HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-24 - Orange Coast Pilot·L11ivyers ~url Epithets
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Little Jason Rea ,,
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Dies in .. Hospital
After Long Fight
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
• • • FRIDAY AFTE~NOON, AUGUST, 24, 1973
YOL. U. fltO, JJt.. 4 SICTIONS, • .. AGlll ..
f~t,,.. ltlatela "._ ""I
~ a tetius Case • ' ' ' '
. H~~ring Erupts
• By TOM BARLEY
·... Of 1tlt DlllY ..... Steff
:j,os ANGELE'$-A tJtree.<lay medical
e\aminen' hearing into charges against
Dr. Ebbe Hartellus. El Toro, closed here tale Thursday in a shouting match with
ltifee furious lawyers hurling accusatioos
~ epithets at each other.
figgy B ank
S pre"t Over;
Y outh Ho me < .
By JOANNl'I REYNOLDS
OI IN Oalb' l'IMt It~
Te:JF.year-old John Dennis O'Neill
~ home Thursday to a tearful re-iinlon with his mother. four days atter he
Jeft his HWJtingtoo .Beach home. 'I1le •lltile boy <aOed his mother Mrs.
John P. O'Neill froni a phone booth m
Sanla Ana at about 2:45 p.m. and told
her he wanted )I> coQle home.
"You are unscrupulous people , "
defense attomey Matlhew ginilich Jelled
at deputy attorneys general Mart Levine
and ~rt Mukai. "You 1 are unethical
tricksters clearly guilty ol'<feceptive and
vindictive conduct." +
.. And you're a liar," Levine shouted
back. "The biggest thinllfin this bearing
has 1>een·your m~tb."
Hearing officer ~obn A. W i 11 d
desperately tried to re.store order as the
three physicians who comprise the ·state
Board of Medical Examiners review
committee watched open-mouthed.
One clear !act eyierged from the
fracas:l!Olh Levine f"d Mukai stressed
that the state will now· settle for. nothing
less than the revocation of Dr. Hartellus'
license to practice ~icine.
Both Iawrers h84)een prepared at an
earlier heai"ing to'.1 accept a plan that
would ·have put Hartelius, 51, on pro-
bation for five !Yean provided he
substanllally re~ his use of certain dangerous drugs.
The medical coJ11!11ittoe rejected that
proposal behln~osed doors and ordered
Hartelius 'to his' defense to charges
or moral turpit de ' and unprofessional
conduct -most of them stemming from
his , alleged tli:uggiag of and sexual
association with two Costa Mesa women.
• a1
:'Jt. .•. , ..... ,.
Waiting it Out
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Hnntin·gto,n Boy
Ba~k Ho·me After ,
Piggy Bank Spree
·ers •
r. • • '
U"I Ttltllf\Olt
..
Grand Jury
Hits 12
With Raps
ALTON, !II (UPI) - A federal grand
jury indicted 12 federal narcotics agents
today on charges of depriving 11 persons
of constitutional rights during drug raids
in southwestern Illinois last April.
The 17.count Indictment was returned
in U.S. District Court after a four-monlb
federal investigation.
The indictment said the agents, acting
without probable cause or search war-
rants, broke inio six homes i n
Collinsville, East St. Louis a n d
Edwardsville, all In Illinois, ·durlnra-
five-day period.
During the course of the raids, two oc-
cupants were assaulted while handcuffed
and a third man was jailed for three
days without being charged with a crim~.
the indictment said.
Later, the indictment continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident by
attempting to utone down" reports to in-
vestigators.
In addition, three other agents were
charged with lying to U,,, federal grand
(See INDICTED, Page fl
' -'-·
orange Coast
: J)et. Ray liattab&ugh, who beaded the stM:ch for the missing child, drove hts
lllolller-to the corner of 17th .and Bristol
su.Ots where they met him. . ,
y'oung John said that after leavmg his JJ9i'1" at 21282 Fii"\ Circle be weot to the
.6:dlheim-5anta Ana area, living off about p be took from his sister's piggy bank. 1 pet. Vtrgtnla Kirlaneyer said today
tMt Jhe boy spent t"9 nights In motels.
Kllrilich Thursday agreed to let his
client, who practices in the Harbor Area,
go on the witness stand to answer ques-
tions !roqi both sides and the three doc-
tors who will eventually be his Jsdges.
mains barricaded in the Edwards Air Force Hase
barracks building wjtb a gun for the fifth day.
Air police stand in tbe doorway out of the fine of
fire from windows as· tbey plan their next move
'!'bile Airman Earl Williams, 19, 0_1_st_._Lo_u_1s_re-___________________ _
i1lt is absolutely incredible to me to
rei.zc th:it thete are people who would ctiek 1 little boy Into a m.ot~l a~ .~ rililitered guesl without questionmg 11 ,
~said. '
Mrs. Klr_kmeyer said the youngster ap-
1¥inntiy spent one night in the opeo but
''wu eaten alive by m03quitoes" and so ltc~ spent the ·next two nights at cheap
tN>telJ. ' . . h t h 1'he lltue hoy told hi• mother t a e
tried to a&vc money by not eating too
mUcb. He went to ~e restaurant and •••••l"tlle c:hea!M!st tiling on the' menu which was a bow) of cereal. The rest of
the time he lived off oranges bought at
roadside 1.utnds and in markets. . .
While police searched for the m1ssmg
boy, he went to. a family night baseball
game . at Anaheim stld1u~ and visited
Dl11Myland, Hattabaugh said. The deteeuvcs said ·Jbe Ultie boy got
·eround on bl& bicycle . ,
"Bui the ilre had a leak and he dldflil
want to 9POftd his money on a patch, so
M had to stop at just,, about every g8'
. ' (S.. 11ACK HO.Ml, Past !)
That grilling ended late 'lbursday and
Kurilicb promptly turned to bolh slate
lawyers to open negotiaUOM towards a
suggested iettlement.
What hawened after that is inlerpeled
differently. by each side. But whatever
was said, It led to the shouting match.
Kurilicb ,claims that Mukai told bim
that he and Levine had never intended to
make a <leal. He quoted Mukai as saying:
"we just wanted ,to .get Hartellus on the
stand and listen to his 1tory."
Mukai denied this statement and
denied having said anytlilng resembling
it to Kurillcb. And he asked WIIld to take
action against the Fullerton lawyer for
the mouthing of Jn obscenity allegedly
(See HARTELIUS, 1111<1)
EgyP,t Envoy Killed
LONDON (UPI) -Gen. El·Leiss)r
Nassel. EgypUan imbasaador-<feslgneta
to Greece, plunged to bis death today
from the ninth fioor balcony ol 1 luxury
apartment bulldlng·in narthweat bondon,
pollCil said. Seconds before he fell,
wiutcsses said they ·saw Nassef clinging
to the balcony by one hand .
,,
Candle Bl,aze
Kills Two Kids
COLUMBUS,-Ohio (UPI) -Two
. children died Thursday in a fire
caused by a candle used to light
their hotne. The local electric com·
pany bad turned off power to the
bdil!O' because 'of an unpaid ·133.40 bill. •
Shannon Young, 3, and his sister,
Heidi, 2, phlldren of Mr. and Mrs:
Orvil Young, died tn suburban
Hilliard after a baby sitter lighted
several candlea In a first-Ooor llv·
Ing room.
The Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company said tt turneil off
electric service lo the home
Wedn<aday because of a three-
month delinquent electric bill.
Little Jason Rea Dies
After Battle for Life
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of rt1t Dall¥" Plltt Stiff
Jason Rea, the little boy from
Capistrano Beach' who fought death for
weeks but never knew it, lost the battle
late Thursday at Fairview State Hospital
as his mother prayed at his bedside.
The 3-yeaMld victim ol a pool tragedy
in Huntin gton Beach early In July died of
major complications brought on by
massive brain damage suffered In the in·
cident at the home of a baby sitter.
In the we•ks that followed the com·
atose youngster was fiown to Denver to
become 1 transplant donor. then a wee k
ago was retumed to the Orange Coast
alter physicians In Colorado ruled the
youngs ter no longer qualified as an organ
donor.
"Jason's now a little angel in Heaven,"
his weary, grieving mother, Linda, said
this morning.
"l prayed and pra yed for God lo help
his suffering," she added.
Mrs. Rea, a ~year-old Secretary who
is dlJ"orced, had made flmeral ar-
rangements weeks ago when it first was
plaMed that her only child would be
flown to Denver and the breathing
m~chlnes removed.
The medical consemus at tha t time
wns that bcClluse no hope existed at all,
the youngster would he medi cally dead at
\See CAPO BOY, Page !I
Weather
Slightly cooler Saturday along
the Orange Coast -but still nice.
Highs In the upper 60s at the
beaches rising to 78 inland. Over'-"
night lows 62-65.
INSIDE TODAY
Two Laguna Beach film maJc..
ers were i1ivolved in the making
of a superstar -even if he fs a
seagull. The jilmitig of the Jona·
th.ail Livingston Seagull seagUlls
by Gr~g MacGiUiurg1LJl1id Jim
Freeman f or a bird'a dt:but ii
described in toda'U'S \Veekender,
Page 23.
I
•• • ..
~ OAllY PllOT s
Wounds 2
LONDON (UPI) -A par«ll bomb hid·
den In a hollowed-out bdok exploded with
a whll• Ila.I! oo the 22nd floor of Loo-
dCIS's new stone, glass and steel Stock
Excbange-loday, WOW1dl11g two persons.
halted bankers' had just emerged fron1 flash, disfiguring ~1iss Knight in a blow
ln the traditioo·bound Stock Exchange.
whose $10 billion turnover exceeds that of
all European continental stock exchanges
put logetber, the slllf British upper Up
prevailed to maintain proper decorum ln
the crisis.
'But the 3,600 jobbers on lhe ground
floor trading floor , wearing traditional
black coats and silk top hats, made no
move to leave -lhe building. Trad ing
began punctually at 9:30 a.m. .
the subway and railroad stations to fill that struck at the very heart of one or
the City of London, the capital 's inner the world's great financial centers, Leo·
II WU the sixth day or London bomb •
attack! attributed to an extremU!t wing
cl the Irish Republican Army, and the
Ylcill11JS were lbe first persons Injured by
·the 15 bombs put in Slores, offices and
subw"Y stations since Sunday.
enclave housing Brit ish major C!nanclal don's square mile of rnortcy.
instltutloos. Blood !'>treamed from Miss Knight's
In a gray-carpeted executive office, face, hands and legs. She fainted.
room 2201 , Miss Joanna Knight. 25, began Brind, 62, the stock exchange's chier
sorting tho day 's mai l. She reached for a administrative officer, sta.ggered to the
A police wamlng flasht.>d over the tx.·
change's 2~channel closed television
circuit, used for price colle<.:ting :
• Police said they v.·ere almost certatn
tbat lbe bombs, which have included
miniature incendiary devices as well as
explosives, wer the work of 1a British-
based unit of the Provisional wing of the
Irish Republican Army (IRA ).
Jarge white envelope addressed to the door, shouting "Bomb! Bomb!" "There has been a bon1b explo8ion. The
police are deadling with it. You may
evacuate the building." lt Was a bright sunlit morning and an
Stock Exchange's secretary general, Miss Knigllt 's gold wristwatch stopped
George W. Drind, and slit it open. at 9:20 a.m.
Fugate Parole?
Board May Commute Life Se1itence
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Caril Ann t'ugate, who traveled wnn
Charles Starkwealber in a 1958 murder spree in whtch 11 persons
died, cleared a hurdle today that coUld lead to parole.
The three-member state parole board on a n1aJority vote recom·
mended to the state pardon board that it commute her sentence to a
definite term of years, a necessary preliminary to parole.
She was 14 when she accompanied !Starkweather, wno d1ed 1n
the electric chair in 1959 for the string of murders in Nebraska ana
Wyoming. Starkweather, then 19, was her boyfriend.
Miss Fugate, now 30, was sentenced at 15 to a life term tor one
count of first-Oegree murder. She is imprisoned at the York \.YO-
men's Reformatory.
"It is our judgment," said board Chairman John l.ireennottz,
"that society's puPpose has been served and l\1iss fl'ugate cannot
benefit by further imprisonment and is an acceptable risk for parote
consideration.''
Nixon Pledges Disclosure
Of Estate Transactions
By JOHN VALTERZA
Cl 111• ~HY Piiot 51111
, The Nixon Administration promised
. Thursday that a full disclosure or the
transactions which involve the purchase
of La Casa Pacifica and land nearby will
1'.K! made before the President leaves the
South C'.oast.
Beyond thal, Deputy Press Secrelary
Gerald Wa.JTen would go no further.
Warren said that he did not foresee any
revelations this week on the controversial
arrangements assertedly worked out
EX·FBI MEN ADMIT
THEFTS-Story, Page 4
between the President and two wealthy
friends.
He would concede only that the prom.
ised explanation would come possibly
next week. The President is expected to
remain at his seaside villa until
sometime after Labor Day.
One of the two men believed to have
figured in financial assistance to the
President in the purchase of the estate -
C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo of Florida -ar-
rived at La Casa Pacifica with the Presi·
dent Monday afternoon.
Rebozo, a millionaire industrialist who
has furnished the ~resident a retreat at
Ke:· Biscayne, was the apparent original
purveyor of financial assistance to Nixon
iD 1969 when the original purchase of the
old Cotton Estate was conswnmated.
Jn several references this week Warren
has specified that certain events would
lake place at the Western White House
(t he government financed complex on the
San Diego side of the county line).
He has further stressed that those
events would not take place at ''the
house", meaning the private Nixon
residence on the Orange County side of
the enclave.
It was that apparent confusion which
led to harsh words shortly befo re Nixon
arrived when Northern Ca Ii torn i a
Democrat Jerome Waldie demanded an
inspection of the Western White House.
Waldie, a candidate for California
Governor, was granted a tour of the
Presidential office complex, but was
barred from seeing the Nixon resideoce.
Aides insisted that Waldie was in error
when he referred to the Nixon residence
as an extension of the White House.
* * * Presiden.t Rests .
At Casa Pacifica
After Conference
Nalied Woman
Hitchhiker
Lands in Jail
\Vhat do you say to a naked womnn
hitchhiker?
In Laguna Beach, it's "get in the patrol
car please."
At least, that's what Patrolman Paul
Rose said late Thursday, just before the
busty scanty pantie-clad woman began to
attack him.
It seemd that Rose had stopped the 3g..
year-old Orange woman for tailgating.
He dete cted an odor or alcohol and
\Vhile the woman ,_. clothed at the time
-wasn't really drunk, Rose suggested
she take a cab home.
\Valking to the center of South Coast
Hi ghway near the southerly city limits,
the woman stuck out her thumb, ap-
parently to hitchhike.
Officer Rose advised the woman that
the center of the traffic lanes was not the
place to stand while hitchhiking and the
woman moved to the curb. removed all
her clothing except some brief flesh col·
ored panties and stuck out her thumb.
When Rose attempted to take the
woman into custody for indecent ex·
posure, she allegedly flailed away at him.
which all resulted in a booking for in·
decent exposure and resisting arrest.
Al the station, she declined to clothe
herself, and was handcuffed in an office
untiJ transportation to the women's sec·
tion of the Orange County jail could be
provided.
From Pllfle 1
BACK HOME •••
'Not a Slave'
Russ ian novelist Alexander l-
Solzhenitsyn, saying 'I am not
a slave," has challenged the
authority of the Soviet state
to bar him from living in J{us·
sia with his family.
From Page 1
INDICTED. • •
2 Skylabbers
Take a Walk
To Fix Gear
HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2
nstronauts walked in space today for the
second time on their earth.orb ital
mission to repair a space station control
sys tem and rcJ oad comeras for studying
the sun .
"Everything's going just perfect," said
rnission cximmander Alan L. Bean.
Jack R. Lousma floated out of the 118-
foot station to look over the two areas
\vhere he will work to connect new
gyroscopes.
Owen K. Garriott stay ed in the open
hatch to ha,nd equipment to 'fellow rookie
crewmate Lousma . Bean remained inside
to assure that the orbiting S'tation stays
on course while the gyros are out of
service.
"Oh, boy, there's the V10rld," said
Lousma, staning outside the hatch, hang·
ing almost upside down.
"You feel like this is the first inning of
the second game of a double header ?''
Lousma asked Garriott, referring to their
secood walk.
"It's a long time between games, two
weeks,'' replied Garriott.
The pilots first walked outside Aug. 6.
Lousma lelt the 100.ton station to fn.
spect faul ty gyroscopes and then wait for
the next sunrise in space to connect a 22-
foot long cable, completing installation of
the special package of six: gyroscopes. He
jury investi gating the raids. had to unplug six of the original nine
The agents, attached to the St. Louis gy~!· installation was expected to take
o f r i c c oI Drug Abu se Law only a small part of the four-hour
Enforcement , included six from the spacewalk, and Garriott was to then
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous \York his way out to the solar observation
Drugs, two from the Treasury Depart· instruments and put new film in them.
ment, three rrom the St. Louis police He was also to try fixing minor problems
department and one from the East St. with some of the equipment while he's station to fill the tire with air," Hat· Louis Police Department. outside.
tabaugh said The .six federal narcotics agents in· The Skylab gyros, working in three dif·
Travaj,ing by this labc!rious method, dieted are William C. Dwyer, Kenneth R. ferent axes in which the ship flies, keep
young John made one trip to the Hun-Bloemaker, Dennis R. Moriarty, Dennis it steady in orbit. The astronauts will
lington Beach area during the heightOf Harker, Michael Hillebrand and Leon leave the best working gyro in each axis
Phillips. plugged in, and use the six new ones to the search for him. Treasury Department employes in· replace gyros that have belD misbehav·
''He said he wanted to talk to his dieted are Tom Teyssier and Calvin Culp. ing off and on since the station was
mother so he went to the place where she The three St. Louis policemen are launched more than three monfhs igo.
works. But he didn't see her car there so Ronald J. Olive, Donald \V. Spicer and Bean, Garriott and Lousma had to
he went back to the Anilheim area," Hat· Daniel J. Duffy. hook up their ship's backup cooling
tabaugh said. The East St. Louis officer named in the system Thursday. It works like a car
The OOy ran away from home Monday indictment is Lester Anderson. radiator to keep down the temperatures
afternoon following a family "misun· All agents except Anderson were of equipment.
derstanding." police said. charged in two counts with conspiring to Approaching the halfway point of the ir
But by Thursday afternoon, his con· deprive persons of constitutional rights two--month mission, the astronauts were
science was beginning to bother him and by entering homes without probable reported by Space Agency physicians to
he ca1led his mother because he "felt cause or search warrants, arresting and be in excellent health. By early Saturday,
bad" about taking bis sister's money and detaining them without probable cause or the second crew should have broken the
•
F,.....r.,el
CAPO BOY •..
that point and organ transplanlS could be
performed, using his kidneys and liver to
give Ille to other dying children.
''!tty greatest grief is that tt never hap-
pened; that Jason could not give life to
other children," said Mrs. Rea .
Through the ordeal Mrs. Rea sald , sup·
port bas come from throughout the na·
ti on.
•·I've had messages fro1n perfect
strangers frotn all over the count'], an
blessing me for courage nnd faith in the
Lord, and I'1n so grateful for thenl.
\Vithout the help I wonder if I could hn ve
n1ade It." she said.
The support has continue.~ to con1c
frorn friends and strangers ahkc .
"My phone was ringing all night and
everyone I talked to agreed with me that
God must have had a reason for all or
this, and no,.,, it's up lo me to find the
ans .... ·er," she said. •
One fa ctor which caused some bit· ·
terness during the strain of the vigil were
comments about the youngster "making
1ncdical history,'" Mrs. Rea said.
"Thal hurt greatly," she said. ,
The youngster was literally brought
back from death several tin1es during the
ordeal -first after showing no signs of
life after the rescue from the bottom of
lbe pool.
Jason's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a
team of physicians worked furiously at' ·
J1untington fntercommunity Hospital. "·
Three \Yeeks later at the same hospital
the youngster again lost his bodily fwlC· '
lions but was revived and after surgery'
physicians, Mrs. Rea and her formec ~
husband -Jason's father -agreed to·
the transplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver ~1rs. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fare and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One or those offers of help came from ·
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help Mrs. Rea face what she had
believed to be the inevitable.
"l accepted it graciously,'' she said.
And nl"!tt week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the little boy are ten--
tatively set for Wednesday at the Peek
Family Colonial Funeral Home in
Westminster. 1
Bomb Accident
Huma1i Error
WASHINGTON (AP\ -Air
Force investigators today blamed
the accidental BS2 bombing of a
Cambodian village on the radar
navigator's failure to tum on a key
switch in the aiming computer.
Announcing results of the in·'
vest.igation of the bombing which
killed and wounded more than 400
Cambodians at Neak Luong Aug. 6,
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W.
Friedheim said Air Force com·
manders "are in the process of tak·
ing corrective and disciplinary ac·
tions."
He declined to identify the radar
navigator or other members of the
B52 bomber crew which dropped its
load aOOut 71z miles a\vay from its
target. A 852 nonnally has a crew
of six.
,,. Later, when arrangements were made
' to purchase about 16 fallow acres im·
mediately inland or the estate. Rebozo
asertedly once again lent funds. Later
the loan was picked up by another close
Since his first press conference in live
months -a Watergateodominated ex·
change Wednesday afternoon -Presi·
d._NixOn has settled into a quiet
rolil'ine of morning meetings and af.
ternoon rest at La Casa Pacifica.
he wanted to come home. arrest warrants and assaulting them Skylab 1 endurance record of 28 days and
Hattabaugh said the boy was in "good ,..'w'.'.hi~'l'.:e~in'.'_'cus~lllJod~y'.:.~---------50".:'...nun".'."· ~u".'te:s~i'."n_'s'.l'p~ac:'e':. ________ ~=============! shape" when he was reunited with his
; Nixon friend, Robert Abplanalp, the
aernsol spray valve king from New York.
l
Although some disclosures aOOut the
transactions -facts revealed in press
accounts -have been corroborated by
the White House, one key element in the
transactions has not been addressed.
Abplanalp initially was reported to
have set up a special corporation to deal
with the financing, according to early
White House reports. But later Warren
admitted that no such firm existed.
Public records show none of the details
because the land is in blind trust.
Jn the furore that ensued over the
details of the Joans and purchase, \Varren
and his Superior Ronald Ziegler vowed to
make complete details available to the
public.
In advance or lhe promised run
disclosures Warren has made a semantic
distinction between the Nixon residence
and the "Western White House."
OU.Hal COAST "
DAILY PILOT
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'""""'"' .., ""'" "·'' """"'"' It'll~ *"IMlltM OM .-flllr.
l
The President Thursday emerged from
his San CJemente estate for the first time
this trip, flying by helicopter to his
favorite beach on the Camp Pendleton
Marine base. Aides said Nixon was join·
NIXON AIDES DENY AGNEW
LEAKS-Story, Page 4
eel by close friend C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo
and daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower on
the tw<r-hour sojourn at Red Beach
several miles downcoast.
The President often visits the strand
and occasionally swims there, rather
than in the ocean at his doorstep. The
surf at Red Beach is far less severe than
at the point near La Casa Pacifica.
His aides said Thursday that there was
no sc hedule of activities to announce for
the rest oC the week.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren
said that the public response to the
President's appearance was "most
overwhelming" and indicated strong sup--
port for the chief executive.
Warren add ed that the assessment of
public reaction v.·as made by evaluating
phone calls and telegrams coming to the
\\lhite House.
The President plans to stay at his San
Cle mente estate through the Labor Day
·weekend.
The Chief Executive rises early and
joins his staff at th e office co mplex, con·
suiting through the morning.
In the afternoons Nixon generally has
re turned to the residence for lunch, and
afterwards reads and works in his study
which is on the second floor of the old
Spanish villa.
The White •rouse Press Corps Thurs·
day asked \Varren 1if indications of
another \Vest Coast press conference
were indeed strong: but the spokesman
would not confirm the growin g spec ula·
Hon of an encore,
1'he specula tion involves the possibility
that the President plans yet another
meeting with the press wlth one strong
rule in effect -no more questions would
be taken on the Watergate affair, •
Pot llaul Discovered
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP ) -Police said
Thursda y they found rnore than two tons
of marijuana hidden ln R car and a truck.
Officers said they stopped a cari driven
by Jorge Valdes Aceves, 28, of Tijuana
which led to the disco very.
l...
mother.
A countywide search for young John
had been launched Tu.esday, In spite of
the fact that it was apparent that the
child had run away from home and that
there was no foul play in his disap-
pearance, police feared for his safety
because of his age.
HARTELIUS. • •
leveled at the two young state attorneys
at the height of the fracas.
Kurilich, beside himself with rage, told
\Villd that he would never have put
Hartelius on the stand if he bad not been
sure that some serious attempt at
negotiation would be instigated.
He labeled the state action as "con·
temptuous, unethical, disgraceful decep-
tion" that would mean at least another
year of hearings before he can complete
his defense of Hartelius.
Willd finally persuaded all three
lawyers and Laguna Beach attorney Tom
Reilly, Kurilich's co-counsel, to leave the
hearing room and discuss a possible set·
Uement in private.
But they all returned for yet another
shouting match In \Vhich Levine and
~tukai insisted on nothing less than the
revocation of the silver-haired physi·
cian's license.
Willd Ordered all four lawyers to return
Sept. 11 for the opening of a three" day
hearing and was promptly warned by
Kurilich that an Orange County Superior
Court murder trial at which he is defen·
ding the accused man wUI likely be in
progress at that time.
Wllld said he intends to personally con-
toct presiding Judge Bruce Sumner in a
b!d to delay the trial unlil after the Sept.
11 hea ring is concluded.
ST A.TE LOSES
A. BULLDOZER
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Tlte Ten·
nessec Transportation Department has
losl • $45,000 bulldozer.
High way officials said a bright orange,
19-day-<>ld, f .000-pound bulldozer was
believed to have been carted away on a
tru ck from a work 5ite.
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F'r!<111y, August 24, 1Cl73 s DAILY PJLOl :J
At Y~ur Kiss~ger Grateful s er v Ice lly JOHN VALTERZA President was planning to replace
for Joh New
A Sunday, Wednelld1y and •'rtdoy
Feature
Of the Dally Pilot
Got o pt"oblem1 Tlien writ•
Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red
· tape, get the
•
a1iswer1 and
action 11 o u
n1ed to -1 to!ve lnequi· ties in gov·
ernment and
busin ess. Mail
JI our ques·
dons to Pat
Dunn/ At
".Your Service, Orange Coast
,Dail~ Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa
~Meta. C..'a., 92626. l nctudt vou1
itlephone numbeJ".
Replarem e 11t H eady
DEAR PAT: I recently purchased
fur,niture at t.-tansfields in Huntington
Beach. One expensive item is faulty. I
have been courteous, patient and palitc
for. the last se ven weeks. I do not want to
go,, through a government consumer
protection agency to get action ; I simply
want the item replaced .
S.G., Costa f\-1esu
l\1ansfleld's manager, Andy Nelson,
s~'s a new replaicement table has ar·
riyed at the store, but delivery cannot ht
made on weekdays during tbe evening
\\'hen you are home from work. Ar-
ruugements will be made for a Saturday
delivery if you call Nelson at 962-4477.
t t'•nnen /Uinlste rs
DEAR J>AT: ~~lng 11 Presbyterian, I
was interested in reading some time ago
about a female Presbyterian minister
"'ho had studied theology exten sively at
1-1.arvard Divinity School and Union
Seminary, earning honor degrees and her
doctorate. yet was not able to hold a
seminary positio.1 after the completion of
her studi es. It occurred to me to ask if
female theologians of the Jewish faith
are meeting more or less success in
beroming a t eaching or ministering
member of their faith.
L. T .• Irvine
This iso lated example is no "con-
clusive" statement on w om en Ii ' ad·
vancement In assuming a theological
position in the Jc.wish faith, but 25-year·
old Sally J. Priesand was ordained as the
flt st woman-.rabbi in the U.S., and
perhaps only the second In the history of
R,form Judaism in CinciMati 's Isaac M.
'~lse Te mple on June 3, 1910. Although
many women have studied for the rab-
binate in the reform brant'b, Rabbi Sally.
a1 she is known. was the fi rst to be or·
diJned. Her oDly known predecessor was
oidnlned In Germany, \~1here Reform
J Udaism developed Jn the 19th Century
ad stressed the equality of the sexes.
pennittlng the ordination of women
uallke the Conservative and Orthodox
b(tlnches. Even tbeugh Dr. Letty Russe.II,
t¥ Presbyterian theo logian about wbom
yfu wrote. com mented ttlat s h e
· "ji·ouldn't ad\1l1e women to go through It
a , unless It didn't matter," tbe Rev.
D9.vida Foy Cribtree, !8, last year
eitered the mhllstry of the United
Church of Christ In the first reUglous
skvlce of ordination by a major
dtnomlnation in wbJcb women took all
tbe principal rotes. It happened in
~rthffeld, C.nn .
• • Ch~ekbag Sollrltors
DEAR PAT: Our neighborhood is being
vi.Sited by .nore and more people claim-
ing they represent various charities. I
know that some kind of permit is sup-
posed to be earned by these solicitors
and I'd like to find out what agency
issues this authorization and what in-
formation should be included on it, so I
can check on the authenticity of these
various requests.
J.1t1., Fountain Valley
Persons making soUcitatlons for cbari·
ty are required to show written
autborizaUon to solicit signed by at )east
two officials or the charity and an
Information Card issued by the Orange
County Department of Welfare. U any
sollcJor does no& comply wlth tbcse
regalallons, contact tbe Fountain Valley
Police Department by calling 96%-«41.
Ad:fustme11t Ple dge d
DEAR PAT : tn October, 1971, I joined
the Holiday Health Spa in Costa Mesa.
agreeing to pay ;is each month for one
year. I sentjn my last check on Oct. 10,
1972 then received a letter saying my ae-COW:t was overdue. Holiday insisted this
paYt(lent was not rtceived, so I made out
another check oo Nov. 3 which shows a
cancellation date or Nov. 10. Then I
received the October check in February. 1m with a Jan. ~ cancellation date. I
wrote to the fi~i:plaining the situation
in March, 1973. ey replied saying their
records show no overpayment and I
sent photostatic copies of Ule 13 checks
and received no replf. Af~r more cor-
respondence in June, I still have not
received any response. N.W., Costs Mesa
The Costa ~tesa firm's manager said
he "111 contact tbe bookkeeping depart·
1ncnt at Holiday Health Spa's beitd-
quttrien fn Westminster to 11ee that nn
ad)uttment Ill made In your record or
paymen& and a $15 refund Is malled to
you. I'm sending the photostatic coplert or
your cbcekt that you enclosed fh your
letter ind a ubackup'' request for ad ·
justment to the 1pa'1 headquarters tn
view or your previous correspondence
bcJng Jgnored.
-6 Held in P ill Caper
!,AS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Nevada
nllJFOtlcs nulhorities said Thursday they
arfj!Sttd six per~ons and St itcd $10,000
worth of bcnzcdrine pill$ here and In San
Diego. SUpervlslng agent Pal SOOvens
sakf three persons were arrested In Las
Ve.gas and three in San Dlcgo, where
105,000 pills were con Uscated.
01 "'-o.t11r ... .., 11111 Wl!Uam Rogers as head of the nation's
When a U.S. Pfoesident picks a person foreign policy.
Cl$ Secretary or State gratitude is the Dr. Kissinger, ln a somber moment at ~·uJe, but in the case of Dr. Henry KJ$s-his San Clinte news conference, said 1nger1 the thanks are special. t that he did foresee any special prob-
Because Dr. Kissinger is Jewish, the fems in a ering diplomacy in the
former tlavard professor in his fll'St Near East ause ofbia background.
public appearance since his selection to "The President bas repeatedly stated
the 1>0st made strong reference to his that the Middle East ls perhaps lhe most
heritage. dangerous area," he explained, 1'and 1
"'I'here is not another cowitry in the wlll pursue under the President's direc-
world where a man or my background tion those policies wbich are considered
would even be considered for such a necessary."
job," Dr. Kissinger said Thursday. As to criticism from Arab leaders of
And he added somberly,' "It imposes Kissinger's ability to adequately conduct
up0n me a very grave responsibility." foreign policy in Ught or his heritage, Or.
Ironically, only hours before President Kissinger stressed that he could conduct
Nixon made the announcement of Dr. that policy "regardless of national
Kissinger's nomination to the Cahlnet, heritage."
extra security was ordered for the Dr. Kissinger left hls native Germany
former Harvard professor because of an in the late 19308 before the outbreak of
increase in threats which were Arab in Wor\d War 11.
origin. If· Dr. Kl.!singer indeed wins con-
The threats, which security spokesmen firma.Uon to the Cebinet post he is ex-
said had to be regarded as serious, came pected' to tackle the Mideast policy prob--
before any indication had arisen that the leins more vigorously than he has done
* * * British Happy; Arabs Mad .
Selection of Kissinger
Draws Varied Reaction
Hy United Press International
The nomination of Henry A. Kissinger
as secretary of state today drew ap-
plause in Britain, Arab anger and M
con1ment from Peking.
And many commentators, while
acknowledging Kissinger's role as chief
architect in Ameri ca's triumphs abroad,
expressed resel"\'alions about the in-
ternational effect s of Watergate.
In China, where Kissinger engineered a
tha w in relati ons and set up the historic
Peking summit meeting last year
between President Nixon and Chinese
leaders . the Kis singer announcement was
reported ,1,.ithout conunent in a terse
dis patch on the govenunent-run New
China News Agency .
There was no word either from the
Kremlin, despite two meetings between
Nixon and Soviet leaders in the last two
years and the recent warming or rela-
tions.
British press reaction was overwhelm-
ingly in favor or .... K~ger, with com-
ments such as t a'fin.e-a""Ppointment" and
··not a moment too soon."
The editor of the Beirut newspaper An
Nahar said in a fr ont page editorial that
"'Kissinger's appointn1ent is an Israeli
1.11'1 TeltMfto
fJ e'd """" .E1tdured •
Rudolph Valentino, the great
lover of the f i l e n t screen,
\VO~ld have remained a big star
until recently1 if he had lived.
according to an astrologer who
spoke at a memorial service
marking the 4 7th anniversary
of his deaUL
victory over the Arabs not !:t America
on ly but also in the Middle Ea5t tegion
as well."
He noted that Kissinger was a Jew and
said, "Kissinger's rise to the throne of
diplomacy and defense is attributed to
the Zionist movement which h a s
persuiided Nixon to appoint him as ad-
viser and then forced the American
president to appoint him secretary of
state.''
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban
wired Kissinger, "I am confident that
you will make contributions to the pro-
motion of peace and that the relations
between our two countries will continue
to develop in the traditional spirit of
mutual friendship and respect."
The French newspaper Le Monde said
the nomination "crowns a prodigious
career," but noted:
"This promotion does not necessarily
signify that Mr. Kissinger will have
many occasions to add to his glory ,
Although he has not been tainted by the
recent scandals, the Nixon team which
has received such blows in the course or
the last months will have a hard time
trying to re-e stablish its international
credit."
The Stockhobn newspaper Oagens
Nybeter commented, ". . . everything
could be pretty well in the world or
Henry Kissinger if he had not entered on
the new job while the boss is stuck in
Watergate. Tha t case even baffles the
cleverness and inventiveness of Kiss-
inger.''
* * * Fulbright Wants
Kissinger Before
His Committee
FORTH SMITH, Ark. IUPI) -Sen. J.
William Fulbright (D-Ark.), wants to
know if Dr. Henry A. Kissinger will ap-
pear before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee before he will approve Kiss-
inger as secretary of state.
Thursday Fulbright called Kissinger "a
very competent man in his field " and
said "he's been the principal negotiator
and the most important representative of
the President in the field of foreign af-
fairs.
"As lonk as he's playing this role, it's
better that he be the secretary of state
than to continue as he was ," Fulbright
said.
But, Fulbright said, Kissinger has
"been under the President's principle of
executive privilege and would not testify
before the cemm.ittee.
"There is only one thing I'm not clear
about," Fulbright said. "The President
said he (Kissinger) is going to continue
as his personal adviser on security af-
fairs. Does that mean he's going . to
refuse to come before the committee?"
Energy, Crime, Champs
Lead Sunday Features
A ccn traJ morgue, the energy crisis
and th e increasing unmbers of women
con1mitting crimes are some of the
topics in this week 's Sunday Daily Pilot.
COUN'l'r MORGUE -Should Orange
Coun ty have a central fa cility to whJch
the victims or accidental and violent
(Sunday's Best)
deaths should be taken? Or should the
bodies continue to ho taken on a rotation
basis to mortua ries? Staf£ Writer Tom
Bnrley'cx plores the topic in this week's
Sund ay Special.
OUT OF WOODS -Ranch life seems
to heli> bring troubled youths out of the
woods judging by the result. of sending
them lo the Orange Counly Probation
t>cpartmt nt's institutions In TrabucoCan-
yon and Cleveland National Forest. The
story, told by Stall Writer Carol Moore,
Is the main feature ot thJs week's "YOU"
secti d'h.
•
SAVING ENERGV A n en·
vironmentalist writes that Americans
can bum up to 20 percent less fuel once
they become fully aware of the spiraling
cost of energy and buy smaller cars and
insist on better insulating of homes. The
illustrated article', from the Christian
Science Monitor Service, is also in the
"YOU" section.
WOMEN IN CRIME -Coincidental
with the growth ol Women's Lib, possi bly
or possibly not 'related, has come in-
creased part.icipaUoo by women in ma·
j01 crime. FBI statistics show certain
crimes by women have jumped as mudl
a.! 200 percent An Editorial Research
report tells the slnry in the "A" section.
PIANO CHAMPIONS -A duo or
elgh~lgbll, Tom and Kate Whitney or
Irvine, play together but value their in·
dlvlduaJ careers of teaehlng and n1aking
music. Staff Writer Jo Olson Intervie wed
Ute couple about their lives and
achievements -together and in-
dividually. irlte story will be on the
Women's Page.
before as President Nixon's adviser ou
National Security Affair s.
\Vhen he served only in that post, Dr.
Ki ssinger showed his acu1nen in the f 11r
East, engineering for the President the
historic trip to Peking and the settlement
of the Vietnan1 \Vnr.
Dur ing that ti1ne , it was Roger s who
focused on the delicutc problems of the
Mideast.
In the conference Dr. Ki ssinger made
note or the diplomatic coups of the
Administration over the past three years,
but he termed the status of those
nc hievements "tender'' and emphasized
that ove r the next three years he would
have to work to make them stronger and
more permanent.
Unlike his meetings with the press in
the past, Thursday 's appearance on a
lawn of the Presidential office complex
was n1u ch more subdued. }...
The reason for the quieter presence, I
many observers said , was because Dr.
Kissi nger did not want to add any fuel to
possible fires which could come at his
confirm ati on hea rings.
Nonetheless, the glimpses of the Dr.
Kissinge r of old did come throug h.
A man of quick wit, he responded im-
mediately to a jab from a network
newsman who asked if the designate
would prefer to be called "Mr. Secretary
or Dr. Secretary."
Ki ssinger immediately shot back \Yith: D•ily Pii ot Stoff PflOfo
"I'm not one for protocol ... ·Ex-
cellency' will do.''
NEW SECRETARY NOMINEE AT FIRST PRESS CONF ERENCE
Heritage Imposes A Very Grave Responsibility-Kissinger ~
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' •1 DAILY PILOT Friday, Augu$l 24, l<J73
·u .S. Bombers, Troops ··
·To Leave Thai Bases
BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI) -The
United States announced plMS today to
puU 3,550 troops and more than 100
warplanes out or Thailand In the first
phase of an American pullout from seven
bases across the country.
Maj. Gen . Thomas W. Mellen, chief of
the American Military Assistance Com-
mand for Thailand (MAc:n!AI) worked
out the withdrawal agreement earlier in
the da,y In talks with U . Gen. Kriangsak
Chamanda, deputy chief of stali of
Thailand's Supreme Command.
U.S. MILITARY sources said that the
pullout would begin as early as lbe begin-
ning of next week. They said that no type
of aircraft was excluded including the
BS2 bombers. The first units to depart
were expected to be those Americans
deployed here 'from Vietnam in 1972.
A joint statement, t9sued after the
meeting at the Thal Foreign Ministry,
said, "it v.·as agreed that the U.S. would
take Immediate steps for an initial
withdrawal of 3,550 U.S. military person-
nel from Thailand and also a reduction of
more than 100 aircraft."
The statement made ho specific men-
tion of how long the pullout would take,
but said the two sides would meet agaJn
in the first week of September to con-
sider "further gradual reduction of the
level of U.S. forces in Thailand.
The announcement said the future
withdrawals would include "strategic,
tactical and support aircraft" but would
take ;'into consideration security re-
quirements of Southeast Asia."
THE UNITED stales and Thailand had
agreed earlier to pull oul some of
Six Still Vnco11trolled
Some Fire Areas Cooler;
Blazes Near Reno Flare
By Associated Press
Firefighters in parts of the West
\Velcomed predictions of a cooling trend
today. "But conditions-remained hot near
Reno, Nev., where new fires were
reported Thursday night.
Dick Klade, spokesman for the
lnteragency Fire Control Center in Boise,
Idaho, said Reno authcf'tities had re-
quested l\\'O air tankers to fight the out-
breaks there. He had no further details,
Meanwhile, only six major fires re-
mained uncontrolled Thursday i n
California, Oregon, Idaho and Montana.
burning a total of 40,455 acres. A total of
51 fires have burned 190,100 acres in
~ states, said Klade.
e A irline Donated
e Rall S trike Spreads
?i.10NTREAL (AP) -canada's month-
Iong series or regional rail strikes is now
a nationwide walkout.
Thursday night's walkout 'ft'as Canada's
first national rail strike since 1966. That
( IN SHORT ... )
one was ended in less than 10 days by
back-to-work legislation, and there were
demands today for firm govenvnent ac--
tion. But Labor Minister John Munro
gave no indication of what he might do.
e Getty Kidnap Hoax?
America's 45,000 servicemen and more
than 500 warplanes at Thai bases beeause
of the Aug. IS Cambodian bombing halt.
The bases were built by the United
States during the 1960s at a cost ol more
than $6SO million.
Thailand has the largest concentration
of American air power outside the United
States. The kingdom's military govern-
ment guards a border of 1,000 miles with
Cambodia and Laos, separated from
China by onJy a narrow strip of Bunna.
~!ilitary sources said the f i r s t
withdrawals likely wouJd be from Tak.bli,
an Air Force F4 Phantom base aJ:oout 100
miles north of Bangkok, and Nam Phong,
north of Bangkok, and Nam Phong, a
a U.S. Marine Phantom and A4 Skyhawk
camp 40 miles northeast of the capital.
Other units which could be withdrawn
are stationed at 7th Air Force bead·
quarters at Nakhon Phanom, known to
ainnen as "NKP" and situated near the
Mekong River border with Laos about
375 miles northeast of Bangkok.
THAILAND'S Prime Minister, Field
Marshal Th.anom IGttikachom, conceded
earlier this week an American troop
withdrawal would have "a great deal of
impact" on the kingdom's economy.
Thanom said the Americans "have
spent a lot of money here," but added
"not all" of the U.S. servicemen would
leave.
In other Indochina action, the first
Saigon-to-Phnom Penh convoy to travel
without American air cover beaded up
ti:~ Mekong River today with badly need·
ed fuel.
The Cambodian air force's prop-driven
T28 bombers and navy gunboats escorted
the two cargo ships and five tankers run-
ning the gauntlet of KbJner Rouge gun-
ners along the 60 miles of river from the
South Vietnamese border. There was no
word on the progress of· the convoy.
The Cambodian embassy says it has
been getting dozens of inquiries a week
from former U.S. servicemen who want
to volunteer for duty with Cambodian
government forces .
But the volunteers are being turned
down, an embassy spokesman said
Thursday.
Wtcnnerful, Wunnerful
A far cry from prim, bubbly days on the Lawrence
Welk show, the Lennon Sisters of today have in-
corporated a strip-tease nwnber in their new act
at Caesar's Palace in Las .ve8a'!. The girl~. doff
much of their atttre to the gr1nd1ng slralflS of Any~
thing Goes." \Vhere have all the bubbles gone?
Ex-FBI Men Admit Thefts
Ike , LBJ, JFK Kn ew of Burglar ies ii i Ernbassies?
WASHINGTON (AP) -The FBI com-
mitted burglaries to steal intelligence in·
formation from inside the embassies or
foreign nations during the Johnson, Ken-
nedy and Eisenhower administrations,
former FBI officia ls say.
Published documents indicate the
break-ins we re aimed at getting code
books and other cryptographic in-
formation.
Two former high FBI officials
estimated Thursday that fewer than 10
such brea~·ins took place each year. One
source said they went on for 15 to 20
years before being stopped in 1966.
Meanwhile the \Vhite House stuck to
President Nixon's disputed assertion that
FBI break-ins were authorized,
\videSpread and well known during t\rO
Democratic administrations.
DEPUTY WHITE House Press
Secretary Gerald L. Warren. speak ing in
San Clemente. refused to add any details.
Other \\1hite 11ousc officials indicate Nix·
on personally ordered them lo keep quiet
about the n1attcr.
Dl'spite that. one Nixon aide said FBI
break-ins .... ·ere made in civil rights cases
during the Kennedy and Johnson years,
as \\'Cil as in national security cases. He
gave no olher information.
DALLAS (UPI) -Braniff Airways
gave $50,000 in personal and corporate
contributions to President Nixon 's re-
election campaign, the airline said
Thursday.
Braniff is the seventh firm to announce
donations to the re-eleclion effort in
violation of a federal law prohibiting cor-
porate contributions to political cam-
paigns.
ROME (UPI) -The attorney for the
family of oil billionaire J. Paul Getty's
grandson, missing since he was reported
kidnaped six weeks ago, conceded for the
first time Thursday the wOOle thing may
be a hoax. , Lawyer~ Giovanni Jacovoni said the
boy's mother, Mrs. Gail Getty, still
believes her son has been abducted.
NOW Honors Standouts
No Arrests Yet
In Inves tigation
Of Nixon Plot
The fonner rBI officials said the em·
bassy break-ins differed rrom the
Ellsberg burglary because the code!
sought in them .,.,,ere of obvious, in-
telligence value. '"Acordlng to FBI sband·
ards there is no \\'IY the Ellsberg Job
rould be called a national security opera·
tl on:' one said. '
ll wasn't clear \\'hen the e~
break-ins began. or who first authottzed
them. Former Atty. Gen. Herbert
Bro\\·nell . y.•ho was boss of the Justice.
Department during Dwight D.
EisenhoY.'er's odm.inistration refu.9eCI. lO e Bontb Threat Made
WASHINGTON (AP) -A speech by
Secretary of the TreaslU'Y George P.
Shu1tz at ai meeting or the American
Bankers Association was postponed today
after a borilb threat was received at the
hi. tel whe:e ShuJtz was to speak.
In Male Chauvinism
NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -The in-
vestigation into an alleged conspiracy to
kill President Nixon has failed to turn up
enough evidence to make arrests, a local
so~ close to the inquiry ~ys. e Satellite Launched
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - A new
international communications satellite
moved in orbit today to .... ·ard a stationary
outµost high above the Atlantic Ocean.
The fifth in a series of Intelsat 4
payloads was launched from Cape Ken-
nedy Thursday into an initial orbit rang-
ing from about 340 lo 22,300 miles above
the earth.
A spokesman for Shultz said the hotel
received a call saying that a bomb wou1d
explode about 9:30 a.m. Shultz was
scheduled to begin speaking at 8:30 a.m.
There was no bomb.
~~ .... ~~--~_., ................... ~·~·~·· ................ ,j
a No-No
~ Jud ge Ba1is Mo vie, Jails Pair i
NORFOLK. Va. (AP) -A Norfolk judge ruled Thursday that
the film "The Devil in l\1iss Jones" is "horrible, obscene and filthy."
He barred it from the screen and assessed 12-rnonth jail terms and
$5,000 fines against t\VO theater employes. a
"It's a rotten, filthy situation," said Municipal Court Judge ~
' Llewellyn S. Richardson after he sat through a special showing of ~
the film along with 50 lawyers and members of the press.
The film was seized twice in the past week from The Suburban I
Theater, \vhere it had been sho\vn at the midnight-only performance.
Richard levied the sentence against the theater manager, Don-
aJd Keith Moyers II, 19, and the director of advertising and public
relations for the Windsor Theaters, Ray Bentley Jr., 21. Defense
lawyers said they would appeal. ·
Defense attorneys argued that because the heroine of the film
came to a poor end that it was basically a "morality play."
The movie is about a young woman who commits suicide but ;
is allowed one \Vish before being banished to the fires of bell. She
1 chooses lust , and the film follows her through various escapades.
NEW YORK (UPI). -The National
Organization for Women (NOW), in its
battle against male chauvinism, draped
the statue of Atlas at Rockefeller Cen-
ter today with a banner proclaiming
"Atlas, you held us up too long."
The draping of the statue of AUas sup-
porting the globe was NOW's latest ac-
tion in a week of planned protests before
Aug. 26, the 53rd anniversary of the
Women's Suffrage Amendment to the
trading. (Related sloiy page 14).
Thursday, the Women's Lib group rais-
ed a "women power" banner over the
public gallery of the American Stock Ex·
change to protest the "male domination
of Wall Street. It had no effect on
trading.
THE ORGANIZATION plans to climax
It week of protest demonstrations Sunday
with a "women's liberation" march on
Fifth Avenue.
Vanguard Records won a special
"Keep Her in Her Place'' award from
NOW today for recording the song: "Get
Your Biscuits in the Oven and Your Buns
in Bed."
NO\V cited five other incidents of what
it considered conspicuous m a I e
chauvinism, for a total of seven Keep
Her in Her Place awards, but the
women's lib group also gave "Positive
Image of Women" awards.
The prizes -for positive and negative
treatment of women by the media -
were announced Thursday for presen-
tation today by NOW in an effort to
Storms Rumble Over U.S.
Cold, Hot Fronts Collide Tri ggeri1ig Tliunderous Rai1i
"
~ ~ ~IAIN lci.iJSNOW
~ ..._All ~SNOWllS • ., llOW
A few slloower• $0!'1nk!9d llM nortl'lffn Paclllc Coast and IM111tralur-s In llM 50s were common In tM Nortnwtst. Winds loucl!l1111 SI mll.s per l!ovo' drove cold elr lnlo ll!t Gr.it l11ln. A IOm~ wa1 slal!ted 11e1r Cf'fta'lll ~ec:lt. S.C., Thursd1y Ind _,_ In we1l~tnfr1I Florlcll, No lnludts wtrt
f"tl)OrlfO,
(Coastal weather sum-
mary will be fou11d todau
on Page 22.J
DAILY PILOT
D[LIVERY S[RVICE
Delivery ~ Ille Daily Pilot
~ 11J3ranleed
-~.-I IOI ltlll .... ,_ ... ~~ ......... ,."" .. .. ... • ,.. Call .. tu 11111
J:JI .. .. -·-•IOlltMl-J" r.,, ., t a.a. Silldlf, •• , ... •·"'"''"" .... -~ ,.. Calls ..... ,. l .. .
Tcle~s
lllt .... """ ......... 14!~!1 __ ...
•-.......... Uf.1!!1
Ill -Clll*• -(II loll Clll*• .. ,...
lllll Loi• , .... llipll .. 492-«ll
"raise the consciousness
munlt:ations industry."
of the com·
OTHER KEEP lier In Her Place
awards:
-To the ad agency "'hich created the
Winchester cigarillo ad depicting a man
smoking beneath the headline ··No
woman ever says no to Winchester."
-To NBC television's Dean Martin
show which NOW says "presents a very
males-eye view of women as trivial,
decoration, and sex objects."
-To the film "Last Tango in Paris"
for its "blunt sexual abuse and
dehumanization of the female charac-
ter."
-To 'VINS, an all-news radio station in
New York for "constanUy using male-
oriented language such as 'the average
man ,' 'man in the street,' 'newsman,'
'worRiffg man' and 'businessman,' " and
for "trivializing women by putting more
emphasis on fun or novelty items
relating to women."
lnvestig~_t~s could not piece {ogelher
enough evJdence to prosecute .the six
black mil~nts who were being in-
vestigated, the source said.
1be source said investigators will now
just "ride out" the infonnation they have
acquired. The source added those
persons who were being investigated \\1ill
now be rea~arded as persons of interest
to law enforcement officials.
"WE'IL JUST be watching them,'' the
source said.
1be source said no arrests are in the
offing.
Meanwhile, in Taos, N.M., Edwin ~1.
Gaudet, in jail no a federal charge of
threatening the President, has been
charged by the state with inlent to kill ·
three police o!'i=~
Taos Magisti'ate Norbert Martinez
said the state charges stem from an
alleged exchange of gunfire during the
lhrec-day search for Gaudet in the
northern New l\1cxico mountains near
Taos.
Nixon Aides Deny Leak
Of Agnew Information
By HELEN THOMAS
United Press lntematlonal
President Nixon's top aides, in what
appears to be sh.aping up as a battle
\vithin the executive family, emphatically
deny the White House is smearing Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew by means of
news leaks on the Maryland bribery
scandal.
Reports that the \Vhite ·House is
secretly funneling anti -Agnew in-
formation to newsmen are "blatantly and
absolutely false," the aides say.
Justice Department sources indicated
Thursday that the \\1hite House, which
has access to details of the inquiry, may
be leaking the Agnew reports.
BUT PRESS Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler "categorically" denied that
presidential aides were the source of the
lnfonna1ion.
proper for me to comment on the
charges" but condemned the "outrageous
leak of information from eilht?r the
grand jury, or the prosecutors or the
Justice Department -or all three ...
However, Richardson has noted in a
letter to Agnew that the "outlines" of the
investigation are known to a number of
witnesses, indlvlduals, lawters, the White
House staff, investigative personnel of
the IntemaJ Revenue Service as well as
the Justice Department.
'Potwd' Pl.a11t
Wi1is Top Ptcize
At Kan.sas Fai r
Nixon, Gen. Alexander M. Haig, White
House chief of staff, and Special Counsel ABILENE, Kan. (UPI) - A floral
J. Fred Buzhardt are being kept abreast display with marijuana stems as
of details of the Investigation of allega-greenery bas won a •\ue ribbon at the
lions thal Agnew accepted kickbacks Cenlral Kansas Free Fair.
from Maryland contrnctors. Faye Harper of Junction City s'ub-
Nlxon told a news conference Wednes-mitted the display, whlch was
day that he had ordered Atlorncy predominantly red.
General Elliot Richardson to find the "f thought It )oojced prelty nice
source of the leaks and to summarily fire because of the long~ fcm·llke leaves,"
flnyone involved, Afterward, the Presl-Mrs. Harper saJd. 1
denl called Agnew to relay his concern , Marijuana grows wild In her baclcyard.
personally. .\ l'o!ICI! Chlet Fred Garten pennitted the
floral •rr8"ement to rcmatn on dl,play
TI!E PRESIDENT knew long In ad-for three days, t!'"n,Joo k it to his office.
vance, before he dlscu-ii with "I removed ii oecause It wairbeglnbing
Agnew. that fedtral prOsecuton were to will and ~Ince 1111 award had alreody
conducting lhe investigation, White been Issued, I could IM?t. no reason for
House officials said. , leavin' It for someone to take the mari·
He has said that II "would be Im-Juana , ' he said.
comment.
" I
FORMER ATIYS . Gen. Ramsey Clark
and Nicholas Katzenbach dented
knowledge of any authorized FBI break-
ins during the Lyndoa ' 8. Johnson ad ·
mini stration. Two close aides to the late
&in. f{obcrt F. Kennedy said they are
posilive he \l'asn't told of any such break·
ins dunng the administration of bis
brother, John F. Kennedy.
De a th Pltn19e
Thunderstruck speclalQ,rs at an
Ohto carnival watch with hor-
ror as Army Sgt. Roland w.
Allard falls le his deatll during
a rope -climbing eXhlbiUon
while dang~ng unaer:. hell-
coplcr. The Army announced
today il hns launched an lnve•
li.(tt\lion or lht1 'i\ll,
•
•• :r • ... ... -·· ... •
•
• • ;; . -~ •• •, • • • •• ..
~: :.
;;. 4 ··-.-•• •• ••• •• .f •• •. ,.. .•• ~ •
State Death Penalty
ea s for Approval
State 'Bo1aat1%a'
Friday, August 24, 1q73 DAil Y PfLOT f>
BEACHCOMBER COFFEE SHOP
AND RESTAURANT
2633 West Coe1t Highway
Newport Beach
NOW OPIN
• Le SArn~t n ~~!.In a lma-n-death penalty provlslon in the ~· bill backed by Reagan. Then
da ry ealh penal for 15 the committee voted 6-1 to
crimes tppears he'aded for send the amended bill to the
passage by the 'Call!ornia Asse mbly floor.
Sleroty, an ardent foe of
capital punlshment, added in
an interview that he is not at
all aure the measure would be
identical to the original form
or the bill by Sen. George
Iltjulanejlan (Ji.Long Beach),
which hla committee altered
Thursday. II the Assembly
makes any changes in the way
the bill passed the Senate, it
wOuld have to go back to the
upper house for concurrence.
~
Reagan _Pens ~ax
Rebate Into Law
$829 milllon built up over the
Under New Mana9ement
1o,
BREAKFAST -LUNCH -DINNER
OpOft 7 AM tol PM-7 Day1aWHk
.... Leglslatu e despJte a tem-porary sc~bQck in commilll-e. C a Pit a I punislvnent su~
· SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Californians begin reaping a
one-time tax bonanza Oct. 1,
getting back a total of $721
million in st.ate treasury
surplus.
past two years. [~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Reagan insisted the money lrP
A bill porters -conceded to be a "' ecreelng death for majority in the Assembly -
4-S\Jch crlmes as murdering !ill said they will try to amend the
be returned to the taxpayers
rather than be spent on new
programs. The tax rebate will
take two forms . FREE on-duty peace officer and
1:1'> multiple slayings could be death penalty provision back
"'"· signed by) Gov. R 0 n a 1 d in before the floor vote is R taken , eagan, b next week sup-"I think there will be a .;i porters and opponents say. death penalty bill that passes
That figures out to nearly
$35 for every man, woman and
child in the state. First, the state sales lax will
be rolled back by one peMy on
the dollar on Oct. 1 for six ~ THAT BECAME possible the legislature this year," ~ wJ hen the Assembly Criminal regardless of what t he
GOV. RONALD Reagao call·
ed it the largest state tax
rebate In the nation's hi story
when he signed the bill into
law Thursday.
months. It had gone rrom five
to six percent in most of
california July 1.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
LECTURE
•' ustlce Committee voted 4-3 Assembly Criminal Justice ~ Thursday to substitute life im-comm J t tee does, said
ASSEMBLY REPUBLICAN
floor leader Robert Beverly of
Manhattan Beach said in an
interview he will sponsor the .• prisonmcnt Without the chairman Alan Sieroty (0.1..-0s ~ pogsibility of parole 'ror the Angeles). The reverse now of taxes
was made possible by an
unexpected treasury surplus of
NEXT SPRrNG, the state's
more thar1 6 million income
taxpayers are to get cuts
ranging from 20 percent to 100
percent off their tax bills due
April 15.
move on the Door to amend $721 MILLION BILL
the Deukmejlan bill back to its Gov. Reagan's OK
original form . He said floor ---------
Fi'·-~========-=-.:=:.=-~~~-, ...... by
~
·~1
2;
-:~
•
• , .
1 •
Sunday, August 26, 1973
Showtime: 7:30 p.m.
$5.00 per person
Monte Carlo Room
(no one under 21 admitted)
Tickets: All Ticketron Agencies or
Del Webb's Newporter Inn
t?J Q/JG:}O~m
action will be taken r.1onday or
Thursday.
Beverly, who needs 41 votes
to succeed, said "I feel we
have the votes. I am op-
tim'istic the votes will be
Fire Fighters Stop
I
there."
The lower house has 48
Democrats and 31 Republicans
Blaze in I ts Tracks
with one vacancy. Beverly By The Associated Press
said he estimates he may lose Fire fighters have contained one or two Republican votes at the most and will pick up 12 to a wind-driven brush fire that
15 Democratic votes. threatened homes near Reno,
Sleroty said he felt there Nev. while olher crews worked
might be an effort on the floor to complete a fire line arowld
to alter various segments of a huge 6-day-old blaze in the Deukmejlan m e a s u r e .
Beverly agreed foes "certainly No~m California.
would" try that tactic .
"l can't understand how
they saved all those homes,"
he said. "It was a super·
coordinated, heroic effort that
stopped this from becoming a
major disaster. The men just
held their ground, let the fire
come down to them and then
just beat it out."
The Republican governor
said Thursday he won the tax
rebate over the opposition of
"would-be big spenders" in the
legislature.
Now, he said, the voters of
the state have a "once-in·a-
lifetirne" opportunity to cut
their taxes permanently by
approving his ta:< control pro-
gram at a special statewide
election Nov. 6.
"Then they can finish the
job already started by voting
to limit and reduce their tax
burden pennanently,'' Reagan
said.
BY SENDING out an THE NEV ADA fire, ignited
amended version of the bill, in three spots Thursday by a
the committee averted a ma-passing locomotive, charred
jor challenge to the authority 350 acres and destroyed a
Sketch of Rapist Finished
Miss Patricia Tuttle
of San Franci1co
Saturday • August 25
11 a.m.
EDWARD'S CINEMA THEATRE
FASHION ISLAND
Child c•re will b• provided
et Second C hu rch -3100 P•cific View -CdM
Spotuor•d by First And Second
Chi.irth of Chri1t Sc::l1nti1t,
Newport B11ch or Assembly Speaker Bob bam and two sheds in SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -neatly on his left side, freckles
Moretti (D-Van Nuys), who Anderson Acres, nine miles An officer has drawn a on his face , a 11h·inch horizon-
appointed the committee and north of Reno, said Bill portrait of a man they believe tal scar above his right eye at
opposes the death penalty JohMton of the Nev ad a repeatedly raped and beat a the hairline and a small scar I~~~""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!=""'!=====""'!""'!""'!~
himself. Beverly had vowed to Division of Forestry. 25-year-old woman in a hotel of about . 11, inch above the
attempt the rarely u s e d Ten .born~ were directly in room Aug. 14· 7' N l E
parli amentary maneuver of lhe path of the charging fire, Inspector llobert Ne l son rightsideofhisupperlip. ear y veryone '•
withdrawing a bill from com-blown by winds 30 miles per drew the sketch with descrip-Police believe he also may ti.
mlltee by a majority floor hour, Jolwton said. Many tions from the victim and a be the same man who raped,
vote -a tactic regarded as a fa mi Ii es tem porarily cab driver. beat and bwned a 23-year-old Ji~.:
direct challenge lo the house evacuated their homes while Policesaidthemanis>-feet-woman in a hotel room at Listens to Landers' f--~~~~~~~;:::::;~~~~~~~~~~l~ea~d~er~sh~i~~--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;[~400;;;men~~wo~rked~~to~sto::p~the~on::_-_;9~and~w~e~igrbs~1;60~.~H~e~has~cur~-i__FisE·~h~erm~an~··~~Wh~arl~~l~a~s~t~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' coming flames. ly. reddish brown hair, parted February. 1
AD •ooo •t11 '"""· ...... 21
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6/$100
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Chony
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'RUSSET POTATOES .. 2 lb ./25c
FRESH SPINACH . JOc burich
ITALIAN PRUNES . .. ....... I 9c lb.
".uTENTION RESTAURANT OWNERS":
T1ke 1dvantege of our bu ying power. The Produce Mart will seve you
"Money" and su pply you wi th the freshest produce. Large or small
restaurants, '}tve us • call. We deliver FREE.
INGARDIA . BROS.
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PRODUCE MART
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FOOD STAN.PS
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NEWPORT BEACH (ONLY)
•l.-Co11t Hit-• Clll lor "''m-(714) l'IMU4
•
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Dear Customer,
In regard to our recent letter requesting the addition of
your name to our permanent mailing list we would like to
encourage you to return the card enclosed with our letter.
Even if your name and address was correct we MUST
RECEIVE THE CARD BACK in order to' place you on our own
mailing list. ·
If you've misplaced the card or if our letter was lost on its
way to you, please call us and we 'll add your name to our list.
Phone 644--5070,
To those who have returned the cards ... Thanks very much
for contributing.to such a tremendous response. You 've helped
us to serve you better.
Sincerely,
~ ;}-,.~!> /'JSiU. SuM
Representing At-Ease Management Staff
44 fashion island, newport center 644-5070
(LAAl;BA ~
t~UescT~·e\Jeni~
· Clani Chowds, Steamed Clams, · '
. A Whole Ma!M l.Obller , Chicken; Potatdee, -
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(
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·'
8 DAD.Y PH,OT EDITORIAL PAGE
Parl{ Effort Rewarded
Laguna Beach's '.ftfain Beach Park continued to
gaLher more laurels and dollars with the recently recom-
mended allocation of $150,000 to the city by the Orange
, County Department of Harbors, Beaches annd Parks.
Formal action approving the money Is pendlng from
the Orange County Board of Supervisors. If approved, the
$100.000 will reduce city costs for the $671,000 park
development and another $50,000 will be used for con·
st ru ction of a recreation facility .
The new irants indicate recognition that funds
spent in Laguna Beach benefit far more than just the
residents. Laguna is a regional and state recreation
mecca. Dollars spent here can provide for the demands
or thousands of visitors.
Competition for the grant monies -county alloca-
tions of federal revenue sharing money -was great.
The commission had requests for $4.8 million, and only
$2.8 million to spend .
No matter how deserving and attractive a project
may be, grants don't just fall from heaven. The city's
success reflects very favorably on good work of the city
staH.
H-eading Off the Smog
Real estate promoters, civic leaders and many resi-
dents of south· Orange County always are eager to talk
in glowing terms about the quality of local air.
Unfortunately, the telling signs of smog are becom·
ing evident. On many days, a rust·colored band of pol-
lutants lingers off the coas~ while inland the top of
Saddleback is lost in the haze.
Concern over these observations has reached the
Orange County Air Pollution Control and the APCD has
plans to install air pollution monitoring equipment in
lttissio.n Yiejo and Laguna Beach.
Once suitable locations are found, the district plans
Plenty of 'Pork'
In State Budget
Your money Is burning a hole in the
politicians' pocket.
And through that hole has poured a big
fat ($9.4 billion ) stale budget marbled
\Yith the fat ol excess and extravagance.
Verne Orr, state direetor of finance,
admits the 197~74 budget is run of
"pork." Pork that
\Yould not ha ve be1:.1
permitted in lean-
er yean. Leaner,
meaning the state's
treasury. Not yours.
That "pork" is
costing u·age earners
and taxpayers hund-
reds oi nlillions of
extra dollars. It
comes in various chunks and sizes. llere
are a few:
-A tlOO milUon increase. this year
over lasl. in the operational and capital
costs of state agencies;
-Another $226 million for an ave~age
12 percent increase in salaries for state
employes. That 12 percent is excessive.
(As Cal· Tax suggests, an increase or 6
percent would have been equitable. State
v.·orkers have received a 42 percent pay
increase over the past five years.):
-An increase of $68 million for UC and
the state colleges and universities in the
face of declining enrollment :
-$42 rniilion for a dov.11 payment on
Senator Randolph Collier's t\vin. to\'ters
(or, whatever form new legislative
quart ers take ), and
-at least nnother $50 million in ne\Y
park and recreation projects to "buy"
the budget votes to sustain Collier's seed
1noney for those mentoriat towers.
[ __ R_u_s_w._'A_r:_:r_o_N~J
THOSE excesses and extravagances
were made earlier, if not possible, by
that $826 million surplus hanging in the
Sac ramento packing house. By the end of
the year that carcass may be bloated to
$1 billion . _ .
Politicians would have you believe that
. surplus waS unexpected. Back in Dec .•
1971, and again in March, 1972·this cOl·
umn predicted the huge .surplus and .sug·
festcd it might go as high as $1 billion.
A surplus is no excuse for increased
dnd unneeessary spending. Surplus or na,
any politician with a sense o f
responsibility should approach each ex-
penditure, each increased or new pro-
gram, with this question:
"If l had to vote for a tax increase to
pay fQr this appropriation, would l have
the guts to do it?"
, IN MOST cases the answer v.-ould be
"no." P9liticians dci not like to tie a tax
invoice on their goodies. The surplus
relieved them of that accountability.
SB 90, the "tax refonn" package of
1972, is a monstrous measure. Within the
ne:i..1 four years, it will increase the cost
of stale government by at least $1 billion
a yea r. And, it is causing serious and
urgent problems for local school disUicts
that are in a dither because of its club-
footed language and contradictions.
Thi s year's "trailer" bill to C{)rrect SB
90's deficiencies and technical discrepan-
cies is almost as voluminous as the
original legislation. That's y,•hat happens
to install instruments to measure levels of noxiouS sub-
stance$ Including ozone, carbon monoxide, nitrogen diox-
ide, sulphur dioxide, hydrocarbons and dust. Meaaure-
ments will begin Jan. I.
The studies should be encouraged. Data collected
~ill assis~ in future planning for the south county, par-
ticularly 1n the area or alternatives to the automobile,
now the source of 98 percent of all smog.
The challenge of clean air ln the south county has
become a serio us one.
Handicapped Join D1ive .
The city of San Clemente-assisted by a new group
of allies -once again plans a campaign to win state
approval for replacement of the dereli~t pier entrance
with an at-grade rail crossing.
And this time around, formal organizations fighting
for better architecture for the handicapped will push
the fighl
The new {>ier crossing -obviously -would serve
everyone wishing to reach the city beach, but most of
all it would benefit. persons ·physically unable to negoti·
ate the existing stairways which lead beneath the Santa
Fe tracks.
City Traffic-Parking Commission Chairman \Villiam
Waddell, himself 'alflicted with a physical handicap, has as~umed the key role in spearheading the latest local
drive to shake the Public Utilities Commission into soft-
ening its position to the new entrance idea. ~v~r the y~ars the PUC opposition has been severe, despite the obvious merits of a well-designed safety sys-tem across the tracks.
-~~ time aroll!1~· the PUC could really emerge as
the villain, because 1! 1t refuses to yield, the handicapped
would be the direct victims.
··~.
'
s
' POU~QUOI?
Dear
Gloomy
G.us
Party Leaders Ca11tio1aed i11 Crisis
I've got to admit Nixon makes a
much better target for bis critics
when he's hiding ln the White House
than when he's giving a press con-
ference. Fortunately for them , he
probably uoo't believe that .
A. 0.
GIMmY Gvs <~ •r• 1ut1mJ11M by
rN6erS 111'11 M Ml ..C-rfty rtf!Kf IM
"'"" et "'--._,. kfllll '"r "' _,,. ,. G'-'Y GitJ. D1JIY ltllel.
when politics supersede reason and am-
bition overrides responsibility ; the cost
of political passion is paid by the tax·
payer.
THAT ONE-CENT state sales tax in-
crease? The one now being sqUeered Out
of your J.>OCket? The one the politicians
are fallirig all over themselves to "ad·
just"? It's part of that damnable tax
reform package.
Heat from the taxpayers bas singed the
tails of the politicians and they nish lo
delay or temporarily reduce that $650
mi.Ilion tax take. They have the gall to
claim they are "saving" us $320 million
by temporarily repealing or reducing the
ooe-cent increase. How can the re-
maining increase of $320 million be con-
sidered a savings?
Sooner or taler the entire one-cent \\ill
have to take effect permanently. The
lxJlt-in excesses of state govenunent de·
mand it.
THOSE WHO suggest that the sales t.ax
increase is simply a trade-off with lower
property taxes sing a siren song. Within
a year or tY.'O the sales tax increase will
be a pennanent fixture and property tax-
es \viii be about as high as ever. Ex·
travagance must be funded ; U not DO\\',
then tomorro\v.
Agnew 'Hands Off' Hints
WASHINGTON -A confidential
telephone call from top -White House a'ide
?\1elvin R. Laird to a Republican con·
gressiorull leader, warning him not to zo
all-out in defense of Vice President Spiro
Agnew, is ne\v and harsh evidence to
party professionals
of the depth of the
crisis that threatens
Ted Agnew.
In his telephone
call to Hep. John B.
Anderson of Illinois,
chairman of t h e
Bouse Repu blican
Conference, Laird
carefully specified
that he was talking not as a \Vhite llolL~e
aide.
His message: don't get on a limb in the
Agnelv af!air, particu larly with an all~ut
defense of the Vice President. Stay away
from the Agnew affair as far as passible.
Agnew is under intense federal in-
vestigation on charges of possible
criminal violations of various federal
statutes involving bribery, extortion, tax
fraud and conspiracy.
REPUBUCANS wbo know about the
Laird call to Anderson (described as
"astonished" by the warning) assume
that Laird and possible other party
grandees have contacted other senior
Republicans with similar warnings.
Moreover, tbe Laird telephone call to
Anderson fits a pattern that has in·
furiated the Agnew camp. For example :
I. Before Agnew himsell received
formal notice from the Justice Depart·
ment that he wa .. under investigation, At·
ly. Gen. Elliot Richardson reported (in
late July) to White House staff chief
Alexander M. Haig, Jr., with a briffing
( EVANS-NOVAK J
on all Aspects of the case. On Aug. 2,
Agncv;'s attorneys received their letter
from the prosecutors.
2. A prominent letevision commentator
\l:as privately cautioned by an official of
the Justice Department 10 days ago in
\\-ords siinilar to those used by Laird lo
Anderson: don 't go overboard for
Agnew; you may wind up with egg on
_your f~ce1
3. T¥ WHITE HOUSE has gone. to
embarrass}ng length not to put U'M!: Presi· ,
,.
WicJ:.i
~ent on record ns to his vice president's
innocence.
t The Ne\\' York Times front-page
dispatch of Au,.;. 15. outlining charges
against Agnew in vivid det11f, is btll,ved
by furious Agne11• allies to havt! emanated
from high le\'els of !ht JU.!tice Depart-
ment (\\'ho natly deny il l, not from
lttaryland sources also im plicated in the
charges against Ange\\'.
It is not surprising that allies of
Agnew, 1•.-hose l:llents have sometimes
bcc.n grossly used by the. President to !d-
\'ance ~1r. Nii:on's lntere£ts, would be
filled 'A'ilh dark susplckl1. over these in-
cidenls. They regard them as proof of
nefarious underground 1$,nlnistration
11·arfare against Agnew, patUy 10' ease
the President's Immense Watergate
burdens.
TlfUS, in th1s conspiratorial view -llO
und erstandable on the part of Agnew in-
timates -!\fr. Nixon or RepublJcans
close lo him are greasing the skids for
the hapless Vice Pffiiident. Under the
25th Amendment to the Con.stltuUon, they
are quietly preparing to nominate a suc-
cessor -most likely John D. Connally.
It v.·as Connally who saved ~Ir. Nixon
from disaster in th. inllationary crisis of
August 1971. Perhaps C'.onnally, tht-
former Democratic governor of Texas
who turned Republican at a moment of
maximum help to the Watergat.
beleaguered President lolit spring. can
help again.
To Agnev.·ites. that fits the known fact
that Connally recently cancelled his plans
for a long trip abroad and the lesser·
kno"11 fa ct that some ConnaUy friends
predict he v>'ill be back 1 in the ad·
niinistra tion in October,
Meat Hoarder's .Attitude Annoys · Housewife
BUT IN FACT the Laird ,famings may
spring from something far less con·
spiratorial. ~y may be a flashing
signal of caullon based not on any desire
lo do in Agnew but on a rational and In-
formed judg1nent that AROew Is a goner ~ikcwise, Richardson 's July brieftng Or
1-faig, before Agnew himself had fonnal
not ification. may also be explainable as a
rational act based on the Preskieat's prio~ right to know. "Is that normal?" a
Justice Department official repeated In
ans\\'er to our question . "Hell, nothlng'1
normal in this case. We're playlng lt by
Supe r1narket E111ploye
To the Editor:
I realize you have important tas ks of
editing your newspaper without another
outside letter coming in the way of your
procedures, but something went on today
and I had to write someone and get it off
my chest.
I lfAS in a local supermarket this
aflcrnoon and stood behind ooe of the
employcs \Yho was having his merchan·
disc checked out before going home. All
of his order was packages and packages
of ground beet Seventeen dolfars worth
to be exa ct! Ther the checker announced
that she thought that only tY.'O packages
per customer v.'Cre to be purchased. His
reply \Vll!J, "Don 't v;orry about It. It's DOt
my problem."
Well. maybe it isn't his problem, but
why ls it that when I must make do with
my husband's lance corporal's paycheck
for three boys, a hubby and m)'sclf (six
months pregru•nt), lhen I say I must J:Ut
up with hls "not my problem"?
I COULDN'T do that a.nd get away with
it and 1 feel he's no better than we are.
Sure, the meat situation Is absolutely
gross, but unUI the matter is somehow
• rectified I wouJdn't have gone against the
manager's wishes.
We moved here via the Marine Corps
trom Pennsylvania in March and have
••Joyed Ille aorsoou• change of •\"leS. but even bock home they have meal
problenu. It II It just me tha I gripe, loo
bani or am I Juslllled In leellng over·
WTVUg)lt! Well, thanks for listening
..,,ho ...
llAJlllERA MITCHELL
Se1uible Appraisal
To the Editor:
I v.·ant to compliment and congratulate
the Daily Pilot for printing the kind of
Watergate analysis that seems to have
escaped Anlerican journalists.
I refer, of course, to the guest com·
mentary of British columnist. Angus
Maude in your issue of Aug. 16. Those of
us who support President Nixon in hi s
crisis are deeply grateful to have this op-
portunity or reading a capable and
thoroughly sensible appraisal of the
Watergate af!air in an American
newspaper.
MARGOT R. BARLEY
Bencli Rigl•t•
To the. Editor ;
There 's a rip orr of the public on public
beach In South Laguna!
Yesterday was one of our best Sun·
days at the beach in thiJ whole summer,
and 1 was there with my children en-
joying the beach as lhe publlc has a rlglll
to In California, but many were being
denied this right by subterfuge, ru;e,
misleading statements, etc ...
A UNIFORI\f_ED man with a gun on his
hip employed by the LagWiila Com·
munlty Assodatlon was persistently
patrolling the public heacb just l!OUlh ol
the Laguna Jltach Un• and trying to
persuade tbe public from use of their
pub! c beach •.• he even had lbe audac:l·
Does1t't Tlii11k Shortage ls His Proble1n
MAILBOX
Letters fro1n readers are welcome.
Norniutly tvriters· should convey their
messages iii 300 words or less. Tl1e
1ight 'to condense letters to fit space
or elimi11ate libel is reserved. All
letters must i11clude. signature and
mailing address. but names may be
withheld on request 'f 1ufflcle1,t
reason is' apparent. Poetry toill tlOt be
published.
ty to tell me that J was his guest on tbe
beach!
The city or Laguna had three personnel
on city beach trying to explain to people
!hat the beach •WU aa publlc In South
Laguna as 11 "as In lhe city . . . they
were the lifeguard; a policeman in beach
'uniform', wearing no gun. and a woman.
'community Hal'°" officer.' A call waa
made to the sheriff and the response was
to the effect that the beach was 'private'
and that they could do nothing ! I
Tl!E IGNORANCE of the Sherill. ~·d
lhe people, to their (the publlc'sj rlghls
Is lamcnlable. The beach Is public to
'mean high tide', and this means to a line
that runs roughly aboul Y. of lhe beach
dislance lrom lhe bluff ••. In ellect,
most of the beach II publlc . . . lbe
"aterllnc has no burlng wbai.oeverl I
~1ean high tide is the same in the city
as in the county ... so are the taxe.s on
beachfront homes, so there is no reason
for this beach to be denied lhe public ...
I request that (1) the county in·
vesUgate the erection of a fence that is
illegally on public beach. and (2)
detennine if a man wlth a gun h"'8 any
rights to harass, cajole, or otherwise
coiuse the public to vacate their public
beach.
G. J. CARPENTER JI!.
courage mrped indivi~uals to emulate
and 1!UfP3SS CorU's "accOmplishmcnt."
Also, your sense of space allowance
docs not seem fair al times. After
reading so 1nuch a~t this mass
rnw;dercr, I was appalled this morning
when 1 picked up the Pilot and read the
eight lines on Conrad Aikeq's death.
1 suppose I ought to be glad that the
eight lines were at least \)n the front
page nnd not hlddC!n elscwh~rc. although
eight lines of coverage is rather hidden
no mattct what page they appear on.
Protests Coverage
To lbe F.dltor:
\ CONRAD AIKEN llved to lie 84 years
of age withoul commllting apy serious
crimes : along the w~. 11' won a
PuUlzer Prize as ~..u -, wor19 lame as a poet.
I'm a recent subscriber to the Dally
.Pilol, and I'm happy wilh lhe paper ex·
cept for two tblngs.
For days, now, I've been reading col·
umns and columns· of infonnation about
cUgging up the bodies of the victims or
that mass murdererfs). Certainly, rape
and murder are "news" aod I suppose
quite a lcw people enjoy readi!ig the
details. I could not accept, however, the
beadllne on page 2 of the Aug. 10 lssuc,
announcing (and I quote) "Juan Corona
Sllll .Firsl In Murden." I suppose lhat
now that tbc»e depraved lndlviduals In·
volved have been lound to have killed
more people than Corona, you'll name
Corl! ond accomplices number one In the
field of murder.
I MUST protest the lack of decency
and communlly re..ponslbllity reDected
In that beBdUne. HigblighUng this aspect
ol lbe oime In a lioodline con only en-
I realize tho eight llnes probably
reflect the length of the AP's release. But
I would think that slijcc you have often
cited your responsibility to the C{)m·
murrl ly and Its lnteresb. yeu would have
considered your news duty to tbe ma-
jority of cjtlzena, wbo are both !decent
and reaaonably educated. and haVe sent
a cub reporter -at least -over 'to the
library for a bit of nlsean:h on Conrad
Aiken, I wouldn't have expccl.00 such a
great man's death Jo get the ~e
amount of coverage &I a mass tnunlettl:r
(thnt seems to be one of the iron!~ ttuths
about tOday's news coverage), but 11 do
think you could have·hnd more coverage
on Alken'• death. May I be only lbe 11ffl
of your rcadm to protest these o
•items.
E. JlARLENE LISTER
•
ear." 1 _ But such quiet and i'allonal explanaUon
1S understandably difficult for Agnewita
'.The mood In the Agtiew camp his growri
1so:lated and embittered. Now, wltb word
being secretly pa$sed to ''.keep clear" of
the . Agne~ alralr, that mood will In-
tensify, w1!h dangcrqus l,npllcatl"'s for ~he JU:pu~hcan future no mauer bow the
1nvest1ga t1on ~lnally ends. :
OIAN•f COAIT
DAILY PILOT
I
Robert N. Wt~d, PvbUshtr
Tho'"°' Ktevll, Edlto.
Barbara Kreibich
Editorial Page Editor
The t:dl1or1al ,Pill\.' or lho D;lly
Piiot ~kt lo lnrorm and •tlmu1ate
noaders by Jlrumdna on tl\l.a
dl11ene •commentary' on '°Pies 01t'f;:.
'~-_by t>'ndlcAtfd columl\lils and
"'"""'1"'· by ~Ing • '°"'m (or rradtn' vltw1 and' by Jlf'tuntlns thii
new.paJ>tt'• oplnlorut and ideu O:
cumnt to~. The edttorlat Opinldna
of tM Dally PUot iPPCar ~Y i lh
tdltorlal ,COiumn iit the 1op : t~
J>A&:t!. OPinlons e~ by the 001_
unu1t1ta and C11110orll1t• •nd leftrr
writm lft! thtlt ~n lnd no Otkbi.,
mmt of 1tlelr v\ewa: by ll\e O&Uy
Pilot -Id"' ~ I
Friday, Augyst 24, 1973.'
•
l • l
4
I
I
Friday,· August 24, iq73 DAILY PILOT
• -·.
~ ett · see Rock
Uriiversity
Names Bill Halter 'Top's ln··Barely
BY ANN HENCKEN they aren't obout to il""'it
To . Reagan NEW YORK <AP) -up;,,. haller bares the
The baiter top; which has back, and often, t h e
SACRAMEITTO (AP) -A embarrassed boyfriends midrilt, the latest focal
nv.>ve to get ~ tongue-and outraged mothers-in-point of sex appeal among
tangling names for some state law and made women street fastlJon watchers.
BENT()N, )'J'!lln· ·J AP ) -Carmichael said the purpose t) universities has gone to Gov. dizzy from holding in their Some glrls worry about
Circuit. ~ Judge Virgil of a .temporary injunction ls to Ronald Reagen's desk. stomachs has become an exposing too much and
Carmlcbliel ts.sued a tem-maintain the status quo until Under the measure by entrenched street fashion . wear the ha1ter Wlder a
porary litjUncllon to halt a the rights or litigants on both Assemblyman Law r e.n c e It was introduced on shirt, unbuttoned in front.
Polk Coilnty rQCk festival sides can be determined. Kapiloff (0.San Diego) the Seventh Avenue a few For many, this com-
acheduled 1 for LafN*' Day names of four s t a t e seasons ago, bad a brief blnation has taken the
weekend. "THIS COURT doesn't think universities \\'ould be changed fling in better priced place of the once omni-
cannlcbael lasued the In-the law in and of itself to : San Francisco st 8 t e clothes, surfaced again on present, and more ob-
junction ~y 'at the re-prevents rQCk feaUvals,"• the University, 'San Jose Stale the streets and now ls a vious, tank top.
quest of blst. Atty. ~rd A. judge said, • , University, San Diego State staple item in man Y Most b a It er wearers
Fisher, who~clalmed that the But he went on to say tnat University and Hum b o Id t \\'Omen's w a rd robes , have amassed a great
festival -~ to draw be felt the failure of the pro-State University . across the country. cache of styles. They're
between 1001000 and 300,000 -mQters to go to court pver the Presently, the institutions inexpensive, ranging fro1n
would constitute a public 11tate'1 denial -of a petmit fn.. are officially known as THE II A LT E R col-$5-$7 and up.
nuisance and endanger the dicated that, they fe It California State University lectors say the style is "HALTERS ARE relax-
bealth and 1 I lie t Y of themselves there was in-at --. comfortable, inexpensive, ed, and nattering and you
'
vent Gets Halt ' . '
said Patti Troy of New
York.
"I don't like halters on
girls," said her 16-year-old
son John, a student.
"I \Year halters all the
time. My n1other-in-hHv
hates them," sald Harriet
Lubln of New York. "My
husband is a little
frightened \Valking arOWld
with me. The men get a
little crazy. the con-
struction workers."
Then, there is the &Jper
llalter.
Gloria Jean Betker, a
f re e-lance fa shion
de signer. wore her Super
Halter in silky fire engine
red, camouflaged by a
light blue sbir1. She sells
them for $16. The fabric
llmost glows, aOO the cut
is more precise than
cheaper versions.
ARLEEN Rll:HTER or
Huntington, N.V. wears
her halters with appliqued.
nail-head-studded j e a n s
.and jackets which she and
friends al'e making to sell.
P art I c Ip ant l 1and area sufficient time to resolve ilie The measure won 21·3 ap-don't have to wear a bra,"
residents. I 1_Jma~t~te~ri~belore~. jt~be~sc~hedu~~led~r!'i'P.~7~~~--~pro~v~al~Wiedn~~esda~y~l~ro~m~~th~e~~~vjer~sa~t~il;;;e~,andrsc;;;x;;y~. ~A~nJdr;;;;iii=·~;;;;;;;;;~~;;;~;;~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;~~;:~~;:;;,~"'~ festival dat~ state Senate. "" mE JUDGE' en lned C.C.
Manife1t, lnc. ol Evansville,
Ind. from staging the weekend
festival ,Until a trial can be
held to determine whether the
injunction should be made
permanent.
"The only thing is that I
have to think ab o u t
holding my stomach in
every time J wear a
halter," she said.
HOWEVER, A group or
t e lephone co1npany
repairmen on Lexingto n
Avenue and 59th Street
were split on the issue.
They either loved or hated
th e halter, chuck.lin g or
gesticulating to get their
message across.
He said the earliest date he
\\'ould be able to schedule auch
a trial would be In October.
carmlchael also ordered the
promoten Hto take a 11
reasonable ~ 1" Inform the
public t~t the ·resuvaI will not
be held."
PROMOTERS SAID last
week thill the festival wQuld
be held any,way despite a
decision by the stale refll!lng
to grant them a permit
because of health regulations.
,Qn the t~mporary in-
junction, lhe promoters were
enjoined "from doing or
saying anything to Indicate the
rock festival will be held."
* * *
Rock .Fest
,'
Denial Seen
In Stadium
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Promotera say a benefit rock
concert may have to be moved
or cancelled bealuse of a rul-
ing that the crowd •'On'l be
allowed on the field at San
Diego Stadium.
The stadium board qreed
with city fU"e marsha l s
Wednesday !bat there aren'l
enough exit.! to allow moce
than 15,000 , penoru on the
playing surface with safety.
RON JACOBS, ooo of the
promoters, said a CJ"O\\-d o(
55,000 was expected for the
Oct. :ia concert, wtth proceeds
going to the United Way.
,About S0,000 fans were
allowed on the field last year
during a. similar event .that
raised 126.lloo for the cbanty.
JACOBS, A LOCAL radio
executive, said he may appeal
the ruling to the City Cooncil
or look for another site.
"No other stadium has this
kind of restrictions," he said.
Pope Paul
Mulls Latin
For Hym1is
CASTEL GANDOLFO. Italy
(AP) -Pope Paul VI "'.'Y'
he's considering reinstating
Lalin as the mandatory
language ror hymns in !be
Roman Catholic ti.lass.
The pontlrl said at his week-
ly pubJic audience that "many
are asking tbal the Lalin ond
Gregorian •inging of the
Gloria , Credo, Sanctus and
Agnllll Del be preserved In all
countries. May ' God let it be
so. Study can be resum~ lO
see how this oon be done.
VA UCAN S(/URCES !3ld
many favor reinstating Latin
as a symbollc,gesture of unity
for the worl~'s Ro m a n
Qi tho I\ cs.
Latin hes been abolished ai::
the mandatory language of
Roman CtithoUc . services for
about sill yell[•· l Tn the wake <I. the renewal
started by tlb e Vailcan
Ecumenical Council, a papal
decree allowed churches to
use their national languages.
Tougli]ob
Made Ep,sy·
TOKYO (AP) -· Chen
Chu, an "ordinary 43-yelll'-
old peasant " bas been
Issuing weaiher forec8'ts
wltj> 95 percent accuracy
on lhe basis of cloud
movement•, Bflil:nal
behavior and othe: nalural
phenomena, the China's
lislnhua news agency said.
.
185/14 ER78114
195/14 FR78/14
205/14 GR78114
215/14 HR78/14
205/15 GR78/IS
HR78/IS
LR78/IS
195/lS
G70/15 205115 ORIGINAL IQUI,. '73 CAIS
£70114 '115114
170114 175114
f70114 195114
4:$68
F70114 f78114
F60/1S F7p11 S
f60/1 s
t .75xl6.5
10.00x16.S
...... """" ............. '• -~
GARDEN GIOYI
STEIL 195/14 $33''. f 78714
smL 205/1 4 $34" G71/14
STUL 215/14 $36" H71/14
STEEL 2Q5/15 $35" G78/1 S
STEEL 215/15 H71/1S
STEEL
L78/1 S 235/15
23 A
JOM llAS $ 9 5 lflTfD TIH
a1a11i ... ~ • 1111
'"' ,, 1 ..
OUR CONSUMER POLICY
Ovr c1uto'"er 1M1licr i1 te IMtttr 1tnt ro11. If ro•
ll1wt 1 •11•1ti1t1 cot1ctrnit19 ,r1411ct1 or 1tnict1 ,...;,,..4 t• ro11, ''•••• coll .. , Direct" 1f <•• 11'"1r Affoin, Mr. S. Ar1llli•• (213) 1704737 or
391-1211. If wt 1111114 1111 01t ef r11r 1i1e, 1
"leh1 Check" will Ille i1111t4 11111rl111 1 l•ttr lit·
liwtry ot the odwertistd ,..1c,,
LA HAIRA IUENA PARK
7.35/14
7;75/14
8.25/14
8.25/15
8.55/14
FULLERTON
878/14
878/13
E78/14
F78/l 4
G78/14
G78/l S
•.Lf
1.77
1.73·
1.13
2.09
ill·~·~3 ~
ii [.!;·J] 2.43
HEAVY DUTY
SUSPENSION
SERVICE
'50,MOMnt,J.flAl
Pll•MMANCl PIG.
$34~~Rl
1, WMlll AllGltMINT POU(f
S·TIAlt, J0,000 MILIS
2. MlAY'f DUfT TII IOD
IUSMlllGS
J.' WMllL COil SPllNG SfAllUlll5
'· llAll AOJUSfMllfT
'"""111 0!-<OU0 0 6",.ll\
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ORANGE
2000 Wtilttlor llvd, Jtl2 U1Koh1 ll•d. llJI $ovth Evclld 41 O Nortt. lntl•
COSTA MESA-14040 lrookllanf
•• ,,.,.,,.,; ..
''-""' Ttr
l .oos HARBOR BLVD.
(corner of 81k1r ind H1rbor)
(714) 557-800~
•
loor111r We1t'"l11ttor
ond l roo•h11r1tl -11141 uo.1200
I cor11•r of Whittler
.... d ••• ,hi
674·36'6
lcornor of ll11col11 I I Bloc~ North of ........
•n4 K11ottl Ri,.er1ide Fr1ew11yl
!7141 826·55SO (7141 870-0100 1714 1 639-4121
I
INSTALLID
$36~!.~
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1. loHll• 111 • wllffl ,,n • ..,.
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"
8 U•ILY PILOT Friday, August 24, 191.3
Population Boom
Orange County
·Amo ng Fastest
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Population figures released
Thursday show California's
fastest growing counties are
Orange, San Diego and 5anta
Clara.
The state's population rose
by %23,000 during the 12
months from July 1, 1972, to
July 1, 1973, the state Finan«
Department reported. 'That
gave the state 20,74:1,000 peo-
ple.
For the second year in a
row. San Francisco and Los
Angeles Counties lost popula·
Cyclists
Issued
Warning
capt. Bill Berry, com-
malider of the West Orange
CoWXy c.alifornia High"!ay
Patrol, bas issued a warrung
!or cyclists who carry cycles
on the backs of their cars.
"Bicyclists who transport
their two-wheelers on motor
vehicles .are creating a new
generation . of safety prob-
lems," he said.
Berry cited four hazards
created by Improper exte<-
ior mounting of bikes:
--Obscurement of lights.
-Interference with driver
vision.
-Bikes falling off moving
vehicles. •
-Excessive projection to
the sides.
Berry explained that
bicycles carried on the rear of
a car can obstruct Ughts
which by law must be visible
at a 45-<legree angle to tbe
right or left as well as dlrectly
to the rea r.
If the bike is canied high on
the car, th6driver will have to
mount side mirrors on the car
·ir the. bicycle obstructs vision
through the rear view mirror,
he added.
Uon. The rate of decline dur-
ing fiscal )'ear 1972-73 ,
however, was slower than dur-
ing 1971·72. ,
The increases were 64,100 in
Orange County, 38,600 in San
Diego c.ounty, and 27,300 in
Santa Clara County.
The decrease was 39,200 in
Los Angeles County and 81300
in San Francisco County.
The figures also showed an
jocrease in net migration into
the state. Last year's figure
was '19,000, compared with
44,000 the previous year.
On the other hand, natural
increase in population declined
from 144,000 in 1971·72 to
132,000 last year.
The number of military
personnel s tationed in
California dropped from 55,000
in 1971-72 to 12,000 last year.
Summer's
Employment
Rate Down
SANTA ANA -Summer
unemployment edged upward
sUgbUy to 4.1 percent during
July a level far below the
seasonally adjusted rate of 5.5
Jogged a year ago the state
department of H u m a n
Resources Dev e I o p m en t
reports.
The July job count ol 555,500
was down 4,000 from the
number of jobs available in
Orange County in June, but
that figure was 31,800 more
jobs than were offered in July,
1972.
As employment climbed the
nmnber of jobless in Orange
Coun ty fell by 1,200 In July to
26,m as summer job seekers
found employment. T h e
numbers of u nem p l o yed
persons was down 5,000 from
the previous year.
The HRD office predicts
there will be no "substantial"
rise in unemployment in the
county for at least the next
three months.
,. ' /
,
Grand Jury R eviews ·Co u n ty Police
ORANGE COUNTY
By JACK BROBACK ,
Of "'• Delly f'l"t S!itl
SANTA ANA -In a review
of Jaw enforcement agencies
in Ornnge County, the Grand
Jury has suggested a con-
solidated police acade1ny, a
standard · hand gun, a coun~
tywlde crirpe laboratory, cen-
tralized record keeping and a
centralized morgue.
The jury. in a letter to
police chiefs and heads of
other law enforcement agen·
cles in the county, states that
it realizes that it has no
jurisdic tion over, or
respansibillties for, the pro.-
cedures and operation of
municipal Jaw enforcement
agencies.
It !tales that voluntary
participation In courses given
by educational institutions
!ihould be rewarded by salary
increases or subsidization of
t°Osts of classes.
Co m1nissi on Repli es
To Jury Criticism
Training should i n c tu d e
significant time spent on com·
munHy, youth, and minority
relalions. "This should Include
study of customs, culture and
attitudes of minority groups
taught by the most qualified
and representative experts
available," the jury letter
states.
\Vith a nod to\vard a recent
inciden t in which two of f duty
officers were involved, the
jury sugges ts that such of-
ficers should not be permitted
to t11ke weapons into any place
SANT A ANA - A point-by-
point. reply to recent criticism
by the Orange County Grand
Jury has come from Local
Agency FormatiQn Com-
mission members.
A recommendation t h a t
regular study sessions be
established was answered.
Commissioners said they hold
study sessions during their
regular meetings.
The jury called for more
emphasis on legal educatlo.n
and the commission replied
thnt its is the responsibility of
new LAFC members to
educate themselves on legal
problems that might face the
commission before they take
their .seat on the bQdy.
The commissioners agreed
with the jury contention that
all county areas dOnot have to
be placed jn spheres of in-
fluen ce of cities.
'The jury report suggested
the establishment of criteria
governing the granting of
spheres of influence for unin-
corporated areas, separate
from those of cities,
particularly those which have
applied for muncipal advisory
co.uncil status or expressed a
de sire to remain in the county.
They gave as examples the
Saddleback Valley, the Tustin
Foothill area and Sunset
Beach.
The commission replied that
no MAC spheres of influence
can be granted until the coun~
cils are formed and none have
been yet. R tw R. The jury said that the fears C 'll ISCS
of some area ·groups of place-SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
ment within a city's sphere of rate of return for male
infiuence as a preface to California prison parolees bas
future annexation ought to be been cut in half since 1962,
acknowledged as valid and state authorities report. The
weight given to their wishes late st t~year f o 11 ow up
for inclusion in, or exclusion statistics reveal a prison
!ro.m such a sphere. return rate of 21.7 percent of
The commi.ssioners did not the 6,858 prisoners paroled in
reply to this recommendation. 1970.
~~--"-'~~~~~~~~~~-
THE MESSENGER OF GOD
FOR ·TODAY HAS COME
TO ESTABLI SH UNIVERSAL PEACE
AND UNITY FOR ALL MANKIND.
~oh&11i1tk:
INVESTIGATE ITS TRUTH
AND REALITY.
Baha'i Meeting
SAT., AUGUST 25, 8:00 P.M.
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS & LOAN
1640 Ad1m1, Costa Mesa
Community Room
No Don1tions
whct'e alcoboUc beverases are
served.
"Many agencie> reportod
excellent programs directed
toward the improvement of
mutual understaodifli between
the Police and the community,
including youth and minority
groups," the letter stated.
i.The jwy believes that this
is a subject of gre11 t im-
portance and requires con-
stant attention," the report
continued. "The jury proposes
that a procedure be establish·
ed between all age n cies •d L'k w h e re b y informalion con-l{i S .) • C
cernlng programs instituted
by one agency with an evalua-
tion of the success or failure
of the program would be
available to all agencies."
1'o
Ask Andv -
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: l 0·6
TOMATOES
WATERMELON
~fi..
NO. I RUSSET
POTATOES
10 lbs.
9c
Large Brown
ONIONS
c
lb
WHOLESALE TO RESTAURANTS DAILY
2016 NEWPORT BLVD.-COSTA MESA
(NEAR BAY ) PHONE 646-5718
Now Discover a Beautiful Selection of 1or2 Bedroom Condominium--Homes
I
t
--
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ii'.'. --J-J .... .-v··
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L..1 ·~.--·
If you or your spouse are at leasr 40 years 0( age, welcome to Hunting·
ton landmark, a new private, adult condominium community in cool,
cle<1r Huntington Beach. Discover the advantages of a delightful new
leisurely all ·aduh lifestyle .•. ca refree, secure, relaxing. You'll enjoy
a desirable location just minutes from the beach. You'll fall in love wilh
our· colorfully landscaped, professionall y managed and mainta ined
park-like grounds. You'll appreciate rhe sec urity and 101al privacy of
a walled com munity with 24-hou r attended entr<1nce. And you'll 1hrill
at our spacious rec reation cente r with fabu lous clubhouse, pool, put-
ting green, hot whirl pool bath, tennis cour1s, billia rd & club rooms,
er.t h and hobby shops. As for 1he homes themselves, choose from six
be.tulifully designed floor plans th:it offer 1 bedroom, 1 b.tth; and 2 or
J bedroom, 2 bath units. Most models are available on either the first
or second fl oor. All models include lo~-cut shag carpeting 1hru-out;
individual utility rooms with a washer-dryer; priyate patios or bal·
conies; all-electr ic kitchens wi lh range, oven, disposal and dishwasher;
separate dining are<1s, and wa lk-i n closets (most pla"s),
• •
If y6 u are over 40, and feel too young for a typical
retirement community, welcome to the wonder-
.. ful world of Huntinjtton Landmark. II is truly in
a class by itself. Prices'begin at Just $20,490 wit h
excellent terms availa ble.
FURN ISHED MODELS Of'EN DAil Y 10AM TILL 7PM
-~ A BY SIGNAL LANDMARK, INC.
WhirlP29J • '=' ont of the Sign.11 Comp.1niu [IJ
FURNISHED MODEL HOMES BY BROWNIE ROWE INTERIORS
;LAN$ IY R. J, MARVICX & ASSOC.
Hun@nstQn LVtdm
the new community for acti ve adults in Huntington Beach,
•
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~ Writers' Lives
••
· Usually Shorte1·
Dieters, plea98 note. To cut calories, choose vegetables
that : I. Grow above the ground. 2. Are green. 3 .Need no
paring or scraping. Got that? Such as cauliflower, cucum-
btrt1 broccoli, asparagus, green beans, green peppers, let·
tuce and cabbage. SO advises a medical feUOw who special-
izes in obesity cases .
Deeply regret to report that correspondent., reporters,
autbors,"editors' and critica die younger. Researchers for
the Metropolitan Lile Insurance Com·
pany report that. Younger than profes-
sional rellows in other lines, at any
nte. Reporters and correspondents
are particularly vulnerable, Jt's said.
Authors and critics live almost as
dangerously. As for editors, they sur-
vive the rtskJ only sUshlly better than
their crewmen.
QUERl~S
Q, "Who's the most decorated American soldier of the
Vietnam war?"
A. Lt. Joe Hooper. Besides other citations, he won the
Medal of Hocor in 1968, lben went back into ccmbat. Killed
about 115 of. the enemy.
Q. 0 How much of the Salvation Army's money comes
to il fJirougb small donations in those street corner kettles at Christmas?" ~
A. About a nickel out of every dollar.
Q. "How fast does a newborn blue whale gain weight?"
A. Picks up aboUt 200 pound> a day.
Q.' "Wbc's the highest paid man In the country?"
A. Salaried man? Henry Ford II, It's said. Record in-
dicates be pulled down wages plus bonuses to total
1874,587 last year,
Q. "Is there a Santa Claus in China?"
/\. There Is. His name is Lau ~g.
DOLPHINS
That dolphins can be trained to herd schools of fish
has been re~. Big argument now is whether sa id dol·
phlfts s?lould be rigged out with ·radio transmitters on t~eir
baeti 9o meri ·tn boats can direct them. Some ecolog1sts
say no, such a technique would let fishermen strip th e
seas shortly. Othe"r-«ologlsts say yts, those dolphins
could ~ the fish from predators Ille way dogs protect
sheep. What's your Jtand on this matter?
Questlcn repeatedly arises as to whether a woman
dresses to pltase her husband, to interest other men, to
satisry henelf, or to show off to other women. Researchers
now say none of these reasons apply in many caseJ. Nu·
merous women ofter age 30, they say, subconsciously pick
dresses lhey think their father! might have approved.
Was none other than Rich ard Wheeler who described
the household cat as " ... A purring pet who sleeps away
, •. a goodly portion ol the day .•• so he can prowl around
and fight • • when we would like to sleep at night."
Addttu moil to L. M. B01Jd, P.O. Boz 1875, New-
port Beach; Calif. 92660.
1 $S bounty for each sign turned
over to her. Otlier
Deatlr.s
SAN RAFAEL fAP I -
I Ed.win J. Lukas. who helped
~ shape the civil rig hts policies
of the American Jewish Com-
mittee, died Wednesday at a
coovaJescent hospital i n LOS ANGELES (AP)
Slalltoa -old-Wright, 83,
an artist and co-founder of the
aft fonn called synchronism.
died Wednesday of a heart at-
tack in his home in Pacific
Palisades. He taught ancient.
modem and Oriental art for 13
years at UCLA.
CARMEL (AP) -Roll
Bolla. ·12. former professor of
marine biology and ~logy
at Stanford Universify, died
Wednesday of cancer in
M o n t e r e y Peninsula Com·
mlDlity Hospital.
BERKELEY ( A P )
Lifelong activist B e a t r I c e
Wbltnab is dead at 92. She
once led a campaign to
remove fallout shelter signs
from public places, paying a
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
U'I E. 17Ua St., Costa Mesa
11411118 • BAL'TZ-llERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 173-NSO
Colla Mesa &!&-ml • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Costa Mesa
LI 8-3133 • DIWAY BROTHERS
MORTUARIES
17111 Beacb Blvd.
HattnP,n Belcb Slz.7'771
UflledoadoAve.
Loq Beacb lls-435-1115 • r.<cCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTuARY
1711l Lagaaa Canyoa Rd.
lllWIJ5 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Ceme~ Mortuary
mt Pactnc ~" Drive
Newport Beach, Callfonlla
mrllll • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
1'01 Bolsa Ave. We1llllla1ter w.Jm • SMITHS' MORTUARY
lf1 Mala S~
Haat~lleacb
Kentfiel d.
KENSINGTON (AP )
Funeral services were
scheduled today for Fred H.
Lenway who fled Gennany in
1939 to form engineering ,
mining and banking en-
terprises in America. Lenway,
56, died Tuesday at his home
here.
t* • ...., w;
For the
Record
Births
HNt Mtmtrlll Hotpllll
Allfllltl l l
Mr. 1rw:f Mr•. Oon1t w. l(lrchbtrll, A.SO
Vlclorll, A.pl. 13, CO$ll Me11. cilr1
Mr. Ind Mr1. Josoph l(JrbV•Smllh, 130
$1nt1 h1bel, Cci•tt M•••• girt Mr. Ind Mr1. Androw Sltlnm...,er, ll\$t
8urtOll W1Y, Sl•nlOl'I, girt
Mr. 1nd Mr1. llobort Ch1!r1, 16000 VU11 y.,,.o., Apt. 413. Huntington B1acl'I. ,,,,
Mr. •nd Mr1. Ch1rl11 Bowling, 16111 Mllll• Lin .. Apt. (I, HUl'lll119ton
BHCll. boV.
Mr. tnd Mrs. It-Id Ad•m•, 2371
Zenlll'I Avtnu., S1n11 An1. My.
Alff11tl 14
Mr. end Mr1. Gtciro• w. D111no. J02t
JIYI ROlld, Coslt MtH, g!r\
Mr. 1rld Mr1. Cr1w1ord Tothtv, 711
E111 2ht. Slfffl, S1n!I A111. 9lrl i\\r. t nd Mr1. Rlcl'lard s. C1rl11C1n, 19171
81-lnl L1111, Huntln9ton 8Ntl'I. 9lrl
Mr. 1nd Mrs. Jly Miiier, 1071 8•ttv
Orl ve. Hunllnpton Btltl'I, bo'f
Mr. •nd Mr1 . Rltl'l1rd Me<:urry, 1001
West Sttv9"S, Apt. ll2, S•nt1 An•, .. ,
Alllftl lJ
Mr. •nd Mn. RO!lfr Fot1m1n. 3742
C0t1..,-Sir.et, lrv!nt. bo'f Mr. t nd Mr1. J•m•i M1nu.I, tol
Glldvr., Apt, 7, LOl'll 8Mtl'I, bot'
Mr. 111d Mrs. Robert LOl'l(t, 117 Tl'lt
M••ltr Cln;I•· Coit• Meu, 9lrl Mr, Ind 1'\rt, fidWlrd 8tll1, 17111
GolOOn Wnl, Apf. M·7, Huntt119I011 B••cl'I, 9ltl Mr. Ind Mr1, Cl'larln O. Frl1bf1, 1017
Am.rlc•n Pl1c1. Apl. A. CCI.Ill MIMI, ...,
Mr. •nd Mrs. Gre9orv P11rY!s, 1.POl
T111tln \l'llltot WIY, API 1!·2. Tu111n, ...,
Mr. ind Mrs. ltog.tl" H1oem...,tr, •11
D1rrell SlrHI. CO.II M1w, bol'
Mr. Ind Mr1. Slepl'ltn Plltm.n, 2637
Orlon, Apt, '' s1n11 An•. bCly
II. J.._ H"'lltll
AlllUtl II
Mr. •lld Ml't. 01nl1I c . C1tortU1, t,1:21
Roll!nWOOd C1rclt. lrYlnt, Olrl,
Mr. •1111 Mrs. J im Louo11r1n, 3901
Pat'k'lflw l.tnt. No. tC, lrvlnt, Q'lrl.
Mr, l lld M.1'1, Jll\!'I II, Mkhtt, 174t2
Ct!MfOll l t,, Huntlnoton htcl'I, 9trl,
AvtVtl ll
Mr. I nd Mrl. W1vnt E. Ctr15Cll. 4112 Hom••l••d St,, INln.tFtlrl.-1 Mr. Ind Mr1. Crtlt R. Otv t. 26-Cll 8 roolcllt 111 Rd., hn J111n C1pl1lr1no. .... Mr. tnd Mtt, 'TllMI•• E. 'T~ylor, ,,,..
l lM'TI \l't1t1, .... WMrt IHCll, bO'/'.
"'"'""'' tt Mr. IM Mrt. M1rttl'I F. HINIY. 310.
Ctrl'l'ltl A....nut, lrYll'lt. tioy.
WHITE
• •
SPORT SHIRJS FOR MEN
SPICIALPURCHASI 199 Short sleeve prints, s~lids.
Men's rib knit crews, S·XL
Buy several at this low price.
·SP•T SHIRTS FOR BOYS
SPECIAL PURCHASE 150 Easy care cotton and blended
knits. Crew net ks, scoop necks .
& bike shirts. S-Xl, 8 to !8. ·
OURRIG.42.95 s Gallers & S.tller model with
\.I hp heavy duty high torque
motor. Ultra.quiet operation.
SAVE
28%
" F'rlday, A1.1gu~t 24, 1973 DAILY PILOT 9
OPEN SATURDAY 10 AM to 9 PM
BOLD PRICE SLAS~ING ON THESE MOST WANTED ITEMS THAT EVERYONE
NEEDS ••• COME IN EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS. SAVE TODAY.
SOFT AND PADDBI BRAS
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Variety ol styles in white
only. Nylon tricot, polyester,
nylon, cotton. 32.33, A, B. s1 ...
GEMllNE . LEAJB BRTS
FOR MEN & BOYS
Variety ol widths, Slyles an d BOY'S tj5D
colors. Sizes small to large Ill
in this special group. MIN'S i.
G.E. PORTABLE PHONO
~l~;s1~~-;;;::singles 1350
and LP's. Rugged high im·
p~ct casa. 3Vi" speaker.
FOAM FILL BBi PILLOW
~O~·~ll~rEg~~i~ i!:m filled pil· I I C
lows. 17x23" fini shed size.
Washable. Buy extras now.
G1ADE AIR FRESHErB
OUR RfG. 58c IA. 3 S] Assorted tragrantes to help
keep room smelling fres h and ·
clean. Stock up now and save! FOR
320 PG. COLORING BOOK
~~~gR:n~.'1~1f:1 interesting 3 I C
subjects. 320 pages of color.
ing tun for all children. .
HERSHEY C•IATE M X ~
OUR RIG . lie
Instant real chocolate flavor.
Just add to hot or cold milk
1or a delicious tasting treat. 72c
5 LB. WILD BIRO SEBI
OUR REG. 69c EA.
Special blend of seed
tor all the wild bi1ds
that come to ~is1t 2i87C
THE FAMILY COOKBOOK
OUR RIG. 4.98
A complete guide to cookery
wi th 1.000 tested recipes and
more than 100 color pictures.
29s
BOYS, YOUTHS & MEN'S
BASKETBALL SNEAKERS
OUR REG. 4.88
Choo se hi 01 low cut styling ' Both impo1ts feature cushioned innersole for
top comfort & su1e tread outsole for fast starts & stops. Terrific fo1 the
basketball court or casual wear. Youths -11 lo 2, Boys-2\12 to 6: Men-
6V2 to 11. Choose black or white. Get your shoes before the rash.
YOUR !iATl!!iFAC:TION Iii FULLY GUARANTEED DR YOUR MONEY BAC:K
STORE HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY 10 AM to 9 PM • SUNDAY 10 AM to 7 PM • SOME QUANTITIES MAY BE LIMITED
-C·OSTA MESA IMC
3088 BRISTOL ST.
San Diego Freeway at ~rlstol
WI MOMOI \ ·--• tllSltl Clllltl CAii ~
"111111 ,_ .. CllllT llltlS
I
Friday, August 24, 1973
c 'QUEENIE Good-tasting Drug Cures
Gonorrhea in Just 2 Days
:.:
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WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
glassful of pleasant·tasting
medicine is belng marketed as
a 48-hour cure for gonorrhea,
America's most common in-
fectious disease except for the
cold.
The new liquid drug, a com-
bination of ampicillln and pro-
benecid . was found 90 percent
effecti ve last year by the
.
Public Health Service (PHS),
but only one company, Bristol
Laboratories of Sy r a c u s e ,
N. Y., has received Food and
Drug Administration (FDA )
approval to se!J the prescrlJ>-
tion drink.
HAROLD SNYDER, presi·
dent of the competing Bio.craft
Laboratories of E I m w o o d
Park, N.J ., has complained
that the FDA is dawdling in
approving his company to sell
the drug, which is tastier, less
painful and quicker acting
than the previous cure oJ
swallowing huge doses ol
penicillin pills or taking a long
series or penicillin pills or tak·
ing a long series of penicillin
shots.
Snvder has asked Sen.
Gaylord Nelson (D-Wis.) to
investigate the FDA 's delay
in approving his con1pany's
product.
..... ''Believe it or not, he's from our European office." ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Huge Suit Filed
Over Land Buys AN FDA spokesman said
Biocraft submi tted its request
six months alter Bristol and
that there has not beeii enough
time to consider the ap-
plication.
A mouthwatering mini-dinner that's a giant
on value, especially now in times of high food
costs. A whole char-broiled chicken thigh & leg
in a tangy teriyakl sauce. Served with our
specially prepared fried rice and a bed of'lettuce.
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NEWPORT IUCH SANTA ANA
•lstol IPollsodesl 4th Street ond
at Comp11t Newport fwy.
HUNTINGTON IEACH
5856 Wofiter
ot Sprh19dole
COSTA MESA
1155 l1;11ker
at Foirview
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A and fraudulently represented
San Francisco attorney who they had title and-ownership
of the beach and marina bought a lot at the Tahoe-Don-facilities at Donner Lake.
ner development in Nevada The suit also said buyers
County has filed a $150 million were falsely told that a water
class ac tion damage suit in system would be provided and
U.S. District Court against certain properties would be
Dart Industries Inc. and Dart retained for additional recrea-
Resorts. tional facilities. It aUeged the
Michael D. \\'oods alleged plan for a lake on the property
Thursday that approximately was abandoned prior to open-
4,000 persons were induced to ing of the sa.Je of lots.
purchase land in the project (A $100 million damage suit
by salesmen who "falsely and also was filed Tuesday against
fraudulently" represen ted. that the two firms, alleging they
certain facilities and services used misleading techniques to
would be provided. sell lots in their Bear Valley
' Springs subdivision in Kem
Robinson said p e r s o n s
allerjl:iC to penicillin should not
use the drug, although he said
allergic patients can avoid the
penicillin side effects by drink-
ing a Jot of water and ju.ices.
THE PHS has b-timated at
least three million Americans
have gono.rrhea.
The federal government is
expected to be the largest
buyer.
Bristol is marketing the
drug unde.r the n a m e
"Polycillin TRB" sold for $4.25
a bottle. THE SUIT claimed County ). purchasers had been promisedfp;;;_;;i;;;;; _______ ..,. _______ 11
since Jwte 1, 1971 tbat they
would have a lake on the pro-
perty, water service, golf
course, skiing facilities. and a
beach, marina and boating
ran1p at Dormer Lake.
HarborDENTAL CENTER
But the attorney all eged
none or the promises was kept
and said the representations
were false. He said the
defendants failed to obtain
necessary permits fro m
governmental agencies to pro-
ceed with the development and
that the injury caused by this
Ylas not known until Aug. 20.
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DENTURES ~ CREDIT ~ PENTDTHAL
FILLINGS • muCTIONS • lllDGI WOii
X·RAYS • DINTURIS • ll:l!PAIRS • JAClm
PENTOTHAL .. ll:OOT CANALS
CROWNS • WISDOM TEETH • MINOR OITHODONnA
GROUP
DRESSES
PANTY
HOSE
50¢
If you're._
looking for a
delicious, nulrltious,
Inexpensive meal. then you'd
better try a Chick· Teri Snack. It's
distinctive Japanese lood - a teriyaki
flavored chicken leg and !high along wilh
tried rice and a .bed of lettuce. all for only
97C. And at today's costs, Chick-Teri's
!he only plaCe you'll llnd with 4'-
great food and at a price ,..,,.. ...... .
that won't keep you from ~o., COSTA
enjoying ii. So fight MESA will! !ti.la coupon ~ou are eru1\!ed
inllalion and give yourself t-'\ lEI I 10 one 6 oz.
Snack-il's real cheep! +t>'* NtWPOAT
a treat, get a Chick· Teri ,o;:;<--''"'Tih,_,=.__
1
FREE
IUCH
JAPANESE FAST FOOD
310 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
I COKE
I wlth eve1y purchase at• Ctllck·Teri
Sn11ck. 11'$ so cheeo -Ifs fJtfl!I
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.__p"_._ •• _ .. ""'--0900 __________ .. ,cH~~~ ·~~~~,G~~;~JI
SATURDAY
AUGUST 25
ONE-DAY
ONLY!
CAPRIS
ss.oo
SALE
SPECIAL
All FAMOUS BRANDS
•JOYCE
e AMALFI
• BANDOUNO
•IMPORTS
NOW
ALSO HANDBAGS
SATURDAY ONLY
00
~ -'r:'"''
$5
$10
$15 FINAL MARKDOWNS! THE SHOE TREE SUPER SALE SATURDAY ONLY ALL SALES FINAL
• SUITS • COATS • TROUSERS • SHIRTS ' • 3424 YIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH
3410 Vie Lido-673-5521 . •
Newport Beech
\673-1970
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I yre~ b FABRIC BOUTIQUE Sundries Specials
RECORDS & CASSETTES
1/3 off REG. PRICE
Playtex Living Gloves
3 PAIR FOR THE 2
PRICE OF
VITAMIN E-Y2 PRICE
100 -400 l.V. REG. $2.89
COSMETICS-1 /3 OFF
VIA LIDO DRUGS
3445 VIA LIDO -NEWPORT BEACH
675-0150
i REMNANTS
1/2 AGAIN OFF
Already Low Marked Price
SAVE TO 75% & MORE
ALL McCALLS PAnERNS
1/2 PRICE
SOME REDUCED TO 39c
VOGUE & BUmRICK 113 OFF
'
Y ~ re'!
, 3402 Vie Lido-Newport Btech
FABRIC BOUTIQUE
SATURDAY, AUG. 25th ONLY
'
DON"T JUST STAND THERE
ON THE SIDEWALK
COME IN
FOR
SUPER
BARGAINS
SPECIAL MARKDOWNS
SAT., AUGUST 25th
LADIES SPORTSWEAR-LINGERIE
3404 Via Udo -Newport Beach
"One of the Lido Shops"
Sidewalk Sale Bargains
Fantastic Values!
DRESS SHIRTS . . . .. . . . . .. . • . $4.00
DRESS SLACKS ..... 112 PRICE & LESS
P•l·CUFJID
KNIT SLACKS ...... $8.00 & $10 ;00
SILICTID
SPORT SHIRTS . . . . . . . . . $4.00 & UP
2.PC. SLACK SETS ......... $4!1.00!
SPORT COATS .......... 112 PRICE!
SELECTED BELTS ... 112 PRrCE & LESS!
PLUS AN ASSORTID TA.ILi OP GOODlhl
BIDWELL'S
346 7 Via Lido
Newport Beach
673-4510
::JJ...-
BIDTIQUE
)461 Vll •. LI* ·--
•
Bidtlque B1r.geln1 Too
Mn Ofc1.-a
Acc•••r'let At V1 Price A•lll Leu.
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Friday, August 241 1~73 0-'ll v PILOT I J
Hell-• IS PUBUC NOTICE War PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICI PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI I USIHlll PtCTmous ll.ISINISS '"'.,., 11-----~ ~ NAM• ITATIMINT NA.Ml Sl'ATIMINT 'ICTITIOUS IUIU4lll l'ICJITlOUI IUSINISS
,, ~~ ~~1119 l*'Mn• 1r1 dolno Tlw f«!owfno ,,_., "' clol11111 tMitlrlt• if AM• rTATIMINT I T1" to11!.t"r:' r!".!n,..,~=~ ttullnffl :1 ACAOlfMV OF. i1...v. U.IM. '1~ U I TM . tollowlilg penonl .,.. clo llCI ••1
I 9!f0k~f, Hu"tl"Ofon !-~1 ctllf, ~ ~~i:.·r"!~'"o'1~."", ""=,~~~t.~JAK ASSOCIAT(S, )001 A.J.W. 6NTERPIU$1$. I Sol•
1 ~~L.. ,.._. ··-:;-. '....,-;:o:'= .._,,, r "" " • ·• > i E Pl'Cf;lrhl'Ol'lhlp, Po.t Offlcti loll Drl-' Ille~ ... I NUML 4U IO!tt'O 'W•Y -·· ' • ildl'dll AvtnUe ...... ,,. 1 • &pl .. \ldt Ill D. lAktWOOd. , .. 9011 .. t303 Vl1t• 11 NMoi'I IHdl, C•lH 92660 ' Jaqc kfl 01"'"9. 3030 eouMry Cot.tt MIN. C1IU~nl1 '24Z6 "~--c CA -• •I JfltitY F. LIWl'llflii. -..... ,., W••· cWti. Cou• """'· c11. nt.2f '· JAK coNsT1:UCT10N co.. 3001 _......... YP''"' w • ·~NGTON (AP) Th G J ~ Callon or spen••·· •, Liou . .,. ee1cJ\, C•OI. nO'i" -. ,,'J,1• tMlntU I• COl'IClllCIM bV· In '"' Rldhlll "'"'·• 51111• t~ IN!f1net1t Ill, CyAlv~~ •• Jcr:ll· t)(l) Vl)ll W •n•. fl.o>n• -e en. l\a. ..... '6 !!?t!! OUOll!lont On .t.lltnl s:s a.lo r•ll Ul'IV l)VI 1.4 ' •T• fil ,l
I
' Thf1 butll'lffl I• cendUClecl )1' • ....... •• Ull Cot.fl Me.a. C•. ft'2f Thr. butlneu I• conducted bY •n Ill' General Accounting Office has $430,000 to refurblsb the jet he m.it1.,1'1J:c1!~H:i ~ ~lllii:loP Im' ~Jt;: :::n p,,. Jt: iQ; ~='•,Mf '" "; P•rlMttl\ID. J4Cll S, Giiiette 2. 'filetlonal Uf9 '~""' Com111nv. dlvldu•I. hcurllln Ottl»ra. 1 klv•I Mt JtYli '*' .. r1n ar \" \Iii
Jeftm-IF; Llwm1n Thi• 1'•~1:w11 "'"""" ITMI''°""" wo wnihlr9 iM .. S1.1t11 llQ t..o. Alvin J. w.inoe,11 reported to Sen. William Prox-uses as bead of the Air Force !~.!.,.bla. w oii.rs , •-1 'ffi ROid 111 32l'lo ~ tn ~ 1~ 1 \l, Thi• tblfWT\tnt ""'' ftltd w'lll'I lhl Couno 11' Clltl'k of °'1lllOI CoynlY on Auglitt 7, Allotolll. Ctllf<ltnl.I NI036 Tlll1 Jltltmtnt Wit ftl..:f wlfll tl'll Coun. ....... bv OVff•lhl· r .... l~ Jil.Of)f'I DI• ,, ..-'" ..... ~l ty Cltrk of Ota,._ County.., .t.ugu•t 1.s. lt13 T11f1tici.iilrwM11 ~'bV A ~r•11.,. Clerk of <>r•nue COUfltv on Auousi 1, mire (0-Wis.) that an Air Logistics Cunmaod. t~Nr dllltr• to r~ Mv ' 2' Rolllnt I xl.s\11 I~ ~~~ 1~ ' 1'13· •• '•4>'Mf ,.,l.,,.t1t'llo. 1'13, Force ge neral spenl $870,000 In m-, ""T r !E~~ .. :i: g ! I .. , ... == i:, 1iU :1"1% ~~"" • I= 1lt ' ... ,,,,, l'\ltllllfltd Ota1111e Coett Danv P>IOI. JAi( CO'fST1lUCTIOtl co.. J'21111 mt 119 QUO!• w ~ ,. ~"'rt i:'I" ll"L •,1 flulllllhtd Or·~ c .... 1 Delly Pilot, AUIUll 10, 17, 2A, 31, ltl1 ·Ulii-13 a. ,.."li<ol0<:z:;•llO<\ GORDON . l'llLOS 6 IOU.NO public fu--'• lo OOnvert his "'!. do no! Incl~ I nlr. j It" "•"'1"'s•~ 11'0~ 11••• S fir Nt -....
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· ...... "' 'IU.ll "GEN CA~N has played -0 1 -.,,,,, -~• -11 '' "" """' "" '~ • • • Ind Stot1mblf 7, l y: Jolln Kon r, .Pl'ftkltnt AttOf ... YI •I law • ft Into Jush ti I lY "" """ '" "' ':f.' •-n 1"" US tk L A" I' " -··r-a p ··-· ve • . dOWn ---• ,,,,, p m -· • • .... ~· •1111 S•ol. 1 2$14-n PUBW:C NOTICE G-IJ Parlntr Ull Lak...S 1 ........ ,.. -~.. .__... lot! no _,, R ... s. 9ff'I Cp w; nlv Feb
" Thf1 tlllfrT*!I·-!!ltd Wiii! tilt Coun· Lalt1W'Nf. CA tt7l1 jet. fast and loose with public ~Dl'~l~I 001C,::: :=-Ff ~ i•mtnll 1• 1-Miun ... MObl ' .._\
PUBUC NOTICE -,====-=---~~·--lty Cltrlr. of Otll\P COl.Ollty on Auoutt 1' T....,.._ 12111 sn-im Proxmire, who w.nuested L.-.1-and Nl't.bably violated ra7~·&m' •,· ,. '","•• "t 'I ,?.,_ ~::r-. In .i\\ Dv. ~= ~ !.. re 1TAT91o\INT 01' AIANOOJtMiNT lf11 PubllllWd Orangt COllt Diiiy Piiot, "'"''t IWIUl'.I ..._.. ', AND ILITIUI ..... , m:-s-tt IM I ~VIII ~ 10Yi llU °" usi 0111 1"-tn1i AUQu11 3. 10. 11. u 1913 2•13 the report earlier accused ,,,,,i.. d ..,, •• _. ~.. v WI jll l • #11 l'ICTIT10Ul •USINl!SS •AMI PlilblltNd <>r•no• COl•t D•Hv Pl101,1--------------1 I Air Force re • .,._tions,10 sai Aw~r'n·~~ :r'"Mfu n~ ~~ ~ 1f~ .ml vfc1or St II~ 1
lu•,11r••'•'=• TO CltlOITOltl Tiit followlflll, llftlO!ls Pl•ve abtadtJM& AVQUfl 3, 10. 17, u. 1t13 2399·7:1 PUBLIC NOTICE ---:,.,,,,-,.,,,-,-,,.,,,.,,..,.---1 Proxmire. nu-·'"-·'d be &kl Ask ett c l7'1 121'e scrioto I lft v,•,~, Sn S\4
ITATI <'•~",",o,•,4 T,•0•, fhl u11 of tf1e fl(tltlow buslntu' Mm••-------------l·------------I PUBUC NOTICE DI;' nuvw A~1h!ll 20 llYi ll•r C ltt\ ~)1. a Wl'IO p,v. 2314 t•-. k 1,7<lll 1IT!
THI COUNTY :3 OIANGI JJ<s N•tur•I H•1'c""111111 at ·101 Mi!n s1 .. 1• ,.1ctlTIOOI 1 us1N1Ess -------------1 severely -reprimanded as an ~1 t:,~ il~ q~ ::t :~11 l.N ~ ~:M~ L~ ~~~ .... ":cf 1n; 11~
lit. A·mot ••lllOI Ptn. PUBlJC NOTICE MA.Mil STATl!MINT I "'4f I • .-. bl pend '-1 ta. 81v 2'ili 1 nf<iAll 6~ 714 Se...., UO 29~ )l WISI• Mt 1'1'1 1114 £t11111 of Ait'THUll: JOSEPH MARTIN Thi tlC'ltllou• Mlnep n1rn1 rlfll'fed lo Tilt follow! .. porton 11 dol'9 lwtlness ,.ICTITIOUS IUllNISS examp e to uul\':r g 8 ers Alllecl T~ 19~ 11101 Crt1 St ttlh S~tr Co 1:W. 214 Wallmn I r.li I OtcttMCI ' lboVI Wtl fl'4d 111 0.-11191 County 'Ol'I Julv NAMI! STATEMENT Allyn B4 <4'1\ ni.rc E1t ,_.. l \'J Sl!ot"tw 6~ ~ Wtbb RI 4\11 .4'\il ' 13 lf1) . . ' NOTICJ 01! TltUIT91~,IALI ll t Thi followlng Pl<'IOll 11 clolno bll1ln1M in the m!Utary., Am Aon• '"' ,, 111mt G• u~ \~\'a SllT\NOl'I 11 12 "-"*'n w. t NOTiCE IS H.lAEIY OIVIN to lht • J~I Loul.t• ,UCklV 2'5t 0 T.I . Ne. IAH."' DUMAIJ , .... , M. ALA RENTAL$, 2052 Newooi"I Blvd.. ... . A .-.r1Crlt 1·~ )16 Ill Alum •'h Siio sn::r•o T T<c•• .. l' w1i;t Wt l<4 IS • crldttor. of 111. •bov• ..... mid ......_._, 4 c ' r•n11• ... _ .., ,., '"' 1 1 00 • 1 , C01!1 M1111 nm · P-·-;-said th• ,.,.... Amel Lb ~ ~In l!lkW A 6\'t 6V. SI •• ,, •• 1 •• 11111 all Ptf'llOl'll "-Y1'9 ci!f"" ,. -,,,,-, ·,,... w., otlt Mesa "" llMbtr · , I : o C 0C l YN CR.t.FT MOL.CS _, IOIU • ......,u .. ., "'"'--'. Am E•or 59\l'i 64 -ntrsl Co ll10 V. \0.-• ...-P n Wtll"° M 1•lll 1.-••IO ..... -.,,,,,.,,, ... ,,,,, .. , .. __ J1met Clifford Gullon, l)OO Balboa P,M .. WlLllAM l'IEZUHl.Y, •• duly 10-,!:.','•"M".~ •• ~.,,Houltll•· 111 list .SI .• .t.vt .. we .. mlnsllr, ca. t2'a Am ''"'' ,, •• ,, .... rlland R !" ' 5.,...,,. 11~ lt'lt •It-I Pt ~ Pili -.... ,..,,. 111·.... a ' .. .. 1 gresslooal agency's rep or I•-,,,, ttll ,·· ,,_.,, ' •• '' ,,,, ..... 1 1'~ 11v. w11Pub n 1644 1m wun It'll llfC;ftt••V vouc:11tr1 In 1111 ofllcf ..... • boa Ptn. ' oolnled Trull" lllldtr •rid purwtnl to This bullnth I• conducted bY •n In. R tl!erd M•rvfn S~hrotder, m2 ... ... ..... .. .... y 11'"' F" 01 '"' cltrk 01 lM IOOv• iniltled COUft or Thl1 bu1lne11 w11 cCll'lducted b't' 1 Dftd of Tru1t rtcorcle<I Novemblr 4, 19'3, d!vldual Ntwmen, ADI. 1, Hunlln;1on Beach, ca. conffrmed his charges that ~~lr\G~': ~ff ~:!1.fn1'~ 1~ ,:lt ~l! .,it'll! t~ ~l~ ~~midi 2014 to ""'" -·m, •l>h 1•• ""'""•Y pa rln•r1hlP.. tn book 611t, oag1 4)t, ol Ottldal RKor" e' 01•·0o•• A H-·••••• '"" A ~ ~ 'f'" Kol"' so 01" ll'" WOI•• HJ •o .... .... -J•n Ricki'/ I !ht ... ,, ~ '"' c I R ...... .... ... ' .... Thi• bu•i~ll II COl!dUd9d b I Calton ins'•lled a ~1ally m e v ,.. ..., ... ""SikN ltw 1 • .. Youdltri, lo thl lll'lderllOned 11 !hi otlict " "" Cl '" oun Y K(l,,,..r "' Tl!ti •!""'""' Wtl fll.0 will! 1111 Coun. y in n. Ml .. _... Am Wed I !,\ ~6lvar C ~ 3V. Sim N S l ilt ·~ w1n1 f'kT 1.-1 ... OI WI Ill am L Durant•, UOl Wlt1Cllff g,,, Publl•l!ed °''""' Cllll$1 D1!1v '";:;: fit~"' ~e.rnty;.~l:~Tc of ~·J~'ITJ~ Wli5 tv (l«k of Or-angt Coo;nly on A1111u11 1, cllvldu1tArtt1ard M. Schroedtf' designed galley with a range, ~In I 4!t'.; l(:n~.~'ocllr. 1!~ 1i\'o ~''i:r T~ ·:~ li~ :.:. PL~~ ::14 ,~:t'f ~~·~1~a~::r:!11~:!~1 ~~. :-r:oi:: ~,3u.i ~. 31 •rd 5eoi ...... 111r !:...,1,•,, H,1~rE.sT ... 11~cE1R ."'~~.1c~"J'a~! 1m Ft1u2 ty T~11~r~·~~m;~.:::· ~~.:1: '%~ou~· freezer and trash compactor ~rsllcrnco 11,, 110~ !S:~ ~~ I~ 1U? s~n.,. co 11~ 11'\li wortd sv 1:1v. 1""'
In •ll m111..-1 111r111n1n1 to tM '''''' of ...,... 1 mt "' •• • n , .. ,u ... -~, "' ,,,. Publtlotlld Or11199 C1111st Dellv Piiot, ..... ·• ' U1 tbe plane Two divan that Ardn MJ:: " K:tY•' Fo 1~ 1~ Sabel Fd 4Yi S\<o Wrl111!1 w "~ .!. .. ~~1111'!:f=~c.rf:1~ ~; n:fc'!'.'°' •tt•r PUBUC NOTICE ~:~': ~·'~ ·~klttiec:::; ~:'~lwiu~ .t.ugu1t 10, 17, u. 31, 1913 mt·n 1973. -Pm" fold down . into beds s -re::~ r tilii~ i;~ ~~st cr.:,' ~~~ l~ t:~~rD 3\IJ w. ~:::,•Fer~ 4T:t ffi\
D•ted Julv 31, 1fl1. Iota led II Slnll Ant •nd SV(lfl'\or1 Published Or111111 COit! OeJly Plkll ..... .t.uo Col• l' ll" KMS Ind 3111 ' lOol\IJ 105~ 1~1r Co -•Vii . 7'~ ~UTH L. FDLKEltT Strffll, In tM cltv of S1nl• An•, PUBUC N6TICE Auoust 3, 10, 17, 24. 1973 !392·73 added he said .t.h 01 LI 3 Knaoa Vt l jV. 14'h•o.Tc'c'c'°'--"'---"---"c...,.:.::c'°'o':...:Uclh;;_="""'=>t-Ex1Culrl• 00 tl'lt will of I JlJ)t Celltornl1 •II r111ht, htl• Ind lnlernl con.1 _________ .:_:.::_ ___ , 1----;;;;;;;;:;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;---1 "A ' Ink d. b' Auto Trn t '"" l(oeter Pr 2 '4 n :\41
.. NOTICI! TO CltlOITOIS VIYld to Ind now' Mid bY him Undtr Jlld PUBIJC NOTICE s an ca 1net cost hlrd Ato ,.,. '"' Kr~, l l'li 9 I lboVI n1ml(f dtct<ltnl SUPEll:lOlt COUltT 0,. TNI! Deed of Trust Jn IN D"OCHtrl'f iltu.tt«I In l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS 1!A 11a<t __ ,, three balhr I' rd Wr ~6 16~ l(inlm El 1 7" Wrt.ll.t.M l . DUltANTIE STATE OP CA'IFOA Mid Coun1v end Sl•lt dHCflbR 11: NAMI! STATl!MENT .,..,_. llllU OOlllS •kif' Ff :M\'t Lldd Pel ~ 7
1$01 Wts!Cllft or .. II• J14 TME COUNTY·., .·.'.·.• .. O• Loi so of Trect 45$, In "" City ot The lollowlno penon I• doing fMllhlMI l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS .......... • lalled I ..., .olall... 'd al<IWfl L 9 974 L1ne11I l~ 1 1 ~1
H•W'Pll't 1..c:11, ca NM Na. ,..1.,.1 c,,.11 Meso. 15 .i.own on 1 map •teord-'" NAME STATEMINT ""'""'ms or ..,,,.,y, sat Rm:v 9~ 53\2 Sfl-1 Lane• 26'h 27'hl-::;;:;--;;c;:;::;--;:::;;-:---:;::-;:-~c
T11tP11ont1 (714) Ml·Utt EST.t.TE ol Ol!l.t.t. C. DAVIS, lkl ed In boo11 1611, Pit" 31 to U, 1ncluslve, WESTERN lt.t.TONI CS, 163.Sl McF•d· Tl!• following persons 1r1 llolng the senator. "Carpeting and 1111111 Rtl ~Im l·awt" C ~= ~ NEW YOR K (UPIJ -TN IB
Attorney .., •••cutn1 DELIA DAVOS ''' 0 c DAvo~ .... o1 Mlsei'lleneou• Mllps, r9COfdl of den Sull• u. Tustin, C1. '1680 1>u1lne1s es: fabr'• In Air Force blu we-Ban111 H 23'.lo ~ "''Y 8ov ..,.,.. 1elfve stocks tradll!d on ll'le OTC PubU,hld Orlntt Cotti Delly Pilot, Id ' • ' ,.. ........... Orllllll• County, C1llfornl1. John Purcell, 15721 Wllll1m1, TU$lln, WESTERN CONSUMER PRODUCTS, "-e '"' 81111n F 22~ l3 Ll!IQet F'J 1~ l 4'h Tl!ur'4tV 41 swoll.o by NASO.
•uovo i. 10, 11, U.19n titr.73 NOTICE 05 HEREBY oov-to .,. Tiii strHI adllr-eu ind o!Mr common C• 92680 J3281 Merln• v1111, Dana Point, c.111. added at a cost of $3 000" Bav eu 9~ IOV. L.lbegf H 1'141 21't -v•-••••!"4'"' -------------'-""1,,.,1,M, of '" o•-· ,.••, od , •n•netlon, If inv, of tlll rnl p---.. Tl!l1 bu$1nt$t 11 conducted by 1n In• 9262' ' · llttUnt F ~ ~ Lii mp f!'9 8'1'1 Rank O(!lll 11-4,200 lO'lto ll -...,., n1m et tn O Obod "" I -•o< lo .. ·"'i'..;.~ dl vldu•I 8. F. COklt, 11'1 Ywkshlre, C..rdtn Btkln CD ~ ~ Inc Bd$t ~ 614 Penn Dlf Gii 139.300 • •Vt PUBLIC NOTICE th1t 111 per10111 havlno claims eoalnst tlle 11cr • "' • pUr,...., • : .-11,3 • G•-·•· com. ""' THE LANE Bentlv L.1 • 24'4 2SV. Lion C15• 3\lo ~ SOUtll Flncl 7'.iOO 3'V, 31 " ' -· l ondondtrry SI CO.ta Mill CA "' p is a four-Beil Prd •1 421'1 Loctll• 501" !11" Moblll HOl'nl liOAOO 6'Vo 11-\> ·------.,-,.,,,,-------fll et •r• rt>Qulred lo 1111 them, The und•r1lg~ Tnnf" d11cl~lm1 1ny John Purcell Pt!tr G. C•rller. rsn1 Marin• Vbta. en"'ne converted CJ35 . I ·~I uo 39\.'z 40'11 LO.W! Co SI S.Clf.I AnMut Butch 59,000 "°" 41"' • .,.14 -:i11t"he'ti:.er":'::':iirv ='ller'j,!~"'' •ttic1ll•btlltvfor 11ny lncorl"tltlnts• °'The 11re11 This 1111re,,,.n1 w11 flt~ with ti!• c oun• D1n1 Point, Callt. m2't "... Je a Co 1'h a Mall Gas I~ 14\'a Gulf.Oii ss';! '"' ICDTIC• TO Cll:IDITDAI 1, _ •• ,, 1,.m" .~,,,",'.._ .... court, or ICldr•u •nd °""' eornmon dtatonillon. If ty C"'1t of Ol•rlll• County on .t.UQllll 1, Biii E. Workm1n Ind Dean Workman, tank Ba Drm 11\0 l2Y, Ma l R:tty .W. 5'" T91111KO Otl .w s SUl'lrlUOll COUltT DP THI' ouct;;...-' , ... nKtsMry 1ny &hown l'llrlln l'·tJ'M4 25031 Rudolph Clf., El Toro, C4111t. t2630 er. Blrd l_cru 2'\12 :bV. Me lckl U 43 Ptl'lll Ur. Co 41: ~ •
STAT• OI" CALlllOJINIA l'OI: ~aught~ toAtt':' llnd«sl~"'t. •t P~~ID•s: S~1d 11111 wUI be midi, but wllhOlll Publl511ed Dr111111 Coa~t 01Uy Piiot, Jerry L. Lane, 1SS13 Brmanll• Ave,, 'lbe GAQ said the money for aotllh °U:' ~ lf'IZ trlt Fri 15~ 10 .... C.ntronlc 0 111 .45,IQO ~ 2m
TN• COUNTY 011 OJI.a.NOi Pr01P1C:f Ava., o.;:::r,!. ~1. J;o, wtilcll 1; cown1nt or warrtnty, •JCPI'•• or lmpll«t, A1111u11 10, n, 2A. 31, 1913 uu.n ~~r:e~~;1~~t.1902.t90 """"'" ,, , ,,._ the renovaUo fr tw e~o ? 2~ jl .. :~rvc~'ft ·~~ ~ T•x com Bk. IA.loo °' Ne. A·nttt ttit pl•ce al b>uJlntif of the u,.,_,alllntd In r.o1rdfng 11111, l)OSMSSlon, or tn· I -I """"' ,,. ~ came Oil!-, O BrlnU In I I~ McQuay 14\.ii lSV. NASO Volu~ today
!1111t of WILFORO J, HOGGATT, 111 m•llll'• Plfl•lnlno to !ht oat•I• 01 w td cumbt1nc:"' 10 pay tr11 remaining or1n. PUBLIC NOTICE Ml P•0rtEM•'•''wo'· RK"AN sources -aircraft modif1ca-t;own Ar 61,-0; Mectcm 13V. I• Adw1nc:11 o.c ... 11<1. oac~nl, within tovr months a lier lhe clpal wm of tl'll natl MCUted bY said •----::====--=="'~---~ tio f"-•· d · d 8 ckbt l'I'+ lA\li Med!lrn S3 5' Dttll111• NOTICI IS Hl!ltEIY GIVEN lo tlle first publlcatlon of 1n11 notlc1i. Olld of .Trutt, li>Wltt uo.tse.30. will! ln·l l'ICTITIDUS •USINESS T~ll !llltmtnl WI$ !lied wllll 11'1• C01111-n WIWS an operation an Buck•v SI 24~ J'-'• M1ttld In 41'\ 5~ Uncllanoed
cl'fllltor• of !hi a.boW nal'Md dtcldMI Oaled A1i9ust •· 1913 1""51 "'*"'°"• 11 provld«I In said note. NAME STATEMENT ly Cltfk 01 Or1r1111 County on Augull 1, maintenance allotments. ~\/: M "' 45 :t'r"' Fr 1114 1Ni:To"o~::_ _________ _,__:
1n11 •II wson1 Mvlng cl1!rm. 11t1n1t lhl PETER F. DAVIS. Jrt. Gvanc:•s. 11 •nv. under "" termt of Mid Tile-lollowln; ptrsons ere ctolno ws1ne11 1911 Prox:mlre said that the :;::: J;: ~"" ~ ~~c!~as ~1.4 :r~ MIO lllC«ltnl 41tl tfQl,llreo lo 1111 !him EllfC\lklr' of the Wlll Deed of Trust, flft, c1141rgn Ind tlll>fll'" as· p bll h.ed 0 C I '°1f116 modif' I' f d en VIPS IA 1<4..., MIM Fib '14 6,._
wu11 !ht """11ry'...-n1 • ., In thl otfk~ Of lh• •bov• ... .....i dec:«1en1 :!, ':c1T.i!o'"o1'~~uO: It!• trvsti crnt9d ·MULLER'S MUl'"FLER SHOP, 1.ss i1.U:uu5
3 10 1~~· 1ma•t Daty ~~A _ ica 100 u n s are S"'° Pt '' U'l'o Meou1 Cp ~ 21~ OI' '"' cl .. k ol II• lb0\ll «1IUl«1 court, or P'HILLlPS & NAUGHTON Thi bonlfl r lnd.,. Id Died of w. Lincoln, An•llelm, Ct ltf '7801 , ____ ._. __ ._.________ J'ustified before C.Ongress a •nc• A 17 17\12 Molell 11'1 ~.,., -1'6~
to prn1n1 tl)lm, w1111 1111 lllCIUlfY 1M s.. ~ Av•. Truil ll9retof';,:',rv 111':cut.ci ':n<t dtli¥tr.d .t.ztec Muttlir. Inc., • cailfornli COfl>' PUBUC NOTICE S nl Co ~ 6 Moor. &1 U\\ %1'4 •
llOllCM!r), 10 1111 uM1r1lgned 111 1111 ofllC. !~·· ""'• I ~ !hi u·"·-'gMd 0 -··-""OOlot•·-oraHon, 1'30l INcll Blvd,, Huntington necessary to COrTect Safely tlem (p 3 ~ ~ Morrlsn 20 21 '.'l New York (UPI) TM. fOI
of his allorrl'ili IAll:NE S. SCHAG, ..,,_,_ •• flf .ucu or " ·~,,·-,, ,·•,. 0-·" -:·,-,,, ,,.-, B11c11. Ca. 926'1 '----=cc==cCC'CCC-""'""""""---f hi Br Ir a.I-'" Motor Cl 9 9.V. Allows the l llXkl ,,;, ~ .... JOHN'°N .. K• HEDY ,~. Publlthld Or•not COl1t Dall Piiot ...... ....... "" • I eatures. The o ther funds ?!.,1',," ulef 1~.,_ 151' ....... ,•,• c .... ,·, ·.~ •"'• mot! Ind lost 1119 most ..... ' 4 LI Mac.Artlluf y ' wrllltn No11CI of Otiaull tnd E!ectfon to Tlll1 bulillt$1 ls tondutled bV I car· f'ICTITIOUS •USINE.SI !;; "' ~•.-. 33.~ rt V. of Ila
91\ld., P,O. "'°"' 17N. Ntwpotf SllCll. A119u1t 10, 17, u . 31. 1973 249 .. 11 S.tl. The Undll'SIGIW<I C•ulld Wld Nolk• J>or•llOll NAME ST.t.TaMl!NT usually go for routine strvic-·1~r: l":z i"rn ~:' Jo'1't: 1~~ 1tt! m.,11.~1 ;:~uo:it b'tlhlltlt s ~,tornla_.'2663,. ....,,eti Is the ot-e. of ·PUBUC NOTIC of o.11u1t and Ei.c11on to s.i1 to 111 AZTEC. INC. The followlnu .,.,IOl'l is doll'lf bllstniss Ing J -•-aft be 'd ~ !!: !!:: Net and .,.reenl~ c • ..... ,TI "'tthe undlral'"'911In11f m.attar1 E fetord9d 1n ,,,,. county wher• tl'lt r••t l . c. Zlmmtr, President 11: I.IL au""' 1 sa1 • 0ml'511f ~~~ l~l'I ~~'It dH.,tlrent• b9t.wl(I TIM' , -.-.,,
Pl'" 11 n J\O o lhl .. lift ol Miki cllf.edt:nt, prOl>lrly 11 tixaled f't767• GLENNA'S INK CO., 415 Allio Ave, . I P Newil ·Co 9\'t 111\.'I pr Ind lhe flUrrelll '9!f ,..,.; ;j11111~ ~r morlht efllt lhl flrst 11Ubllc;&• l'ICTITIOUI IUSINl!SS D1tt: Augu11 16: 1913 P1.1bll$Md Or•n11• Cotti D1tFy Pllot, P.O. eo~. lOl.S, Newport Beacll, C•nf. ~ontllll P 1!\'a 15\'t NErlll GE IS~ lS~ ·.
°[)lled Jti':'i~~· ttn, NAMI •TATIM•NT WILLIAM BEZUHLY Auow;t 24. 31, and September 7, lA, t2660 =na(o ~VI = NJ N1t G 15,,,,•16 l OlllQllOlllC O:Al•l1'r . ,
JAMES A I UR GAN Tiii to11ow1no .,.,,_ ,,. c1o11111 •• 1.tld Tru11" <t1J 26S3·13 G11nna Tr•vtrs McGellly, •15 AUto Mayo Lad rukll R •'-' a.\11 •"•'•co2!! •'' ,:,. .?:,_ 2 Mvinlnd .~ ~ ·f: •U Ad I I . ' Ml""I 11: ""1 AVI .. Newport Beach, Calif, 92'60 y U'1 Noll 1S 1& -·· > ,,_ ~••• ·:J TllllOl'lelnc 51c 2«.+ Wto U m" llritor wit~ will annell9d ol CONDOMINIUM PUllLJSHING COM-Publltlltd O!'•not Cc.st Dally Pl~ PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii• butlneu 11 c(ll>(lucled bV •n In-•nl lntl :m~ mil Nl•llllll B 1 •• :n 4 Van Wyck. Inti j~i I O
... _ ... 11' of tllt 11bove n1Mld P'AHY .t.ug. :U, 31 Ind ~pl. 1, 1913 260().13'---------------dlvlduel. D,11nly M 8 l\lt Norasir 20 20'l\i S Tipperary Cp 3YI .U..
C O.OOMIN'UM ''TE •• ATIO.AL ,. I Dart Dl'Q 7 7:i\ NWI NtG 9~ ffi ' Don Hlfo<-·• ~ rn~ U 1.t.•Ne1. ICH.t.t. MAGAZIN E •1CT1T10us •us•NEll G tnne T, McGe&dy T c &"' g:• m .!\! ~o•e!I Cp av. •9 7 •cMAT '"'-• 1 H Tnts 111temenf was f!led will! the Coun· t t 01 39" ·-11 Ro r • 1" • -JOHNSON 6 KINlillOY CONDOMINIUM \.lFE STYLE U$A NAMI!: STATEMENT 0 on es fi n .,.. "" ..,, ~• ! FrltcllsRI 30g 11 -~ •r• .,_, .1. k..,, Jr. MAO""INE PUBLIC NOTICE Thi fotlaw!ng Plf'IOl'I Ii doing bu1lnas1 Iv clerk of Orange Q)lln:Y on Augu1t 1, • Dec• Da J3\'J 1<4 Oakwd H 7'14 I 9 St1ndun tiicp 11\lof 1\11; SA ..... 1913. DK9r In '•'14 SI;\ Ot"" Dr .52'11 ""' 10 Mecrodala Cp 9Dloc JWI ~ H .UH Ml<Artllw ....... C.t.LtFORNIA C 0 N 0 0 MIN I UM •S: F171" Deir.lb AR » S3 0tffn EiC 6"'11 1V.. 11 Fl.. •· C ~ P'O, l.tll 11'6 MAGAZINE Oll:OINANCE NO 7W1 DEUTSCH ASSOCIATES. 318S6 8th Publlt~ OrinQe Coetl Dilly Piiot, g:t1hl lnCll 51AI $~ Dtnar Ml 3~ ;):it. 12 L.tnc'i:!~"' irJ ~Vt ~ • '
N-..rt l.tffll, C•llf. tWJ INDUSTRIAL C 0 M DOM IN I UM AN Oll:DIHANCI! 0" TH• CITY COUJt. .t.ve., South L19una, Cell I. A1111us1 3, HI', 11, i., 1'13 231.S.73 UC F' • 01, Ull• 3S1M 36 Othll Las ~ •91/1 13 Emll'IOOS L111 fllol 11• u~ T": cn4J tJMllt MAGAZINE cit.. 0,. THE CITY 0 ,. COSTA MEU. O•MY ""'·" eur11•. 506 Bluttwrd cvn. iring ,,11m en IN!i 1m llvy M ltV. 21 14 GRT CorPOral 2i.r. 1,ro u Ii Rd Ca 92651 am Hd lo;!~ 10._ Ftrro 1 ~ 15 s AltonMr1 Ml Mll'lllllanter CT.t. CONDOMINIUM WDICL Y NEWS C.ALll"Dll:NIA. AM•NDINO s•CTIOll " · PUBUC NOTICE Dick A a 2""' 2SV. ..,._,1 Coat 15..., 16¥1 Ink & er-7 ~ U • PuOllSMd 0r.,.. Cwst DttlV Pilot, CALll=ORNIA SPECIAL OtSTRICT.S >41 •• 1 OP' TH• MUNICIP'AL coo• Thi• bulll'llU I• cOIKlucted bv an In. Dlvrs Scl N4 \CW. O'nnon1 6fii 7Ve 16 WD «I Co .1Sb 19 2 u .•
A1191111 2. 10. 11, u. ltn zm.n MAGAZINE, $t3 W6t lflll SIAll, Col'I• o~ TNI. CITY o• COSTA M•S.t. TO dlVldult 1----::::::===:::--o:=-c='C0'---1 Doc:IJlll 31V. 32Vt °" 6 ''h 17 SOlr•I Mellt c 114 \.ii u .1
Mfu, C•llfornJa 92621 INCltlAll TH• SP'•IO LIMIT ON Thi•:/,~:':.:! !~~l..:f with 1'11 COiin-FICTITIOUS IUSINESI SACRAMENTO IAP) - A ~1gtn )(2111 Jtt Ov~yrNA •1;\; 4112 J: I::...""t11eO::: 6"'~ ~ ~=!Hl.1
PUBUC ~cE Calllornla .t.150Cl .. 9d C-wltnh. SlllTOI. ITll:ln l"l:OM NIWPOltT NAME STAT•MENT • . Dow JOl'll ~ 30 .... Dlltt Crp 6 6\12 20 Nl!Liblrtv CD .514 Vt Up ITI.l&I htc., a Cllltornla C11rpOr41Uon. lftl..A MMll.•VAll:D TO PA U 1. A 111 NO IV Cl..-k DI Orange Counly on A1111ust 21, The IOUOWllllll pel'$Cll II doing buslfteu SU)>enOT COurt Judge has Oovt<t DB 12v. 13,4 Pplbll Br 4"'939., -..... 21· R:lll Pleillci 6'i'I '9 Up A
M.ipll SlrMI, COlll .M1M. Ct\lfoml1 "'627 AVCNUI l'IDM U M.l>.H. TO • 1'71· 11: . . O\lnkln O 2~1 3V. 1«41r •• "' 22 GtnC1pt Coro \lo U~ D • "'71 Tiiis OUalM$$ 11 conclll(led ..,. • COf• M.P'.H. p •• , F17•74 SPORTS"otJSA, 10714 La Mar..,.. ordered the Uruvers1ty of Econ Ub 421!. C2Vo P,K •,•m •,•,in ??,_, tJ llnctal CedHm s .... u 1·· NOTICI TO Cl:IOITOllS DOtlllon. The City Council of !hf City of (Olll Uuo Siied Ortnge Cc.st Cally P!lol, Ave .. Foun11ln Valltv, 92708: 1• • . El Paso ll11 4ti 12 ec um .,,_ 24 Nuclear RIK 1~• 1;\;; U , 1·· SUP'•1t1011 cOUIT o,. THI! Calltornl• AIMXlilild Mtt4I d-~ otdlln 11 fol!O\ll'i: A1111ust 24. 31, and Sepltmber 1, '" Frtcterkk Lawther, 1D7M u MarQuua Ca ifonua to prove It had the e Nuce! s;:~ ~ ~•So~ 171<o 1m u Phwhurtl C.P 1 l'I u · .o
ST.t.TI Of' CALll'OllOA "°" Conw1t1ntt. IN:. SECTION 1. S.Ctlon 3'16.0 of l1w ltn 2652·73 T·~,e .. ~.~,nllln ValltY. Cal!t. '21118 right to fire a widow aCCused ~~e"'I&t 1t~ 1~ p:~, R1v 1~ 14V.. LOIEllS . TH• CDUNTT 0111 OllANOa N.J. Zl1ntr, ,,.ttldfnl MunlclOll Codt of lhe City of COlll Mtsa, "1 ""'' nns ls Conducted b' 411'1 in. Etn A 23 2 PeullY p 3'h 3~ I At I
N.t. A·'6"' Thi•'""""'"' was tntc1with1tw cou"' 1n1U19d1 "lncr-e111no s111e Sl)Md Llrnlt tn PUBLIC NOTICE d!vlduat. of not spreading mayonnaise E11:~ 1n l:W. :v. Pvlss ca, 1s111 16v. 2 M.,~~1 '1J~ 2v~ ~P f·f
E1let1 of MARGARET S. PETEl::>ON, 1Y Cl1rk of Or•ngt CO\lllly on August \5, Clfllln ?-..'' 11 hfr~ amt<lded by !ht Frellerklr. lawlr.er aJI the Wa to th ed f EZ P1l1tl 6 1 P1r N 5v ·ll llV. 3 R1vne lndu1I 314 i,; UO' 1'1 0«111111. 1tn alldltlon ttierito of the totlowtng: 1 OU 1 1 This 1111emen1 w•s filed with 111<e Coun. Y e ge 0 Felr Ln1 7~ 1~ PaGs& w lr:I• 17'14 4 Cllel'Pltrr• In 1ov.=: IV. u.;t 31 NOTICE II HEit EBY OIVEN to "" • 21JU "BR I.STOL STREET "°'" Newport "W....J~ ,; ... T~~E":;s ,, Clerk ot Or1ng1 County on Augusl 15, bread in sandwiches Farlon El 32'1!' ij:W. Ptl H&H 211/• Ullo s Usar Llnk Co ,__ "" uD~ "3 Cftdll~t Of , .... l boVI n.mld dtcldel!I flublllflld Or•11111• COil i Dall v Piiot, loultvlrd fO Ptul1rlno Av.n1.11 "° MPH " Th• followlno .,.,~ Is doing bullf11es1 1913 f ·27st2 Mrs. Doris Judd • was also ~:,,~ir .... o.~~ 1,,:• ,1 t~ ~.1.~N,'rt~.~ J~ ,I, ~ ~i~~:'ig ~v.:: :z M,• : Iii.I •I 1111'10nl l'llvlng C!1lmt 1111ln1t the AllQ\IU 11, 2A. Sl Ind St$)f1mbef 1, SECTION l. Tl!ll Drdln1nce shall ltkl 11. p bit lied ,., '" ~..., n n n Y> I O k...wt1 2 V. ~Id O.tetdlnl .,. '*l!lltld to fir."""" 1973 U5().11 affect and N In f\111 toru lhtrfl' ()0) div• ·COAST HOME CENTER, 9176 Boise ,.119u t s 11 Ol'1riae Coasl Dally Pllel. F1! 'lloiln 1)'1/• 11 Ploner w l~ 1071' 9 T:•nn10e••n ~ 10:: llti Mg 1.t
w Th tllt n«nsary 'fOllC,...,.. In lhot Ol'llot from and •flei-Its Oll•SOO•· •nd prior 10 ,._, Wblmlnst..-. C•lll. ma 1973"" • U 31 •nd S.01.,,..Wr 7, ( \'I ~~Fln %7 ~ro Piper Ind 11~ 11~ \g ca~ Go.cf! 1,._ ~ U•\ 3 of "" cl..-k Ol 11111 tbovl tnlllled court. or PUBLIC NOTICE the t •plr1Uon of flfl..n (15) dlYt from Mallllll J-. 1433 w Sharon Roed ZSSS-13 ) •'1sco Sf~c ~~ 1~ Pl•nd Mk 19'4 20 l1 Mollie lndu11r 1\lo-Uo 3 to pr1san1 1""""' with lhe NCHNrv IM p&111ge ll!lrlof sh1U oe JIUbll.nect Santa Ana Calll 921'06 ". ' BRI.EP'S F • ·Tllto lW. llYri PQPll Bro 5V. 5V. 12 LV~ C1blelnc .4 -Up l.O ~to !ht llll'IOlrllgrwd 11 1111 oftlu NOTICa T'O ClllOtTottl one:• In 1 h • Orl!IQI Coest Dilly Tiii• lllnl~s· b COIKlutltd by •n '"' PUBIJC NO'I1CE , S:, '~'""~S/ 1,1 ... •,•,~ ·~~ Golf 1nt 1m l~ o,;1?,:f..!'"P M'F," ..... ,,.. ~ u•'• \ of ,., •"°"""-aARNES. $CHAG, Piiot, I -IPll)lf of ll"t\ltl'al drwle-dlvldutl )--------~--.;._---1 nsl· .. ~ -• ,.,,_ .. J0HNS0fil &. KE!>IHEOY, 4S2S MKAtll'lur SUPSllott COUIT .. OP T'°HIA !Ion. printed lrd l)Ul)lllJ'lld In 11111 CllY of ~ JOMS •ICTITIOUI S.USINISS -:;. ' Ft 9V1 Mti C41r IOYI lW. 15 Gold MI0811 n 111>-~ Uo 11¥d.. ,.o . loll l786. NerwPIWt lffdt, ~~~·c::~u:; C:...01 cos11 Mna, t~her wllh the Mmn o1 Thh t11ttmfnt w11 fli.d wlll'l l'IM coun. MAMIE STATl!MINT -----•.--------• ~~r~~lc ~~ ru% ~~,c~: ~'Al ~1.4 l~ ~~1~ 1 = ~ M: 1.J ~=a·~ ... -"'~>-"" r "'"' ..... • .... A-)'911 • Ille ,.,,....... °' "" Clly Council votlr111 ty Cid .'Of Oi'tllll• Couri'h' on Aua•t Z'l, Tiii: tollowlflQ person It clollll bualnas • Frlsdl. R 11 12 Qvakr Cl! lflii 20'!/o 18 SWfeme eoot 12 -1 UD, tl · · "< .~ ..... ,....., ..,-.M1"'9tl R of CAil GUST.t.F$DN for •nf'lllllMI It'll Wl'\t. 19n. • 1•1 accused .of alowness filth Fro.i: FdE-S'/• B~ OU-Cl 1~ 11\01 19 Petro l.ewfa 749-'I> ~1 .4 """"'1• ..... ..., ... ol said dtctdtftt, tl•I• L J . • PASSEO AND .t.OOPTED, tlll• 20ttl day ,,,.,. COUITl!SY .t.UTO CENTER UOI s aau-~.1111'. ,.... f 1-~· . b FU!* H 12'.li 13"' ,R.att:W' Cp ,,,. 16 211 Arn~ .n 121'1-1 p 1.•
wl'f!ln ~ mollfM lftir 1111 lln:t ovl>fic.-Otce1sed. of August 1913. .. ,, •• ~ 0 ' C 1 o' II llol (NJ SI SO I .t, C I -' • ""'... Del C3 e IC-l-ta JO ~unit $1e 9i. fW 'll'llCm ~ :IOI 21 Corn!Ml;an fii •YJ-.. p I., lion of fl!lt notlc1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo "" ' Pu........... renut DIS • I' p • n .• n. ni, ..... v. t lg " 'ly' D . ""'\_ 21!Jli 211'1 ltl"t'md 19V. ;111,ro 22 ..... Corp '"-~ I.JO ' P•IM J IV JI i,n cred!lorl of 1)1.e abOve nimtd clacfldetll J.t.CIC HAMMETT, M#lror .t.ug111I 2'11, 31, and S~llmbtr 7, IA, Wlllllrft F. Ctslro. lUSI S1nt1 a e UDlVE!rSI S aVlS catn-lrfln 1~ :a ltJIM Pee 1~ 1'1.4 23 Qonbll" PeVIP ~ 1-4 UP • Jo~. c' PET.ERSON '"'' ,,, .... -....... ci••m• ag1ln•I ...... of tilt CllV of Costa IM$f 1m 2631-13 Leonor• Cir. Fountetn Valley, C.Ut. pus rdin to ,,. rJ 714i ltlC .. ,, 5 sv. 2l MalnUnt ?'Its " \CJ UP • (~ of tn. wlll of u ld OK~· ar• '°;1q11lrld 10 fill .,,;,. ... .t.TTEST; Tiiis bllllness 11 conducted by .tn In-• acco g a OeWI kO Cp ll;ri 1 ~ft-a Elec: IN 111' Z5 MYlln l..11rir1 <4 -\II Up '
1111 llO¥ w1111 thl nanuery voudltrs In the Offlcl EILEEN P. P'HINNEY PUBLIC NOTICE dlvkluaL release from the California
IAl:NIS. S::NA~ ntmtd i:1tc1ct1111 ot Int ,1.,.ir, of 1,.. Ibo,,. tntitltd tou.,, or City Clark ot tilt Clty ot CoSI• MMI wn111m C•U•o S E I /mE"i011eG>C ... lllll:Ch14t11"'1<lll::llllll!IU•B••••lllllllljlirii .IOHNION & Kl'.iN•DY to prtlllll ltllm, wlln tile ~ STATE OF CALtFOttNl.t. l FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Thl1 Slefemtnl was filed wllh tilt Coun-t8\e mp Oyes ~tfon.
lr1 l11111t J kJlat. Jr vouciwn. to 1111 undfra!Dntld •I "" COUNTY OF ORANGE hs NAMI ITAT•MIENT ty Cltfk of ~"II• Counly on Augint lS, The association filed a court
4SU MM.Arn.W •1111111.. • olllCI of "'' 11tor,,..,.. DELBRIDGE, '1,T';.lreE~~T~H:.e,.s:y Cl~ Cltrk °' Thi tollowll'lll l)ll'IOnf, .,. doing ltn J'·11SU action OD her behalf.
P'.O ... 11". LINTON, W.t.TEIHOUSE ANO CUSH• tilt' City OI ,;,.,, Mff4I 'and 111-olflclo butlrll# .,: Publlshed or111119 COlst Dally PilOI,
N..,.,., ... ltj. c........ MAN • .t.ttoniow-at i..tw. " 5ovlll I.Ml Cleft( of tl'I• City Council of ttw City of MtCICY HOUSE. t763S Forbel Rd .• Auow;t 11 24 31 and S.Dllmllff 1 T•h 1n•1 ....... AYe., Slllr. S10. ........... CIHfOrnl• C:O.t• MIN, ,..,..,. (trllty 11111 Int aDoV9 Vl'lil 0 lulld. 31, Laguna Nlgull, C11lf, lt 73 ' ' 2SSl·ri
•"""""' lw IUc:wtw tl\01, Wlllcll " lhl pl1e1 ot bullnns ot and for190111g Ordlnancs No Mt wis In-mn Auoust 11 encl u, 1913 2;512.73 Publls.twcl Or-111111 C111sl 01Uy Piiot. lhe undfrllllnld In ill m1ner11 pert1lnl1t11 troduc9d Ind ((lftsldtred Mctton by -MC Moon K. Noll, 2'Mil IVV Glenn Dr., l
.t.uoust J. lO. 17• 2A. 1913 2lt1·13 to 1111 "'''' of' said dtcedenl, w!:hln tlon •I. r.ou11r mffll"ll of !hi 11ld Cf~ l111una Nlgutl, Ctlll, PUBUC NOTICE LOS ANGELES (AP) - A .c:i: irot,k 1WF0J; ~m [~ 1!.~ 1lr, Jnz f:" "" $.)) I; I
IOUI' mon!IU .,,.,. llw !In t oubllutlon COUndl htld on Int "II d•Y al A119usf, Bono s. Yoo. 2'SOI Vla Sin Slbestlin, 1'udg has found "-"bu bid Ind asll9d I s lltCm 71C 19 Grw!ll l.93 .4.30 "Isl• " \ . PUBUC NOTICE of tl!h nohc.e. 1t11, 1nc1 ttwr.afl•• 1>1U«1 •nd actopteo:r L111una, Mla11•"· C•llf. e a. imw ~ c11 on Mufv1i let cen1 9.19 10.n ~ncorn 3.90 •.:M V~4111 L
---:c::::==::-:':'.C:C::-:-:-::c::--1 !Ill I ltn, 11 e wtlol• at 1 re>gulir meetl"ll of 1111 Thl1 bullneu. r. conducted by I oen1ral FICTITIOUS BUSINESS erty-0WDer guilty of con~ Funds as jUOted by E~_!f Mu 3.11 3.11 rsl Ut 3.33 ., lfrit~' F l 1 7
SU1>1!•101t C~!I 01" TN• D1t.OJt.: R Mc:NALLY said CllY COVllCll lwld on"" 20lll d1y of Olf'ln•rs~ I( Holl Ttll NAME STATEMENT tempt in the tate' first the NASO nc. E~,· Gr 6.111.53 ::J' $1'1 12..Mlf"" !i E !-!! ~ .. 'l:l'~C:#''u'"o':.':..~\11 .t.d,,.nl•tfator wltll•lllt-wlll· =~•'· lt73, b'f lllt tollowtng roll call 8ona s: Yoo es: tollowlng per1011 I• doing buslnas krio 8 8 ,----~~:. lw. ~fncl 2:~ 26: olll•r o i5'/ .
Mt. ·.t.·1'P4 llV'llllled of IM Elllll AYES; COUtlcl lm!!n: H. mm• I I, Tnt1 stllttnenl WIS !lied wtlh 1119 Coun· 81o.MEOICAL PHOTOGA.Ai'HY P.O. wn decision under the new A1111ust 2\ lm a11ft"'.f-d
0
9..Jll 10.1• J p · . ,,:r t'.4 ~ u: ~d \3 •
HOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION of the 1b0Vt n1mld dtcedent Jordtn, Pll'lkley, WUIOll. Reclll ty Citric of Or•ng• Cou1111 on August 20, IOll "103. lrvhw C1lll. 92/oM/1802 .t.mf005 Coastal Conservation Act Of a .t.DMlllALTY:l4 A* f'N'11 F 1l:: 1~:ll = 1' }'.i,,, ~1, SCUDDrlt p'
IY CO.EXECUTORS fOlt jf,T..c>RITY OILlllOOI, 1.INTDN. NOES· Cauncllmen· Nont '"'· Way, Newport Bt•th, CaUf. 92660 violation of a Superior Court GrWll'I 4.11 .... = F ,,,. 1.63 J, .. -·-,,•.02 t.n ~n.'f.r!r" 11.a,, lrn'•' TO 90ltll0..VMOP>IEY .t.ND T SECUA.E WAT••HOUSE. 6 CUIHMAN .t.BSENT• eouncnmen· NOl'lf 1'·21'11 Rl,l!an:I Cleric Ferrill, 802 ArnlOOS 1neom 3 . .0 3.9S SCtk Itel 12.3913.5' nsm .s.623.S. O. •
SAIC OEIT W17H THE ASSE S OF THE A,,.,,... el LIW IN WITH£ss WHEREOF 0 "' Published Or'anot COolsl 01llv Piiot Wav, Newport Beach, C•llf, 92UO order lo baJt an oceanfront lnll.ll'TI 7.11 1.53 Ellenld 9.9510.87 KIYSTOflR.: fg:.tl ~ EfATE "Slllftll..lkl.t.,¥1 ' ¥IA1111ust 2,, 31 Ind SeDlember 1 14. Thl 'bull I .t.dvtier AI04 •fDIES8 217A217• ~SI Bl 186719$3 ' •
•o"T'ic'eof iA5CKHeJR T,•.L.}EY0•1v"'"'• "",,.·, •'"", •• .!!!, C•'"'".' ''''' ~=~~.~ J"lo!'i!'t::'. ~.'"",,,,"'!.", ,•,1 1973 2'..-13 dtvid!et, "'" 1 cOl'ldUdlld bv •n Jn. project. • .t.ttna Fd ,:,, 1:1111 l'FC M MT '01Pi u11 B2 lt'.lo 21:os i~uirfy 'f.i ~J . iEH --RI h d Cl k F Edw-~ Hi•m-f~"...I Attn• In 13.4' 14.69 EQIV Gr 1.53 1.23 11$1 B<4 8.13 1.91 Eno•llV > t~ Wiiiiam H. Tiiiey Ind Ju1rll1 F. TUiiy, T•h f21J) ..,_SlUJ "4-J.ttlt A1111ust, 1m. C Ir tr 1rrell c:u:u _.,._ Was ~ .t.fllturl t.5t 9.S9 EQIY Pr 2.96 3.23 11 ICl 6.15 7.51 lnVftt ._... •• C•ExKutor• ot Int WU of tilt •DOY• llttorlll'll .., Adn'llftl1tr1i.r ! llEALI PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii$ slatemenl Wll Ill.cf with !hi Covn-$500 b J·"'· cam bell L AGE r<ct •M •.11 Fnd Am 1.21 1.$1 u" Kt S.M 6..«I Ullrl F .... s n•mtd de(f(llnl, ,.. .... tlltd i::r•ln • Pl1t Wlth-T....will .... __, 61Ll!EN .. PHINNEY ty Clerk °' 0fl"ll• Countv on .t.uousf l.S. y ....,..e p ucas Albl1f.t l:t.tO 1).3) Er.ref Gt 11.95 12.99 USI §l 22.05 -U.16 SE.LIECTIO " • ' ~1t:a:!'101:.1~&f: ,•f,.:riJ~ldl":'1:'1o PubllUMd 01,111119 Coe1t Dalty Mot. Cltv Cllf't .nd lll--ofllcio NOftCI! TO C•EDJTOtll 1973 Of Superior Court and Ordered ~~llFi 1 ~:~11:: ~.!::'raTrt 153,.3,n :f $i 1l2:1jj~ ~ sp~ {:I: it!·" fl:"::ir:•:._=11~ T11o~On!ift•=~~ August 10. 17, 24, 31 , Im 2073 f.:.~j~ !."' ~:; ~;;cit of I~ ::.~of the Publltlled Orange Coad Dally JI=~ tO Spend five days in County Am Dvr1 t .02 t.86 Enr:R,Y 11 .14 11.1• A:lto SA .4.l3 4.53 ~ stin 1 ·~ i::"":r. documentl ~ 111lorll'lIn1)1.e PUBLIC NOTICE J Publlllllfd Dr11199 COISI D•ltY PtlOI, Stitt of C•Mfoml• for thl August 17, 2•, 31 Ind S..,temblr 7, Jail, the anowable contempt~ :~~.Etl' A.to~~ Btre ~:~ ::~ t.rct'* t~ 1~ l:::f!.~F 1J f, 'l:'r1~·~~fc;1~~1.':ndw,:: :_rn:,.ct; .':J •uoust u 1911 2"3·73 Est•t• ot~E'lu:'o~a"':sTe:vANEL 1913
Z562·73 maximum. "&~:!f1 7.31 '·" ~f3.~14Y '·15 ... ~~~'G,111 }J~ 9J l~HA,'\f"LD t~' '"'! of Mlrl~ "" ••mt II•• bMl'I Ill • •• ll'ICom 1.1• a.to OIOUP: .......... r 6.41 7.01 llttor ' tor tr>ilmbfr t. 1•12. 11 9:00 1.m., 11'1 1119 NOnCE 0" P'UILIC H•A 1 PUBLIC NOTlCE Dtc;141nct. , 111w1m 1.11 t.4.1 Bnd dlb 1.62 t..I! Llnll Fd S.0$ s.os 111 Fcl •· courtroom of OtNr/mtnt No 3 of t1ld a1'101t• THI CITY cou1te11. Hotlc• I• hlrtb'f gl,,.n to cl'ldltors oi PUBUC NOTICE • V....., A-•••• StMCI 1.42 t.n C•otel 11•2112.3:1 LEX HOUPt rbr . '·a
eo;n'I, at 700 Clwlc: "'"' Ot(w Wtsl. In Ofl TNI Ille lbovt Nmld dtcedent tnat •II -&" " • • ....... Stock 1.21 1.11 Contra 9.00 io l.ldr. 14.511•.oo f!MI L ,, ,. the Cllv °' S.nta Ana. C1tltornl1. CfTY DI' .. OUMTAIN V,\LLl!Y SUP'l!l!Olt •crea~T 0 l)lfWIJ hevlnt tlalms ag•lnJI the Mid FICTITIOUS eus1N•s1 A"' Grth '·" •.21 Cv ss.ac 6..91 7.22 rwth 6.20 6.71 Pace Fd • Dalld AllQUU 1S, ltn. NOTICE IS ttlEREBY GIVEN lhll on I' THE doclOenl 1re required to fill lllem, wflh NAME STATEMllCT MENDOTA (AP) -e AM lnlln 4.4' S.09 OISt 6.0'1 .. uni! lJ.Ob: lj.30 SHEAltSON fl 1 w0tL\!.AMci-~ SI JOHN. Tuffd1.,, -$eplemtoet 4. 1m, 111.00 11 .M l~T•E<Oo'u~'o'°,•0•,tA l"OR Ille noctst1rv vouchlrs, In tht olflit of The following Pl""'" Is dolnt bull111$s 1u "111 rnvst .4.11-... •1 l!u.x lo:24--~IJTY-Fd -s.17.-, ;65 Aocin:----i-, 9.4'-oun., .,,. In Ille councn C1141mblr. 10200 Sllltr ,., • .t.NOS: 1111 Cl&rk of thl abo,,. entltllld court, or . United Farm Workers Union Am Mui 1.90 e.u Ewr•t 10.67 11.5.S L,t• lnlv 8.12 !"' ln<:om 16. ,.11 KAR~ & IC.t.•~IAM Av.nw Fountiln v 111..,-, C•lllof'nla, the MO. A.J71M to P""'111 them, wltll Ille nec•s~rv 11· AmNI Gr 2.22 2.4 Fund 15.07 16.47 nc fi'" 6.84 M nve11 9. :n
111 C"'91 ... Ill City cOuncn win hold • public ""''1111 on NOTICI o• INTl'MTION TO SELL VOUChln lo 1111 undlr.Cgntd 11 lhl ol!ICI c T,,H•,,.•TI,, IC,"' w. ltth, Costa Mesa, bas stepped up its activity in AMCHOJI Purltn 1.w t.61 ~~,s ~~ ~:" '•' . "° 1&1111'1 ., 'I Swtll"' llw follow!no· REAL P'ltOf'•ITY AT P'llV.t.TI SALE DI GI.ASS ALLEN & MOSER llll w a f. I f' Id hil OROUP'1 S•lem F 3.116 4.33 Ci I suf . 1
LT•,,, •,,•r;,•t!'-· Ci!.· M17 '· .... ,· ..... U'l. Clllcllt:IMll UM ..... e."'!! .. of WILFORD J , HOGGATT, G•rden• 81Yd,, P.O. Boll 201.: Garden•,' H,c.',',,,'",.!'•n a~l~c.·,',,'552 W•lll t.-. me on 1e s w e I t s C•ot•t 4.62 5.06 Trend 23.~ 2$.S2 M':iu. v ll·tI l!·t~ ,,:'\,r .. ~, I ""' ..... ii.... " ~· _.,.,, p'1cke!ing 15' al a lull al Fnd Inv 7·37 l .OI "•'•'OGANRC!~LS• LOR:D All:. . ln'I 9 . .t.twwn ..,, PslftlM>fr'I hl'Mll Nt. 111, IM Tllltlll1111,Tr1el ICf. Nofk j .._...... I CA 90'W' wltkh 111t1t pl1c1 of bUSlnn1 of This bu•lntu I• tonc:tudecl by in In. Grwlll 1.60 1.ll ...., . Attllal 630 6.12 Trst 1 · Th/I 1ttftmlllt was tiled with !lie County till -Appllc1tlon tiled bY Pr1111y conll • 1~~,,·-, .. •.Iv-.. !NI, sut)l1Cl to the undlrslgned In •11 m11tafs pertalnlnt dlvtdu•I southern San Joaquin' Valley lncorri 6.IY 7.ss ,Fl1n cvn A.,,10 .4.1~ .t.m Bus i.u l.D1 vintur
Cltrlt of Orl/19'1 Counly on AUQU1I 1. lt'3 O.WIOPfl'lenl to rttOlll property •I !!'If '"" , .. 4 b o v • ·' n 11 I I e O to llll "'''' Df "Id dectndent, wltl!ln four C•roll Slte!Jfr Venlur f.3' 9.1• n Ind "· OS Bnct deb 9 59 10.-&e Smith e y
Puotl11'11d Or•nt1 cc.11 oany Piiot, r.outh"'' corn1r of Ed!11111r and Euclid :u:'~orM c':''.:Z. kf:'~ 111, lt73. •t n'IOllll'lt 111w tM tfrsi publl,1/lon of thl• Thh 1111ement wi• ftlld wttl! tM eoun-grape ranches a spokesman Wa Nill 11.n 12,e1 C'n In<: 5·311 5.:wr Luth1rn 1o:U 11:19 SB l&G~ 1<1
.t.uousl 17, 24, tm 2S7'-73 trorn .t.1 Agrlcul!Url to ltl PO dS(IO. iilowed b;. law ,,; ~:n !.._.,ll'te llrnt notlc1 ty Clltk of' C>rlJIQf County on A1111usl 7, says 1 ~~ F ~:~ ::~ 111~J V41 I~.~ 11~ !:-,U!o"'••"FU~.2205~0.0lt ,5!._1Go1~,, 12. CO!ld!Uonal Us• p.,.mll No. 121 and I I ' g,_,, a• .0. Dated A1111ust 21, lt13. 1973 · A)(I! .., FllST ,.... 3. • "• ... 7,
PUBUC NOTICE TlnlallVI Trier No, 1112 Cfefll"ll u loll ~ n ·~·~ of TM ISiet• ol WlllD!'d J. UNITED CALlfORNt.I, BANK F27'U Sixteen pickets were ar-HOUGttTON: IMVlrSTORS : f:t:,I 1::2 ~:fl t:,~nrn 0 1f'
w on' ll.& ,,rq, tlltd In tOl'lfunc!lort to 1ttl ?"' '.... KNWd, will ltll It prlv1!1 EllK\llOI' of Int Wiii Publls.Md Or1ng1 c01,t 01111' Pflol, ed h Fund A 4,$3 •.n Disc: Fd !'! I'\ Pllorm 1 77 I.At Jffi'~ < 10111 cntng1. 'TM property Is fllrtlllf 111 to'"" llightsl Ind bis! net blddtr on of Mild cllCedtnl. August 10, 17, 24, Jl, 1913 2438·73 rest ere Thursday, the first Fund I 6.13 1.n Gs"'•'°F l l Mlnhln 3:9(1 4.U p ltl) 6'..4 NOTJCI TO COMTl:ACTOll$ dftcrlble& " AP 1'4-121-2, ·10 and ·11. !!'If ttntl$ Ind condlllons tltrtln•tf•r men-OU.SI • .t.LLllC & MOSElt • F Co I . Stock 6.511 d.10 toc: • z • MASS CO; AT IND , CAL.t:9Nt 1"011 llOS Thi• m1n1r Is llllno oroceswcl pvtlUanl llOMd IH f111ht, ttht, •nd lnltf&tl °' lDl w Olrdlnl llvd m resno un y s Inc e .t.ll• Sci •.00 •.15 1$1 Mull! .31 1. l Frfffn 1M• I.I, Ff ..
""""•• 0 I• t t I c t : HEWPOltT-MESA 10 "1• Pltnnlno Laws 111 lhe 51,11 of Wiiford J. Hot111ll. dtcealld, at tilt """ P,o, .ft 1116 · PUB UC NOTICE dep lies finished kin BLC Giii 10 t111 '3 llORUM OltOUP: llMIP F 7 1.51 ""'' ,. 9 u11:1~Hna: 11 ,00 a'cloc:k a.m. on IM ciUtornl• IGov't. coc11 as.eoo tt. M<l·l 01 hi• dfl1111 111d en rlot11, 11111, end ln. 0.l'dlnl. C.t. Ml47 U ma g near-Beblon io:u 1o:u 100 Fnd 111.so TD.SO M.111 F 11 · 12.11 Nlllr. 4•
41n dlV of S.Dltmi.r, ltn 1nd' !ht F01,111lll1t V•l11V 1. on Int ~~~ ::-;.!~• J'':::J:•11eoulrtd In Id· AltorMrt fw •~ PICTITtOUS auSI NISS Jy 1,800 arrests after Jru\SS G:~~ or t:; ~~ !~i!nd '::: ~:U ~1 PfiCt6.u 11 • ~t ~~ ~ 8 •
Pl-o1 lld Rtc.ist: 1157 p11eent11 Ordlnan<:e. Tiit Zonlna ordinance. Zortl"ll hi ..,-1 n 11 thl llmt ot '""' NAME. STATlrMINT demonstrations more than two B11en kl t.13 1.13 .,~ Fo'" •,·2. &.n., MIG 12.10 11~· 1 ~•i -'-· Costa Mii• Mtps, and E•llll:itl1 1rt on flit In lht 1 '"' l'I lht rMI ~ lota1'1d In ,ubllthed Ortnge Cota! Dall; Piiot TM loUowlng l)lrlOll '' doing bus!n111 h1con 10.6' lD.U ...,n r .. , 4. MID 13.CIO 1A I ,.~ ldtrtlllk lllOll Name: INDOO•· P11rinlng Dl!Mrll'IWnl tnd• .,.. 1v1!11bl1 "" (CM,mly of Or••· SI•~· of C•llfornla AUVU•I 2• 31 Ind September 1 ll 11· weeks ago. Bt~r IC 11 .0611.0l't :iuot~•RS MMCFD 12-.lt 1.&. nd I· iulm" CARPETING FOR NEWPOllT for OUbllc: lnU*:llon Ind .t1tamtnetlon descrlbld •• followt! .. 197) • • u., 1.i . GLENDAN "E .. LT y & IN B•r~sl!r 3.911 '·" . I D ll,., 1~.36 AllO Fd \.V:S ~r:i:~r!'~~-: 1lS1 Plectnrla n.o.e dltlr1"11 lo 111111'1' In l•vor Or In ... :n21~':= ~;t~.(1/f) tnllf'lll In • VESTMENTS, ""' ""'• Ana Av1.: • VouC!L-r Plan =:r~,, :~ ,::;:: ~ 1f:li 1J:rl' m::..1" I :J 1t.~ :I ... ~ .. A'l~VI ''I" \im ~tlon to tlll1 propot.tl wlll bl 11lwn l 0111r1 Addllion to PUBIJC NOTICE Sult• c. Cl).$11 Mtsa. Ca. 92621 •n::-Brown 3 zs J ss F MtUlll 8.67 t.• Mid An'! s.01 l" .,,.. NOTitE IS IY GIVEN 11111 ttw an' opportvnlty 1o do M;. ,It 'f\lrll'lfr 1n. ,..•vunt Bt ich, In , ... Clty of L19una Denlel Josfllh Klein, 11162 Wtftton SI.. ' ' aULLOCK . . F SP«I 10.ff 11.91 Morty Fd 10.271 :22 NOi I
' abovt """"' 0111rlct ol <>ranoe formi11on 11 dnlrtd, you"m•Y COlll•cl !ht ch. 11 lllow!I °" mtp lhlrlof rtconfad Gerdt n Grvve. ca. 92660 SACRAMENTO (AP) A •UNOS1 FOUl"isq_ F l ,Sl f.30 M.SB Fd 13.S21!'° ~ 1.:
f Counrv, Ctlltornla. tcllna Ill' •nd lllrOUOl'I Planning ~rtment at ff>.:z.44 Ind:.; look )1, ~ 51 •nd S2, MlKlllllneout TAX COLt.ICTOlt'S Of'l'ICI Thi) bullnest. I• conducted by '" in· -lluU Fd 12.Ae 13.61 l"RANKLIN ~Ill' BnG t.5.4 I .AS s Uft·
' It• Go'llrlllna 81111rtl. 111r.in1tt .. "'"''Id ''"' '' '"' ·-lllm.' • IDS. reconls of lo• An!HilH Counly, COUltTY 0,. OIL\NOI dlvlll ual. seven year p1'lot program of Cdn Fd 21 .SI 23.Sf Oll:OUP'l MIF GFd 7.31 '·ll G s. I • to It "OISTRICT", wlU l'K• VI UP to, but CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY C1Utoml1. STAT'C 0" CALIFORN IA Dan.Ill J. Kleln -Ofv Shr :lS3 3.t1 ONTC 7.At 8.21 · ro <4.32 '· l':r, t i not Jrc"' ltlln IN •bovl •lated llmt, ... 1-OF FOUNTAIN VALLEY Thi Pflll)lrty " commonly l'lferrecl fo NOTICI OF IA.Lil POii TAXES Tiiis "''-' was filed wltl! ffle cou,.. ed~cational vouchers has won =~~en 1i.t lt~ ~~1'k~ l:I: ~:~ =.t&:l f~ i·~ Ji; r.ch'n1 ,.
, .0 dt for tllel°""""•rd of• contract tor Eve1,n Gri090, 'c' 13'4 Third Slrllt, Lavuna a.tell. ON U,NSECUlf:O PltOPEltTY ty Clerk of Orlnat County on ,1,1191151 1, ..-,e approval in the Slate ernllm 9.S2 t.-5'J USGv S t .S.10.SO MM','tt"'Ti;?. 14J'01,u1."Sf~ro F t-i the above pro • Dtputy CllYClet~ .tllornlt. Wl1ER!AS,THOMASN.8RA"ISONh11 1973 -CG Fund 9.8610'6 Utllltfl A.IS S.32 .• 1 •• 17 ... 1t ·~ i ;:
# IUdl tl'llll bl ret•IV>lll In Ille Pl1C• ld1n· PVbllshed Or1n111 ~Oilll Dally Piiot, Tiii .... 11 IUl)JKI to CUITtnl ·•ll•I· t•Jltd Ind negllclld 10 D•Y· Ul)Ol'I demand. . •t110t ·Senate. C111 Trln 10.9311 :ts Rn C•o .&.J) '·" ~1~'1'°,' •'.6S 9.55 lflll)t t.
;. 111r:i i:tio::d ·~ .uiu ,:: ='° 11,= .t.ugusl )A, 1913 '2663-13 eov«11ntt, condlllona. r ••Ir I ct 1on1 , tall" Oll•Uns.teurlld property In the •um ot Publlshed Drano• ca11t D•llr Piiot, , C•nf Sii• l:l1l 1t.J5 R.s E:Qtv •.23 •.w C DS1 ""-' .. , ri'ma c,fld~Ol•c•''f""' 1 1 • • r11eMlton-. r111h11, rl11h11 of w1y, and stD.52. dulV asses~ far '"' Y••r 1911 1 Auoust 3 1o. 11 ,, 1973 231 .. 73 The bill by s ta te Sen. John ~NANNI NG Fkl LIEo 11.Jf 12A5 ~II), 1·n '1~ ~1 'lo · ·~,;; ~ Eich t)ld ,,;.,,., CGnform •nd bl ,... B IC NOTICE ••tlmlnh °'...cord. ,,,, and 1913 • ' ' Hanner (R.(;lendale), calls ':.~n~~; 10.1911.IA ~t~~sd?Nc~97 1·'1 ~~~n,,, .,:.,,. !,·~!,!!I\-' ... ~ .,t: :=
:\ ~.,.d: _:1 ':'~~~ 1111 PU L ' • ..,.,~;O:,: :• a!'~n'':::;11~n!!'1:...r,o:; .,,:.~9!i~·s~:; ;;ld' :f 1~r1tin~1~! PUBLIC NOTICE for the voucher system or ~8:_ ft: ~«\~ ?;~; 8c~3': 8.u 9.as 51i!_"omlo'' 64:.o j u· 1<• j· J~
,0 ._ -lo 1, lho ,-,,a .. ~u-NOTIC• O~ ,UILIC HEAltlNO r V9d by ·J, l.aWfll'ICI Juc.ly •t thl ot· •tv~ 11111 Tlll4111ort Codi. The follow Jiii --~~~~-~~=~---ed ti f'na Cl'Og 'n four """" $09 S S6 1mo;te: 1.59 1 30 o""" .33 • " ed , HCU" y ....... _ ""' ....... NOTICI IS H•R•IY OIVIN lh•I I ff.Cl of hl'MS, Sd\ao. Johnson & 1(111• IW09a"Y ,, •• btln lllad for '"' l)Url)OM PICTITIOUS IUSINESS uca on I n 1 ncom d:5' 7'.10 ndUI Ir 10.IO 11:to H1'W' • ,6.'fJ ·°' Unltund .
;. mtnh •rid bl' 11'11 111-f ot prol)OtMI •1111> .. bllc Marino wtU be lltld IW ' lhl City ntdy, •tlotl\IYI for ••Id aclml111ttr1tor .. of "'' •I f!Wllc avcllon tor ll'le satlsl•C· • .,,.. STATEMENT C.llfornia • c h 0 o I dislr'cts ~ 114 1 '° Piiot 1 33 • 01 r EN ,. . UNION •1•v
c:ontractort. COUl'IC!I of thl City ot C01t1 M ... on 452S MltAnl'lllf' loultvard. N1WpOrl 11on ~ 1.tld. urti>411d 11.11. tooeiner with The follDWtJIQ Pl'"" 1' 0011111 IMlllHI 1 • "" t .lP t:o1 G•llWY 1:11 i 15 !~~ l~·ff lf:Z 08~~"iv I Mr. .l•mt• M. Hel$t1nd, Ot~tor. StDternblt "· 1tn. at 1t1t hour of •:30 l111t11. c1Hfa,'n1t or may bl rutd wltn tnt OltWllllts 1iwr.on •nd cost• a1 11lt 1 ••: Under a voucher-system, CKASl X!. s-s5 P "·l! , ~· s1c11 16'.~• 1,.'5 Nall Inv ':: l Scl!oOI Ftcl"tlu. M•lni.nanee and °"" , m or •• toon 111tr11111r •• 1119 l'l'llllet Cltrk qt &aid S111>1rlor Court or otllvtr«I NOW, TNliREFOl:E. NOTICE IS Ul OE$1GN$ OF THE TIM!$, t02 ts . Ii ed IOSfON1 V'l'l• tc 6..... .~ NE.t. Ml t" 9.31 Un CIPI t trtllont, 1wlll IMlf witl! ll'loM PlfltOnl ni1Y' bl twtrtl. In 11'11 Coundl Clllmblr of ID J. \.awrlfl(t Judy Plf'llOl'ltlly, 11 anv HEREBY GIVEN tlllt Iha County 11• Estrella. Sin Ctl!Mnll, Callforf'll• paren recetVe 8 .IX Sum Flld ero 1.11 .... OIOUP' Sl!C: Neu C.-i 4~ ... ,, WMlllf l '
1n11r11tld 111 tour1n0 1t1t .ii. 11 ttw· Ntw-1111 coy Hin. n F11r c r1vt. cos•• -.. 11m• atttr f1n1 publlc111on or th11 not1e1 co111etor °' Or1nvt county, UNHr and iw 92&12 for the costs of educating their FjS~ .~ !:U J:~ ;::illF~ ~::.' f:;T ~::f'~ iif ~~ u~'"o ~ -l ltrftlnl•"" khOo/. IOC•lld II 141h "-11...,1111, on tlw_ tollowl no l)lllt!on.s tor Ind blfOl't mtll.lng said 1111. vlrl\lt Of !tit l utl'lorlty con!..-red by 1ew 121 D!:SIGNS LANDSCAPING, 602 child Th pend th PKI <5 70 '-2' Cpm Sit. ID 6011 St Nw p-1 <I II ~" ., =:;.• lalbOI ii1VcJ .. joiewl)Ofl hKll, et rl'll,;_ tn ront: Tilt prof>U1y wtll bl Miid on 11W fol!owo uoon tald offf~. wlll 11111 at oubllc l llC· IEllrell1. Sin Cllf'l'"le, Callfomlt • ey C8D S e f' F .. 10:39 11.36 Gtlt FAm •:It ,;51 Ntw Wici 11'.tJ 1 : °"I tlW t.
lO•OO A.M Mondty, .t.wust 11, 1t73. •llON• PISTITION lt·f'.U. Finn 11'111 llnns1 c1Ui or Plr1 C•tll and l)llrt !Iott lo IN llfOlllsl t)IOdfr, lor cash, llwlul '2\172 money at any s 'chool In the f'OlONIAI. Giii F.t.m •.19 4.51 ~lll11s 16.ID 1 ~ on lni: t.
Tne cisTiiiCT '"""'" 1,1 r11111 to ,..,_ GuldJorti, 41 San eernardlflO A...,.,,., cl'ldlt, ttw 11rms Of """ c...011 to 111 1c· montY of !ht un11.o s11111, on 1n.e 31,1 clar•llCll MurN!H, ll02 Eltr1111. s111 di'stri'ct they chose '"~=., : 9"10 io.os 8~':~ tnd £~~ ~:tl ts~vtr 1::ll 'l·o sc"f~ 1t I t lllY or •II !ltd• or 10 .,.. ...... •riv Ir· NIWl)Cl'1 IMCll, MUI Sloto. m Ol'llot1. CfDt•bl• 10. llw Vt!Oll'*'9rwd and to lhl d~Y of A1111uu , 1t 73, II It'll l!our ot .2:00, Clcrrntnle, C•llton•l• 92612 • Eou ty l.1~ >.•~HAMILTON G1'P : • 1.41 1 llfrtlld '· r:iiu1er~111 or 1nform111t111 In anw bldsl or L1Qun1 &e.c:h, •'Id Jot k '-'s. :m E'il11 SUl)lrlor C°"r1, 1°"' of the •mount t)ld -o dqck P.M., of Mid H y, 11 !ht Dtl1ce o T~ls builneis 11 conduclld by 1n In-Fund J·5 10.41 Fund 3,91 4.~1 § Nill fd 11·~ II·~ ~ ~1< In 1111 ddl!?i • COii• MtM S)rttl. CO'l:l.-'Mtsa, lor l(COll"lpanv lhl °"'' bY certified Cl'ltck, ltw Or•no• COllnly l•~ Colltctor. 630 N dlvldutl • Op ~. t Gr'Wtt! ,., Grwtll 6 71 134 Ill W!U ti t i ii' •
·yrie ilST \CT fl-• O.fWmlned ,lhl Pl"l"ll'*lon to ·~, P!OOll't:( loc.aled al lf\¢1 thl bll•n<:t lo bl Pflld on con. l!ll'Otdw1y. Sl l'llli Anl IM IOllowlftll Clarenct Murt41!1 eR Jr, ee S tncOl'J'I 9:4 11);3$ lncom s:s 1·~ illlNNM 'o: • ~ N '
t l!1trSI DrlVI l\1'111. rot ol.,.!t!:~ v;-:: 17IMI POfl'IOllt •v1n119 Mid a1 Wbl ll!h tlrmallon of 1111 &11• by tlw Suoe'l'lor clttetlbM property, or .o mllCll lht rtOI' It '•Ultl Vtn!ur 3,t7 3.~ Hartwel 10. I • P Alm 10.a 'l·" o ~ • l In Int 1oc1lltv n ~h ,,,. .. ...,.._ • o: Of Strwt. fron'I 12 10 RJ. Court. Ta•1t. l'ft"ll., (ll)lt1tlna •nd l'NY bl ntt~ll~· 10 Wll•l'W lllt llf\Mlll p bllltwd or C If D•ily Piiot. SACRA~lENTO (AP) The Strum G 11.7'11.21 H1r1 Lv ,. 1, Fnd 1· j1 V• nc L ~ =-~ ne':ded~~;r.~e ~ := ... ~ llZONI PIT IT ION •• ,.,,. ''"'' m11n14n111Ct ••PtnMI, •fld ~1um1 on '·~ fl)ftll'ler ..., th Mnl llle-s 1heft<MI Ind Alllf~St 3. 10 17 ·~1913 l)f nt)..h 1 I I • r I -. In 1't~Sr~NWLTM ~::o~ 5:;f 1.10 0 c rc: ; 1 .1: o:r : t
l l'll'lf ~Cl!: 41r1 on n !.:Wl&sf Ptac9'11 o1 MeM1 Pl1nnlno Corttftll11lon, Jtoit Offlct IMVl'•nC9 ed:tptlble lo 1111 Pl#Vllst!' Ow COlll of COtldUC:tlng "1d w.11. ' ' ' eg S ature S power U JO t A lo 1 1 tM 1,1, H1rtlOI 1.6' l .M P•r1ml -, .M SAMOe_1ts : t ";\' -11 Miu, mlY bl 1.., , ... c-11 Mii•• tor otrml-.IOl'I to lhlll bl prorated 11 of fhl •II• of f$111Nltid 11 th• •um ol w .10. PUBLIC NOTICE nf eh 'II ... 1 c 1 I•• 1" ..,.,_ 'I'"''' P1u Rey 4 99 1 u Inv•~• ~ t~ ', 111n on r.ov.-1.~ a""" r.ttt ritOl'll f>l'.trrY loc:tled In Int Otftfl'll l'lcorclJll!ll of convey1nc1. E)ramlnallon of Ont lollt Cl4flt•AT , 1 U F"l. C1bln CO er ce COntn\I ee MW Como or .:JJ 1:11 1m11.1'"co i) lil Pa41Su• F .:t3 s:o VS om 1:
., P.al 'if*''° 11 11 · 0--..., l't•rbc:lr l\ovl .... 11d, lltl1, l'KOl'dt" of conwyanc:s, lr4nslff Cr1,1l1tr narntd "IAltTRAO." Tiii 19'2 makes m illions of dollars COll'lll Co 4!i 114 mo Gr 7,13 77' Pinn Mt 1.3" j.l.I $DtC '-f tot1no w cltem ·-.. , • sc ndtn 1 ilornp tid t: :1:1 nc ldAm 12."1);6' P111n So_ 6.SI .!I V!ldrbl t Tiit Ollttd ui: • -~·":= N.-ioort "'°"'"'•rd, Vl('IOl'!I SlfMI ana lllltt. Ind any ""' 11!4Vfll!Ot l)ClltCY 111111 c I •vl•n bultl llOitl ,111s t I 9'9 l'ICTITIOUI IU$1MISI worth of decls 1'ons over each Como Fd 7 .1 :rt Inc; ..... , S.9' 6.,s Ph~,.!!.·~.. •,.n, 6.11 Vv•,\'.',"',.,, ;· 1 :.•r,•,,) Mii,.. T rm for y Wiii 1'1ft Sir"! ff"Oll'I (1, AP. Ind lt2 1o"' at "" IJqlln .. of !tit purchlllt or n.IMder :IOO HP lflOlnl 11111 1111 Ind NAMI STA.TIM.NT r"ancM ........ Ind FA.In 2.a.I 3.11 1'"" .1~ '·'~ "
, ,:.,,,"" work ·.,..1 bl 11 1 .. tt 1 n'HI a1, IU<P, R4•CP • .t.P.C:P. Cl.CP', •nd a. l)Uf(l'lltert. m1y be 1Hn 11 StlD No. u . 1..,.nor. Thi followtng Pf'llOM 1t• dotne bus· year 's state budget would be ront 111.., 10.~1 11.1, nttc1on •·'' '·'' fl""~ •'•·'.' v~'•"" •• ,· i' 1' ilf. e;p ., Tilt U!ldtnlontd ru.trves !I'll right 10 Trllll!' lllart. 112 Wiii Cotll HIQllW.y, !nus 11: r ; ~ Ill 1 t iJ fO~ r!1J ""
• °'\f"f111)J be malld1torv llllOfl 11'11~0~ .. IZON• ,.TITION 11:·7>12. Co-1• rtlttf •nv and an bldi "'1or lo tntry of Nnn:iort •IKh. C1lllotnla. BAT E$ AUTO C 0 H 0 I T I D N I HG required tO hold Open meetings r~~I ~ 1:37 i:~ !n..:~G ~'.3f t:U : :: F~ llm i!:llo w:~I II,' '! l .< TltACT'Ort to lllllom "" con111 _ ... i. Mall f'l.lllnlng Commlttlon, '°'' Offlcl 'fl ordltl' conllrml1111 ..... Mft. On .... pavmtnt ., , .... pflCt bid for I lly CENTER, .165 E. hY11111tnll'I SI ' C0tl• under a bill sent 10 the "°"'r~lt 7.0' 7"' In' Ce> A 11J1 1J,7• p onr 1l ' '.o4 W•l~M:;'o 1 .
awardtd. Ind uoon tn... !!'.!K«',--·~ •• 1200, (OSI• """'' tor PfN!'l!Mlon to DATIO! August 21, 1m ""'""" Mid, IN County T•• CollK tor ot #Mia, Cllll. ttU1 ,....,,rv ,. 17 ., 1) ,.. nv Guld ..... " "':kl . I . . = lllm. to HY ii' ttll ... 11 ... .. .. ..... -toe.tied ., l91L 1tlM ll'ld "'""' ... •u;r;n Ora .... County, or lht Ml'fOfl CC>nduettnq Oena AIMM:lltet. In<;' • C•llfomla Ass bl Doo ""-··-.. ,......,. "O" ,; ,,., A ~· n'I tndlt ·01 ' p •i 9.36 WIL TOM • • _ .... -.-... 1.-· .. ~ar, ............... ..,......._,, "'"' ···-1 1 -........... 1 ,, .... , ., •m y rtuw;,u•V. ,._ ,, , .•.• ,·.,1-· ·-••• ·.,,.~.~1 1 l .4 13.ll O~O •• IW ll'llrll I~ IN lll1Cutlpn at ';Ct e end lf\9 WalllCt .t.\1!Wt I I ,...,,, n 1 .. 1 • M • Ol'I 1 bl If, 1 d vw 1111 ~anon. Mlt f l Conlfnl6 Of, O•ne """ Ass bl R l ~ Co ,..;ii,.1 J ;1 ifv•~T •• " I( owe1 dot 21. lfj ',1 NO ill4cllt !NY wtt~~aw 1 cl tor '1 Pomont AvtfHJI, *'°"' Cl tD Ri.<P. ot llw l~fl'Wd 0Ked1nt. Mld llfl"OPll'ty to tlle PUl'Ctwllf, logitllltr P'olnl+ Call!. 92629' i ue em Y U es m • ,.,,,.i.o.. •'.•I I 41 '"("tNSI L rwth lt~ 'l'i "" l Plrlocl Of torty.f!ft ('41 df'(S aft'lt the NOTICii IS FU RTHI A. GIVEN 11111 11 IAlNU. SCHAO, ~Ill I t>lll 01 Mtl, 1nd t1!t 11111 INH Thll l:Mllllll b COndllC1'd bY ii coro 'II a mend·• the ,, .. L-.WAltl CtMm 110 1r. Nw Er• 1 I • I" I. > daft ... IOI',.,.. optnl"' °'bl.. ••Id """' 1nd plK• •"Y •fld &II Pthon• JONNSOM • KIN!lflOY tl\ereupon \'Ml In Mid ourcl'l1Mr. Pot•llOl'I. nu ee cu open .... ,.". ,-., .... , !" ,.,.. .. HW "°" . ' Cl! ... • ..
A "~rs· = ·~ . Oltlorf!'llnct lnltl'Mltd m•V •Pri.•r and bl tw1rd ~ •• J, ... ~ ,.., Daftdl .t.\191111 24 lm. D•n• .t.uoc:l•l••· In<. n1eetlng provision Into a bill 0-01 I • "' 1n 111 r ....-1 . " s'n s.u ~NW~ ' .. : w.i·., lj 'I ' ---.. -~ ......... "'""' " -c1-C-11 of '"' CllY ot Cos la Ml•• 4SU MMJ.l'hlllr ''"· lt081RT l . "908 " CITRON Wllllom e. ·--·-·· f'l..i~ ~ 9,,, •• , IM\l•!l'T OJtOli,.. GI I I • " w.... ' 1 ~ fiW"'contr , Tlit 'OIYmtnl OOM 1twu bl ;;.,"'"' 11w"•1orem11111on.o A.1zone PttHlon., l'.o. lu 11M • County Ta• Collector p,1,1d1nt _........ by Sen. Donald Grunsty lR· °'"' T •.5' '·~ 'Rs ·Gll'I •.sa · !'\Id Sr • 1 :1 11:0. 1nor.; :
' In th• tOl'm Mt l«tn 1n t111 contrac.1 l ll lilN P. PttlNNi V ,.._,.,.•••tit. c..111, mu "'Ora~ Counly Tiii• •t•ltn'ltnt flttV v11111 '"' c~nty Watson vllle}, following Senate "'~·''711c0 't~~:~ 1~;,.~o 1:l~ !·i,: ,l:'Li~ l4l ~ '°""1"' I I d CllY Citric Of 1111 Clly !If' Tth lTI41 tn•twl 1'1 H. HUll"\fll'lrtV, C'llrk ot Ori....., COunlY on A119ust 1, 1~73, I ''·'" 1• ,, "''·I o » 10 J ~ 11 ~··r: °"~ 'tt' '•'•Mm At.......,.,., "'n"111t1 0epu1,. ,. .. .,. T•• co11et:or .. ,.. •11:a.1 a.c tlon asl week approving a E 9:., ,:., s1n(k 1us ·,. =:.; :n 4 • P~rc'h..ilna" A:l.111 f l5Mr l'VDl1611ed C>r•not COllU Daltr-PllOI lfubll•Md Or1nv1 coa~I D•ll't' 'not, 11Ubll""4 or11191 c w tt 0111)' Fllot Pubthhtd Or•r111• co.i11 D•Hv PH01, s imilar resolution. g0~j1 •,•,• ,•,,•,,•,, ,. •"'••"•'•· •'.·,',' 't, ... ,, _, u,.·,." 11!·.J ,•~!~,.•,,•,-•. f'vbll•twcr Or•no• -c .. ,1 0 110y Piiot, Aw u1t N, 1tn H'2>-ll A1191ut ,., », :n, ltn '"''', Autust ''-1tn 2"°:'> A1111us111. 11, l t. t1 , 1m 1.us. •• , ,.,, la t., . ..,_ ...
OVER THE COUNTER
But General's Jet's Niee •
NASO Listings for Thund1y, Augilst 23, 1973
MUTUAL FUNDS
• Coancl Flne
I 2 DAILY PILO T
Collins
.Pulls 011t
s
Of Plunge
2 Banks Jump
Rates to 9¥2%
.::SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -1.Wo other California based
tMtnks joined the Bank of
Alperica in raising their prime
/erJ:ding rates to 9Y.i percent
Crom 9 percent Tueroay.
Following the lead of Bank or America, the w or Id ' s
l<U"gest commercial b a n k ,
~·ere tbe Los Angeles-based
Security Pacific Nation a l
lfenk and United California '*1k.
CLC DffiECTOR John T.
Dunlop said Wednesday ~t
"some price increases at the
consumer level are expected"
after the revised rules take ef-
fect Sept. 12..
Ceilings on beef prices ex-
pire t he same day, and if cat-
tle supplies are short, this
cQu]d add to the upward
pressure on prices.
On top of this. price in-
creases requested in · mid-
August by many of !he na-
tion'S largest non food
manufacturets -increases
that 'could not· ta'ke effect for
30 days under Phase TV rules
-wiU be showing up abo.ut
this tim e.
The effect wiU be another
jump in the cost of li ving. but
not as big as if the controls
had been lifted all at once. In
fact, Dunlop said he would be
surprised if the next hike
matched the surge that oc-
!iijijiijijijijiiijijiijijiiii~i.curriii;ediii;;iali;t~er the price freeze
OR 50 U5fD
MERCEDES ON
DISrLA't
I " % I
,
• on deposits of $100,000
for six months to one year
The number of these accounts that we
can accept is limited
WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES
ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS
FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN
Arc.adi1 •Cerritos l• Cresc1nt1 "Orange
8111 G1rd1n1 'Con• Mtta Los An11l1s (Zl •sin 81rn1rdino
•t1no11 P1tlc DowMy (2) Monttrty P1rl Whittitr
foe Additional Offices in Northero C1lilorn i1
PIUSlftl Hill Su Brono
F11lor Cil1
IOpuin1 SD10)
M11111111in View San Jost
An1ericans Get
Limit on Meat
WASHINGTON IAPi
Sharp-eyed border inspectors
are confiscating a growing
amount of meat Americans
are bringing home from ~fex
ico and c.anada in excess of
federal cµlowances, says tbe
Agriculture Department.
TO CLARIFY the situation,
USDA Wednesday issued a
reminder tha t travelers can
Chryslers
Could Lose
All Power
WASll!NGTON (AP) -The
Natio nal •lighway Tra ff i c
Safety Administration says the
threat of electrical failure ex-
ists in some Chrysler Corp.
cars manufactured from 1969
through 1973.
The federal agency issued a
consume r protection bulletin
Wedn esday. saying the threat
of electrical failure exists in
Chrysler Newports, New
Yorkers, and Town and Coun-
try 300's; Dodge Monacos, and
Polaras, Plymouth Fury and
Suburban mod els.
THE AGENCY said an elec-
trical failure could resu lt in
the engine stopping, the Joss or
headlighb and the loss of
power assist for brakes and
steering.
The agency said it had
received at least 838 reports of
failures so rar. One person
reportedly was killed and
anothe r seriously injured as a
result or the failures, the
agency said.
The problem, the agency
said, is in an electrical con-
nector hidden In the left rear
corner of the fi rewall.
Misalignment or fau lty con-
nections in lhe connect<r can
cause the car power to go off.
\
Vega D1iver
Suing GM
•
I I I
I
I I
I I i
!
'
I
I !
' I
' • I ' ' I
i
' ' I
' ' ' ' I
Thursday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange Lis
Market Rallies,
But Volume Low
NEW YORK {AP) -Economk, pollUcal, and
technical considerations combined Thursday to touch
oft the strongest rally on Wall Street In nearly a month.
'l97J s. DAILY Pll.OT
Finance
Briefs
0 Vaafro11al
L0s ANGELES (AP)
Uniroyal, one of the 1
rubber manufacturers,
Wednesday that the rubber
dustr.y faces reductions
shutdowns in operations unl
the national energy su
situation quickly begins to
prove.
The company's operations !
California could be affected
&lid George R. V i I a :
chairman.
•
' • ' ' • He made the statement in ~
letters to California :
Democratic Senators Alan M~ ~
Cranston and John V. Turmey, ~
and Rep. Chet Holifield (~ :'~",,,..., Corp. ·~
Special to the Dally Pilot
SAN BERNARDINO -fi•Y.'
L. Bums Corp. r e p o r t e d_.,,,
Wednesday record reve:n~ t
and earning s for li!cal year :
ended July 31.
Revenues advanced 63 per-•
cent to $.1,694,024 compered '
With last year's ervenues of
$2,247,84$. Net income rose 51
pereent to $1 ,457,228 compared ..
with la st year's net income of •·
$964,008. Net lneome per 1hare '
!ncnased to $1.20 avera&e ~
shares outstanding. ...
eFotomat ·-Spe<lal to Ille Dally PDot ::;
LA JOLLA -Fotomat Corp, ,
reported Wedneoday n e t
revenues of $17,925,000 for the ,.
seoond quarter ended July 31
eompared to $12,!07,000 for the •
like period or 1!172. •
Net income for the second -r
quarter was $2, 101,000, or 29 ""
cents per share, tompared to ~
$2,Sn,ooo, or 35 cents per ,,.
share, for the like Im' peJ'IOc!, :
9 ltfa11 Co. . . ,
Spe<lal to lhe Dally Ptltl •
SI'. LOUIS, Mo. -The May
Department S t o r e s Co. ~
Wednesday reported th.at its
"growth In sales and earnings
continued in the s e c o n ~
quarter ol 1973, estabU.sbing
new records for a second
quarter and fi rst haU."
Total sales for the 13 w .. ks
end ed Aue. 4 we r e
$3$1.117,000, an incrtast ol 7.S
pe:rttnt over second quarter
1972 •ales of ~,13S,llOO, and
net eamtngs for the second t
quarter this year w e r e •
$7 .358,000, or 41 cents per •
share of common stock. l&.14 •
percent ahead, of leCOaci!:
quarter 1972 ta.mlnc• ~
$8, 19Q~OOO. or ~ centJ :
share. •
f .J OAILV PtLOI
POW.R11ns
~GOP
Governor
-I !~~~;:~';~! ==m::~ ~
. . . .
QM Rui1is
Uh.earthed
'
7 Meat Markets
Put on Probation
lional Organization for \Vomen ' changes. ' · PARMA, Italy (AP) -CAROLE DESA,llM of NOW beef with ll.S portent fat, INOW) were ejected from Ute ··•• UPON LE•VJNG t be An International ••· SAN DIEGO (AP) -Seven ••· 1 1 llmlt -It was Ute Utlrd protest • compared with '"~ ega . An1er1can Stock Exchange against AhfEX becall.!e the bulldlng; the women were con-pedllion unearQ>ed a 3,000 San Diego County meat or 30 ptrcept, {ht deparlme1•
From \\lire Servlct$ afler demonstrating In the fronted by about 30 brokers year-old village ln the 01arlrets have been placed on .,Id.
public gallery . stock; exchange had taken 1100 and other Door workers of1he Apennine tulls ri ear prQbation for violating the The others were Najjar's
Air Force Col J a me I Thcv den1Rndcd a ct ion acUon in compelling member . e•c•angc. Parma. But thieves were . Mark"t, """"Y'• Meats and
Li d.... It h r s t F f "' •1 state' f.ood, drug' and cosmetics .. JX;iu• n U!"tl? 11g es. o an il c, 1iro·,•r;11ns 'Fhursda,y for the irms to adopt aflir~ative ac-close behind t be f a former prison<'r of war in . • . the men threw pennies and l law since March. the state Ran chers Market , Inc. o san
niinorities. Sh 'd h g · 1zalio · •• 1· g "Maybe 'f m.111y , t e ar ua s """ _, ,. Norlh VhHnan1 . sa.rs he'll seek I"•~.... hir i11g of women an d t1on programs." jibes at the women, with one ~tlOOloolg•stsh and t':tcto e ~-par· tment of Health has an-Diego, B.J. Ra~h Market oi
the Republican non1ination for e sa1 er or an n mo.11 ' commen ui ' thln of h ,nQUrloes('. Chula Vista, Dave's Meats·uir f:;4~rnor of Ne\v t.1exico in ~•~i:r...~ , . J gail~~y'v~':!~~~:a~edb~~~ !~fi~a=~l~:8!:8~ ~l~~:vi::v~k:o~~:~: dtscovery~ays t e Southland Meats of Chula ~ry":v.G~~v~ ~~:J.he COun· •~·•:i~~~':"~'"':::~:rt.~f:toN::_~~o~U6'.:,'.'~~~·~·~·~·w~om~e~o'.,..:Po~w~e:r·~"_.:Secu~~rl~t~~c~h~an~g~e~.:.'Co~m.~nuss~·~w~n':.~w~hl~'c:h~~ou~t.~"~~~~~~~~!::==================:!...~V~ls:u~·,..;:.:;·•~f:ou:nd::.:t:•=se:l=lgro!':.:="n=d:.....::..:..~~'-~~~~~~ The former pilot, "'ho spent , ,
almost six years in North
Vietnamese prlson camps, \Vas
quoted by the Albuquerque
Journal as saying he Y.'ill
parOcipate in retirement
ceremonies Aug. 31 at
Kirtland Air Force Base in
Albuquerque.
( PEOPLE )
HUghes, 46, moved his -vife ,
Darthy. and two children lo
Santa Fe shortly before he left
for \'ielnam duty.
* Police say ty,·o rorn1er
singers with the Temptations
and the singing group's direc·
tor were robbed in Detroit by
two armed men.
fl.1ore than $800 and several
pieces of clothing and jewelry
belonging to singers Eddie
Kendricks and David Ruffin
and director Cornelius Grant.
were reported taken.
The three men . "'ere in
Detroit to attend the funeral or
Paul Williams. also a former
. singer vo'ith th e group.
* Charlie Bro\Yn, S n o o p y ,
Lucy , Linus, \Voodstock and
• their fri ends are moving into a
1 12-room n1ansion in Santa
Rosa.
Actually, "Peanuls" comic
strip creator Charita Schulz is
doing the ' .,
moving, but
the fictional
c h a racters .
\\'ill accom-r:f
pany him. '
Schulz
bought th c
man si on
compl!?te
y,;th three-SCHOLl
car garage, S\vimming p001.
guest house and cabana on a
four-acre estate. from the Ro-
man Catholic Diocese of Santa
Rosa.
.,. The asking price for the
.. mansion was $250.000.
-:_ Bishop Mark Hurley did nOt
~ disclose the price-paid by
..,..,._Schulz.
* .... ~; Bruce Lee, the late movie
:,,i'A. star, has been honored in a
noontime ceremony in San
-Francisco's Union Square.
•,.. Lee, 32. a native San Fran-
ciscan who died in Hong Kong
.. July 20, gained fame as the
1-stoic master of or i en I a I
martial arts in 10 movies.
The form er houseboy on the
-television "Green H o r n e t ' '
series. Lee was in fact a kung
fu mRSter.
The ceremonies coincided
with ttle opening of Lee's last
movie.
* Postmaster General E.T.
Klassen and three fonncr
postmasters general will join
in ceremonies in Austin, Tex.
Monday for th e unveiling of a
commemorative stan1p honor-
ing the late President Lyndon
8. Johnson.
The three former officials -
all of whom sen1ed in the
Johnson administration -are
John A. Grounouskl, Lawrence
F. O'Brien and W. rtlarvin
Watson.
* Interior Secretary Rogers
C.B. !\1orton \\'as sent to bed
by a doctor suf ferin g
"stomach cramps" after a
potluck dinner in N to e ,
Alaska .
"There's obsolutcly nothing
to ~'orry about," said Dr.
Herbert l\1erz after examining
Morton in his hotel room .
The schedul e calls f o r
Morton to visit the northern
coast of the Seward Peninsula
and an overnight fishing trip.
OnJy Nude
On 01itside
NEW YORK IA PI -
There she was: i\ii!S Nude
America. fully clothed.
i•J don't Uke to be nude,
except whtn I have to be,"
Valerie Craft. 23. told a
press conference.
She explained ahe was
wearing a bra because it
wu unhealtl1y not to.
"You ,IOUlld more like
Miu Nude Middle
Am,rica." 10mcbody c11ll-
..i ooj. •
5 n. FOUllC
PICIJC IEICB
. Toldiag alwalalilm 1.,._
-.ootk top. nu prte.
l• • wtq., for th•
cr-allty. S.C.ivmaL so•A-.
we'r. OD.I. ... N o"t
tks.yMr.
17'0
18 us.
BllOUEIS
49c
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coppet &alab.:Doa'I
:mar,lb'.tM old
i.illloud one• do.
, QUI like~ anr·
faMoaff ODN do,)
77!.
JEL.All
DOD
Olt. -• kl..d of wtaaer,
la SO cmd 32 baclt. wld~
..... Mitll.t. I 311 lachM
lhkk. With eUdlq .wtadow
aad. .creen.
1900
WBJIE
TGD.1'T SEIJS
1~7
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BOUSE PlllT
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• .. kd u. dr.at • i.aa, pMa
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hltlt. Pi.-ht. read tM ...,, ....
•
HEY!
IT 6oTS
KNOTS
12112 llllL nHI
TILE
8'!.
All NyL th• Ula• '9 cl._
llaru. Aad the pctteru llN
p'9ttf maclt. toclcrr'• 1ty1e.
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off9rin1 tMt plcda Med.
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-·
AMlWCU FLAC
SET
1'7
IKDELL
IEICB llD.l ·•am
11900
WILL ••••t ••"• Well lt ....._ tllat .,_.,I
M:aket fOll .... aalled .. IM Jroat deer. (I __ ._
.., ccdlllor will .... ·lki•
floorboh. aot la tM
..&.ltJ 1'7
Th• potfcrqe wa1 ldWng us ao let
.th• pi.at• 'm.cdllil.g ganq ol
Amo,rican l' .. tal Corp .. bang it
Oil JOU1 door knob.. The deli'fery
Jadi• or• from,,_ nofg~bood
.o wen•. a-.them·ad borrow a cup
el auqar.
IT'S II m IAC
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moUuit ... ..lcrw lhat f:rllCllu. me ouL
Bx? FL .. .. 99.00
9x7 FL .••. 109.00
10x7 Ft. .. "119.00
12x7 Ft •.... 129.00
Al.UlllUI
UIAGE
DOOIS
Lltltt. but llrODf. Of
COW'M, TO•.tcm. point U.... whate•er color
rou •anL !Exe.pt U.crt
oae, 11'• k>o 1ca:ry.I
14x7 Ft .... 149.00
16x7 Ft ..... 15~ .. oo.
18x7 Ft. . ... 169.00
......... «Iowa. edda ""'· .l•··MwU.ltwu
ll900tey-4MMJ •. ._ ................ ....... 97c
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11
t
Da ily Pilot
Photog ra pher
Patrick
O'Donnell
cap t'ured th e
ups and downs
of beginni ng
su rfe rs at
t he Ne wport Pie r.
Guelt Up in Air
Her High-flying
.-.~1 ' •
Spirits Nosedive
DEAR A N LANDEnS: Last night y,·e
\\·ere invited to a cocktail-dinner pa rty.
\Ve y,·ere hardly ,through '''ilh our first
drink when the door bell rang, and a
scruffy little boy toid the hostess his k.ite
was on her roor.
\Yitbout any consideration for her six
guests (some 'vith their glasses almost
empty),·this nut told her husband to get1
the ladder while she changed to
sneakers. fle's afraid of heights so h~
held tht ladder while she crawled up on
the roof in a eocktail dress and tennis
shoes to get the kite.
The 'Nbole affair took a good half hour.
I thought it was terribly rude, since y,·e
had never been in her house before and
hardly knew the other guests. She could
have told the brat "too bad" or "come
back too1orro\v."
--v
~ . ..
\ .~·' I
~ly husband thought the whole thing
was funny and advised me to forget it. I
reel this woman insulted her guests and 1
decided to ask you for your opinion. \Vbat
do you think? -MIFFED IN MIN·
NEAPOLIS ..
DEAR ~UFFED1 I tblnk It's beautiful
that the ho1ttt1 wi ald attach that much
Importance to B 11,Ue boy's kite. So what
tr you got bigb a bat! hour later tban you
mJgbt have otbcrwise? I see nothing to
complain about.
• • DEAR ANN ~NDERS: .I read with in·
ter .. t the letter lrom the, cigarette fiend,
j'flooked," bccnuse I smoked three packs
a day for 20 year&; T\\>,0 r,~rs..ago I kne\V
1 no IOOger enjoyed smolting. Jt was ' just
a habit to li"1t ~p afftr a meal with my ',
cup ol coffee. or 'w~ r talked on .Uto
boo • ' p ~etc.. ~~ ~ ,
Whtn I noticed )be deep brown juice
lhnt I scraped oU .-m ·windows as I
cleant11· !hem (from cigarette .imoke •and
cooklilg gre ... , II made me think. But l
just coughed and went on smoking.
Then l re'\d a s~ atoty wrlt\~n, bl" •
19·ycar .. ld mother who was dylhg of can·
cer. She gave a day-by-day account ot
hct suffering and her r~clings about
never seeing her husband as a middle·:
aged man or. her baby girl as a bride.
That got me to thinking some more.
~ally 1 got the Ou -really bad. I
v.·a'f·convinced I had cancer o( the throat
and I prayed. I promised God, if l didn 't
have cancer, I'd NEVER smoke again.
Well, I didn't ha"f cancer, ljuM thank
my: lucky Sb\rS Ulat I \tas _given that
\rarning.
It's going on t\\'O years no'"'· and I'm
of( those da~ Utings for the rest of
my life. If "Hf>ked'' v.·ants to ke~p
smoking, J say -"go ahead and kill
Y!lUrsclf! You're a lily-livered idiot v.·ith
no sense and no backbone.
I'm signing this -SAVED ANU
GRATEFUL.
DEAR S AND G' Tbanks for the
tesllmonJal. What you ean do, others can
do. And let's hope the)' will.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have al'o\·ays
admired your abilit y · to give common
sen'se answers to such a wide spectrum
or quest~. but you missed the boat
v.·hen you advised the wife "'b~e hus-
band kep\ spearing her at night -wilh hi•
toenails. You said , "Tell King Kong to
put on socks." ·
If she ~ould 'just sit. ''Kint J<~ng" down
a couple of times a month and give him a
nice, relaxing Pedicure, she would find a
contented man bl her side at night in·
stead of a knife· toed mons~, equipped
to perform mayhem.
I treat my husband Uke a "'king and in
retupi, he treats me lil<e a queen. I
reallie all men can't be as good as yoµrs
and mine, but even a 2karat clod is
bound to be a little nicer U you give him ' l!xti'a-tcndcr. lo\llng care. -QUEEN
BIJ:fl lN OROVJLLE
i/;>EAR QUEENIE: Not Ill ~··wtu ·.u
.ult for a pei!ltue,-bu) ,~_,, ,.,.. clll'
pWt oo·soeu."rhankl r.f wrtff•f·1 ' . ' wbli; kind o1..W<dding ~ •1lh 1.da;·. r . ' . new ltte sly!.S? Does anything 110? Ann
Landers'• .con\Pletcly new "The Bride's
Guide;' tells wfuit•s right rbr tOday's wed·
'dings. For a copy, send a dollar bill, plus
& lQni.,!IClf·adcb-Msed, stamPe!I env,elope
fl6 cents J>OSU!l•) to AM Landers, Bo•
3346. Chicago tll. llOOS4.
•
\
, __
Waves
Surf's
.iSur('s up!''
Every summer a new batch of
neophyte surfers answer the call of the
sea and join the wetsuited throngs in
search of t'?t perfect wave.
The crew assembled this summer near
the Newport Pier ror classes offered .bY
the Newport Beach Parks and Recreation
department may not be ready to t{lckle
the Wedge or shoot the BorlSili Pipeline
but they're just as deter1nined.
•
Call:
Up!
' ' ' At left, 13-yar .. ld Bretl Barding, •n
Angeleno vacationing In Newport, gel!
basic instruction on dry land rrom Scott
Morlan.
In the \Yater, it ian't qui~e that simpt~.
Other beginners, below, find that its
easier to 1Jc on your tummy at first, or
cautiously take a ride on your knees
before standibg, upri~ht.
And the inevitable first lesson is the
meaning of the surfing term , "wipeout."
But i! you catch enough \Yaves and
your knees hold out, you 'll find yourself
on top of it all.
At bottom, left , Brett shows off his
newly acquired style, much to bis own
open-mouthed amazement.
Ben Koontz demonstrates he's catching
on , also.
And Lisa Beazly, looking a little water-
logged, expresses a true surfer's feelings.
She \VOn't give up until there are no more
waves to catch.
~men
BEA A~DERSON, Editor
Frf41t'I'. Alltlltf ,M, ltt) ..... IJ
I
I
•
' . •
i 6 DAILY PILOT Friday, August 24, 197>
Her Interests Don't Gather Dust
;Project
'
Adopted
: 'XEROX -COPIES
: 3c ,
14 HOUR SEIYICE
, , KINKOS -8JJ.J387 ~~ Comp1n __ ~.:_~~I
RUFFEL L'S
UPHOLSTERY
Who Yo11 Wa•t ,,,. ....
1922 Harbof llnl.
Co1hl Mna -548-0259
Aid to Baja is the project
adopted by the International ~:;~ijiiiiiji~~S~~=========~~I Af£airs Committee of the I
Newport Beach JWlior Ebell
club.
The project will support a
preschool in Tecale and the
fam1lles of the preschoolers,
according JG Mrs. Craig Lyon,
chairman.
OuWde donations are being
sought, and some of the need·
ed supplies include p I a y
dough, blocks, crayons, books,
paint, chalk and paper.
During the club year. the
committee will present a New·
used Baby !b>wer to collect
more supplies and Family
Packs for Ouisunas are being
planned.
Items needed for the holiday
packS' include men's, women 's
and children's clothing, beans,
rice, sugar, powdered milk.
toys, scrap materials and
needles.
Contributions are being ac-
cepted now, announced Mrs:
Lyon who may be called for
further information.
A COMPLIME NTARY SHAM POO
ANO SET W ITH EVERY FAC IAL.
f OME IN NOW ANO SEE W HA T OUR
EXTRAORDINARY ADRIEN AR PEL SKI N HEAL Tl-!
SPA CAN 00 FOR You . EUROPEAN MACH INES
5 T l t\1ULATC: C IRC ULATION , BRUSH AND VACUUM
SKIN TO NEW H EAL TH . ORGANIC PRODUCT'..
DEEP CLEAN THE PORES ANO ADO NELOtO
f>10 1 ~TURE. SKIN HEALTH TREft.TMENT .$20 ,.
PER HR. A NO NOW , COMPLIMEN TARY ~H AMf'OO
A NO SET I NC LUDED'. CALL F OR YOUR
l A PPO INTMENT. BEAUTY SALON .
\...----=-------2 FASHION IS LAND 644-2800
For A Career ... NOT JUST A JOB
BE A "WOMAN IN WHITE"
8ttX>IM ca Mttllcol or Dental. AJsilUU&l in 4 or 7 monllLJ.
NEW CL.USU STARTING
DAYS •nd EVENINGS, Sept. 17 24
-·-·
00
·-·-.. 623 w. ----17th, SANTA ANA 541-4461
•
By ALLISON DEERR
Of trl9 Diii\' ,.lltl St1U
Diane Porter Ms bee.n a
housewife who didn't like
being tied to a house, an office
worker who didn 't en}oy a
desk job, and a working
mother who couldn't oope with
the price of child care.
It's a familiar story, with a
new twist.
Diane is a wile, motner or
one child and expecting a sec·
ond in December. She lives in
Huntington Beach with her
Diane Porter
displays crafts
made by her
friends, quilt,
a nest of eggs,
and ceramic
frog.
husband, Bob, and Cive-year-
old son.
And she feels that ideas are
for sharing and the.re is no
rea:K>n why work shouldn't be
enjoyable and why people
shouldn't have a creative
outlet.
\\lhen the Porters purchased
a fixer-upper hon1e on a third
or an acre in Huntington
Beach. they felt it wou1d be
enough to keep all of them
busy.
But, then, they began look-
ing for furniture . It didn't take
long before all three became
antique bugs and experienced
bargain bunters.
NO ROOM
Soon they had m o r e
furniture a n d knickknacks
lhan they had room.
About this time, Diane
discovered that almost every
friend bas a special craft or
hobby Ibey loved. But their
family and relatives had
already received their quota
as gifts. What do you do when
you still like to rn a k e
something but have no one
new to enjoy It?
Diane decided to open a
place to sell Items for people
on a little different basis than
usual. Hobbyists "joined" the
shop and members priced
their own items. 'Ibere would
be wholesale purchase of SUJ>"
plies and so~ traft
classes.
It took a year of pWming
and the result opened last
AprU.
Local merchants told her
she was doomed to failure.
SLOW MONTHS
"They said the best months
would be June to December.
They told me I'd never even
pay j.he rent ," she said. "They
told me tourists would be my
best trad~. Well, they were
wrong."
She's paid the rent every
month, had plenty o f
cusJGmers and moot ol them
are locals.
She can buy furniture and
1antiques to use as display
pieces in the store.
W h e n her husband, a
Diane bubbles ove r with
enthusiasm about her new tine
of work, and even enjoyed Ille
year ol plom>ing ll look JG
mako pooslble.
A CHALLENGE
She takes "you Can't" as a
challenge.
"'Ibere ls a definite need for
this kind of an outlet for peo-
ple to be creatlve,'1 she said.
"Women are too often trapped
into jobs they don't like. And
women with children pay so
nwch for chlld care they can't
really enjoy what they do.
1'1bere ts a real sense of
satisfaction seeing people able
to create, display their work
and have it appreciated."
She finds that interaction
with people on a dally basis
sparks new ideas. and these
spark more ideas. And she
shares her ideas.
A touch that many rmd a~
pealing Is the story that goes
with each Item. She knO\YS the
people as well as the produ ct.
An e:rample of how few op-
portLm.ities for this kind of
outlet Is the distance away
some of her members live.
There are two menlbers in
Utah, one in Oregon. one who
travels the oountry with her
husband, a professional auc-
tioneer.
She feels that too often
women are discouraged from
getting into business. directly
and indirectly. But she feels
this was a natural.
"I love people and love to
talk. What more could one
want?"
fireman , is working and her 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, son isn't in school, he comes 11
30 FASHIO N !SU.ND
NEWPORT IEACH
644-2464
along to work at the shop in
Cannery Village.
Spare time is spent can-
vassing garage sales, second
hand stores, antique shop« and
swap meets. They venture into
Los Angeles often to find new
sources for bargains.
To our ~young customeT6 ..•
free
An@)~o@ @)§@ bike 1:eg with
any back-1D-school purchase
--
~ come in at your eanioist coiweniel'lC£ ...
We were only able 1o d:itain 2CIXJ bags.
\
HUGH MTN.An
Now's The
Time!
MAlK IY'1 -LINCOLNS
YHr·tnll ........ p..,,11.tlc .,..
.-rhlflllllli, Otl Ill• Cir ...... 'v•
llrumld 111Wt ownlftt. SH11·
t111.i. c..m.rt1011, Q111t1. -
"Atll fer H111ll M'f'lllff,"
S'l0·16JO
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln -Mercury
2626 Horbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa
44 fashion island, newport center 644-5070
TILIYlllON • AP,LIAHCll
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Tll.IYISIOH • A,,LIAHCIS
COSTA MESA
411 •• 17 .. St.
hly 9.9 t.t. ·~
EL TORO
II TM9 14. et fWJ,
IN1irt t9 s.. ... 1
Dell ... , Set. 9-6
I
I
• '
, l .....
Frldily, August 24, lll7l DAILY PILOT J 1
St:uttering Habit Timed for Correction
NEW YORK (UPIJ -The
mctrono1nc, that t l 1n i 11 g
device every musician knows,
now also is playing · a
rehabilitation role. It's hel ping
to (..'Orrect severe stuttering .
But in its new role, it's a
mini-metronome. small
enough to be worn like a hear·
ing aid.
The whole idea : the steady
beat or the mctronornc paces
the belaborod speech of the
stutterer, helping eliminate
the seemingly w1controllable
habits ol repetition, halting,
pausing. ,
Dr. Charlotte Zitrin, the
physician using it. says, "It's
been known for a long time
that stutterers don 't stutter,
for instance, when they si ng."
Dr. Zitrin Is director of the
Behavior 'Mierapy Clinic of the
Long Island Jewish-Hillside
Medical Center at New Hyde
Park. N.Y.
She said as best she can
learn the device w a s
developed by an Englishman
who had used a reguJar
metronome to treat his own
stutter and set out to produce
a highly portable one.
Dr. John Paul Brady, ot the
University of Pennsylvania
department o ( psychiatry,
brought it to the Unitt.>d
States, she said. She's not cer-
tain how widely used it may
be now.
The electric pncing device is
bullt Into the casing of a small
plastic ''hearing" aid to be
worn behind the ear. Its
mcchanis1n can be regulated
for both speech and volume,
and be adjusted as the patient
progresses.
Dr. Zitrin said that at the
start of the treatment pro-
gram, the metronome is set at
a very slow pace of 60 words
per minute. Tht! rate is in-
creases as the palient im-
prove, to 112 words a minute,
which corresponds to slow
normal speech.
The stutterer visits the
medical center's clinic once a
week learning bow to use and
adjust the device. And with
cooscientious practice at home,
most patients show noticeable
progreSB within a month and
marked improvement in six
weeks.
The retraining or speech
habits is coupled w i t h
psychotherapy to help
minimize tensions and anx-
ieties which may cause or con-
tribute to stuttering.
The physician said treat-
ment at the clinic usua1Jy
spans a six-month period. The
patient, however, continues to
use the metronome for as long
as he considers it helpful,
eventually getting away from
it by gradual decrease of
length of Ume used every day.
She and other therapists at
the clinic have used the timer
in treatment of only a small
sampling of patients. But all
have been success stories, she
said. All had a long history of
stutter and previous treatment
without success.
The physician cited the case
of one patient who was almost
unable to speak when he came
to the clinic. So troubled was
his speech, he was unable to
give his case history to the
therapist
But there was almost in-
stant improvement wi1h the
metronome pacer, she said,
,.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
and within the subsequent
several months, he attained
ease and fluency.
"We believe stutterers have
emotional problems,'' said the
physician. "But we have not
proved it.
year-olds. They're just begin-
ning to use the language."
And for some reason, she
sakl, ther~ is n1ore stuttering
in maJcs than femalt'S.
•'By and large, stutterers lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"ill
seem to share many of the
same personality traits. They
are usually unassertive, have
low self estee1n, feel in·
adequate and are easily in·
timida1ed . Even though they
appear passive and unag-
gressive, they are often feel-
ing e x t r e m e , unexpressed
anger.
"All of us occasionally
stumble on a word," she said.
SPORTSWEAR
.. • •• 1'1itchell I~: ·~ 1'larlo11ette• l ::
Nom tlar" Sun: ~::
AHIJ. 26t• '-: . ' . .. '\. -
See the popular Mitchell 1"
i\1arionette family todatl · •
at I2·l-2-3 & 7:30 p.m.
Sat. & Sun. at 12·1·2·3 & 4 .•
p.tn. here at Hu1itingtmt .-.
Ceiiter's E1tclosed MaU.
Beach & Edinger at the "· ·
San Diego Freeway.
"And a stutter might be w~stcli1r P!aza, 17th and Irvine,
normal with three or four·1~N~<~•;·"°;'~' ;B<;•;'h~,~Ca~l;ifo~rn;i;,•;2~';'°;J:-==========-
Cancer: Be Versatile
ARJES (March 21-April 19):
Emphasis is on creativity, in-
novation, your own style.
Romance is in picture and so
is young person who makes
demands. Know when to draw
line. Be helpful but refuse to
be used as a human crying
towel. Change is beneficial.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Frank, practical approach is a
necessity. Don't play games
with facts. Instead, face issues
directly and in light of reality.
Leo, Aqua r I u 1 individual s
could f i g u r e prominently.
GEMINI (May 21'.lune 20):
Teach, rise above what ls
petty or irrelevant. You have
chance now to gain greater
. prestige. Re latives figure
prominently in special trips.
messages. Protect your own
interests. Others may not
know what to do for you.
CANCER (JWJe 21-July 22):
Money, po&sessions, special
payments and collections are
featured . Be flexible. Versatili·
ty now is your ally. Gemini,
Sagiltariu persons play im·
portant roles. Don't try being
everywhere at once. Finish
one thing at a time.
one else's idea -that
should be emphasized. Be
selfish if necessary. Means get
point across and insist on in·
dividuality, your way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
What i.s important for you now
may be obscured. Know it and
dig, ask and probe. Reject
surrace indications. You have
right to koow and understand.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Hannony can replace tur-
moil, especially in domestic
area. Make peace with loved
one. You'll feel better emo-
tionally and physically. Tallrtls
person may have plenty to say
-and you gain if receptive.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Accent is on achievement.
civic projects, standing in
com munity, relations w i t h
professional superiors. B e
selective. You need not jump
at first offer. Refuse to sell
yourself short. Pisces, Virgo
persons are in picture.
philosophies tend to dominate.
Your intellectual curiosity
takes you on exciti ng journey.
Refuse to be dismayed by one
who lacks not only knowledge
but also desire.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Improve public relations.
Be sure others know what
you're all about -show side
that is real you. New contact
now can develop into prof-
itable relationship. Do more
listening than asserting.
Special agreement is probably
worthwhile.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)o
Play most of what you do by
ear. Means ttoo't seek hard-
and·fast rules. Allow yourse lf
room for improvisation. Tum
on charm. Member of opposite
sex is studying you. Health
factor is important. Take care
of yourself. Avoid
eating, drinking.
Are you serious
•bout losing weight? HHn:
9aM -7pa medical
weight_...
reduction
OMfCA'S PIOGIAM IS THE SAfC
METHOD UNOfl STRICT MEDICAL
SUPERVISION OF MEDICAL DOC·
JORS. LOSE UNWANTED l"OUNOS
AND MAINTAIN Plortl WEICHJ.
Omega Clinic
COSTA MESA 6'16-1633
1869 NEWPORT BLVD.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.1---------~==========-:..=-:_:_:_:.:__ ____ _
. •
•
HAPPY FACE -Putting a clown's face on Cheron Grayton is Robert ~1olnar ,
clown. ruiili• and dancer. who participated in Clown Week at the Museum of
Contempofary lrafts. New York. Raymond Banda. already painted. watches
the operation.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Lunar cycle is such that you
suceeed by taking chance on
yourself. Your way, not soml'·
21 ): Favorable lunar aspect
now coincides with journeys,
education, a stimulation of the
intellectual processes. You live
and learn. More important.
you apply knowledge .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Interest in occult sub-
jects, various r e Ii g i o us
'NothiJtg Grotesque'
Clown Follows Rule
When Painting Faces
NE\\!' ''ORK tUPll -"I
never saw a kid who dKln 't
"'ant lo be a clown.'' said
Robert ~1olnar.
Molnar, a clo,...•n. mime and
dancer. was busy as he spoke
making clown faces on four 6-
yea r-<>lds rrorn a sumn1er day
care center in New York. ·
"A clown face should be fun·
ny or sad. ll should not be
grotcsq11e." · he satcl, as he
daubed.1away with brushes.
'"lb'fe is enough that is
grotesque in today 's world ."
'Ibe·1 occasion was Clown
WeeJ; the sixth event in a
sumhler-long series of visitor
partidpation programs at the
i1useum of Contemporary
Crafts. The series is called
"ti1ake ll, Wear It , Share It.
Dress Up! " and is sponsored
by the National End9wment
for the Arts.
The museum has assembled
a wide variety of materials for
the events -fabrics, feathers.
leathers, buttons, laces, other
matrrials for recycling to give
adults and children a chance
to express their i d e a s
creatively with the help of the
museum staff and other
specialists.
Lifestyle
Projected
NEW YORK -By 1980.
about lK> percenl of the na-
Uon's young adults. aged 20 to
34, will be Jiving i n
apartments.
This is according to a report
by E. B. Weiss. future
marketing editor. Advertising
Age.
In the report for Owens-
Corning Fiberglas. Weiss said
that by 1980 private homes
will be on the rare side due to
high building costs and high
land oosts.
SAT. AUG. 25 e MESA CENTER
HELEN NEUSHAEFER
' NAIL POLlSH .....
PEGGY PEN PAL
DOLL ~ WH $13.88 ... ' ........ '.
SAVE UP TO 75°/o
SUMMER WEARING APPAREL
1~
MESA CENTER . -COSTA MESA ,,
~ HANGING 1 SET
COLOR TAM BASKET JUNIPER
20% REG. $1.95
OFF Marked
NOW 99~ Price Gal.
LIMITED SUPPLY LIMITED SUPPLY
Alu-Mont SALE Outdoor
Furniture
4 CHAIRS AND
42" TABLE
ONLY
15 GAL
EVERGREEN
ASH
REG. $45.00
NOW $2CJ95
LIM ITED SUPPLY
SLIP 'N SUDE
=~8 5.99
FOR FUN IN THE SUN!
DOLLS· DOW· DOW
~;:.o~.;8 Talking .Doll . . 4.88
Cynthia Talking Doll 4 88 Reg. 14.88 . . . . . . . . . . . . o
:~.h~.88 1. 99
PLUS MANY • MANY MORE!
tiyM Da...ty "Crow1 Nest"
Gil RNCly Fw Tiiie H .. t WIV.I
luy lffw Al u, T• "' OFI'"
:~'. !~:~:icycl~ ......... 2500
l Ooly-Flrst Come B11ill-Ho Prior S.lt
Its Fun Time at
TOY WORLD
Hundreds & hundreds of Toys at
Fun Prices for you. Buy now for
Birthdays -Christmas!
5' MOLDED PLASTIC
POOL ~~:9 2.99
a ~o_;. __ -!~!.i!!
LLOYD'S a NURSERY~~ .. ~
CLIMBING TOWER ......... 2500 1 Only -No
PTlof Sole
Free Balloons
for t he Kiddies!
• •
223 E. 17th St. • Costa Mesa
and LANDSCAPE CD. +
Houn: Ma•.•Tl111n. t-6. Fri. t 'Iii 9, Sat. f·6
o,... lnry S1111., 11-4
2038 Newport llvd., Costa Mesa
,~ .... 646-7441
SAT. AUG. 25 e MESA CENTER
tlie SHE shop
e DISCOUNT WOMEN'S WEAR e
TENNIS DRESSES
V2 PRICE
NAME BRAND
SPORTSWEAR
Summer Dresses
Caprls & Shorll
~PRICE
20% OFF
t1ie SHE sliop
DISCOUNT DRIU SHOP
261 E. 17th St. -Mesa Center
SAT. AUG. 25 e MESA CENTER
DTERT
FINAL CLEARANCE
WOMENS & CHILDRENS
SHOES
50% OFF AND
MORE
----Sc:ramble Tabl1----·e SHOIS e HAH D l.t.GS e OANCC Wl .t.JI
YOUlt s1 88 CMOtCI 1
'llt AM TO 4 PM MOM, THltU SAT.
All Sain Finl
225 E. 17th St. -MESA CENTER
COSTA MESA -548-2778
• hNKAMIR:ICARO • • MA$TIR CM.t.ltOI e
SAT. AUG. 25 e MHA CENTER
1 GROUP -R~. $42.SO to $&9.50
SPORT COATS ONLY
Spetlol Group Wash '11 WNr 5tr.1tht Lhic
PANTS ......... ·2.. 2 ·s· to $12.50 ., ,..,
lack to School
GYM SHORTS
;;-;, 75c
GYM SHIRTS
R1v1rMblo
21 -32 Woist
1 Gro11p
Wosli 'N WHr
Lo111 Si•eve
DRESS
SHIRTS
•••· sa.oa ht
Sil.GO
SJ.SO H .• or
Gro11p
All Wool
SLACKS
Ret. Sll.00 to
SJS.00
....
$4.00 '1" 3 "" •9
LEON'S MENS SHOP
ind BIG 'N TALL
227 E. 17th St., Mesa Center
Between Thrifty & Safeway e ALL SALES FINAL e
j
!
•
II DAILY PILOT ,
A MILER
TUMBLEWEEDS
FIGMENTS
•• Al-l--IAA
FROM
TI:XA6!
NANCY
Friday, AugOS l 24, 1973
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
A.CROSS .45 Sllghtly med
A1 One
1 W1gon
S Dough used in
r1v1o!i
10 Sudden dash
1.4 Turli;ish
regiment
15 "When You
Look upon_
axpre•siog
indignation
A& Color
Ag Outer •eed
coat
50 E. Gennan
fiver
53 Trickery
54 Assistanls
18 Hodgepodge 58 Springiness
11 Mutli.te 61 Expoaor
18 Matter·ol·1acl Astros
person 62 Standard
20 Finilhed 63 Viol1mt he•·
22 Art; Latin lor·all
23 Measures by 6.4 Sa Ml forltl
pieing 65 Oevi1ahzes
2.4 Within Ille law 66 French city
2e Abundance: 67 commies
Suffix
'21 Capitll ol lren
30 Father and
DOWN
mother 1 Arrived
34 Bl1okboard 2 M1n'1 ntmli
ICCeStoty 3 CommanOo
3S Situation action
36 Moulh• .4 Eternal
37 Oiaord•rlf 5 Semiliqu!d
throngs lood
38 Ruleh-6 A1rlght--
"O Kind of 7 Begin we"'on: & Follows
Sllf'llt cloaely
• 1 Lbl. P9" sci, In, 9 Wiler b(ldy
•2 Farm bulldlng 10 Gless
•S Lure con1air111r
11 Ol!1on's
nickname
12 siaak
imperfecuv
13 Small chlldren
19 "11'1---
thing"
21 F1tal
25 Toled
26 Joins
27 Provoke
28 Jagged
29 Dlslincttv•
COS\Ur!MI
30 Darice step
31 Klndol
b1seball
game
32 A. moment
33 Nestegg
amauer
s ' L
35 M1;rmur fondly
39 Ancient
AO Kitchen
gadget
42 Beddirig item .... ~--
chance!"
46 Tu!ts
47 Smell 101a
49 Vlb11to
SO Puts in place
51 EKC\119
52 Scr1pe
ha11hly
53 Maple genus
55 N. Amef. coin
56 Geralnl'a wite
5 7 T ennla unl!s
59"--
0feamer"
60 Affirmative
YOte
ll!JU.Y! ANP MAYI SAVIN
l'AA11NG-•••
-• le' •• '
. PISMISSEP!
---y--
IT'S AWFUL-
NO WONDER
IT'S FREE
PEANUTS
x
TENNIS MATCHES
T...,,....,._ .t,l.."f>M1f;+-,o I .... _ .. __ I
by Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
THIS IS THE FIRST
TIME" I EVER
SNEAKED OUT
OFA SHOW
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
Q
DICK TRACY
~~;It .
.. ..
"
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
ANIMAL CRACKERS
-AM"'21Gl\NS 5nND _,.., _., Vt:AR OH
P06 R>Oo "T><AN ON
PABY r-000 !
by Charles M. Schulz ..------,;.,
by Harold Le DoUll
by Mell
IA HU 006
'e At.ar
HAROIU<'IUN<A
MUNGR'f el>8Y
by Charles Barsotti
.,.._
by Gus Arriola
~~ ..... ~W:'."J>.'JJ-~--,
STR/!.TC.#ll!=t:'
/IPJDl!RM/5 ~!
by Ferd Johnson
by Roger lollen
THE GIRLS
"h tllere any d..i,.er at all who doetn 't lhlnk tbat
women over ti no Joa1er edit?"
DENNIS THE MENACE
Friday, ALl~llil 24, 1973
Ra~s Tackle Mighty Miami Tonight
MIAMI (AP).~ The Miami Dolphins
attempt to get their of!eoae rolling
tonJght lor the !lrst time thll &UJll!ller In
a nationally televised exhibition game in
the Orange Bowl against the Los Angeles
Rams.
The del<ndlng NaUonal F 0 0 t b a I I
League champion Dolphins haven't been
beaten In 22 Saines but their offense has
stut~ In tour previous ellhlblUOns -
includlns last week's &-9 tie wt1h 1he
Chicago Bears. Miami totaled 14 points
in each of thj'ee previous games.
The return of fullback Larry Clonk•
Bosox Invade
Big A; Wright
' Ends Drought
It took California lefthander Clyde
Wright 36 days to walk thNl<lgh the
wilderness.
That's how long it has been between
victories for tbe veteran Angel pitcher.
The drought ended Thursday nJght
when Wright Wl!lll 7 1/3 innings and rode
a five-run Angel rally in the seventh to a
6-3 declsioo. over the Milwaukee Brewers.
"I don't ~ how to react," stam-
mered Wright,1 9-17, as he savored his
A"'els Slate
......... kMf'Cm.,
AllQ. 2~ loctlM •t C•llfornl•
"""'' '1JI a.kif! •• C•ntornl• Aug. 2' a.lu! •I C1Hfornl1
7:$S o.m. 6:55 o.m. S:55 o.m.
ftrst moment of triumph since July 17. "I
don't Know if l should stay here, go home
or go celebrate."
"After 36 days I think you should have
a drink or two," suggested teammate
Aurelio Mooteagudo. .
But all the Angels ore expected lo he m
a sober and somber mood tonight when
they open a three-game weekend series
agalnst the Boston Red Sox.
Bill Lee, 1$-8, wlll he oo the mound lor
Boston against caUfomla rookie Dick
Lange, HI.
The Angels have been brlsUing for a
rematcll with the Red Sox since their last
trip to Boston when they accused Boston
catcher Carlton Fisk of calling bru.sh-
back pitches.
In their last meeting, there were two
bench-emptying incidents and whil~ no
solid punches were tossed. severa1 irate
Angels said later in the clubhouse that
they wooid be looking !or revenge
agalnst Fisk. Some personal threats were
30unded. "You can be sure there is trouble in
Fisk's future ," said Bob Oliver.
"He 's gonna get smoked, 1 guarantee
it," added Tom! McO'aw.
For six innings Thursday the Angels
weren't exactly getting smoked ~Y
Milwaukee's Btti Champion -making bis
first start since May 24 -but they were
getting beaten, 3-1, and bad managed
ooly two bits -Oliver's disputed double
and Ken Berry's rbi single in the second
inning. Oliver thought his hit was a homer, but·
it was ruled a double by wnpires who
said it bit the ralllng.
Mll....icM ISi Clllftnl• {fl .. ,... .,.~
BrfOgs, ff • I l O Pin"°"' If • 0 I 2
COlucclo, dlt ' 0 I 0 Mtoll, U ' 0 0 0 DM•Y• d l o 0 o ROll\11', :Ill 4 2 2 t scon. lb 4 1 l 2 Ell'tmn, lb ' o o o ,.__.,,)D •lllStanton," 4121
MltcMll, " 4 0 0 0 FRODlntOn, dtl :I I 0 0 p°""'· c ' o o o Berry, ct • 1 2 l Garcia, 2tl ' O 2 0 Torborg, c 2 0 0 0 H•iff.M 2000Mc<:r1w,ph 0000
Lal'IOUll, pl! l o 0 0 llMa.1, pt\ 0 I 0 I
Ch•nlf[lklri· p o o o O Stlmaslk, c 0 0 0 O
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••
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OOOOAlom&r:ltl 2001
' otooCWrlglli.o ·otot =.'J:o oootse11._r, 0000
T011l1 ).(JI 3 T0111 )I '1 6 Mii~• 200 001 000 -:I
C.lltomle 010 000 --· E-Plll$0n.' Meoll. DP-Catnorn\a I. l08-M11WIU--... 6, Cllliornl• c. 2&-lt Ollver, ~.,. Sltlfttor>.
HR-kotl lt. MontY f, t,;H•': R •ll II so
(MmpiO'I • 2 2 2 1 ' 3 EdltdOP II.. t-JJ 1/J :I ., S t t &l'lol't • 2/J• 1 1 1. I 1
V ... IQIHI. 1 1 0 t t I c. wrltli't 1w. ,.,,, 111:1 1 3 J ' 1 1
5911• 111110000
U.S. Oohbered
MOSCOW -The soviet Union women's
basketball team, Jed ·by 6-loot-11 OUiiana
s.menova. crushed the Unlted States Jl2.
44 today and won a gold medal at tbe
World University Games.
The Russians, wbo also had three other
players taller than six feet, simply
overwhelmed Americans, who got' a
silver medal.
-
and running mate Mercury Morris to du·
ty alter Injuries marlu the first ttme tl)is
season that Miami bas its regular run-
ning combination available for duty .
C.onka, who hasn't played since the
College All·star game, will start along
with ''third starting beck" Jim Klick.
Morris. who hasn't seen any preseason
acticiri, Is expected to ,.. lengthy duty.
The return of Clonks and Morris
means the benching of Charlie Lelah ,
who baa led the team Jn exhibitions wltb
240 yards in 36 carrlc.a for a 6.e yard
average gain.
Leigh walched from the bench last
year when the Dolphins set an NFL
regular season rushing record with i,960
Ota TV T-ight
Chaanel 4 at 5
yards. Csonka gained 1,117 yards, Morris
J,000 and Kiick 521.
Coach Don Shula plans heavy workouts
for quarierbacks Bob Griese and Earl
Morrall.
Both saw limited action in earUer
games as Shula put third stringer Jim
Del Gai1.o. on display aa lrade bail. The
Green Bay Packera finally grabbed Del
Gal7.o Wednesday in exchange for second
round draft choices tn .197~75.
Rams coach Cbuck Knox has offensive
troubles of his own to overcome.
Tbe Rams, who averaged sUgbtly1over
20 points last year while posting a &'7-1
record, Jost llh'I to Oskland 1 .. 1 weekend.
their preseason oi>ener 24·7 to l>altas and
scored 21 points to tie Cleveland.
John H•dl, heir to traded Roman
Gabriel's quarierbacking duUes, will
stari the gam .. for the aging Rams. Jim
-
Berleiaen and LalT)' Smllh ~ scheduled
_ at running backs.
Rain could a/feet Jhe offensive perf0rmances ol both teama. Heavy rain
has !alien In the Miami area all week and
more is f0tf!C88t.
The Orange Bowl's 'l'Uliclal ,turf,
covered be!ore •game;, doelo:t ..,.in,welJ.
and even .Mort exposure to moisture
leaves Jt sUct.
The Rams may play· withoUt the
services of injured defensive tackle
Merlin otseo and offensive linemen Tom
Mack and Charley Cowan.
UPI Ttlt"'1oto
THE METS' WAYNE GARRETT SLIDES PAST A DIVING JOE 1'.ERGUSON DURING THURSDAY PLAY.
Sports Clipped S1iort
Court Nixes Rentzel Bid
LOS ANGELES -A Superior Court
judge rejected Los Angeles Rams wide
receiver Lance Rentzel's request Thurs-
day for an injunction ending Rentzel's
National Football League suspension for
conduct detrimental to the league.
Judge David A. Tboma5 made the
decision alter considering arguments
over the application for a preliminary in-
junction that were presented Wednesday
at a show-cause beating.
Rentz.el, 29, is free on bis own
recognizance from a 90-day jail sentence
ordered after he pleaded guilty to mari·
juana possession, a charge he ls a~
pealing on grounds of Illegal search and
seizure. e Dcdla Falb
HOUSTON -The spark BUI Peterson
says he saw in the Houston Oilers last
week burst into name in the Astrodome
Thursday night, and it was the Dallas
Cowboys wi» gc;. burned.
Wmless in II straighl games solng
back tC> last season's dismal 1-13 showing,
the Oilers suddenly became giant klllers
with a thrilling come-from·bebind S7·24
violo<Y over the Cowboys.
Defensive back J• Charles in·
tercepted a Roger Staubach pass and
returned it 32 yards and Skip Butler toed
a U.yard field goal lhat put Houston
ahead 13-10 at halltime, as a standing
room only crowd of 46,942 looked at the
scoreboard .:nbeliev'ing. e Record Wln
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. -Conaecutive
no-bitters have placed Tainan City,
Taiwan, in the finals of the Little League
World Series looking lor the AslaJl
Island's third straight championship.
lts opposition Saturday will be Tucson,
which reached the finale here on a pair or one-hitters.
Taiwan shattered four .seyie~ _batting
marks Thursday while dnibbln~Tampa, Fi 27.0 OOhind the nA.htt . · . of 8., _ I , .. v.~ pi1 1" Kuo Wen-It. ·
Tucson's Ed Vosberg !Ost his ,...bitter ,
on a line-drive single in the bottom of the
sixth and final inning, but he preserved
his 12..0 shutout over Birmingham, Mich.
eNet Vpsels
SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. -The u(lSet·
riddled Eastern Tennis Open suffered its
heaviest casualty Thursday, when defen-
ding champ Ilie Nastase was defeated by
New Zealand's Onny Parun, 6-4, 1-6 and
6-2.
Another casualty was filth seeded San·
dy Mayer -was bested by Pancho
Gonzalez, 6-7, 7-6 and lh'I.
Vijay Amritraj, 19, of India advanced
to the semifinals at the Orange Lawn
Tennis Club by delealing third-seeded
Dick Stockton, 6-7., 6-4 and G-4.
The battle of the ages between 21-year·
old Mayer and 45-year-old Gonzalez took
95 minutes. When it ended, the overflow
crowd of 3,000 rose to applaud the well-
played contest. e Lakers Get Lmle
LOS ANGELES -Still on the hunt for
a reserve center who can help out at
forward, the Los Angeles Lakers have
acquired Steve Love from the Capital
Bu1lels. .
The Lakers sent· the Bullets their sec-
ond round plck in next year's draft and
an undisclosed amount of ·cash in the
'Thursday night trade.
Relaxing Said
•
Key to Dodgers
Pennant Hopes
NEW YORK (AP) -"When you're in a
pennant race, you can't be relaxed,'' said
Joe Ferguson.
Ferguson knows. He is a catcher-out-
fielder for the Los Angeles D>dgers, and
his team is embroiled in a tense pennant
race in the National League West.
The Dodgers had a whopping 11-game
Dodgers Slate
All 0..... M KF: ( ... )
Avo. 2• Los A~les at Phlllldmlpllla
A ...... U lo$ Anerief -' PltitadelPilll A119. 26 Los ~lei 111 Ptllktdf'IPl!ra
•:30 o.m. •:30 o.m. 10:30 1.m.
lead over Cincinnati on July I. Today,
they lead by three.
The lead has shriveled because of a
Jack of hitting. Sioce the AU-Star break,
their record is 15-12. It's !bat good, only
because the Dodgers pitchers have been
stingy with runs.
''The team is not relaxed." said
Ferguson. "I hope we can get that way
soon."
The Dodgers, particularly Ferguson,
appeared more relaxed Thursday night,
hammering 10 hits, including five for ex-
tra bases, in beating tile New York Mets
54.
The Dodgers move to Philadelphia to-
day and send Tommy Jolin, 11·7, against
Wayne Twitcbell, IU.
Ferguson was the offensive ringleader,
smashing three consecutive doubles. His
third, with two out in the sixth inning off
reliever Buzz C3pra, U, drove in Willie
Davis, wOO had singled, with the winning
run.
"I've been hitting the ball well for the
past week," explained the rugged 6-foot·
2. 21~ Ferguson, "but I've been
bitling the ball right at people. I just
wasn't getting bits."
Lot ....... (') New Yorll 14)
. , •rllrl)f dr"rttl
Lopes, 21:1, S 1 2 o WGarr•tt, 3b S 1 1 0
Bl.ICkMt, lb ' 5 0 1 0 Miiian. 2D 2 1 0 0
Oavl1,d s222May1.10 4121
Fer9uson, c s 2 3 l Milner, If ' o 1 1
MO!•, II • O O D CJOfle:t:, rf 3 0 0 1 Paciorek, ,If . o o o o Grote. t • 1 1 o
Ruuell,u •OllHaM.cf 4010
Laver Ousted by Molina;
•
Crawtord, rf 2 0 I I TM•rtlnz, $$ 4 0 0 0 Cey, Jb ' , 2 0 0 0 M•ll•ck, p I 0 1 1
Oileel'l,.p 4000C•pr•.P 0000 &eeuchp, pl\ 1 o o o
HP11'1tft', p o 0 0 0
Oytr,ph 1010 HarrelSClfl, pr o O O 1
Rosei~all Upset .by.Borg
TORONTO CAP) -Ivan Molina played
the m•tch of his Ille Thursday and ousted
sixth-seeded Rod Laver of Corona de!
Mar, u , 6-2, lh'I lrom the $100,000 Cal\a·
dlan Open tennis tournament.
"That was the blgesl win for me," 17·
year-old Bjorn Borg said alter his 2-tl, 6-
1, 7.5 oonquest ol Ken Rosewall, 311, who
had won two maJor Australian tiUes
before Borg was bOm. .
Molina was equally impressive in his 4-
6, 6-2, 6-3 decision over Laver,, the
game's first mlUionalre and the WJnncr
here in 1970.
"I bad nothing lo lose and I WU very
JOClle " llid the 27·yeaNJ!d CO!ombitn 'Ibo kept Laver at bay with crisp volleys
and pinpolDI poaalng lhotl.
llofg WU IOOle, too, but that's the way
he pla)'s. He atlacked Rooewall with bi4
slullng forehand that WU laced with
beavy loplpin.
"I bad nothing to !ale and I WU Vary
Joooe," said the 27·year-old Colombian
after bis first oi><OUrt moeUns with
Laver, tennis'• first mllUooalre and \be
1970 Canadian OJ>tPt champion.
MollDa WU r•rtlcularly sharp With bis
backha!'d an retrieved well ·aa the
veteran Laver, playing his first major
touroament In three months, kept him runnJns. .
Laver said late• that the ootci>me in
the battle ol lefl·handers could have betlll
dlllerent ii he had. kapt the prosaure on
arter winnil,ig· the ftrSt set.
"I nil"8<l.ii Jew shots that I shooldn't
hnve atid .t~at ma~e. It easier. A person.
plays wetiif be,doesn't have the pressure
M him."
But Clill Drysdale ol South Africa oon-
tinued to prevail In tbe press11n>peclied
tiebreakers and waldl<d 13th seeded
Jaime Fillo! of Cblle survive four match
poinlt belore he put him away.
'Ille unseeded Drysdale, ,wi\<) won 6-3, f.
1, now has won ad foor 6l tbe aets that '"'It to tl ebroakel'i In the 1hr"'! pu1tchcs
hC has playe« to reach lod~y'11jWlrter-
!inals. •
UPIT•I~
KUO WEN·LI PITCHES A NO·HITTER FOR TAIWAN.
Totals 36 S 10 5 Tolels 3l 4 I 4 lei$ Anll•lts 000 131 000 -5 New York 100 120 000 -4
E-lh1S$ell. DP-1.ot ~Its 1. l08-Lot Anoeltl
'· N-York •· 2~erouwn ,, w. crewfor\t. HA-W. Olvlt IS. S8-R1Upll. $-MHl111. SF-C, JOMS, IPH REllll$0
01lten (W, lU) 9 I 4 ' 2 1
M11!111clt <I 1/l I 4 4 3 2 C11pr11 (l, UI 1 111 1 l I 2 0
H.Perlter 3 o O o o 4
WP-Otl ... , T-2:1'. ~.05'.
Bahashoff Shatters AAU
LOUISVILLE (AP) -Olympic vclcnm
Shirley Babasho!! set one ol ihre< meet
records Thursday aa cempetltion con-
tinued in the Nattonal Amateur Athletic
UnJon Lon~ Course Swimming and Div·
ing Championship<, here.
Miss Babashoff, a. l&-ye&M>ld Fountain
Valley lllgb School atudent, was clocked
in 2:04.635 in the women's 200-meter
lroeatyle W.aklng the previous meet
record ol 2:07.0« set by Keena
Rothhammer of the Santa Clara Swim
Club Nrll~r In the day.
Miss llolhbafruncr challenl"! the final
50 yard.! rut ' the 'har<Hthlklng-M 1;,
llaba.,ho!I was able to hold oil the
challenger.
In last yeer•s Olympics at Munich,
Miss llabaabo!! won a gold medal in the
400-metcr medley relay, a silver medal in
tlie 100-and ~ter freestyle events
and !lnbbed fourth in the 4tll).meter
rre<s1y1e.
Another meet record was set by Jim
Montgomery ol Madison, Wis., in the
men's :zoo.meter lreestyle in a Ume ol
1:53.69&.
Montsomery's time broke his own
remrd of 1:53.962 set earlier Thursday
during preliminary heait, and that
previous record shattered the one of
1:54.& .. t by Mark Spla, winner of seven
gold medals in laat year's Olympics, In
1970.
'rile OJ!ly other meet ~ was set In
the women's too<nettr medley relay
When the Santa Clara A Tum...<lPDIJ>Oled
of Nancy Kirkpatrick, Amy Bettencourt,
lfma Mactnnis and Mbs Rbthhammer,
with a 4:30.131.
6AJLV PILOT JI •
Russians' .,
Propaganda
In Full Gear
MOSCOW. (AP) -The Soviet press Is
pulling oot all stops to ~ct MofCOW as
a spar tsnan's paradise end to
whitewash ugly tncidentS that have
marred the World University G9mes.
Raucous and organi2ed heckling <I
Israeli athletes, denial of visa lo Israeli
journalists and harassment of Soviet
Jews who have tried to attend the games
may have seriously damaged Moscow's
bid to stage the 1980 Summer Olympics.
Some athletes. coaches and vislling
newsmen have also grumbled about the
prison-like security measures, inflexible
bureaucracy, insufficient interpreters, in-
efficient reporting of results, shaky com ..
munications and unin8pif'ed food.
The U.S. delegation was particularly
irate over the Cuban brawl which
disrupted an American-Cuban basketball
game Wednesday night and the very light
admonishment given 1he CUbans by the
Games' technical committee.
II one read ooly the controlled Soviet
press, however, he would never know
such incidents or disputes bad occurred
or would perhaps dismiss them as
nonnal actiom of spirited players, fans
or officials.
Every day since well before the games
opened Aug. 15, the Soviet media bkve
carried glowing accounts of t he
"superlative" handling of the univerSiade
as "proof" of MoscOW's ability to host
the Olympics .
The press bas quoted everyone from
Lord Killanin, president of the lnterna·
tional Olympic Committee, to newsmen.
athletes and coaches, to a cook at
Moscow State University, on the 44ex ..
cellent" facilities.
Some athletes and olllciala said they
\vere misquoted in the Soviet press ac-
counts or that the quotes were
fabricated. Others have said they were
pestered by Soviet journalists to dmy un-
favorable reports by western newsmen.
Some western joumelists ..,ve com·
plained of the "oooslant paranoia In tho
Soviet press" over any criticism, no mat-
ter how minor.
The latest attack on a foreign ne'W'SllWJ
came Thursday in the national youth
newspaper, Komsomolskaya Pravda. It
accused a British oorrespondent -
James Coote of the Sunday Telegra(il -
of attending an Israeli basketball match
Saturday "only to make capital on the
tired theme of imaginary 'persecution' of .
Jews in the soviet Union."
Coote and other journalists had written
that 60-100 SOviet Jews were barred from
attending tne game, even though lley
llad tickets. Komosomohll«lya Pravada
called the report a "Smday canard" and
accused Coote ol-aeelng everywhere
"plainclothesmen, barriers, ushers and
guardians ol the public order."
The article carried the implied warning
that foreign newsmen who write m-
!avorably about the Unlverslty Gem ..
may have trouble getting visas to1mver
(See RU8.S!AN, Page :0) 1
SWIMMIN• t WOMEN'S «It-METER FREESTYLE -1. """ Simmons {U.S., lono 81Kh CCJ, 4:21.I (Gamn
record); 2. JIU Slrwig (U.S., Ar1to!llllt 4:Jt.I; •
Nll<iezhda Mef\lhln11 (Sovi.t Union), 6.. WOMEN'S 100.METER 8UTTERFlY -1, 1rtne Ardtn (U.S., Wa1hl119ton), 1:06.1: 1. Celhy Core~ IU.S., Prlnuton); l . Ai.it•ndra ~ (ioVllt Union), 1:07.S. M!N'S 400-METER FREE$TYlE -1. Jtck
Tln;lotY (U.~ .• USC >. •:02., IG1rntt. rKord); 2. AltK• ander S.l'l'llOl'IOY (Soviet un1on1, ~:l:tl; 3. Jow
N•morldo IBr1ttl!, ~:12.1. MEN'S loo.ME ER 8ACkSTROKt: -1. Dlvfd
JohnllOl'I (U.S .. New ,,,,.XICCIJ, Sf,,; 2. Igor Potl1kln (Soviet Union), l :00.61 l . Eric Fish tC•nMll) 1:00.7. MEN'S .coo.METER FREESTYLE RELAY -I. United StetH IM•rk Elllott, North C1roll1'18 St1l•1
P•ul Tlelte SMUI· Deen AndfrlOl'I, Stanllli'd; IC'"'*h Knoi. T~neuee. l :2'.6; 2. Soviet Union, J:ll; l.
Br11U, 3:55.7. DIVIN•
WOMEN'S HIGH 80.ut.D -1, MUen.1 OucllklW• ICttchofolovakl•), 361 .lSj 2. Hel•lle Dml1rlfv• (SOV'-f Union), J:M,13; l. Alie :i.elln. ISOVlit Union), Jl5.M, WATER l"O\.O l"llMI RWlllll RllMll un11-i s1etu ,, H1H10ery s
Sovltl Union 6, Cuba • ltety 7, West Gtrmeny s Final Sl11ndlng1 -1. Sovlet Union, 10 PO!nts1 z. Cutwl, 6; J. United States, $; llaty, S; S. (tfel Hungary •nd West Gennany, 2.
Chicken Pox
Halts Driver
ONTARIO, Calif. -lndianapGlis
500 rookie of the year Graham
McRae or the STP racing team bas
been feeling out ol sorts for two
weeks.
He woodered why unlil 'lbursday.
Alter three thorough physical ex·
aminations, doctors: at a nearby
hospital made their final diasnosis.
McRae has chicken pox.
Apparently, the rare occurrence
of this childhood disease will not
prevent the driver from making a
qualification alt~ this weekend
fer the Cali!'"11la 500 Sept. 2 at
Ontario Motor Speedway.
Doctors told McRae his level' has
broken, and all he needs is another
14 hours of bed rest. He may be
released for ·today's final practice
sessions.
Record
I
)
• .,
Mcl{aySays
Pe1·fect Year
Doubtf11l
LOS ANGELES -With luck, a g"'/(l
team and n few other Ingredients, coach
.:ohn l\1cKay says his University or
Southern California Trojans ean repeat
as national collegiate football champions.
~tcKay adds: H Looking ahead is for
losers."
Yet 1.1cKay's 14th Trojans team
a ppears better than good. Twenty-si1 let-
termen return, including Anthony Davis,
the do-f:verything tailback; nne-armed
junior quarterback . Pat l:laden and
Richard Wood , the big,. quick linebacker
who was AU-American last year as a
sophomore.
"I'd say our chances of another perfect
season are not very good," says h1cKay.
whose Trojans \vent 12-0 last season and
will try to moke their unbeaten streak 18
games Sept. 15 against Arkansas in
Memorial Coliseum.
Odds of any collegiate team going
undefeated and untied are long, and the
Southern Cal schedule offers ample oir
portunity for a fall. After Arkansas, USC
goes to Georgia Tech, then hosts
Oklahoma , last year's No. 2 team in the
nation but perhaps hurt by Big 8 pro-
bation for the next · two y e a r s -
Washington and UCLA are the Trojans·
primary Pacific-I contenders, and tben
there's Notre Dam e waiting at South
Bend on Oct. Tl. "Our schedule is about
the same as last year ," says l\1cKay
'"It 's always tough."
~1cKay's offensive line has been
depleted by graduation -All·American
tight end Charles YoWlg. tackle Pete
Adams, center Dave Brown and guards
Allan Grar and l\1ike Ryan. He also must
replace defensive tackles John Grant and
Jeff Winans.
·'We've Jost some high quality football
players but I think we have quality
returning,," he said. "A Jot of those guys
are being replaced by men who aren 't
exactly new faces."
Steve Riley and Booker Bro'>''n are two
offensive forwards who played plenty last
year. and 285-pound tackle h1ik~ McGirr
is back alter missing 1972 with knee
surgery. . .
At the so-called skilled offensive PoSJ-
tions, the Trojans have great depth -
exce pt at quarterback where Haden
takes over full-time from the graduated
i\like Rae. who is playing in Canada.
Lynn SwaM is a polished flanker and
punt returner and J . K. P.1cKay. the
coach's son. proved his worth at split end
as a sophomore. There are other
receivers but the great strength is at
tailback, where Davis, Rod McNeill and
Allen Carter return.
Davis. the 5-foot-9, 1 9 0 -po Q n d
sophomOre sensation, rushed for 1,191
yards, caught 18 passes for 132 more and
returned 12 klckoC!s 468 yards. He
scored 19 toucMowns. handled kickoff
chores and passed for a two-Point con-
version.
A3. if that's not enough, l\-1cKay has
given him Rae's placekicking job.
"Tbat means he will do everything but
pump up the balls," quipped McK~y.
Davis showed he has recovered from in-
juries suffered in an auto accid~nt ~y
playing on USC's national cbamp1onsh1p
baseball team.
McKay called the 1972 Trojans his best
team. even better than the 1962 and 1967
national championship squads. and he
believes last year's sophotnores and
juniors ·'should improve."
'
BACK TO
SCHOOL
SPECIALS!
1964 VOLVO
122 CPE.
1 eyl .• 4 speed, r•Cllt, heater IOTS6t
Mew reel ptlt!I tllClc 111119111.
$877
1970 VW BUG
6 CJI .. ' sPffll, rltll9, llul1r tS1101E. °' t•teft '"'· llolKll 1111.
$1377
1967 VOLVO
4 DR 144
,11,., tr1111.. r•,;f, llt•ltt
"'""' ••'·· "" kit,
$1177
1970 TOYOTA
COlllONA 4 DR
• cyt.., 11¥19. Ir.,, ... ,...1 ...... ,.,.
JaAOD. 1,.rti1l111 -11.lll., lllt, ....
$1277
Golde11 West Grid Hopefuls
Mile Record Safe,
Says Wes Santee
By STEVE 811.<ND
Of Ille 01111 Pl .. I lit ..
Take it from a mrut who could easily
have been America's first sub-four
minute miler : There isn't a runner tod~y
who can break Jim Ryun's world mile
record ol 3:51.1.
'''Ibe Africans may revolutionize the
mile with their fast early pace," says ex-
Kansas great Wes Santee, "but I can't
see any d them breaking the record.
They have lot& of talent, but to get under
3:51.l, it'll take more than that."
Santee, a reserve Lt. C.ol. who spent
last month at the Marine Corps Air Sta·
tkMl in Santa Ana, thought Ryun's record
~'OUld fall by now.
"Marty Liquori had all ol the
necessary ingredients," Santee says. ''He
had outstanding speed, good strength but
most important, he had a great desire to
win,
"He beat Ryun in all the important
races even though Ryun, in my estima·
tion, had more talent. The only problem
with Marty was that be had lltUe com-
petition and then, just when he ~as get·
ling ready for a record run, he mjured
himself.
WES SANTEE
"Since 1 was invited to compete in a
few seniors (over 40) events this year,"
he says, "I decided to apply for another
AAU eligibility card. It's been 18 years
since they took one away l'rom me.
Mike Purcell (left) of Costa Mesa, returns at de-
fensive safety for the Golden West College Rust-
lers this season. He is pictured checking out equip-
ment this week with freshman Darroll McCue from
Lynwood. McCue is a defensive tackle and weighs
in at 220 pounds.
"1be ideal stature would be Ryun's tall
and lanky with good speed," says Santee.
"Put Llqoori's detennfnatlon into Ryun's
frame and tbe record would be 3:48 or
3:49."
Santee lost out on the opportunity to
become America's fll'St &&four minute
miler when the year after he dipped under
4:01 three times he was banned for life
by the AAU for reportedly taking ex-
cessive per diem funds. Per diem in 1954
was $1Z a day and a train -that's right,
train -ticket to the competition.
"I sent in my $2, hoping t'hey'd raise
hell. lnstead, they just gave me a card."
Right after he wa.s barwed from com·
petition, he tried to get Roger Bannister
and John Landy to join him on a pro
tour . Event,s for Most Ages
In Anteaters Olympiad
Ever had a yen to ·compete in a
\l'at ered-doY:n version of the Olympic
Games "·ith such events as horseshoes,
nine-iron pitching, softball throw for
distance and free throw shooting taking
the place of the more strenuous events
on the Olympic caJendar?
If so. take heed of the first annua1
Anteaters Olympiad to be staged at UC
Jrvine Saturday. Oct. 6.
Sponsored by the Big I Boosters Club_
1he competition Y.'ill offer 14 events for
men and 12 for \Vernen including a
special rolling pin throwing contest.
Four age groups will compete begin·
ning with the 21-31 bracket and moving to
32-42, 43-53 and 54 and over.
Golf Results
RALEIGH, N.C. IAP) -Flr5 t.ro1.1nCI Kores Thurs-
oay In !t>t" SlOC,000 L&M Open Golf Toorn1mff>t on
•he 6.TB6-~~r(I, 01r 3'-J.S-71 M1cGregor Coonlrv C.l1.1b
coorw C•-d-les amateur!;
O<ive E!c~lber~er
Bud Allin
Bert Gree~ Dan Sikel
Lff Wykle
J . C. Snead
Allen Miiier
Joe Carr
Reiger Y/a!iOO
Byron C.:.rmtoc.k Joe PortN
Ken Still Rocky ThomD.500 Fro1nk Bear(I DeWitt WNYlt
O••ih! NP\ltl
f(I ""'° Jefry McGee David Gralldm
Je>lln Mahaffey Tommv McGl01ni• Die~ Hen1terickso'1 Cnris BJoc~er
Larry 'lll~e B.:i~ Hl1ke~
1'-ll -67
:s-31-61
3'3-3'-'1 ,,_,,_..
.;J.JS-441
Jl.:lt.-611 JJ-lS--611 34-l,--611 ,,.,.._., ,.,,__.,
?7-n-M J.1-J~• ~l}-6' 1~35--70 Jl-31-70
lA·J6-.70 ,.,._,,
1'-:i.-10 lS-1~10 36.:µ_70
1'·3'-10 3'·36-70 Jl-ll-70 l7·D-11l )5->.S--70
l'·l6--10
Competition begins at 9 and enc.ls at
4:45.
Scoring will be similar to the decathlOfl
with points given on the basis of
perfonnance.
Awards will be given lo winners of
each event in each age group. Special
awards will be presented to the top male
scorer in each age group entered in any
eight events and top female scorer en-
tered in any six events.
\Vith exception of the shot put. punl·
pass-kick. batting and h o r s e s h o e s ,
women will participate in the same
events as the men with the rolling pin
throw limited to feminine competitors.
Here's the list of men's events: 50-yard
dash, 44~yard run, long jump, high
jump, shot put, softball throw (for
distance), batting (number or balls hit
fair in 15 swings), football (punt-pass-
kick ), basketball (free throwing), tennis
(number of 10 backhands and 10
forehands returned inbounds). golf ~ 10
swings \\'i.th a nine-iron for accuracy}.
basketball (dribbling), horseshoes and
SY.'imming (50 yardsi.
An entry fee of $5 will allo\v
participants to compete in any or all
events with no admission fee for spec·
ta tors.
Entry forms and further information
may be obtained at the athletic office in
Crawford Hall on the UCI campus or by
calling IJ33.j;93l.
At conclusion of the day-long c&1n ·
petition. there will be a family barbcque
with a charge of $2.50 for adults and .51.f'IO
for children.
Baseball Standings
American League
EH st
II' L
Baltimore 71 02
Boston 68 . 57
Detroit 6'J 58
New York 68 61
J\1ilwaukec 60 64
Cleveland 52 75
\\'est
Oakland 7' 52
Kansas City i3 55
i\'linncsota 59 66
California 58 65
C'hicago fi9 67
Texas 43 81
Tll11rsd"v'1 G•mt1 C~!ltorni1 a, Mllw"u~e1 J Only 9emt SCtle(!Uled
Totl1v'1 Games
Pel. GB
.5i7
.544 4
. 540 41.,
.527 6
.464 11 \1
.4119 21
.587
.570 2
.fi2 l41z
.4i2 14 11~
.468 15
.347 30
Kans•' Cl!y CFlllmorrl5 .5-H at B~l!frnort !McNiolly 12-IJ) r ~xa' ISi<ibert 6-11) al c11.,.l•nd fTfmmermon 6-41 Oelroil !loli(h 12-11) al ChlCilllO <WOod 2';111
~·;1w1ukee !Bell t.S) If Mlnnno11 !Gollt1 '·l! New York IMl!dlch 10-61 I I O.kt.ncl {Hun! .. l>JI
6ostOt1 (Lee lJ-Bl ill CaUlorn~ IL•na• 1-01
s1111"'••'1o Gamt1 MHwa~kee d! Mlnrt!!W!I °'''°'' ~! (hitl'J(J K~n1as City a! a111ttmo-e
New Vo·~ 3t Oat1an-o Te.as at C!e~e11ne1
B°'ton 1! C1lilornl•
SllllCli1¥'S GlnM1 Te~•s al Cl•wlaow:I, 2 ~l•Qil at Ch•c•oo. ' llilwau~ee al Mlnoaso11
New Vo•~ 11 01ktand
1C1nsa1 Cl•y 11 e 11t1lmort
Boston 11 C11!tornla
National League
East w L
St. Louis 64 62
Pittsburgh 61 62
Chicago 61 65
Montreal 59 66
Philadelphia 59 67
New York 57 68
\Vest
Los Angeles 18 49
Cincinnati 76 53
San Francisco 70 55
l-Iouston 66 &l
Atlanta 61 68
San Diego 46 80
Tll~rl(lly's C1mn
c 11k1ao '· Cl~ionatl ), 10 innln~ Phllad1lohl1 6, S•n Oie{IO J LOS Anllf!~ S, New York ~ Only ao1me1 1che(l~li!'Cl TlllllY'I t1m~
Pct. GB
.508
.496 I \I
.484 3
.412 4\1
.468 5
.456 61'>
.614
.589 3
.560 7
.512 13
.416 18
.365 31 \I
Los Ar19ele$ (John 11-1) at PhlladolPhl• fTw!tCheU
12..Sl
San Ole110 fGreit 7-lll 11 Monlreal (Moore 1-121 San Fr1nc1,co · (M1r!(h~1 10-9) at New York
!Koosman 9-1 ')
"
51. Looi• (F'OSltr lfJ..6) 11 Clnclnn1tl 1aHU1'ghlfl'I 11.-
PIU•INrgh (6rllt~ 1'·11) 11 A!"-inla IP. Nlekro IJ4)
Cnl(ljlO (Hooton \().II) ii Hooston Uttl/51 ll -9)
Sal~td~•'s G1rnes S~o Francisco d1 New Yor~ SI. LOU" at Clrn;lnl'tall Plllsburgll 11 Atlanta
Los Anotl n ar Pllllllc:lelphla
Sin OltOO 11 Mootre11 CM<olOO 111 Hoosloo S\lllday•i Glmtl Los Angeles 111 Ph!i.Gelohl•
S•n Fr1ncl!Ko 11 Ntw VOtk Sao 0 19911 .JI Moolre81 St. Loo!1 ill Clnclnn1U Plllsburah 111 At11n1a C.hltaoo a t HM !or>
\Continued from Page 19)
RUSSIAN ...
the Olympics if they are held in Moscow.
''ll is only an ill-\visher who could write
such absurd things," said the newspaper.
··\Vas it v.·orthwhile for Mr. Coote to go
to Moscow and get accredited at the
Universiade in order to invent such
nonsense?''
The article referred only obliquely to
heckling of the Israeli basketballers by
Red Army soldiers who pai!ked the tiny
gym : "It is no surprise that the fans at
lhe match were frequently delighted by
the ma stery of Cuban team," adding that
the Israeli squad "does not stand so high
on the world scale."
CaI\'5 Don Bowden eventually earned
the honor in 1957 as the fll'St U.S. su~
four minute miler.
The ·fonner Jayhawks 'Oash who still
lives and operates an insurance business
in Lawrence, 5ays if ·the identical situa·
lion happened to him today (the ban),
there's no way it would stick.
"A person's civil rights are more pro-
tected today," he says. "Besides, the
AAU violated one ol its rules by not su~
mftting the case in the allotted time. It
would be tossed out ol. court today."
Santee has gotten a measure o£
revenge, however.
But pro track wasn't to arrive until
1973.
"I'm pleased it finally came," Santee
says of the pros.
"If the AAU and USOC hadn't been so
stubborn. it would have come earlier.
You know," he adds, "it seems I spent ·
half my life argu.ing with those guys. And
things are just as bad as ever."
It wasn't said bitterly, just maller-d·
ractl y.
"?ro track is a good idea. Tt'll allow
runners to stay in the sport. Heck, that's
what has hurt track, losing itJ big
names," Santee adds.
"Besides it 'll attract more Interest
and that ~ans records like Ryun's will
become vulnerable." \Viii Grimsley. special COITespondent or
the Associated Press. was attacked in the
newspapers Sovielsky Sport. 'I'rud and
Izvestia for writing about the losses of
the American team's credentials a~
plications and the emergency ap-
pendectomy on a U.S. gymnast.
V.S. Track Performance
While lacking credentials. part of the
U.S. team was kept virtual prisoner in
the Moscow State University compound,
\\'here all athletes are quartered, and had
trouble getting meals.
Doesn't Worry Al_britton
The papers also took issue with the
quote of the U.S. team doctor. who said
medical facilities for the appendectomy
"are not exactly \vhat we are ac-
customed to back in the states." But the
quote was attributed to Grimsley, not the
doctor, in the Soviet Press.
The Soviet media countered conunents
on the blandness and heaviness of
Russian food with a Jong Tass article
headlined : "everyone is satisfied with
the food." It quoted cooks. cateren and
diners at the university's cafeteria.
Sovietsky Sport, the national daily ,
pubUshed this week what it called a
typical menu for the visiting athletes. lt
described sumptuious hors d'oeuvres.
boiled stu rgeon, lavishly garnished and
abundant fruits end vegetables.
A group of British track men were
stx)\vn the account and one of them burst
out laughing: "This guy should be
writing novels."
Favorites Due
At Bike Races
You can tell the weekly speedway
motorcycle comeptitioo at the Orange
County rairgrounds is heating up,
When action resumes tonight at 8: ts .
there will be several grudge matches, but
it'll be hard to find any more spectacular
than last Friday night's five-bike spill.
Wheo the pack roonded the final tum
Fountam Valley's Danny Becker decided
to improve bis position by charging
through the group led by Tustin's Dave
Galvin.
Instead, Becker somehow tang!~ with
. the group and the result was Galvtn was
the onJy one to fmish without falling. The
rest of the pack got back on their bikes,
already looking ahead to tonight.
Terry Albritton, former Newport
Harbor High shot putter who recently
completed an undefeated tour of Europe
with the Unrted States Junior track team
isn't alarmed at Uncle Sam's showing at
the World University Games in Moscow.
"There's only one place where the
United States sends a team of its best
STEVE
BRAND
people and that's the Olympic Games,"
says Albritton. "Things like the World
University Games are a perfect setup for
the Socialist countries. They tell their
athletes lo go and they have to go.
"Some of our best people had just
rinished a tiring European campaign and
":eren't ready for another major com-
petiUon. Disappointed in our showing?
Not when you look at who was on the
team."
There are three Oruge Coast area
players on tbt UCLA football team and
pockets of former prep standouts at
Oklahoma, Nebraska aDd Stanford.
The three at UCLA are former Laguna
Beacb Wgb standout Steve Klosterman,
ex-Marina Hlgb and Orange Coast
College Danker Steve Mooabu and
former Costa Mesa High and Orange
Coast College tack.le Pat Sweetland.
Sweetland wilt piny middle guard for
tbe Bruins while Monahan ls listed as a
split end.
The success of girls like 15-year~ld
Mary Decker of Garden Grove has really
rekindled interest in girls track and field.
The age group program. which has
produced stwmingly good y~ athletes
in the longer distances on the gtrls level.
should help the U.S. improve on the no
gold medal fiasco in the Munich O~
pics. But the days or the U.S. girls Just
stepping ooto the trade and winning the
sprints is obviously a thing of. the past
Rumors are cftulnting that Filbert
Bayl, the !leosatlonal ZO..year-old Tanza-
nian who ran a 3:34,, for 1500 mecer1
(Jim Ryun's world record is 3:S3.I) last
year. i1 ticketed for Cal State (Lone
Beacb).
II it'1 true, Ille USC, Cal -I Long Beach) and UC trvl.oe meet Id: for Feb.
%3 at Irvine, will tale on added •terest.
UCI fl al!O lntert1ittd In a couple or
foreigna-s and, according to coach Bill
Toomey, "If we land these guys, you
"·on•t be able to get a seat to that USC.
Cal State (Long Beach) meet"
* As a prelude to the summer basketball
playoffs recently at Cal State (Los
Angeles), a group of prep all-stars
destroyed a similar group from Brazil.
The standout in the American group,
including such players as City Player Of
the Year Marquis Johnson of Crenshaw.
Lewis Brown of Verbum Dei and Richard
\Yashlngton, UCLA 's newest 7-foot er
from Oregon, was San Jo a q u In
Memorial's Cliff Pondexter.
That's good news for former Marina
High mentor Lute Olson, the new 49ers
coach.
TU~~g ~~mm!~og!~~h~IS
COSTA MESA TENNIS . CLUB
10 LESSONS 510
Black Velvet
feels good
UNDIR THI DlllCTION Of TIMMIS PIOS ••• e RUSTY MOORE ond MIKE DUNN e
REGISTRATIONS: AUG. 25
IC01111 1atly f or 11111r1d •ftrollm111tl
• Morning • Afternoon e Evening Cl11111 •
Beginning · lnt1rmedi1t1 • Adv1nctd
JUNIORS and ADULTS
••r lnfOn!llffM ctn -COSTA M.1'.lA Tt:Nl'llS CLlll -1n.a11
880 JUNIPERO DR., COST A MESA
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
on you.
Smooth Canadia n.
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Friday, Augusl 24, 1973 DAILY PILOT 2J
Start Your
Engines!
Low Net 128
WITH DEKE HOULGATE 4 Share Honors
In Women's Golf
While the original operators of Ontario Motor Speedway
were losl~g $9.6~111I6n In lh(ee years, they were not Jetting
JX.>0p\e drive th r ears lnto the infield because they didn't
want fans to harr thClr $200,000 aprlnkler system.
Consequently, infield customers quickly learned they had to
park their cars outside the speedway and walk around to where
tunnels led to lhc infield -distances from one to four miles.
In the hot sun that's a long walk. Families who do It once usua'i·
ly dOtl'l agaio.
A$ a result, the cheap infield tickets dido 't sell, a fact whlch
may have cost former operators more than JI ml!Uoo in ticket
sales and deprived n lot of spectators of the opportunity to at·
tend good raelng shows.
This has chJ.na:ed under new management. which is partly
made up of. lndlailapolls Motor Speedway personnel. Faru ca11
not only dnve into the infield, they can park there overnight
before the race, If they are willing to pay a small extra fee.
Clar~ce Cagle, superintendent of both Indy and ontario
lracks, f1iUfed out how to protect the sprinklers. His crew
si1nply have unscrewed the heads and capped them so that
nothing can hurt thelI\.
* * * Caglc's !iln1plisllc approach to accommodating fans by ellm·
inatlng needless problems mny res ult In making O~IS a more
friend ly, pleasant place to go watch a race when the Callforn.la
500 ls held Sept. 2.
For Instance, be bWI 1noved the lost children area away from
speedway llrat aid stations, relieving medical personnel from
their annual babysitting chores.
Two of the most 1et1ous medJcal problems on.race day bav•
been exposure (beat and sun ) and dninkenneu, often combined.
To relieve congestion at flnt aid stations -as many as 700
patients being treated at one time -be has ordered extra air-
conditioned trailers placed around tbe speedway. Tbls will
crtate mort medical faC:llltles and more shade for beat victims.
* * * There have been many complaints that traffic jams to and
rrom lhe spccdv.'ay on race day have worsened each year. Cagle ,
the mastermind of Indianapolis' amazingly efficient traffic plan,
has already taken that up with police in Ontario and the Califor-
nia llighwa y Patrol.
··1 /particularly ) brought the getaway traffic situation up in
a traffic meeting. We 've been assured that officers will be on
duty arter the race. I have every reason to believe it will op-
erate efficiently. Everybody involved wants this place to be a
success."
The first thing Cagle did when he took charge about June 1
\\•as lo order a major weed abatement program, which is still
going on. He was fea rful of fire, because everything -landscap-
ing as well as weeds -was so dry. His crews have pumped as
n1uch water as gpeedway wells can take out of the ground onto
the infil'ld grass. The place Is starting to turn green again.
The 86.000 permanent grandstand seats have been thoroughl y
v.•ashed down . cleanup crews have picked up all the litter and
most other problems of neglect due to the six-month speedway
~hutdown are under control.
Fa11gio Tlghl.•fbled
Juan ~1anuel Fangio, the five-time world driving champion, is
ro tight-fisted v.·lth a cruzeiro that he saves his used gum to
t hew later and bums cigarettes rather than buying them, des·
pile his enormous wealth.
?\:like Hawthorn and Peter Collins used to flip cigarette
>ults at the celling' of a hotel in Modena , Italy, to try to make
them stick. but the P.1arquis de Portago outdid them. He made
ii sling out of his napkin and hurled pats of butter at the ceiling.
. Once on the East African Rally while repairs were being
11ade on his car, Stirling Moss heard heavy breathing and looked
ip, face to face with a full-grown lion. He immediately went for
iis camera . lo taken picture of the beast.
These and many other illuminating anecdoles are coolained
n the latest book on worldwide racing stars of the last two
Jecades. Grand Jlrlx Cbamplo1s by Mary SchnaU Heglar
I Bond/Parkhurst Books, Newport Beach , $7.95).
It is a series of sketches on world champions from Alberio
o\"Cari ( 1950) to Emerson F1ttipaldi ( 1972) with a very keenly
lefined analysis of racing driven in general in the foreward
ind a statistical section in the back for settling arguments.
Like most books of this type it is basically biographical.
illed y,•ilh the sort of hero worship quotations that only a died·
n·the-y,·ool fan would prize. But there are enough bright and
nformative passages lo make it worthwhile.
* * * ··~totor racing is impossible to be safe," l\loss told the
uljlaw', •·and I think that because It Is dangerous Is one of the
caSons that people come to IC. Not boplng to see anybody hurt.
ut -I think 11'11 rather like If I go to a circus and I see a muo
n a high wire watching him. I don't want to see him fall -
ut I y,·ant to st>e him sort of 1h11ke a bit.''
The llfe or the party title must go to GrahAm lllll, who b a
1ell known raconteur, arter-dinner speaker, talk show guest and
!lier of all shades of jokes. 11111'1 greatest act, however, b a
trip tease. com plete with bumps, grinds "and a J\ft. Rashmo~
xpression worthy of the toughest cookie In Saa Frandaco'1 ten·
erloln," says the author.
Emersnn Fltllpuldl and the sntter super-star Pele are great
riends and admirers of each other . In mld-197%, when the Bra-
ilian dr:lver was racing toward the "·orld title, Pele sent him bill
oceer iihlrt for good luck. When FftUpaldi woo the next race, he
cnt bis lllCtory trophy lo Pele .
* * * Jimmy Clar k awuy from !he track deligh ted in donning kilts
nd dancing Sconish jigs. oflen with other Scottish drivers as
artners. Once he and Jackie Ste,vart got carried away with
1eir tv.•irling and fell into the shrubbery. Another lime his part·
C"r Innes Ireland ended the dance when a prankster slipped a
\.Ictus plant up under the kilt.
Jochen Rindt crashed at Monza 20 rect from the mobile hos-
ital. Instea d or taking him there, medics put him in an am-
ulance for a 45-mlnute ride to Miian. during which their police
scort got lost. When they arrived, Rindt was dead.
Phil Hill 's parents died within weeks of each other in 1951 .
hey had nevl'r Approved of hi s racing, but with his small in·
C'rltance and a loan from his brother Jerry he bought a Fer-
&ri race car.
"How do you lcll that to a reporter?" he asked. "My parents
ied so I bought a f'errarl."
Deep Sea Fisli Report
ln a guest day invitational
tournament at Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Club this
week , a score of 126 captured
low net honors in the tw...-tfet·
ter balls ot foursome com-
pet!Uon.
In first place were Vi
Hoskln5 of the bost club; Uz
Shattuck of San Juan Hills;
Paula Novak of Anaheim
Hills; and Barbara Williams
of San Bernardino.
In second place at 130 were
Dee Asher, Betty Jo Sleva,
Providence P a y n e and
l!fargaret Winder. Third place
went to Jane Fohl, Jeannie
Chabot, VI Saxton and Elise
Stipes at 132.
Laura Cantland, H .a z e I
Molica. Eleanor Greer and
Katherine Swanson finilbed
with 133.
Four teams tied at 134 in·
cludlng Audrey Lee, Jean
Meadows, Olarlene Collins
and Sonia Kelley; Kay Fu-
jihara, LoLs Hopi, VI vi an
Troutman and VI Theiss;
Barbara Morton, V I r g i n i a
Stevens, Jean Kuhn and
Norine Grady ; and Dorothy
DeVries, Lois GleM, Jean
Dalpee and Pat Lackner.
At 135 were Clndy Aten,
Doris Ball, Jane Hoagland and
Lois Clevenger. Also Hazel
Webster, Violetta O'Gara. Kay
~laine and Nora Morales.
Bette Sanders. Vo n d a
Adams, Ruth Mcintyre and
Dottie Allen finished in a tie
at 137 with Antta Appleton ,
Mary Staggers, Mary Evelyn
lmler and Evelyn Gonnan.
Big Can"o"
~!embers of the Big Canyon
Country Club women's golf
Alamitos
Racing
Results
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Al111 r11n -R01'"1'' lttct\lffl, S01nl11t Lov., Al•rnllllf $1ep, Mr. 111\POfftnl.
0.MI W1ltfl, ltirrr Mc:GN, 11'11 IYll· dlc111.
St r1lclltd -,lr,lll Crlc~att. Bud I.rt.
Hutlllr lll'IWl'f,
HINTM RAC• -400 y1rd1. J v••r eldt. c111m1no. Pur11 Sl7llO. P'rtttlflCI
IWltll)
Ruffin RHltY \CrosbY) Hadel 11 You Mon11l
Timi -70.ll.
JAO 2.M ''* J.JO t ,M ....
AIM rMI -llay .. Pt,..,_. SW.a-, r-Clllnt T-. H•r•t" o-.
Trvi:llnn """'· '°"""" Ck!, NIOll.1. $cr1kri.ct -Tom's l1r.
group staged a low ball or
toursome tournament on guest
day recently.
f'irft place in lhe low gross
competition went to Deane
Helperin and her guest Lucille
Paddock of Mesa Verde CC
along with Ada Hallet and her
guest Caroline Gray of Irvine
Coast CC. They posted a bet-
ter ball score of 74 .
In the low net action, Bever-
ly Peck and guest Sally Kaiser
of San Diego CC teamed with
Virginia Schoemar and Lee
Butler of Irvine Coast CC for
a 57 and first place honors.
Second place ended in a tie
with Pat Anich and guest
Katie Gardner of Irvine Coast'
CC teamed with Ann Holstein
and Joyce Lester, also of
Irvine Coast CC, at 61.
On the othet team were
Margaret lmbrecht with Es
Jacobson ol Bermuda Dunes
along with Helen Anderson
and guest Gladys Bemis of
Santa Ana CC.
Sea'cllff
J\tabel Christianson was the
first flight winner in a criss-
cross tournament for
members of the women 's club
at Huntingtm Seaclilf Cowitry
Club this week as she posted a
score of :n.
In s~ place was Ann
Mays with 33 followed by Kay
Moser and Marilyn Jones with
33~2. Rosemary Erickson was
next at 34.
In the seCQnd flight it was
Edee Nannes the winrler with
29 'h:. Others included June
Claflin (31 1h ). Aileen Allen
(32), Helen Cowden (321fl) and
Hazel 1t1ollica (33).
Irene Pare with a 30 was the
1one third Oie:ht winner.
Mabel Christianson took
first in A Oight with 71 to cap-
ture the low net tournament
for members of the women's
golf club at Huntin~on ScR-
cliff Country Club this \vef'k
Second was Vanda Peterson
With 74. Cuba Curl and Ann
li1aves lied f()r third at 78.
Aileen Allen was second
Oight winner with 75, followed
bv Liz Brandenburg (n).
Mary Vander Sommen and
Helen Hodl{es at 79. Hazel
Mollica and Alice Acklin tied
for fourth at 80.
Third Di~t honors went to
Gloria stinson and Norma
Pard with 79s.
1'11sslon l'lejo
It was a point tournament
where one point is given for a
bogey, two for a par and three
for a birdie and substracted
from net scores. for members
or the women's club at l\fission
Viejo Golf Club this week.
Open Batza was the winner
with 36 followed by Cece
Coury with 34 and Nadine
l!faze at 33.
It will be a better ball of
twosome competition n e x t
week on guest day.
El Nig11el
Jane Robertson is the cap-
tain of tbe A team that will
represent El Niguel Country
Club or Laguna Niguel in the
fall team matches that begin
Sept. II.
Beth Henderson will pilot
the B team with with the first
match for El Niguel aitainst
Big Canyon Country Club at
Palos Verdes.
Under the format establish-
ed for the competition. teams
do not play on their home
courses but host one match
between two other squads dur-
ing the season. There are 10
players on each team.
Jean Le.Bon and Kay Horn
both broke 90 ror the (irst time
and each shot an 88 to ac-
complish the milestone in
their golfing careers.
El Niguel club champion
Ann Teel and president Lor·
raine Impey are participating
in the 16th annual 54·hole
stro~e play tournament for the
\Vomen's Southern Ca lifornia
Golf Association .
Also playing at El Niguel in
the first round Tuesday were
Mrs. Arthur Waxler\ "1rs.
William Deeble and Mrs.
Sidey Leff of Old Ranch cc
of Seal Beach: Mn. Thoma!
D. "fajor of lrvine Coast CC ;
and Mrs. John Conley and
Mrs.. Iona Mouron or Santa
Ana CC.
Action moves to Rancho
8anla Fe and Lomas Santa Fe
later in-the week.
Artists Exatns
Laguna Beach 11 1 g h · s
pbylical examinalions for all
water Polo and cross country
candldat .. wJII be held In tbe
school gym Wednesday.
Athletes abould report to the
gym at 9 a.m.
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&Z 1,1~1L'I' PILOT f",tday, Augusl 24, \q73
Weeke11•I Calendar Adams Cup Serles
T,vo Top Events
.Set Off Balboa
. Ha1bor Sa:il.Brette. "ying .
~· ~ ' I , I" ,; ~'... '" ' Grccnwr · 'l'h'e scrios sta~ ·~uiJf;eom~tition will be In
"" '' 1.t' .. r b 0 ,· f\1onda)'.':ind continues throu)tl SO~.t,;las.s 11loops. !hr .. , Newpcrt .,.,. wOmen ·'are en route to ~-;•:...:__; _______ .;_ ______ -1
Two of the oldest and most
prestigious yachting events on
the loCal yachting calendar
are sched uled to be sailed in
the ocean off Balboa this
weekend .
Nlne o! the top Hhodes-33
skippers wi ll co1npetc Sunday
for the &b \\1hile Trophy in a
sudden-death race th at has
come to be kno\vn since 1951
as the Balboa Ch11llenge rare.
Voyagers ''acht Club h::is
t a k e n over the sole
sponsorship or the unique
Seaman of the Year race
which is also scheduled to be
sailed Sunday. On Saturday
VYC will also host its Abalone
Triangle race, a feature of the
Massey Midget Series for
PHRF and fl10RF yachts.
Greenwich, conn. today to be
Saturday. Sunday. on hand ~1onday for the start
LOS ANGELE..'i YACHT of the North American Ynchl
CLUB -All Sabot tnvltntioMI Racing Union's Adams Cup
Reaatta, Saturday. series to determining the
IIUNTINGTON HARBOUR women's North American sail·
YACHT CLUB -Small Boat ing chal)lptonshlp.
Invitational Regatta, Sunday. The team of Caro I y n
LONG BEACH YACHT Newcomb, skipper and crew
CLUB -Prince of \Vales Bowl members Rosie ( ~1 rs .
finals . fl1onday through Fri· Graham) Jones aod Barbara
day, Aug. 27·31. (Mrs. Steve) Barnard won the
Santa ~fonJea Bay right to represent NA YRU 's
MALIBU YACHT CLUB -Area G (California) in
f\1ailbu Outrigger National / quarter-final and semi·final
Championship, Saturday, Sun· races sailed during the spring
day. and early summer.
PAClFIC ltf A R I N ER S The Adams Cup is awarded
''ACHT CLUB -Cal-28 Na-11La.. .,. __ .... .._ __ ,..,_..._ ..... ____ ~~ .-_,_....,.._·=~-"" ·to the winner of the event
tional Championship, Satur· which is composed or finalists
day, Sunday. AREA G FINALISTS - F laking down a sail on their Soling sloop after a from nine areas of the U.S.
SOUTH COAST CORINTll-r,ractice r ace a re Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ad ams Cup finalists {from and Canada.
JAN YACHT CLUB_ Pacifie eft) Carolyn NeWcomb, skip per, a nd crew Rosie Jones and Barbara Barnard. This yea r's Adams Cup
Palisades Trophy Race. They will represent California in the Ada1ns Cup finals for the women's North regatta is sponsored by the In·
Any man loves
a touch of
Black Velvet.
Smooth Canadian.
ORIGINALLY THE Balboa
Challenge Trophy race was
sailed in Los Angeles Harbor a
week following the 1\tidwinter
Regatta.
c AL 1 F 0 RN 1 A YACHT American sailing c ha mpionship a t Greenwich, Conn. sta rting Monday. dian Harbor Yacht Club or
CLUB -h.1alibu and return :;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=f~~~=~f~~~~;;;;;;.;;;~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I race, (Matt Walsh Series No. I
6) Saturday. Sunday; P-Cat
Nationals Saturday, Sunday.
It was shifted to the waters
of the defending club after St.
Francis Yacht Club won it in
the early 1960s.
Defender this year is Bill
Taylor of lbe host Balboa
Yacht Club. Challengers ex-
pected on the starting line are
Ken Weiss, Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club: Dave Stone,
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club :
Roy CUndiff, Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club; \Vally Spring-
stead, San Diego Yacht
Club; Henry Schofield, Long
Beach Yacht Club; Oscar
Clevidence, Newport Harbor
Yacht Club, Larry Smith, Sa n
Francisco Yacht Club, and
Don 1r1cNeil, Los Angeles
Yacht Club.
'I'HE SEA1\.1AN or" the Year
race is one of th e most
unu s u al races sai l e d
anywhere. The results ·are
based more on feats of
seamanship than speed over
the course.
The race is open to yachts in
the PHRF and M 0 F R
categories. It starts at 1 p.m.
off the Balboa Pier. Ou the
rirst windward leg the crew
\Viii be required to make a
heads'l change -whether
needed or not -and on the
leeward leg there \Viii be a
s i m u I a t e d man-overboard
drill. other fea ts include reef·
ing the mains'I, shaking out
the reef and spinnaker jibing.
After crossing lbe finish line
the boats must anchor and
secure the sails before they
are considered to be fin is hed.
The finish ls recorded when
the crew goes below deck and
only the observer and skipper
are in the cockpit.
SOUTH ERN Ca I i for n i a
Yachting calendar:
Los Angeles·Long ~acb
ALAMITOS BAY YACHT
CLUB -Coronado - 5 Na·
tional Championship, today.
. "'
Coostol Weather
Moulv sun!'l'f today. Light varlablt
wll'ICll nigh! •nd mor!'lll'lll tlourt t>e<:orn-
illll wnl 10 sooth~Slerly t to 15 knots
In antrflOOl'ls lod•v •nd Sa1ur11ay.
Hl9h today, upptr 60s.
CoaUill IMT1Ptri1tur11 rtl'llle from ~
to 70. Inland temperarurts range trom
'' to 71. Weter 1amperaturt 70.
S1111, 1'10011, Tides
CORON AIJ0.25 ASSOC!A·
TION -Class Regatta, Sun·
day.
Newport-Dal boa
VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB
-Abalone Trinagle (Massey
Midget Series) Saturday.
Seaman of the Year Race,
Sunday.
San Diego
CORONADO YACHT CLUB
-San Clemente Island race.
starts today.
North and lnland
ANACAPA YAC HT CLUB -
Anacapa Race. Saturday.
SANTA BARBARA SAIL·
1NG CLUB -Handi cap Race,
Sunday.
SANTA aAR BARA YACHT
CLUB -Ladies Day Series ,
Sunday.
Wales Cup
P1u·sued
By Deaver
Dick Deaver of Newport
Beach will be the Area G
(Ca1ifornia ) representative
when the Prince or Wales
match racing championships
for North An1erica get wtit_er
way Mo\)day at Long Beach'.
The North American Yacht
Racing Union sponsored event
will be sailed in Cal·25 sloops,
continuing through Aug. 31.
Other representatives in the
nine NA YRU areas will be
Glen Foster II. (Area B) fro m
Noroton Yacht Club, Long
Island, N.Y.: Skip Moorehouse
Jr .. (Area Cl New J ersey: Bill
Buchan (Area H) Corinthian
Yarht Club, Seattle: John
Kolius (Area F) Tex a s
Corinthian Yacht Club.
Olhers will be Stephen Cuc-
chiaro (Area A) f\1.IT Nautical
Association : John McNeary
! Area DI Lake Norman Yacht
Club. Florida, and Mark
Goodwin (Area E) h11'' A.
The e"ent "'ill be sailed as a
round-robin lv ith cre\vs ex-
changing boats -after each
race. Racing will begin each
day at 11 a.m. on t\vo parallel
u•i nd\vard-leedward courses. "RIDAY
Second high . , ..... , , .. 7:00 p.m.
Se«lnd low . . 12:'7 p.m.
SATURDAY
First high ...... : ....• 1:,31.m. Flnt tow . . ........ 2:10 1.m.
Sec:Olld high .........•. 7:S1 p.m.
Second low . l:.Sp.m.
•·• The competitors \\·ill sail for 2.• the championship bracket the
•.5 first day then be cUvided into !! championship and consolation
1.t ladders for the remaining
SVHOAY
Flrll high ............ 9:12 1.m. '·' Flrsl low , . , ..... 2:4' a.m. -0.9
Seeond l'llgll . . .... 1:39 p.m. l.7
S.Contl low • . . 2:11 p.m. I.•
Sun ttiHI •:21 1.m. Siii 7:)) p,m,
Moon rtiMI 2;231.m. Stll S:Ol p.m.
LEARNT
SAIL
THE HOBIE .
WAY' --
races.
Awards are made to the
u•inner and runner·up in the
championship flight and to the
winner only in the consolation
bracket.
Hob!1'1 "fun·IO·lttrn" ptogr1m will have you stilir19 1fttr just
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OPEN SUN. 9·6
I
-I Arts/Dining Out
Entertainment Friday, Au9uSl 24, 1q73
DAlLY PILOT
Jonath.an Livingston: Seagull Superstar
,
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
OI lh• Dlih' Piiot Sl11f
· Seagulls· are no~partlcularly bright, well
groomed or well versed in the ways of
Hollywood.
So when you're given a contract to film
seagulls -and nothing but seagulls -
you're bound to run into some ptoblems.
Like \vhere does one find seagµlls with all
ftathers intact? What's the best 'way to take
a seagull to Death Valley? Are seagulls
afraid of helicopters?
Greg ~1acGillivray and Jim Freeman, two
1-aguna Beach film makers, still are shak-
ing their heads over filming the aerial
scenes of Jonathan Livingston seagull,
based on Richard Bach's best selLing book.
'l'be film will be released in October.
Cameras of the film pair followed the
s1voops and dives of more than 2,000 seagulls
QVet the coast of ·Big Sur, the snow capped
Sierra and the sand dunes of Death Valley.
MacGillivray and Freeman along with
Corona del Mar photographers J ack Coulfer
were hired by Los Angeles producer-director
Hall Bartlett to do the aerial sequences.
•i\Ve played Salvation Army to those
gulls,'' says Freeman. "We fed them fresh
fish and horsemeat, gave them places to
bathe and sent the sick ones to the vet."
Durlng a sequence at cannel, the gulls
had their own suite in the Holiday Inn. "Of
COUC$C, we had to line the place with
sheets," chuckled Freeman.
Seagulls like to hang around dwnps and
that's where Bartlett's crew went to find
· their actors and actresses. "We had a three
by five card index of every dump in Cali·
fornia ," recalled MacGillivray.
With the aid of wardens from the Depart·
mentor Fish and Game, the team zeroed in
on two dumps -in Oxnard and Oakland -
to catch the gulls.
The gulls were transported around in a
rented truck, with a screen on the back so
the birds could take in the scenery while in
transit.
For the actual filming, the pair would
select IO·gulls place them in individual cages
and load the cages into the chopper used
for filming.
"They didn't mind it a bit,'' said
Freeman. "We'd get up in the air, let one go
and film it." They repeated the process until
all 10 birds were used (usually two hours)
and then landed to collect another group of
caged gulls.
At times, the helicopter was 60 feet from
the gull being filmed.
All told, the filmmakers spent 228 hours in
the air filming the seagu1ls over a four
month pe riod.
Freeman admits all of it made him
something of a seagull frea k.
"There's not too much known about
seagulls, except that there are 41 different
kinds. I started getting into them and found
they have all different postures, beads and
feat~rs." _
After each days flight, the film shot was
dispatched for processing and viewed the
next morning by Bartlett, who conferred
daily with the crew.
MacGillivary says the film team \vorked
\\•ith an almost "unlimited" budget because
of t~ exacting quality needed for the film .
••tt was kind of funny. We thought the film
would take three weeks at the most, We
spent six months,'' said MacGi llivray.
"But I guess that's the way it is with
seagulls."
LAGUNA BEACH .FiLM MAKERS GREG MacGllllVRAY AND JAMES FREEMAN
Maryland's Censors Work
'Like (Bleep) to Keep Jobs
BALTIMORE (UPI ) - H.L. Mencken.
'the late sage of Baltimore, once called
the members of the Maryland Board or
Censors "professional smellers."
, : Others complain the board wastes tax·
' ' :payers money.
· But board members feel they are
·"civic·Ulinded people woo are interested
in government and the public's welfare."
Mary Avara, David E. Preller and
George Andreadakis are members of the
only statewide agency in the nation that
censors motion pictures -from cartoons
to banl-<Ore pornography.
'Ibe board bas weathered such critics
·as Mencken, consti tutional challenges in
the courts, lind efforts by many slate of·
"\Ve don't have to defend censorship
\vhen the Supreme Court says it's okay,"
said Preller, 49, a Baltimore lawyer who
is chairman of the board.
"We are leaders in the field and other
states will create censor boards,'' he
said. "The states have legitimate in·
terests in protecting citizens against
pornographic matter. The supreme Court
felt that distributors had gone too far."
Andteadakis, 49, .feels tho -supreme
court rullngigave censors import.ant new
weapons in their batUe ~gainst what they
consider smuL
In operation since 1916, the board
"The distributor thought we'd chop 'Last Tango in Paris' or ban
it, but we didn't. It wos trashy garbage -·troshy, .dull, crude and
vulgar-but it wasn't obscene." -·---------------------------~ficiaJs, including fonner Gov. Spiro T.
1Agnew, to abolish it. ? As gpvemor in 1967, Agnew tried ·to•
·starve the board to death by refusing to
·fund it in !he stale budget. But his at-~ tion was challenged in court and declared
•Illegal. The censors now operate on
!SS0,000 a year. ·
reviewed"l,225 films last year. not in·
eluding the 2$-cent "peep show" films it
. also regulates. It rejected 45 films
outright and c:ut scenes from 50.
court. The court must then render a
decision within two days.
Despite that rigid schedule, lengthy
court battles sometimes ensue on re-
jection of a film.
"I Am CuriOllS Yellow, 11 considered to
have paved the way for more explicit
movies, was rejected by the board. State
Attorney General Francis Burch saw the
film at least twice before concurring it
should be banned. The U.S. Supreme
Court upheld the ban 4-4.
'I1le movie finally was shown in
"°laryland three years later, but with
deletions ordered by the court.
1100 FINE
Persons convicted of showing films
without the board1s seal of approval can
be fined llOO for each film. Most of those
fined opehlte seedy movie houses or the
coin-operated "peep shows."
The three board members feel specia l
qualifications are not needed to act as
the judges of what' the public may or
may not see .
"I know what's garbage," f\1rs. Avara
said. "Garbage is thrown in the garbage
can."
PACIFIC OCEAY
The Newport Harbor Character Boat Po rad e tokes place in Newport
HMbor from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Saturday. The theme for this ye.r's
event, sponsored by the New port Harbor Cham ber of Comm erce,
is "The Swinging Ye ors." Clinton Hoose, chairman, says that • chor-
acter boat "is a vessel of individual character, eithe r through its ori-
ginal design or special ad aptotion." Among the Io· trophies to be
awarded are best-co stumed crew, animat ed figures and best steam
boat.
STRUGGLES OVER?
l The board has been fighting tooth and
The &oard refuses to award ofl_icial
seal! to films that it feels when taken as
a wh61e appeal to .prurient interests.
depict P.atently offensive conduct, or
which lack urlous li~rary, artistic or
scientJfic value when contemporary stand·
dards are applied.
Mrs. Avara \Yorks full lime as a censor
with an aMual sulary of $4,000. Preller,
with a sa lary of $5,000, and Andreakakis,
who earns $4,500, work part-time.
In l\1ay,the controversial "Last. Tango
in Paris" was reviewed by the board. It
received approval without difficulty .
WEEKENDER llE,\.'fURES
• nail to stay aUve in the last decade,'' said
. Mrs. Avara, 5$, a \vidow who is also a
. bail bondsman. "Now I don't think we'll
;.have to light so much. But we're ready."
'>',All t11ree board members expect
'sbnuar boards will be ael up in other ·.areas of the country as the result of the ;r~t U.S. Supreme Coort ruling !hat·
local communlty standards can fonn the
,!Jnsis for judging ob!cenity.
The board Is held lo a tight Is.day
schedule. Each film must be · reviewed
and either approved or rejected within
five days of Its arrival at a downtown
screening room.
TIME SCHEDULE
II a film is rejecled. the board hns
three days to take It to court. A hearing
on the film's obscenity mus! be held wilh-
in rivejlays of the tjme lhe boanl goes to
"The disfributor thought we'd chop or
00.n it. but we didn't/' ~1rs. Avara said.
"It was garbage-trashy, dull. crude and
vulgar -bot it wasn't. obscene. '1
Mrs. AV'ara feels censorship could be
ended in Maryland by establishing
something like a red·light district lor
racy films. But she is not optimistic.
Staff Writer John Zaller has an
inlerview wit)1two fledgling musi-
ca l comedy writers. Tom Shellon
and Erin Blackwell. They are pre-
senting their fourth show this
summer. See story on Page 24.
Turning on
GWC Play
Out 'n' About
Honk Concert
In lhe Galleries
What to Do
Michelle Phillips
,.
Page25
Pal[e 25
Page 26
Page 26
Page27
Page28
Page 29
"
l
'
;
I
f.j OAll Y PILOT Friday , Augu st 24, 1973
'
Fledgling playwrights Erin Blackwell and
Tom Shelton of Corona del Mar don 't go
into detail about their new play, but they
prom ise it will be as good as their earlier
works, which they describe with youthful
modesty as bei ng "fantastic/1 "really fan-
tastic" and 11 great."
' -'
GWC
Encores
Play
Theatergoers who missed
Colden West College's sum ..
mer production of 0 A Mid.sum·
mer Night's Dream" will have
a chance to see lt durfng two
~ights, Sept. 2t and 22
at 8:30 p.m.
The repeat nights o l
Shakespeare reprise,
"Androcles and the Lion" will
be staged, Oct. 26 and 27 and
Nov. 2 and 3, with instructor
Robin Huber making his local
di recting debut. A children's
play will be directed by
Charles Mitchell on Nov. 30,
Dec. t and Dec. 2 and 8.
''The Firebugs" will run
March ~and 9, and 15 and 16.
And t~e "Fantqstiks," ls
scheduled May 24 and 25, May
31 and June 1.
DREAMS, REALITY
roken Leg Spawns Summer Musicals In the summer show, direc~
tor Mitchell vividly captures
S h a kespeare's Elizabethan
concept of dreams and reality
and world o,£ spirits, adding
his own interpretations to the
meaning.
By JOHN ZALLER
Of Ille D•ilr Piiot S'-ff
It started with an accident.
You see, Tom ·Shelton's $isler
broke her leg and Erin
Blackwell came over to visit
her. But Erin, instead of
visiting the sister, visited
Tom, who was just then sitting
9Jwn to write a musical com-
f.dy.
"'-"I had never written
anything before," says Tom,
who was at 'that time a
freshman at Corona del Mar
High School and is oow about
to enter college.
"~ut I had always admired
,musical comedies, so I
County TV
1-o Feature
• fDulcimer'
1"Folklife ," a new program
using on folk music, will
· but on Monda y at 3 p.m. on
OCE-TV, Channel SO.
111Us first program , entitled
The Dulcimer," will be
fpeated Tuesday a t9 :30 p.m.
d Thursday at 8:30 p.m .
: The -dulcimer is a wire-
p-ung trapezoid-shaped in-
frument. introduced in this
ntry from cenrtal Europe
t 200 years ago.
Musician Steve Cook, who
built the dulcimers he plays
during the program. is
assisted by Susan R6bertson in
this study of the history and
music of the dulcimer.
thought I would try my hand .
at one."
Erin, who w a s ex-
perimenting with poetry about
that time, was interested.
"It seemed like hm " she
says. "I offel-e<i to help'."
That was three years ago,
and they've been making
music together ever sioce.
Every summer they've com-
posed a musical comedy
together and produced it ·in
Tom's back}'ard. The cast was
their musically i n c I i n e d
friends, plus whoever else they
could rope into coming to a
month of practice.
The auruences were small at
first. Their premiere effort at-
tracted a crowd of only 60,
mostly friends and families,
for its one-night stand. But
they kept at it, and for last
summer's play -an adapted
version ·of the courtship and
marriage of Tom's parents -
they attracted c r ow d s
upwards of 150 on each of four
nights.
'GOING BIG-TIME'
So on their fourth swnmer
together, they're going big-
time. In cooperation with the
NewIX>rt Beach Recreation
Department, they will stage
"Speak Easy," a political
comedy, begirutlng tonight at
the Community Youth Center
in Corona de! ~tar.
The play is bi lled as a
"revelation of how things get
done in Washington D.C.1' Set
in the 1930s, it features an im-
aginary incumbent pre~dent
seeking re.election on ·the
Temperance ticket.
There are, however, prir
blems with the campaign. One
is that despite his pro-
hibitionist speeches, the vice-
president is a bootlegger.
Another is that the President's
daughter falls in love with an
enterprising reporter, v.·ho
then gets the scoop on the vice
president.
The second half of the play
takes place in an illicit
speakeasy. Where the Presi-
dent, vi'ce president, a
president's dl'lughter and
young report(.r assemble to
thrash out their differences.
The play has suspense, good
guys and bad guys, and a
healthy dose of romance, just
as a musical comedy should.
The fledgling playwrights -
Tom is 18 and Erin is 20 -are
reluctant to go into more
detail about the play. But they
promise it will be as good as
their earlier works, which they
describe with youthful modes-
ty as b e in g "fantastic,"
"really fanta s tic'' and
"great.''
HARRY'S REAL
It is true to the point that
Tom's father -Robert
Shelton, former Newport
Beach city councilman and ci-
ty ntanager -used to be
known around the house as
Harry Hammerhead.
Their latest show, which
opens tonight, is the most ant·
bilious of their productions. Il
is also the first to ha\'e a real
supJX>rting cast.
Marthella Rahdall, w•ll·
known in Harbor Area theater,
\Viii be directing.
'Apostle' to Premiere on Sunday.
"
"The AposUe," a choral
\VOrk based on the life of the
1 apostle Paul. will have its
world premiere Sunday 'when
the Continental Singers and
orchestra offer a two-hQur
concert at First B a pt i s t
Church of San ta Ana .
Dorolhy Jo S\vanson. who
operates a NeY:port Beach
dance studio, has done the
choreography for the dance
routines. And the city Recrea·
tion Department is doing some
publicity work.
Sho\vtime for tonight's
performance is 8::iO o'clock in
the Community Youth Center
at Fifth and Iris avenues in
C-orona del Mar.
There will also be evening
performances on Aug. 25, 30,
31 and Sept. l. Matinee shows
will be offered at 3 p.m. Aug.
25 and Sept. I. Admission is
$t.
"While the play may be like
a dream to Shakespeare," said
Mitchell, "he also implies life
is like a play and its style is
mostly mediocre comedy. He
sees all or us mortals playing
roles that we c~se or that
arg forced upon us, having to
ad-lib quickly when we forget
our lines. trying desperately to
be good actors and usually
failing.
"But every once in awahile
-like a beautiful moment OJl
the satte -we. almost by ac-
cident. attain the sublime, feel
true, sincere emotion, and our
performance for a fleetinv
moment turns great."
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
.,_t POND GOLDFISH & SUl'l'LIES
~1" .. ~ Baby Koi Carp 75c ~~
W..., Letbce e w_,., Hyoclltttt
Po114 S•all1 e Goldfllh Food
l!:ol foed e Pu111p Flltrotioit U.th
All Silft & Yarleti.t of Goldfllll
218 W. Wilson, Costa Mesa
9025 Atlanta, Hunt. Beach.
Under the direction of Gary\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Appleton, the 25 vocalists and
13·member ensemble will in-
clude concert a n t he m s ,
spirilual and folk adaptations,
hymn arrangements and co.n-
temIX>rary gospel music in a
program at 8 p.m. al the
church, 1010 W. 17th SL HONK
S.al Mineo Takes 'Mike' From Marv Gray
The concert will be one or
the final local appearances fo r
the group. lt will leave Santa
Ana for a tour that takes in
most of the United States,
northern and southern Europe.
the Far East. the Caribbean
In Concert With Special Gue1t1
manna
An Outdoor Event on the Grass
Newport Horbor H.S. Stadium
NEWPORT BEACH
Turning on
There '\'ill be cries of
;inguish from ri.1arv Gray fans
now that he has left KABC
Talkradio after six yea rs. But
radio is no different than
television or movies or other
forms of entertainment. Scott Manchester
The people who sell the
tickets make the decisions as
to whether an "act" shall con-Spcirts Director Jim Healy
tinue (personalities aside), joining Lawrence this weekend
and in Gray's case it was for the qualifying time trials
decided to replace him with a in preparation for LKAC's
program helmed by actor-pro-coverage of the California 500
ducer-writer · director-record-next Swtday.
ing artist Sal Mineo, who will no doubt attract a younger "The Bill Ballance Show" list~ing audience. will premiere this Monday flO
Being canceled is a common a.m.-3 p.m.) from its new
thin g, and. hopefully, time v.•ill quarters, the KGBS Star
erase some of hls: bitterness Theatre. at Universal Studios.
over the severance. After all, allowing Bill to be seen as well
sir years is a pretty good run as heard by the more than lwo
for any show. million tourists who visit the
studios. He has also authored
'RADIO MOVIE' "The Bill Ball ance 11 i p
l itter C-opelessness''. to be
released by Nash Publications
·in September.
MUS ICAL TAPESTRY
Seals and Crofts v.'ill be
presented in concert by KFI
Sunday al 6:35 p.m., a one-.
hour NBC musical tapestry of
music styles, to be followed at
7:30 p.m. by another KFI
special, "Pyrigi's Wonderful
World Of Dolls," an original
scl·fi radio drama.
KNAC winds up its August
schedule of "An Evening With .
. . " concerts this Monday
ni ght ( 8 p.m.·midnight) wit.h
host John Clark di viding two
Meanwhile. ~1ineo (9 p.m.· ~landhook of Nifty ri.1oves and
midnight) has planned a How to Cope in Situations of
number of unusual feauturestl---------------------
for his initiation into radio, in-,..--------------------.,
eluding a first -a Radio
Movie of the Month, which will
involve participation by both
listeners and top stars in its
a d lib creation. '
ri.Uneo also plans talkfests
\\'ilh many celebs who
generally avoid the talkshow
circuit. like the interview l;c
\\'ill air on hi s program
tonight. featuring the elusive
but fascinating Ava Gardner.
That station's Mau r <'en
Reagan ISA turdays ·Sundays.
3-5 p.m.) is now doing special
feature reports twice daily on
Newstalk (5-9 a.m.), as well :
News Dlrector Jfm Si mon hat
beeJI named program dlrectof,
with the community relations-
editorial director, Paul Dallas,
ass um i n g si milar
responsibilities for KABC's
FM counterpart, KLOS.
THE DANCE STUDIO
SPEEDWA y snow
ICE CAPAOES CH.AL.ET COSTA MESA
2701 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
Tel : 979-1110
CLASSES STARTING NOW
Classes taught by accredited Professor of Da nce.
All ages 3 to 93. Beginners through advanced.
Kl.ACS Jay La~Tence Show
(S.7 p.m.) Is being broadcast
direcUy from the Ontario
Spe..'C!wey this week. with '--------------------'
,.
hours each between the music
of Wishbone Ash and Ur iah
Heep.
a.m. ), is beefing up ru·s arrival and the Bahama Islands.
h.'11J-93's B.R. Bradbury was
one of the six fina lists in the
coveted nationwide "Newsman
of the Year" award presented
by Billboard Magazine's Radio
Programming Forum -and
he won. C.Ongrats. B.R.
by giving away 100 pounds of Appleton said many of the
beef every day on his program concerts given in those tou~s
until Aug. 31. Certainly a will be performed in military
timely promotion. . . . bases. hospitals and churches.
Friday, August 24, 8:00 PM
Tk;kets are Three-Fttty at the G8te
A _,,... l ••"' P1od\lclion
-. Kl IS' recent special feature ·.., ~· ;... t .. I 1i1 ™ ~~hr·~~0:?~:~i~r ,::: ~ WE DD A MILLION DOLLARS A YEAR BECAUSE
·.
ed up the interesting fact that l
Marilyn Monroe was the first . WE HAYE THE SERVICES, THE QUALITY, THE PRICES PI a y mate-of· the-Montll
centerfold, in the December
1953 issue.
That station's new morning
man, Charlie Van Dyke (~9
4th· Annual
Summer Show
featuring pai ntings and graphics by
JOHns WAiaHOL
LICHT~NSTEIN
nOLAno DINE
THIEBAUD
fUiusc~nbers
and others
EXHIBITION THRU SEPT. 13
7 DAV'S A W£EK, lliA.M. TO 5 P.M.
JACK GLENN GALLERY
2831 E. COlsl Highway, Coron1 dtl Mar • 675-8020
OTHER LOCATIONS
SOUTH COAST VI LLAGI, SANTA ANA
424 FASHION VALLEY, SAN Dll!GO
SERVICES!
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEE KI
FREE DELIVERY!
ltlADY MADI SALAD$!
QUALITY I
THE FINEST PRODUCE !
THE FINEST FLOWERS!
THE fRISHIST SALADS!
PRICES!
LARGE LmUCE 1 Sc."·
S9UASH 10c lb.
CANTALOUPES 2k "·
OlAHGE JUICE 4fc qt.
TOMATOES 1 Sc. lb.
FRSH ORANGE JUICll THE IEST YARllTYI With Co1po• lelow I••••• a•• a Iii• a a a a a a a ••• 8 8 a a a a a a ..
a AT THEIR IEST NOW! a clt~~ V'tt~~~IA a ORl,AT llG IUNCHIS a
• SALAD SIZE • ORANGE JUICE· RAINBOW •
: TOMATOES • "s" tt Mu•!" • ASTERS •
• 1 o~ : 49c Quart • 7ftl •
a · In Half O.llon1 Only • Y. llt lunch •
Limit S lbs. • Limit Yl 0 1 • Limit 3 lch'• a
a With Thi• Coupon ·• With Thlt'co:Pon a With This Coupon •
.......... •Cl •••••• ·-·., ••••••••••
DON'T LET THEM ROI YOU! PRODUCE PRICES ARE LOWt ' .
··············~··············' • SAVE UP TO 25c EACH • GOOD SlZll , • AT THlllt llST NOWi •
• ICEBERG • LOCAL GRONW • HONl'i' DEWS or • LETIUCE • GREEN SUMMER OR • •
• L'IROE SIZE • ZUCCHINI SQUASH • CANTALOUPES •
15:. • io~ • 25:. : • • • •• • • l imit Fl•• limit 5 l\t. of lecti Ll..,lt '°"'' •
• With Thi• Coupon • With This C•upon • With Thi• Coupon • .................................
COUPONS EXPIRE AUGoUST 29, 1973
WE WIRE FLOWERS AROUND THE CORNER
OR AROUND THE WORLD BY F.T.D.
"Orange County's Mos t Popular Produce ond Plower Rouse"
NEWPORT PRODUCE
FLOWERS IY DEIR.A
Op•• 7 Days • Weeli 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
2616 Newport loulevard Oft !tie p..,(ntula
• ......
67W71S
'7W711
'7M2'1
ears of Produce
Know How"
IONDED FRUIT St.1JPPER
FOR l5 YEARS
"Wh•rt QUIJ tv
Ord<r of the Howe•
..
•
DAILY PILOT Je t
Que Delicioso1-Try Margarita's for Lunch
Aside from lts outright appeal to taste
buds the Iirst tlme it is ever tried , Mei ·
ican food has always commanded in·
tereit with its origins. It is a fascinating
combination ol Spanish and Indian
(Atlee) influences.
Out 'n . About
Norman Stanley On the one hand it 1nakes much use of
native American staples like corn, beans,
lomatoes, avocados and pumpkins. But
development wasn't co1nplete until the
addition of such Spanish favorites as
rice, olives and almonds.
1be inevitable -and savory -conse-
quences of that union , daUng back to the
days of the conquistadors can be enjoyed
in many local restriurants. And one of the
newest on the scene was vis.ited last
week.
Sitting dov.'Jl to the first meal at
Margarita's l\'lexlcan restaurant in Costa
Mesa may spark some reflection on the
beginnings of Mexican food. But that
gives way to deliberation of the "here
and now" quality of ~tergarila's of-
ferings.
A random sampling or the food led to
the conclusion that every dish was first-
rate. All had been prepared and cooked
in keeping with the best that's been
transported across the border from the
United States's neighbor to the south.
Along with the excellent food , other
On Threshold of 4th · Step
f' ran ci sc o 's American
Conservatory Theater.
Success for South Coa st
Repertory -which has earned
a considerable amount of it in
nearly nine years and 82 1na-
jor productions on the Orange
Coast -is merely a plateau
Ofl which to pla(.'e one foot
while seeking out a higher
ledge for the other.
Intermission
Tom Titus
"\Ve've gained in nlaturlty
and we're very pleased that
it's being recognized," Emmes
says. "This appointment is
recognition that South Coast
Repertory's input is important
on the state level. We also
have two grants pending with
the National Endowment for
the Arts.
The artistic prominence cur·
renlly enjoyed by Orange
County's only regional theater
group has come as the result
of a series of carefully
orchestrated • ' s t c p s ' ' in
development . each larger and
more co1nplicated than the
last.
Newport Boulevard w h e r e
SCR's 82nd production, "Catch
22." is currently enjoying an
extended run. This occurred in
October of 1967, about the
same time as the assimilation
of U:ing Beach's Actor's Circle
Theater persoMel to broaden
!he local company's perform-
ing base. At present, SCR is in its
third of !OW' pMses, which is
why the company's Costa
Mesa base of operaUons is
called the Third Step Theater.
Step One began in late 1964 as
a tiaveHng trou pe low on
funds, technica l equipment
and personnel. Step Tu·o ar-
rived when SCR moved into its
small second Step Theater ou
the Nev.·port Beach bayfront in
lllarctl of 1965.
Today. six years after the
Third step, South Co a s t
Repertory is on the threshold
of Step Four-the last big push
toward the company's even-
tual goal of full professional
status in a theater large
enough to afford such an
operation. Plans are under
""ay for the construction of a
huge cultural center near
Newport's Fashion I s I and
"'hich would include a ~seat
theater for SCR on $1.S million
'vorth of land donated by the
Irvine Company.
STEP THREE. or rourse.
was the acquisition of the
larger lheateron Costa l\1eha 's
'
Ingrid S•y1: Help U1 Celebr•t•
THE IERLINER'S
4TH ANNIVERSARY
SAT., AUG . 25
We wi ll serve• spec:iel
menu for this occ:esion
Chempi!UJne For Everybody
Dine & De nce to the Happy Music: of
STAN WISNIACH & HIS
INTERNATIONAL TRIO
Reurvatloos Only: 961·5800
theBERLINER DELI RESTAURANT
'8 ~8 1 811(11 Bl VO llUll TlllGTOll 8ElCM
TOWN AND COUlllR T t(~!f R I 96B ~9~0 . . . . . . . . ' -. . ~ . ~ . ' . . . -. ,. '""' ............ ,.
GOURMET
SANDWICH
SHOP
A GOURMET BOX LUNCH
Whit b1tt1r w•y
To cornpl1t1 your d 1y
A tf11t by tll1 oc11n bl111
E .. 1'1 boJ'. l11nch
To f•1d your bunch
Or •n intirn1l1 p•rtv for two
No f1111, no rnu11, j111t 111 .. 1
it to 111!
Etijoy our food -•• do .
CHOICE -M•tw .,.clot; rMlt Mri; cenff Mef: 91'
Daltlrt Ito"' lse11rdo1•• ., ,.,., pl11 1elff •cf llOfM.
"'94e dessert -S2.7S + hi•
Coll 646·Jl20 -Tw .. Howr Netke
0,.11 11 •·•· te J it·"'· Molldoy ritni SOhlr4..,
1767 NIWPOlT IL¥D. -COSTA MESA
LUNCHEON SERVED DAILY
From 11 :00 A.M.
DINNER SE RVED UNTIL 8:00 P.M
Monday and Friday
#1 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
644-2200
"It looks like we've finally
come from inspired youthful
activity into a more artistic
and organizational en t er-
prise, declares David Em·
mes , a ~founder of SCR and
its executive director since the
theater's origin. "The dream
of 1964 may now be ready for
fruition.''
EMMES, ONE of only three
SCR members remaining from
the handful of wide-eyed and
energetic idealists who
organized the company nine
years ago, has long been the
architect of the company's
future . He recently accepted a
position on the California
Theater Council of the
California Arts Commission, a
panel composed of the state's
best known professional direc·
tors from such theaters as the
Mark Taper Forum, San
Diego's Old Globe and San
H Against incredible odds,"
the SCR director goes on, "our
theater has become an im-
portant cultural force . Now
everything we've hoped and
dreamed for is beginning to
materialize. We're moving
from a dream into reality."
THE SUBSTANCE of !his
reality is the Newport Harbor
Foundation, which is the mov·
ing force behind the proposed
cu1tural center at Fashion
Island - a complex which wil l
include another, large r theater
seating up ta 2,000 persons, a
museum and rehearsal and
conununity workshop areas.
Backed up by the prestigious
foundation, South C o a s t
Repertory thls month is mown-
( See INTERMISSION PaJe %!)
CHAMPAGNE
SUIDAY BRUNCH
11.,..kffft
L~' -~ Cod.l•ils
&lerT•lnmwit
"HE, ME & THEM"
Nightly for dancing end
enterteinment
lt'i; all happening at
1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach
(714) 644-1700
Prime Rib • lteak • Lob ster
For Your Oincing Pleasure
SCENE Ill
Tuesday thru Saturday
2201 E. 1st St., Santa Ana
I letwffft So11tc1 AIM oml New pert fwys.)
Far R11erv•tion1 C11ll 547 -0709
Steak • Lobster • Chicken
JIMMY LEE
DUO
TUffelay "'"' S•turday
Jolly Ox tluntlnvton Beach
IJ lletb s...i. ef ... S.11 ... ,.,,.,. OJt leecti tml.J
For R111rvttio1u C•ll 142.5535
MIKE SUMMERS
Jolly Ox Mission Viejo
ll• r. aod ... ttie Seia Ote1 0 F-wy.t
For R11er .. 111!iont C1ll t l 0-1220 -·---WAYNE GABRIEL'S
MUSICAL WORLD
T"""1 ritr• S.tu,..,..,
Jolly Ox Anaheim
I ht1N AJt• fwy, et .. 11 lecrd I .
h 1 Att11v•tion• C•ll •s6-32 SO
lacl.OtS contributed to a satisfying ex·
pericnce -like the informal and relax-
ing atmosphere.
ranks ol Orange County r~staurateurs
well bc{ol'e her 30th birthday. Trained by
her mother since early childhood in tbe
art of Mexican cooking, Mrs. Romo of-
fers evidence that she learned her
lessons well.
All dinners also Include a choice ot
albondlga soup or snlad, which means a
substantial quantJty of food at unusually
low prices by today 's standards. ,
A pizza parlor occupied the premistS
~hen ii first opened as an eating
c:stublishmcnl. But reful'blshing and
changes by the new mruiagement created
the present cantina-like setting.
ll would appear, too, th!lt the
restaurant mi ght provide the means to
carry a tradition inlo the next genera·
tion, as Margarita combines business
with family life and five small children.
Other representalive combinatioo
plates are steak ranchero, beans ~nd
rice $2 · taco enchilada , bean~ and nee. ~4!.30: ~hlle ' relleno, taco, enehila~at
beans nnd rice, $3: and the Marganta
sp<..->cial, chlle verdc , beans, rice and two
corn tortillas, $2 .
OC'cor, to be sure, is appropriately
l\.texican but lo\v key. and is carried out
by a spari;e though imagirultive use of
sombreros. sarapes and pinatas. Another
pleasant note is struck by the brighUy
colored, flowery curtains on the front
windows.
Margarita's bill of fare offers a choi(.'e
ol 11 combination plates and nearly two
dozen a la carte items. In the first
category, possibilities range from en-
chilada, beans and rice, $1.50, to en-
chilada, chile relleno, tamale, t.aco, beans
and rice, $3.50.
Confining the selections to the a ta
carte side of the menu. a ta sty variety ot
offerings includ'ed albondiga soup, 50
cents per bowl : cheese enchiladas, ~
cents each: taco. SO cents: stuflec
quesadllla, $1.25: chile rclleno, 60 cents; Guiding spirit of the operation is Mrs.
J\largarita Romo, an ambitious and
capable young wo1nan who has joined the (See OUT 'N ABOUT, Page %7)
Honk, the Laguna-baMcl rock group, will perform in concert tonight •'
in the Newport Harbor High School Stadium, 600 Irvine Avenue, 1
Newport Beach. The six-member group will share the bill with Minn-,
which will begin the 8 p.m. concert. Michael Lawler, producer, uys
Honk itwlf will play for three hours. Tickets are $3.50 gener•I 14-
mission. Honk, left to right, front row, are Beth Fitchet, Steve Wood,
Richard Stekol; back row, Tris Imboden, Craig Buhler and Don
Wh1l1y. , • •
TEMPLE GARDENS NOW APPEARING>
, cµJNE~ Restaura11t WALT & PAUL
RICKS HA
COCKTAIL
.~.~~-~GE
Featuring ~xotic
Tro pical Drinks
ROAST
LONG ISLAND
DUCKLING
S111c1 Bigar1d1,
Wild Rice
AMCJNG 20
SELECT
DINNER ENTREES
VINA
HARMER
DUO
Entert1ining
Featuring
Orange County's
Finest
Amet"ican 81 Kosher
Style foods
CATIRING I. IAKllY
LUNCH I OINNllS
COCKTAILS
"(rOITI 11 Sundwiclt
to 11 ~Ito/"
SUNDAY
BRUNCH -BUFFET
10 A.M.
to 9 P.M.
HOURS
Tuesday· Sundt11y
10 A.M. • 9 P.M.
Closed Mon day
M5 -19DD
&21 EMI 11th Sl
Cotti Mew, Ca.
l uncheon & Dinner Da ily
1500 ADAMS I• HMorl
COSTA MESA
540-1937 540-1923
A114. I•..,.. Gro"'
1?201 llOOIHUIST
tAt Cltepme•l 631-7020
Wed. thru SUI\.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
IANQUET FACILITIES
317 PAClflC COAST HWY.
HUHTINatON HACH
536-2555
.{$ BRINGSA -C-~N\v FUN FAMILY \\J!.~~ RESTAURANT TO ~ -NEWPORT CENTER
"""""""""'N>CllOCl\Xl\l'""'""""""'"'"''"""'~
210 NEWPOAT CENTER DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH
IN THE DESIGN PU.ZA
TELEPHONE: (1M) 044-2801
11:30 A.M. TO 12:00MIDNIGH'T
MR. RTs RESTAURANT & JICJ(•' /J}IQU(. LOUNv G
RILL ~fEDLEY INTRODUCES
-1 I
ROSE MARY
NIGHTi. Y
I 0 PM I. MIDNIGHT
ENTHTAINMINT
JEGINS AT 8:30 PM
l)A~CING
COC KTAl l.S
OINl'\ERS
900 N. BROADWAY · SANTA ANA
PHONE 835.0511
JICJ(/.I. J/JfGI..(.
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
i ~~R E£~~~•~•ddelicious
plping·hot pizzas to your door In minutes.
for prompt service phone 646-7136
(Newport Beach/Costa Mesa· 17th •nd Tustin)
or 847-1214 (Huntinglon Boach-Bcach ind Hlel).
Get the Pizza with Pizzaz 'lnG~~
• •
...
'11
' ,
•
1 11 tlae Galleries
'-DAILY PtLOT F'rlday, A'ugui\ 241 1973 ··----------, Chinese Cuisine
_,.
"FOR MEALS
PREP Al!ED WITH -
P ARTICUl..All CARE"
,1 1f. ~ 0 1·tcntal Cocktail Lounge I
11111 I J -[Fel aturi,,"" .... ::cru Dr,lnt-ks 1
1
JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast IUghway, Corona CHAU.IS GALLERIES -L'JOO S. Coast Hwy., Lnguna Beach.1
• _ del Mar. Fourth annual summer lhow exhibits the worka of Rare antique lithographs, engraved circa 1840 by Louis
Robert Rauschenberg, Kenneth Nolland, Donald Judd, John Haghe, in t.he collec tion of David Roberts, ll.A,. through Aug.
I . I Clem Clarke, Tom Holland and Laddie John DUI along with 26. Also during August, oil paintings by Ron Wagner. Open
Mesa. Watercolors by Soozy West. Through August.
GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Blvd.,
Coata Mesa. Watercolors by Beulah Treadway. Through
August. PHONE •••• 84S.1510 selections by young talent: Gary Beydler, Douglas Bond, da ily [rom 1 t a.m. to 5 p.m.
L ·• -1q EAST_ t7TH .... COSTA MESA I John Balsley, Christoper Goorgesco and Ted Kersey. Hours:
- - - --. .... - - - -lla.m.·Sp.m.daily.ThrougbSept.14:. MUSIC CENT ER PAVILiON -135 N. Grand Ave., Los
Angeles. "Remember Yang-Na" is a graphic chronicle of Los
Angeles from the days of the early Indian that projects into
the year 2001. The exhibit, featuring materials of every his.
torical description, will end Aug. 26. Open dally from IO a.m.
to 4 p.m., except matinee days on Wednesday and Saturdays
wh~ It will open from IO a.m. to noon.
l
CATERING FQR
ALL OCCASIONS
DEU
BAURT ••llUTa U8TAVRANT
840-0322
630 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE
·(Faehlon lalend)
the Ne)\'
~ ...
One entree at our
=~~ gratis
lwlllll\ .,. .. prestlll 11111 ~·"· 141Mfiy
"'"" TIMlndaY .. .,. Stpl ••
3901 E. Coast Highway/Corona del Mar
Phone: 675·0900
NOW OPEN MONDAY
MARINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN -151 5 Westcurr Drive,
Newport Beach. Wall hangings of found objeets by Carol
Richard or Venice. Through August.
QUORUM GALLERY -354 N. Coast IUghway, Laguna
Beach. "Paintings of the American West" by V. Butchby of
Laguna Beach. Through August.
MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION -2867 E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Mixed media and wood re-
lief by Dolly Russell of Corona del Mar. Through August.
DOWNEY MUSEUM OF ART-10419 S. Rives Ave., Downey.
Contemporary watercolors from Hong Kong. Closed Monday.
Through Aug. 19.
CHALLIS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna
Beach. Recent works by Ron Wagner. DaUy, 11 a.m.~S p.m.
Through Aug. 26.
GLENDALE FEDERAL SA VJNGS -500 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. Oils and other media by Mary Speed.
Through August.
NEWPORT CITY llALL-,1300 N~wport Blvd., Newport Beach.
Mixed media by Sieve Krikl of Fountain Valley. Through
September. Open during regular business hours.
Real
Cantonese Food
eat here or
· take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
ORiole 3-9560
MEADOWLARK
/
COUNTRY CLUB
ORANGE COUNTY'S
TOP . ENTERTAINMENT
JOE LIGGINS
The Original "Honeydrippers"
BACK AT THE
LARK ROOM
with
WILLIE JACKSON
Wednesday thru Sunday
Banquet f•cili1i11 up to 450 Peo plt
16712 •RAHAM AYINUI tAt Wanter)
HUNTINGTON IUCH 17141146·1186 12131 Sf2·1f54
AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St., Costa Mesa.
Oils by Ann Souza. Through August.
BANK OF COSTA h1ESA -Harbor Boulevard and Baker
Street, Costa f\lesa. Oils, watercolors, and etchings by Clay
Campbell. Through August.
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1640 Adams St ., Costa ~1esa.
Oils by Virginia Kling. Through August.
COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE -206 W. Wilson St, Costa
Mesa. Oils and acrylics by Jane Huffman. Through Augus t.
TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Acrylics by Maggie Moore. Through August.
CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Oils by Fern Miller. Through August.
DAILY PILOT -330 West Bay Sl.1 Costa Mesa. Oi ls and
acry!J cs by Gertrude Mattocks. Through August.
COSTA ~1ESA LIBRARY -556 Center St., Costa ~1esa.
Acrylics and graphics by Dorinda Cook. Through August.
DOWNEY SA VJNGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th St., Costa
llSTAURANT
2241 WEST COAST HIGHWAY
NliW .. Oll:T a EACH 6'W-JOS7
ARMEN IAN -MIDDLE
EASTERN CUISINI
~
Liv• M1u ic • B•llv D•ncin9
Thurs.-Fr i. -S 1 t. -Suri.
213 6 PLACENTIA A.Cv1CT011t14
COSTA MESA 642 .0800
mITIJf.I
Mexica1i R estaurant
PROUDLY PRES ENTS
THE
CHAPTER
II
For Your Dining
And Dancing Pleasure ~
Playing Nightly
Wed. thru Sun.
-
"Finest Mexican Food in Orange County"
OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS
547 W. I 9th STREET
COSTA MESA 642-9764
••••• I VALUABLE COUPON ••••• ~
I
I
I :
I
I
I
I
I
I • '
\
I
TAKE THE
WHOLE
FAMILY
TO
ARB Y'S
Arlly's ROAST IUF
SANDWICH ............ Reg. .89
FRENCH FRIES ........ Rt9. .29
" Arlly's
Reg •• 29 .-SPIC!AL SHAKE
THIS COUPON TOTAL ... 1 :>47 :
GOOD FOR UP SALE
PRICE
TO 4 ORDERS Only
• -
Arby's
7942 EDINGER AVE.
lldl•ttr .. , .... u
HUNTINGTON BEACH
I <1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
LUNCH • DINNER • COCKTAILS
l'ood To GO -Special Discounts ·
BANQUETS/ CATERING
Dining Satisfaction Guaranteed
OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK
DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT
Wednosday Thru Sunday
2121 E. Coast Highway
(0. lfod: Wfff of MocArtflffl
Corona del Mar 673-9919
I lUVIEftA
RESTAURANT
Continental Cuisint
Cocktails
Serotng
L uncheon and Dinner
1 i\1 011d<1y through Saturday.
ci osed Sundays
W e aro loc:att"d next t o
the May Co, In South
C oast Plate
lllJ S. lristol
Coit• Mlffft 540-114 0
Dining at the Newporter Inn's Marine Restaurant
is a totally pleasurable experience. Excellent
cuisine, ranging from our superb Rack of Lamb
10 Salmon Sleak In Salsa Verde,·
painstakingly prepared by our European-
trained chef s. A wine list of distinction !o
co mplement your en tree. And , in an
atmosphere of contfnentel elegance
unmatched for relaxed enjoyment.
Dining is The Marine Restaurant a!
~•W•••~
1107 JambOree Road, rfJ Newport Beach/71 4·644 ·1700
ALSO, THE LIDO LOUNGE/THE WINE CELLAR/THE BISTRO/THE CHELSEA BAR
••• 8 co.,....Gool 'tll A.,..31,Mld nlght •••• ~ll;Jo.;;;'P77...-.i...::
,,
CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -South Coast . Plaza, !390
Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Olis by Anny Netti Kr1kl.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK Ot' OltANGE -1650 Adams SI.,
Costa Mesa. Oils by Dr. Fred B. Olds. Through August.
MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa
Mesa. Oils by Carolyn Overman and oils, draWings and
watercolors by Pat Pembrook. Through August.
SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 East 17th St., Costa
lttesa. Oils by Donna Baldwin, Through August.
CLYDE ZULCH ORIGINALS -3800 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona
del Mar. Three-man show includes the work of \Varren Wood·
ward, Jack Hannah and Clyde Zulch. Hours: Tuesday-Sun·
day, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
BOWERS MUSEUM -200'l N. Main St .. Santa Ana. An ex-
hi bit or artifacts from the. Cuna Indians of Central Amerlca1
through Aug. 26.
MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY -700 Stale Dri ve,
Los Angeles, will present "Pedal Power" in action in the
south half of the Museum Building through October 28. For
th e fi rst time since 1899, bicycles are being manUfactured
in numbers greater than the auto. Museum is open dally
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Liza Minnelli Adds
Midnight Matinee
former. Paul Williams. Tickets are now available at
the Greek Theatre box office.
Mu!ual and Liberty ticket
agencies, and by mail for Liza
Mlnnelli's "Midnigh t Matinee"
at the Gree k on Saturday, Sept.
I. The additional show \1'9.S
sched uled in order lo accom·
modate the unprecedented de·
mand for tickets.
Liza ~1inelli with Paul Wil-
liams ~1ill undoubtedly be one
o! lhe highlights of the sum·
mer season. Performances be·
gin at 8:30 every evening. iu
addition to the ''A·Uclnlght ~lat·
inee". Their engagement clos·
es Sept. 2.
Appearing with lhe super·
star, will be the comPC>Ser-per-
Tickets for mo.st perform·
anccs are stil l available. For
further infonnaUon . phone
(213 ) 666-WOO.
srovna
S!UlOI
EXQUISITE
CONTINENTAL
DINING
ENTERTAINMENT
and DANCING
LUNCH DIN Nil
Ml>n. tl'lru Fri. T"" lflr'I h i,
CLOSID SUNDAY
For Re11r"•fion•
642·8'193
Waterfront Favorite of
Old Whalen, Sailors
and Hobie Cat Skippers
•••••• ·s1 ••• 4 l:••ru~f,E~;! 1n~•~UNT:
ENTERTAINMENT
Victoriuktl
1HEBALBOAPAVIUON
400 Main Street
Lew Cll1l•terel M•• .. a -HMrt ...... -
a UNLIMITID SALAD AND a a TU WITH DINNll
tWlftl rflll c-. .... ) • • •
I.a Bu1i~•••m•n'1 lunch SI.JS ••
OPIN DAILY
a 1:00 te 11 :00 P.M. a
a 2440 W. Coast Hwy. a , ."':': :;h • .'4i1~1'• •
Open 7 Duys
, . Hi,i...1 Q"""'r
NatlH Mulcan Food.
W ... D•ys: 11 =JO A.M. ff 12 P.M.
fri. •11d s.t. 11 iJO A.M. t• l l iJO
EXCELLENT
MEXICAN
S.a11'-rt: 4100-IJ MIDNIGHT CUISINE
9093 E. ADAMS , HUNTINGTON BEACH 962 -7911
496-5773 499·2626
---= .. ttlll' t~~\\ 1!>ouge ~ GOURMET DINING
OYSTER BAR • COCKTAILS
. BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, Tu11.-s.1.
ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR
4 to 7 p.m., M on. thru Fri.
Sunday loyal Chln'lpllM I Nnch ,__llyM-'•
11111, -· Opeo -....,.. J~802 COAST HWT.
(•I Ctwfl Y111tJ. l'At\w'l fl
LAGUN A NIGUEL
TV DAILY LOG
Friday Saturday
Evening Morning
AUGUST 24 AUGUST 25
1:00 u rn o mm m ,.., 1:0011 ""''" "''" 0 lilt 11!1 PIWNton Pro INllllll D l(Q) !!J Tht "''°""'
Cofll'd f1om 5PM. Loa Anaeles Rims 00 T11111tutt Tuxtdt
meet tht Mltml Dolphlnt fJ I]) H.R. ~llfutut
8 hnt1111 Cl) SUmfNr St*'tltt
(1) Co11tbhlp ol Eddie'• Ftthtt m lrotfltt l uu
II Wtntltd Ot:•d Of Allvt 1:30 a Dusty's TrttflOllM m Tll• n111ts1t1111 D a;) Rom111 Holld1)'S
II) Sttt Trt k I) A h tllr Wtrld
fl) Los Torres (!)Untie W1tdo
8il Hod1•pod1• Loda• O (]) J•cboll f1ve .m nm Stwop • {))TY a t111tr0t•
1:30 (J) Ho1111'1 Htroet ~World Of WOlldflr
0 M°"" (C) (90) "Tho """"' m c-Jian ... flolbll
v.,.,. or Sinbld" (idv) '53-Ker· 1:00 9 (() lup 1111111
win M~thews, Kathl')'n Grant, 0 m TM Jlt11111
ct) Cl$ Htwi Welt tr Cronkite 8 ~II W11" TllNtrt 0 H11t S1111 Will Trnel fl) RodJ & frttnh m AridJ l llfflth U (I) The Ou11ond1
fD Sul Y11n1 Yln1 Ytt ~Vision On ~ N 1 m C~11ntr1 MUJic
"""' O'l't I 8:30 0 (!) S1bfln1
ft) Dtstrt Theatre: ""'NAI ~ Pink P111lhtt
Ef) Utue R1talt @ u.;ide~t
7:00 8 CIJ lllW> 0 00 AIC ....... , "°"' 8 lowlln1 for Dollars 9:001J (.;) Amuflt Qin
(I) Mo"': (!h~ "Tht Iii I.... 0 l[OJ !!)' Und1rdo1
(dr1) '46-Humph rey Bo111t. D Morie: "Dnll's H•lldlJ" (dr1)
([} AlthNI Wol1d '30-Hancy C1rroll, P111l Lukas.
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fli) WMtll, IUl111 l Cll1 (I'm) '57-Jim Divis, M11y C.1tlt.
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'55-John Lund, Dorothy M1Jont.
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'58-Brian Keith. Ritll J1son.
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-M1rk St1vens, John Liltl.
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KOCE, CHANNEL IO
Ortinge County's U~lF television station, KOCE·TV, has
scheduled tho following spedal programa today. Detailed
llstlngs of Channol 50's programs art earned in !he Daily
P!lol's TV Week each SUnday.
•
DAILY PILOT ... %1
What to Do, Where to Go
Monday's Last Night for Concerts
AUG. 27
MONDAY NIGHT CONCERT -Hear Henry Brandon's Big
Brass Band at 9:15 p.m. ~tonday at Fastpon Island, New·
port Center. Program lncludes Strike Up the Band, "Man
of La Mancha" 5"lcclions, Baby Etephan<, Bugle Call Rag,
Baby Elephant \Valk, Close to You, Fascination and ''Mary
Poppins" selections.
AUG. 24 • 26
LITTLE TOKYO -33rd annual Little Tokyo Niesei Week
Festival takes place in LOs Angeles. rt features displays,
martial arts demonstrations, carnival and a parade at 5:30
p.m. Sunday.
THROUGH AUG. !i
J\.IUSICAL -"Gigi" presented at the Dorothy Chandler Pa·
vilion at 8:30 p.m. Monday.Sat urday and 2;30 matinee
Wednesdays and Saturdays. Tickets, $2.25-11 . Lerner and
LOewe slage and movie musical classic. Stars Agnes Moore-
head.
AUG. !5
CHARACTER BOATS -14th annual Character Boat Parade
takes place in Newport Harbor from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sa t·
urday. Theme is "The Swinging Years" for the character
boats, boats of individual character either through its origi·
nal design or special adaptation.
AUG. %5
BUSINESS SEMINAR -Howard Wilson, president of Ad·
minlstrative Research Associates Inc., presents "Improving
Supervisory Skills," a one-day UC Irvine Extension seminar
from 9:30 a.m. to 4!30 p.m Saurday. It takes pl ace in the
Empire Room, Grand Hotel, One Hotel Way, Anaheim.
Fee: $40 includes lunch, parking and material.
AUG. 25
t.JOVIE ON THE SANDS -Free showings of old·time flicks
on the beach, adjacent to the Lifeguard Headquarters at Lake
Street and Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach. Viewers are
urged to dress warmly and brin~ something to sit on by spon-
sor, Huntington Beach Public Library. Shows begin at dusk.
Schedule : "Blaze Glory," "Sergeant Swell" and "Catch the
Joy," Aug. 25, and Sept. 1 to be announced.
THROUGH AUG. ZI
roller rinks to raire funds for the MDAA which will be pre·
sented during the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon. Tickets
for the six hour event are $1. •
THROUGH SEPT,
EUREKA -Burton's Tropical Gold Mine, Rosamond •. oflers
public tours ol gold mine and museum, Thursday tlirough
Monday and legal 1J9ll~s. 10 a.m. -4 p.m. North of Lan-
caster. AUG. U THROUGH SEPT. t
SJ!PT. g CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR -Sacramento Cal EJpo
takes place on 630 acres featuring hotseracing, rodeos and
Pollack Bros. Circus. Fair hours are from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
daily. Admission is $1.50 for ad ults and 50 cents for children
age 7·12, children 6 and under are admjlted free.
SEPT. 1 -!
Fl.Ai\fENCO ANTHOLOG Y -Rene Heredia, Spanish
gypsy guitar virtuoso, is one of the foremost Fla.menco
guitarists Jn coocert in Downey Theatre at 8:30 p.m. Tickets
15 and 14 at the box office. (2t3) 861-ell 1.
BAll.ET ALFRESCO -Laguna Beach Civic Ballet (Ballet
Pacifica) presents its annual Ballet AIIresco Sept. 1·2 at 8:30
p.m. in the Irvine Bowl, LagWla Beach. Pragram: "Swan
Lake." Act 11, "Graduation Ball," and "Polovetsian Dance."
Tickets, $5-4-2·2. Reservations 41)4.1148.
THROUGH SEPT. 16
OUT 'N' ABOUT
(From Page 25)
chile verde burrito, 55 cents; tamale, 65
cents: beans and rice. 40 cents each.
Skillful preparation and seasoning
made everything flavorsome. Special
nods of approval went to the enchiladas,
chile relleno and chile verde burrito.
Additional prospects .in the a la carte
department are beef or chicken en-
chilada, 65 cents; tostada, 75 cents; plain
quesadilla. 40 cents: stuffed chile relleno,
Sl : Margarita burrito, $1. 75 ; bean bur-
rito, 40 cents; taquitos (beef or chicken ,
two), 85 cents; guacamole, chips and
cheese, small 75 cents, large $1.50.
For the small fry (under 12) there's a
special children's plate tabbed at $1. It
offers a choice of cheese enchilada, taco
or burrito served with rice and beans and
a soft drink.
SHAKESPEARE -24th annual Shakes peare Festival has
alternating performances of "The ~Jerchant of Venice."
Two Gentlemen of Verona" and ''King Lear" in Old Globe
Theatre, Balboa Park, San Diego, June 5 · Sept. 16.
• • •
and champignon·schnitzel -champagne
for everybody, and many hours of rous-
ing dance music provided by Stan
Wlsniach and his International Trio.
As many out 'n 'abouters know, it isn't
necessary to have sampled food in
restaurants along Berlin's Kurfursten·
dammstrasse to be a convert to German
food. The Berliner's top-notch bill of fare
has long since brought a lot of faithful in·
to the fold .
The jovial proprieto rs. 0 s ka r
Schaumann and his wife, Ingrid, quickly
certified their credentials for serving
some of the most authentic German food
this side of the Tiergarten. Natives of
Berlin who came to California by way of
Canada, the Scbaumanns have won a
large follo\ving during their four-year
tenure in Orange County.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR mRENTS AND
'VOLINO PEOPLE
JM fb/KtiM" f/MI '"j"'I M 10 ldOlflt ,.,flll, • ...., lfle aui!lllllilt "' _.;, t°""""" IOI ,,....,. !Ir I/Nit cltfl4t11t.
--------------------
• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
OL4oGM-~"' ... ""'*"' --oo-.... ___ ,,, ............... -
ART COLONY -Laguna Beach offers four art festivals,
Pagean t of the Masters and All California Art Show throu gh
Aug. 26. More than 450 artists and craftsmen participating
in the Festival of Arts on the Festival Grounds , Laguna Can·
yon Road, admission, 50 cents daily, noon to midnight:
Beer choices include Coors, Budweiser, Dos EquJs, carta Blanca and Mexicali.
Burgundy er Chablis is available by the
glass, half or full liter, and there are
\Vine cocktails.
Located at 2285 Newport Blvd., Costa
?Ylesa, Margarita's Mexican restaurant is
open daily for IWlch and dinner, 11 a.m.
to midnight, Tuesday through Sunday.
Friday evenings are highlighted by live
rnUsic and dancing. Closed Mondays.
If you can't make tomorrow night's big
birthday party, plan an outing as soon as
you can to 18582 Beach Blvd., in Hun-
tington Beach's Town and Country
Center - and give your appetite a
rewarding work out at the Berliner
restaurant and deli. ***********'
"Pageant of the Masters," nightly at 8:30 p.m., tickets sold
out: Sawdust Festival. Laguna Canyon Road, 25 cents a week
admission, daily, 10 a.m.-midnight ; Art-A-Fair, 595 S. Coast
Hwy., no admission charge, 10 a.m.·11 p.m.; Discovery Fes--
tival, 364 N. Coast Hwy., 10 a.m.-10 p.m. daily, no admission;
and All c.alifomia Show, 3C11 Laguna Beach Museum of Art,
307 CUI! Drive.
AUG. 26
SUllFER'S STOMP -International Surfers' Stomp Spectac-
ular feat ures roc k groups from the early 60s taking place at
8 p.m. Sunday in the Hollywood Palladium, 6215 W. SWl·
set Blvd. '
AUG. %7
BENEFIT ON WHEELS -Harbor &ller Rink. 1126 Super-
ior Ave., Costa f\.fesa is spoosoring a Skatathon Benefit for
Muscular Dystrophy Associations of Orange County from 6
to 12 p.m. Monday. It is part of a national attempt by
Back to school '73 ...
Berlb1er Birthday
The Berlin er r estaurant and
delicatessen in Town and Country Center
will be staging its fourth anniversary
celebration tomorrow, Aug. 25.
This big event, for which reservations
are an absolute necessity, will get under
v.·ay at dinnertime and continue until the
small hours of Sunday morn\ng. A
number of spirited attractions are On tap
for all participants.
These ind ude a speciil dinner menu -
featuring such entree setections as
sauerbraten, wiener schnitzel, rouladen,
CJ[ . fl
[
i J
T J.
t .1
t .J.
t.11l'!'l
T.1.Tl'Tl
'f~i ~r ~
'l'J.'!' l'T' ~ .r
Hawaiian tradrtion& from reyn spooner
LA PhiJhaimonic
To Tour in '74
The 1"" Angeles Philbarmonic will
make a six-week, 19-city tour of Europe
In the fa ll of 1974.
Music director Zubin Mehta will con-
duct all of the 32 concerts, in seven coun-
tries.
The tour opens Sept. 4 in London dur-
ing the BBC's Prom Concerts. Other
cities will be Lucerne, Montreux,
B~els, L<>ilva1n, Ghent, Berlin, Ham·
burg, Bonn, Frankfurt, VeniC'e, Milan,
Stresa, Vienna, Linz, Zurich, Basel,
Bern, Geneva and New York.
44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070
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ORIY•·IN
SUPER SWAP MEETS
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121.tD71
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THI SUNSHINE SIA ~I
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CMOIClf (. KOTT
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WHITE LIGHTNING (PGJ 'lut 1 IUIT t.l.HC.l.STll
SCORPIO (l>Gl
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ONtY Dtl'l'l·1N SHOWING!
JISUS CH•IST
SUPllSTAI 1t1
StLINT RUNNIN.G {01
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AAl IHOllWS
lllAIY PO,PINS IOI
SNOWBALL 1xn1ss IOI
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•
OA1LV PILOT Friday, A1.1gust 24, lq73
'American Graffiti': It's
1960's Writing on the Wall 10 ACADI MY
AWA.ROS!
Ll1ai Mh1elll
Wat· ls Here
Recordi ng group w ar· will finish a three·day Uni-
versal Amphitheatre engagement Saturday night.
The jazz-Latin-rock musicians, who used to perform
with Eric Burdon have a new album," Deliver t he
\Vord" on the United Artists label.
INTERMISSION ....
(From Page 15)
ing what Elmnes terms "the
largest subscription campaign
in our history -rour times
whatever we've done before.
We 're enlisting every avenue
of support," he declares.
others have made their West
Coast debuts at SCR.
When will the Jong-awaited
Fourth Step be taken? Ac--
cording to Emmes, the theater
will open a fund drive early
next year, after which a func-
tioning center cou l d
materialize in anywhere from
18 months to two years.
"We want to produce a
theater rX substance. We feel
we have something that will
aid immeasurably to the whole
cultural environment of this
area.
By LOUISE SWEENEY
Clltitlltll kloellce MOAIMr S~'llCt
"American Graffiti" is a
film that just sort of idles
along, like a 1900 Chevy with
chrome and ''cut-offs" crusing
down the flat, neon-lit main
street of a mnall Calllornia
town looking for some action.
1t is the serond film by
Calirornia wunderki.nd George
Lucas, who made his . first,
"THX 1138" at the age or 25.
"American Graffiti" is Lucas'
remen)brance of things past in
t.1odesto, the year h e
graduated from high school
there. In the vein of other re· cent movie nostalgia trips, it
might be titled "Summer or
'62."
Lucas has conjured. up the
way things were one steamy
summer night in the ducktall·
b o b by-sox-chlliburger--drag.
strip teen scene, the car cul·
ture of the early '60s.
ONE EVEN ING
Nicely o bse r ving the
Greek unities of time, place,
and action, he has limited the
fi hn to a crucial evening in the
lives of !our young men in this
northern Calilomia town who
have been lifelong friends.
That's as close as
"American Graffiti" gets to
plot, because the picture is
rather loose and formless,
seeming to · circle the block
endlessly like one of its star
cars, and at times it gets
stuck in neutral.
Lucas is an original, fresh.
and intelligent director. He
proved that in "THX," his
prize in the National Student "American Graffiti" is adds as much to the early '60s
Fllm Festival when be was absolutely awash with vintage aura as the sock hop, the
still at USC film school, and rock'n'roll , a shower of Buddy starched bouffant hairdos, Ute
catapulted him into a Warner Holly, Bill HaJey and his pre.grass ambience.
Bros contract.) Comets, the Beach Boys, There will be s O n1 e
Chuck Berry, Booker T and moviegoers turned off by
CONTRASTS 'THX' the MGs., and all the Golden Lucas's slow, sentimental look
This film, made r or Oldies, from "Rock Around back at the '60's, who will feel
"CABARET" ., ..
0101111 Ro11
"LADY SINGS
THE BLUES"
10,11 h1 Col11r I ~I
Universal, is quite a contrast the Clock" to "Chantilly it's about as interesting as an
to the clinical nightmare of Lace" and "Teen Angel." attic full o{ hoola hoops. But
"TIIX'' -rather sentimental, Lucas has "Let the Good for anyone who dotes on
rambly, fwmy, a Ii t t le Times Roll" in this one, and nost.algia, "Sixteen Csndles''l----------
awkward around the edges, the supersaturation of rock style, it's a movie must. and sometimes a little dumb., ___ :_ _________________ I
It has all the earnest, adoles-
cent angst of a high-school
yearbook pulled out of an old
trunk.
I think it's going to tum off
R lot of people who don't see
the early '60s in the same slow, rosy light that Mr. Lucas
does.
But where's he going? You
may wonder impatiently. And
the answer is that it doesn't
matter within Lucas' context.
In the course or the rihn. we
do see a boy known as Toad
(Charlie Martin Smith) ac-
quire a ca r, a girl, and a little
wisdom, see Steve Bolander
(Ronny Howard) de c ide
between going off to college
and staying with his girl ;
watch Curt Henderson
(Richard Dreyfuss) make up
his mind whether it's right to .
leave home to find a home
{and on the way take up with
a gang known as the Pharaohs
to rob some pinball machines,
then de-wheel a police car),
and listen to Big John ~tilner
(Paul Le Mat), the town's 22·
year-old drag champion ,
vroom through town on hi s
way to maturity.
U.A. CITY AND IOUTM COAST CINl!MAS-TUISo-'Y !k
(L.AOl ll ANO GOLO~N AOlltS~NH TU, t :to P,M,
t 1tt1r1 Stf"t1s111f/--.O S•l "OWL ANO TMI l"USSYCAT"
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llll11Mt11 TayMr ...... ~ 11 M7
"NIGHT WATCN" (l"O) ''LIVI AND Ln 0 11"
lllft ltt'(MWI "MAN "THI MICMANIC'' WM0 LDVIO CAT DANCING" 1,.0) l1t11 ill Ctitrt (,.0)
J. C9'un1/ll, Wehll ''THI! LAST 01'" SHI LIAH
''THIEi' WMO CAMI TO OINNlll" CtliM" t ,.0)
• .,,, ltrtMtft
"WHITE LIONTNINO"
m MANN
THEATRES
~o
11Hl1L ---~•11£0MITilO
WOI. IKRU INllRS. I l.M.
FllOll 11 US
SIJUROll l·I I Hl
SllOll l-S 11
All SIATS $4.00
There is little question that
SCR is artisticall y deserving
of such endorsement. From
the beginning in 1965, the com-
pany has maintained a pro.
fessional quality of prod uction
which has rarely wavered
through a highly amibitious
output or 82 shows in 101
months. Of these, 13 have been
world premieres, while 21
LOOKING AHEAD to the
culmination of the SCR dream
on the now-visible horizon
recalls a statement of purpose
of sorts Emmes made in
February, 1965, before his
company had taken even 1 ill!l
second step. He declared: .
'.'Our plays are going to say
something, even the comedies.
The audience can 't be passive.
\Ve intend to make them al ive
and a"'are. They're going to
leave the theater know ing
they've been ex~ to
something vital."
upsetting look at a futuristicl~ii]~iii~ifl~~~liii~f2i~f.i;:rn~i'.li~~:;§~~I society of robot people wilhoutlt
Eight and a half years 13.ter,
by every indication, David
Emmes' pro phecy for his
yo un g company ha s
materialized tenfold.
names, drugged into total sub-,
mission to a totalitarian
NOW!
ORANGE COUNTY EXCLUSIVE!
.. inter esting, thrilling, and ve r y
funny ... Photography incredible·'
·Daily Variety
"you don·t have to be a surfer to get a
tremendous boot out of ~sunshine Sea."'
-Citizen iVews·
··spectacular, superb -
-Santa Ana Register
"Zesty, refreshing .•. a stunning piece of
filmmaking •.• EXCELLENT!"
-THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
The ultimate adventure around the workf
by Greg MacGillivray and Jim Freeman .
2nd FIATURf
CLAIRE BLUME
111 ffto tMl'I comffy-clram11
"RED SKY AT MORNING"
lVES: ,.OM 6:30 CONTI N. SAT. & SUN.
government.
("THX" \Vas an expanded
version of the short fibn con·
cept which \\'"On him a first
,_ ,.
/ y /
THEY'LL STEAL YOUR MONEY & YOUR HEART .... fOUHTllH ¥1lUT CINIMI I 10.1. l\ltlDTOM
AH.I.Ml• ts .. 1122 fOVNT llN ¥1LUT Uf-1500 l\A.UtfON S2~7'1
.UC THLlftl -"2 lOWAIOI CINUU, CIHTR 3 STADIUM Dll'lt IN ,I
OUNG1"74J2 COSll MfS.t t7M141 OUNGl.,._.m
llllNI , ... TlllATtl IPWAIOI CINfM.I WUT 3 OWIGt .,_U 6
WISJMIHSm lti~n
TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME ANYWHERE!
THESE 2 DOUBLE· GREAT DOUBLE COMBINATIONS!
•.TOGETHER IN WESTBROOK #! TOGETHER IN WESTBROOK #2e
DUIA/ff~
It D1tE Cl/lAT ESCNEI Wiil_,
r fW
"1111 WiOF Sllll~"
nQHC:O!;,,.,.
Burt ReynOtds is
The Man Who
Loved Cat
~
' •
' ' 11"1 i~·
'
·,
LID 0 NIWPOO T
BE ACH
lNTll.AMCI TQ ll00 l<i 1
~ • ' ~ J so
AND
Wtai'ltH.2 wnJA J
The Owl aad the Pussyr.at
a for r.llildrn.1ia ~
EVES: FROM 7 P.M.
~CONTINUOUS SUN. 2 P.M.
·-~ ...
ii ••
South Coast Plaza I
>o•l<4GO l••.oltll\IDI
146-1711
~ll; l :IS . J:lO . t""J
2 llG
B11h11 Slttisill d Hits
"FUNNY GIRL" 01
"OWL & PUSSY Clf'
FOR
ADVERTISING
IN
OUT 'N' ABOUT
PHONE
NORM STANLEY
642 -432 1
"".perhaps the most remarkable film toen1erge since
· . II w "-v · r "' FRANCO lEmREW -· ROMEO
<B'JUUET
.r.u!r IndJiul l!J«»-.-GNNR ·--
."'9MIGl.a..,~ -~
m-------·--"JF.SUS CHRISf SUPERSTAR"
.. , ·---·--S WfiAlr ·-Mllll't--1•11111/Ulllll / rl!llijH /Ill .. /
-•1•11111111 11.'<'1-e1:r t --·--••11um1 .. _;;-M11·U11•-t-.• -.MM11-.i
IPOl-~~~,!!.l ..;..,fPMlJH.U WlmM"
"1N04AH" IM · 1 ll • 1'21 • l•.3'
--·-IMClf!T --·JM-..,._ .. " I· .
MATINEES BOTH
THEATRES '1.00 EVERYBODY
lo 6 P.M. lo 2:30 P.M. Sat. & Slin.
'
••••••••••••••••••• 1 ... 11111 ••••• • ••••• • • • • • • •
•
• • .
Friday, August 24, 1~73 DAILY PlLOr
:· • ..
' 'M . ' ·. 'ama Michelle Wants Acting Success ... '•
'" By MARY i:AMPB'EU. .
NEW YORK (AP ) -ll It Faye
t>upaway? Sandy Dennis? Leslie' Caron?
No, It's Michelle Phillips, not one ol the
thtee actresses most people misiake her f°:J .. and $he's making her actihg debut as
Bupe Frechette, John O i Ill n g er• s
gh1f'rtend ln the new movie, "Dillinger.''
~ Phillips, who talks with great
g • or spirit, wonders whether her
remghiUon quotient will change and ~ that success will strike a~ain. Suc-a:m Jtleans, she says, "th.at gocid scripts will <Orne to me. the same day they go to
Candice Bergen and to Julie Clu'istie."
Success came once berore, with the
Mamas and the Papas, one of the first
two big Amcrlcan rock groups to follow
the Brttish aval~ncbe started by the
BeaUes. The group consisted of John
Phillips and Michelle, who were mairied
eight years, and Denny Doherty and
Cass Elliot. But ooly Mama casa usually
was recognJzed on the street.
"That reminds me or my favorite story
of rny:;el!, 1' Miss Phillips said. "I was
coming out of a restaurant wiUt a couple
of friends, and a druak told me I looked
like Michelle Phillips and I should start a
rock group. I wanted to get away, so I
said, 'I can't sing a note.' He said, 'Oh,
that's okay. Michelle Phillips can't sing
either.'
.BROKE UP
"When the group broke up in 1968, I
joined an acting workshop in Los
Angeles. I knew that as fat as the music
roya!ty checks were then, they were not
going to keep coming. I wanted to
perform -doing something -and I
alw~y.s wanted to act when I was a lit·
tie litrl. '
1'.<\11 my actor friends told me that l
should study acting. There weno other
people who said acting classes would
destroy your natural charm and spon·
tanelty and an that junk. I'm .really glad
l went to clWJs. You do scenes and
memory e.rercises and all sorts of things
that help you achieve various ernotiooul
states and expressions. I'm still going.
Jack Nicholson and Derutis Hopper
were in classes 10 years nearly, before
they even got a part.
Men.Pon of those two actors prompts
discussion of rornanCe and brings out the
fact that the names Michelle Phillips
contain double letters. "So do my first
name, Holly, and my maiden name,
Gilliam and my daughter's name, ~
na Phillips -she's five.
EIGHT DAYS
"Even Hopper bad two Ps In ll Dennis
Hopper and I married each other for
eight days. We're still friends. Jack
.;_;Yt
Nicholson and I dldn~ marry. We'rt could never live thnlugh il I cried and mayor of Geie Autry, Okla. The
friendly, too. J'magirJ \Vithno~mies." carried on.'' lieutenant governor told~~ 'If )'OU Right now , Miss Phillipe is most en-want to yell out. •·'!bat's me ." fttl free
She and Chy!lllll also are friendly with thusiasUc about "Dillinger." She has to do so.' Everybody WU yellin& oqt and·
John Phillipo, his wile, Genevieve Waite , kept her hair in the style of the movie, screaming and laughing. It was .,.t
who starred in the film, "Joanna"; and up ln a knot at the back. "Jt's ccm-·~Everyone ei:cept \be principal
their little boy. rortable and cool. 1 like it out of my lace c.hatat't~.rs was cast locally. John Mtlius
SCREEN TEST and off my back. put " ad In the papero saying ~ "I loved the movie. I think it's a who wanted to try out for porls, .i-up
Getting the part in ''Dillinger,'' which miracle that we were able to do it for the at the Holiday IAD, room 110. They came
also stars Warren Oates, Ben Johnson amount of n;woey that. we did -$1.1 in droves &Dd be read them and cast
and Cloris Leachman, was dooe without million. lt looks like a lot more. the mvery quJckly."
"It the finl time Jolm Milius has Miss Pllilllpo is hoping that mw good making a screen test, Miss Phillips says. directed. He's been writing 8 n d scripts will be presented to her -
"I tested for 'Carnal Knowledge.' with everything he's wrttten before has been without™" doing screen tests, whldl ahe
Jack Nicolson and for a remake of 'The tampered with, in llOllle way. He feels considers bad luck. "My aim in movies 1!
P°"tman Always Rings Twice.'~ That that he's got it like be wants it now, just to be very successful, get great
film was never made, but I think it will which is lucky for everybody and lucky reviews, be sought after in the lDdwtry
be, and Raquel Welch will probably eod for me, certainly.'' and he good in everything I do.
up doing Jt. For 'Dillinger' they loojed "We went to the premiere in Oklahoma "I 'got spoiled at a very early age con-
at those two tests. City, which was great fun. 11le mayors of cerning success. I want to be considered
"When the 'Carnal Knowledge' project Enid, Ardmore and Oklahoma City, as good in movies as I was in the record
with Jack fell through, I really_th=ou~gc:h:..l:....:..w:..h:..e:..r•:....w_::e_sh:.=o:..t _it_:_. _w_e_re_the __ r_e_and __ the __ ind_us_try_:_·_" _________ _
Their deadly missian:
ta crack the farbldden Island al Han!
Michelle Phillips, former maniber of the
singing group Momos ond Poppos, ploys
John Dillinger's girlfrend in "Dillinger."
"My aim in movies is just to be success·
ful, get greot reviews ond be sought
ofter in the industry ond be great at
everything I do."
#
No Smoking in Metzger's Films
Producer-director Rad I e y
Metzger. Ylho does not permit
smoking in his films, continues
to enforce hls "no-smoking"
edict in "The Picture." now
filming in Paris.
;)1etzger kiclted the smoking
habit in 1966 :When the fir6t
"i>orts from thc 'U.S. Surgci>n
General's office conVinced him
thit cigareUes Were detrlmen·
ta1 to hi s heallh. In 1970, with
"Camille 2000." he began to
eliminate tobacco from his
films, deciding-that t b e
glamorous people in hi~ films
should not set bad examples.
good picture should have but
there won't tie a cigarette in
sight. The statistics don't lie.
1956. "The Picture" will be
distributed through Audubon
Films.
There is a significantly higher,-----------1
incidence of illness and death
from throat. Jung· and heart
disea ses among smokers than
non-smokers.
"Tobacco kills and nobody
\Vilt kill himself wit h it
because the habit appears
desirable in one of the fihns."
"The Picture" i.s based on
''l.'lmage," the clissic erotic
Freoch novel by Jean de Berg,
which has been a subject of
controversy since its publica·
tlon and subsequent banish-
ment by French ce.n.sors in
&fNFAAL CINEMA COllPOAATION
~fOUNTAIN VALl('f ... ~~~n ...,uoo;;;u.;,.,.;-,o,;;c.,R
"PAPER MOON " (PGI
ALSO
'MAN WHO LOVI O CAT DANCING'
./') fQUMTAIN VAllll' ... ~~~l ~ ... o;:-1 -;_j'i;,;;, I~
"NIGHT WATCH" (PGJ
AL50
· "LlfilND Of
HELL HOUSE" "No one will ever start a
tobacco habit becatL<>e of beautiful people who do en-·i -----------~--------~
viable things smoking in my
piCtures." says Metzger. "a,1y
films will have ever)1hing a
..!....-•. ,,__,
CtNEDDMF 20 '
.. £"..'."....:......~_1U,;,J ...
,. -~-·"· CINFDOMF 2/.~:. -=---· -.
·-~·-... $140/UM -2 : ·
t. .._,1Htt1 .l.IU.' ~ • -,. ---, ... $1AOIUM •3 ::." • • •t.:. ._,
NEVER BEFORE
SO MANY GREAT SHOWS
UNDER ONE
GEORGE C.SCOTT
FAYE DUNAWAY
lOHNMLLLS.
JACK PA[ANCE
Ut\L/hOMtt CRUDE
P~• "~Lv!R rox "' SIM Dli!HPDIT"
"POPPINS" al
1-1-l·ll
"Hl.AYY TlAfFIC" IX l
"WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A
HAKED LADY7"
"SOUND OF MUSIC"
NO RISlllVEO SEATS
Witt. J1dle Andr•ws
....
'"ICOIPIO''
"PA,11 MOON" <PGI ....
"HAROLD r.. MAUDE"
••LtYl AND LET DIE" (PG)
'"' '"THI MICHANIC"
"THE MACllNTOSH MAN·., (,.) ....
,.IULLO'' IPGI
. ... '~ •• easily the best
·movie so far this
Yearll -Slephen F•rber
• NEW YORK TIMES~
Wherewweyourt'R? .~ • "
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
ENGAGEMENT
"JFSUS CHRISf
SUPERSL\R"
MIJ'Dmm'
Fill ~·-~.lndlan
l!lCD '°''" _,GARNm •VERA MUS
"'lffU -0.,0'llW:H•.W..to.ttm.
2nd '!G) RATIO SHOW
~ 110~·
Ill• --
to the Chift.I Seas!
lliUl:E Ill ·JOllll SWI ·a.A CAPRI r:'OOEJl lHE Dwarc.~ 11111 WAU:Sll• KIEi
"""1a1Dlg M IWI' J.l>si:, iao S<lilrii·Vlritt"'.,"""" ..,.~-., '"" W"11ra.Cl,.. P>i Hilo';, asmalDI
""'~ °""' ~ecled .,_ewe' ll\NAVOO< .. l!OillalOO•·-.illgWm< Bra;SOih ~ m
ca[RJ ... :!~...=:!!r...t-.1 [o::-""~:~i=I AW<lrE<Qmnricam~
•• JAIHlOfC Ill.AHO ."""'°'"' NOW
PLAYING
AT
PLUS
·CHARLES BRON
"THI
MICHANIC"
" j,C)
j
•
,.. . . .
30 DAILY ,ILDT Friday, August 24, 1q73
$
Fully Equipped inc:!:
Vinyl Roof
:JVL2 t ·ClG·2b lt40
New 1973 Chrysler
New Yqrker BroUCJham
-· •
ONCE
A YEAR
•
SUPER DISCOUl\ITS -,
SUPER $AVll!G$ RIGHJ: NOW
DURING OUR ANNUAL
MODEL YEAR• END
CLOSE -OUT
HURRY FOR
BEST SELECTION•
4 DOOR HARD TOP
Luxurious ly Equipped Including
Air Cond. OFF MANUFACTURERS
SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE
New 1973 Chrysler
Town & Country
Station Wagon Equipped
The W•y You Want It
Including Factory Air
.>-._
~ ••. #
CP46-TlD-l II IOJ •
New 1973 Plymouth
Suburban Wagon
OFF MANIJf:ACTUlln'S . SUGGESTED ' RETAii.PRiCE
All wanted extras incl. air cond.
·uSED CAR
SPECIALS
4 1p••d tr•n1tni11ion, 1ir col'l<filionin9. ·
!tl4EYNl
$1395
GAL.AXIi 500 4 DR. SED .
VB, 1utor111tie, r1 dio, l.11!1•, powe•
1+1•ring. & br1k11, WSW, 1ir eonditio~·
in9, vinyl top. l61 6fON)
$1195
CATALINA 2 DOOi HAIDTOP
VI , •utor111tie, r1dio, h••t1r,
pow1r tl•1rin9 & br1k1t, WSW,
•ir eond., rtlly wh•eb. 1314-
BHL )
$1395
'69 BUICK
SKYLA RK Z DOOi H.T.
VB, 1utom1t1ie, r1dio, h11t1r. pow1r
1t1•rln9, pow•r br1k11, w1w, 1ir con•
ditioning, vinyl top. IYPSOOO J
$1295
STATION WAGON
V8, 1ulom1tie, rtdio, he.tt•r, power
1te•rin9 & br1k•1, WSW, 1ir cond.,
tilt wh•1I, AM -FM, roof r1c•. 1709·
AE X)
·$1495
'69 FORD
GAU.XIE 500 H.T.
VI, 1ulonu1tie, r1dio, h11ter, power
1!11rin9 & br1k11, wsw tir•1, 1ir con·
ditioning, vinyl top. (Y0f41 I J
$1195
'140 STATION WAGON
1/ door. Economic1I 6 eylind•t •n9in1,
Jt1nd1rd lr1n1mi11ion. I WXFS28 )
$795
'69 DODGE
POLA.RA WAGON
VI, 1utomftie, r•dio, h11t1r, power
1i••rin9, white 1id• wilt lir11 , roof
r1ek. IY PClS61
$1295
. ,..., . . ... ...
Sir.
MEW \913
l TOil
\tlllltlll\Otl~l
r\Cl·Uf
. .. ...-.
Sir. ·•JH1COCHl21455
AU V .. lctn l•r.fect .. hfM We ..
'
MODEL
YEAR END ,
CLOSE OUT· TIME MEANS
ONCE A YEAR BONANZA,SAVINGS
'ON OUR ENTIRE'LINE OF
INTERNATIONAL FINE
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES .
NOW'S THE TIME
TO BUY
AND SAVEii I
OFF SUGGESTED
MANUFACTURER 'S
LIST PRICE!
s~,_ # l02HOCHl7S090
'
NOTICEI
Atl•s Chrysi.f Pl
-hu f 'Ii .Yrnoutli • service •c1 ties for
HOMES on ALL MOTOR
size b regardless of
for ' ,,:;xperlenctc1 mo.
WARRANn. rnoctienicsl
International Work on
j·ruclc: ch•11l1. anct Dodge .
\MMIDIA'TI
Dl\.\VlllY
.. .•:
·~ F"rlda~. August 24, iq73 DAILY PILOT 3j
1973
·COUPE DE VILLE
FULL PRICE
•
SUMMER CLEAN-UP SALE!
T his is that unusual oppo1·tunity lo purchase a new Cadillac.
We h ave 74-new Cadillacs lo sell before Septemhe1· 10.
BEAi IHI
PRICE
INCREASE ,,., ' ' . '
•
..
1973
SEDAN DE VILLE
. . ' .
FULL PRICE
•
'FULLY EQUIPPED WITH climate
y::onlrol air conditioning, vinyl top, full
" J>Ower incl; 6 way seat, AM /FM ste-
·reo, w·sw tires, lamp monitor & a ho st
.~or many other factory convenience
.extras, plus cruise control.
1 6677
FUtLY. ~Ql}IfPED WITH vinyl
rObf, climate control, air conditioning,
full powe~.6'Way seat, AM /FM stereo
-"fuitiplet,•;til\ & tele~opic steering,
power doo ~JOcks, tinted glass, door
guards & a:'Jjcjst of many other fac-tory ·converilenee extras.
5 6877
•
JG l\1onth Open End Lease
on Ap1>roved Credit.
(Stock 710'l0)
LEASE Fo< o.Iy ... _ .$149°~ •.
1973 Cadillac
Coupe
FULL PRICE
.. '· ..
SPECIAL SAVINGS NOW
Nabers Leasing ... I:.ease Direci
• • . hnn1 ed iate Delivery
' ' EXCELLENT SELECTION -FREE ;PICKUP AND DE-
36 ll1onth Open End Lease
on Approved Credit.
(Stock 68401
. LEASE fo< Only . . .... $152°~0 .
'
'73 El :Po_rado
CABRIOLET
FULLY EQUIPPED WITH climate control
air conditioning, full po\ver incl. 6 \Vay seats,
' Ai\1/FM stereo, wsw tires, tinted glass, right •, . 56577
LIVERY -FREE LOAN CAR WHILE LEASE CAR SER-
VICED. WE WILL BUY YOUR PR~NT -CAR F'OI;t uJ.
MEDIATE CASH. Four and one-hall aeres iif<.total au\lt(lr-
ized Cadillac facilities designed to bett'ec sell'-and seryice
Cadillac automobiles. (20 worii stalls and 45ifactory•trained
technicians).
FUJ,t PRICE
·~8477 Full po\ver including 6--way seat, power an-
tenna, AM/FM stereo multiplex radio, tilt &
telescopic steering. Vogue premium tires,
etc., etc. Very low miles. (363FPW)
band mirror, tilt & telescopic steermg, & a
host of many other factory convenience ex-
tras.
LEASE For Only $141.00 Mo.
LARGEST SELECTION OF CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY
• co't:PE DE \"(J,l .ES
e El, DOR.\DOS
e CO!\"\'EHTIHl.l·:S
• .
We Sell Over 100 Used Cars Every Month Because 'Pf .911arrty, Value & After. Sales Service •
Over 75 9uallty Cadillacs. & Qther Select Trade·iM ·To 'Choose From. Wide Selection Of
Models And Calors Avm'lable For Immediate Delivei:y.· Just A Few Exa"'flles Listed Below. . .
' ' . ' • •
e SEDAN DE VILLES
e BROUGBAllS
e COUPES
•
HILE THE STREET IN FRONT IS BEING WORKED ON WE INVITE YOU TO DRIVE RIGHT ON Tc;> OUR .LOT. THERE'S PLENTY 0 F PARKING AND EXTRA SAVINGS TOO!
'69 COUGAR
ELIMINATOR. Only ~ mlllll. V-1, 1uto. ltll'lt .. ,..... •'-"119· "°"""'4' bo"llr; ... rtidlo, .,..Ml', ......
Wl'l ll• ~n tir•. YfllYI lllte!'lor. Shows exc.ttltnl ~ l.nuAI
'67 Coupe De Ville
Vt11yl t.o, ltlllfltf" l11r ... 1or, hill oower. l6Ctory •Ir (M·
dllMnl119, Hit sttierlllf wllftl, 1./11/FM 1llrto redlo, wllll• sfdl'\llel/ llrH, etc., e!C. {UD5141)
8 1777
8 1333 tdllnl black full INIMI'" lnllrlor. Full POwer,• factor., ,lliiliiit...I
''69 SEDAN Di VILLE
'72 SEDAN DE VILLE
Turqvo!M with hi~ls• cloth Interior, tvll power, IK-
llH'Y •Ir cotldlllolll119, till stttrlll'll wheel, AM /FM srtreo,
power door locQ, crulst control, senllrMI, etc. {'69G8Z)
5 2777
;.!,!.,~!'!.~.P!. !·~~,. · 5 '>999
air c:onclttlonlng, AM/FM rllcllo, POW9f' door lodts. IW}. ~ .----------------------•l'lllaht UllllMI, Mllf ~wt.I,. 119! wall llrn. onty .Q,000 ·----------------· _______ .. m.11es on this itmt; ~~S~Vivs§.S>
CADILLAC 54333
• ;4
'70 Bul~lt '"Wildcat
'73 CAPRICE Classic
+Or Sedan, v111yt !OP with l•ptStry lnterlot', lull ~r,
fac!Gr)I •lr tondfftonlll!il, duel comfort se.ata, tilt seat, wh~S. AM/FM 1tmia r&dlo, pOMr ~locks. (J32GHMI
COUPE OE VILLE. Vlny! fo9, t•pe,,lry Ind IMll!..-
lnltrlor, Ml POWtf', f6Ctol')" •Ir CWIC!lllonlng, tlll •'-· 11'19 wllMI, AM.f'M ,,..,_.,, pOWel' doQI' locks, twlll9llt
Mtll!Mt, cnrlM control, n.w wtilll w1H urws. Ollf·
1l•ndk'l9 condition: {7200LHI
USTOM. u,m mll•, Gtymplt bl1mt with whlll vlnyt
top Ind lntlrlor, factory air, 1111f1.rNlk:, PG'Ntf' ''"ring,
disc: brlkts, AM/FM. W/S/W tires. tic. C7MHOMJ
5 2444 ----------------,
'70 EL DORADO s 4222 :?.~.f.~,~,~~-~!' .. '!..!~~~-
l !i;"i!""!"ln9. automatic tr1Mmlulon. r&dlo, llelt.r, .....,Ji. I tittt. polllltf' 1twlng. powtr' tnkn. Ind low I& CSl10PC)
8199
'68 SEDAN DE VILLE
Adrl11Jc t11rqvo1 .. Wllh wl'lllt vinyl fOP, t11"1U011t tlpes-
try &-IHIMr, lull pOWtr, ftclOry llr concUllontnv. Iii! wlietl, AM/FM 111teo. oower locks. llXCl'l)llOMI coo-:Slllon. (W9K065l
·.,·70_C_Ol!ll!'.~l!"~P!'lt!l,l:l.:!!'l!".!l'!'J.:..:.... ....... u-·s·3-·3-3-·3--tli-6·9--.-o·rd-LT_D ____ s_1_4_~im4_• .. -4 ... :!~ .. ~!~~~~~,,~, ff':~ 'Yll. ' fllU powtr, tKtw! 11r condUlonl111i1,·d1111 comtort suts,
LMtMt' lnluklf', AM!fil' • ~,ti~ too, fllH ' OR H.T. V1nyt '°"• "'"YI llltwlor, flClOI')' •Ir c.n-• lilt stffrlng whff. AM/FM ., ... .,, lie. (XQWU.f)
' pO'llll'lf, tKtory air COl1dlllonh-U, 1111 11itf11if'Whtt1, ll'ld ttlonl1111, allto!Tlllk transmlhlorl, radio, n..m, powtr
perwer CIOOr loc:k1. (310AGC) tMrlng. pOWet' lnkts. ""IN aidllwa/I tlrn. (YC'""21
· '69 CHEVELLE
MALIBU, Vln'(J top. Tapntry Interior, factor)' alr _con-
tlltlonlng, V ... al)fOIYlllllC, power 1tterl119 tr'ld br81i:U.
1 r~lo, W/SfW. !XIHVJI
'70 BUICK RIVIERA
91, 11arotoo c°""'I ttctC¥'Y air condltlonlno, Chelnvl broWn, blown vlny fOO, lvU poww. 1111 '111«1"9 wllffl.
AM/FM radio, 1mmac11111t. 1mexc1
81777 ---------------1 '71 OLDS Toronado '70 Sedan De Ville
yt top,"""'"'·"'"''°"• fvll ~· tactor..,.-alr con-dltlolll119, tnt 1tttrlnv whltf, AM/PM lltt'.O r.dlo, *'°' ltcka. etc. IUU.011
'70 Olds Deha 88 8199
COlonl1I Ylllow With wtlUI vlnyt top, IMlch/ng t•pntry
bl'OlllllWin't Interior. Full pawer l•tlory air condltlonlnj• dllll comtort Hiii,. AM/FM 11.l't'O m11IHple:it t&dlo, ti I
1teerlllil """1, cr11l11 control, etc. Totau., eq111ppect.
1325CXD)
. ' '73 Caprice Wagon
t Pass. Factory •Ir conc1111on11111, a11tom&llc transmission.
PGwer 1tffr/119, llOWff disc ttrN.es, POwtr wlndowt.
p0w1r f11/ pit, 1111 11ftrlf1G wlleel, AM/FM 1~reo.
mulllple• rlldlo lo I lr•clt laPt ffdl:I .,ow.r door loc:lr.s, cruise cont~, I~ rlCll. Vlrtual y rdry OPtion on
lflls '°' Df thl line awtomobllt, (fOOHSTl
COSTA
MUA
81777
Pric 1 in efftct ~8 hours ofter Dote of Publlcotion
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32 OAll Y PILOT
... '°°.,,. The Bluest Marketplace on the · Oranee Coast Mobile HotniK for Solt , • , 125 • M9
-F""-...aal
.... 950 •9'0
••• 100. 799 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS """"""'· .......... 525 . w
Pefj oncl WpplitJ . • • • • • 850 • 899
Rtol E1to1• ~ol. • . . . ISO • l99
Rtntol • • . . . • · • • • • JOO • .t99
School1 ond lni!NC.tlon , • • 575 • .599
S..-•ic..S oncl Rtpoin , • • • 600 • 699
Tron'P(Wtation. , . . • • , , 91S • 949
~ .orSd-
""' & ~
Merchondi:s#
... 200·"'
•.• 100·124
.. ~·S.14
.• eoo . .,.
.
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad ( 642-5678 )-One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
~~ [ -....... ,. I I ~ J[ -....... I~. [ -"'Ue ]~[ _..... I~ cl•"""••"•'"•'•"•'•~ll~~ .. 1;1~[;;;;;;""";;;;;'•''•"•'•"' .. ;J~l;tt!i;;J~l;;-;; ......... ;.;;~J~[tt!i;;;;~ll DAILY PILOT 1swmu 1;.bllity for the lint · •
_G_•"°~'-•-l~~~~~~G_e_n_•r_a_1~~~~~-;G;~;.,.;';a;l;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:;:;;;G;e;•;e;••;l;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;:;;;;:!:G~o~ne~r~e~l~~~~~·i~G~e!n:e~r!al'.......~~~~....::G~e~n=er~a~I~--~~~
[ -fwUe
G•neral '""9rel
* * **'** * TAYLOR CO. *
LINDA ISLE-$195,IMIO
Waterfront luxury home with 4 bedrooms,
play rm, study, dining room & private bath
for each bdrm plus lovely powder rm. Great
storage, 2 \vet bars. high ceilings, book·
cases, a kitchen w/everything & pier/slip.
''Our 28th Year" H ycx.(re ~ning a
* BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS *
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Much sought & seldom ' found-customized
family home. 2 Bdrms. plus complete guest
house. Family rm. with frplc. & wet bar, open-
ing off enclosed patio ............. $59,500
338 HOLMWOOD, SAT./SUN. 1·5
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Ideal community for a gro,ving famil y.
Schools, pools & green areas. \·Vell designed
Portofino, 3 bdrms., 2112 baths, dining rn1 .,
brkfst. area & family rm ......... $78,000.
HARD TO PLEASE?
Your search is over! 3 Bdrms., 21,-it baths;
gleaming hdwd. firs. A sunlit pool in a
serene garden setting. Be ready for school.
............................. $79,500.
CORONA.DEL MAR
.'tl~'8 t A"il CQA'>l HLC.HWAY
644-7270
BE RIGHT ON
NEW TRIPLEXES & DUPLEXES
in COST A MESA
45% SOLD·OUT IN 10 DAYSI
Open Daily Placentia Ave. at Wiison
ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, 547-6791
-THE WA:rER -
CONOOMINIU~1 -This Jove·
Jy 2-story end unit has
everything -even a BOAT
SLIP. Ultra nwd~111 kitchen
\\'i lh all nC\V builti11s. At·l '-~'""-'"~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'1 1
tractive ston£> fircpla!'e. 2 General General
Bl.'droon1s, 21, B nth s . ...;;.==-------"='-"------11
SUNDECI\ overlooking th('
11·ater. All this can be yours
101· $86.500.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hill• Road
''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club''
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
General G'!neral 644-7270
CORONA DEL MAR
~i~
Half gone in half a year and the rest will not I ~!~!!!!!t~~:::..::..,. last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport !;
Beach development of condominium homes, General General
fl. / () /} built·in clusters around handsome courtyards.
ol...ido J:Jle Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of
LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & Ige. family rm., luxury, comfort, convenience and quality
or 5 bdrm.s., with 6 baths. Ljdo Nord. Specw construction. Sundecks. fireplace, wet-bar,
tacular view! \Vaterfront liv ing rm. \\'ith elegant Master Suite1 Sun·Litec kitchen,
step-do\vn wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000. private enclosed double garage. Recreational
LOVELY custom 5 bdrm .. 3 ha .. Lido Nord. facilities include heated swimming pool,
on spacious 4-0 ft. lot. Pier & slip. Adjacent lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool.
lot also avail. for sale. $295,000 All exterior building and grounds maintenance
provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Newport Crest today!
341 Baysida Or., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 l'J!~~~'""""'!!!!!!!~'!!"',.;,"!".,...,.....,...,.,..=,. I Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Home.s
r.1i-.o:i "ler! ,• ;,; .... r~· · ... ' ."" •:-,t"'? 1-'i.1 ~-e ..,n ad~ from $62,995 :=.:.......
,General ~eneral
I I
i947 PORT CARDIFF
OPEN. SUN. AFTERNOON. Best buy in Har· bo~ Vie~ Homes -custom patios, landscaping
& mtenor decor. Owner must sell! $65 900. Mary Harvey '
PRIME LIDO NORD LOCATION
OPEN SUN. 1-5. 210 VIA LIDO NORD. Pier
& float. Wiii take 50' boat. 4 BR.. 4 baths:
expansio n plans ava ilable . Immediate occu·
pancy. $185,000 . Kathryn Raulston
EXECUTIVE VIEW HOME
2-Story charmer. Rich wood & brick !rplc.,
4 bdrms., formal din. Fount. in secluded gar-
den. OPEN SAT. 1 TO 6· 3619 SURFVIEW
LANE. Marie Bush '
OPEN SUN. 1·5 ·LOVELY VIEW!
1534 ANTIGUA WAY -Dover Shores. Love-
ly custom blt. 4 BR. home on corner lot. Din.
rm., fam. rm. \v/wet bar & ice maker.
$139,500. C. Tennille
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-6
Financing Available at 71/4 °/o *
From Pacific Co1ist Highw11y
and Superior Avenue (Blilboa
Blvd.). drive \IP Superior to
Ticonderoga, and directly 10
Newport Crest Information
Center. Telephone: (714) 645-6141
Sales Office open daily
10 a.m. to sunset
* Typical conventional financing of 30 year loan:
Cash pl'ice of Plan 1 $62,995; down pllyment
$12,695; 360 monthly payments of $361.00 {prin-
cipal & interest) at 8 ~~ 'i~ ANNUAL PERCENT·
AGE RATE.
~******************j SUPER SPECIAL-BRAND NEW
Choice of two of finest 4BR , 3BA homes in
Newport Beach-Spacious interiors, super
location
OPEN DAILY I TO 5 PM, STOP IN & SEE
1801 Santiago Dr., N.B.
1600 Harrow Piece, N.B.
-OUPLEX-
BeautifuJ rustic 2 bedroom,
open bean1 ceilings 11·ith
cha1111in~ brick fiI't'p!a ce,
buiilin kitchen in this front uolt. JUST BEI~G COL\t.
PLE"TED, so )'OU can pick
your own c.'Olots a 11 d
carpets. 3 Bedl'oon1, 2 bath,
cozy fireplace, h u i 1 t i n
kitchen. Best location in Ol<l
Corona dl'l l\lar. $9:'1.SOO.
644-7270
IV BEST BUY Ontu 64S.7221
DO YOU BELi EVE
NEWPORT BEACH?
A private wooded lol on CHERRY LAKE
in area of quiet, exclusive hon1es. Reserve
for your PRIVACY 110\V !
"'211733 WESTCLIFF OR. AND ENJOY THIS ---=-"'""' NEWPORT BEACH ... lovely home: new car-Ge_..;..n..;;e_ra::.:I _____ _ ~ I I pelS and drapes, family ,;,;;;;;:;;:;;:;:;;;:;;;;:~J .._******************* rooni or formal din-*BEACH DUPLEX* h .-=-· iog "'°"'· bul whal a '"'"" Block to Waler . LAST c •nee for ~rime , ~G:•;ne~r:•:l;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;;e:n;•;ra;;l;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;I this l bcdroon1, 2l~ bath, 1--:r: l ··u1it·! 1 .r,, 2 Bdrnis. locat10~ condom1n1um1. j lirepl!>('C horne i~: Largr Itll'nl ho1111• & int"'l1n t:. 1621 Via Park Drive, 1
patio for your en:ertalnln~ <lNL\' SYl.UOt'l Lido Isle. 1st & 3rd I NEW OCEAN CONDOMINIUMS P'°"'."""· All "'""' Coe"'"'' CAYWOOD REAL TY I floor. S144,500. 67S.7710.
NEWPORT CREST RESALES s
31·"'64· 4-7270 * 54
"
1290 * You'll find it 1n Clllssifil'd j CLAssITTm--;tU set!U!-
2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 21'.i Baths. Formal General Generil
Dining Rooms. Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts.
WIDE SELECTIONS ALL PLANS
AT SPECIAL PRICES
BROKER PARTICIPATION
Real Estate Consultants
1525 Svporior -Su ite 3
Newport BHch (714) 64S.3230
Send for your fret
General
Space Race??
Roomy 3 BR, 2 BA home on
tree shaded corner lot. Cptg,
drps, bltns, private patio,
\\·ork shop! Clubhouse &
s\\·imming pool near by!
$33,500 • low do11n OK!!
Call &;;>.S400.
I VII!,!'!!""...!!;! & eo. j
* BAYCREST *
Genera,----Home for Living
RACQUET CLUB magazine of Newport
IN Beach aree properties
IRVINE with pictures & prices.
3 BR completely upgraded, 2828 E. Coast Hiway
l1,1sh carpetinii, drapes & Corona del Mar
pritne landscaping -to : -;;~;;,~~io;;;ii;=
sec i~ is to UJVE IT! f • 4 BIG '
Walker &Lee
llAl ltT•TI
BEDROOMS!!
Used bril'k fireplace, c-.;trn
large h.itC'hen, l '-i Baths.
$31 .500.
CALL "42·93Zl
MACNAB
IRVINE
FINER HOMES
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
AIR COND ITIONED quiet enjoyment &
beauty. S\vim & exercise in privacy of
your own INDOOR pool. VIEW the color-
ful night panorama of surrounding comw
munities. A one-of-a-k ind 4BR + study
home. $149,000. Walter Kin g 644-6200. (Fil)
Enjoy this unsurpassed vie\v '"ith us, from
recently redecorated home . park in driveway
al 2727 OCEAN BLVD., CORONA DEL MAR.
$175,000
General General ON A BUDGET
-;;;;::::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;· Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family
* TREE SHADED *
Lovely 3 bdnn. Good East.
side lac. E xlra large Jot.
Spac. living rni. \V/frpl. ~21
BARGAIN HUNTER'S DELIGHT
Harbor View Carmel. Lovely 3BR/FR
home near new elementary school. Only
566,900 fee . J oyce Edlund 642-8235. (Fl2)
BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM
New-ready for occupancy-"Dover" plan
-2BR. 2 bath. Professionally landscaped.
Lease $700 /mo . or sale $85.000. Bille Matt-
son 644-6200. OPEN SAT. & SUN . 1-5 p.m.
#10 Rue Chaleau Royal. (Fl3)
TURTLE ROCK HILLS
Just reduced! Exceptional value! "President''
4 BR. Outstanding view. SEE FOR YOUR-
SELF. SAT/SUN. 1·5. 18691 PORTOFINO DR.
$89.950. Paul Quick
LOVELY LUSK HOME • SWEEPING VIEW
4 BR .. Pretty home. Courtyard entrance. Lge.
poolsize corner lot for family recreation. 3
Car garage. Best school s. $89.500. Call
Harriett Davles -
NEW OFFERING
If you've waited for right price for Bluffs
condo \\'/greenbelt & bay vie\v, here 'tis.
Super 2 & den for only $69,500. Jim Muller
CLASSIC BALBOAN . BAYFRONT
Charming 4 bdrm. home designed for fun &
entertaining. Large covered porch to enjoy
spectacular view • pier -float -sandy beach .
best bay buy at $162,500. Bill Bents
CAPISTRANO COUNTRY ESTATE
!·AC. Hilltop site on private road. Cntry.
atmosphere. Horses O.K. !\1ear 1\Iarina. Love-
ly cust. home. Lots of trees. $95,000. 21'.i
Adjoin.-ac. avail. Geo. Gru pe
FIRST TIME OFFERED "BLUFFS"
Paging couples for i1nmac. tO\\'nbouse. Pro.
fessionall y deco rated. upgraded carpels &
drapes. Terrazzo entry & kitchen . A litUe
gem. $63,500. Muriel Barr
PRICE REDUCTION
2 Bdrm. home in Laguna Can yon on 3.3
ACRES: Vie"'· \vith privacy. Horses permitted.
Now priced al $72.500.
BAYCREST'S BEAUTIFUL BARGA IN
$84.500 • This Ivan We lls home has luxury.
Lg. formal dinin g. 31.~ ba's., lam. rm. 4 Gen·
erous bdrms. Come see! 1\fary Lou Marion
13~700 --Coldwell, Banker
~
550 Newport Cent1r' Dr., N.B.
• home on a lge .. \\·ell located * CORONA DEL MAR *
2 COLORFUL COTTAGE$
Rare offering of ocea n side of the h\\'Y· prop-
erty of two houses on one lot , live in one
have income from the other. First time of~
fered, at $89,500.
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662
General
LOWEST
PRl<;ED
EASTBLUFF
4 BDRM.
FAMILY RM.
NEWLY
DECORATED
NOW $59,500
Owner Motivated
Bought Another Home
PLEASE CALL
675-3000
mnn· ,\ 111:.ll'll
111;,u:i·1· •~r.
,EST 1~1q 1>1 5.JOO~j
General
"HARBOR VIEW
MONACO"
Enjoy the ocean breezes and
greenbelt living in this
enchanting community, Thia
delightful 2 bedroom and
den is full upgraded with
custo1n decorator's drapes
and lil('S. The patio is a true
delight. Nicely landscaped -
lots of fruit trees! I-furry for
this one at anly $65,500.
546-2313
()PEN T/L 11 • IT'S FUN 10 8E NICE/
~ -:
Huntington
Harbour Condo
Near new bachelor unit with
ocean vlC\I.'. New fllrnlture
I n c I u d e d . RccreatJonal
lt1cllitle1, walk ac r o 111
1-fyway to beach. Vacant.
Summit offl'lr. Owner will
h!aM! for j195 per month.
Asking aclllng price 11
$24,900 phooo 631·9101.
lot. Ch\ner is leaving to1vn
& has priced the home for
q1,1ick sale. $69, 750.
All fOl' "$32,500
BALBOA BAY PROP. 17301 Beach Blvd., H.B. CORBIN-MARTIN * 642-7491 * RHl!ors 644-7662 Want ad res1,1llJi .•.•. 642-5678 Need a "Pad":' Pl:.ce an ad!
Gener el General 1 General
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
ONE.OF·A·KIND MONTEGO
4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining, creative de cor.
You 'll love the landscaping. Priced for you at $74,SOO
BRING YOUR SWIMSUIT ...
when you move into this ·immaculate 4 Bdrm1 family
rbom Harbor View HOll\l>-Oext to community pool
& park. Includes: Wetbar, 2 fireplaces, w/w shag &
many other extras. Submit your terms. $81,500
ISLAND HOME
Scarcest of all • Hardest to find. Nicest to own. Water-
front/pier, 3 bedrooms, family room, island location.
You own the land; 80% avail. at prime rate. PRICE
REDUCED $5,000
HARBOR VIEW
REALTY
lIOMES
NEWPORT BEACH
B33 -0780
INFORMATION ON OTHER HOMES AVAILABLE
125' BAYFRONT
Will accommodate lg. power boat. O\vner
motivated-price reduced on th is delight-
fully different 3BR, 3 bath home. Lg. LR,
formal DR. spaciou FR. Great for indoor/
outdoor entertaining. G. Fay/B. O\vens
642-8235. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m. #41
Balboa Coves . (Fl4)
IRVINE TERRACE-SALE OR LEASE
2BR + den view home w /pool. lmmacu·
late & ready for immediate occupancy.
$74,950 or lease $490/mo. Tom Queen
644-6200. (FIS)
· INCOMPARABLE BIG CANYON
This imposing & war1n home invites you!
5BR (4&TV room ). FR. DR, 3 baths. Char-
lene Reichmonn 642-8235. (Fl6)
BLUFFS ON A BUDGET
$52,500. 3BR home in low monthly main·
tenance area. A Best Buy! Jack Howell
644-6200. I FI 7)
ACCESS TO DOVER SHORES
PRIVATE BEACH
Bright, su nn y. spacious home-lg. corner
lol -beautifully landscaped for r.rivacy.
Prestigious nei ghborhood. 4BR s, SY.I
baths, lg. LR, formal DR, FR & efficient
kitchen. $125,000 fee. B. Owens/G. Fay
64~. (F18)
ONE OF THE FINEST
Lg. 5BR Big Canyon home. Lar~e corner
lot. Central air conditioning. 3 fireplaces.
Lovel y FR. Fine carpeting & drapes. Great
location for children. $150,000 Joel Smith
642-8235. ( Fl9) __ ,_ __ ---~
( lrvina I -b·fn1M -··,-p . ., J
, tot Dlwor Drive .. t •HH
1144 M1cMholr 144·1200
...... , Gentr•I Gener11'
'I
•
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THE VIEW
..... ;:;:_;:_:_;;:;_:_;:;_:-;:;_;:;-;::: .... ;:;
~11.500. • 4 Bedroon1 Z UA
****** Heritage Collection
ARTIST M/LEAVE. Talentedly dec'd. 3 BR
lo\vnhouse. Spac grounds w/beaut pool &
landscpg. Lots of trees, ocean breeze in
~uiet adult only community. Perfect loca-
tion near Newport Back Bay. Priced only
42,500. CALL 546-5880
NEAR SO. COAST PLAZA
MUST HAVE QUICK SALE. Adult occup.
3 BR, 2 IJA , w /lrg kit., brick fpl & beaut
c:overed patio. Huge cul-de-sac lot w/many
fruit trees & nn for your own garden. Own-
er leaving slate. Offered at only $32,500.
CALL 546-5880
·~mp pai<ned '·" & 001• "·'"'TALK ABOUT SHARP' rUl"µ(>(Lng L'Om1ng. R-2 Jot. •
1·111 for another unit. l.r<"._.: lot. YOU'LL LOVE THIS! fine 3 bedroom, din-
U11't1<-r "''/be-Ip tin.
1
ing, 2 balh home complete with builtins, fire-
• CALL ANYTIME • place, shake roof, new crpts & fresh paint.
644-3928 or Eve. 673-4577 Id eally located near s hopping. Room for
yo ur camper and boat. Asking only $32,600.
Hurry! CALL 540-1151 L(lchenmyer
Realt or
ltfUST BE SEEN TO BE AP-
PROCIATEO • ALL or Nl"V•-
~ Jinrbor & Catalina b('-
jond. 2 bedrooni~. dining
1'00l11, and fwnily roorn.
l'rice ''"''"''" ""' indudc' MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE
laml · · · ss2.ooo. LOT OF LOVE BEAUT. RAMBLING 4 BR., 2 BA. one-story 3201PEK,.,INS.~ISTR&OA5l~; ~!,'· A home. Heavy shake roof, picturesque atrium, ,, ii!l(I a Jitl](' pn int will rnakr I od k ·t h f ·1 be · PETE BARRETT !his 4 0011·no1n hon1<;> a cai;-rg m l C , a1n1 Y rm:, aut carpetmg
11('. t]C'ctric huilt·lns, \\'all· and paneling. Spacious lot on quiet cul-de· -REALTOR-10-11·a ll c:.irpcls ani\ a ro~:k sac close to ne\V regional park. Offered at
642-S200 bottom priN." at $25,500. Dud onJy $49,500. CALL 546-5880
- -------9'i2·8.'\."1l Ull\I". ~-, ~':"'"'"'""'"'"'""'"'"1 NEWPORT BEACH BEST BUY ON A BEER 1• , ON THE WATER-For $87,500, now vacant. BUDGET' II ready for immediate occupancy. Boat slip
• ~ by your !ront door. Spacious 2 BR, 2'h BA.
lfttt"11 a cl"i.11..111p:u:-ne home, 4 -:_ --Gorgeous, convenient, private. CALL 540-1151 &droon11, 2 Baths, Cozy
"""'' li"'pl•c:e. Cleo n new FRUIT SALAD ROOM TO RAMBLE paint, l'Omfortablc de t' p ... in your Q\j,'TI b<tck yard? A
lhag carpets. No cm.,, VA · I viuii.'ty o! h'C"!ih pil~t'ii fru~r OVER 1800 SQ. FT, IN MESA VERDE for ~ppra~~I. $26.~. CALL Is you,·s · l l 1)1.·aru~ fn.ut onJy S36,500. 3 -Big bedrooms 2 baths
COL\\ ~LL. 6'M)....()555. I '!" ... "Ii & ~r;•Pt' a~·bor. ,\nd huge bonu s room with room for poo' I tab! ' .. hvc a~ \•)U 11l('n!i'.' Lil lh!~ . . . e.
.i:r ..... 11 riU11 11on1t• ri-a1u1;nl! Lots o( privacy with low mamtenance. CALL
I BR, 2 [l\, hliill8 a11 d lire 546-5880
IRVINE TERRACE • VIEW
Lovely ocean vfc\v on Galatea 'ferrace in ex·
elusive lrvJne Terrace. 3 Spacious bedrooms,
3 baths, formal dining room; fully equipped
gourmet kitchen; pool & poolside lanai. Ele-
gantly decorated & beautifully constructed
home in a prime location ......... $186,800.
HARBOR ENTltANCE
Olde English styled hillside home, overlook·
ing the harbor entrance in Corona del ti1ar.
Magnificent view o( all the boating activities
at the harbor entrance. Rambling 2·l evel
home with 3 large bedrooms, large do\vn·
stairs paneled !amily room with bar & wine
cellar, intimate book-lined den; 2 large sun-
decks. See 2501 OCEAN BLVD., OPEN
HOUSE Sunday 1·5. Only one of a kind!
. " " .. " .. " " . " ..... " ..... $296,500.
APARTMENT SITE
'220 Jl 105 In choice S1nta An• location
Reduced for quick s•le. Now $20,000.
HARBOR
COMPANY
REALTORS
2141 E . Co•1t Hwy., Coron• del Mar
''Selling Rul Estate in Newport Harbor
SlnCe 1944"
673-4400
Gen•r•I General
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Linda Isle Waterfront
Custom 4-bdrm., 4\>\i bath home on lagoon. Fully
equipped island kitchen, \Valer!ront family r~o1n ,
billiard room ......................... S24o,OOO
Linde Isle Waterfront
Love ly 4 bdrm., 41/2 ba. home "'.ith .swim-
ming pool, pier & slip, panoranuc view of
1nain channel. Lge. family rm. w/space for
billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal
dining & Jivi ng rm. $275,000.
Linda Isle W.1terfront
VERMONT
FARM HOUSE * ACRE • REDUCED
$29,950
Rollin; ~r~u la11•111t and
1t11lely trees 'W'l'OU/'11.I pie·
tur e1 qu e Vcrn1011t
lamlhouse. Old '"'or Id
char n1 11..nd arC'hltecture.
Fon11al entry. Step do1vn
n1aster suite wl1h Z>lh bath.
!\lun si:t•l dep \Vlth n1gged
i)(''ln1-i. J\luids qua1·1crs. 23'
TA VEJW KITCl-lEN '"lth
C<tU1c:rlntl bcunts. Banquet
formal dining. E I e g a 11 t
French doors to secluded
garden paradise. \Valled
patio with outdoor fireplace
and 8.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd
story tn-la1v RjXU1nu.•nt, l
guest cottages an11 covci~
dance po.vUHon overlooki1~"
magnificent fn.>C fonn pool.
EN'TEH.TAINERS PARA·
OISE. CALL 645-0300.
I 01!1. \I I. 01 SO\
/..' r A i : (.)RI
BOAT & TRAILER
GATE
... leads to this GREAT 3
BEDROOi\f 2 balh Costa
l\lesa hornet CoverOO en·
closed patio \\'ili1 <'nterlnin-
n1cnt center. Super location,
wnlk to schools and shop.-
pin-,:. Hun-y on 1his. priced
at $32,250. Ollly 10',~ down.
JOa... COATS ~WALtACE
REALTORS _ _,.54,.,_,4141_
(Open Evenings)
QUICK
OCCUPANCY
ASSUMABLE
LOAN
Extra clean 3 bedroom 2
CAMEO
SHORES
Owner Transferred!
OCEA~ VIEW
AND POOL
OPEN SUNDAY
1 TO 5
4545 TREMONT
NOW $119,000
PLEASE CALL
675-3000
fij li.u · ~\ HE:lfiil
llLU:I'\' l:\f.
ES~ 1~1q _1)75 ·3~0j
Balboa lsl1nd
ISLAND CHARM
5 llr, :l Ha, sin. play room +
IY'OU•I unit..J...g. i.OJndL'Ck, \~):
Old world eh1u'Tll. LM ~ of
! 11·ood, vilullcd open bf'am
llv. r111. 11•11l61cony. Xlnl
I l'.Ullll. 213 'L'O~l'. $ll6,000.
()1v11cr. 675-700 I.
·SA"LI-: c11· lc.ut'.' option :
: Chtlrnling 4BR 2BA older
ho1ne -Beaut brick patio,
I htllllins. $77,::.00. b"IS--:Mll
01t.1)('r,
SalbcMI Penin.ul•
* BEACH HOUSE *
1 $:);),OOJ l:iuy l'i cute 2 bdrn1 ..
. ... tuu·p, 1·\L'illc dl'L'O r. \Valk
10 ~al'll. V11.lu1thlc R-2 lot!
--GEM--
J:Yl.~· Tu1>tln Avt·., N.B. 1 REALTORS ~2-462:': I Jl,\ YVIE\V DUPLEX
..,.,..,..,....,_,.. ... ,..1 2 Bil. 2 BA, one year old. -= 2 Obie garages
$30,500 "''"' • :,1Ml11
ASSUMABLE I Bay«esl v A LOANS J~A,'CRES1' " 13R. 2·~ BA.
•-hard• I~ find lhC'Sl' i!a~·,, .'1•','' . Boat yd. $75.000 . S. '" Lunpre, Gen Dt l, C.i\L 0 1111 But \\'(' huve a real i,:oodi1~.
This is a 3 hcdt i;Otll l'lllie c;rona del M•r
"'ith such desirable l':\1L'as .;:.:.;.:,;'°-='-----
as nc1v carpclin~ tln'Ou~hout OPEN SAT /SUN. 1·5
nnd an expC>nsive 1vater eon-4515 TREMONT
ditioner. You CAN qunlif~· C:unL'O Shi1rl'S. A home for
for this one -call llO\\" for l~c. fa n11ly, with pool .I\:
details. S47-6010 \'li'\1". \Vorth seeing! Quick
:s F-UN 70 BE NICEI possess. Askin!{ $12-1,500 ~OPf.NnL9 • 17 ~' Bc~~:u~!~cr~~~~~~R.,
• family nn. \.\'/bar; patio.
Really pride of ownership,
upgraded carp., drp11, shu1·
Fight lnflotion
Grow your 01vn vegetables
and 0\1·11 you!' O\\'n hon1c!
Feed your family abun-
dantly fron1 this producing
garden, plus f1·uit trees. At·
tractive 3 bedroom, 2 bath
hon1c \\'ith fan1ily rooni &
dining area. Ne\v carpeting,
Ne111 lloor in kitche11 & bath.
Inclosed patio. Santa Ana
address · Garden G1"0ve
school dislriL't. No do\vn. VA
tel'rns. $31.800. 673--9101. j
te1.,;, appliances, etc. Plu.s,
outstanding 3 BR. rental
SMALLER DUPLE)(
2 BR. each; frplc., scp.
ga.i"ttgCS, IJC\V 1mlnt, CQ_f1).,
hardware & appliances. A
bargain at $78,500
LEASE/OPTION
bath hon1c. Lots of ne\IJ -~~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;;::::;£._ paint In and out. Hon1~ va-
You can nvoid today's high
interest rates but control
ttic sales price of the home
you \vant to huy -with a
lease/option purchase plan.
\Ve have 3, 4, 5 and 6
bedroom home!'! In O:>rorla
del Mar and Newport
available on such a plan.
CRll 61a-7'225.
cant for fast move-in.
Assumable 7'1• V.A. loan -
total payments $260 per
month. Prll-e<I to sell at
133."10. 842-mi.
OPEN TIL 9 . /J'S FUN ro Bf NIC£f
WHAT HAS
10 LEGS AND
EATS A LOT??
A fan1ily lnrge enough to \ ~.-::;.,
11101 nn. Conc-1-ett~ boat/
11;11ll'f r-.i::e~. \\'in:'d 10 M'll lr------------------.1
Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of
1nain channel. Soft colors, rich wood pan~l·
ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel-
ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath,
ncC'CI this spectacular 5 1
bedroon1 2 story hon1e!
Lovo, lo\\' price is S37 .!nJ.
Yes, it is in Hµntington I :L!l.H nt $~.OCXI.
larwin realty inc.
968-4405 (24 hrs)
1"11 ttih 9tettcty dlrec,.ry wlft '9• ttilt .... .,... •
Y•• t • IHHIM09!11•tl ... All tile lecatlMI listff ltelew
... 4elctl"41 hi ,,..,_ cktell by 9Chitt1kl ........
wltHe I• t-'-f's Delly Plt.t WANT ADS, ,...._..
1hewi11t .,.. llHMS fer .... er to f9ttt .,. 1f9ff ..
lift llKh ltlferfftatl•• ht ttth "''"'" "'" frWr(, s.t-~rd11y & S11H111ey.
HOUSES FOR SALE
2 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
1947 Port Cardiff (HVuHomes) NB
644-24:!0 $65,900 (Sun. PM)
617 Marigold. Corona del Mar
&44-2430 ~69,500 (Sun
3 BEDROOMS
2727 Ocean Blvd .. Corona de! Mar
644-2430 $175,000 (Sat & Sun 2-6) *6009 Bruce Crescent (Lido Sands) NB
64S.3255 $49,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
3 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
* 19881 Providence Lane. Huntington Bch
84S.1305 $41,500 <Fri/Sat/Sun 1·5)
962 Sandcastle (HVuHills) CdM
&44-2430 $89,950 (Sa t 2·6)
375 E. 23rd St., Newport Beach
646-3255 $58,950 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
4 BEDROOMS
471 E. Broadway, Cosla Mesa
646-3255 (Fri & Sat 1·5)
tt210 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB
644-241!0 $185,000 (Sun 1·5)
4533 Tremont (Cameo Shores) CdM
644-2430 $119,500 (Sun 2-5)
4 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
1930 Irvine (Baycrest) NB
64S.3255 $59,950 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
18691 Portofino Dr. (Tr Rock) Irvine
64+2430 $89.950 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
1534 Antlqua Way (Dover Shores) NB
644-2430 $139,500 (Sun l.S)
*3615 Sausalito (HVuHllls) CdM
644-2430 $129,500 (Sun 2-6)
3619 Surfvlew IHVuHlll s) CdM
644-2430 $129.500 (Sa t 1·6 : Sun 2-6)
18317 Foxglove Way (Univ Pk) Irvine
675-4562 (Sat & Sun)
2200 Aralia (Eastblu!f) Newport Beach
5411-7729 $69,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
DUPLEXES
2BR & 3 BR
607 Mnrtlssus, Corona del Mar
$122,500 (Sat & Sun 1.S)
* ,. •• ** W-"•"' *** Wetlfh"' & ....
ERITAGE
REALTORS
General
2•2 '/. C.!l-T ~"\ \fl\CtiE'< · .• ':'\. . .
SCHOOL DAYS
The first unit or Peppertree Homes in Tus-
tin is nearing completion and we have a
limited number of 2 Story, 4 BR homes left.
~Jake a deposit now and you can move in be-
fore school opens~~
$45,990 and $46,990
with 9uar1ntffd interest rates
Models open daily from 11 to 7
at ~lyford Rd. and the Santa Ana Freeway
BUDGET
PRICE TAG
\Ve point \\"ith pride at thi ...
OtK'. Gre11 t schools, near
lx·ach in Coronn <trl l\lar.
IUKI play ya1iJ. 3 lx.-<lroon1s,
2 bnths, ln\1cly family roon1
\\'ilh S1\·cdish flrcpla.cc. Fee
\\'h~t·e the llP\.'C!llcull\r vlC'N
pl't~('ntg 11...elf at every n"t0-
n1c111. 1'hls 5 l:lc-droo1ti, 3
llath hon1e is Ill\ outstanding lv~n \\'t·lls dl?&ign. FtichJy
001nttcd. "llh un c1£>grutt
forr1111I din ing 1'00nt & in vlt.
ing lan1ily t"001n 111th 1vr1
bt.r, t'ront courtyftrd patio
\11th heated pool. Priced at
SlJi,500.
C. F. Colesworthy
RH hors '4M020
* 4 BEDROOM, 2 balhs,
double garft&I. $3Q 'OJ, Belt
of terms. * COf\1MERCIAL ZONF~ • 2
BR two story older home.
1:u rnt'r lot. $2.J,!'XJ().
Roy McCudlo Roallor
lSlO i'/('I\ ]lfll'I 131vd., c.ro-1.
548-7729
-$2900 Total
Down
Telephone:
544-8012
BEACH HOME
Walker &Lee
lllal lllafl
SIMON SEZ
sitting area, view decks ......... $295,000.
Looking for Home
Plus Guest House?
Beach. No, it's nol a fixer _J!~~!!~t-1 upper or ;i.n "oldie." You'll
ha\·l! to act fast because thi!I For Complete Information
On Al.I .~~~.!..' ~ lots, Pleau C•ll:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR WALK TO WES"I'Cl.JFF
Erutiride beauty . immacu-
late! 3 Bedroon1. formal clin-
irig plus breakfast area In
kitchen. Nicely ldscpd, dou·
ble garage off alley. Roon1
for trailer or boat. Addition·
al roon1 & bath for inla\\·s
or ? Roo1n to add-on to the
ho1ne, many possibilities.
OPEN THURS, FRI &: S~
1-5 pm, 4TI Broad1vay, C.1\-f.
ls the one everybody is: look· We'd tike To
ing for. 847-0010.
OPEN TIL II • rr'S FUN TO BE NIC8 ~ Buy A Duplex
11 ••• But 341 Boy>ide Dr., Sulto 1, N.B. 67S-6161 THE REl!L
ESTATEBS Gener ii
PRIVATE ISLAND
NEWPORT ljEACH
BY OWNER
Leaving area. lmmedia1e OC·
<.-upanc)', 4 BR, 5 BA luxury
2 )'Ctll' ol<l hon1e. i\Jany de·
lu.'\e, cunom features ha~·e
been built into th~ outstand·
ing "'aterfront home . cus·
tom furniture & 196i CruiS('r
included. Ex1..-ellent terms.
'2i9,000. AlliO availabk! w1-
!ul'nished. · l,.ol' info -caJI
6iJ..7782.
-$10;000:-BELOW-
MARKET
*IN BAYCREST*
LA CUESTA VILLAS
Avail•ble prior
to schooll I
Due to Credit Rejections!
• Not a Condo or TO\\'nl\oose
• You Q\\11 111e Ltu1d
TI1cse arc single fan1ily, com·
nion \\'all homes 11·ith 3 BR
. 2 BA . lg tan1 rm • liv ma
. kitchen 1,·ith ali bltns ·
front yard landscaping with
sprinklers. side yard fences,
tull detached 2 car gar.,
shake & Mission tile roofs
antl ABOVE ALL • BUILT
BY AYRES:!
I H2 Sq. Ft. from
$30,490
Conv•ntional I 0 ~. Down
l\lodel al . .\dams & Florida -
one b!oek \\". of Beach,
Huntington Beach.
536-1445
400 E.17" , FOR ALL C.ll All.IS
Excellent l'entels! Ch111ed by
a Dutchn1an & clean as a
pin! Both r~nteU by Jong
lenn tenants at $185 each.
This sharp duplex is a ''ta .. '<
sheller" wiU1 no v.·011•Jes at
$35,500.
Walker &Lee
ll&l lll &TI
SPORTSMAN'S
PARADISE
I[' \Yh"rl!. \\ill the kids play'?? 1 ll01\· o'xlut tl1c nearby youth ='='="""=""=""=='"' l'E"ntc1· 01• 1hc park across BY THE LAKE-. thp strert h'Om this out-
standinjl'. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath BY THE, LAKE (\\·o11l'1 's unit and 1 Bedroom
BY THE LAl\E . rt!ntnl. $S9.50il.
You 1vili sing a happy tune 1-CALL 644-7211
\\tlen you dis~ver this uc>1;·,
4 bedroom, 3 bath, L a k e '
fo,.S', home. Fcrevo" ''"'"I ~~~~lill 1•:11\ nev;,>r be obs'trur·r.-'(J. s • •
l¥i.vc your O\\'n do::I< & beat f
nt yo;ir tluor s:cp. P l. U S ' ' f!~~ii~~~s~ i~ ~~~~~~~ 11 OCEAN VIEW o"ner s assoc. Ol1'n a piece
of the 11-ater! 673·9101. JO% Down 81;,•;. Loan
Dramatic 3 BR, 1 BA home
has \•.:aHed priv1t.ry on street
side and spa·tacular ocean
vic1\·~ h'On1 breakfast nook.
l.anrily r1n, liviug rn1, and
n1asLer suit.-.. Carpets/drps
like ne1~·. Lots of storage.
AL'L't:>.ss to 3 µ1·1 h eac h es .
Open Sat•Sun 1-j, \Ved/F'rl BRING THE KIDS ,_,, ·l<~I . co .. tl•nd De.
• . 1111 Carn e<> !l1 g hlands.
'"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"""' i Situated on the larg('st cor·
and 11101 e into th1.~ one year I $71,5(1(). 673-3177
1ic<.r. 4 bed1'00m honle. The -,""'~=~~·--"":..=:
unique, open floor plan pro-CJ:IAR.i.\11NG vine covered
,·ides space f>IUS pri\"acy. si_ngle story dup.lex. South of
The \"aulted li\'ing roon1 I highway or~ quiet dead~nd
ceiling is great for hifi and I slreet .. Units. have large
11-arn1ed br 3. beauti ful I "'.ood decks 1vllh permanent
fire place. Bl'ir-k fence stir-vie\~. of 1•anyon. 2nd. floor
1,i.aiHs 11 1,;11111 :-i:•](· >•H"<I. 1 :1d1l1!1•ln \vnuld h;ive view ~r
Easv nC\.-c:<s h\ th1' ")11\· I ~1r. $72.000. &!Iler 1v11\
111 :.uii.y pool. Only SH,900 -I f.1.!!,ru!~; Bl'uker, 642-2171 or
\\'hilC' it lasls. Dial 9624·s.·11. I _?_i.r.81JJ. __ =~~-I
OPENnL9 ·17"Sf'VN TOBENOCE1 1 *NEW LISTING*
"WANTED"
SIX CHILDREN
JN
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
,\nother super h\-o slot}' 4
BR/fotmal dining roon1 &
den n1odel hon1l'. T1vo
UJ"epJaces -\Ve l bar -
paneling & tile floors. Great
run1ily home l~ n1011ths old
in Sandpoiute.
ner lot In the area, 1>lenty o(
room for that bn:ll &. lrallcl'
-,\II this Rllcl ~ l1ugc
bedrooms makes this tlie:
~st bu~· on the 111a rket al
$3'1,950. Call 1101\'! 842--253."i.
OPEN 1/L 9 • IT'S F-UN 70 BE NICE!
~ I'
, I
' I
THE REAL
ESTATERS
r. -=-! Sharp rh11>!c'\ on bt-autlful
11 11'1 C' llnerl /ilr'P('t. Immac. ~ ' 1..'0f)(f, Newly painted outa'idc,
'II< 11 fl Niccly lnncl'M:aped. Xlnt
~ rcnlnl &1'f'a. Priced under
oPEN DAILY-1-:-s --ROOM FOR 1~~GAN REALTY
BOATS & TRAILERS 673-6642 675-6459 2545 Westminsttir Ave.
3 BR l Y~ ba 1v1larl{e 11.dded
l'UllqlllS I 1..'.lln, f l" l' S h l y
p3-h~'l'<I in<.,iti.) &. oul. &at
•r11tc iu10 1Lu4e )'QN!. :oi'H>p
in1 e CALL ANYTIME e
644-3921 or Evo. '45-2986
Lachenmye
' Realtor . .
FOR THE GI I-· ---,---'--:_:_:::..:.1
LJ,·cly, 1xu1rlll'd .1l: 4 111.·lj: AOOHA~LE duplex. So. of lute~ !ui f•l;. µa.lo .~ )tU'<I uil 11,.."Y· :\ln1 lo<'atlon. 2 br &
n l'Ornr1· lot. o r:crl•rl ut 11 11• I ~~ .s. ~~·" l ba apt s:..'9.!Jllf 011 \'o·,,;r-i n~ !tHni.•. f ~~. £>~\1,~1. 61:,-1.~:n eves,
l'.Ol doii 11: ~~~ •• ext. 21i9, \\'eekdays.
I SPYGLAS.;; Ilill°<; Best Vu ,-~ 111 ..... 0:.--" I N'c\v 4BR. 21 ,oo. Sep. dining lun . 2.; Curmel Bay Dr. By Wa,.l.~le1{,~,lee l 0111;;~·PLE.'<-eorner Lot
~4G ~'t.'1. , __ 1 Xlnt t'Ond. 3BR. 2BA. + new
-:lHR. 1Il1\. 500 Poinsettla,
I ."IX"'c' c_l-<>7-·-------I
i Cost1 Me11
KEEP-YOUR MONEY-i ARE YOU A
~o . 0011'N VA Bri•h' "'"' [ BEACH NUT?
!)Htni & ciu·1x•ll'I, " lru!y \l"lllll" .... I II IUYl !_:, l11JUIC 1Jtlfl j.;111\h .~ I n1i ni i1lock fl.,,i'll 1l•c \\ 1rrir. ... . . .~•!\\'pot gt •.
1Jeuti1ifu1 011 lt'\'t:•i hUdcd I Pl1.:1 ;i n im"~ll\" .unit 1 IJ1•\'t' I ,\n•11. .l B~. Z B.\, Anthon,y
Jun •. '. Only sz+,j()I) (l.O'j th" lo r .. ~1· .wul•i·• ~aJ"1r;r. ~·. P.Y, ~tone frplc.,
Pr:""rt "' ,in!'· $7\l.000. Hur· fa1~·1n;::. r v c op per
1·1. ("till G.if,,..i 1'i1 phi<ilf~. n~v.:ly nvlec. Mucb
DP!f1 Tit. II • 11 S 'JN 10 EN. ,VJC(t • J, 111-c: \. 1('~11 ' $ 3' 8 , 5 0 0 ,
W lk & l ~ I ~ ~I 0
'"""' 6'1J..:J!l:• CA~~~~EROW a.,,.8,t.,, 88 . . .t~!;i~ 1 ·i ~:{'.~ ~);'.'\;,o~; ~~
<I Hcntals in thf11 1)li m'1 nrrn::1 •"4•"'122-'""iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiOiiiii l_l~~~-~~~!~~~~~!!!~~j!!!!!!!! al $."l.8,00(1. Qu iet-dead t'nd l(!nt uppo1·tunlty for i;J:.01.1" &: -.:: 1111~1. pl'f"sHa:e a 1· ta.
ll\1nfl. $73.500. · lnfonn11tlon RegardlnK Horses OK ! Bro1«1r. 91i&-81:s:t.
Ca.II: 6i3-3603 6i3-80S6 E\its. NEW ZEALAND £xc1.·llen1 a1·ea tot kid,. Top 1 CilARi\nN·'°G='-'"d"'u~pl-<x-.---J
associated
8Q:Ot<: f Q: S -q(: Al TO'IS
1o1 l \ W 9olboctA f l 11.11
Clualfied Ad• ...... sn.16'18.
Hon1cs * l"nnns * Oalrl~ 3 beth'tl\., 2 bu~h In SAn111 , 11haded @!Ifft!~ typr R-2 Jot
P1ciflc Properties A113 ltcl1h1a. F ami~· i,-u.
1
1 lff!':\132'. ~I.~. on,~ b)'
105 ?.fain, BAiboa flrtpl•ct. Dlnlna rm. $:1.6,:JOO. 117'2 ~llntr, A.gt. ~
67H'112 or 5'13-81116 brk ~~BELL RF1'0<SE$10NS 128,300 10
. _ $1 1,000 l.nw ln 1e re•t ~st results l\l'e Juat a pllone I A good want ad u, a IOOd lrt-(ji)\·,.rnment loan& C.ll bl1c
call av.•ay -&i2~ ,,_'Slment. ~7739 ~-"----~~-\
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Cotti -$25,730. MONTICEU..0 CON·
DO -3 Bedroon1. l~ bith.
bell shag. Sl92 per 1no. pay&
all. E9 '.r.'orklown, rlghl on
the squart.
$36.950. ?.IESA DEL ~IAR -3
Bedroo1n. 2 bath, con1p
rctm·blshcd ln &. o u t .
Asaumabll! F,.IA loon. $262
per mo. 2878 P.1onterey.
ON AL..L ABO\'E ADS,
AFrER 6 P'.\t, CALL 557-4617 c .. ta Mos• RHlty * 541-7711 *
SUPER FAMILY
HOMEI
Mes• Verde-$38,250
3 Spacious Bll.. private yard
&: patio on quiet cul-de-sac.
\\1alk to i>LilOOLs. Large din-
fam nn \v/bitin ste.rt'O.
~'Place living m1. 1\vo
tirepl's. New tTJ>I. tile. &
~·shr. Fast sale \\-anted
... 111alre offer. Assun1e
FllA or otf'ipr -:Inf !e1ins.
JIM WELLS,
REALTOR
557-6264 979-263.1
Beaut. 4 BR. 1800 sq ft, fami-
1,y rm honte, 2 blocks
Pon10na Elem & Rae Jr. Hi.
2U5 Wallace, CM. $34,300.
1t7o Assun1able F1lA.
_'-.1 I (.,,,, ll,i;tn,11
( • ~ 1. , I< I \l,,, t , ' r "~'
BY O\VNER. ~lesa Verde.
Attractive 3BR & 1-~am. nn.
with 2 frpl. custom bit-in
BBQ with rottss. in 1''1l.
Freshly painted. lfUi" pie-
Shaped Jot w/nn for pool.
boat, etc. Big covered
fla&'1tone patio. Lola of fruit
& shade trees. cul-de-sac.
$34,250. 3077 ~folokai Pl.
Sat·Sun. 10-4 . 549-1821
1'\VO CUTlES ON A LOT .
Roaring fireplace, ooun11)'
kitchen, 2 big bc<lrm!'! each,
big garage, No qualifying.
Assume 1c1o VA I o a n
balance 1o1•ith a small do•vn.
Only $290. per mo. pays
everything. Rents $160. &
$175. per. mo. Live in one,
rent the other. Only $40,900.
Bkr.962-5511
CUSI'OM BUILT HOl\lE
On corntt lot. 0.1 Back Bay
area. 4 Sr. I 2 Ba ups.lairs,
Hv. rm, din. rm., kitchen,
Fam .. den & Ba do\\'flStalrs.
Lots o( closel space. Lrg
dble car gar., 2 patio
covers. Citrus I r e " s .
\\1oodland Sehl d i s I r i ct . S8'1.SOO Owner a.IS-4732 01·
531.,,;oo
$23,250
Cozy honte on R-2 corner lot.
N\ce trees & large, clear
bldg. ~tc lo1· W10lhl'I' unit.
CALL (!) ,4,·1-414
'*A~llC, Nt ar l'(e,.po,1 Po1t Otflte
Why Wait ..•.
'Tll lnt1r11t Rat11
Go Down??
Assun1e 6~; f l IA o'.l. F:asl3ide
3 BR, 2 Ba hon1e. fatn mi,
frplc, high lwanls, ige yd
on cul-de-sac. ~46. Brok-
""·
FOR Sale by O\\Tler. Xlnt
oond, 2 BR, 2 BA, fan1 rn1.
w/w crpts, drps. 2 n1ins
trom marina, $38,000.,
493-5029,
3BR HOME &
GUEST HOUSE
$31,900.
Idea.I an·angr111en! "' '1nodcl
cond, 3 BR, 2¥,, BA CONDO
& a huge guest house ,,.;
sep bath & "·alk in closet.
l''eatures bl tins. gold \\' ·w
shag, cushn <lrps, mhmrs,
outdoor gas B-ll-Q & pool.
Nr l\1ile Squru-e Golf Course.
CALL TODAY.
larwin re1lty in c.
'" 4405 (24 hrs)
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S
FINEST
ONLY $32,500
All elec Medallion ho1ne v.'/3
BR & 3 BA's. Over HiOO sq.
ft. luxury living. Extra lrg
lot w/xlnl lndscpg.
I' 1l!age Rea l [state
•u.+171 ( :::J 546-llOJ
NESTLED BEllIND 1-IUGE
PINES & EUC1\L\'PTUS Is
a rnmbllng 4 bcdroon1
''Clas!Uc" hon1e \\'ilh a
bee.vy shake mof. plush
carpel! and unique lighling,
superbly equipped kitchen.
master suile 1o1•ith private
bath, loud1 or 11 c1 ua r e
footage. 1-lurry, v.'On't Inst 111
$39.~. BKR. 962-5511
REPO
$750 DOWN
2 or 3 BR Townhouse, hge
rumpu1 l'OOtn dblt ~ar,
swim pool, rew left Hurry:
Sll-4421
Finl Pionoor RHlty
,
S1400. DOWN
· SUper clean Stardusl Home with 3 bedrooms, 1 ~ Ba, separaU. service
porch, bwd floors with w/w carpet & drapes, large 12 x 12' dlnlng
room with beautiful brass & cryslal chandeliers. Lots of rich wood
paneling thruout. Newly redecorated Inside and out. Room !or boat
or trailer, large aluminum covered patio. Bloc k wall fence, large shade
tree in front yard. Walk to shopping and schools -just minutes from
Garden Grove or San Diego frwys. VA appraised for paraplegic.
$27 ,500. CALL 842-445t
4 BEDROOM
Charming, near new honeymoon cottage decorated with exquisite
taste. Builtin range & oven plus washer &. dryer. Private landscaped
patio in brick & Spanish tile. Assume low interest 7~ % lo an at only
$167 /month. $23,90-0. CALL 842-4451
2 FOR 1
Two • 3 Bdrm homes in Huntington Beach on I lot. Newly painted
Inside & out. Excellent location, short dislance to surf & sand. Now
rented at $20-0 & $165/mo. Tremendous investment !or only $32,900.
CALL 8424451
4-PLEX
Four -2 Bdrm t,1nits; Air-cond, new carpets & drapes, new paint in-
side and out. High income w/good spendable. NO vacancy-mainten·
ance free. $44,950. CALL 8424451 .
SPANISH ELEGANCE
WITH POOL
Old world charm together with the Roman splendor of lall Italian
Cypress trees surrounding a dual level sparkling pool will be yours
to enjoy. Area is most i.mportant and this has it all, pride-of-owner-
ship homes, good neighbors, community park & playground, under·
ground utilities close to schools & frwys. 4 spacious bedrooms, large
master suite, large living room + fonnal dining, family room over·
looks the pool, serve-thru bar from kitchen to rear grounds, comp-
pletely finished garage wilh work bench, Spanish brick planters &
beaut lndscpg, very easy maintenance. The best pool home on tbe mar-
ket. $53,000. CALL 842-4451
ELEGANl 2 STORY
6 lilo's new, quality S &. S construction on large bonus lot. Quiet circle
street and close to the blue Pacific. Spaciousness is the keynote in this
family size home featuring super upgnded carpets with decorator
drapes, a very unique dual woodburning fi replace adjacent to the cozy
stepdown conversation pit. A raised fonnal dining room for the lar~e
est of family gatherings. An observation balcony high above the famil y
level leads to 3 spacious bedrooms upstairs + recreation room for that
all popular pooltable. Entertain in comfort upstairs & down with large
den exiting to the rear grou nds for those outside parties. Owner leav-
ing area ·-offering this palatial home at the low, low price of only
$57,9000. Truly a bargain in todays market. CALL now for a private
showing. 9684456
$29,950.
That's all -and what a beautiful tree studded neighborhood. \Vi nding
roadways, a soft cool breeze and lots of greenery sets the atmosphere
for line living. Very sharp 3 bdrm, 2 bath with 'big lot, hdwd floors
with w/w carpets, builtin range & oven, step saver kitch with that old
fashioned eating area large enough for everyone. You will fall in
love with the home and the area, but best of all the people -that's
reason enough to investigate this offer. CALL 968-4456
4 UNITS
?i1aintenance free. new paint inside & out. new cpts &: drps -No
vaca ncy - 2 large bedrms each. enclosed garages. High income, cash
flow. Only $4500 dn. $44,950. CALL 968-4456
4 BEDROOM
Super big lot with alley access. Family size home for lots of children.
4 big bedrooms with 2 baths. Nice big ranch style kitch w/bltln range
& oven, w/w carpet & drapes. A real friendly nbrhood. Asking only
$27,900. CALL 968-4456
LIKE A MODEL
Shiny bright with a brand new coat of paint. Seldom, out of hundreds
of homes we see each week. do we find one with the pride of owner-
ship this home demonstrates. From the moment you step out of your
car, you 're in a different world . ?ileticulous maintenance, lush ldscp.
color coordinated decorating in paint, carpets. wallpaper & drapes. 4
Bdrms, each uniquely designed & decorated to perfection! Ranch
s~yle kitch ~/lo¥dS of cupboards. Log burning fireplace for those cozy
nights. Spac1ou~ rear yard for that Summer fun of B-B-Q & games.
CALL 893-8533
PRESTIGE 1400 MODEL
The ~nly one oz:i the market -Brand new listing -and is it sharp
-Big huge evergreen tree in the front with a sculptured hybrid
bermuda lawns. Sprinklers & block wall fen ce. The entry ts elegant
with flocked wallpaper, step to your right into the beautifully ap-
pointed kitchen with plenty o! cupboard space and large pantry. A
wall ol brick with a bltin B-B-Q ri ght in vou r own kitch. Formal din·
ing .at its best with plenty of room for that big, big hutch and large
family table. Spacious rear living room with log burning fireplace.
leading to a quiet garden of shrubs & trees. Perfect tor getting awav
from it all. It's a stea l in this type of area. Homes range up to $55
to $60,000. Asking $39,000. CALL 893·8533
$1200. TOTAL COSTS
\Vhere ~an you find a home tol:lay w/3 bedrooms, big fenced lot on
a tree lined street. close to shopping, schools & both the San Diego &
Garden Grove frwy for this kind of money??! We have it -it needs
paint and a little yard care -but not much. Owner will help finance.
$23 ,999. CALL 842-9371
V.A. BUYERS
Quality Grant Co. construction, copper plumbing, hwd floors, double
steel sink~, w~lnut paneling sets the atmosphere. Large country kitch
w/gas bltins )Ust off the rear yard, featuring large covered patio &
block wall fence -well cared for area, close to Marina High. $30,900.
CALL 842-9371
BIGGER & BETIER
The biggest family fun center you will ever see, is the outslanding
feature of this beautiful, spacious Sol Vista estate -Just a drive past
is impressive but wait until you see the interior. 3 Bdnns that are
unique in a very special way -each is decorated for the individual
pe~sonality plus a master suite that is sheer elegance -separate fot
privacy, large for comfort, exquisite in its own right. A living room
and family room so lastefully decorated that you feel like Royalt.v
just to view. Then walk to the upper level for the most exciting feel·
!ng. ~f a massi ve enterWnment center -Now you need not hesitate
mv1tmg over 100 guests to your party. There's plenty of room. This
family hates to leave this lovely home and area, but they must. CALL
now !or a private showing. $46,500. 842-9371
"
•'
I
Huntington llHch
HIGHLY DESIRABLE
Mea~·lttrk art'il, out11tund-
in1 L'OnSll'Ucllon. (t•1tlut1ng
3 bedrootYu~. th.llths, &trlun1,
2 flrephK.'t.'S, CUli!Olll putio,
pi'Ofcdionu.I deroratlng In-
side and out. ShO\\'ll \\'llh
1>rlde at $"6,500. CALL
S.JG.lJT.Z. PRIDE OF
OWNERSHIP
3 Bcdroonis, .1% baths. dining
area, block wall fence, liCP-
8Jate laundry l'OOnl. Looks
like 11. nlOdel inside and nut.
1'~antasUc Huntington Beach
area. close 10 all n1Rjo1·
shopping, 11Chools s,nd rr~-
1o1•ays. $32,!XXI. 96.'l-5621.
GOLDENWEST
ESTATES
llorne 1o1'ith pool -4 Bcdroorns, 1,_ batJUi, aCt.'On1modation
family and dining nrea on a
cul cit' sac. Beautilul 1-lunt-
lngton Beach iu-ea.. No rnain·
tenance back yard. Jots of
brick flO\\·er planters , heavy
shake roof and priced to
sell qulL'k at $34,900. C,\l.L
847-$84.
OCEAN VU • DUPLEX
NORTH LAGUNA
Two • 2 BR. units wilh beam ceilings, hard·
wood floors plus co1nplete guest unit for
U.C.I. stude~ts .................. $87,500.
Huntington h•ch
WE BUY HOMES
1. Cash ror yo11r equity
2. '\lill pick up beck paymb:
3. No charge for appr.
CALL US
FOR Al~ £Srl~1ATE
NO \\'AITING
CASH NO\V
. 842-9371
494-9794
1000 N. COAST HWY.
LAGUNA BEACH
* OPEN llOUSE SUN. 1-'I
3Hi0·-~'IOUN1'AIN VIE\V
1''nbulo11s ~11. Views from
this ii bdrm., 3 ba., irnmac.
hon1e Y•ith cozy family nn.
Ncur !chools. 2 patios for
rt..J.a.xing in the sun plus a
gardell(>r's delight I a t h
house tilled with poUNI
plants. A n1u11t sec at
$59,500.
• Cl-IARM I-IOP.fE * On R-2 lot. room to add
another w1it. North end. 2
Bdrn1. & den, 2 frplcs.
$65,000 •
l ido islo
*COUNTRY CHARM*
3100 Sq. Ji'\. f&mlly livability.
4 BR/4 ba. Hugo llv. ttn.,
rt.'i:. m1 .. dlo. tn\.: garden
vie"~· D e co r a t o r cont!.
$lb2.500. * $79,500 * S)'l<inhsh style ho1ne on h1rge
lot. 3 BR & den, optn
bc1un11, h11eresting fpl. Near
Lido tcnnl°' ct.
LIDO REALTY
33TT \Ila Lido. N'pt Bench * 673-7300 *
M '!'ta Verde
l\.tESA Vfrde pool honle, 3
BR, Z BA, lwn rm & offll~.
Encld atrhun plus! $49,930.
By OWIX':l', l\.tr. Kent .
551H431.
Mi11ion Viejo
OPEN llOUSE 1-4 pn1 Sftt &.
Sun. ~ Las Tunwr, ~1.V.
3 BR, 2 BA, (.'en1ral Air l.'OU-
dilioning, big fencro hnck
)•nrd. Take Avery Park,,·ay
to Coronado.
DON CONRAD REAL TO It
802 S. El Camino Rea.I
San Clentente, 492-9510
Newport S.1ch
Nowpor1 llN<h
OUPLEX
6 DOORS TO
BEACH
Don't pay high 11unm1tr rtnt
,.,.hen you can oollect It, and
still re.serve the bc11t period
for you nnd yours. 3 Bed·
1'0011\S d°'l'n, 2 Bedrootn11 up.
$34,500 fee. 10% down..
CAL l '44-721j
GRAND OPENING
Newport B•y T ower1
l & 2 BEDROOM
CONOOJ\11NIUl\.1 I-IOAIES
Ba,yfront Honl<!a
Solit SI.IP'
1''uU Sl>cu1i1y 1-llghri.&e
Steel & concrete const;uction
PrlvN\C BKh.-onles
2 S,'ll rage s1mL'C& per unil.
Roof tori swl<lc;.:k
Unu.s1111I Oppor1u11Uy to Pur-
(·httSI.' B1:tyfront Property b1
Newpo1·t llcllch.
310 ferll!lltdo Rd., N.B.
675-8551
--=BEST BUY * A TI'ENTION *
"'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; I BUILDERS & INVESfORS -Oceanfront b I u f f , San California Classic
WOW See It To Bellovo
Ill! i'"""c~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!R!!!!!!!!!!!! ON THE MODEL STREET. ountry anch By ""~". ' Y"""' old. ' Rambling calif. Ranch home Br. 2 Ba-:-plus fan1ily 1·n1.
features 4 big bedrooms. includes an au glass kilchen,
mar1 size den, h~ Old carpets&: drapes. fully land-
\\'est fan1ily nn, n1an1moth scaped, including brick
ma11ter retreat has L'Onver-palio u·ith t'Ove1·. By apl.
sa.tion area, dressing 1111 & only, 8~5494 aft. 6:00 pn1.
vanity bath. Big galley kit-
Clemente, 2 Bclnn home,
IOI) slutpe, l'OOm for 4 n1ore
units. $95,000.
ENGLUND
REAL ESTATE
MOVED OUT
IT'S VACANT
Seller Wants Offer
TH.E BLU1''}"S PLAZA. ~ BR.,
2~: ba. w..,·est leasehold &
n1aintenanc.'t'. Listed al
$5.1.S50 -whl\l'S yottr otte1·!
2 YEAR old, 2 bclrn1. home.
Sw{.-dis:h firepll«.-e. Very
K\X)d location. $31,500.
JONES
REALTY INC.
ESJ"'6
chen 1o1'ith pantcy and all
the latest appliances, in-
cluding an ISLAND COOK
CENTER! Big. uru111 li\'ing
rrn u·ith <'l'fl.ckling \Vestern
firep]a('e vie1o1·s huge spark-
ling CUSI'O~I POOL. 1\lan-
icured grounrls surround
your "1\llNI RANCH."
Priced al $43, i50. BKR.
!,!62-:xill.
VACANT
MOVE-IN-FAST !
Ran1Wing 4 BR La Cuesta
-6 Blocks to ocean. No qua.1-
liying, just assume this 611 •,.
VA loan balance.
ONLY $252 PER MO
PAYS TAXES ,
PRINCIPLE,
INTEREST &
INSURANCE
Despcrale 0\1·n.:.T u·ill ea1n·
a St."<.ood TD if you nc-«1
Irvine
Large Backyard
goes ·with this 2 bdrn1., 2
bath to\vnhouse in Universi-
ty Park. \'ou'll view thl'
gnnlen entry fro11\ the
kilchen \VindO\\' and love the
exlra sl()rage in the hall.
This one's sharp knd ready
lo go at S36.9(Kl.
Vision -
red hill
REALTY
A Company \rith \'ision
Univ. Park Center, lr\'ine
Call AnytimC'. 552-7500
Office hours 8 A~'I to 8 P~f
318' THAU A ot!»--8003
SOLID
l\lotc>I apartn\enl con1plex. 17
unlts, located jus1 11 block
tro1n bes.ch. Close t o
e\1erything. Even has a
penthouse for the
6"'ncr/operRtor. A c I u a I ~'l'Os~ AlreRdy excro:I $30.<m
pt"r yf"'ar 1o1·i~h 100111 lo grow.
Only $235.000.
~Ian
REAL ESTATE
11 90 G lenncyre St.
49·1-!}..173 ;>-t)-.():llfi
--Open Sun. l~S--
802 Manzanita Drive
\\'hite \voler vie\\'; quality
older honw. y,·orthy of Honie
~lagazine. \Vith ruest apl.,
on se-cluded, woodsy lot.
~lust st'e. $12.900.
Artist's Home
Orii:-innl Lllguna Chnm1 on
prlv. u-oodliy grounds.
Ocean \•iey,•_ S k y I i 11: ht !'I,
frplc.. 2 BR & din rn1.
$58,500.
EASTBLUFF
Realty 644-1133
2414 Vista Del Oro, N.8. * * * DUPLEX • Highly cte.. sirable rental area, v.'Blk to
hl.-h, Lldo Isl shops &
theatrt.
• • * OCEANFRO~"T DU-
PLEX . 1 ~r old 7 BR~ B,\.
OPEN SUN -Ca.II tor detri.ili;.
DAVIDSON R.EALT\.
G.JS-7707 613-9000
DOVER SHORES
5 Bedroo1n, 4 Ba!h, livini:
room, dining roon1 & dt!n.
Super pool. Aulomatir. gar-
age, sprinklers & lighting.
$139.<m. 1315 Santiago Dr ..
N.B. By Owne1·. &li-SZ73.
Principals only. * OCEANFRONT *
1714) 173·&210
2001 ...........
_Kt.,.i ~Cllifamll llffO
"BLUFFS CONDO"
Moi;t dei;ill'tlble Bluffs loca-
l.Ion. 4 Bdrm, 3 Ba. Lovely
privat~ palkl on '1"ttllbeil.
Oprn bea1111 lhl'UOUL Low
leusehold. $67,500.
GRUBB & ELLIS
Realtor1
2863 E . Cst. lhvy., Ccli\I
675-7080
HARBOR VU PALEH.~10
1'otally upgraded, beuut. 4
Br. fr1n1 r1n. 1/3 at·rc. Fee,
End cul-<le-~c Oii green
belt, nr. sthools, prof.
ll\ndl!Cltped. ~lru1y extras ·
bhn color tv, 'A'elbar, elec.
eye gar. dr, many more.
JI.love jnto this Drnm
!loose, ent""&.ln ln1m«1.
Redul.'t"d to $86.000. 644-72:1>.
Open houM" Sat -Su n.
-HOME----:fTNCOM E
help 11·i1 h douTI. Cuthl,\ral WALK TO POOL
1.:eilings, n1assivr a~ohr .fil'r· TENNIS & SCHodL place. gardC'n patio k11ch, ., ..,,, ,, ba . · 1
Above The Traffic
Ar<"h Beneh Helghls is Inc. of
thi s 2-sty., 3 BR. honw
w/,·icu·. ?riv. sundeck &
charming kilch. 0 n I y
$52.500.
4 t':U1n . units. 4:. ,"iUll(l1,."<.·k
2 Dbl. garag,-s. \\'ill trade
for incon1e in ~•u1 Ol•nil·nte
01· D:Ula Pt. Sl25,()l'M). I
BALBOA BAY PROP. * 673-7420 *
PORTOFJKO . H. Vu. !lorn;;
l Year nl"\.\', nuuiy e.xlrJs,
Our the door 50 steps &
ymfre on tht• bearh! Thi& 2
bdr1n. wilh baeheLor unit is
ix'ing remodeled lnsKl.e &
out. 115 26th St.. ?\ .. pt.
Beach. Asking $58,500 Su~
n1it plush carnn1s cu ·hion I I .; uurrns., ~ · · . rlll.'(' Y . r-. • s ct decoratM farn1 kitchen· Dooring, d($1gJl('r drapes. shag c~ting. Ask i 11 g
Load." of modl•I t•x!ras. Dt>at $36 900. Anxious !iC.ller -
fell thru. niust sell fn5t! b " If •
HOBBS.ALAN CO.
494-7551
OPEN HOUSE AU.. \\'l:EK-rmg o er· 1000 N. C.St. 1-IY.'Y., Lo.guM
3 BR, 3\: BA, bonus rootn,
available school opening,
O\VNER \\'ill finance I""''·
Wyer. t''ee $.i9,;,()) &U-444.'I
1715 Newpo1i Hilla Dr. \V
• 633-1100 •
Super Sbarp-cOOdo
Frt•sh.ly painted, 3 bdrn1.. 2
ba's., hobby m1., laundry
rm.; dbl. garage W/elec.
opener. New carp etl n a:,
END. Bkr. 962-5."ill.
FIREPLACE & WINE
Relax in front of your roar-
ing rireplace with a bottle
of \\'i ne & a bear skin rug!
Ve1)' private Spanish slUl't:O
\\"ailed a!rtum l'ntry il'llds
to spotless 3 Brvtam rn1
home located on quiet cul-
de-suc. 1\ssumabJe 7~1 ·,;
FllA loan. Only $36,900.
CA.LL TODAY.
larwin realty inc.
96M40S 124 hrs)
One Blk To Beach
Channing 1·anch-style hon1e
u.·ith shake 11>0f. Still looks
brand lll'\1'! Gounnet patio
kitehen has aH rolor coor-
dinated appliances, SUJUly
breakfast room views mani-
cured grow1dis, nlassive
roati ng f.il:eplace in elegant
living rn1. sparkling vanHy
baths, 3 den-i;ize bcclroo1ns.
A real ocean r etreat \Vith a
st:a.rl'er price! BKR. 962·5.Jll.
OPEN HOUSE
FRI ., SAT., SUN l·S
Lovely Glenmar 3 BR, 2 BA
1.,:/pool, lg fa.m rm.. air-
cond, fncd play a re a
y,•/playhouse & e q pm I .
19881 Providence Ln (N. of
Adanis/\V or Bushard)
$41,500. NELSON R.E!L
EST A TE 846-l.10:>
$26,950
BRING YOU!< POOL TABLE
for this beaul. 2 BR condo.
Bonus nn :l)• x 20'. 2 car
encl. gar., bltlns xtra cat>-
ineta, sbag crpts: Ad.It occ,
Fronts greenbelt & steps to
pool. RED C ARPET
Realtors 536-8836.
* VA * -NO DOWN-
1mmacu1ate 4 b e cl r o o m ,
Plush carpeting, 2 baths,
bltins '1ld quiet tl'ce-ahadcd
location. Only $32,500. B~'7 I{ U R R Y ! Call 5-45-8420
SouthCo Rcaltoni.
1Job ''l1rllil. BEACH DUPLEX
---'llrnllor 2 .\. 3 Bdnn unll's, one block d111.pe11; all lleu' kitchen ap-
frorn . beach. Needs palnl & plla.ncea. Incl. s.:ln'<:. S.13,5(11). Laguna Hills fix up. Best buy on Uu· Glk Walker Reetty
beach. $69,5(11). .. .. ~~ ,, Vi Ll"" N I Be I "SINCE 1946"
1st 'Ve~tern Bank Bldg.
Universily Pnrk, Icvine
Days 552-7000 Nights
4 BR, fam rm, Jeai;c/oplion ,,.._.NTllRY ~ "'" 1 •• 1 ~ a uv, P · ac1
Snl/1110. $36,!lOO. Avkil for '-'L ~ ~· • i;>U· H * 67$.5200 *
openinl':' of school year. 2 )rs 8£..\UT. condo., p1'0fcs.•. 1-*BAYCREST*
old. fenced yard. 673--0:?16. d<'COr;tted~ 2 BR & 1len, 2 B+..UWN~ .. ~L>ganl custotn __________ Q\vner/A~ent. ba. 2 l'rplcs. Lo ve I)' blllt<BR + 1 1• Rm
Open Sat & Sun 1-5 ga1'den.~.& pool . 1 1 /"R. am , UNIVERSITY PARK J\flSSION Viejo an•a, 3-4 BR. No. U \llestcliff VillR 2 ~lutcr ~k + 2 (rplct,
4 BR, VIE\V, S56.000 lg all ele<>t kit, 2 sty, super \\lilliam90n, Ikaltor 64:'t-l5&1 lluge l..R, 1'onnal Dr. Com-
1.,.)17 F 1 \V fm nn, 2200 sq ft, 75xl27 plt'tei,)' 1>ri\'alf' :.is· coveft<l
La\\:;n co::,!~~ 6r~ lot. Crimp prk, priced to sell Bluffs New X Model outdoor Living an•a v.•lth Ju.ih
nou'. Xlrl!s. 830--0AA-1 Carpeting choiet". 3 br .. din -lan<l!K'apif'€. O\\•ncr will
OPEN l!OUSE-B\' O\\INER fan\ m1., 211 ba. Open 1-5 til\IU\Ce responsible buyer.
BEAlrr. 3 br, 2 ba, 011 cul-Lai:1una N iyuel r!aily. 2749 Vist a Umbrosa. Princlpnl.s only ~1;;oo ~~. ~:_~ass t o rage , -."$38-,-.-;oo-."'s'-E-ST--BU_\'_•-· I NB, $64.900. 644-0296 O"·ncr. BLUFFS-OWNER
O\\ E ?\toving out of IU"f'a. 4 BR., WESTCLIFF $61.SOO 1 YR. nu, end unu. cul-dc-S~-~:~~,(; V~ ~~1• ~ti 211 ba. Ii;:. cul-dc--AAc lot. 3 Br. 2 Ba .. Dining nn. front sac, huge green belt, next to
pymnts $211. 8 3 3 _ 11 0 3 , * LEASE/OPTION * & rear patiOs, wrouRht lroo tf'nnls, y,·alk to everythlna:. 3
5;)2_9503 3 Bdrm., 2 bath viey,· home, gates, xlnt cond. Prine Only BR, prof. dee., all xtra.s, on·
vacant now! nit 6 P~1 &ffi-4219. ly $ti4.900. &ro-0926.
Laguna Beach * PLACE REALTY * FOR sale b.\' o\\·ner, Bluff!! r. A F"RAfl.IE BEAC11 2 BLKS
494-9704 4!M-9'i29 Plan. Widest Greenbelt. 3 Br, 1.00) ,SQ rt. community OPEN SUN. 1-S Priuc. only, call 644-1680 for rentc.a·. 646-00Jl.
2808 ZELL OR. Lake Forest appointment TRADE NN•port Buch
One of Laguna'!! large~! BE FIRST TO SEEi! e BLUFFS .. E" Pl.an Condo Profl. F'or Out-Of-Toum family homes: 6 BR., 4~~ 3 Bedroom, 21':l Bnth Prop. Bkr. TI4/673-20$8.. baths. family rm.: sweeping ()pen Sundy 1-5. stutrp 3 BR Lrg Old \V Id n -~.:ean views. \Vood & glass garden homr. rlecorator·s By Owner. or ~i7.l8 Newport Heights I
construct. $104,000 cpt & drps thruout. Compl H. ILLSIDE 11'1\'lEW ,-8;, EMERALD BAY air 1:ond. AU club & lake · • prl\Pilege~. split level, $68.500 612 Santa
3 BR., 3 bath plu:i1 family rm. BLUE RIBBON J:unes cliff Haven Open Sun
Stunning interior .~ a full t-5. Owner/agent 548-6.110. ocean view. sec 1 u de d REAL ESTATE
garden entry. $1&.l.(XXI 213: 429-5901 213: 431-7663 Harbor Vu Home11, Palenno, VICTORIA HLDS , 2 S~·. 4 b•o. 2'1 oo. FR, 2 fp,
Lge. family home of 4 BR. & Lido lt1e u-et bnr, $76,!m 540--13-16
conv. den. 3 baths ,fi. huge 1--------* Bluffs E l\.fodel Condo
family rm. wlwet bar. JSR, 3 BA (or trade for Bayfront 3 BR. 3 BA
W'hlte \\"Iller > coaRtal CD~1 single or duple~' By Owner • 644-1740
views. Will -:;n:
500
ssll1der trade 673-5665 or 6T~ BLUFFS Condo $00,000. 3 Br,
in W. L.A. $1 • You don't noed a gun 10 212' Ba. 01o1ne1·. Walk to ten-
STUNNING ··0ra,v Fast" when you nis clb. 640-1000
New contemporary, 3,00,J SQ. place an ad in the Dally JBR house, near ocean
fl. of spectacular wood & Pilot Want Ada! can now $59.000 Lo dwn. Miles Larson glUI construct. 3' Bdrm!!., -642-5678. Realtor 673--8563
interiors, gan1e room. Soar-
3'h. ba. Oak fir.I.: rare "'ood !.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ing vle~·s. ~144,000
Small classified ads
-·
doa
bi se~ling
job.
Try onel
642·5fi78
NEW LISTING
2-Story, custom built home
u·hh shake roof. 4 B<lrm1., 2
ba. Lge. mstr. Ba.: 2
fti>lcs. 500 Sq. ft, recreAtion
m1. Come see A: buy!
$68,500
CALL Ci) 4•••J•t4 'Jt•l.111. llALTY
Near Nt•••rl P••t «;)Ilk•
A.SSU~lE 7% VA 3 BR. 2
BA, Fam Rm, fp, on cul-de-
snc, $45,000 646-151.t or
521-T;:i60, no agts. I
BLUFFS
BY owner 3 Br, 2l-J Bil, o~
looking bay. $67,500: 426
Villta Parada. 6'14-U8Q.t * LARGE, 2 BR house, nice yen!, $38,500. 642-70581 alter
6 PM. 1
--
MoblloHomos
For Salo
10x50WTnf13x b
JJIUldo Lv. rm . 8 =:n !lcrecood nn, 2 BR. dull
Pk. nr lloag H08pltat • ~2M9 I
$20,0l)O MOBILE H°"" tor 11.l~. Sal.'\'WC@ fot $Jl,9!!1'l.
All convenlencea. M1-M6tJ
aft 6.
Jl'a1t rttuh• an JU91 a pbOl'W
call "way 60-5678.
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Friday, August 24, l<J73 OAILY PILOT 3/;
..-[ l~ .__I -Rt~,__··t .. -'---'Jlj]i ..._ -~'--: ... _Jlj] I -"'-I~ I ... "'-I~ I -·-' tcoul• for hnt I~! _..,_ I~! -"' ... l~ ~~:;. [i!!ll j MobUo HomM Com morclol Mountoln, n--rt HouM1 Furnt·•-•. 300 ~Hmomum,.,mU~n-fumriinii. ~·30~Si H ""S Hou111 Unfurn.
.... F~l"$1l1 l25·1-;;P;ropo;;;;rty;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;·;l51;; .. ..Jllc;•.;.'°;;.;rt"--·~ __ _;1;;..74 Gonor1I ..,_ ..,.., Unfurn. ""
30$ Co~d.,,.lnlums Duplexes Unfurn. 350
...;.F,;;urn=. ___ _:3:.:.:15 -'-----"---
' NEWPORT BAY I' • General _c_._.1_._,.,_ ... _____ 1,L;;.;"11=".;."';;...::B:.:•;::••;::";_ __ _
-,-New 2 llR, 1 BA living rm. * :I-UNIT * INDIAN WELLS Unbollovobly Boautlful GARAGE Apt. I br $140 util 1163_ • I BR. N .. r beach!
Huntlnvton Harbour
HUNTINGTON H tt r b o Ur
bachelor unit with ocean
view. fl.95 pr. month
637~9101.
Now~rt 8Hch
Adult p&f k '"'/private beach COMMERCJAL BLDG. VAL O'lSERE Garden Apta. pd stove/t'(.>f CID Sngl j Oiild & pet welcnn1e.
0 l\!,!!00 -3612 well localed w/orl·•treet SANDPAPER Adults • no """ t1owcl'i SH., Cn'IZENiPark •'YI~, 2 250 . 2 BR. 2 BA, apt. All
BUPGER expando MoUlle pal'kl~. Q\\'ner will ci&rry every"•hcre. Stream & RENTALS br l \~ ba $175 U>vely bltn3, Deck, 01.-crui Vu?
Rl;ltne .'111) )iobile purk in r.o. $59,000. LOVELY UJ'!t\tm, 3 bdrm, 3 "'atertall , 45' pool. Rec. Apwtmentl NE\v PAINT In °& out i Br S3~. J Bit, 2 SA O<,'('aJI view
YEARLY -seashore by 51.st.
l..t(t 2 BR. lmmcd. OC·
cupancy. $300. 51&-1607 I
213' 333-®2.
Newport Shor•• Newport Beach. &l&-2748 or -bath condo, au,-.eta1 drapes, Rm. Sauna. Sgls 1·2 &Inn., Oup-.. 2 Bu $21li. Fpl. l'Qls/kids. ' home! $ n1in. nutlk beach! lrt~ bua 642-3128 * S9'x29' LOT * cu8ton1 wu'llPepcr. mirrored J.""uni·Unfum. from $142. ..-N"£A1' 4 br :.i ba on beach NU~VIEW RENTALS
l•ll11, OCEANF1lPNT 1'RA1L£ C·l ZONE wa ll, tccmttkt.T rclrigerata-, SEE IT: 2)00 Parsons, ~ $375 yrly. Nwpt Shni w/ga.r. 6734030 or 1.94-3248
Condominiums
Unfur n. 320 BRAND NE\V DELUXE 4
BR. Upper DUPLEX. Yrly.
Lease. 1 blk ocean. 979--0493. ~~·:,.. Lrg. glassed-111 de.ck, qui k $32R .500. E·Z TERMS ;':~her, dr'ytt'. $65,000 sub-6'1~70. 433 W1 J9th St .. Costa Mcru IAiiiLiiAiiiRiioiiniilaiilii1 iii64iiii2ii-8ii38..,31 LAJt GUNA Niguel, 4 BR, 2 ba. 1 :.:H~".::".::";::"..:9;;1•:.:.•:...:B~oa=c::h:.__
,l{U ,,_.1 sale · $800) cash, ll oy McCardle Realtor · $ LANDLORDS S 1854 s. Coast Hwy., Laguna v-nn & din. arcu, frplc,
494-0509. lSlO Newport Blvd., C.M. GRACE C. COX Let us rent your propertie11. MESA VERDE thrff blt-ini;, refrig-b..,"Czcr, cpt, LG. 2 BR Slud\o In a 4-11tex. ~
84) MOBILt:: hefn1c, spac:c 541-7729 & Associates \Ve're back to SERVE YOU COsrA MESA OFFICE bedroom , -Sha rp .& ~!k,~10~~I~~;a~.x~~li:;: ~~~~· ~~~hHt~u, 0k_ Ap•rlments for Rent llUl
, rei:it $<\7..50. :l1J \Vilso11 Sl, AGAIN • ft.taey Clients. Cull SS5 & UP. Furn Bach, 80me clean, quiet street near last, del)Obil, iease. 495-4244. 827-8523 ! 1~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;Tm~J : Space ,38. CM, IN:!-, mr. 1 o•'o + 20 YEARS (7141 346--aJIYlime odor to va.,.ncy. Save 1$. oooking. Ideal !or students. h I R I' 'd gy 0 · ft:k ( 11 73-847 llwy. lll. Palm Desert $ ALA RENTALS $ $1'15. SEPARATE 2 Br. Gar. sc 00 '· • 1 req ' Laguna Hiiis Irvine · wn~. e. new, 2 BR, Priinc tenant c.-...10~ -SUNNY p N Kid!l:/pets ok no pets. $275, P er -"---'---·----c;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;, IAnts F 360 Ll'ke new ·caiwts & cur· ........ 10~ +' .;M.l ,.....,ase-ALM SPRINGS ewport & Bay, CM 642-8383 . . th CALL 54•1151 . • -"'"=·....:";;:'cc"'-'----'-'-•·•ns _ 300 "'!'-""""' "'""'· 111 ""'rcen-Biltmore Coii•os 1 3 Br , $150 • COZY' 2 Br Cottage. mon • v-3 BR., 2 bu., bltns. incl. WA'LNUT S UAR -
·...., · ..,, • '"-v.w;i l'i't MvncT. Requh;, S%)0o00 beaut. furn. POOi, j acun.1:
1
B;;.•;;.1..;bo.;.•;;...;l;;.sl;;:•.:;n.;;d____ StQve, crpts, drvs, beams. HERITAGE REAL-dlsbws11r., wa.'lher/dryer. Q E · Balboa Island l~~~~~~~~~~I cash. Principals only. ' tennis, ps bbqs. Wknds, $160 . NICE 2 Br Home. Encl TORS Pool tn ember i; hip &: 3 BR, air condi'l'ioned -near 1----------1. ~ rnED BAROOUR wkly, mo or lse. Cn 4) EXEC. Horile ·Little Island. gar. Yard for kids/pet, ' gardener incl. $225 Per mo. parks & pool. $275/mo. 401 N. BAYFRONT -2 BR l .a. REA91;., EST
3733
ATE 311-6274• Write L. Fowler, ~fc~"~:~~ ~~ :.& S~arpt: $190. LRG. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Appl's. Dani Polnf CAPRI Realty &14-7525 Lasz(F'6)1~ 51\arkany 644-6°200
1
l~i"~~,' 8~!~ '_Va2teBR'.~~:~r. -2 i~--~-iAllllliiil '"" 1416 s. Camino Ree.I, P.S. '1
J ...,.,., Kids/pet 0[' Kngit;. Lagun.• Niguel • C 2 15-June 15. Or $650 mo Yrly Call 645--0111 fl,.\. Winter or Vr!y.
Acrea1• for sale 150 Ne~': BJ~'.~ De~· M!: s~~ 0arCf1:t=se ::; ~ =l~ea°'se~. C-Re"7f.-'67~3-4'-'394=.'-~-LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE Cus~o~~JR o2~A~:i~El:vel. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Vie1v. Pool * 613-3245 *
1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:1 Ready for devel. or can be Arrowhead. Lake view. 3 BR, 3 BA house, Baytront. $l40-lBrfurn. Ocean view. Walk to Doheny State facilities. $325 ~tonth Realty Company \VATERFRONT, 1 BR, fplc, o!'otl'•l I• held w/present inc. $3.2S Neivly furn. l''rplc. Very Pier. Also 4 BR, 2 BA on Beach. Vac. $260. {n4J Agt. 494·-97Q.I 49.i-9729 642 8235 644-6200 priv patio, parking, avail * * * 625 FOOT E1l0NT· Sq. ft. Ownr/Brkr 642--0590. good rental. s 31, 9 o o. ~~~~. ?:i:I,' ~7762· each. $~~ :0~"Br. Stove, relrig, 774-6560 3 BR, 3 ba, $3(1(). mo. 1st & .. ~trro~:1No. ~q. 400 S. ~:;:,.~t~·:roo~~. St.9 Condominium' 637-3140. \Vinter Rental-AJso apt. patio, child/pet ok, Fountain Valley ~~~. ~=· 25151 Laauna Hills \\'IN'l'ER. NE\V 3 BR, 2 BA .
.-w·I Acres • "~.ooo. for sale 160 Ranches, Parm11 3 ,12 $250 -1 2 Br House. Din Rm, " ~ 1-.cc:...:.=.;:_ ___ ...,::; Groves or .. Ba. Sun deck. frplc, huge yard for 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car gar, all Lido Isle LAGUNA HUis! ! 23366 Sr1n f1·plc, dlx bit-ins. Beautifully
111 ~·' *** 245 FOOT FRONT· LAGUNA Hills. L e isure llO Guest room, 675-6299 kids/pet. bltns, !pie swim pool, kids I----"-------?o.liguel, to1vnhousc 3 br, 2 lurn. $375/mo. 7I4/675-:nl9.
-AGE . Beach Blvd., \Vorld:, New 3 BR, "La 10+ acre beautiful young ~. 4 Br. Convert, Den CALL 494-9491 OK. Like ne\v. Only $255. LIDO Isle, Lovely 4 BR, 3 ba "'/vie\v. Bltrtll, dsh•vshr, DELUXE 2 Br. Garage, year~
lluntington Beach. 21,i Reina 213-433-7266 Hass avocado grove going House $400 Winter $525 Yr· * LANDLORDS * mo, No !ee Agent 842-4421 ba, den, \.\'Ct bat,'2 car gar, forced air hi, comm pool, ly. $300 mo.
Acres • $217,00>. }"an· LAGUNA Niguel by owner lg on four yrs. Good set for ly.' 673-2472 or' (213) 3.»-f.001. FREE 'RENTAL SERVICE Huntington Beach \V/electronic door opene~. rec area closeby. Rent S245 •675-3063*
tastic 11ales Jot or 1110-2 Bl~. 2 BA, sunporch, & 1 ne.'Ct year. Fenced. $115,000. 8alboi Penlnsufi $ OWNE S OF --50 yrds to prl bch, temus nio. 1st & last. First Securi· Balboa P8nlnsul•
·"''v"I ll'1 locatiQn. level. $39,900., 493--0555. 0wJl(!r wiU carry papers, I ;=:.::::::...;..::;:;:.::::;~--· · R. $ DECORATORS show place. privl, ln1mac corn:!. $575 mo. ty ?o.fortgage. 714/537/'393 ----'------
'Cl ' Principals only. 714-17S.2'J41 . CHARMING 2 Br, l~S Ba $ REAL PROPERTY$ All new inter, 2 story, Crplc, yrly. lsl & last. $200 dep. M. . v· . $3S WEEK & UP
'' ** * s ACRE.'S R-3 . Choice Duplexes/Units cottage. Sept. 17.June 30. 2 We e:re bad) to SERVE YOU 2 br, l ',£! ba, stove, retrig, 01vncr 673--0541 alf 6 pm "';.;15,;;1;..1°"c.;...-'-"".:.':.;0;...._~-
l-luntingt0n Beach lo-__ 1_1_1_• ______ 162 Real E1t•t1 car gar, frplc. 1 blk to AGAIN ! FREE OF washer & dryer. Adult com-wkdays & -anyti1ne Qll ALISO Villa Plan A. 2 Br. • Sleeping Rooms
J
cation. Neal' schools Exchange 182 ocean & bay bchs. Respon. CHARGE. CaJl ~prior to munity. Pool, club house, wkends. 1 Ba, carpeted, drapes, built • Housekeeping Rooms
J>arks & Showing. , OCEAN .View. New Duplex adults. 673-9508. vacancy. Don't Jose $$. steps from shoppiog. Lease Mesa Verde ins, covered patio, 1 car gr, • OceBan View Apts by Builder. Open house ·BRAND NEW, Oceanside, 3 C""='"'7"'-.:::::=----Save time. $220 mo or rent $23.5. nio. ·,;.;;=;...;..;;;.;;.::.____ Al.BOA INN
Sat/Sun 1-5pm. 2 BR. 2 BA, BR, 2 BA! Private hillside 3 BR, 214 BA New remod. $ ALA RENTALS $ 962-2913 or 534-3896 3 BR, fam rm, house for ~e:!e '8£s8'J~t Joe, S2ll 105 irain.Street
plus J BR, 2 BA. Crpls & lot, I.all pine trees -ocean int. $?.05/MO. Winter. 305 Newport & Bay, CM 642.8383 MOVE Rig ht In! Freshly rent. 2952 Penibrooke Dr., 1 -==-="-'='----:: ~40
drps & all bltins. Prloc view. Builder asking $39,500 it on t er o . n4/879-5991 ; paint-... 3 Br, 16' x 22· den blk Irom schls, church & N ••ar..:R·'oco·ratod ~Jy ~~ 500 <~ N ,__ • submit Orange Co. prop. 213/335-4696 LRG. Bach $110. UtiJ pd. Kit , <:\I ewport Beach ~· r-.u "--17M\t63....W "'" · .,u .. , · ..,...., arc..,.,.us, erty or TD!! Broker 645-8-100 I o"='-=c...c=---~-lrg. closets. (4th BR) Finished gar. golf course. $330 per mo. --'--------4 BR. 2BA. Frplc, front
(If; Cdf\f 2BR, garage, garbage disp. FLAT 2 BR, $l40, l~-2 Ba (bonus rm) Cpts, drps. No Call bef 5, 642-9840, ext. 29, BRAND NEW porch & lrg fCM terra~. ~ 2.9 ACRES, Siskiyou Cnty nr, NEW Deluxe Duplex, 3 Br. Real Estate Wanted 184 1~~.h/wsh, Cwasll h mac h · Bltns/retr, child/snt pet. n1aint. yard. Nr schools & aft 5:30. 97H126 Lease with option 10 pur-Nr. ocean &: bay, beaches.
, lake. Ca.sh $Tt(XI. Terms 2 Ba. & 2 Br. 1 Ba. has 3 car .• mter -0 ege stdnts ok. \VO\V! Oreanfrnt 2 Br $2'25 shops. Cul-de-sac. $285 tJl9. 3 BR, 2 BA, family &. game chase! Top qualily! Adults on1y. Avail Sept. 8th.
$200 Oil, Bal $60 ,no Incl 7"/o gar. 618 W. Balboa Blvd. -* CLIENT * -$225. 675-5470, Nicely furn, gar, lg deck. 1st, last & deposit. 847-1905 roon1, frplr:, fncd yard. e 2 & 3 Bedrooms· Rent $380/mo. Win ter.
1(1'• '' int. owner 714: 499-J005 871-9467 or (Zl3) 342·9812 \i:ii;hcs to purchase distressed WINTER, 2 BR, 1 BA, ya.rd, GOOD area! 3 Br, 2 Ba $235. $200 UP. 3 & 4 Br. No lease $320/mo. 545-3182. e 2 Car G""age• 64&-JJ2ll
! propertiei., homes or income 1 TV dul'· t -.1 ~·+ Business Property 154 DUi:'LEX -~al1,> Santa Ana units for the pu1"'1'\(\se or co or • a ..,, no pe 8· Fncd, gar, CID. family ok. required. Others avail in I~IMEDIATE Occupancy • Avail. September Corona del Mar
·nt\! Heights. Principals only. .,~ $2'75. 673-6243 ALA Rentals 642~8383 Org Cty. Call Dep_t of Love_ly 3 BR, $0~. Option NEWPORT CREST renovating & re-selling. For "°" T\VO LOTS TOTAL 104'x209' Terms. $37,500. 642-3729 info call 545-8424 SouthCo Corona del M.r RENT 2 BR houses _ 4 on T r a n s Por t at Ion. possible. Bkr 838-6341 eves. SA!.ES OFFICE ' STUDIO Apts. Beaut. loc. 2
Z CHOICE LOCATION, Hun. Income Property 166 lnvestn\ent Co .. Realtors. l ~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lot . $160 ea. Avail OO\v, 21~~6~3310 from 9.3 . Phone 645.0141 sizes Iron1 $125 to $170.
tington Beach, z 0 N ED \VANTED Residential Lot l16000-208th St., off Pioneer, -";y' w"Yt'v· 4JR,:-?J,.;;--;;;;;;;;:1!1;1~,~is~s:!io~n~Vi~o~o~)o~---NE\VPORT Ct-est, 2 Br. 2 ,IO'n-"cl"d"'sc,:;util="o.· ..o675c;Hc...clc.74cc·--:t BUSFNESS, PR 0 t~ ES· POSITIVE CASH scm 6000 VIEW + POOL Lakewood. Senior Citizens LOVELY 4 Br, 2 Ba. design· Ba, Lease, $475 mo. S.15-0lTI Cost1 Mell
SlONAL OR OJ...,.~IC~S. FLOW FROM A \YIU ~ay ca~· ~!u Ha~l :r~:i 3 Bed.room -3 Bath preferred. 21J-422...8237 or ed for family living. G1·ade FOR Lease -3 BR, 2 BA, Avail Sept. ~ $17,500 ea. TER?i!~ ~;nte: SWIMMING POOL? 58&-644 $475 WINTER LEASE 714-642-4603 & Hi-Schools ·immediate hon1e never lived in. Avail Casa de Oro c,• " KANPAK, 1993 Kihe1 Rd.. . . 1· Rlt ,,.n70 area. ~·mile from Beach. 913. $300. Wtr pd. 837-7309. PARK Lido Condo, 3 br, 2~ · ' Klhci Maui, lfa...,·a.ii. This OJlt' IS leased for $220 r. -81lboa Island Lease .350, Ava I lab I e N bn, patio, pool. $310 mo. ALL UTILTTIES PAID r. /, a mo. to 4-plex 01\'IK'N. In ~ 9-1-73. 646-l TI2 after 6 pm. . ewport Beach Adlts/no pets. 54~3993. Con1pare before you.rent
,., 1 Commercf1f addition, you gt-t a tt·e-....____ I • 1 BED 00 PRIVATE w/view! 1 BR $195. C..istom designed, featuring:
••'•·l'i;i Propel'-ty 151 mendous recreo.tion roon1 + .. ~Ill R ~t. bunk rm, sml, Or \\'/patio. frplc util pd. 4 BR. 2 Ba. Walking distance Condo. Furn. or • Spacious kitchen with in-
.\•11 (2) 3 Bdrm A,.,,.,, for on1y . Jrg patio, charming, ldeal Crpts. d'"""'. Take your pick! to all schls, carpeted $330. EASTBLUFF U I 32S di.....,... Jo'~ti'ng ,...... sgl person or cple. 409 lris. ·~ t ·d 1 Del' btful 4 BR 1 n n urn. '"""" &" • "" • $57,500. The choio-pru1 of GOODIE! 3 Br, 2 Ba; $375 mo. \Va er pat • year ig · on · oor: e Separate din'g area
.'.>'.Ii NEIGHBORHOOD an ~pt, complex, lhis won't Business Cost1 Mes. Furn or W\f. 1'l'pl + xtras! lease, $100. cleaning deposit spacious Uv. 1m. w/fTplc. F t · V U e Home-like storage ·
,,.!> .... SHOPPING CENTER last Jong! Ov.ner \\'ill fi· RARE! 4 Br, 2 Ba, $425. 96S-6164 Family nn., eating space in oun a1n I ey •Private patios UHl~l( NEAR nancc ut 8~'r, Opportunity 200 1 BR Trailer. Adult park. Furn/unf. Frplc, erpts, drps, FENCED 3 BR, 2 BA. Bit· kitchen. Avail, Sept. ls!. 3 BR 'Z Ba, Condo. dble gr. • Closed garage w/storage
,!,-, ' Mile Squere Perk MT. SHASTA Xlnt tor bachelor. sto\"t', ref1ig. ins. frplc, covered patio $475. \Vasher, dryer, pool, rec rm, •Marble pullman .oc-.:. Fountain V1lley Cervelli's t.Iarkct S32,500. Call 64f>-3974 ALA Rentals 642-8383 'v/gas BBQ. Attached V1"s"IOD-549-1191 or 968-1781 e-ves. • King--sz Bdnns
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$1,2751000. Prime midtown location in Huntington Belch VACA:'IT NOW 1 ..... garage. $260 mo. Lease Townhouse Unfurn. 335 •Pool -Barbeques -sur-' ! .... & modem 97g..{)543 rounded with plusft land·
Call now for d<.>tails. $f~~bl!nnu~~ ~~ iftio \VALK to water, 1 BR, ;~!!:ly, ~~1:"° furnish, -LO=VE~Lc.Y_._ 2b_r_u_n-furn--.ad_u_lt ied hi·11 Huntington 8e1ch scaping
tiQ. ft., leased at U7S per singles/families. Also Cot· a. h condo. frplc, \\'asher & Adults. No Pel<t
• OMSKlN nlO. !>rice includes $12,000 blge in canyon $150 in mid· uays ores dryer, pool & r ec . I BR Townhouse, 2 Bath, LARGE 1 BR, $190 t
"-f114)963""567 inventory, $10,000 fixtures, di~•~ of ~rcsalt k& Bachelor CORNER lot. , -. 2 B Privileges. $200. per mo. new shag c r pt' g, 365 W. \Vil.son 642--UJTI
•
CLASSIFIED
"HOURS ' .
Adverlltc:TS ·may plate
thclr sell by telephone
S:OO a.m. to 5 :30 p.m.
:t.1onday lhru Friday
8 to noon Saturday
Sparling Investment etc. Call locally: Al Day utlha ..,., w to water. ...,_"' r, 968-2'290 · REALTY washer/dryer, tennis Cl'ls, LOW WEEKLY RATES ITI4J •« ooo. or to "·altor Agt. Fee. 536-2575 frpl., patio, crpts, appl., I I ~?Ml/ E S I Corp. 833-3544 . ~~ n.i:: L a--ganlener. $385 yrly lease. BRAND new 3 br, 2 ba, lrg A Company \Vith Vision poo · Pay area. ~ mo. xecutiva u tes m ~ft. ~ ... sta, Mr. Shell agun1 ~di 646-5430. fam + !iv rm. Dbl car gar. Univ. Parle Center, Irvine 962-8781. 2080 Newport Blvd •
NEW 4 PLEX f9161 926-4298. S f •-· .,~ Call • $120 . Util Pd. Bach, stove & Corona def Mar pace or v.•ash/ .... ,-er. fJ\IV Anytinie, 55i..r:>00 Laguna Niguel Cost• Men B nd mo 5J&.4850 536-1277 Office Hours 8 A?.1 'tO 8 PM ra new, Spanish.motif, 3 e Cocktail bar $1SM down retrig. Sml. pet. So. Laguna ---------· ' · 3 BR 211 ba · Se ·T 642~2611 BR. 2 b.·1. deluxe un it e Electronics Sys _ Sales $150. Util Pd. Lrg Bach, tun IRVINE Terrace f a mi I y \VALK to ~ter 2 BR h.~e. Goori -a ., 111 a err. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S 1v/fi•plc., & 3 2-BR units ea. e •Cbildren:s Store ·-beach kit. Jn town, near beach! home, lge Liv rm, formal din singlcs/tamilies. Also 3 BR LRG Bach. $90. Close to Bch. ocean View. Avail. • F1lEE Unens
"''/patio or sun deck. e sw~plng Serv. 68 accts $175 . Uttl Pd. Oceanfront l rm, screened lanai, 4 BR, 4 $183, C.M. Agt. 1'"' e e. Stv/ret. Util pd. ~~161i~ ·yr. lease $380. • F,REE Utilities
Eastside Coista !.Jesa nr. Holland Bus S.les Br. Vie~', deck. Yearly! BA, 2 hUge yardi romp! fen· 97$-8430 NEW hse 2 Br, 1% Ba. $215.
Newport ltts. Buyer gets l.st MS-f170 or S4o..ooo8 $300 • Uti~ pd."-2·BR, trplc, ced. $600 mo. i ti. c Id g 4 BDIThf 2~~ baths, two story ::r~Acc:t/~r~r ~tns.n~!~· :D;;u;!p:.;l;;ex:;e:;•:,;.F_;u:;r;.:n:.· __ :,34;:5 : ~~t~~
,•)o~ COSTA 1'1ESA 'o mcE
330 \V. Bay
642-5678
:""'rsii8D~epreciation. Ask· """""""""""""""""""' yard, patiO. l blk beach! gardener call 67J...:1"262 all in xlnt Joe. $350. Ask for $3~ Ye~ly Bnn!u frplc. Bilboa PonJ"nsula e Laundry Facilities
ng • \YANT to seu good pumblng NU·YIEW RENTALS 4:30. Dale 962-4471 • . ' ' --'-'-'-..:.=;::;;.:..__ e TV & maid serv avail.
CALL 0 '''·l41• re-pair business in NeWport 6734030 Or «3248 SPACIOUS Ex ec home 3 BR, 2 BA, newly decorated. HgG~TS Home. 3 br, DR, $300. 2 & 3 BR. \\linter. $2.IS &• ·-:-P-;ho;,ne=Servi'=7.·~""7=c==-=' ')'••~ ~ Beach area, Take over hun-l Br hse for salaried wlfabulous view of harlx:Jr, Nr. the beach. $265. Jse. on cor. Frpl, gar, nu C/D. $295/J.\10. 114 E. Balboa. **WORKING WO!\.L\N 55,
"aff...... dreds of regular custon1ers. bachelor, $170 &. 3 Br semi city lites, ocean. 3 BR, 2~S 968-6215 or 962-8851. ALA Rentals 642-8383 714/879-5.991: 213/335-4696. will share 31Ui1 furnished
fH•11.,.·
.•n''
' NE\VPORT BEACH
3333 Newport Blvd.
642.5678
KEAL TY 642-3128 turn hse. Studio $87.50 Ba, tam .rm. dble fplc, cust I Nt•r Nt•porl Pott Office LAWN Route, Pre ' e n t I Y ""ponsible salaried adul'B· cpts/drps. Gardener, Sl:lXl rvine $260 . 2 BR, trp.lc, dbl gar, Laguna Beach apt. with same for % rent
7% A bl L ~'°l70 .... mo. Lease. Owner 644-2979 trg yard. Ncwporl 1-lgts. _._:_ _ _:_-;.;.c;;____ $65. Mo. plus ~2 utilities SSuma e oan groosing $150. Good to build ~ , eves. $350 N 2 BR lo"er Op" I FA (•~ter furn~hed) N ot on. Steady custo1ners, sell LISTEN to the Surf from this BEAUT Split level, 2 BR den 3 BR., 2 ba ••••••••• $375/475 • eo.v 4 BR, frplc, deck, "' i.,'7, urn, ·
$500. 645-4181 aft 7 PM. unique 2 BR ,,_ home lor home. 2 BA, priv sundeck, 3 BR., 21,3 ba .••...• $385/450 1 blk beach! Newpo11 Shores. heat. priv patio, enclosed ~=~ con~f~:.abii::3'!!:: •wu no y·~ fully ~td & drpd 2 BR, 2 ba, den, A/C •.• 127·, $500. Very lrg 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 gar. Near beach. avail Sept
' , HUNTINGTON SEACH
.rn.. 17875 Beach Blvd. I 0 Units $130,000
Nice Costa Mesa Area.
lncomo $16,068
NEW beauty shop for 118.Je in rent! $425. \\inter rental or <>-<u, ~.. • ' c 1 • 15th, 494·9601 Bay & Newport, C.M. no 1.r... 54().1220 Newport Beach, low rent, 6 yrs lease. 497-1081 or bltns. Adults. Operl Sat/Sun 4 BR, 2~~ ba .•••••.•.•• S475 rp cs, yard, deck. CdM. lease, cleaning fee or 1st & 11.ttH
!Jr, • LAGUNA BEACH
22l f'uretst Ave.
494·94GG
station_ 646-2Sl6• ;;';;94-8962;-;;""=::--:=-,--, 11H, 7rfl Begoitia Av. CdM. 2 BR. 2 ba.ths, fruu t111, $350 NU-VIEW RENTALS cNc;eccw;.:po:.:.:.r:.l .:B:.:1.:•~ch:.:____ last. SEE _ after SPM, eves
Mo L
739 HELIOTROPE', 2BR, 3 BR. 2 baths ••...••..• $400 673-1030 Ot' 494-3248 ol· wk end!!. Avail Sept. lSI'.
Bkr. GT.,.5800; eves. &IS.2S&I ney to oan 240 DELTGHTF"UL Vacation 4 2BA, l blk beach, crpts. 4 BR. 2 ha•"''• .......•.. ,$475 BLUFFS, new sectio n ' \VINTER Rental, steps to 2079 Thurin No. 2. -Br. 3 Ba. pool home. $950 drps ,_1 f . v uJ z 1 beach. view. shag crpt ..:.:c;;,.=='--":::..C"----1
~· SAN CLE~J ENTE .,1-.11 305 N. El Camino Reftl
*TRIPLEX* 1 t TD L Sept ]/Nov, 15. 494-0451 ' _,c, stve, reng, 1s1on-pop ar pan, wide gi·een thruout. 2 BR, $250. open $30 WEEk & UP S Oa ns auto ga1· door opener, belt, 5 BR, nr tennis s 3980 Custom prlde-<if.-ownership, . 2 BR turn house on Victoria covered patio, $375 mo/Yr· club/pool. Malnt. cust drps, un. Seashore Dr. • Studio & l BR Apts.
(I! .. •
itUf·~\
t ,.-.11 ' . rtOf)fl
:~u"'
t )!,
• .-,(~ 11
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all new carpets, drapes and Be eh Se t to J ·~ 1 6~1,." d d 67'~ or 21J.44G-3715 col· • TV & Maid Service Avail. . Larg UP TO 90m0 a • P une -· y. ,_,... 'tOJ. d h 11 pts, a ults, no ..... ts. 1st & I t prunl. e o.,.,ner unit '' 497 2746 e I de .. ~ ec · • Phbne SerVlte -Htd. Pool
NORTH COUNTY elegantly furnished, builtin 2 d TD L mo, -HARBOR View Hi 11 s . re I ast + p. $575 nw. Avail HURRY -l"on't Last Long •• Children & Pet Section
dial free 540.1220 '"t··•·ns, c'--·' garage,, n oa 0$ South Laguna s""'"ious 5 BR ; .i.., I Fam Sept. Call eves or wknds. •• ""' ui<:: IUlM!U ,....... 644-8122 Oceanfront, winter. Beaut. 2376 Nel\'JX>rt Blvd., CM
CLASSIFIED CALL 642-4353 for details. rm, pool, spectacular vu. furn. lower 2 BR. 1% BA. 548-9755 or ~3961
BARRETT REAL TY Low est rates Orange Co. 2 BEDROO~I & Den. Ocean Mo. to t.fo, rental S850 with REALTY THE BLUFFS Fr p I c, washer/dryer. (Ad good for S5 on rent)
DEADLINES S1ttler Mtg. Co. ~ewh ~deck, 1 block to "poo~_I _m_.,_·n_t_. ~64c.•l-_23:~59~--A Company With Vision SJ-1,\RP NE\V 3 Br, pool & 646-2830 $11:> • Atb"!lctive furn. front
O('adlinc for copy & kl!ls 20 NEW UNITS 642-2171 545-0611 ac . remodeled and LRG. 3 BR, 2 ba honre. Univ. Park Center, Irvine yard, maintenance custom I is 5:30 p.m. the day be· Costa ~tcsa. Ae<.-clcraled redecorated. Deluxe. $350 Bltns, crpls, drps. Near Call An)'1ime, 552.7500 crpts, & drps. $575 .. per n10. \YINTER Lease, 2 BR, furn., 2 BR. Qulet, clean. Patio.
fore pulJllcation, except d e preciatlon opportunity. Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. per month Sept. 15th thru elem. sch!. yrly lease. $450. Office hours 8 AM lo 8 PlYI 1st & last & deposit blUns, crpts, drps, else to Garage. 1\dults, no pet.
for Sunday & ?.Jonday Schct.l. income $54,000. Price DON'T BORROW-June 15th. South Laguna. 644-0Gll for appt. 644-1846 evenings & wknds:-ocean & bay, -$275 -mo. OPEN-m.t~A Rutgers Dr.,
Editions \\•hen deadline $355.000. For details cail 'TIL YOU CALL USI 213: 464-1686 eves. 213: HARBOR VIE\" HOMES Avail Sept. 15th, ca 11 Cl\f. is Saturday, 12 noon. CJS J:t.EAL ESTATE 721-5115 days. RUSTIC 3 Br, 2 Ba home, ., ' 675-0544 or 884-18.58.J.G --E~f-w-·n_2_B_r_d_e_J·-.. ,-e---~-,,-n ' r. 68 Bon'O\Y on your home equity completely remodeled on 'fES, WE HAVE flENTALS $5'751per mo 1vith gardener, ..... "'""'"'
CLASSIFIED &48-11 • or eve 557~244 for any good purpose. Set".'· Lido Isla large corner lot. 4 0 0 blay 1ve be or !.erViee 5BR, 3BA, plush, near pool OCEANFRONT -On the apt, 5 n1in. to beach. Gar,
REGUL.ATIONS DUPLEX 2-2 BR's ing Los Angeles County for J asmine. $425. 673-1658 in solving & clubhouse. 1860 Port Sand, winler. 3 Br, 2 Ba. patio, walk·in closets, bttns, Lrg yard. $35,900. Assume over 20 years and NOW in SALE • LEASE Beaut. home Your housing needs? Carlow. Ready Sept, 15. $325/mo. Avail 9 / 15. dishwasher. Adults, no pea.
ER RORS: Advertisers VA Loan. JOSEP H Ot Co t)'' 5 Br, 37' lv. nn, patio & SPAC. home 3 Br, 3 Ba, 2 ~1295 or 642-2222 675-5366 $180. 544-42'13. ~l1~d &ch~~:re1:r,.~~ ~~.rt RE ALT 0 R. SI~~~ M~RTGAGE co. tr~70· lot S13» mo. ~!~f·9fr16o~a~~p~· nlO. BA y & Ocean Vie\V, 3 Br. 2 _D_•.:.•~••.:.•.;.•;..•:...;;U;;.nt;;.u~m;;·_c..._3;:;50;;: NEWLY derot'. 2 BR, 11,4 Ba,
immediately. THE
2
(714 ) 556-0100 CONTDIPO 4 Br 3 Ba ,_1 ••New 1 or 2 BR Condo. Nr Ba, carpets, drapes, stove, $2!Xl. l BR $190. Incld's gas ·oAJLY PILOT assumes ( l 4·P1exes Jor Sale in Hun-4500 Campus Oriye, N.B. • , ... ., • Chi C A 11 refrig, washer & dryer, $400 Balboa Penlnsula & wtr. Adults, no pets.
liability tor the flrst In· tington Beach. $48,950. 2 bltns. Close to water. $415 na o v e. PP . anccs Call 613-7300 ·---646-4095. 114 E. 20th st.,
i ., nJy BR lnc~nie $600 ~r mo $500 to $100,000 for month. Winter. 675-4923. •fu rn. Ph. 673-89U. DeAN BAYFRONT yrly lease, 2 C.~1. correct nserwon o • 84:z.:.3546:" .. ~ · Business or personal needs ZA Bayside Village, No collateral' required 4 BR., 3Y.ii Ba., den, Sept. Costa Mesi "SINCE 1946" unlurn 2 br. 2 ba, cabana. l BR, 2 BA, frplc, 2 yrs old. SM apt in. REAR -l older
CANCELLATIONS : industrial Property 168 Uponproofotabilitytopay thru June $450. 1st.Western Bank Bldg. yr. lease. Club house, pool, Pvt bch. $450 mo. 675-8762. adult only. Fum. Util pd. \Vhen killing an. ad be 675.7fi67 Uruvef'Slty Park, Irvine jacuzzi. Pri. beach. 675-6001 Corona del Mir $125. inquire Apt. No. 4 in ~~~h!o h~e r:u~~~: ** M-1 ** 2 BR, 2 BA, FA heat, tplc, POOL HOME Da.ys 552-7000 Nights WE.5TCLIFF-3 BR, 2 BA, REAR. 2335 Elden, C.M . glv~n you by your ad COSTA MESA Thi! Action Broker dble gar, washer/dryer, 3 IBR!'t"R, H & F pool, bslr. crpl'd, fncd, dbl gar, ~!,.~ ~tf~ 2 ~~.re:&: ,STUove~I040• •. P.t .• 11l5turn./mo,Perso219n1 taker 115 receipt oC your 63 x 300 FT. Collcct (1) 21S /386-743.1 winter $340. 6T>7879 Newly painted. l·Yr. lease NEW 3 Br, 2BA, Univer. $3'50/mo. 1st, last. sec dep. Adult 1 Ls $275
cancellation, This kill P lans for new bldg. Newport Buch or n1oro. $.17S/n10. CaU Lois Patk. 11'/1v cpts. drps, TI4/792-7828 aft 6 pn1. 675-Giits no pe s. e . · Harbor Blvd., CM across
nurnbcr must be pre· RIVIERA.REALTY 2ND Trust DHdS MiUC'r 642-8235 fF47). pools, __ ~ennis Nr. sc/tls. BL1.JFFS, 2 BR, 2BA charm, from K-Mart, Space 19.
t ent«! by the advertiser A llOME TO BE $375. ;:i.i2 8138. spac, Condo. Pri cor vu, Dane Point 1 & 2 BR, lrg, $165 & $1$.
in case ot a dispute. 64z!i&~ro&i'W.asy6.90 c.EMves . PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. CHERISllED LOVELY 3 b,r home in pool, fplc, avail 00\\', $465 PANORA~flC OCEA.i."I' VIE\V New crpt. Swim'·g pool. Any Amount Some house9 aren't much Culverdale .. Con1n1 J)flJ'k & lse, adlts, 64()--0746, 968-49&1 Adults.~ Ideal ror Bachelor.
492-4420
CANC~1i,ogF N~~ Lots for Sale 170 * C1ll 675-4494 BKR. more than 4 walls & a roof, Realty Con1pany ~I. crpl/drps. $ 3 2 5 . LUXURY HOME. 5 Br. 3 Ba, ~'Jd~ 11~.3 Ti~iJ~ss ~~ \1~;, 1993 Church St. 548-9633
f---H ~RfEFORE RUNNlNG: I I,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; b1 ut he~9 onebeybu'll lovc • 2 642-1235 644-6200 ;,oi.7597. 2 frplcs, lrg fan1. nns. $575. kitchen. Spectacular view of 3 BR, 1\1; BA.
,..,, I r d Mortg_, ots iivm l ocean. 3 Laguna Bea ch Avall. •"mm. "'" 0~9 I' ht t ' I 1300 Upstairs. ,,,111 Every cf ort Is ma (! to DOVER SHQRES Trust "-~"I master br, 2% ba, pan'ld 3 BR, l~~ ba honte. Nr --"---_...;.. ____ l·====..o~o.::c.:::::::___ 4~1l nig it · nm. 757 Sh c M
kill or correct I new ad Prtmc location w/view of ;;;:;;;;;;;;.._;;;;;;;;;;;;;2;60;; den w/a prof. pool table. Estanda HS, fnsd back yd, TOP OF TllE WORLD Santa Ana Heights alimar Dr.. · · that has betn ordered, u Ba • ·-1 1 Ls I t Newport Beach NICE l & 2 BR Trailers. S80 '1iiitt!I pper y. ,_.fiv evt , e W poss, op · 2 car gar, crpl, drps, OCEAN VlE\V large 3 \I ACRE h ·.:.;:..:O!:::..:..::::::;::;.___ & 1• but W<' ca.nnot gtl&rl'l.n~ 90x1'16. ~vatl' beached. PUT YOUR MONEY McNASH REALTY & kitchen stove. $245. mo. bedroom, 2 bath ne'vly , orse corrals. 2 .. Up. t.fature adults 133 E.
1.--ff too to do so until the ad Reduced to $49,500. Harriet TO WORK FOR YOUI INVESTMENTS \Vatt>r pd. llt & last mo. d led dra . BR, 1 BA, S25<1 n10. N W D S 16th St. 642-126.5 'l~llill 'hili appeared ln th C! ?c-try 642-82"JS. (1''53). 642-13.'W, eves ~78 ~nt. & $.')(). cleaning dep. feco~a • ni:w peries, ReferenCi!s required. E P RT' FINEST 2 BR. 2 BA furn apt,_ No JI 1po.per.. Earn 10% interest t.n well· 11 Se 980 irep !l<.'C, family roonl, hull! 557-0038 BEACH t ild ts 0~ Ce •-I~-~· IM'!CUl'td 2nd Trust Deeds on $185 • Nice l BR. All red.cc. Ava . pt. 1st. ~t Ins, $425.00 per monlb -"-'=------c 1 ren or pe • ~ n..,.,
II DIME~.A·UNE ADS: O~c r.ounty real estate. Balboa Isle. Winter. AVAIL now. Freshly painted, 644-2013 3 BR, l ba, encl palio. Lrg BRANO NEW 3 BR. 2 BA, St. e 642-5848. '
These. ads are atrlctly Re I Si AL •~RTGAGE ~. . $210. 2 BR, gar, ~tio, l blk ncll'ly epted. 3 BR. 2 BA. R~~ · ho f'ncd bck yd. S.A. Hghts Nr Elec ftit. \V/w crpt'g, drps. *SHADY ~POOL , d b 11 a ty Q:>mpartt ~u"" 1 .u .,.. 1~o1, • ocenn view . me, oc Airprt, 1275 mo 64.'l-1528 \•early. $35()/~tO. du! cuh In a vanco' Y ma "424235 644-6200 • (n4) 566-0106 beach. Yearly. Xtra lge. rued y{!. Quiet cul· Beaut. 2 BR, 2 BA. den · · • A ts Poolside $150 u.P. u r
,ti,76-
nJ 1
oi ~I
·~''" -~·
or nt N~ oie of o~ of .. I I~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!'!'!!!!!! 4500 C&m~ Dr., N.B. $235 • N6cely furn 1 Br. Fl'plc. de-sac. Nr. all r.chools $285 I Arch Beach. ligl') honie. HouHS. f.ur~, or 548-2819 177 E. 22nd St. CM 642-3645. g~:~Hn<': r :.~~ ~13~: NEWPORT bellclt -CUaiOm ~~~ ... ~~'""""""""I ~:v1Ewcd:ENTALS ~~:1~'· lai;t & deposit. f~lg•.g f~~g,yoaperdn. beAv'a';I ce,.\'d· _...,.:.c".:.'":.'cc";;· ____ ..:l:.:.;10 'o"EL""'u"x"E~du-,~,,,-,-.-.. -.-r-l>e-.e-b _H_._._,_rn_g,_t_on __ a_ .. _•h ___ I
CO!ltA. Meta offJce 12 Rt In! l!ia' tront.nge on 8th FOR Sale, $54,S!!S lst or all· 6.,., ,,,...,,. ,,, "'Ho Se 1315 o.7,09 G I & Lido shops. 3 Br. 2 Ba, ri~~~. -all branch or-~~~~ grub~igVl;:nyo:r ~l~~w 1:'· $3t)~il ~~Ai \Vlt 2'~~ottage~~urn. ~:.;:: 1f'~E BRLe~ri~3511'~: 3 ~~Cti B:;· 34:; .. 2 Ba,, •n•r• -~~. bl~y/:~vhri 3 s:o~ BACHu.Jk45& ~l~R •• p.'ltloS.
Fashion Jsluod A .Co}'O\ta dtl consi<t,c:r smaller TD ' a tor 9 mo's. Plush. 3210 S<."tk· Z.100 Elden. Avail $cpt. l5th. Bean1 CPillng living rm, Cd~t 3 U'R 2 ba vie-.v ru111 S.\S..1346. trplc's prlv. 13.l'l:lges -T1~E DAILY PILOT Te· r.for. Private plannf"d Com· 1 _,P .. /"Pl'IM=.-•c..· _.6 .. n--0'-"71i6="---view CdM. Ready Sept 15. Bkr. 838~t eves. rrpl<". ChQrm. lclUll' opi., $500 Ato/Yenrlf. · · · • .::.:='"""'-~--~-Dlvidfi' bath lots of
serves the right to cJaa· lllUJ!itY with flue.rd gate. TIME FOR Kl'N6AARD R.E. 642-2222. 3BR, 2BA. yrd! lrg f1·plcl $100{) d1\'ll,~ $425 mo. CJ-Ain/ Ptnln. Pt. 3 BR, 'Z ha. Uni. 3 BR. part rum. w/2 car close . Rec. hall, pool & f~1';e ·~~· t1dC:r~f,:~ Pr\Ced to 11ell! Ttrms 1 BR. hou!!e, $~ util pd. bea1n (,'('\!, $31a mo. Aval A~. 494-Mat $375 ~10/ycarty. ~iii 1:ac~~~ni-ty~l 2~~~ =1 ~~~1~~~~ ~~
and lo chang• It. rates •"811abl•. Pvt Ply, 640-1537. nu1cK CASH Aloo C.M. 190 Cotl11g• & HB S.Drpl 1. 551-1218, 299 Mesa FANTASTIC ocean & town ~JHl90. 122 42nd st. Ke<l9011 Ln. t1 b!k w. of
& regulalioM .. 1thout CllOICE tocaUon on Balbon .,. l rut hie, walk lo water. · vico,1." 3 Bh., 2 bas, $400 1n<l NN]l?rt Bch. Beach. l blk N. 0-f Stater).
1-:;;;-ILl>'iOr notle<. Peilin, Zoned R-1, "" THROUGH A Agt. Fee. 919-84.10. 2kBldR/+ .~", 1' l~I~~. 3081!'· !I~ ',':-!'~;.,, 541-3000. wk n d' YEARLY L<3'e, 3 en. 2 BA. ==--""84"2""·'1848=...,......,...~,
CLASSIFIED
owner, 893-0091 Cl' Eves, LOVELY 4-BR, ha~, ou tside F s P<979-.., 0s,~ .. s es "· ''.I>'· 1 --'""c.=~------bltins, frplc, crpts. drps, a,tEN, small beach OOtcl.
493-4429 lhowcr, Ba.ytront, Winter ee. ootow El\fER.Al.D BAY, av1til. mid w/dcck. ~ hou.sts to oetan. Roonu $Zl.50 per wk. Ants
MAILING ADDRESS ~lxUO LOT. 1fi0'1 Cornwall DAILY PILOT r<ntal, 400 38lh St. NEW 3 Br townhome, nr Sept. thru June. $8.'iO mo. 2 $3SO per mo. Ca II $9D per monlll. 536-_,.,.
P. O. Box 1560, Newporl Beach. Nr. ahOp. "White Elephants" over· pool. Ready for occup. Sept BR, Priv. bench o.rea & L1puna Be9cfa 67$-0.'i44/fe84~1SS8. I 'L;'o:::g"u"n"o~B;::1:::1:.,c;::;:...:.::~-
COJta l\f~111 ping. O'Nner. 673-6293. WANT AD ninntng YoUr howiof Tum lst. $285. Jock, 979-lGp faclls. n4~T03C -New custo1n duplex. Upper 4
11.h 92626 Like tn tmde'l OUr 1radttr''5 thent tnto '"Cub" .•• sell f\,tONTICELLO Condo, 3 Br 2 UPPER Three Arch &!1....:.2 SML llo11sc tum/unfurn. 3 br, 2-btl. &yvw. $tf..to n10 OCEA."f beach tn'lnt, 2 BR, Ji1!!0~~:::::::::====::!I JP~•~r~od~l,.},!cc~l~u~m~n~ls~lor~youC! 642·5678 . them thrv a Dally PUo\ Ba newly dtcontt'd, sx;o Bll. 1 bt, priv beoeh, MW. blkS httm be~. bacht preL yr. U>wc.r 3 br, 2 hB $3:,() n10 2 bti, $300. rno. 741 0t.'l"8Uo , ~ 5 llnt!s. 5d.,ys for5 buek!I. ·---------ctualfied adt nio. no pets. 833-0328 831:'!1'4 $®.mo. MtHi2.'t )'r~ 54l-2'2.U. 64(.2151. rronc, .z.:M-lsOl .
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' .
38 DAILY PILOT Frldll)', Au9u1l 24, 1973
i·i • ....... _ ~I ·•····· ... -I~ I ~ .......... -I ~ I Aport_ .......... I~ 1---J[t I ...... ]~1 1.__ --~]~~I· Loot~-J[S)[-~-)~
360 ... Cost• MoMI 1 ~Ai:;pt::. • .::U::.n;;fu::.':.::"·:._ _ _;:365= 1-F d (f ads) 550 Apt. Unfurn. --Apll.. Offlco Rontol 440 lndustrlol R1ntal 450 oun '" -~Y:..:'::."::.'l::."'L..----
c-""o-ro-n""1-d"'11.;;;.Mo_r _ _;;.:: Apt. Unfurn. 365 L-eun• h•ch Furn. or Unfum. 370 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I M·1. CORNER. 1 21 x 9 0 . a Buch
S'fUD!O Apt. llti lneludet
!¢llUe1. Ail.le Ofll)'. lit 6
list. 491-1138
iiiiiiiiiimMii5iiiiiiiiiiia '";,:.:.:....::;:.;.;.;;;.;.;:..... __ .:.;; 1LACUNA l'Stale living on Cost• Meu PRESTIGE w/bulldlfl&'. 991 \V. 19th St.,
acres oJ rna Int a In e d OFFICES C.?-1, =· 642·3490.
gardt'ns. Pool & 11pa. Oeellll EXTRA l...arle l or 2 Br. Fountain Valley, Beauti· vle~·s. Clott to hea<:h & Healed pool From $14.?. tul new building, Cf'OWld 455
LAST seen NMinC down MATURE, dependa~, te.nc-
OW'le St., Costa Mea. Vic ed yud. , 14.)t home. Refl. ot HamRtoo a tlarbor Blvd. Good lunches. 5'15-1087.
2 yowig doll on the run. One red, one black. Very C.~a:!.rpei:::n;.:t.:o;_r ____ _
S1'U010, LL cooki ng,
matur~ Eznp\oyed, $l50 nio,
tftlls [>d . $.1440
Lido 1110
2 iBR, 2 BA. bnck tprle, dbl
lfar. Winter rental. S350 plus qw. m.1500 a1t ~ pm.
Newport 8e1ch
WINTER Nlll8I. Av111\l Sept.
~~~~!"~~
ON TEN ACRES
Apts. fum.lunfurn. ~a.se
Fireplace / 11r1v. patios.
Pools Tennis Confnl'I Bkfst
900 Sea Lane, CdM 644·2611
(Pt1ac.Arthur nr Coast Jlwy)
3 BR. dt"n, 2 BA. $315/mo. 2 Coita Mela 8R, 2 BA, $225/mo. Alto ;;.:;=c.:.:;;:::_ ___ _
4vall. Year()'. S@e at 5000 GRAND OPENING
l'leptune NB. or ph' 64$-S26$ PRlu• c••• APTS Or 714: 325--3476. ~ l"W"' YEAR:=.L"Y""'L°'E~A~S~E~S~ ~ P~~~v~fr'J
; PRIVATE BEACH Family Units -Chlldttn ~ 1 I: 'l br trailer/ W<'lcome. Larg@ 2 BR, 1
tabai\as. Adulta onl)'. Brok-BA. Rttrig, dshwhrs, bllns,
tr. 536-4680. patios, walk-in cloieta:, gar,
stAcurr Pt1anor A p t s . crp!s, drps & P O O L -$2:10-$2.10/MO. Bachelor apt. S~ ullt pd. CaU C.J .S. Real Estate Pool. Ask ahout nut dis· 543-ll.68 or 83l-0584
Count plan. 1~ Placentia ~""· NB. 54>-2682. El Puerto Mesa
18oach R1ntal-Yrly, 1 & 2 BR Apts., Unfurn.
2: br, 2 ba, paUo, 50 ft trom SlSO. & Up.
I"'""· 1 YT old, .... $280 per All Utllltlos Paid
P"lO. 673-6935. Pool &: Recreation
QRIClrr & Cheerful 2 Br. Garage tor rent
Opl. Baytront. Priv. patio. 1959 Maplo Avo, C.M.
~~only, no pets. TIRED OF NOISE?
.J=::=:: \Vilson Garden Apts. 2 Dr, tx:>;AN>"IWNT • 2 BR du· lli Ba, crpts, drps. Pool.
J,rex. Sept. 15 • June 15, Mature adults. no pets.
lot,·er -$?ZIO, upper -$300. ONLY $162.50~10.
642-6277 2283 Fountain Ws::1 East
1iOCEAN1'itONT 1 BR (W, of Harben-' on Wllil>n) (:ara.ge apt View, paHo, Call 646-2846
ratJ>eterl. Winttt. $200 n\O. NEW ADULT LIVING!!
615-5449 BACHELOR Units &: 1 BR'1
'""~~ ~·"c ~Up. 1 BR., 2 BR la w/Loft&. Frplc's, beam Ion. Color TV, maid ceiJ., patlo &: pool, bltins, &
rv, p;iol. The Mesa, 415 N. reh1g avail. $160 to $225.
ewport Bl ., N.B. 646-S681. Ulil pd. No pets.
· br, l·blk-0eean; patio 393 1-famllton C.M.
yrly; adult, no pets 6454411 or MZ-8520
St; "'""' &12-3331 ALL ELECTRIC
\
BR. up<laln, near bch. I< GOLD MEDALLION
tores. Util. pd. Winter. 2 BR Apt w/patio, encl gar,
175. 300 34th St. N.B. w/.storage & laund. facll. rllRc 1 Br. 1 Ba. apt. 1 blk to Adlts only, oo p e ta .
JSay or ocean, year!)', $195 $165/nto. Melody Ln. in
fllO. 6~600 days. C.M. 64&-0977 or 646-1809.
~ BR close to ocean furn 'vtr
Pd . Avail Sept. 15 .
!'Zll/!M.3-2928 or Len 521-9550
~ BLOCK to beach. 1 &: 2 :BR, garage, winter ,
•vallable Sept. 1. 673-6641>
: •2,3,4BRapl.s*
2 BR, w/w shag crpts, drps,
sty, lull RA & \;. Feoced
patio. Laundry room, encl
gar. ~fature adult.I only. No
chi.Id, pets. Park-Uke aur-
-· Jl15/mo. 54Um FOUR SEAfDNS API'S.
Spac. 2 sty 2 BR, l~~ BA,
bltnR, crpts, drps, priv
·BR, 2 BA, all blt-ins, near patio, pool, conv. Joe. No
&: be h Avail Se t 15 pets. $165. 735 Joann St.
I ~~ blk to beach, yearly
673-6fJOO or ~70
l-l"=·...:673--04::.::.'.:.'::..,j:;.· __ • __ P_· C.M. 64&-1450.
! 2 BR, crpts, drps, bt1ns. Call
548-8196 or 675-6678 or see
2246 A Can)'On Dr. Rent
· BR Furn apt. nr beech. SlSO/mo. lit & Wt + $100
upl.e only, no children, oo deposit req. No pets.
, $150. mo. 1-634-3652. BRAND new 2 Bdrm. $2'25.
A ... t Unfurn 365 Open tor your inspection
"" • • • I bet. 4 PM &: 6 PM Wed. thru
General Sun. at 201 E. 16th St. bl t Mo. ttnt + $100 deposit.
All NEW NEl\'LY docor. l Br. 2 Ba
~ts. drapes & paint, lovely $215. 1 BR, $170. Incld's gas
lge 2 BR. 2 BA bltn k\tch 2 & v.•tJ', Adults, oo pets.
:car closed gar. Adults 646-4095. 114 E. 20th St.,
1p1east>. $250 mo. R 11 r "C°'."'M;;·~===~== •642-4353. LOW DENSITY APTS
81lbol lslend Available. 2 BR, 2 BA. All
WATERFRONT Ba Ibo a
1Jsland. 2 Bedroom apart-
:ment. Yearly. $225 a month.
:(:all 673-9388.
atbo1 Penln•ul1
ex'tra1l ind'd. Cosed gar.
$190_ Adults, ro pets.
2126 Thurin St. 54.5-5800
PINECREEK
LIVES UP '
TO ITS NAME •••
Over 500 tall lrt!c1
and 10 1lrean1s with
waterlslls c:reete a
relaxing selling Ior
)'Ollr t1pa.c.lou1 new 1- or
shopping. Lge, 2 BR., 2 ba. ?t1alure adulta. Infant ok. No noor, 3,000 r.qu.a.re feet,
apt . w/amenltie•. All90, 1.e•s. 11187 ?tt on r o v I a . wUI divide into smaller
aludlo apt .. $1B5-S350 mo.. 6~5-2174. offices. 5Clc per aquare
partially dfurn., Incl. utU . REDE:C. UNF. 2 Br/2 Ba, .foot, lncludca ca.rpett,
Mature a ults. 4!»-4653 Or S2l5. FURN 2 Br/l'.i Ba, drapes, all utlUtles, janl.
your broker. $200, 1 Br $190. Adult.I, m tor service. Call Marilyn
Mel• Verde pets. U4 E. 20th St. Stovall (714) 83U440. 646-4~. l =z:~~~zz~ DLX 2 &. 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl
gar. $170 up. Rental'10fc ..
3095 M1:1ce Ave. 546-10'.!4.
Newport Baich
me&li.BllU ZI
2 BR 1 BA furn $22\'l
2 BR 2 BA unfum $~
OFFICE SPACE
LE.ASE
151 E. 2bt. St., C.~1. ... 646-SfiOO • ~bedroom apwtmoot. Small PARK NEWPORT pet. ok. From $170. f'urnlturc H t ' t •
Downey Sa.vlngs Bldg ,
Brook.hunt & Adams, Hun-
tington Beach. Up to 4300
11q. ft. 52c/sq. n .Jntonth.
Thn:>c year lease. F'Ully tm.
provi..'(J 10 suit. Simonds/-
Johnston
avallaol•. Models open 9:00 APARTMENTS un tng on uoach
to 6:00. 2300 FalN!ew Rd., th ba DELUXE AdW• PooWde
Costa Mesa. Phone: 54$.2300. Oft • Y Garden Bungalov.•. N r •
DELUXE Luxury apartment llvtng ocean. Frplc, lrg patio, 6
APARTMENTS overlooklng the "''ater. En-pools, sauna, ten n Is.
Air Cond -Frplc's • 3 Swim-~;~ ~f~~ f~·teJ 8.J6--0Zi9. N-EW OFFICES
nling Pools . Health Spa • tcnnU courts, plus miles ol I Bdnn. From $13.l. AIRPORT
Tennis Couns • G)'m and blc)'cle tran8• putting, ahuf· Newport Beach No lease req'd, full servtce.
Billiard Room. Deboard, croquet. Junior l's drps, cpts, music, air cond.,
1 BR. From $l!i0 '-m $194.50 monthly,· also I BAYFRONT 1 BR luxury all util. Single offices trom
I Bu l< De uv lease $.100, inclds utll. Vlrttll $125 ''" n From Sl!IO and 2-bedroom plans and · mo.
2 BR from $210 2-story town houses. EIPC· gf~g. ~~~s673~11~rlty PAlJSADES CENTER
2 OR. Twnhtta From $250 trlc kitchens private patiot 2082 $. E. Bristol MEDITERRANEAN or balconleo, 'carpctJn&, dra· OCEANFRONT 2 or 3 Br. Newport Beach 551-1010 ~es. subt rr k Do,ys 2'13: 338-8461 ext. 419 (Campwi·Irvine Intersection) VILLAGE ~·· e anean par . or wknd• & alt s. collcct BAYFRONT OF-F -ICES Ing with elevators. Optional 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. maid service. Just !lOrtb of ,213~:~69>-=!c,05::lc,...~~~~ Prestige offices overlooking
<714) 537-8020 Fashjon Island at Jamboree OCEANFRONT. Yearly. 2 Balboa Bay ln Newport
COLD\VEU.. BANKER
REALTORS 5111-52'll
STORACE lot, locked yurtl.
Boat1, trlrs, etc. $7.00 mo.
Nelli Neon, Inc., 531-3374.
Rent1l1 Wented 460
UCI undergraduales,
graduates & !ncully will
need housing bea:lnnlfll mid
Sept. U you hllve a room,
house or apt. to rtnt near
tho cllmpua plenae cantact
Kathy at UCJ Housing Of-
fice, 8J3...68ll. Free lislini
service.
YRLY rental desired on
BalboA lslo.nd. Will t11ke
aea1t0nal If nee. No room-
matl!s. Rell8ble 28 yr. f~1n.
1 BR fum/unfurn, rea1.
rent In exchange for slllble
tenant v.•ho wants a home.
Days 493-3 23 5, eves
644-71$3.
URGENTI
lo1t. ALTEtlATIONS • REPAIRS
FEMALE doi. mixai breffi • .Patio oovm, declul, all !»*
nted size. Tame. Blk back, of euptntty. Ontwina:I 1 wht legs. July 16 tieRl' available. flh. 54&-'TIKlG
BrookhUl'1it & Hamilton, CARPENTRY
H.B. 963-Jm. CENERAL REPAIR
BEAUTIFUi.., female Irish * 6~211 * Setter w/leathe:r strtni: C ,_...,, around neck. Found 8122 .trpet ~·..-ice
Monticello Ap11, C.l\t Call -JOILN'S C t A Upholst
557·2871. Drl Shan? tree sto:i
1>""0UND: neautuu1 purebred eard. SofI'° Ret&rd&nt11>.
SeaJpolnl Siamese. l\fature Dell't!uen A all colcir
2-3 yrs, spa..ved. fem. Iden-brlabteners A: 10 mlnute )
tlfy. No. 11.B. Cote to new bleach for white carpe\I.
tracts. 892-4318. SAve ycur money b)' uvin&
FOUND: Blk cat, OuU;y ta.ti, me extra trlps. WUI clean
green eyes, wearing callar. llvln$' rm. dlnlng rm .. A:
Vic. l\1agnolia & l\fcFadden hall $15. Af"1 nn. $7.50,
8/17. 892-Ul23 ' couch $10. OWr "· 15 yn.
LRG Friendly ma.le dog. exp. ii whkl oountl, not.
Part Shepherd . Vic. method . I do .,,.'Ol'k myaeU.
Newport Shores & Coe.at Good ref. 531-0101.
Hwy., 8122. Call 548-4536. Carpol Cloanlnt
t•'OUND: Lrt.rge Blk &: Tan Floor Cert & Wlndowt
Shep. 1nix male. Vic. Tern-Dutch Malnt. Serv. 537-1508
pie Hills & Thalia, Laguna, DiBERNARDO and SONS
494-3436. carpet sales, Installation &:
BLK poodle. Aug. 151h, Nr. repairs. 1'"ree Est. 963-~
3-Ut St N.B. 673-2672 alt: Steve's Rue Doct.or. Carpel
4:30 PM cleanblg. Stenm, hot rlnSt? &
Lost 555 rotary ah.ampoo. 64&-7811
OPEN EVERYDAY and San Joaquin Hills Road. BR w/deck. From $325. Beach. Various size suites
Sold home, widower 5CI w/
)-oung son desires duplex or
guest house near Newport
YMCA. 546-56..18 betore 8 am.
RESPON. Ma!ure en1ployed
man seeks 1 Br. furn. Hse.
or duplex. May consider
shllrlng. 968·M61 aft. 5.
CdM Family of 3, non-
drinkers. No pets desires 3
Br home $325. ref. 673-4999 Cemer'lt, Concrete
Hou.rs: Fri· Tues lo.6 Telephone cn4) 644-1900 * Call 645--8908 * 8.s low as $120 per mo. In· • GENEROUS. Wed. &: Thurs. 10-7 for rental information eludes drps, crpt, uttlltl~, CUSTO~l C.onerete Work.
1 & 2 BR, 2BA, 1135 & IIB5-BEACON BAY ,,,,.I janHorial ,.rv;c.,, Monthly ~ •REWARD• Remove ••phall driveway•. Crpts, drps, bltn . ...,'noe & W'TERFRONT Rent• Qrlease.371)()NewportBlvd., Announcemlnt• , ., Replace Yi/concrete SSc. tt. ........ ·-.. "' NB 675-lZlO No dela)'s. 1'~rtt titll. \Valka,
oven ......... vered carport, close OUTSTANDING VIE\V! =:c·-=';..o:;:::·_=---al b tlo N Jo to shops & beach. Children Beautifully decoraled. * COSTA MESA * For return or any tnroMT'&· ~1• J!1! L
0
b too
OK. 830 Center St. 54~~ 3 BR. Private Beach Rooms 400 New office building • Three tion leading to return ot a sn · __.a.
LG 2 BR, fully crpt'd, drpd, Boat Dock. Tennis. room suite available, 700 sq. ~A;;.n;;.n;.;o..;u.;.n..;<.:•"'";.:;.;::."::.'l:....._.:5:.::00 gold lour leaf clover pln, PATIOS. walb, drtwt. Saw,
!WC Ir! le l lo Adu! N NICE room, pvt. home. \Valk "" ... .,...... 2 ooo ., n all .t""'rox. 2 inches 1n diameter, break, remove &: replace ·' P x, enc pat , "" ts. o pets. u. ~ · · · • NEW tale t t riaJ '" "' o= & priv lndry. Garden apt nr Yrly Lse S600 mo, 675-2555 distance OCC &: Fairview or part. All utilities, jani-n • new ma e v:ilh jev.·eled horseshoe in concrete. ~tor eat.
shop'g, pvcy. security & Hosp. $15 wk. $;x) mo. tor selVice. 2706 llarbor needed immediately for new center; aJso, eold locket CEMENT &: Block Work. 1
quiet. AdJts. 646-4388. l BR UNFURN $225 541J...3810 Blvd. Robert Nattress, JUtr. ~~g~es 8~"'.: tr~n KNAC. (v.·as on chain), approx. the W'all, patk>s, lidevmlklJ, etc.
ROOMS I~ k /kl I 642 lA« • uur.16, IOI, groups, size of a nickel , inlCrl..__ .. By hr. or~.•••-••. 1 BR. $1.50 mo . Incl. elec. 2 BR .UNF1JRN $23$ 'v w up w t 30 • ........ also tor club v.'llrk & ~ ,..,.. _._w
nite lite view, adl!s, no petJ, Ocean Vie"" Yearly lease, 11.1< up apts. O\lldren & pet BUSIEST ' intersection 1 n overseas tours . SRO in acript, Fl.A. These are CUSTOM CEMENT WORK
Days -~ Eves _ Heated pool. Adults only section. 2376 Ne\vport Blvd., Ne"1JOrt Harbor. Second Enterpnies, m \V. 19th St., deeply treasured family Drlvt!s WALKS, Patiol, Pool
642-2100 ' LAS BRISAS APTS. Cl\1. 548-9755, &-15-3967. story in Unique l-fon1es Costa !\fess. ln4lG42-898l . mementos: le: the loss ii Ir-clecks. Don &U-8514. Build' 800 f ' · replaceable. PLEASE .1~=~=-''-'-''-"=--
LRG 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drD!I, 5.515 River Ave .. NB. Rl\1. P\'t. bath. Sep. entry. 1ng. aq. t. at PLEASE h l It h
bltns, s 175 / m 0' 7871-.. ... ,,' .... ·.11~64 ... 2-.2.566.......... Nr. bch. 1 pen;on. $70. 300 ::::::::;Bo~ ~'ti ~~ew!~ any infonn~~on :°W.:s89 c_h_lld_c_._,_. ____ _
Shalimar. 551--5932 U llOI"! 3'1th SI., N.B. fi73-ti000. ~-----"'*-_ _,IJ•l Eves. & weekends. mIPORAR\" catt b y answer, 64.5-4512. THE NEW ROOl\f w/kltchen, pool priv. 1
N DCC I I I""' SERVICE LOST: Loi"' halttd Tiger 0Ui8'tian t.nmJ Y in ... " 2 BEDROOM, quiet at-BAY\VOOD APARTMENTS ear · Fema e on Y· u....... F ~A 3 "--hll "v motphere, $145/nio. Adults In Newport Beach are ReL req. Call 963--3731 Westcllff Building cat, em. wrox. year ,.,.,,e "' e you are nwa,y on ---• The Comer We•tclilf Dn·ve •-Personili r30 old, in Vic. ot 27th St. NB business or vacation. Ex-
1
or married cpl pref'd. ·~Y. sales office is LARGE fumlshed room, den °" ~ wearing flea collar, frlendlf cellent referenc;es.. 963-4062
968-8064 6~ t~Y 1'11:rt~~A~11v~~ ~r~.N~~:~ shop'g 5foi.Blvt'ir. Ne H~~ !'1s~irk:fil~~ =~~ :~9 desperately Contractor
01n1 Point &: San Joirquin Hills Road. Guest Homo '15 ~~'ii;;T";-7.:0:--:==:-;::c l:;::;:.:.:.::;:::_ _____ I 644-5555 " C.D.Ptf. 900, BOO, 500 Sq. Ft. Spiritual readlnga 10 am·lO RE\VARD! Large grey tab-pm Adv'-on all matte-by, male. B'-ck •trl....t JACK Tau.lane, repa ir,
2 BR. deluxe paneled apt, OCEANFRONT 3 BR., 2 ba. From 37 cents. Air cond 312,N. El Camino Real,~ ba.c.k, spotted ~I 0 ma ch"". remod, add. Uc B-1
downstairs, crpls, d rps , Yearly. $450 Month • Private Room or Cottag 1 priv. park Ing, will Clemente. 49i-Sl36 492-9004 """'n ey.s, .,.......n Dea cal-269012. My Way Co. 547-0)36
bltns, gar. S 2 0 0 Imo. 2 BR .. l ha. Frplc. 1-Blk. to e redecorate. 2700 E. Coast ... ~~ .... ~~ 831--0834. ocean. Yea(ly. $325 for Plderly, ambulatory man Hv.'Y. c."'· Masters 01,,ner _ PROBLD.1 Pregnancy. Con-lar. Vic. Balboa 11. 673-3158 Electrlcll
2 Br. g.,,·eepin~hatbor vu. Ask For Mike or lady, Quiet surroundings. Realtor, 673-4120 fide nt, & Y mp at he t I c AIREDALE, fem. fi mos 1----------.... ,.... Good meals. Call ~753. pre~••cy -u""'"ling Abor "z ,. be 1 ·1 n e .. v 1· , · ELl'CTRICIAN·Uctme No. 1 \Vater & gas I'd. Adults. JONES REALTY 61~•10 STORE/Office for lease, a·-· "" '""" ' . ..... 1111 S N dog ~95 4~39 tlon &: adoptlons ref. Rochester/Newport. 1 8 S ""'>Vl~. mall jobs, nu.int & o s ... ~ · · SEACLJ1',F Manor Apts. l 1300 SQ ft, F.V. Shopping APCARE 64Z-44JS Ro..•hester 0-f 837-9ilX> Ext repa1n. ~.
Huntlnfton Beach B
00
r. Unfum. ~~..:..Pool. Ju
1
k Summer R1ntel1 420 Cb·oenedntf'r. pl~ ti al I Y ~· LADIES_ Summer Special 1 2116 ' . Furniture
a ut our UJ.M."unt p an. · ~. mo. ........,1 ----------1 VILLA YORBA 1525 Placentia A\'e. NB. 3 BR, 2 Ba hse, 2 blks ocean, 5 3 6 -0 3 9 O, 9 6 8 -0 3 2 7 yr membershlt $5. Cali RUST/Bro'tl.n small m1xed
APTS.
548-~2. pool, linens, phone furn, eves/weekends ~~~W.14~.ER' 36-Im or breed dog w/short tall lost ~1Ti:~ S ~1'! P 1 n I frpl t' WJD $275 p '"°'" '" Aug. 2ln! \1clnlty Garflcld ~un •""6• ,.._..., an-
1QXXI Villa Yorba YEARLY RENTAL Feni~npa ~2uo 0~ 5'15-il59: L'l801617 ~12ESTCLIFF-NB PREGNANT? Th 1 n king &: Beadt, H.B. Answers U> ~.,L Chem-Clean West
Hwitiflil.on Beach 1 blk from ocean, 2 hr, l ba, , , 756 • 540 Sq. Ft. abortion'. v-. all the 1,,18 "Paige" 96:3-6179 °".-v.;xo;o · 1 parldn -.::n SLEEPS 6 to 8, Ocean View Ampl -~-· Util. Ba ~~w !OU San Diego Fnvy. So. on patio, amp e g, .,__, e _.. .... ~. um-first! Call UFE LINE -24 REWARD, '--1 BI a ck G_ o.•Nc.;;.;on=lf!J._, ___ _
Beach BJvd., 1 blk. 'be.,,..nd per mo. 673-6935. Steps to beach. Avail wkly gardner, 541-5032, h ,.A, ,.~...., ~ -.,y 8/25 thru 9/15. 7205 rs,.ru-....u•. miniaturemal~poodle . MOW•"&DGE
Edinger 10 Stark, E. tD PENIN. \Vater Front Spac, 3 Seashore Dr. 646-6114. NEW bldg., ocean view. 2,00J YOU benefit more ,or much Wearing Oea coUar. 5J6..8264 Malaga, turn right.) Br. 28' boat slip, Av8.11, $325. sq. ft. avail. 40c per sq. ft. leu _Corona del. Alar Ten-bet noon, or 213-m--0281 EXPi.RT &
714/842·9621 Wtr/$350 yr, lse <TI4 ) AVAlL. 9/l-9/8. 3 Br, 2 Ba, Brookhurst St. 962--£683. nis Club. 673-57ll. oollect DEPENDABLE -· --548-4395 / 674-2796 $175. 2 Br, 1 Ba, $150. Nr. NOW RENTING ocean. 67"":>-5366. Bcuo,1::.in:;.H;::::1_:;R::•::.nl:.:•:;.l __ «.:.;:5: I ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. REWARD -part Sian1ese cat. Cell for Prompt,
Spacious New Apts. \VALK to Beaches -dlx 2 Br, Rental1 to Shire 430 -Phone 542-7217 er write (Declav.-ed) ~I~ Ii ~te. FrH 13fll1\llte. 1 Br._ $lG5, 2 Br_ S200 encl gar. Adults over 21. No MOBIL OIL CORP P.O.Box 1223. Costa Aler.a. An!!. to Ra:ppy. Vic. of 961412
Count r Y al mos ph ere pe:ls. Yearly. $215. 673-1991'.l * * * WORKING Has high \.'Olume service rta-Social C•ubt 535 LaPala, Miuk>n Viejo, Sunl;:;,===""''--~-1 dl!lhwshr, BllnS, crpl/drps'. or 213: 274-3933. tlon with good back room <'Vt!. Pkase call 837~5 GARDENING a er vice,
Near schools. 5-ID--0781. 2520 ATI'RACTIVE 2 BR, 2 BA, WOMAN 55, will share saif!I potentia.1 in ttie Ana· * INTRADATA * LOST -Catherwood lrg complete lawn malnttnance,
11th St., H.B. (1iJ: Blk N. off crpts, drps, !rplc, 2 stall 3 RM furnished ept he1:n1 ares. Paid training to Male Irish Setter,' \71c. ~lean-u~, rotoUIHng, lawn
Yorktown). Available to carport. $300. mo. Aval! with same for 1h rent start immediate!)'. Phone QUALITY matches ~ Bo2sa ch 1 c a inslalhtlion, expr. and
SOOw Sat & Sun 11 to 5. Sepl. 1$lh, 644-0J79 ($65) & sh1r1 utilitlts. Sam Reddick, 714·521.-1381 w/PHCYTO 541485.1 or M&-8T.5 Rev.·ard reliable, !rtt estimates.
' d'""' TI4-S68-9244 11-"' .. _..est i.n Calli." 9fill.-al32 3 BUX.'KS from ocean/golf BAYFRONT Condo. Lu.'1:· Water furnished. Not ....,~, eves "" ....... ., 2MO old German Sbt'pherd, E
coune, nr schls, brand new, urious. Security Bldg. PooL dtlux• but comforte-\\'eekend3. (Call NO\V for FREE sa.m-lost Vic: Placentia & Vic-XPERT
large 3 BR, 2~1 Ba, 2 fplcs, Yrly. Adults. Sips avail. ble{ clean, reasoneblo FOR LEASE ~~t~~~e i:.~ pro!lpectlve taria.. Plse return, Reward, JAPANESE
G duplex, 2 BR, DW, 2 car gar., $295. OR1..:.675-=3<64='-· -----~ na New stores or ottices .,,.111 be 714 . 638-59'JO I LA 658-6283 64.2-6515 GARDINING
nev.•ly dee.. adults only, NEW 1 BR. Bltns, drps, large 2 BR, fplc, gar., $185. 2 BR. 2 BA. Duplex. Frpl. 1 near Bay & New-available in about 3 months. 2 SHEPHERDS, Black 6 Complt'fe Gl.l"denin& Serviee
2 BR. Apt. Refrig. tum.
Newly decorated. Children
OJ(. Mature persons
646-1800, ~-
jcloee to ocean/bay/ahops. crptg. pool, BBQ. Gar. Lndty facil. Avail Sept 1st Dshwr. Next to beach. Yrly port Blvd., C.M. SEE Ideal Hwitlngton Beach ""''-... ..,...__ .. •· "Baby" Free Estlmat-546--0124 !f1S.-87JJ or 985-5822. Adults. No pets. 376 W. Bay MS-3179 alt 5 $3:5 fte 5PM le 1 ti in "=' ~,...... °' ""' d'. 2 B St. CM. RE,.S . !~~'4Start Sept. mo. _.,.nd rN I eves olr w Foca ·°"1orm""°u.nPP~~•1"'Jnter. l[S) vie. Bolu &: liiagnolia, JAPANESE; Gard@ner, ex·
,_.ACHELOR to r . '"""""'="-=~=~=~ F HAIR 1..:.~::;.c:;:,u~·==~=~~ e s. o 1a11, cean-or ln a .,;ai erry LoltWFGUlll Re:·1,,ard. 892-52.n per. Clf!anups, yard 1erv.
[monthly. i..t &: tut. .,...40. UP. 2 Br; 3 Br .. 2 Ba. 3 Block1i IO bead\. Lrg 3 br 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. ing fff or lit & I.tit. Gillespie I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim~.: LOST dog, Chihuahua Brov.'J\ .ttelia. & neat. Free est.
1 (113) 697-1496 Jr::~ ~;:SM:~~:~·t. apt. 2 Car gar. W/w crpt/ 2 BR. 2 BA. Bltn. appliances. Avail Sept. lST. 2079 962-~~~~ ~s~~2974 II !\la.le no collar or tags. eau1,-,64=:,_°'"'~· ~-----.I
forona d1I Mar 2212 College No. 1 646-6032 drps. bltns, dstlwshr. No ;P,::ooo:lc-;-642:::"";.";:-"4 =--=c--,--Thurln #2. Found (frH adi} 550 968-2874. MO\V & edge, exptt'I. and
2 BDR.,I, crpts, drps, bltns, ~irJ24.5 per mo. Ca I I NICE. 2 BR, .lY.i BA, yrl)', RESPONSfBLE man over SUCCESSFUL RE\VARD A red ffav.11.Uan dependable, call tor prompt
washing facil. Nr. shop'g. · dishwshr, garage, ~J block 40, 10 share my 4 br, 21h ba, EAST 17TH STREET fND Blk cock-a-poo, male print shirt Lost Betweton NB free est. Walt M2--0tll H.B. ~ -$180/mo. AduJL<i only. 369·8 HARBOUR VILLAGE, llun. lo beach. $275. 548-l:!o.I. Costa Mesa condo. Comp. Location, Costa Mesa nr Edi90n High school H.B. & HB 546--6988 c';o"-;-';;·""""=-,:;-,,==,,( ~by Ogle SL CM. &l-l-435!:1. Lington Harbour area, only 2 br t-blk-0eean· palio furn. $150. mo. or 2 1nen $75. 1430 Sq. It, with additional 962-3932 GARDENING -CLEAN " ores ~NO:E°'w"""L;::Y:::D~ECO°"'RA~T'<'E=D~-1 27 2 & 3 Br. on 2 ac;:res. $210 ).rr1y; no pets'; rehig ea. 64&-3.UO aft 5pm or aft. 400 sq. ft of storage. sr.1. brown n1ale Tc1Tier type Reasonable Price -Free flit.
2 BR \\'/gar. Water pd. Call ~~~~ n~. lrou::a $IBo~li~~ 128~~ 46 St; shag; 642.33311 _1_0_._n_, _Sa_t_&~Su=n~---REALONOMICS CORP. dolC,·~A • ...... Yic. S.A. Injured. ntruct5on I[ r-] Complct·. La>lwnl-:104&3 G~~"'"'f
TOWNHOUSE btv.11 1 & 5, 636-4ll'.I Heil St. 846-3166 or 84&-507fi. BLUFFS, 2 BR, newly NEED female roommate, BROKERS 675--6700 .)'l-J"""' . ~
i Br, fireplace, pool, private 2176 "E" Placentia $145. ** $l49 ** decorated, pools, vie1v, elec Mesa Verde condo, OFFICE on Newport Blvd. 1X>G FINDERS SERVICE ~~~-=iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~IJServ1~~"'~2·=~11~a:ul~ln~a~~I patios, continental break-* '"'sr=UN~N"'IN""G~l~Br~. ~G'"ard~en Spa I 2 BR A Crp 2 car gar, lse $350. 675--0175 $100/mo. 556-8638 aft 7:30 Avail on lease. Partl&.lly IF YOU FIND OR LOSE A = Cleanups. s.&8.QtOS
fa.st. Spacious ground,, near Apt. Pool. Rec area. $145. ~~Near Beacn Slat:;: UNFURN luxurious Spacious ~p~m~. ~------turn, carpeted, air/CQnd, DOG pleue eall 541·5965 Schools & EXPER. Japane1e Gardener
1ihopping & fine beach. Fur-,.....,1~to~W;:-;-.=1B"th"--'St"'._C~-:::M".~ Pool. Pets & children weJ. 2 BR apt w/frplc, 1731 Bed· SllARE my Park Newport parking. Approx, 1000 ltQ. ft, FND: Siamese kitten on vie-__ 1n_•_lr_u_c1_10'-n-1 ___ 5c;.;75 Yard serv. aeanupe. Rella:
1ttlshed or unfurnished, from 2 BDR?o.f, stove, rebig, t'Onle. 842-:1546. ford Ln, NB, 646-8372 apt. 2 BR, 2 Ba. Furn. Fem. $250fmo. Warehouse allO tori& nr Harbor CM. Can't & neat. Free Ht 642-4389. !$240. Corona del ~lar, dlshwhr. 103 Shalun" "· II"". 25-l.') Jan ~1480 or avail. Ideal for oontractor. keep. Seal Polnl. MZ-7220 PIANO lessont, beginners. EXPERIENCED J ,. '"'26ll w $140 'S MI N f H t &h 833 2ti22 548-2616 Re a a onable. HWlUngton apaneae
l
vrr · mo. 962-8936 -' · · 0 n g · San Clemente -· LADIES "llo--eddi..rig ring near Beach. 968--0063. Gardener. Malnte~ & '
ALL El 2 Br, bltns, cplJi, drps, pool, -...:o=:.:.:.c:.:;____ ELEGANTLY furn. Irg 2 Cl.ITE AOOBE HOUSE, 1COO Oiff Dr & IrVlne, Nev."""'"' Cleanup. Call -._ ......... cc. 2 BR, l BA, l play )'ard, carport &: lndry NEW large 2 BR, 111,4 ba, ..-• orirai:10 ~ Fantastic View child OK, $175 mo. See 120 facll . Cple & l sm child ok. plus gar & shop, 314 A. Del :~iur: w~~'an.ap~ CdM, :r. ftf~r ae=s '!;1rsyof~ Beach, 64G-8716. [5l JAPANESE Gardener
Modem deluxe 2BR. 2BA, Albert No. 7, CM ~. 842-4004 aft 5:30 pm. Mar, quality extras. Adults, over. 6#-7l53 eves. )'?' or use. C 0 s 1 a ?ii e 8 a. FND. Ger. Step. pup about 4 I -.......... j Gardening Service, trim: 1
J(tuptex. 1600 sq ft. frplc, * BRAND NEW Deluxe 2 Br WALK TO BEACH , -'492-=2'64=::·------645--2020/64U560 mo. old. Blk flea collar, vie . . ming, cleanup. ~1796
lbttlns, gar. \\.'lk to beach. in triplex. $220/mo. ,. FE!\fALE wanted to share Senate St., CM. ~2278. ROTO'T'TLLING, Ui.wn in·
4dlts. No pet~. Yrly $.'.fiO. 642-8370 or 673-4350 . 1 & 2 B~ ~r~~t-Sin Juen C•pl1treno luxury 3 BR house "'/fplc, "THE Factory" has a lrg FND _ \Vatch stallaUon, 1prinkJus, IOU J
:1!>73-8»4 I EX"""' •n>I' 3 BR 1 %BA, Spacious. $170. ;7..¥:7. 2ffi 15th. Sfh.1749°: l·N'-'El:C..V.;..;2..;..B_R_;;"!;;".Cd.;.lo;.;ccoc.;nc..do-, ~~s.~h;:~~~46~· No ~v;nma:~i~ i~ Vic: !!~~!l28· Pier Beby1lttln9 preps. 5.'fi-3010
. PLUS! ~. •~' · 2286 r--·-n 0. Ready I" D W NB 6~96116 ••• --••~ Garo~tn51& 1-· or Lease. NU Vl£\V APT. 4 ...,.....,., . 2-STORY Villa Pacific 2 BR buns, I crpts, drps, SHARE Apt or House Save $$ · •.r or l>"IU'OiUU. LICENSED Babysitter hal ..... • c ---·-UPI
l'!r. 3 Ba, ram rm. All elect. Sept. lst. 642-ZlZ!. ea. w/BA. i,iBA down, Uv. J>O?l.,~ ... P~Z~ v.•asb fa c , Call HOME PARTNER SHOP STORAGE 1350 sq. fl. ~~ ~t ~taDogM:· opening for 1 chlld, l8H 3-4 5 57
bltns, crpt/drps. $T<IO per $$2 BR, stove, frplc, w, rm. din. nn. klt. w/bltnJ. =11"~'-="--=-----836-1194 or 548-14~ in rear nr. Npt Post Ottice, ' yrs. Weekda)71 only. Mt-als, Generil Strvl
mo. Too l1l8.nY extras to lncld'g elec. AduUs, no·pets. Adults. Brand new. 968-5497 Aptl .M YR. teml will share bach $175. Apnt, 646-2414. 548-0044 fenced yard. 968-4971 en
mention!! Call £73-6992 32'2 lleliotrope, APl C, CdA-t DOWNTOWN 3 BR, crpts, Fum. or Unfurn. 370 apt w/pool. nr heh NB. $75. lliOO sq ft INDUsr. shop, FOUND Parakeet Nr. High-BABYSrM'ING • Kin-ALL types home ~pall's
'BR Upper apt. Avail Sept LARGE, newly decor. 3 BR. drp11, Aft 5 &: wknds, 675-3814. $2'.!5. Also 300 sq tt office land, N.B. I: Someraet. dergarten age. Matur e Actual time A material' 1 ~t. So of hwy. Garden, encl 2 tiled ba's. Adults, no peta. bltn!J, D/\V, gar. & yard. Coit1 Mese $95. C.M. ~2130. 1=:646-=ll>!<I~~·_,~~,.---woman, expet'. Cd M · Fa.11t Serv. No job too am' I
gar. Walk to everything. $225 mo. Agt. ~2414. $285 mo. * 5J6.-S919 Gerigtl for Rent 435 SURF board. ln Laguna on 644-7002. FAB Home Rep a t r ·
$250 mo inc.Ids util. Call LRG 2 BR, crpt1, dJl>s, bltna, NE\V 2 BR D/\V ell:!C'I ' THE EXE1,..."1TING S lndu1tr11I Rental 450 ~h_ Coast HI g h w a Y • BABYSITrlNG b)' week otly, 6'12-140.l. '
675-7583. priv, patio. no pet a . range, r!rps, 'shag ca!pts, Nr PALM M SA APT • ** DOUBLE garage, off .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ==~:o--=-~~~--my home. Npt. Bch. Xln't SAN CLDlENTE AREA
ELUX"E Apt. Vleiv of $165/mo. 557-5()1(1, Huntln2"1on Hllrbour J\dlts '111NUTES TO NPT. BCH. ulley, Newport He 1 g ht s. NOW LEASING GERMAN Shorll1.alr pointer concl. 646-7656. Pa.tnt'a:. Plwnb'r . Repa.in.
Ocean. I Lrg BR. Crpts, J~U.tAC 2 hr, Nearly new, no pet.i, $200 g.~360 , FUllRN.bOlyR UNFURN. Sf,O/MO. 644--0030. Huntl-~ 8oach male, Vic. HB -~ BABYSITTING my home fl.lob. J-1.nu l AptL 496-5n7,
d tr! • t 0011 DI h he X1n Unbc eva laree apts. GARAGE ~ rent all ... •-• !'ND l"h Im! I '~" r ced ard lov••• 616-0071 rp1, re g °" s ove. ""' s was r, range, • t ~R. 2BA, widen goc;><I loca-huge pool, Jacuci elect bit. ~"' , ey ac. NEW M-l • : v I cat v c uu• St en Y ....,. care,1 ===-·-;:---~---I
Seavlew. 6'f3..1853 or 1-213: area. ~ mo. 673-8.164., tion nr shpg AvaiJ s:/' In h rpt d cess, nr. 19Lh & NewP""" N.B. 6Th-6726. 556--0855 Cl.EAN Sweep CleabM'a. .,.._1653. • ... ~ mo ~-11 ~' •1 · s, & ag c s. rps, aauna CM. $32/mo. 897--0196 ~ Ml -. Ft. & UP Fl-w•-•-··-"-
,1,;T'r" 2 BR apt, cpts, drpl, bltnl, ...,. • .,.,.. · '-" .:>VO"V etc. Adults, no pets. .,.,. ""'"• wNUWI,. Ufl)etl •
.BR. yard, garage, $D> per ~Ingles OK. $150. ~UZJ 2 BR. 11,t Ba. Close to ocean. SINGLES From $150 GARAGE for rent $25 month. }1~~ Ir Newland Expert Strvtce. ~
mo. Will show Sat 9--12. 546-2222 mtns, laWld. rm, gar. Call 1 BEDRM. From $165 Costa Mesa. 548-0919. Near 1 ..,~-1!!'!!'!!'!'.!,or~m.o!~~~U~ H1ull"1
508\I M••1•01 d . No EASl'SIDECM.2BR....,,1c. 5lH321. 2BE0RM. Fromll85 occan11uo. 1• Trader's Paradise· ==._ ___ _
childr<n/peu. Cpl8, dti>s. Adulu. No pe!>. UtG 2 Br. 1\1 Ba. studio. Unlurn Apta A"lail Fro;n $10 Ofllco Ront1r 440 MISSION VIEJO RUBB!SK haullna' YUd,
RAND new I~ 2 Br apt $190 548-2748 Encl .. ,. mature couple ...,.. lo $15 LESS. 1-SQ -~ UP earq:e, warehte, clell.0:-Qp:
w/be&m cellings, bltns & · pets. •sls'T.50/mo. 84~'." Yc.u're right, they're under· DESK apace available $50 .ay wuAILABL 'E· •N:;; .. 1 1 • Remove tn?es, •hr u b 1
tree lop view. -4 0 0 ~~ 2 BOR.i\1. New carp. point. priced! 1561 f.1eP Dr. mo. Will provide funiiture "' U1' Ines unsl.lhf4r trub • debN of
Jwnlne, $350. 613-1658 ~~cl~1 patlo.
2533
No
0
pet!: Sn>. Huntl'!lton Herbour (5 blks trom Newport Blvd.) at~ mo. Answering aervice ~CN l?IEGQC' ~RWY. aJl Qtt>e1. 7 dacys a Wffk . .x.'<' n i,'r at range. 546--9.0.00 • avallable. 178'15 BeAch Blvd. ~,,,...,, ammo pistrano Fast, reliable, reu. South
BR, 2 bft $350. 435"' Ooh.Ila. FOR rent or lease. brand H I Ile -8311600 t1• mes Coast llau11-a ~-I
!
Open Stlt & Sun I-5. LRG re<tec. 2 BR, shaa new 2BR To"11ho111e, 1wtm· PREVIEW OPENING wit ngton ach. &42-4.u~ . . WJ • u•.r
1173-2554. ~"· bltns. ln neat 4-plex. ming p;>0I & rec., cl~ 10 Av.•ord winning l, 2 & 3 111' NEW offi~ bldg. Airport 4001 BIRCH,... NB GET RlD OF UNSIGHTLY
BR, newly decor. C..rp, $ Imo. &il-7315 ocean. Patio 4 Vf!ry prlv11to. ap~ w/fumily rm.a. No area. f'ull service. 4lc per 2000, 20oo, 3600 sq, tt. or com-d 11 TRASH &. DEBRIS. JU
d ' bhns; pool. S220 ti.lo. 2 eBrTROS;udP;.~7.AlL\I POOBa. L~e 1, ?ifust •et to a.pprccl1uc, ci!.ll !('ase. SOtTy, no pets. From sq.lift. ~ ltoty ~~ ~· .. ft. ~tr' tbBaeroofum.;_~;· lD1/J~. 0 ars iri~i'NT i:.£ ~}:.OLEG E • Lease. 644-1662 Agtll1. " collect, 213: 3'22...uzi all Jult $175. OUR TOWN l-fu an n.ea , .;J'fW ""'nc, 1• • • .............. .,, •iJW,.. 11'";;,::~::.;.:;,.·.:~c:;..=:....--
apiral 1treae. $200. E/s e 7pm fa.m.lly Af)U, 1250 Adams Newport Beach. MG-2900 4 DELUXE omCES M 0 V I N G I: ha u I tn I
BR. Apt. So. at Hwy. $~ on 18th . M8-U68 Lux u RIOUS watt!rfront Ave. (Adams at F'airvlaw), 1200 SQ. Ft., wood C-1, con-Carpeted, Illuminated Ct!U-anywhere. FUrn!tuni~ mile ~ 8el?Of1lA Ave. 2BR, 1Ba, dM/wsh, bl tins, rondo. Prtv. boat &Up at your Coiro. Mesa. Phone-556-0166. .wenlenL w/pJeoty ot park-inp. Plus 400' Wmhoute '68 OOOOE Vt.n,.~W, auto, 11AVE 21' 73 Ftrtball mtr ~n;wetc. Bill A ctte:r: f,.;::.;:;:;::c....,--.,..-,-=~ I ('nclsd gar, 1 chlld ok. No door. Spectacular ma In * CASA VICTORIA * Ing. ~ 9Q. ft. 3&I W. Space. 1370 D Loga.n, CM nu brk'I, nu tires & chrome home on l T. Dod;e Chaula, ""'='""'=:-:-=-~-~
J ' BR ftpt, neal locaUon pets. S160 mo. Call 8*-7U9. chN.nnel view. Be au 1 . !: 2 & 3 nn. Furn It Unf. WllM>n, CM. Pb: 00-~ or ,64;;:'-,;2228;:c,...,,,--,---rims, nu rebuilt motor, ltill under Wl\IT. 7400 mt. SKJ.PLOADE.R A dum~ tmc-~'"""IW'
41
f.75· 1 Year $140. UP. 2 Br; 3 Br, 2 Ba. dtcorat~ 2 BR., 2 Ba., t.,;11rpe18, dnlpe11, D/\V, TV 842-XMXI. OFFICE & Watthou.te space 1rado ror any Ute utU Wilt ~7'6~u"!~ or t ~k. ~n::e, ..:'haUI
I "'· • Pool. Blt-tr.s, play yard. trplc., patiO. pn.ie. $500 ant. Pool, e1c. 525 Victoria omcE Space, St.art your avaU La.runa N((uel, 2,0CO tn1ck. 642-9693. ' 1
<100•-.i1 aa ng, I· 16--'1110.
BR. apt1, from 1110 to $300. 1996 fl.faplt. Ave .••. G4z..3813 ~lo., lt1se. ~. St. at Harbor, CiA. 642-8970 day wllh a llarbour View. IQ ft or more lf needed. l7c Like to trade? Our 'l'radet'a WILL trade fl'l"C Ir clear GEN Hli.ulh\J. 'I'lwJSbrub
Al.,, untum. hou1e1. NE-W 2 I 3 BR Es Ide ''!\lake Raona ,.vr Dt&ddy" Ask about f.1 o v e ... 1 n SpaM now avail In !he Udo per sq h. 8.11-1882. l'al'3dl~ column IJ for )'OU! borne, NB addres.11, 158.900., trim. Oar &: Yd cle•nup. '
YD Jtr:allOrt &'B-6930 c.JI fi75-6488 ""·es. , .. cle11n out the prage AU~·ance bulldtna. 673-4156 1300 Sq ft M-1, wJfront of· s Un tor urrltt, axer upper, smt.U E.11. 531~. 557-6904.
to Trade? Our +ra&r'1 Now
2
&
3
BR E /il'o .. , turn th:at.Junk Into cub ft'• a breeze .•• stU your Corona dcl Mar, sm if1ld Dct. Lrg rea.r door. $180 mo. & dtl)'I home or la.nd tn Joc&I area. HAULlNG!.. ll(t .m 0 v1 n a Plftdilt column ll for )VU! a wllh a Dfl.lly Pilot ClullUed ttemt with t!UC, me Dally floor, A/C, utll, ample 646-0033 da y 1. EYta: tor 5 buckL AGT. ~. Pl"ftl'e It ~ cleanuJ!!i, ·s ti-. ! tor ! bticlt" C.11 6~ """· ad. C•ll 64>5618. Pilol Oa&Sl!Jed. 64~ prlcg. JI~S mo. 6'5-<l!IOO 646-<ll81. 1191 Wl11tder, CM ••••••••••••••••• !Wa-3129 or 54Hll1l!.
"
• ,
1•
I
llST
lllYS!
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
JAYE
t=ASH!
'
.. • .
Ii:·:;· ·_, ug-un_t:~ .. • ';;.:~;;. ~l[i;..1 L__ .. _ ... _, .... _ _,·;~1 1---1~1---1 ~ )[ff .__[ ._ __ IITT1 i !(Il] I_-. ... E c h;1 ... --
Haullnp
3.2 FT. 1'~URNITURE V11.n for
locaJ furn haul11 & gen'!
hauling. !><Jl-1862, 557-2736.
LOCAL moving & hauling-bY
student. Large truck. Rea5.
Barry. 534·1846 or 673·0647.
Housecluning
E XP E RIENCED, depen·
dable lady will clean your
house, work by the day.
li36-007<1
* 1-IOUSECLEANINC * ~ELlABLE . r...;i..... :: "'"•':F.S
556-0855
[=~INDEX )
[ Real E1tat• for S. ] [ ~ J
HOV.ti Mr Siii ............ lot MH1ul1r1,.r .. 1uu1 H1mu •• 120
Mot.Ill Hllllft P'ff Slit . , IQ
4cr1 11 ,l~f 1~11 ........... lM .,, "'"'"h lff .... . . . . .• . . lJJ •u~tnflJ P~r . . . . . . . . .. . . IH cem"''Y L1!1/Cryp11 1u C1mmtrcl~I ProPtl1Y ..••.... lSI Collclemlnlunu tit 1111 . • . • . 160
Dloi,i.•fl/Ur.1!1 UI.. . , . .. . Ul H11.t:.t~ II l>I 1111¥.0 ...•.. , . . . 164
I.amt Pr1peny . . 16' lndu;trL I l'r11111nr 1~
Lill fir Sall , .... , . . . . . . . .. . IJO
Moblll Hlft\e/Tr1J11r "•111• . . 1n Mwr!IJln, o.s.t1, Rltlrt . . . . 114
Or;111s1 Cl. llr1perty .•...•.... 176
Cut 11 11111 llrlPff'Ty ..•. , ... 171 R111t ... t, "•rmt. Gr11111 • . . • llO lftMI lllllt l•cll1n11 ........ 112
ltMI l1t111 W11111d • • . • • . . . •• 114
IWl.lftl O...rt1111r.r •......•• 20ll
'"'""'"' w.1111111 ••••.••.•••••• uo
lilYftlmlfll °"""""''"' ... , . . tfll l:1Y•.;tmtr.t W•11ltd ••••.•...•.. :IJO Mlntr I• LN ll , .•..... , • . . . • 2.0
MO • .er W••llCI , . • . . . . . . .. . . . . . ZSI
Mtrtvlfft. Tnul Dlldl , , .... i...
.__._ .. 1"'___,I~
H111 .. 1 nor•lll'llCI . . . . . . . . . .. . . . MO
Hflllft 1111t11m. . ...... , ...... )t5 Ht Ylft fyr11. 1r tlftlyr11, . . . . . . 21'
CfMoml11l11"'1 ''"'· . . . . . . . . . iu C11Mfeml11!o9>1111 •9ftma. . . . . • . • • m ConN, 1w.. " ....,._ ........ m
TIWMWM '""" •. •. • .......• • »I T•WllllWll ""''"'· ........... , W
Ttwllllou11, 1111'11., If" """'"'· .• )4CI ~ .... ''"'' •••••••••.••.•.• )41
Dll"•" -·~.. • . . .. . . . . . •.. . Ht
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Ho us.c;:lnn lng
HOUSF; OF CLEAN
Steam Carpet cleaning, win-
dows & Doors, ~ eat.
64z.<;824.'
LITE llou»ekecplng,
Care-One· I wo days
Ref$. 832-6529
1.a ndacaping
Child
week..
FOR 11 Uniq11e anrt
Personalized S t y I e ln
Landscaping, colorscaplnq-
11nd Interior dealgnlng. Con·
tact .Ja!!W"!. C. ,Elmer,
Landse:lDlng & P lant Co,
Free Est. 642--6165
'\ ...... ~nrv
SLUM?STONE, block walls.
Planters, m a r b I e en-
tryways. E)(pertly instal'd;
rensonably pi-iced. Bob;
64>493'0
P a intin9 &
Paper ha nging
--------1, Holp Wantod,MlF 7 10 H•lpWa ntld,Ml F 7l 0 ,1vleWant,Od,Ml,F 11; Help Wanted, M&r 710 •p We ntld,M l F 71. Ho lp Wantld,Ml F 710 ~
ACCOUNTANT BKKPR-BAYSIDE OFC COOK -bre1tkfnsl & lunch. Engineer <;lnL F'ridny 1.1!.1 EXcgr, •I
CPA tlrm ocek1 umbltloua s.ostanllal lnveatment co. In Call 67J~6JJ. CONT ROLS LENT typln" l80 o 120 INSURANCE SALES · 'j.:,
accountanl _knowledgeable N.B. has openin& for • w:k for U11\ ENGIN E ER \"/PM) & Secretarial &klllii ~
In laxes, auditln&, manage-bookkeeper$ a.11 ls tan I COUPLES ~·1ullrd. Build 'lndus1rkt1 " ProgTeaive \_!M~ by consultin~ llrm No exp nee., cam while you · :
nient services & supervl.stni w/accurate typing skllh1, your own business. \Vu Divbion of fl.tt1jor Corp. re-. ln-Lalliµa Bcad1. Start learn, part time, eves & 1 :
for sn1l client practice. Send Must be a norHnlOket', \\:ell train. Phone for app't for quires Engin(.'t'r wJexpcr. Se~t 1.' I E}l i z ab c t h wkncls, full time when qua · l
re11ume to Box 924 Daily groomed, & enjoy meeting personal intcrvic\\' 5:>7-3361 i n t be d es ig n A 494-$5.92. fled, ~,
.'ilo<, PO Bo." 1560, Cos.a people. Please send resume I•--•·.__. ... .._ __ • I Dev~OJMnent ol con t r o 1 GllU. Frida,y for general of-Fanners Jnsw-ance Group j:
Mesa, Calif. 92626. & salary requirements to Day Help Systen1s utilizing re la 'I I nee woac. w Is 0 me Ed Lani * 540-1834
ADULT Babysitter Io r P .O. Box 1715, Newport d I g It a I & an g IO g Y knowledge of bookkeeping, '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!•~· ,
Oiurch Nursery. Sunday Beach, Ca 92663 Wanted circuitatory orientate, pla'b M)'; age.~-IRONWORKER EXPER. ,.:
mornings. $2 hrly. 548-2!1)8. BREAKFAST It lunch cook & design control systems & GIRL Ftlday, part time, ORNAMENTAL 6;
AIRPOkT:::n Inn HOtefSall 5 needed. Houn 8-2:30. 10 e Kitch en conlpooents for autornatlve neat, -"' >yplst, c11.ll for LAG UN A 49'1--6376 •1:
& C 1 · ffl d years exper & all around bo machines. BSBE degn:e A gvuu l a enn..., gen o ce, g kitcben wodi. Some . locnl • H8u1 y famll la11ty w/DC ?.toter (\J>pt. 561-411_4 ____ ~-V--• V»• ~ '\ 1'1 ~rf'i;1• Apply In person, 2.-refer. 310 w. Forest, Santa • ostess Control & Servo-System• ls GlRL over 30 to help w/oew
ANCIENT
MARINER
Now Acx:epting
AppHt"B.t'.ons For
Ana. e Maintenance also required. Call Ikan hc1lth At m&.1-.ge program.
Tellinghuisen at (71.f ) Call 64J..8(r.28.
BUSBOY full time, must be APp_ly ln Pt•f'llOn 541)..6900 between 8:30 & 4:30 Health Services· Assistant
iible to work split shlft ANC I E NT MARINER P~·I Aug. 27th & 2Sth t4.• ru:; ~ur lunch & dlnncr, Hungry . AMF TIRE ~" ·~ Tiger 1641 w. Sunfio\l.'er ;{(11 No. Tus1ln, S.1\. Five new poe: tionr1,vailable.
Santa Ana.. r,.12-1488 E quipment Dfvi1'°"' Will uaist nune &~'-Ssigned
e CABINET lo.takers Equal Opportunity .t:mployel' school provjding tlist aide
DENT A L Receptionist. M/.F to students a: pertorn1ing
!\lust be S:~~:8· area. ~~,t~~~ 0:~~:1; c ~; -EXECUTIV=E~S--~:::1-ra':e~l:n J~~:
• '.i
" ' ,.
" •'
CAaINET maker & finish qualified peraon. ·ro $700. $12,000 to $75,000 or equivalent.· No ex-
Gcor--e Palnfuig & Decor'ng carpen~r needed Newport Send resume to Classified Send re!;ume or call TODAY _perlence nee. Apply in
Interior & Exterior Beach area. ~7429 Ad No. 901, Daily Pilol, for confidential NO COST person Oran E Unified HELP
':'.iuaran. Top Quallty Prof. CARPET cleaner he Ip er P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, executive intervtew. School District. '.370 North
Workmanship & MaterlAl!i Broiler -Kitchen wanted. Neat, energetic, Ca. 92626, Replies stricUy EA"ECUTIVE SERVICES, -Gla.uell St., Ol-ange 1~rec est. 645.8616 ·.1ages opeu. S1ean1 Master 1="co="cc"ccd="cc'1c:;•ccL-~-~-,..,. INC. HEATING & v~:ilator n1ain-PAU'~ER NEEDS WORK. Ho.:r.> 9 ~n1.4 pm l.'aJ'Pf". Cleaners, 1 74 0 DENTAL Receptionist, 8S8 N. Main, Sa.'1ta Ana tenanoe man, ;o··meyn1en '" S "-Se El T ti (7141 547-9625. ' r.o. · · _,1 REASONABLE Apply In Person upe,,..,r Ave., CM c'y, oro area. A :C?Vd. i"-"q>E'r in 1ast.u.afion,
JllGHLY ~l:u A J.J FIE D I 3 pm-5 pm, ~Ion-Fri -CASHIERS ''2'-' --p~s mastered. _Sal open. maintenance.~ reeair. Apply 645-8786 I 2607 ,-1. Coas. H\vy. N ded f Re . 1 il<'phcs <..'Onfidcntlal. (TI4) Exec. Sec'y $700 in person, Capistrano lJni-
PAINTING & repair, 35 yrs ' Newport Beach 646-0201 ,;:hiclesor&::;ly s':!~10~-_1131>-~~ll.1-0~~~~-~~ Lei "1~1 SecreCotary ·1 to $750 Vlfiedlo~hooBll dDistl'IC·ct,_ 1261 26
VJOrkmanship guar. Take j ~~~!!!!!!~'"'~""""""'I per preferred but not nee. DA~AL. 1 Ex~~~ CMhairsid1e ~r~~~'Ye unci SS50 .,~,!"'a v ·· ap1srllllo
SEE OUR
SUNDAY LISTING
• ' ~:
L .. L. ....... !SJ! lhJt>KlNS I
.iLH.lU \~tllITl!:MOJ{E .:
4:.S L.17 .... 1St. (at Irvine/ C~1 ;'
Suite 124 642,1470 1 ""'__,,,__..,,,.__ . ' -~'JA""N"I T"'O'"R.-'---I .:
advan/a.e Of my e A N S W E R l N G . AtJl/y lnNclrson ssistant or \..Ut!ta esa o • i~iir-liii"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiii j • xp. service H G ti Pl 1 t 1:3o Exec, Sec'y $100 Exper. reliable, nlature man 536-7056. operator. &ftOOon &hitt, 228 NTI TON BEACH ce. I ease_ ap~.Y 0 x no To Dirt•c<or or operations for restaurant kitchen, II.rs ·I
PAINTING in C.M. In· Forest, l..a&'l1na Beach. TRAILER SUPPLY ~. c 0 Dally ilot, .PO Box Financial Sec'ys lo $700 HEL'P! 9 an1-l pm. $300 per mo~ 1 ter I exter. Small job s A~ss""1"m°"'b"'1t"r"s=l7'"T"'r=a'°1---s· 116242 Beach Blvd HB 156 eo.ta Mesa, Calif 92626 Sale11 Sec'ys $600 Ambrosia, 501 30th St., rear
I Free t Jin D ENTAL A sssist ant $500 N v•e con1e. c:s · l. All 3 shlfts. Apply at gate CASHIER & General ornce Chairside a t least 6 mo's Gal 1'~riday to entrance, 1 .8.
979-8186. 7a m ~~pm &' llpn1. Work. full & part tin1e. exper. H'.B. area. S.16-3540 A/P Clerk S!"J(l() JANITOil·-p-,/'°H_m_e_. --,S""c_m_i \;
PROF. waUcovering state AtacGregor Yacht Corp.-l>lust be o"'.er 25. Contact betwn. S-I2 am or 5-8 pni. Receplionis! $5.50 retired. No exper . necess. ·I
lie. no. 279514. Insur., all 1631 Placentia, Costa Mesa. Mr. F I e 1 sch er C/O . , NCR Operator $450 VOit Instant Mr. Scane or r.1r. William11. 1
types of paper. 714 : 842-4386 AUTOMOBILE Hoelscbers, South Coast DENTAL Assistant~ Exp d Leasing gal f'ri $450 Silver.1oods, 45 Fashion ;
-Tr:RIOR Paintin~ & WARRANTY CLERK Plaza., Costa Mesa. odnly 4 hak '!~~23~01ntistry, 3-4 Ftc Bkkpr, Corona p I Island, Ne\vpt. Center. ,; .,. ---. ays \'J • ,).:)()"" ' • Ti:le exper, $150 ersonne r.;-_rpe~ cleaning. Free Exp'd girl or will train. Typ. CATERING & Sales Director DINNER-HOSTESS Sec'y Consulting $625 · J AN IT 0 RI A L, part 1! "-::inales. 642-7059 ing 50 wpm & lite book· exper., typing oec. Salary M T Tech 14 15 h lime/full time, local, eves., ':
INT/EXT PAINTING keeping required. Salary + Comm. Apply in person. For prestige house. 1 ei:nort est, ..._ •A ·,.: hr exp'd adults only. $2.40 hr. 1 Quality Work. Reasonable $400 to $425. Mon lhru Fri, 8 M.r. Marrnan 1-loliday Inn Apply in person Digital Tc·· e ,,. ..........., I" NEEDS 979-3923 :
"·!'•· G15--0l60, G73-Slc... am to 5 pm. Phone Bauer 0 1. between lOam & Jpn1 NEWPORT J N~R . 1 , = = B 'ck ~2500 •1 T ca I p I A • s . A 1 11V part 111ne, <..'OUpe " w ' Jl;r • ;• rs . a.EANING person f/tin1e 0 ro ersonne gency ecretar1es f ed . "
No Wastl~ Cameron after 10 am. for ofc in Nwpt Ctr. Send MARQU IS 833 Dover Dr., N.8 . pre err s:;_~s. .'I * WALLPAPER * AUTOMCYl'!VE resume to Clas•lfk>d ad no. IB70 Old Newport Blvd 642-3870 • Typists ===-~~,...,.,--=-~l
When you call "Mac" Parts dept. has severa1 open-932 c/o Dally Pilot, P.O. Costa l\lcsa • K h JANl'rOR & l\1aint. Man •:
548-1444 eves. m.,. Including Par 1, Box 1560 Cos/a •r c !SH SHER .1 eypunc \V/rixit abilities, club work, II , esa, a D \VA • eve sh1 t, Exper'1enc:ed P"I h'ft A I ~ IV """ . llf-QUA.LlTY, LO\\' S counter man, part.a helper , 92S26. \Ved 1hru Sun . Bahia • PBX Oprs '~ s 1 • PP Y '"" · ~ •'
State Lie. No. 280044 & parts driver. good Co. CLERKS-Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601 Boat Carpenter Ave .. Balboa. Dosed h-1on. ~
... Ml-1701 ... Benefits. phone < 714 > VARIETY STORE Biyslde Dr., CtlM. See aiet Tempol-ezy Se.i;vi;il JUNIOR SALESMAN: fl
PROF In ho rk 646-9303 Debu!I ·to ''vork Qn 37' Trawler .,0 A8 C 'Dr S . 106 Earn $20-$40 ""' week •urk · '•/ · pa fer, nest wo • Cashiers, F1°oor Oerks . No · yachts. ,,.,.. am~· :, ult reas. Int/ext, free est. B AB Y Sll'I'ER/housekeep-full time students. G 0 0 d Dishwasher Wanted Pacific Trawler Corp. NC"-'(.)Ort Beach 546-4741 ing after school and Sat 1
Rels. 54S-2759, 642-3913. a-, mature, gentle, loving , Juture, xlll 't benefits. Perm. 54:}9249 [)4?-6!!08 Eqc:al Oppor. Employer days ~elling new subscrip-~, woman w/flexlble schedule .ions for the DAILY PILOT. ~ "· i"•tdl, R~ir tocaredaily for2chlldren2 F/time. Apply in person, OOMESTiC"-ffelp George EXPER. lovtng care for my -· · -.1i"> i.> 1io1 a paper route :
;;;,rnpLASTERING * & 4. Prefer pre. sch. ~ N~ve, 3425 Bristol, Allen Byland Agency, 100-B 7 mo old boy. My home, Help! HOu·s•kHP.r -.::J Uoc.> nol include di-::
training, must have own .a · E. 16th St,, S.A. 547--0395 Ba.I. Island. Own transp. needed, so .1e child care. ..vcl'ics o: col:ecling. Open. •
All ~.:'ii ~'.mates trans. $45. Wk. 968-9993 CLERI{-Typist, for sales DI:MONSTRATOP.S needed Refs. Call Collect aft 6pm, .\I, ;;_ .-. . :J!Q.. 468. ,;:_.;in c o .... .i. Mesa. Foun tain :
BABYSIITER ~ed. for dept. Call betWttn 9-5PM now. Unlimited earnings 1 ;,i-\iiTiii4ii/ "C"24"-".,.89ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio ,,..· ... uey :.:.nd Sou,h Huntingto :
L.R. OTIS PLUMBING
Remodels & Repairs. Water
heaters, disposals. furnace!i,
rlsh\\'ashrs. 642'""263 l\1/C &
B/ A. Complete Plumbing
se1vice .
PLUfifBlNG REPAIR
No job too small
aft. school, thla fall. Within MON-SAT 642--0142. possible. For info call, I' HOMEMAKERS J;eac.1. Apply OO\V by callifli; •
wlking dist. of !.lonte Vista a.UBHOUSE manger, 2 ~84H=~'~4J~·~-~~~--FACTORY UPJOHN :4....30l.:!. j' Sehl, CM. Approx. 11:30 -days per wk. 8141 Atlanta , DONUT Shop, 6 anl-2:30 pm. ..,qual Oppor. Employer 1
5:30. 646-5463.aft 6pm H.B. 536-8091. Female, age 25-45. Apply in ''People Helping 1•
BABY SJ TT ER-mother's COCKTAIL ~·aitreas & group person, 135 East 17th, CM P eople" JR. CLERK -
helper for teacher's 2 for enlertainn1ent. TRAINEES Beginning position tor young ' daughters. Own transporta-* 548-9988 * Don"t Be Fooled!! ina.n. Must type.
lion references required_ I ----~-~---Dr's Assistant Our Name Is l-lo1nemakcrs Apply In Person
536-442'l Young lady (U-281 to· 8.J!!i:st. ~p?cu~v~s~:J ~~pie MARINERS
BABYSITTER wilnted for C • I in health spa. \\'ill train, no SAVINGS & LOAN 2% yr old girl from 6:30 0mRJ8fCJ3 exp. nee. ,\pp\.y, in perso1,1 Jobs Available If you care & have a special 1515 Westcliff Dr. '1
am-3 pm. Wdl. pay $25 a wk. any aft or eve. 2930 W. In Irvine & concern for others, become Newport Beach :.\ ~ Hilla area. 8JO..Sll07. Tener Coast Hwy., N..B. Newpori Beach Areas a homemakers employee.
~-----~]~ '--*~*-642_-_'128 __ .. _ .. __ _ hrlonal• .~ ,:·flwing/Altereti">nl
..... tr..,.ri.... . . . . . . . . • . • . szs .. ......,.. ........................ "'
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Altorotlons-642-51145
Neat. ACCUta.te. 20 years np .
'i'eltvl1ion Re;iair
COLOR TV Repair, expert,
reasonable, 1nost In home.
Free estimate, H.B .. N.B. &
C.M. Bert Gallemore,
f'ev..tl tl~M · tl:;I .... = 96S-2183.
L--""'"""-"" ___,j~
Sc11o1.1 & 11111rvct1t111 • . . . . • . . sn T,,1.lrlc.1 . . . SIC
1---1~
Sink• D • .-.ctory •..•.••••.•.•. MO
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*QUALITY * * Z\1ULCH k TOP SOIL * 5116-6930
Trff Service
TREE trimming Including
palm trees -1,lnd I r e e
removal, Gen. clea nup,
reas. & insured. 84.7-1791.
TutorlMIJ
BABYSITrlNG & lite ___ Immedia te Work Enjoy a new idP.ntUy in the I
"°""keeping. Room & DRILL press operate" 1235 On All 3 Shifts medkal eommmlity. KEYPUNCH ·! .
board + salary. 842-7636 or Ex . ed P /tim per hr. to start. Exper. • RN-LVN's T "I ' l
644-0023 ask for Gail. penenc e preferred. 557-Sza:J. No E xpe rience • P rac. Nurs es All shiI~ :ailable .. ~ ·•
BABYSITTER in my borne, UNITED Electronic Development Nece ssa ry • Conv. Aides Irvine 541)..4.B) 1 lite hskpng, near Brookhurst CALIFORNIA BANK 17802 Sky Parle & Victoria..' 7:45 _ 4pm, 111on Technician S.J.S. • Nurse1 Assistant's 1\nahein1 533.2322 l
thru Fri. 64&-6706. 309 Z\1ain Street TF:rtf?ORARY SERVICE e Compa nion Aide s 1730 rl. La Palma , •
J-lwiti ngron Beach Design, layout, .test & build 1424 S. Grand, San:a Ana • Hous k NLJBi~ Ar-EE AT TEMPO"·: BABYSITTER , 111 e solid state test equipment ·---------e eepers 1 housekeepina, Uve in + 5J6.88ll Tempo Temporary 1-Ielp ~ •' 5ala.ry eaii~ for voice warning systems. FAC1'0RY he-Ip, wili train. One Visit V/ith Us. 'I
Equal Oppor. C.'mployer Req's min. 4 ~yrs exper. Young mature woman And You're On Your Way To -K9ypunch-Opening~ f
BACK Office Nurse (30-50 ..,.,_..,..,...,,_,.....,...,.,.1 ~?1e b college electronics pref'd. St $2.10 hr. C.l\f. Creatinf': Your Own Day & nite shifts available• I yrs old) Hrs 8-12, l>lon.-Frl. """------.....-.ira le. area. 545-0·lO'I. __ ~-Work \Veek!! Pref. w/X-ray exp. 646-1~ LW.<, ASSc Man a " er, -h , If qualified could becomi 1
9-4 pm (Ca.II Mon. 8127) graveyard shift, u day wk. Ma5ter Specialties . Fc;>rei9n car mec an1c HOMEMAKERS permanent. Exper . on O'At: 1
BARBER'Halr 'I YI'. , 1 Immed or.;~· . Co. paid 1640 Monrovia wanted. • 00-5133 059 & 129. Irvine area. TOJ? 'l
benefit. .ck The Box C .,_ UPJOHN salary + benefits. Please -, wanted for NB Hair Salon. · ' osta """sa FULL & Part Time Help call 635-6001 for appt. Victor 1 Tues.-Sat. 646-2716 lal5 Baker St., Costa Mesa. Wanted. Over 21 , w/neat :-..
Apply in person. ,-----J,..:;Eq;:;;""::;'..;Op;:;:;po;;r;;.·_:;E:;:m:;:p;::lo~:/C;;r;. clean appearance. Apply in 1805 N. Broadway, S.A. Temporaries, 13 6 0 S.: I BEAUTICIANS hair stylists 547 ""1 Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim. • COOKS ----person, Me & Ed's Pizza, --
& aggres•;ve manager need· EXEC SECRETARY ~--t 17th St Cost •1 ·-------... 1 Kitchen Help--F/timo,· I ec1 for Harbor Area Salon. DISHWA:,HERS • 410 ~ . a" esa
Jtllt Wln!ICI, M&f .......... 1" HUNGARIAN.
speak. Prlv. rK'l young/old.
Htl• W.:inl..i, M&f' • • . . . . • . . . n• -I~ OOZ-5267
R.ead, write,
in5truct. For
IA> rates
Interesting opportunities, DicK ~1ur.!..1 t1 &slaurant Highly attractive exec. ofcs. ---.:-GA RDENER * Hospitality Hos tess 54:J-30Sl 646-~ or 494--6364 eves. 2&8 Ne"<V""JOrt Blvd. CM Perm position for exper. at-Be your own Boss Service LEGAL Secretary, mln. . I -** ·c·OOK· S ** tractive, y,·elJ g room ed , . 1 look' , 1 yrs Calif. exper. Westclilf 1 BEAUTICIAN . Be your awn organized young woman. 1'\ill er p ,iJne 1n your s ·1ng ...... •·1omen o N 8 Call "'"2330 1 ~-t t tl ·r· ' · ..... me 11£'lcome & in~erview new area, · · IJ"t4r or uu::os, ren your own s a on. First & second cooks, xlnt Must have xln 't .secretarial o::n ell':-.. 1:-' l in_.,, . appt. ' N~'Pt BcE.._!_~ ~2816 working hours. Employe s!dlls, full ofc procedures, Guara nteed Custome r s resic!e .t~. Sa:e-: or adver-I B~ME 1 bene"t ••• = kno I dg 1 'I 1 N C h D n ._isi : c .. per. !1c!pful. Must ' IFE Guard ~·/Sr. Life sav .. J!A.,V an nsurance u s.~. w e e o gen ace ng, o a s ow . • . _ _, al agent. Opportunity to learn rooK---Expen'enced, all & some adm abilities. Earn • , '.i.v -~·Her .::.ivc <..'f-1' ..-typc\vr1!er. C<Uu. m e, 15 hrs wk. Lt.
A 'bil" -~"47-:::00S. Eves & wknds, 10.inl. "'Ork, Lake Fores insurance business. Part shitts availabl~. Apply io s sum e respons1 1ties. 968-4812 ::4.'.-!:004.
:"C.,.-,.-::-,~--n-.. -.. -.. -.. -::-.:-:.-::__,.:::::· ::; I L ;I JllWI ~Iil)
A..:::... .....•.•.....•..•.•... IM
&11lllliftt M111n.l1 •••••.•...•. "6 time eves. &_weekends, Full 3099 s a · 1 I CM Salary com mens u rate ~~---511&-0160 .. _~~-~~~,n penon. -ris 0 • · -G--I M h' ' I HOS SS .-> time when qua l Ifie d , VandeKamp's, A division ot w/exper. Send resume & e nera ac 1n1s TE LUNCH \Vaitress, LaCa'!°"I :
w/unlimited opportunity &. Tiny Naylor's. salary requirements, t o Prototype \\'Ork. Advanced Leisure \.vorld Clubhouse. Restaurant, 16~ Jr v In~ ~:=::.".~.~~:~~-·.:·.:·.::::·:: Job Wanted, Male 700
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AIKratt ... . . . .............. t1J c..,.,..,.., s..11111.1111 .••••.•••• m
(ye .... llcltt JC9lftn ........ tu lllctrk~ .................. ,.
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~ ............ : ............. ... Trllltrt. T"""' ••.. ,,,, ........ M
Tr11ttn, U ......... , •• , •.•••• HJ Ant ..... ic. • 1'41irlt • • • • .. ..
l.,___-_ .. _ .. __,11 ... 1 "'""'' ' " ............ " .. -. .. . ,.. .l.tttllfllti/CJlllk:r; • .. • • .. • • .. . • • t S7 a.... '""'" .................. fJf ~t·•• lliKe. .... , ...• , ... tJt
Tnicb .. .. ............... ff: v... . ..................... ,1 "' a...~ .................. .... ..... ..Nici . ,.,,. .. . ... . . "' ...... WlllllM •••••· .......... Kl All'I~ I,,..,,.. ,., ,, ,., , ... tJI ....... ,..... , ................. ,. .. ..., u• ................... ,..
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
DropSy -Cana:! -Alive -
Cudgel -OLD LADY
Scene In an art museum:
A grot.g> of teenagers were
vtewing Whistler's great
masterpiece. One s a i d ,
"Look, that painting is
\Vhlstler' a OLD LADY."
Job Wanted, Fomalo 702
NEED help at home? We
have a.Ides, n u r s e s ,
ho u s ekprs, companions.
J.fomemakers U p j o h n ,
547~1.
Jobi Wontod, M & F 704
high guaranteed Income. Troy Equities Corp, 2152 Kinl'lics, Inc. 1231 Victoria Recreation & social ac-Ave., C.~l. Apply in pt.'t'SOn
Farmen Insurance Group. COOK, middle aged 00•umun5, Dupont Dr, Suite 203 , St., Cli.1. 646-TI65. Equal Op-tivities background helpful. 2nd floor. 1.lon -8128/TJ, Phone 439-3555 Mr. TutUe. for s:nall nursing me, Irvine, Ca 92664. por. Employer. lOrun-Zpm ' days per week, Laguna I"'~=,=-""~'-~~= ='""==~~'--=="' Part time poo'ition, 15-20 BOOKKEEPER!Sec p I r, Beach, call for appt, n4: Want ad resulls 642-~ (;LA~SrFIED 642-56i8 hrs/\•1k., \l.'knds & evenln~. LVN's J..11 & U-7, full ti
a/r, alp & taxea, l girl of-494-8075 Help Want~, M & F 710 Help W a nted, M & F 710 Apply persorflf'I office M-F, modern facillties. x In
lice, gd ¥t'Orking cond., Call CX>OKS '"dL.iner & Broiler" _ ·-------· 9-4. Administrntion BIM. working cond. Gordon Lane 642-1343 Immed. Opening. 2"52'1 p,.i;;~ ~ Valenci:i, La· Convalescent Hospital, 18'll',
BOOKKEEPE-R--Apply in person Hours 2 to 6 E ch a pm an Ave
Hungry Tiger Rest. 1641 \V. MEtt .. WOMEN ,.,,~n, Hill... Flillerton. .,
R-r'• Gardens Sun!lower Santa Ana. -------·.-EXECUTIVE<' UANAGERS HOSTESSES LVN lo' »11 & 11·7 reHef: Need bookkeeper w/ba"1c rooK lo' year around child r-m11 Xln't wages. Call 64Z.2410 schooling in acrounling, typ-day care center. 5 Hrs dal· AP"'lv 1'1 Pprso'l or apply, 1443 Superior Ing skW helpful 'but not ly. Comer Bay St & Orange, 10K, 15K, 25K, SOK Jntt'""v<; Fri. 2-5 pm Only NB
req, M.,.. be penoooable 4 C.M. ~70. SALARIES • NEGOTIABLE ~ A' t I Ave., ' .
wilting'to learn, Salary~ -CredentlaJs Technician 1rpor er nn LVN, full & p/lime. l\.1odet'Q I mo. or up depending on Salary $636-S76J Are You Unemployed Now -Are You Seeking Hote l convalescent bosp. Ca 11 .
qualifications. Apply in per-Must have a working A Chan9e -Worried About Your A9e -1 ~00 l\1ac.o\r~h·•r Blvd ., NB 642-<li98.
son at our garden at 2221 •---·1~~ f the CaliJornla Tired of Broken Promises -Undecided As To Oo'"IO~ltr Dr<>~P Co. Airoort MAOllNIST Class A. Allll 11
Fairview Rd., Costa Mesa, Cred~~enti'""a1' 0 ~-. A 11 ·-------... ,..•I lalhe, 4 day wrk ¥tttk. 1GIJ.a .,,,. ... "'-.. A Proper Course of Action ---
BOOKKEEPER w Non-profit work pertaining to teaching, E YOU UNDER PAID? H~. e""'erien..."erl only per day r.1on-Thurs. Appl~ corp. w Ih a n d I capped credentials & maintaining AR need nppl". Dc'lver MininR in person, Vought Division,:
children I: adultt, Payroll, teachers permanent records If YaY Can Answer The Following CcrtetarlH r.~ .. 719 r·. 1~'1 St., Cos'a 290 Fischer Ave., 0.1:.
A/R, AJP, gen. ledger, etc. & tiles. Keep informed on In ne Affirmative, W e'd Like An Interview MeM. 540-lO'b1. ,
GOING on vacation? 2 Good s:pot 1or retired person all old, cur.<Ult, and pro-W ith You * HOUSEKEEPER * l\tAID, FOR MOTEL,
respon University students who needl I ¥t'&nls work, posed credeni.:i. legislation, ·1111 i•torkin; cc:Y.tt'.ions. Em-Laguna Reef Motel
will be llve-ln caretakers for 646-8112 policies, and procedures. IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL rtlovee he""('''tot No exp. 30800 s. Coast llwy.,
your1 1
~'.""!.'
63
,aro
7
...,.:., peta, t --.~'W-eed~~U-&-R.~a-p'-' -AUpnlfledply IScbooln ~-trtOran&et 370 -WE CAN HELP YOU needed. 642-3500. Laguna Beach, 4.99-2000
P ~ s. ""' s -·-From treasures to truh 1-t11t c ' A. Do you h1 v• 1tto"g voc1tioft1I dr iv11? HOUSEKEEP~ER~. ~11-ve~ln-.~,or-l\.fAID needed. l>lotel ln H.B:
5 line •• 5 days ror $5. Call ~·-them Into --k North Glassell St., Orange e D h d II 1 S>nrt M, per hr. ca!j' 61U" . '-'CLIU• • o you 1v• 900 "1tiv1 i"t• i91"c• eMployed -I 1-k ~ ·~-.... , "" ~ CALL D-"" Pilot CLASSllo'l~D 642 ?"1678 ,,,vu"> e. 1"· "' • "'"" '"11. -.,. .,.._,,;i10 o.i.q C. Do you f11l 1uffici1"tlv motivt l•~ to 1chl1v1? , xefs. req'd. }\eply to P.O. .,.>V""V"I
Help Wanted, M & f 710 Help W '-nfed, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 0. Do you htv• th • tbility to Mtkt cfecido"1? tlox 1438, Lelgun.s Beach. MAINTENANCE Job E. Ari y..,,. reedy to 1tt 1 r1.li1tic c1r1er objecliTt1 0 ·
ATl'ENTION
Keypunch Operators
Must have at IH1t one year's experience
on 029, 059 or 129 mochlno
Doy l IYlftiMIJ work hours ovelloblo.
Computer Programmer
Botw-. six months l ono yHr's oxporlonco.
Fomlllar with JCL or OCL. Avo llablo to work nights.
Prior mUlta ry e xperience we lcomed
MANY COMPANY BENEFIT'l-INCLUDING
LIBER.AL FURNITURE DISCOUNT
FOR OUR EMPLOYEES
R ~ ... , nr-'\r ·1~y r ~riE • u. w ".jJJ ~·-·-lodl ~ u
I ,. d ti. h / ,JJSKPR/~tN>M ... · boy 8 yrs, perung F. I you w1r1 Co""i"c• •t • p w11 ,,.,111bl1 , would l--5 PM.-?"d.:\~.r l"efs .• .,_ hr. Building maintenance .,. you 1cc1pt It without d1/1y1 "V"' .,_ n -h 5 d k N\vpt Bch Pen. 675-6502 rwg. ?'9., ay ~
YOU SHOULD KNOW
e Thi b1tt•r job• 1r1 "of •4v1rfl11c:I e lhlrc:I p•rly prof111lo"•I Jnfl11•nc• Ii 10M1Hm1t
"''''''l"Y e Gtltlng the right doori op•"• •I th1 ri9ht l1v1/ re·
quir11 t1ch11iq111I e E•tc11tiv1 po1!tlon1 1r1 filltd th ro11gh lllC11fiv1 in-
l1rvi1w1 e M111 r1111tn1 m1iling, i1 "ol • tol•I 1"1w1r
EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC.
May H, •• An Answer For Y oul
S1nd R11ull'L• Or C1ll Toc:l1y
-For-
HO COST lll!CUT IJ!" INTr::'"Vl!W
r!::ECI l'llV~ Sllr.VICllS INCO r.PORATED
ICl N. Mt\IN :r. -HOM! UFFICi-'l'INTA AN!t
Scc'.lr'. v 13 1;,lc tuild l
SuHe 702
eves. Cont3ct !\tanager
Anchorage Apts. 5@-1:,01 ' HO~SE\VORK Ught duty Dally 9-5 ' alter su~. Reft>rences.
req. caII 8C2-0377 _
INSPE CTOR
Precisioo. sbc'ei mC"!al «hop.
Z\ftm bf> e.~~·rlr'"lC'Cd & re-
lii.l>!e. ""lior· ,.,......,,
SPACE-TEK
INDUST RIES ·-
MAI N T ENANCE MAN.
Exper. l'1 hospital ma.Int
Good rtar.lng salary.
lnsuran::'(! • fringe benefits
Immediatei ope.ninKL
'fr ~10· '7(Q=) •
MAINTE NANCE MAN:
~1 s ~ familiar w/pl.wnb,
C''r If. ,...t'fl'l carpentry &
"I I"! rxper necess. See Per
-~ "1 >.f'"n:.."1'r.
Balboo B oy'Club
• '· . CoA..• llwy., N.B. YIN OM11 ~ a fWl to
'1Dri.w Fut" when )'O\I
..... .. "' Ill the [ ..!l1
Pllol Wont Ads! Csll now C a ll Devo Ramuy 97MODO
-MH618. IPJ. ................. iiiiiii ................ __ PH O NE: 17141 S47-9625
lnt .. rior o .. 119 ner
E•·ii n<' r <' ~ ...,_ r • \Yell
,.h,,..~11~,,.... tfflrll ~lh t~
rnest line!. On\w against
romn1. Call bet. 9 & 10 am. 642-2000.
CIAullled Ads , . , 642-5678
The tns1r.a draw 1n the w..t.
. . ·• Dilly Pllol Ad. Ml--.
·.
'.
•
•
•
,.
•
omeone
To Take An
I ere At It
We'll even pay the postage to get · you to give us an order. Get
ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put
0
a hafd·working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you •
USE THIS ORDER FORM
USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY0 POSTAGE!
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
z
TIMES
-
$4.50
$5.80
$6.80
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
!!!!!!!!!! OR USE YOUR • liiii C)iARGE CARD
Pvbli1h for • ••. ••• •• •• • d1y1, li19inni119 , ., •••• ,, •••••• •••••• •••• •••
Cl14dflc1tio" ••• , , •••••• , , , • , , •• , ••••••• , • , , • , , , , , , , , , •• ,, , , • , ,
N•""• • • • • • , • • •, • •• •• • • • • •• •• •• •• •• • • •• • • •• • • • •. • •. • • • • •• • • • • • • •
"'4te11 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Oty • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • rhorte •••••••••••••••••••••• ; •
Ma1fH CNf!t' NvmMr • , , ••• , , • , • , •• , , • • bpiratfol'I Dito , , ••••• •
lt11kAm•rlc•~ Nllfl'lll1r •• , , , , , , , , , , • , • , • , blpr•tion D1t• , , ••• , ••
• 1 12
TIMES TIMIS TIMI S
---
$7.40 $11.70 $17.70
St .OI $14.50 $22.50
SI0.76 $17.30 $27.30
TO FIGU•E COST
Put only on1 word in 1f1li
1p1eo 1bo•o. lndud1 you'
.iufdr•U or F'~one nu111b1r.
Th1 eo1l of your 1J it et tile
e<1d of the line 011 whieli the
l11f word of your ed it wri t•
ten. Add Sl .OG plu1 l li1111
••f•11 if you d11 ir1 v11 ef
DAILY PILOT 801 lttYite
with '"'iltd r1pli1i.
------CUT HEil -PASTE ON YOUl I NYILOP''------
Cl1111fltcl Dept:
BUSI NESS REPLY MAIL
Fiut Cl111 Permit No . 12. Coile Me11, Celifot11i1
Orange Coad DAILY PILOT
P. 0 . Bot 1560 .
Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 •
Or Give Us an Order by Phone
at 642-5678, the Direct Line to
•
DAILY PILOT
Classlfiecl Want I.cl
RESULTS .
•
I
I
. +
!
I l[Il] _I _ ...... ,_. •_,l[il1 ~I ~ .... ·~·"···~I ITTJ~1~! ;;;.;;; . ....,.;;; .. ;;;.:l[Il)~IJ
Helo Wonted. M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Hole Wanted, M&F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wanted, M&F 710
----------E>~~~P.~~!~~M R E SALES * SALESMEN * · MACHINISTS lrvi>:e Co:npl<x """· Call • • Do i~u t.Xe "Salounen Top pay & liberal wage program. Paid health Mn. Patton, ~70. wanocd" eds with a .,.aln o! & dental lnsura~ce. 11 paid holldays a year. KATELLA REAL TY "'11? Can't soy l blame you.
Long term security. _ NEEDED NOWI, INC. I followed up • few m)'llOll Off~ni: In the past. Tho job teldom
yal Industries, 8 mai· or manufacturer of DU· • rastest grov.ing R.E. co. lived up to the cfabn in the cl • Im1ned. floor ti.1ne avaJJ. ud. ear components, is now hiring experienced e DISHWASHERS e Eal'n up 1o 80% 1..•orrun. Do youraelr a. favor &-eK· machinists ln the followin g categories. All e BUSBOY • Full i:ia&-e adve1111111g plore thili one. U you'd like
shifts. nC>thlllg off top of comn1• to make $250 a week lm·
Jig Bore Machinist
(OeVllg)
Profile Machinist
(Hydrotcl)
NC Machinist
Engine Lathe Machinist
Grinder Machinist ID·OD
Milling Machinist
Personnel Department will be open for in·
terviews 8 AM·6 PM Mon·Fri. & B·noon Sat.
Other interviewing times can be arranged,
ROYAL INDUSTRIES
2040 l:. Dyer Rd ..
!Redhill & Dyer)
Santa An1, Ci .
S40·3210
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Must be clean &: noot. Over e We are not a Jni.nchlse mediately, with e.n eye to
21. Dependable. Xln'1 "-'Ork· e NationllJ N-ferral program much more ln the tutu:rt!,
tng <.'Olklltlons. e 17 oles ln Orange County I'd like to talk to ;you. It
• Management opportunities your quallficatiorui match
Ap1>ly in ~·rti011 e Both resa:te & new homes our requlremenll, lhls oould SURF & SIRLOIN e Training for new licensees be the <..-srecr you'\1e reeo
f:B30 W. CbMt J-lwy. • Jf unllOOQsed . we assist lookb~ for. Newport Bea.ch Jntel'V!ew uppolntment 11)..4
NIGHT \Vatennan, 1rvine
Coast Country Club. Apply
in person.
INR N·LVN-AID E
11·7 & other shifts. Top pvt
duty pay, Imn1l'd. pay Jor
floor duty. Co u n l y w Ide
lntJ.v\•:1. lt1on·Frl 9-5.
Lelicoulie Nur&es ltegistry,
351 llospitaJ. Rd., NB (Lob-
by Park Lido Bldg l
642-~. S41).9954..
Nur1e1 Alde1-
0rderlle1
Openings all shifts. Good
sUl.rtini: wages • xln' t bcne-
fl ts. Trainees accepted,
older won1e11 pref'd. LVN •
Charge 11·7 shill. Relief
LVN • All shUts. Bayvleo.v
Conv. J-lolpital 541).5690.
Get With PM, weekday•. 586-3182.
Sales Katella Naw roY & Glf'T PARTIES
Call Bo.t:Jinton llouscwives dt":monstrators,
77 earn to $2,(XX) by Dec. L No
Or Tom Caruso rlelivery -no coUection. Free J-foatess gifts, need
837-9400 car. 523-5484 Gifts 'n
Gadgets
REAL ESTATE SALES SALESGIRL, full lime, $2.00
hr start. Good working
cond. Please apply in NC'\v office in l..Qi\lha Beach. p c r ~ 0 n , 1 O a m -5 p m , M~t he Ucensed, but will Wed-Sat. Aaron Brothers,
tonslder eager, new salt'S· 190 South Coast Hwy,
people. Many advantage!'!, Lnguna
Contact: Dorie Smith I;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
American Home SCHOOL BUS
RHllor DRIVERS
875 N. Cs\. Hwy., Laguna A 1. I "·I * 494-1001 * pp 1c:it ans .......,. ng accepted ==,-,==="""=-==I lor Sept. employn1ent. by REAL ESTATE SALES contractor operating in
FREE LICENSE I1vine Unified School Dist.
~~~NURSES.Ward Clerk, 1·3:30 TRAINING Peraons holding valid school
bus driver eertiDcate pref'd.
Training program avail for
those \\'ithoul certitlcafe15.
Xln't sala!'ies & benefits.
Call: ~trs. \Valp, (TI4)
~4·ll70.
ljjjHjio~lpjiWjjiiejjnjitod~,jjMiiii&iiFiiii7ii1~DHiiiiol~p~Wiiiion~l~odiiiiii, Miiii&iiiiiF~7iiiil0 \Veekends off. Xln't v.•ages Famous Real Estate Liccns· -I & benefits. Apply at 1445 lng Course now available
s rl A N s thru Tarbell Realtors. Free
MOTOR ROUTE DRIVER Ni~ .. ;;Bci;~·a·r·i~ s~~ ~~~r;:;ntr=.. r~
\\'hUe you learn. Call Al
vale...'Cnt Hosp. E x P er . Sloan (TI4) ~5440. !~~~~""'~!!!""'""'""
Male Female or pref. ~1 ---------SALESGrRL, Boutique shop.
2 OFFICt. lilRLS R.E. SALESMAN 21 o• ove.. Expcr. only need NEEDED lnvestlgale the new approach apply. Beach area. Chance
FOR DAILY PILOT
Radio telephone dispatch & innovati\'e n1arlc;etlng for management. Reply to ~lust be 2S, able to drive techniques of THE GAI.,. Classified ad no. 933, c/o
A I I P LERY OF l-IOr.IES. You Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560,
PP1)' n llrsc>n will be glad YQU did: Call Co11ta Mesa, Ca 92626.
IN SOUTH lAGUNA YELLOW CAB CO. 963-5611 for appointment. SALES _
186 E. 16tti, Cos1a Mtsa L!.ccnsed or wllicensed v.•e Personable woman Who en·
Liberal profit plus generous car allowance.
Must live in area & have valid drivers Ji.
cense. Dependable auto & cash bond re-
quired.
OFFICE Manq:er, 11 t e wii! train. joys people. P/lime work.
bkkpng, li te I Y Pin g· R.E. SALESMEN Some evl'S & \\.'knds. Time
Intere1>tl!lg work. 5 Dnys \Vhy not work in the hottest Life Book Shop, So. Coat1t
per v.•k, 10-5. 8141 Atlanta, are a, Huntin gton Village, 557-3875. ~H.:;·:::B:.. . .::~~~l;;·=~---1 Beach~Fountain Valley. Let SALESMAN, f/time. Mens PAINTER us tram you! Ask for Mr. furnishings & sportswear. Call Harry Seeley 642-4321 Exper. enamri pa.inter ooly. Snider, VlI.l..AGE REAL Exper. pref'd. Contact Mr.
F /tin1e. See Personnel l.1an· ESTATE, 962-44TI Fleischer. Hoel.&cher's, 3333
An Equal Opportunity Employer ager, Receptionis,.. Typist S. Bristol, Costa Mesa, (So.
Balboa Bay Club O.C. Airport area. Need ~°'~'~Pl~aza=)·~~--~
·----------12Z1 W. O:m8t Hwy., NB persoi:iatile neat appearing, SALESLADY, fully exp, full
I M & F H PART ll · I needed f organtzed, at t ra c l I v e , time. for \\'Omens tine an-Hz p Wented, 110 elpWanted,M&F710 me"" 0• • sa.I ·u 1 H bb b No mature young . ~oman for pa.rel shop. Call for ap-
AtAlLING DEPT.
Great Opportun ity
In Costa hlesu
c.et in on the ground levt>I
of tht> most Rapidly Grov.··
Ing 1i1aHing l-~irm in Orange
Co. Expanding dally, our
firm Is looking for n?!lp. in·
dividuaJs for our me.Hing
dept. who have or do not
ha\-e exper. in the d lrec1
mail field. This type of
position v.i:ruld pom;ibly be
mote lnlerestlng to female a~cnnUI.
Call Now fof appt. !tt0-161
/utdreSl'l-O·Print
Centt'r , Inc.
Eqip.l Oppor. En1pluycr
?itALE 18 yn; or older. Apply
in penon at Suri Theatre
t~s only, U1 Slh St, Ihm·
tington Bt'ach.
'-'AN to ""Ork f/1in1e in ren-
tal yard. Short hair. Very
neat handwrit.1.ng. Will train.
App«y morns, 1930 Newport
Blvd, CM.
?itAN or couple, early Al\1
nev.·spaper delivery in
Irvine area. Xlnt route
open. $300 mo. approx.
96Z-4633
~n't give up the lhlp!
• "Ll1t" It In cluslflad, Sh.Ip
to Shore Results! 642-5678.
•
es Po9' on a u u , front ofc position. AccurJ•ii"°iiliintiimiiciiniit.ii4ii!lli;·;i1'iili;9iiiiiiiiiii MARINE ENGINE experience nee. So. Cst typ:ng· , Dictaphone, clerical
r.tEOIANIC Plaza, 540-l685 duties, pleasant ph o ne ""'i l be exper. & CWTCnt on PBX Operator, answering voiee, SH pref'd, but not SECRET ARY
P ea.sure lxiat gas & diesel serviC<', HB Eve hours. req'd. J<"'or iJJl:e.rw• ca J I
eni,.rlnes, traru:missiora, out· 536--8881 833-9184 bef\\•en 2:30 pm & ~rive, etc. Highest "''8.i:es In . PICTURE FRAMER 4:30 pm.
-TO THE-
CITY MANAGER uxl u s t r y . Brand new
facilities at Sunset Aquatic Orange County•& nl06t ODm·
Park. Call ht for appt. plele & fastest grov.ing
714:846-412:) or 213: 592-1645 (.'USIDm framing operation.
a nytime. ~tll9t have experience in all
~tATURE husky young man phMeos, Top \\11.gee:. 646-2996.
tor plant v.·ork. }Or Soft POSTING, Typing,
\rarer O:>. SJC 493-4.535. Diversified office. St ar t
Mech•nic•I AsMmbly s2·00• hr. 557-4491•
Ute manuf.f.'/t\me. t.fin.
t>:\:p. req'd. 979-2290, Jln1
Cline weekdays.
POWER BRAKE ·
OPERATOR
Precision cxJ)l!ricnce, set up
&: operatt>. Sa.JIU;' open.
SPACE·TEK
INDUSTRIES
RECEPTIONIST
Day or night, no exp. nee.,
easy, fun job. Will train, no
typing or sim'thand, etc.
$751 • $912 Por Mo.
CITY OF
IRVINE
Apply bl penon any afl or ts seeking an e"nergetic well
eve. at 2930 West Cst H\vy., organized & inno~tive in-
N.B. divldua1-to be appointed as ~~..,~~!!!!'!!'!!!!!!!!!! the secretary to the city Receptionist-Mature manager. The individual
Busy desk, lite duties. Sa.Jacy wil l perform a wide variety
negotiable. 642-9-170 Mon-Frt. or dlfUeult responsible &
MaryAnn. contidential secretarial v.'Ork
for the city manager &
n1emben of the city council.
Now Hiring
Full Time
Sales People
Al!O
Janitors
Apply in person J l).S pn1
No. 2 f'a.<thlon Isl., ,.;s
F.qual Oppor. E1nployer
Apply
City of lrvlne
Q)l Campus Dr., Irvine
Or CaU 833-3840
SHOE SAL ES MAN * 644.().12"' •
SERVICE STATION nel'ds 2
ROOM O erkl exper. pref'd., nlen with exp. l day lhltt:. 1 but will tra n. Apply: Holl-pru1 time S pm nr itr pm.
day tnn, Brl11tol St. at San UNION OIL 393 E No. 17\h
Diego Frwy, CM. St. 01. ' '
SALES. Full time wUI train, --=~-~--
-opportunity. Apply nt 1819 SERVICJ:;.Sta. Ma.naaer, elC·
Newport Blvd., CM ptr. SmOK lie. Ute meth.
Ver:v neat In a ppear. $!k)O+
Don't rtve up the thlpl pPr mo to 1tat1. Apply "Ust'' lt ln ctusWe<t, Ship moms. 2590 Newport Blvd.,
lo Sboro Resul!JI -· ,_O."'-! ______ _
•
frlday1 August 24, 14J7J DllLY PILOT
, .
' Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Hands ....
See If You Ha¥i~ Any
Of These Things·.'A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove
2. Guitar
3. Baby Cr ib
4. Electric Saw
5. Camera
6. W11her
7. Outboard Motor
a. Stereo Sot
9. Couch
10. Clarinet
11 . Refrit'ralor
12. Pickup Truek
13. Sowing ·Mach ine
14. Surfboard
15. Machine Tool•
16. Dl1hw11htr
17. Puppy
J.8. Cab!n l=ru i10r
19. Golf Cart
20. · B1rometer
21. Stamp Collecllon
22. Dinette Sot
23. Play Pen
24. Bowling Bill
25. ·Water Skis
26. Fr .... r
27. SultcHo
28. Clock
29. Bicycle
30. Typewriter
31 . Bar Stools
32. Encyclopedia
33. Vacuum Cleaner
34. Tropic1I Fish
3S. Hot Rod Equipm't
36. Filo Cabinet
37. Golf Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mirror
40. Bedroom Sot
41 . Slide Projector
42. L1wn Mower
43. Pool Table
44. Tires
45. Plano
46. Fur Coat
47. Drapes
48. Linens
49. Horse
SO. Alr plano
SI. Organ
52. Exercycle
S3. Rare Books
S4. Sk i Boots
SS. High Cha ir
S6. Coins
57. Electric Tr1in
SB. Kitten
59. Cl111ic Auto
60. Coffee Table
61 . Motorcycle
61. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV Sot
65. Work Bench
66. Diamond Watch
67. Go-Kart
68. Ironer
69. Camping Trailer
70. Antique Furniture
71 . Tepe Recorder
72. Sailboat
73. Sports Car
74. Mt llross Box Spgs
7S. Inboard Spoodbotl
76. Shotgun
77. Saddle
78. Dart G1me
79. Punching Bag
80. Baby Carri1ge
81 . Drums
82 . Rifl e
83. Desk
84. SCUBA Goor
These or any_other extra things around the house
can be turned into cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
So • • •
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
.642-5678
. .. ...
'
\
" ' I
Hol p Wantocl, M&F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 711
SERVICE Slatkin An1.,1w.h.\nt~
Xlnt v.wking rond. 8e1K.'fits,
APPlY \\'kdays &lw-12ooon.
Bill -Rash Chevron Station.
2-IOSl El Toro ll.d, Laguna
llill1.
The Balboa
Bay Club
111 Now Aec..'ttplb1A;
Applications Fl'.lr
SERVICE Station Cd l\t .
area. Out ot the sn1og. Ex-MAIDS &
per. atkndant w. n led . PORTERS Phone 673--8818. for appt.
For The Opening Of SERVICE titatlon niccha.nir. Our Ncw Guest Units & attenclant, full or 1mrt
time, flllJ'bor & Baker Apply ?.londtty tbru Friday
Union, Coi;ta l\1esa 9 A~t..J:30 J'i\1
SERVICE Statk>n Help. l<'ull Personnel Office or p/llJllC. 990 E. Coast Hwy, Newpor1 Bch. 1221 W, Coa1t Hwy.
\VAITRESS "'Ml~ for lmtlU
M>UP Ir: ,Jtlndwlch shop-must bt penonablc & nNt. No
exp req'd. Call 645--89'n
\\' AITRESS & ldtchen help,
full &. pll.!1. 1ime. Laguna,
-19-1-1353
\VAITRESS, exper. neCC!US.
Apply, D<-nver l!Uning Co.,
719 \V. 19th, Cfl.1 645-2343.
WANTED Female B e e r
Tender. Pa11 tln1e. * • 496-9023 ,Days • *
'\'E need a slrong young mu.n
\\'ho will do yard maln-
le:ll(lnce for apt. ron1plex.
SU-~.
SERVICE Station Attcnclant Newport 8Mch \VHO WANTS TO 'VORK7
fulltime. Apply Dana Point ~~'!""!!!'!!J!!~~..,,..~ I DltIVE A CAB!
She.II J.1137 Cml.st Hwy. TOP Not_s:h Gal F)ido,y need· Cl-IOOSE your hours, work
St•tion Attendant f'd to hllniile all otc resp. for for yourself, be your 0\\'11 rrow\ng CO.ta A1esa fitanuf. bo.ss. ~1en or \\'Omen. Can Cltan cut, for part li1ne, col· co. 64l-SOSO. he sllgbt1y handicapped.
lqe student l)n:I., good pny, Tia'---Fiie Clerk Neat-Clean Appearance. Arco Station. San Diego ..._
..
I04Auctlon I04 Garago Salo ;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::;:1 111 112 Mlscolla-u1 ll1Mlsctllanoou1 Auction
*·** ***
2 Day Special
ANTIQUES .***
AUCTION ***
Uquidalion Sale in Los Angeles enables us
to bring to you one of U1e !inest collectlons
of antiques. Sale wlll be beld ........... .
SATURDAY, AUGUST 25TH , 7 P.M.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 26T~, I P.M.
Moved for convenience of sale to :
2722
Jake'$ Auction
No. Main, Santa
543-4941
Ana
CARAC& SALE RUO I: Cocker, ml x.
2ND OREAT WEEKEND FOXY LADY BIKINI SALE •Female, 5 na old, all Mo,.. new campl"fl l'<!Ulp. , shotlo x~1t wlth k ld 1 I
tgloo coolers, 'Pr l m u 1 536-4.773' 557...2891
stoves. Sleeping bags, rtg & SPUT Sl""'S AA DD POODLE
2 lb. goooe down -Tem•l• 6 " " C!10col4 to "'°wn mole. Pree
racqueb, golf oets, mtnl $7•95 ( 40010 OFF) 10 aood home. 546-2848.
table tennis. Depression t • l ~-
glasllWare"Lamp d•lk-room MATCHING COVER·UPS $3.9S BEAUT Blk/Sl ve.· ~nnM -~--~--~ hood with light A ton. Many PRE·INV~NTORY SALE STARTS Wo havo "'yrd. 968-<i~
nlOl"e misc. Items. 1867 FREE cute kittens, ¥TaY le
Bayport \Vay between S•turday, Aug. 25, 9 AM · 4 PM Charcoal tlger st r IP es.
Tustin 6 Irvine, }i'riday & 832-9355 aft 6. -
Sat. !MPM Mon .• Fri. 9 To 5 AKC SJIEPJ-IER.D gcntlt, S
CAR.AGE Sale, ·2 families. 1595 Monrov l•, Cotti MeSI yl'. fcn1. Free tq 1Gvina:
Like new belt massager iso. t ~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!"'!f"!'"!'l'l"'~!!!!O!!!!!!!'!!!!!!"!!'~I home, papen incl. &U22. Tea \Vagon $20, Hoo\lerl~ _ ... 1 ... upright ya.euwn f,ll, Set ot Mlscell•rte0u1 818 Mlscell1neous 811 * BEAUTIFUL youna .. _
di-· •·-•1 t 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. kirty. AJ'te.nid, llbo<I, box • pic.w..,s, "ex ca n!• MOVING! t.fusl Sell Heren-trained. 64<HJ139 crafts. bed s p r ead 11 , * artlHclal fiOWttS, baskolS, * AUCTION don '"''.''"' dlnhig rm set 8 MD old blk >'em Mlxo<l otlsc fum.it $400. ?incl ~loset $400. Sea-Teni~r JIUWY needs • sd . ui:e. area rugs, FRIDAY 1 PM !Y King size bed. Alise hnlnc ift 6 8"2-3612 .)e\\'elry & m'ISC. Sund a Y AUGUST 24 items. 673--0176 ==·..:::;c::,.===--~1 on1Y, 10-4, 2400 Vi.a ?o.larina, , I lhl I . MOVING, 2 Yt\I ma 14;: NB. Don t m ss 1 sa e · • • un-2 BOYS Bikes, 1 Raleigh neutered l.'&ts. Blk lh-Orl
Frwy. & llarbor Blvd. A cheery smile & love for Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70.
l l Lll ~· Beg. Supplement your lnconle. STOREKEEP"R -Qua!,.,,._.. peop e. e ·~.-1ng. m-D I b 6 • ~ · f mind-"' r vea ca hrs or more a ~n w lmo"·lcdge of n1ng or a cnreer .... , 1 .-.·-" •A""' t t rt C ti dny. Apply n person, m&rine hardv.'8re & Uni.shes per'!IOnAn Ch. ~~::_ ~" 6 .. ~· r~ Yellov.• Cab Co., 186 E. 16th to serve a.s store & rccelv-11 """""• wo-o;P.N, ....,n-Cos ~ t.ng ck!rk. Apply In person, trot Caree'r Employment St., la l\fesa.
Lido Shipyard, 000 Lido Agency, 3400 Irvine Blvd .. \VOMAN lo work in Donut
Partial listing as foIJo\vs: Carved side-
boards, {Oak , Mahogany, Walnul), Round
Oak Tables, Oak Dining Room Sets, Press
Back Chairs & Rockers. Oak Bedroom
Suites, Mantles, Marble Top Wash Stands.
In Mahogany ... lrg carved Serpentine Side-
board, Dressers, Sheraton 4pc Bedroom Set,
many, many pieces of Glass, Vases, Lamps,
Grandfathers Clocks. Mary Gregory Glass,
an d over 300 pieces of unusual bric-a-brac,
carved screen·s, lots of Brass, Porcelain, &
Pe,vter. Plus many un usual items.
l•ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0iiiiiil claimed rtorage, personal cl~pc.r. 3 Speed. Forenioal h.'\lr, blonde long hair. both GIANT BACK eUects, bedroom sets In Pro-26 . 2 Fi.o;h tanks 20 gal & ts h.s()brk 675--l886
T·o SCHOOL vincial & l\fodern, dining gal fully equip. ca 11 -c=o;·-;c:-====:-·i room sets, chegt,_~. coUee 552-9415. nvE beautiful Kittens
RUMMA°GE -SALE I ta:bll"S, 2 pianos, divans, re-BPGEN P.A. Amil-00 watt. Long halrS~Js.1 &. female
SAT. 2S * t...3 cllncrs, color TV's, .stereos, use w/horns or speakers.
Tt rrlflc P'rlcesl I stereo components. pictures, Al\Y ohms 1100. or will trade SlA~t.ESE kittens &: rare
Park Or., Nc\\'pGrt Beach. N.B. ' shop 4. nJtes, no phone calla
Und 't T · please. Winchell's Donut STUDENTS, •t>ply nov.· for erwr1 er ra1nn 2947 1 .... C /U · j bs S2 AAA firm offl'rs outstanding shop, Harbor B vu. 1\1
Pf me conce1>Sion ° ·. oi)por. for eollA<Te graduate. \VOfl.1AN for part tin1e offlce hr. Over 17. r..t.S. Tait, ""' k · 449 w 838-1186 be! noon. Acrounling background a \\'Or , mornings. .
610 West 11th St. Jainps, fans, SC\\ing ma-tor coniparab.le electric Slnperl!IC06 w/fleas. CaU
Cost• Mesa Jr. -Women chines, frost b-ee refrig-guitar or bass. 847-4TI2. 675-7110 eves & wknds.
· era.tors, 1vashers, dryen1, f-~~~;,;~:!!:~"::=I !~~~~~~~~~!! '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Jots of ln1eret.1ing misc! 1 ! Miacell1neou1
Inspection Frid•y 9am-saletime !oiiiiiii"""""""""""".., I plus. Sala1')' to $82.'i. Call Bay, Costa Mesn.
lle-lf'T\ J\.Iason, 540-6055. \\101''lEN nel'ded for1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'1"!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Coas1·:i\ Personnel Agcney, houseclcanin", Call Robbie's 1' 812 ~· H 1 st t c~" " Furniture 810 G•r•ge Sat•
TECHNICIAN
C!i'.~'.~'~;:;:.,1 h~~~;:;;i WINDY'S AUCTION WA:nt~ buy Auxll~n~l~'iiiiii'"'jjjjjj' ii'""iiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiii~1.1~~ill
leaves, silence pads. n1~tal C'Ol\18 BRO\VSE AROUND tanks lo flt GMC % ton 11
inlays, $65. Or beat offer. 2075~~ Nev.·p;>rt Blvd. pickup. 544-3417. Pets, Gtneril ISO
I
·'
To become ln\'Olved in a
broad spcctnnn of electrical
&; rnechaJlica\ p1·ojects as.-
80clated 1vl!h our researt'h
laboratory. 1 OI' 2 years CX·
pe'l'ienCEo Y"eQUired on electro-
111echanlcal or vacuuni ap-
paralus.
PLEASE CONTACT :
A. J. ARMIN!
979-6680
SIMULATION
PHYSICS INC.
179'.21 "B" Sky Park Blvd.
Irvine
-~-·~v:~7;R ~~S ES. Rag A !\fop 54S--OTJ7 !;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;
Appty 1n p....,n ·MODEL HOME
\Val. 'fhuri;, Fri 10 A~I I 1111~ 11~ J FURNITURE SA'-E
ALLEY WEST . . V ?o.fodel Horne furniture and
2106 \\I. Oceanfront, NB decora1or items from h\·o of
\VAITRE.5~xperlenced, all the famous developments in
shifts available. Apply ln Antiques 800 Orange Q)unty. Great sales.
3099 B l l"T>. Ab sales cash. person. S. rtsto, -.....I. p C I b. · G Vall j " \'artdeKamp's, A di11ision of re-o um ••n At reen ey, ust ou
Tiny Naylor's. A ntiqu•1 '''amer Ave. entry, across Private Sale from JI.tile Square park and \\'AITRESS "·anled, part C golf coun.-e,lf'ntn. Valley. time or split. Coach<'s eramic & gold pi~s from
C ,,_ So Bi l Columbian & Ct"!rtral Ameri-omer. ~ . . 1 sto, C 1 C.i\t So Coast p I a z a , can u tui'\.>s. F'ron1 1027 BC-
546-795.J 1260 AD.
l~-~-~'!"".~~""'""'""!!'!!~I WAITRE=..,.&~~o-ver-721~.-,-,,-.,,.,.,.,-.
TECHNIClAN for "·eight \\led-Sat Lunch & dinner gd
\VOODEN dining table &
chairs S25. BR set. separate
or together: standard size
reducing clinic. Jx-nt-fits, Please apply in
13U1 ·Largest privately nmttress \\'/box springs
owned Columb1an Collection $35: Lrg. dresser $30;
in US, Authenticated ccr· clothes dryer, almost new Call fi.16-161'\ person, froin 10-10 979-6235 tificated. ' $175: white sofa $50; out·
TELEPHONE SALES
Pennanent or part time
work, n1omings & eves.
guar. wastes & con1m. 1·or
detail'i call:
LA TIMES
$40-0301
Need a "Pad .. ? Place an ad!
ask for Nick
\VAITRESS expcr. Fantastic
chance for a professional
\\'8.ilress. Craveyd shift.
>..1n't tips. Refs req'd.
646-5304.
\VAITRESS \\-anted, on grave
yard shift. Apply aft 10:00
af night. O<lies Restaurant
1400 Pacific Coast ~flvy, NB
. door picnic table $25;. ping
Qwmbaya, Muisca, Tolima, Pong table w/paddles $15.
Shnu, Tairona, Calima, Tu. · Aasorted furniture. l\fale tab-
1~aco, Tarnala·Meque & by c&t, free to gd. home.
Tierra. Dentro cultures. Rare 645-0287 att. 6: 30Pl\1
ceranlics, Including whistles,
flutes & funeral wm. Gold
nose rings, car rings &
breast plates, To 60 graziis.
1 day showing Saturday, Aug.
25, in l'\e'!vpo11 Beach, call
3 TABLE lamps $25 & $35.
\Vood fi"amed wall n1irror,
3Sx30, $40. 2 8'..'Cnic paint-
ings. $25 & U>. 5 small
\Vood wall plaques, $3.50 ea.
6-i6-91St
il·l-tl75-5TI6 for .11.ppl. 9 DRAWER chest 11,•/mirTOr -~ ... iiOiii;;iii;ii.,..,.,. $100. 2 bar stools for $10.
PUBLIC SALElll Dinette set v.·/4 high back
* ANT IQUES * green chrs. $35. Herculon
.... ..--~-=--~==--==-~ '"", ~~'1#~ d fabric green arm chair $25.
t\LY6. 2.i nnrl Aug. 2U Servel gas refrig. ?tfake of·
Co11t11irK'r of Kl.""" England 05
\ . Ir. 675-41 . ~ 1//(
-;;._\._-A COHV'ENlft'T SHOPPING AN '~' ' n1eJ1C-d.f11l. Largesr St!lee-tion Oak chairs/tables. GIRLS 10 pc. antique \11hite
Antiques of the World & gold )Xlnn set, 2 matching
....::To SEWlttG GUIDE FOA THE . •
~ CAL OH THE GO. ..._ ____ !!! commodes & coffee table, * 22 Rooins of Antiques Spanish, 2 lamps, 8' sofa. 8'
For •n •d Jn Woman~, World
Call Mary Botft · 642·S678, eit. 330
* '1'.l"C!lll Zl Countries oval • area rug, breakfaat
1957 Nl.'\\'lX>rl A11e. · . m!' Costa J\.Iesa ~ ~. 4 .,chairs & sc.
Seamed-To-Slim Mom and Baby! I '.m~,~-;~'E::".E:'!'""la'!'b~t•", '"", •• ",~'""~fi!!od~.1 5 PC Game Set. Oak table,
Ships hatch antique door w/leaf, 4 hi·back green 7 coffee table senled in resin. naugh. Gold 1netal base f· '
. ....
'
I•·
' ; .
I. 55s:36. Xlnt for yacht or den. swvcl club ch al rs.
Retail $575, .sac. $275. AL.YOST NE\V! S 2 5 0 ·
. 835-9600 962-72ZL
LEA YING area. selling an-SOLID Salem Maple twin
I liques. de<:ora!or items & poster beds. chest, dresser, painti~. Irvine. ca 11 ntirror & night stand $500.
552 767'.l k" Maple chair & rocker $25 -·• .,.., "ys or e\·es. each. Dinette, 5 chairs $35. ! Appliances 802 646-7276 alt. 4.
P~ of· beaut. Contemp.
COLDSPOT Rctrigeratot'll, chairs; pale blue velvet.
Kenn10re V.'a!lhers &: dryets Teak end table. Gold velvet
fi-eight damaged recliner. Xlnt con d.
Disc.'OnUnued ~1odels 67':>-7~. ~ •.. Reduct ions to SlOO MOVING e\·cn1hlng must ~(~ Sears, ROl!buck & eo: sell Bassett fonnal din. ~ AdanlS at ll1agnolia, H:B. Magnavox stereo, Color TV, / ' "j 1 ~!':'.'~~96!!2~-,.rm,....,,..~• I BRM set & misc sml items. I ~ books 847-4620 • "" * ' F'REIGHT Damage Sa.le, 11 "". • . ,,. . ·'·,·.· DIVORCED -l\fust se ¥ \11a.'>hers, dryel's. ref1·igs, velvet sofa. pictures, ~ nc\\" \\'Drranty. Re b 1 t f.lerculon sofa & LS. hide-a· It' • · l \V n sher s Jflrycl'$ fro1n '-' t • ••••. .'\ . $Jg.!);), Bench City Ap-bed, lamps, rcu1g, e c.
°f..' •• _;,.:/ • ' i pliancc, ::.623 \V. \\'an'ICr, "67"'5-086"""9"-.------
: . ..-"' , S.A. ( 1 Bick E. of Harhor) VELVET high back chr. $90
3
.
\ • . .,..9 l'l'JOVING 1nust sell, nu llexagon commode lbl $ 5.
··-·" ~ nu101natic \vatrr sioftcni"r & 1 King size or ange quilted bed -:-.· •. .0-._'(. new distiller. Stand up unit spread $30. All xlnt corn:!,
· trnake~ 6 gal per day) 642-2977. i 84:?-9Ri7 l\IODER.a'l ::; pc Br nn set.
'Yi· COI.DSPOT Refrig/Frccicr, Red reel. chr. matching Fur
large . xln! cond., SS5. chrs, & much m 0 re .
I * 540-1192 * 5$-17SG.
i}i .·· . ~ 10 CUBIC fool rc.frigerator 10· SECTIONAL $2'"JO. Obie ~ · ? 1-:· S46. 1\totor 1 ~·eru-old l:E'f bed •\\'fH/B $60. T\vin bed
&, f"\n i3: .. 0 _ 9an1 & alt 6:30pm, 847-4871 $20. Reel chr, $60. 5,11)....t).118.
H1:lu ~ f'OR Sa le GE refrig, $75. 8' GOLD Colonial couch. good
rofn $100. Xlnt con d. cone!, $95.
9478
SIZES 8-20
1·0 see then1 is to lo\•C
\ thc111 -charrni.ng for gifts,
~1938 aft 6 pm. 5-IS-4113
C.E. 2 door R"'•"fn~ .• -,-ra~l~or-.1.,..;;;;;-;;;-;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;;.
,,,, 1Tf ,.,.; .... 1ff .... -r ...
Thi!; soft, sen s uous ,
SEAMED-TO-S Lli\1 SfYL8
bauiarst \7ery clean, runs good. Floral Davenport,
675-5258 Excellent Cond. UA, -~=--,-==~ .... \VASHER * DRYER 480 Broadway
Portablt> Dish\1·asher Costa Mes• $50 <'HCh * 646--5848
., Is a knockout in .sv.·eatcry.
dtlYlime or glittery l'vening
I knits. Easy-sew -no con1·
1 pUcntlons!
New! Delight nil eres \\'ilh
exotie, f'n1hroidered relt 01·
velve!een 1nom and hah~·
elephants. Larger une co11
n.li;o be used us pill0\11. Pat-
tern il-12: transfer 1Lx15"
and 'i"xS". Auction ICM
INDIAN JEWELRY
AUCTION
~fEDJTERRANEAN couch
165. Ne\v frultv.•ood corlee
table, end tables $150. 2
C"eran1ic lamps Sl5. each.
. :;:;&-8324. Printed Pnue r11 9 4 7 8:
CUSTOM furn. Class top cof·
fee table, sofa, light fix.
lures, occas. c h a i T s ,
torchiere lamps, \\•all co~
sole, nlirror, Carpl!t, paint-
ings, King bed frme,
kitchen faucet, lamp shade.
6#-:iml.
1\IOVINC! Stereo, 12 chord
organ. Furniture, lamps.
Cl.Ina, serves 12, Fostoria
stemware. Steel office desk.
Elec. typewriter. lfousehold
tools, machinist tools. :!'>1isc.
2.i07 Lehigh Pl. Cl\t.
GOOD clean, ot'lginally ex·
pensive furn. Bassett BR
set, BabyLlne crib &
dresser. Qn 11z Herculon
Hide-a-Bed, boys Campaign
furn. modern lamps.
963-3378
GARAGE SALE • ALL
\VEEK. Corner group, crib,
baby's chest, dinette set,
refrig., bar & misc. :Hun-
tington Continental, 1.9'T12
Cla r emont Ln., HB.
963-4896.
GARAGE Sale -:r.t ed .
furniture, v.'Uher, refrig,
free-Ler, household items.
Very reasonable. 2 3 2 2
Palisades Rd .• Santa Ana.
979-1496.
GARAGE sale Sat & Sun. Air
con<la., bikes, rugs, drps,
antiques, lawnmov..·er,
~<>e retrig., misc. items.
3951 Banyan St. In College
Park, Irvine.
SOFA $85. matching drapes
$25, al;lllqued desk 30" x 50"
$45, .real antique dre1se.t'
w/mirror, llllll]'.lll, odd'!I 'n
ends. 97~2315 after 5 PM.
C 01'1 PL diving gear,
bicycles, aki equip, camera,
elee dryer, mi1te., Sat/Sun
10-5, 522 San Bernardino,
NB 642-<l980
DECORATOR sale, wicker,
calico, antiques, p tan t s ,
mlsc. Sat 9 am to 5 pm. 1961
port Ranugate ( Ha r b o r
Viev.· Jtomes) N.B.
WURLITZER piano, sofa,
Dbl door refrtg. Also Patio
Sale lQ.6 Sat. &: Sun.; 18742
Via Palatino, Irvine (Nr.
CUlver, Campus) '* SALE -Sal 10 to 3. 3109
Oay St., Npt. Bch. Games.
toys, books, record.s, TV,
stereo spkrs, goodies &
junk! Se to $100.
LEAVING state, must sell
all misc. items. Aug 25 &
26th, 104:54 La.Despensa,
F.V. 968-7789.
l\10VING out of state. must
sell es:cess furn., clothing, &
misc Sat &: Sun.. 9-5, 1132
Canon, Ci\f.
G1\S Range w/griddle.
refrlg, rug, la~s.
household Items & misc, J.13
Colleen Pl , Cl\I. 642-3100
OLD Round Oak table & 4
chrs, $125. Brass bed. S135.
Allsc old furn. 1740 Newport
Blvd.
GARAGE SALE, 2 3 8 4 2
Boeing, El Toro. Sat, SUn
Aug 25-~. 9-6. Stereo. bed,
furnitut'l':, rulsc.
Cold.spot refrlg. $15, Crib, Behind Tony's Bldg. Matrs. \Vi\NT TO BUY:
rompl $15. 1t11SC ITEJ\.1 S! Costa Mesa * 646-8686 Engine for AU$lin. ATTENTJON PETS!
64&-0827 * 378 La Perle e ~17 e Jiome away from bonlC,
1....ane, Cl\f. 8' RETAIL frozen food case Built just for you!
Household boodt 814 $200. 30 x 30 x 15 old Music•l Instruments m 8oard1n&fgroomlng ~2848 ---------1 tashloncd chopping bloclt Cet1 152
HOUSEHOLD furnishings. $65. Postage stamp machine BOGEN P.A. amp. 60 v.'81t, ---------
bd.nn set, TV, chest, love $<IO. Conve.'< SeeAll mirron, use V.'/hom.s or speakers. BurulESE KJTIENS
18" $16, · 26" ~-36" $33. Any ohms $100. or v..ilt trade Show stock $50-up. seat, 4 chairs, dlsbes & bric-,,..v. a-brae. 419 1.1 a r i g 0 Id , Old fuhloned ceiling fan for comparable electrical 71-1-537-474-1
Corona del ~far $15. Rotisserie $25. Almar guitar or bass. 847-4'772. ~="-'""--='-----! retail dl.splar. ateel shelving, CLARINET Bundlg use<! s ~s 154
J_o_w_1_1_ry,_ _____ 1_1_51 ~:~ P~:p ht,::~ 1~~:: ~~~ i~~. $100 call even-e PUPPY WORLD e
e GENEROUS e both for $400. 10 lb hanging LUD\VIG deluxe c I ass i c E N_G 'L I S ·H> Bull n1ix-,
•REWARD•
scale $15. NCR Ca s h drums, sU\·er sparkle, cym-Ch1~uuhuas, A in." r I can
register, 4 iten1, $550 NCR bals & cases. $300. !J6l...JOOI Eskin\O (Spltzl, Pit Bulls
factory rebuilt in 1971, $l)O. · Greyhound, Bull Terrier,
Mea t hanging scale to 500 T-cu11 Poodle!t, I 1a I Ian
lb. $2'5. GE store clock $15. Office Furniture/ Ct'l':yhound, Bull Tonier,
For return or any 1n-10 to 2PM, Sat. Aug. 25, 112 Equip. 824 Cockapoo. 100 '?of t XE D
formation leading to return Alcl<~adden Pl. NB. (by U1e PUPS!! St\Jd Service Most
of a gold four leaf clover pier). EXEC swvl chrs $15/25 Sec Bre<"(!s. OPEN EVES:
Pln, ap•rox. 2 •-c•-s In chrs SS/24 Desks $20/00 531 <~
" 1.1• '~ Piere" 867 W 19 CM "'n "·'"" ~·· diameter, with j ewe I e d GET acquainted Sale 5th St. "' ~1 -~IR-l~S~H~' -S~E=l=l~E~R~~• 1
horseshoe In. center; also, Clothing & Oeaners, wits, OF.folCE equipment _ Dr.sk.<1, • . ..
gold locket (was on chainl, shirts. 8'1.·lm In.inks, dble chain, machines, tables. * AKC MALE, •II
approx. the size ot a nickel, knit slacks. 30-50 percent Need urgent otter. 54~1174. •ts, xlnt disposition. inscribed in script, r~LA. off. Need to make roon1 for
These are deeply treasured fall line ol Levi's, Lancer, Pl•not/Org•ns 126 Super fOOd with chlkl-
famlly mementos & the l<m Co-Ordinates. Lee pants &. ren. $S0 "3-1514.
is irreplaceable. PLEASE, top name brands. Also try Free °""'" Lessons Pt..\ Y.F1JL. Golden Cocker PLEASE help U ~'Ou have our dry cleaning penny sale. Vl5all any information -&l2-3589 For each garment cleaned, S1xu11el. AKC, 9 nlOL'll. n1ale, ~--& k nd A \'efY lllfectkmatl.' SIOO lu c.""''"· v."ee e s. a sintilar glln'Uent uill be I Long Al You Llke l .........i horne 011 ..... RJ1.JlW8 .
M• II cleaned for le. 5th St. N pl •c-u 1sce •neous 118 Clothin" & Cleaners, 250 on-ayers &: pll\)'en "'el· SILKY Tl"OiM" AKC 8 " come to attend Tuesday . . · reg.
CUSI'Ol\I Spanish Wrought Neu•port Blv., at Bal in CAl night at 7:30 P1't. \Ve \\'Ml •.no¥ male. Oiamp .. dam &
iron, 2 room dlviden;, I 7'11 Aug. 2'1-28. evel)'one to· le-am to play lib~. Shot~. & _Ile. Righi for
by 3', 1, 7· llx4.'. 1 gate, ~ the organ! Ali materlals tramlng, 35l--4M2.
4'6x3'. Decorators staircase With This Ad furnished. OBEDIENCE Cl!WI to 1tar1
to . match .. 2 High Back Treadle St."\\•ing niachine $50. Tom Dlete1ieh • In charge. Wed .. Auw: 29, 7:30 p.m. in
Swivel chain & .sml round Old refrig $15 Oironie kit-Phont 642·2151 the hvuie/NB tt.rca . co~ee table. Sacrif at % ci1en Sl.-t." ~: St. George COAST MUSIC • ~1928 '*
ong cost. Approx. 60 ynb drum llCt', $75~ Book Shelves Ne>.vport Biv<L at tlarbor "rEJa1ARANER J)uppic1 lar ~t ~ .. ~~ .... crpls . .l ~· SS. Bookcase Headboard $10. ~sta ?ttcsn sulc, AKC. $200 ~mi~ $4iOO Sacrit Ends Aug. 28. USED US---. S.1f>-.1\j8
· · ABLES, 2560 Newport Blvd., PIANOS -ORGANS AKC Stand1u·d PoOOle Pups.
STEREO. Q ~ a.d a f ~ ~ t • 4 CM. Tues. ,Um.i Sat. I Nc\v & U!k.'(!. Great selection. Sl:Kl\\' or pct, rron1 S75. Stud ~':".!1~ge r ~b ~fict\:ift ~ Competetive price!!, Open sen•icc. 83)-5.tTS, 89J.-.t1.)8
A l!.1/n.1/MPX Receiver, A.i.'ITIQ. aolid bronze lrg ~~~-& ~nys. The be11t POI_NTERS - . lEngllsh l, .
Garrard professional slr.e chandelier over 100 hand s n,re av.a~ at. AKC, Cham p. i;1red 3 1"llOll ~table, 8 track. tape deck. cut crysta.i pri~.,, l6 Htci. Wall1chs Music City old, 2 niales $.jl), 673-8613
Still brand new. in box a_nd Paid $2(XX). Sell $500. Very Sooth Coast Plau.. 5-11)..28.l) AKC Irish Setter Puppies. 6 guarani~. Will sacrifice OOaur. Tiffany hanging tamp v.·k.s, lrt sboli!-, reasonKble
all for ·$127.~. or for small $100 .. Couc::h custom. Cost 8n-1PHONIC slt>rt'O BSR 5.17-L%.1. • ~~~ paymcn~la l l $650, sell $DJ, grn ,(! v.·ht: 2 turn tab!~ A.111/Fi'lf tape dk r."1"A,-L"'T°""-'°"SE".""'A"K°'C~. -s."s=-,-.luo~, I' ~ · C1TI IOOSC: cwh. club chairs 4 lge floors spkrs. 13rarlfl nu sho\\· lines, ~f. $125. f". $150.
Get ;urr S\vllu SuU far the $40 ro. s.>2-7586. cost $lXI "ill sac $170. irn-5566.
long Labor Day \\'eckencl 4J,1."<9' BRUNSWI.CK pool 1bl ~~~1;29 'P"om~~.~,-a-n,-lan-~P~u-ppt~ •• -.-I
and b;>t d3;)'S ahead!!? Lcl\1:· y,1/cqulp s:;.JO. ~Iaytag ele<:. a a;>NSOLE stereo, Al\1-F?o.f S79-2791
est pnees 1~ IO\\'Il • • • \\'llEhr/gas dryr $300. 'Esec radJO & !urn table. 1970 • . • Ballif S1t.1 steel desk 40x70, 2 1natch model, i\lodem medltl. Xlnt KEESHOND 11 mo old, all 1 Discount Swimwear chairs $2'95, Credenza S70. cond. SlOO. C&.11 6·1E>-J.12-t shots & papers. AKC $250 or 1 1004 Nev.1port Blvd. , Ual Pro11. br set, $350. Tile FISCl-IER Bab G l)t!st off. 536--0143. · ~ta :.1,... .. * ""' "'' •11 lop Coff~ table, S65 Also Jn Y rand, dark POODL" --•-•••1e 1 • .... v;:,. ""-V'f<1VNV wa ut -del.'Orative. Xlnt L, 1111U1r, ro ;
\Ve Close Sept. 8th! Misc. 4-18 DeSola Te1T, cond. S/J(), or submit offer n\Oll. old: hou.sebl'OUn; all I SUPER SALE_ll __ Cd~t 673--016.1. 552-9455 . shotA, papers. SlOO. 642--4821. :
Back to School Clotties! Fall H~R uptight Vacuu!h PL\YER Piano, Kin1ball Golden Retrle\'era j
& Winter Spoi1 Clothing! ~. !·Ivy_ nietal 2 drav..·ei· fil· consolette 6 lessons old. \VIII AKC. 6 wk11. 551-5442
Everything out for the first ini;c ~abui.:-t S20. Decorator Sacrifice. 644--0788 eves. Horio•
tinre! Sl:a.rting 1\forxlay Aug. Span1~h v.·ood wi;tll shelf \\'kends. 156 ' 27th 10 Al\'l lO 2 Pl\1. u•/pa1r of _matctnng \l'llll
S. Th 'f Sh sco1x.x"ll'. Sla. Plate gln.ss PIANO, Kimball. artist con-SPECfACULAR Appy. Very •!r~ r t t op mirror 89x24" $15. 846-2230. sole. Freoch, frliitv.'Ood $7!ll reas. Must 11ell. Phone art 6
1 l3 ••lam St .. Hn'tgn Bch _._ •64 FORD \Vagon, needs 49-1--4769 ' PM or M.Ytime Sat & Sun
repairs. 3 Pc green sec. FOR sale upright piano, an·1cc96S-5=::74,_6_,· ,---~--·I
couch, good cond. 4 Bikes, tique finish, good cond. $300. 110RSE, Cre.y, part Quarte1·,
red wagon, Bissel Shampoo-897--8386 aft 5 pm 8yn. Bikinis, cover-ups, long & Call f 5 • ·~~ short halters, special occas-Master, desk &. chair, HAMAIOND organ model R-at , ..r...r-..u.JU
i9n ~· Sa.rs on!.y lQ..S. games, etc. Sat., sun. 165'7 124. Excellent condition!
700 w. l6tb Sr., tosbi. Mesa Labrador Dr. C.M. 54~2539 $2.IKIO. Call: 642-l821. J _,.. JU• J(I
(Comer of 16th & Superior) PATIO Sn.le, Fri, Sal, Aug UPRIGHT Iron Grand fro1nl~~·~; .. ; .. ~·;1;rllllt~;Jl~t(.~~ ~~~~!!!!~'""!!!!~"! ~~Pi~t~~t:1~ ~a:: ~~ xlnt cond, $400. CaU :
\VASHER-DryerCom-books .......,.rds s•-,
bination, elec. Uke new. Mudt. rn:,;;_" 270;; s. ""'Co~ Pi•~pright. Boats; 0.Mf'•I 900
Has small elee problem. H\I,"' -~ ""·--t • .. S42-CM97 --.s.. """ "" .::>1.1.1~ ' ..... llO 9 Pr BOSTON W"lA' ~ Ptfake ofier. Xtra king si,,.,.le guna. ~· ~· S rtl Good ' ~~ ·~ -~. po ng I SQUALi
Manufacturer's Salel
bed w/I.ra.tte, eood cond, "DRAPERY FABRIC" I It" I f.._.l BABY itl!nlS, furn, dryer, 1,,;:$35.::::,;·,.;49!-~5"1"'67".,.' :;. --,-~.,-1 GR.EEK Surfboard good ( a 1~. Us dingey. Ex-
clothes. OOoks, Sat/Swl, 50 GAL. . <fl 2-10 ·~ tMk~. S~: 'l\'iitt~~ condition, 6'5;>". Yellow & Ct'llent condition. Only $350. '
20781 \Voodlea La., H.B. tand •~ ,,_. all l ~· c-... .. ~""'. "'" '"~ ask tor 714-!WZ-3737. I S o; uau, equ pment. f2,00. $7.50 value IA prtce ........ ....,., ~
962--0998'. sm. O'Keefe & Merritt trl· 1510 E. Edinger, SA. 541-:D!O Dole. BOSTON Whnler, 13', ex. I
CERAMICS: Kiln molds, col-~~n, Coppertone. $75.COPPERTONE Ref & gas POOL table. genuine cond1.,,· ,S~~.· 19-0\lhhp ~~·
ored tile for mosa..IC!I, Sim· o;:r~""OO();.> Brunswjck •u 9 l t· '"' rs. -· . range, like new, 2 KJtchen . • ,n x • a a e, Private partv 673-3438 ' mon.s innen:prlng· & matt. QUEEN sz bed, Simnwn11 sets, one 15 maple. 2 leather pockets, acceuoriesl'i-7:=."· ""'"'-"";<o:~~-
Sat. 2802 Francia Ln. CM ~auty Re~. + sheets & Hollyy,.'OOd twin bed 8 . $~.J0 .• &12 .. .ar~ *Cu1tom M•d• dinghy ,
JBl\t typewriter, co p y t)ad. Dw1bar butfct, Dln Rm 5-13--0-00 1 DlVING Equip. Seuba Pro 495. G.f6.-0.i23 [
nlochlne11 desk, Ule, m l&c. table, 6-chrs, Sectional. ,65 VET p 321 AJmost ne\v. Complete Rt Boe••"l.M.rlnt
Sat....Sun, lo-4. 131 Com-58&-3()38 1 arts, efli, Call 673-7896 ·~·
Jal ~.1 . . 'lrnns, & 1.fech. Alag whls, =tii:L'"s,"';tc' ~"ti;;f;;;:' m;e;;;.11-!::Eq!u~l:eP;_· ----.!""~'ll nlerc • "-'~ ~\VER Mowtr.s. Remodelcl· a1um rod. Like new , FUr.L set Golt Clu~. like nu ~ I Misaes' Sizes 8. JO. 12. 14. 16,
( ~· 2(). Siz~ 12 (bust 34) takes
I 1 ;!_ l;s )'1lI'ds &Chi.nch fabric.
8J!VE:tt\;•ftV~ CENTS
for eacb Pt.t.tern -add 25
otnts for each pattern tor I '1 .Alt Mall and Special Uandl· l ma· othtrwiae third-class i ,delivery wDl take thrtt' weeks or more-. Send to MarlM Martin, the DAil.,Y
Pn.O.!z 442, Pattern Dept.,
232 weat 18th st., Ne'\•
York. N. Y. tinu. Prlnl
!(.\Mil, ADOIU".l!S with
UP, SIZE and m'U::
si:rt:NTl'·l·~\'t•: ('ENTS
fol' each pallern -add 2;,
cents for each pallern for
Air 1\J11il nnd Special H3ndl·
ing: other\\'ili:l: third-class
dell\'i!'ry will take flln!'I!
\\'eeks or more. Send to
Alice Brooks, the DATL Y
Guarunlcpd Au!.hen1ic
Friday, .\ug. 2-l th 7 P)l
ln.~Pl'C'tinn Friday 12-7
2722 N. Ma;n SI .. 's.A.:
CALL 543.4941
PILOT. 105, Need}ecra.ft Building Materials 806 Depl., Bos: 163, Old Chelsea -
Smtlon. N.,. Yorl<, N.Y. e Surplu1 Bullcllna 1~11. Print Nanlll., Afkltoen.., MATERIAL • 1000'1 Of 1'iEw
Zip. P•Uern Number. ITEA1S! Doors. l11mber, ply.
N E E D L ECRAFT '71! 'vood. aJum sheetine;, nxild·
10" COUCH, xlnt cond. 1.1ust
sell $100 or best offer.
54()..44Sl bet 7:30 a.1n.-
5 pm •>kdays.
TF.AK dlning table 4 4
chairs 66""31" ext. to 106",
$3». ~ coUee tabh!, $T5. Call alt 4 pm, 54$-5815
FOR sale llv. rm turn. Sota,
dn. tbls &: lamps, Df'eW'r
~ !!:lie bed, aft 6
SACRIFICE Sat on I y. 1ng bathroom, new go1 642-43.15/'6-J175 + nu baa. gd buy $.10. 18.HP EVINRUOE ,
Garage sale, bst oUr takes w l n d 9 w. Bake~Brollcr,· * S6--7977 * Ell.l':ct. ttal'1e.r $85 lakes house full of furn! 6910 W. l'l'\iSc. Refer to Ofme..A-Jine SACR.JF! di1he1, .sm ai>;-327 W Wtl ,
Ocean front WB. ad. 646-7394 pliancea, linens, tools, patlo TV, R•dio., HiFI, ' oon, Sp. S, CM 1 tum v<ry gd c:ond -.. Sttroo 136 10, hp Mercury 0u1~-~ ,
PATIO Sale Closeout. 100'1 FOR. sale <Un tbl A ' ~ 644-in.99 ·• ... · 1 1970, like new. ~ •
of ttems. Cheap! Club tains chrs SGO 3 end tbls &: * S S I I CaU ~ ,,,_
Be1dlL 2924 Rtdwood, CM 1 oofi tbl '!50.' 2 lamps $1'. MTVOVINp!ayG, ~-!lJc turnJ ~· ummor poc a * ··~' <Mesa Verdol 842-3119 • , r -· Robullt-Plcturo Tube U VOLT Ball l Blli• * * SAT I: SUn. F\D'niture, MOVING ll SI'ORAGE Compl dark rm, g u n $17.50-21'' or 25'' Color Purnp11. Close out, $14.95 tt,..
r,
I ~
SE& MQRE Qui ck l'Mhlonl and chOOle one
1 ·~~ free ftom our
;:i;;;i'sam...-ealaloa. AU
I msl-f#I ~ BOOK
... today, 'ftat lOn.\OfTOW.
JlliisTANI' FASH I 0 N
BOOK -11•mdnda o I
fuhlon fa<U._,SI=·---
• ,
Cnxhet, knit, etc. Free ing, \viru:lo\\is, etc. •:~~~•""~ llook. BUI LDERS SURPLUS
Buie, fancy knot!, pal· 24lll' ~· Ma;n St.J S:A.
ft!nll. $1.00. Mon thfu Snt 0-$ GREEN A White lll:ib. a: low
seat, :P.1edit. coffee ta.ble, 2
·aCtaiOn end ta.bits. AU rood
cond. 837--7908.
lru:tant Crochet Book -TI4: 5116-10.U
L<am by pldllTfll Pal·
terns. Sl.00.
Oompfcte lndant Gift Dnok
-more thlln l.00 o!Jm -
$LOO.
G'lfr1plcte .&titian Ooolt -
11.00.
18 Jill)' Rug &cWM • S()c.
8t>ot of .U Prl.e Af&lia•1.
!iOc.
Quilt Book 1 ... 16 pattema.
5(1(',
1'fll§l'!Vm Quot Book :s ..
!i!lc.
Qttllf• f1tr Tod-.r'• Uvf•c •
l5 btautltul patterns. SOc.
Furnft ure 110
Twin B.cls., xln 't cond
8<-st Offer 6i5-746S.
C0~11'fODF. rlk walnut. 30" x
XI" 26" h!J.h·aood storage.
end table s.:A>. 644-7«7
FOR Sale fum, 2 Br, 40'
rfiobDc home located l>fam-
niotb Lakes, Eastern Butlt,
rorctd heat. 962-5369.
8 DRWR. Drexel dresset,
w/lrg nlirror + dbl bed
bkca.Mt hdbrd. Only $W.
64HQOO.
• muCll & LOVESEAT .•
GLENN dining tbl \\itlnut 2 brand new, both for S150.
fUl1 &: pad! 4 din $150. U11111lly home:. 968-7910
ROUND •18" marble cotree
table; black orltnt&l·~
boM. l\al.-....
E'-'t!I & 'fkndl ~7003. hfUST sell double bed, 3 nK>
Fut results a.re Just a pbOne okl S40. cau att 9: 30 eves.
enll 11".\'. '42-56'71. &J0...3298 ----------
ckilhea A misc. 969 Grove Lowt!irt rates In area loading, 96)..'7929 * 2 YF...AR \YARRANTY ' * ~~ *
Pl., Corio Mea &l6-7Ql7 968-47$5 WALL turna .. , '°"'' Sean, lnslallatlbn Avallablo lloah, Poww 906
• FAMJT"" ;c:::: Sale Fri· .-.to .. ......,, ....... y pow-ha~ aclutDm1._. __ a~:...~ 251 ,080 RTU in-lttct'• Televlslon Servk:f' , , "'"' ""'"&"' .... ~..., '0 '"'1WI .... \;"' "'""" ""'"' duct $30 fonn~y Meaa. }iorth Center 1971 STARFmE 19'. Mere Sat.sun ll9T Baker St, Costa saw. $50. ' 675-410.1 ' ' · l Blck s. oi Bake.r ~ UIS 110 •. ~P V. Excellent
M•&a· * 51+3417 • BIG Sal lndi>or P!anu open~ (6 dty1) c:ond, 612-.1192 ~·.. .
FROM 'Jbun. on-Bec11, TV, mGH Chr, $6. Car si&t $8.. Chri.stma~' Jard,. Mlle,. m SONY ,portable tape recorder l~ nSJJ/$ltl boo.I, S5hp
chroi,l\11.c. M.ucli n>0re! 138 Baby Chest $6. \Vardrobe Apt B Roynl Palm Or., Cn1, w/cat adapter, Uke new molor, tridlt'f. $450 or otter.
£, 1 , C.111. 54M4SS. closet $15. 675-4004. F'rl-Sun • $ftl. Portable reoohl player _!ft 4, ~ I ~~TER ,bed, mini bike, TV, SUDJNG glasa pA.t~ cSoot; ~ MAPLE' cof tb:l chrs chests w/l\\'O spcakm'a. $ 4 0. 25' TROJAl", only 170 hi'!. cl~thes, misc. Sat. only 9-5. frame, xlnt oond. JO by 6 8 brtlldcd rua lntp& ft stnot '644-6323t 833-2122, uk for Btjt~ antr over S400>. E:oc
1624 HtrihJand Or., NB. $90:. !>'t b8t. o1ft. 646-5250. dah ptct mm maeymore Jenl corp. 67fl8.49_ . . ,
GA'iiAGE Sale, S.l Aug !$ TENNIS IOOm])ershlp 1100. 58&-SL11. ' . I ' CURTIS M•thes, ~Mlcal • 21' ~R~ ,cnll, 1968, 10'
9:00-3:00. 607 Mar I gold, CdM tennl1 club TYPEWRITER p 0 r to b I e walnut cab. Color 'JV, be-anl. S\(ptt clean, ma
OiM, Bar stoo!• & l\fi11e. * ~ * Smith Qmna ldl or trade stenio am/fin. radio & extre.s .. M~ oiler. 6 ~tOVJNG Guap S81e, Fri & OAK <Mn, l pr. $25. Gu for blkr4 110!a, di e,1 t . record pla,ycr. 675--7465. !'A' QlESEL 'l'rowlcr Ala.tkah
Sat. rmo Santa Lucia St., Dryer, aood cond. U), Call !>4W1!7. t 2 LANCER SC6 Speakers. tn>l-1 '6!.«»-
F'V. 847~363 .t96-'6lXl!I a~er 5'PM. i\1.EM8ERSHIP toiili'vlne $250 each naw. $1i'JQ each 1 ~-
SUPER Big Gar.go Salo IT' cltctric cttu Kiln $50. Coast Country Clu~ sale, now. Xlnt. !7i-164!. U' BOAT. 28 h.p. n>01or,
Satuntay-2349 Notftl De.me Phone $1a.l. 529>-9991. Wk a a.ft For' that Item u~ $50, U1 trailer, bfo.1t o1fer over SXXl.
C..tn Mesa In C.11"'" Prk 53&-2041 6, m-151! the Penny Ph.-htt. b>:' Aug. 2ltl• W... 67H312
I
•
Saturday, AUQll$t 2S, 1973 DAILY PILOT 4 I
•• l~I )ij] ( liiJI ~ ._,,,, ..... _ .. ,.~!§] I~' ._ ........ _ ... ·~!§] i:.-1 .. _ ...... _ .. ~1§1...;1 • • " I '
!~ Boato, Power 'J06 Boati. 51111 909 Cyclo1, lllkes,
:,. ANNUAL · MID SUMMER WOW Rare Scooters_ 925
: c:let.rance sale. F~c 22' Albatrou 4 baa• ol alls, ---------
' 14..tngs on our tnventm-v ot rad..-ria&ed. Good cond. FREE SAf,E'I'Y QiECK I ··' Wl6I< Ol:!o ,_ Wint TUNE UP , new & uaed boa ta. No reaa. ;i~7'i-'N~, ,,~"-"~~,.· ---=~I
ottr. rttused. Meu. BoCll CAL 2S, Reduced lo $5!m S:~~n:·~B.
Ceflter, 1593 Newport Blvd., Super Clean, Sparklln& rood. LABOR ONLY
CM. 646-6269 or 646--0539. ~· 1177. 0 \vn er · PICKUP ANO DELIVERY
~· WOOD Lap 1 tr a k e Nonn's Moto1·cycle Haven
''Ulrlchlen." Xlnt cond. 16' PRINDLE Catanuu-an, 1629 S. Standard, S.A.
Motor Hon:ws
Salo/Roni 940
NEW '73 VIVA
MOTOR HOME
Fully Stil Con1alned, raruce,
oven, dual sinks, du a I
wheels, I Ton Dodge Chas~is,
& much much more. (V-dOS)
T~taUon
Motor Hom•• · Tr1ilers, Travel 945 Recre1tioN11
Solo/Roni 940 . Vohlclo1 956
_.,....,_ ·------FOR lhe small car &: hie ---------NEW 173 ~·eight towing, 12' Papoose. • 1973 CHEVY Bluer, 4.whl.
11 & 15' Field & Stream. dr. 350 w/auto trans, air, EXPLORER 24' Mesa Carhper Sales, 2036 Tacoma y,1\1~. 1v /Gate .11
Harbor. Coi>ta Mesa tires. Ah-1/FM stereo, roll
GAUCHO-Trollors, Utlllty 947 bao', rear '"" mowH. 5000
I Ton Oiaasls, &I ~. Dual ml. $5950. 6l'.Hl360
Batterle1, Dlvidl't' dntpe, BOAT Trailer, 4-1'on Capacl· NEW '7! LandcnJlaer, 900
Arm Chair teat, atove, oven, ly, Tantlem Wheels. brakes. miles. Soft top, roll bat,
V1n1 963 V1n1 963 --------NEW '73
N'ewporter
Surfer Van
CHEV '87 Sport van 108,
cyl O.UIO, p/b radto, 1tove.
sink, tng, looks 5'QOd. runs
greal, $1450/nr. o I f e r -12l().
Autos W•nt9CI "'
' "' New builneu venture forces All extras, like new. Call e 835-5102 e
aale. Jl<st ofr ov" $5000. 492-9570 ~ go for a sail.* BICYC LE -SALE * ~hrs on ena. 640-0168. $l700. NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN
$6595 shower, tollM & etc. SOOO or oiler. 962-o789 \Varren hubs1.... all xtraa.
1#2'U531. Auto Servlce P1rt1 949 Sacrifice -Milke offer.
on a Chevy Cbassis, F.quip-
ped w'tth V-8, Auto T1·tuu,
Special paint, Football win·
dows, sfdeptpe-8, M&.g11 1vlth
oval ti.re!J, (~01533521.
$4495
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
IMMEDIATELY
FOR ALL
FOREIGN
CARS
"
16 FT. Fbel• Rul\Oboul, 120 Boat1, Sllp1{1-k1 910 BICYCLES $59.95. Beach
outdrlvc.. Trailer, elec. mtr Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa
lift, new top It canvu 24' BOAT slip, H unt. Blvd., 675-7282. Authorized
cover. Xlnt cond. C&.11 Harbour $45 mo. NlSHIKl dealer.
644 5S92 Call 846-2678 UNBELlEV ABLE! '69 Hon-
"71 SIDEWINDER, 85 HP BcNh, SpelHI & 'Ski 911 da Mini SO. NeW Yamaha
Out-Boa.rd Q\eyller, aold &:: ALTA Craft l.8' Ca. b 1 n 300CC eng. Loob fac. Frwy bronze. Xlnt cond. $2400. ~gal •M mph Com-• 646-6032 2212 c.oll N 1 Cruiser. 50 hp Johnson elec-' ........, ' "' · ege 0• • lrl Ski Fl h "-·I Full w/nmtcblne side car. $350. C.M. c. · s . ....,. .. se. 642-5919 Steve
,,_ 11 1 II ble coven, etc. $600 lnc. 1 mo. ··="""'~="~=~---"""" ~ us· se your ra era free dock. Bay shore Pari<, 68 HONDA 450 Chopper, tiberi!an boat. For fast Slip SO. s h a r p ! Nee<IA sonie ~sultl call fifeu. Boat , carburetor Y,'Ol'k. Best orter
Center, 64G-Q69 or 64&-0039. 16 GLASPAR 75 hp \\"Ith or trade on smaller bike
'72 SKJPJACK 20'. Oj>en-225 trailer $800646.oo78 ;;c;<&-;-' -;21-;:65"", ,,64..-2-4_,,..,GO;~·--=·
OMC. Under 100 hn. Trailer . . . '69 HONDA Chop(X.'r, fiOOO
& l!Xtru. Xlnt co n d . CLASSIC H1ggms, 1nbrd, 120 miles. aean. l\1ust See!
n4/4M-790l. hp, Chrysler, R ec en I Best offer . 642-2295 aft 6.
tT • CRUIZON Inbd. Unfin, o/haul. $850. 714-644-2929 Ask for Bob Paris. 761 Scott
OY.'n trlr, mahog deck, l ~~~~~~~~~~I Place, Apt. 3, C~f
plywd hull, a:lae. $400 or of· I 1 A Great Blkel
fer. S48-GlS. I Jlnhl 1970 Kawasaki 350
4 cy2f1p~~~:~etel Trl!WpClttation -~ Xlnt cond. $350 call Jin1
$92.19 por mo.
90 mo w /20rk dn, Cai;:h price
$7048.70, ~ferred pr I cc
$9700.84. A.P.R. 10,96. 0.A.C.
EXPLORER ,,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
1sw1 ~AlH lllVIJ M7 ~1
11U"4f1N(~ION iJ.EA(H
e SALtS e
• SERVICE • e RENTALS e
EXPLORER ,,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
)obUI bl•\lH l\LV() t>-ll ~l:iO)
HUN11N(,f0"< bfACH
M~~~r~~~es
IMMEDIATE DELNERY
$9295 . . 646-2189 all. 6.
V\V tow bar for sale cheap, DUNE BlJW Lale model 140 $13.51 per mo.
used once, call Sunday hp, l.'Om~I bug & trlr, sand "60 mo w/2Q~:. dn, Cash $121 .32 per mo. 1'.'lornlng, 536-2076 & dh1, lltts + spare. Eng prloo $480S.70, Dt'fen-ed
10'/.> dn, 120 1110. Cash pric£'4 WIRE ·wneels 2 new ready, lvlng overseas. pril'e $5972.34. APR 10,93 $9938.70. Deferred pric e radials 14" 2 new $Ct!.IS 1700 or bt.1 ofter 646-0176. 0.A.C.
$15552.27. A.P.R. 10.62. for sport8'.:ai-. $140. 673-952!>. fl.fANX Dune Buw. lfUper
0.A.C. · perf cond. Street legal \Vlth
many extras. 673-8742. EXPLORER O,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
lij.801 8[A(H HLVlJ ....:] l>&JJ
HUN'IN•·ION l\!Af_H
1973 Anliquo1/Cl•11lca 953 SUNDIAL 18 ft . motor .
home loaded with all great '47 BUICK Super. Good
camping e qui pm e n t In· body, good tires, good motor.
Cluding dual rear wheels, Needs rear end work. ~fake
air (.''Ond, roof rack and lad-offer. TI4/870-4564.
der. !fig UB. automatic LEAVING State, mlLSt sell
1ransm1ssion, power steer-'56 0 Pi kup '64 Buick ing and Buer brakes. THIS ievy e •
Trucks 962
•n GMC
1 Ton Sim·l'a'. auto . air t'Ond.
P. Steering & brakes . sharp
. (l5617Kl. Only
$3699.00
HOWARD Chevrolet
Newport Beach
~1acArthur Bh...i k Jamboree
13i.G555
EXPLORER O,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'>;·•)I ttl.L" ,.,[! 84~ 8&1J
t<v'd "J,C T,lN BlA(H
VANS
FORD-DODGE
Sevt-ral to choose b'OTI\ . --
'Qh·arh Jh11p1111!i
+~ . " ( ..... , .... ,,)
.. ,. ,, '" ·~·. h40t,. ' . . --·· .
ALF A ROMEO • SMB
in'NEWPORT
WE ARE IN
DESPERATE NEED
OF GOOD, CLEAN
FOREIGN CARS
TOP DOLLAR-PAID
FOR OR NOTI
Call or come in to see us.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
310C' W. Coast Hwy., N.Jl .
642-9405
TOP CASH
Hauled, pttlnted, surveyed • 536-7867 •
' ~· 646-9000 C $ '71 HONDA 350 Scran1ble1· Lo FtSH or Ski 15• o~tron amperl, •a./ Rent 920 mileage, new t'Ond. Must
'l'rt-hull, 601tp :1ohnlon full '69 FORD F·250 Ranger sell. Leave overseas, $550
top, tach/sp, Pll vrs, 1alv Camper Special, pwr bt'ks, .; best ofr. 6'16-01:6
01-ange Cq.'s 1
FJxcluslve Dealer
Bilt Barry Pontiac
G~1C REC. CENTER
2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana
~1000
low low mileage beauty eng. ~ or best oiler.
rt'lailed new for $11,000.t,784=;2.c-8c:155o===..-o,.,---,--Thls \\'eekend you can drive 1950 MERCURY. New trans,
it home fo ronly $6,995. Lie good body. Needs engine.
264HOK. At Bob Longpre $1'15 or best ollef. 968-6T18.
Pontiac. t3600 Beach Blvd., 892-fffil or 636-2500 Recreational
'71 FORD, truck & ca1nper ,
390 V·8, auto, air, camper
special 1200 16.'5 tires (rear)
loaded! 11' H arvest
Camper, boot, Bou n cc
ahvays, sureHfts, . l e I e
bumper, gas/elec rc[rig ..
1nusl see to a pprcc! $;,()()
and take overpymnlS. Priv
.party .... 2561.
1964 CHEVY Van, runs good,
$300. or makf offer. See at
Hi-'Nn1e Liquor or call
548-~14, ask for Skip.
for clean late n1odel cars
and trucks!
Howard Chevrolet ' •
trlr, $1850. m-9119 a ir cond, etc., \\'/lO~i' self· HONDA CL 350. Looks
13' BOSTON W ha I er cont. camper. 213: 421-1440 like new. Needs clutch
I • ~ plate. l\fust sell S400 or Complete 40 HP Jo mson. i.L 1 us sell your camper or trade for truck. 5f.o&-027S.
Trlr. 1n4l 6'f3.-77Tl traJler for you. .J\f e sa -..-c=c-~"'°'7-°'-=0:,,:C.:-"-
GRAND BANKS 36 Camper Sales, 2036 Harbor, * '72 KA\VASAKI 150, Im·
Lo en.a: houn. Fully equp'd. Costa Mesa, 646-4002 mac. \vndshld. & cvr.
$38,500. Owner 675--0743. '70 FORD PU ,4 ton with ~es!J627 Days, 5 5 6 - 7 0 3 4
camper, jacks. Sleeps 4, nut :=~.~·~=--~~tires. Xln't cond. &16-7387 '66 BSA Cbopper. 14" ex·
9\.S' FUILY 1 ·__, tension \V bars, tear drop e q u P P '°"' tank reblt 650 eng $500
*RENTALS*
Lifetime, Superior, Open
Road, Landau, Overland &
\\linnebago Motorhomes
RECREATION
REi.''ITAL AND SERVICE
716 N. Clara, SA
n+83&8615
Boats; S.11 909 * CONTEsT 31 * EXECtT1'1VE DEMO SALE
Cabover Camper, must sell, 493-il47. · · make otter! 548-8182 HAVE 21' 73 Fireball mtr
, SCHWINN Suj)(!r S p o r 1 home on 1 T Dodge chassis, ! ! DIESEL 11
$.11,IXXI INVENTORY
ONLY $27,950
$6895 Vehicles 956
PACE ARROW NEW '73 Cb:
T1ocA Newporter
Base Prit'i! c
fMMFn!ATF: DELIVF:RY Santa ruz
CREVIER BMW Van Conversion Sales . Scnri(.'e . Leasin~ 20! \\'. lEI St., Santa Ana Equipped \\ritb Bubble Top, ~3171 12 Volt Refrig, Range., Oven,
=~~-"'"'-""'-~~-! Jensen Toilet, awning, On FOR sale \Vinnebago l.lolor 3 Dodge chassis and a lot
home 24' xlnl L'Ond., SS.500. n1ore t #0427231.
Call 979-7853. $5995 Winnebago-For Sole ·
'll' Chicfton pri 111y 6~4-5461
phcnC? R-5 P~1 o.1Jy $87.89 per mo. 8 CA!\tPER, 'ol:ater, lee box, Dereiler . Great c.'Ond. Ne\\' still un(ier \v&1T , 7400 mi.
propane It\~, S250 or offer. gears, $70. Call Duve, "'ill accept cf!r in 1rd or
548-Slll, 3227 Broad, N.B. 546-8937 \\'h a I • ha \' c . y 0 u.
'73 V\\' ~mper. Ail', loaded. '73 YAMAllA 12.i l\1X all ex· 54:1-3766/586-5807.
Completely Conimlsskmed Automahe. T.0.P. Ca I I tru, \'cry fast & reliable, e Ornne:e County's r-inest 9 e REAL Bl:!Y e
and Ready for Immediate 5@-7584 must sell by the lst. $430. or Dalc'!'I f\.1otor Horne Rentals 1s· xf;' ti'a\•el trlr. C.Overed
-~-----~--1 1or S4 inonths. 20 ~i> ON, Cash
Trailers, Trave1 945 Price ~6!0S.i0. n~ter1<2<l ----~----pl'ice $8664.50. A.P.R. 11.~.
O.A.C.
Delivery '68 CHEV C-30, chaJ mtd, ofter, 53&-1096 Ne\\' 1'.linis, 2.'i-26' l.ifetin1cs wagon, 11\f-cntnd, V..'tr. htr, OR Opeo.nroad, self contt bt rack. °72 KAWASAKI GJSS, 90 cllfc> "C.'\rcfree fun" 83&-0900 ref. gas/elcc. toilet, shwr,
ORDER NOW FOR WINTER Very clean, lo mi. 54&-0067 racer. $225 firm. 7 6 :t IM1d AC. 24' Pact' Ai·ro\\'. leveling jacks, a11 .. n Ing:.
DEUVER\' AND SAVE $$$ ALASKAN 8' 1971, all xtras, Han1il ton, Apl A. O 'I'. aft Lo 11 de d \VI x tr o s. $1400 cash. Pvt. Pty.
EXPLORER ,,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
HiP.01 ~tA(H ~LV[1 c :.1 bd01
11i.:°"!1N•,JO•i •JA\H
71 SPORTS CUSTOM
f·lOO Super sharp. 4 spd.
rad & heat. New 12 x 16.5
tires plus orig tires & rims
• 892-1832 *
'69 FORD Eron. 300, exper tly
designed interior set up
camping; Very good n1ech.
cond. lo.fake offe1· 494-6396.
'SS DODGE Van, VS auto, nu
brakes, nu til-es & chronie
rims, nu rebuilt motor,
$1650 will talk, 642·9693,
'69 DODGE Van, Slant 6, all
windov.·s, $1300. 642-4T::>8,
1973 FORD % Ion, 4 wheel 6302 West Coast Hwy, NB.
n . AT I h ll bed '69 CHEVY Van, !\1 a i; rive, • P s, s e • 5• wheels, Lo mil""""e, $1500 or 4 mo old, 6000 mi, like ne\v, ......,. 495-5526. best offer. 642-7910/545-0946.
MacArthur and Jamboree
Ne"•port Beach I
8.13-0555
-,,IV"'E""P"'A"Y"""TO=P-:DO=LLAR..,...,~ I
FOR TOP USED CAnS
If your car is extra clean,!
see us first.
BAUER BUlCK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Cosla l\1esa 979-2500
WE HUY
IMPORTED AUTOS
BEST PRICES PAIDI
O.•n· Lewis Imports
1966 Harbor, C.lil.
646-9303
ii FOR-D~P-.U-.-.. -l~T~o-n.~N~ew-'64 FORD VAN, $450
engine. $300. Call 646-8137 1 =~644-==1354=-~"='-675_>-0!M=-7~=
after Spm. '72 FORD Econo"llne 100. IMPORTS W.A?\'TED
'67 CHEVY 1,S Ton P\(•kup, V-8, auto, PIS, P/B. 170IXl Orange County's
Auto, V·8, camper shell, ml. 545-5991 b\\vn 6-8 pm TOP s BUYER
$1ZOO/or oner, SJ2-817J. 1966 FORD Station \Vagon Bll.l;MAXEY TOYOTA
Lll\E new '68 01evy 1~ T. Va n. Ex. cond. Reasonable. 18881 Beach BlvJ.
Ne"' Tires, lo mi, $1400. Call eve or Sunday 646-3431 H. Beach . P h. 847-855.i
Alter 6, ,556-8516 Like to Trade? Our Trader's * TOP DOLLAR FOR
'62 CHEVY one ton panel 317 Paradise column is for ~'Ou! JUNK CARS.
$24,2'0 9.tlL AWAY · used very little $1250. 5:30 daily. Rent/Sale. (\Viii sacrilicel. * Ph. 5-tS-l338 *
lncludn 0\Hel Enilnt. st&-2222 TRitn.fPH 650 CC l9S6, nJM ~7=14°':~586-44c=.=l'CI~-~~~ 1970 NO~tAD. 211,~', fully self Sell idle items . I eng.. 4-spd. $501J. or Best !'i lines, 5 days for $5. Call Day '-Or night.
642-50'78 Offer. 894-8381 Evenings today ... 642-5678 * 639-lt64 *
\\'ortdn$c; Sails, Pulpits a· FACI'ORY camper, comp very good. Alto BultJtro 350 1''0R RENT: Q\\·r.ers '73 &>If. contained. Xlnt cond. pri Autos, Imported
and Ute Linel, Two~ lnskle $115 or $ 20 o CC Pursang 1971 Will talk c~tained motor ho111e, $165 ply. 962-3760
9fO A•1tos. lmported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970
: ' '
• I.
1,-
" I ,,
'l
• . ' ' I
I
·-.
• • J_'
i
• \, : . • i~ : . ,,
' I ,,
'· ••
~~~ro-:Sr:iW'Frr~N w/ktadJng jacks. 646-1278 about p1ices. ~ aft 6. \·:k. 6c' mi. S97-6i00. FOR sale 13' trailer, elec. &
N SU A 25 Ir 26 ~BSA 650 Ll;:htning, 21'.i' MOTOR hon1c for-l't'llt gas frig. surge brakes,
OQn ·to ~ lA !J&. CyclH, Biku ntlnt. I.st $500. takes. See It reasonable ral£'s 839-1653 spare wheel 64:HrJ09
N~1»!1 Archetl ?-tertna Scooten 925 al 88.i \\'. lfith, N.B. days, or , slccps 8 ':>4 TRAILER. 8 x 31. Stone
{Behind Centinela Bank! .65 TRI 650cc 80nn Rum can 67J...805.1 -*~~'7=2~K~O~D~l~A~K~*~ Villa Trlr Pk. 646-7914, not
lloUand Yachts/Newport good $350 call Fri/Sat only * l!O~Af<:'\ ACE I 0 0. Nu, $&1(Xl. SI~ 6, full .equip. after 7:30 Pl\I
714-644--0139 &42-s.iOl ' Ce r lM 1 front susp. List $9200. 642-4933. '69 SHASJ'A 13'. clean.
CDLIDiffilA 1.6 ?.IK II '==~~-~-~1 High-comp head.-chamber. Like to Trade? Our Trrult>r's SacrifiCt' $62:i. or make of· ~-5 a·"·lts, head, ra"-y, '72 TRIUMPH Bonneville, 5 BaJi!ain $250. 540-7823 p . 1 . f fer. P.1.ust sell~ ,;)(--.. ~ U\,I "" ...........1 t'C<\--i.~ ff --•1 ar::1.dise OJ umn is or you1 •--~• ·~ I I Hng .. , ... ~. ~. lll'il 0 r, \;lU d 0 -d ' IUOl,IC\J "'•u1 g~r nc lK between 4 &: 7 P:Pi1 002-9SU 1be ''Yelaow Pages·· ·Of 5 lines, 5 days for $5. Call Like to Tra e ? ur 11d er s
bow pulpit and life llnec, • 1972 YAM Au A ' 250 MX. claPillcd. . .6'12-5618. today , , . 642-5678 Paradise column i.'I for you!
CU51.0m dedorator trim, shag G<)Od cond. v';y"A.-1enn. $625. Motor Homes I Motor Home~ Motor Homes
carpet. com..,., R.D.F.. 644-1165 ' Solo/Roni 940 Salof Ronl 940 Salo/Roni
anchor, line, and ftnres. 9.8 ~j~y(i!iQ~~:--li~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~~~~;;;;~;;;;=~ horsepO\vq . P.terc. , Ala1n, s.c;r l\fll\( ').JlKE
mule, and 167% Genoa 3 like tle\\'. \; Pficel $125.
BaHo\'' 'vinches, boerdine • siO-J823 *
ladder ttil<I n1ore, Thli 11 •n HONDA Trail 90 like
an excepllonnlly l'lelln boat new $225. · '
and had f1~h bottom pp.int 613--6108
ln Auaust. Replacement cost
well over SlD,000. Owner
bey1rc tarrer boat. Asking
$1800 or make offer. Will
help finance. TI4-8f2.3737.
*AUCTION*
Trallenble Sailboats
Aquarius 23 & 21. Clipper 26
Sealed Bld11 \\1th S100 lte-
htndable Deposit acce-pted
from 10 AM to 4 Pl\f, Sat.
8125 ·i3 and Sunda,y 8126nl.
Sidi will be opened at 4
PM. Boats may be lnlpected
at NAMSCR.An' Boat Sales.
Dana Point Marina, Dana
'72 HONDA CB-100, xln't
cond. l<X» miles: sm. Call
~ aft4pm.
n S MK, fa.st bike -good
condition.
113().4669
RALEIGH "Chopper" Boys
bicycle, 3 speed, Xlnt cond.
165. 84o>5300.
'72 KA\YASAKI 175, dirt bike
Cd. cond. ?.lust sell s-m.
5.il-0070. * :tm Kawasaki '15. $115
Excell ent condition!!!
675-Ql5.
Point. 496-3711. • ·n HOND'A, a 450
ISL.ANDER 32, P.todUied to $875. lmmac cond. 3mo old.
34. ~ Bags + Spin. Rolter 1 ____ 00-~_1_93:_3~~-
R e e f . Elect water, ·n SPORTSTER Xl.Jf, el<·
Fathometer. 0 pt Is at I , tended forks, Cobra seat,
Geared "'inches, Dodger, 5900 miles. $1700. 968-713.1.
Radio, RDF, 0 w n e r• 10 SPEED Schwinn Girls
67'".>-llTI. bike, \\'hlte, good condition.
WANTED -Lido 14 or lfoble 673-6086 or 673-S457.
12. \V iii trade Nlkormat HONDA J;iO CB, 1972, 1200 \\1.th lem, approx value ·~ ~~ N 0 .. ,_ 1 mi 's, $650. .,.,.,.,. """ · ........, .. vn ' Call 54;)-839.j Balboa Island. Good thru S. 31).73.
FULL Race, Snipe, reg. In Natl' Slllpe cla.N:. Traller,
cover, new sails, newly
refinilhed. Make otter. Uf..
64>-2381, 213-331.J'l58
RHODF.S 33-0aulc racing champk>n ':HANAHUU."
Top condiUom $6500. Ph:
67>-1232.
19' PACIFIC Cal, no 450, dbl trapeze, trier, cover, 1~9 hp,
outbrd. Many xtras. Musi
.o<ll. 6ni692
BEAtrr Catamaran 12'
tnclds ~m nwt, dacron
aail, SS rlgginf, car rack,
673-1534
SHOCK SABOT
SUPER SHAPE!
Used 2 mo. $350. 615-6&14
•CORONADO 25, No. 925,
xlnt cond. Oelux features .
See Ii: make oiler. 968-5830 •
18' y flyer Sallboo.t and
trailer. Planing, tnlll. Xlnt
cond. (2131 ~
12' !(OR.AILE Jr. s.llboat
w/trler\ Xlnt cond. Prl pty,
make offer. 213-51'9-5167
MONTGOMERY lO plj""lf
to mov~ wi...,. In ita Clau. !!9IJ. 1112 liter e pm.
FLYING 'Jr. '4' w/roa.d trlr, cover. 2 tet• •ti•. $100.
dayo ~1'100 ...... ~
HOBIE 16 F\111 race. mlll\Y
extru. Near new cond. Jl.m .
FOR sale, 250 Yamaha, 19'72
Enduro. Xlnt oond. Xtras.
Call 536-9685
'72 STEEN 100, Dirt bike,
seldom used, xlnt cond, $350
or bst o!fr, 546-8&47
(2) T.AOO Miro Bikes $150 &
$100. X1tru included. Call --'70.""""H~ON-D~A-7=50--11
Clean. $1IOO. 968-10$
'TI HONDA CMO Mini Trail,
xlnt . cond. under 600 mJ,
1185 lm-1763
YAM.AHA 125 MX, fast, Just ~built $350.
962-'7219
YAMAHA 125 11.IX, fast, ju.11t
ri!bullt, $300.
!m-7219 * llONDA 250 XL Perfect
condition. J;tecently 9et'Viced.
Call Kurt. 979-7579
'72 360 1-IUSKY. Like new.
Must see to appreciate.
.548-8616
KAWASAKI "Big · HOm".
350, l,<XXI mi, $400. . cau '48-1071 . • * 23" PARAMOUNT. 1NI campy. Ind. brikes. Make
otter. 875<i63l
"12 YAMAHA US Endun>. lo
mf'I, A·l cond. $425. caJ1
846-5230:
'65 llSA ... ttlNilt chirry
cond $600. * 5'13-7236 *
20' MOTORHOME Roadliner by Redman
3 bul'MI' r111ge with own, bslhroom, furNct , o.o.H. 1.,g,
00d9e th.l"lt, V4, •1110. lr•M.. POWer stfftlnQ & dlK
bn1tes, tit! wtlffl, d~I r"r wllHls, el..:tronk Ignition,
(Smoini91 s·s ·966. FULL PRICE
5660 Down 581 A Mo.
S660 Is !Giii dn. 1:ovmt. Sil Is tol&I rno. ovmt. lnct. 1a•,
lk:!nit a. ell cerrylng charges on eppr, credit for 1'0
mon!M. Offerr9d Pil'fmtnl orke 51Dlf),OO Incl. 11.-I. ll-
Cltf'l$8. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE It.ATE 11.'5%
28' MOTORHOME Roadliner by Redman
,....-! =-., -· .. -..:...:..:.
Dodge 440 chassis, V-8, automatic trans-
•\ mission, plus full factory equipped. IS20-
•• \ 300385 1
I
•·8366~~~~
20' MINI-MOTORHOME Fling by Redmon
J60 cu . in. Oodqe \1-8 en9int, 1uto. tr1n1., 4 burn•
or rtn90, bathroom, d1ul rt•r whetlt, b1tt!J:f' con•
vetftr, powtr 1l•trin9 1 powtr brtkt&..-'""tf205·2·
08 Ill $56'88 FULL
PRICE
$688 Down $74 a Mo.
tt4/675-6891. * Scan 3 Wheel Bicycle *
·' SAOOr, Sidney, nberala~ ·A·l~~78$!5.
yr_ o_l_!l1., Ulfd ' Umea, . 54'Hl'lw '70 HONDA. SL 350, 11,llllll
•r • mi's. xtra. 'tl:l'ff, Very good , , J1ck Silmon Sloop 14 ~1 cood. $400. 54~. ~ $950. 586-5864 Pa. 'K.SlS Cl• Two late 72'. Very elean
Ill VENTVRE 241 QUtbof\rd, 'W'extras. Jdt . 675-7750,
tnllltr 3 sails. Reidy ·to Frank 673-5076
sail. chll 1146-Jt31 alt 5 '1g . NORTON 'l!IOcc, ltd 1.: 11' MALlllU CAT lhape. Muoi .. u ~ulclcly.
p I $300. ~-'650, 961-2739 aft 5 ,
' •
-·
'fty the new Honda Civic"' fur
just fifteen minutes.
If you're not completely satis-
fied return the unused portion
to us, and you'll only be out fifteen
minutes.
There is one catch to this offer.
When you find out how this
car handles, hQ.W it feels around
comers and holds the road and steers,
you are probably going to want to
buy it. Especially when you find out
how little it costs,
So when you come for your free
trial offer, bring your checkbook.
30 MIL·ES PER GALLON!
BIG SELECTION-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
I •
I
' . -
·•2 DAILYPl,LO_r~~~~~~~s·~'"-~-"~·-A~o~··:"'-r25~,~1·~1~-~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~,~~~~~~~~~I -~~~~~~~~1 ~~~~~~~~~1 ·~~~~~~~~ Mr••tlonal Recreetion1I ~~~~~~~~~ 1 ·~~~~~~~~ \ "; ~
Vohlclff 956 Vohlclff 95' ---11~1 [ ---l[M] I -·u. llMI r --.. 11~1 ~' ;.;";"';" .... _~11~M~l1 ~'-·'~'"•'";; .... ~1;,;;1~~J [ _..... I~
BRAND NEW '73 DODGE
VAN CONVERSIONS
•11Hy f11Wtory tq11ippH, inchtctl"I P"n.!i119, rnr
dinett., looded with t •lroL
Mdlooli"I icit '-•·I ryl. lU , .. ..._, ,.. .. ....,_,;...,_,.
,_.! ~. W.k , ..... ...,, • .,.1..,i.., A.M. .......
~.-,.1 .. ~. ,iw-1Mimpto1"""a,..,,._.111,s
wt.t.. ~ 11111111 µu
NEW '13 PACE-ARROW MOTORHOME
s.i..t "-ii~ ""'-11 wlrll •ip.M"" llwr Mlil1 r•· llG _... wiftt ·-ic ..,_,..;,.;..,, ,...., H•ri .... ,._ ..... ~"' lflll<ioul
w .. , ~ifully ..,..;"'-' kitdwil witli l lou ....... 11 .. •: ....... ,. ... .,.. iWI~·· i.tt.. ..... 90 .... "'°'""'' -..... enol "'* ll•~IM1 indlllli"ll enit •t11. !S:IO••)
~6888
PICK FRl!Mf orHER FINE BRANDS
"""""'-• W...00 .......... , •• ,_.., llw • """• llllWor Mio<~---
IMMEDIATE Oll/VEllY
• •
NEW '73 TIOGA
MINl-MOTORHOME
0111 1011 Dodgt ChaHl1 whh 3.0 V4 engine, outomatit
tro11~i11illft, power Droke1. Mlf-cllfttol.....i, loaded with
••l•al il'ICl11di119 Ktffn daor, medicine tal>intl, ,.int stripe,
d11<or bucket M1at1, am/fm rodio, flipper cah entry, ond many
t1.1ra1. ISl9SSJ
$7388
PICK FROM orHER FINE NAMES:
,_....., rwa OoiM9l•......,rtTitte•f-5-rtYi ... ~wi..i. --BIG SAYINGS ON LATE MODEL
RECREATIONAL TRADE-INS!
1971 SANTA FE
MINI MOTORHOM(
v.a, 01110. tra111., air condi·
tioni119, radio with r1ar
19"kw, doublao 1i11k1, 110....
with .,...n. \66SOtN)
ONLY
$4988
'69 DODGE
TRAVCO
VAN CONVflSION
"'· -· ·-··""' .... -,_....., 1wp 1w-·---~·•·-· ,_.
~288
NOW ON SALE!
1971 DODGE
VAN CON\lfRSION
bu bbl~ top Y·I ,. automatic
1ran1111i15iall, 1lidi119 win·
dowt, ..... lw, 1lov1, dinette,
1oil11, 6 1i.tper, rodio, car·
peh, Jr. Wilt Coan Mirrort.
(1101CPMlONLY
$2588
NEW '73 MEL MAR
25' MOTORHOME
fy1 11.,..J oveft, 4 b11rrter slowe,
double 1i11k,, f11lly 1•11·
(Dlllained, IO¥cl'd air htGI,
AM/fMsterto, I 1p•oktr1.
(JTKNlSSl9317) ONLY
$9888 . ' -".
THf. ALL NEW 4 STAR
....... """ pirtW'I .... 1'i411 .. wi .... 1 w ,_,.,w, l<t"~l, ..... ~ ...... ,. ,.ii... Wt-'-""-... 111 '""' ,...,., , """ ,.f"' ..-. ...,. it.. & ,i,. w!Nd. 11111-,.. l"'4 .......,.,, 1..i1 r ••"•·•-
....._' """""--Jl ....... -,;, iMcii. 10 .. """ ...,., """"·
S TO CHOOSr FROM
i...._ ON SALi AT llG DISCOUNTS!
BEACH CITY DODGE
RV . SUPERMART fll'.~
16556 BEACH BLVD.-~
Huntington Bcoc h -. -I.~ . -•
540-2660 --~-
842-1566 ,.),,.
•
\;A;;;u;;;to::';.;• ;;;lm;;;;:po::rt;;;od::;;::=;;;';;;7;01:A~u:!:lo~•~· :lm~po=rt~ed:7::-_:9:!!fo Autos, lmponod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 97o
RENAULT DATSUN FIAT JAGUAR MERCEDES BENZ MGB SAAB
WE 'RE MOVING '71 Fiat 850 Spa·.ier ATIN c.u..,,.,.., '63 Jag 50 USED '61 MGB "'"" 11""'1. AM-'63 SAAB R 12 'f l\1ark x. Best offer. Call 1''1\1, Xlnt condition $1l00/or 96 2~0R
• BIG SAVINCS ON Spct:h&l this "'t'('f(end evenings 6'fl..5426 MERCEDES best otter 963-0ai1 n.adio. hL'fll'er, .. rpttd.
'73 Demos $1495 OPEL $995 4 DOOR SEDANS SJO's '6S Sportste. XLCH ON DISPLAY
Pl k New 77 cu. in. eng. & tre.ns. tG:ITHOF' -
WITH AUTOMATIC 6\0~:s Call eves; GT'a-4609. Sharp New Car GT DICK MILLER
KARMANN GHIA-Trade-ins '69 Opel MOTORS Tth\1rh Jhnp1111~;
NE\~J"'~T DAlSUN
888 Dove
Newport Bch
833-1300 Open Sw1day
+" ''°'' '(Y l ""'' ... ~ ...... l "'°"'"!'"' fl, • '' •.I·• •·IOlo . -' . -.... C I I E D Silvpr finish. with red lnttirior. om ng n very •Y (ZRROTIJ . 120 \V. Wrtnl(>r, $.A.
'69 GHIA New tires & pain!, Ask About Our Unique $2099 5:>1·2132
ALFfi1 ~<i.~mRr ~1.otor xint, auto sttck shift, Used Mercedes L•••• '66 sAAB. Xlot running cond1
<!19--3433 Plons BILL MAXEY Mloo' body wo,k, 1450 or 'G!l FIAT 850 Convertible fl fl 5 64" ~• •" "'"' LOTUS House of Imparts TOYOTA b•"' 0 •" • . ~ =~='"''"'4---"1'6"'1'=~~ --------61162 Manche•l•r. Buena Park l888l BEACH BL. 8-11-855.\ TOYOTA FlA·r 12·1 Spyder. 1969, 5 spd , '65 LOTUS Etan, new twin \Jn the Santa Ana Frwy HUNTINGTON BEAOI
buryundy, good L'\lnd. $1650. cam eng., perfect cond. 523-1250 '71 Toyota all 5, 493-52".)7. 6~3968 aft. 6-w k d Y s, ---~-----1 OPEL Rallye '68; Xlnl cond.. ·
. ''"" .. . .. .. '71 DATSUN 510 ~ ~ • } ffiJ,~ • t6~bt¥i eooo, New Tire" wknds -all day JIM SLEMONS odg owner, 17""1-or make Land Cruiser HT '67 FIAT Sta. \Vgn. R/H, offer. 968-91Hl Priv party.
factory air, 40 mpg, runs MAZDA IMPORTS ,67 RAU.EY Kadel!, orig. \Varn Hubs, Cret'Tl, (4T9DANJ
.... al. 1125· 9"'-l85l MERCEDES BENZ owner. Near oew radial•. $3099 "·" il J I ·' S1395
DICK MILLER HARBOUR VW JAGUAR * Mozd• '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
""'' """''Y-1895-536-3l26 BILL MAXEY
MOTORS
120 W. WARNER
SANTA ANA
557-2132
ALFA ROMEO-
ALFA ROMEO
SAAB
Buy or Lease
Sail's -Service -Leasing -
Rentah1
ALFA ROMEO • SAAB
in NEWPORT
AUDI
We Buy Used
BMW'•
Top Dollu Paid
CREVIER BMW
Sail's -Sl'rvic{' • Leasing
20S \\'.1st St., Santa Ana
835-3171
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
0
SALES-SERVICE-LEASING
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
ROY CARVER, Inc.
T.A E. 11th St.
Costa Mesa 546-4444
CREVIER BMW
Sales • Service • Lea~ng
IDS \V. 1st SL, S.A. 853-31TI
USED BMW'S
'73 BAVARIA !DEMO)
'71 BAVARIA
'72 Tll
'70 3.0CS COUPE
'69 2002
'68 1600
'67 2000 CPE
'64 BMW 4 DR.
\Vhlte (OWR974)
$999
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
!&:Sl BEACH BL. 847-8555
l!U~'TINGTON BEACll
Bob Mclaren, BMW
Inc.
SaJl's . Service • Leasing
850 North Beach Blvd.,
La Habra
(714) 879-5624
'69 2800 CSA Cpc. SHO\V·
CAR COND. Loaded. 4 spd.
SG."iOO. Pvt pty. 642-7315.
'72 B~f\V Bavaria, whitl'. 4
spd, am/fm. pis, 22,000 mi,
S5695. prl ply. 548-7302
CAPRI
~
NOW OWN THE
FABULOUS 1973
CAPRI
Sport roupe decor, body side
mouldings, reclining Cront
scats, contour rear scats. 4
speed 1ran.~mi ssion, jJO\\"er
front disc brakes, style s!('('I
"'11l'Cis, huckt•I s1•1:1!s, r11dlal
ply ti1·rs. 20U0ce rng.
(GAECNB42801 f.
OVERSTOCKED I
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
lSSOO Beach at Warner
Hunlinglon Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
''Home of the Viking''
'73 CAPRI V-6. Air. Prot.
trim. ete. Dcror. I.ow ml.
-1644
DATSUN
DATSUN '13 240Z, alr, xlnt
cond, mu&t sell.
•833-8380•
'71 01\TSUN Wag .. 4 spd.,
R/11 .. air, lugg. rack. clean
$1,525. Pvt. pty. 831-~.
'Gii DATSUN. Must 8Cll.
Radio, heater, runs good,
$750. 549-3793, 673-0871
Any day 11 the BF..sT DAY to
ruu Rn 1:1d! Don't dl!:lA)'. •
call today 642~
ism Beach Blvd.
Hwit. Bch. SU-4435
NEW LOCATION
SALE
'68 Datsun Wagon
Nice Car CWXK6021
$1299
NE\'JM~T DATSUN
888 Dove
Newport ~ach
83.1-1300 Open Sundi\y
NEW
XJ-12
E Type Cpe.
+ Conv.
XJ-6
Great Selection
Ready For
Immediate Delivery
~lltin1111•; llltih11"
flllllll& ~ 1o11ii ~ ~tiu . , ... ".~ ....... ~~·
36 hfONTHS OPEN LEASE
\Vill accept trade-ina
CAI..J... MR. FRY 842-6666
PORSCHE
'61 PORSCHE, reblt '64.
{lM...'C engl nu tiJ"es.
b1'8kes, upholstery. Sl'C & Hunt. Beach
Jim Slemons
Imparts 1301 Quall
Newport Beach 333.9300 n1ake ofl", 548-3120
MAZDA ENTER FROM MacARTHUR * '58 SPEEDSTER *
'65 MERCEDES "'"' co"'· t'!;OO. n~21"
11331 Beach Bl. 842-66~ 4-DR _SEDAN _ .
BOB LONGPRE A u '·om a t 1 c transn11ss1on, radio, heatcl', pt;ru'Cr steer · MAZDA ing, air L~$11~9ring.
-SERVICE FIRST-
EXCLUSIVE
MAZDA LEASE
PIV535l
DICK MILLER
MOTORS
120 \V. Warner, S.A.
5:17-2132
':i5 ~fERCEDES. 810. Xlnt
Europ. body, reblt cni;, good
int. $550. Best o f f e r .
557-9394
'fi6 ~1EH.CEDES &nz 200
Sedan Diesel, reblt eng,
stick, pri pty. 493-6276
MG
&\RE '65 Porsche 356-SC,
Conv., AM/~f.1. Radiali;.
$.1100/best orft>r. 640-8'1.ti
RENAULT
RENAULT
R· 12 4 DOOR'S
1\utomatic Transrnlssk>n
SALE $2499.00
DICK MILLER
MOTORS
120 \\I. \\·arner, S.A.
557-2132
IRENAULT+I
TOYOTA
18&'n BEACi-1 BL. 847-8550
1 IUNTINGTON BEAC1-I
WE BUY
-USED
TOYOTAS
ALL 1973 MODELS
IN STOCK
'67 Toyota
Corona 4 Door
Au10 Trans, Radials. (UOG·
3121.
$895
HARBOUR VW
WE WOULD LIKE TD SERVICE YOUR DATSUN-WE DON1 CARE WHERE YOU PURCHASED IT
1967 VOLKSWAGEN 1971 DATSUN 1967 vw
GHIA 240Z SQUARE BACK
4 spcl.. ,\:'Ii radio. Lie. # UIG861. Just like
Ill'\\'. Beautiful lx·igc paint.
4 spd., ?\-tags. Lie. #550C:XX. Blue paint and
one ot the nicest cars In town. 4 spd. air. Lie. •YDHro:J.
1971 DATSUN
510 WAGON
•I i,;pd. Hadlo. Lie. •904CA..-"X. Gold paint. Heal
nicl' cal'.
•
$
1973 DATSUN
PICK UP
4 spd. AM Radio. (Lie. #801Cll. Red finish.
SALiS HOURS .... ' .. -.... ,. ......... SIRVltl HOURS -FOR Now Ir Usod Car Salos
-1.-1 .. Dally ... tah-
Str\'lc-"arts
Mon.•Sot. t o.m. to t p.m.
Suoclcrys t o.m. to 6 p.m.
Mon.-i'rr. 71JO ..... to 5 P·"'·
So111clcry 7:30 to N-
HUGE SELECTION .
OF QUALITY
USED CARS
AT SALE PRICES!
CALL 493-3375
OR 831-1375
: •' ' ' ' ' .. • " ,.
" l ' •
CHOOSE FROM 35 EXECUTIVE CARS
& DEMONSTRATORS GRANDVILLES--CATALINAS
BONNEVILLES NOW ON SALE! 2 DOORS & 4 DOORS
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BUY OR LEASE YOUR USED CAR TODAY!
"We try harder"
• Finest Selection
• Highest Trade
Allowances
• 1 Year-12,000 Miles
USED CAR WARRANTY
......... .. •" fftNltJc nMI c... 1 .,.., .,
12,000 ..U.., wWcMftr MClrl ftnt.
DAYI 1011 PONTIAC WILL WAlltANTY
COMPLITI DllYE Tl.I.IN
l11ellt4'-t ....... tr...,,.i. ••• ' ,.., .. c1
----------
'66 vw BUG
Fully factory tq11ipptd,
roof, IS RN266 l .. d '""
$795
'67 PONTIAC
EXICUTIYE Z-DR.
Rtdio, httttr, •utom1ti1; tT1111mh •
1ion, pewit 1fttrin9, powtr brtkt1,
powt t window1, t it conditionin9,
t nd only '49,67] milt1. I t79ASHI
$777
'66 TOYOTA
PICKUP
Crttm pwff, '4·1pttd, rtdio, •nd
'49,615 mi111. ITl9277l
$895
'67 CHEVY
MALllU
Radio, ht1ter, 1 utom1tic tr1n1111i1·
1lon, powtr 1!1trin9, 11'1d buc k1 t
• •• , •. ( # 159666)
$995
'69 PONTIAC '67 MUSTANG
CATALINA 9-PA.SS. WAGON
Rtdio, heater, tutomalic htn1mi1-V8, 1utom1tic, rtdio, heater, power
1ion, power 1t11rln9, t lr co11dition-1lt1rin9, ITWS728)
Ing, power br1k11. l680GOE1
$1888 $1395
'66 CAPRICE '69 BONNEVILLE
' COU,E 4 DOOR HAIDTOP
Radio, ht1ttr, 1utomttic tr1n1mi1· R1dio, he1ttr, t utom1tic tr1n11'1 il•
1ion, 1ir condltionin9, pow1r 1!11r· 1ion, pow•r 1lttring, pow1r br1kt11
i119, power br1k11, clock, vinyl top, power window1, 1ir conditioning.
1249EKSI IY PU7 l91
$795 $995
llllll•IUVIU
• IF Mii •
BLVD. •? ..
11/J MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
Autos, UMll 990
1§:1 ............. 1§11 ...__ ... _ •.. _ ...... ~1§11 ...__ -_ ... _ .... ~!§][ L_ -_ ... _ .... __.l§l iiiiiil .............. ~l§J~ ... [ ~..... l§J
970 Autos, lmponocl 970 '!'A•ut•o,•,~lm-po•rt•ect-~9!11!7~01•A•ut•o•s,•U•nd---•990• Autos, Imported 970 •Au•,•0,•, •lm•po-rt•ed-•9•7•0
NEW LOCATION
SALE
TRANSPORTATION
SPECIALS
YOUR CHOICE
Autos, tmported 970 r..:.;=:..,;;.=.ccc.:__...o A~~~pc>r19c1=_..;.9:..;70 Autos, Imported
TOYOTA TRIUMPH TRIUMPH
$2021.95 Orange County's
Newest
TRIUMPH
'71 TR-6
ROADSTER
Butterscotch, roU bar, radial
Urea.
is the
Delivered Price
for a
'73 TOYOTA OF.-•LF~ $2695
FERRARRI DIC ~!lr~n)LER
LOTUS MOTORS COROLLA MG
AUSTIN MARINA m w. wame,, s.A. 557-2132
al 3) yellf'S expl?lie~ In foreign ---'-~--'--
car..
:Om le.wi&
" TOYOTA
NEWPORT
. IMPORTS
CLOSEOUT
ON BRAND NEW '73
LANDAU MOTOR HOMES -
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
515,995 .
Lo1dtd with .. ,,., -Sticker Prlcu
over $20,000 reduced over $4,000
for quick ult -Stt tvcl1y
Johnson & Son
LINCOLN-MERCURY
2626 Hubor Blvd,
Go1t1 M111 e 54G-J630
'68 VW Bug. Radio, rcnr seat
1peakers, good tires, nev.•
battery, low n1ileage. $975. -'72 GHIA, orange, 2100'.l ml, 4
1pecd stick, radials, radio,
top cond, $2200 Ft rm
644--0609
173 VW. U> mUeage, am/!m
rad\o. 15 year warranty.
$2395. or otr"r. 557~ or
m-1397.
'56 Kharman Ghia
(FLA47H Body & lnlcrior
OK, Ne«ls Trans & Etlolne.
BEST OFFER
HARBOUR VW
18711 B<¥1> B!lld.
Hunt. Bch. 842-4435
'67 VW Squnrt!back. Xlrtt
ru.nnlng cond. $.m. Call 671H884.
FOR Sale VW Bw:, '68, Gd.
eond. $1250. wk d a ya ,
!98-1819.
'7Q V\V Fulback, 4 Ip(!.
radio & heater, 30,000 nlilea
Sl40096H374
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN WAGON VOLKSWAGEN
1972 VW BUS
VOLVO ... -$599 VW'S
Several to choose trom
'64'S-'72'5
FROM
$595 -., -----.
!!11\tdl Jh11p11t1!i +..., ., .. ' . ""'"'" ........ , ••• lie•' ,_,.,, <;400 ----· -· -. -,
"SERVICE" ....... , y--...........
'69 vw
Kharman Ghia
Cpe, orange, Jo mtles (998·
ADX).
$1549
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEAat BL. 847-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
"
SPECIALS 9 passeneer, 17,146 mlles, ab-
solutely lmmaculate, blue
with black ·Interior, '64 BUICK '70 RAMBLER
Station WCICJOn
6 cy~ automa& """'· radio, 1967 vw CAMPER
mDNOMY SPIOCIAL. 973-
4 Dr Sedan, Air Cond, Auto
Trans. Nke Transportation
(SL\'316).
'65 MERCURY COMET
4 Dr. Real Clean ~ANice 'I'nntportation (Sl..WltiJ). DW. Fully Factory Equipped, $1 077 Ha• It all.
Autos, lmpontd 970
VOLKSWAGEN
NEW LOCATION
SALE
167 VW Squareback
Real Economical (V\VB273)
$999
$1395
'73 MODEL
'65 FORD
STATION WAGON
(ZWV2o"2J
SELL OUT!
EVERY NEW
'73 BUICK
MUST GO!
EXECUTIVE CARS AND DEMOS ALSO AVAILABLE
/~~~T
Nev.'PQl1 Beach
Whether its New Car Announcement, the middle of t he season,
or year model close out time-you'll always find tho lowest prices
where you find the
833-1300 Open Sunday
'68 Westphalia
Camper
!XDE833J
$1595
HARJOUR VW
18711 Beach Blvrl.
!tun!. Beh. S42-443S
'iO VW Sq beck, real clean,
run.• aoocl St.300. or tak~
over payments. 531>-1582
'65 V.\V. BUS. Good rood,
a~frn sleroo, $900. Lagwla,
494-3985.
LOWEST OVERHEAD
CHECK OUR LOW, LOW CLOSE OUT PRICl!S BEFORE YOU BUY
THEY ARE ALWAYS LOWER HERE
~·. TERRY BUICK ~-
5th & Walnut, Huntington Beach 536-65B8
•
,.
,
.. '!
I
·I ,.
i
I
I • I
I I • I • • t • • '!
" ·I I ' • I • l I
I . 1
,1
t
I ·!
I ..
·l •
ii
' '
:!
:I
I
! • ,,_
:o
I
' I ' I , .
' ' . I 11\1 . '
' I " I ,,
' \
' I·
. ' .
44 D"tlY PILOT Friday, August 24, 197l
J~~~~~~~~~~~'JIEEi.L DORADOS r,;i l_--'!",_ .... _l~l 1 .,.,,..,..,. J1 ~1 aiu1:J~~~~~LES wbw. l§J I ..... 1orw. I§] I -•• 11~11 -. ... u. J l~J[ Autos torSM J[~J I· .......... ~ )~
990 DE VILLES Autos, u·~ 990 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:i:.990~ ~;;;;;;U;_m.m~990~l~Auiii~iiiiii., ~. ~~~-~~990~ !Autos, Usad
-_.;.... _____ ...;.~ A_u_lo_s..;.,_u_ .... ____ 990_ Autos, Used Autos, -•v• ~ 38 T~~::'sE CHEVROLET·
990
SEDANS C~DILLAC CADILLAC CAMARO CHEVROLET CHEV,ROLET -
** 65 CUSTOM. fUll pwr '68 8UI0lC Skylark. Onl' ~1any ~~~ii:~T!~~~S SUPER clean ~ Cad '72 CADILLAC Sedan do '70 RAU.YE SPT. Llke new. '71 VEGA '68 CHEVROLET '72 MOc~LEPiARLO
IUICK BUICK
Ri~ $ll00. Call after owner.. 2.4..000 ro t. Like Jl<'\\•! Oioiceor liitl'riors C.OOpe deVille. $500. or Ville. ~lust be 110ld at a l owner. All xtru. Air, HATCHBACK , · IMPA~>\
4:30 &l6-8l9J $15S5. lM E. 2)th, No. 1, OJ !Clo!h & leather) reasonable oUer. 64&-2398 sacrifice. Has been lovingb-1tereo, copper cok>r, BL top FoW" lipced. lleallT &~ trt Coupe • VS, ~uto, P. Auto trans, air cood1 VS,
, ,. "-..ww1 548-1618 Ion aft 6 cared for by one owner 46,000 ml. $2595, &14-1316. _ t-•r . -"lo. o•v ;,.! r, 1-·~ brakt"il, air cond, radio, vinyt roof, P. &tee"' '64 ...._ Sai'I"'• runs ,.......... · !-'actory air condil ing CAD CdV ..iK~ '"'" ...... L" ... ........ lt It "'-" 337ETY Only ~ or best oUer Full power. Qxilce of: • '12 • loadod, air, ....... ..,.. birth thru 16,00J econo111ic:tl . 1o Miles #18511 heater dcfrostcr. \VVJ233. ig ... ,...es. · . * 5484162 * '68 SPOR'I: Wgn, 9 pass, All Stcroo AM/FM radio lie'"°, Excellent, $5200. mllet. Call 646-72ZT for CHEVROLET $1599.00 Only $3199.00 •
ro. __ ,;_. pwr, 60M n1iles, CntlSC'COntrol 494-2906 details. --------HOWARD Chtvrolet $1199.00 HOWARD Chevrolet
BLUE 'fl DqK:lc. ~.000 mi. 213-3 8 2~.'6'286 dayK, Trunkopcner&more •72 CAD Eldorado, 12,000 '73 ··COUPE DE VILLE, '6G CHEVY Impala 4 dr, Newport Beach . HOWARD Chtvrolt! . , Newjlort Beech
V8U • A~ Itad$900.lo. 5'8---029NCechi n:cw 714-844-29'19 ttltes & "'kcnrls. AU in hnn1aculate condlUon m:ile1, all xtras incld !ape brown ext., brown Ithi int., hrdtp. ReaJ nice -hurry! • N wport Beacl\ •4'ncArthu• Blvd & J lltnboree -s 1 full fm ,.. .~""'Arlhur 8"•• ' Jan·•~--t "'-" '"' ' La~cst selection in deck. Immac~ $ 6 9 O O. pwr, l sp •• pwr seat, ~. Good deal, 7 14 : "1""' " "' ,.,,,.-=-133.0555 '63 BUICK Special. v..g, CADILLAC Orange County 644-4144 GCdl mi., tnke over lease. 968-6893 13~0555 l\tac:-Arthur Blvd & Jamboree
auto, •'~ •"• """"'· $195. Noben Cadillac paymeot 5.52-9728 833-0555 ~ '62 CAD. Auto. air, RadlO, '68 SEO DeVille, wht w/blk '64 CAD. Cpe de Ville. All * '72 P.10NTE CARLO * '00 ll!WALA Sedan, 4 <IT', air, S200. O>evy 1\tallbu. Station '69 CHEV.
CAMARO full p\\T. Nr lit"•" tires, At.rl'HORIZED DEALER Landau top. 36,000 nU's. xtras. newly painted, good Very clean. many xtras, auto, P/S, low inllcs, $495. Wagon '6-t. Runs \\'ell!
\Vhite Elephant Dirne,A;Lioe trans .. Xlnt. $300. &12-8343 2600 HARBOR BL., $2800. ~1524. cond. $300. 6-15-1531 493-3ttl s.1.'Hl13 640-ll39 l~Ajiuiiitoiiisiii, iiiNiiiewiiiiiiiiiiiili9iii80iiiiAiiuiit~os~,iiiN~o~w!!iiiiiiiiiiii9iii80~540;·~91ij00~aliiSTiiiA~~~""~~iijSuniiid'~Y~j Aiiuiiitii_.~, iiNiieiiw~. iiiiiiiiiiiiii98iiOiil;Aiiiutiio~s,iiiNiieiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9ii80iiiiiAiiuiiitoiis~, iiiNiiewiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9ii8iiO.~p.iiuiiitoiii•~· iiNiiieiiw~j;!i~9iiiBOil ·~ 1'1!1~~s xl~~10tra~~·· ~~r~:,1~1;,"'p;\1!~!f:!r::. fl s:m. Aft i Mf~17 ' vinyl roof. 6.SlADB.
• 'G6 CHEV Bel Air 4DR auto $1777
AT · CONNELL CHEVROLET
ALL REMAINING 1973'S NOW CLEARANCE PRl'CED! OUR BUSINESS HAS
BEEN SO GREAT THAT WE'VE BEEN GIVEN EXTRA SHIPMENTS FOR
CLEARANCE!
Largest Selection of
MONTE CARLOS
TO C:HOOSE FROM
ALL 1973 IMPALAS
CAMAROS * CAPRICES
STATION WAGONS
CHOICE OF COLORS-OPTIONS-MODELS
NOTE • WE ARE NOW TAKING ORDERS ON 1974'S.
• ORDER NOW FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY
BARGAIN$
'73 VEGA WAGON
* CORVETTE *
NOW SALE PRICED!
ECONOMY
. '73 CHEV. II NOVA
ECONOMY
SCHOOL CARS
FOR STUDENTS:
Autom1lic h 1n1mi11iion, r1dio, 282 1 "1ilei, Ii•• .br1nd n1w; Fie·
io1y W1rr1nly. (#1934 )
Vinyl top, •ir conclitionin9, pow•r 1+••rin9, •ulom•tic +r•n1mi11ion,
1750 mil11, Bro wn Cit with b1i91 inl1rior. Show room fr 11h! (945.
GVG J ~
$2996 $ALE PRICED
$ALE PR1CE.,,,-WILL TRADE
'72 MONTE CARLO CJ!Ei ·
V-8, I b,000 M;t,.
1802 FBAI
'72 MONTE CARLO CPE.
V.8, A ir Cond itionin9
21.000 M;1,.
'1•53191
,
'72 MONTE CARLO CPE.
V.s; Air Conditioning
27,000 Mi les
I 104EJ8 1
'71 MONTE CARLO CPE.
V .8, Air Cond itioning
40,000 Miles
lb31CQS I
$ALE PRICED -WILL TRADE
'73 VEGA HATCHBACK
Automatic Transmission
Rad io, 91 95 Mil.t~
I 183GXPI
'72 VEGA HATCHBACK GT
Automatic Transmission
Air Conditionin9, Radio
10 ,715 Miles
I03bEY1 1
'72 VEGA HATCHBACK
Automatic Transmission
Radio , 27,000 Miles
ICFR941 I
'72 VEGA HATCHiACK
Automatic Transmission
23 ,000 MHe•
r802EBM I
'
'71 CAMARO .CPE. $ALE PRICED -WILL TRADE '72 JEEP
Y-1 R11ly Sport, 111 utom•tic tr111n1mi11ion, pow•r 1t••ring,
•ir conditioning, r111 dio. l r•m•ndoui Buy! 17llCJGI
$2599
'70 SCOUT WAGON
H111rdtop W19on. '4 wh••l drivt , lock hubs , r111dio, 1e1h 4.
ll,000 c111rt fr1t mile1. (679A8N l
$2699
'73 CHEV. BLAZER
V·I. 4 wh•tl driv1, aulom•lic tr111n1mi11ion, 111u1. 11•1,
9100 mile1. l ik• N•w ! (l45HKVl
WILL TRADE
'72 CHEVY II
NOYA CPE.
V-1, Aulomelic Tran1miuion,
Radio, 2 r ,ooo milt 1.
!941EPPI
'70 CHEVY II
NOYA 4·DR.
6,-Cyl., Automatic
Tr111n1mi11ion, Radio,
41,000 Miles.
1#2101)
MAKE YOUR OFFER ON A NICE TRUCK, YOU MICOHT IE AN ·OWNH-
'71 GMC 3.4 Ton P.U.
v.1. Automatic Tr1n1min ion,
) t ,ODO Mil11
11817 JJ)
'71 Ford 3.4 Ton P.U. •
VI, Aul11m1 tic Tr1n1mi11ion,
34,000 Mil11
(1 17Z0Kl
'71 Chev 3,4 Ton P.U.
V-1, A11lom1lic Tr1n1mis1io"•
17,000 Mil t 1
(2S41 6HI
'71 Dodge Y2 Ton PU
Aulorl'!alic Tr111n1rni11ion,
Air Conditionin9, 11 ,000 Mil t1.
1601DLR I
THIS OFFER OPEN TO WHOLESALE BUYERS TOO!
15 OTHERS TO LOOK AT WITH SAME DEAL
'71 CHEVY II
4 wh••I driv111, loc k hub1, •P•ci111I tir1111, rad io, 11,000 mil11,
N1w car condition. lllOEIBJ
$3199
NOVA CPE.
v.s, Sticlc, R1 dio,
40,000 Mil1 1
!l12CTQJ
'73 CAMARO CPE.
Grt •n cir }O'ilh black interior. V-8, 111utdm111tic tran1mi11ion,
power 1t.erin g,. powtr br1ke1, 111ir conditioning. SHARP! -----------1 fUUJ717l
'69 CHEVY II $3799
NOVA CPE. '68 STINGRAY CPE. .
6-Cvl. Stick
56,000 Mil11
IZQF241J
'427 cu. in. v.1, 4 ,p,.il, n~c• c111r! I057CUGJ
$2999
EYER IUY AT YOUR PRICE? MAKE OFFER
IRINIO TOUR TllAD! AND MAK! YOUR OWN DEAL, WE MiGHT ACCEPT IT.
'70 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
4-Door, Air Conditionina, lo•dt cl! JJ,000 tr1il•s. 11 51AEEI
'71 BUICK CENTURION
4·Door.•Air Conditioning, lo•dtdl 3'4,000 Mil•1. f542CXTI
'71 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON
Air Co"clitionin1, '42,000 Mil•1. 1772CTKI
'72 CHEVY IMPALA
4-Door H.T. Air Condltlonlna, Nie• C•rl ll06EIE)
'69 BUICK GS 400 COUPE
l uclctt Se•t1, Air Conditionin9, 52,000 Mil••· IYCH2161
''QUALITY IS THE REASON WHY CONNELL IS THE PLACE TO BUY"
2121 HAllOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
•
NEW CAR
DEPARTMENT
'
rxll-en1cly clean xlnt cond. l
$600. 96l-lffi9 lDWl ...,.
'69 CAMARO a voLva
350 . 3 '""· R & H. New tires • , ,
1000 l-lruiJ01', C.M. ~9303
'69 CORVETTE-'
FASTBACK
• Lo\v A-Jiles 12648) Only
$1699.00
HOWARO Chevrolet
Newport Beach
?i1ac1\rthur Blvri & Jrunborce 350 VS, auto trans, power 833-0555 stffring and brakes, air
.-69-CJ~IE-\ll::LLE l\falillu, 350 cond, till wheel, AMIF/.1,
HP, radio, nu tirl's, vinyl ncW tires. Special pa.int, lo
1011. air. Uucek1 scn1s, must n1ilcs . tx-autiful. 31JJBEX •
sec to nppn•c. :14()..2928 $3599,00
'7l CJII::VY Kingswood Sta HOWARD Chevrotet
\\'ag, 1\/C, ps/11h. bro,vn Newport Be•ch'
$2'JXI. Call Susan betv.'11 7 & MacArtJrur Blvd & Jamboree <: 83.'1-211<0. 833-0555
1962 NOVA, good trnnsporta· ,69 CHEVROLET lntpa.la
tion car, reblt c~:;. new Custom 350. po"·er steering tl~s & brakes, asking $250. factol'Y. , air, tinted glas~
bµI 646-Jt46. • complCte, auto1natic trans
'70 CHEVROLET .Jn console, slrato Bucket
~ Ton pic'k-up: 3 spd, heeler seal!, Vinyl roof, radial lire
•& ~froste1· • clean •. tow saver 1ire11, radio, heater,
nUles (57'2-t1Jo'l. good condition. &.'St cifer,
• $1'99.00 phone 644-40'l1.
HOWARD Chevrolet '73MONTE'-C""A'"'R"'L"'O.-
. Nt~rt Beach' CooJl(' • 4utou\11tic trans., P.
!f&c4l'ili.ur Blvd & Jamboree steering & brakes, air cond,
833-0555 vinyl roof, noo n1ilcs, Save
··'"••"""c"'HEl=m'°'I pal SS $800.00 horn 01iginal sug· . .,.. , ~ m a • Aul.o ~led price. • 182FSQ. ~·-~~±Jt S, runs peif. HOWARD Chevrol.t
,' · -Newport Be•ch 11 CHEVR,OLET ~lacArthur Blvd & J amboree
•• IOI PICKUP 833-0555
3"1pl!, radio & hrater. 245731-1
• excellent • Drily
$2499,00
HOWARD Chevrolet
Newport Be•ch
~fac,\t1hlll' Blvd & Jamboree
.., .&J3-0SS5
'65 CAPRICE, prl party,
good cond. new paint,
At<.f/FM, $00). ~lli6 or
962-5723
'65 Ia.IPALA \\'agon, air. S295
1401 Saini Andrev.'S, Santa
Ana, 54~82.
99Q Autos, Used
' . .. MASSIVE • I
New Car Sales With Trade-Ins
• f1in:e Us To Drastically
CUT .ff RICES
In Out ~Yerstocked
' .. ~
USED CAR 'DEPARTMENT
'72 Javelin '72 Ch•y LUY
SST PICKUP
Full Pow1r, Air Cond.
lowmil11, ll l lEAOI
SAVE
'71 HOntOt
2 DI SEDAN
'4 Dr., Full Pow•r. Air Auto Tr111 n1. 6 cvl, •
Cond, low mil•1 1561· r••I 6•• s ,,,,r, Hird
FEOI to find.
$2995
'70 Ambassador
2 DI HT
Full Pow1r, Air Cond. 2 Dr. HT, Full Pow•r,
Mint Cond., Air Cond,
t9l9ANEI (7l9AEV!
$1695 $1795
WAGON WAGON
Au to. Tr111n1., Powtr
St.•rin9, Pow•r Br•ktt
!OZN5291
Full Pow•r, Air Cortd,
INQA5171 •!
$395
Uk• nt w, ITEY527 1
$1095
'67Fanl
FALCON
6 cyl., Air Cond, per•
f1ct 11co11c:I ''' IUZT ''')
$895
, '
.. ... ,,
$;695
'6'1 Chny
llll'AU. .
1FuU· PoW.t, Atr Cond.,;
lo, m l 1 • 1, Exc1ll•nl
Cond IVFM1l41
· l:AaGE .
~WCTION ,
Oi! CLIAN
·JAVELINS
'68 • '72 . '
,..,
' Friday, Augusl 24, 1CJ73 • DAILY PILOT S
..
LINCOLN CONTINENTALS
~73Matk IV ONLY
' . $3600 This bei1u+if.ul metall ic blue Mark IV has all the 9or·
Teous convenience accessories you can ima9ine.
54201 less than 1,200 miles. Yes, 1,200 miles.
' • " '
•
, ~7~· ~otj~ental 4-dt~. SAVE
' ·-$16 00 feeutiful tG.;~ cir interior -;!eed control -AM I
FM, -Door Locks -'Etc. lamor metallic paint
• 1625. This is a 9or.geous example of our real ye•r·
_.. ber9ainf. .... • '·
... -.-..-
. ,, '73 Co~tillental Sd . ONLY •,
.• -$6930 Outstanding sedan in AMERICA todey. Light 9inger
gold metallic executive car with complete Continen.
l , tal options~ 11594)
••
'
'
Clyde Johnson .• President
I'd like to toke this opportunity lo invite you to toke
advantage of our year·end sale of current models
at substantial discounts. An especially attractive item
at this time is our selection of demonstrator and ex·
ecutive cars ... all extremely low mile.age 1973 auto·
mobiles, covering nearly the complete line and, with
new car warranties in effect.
Lincoln Continentals, Mork IVs and Mercurys, all
brand new , will be marked down as well, effective
immediately .
Thi s could be what you've been waiting for ..• a
beautiful new or near new luxury car at a price we
honestly feel changes the "luxury." tag to "economy."
OVERlOOCARSONSALE
. ~~~-MERCURYS~~---
'73 COLONY PARK
9 PASSENGER WAGON
Thi1 brand new lu1ury wagon is 1 re1I b1t91in
now. H11 air, belted tire1 , fop rack, dual
1pe1ker1, etc. A 1ub1t1nti11J sa'fings & one of
many lo choose from. #2066
55295
'73 MERCURY
MARCj)UIS BROUGHAM
Demo. 460 VI, tw in lou11g1 1e1t1, 1teel belted
tires, lilt wl:eel. AM/FM w/1!ereo tepe. Gin-
ger Glamour metallic lu1ury ear. 12036 )
NOW ONLY
55595
FULL PRICE
'73 MERCURY
SEDAN
Cu1tom. Vinyl roof. belted tires, air condi·
tion ir>9, tinted glass, body side mou ldin91 ,
etc. Stick tt $5 19'9. #2078
NOW ON!-Y
5 446.4
FULL Pll'CI ~
'73 MERCURY
MARCj)UIS BROUGHAM
'460 tn9ine, sleel belted fires, air conditio11·
ing, AM/ FM radio, 6 way power 1eal, pow-
er wi11dow1, lock group, power 'fent1, etc.
Sticker $7000.78.
DISCOUNTED
51100
OFF WINDOW STICKER
•
•
"Orange Cout1t11's Family oj Fine Cars"
Jforne Of· Th@ New Car • • • "Go~• r-clt" '
Autos, u... 990 Autoo, !.!Hcl 990 Autos, UHcl ~~.;;.;.;;;;.,....~~-~~--~~-
ohnson & son
ME 11CURY
COUGAR (.\PH I
2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA ME~A e 54G-5630
Autos for sa.
990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used
CHEVROLET CORVElTE FORD FORD JEEP MUSTANG .. -·-....
Home Of The New Car , , ,
"Golden TONcW'
· Autos for S.
990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Usec 990 A1Jtos, Useo
OLDSMOBILE PINTO PONTIAC
I '
l
I
I ' I
I '
1,1
I
1
990
'67 IMPALA station wagon, 1966 CORVE'ITE C.Onvert.iblc
A-1 cond, P\\T, rack, 1'take ' Hardtop. 427,, 4 -spL>ecl.
otter, 496-0708 AMl.li'M rad.10. New ~ires.
'65 CHEVY tt Nova Wgn. 283 · Real .Oean! $!900. 546-~
Good Transportation NEW LOCATION '47 WILLY'S Jeep, 4·whl '69 ·MUSTANG, 351, pis. '65 OLDS Delta SS, 4 dr,
'60 FORD 4 dr VS t drive, 4 t'.'yl. xln! cond. Roll p/b, auto trans, a/c, good a.ulo, J!ls, p/b, air, new
great 2nd car, $250. 'ora~~ SALE bar • Ne\v lop $13!i.l. mileage, good oond, must tires. $550. 837-4294.
trade for lunnt""' or 1 '70 MAVERICK 645-2704 sell, SI575. or best ofr. PINTO
'
"It' 543-3691 * 2 Dr, Real Good Buy (ZVK-'69 CJ5 J eep, 1 ownel". Alt ~ay48s~ bet 7:30 an1...Spm1 ________ _
'Tl PINTO sed. vinyl rool, 67 LEMANS
big eng, 4 spd, R&H, custom 1-I. Top Coupe _ Automadc .
exterior, 4 ne\v tires, 20,000 Bucket Seats Pow~ Steer·
nli. Runs perfectly! Sl9'J5. i~ . Air a'.md. (SZI..525).
494-4482 Only ell&· Ault>. $525. 'GS VET PAllTS. 327 .eng, e 646-1075 e trans, A MecJl. Mag whls,
alum. md. • Like ne w .
• CONTINENT~L 642-4335/~1175
70 LTD W&&"On, lo mileage Sn). xtras. Ve11• lo mileage. Sec 1971 P'Rt R bo l Loaded. A/C, am I Im $1399 to apprec. s:ltl-7289 aft 4pm CLEAN 1967 Mustang, 56,000 ' I 0 una u 6s~O:... p/win & seat!!. _ MERCURY mi. ale, pis, disc brks new ,.,..~ tires, xlnt mech. cond. $9:>0 20,130 miles, Auto Trans, ' .. COUC'iAR" '13 GALAXY MDllJ~r or best offer. 213: 431-4ll.9 Radio Heat.er flawless l ·~~; .. 11:11=.: ' ' atr, p/s, p/b~.:.1:·0: ·,~\;" f'V~ NEW LOCATION *CLEAN. '65 Mustang 289, ownercond, Bronze with ian
'Only 1100 ml. ABSOLUTJi:· 68 COIJ(!All, air, ·~· Moat .. 111 $2959; oroc.. ' DATSUN SALE Auto, al,, P/S, R&H, plaid int01ior.
LY IMMAfUru:TEI "Blue AF/FM, id cond,. -(lr 640-lJ00.1-tome, 846-1492. . 888 Dow radials, $700. G'i>-'1609. $2095
Book $7,23.5. Ul aa<.11ftCc ~·=1Jr:.:•.;;alo;t.;;5FOR;,:544-~3::IOOD;::--,--1970 LTD Country Squire Now-port Beat.ii '67 Mercury Cougar '65 MUSTANG, red wl"•ht
'tor $9.191. CJn 'f.tnaneti Wagon, 9 pasa, ractory air, 833_1300 Open SUndny 2 Dr ~l'r tUVVT:>G) vinyl top, r/h. air conrl., gd :i::o Ptiv. :-· 530J999 loj\ded, luggage rack, xlnt '12 MAVERICK A t $1399 oond .• best offer, 642-1654
$1099.00
HOWARD Chevrolet PLYMOUTH
'73' DUSTER. 6 cyl, auto, Newport Beach
p/s, & p/b, vinyl root MacArthur Blvr:I & Jamboree
Am-fm fadio. fact. air, 5,500 au..osss
mi. $.'l,450. Pvt pt)'. 831-2538.: --------·I
'70 SATElLITE \Vgn. \Vlfe's CORP. Exec. Ve hi c I era .
car. Xlnt 'con<!. Extras. Oioose froin (2} •n Exec.
1'1ust sell. i\'lake olfer. Ponti11c "-'ng or '69 GTO 979-3616. Pontiac. Both ale in xln't cond. 979--2200. d a y g •
196.i PLYMOUTH Satellite, 963-3796 eves. •n FORD Galaxle 2 .ctr Mu>. cond. $2400. 979-8395 couoe .u 0 '69 MUSI". Conv, p/s, p/b,
'\ '72 MARK IV, llAM/~1' Extra Clean, $1395. •• ' ... ,,,o FORD Cou11try Sed ::;ad,·"o'" l1el'ont"~er'li:t1 SteeCunngn, Nf:i~,ro~r radio. whi-re ,.,·/hick t9p, ontlle control, t l W1~ 494-5886 l VO . Qn 'a ' ' "--' ~ Ji bJck \thr int, $14()(), 833-8246
door locks. Pvt. pRrty. Mutt ~.~=ro=R~,;,ALCO~'=c...,Run=--1 Sta. wgn, , p/s, p I b , E1 CONOf\.fYI. 6 Prlcyt engine,
,.11. 15595, 0111ce 64().1360 ~· D F N ·,. ' alr/rond. New tires. S1o.\O. ow mi••· • P 'Y • DATSUN OLDSMOBILE 3IOO W. Coast H•y .. N.B.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS ·
V.S, R&H, air, P/S, good "0 G~ ""'~-P-/_S_P_/_a cond. $395. 962-7517 ' "'-v 'IW• • ~· n/C, 't!l.lley whee:t.s, vtny1
PONTIAC top. Xlnt cond in A out. Pri
ply. $2:1Xl. 534-0lll;
i-, 846-1482., . G()9d • Needs Brakes tor on· 968-:1969 847~, --;;;;;:;;-&:-;;;;:;;:;--· 1 ---_!64~2·:!940~5---16,• ,llARJ( < m 23',000 m!, Jy $100. MIKE 839-1427 1972 FORD Torino Squire 191'0 FORD Cortina 1600, 4 N(.!:I~ ch Salet & 5PNice . '65 PONTIAC GTO, nu eng, RA MILER -..er, vlnY!-tOP .. Like MW• '64 roR1o, Galaxle V'-8 .~~~-Staiton Wagon, 3 aeats, air, s0peed, hR&d·H mags, "N•ide &\1.1300 Opc·a n Sund&)' OLDSMOBILE ·n_!TT08 Sedank. big enFg~. ~ ~tint.0•1 re•.·.~~lhin~g' ms~~·. AD atra , fi0..&424 coact c ea.n,. ale, new wee, luggage rack, 15,700 miles. res, ea crs, etc. c\v GMC TRUCKS sv<-~· trac & 1~l. ...,.,, ""'·..-1"" * '66 Rru\1BLER Amt.~t.n. ,
•• ~LN 4 Dr. Sedan aa~ce $350. ~ 642-8703 cl~tc~r1•87kestt, e~c. Must '73 COLON.f ·Park Wegon, HONDA CARS ~.,:~e~C: ~~tle. Track 644-4006 Steve g(lC)d C!Onditkm, $4?5. or best .• An 111 53,0QO ~ f7sO '69 a:>UNTRY Sedan, 9 '63 F:'AIRLANE. Runs good. se · a er · metallic l)lue, lo mileage. "' '72 GRAND Pt t x , ex-olltr. n4: 84&-9'&1
l'ft r?~; · -~r waaon. Air, rack, Has ttalety cheek $190. JAVELIN Many "''"'" 6-12-2917 UNIVERSITY OLDS * * '12 PINTO Runabout, 4 t:eptional. ,\II "°''~'· M"'t -===-=-="----r
,COIYEllE ,
cltan. $1695. 963-1850. • M7-887fl • _________ 1 ·ro MERC. Coloey Pork. 10 2800 Harbor Blvd. >!JlC<'<i, "'""' AM I F M ,.II, Best offer. s«h'557 T·llRD ·~ FORD Qalaxle 500, 4 dr pa11N, loaded, priv ply, Costa l\lesa 540-9640 ~· iur. $2200. 673--8730 • '65 PON11AC Le ~Jans, ---------'
hdtp, air; tinyJ top, $800. '7' Ford LTD, $1300 '68 JAVELIN SM', ~"':e'il-;_!>1::·:::57 ______ F·at Protlt ~1 attained wlu~n '72 f'tN1'0 Runabout, ~ V-S, r1h, orig O'>~ncr. $250.
'64 CORV. F'S, 4 tpd, p/w, ~8::::l0-004::..:::;::5:... --.,-.-,.,--~ CaLl 552-0234 556-8249 ;JW '62 ?iTERC Stullon 'ivagon, you M?ll through result..get· T~e ow~yment. Alr, I ~,_..-.c6e;75::>-.:::~;e--,=-~ ta. Amlfm, xln'l cond. Lo A good want ad is a good i:t-Need a "Pad"? Ptnce an ad! 1'he fastest dra"' in thl! \Vest. f\P\V brakes, perfect running ting Daily Pilot Classified stick, ~():. • 546--0777 LlJ..-e tb lTtlclr.~ Out' Trnder'1
mJ. fl37!51otr 644--1362. Vfftment. Call 642-56'18. .t\ Dally Pilot Classltied ~'~:::":::;_<I. 1,:,:1::50:.. • .::•Mc.·.::28::28;:_ __ ,:..:,:A:::d';;.· .::-==s____ Sell idle ilc ma ... Q42-56i8 Parndl!!.e column 18 for )'Olll • I "
'69 T BIRO Landau, bu
evtrythln&. mach. IO\IN,
looks grtlt, ~ or hit oj.
ft.~l
. . •
Friday, Augusl 24, iq73
•
. PRE LABOR DAY ''Calif. 500'' SELL·A· THON! ! ! . FRIDAY NO ON 'TIL MONDA Y NOON-OPEN 'TIL MID NIGHT**
. . BRAND NEW BRAND NEW BRAND NEW
'73 OMEGA '73 TORONADO '73 OLDS 98
$
1=1110201 1=728 6411
OVER DEALER $77 OVER DLR. INVOICE
INVOICE
-
ePIT STOPe
'68 OLDS DELTA 88 '68 CHEVY CAPRICE '66 OLDS 88
'69 DODGE • '69 CHRYSLER
POLARA WAGON 68 OLDS CUTLASS NEWPORTER
$C} '""' """'''" ,;, <~ $977 $ Fully equ~, •Ir CO!'I· 77 "'tioning. lllSADWI F"'llY fquiPOl!d. eir con. 977 dlliorlitlliJ. OCXAOO:I) dlUonlr.g, !7~ADZ I
. .
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
'70 OLDS '70 OLDS .98 '69 CAD. '70 MERCURY
98 COUPE LUX. SEDAN Coupe De Ville MARQUOIS
Fully equ;pped, air cood1-Full'{ equipped. air eondi-Fully equjpped, air co~d<-Fu lly equipped. dir co"-
t;oni119, vinyl top. ( 105· tionin9, vinyl lop. (72b· tioning, vinyl top. CYZS-di'ion;~9. (54JEIGl
HOC ) AP Ml 2261
$ $
DN.
77
MO.
$77 is tolal down pyrnt. S77.77 is lot.ti monthly pvmt. ind.
Id~. licenut. ll nd all c•rryin<J ch11r9e1 on "pproved credit for lb
mo11th•. Oef~rr,d pymt. price ;, S287b.72 incl. t ... ! lic,~1r.
ANN UA~ PERCENTAGE RATE I S.40 ,-, . Tot~I c~1h price;, $7100, ------HONDA CIVIC CENTER
'73 HONDA CIVIC
GMC TRUCK
COUNTRY
BRAND NEW '73 SPRINT
$ 1•501 950 1
OVER DEALER INVOICE
I •291599 I
$
WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSIN ·ESS
• \
OVER
DEALER
INVOICE
• I -. -......
--
•
'73CHARGERS
These are all BRAND NEW 1973 CHARGERS. Fu lly equipped.
Ser. #"" (WL21-C3G-242330 (Wi.21-CJG-249669) (WL21-C3G-
242329)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
$78 DOWN $78 'A ·MONTH
YOUR $2588 eHOICE
$78 i1 tot1l d~. pyml. $78 l• total mo. pymt, Intl. ttll, lic1n11 and alt carrying char911
on appr, tr•d1t for 42 mo1 , D1ftrr1d pyml. pritt $)354 incl. ftll I lit•n11. ANNUAL
PEICINTA&E U.TI 11.JO•;.,
2 DOOR '73 DART HARDTOP
Power steering, r1dio, hooter, high bock soots. Used, low 111il11ge.
(221FWC)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
$75 DOWN $75 A MONTH
FULL
PRICE
52188
$75 i1 tottl dn , pymt. $75 it tottl mo. pymt. incl. t1x, lictntt I tll carrying th•rges on
•ppr. credit for 36 mos. Oefarr•d pyml. pritt $2775 incl. tax I llctnlt. ANNUAL PER·
CENTAGE IATE 11.41°/o.
Friday, Au gust 24, 1973 DAILY PILOT
•
'"
'73 DODGE SEDANS
EVERY BRAND NEW 1973 POLARA-MONACO-CORONET
WAGON OR SEDAN WILL BE SOLD THIS WEEK FOR ONLY
$59 OVER INVOICE.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
YOUR s59 OVER
CHOICE INVOICE
PLUS ADMIRAL PORTABLE TV
With purchase of Polara -Monaco -Coronet
·Wagon or Sedan
LARGEST SELECTION OF DODGE VANS IN THE WORLD! •
'73 DODGE e SUPER VANS e COFFIN VANS e WINDOW VANS '73 SPORTSMAN
B·100 e CUSTOM VANS e ALL COLORS AND OPTIONS
B~100 VAN
V-8, auto. trans., mags & tires, radio
& heater plus full factory equipment.
Used, low mllOlge. (83026N)
SALE PRICED NOW-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FULL
PRICE
IMMEDIATE DELIVER1
f112 It t911I Ilk!, pymt. 5112 It te-
t•I IN. pyrnt. IMI. tax, llctma a
•II talT'fllll dlt'9ft on •ppr.
cAllllr tor M ll'ltL Dlf11Ad
pymt, ,..1c1 Pn4 hid, t•x & II·
-... AMfllUAL ,IRClfllTAOE
RATI 11 ......
V-8 engine, auto. trans., AM/FM radio,
power steering, horn bar, dual inirrors,
bright bumpers front & rear, 5 whHls
15x550. (B 12AF3V058487)
WINDOW
WAGON
$3688 FULL
PRICE
A
IMMEDIATE QELIYERY
till .. total dn. pymt. SIU I' 10111 pyml, incl. ltll. llctnM • er.ell! for 42 mos.. Dlferrld pym!. prlct uni l1tc:I. tu a
lie-. ANNUAi. Pl'RCENTAGE
RATI 11.11%.. ' ' $102 A MONTH $111 DOWN $111 A MONTH
COM_PACT CAR. CENTER. ONE~~ ~~::G::~::!~CTK>NS --'
-. i PINTOS e VEGAS e DATSUNS bARTS e TOYOTAS e COLTS e MAVERICKS e VW'S
1971 FORD PINT,O
R•d io, h1•ttr, fully factory 1quipp1d. l208FWCJ
YOUR . CHOICE
$31 Dn.$31 Mo.
$888 '
'72 DODGE COLT YOUR CHOICE
$34Dn.$34Mo./ 1971 DODGE COLT
R1d to, h1-i1r, chromt wh11l1. 16H2lK15 1058441
•, 1971 ·TOYOTA
Corollt. R1dlo, heottr, fylty f1ctory 1quipp•d. 1615DBVI
4 SPEED TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER
BUCKET SEATS. (430-EXEJ
'72 DODGE COLT $1299
1969 DODGE GT DART
01rl. H1rdtop, autom1ti(., pow1 r d••rin9, vinyl top. !ZW586 )
S3 I i1 tot1I down pymt. $31 i1 tot1I monthly pyrnt, incl,
ft1, tictntt, and alt c1 rryi n9 charg1s on tppr. cr.dit for
36 mo1. 01f1rr1d pymt. ptic1 i1 $11-47 incl, ta.-& lic1n1t.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE ll.51 'X.,
FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED, RADIO,
HEATER. !981HFRl
'
$-43 i1 total down pymt. $43 it tot1 I mOnthly pymt. incl.
ta.-, licon11, and 111 carrying char9•s on appr. cr1dit fo r
l6 mo1. D1f1rr1d pymt. price is $159 1 incl. tax & license.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE IO.i8.1'.. '
'70 PL YM. FURY Ill $34 ~N. $34 MO.
Autom1ta1c, air cond., RIH, pow•1r 1t11rin9. (993AVKI
$3-4 i1 +otef down pymt. $34 ii total monthly pymt. incl. $988 tax, lic1nu1, and 111 c•rryinq chergos on •ppr. crtdit for Full
36 mo1. D1f1red pymt. price h $1 258 incl. t1x l licent•. Prite
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.50 %.
'67 COUGAR XR7 $25oN. $25M~.
He1t1r. mt9 wh•tls. IXEV13-4) S25 h total down pymt,
$25 i1 total monffily pymt. incl. t .... lic•n11, and all ctrrv· $688
in9 ch1r9•1 on •ppr. cr1dlt for 36 mos. D1f1rr1d pymt. Full
pric1 i1 $925 incl. t1x & lil:1nte. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE Price
RATE 111.3 8 %.
'69 ROADRUNNER $34oN. $34Mo.
R&H, f1ctory air, pow1r sfeoring , l1nd1u top. (YQY7171
Sl4 is tot1I down pym+. $1• is tot1I monthly pymt. incl. ~88
tax, ll can11, 1nd 111 c1rryin9 ch1r9e1 on 1ppr. credit for Full
)6 mos. 01ftrr1d pymt. pric1 i1 S 1258 incl. t•• l llc1n11, -. Price
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.50 "/.
'69 CHRYSLER 300 $34 oN. $34Mo.
VB. eir cond., 1utomtfic1 ltndtu roof, pwr. 1t11rln9.
!XXC141 ) Sl -4 i1 total down pyml. $34 is total monthly $988
pymt. incl. lax, lic1n11, ind 111 carrying ch1r9e1 on •ppr. Full
credit for )6 mo1. Otferred pyml. prico ii $1258 incl. t11 Price
l lic•nto. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12 .50 "/ •.
'70 MONTE CARLO $51 DN. $5 IMo.
Au lom1tic, powtr sttering, r1dio. (861AFWI $5 1 i1 total
down pymt. $51 it fotel monthly pyml. incl. t•x, lic1n11, $1488
i nd all carrying chtrg•t on appr. cr1dit for )II mos. De· Full
ferred pyml. prlc• is $!887 incl. 11.-& lic1n11. ANNUAL Price
PERCENTAGE RATE 12 .28 '1..
'68 CHEV. N.OYA $31 ON. $31 MO.
Autom1t1c lr1ntm11tion, r1d 10, h11t1r. I 1035 ) SJ I i1 tottl
down pymt. $]I is total monthly pymt. incl. tax, lieen1e, $888 and all carrying ch1r9t1 on 1ppr. cr1dit for 36 mos. De . Full
f•rred pymf. p1 ice i1 $1147 inc l. ta• I l icen~e. ANNUAL Pric•
PERCENTAGE RATE tl.51 1' •.
$27 ON. $27 MO.
Grein, vi nyl top, V.8, auto. tr1nt., pow1r tl1•rin9 , 1ir
cond. rXTZ8501 $27 is total down pymf. $27 i1 lot1I $788
monthly pyml. incl , tell, lic1n1e, and tll carrying ch1r911 .~~~
on appr. credit for l ll mo1. Oeferrtd pyml. price i1 S999 •-
incl. tex & li c1n1e. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12. I l % •
'72 DODGE DEMON $55oN. $55Mo.
2 Dr. H.T., r1d io, htaltr. mag wh.el1. (948FFGI $55 it ·
tot1I down pymt. $55 it +ot•I monthly pyml. lnct. t1x, $1588 littnte, tnd 111 carrying ch1rg11 o" 1ppr. credit for 16 F'!ll ·
rno1, Dtf1rr1d pymt. pric• i1 $2035 incl. t"x A lic1n11. PrlcJ
ANNUAL PERt;ENTAGE RATE 13.04 Y ••
'71 FORD TORINO $38oN. $38Mo
Automatic tr1niml1lion, air condition in9. 150 7CQW) $38 '
is total clown pymt. $18 is tottl month ly py rnt. inc!. tai, $1088 lic1n11 , ind all carryin9 chtrge1 on appr. credit for l b ,Full
mot. 01f1rrtd pym t. pric1 h $1406 incl. tax & lictn10. ' Pric.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 13 .59 ,..
'69 DODGE CHARGER
'69 DODGE HARDTOP $25oN. $25Mo.
R1d io, ht ,,.l1r, 1 cylindtr, llL2909Bl8415ll. $25 i1 total
down pyml. $25 is totel monthly pymt. incl. tax, lic1nt1, $688
•nd all c1rryin9 char911 on appr. crtdit for136 mo1. 01. hll
f1rr1d pymt. pric1 i1 $926 incl. tax I lic1n1a. ANNUAL Price
PERCENTAGE RATE 16.ll % .
'72 DODGE PICKUP $68oN. $68Mo.
Autometic trtn1mi11ion, VI •ngin1, 190924Ll $68 is fot1I
down pymt. $68 i1 total monthly pymt. in cl. tax, licant1, $1988 tnd tll carrying ch•rg•• on appr. tr•dit for 36 mos. 01· !lull
f1rr1d pymt. prict it $2516 incl. l1x I llc1n11. ANNUAL Price
PERCENTAGE RATE 12.17 %,.
'70 OLDS 442 $48oN. $48Mo ·
va, •utom1tic, radio, htaf1r, pow•t 1!11rin9. l 9762 l $ol8 •
i1 toltl down pymt. $48 is tot•I monthly pvml . incL lair. $1388 lit1n11. and ell c1rry in9 (.har9t1 on •ppr. t•odit for lb · F11ll
lnOI. o.f,rr1d pymt. pric• i1 s I 776 inc l. tax l lic1ns•. ,....
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.91 "/ •.
'69 MUST ANG $31 ON. $31 MO.
fyll f1ctory 1qulpm•"'· l612EPQI . $11 it tot1I down
pvmt. $11 ii total monthly pymt. incl, +1x, lictn11, ind $888 •II carrying ch1r911 on •ppr. cr1dit for 16 mo1. D1f1rrtd Ftdl
pymt. prict 11 SI1-47 incl. ttx l lictn11. ANNUAL )ER· PrtM
CENTA6E RATE 13.51 '/..
.'70 CHALLENGER $51 DN. $5 IMo.
VI, auto., P.S., rtdio, h1at1r, f•clory 1ir, landtu lop.
(6-4196 ) $51 h total down pymt. $51 i1 total monthly $1488 pymt, incl. fix, lic1ni1, ind tll ctrryin9 t htr911 on appr. F11ll
crtdit for ]6 mos. D1f1rttd pymt. prlct is $1 887 incl. Price
tax I lic1n1t, ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.28 'to. .
'69 DODGE POLARA $27 DN. $27 MO
Aytomalic, P.S., factory 1ir, r1dio, h•ater. IYRJI 18 l $27 •
it toter down pymt. $27 ii total monthly pymt. incl. t 11, $788 lic1n11, ind t ll carrying chargai on tppr. c.redit fo r 16 fllfl
mos. D1f•rt1d pymt. pric• it S999 incl. t•• & lic1n1t. f'ric9
ANWUAL PERCENTAGE RATE, 12 .1 l % •
.. • •
I
•
• • • • • •
• • • • ~ • • • • • • . ' • .
'69 FORD WINDOW VAN
Club w19on w/1•1tt, 6 cyl., r1d io,
h111f1r, 111.11lom1tii:. l6l68QE I
'71 CHEVY MALIBU 2-Dr. H.T. $2284 R1dio, hent~r, 111t.om1tic _t~111~mi11ion,
power st11r1n9, 11r cond1t101un91 ind
good mil11. I 59)0TAI
;!~9~~~1~s~!-~~~.~~ r1dio, h11t1r, s.2494
111tom1f1c tran1m111ton, power tl11r-
in9, 1ir conditio11in9, and Ii•• 111w.
l46SOLNI
'71 T-llRD LANDAU
Full pow1r, 1ir cofMI., w1r-
r111ty 1¥1i11bl1. Good mil11,
1741CPCI
'71 T·BIRD LANDAU
Loaded, lo mil••• m1ny 111·
fr•~ l9l4DCHI • , •• ONLY
$3484
'70 IUICK ELECTRA H.T. $2784 2.25. ·RlH,, 111!0., pwr. 1hg., windt . I
11 1+1, tilt wheel, 'f'inyl top, AIR CONO.
1196BEU J
'68 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
4-DR. HARD TOP, full power, 1ir·con-
ditionin9, good mil11 (YCNS I I I
'70 CHEVY WAGON
Klngswood , R&H, 111tom1tic, pow1r
1t11rin9 roof rte~. 1ir conditionin9.
I 171iCAXI
'69 FORD XL HARDTOP
Red io, ht1itr, autom1tic, pow1r 1t1er·
ing, Yinvl roof, 1ir cond., good mil11.
17'47EtAI
•
MRY NEW & USED CAR & TRUCK
NOW AT · MO.DEL YEAR-END
' SALE PRICES .DURING -~
19 M DEL · -£A
.... .
' •
t' , ' '
THIS· IS "WHAT YOU'VE ·auM WAITING: FOR!
1·973 :FORDS 'YilLL NEV.Ill IE LOWEil• ~OME .• N .. TOD•Y·
' . . ... . . .
DEMO S.ALE T·BIR.D SALE! . .
ALL DEMO AND STAFF CARS
MUST GO!. ........
15 1973 T·BIRDS
TO CHOOSE FROM! \ •
SUPER SAVINGS ON
T-Bircls, LTDs, T~l~os, Gala.xie 500's,
Mustanss,.Station Waaons
WHILE THEY LAST!
PINTO·MAVERICK·MUSTANG· TORINO
GALAXIE·LTD·WAGONS FORD
SALE! MANY TO CHOOSE FROM '65 THRU '73 MODELS
SqulrH, 2 Door & 4 D-SedoM & HardllflS. Wltli lo Wl-t Air Coodltloo-
lng. 4-6·8 cylhodon. WARRANTYS AVAILAIU.
EXAMPLE
'73 FORD LTD H.T.
Full power, f1ctory 1ir conditioning, AM/
FM, "inyl roof, power cloor loclu, 1t1d
only 9,000 "'11,,. 1172GlUI
$3984
'61 BUICK SPEC. WAGON
R1cfio, H1t1(' eulomet!C, poW•r 1hjr-
in9, eir, 100 tacit. 9oocl miles. I ).10·
EXXl .
EXAMPLE EXAMPLE
'72 MUSTANG H.T. '72 CUSTOM 4 DOOi
Air co11cfitioning, r•di.o,-heifer, 1utom1tic,
pow1r 1tterin9 302 eng., good miles.
I 196EAFI
l11. R1t. Avtom1tic, power 1htri119, tood
milts. 2 to choose from . ll l540ZI 11 50· 1591 .
$2484 $1684
$1184 '67 IMPALA W-
R1dio, h11t1r, 1uto.m1tic lr1n1mit1ion,
powtr st1erin9, 1ir conditioning, 1rid
9ood,mil1s . ITYT2111
'67 MUSTANG HT
R1ilio, heaf1r, 1wto·tr1n1 Pow1r .1ft1r-
h1g, 'finyl roof, goocl miles. IVHC992 l
'
$984
$J084
' .
'70 DODGE DART
R1dio. heifer, ..-uto .. r•ns.·-.,ow•r 1f••r·
ing, tir-conditloning, good mileJ. 1=447
CEKI
~1584 '68 FORD LTD 4 DI!-11.'f;
. RlH, euhlmetic, power 1tffri119, 1ir
conclitioni1t9 9oocl mile1. lW~C649),,
'65 MUSTANG H.T.
6-Cyl., 2-tone, r1dio, heat•r, 1utoma·
tic tr1n1mission, ind good mil•s.
(#2162921
'70 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLI $3384
4 dr. H.T. All POWER, vi11yl top, AIR
CONDITIONING, lo mil••· 1521ADll
'70 MUSTANG H.T. $
6 cylinder. Economy •peci1!, R•clio~ •
h11t1r, good mi111. 177llfC)
'68 FORD TOllNO·H.T.
R1dio, h•1ter, autom1tic fr•n1miJ1ion,
power steering, •ir conditioning, ind
9ood mil11. IXDl730)
584
'984
.
'71 TORINO G.T. HARDTOP
Rtdlo, hethr, 1utometic, power~d••""
i119, air conditioning, good miles. ( ]06·
OIMI
'66 CHEV. ¥• TON
V-1, eulom1tic, r1dio, ht1f1r, 1ir con·
ditioning, ntw p1int. IU21146)
'71 fORD.4 DOOi SEDAN
302 1119ln1, r1dlo, heehr,, eutotne.tlc,
, power 1te1rin9, good mil11. C707DJA)
'70 SPOIT FURY
Pl.,mouth H.T. R&H , •utom1tic, P.S.,
•inyl roof, 1ir cond., low mil••· 1612
CT81
MAKE
OFFER
•17s4
$.
I I
CLIAN UP
PRICE ONLY
COMPACTS-MANY TO
CHOOSE FROM
DATSUN~TOYOTA~VW-YEGAS-PlNTOS
MAVllletl
ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED
'ii CHIV. tMrALA
4 dr. H.T., RlH, 1uto., po-1titr•
ing, AIR CONDITIONING, good "'i111.
I0)7!1VI. -, ~ ~ , . ,.
'H FORD ·F~LANE '
Hird top, redio, h11hr 1ufo.tr1n1,
power 1t11rlng, 9oocl mileJ, IZDT7121
'65 FOID HT
R1dio, h11ter, 11lfom1tic tr1ntn1issio11,
pow1r tfe1ring, good milt1. ·IDOE591 l
'67 PONTIAC FIREllltD
Herel top, r•dio, h••f1r, 1uto-t;1n1 ..
powtr ,tfeering, Yinyl roof. IUTIJ 16 )
.,
'6' CAMAIO SS H.T •
R1dlo,;h11t.r, ... wtomttic tt1111mi11ion,
po-r.t tf•tring, '<'i11yl hp, 11td 9ood
ml.les: ISAOPQHI
'"' oµis Nl'H.T •.
tidiO, h11fer, 111tom1tic IT1111mission,
pow1r tftering, new 2-tont p1 int, i nd
low mil••· (SST995l
•594 •
'71 PONT. LE MA'.l!S $1784 Redlct, heeftr, 1utomttic tt11111"iu ion, '
p~wtr 1te1rin9, ind IOw mfle1. 191].
DCll
'71 WAGON
4 1p1ocl, RlH, chrome trim.
1117CXWI
72 <;OUPE
ltlH, 111tom1tlc 1~ cond., low
mlle1 . 1779FWPI
~· ____ ...... __ ., ~
!I!!
VEGAS
--
. AN hlo ""• _d,,"'"' sft.. A-If, 1'11
)) ..
IALll DIPT. HOUlllt I_, ... _ _,.rt.: I e"'"4 ,.. let.: 11-'°" I..._
PAllTS Ult.VICI HOUU: 7 _, '°" -: 7 --' '°" T_.,rt •
PAllTI DI". ONL'f: I -1 ... let •
, -r
San Clemente
Capistrano EDITION
VOL. 66, NO. 236, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES
""/ .... ,
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
...... II'-..
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1973 TEN CENTS
Little Jason Ilea Loses Battle lor Lile
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of 1111 DtllY Pl ... Slaff
Jason Rea, the little boy rrom
Capistrano Beach who fought death for
weeks but never knew it, lost the battle
late Thursday at Fairview State Hospital
as hls mother prayed at his bedside.
The S-year-old victim of a pool tragedy
lo Huntington Beach early in July died of
major complications brought on by
massive brain damage suffered in the in·
cident at the home or a baby sitter.
IRA Terror
In the weeks that followed the com-
atose youngster wu flown to Denver to
become a transplant donor , then a week
ago was returned to the Orange C.oast
after physicians in Colorado ruled the
youngst er no longer qualified as an organ
donor.
1'Jason's now a little angel in Heaven,"
his weary, grieving mother, Linda, said
this morning,
"l prayed and prayed for God to help
his suffering,'' she added.
Mrs. Rea, a 29-year-old secretary who
is divorctd, had made fWJeral ar-
rangements weeks ago when it first was
planned that her ooly child would be
flown to Denver and the breathing
machines removed.
The medical oonsensu.. at that time
was that because no hope existed at all,
the youngster would be medically dead at
that point and organ transplants could be
performed, using bis kidneys and liver to
give life to other dying children.
•
arco
"l\fy greatest grief is that it never hap-
pened; that Jason could not give life to
other children," sa.id ~1rs. Rea
Through the ordeal 1\1.rs. Rea said, sup-
port haJ come from throughout the na·
tion.
"I'v~ had messages from perfect
strangers from all over the country , all
blessing me for courage and faith in the
Lord, and I'm so grateful for them.
Without the help I wonder if I could have
n1ade it," she said .
The support has continued to come
from friends and strangers alike.
··~fy phone was ringing all , night and
everyone I talkOO to agreed with me that
God must have had a reason for all of
this, and now it's up to me to fmd the
answer," she said.
One factor which caused some bit-
terness during the strain of the vigil were
comments about the youngster "making
medical history," ~trs. Rea said.
''That hurt greatly," she said.
London Stock
•
Tower Bombed
LONDON (UPI 1 -A parcel bomb hid·
den in u hollowed-out book exploded with
a "·bite flash on the 2!nd floor or Lon-
don 's nc"' sLonc, glass and steel Stock
Exchange today, wounding two persons.
It was lbe sixth dny of London bomb
attacb blamed on an extremist wing
ol the Irish Republican Anny. and the
victims were the first persons injured by
the 35 bombs put in stortS, offices and
subway stations since Sunday.
It was a brlaflt sunlit momlng and an
~rmy ol ~. derQ and bowjer·
batted bonkers. bad Just emerpd lr'om
the '"bway and railroa~ l13tions to fill
the ctty of London, Iba G1pltal'1 Inner
r.:~n..':'."in& British major financial
"'tn a gray.carpeted executive office,
room 2201, 1.liss Joanna Kniaht, 25, began
sorting the day's mall. She reached for a
large white envelope addresseii to the
Stock Exchange's secretary general ,
George W. Brind, and slit il open.
The envelope exploded with a y,·hite
flash, disfiguring ?.1iu Knight in a blow
that struck at the very heart of one of
the world's great financial centers, Lon·
don's square mile ol money.
Blood streamed from Miss Knight's
face. bands and legs. She fainted.
Brind, 12, the stock exchange'• chief
administrative officer, staggered to the
door, aboutlng '"Bomb! Bomb!"
Ml.u Knight's gold wristwatch stopped
at 9:20 a.m.
In the tradiUoo·bound Stock Exchange,
whose $10 billion turnover efceeds that or
all European continental stock exchanges
put together, the sti[f British upper l~p
prevaJfed to maintain proper decorum m
the crisis.
A police warning flashed over the ex·
change's 2Ck:hannel closed , television
circuit1 used for price collecting :
"There bas been a bomb explosion. The
police are deadling with it . You may
evacuate the building." '
But the 3.600 jobbers on the ground
H artelius Court
Hearing Erupts
l1i Shout Match
By TOM BARLEY
Of "" _..., ,.... .....
LOS ANGELES -A three-<lay medical
examiners' hearin& Into charges against
Dr. Ebbe llartellus, El Tol9, dootd here
late Tbursday In a shouting. match with
three furious lawyen hurling a~tloos
ind epithets at each qlhcr.
0 You are unscrupulous p e op I e , ''
defenae attorney Matthew Kurlllch yelled
al deputy attomeYJ general Mark Levine ~ Robert Mukai. "You ore unethical
\rlcksters clearly guilty ol deceptive and
viiidlctJve c:onduct..1'
"And you're a liar," Levlne shouted
back. "The biggest thin& In th1s hearing
nas been your mouth."
Hcsrlng olficer John A. W i 11 d
desperately tried to restore order as the
three physicians who comprise the state
Board of Medical Examiners review
committee watched open-mouthed.
One clear fact emerged from the
Jr""''· Both l.evlne nnd MID<al stressed
{hat the stale will now actUe for oothing
lets than the nivodalton of Dr. llartcllus'
UCilllle to practice mcdlc!ne.
• Both lawyers had been prepared at an
earlier hearing to accept a plan that
would have put Hartellu>, 51. on pro-
bation fer n.. years provided he
substantially restricted his use of certain
d1ngerous druga .
floor trading floor, wearing traditional
black coo.ts and silk top hats, made no
move to leave the building. Trading
began punctually ~t 9:30 a.m.
Police said today they nre sure
lhat the bombs. which have included
miniature incendiary devices as well as
explosives, were the work of a British-
bascd unit of tbe Provisional wing ol the
Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Nixon Villa
Repott ·Que
'Very Soon'
"" By JOHN VALTEllZA
Dl "" ~" ~.,.. ., ...
The Nixon Administration promised
1burSday that a full disck>sure of the
transactions "'hich involve the purchase
of La. Casa Pacifica and land nearby will
be made before the President leaves the
South Coast. (!Waled l!Oriet, Page 31.
..,. '°'"' SI.rt '"""" BELGIAN BIKER FRANK MEY5MAN TAKES BREAK AT END OF· LONG, RUGGED ROAD .
'N1Y1r Thought I'd Mike It/ He Says of 43-day Cross-Country Journey
Bike Rider Reaches Goal
Beyond that. Deputy P,... lle<:relary
Gerald Warren would go no further.
Warren said that be did not foresee any
revelations this.week on the controversial
arrangements assertedly worked out From New York to Dan.a Point in 43 Days
EX-FBI MEN ADMIT
THEFTS-Story, P•ll" 4
between the President and two wealthy
friends.
He would concede only that the prom-
ised explanation would come possibly
next week . The President is expected to
remain at his · seas.Ide villa unUl
scmetime after Labor Day.
One of the two men believed to have
figured in financial 8'sistance to the
President In the purchase of the estate -
C. G. "Belie" Rebow of Florida -ar·
rived at La Casa Pacifica with the Presi-
dent Monday altemoon.
Rebozo. a millionaire lnd111trialist who
has furnished the Prfsident & retreat at
Ke: Biscayne, was the apparent original
purveyor of financial uaistance to Nil:on
in 1969 when tbc original purchase of the
old Cotton Estate was consummated.
Later, when arrangements were made
to purchase about l6 fallow acres Im-
mediately loland cf the estate, Rebozo
asertedly ooce again lent 'runas. Later
the loan was picked up by another close
Nimt1 friend, Robert Abplanalp, the
aerosol spray valve klng from New York.
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of llle.DallY .. ..., 11.tf
It was just after 11 a.m. Thursday that
Frank Meysman was face-to-race with
the Pacific Ocean in Dana Point.
His 43-<iay, 4,500-mile bicycle ride that
began July 11 at New York's Kennedy
Airport was over.
"lt was just great seeing lhe ocean,"
.. id Meysman of his·first glimpse ol the
blue Pacific. "I couJdn't believe lm ade
It."
One thing made clear is that the United
States is not ideally laid out for J>icycling,
Meysman said between sips of lemonade
at the Three Arch Bay home of Mr. and
Mrs .. 1bomas Cutkomp.
Take the relatively short run from
Blythe to Palm Springs1 across the
scorching southern . desert. The two
desert towns are ronnected by high .. peed
Interstate 10. where bicycles aren't
allowed.
Meysman. rather, had to pedal his
Belgian-made touring bicycle south to
Brawley, then head north through
Coachella and finally, to Paint Springs.
Tbe cities were even worse. lt took
nearly two hours to find a surrace street
leading out of JFK Airport in. Ne\v York.
Meysmart. 21 , a university' ·student in
Belgium, begari planning for the cross-
country trip 18 months ago.
"SOme of us had joked about a trip to
China -even before President Nixon -
but we figured it would take four months
and we only had three months of vaca-
tion . So we settled on America/'
Meysman recalled.
When the bip began in New York,
Meysman had two companions riding
with him. "But they quit in Kansas City.
They were physically disturbed," he
joked. ·
Meysman, a former American Field
Service exchange student who lived in
Iowa two years ago. relied on AFS
members (to provide places to stay d~
ing his ride.
He admjtted it was no easy task to line
up families ooast·to-coast.
The only thing he carried with him was
a small pack containing clothes, a. first
aid kit, 900le food and spare parts.for his
Superior brand bicycle.
A Belgian manufacturer donated the
Mthollgh some disclosur.s ahoot tbc
transactions -facts revealed tn press
accounts -have been corroborated by
the White Houae, one key element In the
transactions has not been addreued.
Nude .Bit~hhiker
Abplanalp lnltlally WU reported to
have set up a spedaJ corporation to deal
with· the financing, ·~ to early
White llcuae reporU. But liter Warren
admitted that oo such Onn ex~ted.
Public records show none of the dttalls
because the land Is In bllnd trust.
Poliµ Book Naked Woma1i in Attack
In the furore that ernued over lhe
delalls of the loans and purchase, Warren
and his superior Ronald Ziegler vowed to
mak'e complete de(alls available to tlie
• What dO you say to a naked woman
hitchhiker? • ,
In Laguna Beach, It's "get in !he patrol
car please."
At . least, that's what Patrolman Paul
.Rose said late Thursday, just before the pubbc. In advince of the promiled 1110 btlsty scanly ~Ue-c\ad woman began to
d!,!t]!lsures warren bas made a semantlc -~t~lllll!!!, _
distinction between ffie "Nlion rial~ It oet!lriif.lbat Role bad. stopped. the ~
and the "W.Stem White llollle." y......td Oraqe woman for tailgaUng. In several references this week Warren has •P'ICIUed that certain e .. nll would lle detected an odor of alcohol and
lake place at the WCJtem White HOllSe while Ibo -'" -clothed at the lime
(the government llnattccd complex on the -wasn't ....Uy drWlk, Rose suggeatcd
San Diego side of the cowil)' UM). she take a cab borne.
He has further stmsed that tholC Walking to the center o! Soulh Coast
(Ste VILLA, Pap I) l!Jgbwa1 am lilt 10ttlberly city limits,
the woman stuck out her thumb , ap-
parently to hitchhike.
Officer Rose advised the woman that
the center of the traffic lanes was not the
place to stand while hitchhiking anti the
woman moved to the curb.,i removed all
her clothing except some brief Dosh col·
orcd pantlea and stuck out her thumb.
Wilen ·Role attempted . to • take the
woman lnto-cust-Ody-lor-indooent ex•
posurt, she all~gedly Dalled away at him ,
which all resulted in a booklng for ln·
decent exposure and rest.sting arrest.
At the station. sli< d<Cllncd to clothe
hencU. anti was handcuffed in an oUice
unUI transportaUon to the women's sec-
lion of the 0r""!l• Cowity Jail could be
proyldcd.
bike for the. trip and ~feysman said it
perronned beautifully, with not one
bfoken par~ anCI only one flat tire.
~·And the roads some places were
awful," he added.
The worst part of the trip, Meysman
declared, was the .seemingly ~dless ride
through the southwestern desert span-
ning New MeJico, Arizona a n d
California.
Because of the scorching daytime
temperatures, Meysman rode at night.
His longes~ ride in a single day was a
19-hour run from Brawley to Nuevo, a
(Ste BIKE, Page %)
l'etitions Sought
To Get Tustin
District Change
By JAN WORTH
Of !tie Dall'I' l'lltf Slaff
A 151).member ''College Committee of
Tustin" is going door-to-door with peti-
tions in an effort to get Tustin out of the
Saddlcback Community College district
and into the Rancho Santiago Community
O>llege dlstrict.
Shepherd Kanerak. the originator of
the push which he said "has grown by
lcapa and bounds" since it began several
months ago,. cited 1 probable decrease in
the tax rate, better facilities, aod greater
convenience as the major reasons for the
S\Vl tch.
Tustin students must travel 20 miles to
the 200-acre, f\1isslon Viejo campus. San-
ta Ana College. in the Rancbo Santiago
district, Is only rour miles trom
dpwlitown T\lstln.
"Almost everybody I've spoken to uses
a eubterfuge of-tome-kind .. to-sey--out of
S.ddlebtlck," Kancrak said. ':They use
addresses or their relatiW:s' or rrtends to
establish rtsldency outside ·the district.''
Kanerak said tho chief compl'alnt is tile
driving dlatnnce. He anld when the S.d·
dlebaclt district proposal Wll• presented
to voters slx years ago. the locatlon of
(See GET OUT, Page ZI
The youngster was literally brought
back from death several times duril1i the
ordeal -first after showing no signs of
life after the rescue from the bottom of
the P90i.
JasQn's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a
team of physicians worked furiously at
Huntington lntercommunity Hospital.
Three weeks later at the same hospital
the youngster again lost his bodily func-
(S.. CAPO BOY, Pace ZI
Drug Raids
In Illinois
Get Probe
ALTON, Ill (UPI) -A federal grand
jury indicted eight federal and four loc8l
narcotics agents today on charges o1.
depriving II pet10n! ol constitutional
rights during drug raids in southwestern
Illinois last April.
The 17-count indicbnent was returned
in U.S. District Court alter a four·mooth
federal investigation.
The indictment said the qents, acting
without probable cause or search war-
rantc, broll:e into six homes i n
Collinsville. East SI. L<IW• an d
Edwardsville, all in Illinois, during a
five-day period.
During the course of the ralas, tlvo oc·
cupants were assaulted while blndcUffed
and a third man was jailed for three
days without bclng charged with a crim~.
the indictment said.
Later, the indictment continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident by
zttempting to "tooe down" reports to in-
''estigators.
In addition, three other agents were
charged with lying to th "? federal grand
jury investigating the raids.
The agents. attached to tba St. Louis
o f f i c e ol. Drug Abuse Law
Enforcement, included six from the
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs, two lrom tbe Treasury Depart-
ment, three from the St. Lotils police
department and one from the East. St.
Louis Police Department.
The six federal narcotics agents in·
dieted are William C. Dwyer, Kenneth R.
Bloemaker, Dennis R. Moriarty, Dennis
Harker, Michael Hillebrand and Leon
Phillips. ·
Treasury Department employes in-
dicted are Tom Teyssier and Calvin Culp.
The three ~ Louis policemen ere
Ronald J. Olive, Donald W. Spicer and
Daniel J. Dully.
The East St. Louis officer named In the
indlctment Is Lester Andersoo.
All agents except Anderson were
charged in two counts wilb conapiring to
deprive persons of constitutiooal rights
by entering bomes wlthoot probable
cause or search warrants, arresting and
detaining them without probable cause or
arrest warrants and assaulting them
while in custody.
or .. ge Cout
Slightly cooler Saturday along
the Orange Coast -but still Diet.
Highs In the upper !Os at the
beaches rising to 78 inland. Over-
night lows 6Ui.
INSIDE TODAY
Two Laguna Beach. film mak-
er:t weTe h1uotved in the making
of a supersta r. -even if he f.t a
•eagull. The filming of the J<ma-
th.cm Livinps ton Seagull .seag1.dti
by Greg MocGllli •"l'OY ail(! Jim
Freeman for a bJrd'& debut is
described In toda11'• Week.ender,
Page 23.
Al Ytlff' hfYk• S
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. -
Z .DAILY PILOT SC
Coast Panel
Chief Eyes
Court Move
By RUDI NIEOZ1E1$KJ
01 TIM 0.llY PU .. l lfft
...
r..1elvin Carpenter. executive director of
the Sooth Coasl Regional 7.one Conserva-
tion Commlssion, tO\d a group of Orange
County lawyers Thursday be was un-
certain how the rece nt Supreme Court
decision will affect the Avco project in
Laguna Niguel.
He said he would first have to review
lhe development finn's applications for
exemption rrom the Coastal 1.one
Conservation Act to determine if the 4-3
court ruling. issued Wednesday, allows
Avco to qualify'.
The court decision declared that
Coastal Zone Conservation Act permits
are not required for bullding projects if
substantial construction was started
before Feb. 1, 1973. 'lbe former cutoff
date was Nov. 8, 1972.
Speaking to members of the Orange
County Bar Association, Carpenter said
Avco had filed for a total of 18 ex-
emptions for the Laguna Niguel projects.
Of these, carpenter said, be believes
only one is covered by the extension
granted by the Supreme Court ruling.
"All the rest of the Avco developments
must go through th permit granting proc-
ess." he predicted.
Avco's projects were stopped by the
commission earlier this year when a
pennit was denied for the construction of
72 acres of condominiums in two
separate tracts oo both sides of Pacific
Coast Highway.
Although the Supreme Court decision
will allow more construction projects
through unimpeded, Carpenter cautioned
attorneys represe11ting developers that
their cli ents cannot start construction
aut001atically.
"AlthougJ:i your client may have
started constructiOn in January <n:
December he is not exempted. He will
have to come in and apply for an ex·
emptim first," he said.
Any infractions will be tW"ned over to
the Attorney General as will cases where
builders engage in construction without
first obtaining an exemption or a pennit
from the commission.
Ce.rpenter said he must play the role of
a policeman and has investigators
patrolling the coastal area constantly to
check on the legality of construction.
He added that Orange County residents
will be able to offer their advice on
coastal planning in sessions to be
scheduled throughout the yea r.
The first of these will be held from 3 10
11 p.m. Sept. 6 in Huntington Beach City
Council Chambers.
FromPqel
CAPO BOY ...
tions but was revived and afte r surgery
physicians , ~trs. Rea and her former
husband -Jason's fath er -agreed to
the transplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver Mrs. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fa re and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One of those offers or help came from
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help Mrs. Rea face what she had
believed to be the inevitable.
"I accepted it graciously," she said.
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the little boy are ten·
tatively set for Wednesday at the Peek
Famil y COlonial Funeral Home in
\Vestminster.
Fire Still Blazing
SAN DIEGO (AP) -IV ear y
fi refighters, after spending much of the
night in ~up operations, hope today to
control a blaze which destroyed 140 acres
of rugged brush in the Cleveland Na·
tional Forest. Firemen reported no in·
juries or structura l damage from the
blaze which began around noon and u•ati
contained at 5:30 p.m. by 150 men , 15 fire
trucks and six aerial tankers.
OtAN61 COAST ••
DAILY PILOT
T~f °'911911 CN1t OAILV Pll.OT. wllfl wll~
It «M'llll1"911 t~ NfWl..Pra•, 11 """n-bY
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ftrlp•r. IOr co.11 M ... , Mtw!IOf"I ltleh,
~unrf.l'IJlor! l1tc:ll/F°""11!11 V1t1ey, L•oun• ... di. l,....lrlelSlddl"*'i tnc1 h11 C11mtto11/
S.11 JW11 C•colatr1no, A •Jnol• ff9kwwl
.. ltloR If "*'llllfll S..llltHp tf'4 Sclnffn.
Tll9 ,riMINI M l ... lnf pi.nl b 11 llO Wnl
.. ., 1'"9f, CO.II MtN. C.llllmlt, f1l».
••It.rt N. Wed
Pt91ldln! 1"4 P111)1Wltf
J1cl( R. Cutl1y Vke PT1'1'1119111 11'1d a.e....r11 M-IH
Thom•• Ke11il
Ed/lot
Tho'"•' A, M111 plli~e M1Mtf"9 Editor
Cliatlot H. Looi Ridi1rd r. Nill
AMbl•11l M1n19fft0 tlllilot• ... -0-JOI Nert~ El Co111lno Real, t ?671
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'PLAYING POLICEMAN'
Coast Watcher Carpenter
Nuclear Power
Plants F aci1ig
'l,irnitations
MONTPELIER. Vt (AP) - A
spokesman for the Atomic Energy Coin·
mission said today that the AEC's
regulatory staff has imposed operating
li mitations on IO nuclear power plants
across the country.
The spokesman. in a telephone in·
terview from Washington. said the
restrictions would provide additional
assurances that the effects of so-called
"fuel densification" were taken into ac·
count in operation of the plants.
The ·atomic generating facilities in·
volved are: Vermont Yankee, at Vernon,
Vt.; Pilgrim Plant, Plymouth, Mass.;
Millstone Plant, Waterford, Conn.; Units
2 and 3 of the Dresden Plant, Morris,
Ill.; Quad Cities plan ls 1 and 2, Cordova,
Ill.; Monticello, Minn.; Nine Mile Point,
Scriba, N.Y; Oyster Creek, near
Waretown, N.J.
He said that according to preliminary
caluclations, the restrictions will result in
a temporary "derating" in power levels
in the affected plants ranging from 5 to
25 percent.
All of the plants involved have boiling
v.'ater reactors manufactured by the
General Electric CO.
He explained that fuel densificati on
means that uranium-oxide pellets inside
the fuel-rods of a reactor densify or
shrink down during the operation of a
reactor.
He sajd that AEC assumes that all
nuclear fuel densities to some extent. But
he indlcated that the study is aimed at
• deermining whether such densification,
even U minimal, might worsen the situa·
lion if the reactor were involved in some
accident.
That is:, he said, the matter under
study boils down lo this:
"If you have densified fuel, can you
still keep the temperature of the fuel
elements ... no higher than 2300 degrees,
one of the criteria which the em<>:rgency
core-cooking system (ECCS) must be
designed to meet."
'Obese' W ornan
Had $300,000
Cocaine Bulge
From Wire Services
MTAMT, Fla. -A young Orange Coun·
ty woman whose abnormally bulging
waistline failed to fit her facial features
as an indication of obes ity experienced a
quick, two-pound weight loss Thursday.
Deborah S. Stayanoss, of Santa Ana,
\..•as detained by suspicious U.S. Customs
agents after she arrived in Miami on a
flight from Peru.
A search disclosed two pounds of alleg·
ed cocaine worth $300,000 strapped
around the woman's waistline.
Authorities placed her under arrest on
fede ral charges of attempting to smuggle
narcotics into the United States.
The suspect 's age and Santa Ana ad·
dress were not immediately available.
Pot"Haul Discovered
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -"Rolice said
Thursday they found more.'.j)lan two tons
of n1arijuana hidden in a car and a truck.
Officers said they stopped a car driven
by Jorge Valdes Aceves, 28, o( Tijuana
u·hich led to the discovery.
.
Youth -Arrest;ed
l n Police Theft
A 16-year-old Laguna Beach
youth who detectives said likes
police equipment, was arrested
Thursday in connection with the
thefts of a sJren, red light and
police radio equipment from the Ci·
ly Yard.
Detective Sgt. Neil l'ureell said
the youngster may also be lm-
pllcated in thefts from other areas
of town . ,
"I t sure is nice to be able to clear
some of these things up, especially
~·hen ifs from the City Yard "
Purcell said. '
Asked II lhe youlh had mounled
any of the equipment in a car
Purcell said no. '
"He didn't have a car yet ," he
noled.
-
Fro91P .. e1
GET OUT • • •
the proposed school was not yet known.
Facilities are an additional bone ot
contention .
Kanerak pointed out Iha! while Sad-
dleback has only one permanent building '
and operates mosUy in relocatable
building>, Santa Ana College has 23
build ings, 21 of which were remodeled In
the last three to five years.
"They have modem teaching aides, a
planetarium, an olympic swimming pool,
a gym, stadium , a computer center, and
sophistlcatl'd electrical machines of all
klnds." he said.
Sadd.Ieback's class offerings, both in
number and organization, also create
dissatisfaction, Kanerak said.
A'fany classes which give three credit
hours and meet one night a week at San·
ta Ana COiiege are four-hour classes
meeting two nights a week at Sad-
dleback,' he contended.
"This means that if I take the same
class at Santa Ana It takes one fourth the
time and one-tenth the dri ving distance.
Kanerak declined to comment on the
notion that many students don't want to
attend Saddleback because it has the im·
age of "a police state,11 a charge made
hy Sadd.Ieback trustee Hans Vogel at a
recent board meeting.
"Although I've heard many comments
in that regard I don't want to enter the
arena of those charges," Kanerak said.
"We're trying to present a practical case
in our petition drive."
Vogel, the trustee for the Tustin area,
has registered alarm about the petition
drive. He has officially objected to the
course-hour difference between the two
schools and warned administrators that
the school's image has deteriorated.
Both Vogel and Fred H. Bremer. Sad-
dleback's superintendent, are on vacation
this v.·eek and could not be reached for
comment.
However. Dr. Bremer attended the last
meeting of the Tustin Unified District
board where Kanerak asked for the local
trustees' support.
Bremer challenged Kanerak's con·
tention that the tax rate would go down if
Tustin is transferred to the Rancho San·
tiago district.
He said massive building would be re-
quired to accommodate the new students
on the Santa Ana College campus, re-
quiring more taxes.
Presently, an estimated one-fourth of
Saddleback's 4,000 studenls are from
lhe Tustin area, a<.'OOrdlng lo Saddleback
officials, and about 25 percent of the
district's taxes come from Tustin.
Saddleback is in the midst of a 10-year
building program. A tax rate of 91 cents
approved early this month by trustees
will help construct a new $3 million
math-science building and begin work on
a fine arts facility.
The Rancho Santiago district currently
has a tax rate of 75 cents.
"We can't see paying taxes to a coUege
that is unresponsive to our needs,"
Kanerak said. "We can't foresee 8Jly
solution to the problems to the Tustin
area for years to come."
Saddleback's building procram calls
for a Tustin campus, in about 10 years.
Marine Arrested
For Questioning
In Stab Death
A Marine Corps enlisted man was ar-
rested Thursday in connection with the
stabbing death of Lance Cpl. James M.
Quarles, 22, Wednesday night in a camp
Pendleton parking lot.
Pvt. James Earl McGee, 22, of A Com·
pany, Schools Battalion, was ap-
prehended Thursday, but no formal
charges have yet been filed .
1\l:o other men are being questioned
along with McGee. Two other witnesses
to the incident have been bound, but all
names are being withheld by the public
information office and circumstances of
the death are not being released.
Quarles was dead on arrivaJ at the
Naval Hospital at 10:45 p.m. Wednesday.
He had a single knife wound through his
heart.
He is survived by his wife, \Villa, of 515
Greenbriar St., Oceanside.
FrornPqe.I
VILLA • • •
events would not take place at "the
house'', meaning the private Nixon
residence on the Orange County side of
the enclave.
It was that apparent confusion which
led to harsh words shortly before Nixon
arrived when Northern Ca Ii for n i a
Democrat Jerome Waldie demanded an
inspection of the Western White House.
Waldie, a candidate for California
Governor. was granted a tour or the
Presidential office complex, but was
barred from seeing the Nixon residence.
Aides insi$ted that Waldie was in error
'"''hen he l't'!ferred to the Nixon residence
as an extension of the White House.
IO.acre Blaze Out
At San Onofre Site
A spark from a camp Pendlekln gun-
nery range Ignited a !~acre bru•h Ore
near San Onofre early Thursday af·
ternoon .
The fire WRs out In less than two hours
alt., 14 camp Pendlei.n firefighters and
nine engines converged on the scene.
No Injuries or los.! o( properly were
reported.
.. Candle Blaze
Kills Two Kicls
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Two
children died Thursday In a fire
caused by a candle used to ligbl
their home: The local electric com-
pany had turned of_f power to the
house because of an unpaid $33.40
bUl.
Shannon Young, 3, and his sister,
Heidi, 2, children of Mr. end Mrs .
Orvil Young, died in suburban
Hilliard after a baby sitter lighted
several candles In a first·Ooor liv-
ing room.
The Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company said It turned off
electric service to the home
\Vednesday because of a three-
n1onth delinquent electric bill.
Nixo1i Advised
To Hold More
Conferences
By United Press International
President Nixon's news conference was
a trium phant test of his strength and
character and he i.! being advised to hold
them more frequently in the future,
White House Counselor Bryce Harlow
said today.
Harlow, in an in!erview, told Lucian
Warren, Washington bureau chief of the
Buffalo News, that the President was in
a "very, very pleasant, very happy"
mood foUowing his first news con!erence
in five months. "He had in my opinion.
about as severe a test of a person's
strength and character as I have ever
seen in mf 35 years in Washington.
"I have tried to think back over the
years extending back to President·
Roosevelt, and of any comparable testing
circumstance," said Harlow. "I can't
think of any."
He said that White House aides told the
Prestdenl the "very encouraging" reac-
tions they beard following the news con-
f erence.
•i1 was struck Wednesday by the
remarkable steel in the character of
Richard Nixon," he said. "I don't know
many men, ii I know any man . who could
have stepped out there Wednesday in
that situation and done anything like as
well as 1 ~ught he did.
"It just takes an inunense amount of
strength," he added. As for whether Nix·
on will hold more frequent press con·
ferences, Harlow said "l think so. I think
he should and I think he will."
"I am persooally persuaded that the
President .is going to have far more fre-
quent press confere nces," he said.
Presidential aides, meanwhile, sald
that Nixon is in an upbeat mood, feeling
that he scored a success with his news
conference. Aides said In hurdling the air
parently dreaded meeting with the press
a.fter a five-month hiatus, Nixon had
given a lift to morale in the White House.
They also reported.he was stunned at
the number of questions on Watergate,
and hopes now that he can turn attention
to other domestic problems.
Aides also were fanning out to reassure
the public and the press that Nixon is
fully capable of gover ning, despite in·
roads: into his popularity because of
Watergate.
Appeal Planned
Gasoline Price
c ·ontrols to Go
WASHINGTON (AP) -A federa l
judge ruled today that 1nost of the na·
tlon's retail gasoline dealers can raise
pricts sta1·ting Sept. I.
The JusUce Department and tho Cost
of Living Council said the decision would
be appealed immediately.
U.S. District Court Judge Barrington
D. Parker issued the ruling in a suit
brought against the council on behulf of
165,000 service station dealers selling
retail gasoline under the brand names of
major gasoline suppliers.
The decision , if it withstands the
governmental appeals, would effectively
lift con trols for the retail gasoline
dealers. Between nO\V and midnight Fri·
day, Aug. 31, prices remain frozen.
After that. Phase 4 controls on gasoline
prices are scheduled to go into effect.
The dealers contended they were
"singled out for special treatment" un·
der Phase 4 regulations which discrim·
inate against them.
Parker agreed, saying that the \Vay the
regulations were applied to the retail
gasoline dealers "is arbitra ry and
capricious."
The judge said that the controls
discriminate against the dealers and
"violate the due process clause of the
Fifth Amendment."
He said that the gasoli ne dealers were
the only small businesses with 60 or
fewer employes covered by the price
controls.
Granting a request for preliminary in·
junction, Parker held that the dealers
'.'have made a sufficiently strong show·
mg" and are likely to win a fina l ruling.
The court decision came as some
gasoline dealers planned v•eekend clos-
ings to de1nonstrate their protests of
Phase 4 regulations.
The American Automobile Association
Front Pfl{Je 1
BIKE • • •
hamlet In Perris Valley.
He left Brawley. just 24 miles from the
,_1exican border at 6 p.m, Tuesday and
arrived in Nuevo at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Each week during the trip, people In
Belgium were kept abreast o I
Afeysman's ride with tape TeCQrdings
that he made and air-mailed home.
The ta pes were broadcast every Sun-
day afternoon on Belgium's national
radio.
Meysman has only one more goal for
the trip -to ride to the Los Angeles city
limils.
Then he will be off lo San Francisco.
And New York. But, this time, he plans
to ny.
Ecology Move~ Nixed . .
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two measures
to increase the conservation con-
sideration in the state's management or
tideland oil and other state property
were blocked Thursday by the Senate
Committee on Governmental Organlza.
lion. Both were introduced by Assembly
Speaker Bob Moretti (0.Van Nufs), and
both had won approval of the Assembly.
y.•r1rned n1otorlsts that they would face
problems getting gas while traveling
tnterst11tc' 70 through tudlana this
¥.'L."tkend.
Piggy Bank
Spree Over;
Youth Home
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Qf ttle DIUY l'Utl Sl•tf
Ten.year-old John Dennis O'Neill
returned home Thursday to a tearful ~
w1ion with his mother, four days after he
Jcft his Huntington Beach hon1e.
The li ttle boy called his mother Mrs .
John P. O'Neill from a phone booth in
Santa Ana at about 2:45 p.m. and told
her he wanted to come home.
Del. Ray Hattabaugh, u•ho headed the
search for the missing child, drove his
mother to the comer of 17th and Bristol
streets where they met him .
Young John said that after lea ving his
home at 2128'l Fleet Circle he went to the
Anaheim-Santa Ana area, Jiving off about
$20 he took from his sister's piggy bank. •;
Del. Virginia Kirkmeyer said today
that the boy spent two nights in motels.
"lt is ab.solutely incredible to me to
rt'alize that there are people who would
check a little boy into a motel as a
registered guest without questioning it,''
she said.
•
f\.trs. Kirkmeyer said the y01,U1gster ap·
parently spent one night in the open but
"y,•as eaten alive by mosquitoes" and so
he spent the next two nights at cheap
motels.
The liltle boy told his mother !hat he
tried to save money by not eating too
much. He went to one restaurant and
ordered the cheapest thing on the menu
which was a bowl or cereal. The rest of
the time he lived off oranges bought at
roadside stands and In markets.
While police searched for the missing
boy, he went to a ra.mily night baseball
game at Anaheim stadium and visited
Oimeyland , Hattabaugh said.
The detectives said the little boy got
around on his bicycle.
"Bui the lire bad a leak and he didn't
want to spend bis money on a pelch, so
he had to slop at just about every gu
station to fill the tire with air/' Hat-
tabaugh said
Traveling by this laborious method,
young John made one trip to the Hun-
tington Beach ,rea during the height ot
the search for him.
"He said he wanted to talk to hlt
mother so he went to the place where she
works. But he didn't see her car there so
he went back to the Anaheim area," Hat-
labaugh said.
The boy ran away from borne Monday
afternoon following a family ''ml.sun·
dcrstanding." police said.
But bf Thunday....afternoon, fUs .,con-
science was beginning to bother him and
he called his mother because he "felt
bad" about taking his sister's money and
he wanted to come home. :.
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J7t•IZ7't
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I
I
\
Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
• .
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 60, NO. 236, <4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA FRI.DAY, AUGUST 24, I"' TEN CENTS
Art Festivals Closing on
"Art 1s Long, aud time 1s fleeti1ig."
-Longfellow
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of Ille 0.llf ,I._. Sl•ff
Longfellow's poetic obsenration aside,
the time for art in 1...pguna Beach is
fleeting by.
The 45.Qay summer art season closes
Sw>day and depending on who you ask,
this year's exhibition has been absolutely
great, or just so-so.
R. Lloyd Babcock has more than a few
festivals under his belt, having started
with the Festival of Arts in 1932.
"I sold more paintings in the first two
v.·eeks than all year last year," Babcock
said, He's a sea and landscape painter.
"It varies from year to year. One year,
it'll be pretty good, one year it'll be just
a bunch of punks," the crusty artist said.
There were four art festivals this year,
the Festival of Arts, Sawdust Festival,
Art·A·Fair, and Discovery Festival.
Exact figures on sales are difficult to
pin down.
While each of the festivals has a sales
booth to accommodate customers while
the artist Ls not at his booth, not all sales
are made through the booth, so not all
sales are recorded.
With more than 550 artists
participating in the summer festivals,
many sales are made directly by them to
their customers, particularly at the
Sawdust Festival where a higher percen·
tage of artist! and craftsmen stay at
their booths.
Attendance at all the festivals seemed
to be up this year over last year, but,
only the Festival ol Arts keeps careful
track of the numbers who attend.
Estimates by the organizers of the
oth~exhlbitions indicate lots of persons
on the groUDds wiUt weekends and
especially Swtdays being the busiest.
Here's the breakdown by festival then
(S.0 FESTIVAL, Page !)
12 Narco Agents Named
Jason Rea
Loses Fight
For Life
By JOUN VAL TERZA
ct tflt 0.ll'f' P'lttt SIAff
Jason Rea. the little boy from
Capistrano Beach who fought death for
weeks but never knew it. lost the battle
late Thursday at Fairview State Hospital
a.s h1s mother ~ayed at his bedside.
:Jb• 3-yeaN>ld victim of a pool tragedy
!n.JlunUngton Beach early In July died of
major complic.ations brought on by
massive brain damage suffered ln the in·
cldent at the home of a baby sitler.
Jn the weeks th at followed the COii)·
atose youngster was rlown to Denver to
become a transplant donor, then a week
ago was returned to the Orange Coasl
after physicians in Colorado ruled the
youngster no longer qualified as an organ
donor.
••Jason's now a little angel in Jleaven."'
his \\'eary, grieving mother, Linda, said
this morning.
"I prayed and 'prayed for God to help
b1s sufiering," she added.
"Mrs. Rea , a 29-year-old seC.M"tary who
Is divorced. had made f~ral ar·
rangements weeks ago when it first was
planned that her onJy child would be
ij(iwn to Denver and the breathing
machines removed .
The medical consensus at that time
was that because no hope existed at all,
the youngster would be medically dead at
that point and organ transplants could be
performed, using his kidneys and liver to
give life to other dying children.
''My greatest grief is that it never hap-
pened; that Jason could not give life to
oJlier children," said l\.irs. Rea.
Nude Bitehhiker
Police Book Naked Woman in Attack
\Vhat do you say to a naked woman
hitchhiker?
In Laguna Beach, it's ''get in the patrol
car please.··
At least, that's what Patrolman Paul
Rose said late Thursday, just before the
busty scanty pantie-clad woman began to
attack him .
IL seemed that Rose had stopped the 39-
year-old Orange woman for lallgating.
He detected an odor of alcohol and
while the woman -clothed at the time
-wasn't really drunk, ROie 1uggested
she take a cab home.
WalJtin& to the center of South COast
Highway near the souther)1 city 1lmits,
the woman stuck out her thumb, ap-.
parently to hitchhike.
Officer Rose advised the woman that
the center of the traffic lanes was not the
place to stand' while hitchhiking and the
woman moved to the curb, removed all
her clothing except some brief flesh col-
ored panties and stuck out her thumb.
When Rose attempted to take the
woman into custody for indecent ex·
pc>Sure, she allegedly flailed away at him,
which all resulted in a booking for in·
decent exposllre and resisting arrest
· At the station, ohe declined to clothe
benelf, and ~ • .,.. ""4 in "!'' olflte
until transport.a~ tO Ole women'• aec-
Uon of the Orange Qlunly Jail could be
provided.
Parcel Bomb Explodes
In London Exchange
LONDON (UPI) -A parcel bomb bid-
den in a holloweck>ut book exploded with
a white nash on the 22nd floor of Lon-
don's new stone, glass and steel Stock
Eichange today, wounding tv.·o per90ns.
It was the sixth day of London bomb
attacks blamed on an extremist wing
of the lrish Republican Army, and the
victims were the first persons injured by
the 35 bombs put in stores, offices and
subway stations since Sunday.
In a gray-carpeted executive office,
room 2201, Miss Joanna KnJght, 25, began
sorting the day's mail. She reached for a
large white envelope addressed to the
Stock Exchange's secretary general,
George W. Brind, and slit it open.
The envelope exploded with a white
flash, disfiguring l\fiss Knight in a blow
that struck at the very heart of one of
the world's great f111ancial centers, Lon-
don's square mile of money.
Blood streamed from Miss Knighl's
face, hands and legs. She fainted.
Drug Raids
ht 111inois
Get Probe
ALTON, 111 (UPI) -A federal grand
jury indicted eight federal and four local
narcotics agents today on charges of
depriving 11 persons of constitutional
rights during drug raids in southwestern
Illinois last April.
1be 17-count indictment was returned
in U.S. District Court after a four.month
federal, iiivestigatiQn.
Thi ~t ..W..tbe ~ts, actjn~ "wltJ.idl, ]INbltilo ewe or'IW'Ch lwir-
rants, broke inio six. ~ in
Collinsville, East St. Louis a n d
Edwardsvtlle1 ell in Dlinois:, during 8
Ii ve-daf period.
During the coarse of the raids, two <>e·
cupants were assaulted while handcuffed
and a third man was jailed for three
days without being charged with a crim~,
the indictment said.
Later, the indiewent continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident by
attempting to "tone down" reports to in·
vesllgators.
In addition, three other agents were
charged with lying to th• federal grand
jury investigating the raids.
The agents. attached to the St. Louis
o f f i c e d Drug Abuse Law
Enforcement, included six from the
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs, two from the Treasury Depart-
ment, three from the St. Louis police
department and one from the East St.
Louis Police Department.
The six federal narcotics agents in-
diC'ted are William C. Dwyer, Kenneth R ..
Bloemaker, Dennis R. Moriarty, Dennis
Harker, Michael Hillebrand and Leon
Phillips.
Treasury· Department emp!Gyes in~
dieted are Tom Teyssier and Calvin Culp.
Great; Note
Dllty P'llet SlaH ..,,...
ART SEASON .DRAWS NEAR CLOSE IN LAGUNA BEACH
Carol Kleyn Plays Harp at Picturesque Sawdust Festival
.. . •
Petitions Sought to Get
Tustin Into R,ai1cho
By JAN WORTH
01 ttl• DtllY P'llol Sltll
A 150-member ·"College Committee of
Tustin " is going ~r-tCHloor with peti·
tions in an effort to get Tustin out of the
Saddleback Community College district
and into the Rancho Santiago Community
CoUege district.
Shepherd Kanerak, the originator of
the push which he said "has grown by
leaps and bounds" since it began several
months ago, cited a probable decrease in
lhe tax rate, better facilities, and greater
convenience as the major reasons for the
switch.
Tustin students must travel 20 miles to
the 2~acre, Mission Viejo campus. San-
ta Ana College, in the Randlo SantiagG
district, is only four miles from
downtown Tustin.
Kanerak said the chief complaint is the
driving distance. He. said when the ·Sad·
dleback district proposal was presented
to voters six years ago, the location of
the proposed school was not yet known.
Facilities are an additional bone of
contention.
Kanerak pointed out that while Sad-
dleback ha s onJy one permanent building
and operates mosUy in relocatable
buildings, Santa Ana College has 23
buildings. 21 of which were remodeled in
the last three to five years.
"They have modern teaching aides, a
planetarium. an olympic swimming pool,
a gym, stadium, a computer center, 3lld.
sophislicatcd electrical machines of all
kinds." he said.
Saddleback's class offerings, both in
number and organization, also create ,..,
I
Xhrough the ordeal l\.trs. Rea said, sup-
port has come from throughout the na·
ti on.
It was a bright sunlit morning and an
army of secretaries, clerks and bowler·
hatted bankers had just emerged from
the subway and railn:lad stations to fill
the Cily of Londoo the capital's _,
enclave housing Brltlsh major financial
institutions.
Brind, 62, the stock excbange's chief
administrative officer, staggered. to the
door, shouting "Bomb! Bomb!"
The three St. Louis policemen are
Ronald J. Olive, Donald W. Spicer and
Daniel J. Duffy.
"Almost everybody I've spoken to uses
a subterfuge of some kind to say out of
Saddleback," Kanerak said. "They use
addresses of their relatives or friends to
establish residency outside the district."
dissatisfaction, Kanerak said. _
l\.1any classes which give three credit (.
hours and meet one night a week at San·
~'I've had messages rrom perfect
slrangers from all over the country, all
blessing me for courage and faith in the
Lord, and I'm so grateful for them.
Without the help l v.·onder if I could have
mide It," she said.
The support has continued to come
from friends and strangers alike.
. (See CAPO BOY 1 Page t)
oran11e Coast
Weather
Slightly cooler Salurday along
• the Oraoge Coast -but sun nice.
Highs In the upper 60s at the
beaches rising to 78 Inland. Over·
night lows 62-65.
INSWE TODA l'
Two Lagu11a Beach film mak-
ers were involved in tl~e maki11g
of a superstar -even if he is a
seagull. The filming of the Jona-
than J..iutngston Seagull seagulls
bv Greg MacGlUivrav and Jim
Freeman for a bird's debut is
deacribed 'n todo11'• Weekender,
Miss Knight's gold wristwatch slopped
at 9:20 a.m. ·
42-day Trip
Belgian Crosses U.S.
' On Bike, Sees Pacific
~ By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL
Of fllt DtiW '"" Sllff nearly two hours to find a surrace street
lt was just after 11 a.m, Thursday that leading out of JFK Airport in New York .
Frank Meysm8n was face-to-face with r.teysman, 21, a university student in
the Pacific Ocean in Dana Point. Belgium. began planning for the cross·
His 43-day, 41500-mile bicycle ride that country trip 18 months ago.
began July 11 at New York's Kennedy "Some of us had joked about a trip to
Airport was over. China -even before President Nixon -
"It was just great seeing the ocean." but we figured it wouJd take four months
said Meysman of bis first gllnipse of the aod we only had three months of vaca·
blue Pacific. "I couldn't beUeve lm &de tlon. So we settled on America,''
It." Meysman recalled.
One thing made clear ls that the United When the !rip began in New York.
States Is no\ Ideally laid out for bicycling, Meysman bad two companions riding
Meysman said between alps of letnonade with him. "But they quit in Kansas City.
at lhe Three Ardl Bay borne o1 Mr. and They were physically dis!Url>ed," he
Mrs. Thomas Cutkomp. Joked.
Taite the rclaUvely short run lrom Meysman, a ~former American Field
, Blythe to Palm Springs, across the Service exchanse. student who lived tn t!,i"':.:no•c• ; ::~':· l7·2' scorching southern desert. The two Iowa two years ago, relied on AFS
Paa• 23.
... 11111 ~ M•1ua1 '~..!. 1! desert towns are connected by hlglHpeed members to rovide places to stay dllf· ._~~m• fi.J -g:=:Jc..,.ty-• --nfterst\ie-10. whc"re blcyclu~ aren'f ln(&ilrldt. ·
<tmk• g :"''"""tt ?::~ allowed. Re admitted it wa1 no easy task to llne ~'"'" t sr:::' Mtrt•tt 12·•: Meysman, rather, had to pedal his up families cout·to-<:oast. ==~· ~ ... n.,; :,:=:r ', Belglan·made touring bicycle aoulh to The onl1 thing he carrted wllh him was
"'' t11t •eceN ,; w:;r~ ".., 1s.1: .Brawley. then head north throueb a small pack containing clotheJ, & flrsl :~:.,. ,, :.-.... "" '"' Coachella and finally. to Palm Springs. aid klt. some·food and spare part.a for hl s
The ciU03 wert even wone. II took fi!ee lllll, Piao II
·1
The East St. Louis officer named in the
indictment is Lester Anderson.
.. '
ta Ana College are four.OOUr classes
(See GET OUT, Page I)
!!Ill. Piii ........... BELGIAN BIKER FRANK MEYSMAN TAKES BREAK AT END OF LONG, RUGGllJ ROAD·
·'Never Tho<1ght I'd Mlkt 11,' Ht Says of 43-diy Cron.Country Journey
•
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DAILV PILOT LB Frld.v, AUQU\l 2-4, 197J ~--------
Fro11t P .. e I
FESTIVAL ... ..
of bow exhibitors felt about lhe season:
FESTIVAL OF ARTS: This was !he
lint ymr In tho "Big F .. Uval" for
sculpt,.. Ra! Pastorius who had previous·
ly exhibited at th e Sawdu.$t. llis wife
Kaye said that by mld·festiv al they had
sold more works than during all of the
yean at the &awdust .
"There are more serious buyers here ,"
she said.
But, direct sales are only part of the
festival business, commissions a r c
another and Hal has picked up several so
far .this summer, Mrs. Pastorius said.
Marjory Darling, an original Festival
of Arts exhibitor. sald that she had sold
out at th is year's f~tival. She'd painted
two worb.
Prices at the Festival of Arts ranged
from $25,000 to 25 cents this year. The
$1.5,000 price tag was for an artistic
grandfalher clock by Paul Kasprzycki. A
ceramist makes the two-blt beads.
"I think there's just about everything
at this festival," said Eleanor Brees.
.. There 's something about this little old
festival that really gives people a thrill,"
she said.
SAWDUST FESTIVAL: We have got
the market cornered in Laguna," said
Katl\y Pyhrie whose husband Jim makes
and sells dulcimers, a string instrument,
at the Sawdust.
"Th.e show Is excellent," she said. The
Sawdust ls about a lblrd larger in area
this year, but, has kept the same number
of exhibitor!, she said.
As tor the dulcimers, they are played
by blucking the strings, like a guitar and
sound something like a small mandolin.
"A lot of them are bought by parents
for reliel from electric guitars . One lady
said it .,.,·as either ·a drum set or one of
these, guess which "''On," Mrs. Pyhrie
said.
Arley Ranger, a Sawdust jeweler, said
her stuff was selling well, but griped
about the price of silver and the cost of
gold.
She said she wasn't guile able to keep
up with demand .
Weaver Sue Newbill who was in her
first exhibition was a little dismayed at
the commercialism involved. "We're just
pricing things on what the particular
thing is worth to us," she said.
"What could be better than doing
K>methi.ng you love, rriaklng something
you love, and then selling it?" she said.
* * * Art Galleries
Not Really Hurt
By 4 Festivals
When lhe art festivals first started,
gallery owners feared the competition.
Now , with four feslivals in town, some
owners reported poor sales.
Others said they deal with a different
clientele, and don't depend on festival-
lype buyers for business.
A sampling:
Richard Challis, owner C h a 11 i s
Galleries, 1390 S. Cost Highway: "It's the
best year we've had. Sales are up 23.6
percent over last year, which was up
ooly six percent from the year before. We
dea l with a cli entele. We have one-man
shows."
Larry Kronquist, owner Kronquist
Studios, 362 N. Coast Highway: "I'm
having the best time in my life. It's the
best I've ever seen. In the first five
months of this year, I sold more than I
did all last year, which was my best in 18
years. (Kronquist is going out of business
in October to retire).
"I hate to quit when it's going so
good." A lady from East in ~fay bought
14 Robert Woods paintings for $59,000,
cash. She's made a commitment to buy
14 more in December.
Shirley Meyers, 1951 S. Coast Highway:
''I'm very happy with way things are
running. Of course, I don't depend on the
art festivals, but repeats and referrals. It
Is excellent."
Tom Enman, Laguna Beach Museum
Df Art, 'JIJl Cliff Drive : "To my
-knowledge, the galleries are down during
the summer. By the time people get
through the n1ain festival and the
Sawdust, lhey1re just too tired, you
knoW, to go anywhere else. 'They're just
saturated with art. \Ve put on the best
show we can."
•
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Otllf fllltl 11111 Phal•
BIJAN BAHAR POSES WITH CONTEMPORARY SCULPTURE
The Work at Festival of Art5 Sold for $2,900 to Collector
Kidnap, Rape Victim, 11,
Found Unconscious in Lot
BULLETIN
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An ll·year-old
Mission Hills girl, found anconscloos Ibis
morning after reportedly being Jddnaped,
was raped and probably dntgged by ber
abductor, a hospital 1pokcs'll&n said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An ll·year-0ld
Mission Hills girl, reportedly abducted
Thursday night by a man who enticed
her into distributing leaflets, was ln a
coma today after being found un-
conscious in a parking lot be.hind a
suburban shopping center, police said.
The young girl was reported in
serious conditlon with a possible con-
cussion at Marina Mercy Hospital in
?i.1arina Del Rey.
judge's Ruli1ig
Raises Gasoline
Price Sept.1
WASlllNGTON (AP) - A federal
judge ruled today that most of the ~a·
tion's retail gasoline dealers can raise
prices starting Sept. I. ..
The Justice Department and the Cost
or Living Council said the d~ision would
be appealed immediately.
U.S. District Court Judge Barrington
D. Parker issued the ruling In a suit
brought against the council on behalf of
165,000 service station dealers selling
retall gasoline wider the brand names of
major gasoline suppliers.
The decision, if it \\'ithstands the
governmental appeals, would effectively
lift controls for the retail gasoline
dealers. Between now and midnight Fri-
da y, Aug. 31, prices remain frozen .
After that, Phase 4 controls on gasoline
prices are scheduled to go into effect.
The dealers contended they were
"singled out for special treatment" un-
der Phase 4 regulations which discrim·
inate against them.
Parker agreed, saying that the way th.e
regulations were applied lo th e retail
gasoline dealers ';is arbitrary and
capricious."
From Pagel
BIKE • • •
Superior brand bicycle.
A Belgian· manufacturer donated the
bike for the trip and Meysman said it
perfonned beautifully, with not one
broken part and only one flat tire.
"And the roads some places were
awful," he added.
The worst part of the trlp, ~1eysman
declared, was the seemingly endleS! ride
through the southwestern desert span-
ning New hfexico, Arizona and
Cali fornia.
Because of the scorching diiylime
temperatures, Meyml811 rode at night.
His longest ride in a single day was a
l~hour run from Brawley t.o Nuevo, a
hamlet in Perris Valley.
He Jeft Brawley, just 24 miles from the
Mexican border at 6 p.m. Tuesd•Y and
arrived in Nuevo at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Each week during tbe trip, people In
Belgium were kept abreast· of
Meysman 's ride with tape record.Inga
that he made and air-malled home.
The tapes were broadcast every Sun-
day afternoon on Belgium's national
radio.
A-1eysman has only one more goal ror
the trip -to ride to the Los Angeles city
limit> .
'!'hen he wUl be oil to San Francisco.
And New York. But, this time, he plans
ID Oy.
Police continued to search for her a~
ductor, believed to be a middle-aged
man.
She \\'BS found at the rear of a store by
a trash collector, tx>lice said. The spot
where she was found "'as about 35 mil es
from where she was last seen.
The girl and her 8-year.ald brother,
both had been approached by the man
Thursday and were asked to distribute
leaflets for a San Fernando Valley dry
cleaning shop, police said.
The children were seen distributing
leaflets in the Granada Hills and Mission
Hills areas. The boy told police the man
drove him and his sister to a parking lot
and that he got out to put handbffis on
the windshields of cars. When he return-
ed, the car was gone, he said.
Officers and two IX>lice helicopter
crews hunted for the girl all night. They
y,·ere aided by members of a volunteer
civilian search-and·rescue team with 15
four-wheel drive vehicles.
Frono Page I
CAPO BOY ...
"My phone was ringing all night and
everyone I talked to agreed with me that
God must have had a reason for all of
this, and now ifs up to me to find the
answer," she said.
One factor which caused some bit-
terness during the strain of the vigil were
comments about the youngster "making
medical history," Mrs. Rea said. ,
"That hurt greatly," she said.
The youngster was literally brought
back from dealh several times during the
ordeal -first after showing no signs of
life after the rescue from the bottom of
the pool.
Jason's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a
team of physicians worked furiously at
Huntington Intercommunily Hospital.
Three weeks later at the same hospital
the youngster again Jost his bodily func·
tions but was revived and after surgery
physicians , l\1 rs. Rea and her former
husband -Jason's father -agreed to
the transplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver ~lrs. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fare and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One of those offers of help came from
one family which offered a cemetery Jot
to help Mrs. Rea face whal she had
believed to be the inevitable.
"I accepted it graciously," she said .
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the little boy are ten-
tatively set for \Vednesday at the Peek
Family Colonial Funeral tlome in
Westminster.
Two Teens Held
On Burglary Rap
Laguna Beach detectives arrested a l~
year~ld Laguna youth and a Laguna
llills juvenile Thursday, assertedly clear-
ing up several recent burg laries ln the
Art Colony.
David Oney, of 306 Canyon Acre.
Drive, was booked for alleged possession
of stolen property and suspicion or
burglary .
Det.ecllve Sgt. Neil Purcell said
recovered property included antique
watches, jewelry, clothing and cash,
mostly taken in smn ll jobs.
't'he Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
ment wUI be investigating the Laguna
11111'1 youth 's connection with county
burglaries.
•
Shoutitag Matcla
Hartelius Case
Hearing Erupts
By TOM BARLEY
01 1~, ll1llv ,lltt St11f
LOS ANGELES -A three-day n1cdicul
examlners' hearing into charges ngain st
Piggy Bank
Spree Over;
Youth Home
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
ot th• DIHY flllot Slltf
Ten-year.aid John Dennis O'Neill
returned home Thursday to a tearful re-
union '"'ith his mother, four days after he
left his lluntington Beach home.
The little boy called his mother Mrs.
•
Or. l!:bbe l·l:1rtelius, f;J ·roro, closed here
late 1'hursday in a shouting mulch \Yilh
three fut'lous lawyers hurlinl: accus;itions.
and epithets lit et:1ch other.
"You are unscrupulous p e op I e.''
defense attorney Matthew Kurll ich ye lled
nt deputy attorneys gcncrul ~1ark Levlnl'
and Robert f\1ukai. "You are unethical
tricksters clearly guilty of deceptive and
vindictive conduct ."
"And you're a liar," Levine shouted
back. "The biggest thing in this hearing
h1:1s been your mouth."
Hearing officer John A. \V i I I d
Uespcrately tried to restore ~rder as the
three physicians who com prise the state
Board of ~1edical Examiners rcv ie\v
committee \Vatched open-mouthed.
One clear fRct e1nerged from the
fracas. Both Levine and Mukai stressed
that the state \Viii now settl e for nothing
less than the revocation of Dr. Hartelius'
license to practice medicine .
Y outli Ar.rest:ed
In Police Tli~ft
A 16-year--O\d Laguna Beach
youth who detectives said likes
police equipment, wu 1rmted
Thursday in connection with the
thefts uf a siren, red light and
police radio equip1ncnt from the Cl·
ly Yard.
Detective Sgt. Nell Purcell said
the youngster n1ay al50 be in1·
plicu ted in thcfl:.c rro1n other areas
of town.
"It su re is nice to be able to clear
some of these things up, es~(illy
when it's front tbe Cily YIJ'd,"
Purcell s.11id.
Asked if the youth had mourited
any of U1e cqulprncnl In a ce.r,
Purcell said no.
.. lie didn't hnvc a ca r yet," he
noted.
""'"' Pqe 1
GET OUT • • •
inecting twu nights a wee k at Sad·
dlcback , he. contended.
··This 1neans that if I t;ike the same
class at Santa Ano it taket one fourth the
time and one-tenth the driving distance.
... •
John P . O'Neill from a phone booth in
Santa Ana at about 2:45 p.m. and told
her he \.•:anted to come home.
Oct. Ray Hattabaugh, who headed the
search for the missing child, drove his
mother lo the corner of 17th and Bristol
streels where they met him.
Both lawyers had been prepared at an
earlier llCaring to accept a plan that
would have put 11artellus, 51, oo pro·
bation for five years provided he
substantially restricted his use of certain
dangerous drugs.
The medical committee rejected that
proposal behind closed doors and ordered
Harteli us to open his defense to charges
of moral turpitude and unprofessional
conduct -most of them stemming from
his alleged drugging of and sexual
association "'ith two Costa l\1esa 'A'omen.
Kanerak deelined to comment on the
notion that marl¥ students don't want to ..
attend Saddleback becouse it has the im·
age of "a p61ice stale," a charge roadr
hy Saddleback trustee Hans Vogel at ii
recent board meeting.
Young John said that after leaving his
home at 21282 Fleet Circle he went to the
Anaheim.SSnta Ana area, living ofr about
~ he took from his sister's piggy bank.
Det. Virginia Kirkmeyer said today
that the boy spent two nights in motels.
.. It Is absolutely incredible to me to
realize that there are people who ,,·ould
check a little boy into a motel as a
registered guest without questioning it,"
she said.
Kurilich Thursday agreed to let his
client, who practices in the Harbor Area.
go on the witness stand to answer ques-
tions from both sides and the three doc-
tors who will eventually be his jsdges.
"Although I've heard nlany comments •:
in that regard I don 't want lo enter the
arena of those charges:· Kanerak said.
"\Ve're trying to present a practical case
~trs. Kirkmeyer said the youngster ap-
parently spent one night in the open but
""•as eaten alive by m~uitoes" and so
he spent the next two nights at cheap
motels.
The little boy told his mother that he
tried to save money by not eating too
much. He went to one restaurant and
ordered the cheapest thing on the menu
which was a bowl of cereal. The rest of
the time he lived off oranges bought at
roadside stands and in markets.
\Vhile police searched for the missing
boy, he went to a family night baseball
game at Anaheim stadium and visited
Disneyland, Hattabaugh said.
The detectives said the little boy got
around on his bicycle.
"But the tire had a leak and he didn't
want to spend his money oo a patch, so
he had to stop at just about every gas
station to fill the tire with air," Hat-
tabaugh said
Traveling by this laborious method,
young John made one trip to the Hun-
tington Beach area during the height of
the se arch for him.
'·He said he wantfrl to talk to his
mother so he went to the place where she
works. But he didn't see her car there so
he went back to the Anaheim area," Hat·
tabaugh said.
The boy ran aY.'ay from home ifonday
afternoon following a family "misun-
derstand ing." palice said.
But by Thursday afternoon, his con·
science was beginning to bother him and
he called his mother because he "fel t
bad" about taking his sister's money and
he "''anted to rome home.
SALE
'
niat grilling ended late Thursday and
Kurilich promptly turned to bottt state
lawyers to open negotiations towards a
suggested selllemenl.
What happened after that is interpeted
differently by each side. But whatever
was said, it led to the shouting match.
Kurillch claims that Mukai told him
that he and Levine had ne\·er intended to
make a deal. He quoted Mukai as saying:
.. we just \vanted to get Hartelius on the
stand and listen to his story."
Nixo1i Advised
To Hol.d More
Co1ifere1ices
in our petition drive ."
Vogel, the trustee for the Tustin area ,
has registered alarm about the petition
drive. He has ofncially objected to the
course-hour difference between the two
schools and warned administrators that
the school's image has deteriorated.
Both Voge l and Fred H. Bremer, Sad-
dleback's superintendent, are on vacallon
this week and cc.uJd not be reached for
comment.
f-lowever, Dr. Bremer attended the last
meeting of the Tustin Unified District
board \\'here Kanerak asked for the local
trustees' support.
Bremer challenged. Kanerak's con·
tenlion that the tax rate ~·ould go down if
Tustin is transferred to the Rancho San·
tiago district.
lie said massive building would be r•
quired to accommodate the new stude!lt!
on the Santa Ana College campus, n.
quiring more taxes.
PresenUy, an estimated one-fourth ol
Saddleback's 4,000 student! are from
the Tustin area, according to Saddleback
officials, and about 25 percent of the
By United Press lnternatJooaJ district'il taxes come from Tustin.
President Nixon's news conference was Saddleback is ln the midst of a 10-year
a triumphant test of his strength and building program. A tax rate of 91 cents
character a.Dd he ij litiifg advised lo hold approved early lhls month by trustees
them more frequently in the future, will help construct a new $l milllon
\Vhite House Counselor Bryce Harlow math-science building and begin work on
said today. a fine arts facility. '
Harlow, in an interview, told Lucian The Rancho Santiago district currenUy
Warren, Washington bureau chief of the has a tax ;·ate or 75 cents.
Burfalo Ne\\'S, that the President was in "We can't see paying taxes to a college
a "very. very pleasant, very happy" that is unresponsive to our needs,"
mood following his first news conference Kanerak sai d. "We can't foresee any
in five months. "He had in my opinion solution to the problems to the Tustin
about as severe a test of a person's area for years to come."
strength and character as I have ever Saddleback's building program calls
seen in my 35 years in Washington." for a Tustin campus, in about 10 yean. ----------
• • • LAST 10 DAYS!
•,._ .
~t{,,._l _<-=-_. --··--· --··' .. "/;
. .
Terrific. Selection ,of Top Q~ality Sale Merchen"dise Ready for Immedi-
ate Delivery. Don t Delay. Final Chance to Select From Our Large In·
ventory et Reduced Prices.
DREX El-HERITAGf>.4-IENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS tAN -
INTERIORS
WIHDAYS & SATURDAYS f :OO to 5:10
FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00
NEWPORT IEACH e
1727 WESTCLIF, OR. •'42·2010
IOp1n Su"d"y 12°5 1101
LAGUNA BEACH e
J4S NOltTM COAST HW'I'
tOp•11 SunJ•v 12-ltlOJ 4t4.tlll
TORRANCE e
2lMt HAWlHOlNI ll VD,
111.121•
. . ,
\
\
'
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' '
Saddlebaek
EDITION
VOL. 66, NO . 236, '4 SECT IONS, '48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• •
Today's Final
N.Y. Steeks
I ,t •• i
TEN CENTS ~1
Hartelius Hearing Erupts in Shouting Match .
' ,
By TOM BARLEY
Of t11e Dllh' Pitel Sltff
LOS ANGELES -A three-day medical
examiners' hearing into charges against
Dr. Ebbe Hartelius, El Toro, closed here
late Thursday ln a shouting match with
three furious lawyers hurling accusations
and epithets at euch other.
1'You are unscrupulous p e op I e , • '
defense attorney Matthew Kurilich yelled
at deputy attorneys general Mark Levine
and Robert Mukai. "You are unethical
Narco
tricksters clearly guilty of deceptive and
\'lndictive conduct."
"And you're a liar," Levine shouted
back. "The biggest thing in tbls hearing
has been your mouth."
Hearing officer John A. W i 11 d
desperately tried to restore order as the
three physicians who comprise the state
Board of Medical Examiners review
committee watched ope&inoulhed.
One clear fact emerged from the
fracas. Both Levine and Mukai stressed
that the state will now settle for nothing
less than the rev~ation of Dr. Hartelius '
license to practice medicine.
Both lawyers bad been prepared at an
earlier hearing to accept a plan that
would have put Hartelius, 51 , on pro-
bation for five years provided he
substantially restricted his use of certain
dangerous drugs. ·
The medical com'mittee rejected that
proposal behind closed doors and ordered
Hartelius to open his defense to charges
of moral turpitude and unprofessional
conduct -most of them stemming from
his alleged drugging of and sexual
.association with two C.Osta Mesa women.
Kurilich Thursday agreed to let his
client, who practices in lhe Harbor Area,
go on the witness stand to answer ques--
tions from both sides and the three doc-
tors who will eventually be his jsdges.
That grilling ended late Thursday and
Kurilich promptly turned to both state
lawyers to open negotiations towards a
Raiders Indicted
12 Agents Face Charges in Drug Attacks
ALTON. Ill iUPll - A federal grand
jury indicted eight federal and four local
narcotics agents today on charges or
depriving 11 · persons of constitutional
rights during drug raids in southwestern
Illinois last April.
The 17-counl indictment was rety.med
in U.S. District Court after a four·month
federal lnvestigatlon.
The indictment said the agenls, acting
without probable cause or search war-
rants, broke into six homes in
Collinsville. East St. Louis a n d
Edwardsville. all in Il linois, during a
five-day period.
01.Jring the course or the raids, tlol'O oc-
Kidnap-Rape
Victim Fo1111d
In Auto LQt
B!.JLL!TIN
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"" n-u:r .. ld Mlulon RID1 1Irl, loud ..... !Ms
monln1 Iller reportedly bela1 kldupei,
w~s raped and probably d'"Ued by Mr
abductor, a bospllal 1poke1'tlu said.
LOS ANGELES !AP) -An ll·year .. ld
Mission HUis girl, reportedly abducted
Thursday night by a man who enticed
her into distributing leaflets, was in a
coma today alter being found un-
conscious in a parking Jot behind a
suburban shopping center, poUct said.
The young 1lrl was reported in
strious condition with a possible con-
cussion at Marina Mercy Hospital in
'-1arina Del Rey.
Police continued to search for her ab-
~~ctor, believed to be a middle-aged
nan.
: She was found at the rear of a store by
a trash collector, police said. The spot
where she was found was about 35 miles
trom where she was last seen.
'the girl and her 8-year-old brother.
both had been approached by the man
Thursday and were asked to distribute
Jf:aOels for a San Fernando Valley dry
cleaning shop, police said.
'lbe children were seen distributing
leaflets in the Granada Hills and Mission
Hills areas. The boy told police the man
drove him and his sister to a parking lot
end that he got out to put handbills on
the windshields of cars. When he return-
ed, the car was gone, he said.
Officers and two police helicopter
crews hunted for the girl au night. They
were aided by members of a volunteer
civilian search-and-rescue team with 1$
four-wheel drive vehicles.
Minuteman Launched
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE
(AP I - A Minuteman Ill mlssll• wji
routinely launched Tbunday night on a
5.~mile 11hot toward a target zone near
the Marshall lslandJ in the Pacific, the
Air Force said. ' •
District
By JAN WORTH
ot ltM DlllY P'llet '''"
A 150-member "CoUegc C.Ommittee of
Tustin" la going door-to-door with pttl-
uons Jn en errort to get Tustin out o( the
Saddleback Community College district
and Into the Rancho Santiago Commwilty
College district.
Shepherd ~ancrak, the originator of
the push which he said "has grown by
leaps and bounds" since it began se\leral
months ago, cited a probable decrease in
the tax rate, better facllltJes, and srcatcr
·convenience as the major reasons for the
1wllch,
Tustin 1t1,.1dents must travel 20 miles to
the 20().acrc. Mission Viejo campus. San-
cupants were assaulted while handcuffed
and a third man was jailed for three
days without being charged wlth a crim-:',
the indictment said.
Later, the indictment continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident by
2ttempting to "tone down" reports to in-
vestigators.
In addition, three other agents were
charged with lying to th~ federal grand
jury investigating the raids.
The agents, attached to the St. Louis
off i cc ol Drug Abuse Law
Enforcement, included six from the
Bureau or Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs, two from the Treasury Depart-
ment, three from the .St. Louis police
department and one from the East St.
Louis Police Department.
The six federal narcotics agents in·
dieted are William C. Dwyer, KeMeth R.
Bloemaker. Dennis R. Moriarty, Dennis
Harker, Michael Hillebrand and Leon
Phlllips.
Treasury Department employes in-
dicted are Tom Teys.sier and Calvin Culp.
The three St. Louis policemen are
Ronald· J_ Olive, Donald W. Spicer and
Daniel J. Duffy.
The East St. Louis officer named in the
Nude Hit~hhiker
Police Book Naked Woman in Attnck
Whal do yoo> ll1-'to 1 llll:ed woman
hitchhiker?
lllJ .. 11cuna Buch, It's ·~et In tile patrol
car please." '
At leolt. that'• !!hat Patrolman Paul
Role aald late Thunday, jurl before the
busty scanty panUe-clad woman began to
attack him.
It seemed that no;. had !lopped the~
year-old Orange woman for tailgating.
lie detected an odor of alcohol and
while the woman -clothed at tht time
-wasn 't really drunk, Rose suggested
she take a cab home.
Walking to the center of South Coast
lllghwaf near the southerly city limits,
•
the woman .-.,ou1 her thumb, •Po
parenUy to liitchbike.
O!licer ljo&e adftled the womaD' th•t
the center of the traffic lanes was not the
place to -wblla bitcllblking anO ~ woman moved to the curb, removtid. all
her clothing except some brief Oesh col·
ored panties and stuck out her thumb.
When Rose attempted to take the
woman into custody for indecent ex-
posure, she allegedly flailed away at him,
whlcb au resulted in a booking for in·
decent eiposure and resisting arrest.
At the station, she declined to clothe
herself, and was handcuffed in an office
until transportation to the women's sec-
tion of the Orange County jail could be
provided.
Parcel Bomb Explodes
In London Exchange
LONDON (UPI) - A parcel bomb hid·
den in a hollowed-0ul book e1ploded with
a white flash on the 22nd Door of Lon-
don's n1!w stone, glass and steel Stock
Exchange today, wOWlding two persons.
It was the sixth day of London bomb
attacks blamed on an extremist wing
of the Irish Republican Army, and the
victims were the first persons injured by
the 35 bombs put in stores, offices and
subway stations since Sunday.
It was a bright 1UDlit morning and an
army of secretaries, clerks and bowler·
hatted bankers bad just emerged from
the subway and railroad stations to fill
the City ol London, the capital's inner
enclave housing British major financial
institutions.
• In a gray-carpeted executive office,
room 2'l01, Miss Joanna Knight, 25, began
sorting the day's ma.11. She reached !or a
larg~ white envelope addressed to the
Stock Exchange's secretary general.
George W. Br ind, and slit it open.
Switch
!a Ana College, In l'1e Rancho Santiago
district, ls only four mlles from
downtown Tustin.
"Almost everybody t1ve Spoken to uses
a subterfuge of aome kind to say out of
Saddleback ," Kanerak said. "They use
addresses or their relatives or friends to
eatabllsh residency outside the dJ!lrlct."
Kancrak said the ehlcl complaint js the
driving dlstance. Ha aald when the S.d-
dleback district pro-I w•s presented
to voters sht years ago, the location or
the proposed scnool was not yet known.
Facilities are an additional bone or
contention.
Kanerak pointed out tho! whlle Sad-
dleback has only one permanent bulldlng
111e envelope exploded with a white
flash, disfiguring Miss Knight in a blow
that struck at the very heart of one of
the world's great financial centers, Lon·
don's square mile of money.
Blood streamed from Miss Knight's
face, hands and legs. She fainted .
Brind, 62, the stock exchange's chief
administrative officer, staggered to the
door, shou~g "Bomb! Bomb!"
Miss Knight's gold wristwatch slopped
at 9:20 a.m.
Ill the tradition-bound Stock Exchange,
whose '10 billion turnover exceeds that of
all European continental stock exchanges
put together, the stiff British upper lip
prevailed to maintain proper decorum in
the crisis.
A police warning flashed over the ex-
change's 20-cbannel closed television
circuit, used for price collecting :
"There has been a bomb explosion. The
police are deadling with it. You may
evacuate the building."
Pushed
and operates mostly In relocatable
bulldlngs, Santa Ana College has 23
buildings, 21 of which were remodeled in
the last three to five years.
11They have modern teaching aides, a
planetarium, an olympic swimmJng pool,
a gym, stadium, a computer center, and
oophlsticated electrical machines of all
kinds," he said.
Saddleback's class offerings, both In
number and organization. also create
dltsatls!action, Kanerak said.
Many classes which give three credit
hours and meet one night 1 week at San-
ta Ana College are four-hour cl....,
(See GET OUT, Pap ZI
indictment is Lester Anderson.
All agents except Anderson were
charged in two counts with conspiring to
deprive persons of constitutional rights
by entering homes without probable
cause or sea rch warrants, arresting and
detaining them without probable cause or
arrest warrants and assaulting them
while In custody.
John R. Bartels Jr., acting ad·
ministrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administ ration, announced immediately
after the indictment was returned that
the six federal agents named as deren-
dants were suspended without pay.
Turtle Rock
Plan, Zoning
·Report Bared _
By GEORGE LEIDAL
OI .. Olitr Pllt S1tff
Irvine Plannlng CommiJsion members
Thursday nlgt.t sent the Vtlla1e of Turtle
Rock zone Plan and environmental im-
pact report back for city staff and Irvine
C.Ompany study, with nearly 300 at-
tending the hearing in Uni versity High
School.
Many heard for the first time details
about the planned community zone
amendments to provide homes for up to
15,000 persons on 1,400 acres instead of
the 1,100 presently planned for 11,000 peo-
ple.
Also new to many in the audience was
the Irvine C.Ompany's developinent con-
cept, which leaves 321 acres of hilltops
and ridgelines undeveloped, 1be idea, the
company contends, requires increased
density in clusters of OOmes to be tucked
into l'1e folds of the TurUe Rock Hills
area. They asked approval of a fleltible
density from two to eight units per acre
instead of the fixed zoning densities
which now cover the village land.
Commissioners voted 6 to 1 to find the
environmental impact report not suf-
ficient.
C.Ommissioner Lowell John.son of The
Ranch publicly wondered what all the
fuss over density in Turtle Rock wa s all
about. He voted against the motion to
send the ElR back for revision.
Johnson noted the north Irvine precise
land use plan suggests a density of 16
persons per acre, compared to eight
persons per acre said by Commissioner
Frank Hurd to result from the new Tur-
Ue Rock zone plan.
Another unanimous vote of the com-
mission continued the public hearing un-
til Sept. 30, to aUow time for a new EIR.
Staff members and the Irvine company
also will prepare answers to a variety of
commission and public questions related
to the village plan.
Among the questions are:
-How wlJl problems of noise along
Turtle Rock Drive and near University
High School and new Broad.moor duplex
units be solved?
-How can at least five vehicular ac-
cess points be provided for the village?
That is four more than there are now,
and two more than are projected for the
15,(IOO.person village.
-lfow can noise and exhaust pollution
be eased when Bonita Canyon Road is
built, and can tbt. road be moved away
from existing homes?
-What population should lhe village
ultimately accommodate?
Al lhe close of the lengthy hearings,
commissioners aired their personal con-
cerns about the plan.
Commlssloner Hurd, who lives In
University Park, 1aid : "The biggest
question I have ls why we are con-
slderln1 this mmie at all."
Ho altac~ed l'1e Irvine Company's
priorities. suggesting they are "not
synchronlzt4 with the demands or the
mi.rket."
"He also IU1'd the company ID subm;t
Ill Town Center Village plan, noting the
city "needs mart homes priced at from
!20,000 lo ~000 !or students, facullr
(See TURn;E, P11e Zl
•
suggested settlement.
\Vhat happened after that is interpeted
differently by each side. But ~'hatever
was said it led to the shouting match .
Kurilich claims that l\fukai told him
that he and Levine had never Intended to
make a deal. He quoted Mukai as saying:
"\V(' just '''anted to get Hartelius on the
sland and listen to his story."
Mukai denied this statement and
denied having said anything :esembling
it to Kurilich. And he asked W1Ud to take
action against the Fullerton lawyer· for ;
the mouthing or an obxtnity aUegedJy
leveled at the two young state attorneys
at the height or the fracas.
Kurilich, beside tUmself with rage, told
Willd that he would never have put
Hartelius on the stand if be had not ~
sure that some serious attempt •t
negotiation would be instigated. l
li e labeled the state action as ''con--
tcmptuous, unethical, disgraceful decep-_
(See llARTELIUS, Page %) , l . .,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,~
UPtT .......
War's Innocent
A small Cambodian girl refugee washes clothes in a muddy stream
on the outskirts o! the capital city of Phnom Penh. She and hundreds
of others are camped near the city, displaced by a war they have
never really understood.
Adventure Over
Roaming Beacli Boy Turns Self In
By JOANNE REVNOIJlS or 1t11 o.ltf' P'lltt· Shift
Ten·year-old John Dennis O'Neill
returned home Thursday to a tearfu l re-
union with his mother, four days after he
left his Huntington Beach home.
The little boy called his mother Mrs.
John P. O'Neill from a phone booth in
Santa Ana at about 2:45 p.m. and told
her he wanted to come home.
Det. Ray Hattabaugh, who headed the
search for the missing child, drove bis
mother to the comer of 17th and Bristol
streeUI where they met him.
Young John said that after leaving his
home at 21282 Fleet Circle he went to the
Anaheim-Santa Ana area, living off about
$20 he took from his sister's piggy bank.
Det. Virginia Klrkmeyer said today
Death, Ffiially
Ert~ Jaso1i Rea
Fig lit for Life
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot ni. 01IN ,1111 Iliff
Jason Rea, the lltUe boy Crom
Capistrano Beach who fought death for
weeks but never knew it, lost the battle
late Thursday at Fairview State Hospital
as his mother prayed at his bedside.
The 3-year-old victim of a pool tragedy
in flwtlingtoo Beach early ln July died of
major compllcatioruJ brought on by
massive brain damage su(fercd in the in-
cident at the home or a baby sitter.
Jn the weeks that followed the com·
atqse youngster wa s flown to Denver to
become a transplant donor. then a week
ago was returned to the Orange Coo.st
after physicians in Colorado ruled the
youngster no longer qualified as an organ
donor.
'jJason's RO\V a little angel in Heaven."
his weary, grieving mother, Linda, snid
this morning.
"I prayed and prayed lor Gnd to help
!See CAPO BOY, Page II
that the boy spent two nights in motels.
''It is absolutely incredible to me to
realize that there are people who would
check a little boy into a motel as a.
registered guest without questioning it,"
she said.
l\trs. Kirkmeyer said the youngster ap-
parently spent one night in the open but
"was eaten alive by mosquitoes" and so
he spent the next two nights at cheap
motels.
The little boy told his mother that ho
tried to save money by not eating too
much. He went to one restaurant and
ordered the eheapest !hing OJI the menu
which was a bowl of cerea1. The rest o(
the time he lived off oranges bought at
(SeeeBACK· HOME, Pago %)
OraBge Cout
Slightly cooler Saturday alone
the Orange Coast -but still nice.
lllghs In the upper 60s at the
beaches rising to .78 Inland. Over-
night lows 62-iS. ;o
INSIDE TODA-i-
rwo Loguna Beoch film mak-
ers were involved in tht! maktng
of a superstar -tven if ht ia a
seogull The filming of the Jont>-
th<m Livingston Seogull 1eog11lll
by Greg MocGlllivra~ ond Jim
Fre.,..n for a bird's debut !.t
described in todapJ.t \V ttkfftdtrf
Page 23.
I ,
•
Appeal Plata1aed
Gasoline Price
Controls to Go
·wASIUNGTON (AP) - A federal
judge ruled today that most of the na-
tion's retail gasoline dealers can raise
prices starting Sept. l .
The Justice Department and the Cost
of Living Council said the decision would
be appealed immediately.
U.S. Distr.itt Court Judge Barrington
D. Parker issued the ruling in a suit
brought against the council on behalf of
165,000 service station dealers selling
retail gasoline under the brand names of
major gasoline suppliers.
The decision, ii it withstands the
governmental appeals, would effectively
lift . controls for the retail gasoline
dealers. Between now and m1dnigbt Fri-
day. Aug. 31, prices remain frozen.
After that, Phase 4 controls on gasoline
prices are scheduled to go into effect.
'lbe dealers contended they were
"singled out for special treatment" un-
der Phase 4 regulations which discrim-
inate against them .
Parker agreed, saying that the way the
regulations were applied to the retail
gasoline dealers "is arbitrary and
capricious.''
The judge said that the cootrols
discriminate against the dealers and
"violate the due process clause of lhe
Fifth Amendment."
He said that the gasoline dealers v.·ere
tbe only small businesses with 60 or ·
fewer employes covered by the price
cootrols.
Granting a request for preliminary in-
jUDction, Parker held that the dealers
"have made a sufficiently strong show·
From P qe l
TURTLE •.•
and staff of UC Irvine" than It does the
!l(l,000 to $US,OOO homes proposed for
Turtle Rock, and in another major zoning
yet to be unveiled for central Irvine.
Hurd suggested that by providing
homes of lower cost in Town Center, the
Irvine C.Ompany could prove its interest
in serving a moderate-income market.
He added that in his view, the Town
Center planning might be being delayed
"perhaps because of a fear of the bygone
threat of campus activists."
An Irvine C.Ompany spokesman today
said the Town Center plan, along wilh
zone changes in central Irvine, a major
commercial zone change for an area yet
to be annexed by Irvine and tract maps
for the Village of Valley View all are to
be filed shortly with the city.
James Taylor, director of pl&Ming ad-
ministration, represented the Irvine
Company Thursday night. He said today
be believed it will be possible to work
with city stalf to "prepare a revlsed plan
by September whJch the commission will
be able to vote on."
Privately, Taylor discounted t h e
"political" concerns related to the Turtle
Rock zoning, noting the firm is confident
the major open space features of the new
village proposal and the esthetics of it s
de Sign' merged ' With coosideration of the
concerns voiced Thursday night will
result in a •·work8ble plan."
T,vo Teens Held
On Burglary Rap
Laguna Beach detecti ves arrested a 19-
yt M-old Laguna youth and a Laguna
Hills juvenile Thursday, assertedly clear-
ing up sevetal recent burglaries in the
Art Colony.
David Oney, of 306 Canyon Acres
Drive, was booked for alleged possession
of stolen property and suspicion of
burglary.
Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell said
recovered property included antique
watches, jewelry. clothing and cash,
mostly taken in small jobs.
The Orange County Sheriff's Depart·
ment will be investigating the Laguna
Hill 's youth's connection with county
burglaries.
OU.NGI COAST II
' DAILY PILOT
tti. Dnn9t Co•1t DAILf f"ILOT, wltll Wlllclt
i. cemb!floed tl'lt Ht-PrM, IJ pUbtl'11td llf ~ Or•"9t CO.JI '"ut>llsl'll"'I! ComNnf. !oepi1.
ret. tielll!Ollf •rt 11ubU11\td, Monda\' thr!Wllh
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Hllnllntton ltKll/F-!tlrl Vtllty, L-
t.di, l"'IM/hdd!tbtc-Ind Siii CftrtleMt/
""" Jll#I Ct11lltr~""· A Jif19I~ rwaloto•I
ldlllOn II publlthed Sllunf•yt. tnd S\H'ICl1y1,
Tiit ll'lnc:j•I publ•ll\1119 Dl•ftl 11 .i UO Wet!
llY llr"1, C.11 Mftof, Ctlllorftll, '11ilt.
aebttf N. W1H
' f"rtsldtnt Ind P11blltt>u
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VICW f'Nllld..,t •1'111 ~II MIO\lfef'
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Tltoll'llt A. M11rplli111 Mlfttltllllf Ell/tor
C1t•"•• H. le" ai<ll1rd P. Ni ll
,.. .. 11111 M"""'"' E•1100 -C:.te M ... l D W.I t1y Stl'MI H..,.,. hldtl un N_,.,I to.l!,...rlll l.,urlt 9eKll1 m 1Jortt1 ... _
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C.tl,...le. ""'-""lwi ., tltfltr tu.I _..,., w !Nfl u.11 ~' mr/WY ........ ,,.... t:IAI INl'lt'llY.
ing" and are likely to win a final ruling.
The court decision came as some
gasoline dealers planned weekend clos-
ings to demonstrate their protests of
Phase 4 regulations,
The American Automobile Association
warned motorists that they v:ould face
problems getting gas \•ihile traveling
Jnterstate 7t) through Indiana th is
weekend.
Fro111 Page l
CAP O .BOY •••
his suffering," she added.
Mrs. Rea, a 29-yeaMld secretary who
is divorced, had made funeral ar-
rangements weeks ago when it first was
planned that her only child would be
flown to Denver and the breathing
madlines removed.
The medical consensus at that time
was that because no hope existed at all,
the youngster would be medically dead at
that point and organ transplants could be
performed, using his kidneys and liver to
give life to other dying children.
"My greatest grief is that it never hap-
pened; that Jason could not give life to
other children," said Mrs. Rea.
Through the ordeal Mrs. ·Rea said, sup-
port has come from throughout the na-
tion.
"I've had messages froin perfect
strangers from all over the country all
blessing me for co41"age and faith m' the
~rd, and I'm so grateful for them,
Without the help I wonder if I could have
made it," she said.
The support bas continued to come
from friends and strangers alike.
"My phone was ringing all night and
everyone I talked to agreed with me that
God must have had a reason for all of
this, and now it's up to me to find the
answer," she said.
One factor which caused some bit-
terness during the strain of the vigil were
comments about the youngster "making
·medical history," Mrs. Rea said.
"That hurt greatly," she said,
The youngster was Jitera1Iy brought
back from death several times during the
ordeal -first after showing no signs or
life after the rescue from the bottom of
the pool.
Jason's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a
team. of physicians worked furiously at
Huntington Intercommunity Hospital.
Tbree l'OOka late~ at the sapie hospital
the youngster agalb lost his bodily func-
tions but was revived and after surgery
physicians, Mrs. Rea and her former
husband -Jason's father -agreed to
the transplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver Mrs. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fare and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One of those offers of help came from
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help ~irs. Rea face what she bad
believed to be the inevitable.
"I accepted it graciously," she said,
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the little boy are ten-
tatively set for Wednesday at the Peek
Family Colonial Funeral Home in
Westminster.
F rom Pagel
BACK HOME • • •
roadside stands and in markets.
\\.'bile pollce sea rched for the mis sing
boy, he went to a family night baseball
game at Anaheim stadium and visited
Disneyland, Hattabaugh said.
The detectives said the litUe boy got
around on his bicycle.
"But the tire had a leak and he didn't
?.·ant to spend bis money on a patch, so
he had to stop at just about every gas
station to fill the tire with air," Hat-
tabaugh said
Traveling by this laborious method,
young John made one trip to the Hwi-
tington Beach area during the height of
the search for him.
"He said he wanted to talk to his
mother so he went to the place where sbe
works. But he didn't see her car there so
~b;~~~ ~f~. to the Anaheim area," Hat-
The boy ran away from home Monday
afternoon following a family "miswl-
derstanding," police said.
But by Thursday afternoon , his con-
science was beginning to bother hlm and
he called his mother because he "felt
bad'' about taking his sister's money and
he y,·anted to come home.
Blacks Boycott
Sa11 Diego Fest
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A soutbeast San
Diego black group says it bas been
harassed by police since organizing a
ren t strike in April and called upon
blacks to boycott the cUJTent "America's
Finest City" week celebration .
"We are calling M all blacks to
demonstrate against the observance by
calling or writing to the City Council
Mayor Wilson or President Nixon ,;
Harold Sadikifu, a spokesman f~r
S.rvices Unlimited, said Thursday.
Speaking at a press conference on th~
l11wn of bis ~e. S&dikifu said a survey
by his organtzatJon showed it is sup-
ported by 56 percent oJ !he black com·
munlty. He would not say how many
members the group bu
::-.. ·-
Delly Piiot Sllil PholO
BELGIAN BIKER FRA NK MEYSMAN TAKES BREAK AT END OF LONG RUGGED ROAD
'Never Thought I'd Make It,' He Says of 43-day Cross.Country Jou;ney ,
Bike Rider R eaches Goal
From Ne·iv York to Dcinci Poi1it in 43 Days
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
01 th• oauv Pilot S••ff
Jt was just after 11 a.m. Thursday that
Frank Meysman was face-to-face with
the Pacific Ocean in Dana Point.
His 43-day, 4,500-mile bicycle ride that
began July 11 at Ne\v York's Kennedy
Airport was over.
"It was just great seeing the .ocean,"
said Meysman of his first glimpse of the
blue Pacific. "I couldn 't believe Im adc
it. "
One thing made clear is that the United
States is not ideally laid out for bicycling,
A1eysman said bet\veen sips of lemonade
at the Three Arch Bay home or ~tr. and
Airs. Tho1nas Cutkomp.
Take the relatively short run from
Blythe to Palm Springs, across the
scorching southern desert. The two
desert towns are connected by high-speed
lnterstate 10, where bicycles aren't
allowed.
Meysman, rather, had to pedal his
Belgian-made touring bicycle south to
Brawley. then head north through
Coachella and finally, lo Palm Springs.
The cities were even worse. It took
nearly two hours to find a surface street
leading out of JFK Airport in New York.
r..feysman, 21, a university student in
Belgium, began pl anning for the cross·
country trip 18 months ago.
"Some of us had joked about a trip to
China -even before President Nixon -
but \\•e figured it would take four months
and v.•e only had three months of vaca-
tion. So we settled on America :•
~1cysman recalled.
\\'hen the trip began in New \'ork,
fl1eysman had two companions riding
\•:ith him. '·But they quit in Kansas City.
They were physically disturbed," he
joked.
Nixon Pledges Disclo su1·e
Of Estate Trans actions
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of 1111 D.lil1Y Pilot Sl•ff
The Nixon Administration promised
Thursday that a full disclosure of the
transactions which involve the purchase
of La Casa Pacifica and land nearby will
be made before the President leaves the
South Coast. (Related stories, Page 3).
events \vould not take place at "the
house", meaning the private Nixon
residence on the Orange County side of
the enclave.
Jt was that apparent confusion y,•hich
led to harsh words shortly before Nixon
arrived v.•hen Northern Ca Ji for n i a
Democrat Jerome Waldie demanded an
inspection of the \Vestern 'Vhite House.
Meysman , a former Am erican Field
Service excflange student who lived in
lowa t\\'O years ago, relied on AFS
members to provide places to stay dur-
ing his ride.
He admitted it was no easy task to line
up families coast-to-coast.
The only thing he carried v•ith him was
a small pack containing clothes, a first
aid kit , some food and spare parts for his
Superior brand bicycle.
A Belgian manufacturer donated the
bike for the trip and ~1eysman said it
performed beautifully, with not one
broken part and only one flat lirt'.
"And the roads some places v.·crc
<.11~'ful ," he added.
The worst part of the trip. Meysman
declared, was the seemjngly endless ride
through the southwestern desert span-
ning New ti.1exico. Arizona a n d
California.
Because of the §CQ.rching daytime
temperatures, h-1eysman rode at night.
His longest ride in a single day was a
19-hour run from Brawley to Nuevo, a
hamlet in Perris Valley.
•le left Brawley, just 24 miles from the
Mexican border at 6 p. m. Tuesday and
arrived in Nuevo at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Each week during the trip, peeple in
Belgium were kept abreast ~ f
fl1eysman 's ride with tape recordlnp
that he made and air·mailed home°.
The tapes were broadcast every Sun-
day afternoon on Belgium 's national
radio.
Meysman has only one more goal for
the trip -to ride to the Los Angeles city
limits.
Then he ,1·ii l be olf to San Francisco.
And New York. But, this time, he plans
to fly. •
-~-· -
Ff'GM Pllfle 1
GET OUT • • •
meef!ng 1·wo nights a week at Sad.
dleback. he con tended.
"This n1eans thnt if I take the same
class at Santa Ana it takes one fourth the
llme and on1>-tenth the driving distance.
'-Kanernk declined to comment on tht
notion th at 1nany Sludents don't want to
attend Saddleback because it has the im·
age of "a police stote," a charge made
hy Saddleback trustee 11ans Vogel at a
recent board meeting.
"Althou gh I've heard n1any commenls
in that regard I don 't want to enter th e
arena of those charges," Kanernk said.
"We're trying to present tt practical case
i11 our petition drive."
Vogel, the trustee !'or the Tustin a.r~a.
has regi stered ala rm about the· pcl\Uon
drive. He has officially objected to the
course-hour difference between the two
schools and warned administrators that
the school's image has deteriorated.
Both Vogel and Fred H. Bremer, Sad·
dlebac k's superintendent, are on vacation
this week and cculd not be reached for
comment. However, Or. Bremer atteraded the last
meeting of the Tustin Unified District
board where Kanerak asked for the local
trustees' support.
Bremer challenged Kancrak's con -
tention that the tax rate \vould go down if
Tustin is transferred to the Rancho San-
tiago district.
J-le said massive building \Vould be re·
quired to accommodate the new student s, ..
on the Santa Ana College campus. re.·
quiring more taxes. ·
Presently. an eslimated one-fourth of
Saddleback's 4,000 students are from
the Tustin arca1 according to Saddlebac~.
qffi cials, and about 25 percent. of the '
dist rict's taxes come from Tustin.
Saddlebac k is in the midst of a IO.year
building program. A tax rate of 91 t-ents
approved early this month by trustees
v.•ill help construct a new $3 million
math-science building and begin work on
a fine arts facility .
The Rancho santiago district currently
has a tax t'atc of 75 cents.
"We can·t see paying taxes to a college
that is unresponsive to our -needs,"
Kanerak said. "We can't foresee any
solution to the problems to the Tustin
area for years to come."
Saddleback's building program calls
for a Tustin campus, in about 10 years.
F r oDI Page l
HA RTE LI US. • •
lion'' tha t would mean at least another
year of hearings before he can complete. ..
his defense of Hartelius.
Willd finally persuaded all three
lawyers and Laguna Beach attorney Tom
Reilly, Kurilich's co-counsel, to leave the ·
hearing room and discuss a possible sci· .
tlcment in private.
But tbey all returned for yet anolher ,
5houting match in which Levine and · ·
fl1ukai insisted on nothing Jess than the.
revocation of the silver-haired physl...
cian's license.
\Villd ordered all four lawyers to return
Sept. 11 for the opening of a three day ,
hearing and v.·as promptly warned by ,
Kurilich that an Orange County Superior ,
Court murder trial at which he is defen-
ding the accused man will likely be in
progress at that time. ,.
Willd said he Intends to personally con. ·
tact presiding Judge Bruce Sumner in a
bid to delay the trial until after the Sept
I 1 hearing is concluded. -------Beyond that , Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald Warren would go no further.
'Varren said that he did not foresee any
revelations this week on the controversial
arrangements assertedly worked out SALE • • • LAST 10 DAYS!
EX·FBI MEN ADMIT
THEFTS-Story, Pago 4
between the President and two wealthy
friends.
He "'ould concede only that the prom-
ised explanation would come possibly
next week. The President is expected to
remain at his seaside villa until
sometime after Labor Day.
One of the two men believed to have
figured in financial assistance to the
President in th_e purchase of the estate -
C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo of Florida -ar-
rived at Lacasa Pacifica with the Presi·
dent Monday afternoon.
Rebozo, a millionaire industrialist who
has furnished the President a retreat at
Ke. Biscayne, was the apparent original
purveyor of financial assistance to Nixon
in 1969 when the original purchase of the
old Cotton Estate was consummated.
Later, when arrangements were made
to purchase about 16 fallow acres im·
mediately inland of the estate, Rebozo
asertedly once again lent fwids. Later
the loan was picked up by another close
Nixon friend, Robert Abplanalp. the
aerosol spray valve king from New York .
Although some disclosures about the
transactions -facts revealed in press
accounts -have been corroborated by
the White House, one key element in the
transacUons has not been addressed.
Abplanalp ·initially was reported to
have set up a special corporation to deal
with U1e financing, according to early
White liouse reports. But later Warren
admitted that no such firm existed.
Public records show none or the details
because the land ls in bUnd trust.
In the furore that ensued over the
details of the loans and purchase, Warren
and hi! superior Ronald Ziegler vowed to
malte complete details available to the
public.
In advance of the promised full
disclosures Warren has made a semantic
distinction between the Nixon residence
and the "Western White lfouse."
In several references this week Warren
has specified that certain events would
take place at the Western White llouse
(t!ie government financed complex on the
San Dl•go side of the county line).
lie has further !tressed that those
'
Henredon to
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DREXEL-HERllAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS1AN
INTERIORS
WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5130
FRIDAY "TIL 9:00
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D A U ,y P R OT ED ITORIAL PAGE
Elite Housing Only?
U an interim policy plan suggested by a 31-member
study team in the Saddleback Valley becomes realicy ,
a lofty future is in store for the fast-growing 100 square
mile area.
The intentions and dedication of the hard-working
committee are above reproach. They met 27 times with
P.~ofessional planners, academjcians and county author·
1t1es.
But the 70-page result, while offering many solid
guidelines, also poses glaring conflicting policies.
An example is the report's suggestion that hillside
building be limited to 20 percent slopes or less. Another
page says OaUands should be preserved for picturesque
agriculture.
Where do the houses go? Whether anybody likes it
or not, houses are an inevitable, formidable commitment
in valley planning.
Secondly, while the report calls for 15 percent low-
cost housing, it also sets forth standards of esthetics
which will boost building costs sky-high.
Requiring higher and higher appearance levels,
while they're admittedly nice to have, makes a _joke of
achieving real low-cost housing.
'In short, the interim policy plan, while having one
hand on earthly goa ls, has both feet in heaven. The
price is steep and the path there unclear.
Wise Investment
Jrvine Unified School District trustees' decision to
spend $27 ,500 to landscape the new University Park
elementary school will prove a wise one in the long run.
of trustees. He remarked that seldom in his experience
as an administrator had school boards realized the im-
portance of adding landscaping to state-aid funded schools. ~.
Landscaping generates pride in ·a school, he said.
Pride in a school, in the long run, reduces district
costs related to vandalism. Vandalism is discernibly
greater at schools set in barren, turfless surrovndings.
Trustee Norman Ginsburg observed another reason
for beautifying the new school. He suggested the dis-
trict's p~llcy that schools in Irvine are to be part of the
commumty is best demonstrated ii they esthetically
blend in with their surroundings.
All the reasons are good ones. But there is another
reason this landscaping package was a wise decision.
The district will be getting a pre-inflationary price agreed
on nearly a year ago. The trees, shrubs and turf will
be a bargain at $3,000 an acre. ,
Of£ to a Good Start
Irvine Unified School District's first summer school
was a hit.
. It made the district money. Money which district
off1c1als predict may be used to enrich next year's
offerings.
The program generated record student enrollments.
And, best of all. the interest of students was main·
tained throughout the summer resulting in one of the
__ lowest drop-out rates recorded by typical public sum-
mer sessions.
~
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Supt. A. Stanley Corey praised the unanimous vote
D:isfrict administrators and teachers ,deserve a
"":¥ell done." Theirs was a commendable first effort. It
hints an even brighter program wi ll be offered ne.xt year.
SB fOURQUOI?
Plenty of 'Pork'
In State Budget
Your money is burning a hole in the
politicians' pocket.
And through that hole has poured a big
fat ($9.4 billion ) state budget marbled
\\'ilh the fat of excess and extravagance.
Verne Orr. state director of Cinancc,
admits the 1973-74 budget is full of
"pork ." Pork tha~
'\\'Ould not have bet!n
permitted in lean-
er years. Leaner,
meaning the state's
treasury. Nol yours.
That "pork" is
costing Yi'age earners
and taxpayers hwid-
reds or tn11Hons of
extra dollars . II
comes in various chunks and sizes. Jlcre
are a few:
-A $200 million increase , this year
over last. in the operational and capital
costs of state agencies:
-Another $226 million for an average
12 percent increase in salaries (or state
empk>yes. That 11 percent is excessive.
(As Cal-Tax suggests. an increase of 6
percent would have been equitable. State
workers have received a 42 percent pay
increase over the past five years.):
-An increase of $68 million for UC and
the state colleges and universities in the
face of declining enrollment:
-$42 million for a do\\'D. payment on
Senator Randolph Collier's twin towers
(or, whatever form new legislative
quarters take ), and
-at least another $50 million in new
park and recreation projects to "buy"
the budget votes to sustain Collier's seed
money fot those memorial towers.
( RUS WALTON )
THOSE e~s and extravagances
were made earlier. if not possible, by
that $826 million surplus hanging in the
Sacramento packing house. By the end of
the year that carcass may be bloated to
$1 billion.
Politicians would have y()U believe that
surP,lus was ~~cted. Back in Dec.,
1971, and a:galii In March, 1m this col-
umn predicled tbe 00,. surplus and sug.
gested it might go as high as $1 billion.
A surplus is no excuse for increased
and unnecessary spending. Surplus or no,
any politician \Vith a sense o f
responsibility should approach each ex·
penditure. each increased or new pro--
gram, with this question:
"IC I had 10 vote for a tax increase to
pay for this appropriation, "''Ould I have
the guts to do it?"
lN MOST cases the answer would be
"no." Poli ticians do not like to tie a lax
invoice on their goodies. The surplus
relieved them of that accountability.
SB 90, the "tax refonn" package of
1972, Is a monstrous measure. Within the
next four years, it will increase the cost
of state government by at least $1 bill.ion
a year. And, ft is causing serious and
urgent problems for local school districts
that are in a dither because of its clu~
footed language and contradictions.
Th.is year's "trailer" bill to correct SB
90's deficiencies and technical discrepan·
cies is almost as voluminous as the
original legislation. That's what happens
Dear
Gloomy •
Gus
Urban sprawl is eatii:ig up the far1n~
land of America. What little farm·
land remains in Orange County
should be retained for food pro-
duction and open space.
J. s.
GIOOlllY 0111 (omm1n1• ire 111bmilfM by
'"""• Ind do ntt lltC:IU9rlly l't'flect Ille YllWS •I lht _.,.,. Slfld Your "' HIVt IO Oloclmr 0111, D•llY l"llot.
when politics supersede reason and am-
bition overrides responsibility; the cost
of political passion is paid by the tax·
payer.
TBA T ONE-CENT state salell tax in.
crease? The one now being squCezed out
qf your ,pocket? The one the politicians
are falling all over themselves to "ad·
just"? It's part of that damnable tax
refonn package.
Heat from the taxpayers has singed the
tails of the politiclans and they rush to
delay or temporarily reduce that $650
mi~lion tax take. They have-the gall to
claim they are "saving" us $32~--million
by temporarily repealing or reducing the
one-cent increase. How can the re-
maining increase o( $320 million be COO·
sidered a savings?
Sooner or later the entire one-cent will
have to take effect pennanenUy. The
bldlt-in excesses of state government de--
rnand it.
moSE WHO suggest that the sales tax
increase' is simply a trade-off with lower
property taxes sing a siren song. Within
a year or two the sales tax increase will
be a pennanent fixture and property tax-
es \Vill be about as high as ever. Ex·
travagance must be funded ; if not no,v,
then tomorrow.
Party Leaders Ca 11tiolf.ed ·in Crisis
Agnew 'Hands Off' Hints
\VASHINGTON - A confidential
telephone call from top White House .aide
Melvin R. Laird to a Republican con·
gressional le~der, warning him not to zo
all-out in defense of Vice Presiderit Spiro
Agnew, is new and harsh evidence to
party profes.sionals
of the depth of the
crisis that threatens
Ted Agnew.
In bis telephone
call to llep. John B.
Anderson of Illinois,
chairman of · t h e
House Republican
Conference, Laird ....
carefully specified
that he was talking not as a White 1-Iou.<ie
aide.
His message: don't get on a Umb in the
Agnew affair, particularly with an all-out
defense of the Vice President. Stay away
from the Agnew affair as far as JKISSible.
Agnew is under intense federal in·
vestigation on charges of possible
cMminal violations of various federal
statutes involving bMbery, extortion, tax
fraud and conspiracy.
REPUBLICANS who know about the
Laird call to Anderson (described as
"astonished" by the warning) assume
that Laird and possible other party
grandees have contacted other senior
Republicans \Vith similar warnings.
Moreover, the Laird telephone call to
Anderson fits a pattern that has in·
furiated the Agnew camp. For example :
l. Before Agnew himself received
formal notice from the Justice Depart·
ment that he waJ under investigation, At·
ty. Gen . Elliot Richardson reported (in
late July) to White House staff chief
Alexander M. Haig, Jr., with a briefing
( EVANS·NOVAK)
on all aspects of the case. On Aug. 2,
Agnew's attoi;neys rei:ei ved their letter
from the prosecutors.
2. A prominent television commentator
was privately cautioned by an official of
the Justice Department 10 days ago in
'"''ords similar to those used by Laird to
Anderson: don't go overboard for
Agnew; you may wind up with • egg on
, your fa.if· _ ~
• 3. TH!l • W/U'l:E l\OUS,E has ('>ne, U>
embarrassing !e"bgth not to put the Presi-
Wic ks
dent on record as to his. ice president's
innocence. i
4. The Ne\v York Tiles front-page
dispatch of Auh:. 151 o.l)ining charges
against Agnew in vivid dlail, is believed
by furious Agnew allies ttiav~ emanated
from high levels of th~lustice Depart·
ment (who flatly denj"it), not from
Maryland sources also bplicated in the
charges against Angew.
It is not surj>rising that allies of
Agnew. whose talents 1lve sometimes
been grossly used by tbei;;r«;sident to gd-
vance Mr. Nixon's int#sts, would be
filled with dark .suSpiciC over these in-cident~. They regar4 tl\tn as proof of
• nefarious i.wdergroun~ administration
'varfare aga.ins.t Agnew11partly to ease
the President's immese Watergat~
burdens. ~
THUS, in this. conspiraU'iai view -so
understandable on the pct of Agnew in-
timates -Mr. Nixon 1r Republicans
close to him are greasi14 the skids for
the hapless Vice Presidilt. Under the
25th Amendment to the CtStitution, they
are quietly preparing to l>niinate a suc·
cessor -most likely Joh B. Connally.
lt \Vas Connally who s~ed Mr. Nixon
from disaster in th . inflaOnary crisis of
August 1971. Pertiaps Coooally, tbt>
former Democratic govrnor or Texas
who turned Republican t a moment of
maximum help to 'ie Watergate-
beleaguered President ~t spring, can
help ~gain.
To Agnewites, that litdhe known fact
that Connally recently cc;celled his plans
for a Jong trip abroad10d the lesser·
known fact that some onnally friends
predict he will be B:k in the ad-
ministration in October.
Meat \Hoarder's Attitude Annoys Housewife
BUT IN FACT the Latl. warnings may
spring from somethin! £ar less con·
spiratorial. They may be a flashing
signal of caution based tt on any desire
to do in Agnew but on uational and in-
formed judgment that Apew is a goner.
Likewise. Richardson':July briefing or
Haig, belore Agnew hinielC had fonnal
notilicati-0n, may al,sc, be!xplainable as a
rational act based onthe President's
prior right to knoW. "IS.hat normal?" a
Ju stice Department ofl:ial repeated in
answer to our question."Hell, nothing's
normal in this case __ Wee playing it by
Supermarket Empwye
To the Editor :
i realize you have important tasks or
editing your newspaper withou~ another
outside Jetter coming ln the way of your
procedures, but something went on today
and I had to write someone and get it off
my chest.
I WAS in a l~I supermarket this
afternoon and stood behind one of tbe
cmployes who was having his merchan'.
dlse checked out before going home. All
of his ofder was packages and pacXages
or ground beef. Seventeen dollars worth
to be exact! Ther the checker announced
that she .thoug ht that only two packages
per customer were to be purch1sed. His
reply was, HOon't worry about it. Jt's not
my problem."
Well, maybe It Isn't his problem, but
"1ty is ii that when I must make do with
my husband's lance corporal's paycheck
for three boys, a hubby and myself (six
months pregnant), then I say 1 must FUt
J111 George ---,
Dear George:
No matter where I hide my booze
bottle my wife finds 11 and even
when I sneak into a backroom and
try to slip a slug she knows ii! I
swear, that womar. cnn hear a bot·
tie open at 25 paces! What can I do
about her? JUMPY
Dear Jumpy:
Quit being selfish. II she wants
a drink that bad, give ber a drink.
Whst's a marriage ror?
MAILBOX
Lttttr. from ,.. .. ,. 1ro wtkolnf, ftormt111
wrlten tlltllld CM.,.., lflelr 'ftll~ lit M ~·
M' lffl. Tiii rllllt NI CtflMllM lltt-.. tit f'l(t « tUll'llMIO I/Ml If ,.....,,,.., All .. ttol'S ll'IUJI In•
ClllM tifMllll'O I nd lfltllh1t MNll'U'-b\11 nl llltl
_,, M Wltl!MN on rM1,11tl II 111tfltl1lll rNMll II _,Plf'Olll, l"MttJ Wiii ntl bo llilbllthed,
up with hls "not my problem"?
I COULDN'T do that and g&t away with
ii and I feel he's no better thlll1 we are.
Sure, tbe meat situation ts absolutely
gross, but until the matter' Is somehow
rectified I wouldn't have gone against the
manager's wishes.
We moved here via the Marine Corps
from Pennsylvania in March and have
enjoyed the gorgeous change of states,
but even back home they bave meat
problems. So b it just me that gripes.too
hard or am I justified in feellng over.
wrought? Well, thanks for lialeninJ ·anyhow.
BAllBERA MITCHELL
P rote•t• C:oeerage
To the Editor:
I'm a recent subscriber to the Daily
Pllot, and I'm happy with the paper ex·
cept for two things.
For days, now, t've ~en reading (Xtl·
umns and columns of infonnatlon about
dining up the bodies of the vlctiml of
thll! mass murderer(s). Certainly, rape
Does 1i't Thi1ik Shortage ls His Proble1n
and murder are "news" and I suppose
quite a few people enjoy reading the
details. l could not accept, however, the
headline on page 2 -of. the Aug. 10 issue,
announcing (and I quote) "Juan Corona
Still First in Murders. 11 I suppose that
now that those depraved indlviduals in·
volved have been found to have killed
more people than Corona, you'll name
Corll and accomplices number one in the
ficld of murder.
I MUST protest the lack of decency
and community respJiisibility rertected
in that headline. Highlighting this aspect
of the crime in a bea.dline can only en-
courage warped individuals to emulate
and surpass Corll's 11accomplishmcnt."
Also, your sense of space allowance
does not seem fair at tlmcs. After
reading so much about this mass
murderer, 1 was appalled this morning
when I picked up the Pilot and read the
eight lines on Conrad Aiken's death.
I suppose I ought to be glad that the
eight· lines were at least on the front
page and not hidden elsewhere, although
eight lines of coverage is rather hidden
no matter what page they appear on.
CONRAD AIKEN lived to be 84 ytars
of age without committing any serious
Cl'imes; along the way, he won a
Pulitzer Prize as well as world fame as
a poet.
1 realize the •lght lines probably
reflect the length of the AP's release. But
I wou1d thlnk that since you, have often
cited your respon1lbUity to the com·
mw\lty and lls interesi., you l90Uld have
considered your news duty to the ma·
jority of citirens, who are both decent
and reasonably educated, and have sent
a cub reporter -at least , over to the
library for a bit of research on Conrad
Aiken. I wouldn't have expected suc.b a
great man's death to get the same
amount of coverage as a mass murderer
(that seems to be one of the ironic truths
about today's news coverage), but r do
think you could have had more coverage
on Aiken's death. May I be only the first
of your readers to protest these t\vo
items.
E. DARLENE LISTER r
Se 111lbfe Appralsnl
To the Editor :
I want to compliment and congratulate
the Daily Pilot for printing the kind of
Watergate analysis that seems to have
escaped American journalists.
1 refer, of course, to the guest com-
mentary of British columnlst Angus
Maude In your issue of Aug. t6. 'llme of
us who support President Nixon In his
crlsis are detpJy grateful to have this op-
portunity or reading a capable ond
thoroughly sensible a.ppraisal of the
Watergate affair in an American
newspaper.
MARGOT R. DARLEY
No Victim ?
To the Editor :
No man l4 an island; no man livea
al cne. The experts are saying that there
are no victims of the crintes of pros·
Utution, pornography and certain
narcotics such as marijuana. Corruption
affects everyone of us. This wou1d be so
if there were no God.
I \VOULD NOT want to have lli pros-
titute in 1ny family, \vould you? What ir
your moth er \Vere a prostitute ? What
\¥ould your chance be of becoming a self-
resnectin_g citizen? It would' be diCficult
to keep such a thing secret. \Vhat if It
. \Vere your sis ter, your daughter? Would
you ~eel li_ke fl victim or prostitution?
What of pornography? Could it be hid·
den .in the farnily safe rrom children? Not
likely. The person who feeds his soul on
pornography \\•ill act differently towards
others.
YOUNG ADULTS tend to disregard the
w.ll being of others. Think of your
children. Some men having been
disCharged from the military Lend to
bring the barracks lalk home with them
with no regard to the effect on their
wives and children. They often plan
recreation <0n Sunday so thal the child
will be deprived of spiritual training in
Sunday school and church.
The families of compulsive gamblers
are all victims as are I.be families of
alcoholics. The gambler or alcoholic will
often set up the friends of their wives
and family re: a \oqn which will nev~r be
p1id b.!lck. This is beside vsi no: the money
that should clolhe and feed the family.
No victims Indeed. We a:e all the vic-
tims of corruotion. No man I .. a.n island.
JIM BOLDING
ear." "'
But such quiet and ra&lal explanation
is understandably dilCiCtl for Agnewites.
The mood in the Agnew amp has grown
isolated and embJttered.~ow, with word
being secretly passed to ~keep clear" of
the Agnew affair, thal mood will in·
tensi(y, with dangerous mplications for
the Republican future ncmatter bow the
investigation :inally.end!
Robert N . \Vted, 1'ubti&her
ThomaJ Keevil, Sdi&or
Barbara Krtilch.
Editorial Page JdjtQr
Tho <dltorlal . """ I the Dail>
PIJot Seeks to inform ad stimulate
readers by pt't'5etltinc1n. 1th is pqe dlVE'l"lle •CO!!'M~nt&Jy'Oifopict io( (n..
terest by sYndicated ~nlft• and
cartoonlsts, by provkliDfa forum for
resde-rs' vlt!wa and by ~ttntlng this
newspaper'• opinMJm &Id ideiu on
C\IJT'ent topics. The tdi,ritJ oplniofw
ot lM Daily PitOt •ppi;a" onl¥ 1n the
fditorW column 1.t ~ top of tt)e
Paac. Opinions expreitcl by th~ cot-.
umntsts Md ctrtoon9 and letter
\\Tl ten art their own .t M) ftldone-
mcnt of tMir views the O.Uy
Pilot -bt w ......
~day, August it. 1973
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.2 DAILY PILOT IS F'rlday, August 24, 1q73
Appeal Plan11ed
Gasoline
Controls
.WASHINGTON (APi - A federal
judge ruled today that most of the na·
Hon's r.etail gasoline dealers can raise
prices s~arling Sept. I.
'!be Justice Department and the Cost
of Living Council aaid the decision would
be appealed immediately.
U.S. District Court Judge Barrington
D. Parker issued the ruling in a ·suit
brought against the council on behalf of
ISS,000 service station dealers selling
retail gasoline under the brand names of
major gasoline suppliers.
The decision, if it withstands the
goverrunental appeals. would effectively
Jlft controls for the retail gasoline
dealers. Between now and midnight Fri-
day. Aug. 31, pricea remain frozen .
After that, Phase 4 controls on gasoline
prices are scheduled to go Into ell<¢.
Price
'
to Go
ing" and are likely to win a final ruling.
'Ille court decision came as some
gasoline dealers plaMed weekend clos..
ings to demonstrate their protests of
Phase 4 regulations.
The American Automobile Association
warned motorists that they would face
problems getting gas while traveling
Interstate 70 through Indiana this
weekend.
From Page 1
CAPO .BOY ...
his suffering," she added.
• ""' . =~
•
FromPftfel
GET OUT • • •
meeting two nights a week a1 -Sad·
dl eback, he contended.
'·This 01eans that if I take ' lhe s1u11e
class at Santa Ana it takes one fourth the
time and one-tenth the driving distance.
Kancrak declined to comment on the.
notion that many students don't waut. to
attend S:Jddleback because it ha! the im·
:ige of "a police state," a charg e made
hy Saddleback trustee 11ans Vogel al a
recent board 1neeti11g .
"Although I've heard many comments
in that regard I don't want to enter I.he
arena of those charges," Kanerak ~aid
HWe're trying to present a practical case
in our petition drive .''
VogcJ, the trustee for the 1'ustin a.r~a.
has reg istered alarm abOul the pclltinn
drive. He has officially objected to ~c
course-hour difference between the t o
schools and warned adminis.trators that
the school's image has deteriorated . _
Both Vogel and Fred H. Bremer, S~d-,
dleback's superintendent, are on vacallon
this \\'ee k and cculd not be reached for
comment.
However. Or. Bremer att~~ded the last
meeting of the Tustin Untfted District
board where Kanerak asked for the local
trustees' support. ,
The dealers contended they were
"singled out for special treatment" un-
der Pb!se 4 regulations which discrim·
inate against them.
Parker agreed, saying that the way the
regulations were applif\d to the retail
gasoline dealers "is arbitrary and
capricious."
Mra. Rea, a 29-year-<>ld secretary who
is divorced, had made funeral ar·
rangement.s weeks ago when it first was
planned that her only chlld would be
flown to Denver and the breathing machines removed.
The medical consensus at that lime
was that because no hope existed at aU,
the yollllgster would be medically dead at
that point and organ transplants could be
performed, using his kidneys and liver to
give life to other dying children.
BELGIAN BIKER FRANK MEYSMAN TAKES BREAK AT END OF LONG, RUGGED ROAD
'.: • 'Never Thought I'd Make It,' He Says of 43·day Cross-Country Journey 1
Bremer challenged Kanerak s coi~·
tcnlion that the tax rate would go down if
Tustin is transferred to the Rancho San-
The judge said that the controls
discriminate against the dealers and
"violate the due process clause of the
Fifth Amendment."
He said that the gasoline dealers "·ere
the only small businesses with 60 or
fewer employes covered by the price
controls.
Granting a request for preliminary in-
junction, Parker held that the dealers
"have made a sufficienUy strorig show4
From Pqe 1
TURTLE •..
and stall of UC Irvine" than It does the
$50,llllO to $125,000 homes proposed for
Turtle Rock, and in another major zoning
yet to be unveiled for central Irvine.
Hurd suggested that by providing
homes of lower cost in Tovm Center, the
Irvine C.Ompany could prove its interest
in serving a moderate-income market.
He added that in his view, the Town
Center planning might be being delayed
"perhaps because of a fear of the ~ygone
threat of campus activists."
An Irvine Q>mpany spokesman today
said the Town Center plan, along with
zone changes in central Irvine, a major
commercial zone change for an area yet
to be annexed by Irvine and tract maps
for the Village of Valley View all are to
be filed shortly with the city.
James Taylor, director of planning ad-
ministration, represented the Irvine
Company Thursday night. He said today
he belle~ it will be possible .to work
witlt city staff to "prepare a revl!ed plan
by September which the commission will
be able to vote on."
Privately, Taylor discounted the
"political" concerns related to the Turtle
Rock zoning, noting the finn is confident
the major open space features of the new
village proposal and the esthetics of its
design merged with coosideration of the
concerns voiced Thursday night will
result in a "workable plan."
Two Teens Held
On' Bm·glary Rap
Laguna Beach detectives arrested a 19·
year-old Laguna youth and a Laguna
Hills juvenile Thursday, assertedly clear4
ing up sevetal recent burglaries in the
Art Colony.
David Onev, of 306 Canyon Acres
Drive, was bOOked for alleged possession
of stolen property and suspicion of
burglary.
Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell said
recovered property included antique
watches, jewelry. clothing and cash,
mostly taken in small jobs. "
The Orange County Sheriffs Depart·
ment wilJ be investigating the Laguna
Hill's youth's connection with county
burglaries.
OIANGI COAST II
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"My greatest grief is that it never ha~
pened; that Jason could not give life to
other children," said Mrs. Rea.
Through the ordeal Mrs. Rea said, sup-
port has come from throughout the na-
tion.
"I've had messages from perfect
strangers from all over the country, all
blessing me for courage and faith in the
Lord, and I'm so grateful for them.
Without the help I wonder if I could have
made it," she said.
Tbe support has continued to come
from friends and strangers alike.
"My phone was ringing all night and
everyone I talked to agreed with me that
God must have had a reason for all of
this, and now it's up to me to find the
answer," she said.
One factor which caused some bit4
temess during the strain of the vigil were
comments about the youngster "making
·medical 'history," Mrs. Rea said.
"That hurt greatly," she said.
The youngster was literally brought
back from death several times during the
•ordeal -first after showing no signs or
Jife after the rescue from the bottom of
the pool.
Jason's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a
team of physicians worked fwiously at
Huntinston lntereommunity Hospital.
~ ~ks later at the same hospital
the youngster agalil Jost bis bodily func4
lions but was revived and after surgery
physlcians, Mrs. Rea and her former
husband -Jason's father -agreed to
the lransplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver Mrs. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fare and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One or those offers of help came from
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help Mrs. Rea face what she had
believed to be the inevitable.
"l accepted it graciously," she said.
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the little boy are ten4
tatively set for Wednesday at the Peek
Family C.Olonial Funeral Home in
Westminster.
From Page 1
BACK HOME • • •
roadside stands and in markets.
Yt1hile police searched for the missing
boy, he went to a family night ba~e~ll
game at Anaheim stadiu~ and visited
Disneyland, Hattabaugh said.
The detectives said the little boy got
around on his bicycle.
"But the tire had a leak and he didn 't
want to spend his money on a patch, so
he had to stop at just about every gas
station to fill the tire with air," Hat·
tabaugh said
Traveling by this laborious method,
young John made one trip to the Hwi-
tington Beach area during the height of
the search for him.
"He said he wanted to talk to his
mother so he went to the place where she
works. But he didn't see her car there so
he Y•ent back to the Anaheim area," Hat-
tabaugh said.
The boy ran away from home Monday
afternoon following a family "misun·
derstandlng. '' police said.
But by Thursday afternoon, his con-
science was beginning to bother him and
he called his mother because he' "felt
bad'' about taking his sister's money and
he wanted to come home.
Blacks Boycott
San Diego Fest
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A southeast San
Diego black group says it has been
harassed by pollc. since organizing a
rent strike In April and called upon
blacks to boycott the current "America's
Finest City" week celebration.
"We are calling oo all blacks lo
demonstrate against the observance by
calling or writing to the City C.Ouncll,
Ma)IOr Wilm or Prealdent Nixon,"
Harold Sadikifu , a spokesman for
Services Unlimited, said Thursday.
Speaking at a press conference on the
la\\-11 of his home, Sadiklfu said a survey
by his organization showed it ts sup..
ported by 56 percent or the black com·
munlty. He would 110t say how many
members the group has.
tiago district. , .
Bike Rider Reaches Goal
He said massive bwld1ng would be re·
quired to accommodate the new students,,.
on the Santa Ana College campus, re-
qu iring more taxes. .
Presently, un estimated one-fourth ot
Suddlcback's 4,000 students are fron1
ihe Tustin area, according to Saddleba<:~.
Qfficials, and about 2S percen.t of the·
district's taxes come from Tustm. From Ne1v York to Danct Point • in 43 Days Saddleback is in the midst of a JO-year
building program. A tax: rate of 91 cents
approved early this month by tru~t~s
will help construct a new .SJ m1lhon
math-science building and begin work on
a fine arts facility.
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL
01 1111 O.llr Pilot Slltff
It was just after 11 a.m. Thursday that
Frank Meysman was face-to-face with
the Pacific Ocean in Dana Point.
His 43-<iay, 4,500-mile bicycle ride that
began July 11 at New York's Kennedy
Airport was over.
"It was just great seeing the ocean,"
said Meysman of his first glimpse of the
blue Pacific. "I couJdn't believe Im ade
it."
One thing made clear is that the United
States is not ideally laid out for bicycling,
l\1eysman said between sips of lemonade
at the Three Arch Bay home of Mr. and
l\.lrs. Tho mas Cutkomp.
Take the relatively short run from
Blythe to Palm Springs, aero$ the
scorching southern desert. The two
desert towns are connected by high-speed
Interstate 10, where ,bicycles aren't
allowed.
J\.1eysman, rather, had to pedal his
Belgian-made touring bicycle south to
Brawley. then head north through
Coachella and finally, to Palm Springs.
The cities were even worse. It took
nearly two hours to find a surface street
leading out of JFK Airport in New York.
Meysman, 21, a university student in
Belgium, began planning for the cross-
country trip 18 ·months ago.
"Some of us had joked about a trip to
China -even before President Nixon -
but 're figured it would take four months
and we only had three months of vaca-
tion. So we settled on America."
t.iteysman recalled.
\\/hen the trip began in New York ,
J\feysman had two companions riding
with him. "But they quit in Kansas City.
They were physically disturbed," he
joked.
Meysman, a former American Field
Service exchange student who Jived in
Iowa t\\'O years ago, relied on AFS
members to provide places lo stay dur-
ing his ride. .
He admitted it was no easy task to lme
up families coasl·to-coast.
The only thing he carried "'ilh him '_YaS
a small pack containing clothes, a ftrst
aid kit, some food and spare parts for his
Superior brand bicycle.
A Belgian manufacturer donated. th.e
bike for the trip and ?>.1eysman said 1t
performed beautifully, 'vith not one
broken part and only one Oat tire.
"'And the roads some places y,·ere
U\\'ful." he added.
The worst part of lhe trip, Meysman
declared, \Vas the seemingly endless ride
The Rancho Santiago district currently
has a tax ,·ate of 75 cents,
"We can 't see paying taxes to a college
that is unresponsive to our needs."
Kanerak said. "We can't foresee any
solution to the problems to the Tustin
area for years to come."
Saddleback's building program calls
ror a Tustin campus, in about 10 years.
From Page l
HARTELIUS. • •
through the southwestern dese rt span· lion" that would mean at least another ··
ning New ~1exico. Arizona an d year of hearings before he can complete. '
California. his defense of Hartelius. '
Because of life scorching da ytime Willd finally persuaded aU three
temperatures. Meysman rode at night. la\vyers and Laguna Beach attorney Tom
His longest ride in a single da y was a Ileilly. Kurilich's co-counsel, to leave the
19-hour run from Brawley to Nuevo, a hearing room and disCU$ a possible set· '
hamlet in Perris Valley. tlement in private. ·
Nixon Pledges Disclosure
He left Brawley. just 24 n1iles from the But tbey all returned for yet another ,
Of Estate Transactions
Mexican border at e p.m. Tuesday aod shouting matc;:h in which Levine and · '
arrived in Nucvo st 2 pim. Wednesday. l\1ukai insisted on nothing less than the·
Each week duriog the trip, people in revocation of the silver-haired phy:;i...
Belgium were ke pt abreast . of cian~s license,
By JOHN V ALTERZA
01 "" ~ll'r P'ilol Sl•ll
The Nixon Administration promised
Thursday that a full disclosure of the
transactions which involve the purchase
of. La Casa Pacifica and land nearby will
be made before the President leaves the
Soulh Coast. (Related stories, Page 3).
Beyond that, Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald Warren would go no further.
\Varren sai d that he did not foresee any
revelations ttlis week on the controversial
arrangements assertedly worked out
EX-FBI MEN ADMIT
THEFTS-Story, Page 4
between the President and two wealthy
friends.
He would concede only that the prom·
ised explanation would co1ne possibly
next week. The President is expected to
remain at his seaside villa until
sometime after Labor Day.
One of the two men believed to have
figured in tinancial assistance to the
President in the purchase of the estate -
c. G. "Bebe" Rebozo of Florida -ar-
rived at La Casa Pacifica with the Presi-
dent Monday afternoon.
· Rebozo, a millionaire industrialist who
has furnished the President a retreat at
Ke. Biscayne, was the apparent original
purveyor of fmancial assistance to Nixon
in 1969 when the original purchase of the
old c:otton Estate was consummated.
Later, when arrangements were made
to purchase about 16 fallow acres in1·
medJately inland of the estate, Rebozo
asertedly once again Jent funds . Later
the loan was picked up by another close
Nixon friend. Robert Abplanalp, the
aerosol spray valve king from New York.
Although some disclosures about the
transactions -facts revealed in press
accounts -have been corroborated by
the White House, one key element in the
transactions has not been addressed.
Abplanalp ·initially was reported to
have set up a special corporation to deal
with the financing, according to early
White House reports. But later Warren 1
admitted that no such finn existed.
Public records show none or the details
because the land is in blind trust
Jn the furore that ensued over the
details of the loans and purchase, Warren
and his superior Ronald Ziegler vowed to
make complete details available to U1e
public.
In advance of the promised full
disclosures Warren has made a semantic
distinction between the Nixon residence
and the "Wcstem White House."
Jn several ref~rcnces this week Warren
has specified that certain events would
take place at the Western White House
(t!1e government financed complex on the
San Diego sid• or the county line).
Jlc has further !tressed that those
l\Ieysman·s ride with tape recorchngs Wllld ordered all four lawyers to return
. that he made and air-mailed home-. Sept. 11 for the opening of a three day ' events 'vould not take place at "the The tapes were broadcast every Sun· hearing and Y.'as promptly warned by ·
house" meaning the private Nixon day afternoon on Belgium's national Kurilich that an Orange County Superior reside~ce on the Orange County side of radio. Court murder trial at which he is defen--
the enclave. Meysman has only one more goal ~or ding the accused man y,•ill likely be in
Jt was that apparent confusion \\'hich the trip -to ride to the Uis Angeles city progress at that time . •·
Jed to harsh words shortly before Nixon limits. Willd said he intends to personally con-..·
arrived when Northern Ca l if or n i a Then he "'ill be off to San Francisco. tact presiding Judge Bru ce Sumner in a
Democrat Jerome Waldie demanded an And New 'i'ork. But, th is tilne, he plans bid to delay the trial until after the Sept.
inspection of t~e \\'estem Whil~_H_o_us_e_. __ t_o_f_ly_. ______________ 1_1 _h_ca_r_in_g_is concluded.
-
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WRMDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:30
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NEWPORl BEACH e
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'
DAU,y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE -
Elite Housing Only?
II an interim policy plan suggested by a 31-member
study team In the Saddleback Valley becomes reality,
a lolly luture is in store !or the last-growing 100 square
mile area.
The intentions and dedication ol the hard-worklng
committee are above reproach. They met 27 times with
profess1onal planners, academicians and county author·
1ties.
But the 70-page result, while olfering many solid
guidelines, also poses glaring conflicting policies.
An example is the report's suggestion that hillside
building be limited to 20 percent slopes or less. Another
page says .flatlands should be preserved !or picturesque
agriculture.
Where do the houses go? Whether anybody likes it
or not, houses are an inevitable, formidable commitment
in valley planning.
Secondly, while the Ieport calls !or 15 percent low-
cost housing, It also sets forth standards of esthetics
which will boost building costs sky-high.
Requiring hi~ber and higher appearance levels,
while they're admiltedly nice to have, makes a joke of
achieving real low-cost housing.
'In short, the interim policy plan, while having one
hand on earthly goals, has both feet in heaven, The
price is steep and the path there unclear.
Wise Investment
Irvine Unified School District trustees' decision to
spend $27 ,500 to landscape the new University .Park
elementary school will prove a wise one in the long run.
Supt. A. Stanley Corey praised the unanimous vote
of trustees, He remarked that seldom in his experience
as an administrator had school boards realized the im·
parlance of adding landscaping to state-aid funded
schools.
Landscaping generates prJde in · a school, he said.
Pride in a school, in the long run, reduces district
costs related to •andalism. Vandaliam is discernibly
greater at schools set in barren, turfless surro\lndings.
Trustee Norman Ginsburg observed another reason
!or beautilying the new school. He suggested the dis·
trict's policy _ that schools in Irvine are to be part of the
commuruty JS best demonstrated if they esthetically
blend in with their surroundings.
All the reasons are good ones. But there is another
• reason this landscaping package was a wise decision.
The district will be getting a pre.inflationary price agreed
on nearly a year ago. The trees, shrubs and turf will
be a bargain at $3,000 an acre. ,
Off to a Good Start
Irvine Unified School District's first summer school was a hit.
. ~t made ~he district money. Money which district
off1c1als predict may be used to enrich next year's offerings.
The program generated record student enrollments.
And, best of all, the interest of students was main-
tained throughout the summer resulting in one of the
lowest d~op-out rates recorded by typical public sum-
mer sessions.
' ' . ··~');;,,,· ........ ...,' .. District administrators and teachers deserve a "~ell done!' T~eirs was a commendable first effort. It
hmts an even \)righter program will be offered next year.
SB POURQUot?
Plenty of 'Pork'
In State Budget
Your money is burning a hole in the
politicians' pocket.
And through that hole has poured a big
fat ($9.4 billion } slate budget marbled
.... ·ith the fat of excess and extravagance.
Verne Orr. state director o! finance,
admits the 1973-74 budget is full of
··pork." Pork tha~
\\·ould oot buve bcf'i'I
pennittcd in lean·
er years. Leaner.
meaning the state's
treasury. Not yours .
That •·pork" Is
costlng \vage earners
and tazpayers hund·
reds of 1nillio11s of
extra dollars. It
comes in various chunks and sizes. llere
are a few :
-A $200 million increase, this year
over last, in the operational and capital
costs or state agencies :
-Another $226 million tor an average
12 percent increase in salaries for state
employes. That 12 percent is excessive.
(As Cal-Tax suggests, an increase of 6
percent would have been equitable. State
workers have rectived a 42 percent pay
increase over the past five years.);
-An increase of $68 million for UC and
the state colleges and universities in the
face ol declin1ng enrollment :
-$4l million for a down payment on
Senator Randolph Collier's twin to"·ers
(or. whatever fonn new legislative
quarters take), and
-at least another $50 million in new
park and recreation project s to "buy"
the budget votes to sustain Collier's seed
money fo1 those memorial towers.
( RUS WALTON )
THOSE elCeSSes and utravagances
.,.,·ere made earlier, if not possible, by
that $826 million surplus hanging in the
Sacramento packing house . By the end of
the year that carcass may be bloated lo
$1 billion .
Politicians "'ould have you believe that
surP,lus wa~ unexpected. Back in Dec.,
1971, atid again Jn March, Im this col-
umn prtdlcted the 00,. surplus and sug-
geste<l it mighl go as high as $1 billion.
A ·surplus is no excuse for Increased
and unnecessary spending. Surplus or no,
any politician \Vith a sense of
responsibility should approach each ex-
penditure. each increased or new pro-
gram, with this question:
"If I had to vote for a tax increase lo
pay for this appropriation, '4'0uld I have
the guts to do it?"
IN l't10ST cases the answer \\-otlld be
''no." Politicians do not like to tie a tax
invoice on their goodies. The surplus
relieved them or that accountability.
SB 90, the ••tax refonn" package of
1972, is a monstrous measure. Within the
next four years, It will increase the cost
of state gov~mment by at least $1 billion
a year. And1 ft Is causing serious and
urgent problems for local school districts
that are ln a dither because of Its club-
footed language and contradictions.
This year's "trailer" bill to correct SB
90's deficiencies and technical discrepan-
cies is almost as voluminous as the
original legislation. That's what happens
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
Urban sprawl is eating up the fartn·
land of America. What littla farm-
land remains in Orange County
should be retained for food pr<r
duction and open space.
J. s.
Ot.rnv Ous Clll'lllM'lltl •rt slltlftiftM ~
rMOWS tnd clil llOI 1MC:..uar!tr A'fled IM
Yttws •I Ill• MWSNMr. s.!Mll rour "'
-" ,. Oloomy Gvs, O.ll'Y ,.llof.
when politics supersede reason and am-
bltioa overrides responsibility ; the cost
of political passion is paid by the tax-
_payer.
THAT ONUE:NT 1tate sal~ tax rjn-
crease? The one now being squeezed out
qi your ,J>OCket? The ooe the politicians
are falling all over therµselves to "ad-
just"? It's part of Ulat damnable tax
reform package.
Heat from the taxpayers bas singed the
tails of the politicians and they rush to
delay or temporarily reduce that $650
million tax take. They have· the gall· to
claim they are "saving" us $320 million
by temporarily repealing or reducing the
one-cent increase. How can the re·
maining increase of $320 million be con-
sidered a savings?
Sooner or later the entire one-cent will
have to take effect pennanently. 'The
tx.ilt-in excesses of state government de-
mand it.
THOSE WHO suggest that the sales tax
increase' is simply a trade-off with lower
property taxes sing a siren song. Within
a year or two the sales tax increase will
be a permanent fixture and property tax-
es \Vill be about as high as ever. Ex-
travagance must be funded; if not now,
then tomorrow.
' Party Leaders Catatio11ed ·in Crisis
Agnew 'Hands Off' Hints
WASHINGTON -A confidential
telephone call rrom top \Vhlte House aide
?i.felvin R. Laird to a Republican con·
gressional leader, warning him not to go
all-out in defense of Vice President Spiro
Agnew, is new and harsh evidence to
party professionals
of the depth ol the
crisis that threatens
Ted Agnew.
In bis telephone
call to Rep. John B.
Andei'son of Illinois,
chairman or • t h e
House Republican
Conference, Laird ..
carefully specified
that he was talking not as a White iloui::e
aide.
His message: don't get on a limb in the
Agnew affair, particularly wilb an all-out
defense of the Vice President. Stay away
from the Agnew affair as far as possible.
Agnew Is under intense federal in-
vestigation on charges of possible
criminal violations of various federal
statutes involving bribery, extortion, tax
fraud and conspiracy.
REPUBLICANS who know about the
Laird call to Anderson (described as
"astonished" by the warning) assume
that Laird and possible other party
grandees have contacted other senior
Republicans with similar warnings.
Moreover, the Laird telephone call lo
Anderson fits a pattern that has in·
furiated the Agnew camp. For example :
1. Before Agnew himself received
formal notice from the Justice Depart-
ment that he wa'i-tunder investigation, At·
ty. Gen. Elliot Richardson reported (in
late July) to White House staff chief
Alexander M. Hai g, Jr., with a briefing
( EVANS-NOVAK J
on all aspects of the case. On Aug. 2,
Agnew's attorneys reCeived their letter
from the prosecutors ..
2. A prominent television commentator
\\'as privately cautioned by an official of
the Justice Department 10 days ago in
v.11rds similar to those used by Laird to
Anderson: don't go overboard for
Agnew : you may wind up \vi th egg on
your r~.
3. TH~·W,HIXE IWIJ~ has il!ne to
embarrassing feogth no( to put the Presi-
Wicks
-
dent on record as to his vice president's
innocence. · ·
4. The Ne\v York Times front·page
di spatch of Au&. 15. outlining charges
against Agnew in vivid detail, is believed
by furious Agnew allies tp hav~ emanated
from high levels of the Justice Depart-
ment (~·ho flatly deny it), not from
Maryland sources also implicated in the
charges against Angew.
Tt is not surprising, that allies of
Agnew, whose talents have sometimes
been grossly used by the Presideqt to '!Id·
vance Mr. Nixon's in~sts, would be
filled with dark suspiciOJJ over the~ in-
cidents. They regard t.bem as proof of nefariou~ iwderground' administration
' 'varfare agalnst Agnew\! partly to ease
the President's· imfnense Watergate
burdens. '
THUS, in this conspiratorial view -so
understandable on the part of Agnew in·
timates -b1r. Nixon 1or Republicans
close to him are greasigg the skids for
the hapless Vice President. Under the
25th Amendment to the Constitution, they
are quietly preparing to riominatc a suc·
cessor -most likely John· B. Connally.
It \vas Connally who saved Pitr. Nixon
from disaster in th _ inflationary crisis of
August 1971. Perhaps Connally, ttw
former Democratic governor of Texas
who turned Republican at a moment of
maximum help to the Watergate.
beleaguered President last spring, can
help again.
To Agnewites, that fits the known fact
that Connally recently cancelled his plans
for a long lrip abroad and the lesser·
known £act that some Connally friends
predict he will be back in the ad·
ministration in October.
Meat Hoarder's Attitude Annoys Housewife
BUT IN FACT the Latrd warnings may
spring from something tar less con-
spiratorial. They may be a Clashing
signa l of ca ution based not on any desire
to do in Agnew but on a rational and in-
formed judgment that Agnew is a goner.
Likewise, Richardson's July briefing of
Ha ig, before Agnew himself had formal
noti!icalioo , may alS<.1 be explainable as a
rational act based on the President's
prior right to know. ''I~ that nonnal?" a
Justice Department official repeated in
answer to our question. "Hell, nothing's
normal in lb.is case. We're playing it by
Supermarket Employe
To the Editor:
I realize you have important tasks of
editing your newspaper withou~ another
outside letter coming in the way of your
procedures, but somethlng went on today
and r had to write someone and get It off
my chest.
I WAS In a local su"permarket this
afternoon and stood behind ooe ol the
employca who was having his mercJwl..
dise checked out be!Ori going borne. All or his order was packages and packages
or ground bee!. Soventeen dollars worth
to be e..uct! Ther the checker announced
thaf she thought that only two packages
per customer were to be purchased. His
reply was, "Don't worry about It. It's not
my problem."
Well, maybe II Isn't his problem, but
why Is It that when I must make do with
my hu.!band's lance corporal's paycheck
for three boys, a hubby and mysel! (six
months pregnanl), then I say I must ~ut
1111 George ---.
Dear George :
No matter where I hide my boou
bottle my wife find• It arid even
when l sneak Into a backroom and
try to allp a slug she know• It! I
swear, that womar. can hear a bot·
Ue open ot 2S paces! What can I do
about her! JUMPY
Dear Jwnpy:
Quit being selllsb. If she wanls
a drink that bad, give her a drink.
What'• a marrtqe !or!
MAILBOX
utten lrom r .. c.rt tl'9 Wik-. NOf"mMly
wrtttn llrloulf """'"' tltelr _,. .. , 111 • -•• .,. lffl, 1'1'11 rlllll tt CtMlllM Mlttrt t. Ill ••I« w •HmlnlM llMI It ,...,..,..., All i.tttrs must 111-
clffll 11tna111,.. anCll mtlllllt _.,...lo ~l 111mn
Mrt 1N1 wltlllltltl °" rHue1t If 111Nkl111I rMMll It
_,.,.,..,. 'MITY Wlll 11411 1M1 ~~Uil!HI.
up wlth his "not iny problem"?
I COULDN'T do thot and get away with
It and I feel he's no better than we are.
Sure, the meat situation is absolutely
grou1 but until the matter ls somehow
rectified I wouldn't have gone aa:atnst the
manager's wlshes.
We moved here via lbe Marine Corps
rrom Pennsylvania In March and have
enjoyed the gorgeous change of states,
but even back home lhey have meOl.t
problems. So Is it JU$t me tbal gripe• too
bard or am I jusUlled In leellng ovel'
wroughl? Well, thanks for !IJ!enlng
anyhow.
BAR.BERA MITCHELL
Protuu Cotlerage
To the Editor:
I'm a recent subscriber to the Daily
Pilot, and I'm happy with the paper ex-
cept for two things.
For days, now, I've been reading col·
umns and columns of JnfonnaUon about
digging up the bodies ol the vlctlml of
that nuw murder<r(sl. c.rtaraly, rape
Doesn't Tlii11k Sliortage ls His Proble1n
and murder are "news" and I suppose considered your news duty to the ma-
quite a few people enjoy reading the jority of citizens, who are both decent
details. I could not accept, however, the and reasonably educated, and have sent
headline on page 2 of the Aug. 10 issue a cub reporter -at 1east -: over to the
announcing (and I qu0te) uJuan Coron~ library for a .bJ~ of research on Conrad
Still First in Murders." I suppose that l Aiken. I w~ t have expected such a
now that those depraved individuals 1rf--great man s death to get the same
volved have been found to have killed afunt of coverage as a ma~s n:iurder~r
more peo le than Corona yo '11 (I at seems to be one oLtbe 1ron1c trul s
Corti P m 1. · . u .name about today's news coverage ), but r do . . and acco p ices number one 1n the think you could have had inore coverage
rield of murder· Oil Aiken's death. May 1 be only the first
l MUST protest the lack of decency of your readers to protest th ese t1vo
and community responsibility rtnected items.
In that headline. HighllghUng this aspect
of the crime in a headline can only en·
courage warped lndiViduaJs lo emulate
and surpass Corll's "accompllshment."
Also, your seme or space allowan~
does not seem fair at limes. After
reading so much about this mass
murderer, I was appalled thls morning
when t picked up the Pilot and read the
elgbt lines on Conrad Ail<en" death.
r suppose I ought to be glad that the
eight lines were at least on the front
page and not bidden elsewhere, althougll
eight lines ol coverage is rath..-hidden
no matter what page lbey appear on.
CONRAD AIKEN lived to be 84 years
of age without committing any serious
crimes; along the way, he won a
Pulitzer Pritt as well as world fame as
a poet.
1 realize the •lgbt tines probably
reflect the length of the AP'• release. Bui
( would think that since you have Olten
cited 7our responsibility to the com·
muntly and lis lnteresis, )'OU would have
E. DARLEN' LISTER
Sen•illle Apprallal
To the Editor:
l want to compliment and congratulate
the Daily Pilot for printing the kind of
Watergate analysis that seems to have
escaped American journalists.
I re!er, of course, to tbe guest com-
mentary of British columnist Angus
Maude in your Issue o! Aug. 16. Those ot
us who support President Nixon In his
crisis are deeply grateful to have this op-
portunity of reading a capable and
thoroughJy sensible appraisaJ of 'he
Watergate affair ln an Atne.rlcan
newspaper.
MARGOT R. BARLF.Y
No Victim?
To the Editor:
No man is an ialand; no man lives
eltne. The experts are saying that !here
are no victims of the crin1es of pros-
Utution, pornography and certain
narcotics such as marijuana. Corruption
affects e\teryone of us. This would be so
if there were no God.
I WOULD NOT want to have a pros·
titute in rny family, would you? \\'hat if
your mother \Vere a prostitute? What
\vould your chance be of becon1ing a self-
respecting citizen? It would be difficult
to keep such a thing secret. \Vhat if it
\vcre your sister, your daughter? Would
you feel lik e a victim of prostitution?
'Vh..1t of pornography? Could it be hid·
den In the fan11ly safe from children? Not
likely. The peB>n who feeds his soul on
pornography will act d.i.Uerently towards
others.
YOUNG tDULTS tend to disregard the
ll'Cil being of others. Th.ink ot your
children. Some men having b e e n
discharged from the military tend to
bring the barracks lalk home with them
with no regard to the effect on their
wlvu and children. They often plan
recreation on Sunday so that the chtld
"'ill be deprived of spiritulll training in
Sunday school and church.
The families of compulsive gamblel'.'s
are nil victims as are the famllles of
alcoholics. The gambler or alcoholic wUJ
often set up the friends of their wi\'es
nnd fitmlly fc; a !01Jn which will never be
P"irl b~ck. This Is heside vsfn~ the "'Oney
that sOOuld clothe and feed~t)fe family.
No victims Indeed. We a..e all the vie-.
tims of corruption. No man I .. an Island.
JTM BOLDING
ear."
But such quiet and rational elplanation
Ls Wlderstandably dilficUlt for Agnewites.
The mood in the Agnew camp has grO\\'ll
isolated and embittered. Now, with word
being secretly passed to 11keep clear" or
the Agnew affair, thal mood will in-
tensify, with dangerous implications for
the Republican future no matter bo1v lhe
invcstignfion :inally end!i.
DAILY PI LOT
Robe r£ N. \Vttd, Publisher
Thomo.s Kttvil, Editor
Barbora Kreibich
Editorial Page Edilor
Tht editorial p.1JN of tho Daily
Pilot 'ietks to lnfom. and •Umula.te
~adtn by presffit1ng 'on this pq:e
divtn4!'1comm~ntary on lopics of in.
lttt>sl by l)'nd.lcated columnists and
cartoonists, by providing t. f<lt'\lm for
readers' vlew11 and by presentlt11 lhl1
newspaper's opinions and l<k,....._. nn
current toplct. Ttl(> rdltorial opi111oM
o! the' Dally Pilot •WCW' only fn the
editorial column rt.I tbe top of the
P&(e. Opinions exPf't': J'd ey the C'Ol-
u.mnilts and t"artoonlrs and lener
writrn an their own and IW) t'f\dorM-
mtnt of thtlr vi"'-s "by the o.1t1
Pilot should Ix Wmftl.
Friday, August ~4, 1973
•
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•
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• S1f te J>eath Penalty :..,,,,,.,.~
H ~ds for Approval i '.
State 'Bmaan%a'
Reagan Pens Tax
Rebate Into -Law
\ ' ' I . ~ ... \11 ....
Sunday, August 26, 1973
Showtime: 7:30 p.m.
$5.00 per person
Monte Carlo Room
Sieroty, an ardent foe of
capital punishment. added in
an interview that he is not at
all sure the measure would be
identical to the original fonn
of the bill by Sen. George
Deukmejian (R-Long Beach ),
which his committee altered
Thursday. If the Assembly
makes any changes in the way
the bill passed the Senate, it
v.·ould have to go back to the
upper house for concurrence.
~
ASSDIBLY · REPUBLICAN
Door leader Robert Beverly of
Manhattan Beach said in an
interview he will SjXlnsor the move on the floor to a!N!nd $721 MILLION BILL
the Deukmejian bill back to its Gov. Reagan's OK
original form . He said floor -----'-----
action will be taken Monday or
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
C.llf<rnlans begin reaping a
one-time tax bonanza Oct. 1,
gelling back a total of $121
million In state treasury
surplus.
That figures out to nearly
$35 for every man, woman and
child in the state.
GOV. RONALD Reagan call·
ed it the largest state tax
rebate in the nation's history
when he signed the bill into
law Thursday.
The reverse flow of taxes
was made possible by an
unexpected treasury suiplus of
Thursday.
Beverly, who nee<ls 41 votes
to succeed, said "I feet we
have the votes. 1 am op-
timistic the votes \\'ill be
Fire Fighters. Stop
I
there."
The Jower house has 48
Democrats and 31 Republicans
with one vacan cy. Beverly
said be r.stimates he may lose
one or two Republican votes at
the most and will pick up 12 to
15 Democratic votes.
Sieroty said he felt there
might be an effort on ·the floor
to alter various segments or
the Deukmejian m e a s u r e .
Beverly agreed foes "certainly
would" try that tactic.
Blaze in I ts Tracks
Ily The Associated Press
Fire fighters have contained
a wind-driven brush fire that
threatened homes near Reno,
l"·Yev. \\'hile other crews worked
to complete a fire line around
a huge ~y-old blaze in
Northern c.atifomia.
''l can't understand how
they saved all those homes,"
he said. "It was a super~
coordinated, heroic effort that
stopped this from becoming a
major disaster. The men just
held their ground, '!et the fire
come .down to them and then
just beat it out." •
$829 million bullt up over the
past lwo years.
Reagan insisted the money
be returned to the taxpayers
rather than be spent on new
prognuru. The tax rebate will
take two forms.
First, the state sales tax will
be rolled back by one penny on
the dollar on Oct. 1 for six
months. It had gone from five
to six percent in most of
Calilornia July 1.
NEXT SPRING. the state's
more thaI& 6 million inoome
taxpayers are to get cuts
ranging from 20 percent to 100
percent off their tax bills due
April 15.
The Republican governor
said Thursday he won the tax
rebate over the opposition of
"would-be big spenders" in the
legislature.
Now, he said, the voters of
the state have a "once-in-a-
lifetime" opportunity to cut
their taxes permanently by
approving his tax control prcr
gram at a sJ)ecial statewide
election Nov. 6.
"Then they can finish the
job already started by voting
to limit and reduce their tax
burden pennanently," Reagan
said.
Sketch of Rapist Finished
neatly on his left side, freckles
on his face, a l~ii-inch horizon-
Friday, August 24, 1973 DAil V PILOT ft
BEACHCOM.BER COFFEE SHOP
AND RESTAURANT
26ll We•I CoHI Highw•Y
Newport Btach
NOW OPEN
Under New Management
for
BREAKFAST -LUNCH -DINNER
Op'" 7 AM to &PM-7 Daysa Week
~
FREE
•
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
LECTURE
by
Miss Patricia Tuttle
of Stn Francisco
Saturday • August 25
11 a.m.
EDWARD'S CINEMA THEATRE
FASHION ISLAND
Child care will be provided
•t Second Church -3100 Pi1cific View -CdM
Spor11ored by Firit And Sec:ond
Ch11rc:h of Chrht Sc:ienti•t,
Newport l••c:h
(no one under 21 admitted)
Tickets: All Ticketron Agencies or
Del Webb 's NewpQrter Inn
BY SENDING out a n
amended version of the bill,
the committee averted a ma-
jor challenge to the authority
of I Assembly Speaker Bob
Moretti (D-Van Nuys ), who
appointed the committee and
owoses the death penalty
himself. Beverly had vowed to
attempt the rarely u s e d
parliamentary inaneuver of
withdrawing a bill from com-
mittee by a majority floor
vote - a ta ctic regarded as a
direct challenge to the house
THE NEV ADA lire, ignited
in three spots Thursday by a
passing locomotive, charred
350 acres and destroyed a
barn and two sheds in
Anderson Acres, nine miles
north of Reno, said Bill
Johnston of the N e v a d a
Di vision of Forestry.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
An officer has drawn a
portrait of a man they believe
repeatedly raped and beat a
25--year-old woman in a hotel
room Aug. 14.
tal scar above his right eye at 1..,,,~~!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'~~!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'~ the hairline and a small scarl -
S<2ffe;;~~
1107 J1mbotee ~old, Newpol! 8tKl'I I Ph(lnf . 714-&44· 1?00
leadership.
'"'fl-. fttS\\ \
AD GOOD 'tfl TMI., A119. 21
GREAT fOR
IRU.KFAST
CANTALOPES
6/$100
LARGE FRESH
BELL PEPPERS
1 lbs.
29¢
SQLID LOCAL
TOMATOES
Ripe
Cherry
Torncrton
10 lcukm
I lb. Bag CARROTS .... 2 bags I 9c FRESH SPINACH . I Oc bunch
·RUSSET POT A TOES ...... 2 lb./25c ITALIAN PRUNES . .. 19c lb.
"ATIENTION RESTAURANT OWNERS ":
Teke •dventege of our buying power. Th e Produce Mert will seve you
"Money" and supply you with the frelihest produce. large or smell
resteurents, qive us a cell. We deliver FREE.
c
i w u ~
INGAROIA . BROS. ,
VICJORIA ., ,. N i . .. . "' 19TH
\
PRODUCE MART
WE WELCOME
FOO D STAMPS 2140 PLACENTIA
GALASSO'S ITALIAN
BREAO--FRESH OAILY
FRESH CORN & FLOUR
TORTILLAS
at Victoria
COSTA MESA
645-1365
hungiy tiger
RESTAURANT
' JlllfillCI llal'OOO OTITllt ••II
NEWPORT BEACH (ONLY}
1111. 'llCfflc: Cont Hlghw1y • C11J for rtMMllon1 (7t4) 87:MSM
•
Ten homes were directly in
the path of the charging fire,
blO\\'ll by v.inds 30 miles per
hour, Johnston said. Many
fa milie s temporarily
evacuated their homes while
400 men worked to stop the on·
coming flames.
Inspector Hobert N e t s on
drew the sketch with descrip-
tions from the victim and a
cab driver.
Police said the man is ft.feet-
9 and weighs 160. He has cur-
ly , reddish brown hair, parted
Dear Customer,
of about ~· inch above the
right side of his upper lip.
Police believe be also may
be the same man \Vho raped,
beat and burned a 23-year-old
woman in a hotel room at
Fisherman's Wharf l a s t
February.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Nearly Everyone
· Listens to Landers ·
In regard to our recent letter requesting the addition of
your name to our permanent mailing list we would li ke to
encourage you to return the card enclosed with our letter.
Even if your name an d address was correct we MUST
RECEIVE THE CARD BACK in order to place you on our own
mailing li st. ·
If you've misplaced the i:ard or if our letter was lost on its
way to you, please call us and we'll add your name to our list.
-~Phone 644-5070.
To those who have returned the cards ... Thanks very much
for contributing.to such a tremendous response. You 've helped
us to serve you better.
Sincerely,
~\ ~~~ /'f5ii.L ~
Representing At-Ease Management Staff
44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070
.•
Huntington B~aeh
Fo~ntain ·Valley.
*
-•
Today's Final
I
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. ob, NO. 236, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUG UST 24, 1973 TEN CENTS
• Roa1ning Buitti,n ·gton Boy HoJDe to Mo111
1
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of flit 0.11• .. u .. lllff
Ten-year'{)ld John Dennis O'Neill
returned home Thursday to a tearful re-
union with his mother, four days after he
teft hi s Huntington Beach home.
The little boy called. his mother Mrs.
John P. O'Neill from a phone booth in
Santa Ana at about 2:45 p.m. and told
her he wanted to come home.
Del. Ray tlattabaugh , who headed the
search for the missing child, drove his
mother to the corner of 17th and Bristol
streets where they met him.
Young John said that after leaving his
home at 21282 Fleet Circle he went to the
Anabeim-8anta Ana area, living off about
$20 he took from his sister's piggy bank.
Det . Virginia Kirkmeyer said today
that the boy spent two nights in motels.
"It is absolutely incredible to me to
realize that there are people who would
check a little boy into a motel as a
registered guest without questioning it,"
she said.
Mrs. Kirkmeyer said the youngster air
parently spent one night in the open but
"was eaten alive by mosquitoes" and so
be spent the next two nights at cheap
motels.
The little boy told his mother that he
tried to save money by not eating too
much. He went to one restaurant and
Mis take Break-ins
Raiders Indicted
ALTON, l// IUPI ) -A federal grand
jury indicted eight federal and four local
Mtmtics agents today on charges of
depriving 11 persons of C()nstitutional
rights during drug raids in southwestern
Winois last April.
The 17-count indictment was returned
In U.S. District Court ofter a four-month
federal investigation.
The indictment said the agents, acting
without probable cause or search war·
rants, broke into six homes i n
Collinsville, East St. . Louis a n d
Edwardsville, all in Illinois, during a
five-day period.
During the course of the raids, two oc-
c:upants \\'ere assaulted while hahdcuffed
and a third man wa~ jailed for three
days \l.'ithout being charged with a crim~,
the indictment said.
Later, the indictment continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident by
attempting to "tone down" reports to in·
vestigators.
In addition, three other agents were
charged with lying to th" federal grand
jury investigating the raids.
Fight for Life Over The agents, attached to the St. Louis
o f f i c e ol Drug Abuse Law
Enforcement, included six from the
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs, two from the Treasury Depart·
ment, three from the St. Louis police
department and one from the East SL
Louis Police Department.
Little Jason Rea Dies
With Motlier at Bedside· The six federal narcotics agents in-
dicted are William C. Dwyer, Kenneth R.
Bloemaker, Dennis R. Moriarty, Denni s
Harker, Michael Hillebrand and Leon
Phillips. By JOlJN VALTERZA
OI rtM ~llr l"U" fl•ll
Jason Rea , the little boy from
ppistraoo Beach Wbo fought death Ior
.!weeks but never kneW it, lost the battle
late Thursday at Fairview State Hospital
as his mother prayed al his bedside.
The :I-year-old victim of a pool tragedy
in Huntington Beach early in July died of
major C()mplications brought on by
massive brain damage suffered in the in-
cident at the home of a bab'Y sitter.
In the weeks that followed the C()m·
atose youngster was nown to Denver to
become a transplant dono~. then a week
ago was returned to the Orange Coast
af(er physicians in Colorado ruled the
youngster no longer qualiJied as an organ
donor.
~"Jason's now a little angel in Heaven .''
his weary. grieving mother, Linda. said
this morning.
"I prayed and prayed for God to help
bis suffering ... she added .
Mn. Rea. a 29--year-old secretary who
ts divorced . had made funeral ar-
rangements \Veeks ago when it first was
planned that her only child would be
nown to Denver and the breathing
machines removed.
The medical C()nsensus at that time
wo.J that because no hope existed at all,
the youngster would be medically dead at
that point and organ transplants C()u!d be
performed, uslng his kidn eys and liver to
give life to other dying children.
"A-fy greatest grief is that it never hap-
pened ; that Jason C()U!d not give life to
other children," said 1i-1rs. Rea.
11trough the ordeal l\1rs. Rea said , sup-
port has come from throughout the na-
tion.
.. I've had messages from perfect
strangers from all over the country, all
blessing me for courage and faith in the
Lord, and · I'm so grateful for them.
Without the help J wonder if I could have
made it," she said.
' Orange Coast
Weather .
Slightly cooler Saturday along
the Orange Coast -but still nice.
Highs in the upper 60s at the
beaches rising to 73 inland. Over-
night lows 62~.
INSm E T ODA\'
Two Laguna Beach film mak·
ers we re i nvolved i n the making
of a .superstar -eve» IJ he is a
,.agu/l. The filming of the Jo11J1·
than Liuingston Seagull seagults
bu Greg A-1acGillivra11 and Jnn
'Freeman for a bird's debut ts
' ctescribed fn coday's \Veekender,
• Pogu 23.
Al Y•ur ltrvlct I
L,M, l•'t"I t
1oatlftl '' C•llltf'lll• J, 11 Cl8111tlt4I 114
I C•.,,k• • c .... woni n
DMfll MtKCff ' lfltorltl .. .,. t ,IMnn 11·11
Jlltr TIM •tttnl t
H-8" 11
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The support has continued to C()me
Crom friends and strangers alike.
"My phone was ringing all night a!ld
everyone I talk«l-to agr:eed "" 11)t \bat
God must have bad a reason for all oC
this, and now it's up to me to find the
answer," she said. ·
One factor which caused some bit-
terness duMng the strain of the vJgll were
comments about the youngster "making
medical history," Mrs. Rea said.
"That hurt greatly," she ~aid.
The youngster was literally brought
back from death several times during the
ordeal -first after showing no signs of
life after the rescue from the bottom of
the pool.
Jason's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap. but came back after a
team of physicians worked furiously at
Huntington lntercommunity Hospital.
IS.. CAPO BOY, Page%)
Treasury Department empklyes in-
dkted are Ton! Te~r and C&lvJn CUip.
The three " a 'laiil • policemen are
Ronald J. Olive,. Donald W. Spi"r and
Daniel J. Duffy.
The East St. Louis officer named in the indlclment Is Lester Andenop. ·
All agents except Anderson were
charged in two C()UDts with conspiring to
deprive persons of constitutional rights
by entering homes without probable
cause or search warrants. arresting and
detaining them without probable cause or
arrest warrants and assaulting them
while in custody.
John R. Bartels Jr., acting ad·
ministrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, announced immediately
aCter the indictment was returned that
the siJ: federal agents named as defen·
dants were suspended without pay.
Fugate ParoleP
Board May Commute Life Sentence
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Caril Ann t'ugate, who traveled wrtn
Charles Starkweather in a· 1958 murder spree in which 11 persons
died, cleared a burdle today that could lead to parole.
The three-member state parole board on a majority vote recom·
mended to the state pardon board that it commute her sentence to a
definite term of years, a necessary preliminary to parole.
She was 14 when she accOmpanied ~tarkweather, who died in
the electric chair in 1959 for the string of murders in Nebraska ana
Wyoming. Starkweather, then 19, was her boyfriend.
Miss Fugate, now 30, was sentenced at 15 to a life term for one
coilnt of first-degree murder. She is imprisoned at the rork wo-
men's Reformatory.
"It is our judgment," said board Chairman John tJreennottz,
"that . society's purpose has been served and Miss ~'ugate cannot
benefit by further imprisonment and is an acceptable nsk t'or parote
consideration."
Fired Beach Policeman
Still Fights for His ]ob
Gil Coerper was (ired from the Hun-
tington Beach police force more than
three years ago, but he still hasn't given
up his battle to pin a badJle back on his
shirt.
The ex-motorcycle patrolman Is now
embroiled In a light to force the city to
obey an Orange County Superior Court
order to set aside his discharge and con-
sidu another penalty.
Judge Mark Soden issued the order
June 7, saying he felt "the entire matter
had been blown out of proportion."
Cocrper was !Ired beca use he allegedly
misrepresented hlm!ell while picking up
discarded charily Items rrom Montomcry
Ward where he worked part-Ume as 11
security guard .
Store officials claimed the officer said
he was collc<:Ung ror the Police Wives
Guild , but actually gave some of tho
items to friends and neighbors.
... Coerper claimed his only agreement
with the store was to use the Items for
charitable purposes and that he never
pretended to be collecting !or the Police
Wives Guild.
He falled, however, to convince the
city1s persoMel commission during 32
hours of public hearing.
But tn a civil suit agalnst the cl/$, the
!Ired officer did co1wfnce Judie Soden
that the police department's internal In·
vesllgatlon was ''slanted .against" him .
The city has now appealed Soden's
decision to the U .$. 41~ District Court of
Appeals in San Bernardino and Is awai t·
Ing a hearing date on that appeal.
Both partlcs are also tryin( to
aegoitate an out-of-court tettlcment.
"tf·yoo believe in yourself tlttt you 've
clone nothing wrong, you ·jlJst keep
IS.e COERPER, P1ge l)t
ordered the cheapest thing on the menu
which was a bowl of cereal. The rest of
the time he lived orf oranges bought at·
road side stands aod in markets.
While police searched for the missing
boy, he went. to a family night baseball
game at Anaheim stadium and visited
Disneyland, Hattabaugh said.
The detectives said the little boy got
around on his bicycl.C.
"But the tire had a leak and he didn't
\vant to spend his money on a patch, so
he had to sto p aL just about e\1ery gas
station to fill the tire with air," ltat·
tabaugh said
Traveling by this laborious method,
young John made one trip to the Hun·
tington Beach area during the height of
the search for him .
··He sa id he wanted to talk to his
111olher so he went to the·place where she
works. But he didn 't see her car there 'SO
he went back to the Anaheim area ," Hat-
ta baugh said.
The boy ran away from home 1.tonday
afternoon follow ing a family "rni!Un· ·
derstanding." police said. ' 1
But by Thursday afternoon , his con· '
science was beginning to bother him and
he called his mother because he "felt .,
bad " about taking his sister's money an<! )
he wanted to come home.
1
UPIT .......
FEMALE .POLICE OFFICER TAKES SHELTER BEHIND POLICE VAN IN STOCKHOLM STAKEOltT
'
• '·
1
AuthoritiH ~~it A< Submoc~lno G~~toting Blndil ~· Numbor of Host&9H ln1/da Bin~
Har ·telius Case Hearing
'
Erupts in Shout Match .
81' TOM BARLEY fit 1118 ~llY l"ilot Sl•ff
LOS ANGELES - A three-day medical
examiners' hearing into charges against
Dr. Ebbe Hartelius, El Toro, closed here
late Thursday in a shouting match with
three furious lawyers hurling accusations
and epithets at each other .
"You are unscrupulous p e op I e , ' '
defense attorney Matthew Kurilich yelled
at deputy attorneys general Mark Levine
and Robert Mukai . "You are uneth ical
tricksters clearly guilty of deceptive and
vindictive C()nduct."
"And you 're a liar." Le\Ti.ne shouted
back. "The biggest thing in this hearing
has been your mouth ."
Hearing officer John A. \V i 11 d
desperately tried to res tore order as the
three physicians who C()mprise the state
Board of ~tedieal Examiners review
committee watched open-mouthed .
One clear fact emerged from the
fracas. Both Levine and ~1ukai stressed
that the state will now settle for nothing
less than the revocaUon of Dr. Harteli us'
license to practice medicine.
Both lawyers had been prepared at an
earlier hearing to accept a plan that
\l.'Ould have put Hartelius, 51. on pro-
bation for five years provided he
substantially restricted his use of certain
dangerous drugs.
The medical committee rejected that
. . '
SJllL FIGHTING
Ex·pollcomon Coerper
proposal behind closed doors and ordered
Hartclius to open h.is defense to charges
of moral turpitude and unprofessional
C()nduct -most of them stemming from
his alleged drugging of and sexual
association with two Costa Mesa women.
Kurilich Thursday agreed to let his
client. who practices in the Harbor Area,
go on the witness stand to answer ques-
ti ons from both sides and the three doc-
tors who will eventually be his jsdges.
That grilling ended late Thursday and
Kurilich promptly turned to both state
lawyers to open negotiations towards a
suggested settlement.
What happened after that is interpeted
differently by each side. But whatever
was said. it led to the shouting match .
Kurilich claims that Mukai told him
that he and Levine had never intended to
(See HARTELIUS, Page Z)
Bo1nb Explodes
In London. Stock
Market; 2 Hurt
LONDON (UP!) -A parcel bomb hid·
den in a hollowed-out book exploded with '
a white fla sh on the 22nd floor of Lon-
don's new stone, glass and steel Stock
Exchange today. wounding two persons.
It \1•as the sixth day o( London bomb
allacks blamed on an extremist wing
or the Irish Republican Army, and the
v1cti1ns "'ere the first persons injured by
the JS bombs put in stores, offices and
subway stations since Sunday.
It was a bright sunlit morning and an
army of secretaries, clerks and bowler-
hatted bankers had just emerged !rom
the subwa.y and railroad stations lo fill
the City of London, the capital's inner
enclave housing British major fmanclal
institut ion s.
In a gray.carpeted executive office,
room 2201, l\11ss Joanna Knight, 25, began
sorting the day 's mai l. She reached for a
1:-irgc "·hl te envelope addressed to the
Stock Exchange's secretary gencrah
(.i{'orge \V. Brlnd , and slit It open.
The envelope exploded with a white
nash. disfigur1nit Miss Knight in a blow
that struck at the very heart ot one of
the "·or\d's great financial c.cntcrs, Lon-
dotfs squ3ftl mile of money.
Blood s1reamed from l\1iss Knighl's
face. hands and legs. She fainted .
Orind, 62, the stock excbance't chief
administrative officer, staggered to the
door. shouting "Bomb! Bomb!"
Swedish Gunman
Warning Police
He'll Use Bomb
STOCKHOLM (UPI! -A gunman,
barricaded in a downtown Stockholm
bank with four hostages and ac·
C()mpanied by a criminal involved in the
murder of a policeman, threatened today
to blow up hil118elf and the hostages "as
a last reort," police reported.
The gunman, identified as bankrobber
Kay Robert Hansson, 22. and believed to
have been deported from the United
Stat.es, was still holding out more than 28
hwrs after the drama began. He was
keeping police at bay with a submachine
gun. •
Hansson has demanded safe conduct
\vlth the hostages but police have refused
to let the hostages go with ·him. They '
also refuse to give him the $750,000 he
demanded, although the money· in
Swedish and foreign currencies is ' kept
available in the bank. '
Cark Olofsson, 26, an inmate friend of
Hansson, was brought to the bank Thurs-
day from a prison in cenlral Sweden
where he \Yas serving a 11>-year sentence
as an accomplice in a police killing in
1966. H~ demanded Olofsson's
release and explained be needed Olofsson
as a driver of a getaway car. ·
Olofsson said in a telephone interview
from the bank that Hansson would blow
up the bank should the poLic. try to overpower him.
"He has dynamite sticks adapted for a
blast and lots of ammunitiOn which he
will use as a last resort," Olofsson said.
Olofsson quoted Hansson as saying:i "f
don't give a damn what happens."
"I know him and I know he will never
(S.. HOSTAGES, Page Z)
Bomb Accide1it
Huma1i Error
WASHINGTON fAP l -Air
Force investigators today blamed
the accidental 852 bombing of a
Cambodian village on the radar
navigator's fail ure to tum on a key
switch in the aiming C()mputer.
Announcing results of the in-
vestigation of lhe bombing which
killed and wounded more than 400
Cambodians at Ncnk Luong Aug. 6,
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W.
F'riedheim said Air Force com-
manders "are ln the process or tak-
ing corrective and disciplinary ac·
lions."
He decl ined to ldon/l!y the radar
navigator or other members of the
852 bomber crew which dropped its
load about 711 mil es away from its
largtt. A 851 nonnally has a crew
of slx.
:J DAILY PILOT H
De 11aolition Day _,..,,,-
3 Auto Crashes
Leave 4 Injured
Three se parate traffic accidents within
an hou r of each other in Huntington
Beach and f'ountaln Valley Thursday left
a total of four people hospitaJized.
Listed in satisfactory condition follow·
ing a tw0<ar cru sh in Fountain Valley
Coastal Panel
Chi ef Probes
Court Ruling
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of lllt l>tl!V ...... Sl•ft
~felvin Carpenter. executive director of
lhe Sooth Coasl Regional Zone Conserva·
lion Commission, told a group of Orange
County lawyers Thursday he was un~
~in how the recent Supreme c:ourt
decision will affect the Avco project in
Laguna Niguel.
He said he would first have to review
the development firm's applications for
exemption Crom the Coastal 7.one
Conservation Act to determine if the 4-3
court rul ing, issued Wednesday, allows
Avco to qualify.
The court decision declared that
Coastal Zooe ConservaUoo Act permits
""' not required for building projects il
substantlaJ construction was started
before Feb. 1, 1973. '!be fonner cutoff
date was Nov. 8, 1972.
Speaking to members of the Orange
Coonly Bar Association, Carpenler said
Avco had filed for a total of 18 ex·
emptions !or the Laguna Niguel projects.
Of these, Carpenter said, be believ,.
X!.ly one is covered by the extension
granted by the Supreme Court ruling.
"All the rest of the Avco developments
must go through th pennit granting proc-
ess," he predicted.
Avco's projects were stopped by the
commission earlier this year when a
permit wa.s denied for the comtruction of
72 acres of condominiums in two
separate tracts on both sides of Padfic
Coast Highway.
Although the Supreme Court decision
will allow more coostruction projecU:
lllrougb unimpeded, Carpenter cautioned
attorneys representing developers that
their clients cannot start construction
automatically.
"Although your client may have
started construction in January or
December he is not exempted. He will
have to come in and apply for an ex-
emption first," he said.
Any infractions will be turned over to
the Attorney General as will cases where
builders engage in oonstruction wilhout
first obtaining an exemption or a permit
from the C<Jmmission.
Ca rpenter sai d he must play the role of
a policeman and has investigators
patrolling the coastal area constantly to
check on the legallty of construction.
He added that Orange Coilllty residents
will be able to offer their advice on
coastal plaMing in sessions to be
scheduled throughout the year.
The first of these will be held from 3 to
11 p.m. Sept. 6 in Huntington Beach City
Council Chambers.
Aides Sought
For Playgrounds
Higti school sludents in Huntington
Beach who want lo work as playgro'und
recreation aides during the school year
may apply y;ith the city Recreation and
Parks Department.
Applications are avai lable at the
Recreahon Center, 1706 Orange Ave., for
the posts which average about eight
hours a week at $1.90 an hour. Students
must be 16 or older.
Applications are also being accepted
for aduJts to .serve as rec reation leaders
in the after school program. For further
infonnatlon call ~6-5486.
OI AN51 COAST Ml
DAILY PILOT
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It comblntd tllt J<'tW,•Prttt, lt IPUbl!lllte bY
lllt Ol"tl!llt CO.II Pvblltfl!f\t ComNnJ. S.pt.
r11t editions 1rt Pllb!lth-0, MDN11r thro119h
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are DoMa Silverman, 32, of 20571 83\l
Air Circle, Huntington Beach and Lisa
Ann Kelsh. 15, of 7522 Rhine Riv er Ave .,
Fountain Valley.
They were admitted to FoWltain Valley
Commwlity l!ospital.
lnjured in a bicycle accident in Hun-
tington Beach v.·as Robin Shirley }fan.sen.
14, of 16352 Del Mar Lane, lluntington
.Beach, who is in satisfactory condition at
Pacifica Hospital.
The four th accident victim, Patricia
Botigian, 19. o! Whittier was admillcd to
Pacifica Hospital after a three-car rol-
lis!ion.
1be first accident occurred at 1 p.m ..
when Miss Hansen, riding her bicycle
v.·estbound on Olive Stree t at 17th Street,
collided with a ca r driven by Richard
Allen Brown, 18, of tm Crest View Ave.,
Seal Beach.
Politi! claim the 'cyclist failed to yie ld
the right o! way to the auto.
· A balC-hour later, at the intersection of
Talbert Avenue and Euclid Street in
Fountain Valley, the car driven by Mrs.
Silverman collided with the auto driven
by Dru Butterfield, 17, of 17577 Santa
Catal ina Circle, Fountain Valley.
Miss Kelsh was a passenger in the But·
terfield auto, along with two other
teenagers who were treated and released
from Fountain Valley Community
Hoopilal.
The th......,.r colliaioo occurred at 2
p.m. at the inlersection of Beach
Boulevard and Adams Avenue.
Police said a car driven by Barbara
Beattle, 19, ol La Mirada bad pulled 10
the right of the Intersection to yield to a
fire truck answering a fU"e call, when she
' was struck first bf a car driven by Eric
Binyon, 22, of Bell Ganlens and then the
Bozigian car.
There were no other injudes reported
in that crash, police said.
President Rests
At Casa Pacifica
After Conference
Since his first press conference in five
months -a Watergat~minated ex·
change Wednesday afternoon -Presi·
dent· NiJ:on has settled into a quiet
routJne of morning meetings and af-
ternoon rest at La Casa Pacifica. (Rela t·
ed stories Page 3.)
The President Thursday em~rged from
his San Clemente estate for the first time
this trip, flying by helicopter to his
favorite beach on the Camp Pendleton
Marine base. Aides said Nixon was join-
NIXON AIDES DENY AGNEW
LEAKS-Story, P1g1 4
ed by close fri end C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo
and daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower on
the two-hour sojourn at Red Beach
several miles downcoast.
The President often visits the strand
and occasionally swims there, rather
than in the ocean at his doorstep. The
surf at Red Beach Is far less severe than
at the point near La Casa Pacifica .
His aides said Thursday that there was
no scheduJe of activities to announce for
the rest of the week.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren
said that the public response to the
President's appearance was "most
overwhelming" and indicated strong sup-
port for the chief executive.
Warren added that the assessment of
public reaction was made by evaluating
phone calls and telegrams coming to the
White House.
The President plans to stay at his San
Clemente estate through the Labor Day
weekend .
Th e Chier Executive rises early and
joins his staff at the office complex, con·
suiting through the morning.
In the afternoons Nixon ge nerally has
returned to the residence for lunch, and
afterwards reads and works in his study
which is on the second floor of the old
Spanish villa.
The White House Press Corps Thurs-
day asked \Varren if indications of
another West Coast press conference
were indeed strong, but the spokesman
would not confirm the growing specula·
tion of an encore.
The speculation involves the possibility
that the President plans yet another
rrieeting with the press with one strong
rule in effect -no more questions would
be taken on the Watergate affair .
'Ob ese' W oma1i
Had $300,000
Cocaine Bulge
From Wire Senicet
MIAMI, Ila. -A young Or""ie Coun-
ty woman whose abnonnally bulging
v.·ai.sttine failed to flt her facial features
as an indication of obesity experienced a
quick, ty,•o-pound weight loss Thursday.
Deborah S. Stayanoss, 0£ Santa Ana,
was detained by suspicious U.S. Customs
agents after she arrived in Miami on a
nlght from Peru.
A search disclosed two pounds of alleg-
ed cocaine worth $300,000 strapped
around tht woman'• waistline .
Authorities placed her under arresl on
federal charges of attempting lo smuggle
narcotics lnlo tbe Vniled Stales.
Tho '"'pect's age and Santa An• ad·
drest wer. not lminedla1eiy available.
...
Fro• r ,,.e J
HA RTELIUS . o 0 I
'
make a deal. lie quoted Mukal as saying:
"we just wanted to get Hartcliu.s on the
stand and listen to his story."
Mukai denied lhis statement and :
denied having said anything resembllttg ,
ii lo Kuriilch. And be asked Wllid to take ;
action against the r,ullerton lawyer for ;
the nlouthing or an obscenity allegedly :
leveled at the two young state attorneys : 1
at the height of the fracas. ~,
Kurllich, beside himse lf with rage, told ; I
Wllld that be would never have pul , ' Harteilus oo the stand if he had not been , I
sure that some serious attempt •t i
negotiation would be Instigated. ' t'
He labeled the state action as "con·:
tcmptuous, unethical, disgraceful dectp-
tlon" that \VOuld menn at least another
year or hearings before he can complete
his defense of Hartelius.
Wilid finally persuaded ail thr~
lawyers and Laguna Beach at torney Tom-
Reilly Kurilich's co-counsel, to leave the heari~g room and discuss a po6Sible set ..
tl ement in private.
But they all returned for yet another
shouting match in \Vhich Levine and
Mukai insisted on noth ing le ss than the
revocation of lhe silver-haired · physi·
BELGIAN BIKER FRANK MEYSMAN TAKES BREAK AT END OF LONG, RUGGED ROAD
'Never Thought I'd Make It,' He Says of 43-day Cross·Country Journey
cian's license. ~ ~
;•
FrotttP"fle l
Bike Rider Reaches Goal CA PO · BOY . . . .~ · . ~·I
Three weeks later at the same hospil~ .. l
the youngster .again lost his bodily fun~·
lions but was revived and after surgel"j'
physicians, Jl.1rs. Rea and her former
husband -Jason's father -agreed to
the transplant procedure. Fr .om Ne w York to Da1ia Poi1it in 4'3 Days
Through the phase in Denver Mrs. Re:&
stayed al borne despite many oUen of·
donated plane fare and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide. ·•
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
01 tM 0.lrY P'li.t Stiff
It was just after 11 a.m. Thursday that
Frank Meysman was face-t~face with
the Pacific Ocean in Dana Point.
His 43-day, 4,500-mile bicycle ride that
began July 11 at New York's Kennedy
Airport was over.
"It was just great seeing the Ocean,"
said Meysman of his first glimpse of the
blue Pacific. "I couldn't believe Im ade
it."
One thing made clear is that the United
States is not ideally laid out for bicycling,
Meysman said between sips of lemonade
at the Three Arch Bay borne of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Cutkomp.
Take the relatively short run from
Blythe to Palm Springs, aero~ the
scorching southern· ·desert. --me two
desert towns are connected by high-speed
Interstate 10, where bicycles aren 't
allowed.
~1eysman, rather, had to pedal his
Kidnap-Rape
'
Victim F 011nd
In Auto Lot
BULLETIN
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An 11 -ye:ar-old
Mission Hills girl, found unconscious this
momlng after reporte:dly belng lcldnaped,
was raped and probably drugged by her
abductor, a hospital spokcs"Dan said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An ll·year-otd
Jl.[ission Hills girl, reportedly abducted
Thursday night by a man who enticed
her into distributing leafle ts, was in a
coma today after being found un·
conscious in a park ing lot behind a
suburban shopping ~enter, police said.
The young girl was reported in
serious condit ion with a possible C<ln·
cussion at Marina Mercy ~lospital In
Jl.1arina Del Rey.
Police continued to search for her ab-
ductor, believed to be a middle-aged
man.
She was found at the rear of a store by
a trash collector, police said. The spot
where she was found was about 35 miles
from where she was last seen.
The girl and her a.year-old brother,
both had been approached by the man
Thursday and were asked to distribute
leaflets for a San Fernando Valley dry
cleaning shop, police said.
The children were seen distributing
leaflets in the Granada Hills and Mission
Hills areas. The boy told police the man
drove him and his sister to a parking lot
and that he got out to put handbills on
the wind shields of cars. When he return-
ed, the car was gone, he said.
Officers and two JXJlice helicopter
crews hunted fo r the girl all night. They
were aided by members of a voluntee r
civilian search-and-rescue team with 15 !
four-wheel drive vehicles.
f'rottt Pllfle 1
HOSTAGES ...
give up," Olofsson said.
OloCsson said police told llansson he
was free to le.ave if he released bis
hostages, but that Hansson refused.
"Hansson was then offered to leave
with two of the hostages and myself, but
again refused," Olorsson said.
"My job I. to negotiate wilh the robber
and to prevent a massacre," he: said.
"I don 'l want anyone to get hurt. The
police have not got a chance. The man
wtll never give up. The best thtng to do
would have been to let him leave and
then deal with him somewhere in the
country," Olofsson said.
Police sources said Hansson lived in
the United States 5'veral years before
being expelled for unexplained reasons
this year.
Belgian.made touring bicycle south to
Brawley, then head north through
Coachella and finally, to Palm Springs.
The cities were even worse. It took
nearly two hours to find a surface street
leading out of JFK Airport in New York.
Meysman~ 21, a Wliversity student in
Belgiu m, began planning for the cross-
country trip 18 months ago.
"Some of us had joked abou t a trip to
China -even before President Nixon -
but we fi gured it would take four months
and we only had three months of vaca-
tion. So we settled on America,"
Jl.1eysman recalled.
\\'hen the trip began in New York,
11eysman had two companions riding
with him ... But they quit in Kansas City.
They were physically disturbed, '1 he
joked.
From Page I
COERPER ...
fighting," Coerper said today. "l'd like to
be reinstated so I could get a transfer to
another police department .
Ed Thompson, the city's persoMel
director, said the negotiations are at "a
delica te point."
"I think there is a good possibility that
'>''e may be able to settle it out of court,"
Thom pson said today. "We are trying."
Coerper's attorney, Cecil Rcks, said
the officer is seeking $25,000 in back pay
and benefits.
Since he was fired, Coerper has sup-
ported hi mself as a construction worker.
a janitor and as a part-time security
guard.
Meysman , a former American Field
Service exchange student who lived in
Iowa two years ago, relied on AFS
members to provide places to stay dur-
ing his ride.
lie admitted it was no easy task to line
up farni lles coast-to-<:oast.
The only thing he carried with him was
a small pack containing clothes, a first
aid kit, some food and spare parts for his
Superior brand bicycle.
A Belgian manufactu rer donated the
bike for the trip and 1'.1eysman said it
performed beautifully, with not one
broken part and only one flat tire.
"And lhe roads some places \\'ere
ay,•ful," he added .
The \\·orst part of the trip, 1'.teysman
declared. was lhe seemingly endless ride
through the south,vestcrn desert span-
ning New 1'.texico. Arizona a n d
Calilomia.
}Je(ause of the scorching daytime
temperatures, Meysman rode at nigbl.
His longes t ride in a single day was a
l~hour run from Brawley to Nuevo, a
hamlet in Perris Valley.
He left Brawley, just 24 miles from the
Mexican border at 6 p.m. Tuesday and
arrived in Nuevo at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Each week during the trip, people in
Belgium v.·ere kept abreast o f
Meysman's ride with tape recordings
lhat he made and air-mailed home.
The tapes were broadcast every Sun-
day afternoon on Belgium's riational
radio.
Meysman has only one more goal for
the trip -to ride to the Los Angeles city
llmils.
Then he "''ill be off to San Francisco.
And New York. -But, this time, he plans
to fly.
One of those offers of help came from
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help Mrs. Rea face what she had
believed to be the inevitable. '.
''l accepted it gracioll!ly," she said. · ...
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the little boy are ten·
tatively set for Wednesday at the Ped
Family Colonial Funeral Home •in·
\Vestmins ter.
Y outli Arrested ·
l1i Police Theft ·
A 16-year-old Laguna Beach·
youth who detectives said likes
police equipment, wu arrested •
Thursday in connection with the ,
thefts of a siren, red light and.·
poUce radio equipment from the a.., ,
ly Yard.
Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell aaid
the youngster may also be im· .
plicated in lhe!ts from other areas ,
or town.
"Jt sure 1s ni ce to be able to clear
some of these things up, especially ,
when it 's from the City Yard,"
Purcell said. ..
Asked if the youth had mounted .,
any of the equipment in a car,
Purcell said no.
'"lie didn't have a car yet,'' ho
noted. •
SALE ••• LAST 10 DAYS!
Selechld Groups From Drexel, HeritacJe and Henredon to
Rema in on Sale Through August.
JR!.. jfM.. a s
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e:!l~
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Bl 101 ~~
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Terrific Selection of Top Quality Sele Mercha ndise Reedy for lmmeCfi.
ate Deliv ery. Don't Delay. Final Cha nce to Select From Our large In-
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DREXEL-l1ERITAG~ENREDON-WOOOMARK-KARAS1AN
INTER I O RS •
WUXDAYS & SATURDAYS f :OO to 5 :JO
FRIDAY 'TIL 9100
NEWPORT BEACH e
1717 WF.STCtlFF Olt.. 642:-2011 ro,,.n Sund•v 12-51101
LAGUNA BEACH e
14~ NORTH COAST HWY
lOp111 S111wfay 1J.l1JOI 494·4111
TORRANCE e
2J44t HAWTHORNE ll YD,
111.121•
• ' .
,.
"
i
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• •
H uAIL'I r1LVI
At_ Your_. Kissi11ger Grateful for New Job
.Service
, A Sunday, Wedneaday and Frtdoy
, . Fe1tare ..
·.: Ol lhe Dally Pilol
:•. Gol a problem? T~tn IOl1u ~ •1f'at Dunn. Poi will cut nd
. ',.
rope, o•t the
•
anawer1 end
action u o u
need to ._1 JOlN fnequi-
s In II""' ernmmt and
bu.sine.!r. Moil
11 o u' ques· iton.s to Pai
.i ~-Ou t1 n I At .Your Service, Orange COtUt
Dailv Pilot, P.O. ~a' 1560, Co•la
"&feta, (.;o., 92620. Include 1101.11
ttlepl1t>ne num!J1r.
ileplatttt1ent Ready
.. DEAR PAT: I recently purchased
furniture at Mansfields in Huntington
Beach. One expensive item is faulty. I
haye been courteous, patient and polite
r~. Jhe last seven weeks. I do not want to
gG; through a government consumer R~ection. agency to get action; I simply \Yant the 1ten1 replaced.
S.G., Costa l\1e sa
l\1ansfleld's manager, Andy Nelson,
11ays a new repl~ement tuble has or·
rived at the store, but delivery cannot be
made on weekdilys during lbe evening
tl'he.n you are home from work. Ar·
'.· runge ments will be made for a Saturday
_<\e.Jlvery U you call Nelso n at Sii!-4,.77. ,,
Wu111e11 JJJi11iNters
DEAR PAT: Being a Presbyterian, T
\flS interested in reading some time ago
about a female Presbyterian minister
who had studied theology extensively at
Ha rvard Diviruty School and Union
Seminary, earning honor degrees and her
doctorate, yet was not able to hoJd a
seminary positio.1 after the completion of
her studies. It occurred to me to ask if
hale theologians or the Jewish faith
are meeting more or less success in
becamlng a t cachin g or ministering
rb~ber of their faith.
LT., Irvine
'nils Isolated example Is no "con·
dasive" statement on womens ' ad·
v&ncement In assuming a theological
position In the J ... wlsh faJth , but %5-year·
old SaJly J . Pries and was ordained as the
lint woman rabbi In the U.S., and
k:rhaps onl y the seeond In the history of ~eform Judaism Jn Cincinnati's Isaac ~1.
· 1\'lse Temple on June l . 1970, Although
~any women have studied for the raJ>..
•ln•te in lbe reform bro11eh, Rabbi SaUy.
t s she is known , wa!I the first to be or·
~ained. Jler only koown predecessor was
trdained in Germany. where Reform
ludalam developed 1n the 19th Century fd ltmlsed the equality of the sues,
termlttlng the ordination of women
11D.Uke the Conservative and Ortltodox
Eanc~s. Even tboqll Dr. Letty Ruuell,
t' Presbyterian lheologtan abOat wbom
ii wrote, commented that s b e
• wouldn 't advlle women lo p throu gh it
iill, unle11 It didn 't matter," tbe Re v.
pavlda Foy Crabtree, %8, last year
tntered the minl5try of the United
Chureh of Christ In the flnt religious
kervice of ordination by a major
~enomlnation in which women took all
Jhe principal roles. It happened in
f-'ortbfJeld , Conn.
' Checkb19 Solicitors
: DEAR PAT: Our neighborhood is being
\ti.sited by .nore and more people claim· mg· they represent various charities. I
know that some kiDd of perm.it is suir
µosed to be carried by these solicitors
and I'd like to fmd out what agency
issues this autborlzation and what in·
rormation should be included on it, so 1
carr· check on the authenticity of these
various requests.
· J.~1., Fountain Valley
Persons making soUcltations for chari·
ty .. are required to show written
autiortiation lo sollclt signed by at least
twO. ofrlclals of the charity and an
lnftrmatlon Card Issued by the Orange
COtilty Department of Welfare. If any
solleltor does not comply wttb these
r~atJons, contact the Fountain Valley
P~ 0.partment by calllng -·
' A~jmtment Pledged
li':AR PAT: In October, 1971, I joined
tbe;Hollday Health Spa In Costa Mesa ,
agijltlng la pay $25 each month for ooe yw. I sent In my last check on Oct. 10,
19'71i then received • letter saying my ac-
"""t was overdue. Holiday Insisted this
papent was not received, so I made out
anlther check on Nov. S which shows a ~ellation date 91 Nov. 1 10. Then I
reciived the octobtt check"" February.
~with a Jan. ~ canc<il11Uon date. t
e to the firm eR>laining the situation
in arch, 1973. They replied sRying their
rc<S>rds showed no overpayment and I
self photostatic copies of the 13 checks
an¢ received no r,ply. ,After more C!>r·
re:f(l"dcnce ·in Jltne, I still havt ~ot
r~ived any respdtlse. . • , N. W ., Costa Mela 1\e Costa ~1eta nrm·s manager 1ald 11t,Iw&n conlacl Ille bookkeeping depart-
mft~ at Holiday Health Spa's bead·
qt(tter1 la Westminster to ste that an
acttstmt.at k made ln yoar rtt0rd of
pajmtat aad a fl5 refund Is malled to
Yolo l'lD 1endlal tbe pllolostatlc copies or
i' clle<n lbal ,.a ...,1osed Ill your
and a "backap" request for ad·
J en& &o lhe 1pa'1 beaclquarten In
of your previous corrttpondence
bfli1 Ignored.
~
ltlentity of Cycle .
~ motorcycll!lt who was fatally In·
ju)cd in a rl!ar end collision with a tn1ck
c;i,ily Thursday "" Identified today by tOrange County Coroner's olfice as
hard E. YoWlg, 20. or 801 N. Loaro
Anaheim.
llce seld Young's cycle collided with
llintar of a trµck which had stopped for
" red lijht at Harhor Boulevant and
Freedman Way, Anaheim.
When a U.S. President picks a pe~n
as Secretary of State gratitude is the
rule, but In the case of Dr .• Henry Klu-
lnger, the thanks are special.
Because Dr. Kissinger ls Jewlsb, lhe
fonner Havant pror.,..r Ill hi 1 first
public appearance since hi.a select.Ion to
the post made strong reference to hls
herilage.
"There is not another country In lhe
world where a man of my background
would even be considered for such a
* * * Nixon Villa
Report Due
'Very Soon'
The Nixon Administration promised
Thursday that 8 run disclosure or the
transactions which involve the purchase
of La Casa Pacifica and land nea rby will
be made before the President leaves the
South Coasl.
Beyond that, Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald Warren would go no further.
\Varren said that he did not foresee any
revelations this week on the contfoversiol
arrangements assertedly worked out
EX-FBI MEN ADMIT
THEFTS-Slory, P•ge 4
between the President and two wealthy
friends.
fie would concede only that the prom-
ised explanation would come possibly
next week . The President is expected to
remain at his seaside villa until
sometime after Labor Day.
One of the two men believed to have
fig ured in financial assistance to the
President in the purchase of the estate -
C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo of Florida -ar-
rive<l al La Casa Pacifica with the Presi·
dent Monday afternoon.
Rebozo, a millionaire industrialist who
has furnished the President a retreat at
K(' Biscayne, was the apparent original
purveyor of financial assistance to Nixon
in 1969 when the original purchase or the
old Cotton Estate \vas consumm ated.
Later. when arrangements were made
to purchase about 16 fallow acres im·
mediately inland of the estate. Rebozo
ase rted.ly once again Jent funds. Later
the loan was picked up by another close
Nixon friend, Robert Abplanalp, the
ae rosol spray valve kihg from New York.
Although some disclosures about the
transactions -facts revealed in press
accoun~ -have been corroborated by
the White House, one key element in the
transactions has not been addressed.
Abplanalp initially was reported to
have set up a special corporation to deal
with the financing, according to early
\Vhite House reports. But later Warren
admitted that no such firm existed.
Public records show none or the details
l>ecause the land is in blind I.rust.
Jn the furore that ensued over the
detai ls of the loans and purchase, Warren
anti his superi or Rona ld Ziegler vowed to
rta.ke complete details available to the
public.
ln advance of the proqiised full
disclosures Warren has made a semantic
distinction between the Nixon residence
and tbe "Western White House."
In several references this week Warren
has specified that certai n events would
take place at the 'Vestem White House
{the government financed complex on the
San Diego side of the county line).
He ha s further stressL>d that those
Waldie .• a candidate for California (~overnor. \\'as granted a tour or the
Presidential office complex. but \vas
barred from seeing the Nixon residence.
Aides insisted that Wald ie was In error
\\'hen he referred to the Nixon residen ce
as an extension or the \Vhite House.
events would no t take pla~e at "the
house", meaning the private Nixon
residence on the Orange County side of
the encla ve. '
lt was tha t apparent conrusion whi ch
led to harsh words shortly be.rore Nixon
arrived when Northern C a I l r o r n i a
Democrat Jerome Wald.le demanded an
inspection or the Western White House.
Job," Dr. KU.Inger said 'lbunday.
And he added somberly, "II impose>
upon me a very grave responsibility,"
JronlcaUy, only hours before Presldenl
Nixon made the annoWlcement or Dr.
Kissinger's non1ination to the Cabinet,
extra security was ordered for the
fonner Harvard professor because of an
increase in threats which were Arab in
origin.
The threats, which security spokesmen
said had to be regarded as serious, came
before any indication had arisen lbal the
President was planning to replace
UPI T1i.llhoto
Ue'd' UauP. .E11d11red
Rudolph Valentino, the great
lover of the s i I en t screen,
wo uld have remained a big star
until recently if he had lived.
according to an astrologer who
spoke at a memorial se rvi ce
in Los Angeles marking the
47th anniversary of his death.
Judge's Ruling
Permits Gasoli1ie
Hike ort Sept. 1
\\'ASlflNGTON IA P 1 -A federa l
judge ruled today lhat most of tbe na·
lion's retail gasoline dealers can raise
prices starting Sept. I.
The Justice Department and !he Cost
o[ Living Council said the decision would
be appealed immediately.
U.S. District Court Judge Barrington
D. Parker issued th e ruling in a sui t
brought against the coilncil on behalf of
165.000 service station dea lers selling
retail gaso line under the brand nan1es of
major gasoline suppliers.
The decision. if it \\'ilhstands the
govemffiental appeals. "'ould effectively
lift controls for the retail gasoline
dealers. Bel\\'een now and midnight Fri·
day, Aug. 31, prices remain froze n.
After that. Phase 4 controls on gasoline
prices are scheduled to go into effect.
The dealers contended they \\'ere
•·singled out for special treatment" un-
der Phase 4 regulations which discrim-
inate against them.
Parker agreed, saying that the \vay the
reg ulations were appliP.d to the retail
gasoline dealers ··is arbitrary and
capricious."
The judge said lhat lhc controls
discrin1inate against the deal ers 1.1nd
.. violate the due process clause or fh c
Fifth An1endmcnl. .,
fi e said that the gasoline dealers y.·erc
the only small busi nesses \\'ith 60 or
fewer cmployes covered by lhe price
c:ontrols.
Gra11ting a request for preliminary in-
junction, Parker held that the dealers
''have made a sufficiently strong sho w-
ing" and are likely to win a final ruling.
The court decision came as some
ga'Soline dealers planned weekend clos-
ings to demonstrate th eir protests or
Phase 4 regulations.
Energy, Crime, Champs
Lead Sunday Features
A central morgue, the energy crisis
and the increasing unmber5 of women
r,ommitting crimes are some of the
topics in this week's Sunday Daily Pilot.
COUNTY MORGUE -Should Orange
County have a central racllity to which
!he victims or accidental and violent
(Sunday's Best)
death s 5hould be taken1 Or should the
bodies continue to be tnke.n on a rotation
basis to mortuaTies? Staff Writer Tom
Borley cxplortis th e topic in this week'!:I
Sunday Specia l.
OUT OF WOODS -Ranch lire seem1
to help bring troubled youths out of the
woods Judging by lhe rC!ults of sending
Ulen1 to the Orange County Probation
Department's instit\lUOns In Trabuco Can-
yon and Clcve.l,nnd NaUonal Forest. The
story, told by Staff Writer carol Moore.
ls the main feature of this week's "YOU"
section.
\
SAVING ENERGY An en·
vironmentalist writes that Americans
can bum up to 20 percent less fuel once
they become fully aware of the spiraling
cos t of energy and buy smaller cars and
insist on better insulating of homes. The
illustrated article, from the Christian
Science Monitor Service, is also in the
"YOU'' section.
WOMEN IN CRIME -Coincidental
with the growth of Women's Lib, possibly
or possibly not related, has come in·
creased partlctyatlon by women In ma-
jor crime. FB statistics show certain
crimes by women have jumped llS mu ch
as 200 percent. An Editorial Research
repor; tells the story in the "A ·· seclii>n.
PIANO CHAMPIONS - A duo of
eighty-eights, Ton\ and Kate \Vhilncy of
Irvine, play to.1:ether but vnluc their In·
dividual careers of teaching and 1naklng
music. Start Writer Jo Olson interviewed
the couple about their lives and
achievements -together and In·
dividuall,y. The story will be on the
\Vomcn's Page.
\Villiam Roger~ as head or lhe nation's
rorclgn policy.
I>r. Klssini:cr, in a somber moment at
h.is San Clemente news conferencC, said
that he did not foresee any special prob-
lems in admlnlste.ring diplomacy in the
Near East because of his background.
"The President has repeatedly stated
that the Middle East is perhaps the most
dangerous area," he explained, ''and 1
will pursue under the President's direc--
tion those policies which are considered
necessary."
As to criticism from Arab leaders or
KisslngC!r's ability to adeq)J8te.ly conduct
foreign policy in light of his heritage, Dr.
Kissinger stressed that he COtJld conduct
that policy "regardless of national
heritage."
Dr. Kissinger left his native Germany
in the late 1930s before t.he outbreak or
\Vorld War JI.
If Dr. Kissinger indeed wins con-
firmation to the Ca binet post he is ex·
peeled la tackle the Mideast policy prob-
lems more vigorously than he has done
before as President Nlxon's adviser on
National Security Affairs.
When he served only in that post, Dr.
British Happy; A1•abs Mad
Kissin1er showed his acwnen in the Far
East, engineering for the President the
historic trip to Peking and the setUement
of the Vietnam War.
During that time, it was Roger• who
focused on the delicate problems ot the
~1ideast.
Jn the conference Or. Kissinger made
note or the diplomatic cou~ of the
Administration over the past three years,
but he termed the status of those
achievements •1tender" and emphasized
that over the next thre.e years he would
have to work to make them stronger and
more permanent.
Kissinger Reaction Mixed .
By United Press lnlernationaJ
The nomination or Henry A. Kissinger
as secretary or state today drew ap...
plause in Britain, Arab anger an d no
commen t from Peking.
And many commentators. w hi J e
acknowledging Kissinger's role as chief
arch.itect in America's triumphs abroad,
expressed reservations about the in·
ternalional effects of Watergate.
In ~hina, w.here Kissinger engineered a Iha~ 10 relations and set up the historic
Peking summit meeting last year
UP TO
between President Nixon and Chinese
leaders, th e Kissinger announcement was
reported without ronunent in a terse
dispatch on the govemn1ent·run New
China News Agency.
There was no word either from the
Krem lin , despite two n1eetings between
Nixon and Soviet leaders in the last two
years and the recent war1nlng of rela-
tions.
British press reaction was overwhelm·
ingly in favor of Ki ssinger , with coin·
me nts such as "a fine appointment" and
"not a moment too soon:·
The editor of the Beirut newspaper An
Nahar said in a front page editorial that
"Kissinger's appointment is an Israeli
victory over the Arabs not m. America
only but also in the Middle Easl region
as well."
He noted that Ki ssinger was a Jew and
said, "Kissinger's rise to the throne of
diplomacy and defense is attributed to
the Zionist movement which ha s
persuaded Nixon to appoint him as ad-
viser and then forced the American
OPEN 7 DAYS
SUNDAY 8 TO 5:30
DAILY 7:30 TD 6
NAME BRAND
PATIO FURNITURE
Many instore specials ... floor samples. One of a kind ... discontinued, sli9htly damOCJecl, etc. A• priced
to clear. LIMIT~D TO STOCK ON HAND.
TROPITONE CHAISE LOUNGE
TROPITONE CHAIRS .
TROPITONf TABLE and 4 CHAIRS
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REG. $50,00
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TAMIAMI TAMIAMI
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SPRING
BASE
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FROM OUR NURSERY
MARIGOLD REG.
69c
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Hybrid Bermuda
STOLE NS Rag.
6,95
95
BIG SAVINGS 2 for price of 1 Sale
• Star Jasmine• Meyer Lemon
wllh fruit
• Eugenia • Natal Plum
2123 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
(Corner of
Newport &. Vlotorla
P•tio 646-4103
Nursery 646.3925
SALE ITEMS llMITIO
TO STOCk ON HANO
Reg.
$47
TAMIAMI
TABLE •nd CHAIR SET
io·~~~~~. $138
Rag. $171.00
Bandini
FALL SALE
' '2 Ol'F : '2 OFF I
N<J"' oi the tl11'19 , : Jlfowls theo l•m•
10 preV9nt I to Pf.Vant
Won1e• B!~•vr••• t we«15.
.ird CrabgrM&, I l("°°'eut INQS.
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All lawn• I Dithondra Ofll)t
' 21 '~.:/a 1 ~·~
,~ .... ~).xl o<) !I. 1 3't'•l 2,!oll01q.n. "•Q '' \' I ""°·Ill tlo
""'$7.95 I ""' $10.95
I
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•
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4. DAIL V PILOT Friday, Aug!1'l 24, 1'17.3
U.S. Bombers, Troops
·To Leave Thai Bases
BANGKOK, Thailand (UPIJ -The
United States announcect plans today to
pull 3.550 troops and lriore than 100
\\'arplanes out of Thailand in the fir st
phase of an American pullout from seven
bases across the country.
f\1aj . Gen. ·Thomas W. MeUen, chief or
the American Military Assistance Con'·
mand for Thailand (MACTHAI ) \\lorked
out the \Vithdrawal.agreement earlier in
the day in talks with Lt. Gen. Kriangsak
Chan1a0da1 deputy chief o! staff of
Thailand's Supreme C.Ommand.
U.S. l\flLITARY sources said that the
pullout wouJd begin as early as the begin-
ning of next week. They said that no type
of aircraft was excluded including the
852 bombers. The fll'St units to depart
"·ere expected. to be those Americans
deployed here from Vietnam in 1972.
A joint statement. issued after the
meeting at the Thai Foreign Mlnistry,
said, "it was agreed that the U.S. would
take immediate steps for an initial
withdrawal of 3,550 U.S. military person·
nel from Thailand and also a reduction or
niorr. than 100 aircrafL"
The statement made no specific men-
tion of hov.• Jong the pullout would take,
but said the two sides would meet again
in the Cirst week of September to Con-
sider "further gradual reduction of the
level of U.S. forces in Thailand.
The announcement said the future
withdrawals would include "strategic,
tactical and support aircraft'' but would
take "into consideration security re.
quireznents of Southeast Asia."
THE UNITED States and Thailand bad
agreed earlier to pull out some of
Six Still Vneontrolled
Some Fire Areas Cooler;
Blazes Near Re110 Flare
By Associated Press
Firefighters in parts of the 'Vest
\velcomed predictions of a cooling trend
today. But conditions remained hot near
Reno, Nev., where new fires were
reported Thursday night.
Dick K1ade, spokesman for the
Interagency Fire Control Center in Boise,
Idaho, said .Reno authorities had re.
quested two air tankers to fight the out·
breaks there. He ·had no further details.
Meanwhile, only six major fires re·
mained uncontrolled Thursday i n
California, Oregon , Idaho and Montana .
burning a total of 40,455 acres. A total of
51 fires have burned 190,100 acres in
those states, said Klade.
e Airline Donated
e Rail Strike Spreads
MONTREAL (AP) -Canada•s month-
long series of regional rail strikes is now
a nationwide walkout.
'I'hursday night's walkout was Canada's
first national rail strike since 1966. That
( __ IN_S_H_O_R_T._ •• ____ )
one was ended in less than 10 days by
back-to-work legislation, and there were
demands today for firm government ac-
tion. But Labor Minister John Munro
gave no indication of what he might do.
e Gett!I Kidnap Hoax?
R0~1E (UPI) -The attorney for the
. I
America's 45,000 servicemen and more
than 500 warplanes at Thal bases because .
of the Aug. 15 cambodlan bombing hall.
The bases were built by the United
States during the 1960s at a cost of more
than l6SO million.
• Thailand bas the largest concentration
of American air Power outside the United
States. The kingdom's military govern·
ment guards a border or 1,000 miles with
Cambodia and Laos, separated from
China by only a narrow strip of Bunna.
Military sources said the r i r s t
withdrawals likely would be from Takhli,
. an Air Force F4 Phantom base a1'out JOO
miles north of Bangkok, and Nam Phong,
north of Bangkok, and Nam Phong, a
a U.S. Marine Phantom and A4 Skybawk
camp 40 miles northeast of the capital.
Other units which eould be withdrawn
are stationed at 7th Air Force head-
quarters at Nakbon Phanom, known to
airmen as "NKP" and situated near the
Mekong River border with Laos about
375 miles northeast of Bangkok.
THAILAND'S Prime Minister, Field
Marshal Thanom Kittikachorn, conceded
earlier this week an American troop
withdrawal would have "a great deal of
impact" on the kingdom's economy.
Thanom said the Americans "have
spent a lot of money here," but added
"not all" of the U.S. servicemen would
leave.
Ia other Indochina action, the first
Saigon-~Phnom Penh convoy to travel
without American air cover headed up
th:! Mekong River today with badly need·
ed fuel.
The Cambodian air force's prop-driven
1'28 bombers and navy gunboats escorted
tbe two cargo ships and five tankers run-
ning the gauntlet of Kluner Rouge gun·
ners along the 60 miles of river from the
South Vietnamese ·border. There was no
word on the progress of the convoy.
The Cambodian embassy says it has
been getting dozens of inquiries a week
from former U.S. servicemen who want
to volunteer for duty with Cambodian
government forces.
But the volWiteers are being turned
dO\VD, an embassy spokesman said
Thursday.
Wunnerful; Wunnerful
' A far cry from prim, bubbly days on the Lawrence
Welle show, the Lennon Sisters of today have in·
corporated a striirtease number in thell" new act
at Caesar's Palace in Las Ve~as. The girls doff
much of their attire to the grindmg strains of "Any·
thing Goes." Where have all the bubbles gone?
Ex-FBI Meh Admit Thefts
Ike , LBJ, JFK K1iew of Burglaries in, Embassies?
WASll!NGTON (AP) -The FBI <:em·
mitted burglaries to steal intelligence in·
formation from inside the embassies of
foreign nations during the Johnson, Ken-
nedy and Eisenhower administrations,
former FBI officials say.
Published documents indicate the
break·ins \Vere aimed at getting code
books and other cryptographjc in-
formation.
Tv.·o fonner high FBI o f f i c i a I s
estimated Thursday that fewer than JO
such break·ins took place each year. One
source said they went on for 15 to 20
years before bell!g stopped in 19tl6.
Meanwhile the White House stuck to
President Nixon's disputed assertion that
FBI break-ins were au t·b or i zed.
widespread and well known during two
Democratic administratiom.
DEPUTY WHITE House P re s s
Secretary Gerald L. Warren, speaking in
San Clemente, rerused to add any details.
Other White House officials indicate Nix·
on personally ordered them to keep quiet
about the fnatter.
Despite that, one Nixon aide said FBI
break·ins were made in civil rights C38e3
during the Kennedy and Johnson years,
as well as in national security cases. He
gave no other information.
DALLAS (UPJ) -Braniff Airways
gave $50,000 in personal and corporate
contributions to President Nixon's re·
election campaign, the airline said
Thursday.
Braniff is the seventh !inn to announce
donations to the re-election effort in
violation of a federal law prohibiting cor·
porate contributions to political cam·
paigns.
family of oil billionaire J. Paul Getty's
grandson, missing since he was reported
kidnaped six weeks ago, conceded for the
first time Thursday the whole thing may
be a hoax.
Lawyer Giovanni Iacovoni said tile
boy's mother, Mrs . Gail Getty, still
NOW Honors Standouts
No Arrests Yet
In Investigation
Of Nixon Plot
The former FBI officials said the cm·
bassy break·ins differed from the
Ellsberg burglary because the CQdes
sought in them were of obvious i in·
telligence value. "Acordlng to FBI si.n<f·
an!s there is no way the Ellsberg ;job
could be called a national security optra·
lion," one said. . 1 It wasn't clear when the em.bassY
break-ins began, or who first authorized
them. Fonner Atty. Gen. Herbert
Brownell, who was boss of the J~ce
Department during D w i g h t ' D.
Eisenhower's administration refused to
CO!!ll1l«ll.
believes her son has been abducted.
e Bo111b Threat Made
WASll!NGTON (AP) -A speech by
Secretary of the Treasury George P.
In Male Chauvini,sm
NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -The in·
vestigation into an aJleged conspiracy to
kill President Nixon has failed to tum up
enough evidence lo make arrests, a local
source ctqse to the inquiry say$.
'1nvestigators <ould not piece together
enough eyidence to p{osecute the six
black militants who were bein; in-
vestigated, the source said.
e Satellile Lu1111cJ1ed
NEW YORK (UPI) -'!be National CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -A new
international communications satellite
moved in orbit today toward a stationary
outpost high above the Atlantic Ocean.
Shultz at a: meeting of the American
Bankers Association was postponed today
after a bomb threat was received at the Organization for Women (NOW), in its
hl tel whe.~e Shultz was to speak. ~ battle against male chauvinism, draped
A spokesman for Shultz said the hotel the statue of Atlas at Rockefeller ('.en.. The fifth in a series of Intelsat 4
payloads was launched from Cape Ken·
nedy Thursday into an initial orbit rang·
ing from about 34-0 to 22,300 miles above
the earth.
received a call saying that a bomb would ter today with a banner proclaiming
explode about 9:30 a.m. Shultz was 1; he d ,, scheduled to begin speaking at 8:30 a.m. Atlas, you. I us up too long.
There was no bomb. ~e draping of the statue of Atlas sup-
; ;;.-
'
-..--,.,.. oqJ porting the globe was NOW's latest ac-
---,._., tion in a "'eek of planned protests before
Aug. 26, the 53rd anniversary of the
Women's Suffrage Amendment to the a . No-No s trading. (Related story page 14).
Jndge Bans Movie, Jails Pair
I
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -A Norfolk judge ruled Thursday that 'I
the film "The Devil in !l'liss Jones" is "horrible, obscene and filth)'·." r.
He barred it from the screen and assessed 12-montb jail terms and
$5,000 fines against t\vo theater employes. .
"It's a rotten, filthy situation," said Municipa~ Court ~udge
Llewellyn S. Richard son after he sat through a special showmg of
the film along with 50 la\vyers and members of the press.
The film \Vas seized twice in the past week from The Suburban
Theater. \Vl1ere it had been shO\Vn at the midnight-only performance.
Richard levied the sentence against the theater manager, Don-
ald Keith ?I-layers II, 19, and the director of advertising and public
relations for the \Vindsor Theater s, Ray Bentley Jr., 21. Defense
lawyers said they 1.11ould appeal.
Defense attorneys argued that becau se the heroine of the film
ca1ne to a poor end that it \Vas basically a. "morality play."
The mo\'ie is about a young \voman who commits suicide but ·
is al101.ved one \vish before bein g banished to the fires of hell. She }.:
chooses lust, and the film follo1.vs her through various escapades. ~
Thursday, the Women's Lib group rais·
ed a "women power" banner over the
public gallery of the American Stock Ex·
change to protest the "male domination
of Wall Street. It had no effect on
trading.
THE ORGANIZATION plans to climax
it week of protest demonstrations Sunday
with a .. women 's liberation" march on
Fifth Avenue.
Vanguard ReCXlrds won a special
"Keep Her in Her Place" award from
NOW today for reCXlrding the song: "Gel
Your Biscuits in the Oven and Your Buns
in Bed."
NOW cited five other incidents of what
it considered conspicuous m a I e
chauvinism. ror a total of seven Keep
Her in Her Place awards, but the
women's lib group also gave "Positive
Image of Women" awards.
The prizes -for positive and negative
treatment of women by the media -
were annoWiced Thursday for presen·
tation today by NOW In an effort to
Storms Rumhl.e Over U.S.
Cold, Hot Fronts Collide Triggeri1ig Thunderous Rai1i
A ftw sliower1 J.Ol'lnkltd Ille nortlltrn Ptcllk Co.11 tnd ltmpertlures In lhe
.50$ _,, (ornmon In lhf HortliWtll.
Wll>d& 1ouc~1ng 50 mlltt ~ hour orove cold tlr Into the Grttl 8ttln, A tprnlclo w111 1l111'1ft'd llttr C~eK-tlll 8etcli, S.C .. ThurJdtV tnd 1nOlller ln Msl..(lfltrtt FIOl1dt. No r11Jurln Wffe
'-fc6astat weather sum-
marv will be found today
on Page 22.J
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
llel'1!1J of the Dai~ Pilol
Is guaranteed
....,~ .... M ,_ " Ml II• fr< ""' ~ ~~ ,... "' .. ,.. "" .. .. i'llC't 11 JOll. Cali Ml bkn d
1;3; ,..,
Salll'llaf ind s.nNJ: n p11 * It! RCIM
f"'. CIPJ iY I IA s.tnr. • I UL Sl!lllJ. QI llrf ' «fl' 1111 ._ WWOI It
fll. CW at1 tlbt d ID'·"·
J eleitiones
.. , ~·~· C.OIJ ........ ll2~321 ...... ~ ...... .... ...... ., ........... 1@·1221
S.. Clellim1, taim11n ltxl,
SM Ila. b;s11• .... hill!, s.u • .., t•., llil"' .. l!2-«2D
"raise the consciousness of
munications industry."
OTHER KEEP 1-ler In Her Place
awards:
-To the ad agency which created the
Winchester cigarillo ad depicting a man
smoking beneat h the headline "No
woman ever says no to Winchester."
-To NBC television's Dean Martin
show which NOW says "pres~ts 2 very
males-eye view of women as trivial,
decoration, and sex objects."
-To the film "Last Tango in Paris"
for its "blunt sexual abuse and
dehumanization of the female charac·
ter."
-To WINS, an all·news radio station in
New York for "constantly using male-
oriented language such.. as 'the average
man,' 'man in the street,' ·newsman,'
·working man ' and 'businessman,' " and
for "trivializing women by putting more
emphasis on fun or novelty items
relating to women.·•
The source said ihvestlgators will now
just "ride out" the information they have
acquired. The source added those
persons who were being investigated will
now be reagarded as persons of interest
to law enforcement officials.
"WE'ui JUST be watching them," the
source said.
The source said no arrests are in the
offing.
Meanwhile, in Taos, N.M., Edwin M.
Gaudet, in jail on a federal dtarge o/
threatening the President. bas been
charged by the state with intent to kill
three police officers.
Taos Magistrate Norbert Martinez
said ~ state charges stem from an
alleged exchange of gunfire during the
three-day search for Gaudet in the
northern New Mexico mountains near
Taos.
Nixon Aides Deny Leak
Of Agnew Information
By HELEN TIIOMAS
United Press ln~eroational
President Nixon's top aides, in what
appears to be shaping up as a battle
within the executive family, emphatically
deny the White House is smearing Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew by means or
news leaks on the Maryland bribery
scandal.
Report s that the White House is
secretly funneling an ti -Agnew in·
formation to newsmen are "blatantly and
absolutely false." the aides say.
Justice Department 90urces. indicated
Thursday that the White House, which
ha s access f.o detaiJs of the inquiry, may
be leaking the Agnew reports.
BUT PRESS Secrelary Ronald L.
Ziegler "categoricaJly'' denied that
presidential aides were the source or the
infonnaUon.
Nixon, Gen. Alexander M. Haig, Whtte
House chief of staff, and Special Counsel
J. Fred Buzhardt are being kept abreast
or details or the investigation or allega..
lions that Agnew accepted kickbacks
from Maryland contractors .
Nixon told a news conference Wedne,,.
day that he had order<d Attorney
G<neral EUlot Richardson to find the
source\or the leaks and to summarily fire
anyone\involvcd. Afterward. the Presi·
dcnI ca lled Agnew to relay his concern
personally.
THE PRESIDENT knew long in ad·
vancc, before he discussed it with
Agnew, that federal prosecutors were
eonducting Ille lnwistigaUon, White
House offlcials said.
He has said that It "would he im·
proper for ' me to comment on the
charges" but condemned the "outrageous r ... k of IDformatioo from either the
grand jury, 1or the prosecutors or the
Justice Depai1ment -or all three."
However, l'lichardson has noted In a
letter to A~ that the "outlines" or the
investigation 1are known to a number of
witnesses, individuals, lawyers, the White
House staff, investigative personnel ol
the Internal Revenue Service as well as
the Justice Department.
'Potted' Plant
Wi1is Top Prize
At Kansas Fair
ABILENE, Kan. (UPI) -A Doral
display with marijuana st.ms as
greenery has -a blue ribbon at the ~tral Kanoa> ~ Falt.
Faye Harper ol Junction Clly suJ>.
rnl!ted the display, which was
predominanUy n!CI.
"! Jhought It looked prelty nice
becaus& "4. the loni. fem-like leaves,"
Mrs. Harper said.
Marijuana groW. wild In her backyard.
Police Chief Fred Garten permitted the
floral arrangement to ,..main on display
for three dl\Y•, tl"'1 took it to his office.
"! removed it~use It was beginn"'3
to wilt and slllce award 'bad already
• been .,,.~ r ... no """""' f01'
leaving 11 ICI' 10meone to i.ite the mari-
juana," he said .
.
FORMER ATl'YS. Get Ramsey Clark
and Nicholas Katzenbach d en le d
knowledge of any aUtborlzed FBI break·
Ins during the Lyndon B. Johnson 'ad·
minlstratioo. Two dl\)Oe aides to the late
Seo. Robert F. Kennedy said they ·are
positive he wasn't told of any such break·
ins during-the administration of-..his
brother, John F. Kennedy.
Death Plu11ge
Thunderstruck spectators at an
Ohio carnival watch with hor-
ror as Army SgL Roland W.
Allard falls to his death during
a rope· climbing eoililbltion
w!llle. dangling Ul'der a hell·
oopter. The' Army announcod
to<lay ii has launched an Inves-
tigation of the fall.
!
I
6
•
Police Safety Hazard
. City officials in Huntington Beach have a problem
with their police facility . The existing one is det'(riorat·
Ing much faster than anticipated and the new one is
four months away from being in any condition to occupy.
. It's no one's fault the problem exists, but some
action may have to be taken in the interest of the health
and safety of police personnel.
The working conditions in the 1920·vlntage head·
quarters have become increasingly more crowded dur-
in'g the past years as the department has expanded with
the growing city.
In the last eight months, however, the situation has
changed for the worse. It started in January when a
water main under the building broke, pouring out thou-
sands of gallons of water which undermined the founda·
ti on.
The floor settled and walls cracked. City engineers
said they solved the problem by pumping several yards
of concrete .under the building after they· repaired the
pipe. Surveys taken after the repairs indicated the move..
ment had stopped.
But in the last month the building has started jo
move again. New cracks have developed and there are
signs that the walls are pulling away from each other.
The plumbing bas malfunctioned and the police spent
one weekend with no usable toilets.
The situation is deplorable. The people who are
sworn to protect the lives and safety of Huntington
Beach residents are forced to work in conditions that
would close other businesses.
There is a serious question whether there should be
as many people working in the building as there are,
even if it' weren't so badly deteriorated. One administra·
tor was told he could not expand his staff because of the
health and safely hazards created by putting one more
persQn jn the office space he had.
In the circumstances, there aren1t many practical
options for relief of the situation. City officials are keep-
ing a close watch on the building for signs of structural
deterioration and they have told the contractor to ex-
pedite the construction or the new building so police
can move in as soon as possible.
If there should be signs of major structural stress,
it may be necessary for the building to be evacuated be-
fore the new one is ready. We hope c.ity officials will
~1ave the courage to take whatever action is necessary if
it becomes apparent the old building will endanger lives.
Thrifty School Leaders
Apparently school officials aren't always the spend·
thrifts taxpayers might believe. The leaders of two school
~districts in Huntington Beach reCently showed admir-
able initiative in saving taxpayers money despite errors
made by the Orange County Department of Education.
The Huntington Beach City School District was the
hardest hit by county miscalculations. Officials there dis..
covered they would be short $170,000 of the tax revenue
figure given by the County. Instead of raising taxes, as
they could have, they just tightened their belts and ct ..
cided to absorb it from the reserve fund they had al·
ready established.
The Huntington Beach Union High School District,
on the other hand, fo und it would actually receive an
additional $211 ,000 rrOm a higher assessed valuation.
But the .dis~ct, ratber than keep a tax rate above the
state guideline, went along with another 3.5-cent ct ..
crease to further help taxpayers.
Neither action resulted in an overwhelming sa vings
to property owners, but they displayed admirable intent.
H fOURQUOI?
Plenty of 'Po.rk'
In State Budget
Dea r
Gloomy
Gus
Party Leaders Cautioned in Crisis
. 1
Your money is burning a hole in the
politicians' pocket.
And through that hole ha s poured a big
(a t ($9.4 billion ) state budget marbled
with the fat or excess and ext ravagance.
Vern e Orr. state director of finance ,
admits the 1973-74 budge t is full of
"pork." Pork that
would not have bct•n
permitted in lean-
er yean. Lean~r,
meaning the state's
treasury.''Not yours.
That "pork" '; Is
costing wage earners
and taxpayers hund-
reds or mlllions of
extra dollars. II
comes in various chunks and sizes. IIere
are a few:
-A $200 million increase, this year
over last. in !he operational and capital
costs of state agencies :
-Another fl26~mil~for an average
12 perC(!nt increase in salaries for state
empJoyes. That 12 percent is excessive.
(As Cal-Tax suggests. an increase oC 6
percent would have been equitable. State
workers have received a 42 percent pay
increase oVer the past live years.):
-An inci-ease of $68 million for UC and
the state ~lleges and universities in the
face of declining enrollment;
-$42 mj.llion for a down payment on
Senator Randolph C:Ollier's t\Yin towers
(or, whatev er form new legislative
quarters take). and
-at least another $50 million in new
park and recreation projects to ''bu y"
the budget voles to sustain COilier's seed
money for those memorial towers.
[,,__R_u_s_w:_l\_r;_T_o_N__..J
THOSE excesses and extravagances
were made earlier, if not possible, by
that $826 mlllion surplus hanging in the
Sacramento packing house. By the end of
the year that carcass may be bloated to
$1 billion. •
Politicians would have you believe that
·-~f.1~:~g:~~~ ~his°"J:
umn predicted tlle'lulge surplus and sug·
gested it might go as high as $1 billion.
A surplus is no excuse for increased.
aod winecessary spending. Surplus or no,
any politician with a sense o f
responsibility should approacfi each ex·
pencUture, each increased or new ~
gram, with this question :
"If I had to vote for a tax increase to
pay for this appropriation,' would I have
the guts to do it?"
IN MOST cases the answer would be
"no." Politicians· do not like to tie a tax
invoice on their goodies. 'l11e surplus
relieved them of that accountability.
SB 90, the "tax re!onn" package of
1972, is a monstrous measure. Withjn. the
next four years , it will increase the. cost
of state go~emment by at least $1 billion
a year. And, it is causing serious and
urgent problems for local school districts
that are in a dither because of its club-
footed language and contradictions.
nus year's ''trailer'' bill to correct SB
90's deficiencies and technical discrepan-
cies is almost as voluminous as the
original legislation. That's what happens
Urban sprawl is eating up the far1n-
land of America. \Vhat little farm-
land remains in Orange County
should be retained for food pr~
duction and open space.
J. s.
Gloomy Gus com"'lllts '"' wbmltttd by
rMders Ind OI M l llteeUlrl,.,. rtlltct Ille
YltWI of TIM llfWIH,..,., Stncl JMr H I
IHt\lf hi OIDGmY Gii .. D1I,.,. Pilot,
when politics supersede reason and am-
btUon overrides responsibility; the cost
of political passioo is paid by the tax-
payer.
'•• .
·mAT ONE-CENT stale sales tax in-
crease? Tbe one now beirig siqueeied out
of your pocket? The one the politicians
are falling all over themselves to "ad-
just"? It's part <J. that damnable tax
reform package.
Heat from the taxpayers has singed the
tails of-the politiCians-and they rush to
delay or temporarily reduce that $650
million tax take. They Jµ.ve the gall to
claim they are "saving" us $320 million
by temporarily repealing or reducing the
one-eent increase. How can the re-
main ing increase of $32() million be Con-
sidered a savings?
· Sooner or later the entire one-ctnt will
have to take effect permanently. The
buil.t-in excesses of state government de--
·mand it.
THOSE WHO suggest that the sales tax
increase is simply a trade-off with lower
property taxes sing a siren song. Within
a year or two the sales tax increase will
be a permanent fixture and property tax-
es will be about as high as ever. Ex-
travagance must be funded; if not now,
then tomorrow.
Agnew 'Hands Off' H;ilits
WASHINGTON -A con£idenlifll
telephone call from top \Vhite House aide
Melvin R. Laird to a Republican con-
gressional leader, warning him not to eo
all-out in defense of Vice Pres1dent Spiro
Agnew, is new and harsh evidence to
party professionals
or the depth of the
crisis that threatens
Ted Agnew.
In his telephone
caJI to Rep. John B.
Anderson of llllnois,
chairman of t h e
House Republican
O>nierehce·, · Laird
carefully specified
that he was talking not as a White llou.<:e
aide.
His message: don't get on a limb in the
Agnew affair, ~icularly with an all-out
deJense of the Vice President. Stay away
from the Agnew affair as far as possible.
Agnew is under intense federal in-
vestigation on charges of possible
criminal violations of various federal
statutes involving bribery, extortion, tax
fraud and conspiracy.
REPUBLICANS who know about the
Laird call to Anderson (described as
"astonished" by the warning) assume
that Laird and possible other party
grandee s have contacted other senior
Republicans with similar warnings. ·
Moreover, the Laird telephone call to
Anderson fits a pattern that has in·
furiated the Agnew camp. For example:
l . Before Agnew himself rece ived
formal notice from the Justice Depart-
ment that he was under investigation, At-
ty. Gen . Elliot Richardson reported (in
late July) to White House staff chief
Alexander M. Haig, Jr., with a briefing
'
[ J
, dent on record as ~o hts vice president's
innocence. . EVANS• NOVAK 4. The New York Times fronl·page " dispatch of Aug . 15. outlining charges
'-------------against Agnew in Vifid detail, is believed
on all aspects of the Case. On Aug. 2,
Agnew's attorneys received their letter
from the prosecutors.
2. A prominent television commentator
was privately cautioned by an official of
the Justice Department 10 days ago in
words similar to those used by Laird to
Andersen-:-don't· go · ·overboard for
Agnew; 'YOU may • up with egg .on yo~ la<f .. , ~ ~ • •
3. THE WIDTE .B~!JSE . has gone to
{mbarra.,1ng lengli! not 16 put the l're<i·
I
by furious Agnew allies to havl! emanated
from high levels or' the Justice Depart·
ment (who flatly Cleny it), not from
Maryland sour<!i;ls also implicated in the
charges against Angew.
It is not surpri~ing that allies of
Agnew, whose talents have sometimes
been grossly used bf· the President to ad-
v a.pee Mr. Nixoo's4interesls, woUld be
filled with dark •suspicior. over these in-
cidents. They reg3ro. them as proof of
neflitiOus under~nd administration
\11arfare against A(Cbew, partly to ease
the , President's ttiunense Watersate
burdens. •• THUS, in ttiis conspiratorial view -so
understandable ·oo the' part of Agnew in-
timates' -Mr. Nixon or Republicans Wic s
I •' · close to him are greasing the skids for
the ' hapless Vice President. Under the
25th Amendment to tbe,.COnstitution, they
are quietly preparing to nominate a suc-
cessor -most likeij John B. Connally.
.
It was Coonally .... who 1saved Mr. Nixon
from disaster in th: µll!ationary crisis of
August 1971. Perhaps Connally, th..
former Democrati~, governor of Texas
who turned RepubliCan at a moment of
maximum help to the Watergate-
beleaguered President last spring, can
help again.
To Agnewites, that fits the known fact
that Connally reeenUy can~elled \lis plans
for a long trip abroad and the Jesser·
known fact that ~me Connally friends
predict he will be back in the ad-
mini stration in October.
Meat Hoarder's Attitude Annoys Hou\sewife
BUT IN F Aql' the ;Laird warnings may
spring from something far less con-
spiratori al. They may be a nashing
signal of ca ution based not on any desire
to do in Agnew but on a rational and in-
formed judgment that Agnew is a goner.
Likewise, Richardson's July briefing of
Haig, before Agne"'! himself had .formal
notification, may alsei be explainable as a
rational act based iOll the President's
prior right to lmow .• ~'Is that normal?" a
JusUce Department ,,,,ficial repeated in
answer to our questkn1. "H~ll. not1*tg's
nonnal in this case. 1We're playing it by
ear."
Supermarket Emplo ye
To the Editor :
I reallze you have impo~nt tasks of
editing your newspaper witftou~ another
outside letter comlllg Jn the way or your
procedures, blll somelblng went on today
and I had to wttte someone and gel U of!
my chest.
I WAS In a local supermarke~ this
allemoon and stood behind one or the
employes who was having his merCban·
dise checked out bef..-. going bopl~. All
or his order was packages Md packages
or groUnd beef. Seventeen dollars worth
to be exact! Titer. lhe checker announced
that she thought that only two packages
per customer wero to be purcilased. His
reply was, "Don't won-y about It. It's not
'.:ll' problem." Well, maybe It isn't his problem, but
why Is It that when I must make do wil.h
my husband's lance corporaPs paycheck
lo• three boys, a hubby and myself (six
months pregnant), then I say I must put
up with hls "not my problem"?
I COULDNT do that and got away with
it and I feel he's no better than we are.
Sure, the meat situaUon is absolutely
gross, but until the matter ts somehow
rectified I wouldn't have gone against the
manager's wishes. . . We moved here via the Atanne Corps
from Pennsylvitnia in March and have
enjoyed the gorgeous change. of states,
llot even back home !hoy have me•t
goblems. So Is ii just ma that gripes too
hard or am I justified In feelln' oVel'
wrought? Well, thanks for listeolllg
anyhow. BARBERA Ml'l'CRELL
S ens ible Appraisal
To the Editor :
I want. to compliment and congratulate
the Daily Pilot !or printing the kind of
· · Watergate analysis that seems to have
escaped American journalists.
l refer, of course. to the guest com-
mentary of British columnist Angus
Maude In your Issue of Aug. 16. Those of
us who supJ>Ori President Nixon in his
crisis are deeply grateful to have this o~
portunity or reading a capable and
thoroughly sensible appralsal ol the
Watergate affair In an American
DeW$peper.
MARG.OT R. BARLEY
Efficien t GollernMent
To the Editor:
In response to the lettef) which ap-
peared in the Aug. 15 column rtferrlng to
the ror1hcomlng llwitington Beach ·elec·
tlon issues to make the positions, of city
clerk, city attorney and clly trcasurtr
appointive.
NO ONE con argue with the fact that
these issues have been defeated on
previous occasions by the voters of Hun-
tington Beach, however, I would lika to
point out the following considerations to
your readers. The initial reacUon Of the
people to such proposals Is the concern of
losing contlol of government. These posl·
Uon.s, at such times as vacancies may oc-
cur, would be filled alter exll'OSlvt In·
tarvlow by llldependonl boards, al the
Doesn't Thi1ik Shortage l s His Proble1n .
titution, ~rnography a n d certain
narcotics sfch as marijuana. Corruption
affects eveiYooe of us. This would be so
if there we~e no God. MAILBOX
Letters from readers are welcome.
N onnally write·rs should convey thtir
tnessages ·i11 300 words or Les&. The
rigltt to co11dense letter~ to fit space
or elin1i1mte li bel is reserved. Alt
letters must include signature and
mailing address, but name1 may be
withhtld on request if sufficient
reason is apparent. Poetf'fl will "not be
publlsh•d.
recommendation of the c i t y ad·
mlnistrator, subject to lbe approval of
tha elected city council, thus the real
power and responsibility still lies wlth
the elective body.
If public concern regarding the
performance of some appointed ln-
dlvidual exists, the elective body can be
peUtioned to req-a review of the prob-
lem and pressed to cause action to be
taken, if necessary. I would suggest that
lar more appointees have been fired
from positions suc:b as these than elec-
tives have betm recalled, the only means
available for removing an individual \vho
is not performlt1g duties in a proj)\!r man·
ner.
WHEN A CITY with " large a popula· lion as HwtUngton Beach, approximately
"'.000, has to d<lermine, at an elect1on,
\~1ho shall occupy that office for four
years, it is very difficult to assess the
technical capabilities of an individual
who is running for the position. Public
image or a good manager can, on many
occasions, be far more signiflcant in
deciding who should get the office than
the candidates ability to do the job. Con-
sequently the situation can be foreseen
\Yhcre the city can be "stuck" with poor
advice or capability for :'I four·ycar
period.
Currently, under the terms of our
charter, it an elective so chooses, he can
commit as little or as much of his time
as he wishes to his responsibilities. lo a
city of this size lbe business of govern·
ment is complex, the volume of in-
vesunent high and the day to day
p&perwork heavy. Surely to have people
in these offices who are directly
responsible to a boss who is present to
ensure that they are carrying out their
rcsponsibiUties in a proper manner and
bas the power to fire if they do not do so,
will 'ensure more efficient government.
I should point out this letter reflects
my own thoughts and does not necessarl·
ly express opinions of any other member
of the Charter Revision Committee.
BRIAN PARKINSON,
Chairman.Charter Revision Committee
No Vlcthn?
To the Editor:
No man ls an Island ; no man Jives
•lone. The eicperts are saying that there
are no vicli!N' ol the crimes of pro&-
•
I WOULq NOT want to have a pros·
titute in m~ family, would you? What ~f
your moth~ were a prostitute? What
would your chance be of becoming a self~
respecting citizen? It would be difficult
t.:> keep such a thing secret. \Vhat if it
were your sister, your daughter? Would
you feel like b vic tim or prostitution?
What of ~ography? Could II be hid·
den in the family safe from children? Not
likely. The person who feeds his soul on
pornography ill act differently towards
others. '
YOUNG AD TS teod to dlsrtgard the
well being clt others. Think of your
children. Sori\e men having be e n
discharged from the military tend to
bring the ~arr~cks talk home with them
v"ith no ttgalil to the effect on their
"'ives and chlldren. They often plan
recreation oo ~Wlday so that the chlld
will be dcprlv&O of spiritual training in
Sunday school ~nd church.
The fa1nlllt:!s of compulsive gamblers
arc all victims as are the fam1lles of
alcoholics. The .ambler or alcoholic will
often set up the friends of thei r wtves
and fan1ily fer a 10nn which wilt never be
paid back. This is beside usin" tho money
thnl sl-<iuld cloth~ and feed the famil y.
No \'\ctims indeed. We are all the vic-
tims of e-0rrUDlion. No man Lt an island.
JIM BOLDING
But such quiet and fational explanation
is understandably difficWt for Agnewites.
The mood In the Agnew camp has grown
isolated and embittered. Now, with word
being secretly passed; to "keep clear" ol
the Agnew affair, that mood will ifl..
tensify, with dangerOus implicatioos for
the Republican futuri' no matter how the
investiga tion !inally ends.
~ • OIANel ~OAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wrt<!, PllbUshtr
Thomas K,.tit4 Editor
Barbara Kreiblch
Editorial POQe ,Editor
The editorial ,pqv of t~ Dally
Pilot ·'seeks to lnfonq and stimuli.to
ttaden by pttsentilJ on tbls page
dlverse•c:ommentary on topics or in-
tettst by sYndJcattd c:olwnnlsts and
cartoonists, by pi:pv\dinc a for\iin for
readen' viewa and by'presenttrw thil
ne"'•spaper's opinion! and ideas °"
cu1'f'ent toplC!L The edltorl&l opinions
o1 the Dally Pilot &PPMJ' oal)J tn Che
editoriAl tolunin at tl\t 'tOP Of the
page. Opinion.$ txprtMtd by the <.'Ol·
wnni'ts and cartoonkls Md ietttr
writCl"ll art their own and no~
mrnt or thtlr v1n... by tbe Dally
Pilot -Id ht inltmd.
Friday, August 24, 1973
I
1 •
.
Friday, August 24, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5
State Death Penalty State 'Bonata:a',
Reagan Pens Tax
Rebate Into Law
BEACHCOMBER COFFEE SHOP
AND RESTAURANT
. He r ds for Approval 2633 We•I CoHI Hi9hwoy
N1wport Bt•ch
NOW OPEN
Under New M•n•gement
for lit , ~CRAMENT9< CAP)
'• Legislation bnpbJlng a man-
,.. datory death ~lty for 15 0 crimes appears headed !or
,• .. passage by California
~ Legislature despite a tc1n·
.. porary se tback in committee.
,; A bill decreqig death for
f • such crimes as murdering an
~ on-duty peace ~ officer and
multiple slayings could be
.-signed by GQy, Ronald ;-!e Reagan, by next v.•eek sup-S.! porters and op~nents say.
t THAT BE~E possible
when the Asseijlbly Criminal i;. Justice Comrriiftee voted 4-3
~ Thursday to sul:ftitute life im-
~ prisonment Without t h e
:;: possibility of ~role for the ~ ~ ."!
death penalty provision in the
bill backed by Reagan . Then
the committee voted 6-1 to
send the amended bill to the
Assembly floor.
C a p i t a l punishment sup-
porters -conceded to be a
majority in the Assembly -
said they '''ill try to amend the
death penalty provision back
in before the floor vote is
taken.
··1 think there \\'ill be a
death penally bill that passes
the legislature this year."
regardless of what t h e
Assembly Criminal Justice
Committee does, said
chairman Alan Sieroty (0.Los
Angeles).
Sunday, August 26, 197J
Showtime: 7:30 p.m.
$5.00 per person
Monte Carlo Room
(no one under 21 admitted)
Tickets: All Ticketron Agencies or
Del Webb's Newporter Inn
f?J~~
• Sieroty, an ardent foe of
capital punishment, added in
an interview that he is not at
all sure the measure would be
identical to the original form
of the , bill by Sen. George
Deukmejian (It-Long Beach).
which his committee altered
Thursday. If the Assembly
makes any changes in the v.1ay
the bill passed the Senate, it
\Vould have to go back to the
upper house for concurrence.
....
ASSEl\IBLY REPUBLICAN
floor leader Robert Beve rly of
Manhattan Beach said in an
interview he will sponsor the
move on the floor to amend $721 MILLION BILL
the Deukmejian bill back to its __ Go_v._R_oe_g_•_n_'s_O_K __
original form. He said Door
action will be taken Monday or
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Calilomians begin reaping a
one-time tax bmanza Oct. 1,
getting back a total of $721
million in state treasury
sw-plus .
That figures out to nearly
$35 for every man, woman and
child in the state.
GOV. RONALD Reogan call·
ed it the largest state tax
rebate in the nation's history
when he signed the bill lntD
Jaw 'lbursday.
The reverse Dmv of taxes
was made pc&ible by an
tmexpected treasury surplus of
Thursday.
Beverly, who needs 41 votes
to succeed, said "I feel we
have the votes. I am op--
timistic the votes \rlll be
Fire Fighters Stop
I
there."
The tower house has 48
Democrats and 31 Republicans
Blaze in I ts Tracks
with one vacancy. Beve rly By The Associated Press
said he estimates he may lose Fire fighters have contained
one or two 'Republican votes at a wind-driven brush fire that the most and will pick up 12 to
15 Democratic votes.. threatened homes near Reno,
Sieroty sa id he felt there Nev. while other crews worked
might be an effort on the floor to complete a fire line around
td 'alter various segments of a huge 6-day-old blaze in the n,oonejian m e a s u r e . Bev~~lf .. ~eed foes "certainly Northern c.aJifomia.
would· ' try that tactic.
''I can·t understand how
they saved all those homes,"
he said. '1It was a super-
coordinated, heroic efiort that
stopped this from becoming a
major disaster. 'Ibe men just
held their gl'OOll(I, let the fire
come down to them and then
just beat it out."
1829 million buill up over the
past two years.
Reogan insisted the mohey'l,,_iii
be returned to the taxpayers
rather than be spent on new
programs. The tax rebate will
take two forms.
First, the state sales tax will
be rolled back by one penny on
BREAKFAST -LUNCH -DINNER
Open 7 AM to 8 PM -7 Day• a Wnk
FREE
the dollar on Oct. 1 for six
months. It had gone from five
to six percent in most of
California July I.
NEXT SPRING, the state's
more thar, 6 million income
taxpayers are to get cuts
r~gfrom20percentto100
percent off their tax bills due
April 15.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
LECTURE
The Republican guvernor
said Tmrsday he won the tax
rebate over the opposition of
"would-be big spenders" in the
legislature.
Now, he said, the voters or
the state have a "once-in·a-
tifetirne" opportwlity to cut
their taxes permanently by
approving his tax control pro-
gram at a special statewide
election Nov. 6.
"Then they can fmish the
job already started by voting
to limit and reduce their tax
burden permanently,'' Reagan
said.
by
Miu Patricia Tuttle
of San Francisco
' Saturday • August 25
11 a.m.
EDWARD'S CINEMA THEATRE
FASHION ISLAND
Child care will be provided
at Second Church -3100 Pacific View -CdM
BY SENDING out an THE NEVADA fire, ignited
amended version of the bill, in three spots Thursday by a
the committee averted a ma· passing locomotive, charred Sketch of Rapist Finished
jor challenge to the autbQrity 350 acres and destroyed a SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -neatly on his left side, freckles of Assembly Speaker Bob barn and tv•o sheds in
Spo"tored ~v Firtt A"d Sec:oncl
Churc:h of Chritt Sc:lenlitf,
N•wport l••c:h
Moretti (0.Van Nuys), who Anderson Acres, nine miles An officer bas drawn a on his face, a l 1A-inch horizon·
appointed the committee and north of Reno, said Bill portrait of 8 man they believe tal scar above his right eye at !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
opposes the death penalty Johnston of the Nev ad a repeatedly raped and beat 8 the hairline and a small scar l~
hl·-··lf n I had ed t Di · · f F try 25-year-old woman in a hotel .. ~ · ever Y vow o V1Sl(l(l O C1'eS · of about 1,~ inch above the
attempt the rarely used Ten homes were directly in room Aug. 14· N l E
parliamentary maneuver of the path of the charging fire, Inspector Hobert Ne Ison right side of his upper lip. ear y veryone
withdrawing a bill from com-blown by winds 30 miles per drew the sketch with descrlp-Police believe tie also may
mittee by a majority floor hour, Johnston said. Many tions from the victim and a be the same man who raped, ' vote - a tactic regarded as a f a m i I i e s t e m po rarily cab driver. beat and burned a 23·year-old L o OO
direct challenge to the house evacuated their homes while Potice•aidthemanis5-feet· woman in. hotel room at .. .,.,,,..ns to Lan rs ! '
t~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~iiiii.:.~le~ad~e~rs~ru~·p~~------~IJ-400;;:;m;en~wo~r~ked~to~sto:p~the:.:on:·_J9~and~~w~e~ighs~1~60;·J"~e~has~~cur~·_JFis~·~he~r~m~an~'~s~Wh::a:ri~~la~s~t1__~~~::~1-t;~~~~~~~~~~~~~--_.... . coming flames. ly, reddish brown hair, parted February .
.. ,·
.,:
.•.,.. '·
.~ ... ....
•
I•
•
GllAT FOil
llEAKFAST
CANTALOPES
6/$100
LARGE FIESH
IELL PEPPERS
2 lbs.o
SOLID LOCAL
TOMATOES
Rip•
Chony
Tomatoes
10 hltets
I lb. Bag CARROTS ...... 2 bags I 9c FRESH SPINACH ····-· I Oc bunch
RUSSET POTATOES . _ 2 lb./25c ITAUAN PRUNES .... 19c lb.
"AnENTION RESTAURANT OWN ERS":
Take edvantage of our buying power. The Produce Mart will save you
.. Money" and supply you with the freshest produce. Large or small
restaurants, qive us a call. We deliver FREE.
• I
INGARDIA . BROS. PRODUCE MART
VICTORIA .,
!/
'I ' .
!I
WE WELCOME 2140 PLACENTIA \~ FOOO STAMPS
at Victoria
' GALASSO'S 1TALIAN s BR EA O-FRESH DAILY COSTA MESA
FRESH CORN & FLOUR 645-1365 TORTILLAS
"
I -hungiy tiger
;,:•:• RESTAURANT
• AllD •tA,000 OTlflt lat
NEWPORT BEACH (ONLY) m 1. -Coal! Hlghw1J • Cott for rollf¥1tlono (714) tn.ssM
•
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Dear Customer,
In regard to our recent letter requesting the addition of
your name to our permanent mai ling list we would like to
encourage you to return the card enclosed with our letter.
Even if your name an d address was correct we MUST
RECEIVE THE CARD BACK in order to place you on our own
mailing list.
If you've misplaced the card or if our letter was lost on its
way to you, please can us and we'll add yo ur name to our list.
Phone 644-5070.
To those who have returned the cards ... Thanks very much
for contributing.to such a tremendous response. You've helped
us to serve you better.
Sincerely,
~ ~~!> ./f5il.l ~
Representing At-Ease Management Staff
44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070
\
ft OAI LY PILOT SC
ll.S. Trade
Export Surplus
Shown for July
WASlllNGTON (AP) -The
Untted States recon!ed Its -
oM trade 1111plus ot the ,._,
in July us foreign demand for
!ho country's goods caollnued
at record high levels, the
Collins Gets
Continental
System Bid
Collins RJidlo has ...OOved a
aintract r r o m ConUnentaJ
Airllneo for a fS00,000
AuU>maUc Call DlstrlbuUon
l)'lt<m.
eomm.rce Deportment said today.
'l1le -IUJ"P)us of exports over
imports for tho month was
•1os.1 million compared with a
deficit of IU.5 million Jn June.
EXPORTS IN July totaled
almost $5.81 billion. a new
record. and imports totaled
11.76 billion. down sllghtly
from the June figure .
The flOS.l million trade
surplus was the s e co n d
nnnthly surplus this year and
ooly the second time that tile
United States has had a trade
SU!l>IUS since September 1971.
The country bad a surplus of
$1115.3 million in April this
year.
The improvement in the
country'• trade picture so far
this year bu been substantial,
due in part to recent devaJua.
tiom of the U.S. doU.r and atso to growing foreign de-
• •
lnlWlaUon ell the •r•t.m ts
sdieduled for March, 111'/I.
CoUJns Radio was selected
from • field of 22 vendors for
the project which will provide
Continental Airlines with the
I 1 r s t computer~troUed,
digital-switching ACD system ..
Collinl will ins!JlU the system
at Continenlal's ll oust on
Jlt;servation Center, replacing
the """"'t elcctromedianictl ~CD.
mand !or U.S. g oods . Lady
espectslly brm products and and the Trash
machloery and I r a n • P o r t Pretty Lisa Erickson displays the new Sira Fuel
eqwpmeuL Pellet which a Los Gatos, Calif. firm says it bas de-~ country'1 a~ger trade veloped to turn the nation's garbage and solid
-t"'" probably will help the wastes Into a clean, pellet-sized fuel. Sira lnterna-
U.S. dollar whose value J:ias tional, Inc. says the fuel \vill aid the nation's dwin·
been under attac~ In foreign dling coal reserves.
The Collinl ACD system wiU
be used to handle Coo-
dnen1a.1'1 reservations and in-
!ormaUoo ctUs throughout the
IOUthem Uoli.d States, lo ad-
dition to handling PABX func-
tJom and m a nagement
r<p>rtlog.
Container .
Order Set
Plant Industries Inc. ol
Anaheim has received an
order for il! SELVAC
preswrilied container from
Slrickland Laboratories o f
1'Sempbi1, Tenn.
The onler calls for I0,000
units llt'beduJed for delivery in
Nowmber' for • t e s t
11\111<.Uog -ram.
01 It USID
MllCIDa ON
Dllr\AY
mooey martets this year.
EXPORTS. WHICH are run-
ning 33 pem!lll ahead of last
year, also should mean n,ore
Joi>! f0< the American woriter.
The Commerce Department
estimates tbal every $1 bUl.ioo
in ezporU provides 72,000 jobs.
Imports allo .... running
ahead of Wt year's level, but
only about • -~ not nearly u big u the growth in
aporfl.
The figures on July trade
"""' adjusted f<ir seasonal
variations.
The Uoli.d States had 1n
over-all deficit or more than fl
billion in 1972. which followed
a 1971 deficit of about $2
billion. the country'• first
trade deficit lo """"'t history.
The Commerce Department
said that for the first seven
months of im, trade was in
deficit about fl03.6 million,
compared to a deficit ell
almost $.1.11 billion during the
ume poriod of 1972.
11' 1llE TRKND cootlnu<s
Unulh the year, the ddicit at
the end of Im """1d be about
$1.% billion.
Exports so far this year
hive been at an annual nle o(
•. I billion, compared with
111'12 exporta of $19.2 blJlion.
Imports this year have been
at an annua1 rate of $M.G
billion, compared with total
imports of f55.5 biUion in lm.
The Ciommerce Department
trade figures showed sub-
stantial increases in exports
during July in manufactured
goocb , machinery and
tran!port equipment and food am live animals.
% •• 11de,tslts11 $110,000
for si11n11th to 1ne year
The number 11 .. ese accounts that we
can acce,t is limited
WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES
ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS
FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SER\/E YOU IN
Arca411 •c«ritM L• Cmc:enu •a,.,..
11a G1r•1M •comMl'll' LnA.,...s IZJ ~'" a.rn1rdi••
·-C1t10fl P1rk Dewntv (2) MsctMey M Whhti.tr
fin AiiitlD11I Ofticn i1 lllrtHnl Cllil1ni1
Pl11sa11Hill S11..._
(lllllilll SHI)
f11t11C llJ 'llllibl1Yin Salllu
~OPEN NIGHT & DAY
. and Saturdays
•
Cell (213) 923 -9601 .:~
orsoe 111t white peges • , ·
: for your nearest office -
ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION
•
Beef Supplies Rise
As Stores Take Loss
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Industry officials say at least
three packing plants have re--
opened here to custom -
slaughter s t e e r s from
aupermarket chains ~ will
ARCO Told
•
Price Hikes
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
CJst of Livlng Council told
Ailantk: Rlcblield Co. (ARCO!
'lbur3day that it must justify
to the government tbe recent
increase in its prices of
beating oil and gasoline.
The move could become the
first major enforcement ac-
tion under the Nixon ad-
ministration's new Phase 4 an-
ti-infiaUoo program.
1be council said ARCO in·
creased Its wOOlesaJe pri<:es or
home beaUng oil and gasoline
by two ce11.ts a gallon on Aug.
20. The increase would mean a
one-oe11t·a-ga1loo hike in the
retail price, t.be CX>UDcil said.
Standard Oil
Draws Slap
In Senate
SACRAMENTO (AP I
Standard Oil of California has
received a fiscal slap in the
face from lhe state Senate
because of a company letter
urging more recognition of
Arab aspirations in the titiddl e
East.
On a Z>S vote Thursday, the
Senate approved a resolution
that woold 1ostruct the state
Department of Ge ner a I
Services to !hint aboot buying
gas from someone besides
Standard Oil.
Tax on
Delta Sued
By Widow
Of Victim
Fuel~
Gas flogs to Cost More
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nixon admm1Stra·
lion is studying the idea of a tax to penalize poor
ruel economy in new cars, officials said today.
INTERIOR UNDER Secretary John C. Whitak·
er sa!d such a tax would be designed to enrourage
auto purchasers to buy fuekonservlng cars that get
plenty of miles per gallon.
Wbltakor said the study was still In Its very
early stages.
He said consideration was being given to a
tax on engine horsepower or vehlcle weight or some
romblnalion of the two, or even a tax pegged dlreot·
Iy to gasoline mileage as calculated by the Envlron·
mental Protection Agen cy.
Thursday. the EPA announced a voluntary pro·
gram for the labeling of new cars with their tuel
econom y performance as ra ted in EPA's antipollu·
lion tests.
AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION is already regu·
lated by federal Jaw. but the administration has
been Increasingly concerned with gasoline mileage
as well, because of lhe lnc.reasing scarcity of petro-
leum .
Complete New York Stock List
Friday, August 24, 11J7l DAlLV PILOT J J
'
I
War • IS • PUllUC NOTICl!l PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC:NOl'ICI: l!UBLIC NOTICE
I!' •ICTITK)US IVSINISS l'ICTrTIOUS •UJINIU SU-.7' ,ICTrTIOUS IUSOll.Sl MAM8 STATliMENT NA.Ml STATaMIMT PICTrTIOVS IUSINflS .. AM. JTATtM.llfT
TM "°''°""'"' ,..._. .,. folno Tl'of toUowfng f*tol'I I• tlol'llt M lntU Tiit (Olr.!:'..: "='~r• OOll'IO TM tollewlftt '*"" I• doll19 lM.lalntta \ 111.t"nett •1: 11: tll.lflM .. .-: I II!
1 At;AOIEMY 0 11 \,.IMA lAJM. 11°"2 J, $. GILLETTW .. A.SSOCIATu. PO NATlOP<tAWAK A$50CIA'tn. )OOl A.J.W. 'E"NTl:IU•t1;IS£S, I $ o t t
:I ~7:tl¥~1, H\11111"°torl '*tll" C~lt. ~.1'=26' ,.,. ... Col.lllrry a• or ... llfdht11 ... ._..... W ll !If. -~ Ill ~;c"'(.~ 'll' = e:,, Or~~r.
I !ti(... """"''' ~,. ... -.,.. J.ck k~ Om.ttt. 3030 C9111'tlry COtt• MeM1 c.111on1r. n.u $lf'l;M, cYortAt. CA ~ II N~ ltl,di, c.i11. ""° 1 ci1111. co.i. ... "' "'626 1• J.t.K CONSTttV(ffON c o .. 81 Al~n J. Wth1btr9, ni:io Vin• W tN. WASHINGTON (AP) -1be Gen. Jack Catton of spending ,.,. ..,, 1 » ~ u univ ll'h 1• •t• Jif'fl't'f .,.. \,lbti'Mjln. V'l'O Qutdl wrr. 'thll 11U1lnttt ll ~idea by •• In. Rtdlllll Awia.. Suite Jl6. E'PllM\ICM ltt, Cy.,,.... ~ to630 .. !~· GUOl•flont :or:: II~ \1 \'I RM Pl•• ... ln lhln ~ l.MUM &••ell, C1ll!. J1'!1 dl"4dllll Cotti Mt\I. C... nu! Thl1 tMltifl'ltM It conduc:ltd b~ •11 In· General Accounting Of flee bu $43(),000 to ref Urbish the je t he !~'1.::.1 llll ~'°" N:f '°" ~11'i' :m • "•"l••'I •,.", Hil m: l:~· ~I ltlfl til,ltllllM 11 c...OUC:I"' 11'1 • ....... J~ s. Gllletll 2. N~tl u-....ioaur~· ComlMtflY. 4'1~°'*'· -~1... OHi.,.. '-T .... • 111~1p. Tiii• •l•tlt!len1 wu 111ec1 wttn t111 Coun· s.10 w11.n1r1 •1vi11 .. s11111 11es t..OI AMn J , w11ntM1ro reported to Sen. William Prox-uses u head of the Air Force:"' 11\.,endOV:.""' ~=:. 1 v. 1!tl =~1 ~x1 1,'lil !~ 0::.,
l TW• t.r.=:n~·w~~i'.:i1~11h 1111 C!Ollflo ;"1i'.,k o1 Or•"ll• C011nty on A••1 1' ~~:;1~~c!.ici':'., w A Gtner11 ,., T~\!,~·~ .. c~~ty w: ~;.~t mire to.Wis.) that an Air l.og1stlcs Command. c~~ r°""~··~ 1 ':h ME~ 11~ J'.Z =~ c~ ·~I: l ui;rnc!~
ty Clll'I( Ot' °"'~ (OV<'lty Oii August 1.51 ... t1"$ ,..,,l\tt'1tllp. ' ltn, Fo-e gene I spe I -o 000 . !i (E•1-rn ~:ir h v; 29 R-Fnf ·~ I • ""'"' ~ I l'7l. ..__ l'ublltl!td Orillft"' Cotti Ollty Piiot, JAi( CONS'taUCTION co.. fltnlJ '... ra . n ~1 • U1 • • I Thi _... F w, ''"•'',"• •«rr Pll If\ UMrt "•
I " ..---~· A~t 10, 17, ~. 31, 191' u...n • C.tltornl1 C'Crlo<•llon OOltOOfll. •••I.OS & •OLANO public funds to convert his -do not lllCl!Jdt fl ~ Riii SIOY 11 t Ii$ BIC •~ 1Put1H111od Orat!Clt cooi,1 01 Y Pl~. •Y: JoM Konwber. Pr11IOeflt 4tl'Onleyt ''Law .-.:rcraft Into a p lush ex-·tlve ''GEN CA'ITON has played m.rki;p, mertc 111 '•' • ,4 "~ S•fll Adi m 1\'I us Tril l. Avg11U 11, '" ,,, 1-"d .StPltmblr 1, GIMr•I PM111ff' nn ................. ,,.,.. .... ""-U • zi::n ~ "mm1.. ., vn Sll•m Cp ""' Jl'li l1:1V Fd• 1 Avo. 11. 1•, 31 •NJ '"°'· 1 m+.n PUBLIC NO'n.CE Thi• tt•IMllnt ..., tlltd will'I lh• Coufl• LU....,. <A Mn1 je t. fast and loose wfth public ~11~~r' ~~ U:: ,.It ~ "t s~·::s~ ~D~ v~ ~
\' 11 Clerk ot Or•not COlltl!Y Oii A.1191111 1, T..._.. (fl"1 IJl-37Jt p · who ted lrtl!Mctlona. lliUl• Ml Yli • V SO ·I PUBUC NOTICE 1 1tn 11'\llMl.n.d or•'* CM1t 01!ty PHot. roxmtre, reques funds and probably violated 1N~""'\"L.S • x~ .. ·, c l~ c~ 1~~ ldl6! •~ vrnc-DYk • ITATEMDfT o• AIAHOONMENT •·tn1J A~t 3. 10. 17, 2A. ltn 2400·13 lhe report, earlier accused Al F ~u ,, aJd .AM ~!Tiii a°"'~ fly. tt-~l. c; 7V. V•" ShC:k -------------OJI' USE OP PUbllllwld Orll'Qe Co.11 O•ily PllOl.j--------------1 r orce regu .. ons, s 'IJ/o11~r;rr.~. ::WM.. I 12i.I. Scrl!IP$ H 17~ Iii.', VICIOtl $t • ..,n PICTmout 1us1Mns NA.Mt AV!illllt ·:1, 10. 11. :M. 1'1'3 fm.n PU8U. C N011CE ------------! p · "H -~"d be 1 k Y•tl c • m ll" k:rt11to 1 f," 2 •\"° '" NOT1C.f TO CJIEOITOll:S Tiie lollOWl(lfl ptrwi• ~·v• •bl~ PUBUC NOTICE roxnure. e IWIUW AC\ttlll'I~ ~ 1 Hw•tlff' c · ... VI St l Wrld "'23\41 V Wll $1:
SUJ'lalOll C:OUllT 01" TME tn. 'Uff llf ""'tlc11llo1H 1>111lntU llll'l'Hl•-------------·1·---;:::::::::::;--,:::::::=:-::---1 -----.:....:....:....:.:.:.:.:... ___ I Aft11. 1 • Im W•I 11,,. '"" S11 Merell sv. 1•:v. Vol $llOOI STATI! OF c~·.•,••o·.·.·.·.·.· JJ•1· H•l11r.r H•lm.tltlng ~t 101 Mlln st.,•-l'lCTITtoUS IUSIMl.SS severely reprimanded IS an Alie• l'.I :in I I Nucl :If -~ Svm1str 24 » W11h NO THI COUNr• B•lbOll ,,~. PUBUC ND'n,CE NAM• STATl:Ml!MT FICTIT•ou' -, 1 'II•. \4 nore• ~ I S•v111 Uo 29\li 30 . Wt•l• Mt No. A.J'700I TM f\(ll!lous tl<.l•lntM n•mf relttrtd to Thi lollow'I---b doln• 1>111lna11 USIMftt ex.ample to other big spen&rs All114 .. ltn nta1 1: 61 s '"-Slit/Ir Co l~ F Wfl(mn. I E$llll 111 AqTHUJI JOSEPH MARTl!ril, 1~ Wit f1Ltd In ar-111111 Coimtv Oft Jv1y . .., ..... ··~ MA.Ml! ITA,,TEMfMT A/IYfl I ~~ ~' n11rc n ~ ,.. Shorew 6VI W.VO I
Oe<:111od. 13. 1m. MOTIC• oF TltUSTEl!'S SALE ll: ALA RENTAL.$. 2052 NawpOfl Blvd .. ~s:he fclloWlllfl ""'°" 11 doi ng b\11ln1s1 in the mllltary." ~A~~tl J~"' ,::m~1um' I~ 1•1~ ~~'::''fo11 ll k =r'wi
NOTICE IS Hell'EBY GIVEN to tl\t J•net 1.oulw Rickey, 2tJt Ot'11111e T.S, No. SA.M SU o u!!"1s, ........ r. Ml. k Cost1 Mnl nm . LY"' CRAFT ···Lo•. -Bol·· Proxmire •• ,.d the con· ~mm•1, I:! '411 ln,, .. ,w,• ··~" '!""' Slnd P•D lAVi 'I W•I~ ,. creclttor• ol 1ne .eiov1 nil'l"lld 41Ktdtnl Aw., C.0!11 Mtsa On $1e>tembtr 2', lt,~. 1 : 0 c °' EH1•btt11 A Hwtett1 117 ,hi St " """ -· .. ~... I ''"' o "'° 1 11111 •JI 11en or" nt.wlng Cllil'l'll IOlll'l•t fM Jll-Cltttord GIJllon, 1700 Bt1bOI P.M .. Wll.LIAM BEZUH LY, illl dUl\I I~ Ciqli •Mell t'J.,'2T ' "' Ave,, We•lm4n•tert Cl. tu.as· Am Fin.cl I ~ ~ r.it~ R ,_ SOl(lrl ll~ 1" llU Pf
••Id c1eceo:ien• ••e l'9Qu1,...., 10 fUt 111em, BN4 .. 8111xw1 P•fl, PClinl'l<I Tru•'" \llldtr •1'111 ovrsuant 10 Thli 1>11tln.ss 11 conducted by •n in· Rl(l'ltrd M''""" Schratd1r. ?162 gressional a.gency's r e po r t a.m F11rn 1 1 Jame• 1m 11 s .. ntllY 1 16\.t l'v. W1tf.itb n
with Ille nK•U•rY ~. In 11\t oflk• Tl'l11 bJ.osl~Ut WI' condvcllld 1)'f 1 Dted of Tru&t n!>eorded Now1nio.r '· 1963. dlvld11tl. Newmen, Apt,.!, H1.1nt!ngton Biid!, Ct. CODfinned hiS charges that ~~lr1Gr:: lm~\; "'« j:,fn r~ 13 1:~ ~1t Nlt'I~ k~ 2~~ ~f11tll'l'lrcll
ol th1 clerk ol '"e il)Ove 1n111~ court « P't1lllr1hip. In book "'9, P•ll'I 439, o1 OHlcl•I R.cord1 EllUbettl A Houltlle 926.47 A Tel '!"!: I( I St 1~, w 1111 H
10 11r1sen! tt>rm, with '"'' 1*:1$$ll"Y Jin Rickey lfl 1111 olflc• ol lhl Cou.-ty lilt(Order Ill This •l•l•menl W.I llltd with 11\t COii"· 'This busln•11 1• conduettd bv 11'1 ln· Catton installed 8 specially ... ~ w~ ~ K: ~r c lt~ ~:~k a'~ '1~ '1·~ Wlfll PkT v~hers, IO lhe under!IOflfd 1t ttll offlc. Jrltttl Orltlfll County, St1t1 ol Ctlltornlo Wll.L IV Ci.rt of Or1nge COi.iniy on August 1 dlvldualifl h d M S h designed galley With a range ~~~o'o"lo Ill 'i' K~o,.•1•~o 1' •"'··~ 1iV. Slrl'!I Tee 1 i,..., I Wiit PLI of W!llltm L. 011r1nle, UOl Westctlff Or., Pvbl1slled Or1rigeo Cofal Oflly Piiot, SELL AT PU8l.IC AUC:T!ON TO 1m ' Thi I c er I ' c 1[.*"1 f nd sh • •P'llaa I '' ia .. lO\.') SUP'I" Et t~• Ilk Wood Llh S!1. 3U, NeWl)O(T &c1ch, Cl t 2660, whieh AllQllll 2 .. 31 •nd September 1 14 HIGHEST BtOOER FOR CASH (P4JYlble lft1Ut I s .iemen wes td w th !he CC\ln. reezer a tra compactor iPS j'W l•'• '!'""kt• 11 '\Ii Synlft' Cll 11 \4 11~ World $11
II tl'll Pl•<• of bl.lt!MU ttf '"' Ulldersl;n41d 1m ,;. .. n II """ of Slit Jn ltwlU1 rnot141'1 of 1111 P11btltl>ed Otlf!Ot Coast Dilly Piiot, ,.,. Clerk \It Or&flQI Covflty on Ju~ 30, In the I Tw di "·t Ardn N'. •• It• .. F~ 1 ' l:W. Stlbo F<I •:vi s~ WrlQhl w rn •II m1tter1 per111n11111 111 thl "'''' of Un1ttd Stetfll et ll'le sovlll ftronll en-AUO!AI 10. 11 2A. 31 191'3 2'39·13 \973. Pane. 0 vans u ia Arrow r 15"' lt.'4 Kt.,, Cuat J\lo 1~ T1nv Crp 3V. ,,._ xom11 Cp said 11eceo1111, wHtiln four months '"'r lrtnc. of tlll old c-tv COllrlhOuse ' • '171U f Id d Int ..... .a.. A Id 1 T1~x Y.Slo Fri t~e flrat pubUC111ort ot lhll notice. PUBLIC NOTICE lcic:•ted ,, Slflll A.flt •nd SYtlmort Pub1!1htl: Or1ng1 Co.st Delly Piiot 0 own 0 ~ were A~~ 'coi ,,., ''"' K:tst Int l•l'I ~ 'KMVi 105\.'r l leolr Co
o11t1.1 Julv 31, 1m. s1ree1,, 1n 111e cny o1 Sent• An1, PUBLIC NOTICE August 3. lo, 11, it, 1m 23'2·73 added he said .a.ti Ga L, fm fl""~~ 1Cf 1jit i:v.i T111lor w '' 49\.'t ll11111 urti
lhlTH L. FOLICIE"RT 1 ?U3t C•llfornl• alt rlgh!, Title 1nd Interest con·•----,.,,-c,---------1---,;;;;;;,;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:----' , Hiii Trn t •l'I KOl'f ·Pr 2 "' 22~ E~ec11trl• llfl 1111 wm of NOTICE TO CRl!DITOll:S v1Ytd to 11nd now 11e1d bV film IJl'lder MJldl FICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS PUBUC NOTICE "A sink and cabinet cost '{~ ¢1'° 1.14 1t..., 1Cr111111r t li!I t A I
lilt llbllvi! "'"'" CIKtdtnl SUJ'£Jtl01t COURT OF THI! °'" of Trvst In lh• pr~ sfluited ln NA.Ml STATEMENT $4,966 and three bathrooms ·:lft' F~ ' ,:~ kL ... "'m.,.EI Lt ~y, 10 Most ctive.
Wll.LtAM L. DURANTE STATI OF CALIFOkNIA ~ Mid COl.lflly ind Sltll dttct'lbed 11' T f I I I <lol I FICTITIOUS ltltlNl!SS e.1own l. '~ ;1' l ltl Wnlcllff Of., 1111114 THE COUNTY OF ORANGE l.ot SO ol Trtcl 4355, In !hi City ol he OI ow no P'l"MMI s ng bus MS$ NAME STATl!MINT were installed for $2,~," said =~~VI~ fl~ $4\.; t:::it ~~ l~
M•w,orl •••Cl'I, C• nut No. A•76fl7 Coste Me .. ,., shown3'f • :·r ~tc:d· ll: WESTERN RA TONICS IWl Mcflld Tiit loUowlng p«$D11$ 1r1 doing the senator. "Carpet•na and Bink R';I $ I I ,IWI¥ c 3S ).lo,\ NEW YOll:IC IUPIJ -The 10 iloat Tll•plleN: 010 "5•HM ESTATE of DELIA C. DAVIS, 1k1 tel lfl book l6a, Ploes lo ' l'I( v \If, den ~ .. llt A2 T ti C f26IO , bus111e5t •s: --o 8 H U cr ~ V. ~ ICll o lfCICk tr .. .cl an thl OTC A'Wk•t
AllDmtY !Ir l!•Kvtrtx DELIA DAVIS •k• 0 C DAVI$ Dlct15-ot Ml~&neOuS MtpS, rtc:ords of JoM Pur(111 U115'21 'W!1U1ma. Tutlln WESTERN CONSUMER PRODUCTS, fabric in Air F orte blue were a:~I F V. L1!!.1,t •P.11 1'2,. ... ~. Thu~v .: 1UD011ed by NAStt•
Pul)lld1e<l Orenge Cots! Diiiy Piiot. td . . . ' T~! .. ,,, ... ~' .. ",·,,c,',111,~~110·,,., ··m-C1. 92'$0 ' ' 33U1 Marina Vlsll, Otflll Point, Cal!!. dded t t f $3 000" 81vleu t-.ri ~ -Y V~-1141 •.• ,, , ,, ,, .. ,,_ ·-n ,.,, '"' ..... ....... .... ,, a a a cos o , . e"u·· , ··-\' (tlrno ,_ 1\\ ,,,, orr , ,,-,M. , . · •• u ' ' • -.. '~ ._r NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to flll "-••••<I••, If ,-, -'"' -I •• _... Th11 bllr.l,,.SI II C'llndUC'" b• •n In· ~•6 ·-.-. .... -t" -~ "" '"' "'' "' "'' ·-,., ,. B F c k 1-• y I 811tlfl 'i'' "'ll!1 nc:: ...,. .. Pet1n Of Git lJt.300 ' •'Al 1-. crtdltors of tlM •'!Ove namtd decedent described above 11 purported 10 bl: 131)4 dlvldU1I. . · o tr. ,. ork$h re, Garden , f einllv • 2•14 2S\ 11111 CW• WI 3'\lo SoUfh Flncl 1UOO 3'1) 11 f ..
!hit •II ptrMllS hav•l'l9 ~l•lm• ltl•lnst thl l.ondond•rrv St .. Cllll• M1$1, CA. 1913 Grove. Calif. '2MI THE PLANE 1S a our--B11t Prd 41 ' L.Odlt• 50'4 51 '4 Mollollt Hlll'M n;· ""' M .
511ld dtellden! •r• raciuorld to Ill• lt\em, The undtt1lgntl.I TrUslH dlstlalms lf!Y Johfl Purcell Pettr G. C.trlltr, 332t1 M1rln1 Vl$1&, eng1·ne converted C l35 jet '•"'' 4.~ ",'h .,le llr#t .. ". ",-.... ~ ....... ,. '0'11 lllKtl ' 2"1~· 'nlllo ','~ ·--·----.,--,.------With !hi ntelUlrv vauc:h1r1, ln Ille oltlce lltblllty for '"Y lncllrl'eclnt ss ot the !lretl This slatement wes lllld wlll'I th1 COUfl· Dana Point, Call!, 92629 tDO ..... lo\ ·a ,,... .. .. •
I 6ft7• of !I'll Clerk.of 1111 •tiove entllled court, or eddress ilfld other common deslonillon. lt tv C1trk ot Or1f1Qe Counly on All(lu11 J, Biii E. Workm•n •flll OMn Workm•"· tanker. ~!~ ~s 11~ ll\t .!, :.•tr ,:" JI\ T.~•1,_0ffco ,",,,,.. ... ~ s,14 :!
NOTICI! TO CRl!OITOltS to Pl"fleflt tntm, with !he nte•P•rY lnY il'IOWn lllft'eln • lf·t7"4 25032 Rudolph C!r., E1 Toro, Celt!. '2630 ""'"-GAO sat·d "le money for a,Ob .. Evnt i!lio 19~ ,.,,1~ Fr< ''"'" 1,, .. C~<-L.,,• 0,,, -""' 20-,, 2., 1,, SUPEll:IOR COURT Of THE voutl'ltr .. 10 11'11! llfldtrslgllld •I Phllllps .. S~ld Mil wilt i,e mlde, twt w!lhO\ll Publlslled Or1n11e Coest Olll'f Piiot, Jerry L. Lene. 1!S13 Brm1flllt Ave., 'ltC w N :jg "' I< .,... '" '"'' ,,,.. ..,....,., "'" , .. STATS OF CALIFOll:NIA FOR Ni111J11ht0fl, Attorneys 11 L•w, 150 Sc. c;oveninl OI" warn11"tv express or lml)lled Au;ust 10. 17, 2•. 31, 1973 24«-1'3 G1rotn1, Ct tlf, 902._, the 1. f B~ll T j~~ 121~ ~rye ~ ~~ ~ T111 Cam Ilk "1,100 3nt. »"' ·· ·
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE PrOIH<f Ave .. Tustin, c1. 9'611!, Which 11 r1g•nllng tUle, ~stl.'lon, or en'. This bustneu 11 conducted by • gen. renova 10~ crone rom ,two Brlflto rn I\\ MCO.Uill": ~4J 1s14 NASO Volume ~ .. -m
No. A·710t4 tne pltCI of business ot the underslQfltd ln cumbraflCes. to ply 1111 l'eri'll lnlno prlfl· PUBLIC NOTICE ertl o.an nershlp, sources -aircraft modi!lC3· =~~Ar .... ,•,n Mllkm 1314 lA A~ ~ ', Estate of WILFORD J. HOGGATT, I ll m1tter1 Ptl'fllllfllnQ to lhe nt1te Ill wld clpel sum ol the noti r.ecured bV s.ald DEAN WOR KMAN • 1. f ds d [' d a t. "" ... M.Oftrn ~ 5' Olcll!llt ,,t
Otceo:5'11. dl(.0.nt, wltnlfl tour m11ntn1 att1r the Oe<ed ol Trust to-wit · UO.tst 30 with In· This Sltltmenl w11 llled with lM Covn· \OD Un an Opera 100 M a::Cf11ll y SI 2~ -A'A Merlo In 4\.\ Slo'I OrW;Ml'IOld ~, t j
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ttll fl ril pUblle1tlon of 11111 flOllCt. lerest..tnereon: '' pr0vldt11 1.i S1!d note, l<ICTITIOUS IUSINESS tv Clerk of Or~· CllUntv on Aug ust I maintenance a llotments uller M "" .s Mn•r Fr 1714 \Jlj, Tot.If -.•r crtc1!!or1 of ttle •bove nemed dfclclent 01ttd A\11111$1 •• 1m lld~I, II 1nv. Undlt" !ht 1erm1 ol Wld NA.Ml STATEMENT 1971. ' . ""' T•o 20 2<Wi MllUDOr .. n
111•1 •II persons h1v1no c111ms 1111111!1 tne PETER F. DAVIS. JR. -Trust tees. chtrges tnd eltoensfl The following perwns are dolno bu11n111 F2717' Proxinire said tha t the 1111 SoW 4~ sw ~ Gfi• 11~ 2)"
"'" decedent fl.rt required IO Ill• them, E11.ecutor of Ille Wlll of Trust~ Ind of lhe fTUllS Crtaltd ill : p .. bllshed Orilflge Coast 0 1Uy Piiot, modirication funds are ~~llVtP.I 1'•' .·.·~ M 111 Ft: J: 2t: G•lners 4 IM•---w!lfl lht neeti»rv V0\1(1\efS. In thol! oftlc1 of lhl lDOVI Mrned d«llletll bV ·~'"' Oeed of Trvit MULLER'S MUFFLER SHOP, 1,SS AuguU J, 10, U, 2•, 1973 2369·n • I 3.5\.\ ll" -•.r
o1 tt>e c1er11 01 1i.1111we et1Tll1ed C0\11'!, ot P'MILLIPS & NAUGHTON li\;''"0ene1rcl•rv u!'lder seld Deed ot W. Lincoln, Anaheim, c1111. 9'2S01 justified before Congress as 111::f• : ~~ l~l'i ~~ s.n 2'\.'I v. •
lo pt"t$1!nl them, wilh l"-nKHMry ISf ,., P'.-.,.c! AYI. Tr# •Mrtlllfore executell t nd dt l!v1re11 Arlee M\lfftll', Inc .•• Ctlllomi• ('Ol"p. PUBLIC NOTICE necessary to correct safety ~I •• ~.~ 'l!i.I. ""'tt ,..~'ncl "• •••• Ntw Ylll"ll IUPO -TM folf£.U1l
v011eheri. ., ihe vn<ltr$lgnlld •t Ill• office Tltl5ffn. c .. tulO 10 Thi und«sJgl\ld , wrlf!et1 Oecl•r•tlon 111"1t1on, 1430! Beteh Blvd .• H11ntl11gton feat"-•. -e other f··-•· e,1, ,h,1 ,",. .. ,.,1 • .,,, ,.. '" !!'!!", ,.,'Mi~"', ,•,.• -"'"• .. "'.,.w _ ~. of hh 1t1omeYa. BARNES, SCHAG, AHONMrYS tor Euc:11tor of O.hull lfl<I Otmlnd for Sell Ind 11 B1aeh. Cl. 926'7 (---------------..,.,_, lll w~ " ,. .. ,,_ '"" _. · ..,,
JOHNSON & KEN,NEOY, •SU MlcArthur Publl111ed 0ra"51• COlst Delly Piiot, wrllten Nolle• ot Olflult end El~t!Oll lo Thli buillneu ll eondudllCI bY • cor· FI CTITIOUS 8USINESS ltll i 33lo'I Nt1 CnvSt t~ 10 Of ClllROI on lhl °"""'"' let Blvd., P.O. 8o)l 1116, N~WPOl'I B11eh. August 10, 17, 24, 31, ltn 2•9+n Sall. Thi unOerslglltll ceuitd H id Notice oor•tlon NAME STATeMl!NT usually go for routine strvic-l:W""tro 1'~ ~t' Jtl'1'!: ,:~ 11 \li l'nlA1t •• quoltd w lllit NASO. ~
C1llfornl1 92663, Whkh Ii tl>e pll(• of ot Otlf1ull 111d Ele<:llon to Sell lo be AZTEC •. INC. The tollowlr19 ptf'SOA Is llolng bUslnus ing or aircraft, he said, ~OCICI .!,! 11.." t Nt Pl ll'rll 11 11~ 01!!!!_!.1'1110 .. II!~· ~ ".""' tl<.lslneu al !he ~slgf!llCI In ell rn11tltr1 PUBIJC NOTICE rwconled In theo county wher1 tilt re11 L.. C. Zimmeor, Prt$1dcnt es: om ;H,. NMdlml t \!Ji lOV. 'i:;;'"'Zwt ,....,, Thi ~JOI.II....., ~lelnl/lfl ID The 1tl111 of wld dtcldent, IH"IJPlrtY I• ICIC•lllll. 1'!1'7' GLENNA'S INIC CO .• '15 AllWI Ave, ~':(Tl ,. "-II Co tlo'I 10',<a Ot lhl QlrN!ll .--. Ct.
wolhlfl four monlht lftv tilt fi r1I p.ibllCI· PICTITIOUS •USINESS Oil•: AuguU 16. ltn Publlsheo Ol'lll9t C11sf O.Uy Piiot, P.O. Bo11, 106$, NewPOrf 8111<:1'1, Calif. :;:i111 ,. 151.to y\'a NEnt GE l~ 1$4 .. IMa•I
!Ion Of !his nollct. NAMa STATEMENT WILLIAM 8EZUHLY AUCll.>SI 24, 31, Ind September 1, 14, '2660 roq"'co ~\'a~ NJH•! G lS\'11• 1 Oli1111110lllc DI ISn ...
Otl1d July 31. lf7:1, Thi followlfll PlrtOri' • i ri doll\fl '' uld Trustee 19n 2"53-13 Glenn• 1'rtvers McGe1dy, 415 AllMI M Lad "'"" R !" l_, J:'.::. ~ 1f~ ~ 2 M'flr\lnd ,0.0 6'4 1~ ·1 JI.MES A. 8URG.a.,_i, WS!neQ 11: ""1 Ave., Newport 8111ch, Ctlll. 92660 ayo y 11 Noll 1 l Nlellll'I I )ll'I S2 J T••l-lllC $11 2\'I V. .
Atlmlnl1tr1t11r With will 1nnextd of CONDOM INIUM PUBLISHI NG COM-Publfsl'lld Or1ng1 C1111 01lly Piiot. PUBUC NOTICE This buslntH 11 cond ucted liy '" In· anly .lfJ: ~, '!!!! Norcbtr 10 JOI'! ~ ¥:...~ lnt!Co l\i+ l _ •' 1 tilt at;tei. cf tilt lbo\11 Mmtd PANY Aug, 2A. 31 •nd $11)1, 1, 1973 260G.73 dlvldutl. rt Oro 'ie Nws NtG ""' Mt 6 Don Hincllorn Siii. ~ ~· dtclcllfll c OffOOMINIUM INTERNATIONAL ,,CTITIOUS •uSINEU Glenfll T. McGNdy .,. OU ~ )\Ii ~'" Cp 47¥1.., 1 c T 1 .s
IAtU•ES, SCM.t.9,-MAGAZINE NAME STATIEME"NT This s11teme<11 was flltd wtth lht Coun· T c te t t °"" tfl4 «l\4 N11Clr IU llii 11/'a 1 ~rt~t ~31;: :r' 1~ i;;:.;
JOHNSON & KENfllEOY CONDOMINIUM L1FE STYLE USA PUBLIC NOTICE The following person 1$ dolnt bvslMU ly Clerk of Orenge Coun!y on August 1, 0 on s It Dll ''"" u. = : ~~ .l"" '$ltndllfl lll(O 11\(J I"' u.~ .., .,, 1.111111 J, Sdllf, Jr. MAGA:ZIME es: ~ 1'73.. lli 414 $1 10 MKl"Odll• Cp ~ l,r,. UIJ <"l4.1
"52$ MICArthw ....... CALI FORNIA C 0 N 0 OM I H I UM DEUTSCH ASSOCIATES, 3lf$6 tlh Ft71" ~f fn~ Slim S3Mll n :,:; t~ ~ 1131 Fl~J.'!Jrt"' i£? •' .. "' UUif(lU ,0. lex 1116 MAGAZINE OltOINANCFETNHolnC.,TY, OU Ave , Soulh l egun,., Celt!. • Publllhed3 0 Ore11ge2 Co.st O•!IY PHct, vc F IOI' c 'Al :t6 l.Ot Pf. t~ 11 k'~ Lid l!Ao ill:t
NIWptfl 8Hcfl., Catll. '1"-1 INOUSTRIAL c 0 N 0 0 M IN I u M AN OltOINANCE 0 I c N· oiinny "B" B11roo 506 Bluebird Cvn .. 119ust • l • 17, •• 19n :l'ltS-n i'ri'ng I m Crs ni. l'R\ llvy M lt~ 21 •••• , c....... ,. .. u 11·1 Tl/: {714) ,,,_,,.. MAGAZINE CIL OF THE CITY OF COSTA MESA, . , ' ·1---------------I ) ll'YI Kd I~ I~ F...,._ 1 N 1., s1tlk &. Br-~ Uilll
Atton11y1 tor Admllll1tr1tOI' CTA CONDOMINIUM WEEKLY NEWS CALIFORNIA. AMENDING SECTION ~:1~ ~~1:~~: It condUC"led b~ •n In· PUBLIC NOTICE g~k ASc'l 2ft ~ CHt IWI ''"" 1' wo .o co .151) It 2. ua• 1:,
Publlsl\td Or1f19a COl.i 0111y Piiot, CALIFORNIA SPECIAL DISTRICTS 2'1'.0 OF THE MUNICIPAL COOi! dlvldull , l---=~======----I ~~ttl ;,f\; ~ I ~. .~ 17 Slllrll Melll C 1\0 "' Ulll.I Aw1.11t 3, lo, 11, ,., 191'3 :mo.73 MAGAllt-JE. ~west ltrh Street, cos11 Oii' THE CITY OP COSTA M~S.t. TO Ot flflY e Buriie •tcTrrlous BUSIN ESS SACRAMENTO A 1 GIA m 'tr ~ 11 Ttnl'ltcll OH.n s l \., U 111 Mew.C1lllornl19\16~7 INCREASE THE SPll!!ID LIMIT ON ThlS$!alemtflfwasllled wlllllhtCoun· fAP) -rllh xzf!.lttR: HA '~ 4"1 1tStory Cllln'lld ""-._ 10:1 C1lllornl1 Auocl1ted COMUtlanti, 8RISTOL STltll!!ET l'ltOM NEWPOltT .., Clerk of Ori"'e COllnlY on -"""USt :n, NAME STATEMENT . • JOlll ~ 30\'t r.lfl (:rp " '\.\ 2CI H11Ubtrt\I CP S•.k \'t U.' 10.S PUBLIC Nern.CE Inc.. 8 Oilifom!t corporellon. 1911-A BOULEY ARO TO PAUL A It I NO itn ... ,,;he following person Is llolng bUslne" SUper1or court Judge bas 1 oa 12ut 13'4 ~111&1 Br = ~~ 21 Rt». Pl1,1fu .,. 41 to.4
( fMplt.Slrftl. Colla Mell. Ollloml1 "1f71 AVENUE FROM :ts M.,.,H, TO .. . F17614 SPORTS-USA. 10184 L• /MrQU61 ordered the University ol ~lllL.i; J'I? l,~ P~t!.rn 21 \'I n Il ~1p!c~:r~ ~ ~ ~: lt.:
NOTICI! ~--r:£OITOll:S Tll\r bUtlne1s l1 concluded bY a cor· T,:·~·1~.; Council of Ille City of Cost• Publlshed Oran-gt Coast Oefly Pllol, Ave .. Founf•!n Vtlley, 92JW 1 PIM! )tll.\<S ii"'" Pac l.11m J7 37\4. 2• N11Cl11r R•M: l"" \ti ~ lf.0 11111"• on. Mes.i does he reby ordelfl is follows: Auousr 1~, 31, end Sepl~mbtr 7, 14, Freotrk k L1W1ht'r, I01M L• M1rQues• Califo rnia to prove it had the 1 Nucel Sh "~ P1So Brd Tl~ i v. 25 Plnehur•t Cp l~e " uiao.. \0.0 ~~:~:1g: cC..'t~:~R~f.a. i~: ~::;=~,,~~~lited SECTION i. Stc11on 3416.0 of th• 1973 24512·73 ,•:--, "!'."'ntain vauey. cent. 921'08 righ t to fire a widow accused ~f 1f~~ 1 ~ ~::, ~ l~ l~~ LOS1.1ts J
THE COUNTY OF Oft.ANGE N.J, Zlener, Pres!Oenl ~unfdp1I Code DI the Clly of Cos la Mew, dl~jd,',,-. stne5J It COnducled by lfl In· f t <>t"t' • lll•n A 23 24 Pi11Ul1V P l \.'I )'I.a. I A ti In lie Indus 2\4-I U 2 •
No. A·7'ttt This sta!emtnt w•s flied with tile coun. entitled: "lncreeslno Stele Sl)ted Limit In PUBLIC NOTICE Frederick L•wlller 0 no spre...,..mg m ayonnaJSe itl(u In ~ •'4 PY115 C11 1sv. 161.~ 2 ~rk IVHllll'll )\.-a-u 1:•
E•t•te of IMRCAARET s. PETERSON, tr clerk of Ora~ COU!lty on August 1s. Ce<taln Zontt." is hereby amenoed by tile Tllli steiemeni wes tlltd with lht cou"· all th~ way to the edge o( ~f1, Pt:;! ~" ~ ~:f:a s~ ;~ :m ! ~~~r! 1~\;: 1~ ~u:;)! ~l' Oece1Wd. 19n ld<lltlon lh1re!O of Ille followlng; ,-1cTITIOUS 9USIHESS t Cl k -0 C b d · nd ·ch F1rlon Et -.., .......... ,...., H•H _,. 21• Ol NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN to ll'lt .. usu "8RISTO\, STREET from NfWl)Orl NAME STATEMENT 1;73 er v-. r.111111• ounry on AUQUll lS, rea 1D sa Wl es. Firm Br t~ ~ P:iro Lw '~ I ! ~"'P~:~: .,"-=. ~ u:! •
Crldltor1 llf 1111 ebo"I Mn!fll cll(edent Pul>ll!.hed Or1nge Coast Oaily Piiot, 8011lev1rd to Ptulerlno AVll'lut «'.> MPH" Thi followin-g per~ is doi/lfl business •·•>m 1'-frs Doris Judd WaS ,,,_ F1y1 Oro • 1 PlcN S1v 6 7 7 Cin«nl!lon '" 21&-Ill \:i:;f a th1t 111 Persaris hiving cl1lmJ eg1!nst tilt Aug111t 11, 2•, 31 and September 7. SECTION 2. Thb Ordifltflc• thall take 1s: Publisl'lell Orengeo C~sl O•llY Pllet, · ~ FlflQl'tlt 12 l~ P!nkrt" 2'\.\ 11 I 01nktl"'Nh wt J\lo-\lo Ui ,
H id dlcfd«ll lrt reQulred lo Ille thlm, 1973 2550-73 effect Ind be I" full lorc1 Thirty {JO) dlYI COA$T HOME CENTER, 911• 8ol11 August 11, U, 31 ilnd s,.t...,,W ], Fst Bos-In l 1\(o ll., Plonlr W ICW. IO'!'i t Tr•n-n 01 10~ 111t Up 1.f
wllh Ille MCHSltV voucher1, In !ho: offlc• from tnd tl~r 111 1111sseoe, end prior lo Avtnllt, Wes!mlnster, CtHI. m13 19n ( 11f T•FI" 22 ~ PIPH lfld ,I~ 11~ 10 CilltMIAft Cllf.Ch 114-\II Up l ot·111e dlfk of tilt•~ emTtled court, or PUBLIC NOTICE Ille e•plrellon of fifteen 05) deys ftorn Mexlne Jones-. 1"33 w, $111"'°" ROid, 1S.SS·73 J ~'I W"(F ~ te Ptind Mic 1'14 20 11 MO•ll lnd111fr 114-\Iii U•
to PJ•wnt them. "11111 !hi 11eeessery the POSW~ ltlereot sh•ll be CMJbUshtd Santi An1. Celll, '2106 BRIE'F'S =-T11':. 11.\1 1•, .... PoOll Bro s"' Slo'I II LYO C1.itl11C 4 -~ V•i ' " .. .. " ....., l t ~ n~ c • 0 II PUBLIC NOTICE .. l' 1 1i ~ GOif "" 2\ro 11 OlohCorn11 C•I ~ ~ up, I voue.,era. Uflder Qf!ed •I the""'"' MOTICI! TO CREDITORS Ontl n "I ...,lflgt Ols I Y Tnlt busln-.s is conoutled by •n In. , 21 Jl4 ll\l rts 1~ l•tl u Cllitlon MIO 1\.-I.ti U•\
ol bl1 •ttorn.r• BARNES, SCHAG. \ SUPER<O• COURT OF THE Piiot, I newi.paper Ill general tlrcul•· dlvldlfll. l-----'-----------1 P<oN<. ,,~ -. PS Cll' 10'4 I~ IS GolO Medellin 11'1-\ollo U•~
JOHNSON & l(EN#EOY. 4'2S Mk"rlhl.lr • o• C"UFOJINIA ,-OR !IOll, 11rlnl9d 111d pUbUshtd If! Ille City of M .. 1ne J-f'ICTITtOUS &U$1NliSS ~~ntll 22\: ''t; Jtutn C•ll 4 ''M I• GrlPlllc Scan 6 -\ollo U.\ 1-1
8tv!I., P.O. 8 011:9716, HtwPOrt 8el(:h, ... ST~T .. cos11 Mts11, tog.tlher' wllh Ille ntmH ol This sf11tment wu flied with llM Coon-lfAME STATEME"T ii' j. N j' 1E •"' ' \7 ~ ..._.,.. t -" l!:i l
C1lllornl1 '2643, ;.t'llth 1$ lnt pl&ce of , t:> THE COUHHTYA 74?~1 OllANGE !he mernbtni o1 1111 City Covflcll vDlln; ty Clwk Oil or1ng11t COuntv 1111 Au(IU:sl 2;l, The ~ Dtt"ton It diOlllll llllll'*' a-·-·' or ll~ -lib F• ' ~ ' , 1,,.. ... -II ',1-... • ~. 1t -'.. • t b\111/lell of Ille unitrs!gf'llO lfl .. , mall"' .. ·" for I nd •glllflit the samt. 1m. ,.; .!.-...... .._. .... ~ W1 rw !~ ~ ~ _.-11 ,..._ peT11lflll'lfl to lne ,.,.,.of ti.kl dtcedlllt. E•l•t• of CARL J, GUSTAFSON, PASSED ANO ADOPTED, ltlls 20th dlY FU'7S COURTESY AUTO CEl'rit:R, 1211 t. saua-kraut in·her caf ttria. b ~uuer 1 ~ Cp'!MN ... "'"",,...... ,z:t 12\i-' Vii ..
wltllln fwr monllll •fltr fM fin! ,ybll~· DIKOHT ... CE• <S HERE&Y GIVEN lo .. of At.JOllSI, 1'13. Publhl'ltd Or1nge Cots! 01ily Piiot, M1ln SI., S1nl• Ane, C,.I, '17101 al tlie um·v·-·tty'I Daern• C8Dl)O n.t'T*lH'tl!oS.. In,. tti ft'.= 1'16 ~M ~ ~:"'~.J: 't : ~. -':
lloll ol 11111 flO'fice.l • N I JACIC HA.MMETl, Mayor AUllYSI 2A. 31, and Septtrnb« 1. l•, Wlllllm F. C1slro, IMSI S11111 .,.~ .,..., IE" !'\\ :•M p 1~ 1'"'.,. ...._..__ OJl' -\1 •-1 l O•led Julv 31, 1973. credll«s of Ille 1b0v1 named de<:1 ~.,.• •• "" Cl" -c-•• M-· ,,... 2631·73 L-. Cir. Foun111n V•Uoy, Ctllf. • " ac ... ...-....... 11 --Y• ' JOHN c. PETERSON th~! •II per_,fll hiving ~111ms "'' n~. ,l,TTEST: •• .,. ... ~-·~ Thls buslneu 11 conducled by •n In-pus, according to a news "'o Ll~ UY, 1~ ~~ 1~ ,~ y =-~nr.b:~ : -... H: :
l Ell.IW!or of "" wm of s.ld dtcec1en1 ere rtciuired tD 111• t11ern, EILEEN P. PHINNEY PUBLIC NOTICE divloU111. release from the California · the •bovt MITllld 11«tc1en1 with Ille nKnwrv VOllC~ers, In lhe ottlct City Cllrk of !hi City of Cotla M!l5.ot Wllli1m C1slru
• IA.JINES, SCHAG. of tlll (!erk llf tilt •bove entUled court. or STATE OF CALIFORNIA ) Thll t11teme<it WfS llltd wi!l'I '"" COUfl· State Employes Association. I ••a:;•mll!ll••• ........................ a I JOHNSON & KENNEDY 10 1>"1M!nl lllem. Wllh tilt M(eS$1ry COUNTY 'OF ORANGE }SS FICTITIOUS 8U51NES$ ty Clerk ot Or1nge County on AllQUSI l ~. The association filed a court '·'
.,, E""'' J. Schtt, Jr. vo;,clleni. to Ille undef"~Dnecl '' Ille CITY OF COSTA MESA l NAME STATEMENT 1913 MUTUAL FUNDS 4S2$ MacArtllvr 81¥0, ottke of hl1 attorneyi. 0El.8RIOGE. I EILEEN p PHINNEY Cltv Cl k ot Thft fOllowlll'il persotll ill'• doing fl.VSU action on her behalf. - '
,.O .... 1716 ' l.INTOfril, WAT&RHOUSE ANO CUSH· the' City of c0sti MHa '•!Id e•:llclo buslnMl ts: Publlthtd Ol'•l'llllt CO.st D.ally Piiot,
Newport •11ch. C•llt, nw.s MAN, Attorneys •I L.lw. " SOUffl Llk• Clerk oJ ll!e City Covnell of the Cltv of t•"'i\C~Y.J:~U~E., '!f.'35 :1or:s CR~;· .4uou" 17, 24, 31 •!Id StPltmb« 7, • Co••tal .,.._
I 'tfl: Cn4) t7t.,,.., Ave., &1!11 S70, P~na, C1!1fomf1 Cos11 M11e. hereby certltv !Ml Ille •bove fl · • ...,.unfl g ' • · 1'73 2551·73 -r •
'
Aitonllt'I tor Eututot 91101. Wllk l'I Is lhl plac. of bus.lr.tSI ot •!Id foroagolno Ord!111f1Ce No. 1).31 WI S ln-mn AUQ\1$1 11 Ind 2,, 1973 ~2·13
Pubtl'htd OrtnOe Coast Dally Piiot, 11'11 undersloned ln ~ti m·~rs ~fttlnlng lroduttl.I a!!d considered HCllon by HC• Moon IC. Noll, 2"3l lvv Glt!nf! Or.. LOS ANGELES (AP) A New Y«k -Fiii· "!'l Fd 3.71 317 hwR.. 4.. t.l:S I" " m
! August 3, lO, 17, 2,, 1913 2lt1-13 to 1111 eslale of w id Oecedrfll, w1~hin llon .11 1 regular mH!!f!g ot the wld Cltv L•:::; ~1"i:!• ~~:·Vii San 5tbt$llan PUBLIC NOTICE , -'°""Ina b 1 list ,,l. f.r"{i Lv 1430 1,.67 I t Ii n; ' ~
four ""°"'"' •lier the flri • publlcttlOll Counci l held Of! the 6111 day of Augu'1, Lagvn1 H101.1t1'. C1llf. • JUdge has found a. Malibu~ ~: •ndon 1lkldM111119i :11 ~~ ~:J: 10:~ t-"' t: ~ ~"'':a p 1 .
PUBLIC NOTICE of this notice. i9n. and IMreeller 11assed •nd aCIOllltd ThlJ Duslneu IJ conduci~ by • oenei-11 FICTITIOUS •USIHESS erty owner guilty of coo-Fundi •t jUOte<I by El.:!, M11 J.17 j·U T~UI 3.33 . R..,.,., fl 1 • ---------------·! Ootod • .,,s! I, lm. as I whOle-el • regula r mttllflQ of the oo"-•«p. HrnE •TATEMEHT ... NA$O •• • ... G• •Al •• T~< •• IU,. ''" IUnfrt r• -su~EJ11011: COURT oF THE JOHN tt McNALL v wld Cltv Council llefd on llle 20th dly of ""'Moon K NOii Tiit 11111owlr; per$0A It c1o1,,g Mines• tempt in the state's first ~,._ EATON • ..... I'"' ir;;j 20:V 21'..5:2 ~ Eo n;J' ffi STATE OF CAL\fORNJA FOR Adfl'rinlstfetor wl!h.fhe-w!U-Auguit, 1tn, bl' 11'11 fOllOW!f\O roll call 80f'lfl s.'Yoo as: fmo d · · d lb TittttMlY HOWAllDI VY Fllnd !~ •.62 tlf!'. THE c ouNTY or 0,.,0, vo•e· 1 1 1 w n ec1s1on un er e new .a..,1111 tl.' 1m ••rn Fd !·'° 10.1• J'' Gw111 : t .4 Fd . Nt. A·7tl34 .. •"ntlted Ol 1111 Eslafl ..\YES: Councilmen: H •mm t t I , Th s 1talemt11I wes Ill~ w th 1111 Coun· B 0-MEOICAL PHOTOGRAPHY P.O. IW Mil Gwltl I JO l ~ JEM Fd S_9 t~f NOTICE OF HEARING 0 11' PETITION ot the tDovt ntmed llK~fnl Jordin, Plnktey, Wi150n, Raciti ly Clerk Ill Or&f'IQI County on Augll5! 40, Box Q3. Irvine C1l lf, "'64/1802 Amlm Coastal Conser vation Act Of a ADMIJlALTY· l~ fl ~ t 9 ID'Oflt ~ ~'1Sf,U~··1'0
8Y CO.EXECUTOftS FOR AgTHORITV Ol!LBRIOGE. l.INTON, NOES: COUnCllrntn: NOile im . W•V· Newport Be.ch. cent 92660 violation of a Superior Court Gt'wlll '·°!& Ht sc;r,, "" 7. =..,11o • In l.'r1.:v 115.t 'ij'~ ~~1~0.fe~~vli'T0~~~EA~fsJTs 5JFC~~~ :~~~~~.s~: CUSHM.a.M INAB~~~~Es~~~':'~~on• I hlvt Publlsh.~ Or1nge Coesl 01llyF·~~~~ w~!~~~~ffl~:.r~~11i1. 8:uoAtnf'IO$ order to h a lt a n oceanfront 1: t.,. ~ Eblt'ltdin1 .t$ ;i:tt YSTOttl~ Z3J6 f::k : '1
ESTATE " South L.lk• .a.vi. ' August .. 31 ind Septernblr 7, )4, This b!Jsiness 11 eonduc:led tw tfl lfl· l Advt"r 4lt W EOIE ! .14 21,14 llSI I' lt.6119 S3 Sbd ft"__ • Ett11e of JACK J. TILLEY Oeceased. Sult Slt hert un!D HI my hl fld tnd llfl~ed tht Seil 1973 26473 dlvldua l. pro Jee , Altnl Fd 1.14 f, ll<C OR,: us1 2 19.20 21"05 $~CCU ITY · t NOTICE IS H1'RE8Y GIVE N ll'Nlf ,..,:.,.. CIHforni• tlWll of !he Cit~ of C0:J11 Mesi, thl' 21st d1y of Richird Clark FirreU Edward Higgins WBS fined A= In 1&.14 M, ~CllV Gr 7,53 J.D in 1 •.ll 1:t1 Ql/11\1 + 11i.
WIUJ1m. H. Tlllev attd Juani ta F, Tllit"f', Tfll• iin) ..,-$Ul l 616-tltl A119ust, 1913. PUBUC NOTICE Thi• •••••--• "'' ., •• wl-'"' c--. AAG~ ~ t.B '·"n FP.)IAP< 17"2, 1·" "°',. ti j-15 .SI "~ 'nl
I •• Co-Er.KV!ors 111 !tit wiu DI the ebOve-,,· 1 Ad lnF tntor fSEALJ """" " = '" ""'" $500 by Judge Campbell Lucas ..--.. '·" 4. "" m · • 11 M ,..., 1r1 , '· • ' n•med decedenf, hive fll~ r,ere!n ' Piii· w', ... ~·W~ll'Ao~--.· El LEEN p PHINNEY ty Clerk ol Oreno• COllnl\I on Aug111I lS. All ... 11AQ J1.S3 eom Gt 11,ts 12.,, "'' 2'1.os 2'..16 Slll.llCTIO , ' tlon for If! Order •lllhorlr flll !tit Ptli· ,.,.. r ,,..,... ,1_ Cl k '.. ..,1 I NOT<CE TO C•EO<TO•$ 1m of $upen·or Court and onfered AIOlll Fd 12.1a , .• Elfi.in Trt lS.IJ ust ll.071j··" ~ Silr J t 4• ~.M ti-rs to 1slt1>U1n 1 Hne or credit •!Id 10 Publlthell Or ange Coast Delly Pltot, " "" a,., e11;..,.. < 0 f'·!1J24 Al'nelO F 4.62 5.M Emtr9 3.$9 !·" 11st 1.41 .41 FO ~· • ~'.ao borrow mOlle'Y 1n1110 secure, 11 n«t$S1ry, Auoust 10, 11, 2.1, 31, 19n 2C83·73 Clerk of the cny COi.ineii ot MD-.t.·761n Publlihed Orenge coait o1ny Piiot, to spend five days in Cotmty Am OW't t0'2 t .t6 El!f"lv 11 .u I .1, "''• 4.lJ 4.53 Shr1 1 u;
""'debt 1>11 e•ecull111:1 •Promissory Hota The c11y of Cost• Mes.I s..,.nor cevrt "'""' Ja1·1, lhe allowable contempt Am Eq_iv,,•,.,• .C.llO F•'m'"""•·-,",.' •,·.",. {;:~,-t'."., ,'"., 1:1"":.i • '. 't':ll •nd IKllrltv oowmenta 11 set forth lfl lht PUBLIC NOTICE Pu1>1!1htd Orange Coe" Olllf Pltol Sl•ll Ill c111ton.r1 tor 1111 Auou11 11, 2,, 31 •nd September 1. AM •xJ' ... • • • petition, rlference ro which Ii ma11e tor Augu1t 2.1, l m 264-73 Covntr of Or11tt• 191J 15'.2·73 · l'UNDSt filld ~Rt t.lS ., n r0 to '·ti ~A INLO ,
fllrther P1l'llcvl1rs, Ind lhe1 the llrm illnd Estatr of LEONORE ESTEVANEZ, maXlffiUDl. Cllltll 7.31 l'"· l'IDILITY . Lnd r rkttl .12 ':!f oms! f 'ff.
ol•ct of helrinQ The w me !ifs been tt! NOTICE OF PUil.iC HIARIMG PUBLIC NOTICE Otceastd. ltJtom ·~ .to 81tOUI': l.lff mr Fd jjl 7, r."'• OI S. ~~i::-~~~m:~1':~0.•·;n·;,11",~7: aEF011:1. THE c1TY couNc1L Notice is MrebY otve,, to creditors 01 PUBLIC NOTICE • VFW Arrests ~ttn ~'.n •1·ft ~=,tr 1!'.V 1li .._.; e.ou,.1 $ s.os ~.')bfF« it\ f,,,
court, •t 700 Civic Cetiter Drive West, In OP THE tht abOYe namN d«totnl ll'ltl en -$ k 7.21 .• Contr1 tOD ~II Lldr ll!ft•oo LIM L. ·~'•SO
tilt City ot Sll'!t1 Af!a, caUforfll,. CITY 01' FOUNTAIN VALl.l!!Y I 1Ul1 per$Ol'l1 having d a!mt again'! ll'lt $1ld FICTITIOUS BUSINESS M~'~A (AP) The L •,-"", •'."' .. 's.>llf1 Cv,$$0< •.·.•,.1 7.22. ~. ' ·." i~· s'"*, ~ p ·"" Otled A1111ust IS, 19n , NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11111 Ol'I SUll'lltlOR COURT OF THE !lecedenl are required to Ille 11\em, with HA.Me STATEMENT .llill UVJ ''"' ... I~ 0.. '""""·" n HEA WILLIAM E. St J OHN, Tuesoay, September ,, 1973, at S:OO P.M, STATE 01< CALIFORNIA FOR !roe necnsary vouchers, lfl the ollltt o1 T~t follawln; persan It doing bullnftl -Arn lnvd 4.61 ..._,, E1H11 I0,2A t f.111 t Fd S.I 4S a 1~ , ...
Coun'ly Clert: ,, ,., cA .. ~n Chllmbtr, 10200 Slt~r THE COUNTY o,. Oll.l.NGE 11>e Clerk of Ille 1b0Ve entil1ed cour1,.or ••·· United Farm Worken Union Am Mut 790 ':ll Event 10.5711.SJ t Jl!Y I" !·" ncotn 'II ·" ••••••• ····~· .. ---HO A-· .,.. Arn NI Gr 2.22 2 Fund 15.0716 •7 ~--o .•• ... n111tt ' .OD " -A"'fl!ue Fovfllaif! Valley, Callfornl1, !hi .. ,,..... to presenl lllem, WI " me nect~Jt•Y THE ATTIC, 690 w. ltll'I. COlll MIMI, has stepped up its " •t • AfiltHOR Pu It ... 9H IS Ot•fl 11 g 1 :ti:!~ l.VtJ~! $~ft11~~ Coty C~uflCil Wiii hold 1 p1,1llllc l!Hrl"9 on NOTICE 01' INTENTION TO SELL voudl!lrs lo the und1rslgned al !I'll cttlc• Clllf, 926?7 , 8CuVI ~ m OltOU,i Sa1".t: F t.ft. i:U I YLIS: ~di Fd ' 1.::
..... Allfft11. Cali . M17 !Iii follow!llfl REAL PRO,.IRTY AT PJllVATE SALE of GLASS. ALLEN .. MOSER, 1331 w. Carole Ann Sleeoeor. 16552 Wiiie Lane. melon fields while l t a ·CMllll 4.61 s.a. Tf9n0 23.JJ2S.52 M·U~Vl~v lf·t,112,11 S~OMA~ , 1·
Ttl: c2ta) 1111-tttt l. to11e Chl1191 m. c.Mltiontl U11 Ei !•lt llt Wll.FORO J, HOGGATT, G1 rdent 81\'d., P.O. Box 2016, Gt<dfna, Huntln-gton 8eich. Calif p<.Cketing 15• at a Juli al 0F~.2nv 1, •• " .. 10.0ID Ppl~~MC.J~l.S•. LORD Alli · '·" I~ $.,r · ' ji·n A.......,• fw: Pttlllonei'I J'1rrnlt N11-121. •nd Tent1tlv1 Tr1ct NII. Oeceated. CA 90247 which 11 tilt plKI of bU~ness ot Tnls buslfleu 11 (Onductl!d b'( '" In· """ -...., Ann t •.JO T Ttlls stafemln! w•s tiled with !he eou~iv fll2 _ Applleitlon tiled by Presley Notice I• herebY 11lven th1t, aub[ect to lhe undenilon~ In 111 m•lltrl pertelnlng dlvldutl southern San J · Vall tncorn •M 7 SS F l'I Ovn 4.10 "'I A '8 2:.N 1·1} v"'11 1.
Cltrlt of Or•f!O' Countv on Al/flus! 1, 197l Dl!velociment to rtlont lll'Oj)lrly el Ille conllrmallon oY lht • b o v to · e n 111 I e 11 to lht estate of Nici dtctl'IUll\I, withi n 10\lr Ctrole Sleef)er 08qwD ey Vl'lllllr 1.34 t:I' F n Jnd -4.2S 4.2 e~ ~ t.lt 10'4 .smt'h ur. t· ,43
P\lbllsn.ed Or•noe co.it o1uy PHor, southeast clll'"ner" 111 Edlnoer M>d E11Clld :u:'1°'M Court, on September 11. 19n, a1 month• after thft tlrst publlc1t1on of this This 11a1 erneT1t was tiled wltn the coun-grape ranches, a spokesman l:t~C:'" 1~:1J 1!.g ~;., llC 1.o~ ::if uthtm 10~4 1:1t !t llGr 'j il:li
August 17, 2•. 1973 2579·73 from Al Aorlculturt to RI PD UOO · A " or thtl'l!elter wllllln "'' time ~Otl(e rv crerk ot Of'•ntl County on Auou•t 1. says. '•""••'• p 1.11 t.50 111'•'s'TV• 10.tt nJO lllh0'•~'•u''"••'·.'·" !k•""'••' "· i Cond!llOf!al uu Permit NII. 127 ind allowed by law, the ufldll"sl9ned, •s lld• Ot!ed August 21. lfn, 1913 · 1 " "" ~
PVBUC NOI'ICE T1nt1tlve Tri(! No. tll2 crNli"'il"' lots mlnlstrator of Ille IS!tl• of Wiiford J. UN ITED CALI FcmNIA BANI( fl27US Sixteen pickets were ar~ .. ,ouCJ"!ON,•.,, .... 'E .. "~TG·•i·· ~·~ .. 1'11 j:ll w ~nTn 1f: l .~ on 12li acre .. flltd In conluncilon ti! Ille Hogoell, dtulstd, Wiii Siii It PJlv1te E•llCUfOI' ol 1111 Wiii Published Orano1 COHt Olll'I Pilot, Ufld ,.. 1J t.4' Ji tonf ct1.ang1 Thft 11,~ 11 fllrtlll!1 w•e 10 Ille hlglltSf •net bell ntt llkl0tr °" of aaid ell(~!. .a.ugu!t 10 11 2, 31 1973 2.Ql.n rested h ere Thursday, the first ~\llldk • ,•~ 1, •. l,' Sftltl F ~ ~ tn :1'.to ..:U 'fno l'.4 :fi
MDT ICE TO COH'TltACTOltS dlSCtlbtd •t AP 14C·121·2. ·10 end ·11, !Ill Terms end COndl!lans l!trelnatter men-GLASS. Al.LEN • MOSllt ' ' ' ' in Fresno County Si DC e ta:' Sci A 00 •.J4 If Munt I 1 COi ••t TE /HO, p , CALLl1G FOR: a1os Th!s matter 11 being proceued PVnUtnt tloned •II rlghf, title, end ,lntt-resr of lSJI w. O•nllfll •11111. PUJhJC NOTICE u~mo? 1•1 r c ' ) NE"\'iPOR'T-MES.4 to Ille Pltf!nlng L•ws ol the S!ltl cf Wiiford J, H*411!. dKNHd, t t , ... time ,.,0. &OJI ttl6
Bid offdnnt: n:oo o'clock '·"'· on t11e can1om11 (Gov't. Code liS.000 et. HQ.l 0' hit dNlt! •nd •11 right, 11111, "nd •n· G1Mn1, CA "241 ly I""" •-ts after _ ..... ., B•v~ "" 1."1 •' F ,7f 1• l'MC . I' , or
.111'1 dly ol 5e11twm~. 1973. Ind Ille Foun!•ln Valley l 0 fl I fl g ''"st llMI the tsl•t• his ecqu{fl'd In 116' A116rMyt "' a..c.tw FICTITIOUS 9USIMESS ,,,,.,., ..... """ .. ._ 5or s.n S.tl ~ •• ts n.a I r Inc p·
PIKe d &Id R«ellll: 11$7 .-i.cflllla Ordlntntf. The Zonlrio Ordln1nce. lonlng dJtlon lo tllll of decilldent 11 fM llmt of 6flll NA.Ma STATEMllNT demonstrations more than two Men HI 173 I n F~ 6.t2 l l'i ii'* $Ir AvetiUI, Cost• M•Y. . Mei». end E•hlbits 1rf on 1111 111 Ille ~1$ dllth, In lht re.I prooerty l«11td In PUbll"*I Or1!191 Cotll D•ftY P iiot Tl'll fOllowlng person It doing blltll!IU ' Oii 10tflt"fi r fM "'° ' .i IAp:A fl o&=11:ldc!:.U~~f\c:JGN/ffif'N~~~:f Plinnlno Department end ire 1val11ble :c~ouflty ol Ort~, Sl•ll of C11ltornl• A"9\lll v. 31, tnd Stpi.mber 1, 14, a1: weeks ago. ll~rlC 'ltt 4: 5 e .... .-.~1• • ..... ~ ,:111 Mio 1d f:n : ,'
.LE,.ENTA.-SCHOOL for t>Ubllc lflspe>dlon a!!d ex1m!n1tlon. bed •• 11)11ows. 197' 26'1·n GLENOAN RE A \, 't y l IN-.. _...... • .. ' _.., -~ --a" " I ~ ' ~ .. Plfal Pllns '.re on Fiii:: 1857 Pltctfl111 T"°'e de1lrl1t9 to testify In 1avw or If! • ~n ... vndlvldell ~lnth (l/t} '"'''''t In VESTMENTS. 1670 Sanlt Af!a AYI., • v-· .. --Plan ,i;!J:'dn l:,,, w, : ... 1==m '•'·• '•".n• ~ .... 'l! ' 1 : I : m. •o~' '. ' A.Yl'mlf, Cost• Mtst. opposition to 11111 PfOPOSill will bf 9lven ...... " In &lock e Ill ROOlft'S MdlllOf! to PUBLIC NOTICE Su!le c. COSll Mlw. C1. t:U27 --·~ """" 2S 251 .., "' m iltne .3' f NOTICE IS HE RE SY GIVEN !Nol the 1n OllllOf'lunltv Ill do so. 11 further In· leguna Blach, In !ht City of l.111una Oenlel J<»eJih Kltlf!, 111162 Winton St,, ' ' Ml•UHU.OCW: • ' ~ l~·?t 1,1.11 =nv F: ' I\ ' 10!11 1 , ;1i ! •bove rworned Sthllol Ol$trict ol Or811Qe formallon 11 deS1rtd, y11u mav contact the eeech, 1' Viown on m1p ~ r.airOH G1rd11'1 Crove, Ca. '2660 SACRAMENTO· (AP ) -A 1,•11bl ,•,• . 1• •• !l:!l 'N LIN..... ' Mil Oo<> , s ""ooour", · 14.$2 J Cll!Mlty, C.lllornl .. ~llllQ by •fld lhr.>ugh Pl•nnlllO 0eJi•l'llN1lt 1t tQ•:UU end ln Book )I, l)lges SI efld 52, Mfsctll1ntous TAX COl.l.eCTOlt'S OPFICE Thft bU1lnt$I 11 cond\/Cftd by 1n In• C ..._ t ~U M II fid I Q,
lit ~erfllnQ BOlrd, hertlntlltr reltrrea reftr IO IM t bovl Utm MIPS, rttordl ol LO& ,t.nvelu County, COUNTY 01' ORANGE d1vfd1111I. • SeVen-year p iJOt program Of o1~ ft!. '~:i; ,,17 fl 1 1 ... f ,21 M=:' Oro ~· 1·~·~ I~~ S,. t.!! ; lo ils "0/STRICT''. wtll rei:eivt uo le, b\11 CITY COUHCl l., OF THE CITY CaUfotl\lt . STA.Tl 01' CALIFORNIA Otn'le1 J. Klein # N ~ wlh I J 2' 7,. M M It 4 Sm It
I no1 ll~r tll•fl llll tbov• Slt lec:I tlmt, 5~•1• OF FOUNTAIN VALLEY Thi or1111trtv IJ t'ommonlv r•ferred '° NOTICE 0 .. S.4Lll: ltOlt TAXES Thi• 1tetamen1 WBI flied with thr Coun· educational vouchers has won N~ Vfn ,~in:tt r lncrn 1: .. 2:02 ' ft .:S6 • 1tcr:;fll ,] 1i ~ bl::o:-~i:i.:,~ard of ill conlr•ct ior Evelyn Gt!ppo, ~salll~~l.:hird Stru t, Laguna Beacn, w.?ENRE~~~~~~~~~ :RBo:Ae'IRS1~ his tv Cl~rk of Or1f1Qe CllUnly on August 1, 23-6 approval in the state BGmhr~ •1 ...... i'o.u" V~~ifft S l:H '::: ~:ti liii~l'I 'f:'~ lf, 7 iJn'O AF~ • ,·
I Bldt $hill be r.c11v.ci lfl The 11lac1 lde"· Oeollly Clly Crerk T"' 1 ol 1 1913. "'· .., 11 I t s.s f __, !!fled a~ •!Id inin be orit"tll efld P~b1J511ec:1 Or~n&e coasl Daily Piiot ialt i 111bfect 10 c11rren1 t~_.es, I led1nd negectedto l)lY,upond1m1flct, "1not Senate. 10 ~.' J,·,",',,'·!? .. ,-,,• },tt ~.·",. SI POS: °"T:W~ ! t.ot oubllcly r..d aloud 11 tn1 lbOvi illl1ect A....iu11 u, 1'73 z663-'3 covet11n11, condlllana. r • t Ir I c I i on•, la•es on unsecvred property In tf\t sum ol Publldll:d Or•llOI Coed Dally Piiot, " I -"' -"" •
11111'1* 1nd ollCt . · rnervatlont. rlghl1, rlg~ll Cl w1y, and S2:Sl.S2. d<JIY a1setsed f« lh1 yeer lt71 1 Au;ust 3, 10, 11, 14, 197:t U8'"13 Fd~• 0 1 0 < • ml E ~ 1•·••
1!«11 blo mvtt tonfOl":'n Ind Ile re· e1semet1ls of record. 1972 111d 1973 -Ha (R-01 d J ) calls f'UNDS: tt f ' 1 dn M 'I ~ · '~ •pon~~· 111 the C011trtct lioc:~n''· PUBLIC NOTICE Bids or offert ire '""''l!d tor this P'llf>< WHEREAS. und.,. and by virtue o1 111e PUBLIC NOTICE rme r en 8 e 1 =~~d 1~Jf 1r'·:11i oK ~1 lfC ret slk s.i• i ~G 1 • 1· E1<:ll bid "1111 be accom~nltd by the erly Ind mint be I" wrlllng J!ld wltt ~ prvilslon• ol Settlon ttl• llf 11'11 C~llfOr'ttll for the VOUcher system Of Corn $~ -,.U . t UDl'!lm J·" t,4' ~~St t · Cl • t~ i ~tty ret•rred 10 111 "" ~trKI dotv-NOTICE o,. ,.u1L1c MEARING 1•1eceived bv J, Lewrtnce Judy ,, 111e of· ~~ !nd !!~1~~ ... co0,e, 1tte1,.~~l ---c,-1CcTctTc•co-u_s_o_u_s_•_•~•-,.----educaUon financing In tour ,o..':"i!! ,•·.,." ,• .. s.w :r:.c tr 10·.p," 'j'~··"' • "'~•••ti''· ;,. ~n P11'::. i:1
MtftfS ~ ey tM 1111 of orCIPO$fid -NOTICE IS Hl!REBY GIVEN 11111 ii Cl ol B1rnos, Selleg, Jol!nll)fl a. K• ,,. ......... 11•• ...,.., -OI' ............. '"""'" lW " ION Siil ' ' ll\lbUc hearln-g wW be held bV lhl City Midy, •lflll"ntn fOI' t•ld ldmlnlstr1tor •I llf Nie al PUbllc ~Ion tor thl Mll!f&c· lllAME STATEMENT california SC b 0 0} districts. t=;wr ~~ i: Oil~kil 1; 1 . 1 t Q:i:""'ly J..i:l 1!;'7 OUP'i I ~ conftKJ«J • M H I tand O'rect council 01 lhe City o1 Co.la Mew on '52S MacAMh\lf 8oult11ird """"*' 11on ot .. 111 llllHIC t1•t1. teotlhlr wllh Tht loltowlllfl parson 11 dolflQ tMnlnt•t nd -"'-... GE s p 3SlO 01..a rdS Iv 11 : .~ ,:C"::n ·,.,.1!1!n1~'1 ,:.i, ~ $epltrnbtr 4, 1m . 11 thl hour of 6:30 Beach, Cellforflll ~ m1r ht 111.d wlll'I tlll P111•1tl11 lhtt"to11 and cotll of .. 111 II: (I I OlSIOHS OF THI! TIMES '°2 U er 8 VOU1;&1\ll sys~m CN.U °"' its 'U I t'. A5 ltl if'
• it'-'_.. ' p,m., Dr •1 ioon there•tle< •t !hi m1tttr clerk Of Mid Superior CllUrt Of dellwrld H(1N, THEREftOftE, NOTICE IS ' par••'· -1·"ve a fixed sum' -,go,r:N• l u I H •1t10li, taCi ' N~A CM1 • .311 C ' ti lft'liln-Wltl mlllf With tflOSI PtnOnl m.., bl ~tird, Jn 1111 Covncll Cl'lllmtier of IO J, Wwr111Ce Judy Pll'iOl'llllv, •f iny HEREBY GIVEN n.t 1111 C:ounlv T1~ Estrt:Uill, S1n Cltmtnll, C.UIOl'l'li1 '°''1.3 , .. -...... ftl'Of'I p : 1·i Aoe~ j·• S.tt ":!wt.rt '· ~.'3 Wttt,ri• I l
• 1 .. ttntNd In tour"'cl 11'11 site11 the New. ""Clly H1U, 77 F1lr 0.1 ..... Cot!• M-.a. llmt •lier first publlc.lt10f! of this notlel Collector of°''"" CWnty, \lflOer tlld by '1672 for the costs of educaUng their ~Tr • •• ' ••• ;·stl .. :U 1t2.,1. H-i r;"h "ll'J, t· • .
pOl"I l!.-..nt~ Sdlool, ICICl1ed II Ull'I C1tlfoml•. (In 11'11 follow11111 petitions ·for 1nd btlorw m•KlftO SllC .. ,,, vlrt\11 °' 1111 •lllhllrllY c;Ol"rltrred by l•w 12) OESIGN.S ~NOSCAPING. '°'2 child. They can ...... the-. •• ,•,·,,",t.-tJ;..,,·•·m ···1'! '-"•' N;.. , .... ', ·. I" ~~! i ... ·. '" 1ftd a.loo. Bt\ld., N~ BHCll, 11 ™not In 1on1: Thi Pf'~rty wlll bt sold on thl follOWo llPO" 11ld officer. Wiii Mii 11 Pllbllc avc• Estre111, Sin °'""""' Celllomr• .. .,......... •• ,..,, 10 --'M ICh Wld a. ..,,
1o:m A.M .. MondlV• ,AllllUff 21. 19n. •1:r:OH1 J'eT1T10N 11:.n~. Fl~n 1roo "'"": c1Jh or p.1r1 c11n ""° Nrl tlon to 1119 ~tal!at blddlt'. for ui11. ••wtu1 '2472 • money at •"v school tn the " IAL 1:Q If 1, n ,.. l •.1e on nc: ! I •
Thi DISTIUCT tlllt\llS ,,.. rlflfll 111 r.. G111djor!I, n1 S8n B~trdlno A\NM!, crldll, tilt ttrm' d lllCh credit lo bl !IC•,,__., Ill Ille Un11'1d Stalff. °" thl Shi Cl•~ Murnlt,, 402 1!1!rtlla, kn ~ p NDS: rd tt '13 lvtr ' lm ~"" t 1· lec:t 111'1 91 ...... Of "' 'lfl'llve •llY Ir· NIWllOrt BtlCh, Miit Sloto. nt G1vlot1, c111t1bl• to Int lll'lderslflntd •nd to Ille ~·y "' Aug1.11t, 1m. ., 1111 hour ol 2:00 a.-11. fciflllll'tlll '2672 . di.sttJct they cbole. = t:*~ 11:~ HAMILTON ol~·1 I f: . Bi 't• r.irUllrfrl" OI' lnformlllt"1i In •nv bld1 or 1..1911111 Btlctl, •nd Jct SCllotles. ,n E•sl SuoerlOI' CC\lrl, 101\ ot 1111 •mount llld to o'clodl: ,,M .. ot Mid dey, •t ttM Office of Thi• butllllh 11 cond\/Cltd by lfl ,,.. Fll!ICI J 1DA I f.n 4.'7 Uff j J ,SI 1 I in ·fl'll D*l~I~ Ns Oetermll'ltd tht eo.11 MeM &trttt, cos11 Mtwi, tfol' •c((:l!'r!Nny 111t otter b'I' c1r1111ec1 Cflkt. 111e OrMIU• Couri!Y T•• <:oUIClor, '30 N, dlvidl.lll • n..._ Meets 9.;rwllt s: A;.+ nirtl'I ;:" 1.34 iNiti ii'\ 1
Thi I OIS!;ij rlJI ol Oftt dfern W"'9 per'rnln !on to flUIM lll'Opll'IY loc11td 1! •nd The bll•11C1 lo bl PJld on con-llrotdW1y, sent• Anl lhl followlng Cllrtnee MUrrtfl ...,....,.,... v: r~·iV'i:~ :::. 10:= 11:3 't.n"' M1 , 1110.11 y~ ~(NI, P tv Wllldl Ille WOtk 11 Ill bt ,,..,. P-• Avt1111e •nd .. 7 Wnl 18th llrrne!IOll of Ill• Mii by "" su,,.,1or GtSCrllMd prOOlft"IY, Ill" IO much """eOI •• ,,.,,,.. ,. • II 11 " ... ,. 1.a "" ,.. 1~ ~ . tor ffd'I cr1tt OI' l\loe Ill St:Ht, lrorn ., lo JI>. Court. T•~ts. ren11, oper11l1t9 41'1d M•Y bt ntcft6if'Y, to .. 111f'r "-111\Hld Pub11111ed Ortn!lt co.1" OtllY J'Uot, SACRAMENTO (AP) _The .. ~::J,OMWt. ' .M t.7'0 fM , s • i: .-ilfNllll ......... ••1<111•""' tOfltrl(f. JllE:ZONI f'ITITION R·)').lt, Colat• Alll"ltnflltl ·~ptntft, •nd Pf'•ml\llM ~ t ..... IOQllher wltl'I f*\tllltt '"""-•nd Auo11•tt. 10, 11, u.1m 2393.n rlul Joi T1lltlT1 tdlll S21 c 5«: '!' ~ t TlleM NN1; .,. Cfl fl~c:r llS7 PllCll'ltl1 Ml~• J'lfnl'll"9 Cornmluton. PO)! Ofl!cr !11111,lflC• 1CCtp1•1M to thl purct11ter 1111 c;otb of condllCl!l'IO Mid Wle, lcglslature'J powe nt A & a , 1•1111 1.1~ lfltaft J'.M!11!.~ a~f'W"' ,· : S~A D ltS1,
if:. (.cil&I ~u.· "of'ri:u~.:s &OJ HOO. (ostt Mel•, tor perml1skilt to !111111 bl prorated a• of 11'11 d•te d ••lmtltl.I t t 1111 WM 01 ..,.,,10: -..VBLIC NOTICE f·-·'-commit'-···1 c .. !·'' ICll ••• .47 ' ,,4 lllllJI •• l~ • ~i'nw 00 111:t l'ltont P'OPfl'IY loctted I" 1111 {llfl!lf'l'll recordlfl{I er COl'IV'fYlflU, i lll"'11Ml1Cfl of Ont 80oll CJl.Onl-AT, 1 U Ft. Cabin r con 11;n:n..... u;oc; ""' '"''""°' •r ,;Jl .11 l'l'lPl'1 Cp Ir rl 1:111 1 '·ll .41 rs 'rom 1. '.
llllf.I • It w d1tn1 •rt• boul'll!l<I bv H••tior 8q.11ltl'•rd, rill1, •tcordlnt:1 01 C'O!Nft'tnct . 1r1ntftr Crul•er ntrntd "8AFl.TRA0 ," Ttlt 19'2 ---makes millions o( dollars:=~= :;g J:~ :P fAm f J.i{19 P9M~ !·J! :J: °1bt 6,
-~ 1 wor Jnq dlY Ol H•wpor'f ew1,v1ra, Victoria Slrttl 111· !1».Q, """ ""Y llllt IMYr1t1a. PQltcv 11'1111 Sc1ndln1vl1n b\1111 ~ hi• I 1159 lllCTITIOUS BUSINISS. WOflh Of d~Jslon· S tJV•r t&ch {~lfd 1,.IS 1,.'1' !!S, ... ~ ~~ •• u ~",."" .· , ... , 'Vv•.~... f. t.fl ...,._,11 ltoDWt. T ,.. .. for l'lol~•v •lld w.-1 1t1~ s1res1 ''°'" c2. "'"'· 1n0 1t2 to tie ar ine •11.ptnM1 o1 t11t pul"(:hlwr or Cnn•d•r 300 Hll tn0IM lt11t•lltd •nd MAMI STAfEMINT ..... , " • , ... """ t. .. IU f "' I
..-11 w1 bl·•' ...... 1 rrH1 •M 111, R1.CP. Rf·CP, ,..,..CP, c1.c P, ,,. a . pur~htst,,, mev bt -11 .sup No. 3S, a.rs11cn Tl'lt tollowlng Plft'llOnt 1ro doll!fl iiw. yea r:'s state budget would be !:~, ••• ~ ''.•·.~ 11,,:,•: 1o11~ '!.;·',.',.:. ~ '\ ·~·•. ~rtllir ,..J . ,· ~ tilt CON• (,,P, Tiii u!'dtrslgntd rtMrYn !I'll riOlll IC Tr1ll8'" Perk, 112 Wn l COllll ftlgl'IWl'I• ltWU •t: , ,.. .,_ ..,, ., ... , ' ! ~ '
.... '"'...,..""torv,~Of<ll-acl It •IZOM!: P£71TIO l>I lt·1)·1J. COlll reject lf'IY Ind lit bldt prlOf' to tl'lfN Of Newoort •••ch. C•l!lornr.. 6.t.TES AUTO c 0 N 0 I T I 0 N I N G required to hold open m eetings f'MMI /" 1.11 1~'ff hw•rn 0 :M 1.M on .. ~ I ' I ., ~: h 1,1,,r l ..
.,.,. -4'\V ,U0c;onh1t<l9" Ml11 Pl•nnlno Comtl'lluion. Pott Offltt ~~ ordtr conllrrnl1tt tt11 Nie. on !hi PllVrntnt ol l,.. prlu blo tor l llY CENTER, "5 IL &evenlftl'lltl .St., Cotl• Under 8 bill ••nt tO the ~~·.~1 .. 1,'-,1;1,;r. I: c&,Q
1
"if. 'ti: 1,.-': 11 :
1
.
11
M -~lr.J0 \2: to H¥ Pot lltl tlltl'I the MIO lo• 1200. Cost1 ~. n.w 1>trmrttlon to OATl!O: .a.uoutt 21, 1'7). proptrlY .Oki. tht Gw111• Tu: CotlKIOf of ~. i;aut-•2671 ~ .,, •• :51 ,,,.,. .. TO
.. ~ .. Ill WO(l{1: llY'llloY...S rtlO<'ll ll!"Olltf'IV la<.•ted 111912, 1916A Ind Jlm<tl A ....... , Or.noe COunf't, OA" !hi pe'flOfl C'Ol'K'hlCHnt D•rtt A»oclt!IS. lflc ... C1n1or11l1 ..... embly floor -u-•ay r.wn 0~11 6.0't A.U f!Y '•""' ···-,, • f'L~ltD 1 41 I """"I ·• ccOftlr•-B ..... '''' w " • rt ••1• -•-1 -o l'l{I;) '" •~ • ,._.., blv ''' J.t1 1'111 ~ •• ,,. l"tllC l.O 1 , -'I IHI ,y ;,1n1on oi bid ,_ •.• P "" • 11t1 "'"'"UI '"" 1m •• A11mtnli1r1tor of l'hf E•t•te 1111 w 11 on 1111 betlllf, wlll dtllver tn1 ~· '"' -'"''....., en10 ..... 11\11 I I Co 0 11 , a.11 "YI\ orw "' ft'llY tNltff • flff the arnon• "'"""""·from Cl lo Jt:J.CP. Ill Ille ·-mtd dtc«lef!t. ••Id prootrty lo '"' 1111rcflt11tr. toollMI' l"cllnt, C•llt. t2t2t The Assemb ~-} llu es m .. ,,;..~ y, ... , ;~Mt L Nw ,. ' 11' n I ' -;:r' .... t~lot ":r:... fdOT~ " l"URTHlilt. GIVEN lhll •• B.t.lt.Nl f , K HAO, .rui .• bill of t.ate. Ind 11'11 lllle wn Thi• b\lllMIS •• COllOU(lt<I by • COi'• mittee amendeo... the open hlP IWAltll ~=~ 1.lD 7.111 Nw or . : ~ ,.,
T ~,.~.-,:i • OflrlorJ'i'!~ ~ • ..;.tect :!v ~;,:~_,!irl+lt\e•1~.:.~·~ '~"f.'~w:.!!~:.,°"" ~:" ... :::V~t 1~ ~~ wrct11111tr. • POl'l"°"oej\. M aoel•'"· 11'1(. meeting i:,v,:ston into a b~iU l\;:r~. :·n 11:~ 1 c;iiJ~o,ti,~:~ ~ ot : ! 1: "'!~fix 11
1' I~·; ... ... .. ...=, 't:.K .... on11 Ill' !he ~ty ~nc:lt ot "-Chy Of coua Mell ''" MlcArthlft' ,,,,... R08EJIT L. "90t-'' C:lftltON Wlll!am e . S~lltf'. by s-. Id Gruns"'• ( ..,o.1.!!.. T 4.tt ...... 1·· ·.~ ··u ··~ ~flt• ' . 1 ' wr~ I' . . .~ ~ ~ ... ~ M '"' con rl(I Of! "''L'it,'.;'~ Rtront Ptlil!Cftl, P.O .... 11" (ountv T•• Colllctor ,,..,dttl, ,..-., •Vi-, a.it •;If ~ 10 ,,. MAM
"" • ,HIMN!V· N~ I H<h. C•lll.""' of Drlt111t County Thi• 1tafltMnl flJIMI with lf'lt ~ounty Waf.sOnvilJe), (oJIOWinl Senate orert ,co t+!,11 l"".... S''< w· ~"· 1 HDI< 'I· l Ir. . ~·~~ ~o.r-.o11111 cnv111 Tthl'14)nt<ttlt Ir H. Hu11111hr,y, Clcrkof0ff!'l9•C011n1YOl'I AllVll•l 1.1tn. I • Ing ~ .... J"n 11~ ~ '-~ l"I... Pvbllllltol. ::--AJllfMY' , .... f'tll!IOMll' ' °""'y AM't, , .. COllKlcr ""'' action ast wee,., approv a Wt;J,fit :15 ;.n 1 • ' n:oM I ~~et oany Piiot """'t " 1.,,., ll'lfll cou1 o.11y ""ot '11t111'1ted 0r11t11111 c..l1 06111 ,11o1, 'UbllJl'ltt <>ranos COlll 01111 Plkl1 Puolliflld Or•no• co.11 D•lrY !} .. '°'• similar resoluUon. 0._ -• 1• ''"·'' •r .., 1: f ,:f: :":1t1 1#: t : :~11,1r, ftM.,,._. -·-• • "4J.n,-.1111u\I '" 25, i1 , 1m U.l<ll &uo1111 2.c. lt73 ~l ~UO'Ulll 10, 11. tc. JI, lt7J "" '"' ""' .....
OVEl\THE COUNTER
But General's J ~t' s Nice NASO Llstlnp for Thu"41ay, A119u1t 23, 1973
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
t
•
rr\dily, AUQUSl 24, 1973
Friday's Oosing Prices Co1nplete New York Stock Exchange List
Schultz' Remark
Off sets Gains
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market posten
some modest morning gains Friday, but the anvance
was erased by a!ternoon. Brokers said it was a case
of pre-Labor Day doldrums.
SC DAILY PILOT
Good Deed
make the """""
Sundays
JO
In tho j,J.J!Elij!t,JI
Ameriean
ltlo1e AetiH
American Sales
Volu111e
•
Finance
eBlueLake
.•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -
recrea.Uonal subdivision
beon ordered by a fed
Judge to actively 80llcit buy
and renters from black con@J
muniUes through mall ;;i
newspaper advertising. : ~
In turn, the federal govern-:
ment agreed not to ProleCUte ~
Blue Lake Sprlnp Sales Corp. \j
and Marc Land Inc., for 11 violatlng the Fair Housing Act : '
or 1968. Both fmns ani,.~
operaton of Blue L a t ~Jj
Sprinp subdivision in Arnold ~
Calaveras County. .~
e Cornputer Stock· ..
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -r.
Boothe Computer Corp. TbW'!~ \4
day req~estcd the American ~j
and Pacific Stock exchanges i ,.
to halt trading in t.be com-~'j
pany's common stock and its ~
S:V.a. percent c onvertlble ~,
subordinated. debentures. :
D.P. Boothe Jr., chairman ::
of the board, said the request !I was made to perm.it the com· • pany to meet with Its major·:
creditors. :
e Dollar Sllp1 • • • • ' LONDON (AP) -11le dollar ~
opened marginally lower In '!
European exchange markets
today. repeating the pattern t
set before last weekend. ,
The dollar continued to t l
rtcover during the month and ii
dealers in London explained 1.,
the cUp and strtngtherung of'~ i
slerling by profit taking and ill
the upcoming th ree·da y ~
August holiday weekend. ~ .. e Broadwa11 !t :1
EarolLOS ANGELES CAP) -.::
ngs of 20 I percttlt : •
higher than a year ago and ~ i
&ales 13 5 percent higher ti1vo: •
betn reported by Broadway-~: ~:~ekss!~~~ ~~g· !~r the 1S ~~
The Los Angeles ba~: !
depar1ment store c ha in::
reported 1'hunday that earn:::
lngs for the period were $5 55;:
m1lllon. or ?3 cents a shaft'.~·
compart<I with t-t 7 mlllloo, ot~:
23 n:nts a shart. IAJt ,.,ai~ ·
Sales'°"' lo 12Zl m\lllCll rrod•:
$1!>5.62 m1lhon dur1nl ~'
aame period last year.
1
POW Runs
AsGOP
Governor
Exchange Ousts Women
NEW YORK (AP) - A gualds tore down the banner establishes the rules and
dozen members of the Na-~ forced them' lO leave. regutatk>M for b9th . the ex·
Old -Ruins
Unearthed
..
7 Meat Markets
Put on Probation
lional Organization for Women CAROLE DESARM of NOW changes. PARMA, !talY (AP) -
1NOW1 •·ere ejected from the said it waa the~ protest UPON LEAVING .tbe An International ••· SAN DIEGO (API -Seven beef with 4t.3 perconl rat ,
American Stock Exchange ag••••t "MEX because the building, the women were ,coo. ped!tlon unearthed a S,000 San Diego County meat compared wltb ·the legal Um~ fl d t t . h -n of 30 percut, the departmei. From \\'lre Services a er emons rat ng 1n t e stock O:change bad taken "no fronted by about 30 broterl year-old vlllage 1n the fttrkeb have been placed on Id
Air r~orce Col Jam e • public gallery. action 'in compelling member andchother floor work~ of .the Apennioe hills near probation for violating the u The others were Najjar's
U ndberg Hughe11 of Santa Fe, They demanded a c t i o n ex ange. Parma. But thieves were food •-· d ti '1arket. Benny's Meats and p1'0,l{ra1n.s Thursday for the llrms to adopt affirmative ac-'!be --~--• .... _., c Jo 1 e be b in d the state ' wug an cosme ~ 1• a former prisoner of war in ' men w•·c ..-,......... w 11,1. 1aw1 since March, the state Ranchers Market, lnc. of San North Vietnanl . says he'll seek hiring of wom en and lion programs." jibes at the women, with ooe ~lsts and stole Diego, B.J. Ranch Market of
the Republican noinination for ininorilies. She ·~ her' organization man ·commenting '1Maybe it many Pf. 'the artifacts Department of Health has an-of.
governor of New Mexico in ,1 utMroi.Wi The wo1nen appeared in the has filed a brief in Washington you behaved like women, you :Wlthln 9111 of t h e Jl9l11ced. Chula Vista, Dave's Meats :•'7.':c-"''~"'''==,......,,.~-.,} l!allery displaying a banner with the Securities and Ex-wouldn't have gotten thrown : lllscovery~ , ' Southland Meats of Chula Lemon Grove, and The Coun· 19~1~e fornler pilot. who spent ~~t·r AN !NSP_•llA_r_,o_•_To_u•_•_•:.i_: __ ".::W:::om::::••::_:.Po:::_w_:er:_.'_' _:Se.:c::":::'i::-tY:__.:ch:a:::n~ge::_::Co:m::::nu:::·ss=ion:::·:__w:h:::i_:ch:_:••:::':.· "---------======='===::!._:.Y::i•:la:_W:::8'::.:l:oun::::d_:t:::o·:::":ll:.:gro~u:•:.:d_t:::':..Y.:Bo.:Y:..':..· o:_r_La_M_csa_. __
almost sii years in North
Vietnamese prison camps, was
quoted by the AlbuquerqUe
Journal as saylng he will
participate in retirement
ceremonies Aug. 3l at
Kirtland Air Force Base in
Albuqu erque.
( PEOPLE )
1Iughes, 46, moved ·his wile,
Darthy, and two children to
Santa Fe shortly before be left
for \1ietnain duty.
* Poli ce say t\VO former
singers \\1ith the Temptations
and the singing group's direc-
tor \Vere robbed in Detroit by
ty,·o armed inrn.
ti.1ore than $800 and several
pieces of clothing and jewelry
belonging to singers Eddie
Kendricks and David Ru£fin
and director Co rnelius Grant,
were reported taken.
The three men were in
Detroit to attend the funeral of
Paul Williams, also a fonner
singer ~ith the group.
* Charlie Bro\\o-n, Snoopy ,
Lucy, Linus, Woodstock and
their friends are moving into a
12-room mansion in Santa
Rosa.
Ac tually, "Peanuts" comic
strip creator Charles Schulz is
doing the · --
moving, but
the fictional .
c h a ractcrs
\\'ill accom-:f
pany hin1. .
Schulz
bought the •
mansion
complete
\\'i lh three-SCMULZ
car garage, S\Yimming pool.
guest house and cabana on a
four-acre estate. £rom the Ro-
man catholic Diocese of Santa
Rosa.
The asking price for the
mansion was $250.000.
Bishop Mark Hurley did not
disclose the price paid by
Sehulz.
* Bruce Le,, the late movie
star, has been honored in a
noontime ceremony In San
Francisco's Union Square.
Lee, 32. a native San Fran-
ciscan \\'ho died in Hong Kong
July 20, gained fame as the
stoic ma s1er of or i en ta I
martial arls in 10 movies.
The former houseboy on the
television ·'Gree n •t o r n e t ' ·
series, Let was in fact a kung
fu master.
The ceremonies coincided
with the opening of Lee's last
movie.
* Postmaster General E.T.
Klassen and three fonncr
postmasters general will join
in ceremonies in Austin, Tex.
P.tonday for the unveiling of a
commemorative stamp honor-
ing the late President Lyndo n
B. Johnson.
The three former officials -
all of wbom served in the
Johnson administration -are
John A. GrOW10uskl, Lawrence
F. O'Brien and W. r.larvi n
Walson.
* Tnterior Secretary Rogen
C.B. 7t1orton was sent to bed
by a doctor suffering
"stomach cramps" after a
potluck dinner in N t o e ,
Alaska.
"There's absolutely nothing
to worry about .'' said Dr.
Herbert Merz artcr examining
Morton in his hotel room .
The schedule ca Us f o r 1
Morton to visit the northern 1
ooast of tbe Seward Peninsula
and an overnight fishing trip.
Only Nud e
011. Oritside
't NEW YORK CAPI -
There she was : Miss Nude
America. fully clothesf.
•1r don 't like to be nude,
except when I have to be,"
Valerie Craft~, told • p,_ conler<n
Sbe ezplaln she was
woarlai • br because· ll wu llllhe•llhy not to.
ory.. aound more like
Mia Nude Middle
Amorita," tomebody call·
l!d ClllL
5 n. FOJ.Dllli
PICllC IEICI
• . Foldlar ah&abt.im. ~
-oolll top. Tlak prlC9
i. a .....ta.er for Ille
qaizl!ty. s.a-1. •• •b•
w e're ov.e.. ... • .... , ......... 1710
II US.
BllQuEIS
49~
Aacl U.. prlc;e geta lo"er cr:nd
1o .... mt ov place. E•ery lime the
otkw PT, ... ~ aetTe 11p crnd
lo-e,lt.-drop crtcdn..
Are•'t we de.U.?
PLAn;
IALL wms
77!.
IEL-111
NOi
Ob, SOIM klatl cl W"llllwr.
hi 30 cmd SI Jacla wtdtla..
l 'l" Wg!rit.. 1 Sii tDcla"
~ Wltlt. ebdm,. .wiDdow _,Knft,
nn
TOILET SEATS
197
•
una
1111••11 um
2~~L
11n1111
El1EllOI
BOUSE PAllT
3 97
GAi..
ni. ..-..,.., wood. lltllcce,
..... ci.~.hac:ky--
... S. ltl. Colon,... ..... .... _ ........ ...,,.....
•
HEY!
..
IT GoTS
KNOTS
12112 tlifL FUU
TILE
89!
AD 'liayL ~. KIM Is ci..
.... AM ti.. pcrtterae are
pr.ttf aac:la today'11tr\srr. •On• ..... .S,i.t i:.. •
1111 mMol wttii .-...tm.J
TOILET , ...
177
1'7
llCDELL
IEICI Mn.1 ·nr.ss ,_ .............. -...-w~
drdl; tatlfd=11Ule
......... ooli•-· 11900· • work...W..Wldt.ltlW,.. -.a1oo1. ..... ..., _.. __
.... Mal ........... .....-==••'
WW.
•IDT •mm
W•DltbenlllctbuMl
...... 7" .... ..u.lto tMtroat .... <11 • ..-
...,~.w .....
tla :skzelJ.. aot la tH ..0-.J . 167
Th• potl"a;e wa1 ld.llln9 Jll IO l•t
tilt pd•at• lnailln9 gang ol
Amorl-l'ootal Cotp.·b-it
on. your door lmob..ta. dtli••rr
lo di ff are from your n.ighhorhood
IO WCIYe. at them· and borrow a cup
el 1uqar.
ITSll m llC
o•~••••
Tie f\lf tJial lzl•ented. thJ1 U.0\114 b• gl••D
a medal. Puta 11uff \I P out ol Ille wcry. flt
,,_a dlkk. She wn dnlp.lng • rie"
oitplcme wbig.I
IATllAL 1:1••-n
lllCIS
5'
29'
1115 n.
IADll
FEICllli
297
ROLL
IEDROI
IEIDllAD
3'1JN.Fr.
C1UT• It to flt ~ pla..,. .
UM U to tfMft-• 6-ce. •.
be ~ aacl ,..1. f009
wt~ It.
@
•
. ..
l'• 9lad 0.91're nllhlrcd. I wouldn't wcrnt a11ytldag elN
118.DGtllrcd mwnd ay lloue. I alrHdy belft a ·
aotlMr.fa.law that lreab m.e OUL
--. .l,•\• •• ':•,:-. ~.-.,.,,..~ . .
·•~1 M-
;,!. .
_ .... ·
. ,, . .
8x7 Ft. . .. . 99.00
9x7 Fl .... 109.00
l0x7 Ft ..... 119.00
12x7 Ft ..... 129.00
11Ullllf9
liWGE
'DOOIS
Llglt.t.. bvt stroev. Of
couru, you am pcrinl
tlaea wbale"rer coloc-
yoa wont. CE.xc-s>i tHt
oae, 11'1 !00 ICClrf.)
l 4x7 Ft. . . . 149.00
16x7 Fr •.... 1se.oo.
I 8x7 Ft. .... 169.00
DUIO-llST SPiii
PAllT
97c
I
... • • • , ,. ..-·~ • I r '
.Orange Coa8t
-EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
,
l
VOL 66, NO. 236, 4 S~CTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1973 N TEN CENTS
Nicoll
Superintendent John Nicoll or the
Newport-Mesa Unified Sfiool District
fired or! a strongly worded letter Thurs·
day urging the state legtslature to reject
l"'o bills that could lead to collective
bargaining with teachers.
Nicoll , acting at the direction or
trustees, said In his letter that rorced col·
lective bargaining with teachers would
"destroy'' essential eJements or the
Moves
American public education system.
"The genlUs of our system," Dr. Nicoll
wrote in a letter to every assemblyman
and senator In Sacramento, "has been
the cl06e relationship between the school
system and the pet>ple they serve."
This relationship, he said, insured
"personal, collective, and visible'' ac-
countability on the part or local school ol-
ficials.
Council Gets Choice
Against
Two bills, one introduced by Sen .
George Moscone (D-San Francis®) and
Assemblyman Bob Moretti ( D-V a n
Nuys), would lhreaien this by interposing
a mandatory arbitration panel in case of
disputes between the teachers and board,
Dr. Nicoll said.
At a meeting of the board of trustees
earlier this week, Board President
Donald Small~ood, pointed out that
Plan Ready
By JOHN ZALLER
ot tM D•ll'r '°ilel l!Mf
Ty,·o bicycle trail master plans -one
highly controversial, the other stripped
down to uncontested basics· -will go
before the Newport Beach City Council
Monday for a pubUc hearing.
The first plan, which includes contro-
versial trails on the peninsula ocean·
front. Lido and Balboa islands, and
Mariners Drive, was approved by the
planning commission lhree months ago.
The second plan, which excludes any
trail that has generated pubUc oppasi·
· lion , has the unanimous approval of the
newly reconstituted Bicycle Trails Q>m.
mlttee, which completed its work this
week.
Mary Blake, t'hairman of the trails
committee, said today the second, ooo-
controversial plan waa: endorsed because
committee members were told the city
council wanted a masterplan that could
be universally accepted.
Lawyers Htarl Epithets
-Hartelius Hearing Turns
,
Into Wild Yelling Match
By TOM BARLEY
Of flle DlnY '"""' .....
LOS ANGELES -A threocday mtdi&! e~aminers' hearing into charges aga~t
Dr. Ebbe Harlelius, El Toro, Closed hirt
late Thursday in a shouting match wtth
three fw-ious lawyers hurling aCC\UatloJ\S
12 Narco Agents
Held in Mistake
Raids on Homes
ALTON. 111 (UP!l -A federal grand
jdfy indicted eight fede ral aad four local
narcotl.cs agents today on cha.rge~ or
depriving 11 persons of conslltuUonal
rights during drug raids in southweste~
Illinois last April.
The 17-count indictment "'as returned
in U.S. Distri ct Court after a four·month
federal investigation.
The indictment said the agents, acting
without probable cause or search war·
rants , broke into six h<>!'"es in
Collinsville, East St. Louis and
Edwardsville, all in Illinois, during a
five-day period.
During the course of the raids, two oc-
~upants "·ere assaulted while Handcuffed
and a third man was jailed for three
days without being charged with a crim-,
!he indictment said.
Later, the indictment continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident by
attempting to "tone down" reports to in·
vtstlgators.
1n addition, three other agents wett
charged with lying to th' federal grand
(See INDICTED, P1ge l)
Orange Coast
and epittiets at each other.
"You are unscrupulowi p e op I e , ' •
d<ferue attomeir Matthew Kui:illch Yelled
at deputy attorneys aentral Mark Levine
and Robert Mukai.. "You are unethical
tricksters clearly gilllty of deceptive and
vindi ctive conduct."
"And you're a liar," Levine shouted
back. "1be biggest thing in this bearing
has been your mouth."
Hearing officer John A. W i 11 d
desperately tried to restore order as the
three pl:lysiciam who comprise the state
Board of hfed.ical Examiners review
committee watched open.mouthed.
One clear fact emerged from the
fracas . Both Levine and Mukai 'stressed
that the 11tate will now settle for nothing
less than the revocatioo of Dr. Hanelius'
license to practice medicine.
Both lawyers had been prepared at an
earlier hearing to accept a plan that
would have put Hartelius, 51, on pro-
baUon for fiVe years provided 'he
substantially restricted his use or-certain
dang erous drugs.
The medical committee rejected that
proposal behind closed doors and ordered
Hartelius to open his defense to charges
or moral turpitude and unprofess ional
conduct -most of them stemming from
hls alleged drugging of and sexual
association with two Costa Mesa women.
Kurillch Thursday agreed lo let his
client, who practices in the Hart:>or Area,
go on the witness stand to answer ques-
tions from both sides and the three doc--
tors who will eventually be his jsdges.
That grilling ended late Thursday and
Kurilich promptly turned to both state
lawyers to open negotiations towards a
suggested settlemenl
What happened after that is interpeted
differently by each aide. But whatever
was said, It led lo the shouting match.
Kurilicb claims that Mukai told him
'thtt he lllid Levine bad never intended to
make a deal. He quoted Mukai as saying:
(See HARTELIUS, l'lge l)
\Vilh the controversial trails excluded
from the masterplan, the committee
recommends the disputed trails be kept
on a separate list for possible future
study. '
'"1e idea for pulling the controversial
trails out of the plan for separate con-
sideration came from Mayor Donald A.
Mcinnis, who suggested it at a trails com·
mittee meeting three weeks ago.
Mcinnis, a West Newport ocean front
resident, opposes the West Newport
oceanfront trail in the plan passed by the
planning commission.
Deletion of other controversial trails
is also expected to please Vice-Mayor
Howard Rogers and Councilman Paul
Rycl<ofl.
Rogers, a resident of Peninsula Point .
opposes the peninsula oceanfront trail
recommended by the planning commis·
sion.
Ryckoff. a Balboa Island resident, op.
poses the Balboa fsland trail re<Ol11Illend-
ed by the planning commission.
"Foi: years the bicycle trails committee
bas done its work without paying much
atten~ lo .......,~ city council -"' ed." said Mrs:"BIW.
"But-· .it De.V• bad the money to ac>
compllsh anything. ,·When it came Ume
to bJlld a trail, it didn't have support of
the city council.
"I sincerely hope that we will be able
to get agreement on the non-controve ....
sial trails and that we can actually get
busy building some ol them," Mrs. Blake
said.
The plan recommended by the commit·
tee includes propooah lo build so lo 75
more miles of bike trails in the city.
Included are a Pacific Coast Highway
tdul, a trail along the west side of Up.
per Newport Bay, and an Irvine Avenue
Trail.
Committee members also indicated that
ooe of their highest priorilles is coostruct.
ing a bicycle crossing over Coast High-
way at the Arches Bridge.
At its meeting earlier t}!Js week, the
committee also voted 3-2 to urge the cily
council to declare a moratorium on studv
(See TRAILS, Page !) .
Slie Used It,
But Hat,ed It
Sarah Scull, 2, bas baby-fresh
breath already, but she apparently
decided to sweeten it Thursday like
those pretty girls oa television who
worry about not being kissed.
The tot toddled into the bathroom
of the family apartment at -455 N.
Newport Blvd., found a familiar
spray can, opened wide and got a
mouthful of underarm deodorant.
Newport Beach Fire Department
personnel said the incident left a
bad taste in little Sarah's mouth,
but the experiment evidently didn't
hurt her.
Teacher Bargaining
arbitration panels could enforce their rul·
togs not oitly on salary disputes, but on
any educational policy in which teachers
disagree \vilh the school board.
This, Smallv.·ood said, would have the
~ffect of forcing the board to "transfer'
Its rights'' to the arbitration board and to
become "subservient" to the orders of
the arbitration board.
Jn his letter lo state legis lators, Dr.
Nicoll said: "The bills in question would
have the net effect of placing the
governance of the public schools in the
hands of fa celess entities without local
knowledge; with no responsibility 'for
success of local schools, and with no ac·
countability lo the parents wOOse
children's education would be affected."
SmallwOod and Dr. Nicoll both iIJ..
dicated they felt some form of collective
bargaining mighl be inevitable, but they
~QM· Q~ 'JI.~~ I 1 •• F ')
urged a cam pa ign to make the public
a\\'are of its dangers.
Trustees had wanted to pass a fonnal
resolution opposing the two collective
bargaining bills. However, Dr. NicoJI
told them thev could not do so until their-
next meeting ·because the n1atter had not
been included on the meeting's agenda.
Trustees then directed Or. Nicoll to
write a letter until a resolution could be
passed. ~
·~
'
' .,
Diverse Views~of the world around ~ as seen Dy
young artl8ts catch eye of intrigued passerby m
South ~ Pl.ua Mall. The aft show runs tbrougn
Aug. 31, featuring work by students of Jim Stoia
and other instructors involved in Newport·Mesa·
Orange C<N1st College Fi ne Arts Workshop. Small
browser seems more interested in watchlng the real
world go by. ·
Neivport Cuts Red Tape
To Upper Bay Dredging
It's taken three months, but Newport
Beach appears to have untied the red
tape that stopped plans by the Dover
Shores Q>mmunity Association to dredge
their two chaMels in Upper Newport Bay.
1be U.S. Army Q>rps of Engineers an-
nounced today it will.issue a _permit to
dredge the channels, unless it receives
written opposition before Sept. 6. Should
there be opposition, it would call for a
public hearing.
The channel dredging was planned in
June, but Newport Beach Marine Safety
Director Robert Reed said he was forced
to hatt ~ because ·permlts had not been
is.sued by the Corps,. the Environmental
Protection Agency, the U.S. Bureau of
Sportlisberies and gume and the Santa
Ana Regiooal Water Quality Control
Board.
Reed, however, called .the need for the
work urgent and tried immediately to
get emergency approval.
"We "urked as hard and as fast as \ve
could,'' said M11-rine Safety Lt. Dave
Harshbarger, "but it still took us three
months."
Normally, it -would probably have
taken six months to get the · pennits, he
said.
He also said there woul~'t have been
even a three-month delay, if the U.S.
Bureau of Sportfisheries and Game badn 't
insisted on follo'o\·ing its: regulations to
I.he Jetter of the law.
"'Ibey insisted v.·e get a permit," he
said, ''even though the Corps of En·
gincers had told them they had no ~
(See RED TAPE, l'lge Z)
Kid11ap-rape
Victim Found
I11 Auto Lot
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An tl·year-old
~Ussion Hills girl, found uncooscious this
morning after reportedly being kidnaped,
\Vas raped and probably drugged by her
abductor. a hospital spokesman said.
The girl was in a coma and was listed
in serious condition 'vith a possible con-
cussion.
Officials at the UCLA ?lfedical Center
sald , she y,•as "seJ:aully molested and
probably ingested drugs."
Swedish Gunman
Warning Police
He'll Use Bomb
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -A gunman,
barricaded in a downtown Stockholm
bank with four hostages and ac·
companied by a criminal involved in the
miarder of a policeman, threatened today
to blow up himself and the hostages "as
a last reort,'' police reported.
The gW1man, identified as bankrobber
Kay Robert Hansson, 22, and believed to
have been deported from the United
States, was still holding out more than 28
hours after the drama began. He wa~
keeping police at bay with "' submachine gun.
Hans90n has demanded safe conduct
with the hostages but police have refused
to let the hostages go with him. They
also refuse to give him the mo,ooo he
demanded, although the money, in
Swedish and foreign currencies, is kept
available in lbe bank.
Ct.ark Olofsson, 26, an inmate friend of
Hansson, was brought to the bank Thurs--
day from a prison in central Sweden
where be was serving a 10-year sentence
as an accompUce in a police killing in
1966. llanssoa demanded Olofsson 's
release and explalned he needed Ololssoa
as a driver of a getaway car.
Ofolsson said in a telephone interview
from the bank that Hansson would blow
up the bank should the pol~ try to
overpower him.
Weather
Slightly ccoler Saturday along
the Orange Coast -but still nice.
Highs in the upper !Ills •I the
beaches rising to 78 Inland. Over·
night lows &US. 4,,.
Little Jason Rea Succumbs
She was transferred to the center from
ri1arina Mercy Hospital in Marina Del
Rey, where she. was taken after being
round unconscious in a parking lot behind
a suburban shopping center this morning.
Her fat her told newsmen hi s
daughter's condition appeared sta ble.
"\Ve're just thankful she's alive Md
'''Rnt to thank the P,OUce department and
her friends and neighbors for their con--
cem ." he said.
Bo1nb Accident
Hu1nciri Error
INSIDE TODi\ \' .
Two Logu11<1 Beach film mak·
tr• were i1tvoiwct jn ihe mcleing
of a supar1far -even 'I ht l.s a
aeoguU. The filming of the Jona·
th<m Llulngsion SeaguU seagulls
bv Greg MacGlUlvrav and Jim
F'r•eman for a bird's debut Is
dtscrlbed in £oda11'.1 \Vtekender,
Page 2S.
Pool Victi1n Loses Lo11g Battle for Life
By JOHN VALTERZA
Ot' "" 0.11¥ l"IMit IMff t
Jason Rea, the little hoy from
Gapistrano Beach who fought death for
weeka but never knew It, lost the battle
late Thursday 11 Fairview State Hoopital
as bis mother prayed at hll bedside.
The 3-ye•N>ld victim of a pool tragedy
In Huntington Beach early In July died ol
major compllcatlons brought °" tJy
massive brain damqe sulfered In the In-
cident at· the home of a baby sitter. 1 In the weeks that followed the com·
atose youngster was Oown to Denver 10
become a transp1ant donor, then a week
ago was returoed to the Orange Coast
after physicians In Colorado ruled the
youngster no longer qullllled as •• ora111
donor.
"Jason's now a JitUe angel in Heaven ,"
his weary. grieving mother, Unda, said
this morning.
"f prayed arid prayed for God to help
his suffering," she added.
Mn. a.. a :is.year-old secretary who ts dl;.o.:;.\, bad made funeral a,..
rangemcnts weeks ago when It finit was
pl&Med that her only child would be
flown to Denver and the breathing
machines removed.
The medical coogensus at that time
was that because no hope existed at all.
the yountpter would be medically dead at
Iha! point and organ traMplants could he
performed, using his kjdneya and liver to
glve Ille lo other dying children.
"My greatest grief Is that It never hap-
pened: that Jl90ll could not 1lve life to
olhtt children," uld llln. Rea.
I
Through the ordeal 1.1rs. Rea said, sup-
port bas come from throughout the na·
tlon.
"I've had messages from perfect
.strangers from all over the country, all
blessing me for courage and laith in the
L<>nl, and I'm oo gr•teful for them.
Without the help I wonder If I could have
made lt," she said.
The support bas continued to come
from friends and strangers alike.
"My phone was ringing all night and
everyone I talked lo agreed with me th at
God must have had a reason for all or
this, and now It's up to me to !ind the
answer," she aaid.
One factor wblch caused some bit·
tcrncsa during the alrain of the vigil were
(See CAPO BOY, l'lge II
• ' I
Police contin ued to search for her ab-
ductor, believed to be a middle-aged
man.
She was found aL I.he rear of a store by
a trash colleelor, pol\ca said. The spot
where she was found wu about 35 miles
from where she was.last teen.
The girl and her S.yeoNJld brother,
both had been apprvacbed by the man
Thursday and were oslled lo distribute
leaflets !or a San Fenlando Valley dry
cleaning shop, police said.
The children-were seen distributing
len(lcts In the Granada lillls and lllission
Hills areas. The boy told police th<l man
drove him and his sister to a parking lot
und that he got out to put handbills on
lhe windshields or cars. When he return·
ed. the car was 1one, he said.
Officers and two police hclicept<r
crews hunted for the girl all nigltt. They
y,·ere alded by members or a volunteer
civilian searcl\-aod-~scue team with IS
four-wheel drive vehicles.
WASHINGTON (APl -Air
Force investigators today blamed
the accidental 1112 bombing of a
Cambodian village on the rad•r
navigator's failure to tum on a key
switch in the. aiming computer.
Announcing results of the In·
vestlgatlon of the bombing which
killed and wounded more than 400
Cambodians at Neak Luong Aug. !,
Pentagon opokesman Jerry W.
Frledhelm said Air Foree rom-
manders ••are in tbe proceu of tak·
Ing corrective and dl.scl pllnary ac-
tions."
lfe declined to Identify the radar
naviga tor or other members of the
852 bomber crew which dropped ILS
load about 11 ~ miles away from Its
tarset. A B5S normally has a crew
of six.
1
•
f OAJLV PILOT N Friday, August 2~. iq73 ~~~~~~~~~:.:._--'-~-'--~
IRA Terror
London Stock
Tower Bombed
LONDON {UPll -A parcel bomb hid·
den In B hollowed-out book exploded with
a white fla sh on the 22nd floor or Lon-
don's new stone, glass and steel Stock
Exchange today, wounding two persons.
It was the sixth day of Landon bomb
attacks blamed on an exlremist wing
of the Irish Republican Army, and the
victims were the first persons injured by
the 35 bombs put in stores, offices and
subway stations since SW1day.
It v,ras a bright sunlit morning and an
army of secretaries, clerks and bowler-
batted bankers had just emerged from
the subway and railroad stations to fill
Scantily Clad
Hitchhiker
Lands in Jail
What do you say to a nearly naked
woman hitchhiker?
lo Laguna Beach, it's "get in the patrol
car please."
At least, that's what Patrolman Paul
Rose said late Thursday, just before the
busty scanty pantie-clad woman began to
at tack him.
It setlmed that Rose bad stopped the 39-
year-old Orange woman for tailgating.
He detected an odor of aloohol and
\vhile the woman -clothed at the time
-wasn't really drunk, Rose auggested
she take a cab home.
Walking to the center of South Coast
Highway near the southerly city llmlts,
the woman stuck out her thumb, air
parently to hitchhike.
Officer Rose advised the woman that
the center of the traffic lanea was not the
place to stand while hitchhiking and the
woman moved to the curb, removed all
her clothing except some brief flesh col·
ored panties and stuck out her thumb.
When Rose altempted to take !ht
woman into custody for indecent ex-
posure, she allegedly flailed away at him,
which all resulted in a booking for In-
decent exposure and resisting arrest.
At the station , she declined to clothe
hersel!, and was handcuffed in an office
until transpor tation to the "'omen's sec-
tion of the Orange County jail could be
provided.
From Pagel
CAPO BOY ...
comments about the youngster "making
medical history," Mrs. Rea said.
"That hurt greatly," she said.
The youngster was literally brought
ba ck from death several times during the
ordeal ~·first after showing no signs or
Jife after the~rescue from the bottom or
the pool.
Jason 's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a.
team of physicians worked furiously at
Huntington Intercommunity Hospital.
Three weeks later at the same hospital
the youngster again lost his bodily func-
tions but was revived and after surgery
physicians, Mrs. Rea and her former
husband - Jason's father -agreed to
the transplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver Mrs. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fare and expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One of those offers of help came from
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help Mrs. Rea face what she had
believed to be the inevitable.
"l accepted it graciously," she said.
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
Services for the li ttle boy are ten·
talively set for \Vednesday at the Peek
Family Colonial Funeral Ho me in
Westmioster.
OUNOI COAST H
DAILY PILOT
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$1n J!Mn C.plsl••M A tlr>Olt P'e9'°'1•1
91111ion If Jlllllll$1'19d St hlrlll'f' Ind $ut'!dl}'I.
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&IY '''"'• CO.II M1s.1, C11!forn!1, tUH.
Robert N, W11d
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the City of London, the capital's inner
enclave housing Britisn major finan cial
institutions.
In a gray-carpeted executive office,
room 2201, Miss Joanna Knight , 25, began
sorting the day's mail. She reached for a
large white envelope addressed to the
Stock Exchange's secretary general,
George \V. Brind, and sli t it open.
'!be envelope exploded with a white
flash , disfiguring Miss Knight In a blow
that struck at the very heart of one or
the world's great financial centers, Lon·
don's square mile of money.
Blood streamed from Miss Knight's
face, hands and legs. She fainted.
Brind, 62, the stock exchange's chief
administrative officer, staggered to the
door, shouting .. Bomb! Bomb!"
Miss Knight's gold wristwatch stopped
at 9:20 a.m.
In the tradition-bound Stock Exchange,
whose $10 billion turnover exceeds that of
all European contlnenlal stock exchanges
put together, the stiff British upper lip
prevailed to maintain proper decorum in
the crisis.
A police warning flashed over the ex~
change's 20-cbannel closed television
circuit, used for price collecting:
"There has been a bomb explosion. The
police are deadling with it. You may
evacuate the building."
Surfing, Sailing
Classes Extended
An additional two-week session or surf-
ing and sailing classes will bi offered
from Aug. 'It through Sept. 1 by the
Newport Beach Department of Parks,
Beaches. and Recreation.
Instruction in beginning and in-
termediate Sabots will be held at the
Orange Coast College Sailing Facility,
1601 West Coast Highway.
Persons may register with instructors
through Aug. '1:1 during class hours from
9 a.m. to noon, 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., and
6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Surfing lessons will take place at the
Newport Beach pier from 8 a.m. to 9
a.m.
Cycle Hits Car;
Gh·l, 14, Injured
A ~ Ne\vport Beach girl suffered a
forehead laceration Thursday afternoon
when her bicycle slammed into the side
of a car on Jamboree Road at Back Bay
Drive near her home .
Sherri Henry, 14, of 1840 Park
Newport, was treated for a l 1,~·inch rut
at Hoag Memori al Hospital and released
following the 1:30 p.m. accident.
Police said Miss Henry ·was riding
down Jamtx:iree Road when a car driven
by Gertrude Ohlig, 39. of 3080 Johnson
1\ve .. Costa Mesa, started to enter lhc
road from Back Bay Drive.
From Page 1
RED TAPE ...
jectioos to it.°'
Reed had said an emergency situation
existed because the channels were so
filled with silt that many boats were
scraping bottom just sitting in their
berths. Others could not be moved even
at high tides. he said.
Harshbarger said that while he doesn't
expect any opposition to the plan now on
file, if there is H \\'ill cause additona!
delay.
James l\1etalios, de puty district engi·
neer for the Army, said the homeowners'
association plans to dredge a total of
1.300 cubic yards of silt.
The dredged material \\'i ll be trans-
por1ed by barge and dumped in the
Pacific Ocean about three miles off
Corona del Mar.
"However. if they determine lhere
are some contaminants, the disposal site
will have to be moved to an EPA.
approved disposal site off San Pedro,"
Harsbbara:e r said.
He expfalned that the company doing
the dredging is currently performing
chemical tests to det ermine if any con·
taminants of any significance ex ist.
•Not "Slave'
Russian novelist Alexander l
Solzhenitsyn, sayil1g '1 am not
a slave," has challenged the
authority of the Soviet state
to bar him from living in Rus-
sia with his family.
From Pagel
HARTELIUS. • •
"we just \\'anted to get Hartelius on the
stand and listen to his story."
Mukai denied this statement and
denied having said anything resembling
it to Kurl.licb. And he asked Wllld to take
action against the Fullerton lawyer for
the mouthing of an obscenity allegedly
leveled at the two young state att~eys
at the height of the fracas.
Kurilicb, beside himself with rage, told
Willd that he would never have put
Hartelius on the stand If he had not been
sure that some serious attempt at
negotiation would be instiga~d.
He labeled the state action as "con·
temptuous, unethical, disgraceful decep-
tion" that would mean at least another
year of hearings before he can complete
his defense of Hartelius.
Willd finally persuaded all three
lawyers and Laguna Beach attorney Tom
Reilly, Kurillch's co-counsel, to leave the
hearing room and discuss a possible set-
tlement in private.
But they all returned for yet another
shouting match in which Levine and
Mukai insisted on nothing less than the
revocation of the silver-haired physi-
cian's license.
\Villd ordered all four lawyers to return
Sept. 11 for the opening of a three day
~ hearing and was prompt~ warned by
Kurilich that an Orange County Superior
Court murder tri al at whlcb he is defen·
ding the accused man will likely 6e in
progress at that time .
Willd said he intends to personally con-
tact presiding Judge Bruce Swnner in a
bid to deJay the trial until after the Sept.
11 hearing is concluded.
From Page 1
TRAILS ...
or all trails on the controversial list.
Accrding to the committee majority,
the purpose of the moratorium is to clear
the way for the committee to proceed on
non.oControversial project.s.
The committee also voted 4·1 to pla~
the Balboa Island trail on the contro-
versial trails list. Th.is reversed a 4-3
vote of the previous week on which the
committee excluded the Balboa Island
trail from the controversial trails list on
the grounds that it was opposed by every·
one and therefore was non~ntroversial.
Mary Blake, \vho changed her vote, said
she did so after committee member
Lansing Abbott told her that ~1ayor Mc-
innis favored listing the Balboa Island
trail on the controversial trails lii;t. Ab-
bot Is Mclnnis' appointee to the con1mit-
tcc.
Auto Regulation OK
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Controversial
legislation regulating auto dealer and
manufacturers' activities in California
cleared the Assembly without a vote W
spare Thursday after sharp debate on
whether it hel ped consumers at all. The
41-19 vote came after Assemblyman Alan
Sieroty (0-Bever ly Hills), attacked the
rneasure as "antk:o mpeliti vc."
Fugate Parole?
Board May Com1nut,e Life Sentence
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Caril Ann t•ugate. who traveled w1tn
Charles Starkweather in a 1958 murder spree in which II pers ons
died , cleared a hurdle today that co uld lead lo parole.
The three-member state parole board on a majority vote recom·
mended to the state pardon board that it commute her sentence to a
definite term or years, a necessary preliminary to parole.
She was 14 when she accompanied :)tarkweathcr, who dted in
the electric chair in 1959 for the string of murders 1n Nebraska ana
Wyoming. Starkweather. then 19. was her boyfrien d.
Miss Fugate, now 30. was sentenced at 15 to a life term 1or one
count or llrst-degree murder.-She is .1mpnsoned at the York wo-
men's Reformatory .
"It ls our judgment," said bOard Chairman John lireennoltz,
"that society's purpose has been served and Miss t11gate canno t
benefit by further imprisonment and is an acceptable rtsk !or paroto
consi deration."
Dolly Flies
CdM Coop;
Pet Hunted
Bob George promises Oolly'll never go
away again.
But right now, he wan ls ber back
\\'here she belongs -in her cage.
Dolly, a 5-year-old Jendaya parrot,
fl ew out a window at the George home,
205 Carnation Ave., Corona del Mar, a
week ago.
"It's really disrupted our \Yhole
household," George insists, "We're all
attached to her. Even our dog, Stonny,
just mopes around looking at Dolly's
empty cage."
George said he reported Dolly's disap-
pearance to the Newport Beach Police
Department's animal control division and
has offered a $50 reward to anyone find-
ing her.
He asks police be contacted if anyone
spots her, which won't be difficult.
"She's extremely brilllant-colored,"
says George "She has a very brilliant
orange head, neck and chest and olive-
green wings \Vith red and blue on them."
George said he reported Dolly's disap-
pearance to the Newport Beach Police
Department's animal control division and
has offered a $50 reward to anyone fin·
ding her.
';If any human comes near her," he
said. "she blurts 01Jt:
"Hi dolly. You're OK. I like you.
Dolly's OK. Sweetheart. Go to your
cage."
"And her diction is perfect," George
boasts.
"She flew out the door once before," he
said, "and she flew down to Balboa
Island and went direcUy to the niece of
some movie actress.
"I put an ad in the paper and got her
back the next day," he said.
George says Dolly got out this time
while be was washing windows, but he's
putting up special screens to keep her
swinging all she wants -in her own cag-
ed room.
From Pqe 1
INDICTED .•.
jury investigating the raids.
The agents, attached to the St. U>uis
o f r i c e of. Drug Abuse Law
Enforcement, included six from the
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs, two from the Treasury Depart-
ment, three from the St. U>uis police
department and one from the East St.
Louis Police Department.
The six federal narcotics agents in-
dicted are William C. Dwyer, Kenneth R.
Bloemaker, Dennis R. Moriarty, Dennis
Harker, Michael Hillebrand and ~
Phillips.
Treasury Department employes in-
dicted are Tom Teyssler and Calvin CUlp.
The three St. Louis policemen are
Ronald J. Olive, Donald W. Spicer and
Daniel J. Duffy.
The East St. U>uis officer named in the
indictment is Lester Anderson.
SALE
'j
UPITtletlMfe •' l
' ' Getting a Boost (
Artist's conception shows space shutUe system entering orbi~. The ··'
twin solid rocket boosters are being jettisoned as the DC·9-srze or· '
biter and its external propellant tank continue to climb. '
Belgian Crosses U.S.
On Bike, Sees Pacific
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Ol 11'14 01llY Pltgl Stiff
It was just after 11 a.m. Thursda y that
Frank Meysman was face-to-face with
the Pacific Ocean in Dana Point.
His 43-day, 4,500-mile bicycle ride that
began July l t at New York's Kennedy
Airport was over.
''It was just great seeing the ocean."
said ~1eysman of his first glimpse of the
blue Pacific. "l couldn't believe Im ade
it."
One thing made clear is that the United
States is not ideally laid out for bjcycling,
Meysman said between sips of lemonade
at the Three Arch Bay borne of 1t1r. and
1t1rs. Thomas Cutkomp.
Take the relatively short run from
Blythe to Palm Springs, across the
scorching southern desert. The two
desert towns are connected by high-speed
Interstate 10, "'here bicycles aren't
allowed.
Meysman, rather, had to pedal his
Belgian-made touring bicycle south to
Brawley. then head north through
Coachella and finally . to Palm Sprlngs.
The cities were even worse. It took
nearly two hours to find a surface street
lea ding out of JFK Airport In New York.
Meysman, 21, a univerSity student in
Belgium, began planning for the cross-
country trip 18 months ago.
''Some of us had joked about a trip to
China -even before President Nixon -
but we figured it would take four months
and we only had three months of vaca-
tion. So we settled on America,·•
t.-leysman recalled.
When the trip began in New York,
J\.1eysm an had two companions r1ding.
with him . "But they quit In Kansas City ..
They v.·erc physically disturbed," he
joked.
Meysman, a fonner American Field
Service exchange student who lived in
Iov"a tv.·o years ago, relied on AFS
members to provide places to stay dw:·
ing his ride.
He admitted it was no easy task to lin~
up families coast-to-coast. ·
The only thing he carried with him wa"
a small pack containing clothes, a firSl
aid kit, some food and spare parts for hiS;
Superior brand bicycle.
A Belgian manufacturer donated the
bike for the trip and Meysman said It
performed beautifully, with not o~
broken part and only one flat ti re. ·
"And the roads some place! were
awful,'' he added.
The worst part of the trtp, 1'feysm3n
declared, was the seemingly endless rid~
through the southwestern desert spari-
ning New Mexico, Arizona a n d,
California.
BecauSe of the scorching daytime'
tem peratures, Meysman rode at night.
H1s longest ride in a single day was a
19-hour run from Brawley to Nuevo, a.
hamlet in Perris Valley. · ·
He left Brawley, just 24 miles from thq
f.riexican border at 6 p.m. Tuesday and
arrived in Nuevo at l p.m. Wednesday.
Each week during the trip. people hi
Belgium were kept abreast o.f
Meysman·s ride with tape recordings
that he made and air-mailed home.
The tapes were broadcast every Surf:;
day afternoon on Belgium's national
radio.
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6 DAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Sphere of Influence
Excitement was stirred in Irvine and Laguna Beach
governmental circles last week when Newport Beach
reaffirmed that It wanted its sphere of influence ex·
tended to include the Irvine Company.owned coastline
between Corona del Mar and Crystal Cove.
The decision wasn't really that surprising. Newport
Beach made its original declaration in 1970 and Its ac·
lion last week, wh Ue significant, was really nothing
startling.
And it was a hesitant reaffirmation at that. Two
councilmen clearly were afraid not that the downcoast
area might slip away from Newport Beach, but that the
downcoast might be forced on tbe city.
When a city says it wants an area in its sphere oC
influence, it is simply saying that it possibly may want
to annex that area sometime in the future.
In this case, in NeWport Beach the emphasis is on
the word "possibl y." The city has not yet done the de-
tailed technical studies necessary to determine whether
annexation Would be feasible. Further, it is not yet cer·
tain that Newport Beach would want the downcoast eve n
if these studies proved the feasibility of annexation.
Some councilmen make it clear they are more con·
cerned with protecting Newport Beach from possible
adverse effects of any future downcoast de velopment -
for 'instance, increased traffic -than in actually an·
nexing it.
And if Newport Beach were anxious to annex -
. which it is not -the wi shes of the downcoast property
owner, the Irvine Company, still would need to. be taken
into consideration. And at this point, the Irvine Com·
pany is saying plainly that it doesn't want to annex to
any ci ty until more study is dot\€!.
Given these circum~tances, the Local Agency For·
matjon Commission (LAFC) would be wise to proceed
cautiously next month after it receives testimony on
whose si)here of influence should be extended into the
downcoast area. Irvine, Laguna Beach and Newport
Beach all have legitimate interests, if they choose to
press them, because each city will be signi!lcantly af·
lected by the downcoast if it develops.
The I.AFC might acknowledge this by allowing all
three cities to stake out overlapping claims on the down·
coast, or by permitting none of them to make any claims,
But in any case, the LAFC should not close the door on
any city until all the facts are in.
Upper Bay Rights
Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa
Ana apparently has struck out on his own in a new effort
to resolve the Upper Newport Bay problem.
In a letter to the Field Committee -a joint led·
eral, state, and local government group working to bring
the bay ir_ito public ownership -Battin, who serves on
the committee, makes two key points:
.-. Orang~ County's direct interest in the bay should
be hm1ted basically to the actual shoreline area. This is
where the coun.ty's prescriptive rjghts suit would have
the gre.atest w.e1ght in establishing public access rights.
The suit now includes lands on the bluffs not essential
for public access to the shore he says.
-Orange County should file suit to gain clear title
to the three undeveloped islands in the back bay islands
the Irvine Co. pas claimed fo r nearly 50 years. '
. _Battin says ~is Jetter i~ based on a county counsel
opiruon questioning the Irvine Company's title to those
islands. Thus, he reasons, it may be possible for the
county to win most of the Back Bay by lawsuits alone .
. Others, notabl.v in the Irvine Company, doubt this
motive. They see Battin's action tas simple harassment.
It seems. t~ ea~ly, however, to make any judge-
ment on Battin s pos1t1on. The legal questions are still
unclear. \Vhatever action is taken, speedy resol ution of
the Upper Bay matter should be a principal concern.
-
N
Plenty of 'Pork'
In State Budget
Dea1·
Gloomv
Party Le(fders Ca utioned i n Crisi s
Your money Is burning a hole in the
politicians' pocket.
And through that hole has poured a big
rat ($9.4 billion) state budget marbled
"'Ith the fat of excess and extravagance.
Verne Orr, state director of finance.
admits the 1973-74 budget is full or
"pork." Pork !hut
would not have been
pennttted ln lean-
er .. y'i.ars. Leant!r,
meaning tbe state's
treasllry. Not yours.
That "pork" Is
costing \vage earners
and lalpayers hund-
reds ol millions or
extra dollars. 11
comes in various chunks and sizes. Here
are a rew:
-A $200 million increase, this year
over last. in the operationa l and capital
costs of state agencies:
-Another $226 million for an average
12 percent increase in salaries ror state
rmployes. That 12 percent is excessive.
(As Cal-Tu suggests, an increase of 6
percent would have been equitable. State
y.·orkers have received a 42 percent pay
increaSe over the past fi ve years.):
-An increase of $68 million for UC and
the sta le colleges and universities in the
race or declining enrollment;
-$42 million for a down payment on
Senator Rand olph Collier's ty.•in towers
(or . "'ilatever form new legislative
quarters take ), and
-at least another $50 million in ne\v
pnrk and recreation projects to "buy"
the budget votes to sustnin Collier's seed
money for those memorial towers.
( ___ R_u_s_w:_"_r:_l'_O_N___,J
THOSE excesses and extravagances
\fere made earlier, if not JXlSSible, by
that $826 million surplus banging in the
Sacramento packing house. By the end of
the year thaL carcass ~ be bloated to
$1 bi!Lioo.
Politicians would have you believe that
surplus was unexpected. Back in Dec;,
1971 and again in MarqJ, 1972 this col·
un\n p..dicted the huge surplus and sug,
gested It might go as high as $1 billion:
A surplus is no excuse for increased
an-d unnecessary spending. Surplus or no,
any politician with a sense o f
responsibility should approach each ex-
penditure, each increased or new pro-
gram, with this question:
"U_ I had to vote for a tax increase to
pay for this appropriation, would I have
the guts to do it?"
IN ·MOST cases the answer would be
"no." Politicians do not like to tie a tax
invoice on their goodies. The surplus
relieved them of that accountability.
SB 90, the "tax refonn" package of
1972, is a monstrous measure. Within the
next four years, it will increase the cost
of stat& government by at least $1 billion
a year. And , it is causing serious and
ur:gent problems ror local school districts
that are in a dither because of its club-
footed languag e and contradictions.
1'his year 1s "trailer" bill to correct SB
90's deficiencies and technical discrepan-
cies is almost as voluminous as the
original legislation. That's what happens
•
Gus
I've got to admit Nixon makes a
much better target tor his critics
,~·hen he's hiding in lhe \\'hite House
than \Vhen he's giving a press con-
ference. Fortunately for them, be
probably y.·01i't believe that.
A. D.
Glot>lt!Y Gm C°"""tftf1 •rt WCllTlittH oY ~ ....... ~ ....... 111Y Nl'Met ,,..
,,.._ tf fl'lt -....,.., S.llf '"" "' •ff .... r. G!Gorny Giit. D•llY ,llOt.
when politics supersede reason and am-
bition overrides responsibility: the cost
of political passion Is paid by the tax·
payer.
THAT Or..'E-CENT state •sales, tax in·
crease? The one now being squeezed out
of your pocket? The one the politicians
are falling all over themselve s to "ad-
just"? It's part of that damnable tax
reform package.
Heat from the taxpayer.s has singed the
tails of the politicians and they rush to
delay or temPorarily reduce that $650
million tax take. They have the gall to
claim they are "saving" us $320 million
by temJ)Orarily repealing or reducing the
one-cent increase. How can the re-
maining increase of $320 million be con-
sidered a savings?
Sooner or later the entire one-cent will
have to lake e!fect permanently. The
bUit-in excesses or state government de-
mand it.
TIIOSE WHO suggest that the sales tax
increase is sirnpJy·a trade-off \vith lower
property taxes sing a siren song. Within
a year or two the sales tax increase will
be a permanent fixture and property tax-
es \Viii be about as high as ever. Ex-
travagance must be fun ded; if not no1Y,
then tomorro,v.
Agnew 'Hands · Off' Hints
WASHINGTON -A confidential
telephone ca ll from top White House aide
Melvln R. Laird to a Republican con·
gressional leader, warning him not to e:o
all-out in defense of Vice President Spiro
Agnew, is new and harsh evidence to
party profess ionals
of the depth of the
crisis that threatens
Ted Agnew.
In his telephone
call to Rep. John B.
Anderson of Illinois,
chairman of -t h e
House Republican
Conference, Lairrl
carefully specified
that he was talking not as a \Vhi te llou.«e
aide.
His message: don't get on a limb in the
Agnew affair, particularly with an all-out
derense of the Vice President. Stay away
from the Agnew affair as far as possible.
Agnew is under intense federal In-
vestigation on charges of possible
criminal violations of various federal
statutes involving bribery, extortion, tax
fraud and conspiracy.
REPUBLICANS who know about the
Laird call to Anderson (described as
"astonished" by the warning ) assume
that Laird and possible other party
grandees have contacted other senior
Republicans with similar warnings.
Morel>ver, the Laird telephone call to
Anderson fits a pattern that has in-
furiated the Agnew camp. For example :
1. Before Agnew himse!f rOO!ived
formal notice from the Justice Depart·
ment that' he wa ... under investigation, Al.·
ty. Gen. Elliot Richardson reported On
late July) to White House staff chief
Alexander M. Baig, Jr., with a briefing
( EVANS ·NGVAK J
on all aspects of the case. On Aug. 2,
Agnew 's attorneys received their letter
from the prosecutors.
2. A prominent television commentator
\\'as privately cautioned by an official of
the Justice Department 10 days ago in
words similar to those used by Laird to
Anderson: don't go OVCJ:?>ard for
'Agnew ; you may wind up with egg On
·~yo~Jaee.
3. TllE< WHITE HOUSE hns g0ne to
embarrassing length not to put the Presi-
Wl.,ks
dent on record as to his vice president's
innocence.
4. The Nevi' York Times front -page
di spatch of Aug. 15, outlining charges
against Agnew in vivid detail. is believed
by furious Agnew allies to hav~ emanated
from high levels or the Justice Depart-
ment (who flatly deny it I, not from
Maryland sources also implicated in the .
charges against Ange\V.
It is not surprising that allies of
Agnew, whose talents have sometimes
beel grossly ~ by the President to gd-
vance Mr. Nixon's interests, would be
filJed with dark suspicim. over these in-
cidents. They regard theJn as proof of
ncfario.us un4c rground admlnistration
vvarfare against Agnew, partly to ease
the · President's immense \Vatergate
burdens.
THUS, in this conspira torial view -so
understandable on the part of Agnew in-
,limates -Mr. Nixon or Republicans
close to him are greasing the skids for
the hapless Vice President. -Under the
25th Amendment to the Constitution, they
are quietly preparihg to non1i11ate a suc-
ces.sor -most llkely John B. Connally.
It p;as Connal ly who saved Mr. Nixon
from .disaster in th. inflationary crisis of
August 1971. Perhaps Connally, tb.>
former Democratic governor of Texas
wholtumed Republican at a moment of
max mum help to the Watergate-
beleaguered President last spring, can
help again.
To Agnewites, that fits the known fact
that Connally recently canoeUed his plans
for a long trip abroad and the lesser·
known fact that some CoMally friends
predict he will be back in the ad·
ministration in October.
Meat Hoarder's Attitude Annoys Housewife
BUT JN FACT the Laird warnings may
spriQg from som~thing far less con·
spiratorial. They may be a flashing
signal of aaution based not on any desire
to do ii:t Agnew but on a rational and in·
formed judgment that Agnew is a goner.
Likewise, Richardson 's July briefing of
Haig, before Agnew himsell had fonnal
notification, may also be explainable as a
rational act based on the Pre!ildent's
prior right to know. "ls that normal ?" a
Justice Department official repeated in
answer to our question . "Hell, nothing's
nonnal in this case. \Ve're playing it by
ear."
Supermarket Emplo ye
To the Editor: I re alize you have iinportant tasks of
edltlng your newspaper without another
outside Jetter coming tn the way of your
procedures, but tonM!thing went on today
and I bad to write someooe and get 11 off
my chest.
t WAS in a local $Upcnnarket this
afternoon and stood behind one of the
employea who was having his merchan·
dise checked out before going home. ·AU
of his order was packages and packages
of ground be<f, Seventeen dollani worth
to be e1actl Ther the checker BMounced-
that she thought that only two packages
per customer were to be purchased. Hls
reply was, "Don't worry about it. It's not
my problem."
Well, maybe it l'"'t bis problem, but
why Is It that when I musL make do with
my husband'• lance corporal's payctiec:k
ror three boys, a hubby and myself (six
months pregnant), !hen l say l must f,Ul
up with his "not my problem"?
I COULDN'T do that and get away with
it and I feel he's no better than we are.
Sure, the meat sltu&tton is absolutely
gross, but until the matter Is somehow
rectined I wouldn't have gone ag~inst the
manager's wishes. .
We moved here via the Marine Corps
from Pennsylvania In Marci\ and have
enjoyed the gorgeous change of states,
but "'"" hick home they have m••I problems. So Is It just me that gripes too
hard or am I j1Utilled In feeling over-
Wl'Ollf!btl Well, thank.s for listening
anyhow.
BARBERA MITCHELL
\
Se111ible Appraisal
To the Editor:,
I v.•ant to compllmcnt and congratulate
the Daily Pilot for printing the kind of
Watergate analysis that seems to have
escaped American journalists.
l refer. of course, to the gu est com-
mentary or British columni st Angus
Maude In your issue of Aug. 16. Those or
us who support President Nixon In his
crisis '8J'e deeply grateful to have this op-
porttmity ol reading a capable and
thoroughly S.nslble appra!aal of the
Watergate affair ln an American
newspaper.
MARGOT R. BARLEY
B e a .,fa Right•
To the Editor:
'There's a rip off of the public on public
beach In South Laguna!
Yesterday was one of our best Sun-
days at the beach in this whole summer,
and I was there with my children <ti· 1
joying the beach as the public has a right
to in Callfornl o., but many were bein g
denied this right by subterruge, ruse,
misleading statements, etc ...
A UNIFORMED man with • gun on his
hip employed by the Lagunlta Com·
munity Association was persistently
patrolllng the public beach just south of
the Laguna Beach line and trying to
persuade the public from uoe of their
pobllc beach ... he even bad the audacl·
Do esn't Tlii1ik ·s lior tage ls His Proble111
MAILBOX
Letters fro 'n readers are welcome.
Nonna!lu writers should convey thetr
messages 111 300 words or less. The
right to co11de11se letters to fit space
or elinii1wte Libel is reserved. All
letters niust include signature a1id
mailing addrtss. bt4t 'tamtl 111ay be
wiehheld 011 req1iest 'f su//idetit
reoson is apparent. Poetry toil( not be
publuhed.
ty to tell me that I was his guest on lhe
beach!
The city of Laguna had three personnel
on city beach trying to explain to peoplo
that the beach was as public In South
Laguna as it was In th< city , . . they
were the Weguard, a policeman in beach
'untrorm', wearing no gun, and a woman
'community liaison ofricer.1 A call wRS
made to the sheriff and the response \\'as
to the effect that the beach was 'private'
and that they could do nothing !!
THE IGNORANCE of the Sherill, end
the people, to their (the public'•) rights
iJ lamentable. The beach Is publlc to
jmean high Ude', and this means to a line
that runs roughly about v. ol the beach
distance from the bluff . . . In efle<:t,
most of the beach iJ public • . • the
waterline has no bearing wba\loellerll
l
~1ean high tide is the same ·m the city
es In the county ... so are the taxes oil
beach!ront homes, so there is no reason
for this beach to be denied the publi c ...
r request that ( 1) the county in·
vestigate the erection of a fence that is Illegally on public beach, and (21
detennine if a man with ·a gun has any
rights to harass, cajole. or otherwise
cause the public to vacate their public
beach.
G. J, CARPENTER JK.
Protests Collerage
To the F..dltor:
I'm a recent subscriber to the Daily
Pllot, and I'm happy with the paper ex·
c:ept for two things.
For days, now, I've been reading col·
umns and columns of infonnstion about
digging up the bodies of the victims of
that mass murderer(s). Certainly, rape
and murder are "news" and 1 suppose
quite a few people enjoy reading the
details. I could not accept, however 1 the
headline on page 2 of the Aug. 10 issue,
announcing (and l quote) ;'Juan Corona
Still First In Murders." I suppose that
now that those depraved individuals in-
volved have been round to have killed
1nore people than Corona, you 'll name
Corl! and accomplices number one in the
Held or murder.
I llWST protest th< lack of decency
and community respooslblllly rellectcd
In that headline. HJghlighting thiJ aspect
of tho crime in a beatlllne c&n ooly en·
courage \varped individ uals to emulate
and surpass Corll 's "accomplishment."
Also, your sense of space allowance
docs not seem fair at times. After
reading so much about thil mass
murderer, I,, was appalled this morning
when I picked up the Pilot and read the
eight lines on Conrad Aiken's death.
I suppose I ought lo be glad that the
eight Jines were at least on the front
page Dnd not hidden elsewhere . although
eight lines or coverage is rather hidden
no matter what page they appear on.
CONRAD AIKEN li ved to be 84 years
of age without committing any serious
crimes; along the \Vay, be \\'OD a
Pulitzer Prize aa well as world Came as
a poet.
t realize lhe eight lines probably
reflect the length of the AP's release. But
I would think ths.t since you have often
cited your responsibility to the com-
munity and its interests. you would have
considered your ne'-''S duty to the ma-
jority of citizens, who are both decent
and reasonably educated. and have sent
a cub reporter -nt least -over to the
library for a bit of research on Conrad
Aiken. I wouldn't have expected such a
great man's death to get the same
amount of cove.rage as a mass murderer
(that seems to be one of the. Ironic trutM
about tod•y's news coverage), but T do
think you could have ho.d more cover~ge
on Aiken's death. May I be only the first
of your readers to protest these two
items.
E. DARLENE LISTER
But such quiet and rational etplanation
ls Wlderstandably difficult for Agnewiles.
The mood in the Agnew camp has grown
Isolated and ·embittered. Now, with word
being sectetly passed to "keep clear" or
the Agnew affair. that mood will in·
tensify, with dangerous irnplicalions for
the Republican ruture no matter ho\V lhe
Investigation .1nally ends.
'
1'0IAH Cil COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Veid, PubUshtr
Thoma1 Keeoil, Editor
Barbaro Krtlbieh
Editorial Page EdllOT
The editorial ,pagv Gf tht Dt;jly
Pilot 1eeka to lntomi and stimulate
readers b)r pr'l'9!ntlnc on this pqe
diverlt','commtnt&ry·on topics o( tn-
trrest by q;ndfcated colurnnlst• anrt
cartoonists, ~by l)l"OYidlng a forum for
readus' vl~\·s and by presf!tltint this
ncrwspA.Pt'r°!I oplnlonl and ldc?u on
cumnt topic•. The tditorlal opln.looe
of the Dllily Piiot appear only in the
editorial column at the top of !:ht
Pfllt>. Opinions t!Xpr\'Md by the col·
umn!stt •nd c•rtoonbtt aod kttn-•
\\Titers are thr:it own ud no .. ..._ '
mtnl of tbclr ~-s by Ute o.llY
Pilot -Id be """'"'
Friday, August 24, 1973
I
JL-rrlday, Augutt 24, 1973 DAILY PILOT /;
State D ~ath Penalty
;~Heads for Approval
'
' State 'Bonan:a'
Reagan Pens Tax
Rebate Into Law ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) -
': Legislation imposing a man-
¢• datory death penalty for 15
'. f .. crimes appears headed or
death penalty provision in the
bill backed by Reagan. Then
the commJttee voted 6-1 to
send the amended bill to the
Assembly noor.
Sieroty, an arden t foe of
capital pwtishmenl, added in
an interview that he is not at
all sure the measure would be
identical to the original form
of the bill by Sen. George
Deukmejian' (R·Long Beach),
which his committee altered
Thursday. If the Assembly
makes an y chnnges in the way
the bill passed the Senate, it
y,·ould have to go back to the
upper house for concurrence.
... 1829 million built up over the
past two years. • passage by the California
• Legislature despite a ten1-
y porary setback in comntittee. .. ! A bill decreeing death for
~-such crimes as murdering an
'-; on-d~ty peace officer aOO
t;~ mu!Uple slaylngs could be
~:signed by Gov. Ronald fc:.. Reagan, by next \\'eek sup-
~.-porters and opponents say.
:_: THAT BECAME JX)Ssible ',~ when the Assembly Criminal ~ Justice Committee voted 4-3 '!• Thursday to substitute life im-~~ prisonmeot Without t h e
~ possibility of parole for the
C a p it a I puni_shrpent su~
porters -conceded to l:>e a
majority in the Assembly -
said ~y will try to ijlllend the
dentb penalty provlBion back
in before the floor vote is
taken. 1
"I think there will be a
death penalty bill that passes
the jeglslature ms year,"
regardless of \fhal t h e
Assembly Criminal Justice
Co mmittee ~s. said
chairman Alan S!poty (D-Los
Angeles).
ASSEMBLY REPUBLICAN
floor leader Robert Beverly of
Manhattan Beach said in an
interview he will sponsor the $721 MILLION BILL move on the floor to amend
the Deukmejian bill back to its __ G_o_v_._R_e_a_g_•n_'_• _O_K __
original form . He said floor
action will be taken Monday or
SACRAlllENl'O (APl -
Calll«nlans begin reaping a
one-time tax bonanza Oct. 1,
getting back a total of $721
million in state treasury
surplus.
That figures out to nearly
$3.l for every man, woman and
child In the state.
GOV. RONALD Reagan Call·
Reagan insisted the money
be returned to the taxpayers
rather than be spent on new
programs. The tax rebate will
take two fonns.
First, the state sales tax will
be rolled back by me penny on
tile dollar oo Oct. I for six
ed it the largest state tax months. lt had gone from five
rebate in the nation's history to six percent in most of
•lien he signed tile bill Into . C.li!omia July I.
law Thursday.
The reverse Oow of taxes
was made possible by an
unexpected treasury surplus of
Thursday.
Beverly, \Vho needs 41 votes
to succeed, said "[ feel \Ye
have the votes. I am op-
timistic the votes wlll be
Fire Fighters Stop
I
NEXT SPRING, the state's
more thar1 6 million income
taxpayers are to get cuts
ranging from 20 percent to 100
percent off their tax: bills due
April 15.
The Republican governor
said 'nlursday he won the tax
rebate over the opposltloo of
"would-be big spenders" In the
legislature. there."
The Jower house has 48
Democrats and 31 Republicans
with one vacancy. Beverly
said he estimates he may lose
one or two Republican votes at
the most and will pick up 12 to
15 Democratic votes.
Blaze in It.s Tracks
Sierot y said he felt there
might be an effort on the floor
to alter various segments of
the Deukmejian m e a s u r e .
Beverly agreed foes "certainly
By The Associated Press
Fire fighters have contained
a wind-driven brush fire tha t
threatened homes near Reno,
Nev. while other crews worked
to complete a fire line around
a huge 6-<lay-old blaze in
Northern California.
wou1d" try that tactic. THE NEVADA ftre, ignited
BY SENDING out a n Sunday, August 26, 1973 amended version of the bill, in three spots Thursday by a
Showtt.me· 7 30 the committee averted a ma-passing locomotive, charred
"I can't Wlderstand h:lw
they saved all those homes,"
he said. "It was a super-
coordinated, heroic effort that
stopped this from becoming a
major disaster. 'The men just
held their ground, let tile fire
come down to them and then
just beat it out."
Now, he said, the voters of
the state have a "once-in-a-
lifetime" opportunity to cut
their taxes permanenUy by
approving his tax control pf(r
gram at a special statewide
election Nov. 6.
"Then they can finish the
job already statted by voting
to limit and reduce their tax
burden pem13nently,'' Reagan
said.
. : p.m.
$5.00 per person jor challenge to lhe authority 3.IO acres and destroyed 3 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -neatly on his left aide, fteekles of Assembly Speaker Bob barn and two sheds in
Sketch of Rapist Finished
IEACHCOMllJl COFFEE SHQP
AND RESTAURANT
·26H Weit Coe1t Hlghwey
Newport Retch
NOW OPIN
Under New Man191ment
for
IREAKFAST -LUNCH -DINNER
Opte 7 AM to I PM -7 D<lyl a WHI<
FREE
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
.LECTURE
by
Miss Patricia Tuttle
of Sen Francisco
Saturday • August 25
11 a.m.
EDWARD'S CINEMA THEATRE
FASHION ISLAND
Child cere will be provided
et Second Church -31 00 Pecific View -CdM
Spo111ortd bv Fir1t Jv.rl S•c.ond
Chureh of Chri1t Scitnti1t,
Ntwport lt1c.h Monte Carlo Room Moretti (D-Van Nuys), who Anderson Acres, nine miles An officer bas drawn a on his face, a 1'12-inch borlzon-
(no one under 21 admitted) appointed the committee and north of Reno, said Bill portrait of a man they believe tal scar above his right eye at 1~~~""!"""!"""!"""!"""!"""!"""!"""!"""!"~~~'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!~ oppooes the death penalty Johnston of the N e v a d a repeatedly raped and beat a the hairline and a small' scar I= Tickeu: All Ticketron Agencies or h" self B 1 had ed t Di . . f F •~· 25-year-old woman In a hotel im . every . VO\V o VlSlon o cres ... .l'. of about ~-. inch above the Del Webb's Newporter Inn attempt the rarely used Ten homes were directly in room Aug. 14· N l E
parliamentary maneuver of the path of the charging fire, Inspector Hobert Nelson rightsideofhisupperlip. ear y v. eryone p;J rl ~;)';;:~;,_...,_..., ~:1n:1 withdrawing a bill from com-blO\\TI by winds 30 miles per drew the sketch with descrip-Police believe be al.so may f ~ ~ l::Y//fAu/-v'Ut"7~'//'v mittee by a majority floor hour , Johnston said. J..1any tions from the victim and a be the same man who raped, t:t
•• ( .
11o1J.,,,bo•H~oid, N.,.,00,,8,1Cf'l 1 P~n•:714.644.1 700 vote -a tactic regarded as a fa mi I ie s temporarily cab driver. beat and burned a 23-year-old L • L de 1'
"':. leadership. 400 men worked to stop the on-9 and weighs 160. He ha! cur-Fisherman's Wharf I as t 11 r--~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~--~~d1~·rec~l~c~ha~ll~en~g~e~t~o ~th~e~ho;:;u~se;l_~ev~a~cu~a~le~d;t~he~ir~ho~m:es~whi~·=1e_J~Po;h~·re~s~w~·d~t~he~m~an~its~~~fee~~~w~o;m~an~i:n~a~h:ot~el~roo~m~a~t-~~~~~i:~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~:~~~--·· ~~ coming flames. ly, reddish brown hair, parted February . .
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6/$100
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RUSSET POTATOES ·--2 lb ./25c ITALIAN PRUNES .... .... .... 19c lb.
"AnENTION RESTAURANT OWNERS":
.
Teke edvantege of our buying power. The Produce Mert will save you
"Mon~y" end supply you with the freshest produce. Large or small
resteurents, qive us e call. We deliver FREE.
I .. i
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· NEWPORT BEACH (ONLY)
•& "M!"" Co..i Hltlllny • Cati for '9Mrntl011r (714) 873-5534
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Dear Customer,
In regard to our recent letter requesting the addition of
y our name to our permanent mailing list we would l ike to
encourage you to return the card enclosed with our letter.
Even if your name and address was correct we MUST
RECEIVE THE CARD BACK in order to place you on our own
mail ing list. ·
If you 've misplaced the card or if our letter was lost on its
way to you, please call us and we'll add your name to our list.
Phone 644-5070.
To those who have returned the cards ... Thanks very much
for contributing.to such a tremendous response. You've hel ped
us to serve you better .
Sincerely,
~ ~~~ /&iz.L ~
Representing At·Ease Management Staff
44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070
11
I
Nicoll
SUperintendent John Nicoll of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District
fifed off a strongly worded letter Thurs-
day urging the stale legislature to reject
l\\'O bills that could lead to collccHvc
bargaining with teachers.
Nicoll , acting at the direction of
trustees. said In hls letter that forced col-
lective bargaining with teachers would
''destroy" essential elemt'nts of the
Mesa
Moves
American public education system.
"The genius of our system," Dr. Nicoll
\Vl'Otc in a letter to every assemblyman
and senator in Sacramento, "has been
the close relationship between the school
system and the people they serve."
Th.ls relationship. he said, insured
•·personal, collective, and visible" ac-
countability on the pail of local school of-
ficials.
Open
Against
Two bills, one introduced by Sen.
George ~toscone (0.San fo~rancisco) and
Assemblyman Bob Moretti ( D -V a n
Nuys), would threaten this by interposing
a mandatory arbitration panel in case of
disputes between the teachers and board ,
Dr. Nicoll said.
At a meeting or the board or trustees
earlier this \\'eek, Board President
Donald Smallwood, pointed out that
Space
Doomed by 1980?
By RUDI NIEDZIEl.'iKI
Of fllt D1Ur Piiot Sl1ft
Going, going, gone.
'Ibat is lhe direction in which open
space Is heading and by 1980 there may
not be any left in Costa Mesa.
This is the prediction of Vaughn Red·
ding1 chairman of a citizens committee
oraaniz.ed for the purpose o{ preserving
sOme of the existing open space by
means of a bond election.
The measure. scheduled for a vote
Sept. 11, is the first bond election in
Costa f\1esa's 20-year history. It would
preserve 70 acres of land from develop-
1nent, at a cost of .. million.
"There is no question lhat open space is
rapidly disappearing from Costa Mesa,''
maintains Redding, "In 1959 over 6,500
acres were open space. Today, just 14
years later, there are Jess than 2,400
acres of these lands left.
"If the past and present rate of open
space development continues, it appears
~wyers Hurl Epithets
'Hartelius Hearing Turns
Into Wild Yelling Match
,
• By TOM BARLEY.
... Of .... 09!" Plttt SI.ti
LOS ANGELES - A three-day medic:a l
examiners' bearing into charges against
Dr. Ebbe HarteLius. El Toro, closed here
late Thursday in a shouting match with
three furious la wyers.hurling accusations
and epithets at each other.
"You are unscrupulous p e op I c . ' '
defense attorney Matthew Kurilich ye!Jed
at deputy attorneys general Mark Levine
and Robert Mukai. "You are unethical
tricksters clearly guilty of deceptive and
vindictive conduct."
'1And you're a liar." Le\•ine shouted
back. "The biggest thing in this hearing
been your mouth." Heanng -officer John A. W i 11 d
. rately tried to restore order as the
physicians who co1nprise the slate
ird of Medical Examiners review
mittee watched open-mouthed.
One clear fact emerged from the
cas. Both Levine and Mukai stressed
t the state will noVi' settle for nothing
leSs than the revocation of Dr. J1artelius'
license to practice medicine.
Both laVi'Yen had been prepared at an
earlier hearing to accept a plan that
"'ould have put HarteLius, 51 . on pro-
bation for five years pr,ovided he
substantially restricted his use of certain
dangerous drugs.
The medical committee rejected that
proposal behind closed doors and ordered
Hartelius to open his defense to charges
of moral turpitude and unprofessional
conduct -most of them stemming from
his alleged drugging of and sexual
aS90clation with two Costa Mesa women.
Kurilicb Thursday agreed to let his
client, who practices in the Harbor Area,
go on the witness stand to answer ques-
tions from both side.s and the three doc-
tors who will eventually be his jsdges.
That grilling ended late Thursday and
Kurilich promptly turned to both state
lawyers to open negotiations towards a
suggested se ttlement.
\Vhat happened after that is interpeted
(See llARTELIUS, Page !I
COSTA MESA
much of the remaining open space in
Costa Mesa will be developed by 1980,"
Redding maintains.
"U we are going to preserve open
Space ln Costa Mesa and if we are going
to have an adequate number of parks in
Costa Mesa to keep up with an ever-in·
creasing population, now is the time for
action."
This "now or never" viewpoint is
shared by the other members of the
Citizens For Open Space, who are now in
the midst of their campaign to convince
two-thirds of the voters to cast "yes"
ballots.
They are bucking tough opposition
f1 om another citizens group called PLAN
(Preserve Land As Needed) which con-
tends that Cos ta Mesa already !)as
enough open space and that the tax-
payers.cannot afford to buy any more.
In tbe vanguar4 ol tbe ,.,position i~
lonner city counc:llmaif11W &t. Clair.
Yet despite the counterpress\lll. Red·
d,ing believes his grouP will succeed.
"The bond election will be successruJ
because the people in Costa Mesa are
farsighted planning types. I think that
approximately two-thirds of the people
are interested in keeping C.OSta ,.,esa as
a city which moves ahead," he said.
Passage of the bond issue by the re-
quired two-thirds majority "''OUld finance
public acquisition of the following:
-10 acres adjacent to the Fairview
Regional Park Site.
-20 acres across lrom Estan<:ia High
School.
-10 acres north o£ the San Diego
Freeway between Bear Street and
Fairview Road.
-S acres adjacent to the Tanager Park
site in the Mesa Verde tract.
All of these are Newport-Mesa Unified
School District building sites which are
no longer needed and are ofrered for sale
as surplus.
In addition to the already-listed 45
acres, the bonds would also be used to
buy 23 additional acres of private land to
reduce park deficiencies in other parts of
(See SPACE, Page !)
I'
I I
•
'.l'oday's Fln a l
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Teacher Bargaining
arbitra1ion panels could enforce their ruJ.
lngs not only on salary disputes, but on
any educational policy in which teachers
disagree with the school board.
This, Smallwood said, would have the
effect or forcing the board to "transfer
its rights" to the arbitration board and to
become "subservient" to 1the orders of
the arbitration board.
Jn his letter to stale legislators, Dr.
Nicoll said : "The bills in question '"ould
have the net effect of placing the
governance or the public schools in the
hands of faceless entilies without local
knowledge ; 'with no responsibility for
success of local schools , and with no ac·
countabilily to the parents whose
children's education would be affected."
Smallwood and Dr. Nicoll both in·
dicated they felt some form of collective
bargaining might be inevitable, but they
'
urged a campaign to make the public
aware of its dangers.
Trustees had wanted lo pass a form at
resolution opposing the two collective
bargaining bills. However. Dr. Nicoll
told them they could not do so unt.il the.Ir
next meeting because the matter bad no~
been included on tbe meeting's agenda.
Trustees then directed Dr. Nicoll If•
v.•rile a letter until a resolution could be
passed.
fla , :.fl-""~ . ,, Diverse views of' the world around . u; as 8ffn by and other instructors Involved in Newport-i.,esa·
young arl!Sls catch eye or· intr\gued passerby 1n
South Coast Plaza Mall. The art show runs Utrough
Aug. 31, featuring work by students of Jim ~Iota
Orange Coast College Fine Arts Workshop. 8mall
browser seems more interested in watching the real
world go by.
Little Jason Rea Dies
After Battle for Life
By J OHN VALTERZA
Of "-Dal"' P"-t Sl1ff
Jason Rea, the little boy from
Capistrano Beach who fought death for
weeks but never knew it, lost the battle
late Thursday at Fairview State Hos pit al
as his mother prayed at his bedside.
The 3-year-old victim of a pool tragedy
in Hwttington Beach early in July died of
major complications brought on by
massive brain damage suffered in the in·
PROPOSED .
REVENUE
OPEN SPACE .
ACQUISITIONS
cident at~ home of a baby sitter.
In the ,weeks that followed the com-
atose youngster was floWn to Denver to
become a transplant donor, then a week
ago was returned to the Orange Coast
after physicians in Colorado ruled the
youngster no longer qualified as an organ
donor. ·
"Jason's now a little angel in Heaven,"
his weary, grieving mother, lJnda, said
this morning.
"I prayed and prayed for God to help
bis suffering," she added.
1\-lrs. Rea. a 29-yeal--old secretary who
is divorced, had made funeral ar·
rangements weeks ago when it first was
plaMed that her only child would be
flown to 'Denver and the breathing
machines removed. •
The med,ical consensus at that time
was that because no hope exis ted at all,
the youngster would be medically dead at
that point and organ transplants could be
performed, using his kidneys and liver to
giVe life to other dying children.
"My greatest grief is that it never ha p-
pened: that Jason could not give life to
other children," said Mrs. Rea.
Through Ute ordeal Mrs. Rea said, sup-
port bas come from throughout the na·
tion.
"I've had messages from perfect
strangers from all over the country, all
blessing me for courage and faith in the
Lord, and I'm so grateful for them.
\Vithout the help I wonder if I could have
made it," she said.
The support bas continued to come
from friends and' strangers alike.
"~iy phone was ringing all night and
everyone I talked to agreed with me that
(See CAPO BOY, Page !)
Ho me Loa1i R ate
Jumps to 8.5%
Swedish Gunman
Warning Police
He'll Use Bomb
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -A gunman.
barricaded in a downtown Stockbobn
bank with four hostages and ac.-
companied by a criminal involved in the
murder of a policeman, threatened today
lo blow up himself and the hostages "as
a last reort,'' police reported.
The gunman, idenlilied as bankrobber
Kay Robert Hansson, 22, and believed to
have been deported from the United
States, was still holding out more than 28
hours after the drama began. He was
keeping police at bay with a submachine gun.
Hansson has demanded safe conduct
with the hostages bu t police have refused
to let the hostages go with him. They
also refuse to give him the f750 000 he
dema.nded, · 8.lthough the mm~y, in
Swedish and foreign currencies, is kept
available in the bank.
Clark Olofsson, 26, an inmate friend of
Hanss!ln, was brought to the bank Thurs-
day from a prison in central Sweden
\rherc he w88 sµving a Ill-year sentence
as un accomplice in a poli ce killing tn
1966. Hansson demanded Ololsson's
release and explained he needed Olofssoo
as a driver of a getaway car.
or....-
Weailler
Slightly cooler Saturday along
the Orange Coast -but still nice.
lligbs in the upper 60s at !be
beaches rising to 78 inland. Over-
night lows 6U5.
INSIDE TODA\'
7'wo Laguna Beach /Um mo/<.
ers were iuoolvcd i1' the mak'ng
of a superstar -even if he: it A
seagull T1te fiLminQ of tltt Jona·
them Ciuingston Staaull 1eagulia
bu Gttg MacGULiorau and Jim
Freema11 for a bird'• debut it
dercribed in toda11'1 Wee:ke-ndtr,
Page 23.
... , y_. hrric:e I
l .M, ~ ' IN1"'9 Jt
C•'"9""-1. 11 C'*ntthif )1 .. 0 Acr., of open space to be acqu ired.
'lr....,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~..-..;;;...~~~~~--'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The govtm•
ment this aftemon raised the interest
rate ceiling on federally insured home
mortgages to a record 8.5 percent to
help ease the tight mooey cnmcl> ihot
hB> forced many borne bllj'ers 'out ol the
market.
The.new Tate will take clfect Saturday
for mortgagos op to $33,500 lrulurcd by the
F'ederal Hou!ing Administration and the
Veterans Atlminislratlon, Hou.slng Sec-
retary Jnmes T. Lynn said .
c.....i.:1 21 c ... ....-.n Offlll Netictt t
a.ittr111 P• • PlfltMt 1loll
i MAP SHOWS APPROXIMATE LOCATIONS OF PARK SITES INCLUDED IN $4 MILLION OPEN SPACE BOND ELECTION IN COSTA MESA
; Circled NumMn R.,,...Hnl Aerts In heh Sito; Unetreled NumMrs llM Park Dlslrlcl• In Costa Masa . 1'0111 Paeko90 Would ProHrve 70 AertL
• . • . •
,., fM ltctrll '
M~ 11
Allll u..-.,.. II
I 2 DAILY PILOT C Friday, A11gusl 24, ltJ7J
~~~~~~~~~
IGdnaped
Girl Raped ,
LOS ANGELES (A Pl -~n !I-year-old
~1ission Hills girl, fowld unconscious this
morning after reportedly being kidnnPL'<L
v.•as raped and probably drugged by her
abductor, a hospital spokesman said.
The girl was in a coma and was listed
in serious condition wilh a possible con·
cu.ssion.
Officials at the UCL.A ~fedical Center
saki she was "sexually molested and
probably ingested drugs."
. She was transferred to the center from
11.tarina Mercy Hospital in Marlna Del
Rey, where she "''as taken after being
found unconscious in a parking lot behind
a suburban shopping center this morning.
Her father told newsmen h i s
daughter's condition appeared stable.
''We're just thankful she's alive and
want to thank the police department and
her friends and neighbors for their con--
cem," he said.
·Police continued to search for her air
ductor, believed to be a middle-aged
man.
She was found at the rear of a store by
a trash collector, pollce said. The spot
where she was found was about 35 miles
from where she was last seen.
The girl and her 8-yeaMld brother,
botli had been approached by the man
Thursday and were asked to distribute
leaOets for a San Fernando Valley dry
cleaning shop, police said.
'The children were seen distributing
leaflets in the Granada Hills and Mission
Hills areas. The boy told police the man
drove him and his sister to a parking lot
and that he got out to put handbill! on
the windshields of cars. When he return·
cd, the car was gone, be said.
Officers and two police helicopter
crews hunted for the girl all night. They
were aided by members of a volunteer
civilian search--BJld..rescue team with 15
fOW"·Wheel drive vehicles.
Frot11 Pflfle 1
CAPO BOY ...
God must have had a reason for all of
this, and now it's up to me to find the
answer," she said.
One factor which caused some bit-
terness during the strain of the vigil were
comments about the youngster "making
medical history,'' Mrs. Rea said.
"That hurt greatly,'' she said.
The yotmgster was literally brought
back from death several times during the
ordeal -first after showing no signs of
life after the rescue from the bottom of
the pool.
Jason's life signs ceased for 45 minutes
after the mishap, but came back after a
team of physicians worked furiously at
Huntington Intercommunity Hospita l.
Three weeks later at the same hospital
the youngster again lost his bodily func-
tions but was revived and after surgery
physicians, i1rs. Rea and her former
husband -Jason's father -agreed to
the transplant procedure.
Through the phase in Denver Mr!. Rea
stayed at home despite many offers of
donated plane fare aod expenses for a
trip to her son's aide.
One of those offers of help came from
one family which offered a cemetery lot
to help itrs. Rea face what she had
believed to be the inevitable.
"I accepted it graciously," she said.
And next week, that sad donation will
be put to use.
SerVices for the little boy are ~n·
tatively set for Wednesday at the Peek
Family Colonial Funeral Home in
Westminster .
Bathing Suits Out
CHERRY HILL, N.J. (A P)-The Miss
Black American Pageant announced
Thursday ii is dropping the parading of
contestants in bathing suits during the
pageant. J . A-forris Anderson, president
of the pageant, said at a news conference
here that contest officials didn't believe
that the bathing suit compelition was
•inecessary.''
OIANIJI COAST CM '
DAILY PILOT
TM Or-.. COAJI OAILY PILOT, "1111 '#flldl
11 ~ the .....,.Prn1, k lllltllltflfof "" .... er-. (:Met l'llOll"'lnO c.,.....,, "'*'
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"rld•Y• Iv Cotta M ... , H-rt fltlcl'I,
Huntlnrtofl 1Pdl/l"OU11111" Ytllty, L111-.Ndi, 11""*'SW111ntct .,.. $all ci...-111
Safi Jllff C.l!iWIM. A •lflllls r.tiantl
.i1tllill II pUllo!llMd Sllvn:llf' 91'111 SunNyL
flw ,,lrlC~I ...... 1,,,'"9 $nl It •t »O Wt1I
.. 't Strtd, Clill1 MH4', C.llfoNIJ., tMM.
lo1'trt N. Wt1C
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Bomb Accide11t
Hu1na1i Errf)r
WASllJNGTON (APl -Air
Force investigators today blan1ed
the accidental BS2 bombing of a
Cambodian village on the radar
navigator's failure to tum on a key
switch In the aiming computer.
AMouncing results of the in·
vesligalion of the bo1nblng \\'hich
killed and wounded more than 400
Catnbodians at Neak Luong Aug. 6,
Pentagon spokesman Jerry \V.
Friedheim said Air force coni·
manders "are in the process of lak-
ing corrective and disciplinary ac·
lions."
He declined to identi fy the radar
navigator or other members or the
B52 bomber crew which dropped its
load about 7~2: miles a\\•ay fron1 its
target. A B52 nonnally has a crew
of six.
From Page J
HARTELIUS. • •
differently by each side. But \Yhatever
was said, it led to the shouting match.
Kurilich claims that ~1ukai told him
that he and Levine had never intended to
make a deal. He quoted Mukai as saying :
"we just wanted to get Hartelius on the
stand and listen to his story."
Mukai denied this statement and
denied having said anything resembling
it to Kurillcb. And he asked Willd to take
action against the Fullerton lawyer ror
the mouthing of an obscenity allegedly
leveled at the two young stale attorneys
at the height of the fracas .
Kurilich, beside himself with rage , told
\\'illd that he would never have put
Hartelius on the stand if he had not been
sure that some serious attempt at
negotiation would be instigated.
He labeled the state action as "con-
temptuous, unethical, disgraceful dece~
tion" that would mean at least another
year of hearings before be can complete
his defense of Hartelius.
Willd finally persuaded all three
lawyers and Laguna Beach attorney Tom
Reilly, Kurilich's co-counsel, to leave the
hearing room and discuss a possible set-
tlement in private.
But they all returned for yet another
shouting match in which Levine and
Mukai insisted on nothing less than the
revocation of the silver-haired physi·
cian's license.
Willd ordered all four lawyers to return
Sept. 11 for the opening of a three day
bearing and was promptly warned .by
Kurilich that an Orange County Superior
Court murder trial at which be is defen·
ding the accused man will likely be in
progress at that time.
\Villd said he intends to personally con-
tact presiding Judge Bruce Sumner in a
bid to delay the trial until after the Sept.
11 hearing is concluded.
'Bo1nb Explodes
l1i Lo1ido1i Stock
Market; 2 Hurt
LONDON (UPI) - A parcel bomb bid-
den in a hollowed~ut book explcxlcd v.•ith
a while flash on the 22nd floor o( Lon·
don's new stone, glass and steel Stock
Exchange today, wounding t"''O ~rsons.
12 Agents Indicted
Charges Levied in Mistaken Narco Raids
ALTON, JU CUP!) -A federal grand
jury indicted eight federal and lour local
nart'Otlcs agents today on charges of
depr iving 11 persons of eonsUtuUonal
r ights during drug raids In southwestern
Illinois last April.
The 17-count indictment was returned
Jn U.S. District Court after a four-month
federal investigation.
Enforcement, Included six from the
Bureau of NarcotJcs and Dangerous
Drugs, two from the Treasury Depart·
ment, three from the St. Louis police
department and one from the East St.
Louls Police Department.
The six federal narcotics agents in·
dirted are \Villiam C. Dwyer, Kenneth R.
Bloemaker, Dennis R. Moriarty, DeMi.s
Harker, Michael Hlllebrand and Leon
Phillips.
Treasury Department emptoyes In-
dicted are Tom Teyssler and Calvin Culp.
The three St. Louis policemen are
Ronald J. Olive, Donald W. Spicer and
Daniel J. Dully.
The East St. Louis officer named in the
indictment Is Lester Anderson.
All agents except Anderson were
charged in two counts with conspiring to
deprive persons of constitutional rights
by entering hon1es without probable
cause or i>earch warrants, arresting and
detaining them without probable cause or
arrest warrants and assaulting thein
"'hile in custody .
John R. Bartels Jr., acting 1d-
ministr$tor or the Drug Enforcement
Administration , announced immediately
after the indictment was returned that
the six federal agents named as def en··
dants were suspended without pay.
The indictment said tbe agents, acting
without probable cause or search war·
rants, broke into six homes in
Collinsville. East St. Loois' and
Edwardsville, all in llllnols, durlng a
five-day period.
During the course of the raids, two oc-.
f'Upa nts \\'ere assaulted while handcuffed
and a third man \YBS jailed for three
days "'ithout being charged with a crln1 ·,
the indictment said.
Gyros Booked Vp
Later, the indictment continued, three
agents sought to cover up the incident ~y
attempting to •·tone down" reports to in-
vcs1igators. In addition. three other agents were
charged with lying to th.'? federal grand
jury investigating the raids.
The agents, attached to the St. Louis
o f f i c e o! Drug Abuse Law
Piggy Bank
Spree Over;
Youth Home
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of t11e D1IJW Plltt St•tf
Ten-year~ld John Dennis O'Neill
returned home Thursday to a tearful re-
union with his mother, four days after he
left his Huntington Beach home.
The little boy called his mother Mrs.
John P. O'Neill from a phone booth in
Santa Ana at about 2:45 p.m. and told
her he wanted to come borne.
Det. Ray Hattabaugh, w~o headed t~e
search for the missing child, drove his
mother to the comer of 17th and Bristol
streets where they met him.
Young John said that after leaving bis
home at 21282 Fleet Circle he y;•ent to the
Anaheim-Santa Ana area, living off about
$20 he took from hls sis ter's piggy bank.
Det. Virginia Kirkmeyer said today
that the boy spent two niRhts in motels.
•·1t is absolutely incre<llble to me to
realize that there are people \Vho would
check a little boy into a motel as a
registered guest without questioning it,"
she said. t-.1rs. Kirkmeyer said the youngster a~
parently spent one night ih .the ?,pen but
·')Vas eaten alive by mosquitoes and so
he spent the next two night.! at cheap
1notels.
The little boy told his mother that he
tried to save money by not eating too
much. He y;ent to one restaurant and
ordered the cheapest thing on the menu .
\vhich '~'as a bowl of cereal. The rest of
the time he Jived off oranges bought at
roadside stands and in markets.
While police searched for the missing
boy, be went to a family night ba~e~ll
game at Anaheim stadiu~ and v1s1ted
Disneyland, Hattabaugh said.
The detectives said the little boy got
around on bis bicycle.
Sli:ylahhers Make Repait~
In Second Spacewalk
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP ) -
1\vo Skylab 2 astronauts stepped outside
their orbiting space station today and
successfully hooked up a new "six pack"
of gyroscopes to keep their ship on an
even keel.
Bundled in bulky spacesuits attached to
60-foot lifel!Oes, Dr. Owen K. Garriott
and Jack R. Lousma left the laboratory
at 9:24 a.m. PDT, 270 miles above' the
South Atlantic Ocean.
''Hatch is open and I'm on my way
out,'' Lousina reported. "Oh boy, there's
the world."
The muscular Marine major ' im·
mediately began the task of booking up
the 23-foot-long gyroscope cable at four
connector points. Garriott stood near the
open hatch and led the cable Jo him and
later began ch811ging film in a battery of
solar telescopes.
"Okay, we got four for four," Lousma
reported after 90 minutes, referring to
the cable connections.
"Beautiful, Jack," said capsule com~
municator Bruce McCandless. "The
gyros are matching. The six pack is look·
ing beautiful."
Mesa Rec Aides
Now' Full Time
Debby Lamb and Char1es Carr have
joined the Costa Mesa Department of
Leisure Services as full-time employes in
the recreation program.
~trs. Lamb, 23, of Orange, is the new
recreation leader in charge of senior
citizens programs, activities for ex-
ceptional children, and other special in-
terest groups.
Carr, 30, of Costa Mesa, is the new
recreatk>n supenrisor in charge of
athletic activities for adult men and
women .
Mrs. Lamb is a recent graduate of Cal
State Long Beach, while Carr is a
graduate of Cal Poly Pomooa and former
recreation coordinator for the city of
West Covina.
11Good news,'' replied commander Alan
L. Bean, who remained inside the space
station, ready to control it on the remote
chance something went wrong during the
installation of the six gyroscopes.
The gyros keep the vehicle from tumbl·
ing out of control.
During a nine-minute period when
neither the old nor the new gyroscopes
were operating, the station drifted only
slight ly off attitude and Bean had to take
no action.
Just before Garriott and Loosma v.i!nt
out to start the planned four-hour ex·
cursion McCandless told them jokJngly:
"On the way out don't forget to tum off
the lighls and air cooditioaing and to
close the door."
After surveyjn& the cable connection
]Xlints, Lousma reported: "I can do the
job with no problem."
While waiting for a daylight pass to do
the job, he rested on a strut of the
telescope mount and enjoyed the view.
··It's a beaotiful sunrise. I can see that
sickle or crescent-shaped light on the
horizon spreading out and becoming
v.·ider as it expands around the globe ,"
he said.
Because of the orbital path of the
space station today, they v.·ere to be out
of radio contact !or Jong periods during
the walk, sometimes more than an hour.
"It's pretty much your show up there
with the stat.ion activity t o d a y , • •
McCandless Jold them.
The space walk originally was plaMed
only to change film in the battery of
telescopes through ...vhich the astronauts
observe and photograph the sun.
But during the Skylab I mission, the
original set of gyroscopes became over·
heated and some started to deteriorate.
So Bean, Garriott and Lousma brought
up v.·ith them six replacement gyros.
The "six pack" has been mounted in·
side the space station. But the astronauts
had to go outside to complete the in-
stallation by coonecting electrical cables
to a computer system located in the
same section that bolds the telescopes.
"It's as easy as pulling out a light plug
and putting in another plug," explained
flight director Neil Hutchinson.
•.
D•ll'f ,lltl illll ,,J".·
KEEPING CITY GREEN
Mesa's V•ughn Redding
From Page 1
SPACE •••
' ' ..
II
ii . , . ._I Costa Mesa . '
This includes: -!~
-15.S acres in southwest Costa Mesa:,··
-6.2 'acres on the ~st side of Newpdft'
Boulevard. , . \
-Three acres in northeast Costa ~1cs.1.
Togettier, lhese properties total up to'
70 acres, costing an estimated $1.6
million to buy. ~
A second quealion on the ballot '~·ill a·str
voters whether they v.•ant to spend an ad:
ditional $1.3 million for development,
thus pushing the total to nearly $l
million.
Redding says development \vill consist
or irrigation and sprinkler systems,
landscaping, turf, trees and various types
of shrubbery. The development will bt
minimal, thereby keeping ma1ntenanco
costs below average.
"Open space is important to our com·
mnnity and lends itsell to a variety .ol
uses that are important lo community.
life." Redding coocludes. .,.
"Open spaces provide visual an4
psychological relief from the moro
urbanized areas of our community and a~
this time. v.·e are SIU\ forlunate to h.a\'6
the types of apen spaces th.a~ contain
many interesting and d 1 v e r i e
geographical features ." ..
Redding is dedicated to the propotiihOQ,
that future generations should enjoy lJla~
open space as well.
He Pawned 3
Steaks for $5
TUCSON , Ariz. (UPI) -It had to hap,
pen -a paWnshop says a man pawned ·
three steaks.
Donald Viagino, co-owner or the
Arizona Traders Pawn Shop, said Thur,..
day he gave the man $5 for three USDA
choice T-bone steaks and promised lo·
hold them for 30 days in a freezer at the
shop.
·"We'll take most anything ot value/~
said Vlngino. "If he doesn 't come back,
I'll eat them."
It was the sixth day of Lond?n bo~b
attacks blamed on an extremist wing
of the Irish Republican Army, and the
victims were the fir st persons injured by
th e 35 bombs put in stores, offices and
subway stations since SWlday.
·'But the tire had a leak and he didn't
\Vant to spend his money on a patch, so
he had to stop at just about every gas
station to fill the tire with air," Hat·
taba ugh said
SALE • • • LAST 10 DAYS!
It '''as a bright sunlit morning and an
army of secretaries, clerks and bowler·
hatted bankers had just emerged from
the subv.•ay and railroad stations to fill
lhe City of London, the capital 's inner
enclave housing British major financial
institutions.
In a gray-carpeted executive office,
room 2201 , Miss Joanna Knight. 25, began
sorting the day·s mail. She reached for a
large white envelope addressed to the
Stock Exchange's sec retary general,
George \V. Brind, and slit it open.
The envelope exploded with a \vhite
flash , di sfiguring fl·liss Knight in a blow
that struck at the very heart or one of
the world's great financial centers , Lon·
don's square mile of money.
Blood streamed from Miss Knight's
(ace , hands and legs. She fainted .
Brind, 62, the stock exchange's cilief
administrative officer, staggered to the
door , shouting "Bomb! Bomb!"
Miss Knight's gold wristwatch stopped
at 9:20 a.m.
Traveling by this laborious method ,
young John made one trip to the HWl·
tington Beach area during the height of
the sea rch for him.
"fle said he wanted to talk to bis
mother so he went to tbe place where she
\vorks. But he didn't see her car there so
he went back to the Anaheim area," Hat·
tabaugh said.
The boy ran away from home ~fonday
afternoon following a family "misun·
derstanding. ·· police sa id.
But by Thur sday afternoon, his COO·
science \ras beginning to bother him and
he called his mother because he "felt
bad " about taking his sister's money and
he wanted to come home.
Hattabaugh said the boy was in "good
shape" when he was reunited with his
mother.
A countywide search for young John
had been launched Tuesday, In spite of
1he fact that it v.·as apparent that the
child had run away from home and that
there was . no foul play in his di sap.
pearance, police feared for his safety
because of his age.
Fugate Parole?
Board May Commute Life Sentence
LINCOLN. Neb. (AP) -Caril Ann t'ugate, who traveled Wtln
Charles Starkweather in a 1958 murder spree m which 11 persons
died, cleared a hurdle today that could lead to parole.
The three-member state parole board on a maiortty vote recom-
mended lo the stale pardon board that It commute her sentence to a
definite term of years, a necessary preliminary to parole .
She was 14 when she accompanied ~tarkweather, who clied m
the electri c chai r In 1959 !or the string of murders in Nebraska and
Wyoming. Starkweather, lhen 19, was her boyfriend. ·
Miss Fugate, now 30. was sentenced at 15 to a life term for one
rount of fir st.degree n1u rder. She is 11np11soned at the York Wo-
men 's Reformatory.
"It is our judgment,'' said board Chairman John lireenno1tz ,
"that society's purpose has been served and Mi ss t'ugate cannot
benefit by fur!her Imprisonment and is an acceptable risk !or parole
consideration."
'
Selected Groups Ft om Drexel, Heritage and Henreclon to
Remain on Sale 11tl'OllCJh August.
~~-
~Q
M
M
~~
·~i_
Qi
~~
M
.@.fill A~ Fl~
-~ ~ ... ..;--._ .1 ..
Terrific Selection of Top Quality Sale Merchandi1a Ready for Immedi-
ate Delivery. Don't Delay. Final Chance to Select From Our Large In-
ventory et Reduced Price1.
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMARk-kARAS.1AN
INTERIORS
WIEKDAYS • SATURDAYS t :OO te 5110
NIDAY 'TIL t tOO
NEWPORl BEACH e
1727 WESTCLIFF-Ol. 642-2050
tOp111 Sul'lff•y 11-5:10)
LAGUNA BEACH e
)45 NORTH COAST HWY
IOIM" Sun4•1 12-5:101 4'4·45151
TORRANCE e
21649 HAWTHORN& ILVD.
J71 ·127t
• DAU .Y PROT EDITORIAL P AGE
A Benefit for All
Add It up. It should be-worlh-$10 a-year to any
Costa Mesa family.
That's roughly the cost to the owner ol a single·
family residence if the Sept. 11 open space bond erec-
tion ls approved by two-thirds of the vote. (More pre·
cisely, It Is estimated at $8.89 a year on a $30,000 home.)
What's the election all about? ·
Not too complex. One part of the ballot proposes
spending $2.6 million acquiring 70 acres ol still unde-
veloped land for parks and open space. Another part
proposes spending $1.3 million for developing the land.
It really is quite a modest proposal. In a city with
no bonded indebtedness, it would add about a dtme to
the tax rate and the returns are promising indeed.
Four of the sites -involving 45 acres -are owned
by the Newport·Mesa school district. The remaining 25
are privately owned -smaller park sites scattered ,
throughout the community. Together, they would pro-
vide a rich opportunity to enhance the city and, in all
likelihood, enhance property values at the same time.
Doesn't the city have enough open space already?
It might 'look that way. but the answer is: in all
probability. nQ . What looks like open space -lhe fair·
grounds, Southern California College, the Santa Ana
Country Club, Fairview State Hospital, Orange Coast
College -are sublect to development any time their
respective owners decide that way.
In figures, bond proponents point out that Costa
Mesa has 1.5 acres of neighborhood and community
parks per 1.000 pooulalion. For satisfactory exposure
to all citizens, it should be about 2.5 acres.
Couldn't it be out off?
Yes. but the orice will never be cheaper. It comes
out to about $35.000 an acre -remarJrably low consid-
ering the .prime locationo;; of some of the parcel.~.
1w1anv cities would be hapoy to have vacant land
sti ll available to acquire for parks, especially in older
areas that can be up,graded and enhanced by the addi-
tion of ~reenery and playgrounds.
It is noteworthy that every member of the always-
_pl~µty of 'Pork'
I~ State Budget
.
Your money Is burning n hole in the
politicians' pocket.
And through that hole has poured a big
fat {$9.4 billion ) state budget marbled
"'ilh the fat of excess and extravagance.
( RUS WALTON J
Verne Orr. state director cf finance.
admils the 1973-74 t:udget is fun of
··pork." Pork that
\Yould not have be: .. 1
permitted in lean-
er years. Leaner.
meaning the state's
treasury. Not yours.
THOSE excesses and extravagances
"·ere made earlier, if not Possible, by
that $82& million surplus hanging in the
Cacra mento packing house. By the end of
the year that carcass may be bloated to
$1 billion.
That "Pork" is
costing wage earners
and taxpayers hund·
reds of ntlllions o'
extra dollars . 11
comes in various chunks and sizes. llere
are a (e\v:
-A $200 million increase, this year
over last . in the opcriifional and capital
costs o( state agencies;
-Another $226 million for an average
12 percent increase in salaries for state
empklyes. That 12 peccent is excessive.
(As Cal·Tax suggests, an increase of 6
percent would have been equitable. State
"'orkers have received a 42 percent pay
increase over the past five years,J ;
-'An increase of $68 million for UC and
the state colleges and universities in the
face of declining enrollment;
-$42 million for a do'NTI payment on
Senator Randolph Collier's twin tou'ers
(or, whatever form new legislative
quarters take), and
-at least another $50 million in ne'v
park and recreation projects to "buy"
the budget votes to sustain Collier's seed
money for those memorial towers.
Politicians would t:lJ."e"e you believe tbm:
surplus \vas unexpected. Back in Dec ..
1971 , and ~g31n in March, 1972 this col-
umn flredi~ t!le huge surplus and sug·
gested it might go as high as $1 billion.
A suriplus .jg no e~use for increased
and unnecessary spending. Surplus or no;
any politician with a sense o f
responsibility shou ld approach each ex-
penditure. each increased or new pro-
gram. u'ith this question :
"U I had to vote for a tax increase to
pay for this appropriation, would I have
the guts to do It?"
IN MOST cases the -ans\\·er would be
"no." PoliUdans do not like to tie a tax
invoice on their goodies. The surplus
relieved them of that accountability.
SB 90. the "tax refonn" package of
1972, is a monstrous measure. Within the
next four years, it will increase the cost
of state government by at least $1 billion
a year. And; it is causing serious and
urgent problems for local school districts
that are in a dither because of its club-
footed language and contradictions.
This year's ''trai ler" bill to correct SB
go·s deficiencies and technical discrepan-
cies is almost as voluminous as the
original legislation: That's what happens
conservative ~Cos~a City Council has warmly en·
dorsed the bond proposals. Since incorporaUon, this
council has had a reputation for being one of the most
financially cautious city bodies In the state; it's hardly
likely a poor investment would win such approval.
Tho Daily Pilot bas studied all aspects of the Sept.
11 issue and concluded that it is a solid proposal, mod-
est in scope, well within the taxpayers' budget and one
that would benefit all areas of the city.
Further details of . the bond issue -and criti·
clsms of it -will be explored in subsequent editorials.
Upper Ba y Ri ghts-
orange County Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa
Ana apparently has struck out on his own in a new effort
to resolve lhe Upper Newport Bay problem.
Jn a letter to the Field Committee - a joint fed-
eral, state, and local government group working to bring
the bay into public ownership -Battin, who serves on
the committee, makes two key points:
-Orange County's direct interest in the bay should
be limited basically to the actual shoreline area. This is
where the county's prescriptive rights suit would have
the greatest weight in establishing public access rights.
The suit now includes lands on the bluffs not essential
for public access to the shore he says.
-Orange County should file suit to gain clear title
to the three undeveloped islands in the back bay islands
the Irvine Co. has claimed for nearly 50 years. '
. .Battin says ~is letter i~ based on a county counsel
opinion questioning the Irvine Company's title to those
islands. Thus, he reasons, it may be possible for the
county to win most of the Back Bay by lawsuits alone.
Others, notably in the Irvine Company, doubt this
motive. They see Battin's action as simple harassment.
It seems . t?D ea~lr. however, to make any judge-
ment on Battin s position. The legal questions are stiU
unclear. Whatever action is taken, speedy resolution of
the Upper Bay matter should be a principal concern. c fOURQUOI?
Dear
Gloomv
Gus
Party Leaders Ca1itio1ied in Crisis
The sign ordinance and the parks
and open space bond issues repre-
sent "last chance" effort s for Costa
!\lesa. Let your councilman kno\\'
you support the sign ordinance and
vote "yes" on the bonds.
P. 0.
G._y Gus co"'m"'h 1'1! 1ull"'1tttd llY
rwllen •lld d• ft.Of NC8"tl1Y rl'li.tt Ille
¥MW5 ol Ille -•Hr. Send Ytur Pl't _.,. hi Gloomy G111, 0.Uy ~!lot.
when politics supersede reason and am·
bition overri~ ........ ~ ...... nsibility· the cost ---__ i L ~ . ' e. .,u .• ..ical pass10.. is paid by the tax-
pa yer.
THAT O!\:"'E:-CEN'.1' state sales taz in-
crease? The one now being squeezed out
o~ your pock'et ? The one the politicians
are falling all over themselves to "ad-
just11? It's part of that damnabl e tax
reform package.
Heat from the taxpayers has singed the
tails of the politicians and they rush to
delay or temporarily reduce that $650
million tax take. They have the gall to
claim they are "saving" us $320 million
by temporarily repealing or reducing the
one-cent increase. How can the re·
maining increase of $320 million be con·
sidered a savings?
Sooner or later the entire on~ent 1vill
have to take effect permanently. The
bLilt-in excesses of state government de-
mand it.
THOSE WHO suggest that the sales tax
increase is simply a trade-<Jff with lower
property taxes sing a siren song. Within
a year or '"'O the sa les tax increase 1vi1J
be a permanent fixture and property tax-
es \Viii be about as high as ever. Ex·
travagance must be funded ; if not now,
then tomorrow.
Agnew 'Hands 0 -ff' Hints
WASHINGTON -A confidentinl
telephone call from top White House aide
l\1elvin R. Laird to a Republican con·
gressional leader, warning him not to !lO
all-out in defense of Vice President Spiro
Agnew, is ne\Y and harsh evidence to
party professionals
of the depth of the
crisis that threatens
Ted Agne1v.
In his telephone
call to Hep. John B.
Anderson of Illinois,
...-irman ol t h e
llouse Republican
Conference, Lairrl
carefully specified
that he was talking not as a \Vhite IIou.1;e
:tide.
llis message: don't get on a limb in the
Agnew affair, particularly with an all-out
de fense of the Vice President. Stay away
fro1n the Agnew affair as far as possible.
Agnew is under intense federal in-
vestigation on charges of possible
cri minal violations of various federal
statutes involving bribery, extortion, tax
fraud and conspiracy.
REPUBLICANS who know about lhe
Laird call lo Anderson (described as
"astonished" by the warning ) assume
that Laird and Possible other party
grandees have contacted other senior
Republicans \vith similar warnings.
Moreover, the Laird telephone call to
Anderson fits a pattern that has in·
furia~ed the Agnew camp. For example:
I. Before Agnew himself received
formal notice from the Justice Depart-
ment that he wa~ under investigation, At-
ty. Gen. Elliot Richardson rePorted nn
late July) to While House staff chief
Alexander M. Haig, Jr., with a briefing
( EVANS-NOVAK J
on all aspects of the case. On Aug. 2,
Agnew 's attorneys received their letter
from the prosecutors.
2. A promiljlent television commentator
was privately cautioned by an official of
lhe Justice Department IO days ago in
\\'Ords similar to those used by Laird to
Anderson: don't go overboard for
Agnew ; you may wind up with egg oo
your f_!fe. ·
3. THE WlllTE 1101.lSE has gone to
embarrassing length not to put the Presi-
lflcl<s
dent on record as to his vice president's
innocence.
4. The New York Times front-page
dispatch or Auti;. 15, outlining charges
against Agnew in vivid detaii, is believed
by furious Agnew allies to hav~ emanated
from high levels of the Justice Depart·
menl (who flatly deny it), not from
Maryland sources also implicated in the
cha rges against Angew. '
It is nOt surpriaing that allies of
Agnew, 1Yhose talents have sometimes
been grossly used by the Presitlont, IA> •d-
vance Mr. Nixon's interest!, would be
filled with dark suspiciot. over ~ in-
ciden!s. They regard thelI\ !\S P!!JO( ol
nefarious underground adtr\bilJtration
\varfare against Agnew, partly~ to 7 ease
the President's imniense Watergate
burdens. .
THUS, in this conspiratorial view -so
understandable on the part of Agnew in·
timates -Mr. Nixon or Republicans
close to him are greasing the skids for
the .hapless Vice President. Under the
25th Amendment to the ConstitutiOn, they
are quietly preparing to nomiuate a suc-
cessor -most likely John B. Connally.
It \\'as Connally who saved Mr. Nixon
from disaster in th . inflationary crisis of
August 1971. Perhaps Connally, Ill<'
former Democratic governor of Texas
1vho !urned Republican at a moment ol
maximum help to the Watergate-
beleaguered President last spring, can
help again.
To Agnewites, that fits the known fact
that Gonna.Uy recently cancelled his plans
for a long trip abroad and the lesser-
kno\vn fact that some Connally friends
predict he will be back in the ad-
ministration in October.
Meat Hoarder's Attitude Annoys Housewife
BUT IN FACT the Laird warnings may
spring. from something far less con·
spiratorial. They may be a flashing
signal of caution based not on any desire
to do In Agnew but on a rational and in-
formed judgment that Agnew is a goner. •
Likewi se, Richi.ntson•s July briefing of
Haig, before Agnew him self had formal
notification , may al~ be explainable as a
rational ect based on the President's
prior right to know: "ls that normal?" a
Justice Department official repeated in
answer to our question. "Hell, nothing's
nonnal in this case. We're playing it by
ear."
Supermarket Employ e
To the Editor :
I realize you have important tasks or
editing your news~per wllhou~ another
ou tside letter coming in the way of your
procedures, but something went on today
and I had to write someone and get it oU
my chest.
I WAS in a locai supermarket this
afternoon and stood heMnd one ol the
employes who .was having h1s merchan-.
dise checked out before going home .. Al!
,of his order was packages' and packages
of ground beer. seventeen dollars worth
to be exact! Ther the checker announced
that she thought that only two packages
per customer were to be purchased. His
reply was, ''Don't worry about It. It's not
my problem."
Well, maybe It Isn't his problem, but
why is it that when 1 m1.1st make do with
my husband's lance corporal's paycheck
!or U..... boys, a hubby and myself (!ix
months pregnant), then I say I must >Ut
.----B• George ---,
Dear George:
No molter where I hide my booze
botlle my wire finds It aad even
when I sneak Into a backroom and
try to slip n slug she knows It! I
swear, that womar.. can hear 1 bot~
tie open at %5 paces ! What can 1 do
about ber? JUMPY
Dear Jwnpy 1
Quit botna selfish. 11 ahe wants
a drlnt lhat bad, give ber a drink.
Wltal'I I mmlqe for!
MAILBOX
Letten ,.._ ....,.,.. .,. •Mu!M. Norm•llY
wrttwl ...... ClllV"' llltlr 'MIMfM 111 -Mrdl
tr ..... Tiit rlll'lt It tllleltll .. lettWI tt tit Mlil<t
er .. lmilllle libtl 11 f9~, All i.ttwrt mv11 ill·
cw. 11eMh1r1 ""' rn.11111"' ""'11, but nt mn 1111r '119 wttMl.ttl ot1 ........ ,, If w l!kllflt mu11 11
8ffrll'Mf, '"'"' wlll 11tt bt t1.1MINtM.
up with his "not my problem"?
I COULON'!' do that and get away with
it and I feel he's no better than we are.
Sure1 the meat situation is absolutely
gross, but unlll the matter Is somehow
rectified I woutdn·1 have gone against the
manager's wishes.
We moved here via lhe Marine Corps
from PennsylvanJa ln h-1arch and have
enjoyed the gorgeous change ol states,
but even back home they have meu.t
problems. So is If Just me that arlpes too
hard or am I justified tn feellng over-
wrought! Well, thanks !or listening
anyhow.
BARBERA MITCHELL
Proteau Co ver119e
To the Editor:
I'm a recent subscriber to the Dally
Pilot, and I'm happy with the paper e.·
cept for two things.
For days, now, I've been rending col·
umns and columns of information about
dtulni up the bo(!ies ol the victims ol
!bot masa murdmr(s). Ceralnly, rape
' Does1i't Tltirik Sliorwge ls His Proble1n
and murder are "news" and I suppose
quite a few people enjoy reading the
details. I could not accepl, however, the
headline on page 2 of lhe Aug. 10 issue,
annolDlcing (and I quote) "Juan Corona
Still First in Murders." I suppose that
now that those depraved individuals in-
volved hav e been found to have killed
more people than Corona . you'll name
Carll and accon1plices number one in the
field of mw·der.
I l\1UST protest the lack of decency
and community resPonsibllity renected
In that headline. Highlighting this aspect
of the crime in a headline can only en-
courage warped individuals to emulate
and surpass Caril's "accomplishment."
Also1 your sense of space allowance
does not seem fair at times. After
reading so much about this mass
murderer, I was appalled this morning
when I picked up the Pilot and read the
eight lines on Conrad Aiken's death .
I suppose I ought IA> bo glad that the
eight lines were at least on the front
page and not hidden elsewhere, although
eight lints or coverage Is rather hidden
no matter what page they appear on.
CONRAD AIKEN lived to he 114 years
of age without committing any serious
crimes: along the 'vay, he \\'On a
Pullttcr l>rize as well as w»tld fan1e .i.i:1
a poet.
I realize the eight lines probably
... aect the !e"ith ol the AP·s releasa. But
I would think that since you have often
cited your responslblllly to the com-
munilJI and Ill lntemts, you would have
considered your news duty to the ma-
jority of citizens, who are both decent
and reasonably educated, and have sent
a cub reporter -at least -over to the
library for a bit of research on Coo;ad
Aiken. I wouldn't have expected such a
great man's death to get lhe same
amount of coverage as a mass murderer
(that seems to be one of the ironic truths
about today's news coverage), but I do
think you could have had more coverage
on Aiken's death . May I be only the first
of your readers to protest these two
items.
E. DARLENE LISTER
Settslble Appr11ba l
To the Editor:
I want to compliment and congratulate
the Daily Pilot for printing the kind of
Watergate analysis that seems to have
escaped American journalists.
l refer, of course, to the guest com-
ID<Dtary of Britisb columnist Angus
Maude In your Issue ol Aug. 16. 'nlose ol
us who support President Nixon In Ms
crisis are deeply grateful to have till• op.
Port.unity of reading a capable and
thoroughly sensible appraisaJ of the
\Vatcrgate affair In an American
nc\li·spnper.
MARGOT R. BARLEY
/lio Victim?
To the EditA>r:
t>{o mAn Is an Island; no man lives
alone. Tho experf> are saying that there
are no victims of the crin1es of pros-
titution. pornography a n d certain
narcotics such as marijuana. Corruption
affects everyone of us . This would be so
if there were no God.
I WOULD Nor want to have a pros·
titute in my ramily, '\vould you? What if
your mother were a prostitute? What
would your chance be of becoming a se:lf-
rellpecting citizen? lt would be difficult
to keep such ·a thing secret. What if It
\Vere your sister, your daughter? Would
you feel like a victim o( prostitution?
What of pornography! Could it be hid-
clr..n in 1he famlly sate from children? Not
likely. The person who feeds his soul on
parnograpby will act differently towards
others.
VOuNG ADULTS tend to disregard the
well being or olhers. '11tink of your
children. Some men having b e e n
discharged from the mililary tend to
brini the barracks talk borne with them
with no regard to the effect on their
wives and children. They often plan
recN!aUon on Sundoy so that the child
will be deprived or spiritual trajping In
Sunday school and church.
The families of compulsive gamblers
are all victims as art the families of
alcohollcs. The gambler or alcoholic will
often set up the friends of tbeir wives
and fa1ni1y fc :-a loan \\'hich will never be
p"id bnclr . This Is be!ilde usin~ t~ money
thnt should clothe and feed the family .
No victims Indeed. We a;-c all the vlc-
Ums or corruption. No man t.. an Isl~
•JIM BOLDING
But such quiet and raUonal explanation
is understandably difficult for Agnewites.
The mood in the Agnew camp his grown
Isolated and embittered. Now, 'l'ilh word
being secretly.pasaed to "keep clear" of
the Agnew affair, that mood w1n_;n::--
tensify, with dangerous lm~tiOOs for
the Republican fut lio niailer how the
investigation :tnaUy
OIAM .. COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, PvbUsMr
Thomas KttPil, Editor
Barbara Krtitrich
Editorial Page Editor
1'ic editorial .. ~ ol the' Dally
Pilot &eek1 to lnl'orm and rtJmulate
readers by presenthw on thit pqe diver-.e •commentary· on topics Of in.
tmst by s}rndlcated columnl111 and
cartoonists. by pmrldi._ a lonlm. for
rtaders' view1 and by prHentlrw: this
nt...,pa(>t:l''s e>plniont and ideas m
current topics, 1'tl(> edttorill opWons
ot tht Dally Pilot appear oni¥ tn the
editoriaJ column Jl the top Of tht
page, Oplnfon1 expn!Slll'd by tht col-
umnistl and cal100ftists Md letltt
writers are thelrOINJ\ Md no~
tnfnt of thelt vltrv."11 by the Dally
Pilol tllould be Wtmd.
Friday, August 2<l. 19'13
-
~~State Death Penalty
~Heads for Approval
. . ' ~: SACRAMENTO (AP) -death penalty provision In the Sieroty, an ardent loe o1
State 'Bonata~a"'
Reagan Pens Tax
Rebate futo Law
DAIL y PILOT G
BEACHCOMBER COFFEE SHOP
AND RESTAURANT
2Ul Wut Coul Hlghw1y
Newport Beach
NOW OPEN
Under New Management
for
UEAKFAST -LUNCH -DINNER ':1J.egtslation imposing a man-bill backed by Reagan. 'nlef\ capital punishment, added in ~~datory death penalty for 15 the committee voted 6·1 to
··;.crimes appears headed ror send the amended bill to the an interview that he Is not at
f:i;as.sage by the California Assembly floor . all sure the measure would be
~ $829 million built up aver the Optft 7 AM lo I PM -7 D4lys • Wook
past two years. I~~~~~~~~ s;;.,Leglslature despite a tern-capita t punishment SUJ>' identical to the original form
r:--• 4>0rary setbacK in committct. porters -conceded to be a of the bill by Sen. George
.. :,, A bill decreeing death for majority in the Assembly -Deukmejian {R-Long Beach), ~ !uch crimes as murdering an said they will try to amend the
¢1!bn-duty peace officer and death penalty provision back which his committee altered ~multiple slayings could be in before the floor vote ls Thursday. If the Assembly
i.:-Jigned by Gov. Ro n a I d taken. makes any changes In the way
.. !!.Jteagan, by next "''eek su~ "I think there will be a the bill passed the Senate, it
j;!porters and opponents say. death penalty bill that passes would have to go back to the ~: TllAT BECAl1E possible the legislature this year," upper house for concurrenct.
;;: when the Assembly Criminal regardless of what th e ~stice Committee voted .f..3 Assembly Criminal Justice ASSEMBLY REPUBIJCAN
b -yJ:J.ursday to substitute life im-c 0 rn mitt e e doe9, said floor leader Robert Beverly of
rrJirisonment w1thout the chairman Alan Sieroty (D-1..<>s Manhattan Beach said in an
ssibility of parole for the Angeles). interview he v.·ill sponsor the move on the floor to amend
the Deukmejian bill back to its
$721 MILLION Bill
Gov. R1•9an'1 OK
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Calilomlans begin reaping a
one-time: tax bonanza Oct. 1,
getting back a total ol 1721
million In state treasury
surplus.
That figures out to nearly
$35 for every man, woman and
child in the st.ate .
GOV. RONALD ~gan call-
ed it the largest state tax
rebate in the nation's hi.story
when he signed the bill Into
law Thursday.
The reverse flow ol. taxes
u·as made possible by an
unexpected treasury surplus of
original form . He said floor ---------
action will be taken li.tonday or
Thursday.
Beverly, who needs 41 votes
to succeed, sai d "I feel we
have the votes. I am op-
timistic the votes will be
there."
The lower house has 48
Democrats and 31 Republicans
with one vacancy. Beverly
said he estimates he may lose
one or two Republican votes at
the most and will pick up 12 to
15 Democratic votes.
Sieroty said' he felt there
might be an effort on the floor
to alter various segments or
the Deukmejian m e a s u r e .
Beverly agreed foes "certainly
'vould" try that tactic.
Fire Fighters Stop
I
Blaze i11 I ts Tracks
By The Associated Press
Fire fighters have contained
a wind-driven brush fire that
threatened homes near Reno,
Nev. while other crews v.·orked
to complete a fire line around
a huge 6-day-cld blaze in
Northern Ca1ifornia.
"I can't understand h:lw
they saved all those homes,"
he said "It was a super--
coordinated, heroic effort that
slopped this from becoming a
major disaster. 'Ille men just
held their ground, let the fire
come down to them and then
just beat it out."
Reagan insisted the money Ii
be returned to the taxpayers
rather than be spent on new
programs. The tax rebate w!U
take two forms .
First, the state sales tax w!U
be rolled back by one penny oo
the dollar on Oct. 1 for six
months. It had gone from five
to six percent in most or
Ca!Uomla July I.
NEXT SPRING, the state's
more thah 6 million inoome
taxpayen are to get cuts
r~ng from 20 percent to 100
percent of! their tax bills due
April 15.
The Republican governor
said Thursday he won the tax
rebate over the opposition of
"would-be big spenders" In the
legislature.
Now, he said, the voters of
the state have a "once-in-a-
lifetime" opportwlity to cut
their taxes permanently by
approving his tax control pro-
gram at a special statewide
election Nov. 6.
"Then they can finish the
job already started by voting
to limit and reduce their tax
burden permanently,'' Reagan
said.
BY SENDING out an THE NEVADA fire , ignited
Sketch of Rapist Finished
FREE
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
LECTURE
by
Miss Patricia Tuttle
of San Francilco
Saturday • August 25
11 a.m.
EDWARD'S CINEMA THEATRE
FASHION ISLAND
Child care will be provided
at Second Church -3100 Pacific View -CdM
·· .. ·
Sunday, Au gust 26, 1973
Showtime: 7:30 p.m.
.$5.00 per person
Monte Carlo Room
(no one under 21 admitted)
amended version of the bill, in three spots Thursday by a
the committee averted a ma-passing locomotive, charred
jor challenge to the authority 350 acres and destroyed a Spon1or•d by Fir1t A111l S•co11d
0.1i1rch of C~ri1t Sclentht,
N•wport leech of Assembly Speaker Bob barn and t\\'O sheds in SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -neatly on his left side, freckles
Moretti (D-Van Nuys), who Anderson Acres, nine miles An o£ficer has drawn a on his face, a l lh-inch borizon-
appointed the committee and north or Reno, said Bill portrait of a man they believe taI scar above his right eye at
op pases the death penalty Johnston of the N e v a d a repeatedly raped and beat a the hairline and a small scar!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ... ~ . ' .. ·
.··
Tickets: All Ticketron Agencies or
Del Webb's Newporter Inn
~ r\ ,// c. "'' W";'fA,,_,_ l'L i:aj C::!//~Oeu7~/l?Z
himself. Beverly had vowed to Division of Fcrestry. 25-year-old woman in a hotel
attempt the 'rarely used Ten homes were directly in room Aug.14. of about If• inch above the N l E (',
pa rliamentary maneuver of the path of the charging fire , Inspector Hobert Ne 1 son right side of his upper Up. ear y very one
withdrawing a bill from com-blown by winds 30 miles per drew the sketch with descrip-Police believe be also may f.
mittee by a majority floor hour, Johnston sajd. 1tfany lions from the victim and a be the same man u·ho raped. 1 ~
vote -a tactic regarded as a fa mi Ii es temporarily cab driver. beat and burnl>d. a 23-year-old i!_
direct challenge to lhe house evacuated tbeir homes while Policesaidthemanis5-leel-woman in a hotel room at • L;s*""ns to Lan..1-rs j ·;,.-=~~~~~~~::::::~~~~~~~~":~~l~ea~d~er~sh~i~P·-..~------~J~400~m~e~n]w;o~rk~·ed~to~s:to~p~the~on=-~~9~and~w;e~igrh~s~l;60~.~H~e~has~c~u~~~F8is~h~er~m~atn~·s~Wh~arf~~l~a~s~t~__:~~~~~f,t;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--t·r coming flames . Iy, reddish brown hair, parted February. 1
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10 .... ,..
I lb. Bag CARROTS ...... 2 bags 19c
RUSSET POT A TOES -··· 2 lb./25c
FRESH SPINACH ·····-·· IOc bunch
ITALIAN PRUNES ... . .. 19c lb.
"AmNTION RESTAURANT OWNERS":
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NEWPORT BEACH (ONLY) "'I.,_ Coool Hlghwity • Coll for r•N,.otlono (714) f7J.5634
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IMPORTANT NOTICE
Dear Customer,
In regard to our recent letter requesting the addition of
your name to our permanent mailing list we would like to
encourage you to return the card enclosed with our letter.
Even if your name and address was correct we MUST
RECEIVE THE CARD BACK In order to place you on ou r ow n
mailing list. ·
If you 've misplaced the card or if our letter was lost on its
way to you, plea se call us and we'll add your name to our list.
Phone 644-5070.
To those who have returned the card s ... Thanks very much
for contributing.to such a tremendous response. You 've helped
us to serve you better.
Sincerely,
~ ~~~ ./15;1.L \S-.M
Representing At-Ease Management Staff
44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070
vc.
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Call
torn
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