compete with comedy techni- "Prisoner of Second Avenue" que through much of the play, doesn't quite make it, with nr and this is why "Prisoner'' \Vithout comparisons lG the never really succeeds in either legion of past Simon suc-department. Embellishing the resses. It is basically a situa-script between scenes is a lion comedy and the freshnes!' 1 . ...:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~--of the single situation wears off before the first act curtain. J~. second act is unbeli•,.bly Andg War ha I EVEN THE considerable talents ol Art Camey in ·a Piii.iii virtuoso roJe cannot save WEEKDAYS "HEC RAfl-1SEY,'" which Simon's sour script from 6-8-10 aired Oct. 8 and returns Oct. itself. Cam ey plays e modem 29, fea tures Boone as a J . B .. frapped in a high rise sardonic, shaggy 1901-model apartn1ent where the tem- lawman moving from the code perature is 89 degrees outside of the Old West to scientific and 12 inside because the air detection in New Prospect, conditioner only kno~·s one Okla. speed -high. He is chief deputy to th e Before long, he has a fC\\' New PrOSPf:CI police chief -a more problems on his mind. young whippersnapper -and His apa rtment is burglari:zed, has a.trunk fu~I of outlaw files. ~~ chemicals. microscopes, test __ tubes and bullet-comparison J gear. . . . . -' ... "A MASTERPIECE!" _.., _,AUl D. llftllilEltMll/ll &.aa # ......... I JiAlll' SAT. SUN. MON. 2 4 6 a& 10 I l'ICIURE i!!i I 111111111 ~c:..~ ...... ll--------_::::::::::::!:c::.---:-_-_ _______ _ ~~11 ENDS TUESDAY Orion WeltH "TREASURE ISLAND" ,, .. "KING ELEPHANT" CONTINUOUS TODAY froM 2 p.m. --CtNEODMl 21 --~~l'-.1~~ --··· -:.ill•• $TADIUM•2 II~ ·~~ - - -c ••• SIA0/3M ·3 ' ' .....• -- - I I I · 1 I Times :~ "CATCH" -6:00 &-10:10 "PICTUlllE" -1:01 ..... Mir""., ...... " ''THI GODl'ATHI!•" I•) • "l"OINT ILANIC" {Ill ''TJIEASUJll: ISLAND'' 10 1 • Ll11 MIMIH "CAIA•IT" (fOO) • "SWllT CHA•ITY" • t ACAl(Wf AWAflt Wl•lttt ......,~·-~Do< .. ··---·-· 4"• NlchOIQo .. Alexendr• • "BAD COMPANY" IS GOOD COMPANY. GO SEE IT "BAil COMPANY" .... ltOlllf1 #llffc.11111\. ltlj l r'ldttl ••• ,.,., ·-"THI 0000 GUYI ANO ,.H. SAO auv1•· 'I Matinee Monday All U.A. ThHtrMI 1tklt1rd H•rrh "CltOMWILL" 11th lft Ctllfl l'GI o...dlltr '11111 Dl"~~IJll "ILACULA" • Now TIIMll l'Vt911ayl "OONE WITH TMa WINO" 111 Ctltrl lOI W.i. "•11 A ltk• oey_y .. • " ; I • ~ < f • , ' r • :i j ' • t • I ' ' t • • ' ' For the Recor d ~~~~~anas. Mt. -~ J~ ~ fo\ .. L "° c...,... St., Coe•• IMM. •• M<. ::!.. "'l-. .91'!!! ~ ... "" w. Marriage Licenses Mr:".:C.1t£:L-.":id ~~-, '~!."" -' ""· :=: ..... ·.n.~.. . . .,,, l*lK•La..T•INOaL -l4clf, i. wry ,,,,,.s.nw_:1ot LMW":'&1t Mna. rr.· · Jwt $MQll, 11, 1M hrwrl L.w •• Mn. Ctw. ll:. Ftidl: M. T~ ta t1o1f1 of Hvntt-~~ M IY ton!,.lllboto ttl.wl.. !llrl • ., _,,.,. r. 111'1111 Mtt. l(tiWMltl 'M,. ~. •OflLll L-Ol.IV.t.ltES -lffl, t. *'I KllYll\ LIM. Hlolll:lfllttol'I hid\. TllMIM Stofftl. 54. ot SOVltl L..,.r11. boy. ' •P'td e:tt!tl (tf91yn Ollvar1t. Sf, Mf.,.,.,!!:'d SC:""' a. Oru!Mr tN2 Of $M J!WI taoitlr-. ie'i(Ji, , von Dl'lw, Hunt\1111tan LAMll•T-MINCMI; -$WI. 2, Jolwl A. t , 1"2 L1Ml)frt, J7, of Moru., •net MlorHy11 M&,.!!!". ~· s. Ruiiofllft ......... ,,,. J. Minor.,., ol WntmlMler. ";NJ',;;;.'• An...,.,. MATHll•~THE•S -lip!. :L A\ovaf ,.tlm ~~coit:'t.':M~~A. CJllttft Dolen 11\All'ltn. & ..-rrled IN 1!!111 Mn. M V W"' > ,.,....,,, '"'°""' M11t1tn. s1. bOtll ot N.,,u .. fi"!!""'· Downtov.) .... • Hlll!llnOfOn IM(~ ~ ~Nfr J.J, ~ :lffC2 MHICl(.9•0Wfol -s.o-t. :L GerdOll r 1~ ' ' A'11kil. •· ft "'MY io-. <11, botll Mrw.= ti:;~ P, WW. '511 "' CW. MIN. Mr _,.. Mf'L OAM 09I MM, •lrl. ttOU.OWAY.W.091MlON -s.,t. ), 1m; StrMI. f!"\..S.~· "° W. ArttM' C. Hdiowey, •• and Judltf\ Mr, Ind M... 1~1 '~ Ml ,,,,,,. RoM-. n. llllth ot Cost• Vkttl1t s-· . n ·-. ..._ -~r: ' .. , .... y • • W.M!~-5-~~c.,.r-., •··. PEDRO.C•IM,. -s.ol. '-la9by R.., _....n1 ...,., "' ..,.. ......,.., 11. ot INlftt. .... I(~ / f'••ll• ()lreau bfl Bil l(ea11e ~'It btoke. Now o ll 1 hove is o yo." ..,_ CrLmo, 20. of Corw WI Mtr. ~-0r~"'r'c Jf"'" E. a.rt.111. 1"°5 GOMElQ.ISUltll -,.,,,. ~ •fll'l'Ntld ·~ ~jrif'" Dlll'lfl ~r IL of IJolllld, Wld M,. Ind M111. o.-11 W ~ Mathias Foe 1(1•1'1", J,.HORfUl -Ol'lld lllt!N> 3201 Cll'f' Sh'Mt. H....,_i BNC:~. Qlrt' Mr. W Mn. Wll1~11m E. HlnU. rilo w: 1=.,,A.sLn -51111. J, Otonltl M. MrLI Vtlt, 12', °'"t'T.• ~lrl. ---------------------- 11°'4, 25. ol Hllnt!MIOll a-11. tN:I M1=.r.Mo:i~eo.i."~~'. .. OilOI'• • Lis 1i1tlty, %2, 0 I ""-· Ind Mrt.-Rlttwird llio«el1, •1n Wfttmlmttf\ •n Drlvw, llnafol\ Bffdl, otrl. JUDICE<ARl"lllr(Tf.• -5tPt S. Mr. tnd Mn. ~·it. Burns. lf'312 Artt.ur JtmM JI.diet, Sl. of Hlln-:,~.,.,. u ... , ~tll!Cfton lllKll, llf\otOll ~ Mid M.IWl"tt A. N,, and Mn. Minh aw 60N Sierra '-"fW, ... of ~ Bndl. slenM ltOl'd. 1rvr,,., ol•f. KfllSY, JttMOfl:•ll -D t YI d ~ 7, 1t1l "'°"" .. 101 l!NI ...... rt, /Utt. Mt,. fftd M,... Ml(l>MI M•••· U2" U.S ... ~If.I .... •Dllll'f'n C11'Gt. 1'J, .. ~ UM, MtUlfln vi.10. a.rt. SQ $t1f1 a.rnan11no, Ntwpllt1 ltldl. Mr. AAd Mn: Wllhtfin Sorll(tlmner, OLLILA-QDHCA1. -Edwens.Jacob. 20. M~.:.t~'°:i~t~~"'°VH.n t2t w.11:, l<rwnt, Cotll """' tnd AlleflUoe, Hunff11111kltl &ucl'I, gLr1. ~Jo,; 1 .. IM4-S Sal\tl Alli Avt.. Mr. Ind M,.., Donald G. Clark, 2JDS COltl Mello, SI, Gtf'tNdot Pl-, Stnlt Arwi, tiov. IUE•-lAMA•ANO -•O(ltl" Gltn, 2G, Mt.;.•nd Mr1. 0.W.111t1 F. N-.11'11111•, 10402 " '551 W, W•rfltf". H11nltn<flan 8HCll vollll. ~ "Mlinll llll\ 8 h bov Ind Alltlt L't""', :II), 6'11 H11tnl ~;_'J'd11M,...'Rolf N~G1•!1\'":~V.,,. •fa2 Ayt., Wel!PlllM!.... .....,, "'' Hunt!""""' 8Nr". OOy. DllMONTE-OENNIS ~ J. 11111 Mr. •nd Mrs. Jetfrov Colt. 141:)2 •-·-.. .... C ioo H•""""nd W11v, Tu1tl"· bov .,..,_,., • .....,,.,., A1tl. ' M•. tnd -"\rt. Gr11v W. JiftMn. 110 ,....._-. BHC:fl and s.ndfa J-_, It, T-Sfrett, C°'ll Mn.I, otrl. Sky's the Limit, Says Candidate m Vlctorla. Allt .•• I.In Clenlenlt. ~-•nd M,... ltoberl Dtel< .... '20\'f w. f'HOM,\$.aAJ(Tl!R -fitllbtrt E.rt, 22. '7hfll"lll. Slon•• Al\I, tol'1 Mil TM'ltnl ...... c. """ll""tan Mr. Mid Mn.. 0-. E"'"-· 2'l03 Frum Wire Services •MCti • Del1• s ..... 1•· 1"'1 s..ii. :;;.'-"' "-· 111_._. a&lldl, The Democratic candidate !Mitt, l'-1~(" VIII...,. OdtMf' t. l"t COOL~LINGWORTH -Alfrtd Mr. •net Mrt. JIC~le WTlllRml. "'" for the congressional seat °""-ir • ..,I SUn Vllll•'f' Drlvt, Stltt.lill t>rl...., Huntlnotan 8MC.,, f the 18th ~-· t VI nt L1911M lffdl lll'ld Lor•'"' E11t1i.. bolo rom ..,..,,nc , Def! ti', ..,.1 11111 v11i.r Drtvw. Ugunt M• •Piii M..,_ .,_ P-1". 1•112 o---Laverv, challenged his GOP the Thomas h-fore Storke Professorship and be endowed by Storke's widow, Marian, and by the Thomas More Storke Foundation. htdl ml1111 ~. Huntlng!Ofl &Md!, tiov. • ,, SCMAuL-eoYA•D _ Sltol'*I JllMf'I\. opponent, Rep. Bob Mathias, AristoUe 8 n d J acqueline "· , ... W. -.Arlm. A¢."·""'' Dissoluti~n.. to a paracbuie 1·ump """ •net ~ .. J-. -. 4111 .,, a · Kennedy Onassis celebrated ,.,.,_, Hvlltl""°'1 e.Ktl. Lavery, a former Army th · I urth edd. ADAM.t-ADAMS -L-4MICI Jll•'ff· 111 eir 0 w mg an- m ",,..,"" 111.ar1orc.o. Apt.,, Lao11n• .A# .. a-t-ge paratrooper, has accused nlversary with a private party "'"' w Loutw Ot"tc•. "· m VI ir• • • .,... Mathias, a former Olympic Avwnidl MaorlCM:•, "Pf. •· 1.-"""' at the Elmorocco night club in Hiib decathlon champion, of using N y k nev:wALKIR -Emnr LlllC!My, 26. Odllltr u thl ew or . '°'' APKM RDt<I. wes1m1ns1 ... •nd ~~=~~·~~ .~rrzrRow "· his a etic ability as a· More. than 60 guests at- Debtll• K•'f'• JO, 60tl APICht Rd., MIVNlt. F Mid .t.rtt1w e. political tool. tended the party for the couple BRYANT·•ct•KLANO -""'WI Brvc•. tct1tn, ,_... M. 1nd J~. nee 8 8-' re uses in a private room of the plush Wm!n'1111ttw. ~UdHI, 'f' H. Ind John H. "SI M lhi f to 21. IDt e:. <k"K'I St .• ""'' ""' Ind 115, T"°"'" L. Mid Dorottlv M. deba•· the ..... ,, bef-e the Holly RH. 17. IC2t'l Mtlrlc, llecio. Fi.• •nd A/ICll'ff H..-rwindeJ:. .., -"' Manha ttan night club. Wt11mln5W. H~ Shtllt RM Mid FrllL ,----------A ... Mr SPE''···•·WILSON _ Freet w!lll•m. McDoNI . X..n"' •1'111 Rober! J. ( ) mong w.n:: guests were s. ..,.. Gibbs, Jlmmlt L i ncl Cl'Mrtn fit. Qna · f "-. 2A. tS'5 ~·· F111111t11n v .. 1.., W•bOn.,. CO....t.tnell. L •1'111 wHU•m D. PEOPLE · ssis' o r m e r moun:r-1n and "'l'Wnl• M111t. 20. t56l °'~' J I u -n --K-~ he A,,.,. LI-ti.Ill V1llty. f-~!:'!!~ ~~-tnd"CW'OI fl. _ 8W -o.u<>~ ... ~ -Yi r-GODl'REY·kEN NON -o a"•• d oo;.rn: ~f.~.: ~:;:: ~.,.J.-.,_ rormer sister-in-law, M r s . ~:,:· ~~c~~ ~~~·i "~~~..o.::~.F•,:'1R~91:'T~· people of th1·s district, I he-by Jean Kennedy Smltb, and her Geflldll\t, Jt. ,..,., c*""•t« cir. '+!i 1tm wniow lll'ld Sl'llr1tv """· •'" sister, Princess Lee RadziwUI. ci.. """11"'"1111 e.llCll. g ..,,_, t"'" •1'111 J-. challeng• him to a free fall •105-WALKE• -Dtvld fit~ 21, •'*-. Mlllnd.9 J. Ml<:! W•mt e. ..A. _A. A _, coaii. "'""·· Apt .•••• co.t• 1c11110, J-R. •1'111 Lortlrit M. jump from 20,000 feet. We'll w w w ~ .-s.-ty EINn. 11. 1401 w. Andtr$0rt. Jova L Ind Rootrt PMll. bo pull he · rd A city park in Indianapolis S ··--...., .,.. ~-~-_.1t1mtr11 o. see w s t rip co • .. ....,. .. _, • · u~~· ll:Dbwt• Lwltt. 1nc1 1t11ue11 I " La d was d-•,·cated to and named ELLERMAN~EI -Crlt Mktwotl. Jt ast, very sai . cu ,., 11u. ""°""""'' ""'·• ""'· u , ca.1• l!Ol!Qtn. e."-1"' J. 111111w...!.-.. E•-~·-A -"-A for the late 1·azz guitarist Wes MtM el\d Llndil Rvtti, It, nioJ ~· ~ •• ,_ -).-.{ ).-.{ ).-.{ s,J!vr~Lu . Mton1o E"£~ ~tftd Unv o. A Brookings, S.D. man who M:lantgomeryRichard' who diGed inLul968. tt'"*'*1. 211. a oodtoo.i. c:os11 .no.~L •nd~rv. is a prisoner of war in North yor · gar -.., •nd 0ttorw card .. 'ZS. m 0r-. M. 1tr111 W1Hi.tn T. Vtetnam bas been sent an dedicated the park in honor of ~. Coll• MMll-°"'""-• J. 1nc1 JOIMi w. Montg ti ol •-Aus1111us.sEMlON -floblrl Br\K'I, u , Wo!font, J-1 e. lll'ld ftOl'lllO e-. absentee ballot to vote in the ornery. a na ve ur '' ... --•~ '°' ·-Sltrn, Mtrllvn Ant> lll'ld Jtct; lrvt"'!. d. lis .. ._ .... ~ ...... • Oslund, s.ndr1 LN 111111 J11mn wm11m. November general election. ianapo · a.._ tnd Stftdr• Jaf, tl, •7'2 ~ &trnkt hi.Arlt 1nd O•YW * * * w,,,.,., ""'· u"'. ~ 8Ndl. croc:t!'lt. .1.:M Force Capt Jerome D WEIX.tM·ROIBINS -Ktvlft Rict.nl, K._ Stftllno RllV tnd MlchMI l'UJ • • 20. "1 E"""" Ortvt, u. ._._ 1n11 ~' BHren, rt, submitted an ap-Andres Seg:ovia, the world's H.itn J..,_tlt, JD, 2 s • o 1 oe...... 1, lie lion f •---tee ballot I ••-· ~. M1u1tr1 vttto. • ~K•""'"" LoutM .m wa1ttt-LM. P a OJ" an au;icu ea ........... classical guitarist, was c1L•ERT~Av -Gvy .,_, n. • Chrntirit 1nc1 1r1 .. w. Aug. 30, 12 days before he was m· 1·ured In a ta · h · 21102 ~ ''··'""'· A. H~.., "ti-A. •net Flovd A., Jr. XI eras m -nMfol'I 8etttl _. P•lrklt Hitt!!,''· ~ --~-:!J"'!J."Ro. shot down whlle on a mission London's West End, doctors 1001 s.11 s1 .• o«'lltn ~. ,,_~ Ml L .. wo "•· over North Vietnam. report-• H I le led MtlMTDS)W'EPtN -Jlltlft "~ ~ RttiaceA l . Mid ~ L t:U-e a r cance m e._i,. c"""' ••· ~rtlOWL P11rk1a hi.Arlt lll'ld ,.,111ot1 The ballot was mailed by part of his European concert ~'~ 0:, ':, °:!:k.:~· ..... .!I!!!'!:. ~Jo •nd Affr..i L-1••· the Brookings County auditor's tour. WHEELER·VAN DE• BC*Oli~-~l't~':' ,~._. Mlrwll office to an Army post office The 79--year-old span is h fl:odrlty, 11. m W•• MllA. ~ D. Hid¥ • I Sa F · · I Tusn" and Je11n e11111bttt1, S4, f741 iC!~' .w. tlld COtile Jo. n n ranctsco. mus.tc an was taken to a Tutllf>. Mt. 11. COat• Mesa. , a.I• Dotti end Mlrvln A -A. A hospital sufferjna leg injuries. HULL-MCMINN -••lph Ln~. n. tJ(Wlf. w u -;,.[ •-e 1nn ao1w cn1u. Aflt. "· H~ tt.1-. v.n D-~nt H. Dr. Joba Bardeen, who won Segovia was a passenger in 9.-.:ti Mia °""" J-. "· '" l"ln.. Htl~W ~ H a Nobel -'•• for physics in a taxi involved in a collision S~ Dr., S.11111 AM. WJ~... • J r1 ·~· C •' -COLE-MAY -Tlmottlv P1u1. 11. ui1 -·, • • f f th with lwo v·•1·c1es. 81_.., oll'"dtn ~ •nd Dttw. c.D11o. ~ ~ Ml JtnnY 1956 or dlscovery o e cu J-11, 1no1 Asl'I s1., Hvftllnotcwi •"'"'· transistor, &>uldn't get his A ..A. ...A-IMICt\. • O'O.y, !<dWlonl L.w lflCI 811l't>tl't A. d to U U U cOHEM<W\NBURN _ ....,...,. tMnf. Hl•1.""'"'Mtrie ·~°"" aue1. transistorized garage oor Jalllff L ~•--aa of Spokane ''· "° Mlf'uk:o. i..-94'ldl _, ~~~· r:;,u. ltldJ • ..., ~~. • bis • ~ MtmdY ,,._, 31, '90 ~ e,.......,U, 11nhA1W1tlld~Jr. open the day he WOO sec· apparently fits the hijacker i..,... IMle1'. • Ric"'"' v. _.-A~ M. ond Nobel in physics. profile. BERG-LAKe -Jolwl W•ll«, g, 1!701 • Jl<lWt P. tft(I c..........i J. O!Oci···-from the Ua1·vers,·1y '""." VllMDt w.,, ..... IL TVtlln --CM"04 Ind HKtor G. °"'" On recent trips to the East •nd Lm•11n Gertrvdt .... ,,~ w-. ~lU:;:· LMonnt J-111\d J•mn or Jlliools, who bad gone to Coast Apt. cr.e.: Huooillrlgton BMcfl. ~""" e w J-L. B rd , •-··--1 Cb , he said. he was pulled ROBE•TS-U.HILL -Iii•• fit.,, 21, •• Chrli"""' E. •ncl ht« E. a een s llUWIC n am-out of lines of passengers nn E--. wnlmlnltw lll'ld 1t11tr, Bt111tr• J. _. Hlln"Y e. paign, had to drive him to · euut1o11t1 en..,, tt. en VI• u. Quin-Kl!Otb. oorb a. anc1 1£mest. waiting to board planes six i.. vortM L1~ Gvlrto. ,..,. e>t11 11nc1 J-J. work. 11·mes and uesti ned tUCKER-OREEN -SM(Nn Cttf11, 13, fUn'ltf', C.l'DI J . tnd JOMDll ltkl'Yrd. ..A.. _A_ _A_ q 0 · 2'-lll .,_ cllmllll. s.n Jw" u. M¥'Cht, l'....-r1dl, Jr. Mid ~rv e:. w W W Kieran is a fJight instructor C-'•""-Mii ,,,.,.., Jot. 21. 11'6J W•ktht. StMrret Ar1111111c1 eon.id LM' The memo"' o( Tbomas M. al Spokane c 0 mm u n 1· t y Gftn St., 0.n:IM Qrwt. Bl~p, Hvlt ll:Olt Incl Wltl Im ._, . GALLAHEft·JOSEPH -W11t11m Jatwi. Smith Cl•Udle Rost lflCI Douot•• Joftn. Storke, late Pulitzer Prize. College and a Federal Avla-- •1. nt s. cituc11n1 st., AMlwlm Md "~ Kl""" tne1 Rldltrc1 D winning N•bllsher of lhe Santa tlon Administra11·0n p 1· I 0 1 1.ou1 .. Mlrlt, U. 14151 ANml St.,, LM. Roc:Mi1e tftd o.nnv cunk. · r-MktWl't ctty. Bnt1K11t "'""'' IC. llM K""""1h c. Barbara News-Press, will be certifi. u· · QUINN-GOOWARD -•Dbwt e:dwkl, F••nb. Euit ~ 'G.Nnit Lff. ca on examiner. " ,., lm1 vlM. Of'MIOt Mid G1y1t l:;;feyl:>l.lklndl Mirit.irid Alt>trt P•ut. honored at Stanford University ( •ot11n. •· D05 1t1Wr, ""'· .., • ~.: ~~IC9E[l.,:.~cA. by a professorship established NfWPOl'f 8"'~ lldtnofl, c. Sv-Ind \.Yd.., O.vld. • bi IOllAUSE·WOOD -Lvll LudWtg, 21, trM!k•. \11"'1 "" c . •net ......,._ in s name. ;; IUlf ~. For.lfllllll Vllllty Ind ~IO, AP11M" Arwlrft _, O.rltr!t 'I1le distinguished c\.nlM in f llol\I 1,_, 11, 16lff S'f'UfTIOA, oulw °'''""'*"' , 1J.111J, , Fount1111 v1111y. A • v ... ~1 °" w wu111m e111•· the Department of Com-, OERl'LIMGER..t.BBEY -Mlc..... ·~ Cllltoro S191ton. Jr. Mid ,. P111n1p. 1•. ""' •l'ldtt ..-. HUii< "Mi:'rson lf:;, Altitri ind eo.m Lff. murtlcatlon is to be known as J tll'IQIDll 81Nd! tnd Carlt AM, 11, ' lJMI Elldl!O. Hvnllngton 8Mdl, l"Al.CLOO!I -lttlbtrf JONPft , '6, ltls.1 ·-:JIOllltlOll ____ .,.. _______ ......... ~ I hacll 91W,. Hllllllllfl'Dll BHdl tnd Do!oNo flty, 216, 1'15'1 BNCh BIYd., • HulltlnttOl'I BMCtt. "t !f.1 ·~-?~~ 'B·.J.' Held In Second Accident \ -Mond.ly, Ocl.Obff 23, 1972 OAJLV PILOT Jl Newport Fall Regatta Swift Captures Gold Cup S\ril~ 1 Newport-41 sloop eo- sklw<red by Vince Arrigo ol Newport llarbor Yachl Club and Jack Mallinkrod~ Balboa Yacht was the wiMer of the Pacific Handlcilp Racing Fleet class in Newport Harbor Yacht Club.'s Fall Gol.d Cup Regatta. PHRF was the largest claJS on outside courses wlth 13 en- tries. Largeot fleet sailing inside c.ourses was the Sabot A with 24 entries, won by Mark Gaudio of NHYC. Trophy win- ners: Outside Quses PHRF (13) -(I) Swift. Ar· riJ<o and Mallincktt>dt. NllYC, BYC: (Z\ SaU Le Vie. Don Dtibose. VYC; (3) Niki !!. John Kinkel, VYC: ( 4) De eo ... , Cal Preston, NHYC; 1s1 SparkJe, AJex Irving, BYC. STAR (6) -(I) Generation Gap, Don Edler, NHYC. INTERNATIONAL-14 (6) - ( 1) White Tornado. Peter Gales, BYC. LUDERS.16 (61 -(IJ Ari•I, Carl Davill, LYC. CORONA00.15 (S) -(I) Dacron Jurigle, Dick Obst, KHYC. FINN (Bl -(I) Soook, Ray Boolh, BYC ; 121 TFIA, Jeff Lenhart. MBYC; (3\ !io name, Andy MacLaren, MBYC. Rio Circuit Race Wo1i By Sa ga RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - The Brizilian yacht S a g a maneuvered through c a I m winds Sunday to win the first race in the 1m ·· Rio" circuil cttmpetttibn for oceangoing sailbmlts. Matrero of Argentina was second. 33 minutes behind. on corrected time. Jesse Phillips' Charisma of Dayton, Ohio. came in third, followed by James F. Baldwin's Sorcery of Edgartown, Mass. Thirty • eight boats [rom Brazil. Argentina and the United States competed on a 35-mile course around islands and buoys in the Atlantic ocean, off the coast from Rio. The series consists of four races -the m o s t im- portant being the triple-point No. I finale, which will cover 490 miles, starting in the southern coffee port of Santos and ending here. Saga. sklppered by Erling Lorentzen, took the lead with about 15 miles to go and finlshed the course in nine hours, two rrtinutes, 4 1 seconds. Saga's time was corrected under a handicap system to 8:28 :46. Malrero , with Estarllslao Kocourek at the helm, was the third boat to finish but took second place on the corrected time of 9:01 :17. Charisma's corrected time was 9:33 :141 and Sorcery's was 9:39 :06. The next race in the series will be Thursday over a 220- mile course between Rio and Santos. Vehicle Ban RllODES-33 (5 I 11 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;-;;.;:;-;;;;ma Impulse, raul l\iarx, nvc. RHODES-Ii (71 '1 ) Conltict, Bob Wiegand, SSSC. ENDEAVOR (~) -(I) Pacific Freedo1n. }1 o g ~ r MeisiJnger, NllYC. SOLING (6) -(II Gold Vig· ger, Roger Welsh, NHYC. SHIELDS (10) ( I I Tornino, Howard ~ r l q: h t , NHYC ; (2) Jean, Ca r I Reinhart, NHYC; (3) Colum- bia, Robert Koll, VYC. EXCALIBUR (7) -(I) Con- tagious, Ken Green, CBYC; (2) Commotion. Alcumbrae and Butler, NHYG. Wide Clasus I SABOT A (22\ -(I I Racing Machine, l\iark G a u d i o • NHYC ; (2) Far Out, Ty " Beach, BYC; (3) Firecracker, Keith Kilpatrick. BYC; (4) Buckshot, Jim Buekingham NHYC ; (5) ·White Tornado: Nancy Perry. LSC. SABOT B (16) -Ill Smokin, Scott Merrill. ABVC; (2) Water Wiggle, Kathleen Gerrie, NHYC; (3) No name, Steve Rados. NHYC : (4) Blue Box, Daniel Wilson , ABYC: (5) Speed Tyrlle, Linda Kim· ball, ABVC. SABOT C 120) -Il l No name, Ned Jones, NHYC ; (2) Blast. Tom Hald erma n , BCYC: (3\ Blue Winn, C Jlom- me. NHYC; (4) ~o name, Suranne Soangler, NHVC. THIS'l'LE (8) -Ill Wild \Vinn. Will Templet.on, BCYC; (2l Picnic, Dave McKinley, PVSA. LOASED (6) -(I) Just One More. Bill Moore , LBYC. LI00.14A (61 -(I) Kara!, Edward Gold. VYC. / LI00.148 (12) -(I) Old Pokey Vil, Scott Simpson, LIYC; (2) Buttercup, Jack Haupt, ABYC; (3) Mersldh. Doris Kirst, BYC. . KITE .A (71 -(1) Bottom Dvnke..,..Tom Will!On. BYC. KITE B (6\ -(I\ ·s.,.•1 De ..... on 11 , Rrad D w ;:in , NHYC: (21 KinriP.v's Kille':", Robert Kinney. NHYC. FLIPPER (9\ - (l l Hulla Btu, Brian Carter Jr .. BCYC: (21 Lemon Drop, Scott C:irter, BCYC; (3) Green Li(;~t . Carter Faber. Be YC. HOT CAMPAIGNER -Bob Grant's 61-!oot sloop Robon from Newport Harbor Yacht Club has be- come the hottest campai~er on the Southland yac hting front. On her maiden race the Cassian and Cuthbertson-designed sloop was first to finish in . lhe 1972 Bermuda race and has juM: won Los An· gcles Yacht Club's Harbor Series. Rabon is an entry in the upcoming Mazatlan race. Robon Sloop Takes -·· LA ¥ acht Club Race Bob Grant's 61-foot Cassius and Cuthbertson sloop Robon from Newport 11arbor Yacht Cl ub was the overall winner of Los Angeles Yacht Club's Harbor Series Sunday. Offshore Power Boat Club Nmnes Nordskog Robon was the only yacht to finish under the time limit in the initial race two weeks ago. was first to finish and seventh overall in last Sunday's second race. and made a clean sweep of Sunday's H u n ti n gt on J1artx>ur Race. A1 Viento. sailed by Hatch and Barnhill of LA Ye was the winner of a special Pacific Handicap race sailed over the same course as the Huntington Harbour Race. Final resulU: Bob Nordskog of Van Nuys has been re-elected president or the Pacific Offshore Power Boat Racing As soc i at Jo n (POPBRA) for a second term. Al Rogers Trophy Won By P ete1·son BUI Peterson of Channe:I Cruising Club wa s the winner of the AJ Rogers Trophy for the Pacific Handica p Racing Fleet closed course cham- pionship Saturday and Sunday. The three race series was sailed under the auspices of Channel Cruising Club in the Nordskog. two o t h e r holdover ofrtcials and four new officers will be installed at POPBRA 's annual awards-in-· staUation banquet at the Cen· tury Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles. .. Bob Penrod, Long Beach, continues as vice president in charge of racing and Bob Brown, Los Angeles, was reelected West Coast Classes representative i n balloting among more than 1 O O members of the ocean racing club .. Elected for their first tenns were Merle Stromberg, vice president of social events; Bob Sioclair, vice president, Public relations; Larry S m I t h , Offshore Class representative, and Jim Loos, secretary~ treasurer. H untingtoo Harboar Race OVERALL -(I) Robon; (21 Sandpiper, Dean 8 row n . SBYC; (3) Spirit Robert O'Brien, e ve. Class A -(I) Robon; (2) Sandpiper ; (3) Spirit. CLASS B -(I ) Cheetah, Dick Pennington, KllYC; (2) Lucky Puff, Dick Fon, BYe; (3) lnvictus, Hugh Lamson, LBVC. PHRF -(I) Al Viento; (2) Tempest, Jim Eddy, LAYe : Viva. Karl Klokke, LA YC. 4-man Sail, Teams Set · For Series FLORENCE (AP) -The Los Angeles-Long Be a ch city plans to ban cars and Harbor area with 17 entries. motorcycles from C a 5 c i n e Courses ranged from 6.6 to Park, a favorite riverside. pro-14.6 miles under light to menade where the poet Percy moderate w i n d conditions. Shelley is said to have con-Trophy winners : The seven officers will COP.. stitute t h e organization's board of directors and are responsible for planning as many as seven race events during the year, including the Long Beach Hennessy Cup. Men in Service 11 Gltll'l'~lllil -Sttvtn Brook•, f ~.!!'~ '"!ll>' ···"'~· ? ~'ll!lr·c~ ..... ~ -r.-r ~"· , ((,; ... \.;;; ... ""ll.~·J..,, '!J: celved hi! "Ode to the West (1) El Tigre; (2) Vaya. STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) -Wind." Authorities s a i d Peter Utecbt. ABYC: (S) PO PB RA 's first event of the 1m-73 racing sea300 is raee No. 10 of the Rum Run Series, set tent.atlvely for Dec. 2. Four-man sailing t t a m 1 Crom the University o r Southern California and UC Santa Cruz wUI meet Wed- nesday outside Ne w po r t Harbor in a b@St-of.five match race series in which will qualify the winner as a con. tm:ter Friday and Saturday In ~ Beach Yacht Club's seventh annual Douglas Q.ip ~ lntercolleglate Match Rice Salling Serl<S. lf'rMPOrl lMw,"' '1funtlnst1111 a. ST USA -o.tt T'*-• 21, ..-'612 fllldwood, lrvlnt Ind "'-' --~·" "" ,_,,. '--•· '"""'· 0 J~KI UCAS -Cltlr Lt VOii. 13,. 2tl ' • l~~N.ol:::': :~. N=z I Births Marine Pfc. Jellery A. graduated from basic training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego. Y-. son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Young of 13612 Sisl<lyou St., Westminster, was meritoriously promoted to his Airman t'Urles E. Rankht, present rank upon graduation aon of Mr. aod ~· Harold from basic tra,ining at the E. Rankln Jr. of IMl Corian- Marioe Corps Recruit Depot der Ave.. Costa Mesa, bu ln San Diego. graduated at Lowry AFB, He received the meritorious Colo., from the U.S. Air Force promotion in recognition of his weapons mechanic course COD- outslanding perlormance in all ducted by the Alr Tralnlng phases of recruit training. Command. The airman., who was train- Mar1ne Pvt. Carl R." DllDilc, ed to load and inspect the 'son of Mr. and Mra. W. ff weapons used In Air Force Jones of I 4 O 7 I Ash. -lighter aircraft, Is being We$1:mlnster, graduated Crom assigned to 1 McChord AFB. basic training at the Marine Wash., for duty with a unit or Corps Recruit Depot in San the Aero1pace Defense Com· DieSo. mand whlcb prot.cts the U.S. against hosU!e alrtralt and ml.ssilet. Marine PVI. ltelt-M. Cllace, aon of Mr. G<orge W. Chae<, of rrm San Clemente St., Fountain Valley, gradual«l lrom bOllc training al lhe Marine Corps Recndl Depot In San Diego. Marine Pvt. Jim E. Nowll•, IOnOf Mt. and Mrs. Robert E. Nowlin of 13782 Lapot Place, Wellmlnster, graduated from basjc training at the ·Manne eo,,,. Recruit Depot in San Diego. Marine • Pvt. Bobby G • M!ltea,"aon of Mr. and Mrs. Jaea • E. Melton ol 8010 McFadden, Westminster, Alnnan IAwtll E. Heete, IOn o[ Mr. aod Mrt. Da1e A. Heese of 21311 Bulkbead Cir- cle, HunUngton Beaeh, bas gradulled ot Lowry AFB, Colo., from the.U.S. Alr For<e murUUona maintenance opoc:Wlst coune conducted by the Ajr Trainlnc Command. The 1lrm1n, now qualified to Inspect, auemble and dlspooe of erplosive munltlons1 ls being oaslgnod lo Luke AFB, Ar1z.., for du1f with a unit of the TacUCal Air Com- mand whl<h provides combo! unlll ({Jr air support <>I' U.S. ground.._. Pop singer Billy J . "B.J ." b ned Ill D Robe S icycles will be Joa free to Snoopy , . rts, 1 Tbothe mas was arrested here for park visitors. eve. second time in three days, -------------------- both times in connection with automobUe accidenis, polke r'""'''"'ll!IP!'l"!r...'!!!I"•""'! said. Police said Thomas ltft Stamlonf Hospital Saturday driving "at a fast rate of speed" and struck aoother vehicle. When ~fflctrs a r rJ v e d , Thomas became abusive and was handcuffed for the trip to police headquarters.,. where he conUnued to be abwive to of· ficers, police said. '11'w>mas, 30. was charged with breach of the peace and evadlng responsibllity, police said. He wu released on bond for a bearing af an unspecified date. Police did not Indicate how strious the accident was. Tbomu, who recently mov· ed to Stomford, waa arrtsted on foor chitgel Thursday efter he tried to j 1knee" a J!Oiceman In tile .,.1n, of. fk:en aaid . He waa charged with speodlng, lftach ol peace, breach of peace by awult and resisting arTell. The linger allegedly ram· med the rur of a car slopped for a ~ light Thursday, and punchtd the driver, polJce said. . When told he waa: unde?' 1r-m t, polite laid, Thomaa kick. ed the officor aa}"'_ attempled to handcuff the onnger, f ' ' • QUARTER TON WINNER -Escal~Uon, • Cal T/4 sallod by Karl AnderJIOn WIS the wlnnor of l he Quar- lllr Ton division bi Windjammers Yach l Club'& Southern caUfomla Ton Cop Champ onshlps. . ' 2 Cal Boats Win. 'Ton' Competition Two cal boaL!, man11rae- tured by Jensen Marine of Costa Mm, were wlnoers in the Southern California Ton Champlonshipo ,_,.,...r by Wlndjammel'8 Yacht Club or Marina del Rey. P8t Marl ett of Pacific M1trinen Yacht Club swt'pl the first lhr~ ot the tour races Jn the one Ton O.tp com· pelitloo in his Cal-33 St. Tbe Quarter Too com- petition WU dominated b)' S pair of cal T_., wttl1 Karl Anderton'• Escalation the ev~tual winner. Srad W. fte\t's Plum Nuts was Je(OOd. The aeries ftl'ttured th~ round·tbe-buQY> ram and one dlslance race. Wind coadltlons w.,.. up.1 10 modttal• for the .. 11 ......... Both the Cal-33 and tho Cal T-4 ara ,...nt dollgnl !tom ' tho boanl o1 Bill Ll-11! o1 NeW!JOri -.... bulll by J..,... Marille. use. survivor or preliminary co m p e t I t k> n agaJnst rune other Southland teams, Is defending champion in the Long Beach event, ~ teroolleglate sailing's molt Important match racing c:om. petition, but will have to outsall the Northern California tliminatlons winner In Shields Cla,. •loop& In onfer to qualify for the weekend's racing. ne Trojans, skippered by Pettt Wilson of Newport, will be f1veted. Sil teams, lnc!U<!lng aMiolt Long llffcll Stale UnlV<l'lity, are already ~te Dou1ll1 OJp ti.nail.st!, with a 1eventh team due to be named Wedneaday to """""'1 the Pacific Northwest. Seeded Into the reg1tla alone Witb L. 8. State are Stevem Institute ol H~n. N. J.; the U.S. Naval Academy of Annapolia, Md.; the U.S. Coul Cluud Academy of New Londcm, Conn.; the Unlvenlty ol Ha~ of Honolulu, and Notte Dame 'Unlv'!"lly, of South Bend, Ind. Do41glaa Clip competition will Clll for four ..ia of 111- dll'ldllll t...,. -tam mlldles Friday and -mare Sall'"1of. ' ' ·-. J DAILV PILOT Everyone Has Something That So meone Ello Wants _ ..... Gener•I DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With 11 Want Ad I~ I I~ l~~---w.~J~ ._I -_ ... _ .. __,!~ I~ _ .... l ------_ ..... General General -• Opportunity REOUCEO • Calling In "'"' vmJ~·OO: bedroom•. : ofinJa !Jt>/e MACNAB IRVIN E PRESTIGE WATERFRO NT HOMES Mesa Verde tonn1t1 t1intng roon':.t family roon1. AvaU Nov. rst. , Four bedroo1n, 2 bath, fa mlly GINNY MORRISON ! THE PEYTON'S PLACE "WOW! ..• IT'S BEAU TIFUL !" \'OU' II agrN' \\ ht'n I Sho\1' you this 3 BR. + llht"ary tor dt'n I !onnal DR honie In Easthluft. $59,900 And hur- ry. Just hsted & n1ay not Inst the 1vPCk. Jack l·lo1vell 644-6200 I K--:IDL CHR ISTMAS ..• IN OCTOBER? /\ gift thl' f'ntit-e family "·ill love. Immaculate 4 BR, 2 B;ith Harbor VieW hotllC'. Cus1on1 land§Caping & brick p lantcrs. Washer/dryer., retrig., selfclennlng oven In- cluded. Near pool & clubhouse. SSB,900 tK-15). UPPER BAY Beeutiful 4 BR, pant!led FR, fireplace in ~mR. Quiet street. I-louse & ~unds ex- HARBOR VIEW HILLS Price iusi reduced ... on this lovely SAND- CASTLE home. 3 Bdrms. & family rm., with many deluxe features. Xlnt view of the can- yon ... with plenty of privacy. New price $67,500. -~ BAYSIDE DR., CdM LIKE NEW dream home -3 bdrms. & fam- ily rm. -overlooking wide be a ch & the blue, blue bay. $159,000. !remely sharp. SJt,500. (K-Convenient parking-easy to be 25). e. "DROP-IN'" at Bay &: Beach Realty 675-3000 SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Lindi Isle Drive Beautiful new 5 BR, 4\'J Ba. home. Water- front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled fam. rm., frplc., wet bar. Large master suite has frplc. & cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains. '179,500. For, Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Plea .. Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Baysido Dr., Suite I.. N.B. 675-6161 Gener ii Gener1I * * * * * * room honw with new living * REAL'l'ORS- t'OOnl CaJ'P.l't and new vin}'I • '* *+ - cushion tile Jn the built-in •.,-_y• ~ lka kitchen and family room. •U1Tt•Vet"de Dr. Eut. \Valls 11.nd wood"-ork freshly ..,, -• Costa Me.& painted Tu"tl "'OOd burning **•** 561"""130 fireplaces with rai s ed (Open Evenlna:al hearth.,. Large m a s t e r ~='"'-=~~-=~-­ suite. Ample rear yard Wa• to Ocean fenced for active children /\ real executive manalon and pets. Owt)er tran.<1ferred that has 90 many extra.I -leaving for f.tontana and we don't have room hert, Sill "hurry." Asking just """ so hurry and call for appl •"""· Try lD% down. l<~uu price $44,000. SACRI· C. F. Colesworthy ncE. & Company 640-0020 NEED YOUR n.a1to" S42-4455 Open Eves EQUITY? QlJJET Eamlde SireoL IJkc Do you want to make an of-n<'W, cazy 3-Br., z bo. home. fer but are a!raid to unless Dbl stone frp.lc. Bltm. you know your home ls GreenMc. $35,000. AC I • sold'! \Ve can he!p you with 64&-1456. You won't believe what goes on here! In every one of the 4 bedrooms there's shag carpets of various colors. Downstairs, be- hind the big g a m e room doors you just know people are laughing and drinking and ... Outside, on that bii? lot there's no tell- ing what goes on behind the lush trees and shrubs of the huge back yard. And that quiet cul-de-sac location: Don't let it M>ol you, those neighbors are really ... "friendly". U this entices you, you should meet the folks who live there now. A finer f a m i l y you couldn't imagine. But why Peyton's Place'? Easy! It's owned by the Bill Peytons (he's the former Pr esident of the Newport-Mesa School Board) an4 their Unique family home !llVllll J letc;e:; J is proudly presented by Unique Homes Real tD1 Dl:lwm' DIM MZ·aa BL BAY& BEACl-I REALTY .. our Guaranteed Home Sale Plan. NE\V. DUPLEX •••••• $48,tllO 675-7225 646-0553 58G-0222 1-2BR " l -3BR apt. 151 E. TAYLOR CO Estate at $54 ,500. -=--~":'., I /B CONTACT UNl9UI HOMIS OF MESA YEl Df, S46-5tto 1~=====~;~1 ~-~~~!!!~~;;;;~~~~!~I 'I"'•~~ "HI .... ,, •OI• '~C..I "• LIDO ISLE -$74,900 Summer /winter fun home. Plenty of activi- ty on this friendly island. Bright & cheerful 3 bedrooms & 2 baths. Top condition. Spa- cious south patio. Quick possession. '" Bay, Costa Mesa. &0-4837. ••: ~-~~~=.::;~::.S.::;~:N.=~:,_:nd.=~"-k-"J"'.t'--.=_. U ~ ICJU f. li()Mf.§ BAHAMA General Generol ON TOP OF THE REAL ESTATE MARKETWITM THE BEAUTY ''Our 27th Year'' SU!!IOIAIY Of TM( (Ol.WIU co. SUPER DUPLEX WATER, WATER •• , •• , NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES Exciting ne\v !isling In !\lESA VEH.DE . 3 bedroom. 21,~ •••••• EVERYWHERE POOL, PIER and SLIP too. New carpets aad drapes, 2 Bedrooms, 2\'J . baths. WET BAR, marble fireplace. Overlook THE WATER from your patio and enjoy . . . . . . $85,000. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hiils Road EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Price redueed to $19.950 b:9 an anxious owner who wifl consider a leue-optkm to purchase. Vena.tile floor plan!I. 5 Bedroom, 4. Bath -.. Kitchen areas. 4 outmde en- ·ll'llJ)Cf!S. Bkr. ~'1225. CORONA DEL MAR, 675-MOO • MESA VERDE. bath luxury hon\e located S46-5990 • NEwPORT BEACH, 54Soe500 • CALL US on a quiet cul·clt•-sac slreet. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 ''!ll!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!ll!!!!j /\ pool-size ~1ard \Vi!h a large I! covrtef\ patio &-!>prlnkll'rs Generil Generil 5 neat houlca on a hug<' lot. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Each home with separate 1 • garage, yard & laundry General -General · LIOO ISLE •• , ••• lront & back. First person with $51,500 cnn O\Vn this j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 home. • • , ••• LUXURY ... in this beautiful 2 story 4·bedroom, 3 bath home with many extras and builtin kit· chen. On extra Yiride lot, so you can store your boat or trailer . . . . . . . . . . . . $79,500. BAYFRONT -NEW LISTING -BAYFRONl room. Chooee your home from a 3 bedroom, ti~ 2 bedroom.t or a l bedroom & rent the others. Hurry and see thla new listing -asking $79,500. PREFERRED LIDO LOCATION 836 VIA LIDO NORD PIER AND SLIP 3 & DEN & GARDEN ROOM $295,000 DAVIDSON REALTY 1769 Bahama Pl OPEN SUNDAY NOON UNTIL DUSK N-rt ot F1Jryn 646-1111 (•nytlmoj Call S•Hl51 ()pon Evos. 'A~-Sllt/d, · . <. ~ HERITAGE REALTORS ~ llll>ASSUClm.S SALISBURY REALTY EZY on the Feet REALTORS 673-6900 EZY on the Eyes Via Lido Soud, \Vith nice beach. 3 Bdrm. Jow- er plus 2 bdrm. upper plus guest room. Just completely remodeled. New carpet. Mission tile roof. Immaculate condition! Owner will include furnishings ·in the downstairs plus guest room in the sale price! $197,500. Owner will consider t rade or condominium. ~~~;. ~"'3!!!IS'!""MA"""R"'IN"'E"""A"'V"'E"'.,~B"'A"'L"'B'l'O"'A"'l"'SLA"""N"'D"""""' I Ezy on lhe Pocketbook DUPLEX. 3 BR. up, 2 dn. 155.000. Next to beach. AGENT 675-014.4 Corona del Mir . RALEIGH STREET 4 BEDROOM Call Blll O'S!rikc General General 5801 W C ~ H NB '"'7767 · at 545-8922 eves. 644•..,,,,.,,.. _..:.., ________ 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;JSoft carpets &: hardwood • 0 ••• wy., · • _.,.. 1~~"1lr!!!'!~,~~!/,o-_.;_:::..._:__:,.~~·1:;:11t;,:f-=V----floors . Professionally 3116 Newpo rt Blvd., N.B. 673-9060 MESA VERDE $995 TOTAL '-· Priced °"'' Check into this roomy 1700 sq. rt. 4. btdzoom, 2 bath family room home with a private office. Room far campers, boat a, or whatever. A perfect home for a large, active family on lovely Raleigh Street in OJ&ta Mesa. Onb' $29,950. CALL &'B-8550. '~"""~""""""""""""~"""~""""""""""""~I If Houses Could . m.soo. Ca11 now to ·see thl• 'G.n.ral General General General • ORIGINAL DOWN 3' bdrm ~ family room 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Talk J;;;::=:=:;:;=:~~:;JI ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; When comtruetion wu bet-home. - I• this one would havo a rew CORONA DEL MAR SPYGLASS PLAN 74 "'· th• equlpmeot more ASSUME 646-3921 E-: 646 4543 Exel Usl"ve co-r-a del Mar '""'" to toll. Goo-goous Spaciou• 2-stocy homo 3600 plus"' It In th~ 5 bdrm, •turoy, lhe own" added In-VA LOAN Same location l8 ~""' Ull spacious family home in On the OCEAN SIDE . sulatoon· ••• lnte-m ... ·d 1 0 · 4 ba, plus bonus nn home ...... • .. v .... 4 bedroo 2 ba••· -~ pn c o wnersh1p neigh· of Coast H\ghv.•ay. alarnt system, a covered ms, u.,,, "v""n:u Lachenmyer Considered one of the best areas on the ocean side or the Coast Hwy. This older family home is situated on 2 residential lots. Xlnt appreciation situation. 0 ff ere d at $79,500 CORBIN -MARTIN REALTOlS 644-7662 General General borhood. 5 bedrooms, bt~au-Just 2 blocks from ocean on a V.I.P. location. Central patio and block wall fenct'. patio, carpets, drapes. Ex· ti(ul landscaping .., \\'Ith 3 Big bedrooms air cond., intercom &: built-Interior also shows original cellent home in beautiful sprinklers. Recreation roon1 Plus Family Room in rt'COrd playier. No.wax quality. if you like it sharp-rolling hills area. $995 total and swimming pool. 3 car 0{X'n beam ceilings vinyl. shag carpeting, \\'ii· er the owner "'ill cooperate down & take over VA loan =iiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Realtor garage. Step!: away from Formal dining room nut cabinets In kitchen, pool-to u...,._,.ie belo-~· move + owner will carry 2nd loan -Right' 1 ....._ __ !'"· Ch·- park and school. All or this All built·in kitchen sized Jot & breath-taking in. iw:ik to ·"e.~;n..ihing. {~t.dl.fference. Hurry, v•on't GOVERNMENT Ing j '~~.u2bath ';,itj; for $42,900. Call to sec and The best buy in view of ocean &: coastline. Three and r·amily, $31,950. REPOSSESSION-lo~ of used brick, "''OOd and judge for younielt. 842-2535. Corona del ~Iar Yor can celebrate the holi-Call 564-2:!13. wannth, on a tree lined At $72,500 dayr In your new home. cau ~ co,,ATS $1150 DOWN S!Tttt in CdM·s finest area. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION HARBOR now s145,ooo including 1anc1. ~THE REAL WALLACE Everyont! 11 eligible to boy ~~~~to ~1:-:~~ac~~ i eel h•11 ~ES'l:A,TERS REALTORS this beautiful 3 bedroom, Only $19,ooo and you own COMl"ANY REALTORS r I Cl<'<N T< 9PM C:O.ta """ home. Great the land. Cali NOW 61J."550. --...54166-44141-condlUon with new shag SINCE 1944 REAL TY ""===~~==== J lot. Unbelievable price of A AA -........... WELCOME To (Open Evenlnss) """'"· n.w paint & 1.,... re-,...,, a·~ 'MARLBORO • only 122.000. Bui htnTy. all ES.J..~.i ~-• ..,s MECHANICS oUcrs must be submitted by _ _.d( ""'l.... . COUNTRY -o..1. 25. eai1 u• '" r,i1 673-4400 Ontv. Park Center, Irvine Vac11.nt 3 bdrm., 2 bath ranch Call Anytiml.', 833-0820 I I style ho~ complete with'""~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~""~ Office hours 8 A~1 lo 6 P?if "'ttiltl-11 '°""""' patio. -""""t' THE ROOM and bring your hot'!le to this """'l'!!!!!!""'~""""""~ J1£'8.t 2 bedroom ranch-style ir' ii: drapes, att&ched garage, ownuod lot .ard many trult AT THE TOP New UstinC) home on la?"Jte lot. Perfect HOME deta1i.. OCEAN FRONl! Call 5*-589l (Open eves.) Private steps lead to the ·CRAFTSMEN .,.... "'" ""thing bead> NEW LISTING -HARBOR VIEW HILLS Lovely 4 BR home w/!ormal dining. For- ever harbor view in lge. living rm. New pain_! & carpet. Only $69,500. Harriett Davies • ON THE BAY Attractively decorated 1-bdrm .. l bath own- your-<1wn apt. in most desirable area. Shel- tered pool. Steps lo finest stores. $65,000. Edie Olson BEAUTIFU L NEW CUSTOM OPEN 1-5 DAILY. 1215 SOMERSET LANE. Choice toe. affords great privacy for this 2llOO sq. It. 3 BR., 3 bath. Must see. Mary Lou Marion ' LIOG-NEAR CLUB & TENNIS Well located & livable 4 BR. 4 Ba., F. DR ; heron cell's., tile fioors & beaut. Master BR , wtlh sundeck. Summer or family home . $'16,500. Eugene Vreeland BAYSHOR!!S-GREAT BUY Owner must IJquldatc -leaving area. 4 L•e. BR., din. nn .. den, brk!st. rm. Well located nr. prlv. beach. Make offer. Mary Harvey SPECTACULAR SPYG LAS S Thll 5 BR. home has 3 baths, lge. t01n. rm. & wet bar &: 3 car garage. Enjoy your own ~orgeous ocean view! S122.000 . LaVera Bums IRVI NE COVE -view' This lmm1c. 3 BR 3 Ba. & den home over- lookJI' finest pm. surfing beach In the area. Quality thrunnt ls shown by many flne fea- tures. $195.000. K.othryn Raulston trws. Temfic Costa Mesa location, close 10 schools & La Cuesta, El Dorado Mod<'! shopping. Price 0 n 1 y featuring 3 bedrooms, faml· $24.500. AssumablC 6% loan ly room with fireplaee, and with payments of only $152. formal dining area -and per n10. Includes taxes. lD> AQ. ft. upst:aifs ready Call 54&-llSl Open Eves. tor completion as ~ rum- for !he family who wants * SPANISH ""'ma" • wide _op•n On€--in-a-milUon rare find. 4. h'on1 thill laYely ttiree bedroom, 2 bath, hu~ faml-bedroom home. 1"M:> level~. DREAM * spaces. Located just a few ly room with beamed ceil-each \\1th a eep&nlle en. ings, fireplace. Doub J e ""::IZ:Z j trance and~ room, a..f. block.'! fron1 Newport Beach. You must .see this fantastic 3 New on the market. Call us bedroom, 2 bath home with quick. garge + bonus of another • forcls privacy for mlaW8 or MONEY MAKER ...,,.,. tbtt """" to din- pus room, add1t1o nal bedrooms and baths • or ? Sued on cu~nt b8lle price of new units. O w n e r aepani.te master bedroom, Call 546-5880 (Open f!Yf!'B.) =:~~ :u::,~g~J~ Eight 1-bdnn. wUta on 2 lots. ner." Call ~7225. of extras. All for only Xlnt rental area. 1-Blk to ~··-~ --'"'" HERITAGE . . ""l!!!!!!!!'""""""!!l!!""""~I transfe'm!d and will sell for "' $45,500. Please p ho n e Corona del Mar S<&-2313. , REALTORS huge living room with wall to wall fireplace. family room with wet bar, and beautUul landscaping with babbling brook in private . ~--HERITAGE REALTORS rear yard. Price o n 1 y "'!~~~~~;!!!!!!!~~ Zu~~o;.;~; ::: ~.i~~::: Uri& -~ f,-"'" HERITAGE associated S.l~.500. call now 842-2.535. NPT HEIGHTS """' ' bedroom • pool. • ~ R......... ~ 4 BDRMS Ideal far !he eouple who ES'lATa:RS EST~l·&RS Here la what you've ix-en . • REALTORS RANCH • BRICK BR OKERS-REAL TORS 2 02 ~ W Batbaa 67l·J66l $USSIOIAIY Of ttt[ (Qt.WW. CO, JUST umD Just north of Coast Hwy • 11......,, .,, • • ®THE R"' • • • • llk<'s 10 entertain. Large '::'.::;:;=::OPE:=N':·::n.:;:•::™:::::: ':::::;;;;~°""~"~·,~·~·~"":::::. kloking for. lovely tree-covercd patio with ample -_ shaded street JIKXI sq. ft. of prlYacy in rear yard. Full Everg reen & CHECK THIS comfort with 1Jxl9 muter price only $42,500. Call Palm TrMs l.Rt'ln' 4 bedroom home, 21A suite. Alley access for boat $12,500 ! Mini-ranch • 1B fruit trees! ALL BRICK l-IOME! ce- ment drive. REFRIGERA- TOR, STOVE INCLUDED! Investors delight. Act now - call 60-0303. llard to find rustic in Corona del ?\tar. 4 bedroom, 3% "':i-~-:::::::::::-:::::::::::-~:::-~-::::::::; I bath. ramuy 1'00nt and Hi1iDTofiND-e.?.~~·l!.. ~:.:n.;i.J~:l!:l Call NOW. 613-8550. I Thia 3 bedroom, 1-%. Bath Baths. Beam Ceiling Rum-or trailer. Better check this - home will welcome a new pu.'I Room with Paneling, today. Owner \Vill carry il ;11 O\V!'t'r Into a Dell1thltul \Vet Bar and ¥,. Bath. Good fiNI T.D. with no loan feea! Neighborhood. Featured 11 sized K I t c h e n with Palos Ve?'des Stone inside DI 1 h w ashcr. Ftreplace, and out. Move in and rtart Shake Roof. No Down to 4 Bedroo~ and large family room, dellghtfuJ homey at- mosphere, xlnt terms, Newport Heights a re a 14~ETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642-5200 BROKERS INC. to live. lluntlngton Beach. Qualified Ve1enms.. $34,950. $33, 750. call 646-0555. Call 646-05M. ~i::IL:-:~--=~"'.';;:z:::;:i:~-=~~~::~T=,~1 ·1 ...... • .. i1a -_'Jmkn- bft.ths. oornplete}y fPnced. IUl.\IOIAIY Of ft+( (()lwru co. -~..:.,_, - 'l'r.\ller Monae. A3 little all tlJIUIOtAIY Of TIU COi.Will co. $1300 down. $25, 900 coA~ SWIM POOL LARGE FAMILY a. A lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath WANTED ! . WALLACE homo, all electric push ""'· $28 750 • REALTORS ~!.1:-. ''!.!.~~~; 1~pn"'11o". ' Ull.~IW .....,.,.. .. u.. L8fsre family w.UI loYc this. --5'54161-44141 -h::i.ngtng ha.!ket.11 w I l h btdroom ~ Wi1h 2 fuU (Open Ev1nlng1) nowenl. loM:h of decldna. batt.. w~vcr buUtin lu!lh )Ow ~ yard dream kitdlen. Koop cool Realtors 646-771.l IDt.1 Westclilf Drtve Open 'llll 9 PM ·101il,fJ Ol\O\. Ri-AL r l.)R\ HOMEABILITY C'-·-SOLVED - --==---- Spadou!I 3 Bedroom Home In Y E Hontlnaton Beach. 2 Baths OUr ' yes ~ Thl't'C bedrooms, 2 baths with ' lirtpl&ce, built-ins, new !!hag carpets &: drapes. $230 per month. Free rental ~rvice. Family Room. Pl.enty 0f and picture a bright and Room to stot'I! a Boat Close rhee'rful 4 bedroom. 2 bath lo Schooll1 and Sho(lping. Of. home with a fonrui.I dlnina- Jon:d for $34.~:;o. Call room. This home hrui a vt!ry ~. uu.ble family room. AllO ll Rcaltoni ~7711 C fanlaslic swlmmlni:t pnol. ~3 \Ve,.l<'liJf Drtvc •• 1-. You must tee thl!I home Open 'till 9 PM ·~~d ~i.~m1~~=~~ ~r!,~. 3:::;~L b OPEN SAT/SUN/MON I TO 5 423 NARCISSUS Rll.nch style, loll ot charm; 2 BR. w/beam cell's., blt·trui, new cnrp. Huge brick trplc. Lota of shuttma 6 stonln R·2 Loi wilh room lo build: $51,!00. .... MORGAN REAL 1 T 673-6642 675-64.59 ANXIOUS OWNERS WB111 lhetr beautiful 4 bfdmom homt> In Big Caf'I. yun sold. l.DYC!y floor plM. great loc•llon. Bier m-1225. . """""""'"""""""'""""""' and a bt11.uUfUl irwkn pool! wlth air condltloMr. targre "--"' • &1<, ••>-Im. cov....i ~ wt1" ithade<I ____ , re=--~ gar. Added llltrnctlon, l11- 1v1s101A1Y or Tltf <Ol.wa.a. to. _ .. na aJEAL rome from new, priv. 1 BR. F...ASl'StDE _KH'rA:i'.'ICA:S apt. Beautifully lndscpd, SY 0\VNER 4 BEDR~M <iiEN"JifiiiOC clote In $43,?50. lN BEAUT CAM £0 • --'-"'. "u~°'r-2I NNtl:lj!I ~~:~~=M~ I I j f j 2955 Harbor, ec.ta Meta $32500. BALBOA BAY PROP. SHORES. 3 BR, l DA. rAN. N,.. 11111.,. (,.,. qolet .... CORONA DEL MAR , * 642-7491 * TAS11C VU. POOL, Nt;WI,y • lined 1treet. near irchool1 4 BR. & POOL DECORATED. SlJ!l,500. : 133.0100 Coldwell,Benker ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.I. • 3 8DRM neat ocean • • . S•le or Ll •H/Optlon ~.900. By ow.-Sba11> M ... Vt'Tdo • I ~f M A O alr-cond 3 Paccsettrr 3 bedroom, 1 % BDRM, aaaume $2.'ll Prr1. be, lrplc, gold •h.111 carpet, Mlqlon Vjejo •••••• $38,900 CCNtred pallo, heavy lhAkc, • 4 BDRM near oceci MJ> dc>J; __ }'•rd. Potlr•lon $S4,000 " ' ' Nov. 5. $4.l,!OO. 2838 Tabqo 1m Wt.icutr Dr .• N.B. Pl., C.M. -.m&. 645-7221 SeU ldlr ltrms . 6-1Z.56i!I ' .. ' TARBELL %155 J-f(U'bor, C:x!:ts Mesa BALBOA Cove•, N . B . walertront. Prlvftte ram() A float. Mod<!m 3 br. m.500. C.U owner, ~iO tor ap11't, PrlnciPHL• only. Md ctatrchn. ~-,:, ~um· fl.AM. RM. l CAR B•m-Style Home 675-84m : able loan or 111' 10~ down OWNER SAYS SELL Earth lovtT'1 kind of llv1n'! 2 BR., 2 Ba, tn>I. Remodll-• to new lottn. For a.ppoinl· Warm frplc., kldt ms., ed. R..J lot, C.{t ~ • ; 1 L17' 1 . FoRt}J i8Wlr==rl ~i~i~;A;~~~:"w• v:::: .. c::.::·_ ~' C.M. • • • A - -l831 WeatclW. NB. 64&-<770 "°"' ""''e. •pt., '""" • FUt rerrulta arc ""'t a ph0nc1 blda .. etc. tl'lrt.I a Daily Ptlot i l'all away·~. NMI 11 "P11ll"? Plnf'f' nn nrl' ClttUlfled Ad. 1 • ---• Cosio Mno Huntinqton B.•dl Newport Beac:tl Newport B•ach Condominium• Condomln.,um1 llOME A: JNCOP.!E -Spuld-EASTSIDE lrc new duplex $411,9.50. . neautlf'ul 3 bdrm ow11U11 Nu.'t' quiet area. 3 BR & unlt + 2 bdnn rental unit. faniily rm., t!replace, IOJ"gc Xlnt location. 151 E. ~ patio v.·lth BBQ. Dbl S-IU', A SELLERS SACRIFICE REAL CLASS ;'rv;;;;l";";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l -~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~11-;1;"';;;;"';;;1•;;;;;;;;;1;60;;;!o;•;so;;:l•;;;;;;;;;';";;I UNIVERSITY PARK Pre-Grand Opening Sale! 1' B c a 11 1 I I u I ?.1edlt.errancan !lyle<I <I BR .. fJun\ly rm. homr, un1lt>r rrd Ille roof. Jdt~al &e p n ration or ad~l-<'hUd arca.s. \\lalk1ne dlsta.l\Cf' to parkll, pools, sc hools . Extra hze. wnlled-ln corner lot which St., C.M. 60-4837. w/alley access for boat or By ~. 3 BR ho camper storage, $31,500. Spacio u11 aplh h.~t~I Clerr-~a.r l'N0-810!')' nome ioa.1cd (llt • quiet lltrttl. Hu 3 bis( bedrooms, wi.th a large pooHa ble 11.ze sopara.te Family Room and n Olnlrig roo1n. Apple pie con- dttion! Al $34,500. Call now. 6-16-7171. STOP PAYING RENT!!! ,..,;e·i:.;: 232 O>ata M':a St~ NEW LISTING · Take Advantage of Our NT St Joachlm'1 School. Near Newport Hght.s. 3 BR, 2 $26.SOO. For appt, 839w6164. Ba., Ii:. 11ep, playroom, 2 BY ownu 3 br, 2 ba, trplc, 2 frplca .. kitchen blt.ns, &. n1ce car pr. pj,900. B:.tx, Obl gar, Corner lot. )'OU O\Vn! "NO CLOSING COSTS" SPECIAL * 5'11).6!67 * 1340 . TRIPLEX ®THE REAL ESTATERS "I 1 I 'I 1 )II I l'!!il. IBST llYSI • c L A 5 5 I F -I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ·SIYB t:ISHI 3-2 BR unitll in llke f'le'W 1,.'0nd. Upper unit haa lovely view of hill.1 & llghu. Cooct int.'<>me. Existing VA Joau over 80'):, can be assumed at nr. $49,950. CALL 0 ,46-24 14 ,,. .. REALTY N••r Ntwpart P•1I Offlc• Mesa Verde First I I m e advertlaed! ! ! Semi-custom 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2-story, just off golf course. Plush carpeting, beautifully decorated & less than 5 years old. Don't be last -$65,000. Call 545-8424 SOUT H COAST REALTORS. 384-386 La Pearle La. Costa Mesa Open House Sunday * O\VNER-1NC01\1E * 2 Bn, owner's unit plus sep. 2 ·DR incon1c unit. Xlnt Costa Mesa loc. $37,500. Jane Krauss, Brkr 642-<;233 * 540-3462 * F.H.A. REPO * 4 BDRM., 2 ba. on OPEN "TIL 9PM MONEY ROW tt takes .!IOinC position in lift' to afford this home, but U [iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO you qualify, you deSt"rve i1. PARK THE BOAT 4 Huge Jxlmu .. family nu. w/flr. to ceil. trplc., fomlal right beside lhis lmmaculatc L.R. & dining. 2800 Sq. l<"'t. 2 story 3 bedroom, 2~ bath nf luxury living. A steal al beauty. Walk lo beach and $49,900. Also, have 5 Br. park, l•uU price only $39,950. pool home at S.ll,000 Call NEW LA QUESTA for de'lails. SAN MIGUEL CALL 842-1418 Comer lot, pouible boot ac- • Nm • CCS!, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3 Cjl.r WAUCfl • garage. sharp, clean and _,.,.... upgraded thruout. Only tnn Beach Blvd., H.B. $4.1,900 ... 1-IURRY! EXECUTIVES: CALL 5-151)158 ---,'l lrul!ur "SINCE 1946" 1st \Vesl('ITI Bank BldR. University Parle, Irvine Days 552-7000 Nights BUILDER'S DREAM Prestige living is yours in this 3,000 sq It 4-lcv<!l home high on a hill. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal dining & 2 huge family rooms. Patio parties arc a natural with the custnnl land.!<:apiog & utmost piivaC'y. The final StC:lJ up. Call 968-4156. . _ V.'ill coinc true "1)('11 you se<' !'his large R-1 lot. Of- fers un abun!ie:nce uJ fruit trees & located kl a highly d~rable & weil developed neighborhood. ou n1ust sec ,thi;; ocean vie\\' tn n~ •. .' I prcclnte ii. Call Bryan l\1acc. SL'\.000. AO/an BEFORE BUYING REAL ESTATE YOUR HOME •• si'.~t~ooo DURHAM in !he llWltington Beach or lluntington 1-larbour ru-cas. stop by & use our revolu- tionary visual programing that sho1vs at a glance lhe homes for sale, indicating size of home & Jot. price, pool hon1es & exact loca- tion. Cali 962-8847 or stop by Authorized Broker This is no bull -~ bedroom. 2 s=r21 * 548-6570 * bath. 1200 F<J. ft., F.A. heat, l;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; [ clcctrlc huilt-in range &. 1• O\'en, built-kl bar, carpet11, MESA VERDE. By owner. Prime locatiOn n e a r Balacric ~hool. 2260 sq IL 4 Bedroom, Master bedroom doy,•n, Z...rge family room. Comer lot. Shown by appt. rwi-3TI6 or 540-;44.11. *VACANT* l\TUST SELL! 3 BR. Big yard. Trailer access. New paint & crptg. $22,000. Low dn. SCOTT REALTY, 536-7533, 24 hrs. LOVELY LRG Z sty 4BR, home, 2~ ba, frplc, bUin gas kitch dsh/wsh. Furn. Huge yard. Sprin kl e r s 543,000. Owner, 976 Denver 0r., c.~1-540-2442. East Bluff * ntE BWFFS * By ~·ll('r. 3 Br., l 'i/i Ba. Lo ma.int area. $33,900 6'»-(1166 * 640-0277 aft 2: 30 Fountain Vall•Y MARK SPITZ GREW UP WITif • A POOL • • and so can your chil- dren. : Ste this guper -4 bed- room WiiliTamily room and coWNMt patio Sot V"tsta for on1y,.S44,'l50. aE A WINNER Eleg&Jt 4. bedroom 2 bath wHh !amity room, covered and enclosed patio, lush car- pets and drapet, new sparkl- ing pool_ Near everything. Only $46.500. WIDE OPEN SPACES Loll of glau walls, cathedral Cf'illngs, sunny kHchen, screened-in lanai. 3 bdrm, 2 bath. All this and a corn6 lot for only $36,900. CALL 54S-OIS8 •• drapes, f>!l_tio. Excellent condition. SZl,950. $21,500 Enjoy the warm glow from the b~ fireplace. 3 bedroom·· condo. N ew 1 y painted, new drapes, washer, dryer, refrigerator, carpets. V a c a n t . Im- maculate. Call 968-4456. •• SINGLE STORY 1 BEDROOM Oldcr person for l bedroom condo in adult nrea. Walk to big shopping Cf'Jlter. Price of only $15,900 includes wiuher, d~r. range & refrlgerator. I' 1llage Real EstJ te 31.o51D.O l ::::L531·5100 MOVE IN NOW!! 5 room, vacant. immediate possession. Newly decorated thruout. Large fenced cor- ner lot. Full price only $19,950. Only nooo down will handle, Call. e TRAOITIONAL e BROKERS INC. Beautiful, shady 4 bedroom, 2-story. Overloaded \.Vith e.'IC-BIKES & TRIKES trRs like micro-wave oven, dot this lovely EMERALD BAY FINEST LOT VIEW • $50,000 TED HUBERT and Associates ::471 Via Lido, NB . 67S-8500 Home-Units-Workshop 2 Blks. to beach with the :i;ound of pounding surf! Handsome income & po1en- tial "add-on" makes 3 un its \.Vorlh $79,500. 494-7551 H. McCormack, R.E. OCEAN VIEW GAZEBO 3 BR, den, 2 baths. Slate en- try, sunken llv. rm., fl>I. lli peaked ceil., open beams. glass gables. Bltn kitchen. A prize wlnnl'r at $55,000. l\Tission ReRlty 494-07:ll PORTAFINA LAGUNA Custoin building ~Hes & hon1cs. LC'ft t?1 Nycs Place lo entran('C'. Laguna Beat.:h Lido Isle plush carpcl5, drapes & neighborhood. Why not7 '1 land!!Caping. Big family Big Bdrrns., block wall room even has dumbw"alter fence & ready for your to 2nd fioor. No down pay-family. 1 Blk to elem. men! required. school. Only $28.500 at ap-* REDUCED * CALL THE REAL prai.sal. 6551 Walton Dr., Spacious 4 BR. 4 baths: fam- ESTATE FAIR J-:.dwards at Edinger. Open ily rm. v.•ith wet bar, Frplc. 5~2551 Sun. 1-5. in n1aster suite. CAU.. 842-1418 OWNER must move . NO\V S89.500 decorator's de Ii t e . 4 • ~-~~r: • bowcJAl) !.,.,.,_ JIL bedrooms, 2 baths, large "~.:,i;"" ___ ,..,,,_ family room with lovely _.._ <'rystal chandelier and m05t 17ln Beach Blvd., H.B. :W IS Vin Lirlo 67:J...4562 appea!inJt fireplace. Buill-in NEW 3 Br home. walking * CHOICE * kitchen. indoor-outdoor dist to ocean. Just $37,000. carpeting. Uke new cloud Call 968--0-107 By Ch\'Tler. · Nord Corner Lot soft shag carpeting. Loads 5 &frms., 31'1 baths plus din of decking. Patio, lush low rm. plus li:::c. sundeek. Irvine SS' 000 O\VNER leaving, E v e r y maintenance landscaping & . , room is wired for stereo, a beatrtitul swim pool with LIDO REAL TY \Vall TV Antenna, 3 spacious vacuum included. Br k. Beauty To Behold I! 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach CONDOMINIUMS EXPIRES OCT. 31st· ·-$41,99S Lolly Uving owa1ts you' • Minimum $950 Moves You In. Act sw1f\ly 10 selecl your own Ne\vport Beach condominium. V1s1t the lemporary ofl 1ces ol lhe Ncwporl Crest lnforma11on Center, • No Closing Costs. • Immediate Possession. JN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, I~ & 2 baths, built-in r ange, oven, hood, dish- washer, disposal, individual laundry area, en- closed private garage, private entrances, choice of carpet color, cable TV, swimming pool, gas B-B-Q & park-like recreational ar:ca . conveniently located at 2400 West Coast Highway SLlite B. Newport Beach. Open Daily 10 a.m. to sunse!. 17141 645-6141 Newport Beach --------SPANISH SPLENDOR If the comfortable but lux- urious life is what you're looking for in lhc Spanish decor, \\'e have it -and with over 2700 square feet in. eluding 4 Bedrooms, scpr1r..1.tc Fan1ily Roonl. Dining Room, 1,Jlility Room and Photographers \Vorkshop. Be au ti f u l Spanish Tile Roof + many extras, in a great Newport locatJ01~ and only }69,500. 646-7171. ®THE REAL ESJ "ts:RS <Yi'f.-e+Tll 9PM GET IT ALL! 3 'BR. rondo. Entry, 2 Ba., P\Vdr. room. Dining room. frplc., Olt-ins. Pool HURRY -$32,fffi --·· GEMM---- 1610 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. REAL TORS &ti-4623 Owner Sacrificing Large, ~ar new Duplex. Must sell. $76,000. OPEN IIOUSE, 126 45th St., N.B. * Call 642-BSa) * * LINDA ISLE. Beaut. \Vaterlrnl _hom e w J_p v_ dock. Sac. by pvt. pty. Sl.22.000. Consider lease with option. 673--Q363. BLUFFS -View 4 Br, 2~ 8..1... Twnhsc, !am area. Pool. CusL By Ownor $44,9JO. 64HJ275. Newport tfeiahn NEAR NEW -IN C.M. 3 BR. 2 ba., 2 trplc. + formal din_ rm. + + ""20 fan1. rm. $41.900. Call for App't. LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Lido, N.B. 673.-7300 BY OWNEk - 3 B<lr., 2 Baths. Beautiful kitctw:.'11, large ma 11 t er bedro om w I Pri . balhfdresslng area · Owner motivated. Terms A v a . $38,500. 673-1658 or 645-8684. Tustin All this for as litUe as $207 per month, in· el udes everything, on our least expensive unit. PRICED FROM $18,950 TO $23,4SO = 1 Newport Beech Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about 1.4 mile to Walnut (Isl road on left). left 1 mile to "\\'alnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to "Walnut Square" or call 714/832-9670. Walk to Beach 1-Sty. 3 BR., l~ ba. Carp., Duplexes/Un its drps, frpl., blw. Tennls, sale 162 pools nearby. $32,900. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;; CAYWOOD REALTY I• * 548-1290 * NEW DUPLEXES Lots for Sal• 170 LAGUNA BEACH. C>ttlln View. 9 adjoining lots. Private party. Res. 213: 821-1909- BUILDER SEU.JNG NOW. Mountain, 0.Mrt, 174 Resort ]IJ'Y] &">ulh of A~~~5~n Hunting-LARGE Waterfront Lot, boat Mobile Homes ~::~==~;;;;;--~1.t~on~S~t,:<-0~t~, ~H!.B~. :.. ......... I dock, CANYON LAKE. 2.66 536-8188 Ac. Vie\\• Lot, Lake Mobile Homes Riverside. Sell or exchange , Duplexes near the ocean fur Lake Tahoe. SPARLING For Sale 115 l\1Ues Larson, Realtor INVESTMENT R.Jtr. * 673-8563 * m-351-t, 64&-S320 ONE ONLY Income Property 166 20<52, 2 BR, 2 BA, 1MO llv-11 UNITS 1ng room. 2 door retrlg .. garb. disp., plumbed for Deluxe l year new 1-<>ne washer, ca.11>Cled lhnloot. bedroom 11)-two bedroom. Awning, carport, porch & located In tree I i n e d full skirting. Delivered &: reSidenlial area, ga.rde.n set up in park of your areas & patios, D/W rur choice S9,!m. Full price. corxl!Uontng, shag carpe'tU];:: Save $U$ $160,<XXI (IR028). Call 7 dafg LAGUNA HILLS !TI41 ltll-0040 . MOBILE HOMES Investment Division_ 2Hl Bwdne&a (;.enter Oriw 246.S9 San Diego F w Y -• Irv" ~-"' Laguna HJll1. fn~J 830-9tHl. me, .............. park, adjacent \Vorld, 23301 Ridge Route Dr., Coll Moultoo Pkwy.J. -1-N-C_O_M~E-U_N_rT_S_ Laguna Hills. TI-4./830-3900. LOT ln famous Lake Havasu. home of the world famous 1.n.ndon Brtdj:e. Located close to all schooh I: dty. S9!lX> or wW trade tr. o.t. Mesa or Newport Beach ln- come prop. 644-4687. Rei l E1tete Exchange 10f' local income property. McNASH REAL TY 642-MOO RMI E1tal9 Want.d 114 TRAILER home & cabana. 2 howics, ~~ acre $51,000 "Trade \Vind Village," 3 BR duplex $38,000 * I'\ 1-L C-L * Costa "fl.fesa. E. J. Smalley, Duplex & bRch unit $41,500 ,,.Uno.a uan Sp 5. 641--0234:_ c1'.fu.se5 & duplex ~~m WW buy your property. All 3)x57 Bro&dmoor, 2 BR, 2 -cash withln 72 hn. Call BA. Screened p&Ho, 5 Star ~~ • ... ~v..',.,.ri~_k , '" f"V , ~V'fllU"'21 I 24x60 Wetterner. like nev.'. 2 Br., den. wet ber, air cond. Acro61 11l from b c h · l;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO f 53&-4876 or 642-7523. 1• ~~~==~..,,... . ....., 8 Deluxe Units Ux60 EXPANOO. !iv rm .. 2 Br .. l tli Ba. Adult park, nr 2 Bdrms each. All on ground ocean. $5800. 536--0397. floor w/pvt yanh & gar- l0x55 KIT w/cabana, 2BR, f\S:l'ti, Cho I c c locaUcm. nice cond. Adlls, Hunt Bch SW.~. $32.000 down. fi- $4250 962-0179 nanc1n1t by owner. · Roy McC1rdle Realtor 2 Br., den, 2 ba. nr heh. l8lO N -Blvd c •t Driltwood beach club. tr.OJ ewl"'' • ·• ·" · 541-7729 firm, 536-0321. BROKERS INC. 962-8851 PVT. Ply seeks houae ln $4{1'~. or duplex in $50'1, In CdM. Prlnctpala o n I y . 613-8455. bedrooms, large fa m i I y -=$33~.000=-~-~=1373.~~-=='"' Central stairway creates a * 673-7300 * room with ins Pi ring CUSTOM POOL HOME lovely effect In this 4 bdrm. Mesa. Verde BEAUTIFUL! 384-386 La Pearl• La. fireplace, beautiful built-in ON 1/2 AtRE ESTATE home with dramatic 2-story 1----------1be neat }«Ing couple that Real Estate, jral Costa Mesa l!il ~~=~e d ~~~:s~ h :;;.: 4 bedrooms, family room, fireplace & beamed ceiling. Mission Viejo OY.11 this ~harp 3 bedroom ~ ~ Open House Sunday High block '""'8ll fence for Spacklus living r oom $42,950. home haw decorated ii to· * OWNEJt..INCOME tit BusiMss Opportunftv supreme privacy in the overlooks the pool &: hUge i eel h•11 2 Bedroom-$22,950 ge_,rfect1on. M1,MY Arm andnd 2 BR. OW!K'r 's unit plus IM1>· lovely contour pool! No gro unds . Automatic ' r I Near!yncwcondominium-2 ......,11.·ecomp1ment y~11 Acreegefors1le 150 2 BR Income unit Xlnt AVAILABLE NOW down G.J. lerm.s -U:iw down sprinklers & water !Klftener. bedroom, 2 bath, located hate to see you go. Call Costa Mesa loc. $37,500. Large Corporation dellrts non-vebi! Brk, $28,750. In quiet rural area. Only prime area of Mlshon Vie-675-7225. Jane Krau~. Brkr permanent resident 10 dti- 846-0604 141.900. EAL REALTY io. Plush w/w """"" & ~~ --6'2-<233 * 548-3462 tribute Tcnco fa Dfm~n of Ovmer desperate, 4 spacious C~'s~ATT~E F~IR Univ. Parle C-e nter, Irvine ~~~mca~1i~~ntral air ~·~ l~~ FOR Sale, 7rl,, down, brand. T If E COCA-COLA C'O.I bedroom., 2 baths. family Call Anytime, m-0820 KATELLA REAL TY ~ ~w fourplex Huntington Colfre Product•. Can 11art room with han d 11 0 me 534-1551 Olfice hours 8 AM to 6 PM ?; :j. Cold'Mll,S..... Brach. \V. of' Beach Bl\.'d. full lime or part lime <S.-10 ftl"t'place off the deluxe Owner sacrifice, AMUme apr SHARP 3 Br & fam rm home _[_ •. ~-· . hlln!J, erpt.s, cnclOM"d pr. hrs. ~r wk.). Company no built-in"kltchen, dishwasher. rt t 4 Br. in Irvine. Screened \\·/pool & view o( Sad-~EALTOll~ $&1,9..'iO. Call 968~. By ra.hlis~ IMJ~lneu fot di. Patio. No \\'ax linoleum, VAloannowonprope ya patio, frplc., cpts & drps. dlebllck Valley. $39,500 . \UISilliAJrOJ Tlltca..wru co. --...-.i owner. tributoD. gorpous shag carpeting 5%% and your monthly in-O I $1500 d $29 900 P · · ls o I 8J0..8761 Vacancies cost money! Rent NO SEU.ING thruout. Beautiful patio 5.\::m::::"cn~e.=us Jes.~ 1 !~~ ~' existi~ vA 1"oa~~ rincipa n y. · your hou&c', apt., stof'f! R·1 View Property ~v~, o1ru1s1 ! ~ed .,, """950 Um!ted opportunity. Cash """ awaiting your o utdo or ms, custom shutlen, Standard Real Est at" Seti the' old stuff. Buy the hldR .. t'tc. thru a Daily Pilot fo:VO<'artn Gnivr -8 pl~ ttcre!I uup ex. u Y ren ; ..,..,, · quired 52,498. Write 1nclud- =.-1 Bric:, $ 3 2 . 5 o o n dream kitchen. fun 1 ;963-~55.18;;;0;:'=~:033:0·0o26:10:'"'·==='--.,"'='"=' :'t="="=· ======-!-=°""=="='ed=A=d=·=64M611!===·=-. r~ ~~~,~~-1{ .~('i1~:;~~4 ~~ ~~ !;~'. 7~f'ck '°':~ ing phoR~~~~~~ dining room. professionally!' IH11nc \Y/pOOI & guest predation. 151 E. Bay St., coffi.oltATION • SPANISH BEAUTY ~~*~~~~11:~ $©~~1s\-/£f..trs· house. l,.pnd Vnlue $295.000. C.t.1. &12-4831. 1001 lloward A~. 2-Btory, d4 bedroom with ... ..,.10 •• " patio. Brk. •~,000_ • Cnrol 1u1u111. Industrial Property 161 San Mateo, Ca. 9-MOl tonnal ining, huge family "'"' .._-u ,..., 644-2430 133-0700 room, J..car garage. Almost 962-8a65. F d Clea DRY CLEANING Is LAlJN. new. Walk ID the counlry MOUNTAIN C ABIN at-Tlie Pun/., with the Built-In Chuckle 5 ACRES 1195 TOTAL ree an r DPRJRYCE~CY-FULL dub a: golf courte. mOKPhere with ocean air? $:;() cln. S9 mo. nr San Industrial •'":':,';~, * CALL THE REAL ShaKe shingle roof, big view 0 Re<lNGTIQ9 len.m of .,,_ .--.,_,,,...--....,.-........ 11 y c 1 -~u ESTATE FAIR ""'ndows It oozy lln!pl11ce. fout xra1mbled ~di :-~ ri~;;•;;dcno ~;Jy_ 0-:n; Property I>l:STRJBtn'OR. who&eaale ~2551 Thick. warm llhag carpcl11, low to fOfm our Jlrnp .. wor . 21.1: 112,_357:;_ Q\t."f)('r \\'ill M!ll or t'Xdu!ns:t bkyc.le :\m!WWW8 Good I ~--_;_;c..;.~~--1 cha.nnlng C"Xterlor, hut I T A S E T I flv~ htt nnd c: IC I\ r opportunity. Sl500. Alt 5. Otvocr nnxk>wl. 3 bedroom, couJd Ute 11 few Pines & L Ind 1 p 1 · ~2832 den. 2 bath homo. Elegant shrubs. Only 2 years old. 1 1 1 I' 1 1. f. Bu~.111 Pro~rty 154 ~t:13 1n ~ 0 ~!:in~~ ..:·::::..=:;·------ fireplace l<!ndl added charm Red Carpet Re a 11 or 5. • _ _ _ _ __ • f'OR ~~!•''. !Wal Estate ofh(.'t" J"';1rk Af't'I\, TIME FOR ~ wl~~ :'~ 962-55lt «rit. C'.M. Incl R . !:: . II ThrM> unlt11. l.l"nS<" i~ rl('I, ba I OWNER ll"ansfC!M'Cd, G.J . I H A B E T I '; "'"/ll~ffl'I income. &42-6.160 or ~t. nrt. <;l'Olt'!'I Income over wet r. ntercom system. terms • Jov.·-low down non-I 66--2020. s.;,000 iu111U8lly. Pr I c ,. Nc8' all ochool• I ""°""'"'· """' 5 bodroom" '"""' I I I S"'" !00 QUICK CASH Rrk, $25.900. sc..2S61. f&mJly room with Inspiring 11 l Commercial 2) ~'O units. Cro11• lncon'M' m . e:ii:ecullvc -Vacant. On a fireplooe. gourmet'11 pride I<. ----Property 151 ()lf't'I" $3,CM» M!Ulll)'. Pra corner. ! Bdrm. huge k>t. joy bullt·in k Itch en , --~--------132,!iOO. room for boe.t 1atr. Pride ot dlllhwaahtt.-Well planm:t I y A R 8 E I ~ FOR Salc or lease 1~. 4 unlta, 3) Tv.u unit-. Gl"Olll i~ THROUGH A ownershl.p. Move in todaJ. home. Pool 1il!Cd ~! I I I I' 1.00'.I 1111, ft _ eedl. J.865..n $3,0» IUV'IU.llly. pr l c • $32.950. Brk $38~. 842-«19 -• / One nudist grMtt onotheo Park Aw., C.M. Do not 128,000. . t..adenhlp R.E. !Q-416S. REPOSSESSIONS · --· "Glad 1o--·-.· <11a.,rb ...., ... .._ !'hone •I'""""'""'"· c-1ncome BY Owner: Qiotce ~Br. + ~-------.. •--DWMr, B»?t&l 'Courttq to lOOO ~. Price ~~'£~+.iit.7ii !:S::~~.·~. ~': 1-:--r-'-T-....:,..;;...r.T--il o ~~ ~~~~~ c~'"""'" s~~-~~Cl)~ DAILY PILOT l'SlPm.833-uo.i. KASABIAN -"""""'1op.1..,.•opNo.3bokw. for .. i. 160 ""' ""'~looo.5*-ttoo. Huntington llNch Roal E1tol9 '62-6644 PllNT NUM8U!O lUIU$ IN CON1lO SPl:1ClALl$'\'S · -OIV\Sl,ON ~~=;:.-,~-THESE SOU•l!S HAVE om; TO Sf.U.T WE ~ THlt D:AL~ 3 SOR.MS. l 313 bu .• M!:R!:Dml Gudena dtll1ht CAN 00 lTI WANMA BUY p,;fii • hardwood !loon, ..,.,., • • """"'· IDrmal dlnlllf! .. tJNSCRAMll• 1u1w 10 I I I 1:0 .J I I I vo•HE?,,, ~~ ,oop ~'• -~ drp11., blt-1111, lndscpd, new-rm. Pride of ownenhlp. V Of! AN!Wfl • • • [. ~ • • • ,.. ... oft "1'I "" • .. _ _.!~ . 11 »1-lnled lntertor A ex· .PariM.lke yatd. Hr ehoppt,. P BEDROONB IN AL ~=. ~~. ........ By ~ .. hip R.E. MHlell _S_C_RA __ M-_L_ET_S_A_N_STW_E_R_S __ l_N_C_LA_S_S_l_Fl_C_A_Tl_O_N __ oo"'-. -· =~ ~"'7::' r:_•:;::~ ~ Ir)' WANT Al 142-1111 ' . • I " I IWLY PILOT !~[:;;; -----~l~~.1 1:. -.-~---~Jie~1~!;;--·_ ...... ;;:J~ltl~l ... ~-~-;;;-;;;;I~~_ ....... -_. ..... -;;:;---~~ ~-I !~~,. .. ~ .. ---~I~~ I ... ._ ..... I~!.___-____.!,..__.,,,. Buslnt•• HouM1 Unfurn.. 3QS tfous•• Untvm. JOJ Apt. Un.turn. ~Apt. Untvm. HS A.,+ t.Jnturn. MJ Apt. Untum. 36.S ~t. Ufthtrn. MS •R•-••,•••••IJ!I!~ - -~~~-'-;.....~--~~~~~~~ ...;.~~~~~~- 1-;:;°""".;.::;:;;rl=" ";:;'o.tv:.... __ *"'-' Gener•I Newport BMch Gen.,al G•n•r•I ';oron• del ~r :C::°':::'::•:.M0.:.;::::;: _____ 1."'_'w,..oo;..;;.;rl....;B;;.•;.;ac;;;;h___ ROOMS $15 wk. \IP w.lk!e 1 i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;i;;;;i;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0iiiii ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiio VIEW APARTMENTS $2'1.lll wk up Aptt. 231< Liquor Sloe.•. ~M4150'1 LANDLORDS! OC'J\NFRONT '"'° ... tt.I• P•rl<·Llke Surroundl1111 AS BIG AS Newoort Blvd.. c11 . Be•uty ~. s4.500 l.11x"t'Y 4 RnnM, 11.rMI"""· EL CORDOVA APTS. • QUIET DEU.IXE ~ Pry Cir-;;;;,. $42!\1 W• Sptdaltu tn Nrwp.irt 1ural 1~ New~ From $l 45 ~ 2 a. 3 BR APTS. A HOUSE GENTLEMAN , maalf'r Butcht·r Shop • Nt'tS S17~f Jkol'ch e CoroM dttl M1r1r • mo: yrly. 5: m.-tm. 1 & 2 BMlrooms • Pvt. Patio. • Hid, Pootx Ocean view, 24 hour bowie ~. ttfrisc, TV. Bt&dl I La.gunA. Our Rer.taJ ~r Wll.!k oceM or bay 2 Br, 11t11 Nr Shot>'& * Adi.Lila Only ~-trl apart men 1 1 &: Pac. Cout Hwy. 5.'6-85ll HOLLAND But . s.1.. vtcc la FREE to You? T'ry pd, 2 Ba, fncd. Vacant. Dishwasher • Shag Carpeting • Walk-in Clos-ON TEN ACRES Martinique Apts. deSJgOOO with a Muter'• Deluxe. Pvl entr 6: be.. 1n 6 Orangt', c :vi. S4&-el TO Nu· View! Brini~ klrl,/pets. el!, Forced Air Heat • Extra Large Rooms· Apts. tum./untum, Let• 1m Santa Ana Ave.1 .c;~:A toueh, uclwdw: club with Mald .-rvice. No IM!) BARB£R.Style Shop. NB NU·VIEW RENTALS Rent·A·House tn.l430 Beautiful Game Room· Heated Pool· BBQ'9-Fireplaces / prtv. patios. Mgr. Apt. l13 ~ ~ut~~~~ ~-'m--0310~="-'-'54&--"-n"'llt'-'--;;c•I loqi,tlon. $3.50 h a 1 r c ut . m-«>.10 01 494-3248 BLUFFS • View 4 BR. 2\i Enclosed Garages. Quiel surroundinfis and Pools Tennif Contnt'l Bkflt. * * $TIO * + ()art ot the south Coast'• Gu••t Hom• 415 548--1346 e\'CA. 63.1--1402. Corona del /Nr Ba. Twnlwe, tam area. close to shopping. (Nr J-larbor & Ham I ton St) ikX> Sea Lule. CdM 644--26U 3 Br .. 1% Ba. ncwl,y painted. finest apartme nt com· I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Money to Loain 240 1---------Pool. CUltom. $ 3 9 S. Adult Living· No Pets. MacArthur nr Cout Hwyl Bttns, crpt/drps, end patio. munity. 3 Rr .. den, 2 Ba. F IA ht.. 6#-0275. 'J.077 Charle St., Costa Meta 642~70 Nr ICbh: I: ahol>'&· Chlldttn 1 bedroom/studios from $195. 1st TD loans 6% % INTEREST 2nd TD loans Ul\l'est r'sles Oraiir;e Co. "WE BUY TD'S" Sattler Mtg. Co. '42·2171 54S-4611 &>rving Harbor att 2l yrs: fmmac. $350/mo. 4 2 9 .;.:.:_:,:cc,.~~--~-ok N~b 880 Cute St 2 Bedroom trom $295. Heliotrope. 675-46.51 o r LIDO ISLE 3 Br .. 1% Ba. HACIENDA HARBOR CHEERY 2 br. upe,taln apt. · 0 ' r '• Deluxe 3 bedroom 675-2087. Bll·lns. Leue $315/mo. From $TSO P'ul1y cptd & drpd. Quiet i~day~,~~· Models~n9A.M.to6P.M.. C\ll'E oottage. 2 b<, new """ 6734083 .,. ro, m.2tll8 DELUXE I & 2 BEDROOMS cmr w/pvt entr. Uoe ol NEWLY DECORATED VERSAIWS trplc, patio, wtr. j anle_!W-"r. 4e~e~: :.O~ ~'r.t!. bright Fumished & Unfurnished ~· ¢'.~rly~. ~ 6 ~ 2 Br w/pr tncd yrd on the BLUFFS r.~d. 64-l-l6la. a o 4 WINTON Realty 675-3331. Heated Pool -Garages -Shag Carpeting &: wlmds 673-03&3 w/patlo. Wlr pd. Call btwn at NEWPORT Dishwasher -All Utilities Paid. 2 bedroo • h. B.J · 1 &: 5· 636-4.lXI. F'rru'ii NNpCl't Blvd., turn at l !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!~j lrel:' .. ~:~. c~rt.s~: Tustin Adults Only . No Pets :,ts ~;.,n,.. cho~:·,~: ~A~=tia Ave. ~ =~adf~~lH~~ R~ntal1 to Sh•l'9 431 . Stepa to bch. 675-2207. 4 BR, lrg. yard, wtr & 241 Avocado St., Costa MeH 646-1204 n. _.., pr mon · *SHADY ELMS ·PCX>L * Lido Ille) to entrance. I.Dea Co-sta Mesa mftner pd, ChUdr-e-n ok, Call 673-8550 RLTR. e Adult1 Poolside $1«> up 900 Cagney Lane, Newport Ps'!?~ ':\'th pool~Ji S325. Wtprdener, 544--2676/ VILLA MARSEILLES 3 BR & den auplex. 2lAi be, e Childrennextbklck Bea c h, ca . 93660 . ~b&e N'"pt. Beacb Joe. 3 BR. 2 BA, new crpt, paint _L>_,...,. __ l_._8 ______ , SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. jdul~7~~la, ~ LeuecdM' FrH Furniture Pl•n Telephone: Cn4) 64S-OJGO. .1:::175~. Callo=o,c..S.=-°'1502=·.,..---I in/out, fncd yrd, cov patio _•..;q_u~n-•_N_<_h ____ 1 Furnish.cl & Unfurnished ~~I. No~.ist~'M+.~ . 177 E . 22nd St., CM 642.-3645 P R 0 FESS I 0 NALLY -2 Br. house to &hare. \\•/brick BBQ, nr schls \\I. Ad It LI I decorated condo. 3 BR. 2 y round HllC NEED CASI{? Sl.000, Or up side 1st & last, refs. $221:'.1. LOVELY 4 BR, ocean view, u v ng OOWNSTAIRS duplex, lovely ""'lllln• P~tnt BA frplc pool dbl ear . .,._,mo. to $3,000, Sl0,000 and n1ore. 54&J3342. near town & schools, fncd Dishwasher color coordinated appliances 3 BR, 2 BA. trplc, drpg, OCEAN view. Spacious 2 eleci openU. ~ ~ile to ~h: Your ~.,$95. 673-0028 See Avoo Thrift for a Real ~s";.,.=-c1""-17:C~p-ts-. -.-.-,.-,-,.~2 -B~r. yd. $400 mo. 494-7754. Plush shag carpet· mirrored wardrobe doors--shag, bit~. enclsd gar, $350. br., 2 ba., din. aree., bltns, $325 Sml pet ok. 645--2346, Office Rental 44G Estate lnM. Upon approval. S135. c ar_ Kids/pets. Condominiums indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar· 603 Begoru4 213-639-2201. new cptg &: drps. Balcony. '-i645-411c=.O::·=~-=--=- use the n1oney ho\l"('Ver you Rent·A·House 979.a430 Unfum. 320 huge private fenced patio • plush landscap. LRG 1 br, garage apt. Shag $190. 837-3927: 837-5178. 1· Spectecular Bey View like. Also ask about our C0'"1TV\ Ing • brick Bar.b&Ques • large beatM pools crpts/drps. Walkin closet. Pvt beach, dock. 1 uniurn . unS<>Cured '"'rsonsl loans. 3 BR ~~uv-Double garage, r.ostA Mes• & I • Air d"t" In \' $170 mo. 494-7463. -'••nllngl-. n-ach ,.. new c ..... IS/d'"""' $ 22 5 _.:c.,_...;.;.;;.. _____ I anat. COD l lOn g, n ""' ~ 2 br, 2 furn or unfum bach· AVCO TllRIF'T.620 Newport .,, .,,~. . - NEW OFFICE SPACE ANAHEIM Agent, S40-115I. Huntington aeach 3101 So. Bristol St., Sante An• 5574200 co~o ••---* MOVE IN TODAY * elors. All with crpts, drps, Ctr. Dr., Suit t' 101, Ne"·port COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. :a1 m... bltns, stove, refrlg, dis· Beach, Ph. 8.13-3440. 2 BR. unfurn. $165. No $139 A MO. posals. 6n.n62. children, no pets. 388 \\'. 2 BR condo, adlt I i v In 8 • MANAGING AGENT Sr>ac. 2 &: 3 'BR tn 4--plex. Wells f•rgo B•nk Bldg ~ s., St. 645-1317. H"ntiog•on Boy. swimmlng:l!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll[!~ HARBOR GREENS S.V<ral av.UL ALL EX· Apts., pool, retreatlon, Ir p I c, TRAS Pool bldg Kid F Unfu 370 * li-fONEY to Joan oo real Dan• Polnt he /d lo ' • Ap F . . rec . A um. or m. ---------1VHs r ryer: s ve . ......,ue ta. urn. 360 A""' Furn 360 weloo-~m $139 See _____ ..;.;;c,;;;....;.;.;; eslate. Reasonable n.tl!s, or -$200 968-2290 ,..,_ • "'"· ·~" · -2 BR., family rm .. 2 trplcs. ,!'~m~··~!':!:~·~-~71:::'--:-7.-".""____ Fumllhed & ?o.fgr, 17371 Keel90n "B". l Balboa Penb'llU1• -198 So. Herbor Blvd Contact GRUBB & ELLIS CO. 557-7'00 \viii buy your T.D. t.tagnilicent ocean vie\\'! 1 BR condo l"D" Beach &: Co111ta Mes•· Huntinoton Bl•Ch blk \Y. of Beach Blvd. off _ _;..;;..;...;..;....;,;o;;;;;; __ * BROKER 642-7491 * $250 Month. 846-3293 Atlanta, trplc, refrlg, dbl Unfumlshed Slater. 968-7510 or 847-G'iO. DELUX 2 BR. tum, or un.. ""' w/cl<ct door opeoe<. Casa del Oro 2 BR. u..wn. crpt>. -· 30 WALK TO BEACH tum, \I blk ocean/bay. $)70. 962-T.ES. AU. UTILITIES PAID bltlrui, no pets, 1 child. $150. From $1 to $215 mo Agent, 675-4630. 846-7337 aft 4. New 1 &: -S BR. cpt/drps Morfgeges, f.:l ••n·i~n•on Beech Trust Deed• 260 1..;,. ___ ..;;..;.;:;; __ 1--------$5500. lst TD, $55. Per •fl"!O. Including 9% due-3 yrs. Coven $10,000 L a g u n a Beach ocean view lot. $2800 bond paid off. 10% diAcount. {714) 493-1154. Houses Furnished 300 Balboa Peninsula 3 BR, 2~ bath. All ne\V in· ll'rlor. \Vinler renlal. 305 Montero. 1-879-5991. Corona del M•r NEW 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath · Quiet street · \Valk to beat'h • S350 a month. 'Bkr. 6'~7225 Laguna Be•ch $125 uw pd, lrg bacli, full kit. pvt patio. $140 -Util pd, Sml but nice 1 Br. \Valk to beach & town $'100, Util pd, l br sepr rot· tat:e w/pool. Decorator furn. NU-VIEW RENTALS 613-4030 or 494-3248 1 EWclroom, new c!lrPf'ls 2 Bedrooms . All electric Best local. Call ?tlr.s. Segner 962·2936 or r.trs. ll1lcLey 962--H n I BR, unfurn. Ref.rig. I: bltns. Compare before you rent Bachelors e 1 Bdrms dAwshr. 316 16th. 536--7465 or Coron• del M.lf' ""1~~~~~~~~:.J Crpts. drps. patio. $155/mo. Custom designed featuring· MEN, STWlll beach hotel. 847-3957. 1------"'----,; Les Luymes, Bier, 54().1151. e Spacious kitchen with ~. Roomper n!,~S.:=k, apts $95 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms BEACHBLUFF Apts. so. of Hwy. Spac. 2 BR. L NI I 1 'h or 2 Full Baths apts. &: pool. 1 Blk. to agune gue direct lighting 2 & 3 BR.E11Poo1 l~A .. '.:..~ beach; also . 3 BR. unt. 3 BR. 2~ BA in Sea Terrace, • Separa~e din'g area L1gun• Bet.ch Master size bedrooms w/ D-whr. 8231 s. o-u;-..».>. hcwe avail. A~nt, 644-4848. ocean v ie w' cpts/drpe .• • PrivH~e-teliket~e LIVE in luxury from $45 wk hln'gh beam ceilings, large SPACIOUASll 3 ~,!JB9KAlvalld' l;;;';;"';';;•;;M;;•;;•;•;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;, Lease S400 mo. lnc. Assn a pa Kls or $160 mo. Singles nr iving room w/gas or now. xu.... DESK space •vallable $50 4 Blks from Ocean 2 Br, has dues. Zll: ~ Eve.• Closed garage w/storage Euites, heated pool, maJd wood burning fireplace. weloome. 968-7510, 8-47'""'260. mo. WW provide fUr'ni ' everythif\£, Kids/pc1s ok. 213. 322-2202 • Marble pullrnan service, laundromat. Village Convenient laundry area NEW, 1 BR, $145. 2 BR, $115. at $5 mo. Annrnillg aerv1ce Rent·A·House 979-8430 · · e Klng-az Bdrms IM. f94.943G. off kitchen. Enclosed Jl8.· 4 Bloc.kg from ocean. * * * * * * available. 222 FOl'Mt Ave, 3 BR. Max, 3 children. No San Juan Caplstr•no e Pool • Barbeques • sur· OVERLOOKING ocean & ti(ll!. 2 swimming pools, l-"536-""-''16'18-""''-" ------Laguna Beach. 49f.-!Mli6 -ts. 1.8421 n-aoh Bl•-'. rounded wfth plUSh land· viii I in !ro ... a:auna. ~ation {4cili· 2 BR Duplex Downtown. LA COSTA APTS. ,... DO:" vu 2 BR, 1 BA. refrlg., cpts . age. m · m .,,ore;, t1es._ Security guard. No "°"lB ... _.. Atove 1145 mo BAY VIEW OFFICES Close to shpg. & drps, Wtr pd. $180, mo. scaping. $225 monthly incl. util. & TV pets. ._.., ' ........ ~':k. ,.u,., · ' CONDO !119-9163 21~•i ......,.. Adult living at its best cable. 494-8541. ~· I •2 n-.i Deluxe. Air-O>nditioncd * 3 Br , crpts, drps, 1-· -~~· =~~--~·~·-· ~ La l B Model 'Ope 10 ill 7 -• c----.__ ..u.uroom Redecora.ted. Lido Area-pool, washer/dryer, R/0, fluolexes Ful'tl. 345 rge R SIBO. 1 BR wtooean vtew. $175 -I n pm laguna rotHCn e Built·fnl e Shag carpeta Realonomlcs, Bkr. 6'ffi.6700 ' refrtg, s200. 548·1405. 1-----...:..;___ 2 sz:~~1:200. mo. 9 mo. lse. AdltA. Ph : 2700 Peterson W•y, CM e VIEW • e Drapes e Walk tn closets OFFICE-STORE 3 BR, 2· BA, bltins, fenced N'twPOrt Beach 365 Palm Springs TI4: 32&-243.5 H bo Blvd I. OCE NFRONT e Swimming Pool UtJ OH children ok. $270 mo. ren1 1--"-'-.;..;-',-"'---W. Wil!IOn 642-19TI eve. nr ar r A ' -• Bar·b-Ques 525pa"'Jg·.ft.:.....,,.1Npale..!.~. _'!: WATCH the sun set over the Ad 2 BR, 2 BA. LA;:a.se. Mature e Enclosed Carag '" --..,.... ... ... , $260 lease. 842-4827. WEEKLY·MONTHLY BACH. ,.. "'•ch. $ll>$15.\. •m• Adulta, no ..... Elevato< Alf Utilities Pa·1d of Bay St. 646-1.252. $1'5-2 Br. Frplc, bltns. 2 Ba. oceB an,,rro~ ~ bal 100"'1 · 4 Executive Suites Col. TV. 1435 N. Coast. 546-lJlJQ to .beach. Pool. Security. BUSINESS suite, c.m-~ ndo 19742 Cove ......_. N r ., .,.., nice Y um. 2080 N Bl d Open eves. 6 7 5-4 3 6 7 : .. .,~ UP •-oo · n .... ,.. r. Suitable for 3 or 4 teachen ewport v • 494-2508. aft 4. ~ · Dr. at MacArthur, N.B. Ap-. Brookhurst & Adams, H .. B or students. Thru June. $300 Coste Mes• 31755 Coast Hwy, S. Laguna Mature adults, m pela prox. 400 aq. fL 5-10-4752. Irvine mo. (213) 4D-2406. 642·2611 Newoon n--..a.. 499-2835 Walking diAtance to BEAUT oftlce to share. -~ ROOM • ba'" / I 11hopping center. t')u.,lexet Unfurn. 350 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S DELUXE "' .,, w pr v en-354 A :ado s ACI"OM from BBC. NB. Resp 3 BR., 2 Ba. Atriwn , •.. $325 e FREE Linen8 We have \Vlnter Rentals APARTMENTS lrance. Near beach, bu-'l & voca t., C.M. party only. 66-0930/646-1%11. 3 BR, 2 Ba ••••••.•...•.. $345 Capistrano Beach • FREE Utilities \\'Ill Take Students Air Cond • Frplc's • 3 Swim· ~7U79North eOO. S 8 5 • '4l-9JOI Business iilent•f 4t5 \VE 1-IAVE OTHERS 1.0===;.;;...=="---e Full Kitchen Also oceanfronts avail. ming Pools. Health Spa . !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 LOVELY custom 2 Br. e Heated Pool 4 BR. 2 BA ...•.•.. $325/350 Tennil O>urts • Game and La9una Nl1uet I' LA MANCHA SS ON O ~~~~7!ic. g=n~~ e Laundry Facilities 3 BR, 2 BA ............ $28.5 Bill.lard Room. LAGUNA NIGUEL Brand New Deluxe Units Ml I VIEJ wtr pd, no pets, avail Nov. • TV & maid serv avail 1 BR., 1 BA • •• ·• ···' ·• • $l7S 1 BR From $160 Apartments Rent now for yoor oorr Retail/C.Omm. space avail lst-l!i, ~. •Phone Service ~ ::: ~~ p~~~·:::::::: 1 .. ~ERD, AITEDeRoRAFroNmEA$1N8.5 1Br.,1 Ba.; $185 e 2 Br., 1 ~~ ~~. ~f8J Conta.ct Coron• d'•I ~r * $27 • .50 WEEK & UP CAIL: 613-3Qi3 fVI Ba; $2'25. e 2 Br., 2 Ba.; .t: den 2 BR's A ~ BR's. GRUBB I: ELLIS CO. C:-l)j 'l 1 11111 I' I I ii ' ---·1 Li'11 llu r • Studio &: l BR Apts VILLAGE $2.15 From $155. D!hwshr, encl 557·1'00 ROOMY l Bedroom, 2 bath, • TV & Ma.id Service Avail Incld Gas, TV Cable & wtr gar, swim'g pool. BBQ'11 '!'!'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!'Ii ground Door. Sl50 pr. month • Phone Service-Hid Pool 2400 Harblr Blvd., C.M. Fully cr>ntd .1 drpd, ltec Pets acceptable COMMERCIAL unit on ~ I ISHED Laguna charm "SINCE lS46" hoU5e for salaried re!!pOnsi· ble older man. $160. No ill Western Bank Bldg. University Park, Irvine plus,.,,..spacl<?'-th" lri bed1 room • Oiildren & Pel section <n•J 557-8020 · facU. Hi.d Pool BBQ area. 642-3Xl7 778 Scott Pi., C.~. Coast Hwy. suitable for ups wi p va e en· 2376 Newport Blvd., CM RENTAi 0 CE bo . hop II trance, $225 pr month . Both 548-9'155 or 1)45..J967 • rn 29041. AJoma Ave. 1 BR furn $130.. 2 BR unflu-n uhque s or ga ~a ' uni tA n~xt to p.a.rk & tennis, SlOO month & up. *Balboa. Penln, 3 BR, 2 BA OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM m.22TI or 495-5774 $14ll, pool, adults only. 325 $275 mo. leue. 64-751, t.-L~7-~:~·~:-::-'1-.-10-· ----Oevs 552-7000 Ni1_hts BLUFFS !FUU..Y FURNISHED) Very p o pular "Bonila", mo d e l ho m e cona. Completely redecor. Avail. now! $600 per .month or 3 BR 2 bath' $3~ l .,!c:!•!!!ll..'"'!!"'l:Sc;:.~67'!3-8550::":'!~A~<f;!.o__l;;-gH..\ov'"F.ii:.i;:':°~io,:-; E. 17th Place. • Good Real Estate. 1 . . . .. . .. .. . ~ * HADY ELMS • POOL * over garage On b a y 11111i•e81i8JIU aJ M V 1'1111 4 BR. 2 balhs ... , , .. , • $350 Coste Mes• • Adults Poolside $l40 up w/beach. Util ~d. $.150/mo. U:J1 61 ese • NE\V -2 Br unf. $190, furn. SMAIJ.. Ottioe & Shop lflll<:e1 3 BR,, bonus rm ... · ... $400 e Children next block. 213: 621)--7233 collect. 2 Bedroom, 2 bath ••••. $205 2 Br Mega Verde Villa, ~~ 1:;:,· ~~ ~pi::s:· J.,n ;:: ~ua_: eel h.11 2 c~Rdrn,. u~urnpetBS~W· ~Yo Free Furniture Plen BACHELOR apt. Winter or 31 ~m, 2 bath ..... $255$160 crpt/~;..!o sin&}es.. $195 o g. . up. 493-Jl.54.. r I St . 645--1317. · · 177 E . 22bd St., CM 642-3645 yearly lease. Open Sat & 1 ~.·~a:·:: SI.BO mo. ~""'· Industrial RMtal 4SO Huntin,ton Beach 2 BR. UTIL PO $175 Sun. 4831 River. St, NB. or Beautiful new apts. w/pvt Newport 8e•ch II &) I;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;; Attrac. ""''· Hid pool Adlts. call wkdays 213· :m-15811. """°'' • .,...., pool, spa. •-· -JUST COMPLETED ' REALTY No pets (infant ok) 3 or 4 BR. Winter or yearly Lush garden setting, Adults, PARK NEWPORT L'niv Park Center, ln·inc IMMEO. OCCUPANCY 642.952() · lease. Open Sat I: SUn, 4831 no pets. 151 E. :I.st, C.M. APARTMENTS 1600 to 3300 Sq. Ft. Call Anytime, 833--0S2J New 2 &: 3 Br apts * $2S PER WEEK * River !!I., NB or call 646-8666. Rooms 4QG IN SANTA ANA Off ice how's 8 A?.-1 to 6 Pt-of Dbl garage, dshwshr & U Pool & 'd . wkdays; 213: 33().4588,UPP .~c::.,,.:::;;:::.LAR~~(:~E-2~1!<-.-.nc-I . Oft the bay New tilt-up bldg w/aharpl Cor lluntl~on/Adams HB p. nw aervi~. YEARLY Lse. 2 doon from gar. Nr. occ &: ghop'g. Luxury apartment Hv{ng ov· * BR, pvt borne. Ck>se to crptd. paneled ottie@t & PRJV ATE HOUSE "'-8181 ' . Kitchens ava 'I. Motel Tahiti bch. 2 BR, part. turn. Crpts, Adults, 00\pets. 29S4 Royal loolrl the t Enjo Ahopg. plaza. Costa Mesa. B tor a 1 e me z z a n I n ~~S2n;!t!Ap~ ~E0~ t'<lmet Harbor A Victoria. drps. $250/mo, 642-3443. Palm Dr. $152/mo. ~l5l5 ~.OOOnghealth ~7 mi: Aft 5 & wknds, 64&-3>42. ~~ ~~ doon, W. library. Enclosed yard and CHARMING 1 BR. furn. ~h· 3 ~-~_2 beV .. st~~ to or 5S1-l372. ming pools 7 u .. "ted ten. 2~REALownNICEentrances$71l .'. HUNSAKER DEV. C~ t'<lvered patio. All latest paint. Lovely garden !!Ul'· 675-4630. ts "'""'" bl-D --•---.a nill courts, plus miles of $60. Men only. 646-9236. I'" 1 duplex, new crpts, drpe & ...,ac . ""--.,..., u, ""6ent, BRAND new 2 Br apt.s, • _.. LfV ~ • • • "' 546-5460 ~~~~iJ1~~:S m~~~~j rourdi.ngs. $135. Mature NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. $285. ht & ~ ....... Siis. C:U ~ blcycle trallA, pumna:. lhuf· PRIVATE room. Own eriL 340 sq. ft ofc., workl•torage ·~ £73-6568 or 546-J688. ~iiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~mitl.~ad~ul~U~o~ru~yt'.:.J548.$.ll~~~-'..:.:'.:'. I last. %: Block to beach. 2J07 or 548-0058 aft 6. Deboard, croquet, Junlor l's Wlbatb, phone 1: view. $30 space, C.M. Utlla pd. Mo. to ;~t\ lagun• Be•~h Aots. Fum. 360 BACHELOR. 1 It 2 Br. apts. Court St. apt B 675--0258 2 BR apt. Carpets & drps, from $174.50 monthly; alao l week. ~3143. C\. ;moC"".-'f'6=7-<4..:.c16c.;'--'673""'24~=::.· ~~· \eS11'.' :st Oi\f ~ -"---------8-a-lbo-a-lt-la-nd----·1 .~/nocarporta.pets, .,.~td &.~p: WATERFRONT, lrg. 2 BR, $150, w/util. Older person ~d 2-~-.~~ansE!and ROOM W/w;iv. bath A 'ii) Storege 455 ti_'}!) U $150 Victoria Sch., lrg studio, • ....., f.91 winter. $300 yearly. No pets. Stove & retrlg. story town nu..-:a. ec-· prlviJ, Pool tacU. $70/mo. ocean view, full kit. 853 Center St. ~. 544-2013. 839-~. trlc kitchens, private patios S.A. Hgts area. 557-7678. BLOO. for rent. approx. "ft! ~ rcnlty $225, 2 br, bltns, crpt/drps, Nc~~~iur~A.113 e~!"t ~it~~; VERQuleyL "s.l"'p. 1byB1:.,.,!1~ •. · 4 BR, 2 BA on Beach. Avail. Spac. 2 & 3 Br apt. $140 up or balconies, carpetin&, dra· LARGE room, pvt ba .l entr. ~·m';.~%.ce:sen:,::.:. ocean view, gar. f I kl BBQ Le a~-~ now thru June 1 9 7 3 Pool, cpt/drp, bltnfi, kids ok perles. Subterranean park· Jn Mesa Ven'le. Emplyd 24~~ &!~c~ro $325, 3 hr, 2 ba, 2 frplcs. gar 1'"1: :·u paJ u'n e . · ase ~~cniver ~. No pets. 645--0245 or 541.9'ri.&Bob. • 1996 Maple No. l •. 642-3813 Ing w1th elevator.a. Optional man. Call 54.5-2822. C.M. 644-ll33 ANYTIME yard, deck. patio. 638-8470/~1. · NEW dlx duplex, ~ blk 2206 College No. S .. 642-7035 mAid service, Just north or *Nice Bdrm., kitch priv op-R .. ntalt W•nhd NU-VIEW RENTALS Furn Bach & 1 Br Ex· 3 B •····-1 "-· 2 BR,-·-, d~s. bl--. 1.--• Fashion Island al Jamboree tional. Pvt adlt borne, ,..!----------< Ba h $l25 St d' ba,yfront G73-t030 2 Br. Utll pd. Prtrlng • • • ocean. r. IUW':l.-, se. \,.... ~ .. ~ .... """ •1e1 EA~LUFF 3 BR. home or-Sl~: ~a:n u c:tage fncd or 494-32-4!l hftloonies. $200/mo. 200% ceptlon•lly nice! 2110 June 15. $300 mo. 540--8442. garage. Mesa Verde area. and San Joaquin HUl1 Road. all. East C.M. 548-4271. Condo. Needed lmmedlately 2 Br, !IJ\gls /fam ok. Lagun• Hiiis Sapphire. 67&-3288 N•wport Blvd., C.M. WINTER. 2 &: 3 BR. beach $160/mo. 549-1008. Telephone (7141 644-1900 Nice room, own ba. & entr. by responsible part, furn or Rent·A·Houte 97f...1430 Balboa Penlnsul• 1 BR Trir, $UO. 2 Br, trlr rentah Red, to S250 &: leu. 1 & 2 BR. Garden Aptg. Pool. tor rental lnfor;mauon kitchen priv. Good loc, East unfurn. (older sect It' n $265 • Lovely 3 BR, 2 Ba $12). Util Incl. No pela or ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 DshWlbr. Utpl pd. $160 up. WALK C.M. $98/mo. 548-5998. pref'd). ~ * l BR furn houAe, on duplex w/elec. bltns & NEWLY dee . .t: ttmodel@d. children. 646-llll9, 642--3375. r-n Cl-onto 324 E. 20th SL, 645-Cm. 11.1. BlockA ta the beach or PRIVATE entrance & beth.14fi;BCiiR,-"i-1':,1y:::'iboe=:.':.,.:::CA"dtmo=~:1 beach, to June 1st air/cond . New crpt'g & Furn ...... -t I-'* bch ~ ... , ,.. N 9291 54()... drps. Attractive M:l\\'OOd · -,,uun w ~..-. • FURN l Br apt in £ood "-'"-"-'"-'=.0..---I.GE. l Br., pool, nr shops. run -% block to the bay. 2 $SCI/mo, ear Brookhunt &: Mesa Verde tchl, 1 child $300/mo. 646-M fenced patio. Call eves <2l3l Quiet mature single or cpl .:ea. ·water ir gu pd. $150. l BR. apt., Incl. linens, walk Ad.Ila, no pela. Utllil pd. 1884 BR apt, W/front yard. -'Adornjiiji~i;Hi;ii.ai;i968-ii;~i;ii"iiiil;,,iCallii;;j2llii;';i633-ii;;il.l!Oi;i.iiiiiiij 2846. 393-7070 or Sat. 1 71 4 1 pref. S225 mo. Yr I Y · 50--J:m or 838--891! to bch., 262 Victoria, S.C. Monrovia. 54&--0336. Avail Nov. 15. $199.50. Call • Sn&ls ..,~ ovac~nhL .!aJk11: ,_586-_3898._______ ~!:~ . uf On n.....,,. 2 LARGE Bl" apt, 1 ~d ok, AByptOwneTUnfu. 493-"835. 365 3 BR, 2 BA. shllg crpt:u. drp&, ffl>.1304. * * * * * * '4'lr •·~ " c · Lagune Niguel ~ly &cb-Br-~ partly turn. $140. • rn. carport nr. OCC. pstain. BAYFRONT Walk to Beach. Util pd, 646-2270 $169/mo. 552-9786. Lrg 3 ~R. 2 BA. partly fum. Rent-A-Houff 979..8430 SPAC 4 BR, $70,00J home, Maid~ ~~til pd IMMAC 2BR. $170. BltinB, B11lboa Island l & 2 BR. Adults no pets. or unrurn. Util od. Crptd, r----------------.... 1 HouMS Unfurn. :J05 Nr. beach. Rent $450 mo. AdulUI N la 160 BAY MEADOWS APTS. draped, dock avail. Adults. no ··-e SJt-="° 2 BR, l~ii BA! ~tlo. balcony, garage. · o pe · 3 Br., 2 ba., frplc. Can furn. 387 w no .. St CM.,. -n $365/mo Yearly 675--5934 •....:SJ> ....... ~,.. ""°"' 315 E. Bay, $Z'IO mo. on url,y 2ht St. S.2127 Prefer yrly. W/mo. ll71Ai · ua.J ' II'"""'-' • • • G.neral YRLY '. N 2 R 2 I ,. 2 DJ nd ~ -SPAC ba hi t hi " 2 Lrg BR, Ntil Rm, frplc., ..... 8.M!. ew B , lie. trq. at Apt C ~1521 **Nice 1 A BR Trailers. amo · v•.r.--·. c ap · nr sc s a: d!h/wsh, shag, sundck, ba. On Golf Course. $285. or 543--'mt. $85 I: up. Mature adulla. Balba. Penlnsu•• shopping. No pets, $130 mo. patio, 1 min. to bch. $285. mo, Call ~2030. BAYFRONT . Clean 3 BR. 2 child ok. 642-1265. Util pd. Call~ Mr. Dietzel 832·3580 • 1-8 Mesa Verde Ba. lrplc, Winier rental. UTU.S Pd., Bachelor, Qlllet. • OCEANFRONT Town · ** 1 Br., patio, carport. pm. llENTAUI --*""'"· * l41·01n * RENT Mc. unturn, 6 Br., 3 hA. w/crpt. Year lea.~. dePo1lt. Ava,11 29. Oct. $475 mo. 557..gzsg) l"-~W.1tlhall?AMllA JMMAC. Ip 3 BR, 2 BA. tam Theae Are Just A r ew Of rm. trplc, OW· •hag crpt11, Prtv. beach. 615-0 7 4 6, J Adult only, no pela, $120. house, tantuUc view, 3 BR, new cpts I drps. $135, Furn l ·SP=A::.Cl_O~U-s-2-B-,-. -2-Ba-, -1-b-lk 67~2599. 548.8251, 548--1416. lam nn., 3 frplca, '1 Ba. avail. 531-8508. to bay 1 blk t Coron• del M•r ~· IL $700/mo, Yrly. 2 BR, utll paid, $170 mo. no Yearly.' $DI/mo. 0 :::a;: Huntlnport 8e.c:h ~~~· ______ 1 pets. 2277 Maple St. 61H9ll OCEAN View. 2 Blkl to bbl; PENINSULA 3 Br, 3 Ba * 5t8-59l3 * .::.:;:..::::::.:.· ------ -O>rona, 2 Br. SD> uUI. pd. L•QUINTA HERMOSA Fireplace. Nkc $263/yearly DUPLEX • 2 BR unturn 2 BDRM .. 1% Ba., lrplc., Yearly. Adu1t1, no pell. Spanish 0>unb'7 !'.atate LIY. 615-¥47. Garage. Qultt. NO dogs 0~ patio, lgc. back yard. 1 blk Jrader's Paradise lines times dollars ALS $275. mo. Avail I 0 • 2 6 . Our MANY RENT . . . 516-8218 * $"ll5 • BEACll PAD: Partly _N_•_w.,,po_rt_llo...;;.•<;.;h.;..... __ &15-1624. lnc A Sp&cloul Apta. Ter-Coron• del M•r motorcycles. 548-2720. to ocean. $250. yrly. C915 1 BR, turn prage apt , rtced pool; sunkt'n pl * 2 BR Apt. C'rpts, drps, River. 675--3908 after 6 pm. , _____ _,._ __________ _;,'! beamed cell., sunporch, no BBQ UnbeUnabte Uv1nJ Cll.AltMING 2 Br duplex. carport, upstain. $135/mo. NEW xhae. paint, 11tove. 1 $75M eqty on ~ acres nr. PRIME Ind. bid&. AAA Nat. Tenanl, 20 yr IM!. $30,000 N.N.N. lnc. Trade $121.cllO eqty for IJ[e •pts. or cont· merdat nicr. Ml-M!9. RIVERSIDE. 1 M:re, 1 BR t'<ltt8Cf:, owrlook1na La Sltrra, nr la lhppa: aiu. ideal ).or rctlre. TRde f(lr CM _,.,., 64fl.<l5n dy! tum. Ut.ll pd. Lorw hair ok. * $135 • BRING Kkls/Pet. 2 Br. IJOrcalow. Gar. Vocon1. SJ.50 • HAuNt:D HOUM. 2 + den + older homl Fncd ynt for k:ldllpel * f165 • YEARLY at beach? 2 Br. Furn. Gar. Slnalea ok. * S1 75, new 1 br, nr bch. bltns ,.,., nice. • $21G-2 + Den P~nlnwla Point. Child, pet ok, $300, 2 br. 2 ba, dbl frplc, bltns, pvt over pr. NU-VIEW RENTALS 61'3--4ll)J or ClM-3248 e AT Beach! 1 Br. All utilities paid. $125. • ALARentals•'4~ $1«> ·PRIVATE 2 Br. Home. e UN"BEU£VABLE1 3 Br IS'. ~ng. Yard for nr. beach. All UIU pd, $100. child/pet. Chi.Id ok. * ALA Rentols • 645-1900 1190 • BY the SEAi 3 Br. }"'nett. Gar, KJd1 wcleomt . ~:tr! ~ ~~ Ba, po.Uo, LANDLORDS I * 'eau 641J.t11'1 * rnm RENTAL SERVICE . BEACON RENTALS Delly Piiot want Ada haw * 645-0111 * -plore. pet1. $185. Plu1 u t 11 . ency' • Newly dee. 1190 mo. Call Older pretd. 673--8143. blk to bch. Ulll pd, Ytly. Yucl11,pa... BAJ. $400,000. inl. S37.s147 U $1 5 after 5, ffl>.5610, il no -S BR. 2 BA-PATIO. ~~n$1!i0. 2 Br. $2!WJ only 7%. Fantastic v\ewa. 2 Blkl to Big Corona. 138ch. 1 BR. F RN. 7 sll!!Wff call 675--l'.IOO. v•.rv• h!Us valleys For inc $150 util. pd, Ycarl,y. J 2 BR. FURN. $210 2 BR. 2 Ba., upstairs, dcrYm· $l70 Mesa de! Mar. 64!).tnl. WATERFRONT dupl~. De· ot ! Bkr. 547-6469. ' prop Adult. no pets. t>U-1624. 21:f·~ i~ ;~ Att~r Sw;!lllh Crpt • fr!R Q~~ • a ::~ ~krmFU gar., la'!uOOry, sni.ooo eqty in ssoo.ooo 1 BR. FURN. No pet•. $150 ~ alt & s; Nr 'Harbor Ce t ' ~· ....., -..1 · .-."!·~~ u um. bldg Portland, Ort. AAA + St:i untll. Adult. No pell · p.m. · "er. · 1".,)''00 or 0·~· National Tenant, on N.N.N. * Call m.fl737 * * GREAT VIEW, ·12 BR. * 1 Br. ~dth ~· Wtr &: $185 l Bdnn. $195 2 Bdrm, 31 yr lie. Want prime ahoPI ,..ft\t• "'9n 14 blla S. Clf San Dlq'o n,.,. Frplc., bltna1 .~~ llOO(. ~hl"I' tum. $110 mo. bla modtm yrl)'. Dev~ cntr or?? Bkr. SfT-6469. on Bea.ch. 1 blk W. on HoU $210 Ufl. M4-6344, 615-3535. AdltJI only, no pel'A. 543-e4. c.<M-o615 675-1972. CANYON lalte lot, aolf cne JUS .. mo. Dix tdob. home. 2 tlD 16211 Parbide I.Ant.) 2 BR apt avail Nov 1st, walk 2 BR. 8/,t. Beam cell., pool, NEW dlx. d\lplex, % blk view, nr lake. und. utll. bedroom comp. furn. Jltd. 17141 147-540 to bnch, IUtults. $205. carp, f't>I, bltns. No pets. ocean. 4 Br. UJ>Of!r, yrty Sl0,000 ~ I cle1.r. Trade POOi. Adults • no peta. 2359 83l--14TI or $46-4431. Jnfant O.K $150. 6-t2-,98S2. lte. $42$. per mo. 540-M{l, -tor income proporty or ?t Newport, 543-1332. $145 • $165 e CoroUdo 2 Br .. 114 0.11 . Cl·l'EERFUL, airy, nu 2 BR. F.ASTBLUFJo" DLX 2 BR, 2~ ;:B;_,rlc:;,, ,:MT::.;::-6469::::;;..·· ~,-,,..-.,.- 1 Dr encloetfl patio l\achelor &. 1 BR. paUofl, Pool. 2" car prlc'1. $210. 1 ba apt. Adults, no pcta. DA. trplc, 91!.q:, ~. pool, WANT Isle Cad Cir ConnJt 0irl>ort, pe111 OK. hi>lc '11, tmv. PfalJ'!!I • M4-8Sl4 or t1'S--1721. 548--0IKM dbl gar, pa11o. ·&f4..M<r>. In part tor Newport 30 $140. 6T!-5134 ~~"'::'-~-cUtiJ.. t;:i ~ 2 BEDROOMS,·1 bath, just 2 BR, u~n, bltns. crplll, YEARLY. 3 BR, trpl., lteps Au:<. sk>op! Sleeps 7! All 1 BR. Fum. 11,pt. Adults. pool t.ables, uuna baths. ~ted. $ 21 O Imo . drp1, s ngle cltt' gar. $140 to ~an. S)XI, 4 Brt, ~. Raclng/Crul= Cear Inc. !148-2080 all d&y wkntb 01' Stf' for )'OUl'f!l(llf1 lml R4!allor, 64~7210. per mo. 642·9026 or 644·1045. ABBEY REALTY 60-3850. JOllN 562· : 64Ml306 l.'';o't-'5"pO'm"'.-'w"l«l"""'=·'-.,..-,,-,,I K~lllOD t.n. (1 b1k W, of 2 RR, 2 BA. 2 BU<~ from Retll'M COU.PICI w/small do8 1 Wock to ocean • 2 BR. 2 * Sen idle Item• now! c.tl ~sch, 1 blk N. of Slater ). beach. 3 3 0 Martur.rlte, 1 Br apt nr. Catholic chrch ba., brand new $275/mo., 642--5678 now! &d--7141 673..0937 or 675-4873 In 11boprltna cntr. 549-1724. yrly ·leMe 847-8531 ~nl. * * TR~ Bmnuda ~ CC Elta.tet Vu lot. PUn 0.. ert • Lalte EJl!nor9 CJ: H .. 1aht1 • Vu lot ror or on • rondo Of mob. hm. 673-lUI llA VE two Sf(Joo1-ae.t 1o1t1, moo and S6800 c1ce \\'Ant llllfbor Area R·l GI: R·2. Ctn add cuh. Bia. m.'122$ * * * ' I M""'" Oet-?3, 19n DAILY PILOT ! l i;;;m ... _. ·~l[j)~ [ -.. ._ J[5J I --.... jl5J ~[ ~L,.,..~, ... ~J~[JJJ 1 ~''*'-J[ll] ~' _-_ .... _,J[fi]1 ~i ~ .. ~ ... ,.~ .. ~ ... Jl~IJ ~j ~ .. , .. ~ .. -~J[ll)~IJ~[ ~r. ... ~ •• -~,l~IJ '"'"l•MI• Ull C-t, Concm. Hou-IMnlnt Holp Wonted, M & F no Hole Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, t & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 IMlp Wo•lod, M & F 710 • t • lfINl)U SPIRITUAUST * CUSTOM CDlENT \VORX P•fntfrt1 a. Atrr'OMOTIVI! lpprtDtlce ID CXX>K-FmME GENERAL Of~: s e 11 • MANICURIST WAN'T't-:0 Real Ea-fate Salu WAIT'R.£SS. ~· O'm' ~-~ this ad cbanae ~ Drtvet. WALKS. _ patios, Peperhenglnt work on antique C8.l'L Must Owr 21 startn-for young ofc. Penn Thurs.-Sat. Blu:y ulon [[ Aziply bl oenon+ l.oYI! • Mole ou.Uook on Ufe Jor tht pool aecb. Don. 6CHS14 be tndUltr'loua, artistic, I: l.Gm Beach Bl., Hwit Och posit~ f/tin\e, Apply ltoff. In San Juan Capo, 493-!0ll fR BBQ, Brookhunt I: Adams, better Prof.etl)ona.I advt.oe PATIOS::PLANTERS PAINTING : Int/Exler. Neat, full lime. 51M6'1L COOK (Fry), exper no t riec. n'Ul.l'I 1-'•brlcs. 345· 11c.<:or-lo"llco.B.°'==-="',.,...__,-.,.,--,,I a life. Uc. Rla41IWa dally. All Cohcrete work. Bdclt. clt'&lt, fAllt, oow1eow1 ~ AVON" ClllUSTMAS EARN· Dana Point YRcht Oub, mlck Ava., c.~t . MATH MAJORS Llcens• TralnlnS WANTIDPoUlh Ir dfltall ~-~~=·El~: P~ .:·:e.l\18~ ~· es~tEst~~-~ 1-M ~ifd~~ha~J:r °t:e )'01:; ~~ ~~,1~~r dry GIRLS F Limit: Time On y W!;1t.:~:~ Meaa c.r n-• ~ ,.._ ... _ ._ __ ... 'w • , law, ,84:::1!:~~1::28:,c·,,..=--.,,----entire 1amlly! It'• easy sell-cleaners, cxper. Call •--EM;Y. tun job. Jn1med. O(.)C'n· ~ enst rourae now Wig Styli•!, oxp'd. """'-...... me .. i.o;, un:IU\, l"l!mcM! It rep ce -N W •1.... ing, tine Avon products for 8 . lW. IJ\ia,. E'111, part tinle, day ava,,.ble lhru Tarbell Corn· EASY DIVORCE c.~te. 548--8008 for est. * WALLPAPER * our lrres18tiblc Christmas appt. bet11.'TI & 9:30 a.rn.. or n1gh1. Apply lu JX•n1011 NE\VPORT BEACH p~u1y, l\pplican!s fully n:· 846-2230 Ch Id C.r. CataJogUe. Call Now M0-7CM1 548-4243. Kuster's Qu11illty any AfL or E\'t'. lit 2'J30 W. FIMnclnl lnJ1titutlon has im· imbursed upon Q, Wl.lificat.lon. \1'110 WANTS 1'0 wonv! •-•em di·-r-14ws are 1 "~-n ~· call .... _ _., Cl-nc" ,.,, Newport Bi N -• 1 ~ PN1 ... .... "'~ -1v -••WL\:" BABYSITTER. for 2 drls .... ' ........... ·• C1)1111t lh\'Y. NB. mediate 0 11 f' n Ing fur rw or ex:penenc .. , sa es DRrvE A CAB! il.mple. Step.by·&lep, oon· COSTA MESA. PRESCHOOL, M&-l4f4 646-1711 ages 8 &: 12; boy 15 -from 5 C.M. ill h S d . lfi . b nwnagement trainet". Pf'OPl"· Open.lngs avallabJ!", CllOOSE yoUr hout'f, woric flt'ltnt\al lnftruciioo, make 1Rth & MOlll'Ovia. NEW PAINTING & PAPERING, t g S d k DElJVERY of DA l Ly sc · r. esires o ce )0 qon1plete training progrnm. for yourself. bu your OWTI it poulble for you to handle JIOURS 6:30 am-'::.> pm. 19 yn. in Harbor area. Lie hoom• ·~-•'bt•'"'1 1 vwe tniy PU.lYJ', SUNDAY ONLY, to 1·00 5 dadl_ly,l 2 ~ e&xp.lfi~lft MINll\1U~1 1'utu;e management oppor· boas Men or women. Can be your own dlvwce llhOut & bonded Ref f · ~-~ • n ' newspa""'" caITlel'll. R"-s Jl, isp ay, aruCS 0 ce. QUALIFICATIONS lunltit't. Call Mr, Sloan at sllghlly handicaf.ped. Vis, lawv w a Mu1ic, stories, art. Reas. · I urn. 551~3954 ,_ ,...... .... Will do sorting, stuffing, * Coli n....-r. 8.12 5440 ;_,, 21 -, wyer. $24.95.:' M4-2482. Ratel. Llc'd, 6(2-4()50, Evea.1 .:642=·=23'6::::::·=--~--qu .. ~s the uae of a Slatio11 billing, typing, mhneo :i.t ege ..,...."'""~ · · ret .. =. A~e o 1v, aup- ALM I: CARD READINGS 838-52.Tl. INT&: EXT painting, paper ~YS~~~: J,0 :Jldr:.: ~~&:'el~y~~=~BayP.lr. homt>. Type 65 wpm. ! fJ~~~rk Exper. TARBELL :1~~~nJ~:1'~":::::·anr:. fast, preeent A-future. DEPENDABLE Oilld Care htul'!'~· natural wood Coleman 347-43.j9 alt 8 pm -·-1 962-6182 A I · y Uow Cab 1,.dvlce A help tn m&l'O' mat· in my home. flnl111t1ng. 548-1'9ffi. ' . St., Costa Mesa . 110 SEKE. REALTORS PP y86in perao6n, Sle H bo 1n~.. /Fairvl BABYSl'ITER, my home. U EPER. part time, Only !hose v.1th the 1 e Co., l E. 1 th .. Costa tm. 213: 696-1350. Fully lie. ar r,D<U\tt ew area Pla•ter, P•tch, Repair Corona del Mar, Mon-Fri. DENTAL front ofc, prior ex· vicinity Ne\vport Beach. quali!lcatlons nee<! apply. R.E. P.fesa. • 1_ .. Habra. Call for appt. from ages 2 and up. per prerd. AppL making, ~s--0089 'I'taintt. Brier &i.-"7"=--~----1 .---Call 546--04.S * PATCll PLASTERING 11:30-5:30. Refs. 640-0365. filing' ti typl · ~·b . A_, developer will train &: WOMEN for C&fetertl. SttV· iiiOBLEM ' flOS ng, ng, etc. HOUSEKEEPER for -con: .xi nut resume w/~ary re-· Ing. PIT Im e on I y ,_ I Pre~. c.o, t"" YOUNG Set School • open 6 All lypet. Free estimates ~.~.'.-no' ,.exep21~~ as backup to ofc. mgr. va1esccnt ho.llpital. 14 , 5 quirement in ronlldence to: sponsor for he. Call between 1Dam-2pm daily. All wlcend \ ~ ~rlng. ~bor~ daya; 5:45-7:30 PM, 21i!i to 6.1 =--"Call=.:~=.;='---9 ~9935 • ""3 ~Jary =~ ~ly.6646-2481 Superior, Newport Beach~ Clas.sitied ad no. s:n clo lOIUn-Jpm. 5t!r-1124. & holidays off. Ora~ l,\Uon le adoptiona n!f. AP· Proless1onal teachers. rn Plumbing ays. I . Daily Pikit, P.O. Box 1560, Receptiaonist C.Ounty Airport area. Call CARE. &0-4436. weekly. 646-37Ufi. !----''------*BEAUTICIAN W/NEAT DENTAL reeepUonisL Exp, Housekeeper, f/time Costa Mesa. Ca. m26. 833-8666 aft 2pm. 'llr....EUROPEAN PSYOIIC * Contractor DnUns unclogged -S7.50 APPEARANCE, FOR mature. Must be able to 56-3061 Equal Oppor. Employer Day or nigh!, full or partl ~~~~~~~~~~~I 1.:.:.;;;.;.;:;.;.;.;'------Sewer line to 100' -$1S BUSY SHOP. 548-9919. cope w/people &: pressures. * INSPECTOR* lime, no t':'<p necessary, •.ve ~ $Z).. JACK Taulanc _ Repair * 549-250'.l * 548-9470 between 9 &: 10 or 4 MATIIRE, Chrllillan wonian train, no typing, no short· 1 I~ ~ppts. avail thru Oct. &: Nov. remod., addit. 20 yrs. exp. COLE PLUMBING Boat Manufacturing & 5, ExJ>('r. w/machine parts & for lite housekeeping & hand, f'tc. Apply in person Mwd\lndise f9!rr... , (n4) 523-ll!i6 Lic'd. My Way Co. 547-0Q.36. 24 hr. service. 645-Il6l Cabinet Assemblers Exper. Den 1a 1 Receptlonlst.Assi!I· plasti~s . 1 1 babysitting. $40. wk. Own any aft. or l'Ve. at 2930i ;·;;;;;;;mm~-~~V~j AilCOHOUCS Ano.............. Addttloml * Remodeling PLUMBING REPAIR mAssein. •'• yrs, ........ ~ ab In et tant. Exp. P/Ume. El Toro, Edle~Pr~~sJ7~~nc. , ~~:~~S2panish speaking OK. West Coas1 1-lwy., NB. ·v .. --u Gerwick .t: So lJ 'd m ers '""'• min. 6 Laguna Hills, 830-1130. 2101 Do St ............,.. . RETffiED lo.tale p/tUne, 'Alone Sf'-7217 or write 6'1l-604l * n. ~2170 No job too small mo. exper. Exper. Bonders, Newport v:ka~h MEN over 25 needed for ear-early morning, mechanicaJ· ,_1>._n_t_iq..:•-•_• _____ eoa_.;__1 P .O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. * ~ • exper Touchup, exp er . DENTAL Secretary-Np!. ( ly mom "e w, 0 aper ,., I li -" M ·n t ,. orthodontic ofc. Age ~-Across from O.C. Airpor1) • v nc ni:.... ow1 g, \\'a er-SCRAM LE OOUPLES PARTIFS cau ,G:.:.•rd;.::;on:;;,;l;.;ng:<...-----Sewing/Alterations Hardware. I delivery. Penn .. pt. time. ing, elc. Apply Fair Grounds -TS Phil 2-8 1 ' Erickson Yachts Denta exp. prer. 642-2G40. INSURANCE girl, exp'd, Pref. H.B., F.V. resident. Goll Ra.ngr, 100 1-~air Drive, P;.~ ""A< AMERJCAN gardener. Tired Alt t1'on· "2 5845 1931 Deere, S.A. DENTAL assistant want-', For busy Doctor's ofc, 8-17-8979 Co,la 'le••. ANSWERS "'1""""" ol "Grass cutters" doing ere ~ • 54n """I """ N t Be h "0 39tl3 "";~i'oi:iiidAiirnilS*-l.iiiiiii.ii"iiii-0..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I i'===='""~--.ll;-,,-N 1 , .. 20 ye·-~ ""perienced. 1 girl oflice El e\vpor ac · O'fil"" * MOLDMAKERS * SWINGING Singles ca Jim half a job! For estimate' ea . accura 'C". ...~ e:itp . • 2.0 Bookkeeper Toro area. ~5010 INSURANCE: P/time, ex· Plastic & die cast. Top men * RN' * , =a p.m. call Custom Gardener, John Tile w need A t 0· Cd" · Gd 5 , 539-3122 Mo 645--26S8 ;.;.;.;..._______ c one u omo ve * DENTAL secretary-bkkpr, per. "' ins. agency. only-refs. Air cond. well Lalest -Bathe -B1·nvc - 535 1 '°='"="'°~· ~,=~· ,..-7"""-I CERAMIC tile new &: Bookkeeper with DMV ex-2850 E. Mesa Verde Dr., sa.lary. Send resume P. 0. lighted duplicator sOOp In Should -SEE )'OU ALL ,&_oc_i_a_l _C!_lu_b_•_____ EXPCom,plellteawailang-~--Gard, e'rnev". remodel. Free est. Small peri.ence. Send resume to Suite A, CM. 546-3000. ~x25•.· Corona de! Mar, Ca Org e.o. 546-3030. One nudist greets aiJOlhcr· ,. w~• 2.-Box 501, c/o Daily Pilot, ~UJ "Gl d t SEE A' 1 •. " \ FIND YOURSELF Kam a I ant, 6 4 6-4676, _joEb•::..;:we.:cl,,;com,,,,e::·.:53&-=:;==·--330 West Bay Street, Costa Dentel atti&tant MOTEL Maids wanted. Wlll a 0 • you ....., :·""IN SOMEONE El.SE. 642-1337. Tutoring Mesa, Calif. 92626. Sat only. 548-7074 · ~ Costrain. Apply In person only:! TOP QUALITY 1'fON, 10/2.1 Navajo Je'\llelry : EXP. Japane,. Gardener. Bookkee D • / ""'""'E PERSONNEL la M.,. Inn, 320 EXPERIENCED b""' hcd, oak hcd, oak ' DISCOVER CREDENTIALED teacher per tts1gner 1r-..v11~ Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. show case, copper ~"-r. Complete Yard Alain-· We need one Automotive ccD\nrES•Arc .. V""V ---" ~ v· .~ : DISCOVERY tenance,-ahnlbbeTY', trees. er.eat. interest to )lelp Bookkttper with machine Engineer ~I\.. --~"4\...I MOTHERS Positions available in all wiu"' 1-"..,ne, 1ct. reaser, ;RAl83S465 213/387-33:93 Free Eat. 645-0347. cAhllil~hool" w.,./re~. ,/}.._"',~~ experience. Send resume to W ted t fill . . Free &: Fee Positions Need money for ChrislmM! areas. All shift s, xlnt in ser· :i~s~l· Bayfronl, Mrs. Grope. "'est Bay Street. Costa in engineering dept. Exper. re ue e Y TEJl.lPO. vancement opportunity, ed· 2 Antique JI.ting Oriental I BOB'S GARDENING """ ~ ..... v....-"'7:1 Box 501 c/o Dally Pilot, 330 an ° perm. position G d t Alt' $12'K It's waiting for you at vice program. Career ad-s. :., ~lllCIFOlllll l[S] &:~~~G Mesa, Calif. 92626. ~j=~~c\t~~~~ s!1!:~a~ork Ex1forie$11K e Clerical ~~~;~ebe~~~~aTci'?~: Chairs.!E~e.* Complexes. I J[Il] Bookkeeper Advancement oppor. + xln't 'I:'-... w/hot melt a••-1·ve e Keynunch 557 '299 alte Sp if ...,.., u"""" r-: surance prograrn. WANTED. •·-e ch '•"• ~-07'~""'~~,'*~m=·~ Elt4'o)1M'lt \Ve need one automotive co benefits. Send nsume to Secretaries to $650 e Typist ~.-1• * LANDSCAPfNG * 'iiiiimiiiiiiiiiijji;iiiiim:,~;i;i 1 Bookkeeper. Send resume R.E.J. Poole. Clerk Typist to S475 e Steno The N('\I/' & Expanded cabinet. Re as on ab I e . rfound (frff ads) 550 Newlawns,Sprinklers, I to Box 501, c/o Daily Pilot. Columbia Yachts Recept/Typist $450 e Assembly PALM HARBOR l-----··------ deckl!I, cleanup. State lic'd. Job Wanted, Mal.t 700 330 West Bay Street, Costa A Div of Whitaker Corp. Sr. Acctng Clerk $560 And l\tany 0Ull"r:s GENERAL HOSPITAL Appliance• I02 ~UNP ~ black male 536--1.225. Mesa, !if. 92626. 275 McCormick A~. F~ Clk/Career op $400 1-"'--------,;,.;.I :1 A{~haN~B~~aOO EXPERT J a Panes e SUCCESSFUL sales oriented BOOKK PER • Xln't Op-Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 ~ t Recept!Typist $2.50 hr =~im ~= 12860 Palm Street FR I G . I ro • l· proo I nn1y Btv.'Tl 4 and 7 pm. Gardener. Complete MBA-35, desires position ~~ ~ .. °GU30 Ann e• Equal Oppor. Employer M/F p~r~:nist :~ = NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Garden Grove 537-5160 ~big~r, :· :wrt~ WHIPPETS red f Gardening Service. NB, CM leading to own I! rs h Ip ~~~~~"~,.;' ~·~p'!;m~·--EJectronic A11e111blert F/C Skpr, Textiles to $650 Tempo Temporary Help en. er .,.,... yeuaw-tawrr, lna1e, fer!:!:'. area ~1894. locally. \Vrite to P. O. Box .BUSBOY /MAN Exper. lllng tenn assign-488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M, NEWCOMER WELCOM.tNG : RN-LVN g8s dryer $40, sm. Ken. ·corona del Mar High AL'S LandM?aping:-'l'ree-re-_513,_cLo . .D.ail)'. eilot, P~ O. & DISHWASHER !~~et. • 642~1470 T Cllo6tlpLOCitalitALLy Hyo!leu Pvt duty. all shifts. County· :"~~ .. ~~-~~ $chool. 10-20-'ll. 545-3519 moval, Yard remodeling. Bwc 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. Must be clean & neat. Over '""' 540-4450 ~ o a on new wide, Interviews, registra· bathroom heater 42-17928 !SLONDE cocker/retrieve.r Trash hauling, lot .cleanup. 92627. 18. Apply in person, &lit & ~A FEE AT= JUNIOR Salesmen: lO-lS. ~dent . f!lffiiUes bringing tion 9-5 dally, except SUn. Slllnta Mariam F, v , w/tan studded collar. Vic : Repair sprinklers. 673-ll66. Job Wdnted, Female 702 Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast Hwy., Earn $20-$40 k gifts & c1v1c info. Good pay Lescoulle Nurses Registry, S17-&:J) ' Mission Viejo ffioh School J A p AN~ ~rien--~ NB. Tempo Temporary Help t' (per wee! get· P/time. Must have happy 351 HOBpilaJ Rd, N.B. Call G'°AS~""t -· -o=·K'""'fc-&:-:M,,..--1 "O ~ Lo ... .,.. '-~ GOOD TYPIST 1ng new cusomers or the smile, car, typing ability, anytime 642-9955or540-9954.. sove, eee er-ll)'.)-8504 Gardener. Maintenance & DAU.Y PILOT. This is not a 54.7..J®. ' . ritt, double oven, 5 ~n •"ND: Grey &: white male deanup Work. 842~ Wiii do your typing at BUYER -Exc1·1·1ng newspaper foute and does R.N. SuperWlor for small plus gTiddle excellent con- Kitten w/fiea coUsr Vic. GARDENING SERVICE her home, Will rlckup not lnclude collecting or NEW FACTORY nursing home, beach area. dltion $75.' 5261 Loyola, ~Clubhouse ave N.B. 6'f3.-fi049 Reasonable -Reliable and deliver loca H.B., Newport Beach financial in-delivering. Transportation is EXPANSION Call 4!K-&'.175 for appt. Westminster, 893--6400 . . "'u: All while mall' cat * 646-G852 * F . V., West, 75c fMr pg. stitution has immediate N ho~d:iier ~ ~ 8fo0"'n $4S8 _ itu11. Per Mo. SALES RECOND. trade · in ap- vic. Fairview & Baker. EX p ER T Japan ese or will work by hour opening for a :prolessKlnal ew Saturday. We have openings ~ Established tenitory \vilh a pllance!< &. TVs. Dunlap's, MCJ..2586. gardl!ner, knowhow, upkeep, call 847-3095. w/strong expenence. You , for Fountain Valley & South .__ Ptr Wri"tton 56 year old company. Sal· 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. ?4LICO-Persian K 11 ten plant, pest, ITini. cleanup. will purchase office sup-Huntington Beach areas on-~ ary, commlssion + many 548-7780. J:lalecTHt Trad, C 0 5 ta 968-3486.. NEED help at home! We pUes, auto lleeta &:-ottiCe ly. You must be out of AgrHment other benefits. Experien('(! -=--c=,-,c--,-:---1 ~e~ 54S-3898 PROFESSIONAL Japanese have Aides, Nu r ses, equipment. R t t school by 3 PM 10 In services desired. but not Rent Washers/Dryers nale PJPPY, no collar. Blade Gardener. Reliable. Free ~=~=· C~~~~s'. We will consider on)y ap-es auran participate. ExperienceJ Full Time . =·~0~e-~:~· call S2 .• \\'k~~~m4!.nt. &: white, 1cmg hair, vie Fair est. Call 963-4974. 547...Qi81, plicants w/a proven reoord ~n Pr iori I Y · Young men -mec:harucal Salii,.;;:::::..=c..:::o..:=---lc=.,.;;.,.:;::::.:::._.:....,.~ Dr&: Fordham, CM 549-2331 Hauling ABOVE AVERAGE of the highest integrity & aptitude helpM, but not PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE N ~ARLY new portable honesty & who easily=· a Dcper'enced LAUNDRESS, full time, required Muat be 19 or N tional HQ . N dishwasher. Paid $249. \VIII .. t 555 GET RID OF THAT Secret a. r y ·sh· fa c I le co--..--... -~'--of ' M v rd Conval I • ew na m ewport sell tor ... 1 "'. ""'"'h. ~·1 2 uuu" ..... " .. w.u.1...-.. esa e e escen over. Able to start M>rlc fm.. Beach expanding 14.ln staU. 832.7862 a1tS. 30 ......, t...a1 ...o.t!'I' al Irtsh sett UNSIGHTLY TRASH & :'1~: :Zl'?Ji;urs.datie: management & vendors. e Waftresus 1541~~0"661. Center St., C.M. mediately, ff accepted. For Men W/college exper. Call . . 'IP-.,., fem e er, DEBRIS, FREE EST. --• • Hosto11e1 & ~-Job•-~-"--. 547-7315 lo learn abo"I OVER 3lO washer8, "--_, j&ned Una, 14% yrs, Male COLL. STUDEN1' 548~28 typewriter. Top ..... ary for Send resume Ir sala ry uu.u1u ... uvu t..1-.fro '"""''" !ftsh Setter, w/whlte maril:· ~ · 1 •• • • top caliber penon. Sharp, history in confidence to: e Cash.iers 1 LOT Man Good wages, Call Tuesday career In financial planning re ... ~.,.rators m $39.95. 5, 2 yn, name Brian. VIC Tl\!;E Work. Garauf: & yd mature applicant please. Classified ad no. 528, c/o goOO benefits contact Mr. 10 1 m a 4 p m services. 5t5--07'80. B'. 548-5582 tlitup. Move & ha Ask for 673-67li0 Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Bet!y Manos \Viii Long ot Mr. Wat.son Garden 77~SJ ' ' SALESLADY . MATIJRE e MAYTAG WASl-JER $50. • MALE Golden Retriever, M&T, 642-1403. Co!ita Mesa, Calif. 92626. Accept Appli cations West Volkswagen 7 6 00 F()r Gift Shop 2 SPEED, 1 YR GUARN. ~ ~. old. Needs medica· YARD, garage cleanup!. Accounting_Clerlcai EquaJ Oppor. Employer Between 9 AM &: 5 PM West m Inst e r Ave , "!!!'!N'!'U~R'!S'!E!!'S!!"'A'!l'!D'!E!!!'S!!"'""l64&-6741 eves. betvm 6-8 pm FGAS DRYERS 839-1778. ,._ Calli H RemoYe treea dirt. · RUTH RYAN AGENCY n,...,.;nn Westminster, Calif. LtkJn. Vic . omt'S, . • 1vy. ....,.~ ... ing Wed., Oct. 25th Exp -I. Day ·•tft. Beverly SALESMAN. _ Exp. office umlture 110 'ltvine. REWARD! 544-6354. ottvewys, grading, 847-2666. 1792 Newpo11., CM &16-4854 CAPTAIN wanted for LVNS EXPER. .,... ""' 1 f established "'I Y'#'i • G Cle 17931 Beach, HB 8-17-9617 Sailboat with mecllani.cal D I I & Nurses Aides. 549-3061 Manor Conval Hosp 24452 supp Y or ac· SWIVEL ROCKER ~ REWARD b tan nlale 111: arage anup. experience, for charter in e a e Via Estrada Lag 11llis. count.I ln Newport Bch. BLACK NAUGHAHYDE .(Jerman Shep. 7 mos. 536-est. 7 days. Call Salary & share n y S MACHINIST ' area. Call BarTy West · n4 · · ~. 315 1.oma Ave.' HB, anytime, ~-A/P ConstructX>n S&Kl ~fi•-·-· 1913. Np! n -o.. Engine lathe ..... ~ shop-......_ NURSES Aides, pt. time, 9-1. 557--9212 for appt. ALMOST NEW. 10/21 GEN. Hauling. 'Ifte/shrub Secretaries. many $500-$650 .,.¥ ...._ .......,., I-JU ~.,... Park Lido Conval Center Paid $80. Sell $50. 11--m-o-. -or~d~I,.-~"-•~°"•-;c.-,~,, trim. Gar & yd clean"•· Est Para Lepl TraJnee S600 .Cal=:::":.· ~------s Sh TracerN ~ P,refds. Short 466 Flagship Rd., N.B: SEAMSTRES.S, Garment ex-542-lT.U evn I: wlaW l"Lll 01<0u SJ9.2J03 567-6904 100% Fee Paid By Company Carpenter e nty run. O P•uuUCtion. tarting M2-8044. per, Fer:riate. C.all 536-n66 3 i\fpl tbk 2 mJA Br let.I l fema1e, No. Laguna area. . • · Liz Reinder's Agen&y M h • a a rate $4.80 hr. Grou~ ins. lor appointment. 14 f ' Family desperate. 497-~. SKIPLOADER & dwnp truck 4500 camrui nr. Marine ec an1c Equal Oppor. Em.pJoyer. NURSES Aides, exp. pref. . . copper cu .. t relrlg., work Concret halt, 546-2118 Newport Beach Marine Electrician Apply 1642 E Edinger s A Parle Udo C.OnvaJ Center, SHIPPING ~ re c e 1 v 1 n g ru.a:s, oil paintings, ml.sc. sa.wu;g, breaki:g_ S:mo. ?I-lust be experienced 10 v,:ork ' • ' · · 466 F1agshlp Rd.. N.B. clerk: Vaned duties for T::.62 Juliette Low Dr., Htg. AIHmbly Tr ainee 24035 El Toro Rd MAID work in excha~ for 00-81»4 growmg Orange County Bch. ~7004. Hauling & cleMup by exp To $2 Per Hour. Day&: Nite onp=if~=~powy Krppo~t. L Hill motel Apt 237ti Newport NURSE:s" Aldes for ti:m. Muter Blueprint. 234 ***Sofa Ir matching love coUege student, lge trk. SJ4.. shift. eguna s Blvd., C.M. 54S-9755. conv. Fisher. Costa Mes a . t used 8olh • 1846 or S.14-Z1S4. P.P.S. NO FEES 1 ... ;; 1 ;;6;; 26 e.iiiiP_,.ii1aiiceniii;:-i;· iiei;cio~iiii;;;; ~======Ii!:!!!! ~~: :::i:: ~~~I~~-~-tie1i: 9~:Z2 P~~e ., s:!~ARY lor new Lab in ~v'a=."~7910: .l50. Housecleaning P•cffic Fee Paid * 6T:t""3463 * ORDERLIES 1445 Superior Fashion Js. Need mature MOVING. Will sell house full Dedicated Cleaning Personnel Services CUhier :~~~:O~P ~ MAINTENANCE Mechanic Ave., Newport Beach bet. 9 person. Ty pl n g: 65. of furn. All must eo-407~ '""""'""' I~ . S.,chools & ... instructions 575 * WE DO EVERYTHING * ll2 No. Tow er General Ledaer Acct $700 for rental yard, Some &: 2. Shorthand: 90. 64fHJ140. Hantlng, Balboa. 6T.HiM.l 0'PIANO or voice, my home or Rela. Free est. 64&-2839 Unkln Bank Square New Building F/C Bkkpr/Sec'y $700 delivery work. Appllca.tions PBX Answering Service. SECRETARY for penoMCI 2 HIGH·Rlaer Md. $30 each i~ni-20 833Yn2320. exp. Master HOUSE OF CLEAN Orange, Calif. In Exec. ~c'y to pres to ,700 accepted daily 7 am-5 pm at Evenings &: grave yard in· Days, f/time. Pel'80flnel Sml chest ol drawan. $10 '-".-.u-mu11lc ... ·_. [5J 547•6446 N1wpo. rt Center Secretariea :11o:n Hartley & Nixon Rental, eluding weekend,11. Costa Depl. lloag Hosp. N.B. 968-45.17 Joioora, windows, crpt, walls, ..,.,., r 2862 Barran Rd Me&& area 542-1164 l;;;==""'°-,c-.,-,,-,,.--6 yrs. In area. &t2-6824. Ask for Rachtl May Messenger $350 nc., ca ·• · 21 · SERVICE Station Salesman-COUCH 8' off white, fklral Travel Manager $700 liilrvlneiiiiiiii';i54i;f).i;;ii5185iiii.iiiiiiiiiiii;;;; PERSON over , . pf time Mechanic, expt!r. 0 n i y , pattem ~-Prof. Carpet Cle•nlng ASSEMBLERS EMPJ..OVEE Lepl Secretary to $650 eves. & f/tlme avail. Apply F/tlme. U c. prcf'd. Neat in 557iiiit. Also windows & Ooor care. For small electro 1nech. CAFETERIA F/C Bookkeeper $650 Manager Trainee in person, Me N Eds Pi1.zn appearance Apply AM 2590•~-~-------1 Cal! Dutch 537-1508, 8am-6pm manuf. co. Perm. & I/time. Also Fee Positions Parlour 410 E. 17th SI. Newport Bl. CM ' Beautiful black leather, wal· Accounting WCX>ME TAX, oper st.mt & bal sheet mlhly. fin serv. "COmputerized, 492-8176. Mui;t have gd dexterity & NEWPORT WANT THE c M ' ' " · nut headboard for king 1lze WOMAN wishes day \\'Ork. v\aion. Non-smoker req'd. · · SERVICE Sta. Attendant bed. Ph. 67>6376. Good and reliable. Refer-N N t Experience EssentiaJ for Pers0nnel Agency ULTIMATE ~!CS. Xlnt opty for in· Full or pt/time. Exper. A-ence. Phone 541-8029. 0 exper. nee. ea small fa.st moving caleteria 833 D D N B dividual w/expcrlence In piy ,·n pe-n Brown'• Gara~• Sale ro to WOrk for C.11 "A" 0~"· over r ,, ' ' CHALLENGE ·-• J(J H I . · · .,....~ l" 7 lan1inating f.lhergl11.111 epoxy ShE,ii1 990 E c.t H nt ousec eanmg for appt S. R. Engin('('r\ng, uie. 642-3870 mater;ials. r..tusl be familiar NB ' · ' wy., Gflrage ESTATE Sa I e . By Day. Own Transportation 834 Production Pl., N.B. 11our:s 8 AM-4 PM, 5 days with the operation 0 f · · . Estale of G. Wllli&.m1, 13392 112 '* 836--0648 * ASSEMBLERS a week FEMALE wanted nights, Can You Serve laminating preS11e11 & in· SmER for active lovE.1y Sorrel.I Dr., Gantert Grove. P.ROFESSJONAL teacher i;L:;;•:;;nd.;::;•c:cc:•.:;P;;.int.;:. ____ Isl &: 2nd ahlft in eJtttronlcs Costa r..1esa. Factory v."Ork. Over Twice The duatrtal quality standards. lady 1-5. Own transp. Call Furn .. ret'r\&"., Rangl', bed will babysit nltes & wkenda LETE , _ _,.. __ ,..,. • nnn. Ne Exper. ~uired. Apply in the 968-0297 or (213} 29-l-1166 N1tlon'1 Popul1tio1t Opty for asaumeGoodmanagc-~. divl·van •. deU:redl. c ha Ir, R.lbysittlnt ~ home. No tntants. COMP ..... _ .. p .. '15 cw: Apply in pereon. 9 thru 3. Pcraomel Department F/C BOOKKEEPER A Hot Meil & ment pos!Uon. pay & SOLDERER braung Iner, TV . Reuonable. 645-1057. lnsWlaUon Stab!' licenaed. Po!t('r & Brumtlcld Div. 8 am-3 ~ For CPA llnn to work 011 Still Smile? benefits. Deco Manufac-1 Yr Min R«"ent exper in A\'On, nu oul dated dothta, ~~~f.iOiliiEiiR:--;;w11;jiii1tes6ki Comm, lndustrlal, Apt. AMF Incorporated PACIFIC MUTUAL varlou." K'!n'I Iedgu accts. turing, 979-1623. ooniwooc1' or flat bOud bl!ddlng, linens. l.otll of nu L'4 care :.~dren in ; 534-4871. 26181 An!opuerto BUILDING Salary open, (213) 595-16.55. ff you can, then r..1c0onald's Practlc1I Nurses module. Must read resis1or yn:taao, Ollk butret, extends home. Fenced yd. CM area. Maaonrv Sim Juan Capistrano 700 N~wport Centtt Dr .• NB FIL-I T II Is your kind or place. Join & Ald.t capacitor diode code. to1 make tbl. Eteptw.nt col· :...J. • An equal opoor mipl JI.VF CloAed M Oct 23rd inrg ass 00 ng us today at An1erica's Num· Pleue Apply ectkin, llOl'ne antiqueit, anl SG-1.161. BRICK, BLOCK & •ASSEMBLERS on. . . APPRENTICE her One family restaurant All Orange Co. Pvt duty or GUi..TON INDUSTRlES s!~board. Round Oak tbl. PAY Nunery, babies In 3 642-0542 &: h.v.On your carett with aoor al 1w1 duty wagMt. No 1&44 Whittier Ave C P.1 China giass. Garage ti.ID yn. $1S per wk. 646-5788 or Stone work. 645-8266 Electronic * CHRISTMAS Eq1i1al Opportunity Employrr ...... ,.. wait for Pl'Y· Ref, nec('t,, " · · !ooh, tni:nks. cedar chc5t. '&15-4302. Peintlrv1 & • C1m1tt Board MONEY * the natkm'a largeat & con· lnter.'iewa, reai61rt1lion 9-S &42-2400 chopptn~ b.lk!t 1·30"x72", P • .:;.•,ha""i"" e Wiring & Soldering llnU01.1slv expanding re!ltau-dally, except Sun. UJICOuJie Stat TT.pist $476 Oddi & ends. Take Harbor 1 ... arJ>9nler ,... ··• ··• A really nice place to work. Slar1 earning 00\V. Full or FINANCIAL ran! chain oUering <in ex· Nur111 .. 11 RP1t1*tf')', 351 Hos-Rocepl onlst $433 blk North of GllJ'den Gmw ELPAC INC p..irt lime. Selling Chrt!ltmai'I PLANNING citing&: challenginR: career. 1 1 Rd N 8 c II ytl -·-· w n. l'lndu1/Comm'l/Re1ld PROF. Painting, alllO roofa. . i;:ills for ... Vlvlsne Woodard DIRECTOR Jn leM than 2 yrars. you pta ' .. " an me, Sec'y/Bkkpr $600 u .. ,..rum e1tona.a.rwrto acoou1. Cell. i nter/exter. 31~1 Soin~~::~ard, SA Co!lmctics, a subsidiary of can, as a McDonald's man· 642.!1955 or 540-9954. \Veslclltr Personnel Sorrrll Dr. lhrn Jetl.i:J Sall' t.'',\e:if:. "1i~~.Re~0:~'. Lic/1111. \l'ree eat. 645-5191. GcncrB.I Food,, F'or In-Newpol to" Beah eh llnanclm lat in-ager, make an: PRODUCT ENGINEER Agel\MI ·~Arts o am·!! OcL • 2-1, l EXTER. O>mplete 2 coats, 1 ASSEMBLERS lcrvicw appointment call tJl tu t n a' mediate 204.3 Wesi~Jirr Or. 25. .a;, \Vanda Hullman panel, etc. 962-1!!61 : v ~ 49'.Y-l708. ciot.nlna tor dlreclnr ol Avern.ae BDM Sillary ~porullble for d e " t g n, Newport Beach 645-27'70 £.tale Sale11. ~ORLCARPD'aE:T~:T ~~:J~·R~,~. '~~ ;r:~~papllyexper. ·CH"°'Rl-'Sl'MAS='--M-o_n_"1_·_S_tut_ e&tale&bwrineMplen11. AOf ...... Bo ••••••••••• Sll,300 documentatlon1Amallprodtlcl lion ESTATE SALE : Ocl. 21st !Small Jobll •J References INT. Apl. 'painting .-•rn11t • • e11mlng now full or p/ttme M hft. Ja dt W1"ft.fe ntJ!I .•.. S 2,500 line support o s eectro TELLER th.ru 24th. 8A,\t for Garagt ~ shampooing. Sunswcpt81di:. Gulton lndustrle!I selling Olrlttmas Gift& for h~~vy ~. 1: tax f:mt! Average TnlnJ ..... , $13,800 mechanical devices. 3-5 Yl'I Oownry Savtngs A: Loan h Ooodle11. 9am Houae Sal9. cn4l 645'-?MS Matnt., 80-.1996. eo~;6:te:11lttler A&U-2400 prestig(> nnt'l tlnn. No Jn.. a.na1ym1 aemce. Pn.."V'<>tlll Some of Our monnacl'll t"arn ie;n' :~:ih™i~:t oprnll'llt ln thtlr Cott11 M<':! :i~\H! ~~~:·~:.~'. fi:uSTOM Woodworklng · I ~H:;o'°'u'=s.:="'"pa1~n1=-'1ng-, ~in""lf'"e-ict. ASSIST. MGR TR.NE vesl. ltl pottntlAI eA.rnln~. Insur" n c e & Q.lJ u much a1 $15.000 per year. SPnd resume to Chu~ll!ed Office for n lt'llrr on l\ full F'ry, Findley Onyx. SterU~ r 'llJlnel ~allsts. 5't&--IJ20 Iii PART-TIME 1--or interview call Grayce, background prtf'd. ~ow. a.• a manAg~r trainte, ad _ 521 c/o Dally Pl'-( lh'l\e balls. Sll\'\n£!1 .\ klan -na M'·• ~ Id T'Bob, M&-1023-Bob, accout1. oe ng1, reas. Free 549-0019. yOU Ill t.l.r1 ff · h . ...,. • "' • or bf.rtk exper prtferred • .., .r<"'"'ry, 0 C. _ _. Sorvlco est. 714!5*5857· L9·.30 EVE~·. CHURC!l ~.~•1an -f/Ume Sil•~ \\'Ul be In 11ceordo.~ ·-' w I!-.:::. .2-: y,·ir a P .O. Box l$60, Cotta 1'tClll, Excellrnr n•v ,.,,· llf'ntflls11n: books. 6 new turn. f."11~. ,.,..., n1E Hangman, we sell too ,.. \..uswu -·--1 llll181')' o .,......,...,o•a, plWI a Calif. 92626, clut11ng 1~""tnsW"l!.n1~. \V a II h ' r ID t Ye r' I one stop price A patttrn, for DIVISION ol manuf. ('(). ha9 JRnitori:d/~ rt pa Ir' w/e"IK'r. 6 quaJ!flC'atlons. ll"'nf'~ profit .martn1 C11l Mr. Ruppe D\ahwa9her, Lotl of other J~~~S.mCui>l1!~ 1 &,eU:~~c~l~home;::;,~'O<P'=Pl"-'"54°"7,-'.58<0='-· ~-intmed o~nlna:1 for_!.?._:•ni:: ~p3727. It. Sch. 842...wsl, ~~~me~~.,~!:?: P~.~! .. !','d• vco"m"pHlnente''mledlftt PRODUCTION Trall'll'(' to ..._...2 74n Items. S1S ~ Or .. :u•• ;:111 men over 21 whO ,.._..,.., a <!'•...-· • ~-.M '" '"'"" h.,............ • learn vinyl moldln:!,,.. air U"I • Slr8J Beat h, Tum on Bolsa · '"'" • • • "'' · a • perm. ~nd job to supple-CI.EANJNG woman f 0 r Piiot p 0 Bo ·~ bn1M painting. 11 for Equal Opper, EmpkJyer ott of See.I Beach Blvd. Vic· : 1Q'1 mfri'~! guaranteed work. UcenM!d mcnt p~nl Income. Nt"wport Center oftlce bldg. g::~ Mesa'. 6.Jir m~· We Will 8£' lloldl~ a.ppt. ~116, uk for Sam. 0t MJ\n A CouUlne 8. ol El II Retardanl1) P'~NG Ho-st cie n lo. Cla1'.~\fled arl no. !127 c/o leaf pla• f 0 r w h t t e 6 \Mum!. 875-5740...._ $4 75 HR · Nile work, bondabll, Jld, Equal Oppor. Em~r Tnttrvlews on Tut'5rin.y, PUMP lll1and Sa I es m 111. n TYPIST Stat. lor P.A. In A. I: M.C ~.Saveyoormoneyhy FOR clean I: neal J>r8.lntlng, ' S4J-'Wll ""Callon A tna. 40 Hnl. wk, 1 ~~~'!1"!'!"..,~~-I October :u, 9 AM-6 Plot at CdM. ane. 5 Daya. 50 tin'. H.B. Mutt be exp'd, Wt & ltelen Noland :"u""-me C!Xtra trll?fl. Wtll Interior. n.>aJ. n.tes. Call For lntervw: 644-0814. l'TRY Cook. Utlme. $2.50 per Nlte llhlrt, Top "K'l'I· ~te7 · ~.;.,,!..iJ.ll ti.me. r R I G , ft o 1 t ·proof atian lt~~ rtn .. dlnlnl rm. Dick, ~. Automotlve COMPOSING hr. to 1tort. Chance lot ad· 110UDAY INN Phone 67'.l--Mt~ for appt. _..._..,,,., « ...::itr,)•;M. r" r r I 1 /fr eezn, Ken .• hlll ~ Any nn. $7.!iO, AGGRESSIVE. amblHous MANAGER vanctmrnt. CottAge Coffee 1640 Ll.kewood Blvrl. Real Estate Sale• VETER.TNARY l'ttt'.pdonitt v.'Mbtr. wttlri.pool I" s «iUch tlO. Chair $5. 1~ JfS. QUICK CASH new car 8al1~'!!.l'IOn rrr one Full mlU\l,len\et'lf rtfJ)Onsl· Shop, 562 w. 19th St. CM. (Tak,. :i:~ C!Xit Why not stll h, I.he "boom· ' lll!lls:t.n~. 1tryer, 2 bathroom htatm., 2 .-. ts what coun\1, ncil <if the ....... 11 or d hiiiti 1 f'-·t GAL ~~AY·. Soi id __ 1 '°"-'" -•tr 1 the Us. Call 60-9142 be-f. 5:30 v.1rt•look ~ e over e d ~·• rk 1 H OUGH A Otalt>l'lhtps lil 0 r Ari gr M or O '-' contPQI· r"'"" -.. ~ olf the San Oirr.tO Frv.'}) n .... , 1.:.1 e. n .. -W chain fnd tb1' codm1U =L1,ff-m'O\. """1· T R County. l'rotfl"Hiv• pay tng dept. UllUu your di• Ing co. needs rlKhl h•nd for llonltngton Bcach/roonfain l>.ITRESS, EXPER. tbi• .. "1ampa. miiny mite. 'C'acancit!I cmt money! Jtcnl your hou111, apt., J1lore •tildg .. etc, tl\ru a Otlly Pilot ~j!dAd.-. pl~n. tnl'Utanee, rte. Ex-plK)' ndvtrtJalna knowledar. ablent bou. Lob of varlelY. McDonald' Valk')'. M"Ult bf OYel" 21. No Phone. llf:m•. Come .... Sat. &In. DAIL y PILOT 1;ertence pn!ferred. Se 0 Rough copy fnim """ lo A/P, AIR • '°me payroll S Cali Phil McN1mtt Cail•. Applt In pe..,.., SUrl Mon Oct 21·23. 179211 Sania Don Crevle.r. finlshOO f18tl for camera. loo. $550. Call Jnn Page. VIiiage Real E1t1t,t &: Slr1oln,T 0030 w. Cout ~llll"iina. 'F.V., 84J-t!l'5. WA.,. AD THEODOR£ ROBINS lo.tall rcspon1e' lo P.O. Dox • M().OO:cy.rr.fi1a~~~ Bl ~~M'."tn· Equal Oppor. Employer 9624171 . lf'4'y,, N<'wpon lkh. "ALL KINDS OF GOODY'S" "' FORD 755, Costa Meaa Ca. IA/ • Ukt 10 Tn~? Our Tr•r'11 Don't Elver up !ht: 1htp! Ga"'ft aalc. l?M> S.nt. 642-5678 XG:I HarOOr Blvd.. For thll.t Item under SSQ, try A good want ad Is a aood In-Sell tdle Item• now! C:a.11 ParadOO oolumn fa for yoo! "l,.lll " \l ln cla.u!~;..§.hiP MlltlaM.. Fountain Vllley. <:osta Mel& the Pmuiy Pinchrr. v"tment. 60-667S NUW! 5 llnrt, 5 dys for 5 bucb. 10 Shore Retultlt M~··~uo. "Two lfotuea rull" r -~ . > • ' , O~LV PILOT ~· ·' Motor Hom.• S.lof Roni MO Goroge Solo 112 Mi1cellaneous 970 Auto1, u- PATIO SALE Stans r,,.. >1'EREO W2 Ca """ ORGAN HOBBY 25' CAWS""""''.,. ""°•·I-.;;.;..-"-=;....--.;.;.;. WE PAY TOP dlu'. 10/2'1. 1c Wtdl. All 1nodel. sy11emlted Ml auto ri~ for crui.ain& w/club Motor Home Rentals CASH VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET ' ~ kinda (If KQOdit'S, ofkb & ctuUlier. AM/t""M llt'n.'O jib, 6 b.p. O/B. lto\le a A.vallaible for dally, Wffkl,y '70 MCB-OT. Top llhape-. '69 vw BUS $1595 1970 Chevy El Cainlno, l"Wll " end&, Ski boots site T~i:. 50c radio, RCA tape deck Pllli: Dort'! bu.v any Crr&&n WJUI you '1nlt, $5500. Call Stn.t tnly bub 2:1' 23' PlZ. 64S-a27: 2400 W. 10 "--wepi. Excelltnt txctUrnt. Re~l l!lll • 1 vo'hlte clinic &hoes 1ize 58 , tn type jaclta. A 1 r c11~play: Non·rla)'tn \l'tl· En r i II ht . MichalJd.t.ell, ~ ": R U coni~ncd t.to'. c.oa.t Htwt.y, SUJte 3 Npt cond., Low mllef. tranl., 30T cu. in. Pwr. !tr, merw 51.acU. w-32, M. iuq>ension spe&ken. Still rome ID attend free \\'Ork ~l~ tor Homtt, •U equlpc with lot ulld ean 6 trucka. Jllll Sch. NEWPORT IMPORTS Auto. S1750. or bHt otter;. :"r!d:~e ~-:':~~. to;!:~ t~w in box Ir guar. Wu left AhOPI. For Information 14' /\qua Cat, racing saila aenerator, roof air, and call ti.I kr trei. Htlmatea. MGI 3100 W. Cout Hwy., ~ewport 8'J!r3828 FuUenon. rre~bc>~~ ba~~rl;a~uit~c:r: ~i:~::-~!'!:Z Contaet~~~w~ielt>rlch ~! :! %f~f~r ~i ~~l'S oi:: ~~e~!~ GROTH CHEVROLET '69 MGB GT. R&dlal tlrel. .::· c=~p top with COUGAR : 16. X-mas dc'co1~tion, etc. l-'Oe=pl::.·_;n,:.<::.'="'::-050~°'1.'---Co11t Music S.rvlce 6 p~m Venture 24 We have the au stttl Amigo AU t« Sales Mlr\q:et new clutch, AM/FM ra<IJo. tent. Sll.00. '67 Cougnr 4 Spd, 289 Enaine ~ t>tc. 1853 Port Abb&y, N.B. * AUCTION * N£>Wf)()rt Blvd. at Harbor allO. Please call R39·956Cl. l82ll Be••• 81._. Excel cond. $1,.850, 64l)..l024 • 893-6856 * Low mil~. ma.a: wheell. ' Costa Il.tesa Looded w1xl1'WI. Genoa. ....... yg, evea. '63 V\V VARIA'NT. vinyl root $996 e '67 Mu...- TRUNDLE """ s:io. cir<. • Ftne F""'uw-e •••d. Elect .,... s3900. Motor Home Rentals Hunt!Jlrton 8acb * IASO. * iana 390 GT. • •od. PS, ho» clothoS. Bnw lamp, l Appllanc" PIANOS • ORGANS 968-1396. "7""87 Kl t-S!!1 PORSCHE 6'5-<188 alt 6 _ Must sell, 1995 • 'll!i M,,.. luiK&F· 6.10--0166, li40--02n. Hammond, Wurlitzer. many R __ _!~'.::~::!::::_ __ l :;:niiiT.F,""ii';~";;lr:;"-"y,;;-, -, .-1 I 815 Auctxms Friday, 7:30 p.m. CORONADO 25. acina win· SALES & LEASING •72 BUG ,.~, blu Xlnl tare -· "' "t"'• mma!:., ' Jewelry Windy's Auction Barn others. Pre-season specials. ner. Fully eqv.ip. Alt 7 ·. Autos, lmport9d 970 19n Pol"lehe 9ll·T. Immac. oond. $t8oo "6" , conil. Must &ell. ~ DIAMONDS-RINGS model c~uts. Piano 4r: wkdas, or anytime wknd& full service fac.Ulty cond. * 536-99Bl * 1969 Cougar. Full power .• S..balantial sawng•. Dn-.c1 ":::~ .. NewportT •• BCMJ•-""'"" 0"'"' "'"'""' Money .. ,. S•tHm Oarunar Motor Homes AUSTIN HEALEY 979-341!4 ""' vw. lac air, AM/FM. l2l90 .. --.u ... trom manufac1urer. ony s ug P.tal'_I · Ing bargains ar_.e here rl11:h1 Bo.ts, Sllps/OO"'.Jc1 910 RENAULT Excel cond. $1.295 or bet;t ** SC-4268 '** Antwl!':l'P Diamond Company * IRVINE COAST COUN-now al: 531 6800 Ul66 Audin Healy Mark Ul, 1---------otter ~ DODGE 500 Newport Centl'r Dr\~ TRY CLUB MEMBERSHIP Wallichs Music City BOA,T slip avail. 12'x38' 407 • 3,000. $650. -· • Newport Beach 644.gioo FOR SALE. 644-7251 E. 'Edgewater, Balboa. $100 642-#72 after 5 pm RENAULT 16, '69, Excel · VOLVO South Coast Plaza 541).2830 mo. (Zl.3) 697-1336 eves.T c.;.r.:;•;.;ll•;;;•.;•;.;·.;T.;r.:•~v;;.•;.l _...;.MS.::: BMW cond. 2 nu tires, rooi1 rack.1 __________ 1966 Do(lae Charger, New E LEGANT Platinum & dia· Miscellaneou1 52&--1153 days. -) ___ _:::;,.;.: ____ ) ·-'":.:'':.:r_;h:::il~"h.'ili;l2i07,i;'~if=':::"c.. Tlre11, Brakea Sbock1. Ex· mood brooch. rectan""'" Wanted 820 *PIANOS.ORGANS* =""'='"='~'--.-c-c.·l'n IDEAL 24', romplotely SUBARU SAYINGS cellont Condlllon, 6w.Jlll0. !lhaped g1~ carats approx Going Out For Business BOAT SIJp for rent, Avail. SIC. air, awnings, tub & Visit our new t\omel '169 Dodge Camper. Air. loo di~~ndJJ. $400! orig. ** WANTED ** Best quallty · prices· serv. ~~61.i,_;~~ Jul~ 1• Up to sho"-er, eto. $4500. or ofter. • & At Never Before rai,&ed root, tu11y equlp'd. cost, wjjj sacrifice. 545-7863. Ft-1eridly, loving home for Kawai·Stelnway.BaJdwtn, etc 645-:\509 or ~3031. FRITZ WARRCN'S Xlnt oond. $2950. 675-0425.. M iscellaneous 818 adorable Silky Te-rrier fe-Player Pianos &: Rolls SUP space avail. 20-26' '70 Wln'nabago, 17'. sleeps 6. SPORT CAR On All Remaining '72 FORD male poppy. AU shots. ffse-Rentals ......... We Bey-Seil Sailboat. Draw-Tite hitch, SW!Q' con-VOLYOS FRICIDAffiE Bot. freezer bkn. Daily lo.6 . Sun 12-5 e 673-6606 e trol. Only $1,985. Must &eU. CENTER $125. 'pc oeorly "" Br. "'· ==-=830-8333=-=~~--FIELD'S PIANOS . Boats, Speed .. Ski 911 "......,"'""'"=-o· ~-~--ROY CARVER. Inc. EM 1969 FORD Country Sedan, ~ orig. avocado finish, $2S(I. 2 GIINA <'ablnet Jr hutch, an-Costa Mesa (TI4) 645-3250 ·n 18' Colden Nugg e t 234 E. 17th St. YEAR D -toll Lelai&• ...,P/B·. Awrrago. ";. ... Air. ta!1811y• orange & yel101v club chrs, tim•e or ne-w. La r "'e . "" Ft Se Ra --~e l Tandem ,.Jr ront'd XI 't '~ $35 ea. Blue & lavender sofa .,.. "' 5 Player Pianos, rebuill It ""' a Y OoN ""''' s. · · n C.osta Mesa at6-4444 MODEL car. $1675. 6 4 4. 2 7 o 6 ; 190 k . bl Reasonable. 644-4687. refinished. $875-$1175. New year new. 455 CJ Oldsmobile c'::~:::""o:·.:l3400=::::·:.64""-4-_,J.833=::.· __ YOLllll - · Lrg Walnut coc tail 1 ·w'~A~N=r=E=o-eo-...,-'-..,-.-,",-ite-,.-,a & Used rolls. Dupree Player pack·a·jet engine. Equipped & CLOS£ OUT '.fll ~I ~nd'°. ~isc::~blsl35. -l~mApl! hide-a-bed. Pianos. 545-4650, 546-6108. for fishing & water sdkl ing.1 _T_r_a..;il.;.er..;•~·-U:;..:.;li_li_ty,__..;9..c.47 !!166 H bo C M '"9303 '69 I Ford Goodvan, Vnd~;,_ Low ....... Fully equipped t a n o m ar r. . . ,,_. ml eage. co 1uvn. etc. 557-0442. 6-14-4687 TI-IOMAS Malibu, best ot trailer. This outttt is like ALL steel utllit)ltrailer. 4x7'. $SAVES •~• v I Sell I ~eves Spinnet Une w/Leslie Color-v ...,.... o vo. or parts · si.!~~~u~~.!W:DE. Musical Instruments 822 ~low solid walnut cab. ~~fi~g~ cos~ h~C ~~ condition $125. ,".!.-L~':rARTS EXCEll.ENT. ~ ... -FORD Tudor Touring P•rf-t rond. ~. 966~'" . SALES-SERVI~LEASING •..-o.u · ....,.,..n. AL!\10ST NE\\', PIANO. xlnt cond $250. Gib-"'" ••;r..I -"""" 8JO.-M82 ......,... NEW ,_ call 54· 7"a88 Paid $80. Sell $50. son 12 string elec. guitar. · Auto Service, Parts 949 Overseas Delivery" 1 • 4.utos, UMO 990 :r , --'"'=·'c::"""-''-"'"'c:..:•o..::w::ckn:::od:::.'-I hard shell case. s~ or best TV, Radio. Ht Fl, l\fUST sell 14' Ski boat & CREVIER MOTOR~ SUBARU 4 DR. SEO. 'St Ford Country Squire rood •-S Trailer. CB-lladio D-104-M * NEW MAGS $1999 BUICK •PP<ar&nce, Radial•, Air POOL table, swing set. CE ofter. Bell 360 4 track tape tereo 136 23 Channel 531-2164, Sti.8995 * 208 \Y. L'it St., Santa Ana Conditioning. ~. 833-a288. frost tree 1 · II l'k re::order w/echo, tape copy 548-8995 83S-3171 ......., re ng, a 1 e machine, microphone & 1973 RCA & Zenith TV sets. · 4 U.S. Mags, 4 Lugs, Lugs, • "1'0 Buick CUstom Skylark '66 Ford LTD. 2 Dr. Xlnt ~~ i~urt~~~· An!J~~~ srand, make oUer. 675--7808 All available models in slock 1,s· hGlaspar Ski Boa& bt.. 100 HP1. CBoa.,b · $10. 544-7613. Ask tor DATSUN NEW 'n Wht. Blk vinyl top. P.S. cond. PB, PS, Auto. $650. to ;ii, make offer. 673-2921 aft. 7:30. & priced less than the dis-:ailes;;>ri,~oror ~ :: =:::·'--------I·---------SUBARU 2 DR. SEO. 30MP.B. ~.,;,, facundert air. Under * 548--1281 * ACCORDION ( D a Vinci I rounren ~yr pi"ctur£> n1bf:o --. '59 PLY. Good transp. $125 1972 Datsun 1200 sedan. $1799 . .,....... -book. '&T LTD 2 Cl fUll ..,....,. * NEW MAGS * 1 YT parts & sel'v'ice war: .96l-2963. BuiCk top shift stand trans, R d' 6 ~ · I or-" 64&-1252, 644-2228. • r, I"""~' Prof. sz. Xln'r cond. Value u 10 ,vvu m 1 1o5v. air landau '1\nt cond $850 S2000. eo::n or bst off. ranly. Terms or 90 days CENTURY CoronAdo. 1971 $40. 28 V DC, 400 amp gen· 548-075o alt 6:30 p.in. '71 Buick Riviera • Lo ml. ,, ... • ... ~.. · · · -I U.S. Mags, 4 Lugs, Lugs, ..,.,., same as cash. Fret' color Nr new. 21', trier, landau eralor $30. 646-2004. NEW '72 AU 1 Ex d $3850 ~~=="---~----1 Caps. $70. 544-7613. Ask for 963-4887. antenna with all consoles top. stereo, boat leve!.ers HONDA SUBARU WAGON 5.51-23zr-ra:r· 545,:~. · · '71 LTD cty~. 10 pug. wag. ,;.Bo~b·~-~-----1 Office Furnfrur-ef purchased thru 24 Oct. ABC $9850. Contact 417--675-<m2 1969 Bu!-" ~·-~ XI full pwr., air, rack, lo miles ~~~i ~.c~~71e ~~~1 __ E_q,_u_ip,_.;_ ____ 82~4 ~~1~tingt~,Be~~ ~~· I Aut01for5* I f~·! 'TI Honda car. $2199 rond . Lo<:1<mll-;:'"prt/p;~~lowFo~Oiru64+561G tires Coffee table $30. ki~ize EXEC swv:I chr tE . 23 Sec ' . TrlrllpOrtatioft Jjc11) . G*R~. call 557-41141979--7517. Excel ~Calu cond'. bed ~· E'.':;;27 Mahogany <hr S8 • 18 dero files stJs . JAGUAR SNUEBAW ~~ CADILLAC O•an. $<95. 613-&17. desi< a. 642 · 867 \Y. 19th CM 612-:wa:! JI s Trucks 962 '68 Country Squire. New A~o~::,· !~ne~r VICTOR AtrrOMATIC Fr9e to You . '70 Ford Van. Xln't cond, '70 JAGUAR XKE ooupe DELUXE SPT. CPE. '73 Cadillac brka. Very gd cOro. $1950. 835--3909. CALC•';';.:'Tl~el16> 3 L' 2 T ' $2 00 C•mpers, Sale/ Rent 920 30,IXXI mi's. Gd tires, w/wi.re wheelsXln, 4-speed. $SAVE$ Cpe De Ville * 644-{641 * ~ u"" ines, 1mes, . ~·Slid J SI. am/fm stereo tape. Xln'! Regency red. t oond JAVELIN ~~~~t~~ni~:iby$~~ Pianos/Or~ns 826 ---------e ~~~D.eeper. lli"~· $2000. 534-4090, ext -~~3899=-~Call=~54=3--0355~~-·--· EXECUTIVE CARS ~f.°';::aiA&,~~··~~~ 'lOJ ·-"· °'"'und-·-aJo· 673-57U SILVEft.blk Gei'rTian ."She'p -S295. · '?O JAGUAR XKE co~ '72 SUBARU GL Beautttul · Ftremtst F1nlii:h-a .......... ._..... ....__.... .._ per mo. · Used Organs Needed long hair, 2 yrs, spayed. 542-1734; 631-2304 1955 FORD F-600 2 ton dump. w/wire wheels. 4-speed. SPORT COUPE &-way seats. stereo ta~ wan-an. Loaded w/xtras. RATT'AN chairs, t ab I es, Highest SS Paid in Cash Shots, Lie. Gd disposition. .70 Ford E c 0 n 0 1 i n e $700. 1964 Ford F·250 "" ton, ~J!{?;u ~nt cond. S900 miles, Factory Warranty cruiae control P/s, A/C. 831-2959. Jap;inese Tatami Mars & Call Collect 213: 874-6762 646-4017 111 rt"frig, bt-d. crpt, lifgrinr:. all metal box for fittings. --""'~"· =o.,1 "'='~"'°'· ,,.,.....,, $2199 $176 JEEP exotic curios. 963-554.~oc-"'''--t CABLE-NELSON PLAYER am/fm stereo. Xlnt tires. $850. caJJ eves, 962-0492 *Jaguar 1971, red, Vil cnt:. • U SEC BICYCLES PIANO Collector item. Mint $2(m. 534-4COO, ext 235. 19611 Chevy Carry-all. GoOO ;;n; S:C~~ air cond, auto per month i:Al::::.ll,_Yl>'=''-----'642-=l"-"m cond. 646-3497 ·alter 4 pm. [ ""aod-ll't....i 111' c A ~f p ER, seU-oonld cond. $1,200. _;;.:::;::,,:.~=~~--'72 SUBARU 4 DR. 1 36 ~; O.E~_1•.ax •••••••••••••••••••• r", wl•howtt, "'""""'"· many ~--'°646-0!6S::..::=._ ___ '66 XKE 4.2; w~o rims, new 2100 m;J"·sF 1 a 8 ct 9 o9 Wan-anty mm-oalo ~ IYOry xtru. ae.1 ott". 49'-7014. 1961 FORD p;c1<op v..s. 8' Mich X tU... Low mi. $2400 LEASING '68 Jeep 4 wheel drive, automatic transmission, air condition· lr!g, radio, whitewalls, very clean and low mifeage. (}{!:X316) $1895 dlr. Call 1136-6'16. A CON\IENIENT ~ANO SEWING CU10£ fOR THE GALON TNE CO. For an ad in Wom•n's World Call Mary Beth 642-5671, ext 330 Super Swifty Bare Your Back! ~· I I _ ..... ' \ Cats 852 or best 6tter. 646-2690. ALL M'""'LS Cycles. Btket, bed w/lumber rack. Runs ~-s~r• -· "°""· 54""3497· KARMANN GHIA AND MAKES PERSIAN & Himalayan kl!· tens, many colors. $50 & up. * 892-2970 * ._..,. .,-g COMPARE Price and Stand· '73' ·52 International lh ton, 6 cyl. ard Features on all 1972 S 5Good_·3() •""mnd .. $435. 642-3'6> aft '68 Karmann Ghia conv. 16 S"b""" Southern Califom .. Dogs BICYCLE REPAIRS * * \YANTED: Friendly loving home for darling female Silky Terrier pups. Housebroken. All s h o t s . Must sell immed. 830-833.l. SILKY Terrier pup!I, iAKC, champ llneB. 1 male, 3 females, 10 wks . no1.153S-2288. !o,l'CC! pick-up & delivery lhis w"k. COM BIKE SHOP ~ E. Coe.st Hwy. 640--0911 Order now for Christmas LABRADOR PUPS ------------~~- 6 Wks, AKC, Ch., yellow It JOHN'S RACING CYCLES blck, 1st shot 645-4782 alt 5. * BULTACO * * IRISH Setten, 6 wb old. '731 are here. Largest In· ventory o f motorcycles, AKC reg. 1 male, 1 fem!. parq & accesaoriet avail. 846-3994. tJ.ed cycles, atftet & dirt. WEIMARANER pups, AKC, Expert ael'Vice depL (Check top show quality. Stud our warranties). 9 to 6 dai- i;e!Vice. Call 644-7102. ly, closed Sun & Mon. 2255 MALTESE AKC Sun Canyon Harbor Blvd. (Co rn e r paid $250. Sac ror $75. to a Harbor & Wilson). Costa .. 1...,,., Mesa. &1&-4655 or 646-2428. good home. 54 ,....,_ ~ AKC MUST SELL! .,, . Bernard puppies, ' GOT MARRIED!! shots. 7 wks. old. 36 YAMAHA OIRT BIKE 96>-3889; 536-f2l8 1!J7% Horses 156 $195. or best offer "ARABIAN PUREBRED" lTMO Sen~n M~ Foun- CRAY Stallion age 6 l rides $975. Palomino % Arab, YAMAHA 360 MX, '70 Nu top buggy, show horse & ~ It bottom end. J:Coni shocks, w/plenty of ribbons. $1250. Cerianl .spmgs·tml end. lm- Reg. Quartw mare&. Dapple mac. $625. 644-0578. gray, ready to race $675. '69 Honda 450 A·l, '67 Palomino Mare-rides &: baa Greeves, good, '67 tlonda 50 been bred $275. Palomino A·l . Make olrs. 3 3 5 ·A Gelding . Top deck blood, Woodland, CM 645-3544. \Vorth $1500, Sacrifice $875. NEAR new Schwinn 2 spd 714-737-2651. Tandem, good condition. NP.W store to serve y<>Ut $75, * 646--2624 English & Western riding c.-.~7.;.0 °"T'"r'Ciu~m~phi"'-650'=-.7 needs: Horse World, Town $850 * * 548-3773 & Country Squatt, 18582 Beach Blvd., H.B. 963-3990. Motor Home• 12 Yr. old Mare, gentle. Has Sale/Rent \l"On ribbons in Gymcana. $225 Tack. 962-1025. (• 940 niileage. Ext &-int. Xlnt 8 Front whee l drive IG CHEVY Van '65, mags, nu cond . Sl050. firm. 644-5003. e .c spd, au sync trans paint, reblt '"' w/16 m;"· MAZDA • AM Radio 1st National MERCURY '70 Mercury Xlnt cond. $1100. 673-9474. e White walls Monterey 2 Dr HT, V-8, Aut Trans, power stee r i ng, Radio, Healer, white wall&. wheel covers. A very nice DIESEL POWERED MAZDA •Wheel cc"'"" ·~ Tun Chevy. 827-2248 LEASE SPECIAL e Heater&: defroster Bank Leasing • Reclining seats Autos Wonted 968 New '72 RX3 • B"m"'r guar<I. 2X1l Michetton om. car {716CTO) $1995 dlr. Call REWARD WILL PAY OVER Kelly Blue Book For late model, cleen, low mlloogo dome .. tics~ Imports~ trucks or campers. cau and R&k klr Buyer DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 24'0 Horber Blvd. Cosio Mo1<1 546-I017 \VE buy all makes oi clean used sports cars, paid for or not. Please drive In for -·-NEWPORT IMPORTS $57•56 : ~tt~hter e Locking steering wheel Loaded. ROTARY powered. 36 mo. + T & L. For resp. pty. Trades oona. • 72 ROTARY'S "Demo Sale" • Dual braking system • 2 speed elect wipen • Seal belt & harneu ALL TillS-and over 25 MPG! (Comer ot MacArthur) 836-6536. Irvine, Calif. 92664 l,.::67=MER=;:c,C_4_d>'~P~arl<-~Lane-I n .4!8S.'M63> 213/621-()367 HT. Air cond. Pwr aeata a: YOUR ONLY wll>dowo, Oean. Un, 557-1550 FACl'ORY AUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC ·ro 01.i. Corti'!" s........,.. DEALER Full power, ""· '°'!rl :rJl: lArs Rlectio f cad.U Mag wheel CCM'I"&, Mu~hel 10 TO CHOOSE Also good selection of taC1 1~ Oran~ 0 County'. ~·=eage $2.850. Pr, "BIGGEST SAVINGS" new •n Peugeots •nd SaJN·Leulns. .68 ;,.__0 ~ .. re 'C'.·lly .. Service is tht> differ oet''" ..... ass . .xip me. "'"' HUNTINGTON BEACH Triumphs. ~ Nabers ~-ri],,°'." ~:j ,!~ MAZDA BUY NOW •nd U Cadillac 1c968-5539=...o""-· ____ , $SAVES ~~~'-· PINTO 17331 Beach Dlvd . 842-6666 Lease Mgr, Mr. Fl')' FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. ht ST., S.A. 547~764 TOYOTA 540-91 00 Open Sunda,y •n P!ntn Runabool 11495- "64 Sedan De Ville. FuU pwr. 34,000 ml'L ~ Aft. air, xlnt oond. $S95 or best wkdys, 837-8839. otter. 842-9095. ·n Pinto DlOcc l!llg. Dtl.Ux * 1971' Cadillac Coupe de lnt. & ext. Auto trans. QDoi! Vile. Xlnt cond. $4900. Call cond. $1500. 673-8116. .. 675-2013. '72 Pinto Runabout. stldr~ CAMARO di" boi<s,,radlo. clean=· ditlon. 6'13-Tl'90. • 17 I I s 7 San Cle111ente Ca istrano EDITION • ·N.Y. Steeks VOL. 65, NO. 297, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Still More Peace Rulnors Boost Stock Market From Wire 8'rvlca NEW YORK -Continued speculaUon about peace in the Vietnam war boosted the stock market sharply hJgh~r in early trading today on lhe New :York Stock Ex· change. The Dow Jones industrial average was up ll:.19 at 95$.00 by 11 a.m. By noon, IL bad dropped to 9.40 and to 8.20 at z p.m. By 11 a.m Standard and Poor's ~ stock inda:, a broader indicator, was ahead 1.12 at 110.36. • Advance1 led declines, 1,014 to 76, among the 1,3911 Issues crossing the tape. Volume amounted to around 3,110,000 shares during lhe first hour. There were indications prestdential ad- viser Henry A. KWlnger'I talks in Paris and Saigon may have been frulUul, and hopes for peace ·encouraged many in- vestors, analysts said. The stock market bas been sensitive to peace rumors the past several months. Many glamour stocks and electronics ......... ars Ca1.1yon, Beach Panel Approves Recreation Plan California's parks commission has granted its blessing to the general d<velopment plans for 2.300 acres of San Mateo canyon and six miles of fonner Camp Pendleton ~reline to eventualy become one of California's largest state parb. Most of the nearly 3,000 acres of San Onofre park property will be kept un· touched, but campir ~ and parking areas will be built at diverse locations. . Horse's Tail Cu,t in Tustin and computers were big gainen in the rally. IBM, Burroughs, Te :1 as Instruments, Motorola and Walt Disney all gained around 4 painta In early trading. This came on the heels of a lO~point rise Friday which analysts &aid was also prompted by encouraging reparts about Vietnam. Trading was very brisk, despite the Veterans Day holiday. Late last w~k. a French newspaper • Cities Get $584,000 In Funding Orange Coast cities this month will receive $584,000 from a scheduled $34.1 million October distribution stalewide of funds under-the Bradley·Burns Local Sales and Use Tax Law, state board of equalization chairman John W. Lynch lw announced. Commissioners late last Friday ap- proved of the general plans alter hearing teot"-Y from aeveral ol!iciala, in- cluding San Clemmte City Manager Ken- neth Carr. 'l1le development plan callJ for 1,000 campsites and utenslve recreation facllltles &t the large acreage released for 1JUbllc a.e by Pn!sldent Nixon 1aJ1 year. om,. Comity Sheriff'• ofllcerw aro today investigating an Incident ~by them .... ''m!usually cilloua" act of cruelty during the weekend in the Tustin area. The $S4. l million comes from August prepayment& of various local laxes, in- cluding Ult o~petcedt sales and use tax; !be new one-tourti.1 pereenl local sale& and use ta• payment to COU!ilits for local Ir~ IWld; a.. ,._.... I. Bay Atta Rapid Tl'.allllt Dlllrfd tnmac- lion and use tax; and Southern Callfomla Rapid Transit District transaction and use tax. · Coocem, boftver, bu come from Carr over which 80rl of waste treatment pro(,. -will be cboaeo by the State Depart• mmt of Parts and Rocteatioa,. Carr told commlaalooers tllal I pro- _.i miaJJ, Imported .. ---t ayalem woold llOl lollow the J'OllaUI ap- -cb to treatment being emphasl:.ed by state llllipollullilil ~. No opedflc ...,....., bu Ylt been made, however, • tbe exae{ f¥pe ol. syatem to be WJed ~the padl. Fundlng for Ibo -........... ...,pnom1mt project being ...-por I •!ly by tile President will be requesled for the nert flical year'• budget. The coots of the total pn>ject bave been compated to be In exceaa of $3 million. So far, planning funds as well as cash !oi tile lnstaDaUon of water mains from San Cl~te have been allocated. Other funds also have been used to open up two miles of the beach on a bare. bones format with only portable facilities and trails lo the beach Installed. 2-month old Tot Bitten, Battered To Death in NY NEW YORK (UPI) -Police said bwnan bite mark• and lacerations covered the body or a two-month-old boy while bis" familY, reJaUves and friends who apparently was killed in hill cflb were celebrattng his chrl!tening In another room. "' The infant, Hector Rodriguez Jr., was pronounced dea4 on an-lval at Green- paint Hospital late Saturday nlgbt. • Olllolal1 class~ed tbe dead boy "' a "bittered child." Police questioned tbe party guesta at the local station house shortly after the death wu reported. No arrests or 1U1peCta were reported and au were releaaed. 'l1le baby'• body waa dlacovered by his mother, Mrl. Delores R4drlguez, 21, in Its bulinet In the llnd atory apartment Of Lindsay Houalng Project located In Brooltlyn. 'lbe child'li father, Hector Rodriguez Sr,, 22, a clerk, said be had no idea how the Infant died. Another child, 2, w a • unbanned. The bites were lnfiicted by a child or an adult wlilu amall mouth, the medical examlner says. "It could have ba<n done In a ~ or by aemeooe wbo hated the l11111ly,' aald detective Ernest Bort>ee. The medical eumlntr aald tbat In ad- dl\IOO lo belntbltlon, the boY'• lkull had ~ cruahed flun bltterq againll I wall or tbe floor. Intruders at a Brier Lane corral cut. off the throe-loot tall of a bone owned by Mrs. Anoa Bergstrom and left the animal bl<edlng and distresaed, depa&s said. ''There could have been no other ttaaon than to tnnict cruelty on a friendly anlmal that obviously trulted lbe penoo wbo approached him," an Investigator said. ' President Vows Congress Fight On Overspending • WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -casting the Democratic-corltrolled congress as villain, President Nixon said today "The time bas come to stand up to the big spenders" who, be contended, threaten to cause "higher-prices or Jµgber ta:res - or both." He said he will fight .,.,., spending wJth vetoes and fund bold.backs. Nixon released a statement on mtvtng . at Weatchester County Airport near this New York City suburb at 10:15 a.m. PDT as be began a busy ball.Qy. or motorcading. rallies and .....,p11ona ID the area. He said: "The""bject failure of the 92nd Congress to bold a mponslble level of spending caals a long shadow over the glow of a resurging American economy." Nixon said the economy probably will grow this year at a rate exceeding the AdministraUoo's a percent estimate. He laid claim to cutUng inflation .in half and .asserted the Administration is "crtatlng more new jobs than at any Ume in more than 16 yean." However, be said, Congrea has recently embarked on a "spending sprff" and added: · "Today, I have 10me news for the big (See.1 NIXON! Page I) RENT A.L A.D HAS DRAWING ·powER Check this ad for its 0 qulct draw" power: PRJV ! BR, 2 BA, patio, tncd by ,.t, frpk:. Wik to bch • abopa. $250. per mo, be Ocl.J'Un!, XXX·XXX:X. Wk da)'I, X:XX•XXXIC wkndl. '!be Id rented lbe house to tbe lint pmon to ttspond the firat I day It ap- peared In, tbe DAILY PILOT. 'l1le ad- vtrtlitr, of courte, was "very happy." The DAILY PILOT'wanls the _.-tun-llJ lo make you happy the wne way. Dial Mum, the direct line to mulls. The ta:res whJch were due Sept. 20 are admini$tered by the board of equaliza- tion. Tbe remainder of money due local government for the third calendar quarter will be disbursed in November and December. Tax monies received by coastal cities are: -Costa Mesa; $165,000. -Foontaln Valley: $20,500. -Huntington Beach: 1127,500. -Irvine: ll0,500. -Laguna Beach: $29~. -Newport Beach; 111111,000. -San Clemente: 111,000. -san Juan capistrano : $&,500. -Seal Beach: $13,250. The county government will receive $80,000. Taxes received in a 11 local government entities in the county will total $1.1111 million. Anaheim is the largest recipient, with $330,000. Villa Park is the smallest, with 1125. Veterans Ignore New Day; They'll Celebrate Nov. II Today is Veterans Day but for the fact that government offices are closed, there are no announced ceremooJes planned on the Orange O>ast to honor the men Who have served the country in the Armed FOl'<el. A check of the citlea, American Legiod Posts , tbe VFW and local memorial parkl showed that Veterans Day will pracUcally go unnoticed this year. A spokesman for Harbor R e s t Memorial Park in ~ta Mesa offered Ulls exphmatlon: ' • "Most of the veteram I know have always observed Veteram Day on the 11 of November, as It used to be. They say Uiat'a when they'll ctlebrate It." 'l1le armlslitl' that ended World War l was declared at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, •1918. Since 1922. Armlllloe Day has been ·Of• flclally celebrated on, Nov. 11. It WU made I Natlonal holiday In 1138 md In 11151. tbe name waa chanced to Veterans Day '° tbal veterans lho bid aeived llnce World War I could alJo be honored. tn 1970, the date was cbans~ to the fourth Monday In October by aCI of c..creaa. But tt loob llke VtterlDI Day will alw111 be Nov. 11 on lbe Oranat CouL Wooden Indian Gone . . . MONTEREY (UPI} -'nit Trade Wlndl gift tbop on Flaberman'a Wbarl Sunday r<pOrted the theft of I IOV!ll-!Oot .....i.n cilar .tore lndlan valued at '710, ,• reported that a cease-fire was erpected by the end of Ws month. Since then, new reports have bolstered Wall street hopes of an approaching ~fire l n lndochJna . Klsslnger left Saigon for Washington today after the most intensive peace talks of the Indochina war, and the U.S. Embassy sal~ progress had been made toward a settJemeot. . But It lndlcatee that tbe U.S. and South Vietnamese government still differ on some points. "We have made progress," said an em- bassy statement. ..Talks will continue between us and the government of Viet· natn. It is not ln the interest of negotia· t1ons to be more specific at this time." Kissin~er Oew home to report to Nixon atter SlX meetlDg.s with Preaklent Nguyen Van Thieu. Asked at the airpart If his vi!lt had been productive, Kissinger replied, "It aJways is when I'm here." Tlu.e boura alter Kissinger leR, the U.S. Anny chief ol stall. Gen. Creigbton W. Abrams, left for Washington. He spent &ix days in Saigon &MeSSlng the military situation and the Vletnamlzation. program; and sat in on 10me of Kls&- inger's meetings with ThJeu. Although Newsweek and T I me magazines reparted that the United States and North Vietnam agreed to a oet- Uement that would include a ceuH!re, CS.. REPORTS, Page I) on . reewa ' DAILY PILOT,,_,, ...... ' . . Vietnam veteran Stuart Baker and World War I veteran 0. W. Price, both of Laguna Beach, •compare notes over a captured North Viet· namese rifle Baker brought home with him. . -. . . Seareh Begun WWII Holdout Soldier Souglit LUBANG ISLAND, Philippines (UPI) -A combined Japanese-Philippine search party widened its hunt today for one of two holdout Japanese soldiers authorities say may have killed and wounded 130 persol18 in a 27-year.old pri-- vate war. · The defense department said In Manila today that despite Uu1, tt ml&ht forgive the man If andi when he Is captured. His comrade tn the jungles of Lubang Island died Thursday in a clash wlth police. "World Warn would 'bave ended for both men on Thursday, but one man got away," said Lt. Col. Pedrito de Guzman, chltl ol lbe natlooal Police on the Island. Authoilties tentallvOly Identified the ,.,.;.or still flgbting the war with a Japanese army rlne used a generation ago as 2nd Lt. Hlroo Oooda, 50. He was listed by authoriles as U>e lut ·holdout ol the Pacific war whiclt ended olllcially In 194!. Searcher• stepped up th<!lr hunt on the !OZ.square-mile Island 75 m!leJ aeuthweat of Manila by brlnglnlf In bollcopters to track down the man. 'Good Samaritan' Killed While Aiding Motorists A 21).year<Old WhlWer youth wu dne· ged to his death &lnday night Wilen lie wu hit by two can while trying to aid the vlcllma of another accident on Plclllc Coast llilhway near Womer Avenue In HWIUngton Beach. Police aald James Anthony Doerr, 20, 1Dppid and !ell whlle . trying to dart ..,..,. tile busy highway at 10:15 p.m. and wu llrllck by 1 car drtvt!! by Joee Alulm Rivera, 11. of Long Beach. Doerr -draQed 10 feet under Rivera's car and then wq run over by another un\dellU!led car which pulled him for another 20 reet , pallet said. Police .. Id they have been .,..blc to Identify lhe drtvet of the other car which mysterlOUJly 1llpped away juJt arter the accident. Friends or Doerr told pollct be waa · running to ald the victim& of 1 van which had just spun off the road on tht north side or the hlgbw1~. Tbe driver or the van bid l<iot control of the vehicle. Neither the driver or bis J.>UMllgen were Injured. · Rivera lold pallet be was paaalnc-tbe van when Doerr IUddenly appeand In front nl him •nd bo wu unable lo llop · before hitting the Vlhlttltr ,..,U.. • No diargt1 are peodina aplllll Rivera, ~ to pollct. .. • Riverside Road Closed Both W.a~s CORONA (AP) -At least one person was killed and about 25 lnjurtd ln ~ seriei of pileu1>5 on foggy RJverslde County roads today.: ·The highway patrol said 40 lo 00 can crashed In pileups on the aeuthbound- lanes of the Riverside Freeway, Later. about 10 vehlclea piled up on tha northbound side or the freeway, lncluding a gas transport truck Which overturned and dumPecf fuel IC2'09S the pavement. t\e lree"IY WU closed In both dim> ~. A third pileup Involving about !Ive earw waa repal1ed on U.S. 1911 It Nri ~ ••• aboilt io mlle•flrom ·-. · Don ShlH0r, dl'fver ol. the· .fll:ll, -• • buJance at the eady.mqlt!Ple ~<i;ltli,-. "A semi blew up and tliere """' ~ oil over the ptace. People were tnpped in their cars. It was just terrible.• . Ho aald be drove eigbt ~ ln serious condition to the CoroU Com, r.1unity Hospital. ' Five other pel'llODS were t.abn. olller hospitals. Shlflor aald vislbility ID tbe file wbel! be arrived It the occident Wll,Clle,Alf tn lee~ and said re3a1en bid trouble find., Ing the ricllms. A hlgbway patrol weather ~ said visibility in aome areas was z.ero. SherHr1 deputits said· the roe wu Ill patches. ae that driven were travelloi al a high rate of apeed when they -the low visibility .,.... 'l1le ldenUfy of lbe slnaJO kmwn fatali- ty waa not lmrnediately avaiW>le. Tbe victim ,.portedly burned to death in hll car . Kids to .Receive Turtle Playmate Klndergarten students at Pall.sades school wlll have their own concrete turtle in the playground 100n, oompllmenta: of a neighbor h1 Capbtrano Beach. Trustees have agreed lo accepl tha large playground piece "hlch WU buJll and donlotecl by R~ B. JollnlOn ol 26352 Via Callfomla. 'l111tall1ntI the apparatll! will be simple and inexpensive to the district, tntstees learned. The ..... 1p1 of the gilt will cOlt about S12 and a few houri of staff time. Orange Coast Weatller Low clouds and (Of aioo, Ille coast will clear by noon on Tu& day, according to the weather aerv· Ice, with highs of 71 at the beacbeo. rlalng lo 77 Inland. Lon tonl&ht 53-41. • INSmE 'l'OD&Y You con oet a dloorcc m Ca.I· ifornfa for on1w '" under tllc ~it"VOUTltlf plen. 0r Qtt 0 complelc dlvofi:a kit for r.11 tll4n·fl00. See •IOT!I cm Pall• S. l..M.-I -" -I .,_ IHI -" ........... 11 ......... ,_ . .,. ...... 14 -.. ~ .......... ,, .... I l4 .... L.-n 1~ .......... ,., -" --. =='I ...... ,.._, --.. T,....,.... M =: 'S \ .............. " ---. . ' DAILY PILOT ti.ff ..... ,. MRS. JOHANSEN REMINISCES WITH COPIES OF OLO NEWSPAPER Costa Mesa Woman Recalls How Veterans Day Got Its Start Vets Day"' 1921 WWI Widow Recalls Celebration By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of rM Deity Pilot St•ff To many Americans the meaning of Veterans Day is obscure. It .has. beco_me one of thQ.<;e "boQJ.Js" holidays everyone loves because-. it stretches out the weekend. Tt's a welcome reprieve from school. time to catch a haircut and a chance to run er· rands. Nobody celebrates it very much except for the American Legion or the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The Doughboys who helped rout the mighty German anny 5& years ago look- ed at it differently. To them it was a vic- ~ory to end all wars and they celebrated 1t on Nov. 11, the day the Armist.ice was signed in 1918. Mn. Janie Johansen, a Costa Mesan, would just as soon go on celebrating it on Nov. 11 because it bas more meaning to her. "I lived on a farm in 01¥boma lthen the war ended," Mrs: Joben9en, 68, 'of 989 W. 19th St., recalls. ' "We had a bell outside with whlcb we ttsed to announce dinner. When the phones started ringing all over th.at the war was over and all tbe train! started tooting real loud, I just ran out there and rang that bell as hard as I could. It was One of the big days in my life." ·Mrs. Johansen, just 14 at the time, had oot yet met her first husband, Grayson M. McCarty, a sergeant in the Signal Corps. That was to occur on another big ~ay, Nov. 11 , 19'21 , when he marched past J?er during an Armistice Day Parade. When the war ended, McCarty was In Coblem:, Germany, a beautiful Rhine River city, putting out a newspaper call- ~ the American Anny of Occupation ~AMAROC) News. A printer by trade, be ~d them bound in two volumes -one ~vered with his outfit's insignia -and gave them to his Wife. , Mrs. Johansen maintains that there ere only three other sets in existen·ce. ()ne belongs to the National YMCA $!Other to the Hoover Library, and th~ third to the fonner editor, Guy C. Staf. ftlrd. The small daily paper, now yellowed with age, is an amazing sourcebook on e aftermath of WW l. The first edition. blished on April 21, 1919 , announces t it's "All Quiet After Violent i igbtlng." . But there were riots in most of ennany. Munich was in a state of ~· ORAN•I COAST IC . DAILY PILOT ...,.. Or•-C.•I OAILY PILOT, wlfll ... ldt b ~lned !tit H....,.PT.,., J1 JIWll..,. tw tl'l9 ~ CMd "1.iellWllrt(I (~'f. S.,.... r•M edlliol'lt •t• PlllllllMd, Mll'Ml'I' ~l'OUOh ll:rld•l'• fOr Cml• ~. H....,,...1 ttKll. Hwnllntfon IHCllllllM,1111•1" 'l•!Wi', Uo- a.tcll, ltvi..ISMll'-"Kk .... $•" C"-1•1 , S... .. hHO'l Ce!ll•lt•llOo A llfto'-!'90\oMI ~Iii.on 11 pub!ltMd .S.l11rd1v1 Md SIMlll•'l't- 'l'hl prin(.FMI 11wt1Ht111no pi.111 1, et lJO w~•• ••'f Str.-t. C•I• M•~• C•Hton1l1, tUll. ltolMr• N. w,,, "'""""' .... PllOtlth« J•tlr I. CIWl•y VICl9 '"'""""' •nd °""""•I IM""'1" Th,,,..,, K .. vU ·-n ...... A. Mur,l!i"• ~Int ••l• Clt•t'" H. loot J.ftlrri1r4 P. N•ll ,...,...,., MMOOlnt 1111,.,.. I S-Cl._...Offke 1305 N•rffl £1 C1Mi11• "••'· t2672 --CMt• ,._I :no ~!::r Sl!'M! N...,.,, ... Cf>r ml H a.u~ro Mlll\lll'Otoft .. Kl'li \"1S 9.-dt ........ ,, L....-•MC11: m "°'"' •-~· l Tef1,.1• ftf4l '41-4111 .. l c...,.. .,,,.. ...... '4J.f671 , ' ""' ~ . .clewtt •• ~, ...... : ,. ) T ... h .... 492 ... 421 ~'· 1•n. 0r-. .c ... 1 Pvt111111n1 ~. Ht NWI tlOMM IUll'ltf'ltllM. ~ "'f!IWll( rnttt« or .._''"'"""" '*'"' _., • ,.....,.,..... 'Wlrroovt ..,. .. , ,.,. m!Mllfl .. C'9Pfl'lll\I _,, ._... t• ~I· Mid It Cltt• MfM, Ct!llOM'*. flllilO"J.,IM iw airrltr SJ,11 f!llllltllfJ "'· M.111 u ,11 l'llllllflt11 mu)t.,,. WltlM-. Q.6' ll'IOftltllt'. - I anarchy, and elsewhere Red German partisans bad taken 100 persons hostage. There waa a continuous threat of renew- ed hostilities until the pe,!1ce was f01tnally signed. _ _ "It covered what -was going on there and what was going on in the world and I think ii did a pretty good job," Mrs. Jc.hansen says about her bound treasure. One of the stories published by the AMAROC News tells of a yoong man who chopped ofi bis hand to avoid the draft. Another reports the crufse of two dirigibles loaded with machine guns and bombs over U. Kiel, Germany "until the signing or rejection of the peace treaty." On the lighter side was the escape at- tempt of two German girla from a local hospital, both wearing A m e r i c a n uniforms, "one riding a horse and the other astride a cow wt~ apprehended." McCarty also worked on the newspapel" when the June 28, 1919 edition announced u·.at the "Huns" reached Paris to sign the treaty and a day later when headlines cried out "War is Over, Peace is Signed" and 'jTreaty to Lay Foundations for a Changed World." McCarty, who put bis printing ex- perience to use when he returned home by publishing the AJtadena News with his wife, died long after WW I of bleeding ulcers be contracted while engaged in battle. But his books and his uniform remain behind to remind others of the origin of Veteran's Day. "We always used to celebrate it on the 11th hour on the 11th day of the 11th month becausf' that's when the firing euCed," says Mrs. Johansen. "It's only , been a few years since Congress changed the date. None of the vets like the new date ." Mrs. Johansen, president of the Gen. Douglas :vtacArthur Americau Legion Post Auxiliary Unit 499, will celebrate Veteran 's Day with her friends at 8 p.m. Thursday ta Coma Mesa's American Legion Hall. From Pagel NIXON ..• spenders ... "I'm going to use every weapon at my command to hold spending in this fiscal Year as close as possible to $250 biflion -so that we will not have a new wave of crippling inflation and theTe will be no need for higher taxes." Nixon continued : "During the coming week, there will be a number of vetoes. If there are big spe_ndlng bills which I must sign for pollcy reasons. I also promise to exercise my full legal powers to hold down these appropriations. or reduce others to make room for the new programs." The total impact of actions by the just· adjourned Congress, "If left to stand, would be higher pri ces or higher taxes - or both." be argued. Leaving much of the campaigning to "surrogates" -mainly members of his administration speaking for him -Nixon ~a~ made :lvowcdly political appearances IJl Just six states since his renomination. He was aocompanjed on this trip by Mrs. Nixon. Before leaving Washington, he con. !erred with his chief budget and economic policy advisers on legl&lation paSS<d by Con(ims before Its a d- joumment Wednelde.y. Following a motorcade journey today through almost a dozen' communlUe.11 in Westchester CoWlty, N.Y., Nixon was to attend a reeeptloti for GOP leaders from It slates at the home of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller ntar Tarrytown. The President then wa1 heading for an evening rally at the Nasaau COunty coliseum in Uniondale on Long Island. and wlndina up his day at 1t1U another rally at MacArthur airport In 1$1Jp, Suf. folk County, wh<re his plane would be waiting to carry him hick to Washington . The White Houae announced Sunday an addltlon to the Republlcan Candidate < stump schedule: an evening rally Th:urs- dtiy at a high ,ac:hool 1n Ashland, ky. ·' Halloween Tips Given For Safety ll you can't decide whether to be a sheet.white ghost or a black devil for Halloween, choose the first costume. "Halloween is great fun for kids and children da!bipg across darkened streets In eager pursuit of candy are much easier for motorists to spot if the young ones are wearing light-colored cost umes. "Every year we always have a few mishaps," says officer Gary Wright. "U people would just take better precau- tions, we could avoid many of them." In a drive to cut down accidents this All Hallow's Eve , police baVe issued a flysheet to all city elementary schools that lists cammcin dangers. Among them are: -Treacherous treats. Some common examples include fazor blades in apples, tncks In popcorn, and poi!oned candy. -Bulky gowns, masks th.at restrict vision, and oversized or tmacc.Ustomed to high heel shoes could all cause a child to stumble and· fall wbile running, possibly in the path ('fan on-coming car. -Open flames from jack+tantenm are dangerous to loose clothing or frills. Costumes which are not fire-retardant can easily burst into name. Huntington Beach police point oUt that we're not against it," says Wright. "But there are dangers and people should know about them." His number ooe rule b close parental supervision. "II parents let their children go helter skelter, there are going to be accidents. Children up to the seventl> grade abould always go in a group that ts accompanied by an adult," Wright says. Even the danger of treacherous treats coold · be mitigated· through close lilll!ert'!SJM. b~ J!ll'1, - - -Parents should "Insist Ilia!" -. ll Halloween tricks and treats be brought home for yoW" inspectirn befare the child eats them. Go over each item carefully," says the police flyer. Wrigbt stresoes this, noting that last year there were five separate tracts in which children were given candy bars with needles_em~ , "There are apparently IOllle people who think Its fmmy tO do Ibis, a< to put a laxauve coating on candy," Wright says. "But you never know bow a child's body b going to react. This kind of thing Isn't at all funny." However Wright says be knows of no cues tn which a child was killed or seriously iojured from a prank of this kind. ' "Go over these things with a child lm· mediately before be leaves to go trick-or- treatlng," Wright siys. "If you do it a dav or two beforehand, it'll be forgot- ten." Man Booked Over Alleged Assa1tlt A Hawaiian visitor who allegediy punched a UC Irvine student in the stomach to prevent her reporting a traf· fie offense was booked into Orange Colll). ty Jail on multiple charges during the weekend. Sherifrs deputies booked J o s e p h Anthony Kaohi, 28, on suspicion of assault and battery, operating a vehicle without a valid drivers license and druoken driving. Kaohi was aJTeSted in the Dana Marina area after he allegedly struck Teresa Aft. ne Worley, 21, of 1016 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. Officers said Kaohi attacked. the stu- dent in the Dana Marina parking lot after she warned him that she intended to report a traffic infraction to the California Highway Patrol. FrotttPflfle l REPORTS ..• there was no confirmation from either U.S. or Soutb Vietnamese otficials in Saigon. Sooth Vletnameae sources s a i d , however, that Thieu IB.!Ued ordtra that junior m.llitary ortlcers -lieutenants and captalot -should prepare to take over the functlC)ns of civilian village chiefs in the event of • cease-fin. This was intended to insure that the Saigon government had a rum hold on the P?JJUll!ition and the government machlnety should a settlement come, the sources said. For two months, government workers have 'been painting SOuth Vletnameae flaga on the doors, walls and gates of homes and other buildings all over the country. 'The nags, which began a~ pearing more than a year ago, have often been descrtbed as a Rhow-alleglance tn the event of a ceuHire. lnfonnanll aald that during the paat two weeks, government troops captured et least t)fo caches of Viet Cong Oag1 during operations near Saigon and on the northern coast. Thf: apokesman (or the North Vitt~ namcse delegation to the Paris pttct talks told ntwsmen today that "the Viet· nam problem Is still not tettled; the "war happeM to be prolonged and Intensified." Ht added thet the North Vtelnamese "Position is correct, &oflcal a n d rtuonable," and asked : "~• the Nison adminlstralion really want 1 e r I o u 1 negotiations or dou It still engage In maneuver1 aimed at deceiving public opinion?" UPIT ...... New v~s. Citizens Get Vote? By JACK BROBACK Of "'9 .,,..,., PW s..H A group of 142 persons who became United States citlzem on Oct. 11, three days after the deadline to register to vote hi the Nov. 7 O.neral Election, lhould be allowed to caet their ballots, accardlng to thb Orange County Chapler of the League of Women Voters (LWV). Mag and December The LWV has filed a class action suit on behalf of Elizabeth Ann &berts of Brea whlct. will be beard Wednesday In Orange County Superior Colat. Mrs. Roberts, "8 fonner citii.en of ·Great Bri- tair1, waa one of the 142 persons sworn in an a U.S. citizen Oct. 11. Louie Nine Pipe, 74, a Flathead Indian, married Vivian Rice Red Wing, 23, of Bristol, Eng .. , in his home town , Missoula, Mont. They met by mail two years ago after Miss Red Wing saw his picture on a record album. "It we win our point, Mrs. Robert! and the other 141 new citizens will be able to vote on Nov. 7 for president and vice president," aaJd Mrs. Jeannet~ Turk P""'ldent ol the county LWV. ' Turks Reject Hijackers' Demands to Free L'eftists Two o1 the group tried to register alter the Oct. 11 ceremonies and were told that they would not be eligible t.o vote No. 7 by the Orange County Registrar of Voters office, according to Mrs. Turk. Shirley Price, vice president of the county LWV, announced at the ceremonies in Santa Ana that the new citizens were eligible to register and vote Nov. 7. She said she had been told this was correct by a member of the registrar's stafr. Later, Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock said the in- formation had been in errol". ANKARA (AP ) -The Turkish govern· ment again rejected the demands of four young Turks holding 66 Turks hostage aboard a hijacked airliner in Sofia, Bulgaria. todltY, and tbe hijackers ex· . tended their deadline. The hijackers said they would blow up the Turkish airline's Boeing 7f11 with all aboard unless the Turkish government freed 13 imprisoned leftists, Including one sentenced to death. 'Ibey first set a deadline of noon -3 a.m. PDT -but then extended it. They also·demanded certain changes in ..'l'urkey_an<t_remo_val of_·~de.nwcratic" articles from the Turkish cmstituiiOn. BTA_, the Bulgarian neW> agency, said the b11ackers wanted political asylum in Bulgaria for themselves and the J3 prisoners whose freedom they demanded. The Turkish cabinet, after a a-hour meeting Sunday, rejected the demand for release of the prisoner. But the cabinet was reported to have no objection to Bulgaria's giving the hijackers asylum. , The hijackers demanded repeal of a ban on strikes, improvement in the lives Fiesta'. Group Meets The San Juan Capistrano Fiesta As.wciation plans a general membership meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. The. group, which each year sponsora the FleSta de las Golondrinas, will meet at the San Juan Hills Golf Club. Members are invited to bting a friend as well. Refreshments will be served after the business meeting. ....... ConYertible Dilhw1tller with Handoome T•x!Olll .. Top ....... ~ .......... ...... ..-...... •"'-................. ,,..._.,.... ____ _ -·-.--.. ....... ._. •• 111 ... .-· .... .....,_ ........ ............. . -• ,.....,,.....,..-.itvl., -·-•Tlllht ....... ' • of the peasants and bette' conditions in the universities. "In the end, we believe humane feel· ings will prevail and the air pirates will tum loose passengers and crew " a ' ' government spokesman said. The hijacking occurred early Sunday on a flight from Istanbul to Ankara. The pilot and a passenger were sligbUy woun- ded by gunfire during the lligbt. Tbe fo/,ll'englne Jet landed safely at Sofia during a snowstorm. Security forces surrounded the craft-and hot meals later were-bn>ught to its 00- cupants. But it was "i.mder the complete control of the terrorists, and the situation was tense," according to BTA. Tbe plane landed In Sofia with 81 persons aboard, including the four hi- jackers. But BTA said the hijackers let the two wounded men leave the plane along with two mothers and their children. The hijacking was nearly Identical to the commandeering May 3 of a Turkish DC9 airliner with 59 persons aboard. It also was taken over by four leftists who diverted it to Sofia. A Turkish government spokesman said be hoped the Bulgarian government would give "The same belp and un- derstanding" this time. The four hijackers last spring demand· ed the release of condemned terrorists and political asylum. The Turks refused to free the terrorists, but Ufied the Bulgari!UJs to grant the hijackers asylum to save those on the plane. -· The suit will be argued for tbe LWV liy Richard Petherbridge, president of the Orange County ACLU before presiding Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner Wednesday. Joan Riddle, YOter service chairman of the LWV, said the right of new citizens to vote for president and Vice president is belng argued on the buJs of a Callfomia :election code proVislon wbicb states that If a person has fullfilled all requirements other than that of residence before an election date they sball be allowed to -vote. · "This particular c1... of people are being e>:cluded from Ibis right," Mrs. Riddle !tfltd today. "If they bad become citizens in another state and moved to Calllomia this week they would be allow- ed to vote under the code. "We feel it is unfaif' to exclude these people just because they hive lived In Orange County rather than some other state," she argued. Mrs. Riddle said the Callfomla code which applies only to voling for president and vice president is in Utt! state election lawo to c:ooform with federal regulations. Body Found in Motel RIVERSIDE (AP) - A North Carolina man was .'.ound dead in his motel room here Sunday, bound and apparenlly su!- focated In bedding. Police Identified the man as Dr. Benjamin S. Gantz, about 60, of Gr<ensboro. Details weren't disclosed. OUR NO. 1 GOAL: TO MAKE GENERAL ELECTRIC THE BEST BUY SouncMrwulotld lulM-ln MEMBEl OF CALIFORf'llA'S LARGEST COOPERATIVE BUYING GROUP WITH THE VOLUME BUYING POWER OF 110 STORES DilhwMhlr glvn Quollty .. ""'""'--OullttJ .,,..., .. ..,._ ......... ............. .,.. ..... ..,.. ... __ ..... ....... &..,,, •!Ml ........... ........... ~,. __ ., •lllllMl••fl.-......... ,..... ............ __ ,..,,...._ 1815 NewpCll't lllvd. 60 Miiiion Doll•r• In lluyl119 Po.-.r We •r• •n authorlnd GENERAL ELECTRIC Downtown Cotta Mo .. Phone 548-7788 •·-=---8 Molor Appliance and Telovlslon Service Con tor J ' ' I I I I I f s t I f I t I I r I t f I f It DA.I!. Y PILOT SC M.....,, -23, 1'172 In BfghGear Opel ~lanta Makes Debut By CARL CARSTENSEN Of ..,. o.11r "" ..,... The MW Manta Rriu In- troduced by Opel thll yur seems to have created a 1"111'1'• found enthusiasm for Buick dealers carrying thls popular European import. A new tW<loor sport coupe, with cualomJzed color and trim features plus the adap- tation of the ''Manta•' nameplate for the U.S. market highlight the Introduction of the '73 Opets. THE COUPE, called the Manta Luxus. wlll h a v e carpeted trunk and package shell, <0me In three specific exterior colors and have coordinated brushed corded fabric lnttt~n. A manually operated steel sun roof iJ op. ttooal with either the ,.gu1ar or vinyl top. Tho 1900 Sport Coupe and 1900 Rallye will al!o Carl)'. Ibo new dealgnaUon for1973 , being caJler the 'Manta and Manta Rallye, respectively. The Sport Coupe series features basic semi-fastback styling with new omamen· U..tlon. This includes Manta and Manta RaUye nameplat es on the decklld and Manta 1900 lettering on the lower front fenders . Remaining models in ~ 1973 line-up include the 1900 two-and four-door sedans, 1900 two-door wagon and the Opel GT In its clMslc Cran Turismo styllng. RETRACTABLE headlamps and sculptured wheel wells produce an Wlcluttered look in keeping with the o v e r a 11 design of the sports car. The short deck rear end and large, round talllamps complete the iffipression. Rear quarter win- dows swing out. transmission and dealer·i~ stalled air conditioning will be optional across the board. A semi-closed cooling system is included with a-i r con· dltionlng on 1973 Opels, except the GT. The system collects ovArflow coolant into a plastic reservoir during oonnal driv· ing operatiC1n and returns the fluid to the radiatc.r as the engine cools. THE OPt!:L is produced by General Motors in Europe and distributed in the U.S. through more than 2,200 Buick-Opel Emplnyers: dealers ... * * *· Just a reminder -In ad· Wheel trim rings are stan- dard equipment on both sedan and station wagon models. Good visibility is assured by the large ventless side glass area and thln roof pillars. D adl • dition to turning back your e f.ne FOR THE 1900 station clocks one hour this coming l'.·agon, a roof lugg~ge rack Saturday night -you'll have October 31 and wood grain applique on to adjust your driving habits side panel~g are .~vailable as sllgbtly too. • ----~---~----~d~eal,,,er,,,,ins=ta""'-'Ued~o"U~oo;;nse'.~ --1n..a recent_statement. Auto AU California emp1oyen were Manla and M8nta Rallye f.n.. reminded this week by A. P. terlon provide • ' c o n t r o 1 Splltler, Tax Administrator center" instrument grouping. for the State Department of Full front and rear carpeting, Human Resources Develop-a deluxe console, and glove ment in Santa Ana, that Tues· box are also standard. day, Oct. 31 , is the deadline All models will come stan- date for filing California dard equipped with the Opel Unemployment IMurance 1.9 liter, cam·in·bead engine. ' wage reports and contribution f 0 u r . s p e e d m a n u a 1 returns and Report 0 r transmission and power-assist Personal Income Tax Withheld front dlsc brakes. Like 'em--But Use 'em for the third quarter of 1972. A three-speed automatic Penalty and interest will be charged If the report is filed alter _the deadline. .---------~ Spittler also stated that in- formation avaJlablc at the pre5ellt time shows the follow· ing with regard to unemploy· ment taxes in California for the year 197!. -The taxable wage base for umemployment insurance will remain $4,200. The taxable wage base for disability in- surance will increase to $8,500. -The high 1 rate schedule provided for in ~Uon rm o! the Unemployment Insurance Code will be In effect during um. The rates in this schedule range from 0.7 percent to 3.1 percent. -The balancing account tax provided by Section 976.5 of the Coe.It. will be increased to LO percent In genera], but new employers and employers whose base payrolls have in- creased 25 percent or more will have a 0.9 percent rate. Empk.yers who need help In preparing their returns and wage reports or wish ln- fonnatlon about the 1973 tax 1nformatlon may contact the Employment Tax Office at 1619 West 17th Stre<t. Santa Ana or tel~phQne ft43.0111 . Securities Talks Set The second of five lec- tures on the va r ious aspects of the securities market and the economy will be presented Tuesday evening at Eastbluff Elmientary School. William L. O ' Bryon , originator of the course 22 years at(o, is well known as a lecturer and in· vestment consultant. The course, offered as a com- munity service by the adult education division of Orange Coast Cot I e ge , serves as an introduction to the basic fundamentals of Investing .. Lectures are s 1 a t e d eveJY Tuesday through November lf at the sd100I, localed at 2627 Vista Del Oro, Newport Beach from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Registration is at the lecture. Don't Miss These Ft-ee Lectures leaf ~fale J.nve:Jlmenl Seru:J Oct. 25tft "Maximum Return on a Mlnlmum Investment" Lecturer -Fred Becker Nov. 1st "Advantage of Real Estate Syndication for the Small Investor" Lecturers -Phil McNamee and "Cap" Bl1ckburn Nov. ltft "Capital Conservation Through Excbanitng Prlinimizing Taxes'' Lecturer -Bruce Howey "Tailoring Your '73 Investment" Letturer -Randy M<Cardle TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THI DOOR EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 • 9:30 P.M. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE S.ritt Co-1pon1ared By Or1nve Coast e Golden w .. t DAILY PILOT Coll""° Huntlnglon BNch • Fountain Valley llolr.i of RNltors • By SYLVIA PORTER Do you have at least three credit cards, most or them good onJy at a particular store or chain of stores"! Do you use at least one of these cards ..gu1ar1y1 ' Do you think of your card or cards prim- arily as a IOW'Ce 0 f . crodlt, and In only a s e c o ndary f'OltT9• way as a convenJence? DO YOU WRITE more check> than you used to, de~tte your U!e of 11\e cards too . . Do yoo have a basic, nag- ging fear lllat credit cards make It too easy for you to buy things you do not really want or cannot honestly al· ford ? Do you,-as a result of this besJc fear, tend to think of your cards as an evil -a necessary evil, but still an evil -and not a good thing? tf you answered yes lo every one of these probing questions, you are typical of today's credit-card uaer, according to the Ont «>mprehenslve study ever made or •'credit Card Uae tn tbe U.S., t• 8000 to be publlsheJ by the Univenlty of Mi~aJ: Imtltute !or Social RneardJ. "Few Americans tend to think of credit cards u a good thing, whether they ,use them or not," says Dr. Lew1'i Mandel~ who directed the JSR study. • Fully '15 peroent of all rtsp0ndenta Mid lb.at credit cards m3de It too easy to buy thing>." NOW CHECK where you, a credit card owner, fit In the wide range of users analyzed. • U yob have a higher than average Income and higher than average educaUon, you're more likely to be a card user than those with lower lncomes and educations. "Income is the major detenntnant of credit-can! use," Mandell con- cludes. 0 ll you ... a Youni family and baive children, you are t'COl'e likely to ... cards than other l(JOllPI and more likely to tnour ddJt on your cards than other pwps. "Another determinant of'credlt><ord uoe II related to the 18• Ill the f.amQy beM." • II 1"" Un In tho .. burbo, 11'1 probohle Iha< )'OU ·arc an active credit cant mtr t #b.lle: "t1mlllea llvtn1 In central ctUes or rural areu are lwt Ull:ely to U5e such :ardl.'1 • • • • COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST I i ' 'I • • Millions O... lo till Great ,_,_ Polu 1l 11J office of Wal1111 F.Ur1I u• ro11n h 1H Ml for 1 HoppJ H1UowH1. W1'll 1v11 give JOI 1 copy of n. Hlstorr of Hallow•; l1cl1dl11 11uat1on for soM 11w w1y1 lo cane 1 )lck-0°la1l1r1. <Whll1 q11nlllia 1111, and llmlled lo ro11plers 1ccomp1nled •r u •••tt) Waleni F1d1rol is. of ao1rso, "°" lh11 1 p111pkin patch. We're 1 uylags nsoclollon that k11p1 its promise to '''' J6• th 11111 for yo1r 1avi1p dollar, •• c1rr••llJ from &0/o I~ &0/o, wllh safely insared lo $20,•. CoM in, we'll make yoa 1 bllieY1r. DAILY PILOT 7 Wester11 Savl .. oe Hugti Et111, Jr., Pnlldtllf, • ..,,. -~ 111111 .,. S300 111111 .. Hu• Offlot: Ith IH Hiii Str11t1 Donlon Btv1rlj Hills: 11 till Btv1r1J Wllslllre Hotel Larcllmo1t: First l u..-..1, Ln Aqelll P11or•1 CllJ: Roscoe 11 Y• llJI lngllwOOll: 31& E. lacH111r Torruct: Del A• Fialolal C.ter CilJ of Or111e: 2233 I. Tt1ll1 Ave. La Huro: Fnhlt• ~''" USO ll'tlldl: 1107 W. Jefftrso1 Hol1Jwllff!Y111101t: 112& II. Yennoal An. Coro11 del Mir: 2744 L Cont Hwy. 0 £. Devices ·1ust about everything but the kitchen Spiced Up • .-z · ~ d J S . u=~~~~(~).di1:: knife lree at .. estern .awe era aV111gs mlllloos of condoms in many colors to Asia and Africa in the expectation the unusual nature of the birth-c<introl devices will spark new interest in their use. Besides red , white and blue, the U.S. Agency for Interna- tional Development is pro- viding the prophylactics in black, green and pink in packages bearing a legend in- viting the user to "embark on a new adventure." Dr. R. T. Ravenholt, AID's dlrector of the Offi<:e of Population, says the use of colored condoms is neither frivolous nor an attempt at being cute, but a serious at- tempt to promote bir~ control in the high-population areas of the world. "WHILE THE pill remains the most powerful birth-con- trol device available and one that will be u s e d in- creasingly." Raven bolt said, "there are serious cultural and practical obstacles to its use." These fndude rudimentary medical a n d distribution systems in s o m e un- derdeveloped countries. he ex- plained Condoms, on the other hand. are easy to use and generally aOO!pted by most societies. AID HAS distributed the traditional gray condom !or several years. bot with only lackluster rocepllon. 5o, when the colored variety came on the market during the sum- mer the agency decided to run a test program. Amrican missions were sent supplies of the new pro. phylactics and Raven b o It reported the distribution in those countries brought an enthusiastic response. HE SAID a recent trip he made to the Orient showed foreign officials "much more inlef'ested in the colored ~ doou than the gray ones. You coold see the Interest in their faces," he said, "when they saw the many colors. The displays brought smiles and requests for some samples." IF you really want to lose weight ••• but you enjoy good food and a lot of it c::,) ... you'll love Weight Watche~! The Weigh! Wa.tchers ptogr•m offers you ;in e!"ldless variety of delicious foods, il'ICludlng mN"t, fish, fowl, salads, fruits, vqetabln, pot&ton, pu11. and wonder- ful dnset1sl And It really wons. Over 4 million hapP"f people have lost weigh1 wtth Weight W&lchers. So whywa.ltl Come lea.rn how' to illm down ufely, Mnslbly, enfa(ably. CLASSES NOW OPEN ' Newport Boa~h w.....,.. 7:00 ,,... ............ F,OR INFORMATION AND. FREE BROCHURE CALL : 835·5505 WEJtHT(i WAIDIERS. \I ,.....,..WfldiootlM ... ~ .... _.,., ~W~11 .....,·1 ~--CIUl-11..N.~. Celebr~ting Ne~ I) Corona del Marbra11ch! . The Great Pu1npkin Give·A Sta1•ts October 23rd • • . . ·~· ' ' I I I I l 'I . I ' • ::: ·• .. , ~&I .. •• .. •• p •• •• •• .. p p • ~ • ~· • •• • ll' • ~ p • ~ p ' ' ~ ..... -· -,.. -·- • Moncl.ly, OUobtt 1J. 1972 Monday's Closing Pl'ices-Complete New York Stock ~xchange List • Cease-fire Report Sends Stocks · Up NEW YORK (AP) -Another rally rooted in i:e-poru of progress toward a cease-fire ln lndochlna boooted stock market prices Monday. Despite some businesses being closed lo oboerv· ance ot the Veterans Day holiday, stock trading waa relatively active, chiefly because of a flurry ol buying early in tbe session. ' ''The market will respond to reports of prog- .. ress toward pe ac e as long as there seems to be smoke where there is fire," observed Bradbury K. Thurlow, vi cc president for research at Laidlaw & Co. -.~..----------·, --.a ..... u. ~ 0$. Dow ' • DAIL V PILOT 8 • V11lo11a1nerlcn ANGELES LOS Unwnamerica, holding com· p.any !or Union Bank of Los Angeles , has reported a 24 percent increase and net ln· C<>me for the third quarter and a 22 percent gain for the nine lllOflths ended Sept. 30. Third quarter figures rtleas- ed showed Unionamerica 's net income at '7.25 million or 70 cents a share, up from $S.8S million or 67 cents a share a year ago. ' • O.lll Y PILOT Wild Scene Afterward By Cl1a1nps CINCINNATI (A P \ -Oakland's Dick Williams, who virtually "'Ore out a pair of spikes in the \\'orld Series. had the last laugh Sunday when be sald sarcast1cally. "I overmanaged." The A's manager "'ent against the percentages time and time agam 111 lhe seven games with the C1ncinnat1 Reds - and be always seemed to be right. "It was beautiful," he yelled in the A's ba"ppy clubhouse after the J-2 SC\'Cnth game victory over the Reds. WiUiams' last. managmg decision of 1972 was to change his mind. he revealed With two ouls in the bottom of th<' ninth inning, A's reliever Rollie Fingers hit pinch hitter Darrell Chaney, bringing up Reds' star Pete Rose. ''I went to the mound to take out Rollie," Williams admitted. "But my catcher (Dave Duncan) told me . "He's throwing the tar out of lhe ball. Leave him in.' " Williams, v.·ho said. "1 think I only went to the moW1d 10 umes today ," said okay. Fingers rushed in to the clubhouse yell- ing, "Where's the champagne?" a few minutes later, after getting Rose to fly OUI. WRERE'S r\1Y CIIECK? Vida Blue, who would have pitched to Rose if the manager had his way, shouted , "Where's my check?" Then the green bottles -matching one of the A's W1ifonn colors -began pop- ping. Owner Charles O. Finley y,·ept as his baseball players laughed and sprayed each other. "Greenie went nine! Grecnie \vent nine!" a group or players chanted as they drenched second baseman Dick , Green, who usually plays only a few in· nings before being replaced by.a .pinch hitter. · "I'm not used to · going all the W!-Y· That's why I struck out my last ty,·o times up," said Green, who totaled six hlls In the series. \Villiams threw a new lineup at the Reds in the seventh game because. after Saturday's S.1 Joss, he decided , I just had to get some punch in there." The drastic move was to bench left- handed cleanup hitter Mike Epstein. even though the Reds v.·ere starting right- hander Jack Billingham. The first baseman was O-for· 16 through six games. "Mike said it was all right y,·ith him, so long as we win," Williams said. STRATEGY MOVES Williams' agatnst-the-book moves Sun- day included removing starting pitcher John "Blue Moon" Odum with the A's ahead 1-0 in the fifth inning. The manager had lifted Ken Holtzman with a I~ lead in game No. 4. It was no surprise," said Odom Sun· day. He 's the manager, and he y,•as right. We don't worry about getting taken out, because we've got a dam good bullpen." "We've got the best pitching staff in baseball," Odom added, and Rollie Fingers is the best relief pitcher in the world." It was a pitchers' series and the A's h.itters ~·ere the first to admit it. "We didn't exactly overpower them." third baseman Sal Bando said. "Their pitching was good. too. But they didn 't have to face Reggie Jackson. Ir they 'd held us down with Reggie in the lineup. I'd be willing to give them more credit." Finley, who bought the A's 12 years ago in Kansas City and moved the team to Oakland in 1968. was red-faced and hoarse after the seven-game ordeal. "He wished me luck before the game and told me he wanted the championship b.(ldly." Odom said . "I told hin1 y,·e'd g<'l it. " OAK UNO CIMCINNATI .. ' •• .. ' ' . (lmp!'lfll II • ' ' • A-If ' ' I o M•nou•I cl • ' • • Mor;en )ti ' . ' • R\ldt It ' . . • Tolin cl I • • • T-....:1 1b , . I I FOii., ff • • • • l .... 11 1)1' . ' • • J1"1tt °"' 0 G II 0 Htvan lb ' • • • H~rl ' ••• ..... ,, .. ' ' 8...Cll c l 0 0 0 Wlou rt ' .. • T~•• " ' ' ' ' Dulf!Ull'I c ' .. • ,,_,_rl 3 0 0 0 DGrHfl ~ • • ' • M-• lb • ••• ...... I ••• (OM..pn! 11 ' 0 0 0 Hlll'll.,. II • . . ' llHllnot>m 11 I • • • Holtln'en 11 • ••• MciltH llfl • • • ' Flngert p ' .. ' -· 0 0 0 0 C1rroll ' 0 0 0 0 Grlnuley II 0 0 0 0 Vhl1efldr pll ' ••• Hill • •• • • ChlMY pll 0 0 0 0 tot1I " ' . ' TOlll ~ ' • I Otllltrld 100 00'1 000-3 Cln(lttntll OllO 010 010-2 t!-T•I•"· Cencnoclon, C1m11ent"rl1. CP-OM;t11~n 1 l.~1k111ld I, Clnc:lm"ll I. 211-T. P~1r, y~,,. ac.11, 11..0., Mo!'111111. Sll-l'lel'ldl. 5-M11111u11t, Cimo 1ntorl1. SF-M<lltn, T. PertJ.. ,, w 1ta1t1110 ~ 4V. 1 I I • 1 HU!ltv W, 2.(1 1\11 I I 1 1 l Wo1ti.men o I o o o o ,. .... ,,. '00010 llrllnllhem S 1 I O 1 t llorbof'I l.. G-1 "' l 1 ' o o Ctr'1111 I 00021 GrlrnNt'r 'i 0 0 0 I I ... II 2 I O O Ol ....,._,..,_, 1. Hl~-br "''-" CClllM't'l. Wl"-4-tuntt•" r-i~10. ~ I ' PET E ROSE RUNS OVER A'S MIKE HEGAN. I 25,000 Out to Greet World Champion A's OAKl.AND (AP)-Cheering and chant· Ing "We're No. I," an enthusiastic crowd of 25,000 Oakland Athletics' fans clogged freeway approaches to Oakland International Airport and spilled onto the runways in a wild welcome to their World Series champions. The chartered 707 jetliner carrying the team taxied to a remote section of the airfield Sunday night while airport security men and other law enforcement officials sought to control the massive tangle or people and cars. "We put Oakland on the map," A's owner Charles 0. Finley told his players aboard the plane. "We brought the San Francisco Bay Area its first. world's sports championship." At oae point. Finley seized the airplane public address system and sang several verses of "Sugar in the Morning" before telling the A's how proud he was of their accomplishment. The A's, who defeated Cmcinnati 3-2 in the deciding seventh game of the series, arrived an hour and a hall late after a four-hour flight from Cincinnati. . But many of the players slept for most of the flight after enjoying a victory din· ncr of steak aad lamb chops, California y,•ine, and butterscotch sundaes for dessert. The A's "'ere advised to travel the re- maining mile to the tenninal by bus because the jet could not be brought safely to the unloading ramp due to the size of the crowd. Despite the delay, fans inside the terminal waltOO patiently In muggy htat for a glimpse ol their returning heroes. Some searched for I06t children and relatives separated In the exuberant stampede. They roared as each player was in· troduced and made brief remarks. Most players lfiyly rWed their hand>, grinned and echoed the crowd's chant of "We 're No. I." . But a few , swept up in the excitement, took the occal!lion to make champion-size predictions or the future. "l think the W.orld Series trophy is going to stay here the next two or three years," said Pitcher Dave Hamilton. And fi.rst baseman Mike Epetein said, "We'll keep this trophy for the next 10 years." catcher Dave Duncan recited a poem to the thrmg, which ended, "We're world champions now, and as YQU can see, we're as happy as can be." "Who thought another basebaJl team wouldn't worlc in the Bay area?" pitcher Bob.Locker asked, referring to criticism that the A's shouldn't have traosfl!rred from Kansas City to Oakland because the National League Giants already had a franchise across the bay in Saa Fran· cisco. And second baseman Ted Kubiak told the happy Oak.land fans , "You're the greatest and we're lhe greatest." FinJey drew cheers Y.'hen he raised the large gold World Series trophy bearing pennants representing1 major league teams. and drew boos when he held a Cincinnati Reds' cap aloft as if it were a hunter's pell. Many of the fans sported the A's col- ors, yellow and green and some carried green and yellow balloons or banners. Cincy Reactions "Rain or Shine, We'll Beat Cincinnal,J · All the Time;" "Teaace the Menace;'~ and "Big Game liunter," read some of the signs. A band entertaining the rans before the team arrived broke out with a classic Duke Ellington swing number from the early 1940s, "Take the A Train." A clown named Popo accompanied by a man playing a steel drum led the crowd in singing,"Take-Me Out to The Ball Game." After the airport celebration, A's rans streamed · into the city's Jack London Square, a collection of restaurants aod night spots on the Oakland-Alameda Ebtuary leading lnto San Franci3co Bay\ Cars dragged up and down the stree , horns blaring a n d occupants hangin& from windows, their anns raised high with one finger pointing to the sky to signify No . I. Police were present In strength but most officers appeared to share the jubilant mood of those celebrating. Hundreds of young people· roamed up and down sidewalks drinking beer and wine bot causing little disturbance. Some pounded on car fenders and waved ban- ners to demonstrate their enthusiasm. Middle-aged fans clustered around , pianos in bars. raising their voices tn loud. and sometimes off-key, victor) songs. "It's a happy crowd ,'' said Oakland police Sgt. Barry Wysling. "Kind of like New Year's Eve. They're \\'aving ban· ners, drinking drinks, cheering." Still ahead was another outpouring of Oakland's enchantment with the team - a parade to city hall scheduled today with all the players riding in open con- vertibles. Couldn't .Get Big Hit, Moans Reds Manager CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cincinnati Re<ls. their Big Red ~fachine dismantled by Oakland's shaggy Athletics. joined in a quiet tribute to their conquerors Sun· day but were divided as to who is the best team in baseball. "1 guess Oak1and has to be the best team this year," mumbled manager Sparky Anderson, puf£ing a cigarette in his small office in Riverfront Stadium. "'They won the Series, and you can't take that away Crom them. "We got beat four times by one run. We just couldn't get a big hit, and they did." Bobby Tolan, the Cincinaati center fielder whose first-inning three-base er- ror on Angel Mangual's line drive led to Oakland's winning margin, contended the Reds are baseball's best. Left fielder Pete Rose sat at his locker stall. partially hidden by a stand that would have been filled with players for television interviey,·s had the Reds won . ., He moaned over a lost chance, noting his long drive to center field on a Jim Hunter fastball in the fifth inning with two men on. "He shouldn't have thrown a ball Iille he threw." said Rose. Hal McRae, the pinch hitter who drove in Cincinnati's first nm with a base! loaded smash to deep center just before Rose 's long rly ball, said: "I was just hoping it would go out." ' McRae had stomped Ri verf ront Stadium's artificial turf in frustration 8;J center fielder Mangual hauled in bi's towering Oy ball near the wall . Tolan, his leg in pain from a muscle pull suffered as he raced for Sal Bando's deep drive in the A's sixth, blamed himsell for the Cincinnati loss. •4NS JAM OAKLAND AIRPORT TO WELCOME tlOME THEIR WORLD CHAMPION ATHLETICS. "You've got to recognize Oakland as the World Champions," he said in a clubhouse populated by C i a c I n n at l players slumped on locker beaches, pondering their Series near-miss. He was pulled from the game after the sixth, and pinch bitter Joe Hague was us- ed in his stead when the Reds had two men on base and none out in the eighth. Hague popped up in the infield, TenaceUnlikely Choit;e -But He 's Se ries MVP CINCINNATI -For Gene Tenacc. the 19i2 World Series was his showcase. Tenace, the reM!rve catcher who took over regular duties the last two months of the season and went on to become the hero of the 1972 World Series for the vic- torious Oakland Athletics. had nothing go wrong for him during the seven-game struggle. Tenace was named MVP for his four home run~ and rline rbi following Oakland's 3-2 victory Sunday. Tenace, who hit .225 in the regular season with five home runs. dominated the Series. He had eight hits in 23 at bats for a .348 averflge, slammed four homers nnd drove in nine of the 16 runs scored by the A's in the seven games. He had 30 total bases. "I guess." he said. "anything can hap- pen in a short series, It's one of those things. Forlunately I goL hot like I did . I'm just very fortunate. l h,ad no idea lhat I wnuld be the guy to pick up this club after Reggie Jackson ge>l hurt." Jackson. the A's slugging outfielder, tore up a leg in the final game of the AL playoffs and missed the Series. Tenace, 26, was the catcher in the first six games or the 5eries. M.11.nager Dick \Villiams told Tenacc Saturday night he \vould play first base in the seventh game. It didn't phase the young mnn from Luca svil!e . Ohio. ''I was just happy to be here," he said in the rollicking, champagne-pouring A's dressing room. "I play where the manager wants me to play. If he has enough confidence in me then I go out there, although I would rather catch." Ten ace singled home the A's first run Sunday in the first inning , and after he doubled across another in the sixth, Williams lifted him for a pinch-runner "I was surprised he took me out." Tenace said. "I have fairly gOOd speed. But that is the way we've been playing all year and it got us here. I guess he was going to Pi.1ike Hegan for defen se at first in the seventh anyway." Tcnace. who played first base in only al>out JO games during the regular scuson. and didn't take over regular catching duties W1til the last two months of the season, recalled that during the season he became discouraged at his utility role. But he said A's captain Sal Sando, his roommate, told him to keep his head up, his chance would come. "It sure did," "aid Tenacc. Lakers Defeat Bulls, 104-99 l.OS ANGELES (AP) -Jerry West scored 23 points in the final period Sun- day night as the Los Angeles Lakers held off the Chicago Bulls 104-99 in a Na tional Basketball Association game at the Forum. \Vest tallied 35 points and Gail Goodrich added 21 and Jim McMillian 19 as lhe Lakers ran their record to 4-2. The Bulls were led by Chet Walker with 2:2 and Clifford Ray with 20 but were hit with five technical fouls and lost guard Jerry Sloan, coach Dick Motta and assistant Phil Johnson when referees tffiSed them out. The Lakers led into the final period 76- 67 hut Chicago slashed away at the lead behind Walker and Ray. West was the only Laker to score in the first 6\2 minutes of the final stanza. LM AMO•l.ES 104 CWICA.00 " Hllrl!n MCMllln Cllmb1811 GOOdrlcn W11r Price Elll1 Erle•'°" 101111 ChlClllO G F T • J" T f •·• 12l.ove I 2·2 II 9 1-l 19Wal~tr s u :n 61·fllll.1y 91-520 10 1·2 11 V1n l.ler s 1).(1 10 ll ,_, l5Slo1n l 0.0 l 1 O·l •W1l1$ f 1·2 9 0 O·O OW.ln11 S 0.0 10 0 0.(1 OH11rd f 0.0 I 4wtry 0 0.0 0 G1•rett o o.o O •• 16·2l 11).! Tol1l1 ff ll•11" "'''l"-" l.o' """'111 ,. ,. ,. 1'-16t Fook>cl ool-llOlll!. Tol1I fou!1 -ChlClllO 2$, l.OI Al!llelll ?I. Ttchnlcal ~II -ClllUllO, Sloe" 2. Co1d'I Mo1t8, 111r111nl tco1ch John.on. A-lS,UI. "I'm not degrading the Athletia," Tolan continued, "because they're a great ball club. But I still think we're a better ball club." Relief pitcher ClaY camu, the goat of the Reds' 3-2 loss to the A's in the Series fourth game, refused to c on c e d e Oakland's superiority. "I sure don't,'' he said. "We've got a whole lot of teams in the National League who have more power, but they -the Athletics -do have a great pitching staff." Slugger Johnny Bench was asked if he conceded the A's were best. "They won,'' he replied. "As far as I'm concerned," Tolan said. "there went our World Series chances right the.re. "I feel it was my fault. I let the faru: down and 1 have no excuse." Tolan said Mangual 's first-inning line drive "just took off on me. "I tipped it with my glove. I played the> hall like it was sinking, then it just took off. "This is two years out of three we let the fans down,'' Tolan said. recalling the Reds' five-game Series debacle against Baltimore in 1970. "f apolog ize for that." Did Mental Error Do It? Rams Get Last-second Win LOS ANGELES (AP) -Quarterback Roman Gabriel thinks the Cincinnati Bengals could have made a mental error in those final seconds when the Los Angeles Rams came on to wtn 15-12. •·r don't thJnk they thought we'd run twice with the ball with the time running out '' the veteran signal caller mused mi~utes after David Ray's 32-yard field gool at the gun brought the triumph. "'Ibose two runs by Ellison caught them off guard." penalties, you just tack the 15 yards onto the gain." Said Ray : "I had been calling my father all week, about 10 times. Saturday night I told him I'd sure try to do my best in this game. Anything I can do to make him feel better, that's what I wanted." Hsy had seen Cincinnati's soccer-style kicker Horst Muhlmann miss three field g0<1l attempts from short range in the fourth period. Chargers Find Solution Too Late • Taking the ball on lhelr own 13 with 21 ~ remaining, Gabriel sent Wlllle Ellison up Ult middle twice and each time he gained 15 yards. "l called the pus to Rentz.el in the huddle, a Z-square pattern and It was the rlrst time I'd called it all doy," Gabriel contlnued . "I was conndent when I wcnf in," the Rams' orthodox kicker said. "But 1 do think psychology was working against. Horst on that third kick. After you mlM two field goals, the pressure is really on you." ~tuhlmann's kicks that failed were from 18. 21 and 2G y11rds, usually a snap for a kickirc speciali"t. The second hit the upright lo the left. the others were wider. DETROIT (APJ -San Diego coach Harland Svare complains his team "can't get it together." But Detroit coach Joe Schmidt's team didn 't have any trouble "geUlng it together" In Sunday's 34·20 National Football League victory over the Chargcn. 'Jbere were indications In lh6 filal qu1r1or San Diego might have found Iba aoluUOo, but the Uons had too big a lead to !all a>lllpletely apart. The LlonJ surged lo a ~ lead by ear· I ly in the rourlh quarter, scoring nearly every time they got tht ball , then watch· ed San Diego score two touchdowns oo John Hadl to Gary Garrison passes. "Worried ? Sure I was worried," Schmidt said or the lt1te Chsrger rosW'gence. "But our ball club never lets down." "We continue to beat ourselves," of· fered Svare In the dejected losers locker room. "That's what we've been doing all year. We find all kinds of w11ys lo ~at J ou rttlvcs .. We havt a good team, but can't get 1t toget~r." The outcome pushed Detroit back int<i a Llc for first in the National Conference Central ~!vision with Green Bay, a J0-9 loser to Atlanta . Both the Uons and Pl)ckers havt 4-2 records, while San Diego ls 2·3-1 In the American Con- ference Weiit. San Diego lost one fumble that led to a touchdown, got an Interference. penalty that •set D\1roit up for a TD. and lost a 50-yard kickoff return opening the game becgusc of a cllpplng penalty. . F!rt! ~ II:~, • ..,, P1t•in9 Yltdl Jlittvrn ,.,.,. 11 .. ". ~"'"'' FuMOi.....-.t Ptn111tllt-f1nt1 ... " Ollff 0.lrelt C ... ...-rt UIM " ~ fl-tt ..... ,,,. 10 Id " I 11.m 12-1•1 W1 1·0 1-1 ~· 1 ,.,, ... • 0 0 )a-tel • 1 ,, 1'-44 Rentul zigged and went down the mid· die to catch the pass and gain 17 to the Bengals' 40. ..,. Jack Reader, one of the ofriclals. de1erlbe3 the next move -one that put the Rama on the Onclnnatl 25 and set up the field goel by Ray, who had been wor· rled all week aboul the health of his father who bad suffered a heart attack in Phenix, Ala. . i: Said Reader, "Jt was a personal foul alt)' on No. 6& of ctnclnnatl (Bill f:sey). The penally as caJled before tile completed pass /' on penonal foul _J. 1....-1t 1111m1 11 ,, !1-12 "''" 10 \ft " I 12•21·1 1,.241 ..,, , ... ,., ... 1 ,,,, ..... • ' I I • 17 .. I ' I ' " l I I I 17 I ' I I ' \ ,, , , Lag1111a Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. SMteb • VOL 65, NO. 297, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES 1 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1972 TEN CENTS Sycamore Hills Development Set for _A!ring ' ' By FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL Of .... ~"' ...... , .... An envtronment-<lrlented presentation of prelimlnary plans for lhe development of the 520-acre Sycamore Hills property will be made before the Laguna Beach Planning Comrpisslon Tuesday night. ''Tbll plan IS tailCJre!I \0 appeal to the general welfare and lnteresl of the public/' aald Howard Mille~" a vice presi- dent of Newport Investments, the firm currenUy purchasing the property from Great Lat .. ~boll, loc. Mllltr, however, declined to give details of the plan In advance of the presentation before t la n n l n g com- mlssloners at 7i30 p.m. meeUng at City Hall. Si>' speakers, ~ said, will discuss land use, flood 'pli.Jb, re o log I ca I, economic, a~ and ·~ vironmental aspectt of1 the development program. ·• "You will 'T a ra~ interesting plan Tour Troubles Police Tow Illegally Parkt?:,d Bus Pardon my bu.s? Ezcuae out tow truck. . -"You·can tmaglne what the trafflc was Laguna Beach police were I e f· t like on a Sunday afternoon " Olson said, ""'!'lclllili-lbelr-!Jead<..and-at.Jeast..one~-notlng'tbe1Mlf·parked·t1ra~ zonec police-sergeant was rubbing a sore ear after an illegally parl:ed charter bus He said-attempts \0 locate the bus b1ocking traffic on Coast Highway was driver were not successtul. towed off Suoday. The department contacted the bus Arr lrtte tour llirector, nonplussed Willi owner who said he -would come to town. 11 tourist.I oa ber hands threatened to He hadn't been contacted about any camp out on the City Hall front lawn un· breakdown trouble, Olson said. til the bus was returned. Prior to bis anival, the bus driver "We did everytblhg humanly possible came oot and found bJs bus gone so he before towing the bus off," Police Sgt. Al called us," Olson said. Ohon said today. Olson said-·the bus owner wasn't mad, "It was parted in such a way that only but the tour director "read us the riot lour feet""'"' left in the lane (closest \0 acL" the curl>)," he aaid explaining that traffic "Sbe· called me a rookie cop," Sgt. from that Jane w111 forced into the next Olson said. Jane..., wbidt in tum forced that lralfic Dospile the incldeo~ . the bus was ...--the ceoter lloe lillo -.... ~for.the \OUr \0 leave~ lanes. ICbedufe, police aaid. . Viejo Girl Averts Assault by Driver A quick-thinking 15-year .. ld Mission Viejo girl hitchhiking In Laguna Beach over the weekend averted possible l!lmllll assault that baa befallen other young women recenUy. The girl thumbln& a ride to Laguna Beach High School, was picked up by a eouthbound car driven by a man. After getting into the vehicle, the young girl told the driver she wanted to go to the blgh llCbool for a football game. 'Ibe driver continued 30!.lth along GJen. neyre street, and ':egan to perform a lewd act, police said. Ju the car possed a large group of peo- ple at the 1000 block of Glenneyre, the girl shouted, "Stop, there's my family." The cat stopped and the g~I jumped from the vebicle, and flied a report with police. Sbe bad hitchhiked from Mission Viejo lo Laguna Beach. Recently, .. ' 13-year-oid hitchhiking girl 'was kidnaped and raped by a driver who aaaertedly uaed an ice pick \0 force bi. vlcUm Into aubmls!lion. Aoother kldnaplng and rape \OOk place when a J.S.year-old wu aelied as she walked 'along a Laguna side street with her 11-year-old cousin. Kissinger Mission Fuels Rumors, Spurt in Stocks , ,.,.m Wire Servicet reports llave bolstered Wall street hopes NEW YORK -Continued speculatloo of an approaching ~ In about peace ln the Vietnam war boosted Indochina. the stock market sharply higber In early Kisidrig.,, lelt -Saigon for Washington trading today on the New York Stock Ex· today alter the most Intensive peace change. taJk.s of the Indochina war, and the U.S. The Dow Jones lndustrial average was Embassy said progress bad been made. up 12.19 at 955.00 by 11 a.m. By noon, It toward a aetUement. bad dropped \0 9.40 and \0 1.20 at 2 p.m. But It lndlcateC that the U.S. and Sooth By 11 a.m Standard and Poor's 500 Vietnamese government still differ on stock Index, a broader lnd.lcator, was some points. ahead 1.12 at 110.36. "We have made progress," sald an em- Advancea led decline!, 1,014 io 'IS, bassy statement. •'Talk> will continue among the 1,398 lsaues crossing the tape. between UJ and the pvemmenl of 'Viet- Volume amounted \0 around !,110,000 nam. If is not In the Interest of negolla- llhares during the Ont hour. Uons tn be more 'P"!'iJ!c at this time." There were Indications presidential ad· Kissinger Oew home to report to Nixon vlser HtnrY A. Klsslnger's talks in Paris after six meetings with President and SalgoD may have been frultfuJ , and Nguyen Van Thieu. hopes for peace encooraged many In-Asked at the airport ~ hi• v!Slt bad veston. analyllll aald. been productlv., Klsslnger replied, "It The stock rmrket has been eensltive to aJwayt· la when I'm here." pesce nnnors the past 1tveral montha. Tbree hours after Klsslnger left, the Many aJamour 1\0ckl and electronics U.S. Army chief ol ital!, Gen. Cl'elgh\On and computers were bli galners tn the W. Abrams, iert for Wuhlngton. He rally. mM, Burrou&hs, Te I 11 &pent alx da)'I Jn Saigon •11eSsln& the Instruments, Motorola and Walt ~military .!!tuation and the Vletnamlzatlon ' all gained around 4 points In earl program, and aat In on ,.... of Klu-. trading. er'• m~Ucp with Thieu. Thll came Oil the heels ol a lO~polnt Althoop --and TI m. rise 'Friday which anafyall aaid wu also magazines Ttl'Orted lhet the United promplod by oncouraglng reporta about States 8nl1Nort4 Vleloun agroecl \0 a oet- Vletnam. U'""'it·thai would lnclUda a -· Trading was very bnlk, delplte the thel'f was no eonllrmatlon from either . Vttera .. Day holiday. U,S. or South VJetnam... offlclall hi Lala !alt week, a French nenpaper Saigon. reported that 1 cease-fire w11 expected SOtrtb VietnameM 1 IOUrcet t 1 l d , by the end of this month. lMnce then, new !See llEPOllTS, hp II • ,, ' I which ..,.11 SO to 90 per<ent of the 00. jecUOna of groups In ·the city," Miller predicted, apparenUy referring to the Laguna Greenbei~ loc. and other citlien envlrorumlit organizations. Dlrecton of Laguna Greenbelt' have promised to fight any type of develo~ ment oo the Sycamore HillJ parcel, con- sidered by them to be the "keystone" of the greenbelt aroynd Laguna Beach. They are expected to argue that the city should not allow'development ~light Pair Rob Motor.Inn, TieUpA.i de Two men, ·one claiming to have a gun, robbed the f4guna Beach 's Beach Motor Inn cf $102 and left the assistant manager bog-tied late Saturday night. Glenda Carol Sullivan, 22, was urun. jured in the incident wbidrleft her bound hands-loilnkle. Sbe told officers that in response to the night bell, she had opened the door to the motel's office, 985 N. Coast lllgbway. o.e,.,...-entered, ,m-admitted another man through r back door. "I ha:ve a gun. sit down and shut up," the woman was told, officers said. No gun was seen as the man had a brown cloth jacket draped over his ann, the wonian said. After rifling the cash drawer, the men cleaned the woman's purse and jewel box of casb .. 'lbe woman's quarters are con- nected to the office. They then tied her with a plastic rope and fled. The woman screamed unW a neighbor arrived and cut her free. The men were described as about 20 years old, one five feet, 10 Inches tall with black hair and the other five feet, six inches tail with blond hair. Planners Weigh Fate of Alta Laguna Tuesday 1be Laguna Beach PlaMing Com- misslon will be faced with either ap- proving or scrubbing the propooed ex· tension of Alta Laguna Boulevard when It meeta Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall. Over the past several weeb,·the plan- ning commission lw held two pubU. bearings on the utensicn, which bas received opposition from the Top of the World Neighbor-Association, Village Laguna and the taguna Beach Civic League. 'Ille extension between Top of the World and Arcb Beacb Heights has been supported by the Laguna Beach Unified School District as a means of improving bus service and by the city staff as a way of providing better fire and police protection. Opponents to the project also argue that a large amount of acreage, now in- accessible, Would be opened up to devel- opment, if the extension is built. RENT AL A D HAS DRA WING POWE R a.eek this ad for It.a "quick draw" power : PRIV 3 BR, 2 Ba, pallo, tncd by yd, trplc. Wik \0 bob • lhopl. $259-per mo, "" OcW\lnt. XXX:_,COCX Wk da;I. XlOt.xJOa wknda. . The ad rented the -\0 the lint penoo to rer1• the. first .,_ lt ap- peared In the DAILY PILOT. 'l'lle ad- vertller, " --. wu ·•ve,, ~· 11 The DAILY PIU7I' -the opportun-ity lo make ,.. "-tM same woy. Dial -· the -line to retUlta. of "recent action by the Orange County Board of Supervisors placing a six-month moratorium on zone changes and road construction within county areas of the greenbelt. The board also has given "in concept" approval to the greenbelt. A more comprehensive moratorium, blocking all development en t b e Sycamore Hills parcel, was 800pted by the Laguna Beach City Council in April and runs through December. Sycamore Hills is the onJy portion of the greenbelt under control of the city. Newport lllvettments lw been btn6ng it will develop the property since It began negotlatlni the purclwe of the pan:el In Janua'Cy. The price tag on the •'irgln hillside property is In excess of '4 million: Escrow on the property has opened ~nd will close when Newp<>rt Investment.I gets approva1 from the city for 'develop- ment, Miller said. Development of Sycamore Hills -the ike of the 1970 Christmas "happenina:'"'; which drew Z0,000 young people to- Lagung -will be hampered by the prop-: e,rty's isolation from the rest of the city.· Among 'the problems •re provisions ! ~ water distribution aod sewage trea~ Miller said, that bJs firm is 'preparod to. build an "on site" sewage treatment) facility and that -he i.s confident water. can be provided by the Laguna Beacb- County Water Diatrlct, even though the· land now lies within the Moulton Niguel Water District. on reewa DAILY l'ILOT .......... VETS, YOUNG ANo'·OLD-Vietnam veteran Stuart Baker and World War [ veteran 0. W. 'Ptice, both of Laguna Beach, compare notes over captured North Vietnamese rifle brought borne. Although they are generations apart, the two men• know what Veterans Day is all about, even if few others do. No Celebration Vets Recognize Day on No_v. 11? Today is Veterans Day but for the fact that government offices are closed, there are no announced ceremonies planned on the Orange Coast to honor the men who have served the country in the Anned Forces. A check of the cities, American Legiod Posis, the VFW and local memorial parkl showed that Veterans Day will practically go wmoticed-this year. A spokesman fOr Harbor R e a t Memorial Park in Costa Mesa offered this explanation: "Most of the veterans I know have always observed Veterans Day oo lbe llth of November, as it used to be. They say that's when they'll celebrate it." The armistice that ended World War t was declared at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918. Since 1922, Annlstice Day baa been of· fictilly ceJebrated on Nov.11. It wu ·made a NaUonal holiday In 1938 and in 1952, the name WU changed \0 Veterans Day so that veterans sbo bad served since World War I could also be honored. [ll 1f10, the dale Wis changed to the fourth MOnday Iii October by act of Congress. But it looks like Veterans Day will always be Nov. 11 on the Orange <:oa.st. * * * * * * POW s to Be Remembered In Saturday UCI Rites Although Vetenw Day "" marked today with • minimum o( pomp and certmony, relatives of lel'Vicemen mJa.... Ing In action or: Imprisoned In Soutbeut Alia bava •my reason to 1Wlel1lber their loved onea today, aa they do every clay. Had there been paradel of former -toclay, u-oervlcemen -not been among -bonoted. Tiiey are lllll In NOl1fl Vietnam, 1-, or tlaewlwe, lmprlJoned or dead. , Mrs. Barbm lledr1ct or Jl"rine. -brother A\f ~ Clpt. James w.,,.. Herrick wW be honored SaturdlJ In ceremonlell at 1 p.m. in ClmjJua Park oo the UC lrvlJ1&.eompus, Is 11DOtt1 - A'nterlca111 awaiting MWS of a loved - listed u being ·'mlsalng In ..:lion.'' The followlng l! drawn from her Veteran's and evtryday tribtJte to an who are missing In action -"I Am My Brother'• Keeper." "Octobtr %7, 1069 wu an average October '1ay, allgblly cloudy. I WU doing dishes and the phone rana. ft wu Dad. " 'Barb, tt'1 Jim! llo'1 m!Jslng In ~ tlon. • What do you aay when the world llU. apart and when your mind - lo bell~ve! I cquldn' answer. Later I talked lo my -· I li'led to convince them Jim w., alrichl, that be was down and biding from the -· "When he eouJd lfo wOuld wallt lo f'rlendl)o territory and be aat. apm. 0 1 mourned I brother l toHd • , • how clara ._ ,.y he II m!Sdng. MISSING, tlM llEEPD, ..... II Riverside Road Closed B_oth _Ways . CORONA (AP) -At leut one person was killed and about 25 Injured In a series of pileups on foggy Riverside County roads today. The highway patrol said 40 to 60 can crashed in pileups Cll the soutbbOund lanes of the Riverside Freeway. Later, about 10 vehicles piled up an the oorthbound side of the freeway, including a gas transport truck wblcb overtumed and dumped fuel across the pavemenl The freeway WU closed in both direc- ttom, A thlnl pileup Involving aboat five' can was reported oo U.S. '95 at North Perril, about 10 miles from here. Don Shiffer, driver of t h e first am- . bulance at the early multiple crab, •aid. "A semi blew up and there were -le all over the place. J;>eople were trapped in their earl. It was JU!t terrible." He said he drove eight pel'90lll 1n serious conditkln to the CorUla Qnn- r:nmity Hospital. Five other pertOnS were taken to other hospitals. SblHer said visibility In the fog when be arrived at the accldl!nt was ooe or two feet, and said rescuers had trouble find. ing the vlcliml. A blgbway petrol weather report aaid visibility in some areu wu r.ero . Sberilf'a deputiel aaid the fog WU in patches, so that driven were trlftling at a blgh rate ol speed when Ibey entered the low v!Slbillty areas. • The Identify di the singf• known fatal~ ty was not immediately available. Thi victim reportedly burned to death 1D his . car. Fog in the area has: caused se"'ral serious accidents in the past. One penoo· died In a 150-<ar collision In the area In November 1968. More fog is apected tonliht and Tue .. day. R\ckenh~cker Better MIAMI (UPI) -Aviation pioneer Ed· die Rickenbacker, 12, recuperating from an apparent heart attack, wu listed in satisfactory condition and "much Un.-proved," a spokelman for Mercy llDspitaI aaid Sunday. 'Ille former daredevil flier and World War t hero re- mained in the Intensive are unit at lhe hospital, where he waa admltled Oct. It. Ora a ge We atller Low cloucla and log along the coast will clear by noon on Tue.- day, ·~ lo tho .... 111er ..,.., Icf;1illh blgbl of 71 II the beaches. rising to '17 Inland. I.owl lonliJ>I 5S-M. JNSm E TGDA'Y You can gi1t a divorce '" Col· ifontia Jor onill lff Wiider lh• do-it-y01lru!J plan_ Or Oft o compl<lc df1>orcc tit Jor lc11 than 1100. SH •lmV .. Page 5. l..M.-I -" ,,_ I (........ 1Ht =---:i ............ 9'tq I I •1 " -.. ........... "''' =~ r, ............ n' -" =~; ...,.. •n It.di Mlfl:ilt M ·-" =:-': -----. DAILY PILOT Sllff n.i. MRS. JOHANSEN REMINISCES WITH COPIES OF OLD NEWSPAPER Cost• Mes. Woman' Recalls How Veterans Day Got Its Start Cities Get $584,000 In Funding Orange Coast cities this month wlll reeeive $584.000 from a scheduled $34.l 1nillion October distribution statewide of funds under the Bradley-Burns Local Sales and Use Tax Law , state board of equalization chairman John W. Lynch has announced. The S34.1 million comes from August prepayments or various local taxes, in- cluding the one-percent sales and use lax; the new one-fourth percent local sales and use lax payment to counties !or local transportation fund ; San Franclsco Bay Area Rapid Transit District transac- tion and use Lax: and Southem Calilomia Rapid Transit Oistri4:t tranMctioo and use ta1 . The taxes which were due Sept. 20 are administered by the board of equaliza- tion. The remainder of money due local government for the third calendar quarter will be disbursed in November and December. 'I_'ax monies received by coastal cities are: -Costa Mesa: $165,000. -Fountain Valley: $20.500. -Huntington Beach: $127,500. -Irvine: $20,500. -Laguoa Beach : $29.250. -Newport Beach: l!OS.000. -San <!:lemente: $18,000. -San Juan Capistrano: $8,500. -Seal Beach: $13,250. • • ' DAIL 'f PILOT $1<1" .,. .. - Fines OK'd In Laguna ,, For Alarms Lquna Belch business flnns whose burglar alarms sound too many false notes tn the police department wlll be subject to a penalty and poplble dilcon- nection from lhe central alarm monitor board under new legislation adopled by the dty couoCtl." Seeking autborlulloo for an expanded monitoring system, Police Chle(, Joseph J. Kelly advised the council that the departmeot oow averages about 27 false alarms a montb, or ooe false alann for every legitimate one. Since a police unit bas to respond to every alarm, these are costly erron. The false alarms U5Ually are caused by an owner or employee falling to d1Jann lhe alarm when opening or closing the bwliness, Kelly said, and this ml!use is COllfmed to a very small percentage of th,e 'businesses served. Approved lhe request for an expanded mooltorinirsystem and new fee .eale, the counc1J also authorized penalties for any subscriber who summons police to his premises with three or more false alarms in any 30-day period. '!be tab will be 15 for Ibo third false alarm, 114 for tbe fourth, tzS for the fifth and a $50 penalty or diSODDDectlon from the service, at the discretion of the police chief, for the sixth false alann. Vets Day!' 1921 WW I W idotv Recalls Celebration The county government will receive 580,000. Ta1es received in a 11 local government entities in the county will total $2.06 million. Anahelm is the largest recipient, with $.130,000. Villa Park is the smallest, with 1125. Defensive Driver Kelly was autborfied to arrange in- stallation of a 100-posltkm monitoring panel, to replace tbe present 49-posltlon panel which was furnished by the Securi· ty Pacific Bani< at no charge to the city. Tbe-uisltog panel, he said, cannot ac- commodate the number of businesles ...ting to subscribe to the alann mon- itortog service. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lite O.llt Pllol l lef'I To many Americans the meaning of Veterans Day is obscure. It has become one of those "bonus" holidays · e~eryone loves because it stretches out the weekend. It's a \velcome reprieve from school. time to calch a haircut and a chance to run er· rands. ' Nobody celebrates ii very much except for the American Legion or the Veterans Of Foreign Wars. The Dooghboys who helped rout the mighty Gennan anny 56 years ago look· ed at it differenUy. To them it was a vic- tory lo end all wars and they celebrated it on Nov. 11, the day q,e Armistice was Signed in 1918. I Mrs. Janie Johansen, a ~ta Mesan, would Just as soon go on celebrating it on Nov. 11 because It bas more meaning 'to her. "I lived on a farm in Oklahoma when the war ended," Mrs. Johansen, 68, of 989 W. 19th St., recaJls. "We had a beJI outside with which \Ve usecf to announce dinner. When the phones iitarted ringing all over that the ~ar was over and all the trains started tooting real loud, I just ran out there and 1ang that bell as hard as I could. It was one of the big day!! in my life." , Mrs. Johansen, jllllt 14 at the time, had not yet met ber first husband, Grayson M. McCarty, a sergeant in the Signal Corps. That was to occur on another big day, Nov. 11, 1921, when be marched past her durtng an Armistice Day Parade. .·· When the war ended, McCarty was in Coblem:, Germany, a beautilul Rhine River city, putting out a newspaper call- ed the American Army of Occupation .f-AMAROC) News. A printer by trade, he ~d them bound in two volumes -one eovered with his outfit's inllignia -and gave them to his wile. Mrs. Johansen mainlains that there are only three other sets ln existence. One belongs to the National YMCA, another to the Hoover Library, and the third to the former editor, Guy C. Slaf· ford. The small daily paper, now yellowed "lb age, Is an amazing sourcebook on aftermath of WW I. The first edition, bli!hed on April 21, 1919, announces t it's "All Quiet After Violent ghting." ~:But there were riots in most or .J;ermany. Munich was in a state of OIANGI COAST LI DAILY PILOT TM °""'9 COllt DAILY l"ILOT, Wilt. Wllldl It comol .... t"-N-l"••S. b pUbllJftd trf the Ort"'9 Cold l"llMWl'"9 C"tll'l'IMtty. s.,.. ,.,_ ellllDN ere ~!di.cl, M!lf'llley ttlrw;ll Prldey, fW CO.It M ... , H...,..r1 leedl. """11ntfiM ltt(1'JP-1etr1 V•lley, Leoune lead\, !rvlrla/a.<Ml.ma. and S111 OtlNfll.! Sen JuM C•Plstr1110. A 1!nol• rwoioft.11 •llllon 11 Pllbl~ S.l\lt"dl'fl and Svncl1.,._ > Tht pr1nc:IJNI PVbltshll!O p1a111 It et »> Wtd .... y Slrftf, CGlt• M-, Cellfonla., f2''Jt. le\tri N. W114 ,.,.Mhnt .... l'lltlll'1111" Jee .. I . Curley Vice ,.,.'""' Ml o.wat MaMetr Th11111t Ke1vil ECllW l\1111•1 A. M11r,1rth1e Main-..,. lcltW t Ch1rt .. H. Leot aJ1her4 ,, Nill 4 AMIMM M ..... lnl l.dlkWI __ ...... 221 for11t AvtAUI Melttltf All4mn ~.o. In 664. t261t --GMI• M-1 nt W9t lhY ,,..... IMcfli »» H.....t ..... ~ M ._dt1 11111 hid! 11111 .. 1n11 IM M;as,..,.11~·- t ....... f714) '4Mm Cl 11W1e4i MwMl•1 '4J.oN1• LllflM! ..... All • .,., 1m1 • ,, •• , •••• 4t+.t'M 11 °""'""" 1m. °'"'"" CINtl l'lllllfllhN ~-"' ..... .,.,.... lllvatnitlllll. ,f ......... """'*' .,, ...... IMflWll• ,.... fNY IM ,_,.IUM •lfl*lf .,_,.. ,.. "'"'"'" " .,.,... """'· f llCllllf dllll ....... ,... ,, Ctll• MtMr ~ C.h~M. MMr•1t11 "' urrllr UM "*"""'' ...,. 1'11111 IJ,IS. morntt1¥1 ffllllttr'I' ...._tlrlMloM UM rNflft!tr· \ , Fl'Ottl Pqe I anarchy, and elsewhere Red German partisans bad taken 100 persons hostage. There was a continuous threat of renew- ed hostilities until the peace w~ formally sigJJ.ed. REPORTS ... "It covered what was going on there and what was going on ln the world and I think it did a pretty good job." Mrs. Jc.hansen says about her bound treasure. One of the stories published by the AMAROC News tells of a young man who chopped oU his band to avoid the draft. Another reports the cruise of two dirigibles loaded with machine guns and bombs over t<r Kiel, Germany "until the signing or rejection of lhe peace treaty." however, that Thieu WUtd orders that ]unior military officers -lieutenants and captains -should prepare to take over the functions of civilian village chiefs in the event of a tuse-fire. Boys Club Sets Spook Carnit'al Goblins:, spooks and witches, and all the traditional accoutrements of Halloween will set the scene for a Halloween Carnival at the Laguna Beach Boys Club on the magical eve itself. Oct. 3( The activity will get under way al 6 p.m. and a costume parade will start at 8:30 p.m., with separate divisions for entrants six years and under, seven to 10 years. and 11 years and over. Jointly sponsored by the Boys Club and the city Recreation Department, the program will in- clude cartoons, a spook house, game booths and refreshments, with a free dance scheduled from 8 to 10 p.m. President V o'vs Congress Fight On Overspending WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -Casting the Democratic-<:0nlrolled congress as villain, President Nixon said today "The tlme has come to stand up to the big spenders" who, he contended, threaten to cause "higher prices or higher taxes - or both." He said he will fight e~ce!l.'!I spending with vetoes and fund holdbacks. Nixon released a statement on arriving at Westchester County Airport near this New York City suburb at 10:25 a.m. PDT as he began a busy half-day or motorcading, rall ies and receptions in the area. He said : "The abject failure of the 9Znd Congress lo hold a responsible level of spending casts a long shadow over the glow of a resurging American economy." Nixon said the economy probably will grow this year at a rate exceeding the Administration's 6 percent estimate. He laid claim to cutting lnnatlon In half and asserted the Administration is "creaUng more new jobs than at any time in more than 18 years." This was intended to in.sure that the Saigon government bad a firm hold on the population and the government machinery should a settlement come, the sources said. For two ~. government workers have been painting South Vietnamese flags on tbe doors, walls and gates of homes and other buildings all over the country. '!be flags, which began ap- pearing more than a year ago, have often been described as a show-allegiance in the event of a ~fire. Informants said that durfog• the past two weeks, government troops captured at least two caches or Viet COng fla gs during operations near-Saigon and on the northern coast. The spokesman for the North Viet- namese delegation to the Paris peace talks told newsmen today that "the Viet- nam problem is stiU not setUed; the war happens to be prolonged aod ,lntensified.'' He added that the North Vietnamese "position is correct, logical and reasonable," and asked: "Does the Nb:on administration really want s e r i o u s negotiations or does it still engage in maneuvers aimed at deceiving public opinion?" Education Week Program Readied In La guna Beach Or. William tnlom, superintendent of Laguna Beach schools and Laguna Beach student body president Josh Bright will help members of American Legion Post 222, Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868, and their auxiliaries, observe American Education Week in a special program Thursday night. The LBHS Artist Chorale, which Cilm· pleted a European concert tour this sum- mer, will entertain guests at the 6:30 p.m. galherlng in the Legion Club hoo!e, 386 Legion St. Dr. Ullom, a member of Post 222 who served with the Navy in World War Il, will bring members up to date on current school matlers. Bright, who spent the su mmer in Sweden on the American Field Service Americans Abroad pro- gram, will give the students' view. The program will Include an lnfonnal question and answer period led by Post member O. W .Price, ~ho served on the Educational Priorities Committee which recently evaluated the local sthool system. However, he' said, Congress has recently embarked on a "spendinc spree" and added : Horse's Tail Cut in. Tustin Orange County Sheriff's officen al'f.I today blvestigatlng on incident described by them as an ''Unusually callous" act of cruelty durlna the weekend ln the TUsUn area. "Today, t have some neW! for the big spenders ..... I'm going to use every Wt!apon at my command to hold spending In this tlJcal year a.s close 11 posalblt to $250 billion -llO that we will not hive a new wave o( crippling ln01Uon Ind there will be no need for higher taxes." Nizon continued : "During lhe coming w•ek , there wilt bo a number of V_!!toes. If there are big spending bills which t mUJI sign for policy reuons, I a\19 promise to exercise my full l•gal powers to hold down lheH approprlatlons, or reduce othen to make . room for the new programs." • Intruders at a Brier Lane corral cut oU lhe th,...loot tall of a hone owned by Mrs. Anna Berptrom and lelt lhe animal bleeding and dlatmsed, deputies llld. "There could have been no other re.aaon than to lnfi!ct cruelty on a friendly animal that obvloUJly trUated the penon who approached him," an investigator Aid. Beulah Bartlett. president of the California Retired Teacher's Associa· tion, Orange County Coast Division, reads material on defensive driv- ing. The group sponsors refresher safety courses for retired persons and held one recently in Laguna Beach at the Congregational Church. "!'he group points out that persons over 50 years old comprise more than 30 percent of the population nationally but are involved in only 20 percent of the accidents. Man Booked Over Alleged Assault A Hawaiian visitor v.·bo allegedly punched a UC Irvine student in the stomach to prevent her reporting a traf· fi~ offen.se was booked into OraDge Coun- ty Jail on multiple charges during the weekend. Sherif rs deputies boOked J o s e p h Anthony Kaohi, 28, on suspicion of assault and battery. operating a vehicle without a valid drivers lice113e and drunken driving. Kaohi was arrested in the Dana Marina area after he allegedly struck Teresa An· ne Worley, 21. of 1016 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. From Pagel KEEPER ... the vague indefinite word, so trivial. No one is just missing! He bi a life, a being. He couldn't evaporate! "But -I cried. "For three days 1 did not leave our home, partly in grief and partly in the laith that Mom and Dad would call. saying Jim had been rescued and -well . The call never came, but I believed. "It bas been three years, but time has not dulled the pain. It'! still here, NOW, and often. "I thank G® you do not have to feel this. I thank God Jim was not my son. "But, because I believe in God, Jn Jim and in you; I wrote this," Mrs . ffedrick said. At present, Kelly said, there is no charge to the 49 panel users or the nine alann companies which service them, other than monlbly service costs paid to the telephone Cilmpany for leased transmission lines. The alarm "'mpaoles, he llld, are get· ting a "free ride" from the pollce depart· ment wblch must Index,. update and vmly ,ianns and mainliln adequate records. The J10lice chief was aulhorbed to seek bids from vendors of monitoring panels on tbt bui.s ·of a new fee lcbedule payable to_the vendor. 'Ibis tncludes a $45 e<mnection fee and '5 monthly service fee for businesses and lower fees for schools and government buildings. Kelly cooflrmed that tostallatloo of the new monitoring panel will not restrict subscribers in their choice of alarm com- panies. Body Found in Mo,el RIVERSIDE ()j.l -A North Carolina man was ·ound dead in his motel room here SUnday, bound and apparently suf· focatecl in bcddtog. Pollco ldenUfied the man as Dr. Benjamin S. Gantz, about 80, of Greensboro. Details weren't disclosed. CONVERTIBLE OR BUILT-IN! • • DISHWASHE Convtrtlble Dlshwaaher with H1nd10me Textolit1~ Top • IWlf ... TWUt ... ,........ -ntll WMll. lllll'lltt -~~ ............... .,.. ... ,,,_..., ____ _ rlll••MM ........ lltt .... ~ • l llllMll ..n ,... ~h .... - .................... It -• r--..n. ....,11 -•mr -·-. '"''" ........ • llo\llld--lnoulltod Bulft·ln Dllhw11hw glVM OU.Illy Perfonnonce-Qulltly . ,..._... ... _ ..... __ "*''"' ... 1 TMwlllC7'flel-_... ... ............. ... , ....... ._ .,,.... ................ ,., ........ Ml., ......... -.... ...... . ...,. ......... ,., ....... "" -MM-..... .1815 Newpolf Blvd. Downtown Co1f1 Melo Phone 549.7799 .. OUl NO. 1 GOAL: TO MAKE GENERAL ELECTRIC THE BEST BUY MEMBER OF CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST COOPERATIVE BUYING GROUP WITH THE VOLUME BUYING POWER OF 110 STORES 60 MllllOfl Dolio rs In Buylnt Power W1 are 1n authoriucl GINERAL ILECTRIC .,-=-"' g Miiot APf'll•n .. end T1l1vl1fon Service C1nt1r ' I I -I • Saddlehaek ED ITIOl'I • Today's Final ' -+ VOL. 65, NO. 2,97, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCJ'OBER 23, 19n TEN CENTS Safer Bike Trails Sought in Newport, Irvine 1 ( UCI !lllino planners today published results or a bicycle use survey which concludes the county and the cities or Newport Beach aod Irvine might. do more to provide safer off-street-trails particularly afong MacArthur Boulevard and Univeralty Drive. 'Ibe SW'V~ of 2,709 student!, faculty a~ staff included responses frorl\ 716 bike riders. Of the total who use bikes on campus, 288 rely on them for transports: tioo. to and from UCI. WltUe data collected by the UCI, physical planning staff primarily reflects Ol)r(:ampus concer' and necessary Im· provements, "lhe major bicycle related safety problems exist -off-campus.'' UCI planner Mel Roop sctid, "Bicycle riders and automobile drivers ( 1,MO of lhemJ alike died tile dan&erous s~uatlon on lbe community roads adjacent to the campus as causing primary concern." Roop concludes from the data that lr'iine, Newport Beach, county and state officials Sbould work togethe.I' to "provide separate , safe bicycle paths adjacent to the, major community roadways" to UCI. Three' areas needing immediate at- tention are: -·M3cArthur Boulevard between Bristol street and Pacific Coast Highway and particularly the intersection with University Drive where w e s t b o u n d signalization ignores bike traffic entirely. -University Dri'ie bet w e_e n MacArthur and California Avenue where lend not owned by UCI abuta University and the roadway is nqt fully improved. -Bristol Stceet, the main link to MacArthur from Costa Mesa. Specifically the s u r v e y recom- mendations urge.the new city of Irvine to request county funds for the im- provement of the University Drive sec- tion between MacArthur ·and. California Avenue. Presumably university fund! would continue 1imllar bnprovemeftta: betwten Calilomia Avenue and CamprJS Drive, aince tbe campus fronts on Unlverstty Drive along that portloo. lroolcally, tbe campus Drive test trail installed tblJ smnmer by tile city of Irvine is the pathway to t b e campus least-used by students, lilculty or staff ol l.}CI. Of tho,. commuting to UC! by bicyole, only 17 percent come from ~ com- pared to 22 percent coming from Costa Mesa , 25 percent from Newport Beach and 36 percent from unnamed "other" cities. 'lbe Clllfornla A venue entry to the campus carries tile bulk o! dailr biie tnmc. Of the 215 rlden opproachlng tile campus eastbound on-Universtty nm., %17 tum in OD California. 'the rest pr)!SUIMbly join anotl:u· IOI ~ c.imlng llOUtbbound on Unl""81ty and lulDinl at Cl111p111 Drive for a dally total of JU bib ridera along that tw<>lono Irvine street whlcb presenUy affords no trail !or bike traffic. 'Ibe portion of Campus Drive with an eight-foot j>ainted bike lane, east of Town Center, attracts 126 riders dally !or a quarter of a mile. Total usage drops~ I the Zee Street fire station to 112 eyclilt• a day' according to the survey Of ucr studeota, faculty and ital!. 'lb.at study did not involve any rJ the residents of Irvine who may use the tnll to-get from University Part to Town Center, the seat of city government. On 'lbunday, 1rvlnc Planning Com- missioners will discuss the """'I' re,sulll. The atudy may lead to a discussion of capital Improvement project priorities for tile new city. City staff presenUy ta working on a recommendation of 1treet· improvements which need Immediate at· tention. 60 Cars Pile Up, I Dead Riverside Freeway Site of Crashes in Heavy Fog DAtL Y P ILOT Stllff ~ VETS, YOUNG ANO -OL D-Vietnam veteran .Stuart Baker and World War. I veteran 0 . W .. f'1ice, both of Laguna Beach, compare notes over cwtured' North Vietnamese rifle brought borne. Although -they are gefterattons ·apart, the two men know what Veterans Day is all about, even if few others do. ' No Celebration Vets R ecognize 1J?J1y on Nov. 11 ? Today is Veterans Day but fur the fact that government offices are closed. there are no llQJlOW)Ced cefemonies p1arined on tbe Or~e CoalO to hopor the men -who Ila"" ......i the countty in tbe Armed Forces. . A check.ck the cities, American Legiod POsts, the VFW and local memorial parks showed that Veterans Day will practically go UMOtlced this year. A spokesman for Harbor R e s t Memorial Parle. in Costa Mesa offered this explanaUon: "Most of the veterans I know have always observed Veterans Day on the lllh .; . of November, as it used to be. 'Ibey say that's when they'll celebrate it." The aimlsdce ~t ended World War I was declared at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918. Since 19'l2, l,rmlstlce Day bas been of· ficially celebrated on Nov. 11. It was made a1Natiooal holiday in 1938 and in 1952,' the name was changed to Veterans Day so lhai veterans sbo bad served since World War I could also be honored. . In 1970, the date was changed to the fourth Monday in October by act of Congress. But it looks like Veterans Day will alw~ys be Nov. 11 on the Orange Coast. ' * * * * * f.r~ POW s to Be Remembered In Saturday UCI Rites Although Veterans Day was marked today wltfl a minimum of pomp and ~mony, relatives of servicemen miss· irlg in 'ctlon or lmP}"isQned In SouUte~st Asia have every reason to remember their loved ones today, as they do every day. , Had there been parades of former btroes today, these servicemen would not been among those honored. They are ltlll in North Vietnam, Laos, or elsewhere, imprisoned or dead . OORONA (AP) -At least one person The freeway_ was closed in both .direc- W,!IS killed and about 25 injured in a tions. series of pileups on foggy Riverside A third pileup involving about five cars was reported on U.S. 395 at North Perris, County roads today. · about 10 miles from here. The highway patrol said 4a to 60 cars Don Shiffer, driver of t be first am. crashed in pil~uJ>$ on the southt>Qund bulance .at the earl;jrmultlple er.a.sh, said, lanes of~ Rlvetside Freeway. "A semi blew up and there were people --LateFf abOut-lO·vebicles piled up-on the---all-over· the ·place.· People· were trapped northbound side of the freeway, including in their cars. It was just terrible." a gas transport truck which overturned He said be drov~ eight persons in and dwnped fuel across the pavement. serious condition to the C:Orona Com- 4 Architects To Seek Jn.·ine Project ~act ·· · )Vlthin a month, Irvine· Company pJan. n..,. and cily officials mii!ht well be look- ing at four competing p1ans for develop- ment of a unique town-gown "urban en. viroriment" to.be built on 200-acres near UC Irvine. Following council ratification last week of loosely drawn goals for the develop- ment' which were drawn by company · planners and the Irvine Planning Com- mission, four architect-plarming firms will com;iete for the Town Cen ter design contract. lryine O>mpany executive vice presi· dent Raymond Wa1s9n praised the city for its cooperation in developing the ob- jectives for the develo~t. 1be round of pJBMing coin.mission meetings on the goals represents a unique means of preparing a planned community. Councilmen similarly praised the Irvine Company for involving them in the initial planning. 1be alternative avoided by this process would have been private planning ef!orts by the flrm In the town-gown qua.st-regional center, the Ordinarily, the first city government input comes at the zoning or tract map approval stages. However, by having obtained agree- ment on 'Some basic groundrules for the later 7.00fng considerations are expected to be less time-consuming for both the city and the company. Despite the agreement on most of the goals package, some questions remain to be reaolved. They are: -Wbat will-be;be· precise natutt o! the ••tey, vertical landmark'' in Town Center? Councilmen favor a clock tower to high rise olfice buildings. -Precisely how will can be kept out ol the Town Center homes, apartmenta and commercial shops mil: when at the same time 1treets will be required to handle aervice. and police vehicles? ~w will areas of Jand for mutual · use by civic, _ cultural and cburch organizations be se~ aside? -Should Town center be the seat of city and possibly school d I s t r i c t governance? Competing archltecb will make recommendations on this Issue. Watson indicated he hoped tile city might share in the study of the four com- (See TOWN, Page I) TO •REvtVE COM/lllTTEES Irvine CoUncillftlln Burton Burton Proposes 'City Committees Be Reactivated Irvine .Councilman Jolm Burton today proposed reactivation of city advisory committees under a 10-part program councilmen wtll consider Tues$y nlgbt. Key point. made by Burton in bis pro. posal to restruct.;;e the volimteel' group1 which expired Sept. ll/J, Include: -PinpolntiJli taska to be assigned to comqiltteea in advance fer all com- mittees except public education. --Open men;ibersbip on CO!Jl!llltleel to all residents and limit committee. Dfe to the Point at which fewer than three members continue to be ir)tereated. -After three meetlngs, membien wooia aelod a commlasloner ( chatnnan ) and bis alternate for one-year t.,,.... The appointment wooid be made by the coun- cil yearlY,ih In June. . -Com lttees W011ld operate under coundl rules and calilonn to Ute antJ. secrecy lawa ot caJilornla -the Rolph M. Brown· Act. County Hunter Held Fdr Shooting Deer Mrs. Barbara Hedrlck of Irvine, wf'lo¥ brother Alr Force Capt. James Wayne Herrick will be honored Saturday In ceremoni~ at .1 p,m. lo Campus Park on the UC Irvine campus, is among those Americans awaJUng news ·of a loved one listed as being "missing in action." The following !J drawn ' from her Veteran's and everydaj' tribute to all who are . missing In ad.lop -11I Am My , Brother's Keeper." • RENT AL AD HAS DRAWING POWER -SUbcommittees mlght be fonned .. required •nd might Include DOIH'esldenll, but would report to full city committee. -Tbe dty wooid -Ide dertcal stall support. -Commltleet would report flndlnp to the City COancll, -. minority r<portl. A Buena Park man was cited durln(( tbe. weekend by Orange County Sherlfr's officers w~ charged him with unlawfully ki!llng 1 deer on Irvine t:ompany prop-, ert7. . Oeputiu aaid lrVine Company security gulrds caUo!d them to a pj>lnt near Ute Myford Rood entrance to the nnch ofter t~ey allegedly I~ William Lloyd Tile, 24, In PollffSIOn of the dead <leer.- ' Tate was cited under: Fl!b and Game Codo rcgulallons applying to the killing ol,untaged deer. •. ' "October r1. 19S9 wu an average oetqber itay, sllgllUy cloudy. I was doing dishes and the phone rang. It was Dad. " 'Barb, it's Jim! He's mlsslng In ae- tion.' What do you say when the world falls apart and •llen your mind refllles to believe? I couldn't Gllil!et. Later I talked to my molb>r. I trlod to ®ttiilo~ the!t\ JJm w.11 alrlgh~ that Ila wa~ down llt)d~trc from t1ie enemy. "Whco bO. could lie ....id wllk to !rlOlldl,y• torrliory ud be 1afe again. . . "! mourned 1 brothel" I loved ... how dare anyone II)' he ii n\lasing. MISSING, (See XEEPEI\, he• II • Check this ad for Its "qujck draw" power : PRIV 3 BR. 2 Ba, patio. tncd by yd, frplc. Wlk to bell Ac lhop1. szo. per mo, lM OCWWtt. m-uxx wk days. ""'""""" -'nit ad mited the . -to the fint penon 14 mpond the !Int di!.. ff ap-"8ttd In• the DAILY PILOI'. 'Ole ad- Mtllel', of oourle 'Wl8 UYe1'7 hippy. Ir 'l'ba DAILY PW wanti tbe Ofportun- lty to mate ,you baPPJ tbe Ame way. Dial MWm. the dlnet Urie to raulll. • -While oommtt!ees report to the COUl)o cit, motten ol concem to the plannlnt! r .mmJlllon, dtaian reView board or other city -eommitletl 'fl'OU)d be Jllb. mltled to tbool: bodies for review .9fllY. -()n I. !Jl-monUtly ICbeduJe, all OOID- mltleel """ lhltir ""'81ben ~ - In -dbculilon -with the C!ty 01uncll. lterna needlnc . actlOn by the coundl"WOU!d !le .. , l<r 1 later~·-· -A Ubr~ oommlttee mlnulet ..S raporll -1d lii eotablilhed 11 city ball. lllll1Ga tald ~'le t><-1 "will bavo an (S.. BU~N1 Pep 11 . I ' r:1.unJty Hospital. Five otller persons were taken to other hospitals. . Sblffer said visibility in tile log when he arrived at lhe accident was one or two feet, and said rescuers had trouble find-inl !be victims. , • . A highway patrol weather report said -visibl.l.ity in some areas was zero. Sheriff's depuUes said the fog was in patches, so that driven were traveling at a high rate of speed when they entered the low visibility areas. The Identify of the single known fatall· ty was not Immediately available. The victim reportedly burned to death ln bis car. Fog . in the area has caused several serlqus accldenll In tile put. Cloe .,.._ died-Jn· a-15Ckar colli..ton In the-ma-1n·· November 1968. Mort fog II expocted tonight and 'nles- day. Fast-thinking :Viejo Girl ~ verts Assault hy Driver ,.~~-~ ........ Viejo 'girt bltchbitin& in ~ Bmch ..... the ....tend·-p••dble- .... ul t th.!lt bas befallm otber )'<lunJ Kissinger Talks Fan Speculation, Shoot Up Stocks r..mWlreflervlces NEW YORK -Continued speculation about peace In the v~ war -the stock market sharply bigber In early trading today oo the New Yori< Stock Ex· change. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 12.19 at 955.00 by 11 a.m. By noon, it had dropped to MO and to l.ZO at 3 p.m. 8) 11 a.m Standard and Poor's 500 stock lndez, a broader lndk:ator, was ahead 1.11 at 110.36. Advances led declines, t ,014 to 78, among the l,J911 Issues crossing Ute tape. Volume amounted to around 3,110,000 shares during Ute firs! boor. There were lndlcatlons presidential ad· vlser Henry A. Kissinger's tallca in Paril and Saigon may have been fruitful, and , hopes for peace encouraged many in- vestors, analysts aaid. The stock market bas been sensitive to peace rumon the. past several months. Many glamour sloeka and electronics and oomputen were big gainers In the rally. IBM, Burrough>, T e • a s lnstrurilents, Motorola and Walt Disney all gained ltOW1d 4 polnta In early trading. 'Ibis came on Jho heels of a IO~polnt rise Friday which analysts said wu allo prompted by oncouraginl reporll about Vietnam. TradlJw WU Vl!ry brlat, dapita Ute Vetel"lllS D1y holiday. . Late last week; a French newspaper reportad that a cease-fire "" expocted by the end of this month. Since then, new reports !\ave bolstered Wall slreot hopes of an ap-bin& cease-fire In Indochina. Kmtna•r left Saigon for Washington today after the moll lnl<llllvo peaco talks of the IndoCblno w1r. and the U.S. Embwy laid progrt11 had been made toward I Mt.tlement. But It indicl~ that the U.S . ..S SouUt Vletnlm... government ltlll dlff.. on (See REPORTS, l'IJ" t) 'Cool' Burglar Gets Sprinklers From Site Sprfalder controls valued 11 more thin $1,400 ....,. strii>Ped· flwl their ... 1ro1 panel-durlnf the w..iebd by lntnlden at 1111 El Toro CO!ltlnldlon site. Oranp County Shtrllf'1 of!lce!•_,•ld the C011trolo, owned by the U11J1acto Landocape Oempany ol Placentia, wm -Uy lnltaJJed on I b\tlldJn& alte It J!!lll 'l'nbuco Road. ' • women rec<lllly. The giri Utwnblng a ride to l,aJIUIUI JIMch lll&h School, WU piclred np by • aoutbbound .car driven by 1 man. Alttt getting Into tile v<htcle, the young &irl told the driver lhe wanted to 10 to the high school for a football game. The driver continued IOUtb along Glen· oeyre Street, and · .~gan to perform a lewd act, police said. · As the car passed a large group ol pee> pie at the 1000 block of Glenneyre, the girl shluted, "stop, there's my famlly." The cat stopped and the girl lmnped from the vebicle, and llled 1 report witlj police. She had bltcbhllced !tom - Viejo to Laguna Beach. RecenUy, an 11-year-oid bitc:hhfkinl girl wu tldnaped 8nd raped by 1 driver who assertedly llled an ice pkt to !or<o bis victim into submltsloo. Another kldnaplng and rape took placo wben a 13-year-old wu seized aa she walked along a Laguna side street wtth her 11-year-old cousin.· Visitor to Las Vegas Loser After Return A victim vacationing ln Lat Vttu ove the weekmd learned upon returu•ng home to Irvine &bat he i.rt! his wife 1~-st $780. Bill Putsla. o/ 14292 E. Mall, ntd th< residence waa burglarized, witll a television 1et1 • clock radio, two watches and varioul otber tle!nt ot j<welry stolen. Irvine Police Officer Bill Bechtel said the Intruder Wied a lklch lleel rod, dropped at the scene, to smash a wtDdow oo he could reach in and unlock the door. w .. .._r Low cloudl Ind foe •loof tllo coast will dear by noon on ~ d1y, ~to the -tber ..... lee, with blgha o! n II the beachoo, rlalO( to 77 Inland. 1-1 ton!pl 5UC. INSm E TODAY Y"" "'" Qel a dlvorc<t In Ca~ i/"""4 for Olllll.. $44 ll!ldtr I/lo do-l~l/OUl"1tl/ pl<m. Or Qtl a comp!ct< dlt>orc• kit /or i.., Iha• 1100. Su •torv .. Paa• 5. U..*W .............. ""' =:,. '; =.. ... ': =--· .' Vf. =:.J.• ,. _ ....... ti ._... ,...,., - -I '':,:',.::"" M 1 ~··· •• " w -.. = .. "" .. ._..,,.,, . . ..._.,, If ~ ..... Q.M ... ,.,... u ............ • • • DAll.Y PILOT IS Cities Get $584,000 ·1n Funding Orange Coast cities this month wUJ ft'Celve SS&t ,000 from a scheduled $34.1 rn.i!Uon October distribution statewide of funds under the Bradley·Bums Local Sa.let and Use Tu La"·· state board or "Jualhatlon chalrman John W. Lynch bas annoul\Ced. The $3-4. t million comes trom August prepayments of \•arious local tues, in· rluding the one-percent sales and use t~i:; tbe new one-fourth percent local saJes and U!e lax payment to counties far local transportation fund : Sao Franci9co Bay Area Rapid Traruit Dlstrict transac- tion and use ta..1 ; and Southern California Fq.pid Transit District transacUon and U3e tax. 1be tues which wen!: due Sept 20 are administered by the board of equallza. Lion. The remainder of money due local gove~t for the third calendar quarter will be disbursed in November aQd Otcember. bx monies received by coastal cities aft: -Costa 111esa : $165,000. -Fountain Valley : $20.500. -Huntington Beach : $127,500. -Irvine: $20,500. -Laguna Beach: 129,250. -Newport Beacli ; 1106,000. -San Clemente: $18,000. -San Juan Caplstrano: $8,500. --&al Beach: $t3,250. The county gov~ent will receive $1W},000. Taxes received in a 11 local government entities in the county will total $2.06 million. Anaheim ls the largest l'«iplent, with $330,<m. Villa Park is the smallest. with $1'5. From Pagel BURTON ... l.rhmediate effect of broadening oor base for citizen participation In government." Re saJd he hopes the 5)'3tem "will be a Prelude to a more formalized two.level form of government within · t h e tfjimework of a city charter." Burton recalled the IS.month effort to Create the new city and the tint 10 months ol citizen activity in the now largely defunct citizen advilory com- mittees. "I cannot believe those 111 months of struggle or the 10 months of effort bad as a drivinl Ideal the mere transference of local government from one remote body to another, or the establishrtltnt of a City Cooncil operating in splendid ilol1Uoo. "Nor, can I believe lh1I bat been the intent of the preSent council," Burton said. "Yet , r see in the day-to-day opel'ltion ot the city a great sep1ratlon between the citizens and thOle whom they elected." Since formaUon of the city last Decem- ber, many on the council have attempted lb provide channels for citizen In- volvement. Recently, l'OllllCifmen adopi.d I pro- j)OSe!i set of rules to govern future cltlJen commltteu drilled by Mayor William Fbcbbach. To daet, whose rules affect only one committee, revenue and tu- allon. While aome of the earlier committees s:compllshed much in terma of providing meanin&ful advice and research tn- Mmltkm to councilmen, the complex of llmtted membmhlp advilory bodieo pro- duced large meuuret of cbaot. t:klplic.ations of effort, conflicting ftcommendatkn, and preaentatlona or sJQliey versus the a51!gned f a c t s htehJighled the need for a more orderly c.-ommlttee structure. For some councilmen, the adva ntages of providing a system in which at least one councilman participates in cgm- nittee atudy efforts have been :lighllghted by the city's successes in •aftlng wall and street&eape and Cpsollne station design laws. : ; That question and the realrlction on -.iiesldency of members are likely to pro-..toc-e the most debate 11s the council !:bills Burton'• proposal Tuesday night. ' l ' I l I OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT i • nt ~ c..t DAILY PILOT, wt11 ..._ I , .. _...,,,.. --......,._ "~" ·f ' ... ~ Clletf '"'*'"""" c:oi...-r ...... t : ,.,. ---Me ...... ,....., """"' • PrtMy, ... a.111 MtA, N-1 •ttc11, I : , ... ,,....... 9"cfll~Nltllll v1111W. l~ 1 : ....., ...._,..,..l9tlldl 11111 1111 c--...1 I • Slfl Nin C•lll•lr-. A ,1..,1. '9Glon.til ( : .. "'°" 1s llUbllllllrt S.fl.lt'dtn enc1 &Ulld•ya. ,· • Tiie "1nc .. I lllo!Mllllillt '°""' h •I »:! Wnt ? : Irr I'*'-CleM Mell, C1liflnlllt nu., : ••••rt N, w,,d ,.,......,. Ml "'*Mtr Th••• IC"'tll Ectflw °fkM•t A. M.,,,111111 M ......... Mltef ' ~ H. L .. 1 llcll.NI P. N1H : Aul .. _ #olMtlrle Ml'9n : - ' '" . ' c.N ...... :bl ..... ..., -- """""' hlcfll lm NN"91i ............ L.tMll -..ettr m ,. .... ,......,. ... .,... .. klll ,,.,, hlcll .......... ._ CllnltoWt1 .. N..-r ., c.._ ll..i Tll1ft1n1 17141 MMl21 C'•tll*I M,.tl.a.; '4W71 .. ' •• DALLY PILOT Sllff f'tletl MRS. JOHANSEN REMiNISCES WITH COPIES OF OLD NEWSPAPER Costa MeN Woman Recalls How Veterans Day Got Its Start Vets Day~ 1921 WWI Wido·w Recalls Celebration By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Cit ltl9 o.llf' Plltt ltafl To many Americam the meaning of Veteran!! D!y is obscure. It has ~-ome one of those "bonus" holidays everyone loves because it stretches out the weekend. -Jt'a a welcome reprieve from sthooJ, time to calch a haircut and a chance to run er- rands. Nobody celebrates It very much except for the American Legion or the Veterans of Foreign Wan. The Doughboys who helped rout the mighty German anny 56 yean ago look- ed at it dlfferenlly. To them it was a vie· tory to end all W8J'! and they celebrated it on Nov. 11, the day the Armistice was signed in 1918. Mn. Janie Jollamen, a Costa Mesan, would just as aoon go on celebrattng it on Nov, 11 because it has more meaning to her. "I lived ()n a farm in Oklahoma when the war ended," Mrs. Johansen, 68, of 989 W. 19th St., recall!. "We had a bell outside with which we used to announce dinner. When the phones .:1tarted ringing all over that the war was over and all the trains started tooting real loud, I ju.st ran out there and rang that bell as hard as I could. It was one or the big days in my life." Atn. Johauen, just 14 at the time, had not yet met her first husband. Grayson M. McCarty, a sergeant in the Signal c.otps. That was to occur on another big day, Nov. 11, 19'11 , when he marched past her during an Armlatice Day Parade. When the war ended, McCarty was In Coblenz, Germany, a beautiful Rhine River city, putting out a newspaper call- ed the American Army of Occupation (AMAROC) New!. A printer by trade, he had them bound in two vol umes -one covered wltb his outfit's lnllgnJa -and gave them to his wife. Mn. Johansen maintains that there art! only three other aet1 In existence. One belongs to the National YMCA, another to the Hoover Library, and the thlrd to the former editor, Guy c. Staf-. ford. The small dally paper, oow yellowed y,•ith age, Is an amatlng aourcebook on the aftermath of WW I. The first edition, publlsbecl on April 21, 1919. armounces Ill.at it's "All Quiet After Violent Fighting." But there were riots In most of Germany. Munich was In a state of anarchy, and elsewhere Red German partisans had taken 100 penona hostage. There wu a contlnuOUJ threat of renew- ed hostilities until the pea~ was fo1 mally signed. "It covered what was going on there and what \\'as going on In the world and I think it did a pretty good job," Mn. Johansen &ays about her bound treasure. Trustees to Hear Talk on School Employment Tustin Union Hl&h SChool Dltlr!cl trustee• are consldertng adopting a rHOlutlon oppoalng the Wataon Amend- me.nt. Proposition 14 on the Nov. 7 ballot. Trustffl will dllCUll the amendment tonight 1t 7:!0 •t 'l'llltln High SChool, 1171 Laguna Road. The proposition "-Wld set a limit on the amount of property tax to be \lied for IChool flmding . 1\JsUn Union District Sllperintendenl Jack Schumaker hal rocomm<l\ded tbat trustees oppose the amtndmenl. FroMP.,eJ TOWN •. ·• I pitllll pl1n1 lo be tlnallzed wllhln 1he ne1t m~th. 1'M1 only fear Is thet you will pick out a plan that we don't like," he qutpp«I One of the stories published by the AMAROC News tells of a young man who chopped off hi9 hand to avoid the draft. Another reJ)Ort!I the cruise of two dirigibles loaded with machine guns and bombs over f(; Kiel, Gennany "until the signing or rejectiOn of the peace treaty." From Pagel REPORTS ... some points. "We have made progress," said an em- bassy statement. ''Tal.Jts will continue between us and the government of Viet- nam. It Is not in the interest of negotia· lions to be more specl.Oc at tbLs Ume." Kissi.naer Oew borne to report 1o Nlxon after six meetings with President Nguyen Van Thieu. . Asked at the airport if hil Vklt bad been productive, Kissinger replied, "It always is when I'm here." Three hours after Kiuinger left, the U.S. Army chief of staff, G<n. Creighton W. Abrams, left for Washington. He spent six days tri Sajgon aaseUing the military situation aod the Vietnamlzatlon program, and sat in 'on some of Kiss- inger'• meetings with Thieu. Although Newsweek and T i m e magar.ines reported thet the United States and North VJetnam agreed to a set· tlement that would lnclude a cease-fire, there waa no confirmation from either U.S. or South Vietnam,.. ol!lclal> In Saigon. South Vietnamese aources 1 a I d , fuWever, that Thieu Issued orders that junior military officers -lleute.nantl and captains -lbould prepare to take over the functions o( civilian village chiefs in the event of a ceaae-ftre. This was intended to Insure that the Saigon government had a !inn hold on the population and the government machinery should a settlement come, the sources said. For two months, govemnfent workers have been painting South Vietnamese flags on the doors, walls and gatea of homes and other bulldings all over the country. The flags, which began air pearing more than a year ago, have often been described as a show-allegiance In the event of a cease-fire. In!ormanta said that during the past tv.-o weeks , government troops captured at least two cache5 of Viet Cong nags during operations near Saigon and on the northern coaat. The spokesman for the North Viet- namese delegation to the Parla peace talks told ntwsmen today that "the Vlet· nam problem Is still not settled; the war happens to be prolonged and intensified." He added that the North Vietnamese "poaiUon is coPrect, logical and reasonable/' ,and asked : "Does the Nixon ad ministration really want a e r I o u 1 negoUaUons or does It 1Ull engage in maneuvers aimed at dectlvtng public <>Plnlon?" Man Booked Over Alleged Assa1tlt A llawaUan vlaitor who allegedly punched a UC Irvine student In tbe 1tomach to prtvent her reporUftg a traf· fie oUtm1e w11 booked tnto Orange Coun- ty Jail on multiple charges durln& tM weekend. Sherur1 deputl eo booked J o .. p h Anthony Kaohl, 23, on 1uaplclon of assault ind battery, o-peraUng a vehicle without a valid dr\vttt llcel'llt and drunken drlvtng. Kaohl w11 arrea:ted In the Dana Marina area 11\er he allea:edly 1truck Tfl'ffl Art- ne Worley, 21 , of 1011 W. Balboa Blvd., New~rt Beach. Offlcen 11Jd Kaohl attscked the 1tu· dent lo the Dana Marina parking Jot ntter the warned him thet ehe Intended 10 report a traffic Infraction to the CalltOf'nla Hlghwny Patrol. I • Vettng Rlghn Women Back Hor1e'1 Tail Cut in Tustin '· 1LJ2-New . -1t1zens Or-. Olllll1I D lll'a ...... ......, ............... , deocrlbed by tbeni u .. ''Un111t111fly callous" Id ol cruolty durln( the weekend In lhe 1'llttll atea. lnlnlden a1 a Briar Lane corral cut off the three-loot tt1I of a horse .......i by Mrw. Anna Btrpl!Om and left the animal bleedlnc llld dlsttt.ssed, deputies said. By JACK BROBACK ' OI tfl9 O.llY ,,.., •t•ft A group of 142 persons wh<> became United States citizens on Oct. JI, three day1 after the ~ldlloe to register to vote in the Nov. 7 General Election, should be allowed to cast the~ ballots, aC<Ol'<IJn& to 1bt: Orange County Chapter of the League of Women Voten (LWV). The LWV has filed a class action suit on behall of Ellubetb Ann Roberts of B"'a whlct wlll be heard Wednerday In Orange Counly Superior COl!rt. Mn. Roberta, a former citl!en of Great Bri· tah1, wu one of I.he 142 penons sworn In an a U.S. cltlr.en Oct. 11. "U we win our point, Mrs. Roberts and the other 141 new cltlzenJ wllf be able to vote on Nov. 7 for president and vice president," said Mrs. Jeannette Turk, president of the. county LWV. · Two of the grou? tried to register alter the Oct. 11 ceremooles and were told that they would not be eligible to vote No. 7 by the Orange County Regiltrar of Voten office, according to Mrs. Turk. Shirley Price, vice president of t!Je county LWV, announced at the ceremonies in Santa Ana that the new citizens were eligible to register and vote Nov. 7. She said she had .been told thil was correct by a member of the registrar's staff. Later, Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock: 18.ld the in- formation had been in error. The suit will be argueCl for the LWV Uy FroMPcgeJ KEEPER .•. · the vague indefinite word, so trivial. No one h just misling! He ii 1 life, a being. He couldn't evaporate! "But -I cried. "For three Clays I did not leave our home, ·partly in · grlef and partly in lhe faith that Mom and Dad would call, saying Jim had been rescued and was well. The call never came, but I belteved. "It ha!I been three years, but time has not dulled the pain. ll's still here, NOW, and <>ften. "I thank God yoo do not have to feel this . I thank God Jim was not my son. "But, because 1 believe in God, In Jim and in you; I wrote this," Mrs. Hedrick said. -·t ''I believe H others could feel the pain through me. that you would not allow this tragic condition to continue. "l only hope you never have to live tb1s pain for youralf. "We families only ask for Red Cross inspection of all prisoner of war camps, proper food and medkal tttatmenl, tr.. e:iccha.nge of mall between POWa and families, and a list of names of ALL POWs. .. "That we may know if my brother is dead or alive. Won't you help?" Richard Pelbcrbrfdge, president of the Orange County ACLU before presiding Superior Court Judge Bruce St.unner Wednesday. Joan Riddle, voter aervice chal.rman of lhe LWV, lald the rtgbt of now cltlienl to voto for president and vice -!dent II be!ng argued on lhe basis of a C&lflornta election code provision which states that if a penoo has fullfilfed all requirements other than that of residence before on election date they shall be allowed to vote. '"l'hil partleular class of peo~fe ll't being excluded from thll rtcl1t, ' Mn. Riddle aid today. "U they bad become citlzen.s in anotber at.ate and moved to California thil week they woold be allow· ed to vote under the code. "We feel ii II unfair to exclude lheH people just becauae they have lived In Orange C.Ounty rather than eome other state," she argued. Mrs. Riddle 1ald the C&lffomla code which applies only to voting for -!dent and vice prealdent l!I In the state election law~ to conform with federal regulations. 2-month old Tot Bitten, Battered To Death in NY NEW YORK (UPI) -Pollce 11ld human bite marb and laceratlonl covered the body of 1 -lllOll11Hld boy who lppm!llily WU killed in b1a crib while hla famU.y, relattvea a D d frlendj w.re celelnUng b1a chrlltenlnc In another room. The lnfonl, Heotor Rodrlaua Jr., wu pronounced dead on arrival at Green- point Hoapltal late Saturday nJsht. Ofnclafs_ cluaUed the dead boy "' a "bettered child. ti Police questioned .the puly gueltl II the> local ouUon bouJe 1bortfy alter the death wu reported. No 8l'l'eltl or suspects were reported 'and all were releued. - The boby'1 body WU clllcoverod by b1a mother, Mn. Delorn Rodrlaua, ll, in its bualnet In the DDd llory 1par1men1 of Llndaoy Houain& Project locltod In Brooklyn. -The child'1 lather, Hector Rodrliues Sr., 21, 1 clerk, laid be hid no Idea bow the Infant died. Aiiothet child, I, W I I unharmed. The bites wen inlUcted by 1 child or an adult with a small mouth, the mecUcal exmJner says. "It could have been done In 1 ~· or by 10D1eone who bated the family,' aald detective Erneat Borbee. The medical examiner said that in ad· dition to being bltlen, the boy's skull bad been Cl'Ulhed from botterina aglinal a wall or the floor. '"There could have been no other reaaon than to tnfllct cruelty on 1 frlendly ID1mal tbal obv1oully trusted the pencm Who, 1pproocbod him," an iavesUgator aald. Gates Receives 'Accolades,' Not Demotion Ralph Gales "has not been clOmoted" lnsllts the man who has taken b1a place as llUl>erintendent of the San Joaquin SChoof District but rather bu been 1lven "add1Uonal accolades.'' 'l'ru8teel of the San Jooquln School Dirtrict tut week gave Gal.el the title .of superintendent emeritus, 1 pure 1 y honorary 1111111. Gates, who WU In h1I 17th Ytll' IS tuperlntendent ol the fu111t1n>wlng d1ltrlct In the ltate, wu oo vacaUon at lhe time. He lllJI 11. Gates wu dul to retire nm Juno. 'l'rulltel namec1· llJCbard We It e , IUIOclate ouperlntendent of Ibo dlltrlct since last July, u new ouperlntendent. Welte aald Friday tbert ' wW be no In- crease In ulary ...,.mpanyln( the pro- motioo, u wu reported earlier. Tbe new auperinlm!ect nplalned 1lle boord'I action 1t thll Ume by aylnc. "I alrtady have t be l'<lpODlib!Uty." Trulleel (IVO him lhe title to IO. with the dutleo he'd alrMdy ldoplOd. be ~. , Wolfe has been "IOl!ng u oocutlV<! _..iaey ,!!> \be boord ~ ll!>co ho came from the ~-Sdlool Dlllrict lilt July, Gato, uld hlt 48:-)'lllN>ld suac1B'll', h now a ccmaultant, a "teruor atatelman" and booored u -Dr. Wolle, wllo mobl b1a tiOnio In Palol Venlel, aald G1t11 will continue on the payroll. The C.)'W'<lld G1111• c!llel role rtcenlly bu -odvlaq the two nowwtllleddlltrlcll. July 1, Im, tho lntno 11111 1he Sad- dlebect Valley unified lchool d1l1l1<ts will take over lchool oper1tlan and tbe San Joaquin dlatrtct will be cllaoolved. Body Found in Motel RIVERSIDE (AP) - A Norlll C&rollnl mu wu 'Olllld deod In b1I motel room here $bound and _.;oily auf-focated In . Police ldenUlled the man u Dr. Ben amJn s. Gutz, about 60, of Greensboro. Details wertn't disclosed. CONVERTIBLE OR BUILT•INI DISHWASHE ConY-.tible Dlthwulllr with Handoome ToxtoUt .. Top •MtM-.~ ......... ............ • ltlltt """ ........ ..... .,... .... .,..._ ........ .. l'llLtt• ...... .w.. ....... ...... ••tl.W.MftfMf ....... .... .................. -• ,.....,a......, .. ._.. -·-., .. r_. .. ...., • lounlM111tllllti.d lullMn Dlohw-.-... Quollty ~-a.Mtly .,...,.. ..... __ ...... --• ,. .. .,.1119 ___ _ .............. ................... ............................... ,. __ .. . .................. ................... ~ ... --"""' .. ......, . 1115 Newpoit llvd. Downto.... C0tl1 Moll Phone 548· 7788 , OUR NO. 1 GOAL: TO MAKE GENERAL ELECTRIC THE BEST BUY MEMBER OP CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST COO,lllATIVI BUYING GROUP WITM THI VOLUMI IUYING POWIR 0, 110 STORll ' We •r• an 1utherl .. GINERAL ILlc,,TRIC Molor • Appll1nce 1"4 T1ltvl1fon s. .. 1 •• Ctnltr ' -' I I 17 lU I .Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley Tetlay'-s Finni N.Y. Stoeks , VOL. 65, NO. 2'17, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1972 TEN CENTS ,~~~'--~~-'-~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~..;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~-~~~~~~--~~~~~~;__:~;__: • Roper: By MICHAEL GOODRICH , Of Mle Dell¥' , .... Ii.ff When Jack Roper graduated from high school in Granite City; lli., hls foal in life , was to become a metallurglca engineer. Today, instead of dealµlg with metals and· ores, Roper is superintendent of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. His ,business iS youngsters and their education. , He credits his career in education to a COUhlleiOr at Santa Ana C.Ollege . who in- Engineer Becomes Beach Educator troduced him to teaching. "He sbo,1ed me the impact a teacher and counselor could have on kids al)d I discovered bow strong my instinct to work with youngsters was," Roper recalls. The conversion at Santa' Ana College was the beginning of Rpper's diverse career in Orange' Couilty education. Following bis graduation from Santa Ana College, Roper enrolled at Chapman Colle'ge as an elem\m~ teachlhg ma· ----- jor. Not con~t working with just one age group, he d' vered another area or interest. "I found Juve e Hall and other ways to work witli )'OiJngsters. It was like being a sociologist and a teacher at the same time," Roper said. Working eight· hours a night as a prcr hflUon. counselor while attending college, he encountered youngsters of all ages and proble."llS. "I Qtet murderers and rapists along with some of the brightest )'OUllgSters I've ever worked with," Roper recalls. "Actually there were more bright kids in. Juvenile HaU than in the avera@ school, especially among the Mextcan- Amerlcan kids." ' Following his graduation from Chai>' man; Roper began •arldng as a fourth grade Instructor In a Santa Ana schooJ. But soon he waa back fu Juvenile Hall, this time as a teacher. "It was like teaching in a country day school. In the morning I'd have the kindergarten through eighth grade in ooe room and in the afternoon the high school and junior college kids W'ould move in," Roper' sai_g_. He was soon appointed vice principal of the school and by the time, he was 28, Roper · was principal of three Juvenile Hall schools. Two .years later, Roper was .named ad- ministrative consultant to the Orange County superintendent of schools. His job included legal matters , schooJ district liaison. teacher credentialing, retirement · systems and payroll auditing. Promoted again, he bec~ector or administrative services for the county schools. His responsibilities ran from boundary changes and unification elec- tions to budgeting. He was later named the first superintendent of the Saddleback Junior • College District. After a stormy year there he resigned and returned to the (See EDUCATOR, Page I) on reewa Riverside Road Closed 1=lot4 Ways ... . CORONA (AP) -At least one parson was killed and about 25 injured ln a series of pileUps on foggy· Riverside COunty roads ·today. The highway patrol said 40 to 60 cars crashed in pileups on the southbound -' lanes of the Riverside Freeway. Later, about 10 vehicles piled up on the nortbbotiiid ilde.of the freeway. Including - a gas transPon ~ct whiCb overturned and dmnped fuel across tbe pavement. '"l'lw It*'" · _,...,. Jll' -c4i!oo-~ --. "":"";1Jona. .,. .;... • -.. t FIREMEN BAT'l'&;E FLAMES WHr~ eRuPTenl"AP11.t· SOME '° CARS coLLID~D IN "®-· ~~~ -u ~ ~11·~~°""~. OM Died In llumlnt Cor; Many lnlu...i Ali. Multkehldo Cr11h on Rlvorsicfo Fi'eow1y "-,.,...~ ---'""w about 10 milea troallbere. • ., Man Dies While Aiding Victims Of Coast Crash . A 20-year-old Whittier youth was drag. Jed to bis death Sunday night when he 1ras bit by two cars while trying to aid the victims of ~ther accident on Pacific Coast H!gbway near Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach. Police said James Anthony Doerr, 20, Slipped and fell wblle trying to dart across ther-busy highway at 10:15 p.m. and was struck by a car driven by Jose Aguirre Rivera, 18, of Long Beach. Doerr was dragged 10 feet under ·Rivera's car and then was run over by another unidentified car which pulled him for another 20 feet, palice said. Police said they have been unable to identify the driver of the other car which mysteriously slipped away just after the JCCident. ,l. ~ of Doert told police he was hmning to ai4 the victims of a van which had just spun off the road on the north stde of the highway. r Tbe driver of t6e, van bad lost control Of the vehicle. Neither the driver or his passengers were Injured. • Rivera told police he was passing the ~an when Doerr suddenly appeared in , {ront of him and he was unable to stop before hitting the WhitUer youth. No charges are pending against Rivera, according to police. Wooden Indian Gone MONTEREY (UPI) -' The . Trade ''lWlnds gift shop on Fisherman's Wharf ·sOlday reported the theft of a seven-foot. -. cigar store lndlan valued at '150. RENT A.L A.D HA.S ,))RA.WING POWER Oteck this ad for .Its "quick draw" i )l>Wer: 1 PRtv 3 BR., 2 Ba, paUo, fncd by yd, frplc, W1k to bclr A ahopa. $250. per mo. Jse Oct.June. xxx·x:xxx wk df.yt, XXX·XXXX wknda. • The ad renled lhe house to the flrat pa"°" to reJ1pon<l the first dly It •P- jleared In the DAILY PILOT. The ad- .y~rtlser, of t'OUl'Se JV81 °ve17 bappY." The DAILY Pii.OT wanto the _..,... tty to make you happy the lllDO wty. ' ',Plal 64U6'11, the cflrect line to re...Ito, ., I Don SbiHer. drl,... of t b e finl am- Specumtion on Peace Boosts Stock Market bulance at the early multlpie crasti. said, -.-.--Ji.A. semi-blew-up-and .tbenrwere people all over the place. ·People were trapped in their cars. It was just tenible." He said be drova eight parsons In serioUS cond!Uoo to the Corona Com- r:iunity Hospital Five other ~ were-taken to other hospitals. From Wire Services NEW YORK -Continued speculation about peace in the Vietnam war boosted the stock n1arket sharply higher in early trading today on the New York Stock Ex· change. 'i:dM Sopliomores Break Ping Pong Mark-60 Hours By L PETER KRIEG Of .. °"" l!lllt It.ff Two Corona del Mar High School sophomores this morning broke· the known ~orld's Pipg Pong marathon record and tlien kept right oa playing. Mark GadBrlan and Jlan Paulscio pass- ed the !0-bour milestone a> 5 l".m. today but Were unsure whether they'd make it unUI 5 p.m .• their declared pal. They wmi still ~t It at 10 a.m., thoUgb. Playing continually with p.ve minute r~· periods eacb1 hour, the two 15--xear- olds have been virtually without 'Sleep even tonger, since they both attended school Friday, before slartlng·,.lbetr en-~ durance match al 5 p.m. that da.Y: "How do You feel?" someone uked earlier this morning. "Feel what?" came the rej>ty from young Paulson. "We go on streakl of tiredness," be said. "Most of the time now we Just don't know what11 happening." "People try to pome up and say something, we just look:at them strange- ly. Finally we bear them aftor they sboUt a couple of ttmea:, .. llJd Gadarian, son of Newpon Beach boatyard owner Anene ''Blaclde" Gadarlan. The two youths have had live witne..., through every minute of their game, Some 23 different persona ha,. signed •• orflclal observers with Mrs. Gadarian, Paulson's mother, Mrs. Darlene Paulson r of Eaatblulf and Pauloon'a ll'llldparents Mr. ,Md .Mrs. 0.01'(e .8rouaeau ol Garden' Grove, puu1-.1n most of the wi~ Ilea ~ ~ ,, • h,.,. ...... , an· up all ~ ntPt. alte1114tely enoiurallinlt the boy• to gl'fo u~ and then talkini to keep them go!nc. Graodpo oUer'id the most 1ta)'lne power. _ "lie brough his tape recorder and !Bot PING PONG, l'1lp I) ...... -- The Dow Jones industrial average wu up 12.19 at 955.00 by 11 a.m. By noon, It had dropped to 9.40 and to 8.20 at 3 p.m. By 11 a.m· Standard and Poor'S 500 stock indes, a broader indlcator, was ahead 1.12 ·at 110.36. Advances led declines, 1,014 tO 781 among the 1,398 issues crossing the tape. Volume amounted to around 3,110,000 shares during the first hour. There were indications presidentia1 ad- viser Henry A. Kissinger's talks in Paris and Saigon may have been fruitful, and hopes for peace encouraged many in- vestors, analysts said. The stock ,market has been sensitive to peace rumors the past several months. Many glamour stocks and electronics and compUters were big gainers in "the rally. IBM, Burroughs, Texas '.Instruments. Motorola and Walt Disney all gained around 4 points In early trading. This came on lhe heels of a 1011-polnt rise Friday which analysts ~aai.d was aJso prompted by enc:OUraglng reports about Vietnam. • Trading was very' brisk. despite the Veterans Day. holiday. Late I~ week, a Frtnch newspaper reported that a cea•fire waa expected by lbe•end of this month. Since then, new reports have bolstered Wall street hopes of an approaching cease-fire I n Indochina. Kissinger left S81gon for Washington (See REPORTS, Page I) • Sblffer said vl&lbillty In the fog when he arrived at the accident waa one or two feet, and said ......... had trouble find. Ing ·the Victtma. A big)lway patrol weather report said visibility in some areas was r.ero. Sheriff's · dei>utles said the fog wu In patches, so that drivera were traveling at a high rate ol ~ when lhey entered the low visitiWty areas .. The Identify of the single known fatali· ty was not immediately available. The vicUm reportedly burned to death in his car. Tavern Bandit Gets $109 Loot An anned bandit S6nday morning snuok Into the back of Ll1 Ante"• Tavern In Huntington Beach and escaped with $109 after holding the bannald •t gunpoint. Police said the waltr9, Ropple Gen-~ try, 23, was closing the tavern at 18391 Beach Boulevard when the man entered the rear door and ·c1emanded all the money In the blr. She told poll<t she. quietly gave the night's rectlpts to the robber, described as a Negro In bis mld·3l"s. Ho Ded out the rear door. No other witnesses were In the tavern at the time of the holdup, acconHna to police. Sirike :Up Band V olunt,eer Musicians Sought City administrator David llowlanda hat launched an eff<lrt lo -· musicians !or 1 loo.piece community b and. lie ls IOeklng t'Olldenta wllh musical bacl<ground who would like to volunteer lhelr Ume In the name Gf music. Interested musicians can phone Public Information Officer !1111 8'!0d, 536-5259, or City Librarian Waller Jollnaon, -1, to vol-. Rowlands Hid • concert director II also noeded. Appllcsnto abould -• .......,. of ihelr quallflcatlons and a "'tement of their lritertet lo city hall. It 'llOuld nol ........,.11y be a m•!l'Chinl band. but more of a concert band, Rowlaild8 uy1, Appear.-might be acbeduled In the central city park and al 1Dcatlon1 thr<uahoat the community, Rowlanda iald the el1JlliM!a will be oo muslclans nol already Involved In school bllftda. . Somo 11n1111t1a1 suppoft"for the <0mmun1ty band m1g1J1 ...,. tmn u.. city'• mullc ind pmmotloa flmd, blil city counctl!MI have nol yet 41ICllllOll the proposal. Rowlands Aid. , • . . ' . "· ; --· ' • ' ~.,--•' .. -~ MRS. JOHANSEN REMINISCES WITH COPIES OF OLD NEWSPAPER · Cost• Mes• Woman Recallt How Veterans Day Got Its Start , WWI Widow Recalls First Veterans Day Celebration By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI .. Deity l'Hot It.ff To many Americans the meaning or Veterans Day is obscure. Jt bu bet.'Ollle one of those "bonus" holidays everyone loves because it stre(ches out the weekend. Jt's a welcome reprieve from school, time to catch a haircut and a chance to run er- rands. Nobody ctlebrates It very much except Im-the American Legion or the Veterans ol Foreign Wars. The Ooughboys who helped rout the mighty German anny 58 years ~o look· ed at it differently. To them it Wal a vic- tory to end all wars and they celebrated it oo Nov. 11, the day the AnnlstJce was signed in 1918. Mrs. Janie Johansen, a Costa Mesan, would just as soon go on celebrating it on Nov. U because it has niore meaning to her. "I lived on a farm in Oklahoma when the war ended," Mrt. Johansen, 88, of 989 w. !!Ith St •• recalls. "We bad a bell outside with which we used to announce diMer. When the phones •tarted ringing all over that the war waa over and all the tralnt started tooting real loud, I just ran out ~ and nng ihat bell ., hard u I could. It was one of the big days in my life." Mn. Johanoen, juet 11 1t the time, bad not yet met her lint husband, Grayson M. McCarty, a sel'(eant In the Siflllll Corps. That was to occur on another big di)', Nov. 11, 1921, when he marcbe<l past heJ-durtna an Armlatlce Day Parade. When tile war ended, McCarly was in Coblem. Germany. a beautiful Rhtne .Rivet <UY, puttlnl out a newaPoper call· e4 the Ain<rlcan Anny ot OccuPoUon (AMAROC) News. A printer by trade, he had them bound In two volumtt -one ...w.d wtth bis outfit'• Insignia -and pye them to bis wife, ' Mn. Jobanaon malnlalnl that lhere are oqly tine Giber ltU In. existence. Ooo beloop lo the .Nlliclnal YMCA, ' another lo the Hoovei: tlbnl'.Y. and the .. ' ... I · third to the former editor, Guy C. Staf. ford . The small daily paper, now yellowed with age, is an amazing sourceboot on the aftermath of WW I. The rint edition. published on April 21. 1919, announces that it's "All Quiet After Violent Fighting." But there were riots in most of Germany. Munich was in a state of anarchy, and elsewhere Red German partisans had taken -JOO persons hostage. There was a continuous threat of renew· ed bostlllties until the peace was fo1mally signed. "It covered what was going on there and what was going on in the world and I think it did a pretty good job,'' Mrs. Jc.hansen says about her bound treasure. •Orange Wea liter Low clouds and fog along tbe coast wiJI clear by noon on Tu~ day, according to the weather ll!l'V- lce. with highs of 71 at the beacbee, rising to 77 Inland, Lows tonight 53-54. INSmE TODAY You can get a divorce tn Cal- 1/omia [or onlu $44 vndtT tht do-it-11our1elf 11tan. Or oei a cmnplttt' divorce kit for Jen than 1100. Set story on Page S . L.M..... S ...... 11 ...-. . ~ic:.--, •. ~ O...llttltM ,,, .,....,... ,,_ . .. ,,..,......., ,, ·-.. ... ........ , .. ,, ........ l4 --" DAIL "LDl H • Zoo Backer To Use TV For Appeal Mrs. Shelba Marsh, vexed by a Costa P.1esa ordinance prohibiting wild animals, says she is going lo plead her case for a children's pelling zoo on tele\'ision. Accompanied by Sheba, her raccoon, and Henry. her coyote, she "'ill a~ No\'. 4 on "El~entary News.' a children's news program on Channel 11. "1 want to show the kids the anlmals and 1 think Ir I go on TV, it will he1p me out with my plans for the zoo," Mrs. ~tarsh, of 614 Yi'. Bay St., saJd today. Ben Hunter, producer of the program, confmned Mrs. P.tarsh's guest ap- pearance and said she will answer quer tions about the animals from four "anchonnen," aged 9 to 11. Plans for the zoo at the Orange County Fairgrounds were rejected one week. ago by the C:O..ta Mesa Cily Council. Counclln1en, however, said they would recorWder her request provided they are furnished with a detailed proposal cover- ing animal housing and care. and liability insurance. r..1:rs. Marsh is trying to pl ace her animals in the zoo because they are being kept in violation of the city statute. Her coyote has been nabbed by the dogcatcher on several occasions. Latest arrival to Mrs. Marsh 's backyard menagerie is Chubber Rex , a miniature chimpanzee. As of last count, Mrs. Marsh had seven kittens, a dog. a coyote, two guinea pigs and two rac· coons. A lion and a bobcat are on their \\'ay, she says. Frot11 Pflffe I REPORTS ... today a/tor the most lnten!lve peac. talks of the Indochina war, and the U.S. Embassy said progress had betn made -toward a aettlemenl c But ti tndlcateci that the U.S. and South Vietnamese government still dllfer on Aome points. "We have made progress," said an em- bassy statement. "Talks will continue between us and the government of Viet· nam. It b oot in the lnterost ol negotla- tlom to be more specific at this time.'' Kissinger flew home to repon to Nlxoo alter m meetings ll'lth Preslde.nt Nguyen VBD 'lbl<u. AsUd at· the airport H his visit had been productive, Kblin&er ftPIJed, "It ilwa,.. II when rm bett." Three hours afl<r Klslioger le/I, the U.& Army d!lel ol .wt, Gtn. CreJ&htoa W. Abrams, 1dt lor Wubing10ri. He apent al< da}'I in Slipl usessiog the military situation and the Vietnamhation program, and sat in on some of Kw.. inger's meetings with Thieu. A1tbougb Newsweek and Ti m e magazlnes reported that the United Stat.es and North Vietnam agreed to a set· tJement that would Include a ceue-fin, there was no conflrmaUon from either U.S. or South Vietnamese offlclalJ in Saigon. • South Vietnamese 90\.lrces s a l d , however. that Thieu Usued orders that junior military offlcen -lieutenants and captains -should prepare to take over the funct ions of civilian village chiefs in the event of a cease-fire. This was intended to 1nrure that the Saigon government had a !inn hold on the populaUon and the government machinery should a 9ettlement come, the sources said. For t .... ·o months, government worken have been painting South Vietnamese flags on the doors, walls and gates of homes and other buildings all over the country. The na gs. which began ap- pearing more than a yea r ago, have often been described e11 a show-allegiance in the event of a cease-fire. • lnformanta said that during lhe put Jl"O weeta, government troops captured east two caches of Viet Cong nags ng operations near Saigon and on the hern coast. rr---------- OUN•I COAST Ml DAILY PILOT 1"' O!'enot CNll DAILY l"ILOT wtifi wflktl b c:on'lblllM !tie N-..l"r.st, h publllflH .-, W. er.,,._ CMd l"Ut>lilllifil ~. S-- nte tlllll*" ,,.. llUblltt!M, Mllflllrr lttroutft PrWrt, "' C.• M-. N"""'°"' 1eK11, """"""'°" IMCf'llf-1tln Vllt.y, lqun11 hlcf\. ,,.,.,,.,...,..,.._'* n Sin ci.-111 Sin JUM CtlplUf'-. 14 l lt!Qlt! Nlllllorl.A/ edlllon h Pfilblbhld Slh.lt'dt'l'I tnd SIH'tdlf1.. Tri. prfrlclptl Pllltllslllnt pllnt rs •I J:10 Wnl l1y Stl"MI, Golt• M ... , C1!Uornll, tW., Roffrt N. W1ff Pr..._. lf'!d l"vbllllltr Jeck It. c.tt.1 Vk•·~ .,.. °'""'' Mlnl9w Th-.it•• KM.JI ltll!Of lllom,11 A. Murphl11e -.. -a.Mt H. lae1 Rlcll•nl P. Niii ~•IM ...... •tlblrl r,,,.., c..,1n. Wllt1 Orl!IO* CWftfr Hftror H_. ...... .._.~ 17171 .. 1ch h•l•Y•l"ll M1'1it11t M4t•lu P.O. l•lll 7to, •26-41 --L'IUl'll IM<:ll· m """' """""" CC.It M ... : 3JI ~-=:Streit NIWllOh hWI: Jm M ._MN &lfl CIMllll!t: • Jt•rtl'I II C."*" •111 Tt11f•s1s <7141 '4l ... J11 C'-HIMI Alwftlftt '424,71 ,_ ................ co., Cttntll•• -1221 ~. 1m. °""""' CO.ti ~ ~,. .. ~ ........ 111\alnt!IM,, liltttw... Ntllt' Ir ldYtt!IMffltntt ........ """" .. ~ ......._, .,_.. ""' ........... ., .,....... .....,. "°*"' Cllff ........... M (111• M-. C.llfwM. ~ltn 1¥ ettrllr ..... 1!"''1.llllYI W 1M1 U.IJ lf!Ofllll,..I MUI"" .,..,..,. It~ mlftlhl)'. f • • ' De111.,.d1 Ret .. ed Fie• P.,.eJ Turk ~ijackers Boggs' Plane Still Sought PING PONG. • • p1a,ed ipCW'tleafter1" Niel Mn. PatJ.aon, , "then he kicked us out of the aanc• and ANCllORA(lE, A1UU ~ -.belan i.lllni oil! stories." . Still Holding:-6&-ftna ·i:~Dll Ill 'Illa ,... ,lllllod Gol "1111 I tolal al elPllldad -..., fir • • .... -balll. m&ifiii 1 I carrying HoUIO ,..... ,..... Democrat ~ Hale Boggs and They were down to ball that number three others. ti!~ morning. Wltb Boggs when the Ceana 310 "There's Ping Pong balls In every cor- LEADS SCHOOL DISTRICT Huntington Supt. Roper From Pagel EDUCATOR. • • county schools office. Then he moved to the Tustln Union High School District as director of business and finance be.fore winning the job as superintendent of the Huntington Beach Union High ~hool District in r..lay. 1971. "Huntington Beach had an image of being an outstanding district and I felt there -.·as a real challenge to do some things educationally," Roper said. But his oew district "as not without its problems. Roper lound funding and teacher morale to be low. He immediately decentralized the district giving school a~mlnbtrators and teacben the opportunlt y and respotl.\ibility to mold new programs and idea!: to-flt the needs-of t.beir-lndlvtdual schools. "I wanted tO hring the teachen back into the main stream of decision making and decenbializ:ation was the best way to do it," Roper explains. "The blggost difference ·in the distlicl since Jack toot over bas been the im- pro..,,...t in the ftiatlonsblp - the teachers and the district." says Trustee President Dennll """""· .. There's more harmony now than I can ever remember." Mangen also ci.dits Roper ll'lth lalmehing new classes in vocatiooal education and purau.lng an a,ggresaivt program lor acqairlng state and federal grants. But the problem of fw>dlna still facet him. '!be district's five schools .,.. bulg· ing and school bonds for new coo- .strucUon Mve yet to win voter approval. "Parenta aren't negative about the schoola. The problem is they're uot hap- py with taxes. They feel the money i.s already there but the priorities are mil· ed up. !J it mor. Important to build a freeway or a 9Cbool?" says Roper. "I'm optimistic we can bring the diversities of this district together," he adds. Board to Decide On Unification Trustees or the Hunt ington Beach City (elementary ) &:boo! District will decide Tuesday if they want to )Gin In further unification discussions with neighboring districts. Trustees have been asked to respond to a letter by Assemblyman Robert Burke CR-Huntington Beach) proposing a unification meeting among the six district.s that make up the Huntington Beach Union lUgb School Di.stri ct. Burke's letter wu sent after he discusaed potenUal unllication measures with the Fountain Valley School District. The Huntington Beach Trustees will hold their regular meeuiw at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Dwyer School Library. ANKARA (AP) -'!be 'l'luidsb govem- tr.ent again rejected the demands of four young Turks holding 66 Turks ho!tsge aboard a hijacked airliner In Solla, Buliana. today, and tbe bijaesm ... teoded their deadline. '!be hl)ackm said they wuuld blow up !he Turkish airline's Bottng 7'11 with all aboard uqleu the Turklsb govt.mment n.ed Ll tmprbClled leltlN, tnducllns ... senlenced to d&ath. They flrst set a deadline or DOOD -3 a.m. PDT -but 1hen extended it twjee, They also demanded certain cbaD&"' in Turkey and removal of "antidemociadc" articles lrom the Turkisb ""'51itulloo. BTA, the Bu1garian neWI l&""l'; Aid the bijacken wanted polltJcal 8'l'lum In BuJaarla lor themselves and tbe U prisonen w-freedom they ctenwvled The Turkish cabinet, after a 12·hour Big Tree Given To Huntington Civic Center A JO-foot Sequoia Coastal Redwood tree has been donated to the new HWJlinilOD &>ach civic center site by Rclllld Brindle. of the Brtndle Tree company. Brindle speciaHzeS in moving trees, in· duding a record ~foot tall redwood from northern California. His company openies from HunUngton Beach. His donated tree ls part of a civic center beautification effort sponsored by the women's division of the Chamber of Commerce. The tall redwood \\im't be planted lor another year, -when-the dvte center-ii completed. but it will be lbe tallest tree there. according to Mrs. Llndl Gerarden, president of the women's dlviiion. Meanwhile, Brindle will oowi.sb and keep the Redwood at his company's plant on Golden West Street. Landscapin1 of the civic center, on Main Street across from Htmtlngt.on Beach Higb School, wjU start in the !alt of 1973. 'Disast,er' Set To Test Beach ',l ..•• i Em.e~gf{n~y Plans Huntington Beach erilergency units will be tested Tuelday allernoon In a major, "planned" di.su&er. • The setup dis .. tor :mvo1v .. the faked crash ol a but:illiecl; with 5W'len. The surfers will actually be: memben of the city Fire Departmeot:s Explorer Scoot Post. . Wbtn the police s1l'llchboerd Is notified of the crash at 3:30-p.m., police, flre, Red Croos and boopltal unlta ... ex· pected to snap into action. other city deparqoeota ere 119!> Jn. volved in the disaster lfhich Is planned to checli the su.ngtm .and ·weatnesaes ol the city's clvU defense plan. The disaster, all aspee1a of it, wfll be under the watchful eye of Civil Defense Director Wilbur "Bill" Lai'. Following Tuesday's drill, Lage and other city staff members will review the individual actions taken and issue a crit._ que. This drill was announced in advance, but city officials say there may be future disaster drills which are not announced. Wrong Bumblebee The little bumble bee from the Foun- tain Valley cosblme conteet who waa pic- tured In SUnday's DAILY PILOT was Lisa Shine, 2, not Ciristlne Kahrin aa printed. Lisa was the winner ol the most original costume for children under $ yeara old In the Halloween festivities. May and D ecember · U,IT ....... Lowe Nine Pipe, 74, a Flathead indlan, married ·V1'1an Rice Red Wing, 23, of Brl!lol, Ellj .. , In his home !Own, MJMoula, Monl. They met by mall two yea.rt ago after Misa Red Wing saw hlJ picture on a record album. • -· • • I vanJahed on a rugbt f r om ner of our g1n1e," Mra. Gadarian said. meetlq SUndll'. rejected the demand lor Anchorage to Juoeau a weelc ago Durtng Iha day tbe two youtbl would release of the prl!ooer. But the cabinet today were Rep. Nick Beglcb ol play in the alley behind !he Gadartan was reported to have no objection to A1 k 40 Ru 11 L B 37 ho 11 o Be Bulgaria's giving u. hijackers asylum. as a, : SIC · rown, • a me at 1 gonia Avenue, but at night The hijackers demanded repeal ol a Begtch aide, ml Don E. Jonz, the when temperatures dropped they would ban 00 strtloos, 1m-1 In tbe liveo pllot. move Inside the garqe and clOH the r· · ---Spotlllllen for tbe fl e I c u e door ol the peasant. and better condltlonJ In Coordination Center at Elmendorf ThO boya bave attracted an OOdleu the univmltlea. Air ,.....,. Baile Aid two Jet rocon-stream of visitors and well lvlshers. "In the end, we believe: humane feel· nalssance pl~ 52 aircraft and "Poeple even stop ill In the grocery in.gs wiU prevail and the air pirates will four Coast Guard cutters engaged store and ask ua bow they're dolng," aaid tum looae passena:ers ~and crew," a ln the -·--..1. ~.~ ... but w•-M G da · government ipokesii:Jaa said. ~,, ~ ... .. rs. a nao. The hljackJor -early SUnday hampered by cloudl, rain and foa. The boys• motben and , grondparents on a fl'•ht rrom Istanbul to Ankara. '!be au said they thought Iha wbole thing is .. wonderful. pilot and 1 pauencer were lilahUy WOW> "We've prombed them each a gilt ol ded by gunfire dlirlng the lllSht. 11 the The fOllNllglne Jet landed safely at Council We1··e"hs 1!00 · y make It to 72 bours," said Solla durln rt Mrs. Brousseau. Grandpa mada the oller g a mowstonn. Sect! ty ·a Utue eas!a-. on bisl;cr;kelbook when he forces llllTOU!lded Iha era/I and bot mew i. liter were brought Jo ti. ..,. Rezoning Site ='t.edu!n~ ugh'F~r.lnl! Iha T.it ·,... "under the complete control "I think H's grea~" said Mra. Paulson. or the 1etror1sts; and the 11tua11oo .... Of Valley School ;;:...!!""1' they needed 1amethJ'i uke tense," according to BTA. · '!be plane landed In Sofia with 81 "They •bowed that they could do It," persona aboard, including tbe fatJr tit-The rezoning of an elementary school Mn. Gadarian said. "·Many times we jacken. But BTA said the hlJacken let site: to 8 69-home: planned development suggested that they lhould give: up, but the two wounded men leave: the plane will be considered by Fountain van-pthlaeyym· justg.o I~ at one anotper and keep on along with two motben and their "' chirdren. city councilmen when they meet at I p.m. The boys stopped keeplna ...,.. alter The hija cking was nearly Jdenttcal to Tuelday in the Community Services the 120th game. "When •_,,body got the commandeering May 3 of a Turkish BuUdlng. tired of keeping track," said Mn. DC9 airliner with 59 persons aboard. It The property, bounded by Starfish, La Paul!on. also was taken over by four leftists wbo Alameda, El Portal and La Tierra The event bas less thaa tk:kJed Mark's diverted it to Solia. father. A Turkish government spoke!man said streets, has been masterplanned as a At the outset the-older Gadarian said he boped the Bul&arian government school site by the Fountain Valley School be guesaed Ibey would last "•bcxrt two would give "'!be same help and un-District since July im. boura and 10 mlnulol" biit Ibis IDOrn1ng dentancllng" this time. But becauoe ol I slate quota on tlCbool be would only lay "Well, well, II tbe '!be lour hlJact.n last spring demand-constructloo, known . u ~ ~ trend catcbel oil, w've lcund a way to ed tbe release of condemned terrorists -~ cut Iha crime ratel;. and polJUcal ·asylum. Tbe Turks refused survival syllOm. tbe dlllrlcl bu DOI been "We'll have ball ldda In Corona de! to free the terrwlsla, but urged the able to purcMM tho 11-ty. · " Mar Ju oomebody'• e pll;yfni plnfl Bulgarians to grant the hijackers uy!um Ownen of the property llave agreed to -· and tbe othe!i drlvJnc around to save those on tbe plane. the planned ~ by C1uaJc ~re~'~ to'~ .... lne hbw Alter 27 boun, the hlJacken gave up Homes since approval lor a lchool by the -;:~.1 e=-"tbe .... ..'..a-~~-~·-•--and are awaiting trial In Bulgaria. The -·-~ ~---~w• condemned men they tried to free were state doea DOI seem likelJI. and agreed to lie an olllctal 11'1-lor banged three da}'I !Jterc. -----Under. tho ~val l}'ltem, a -aboul-a-ball-an bour-Sunday oftemoon. . school diltrlcl must have a· .. certatn ratio . '.'L bad to .go to-the kitchen and.1tart " -of student. per llC[Uate fOOfage before It the roaet and be knew ll he wanted tbe Firemen Quench may quallly to buy I alte. rout, he'd bave to be Iha Wltneu," Mrs . F lain Vall ••--Gadarlan laid. oun ey uua not qualify at thil "So be took a martini and went to the Blaze On Boat point but llchool admlnlstraton believe garage to read the Dally Piiot " Ibo oald the site may be needed In the Mure and The two youtbl said !be)' darted !bO plan to submit a hardship pie. to the marathon "becauae we wanted to be the An $1,000 boat n.. was quenched Satutday niomlng by Huntlniton Beach firemen and county n.. unlta In Sunset Aquatic Park. Tbe blau heavily damaged • »loo! cabin cru1aer owned by Dooald Taylor of Cypnaa. Taykr .... aleeplq In tbe boat wbm the Dames erupted about 8:30 a.m. but he escaped unlitJW'ed, firemen said. Counly . liremen said the fire was ap. parenily caused by fuel from a camper- style stove leaking onto the deck, where the stove's pilot light might have ignited It. state Allocations Board in November for best at toroe:thlng." perm1sa1.., to buy the land. AUbough two-man Plng-l'llq ta bot Tbe district bu ukecl the clty councll listed In the current Gui.... Boot of to delay Ill declaloo unW the appeal can World Reoon!s, they llld l<Ran:h tum- be beard by tbe stata boanl. ed up tbe 8"our ._.:. Nun Killed in Crash EL d:NTRo .(AP) -A Roman catbollc nun wu killed and ftve others seriously Injured In an auto accident near caJexlco, a=rdlng to Imperial County authorities. Killed was Sister Maria Socorro VaJdevia Moronas, 41, a private instructor at the Villa Fontana school in Mexicali. A check ll'lth the publlshlnl company that puts out the peper!Jact -1lltlnfl world recorcll In Just abcxrt everythinf aald the ......., for four.man Ping P ... with the players playing alternately was nearly 500 boura. When lnloi'med that 1 ... players have been going at it tbem.telvee for more than 60 hours, the New York executive said, "that's hard to believe, but If they can document It, we'll forward the tn- lonnatlon to the edJtors In England." CONVERTIBLE OR BUILT-IN! DISHWASHE ConYtflflH Dlahwaohorwllh Hlncflome Tnloll ... Top •....._.T ........ ........ ............... • 1'1 .. ""' ...... _ I,._.,.....,. ... _ _... ....... _, ... .................... 1HIMI•· .... .......,_ .................... -....................... -·-•MT• ........ ' .,.., ....... _ ......... -·-,.,. ....... ...,._ ....... .,.. ...... .... . .......... ...... .---....-al&'"t1111uW .......... u., .............. ....... ,.. ................ -MT_.. ....... ,1815 Newport Blvd. ·. OUR NO. 1 GOAL: TO MAKE GENERAL ELECTRIC THE BEST BUY MEMBER OF CALIFORNIA'S LAltGEST COOPERATIVE BUYING GROUP WITH THE VOLUME . BUYING POWER OF 110 STORES '° Mitt ton Doll1ra '" Buyl"t Power We •rw an authorlz.d GENERAL ELECTRIC Downtown Cotta Mo .. l'hone 548·7788 .,....,.._ • Mo)OI' Appl lane• and Te.l•vl1lon s.rvr .. Center I I I " ' ,I ~ ( I I I League B'acks By JACK BllOBACK CMlllt0.1,,..-WSf.tf A group or 142 personJ who became United St.ates citizens on Oct. 11, three days after the deadline to register to vote in the Nov. 7 General Election. should be allowed to cnat their ballots, according to tht Orange County Chapter of the League of Women Votera (LWV). The LWV bas flJed a class action suit on beball of EIWll>eth Ann RobertJ of Brta wbicl. will be beard Wedneeday In Orange County Superior Cow1. Mrs. Roberts. a former cltlien of Great Bri- taiu, was one of the 142 perBOns sworn ln an a U.S. citizen Oct. 11. "It we win our 1>1>lnt, Mn. Roberts and the other 141 new citizens will be able to vote on Nov. 7 for president and vice president," said Mrs. Jeannette Turk, DA.Jl.! Pli,!! St•rt Pflefll -VETS, YOUNG AND.OLD-Vietnam veteran Stuart Baker-and World War ·1 veteran 0 . W. Price, both of Laguna Beach, compare notes over captured North Vietnamese rifle brought home: Although they ai"e generations apart, the two men know what Veterans Day is all about, even if few others do. No Celebration Vets Recognize Day 011 Nov. 11? ' Today is Veterans Day but for the fact that gov&nment offices are closed, there are no announced ceremonies planned on the Orange Coast to honor the men who have served the country in the Armed Forces. A check of the cities, American Legiod Posts, the VFW and local memo'rial parks showed that Veterans Day will practically go unnoticed this year, A spokesman for Rart>or Re s t Memorial Park in Costa Mesa offered this explanation: "Most of the veterans I •know have always observed Veterans Day oo the 11th or November. as it used to be. They say that 's when they'll celebrate It." The armistice that ended World War I was declared at 11 a.m . on Nov. 11, 1918. Sina! 1922. Armistice Day has been of· ficially celebrated on Nov. ll. ,, It was made a National holiday in 1938 and in 1952, the name wa.s changed to Veterans Day so that veterans sho had served since World War I couJd also be honored. In 1970, the date was changed to the fourth Monday in October by act of Congress. But it looks Like Veterans Day will alwa:Y& be Nov. 11 on the Orange Coast. On the lighter side was the escape at- tempt .of two German girhl from a }ocal hospital, both wearing A m e r i c a n uniforms, "one riding a horse and the other astride a cow wt !n apprehended." l\1cCarty .l1so worked on the newspaper when the June 28, 1919 editk>n announced tr.at the "Huns" reached Paris to sign the treaty and a day later when headlines cried out "War is Over, Peace is Signed" and "Treaty to Lay Foundations for a Changed World ." POW s to Be Remembered In Saturday UCI Rites ' Although Veterans Day was marked today with a minimum of pomp and ceremony, relatives of servicemen miss- ing in action or Imprisoned in Southeast Asia have every reason to remember their loved ones today, as they do every day. Had there been parades or former heroes today, these servicemen would not been amoDg tho.se honored . They are still in North Vietnam, Laos, or elsewhere, imprisoned or dead. Mrs. Barbara Hedrick or Irvine, whOse brother Air Force Capt . James Wayne Herrick will br honored Saturday in ceremonicil at 1 p.m. in Campus Park on the UC Irvine campus, is among those Amerlcaru; awaiting news or a loved one listed a.s being "missing in action." The following is drawn from "tier Vetei'an's and everydey tribute to all who are ~lilg in action -"I Am My Brother's Keeper." "October 27, 1989 wa.s an average No Smoocliing In Uniform Cl.ACTON. England !UPI) -Head- masler Ralph Smhh has banned boy> and &iris at Clacton O:lunty hlgb icbool from tlsstng, cuddling and holding haods toge1b<r while wearing lbe school •nifonn. "lt'• ridiculous," 31ld one 18-.)lea.M>ld ltudenl . "It eteJ1ll we are old tnOUsh to 1e1 married hut not to hold llandl. "I don't see why we •hould behave llke· -.am Jo.t beeaWie we are .,..ltlng our unUonna. '1 October <lay. slightly cloudy. I wa.s doing dishes and lhe phone rang. It was Dad. " 'Barb, it's Jim! He's missing ln ac-- tion.' What do you say when the world falls apart and when your mind refuse! to believe? I couldn't answer. Later I talked to my mother. I trjed to convbx:e them Jim was aldght, that he was down and biding fnJJll the enemy. "When he could he would walk to friendly territory and be safe again. ''I mourned a brother t loved ... how dare anyone say he is missing. MtSSlNG, the vague indefinite word, so trivial. No one is just missing1 He ls a n.re. a being. He couldn't evaporate! "'But -f cried. "For three aays I did not leave our home. partly in grief and partly In the faith that Mom and Dad would call , saying Jim had been rescued and was well. The call never came, but I believed. "II has been three years. bot time has not dulled the pain. It's still htte, NOW, and often. "I thank God you do not have to feel lhis. t thank God Jlm was not my IOfl. "But. because I believe In God. In Jlm and In you; I WTOle Uris," Mn. Hec!rlck sakl. "I believe lf others could feel the paln througb me. that you would not aUow this tragic condition to continue. "I only hope you never havt to live this pain for yourself. "We fBmiliel only a1k for Red Cl'oa inspection of all prisontt of war camp1, proper food and medical treatment, free exchln&e or mall ~ween POW• and families, and a lJst of names of ALL POWa .... "That we moy lmow If my brother If dead or alive. !oni JOU help?" • . q Mo¢1r, Octobt, 23, 1q72 H DAILY PILOT f -. New Citizens' Voting Rights ~ p,...klent of the county LWV. 'l'wo of 1he """~ tried to register after the Oct. 11 ceremonles and were told that they would oot be eligtble to vote No. 7 by the Oran&• Olunty Registrar of Votera office, according to Mn. Turk. Sblrley J"rice, vice ptt!ldent of t~e county LWV, announced at the ceremonies in sant:a Ana that the new citizens we.re elig"tble to register and vote Nixon Hits Congress On Spending WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. (AP) -Casting the Democratic-controlled Congress as villain, President Ni.Jon sald today "The time has come to stand up to the big spenders" who, be contended, threaten to cause "higher prices or b)gher taxes - or both." He said he will fight excess spending with vetoes and fuod holdbacks. Nixon released a statement on arriving at Westchester County Airport near this New York City suburb at 10:25 a.m. PDT as he began a busy half-day of motorcading, rallies and reception,, in the area. Thousands turned out to greet him here. He said: .. The abject failure of the 92nd Congress to bold a responsible level of spending casts a long shaqow over the glow of a resurging American economy." Nixon said the economy probably will grow this year at a rate exceeding the Administration's 6 percent estimate. He la"id claim to cutting inflation In half and asserted the Administration is "creating more new jobs than at-any time in more than 16 yeaf3~" However, he said, Congress has recently einbarked on a "spending spree" and added : "Today, I have some news !or the big spenders ... "I'm going to use every weapoD at my command to hold spending in this ft.seal year as close as possible to $150 billion -so that we will not have a new wave or crippling inflation and there will be no need for higher taxes." Nixon continued: "During the coming week. there will be •a number of vetoes. If there are big spending bills which I must sign (or policy reasons, I also promise to exercise my f\ill lepl powers to hold down these appropriations, or reduce others to make room for the new programs." The total impact of actions by the just- adjourned. Congress, "If left to stand, would be higher prices or higher taxes - or both." be argued. Leaving much or the campaigning to "surrogates" -mainly membel'Lof his administration speaking for him -Nixon has made :ivowedly political appearances in just siJ: states since his renomination. He wa.s accompanied on this trip by Mrs. Nixon. Before leaving Washington, he con- ferred with bis chief budget and economic policy advisers on legislation passed by • Congress before It• a d· journment Wednesday. Following a mo~de journey tod8y through almost a dozen communities in Westchester County, N.Y., Nixon was to attend a reception for GOP leaders from 11 states at the borne of Gov. Nelson A. Rocke.feller near Tarrytown. The President then was beading for an evening rally at the Nassau County coliseum in Uniondale on Long Island, and winding up his day at still another rally at MacArthur airport in lslip, Suf· folk County, where his plane would be waiting to carry him back to Washington. The White House announced Sunday an addition to the Republican Candidate's stump schedule: an evening rally Th.UJ'l- day at a high school in Ashland, Ky. 'lbe Bluegrass State will be the seventh on his campaign .schedule. Nixdn hu visited only New York, Illinois, Mchlgan, California, Tuas and Georgia on trips ofliclally pronounced lo be poilUcal. Oo Saturday, NW>n fl~ to Cleveland to launch a 100-mile motorcade that wfl1 take him through northern Oh.io, wlndlng up in Warren. Pendleton Shore, Mateo Canyon Okayed as Park . California 's parks commission hss granted its blessing to the general dt:velopment plans for 1,300 acre11 of San Mateo canyon and six miles or former Camp Penrlleton shoreline to eventua1y become one or California's largtst state parts. Commis"1011er1 late ta.st Friday ap- proved of the genoral planl after hearlna tcstlmooy from .... ra1 olllclals, In- cluding San Clemente City MllNIJtt K..,. neth Carr. The development plJn calls for t,000 campeltts and n:tenslve recnaUOn f1cfUU.. tt the large ocr .. ge reio.laed fM public U10 by Preldent Nllon lut ytar. c.oncem, however, has ((Jlftl! from CVr over whtcb IOrt of WUU! ttta'tment proc.- ,... wtll be er-b7 lllo Sllte lltplrt- ment ol Pari<I and Jle<mtk>n. • Carr told commlUlonm lhll a J"'O- pooed mtaU, Imported wult treotment system would not follow lbe r<&lonal AP' Nov. 7. She uld llhe had been told til ls wu correct by a member of the reclalrar'• lllalJ. Later, Registrar of Vottro DaYid HltclJcock said lbe Jn. formation had been in error. Tbe sult will be argued for the LWV uy Richard P<lberbrldge, president of the Orange County ACLU before presiding Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner Wednesday. Joan Riddle, voter service chairman ot the LWV, said the right of new citizens to vote for president and vice president ia be!ng argued on the basis of a C..Worni.11 electlon code provi!lon which llltes that Ir a person ba1 fullfilled all requirements other than that of residence before an election date they shall be allowed to vote. "Thls Pitrticular class of people are being excluded from this right ,'' Mrs. Riddle said today. "If they had become Sear~h Begun WWII Holdout Soldier Souglit ~ LUBANG ISLAND, Philippines (UPI) -A combined Japanese-Philippine search party widened it.s hwlt today for one of two holdout Japanese soldiers authorities say may have killed and wounded 130 persons in a 27.year-old pri- vate war. The defense department said in Manila today that despite this, it ntight forgive the man U and when he is captured. His comrade in the jungles of Lubang Island died Thursday in a clash with pollce. "World Warn would have ended for both men on Thursday, but one man got away," said IA. Col. Pedrito de Guzman, chief of the national poli'ce on the h land. Authoritlea tentatlvfly identified the survivor still fighting the war with a Japanese army rifle used a generation ago as 2nd Lt. Hiroo Onoda, 50. He wa.s listed by authorite.s as the last holdout ol the Pacific war which ended officially in 1945. Searchers stepped up their hunt on the 102-square-mile island 75 miles southwest of l\1anila by bringing in helicopters to track down the man. State Elections School, Realty, Insurance Groups Back Candidates By DOUG WILLIS SACllAMENTO (AP) '-Some of the biggest spenders in California legislative races are schciol teochers, real estate in· terests and insurance companies, a survey of recent campaign contributions disloses. For instance, 54: Assembly candidates and 17 State Sen&te candidates have received contribuUoos from the Associa- tion for Better Citizenship, an affiliate or the California Teachers Association Watch the Girl From Ipattema RIO DE JANEmo (AP) -A 24- year-old Brazilian fashion designer says .she will go to court to get permission to swibathe topless on Ipanema Beach. Rh>'s police deparbnent, prepar- ing for the coming South American summer, has warned women here they will be arrested U tlley wear Eutopean-style "monokinis" i n public. "I don't consider a naked breast obscene," said Beatriz Sklou, who asked a local lawyer to try to get the police ruling <iverturned . "Nobody can be forced to dres,, the way the police want."· One newspoper illustrated the .story with a cartoon showing a policeman talking to a sunbather wearing only the top part of her bathing suit. "I "You 're right, 1 ad y," the policeman says. "It's the other way that's against the law." 673-5051 0,... Wed. thno lluft, '1:!0 .. 5:30 ~~~·L.. l1lA I lw41•...._a..t which goes under~tl'ie name AllC:---" The California Real Estate Political Action Committee Is backing 6 l Assembly candidates and 18 Senate can- didates and has made contributions to both sides in six races. Another big contributor to state legislative race!! is the Association of ·eaufornia Insurance Companies. The in- surancemen's political fund reports con· tributing to the clunpaign.s of 35 can· didates for the Assembly and 17 Senate candJdates. State election laws don't require any of those groups to tell bow much they con- tribute to any candidate -just which candidates they are supporting. But the candidate! in their individual campaign contribution statements are required to list all contributions of $500 or more. A survey of those statements - which have been pouring into the Secretary of State's office for the past three days -gives an indication of how muc.:1 money special Interests are putting into the 1972 legislative races. Thirty of the 71 candidate§ on the teachers' list report ABC fund con· tributions totaling $8i,OOO with individual contributlon.s ranging from $500 for Democratic Assemblyman K e n n e t h Meade of Oakland up to $8,00> each for Assemblyman Alister McAlister (o-San Jose ), and Kenneth Maddy CR·Fresno). Three tlmes as many Democrats are on the teachers contribution list as Republicans, and about 90 percent of the ABC money is going to incumbents. There are more candidates on the real estate fund list. but the average con- tribution is less than half the siz.e of the average ABC contribution. The real estate fund ls also giving most or its money to incumbents: but It is hedg· ing Its bets. and has made contributions lo both candidates in five Assembly races and one Senate race. prooch In l:'eatment belftl tmphalllied by '~===~==~=== uate anttpoUU~ •atttW.. 1 .. \ • ' citiwu in another state and moved lo California th is week they would bt> allo~·· ed to vote under the code. ' ··\ve feel It IJ unfair to exclude the~ people Just becllll3e they h8ve Jlvl!d 1it- Orange County rather than some other state," she argued . Mrs. Jliddlc said the Ct1.lifornin code which applies only to voting for president'' and vice president l.s ln the state eleetion law . to confo rm with federaJ rrgulatlons.' Uf'IT ....... WW 11 SOLDIER SOUGHT 2nd Lt. Hiroo Onoda, SO Bradley-Bur1is •• •• La·w to Provide Eoast-$584,000-' ~· Orange Coast cities·· this month win ' ,. receive $584,000 from a scheduled $34.l million October distribution statewide of,.. funds under the Bradley-Burns Local Sales and Use Tax Law, state boa.rd or' ' equalization chairman John W. Lynch. has announced. The $.14.1 million comes rrom August prepayments of various local tas:es. in-. eluding the one-percent sales and use tax ; the new one-fourth percent ioca.;. sales and use tax payment to counties for local transportation fund; San Francisco' Bay Area Rapid Transit District transac- tion and use tax; and Southern eauromtK Rapid Transit District transaction and use tax. ' The taxes which were due Sept. 20 aro. administered by the board of equallza· tion. The remainder of money due local government for the third calendat quarter will be disbursed in November'. and December. • Tax monies received by coastal citieS are : -Costa Mesa; $165.cm. -Fountain Valley : $20,500. -Huntington Beach: $127,500 -Irvine: $20,500. -Laguna Beach• $211'AO. -Newport Beach ; $105,000. -San Clemente: $18,000. -San Juan Capistrano: $8.500. -Seal Beach: $13,250 . The county government will receive $80,000. Taxes received In a I I locaJ· government entities in the county will . total $2.Cl6 million. A11"aheim is the largest recipient, wltH $330,000. Villa Park is the smallest, wit~. ll25. Italy's Largest and finest manufacturers of touring and competition Bicycl.s. Priced from $99.95 to $400. EXP'ERT REPAIR SERVICE 2120 ·West Ocean Front 1 Bile. WOii of Newport Pio< I • • OAll.Y PllQT Jo~~ ..-,sttng,~J ·~@ with Tom nrphi e ··,-:,_ Republicans Move Soi1th lfiDING THE COP: As Orange Count)' girds for the NO\'. 7 presidential election. Registrar of Voters Da\le Hitchcock has just unveiled final tabulations that declare we now have 794,174 Orange Countians eligible 10 vote this time around. Pondering the list, you are abruptly jerked by an odd reality. Where did solid Republican Orange County go? Republi· can Orange County has always been lhought of as places like Santa Ana. our beloved County Seat. Or, when national political wags refer lo Orange County, they likely flap about Anaheim and Disneyland and solid gold Republicanism. JllTCHCOCK'S FIGURES. ho11•e\'tr. clearly illustrate that all of this is myth. Santa Ana stands solidly 1n the Democratic camp ~'ith 33.761 Demos to only 28,440 GOP registrants. And in con- servative old Anaheim , the Democrats edge out in front of lhe Republican registrants 41 ,267 to 39,848. Shocked by all thi s, you look sideways a~ the figures again. They arc still the same. Further, you note in the city.by-ci· ty compilations that in addition to Santa Ana and Anaheim. places I i k e \Ye.stm1nster, LOS l\.Tami!os, cypress, Stanton, and Buena Park fall into fhe Detnocrallc camp. Yes folks. even Buena Park. v:here Walter Knott holds forth. is registered 15.359 Democrats to only 1 O • 7 2 9 Republicans. ALL OF THJS is enough lo dra"' cold sweat from long.time Orange Countians. Desperately, they must scan down to totals at the bottom of the registration lists. There, in the final tally, they find blessed relief. In total. Orange County slill stands c.'Om!ortably with.in the GOP ranks. There are 394,93.l with the GOP and only 337 .279 with the Demos. A RepubUcart margin of 57,656 registered voters. Still, "'ith places like Santa Ana and Anaheim over in the Democratic camp, you are left wondering where hide all those Republicans? Analysis reveals they no longer lu rk in the centra l hard core of Orange County. They have migrated into happier climes right here along our Orange Coasl. l N SAN CLEl\1ENTE, £or examp le, you could fire a cannon down El Camino Real and the chances are 2 lo I you won't hit a Democrat. In Newport Beach there are 25,5.17 Republicans and only 10,503 Democrats. To find a Demo in Newport , you have to shoot up a flare. Additionally, the Republicans prevail nicely .in Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach, Seal Beach, Irvine, San Juan Capistrano and just about every coastal locale ex- ctpl Huntington Beach where the GOP still holds the lead by a couple of thotL<;and out of 68,074 registered. Among all cities, however. the GOP margin is only 31,527 or less than 10 per· 1 cent of Orange County's registered voters. A SO YOU J\.11GIIT still ask. where is t11e Republican margin? \Veil, it's out there in unincorporated territory by a 2 to I ed_ge: this . '!leans c:oastal places like Mission VteJO, Laguna Niguel, Dana Point, El Toro, Lake Forest. Leisure World Laguna Hills, Capistrano Beach and Doheny Palisades. In these places, the Republicans lead the Demos 60,123 to 33,994. Clearly, Ora111e County 's solid gold Republican no longer coughJ: in the smog of downtown Santa Ana or Anaheim. He has moved out for a breath of fresh salt air. U.S. Downs Fast MIGs Over Hanoi SAIGON !UPI ) -U.S. Fl Pbaotom jet fighter-bombers have 5hot down three Russia-lit ~llG2l's, U1e r .. teat jet. In 1he North Vietnamese air arsenal. in j dogfight over the tlanoi area, the U.S. command said today. No r S. planes "·ere damaged ln tbe fight, the command said. The aerial bat· tie octt1rred Oct. lS. but the story WM released only today be<'ause "we ju.st got coofirmat ioo'' of the MlG kills, the com· mand said. 1\ command spokesman said he h3d no explanation of wh~ it took so long to make the conflrmatlon. In the ground war. field 'reports said Viet Cong commandos launched a futile attack on the village of Suoi Giua ooly 11 miles north of Saigon before dawn today and were beaten off by government troops. The reports said t"·o Communists u·ere killed in the fighting. • The U.S. command said BS2 bombers t>ar!y today pounded....C:Ommunlst posi· tions ~ miles northt>ast of Saigon to thv.•art another sheUing of the big Bien Hoa air base, where two civilians \\'ere killed and 41 other persons -including 18 Americans -were wounded or in· ;ured in a Sunday attack. EARLIER SUNDAY. field reports said go\"emment troops drove Viet Cong soldiers from Bung Cau, a hamlet only 15 miles north of Saigon overrun by the Communists Friday. The Saigon com· mand said North Vietnamese gunners in the Central Highlands shelled a govern· ment ranger force near Due Co. 250 miles oorch of the capital, and fought two other skirmishes with another ranger element a few miles away. The fight ing left 63 Communists dead at a cost of frve South Vietnamese killed. seven ""'OUllded and eight missing, the command said. In the air war over North Vietnam. the U.S. co~rnand said tactical jet fighter- bombers fle\V Only J40 .sodies.-(One -flight by one aircraft) in the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m. Sunday--fewer than ha If the usual number. ~tilitary .sources blamed heavy thunderstonns. About eight U.S. Phantoms teok part in the Oct. 15 dogfight against four MIG21's. military sources said . The phantoms used 20mm cannon and Sidewinder heat·seeking missiles to bring the 11-UGs down. U.S. planes have shot down 177 hUGs in eight years of air war over North Viet- nam. command records showed, com· pared to 71 ti.S. planes doYt'tled by M1G s. These figures include more than 60 MlGs and about half that many U.S. jets down- ed since President Nixon ordered resumption of the air war over the North April 6. Singer Gets Sendoff MELBOURNE, Australia (UPI ) - Hundreds of teen-age fans and scores of policemen saw English pop singer Joe Cocker leave for Britain Saturday after an abbreviated Australian tour man-ed by two an-ests and one deportation order'"" Cocker told an airport news conference he was warned Australia was very strict about drugs but said he never expected "to get busted." Toy Studied For War Use \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Over a period of four years, the Navy spent $375,000 in a scientific study of Frisbe_es_ to see if the flight charactertst1cs of these plastic toys ~ould be adapted for warfare. But 11 was no go. From high atop Hurrican Mesa in Utah, scientists sent Frisbees and clay pigeons as well, spinnlni Into the air. Tracking ca m eras monitored the flights from the 1,000-foot.-high cliff. The results of the tests were reported in a paper entitled "Adap- t~tion of the Frisbee F1ight Prin- ciple to the Delivery ot Special Ordnance." • Sour Note John Mac Enulty, tubaist of1he St. Louis Symphony, had to use this battered instrument at :r weekend performance be- cause his pr i zed tuba \\'as stolen from his suburban St. Louis home. Trio Perform Scientific Ghost Hunt LITCHFIELD BEACH, S.C. (UPI) -A parapsychologist, a practicing witch doc· lot-and _a-psyeruc rese_arc?ier spenJ the \veekend at a ''haunted" plantation in an unsuccessful search ror a friendly ghost. The three gathered to make a pre- HalJoween check on the ghost of Dr. John Heam Tucker, but the spirit 0£ the kindly old doctor railed to materialize. The get·logether was arranged by an Atlanta advertising agency handling the promoUon for Litchfield, which is being turned into a resort. Legend has it that Tucker, \\'ho died in 1797, upon returning to tbe plantation late at night from house calls would ring the bell at the gate so tbe servants could prepare his bath and be ready to tend his horse. llE SO LOVED Litchfield that he did not "'ant to leave, even in death,-and ac· cording to the story still roams the stairwell of the great house. Each time before he appea'rs thei'e i! the Jlnkling of {l bell to announce that he is "home.'' Hans Holzer,a parapsychologist, spent Friday night at Litchfield.. He said that he didn't hear or see anything that would lead him to believe tbat Tucker was still around. But Holur allowed that be might have been "too sleepy" and continued the search along with J. T. McTeer, v.·ho says he is a practicing witch doctor, and Peter Calhoun, director of a psychic in· stitute. The three never did see Tucker. McTeer, a soft-spoken ~year old former sheriff of Beaufort County, claims he is the most famous of South Carolina's numerous Witch doctors. "Voodoo and witch doctors have been here for years and years," said McTeer. "But now it's growing in popularity three limes as fast with the whites, all wver this country from Texas a n d Pennsylvania to the Carolinas." Library Crack Probed AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Workers wi ll start inspecting the travertine marble "skin" ol the Lyndon B. Jotmson lJbrary today to see what bas caused some or the factna: to crack, loosen and fall oil the 18· month-old building. Th1rty or 40 slabs of the beige marble will be taken from the giant building, so Unlvtrsity of Texas of· ficials can determine how much of the facade will have to be removed and reset. Campaign_ Twilight McGovern 'Woul.d Rejoice' at Viet Peace WASHING TON (AP) -Sen. George McGovern be1lns the last two weeks of hi. lq campaign for the White House todly, declerina \hat he would reJalce at a prH!ecUon penoe settlanent. and quotJnc South Vietnamese President N1"3'en Von Tbleu as aaymc he would rutgn "lf we reduce American military and economic aid." 'fbe Democratic presidential nominee planned to campalgn ill Philadelphia and New York with much of his day devoted to political television. Before he set out, McGovern was to tape for broadcast Wednesday night a JO.. minute speech oo morality, c:ompUoo and the American system. McGovern said Sunday be has no doubt that if the United States withdrew sup- port from th current Sajgon 'govern- .. ment, as "he advocates, Thieu would re- sign "wilhln a matt.er of boun. •.• " "RE TOW ME dlnlctly when t vl!lted with blm last September that evtn If we red uced American military and economic aid that he'd resign," McGovern said on the ABC-TV ln~ervlew program "lssues and Answers." "And I think we ought to tal<e him up on tbet offer," the canclldate added. McGovern found blma<lf -ted on the program with a question he waa told WU IUbmJtled by the White llou!e. The question. related to McGovern's com- parison ol U.S. bomblni ill Vietnam wtth Adolf filler's pollcleJ. "l thlnt this i. ..ally an Interesting development here," McGovern replied," that I could come on a program to be ln- te"1ewed and have questions submitted * * * * * * Ex-Yorty Aide Says GOP Supplied Data on Muskie MILFORD, N .H. (AP) -The man who' ran Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty's unsuccessful campaign in the New Hampshire Democratic primary says he got help from the Republican National Committee in pre.paring attacks on Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine). Robert D. Philbrick said Sunday he was C(lnt.acted by John D. Lofton Jr., editor of the official Republican newslet· ter "11-!onday,".near the end of 1m. He said Lofton sent him lnfonnation to be used against Muskie "about ooce a week for two or three months. And there were many telephone calls offering to help U! gather any lnfonnatioo we need- ed." -com:AcrED IN-Washing!Onof;olton confinried Phl1bricli's report. ·ae wa·the purpose of the otter was to cause dissensloD among the Democrats. He sald that was a ujustifLSble cam- paign tactic." Lofton sald all of the material he sent was on stationery bearing the Republican National Committee letterhead, but Nixon Committee Official Okayed Bug, Time Says NEW YORK (AP) -Tune magazine reports that Jeb Stuart Magruder, a deputy director of the Committee to Re-· elect the President, is identi!ied in Justice Department files as the man who authorized expenditures for-wiretapping the Democratic National Ciommittee headquarten last Jme. The magazine reported Sunday that Justice Department attorneys s a i d Magruder approved l~ use of up to $250,001 for what they called "political ( IN SHORT ... ) intelligence operations.'' Time said it was not known whether the entire amount was speilt. Philbrick said other than the first mail- ing the material came in plain envelopes and there were no markings on the stat· ionery. Philbrick said the first maillag be received contained. a personal card ideo- tilyiag Lofton as affillated with the GOP committee. Muskie was the New Hampshire primary In a close contest with Sen. George McGovern, the event u a 1 Democratic presidential nominee. PHILBRICK SAID Lofton told l\im the GOP committee had computer In- fonnation on. Muskie which the Yorty campaign might be able to use. .J'hllbrlcUald.be WU surprlsed_bf_Lof. ton's fll'Sl caD, ''.but I told him to send me his information and I would look at it. I ~Id him I was not going to close my mind and ean to any legiUmate in· formation." The most useful piece of information Philbrick said, was a 2().page "Muski~ Myth" document which. he said, "con· tained statement s Muskie had made over the years, taken out of the computer. "We did use some of the legitimate in- forma tion,•• be said, adding that all the material wu checked. out with his own sources. "It was correct, and it saved us a lot of research time." HE SAID HE wa s not offered 1n- formation on McGovern or the other Democratic candidates in the primacy. Some of the Wormation used by the Yorty campaign forces , he said, "was statistical evidence on the employment rate in Maine, which we used to attack Muskie's statement that he was a friend of labor." Philbrick said he also used information on "Muskie's absente8\.votlng record in the Senate." "There were many pieces of ln- formatkm which we considered personal in nature whlch we did not use," Philbrick said. He cited a sect.ion lo the 20-page report which covered. Muskie's "temper outbursts, the times be had blown his top." Philbrick now is working { o r McGovern, stumping the state promoting the party's nominee. Lofton said he supplied information on Muskie to other Democratic contenders for the nomination, including Sem. Henry M. Jackson or Washington and Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota. by the Whitt Hou ... "!SN'!' IT Interesting that the l'r<sl· dent himself la afraid, apparently, to come on this program with me or to come on any other televLs!On program and ralse his own question.a. He· knows t would have some to ask blm.'' McGovern, who vwtod South Vlelnam ( CAMPAIGN '72 J ill September ol 1971, wanu to cut off all aid Io the cu""'t Salgon aovernment ond withdraw Ari>erlcan lor<es within 30 clays. "We ought to matco clear that we would like to -J!Ollllcal Jlr'Ouplois come into power In South Vietnam that want to ieitle this wor,'' McGoveni said. McGOVERN SAID he hopes' !hat the neaotlattono and conte-, In Paris and Saigon, lnwMng prealdtnltal ad· viser Henry A. Kissinger sl&n1tY that a selUeJD<llt is close -liut added !hat be doubts it.~ .. That u U1e line ho has taken on cam - paign platfonns sln<:e the heightened peace speculation began, suggesUng at some sto1,>5 that Kl!sbtger's traTeb will be increasing as election day draws closer. McGovern said I! be tbougbt his can- didacy bad put settlement p.....,... on President Nixon. that ~ woold make it worthwhile. He has been campaigning as a declmd presldenUal cindldate since Jan. II, 1971. "U Mr. Nixon can end tbis war on the night belore the election, I'll rojoice along with all other Americans." McGovern said. "No matter the polillcal lDlpact." " 011Arrlllal A whooping ~crane known as Lonesome George arrived in Austwell, Tex., from Canada recently to take up winter res- idence. He and three others are the first of up to 60 expee· ted by biologists. In Washington, a spokesman for the committee restated its denial that anyone in aulhority al the committee, in- cluding Magruder, had any involvement in the wiretapping and break·in at the Democratic offices in Washington's Watergate complex. Rebels Put Down V.N. Workers in Asia MANILA (AP) -Philippine troops put down a weekend uprising on the southern Wand of Mindanao and President Ferdinand E. Marcos vowed the govern- ment wlll deal severely whh the rebels. He called them "Maoist Moslems." lnaurgency i. punishable by death, either by fbing l!Quad or Ill the elec:trlc: chair, under martial law declared by M.arco1 five weeks q:o to lllave oU what he called a Communist threat to over- throw his govemmeot. Attncked; 1. Left Dead 1 WASECA, Minn. (UPI) -Dave and John KllJl!l were "the type to thlnlt or adventure • . • Dave would try to think of what he .<OUld do that olhers couldn't do." state department said David was in ~ salistai;tory condition at a U.S. AJency , for tntemalional Development Mission in I Kabul, U1e Algban capital ) Mississippi Valley Soaked The Department or Public Information, announcing Marcos' declaration, said about 400 armed and well organized rebels seized Marawi, about 500 mlles south of Manlln and killed at least nine enlisted men In 36 hours oC righting Saturday and Sunday. Speaking wu Al KllJl!l, father or the two men who almost two and a hall years ago set out from this aouthem Mi~ esota community to walk roWld the world on behalf or the United Nations Chlld""11' Fund. lt was Swtday attemoon . Only a few hours earlier, Dave's wife Jan received a call from the state department informing her lhat the brothen had been attacked by bandits while camping near Sarobi, Afghanistan. THE BROTHERS had camped Saluf.. day nlght along a rugged section of roe.d about 30 mil~s east of Kabul where ae- cordlng to ·a state dep'artm~nt spokesman, bandits ha\le frequently preyed on travelers. The brothers, who began their journey June 20, 1970, had pnssed the halfway mark and were enroute from Pakistan to the People's Republic of China. Midwest Through W ashingto1i Shivers iii Drizzle Coa •tal Weather F•lr IOOIV Ll!J!>I v1•!1blt v.i'ld~ ·' ~it lO~it II".., Al .. l lOtOi:ldl . uc .. 111---- B ••· .. ~~­"""' ...... ~""""""' .. o .. • ll.S. Summar11 ..... 1.o.,,ltlll'I, MlttlHlllOI '"'°"" r1IM OI mof• !htll •n Inell In -°'"''· • .'~'.o'.:~ ~1m:,, c:t".:-~ ... l 17 Surtilve Crnsh ATHENS (AP ) -There was little hope of finding any more tun'lvors ol the Olympic Airways plane which cr&Jhed in- to the sea Saturday n1ght near Athens with 53 puaons aboard, officials said t~ day. Seventeen persona, Including at least two lortljplers, llWl!D the 500 yar<IJ to oafety an... the plane cruhod during a r1in ttonn as It prepared to land oo a ruaht 1rom the illlnd o1 Corfu. 'l'>o Americans, Caroline CllaJe and Helen Grvunwell , were listed 1J11011i the -en. Oreek police aald they ...,. among the: survivors, but the U.S. Embauy and airline offlClala could not find them. Amln In Hospital KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI) -Presi- dent ldi Amln of U&anda entertd a ! hoep!IAI tocJay !or "a complete r8t" on. ll doctors' ordt!l'I, offlclal government • ' 1'9dJO aa\d. It qupted a holpllAI bulleUn saying n Amin was admitted during the momlng, ij ~ but gave no furt.l\er <letails. The radio tt said only Amin "hal been ordered to tak e Is a complete rest by his doctors." John Kunst. 25, had been shot and klll . ed. David, 33, had been wounded. The Wicks David's wUc was Informed of the at· lack about 8 a.m. Sunday. The brothers' parents drove up to Join her and her children -Daniel, 7. Bradley, 8, and Debbie, 10-from U>elr own home in Clear Lake, Iowa. • Spe.aktng calmly to the newsmen who had come to the Waseca rt1ldence, AI Kunst said hla aona had kept the famlly "pretty well infonned" of t be Ir whereabouts en<! a<lventuret on the 1~.0JIO.mile trip. "They Indicated there we"' some h.uanh:," he said, "but you always keep hoping that maybe lhey 'ro wrong and It will work out okay." .. KUNST SAID thlt once he knew h~ sons wert! 1erloua 111bout the trip, h411 "backed UKm Ill the way." e Jan Kunll aald the "Mrdc1t part Is u,. watllng'' for further neW1 of her hWll9 band. ''\V ... re atJll klnd of numb about the"" whole thing. In a l:oopie or dllJ'• It 'll prob- ably be worse lhan it Is right now." ln a statement to newamen, the rAmily said, "We ha ve no hate In our hearts. We. believed In what the brothers were <loin~. worklng for world peace and un- derstanding througgh UNICEF." • ' I I ' l li ! I • ' . ' I I -- • ~itange COast· Today's Final • EDITION N.Y. Stoek~ VOL. 65, NO. 297, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCT.OBER 23, 1972 N TEN CENTS CdM Students Brea1' Ping-Pong Marla " ' By L. PETER KRIEG Of !tit Dallr 1""9t Staff Mr. and Mn. Geo'le Brouaaeau of Garden Grove, putting m most of the wit- ness time. 'Ibe youths started out with a total of 411 ping pong balls. They were down to half that number this moming. • The boys have nttracted an endless stream of visitors and "'ell wishen. Two C'A>rona del Mar· High School sopbomore.s this l!)Omlng broke the imo'lJI world's Ping ~ maratboo reconl and then kept right on playing. rel periods each ltour, the two 15-year- olds have been virtually without sleep even lcmier, l1nce they both attended school Friday, before starting their en- durance matcli at-S p.m. that day. "Jlow do you feel?" someone uked earlier UUs mgrnlng. . "People try tO come_ up and aay something, we just look at tbern strange- ly. Finally we bear them after they shout a couple of times," said Gadarian, son of Newport Beaclt boatyard owner Arsene "Blackie" Gadarian. 1be two youths have bad live witnesses through every minute of their gamt, Some 23 djfferent perscm have signed as official observers with Mrs . Gadarian, Paul90D.'s mother, Mrs. DarleQ..e Paulson of Eastbluff and Paulson's grandparents They ...... all llP all Sunday night, alternately encouraging the boys to give up and then talking to keep them going. Grandpa offered the most staying •"lbere's Ping Pong balls bl every cor-. ner of our garage," Mn. Gadarian said. 1 "Poeple even stop us in the grocery store and ask us how they're doing," said Mrs. Gadarian. The boys' mothers and grandparents au said they thought the whole thine is wohderful. MArt Gadarlan and Dan faulloo Pl!!S-_ ed the 60-hour milestone at 5 a.m. today but were UDIW'e whether they'd make it untU.5 p.m., their dedared goal. They were atlll at It at 10 a.m., tboUgb. Playing cont!ilually with five ininute "Feet ·wbat?'' came the reply from young Paulaon. "We go on streaks of tiredness," he said. "Most of the time now we jUJt doo't know wb:at's happening." po'11er. - "He brougb his tape recorder and played sportscaster," said Mrs. Paulson, "then be kicked us out of the garage and began telling old sea stories." During the day the two youth& would play In the alley behind the Gadarlan home at 1110 Begonia Avenue, but at night when temperatures dropped they wouJd move inside the garage and close the door. "We've promised them each a gift of $!00 if they make it to 72 houri," aaid Mrs. Brousseau. GraQdpa made the offer (See PING PONG, Page Ii · ' on reewa Riverside RoadOosed Both .Ways ... CORONA-(-AP)-~At le8St one P<""" was killed and about · 25 injured in a series of pileups on foggy Riverside County roads today. The highway patrol said 40 to ~ ears crashed in pileups oo the southbound lanes of the Riverside Freeway. Later, about 10 vehicles piled up on the northbound side of the freeway, including a gas transport truck which overturned and dumped fuel across the pavement. The freeway was closed in both direc- Uons. . A third pileup lnY'!!Y,in&.Jboul ~v~ ~ ftl~ OD ~·~~Nof,1hf.ertiS, ahouUO)Diles from here. Don SblUer, driver of th e fll'St am· bu.lance at the early multiple crash, said, "A semi blew up and ~ were people all over the place. People were trapped in their cars. It was just terrible." He said be drov~ eight persons in serious condition to the C.orona C.om- munity Hoopital. ' ' -• I .. , UPIT ...... .F~ BA?:flol F""-'IJllS •~· ~llUPTEP. Al'ffll IOAll 'JO CARS COLLIDED IN POG : Died In llMlne Car, Mony lnlured After Multl..,.hicle Crash on Rlvenide F....,oy Speculation on Peace Boosts Stock Market Turk Hijackers . Still Holding 66; Demands Ref used ~ • Dtil&.V PK.OT ltarf ....... BOW FISHIRM,\N BAILEY TRIES HIS LUCK' OFF NEWPORT PIER C•rpontor'o H•ppy Huntlne G..,;und lo .tho Pociflc OcNn • Five other persons were taken to other llospltals. Shiffer aald visibility In the fog when be arrived at the accident wu one or two fee~ and said rescuers had trouble find. Ing the\ilciims. From Wtre Services Vietnam. ANKARA (AP) -The Turkish govern- rr.ent again rejected the demands of four young Turks holding 16 Turks hostage aboard a hijacked airliner In Sofia, Bulga ria, today , and the hijackers et· tended their deadline. Trading was very brisk, despite the Veterans Day holiday. Bow111an Angler A highway patrol weather report aald visibility in some areas was zero. Sheriff's deputies sa1d the fog was in patches, so that drivers were traveling at a high rare of apeed when they entered the low visibility areas. NEW YORK -Conti!l.ued speculation about peace in the Vietnam war boosted tbe stock martel sharply higher in·early trading today on the New York Stock Ex- change. Late last week, a French newspaper (Set REPORTS, Page Zl ..... . '• Newport Man Ofufn Hits Fish The identify of the single known fatali· ty was not immediately available. The victim reportedly burned to death in his car. The. Dow Jones industrial average was up 12.lt at 955.00 by 11 a.m. By noon, it had dropped to·9.4C and to 8.20 at 3 p.m. Boggs' Plane Still Sought • By WILLIAM SCHREmER ot .. DILlr P ... Sii" , Dick Balley does a lot of hunting in Newport ·ll<!&ch. He is a crack' shot with his power[ul bow and arrow. Using this equipment, he puts ffesh meat on his family's table. Bailey's bunting ground is the Pacific Ocean and his edible targets are elusive surf fish such u corbina. "There'• a lot more challenge to hit- ting a fast.moving flSh with an arrow than catching II with a halted book," Bailey aaid u he loosed a deadly barbed arrow from· his perch atop the ·Newport Prer. . The abol, which barely mis!ed a large corbina, wu from more than 25 yaflfs away on a foggy morning. Bailey already had bagged a two-footer. "Foi-every 30 or '40 shots, I may hit o;ie fiah -and even then he might shake loose," said tbe Newport B e a c h • .o r ange Wef1 Cller Low eloudl and fog along the coast will clear by noon on Tues- dQ', according to1ha wealher serv- lca, with highs of 71 at the ~·· rising to 77 ' Inland. Lows tonight 53-64. INSIDE TODAY You COR get a divorce m Cal· lfornia for onl~ $44 uncle< the d/H~~011rael/ plan. Or gtl • complete dfvorce kit for leu than $100. See 1tQfl 01' ,Poge 5. L.M. ._,,,. I MM ..,-. 11 ......... '' ...... . " callf!H'Ma I JtMfeMI fMtrt ·~ ClnNt• • '1.ft "'~~, tt ·---11 lf'l'fll ...... L' t \I IMCft .' .. ; .L •1'i l illlwtal ...... • Jftclt _,... .. l11twrl••11t• ,. 'r1'"""9 '' .. ~ ... l1lllllM ,, fter llM ..... ll. 11 w....... • ......... " .............. , •.. A• ........,.. 11 WMI ..... f " ' ' carpenter. Bailey's bunting gear consists of a large longbow, a long, apecially barbed arrOw wiUi rubber feathers and a spool of beavy.-Outy fishing line attached to the arrowhead: The latter-day Robin Hooe!, who lives CA NDY COUPONS AT H ALLOWEEN? By 11 a.m Standard and-Poor'• 500 stock index, a broader indicator, was ahead 1.12 at 110.36. Advances led declines, 1,014 to '1tl1 among the 1,398 issUes crossing the tape. Volume amounted to ll"OUnd 3,110,000 share1 durlng the first hour. at 3301 Clay SI. with bli wile and 1w<> CLIFTON PARK, N. Y. !AP) There were indications presidential ad- viser Henry A. Kissinger's talks in Paris and Saigoh may have been fruitful, and hopes for peace encouraged many in- vestors, analysts said. ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) Three military planes combed an expanded search area today for a missing light plane CBJT)'lng House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs and lbree others. With Bogga when the Ceuoa 310 vanished on a ntght f r o m Anchorage to Juneau a week ago today were Rep. Nick Begkh of AJaska , 40; Russell L. Brown, 37, a Begicb aide, and Don E. Jonz, the pi lot. aons, said he has been bowllshing and Concerned about the po8'ibiUty of spearfishing for a IOlltl ume. lampered candy, the _Jaycees and "I've lived down be.re my whole llfe ~ Jayncees of this commuruty are urging and my dad for a long tlroe before that " • homeowners to dispense coupon! rather be said. "As far as I have beeD able to than the tradltlooal treats this The stock market bu been sensitive to peace rumor..1 the past several months . tell, I am still the only bow fisherman In Halloween. the whole city." "We have seen too many things In the Many glamour stock.s and electronics and computers were big gainen in the rally. WM, Burroughs, Tex a 1 Instruments, Motorola and Walt Disney all gained around 4 po!nta In early tradln&. Balley aald o4hers' have ...., him papen aboot people wbo put things In )lW'!lling hia 'un11111a1 bobby and have candy on Halk;ween nlgbl," Mn. Dean Spokesmen for the rl. ea c u e Coordination Center at Elmendorf Alr Force Base saJd two jet recon- nalsaance planes, 52 aircraft and ,foor Cqast Guan! cutten engaged in the search Sunday but were hampered by clouds, rain and toe. vowod to buy the equlpmefil and try tt W. llurrows, presidenl of the Jaycees aald. tbemaelvea. "The eoupom · will solve everything '.'But so far none of them have," Baile)' The yoWlgsters can redeem the cou~ sat~ey said winter Is the best bow hun~ at ~.store and pick out the candy they Tbb came on the heels of a lO~potnt rise Friday which analysta ~ waa also prompted by encoorag!ng reports aboul Ing season off the Newport Pier and the wanl. Balboa Pier a few' tnUea away. "There's not much swell and the water stays real clear -especially when the sun is shining through it," Bailey 88.ld. Bowllsblng, .,pedally on fog 'ahrouded tn()J'll!ngs, takes a special knack, Balley said. "The water plays tricks on your eyes and sometimes benda the light 10 that you aren't really shooUng •t the place where the fish really la," he aalc.i. Bailey's special arrow easily cull through four or five feet of water before it;; force ls spent "Most of the ·tbne, 1f )'OU're in close enough ·to ahore, rou cc1n see the filb right near the surface," he aaid. 0 '1ben all you have to do fJ shoot them." "Agel unle11 you kill them lnstanUy, · t1-~four l>r O•~m can r<ally ' fighf,'"'Balley added. . , Balle¥.~~-..... the f!ill"Clll ~:."' ..-l gorih~ltlotl and draw the bow than they pull bock oul of tange," he Mid . And '10t too ml>Cll lartber out of range '" the little ~.!!. ~!, our!era wbo al .. (See BO""""'• Pap I~ '\ ' Safer .Bike Trails Needed Ne wport, Irvine Petitioned • in VCI Planning Survey UCI Irvine planners today published riders and 1utomoblle driven (1.840 o1 land not owned by UCI obllta Univeraily result.a of a bicycle use survey which them) 1like cited lht dangerous altuation and the roadw1y Is not fully improved. concludes the counly and the cltleo , of oo the community road! adjacent 10 the -Bristol Slreet, the main link to Newport Beach and Jrvir.:i, might do campus as caualna: primary ec.ncern." P..tacArthur from i:oata Mesa. more to provide aafer off-<lreel trails Roop concludel lrom the data that Spec111cally the a u r v e y -m· pertlcularl:• along MacArthur Boul .. ant Irvine, Newport Beach, county and..tate mendallon$ urge the new cltf of lrYine to and Unlveralty Drive. • •· ~fflclals ollould wot~ IO(etbei• to "J>rovtde requat county funds. for the Jm. The ourvey of 2,!0I atudelltt, 'lacuH1 oepmte, aafe bicycle potba adJactnl to ~I of the u.uventty Dr!Ve tee· and llllirf Included reipoi*i fnlm 711 the major communll)'Tdadways" In UCI. lion be-MaeArtllur and Cllllornla blto.tldmro~~·~,.. bllieo on Tbret .,... needlnf Immediate It• Av1nue! l'relumabty unf•enlty .funds ........._.rlt •tlliem r.,~ · lentlon arei wwld <onUnue. almUar lmpnwtmenta lloa 10 d , UCf> • -MoeArthur Boulevanl -bet,.... Cllllornla Amitie ...i Clmpu1 Whlle data collected bf, lllt • UC! Brtatot fllreet and Pacllic Ooast Uigbwl)' Drlw, olnco ' the cempo1 tronta on physical plannlng llalf ~ rellecta ond particularly the !nlonectloo with Unlvtnlty Orl¥e along that portion. • onampui concerns' aod n'1m1lY tm-f Unlvtralty Drive wbert' westbo-••d .lronlcdy, the Clmplll Drlv, ~traU provt!Mlta, "the najor b~ related lllJlaUutlon lgnono b!U lral!lc "'1UrolY. ' lnolalled lhla tommor by the dty of oafely probll!lllll flXllt ott<a ." -UnrwnI 1 Drive b t I w ~ta . lrvtne t, Jiiii pa~-1\1 the -...O UC! planner Mel Roop " ycle M~ur and Cdf~ A ,...,,.. ' , (14e BtCY , .. I) . • ' \ ' . ' The hijackers said they wouJd blow up Ute Turkish airline's Boeing 7fTl with all aboard Wlless the Turkish government freed 13 imprisoned leftists, lncludiJI& one sentenced to death. They first set a deadline of noon -3 a.m. PDT -but then extended it twice. They also demanded certain changes in Turkey and removal of "antidemocratic" articles from the Turkish constitution. BTA, the Bulgarian news agency, said the hijackers wanted political asylum in Bulgaria for themselves and the 13 prisoners who.Se freedom they demanded. The Turkish cabinet, after a 12-hour meeting Sunday, rejected the demand for release of the prisoner. But the cabinet was reported to have no objection to Bulgaria's giving the hljactt:n asyhun. The hijackers demanded repeal of a bah on strikes. Improvement in the lives of the peasants and better candWons in the universities. ••tn the end, we believe humane feel- ings will prevail and the air pirates will tum loose passengers and crew,'' a government spokesman said. The hijacking occurred early Sunday on a flight from Istanbul to Ankara. ne pilot and a passenger were sllghtlY' woun- ded l:y gunfire during the fiight. The four-engine jet landed safely at Sofia during a snowstorm. Securt\y forces sum>unded the craft and, bot meals later were brought to Its oc- cupaota. RENT AL AD HAS DRAWI NG POWER Chtdt this ad for Its "quk:t dniw" power : PRIV 3 BR, 2 Ba, P1tio, fncd ._ - _ ' by )'(), .,,... WI! ... bCli • ' • -· ll!O. :::_, mo lie ' ', Oct.Juno, -wt 4"" . XXXoJOCCI wtmdl, 1'1e ad rented the hoult to the 0111 pel'IOI) 10 l'OlpOl1d the !Im da1'_ II .... • peared In the DAILY PILOT. The ad- vtrtiaer or eour11e, was 11very ....., . " n,. iiiliv PILOT wanta the' -- ' lty jlo.. mab ,.. happy the ..... -· Dltll llWm, the direct lino to ....-.; ' j ) ' • OAILV PILCJ! H z ... tng Bearin9 Newport Growth Control Topic West Newport. Balboa and Lido lsle residents will be given a cfllnce to com· ment on proposed ways to limlt i~ewPort Beach population growth lhrough r.onlng controls at two special meetings this week. 1'-lembers of the city's planning staff will meet wit h homeowners' group in a series of sessions ordered by planning commissioners and city council to delennine public opinion on various con- trol techniques, including lbe newly Transit Firm, Newport OK Service Pact established "limited duplex zone." That rone limits the size o! a second unit to 650 square feet. The first of the homeowners' meetings v.'ill take place Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the City Council chambers and Is for \Vest Newport residents. Groups which have betn notified or the meeting include : Balboa Coves Com· munity Association, Cannery Village Merchants Association, Lido Sands Com· munily Association, Lido Shop Assocla· tion, Newport Island Association, Newport Shores Community Association. Old Town Newport Association, Park Lido Association and the West Newport Improvement As9oclation. Thursday night at the same time and plr ce. planners will meet with Balboa Peninsula and Lido Isle residents. Groups \\.'hich have been notified in· elude the Balboa Improvement Associa· lio n. Balboa Peninsula Point Association. Bav Island Club, Central Newport Beach Coinmunity Association and the Udo Isle Newport Beach has approved an ag~-Community Association. ment with the Orange County Transit The proposed meeting schedule was District to provide regularly scheduled scrutinized by planning commissioners at bus service to the city. their meeting la§t week . One part of the ~II. Y l"ILOT Stiff ....... MARK ILEFTl AND DAN MANAGE SPIRITED RALLY EVEN AFTER LONG HOURS AT TABLE friends mnd Rel1tive1 Watch as Youths S.t Mlrathon Ping Pong Stand.rd . Helicopter Noise Probed Newport Police Tackle Problem After Swrmy Hearing City councilmen adopted a resolution list drew a great deal of criticism. that will permit the district to install bus Advance Planning Administrator Carl Newport Beach police will do whatever from the Hughes Tool Company in-hand for Tuesday night's meeting, as stop slmu: and p8int bus zones on curbs Neuhausen. who prepared the schedule, they can to cut down the noise their dicating by the second quarter of 1973 well , according to Donald Straw, e.·-included a number of what com-d h · 1 former Newport·Mesa school board at major intersections. missioners called "special i 0 t er c s t helicopters make but they 're not about to they should conclu e me c an 1 ca member and a leader in the Helicopters The agreement \\'ill also require the groups." cut down the time they spend in the a)r. modifications which will permit: Limited movement. district to consult with the city on These ranged from the Newport That's the recommendation from City -"Operation of the helicopter at a Straus,, promised the turnout in a Iet- scbedules, routes and fares. ~arbor Chamber of Commerce to the ~fanager Robert L. Wynn in a report to reduced RPM. ter to city officials last week but be also City Manager Robert L. Wynn said the Irvine Company and the Newport-Mesa councilmen they asked for last month -"A new muffier system which \vill talked in moderate tones about the need . ~~~! wi,.·rviu ~ar t!°vnn'T°d~~g ~ Unified School District. followin' a stormy public bearing oa the further reduce the engine exhaust noise; to quiet the helicopters. LIU-3 ...... .rw~ ''The meetings are Intended for police air patrols. and Saying the group is eqµally coocemed W~ =~~u:~ :0 ~g f:=ts~=i~n:8~~! S:Ca~ ca~~~;:e~L~!!~ti:t, d~ -"A new air intake shroud which will ~~':n;:~~:8~~ the risk in the city for a few weeb, but thiS said Commissioner William Agee. ed the choppers be used only for eliminate the high pitched whine pro-"Please be assured that HeUcopters merely formalizes it and allows for bus "If the Chamber, schoool.9 and other emergency calls and not for routine duced by the. present engine collection Llm.lted will continue to work with the stops," Wynn said. thi bou lb! an1 such groups want to say some ·ng a t patrol. system " council in every way poss e to ve at James Curr, marketing and ad-density (.'Ontrols, they should send Spokesmen for \he group say they'll be Wvn~ said "Admittedly t ·bes e a better answer to the quenion of the use vertisinl analyst for the district, said representatives to the district meetings," at Tuesday night's council meeting when .r·~· ' . . ' . . of police helicopters in Newport Beach.'' ' f',..•PageJ PING PONG • • • • a UIUe easier on bis pocketbook w)l<n he otumblod on • '211 blll while pacil1I the W'l!t lht'"""8lal Upl locllJ• '"I iliak M'• ,._i.• aid Mn. P-. '1 think Ibey needed acmtthini like tbtl ... ''They showed that they could do ii," Mrs. Cadarlan said. "Many Umes we suggested that they should gl~ up, but they ju.st look at one 8nolher and keep on playing." 'Ibe boys stopped keeping score after the 120th game. "When everybody got tired of keeping track," said Mn. Paul.son. . 'l1le e-has 1 .. a than llckled Marti's father. At the outset the older Cadarlan said be guessed Ibey would !alt "about two boon and 10 tninuteo" bul this morning be would only say : "Well, we!~ ll the trend catches on, we've found a way to cut the crime rate." •1we11 have half the kids in Corona del Mar In sooiebod,y's garage playln( ping pQng, and the other ball driving eround from one game to another aeelni how they're doing." But even the elder Gadarkm broke down and agreed to be an official witness for about .a ball an hour Suoday afternoon. "I 'had to go to the kitchen .and start the roast and he knew If he wonted the roast, he'd have to be the witness," Mrs. Gadarian said. J • "So be 01Dok • martini 1114 went to -the garage to read thODllly pilot," lhe said. '!'be two youths said thq siarted the marathon "because we. warited to be the best at something.'' Although two-man Ping-Pong is not listed in the current GlliDess Boot of World Records, they ~~ tesearch turn- ed up the 60-hour recort.. A check with the jilbllsblllg" company that pu18 oot the paperbacl< book listing world record> in jull ab!lol everythin& said the record for fouNDlll Ping Pong with the players playing lllen>I~ WU nearly 500 bolus. When Informed that two p1oyon have been going at tt il\emlelves for more than 80 boun, the .New Yorktexecutlve said, "that's bard to believe, but lf they can document it, w~'ll forward tbe io- fonnation to the edlton1 bl England." buses have been having trouble in said Commissioner Joseph _Rosener. the report is receiyed. measures are not immediate, but 1t is Voegelln said he thought the letter was ~--fuE>otlJl<•d!JindlngJbe !!~~~''I-' den't-think-lt-would-serye-any-u8"1u1~t --""We!l~be-there-inOiily to listen," •aid__my..belie!.lhal lbe Hughes T~mDd"-ln-termHJl-lbe-,..y-lle-lfeelS---_:_-EPe•~-fti..l----- "1bey have Just been stopping at every pUrpoSe to use valuable staff time to give attorney Harold 3. "Ptte!-'-Voegelln, one is now seriously concerned with the noise about the problem and indicaled he ~~ big intersection, but the people don't these groups special briefings of their of the strongest critics of the helicopters. generated by the police helicopter." would setUe for nothina lea than the BICYCLES know that,' he said. "But we have been own," Agee added. Voegelin, who hinted be might take Wynn saitl the September hearing "in original demand that routine patrols by · · pushing hard to advertise our function Meetings with community groups in legal steps to stop the use of helicopters which a good number of residents ap-the helicopters be discontinued. • • • and where we stop." other parts of the city will be held each at the September meeting, said this peared to protest lhe noise, accomplished Curr .sald since the fonnatlon of the week through November. morning that such measures "are onl:Y a a great deal of good inasmuch u it con- transit district in September, bus rider last resort kir.d of thing.'' vinced the HUgbes Qmpany that they • Frot11P .. el least-used by studenta, faculty or staff of UC!. figures for Costa Mesa and Newport He said his group will wait unW it bas should place noise reduction on a high Beach have jumped more than 86 percent FrOIR P .. e J a chance to see the report prepart!d by priority level." BOWMAN over the same period la.st year. Wynn and Police ;;hief B. James Glavas There'll be a good number of people on • • • • Of thooe conunuting to UC! by bleycle. only 17 percent come from lrvlDe com. pmd to 22 percent comln( from Colll Mesa, 25 percent from Newport Beach and 36 percent from unnamed "other" cities. "We bad 19,400 last year and more REPORTS before contemplating any future course than 37,000 this year," be said. "But W< • • • of action. still have a long way to go." That report from Wynn sa)'! that "for OlrT said the new bus service has reported that a cease-fire was expected the first time we have a signed letter become popular because of new equip-by the end of this month. Since then, new ment and lower fares. "Yoa can go one way from the beach reports have bolstered Wall street hopes to Santa Ana for 25 cents and transfers of an approaching cease-fire I n from there are free," he said. Indochina. Curr said buses will run in NeVr'pOrt Kfs.slnger Jeft Saigon for Washington Beach from about 5:30 a.rn . to 9 p.m. on today after the most intensive peace a half-hourly basis. He said that will be worked down to one every 15 mJnutes talks of the Indochina war, and the U.S. within a year or so. Embassy said progress had been made So far, stops have been established at toward a setUement. Newport Center, Dover Drive and Pacific But it indicate<! that the U.S. and South Coast Highway, and Marguerite Avenue Vietnamese government still differ on wl Coast Highway in Corona de! Mar. "But that ts only a start, because the some points. ( buses will still stop at the intersections." "We have mad't progress," said an em- Curr said. "We will try to have signs up bassy statement. "Talks will continue soon." Firemen Quench Blaze on Boat An p ,ooo boat fire was quenched iaturday morning by Huntington Beach iremen and county fire units in SuMet \quatic Park. ~ blaze heavily damaged a 2().foot :abin cruiser owned by Donald Taylor of ::ypress. Taylor was sleeping tn the boat 11ben the names erupted about 6:30 1.m. but be escaped uninjured, firemen iald. between us and the government of Viet- nam. It is not in the ~terest of negotia- tions to be more specific at this time." Kissinger new bOme to report to Nixon after six meetings with President Nguyen Van Thieu. Asked at the airport if his visit had beta productive, Kissinger repUed, "It always is when I'm here." Three hours after Kissinger left, the U.S. Army chief of staU, Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, left for Washington. He spent six days in Saigon assessing the military slluatlon and the Vletnamizatlon program, and sat In on aome of Kiss- inger's meetings with Thieu. Motlier of Mesa Police Cliief I Loses Rare Dolls • A total or 15 rare dolls worth $330 was reported stolen Sunday from the home of Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth's mother, who collects and restores them. Selma R. Neth, 79, told Officer David Walker the missing items include 12 Shirley Temple dolls ,and three Pitiful Pearl dolls, which can hardly be replac- ed. The grand theft apparenlly occurred when she forgot and left some of the dolls in her backyard after doing some fixup work on her collectors' classics:. Some were reportedly recovered later, perhaps after being picked up by fascinated neighborhood childtt.n, but Detective Sgt. Keith Carpenter said be couldn't confinn it. The victim said in the report filed Sun- day she would furnish a detalled descrip- tion of the missing dolls' clolhlng and hair color in case it aids in the in- vestigation. County riremen said the fire was tp- >arently caused by fuel from a camper· 1tyle stove leaking onto the deck, where he stove's pilot light might have ignited t. Vets Day~ 1921 OU.Hal COAST • DAILY PILOT f""' or.._. C..t DAil Y P'llOT, wtfrl ~ • lit ~ ~ "'-"·-· la pUblbf!H "' ... 0.-..... C-l ,,...ltllin9 ~. ~ ··"" •1t..,. ''' PWlbMO. MonNr ~ F""'1, fW C.I• Mt!M, H--1 .. t<h. Hl.-!llnfMa a...t!ll"-141111 V•lli'y, i.._,. a.dt. lrvtn.lleddleMdl ..i Stn ,..._..,, ht! ."-c.,.111,_ A tlflOlt rtOIMl<I fiflllM " ....... """*YI .... S-S.yt. 1'119 ,..._... _.WIMI ""4 11 11 3IO Wtsl .. , """"' co.te ~. c.11tomi., ~ R•Nrl N. W,.4 Pr•i.twlt .... PubUllltr J•ck k. C11rl•Y VQ PN11d9111 Ind 0.""'91 M~ lhOllllt 1(,,.,11 l!.dltor 1\om11 A. M11rphina ~1 ... Edl!IW L l'•t•r kri•t ......,_. 9MCll Cl!y ldtlw "..,...,. h• OffSCle JJJJ Ntiw,.n &.111.v.-rd ·M•lllitt A44t•••: l'.O. low 1175, •2MoJ .............. CeJi. MMI: »I Wnr hr If,.... U,.. .._,.: ttl f'..t A-. """" ........ ---~ ,,., . ._.. ....._. JM ~1 M Nwll\ Ii CMi4M It• Tel.,.._ 1714) '4J..4JJ1 Cl•""94 A ..... lf .... '4W11 ~. lt1L °'..,... CNtt ~ ~. Ho ..,. '"""-htn,._.. ~ --" -.n...,_" .... ni.r • ~ •1"*" .,.., ,.. .......... "'1"1tM ....... ........ 0. ,,..,.., HV IJ C.... ,,_..., °"""""... ~ w ..,,,., $1'1 ... i""'J ... IMlt ltll ,,.,,...,,, ......... ............ GM """'911Y. I WWI Widow Recalls Celebration By RUDI NIEDZIEl..'lKI Of .. 0.11, "" lltff To many Americans the meaning of Veterans Day is o'b,,cure. . It has beu>me one or those "bonus" hol idays everyone loves because It stretches out the weekend. It's a \~relcome reprieve from school, time to calch a haircut and..& chance to run er· rands. .r Nobody celebrates It very much exc_fil)t for the American Le&ion or the Veterii'ns of Foreign Wars. The Doughboys who helped root the mighty Gennan army 56 yeant ago look- ed at it differently. To th~m ll was a vic- tory to end all wan and they celebrated it on Nov. II, the day the Armimlce was signed In 1918. Mra. Janie Johaneen, a Costa 1-fesan, would Just u to0n go on ctlebratina It on Nov. 11 becaUH it hu more meaning to her. "l Jived on 1 fann 1n Oklahoma whe!n the war ended," Mrs. Johanlen, 68, of 989 W. lltb St., rtealla. "We had a bell outside with which we u.sed to announC9 dinner. When the phonu ..taned ringing 111 °"" that the war wu over and alf the ttalnl started toottna reaJ loud, J Just ran out there and TloC that bell at. hard IS 1 ecxdd. lt WU 0tie of the bla days In my We. •1 Mn. Johansen, /"'t II at the time, had not ytl mot her Int hlllhlnd, Grayaon M. McCarty, 1 ....... t 'In the Sfsnal Corps. That wu to occur on another big day, Nov. II, 19%1, when he marched !"It her during an Armmice Day Parade. When the war ended, McCarty was In Coblenz., Germany, a beautiful Rhine River city, pufting out a newspaper can- ed the American Army of 'Occupation IAMAROCl News. A printer by trade, he had them bolll!d in two volumes -one covered witb his outfit's insignia -and gave them to his wife. Mrs. Johansen maintains that there are only three other sets in existence. One belon11:s to the National YMCA, another to the Hoover Library. and the third to the former editor, Guy C. Staf. ford . The small daily paper, now yellowed with age, ls an amazing sourcebook on the aftermath of WW I. Tho !Int edition, published on April 21, 1919, announces that It's "All Quiet After Violent Flghllng." Bui there ,,.,. riots In molt of Germany. MunJcb was in a state of 8Mrchy, and elsewhere Red German P'rtllall.I had taken 100 penons holta1e. Thtre was a.lcontinuoua threat of renew- ed hostilities until ' the peace wu formally signed. "It covered what was gotna: on there and what wu going on ln the world and 1 think It did a pretty good j(>b," Mn. Jc.hamtn say1 about her~ tre11t1re. One or the ltnrleo publllhed y the AMAROC News \ella of a youn1 man who chopped oU bll band to 1vokf the drall. Another 1<ports the crulla ol lwo dirigibles loaded with machine ~ns and bombs •'(tr i. Klei, Gmn1ny ' !mtll the tlplng or re}ection of the peace ~aly." Missing Boy Found OAKLAN:> (AP) -A police sean:h for a &-year-old boy missing since Friday'• World Seriea gome here ended Sunday when the yqungster • w a - discovered safe and sound in the J)ome of a new friend. Elroy N. Davis, son of Louil and June Davis of Fairfield, was turned in to police by Jean U>Jtan after she heard radio reports about the miss- ing boy. like the early morning waves. "Sometimes they get in • Utue Close for comfort but not too often," Balley said. Balley said be pllDI to keep up his hunting activities whenever be bu the chance. He was oul bunting today with one of his sons because it wu Veterans Day. "Most of the time I go home with one fish," Bailey said. "So far, I've never gotten more than one, but maybe today 1 'U break my record." 'lbe C811fornia A venue tn_try to the campus carrt.. the bulk or" daily bike trafllc. Of the 285 rldm •pproacbing the campus east-on Unlvently Drive. 'Pt turn In OD · Clliforn1a. The l"e.lti pmumably join -llK cyclia1a romlng BOUthbotlnd on University and tumtng"·al eampua Drive for a dally Iola} of 134 bike riders along that two-Iabe Irvine street which presenlly aHorda no tra.Q for bike traffic. L CONVE RTIBLE OR BUILT·IN ! DISHWASHE •M...,_TI .......... ......... .... ,. .... ..... . .,.,. ""'..,..... ., ... . _ ... .,...._ ......... _, ... . .......,....,..., ___ ................ ......,_ ........... ..., ......... -,, ......................... -·-•hlTm"....., $1 8995 " SouJKl.lnoulated BulH·ln -11'-Ou•ll!Y -nce-Qulolly . ,.,.,,..., ...... __ ...... -·-.,... ........... _ ........ .,. ""'" ..... ................... .~ ........ ,....., ... __ .. ....... .it ...... ................ ~ .. -· MM-........ .1815 Newport B!vd. Downtown Cott• Mou Phone ' 548· 7788 i OUR NO. 1 GOAL: TO MAKE GENERAL B.ECTRlC THE BEST BUY MEM!IER OF CALIFORNIA'S olARGEST COOPERATIVE BUYING GROUP WITH THE VOLUME BUYING POWER OF 110 STORES 60 Mllllol' Ooll•r• In Buying Power We are an authorized GENERAL ELECTRIC •-=--8 MoJor Appll1n<0 and Ttl..,ltlon Servlc. Center ; l l j l • • • -, Ora.nge f;oa·st EDITION • Teday's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks . . VOL 65, NO. 297, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -... MONDAY, OCTOB~R 23, 1972 I c TEN .CENTS :~till More Peace R11mors Boost Stock Market 1 hem Wire 9ervlce1 Advances led declines, 1,014 to 78, .NEW YORK -Continued SJ>l!<'Ulatioo among lbe 1,398 ~ crl)Ssing the tape. and computers were· big gainers in the rally. mM, BWTOughs, Texas Instruments, Motorola and Walt Disney all gained around 4 points in early reported that a cease-fire was ezpected by the end of th!> month. Since then, new reporls have holstered Wall stmt hopes of ao approaching cease.~ In Indochina. •bout peace In the Vietnam war boosted Volume amounted to around 3,110,000 the ltoCk -tel sharplr higher in early . shares during the first bour. tndlng !Qday on the l'!ew York Stock Ex-~ were lndloaijons presldenuaJ ad· trading. • change. \ viser Henry A. KJssln8er's i.Jkl In Paris This came on the beets of a 101it-point rise Friday which analysta .said was also prompted by encouraging reporls about Klisinger h!ft Saigon for Washington today after the ~ Intensive peace talks of the lndocbhla war, and the U.S. Embassy said progress had been made toward a ..ulement. Tbe Dow. J~ .Industrial average was< and Saigon may have ~ fruitful, and uj> 12.19 at 164.00-by. ll 'a.m. By noon, I~ hopes !or poace enoouraged many !n- had ij~ to UO aild to 8.20 al 3 p.m. , vestors, mullyats Nkl. · Vietnam. · By 11 a.m Standard and. Poor's 500 'lbe ~ market bas been sensitive to Trading was very brisk, despite the Veteraru; Day holiday. stoCk index, a broader indic8tor, Was .-peace rumota the past several months. abeod l.'12 at 110.38. Many glamour ~tocks and electronics Bui It lndlcatee that the U.S. and South Vietnamese government st1ll differ on Late last week, a French newspaper • ' . _.ars .. on ' Hijackers' llemands Refused AN'KARA (AP) -The Turkish govern- n-.ent again rejected the demands of four young Turks holdirig 66 Turks hostage aboard a hijacked airliner in. Sofia, BO!gana, today, IOld the hijackers ••· ~ their deadline. . The. hijackers said they wobld blow up Uie Turkish airline's Boeing 1fTl with all a)oard unless the 'l\lrkisb goveniment fr<!'d 13 Imprisoned leftists, lncludi/fg one -t~ to death. They lint ' 'aet • deadline of noon -~ .a.m. Pl11 ~ "11 1hen extended 'it twic& .-: "They a1ao ---....... "' Mey,~ remova1 of "a::i&f°" irll<lea from the Turkish • BTA, the Bulgarian news egdlcy, said t)le hijackers wanted political asylum in Bulgaria for tbemaelves and the 13 ptisooers whose freedom Ibey demanded. The Turtish cabinet,. after a 12-b>ur meeting Sunday, rejec(ed the demand for i:.eJease of the prisoner. But !lie cabinet :was reported to · ba\'O no objection to Bulgaria'• giving Iha bljachrs asylum. 2-month old Tot Bitte1_1:, Battered.· To Death in N¥ ·' NEW YORK (UPI) -Police said .,. human bite marks and lacerations coyered the body of a two-month-old boy wHo apparently was killed In his crib wli'.ile bis family, relatives and friends were celebrating his christeninJ In .an(>ther room. · The infant, Hector Rodriguez Jr., was prqnounced dead on arrivaJ at Green· point Hospital late Saturday night. · dfflcials classlted the dead boy :is a "battered child." Police qlleS!loned the party guests at the local station boUse shortly after the , de.alb was~ r.eported. No arrests or suSPecta were reported and all were rel~. ' FUTU,RE zqo TE~ANT1 "SHEBA" PUCKERS UP FOR M'R5. MARSH '·She Says She's Galnf 0.. Tlf to Plud Her Cese for Animals ' Mesa Petting Zoo Backer To Carry Her Case to TV Riverside Road Closed Both~W-ays CORON'A (AP) -Al least one person was killed and about f.5 injured in a series of pileups on foggy Riverside County roads -y. 'lbe blgllway patrol said (I) to 80 cars crashed in plleupa on the southbound Janes of the Riverside Freeway. Later, about 10 vehicles piled up on the nonbbound side of, the freeway, including a gas tranaport truck which overturned and dumped fuel l,C?lJSS the pavement. ' --~la~din<> ~~-,-..,--~' ' "'~~~-­WU ..... oB U.S. 3S5 al li«th Perris, about 10 mneS from here. Don Shiffer, driver of t be first am- bWanee at llie'early mO!Uple cra!h, said, "A semi blew up and there were peoph! all over the place. People were trapped In their cars. It waa just terrible." He said he dn>vo eigl!I persons in serious conditi<n to the Corona Com- munity Hospital. Five other persons were taken to other llospitals. SblHer ~d visibility In the fog wben (See PILEUPS, Pqe I) Mother of Mesa Police Chief Loses Rare Dolls A total of 15 rare dolls worth $330 was reported stolen Sunday from the home of Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth's mother, who collects and restores them. Selma R. Neth, 79, told Officer David Walker the missing items include 12 Shirley Temple dolls and three Pllilbl Pearl dolls, which can hardly be replac- ed. 'lbe grand theft apparenlly occurred Mrs. Shelba Marsh, vexed by a Costa Mrs. Marsh is trying to place her when she forgot and left some of the Mesa ordinance prObibiting wild anlmaLs • animaJs in the zoo because they are dolll in her backyard after doing some she is going to plead her case for ~ being kept in violation of the city statute. thup work on her colleetora' classics. Tile baby's body was discovered by his mother, Mrs. Delores Rodriguez, 21, in tis bassinet In the ·22nd story apartment of .Lindsay Rousing Project located In Brooltlyn. sa~s , . _ · . Her coyote has been nabbed by the Some were reportedly recovered later, · children a JJ'.13tting :r.oo on televiaion. dogcatcher on several occasions.. perhaps after being piclc:ed up by Accompanied by. §heba, her raccoon, Latest arrival to Mrs. Marsh's . fuclnated nelglthorbood children, but 'Ale cblld's father, Hec&or Rodriguez Sr., %2, a clerk, said he bad no Idea how the1 blfant died. Another child, 2, w a s ~blrmOO. , Tbe bites were blflicted by a child or an.ad,u.lt witb'a small mouth, the medical exarrJner says. "It' could have been done in a rage or by someone who hated the faMUy/' said detective Ernest Borbee. The medical eiaminer said that in ad- dition to being bitten, the boy's skull ,liad , ·bee!> crushed from battering . against a wall or the floor. RENTAL A.D HA.S ' DRAWING POWER . -Check thla ad for its "quick draw" power: .PRlV 3 BR, ,2 Ba, patio, fncd 6y yd, lrplc. W1k to· bcb & ehOps. $250. per mo, lse Oct.June. xxx-xxxx wk days, ~..xxxx wknda. The' ad ,..ted the house to the Uni penon to -d the flnt day ii ap. pea".'l\ In the DAILY, PILOT. 'lbe ad· .,.\'..erttsi!ri....Qf course, was '1Y"ery happy." Tho DAtLY PILOT wani. the opportun· 'i• ... to ma~ you happy the same "ay. ,1 !4Hm. the dinct Uot lo reau1i. .. ) and· Henry, 'her coyote, sbe will appear backyard menagerie Is Cbubber Rex, a Detective Sf!t. Keith carpenter said be Nov. 4 on "Elementary News " a miniature chimpanzee. ~ of last count, couldn1 conflnn Jt. , . · ' Mrs. Marsh had seven kittens, a dog, a The victim saJd in the report filed Sun. children s news program OJl Channel ll. coyote two guinea pigs and twe rac-day she would furnish a detailed descrip- HI want to show· the kids the animals coons.' lion of the missing dolls' clothing and and I think if I go on TV, It will help me A lion and a bobcat are on their way, • hair co1or In case it aids in the in- out with my plans for the zOQ~' Mii. she says. ves~igation. Marsh, of $14, W. Bay St., said today. Ben Hunter, producer of t.be program, confirmed .Mrs. Marsh's guest llp- ~arance and aald she will answer ques- tfuns abOut the animals from four "anchannen,'' aged 9 to 11. . Plans for tbe zoo ~at the Orange County Falrgrounds were r.ejected one week ago by the Costa MeN City Council. Cowtcllnlen, however, aald they ·would reconsider her request provlded they are furnished with a detailed propooal cover. Ing animal bousina and care, and llsbUlly insurance. Russ Hail Trade Pact MOSCOW '(APJ -Moecow Radio ball· ed the -Soviet-American trade agree- ment today as· a "fr.:uitful contrlbuUon to the cause of atrengt.hening rtlaUon1" between the two countries. 'lbe radio led Its noon news broadcast wlth an mo nouncemenl of the agreement slgl\ed In · Wasblnglon Wednesday, giving the Soviet P<lhllc ltl firat word ol\lfle pact. Reeord Broken CdM Students 'Ping' for 60 Hours ' By L PETER KRIEG "Feel what?" oame the reply from ot "" Dlll'I' ,., ... '"" young Paulson. Two Corona del Mar High 'School "We go on m.akl of Urodneu," he sophomores this morning broke the Nkl. "Most ol the time now we just don't known world'• Ping Pong marsthoii know wbat'1 happening." record and then kepi right on playing. "'i'<ople try to come up and 51y Mark Gadaflan and Dan Paulson pass. something, we JUI! look ot them attan1 .. ed ~ 80-flow: lj1!Jestooe at 5 a.m. today ly. Finally we hear them alter Ibey shout b<it were unaure wba!ber they'd make It a couple of tlmet(' said Gadarlan, '°" of until J pJ11., ibelr declared goal. Newport Beach noatyard owner Arsene • They were still al II at 10 a.m., though. "BlaWe" Gadarlao. ~cont-Uy 'tlllb five minute 'lbe two )'oolhl bave bad llve wlin-t r"t each hour, the two 15-yea,,. tJ1roui11 every mlnutt of their gamt, olds ave been virtually ,-alee~ Some 23 different JN!l'IOlll have signed ill 'even Joncer, llnce they oolb atlended official obserVen with Mn. Gldarlan, sc""9' Frldllt, 1iefOnt llarting their en-Paulson'• mother, Mn. penene Paulsori duranct malCb 11 5 p.m. lbat day. • of Eutbluff and PaUllOll's aranc!Plrenta "flow do you feel.!" IOIDeOne asked Mr. and Mrs. Georp B_. of earller this mornln1. IS.. PING· PONG, Plice I) I • some points. "We have made progress," said an em- bassy statement. "Talks will continue between us and the government of Viet- nam. It ls not In the interest of negotla- tionl to be mor.! specific at this time." Kissinger Dew home to ('port to NIJ:on after six meetings with President Nguyen Van Thleu. Asked at the airport if his visit had been productive, Kissinger replied, "It always is when I'm here." Three hours after Kissinger left, the U.S. Army chief of staff, Gen. Creighton W. Abram!, left for ·washlngton. He spent six days in Saigon assessing the military situation and the Vietnamlz.ation program, and sat 1n on some of Kiss- inger's meetings with Thieu. Although Newsweek and T i m e magazines reported that the United States and North Vietnam agreed to a set· llement that would include a cease--fire, (See REPORTS, Page !) reewa DAILY PILOT li.tf ....... MR!i-JOHANSEN REMINISCES WITH COPIES OF OLD NEWSPAPER Co1t1 Mau Wom1n Recalls How Veter~ns Day Got Its Start Vets Day~ 1921 WWI Widoip Recalls Cel.ebratio1i By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille 0.llY Pltet Sid To many Americans the meaning or Veterans Day is obscure. It has bet.'Ome one of those "bonus" holidays everyone loves because It stretches out the weekend. It's a welcome reprieve from school, time to catch a haircut and a chance to run er- rands. Nobody celebrates tt very. much e1cept for the American Legion or the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The Doughhoya who helped rout the mighty German army 56 years ago look- ed at it differently. To lbem it was a vic- tory to end all wars and they celebrated it on Nov. 11, the day the Armistice was signed In 1911. Mrs. Janie JohanSen, a Costa Mesan, would just as soon go on celebrating it on Nov. 11 because it bas more meaning to her . "I lived on a farm in Oklahoma, when the war ended," Mrs. Johansen, 66, ol 989 W. 19th St., recalls. "We had a biell outside with whJcb we used to announce dinner. When the phonea 6larled ringing au over that the war wu over and ill the-trains started tootlni real loud, I Just ran out there and rang that bell ar hard 11 I could. It was ..., of the big days In my Ulc.'' Mra. Johansen, lust 14 at the time, had not yet met her irst buaband, Grayson M. McCarty, a sergeant In Iha Signal Corps. That wu to occur on another big day, Nov. ti, !I'll , when he mar<bed pBSt her during an Armistice Day Parade. When the war ended, McCarty was tn Coblenz, Germany, a bellullflll Rhine River city, puttlng out a newspaper call· ed the A-lean Army ol Ocetipallon (AMAROC) News. A printer by trade, be bad them bound In !wo 90!umea -one covered with his ooUlt's lnalgnla ~ and gave them to bis wife. Mra. Johansen malntalna !Mt thero are only three other seta in existence. One belongs to the National YMCA, another to the Hoover Library, and the third to the former editor, Guy C. Staf-• ford . The small daily paper, now yellowed with age, i.!I an amazing sourcebook on the aftermath of WW I. The first edition, published on April 21, 1919, announces that It's "All Quiet After Violent Fighting." But there were riots in most of Germany. Munich was in a state of anarcJty, and elsewhere Red German partlSans had taken 100 persons hostage. There wu a contlnuous threat of renew- ed hostilities until the peace was fo1·matly signed. Oranlfe Wea~er Low clood.t and • fog' along the coast will clear by . noon ·OD Tue~ day, according io the weather aerv· Ice, ,with highs of 71 It Iha beacbol, rising lo 77 Inland. Lows lonlibt 5341. INSmE TODAY You ccn-gtt 4 divorce fti Cot. l/omto /or only 144 tmdn the do-ft·ll'OUrtelf plan. Or get a compleU divorce kit for leu than 1100. See .iorv on Page 5. l.M. ...,. • ..... . ,, ..,._, . t•MHlll 1141 -" 0..111 NetlcM. '' ....... ,.... . ·~ .. ......... ... ........ ,,, ,, =·" ::. I ... ....... 11 --,, ................ ...... o...tr ,, .... ,_., I ....... lto-11 , ... -...-. .., -.. '""*"" '' := ...... ~1! --. DAILY PILOT t Man Killed Assisting At Crash A :IG-yoar-<>ld Whittler youth was drag· ged to h~ death Sunday night when be was hit by two cars while trying t<> aid the victims of another accident on Pacific Coast Hlghway near Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach. Pcllce said James Anthony Doerr, 20, slipped alld fell while trying to dart ' across the busy highway at 10: 15 p.m. and was struck by a car driven by Jose Aguirre Rivera. 18, of Long Beach. FIREMEN BATTLE FLAMES WHICH ERUPTED AFTER SOME 60 CARS COLLIDED IN FOG One Died in Buming Car; Many lnjuref( After Multi-vehicle Cra1h on Rlvenide FreeWay Doerr was dragged 10 feet under Rivera's car and then was run over by another unidentified car which pulled him for another 20 feet, police said. Police said they have· been tmable to identify the driver of the other car which mysteriously slipped away just after the accident. From Page J PILEUPS ... tie arrived at the accident was one or t\\·o feet, and said rescuers had trouble find- ing the victims. A highway patrol weather report said visibility in some areas was zero. . Sheriff's deputies said the fog was m . patches, so that drivers were traveling at a high rate of speed when they entered the low visibility areas. The identify of the single known fata li- ty was not immediately available. The victim reportedly bunied to death in his car. Mesa Calendar TONIGHT COSTA MESA PLANNING COM· M!SfilON -Rogular meeUne, City Hall, 1:30 p.m. ALAN ZASLOVE EXHIBIT -OCC Art Gallery, now through Oct. 29. Tuesday - Friday, 9 a.m. -2 p.m. ERIC ORR EXHIBIT -UCJ Fine Aris Gallery, now tbroutb Ocl 29. Tue>day - Sunday, 1-5 p.m. DANCE LESSONS -Department of ~isuNl Services offers round dance lessons at WJbon school, 801 W. Wil80n, 7:30-10:30 p.m. Mondays. $1.25 per session. TIJESDAV, OCT. %4 ANDREW J . HINSHAW SPEAKS - OCC Speaker Serles, Forum 11 a.m. U.S. BICENTENNIAL COMMITTEE -First meet.Ing. Residents are invited to help formu1ate plans to celebrate the country's 200th birthday in 1976. Con- ference Room, Fifth Floor, City Hall, 7:30 p.m. "INVESTMENTS" -OCC Lecture Series presentl!I William L. O'Bryon in second <>f Uve-part series. EastbluU Elementary Scbool. Newport Beach, 7:30- 9:30 p.m. No tuition. SQUARE DANCING -Community Recreatloo Cenler, Fairgrounds , 8-10 p.m. Tuesdays, Sl.25 per )eSS()n. Missing Boy Found OAKLAN::> (AP ) -A police search f<>r a 6-year-old b o y missing since Friday's World Serles game here ended Sunday when the youngster w a . discovered safe and 90Und In the home of a new friend. Elroy N. Davis, 80n of Louis and June Davis of Fairfield, was turned in to police by Jean Logan after ahe heard radio reports about the mW. Ing boy. ' • •. I ' I . \ OIAMM COAST CM DAILY PILOT 1M°""9it 0..t OAILV PILOT, wtt11 wMdl .. ...... 1M " ..... ,., .. " ................. tJlt Orltl99 a..t l"Wllllllnf ~. ""' ,..,. .it• .,. .......... Mond1y It!~ f"flUf, fW C.te MM, """""°" lwdl, ~.,..._ hKffl~1tr.. v11r.-,, ~ kKtl, lrw!MtlNll191Mck ..... Sen Clemlni./ S.... J.... Cl~"'-A llll!lle r .. 1-1 MIHlon h OUblltMCI a.111r11..,. lflll S_,.'flo TM llflnt1Plt Jll,lbllthlfla pMM If If »1:1 Wf'll llY S'"9t, Cllittt Mlfl, Qllfllrnle, fliUf.. aet..rt N. W11~ '"'*"' and ,..oti.i\tt J1ck R. C11rl1y Viet ............ ---., .....,,,.... T\•11'1•1 kM'fJI ·-Tho"''' A. Mw,1tl111 M--a.rt.. H. LM1 llci...4 '· Htll ---C.0--JJO W11t a., lm•t M•llli.t ...,.., •• ,, r.o. h ie 11w, t2•2• ...... _ """"" ._,., WI ~ ....,,_. ~ lltdll m ........ A_ Mvrtlillfltll hKlll 1)97j hid! ........ ,. Slfl Cle!nlft~I Jl5 Nerti! •t t.fl\tnl ftMI ,. .. .,..... (7t•• '4l .... J2t Cl..iw.; U...ttaln1 M1·1611 ~ .ltn. °"'1111 ,.... """ ...... °""""' ... -,.,... "''''"' ... .. , ... , _.,.. -.. ....,,~ .. ......., .... , .. ,.,,..... wl!llM .,.1a1 ...... "" ...... .,......., ... . "°""" dMt ....... ,. .. a..i. ....... C:..llfrtll"llle. ..._.,. .., ai"'9r .... .......,.., W 11'111 D.tf '""'"'"'' ~ ............... """'9'1'Y. . . \ • Population Expert Due As OCC Speaker Oct. 31 . .. Dr. Paul Ehrlich, profesS()r or biology at Stanford University and a well~koown population density expert. will speak to Orange Coast College students Oct . 31. His 11 a.m. address in the Costa Mesa campus auditorium is entitled "the Population Crisis: Where Do We Go From Here?" Author of more than m scientific papers and news articles, Dr. Ehrlich is currently working on density effects in human populations. His boot "The Population Bomb," published in 1968, was a best seller. Dr. Ehrlich has a!So condUcted ex- perimental studies of insect populations in the laboratory, and be has researched the relati<>nship between populatl<>n pressures and social and political events. Bike Survey l! r ges Trails On MacArthur UCJ ·Irvine planners today published results ol a bicycle ""' "'"!Y which concludes the county and the c!U.. of Newport Beach and Irvir.o might do more to provide safer off-street trails particularly along MacArthur Boulevard and Uatvenlty Drive. The survey of 2,709 student.., faculty and staff Included responses from 716 bike ridera. Of the total who use bikes on campus, 288 rely on them for transporta- tion to and from UCI. While data collected by the UC! physical planning staff primarily reflects on-campus concerns and necessary im- provementl!I, "the major bicycle related &afety problems exist oil.campus." UCI planner Mel Roop said, "Bicycle riden and automobile driven (1,840 of them) alike cited the dangerous situation on the conununity roads adjacent to the c8mpus as causing prlmary concern." Roop CQOCludes from the data that Irvine, Newport Beach, coonty and state officials should work togethet to "provide separate, safe bicycle paths adjacent to the major community roadwoy1" to UCI. Three areas needing Jmmediate at- tention are : -MacArthur B<>ulevard between Brist<>l Street and Pacific Coast Highway and particularly the intersection with University Drive where w e s t b <> u n d signalizati<>n ignores bike traffic entirely. SPEAKING IN MESA Stanford's Dr. Ehrlich .... From Pagel PING PONG. • • Garden Grove, ']>Utting ln most of the wit- ness time. They were all up all Sunday night, alternately encouraging the boys to give up and then talking to keep them going. Grandpa offered tbe most staying power. "He brough his tape recorder and play~ sportscaster," said Mrs. Paulaon, "then he kicked us out of the garage and began telling old sea stories." The youths started out with a total of 49 ping pong balls. They were d<>wn to half that nwnber this ITl()ming. "There's Ping Pong balls in every cor- ner <>f our garage," Mrs. Oadarian said. During the day the two yroths would play in the allef be.hind the Gadarian home at 610 Begonia Avenuej but at night when temperatures drt>pped they W<>Uld 'move inside the garage and close the door, Friends of Doerr told police be was running t<> aid the victims of a van which had just spun off the road on tbe north si(le ol the highway. the driver of the van had Jost control of the vehicle. Neither the driver or hJs passengers were lnjured. Rivera t<>ld Police be wu passing the: van when Doerr suddenly appeared in front or hlm and he was unable to stop before hitting the Whittier f outb. No charges are pending against Rivera, according to police. Fro111PageJ ' REPORTS ... there wu no eonf!rmallon from either , U.S. or south Vietnamese official> 'In Salgon. Solitb Vietnamese sources s a i d , however, that 'I1lieu issued orders that junioi' military officers -lieutenants and captapia -sbouJd prepare to take over the funcUons of civilian village chiefs in the event of a cease--fire. ·Thi> WU Intended to Insur< that the Saigon government had a firm hold on the population and the government macblnery should a settlement come, the IO!Jf'C'5 said. For two months, government worten bave been painting Sooth Vietnam.,. flap on the doon, walls and Calt.I of homes and other buildlngs all' over the COl!"try. The flap, wbfch bepn ap- pearing more than a year ago, have often been described u • allmNIIeglance in the event of a ceue-flre. Infonnanta aald that during the past two weeks, government troops caPtured at least two caches of Viet C.Ong Oags during openUons near Saigon and•on the northern coast. OCC Royalty Dan Sobrt. candidate for Homecoming King at Orange Coast Colloge, is surrounded by five lovely queen candidate&. Candidates from. left are Melissa ·Bennett, Cristine Garcia, Ann Rayburn, Debbie Kenney and Mlckey Briet King candidate Paul 'Brown is not shown. Home- coming is scheduled for Saturday at OCC's LeBard stadium. Woman Upse-Y at R-eckless · • Driving Leads to Arrests A woman driver upset by reckless driving set off an episode thal led to trouble for all concerned in COota Mesa Stmday with a honk ol ber born and a shake ol her fist. The tl-ye&N>ld Meu Vmle -I oald II atariad 10! 5::to p.m, wbeiJ llbe verbally and visually clwtlsed -ts of two cars that sped past her an the right and left llfdo oo Adami A vmue. She honked and .-her fist, llbe.told Officer Oluc:k Hamlltoo. They returned tbe geolure and she 1\'SS subsequently chased heme to Balearic Drive and sur- rounded by three carloada ol men. One vehicle allegedly rammed her car as she pulled Into the driveway, at which time sbe .screamed to her son to aet bis father and the assailants backf1 up and sped away. A license number of one car l!tWl•ed in the case -tbe complete repod lo(ged .. an asuult with a deadly weapon wu an ind> tblck -reaulted In a teletype record c:beck wttlt Sacramento. The DeparUneot ol Motor Vehicles reglstratlm c:beCt altowed an addresa in the IOO.llJQcft: ol Paularlno Avenue, w~ poll& tMOrlzed the cars mllltt be bead- ed. . Pcllce 'helicopter crewmen gl.._ the Information by radio said they spotted three cars of similar description rollin& along at. Babb and Baker m.eta. University Driv e between ?o.1acArthur and California Avenue where l<.nd not <>wned by UCI abut.. University and the roadway Is not fully improved. The boys have attracted an endless stream <>f visitors and well wishers. "Poeple even stop us in the grocery store and ask us how they're doing," said Mrs. Gadarian. CONVERTIBLE OR BUILT•IN I -Bristol Street, the main link kl MacArthur from Costa Mesa . Specifically the s u r v e y recom- mendatlolltl urge the new city of Irvine t<> request county funds for the im~ provement of the U.liversity Drive sec- tion between MacArthur and CallfomJa Avenue. Presumably university funds would continue slmllar lmprovements between Calif<>rnla Avenue and Campus Drive. since the campus fronts on University Drive .al<>ng that portion . Ironically, the Campus Drive test trail Installed this summer by the city of [rvine is the pathway to the campus least.used by students. faculty or staff of UC!. Of those commuUng to UCI brblcycle, only 17 percent come from Irvine com- pared to 22 percent coming from Co1ta Mesa, ~ percent from Newport Beach and 36 percent from unnamed "<>ther" cities. Horse's Tail C-ut in Tustin Orange County Shtr1fts offlce.rs I are today Investigating an lncldtnt deacribtd by them 1s an ''unusulllly callous" act of cruelty durin& the weekend tn the Tustin area . \ tntruden at a Brier Lane corral cut off the three·foot tall of a horse owned by Mrs. AMa Bergatrom and left the anlm11l bleeding and diatreued, deputle1 uld. "The~ could have been no other reuon than to Inflict cruelty on a frltll<llY' animal that obvloully !Miiied the peraon who opproached him,·• an inve!Ugator said. I. The boys' m<>thers and grandparents an ,.Id they thought the whole thing Is wonderful. "We\<e promised them each a gift of $!00 1f they make tt to 72 hours," aald Mn. Brousseau. Grandpa made the oUer a little easier on bis pocketbook when be stumbled on a l20 bill while pacing the alley In lhe morning light today. "l think it's great," said Mrs. PaulJon. "I think they needed something like tbi .. •• "They sh<>wed that they could do It," Mrs. Gadarian said. "Many times we suggested that they shoo.Id give up, but they just look at one a!l()ther and keep on playing." The boys stopped keeping score after the l2(lth game. "When everybody got tired ol keeping tra]!t:," said Mn. Paulson. The event has less than tickled Mark's father . At the ootael the older Gadarlan aald he gu.....S Ibey would last "about !WO hours and 10 minutes" but thlJ morning he would only say: "Well, well, If the trend catches on, we've found a WIJ to cut the crime rate." "We'll have half the klda ln Corona c1el Mar In 90mebody'1 garage playing ping pong, and the otl>Or h4U drlvinll around from one game to uothtr aeelng b<>w they're doing." But even the elder Gadarlon broke down and agreed to be an ort'lclal wltnHI fos: about a half an hour SUnday afternoon. "I had to go to \he kitchen and start the '°"' and he knew If be '!'Mted tbe roast, he'd have to be the wltne11," Mrs. Oat1arlan 1ald. "So he tonk a martini and went to the garage to read the Dally Pilot," ahe said. Tho two youths Nkl Ibey starled tho marathon "beeluae we WIDled to be the be.cit Rt Mmethl nA:. '' I . DISHWASHE Convenlble Dllhwul)erwffh llltndoomeTutoUt .. T~ • .....-.1 ...... ., ........ ................ . """' ..... ._... .... •Tiii .... .,. .. _...,.. ..... ..., -·-..... II ........ ....... .uiM. ............ _ ...................... -,,......, .. ......,........, -·-• TlllT ......... 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