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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-09-07 - Orange Coast Pilot- • • • IS Sill er • Brotherhood Pair Freed After ·-Only • • 3 Months ID . I· ,, · . .,, .. • • DAILY PILOT * * *toe * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEM BER 7, 1973 VOL. "-NO, UI, 4 Sl:CTIONS, • P"-GIS Vi~ii111 Aided ~ . . ' . . ..... \ .\ 0.llY ,llot SllM l"Mtw 9 Motoris; Linda Crenshaw, 27, of 31959 10th St. South Laguna. is aided by passerby ..... t~ Ul?ee-car accident Thursday evening _on La- guna Canyon Road south ol·San Dfogo Freeway. She was admitted to . south Coas{ Communily;Uospital with face c~ts and fractured nose. InvestigatoTS say I.a l!aker, 34, Sebastopnl, {;atif., was southbound when be reached' up to lower sun visor. H_is imall :ar ~ollided: Nith and glaoced·of!,big northbound se dan driven by Earline Ulrich, 32. Long Beach. Baker car then spun around northbound Crenshaw car. To lice ·se~k Two Rapists ~ ·-~ . . .. ~ ' . ' "tOf . Girl· in 'Hm1tington ' • Tw~ · lnen ~~· J<ld~pbd a"' young . · 'the ~year.old raw victim said !he . man al kll!fepo;pt. Th.llr'!liY nigh~ bad been with girl friends at the !hen beat and raped \11!1'..bofo<O dumplllg , Hooker's Bar. 21094 Beach Blvd. At about btr in a field In, Huntiplton Beach, art 8 p.m. sh~ left alone. ., ~Ing aougllt today by police. She said she was accos ted as she Jail • Drug l(ing Pair F1~eed From Jail Two men labeled on their arrest as principals in the ''Brotherhood or Eternal Love" drug distribution ring aUegedly headed by imp"risoned Dr. Timothy Leary were freed late ThurSday after serving less than three months or their sen- ten ces. Orange County Superior Court Judge Raymond Vincent's action, taken under a penal code provision . that permits judicial review 120 days after sentencing, brought a howl of protest (rom prosecutor Jack Ryan. "He's gone against the report prepared by the Department of Corrections," com- mented the astonished Ryan . ''I call this an abuse of discretion and frankl y I am wondering why Judge Vincent took such a personal interest in these two men." The two men are James Leroy Crit- tendon, 30, who was living in Long Beach when arrested, and John Charles Gale. 26. a Laguna Beach sur£board maker who was marked down in the Grand Jury indJctmint as a persisrent peddler of LSD at rock coneerts. Crittendon earlier drew a state prison term of one to ten years ·after pleading guilty to possession of dan gerous drugs. Gale got the same pri50n term after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges. Neither man should start celebrating just yet, the somber Ryan warned after Judge Vincent's ruling. · Ryan told the judge that he intends to go to the Fourth 'District Court o[ Ap- peals to challenge the dismissal action on the grounds . that it is contrary oto evidence and the recommendation of the state Department of Corrections. 11 Judge Vincent 's ruling is upheld , it will mean that 18 of the nearly 50 persons indicted by the Grand Jury ten months ago have now been cleared of all charges (See TWO FREED, Page l) "· ornccrs said the ntarly hysteria! stru:ted to leave by two men w~ van 'l!0!11111 ·walked 1"\o tbe .llOU« ~IPll~ Cit ·,,was I!"!~ nc1l \~. ~ oar In the .!"'rk· ~ . ~J . -W • .. . ~19:t5 p.m. and relaiedncr ordeal to Ing lo!. . . 1 1 of lhc SSUe l,JlS-t'Min ..,, 'According to her sta cmen , one · · · ' • men pulled a htmtlng knlre a.nd told her ' n6t to ser'eam . When she hesitated Rbout getting into the van , she said she was _Mruck on the side of the head wilh a • >Ba~dit 'Gets $100 1 At Mesa Restaurant A C..ta Met1 Kentucky Fried Ollckcn resllUrtht wa1 robbed ol approximately flOO In cash Thunday night bY. a lone llUJllllan who fled on 109! alter collecUng Jill loot. • .Police described . the man ln his 30's and wearlni a ski cap and blue jeans, and 1 jacket. The robbery occurred "f nd 9 p.m. ot ~ Harbor Blvd, ~ ho>VY object. Tho woman told officers lhat one man drove the van whUe the other raped her while holding the knife to her throat. After a -while she said 11he was pushed out or the van Into a lleld near the to- tersccllon of Orange Avenue and 2lsl Street. and' walked Jfrom there lo the police 1tatlon on Orange arFlflh SIN?Ct. Ofllecrs took Iler to PaclnC'a Hospital for treatment ol her lnJOrie:s. ' I With 2 Votes EVERE'l'l', Wash. (UPI)· -A voter «imoul ol only two has estab- lished a new sewer.district near Ar- lington In Snohomlsh County. The !.<l vol< represented a one- third turnout of the dlstrlct'a six registered., voters. , Thc ·new'P"etun la Sewer Distrlct takes in thl'ff restaurant1 and folft' 1ervtce stations. • . ·' . -., . -. • • ·~ ' Age Not Barrier To NewJyweds- 194' - .. Age No Bounds Groom, 19, Marries W oma1i, 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) - A 19-year-old Bakersfield man says "age does nol matter" in ltis marriage lo a widow b.alf 1 :entury >lder. Leonard W: ·comeaUSa.id in an interview today he and 72-year· old Eula Mae Fisher had been thinking about getting married "for a long time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues· day. Comeau was maintenance man at Mrs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been "living together for a while " he smd. "A ' ge does not matter." Comeau added. "If a woman is older than I am or younger than I am don't make no difference. If you love a person like I love my wife, that'5 .ill there is to it." The bride's second husband. Cyril, died in January and Comeau was orphaned s~veral years ago when his parents, sister and two brothers were killed in a traffic accident. Two older brothers were killed in Vietnam. Confirming Bloek? J(issinge1· Won't Talk On Phone Taps of Aides WASHINGTON (UP!) -Henry A. Kissinger declined today to tell senators the results of taps on telephones or 17 of his aides beginning_in 1969. Two members of thi! Senate: Foreign Relations Com mi ttee said they would at- tempt to block confirmatio1. as secretary of Stale until they got an FBI report on the matter. Testifying before a congressional com- miltee for the first time in his 41h years as President ~ixon's top foreign affairs adviser, Kissinger was questioned closely and at 1englh about surveillance o( his White House national security staff . KJssinger presumably acknowledged approving the wiretaps as part of a general White House effort to find the source of news leaks of sensitive mat- lers. Kissinger testiCied that some security leaks from his staff were discovered and "appropria te action was taken." But he firmation . He noted that the United Na· lions ·convenes at the end or September and Kissinger's presence will" be required there. In a six-yage statement at the outset of · hiS confirmation hearing. Kissinger said that although th e Nixon administration differs with the congressionall y ordered halt of U.S. bombing of Cambodia "it will not attempt to circumvent it." Sce.kil)g a speedy confirmation' as sue· ccssor to William, P. Rogers, Kissi nger also outlined hi s position on executive privilege since he will also retain the title or national security affairs adviser to the President. "Jn my new capacity," he said, "l shall be prepared to testify formally on all my acti vities. In other words, I shall testify with respet:t to all matters lradi· IS.. KISSINGER, Page Z) said "I would perter not to go inlo in· A L I =:.1. cases" 1-... ~ev~ ~n _e:.~uye ..... t , .. ~t .. ~, .. : ' Ile contended that the decision whether 10 make the information avallable rested with the FBI ·•"'1 the Justice Depart· mcnt. ·- Cliairman J. Wllllam F\Jlbright (I). Ark.), said he asked lhe FBI previously for a written summary it prepared on the wiretaps and his request was turned down. • Sen. Clifford P. Oise (R·N.J.), told Kissinger, if the FBI rtport i!: not pro- vided, "ll shou1d be clear the committee will not be in fl position to act on the ·nominalion." Fu1brtght said he agreed. But Sen. G<orge D. Aiken {R·Vt. ). urg- ed lhc committee not to delay con- Wasn't · Pilik MUNICH Germany I iJPl) -Po Ike rushed to the city's English Gardens after passersby reported spotting an elephant standing in front of a tavern. lt was there nll right, and police said Thursday they found the owner Inside drinking coffee. The caretaker of the local university's nr.lmal research clinic explained he took the elephant on a convalescence walk . wanted A cup of coffee nod tied up the elephant oul!ide. t 72 , Omh1ous Sign Seen For Buyers WASHINGTON (UP I) -Wholesale prices rose 5.8 percent in August. the big· gest advance in a single month since 1946, the government reported today. Farm prices, freed from the restraints of the price freeze. also shot up by 23 percent -more than three times the previous record for a si ngle month. Grain prices and many anima l feeds increased dramatically -in the case of grain by 70 percent. Th.is was v.i~.wed as an 01ninous sign for shoppers at the meat market because farm ers paying higher costs for feed usually pass the burden along to con- sumers. The wholesale price report by the department's Bureau of Labor Stat istics came five days before the scheduled lift - ing of ceilings on beef prlces and bore out predictions by Administration economic officials last month. The report brought :in instant denun- ciation of Adn1inistralion economic policies by AFL-CIO President George Meany. He called the latest figures "beyond belief.'' The BLS said the overall, unadjusted in· crease in wholesale prices of S.8 percent in August was the highest surge for any month since J uly 1946. The rise that (See PRICE JUJ\1P, Pnge %) Orange Coast • Weather The Los Angeles \\leather Service sees a foggy "''eekend for Orange Coast residents and visitors, clear· ing by mid-afternoon. Highs will range from the mid·70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland . l.NSIUi: TOUi\ Y ~ Cilebrifies toill pla11 te1n1is for charity this weeke1ul Ot Ne.w- port Beach, Tiie eue11t takes place ifl tile Balboa Bay Club. See todC1y 's \V eek(11der for de· taJls. • Al Y .. r tltl"'l'!Ct ) L..M. loyd • IMllfltl I C•M..,1111 S CllulMM SJ-41 CtfftlC.t U C...u-4 n Df'fWCtl 1 ... ..n.i ·'··· • ,.\~· 1).11 ,.., ~ •o<.n 1 MwtK'" 11 . Allll laHtn U MllllM• • • i \I t • frid.i.y, Stpttmber 7, 1973 WASHINCTON !AP) -111e-Navy tt> d11y dttoratc.'CI for bravery 18 crew members of the lntclligence·gathering ship Pueblo, captured more than five ye11rs ago by the North Koreans. 'l'he ship's commanding offiet>r. L.loyd M. Bucher. now relired from the Navy, was not nn1ong thctn. The Pentagon sald Bucher recom· mended the 18 awards and decorations (or actions 011 Jan. 23, 1968. the dav North Korean gunboats surrounded and OOardt:d 1 he Put;>blo. Secre tary of the Navy John \Varner said other rte0mmcndalion.s for awards for actions while the crew wa!I 1m· prisoned by the No rth Koreans ar~ being considered. Pentagon spokesmen .lt:rry \V • Friedhl'im sa id the delay in honoring the 1nen resulted from a fe.11 r tl111t prisoners held by the North Vietnam l'se nlight be harmed if the Pueblo crew was decorated while the lndochlna hostilities conlinul'd . Manv of the Pueblo crewmen v.•ho >n cre honoied have left !he Navy. Bu1:hcr v.·as Subjected to an ifltense in- vestigation into how be Jost the Pueblo, No Co111111e11t··Do1aald Officials Want to l(11ow If Nixon B11 gge d Brother F1·01n Wire Services The chairmen of two congrcssio;;"at subcommittees are trying to find out whether Presidenl Nixon wiretapped his Newport Beach brother, Donald. The White House isn't saying. Donald Nixon h a d no comment when contactt'd today by the Daily Pilot in Los Angeles at a hotel ceremony. 11e also declined comment there Thursday when asked for comment by reporters covering the program. Deputy \Vhi1c House Press Secretary Gerald L. \\'arren said Thursday that if n1onitoring of !he President's immediate family took place "it .... ·ou\d have been related to the protective function of the Secret Service. I'm not going beyond lhis." \Varren said that after talking with the President he would have no comment on '"any specific charges'' in a Washin gton Post story f)Uoting sources as saying the .. Secret Serv ice wiretapped Donald Nix- on·s telephone for more than a year at the President's request. Meanwhil e, Sen. Joseph ~1. ~1ontoya fl).N.M.), and Rep. Tom Steed (D- Okla. ), chairmen of subcommittees which allocated funds to lhe Secret Service, said they want explanations in \vriling from the Sec ret Service. "The wir etaps being reported would seem to ha ve no connection with national seeurily and 1\'ould seem to be outside of the scope of Secret Service responsibility ror the protection of the President," ?i-1ontoya said in a letter to Secret Service Director James J. Rowley. From Pagel TWO FREED • • or had thei r -~ent cnces commut ed . Several of the indictees arc still on the 1un, >n'llh police throughout the nation slill keeping their eyes peeled for the 1nan they describe tis "j,1r. Big" in the conspiracy -300-pound Robert L. '"Fat Bobby" Andrist. 30. He was last seen in l2te im in the Hawaiian Jslands. Lawmen said Crittendon came next in order belO\Y Leary and Andrist and iden· lifled him as the man .,..,ho peddled 250.000 LSD tablets in one transaction. They said Gale \Yas best known to them as a "trave ling druggist" who toured Southern Cali fornia rock concerts dist ributing free samples of LSD to young onlookers. Both men were said to be con£idants of Or . Leary, 50. the LSD cultist who is now serving a term in Folsom Prison. Htu1t La1mched For 2 Rapists SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Marin County sheriff's deputil's launched a manhunt for t v.·o young men 1\1ho raped two "'omen in separate incidents early Thursday. 1\ sheriff's department spokesman said there are no clues 10 lhe identify of the t1vo men . both in !heir early 20s, who raped a 61 -year-old 1·erra Linda \voman, ri.nd a 3;.ye11r-old housev.·ife in Lucas Valley near he re. OIANGI COAST ,, DAllY PllOT fht Or1nor Coa1r OAILY PI LOT, With wn•cn II wmt>lnecl !hi N1w1-P•f"!.1, 11 1>ubllol•ed by 1t11 o.-n111 Co111 Pubt11nmg Corn111~v. Stu· r1•1 9<11t1on1 1r1 Pllbll•h.cl, Mofldey 1hlol/Qn Fr1G1y, 111r Co1!t Mt ... , N1woor1 &11cn, l-lunlltlllTOn 8t1ch/Founr1l11 V11ley, L1g1m1 e11cn, 1rvl111/S1lk!T-Ck 11>11 .san ct. ..... n!tl Stn Juan C1p1'1t1na. A llf\'1111 rtql11t11I tdl!~ 11 "°llll'lf<I S1t1m11 y1 ... Svr>li~V•· Tnt prlnc:!Pll P1rttl11hlno !!laM 11 11 ilO Weit Sly Jrr111, Co1!1 Mt•I, Ctlltorl'>la, t'M1'. 11.oberl N. Wied Pr1dd1n1 I nd "ubll1h..- J1clr R. Cur1t'I' Vici ,,~ldtnl Incl Gl ntrll M-eitt Tho""' K11vil Edl'9r TI10'"11 A. M urp~i"• M•M91"9 EdllOt Ch•1l11 H. Looi Rich11J P. Nill A11l11tnl M1n19lng [di,...,_ ...... Cot!I Met! llO Wn1 II•• $1tf•! NtwPDfl !It.Ch: mJ l'ltlltf!Dt'l 111111,..~nl L ....... l1K1'1; m F..-t1I ot.vt~w H11nt1,,.1on' 9ft(fl: J 1t7t I t'°"' 10\llt •ltlll S.n Clln!lnll: ,., North r 1 ""'INI ltlll , .. .,.... 1714t '41-4121 C~ A4'Ht'tl~ 642°$UI """" c.td1I A,_ .... M Ut111M llldl 4tJ-4420 .. ,,_ Nwfll Or•• c-tr C.IMl'Wftllln Mt-1llt CDCtrrlftlt, 1'1.1. Ol"I.... CNll .... lltlllN '""'•"Y 1111 """ oorln, l1tw1m1111t. te1ltorltl ',....".,. or __ ,........,,. l'lltllol ..... , " ~ "'"*" d*lll -.. '"111~ llf niPY•lftll .-. ~ t.lltl _,_ NII 11 (111t11 llMH• c ~""""' ""'*""""*" "' <.,,.., 11..a ~l'NY:r ."' r111lt U.lJ "*"1111¥' mHll1tt" 0t111MtltM SUI ~. • Steed said he, too , would ask Rowley for a \Yritten statement. lie and Montoya said they would await the Secret Service reports before deciding on whethe r to order sub- committee hearing_s. The Post reported that the wiretap of Donald Nixon during the President's first term apparetnly was a result of fears Donald's financial activities might em- barrass the Nixon administration . Donald Nixon is a vice president oC ri.tarricott Corp. But the Presi dent's decision to wiretap his brother was pai;tly caused by concern over Donald's business relationship with billionaire Howard Hughes, the sources said. The Secret Service refused all com· ment. Marine Hurt In Escape From Blaze A Camp Pendleton Marine suffered bums and a severe cuts early today in panicky flight from his blazing apart- ment. Ralph Simpson, 35, jumped from a win- dow 20 feet above the ground to flee the hea t and smoke from the fire which erupted in his living room shortly before 3 a.m. Witnesses said the injured man · beat his _way through the pane of glass and then barely missed another pro- truding pane of glass and a jumble of gas meters on the ground level. Fire Chief Ron Coleman said Simpson was awakened by the smoke from a smouldering easy chair and grouped his way into the bathroom of the apartment at 103 San Luis Rey. ' Simpson then realized that the blaze was too far along, panicked, then dove through the window. When firemen arrived they found the 1.larine dazed a n d wandering in the yard of the apartment buUding. Simpson was taken to San Clemente General Hospital by fire department am- bulance for treatment of burns on the face and ches t as well as the 11}-inch-long gash in hi s upper thigh. After emergency treatment there he was transferred in satisfactory condition to the base hospital at Camp Pendleton. Coleman said a cigaret apparently spa rked the fi re in the living room chair, and had the smoke not awakened the sleeping man, Simpson could easily have been killed by the intense heat being generated. "The whole pl ace was al the fl ash point when the firemen arrived, and it had become so hot in the apartment that the phone, radio and other plastic ap- pliances had melted fi at." he said. Damage to the furni shings and to the carpet of the dwelling was set at $1,500. Arrciign1ne1it For Accused Rapist Delayed Negotiations by a La Habra attorney who may defend accused kidnap-rapist Kenneth D. Kelley, charged with the ab- duction of a teenaged girl Jn Corona del 1i1ar eight days ago stalled his . ar- raignment Thursday. Kelley, a tattooed truc ker from Pico Rivera, appeared before .Judge Calvin P. Schmidt in Harbor Judicial District Court 1'hursday afternoon lo hear formal charges read against him . Co mplaints charging the suspect wi1h kidnaping, rape through threa t of bod ily harm, sex perversion and assault with a dead ly weapan were Issued Thursd ay morning. Arraignmt'nl was continued until ~1on· day morning. however. ol lhe request of !he Orange County P.ubllc 0erender1s Of- fice . Judge Schmidt agreed when it wu ex· plaint'<! that La llabra attOmey Stephen A. De Sa les Is considering representing Kelley in the four~unt criminal cruse. Kelley waa subsequenUy transferred to Orange County Jail, with the stiff llll0,000 bail rcquC8tcd by Newport !leach police remaining In effect at Judge Schmidt'• order. Kelley, who also uses the lest name Blahosky, was arrested In El Monte Tueiday aft•rnoen by a patro111ng police serge.ant who recognized the 11wi:pect and his white vao from a wantecl. clrcular distributed by Newport Beach police. an electronic surveillance s h I p camouflaged as u scientific research vessel. II carried a crew of si x office rs. 75 enlisted men and two civilians w!ll;!n captured after being rired on by patrol boats and planes. After a year of negotia tions, the crew was retun1ed by the North Koreans Dec. 22. 1968. The PUeblo remains anchored in a Norlh Korean harbor. One of two Silver Stars approved by \\la mer goes posthumously to Fireman Duane l{odges. the .only crew member killed during the attack. Steeple Jill Mary Ann Quinn, 45, of Los Gatos. ,calls herself an aerial engineer. She has state license that says she is a steeplejack. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. Th u r s d a y, she painted the Newport Beach City Hall flagpole. She does it every two years. Expensive WU)' To Beat Heat MIDLAND. ?i-Uch. (UP I) -Bernard McLain , 44, found a way to beat the heal , but it cost him $95. McLain was arrested shortly be.fore midnight Wednesday after police spottc-d him riding his bicycle -with nothing on but his tennis shoes. He told police it "was terribly warm and the heat was unbearable" in his apartment so he grabbed his tennis shoes, bike and took off. McLain was taken to the city jail "-'here he was given so1ne clothing. lie was then fined $95 on a charge of inde· cent exposure and put on probation for two years. Topless Dancing Law Overturned NEVI ''ORK (UPI ) -A federal court judge has ruled unconstitutional a North Hem pstead, N.Y .. town ordinance pro- hibiting topless dancing. Judge John Bartels said Thursday the law, wh ich prohibits any display of breasts in public, was so broad as to be "constitutionally invalid as an in- frin gement on First Am e nd men t freedoms." A suit challenging the law was brought by the owners of three taverns in the town. Jn a lengthy decision, Bartels said th e ordinance. passed this year, would prevent the performance of the "Ball et African'' or the musical "Hair ." From Page 1 KISSINGER. • • tlonally covered by secretaries of State and on my duties as assistant 10 lhe presldcnt concerning inter-departmental issues. "l will not claim executive prlvllege In either capacity except for tbe one area customarily invoked by Cabinet officers, that is, direct communications with the President Qr the actual deliberations of lhe Nationai Security CouncU," Kissinger said. Educator Won't Run SAN D!EGO (AP ) -Pcpperdlne University . President William S . Banowsky said today he has been en· oourag<!d tO run for the U.S. Senate next yeu but "l do nol plan to be a Oftll- didate." ' The other goes to Lt. (j.g,) Frderick C. Schumacher Jr. ot St. 1..-0uis, Mo., wbo has Je<t the Navy. The commendation for Schumacher said he led his men In the "destruction ot all classified materials under his purview ." "Through his inspiring leadership, courage and dedicallon in the face of hostile fire, he reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the hlghesl tr'adition of the United States Naval Service," It co'tltin.LJcd. During a Navy inquiry into Bucher 's HCtions, critics said the spy ship abouJd neve r have been surrendered. 'l'hrl'I! crew rnember!l received the Bronie Star Medalo Ensign Timothy L. Harris of Jackson·.-ille, Fla.; Com· 1nunicotlons Technician 2.C. Peter f.>1. Langcnberg of Clayton, ri.to., and Signalman J.C. Wendell G. Leach o! the Naval Communlcatioos Station 1 n Norfolk, Va. The other crew members cited receiv· ed either Navy con1mendalion n1edp.ls or NHvy achievement medals. - ,,,..,. r .. e I PRICE JUMP •• month was t0.7 perctnl, renectl.ng an Jn .. flatlonary pottem thlt followed World War tr. The August lncre;ise, when adjusted for seasonal ractors, was put at 6.2 per· cent -largest hike for any month alnce the government began laking sea90nal <.'Onsiderallons into ::icc.'OWlt in JIM7. August wholesale prices stood 19 per· cent above the level of August, 1972. The big August wholesale prlce rise followed an unusual 1.3 perttnt decline ln JuJy. when nearly all commodities were constrained by the free?.e . Admlnlstralioo economists said at the time that the price freeze causro this and predicted a surge after most restrictions on food were llS1ed July 13. Berkeley Scl1ool Groups Industrial prices, which remained under the freeze until mid-August after the BLS took Its latest survey, rose a modest 0.4 Percent . Bigger increases are expected later this fall as pricing COO· straint5 are lilted on the nation's largest corporations. Seeking St1·ike Sanction 'ft)e biggest jumps in prices in the fann sector were for livestock, grain! and oil seeds. Prices or rrosh and dried fruils and vegeiables dropped sharply. From AP Dispatches With Cupertino and San Francisco already facing school-opening problems, Berkeley is trying to stave off a similar situation. Representatives of Berkeley school employe groups are recommending that each participating organization secure a strike sanction. The recommendation, carried in a vote Thw·sday night, opens the way for a possible school strike within t.,..·o weeks unless an agreement is reached on employe demands. They are seeki ng a 5.75 percent pay hike, a voice in hiring school ad- ministrators and ntore adequate supplies for classroom teachers and custodians. Some 500 persons attended the meeting sponsored by the Berkeley Alliance of School Employes, a coalition of Berkeley teachers and noncerlificated employes. Representatives at the meeting mu st no,~· convince their organizations tha t Meat Cutter Sues Employer After Cleared of Th cf t A veteran meat cutter, cleared of mu ltiple criminal charges after being ac· cus ed by Laguna Beach employers of stealing quantities of meat, has sued the market and two former ~workers Thursday for $1.2 million. Albert W. Pauly, SS, names Albertson's Inc .• 700 S. Coast Highway and market employes Eddie H9bbs and Fred Prendergast as co-defendants in his Orange County superior Court action . Pauly claims he was falsely accused on Sept. 28, 1972, of smuggling meat out of the market via a female accomplice \vho has not been identified. He was later cleared of charges of assault and bat· tery, resist ing arrest and petty theft, among others, in South Orange County municipal court action. Pauly claims in his la"·suit that he was attacked by both.Hobbs and Prendergast at the tim.e he was falsely accused. they should agree not to cross picket lines lf a strike is called. Participating organizations included the Berkele:t Education Association, Berkelty Fe&ration of. Teachers, Local IO of the Public Employes Union and t1le Classilled School Employes Association. In Cupertino, more than 100 non- teaching employes joined almost 800 teachers today in the tw<Kfay-old strike against the 22,000 -student Cupertino Union School District. 1.laintenance employes set up picket lines at 7 a.m., and spokesmen for the district's remaining 300 c I e r i ca I , maintena1tce and custodial" employes said they were expected to follow. The schools contin ued to operate with substitute teachers and enrollment re- mained about 90 percent for the second day, school officials said. The second strike was called by f\Iunicipal Emp1oyes Federated Local 101 which re jected a school board offer of a 2 percent raise and a 2 percent cost-of·liv· i.ng bonus. The strike also was described as a sympatby strike for the Cupertino Education Association which walked out Thursday on the fU'St day of cla.53. The non-teacher strike was expected to limit deliveries to the school, but there was no early word of tnlcU being stop- ped. Cupertino is the state's largest elemen- tary school distrlcl, and the strike i! believed to be the first teachers strike against a public school in Santa Clara County. In San Francisco, a settlement hi3 been reached ln a strike by school bus drivers which forced some 211,000 elemen· tary grade children to find other ways to class since school opened Wednesday. The 230 striking drivers were to vote on the proposed agreement today. If ratified. a union spokesman said, bus service will resume on Tuesday Monday is a school holiday. The settlement was announced 1'burs- day night by Mayor Joseph Alioto who helped mediate the dispute between United TransportaUon Workers Union Local 1141 and the AUodated Cbarlu Bus Co. Terms of the pact were not disclosed. Wholesale prices for consumer f~ jumped 9.1 percent last month but con- sumer goods excluding roods edged up only 0.1 percent. . Consumer-finished good!, a sample of conunoditles that compares with the government's con-- sumer price lnde1, gained 3.8 percent. 1be August farm price surge was led by a 57 percent jump In the price ol hay, hays~ and oil seeds, which play a key role ln livestock feed. Egg prices 35 per- cent and live poultry prices 42 percent. Swashbuckling Lady Navigated To Coast, Brig A Morongo Valley woman whose ration of grog was abruptly cut off at the Newpart Beach Jolly Roger Thursday night wound up In the brig, but she d.1dn't give up the ship without a batt le. The petite woman, who reportedly came aboard from a boat berthed nearby, leaped onto the bartop in a shower of drink glasses when told she could have no more, -according to police reports. Newport Beach Police Offlctt Al FilCber wu dllpatched at 10 p.m. 10 take the lady In low Jowaro h« ... r11y boat. He alleged that the screaming swashbuckler tried to buckle his msh with wUdly kk:king feet. injqring: his finger before she was strapped down in a caged patrol car. Offtcer Flacher said upon AJTi\'al at Orange County Jail for booking on an ln- toxication charge that he needed the aid of two sheriff'• matrons to again JUbdu~ the 5-foot, 3-inch woman. UFW Pickets Freed MERCED (AP) -Thirty oeven Uniled Fann Workers Union pickets accused of trespusing at a Gallo 8l"05. vineyard "-"ere ordered reltesed Thursday from jail without having to post ball. Merced Superior Court Judge Donald Freu ordered 27 men and 10 Vr'Omen released on their own reoog:n.lz.ance. WOODMARK CHAIRS A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price WOODMARK FEATURES * LUXURIOUS 25 "!. DOWN & 75 ~. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC * EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEME!l.T EXCLUSIVE .•• ON DISPLAY NOW - • LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES START AT $215. DREXEl--HERITA6&-HENREDON-WOODMARI<-ICARAS1'AN INTERIORS WDKDAYS I SATURDAYS t.O, le l:JO .. IDA Y 'TIL t:OO J NEWPORT IEACH e 1111 w1net1FF Dl.. '42.2010 10,11t S11ll41y 12·5ilO)- lA6UNA IEACH e 1411/i MOITH COAST HWY. IOp11 S111M11y 12.11JD I 4tWlll TOUANC~ e 21Mt HAWIHOlNI I LVD. J71·121• A Sunday, Wrtlncstlay und 1'~rltJay 1''eaturc ' or lbe lJ.11/y J'ilol Go& a prvbll'111? 1'1-~u write Put Dun11. f>at wall cut red tuve, 9ct the • 1,11swers u1id ocliun ?Jo u ''e ed to -1 ~~Ive . ine qui· '---,..• lies "' {JOt.J-"'f'rtrmcn t find bttsitte:is. Mull y fl 1t f qufS• tiu ns to Par /)1t t1n I At Your ·service. Oranoe t'oust DaU!I Pilot, P.O. Box 156(), t'osta ~1csu, t 'a., !12626. Include your tc .e1Jho11e 1nn11bcr. ~fn1·e ~fobilil!J Her<• IJEJ\I{ l'i\'1': f\ly p~1rC'nts n,:l1rcd to a 1nobilc l1on1c pHrk Ill Fl(}ridtl :1 rl'\V year!' <.igo and they visited tLS this s1 u11n1cr for a drivu1 g vacntion through Califon~:a. i\1 y mother \VES amazed at the nurnber o[ mobile hon1cs in !his s!:ite. but she insists thl.'re arc n1orc trailer and mobile home parks throughout the south, especially in Florida. I ahvnys th<i11ghl California Jed !he natio11 in ruobd1~ ho1nc l ivin~ stt1listk:s. R (,' .• Fount:.iin \'all•·.v C111irornia tlol'S lop Fl orl<la in rnobi lc hu111t• and tra ilel' U1\'eiliui.:s. act'ording tu !he 1970 census. Thi s stott's nurn ber of l:uuschold"> Jivi ng: in rn c.·bilt clwt"llings totaled l97,5til, 1:0111µar·t·d tu Florida's lil,4G9, 'l11e south h;,ad the n1ost 1nnbile humes, 86i',7A in Che reglo nul brcakdo~'?I uf more lhan 2 1nillion Am erica n trailer ch\•ellrrs, hu t Cali rornia raukrcl first In slate figures. tl!t111l<•d: fo'rl<"11dl.!J Hugs l'J F.A lt P . .\T: I'd like to know v.')1r.rt> I 1·an r)urch nst:' l:1dyb11gs ;i nd prH~iug rnan tis. J\·(• heard they ('an help ricl a gartlt'll of pesls. t'Spe('illll,V ants :ind .'l phids. rd rather usc ·'good" insec ts than ('hernical controls. r..o .. Dana l'oint Contact the Bio Control Company, 101!3 Lady Bird Dri\'t, Auburn, Cu. !t2603. Both ladybugs and pruylng man tis clusters are U\'allable In \'arious quan. t1ties and dvlirr~· is \·ja air mail. Rnrebil or Rflbl>il? DE1\ll PAT : _ ~ty 1nolhcr·in-l111v insist~ tht· ili~h that l\e nh1 av-. l';;Jtcd \\'clsh J{;1rcbit i!> Cl'ally tHln;1'd \\'~·!~h I'.abbiL l'Vi' shO\\'n her numerous cookbook~ \1111h the .. rart'bll" !>pcllln/.l'. but she S3)S 1hc~· arc 1ll L'Orrect. It wrn1ltl stcnt Iv n1c there has to be so1ne bn.si~ !Or the spe]lin~ l use. I'd li ke to find out onec and for all whi c:.h or us is corre('t. J .T., Newport &acb lf ~'our rnother-in-l:t\1' I!) l::ngll-.h, sht' \\ill undoubtl'dly slit•k by hrr spellin!; or U1is dish which, 11s you knO\f, ill toasti:d ~re~1d co rered ~·Ith toa sted cheese und &opped "'il h mustard and pepper. Not one ~Jte of rabbit is included. Background on this spc/llni: dlsaj?rcemrnt. as stated in •;JJo'>'' Did It Bc~in?"' by R. Brasch, is based on an old \\'rlsh-Eoglisb feud. The poor \\rclsb countryside lucked ulmost everything, eren r;:abbils. n'hich n·ere nUmerou~ rlse"·herr. hut unaffordable for th(' \Vel~h. Tht' dish is a "svn thetic rn bblt" mral 'Tladr from the r°heaprst lngredirnl! a\'ailnhle. The t:nglish di~ cl al.afully calll'd the \\'elsh nallooal del· k~y thrlr "rabbl1. '' The Welshmen in- rvl bly ca me to resent deeply all that 14' associated ~·Ith thtir "rabb it " and bet an referring to the dlsb as 11 "rare- bit" of de licious food. ~"'"" Club ~fe111ber D~AR PAT ' ~ remembe r tf'ading ~bout 1hc man \\\u becan1c so disgusted \Vith his Lin-t!!fn Continl'ntal that he burned it and ~n formed a club for c:ir owne rs stuck h lemons. I'd like lo get in touch with \ind join lhc ('lub! 'L IJ.C .. Oun tlngton Bearh .~ddie Campos is the man you are look- illg ror. \\'tile to hhn about his ''Lemon Cll;ib'' al 1321 Ironwood St .• La llabra, <If. 0063 1. " "'""""" C11rds t*AR PAT : r.1: sent a $5 n1oney order ~farch 2J to ~rt Hobbyist in Detroit., ~1ichigan for 9': packets of baseball cards. 1 ordered tl&8 through 1963 nnd 1965 TOPPS cards, IKH they have never arrived and my !Ct· *'s aren't answered. '1 S.O .. Corona del !\far I, he rirm hasn't ans~·cred n\y letter er and th ere It no other \Vay to eon· It since the only addres1 avall 11ble h• ~sla l box nun1 trer. An Ornoi;e County b ror collcetorl'i of hascholl enrds and dticr sports memorabilia bo!i an acti ve ~mbership of 150 and perhnps you can 3'r:1nge 11 11wnp to get th e cards you ~nt. Co nt oct .lohn l'arks, 037~$56, for rther lnlonnatloo. ' l"t t Tiina Deploys. to1n Rockets l,()N l)()N I UP I I -Chin01 has d<'plOyPd clea r rfiCkcls !111H .c.1n. reach ~loscow d n1ost paru. of Asia, the Jntcrnntionnl titutc for Slratcglc Studies says in its est world dcfrnse survey. ~t also sniff Thursday the Chinese have f .clopc<l an intercontinental ballistic ssllc capt1blc or reaching the United tes. iiThc survey. enll lled "The Mllltary ~lance 1973-74 .'' said Chinn continued 10 ds clop her nuclear armory while the SMict Union haft or1c qu1trtcr of its arrny dlvttions concen1t·ntcd in I h c Chlncsc border arcn.r. .. I • Councilman Seel{s Park F u11d G1·ants San Clemente City Councilman Thomas C)'Kccle continued prodding fellow city offi cials this week to organize a list ot regional park projects "'hich might ha»e a strong chance for matching.rund i rants from Orange County. And the councihnan -\Vho serves as a 1ncn1i:ier of lh.c.._ County Harbors, Beaches and J'ark s Commission -stressed that the tv.·o ideas under consider.ation in San Clen1cnte would probably not stand a chance for approval. Revenue-sharing funds -$10 million 1vorth -are being parceled out by the county lo cities \vifh projects which ~·oukl serve residents ou tside the city limits as well as local citizens. O'Keefe made several suggestions for projects "'<'hich cou ld qualify, including funds lo nssist the city in purchasing a second golf course -pos.itibly the finan- ciall y ailing Shorecli ffs Golf Course in the northerly portion of the city. The councilman also suggested a possi· blc nc1v purchase of private benc hfront in the !l.'lmc area or the city where private st rands still exisl. Thus far the ci1y's parks commission h;1s offered improvements at Llnda Lane and Bonita Canyon 1>arks as candidates for the cash, . but O'Keefe has predicted that the bids are "smnll stuff." "I'm alrnid !hat these t11•0 marginal projects \1'ould be rejected and it would destroy the city's first chance at getting sonic of the mooey," he said. O'Keefe poi nted to tile receJJ t allocation nf 5600.000 in grants to Huntington Beach for the purchase or a golf course and urgf'd councilmen an d commissioners to think in those ternlS. "\\'e ha\'e an advantage which we sbou ldn 't thro1v away," be said. "If \\'C find a con1pletely "'orl hwttile proicct that stands a good chance and :-;11bmit it :is our fi rst request, ou r ('hances ;ire much better," he said. or the two already suggeesled. he theorized that Linda Lane, because of its proxin1ity to a beach, could 1.\'i.n some funds. Bonita-Canyon, however. w h i c h pri1narlly is used for youth baseball, is :-tric.1!y a locnl park and might not <1u;i1Jfy under the .. regional" criterion. As f01· Sborec!iffs Golf Course, quiet, pri vate negotiations have reportedly been t:1 king pl.:u:e bct1\·ccn City ~1anager Ken- neth Carr and principals in the private operation to S('{• if there is a pat h toward a possible city purchase. Carr recently has said lhat the present city Rolf course is catering to capacity crowds and his initial suggestion for a second course \\'SS to integrate a ne\v one 1vith the San Onofre State Park in San f\lateo Canyon. State Parks officials balked at the idea, hov.·evcr. asserting that their master plan calls for maintaining the canyon in a pristine state. Su('h a project, too, \\"Ould require an- nexation of land across the county line into San Diego County. A Bitl Splash • Going llp .. . .... . ......... Friday, September 7, iq73 s DAILY PILOT ,3 ,:· Many l'icti11ai:ed Plant Purloiner Loose By JACK CHAPPELL Of rr.. OlllY f'lltt Slelt • Ill Is there a creeping Charley in your front yard? Do you have a spider plant harJiing from your pgrch be4!f!s? Do you have a planted crock, or i>oi')m display outside? lf so, you may have trouble. Laguna Beach is and has been the hap- py heisting ground for a potted plant thief. Jn the last three months, scads or stolen Potted plants have been reported to Laguna Beach police. It's suspected many more go unreported as residents just don't want to go to the trouble of contacting lawmen. }fowever, One lady recently went to the expense and trouble of placing a classified ad pleading for the return of he r Creeping Charlie. Most ol the thiefts involve pilfering or hanging or potted plants sitting in plain view on pri vate properly in residential neighborhoods. Most thefts have been small, although several have involved plants valued at more than $50. "This is not something we're taking lightly," Laguna Beach Del. Tony Smith said Thurstay. "We've gone to the troubl e of con· !acting other agencies. We're not the on- ly one plagued "ith this. All the beach cities are involved," Smith said. Laguna He speculated the pi rated plants were being hustled off to swap meets. or taken to the road.side plant stores where they are sold. ''It's hard to tlentify stuff like this unless the public puts special markings on the pots. This is quite a problem. It's going to be a hard one to solve," he said. "Jt would be a very difficult thing to prove that somebody took somebody else's geraniwns and put them in a dif- ferent Pot. . "What we have is somebody taking ad- vantage of a popular item that is readily accessablc for theft. "\Ve'vc had them taken orr front porches, from front yards. ba ck yards and carports," Det. Smith said . He asked for the assistance or the public in stopping the spree. "I{ anybody has observed in the past persons or vehic les they suspect might have been involved in this ty~ of theft they could help b)l giving this in- formation to the police, ei ther detectives or patrol. We do need this type of assistance in the city," he said. He also suggested that plant owners mark their croc:.s or pots with initials or other inscriptions. He said persons spotting a suspected plant theft shoul d try and remain un- detected, and call IX>lice inunediately. And, observers should altempt to remembe r a description of the person and vehicle, with the license number being especially valuable for officers. New $600,000 sanctuary for United Methodist Church of Laguna Hills is under way at 24442 Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills. Beams dra- matize rooftop cross in this photo of interior of combination sanctu· ary. administration and all purpose rooms for 1,200 member church. Pasadena architect Culver Heaton designed masonry and steel struc· ture due to be completed in early 1974, Senior Minister Dr. Lawrence F. Hawley said . High Steaks Barbecuer Bur1is Over Prank Ex-Convict Can't Play Poker-But He's Trying No one area of Laguna has been spared by the plant thief. Because ot the thefts Arch Beach Heights recently suffered a kind o( plant pirate paranoia. One Heights resident who had been entertaining and imbibing with com· pany set out a barbecue in bis driveway and slapped down some hefty steaks. He returned to the house, tossed down a few more and later returned to retrieve the cooked steaks from the covered barbecue. He found the grill bare. ROSAMOND (AP)-Richarrt Manning Swain of RoSamood likes a fri~ly game of poker. But tbe sheriff saY, he can't play in the town's card parlor. A Kem County ordinance bars ex· felons from patronizing public poker rooms. Swain, 42, has a burglary con- viction from Illinois on which he com· pleltd probation in 1966, autborlti" said. When Swain challenged the ordinance in court this week, a Superior Co\U't judge upheld the county law. Swain con- tended: "I enjoy playing cards and con· si der it a pursuit or happiness." Planning an appeal. Swain sat in at a game at -a club the next night and was cited tor breaking the ordinance. A sherifrs deputy also arrested Swain on investigation of resi!:ting an officer's order when be refused to put his cards down. He looked again. ·started angrily back to the house, returned and stared at the grill again and fin ally dashed back to the house to question hi s wife. She hadn't toUched the steaks. Had the plant turned to red meat? Frenzied, he ran out of the house, trotted to a neighbor's house and Q,Uestioned him about the missing meat. Nothing. He dashed to another neighbor and again nothing. "He's one detennined card player," Sheriff Charles Dodge said Thursday. And then from acroas the street came rollicking laughter as his best friend and another buddy watched the antics. GREEN HAVEN Sunshine for your garden MARIGOLDS Flnt Leef,, G•ld NMtvet, 29' Flrecrecllef, S11net, ittc. qt. l9f. 6fc Showy summer flower VINCA , .. ,., .... , ............. "'°'99' ............ -... . Gal. .... 1.tl R1inbow1 of Color PETUNIAS ... vtlhl bl-MllNJ , ... ti 39' I• oU ulctn for nery tw ..... P•"t'· .... 7tc N1tur1I Organic Fertilizer GRO PO W ER fer flowers, lawns, Pren. Co•t.I• H poisoa, htwc~ rid•, llttdfes, etc. 25 lb. $445 NAME BRAND PATIO CLEARANCE ~~?:.~~~~~ ....... ~14250 ~~~~~~~~~ ....... ~1495 5 l'teco Sot $19500 .... S41t,IO •••• , ••••....•••• MEDALLION TROPITONE 4'.uorN4 clilolrs & l••"fH "Ice or IOU •• 2123 Newport Blvd., Costa ~ IC4ftilt of r.tl• '4M10J N41w,.,. • Ylofwtill M......,. UkltJI ELECTRIC HG. $9995 BAR-I-QUE '"'·".ow SPICIAL IAILY IUY DRIFTWOOD GAS LOGS Steve Figard gets mo re than a mouthful •of water at this fountain in !leading. Pa .. but he <ould care less " he coo ls off from the sizzling heat that'' been scorching eutcrn Pennsylvania for lhe last l 0 days. OPIN-7 DAYS IUNDAT I TO l :JI-DAILY J:lOTO' S•I• lttm' ltm1t1d To Stoc:k On 'Hind .-~ • • ' ' I " I I ! t - • 4 DAIL V PILOT frfd•1. S~ttmbtr 7, 1973 Terrorists Threaten to Drop. 5 Arabs Seeks IJii:orC"e Scan Connery, kno\~'n best for his roles in James Bond n1ov- ies1 is suing actress Diane Ci- lento for divorce. Connery. 43, 1narried Miss Cilento in 1962, the year before he played se- cret agent 007 in 'Dr. No.' The couple separated 18 months _ ago. KU\VAJT (UPI) -Five Palt1t1alao gutrrUlas who have lhrealened to throw their five Saudi Arabian diplomat hostages out of u airliner in OJ1ht agreed Friday to lea"e Kaw1ll (or u U · named Arab country, lhe MJddle Ealt Ne\\-'li Agency said, BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -Palestinian gunmen seeking the release of a guerrilla leader from a Jordanlan'prlsOn released four crewmen from a Kuwaiti plane to- day, but stlll held onto five Arab hostages, a Kuwait radio broadcast said. The release came as the Palestinians resumed bargaining with Kuwaiti of- ficials civer their demands. The five gwimen returned to Kuwait earlier without carrying out their threat to throw the five Saudi Arabian hostages ciut of a circling airliner one by ooe. THE PALESTINIANS had taken ciff a Kuwaiti airliner to circle Riyadh, the Saudi Arabian capital. They said unless the Kuwait government assured them it ~ would arrange for the release within 12 hours' of guerrilla leader Abu Daoud, they would first drop the hostages of Riyadh and then would blow up lhemse1ves, the plane and its four Kuwaiti crewmen. An informant at the Kuwait airport Illinois I n1nates Free : Hostage s After Th.reat . .fOL!ET, Ill. (A P) Rebelling · prison<'rs at Statcvillc Penitentiary. : released 10 hostages and returned to '. thr:>ir cells af1cr olfi<.:ials threatened to ' SC'11d in sta1c !lOlice \Vith tear gas. · 'l hei r dcn1a11d fo r amnesty was denied , 'by (:ov. J)anie! \\'alker, but they were ; ('-_I_N_S_H_O_R_T_._· ._) proniiscd there \\'ould be "no reprisals in terms of brutality." The prioncrS-seized control or a ee!lhlock 1'hursday. taking 10 guards hcstagc during 1he noon lunch hour. \Vith riol·t•quipped police standing by. the in- nlillcs yiclclccl eight hours later to \\'tilker's de1nand that no negotiations \\"Ould t;ike place until the h06tages were released. e ·E11tl of f,ine' \\:l\SIJtNGTON (UPI J-F'ormer mine union chief \V. A ... Tony" Boyle said 1"hursday he is innocent of state and fl.'dcr~1I chargrs he ordered the assassina· tion of li1s rival. Joseph A. "Jock·' Ya- l11on!'ki. four yc1:1rs ago. Boyle was arrest· ed Thur~Uuy by t11c FBI after the indict· ml'!l!" 11 ere handed do\vn. "Thi!; is the end of the line," said n ich:ird 1\. Sprague. the special pros- ec111or in the case. "! do not expect any 1norc <irrcsts ... This is v.•here the case hcgan. and this is where it ends." • 1\'i.~·-·· r1'11pes \VASlflNGTON (A P) -President Nix· on 's fight to keep Watergate tape recordings secret has reached a federal <ippeals court. \\'hich agreed to hear the case in an unusual nine-judge session next l\'CCk. \\'hite /·louse l<111·ycrs Thursday asked lhl' l" S. Ci rcu it Court to nullify U.S. l)i"tricl Judge J ohn J. Sirica's demand to listrn 10 the tapes. v .. hich are sought as evidence by !he \\l:Hcrgate grand jury. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE O~l1very of the Daily Pilot 1s 911aranteed Mono~ .. Frtd•.: II •OU de not ~••e vour ••I><!• •• J:)C p.m .• c•U 111d YOU• COPY ... 11 bt b•tu91!t to yO!,f, C•ll• •re li-•n uni<! 1 JO o tn. S•hlrllltJ •nd S.,..cllJ: 11 ya.. Ot Ml rec•I•• .... COPY .. , f l .m. J11urlll11 ••• I ...... ~wnO•v. <Ill lnO • '"'' will &e ~reugM t• vow. C•ll• ••• '""' unt+I 10 •.m, T elept1one\ MOM Otl ll•t (1Hj11ty Ate1• Norlhweu Hun!"''''" It"" 1110 ""'''"'""''' .. , ••l·Otl .... ,.....1121 S•n Cltmtn•e. C••'•1••~• Br•c~. Sin Jw•" C••"'''""• Di n• Pooni, ~oulll l 19un1, L1gun1 N,gutl . •'1·0 10 The appeals court gave Sirica and Special Watergate prGSecutor Archibald Cox until next Monday noon to reply to the \Vhite House arguments that the courts have no power over a president. A hearing was set for Tuesday at 1 p.m. e Sun BlOJllir HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts today photographed a mam- moth eruption of gaseous energy off the surface of the sun that appeared to be even larger than a giant explGSion they saw Thursday. Alan L. Bean, Ov.ren K. Garriott and Jack R. Loosma all rushed to the con- trols of Skylab's battery of solar observat· ion instruments to record the flare, v.·hich scientists on the ground classed with the largest or the mighty explosions. e Airline Bid SEA 'ITLE (AP) -Agreement on a new contract for Western Airlines pilots was reached minutes before a midnight strike deadline, the Airline Pilots Association announced early today. The association's local vice president, Dick Welsh. said terms of the two-year agreement were being withheld untU the final language could be worked out. Henley Charged In 2 Additional Texas .Murders HOUSTON {UPI) -Two more murder indictments have been returned against a teen-ager accused in the sex and torture slayings of 27 young men. The Ha rris County grand jury Thurs- day indicted Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, in the deaths of Homt,:r Garcia, 15 and Frank-Aguirre, 19, bcft.h of •louston.' HENLEY NOW faces m u r d e r in~ dictments in six o( the slayings. He is ac· cused of assisting Dean Corl!, a bachelor electrician, in the killings over a three· year period. Garcia's body was one or four unearth· ed last month near Lake Sam Rayburn in East Texas. He vanished last July 17 \vhile hitchhiking in Houston. Aguirre disappeared Feb. 24, 1972, V.'hi.le on his way to work. His body was uncovered on a remote stretch of beach near High J3Jand, Tex., along with the bodies or five other y0W1g men. The bizarre tale of murder became known when Henley told police Aug. 8 he shot and killed Corll at a drug and sex party after Corll threatened him and two companions. - said the gwunen ordered the plane 00.ck to the Persian Gulf sheikdom after the Kuwait control tower told them no government ofUcial could be reached to receive their ultimatum because it was Friday, the Moslem sabbath. The sour:ce said the gunmen wert' ''furiously insisting" on radio contact with Kuwait's dereq.se minister, Sheikh Saad Abdullah el-Salem, or some .otl\e:r top government official. The gumnen and their hostages arrived in Kuwait early today from Paris aboard a Syrian airllner. Sheikh Saad told them he could not guarantee to obtain Abu Daoud's-release, and the Palestinians ac- cepted his offer of a Kuwait Airlir.es Boeing 7f1l jet to take them to Riyadh since the Saudi government might hav~ more influence with the Jordanians. Pt10MENTS BEFORE takeorr, the gun- men radioed their ultimatum to the con- trol lower. Abu Daoud is serving a life sentence tor plotting to overthrow King Hussein. Jordan's foreign minister refused on Thursday to arrange for his release. The gunmen, reportedly led by a 35- year-old J ordanian doctor, had held 15 persons captive in the Saudi embassy In Paris but let nine of them go be£ore leav· Tops in lJ .S. ing the French capital 'Thursday af- ternoon . Sources at the conrerence of nonaligned nations in Alghus said the Saudi govern· ment had expressed disapproval to the French government because it let the terrorists get away with the Saudi hostages. But Fren<:h officials said the Saudi ambassadoc ln Paris agreed to the arrangements. The Palestinians entered the embassy shortly af~ i~opened \Vednesd<iy mom· ing, took ll over and dCmanded that Abu Daoud be freed and that they be given u plane to fly them to an Arab capital. AT FIRST they said they wanted to fly to Algiers, \\'here most Arab chiefs of state are attending the nonaligned con- ference. But the Algerian government was embarrassed by such an incident while it was host to a major international gathering and indicated it would n()t allow the terrorists to land. Although Abu Daoud is a leader of Al Fatah. the largest of the Palestinian guerrilla organizations. Al Fatah chief Yasir Arafat and the leaders of all other n1ajor guerrilla groups repudiated the terrorists and said they had no con- nection with their organizations. But President llafcz Assad of Sy r i a personally ordered a Caravelle jct of the Syrian Airline to take the n1 and their hostages to the rviiddle East. During their flight to the J\1 iddle East , Posing with their trophies are Lhe talent and swimsuit \Vinners in the !diss_ Americ~ Pageant, ~nder way in Atlantic City. N.J. In swimsuit 1s Miss Washington. Leslie Ann Mays and the talent winner is singer Debbie Ward, Miss Louisiana. Two Delia-soal{ed States Migl1t Still Save Crops GALVESTON, Tex. (AP) -Officials hoped today they could salvage most of the rice and cotton crops in water-logged areas of Texas and Louisiana as Tropical Storm Delia, reduced to a me re depression, abandoned its seige of the two states. Observers reported remnants or the storm, which triggered deluges of rain after coming back ashore early Thurs- day, drifted into Mexico early today. IN HER WAKE Delia left potentially severe crop IGSses in southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana, and high \\'ater \\•hich chased hundreds from homes near the upper Texas coast. Four deaths were reported attributable to Delia. Texas Agriculture Commissioner John \Vhite said rains spawned by Delia hil hard at crops in 21 counties where a bout three-fourths of a $60 million cotton crop and about a fifth of a $60 million rice crop are yet to be harvested. As much as 10 inches of rain fell in rice-growing areas of Texas and Louisiana. "ii the rains stop and the sun comes out, much ol the rice ci'llp will straighten up and can be harvested," White said. New England Are~s Lashed The rain had Stopped in Louistana, but Rep. John Breaux said he was inves- tigating the need for federal aid to rice fariners. Forecastets cancelled flash flood alerts today for 40 counties in central 10 west Texas. Tornado Tou clies Down. iii Man.chester, Con1i. Ten1pe rnl11res tool marine 1lr 111 lit w1kt. 'Tiit _.,,..., strwlct u ld lllg1'11 wlllcfl rt.Chee! 11 T1'111rM11l hi downtown lot -'•!el, wUI rlll09 1lurd1y from ne•r 70 1t0119 Ille ~I 111d 111 t"9 mou11- lef111 to ne1r JO In tne l11l1nc:1 v1lltys tnc:I 90 to 110 !11 Ille ~1rts. Albtl!IV A!11t11• BOf>fOl'I B~ft1lo CllllrtttlOfl Clllcl90 c111elrt11•P ci1w••~ .,.,w, Delrolt 1'1"!11\0lutv Hov1lon 1.mte"*1'11ft JK~to11Vlllt K~11,~1 Clly l•f Vtolt LI' t~ lt"Ck Lovl1ulllt Ml•ml Mllw•uli~ M!Mlflll'!l!ll ,,51. P1ul NtW 0:,!rl'R New y O~i11l'lf'l'll Clly °""•h• """" ~Ofl{T Pllll"dtt'lllt!. lt"Of!!ll, Po!l\!)U~ pnrll• , Ort. lt•tl'lmoM s• lNf• 1"" l.-c; "" rr4t!'('itn ~~~lllt" T .... !UI Hlgll L~ n ~ " " " " " .. " " " " • " ,, " n ,, " ,. .. " " ,, " " .. " .. ,, '" .. .. " " " .. " " " " ,, ~ " " " ... " 1m " •§ " " r. " " a .. t; "' ''· ,\1 -... ... " .n " "' • ••• ... • L-. win IH lrQilT\ »4S In cottr11 atellOl'll to the 40f fWMI mid SOI 111 Ille ll"OYfllt!l'IJ, V.S. S1tmmary (Cocutat weather i1tfor· motion tllill be found todoy on Page 25.J T•IE WARNINGS had gone up as the depression, stalled much of Thursday evening near Sau Angelo, dropped rains measuring up to four inches across much of west Texas. Weather experts said there stiU were prospects for flooding rains in lhe Big Bend country of far west Texas. The dowpours a~ stopped today in the Houst()n area, where some ·suburban residents who were evacua ted from theii" homes early Thursday began to wade hack . Overtaxed fivers and creek! 1rr southern sect.ions o! exas contioued. t.Q overflow Into low areas. 'l'he situation was not. expected to-improve much beJorc the first or next week, oUicials said . Prop. 1 Foe Nam.ed ~ANGELES (AP) -"!'he chairman o( the eaurornia 1':ducatlon Congress, Jane F'lala of Visalia, Thursday was named acting chairman of a group op- posing the lait find spending limitation ~ ltlatlve. . -LI BYA A F R C A EGYPT $AUDI ARABIA ' GUERRILLAS ROUTE MARKED FROM FRANCE TO KUWAIT Take C ircu itous Trip Across the Middle East ,, the foreign ministers of "Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Syria and Iraq met with Jorda· nian Foreign rvlinisler Abdul l·lamid Shara! at the Algiers conference to try to persuade his government to free Abu Daoud. Sharaf pointed out that all 1he major guerrilla groups h?d denied any con- Fighti1ag Bitte1· nection with the gunn1cn. •• 110\V COULD Abu Daoud be tumed over lo persons who might tum out to be Israeli a~ents?" Shara! was reported to have said . The Syrian plane made a SS-minute rcrueling stop in Cairo, and the terrorists Jet the t "'o Syriun hostesses get off. IG1n1er Rouge Rebels Enter City, Tl1rowi1 Back From Wire Ser,ices PHNOJ\t PENH -Communist · led Khmer Rouge rebels S\\"armed through the southcnt half of Kompong Cham to- day, but reinforced government troops pushed them out in a night of bitter · Bullets Fly In Apartment Fray; 3 Die DETROIT (UPI) -Three men were killed Thursday night in a shooting spree at a highrise apartment building where the t enants include Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers Union. and Jim Campbel, general ·man- ager of the Detroit Tigers. Stray bullets from the shootings on the 16th floor of the 27-story building near tile heart of downto"n Detroit pierced the walls of adjacent apartments. Pedestrians outside thought they were being fired upon by snipers. \VOODCOCK LEFT the building under pcilice escort shortly after the shootings \\'hich happened shortly before 3 p.m'. tPDT). The three victims were pronounced dead 'at the scene by lbe Wayne County !\fedical Examiner's office. A fourth man suffered injuries from broken gla55, and his bands were "pretty badly cut up," a police spokesman said .. Two men were arrested, including the tenant in the $470-a-month three-bedroo1n apartment where the shooting occurred, Robert Lee Ridgeway, 51. Two women were also being questioned by police. Ridgeway was quoted as telling police he killed the three men when they drew revolvers on him after he admitted them to his apartment. CAMPBELL. WHO rents an apartment across the hall from where the shootout occurred, said a bullet slammed into the wall just eight inches from his head land- ing in the middle of a baseball Picture and spraying plaster across his dining room table. "I was going to have a drink and then eat dinner," he said, "and then all of a sudden I heard !.bis noise and I.hue wa~ dust on my head. "I got down on my hands and knees, crawled over and called lhe police. They (apartment residents) were screaming, 'Don't shoot, don't shoot!" fighting , mil itary sources sa;d. Heavy fighting also \\'as reported near Phnom Penh and the airport v.·as shelled. TJIE CO!\t~lUNISTS temporarily .seiz· ed the city's market. university and city hospital and fought a bitter battle in the streets only a fC\\' yards from -the governor's residence. the sourres said. Some government troops v.·ere sur- roW1ded . but fought their v.•ay out and rl'Captured the three positions, the sources said. Fresh 1roops v.·ere flov.'Tl in by helicopter and helped in the coun:- tcr;ittack. sources said. The sources s.1 id go,•cmment troops were backed by artillery, mortar fire and close air support from the tiny Cam· bodian air force, the first time the government's propeller-dri\'en T'lSs v.·ere used in close-support operations since the halt of American bombing Aug. IS. lligh Command spokesman Col. Am Rong described the situation at one point as "grave." The road betv.•een the city and its airport -a single blacktop strip -\ras also cut. THE CO~B1 UNISTS have surrounded Kompong Gham, a market center and once Cambodia's third biggest city for 3".t weeks. The city sits on the Mekong River. Military sources said rour government troops were y.·ounded shortly after da\lm today in a Com munist mortar attack against Phnom Penh's Pochentong air- port. On fli ghway 4, Phnom Penh's overland link to ils sole deepwater seaport. 700 go"'emment troops backed by 40 tank-like armored personnel carriers. were unsuc- cessful in a new attempt to open the road today. The highway has been cut since Aug. 26 and the government has tried for a week to break through. In South Vietnam fighting. government troops opened fire before dawn today on a company of about JOO Viet Coog lroops assembling 12 miles west of Saigon, lhc government announced. "Government artillery ll'as directed in· to the area to prevent the enemy from concentrating in that area," U . Col. Le Trung Hien, the government's chLef mi_lit~ry spokesman told the daily press bneftng. lllEN SAID lhe number of Viet Cong casualties was not known because "we haven't received the results o( the artillery fire yet.'' It was the first time since the January cease-fi re that the South Vi etnamese govemm~ had admitted ~ning fire without the Viet Cong or t' 1e North Viet- namese shooting !irst. Hanky, Panky? ~SA Probes Federal Love Nest WASllJNGTON (UPij -The General Services Administration (GSA) Thursday s!'1.d It is investigating hanky·panky at the State De- partment -speclf1cally, a iarutor's closet on the third floor appar- enUy used by employes as a lover's .rendezvous. • ' I THE INVESTIGATION was confirmed by press o!Cicer Palll Hare at !he department's regular news briefin~. The reporter who asked about It said he had been tipped by a Whlte House ;ouroe The· roolil' 1 ... 1n th e-section occupied by the Agency ror inter--national Development (AID). - The State Department ·posted guards at all entrances to the building In the .. rly 1960's; after several women employes com- plained ol attacks by molesters ln"the department parklng Jot but any employ•. with a pw would have no trouble getting past the guards and finding an empty room In the building. • I THE BUILDING IS largely deserted on Saturdays . Most •l the building's offices usually are lert unlocked ' althou ~ cJasslfled documents are locked In file cabinets at the end of :J\e work day and Marine guards make a security check of the enttn bulldJng In the early evening. ' .l j Factory Closur e 'Se ve re' SAN JUAN BAUTISTA (API -The factQry gates close for the final time today on most of the 130 workers at the lone in- dustry In this historic mission town. The Ideal Cement Co. Is shutting down after 60 years , ~ause of tough air pollution laws and a declining market. "I just don't know what will . - > c __ B_RI_EF_:s _) Aeeused Killer h'appen," said Leonard Caetano, 49, plant m:il'lagcr Cecil Erwin Richard· and also mayor of this com. son, 25, inmate of the munity of J,190 located so California Men's Col· miles south ol San Francisco. ony in San Luis Obispo, "It's going to mean a very enters Morro Bay Jus- severe readjustment for ~ tice Court to set ar- ple here," Caetano said . raignment date on first "Twenty percent of o u r degree murder charges popuJation depended on the of killing his infant son plant directly for a living, and during a prison visit. many others relied on that $2 Arraignment was set million p ay r o 11 circulating for Sept. 13. through town." ----'------- • Final Deelslon? SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Legislation paving the way for a firm! decision on what to do with the State Capitol building won Assembly passage Thurs- day. But the 58-17 approval vole came only after the measure's author, Assemblyman Ylillie Brown Jr. (0-San Francisco), agreed to amend his bill to gl\Te botll houses power to pass on the final decision. e Rapist Relrlal OAKLAND (AP ) -A con- victed rapist is getting a retrial because the court reporte r at his first trial died before she could trarucribe her notes. The state Court of Appeal ordered a retrial in the rape case of John Lewis Smith, 19, who was convicted under the Mme James Paul. The court ordered the retrial after learning that n o transcript or the original trial was available and that another court reporter could not read the original notes. e Voter Ll•llngs SACRAMENTO (AP) -A voter cauld I i s t himself or herself as either Miss, Mrs. Ms. or even Mr. on Calitomia Two Plead l111ioce11t To Porno J\bs-ANGELES IAP) Two men have pleaded in- nocent at their arraignment in hiunicipal Court on 25 felony counts relating to accusatiQrls they used eight boys, aged S to 15, in the making of po r n o graphic homosexual films. BAIL FOR Guy Strait, 53, Studio City, was set at $20.000. For Melvin Reynolds, 38, Cud- ahy. bail for $25,000 was set. A preliminary hearing for each '\'BS set Thursday for Sept. 17. orficers sai d the operation was one or the largest in Southern California producing homosexual films. Potice said they hadn't a scert a i ne d whether some youths had been brought from the Dallas area, where a homosexual procure- ment ring was uncovered re- cently. Mavericl~ De11ioc rot Yorty Con sider s Switching Parties SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sam Yorty, a seU·styled maverick Democrat, ls reported ready to bolt to the Republicans. The San Diego Union quoted Yorty's wife, Ellr.abeth, todsy as saying the fonner Los Angeles mayor and preslden· tial hopeful will switch parties at this weekend's s t at e Republican convetltioo here. MRS. YORTY said ln an in· terview from b e r home in Sherman Oaks, a L<>s Angeles suburb, that California GOP Chairman Gordon Wee was referring to her husband when he said a "nationally known Democrat" will join the Republicans this weekend. She said she'll accompany Yorty to the convention Sun. day and both will change registration . Asked il Yorty plans to run for office as a RepubHcan, his wife said, "I think J better let him answer that ." YORTY ISSUED a st.t .. ment saying he was thinking of changing parties but hadn't made up his mind, the Union said. Yorty was beaten for reelec- tion by a city councilman, Tom Bradley, this year after serving three tenns as mayor. A former congressman and political conservative, he AP PlleM TO SWITCH PARTIES? Si muel S. Yorty entered Democratic primaries for governor and U.S. Senator, and last year received a few thousand votes in the New Hampshire Democratic pri· mary before dropping out of the presidential race. I Mobile Home Travel Bill Postponed By Senate • Frld11r. Stptembfr 7, 1973 DAILY PILOT jS Signi11g Ex pected Death Penalty Back MOST SUITS, COllTS. 1-Pc.DRESSES 99c the reasury DRY CLEANING Da ily I 0 to 9, Saturday 10 to 6, Sunday 12 to 5 A Unique Shopping and Dining. Experience voter registration lists W\der a bill approved by a Senate committee. The Senate Elections and Reapportionment Committee voted $-0 Thursday to advance the bill to the Senate Finance Committee. Krogh Pleads Innocent; Says Burglary 'Lawful' e Subsldt1 Kiiied SACRAMENTO (AP) - A plan backed by the Caliromia Real Estate Association lo subsidize the rent of low-in- come families in existing lodging has been killed by a Senate committee. The auhor. Assemblyman Jotm Burton ( D-San Fran· cisco), said it would keep houses on tax rolls that might otherwise be tom down, and would avold the necessity of building public housing proj- ects. Airport Expands SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 25- acre parking apron is being built at Lindbergh Field to ac- rommodate bigger jeUiners. The $3.J million project ls · being financed by the Port Di.!trict with the aid o( federal funds. LOS ANGELES (UPJ)-Egil "Bud" Krogh has pleaded in- nocent to the burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist. admitting he authorized the break-in but saying that at the time he was convinced the covert operation was "fully authorized and lawful." THE FORMER Wh I t e House aide to President Nixon surrendered himself to custody in a county court Tbursday and was promptly released without being required to post bail. Krogh Y.d.S the first of the "Watergate West" derendants to appear for arraignment. Others indicted were John D. Ehrlichman, David Young and G. Gordon Liddy. Young plead- ed innocent here today. KROGH SAID that he thought the burglary was a "mistake" immediately alter he teamed ol the details and regretted it had occurred. But Krogh said he had help- ed set up the "plumber's squad" after a dlrective from Fly(ing) High Salnd l11sect W ortli $850 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Harvey Peters Jr. doesn't mind a tittle extra ingredient in his dinner now and then. As long as it's not a housefly. John's ,Restaurant served him one back in 1970 ·and Peters, 43, took the restaurant through one ·· civit and eight criminal court appearances before winning $850 Wednesday from the eatery. THIS UNPALATABLE TALE began May 18, 1970 when Peters and a friend wont to dinner at John'•s, according to his attorney, .Lois Prentice. After the bread and wine, she said, a waitress served a salad with something extra: one musca domestica . Peters extracted the fly from his meal and called-the waitress, who prompUy smashed it with her thumb tossed lt on the noor and soid, "There's no fly h\ Uie rest of it," Miss Prentice said. • THIS.WAS TOO MUCH for Pe (ers, who .refused to pay bis total bill o! $2.40. The police were called and Petel'B wa s arrested for lnvesUgation of "de- frauding an innkeeper." After e\ght appearances, San Francisco Mu- nlcipal Court Judge Albert C. Wollenberg throw the case out or courL The civil action followed and John's agreed out of court to pay the S850. Nixon to s t o p national s e c u r i t y leaks. Ellsberg had been identified as the source of the leak of the Pent- agon Papers. "AT THAT TIME in 1971, the assignment was presented to me as being of ex- traordinary b a t i o n a I im- portance," !'ittotd newsmen. "In my mind lt was fully authorized and lawful. J do not wish at this time to go into any ol the legal matters but do feel this case raises some very profound constitutional issues." Ehrlichman's altomey has indicated that the rormer right hand man to Nixon would ap- pear for arraingment this aft- ernoon. Newsman Kills SeH ENCINO !UPI) -CBS television news correspondent Bill Walker, 35. apparently shot and killed himself in the kitchen or his fashionable San Fernando Valley home Thurs• day night following an argu- ment with his wife, poUce said. POLICE SAID Walker argued with his wife, Leslie, then went Into the kitchen and pointed a .38-caliber revolver at liis right temple and pulled the trigger. Walker was taken to Encino H0&pital where he died. Ofri· cers said t h e couple's 14- month-old child and maid were in the house at the time. Divorce Filed LOS AllGEt.ES (AP ) Actress Barbara~F.den has fli- ed for a divorce from her bus· band of 1$ years1 actor Michael Ansara. In the sutt filed rccenUy in Superior Court, Miss Eden asked ror custody of tlleir 7- ycar-old 90n Matthew> and child support and llllmony from Ansara. The 35-year-old Mi" Eden starred in televtslon's "I Dream of Jeannie" series. i How muth comfort and safety are )'OU Willing to giYe up for a little car? It's an important decision. Squeezing and bumping? This is ea>nem{l l.et's face it. A small car can be .....y crowded(' And what's the price of safety? Consider the solid security of mare car wi1h mare steel, solid protection for )'OU and your family. Don't sell it short to the lowest bidder! Consider Chrysler, It's built lo last ••• loday and lomom>w. Chrysler offers solid engi.-ing exoollence. for example )'OU get unibody con- s!ruction, tonion bar Mpension, extra-protea. Costa Mesa Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 2929 Harbor Boulevard • lion bumper syslem, fuel-tank impad protection, energy a bsorbing steering column and mare. There a re economies too. The exclusive Chrysler electronic ignition system is designed to reduce maintena nce com. And despite Chrysler's comfort, luxury and big room ••• it runs on regular fueL -J See your Southern California Chrys ler Plymouth Dealer ~.,......., todayand make a decision you can liie with. Solid Chrysler Engineering now at dean-up pi'icesl Hunti119ton Beach Huntin9ton Beach Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 16661 Beach Boulevard l '\__// • DAD.Y PIL01' EDITORIAL PAGE Easing the Tension The test y and apparently nervous President Nixon who appeared on television in Ne w Orleans last month bore llttle resemblance to the brisk, seJf.ass ured Presi· dent meeting the press in 'Vashington thl s week. In his second press conference in as ntany weeks, the President bad tlie situation well In hand perhaps, in part at least, because the earlier confrontation In San Clemente had eased what appeared to be becoming a paranoid fear of the news media . While producing no sta rtling reve lations. he did manage to pursue his announced goal of turning atten· tion from the still unsettling \Vatergate to other mat· ' ters or public co ncern. • Setting the scene with an opening statement that touched on inflation, the energy crisis, the tdi ddle East and the shortcomings of Congress. the President en· couraged newsmen to direct at least half of their ques- tions to these areas. If nothing else, the Session indicated that mo~ frequent meetings of Ulis type could ease both Presi- dential tension and media frustration. l\1ore press con· ferences clearly can serve the best interests of the Pres- ident and of the public. Fu11eral Cost-cuttit1g The high cost of dying, and especially restrictions on the disposal of botlies that go far beyond legitimate public health concerns, appears to have attracted the at,. tention of state legislators. One bill recently signed by the governor author- izes disposal of cremated remains outside a cemetery, under s pecified conditions; another eases restrictions on sea burial of cren1ated remains. Both are designed to ea.se previous laws requiring ashes to remain in the custody of a mortuary until placed in a cemetery. On the opposite side of the coin is a bill presented for the second ti1ne by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach). It appears to be aimed directly al the operation of a low-eost cremation service in San Diego. A Coloring Game for Grown-ups ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Today's qu.iz is a sim ple one to end the swnmer with, and there "·on't be any more until the brisk fall winds begin to blow. Identify the missing color in each cl the following titles of a book or a play. Score five points for each color you get right, and another five if you know the author. Half ri ght is an iridescent score. (Note: a few colors are repeated,) 1. "The ...... Company." 2. " ..... Grow the Lil acs." :i. "The ... Voyage:• 4. "The Great God ......... " 5. 'i'I'he ...... Pimpcmel ." 6. "A Cloc kwork . .. .. .. 7." .......... Beauty." 8. "Forever .. . .. . ,. " 9. " ........ Gloves." 10. "The ........ or the Jest. .. 11. "The ........ Bo\\'I," IZ. " ........ Apes and Peacocks." 13. "The . . . . . Cord ." 14. ·• ....... Fang." 15. "The . . . . Co1v." 16'. " . . . .. . Lamb and Falcon.'' 17. "Otrome ........ .'' 18. "The Way of All ........ .'' Dea1·, Gloo1ny Gus \Vouldn't it be great if manage- ment and labor sat down at the bargaining table with their chief ob- jective being : a quality product for the public? J. A. W. GIOOm~ Gut c1mmenh ••• •~MlltM llr r t•d•.,. •Ml .. lllf lll'CKUUilr rtflttl tlM witws of ftl• "-"''"~· Sf!WI Y*' ,.. PffWe I~ GJeomr Ou1. O•llY ..... ,. 19. "Prater ........ " ZO. "ReOections in a ...... Eye." 21. ''The , City of Oz." 22. "The ........ Field ." ANSWERS : 1. White (OJnan Doyle). 2. Green /Lynn Riggs\. 3. Blue (Conrad Alken). 4. Brown (Eugene O'Neill). 5. Scarlet (Baroness Orczy). 6. Orange (Anthony Burgess). 7. Black (Anna Sewell). 8. Amber (Kathleen Winsor ). 9. Red ,(Jean-Paul Sartre). IO. Cream (James Branch Cabell). 11. Golden (Henry James). 12. Ivory (James l1unek er). l3. Silver (Sidney Howard ). 14. White (Jack London). 15, Purple (Oellett Burgess1. 16. Black and Grey (Rebecca West). 17. Yellow (Aldous Huxley ). 18. Flesh !Sa muel Butler ). 19. Violet !Chri stopher Isherwood). 20. Golden !Ca rson McCullers). 21. Emerald (frank Baum). 22. Olive (Ralph Bates). Learning Begins at 30 Thirty is a dicey age. There are those . among the young who allege that it is black business lo speak to anyone who has passed this dread front ier. For those who reach it, especially women, behind is a waste of quick triumphs and defeats, and ahead nothing can be seen but em· purpled gloom. ·In th e early days ol wireless telegraphy someone seized upoo the sym- bol 30 to mean the ~ of transmlssion of a message. This has surVlved into the ncy,·spaper offices of the Eng lish-spcal;- ing world, where it means a story is finished. There Is a kind of fatal con- nection between 30 and finilo . , • (cHARLES McCABE) learned . Thi s is th e process which begins to happe11, in a way not altogether un- derstood, some time after 30 has been reached. Very seldom before . This learn- ing process, which is often called un- derstanding, makes the over-30 person a bit different from the younger numbers. But, lest you quail, there is another fac(' to the matter. The fun hasn't really '1eglm Wltll 30 is behind you . Up until then everylhlng has been coming nt you. "'(ou haven'! had the chance ,lo play anything back, because or lhat splendid bot lreachcrous endowment r a 11 e d animal energy. You've been too busy racing your motor to rind your bearings. WllEN you begin to talk back to your information. which Is what maturity is, you begin to question the magic of raw fact. This is not liked by you . whose infatuation with the facts of nature is nearly complete. and therefore false . If man has any meaning at all, it consists in y,•hat he has added to the primal data of nature. The yolffig do not Lalk back to their in- formation .. They blurt, without refl ection , large ly because the sap is rising so fast. They make Ule mista·kes all organisnlS make "·hen g-rowing in a strange en viron1nent. It Is an accumulation or these mistakes, and the slowing do"'"'Jl which results, that we.may call the beginning of Wisdom. It may be sai d to begin with the e.xprcssion. think things over, When we begin to think things over we are se tting in our personal store of truth, rather like laying down a good wine cellar. 'nll.s .siore has nolhlng to do wtth the malarkey we absorbed ln one school or another. Someone once said that everyth ing he IOlew he learned after he was 30. I laving just looked It up, J can say thal the man who said that was the fo'rench politici an and defender ol Emile Zola against the J:RJrftanism ol the bourgeoisie, Georges Oemenceau. WE HAVE to make again the distinc- tion between acqui ring in formation and learning. Tbcy are by no nleans synonymous. 1be Cirst is si mply the base ror the ~ .• From even before. the time or blnh ""' are belcagured by in· formation -lasclnnting, frig htening and Jncredible Information about the "'orld we have been brought into. We are 1}mQ.'lt lllerally bombarded by dnu1: Slg,hts and sounds and feelings, all of which ~lly help In the end ; Wld prej- UdJcet and creeds about tho unknown, ll'hich do not belp at alt. , Bui .... the •1$h" and IOWl<ls and focl- i:Dcs do not help unloP they are c ' TlllS post-30 poop Is the pith, the splrttuHI !iinew y,•hlch will sustain or destroy tt.'i during lhe rest of thl1 voyage through travail. Being over 3t>. my hearties, Is an • adventure Gf. the..spirJt. Maybe that '1 why It sca res the hell out of you . BeauUrul, beautiful pot, and glorious smack, and C'Onsciousncss·ra islng coke, cannot give .. you ttnything like the adventure of discovery that simple living can give you art er you're 30. Of course thare are upS and downs, and of course you don't like dO\\•nc r5. This bill would require such services to seek state licensing as funeral directors. Among other things. they would have to be equipped to provide costly storage, embalming and transportation services, whether their cilents require these or not. Tho bill would not interfere with existi ng funeral societies which offer subscribers minimum cost funerals through participating mortuaries. Badham previously indicated he had no perso nal Interest in the bill, but was presenting it as a favor for state Sen. Jack Schrade (R-San Diego). Since the cremation ~ervice ln question already is regulated by .the county H .. llh Department and the- state Cemetery Board, it would appear the proposed leg- islation would benefit only the sponsoring funeral indus- t~ and not the general public. Badham probably could find better use for his legislative interests. Consumer· Credit Rights Legisla~on designed to tighten up credit practices and make life a little easier for the consumer is mov· ing through Congressional channels in \Vashington. Among other things, . it would prohibit finance charges on revolving credit acco unts unless a bill has been mailed out at least 14 days before payme nt was due (a trap that has irked many a bil1payer suddenly finding himself right up against the payment deadline on an alleged "30-day" account). ~e 1neasure also provides 90 days for straighten· ing out billing errors before the dunning letters start to go ~ut; permits a customer to withhold payment on a cre~t card purchase if he is dissatisfie'd; and provides that single women cannot be denied credit. Of course, abuse of credit is an ongoing pitfall for business. and consumers alike. And all consumers pay for the increased cost of doing business resulting fron1 such abuse. But for the average citizen who uses credit wisely and is ready to pay on time for purchases and services. the regulations seem to be in order. Europe Fae.es New · Problems With Worker s · Press11re lf orries Associates LONDON -The \'.·orld has not seen such a mass migration since millions of Europeans moved to the Unil.ed Slates in the late 19tb and early 20th centuries. Indeed. some Europeans liken the cur- rent now or l)'tigrant "'orkers to their countries to the invasion of the Roman Empire by the Go ths. Few economists would dispute the prop- osition that We s tern Europe's pros- perity depends heavily on foreign labor. Around three million migrant laborers are now working in France, and roughly the same number in West Gennany. Austria and Sweden each have ap- proximately 200,000, the Bene!uic coun- tries 380.000. Switzerland's labor force is 30 percent non:Swiss. In France. migrant y,·orkers arc called "Lhe new slaves ." And for good reason. They are almost ahvays underpaid, ex- ploi ted , and forc ed to live in slums. EDITORIAL RESEARCH Germans call the foreign laborers "guest workers.'' but the degree of hospitality accorded them is minimal. One German industriali st told The Economist of Lon- don : "\Vhat "·ent "Tong? We as ked for workers and human beings came.·• THE WELC0!\1E for migrant workers is wearing thin everywhere. Because many of the immigrants have brought along their families , a tremendous burden has been placed on existing hous- ing, schools, hospitals and recreation facilities. Theo Sommer, editor-in-chief of the Hamburg weekly Die Zeit, has que5- tioned both the economic and social wisdom of depending so heavily on fGl'eign labor, Last summer, Dutch Y.'Orkers in Rot· terdam rioted against Turkish im~ migrants who "'e re receiving 5earce housing. A wave of hunge r strikes by North Africans swept France earlier this year. And a p0JJ conducted by the French Institute or Political Science has shown that 7l percent or all Frenchmen believe thnt the nwnber of fQteign workers in the country is excessive. Tbe French governm ent dec ided in May to curb the inflow of foreign laborers and to provide those already li v- ing in the country "'ith better working and living conditions. NO MA TI'ER how degrading their jobs and how horri ble their housing, most of Europe's migrant workers are be tter of( than they would be in their native lands. A Turkish laborer, ror example, can earn around $400 a mOflth in \Vest Germany - 20 times t.he average wage in Turkey. Small wonder , then , that a ntillioo 'I\lrks are awaiting permJsslon to entnr the Federal Republic. Some German economists nrgue that the migrant·labor syste m makes no sense. lf a roreign . worker cunes to Gennany with hi! family, the oost to the government for a wide range of employ- ment and social services amount& 10 bo!We<n $50,000 and $75,000. Wooldn't It be better for everyone coaccrntd, lhese economists ask, to set up Germ.an-owned factories in Turkey, YugoslaY1a, and other cowitries lhat export labor? Studies by the Organi~Uon for Economic Cooperation and Development have concluded that more Uu:in 11 million migrants will be working in Europe tty 1980. If so, the host countries will have to conlront a vexing questJon: Will the Cl· ploilalion of these workers be allowed to continue, Cit will they be grantedo tM same rights enjoyed by natl.,..? Civil rights qutslfons , as Americans 1urely kno,v. are never easy to answer. • President Needs Vacation WASHINGTON -"What he really needs is a one month vacation, without any interruption." That careful recommendatioo from :'Jl intimate of President Nixon reflects no pa rticular fear that the President, grop- ing out of the horrors of Watergate, is on the verge of nervous exhaustion, It does reflect a view, now widening in· to lhe polillcal con- sciousness of many politicians ra nging from very friendly to hostile to\vard Presi- dent Nixon, that the President s h o u 1 d take a long breather from the heavy pressures of t h e \Vatergate c r Is i s these past six months. The toll has been enormous. POLITICIANS accustomed to watching the President -any President -for signs of mood, direction or work habits are flabbergast ed at the extraordinary changes of scenery which now seem such an essential part of Mr. Nixon's regular life. The record of the peripatetic President's last three weeks of travel reads: like a man desperately sean::hlng for a peace he cannot find : Aug, 9 at the White House; Aug. 10 and 1 t at Camp David; Aug. 12 back at the White House; Aug. 14 back at Camp David; Aug. 15 back at the White House for two nights; Aug. 17 at Key Biscayne for three nights; Aug. 20 at San Cl~mente for 10 days; then back to Camp David. So during the past three weeks, he has ( EVANS·NOVAK J moved from one place tG another no Jess than eight times. EVERY poliUcian \\'e have discussed this \\·ith agrees that no one can either \\·ork "·ell or rest v.·ell under such con- dition s or pennanent floating. As one presidential aUy told w: "The President says he wants only tG get on with the job of being President and leave Watergate behind, but ho\v Is that possible under the travel schedule that keeps pulling hlm a"·ay from the Q\·at Office ?" Moreover. the way Mr. Nixon has been spendi ng ·his time the past few weeks strongly Ind icates that even in I.he Oval Offi ce -or more likely in his preferred office in the Executive Office Building - the President has hardly been able to eoncentrale on "getting on with the job." Thus, he has consumed vast amounts of time studying the transcript of the Senate Watergate hearings, not cursorily but in unwholesome detail. PRESIDENTIAL aides justified this study as inescapable crammin g for his Aug. 22 press conference, stating further 1hat Mr. Nixon's ability to come up \'i'ilh names and dates during his hostile ques- tioning proves the time was \\'ell spent . But not wi!Mut serious cost to the President's repeated pleas that he be allowed to "get on with the job." In t'>'·o major recent appointments, for example, President Nixon has failed to find tin1e to discuss any details at all either \\•ith the newly-na med offici1ls themselves or \\'ilh other high officials direclly concerned. ln both cases, tl'ltsc intimate discussions "'ere conducted for the President by the White House ctllef of staff, Alexander ~I. Haig, Jr. PRESJDEf\'T NIXON is even more in- accessible than he used lo be for the kind of rambling, gossipy political talk with top aides "•hich other Presidents have found invalu&blc to sharpen poliUcal perception.,, about y,·hat Is going on outside in the real world. lnsttad, Mr. Nixon's ability to let dov.11 his hair seems limited to old crony Olarles G. (BebeJ Re bozo. PREOCCUPATION v.ith his ov.n des- cent on the slippery Watergate sluiceway from last November's heights of po~ari· ty has also taken a heavy toll in the President's legislative planning for his second term. f>~undamentals of th& New American B.evolution, including spec.la! revenue-sharing and an aid-to-education bill that administration o!ricial! regard as extremely important, have 11one un- noticed by Mr. Nixon. , Yet, Intimates ol the Prtsident are "not surprised at this, considering the deep and rulhless cut Walcrgate has made in his presidency. Not blaming P.fr. NllOO, they are hoping he. too, has a realistic understancllng or the (earful toll he has had to pay. Only then, they believe, will Richard Nixon cease his ublqultous wanderings, take the long vacation he requires and begln to restore bis Laint cd presidency. Newsman as Campaign 'Spy' WASHJNGTON -The 1968 Nixon presidential campaign employed the same spying tactics against Hubert ~lumphrey -and the same spy -as in 1972 when it hired a reporter to work as a GOP "plant." The reports of Sey- mour Freidin, the m,ysterlous "Chap- man's 1''riend" of the Watergate case, Y.'eJ'e filed at least three times a day rrom the Hum~y camp in 1968, some- times reaching lhe Nixon campaign plane midfllght by "'tWX" teletransmission. The capable Freidin was perfectly suited for the Job. While working as a oowsman in Europe in the 50's and 60's, he was a valued infonnant for the Central Intelligence ~geocy. THE CIA paid him small sums for hoteJs , tr"veJ, meals and other pWJIOses. In turn; FreltUn came up wllh some resounding scoops and even handled some of the delicate negotiations toward the 1955 Geneva summit meeting between President Eisenhower and Russian leaders. Freidin, a former foreign editor for the old New York Herald Tribune and now London bureau chief for Hean\ newspe- JM!rs, did not tell the Heant pepen when he was hired of his CIA or campaign espionage stints. ·Neither d1d the McGovern Camp or the ~ Humphrey forces know that he was get· ting $11 ,000 and $6,000 respectively from the GOP while he was covering the ir tampalgns. Indeed, our queries to old Hunphrey aides stirred rears that Freidin WIS mel'!!Iy the tip I)( a 1968 Watergate Iceberg. NEWSMEN on lhe Humphrey plane recalled F'reidi n's poker-playing skill, his friendliness and the vaguene55 with which he ta Ike d about his news assign· mcnts. \Vhil e Freidin may not h.ave been work- ing as a full.time reporter, Murr.ay Chotiner, a 1968 Nixon ca mpaign official, confinned to my associate Les Whitten that he was "work.ing a seven-day week" for the GOP. At least three times each day. Freidin ca\led in his reports to Chotlner's secreta'ry through a specia l phone on her desk which was kept clear of all other ca1ls. Chotiner Immediately, edited the mater!11I to correct any dictaUon errors, then sent th e massive reports quickly by TWX radi1>-wl re machine to campa ign aide H.R. ltaldeman abojlrd the Nixon plane. SOr.fE OF lT reached tb.e presldenti'al plane ln midair, with other copies going speedlly to Nixon's campaign chief John Mitchell and other high campaign off icials. The material was basically journallsllc-typt reports which providd! Nixon with advance knowledge of what the newspapers would be carrying and thus gave him valunblc extra tlme to prepare hls-wmmenu . Olotiner lnslst3 that neither the 1968 or 1972 activities were "spying" and said he believes the 1968 expenditures for Frtldln were duly accoouted for to federal authorities though not under Freldhf s name. He pointed out that Freidin was with llumphrey ror no "1nore th an six weeks,,. but was with1 McC".overn much longer. Federal auditors are now investlgaUng why the til72 eiq>ellJCs to Fr~ldln and a fellow GOP "reporter" spy, Luclanne Goldbe rg, were o0t specifically recorded by the Committee for the Re-election of the President. FOOTNOTE: Reached Ofl the island of Cyprus. Freidin declined to comment on his CIA work, saying only "I gave my word to fform er CIA director) Dick Helms." He firml y denied that his son Joshua. y,•ho had worked with us In the 1972 campaign as an intern, provided him with any informatl~. As to hl1 1968 and 1972 acitivities, he said that he ooly meant to pull "a Joe McGlmls." McGin- nis, thoogh never employed by Nixon's 19'8 advert.Ising campaign, stuck to It cheek-by-jowl and wrote a brilliant in- sider's aceount called "The Selling of lhe President." OUNal COAST DAILY PILOT Robert: N. Weed, PubU..hn' Thomas Kttull, Ed'r.or Barbara Kreiblch E!Utorial Pag• Editor The editorial 1Plllt' ot tht Daily Piiot ~k1 to ln1onn and irt'fmulate rtMlen by prnenfina on tht. ~ dlver.icoipmentary' on topics Ol tn- tfl'eft by s)rndkated O)!umnllts and cartoonl.ltt, bY ~· forum for ttt.deni' vSew1 t.nd by JftllttltlJW lhll ntnpapM"• oplruon. l.nd ~u on <:urrtnt toipfea. The l.'dftorlal oplnlonl of the Da1ly Piiot ~ only tn the edltorlal fOlumn· at the 1f'P ot the ..... Oplniooo .. ...-by tho ..... umniltll and Oll"loOnllta Ud lttt .. wrlten are thelr °""' and no tldne. ment or 'their vtft'I by V. Dal-b' •Pilot ..... .., bo - Friday, Sept.ember 7, 197S I • .... , ... ,~.• Other Deatlr.s Boai·d Suppo1·ts Travel Terminal County Affirms School Tax Rates TOKYO (AP I -Cbanf T~ b"ulh, vice chairman o the Hupeh Provlnlclal Revolut- ionary Committee, d 1 e d in Peking Monday arter an ill- ness the offlclaJ Hslnhua news agebcy reported. He was 58. Deutla l\'otlee• MC AltTNIY SANT A ANA -The Boar~ of Directors of the Orange CQunty Transit District Thurs- da y added Us support to the proposed study ot a central transportation ternlinal i n Santa Ana. Directors said the .sludy could prove to be the pro- totype for similar tenninal , litudies in other major county cities, including Huntington Beach and Anaheim . THE TRANSIT district's help in pushing for the terminal study was sought by the City of Santa Ana. Santa Ana city fathers asked OCTO General ~f a n a g e r Gordon "Pete " Fielding to seek appro\inl to use OCTD planners. The terminal study drew strong support from OCTD Board Chairman Ralph Clark. "I can envision all kinds of marvelous thlngfi with such a facili ty," Clark said. "It will provide the county sea t with a central transit term.lital that could offer an alten1alive IQ driving ." CLARK SAID the terminal could be used by mass transit trains, public bt•s 11 n es , priva te bus services and other transit-related services. OCTD director John Kane! of Cypress questioned the pro- motion or a study that v.·ould benefit just a !ingle county ci- ty. "There are other major hubs in the county, some larger than Santa Ana, that CQuld use such a tenninal," Kanel said. But Clark aald the study !or one city could serve as a model for ruture terminals e!Jewhere. Double Fleet 63 New Buses Ordered wuu-J. McArtney. Jr. "r U; re1ldent of Mlu'<ln v1110. 011e o lh1111. ~11-SANT. A ANA -The Orange County Transit district's temt.r J, Ttn. Svrvlv~ by P11•1nlL Mr. fl t )( th doub 1M1 ....... w11111m J. McAr1riev .sr.1 two ee \\'I more an le by next summer wilh the de· 'rr'1~111 ... inc1,...''a.~~ =~~;"i ;-:01 ,1~1:,-~1i livery of $3.38 million worth of new buses from a factory 11r1,..re11ft. Mr. 1r><1 M11. Johll in Ohio. ""'""'/• of 1Cur111y. Ntw Jt•llYl meter~ 11r1~r ... 11. Mr. I nd Mr1. The OCfO board Of direct.ors VOted Unanimousl y 'J'hUrS- Jdln Ollfty. H1rr1IOl'I, Nt w JlrM'f'. It.. dft I th ( qut"" Mt-••· s..1vr.s.y. 10 AM. s1. Kiiii n Y o accept e ow bid by the Flexible Division of ~~·~::':~· c~f::.,, "~~i::o/~~..: I Rohr Industries for construction of 63 buses designed to l~"' 'ltldl MMtv1rv, 01rect0<"1. carry approximately 40 passengers. MOltt:HIAo County Supervisor Ralph Clerk, chairman of the OCTD H1rrle H Mo•-ld. t.«>A A:hor\<11 boa d d oda ' s1v1111. l~"' HH'" 0111 01 .:1e1111. 1 r sa1 t Y the new buses could arrive by late M::.,.,,:, Pt.u\'iO<'':'.:'~d~ :f C~l!;!,~: March but are contracted for delivery no later than June. ·.11 Strv!Cfl .,.,. Mid toc111· Frld•Y. l PM, .. The way every city is buying up bu00s we are pretty PKlllc Vl9W Cll11>1 Entombme'!I. 0 ~ 1 P1etlk Vllw 1Memor1111 P1rk. P1c11rc lucky to get them when we will " he said '1 Vltw Mcwru.rv. Olrtclor1. Th ' · c new coaches will bring the Iota\ OCTD nect to ~ 116 buses ond 19 regu lar routes and Clark said the result ¥ u·ill tx> much broader service. Clark said the cost or the new buses includes payi ng drivers to transport the new vehicles, maintenance should any problems arise during the week-long trip and spare equipm en t for each bus. SAltl !baa-. -----.... -----------r>lilr..!I JOMPl'I llrl. lteildtnt of Hunrl"91on 11M<ll1 Aot to. Dell DI df,ltn. Sftll•m~r ._ lt1l. SIWVI...., lly 11.,.. IOftl. .Albut, [rMll, Edmund, TMOllprt Ind W1lll!" S.r1J el-or•ndcl'llkt,..... Vl1lt1tlon lo. d1y. l'rld1y, unlit t PM. Smhfll Cllaoel. (;r1 .... 1r.. ttrvit.. S1lurd•Y· 11 AM, (;90d Sl'leotltrd c ..... ~rv, Hunlll"(lton llNd\. Smllttl Mort1,11ry, Ol~lors. ORANGE COUNTY Trial Set For B11ena Park Man SANTA ANA -A Buena Park man accused of killing a young deaf mute who was dating his daughter has been ordered to stand trial Jan. 14, 1974, in Orange C ounty Superior Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date for John Nicholas Lembesis, 48, after the defen- dant pleaded not guilty to allegations that he shot and killed Paul Gregory Pellerin, 18, of Anaheim, last June 30. LEMBESIS WAS arrested at his home shortly after he allegedly put five bullets into the youth. Police s a i d Lembesis and Pellerin had frequently quarelled abou t the young man's association with the defendant's daughter. Lembesis is fr ee on $50,001 bail. Diabetes Meet Set ORANGE -A growing in- cidence of diabetes among juveniles will be discussed Wednesday ~ilen the Orange County Oiapter of the Diabe- tes Association of Southern California meets at 8 p.m. at SANTA ANA -The Orange County Board of Supervisors hes affirmed school tax rates forwarded to th em by in- dividual districts for fiscal 1973-71. The boa rd voted without ex- ception to set !he tax rates at the lev els requested by school trustees. The action is a formality, bul must be taken each year because collection and expenditure of property taxes is controlled by the county. THE RA~ set by supervisors cover only the seneral fund for the school districts and does not include special taxing elements or - bond redemption rates. Orange Coast school district rates per $100 assessed valua· lion Include: Fountain Valley elementary, $1 .22 ; 1-luntington Be a ch elementary, $1.69 ; Ocean View elementary, $1.28 and Seal Beach elementary, $1.34. ALSO, Huntington Beach Toro Marin e Found Guilt y Of Charges SANTA ANA -An El Toro Marin e arrested after three women identified him as the motorist who picked them up in the Costa Mesa area and then raped them has been found guilty of reduced charges in Orange ·eounty Superior Court. Judge James Turner return- ed a guilty verdict on two cha rges of assault with intent to commit rape and one of sodomy after defendant Larry Ray Duran. 23, agreed to trial and let the jurist rule on a reading of the preliminary bearing transcript. St. Joseph H""Pital, Orange. DURAN WILL BE sen· High School, 12.!5; Capistrano Unified , 14.11: Irvine Unified. SS.84; Newport-Mesa Unified , $4.66 and Sadd leback Valley unmed, $5.94. The coast Community Collefe district rate is 81 cent s per JOO valuation and Sad· dleback Commtmlty College's rate will be 84 cenls per $JOO. Advisory Board To Mee t SANTA ANA -The Orange County Affirmative Action Advisory Board will meet as scheduled Monday at 7 p.m. in the county personnel office despite the !act Monday is a state holiday. THE BOARD Is a se lect committee appointed by the county Board of Supervisors to mooitor employment prac· tices ln county government. It meets every second and fourth Monday. Fire Risks Closes Area SANTA ANA -Authorities have closed off 45,000 acres of land in northeast Orange County to all w),irivited persons because of a high fire risk. The area consists of open land between the Cleveland National Forest on the north, Irvine Ranch on the llOO!h and east, and the Santa Ana RiveT 00 the west. The land is closed to all ex- cept for resMient.s of the houses in the area and their invited gu<sls. Manager Named ARBUCKLE & so~ WESTCUFF MORTIJARY 4%7 E. 17th St., Calta P.1esa H• 4111 County Not Affected By Ne w Welfare Rules DR. MERL J. CARSON, tenced Sept. 27 to what could medical director of Children 's be a state priaon term of up to Hospital of Orange County will 20 years on the multiple con- be the featured speaker at a victions. rrieeting. It is open to lhe He was arrested at El Toro Gary Kleeman, formerly public. Marine Corps Air Station last director of student activities He has stated that diabetes June 12 after being picked out Boise State and assistant col- By WILLI.U1 ~REIBER welfare cheaters who claim in children is the most severe as the abductor and sexual lege wlioo director at Boise • BALTZ-BERGERON 01 ,,,. 0•"Y P"' siatt AFDC money by pretending form of the disease and that assailant of lhree females, one State College, Idaho, bas been SANTA ANA -New federal the father Is gone and then children comprise a growing of them a lf.year-old im-named to a new position at \JC welfare regulations closely sneaking him back ln into the percentage of the 3 O, O O O migrant from the Virgin Irvine as ca~ uni o D FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 17J-N50 · Costa Meaa 148-UU home, Peoples said. diabetics in this area. Islands. manager. governing aid to dependent -----'--------------------------------__: _______ _ • BELL BROAOWA Y MORTIJARY 110 Br'Olldway, Costa P.feaa LI 1-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTIJAIUES t'lttl Brach Blvd. H .. tlngto• Beac.b su.m1 14.t Rtdoado Ave. Loq -b l!J-'431-1145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 11" IMaDa Cuyoo Rd. -~,414-Mll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Ptfonuary . Cbape.I S$Ot Pacific Vie" Drive Newport -b. CaWornla Mf.%7119 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7IOI Bo1sa Ave. We1lmllll1ter lt3~5%5 • SMITH'S MORTIJARY 6%7 Main St. H1111~Beacb For Wetkender Advertising Phone 6424321 children of military men serv- ing ay.·ay from home Won't ha\-·e much effect on Orange CoWJty. ~me or thousands of military families . Cowtty \Vel!are Director G. C. Peoples said Thursday that Orange County has been aperating for more than six months under similar regula . lions upheld by the state Supreme Court late last year. THE FE DER AL regula- tioos, forwarded by t he Department of Health, Educa- tion and WcUare early this wee k. rencct a recent U.S. Su preme Court decision which defined "continued absence" of a parent from home. Aid to families w i t h dependent children (AFDC) is reserved for those reci pients who qualify based on low in- come and the near-permanent a.bsence or one parent - usually the father or bread winner. The California S upr eme Court decision was aimed at LET'S BE FRIENDLY ll you have new Mlahbors or know of anyone moving t.o our arta. pJeue tell us •o that v.·e may extend a friendly v.·elcome and help lhem to become acquainted In their ne~ surroundings. So. Coast Y"tsitor 4f4.057' Harbor Visitor W.0174 EXECUTIVE WIR·E ' '• WEEK DAYS SAT. AND SUNDAY 7:15 AM 8:15 AM 108 ON YOUI. FM .DIAL KA·P.x NIWS """ MUSIC 1Ao10 UONIOU D ITt STATE MUTUAL SAVINCH 615 ,1. FIRST ST. 5661 LA JOLLA ILVD. TUm N LA JOLLA -' ' D That's all it takes at a new motel in town called Motel 6. The newest in our national chain of over 100 motels. Our rate for one person is $6.60 a night Which is something to keep in mind if your Atmt Emma comes to town for a visit · (lf Atmt Emma has a husband she's bringing along, it's $7.70 a night for a room with one double bed, or $8.80 a night with two double beds . .-.... If they bring the kids, the rate for up to four people is $9.90 a night.) We give you a lot for so little. A swimming pool Air conditioning. Nice thick carpeting. A comfortable bed with a first· class mattress. And everything spotlessly clean. Aunt Emma will love it 6266 w.tm,nster Aw., 714·8M•9811 Fcx a !me gWde co wr other locations, wriieMold 6, P.O.Box 3550. Santa Bwbm, Cali£ 9310S. .. ' . • '•' • L'SHANA TOYAH TIKATEYU HIGH HOLY DAYS SERVICES Conducted by llabbi Garson Goodman Cantor ~!eyer Liss and Temple Choir For information cell 646.5552 . ... ,.,,. ___ , -..... flEl Off STlllT 'AIK.ING 4 DAY FURNITURE 208 N. MAIN SANTA ANA PHONE 541·9414 FOR DllECTIOl\IS OPEN FRI & MON. 10 AM TO 10 PM OPEN SAT & SUN 10 AM TO 7 PM INNERSPRING MATIR ESS SPECIALS KING $49 QUE EN $39 Quilted Smooth Top REGULAR $29 CLOSED TUES., WED. & THURS. TO CUT COSTS 4 High Back & Tobie Chairs 5 PC. DINING SET EXTENSION LEAF TAILE . $49 BUY ON 90 DAY PLAN NO INTEREST O.A.C. -------· -~- ' '. ( .-· ~ Massive 60 Inch Size Dec:°"""' COFFEE $29 TAILE FREE LAY AWAY PLAN MONTHLY TERMS O.A.C. TRANSITIONAL VELVET SOFA Ch•lcoo1 5I I 9 Colors HERE YOU DEAL DIRECT WITH THE OWNER AUTHENTI C SPANISH STYLE SOFA Reversibl• Foom Cushion Seats--$179 -( \ ,. ' '""' 4 PC. BEDROOM SET 5169 ll'ld ....... OfMMrfMln'W. Hdlltd .• Sl1M BUY IN CONFIDENCE PHONE ORDERS O.K. .. .; - ·-;:F .......... Choice of Finish ARDWOOD $99 CH!ST H D ""'"''" •... ,. I .J ,. ' 8 IWLY PIL-OT F'rlda1, Septembtt 7, }q73 B Ph il lnterlandl O o.F-!.·......, t....'lt7S. .......... __.. "My whole family bas t.alten up 111:iing." L. M. Boyd Mad1·id Citizens Like .Night Life Kansas City, lt-Io., is said to be another bachelor's paradise. In the 18-to-24-year~ld bracket there, the women outnumber the men by 30,962 to 24,650. And in t~e six-coun· ty metropolitan area thereabouts among that age group, the women outnumber the men by 74,000 to 59,000. Do you realize that men every year buy about $15 mil· lion worth o( hair coloring? ... Another little-known fact about the late President John F. Kennedy is he changed his suit. of clothes Oiree timeS a day ... Farmer in Africa's Uganda typically pP-YS his hired hand now about $7.50 a ntont h ... Under- stand 40 boys enrolled in last semes- ter's sewing class in Denver's Aurora Central High School . . . That day of the week on \Vhich a school child is most apt to be hurt in a car accident is Friday. SAFETY PIN It's common knowledge that Wal- ter Hunt of New York invented the safety pin one fine day in 1846 after tinkering for a few minutes \11ith a piece of wire. He was not the first to do so, however. The old Rom- ans used safety pins. So l:lid previous souls thereabouts as far back as 2,000 B.C. What's so mysterious is why the secret of the sa!ety pin got Jost around A.D. 500. And i» body anjwhere conceiv(!d of such a device again until Mr. Hunt came along almoSt 1,400 years later. The divorced citizen Is more likely to try to commit suicide than the married'!,;.xil, that's clear. Specifically, the suicide rate among divorced men is four times tbat of married men, among divorced women, three times that of married women. B!ITERS Q. "You said only four people kno\v the secret recipe for Angostura bitters. \Vho invented it?" A. Dr. Johann Siegert, a German physician. In 1824. He \\'85 trying to come up with something to pick up the appetites of Simon Bolivar's troops. He named it after the town of Angostura in Venezuela. .. Am told it's not uncommon in that Spanish city of ~1adrid to see families strolling through the streets until the early morning hours. An opera there may last until 3 a.m. Movies run even later. The J'l.1adrilenos are nick- named Gatos meaning cats because of -these late hours. This is said to be one reason "·hy so many expatriate · celebrities prefer to live in Madrid. Rapid reply: No, sir, it was the late President Lyndon B. Johnson \\•ho installed telephones in all the \Vhlte House bathrooms. It's the mother of the bachelor in Ireland who is credited• with keeping him single until so late in life. Said mother is known to pamper the young fellow considerably in an effort to hold him under her O\\'n wing. Thus, he usually doesn't wed until he's between the ages of 28 and 35. As you may know, the typical Irish-born bachelor marries aboot 10 years earlier, if he moves away from his mother out of Ireland. If somebody asked you to name those nationals regarded as the worlds greatest sailors, it's not llkely you'd nomi- nate the Hollanders. Still, they must deserve some kind of maritime credit. Our Language man points out our words yacht, schooner, scow and skipper all come from the Dutch. Address mail to L. Af. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. ' Father"s Plea Bridge Barrier Urged SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ - Maryland Lt. Gov. Blair Lee Jll, whooe son plunged to his death last month fro1n the Golden Gale Bridge, says "I firmly beileve that my son would be alive today" if a suicide barrier had been in· stalled, Lee, whose son Pierre Boal ·lM,~.1'1, becamcJhe bridge's _.. victim .\ug, 17, ex- JllW!llld Jdl ffflings in a letter to "jJilldell Gate Bridge dlrec- t«,,lle Lel'ef, U111A llAll BEEN nn ad- •Voellle of. I proposal to place W.._ ~.vertical rods ti !1llTOW Jnf<rval s on ~ ...., ol Ibo NII-colored ,...,.!on ti r l d I e . The s:vr:rJ~i= "'Ille ()aldal Go1e "Brllll!e Is the moot ~ llrldgc l have ever' JMG,., ..,.. Let, ,J I who flew here the day follow- ing his sm's death to settle his alCairs. "It shouldn't be blem- ished by the suicide mystique that hangs over ii. 493 is too damn many." SINCE ,LEE wrote !he Jet- ter, the official death toU has risen to 497. The lieutenant governor said he waa "appalled" at lhe view expressed by some that "there was no use in deterring a suicide because it will occur at a dille<ent lime all'! place later on. "I find it particularly un· persuasive when applied to the Colden Gate Bridge, which ap- pears ·io have a magnetic at· lraccion for unhappy people," he wrote. "I rirmly believe Iha! rof son would be alive loday and Wllh • good prospect of rf!mainlng that way if the bar· l'lt!r had been ln existence on Aug. 17." I WHITE • • 25 LB. BAG CAT LITTER REC. l.19 ... Efleclively ab· sorbs i deodorizes k1tly's 5 I c box to leave it cle an & sweet smelling. Big economy size. JOHNSON iABf.SUMPOO REG . l.18 .. : 16 oz . of one ol the lines! shampoos sold today. Rich, yet gentle latller -leaves hair velvety solt. 121 1 LB. SHRBIDm FOAM REG . 59c ... large bag ol 44c polyureth311e. Many uses : stufl pillows, cushions, or ma~e novelty toys. ' ' • • WHITT FRONT IS OPEN SAlURDAY 10AM to BP BU PRICE SlASHING ON THESE MOST WA . EVERYONE NEEDS • • · • COME IN fARL Y FOR BE ··SAVE •• YI ITIMS ,tlAT SRECTIDNS. • LINDY FINE POINT PEN COMPARE AT 49c ... Lindy Pacesetter. Features a fine bait point ... Choice o! col· ors: red, blue & black. ~:~~~ TOOTHPASTE REG . 48c EA .••. Our own 1·9c . Super White toothpaste is 3 s1 · eJtra strength for an e~lra bright smite. 6l(i oz. of . beauti ful smile FOR WEBCOR HAND MIXER RE&, 7.97 ... 3 speed mixer 499 with lull sire beaters. Choice of avocado or gold. 2 yr. O'ier • counter warranty. # 501 ·5. ...... ·-' • MEN'S NO·IRON JACKET Waler repellant, washable poly· ester -and -co ll.on w/permanenl 4ee press. Comfort -cut raglan sleeves: 11p front: roomy pockets.. · SM·l·Xl. -, MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS Crew neck & short sleeve -It pays to buy two or three! Cotton· 1 ee and-polyes!er rib knit in popular solid colors ... Fall's sportiest. S·M·l·Xl. 12 OZ. CAN lURRE WAX REC. 99, ... r.rt1e w .. _ 77C f~.11ous for the deep, long· lasting shine that car lovers everywhere favor! SHEER NYLON PANTYmSE LADIES' MIRAClE·STRETCH REG. 69c PAIR -Pedecl Iii 2 ., lrom waist to toe. One size fits all. llom 511. lo 5' 10". 100 tu 150 lbs. prs. ·~ A BRA AMI BIKINI SETS lADIES' NYLON STRETCH l he soft and sexy natu(al look! 159 Plunging bra and teeny.b1k1ni panties in tender hues. One size fr\$ au. MEN'S SLIP-ON •a REC. 4.44 ... Comlortable, rugged shoes .feature man m~de u'ppers & a s2 crepe sole. Attractive casual shoe comes in sizes 61h· 12. In brown. , BACK· TO-SCHOOL WNCH ·KIT WITH 1/2PT. INSULATBI IDm.E . • gg .. . OUR REG. 2.69 • Your children will love the colorful characters on· these brigh~ handsome all-metal lunch ktts. Imagine, Raggedy Aon, tile Flintstones; •atld all lh.e other fantasy friends that make children happy, Alladin• modeli:qmes , l with 112 pint vacuum bqttle and a cup cap that keeps drinks warm or cold. Cheer-up your .child's lunch hour today! · ' STORE HOURS: MONDAY ltirv SATURDAY 10AM to 9PM •SUNDAY 10AM to '7PM , you~ !iAll!iFAC1101\1 l!i FULU'-lilJARANTEl;D DR \'OU~,MqNE)',,~M;t.t ~~: : . . ' ---' -~-1 Co' ST' A . MESA · 3088 BRISTOL. ST. •,'!'l .. u~~-· 0 · " Son DllfO Frtowoy 11 iriotol -,.-•• ' ·' I -' . - ' ,. . ., ' ! \ • • ·-. '· ···t r. f" :..£• • •• • • . .. ' •. •• •. • \ , ' • ' .. f · ! - t UrlT ....... •' I ~--Ice Bre•k S t r e e t urchin in Phnom Penh t a k e s puffs from cigarette .tllat was shared with fli s ,cdmpanions . Summer Vacations Far-out By DICK WEST . WASHINGTON (UPI) Travel agencies report that group tours have been ex- ceptionally popular with vaca- tioners this summer. Here are a few of the top attractions: Uve Beef Tour -~n­ sJ>ired by m e a t sbortagt'. Group visits ranching areas, spends two. weeks gutng wistfully at huge herds of cat- tle being bel~ of! the market because of beef price freeze. \GHTe \> . -s-i nE It Skte trips may be arranged to P.1adame Tussaud's Beef P.fuseum featuring authentic lifesized wax, , replicas ol sirloin· atdb ''l'lb routs and other famous ~rlcal cuts of meat. - For amill ptra charge, beer-starved tourists m a y participate in dally bite-a- steer cont est. Those taking part are placed in a corral with real live steer. Object is to try to get close enough to bite lt. -111e .-w~ W or I d ol W•ll!*' -A new amusement' pp.rt that offers apeclal group rates during periods when the Senate hear- ings: are ln rereu. Top favorite ls a lhrlUing roJler coaster-Ute rkle built in the ab8pe of Seh. Ervin's eyebrows. No expense W been 1pared to duplicate the e1:4d movemeols of t h e arlgiaala. . The ~yebrows wiggle, wag- gle, a¢h llld undulate in a rNUstli: manner, 9tSKlina the pdienam splnofng' up, &wn and ~ at a giddy pace .. Some ret diz;y and throw up. The park ls divided into four areas called Perjuryland, Jm- munlty)and, Burglaryland and SUrveUlandeland, each with its own dlatinctJve charm. When v131Ung Perjuryland, doni m• the ~ Hall , of tJan with It! dolortut arr-ay OI labrkeUOllS, hall-lruths and prevarications. Arb ud Crallt Toor - Educational ~ as ·wed u en- tertaining, this tour a!lonjs sightseeing groups an o portunlty te watch native American artl1ans and craftsmen exen:lllng their special ulllf.' · *'' \ They see banke~ 11up interest rates, ol , crea~ DIOllne ~ ... polittdim Taunderlng 9 ~·m'pll I g n Ooll-• trlblltlona and auto makers rec811Ing c'an . 'J1>ey learn how grand Jury leaks come a1>9ut. They gel a dole up view ol • congms- man jmU1)11_1g a jlUlket. Of _partlaiW' inlerest 13 a workibop contalnldl the ac- tual vat Jn which U.S. govern .. meot economlall shrink the 4merlcan dollar. AaUqoe Tow -lllghlliht o! thLI tour o! .antique elhlblts Is 1 visit to the U.S. Poslll Servte!e'1 Christmas package collection. Ubl• FDllfJAY:" .: r. tht 'iWll!U , ... --, --· . ,.. . . . Frld11, Stpttmbfr 7, l<J73 DAILY PILOT f Call Girl Has Book Astron omer's Theory \ .. .. , ··I " J GOOD I X 12 PECIY CEDAI FEICllC We ran it ov•r with a hundred porcupines and cr:ia't it lovely. Includes rails ~d po1ta every e feet. & ft. bomcls. 49 J.ni. FT. .. ' " ' • . ' I " BEllEI Drop the boards in the slot. fa1t fence. Posts every B·fnt. '' LIN. ~. ~ . ., A.MERICAi MADE POST·BOLE DIGGEI BEST IX 12 KHOTTY PINE FEICllG 11 you have a knotty fencing problem you 1hould have some knotty wood to aolv• it with. Rails and posts •very 8 feet. LIN. FT.' GALVANIZED GRAVITY LATCH S~. UFOs 'Possibly .Junk' BESTEST tllDEI PAUIC FEICllC The combed pattern really makes for a nice textured fence. If you don't believe me. who can you believe in this business. Rails and posta every 8 feet. 1~9 · LIN. ~ -' ' ' ,. - " \' \ I I I I ! 'j l ' I MOBE BESTEST - I I I I '1 I '/I i I ' ;1 . I. I I ~ ' ' I ' I I I I I I I ' IXIPllE SlllPW FEICllC Nice tight lockinq, tongue and qroove pine boards make a lence you'll like (I miss lhe knotholes lo peek at the neighbon). Rails and posts every 8 leet. ORNAMENTAL CATE filNGES 2" Pl!. ' LIN. FT. Those wrought iron type aatin:black rugged deal&. You get mptchlnq 1crewm and the other hardwOJ8' is available t i ~I II sides. BUICE SAID there are about 3,000 pieces of debris trom satellltes and launchlnca still orbiti ng the earth and·two of them had been expected to decay and drop oUt of. orbit last wee k. .. -l ' I ; ; \ . • " :\ .. • • . ' The ruJ.tic fence you utually see on those $70.000 homes (and now you know wheN we qot some of ii}. Raila and posts e very I Ifft. of C:QWH, . LIN. fj_ Drops and lockl, pre-drilled Jor padlock il you want to make it more (But $18.99 lor the hcindle, isn't . ~ -.-.thGt-4-litu..liigh?) permanent. lndut:ff .0:.ws. • It drops when you clOH t~• garage door and then nobody can get in (includinq you). And then there ll!"Cd the quy who never worked a day in. his lile. He'a a night watchman. .,, ' ' • , ' • , WUnJi.co,....to digging tha ~incing you lhoUld hcrte·a 1tnm9 cligRj .e a . trained gcipher myseU). Got two . •· Olla for each hand. ""· • !NOW FENCE 24" 11'' 36" 18'' 48" 22•• ... • You. ... yards ol Jt all arounrl ihe neighborhood ' cmdnot once have I seen snow. fUll roll ·out what you need and nail it to the posts.. • ' . - ' CONTRACTOR WBEELBABBOW 2988 The biq tank you can really hauJ the mud with. Rubber tired. hmdwood handlu. CC>alt Guard ApproYed {if you can make it watertight and han9 1ome running lights) REDWOOD FENCE STAIN 99~AI. The way a fence alurp thia up you"d think it never had a drink iD. ita entir• liJe. Thia 1avin91 i.a one you can reallr total up and it meaxla 10methinq. • 90LB. COJ'CRETE MIX 76~ACl }Ult Jor the fun of it. look around and ... what the other 9uyi, qet (oi th1a. And. ou,ra has cement in it too. Cheaper than a truck for amall joH. · 4" GALVUIZED T·BllGES 59.c PR.· Triple qalvaniaed. hot dip1>9d. • (Speoking of luxury. Kn._ are alao luxurie1. Ever try to get hold of one?} . . . • WRITE FENCE PAINT l~AI. For a J.99 you should expect to CJtl 10 years? The guy who mak• it alr.ady qot the 10 years. Worth it. end eyen a dollar more. FEICE ••use 75~ 3"· 31/2"· ,~ ChoOH from thrff qrMt .u: ... Each one a winner in ita own right. acclaimed around the world. lifetime guarantee, il it turn• into a frog. double your mon.,. back. • • . .. ' - ' ,If DAIL V PILOT fr1d11, Stplffftber 7, llJ7J <·;:'.:,:::. i :.;33 5.99 2 99 Children's lunch Altache cases Elm'ar'a glue 1 'A oz. kits Embossed Molded vinyl or vinyl • metal or fl at vinyl. covered wood. Deluxe quality school With thermos. bags Choice of styles and colors. All purpose "can-do" glue. '.: .. ', ..... 4/$1 Rog.33¢91. ''Rocket" cellophane lepe 1500" x V2" of quality cellophane tape. , . . : ' .... ' - 3.59 Cork or burlap bulletin boards Natural cork or colored burlap, 18" x 24". .. . .,. 1.99 Organizer/binder 3-ring binder, clip- board and file. 1.99 Filled 3 ring binder ensemble Zip case, theme book, filler paper, index. 4.44 Orig. 7.98 . Websler's 7th Collegiate Dictionary l imited quantit' .!S of this discontinued edition. ~.G~l 3/$1 Mini dymo labeler .....__:.-_ Embosses 1names, etc. on sell-adherine tape. 1-l " labeler tape. Reg. 89¢ ee. 2/$1 88¢ Rog. 94¢ P1perm1le achool tool Glue, marker and pen. Rog. 37¢ Paperm•t• "Flalr" pen1 Porous point pen, choice of 10 colors. · :.<: : :.-•• . .. . . .. ·. .. ... .~ ... .... ... ' ·.·: ..... . . : : ... :.. ' ICllNA l'AIK B••ch ,, Or•notthOtPlt _..._,,tilt M t 1H p.-. ....., 10 M 1 • • 77¢ Reg. 89¢ Blc banana ink crayons pkg. of 5 Porous point in bright colors. 1.67 Rog. 1.79 pkg.of10 •• /88¢ Rog.691 96 •heet theme boOkt Spiral bound lbooks, 3 hole punch. . "•' 29¢ ··.~· Reg.37¢ Bic school special 3 bait pens. 1 l ine and 2 medium. ··.r.:· · .. · ... • tz POSTER COLO!'IS 1.59 Tempera poster colors Pkg . of 12 jars. reusable plastic palette,:/17 brush. · Pie Chee portfolloa Pkg. of 4 celto . . . .. . ...... . . . . ····~ wrapped · · loHos . wrappea. OIAHOI City or. •t G•rdtn Grove Blvd. Opet! 1 O.t '""'' O.lly SuNhtp I 0 ,. 6 . . . . . . . . ' ..... ,--.-~ .. J Mt•'V- Rog. 64¢ Crayol• pkg. of 41 48 assorted colors. Stock up 87c Rog. 94¢ ... ; . --325 Stoll1S 500 1heet1 filler paper Quality 5 hole punch paper Marginal or College ruled PAPER '-'-------~ .... 99¢ 1 Reg. 1.5.9 Scheaffer ''no-nonsenH'' pens Choice of ball, cart- ridge or liber tip • • 2/$1 Reg. 69t Hytone jumbo scribble pad 180 sheets. 9 x 12" size. ~~! pkg.ol3 _..38lhHll10 book, 1pir11 bound. 3 hol• pur\ch. l • . l 4/$1 Reg . 29¢ ea. 112 pencils, pkg.0110 Treasury brand with eraser. on the back-to-sch ool ex pressway. .. 4;s1 Rog .291 Hylone . con1tructlot1 paptr 9x 12" size In full range of colors. ,_,,_ __ ..,...,. UHJA /iMA ltOO so. er11ror • No. of So. Cotet ,,.,. _ .... ,.... ... ,, . ....,. ..... ,_ Osmond Brother To Wed Shie'd Laws f 01· Reporte1·s Put i11 Assembly Deepfreeze SACRAMENTO (AP) CHAIRMAN C II AR L ~ S From Wlre Services Proposals to give California \Varren. I D ·L o 11 Angeles ), reporters greater protection in said, "The subject is given a TtttrrUI DavlJ 0.mond v.ill digging out the news have priority rating of very im· become the first of the been relegated to th e portant. It is anticipated that Osmoods singing group to legislative deepfreeze t hi s two full day11 of public hear- marry when he weds Mary year. 1 ings wl ll be requ ired" on the legislation before our com· mlttee is to expand the scopr of the existing privilC'ge whlcti allows newsmen to 1nalntain !he confidentiality -or their sources," \Varren added . t:arlson, 22, in Salt Lake City 1'he measures have been measures between ad- Sept. 17. referred to "interim study" by journment Sept 14 and the HIS LETl'ER to Assembly Rules Co1nmittee Chairman John Burton detailing interin1 study plans, was made publ ic Thursday. Miss Ca r 1 s 0 n is a the Assembly Judiciary Co rn-beginning of the 1973 session mittee, y,•here the n1easure in January . schoolteacher in Heber Qty, had been stalled for months. "The p1:irnary thrust of the Utah. Osmond, at 20 the eldest ---------------------of the performing brothers, is No dates for the hearings have been announced . a native of Provo, Utah. A reception will be held for ( PEOPLE ) I the newlyweds Oct. 12 at thl! Beverly Hii is home of Mike C\rb, presi dent of ~I G~I records. A honeymoon '>'•ill fo lio\'-' in late October. * "Call n1e the biggest crook in the 'vorld if you like," 'Glenn W. Turner said. "But take my attitude and apply it to your own honest, legitimate business.'' Shortly after giving that ad· vice to a businessman's club in Jacksonville, Fla .. the flam· boyant Turner left for a federal court hearing on a mo- tion to su ppress s o m e evidence ln a mall fraud case again!l him scheduled to come to trial Sept. 17. Gian Carlo "ttenottl'1 new charµber opera "Tamu Tamu" Fatnll11 Cirrus bfl BU Keane ~ /3. " I ' "Mr. George is very proud of me. We've hod three doys of school and I haven't missed ONE DAY so for.'' During a three-hour hearin1: Jlme 14, \Varren said he felt the new shield law should not apply to libel suits. Several of the authors said at that hearing they would be willing to have their various bills combined into one com· prehensivc piece of legislation. CU RR.E NT STATE law gives the news media un· qualified protection in Caliromia against contempt actions by any sUfte court or agency for refusing to disclose the source or published material. Two of the proposals, AB I by Assemblyman W a I t e r Karabian and AB 4 by Re p u biican Assemblyman William T. Bagley of San Rafael, would extend that pr<>- tection to unpubli shed material. v.·as greeted with chee rs or 81)------- Another proposal, AB 75 by Democratic Assemblyman Edwin Z'berg of Sacramento, would prohibit cont em p t punishment o ( news reporters for refusi ng to disclose con· fidential sources. proval at its 'i"'Orld premier in Chicago. "Tamu Tamu." v.·hich is Indonesian for "guests," was commissioned by the ninth International Congress of Anthropological and Etlrlolo- glcar Sciences meeting in the windy city. Only 90 minutes long and wi th six major singing roles, the opera Is nevertheless a pov.-erful moving "''ork.. * Tv.'O years ago , Randy Brlnk "'DB fired as mate aboard the Wailh.ington State ferry Klahannle beca~ he had a beard. "Thl! week, · Brink pick· cted outside the ferry tennlnal ln Seattle with a picture or a bearded 1•1NK man enscribed: "\\1flshington State ferries wouldn't hire th is man either." The picture on the sign was that of Gov. Du EVUI, who recently began .aporUng a beard. * Dist . Att y. Jtm GarriNn, 52, a defendant in a New Orleans fed eral conspiracy tri1\. has announced he "·ill ~k re· election. Garrison has been on trial with two pinball machine com- pany executives since Aug. 18. They are ac cused of t'OOspiring to ob5truct law en· forcement by paying o r receiving bribes. Garrison, ending his third four-year term, gained na- tional attention with a n unsuccenful prosecution in connection w1lh the assassina- tion ol l'reltdent John F. Ken- nedy. Meyer Lust;, 71 , repu1'od ~d f-dal wizanl, Is suffering from a _!lj>lrt all· ment , forcing pcl6tponefuent ot h.is federal court trial in Las Vegas for four montm. Moretti's Smog . Measure Gains AB J636 BY Karabian. <D· Los Angeles), would limit. to 30 days the time a reporter could be jailed for contempt stem- ming from refusal to identify confidential sources. Three proposals would write the reporter protection pro- visions into the California Constitution. Currently, they are contained only In state SACRAMENTO (AP ) Ing for the Los Angeles law, and therefore are subject Antism,og efforts in Sou thern supervisors and the Los to repeal or alteration by the the ' . . Leuislature. California -na ions Angeles Air Pollution Control e· be! ould be They are ACA 2 b y wont smog t -w District, said th e Moretti pro-Assemblyman Jerry Lewis, reorganJzed under a bill ap-proved b·y a key Senate com-posal v.•ould "destroy the ex-~ R-Highland); ACA 9 by mittee. isling well-proved control Z'berg and ACA 31 by Authored by As 11 e mb 1 y agencies and substitute an un-As s em b I y man Daniel proved hodgepodge." Boatwright, (D-O>ncord). Speaker Bob hioretll, (0-Van:rc·iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Nuys), the bill v.·as apiroved11 9-0 Thursday by tile Senate G o vemmental Organization Committee and advanced to th e Finance Committee. rr WOULD consolidate the existing county air pollution control districts in the South Coast Air Basin under a single, new basin-wide agency. • It also would slap tougher penaltiea on stationary .pro- ducers of air ·pollution and would Impose a one-mill gasoline tax to finance the new district. Moretti said the gasoline tax feature •·ould produce a $5 million savin g to South Coa!lt Air Basin countiet which are HQW ARD'S GOES MEXICAN KOWARD'S HACIENDA Serving N•wport'1 Fln•st MEXICAN FOOD • SEAFOOD CHARBROILED STEAKS o,.. 1 hyt,.., BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER 6 A.Iii, -Hkllilgltt, SMIHMy tt.n. Ttt1'5Hy 6 A.M. -1 :00 A.M., frilloy nd $crhirdoy FOOD TO GO-WINE MARGARITAS 4001 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH 673-7750 financing county d ls tr I ct sl~~~~ from the property tu. Ii THE BIU. WAS IUpported bv the Loe Angeles City coun- cil bolt opposed by the L<>s Angeles County Board or Supervisors. It also was sup- ported by the Reagan ad- m I n i stration, conservation organizations , the Automobile Club of Southe rn California and the San Bernardino C.oun· ty Board of Supervisors, Moretti said. "Smog is a regional problem ,..,and we must atli!ck it on a rtgJonal basis, "-Monrtti said~ - "'lbiJ bill is not going to answu all the problems but It will give us a better way of deallng with them ." HarborDENTAL CENTER DENTURES ~ CREDIT ~ PENTOTHAL FILLINM • mU.CTIONS " lllDfil WOii X·IATS .. DINTVan • llPAllS • JAC•m PINTOTHAL • IOOT CANALS CIOWNI • WIJDOM lllTH I MINOI OITHODONTIA DR. A. FREDERICK SALTZMAN 2706 HARBOR BLVD-COSTA MESA 9'A,_ St. -Nntt9 ...... , Phou• 556-8013 Lanslcy wu to have gooe on trial toda y on chsrges of con- spiring to "skim" some $36 milUon from the Flamingo, __ R~O!B~E~R~T_B!A~RS~K~·y~·~·pea~k~-~~~~~~~~'!'!"'~~~~~~~~~~~~·1 Hotel over a period of se\'enl years. A federal jury In Miami ac· quitted Lansky ln Ju1y of an income lax evasion charge. * Natiooal Alrllncs President Lewi• B.(lud) Maytag mar· rled Wllty Tt11xon, one or the line 's s tCW9' rd es se s, a !pOkcsman confirmed i n Mtrunl. The bride. who reslgned from he< job. wu described a1 "very attractive, dark- haired very n I c e personality." Maytag, 4:1, 1 who bas six children by two previous mar· riages, Is the grand,.. of the founder of the w a s h I n g machine company. B~ Signed SACRAJllENTO (AP) Oov. Ronald Reason has sign- ed Oll•latlon allowln1 th• otate agriculture board to meet wherever It wantl to, not In S.cramento. The bill le Sen. Clare Btrryhill, .,), allO changel the name ol the boord ta the stat• Boird of Food and -Agr cunu,,. - FIYnorth· 4tlmesadayonPSA. {tallornla's 18llOfflda! state bll'CI) ~) • PSA wants to go north (or south) with your money. Other Grinningblrds to San Francisco and San Diego. Over 200 fl ights a day connecting all of northern · and southern California. Call your travel agent or l"_SA and let's migrate. PSApes you a lft. • • ' ,,. ~ . friday, Septtmbtr 7, 1973 D ~I LY PILOT J f Slip around in i'eedy style. A thong for all rc,1sons. Pa d abou1 on \•ery cool style. Thin reed slip· per<;. To 1rcat vour reel. Brighten a ~untanned .lrLh. Coloriul velve- teen straps. Choose floral or gcomclric prints. In a r,1inbow of combinations. \Vith thin reeds under foot for a '"hole new scene. Bottomed 1vith fat rubber soles. for long feel, short feet , in-between feet. Kicky. Al Pier 1, where else? llCl. 1.tt ONLY POST YOUR NOTES ON SPANISH CORK. Bulletin Boards . Dark Spani sh cork trimmed with wal nut frames. Handy for notes, reminders and emergency numbers. Sized pe r- fectly for den, hall or kitchen: 1a· x 24~. Choose yours at Pier 1, and keep the good news pos ted. .Nature A \vild assortment of sa ndcasl planters, un- usual chipv.•ood planters, hanging planters ,v ilh macrame slraps, charQ!.ing terrarium gaodens, etc. 1.99-40.00 TAPESTRY A BARRE N WALL. Warm your room with exotic wall hangings. 2'x3". Wo- ven with Oriental designs in 3 colo r com- binations. So meshipmenls from 3tt France. Lebanon , .~orocco ... GO Fly A CARP! Colorful Orienlal paper ca rp. Celebrates life and energy. Flies like a kite or hangs like a trophy. Al ready ~t~r:rd1 ~~~. ~~i~i.~~ .f.~r. :~~ ....• 431 SPRE AD VISIO NS. Paisley cotton spreads from ln'dl_a. Dr eamily inexpensive. A myr- iad of COiors. 72 x 108 and 90x108. Yo u'll fin d them al Pier 1 II•. ~.ff· 6.tt today ,, ................ ~ 2'' • 399 LIGHT AN OLD-FASHIONED LAMP. Warm your home wi th an old·limey lamp from Mexico. Hand-blown glass, 1s· ta ll. Ad- justable wick. Burn scented oils lo S" illuminale vour senses ......... . Clothe a bare floor. A Cinderalla story. Hemp . .i tough and twiny jungle plant. H.i nd· \voven inlo very un-tough lookin~ accent rligs . Beigy naturiil or dyed rich colors. To drl'ss yo ur b;11e floor. Discover them a! the Pie r - and gloat. • 3: -s: roun ds 1 O'!. 21" • 3 x 5 rectangle •4'x6'oval 509 !. KATELLA AVE. 12,. SO. COAST HWY. CITY SHOPPING C!NTElt ANAHEIM 772·2472 • LAGUN4 IE4CH ORANGE 494-tlOI 633~5 - I I Z DA!L Y PILUT * * Fr101y, Stpttmotr 7, J.q'l) f AMBLER ·- TUMBLEWEEDS " MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS 11<>.ltm ff BE a<£AT Rl!< Tlti.E WA.,~ Q.llfl' f\'ENl'""5 v.IJEN 'lt>l ..llSf WANT TO 6E/ITLY SWIN6 AND RELAX •.• ! ,,,,, . .__ ....... NANCY OOR NEW IMA6E! ftl1l:11if; A~Sfta OF THE V>ORD 110NDfITTi\Kf:R'! NOTE 1}1f; Nf;W St.OGAN! FROM NOW ON Wf; WINK Sl-OM~f:R1 SLEl'P1 RE.51, TRANQUIU1Y, RmlSE! GOT1HAT?! .. ~T IT "· i . .•... • /;. f:. l JUST SAW A SIGN THAT PUZZLES ME IT DOESN'T MAKE SENSE PEANUTS TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Yesturday's Puzzle Sol"ted: • "" N1rrow road ~llMlllU.11 A5 Man's A II 1 Separlte nickl'\lme 6 Declines il'I 46 Dependable M N value ,.9 In good spirits 9 Achieve !:13 British money ACROSS 14 Resembling 54 Palh wings 55 Dellca\e fabric by Douq Wildey THE P'EOPLE OF ... 9UT5tME900Y TME NEIGMBOR~ FROM TME PAST WfRf Kl..a...V TO ffE MAS APPEARED A~R TMEY Rt~l..JZ:(O I ~'T l<ILLED TME BOY,.,,, by Tom K. Ryan HOWAl'OUT THE Rf:ST OF 1HE DAY. O:F? by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller CL.EAN DIRT FOR SALE wt1<E ALL ~ OUT OF ' k---'r, OOG FOOO \. Lu • 15 Indian city 56 Less 16 Mr. Root wpe11lcial JUDGE PARKER 17 Lytton heroine 57 Additional ··' DOOLEY'S WORL D •. SA L:.'.' Bt'INANA5 "1b.+f0~ MMNt/116 -:.... RIDICULOUS ! 8NO Oo YolJ I-lave a FiiNT<iST1c (.JeaPol\J To use tN 11--1e Ne.veR eN01rJG STRuGc;£.e aGafNST CR/Me, ONo/11aTo PeiaMaN"? G0:1CO MOON MU L!.l ~S ANIMAL ·CRACKERS I H~ BEING A TADPOLE! BOT, 400 l.IJO!J'T Al.~ BE Ol.lE J NO! '5Cll.4EDt.<.J, l/OO'LL. ~OOT /,R"1S A»D LEeS AIJD 8CcON1 E A Ffi!oe;! by Charles M. Schulz M rr>IT t.XIRf.~ •. l'A\ NOT 60lN5 10 LET t{OI) STARVE.~ by Harold Le Doux -£C>M~ON6 AS JMfb1nJV.if A$ TKAT W0t.IL.P ~ oN PRIMI> TIME'.' By· ~harles Bar_s!)tti Tj..je: SOUND OF F'ING!R· Nait.S ScRaTcf.llNG. acRo~S a Black' e.oaRo. ~ SKRRllTcH I SKRRRl••.1 5cKRRRfTcl-i! by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson 1ILL SAY·· IT MIGHT .JUST PAY FOR TH<" NEXT JO '(EARS. I by Roqer BoUen THE GIRLS --...~ D O J 111 Dull per.son; 58 Boy's 011me Slang 59 Approaches 19 Burdened 60 Fodder 20 Esteemed 61 Pull apart 22 Metric uni ts 23 B11rg1in DOWN 0 " S L R •'""-"-""'-' "-"~~ "TO GLORlA ••• A VERY SPECIAL FRIEND ... WITH AFFECTIONATE REGARDS FROM: SLADE. H HOW'S THAT, LITTLE LADY 'l NOW, THERE YOU GO AGAIN,,. CALLIN(; ME 6Y MY FATHER'S NAME.' NOW, I WANT YOU TO 5AY !T FIVE WHERE'D SAM 5AY I HE WAS GONNA AAVE DINNER TONIGttT? •• 24 Sumy 25 Artlul 28 Dlapossessed 32 U.K. i;:ounty 33 Distance me1111re1 34 Attentloo 35 Gl'tllnedge •• ~6 P1ep1red 1 path • 37 Medical p11ient M CGSunit Ji Oormo11~ •o Flowers • 1 "011ick1y··. 3 words "3 Library Items 1 Co11ple 2 Cent11ry plant J ·Re101.1nded 4 Va111e highly S Bicycle seat 6 Be ot one mind 7 Framewont or bars 8 Dev1!1hze 9 f1•es ltil brakes 10 Encourages 11 Helper 12 Sonny's partner 13 S1v1gepeool1 21 Cost oer 11n11 22 Rtfiided I 1 3 · 11· • ' •• . " 17 I 1• " ' "' " u , .. ~ " 31 /( " .. •• " • i " • " ' .,. .. 11 1: .. ... - ,. _mignon 25 Combuslion residue 26 Abrupt 27 Impart I slight Javor 28 GOii COUJff piece 29 Pester 30 ArUst"s sl~ 31 Clothing 33 _ Antoinette 36 Canadian· American coin 37 Bedspreid 39 Material handling equipment . -m:. 10 ~ " . 22 " I ~ • 37 " 1, 43 ,, 9: " " -'10 UnthlNllilg repetlllpn -'12 Kind 01 ml"' 43 Required I 4 5 Aspect .cs Drive rapldly 47 Ribbon: &ilfi:t/ .ca Sicillan I resort 49 Mr. Porler so Food and d1i'*· 51 So. Cal. univ. 52 Suggealiv• look. 5' Hockey ol!iclal: Inform&! 11 IJ iiii• • 1' .. " 30 JI " . ., ;\ .. " " - ! J ' ! l • TIMES,., SL.ADE! MISS PEACH 0 rAl~l:D DICK TRACY WE MAVE TME SNIPING GUNS ANO Pl..ENTY OF Fl~"l:I _,-..,.... ... PRINTS. TillO PEOEST1'1ANS CU! ;=;.=..:.-.,,--? • I SGHOO~ YEAR I~ ON•Y s PAYS o"o, AND A"l<eADY YOO'Vf '""'NKeD evflf(.Y- THINGI HOW? COME:?. BUT YOU OON.T MAVE TOTAL.1<. IWANTYOUTO KNOW YOUR .. RIGHTS':; by Mell l STA!<TIOD STLADYING 'WA'I BACI< 1N su"y: ..:-' 1, L.,. ·' ·-i. . -.: :: ,., •. ' v' ,...,.. ~)11-...1. "Henry. everybody keeps telling me bow young you look and I tell lhem I've got all I can do to keep up 'A'ilh you -ob, here are the beauty shop bll Jg.'' •• DENNIS THE MENACE '1S1HIS All. \Vt'ilE ~ 00 ·'.JUST SITAU. AFTERNOCl'l It(~ 10 (}\!)GMT'?' • ~------·- Friday, Stpttmbtr 7 1973 DAILY PILOT f;J Prefab ·Homes Started Off Great--But ~~~;::::-:~ OVER THE COUNTER Bl' TllOJllAS D. ELIAS Prefabricated housing has long been thought a likely aolution to the ever-increasing cost or building new homes. But at least in Southern callfornla it ls not working out that way, in spito of a four- year~ld state re au 1 a I l on designed to ease lhe path to 'relephone Service Hike Told LOS ANGELES (APJ General Telephone Co. has out11ned a number of service charge in creases that will go into effect Sept. 23 as a result of a $5.5 million increase granted by the Califoi·nia Publlc Utilities Comn1isslon. ,Service connection charges will be hiked from $12 to $18 for residences and to $25 for businesses. Moving charges and changes y,•ill be raised li:om I.\ lo 16. C\Jatomer 1 "Uested number changes, which currently are free of charge, will cost $5 for residences and $10 for businesses. Certain monthly charges associated with key systems will be l'µked Jrom $?.80 lo $3.3-0. An additional charge of JS cenlS a month will be levied foe unlisted phone numbers. and a five percent Sur.charge will be imposed on private channel rates. pre-fab, or '1modulnr," homes. IN 1969 , a lmo st simultaneously with the begin- ning or a federal low'<!OSt houslng progran1 c a 11 e d ' ' Operation Brea kthrollgh," t h en -A s semblyman Pete Wilson (oow the mayor of San Diego J pushed through the Legislature a law calling for 'Taki119 Gas' sta tewide modular housing standards. This allowed manufacturers to build units to meet 11. single set of standards without wor· rying about relatively minor local building code variations. Wilson, now touted as a potential Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate seat held by Democrnt Alan Cranston, felt the new la\v would, result In a Oood of low-priced assen1bly·llne housing in urban areas of the: Southland. BUT THERE has hardly been a trickle, Jct alone a Dood. About the only areas where prefabricated homes ha v e made any dent at an in to the Southern Califomi11 housing nuirket are rw·al portions of the region v.•here building materials and labor are scarce. "Manufacturing the homes is only a small part of a hous- lng project," observed Jer<in1e Harris, Southern California 'DETROIT MOTORS administrator for the state Department o( Houslng and Co mrnunity Development's resciirch and assistance division , whlcb ad1nlnlsters the 1969 low. NASO Listings fDf' 5.ptem.ber 6, 1973 ~--• • ,Utkgr '""' 111.oi flool)ft@t W 11 11'~ llTt<lt f f< I\ ! T1'lt\t -1111"" FOl'•\I OI It" U\O P1~r Ind 11•~ 11'• S,..i;tt• El ''• • ~llttl.ltf r.y· lflr. N1-Fttn-l!I 9"• ~·~ P+t1'1d """'-11'• 1) '>rnor CCI P . 11 •"1 i'uOCIAI ~ of "''"llt '• 1illo ?<)JI•+ B•o <; \'lo 'lt•M fll • , , ¢•~1-J''!J(.':1 Frl•f'l<I •~ nVt 11'~ Prot Go+t. l'> 1'• r,11v C•O }'• , , :~~11ii'\,' ... , •• ,, •. F•!~(ll A 1)11) U'1t P•OQft \ 1\'o U'<o fomt>•• (-11• Mlltrt 11 Fro1 F(IE I'"" 1"-P!.N" C~• 10'• 111, -' 1~ • 1ir m iiCll ti"-• _11 f f:ulltr H 1,1~ ll ?ut1'1 C•o 1• 0 , .. l Aylf• W I' > I~ ~· 1ii;11ttr11 l'Uti~ Se. 10'.'\ 10'J) &::;"' {o ~ 8\. T~l~(m &'I ~ nit,) Tl" qllQ:li'Gtit><lll 10"' 11+/o ~· (II 1~1., t~.i.. f tfl~nr 8'"' '' '"' lo Ml 1 ... cl• ,,, ' oc •• ' '''"' m•••uo. m1r 9•.r1nl u"' U ''I •" c~ 111, 11~1 •me • ...... flt (''"'""''"'•It L•J '"' .... A•!~• CP I•· Ja,, r.i~n I • 1 "FINANCING ANO land 1i0<1: •111 oo "'I Gc•to Cp n •Jlli A•rr111 n• u' '''"" Ml ~, "1 • 1•011 .. nl I CllN " lutm ~ tt Aavmd 11 ?0 T•n (;6'>P u .. •t • COSts ate 50 high that the r.\111.tc:ll .. 'i.. n AutoP II 19•;) lhlM Par 1~ 1~1 I fr1'1 Otfn l~>o 11 mod I build ft 'l INOUSrlUALS G" CrucN ll"• lZ A•(Qcl Eq \ ~·, Trnol'I F" I'• ' • u ar er 0 en can ANO OTILITIES Go•~ M!'d ,,,. 1'·· ~~~ E•,< 1~ ,,.,, U11i (Ip! B'' ' ' t ll t"-(: t f G<ll m Mt II'• IZ Afll Un1• IJ 11'1 Union 5ol 11'• I'• improve a a on , ... OS 0 Tllur1day fAl)f\ St 6~ ~···A•• P!tl\ ~·· i'• UnA•! r11 } ' I . conventionally-built housing," !oeottm~r •· lfll rt~ Adv ~ ~~. ~·•n Ai< n , II'• u'> B• ~' J • 1 • . , . , 11d<ll (f\ ¥1•'~ l! Q,,.,H M! '1 1?,, IJ'> Tr~ L I) • I' • he said m an interview. 'So 11~11n EW A3~M E• 11·.1~·. un•• ~1• 11•11 • ho gh · :oil', 1~·~ Qnb•l o., •1 .. 1~ , Un• Mani ft • ~ • even t u 47 companies 11a11 Fn~ 1>>o 11 .. Q~1""\ a ·~ 11 "•lQM l"o 6 • • h bee .rt .• d lo bw'ld S•d A~kl1•m•I 8• :io )I lt)U\~ '" Jl'• 11'• V~nl" <,n ~. 6 ave n C: blC Acu~11nt ,,,,, n 11,_r1,., p s•~ s-. q 3,. .. F"t , , i, If•'> o·•• jl" " • !lr,•0 t::i !f"' !~~ H•roor 1t '" ~" ~1v•.• "" ·~·1 ·~ v11." s11': j'• 1~ SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS modular units, they have not forged ahead as we hoped they would." Nevertheless, there a r e almost 20,000 prefabricated homes standing in Southern California. Most cost between $17 ,000 and $25,000 and contain either two or three bedrooms. But almost all are in rural, mountain portions of San Bernardino, Riverside, Santa Barbara, Ventur a, Los Angeles and San Deigo coun- ties. "In a rural area, the cost of building conventional housing is about double per square fool what it is in an urban area," notes Richard Simonian, presi· dent of Environmental Com· munities Inc. of Corona and Fullerton. ,t,!leO Be'/ 11 ~ l'~~:::-,1; ~~ !;: '~: e.."~! ~~~ I~, 1i. ~:;~~'sy! ·~·: ' ,t,1Ued Ttl 1a•·· "'• 11~·~,1 c 19 1~1. <,.11 "' (II I • ~ • V"u~J s~ ~ • ~ A1i,., 8• 41• ~' Ham .. d 1•, &•, <,·n .. 1 .. r n1, n •. VQ! s~n" 11 •I•, Am Ar>r,1 II '''H3!l•O• 1i·.n•,'>•fl•>I '" l~'.)'l.W•~" NC. 11•'11 A ,t,rl(rlt 1<1 )"11u1'11 Mt, 11 >, 1J ~!~I! I"" I, ~·. W"lt• Ml ll I~ AmE! Lb l'o 7:'•H,,.tt ( I~·• IT'·• \•~lhl 1, I. 1 , W•""'" I I>'•: I Al'l'I f •P' ~~ ~0 ·•11y~t~r c n"-ll'" "'''!>'"II 11. I~' W•\ll> J;lt I •• I Am Fin<I 111, 1!~• 1na~ WJI !~'• !~ "'"O'O I I I '" W"·d•M b .. ~ AmF u•n &'•1'•inihN1'tl ll••l~'•"'·oWt1:t 11 ,1,.w .. qt Wt '''•ll • Am Gr•e 41'>1J·,1~10,,~ 1 1,,~~ ~·•en 11,n .w ·1111~ I.I I••''' AM!rc s~ 11'> 11 •nt~I Cro •I'• ~I ~."1hlr 1l 11 ""'It\! Pt \'• ... ,t,m l•lev 151>1&'1 1nterc E" I'> s ~•··~UP Jl '1 Ji, w,1Pub n lb 1 t• Am W~ld 10\1 11 lntml c,, 1)" 11'• ')~··'Ir Cn 1' l W"!T• 1'<1 !~ '' 11.nf\~u.r •H; ~?"• in1 Alum ~ ;•, ..,nn••w I'• ,-., No!+.tmt I 11, ?I • An'"" In •.• ·~·"e~wA b'• b'1~'""""" 1G•,11• N•••n H) 11·,··~· it.pe1(0 n 11 ''> lrl!t<! (p 10'• 10'• 5.,~,, Toi~ 51''• \q. W•n! P~T Vi' I\. APS Intel 1'''• 15'' l•el~n<I Q l'• t'< \!•n PdiO II 111, Wl"c PL! l"'o''~ illfd1'1 Myl ) ]'" J~me;ti 111. 11•· ':>'"''" 11'• )l Wo:>d LIM II I 11 Arro .. Hr lb U'< J~t AllF• _, .. 4 ,1 m~ll~ I I>'• I~'" WO<ld S• I" 1 If Ar~i~• 5~'0 ''·~ JO•lyrl M 1\>o 1~·, >I~ "'"!" I)'> 1~" Wrognt W ! 1 I ' A,\O Col.t 11~ ?Sil Ka""' SI H" It'•..,,~ /I ''"t> JJ•, ll', ~omc (n ~ > ' All G~ LI 1l'-11 N.~l•ar C ),. Jlo ''~N l>r,. I" @'• V•ll3 Fn tS I' Au!o Tr1'1 ~'~ ~~ N.•arn 11( ~ 1 S'o '>T"d~ N S I'• 91• l 1~Qlf C:o b » , :::~~ ~~· 1:~~ r::~ 1<:r11woo H '· 1\'o Baker Fe JI l'>'• "'•n t nnn H, 11 Rald-..n L 1'< l~l ie,.,. 03• 1 ,',, ,' •. ·, Ne-.. York (UPI J -Tne toll11-..1n9 IP1 bdlly Mil S8'1 5'1'' ,,,,.,.; Fb en-61aq 1.110 l\l o .:~v (11,t J 1 'f\OW• th• \IOCk' tnc.t ""'~ galnr<I In Bank R~I 16 lb', .c~,,1 1n1 11, Iii, mo" •nd !o•1 !fie mo~l b·~•~a on oe1•~nl Ba•n•• 11 1,,, li'• 11;MS , Ind .1 ~ 1•, 01 (nange on me Over lf\e·Co"1\I"' B•nrn F 21'• 21'11 '1;1)"11~ VI Jll., 111, m••kit "~Quoted b~ Ill• NA~O , Bayle•• 'I•• Hl'"' llnQt1• P• 11 n ,Net ~nd 11trcenl•qe '""nqe\ are ; l~P Beeline F II• ''>• .Cr•,•q"r @', • d1!!erence be!-..een ffl~ pr~v,ou~. Ids!{ f!nl 8ekln c11 S'o 6'~ ><u•tm El b'• I', ""'" anci tne tUr<Pn! la>;1 bod "f''' Bently L• ?b''• ?l•r. • • .td~ Pet 8'• •'• • GAINERS . ;inr.;i11 9') 1~1 I M!M T•u~I .. ,. '• ~ ,, Ull IJ 1 ::i: (;~ 3f'' :~ ,-,n,·~ 1~·, ui, 1 G~~Cmptr S1s 1 •,~ l 'n UP !11 l Bibb (0 /'' 8 '-""'I~• C ll > l~ 3 Olhf\or LOQ"t 11 • 1 UD ;111 Riq Orm Ill!""' :.~iv Bov 10•, 7n. I Orro1 co•p l ,. '• Uo '2J~ 8ird Sons 11"> 11'/l ~~qget P1 11 1 1S S FredHtrr .2611 ll ·~ 1'o UP 1~ I Boft Evns 11" ll '.<ll•flv H 71• )', • Cl e•elldk .lOb 111, ~ 11, UO ,1~ ~ Bootl'I No 19• 10''1 L•I (nmp ~ ' q•, J (levTrRll~ WI I • '• Uo .. ! er~n(Q 1 110:111h.!tn< 9,i,1 b'•·~·, 9P!ann~d Mk1q 11 ·.~2>, Un .111 Bronk\ In 11•· 11 Loon. C!S;i )1' ~ 9 Sl'larewood (p I '•• '• UP II l • ' • ,LO(ltt• \l')Sl':100dV""" In~ s•.,~.Uol)• rown r I ~~Loew• Co II'• B 11 1nlo•e• IN:O•P I _,. " Up 11 J 8ucM!1~ 1''•11\\MMI G~' 1J 11'J 118urn~ RL(orp q ~~I UD 111 ·.~;~,ey •a ,•,:: >~~· Ma1 Rily •'o I'• 11 Oplel Corp•ln I'•"->~ IJll 11" ¥ ~ -. ill Matltkl 41 IJ II l•I Ml•S (Pfl> 2b "' • :l'~ UO '-.I \ Cam Taq 1' M~ry Kr , l•''> 3~'" !lo P•n!•or lrulu'I 9'-1' '• Up l l ~uu~r M ;~,11 ~~" Maro1 Fr\ 11 11-, ti 'Sunli!'-011 Ltd "•'-'• UO~'" (:~IJt~ ltVV.l5l~Mc (m(k 4l'•l''"lllta;e1'1Prec In S>,M "UP 111 "ffiE AVAILABU,ITY of . •.1touav 19 lle•C•ne•~ .16 ai.~ ~• uo~oo Cl'lm11 Pl 15, IS\, JrlS 111., 1• Ha1dwCkCo 1n "''•+ ,.. Ull"' o q building materials and labor is '"'"'' A. ., ,, n M~ac..,, 1~"1 11•·· 211 l111y Corllf''"' 1'•· ~. u11 '' SO bad l·n places like the San ',".,1"'1 c,o ,•,;• ,•,~, Moid.Urn ~o·. 1o1'. 11 A1'1altoQ oe~tte 10,., .. 1 uo 1~' . m p " I Mt"d In I'' I'·· •1 emer\O!'l~ I.Id U''•. 11,\i UD I~ I Bernar"--Moun•-•--Iha! Chi 8• tr •2.V. tl'Ao Meyer Fr 18 n•, ll F.tbtl Tek inc 2'•, '• u11 1~~ \WIV 1.<UJQ Cllrls Sec Mlllii>Or SI ~<; 11 Ptu' Pra<I ,lib 1"'+ ·~ Up 1,) even if you're willin<' to pay,,. u. ",1, 11,8 Mp1\ Ga\ 11 ?r,, 1~ ze,.,Hl'I Am cp I.\\,. v. Up 1~~ ~"' '•r " , 6 Minn F~b 6 6', LOSE AS theprice.youoftencan'tgeta c1eve1>~ 111•1J'~Moqu• Cr> 11 n 1Ta\\away In' 1•,_ '• ou 2l• convent;"nal house bu•'ll. But cio .. C•o 10''> n •;, M:>I~• In 1,·, 1~1 1 2 Pelo•e• corp -is -• 011 .~• 1 "' Cl)(.tC L• 18'fo 18''2 Moo•t-Sa ll" )~'• ) Fundln11 Sy.r !lo-'• 011 4 1 I · I' I ho · Coml Sii• 301 .. ll>;.. M~•f<•n 20 21 • MO~ern ""''' 11>,-l Olf 11 S Since 3 COl1Ven !Ona me Ill C:mwlT P ll''• )('lo Motor Cl Q•,~ t'• S Pay\a•e CallQ 1'>-'• OU j" an Urban area COStS about the Con!l.lll p lSVo IS,_. MSJ OM;i S'• q'• 6 Pt!mary M~d ll,-'• 0 !+ Z 5 · Co"'on\ 7?1.• llttJ NII Cn•St l Q-'• I Utd (Oi1'1 !oe•v 1>;..-'• OU 1 S same as a modular One, C•o1\ co 11''2 2•''-i'•Mt Libtv 5'o ,,, 8 Be•ii '""~1"' 1 -'• ou 1 1 modular homes aren't Ve"" Crutch R 9'1o 9'h ~t Mdl(r ~'·• I~'• 9 Cal,rop Corp 1 -''• 0 11 11 1 ·~ Cu•t Noll · 16 11 Nt Pat~nt ~'• 9>, \0 us 1n~•s "" I -1'1 O!I j " We}I a-epled tn' the CilieS. Dani lnlt 36',<0 36~lo ~ee(lnm Qi , IO'• 11 Arrow A~tom 11''2-1•1 0!1 ~.I General Telephone said the rate increase was necessary to offset recent wage hikes. Retailers on Losing E11d of Phase 4 ...... Oan1y M 8 B/1 Newll Co ~ 10 11 comr•h Com !'"'-'• OU j" RUJ'lll people are much more Can Or11 7\ji 8 NEn11 GE l\lt 16" ll Hou5n"SY$ Ga l ''o-+, 011 0,0 Data Des l''• ll't ~J N•t c. 1s1. 1~1 • u 011 ~le Cora _,,_ '·• o u : 9 l willing tO accept them." Oat~ Gen tt~'• tS N!tOl~t In I 8 1\ OiOilComp C:rl 1'•-" Off 18 I Just aa the Slate law .' 'med 0..C•S Oa lSl'll lS°N N1el1en A JFo 35'• 1~ A.td!aton Tee~ 1'•-''o O!f /"' Decor In 4\-o I N;,:i,en B 35'·• lS>. 11 Be•~!v81o En 5-1,-'> O!I l" at f ·1·t 1· fabr'ca ted Oe1<1b ,t,R ~· ss Nord\t• ?1 11 •' 18 EnerQv veni• 6' "' 011 I ' aCl la mg pre I oe111; 1n11 I"• s'" Nw• N!G q,~ 10 19 Am Ele(t Lab ,..;,..:::: '" 011 ,, 1 Southland To Get Gas From Isle By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of t11t' Dalt»' ,Plltt Slelf The man who fills up your tank, washes ~our windshield. patches tires. and comes to t~ house on rainy mornings to get the family stati011 wagon started, is wearlng a frown . His friendly service smile is LOS ANGELES (AP) gone because. as of Saturday Natural gas from the Jsland of moming, be will be taking gas Sumatra in Indonesia may be -not only from the oil com- used ln Southern California panies bat also from the under a new contract an--federal government. nounced Thursday by officials of Pacific Ughting Corp. THAT'S WHEN Phase .IV The 20-year contract signed starts for . the g~so~1ne m- with Pertamina, Indonesian dustry. Chlef Justice Warren national oil and gas company, E. Burger refu~ Tbursd~y to is the largest single purchase exempt gasohne retailers of gas ever by the Pacific from the contro.ls. , . Lighting companies f o r FJ:om the consumer s ~mt Southern California, company of view, t~at means a celling officials said. on gas prices. But from the Initial deliveries arr ex- pected to begin in 1978 or three years after needed ai:r provals are obtained from the Indonesian and United States• governments. By 1980 the volume provided will be equivalent to 550 million cubic fee~ per day, of· fidals said. The gas will be liquified and brO\lght lo lbe Uniled Slates on spec1aUy built ships; a spokesman said. The value of the ~tract was not disclosed. dealer's point of view it is a threat to his livelihood. "I'll suffer a tnontbly profit drop of $2,499 under Phase lV," fumes William H. Bay, operator of a' Mission Viejo Mobil station. Bay ls a director of the International Senice Station Dealers Assoclati011 w h i c h claims-between 'lo.80 Orange County· members. The associa- tion is trying to get its slde of the. story heard by the public. "PHA.S.E IV will prove to be the death blow for most service station dealers and open the door for fully- automated, ()ii oompany~wn· ed, self-service stations," Bay predicts. . The root of the p~oblem is that the dealer's posted price will be frozen under Phase IV according to a complex mathematical formula. But any price increases passed on by the oil companies after Aug. 1 cannol be paaaed to the con!Umer. They must be absorbed by the dealer. "teanwhile, the oil CQm- panies have already in<reased tankwagon ptices of gasoline, putting the dealer in a squeeze between the oil companies and the Cost of Llving Council. Ex· xon USA, the domestic bri1Dch of Exxon Corp., announced a one cent per gallon increase Thursday, in the wholesale price oJ gas. RETAIL DEALERS are !he only stations froien under the formula, whldl is computed on the basis of Jan. 10, 1973, pro- fits and Aug. l ' .tankwagon prices. Oil company-0wned stations go into'Phase IV with a different formula and a "better break," according to Bay. Under Phase IV, t be ·au ·y 'SILVER · BULLION To Secure Your Dollars Against INFLATION ' 4.00 IOOl..LAllS rlll OUltCCI •• • 3.00 2.00 1.00 •• , 0 1100 SILVER PRICES 19"00·1971/72 I YCMLY AVl:lltAQll - , __ JV ... .../\ ... y • ltlO 1910 lt:SO 9·i·7~ • . /' j IV"' 1140 , ... , ... : ! . • 4.00 • 3.00 t:OO 1.00 0 .... AVAILABLE IN 10-25-50· 100 & 1,000 O;i. BARS ON DAILY QUOTED PRICES 3 TO 5 DAY DELIV!RY FROM NATIONAL MINT INC. PRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF 999 + RNE SILVER N~TIONAL SILVER SALES, INC. JJJJ W. COAST HIGHWAY, SUITI 401 NEWPORT HACH, CALIFORNIA, nuo --PHO~l 11141 645-4450 .dealer's average net profit per brand after rents paid t0: the oil companies will be 4.9 cents for ARCO, 6.l cents for Mobil, 5.7 cents for She\J, 5.8 cents for Standard, and 6.8 cents for Union. Not enough, according to Bay who says about 2 cents a gallon more than Phase IV allows is needed to make pumping gas profitable. Jn fact, Bay insists the profit margin for many dealers will be less than it was in 1920. Then net profi'ts ranged from 6-7 cents per gallon . WHJ.ITllER BY design or accident, some members of the International Service Sta- tion it>ealers Association are beginning to reel that the whole Phase IV pricing system is greased in favor of ojl company~wned stations. "If the automated stations take over then the oil com· panies will have the whole cookie," Bay maintain$. \Vhat's so bad about that. if prices are kept lower at self. service stations? mE DEALERS say it will leave the motorist on his own by eliminating q u a 1 i f i e d persons who can pro.vide ·them with service 'vhile they are out on the road, or on weekends when garages are closed. Dealers fear the automated stations because in mid-1973 the oil companies announced that they were the "hottest market item" and that by the late 1970's and early 1980's up to 75 percent of all gas in the U.S. will be dispensed by them, according to Bay. Your Money's__Worth home-building hasn't produced oriu~e C lB lB~, No•-.11 C:o ·~'' 11 10 C.Jym"" C:>•11 l'•-+., OJI ,1 1 Ol;im C:rs 11"' ll''i NuOr R~ '" 1'• 11 Mark IVHome l'i-'• 011 tb l a housing revolution, neither Oi~m Hd 10•. 10,,... o ... , ... d H a•, 8'· 11 s0.,..11~<,itoer 1 ,_ ,,. OJ1 t ~1 h d f al Olck AB 16'1 ll '.k e~n Or 6~'• 61 '• 11 Unicare Hl!hS l ,_ '• Oii ,61 as the four-year-OJ eder Oivrl Sci ''• IO''o Oce<>n E• 6"• 1', ·14 AES Technalll '>'<-~. Oii 16 > "Operali'on Breakthrough." Oocutel 19'•> 10•1, 'Jcngr Mt 10, 1 1 Call• Gen l'':l H'1 r"l!ls~ Los 11 1v, , ~-.. ... t pro1'ect has brought 00"'"1d' 21'-11'1• 0 011.v 1.1 11 11'. 10 hloicl 1'clit1e • .,,.. Co,. Jans ?81.• ?9 On f:e.ro I 11', ' nothing to the Southland. Its oaylP OB 11"• 13» 0011 c~•' 1~ n "'e.w YORK 1uP11 -l~e 10 mo't , . Oun••n o 21,, l'• orm<>n+ ~i. 1 , .tC11ve stock, t•.Jded on tf\e ore mar~~! only tang1bJC results lO the en-Econ Lall 4lV. ll''• Ovrmvr 6, 6" Thursday .t\ ~uoplied by NASO. t. ,07 ho d t i ?••o 13 llllo o~"" NA. 1 ' , Volumt llld A1ktl Cf\~ tre State are 'ft.I mes an El Nucel S:\4 6i.. Oro!a (•11 6'• 6'• Bia<:!< D•u9,t, · lf6,800 U Vt IS ~ _,,,, lownhouses l·n the Sacramento E11ergy c 9"• 10 P.>b•! Br 11'• 11'• N•lionw<de A 101.100 U\'a n:a.:.~:i '• EQu S&L 1)\<m IJ('i P .. ((d• )S'· 1•·'· Ballv Mio t•,•OO S!'~ st•ti-. '• area which arc 1·ust reaching Etha" A 11"' i•"· P.>c c.~m n··· 12· .. ~ Penn1011 L~T•it. 1s.200 1\'I 2'~ .• f E•«u In lV. J•,1 Pac Lun• JI'• l~ Am E•o 11,800 60 .0'1t .. ,, full OCCUpanCy, EZ Paint S'4 6>.\ <>,.So Brd 9 10 Stfl-..slrn Li+~ 6~,SOO tl •1'':! ~ t, Fair l.ne B\\ 9'ho ""~ OCOI lS''i 1\''1 F•an-1.n .Lolt !9,10~ 21''> 111··u '• • ad F•rlon El ll 34 Paul r.te• 1''·• l'>l• p,,.... Lile SB.800 I>\ •'lo-'• EVEN so, state housmg • l'11rm l!tr 11'10 11 Pauley p 1'11 l•. Oil Shale Co IS.800 '''• S'.'o-I.<) · · t •·-Harr. l'ays Oro ' J Pvis, C··~ 11·, 16'• Pll illps Gloe1I St.!00 1~1,., ttd-l' 1-'o rn.uus ral.Ul IS see5 a Flngrllt lf1/4 11 P.Jy N Sv II !I' i --, coming "evolution to greater fu Bos!"' 19 19l!, Pa(;§& w 111, 111, NASO Volume TO<.lay 6.lJJ,100 , 'tt T~Fon 2~ 2t\t• Per H&M 71'< ?•'• Advances ,j"' usage of factory components ""' w.1F 1•• 1 ~1ro' L-.. g ~·· Oetlines 42 • fl f ltou Ing" f'lsco Inc 8'1> 9V, PkN Sa~ 6' > /I, U"Cll~noed , •S Ula types 0 S , ·~a TeteD 19 19 ... Pl111lrtn 1$' r )0 T~l.11 93. Components such as com-· .. ' plele kitchens and bathrooms MUTUAL FUNDS are already being built ~er . . . . .. • i the same 1969 law 'vh1ch ~.-~~;,;1f'"~[$11~~~.,,,.""'J. allows uniform construction of N•w .Yark -Fot· e111y Fd 1 a1 1.1D ·~c:im J.99 4.n 1.... ~.,; 1'S.61 . IOWIMj 1\ .t list O! arvl Lv U 1116.1~ lr.t Ut J.48 Vosta F 1Q 16 11 I~ modular homes. Builders can tiid and asl<ed P•l· s11 '"''m 111 (,) ' voya~ 10 u lj so he buil ce• Otl Mutual Jrd Cen! 10 ll n 11 fr~t Sh 11.'° U.10 l'levert F 6,116 ,SO USe t se pre-t rooms aS Funds as q1,10\ed by G&E Mu. l,14 ),11 ls\el Fnd 1t.S4 ?1.11 l'lin!rt 11.6l oores for new homes, then 11111 NA~~'· i1~~Nc;'i. '·19 1·89 ~.v~ b~~ ~:~ ~:~~ ~~~fta~a ;:~; ; l~ build the remainder around Tflvnday HOWARD; J&nu• Fd 11.11 11,?l chu~ Fd 9.~I 9 lQ the ~olember 6. 1911 aa1n Fd 918 10 1t JH&n O!l'I J.91 8,61 cf\u• \!> 8.66 9 ~& ffi, Gwtf\ F l•.10 11 It !Han Slo 811 t lS CUOOER FOS: •id AH lncme S,91 &,Sl Johnsln 11.J'I 11.)9 !nir lnw U.18 IS.I~ AOMl•At.TY; S~c+I f: 1,11 B.05 KEYSTONE : 8al•nc U.19 16,19 Grwtn •.11 •.• Sick Fd 12.86 u.as Cun Bl lB.51 19.ll Com 10.li 1~.11 lncom J,69 4.0 Eber$\d 10,1111.19 Cu\I B1 H.O 11.1B' '>!><!cal 2• sa.r. 8~ ltoSu•... 7 t2 I EOIE SP 2t.'M n.98 C:u\I 81 8.06 8 84 Sbd Lev l.]l :..l,ll ,t,dvi~r .:11 4: El'C MGMT GAP:. Cus! N.1 1.01 1.10 SECURtTY l'OS: Al!lne Fd 9,t9 t.l EQ1Y Gr 1.8' 8 II Cu\I Ii:? •.OI 6.61 E1iu!!y 1.il J ~' Aelna !n 13.1,lS.02 EDIY Pr ]OS l .1l Cu$! Sl 11.1121.IS lnve$! 65' 1,11 l1iflation No Longer Just Alulure \011 101! l'ndAm I.Mo 8.ll' (u\1 Sl 1!~411.16 Ultra f: 1.l! ltl AGE Fd 1:01 s: n Eore! Gt ll ~? 1l.SO Cu~t SJ 8 04 8 81 SE I.EC TEO FD5; Allstate n,9111.ts Ellun Tri 1&.lB .. Cu" S. 'n •.Bl Am Shr an 8 1? A!p~a I'd 13.lt 11.:J6Emi!<Q lbl 101 AllQllo •.10 S.1S Oop I'd 9,1? 9 11 Am(tP F 1as s30En!rqy 11.1111.11· Pola•s 1.11 4Cl6 Sol Snrs 1l.1t1J'4 Am Ovr~ t:)610:11Falrlld 8.lD 9.01 Knlc~r 6,U bl~Sen!i1'1el 10.0llOi~ Am Eqty t 60 S 04 Fm Bure 9 6~ 9 bb Kn~r Gtll I.It 8.ll !oen!ry I' IJ 89 U,10 A"' l!'XPll:E5°S . Fed RR~ 9.11 ... Lndmr~ 6 IJ I 11 SNAREHLO GR~ ' Prediction-It's Here Now By SYLVIA PORTER "Prices of raw agricultural products at the end or 1973 will be no higher than at the beginning of 1973," pledged Treasury Secretary George Shultz at a luncheon in New York City early this year. "A vitally important pledge," I reported in a February column, for, as I exM plained, Shultz was trying to call attention to ''the extent to 'which the administration's farm policy is now con- centrating on lncfeasi.gg _the supplies of food ." SEVEN months a!- ter the ec- onomlc "czar" of the Nixon a d minlstra- Uon OnUy p r o J e cted l"011tT•• stable food prices. the figures are coming out on the calamitous post-freeze ,spiral' In wholesale prices -and we are deeply into lhe most severe, most prolonged in- flation of our history. Even if we close our eyes to the lrlgbtenlng A u g u st upsurgt!:,_ wholesale f a r m, prices rose at an astounding aMual rala of 6,; percent in the first hall of 1973 -and many of lbe lnerca.scs are atlll to be passed on to us at lhe retail counter. The 1splral In lood prices in 1973 over 1971 probably will reach 18 lo 11 per<:>!J11 l OUr_ ov•rall coot_oL Jlvlng could t1D11 out th'I percent higher thil year tban lul - triple lbe rLte Nixon for.Oas!! ~ l!ow-coulil the Whi. '8ouM co !O wrong in I.ts projections and, therefore, its resulting policies? What happened? Why? ltERE ARE six major fac- tors : ( 1) The White House failed to understand the power of today's worldwide economic boom and the subsequent ex- plosive demands for our foodstuffs, goods and services. We are in a global boom without precedent. AU over the world. people are eating more food and eating better food. Hundreds of millions of customers are clamoring for our production in Europe, J apan, Russia, China, un- derdeveloped lands around the globe. • This boom marks a water4 shed ln world history, is among the most fundamental, historic developments of our age. NIXON BAS encouraged ii and perhaps he does Indeed fully appreciate it -but the e<:onomic policies he has pro- posed for our country have not matched It. (2) The administration underestimated the Impact of its foreign sales of foodstufrs -particularly of wheat to the Soviet Union -on food prices here. As a result Nixon did not simUltaneously fight for an overhaul of our agricultural policies to bolster our pro- duction or 'foodstuffs and, thereby, to ~e in· fiallonary Impact of t h e foreign. sales. (3) Bad weather, drouahts .. crop failures , acts of God have lnt<rfered with footl pro- duct\on all over the" world. ~hortages of fuel a n d transportaUon faciliti es have adversely aUcclcd,prlCC$. • "' NA'nlRE ITSELF h as helped to restrict the supply of vital raw materials at a time of exploding demand -and this excess demand pressing against inadequate suppUes is the basic cause of inflation. (4) The successive devalua- tions of the dollar to the point where it has become one of the most undervalued cur· rencies in the world have vastly stimulated our exports - a trend devoutly to be wish· ed. which i.s putting our balance Of trade back ·in the black :.... 'but the ironic fact is that agricultural exports lead the list with an 81 percent in· crease over a year ago. The dollar devaluations may have been essential shock medicine -but they have scareely helped the squeezed American consumer. On the contrary. (5) Until recently. the White House has followl'd a pro-in· flalionary fiscal policy. The budget is approaching balance now only because extra taxes have been collected on inflated pi-Ices and profits. THERE HAS been no anti· inflationary ta:it rate hike, nor even a request for one; no anti·inflationary lid on govern· ment spending: no curbs on excessive lnstalment buying. Fiscal policy was exceedinglj stimulative nnd inflationary an through 1972 and through the '72 election. (6) Only th• Federal Reserve h .. been flghllng In· flation via a tight monetary policy. What's more, today's hislorlcally high Interest rates add lo the eosl ol living and doing business. And there's c:onsldru-able skepticism about how effecliv~ this policy ean be in tho l•ce of a wot!dwlde boom. l'UNOS: l'IOIELITY L•n~ F(I S.11 S.31 Comll l.41 J,11 Caot.tl 1,58 9 28 GROU": LEX GROUP: En!<P• S 61 6 Ill '"<Om t.H •11 b1'1(1 d!b 819 q41 Cp L~d< lil9!613 Fie! Fd l~! 11g lnvUm 1.a6 s'st Cao1a1 1161 ll &9 G,,.,~ 1o:1s 1 os ~a•br 7 Jo 1 ~! Sr>0cl 1.10 a:11 Contra t J! •. Reirc ll lJ,69 U ,91 ~1!91! L 6 19 ~II Stock 1 i6 B.16 ('1 SSK' I 16 I 48 Llbly f:(I S.26 <; 15 DIC ! I'd 161 8 l3 Am Grin • s:ts 6 ~ o... 6.11 ... L•le 1 .. 1v a bl 9 •1 SNEAllSON FOS: Am l11S1n S.00 s: •• ES1•~ 10,10 ... Li1'1C Cao 7,11 1-8~ 4porc 18 M 13 ~1 Am 1,,vU • 99 , 99 Ev~•ll 11 le 11.13 LOOMIS lncom 11.IK 19 ~1 Al'l'I Mui 1:11 a'.tl Fund IS SS 16.~9 SAYLES : 1 1,,v!~t 9 1110, +0 lmNI Gr-l.J6' 2.58 Purltn 9 11 10.01· Cao Ov 13 10 IJ 10 S" O'.tll 11 n? 11 ll ANCHO• Salem I' 1,1) 1,01 Mut ... I It.SI 1•.SI '>Ide Fd fll !II GltOUll: Tr~nd ?t.1116.l• 0110 ABB : '>IGMA FUNOS; C1pt1l 4,76 S.11 I NA NCI AL Al lHal 6 69 1,21 (dp S~r I 61 I )t F"d !nv 1.6S !.l8 •OGllAMS~ l\m Bu\ It! J.19 Inv 101•11 /~ (;rw111 7.9'9 I.I& Fin Oyn l .ll 1,31 Bnd deb 9 81 10 11 Tr~t 1 M S 11' 1~com 1 10 7.15 Fin •na 1.11 1 11 Lul hern 10 61 11 ~l Venlur ! 9~ 4 P Ve,..tur 5.1' •.&l f:in l')C S.61 S,61 Lu!hn in 9 JJ 10.1D Sm•tll 8 1~ 16 10 l~ W.t NIH 11.0•U.lt Vent ~.11 411 Manlltn ).96 1,JJS8 l&Gr 108110~! "''""" J.n 1.01 h!Fd Va 11.:l4 1tla MISS co: s~ GenF n 61 n .11 Audal F 1.IXI 1.1tFIRST Freem 181 8\6'"'~t Inv ftlO 9'6 AXE IN'."ESTORS, Inda I' 8JI 9.ll s .. 1nv G Olli! 6 \1 MOUGKTOM;., Dost Fa S 40 S,91 Ma'' F 1!,\.bl1.61 Sov• In 11111741 l'uf'l.C! A. ~.U S.OI G'111 Fd Ill 1.0 MASS FNCL: Soeclra o.9'9 S p Fund 8 I Ol 161 Sloe:• f: 1,11 ,,\I Ml! 11 JIU l• S&P !~D b If ~ 11 SIOCk s:llO 6:11 hi Multi • SS I.SS M!G ll Ol u.11 STATE &ND GlllP · A•• 'Sci t ,1' 4.SO l'OAUM G•OUP: MIO I)]! 14.61" Com Fa • 96 } l ! BLC Glh 11,)911.4'; 100 FM 10."10,"' MFD !l.19 11 61 O•vt"I ill s1• BIO\Otl 11.IS 11.IS 101 F..O 9.0s e.os MCO u 1t 1608 PrDQr~ s I) I•~ 8•yroc 1.11 1,96 Colum t.O'I tOtM.t!e\ I~ 1.10 110 '>1 Fr Gr 111 1 ') Barrk or S.H 6,)9 ?S Fund 6.IS 6,IS Mat~e· 11.6111.67 SI Fr l~t '1l 9 1] Bt1tn HJ B.94 1,94 Fan G• •.66 S.()t Mid Am S.JI s 87 SI.tit '>tr 16.11 16 ~· aeactn 11.1911.19 FOUNDERS Mo,,, Fd 10M 11 6] STE•OMAN FOS · Be•11er I{ 11.1111.ll GROU"t MSB I'd UO&l l.06 Am Ind Jn? 3 11 B••k,11• •.10 1.1e Gr,.lh Sl! i.88 1.111 Bn(; t,'IOIOAS A•So f:d 11' 111 BOMl!k 1.16 S.10 lncom It.I! ll,St "1111' I'd 1.1~ 8,J~ lnve~t 1..)6 1 J~ 8MI F~ t.Stl0.41 F Mtu1I S.8? 9M M!F' Gro •S5 t9l STEIN I.OE FOS: Brown h l (~l "' ~en 11 .0i 11 05 M.uOm 511 1.8\ <; 11 B•I•"'' 10.8l 7~ ,~ aULLOCK F<11.1•~q I' I.SB t.10 MoOm +1'1 I.II 9.U CaDltl 10 H 10 ;1 l'UNOS: l'RANKl.tN Mui "Sf\~ 1S 11 IS IS S!-ao;.-11,9114,QJ evn Fd ll.O'I U.l• G•OU"t Mull l•\ 1 I& 1 ,6 SIS GJtOUP; (II" i:a 21.ll:ll.'IO' ONTC 1,91 l .&I NM lndv 10.01 10.07 O•-..lh 619 6,18 Olv Sllr 1.6' (,02 Gw!f\ Sr 1,16 1.18 NAT SEC FOS, ln(om t.11 9,~ Ntlwd 10.01 10.98 f:r tncm 1.'IO l .O!i aaianc a 51 9.lo• Stt!l'l'l•I l.Q~ '•~ NY Vef\ 11 lS U JS US Gw S •.It 10.61 8~n(I 'St' t I~ S.10 l~Cllnl 6 )9 1 ro 8r1'111m 10.01 10:01 Ullhlit SU S.61 01Yidn )SI ).!J'>1nuo I" 611 l ]b CG F1,111d 13.tO u .11 Res C:~p I 16 S.lS P·~· Slk 6.0l 6.S• TMA it.p 'II 9 I~ CtP Tfi.n II.IS u SI Rs EQIV 1.ll 4.19 l"(l)m 4.61 s,01 ffl'l'ltll G Ill • 10 Ce"t SI'\~ to (U "k• Llfq lt,11 n.ao Stock Sr 6 61 111· To-..er c s !IO ("ANNING '°II Ml dp 9.38 •.le Grwlll 6.11 1.lJ Tra,., CaD I .JS 6 11 l'UNOS: FUNDS INCP NEW ENG LF: Tr;i•! Eq 10~8 11 ,, aa1.,cd 10.1111.lt G_•ou~: EQuil, 1'-.ll 11.Sl Tudor H n )S 11 \I B"d Fil 1.'9 t.ll Comm I tt 9 91 Gr-..11'1 10.8111.19 !~In Cl J 01 1 J1 Com SI~ I.la 1,tQ lm(l.OC 1.61 1,61 Side 16~9 19.U Un•toNI SJ •'" Grwtll 112 Sil !"1JUI 1r-11 011110 ~EA Mt t ,Sl fll Unlhmd !61,61) tncom •.Ml 1,)1) PHO\ Ill 81l Neu C:et1! S 20 S.10 UNION SERVI~ Sl>etl l .'1 1.'f Mewy 'U 1,/lo N1u-..!h 9 11 t.11 GI.OU~: Ventur I'll t,11 ~E S>S P l611 ... Nf,.tl)ft 11,11 11.41 Brd~ Iv U141t ~1 CMASI .if" ~ 6H 6SS Nw ?tr\ 1399 1S,ll N.tll Inv I•• t 11 IOSTON: •ou~ SEC: ~ ... 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"·~ ,, n ,UNO'; WIMV ,:s• :1',, Orte.I CD SM S.SI 51r!ttl t II t.'6 COfl~fr 10''1' 11 Wt\t 11'1• ).» OOdoC• U.tt 0 .49 V1r P1'f • IS •• , Eou•ly 191 'to W\hd Gr •.• , Orto't! 1l !tl !II I~~ At\ S Ot 1 \.0 Ct~ jll~ lt,11 Wllo(~ (K OUYl'W\...Oll...-I \ I!._ C.-111 I~ rl 1' ~' t • ... Orf' P• 1061·11 It Gf•ll'I l ,l)t •II I~ -•;W j It .,,. cthl• d. • • -, J DAILY PILOT s 'lnflati.0 1t Boost' P1·e si cle11t IGlls Wage l11c1·ease WASHING TON IAl'I While J1residcnt N 1 x o 11 ' s v ct o of a fcdcrril niin· iroum • ,.,. age 1iill spar'kcd angry re<1ctions fro1n lal:ior leaders. the chances 0 r Congress overriding tlie Vl'IO uppeart.'d 11hr11. Nixon disclosed at In:. nc~s conference \\'cdncsd<t y that he '>''iii slrike down !he bill, \vhic h he considers innationary. lt would h<Jvc rniscd th c minimum \\'age froin $1.60-an- hour to $2.UO-an-hour lhis year and $2.20-an-hour l'lt':<I July I. AT TllE SA!\·1£ time, th e President said he could not say \\.'hen the nation 's worst surge of inflation in n quarter- century would recede. !·le said his economic advisers see some relief for consurners ''over the next few months." Nixon said he would veto the minimu1n-wagc bill ''with very great regret," but that "it would give an cnormotL'> boost to inflation,., if allowed to become taw. "This is a callous. cruel blow to the worst paid workers in An1crica," AFL-ClO Presi- dent George r.1ca ny asserled soon arter the announcement. He said his organization would urge Congress to override the veto. JERRY WURF, head of the American F'edei·ation of Coun· t)', State and ~lunicipnl Emplo ycs. called the President's Vl'IO pledge "a shocking affront to t he Powerless \.'.'orkers in the private and public sectors." J. \V. Abel, president of the l'uited S I e e w o r k er s or An1erica, c::ollt!d Nixon's 111· tcnllon ''ill<0ns1dcrttd nnd cold-blooded .'' ,\n override aUen1 pt might succeed in the Scna ll'. whic.;h passed the bUI by a 62·28 vo te. lts success appeared doubtful in the House. v.•hel'C it was ap- proved 253 lo 1~2. less than the two-third that would be needed to override. He said he would ask Congress to \\.'rile another n1inimum "'age bill. The bill failed to meet a key \V hite llouse test. a reduced n1inin1um wage for teenage \vorkers. Nixon's economic ad· visers said Lhis proposal \VOuld have helped to relieve high unen1ployment among the na- tion's youth. THE MEASURE would have brought 7 million new v.·orkcrs under the minimum wage law, including federal, state and local government employes and domestics. The law now covers 46.9 million workers. Nixon said h i s ad· mini stration is doing all it can to fight the rising tide of prices without bringing on a recession. He said it is holding down federal spending, keep- ing the amount of money and credit available ti ght, and in- creasing food supplies to meet a heavy demand. He urged Congress to help in the anti-inflation battle by holding down federal spending, but said thete are spending proposals pending on Capitol Hill that "would bust the budget lo the tune of $6 billion.'' Modern Wea1•0111·y? The noztle-like appearance of these units might lea d one to think so, but this Picker Corp. tech- nician is just making final adjustments on a line of mobile field X-ray machines. 'fhe Cleveland, Ohio plant is s hipping them to the U.S. Army. Va11 Nuys Plant DETR 0 I T (AP ) Chevrolet's Van Nuys, plant will begin producin g com pact Vegas in 1974 when present plant expansion is cornpleted and GM 's capacity I o r building the car is increased, 0 Worst Since WWII? Augu~t Price l1id ex to Slioiv Huge Cli1nb \VASHlr\GTON 1AP) -The govemmcnt v.·Hl hit consumers Friday with some o! the worst price news of the post-World \Var I l era 1vhen it releases its wholesale August. price index foe Sources at lhc Treasury department said \VC'dnesday the index nlay show lhut farn1 prices increased more than 20 percent during the month. and tha t the over·all wholesale. price index increased by more than a staggering 5 percent. IN FOllEC1\STlNG record increases in the \\'holesalc prices for August. th e sources cautione<l that lht· rtgurcs they are workinj:( \\'i!h are unor- ficial and based on projections 9r Treasury economists. The Labor Departrnent \Vil\ ~lease Lhe off icial index Fri· day. Officials fear iL 11•ill have an adverse psychological effect. because iL v. ill shov.· v.·hJt hap- ~ncd 10 rood prices nf\cr the vernmcn! !1flNI it<; price ~ze from tbl.! food indu.s try on July l&. During lhl' frt'c·zr. l h c wholesale index a c 1 u 11 I I y Occtincd by I ~ prrce11t. In projecting ;1t l:ln annuul ra te. --- PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOA AEAL ESTATE LOANS lal & ?nd lRUSf DCEOS •1.!Ml To S2SO,OOO UP TO ao•.~ l OANS ON l flUST DEEO COLLATERAL Jll EWl"Ol'll t:OUITY nllolDS tot,.P(Hl C•nl11 f>:10 H11wno•I Cnn111r Or> ... H"'P0•1 B111<:f!, C•!tl. t71'' &<l'-&l:4 Or o-tr II U ... #l•CIOllS Oii Dltlll•' the increase or over 20 pe rcenl in August would represent an annual rate of increase of a phenominaJ 240 p e r c e n t , Holiday Inn Said Guilty Of Violation NE\VARK, N.J. (APl -The nnation's largest hotel·motel operatio n, Holiday Inns Inc., is violating antlmonopoty laws by ilS franchising practices, a federal judge has ruled. U.S. Dist. Court Judge Leonard I. Garth made lhe ruling Wednesday in con· ncction with a suit brought against Holiday Inns by a franchise applicant who \Vas turned down because the site of his proposed Holiday Inn y,·as too close to an existing franchise. Garth said such a policy. :ilong \\1ith one that prohibits Holiday Inn O\vners from ov.·n- ing hotels of other chains, is '"a combination and con- s piracy'' and an ..unreasonable restraint of trade." Nix Merger Special to the Dally PUol LOS ANGELES -Charier Ney,• York Corp. and the CoJy,•ell Co. annou nc e d '\'t'dnesday that negotiations '1'11 h respect to the acquisition vf Cohvcll by Cha~tcr have Ucen tcrrninaled by mutual agrecrnc-nt or the parties. t;ordon T. \Val/is. chairman of Charter, and Bundy Colwell . chairman of Colwell, stated that the two coinpanies con- unuc to hold each other In the highest regard and regretted that the negotiations did not result in an agreement which was satisfactory to b o t h parties. ' olthough no one expects the 20 percent rate to be maintained. SECRETARY OF the Treasury George P. Shultz said two weeks ago the wholesale index for August would show an i·astounding" increase. An increase or more than 5 percent in the over-all index would far exceed the post- \\1orld War II record increase of 2.8 percent, set in July of 1950. Gas Utility Price Hike ' Half Cut • in LOS ANGELES (AP I -The Public Utilities Commission staf£ Wednes d ay recom· mended a rate increase for the Southern Callfornia Gas Com- pany of slightly less than hair what the ulility had asked for. Jani ce Kerr. PUC counsel, said th e staff was recommending that the com· mission grant an increase averaging not more than 45 cenls a month. The utility had asked for an increase of 93 cents tor an average residen- tial bill. The ruu increase would bring the gas company Ml additional $53.l million dur. ing 1974. The staff recommenda!lon goes to the PUC, and a fi na l decision is expcct(•d by the first of next year. The recomn1cndation c<11ne nfter the first d3y of public hearings held by the PUC here on the proposed Increase. Smog, Heat Hurt Crops Complete New York Stock List NIE"" 'l'QRI( IU,11 -FoUNlno .,, l!fk ti ""' 1ri. Ntw Yotk 5!ocl Excntl"fff; • ' ·~-t 'Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Stocks Up Again; Trading Moderate NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices were up Thursday In slow to moderate trading maJntain· Ing a rally begun In late Augu st. ' The. market n~ar _closing backed away slightly from guns of earlier 1n the day. Analysts said they continued to be encouraged by the breadth or the rally, although tho market continued to have strong institutional domination. Eugene Peroni of DuPont· Walston, Inc., said the upward trend co ntin ued to be attributed to be· liefs lhe economy would slow do wn without a re· cession and that interest rates were near or at their peak. ,.., f~l Hlth Low L11t ctt:. • , Stpttmbtr DAJLV PlLOT W• M4'1 '·I lhtll Hfftl UW L..t Clio Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List -• Finance Briefs 0 Cofllnt f'oocf Spedal to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES -Net In- come of COiiins Foods Interna- tional Inc. for the first quarter of Oscal 1974 was up 13 per- cent over the first period la.!t year on a 55 percent revenue gain, James A. ColUm, Prest--; denl1 announced Tuefday. • For the three monlha ended! July 31, earninp were~ $1 ,090,900 compared w Ith: $92f,400. Net income per share : was 32 cents v1. last year'• is : ctnt1.. Total rtven~ were : $2a,ct,2'l0-compared-w I t h $17;tl)li,900 r1porttd for thp ytar earller. • Bestllne MADISON, Wis. (AP) Thi rty-f lve Wllt'Oflsln rea!dtnta hive flied a u i t against a Califomta ,..p P<'Od· ucu company, alltging fraud and__requestlng $980,000 In da""'ge1. Tbo complaint, filed 'l\ios- day in U.S. Dl•lrlct Court by. two ltfadisoo attomey1, allee.; td Bestlioe Products Inc. fraudulenlly lured each of thd' 35 into a m1rtecing 1chr.me. e Viet Bre•ch Speelal If U.. Delly Pilot SAN FR A/ICISCO - Ba.nkAmericard will • o o n betomo the llrtt bank credit card accepted In Satcon, Viet- nam and In Seoul, Kana, Btnk or America nporWd Tlluraday. • Bank ol Amrrk:o br ........ ! now are tnUstln& mwcbultl la bo1b Asian clllet. ,,_ ,..... gram II ••r>e<i«l lo bt -' tlooal In O<tobor. · ~ • 8 DAILY PILOT Fr iday, Stplrmbfr 71 197) Not Homosexual, Says Liberace SAN FRANCISCO !AP ) - l.J.Wace, the flamboyant mid- dle-aged pianist Krol , says he's not a homosexual -and he's against homo se xualit y "because it offends convention and offends society." 'The '53-year~ld s h o "'' business phenomenon s a i d here he decided to tell all about his private lire because ''I'm so tired of people writing .itoliet., about me that ~re dishonest and cancerous with innuendo. "NO, 1'1tf not a homosex· ual." said Liberace. \Vho is kno\\TI for his elegant $10,000- a-yea r wardrobe that include velvets. ruffles. laces and spangles. "As I told a British court in 1959 when I "'on a $20.000 libel judgment against a London Piano Idol Seores Innuendos, Attacks newspaper. my sexual feelings riage. It was a deterrent." are the same as most PfOple. He said the irmuendos about l'n1 against the practice of him started "because I was homosexual.ill'. because _it o~; the first ln my field to dare to fends convention and soctely. • be a nonconformist, to wear he told a news conference here the fancy clothes I do. to discuss his up com ing autobiography on how he and his family struggled during the depression. TllE CO!\'FIR.i\tED bachelo r said. "The ooly reason I never got married is p robabl y because l come from a family of divorce. My parents. first of all. It put me off fro1n mar· "Now, ir I were to emerge • on the scene, I would probably go unnoticed .•.. A lot of peo-- ple nowadays, they can wear ~uins on their eyelids and nobody puts a sexual label on it. "J COULD HAVE given up many, many times professionally and personally. 185/14 ERTB/14 195/14 FRTB/14 205/14 GRTB/14 ... \\'hy,, I've been pronounced dead three times. I've bad the last rites of life. I've been the victim of an international kid-- nap attempt. "Oh, mind you, I wouldn't trade my lire for that of anybody else," Liberace smH- ed. The entertainer earns an estimated $3 million a year. He supports four Muses, 14 c~, a private art gallery, a 24-Carat gold-leaf t h e a t e r organ and at least 12 pianos. "I'M A PERSON who was put on earth simply to bring happiness and love to other people," he said. "And I get it back in abundance. It's v.'hat makes me go on living and do ing my thing." Liberace is appearing at the Circle Star Theater in nearby ~n Carlos. STEIL f 78/14 STEIL 67811 4 STEIL H78/14 HE TELLS ALL Liber~c• 195/14 $33" 205/14 $34" 215 /14 '36" • .- Menu Varies i:''.:i<:e . Updated. Weekly RENO (AP) -Rather than price increase, restaurants in Harrah's casinoS here aod at Lake Tahoe have started adding a surcharge to food bills. The weekly charge IS listed on Harrah's menus on a while card headed "food cost increase." This week, for instance, 4 \~ percent is added to the menus prices. TAD DUNBAR, HARRAH'S publi city chief, said the sur- charge is computed 'Weekly based on the iocrease in costs for .lill lood stuffs eJu!ept beef, . ' "''There have been substantial increases in Cood costs since June," Dunbar said. The surcharge will be recom~uted every week. THE SURCHARGE CARD tucked inside menus notes, ''~veryone is aware that in the current inflationary market, food costs·are .changing daily. ~'Natlp'ally it is impossible to reprint our n1enus constantly. 'J'h.erefore, we• must add a small charge lo the food items on the menu io reflect this added cost." 95 215/14 HR78/14 STIEL G78/15 205/15 '35" 205/15 GR78/1S STEIL 215/15 $37" H78/1 S 'Oo1 'lHI Jlllll QW-UAllTll U•"l IM lreH lit. 111 40.IOl llllt~ f1t.111 l1 •11111111 I n rl· 215/15 HR78/1S .,.,1;,. NI •r•1I rnf lal•lh (nd•-1• 111~rlll1 11Ktt111l wH1 tlrt !1111t 11 ""'''" STIEL \AM!lcu •1Nl1ct1nfl 11u1111t 11liclt1 It .... 11 u niu -'"" lk CH1i111t11 ~.S. lu -235 /15 '43" lltflll. 1111hl. ltfll IN ,._ 11 lh r.iltll.t p 11H!" "lrilf liOI I trd il tr <1tnf (11 tt1 235115 LR78/15 L78/15 lfliN) uuJ 11 ar n rntl u ni11. ,m1 •hilolld •1 tM •11Uoll(1 .i 111111tu1 .,1011 ..uel 11 f.M IMI. EXTRA W-l·D·E 60 SERIES RAISED WHITE LETTER "ZI IM(M!l WIO( GS0/15 ~1 llNCHI WIOf . SPECIAL New 78 Series DUAL WHITE POLYESTER .. ll.•! ... " '"• 4'i:!6'8 euctfW•UJ lUt5-11"PI 1111 1' f «U•10 Pl•1fN!1.luU.t f TO FIT MANY Ambassadors, Bulcks, Chryslers, Dodges, Fords, Ponllacs, Old•, Station Wagons & others. !Wllefever lllrntnl .ilow1 7.00/15 7.00/16 7.S0/16 1.00xl6.S 1.7Sxl6.I 10.00.16.5 12.00x16.S A18/13 TUllUSS 2.50 2.67 2.94 2.73 2.96 23 I 30M llA! $ -9 5 IELTED TllE . AJl/13 ,., ... Ill • .......... OUR CONSUMER POLICY Our tu1tomtr policy is to Mtttr ''"' Yff, H yff ho•t o 111u11tia11 co11cer11i119 11ro1h1ct1 or 11nict1 rendortll lo you, pl1•1• c•ll our Oirtctor of Co11- 1urner A.Hai", Mr. S. AN1llio11(2ll)170-1737-or 391 -1281. If •• 1hould 1111 o•I of your '1i11, o "Ra i11 Check'' will '" i11u1d 011•ri119 o loler lle- liwirr, •I tht odwffti1td ,,1ce. DOUBL ACTION llZI fnl °'10113 6.son 3 D70/14 6.95n4 E70/14 7.35 4 F70/14 7.75 4 878/14 878/13 7.35/14 E78/14 7.75/14 F78/14 f .LT 1.77 8.25/14 G78/l 4 II f"5·10j 2.0 8.25/15 G78/1 s II f1\·J>i 2.22 -·8;55f14--H78/ 14-il.f..'JL:Jj "-40 8.55/15 H78/1 S ii f.1\·112.43 , 'WMITIWAUS Sl.N llTIA. • • ONLY 1st QUALITY TIRES/ I SHOCKS ·::· 49s SMOOTHIE CHROME WHEELS HEAVY DUTY SUSPENSION SERVICE LOW ••II .. • • • "'lt:tt:::r 2f $35!.~. . I • S0,000 MIU, S. YU.I · P010QUNCI PIG. $34~~rs 1. Wltln AllGllMllT POUCY S.Y Ul,H,oMMkU 2. MIAYY Dun nt 100 IVSIHMGS 3. 4 WNllL COIL SPllM' STAlllD.llS 4. llAkl ADJUSTMf•T """"ll •~ oa·1~•t..,,.,.,. !.'1:~11lr~rt:.~'!:: -· , 1. l•1hll -HMtll u.1 .. I• 1111••··· . t. 1.-.114 ell 4 wllMI crtl .... I. ..,.k ,.,... ...-ttt ~· .. ,_ ... _,,,..•It • .._ s ....... ft.tit I'-.. '"""' '""''....,. .... .... ... ....-. ..... ... '·Arc tffir4'" ....... .... L...,..t*""tt!'WM ... lt t. ''" ~---t.r Nit .t ..... , .......... 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WHITE PORTABLE TY • 11--lneh plctul'lll ,,,.....,.. •diagonally • Wel;hs 15 lbl. 10 or • • O~!es d"r\AC or DC (Wl1~ opUOnll loilt~ • &olld atatt rellab\llly • Et~ eetry hind I• J9r pona~Ub' 8(llQ; . ~..., .... \' ~•1.aV1s~ • A~l.tAN'Clt COSTA MISA )11 rtrs;, 01ly .n .59t. '"' &L TORO ·- rt fON' Rtl, et 'n· IMtit to $ft ... ) D11ll 9.9 Sot. t•t r IE,t. AND!RSON, Editor "~Y• .._,_..,. 6, lf1' P•t• n Clint Hoose con- 9 ratul,11tes his wife Pat aft~r a 1uccess- ful workout with her horse .Snip. She i• preparing for Forum Hone Show. , I . ~ . . -~ ..... •~··;t A Winning I' Ei:clusi\'C to the Daily Pilot Last year Pat Hoose entered the City or Hope Forum International Horst Show ·wit h a leased horse and y:on tY.'O ribbons, a third and a filth place, and this year she is planning on entering with her own championship horse, Snip. This is a triumph for the Newport Beach resident. whose husband Clint had at one time declared he would never buy any horses. though he is vice president or California Equestrians. Inc .• producei-s of the show. and chairman of the Oct. J.7 show. Pat began her OC\V career with a women's riding class on Wednesday mornings at Cota de Caza with George Texeira as her instructor. As more and more class members left to pla y tennis. she soon was the only pupil . The M. Keilh Gaedes and Bill Hadleys. friends of the Hooses. encouraged her to keep riding and start showing hoi'ses. so DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY PAtRICK O'DONNELL Nutty P~opl,e Ignore Advice • DEAR ANN LANDERS: During the past n,ve yean I have overcome alcoholism, mental illness. obesity and the Ion of lwo be1utilul young children. Tlis was done "''ilh the help of a com- poi31onate and com~tant psychiatrist. '4•..t~ • •• J Jt mUes me furiou s ~hefi l hear peo-k pie say-psfchiatry Is a racket that it 'Int ii no fool. Furthermore, I respect her dots no goOd. Then the detractci-. go 00 integrity. Pl~ase c~k. the story out and endlessly about a relaUve or friend who let ~ ~w 11 theres anythfng to .. lt. •nt a too of money and put in hundreds This friend and I wt:re attending ~e cJ 'hours with a head'doctor and "they fWJeral of a cc;worter. Jmmedfutely are still crazy." ] get angrier still when alter, the graveside services, the funeral tliey ttll me pe1ty g°"IP abi>uf iome nut-~!rector took the '~ 'bl the widow and ty •shrlnt and proceed to downarade the Jed ~ •wo.v from tllli open grave and entire prolesslon. . .helptll her mto a waiting cai<. .• . • I ...,· truthlully sat I( It weren't for The other members of the family u psjchlatric help I would hive kjUed well al fri~ were aa~ed. lo leave the mylel{ with a guJJ« ligla bottle. ~ I 'la• told this " ~ of an ~ mo utflll( )IOOr reader& to get "11 1 mcane:it~. (made legal by a city pr+r.sstonal. help· ev<ri thouih 90me pe<>-ordioanoef ..,....., the funeral people pie tlilJilt ~ a::.1 copping <Jit. Actually, and the Detroit city orliclals. you gave me that advice several' years lt enables lhe mortldan to switch the l4W and r wish I hadn 't waited 91> long to . body fr.om the expensive casket to a taie il 111 .. you and my doc; Mn. -plain pme box so that the expensive dJPINQ NOW ' casket can be "sold" again. -=C.N.: Tlla•l<I for. Ille day Pleaae check this oot.and let me know • 11111 ... , bo tto Mr.i oo Ille the tnlth. -CAN'T SLEEP AT NIGHT , ~y tio.ta•t w~ for . DEAR CS.A.N.: Jules Furth, a .,~, ui .. e ptycblatrl1ta ARE Cltlcap fwr.al dlrec&or, wared me ~ Jiit • "• trabert, llwytn, that tbe 8'of')' you Hird · 11 noue.ase. ...... ,.. drivers aid 111~1• no city ord.iJIUCM! ln -De&rolt (tr .,., o " -· uyptace e1 .. 1 that pritdbttt faqilly or Al If bel•I belay lrlndt !nm wat<blag Ille entire burial 1.wtd'on' .:11111-le ..... -gt. ~ l11t•1e• . , and f I· "Body switching" 11 u old-time ghoul f11i --; -· , bid odd•. A . yarn. It bas been done by ptycbopaths ~ pert of tlHt treatmeot , I• being from ti.me to ilD'!J, but, a funeral dlre<!tor ~ -h tt ,.1 tile rl1ht tbet1ptft ou who would.~ oaCti a h~• tblog would .... flr'll try, Dlllereal folk• need dlf· be promptly drummed out of the pr~ fsbl.,.W., ~le•ltn-_ ~ ' I FllRti uld HY r1mlly tiii Ukl lo .... DEAR ANN LANDERS : Today r h<ar'd mif1 hf Ille 1ravt1lde to ,... Ille casket a t&Or)' ao morbid and tick I can't get lt litWereil lllte Ule ·p-ave 1ed covered com· eUt GI my ~ The peraoo who told pltftl1 ,.id IOI be delied !lie IO<juest. • ' "' ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS : You could have done better Y.1ith your answer to the young man wbo was upset because he had been apprehended for swiping some small items from ·a store. People who commit misdemeangrs (and in some cases. felonies) can get their rerords legally cleared so rurure employers will be unable to uncover detrimental in- formation. Mercifully, our system is oomtructed in such a way tbal individuals who straighten up and become good citizens are not plagued forever by past mistakes . Please let Lbose ooe-time shoplillers and pot offenders (NOT pu.shers) know U>ere's a way of getUng their records cleared in some in- stances.-S.F. LAWYER De•r Law)·er: Tbub for a useful let~ ter. By th WlJ, 4ots SF stand for San f'ranc.IS<:O-Or Store Front? '· . ---CONFIDENTIAL TO THE WHEEL THAT SQUEAKS GETS THE GREASE: It's also the first to be replaced1 lnsH.~d of complaining, 1fY to Improve Ille situa· tlon. A lot needs to be done In thot organization and YOU can do plenty. Don't Ounk )'O;Ul cbeJDlstry tell. Love I• more than one ,.~of .glands ealllag to another. tf yOo Nve trouble makln1· 1 dl~tl ctlon 100 • Ana's boottet.J "Love_ OI' x and llow to Ttll &be Dlfftraet." Se d a ·~ng, telf·addrested, envt'°J»e w h your requetf aid 35 C.litt Iii celi It ll1e Dally Plitt. she began Y.'orking hard to qualify for last year's Forum shoY.'. She OO"'-' rides Snip three ti mes a \\"eek to train him for 1the Forum show and others such as the Del i\1ar show \\'her e they y.·on the amateur stock horse cham- pionship. She and Snip make a colorful pair against the brown hills of the r-.'ission Viejo Riding Stables \l'here they "·ork out. Her pink shirt. maroon fringed chaps and while Westem hnt are contrasted 1vith Snip's striped saddle blanket and tooled saddle, and hi s t u r q u o i s e - ornamented bridle matches the turquoise hat band and turquoise belt buckle 1\"orn by Pat. The premium list for the benefit show is the "finest offered in t h e state of California." Hoose sa id . Included are more than $80.000 prize money . trophies and ribbons. The traditional exhibitors' y.·c!coming party \\'ill take place Oct . 2 in the new ' - ' r "' • •• Pair PSA Hotel. across from the Forum. PaL \Varming up her hor s c , demonstrated the typical demaDds on a stock show horse. In putting him through a series of figure eig hts. sbe explained that "thls is important as it gives the horse pr'actice in changing leads." He also_111iil be called upon for straight ~ runs dou·n 1he ring. which end in a fast sliding stop. and spinning turn.s to the right and left. "The horse a n d rider must form a perfect team." she added. "3nd the horse responds quickly to the wishes of ~ rider. Show horses arc high.strung and must be worked but can't be worked too much. They get excited and hlgh." No11•, all' \VOrk points to the Fon1m shcu', which Pat said draws "the leading horses in the state. It is the most im- portant show because it gives the biggest pri ze money and is now referred to as Madison Square Garden-\Vest. .. * f . • ' • .... .. . . . I ' l " - • . . • J8 llAILV Pllv , frldA1~Sfp1'°mbl'r 1 19fl ------- Customers Conditioned to Clothing Costs . • • By LAURIE KASPER ot ,... 0.111 l"lttt St•ll ~ Orange Coast area shopkeepers report t;Bt sales have slipped during the last •o mooths. . .a time when back to ailool and the new ran fashions normally '!'Ork 1 peak sales period. , Yet none conalder the downward trend ~nnlng. On the contrary, they're ~ding to an optimistic outlook on lplness. :Nick 'O'Malley, of Jean Dahl's in 1Jestcllff Plaza, suggested some buyers ~ staying away from stores because " "a little bit of insecurity due to a 1'bole lot of factor:!." ,"Everything's coming at once," ex- dained Rick Lodwick , sales and merchandising manager for ..J_ C. Pen- ney, Newport Beach. In addition to the rising retail prices, he and others noted rising <mts of food and gasoline. in· flallon, increased Interest r a t e s , \fatergate and publicized pessimism. ScARED CONSUMER The con.swner is "ju.st scared right now," he ei:plained. "People have to re- adjust themselve.s." • It ls both a• confusing and critical lime cautious of "some of the "Titlngs on the for the retailer and consun1cr alike, ac· wall" and la critical of "the lack of what cording 1,0 Jack Kvser. ~Jl economic ad-I call government leadership at • Ume visor \vith United Califot'me Blink . when we desperately need it." Denying talk of recession, he said Yet he, too, agrees the consumer will "everybody" thinks the country is racing continue buying even with rising prices. a rt>play of J!l67's rolling re-adjustment. He asked a group or store buyer!, who "Things weren't l he best but they were In Los Angeles recently to order weren't the worst either," he explained . holiday and cruise wear, "If we're not He predicted the economy would begin enthus~stic, who's going to be?" picking up 'In !he first part of the new Describing retailers a! "the closest year when social security benefits in· thing to show business there is," he said crease and income tax refunds are · 'that if they don't demonstrate their belief returned. in something then people won't buy it. California . aided by increased defense But also, the consultant emphasized, spending , le\'eling off of the aerospace In-"the word condition applles" In the retaU dustry and tourism , would outperform business. the nat ion. I~ said. There was a wave of boycottlng meat Jerry Findley, also an economist. in the spring and a "Buy Nothing Day" believes people are in a buying mood during the summer but soon after, he right no.,.,·, especially for the larger pointed oot, "We were aH conditioned to items, as automobiles y,·hich may not those prices and it didn't make any dif- have yet been raised in price. ference to us, did it?" CONTINUE BUYING "They're going to gripe and groan and moan and everything else," he said , "but they're not going to slop buying." Clair L. Fehler, a business manage- ment consultant, admits to being COMPARATIVE COSTS He noted that a moderately priced dress which used to cost $20 Is now ac- cepted as costing $50 to $60. One area shopowner noted that last year in her store a pair of pants cost $15 to $16. This year's new styles average $18 w $20. Another said he has pant& he can remember selling for S2J now tagged al $10. And wholesale prices on fashions presented in a show for the buyers ai> peared to match the retail tags hung on similar items just a few years ago. Although fewef people are going into the stores and, of those who are, more seem to be "just looking," one storfl manager said, "People who e.re buying at all don't seem to mind the prices." Others note that their customers are showing more discretion and discrimina· tlon in their buying. Lodwick said customers are not walk· Ing in >nd spending $200 to $300 for their family 's school clothes as they have 1n the past. They're only buying the needed items, he exple.ined, and instead of buying two or three sweaters, they'll make do with just one. SALES WATCIDNG "Sales today are much more com· petitive than they were five years ago ," O'Malley said. Larger stores in Fashion Island and South Coas t Plaza have made this so, he explained. 1be public, according to ~ Iarussi, a buyer with the Broadway, i-' constantly waiting for sales. Frorq her viewpoint, they serve as a way ol'briniing people Into a store and giving them a reason tor buying. In ad· ditioo· to the sale Items, she explained, CU!tmners are also· drawn to the regular- ly prtced it.e~. But ooe of the store managers believes thal people going I<> a sale are looking more for a bargain than ». particular i'tem. ·" Jn line with this, Findley predicts thal more discount clothing stores, which of- fer first line products al haU the price, wlll he popping up. This, he said, will place pressure oo the small shop owner. But the area's growth and progress has 'at least as much to do wllh lhis as rising prices. In 1950, he pointed out. a small dress shop bi Costa Mesa had a captive m~et because1 people weren 't willing to <hive even to' Santa Ana. Today, however, there are more stores in close. competition and customers 'will drive a number of miles to get the item they want at the price they want to pay. But some Qf these smaner store& feel they have somcthi11g other than prices working in their rnvor. , Mike R•ynolds. president of the Red Balloon Ltd., ""Id prices aren~ in- creasing as much in llne quality children's wear as with lower and medium quality. ,\!though he said h~ swre 11 t.ldnc less or a profit now, he £eels the loot II* his is a specialty store Is benefidal for business. l:le explained, "I think our customers in general are pe<ll')le who look for. quality things in terms of a look and faahkln ap- proach for children and I don't think they'll stop buying for rising prices." O'Malley believes his customers come there because it Is a specialty store also. They oome, he explained, becau.te they know the store offers on1y a few of the same items. And their service, he added, is "fifty percent of what we sell." "'I think business is good," Reynolds said. "I lhink business will continue to be good for people woo stand f o r something." And that something he's betting M, be explained, is quality and service. Your Horoscope Tomorrow :~Honored :j Twice ! : A double salute was : : given Mr. and Mrs. : ; John H. Stoff when -: they were feted by the · Friday Bridge Group of the Harbor Senior Citizens Club. The nine- year residents of New· port Beach were hon- ored for their 60th wed- : ding anniversa ry and : bid hon voyage to their · new home in Moose : Haven, Fla. The Stoffs, ; who were married in : Dayton, Ohio, have 5 : children, 17 grandchil- : dren and 7 great-grand· . . children. . In Summer Rites Sagittari.us: R'elations Harmonious SATURDAY SEPTEMBER B By SYDNEY OMARR Gemini and Aquarius can dominate the telephone in any -'Trousehold. These p e r s o n s seem to enjoy long con· versa.lions via telephone. In person, Aquarius can be abrupt. Gemini can .be too restless to engage in a long, measured discussion -except on the telephone. I frankly am puzzled by this observation and would be interested in hearing from you. Does this as tro logic a I telephone aphorism hold up in your home? Let me ltnow! ARIES (l\farch 21-April 191: deal successfully with prcr goal. Family m e m b e r fess ion al superiors. Those in becomes valuable ally . positions of aulhority give you VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: green light. Be confident. Underplay statements. l\.1ain- Elevate sel£-esteen1. \'ou have tain low-key approach. Those right to great expectations. who mean most to you y,·ill be working quietly, a v o i d i n g GEl\flNI (May 21-June 20 l: sensational claims. Some Journeys, correspondence, others may make outlandish ability to communicate to boasts. Stick to factual in- many persons -these arc formation. Improve relations highlighted. You leam and with those who work with teach. You reach m ore you. persons In different Scoplaeesk, LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Aquarlm, Leo and rp Your person a I magnetism persons could be involved. soars. Persons with ideas and Gain s~'l1 through reading, creative resources are drawn writing. into your sphere. You get CANCER (June 21 -July 22 ): backing and recognition. Jn You are able now to diJ!: deep personal area, there is more and strike pay dirt . Truth that satisfa ction. Love b I o o ms . had been evasive will surface. ~1 o n e y p i c t u r e i s Money is likely to be involved. brighter. could figure prominently. SAGmARIUS (Nov . 22- Dec. 21): Accent on more harmonious relationships with neighbors, relatives. Short trips. visits are featured. Keep appointments. Check calls, mes.sages. New, more In- dependent approach may he required. Articulate thoughts and ideas. at right plare at right time. Strive for independence of thought, action . l\.1ake new starts, contacts. E i: pa n d horllons. Don't limit your..U. Refuse lo dwell on put. PISCES (Feb. l9-March 20), News which had been delayed is forthcoming -you are able lo remove doubts, fears. Greater inner peace is ln- CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. dlcaled. AqaarlUI, Leo llld 19)' Whal had been mi5'ing Is Sco!:plo lodlvtduals could ploy likely to be recovered. You ob-key roles. You have 8CC8I to lain what you need. Don't ..U lnlonnalton which bad - p-oduct -or youneU -withheld. short. Decision made behind ' scenes favorably affects you. Know It llld slop worTYinll· li•••-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-t Proceed with confidence. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 18): Ci.rcumstances work in your favor. You art able to be You make definite gains. s c o R p 1 o (Oct. 23- Check investment potential. Nov .21 l : What you posse ss is Include mate or business · · I y 1---------- apt to mcrease 1n va ue. ou UffELL' partner in plans. are now able to make far· Couples Exchange Vows Accent on fufilhnent of wish, successful professional en· deavors. You will be p\eas~d by turn of events. Family member springs surprise of pleasant variety. Move ahead with confidence.. Accept social invitation. You make c0ntacts now which are meaningful. TAURUS (April 20-May 20), Good news indicated In career or ambition area. You can LEO (July 23-Aug. 221' Ac-reaching plans. You can con-UPH""' .,_•y cent is on cooperative efforts. elude transaction. You deal v..1 .. You gain allic:; among those from position of gr ea t er .._ '• W• who previously were in oppsite strength. Ariel, Ubra per51>ns 19221::.!:' ..._ comer. Moves aimed against c.-. .._ _ l4lotllt DAl\.Y IN MOH. • THUii. lH ,._Ill Piia, 17111 ... - Newport h1cb,Callfomla'2660 you boomerang in your favor.I r:~;;;;~~:;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;::~:=~:~=~;;==~~~~, FLYNN-RAN GEL ~·· :· ' • >f,,if! _j ; Blessed Sacrament Calholic i _ , • . Church, Westminster was the ''\-,; setting for the 1narriage of "' , " Paulette Rangel and Timothy N D. Flynn. Their parents are the Roy R. Rangels of Huntington Beach and the Robert Flynns · of Westminster. Attendants were C y n d e e ; Hall, Cindy Flynn, the Mmes. , Al Collier and Frank MeJll. 'brila, Mr. and Mrs. John ; Svoboda , Tiffany Hall, Mick ;'Flynn, Les Heil , Tom Sesulka, • Steve Agondo and Jeffrey :Rangel. :-The newlywed's are •'graduates of Fountain Va1ley :•High School and now attend : Golden West College. DoGEU S-MEAGER . ' ' Margaret Louise Meager : became the bride of Anton 1 Jacob DeGeus Jr. during dou· : ble ring rites performed by ~ the Rev. Samuel Hall in ~ Swansoo Park, Emerald Bay. Parents of the bridal couple , are the Norman A. Meagers of . Emerald Bay and Mr. and !-Mrs. Anton J. DeGeus o{ San· ~ta Maria .. - MRS. LYNN Knight· exchanged . n u p t i a 1 vows and rings before 1the Rev. Joe Palucei during a garden ceremony a t t h e Newporter IM. The bride, daughter or the Henry O'Sheas of Santa Ana Heights, is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School Language Revived MRS. DeGEUS and attended Orange Coast College, California St a t e University , San Diego and Cal Poly. San Lui s Obispo. Her husband is the son of the Douglas Knights 0 r Reseda . He also attended Cal Poly and Pier~ J u n i o r College. Attendants were Sarah Van Uden, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dahl. Peggy O'Shea, Marylou Jacobs, Tracey Dahl, Scott Crawford. Eric Floreen, Alan Rosario and Jerry Potter. Be aware and proceed toward DaiDJj P~t~~ *...\';i"'~ ................. ~,.,., ...... ~~ To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their \\•edding llories witb black and while glossy photo- graphs to tbe DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before tbe wedding. Pictures received alter that time will not be used. ' For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accOmpanied by a bla.r.k and white glossy picture, be sub- tnltted six weeks or more before the wedding date; otberwise it will not be published. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT of!ices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staf! members at 642-4321. : Honor attendants were Grel· "chen Weed and Leonard ! Deaton. Others were Midge ; Meager. Patti Fitzpatrick, ~ Shanon Carrell, Jan Norris, ! Melanie Knoth. Kent, John : and Tim Meager and Doug, : Les and Dennis DeGeus. The University of California I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~=--11 at Berkeley is helping revivell nearly forgotten languages of native Americans. • 'Ibe bride, a senior at ~UCLA, ls a member of Kappa ' Alpha Theta, was tapped for Mortar Board and Is a song • girl. Her OOsband is a UCLA graduate where he aff iliated ; wtth Sigma Alpha Epsilon. : was a Blue Key member and ! pltyed varsity water polo and , wu on the national team for : two years. • • . • • ' KNIGHT .O'SHEA Mar)' O'Shea and H. Spencer The university's linguistics department reports it's done significant work on about 75 percent or th e more than 100 different California languages, plus a smattering of other languages from throughout We.1tem America. Some students worklng on ancestral languages are trying to preserve the Yuki tongue through its last k n o w n speaker wbo ls 90 years old . Se• II JEREMIAH" Hie ftill ,,. •• MINIATUll HOISi '11. ••II h t. 111 e1r lteN FISH SPECIAL M•llY l••lt•re S,..J.t1: '"••rl••· filllel, s.,u... c ...... A9ll kw. We Buy lllrch. Fllh end Animals Give U1 A Cell !ti FREE PUPPIES and KmENS For A Career ••• NOT JUST A JOB BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE" Become a Aledical or Chnlal Assiit.olll in 4 or 7 wWrstAi. .......... . ..... NIW CLASllS STAITINO LWjut1 DAYS and EVENINGS, Sept. 17 ..................... 623 w .... , __ ......... . 17th, SANTA ANA 541-4461 vnlaAN'S lfNEflTS AVAii.Ail! PARENTS WHO C.ARE •.. Look to Intern ational Montessori Schools LET YOU R CH ILD DISCOVER LEARNING CAN BE FUN Lile Jong habits are formed early ... be sure a love of learning Is one of them Absorbing adventures Into l,llUSlc, art, science and lhe fa scinating world of nature THIS IS MONTESSORI Phone todav for ll\1MEDIATE ENROLLMENT NEWPOR'r B·EACH (714) 979 • 9241 20221 CYPRESS ST. • Paris By ALINE MOSBY Paris !UPIJ -The outcry Jn the United States about hi gh food prices brought yawns and sad smiles from two American housewives who have recently moved to Paris. Mrs. Edward Casazza, fresh from Poughkeepsie, N.Y., was shocked on her first visit to the food shop in a prosperous section near the Eiffel Tower. "I am overwhelmed to see the priees hei-e,''"" said Mrs. Casazza, wife of an executive America ns in Paris Mrs. Edward Casatta (left) and Mrs. William Stieff and Ruth find prices there shocking. Coast Clubs Stepping Up Pace Fuchsia hlcmbers or the Costa i\1 csa· Bay Cities Branch of the Na- tional 1''uchsiu Society will gather Monday. Sept. 10, for a potluck luau at the Paul Brecht Orchid Co., Co~1a Mesa. al 6:30 p.111 . \vith a business meeting to fol101v . Diab etics 1-:xpandcd t'ducation f o r Orange County diabetics is planned by the D i abet e s Assocjation of Sou the r n California. The first fa 11 education meeting is set for \Vedncsday. Sept. 12. in St. Joseph's llospital. Orange. ~a.n1. In the 01'anae home of l\'lrs. Orville V. Pau l. Speake r Author and lecturer Corrie h;n Uoon1 will speak \Ved· nesday. Sept. 12. at 7:30 p.m. in St. Andre1v·s Presb.l'teria11 Church. Nc v•port Beach. She has 11-ritt en sel'eral book s in- cluding ··The Hiding Place.·· Toastmistress Poise and confidence v.·il\ theme the \Vedncsday. Sept. 12, meeting of the Las Olas Toastmis!ress Club at 7:30 p.m. in the l\lercury Savings and Loan bulding. Huntington Beach. on dining, will present the pro- grani. lie has served as restaurant critic for nl.'\\"Spa,pcrs. magazines national airlines. Literacy and Cl;isscs to train volunteers to teach English as a second language will begin Wed· ncsday, Sept. 12 , from 9 a.nt. to noon in the Dana Poln t Community House, Dana Point and Tuesday, Sept. 11, at 7 p.m. in the capistrano area. p.m. in the Republic Federal Savings and Loan, Santa Ana. Fashion Guild The Newport Beach Fashion Guild will plan fall programs \Vednesday, Sept. 12, at 7:30 · p.nl. in the home of Mrs. l.W. Sturgis. president. Members, who are pro- fessional models and others employed in the fashion in- dustry, hear speakers on related topics and o f f e r fashion shows for o th e r groups. Clipped Wings ·-.-;.~1 •• '!.·~ • ' I ,• ! ', ., I '• j • 1 I ', •, i • '' Frida~. Set)temb~r 7, 1973 Frankly at International Bus 1 n es s Machines. "HO"' do f'rench people with large families manage?" Another new arrival. Mrs . \Villiam Stieff, wife of an American joumalisl, fell the Ii', · 1, ,,....,. same way about prices in k stores in her middle -class ~,- neighborhood. ''American women think ~ their supermarket prices are - high." she said. ';\Vould they -~ get a shock if they could sec "" the prices in Paris." ;,' lli.\~f41WQ1.i Thousands o( Americans !iv-• ing in Paris pay prices for t,\'" most food and household items ~ that arc as high or higher than '1li~•l!ll!ll prices for similar goods in the fl United States. There are some exceptions, but not many. "'Fruits and vegetables ap- pear to me about the same. or even cheaper in Paris," said Mrs. Casazza. She said lettuce selling here for the equivalent of 32 cents a head sold for 69 cents in Poughkeepsie. "But n1eat, butter, eggs, canned and frozen foods, maintenance items such as soap powder, paper towels - they 'l'e higher." She pointed to a cheese and butter shop and said. ;'The medium grade butter in tltis shop is the equivalent of 92 cents a half pound . The last time I shopped in the States, butter was 89 cents for an en- tire pound." Foreigners living in Paris, however, agree that the food is better in France than in the United Stat~, particularly fruits and vegetables. Butter in France is one of the world's delicacies. Mrs. Casazza bought top quality roast beef for the equivalent of $3.29 a pol¥\d and sighed, "Three weeks ago in Poughkeepsie I paid for top beef $2 to $2.25 a pound." She said she found little cans of tomato paste for the equivalent of 67 cents in Paris. but back home she paid 10 to 12 cents. l\1rs. Stieff, touring her open air market near the Place de La Bastille in east Paris, 75 cents a dozen when she left \Vashington. A 49-ounce package of laun- dry soap sells for 85 cents back home but is t h e equivalent of $3.70 in Paris, the women noted. The sessior \\"ill deal \Vtth juvenile diabetes. Speaker wilt be Dr. Merl Carron, diabetes speciillist at Ch i Id r c n ' s Hospital of Orange County. Topicmistress \Viii be J\trs. All former United Air Lines · gasped at the price of fish , in- Many prices are higher for Americans because of dollar devaluations . but even not counting t h e devaluations most items would cost more in Paris than in the United States. DAILY PILOf J High Aux iliary Thonu1s \Voodall. ~lrs. Vchn::i Bolin will n1odcra1 e a panel consisting of the Mn'les. Kcn- nl:'th Page, Lt-ah H.eed , Calvin Olcott and Jane Brun(' Riviera Club The classes. sponsored by the South Coast Literacy Council. will be taught by Mrs . Onalee Carter. former remedial reading and physical education teacher in Los Angeles schools. further in- fornuition is available from f\.1rs. Carter al 497-1138 or (:erri \Vilbrecht, 4gi.ai69. stewardesses living in the eluding sole selling at the Orange County area have been equivalent of $3.63 a pound. invited to the Thursday, Sept. ··B.ack in our ... \Vashington 13, meeting of the ne,vly for1n· su burb of Chevy Chase I never ed Orange County Chapter of paid mbre than $2 a pound for Clipped Wings. Mrs. Jim any fish except lobster," she Preston, Mission Viejo, has said. The lower price f o r devaluated American importsJm;---------------------"ii does not appear to have been passed on to the Paris con-A talk on interior decorating and wall coverings will be presented by Sheila Wolfron &t the Wednesday, Sept. I!, meeting of the Orange County Section of the Won1t!n's Aux· iliary to the American Society of ~1echanical Engineers. The group ~·ill meet .it I I A wine-t.asling party v.'ill precede the 12:30 p.m. lunch- eon for ruembers of t he Riviera Club in the Balboa Bay Club, Newport Beach, Wednesday, Sept. 12. Elrner Dills. author 0£ "101 Nighls in California.•· a book further information. "Flowers are much cheaper here. But bacon 'here rosts CARIH Joel Rapp. of the Mother Earth plant boutique in Los Angeles, will present the pro- gram for the Wednesday, Sept. 12, meeting of CARIH at 8 p.m. in the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Martin Lockney . Thursday Club Thursday Morning Club of Newport Beach will open the new club year Thursday, Sept 13, with its annual Friendship Tea in the Bahia Comithian Yacht Club. Fashions will be modeled b\• the Mannequin section and representatives o f philan· about $3.41 a pound, four to five tinl'es what I paid at the supermarket back home. "Round steak is about $2.50 a pound here compared to $1.39 in Washington." Chicken Is around twice the price in Paris as in the United States. Mrs. Stieff bought six eggs for 62 cenlS, compared to The t!Vent will mark the beginning of the n1cmbcrship drive for the Chil dren 's ~1hma Research In stitute and Hospital. thropies aided by the club will ----~ attend. Twins' Moms Hospital Guild Orange Coast Mothers of \V e s !minster C.OmmWlity Twins will gather at Knott 's Hospital Guild is seeking new Berry farm, Buena Park, for members to meet the needs of their regular dinner meeting new hospital expansion. A Wednesday, Sept. 12. membership tea is planned fGr Guest speaker v.•ill be Nancy Thursday, Sept. 13, at 10 a.m Noble. a preschool te.'l.chcr . in the conference c.enter. who will discuss behavior of Membership is open to preschool children and young _ v.·omcn 18 and older with free children. \in1e to give. A film oo hospital duties will be screen· sumer. Expatriate peanut butter fanciers still pay t h e equivalent of $L 10 for a small jar lind a quart of that Florida orange juice still is 87 cents in Paris. "And who can drive to the supermarke~ V.'hen gasoline costs $1.25 a gallon in Paris?'' asked Mrs. Stieff. ,, ~ Wallabee Look 30 FA~HlON ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH 644-2464 ~ TD . The Shoe That Can Take It. OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12·5 Caucus ed. Cathy O'Neill. who teaches at the Center for Urban Af· Pi Beta Phi • CARP.ETS •DRAPES• LINOLEUM• WALLPAPER•·~~~; SHADES Fran Smith Elaine Turnbull Calling, All P-T Units fairs at use and is a member of the Community Relations Conference of Sou th e r n California \viii speak at the Tbursday, Sept. 13, meeting Gf the Orange County Chapter of the National Political Women's Caucus. A fashion showing and con· vention reports are on the agenda for the Thursday, Sept. 13, meeting of the South Coast Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. They will n1eet at 10 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Richard Elliott. Workshops Conducted The group will 1neet at 7:30 Press c hairn1en tu1d presidents of all Orange Coast parcnt-teacht.'r organizations are invited to workshops, to be presented by tht.' Daily Pilot. news of the w1ils in this area for the Daily Pilot. -;;;...;;;...-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.J In \Vest Orange County, Dai-r Iv Pilot colu1n11 ist Elai ne Turnbull will discuss do's and dont 's for representatives of units in thal~rea. I Procedures wlll be outlined for representatives in the Newport-Costa Mesa a n d South Orange County areas at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept II. in St. John the Baptist Catholic School, IO'll Baker St.. Costa Mesa. Conducting the session will be Frnn Smith, who· cornpiles The meeting ""ill begin at. I p.n1 ., Wednesday, ,Sept. 12, 111 Peck's f'flm ily Terrace Roon1, \Vest.minster. Jt cser v,ation s nrc not necessary, and registration 1 will be tnk,en at the door at both sessions. · PARKING LOT ABT SHOW ' . \ i". r ~ SEPTEMBER 8-9 10 A.M. • 5 P.M. 17211 Brookhurst ~""'"" Wtrn., .. il•IM" Fou'!faln Nalley 961-9330 WOMAN1S nn n ~ rvv7 VARIED INTEREST EDUCATIONAL WORKSHOP Vo UoL.5oUUo AND· MIN TOOi 48 VERY CREATIVE CLASSES INCLUDING: Belly Dancing Ch ina Painling Exercise Ceramics French & Sponish Literature Stock Market Wood Carving REGISTRATION SEPTEMBER 5th thrv 28th CLASSES BEGIN OCTOBER 1 ii CAU fOI llOCHUU 548-2281 WOMAN 'S VIEW 321 No. New,.rt louleyard, Newpart IMdi \ • • • • ZO DAILV PILOT Friday, Stpttmbtr 7, IQ73 Rams Get Final Test ' Against 49ers Tonight LOS ANGELES (AP) -The San Fran· cisco 49ers invade the home of traditional rival Los Angeles at 8 tonight for their 22nd preseason National Football ~ague meeUng with the invaders in the role as favorites. The game will be broadcast over radio station KMPC (710). Still, a week ago, the Rams under new coach Chuck Knox turned in their first 19'13 victory with a 30-17 verWct over San Diego \\•hen the 49ers were up-ended by Oakland 23·17. So far, t.he 49ers are 4-2 in the pre- season, the most victories in the ex· hibition circuit since Dick Nolan took over as coach in 1968. The Rams, in the inaugural year of Chuck Knox , are 1-3-1 and hoping to wind up tbe pre-season with a victory over their traditional foe. Overall, the Rams have a 15-6 edge in the series. Seve1ith Straiglit Loss Sick Bats Blamed For Dqdgers Skid LOS ANGELES (AP) -The first thing • someone asked Los Angeles manager Walter Alston after Thursday night's J..2 loss to San Diego -the sl umping Dodgers' seventh straight defeat -was about all the injuries on the c1ub. "Yes, we have some injuries,'' Alston said, "But our main problem is our s.ick bats." 1be Dodgers were restricted to just Dodgers Slate All 0-... IC': ('40 S1pl. 7 Sin Olewo ., LOI Ar.g.elri Sep!. I San Diego al LOI Angllll Sept. ' San 0119') 11 Los A11t1t!11 Sept. 11 LOI Ang11tt 111 Cincinnati StPI. 12 LOI A1111tln al CJnclonttl 7:55 p.m. •:55 p.m. l :SS p.m. J p.m. 5 p.m. three singles by the Padres' rookie lefthander Randy Jones, 5-4, until the seventh Inning when they scored twice - with help of two San Diego errors. It snapped a string of 15 scoreless 1n· oings for the punchless Dodgers. Until then they'd managed just one run in 28 prevtous innings. "We're having thei same problems," Alston said. "We're just not getting the Benches Empty In Angels Tilt; ' A's Win, 64 The Oakland A's and the Galifomia Angels gave a fairly good imitation of the Los Angel es Dodgers and San Francisco Giants Thursday night al Anaheim Stadium. They were at each olher1s throats. dur- ing the A's IH victory. Not reno"'" as the y,·orld"s greatest rivals, Oakland and California tried to stir things up--or at least Mike Epstein tried. Epstein, who was in the A's employ A119els Slate •H 0-ffl kMl"C 11lll 51pt. 7 C1llfornl1 11 Kanw• (Uy 5"11. I Call!crnla ti Ka"'" City !tip!. t Ct !llornl• " 1Can1a1 Clly 121 Slpt. 10 CnlcAOO 11 Calltornl• 5.1S p.m. 11 :75 t .m. 11 :15 1.m. 7:55 p.m. last year and who now perfor ms for the Angels, triggered an eight-inning bench· emptying incident at Anaheim Stadium when he made a neckhigh tag on Bill North of Oakland. No blows "'ere struck but that was only because Reggie Jackson of the A's alertly leaped on Epstein from behind, embracing him in a bear-hug and preven· ting the hulking Angel from ge tting at North. "I was just protecting my pitctier," pleaded Epstein. Vida Blue won his 16th game and ex- paoded the A's lead in lhe American League \\'est to SVz games over idle Kansas City. "North bunted because he y,·anted to get at our pitcher (Dick Lange) who had bruShed hi:~~ back." Epstein said. "t heard him holler at Lange 'Pick up that ball and I'll nail you.' Hight there I said to myself let me have the ball and I'll handle it." Epstein fielded the bt11l and rammed hJs glove hard into Nonh 's nc:ck. 1be impact was so solid that it caused the ball to fall out of Epstein·s glove. "We all get brushed back ... It's part of the game,'' Epstein said. "There was no excuse for what North dld." North, who already ha s been involved in fights with Doug Bird an d Kurt Bc\•ac- qua of Kansas City this year. announced wisely: "I'll fight ... You knov• that. But not Epstein. He's too big." hit at the right time. We had chances to win it but just didn't." The Padres committed four errors but the Dodgers failed to take advantage, leaving 11 runners stranded including the bases loaded in the first. Don Sutton made his first start in near· ly two weeks and reported after his sev- enth inning that his troublesome shoulder felt fine . "There was no pain ," he said. "I threw easy in the first inning, then let it out ' after that ." But the Padres got a run in the seCTJnd and two more in the sixth to saddle Sut~ ton with his ninth loss against 16 vie· tori<.>s. Don Zim mer , the Padres' manager, said he un4erstands just w h a t the Dodgers are going through. .. They're just in a rut," said the one· time Dodgers infielder, "they'll bounce out of it. They'll get the break they need and CT>rne back strong. No they're not dead. .. But," he added , "I s!ill think Cin· cinnati is the club to beat." Sin Dlege (JI L11 An.-lts U I 111 rllrbl 111 rhrDI A:M(lroltt, cf • o o o Lopes, 11' J 1 o o DThomas, l• 4 I J O F"1lrty, ph 1 O I O EHna,_,z, " 0 0 0 0 LIC), pr 0 0 0 0 DwRoboN-1. lb J I I 0 Moll. U l 0 2 1 Colberl, 111 I O 1 1 WCr1wl0td, rl l O O O l ee, r1 J 1 O O McMullln. ph l O O I Ke<ldaH, c J o 1 1 Jost!Vll. Ill'" o o o o Loclllr, 11 J O O I Zahn, p 0 O O O Murrell, rl O 0 O 0 WO.~ls, ph l 0 0 0 Hilton. 1b • O O O Ftr11ui.on, c J O O O RJontt. p J O O 0 Gnrvty, 111 • O 1 0 Romo. r> 1 o o O Cty, lb • o 0 o (aldwe!I, p D O O O Pa~lorek, cf • O 1 O Corkin" P 0 0 0 0 Rulsell, so • 0 0 0 Sutton, p 2 o o o YNl}er. C 1 l l 0 Suc~nfr, d I 0 0 0 Totals 12 J 1 J To!tls 35 2 6 2 S<ln Diego 010 002 000 -l Los Angelts 000 000 200 -2 E-Hllton, 0. TF!omas 2, DwA:obtr!S, Zahn. DP-S~n O•C110 1. LOB-San Oleoo 6, LOI Angeln 11. SB-Lopel, Moll. S-OwA:obtfll, Murrell, Meli. R. Jcnel ~w. 5·•1 Romo CllldWtll Cor~in$ Sutton (L, 16-tl 21nn S•v-Corkin• 1. lB.115. IP H tll Elt I&. SO 611511 ~7 2 I 0 0 0 1 11] 0 0 0 0 0 113. 0 0 0 0 0 761]11 , ' 0 0 1 1 WP-Sut1on, Z111n. T-2:4 A- Both teams are healthy. The Rams wiU probably go without secondary defender Al Clark who has a hip bruise and the 49ers without running back Vi c Washington with a cracked kneecap and wide r~eiver Terry Beasley with a dislocated shoulder. With Clark out, the Rams will probably go with I wo rookies and two veterans in the secondary -Eddie McMillan and Cullen Bryant as the first-year men and Dave Elmendorf and Charlie Stukes as the vets. Ed Beverly, a rookie fr6m Arizona State, will get a long look with Beasley liidelined. Veteran quarterbacks John Brodie of the 49ers and John Hadl or the Rams are scheduled to go most of the way in this wind-up of the no-count season. A week later they direct their clubs into the openers of the NFL campaign leading up to the Super Bowl. San Francisco figures improvement in its linebacking corps with Willie Harper of Nebraska and Charlie Hunt from Florida providing depth. Knox has gone more to the n.uming game with the Rams. Jim Bertelsen, a rookie from Texas last year, has shown the quickness needed for gaining yards, and Larry McCutcheon, also a second year man and hailing from Colorado State, has virtually won a starting assignment. For the record, Knox named veteran Larry Smith as 'his starter opposite Bertelsen, but it won't be long until McCutcheon gets in. Rams runners gained 282 yards against the Chargers last week with Bertelsen getting ,97 of them and, after five games, Los Angeles has averaged 4.2 yards per carry. Doug Cunningham, the seven-year veteran, replaces Washington at running back with Larry Schreiber at fullback for the 49ers. \Vhil e the Rams still experiment in the defensive secondary, the 49ers !eel they have the best in the NFL with Jim Johnson, Bruce Taylor, Mel Phillips and Mike Simpson. EAGLES MAY SIGN EX-RAM McKEEVER PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Veteran ~-larlin McKeever is the latest propo.s;ed answer to the middle linebacker protr \ems of the Philadelphia Eagles football team. McKeever, a 13-year-veteran released on waivers two weeks ago by Los Angeles Rams, flew to Philadelphia Thursday to take an Eagles physical ex· amination. "We're not fooling ourselves that he's got all the speed we want/' said head coach Mike McCormack. "But if he passes our physical, we'll pick him up." McKeever has ·played both linebacker and tight end for three NFL teams dur· ing his career. Ul'IT ............ "I wanted to na.ll him in the chin." (Su ANGELS, Page 2.11 STAN SMITH BACKHANDS A SHOT DURING WIN OVER ONNY PARUN. • ... U,I Ttlwtltl~ ' Swim .Star I I I. Surprised In P1·elims BELGRADE (AP I -He a I be r Greenwood , a 16-year.()ld high school girl from Fresno, beat world record bolder Keena Rothhammer in a qualifying heat of the 400-meter freestyle at , the World Swimming Championships today. Miss Greenwood led the eight qualifiers for the tinal in 4:24.93. Virginia Rickard of Australia was second fastest in 4:24.99, then came Miss Rothhammer in 4:25.12. Miss Rothhammer, of Santa Clara, set a world record of 4:19.07 in the U.S. Nat· ional AAU Trials at Louisville two weeks ago. Another of America's •Norld record holders. Melissa Belote of Springfield. Va., easily Jed the qualifiers into the final of the ·women's 2QO.meter backstroke. But her time of 2:20.57 was well over her world record of 2:19.l!l. The 'United States narrowly squeezed into the final of the men's 800-meter freestyle relay, finishing eighth in the heats in 7:54.40. The Ausl ralian learn clocked the fastest lin1e, 7:48.43. The American quartet was Mc.I Nash or l\tonroeville, Pa., Tim Shaw of Long Beach, Bill Miller of Santa Ana and Rex Favero of Sacramento. Stan Carper Oi Portland and Fred Tyler of \\'inter Park, Fla .. 1nade the finals of the men's 200-mcter med ley. and Lynn Colella or Seattle qualified for the y,·omen's ~meter breastsroke. DALLAS' CALVIN HILL LEAPS OVER MIKE KOLEN THURSDAY NIGHT. But for the first time since the champ- ionships began, some Americara were eliminated in the heats -Vick.i Hays 0£ Fullerton in the women's 20().meter bre8.ststroke and Mary Anne Graham or Mesa, Calif .. In the "'omen's 200-metcr b<ickstroke. r Sports in Brief Has Miami Lost Touch · Dana Point's Peggy Tosdal rcCTJrded her lifetim e best in the JOO-meter butterfly while finishing fift h to Kornel ia Ender of East Germany Thursday . To Win in the Clutch? Miss Tosdal, a Dana Hills High student who competes for the Mission Viejo Nadadores, was clocked in I :04.32, a shade behind teammate Deena Deardurf( who was foivt.h . DA~S -The world champion Miami Dolphins enter the 1973 regular Natiooal Football League season won- dering where all their magic has gone. Call it the Superbowl jinx or whatever, but the Dolphins have Jost their touch to win in the clutch, a trait which carried them to 17 consecutive victories last year. "It used to be that the Dolphin5 were pulling out victories at the end, but now it has turned against us," Miami coach Don Shula said Thursday night after Tony Fritsch's 22-yard field goal in the final three seconds handed Dallas a 26-23 victory as both clubs dosed out the NFL exhibition season. Tu'O weeks ago, Fred Cox of Minnesota toed a field goal at the final gwt to give the Vikings a ~17 victory over Miami. snapping a streak of 23 games without a loss. · Losses to Minnesota and Dallas came after Miami had built up huge lead!. The Dolphins led Minnesota 17-3 before bow- ing and they held a 2U lead over Dallas before melting to the Cowboys' second half charge led by Craig Morton. e Bruins Depart LOS ANGELES -Cooch Pepper Rodgers of UCLA named senior let- tennan Eugene Jones 1bursday to start 't tight end In Saturday's season opener at Nebraska. Jones, a 6-toot-3, • 230-pounder from Pasadena, repJ.aces the injured Gene Bleymaier. The Bruins, who left this morning for Lincoln, Neb., worked out 50 minute! without pads Thursday, after which Hodgen said: "As I've been saying all the time, I think we have a good football team but we'll have to play a real good game to have a chance to beat Nebraska." e Sf.¥ S ... re Lead COLUMBUS, Ga. -John Schroeder says the Southern Open golf tournament course reminds him of bis finest hour on lit• lour when he caplured the PGA Match Play title. • Howeverf tbe 27-year-old La Jolla player has plenty of company at the top of the original 144-man field after shooting a sparkling three-under-par 81: Five others are tied after Thursday'• opening round of the $11111,000 IOOJ'l\ament over the per 70, 8,791·yard Green l•lan4 Country Club coune. They ire tour rookies Artie McNlckle and Larry Stubl>lefleld, and ""lerans Grier Jones, Lou Graham and Don Bias. e Alou• Tr..ted NEW YORK -The New York Yankoe• traded Felipe and Matty Alou, two of three brothers in the majors, to con- tending t~ms in the National League's East Divis.ion. Ma Uy, a 34-year~ld outfielder-first Qaseman v.·ho6e llfellme batting average of .309 is sixth highest among active ma- jor leaguers, was sent to the St. Louis Cardinals, for whom he played in 1971 and 1972. The 38-year-Qld Felipe, who also plays the outfield and first base, was dealt to the Montreal Expos. In both cases. the Yankees will receive a player to be named later. e Tarka11ia11 Ill LAS VEGAS -Unive rsity of Nevada (Las Vegasl , officials say basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian, 47, is expected to be hospitalized five clays following surgery for a double hernia scheduled to- day al Sunrise Hospital . TarkaniaD moved to the l'ievada school this year after a highly succe___jduJ career at Cal Slate !Long Beach). e Phillips Traded . CINOINNATI -Jess Phillips, v.'ho knows 90mething about second chances, heads for the New Orleans Saints of the NaUooal Football League today talking of oPPOrtunily. "I think I'll have a great opportuhily there," said Phillips, woo was traded by the Cincinnati Bengals 'nmsday for two future draft choices. The 17-year-old. y,•ho was second in th e AAU championships, scored points for· the United States in the competition where the first eight places count. Miss Ender's winning time was 1 :02.~. Meanwhile Ulrika Knape of Sweden. the 1972 Olympic clui.mpion. won the women's platform diving title today. ~1i.1;s Knape accumulated a to1al or 406. 77 points. Milena Duchova o f Ciechoslovakia finished second with 387.18 points and Iri~ Kalinjina of the Soviet Union was third with 381.42. The United States swimmers carried a .!llim lead of 10 gold medals lo nine for East Germany into today's competition. Year's E~perinient NFL Hints Ha1·sh _Action . To Lifting of -Blackouts WASJflNGTON (AP )-Oespile a veiled Rozelle, without being specific, said the threat by the National Football League, NFL would not wait· (or the technicalities f1na1 Congressional action apparently will to be ironed out or tor President Nixon's signature If the two bodies approve what come wtthln the next two weeks on lifting he called "definitive measurea." the ban on local TV blackouls of sold-out Rozelle's commitment Thursday before home games. the House subcommittee on com- By the overriding majority of 76-6, the municallons came afler he s:aid the NFL Senate voted 'lburaday to require the would probably reconsider Its present · telecasting of hometown game.! ii they television policy If the new legislation are sold out 72 ho\Jrs prior to the event. caused the 26 league clubs a decline at The House, which ls considering the gate. aeve.ral $lmllar bills, could take action 1n Jfe said the televising or a single game- the latter part ol next week, triggering of-the-week nationwide is "£ar and away the ~iblllty of lhe 1.elecastipg oC tbe lhe mosl economically productive use ol NF1.. s 1173 openers on Sept. 18. television by professional sports leagues. However, House procedure may delay a "The NFI~ member clubs would then J1oot vote until the week o( Sept. 16 be left to fend for themselves in an at.- 'tkcause the measure sUll must be writ· tempt to lll8ke individual arrangements t"1 In rmal form, acoopted by tbe sub-for lbe1r own lele<:a>ts," the com· committee and approved by the House mlssioncr said .. "And I can assure you Commerce Coounlllee belore a fJna1 11\nt U that sltualion should come to pus, tally can be laken. moot NFL cl~es would ht deprived of the Ra~ket Losi hut Point· Proved FOREST ll!Ll.'l, N.Y. IAl'I -I\ jus1 wun't Jan Kodet' day. He won a match he dkln'L really have to play but loot bis favorl\e ra cket along lfte way. , •fit's grcme," i.nmted tht 26-year-old · c..ch, boldiDI up the ractet with a broken-· "lt's the OOll 1 won Wimbledon with," be 88id Sldly. ''I played all my mat<hes tbert with It ..r all of my matches here with II. I doa'I -a wtl1 with the otbtt one." Kodtl lw'Ollt !ht! ncllel at 5-2 of the Oral RI lheo ll(rUUlod lo I J.2, ~. 1-1. 3-6. 7-6 quartefinaJs triumph over Nikki Pllic of Yugoslavia in the U.S. Open rhampionshlp. . Kcxk!s broke Pllrc Jn the 12th gamt ot the Ofth set for the right to meet top. seeded Stan Smith In the ...n111na1s. Smith, the tall blond ,from Sea Pine•, S.C., who won Wimbledon last ·year and the U.S. Open In 1971, breezed ~y Oniiy Parun of New Zealand 6-3, 6-3, 6-2 in Thursday's first center court match. PUie and Kode s were scheduled tO play the sec:ond match, bul thl'Ough a mix-up 1n sclledullng, PUie was a late arrival so • ' a women's doubles semlflnal w• r ln- serted. "rn the Italian Open I came late for a match with Arthur A!be a\lf! I bad to • delau14" said Kodes. ''But !'didn't uk Plllc «>default. I didn't want ,to So.into - the aemlfinals that way: I wll\lld to I tt c II pay. ...... • II was a ~tier of honor. Kodes -.Wimbledon after more than 70 ~berl of the AssoclaUoo of Tennis Professlonall boycotted It bee•""" Pllic had been baniied for refuslog ' to repreoent Illa country In Davis Clip play._ MIWt llM0'-11 --'"" $mlltl, lie P ...... J.C. ,t/Jltl, 0nrrY I'~ Ntw lltl•lld· .. 2 ... 2. ""· '--··· Jtn l(odls, CJM~';::k,':"i di(, Nlk)l;I Pllk, YUllOllflYi., '"4,~~ILll . "''!:r"" Court. A~ff1R1, a.id v1,..1n1t Wiidt •• 111• !tin, , I~ n11""'~··l1111r1!1t. tMI J~ YOIJllll, ullfrllll1 H. ~ 111111t J...,. k1"91. Hiiton HHd l•••M.i s.c.t,:i"' Rot1'Tl•l"Y c .. 1111s, ~111 fir~ fef, cllttt #ff, ~ort l1tufet"dt11, fll•., lllil Oii• Mofon'll, llt Union •.. i •.. l. MIN't DOUILtt a-ttrll•• Tom 0101,tr, Holi.ncl. ll'ld Mai'"fY ll:ttufft, 1!111n1+on. 111,. dtf, A. AM(ld lftd VII .. Al'llt'ltral, IMlt •.. 1, , ... ,... . . T""' 0.IN!A:J:tlllt. W ll:WI Jttml,.., Mftl(I, dt(··i"'J"' Wl!Mt lolllfl Mtf<:lt W ll:otlfl'f (•rtnlc•I• Autlr•U•, •l, '"' .... • • .,, lltOd 1.ner Ctr'IM 1111 !IM, '" -• A111fNtla, #. ,.Ifft OwfMfi.. ..._ '"' lltllll ll:1mrrtL tf't11~ f.!-~ 7~ • The &m•tc bill originally would lilt the away games of I heir home teams." ban 48 hours In advance or the game but All away games are televised back to was amended on the floor to mov~ the the club's home city under the present lime back 21 hours to enable the clubl to NF'L television C011tr•ct. They also are sell the llck"8 left over or Tltllke II'-lele<:asl on a regional bu!& with the ranaements for lelevlslon. It allO Ci1JJ citlts where tho games are being played f0< Ille ban to be a Of\O year el]l<flmt0t. blad<ed out. Rep. TO<bert H. Macdonald, (D-Maa.), Rozelle said his statemtO\t was not a chalnnan of the Houee 'l'bclomllllll .. oo 11u...,t by the NFL. But Chalrman_Mae> communlcoUona, bas introduoed a ·• Donald .. ktd: "It'• not a thmt! •lmllar 43-hour bill bllt he baa uld he "It'• like taklnl out a gun, polnUng lo WOUid not be apii!>9cd to the 12 hour a guy'1 bead 'ancf ,.y1.,, 'I'm not going deodllno but WOUid prefer to make the to 1hoot you.' " law pemlanMI p( !or 3 · yean at the On tho Senate Door, no one talked Jeu~ against lhe blli w)!lch wu Introduced by Pro footboll comml-Pete Sen. Jom 0. P~re l!>-R.I.). c, --. •, Friday, Stpltmbtr 7, 1'17~ D~ILV PILOT 2J Jaycees Scrimmage Tonight, Saturday Ortinge Coast, Golden West and Sad· dlcback colleges nil have been prom· ine:ntly n\entioned as title contenders in their football conferenc:e this HaSOn. And all three 11rea JC head coaches readily i1dn1it they shouJd be contenders. But a true Indication of the strength of a1·eo JC football Is on tap tonight and Saturday when scrimmages wlth outside competltion are planned. Golden West's Ru stlers an d Sad- dlcback's Gauchos figure to get the stif- fest tgts. Coach Ray Sbacklcrord's Rustlers lock ANGELS FALL •• Continued From Page !O Epstein smiled. ''But I missed. Damn i I. " • Blue went seven innings and survived home runs by Frank Robinsoo and Bob Oliver to gain the decision. The loser was Clyde Wright who absorbed his 19th loss thereby tying George Brunel's Angels record for most defeats in a season. Ironically, Wright alsO bolds the Angels mark for most victories :'22. The A's rapped 12 bit!. Joe Rudi led the: way with a double and two singles. No rth and Camp Campaneris had two hits apiece. North y,•as involved in a collision with Campaneris in the seventh inning as they pursued a pop fl y. Ca mpancris ran Jn lo No rth's elbow and y,·as dazed but remained in the game. North \vas unh urt . NDr!ll, Cf C•mpnrlt. 11 R.tna.o, ;)!) llJ~Ck\On, r! OeJClllnln. dll Lr"'"· l)r Bc.,,Q.,.. lln Jillou, d" Ten~<<', 1(1 Rlldl. 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"-26.lk G1idder Confined To Wheel Cl1air MI NNEAPOLIS -The altend,lng physician for MiMesota Vikings strong safety Karl Kassaulke said Thur3day the in.juries surrered by the football player in a motorcycle accident will almost ctr· tainly prtvent him from ever walking again. Dr, Theodore Cole, U nl ve rsi Jy Ho.spilt!Jls physician, said, "I lhlnk the chances of his rcextveljng are iO Jn.. flniteslmally small thai It's not pro- ductive for him to put his energy into that posstbibility. That is different from saying ho should not have any hope, but he should have realistic hope. "He oug!W to hope for a lile in- dependent in a wheel chair. I would not hold out hope 10< him being able to walk agaln." DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO BACK1 TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! 1"4 VOLVO 122 C'L $877 1961 TOJOTA 1ff7 VOLVO • Dll 144 .... it-.. ............... 'Mllll ..... lllk• "''· $1177 . ' 1'71 TOYOT .. COIONA 4 0;1ti . "" ----· .... ..,... .......... ""'· \' $1277 horns with defending South Coast Conference champion Cerritos tonight at Cerrltos, It's scheduled to begin about 7: 15. Coach George llartman's Gauchos also run in to another South Coast toughle '"1 facing Santa Ana at the Santa Ana Bowl. That, too, wlll !tart about 7:15. Meanwhile, Orange Coast will wait un- til Saturday to tangle with a pair of op- ponents In a rather unique scrimmage. Coach Dick Tucker's OCC Pirates will battle: Yl'ith Mira Costa of Oceanside in a 4 o'cloc k affair, wblch will 18$1 abou t I II hoots. The Bucs will then come back at 7 to scrlmmage Mlsslon Conference fo r Grossmont, which ii coached by former corona del Mar HJgh assistant Dave Jordan. Grossmont and Mira Costa scrimmage from S::W-7. f.ll tbree head coaches fiJ!llfC lo tau long looks at their quarlerbacking can- didates. Saddlebock's QB duiles probably will be split between oophomore John Spring· Many Dine Chippers Another Banner Season For Area JC Gtidders? George Hartman, Ray Shackl erord and Dick Tucker shouldn't have too many sleepless nights this coming football season. After scanning the lists of prospective ·grid candidates at the three area com· munity colleges, it appears that 1973 could very well be anottJer banner year. All lhree colleges came out very well in the recruiting battles -and with sonte CRAIG SHEFF tO!) lc.1tcrn1en bac k·-·73 again figures to be :in ex citin1: year on the JC football rror.t. OCC's Tucker recruited four. AJl-CIF standouts \1.'hile Saddleback's Hartman and Gold en Wesfs Shackleford bagged three AR.CIF award winners. Running backs h1ike Nanko (AA player of year) of Temple Ci1y and Dan l.)rinceouo ( AAAA third team l of Estan- cia, aJong with guards Ror. Stone (AAAA scconc'I tea n1 J of Fount ai n Valley and Tom ,.1cGoldrick {AAAA third team) or St· Francis are playing for Orange Coast. Westmins ter tackle-linebacker Larry Grady (AAAA first team 1. Westminster quarterback Dau Accomando (AAAA sec- ond team) and Bolsa Grande defensive end Lc\\1 Olumi ch (AAA third team ) have enrolled at Golden WesL And Pacilica quarterback Marty Mik- kel sen (AAA third teatn). Pacifica center Bill ~1cNulty (AAA second team) and La Habra tackle Jerry \Vigbt (AAA third teamJ will play for SaddlebacK. * * * OCC's press book, featuring 90 pages or facts . figures and pictures, will be available to the public for $1 this season. ll can be.purchased at all Orange Coa!t games at LeBard Stadium. Publicist Jim Carnett deserves a p a t on the back. The booklet is wen organiz- ed and ·complete. · Leon Skeie is the new trainer at Orange Coast, replacing Dean Westgaard who ls on a sabbatical. Skeie was at Corona del Mar High last year and Is very highly N!garded. He also will handle the Pirates weight program. Checking the football scene: ..• 77 players showed up at opening day at Santa Monica City C.Ollege, the largest turnout in lhree years, leading Corsairs coach Pat Young to say, "we have a Jot of very fine players. It looks like a solid team." ... Rio Hondo coach lt1arty Blackston e has 22 lettennen among the 75 players out and many are sayin g this could be the Roadrunners' best outfit in history. Rio Hondo \\'ill be looking for its fourth SoCal C.Onference title in a row. Citrus coach John Strycula greeted 78 prospecl'i open'ing day , 21 of whom were lettermen. "\Ve are op- timistic about our chances,'' says Strycula. "For th e first time since 1967 we have at least three. good quarterback prospects." . . . Scrappy Rhea had 91 candidates report to LA Harbor the first day. including 19 lettermen (nine starters L The Seahawks' entire defensive backfield returns. ... More than 120 players suited up at Cerritos for the first day. Inchlded were 18 lettermen and 78 freshmen. Ernie Johmon, in his third season as head of Falcons football . says that his freshmen "look a lotiike last year's sophomores". Last year's sophomores won the South Coast title. .•. San Diego City College coach Har- ry \Vest has 17 lettermen returning, but more importantly adds that "we have the largest group of quality freshm en in th e last three years, plus some outstanding transfers." Here 's nly annual prediction ror Saturday's big game: UCLA 3 I , Nebraska 17. FV MAN DEFEATED IN GOLF PLAYOFF HESPERIA '-Rafe Botts of Beverly Hills parred the llnt plO)loff hole lo defeat Dave Sheff of Fountain Valley, and captured bis first Western Touma· ment Goll Association' tournament In 29 tries Thursday at Hesperia Country Club. Botts, whJ shot 61M9-137 -nine un der par for the 36-bole, '2$,000 Tournament, -earned a $4:000 check . Sheff, 67-70, had a five on the par 4 playoff hole and received $2,300. Missing the playoff by one stroke at 138 were Rich Richards, Fresno and James Walker Jr., Las Angeles, both 69~. They received $1,562 each. The next WTGA tournament is Sept. 14-15 at Via Verde Country Club in San Dimas. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltlmor< Boston Detroit New York Milwaukee Clev•land Oakland Kansas City Chicago MIMeJota ""*''' Texu East l)ivlslon W L 7~ 57 77 63 74 67 71 69 67 72 61 68 Wut Divlalon 82 S7 76 112 70 70 67 71 112 73 47 9t Pct. .581 .550 .525 .507 .482 .430 _590 .551 .500 .4811 .4S9 .341 GB 4 711 10 1311 21 SI\ 1211 1411 II 341\ . ' . NATIONAL LEAGUE SL Louis Montreal Pittsburgh New York Chicago Philadelphia ClncinnaU Dodgen East Division W L 72 68 68 70 67 69 68 73 6S 73 63 77 West Dlviaioa 8S 56 . 83 58 San Francisco Houston Atlanta 7ll 59 71 71 67 74 San Diego 50 89 Tll•rMIY'l ...... MontrNI J. ChlctOO ) Un OltOO S. LOI Angeln 2 Ql'lly '"'* KhtdVMcl ft11111y•1 Ot!Mt Pct. .514 .493 .493 .47S .471 _450 .1111 .589 .572 .500 _475 .360 GB 3 3 511 6 9 211 s 15 18~ 34\i It. LOUii IWIM l >-lt) If CN~ IHoolon 11·131 frrftw York CMati.t;ll ll•IS Md ltomtr1tn 11-14) •t """""-I CT111'1"91 "" ft ftrio 11-tl _.1"*'9tl llCllon IMll _. Pfllledtlptll• Cir.ft 1~·11 Clnc:lnnlH IGtlmtl.., lMJ 11 At1111t1 CkM,.,. 7•7) hn l)ltfo INlln "'111 .t U. Anet ... (Ollttn 1'-7l Houltwt l ftoblttt 1.f.tl 11 ien ~rencttco IM41'lhfil lt-111 man and freshman Marty Mikl<elseo (Pa· cilica). Springman saw very little duty last season behind Bob Dullch. Westmin!ter's Dan Accomando and Tom Meunier. are the loP candidates for the Golden West quarterback job. Orange Coast's Reed Johnson wlll get his first lest under pressure as the Bucs' top signal-<:aller wllh freshman Mike Magner (Estancia) also seeing some play. John.son sat on the bench most of last season with Alvin White 'at the coo- trols, BOB HIVNER Hivner Thinks MV Program Has At·rived By HANK WESCH Of tilt DlllY 111Wit Sl1H Bob Hivner isn't carrying any grudges, mind you , but he's kind of sad to see his Mission Viejo football team leaving the Crestview League after the 1973 season. After two seasons or absorbing losses at the hands of Crestview opponents, Hivner's Diablos climbed to a 4-2-1 record against league foes last season, and hopes are high for the team to better that mark in 1973. But when the CIF releagues in 1974 ~lission Viejo will be grouped with other south Orange County schools, and some tradition al rivalries may be ended. "Both as a player and a coach, I always liked to go up agai!]St someone who's rated a little bit better'than I am. so I've ki.nd of enjoyed th~ Crestview League the last three years," Hivner says. "But after those three years, I'd like to play some teams three more years, and with the change in leagues it kind of hurts that we won't get to play them regularly." Hivner came to Mission 'iiejo lhree seasons ago from South Gate High in Los Angeles and suffered lllrough I~ and 3-6 seasons before last year's Dtablos unit notched a 4-4-1 record, th~ best in the school's seven-year history. With over 20 returning lettennen back, prospectl are good foi-a winning season in 1973, and lnvner feels the Mission Vie- jo program may ·be In good stead for several aeuom. · "\Ile have 10me good atbJetes in the program, nl 4lle aupporl ol lhe school district and the parents is very good," IDvner .. ys. 111 really love it here," mvner WB;S a q\l8l'te!'bact at South Gale Higb-;-Oimpton Colleg• -and the University of Washington in his playing days. He led Compton to !he Junior Rose Bowl In 19S7, plO)led on Washington's 19S9 and 1980 Rose Bowl teams and was the starting quarterback In the Rose Bowl in the latter year. In both Rose Bowl games, mvner wu upstaged by Bob Schloredt, who won Player or the Game honors both years, the only player to win that honor twice . Playin~ for outstanding ooaches like Compton a Tay Brown and Jim Owens at Washlngtoo has left ltl mark on Hivner. but he says he'a developed a coaching style and,_phlkioophj all his own. "I learned tbe· value Of hard. work from them, aod that there's ~no such thing as an euy game," mme:r says. "We beat Wisconsin, ~. In the Rose Bowl, but it wun 't an euy gime. We had to work bani in practice to be ready for It. and If you don't "°'k hard In practice ll's !hat much more difficult when the game starts· "" "I probably picked up more about coaching from 0Wen1 than anyone, but you've got to coach the way you reel and do what's best for your program. That's the only wa,y." Rivals Golden West and ocx; clash in the season opene.r at l..eBard Stadiwn a v:eek Crom Saturday with Saddleback meeting Cypress at Buena Park IDgh the same night. The Gauchos recorded an 9-2-1 record last season and gained the semifinals of the state (large schools) playoffs before losing to Pasadena, 7-3. Golden West had a 7-3 mark in fin- ishing second to R i o Hondo in the Southern California Conference last seasoo while OCC was 6-3 and also was second In the Soulh Coas l. Accomando Tops Lions Returnees By STEVE BRAND CH 1111 0.11' _., ... Slfff When a team lists one returning starter on offens e, the kind thing to do is send condolences and flo""-ers . Westminster is rac¢ with just such a dilemma but wow . lhat one returner. Tony Accomando, at a-9 and 165 pounds, may appear more a cross COWl· try runner than football player without the pads, but once the game starts it's a different •story· "I think he's the best back in Orange County, even better than Jim Gardea at Mater Dei." says coach Bill Boswell. "Tony's deceptive, quick and tough. He·s closing in as the a11·time leading rusher in Westminster history." As a sophomore, Accomando t1lshed for 437 yards on 93 carries but amaz.ingly scored just six points as Jeff Siemens was the offensive standout. Last year he played in the shadow of bis brother, Dan, but it wasn't much of a shadow. It's hard to hide a back who gains 676 yards in, 122 carries for a S.S average and scores 54 points. The total of 1.113 yards ranks him foUrth on the all-time Lions list. He'll catch Bill White (1,342), Ron Shepherd (l,311) and Jack Haynes (1,275) unless some misfortune strikes him early. Although Westminster doesn't have' another starter returning on offense, 1t appears the club bas ample talent with 79 candidates vying for varsity jobs.' Junior varsity quarterback Mark Stewart (6-0, 160), rated a strong thrower, appears to have the edge over Steve Alverson (5--1!., 170) and Richard Clemens ($-10, lGO·f, both up from the sophomore team. Behind Accomando is Juntor Greg Skj011Sby (SB, 156) who is rated a tough. hard-rµnning scatback type. Bob Blumberg (6-1, 192 ), a letterman at fullback a year ago, returns but he'll have to stay sharp to hold off the coach's son, Dennis Boswell (6-1 , l!Jl) who 1 .. t year as a freshman scored l 8 touchdowns, including four a g a I n st Estancia in the championship game. Ken Tew (5-10, 184) is also rated a solid p-os- pecl at fullhack . Rob Yoder (5-7, 155) will move from his defensive comerback position to start at flanker and will be backed up by Rick Ro:1eo (5-10 and 170), a letterman last season. Another Maddocks will be stationed at split end as Tony Maddocks (5-10, 145 Jr.) tries to au· for h1s graduated brother, Gary. He'll have to beat out Rob Romine (5-11 , 155) who has outstanding hands. Dan Smick, who started as a linebacker in 1972, has moved to tigh.L end and the 5-11 , 18$-pounder is rated just lhead of junior Scott Roberts 16-1, IM) and senior CUrnal Rungo (5-11, 185). McKAY PRAISES USC LINEBACKER LOS ANGELES -USC· coach John McKay said Thursday that Ed Powell, who has replaced injured Dale MUcheU as outside linebacker for the No. 1 rank· ed Trojans, "has looked tremendous in recent practices." McKay commented as the Trojans end- ed tW<M<lay drllls for their Sept. 15 season opener against Arkansas in the Coliseum. "We looked good today. We showed some !Ip," McKay added. Tackle Glenn Byrd, who is listed as a defensive starter, returned after missing several practices with a foot injury, • ROY BUTTELING Estancia Plans To Pass More With Morton By RON E\I ANS Of lfll DallY Piiot SllH / In 1972. Estancia High Sc~'s offense was built around quar,terback Mike Magner -and halfback _9!1n Princeotto as well as the blocking_..o! ~t Gayner. \Vhen Gayner W)IS injured. the· Eagles slipped from a 5-1 record to 5-4. Ne\v head f®tball coach Jim Hemsley v.·on 't have to worry about losing a taloot like Magn'er, Gayner or Princeotto to in- jury thls season. They've au graduated . ')\Ve only have two kids who even started a game on offense last year," says Hemsley who takes over after 13 years as assistant coach at Newport Harbor High. "l can already see we have great depth and talent in our receivers. I'm cmfideot we'll have a fine passing game and since I like lo throw the ball anyway, we'll put the ball in the air at least 40 percent ol. the time." Tight end Dave Gibbs, 6·1and170, tops the list of receivers. A tight end last season. Gibbs was a standout perfonner-. "He has adequate speed but his real strength is his ability to catch the ball," sa ys Hemsley. ''He just never misses." Backing up Gibbs ts Victor Valley transfer Jim Glancey, who at 6-4 and 175 is the tallest player on the club. Hemsley is so high on those two players he doesn't even list a No. 3. A real battle is developing at flanker where speedy Steve Adams (6-0, 170), and Tun Sweet (6-0, 170) appear to haVe a slight edge over three cha llengers, The backfield, too, appears to be wide open wi th only returning varsity starter Roy Butteling assured a starting berth. At 5-71h and 150, Butteling is listed as the No. l running back and No, 2 quarter· bock. Behind Butteling at running back are sophomore !'at Shaughnessy (S-7, 170) and Dan Granite (5-81.f.z, 170). Right now. the No . 1 quarterb"ack is Steve ~1orton. a 5-10 and 170.pounder who is rated a good throv.·er and adequate runner. Art Galvin. \vho led the sophomore team a yC'ar ago, is the ba ckup. , A three-way slrll8gle has developed at full ba ck where Jon Hartley (5--10, 165), sophomore Al Liddle (5--10, 160) and Jim Parsons (S..11. 175) are rated even. Up rront, Hemsley says he'll be relying heavily on players oH last year's 7-2 jwiior varsity d ub. Jim Gair (&-0, 190) and Steve Ohlsen (6-0, 180) have the edge at tackles while Mike Hewell ( 5-10\.2, 178) and Rich Webb (5-11, 182) are listed as the top two guards. "fl.like Legacy, who sat out last year after playing as a sophomore, retu rns to back up the guards and tackles at 5-11 and 195. It'll be Brad Green 's (6-1 , ISS) job to somehow nu ttie gap at center left by AU·CIF graduate Vince Klees. "I don't believe It when people try to call this a building year ofrenslvely,'• says Hemsley. "Sure we only have 14 seniors, but i£ we can avoid injury where we're terribly thin, we have the players to do the job." M~rtaugh Tabbed Again Pl'ITSBURGH (f.P) Dann y Murtaugh will be back in unUorm as manager of lhe Pittsburgh Pirales tonlghl, ttplaclnJJ BUI Vinion who wss abruptly OUlled 'l'hursday. General manager Joo L. Brown made Murtaugh an offer he couldn't refuse. The crll(li)'-11<9>1 1rWunan wu lured out of r.llrement !or 1 lleCOt1¢ tlme by on •J>' pest to organlsatlonll alleglan<e, not by money. "You've al)"&)'I told me you were an ofganlzatlon man. No"''s your chnnce to prove It,'' Brown told the stunned Mul'Ulugh by telephone Thursday morn- ing be{ore offering hJm the job. 1 "I made the proposal to DaMy in· such • a fashi on that It was impossible ror h.im to refuse ... l·lc acceded to pressure I pl"aced on him," Brown noted. ''It was a vuy personal appeal, and I'd rather not discuss specifi cs.'' The 56-year..old Murtaugh reacted lo BroWn 's request with abeolut• silen1..'C. "Tbere was almost 30 seconds of dead air over the phone, and then he came back on and sald,-'Why?' " Brown noted. 1'1 gave hlrn my ffil.!IOOS and he said he'd think ll over." Murtaugh called beck a coupl e ol hour• later and agreed to replace Virden. the man who had succeeded him ju.~t two sea90ns before. Vlrdon ,_J!1J9sc club had be<n plaguod by mi'5fortune since the tragic death of AHL star outfielder Roberto Clemente la!t winter was playing handball when Murtaugh accepted. lte didn 't learn what had happened until about 1:30 p.m. wllen he entered Brown's oUice. "When I wolked In and lllt down, lie shut the door. and I knew something wu up," tho 42-yel!Mld Vlrdon recalled with a strained smile . Five minutes loter . the stemlaced Rrown told a room full ol reporters about the shuffle. "Th~ Is the moo t diffituk ~ ment I havt made In 11\Y 35 yeen ol be.e- hall " Jllo~'ll began sdltrf1. I ! I " f , .. !'" • • I • • ' l .. ~ . ' •• . . \ DAILY PILOT Friday, Stpumbtr 7, 1q1J Begins Mo11day Yellowtail Cliecking Coast Areci Courses 250 Seniors Due Continue To Hit Big Women Golf ers---Begin Team Play .. -r For Net Tourney By HOWARD HANDY Of "" Dtlly l'llOI $1111 Interest will focus on the Junior Veterans singles rom- petltion in !he Pacific Southwest Seniors open tennis championships at the Newport Beach Tennis Club beginning Monday but action will take place in 16 brackets involving 478 matches and 250 players before champions are crowned next weekend. Meet referee Tooy Prodan announced a lime schedule for next weekend to include nine finals events Saturday and seven Sunday. Matches on the first four days of competition will begin at 9 each morning and be suc- ceeded every l 1h-hours by another match. The featured men's $10,000 Junior Veterans division will have quarterfinal matches Friday (Sept. 14) with singles at 5:30 and doubles at 7. Jn the Jr. Vets singles, the purse breakdown shows t.he winner will receive $3.500 w1lh second place pocketing $2.0C!O· Third and fourth place will receive $500 each with four ad- ditional players r e a c h i n g Area Pair Form New Race Team "' Frida y's qua rt erfinals .setting $200 each. In the doubles, the "'inners will split Sl.000 with second place worth $500. Losers in the semifinals '11ill receive $200 for each team. 11le tournament \Viii mark the first appearance or R o y Emerson in the Pacifi c Southwest S e n i o r s com- petition. Emerson, a resident of Newport Beach. ha s recently been associated with a tennis camr in conjunction with Corona del Mar's Rod Laver. All matches \11ill be a best or three sets with a tie-breaker in vogue for deciding winners in close competitions. Emerson will n1ake his first appearance in the tournament \Vednesday on the center court at 4:30. Pancho Segura of La Costa \\'ill play al 1 :30 with fonner Davis Cup star Alex Olmeda of Beverly Hills playing at 3. Opponents "'i ii be determin- ed in a qualifying competition Monday and Tuesday for the 16 seeded pla yers. FltlDAY'S SCHEOUl.E !SEPT. 10 5:JO p.m. -lS men'1 1lnglt QU1rler- 11,..11, 1 p.m. -l.S m111'1 doubles Qu1rlerfl"ars. SATURDAY'S $CHl!DULI! ISl!PT. 111 C111ltr C•urt t . a.m. -SOJper 6S 1l1111le1 (Fl"tlsl. 10:30 1.m. -"5 men's stmllln .. 1s. 12 noon -3S ml•td doubles (llnaltl. 1:30 p.m. -lS men's slnoles iitlflltlnals. , 3 p.m, -J5 ml'l'S ooubln semllln1ls. ~=JO l).m. -Celebrity exlllblllon. Court T-' a.m. -Senior mixed doubles semllin8I•. 10:30 a .m. -.!iS men's singles (11nals1. 12 noon -Sul)<'r 65 men's <IQ~btes (llnals). 1:30 p,m, -SS men·~ d0uble1 (finals). Action in the Sou1hern \'t llo1vtail action continued Cali(ornia wotnen's i; o ! f good with three Orange Coast <1ssociation tc.:in1 play \viii area landini,:s reporting ex-start 'l'uesday "·ith r 1 v 1: c.-ellent catches \Vcdncsday for • Orange Coast area rourSt·s the second S1raight day. compering in gl'oup E·3 :ind C.:irl McCullah of Huntington Mesa Verde Country Club in Beach Pier reported 6 3 E-2 . yellows for 23 passengers. On opening day in E-2. Mesa ffiost of theQJ youngsters, on Verde faces "Buena Park"s l..os the Big f\.1ac 3/4.(i;jy bo~at Coyotes Country Club in action Thursday. at Can yon Crest CC. Art's Landing, with an in-In the Eastern Division. conclusive count, had 185 Group E-3. first day action yellows on board for 79 Tuesday will be at Palos passengers. f\.1ost of the bigger Verdes Country Club. fish v•ere caught with blue and Big Canyon CC of Newport white hackers. Beach faces El Niguel CC of Dav ey's Locker reported Lagwia Niguel with the ,\ almost 100 fi sh on board with team match starling a 8:30 n1any of them taken on jigs and the Bat 10:22. ralher th;1n fresh bait. Irvine Coast CC fac~ Old r..tcCullah reported bonito Ranch CC Or Seal Beach with strips and squid as the best the A match at 9:07 and the B bait for the yellows Thursday. at 11. Dana \Vharf boats are It is Santa Ana Country Club fis hin g fa:thcr south and have against Virginia CC of Loni{ been catching bass, bonito, Beach with the A match at mackerel and sculpin but no 9:45 and the B play at 11:37. yellowtail count Thursday. Action in the team play DANA WHARF -101 <1P"19!er1: ~5 c1Uco baH. 169 bonilo, UO rock cod. 1 m•c-erel. NEWPORT 1Ar1's Lancll"l!) -98 u1gler1: ~ c .. llce bass, 1 bo"ito, llS vellcwttlL (Oaw•y's L0<k1r) -llO anglers: I barracuda. 13 Do"l10, IC~ vel!owr .. il. 10 rock cod. HUNTINGTON BIEACH -23 anglers: '3 yellowt11ll, 10 bonllo, 5 hallbul. I.ONG IEACH CBelm11nt Pitrl -&2 1ngter5' '' y11!owl11ll, 11 s"nd b;us, 169 roe-cod. Bl~ -79 1nglers: S ba,. rac1H11. 121 wnd bass. JO !x>nilo, 15 hallb1.1I. (~rpolnl Ltndlngl -60 anglers: 21 Ytllowlall, I .blrrKl.IOa. 185 bonlfc, 21 c1Uco bass, 197 rock cod. U.N PEDRO -80 angleri; 10 ~llowttll. A bOtlito, 1t calko bll$.. 102 roe• cOd, llf m1ckere4. SE!AI. aEil.CH -106 angl1r.: 1,106 roe~ cOd. 10 sand bass, 11 ~llow1all. 19 bOlllto. •1 ... -150 anglers: 150 bon!ro, 10 bilrr1cud1. 5 sal'ld b""· 1a 1>allbu1. OXNARD -212 aoglers; Xll!I c"llco b"ss, 37 bOnllo, 6:!.S t>lut bass, ~I! rock cod, 18 ling cod, 2 halibut. SANTA MONICA -'l anglers: 6.l 1>11ss, 79 bonlrc, 3 halibut. 81r1e -51 anglers. 215 mackerel. 1• bonltc, SS rock cod, 2 bar.racud", I wMte sea ban. MALlaU PIER -SJ a"glers: JO calico bass, :II> 1>oni10. 2 barr .. cUda, SI~ rock cod. competition cootinues through Oct. 9 y.•hen El Nigul'I will host the six other teams in E-3 i11 the final round. Big Canycr. hosts the action on Sept. 18: Irvine Coast on Sept. 25 : Old Ranch on Sept. 28; and Santa Ana on Oct. 2. • Mesa Verde will host the E- 2 division on Sept. 25. Seneliff r..1embers of the Huntington Scacliff Country Club \110m· en's gorr group :itaged a 1'&F' tournament this 111eek. ~1arilyn Jones "'as the first flight win ner with 35 1'2 with Cub;:1 Curl second at 39. Evelyn Rice-was next at 40~\! followed..... by tvlabel Chri~ tianson. Ann May s and June Fiuin. alt al 41. In the second fli ght , Liz Brandenbur~ 11•as the winner \\'ilh 351S:. Aileen Allen finished second at 38 with Alice Acklin third at 39. Vi O'Gara \1•as next with 391~ \\'ith Virginia Stevens 1401~ I and F'lo Covell t 41 ) co1nplcting the flight. In the third fli~ht. Bess Petersen \1•as the "'inner with 41 with Stu Dudley !411".!l and Roberta Andrew s (42 1·2l nr:-:t. 1'lt•t1dfllf."f ff 1•f; Diana 1-loopC'r finished with 37 1~i on the holes beginning \Vith T & F al t\f('ado111lark Country Club of Huntington Beach to \Yin tl1e \\leekly 11·0111cn's club tornamenl. \\'i noie \Vi!l i""l~ 1\·::is the n.innerup "'ilh 38 followed by Cuba Curl with 39 and Dottie ~·l ulligan with 40. In the B flight it was Jean Hight the winner 1\'ilh 34 followed by Pat llood with 33 and a tic ~tween Hnrvey Ann Woolcott and Dottie Mulligan at 39; Ila Mac White was fourth with 1891/z . In C flight Shirley Stcbbing was the winner wilh 38 follow· ed by Betty Kretz with 4L Sa11 J11n11 llills ~lrwmt guetit day al: San Juan llills Countr11 Club in San Juan Capistrano · ~·ith 68 players participating in a better ball of partners compelition. On the winnin g cornbine were Belly \Vhitney and Barbara Carey with 5!1. A tic resulted for second with Dottie LaFaver and Elc.na ~tercado on one squad. Thelma Bates and Ellen Wager were on the other with each posting a score of 62. Jean Beck and !"ran N<'lsor. finished next with 63 followed by 1.1!1.Martin and Kuy Farley at &4. Ginny Sin1n1s \l'On the <1C· curacy a\11ard by gettini:: within the circle on the ninth hole. 1'les11 \1e1·de r-.tl'n1bcrs of the ~f{'s:1 Vcrdl• Country Club 11'on1cn's golf group staged t\vo tournaments this \veek . In a b<•t1cr ball of fourson1c event. Erny Burcklc. B<i rb:1r;1 Pegg Rosemary Plotner :ind Shirl~y CallaghBin tied with Arlene Verfurth. M I (' 11 1 Uen1atsu. Joyce Crowell aud a blind dray.r partner for f1rsl place with 59. 1'hird "'cnt to Charlo1tl' \\'ood. Andrey DuPuis. Jun1· S!uddert and Pegg M.:iull :t! 60. Lucille Paddock 1\'0ll -\ow gross honors with an 86 "'hilc Erny Burckle wtis the net vt'c> tor in A fight \'lilh 73. Al i1 ·1· \Vatts. ~1arianne Holt .:ind Lorraine U>\\1ery ti;:od ;H "i'i . In B rlight it 11·as Dot J\lassa !he gross winner \\'ilh 95. Arlene Verfurth 11·on net ll'ilh 72 fol101l'Cd by PcA Jacobson (73l, Kay Farley ~74l : tind Prudy Parn1en· ticir 175\. In C flight it was Peg Jaeobson the gross "'innrr 111ith 100. Sylvia Pranauski \\/Oil net 1\•ith 73 follo\vl'd by .Joyce Cro1\'ell (7~ 1, Horten::;!' Carlin (75\ and Erma Bendel 175). R1111clw SJ ln .:i lo1v net !ournumcnt <1l R.:incho San .Joaquin Golf Course thi s 111eek. Jackit· Cro .... ·ell was the ,\ flight 1o1'in- ll('r with 75. Ca rol _1'nn \Valbridgc "'as the runnerup with 76 followed by man I 1-'hyllb' Stafford 1771 and: Gt•or~la Pr1nl't i791. Ju B 1!1ght ii "'as ~l[txlnl' Strickland 1l1c "'inner with 75. · i\l;inou Keeler "'as sc.•<:ond al 71i wilh !i.·!;1rjorie Thatcher · 1J11rd u1 77. Juyce Hoberts y,·on <.: flight with n folJO\\'cd by Phyllis ; Farley at 80 and Ellen i\h.:Kiriley at 84. B('tty Bl:.1ke-n1ore won the I) flight with 77 With Pal Lackn er next at 82 and Lillian DcShaw at 84. In a ·r & F event, Sally Owsley was the "'inner with 341oi \vith Carolynn "';1lbridg1· 1351 and Fern Sproul (381 nc.~l 111 lint;. "' (;inny Peppin 1VQ11 B flight 11'ilh 351 ~ 1vith Shirley Whetzel next at :.17~2 . Ma:<lnl' Strickland copped the C fli ght with 36 with Belly Poindexter (38t and Ellen J\1eKinlcy 1:1R1':! I fol\O\l'ing. Grae(' Wehe Y.'on I) flight 11•ith 35 111hilc Sue Ise ri wa s tht· ruru1crup with 361•:. Si:.: n1cn1bcrs of the y.·on1cn·::; group l"l'Ct'nlJy brokt• \00 ror the first timc including Sue lsl'ri. PcJ?; Hobcrl s. H('l l'n Hebb, Bobbie Oiarticr. 1'od::ty Broon1e and Pat Larkner. RIVERSIDE -Dr. Tom H. Rise.rudt of San Clemente and Bill Greene or Westminster have fonned an Orange Coast area off-road racing team to participate in M i c k e y 'Mlompson's inaugural $150,000 RV Spe<:tacular at Riverside lntemational Raceway Oct. 5- 7. se~uf.;';:s. -Senior mixed douol11 C'ourt Thr1e t 1.m. -60 men's s!ngles (Unal~l, 10:30 1.m. -50 rrMtn's 1l1111h~" 1u"al1t 12 noon -60 men's doubles C!l"alsl J:JO p.m. -SO me"·1 doubles (linalsl 3 p.m. -IS men's slncilH samlfln~ll. SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE fSl!PT. U) All E""'h Fl1111l1 c..,1,r c.urt Vli!'NTURA -69 anglers: 10J c~li(o bass, 111 blue bass, 101 b,.u, 116 Donifo, J81 rock cod. IMPERIAL BEACH -tf ar>glers: 169 bOtlltO. "6 y1Uow1all, 3ol rock Cod. SAN OIEGO (MUlllclptl Pitr) -'85 a11gl1r1: 1,220 yellow1all, 202 bonito. ~ berracUdt. REDONDO -21l 1nglers: 16 yellow11lr, 4) bllrracud.t. ~18 calico b.IH, <5J3 bonllo, l,2JS rock cod. Saroe -!~ 1noltr1: 10 vellowt .. 11. 7 ~'· rac.,.,., 783 bonllo, 3' macke~I, 125 ome t a.m. -.ii women's s111gles. 10:30 a.m. -Senior m ixed dOubles. 12 noon -Celtbf'!IY 1dtit>l1ton. I p.m. -:)5 n'lffl's •Ingles. 2:JO 11.m. -~s men's !lnulet ' o.m. -3S men·1 doubles. 5:30 p.m. -•S m1n·1 doub!ts. c ... 11 T~rH 2;JCI o.m. -.0 women'I doubles. I rock cod. PARAOISE COVE -91 anglers: 2 yeltowtall. JO boll!lo, 65 c11ico b;us, '85 roe-cod. OCE.ANSIOE -97 t!'!!ltrl: 12 bo"ito, 117 s1nd bass. 9 while sea bass. 31 •0<~ '~· Dr. Riserudt , 33. is a dentist in San Clemente and will serve as driver. Greene, 32, will be the mechanic and co-driver of the single-seat VW-powered dune buggy. Dr. Riserudt has been rac- ing ofl-road courses since 1966 when he converted a 1956 Cadillac into a r a c i n g machine. His most recent competition was in tlle novice Borrego 100 race where he finished second in his class. Top Dragsters Entered In Rich OCffi Race Greene is a IO.year veteran in dune buggy competition vo'ilh most of his experience coming at Corona Raceway. The race will be run over a new course at Riverside. lt will be 7 .6 miles in length and will partially utilize the paved road course and also a portion of the hills to the east of the usual course. Entry infonnation may be obtained by writing SCORE International. 2701 E. Anaheim St., \Vilmington, 00744. Gals' Tennis Entry fee deadline for the rirst annual women's singles round-robin tennis tournament is Sept. 24 at the Costa ~fesa .Tennis Club. The 64-entry tourney will begin in n1id-October and the entry fee is $10 per person. Further information can be obtained by calling 557--0211. The entry list reads like a Who's Who of drag racing for the \Vestern United States Grand American Na ti on a I drag racing championships to be staged at Orange' County International Raceway Sept. 14-16. Don Garlits , Don Schumacher, Jim Nicoll, Don Prudhomme, Gi!ne Snow, Tom McEwen, Jung le Jim Uberman. Danny Ongais and Dick Landy will all be there. Prize money will exceed $150,000, the richest purse in OCIR history. Garlits is the point leader going into the ninth race of the IO-race Grand American Na- tionals series and appears a cinch to win his third suc- cessive championship. He has entered his brand n e w f u 11 y-enclosed and streamlined top fuel dragster at OCIR. John \Viebe suffered a broken leg in a recent collision and is through for the year after challenging Garlits most of the way. Only Chris Karamesines. a 15-ycar veteran. outside chance of Ga rlits. Garlits holds the official AHRA dragster record of 5.99 seconds elapsed time and is hopeful of recording the first official 250-mph run from a standing start over l he quarter-mile drag strip. In the fWln y car division, Schumacher is the leader with 5,400 points followed by Nicoll with 3,950. Prudhom- me with 3, 700 and Snow with 3,200. ln the pro stock division , Dick Landy is the leader \)'ith Larry Huff and Wayne Gapp challenging. Tom ~1cEwen, the Mongoose out or F'ountain Valley, will challenge In the funny car division. Qua lifying begins at 3 o'clock Friday, Sept. 14 and continues at 10 Saturday, Sept. 15. The runny car first round eliminations begin at 9 Satur· day. Sunday's fmal day will find gates opening at 8 a.m. for time trials and eliminations. PARAMOUNT SPORTS "Gver'!lhin'J • C'1 " Jenni:J in A FABULOUS FREE VACATION ~~~ FOR TWO IN BEAUTIFUL HAWAII VIA Cl! CONTINENTAL 747 THE PROUD BIRD OF THE PACIFIC. Help us celebrate the Grand Open- ing of our Para1no unt Sports No. 5 in Beverly Hills by coming into any of our tennis centers to register (no purchase necessary) and qualify for the Hawaiian Va- colion and OTHER FREE Ta.NIS PRIZES including RACQUETS, BALLS, CLOTHING, SHOES, ETC. During this celebration hundreds of items on sale : COME IN AND REGISTER Enlrits CteM Sttt.,nlMr n , ltll DUNLOP YELLOW IA.LL$ s1as fWlttt trode-1• af l Md tiolkl ... , •• "'' ,., C•• NMni '"· t T• e M4t11., T .... W .. ., T~llll'I. & kl. 'HI ' • 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa ......,11N1 Behind Tiit l"t11nation1I Hot11t of '""'•••• 7lU 51,.ta w..mc• •1vo. le• AllftlH, Ct. fCll4' l2UI 11•"1~1 ' PHONE 642"816 N1c1•1 ffll S•"'• Mentt1 111¥11, 1-rty Miiii, C1. "111 lt\JI 17S.HJI l llllt JNft IUnt Ct1111r Rtcrttlltl! ll'tr\ ._.,.. l tNll, Ct. ftlll -- ac 0 • Everymanwantstofeel the smooth, imported whisky from Canada. Andeverywoman,too. BLACK VELVET4' Bl.EN OED CANADIAN WHISKY. 80 PROOF. IMPORT EU BY 01973 H~U BLEIN., fNC.: HARTFORD, CONN. ~ ' I . I • . ' Sta.rt Your Engines! -WITH DEKE ..JouLGATE . , Jolin Mabler iJI widely believed to be the man who blew the whistle on the unsuccessful Champ carr deception at llldlana !is Molor Speedway in May. He bu never denied being lhe ftnge~n ::::X,~t'.'°"' becaWJe ha apparenUy didn't care wha.t anybody "It doesn't bother me a bit to be called a stoolplgeon " Mah- ler said. "The biggest cheaters are In Gasoline Alley ~nd the bigg~ •toi>lplgeons are there, too. It's all part ol l~g to win. When you get right down to it, racing" is a dirty mean; hard bu!Jntss. If you are going to cheat, you had bett~r k:no ' what you are doing." w ln ~ue you are unfamiliar with the Car 34 caper, it hai> pened like this: San Juan, Capistrano's Sam Posey, by a fluke of bad lu~k, took a alow q1.11llfytng speed on the first weekend of tl me trials. Mahler was fired sooo after that and the team nominated veteran Jim McElrealh to try to qualify No. 35, the second of three cars It had entered. A slory was circulated that a fresh chassis tu,b had been flown In from the West Coast. Posey s crew busied Itself working on this "new" car to gel it read~ ror a qualifying attempt. It was ·actually the orlgi~J No, 34 In disgui se, already credited with a qualiCylng speed and in- eUglble to try again. USAC chief technical Inspector Frankie Del Roy upooed !his seemin~ly amateurish bit of tr:lckery, which became known as !he lndianapolls Watergate, both for Its deception and the fa ct it was ISungled. But while Champ Carr, was exposed for its attempt to cheat Mahler was blamed. for his role In blowing the whis tle. The word around Gasoline Alley was that he would have a hard time f111d- ing a ride anymore, on the basis that if it sui ted his purpose he might rat on any new car owner who hired. him . * * * nll 11 to report tbat Mt only did he not tell on Champ Carr be WMn't 11re jusl wbat the ctt• was doing. A1 for the after: mat.b, MUltr'1 career ls doing nicely. He is under contract to Dfct DtatKla, a Connecticut laad owner aad lnVestor. On Oct 1 the two of tltem will decide what is goil1 to be tbelr 117' racing pn>gnm. · After Deatlcla baDed Mahler oat of the Cbamp Carr episode, be UIOdat.td •1th the team for wblcb Mahler drove at Ontario. It w11 a trial na. If aU parties, inchtdlag the sponsor, are pl•as<d, ~-may ,... a W-Melaro oa Ille USAC chm· pionaldp trail nelt year for tbe run 1eason. * * * "Mr. Deutsch is a very wealthy and busy man," Alahler said. "He 11 very loyal. Being involved. with Richard Deutsch Is like being associated with Tony Hulman at the speedway. As long as you keep your nose clean y91-1 keep your tenure." Deutsch is apparently a throY.<back to sportsmen of an ear- Jier decade. He aaw his flnt lndianapolis 500 in 1971 (coinci· dentally, the year Mahler was removed from his car so the own- er could drive Jt, because be bad been bumped from the field in another car). . Deulleh thought racing was an exci ting sport and bel ieved it would be a nice thing to take his friends to a race, be involved y,.·ilb e driver and give parties. The way it turned out, howe,·er, Deutsch is so busy y,•ith phi· lanthropic activities be rarely gels time to see Mahler race, ex· cept for once a yea r when be charters an airliner and flies his friends to Indianapolis and a few other races in the East. Never- theless, the ..,.ealthy New Eng'8nd patron bu remained enthu- siastic about the sporti1Dd his dri ver. Reperts Clarified Last November a IJ'OUP of Mexican journalists confronted Ed Pearlman In Mexicali abortly before the start of the Mexican JOOO otf-road race. 'Ibey claimed Pearlman, president ol lh< •ponsoring National · Ofr-Road Racing Assn., bad promised lhem air transportation to La Paz so they could cover the cooclusioo of the race. They in- sisted oo paJlng, bui laian lnslslod oo D)'ial. 'Ibey mnlndec! him ha bad enUced them lo COiier the race on lbe bull ol !bat ru,hl. Pearlmao was la a terrible dilemma. One ol the two air- craft promised to hlni ., .. upavallable. He only had room on the remaining plane lot bil ollldall. He wu wry aorry, bul they would have to stay bellncl. What followed •* one ol the great journalistic putdowm lpolU blltory.~~ <Mried antl-NORRA atories the lenglh and bniadtb of cauotry. Under the , 11 lhouldn'I have been a aurpriJe lo NORRA wban lbe iovemmenl stepped In and toot any Ila right to stage motor races in Mexico. NORRA officials rwtcted bitterly when it was announced that the Baja Sportl c.omM!tttt, a new arm ol the Tourism Pn>mo- Hon Committee of 8'jl Cllifornia, had been awan!ed the very November dllel thal JIORRA bald !or .. ven years. Only the name of the: race bad been changed, from the Mexican 1000 to the Baja 1000. Mny ol tbe ~t_.,..t ..-ftt..-Ma!cu """' h lrlndl and all!ea ill NOllRA art bet.c ,.i.uci,. denied by Ille ... -la. dbplqll-....... i,. ..-ta tlkNd raelq. !lom• dlarati ,att bdal ~ u ... .......,. ol- iloft. C.mpall6an .... -.......i by NOllRA aapportm \bl Ille M•xlcu pwra-1 wDI collect Income tax !nm lllelr prlle )llOiHtJ atHll tll•t tllert are a lack of En1U.1Hpeaklac offtclell aad 1nedlcal lldlltlel. '.'I• recldal ...,.,i. o! blptry, the ........., Jou -pabl!Ued tut "typieol M.-ellldeacy" will l•t f(fd.11, Stpttmbtr 7, 1973 D~LY PILOT 2;1 Rangers Set Drills Top Bicyclist,s w Compere at MV Ritter Sets Net Defense llonrt Rltt~r will retum to The Coast Rangers soccer club will hold Its Hnt workou t or the aeason Sunday at Mariners Park beg~ at 2 o'clock with p r o 11 p e Ct l v e pl•yers Invited to attend. This will mark the 1tart o( lhO Rang•nr lllh campaign w11h Brian McCaug)ley and George Harrison serving u coaches of the team. The Rangers have won the Pacific Soccer Leagw: six times in the past 10 years and during the past a e a s o n , defeated a UCLA cl ub tea m with many memben of the NCAA championship varsity squad participating. Prospective playen trying out for one of the two teams should report to the part at least 30 minu tes In advance of practice. f\1any positions must be filled this year according to the coaches. Marlners park ls located at Irvine and Dover in Newport Beach. WUe UJcr.y of Thousand Oak• wiU be riding a $2,000 bicycle In the Miller High lJfe Classic bicycle race at Mi.sslon Viejo Sunday, beginning at noon. Lllczy, a 17-year-old in· ternaUon.al class rider who recently returned from the junior world champk>nships in Munich, Gennany, wUl be churning up the hilly course on a new Titanium racer. The average weight of a 10- speed racing bike Is between 28 and 30 pounds. The titanium two-wheeler normally weighs II pounds but has been beefed up to 15 pounds and h .. been slightly modWed for the rigors of road racing. Lucey usuall y races i t around the sharply banked track at Encino in the San Fernando Valley. Les works out by riding more than 400 mJles a week. He says the new bike doesn't generate more speed but it Quaker ......... 41c Ponnzol! ....... 41c · Tex•c:o ......... 31c V•lvoline ....... 34e ' Racinv OU ... 44c Shell ........... 41c C...,,_ ........ 39c AT, ........... 39c 3 •AND• ftlGHTl tltJend his men's open cham- docs he:lp him to malnlnln hls to U1e starting point oo Oso Bahamas: nnd the Soutti"·est pionsblp in the ~1ission Viejo speed for longer periods or Parkway. Each race will be U.S. open and classified lt:Mis lin1e. He recently set an multiple laps around the A novel formal will be used ioumament Sept. 29. American 3,00l).meter mark of with the first racer across Jhe M Iha 600 I three m.inutts, 59 seconds. i;ourse. ore n p ay e rs Current research and John Tunbers of Arizona finis h line not necessarily the participated In the event last race victor. Each rider ac· i·oar In four d1·v1'slo•• of develolXflenl types are toying will return to defend his .... with plastics and frame tubell cumulates points acconting to singles and doubles com· or carbon fibers txmded by championship. Timbers won his place at the encl of each petition. supeMtrength coheslves to the 35-lap event last year in lap. Entrv blanks are available build an even lighter bike. three hours, 40 minutes. A senior event for riders 18 at teMis clubs and shops in Tcedyne Corp. or Garderin More than 150 riders ar1! ex-lhrollih 39 will cover 20 laps Orange County or by calling is pursuing the project and pected to participate Including and a jlU"llor event for 15-17· 837-4084 . Deadline for entries feels that raceni r.nd recrea: _so_me_-::rr:=om-::::--M_ex-:i=co=',='=h=e::::::ye=a=N>=lds-:::'.~=l=I =be=IS=I=•="'=· =-,--:is-:Sec-'::11'::_· _2::_0 .,--,---:::- tlonal riders in the futu re will - be pedaling nearly efforlless ·•'\~' ~[(bj,7,'J? bicycles that weigh less than ~")>;>~·· 'fJ(f' , REVOLVING LE'ASE BACK 10 pound!. tJ' TOii ~ The race is open to Amateur ff§ GlT WHAT ~ A llVOUlhOHM1' CONCEPT fN AUTOMOTIVI UAS9NG Bicycle League of America YOU WANT 0 · riders, both in senior and O WHQll YOU UASE jun·ior divisions. A 15 . lap ~ A '73 or •74 ~ junior race wi ll begin at noon . ~ FIOM .US . ~ · ""t.l"'"'e ......... _ ..,,fell• -• .... 1~11 _;, .Jt~ p.o-ll•I N ............ -.. ,o,..i .. -'<• if _,. .. ...,,. • <rl\lt..•••• .. ,. •••lcl1 ,,.,, 11, 24, • l 4' -""'" • H.,., o D•w• ,.,. ...... , • l ullf·lll Moh1,.11oau S..ht91 e a..nlitt S,.clell1ts e huHvlduol & CoMIMtC'-4 ,---CA&.1. ,0. 1•11 llOCHU•t --- The race wi ll begin on Oso '('<ff ~~) Parkway and will be run ov.r :--0 IJ'/l llJ \j\ o >/"-. _-.------, , _998 __ -4_560_--'J..__5_56_-0_5_7_1_11 IMMl!DIAT• CASH •oA vou• TIADl!·IN Wes t !O h10ntaOOSO Parkway, ~ . nera \,Alf as1ng 2 COMYINffN'f LOCATIONS TO Sll'll TOU a I.II-mile course. It will travel ~ '" Ge I r ~ le . •-- to Estanclero, right to ~ 01v11rOM °' CITY OF ORANGE J NEWPORT IEACH Marguerite Parkway and back General Car Corp~"==::!.!:::::'"'=:':":'"':':·::··===-=:'''.:·:";::'"~'':":'":'":'."'::! '""""'" V•••l•h, Sl.,491 "'"~ Co•~•• ""°IM•I•• ..... Cot Porl .. -•c• R11. I.If SA VE 30% • 50% THE WEST'S MOST COMPLETE DO.IT· YOURSELF AUTO CE!ttER t.:l .t:CTHO:\lf". TH ,\:'\~ I ~TOH IZt:IJ 11;:oo;1TtoS AUTO PARTS PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1973 OPEN SUNDAY 9·6 90° SWEEP 2" TACH 4?.? ............ 1899 lo•g•t Pel•• & Pl"' llf1 ... ,., 'c,11..... ] 99 Vohld 11 •• , E11y To l•U1ll i pp11 ! •FRAM. Ol.FUEJl S'fl'U OIL TllEAT· M E~T ~.,.,., 1 ... ' ,.,, •• 1~ ... 1¥,t'/ . Kraeuteri Ii '~/.~~/ ~ ~ ... ,,,, ' ... , .. ,, PLASTIC OIL POUR CAP ""'" "'' f., AH l'lti voo .... •• c ....... ........ .. ... OIL FILTER WRENCH OR OIL POUR SPOUT 29~. I . " t•RAM OIL l'ILTER 6,QOO Mllo Fllt•• 1?.?. GALVANIZED OIL DRAIN PAN f!!:i~·;-9 9· u •• , .. •••hll!.t P.ru . . . l~. I C....•or,t .. 4 T• U•ot () c, ... 4 n .. llu1 K...,n 0,1 r,,.,., •• , 39~. CARBURETOR AIR CLEAN ER ....... " 192 o ...... uc C.•1 An4 Pe,.,.!•• ' ,.,.... ... r: •• , To 1 .. u1U P•o1tc1 Yo u• c •• llUPONT RALLY Rog. Llf 8 TllACK STEllEO TAPE PLAY ER ::;;:";'(,,. 2 999 v.1 • .,, & l .... c ..... 1 CllAMPION AUTOLITE OR A.C. SPARI\ PL L.:GS l'!~#ttthl<N STEERING WllEEL. COVER Aoooflo4 Celwo 59· • h ,, • CAii llADl,O 1 .. 111.1. s, •• k .. ..... 1 •• 0. w...1c s ... 11ct. Slide R~l1 Tu•ln1 1S!? . ~~ <:P~ 3 PIECE TUNE·UP KIT P•l•t•, Roto•, Condonfff 1!9 .. 12 l'l•:t:t: !'\l)t:K•:1· SET S.A,E, OR t.IETR1C 8 l'OOT 999 BATTEllY BOO STER CABL ES Koop In 99 Yo"' T,...,,11 ( I'., r:•••t•nd•t 26 BLADE THI CK~ESS GA UGE 49' CHE CKER AUTO V·BELTS f o• Moot , ... 11><1!.LJP KIT -MOTOR CRAFT TUNE·UP KITS 6C1llolw I C1l!o4o< 11 .. 1,.., 111 S~? 6~~ 1?.? Ting\• P•obt 299 ;><: l I" Lr G \\'RENt.:ll 4 AMP BATTERY CHARGER (k., .. 1 All • & 12 v.11 l1ttoti.1 c ............ ~.,.,.u.,, 9!! 4 114:. Tll~f: lll' KIT 'l'C)f)I. :-it:'I' 599 GREASE GUN •o·l'lllo~I• ~ .. ,., ... !t.•p, He- 3?.~ Llfto To lOOO L~o . I'•-Un4•• ......... s.1.,, Volvo 1" To 14" L1h ·~ ~ ~ -lplo Ille lud el maNOO. : 1'llo Mc ti a .......... """' ud wlll tura all Ill fft over FREON 12 HAND! PUMP "'" 0,1, L iii W.•Sll LOCKI NG !:."! ~~t.=.:=..M=:;. ~·.:.::.:";.~~ 'tti!.":''·" 69• i·t.r 39' ~!~=i:~.::::· 88, t'.~~.tr;~~:-··-88' ~t~ ~=~ .. ,,. 177 99' CREAM WAX Fiio t.loOI L"t Sl oot lien• will be ·~·11 blll:llpal mea aad women. Tiit MC re-~-":::~~f.W.'f~;;';'.';;~w;,w.,,,,,r..,.,.-~=--~~~~~-.,;....;;."f~'.".':':~'~"~' ~,.,.;;,,....~,;:,::::::;~-_;;;....;;.,,~--~~~~~~-:;.,,""'"_,.;;::~~~ l\lset 1e eomm11t"' 61 11effldeiley" ._. b.t Is dotq: a toU• :S: PO"'ER E 'GI :Cleallou job el ln'lll .. overcome that lmap -... actlou. i e ; STEERING E NNAMNEEL ll ERCLLES CRE EPER : ·11 '* * * · , HOSE _,,.;;;'9 .. : Last weekend 4Jlredo Annaa, executive director of DSC, ·== came to Ontario to !!'001 the (lf<ll and answer aom• ol lh< many •quettiODI that hlYii -llnoeJlaja Goy. Millen CUlelJallj)O Eoo1 O••lt· Yw11oll RoploM- Hooet I ~~ ER T U 111':~ :turned over~~\ race1 to hli own cotmtrr'1'81· !~ : "We In M ~ .. ~ e:tiry gr c:i:,: wt:'~ th< "'!"!1~· Pim. TO~t: II ·did with tht ._ /0 Oii r map,' ~ws C:O~CE~TRATE 9 A o-~le Hltk Gi.11 flnlth l'w ...... ""'11-.......... r: ....... ............... , Ooltt .... 1111-· llOIQISY J ••• -T"~' ~ c1-nt ""'", lvll., HEAV Y ll8,.TY WITH PA.OOEO , .. , LI ETDIE ~· Gl:A RA NTEE SHO!:K ABSORBERS 12 FOOT G ..... Moff .... T ... r TOW CABL E Life Of ··~ Ant!ff Co1i..1 P•ooonl f., Eo o, Moblllt~ ~" 01-.... c.. Stool C:o~lo •·•· 1.•s :aa1c1. "'11le ,._ 1J waa Um• lh4i races w•re bald 199 149 ~.~l'l.~ 2 4 7·9 by . Mexican m for lhe benefit of u,, Mexlcen people. ::::::ii·· ':;;' 111 ••• IU41~• A/'lO c u1be prevloul onJy u~ Baja as terrain. tt organized ;.,._,,,._':::,,;;,-'~Oii''i'""'.:::'.'"""-".:':'.~:"t"'~~~~~~"~'~~~:::~~~~'.:.f ~.,;.w.,,,.,.,,,,.-~,,,,.,,,.,..,.,._..,,.w,_~w;;~ lhc race 1n· Anierl .. , . ' the prlu -"Y and kepi the prullt In J JENSEN CONSOLE ~-,w.;,""'l!M>'"""'"""""""'"""MMcl America.'' ' I · TIRE 19' 199 599 One or the ""'~~fits lo racers ol the new '""'P will PEN c IL be medical cov~ ii alool the r~ route. jjnder a new law, GAUG E Ar_, 1ald, Amejlcan · iJI are .. 1111ed tO th< same llOClal· lied mtdiclne bellifltl naUves. Aca:rdlnc1Yt for the nnt time 17 ... 17,. :r.~:1 •.. !bare wlD be clocl<n ~ In<! semce fl! every checkpoint • '"" "w'• 1--· ....... 1111 aftlta"· Americans ""· tht aillne -II M••· .... c •• '. ~!'..--. UTILITY MATS NN _,. -TUER MOST ATS ~· ... , .... jcaDI froln the ... to Pu. -,/ I t .. h • ·-""• U.ll,T•,,,., t:.11:: ...... 90. S99 ..... S 9, ::-::::~:c'.;.:. ... 199 11l1e.+-Mr 7 "••·'·" s.1 .. 1i.~ 11 .. ~.1"'"'°' OCIR CycI1 Show .......... ~. .,c.,.. ...,_ .. ~·rid .. =I•• domonllratlcns I n _~ Je 1~tht de)' with trallt•and road b n -mu Ind -- p!.C. 11 Hoatla )llpo lo he ..... lillll'ed fer the dll!erml s~ at•~ eyctln1 tven11. lnlimattoaal , Sajui• Ollllf f .. turea , will lnclllde clq""" I •·~7 ' ~ fer llclicla <JL.70 Adrnlaaion llld· · .. m _,.iet, 1 •--1 1 n d rr.. 1o lbe the ..,.cycle .-i.. from ..,..i cnverliia the eollre &ntlalloe, pl111 free balloooa, ocm Voundl· -.-. tOll dr1vea and -M.f~~NT I:.,,,"'"'" ""°" c.. .... ........ 1!! ONE GALLON GA S CA N .,. 77 ;:::r ( ..... NYLON FOAM SEAT COVERS 399 BUCKET SEA T CUS HION C••o\l .. A+IRt Ctlot• lll'll'T !~Ill 'llltT f:ll 39? 1999 71' BRAKE ADJ USTM ENT TOOL 29c VIJltort C.. I'""! la ride ridol, p h 0 t 0 I of Jhi -ol tht ..,.,HOnik tr.I !110loc r o11 !elm and .moton:ycles wllh the gllldan<e mot~rcte and outomoblle ol company a!ety •xt>Cl'll and literature. , .. Phone 645-8264 111 lad 19th STREET, COSTA MESA JUST OFF ' NEWPORT ILYD. , .. ..,. 111-,.....,.,_ 3 ,000 MI LE DRAK E SHOES AMlfl<•R lo \111~ •• o .... c ... 3?.? ... STARTERS ~":l:~; 12 99 ~'1$:~' • " ,...,. .... ,, hlty t·:JI ,. t GENERATORS ·-~ ~ ...... ' .. 10~.9 ALTERNA TORS •I,. t 1~~,\·~t ,. ..... , . c .. . 16!9 OPEN SUN, 9-6 BANKAMEftlCARD //~ft,,.,/, riding lnslruclol'I. An estimated ciowd ol 20,000 The Ronda m~ocroes te4'm is expected. },.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,.;;;;...,.,,,.,.,,,.,,.,..,,..,,.,.,.,,,,,.,,,,.,..,..,..,..,,,..,.,,,.,,.,,,.,,,.,,.,,,.,,..,,..,,..,,.""'""'..,.,.,,.,,..,,...,.,.,,..,.""""""""""""""",.."""""'""'""'""'"""""'"""""""'""'"""""""""N ............ -I • • ' ' . . ' I • ' . • 24 OAILV PILOT Friday, Srt>tembtr 7, l'J73 Week e ttd Y a e ft ting Cale 11dar Backward Race Set Today What's the Ca ta Ii n ~ Backward race? NQ. it's not a race in v.·hieh the sailboats n1ake sternway around the island. In 5imple ternlS, it's Balboa Yacht Club's annual race around the island in \vhich the fleet rounds it from east end to west end, lea ving the rock to stad>oard. _ So what's so ba ckward about that? Simply that all other races that ci rcumnavigate C;ltalina Island leave It port rounding from Y:est end to east end. THE RACE starts at 7 p.m. tQday off the Newport Jetty bellbuoy. In many respects, it s the most frustrating race on the entire season's calendar. Jn all races that leave the island to port the frustration usually cmnes when the fleet gets into the lee of the east end off Church Roc k -one of >:~ tP:---~ "A'"" * t;/ -,_ . ,,,,_,._ .;r/J'i·' // __ the Southland's more famous marine parking lo ts. There the leaders sit and \\'Bit for the others to catch up and the race to start all over again. But in the "back\\'ard'' race the frustration usua lly starts at the very beginning. V.'hat little wind there is at the start usually peters out and leaves the fleet sitting err . Ghurch Rock in ~that celebrated lee. Then comes the slow beat uo the ba ckside of the Island until daylight when, hopefully a norma l westerly begins to rip- ple the waters and send the fleet home in a soiMaker run. ALTHOUGH it has always been sponsored by BYC, for many years the "backward" race was a feature, usually the final race. of Newport H a rbor Yac ht Cl1u b's Ahmanson Series. NHYC drop- ped it a fev: years ago in favor of Jess frustrating races. Despi te its deletion from the Ahn1ansoo Series, BYC decid- ed to retain the rAce as the club's final ocean race of the year beca u s e of its "challenging nature." It oo.w counts toward the P e e k Pcri:.ctual Hig~ Point Trophy. The race is open to yachts meas ured under the Interns· tiona l Offshore Rule and the Performance Handicap Racing Rule. Entries will be accepted until 4 p.nl. at the BYC clubhouse. THE 'RACE is only one listed on the local calendar for this weekend. Here is the ac- ti vity listed in other Southland sailing prrts: Los ,Angeles-Lone Beach LrITLE SHIPS FLEET - Fall Invitational, PH RF , Saturday. CABRILLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -San Salvador Island Race, Cabrillo SerieS', IOR , PHRF, MORF, Saturday, Sur> day. Santa l\.toaka Bay KfNG HARBOR Y ACIIT CLUB -Catch h!e Who Can race, PHRF, Saturday. MALIBU YACHT CLUB - Summer Series No. 2, Pacific Mullihull and One-Des.ig MultihUll, Sunday. .SOUTH C 0 A itT C(} RINT!IlAN YACHT CLUB - Jntraclub ·RegatUI, Sunday. CORONA00--25 ASSOCIA· TION -Class racing, Sunday, San Diego CORONADO YACHT CLUB - Dix Brow Trophy race. SOHR, Sunday; Sabot Fall Series, Sunday. SOUTHWESTERN YACHT CLUB -Tabasco· Series, P· Cat, Sunda;:. North a nd Inland SANTA BARBARA SAIL· ING CLUB -Summer-Series No. 3, Sunday. Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY 'f.~.~,1k:Je-~~~-'HiJ:t~~!itG In offshore po~rboat racing one tie·ars a lot of hoopla about the big 36-foot hulls poy.·ered by twin hferCruiser or Aeromarine inboard engines. But \\'hat about the outboard-po"•ered jObs that e-0m· pete in the same races in a lower category'! BOB NORDSKOG, president of the Pacific Offshore Powerboat Racing ~ssocialion (POPBRA) from Van Nu ys, and hard driving competitor in the sport, pretty much tells the story after he was the first outboard powered boat to fini.sh in the recent California Hennessy Cup race out ot l\Iarina de! Rey. Nordskog was driving an O?.iC (Outboard ~farine Corp.) hull po\\o·ered by twin Johnson Stinger GPs. He \vound up in sixth place overall, averaging more than 52 mi les an hour over the 193-mile course . ''WE OUTRAN boa ts po\vered by three and fou r h'ler- cury outboards, despite the fact that our twin Johnsons had the small est engine di splacement in the race," said Nordskog. Nordskog's win gives him the point lead in Class JI outboard competi tion sanctioned by the American PO\\·er Boot Association. He is tied for third overall in the APBA outboard standings. NEW ISLANDER 41 RACING YACHT UNVEILED Vessel Built by Costa Mesa Company Johnson bas not campaigned its factory team in off· shore racing for several years. Instead, the company has chosen to concentrate on the inland enduros (a Johnson-. powered boat won the Outboard World Championship at Lake Havasu last year). NORDS KOG IS one of the few independents \vho con- tinue to campaign the Sea Horse in the rugged ocean rac- ing circuits. New Boat Introduced By Islander Yachts This is the time of year when dealers and the outdoor ~press wi ll start hearing a Jot -of tub thumpfog about the new outboard engines from major manufacturers -in- cluding J<>hns:on, Evinrude, Mercury annd Chrysler. They \\·ill be talking about everything from a trolling motor to the big, high-powered racing plants. Islander Yach ts, lnc .. has introduced its ne\V Islander 41 to the yach ting pu blic, ac- .cording to Hank McCormack, vice president or Sales for the Southern California y a ch t manufacturer. The new sloop-rigged racing yacht 1'.'8S designed by Al an Gurney, designe·r of Islander's popular 36-ffoter. In discussing the ne\I.' 41 , McCorm ack said. "The first official introduction or the 41 \l,'ill be at the Eastern sl?O\VS in late September. but there has been so much interest shown tha t five have alrea dy been sold. Three arc already in rac- ·~-<~~~*"--"':.iii.I.I~~ Coiutal Weather ~arlly sun11y tod1y. Ltgtil v1rl1ble wl!lds nlflll 1nd mornl!IV 11<>11rs beeom- lng wt51 lo sourhwesl 10 to 1! kr>01S I" 111err>00ns today 11111 Saturd;ty. HlOh todey uppef' 60s. Coastal temperatures ra~e from ~• to n. 11111nd 1eml)l'ra1uns ranoe from 58 to &O. Water 1emper1tur• 70. Su11, 11Joo11, Tides FRIDAY 6:.5<1 p,m, '·' .. 12:V p.m. 1.7 ing competition and \ve're now in a backlog si tuation." ~1cConnack added that the backlog \Vas lemporary an d the finn was gearing up to 1neet its demands. The ba se price for the new craft is $39.995. Islander \·achts located in Costa r.tesa. also builds· the Islander 3{l r..Jk 11, the Islander 36 and a 40-foot classic-style motorsa iler. The firm's Yachtcraft Division is a sup- plie r or custom kit yachts. Yacl1t Club Sets Reg atta Hobie Cat School Set Fo1· Non-Hobie Owners If you '\\•ant to "team to sail the Hobie way," be sure you do NOT own a Hobie Cat. That's one of the prerP<J- uisites of a new sailing· school soon to be started by Coast Catamaran, producer or th e popular Hobie Cat 14 and 16 and the new ~Iono Cat-12. in Southern California from San Diego to Santa Barbara. Th ere \\•ill be a $10 enroll- ment fee, but the main re- quirement is that you do not own a Hobie Cat. Further details on t h e schools can be obtained from Coast Catamaran at its new Irvine plant. ing schools for the nrm says -Van Bagley, director of sail-~ the program is designed to . ··, The Ericson-27 Association give helpful guidelines to ,. ' nfHUEElllmT-it will hold its second annual na-beginning sailors who would ~OHY •O'MC 11 ,...-... ._ ~f UonaJ chan»\fonshlp regatta like to learn the bcsic concepts 111111Mnce ntw lee•"-" "' I "'' f S 'Jin 1111 ''OX,OllD C U ST 0 M . S t d nd Sund · th 0 BJ g, TAllOlllNO'!.•re~r ,.. )... a ur ay a ay m e The program will consist or c11., "' ce111 MltliWIY '" ocean off MariQa del Rey, it a dry-land school plus plenty c.,.. -... Mar. · Tllalllrt t. Mi "'l'. cwt.l'lltrs t•r 111111 \Vas announced by association or actual time on the water -,.....,.,'"· ''"' · -ttute11 111 DE· bl . Hob' Ca ftGM l"U.%A, H•'IYP'OllT C•NTI!•, president Joe Marino. presuma Y in a 1e t. .,,."'' cet111r cu w1s11. .a.m,i. \Vindjammer Yacht'Club of There will even be a diploma. ~0~1':\:t.. ..._, "'' ..,,. FlrJt bi91\ First low Seeoncl l'llgh SATURDAY t :JO 1.m. 1:11 1.m. 7:2' p,m. 'larina de! Rey w1'll be host to Bagley said this type of i11me ••• 11 school bas been very sue--'""' -.Mc - ,.2 the event which is ex pected to cessfut 'on the East Coast and e~"'..~:~:~:N~U~ll o.3 draw about 15 entries. Entry in Florida. Jt wil l be run. in 2• w•Wl"OllT c•NTl ll 01uv• • ~.1 blanks are available from .jcoor.~pe:r:aU~o~n~~=·i~th~HEoJbqie~d~e~al;;•rs;:;;;~'"~"~"~'~"i-~"~'~';•~m~•;;;) '"""' ·~ .. 1:3'1: 11.m. SUNDAY \VYC. ~:: ~:,11 : ....... ::',i; !:~: ::~ Should a skipper find at the AT LAST SeQlnd 1110h ...... •:ol p.m. s.• last minute-that he can sail in A COMPlm R/V second low ...... ,., ?:Ol J>.m. 1.• the regatta, his entry will be su" .,... •:XI 1.m. st1, 1:11 p.m. accepted up t<> 15 minutes PARTSr SUPPLY MOOll 1u"' •115 p.m. s"' 1:u 1.m. before the starting gun on ' & Sl!RVla Saturday, Marino said. 09 M ICMlll CLOll:D ClltCUIT .-r PllOll ...... AT TKI rAl"'-OUt ~ -..WOO.. CAW, IN UV)NG COLOR 1:30 P11 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ALL SEATS $8 OllLJ ORANGE COUNTY CLOSED CIRCUIT TV. • FOR INFORMATION CALL 533·5511,. . ., CENIERj , ... "-"Mitre ....... R/V lttio lo iht U.S.A. . Wlolt """'.,.._....,, 'rl'llhr s.,,iy-. To v .. 1 A fMl!llus--,U-flle ~~-s.rrk:t c•flfff..*'i .... tMClfl(l!I~ ft 11w 1, 1n fl'IRu "'' tll• fl'HI ~-In•• fllt l!IMI lw1111M,fl'letf»llt111t. 011t f\111 .. l"llcl f.cllUltt. llllnllMI fNlMI. JllllMl'lfltl. t~ ttmP!tte · ••lldtdltn 111 -PttftnMnu. Wiii yw M "''"' w~ lllf!Y: t~ • tOll'lfert.W. Mlf~ rve11rtr II°' eut lohtltlle M tw fllt ....,. r! .. tt """·'i"lll•ll SMp,I"' Wlltf fw l~ltmtl!li •rtwslllf .-......... A ""kt fief WI lilt en/~1_•r.1 -• ........................... c..-.. ............ ..... ................ ~.. ....... .. ..,...... ' . _ _....,._... ..,,. .. ,.,._ c....... ................. i. ............. w11 ................... . """",. ...... lllJ . =."Cr. --..... _ .,. .... __ .............. "....... ..... ......... ' - ... -UI JOI AU. YOUl IV NllNI I --~· ltJNIMtl· JUCI DAiil SIJPPIJ ... ,...... htdi, ''"· nPJ'i~ ,. .... -.. ....... ~,,_ •flfllt.0 .... •-ti tltlWalU-tcnrA :.; __ ,,,. \. i': I:: ii ii " I " ' ' I ' ' .. "' . ' . ' i I ' . . I. " , ... ' ' : I '. " ' ' I I ! 11 I I' . ' . I • . , . I • IT.HICI MODEL 66 SINGlE SHOT SHOTGUN 12 GA. 20 GA. 410 GA. GRANTS SPEOAL PRICE HIRRlllGTOll IND RICHARDSotl MODEL 158 TOPPER Single Shot Shot&un 12 GA. 20 GA. 410 GA. GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE • . •32 88 s3288 ·-·-·-•. -...1---·-- ITHACA MODEL 3JV VENT Rll PUMP ICTIOI SHOTGUN 11 GA. and 10 GA. in field cbokes GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE REMllGTON 810 VENT RIB PUMP ICTIOI SHOTGUN 12 GA. 1n• 2Q GA. i• fiei. c~okes GIANTS SPIOAL PlllCE REMINGTOI 1100 VENT RIB SEMl·AUTOMATlC SHOTGUN 11 GA. and 20 GA. in field chokes GRANTS SPmAL PRICE ITHICI MODEL 100 SIDE IY SIDE SHOTGUI 12 G.A. and 20 GA. in field chokes GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE -~ARLY DEER SEASON · 1s ·s11LL ONI· I -1& I ' . ·: , ......... Jt"" .REMINOTOI JOO· IOI. BOLT ACTION RIFU in Standard C1llbers GRANTS SPEOAL PlllCl. s13125 . -r I ' REMlllGTON JOO IDL .BOLT ACTION RIFLE in St11dar• Cali~ers . GllAllTS SPiOAL PlllCl )) '1 l§u • ..... ~~~~~------~ ..... ~~--.~. ~---.u'N1;GifOQ.,s DEER ·~GS S I 88 . . GRANTS REG. $1.00 49c · S,ICIAL SPECIAL PRICI , PllCI _.. . 'I " ---· ' . ---~. TARGET 'TflROWERS ''"""'· 1 1·14n DOGILES • • '*AfllfS .r •,. ,.. , SPICIAL PlfO l r t ' I DEER HOISTS . ~ ,. ., . ~ .::~!t•1•124• PRICI II ' . .., . ·...u.1,..-litcJi ., . _ .. .,... .... , CLAY TARGETS · 12 GAUGE . 1211• DoYf lOADI -·a I ii' 1·35-llRDt ·._,..,..... GaAlfTI PllKI ari·=-.,.~ PH CASE ' . ) , ilft(W. . . ' ..... ,, ' . l i ' ', '• .. ,. .. \· ' \,\ '" . ' \ \· \ ' ' i' ,• ",I ' \ I ' l " " ·1 I I u ', .• ~ 1 ... ' ~ DINO MARtlN JR. , ii:' . ·Guitarist Keeps Fol'eign Travel . " . ~~e9ovia1 ~f Course is the · virtU9so •. " wy 'tl11Sic•I g~itorlst L.,,. enc• Paul, who once l!isltod Segovia. "We played until he had ti> siop." ·1 · • • • • . ' ... ... ~· •1 ' ,, ~ • •• f • .. , • ,l I ' . Arts/Dining Out Entertainment Friday, Stpttmber 7, 1973 DA.IL V PILOT . :· ....._ ________________ .• """ ··: DOUG McCLURE '• :·~ . ~· :~: ••• •• .. ' ~· =· ~· • Celebrities · Lo 1h for Charity ! Bobby Riggs. tennis's number one male chauvinist, will head a list of sports and entertainment personali- ties participating in the second annual Assistance League Celebrity Tennis Tournament Saturday and Sun- day at the Balboa Bay Racquet Club. Matches start at 10 a.m. both days and the week- end will include a dinner with entertainment Sat1')"day night al the Balboa Bay Club. " Besides Riggs, who came out of retirement and into national prominence with. his blatantly sexist, ·and ·suc- cessful Challenge of Margaret Court last spring, the tournament will feature : Lucie Arnaz. Chris Connally. Barbara Anderson, David Hartman, Harvey Korman, Corne! Wilde, Mickey Dolenz, Abby Dalton, Gary Crosby, George Lindsey and James Franciscus. Other celebrities playing will be Ralph Story, Dino Martin Jr., Rafer Johnson , Robert Stack, Hugh O'Brien, Frances Bergin, Dou g ~fcClure and Elgin!.Baylor. Tickets for the tournament may· be1•obtained at either the Bay Club or the Balboa Bay. Racquet Club or by calling Mrs .. Sam Gu;tey Jr. Resen'e~.~e~\s. cost $10 for each day .. ,nd 'g~neral-admission seats are priced ~i $5. . . • ~ . -.. ~ _:....·, •.-~ .. D.inner'r,~ ~llt'i>bt.fu~il-t.~Y·i~UI.ng, (drs. Robert J.,Don,er, ·64l!o0025~·"rbey ,,c<isl •20 per person .. Mrs. Jl4hard D,Jlectel ~s general:•Ililinnan o( the event. She is :a150· being 'as'siSted ~Y tli .. Mmes .. Freder· ick M. Grazer, J. RObert Lawson, William R. Snyder, Dean B. Patton, Alexander Bowie. John B. Keating, James W. Murray. Brenton R. Ogden, William G. \Vade, Norman Van Herzen, Allen L. Goody and William B. Tritt. . . . . . • • . . .· ,• =· . , , Cl·asses, ·' Ill Accord By CAROL MOORE Of 1t1e DallY '11•1 Stiff ClasstCal guitar music filtering through the bougainvillea on Placentia A venue captures the attention and frees the im· agination. The meandering melodies have Jed Lawrence Paul through most or Europe, Israel and Hawaii and into a private au· dience with maestro Andres Segovia . Now at 23, Paul is back in Costa Mesa where he started musicall y. leading rock _bands_aLCosf<l_Mesa._and -EstanciaJligh schools, performing concerts at Orange Coast College and the high school lyceum , and touring with campus choruses. • By teaching classes at Oakwood Apartments in Newport Beach and in his studio. he is giving other people of all ages the chance to be creative -the part ol his career that he likes even bet- ter than perfonning. "Segovia, of course is the virtuoso. Julian Bream added conversation and lute music to his concerts. Now I wan t to do something .. tlHfetenf to set me apart." Paul Sl!iid . J . 1 • . • .. That plus factor1 may be his knack .ror , ~ composition· but ".t~t t8kes lots of guts. Otherwise Ute bqolng1 may be two-fold, ' OQCe for ortg!nality Md once for' pro- duction." He needn't -woiTY, if HTambo,ura" is Any example.'· lt:s his most ~t experiment with the lndiM1 acale ~· he slips it coo- fidmUy, bUt -wialmounced, lnto an 'im- promptu medler,·of \Uch familiar pieees as "As'lurias" ( '_(eyfnda") and Romance •' ~n~~~·i~s ~~~~t~lng for reaction , t~ewartl • OI• ,an tmist who started 1 playing, ·• I he 1.Clllically difficult . . -1n11rumeni-;11 ,lhe-.,.,of a, acquired •• certain Spantill't•Warmth In four years of private study with ·Vicente Gomez and earned a muslc degree at catlfornla state University, Long Beach. Such dedication also resulted in his au-~ dlence with Segovia in the Beverly- Wilshire Hoi.I in March, t970. .. Paul out.maneuvered th.e publlcily • agent to gain enlry to the maestro's suite and then "we played until oo had Io Slop and he ln'Ylled me to come back anytime." .. • (See GUITARIST, Pogo ta i . . . "Annie <;;ef y.,..r Gun," the Lyric· Opere Aisociation "of Orange .County pro. "d~ctioi\,"opem ~t-,9 p.i:n. l!>night:~n..!_he l rvino Bowl, Leguna Beach. The musi· cal com,edy,' wl\ich will conlin,ue Fr.idays and Saturdays through Sop+. 22., itars Teri Ralston~and David Ho~iday. Shown hero, the stars are being filmed for KOCE telev.islon ~y ~amera111an Tom Eberharat ~nd director Kent Johnson (clapbo rd). lt wiH b~ ,on O~ang~ Gounty'.RovioW' at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Thu11- -day and Sepf. 15 on. Channel 50. Reservation• 497-201'4 ... 'I ~ I ' . ... .. D41LV PILOT . . .. . . . . ' , .. .. Clockwise from upper left: Brett Sommers ltop) stars as Gertrude Lade, receptionist to Perry Mason , fic- tional defense attorney. an d Sharon Ac ker will play secretary Della Street as "The New Perry ?ilaso n" premieres on CBS Sunday. Sept. 16. Three police- me n who gave up their beats to become actors on NBC series are J ames McEachin Oeft) of "Tenafl y," Jim \Vatkins {center) of "The Magician," and Albert Reed -of the new "Chase." \Vith Louis Nye, starring in "The Girl From 7th Avenue" on NBC, is Dierdre Lenihan, playing a young college grad Jearning the dress manufacturing business. And guests Dick Martin (below, left) and Joey Bishop (right) join Dean Martin on his NBC show on Friday, Sept. 21. fardy TV Season to Deb • ; • -----~ With 28 Police Shows " • " • • " By JERRY BUCK }as ANGELES (AP} -Hold your hCts. folks. the ne1v television season is ~ here somewhere. MOnclay begins t he official premiere ""~¥° for all three networks, but the v.'Ciitrs' strike last spring will delay soiOi new series for as long as six 11;ecks. ~ nc\v season will bring you another hea(Jy serving of cops and robbers, more co~y than ever before, n cont in uing lreCI to\vard ntini-series and a return to thC:;old·fashioned anthology show. And d~ forget the specials -including f'r~k Sinatra's comeback from retire- ment and Barbra Streisand in h<'r first s~al in five yea rs. ~ .... ile you're wai1in~ for all these v;o erful happenings the nety,·orks \v ill be rO\\'ing a number of things into the brdich: Reruns, old movies a11d a pro- lonjation or some of the suinmer sho\\'S. All,ltting witil all the new shows can deljlll. ;ae police shows occupy by far lhe big· geiij slice of TV time. Twenty-six, count- ing:.atl the rotating shov.'S. Thirteen are nepmers. The new additions include teletision's first black de t ec t i v es, :·-&b>it" from the movies and "Tenafly," Who is an wispectacular as Shaft is ~-~edy is more a bundant than ever as out NBC decideS to take the plunge. C has always had fe\v half-hour com- es, but lb.is fall it adds four new Wll. Mini-serles on tap incl ude \Vitliam Holden in ;,The Blue Knight," Burl Lan- caster as l\1oses in "The L11\·givcr." Brian Keith and John !\Tills in ··111e 7.oo Gang." Ben (iazarra and a dis!lnguishcd cast in "QBVll" and the story of the Roosevclts, •·Eleanor and Franklin .. , Sinatra and ~fiss Streisand. vlho shone brightl y in past TV specials. return this season. Sinatra will be on NBC and Miss Streisand is back on L'BS. Dramatic specials include "Alice Through the Looking Glass .. , the life of late baseball star Roberto Clemente: Truman Capote's "Uncle Sarn's Hard Luck Hotel;" Arthur Miller's "After the Fall." and Mark ~aln 's "The Con- necticu t Yankee in King Arthur's Court:' Here is a brief look at the new regular series: ·•Perry f\.1ason." CBS, 7:30 p.m. Sunday -an updated version of !he Er le Stanley Gardner creation, v•ith t.-lontc r-.1arkham as the shrev.·d. crime-solving la\vyer. 1\cw cast, new look. same courtroom de- nouement. "Lotsa Luck." NBC. 8 p.n1. i\-londay - Stars Dom Deluise as a long-sllffering bachelor still living at home in this adapation of the zany British comedy, "On the Buses." This show will go for the belly laughs. F ASIDON DESIGNER "Diana," NBC, 8:30 p.m. Monday - Classy Diana Rigg as a classy British fashion designer who takes over her brother's New York apartment. Her brother has handed out keys to au his fri~ds -who drop by at any hour. "~Iawkins." CBS. 9:30 p.m. Tuesday - Folksy. slo\v-talking: Jimmy Ste\vart as a folksy. slo\v-talking laY.')'er w h o spcc1a!izcs in n1urdcr cases. This !Hl- n1 inutc shO\\" rotates ,,·ith ··shaft"' and tnarlc-for-TV 1novies. "Shaft," CB.5, 9:30 p.nl. Tuesday - Richard Roundtree brings a scaled-do\\'n version of the hard·hitting black detec- tive to the small screen. '"Chase." NBC. 8 p.m. Tuesday -Jack \\-"ebb departs fron1 his usual factual form in Utis completely fictional story of an undcrco\'Cr police team that gocs in for razzle-dazzle chases by motor- cyc\e1 car and helicopter. Competing with this hardware are stars Mitchell llyan, Brian Fong, r-.1ichael Richardson and Ileid Smith. "The Magician," NBC, .9 p.m. Tuesday -Bill Bixby as a rich magicia n \vho li ves on a jet and solves cases with the fastest sle ight of hand in the West. ··Police Story," NBC. 10 p.m. Tuesday -A police anthology created by police- man-author J oseph \Vambaugh. A major element will be the the whole life style that comes with a badge. "Bob & Carol & Ted & Ali ce," ABC, 8 p.m. Wednesday -This comedy exam- ines the different viewpoints and values of two couples, ooe in lheir 20s the other in their 30s. None of the bed hopping from the movie. Stars Bob Urich, Anne Archer, David Spielberg and Ani ta Gil- lette. "Doc Elliot," ABC, 10 p.m. \Vednesday once a month -James Franciscus as a (See SEASON, Page 31) :: t:UITARI ST ! OCC Offers Organ Course f (From Page 17) ~: An audition with Emilio Pu- :Jol;in Cervera. Spain was won .'-_Y:more conventional means. s u b mi II e d cor- on d e n ce and tape rdings lben fitted the Into a E u rop e an ry. If you are an organ music enthusiast, Orange C o a s t College's new fall lecture series. ent itled "The Wonderful World of Organ Music," may be for you. The four-part series meets Friday evenings, beginning tonight in the OCC Science between music and art, and the cultural contribution W organ music to today's socie- ty. Ton ight's lecture is titl ed "Orcheslral Approach to Organ T\tusic," whil e the Sept. I 14 session 'A'ill deal with - ballads and Jove songs. On , Sept. 21 Foster will examine the waltz, the march and Latin rhythms, while the Sept. t 28 lecture is titl ed ''Musical Comedy Favorites." • 'Ibe instructor - artist wil- gly combines opportunity th appreciation. Hall. The two-hoor lecture:!ll-----------------------1 He has performed for a rman YMCA, at church rvices in Yosemit e. for :-"Qrtvate parties and weddings 'ttr the Harbor Area and as background music for bank commercials. His stark, out--of-the-,vay studio is a far c ry from his in· temational diversity and rai>- port wt.th the experts. But P a ul 's harmony with his rosewood instrument is un- mi1takable. :~ begin at 7: 30. There is no tui- tion and persons may register at the lecture. Series lecturer is Orville R. Foster, a n internationally- known concert organist and teacher. He operates the famous Foster Organ Schoo l and has over 7,000 students in California. The lectures will include instruction about the basic elements ol keyboard music, !echniques of playing live organ music, the similarities SOUTH SEAS .TROPICAL FISH .· .. POND GOLDFISH & SUPPLIES .,~ Baby Koi Carp 75c s,.," Watet i..ttvc• e Wotfl" Hy•J"" PolNI 511011-. 8 Goldfith Food Kef Poot! e ''"'P Flltn1tlo11 U11lt1 All 5bff I Yorltt:et of Golctfllh 211 W. Wiison, Costa M•sa 902.S Atlant•, Hunt. Beach. FOLLOW YOUR ROAD TO FUN .. ·--~·- ·- -l I I •• 'C MEAT, FISH, AND ALMOST EYERYTHINCO ELSE IS HICOH ! BUT PRODUCE PRICES ARE LOW! AT NEWPORT PRODUCE! Look At Thne Low, Low Prices. eom,_. •cl You'll Join The Thousands Who luy nelr ProdKe Here! I ••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• a .... • FLOWER SHO, Produce Prlcft Are Low! 8 SPl,CIALI a _.,-odlK• Prlc• Arti Low! • a ICEBERG a LAST WEEK AT THIS • LmUCE LOW PRICE ... ISH CUT. LOCAL GROWN • • • R051!5 • SMALL TOMATOES • I Sc • •. 10. 1J" • 4 2 "" • EA. •. 99C DOZ. • ,_. 7• • Limit 5 • Limit 4 Lits. a With This Coupon a Limit 2 Dn. • With This Coupon • • • • With Th is Cou ..... 'i •••••••••••••••••• •1• ••••••••• PRODUCE PRICES ARE LOW Hllll • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• a Produce Prlcn Art Lowl a OUR FAMOU8 a lllVINI GROWN • a VIN I, RIPE a CALIF. VALIN~IA a DILICIOUS NOW • ., CANTALOUPES• ORANGE JUICE• WATERMELON • a a "SM It Maftl" a • 5 FOR $1 °0 • 49c Q..t • :::.ii:s 49~ : • Limit 5 a In H•lf Oaltom Only • Limit 4 U • With Thi• (Hpon • Limit % ..... • With Thi• Ceiupon • 1i • •• • ••••• -. .W~th.T'l:o ~r. • Iii"• •.•••••••• COUPONS IXPIRE SIPT. 12, 1973 In t heir constant sea rch to 9iv• their customers the finest food th••• re1t e ur1nt1 serve Newport ProdUce. They know qu•lityf Try thtm, you'll love t he food •t ... Oill mans, Balboa; lh• Fisherman, Huntin9ton Bt•ch; Vill19• Inn , B1lbo1 lsl1ncl ; The Q uiet Women, C.O.M.; The Arches, Newport; Del1ney'1, Newport, 3 loca- fions now; encl 300 otht rs l Why don't you try us7 - WE WIRE FLOWERS AROUND THE CORNER OR AROUND THE WORLD BY F.T.D . "Orange Countu's Most Popular Prod~e and 1'lown-Howe" ~.1EV7POIT PR~DUCE FlOWERS IY DURA Open 7 Days a Week I a.m. lo I p.m. 261' Newport lovle-d Oft the r .. 1.,.1a • ,_ ,,, .. ,,, ,73 .. 711 175-42'1 "35 Years of Product Knoto How" llONDED FRU IT SL-llPPER FO R l5 YEARS "Wh•rt Quality Is th• Ordtr of tM lloust " -· \ CLASSES STARTING NOW ICE SKATING LESSONS • Enhance you r chlld's poise ~: and posture/ A p lanned ~ program fl le:!lsons with the":: excluslve(li:;e Capades ' easy:: l e~rn l ng meth od gives you ~ or your chUd healthy exerclse ':- in plea1ant sltpe rv ls ed .~ sur round ings. •• REGISTER NOW ICE ~l\1~1111~ i/;H,\~ Ml i A Yl ltDI SH01',IN8 CINTllt H•1liot ll,d • .t ..._ CO!fA Ml!A Toi. l714l 979.ano ' . ....... ·--I, 1 , . . -. . . . . . . . . . \" .. .~ I • j I \ . . F"r!day, Septtmbef 7 1973 PA!t.V PILOT _;:~ • • Ducks Return to I' toast-on · Plates • Perhaps Joe l'enncr's old greeting, "\\'anna buy a duck'!" is just calching up to the times. y.·hat \l.'hh spiruling beef costs and dwindling su~plies. Something hus to explain a new phenomenon on the oul 'n' about trail , the increased popuianty ui duck as an ent rec oo better restaurants' menus. The reason~. howeve r, are less im- portant than the circu1nstances. This mighty savory fowl should have been a leading contender long ago in any poll or favorites. _ • Not th:ll duck meal has gone unap- preciated through the years. Stronger in navor th an turkey or chicken. ii has always had a sizable club of boosters. And the delectable ways it's served in a number of local spots make nc\I: fans every day. Before \.\'C ru n down lhat list. though, a little background on these web-footed birds might prove useful . Wild duck, it seems. has been a prefer· red game since Paleolithic man learned to hunt. It is not recorded \\'hen domestication of the birds began. One source says that Peking du ck - the strain now raised in the U.S. - dcset•nds from the Chinese bird that \\'as an1ong the earliest varieties brt>d for the dinner table. Don't be surprised at the nun1ber of restaurants {hat offer Long Island duck Out 'n About I I Norman .Stanley or duckling. This pai:;l or New \'ork pr1r duces a major portion of the country's supply. To assure maximum cu s t ome r satisfaction , a thorough chef wiU require plump. compact biras that are well Oesh· ed and have a clean, unbruised and un- broken skin. A frozen duck should not be defrosted until just before it is to be cooked. Ducks possess a large amount of rat, 1vhich enhances the flavor and makes them especially tender and juicy for roasting. But it's important for excessive fat to be cut or dripped away during the roasting period. The bird is often offered on menus as duck a !'orange. In this method of preparation the ingredients usuall y called upon are butter, bouillon, dry while wine, veal knuckle, oranges and salt and pep- per. The duck is first browned well on all -iildeS over a moderate heat, then season- ed with salt and ·pepper. The bouiUon, wine and veal bones are added and It's covered to simmer for several boon in a large. pan with melted butt.er. FoHowing this, the sauce is removed from the pan, strained, returned with the addition of orange juice and rind cut in thin strips, and boiled briefly. It is then poured over the duck, which has been phaced on a serving platter and garnished with orange slices. More often than not, the dish is ac- companied by some type of rice. There arc variations to this general niethod of preparation, understandably, an~ many other equally delicious ways to cook and serve the bird. Out 'n' about has OO(npiled a recommended list. BOB BURNS -Fashion Island, Newport Center, Newport Beach. You Sept. l 4 Ope11ing Music Center Has Variety f\.1usic Center attractions fo r the 1973-74 season 'A•ill be varied . The company will of(er two performanc- es of the Ballet Folklorico ~lexicano de Garciela Tapia on Sept. 14 and 15 in the !\1usic Center's Ahmanson Theatre to coincide \\"ith f\1exican Independence Day {Sept. 15 1 celebrations here. The Los Angles-based troupe numbers 40 dancers, singers arrd musicians. including the Mariachi Uclatlan. and a 10.piece mflri1nba band . Alberto de Velasco '''ill be the pri11Cip.1I male dancer opposite ?\1iss Tapia. pany of 80 dancers, singers. musicians. acrobats and Kung-fu artists will offer two different programs cont a i n in g highlights from five classic operas, each. and will open Sept. 18 playing through Sept. 23, with matinees on Saturday and Sunday. first appearance for MCP in recital on Oct. 23. Andres Segovia will give one perfonnance this season, on Jan. 18. The Vienna Choir Boys will be heard in the Pavilion on Saturday evening, Feb. 9. and in the Ahmanson Theater for Sunday matinee. Feb. 10. The American Ballet Theater will return to the Pavilion for 1 5 1>crformances. beginning Feb. 18. It, again, 'A'ill offer t\vO bargain-priced, mid- 'vcek matinees on \Vednesday, r~eb. 20 nnd 27, featuring such artists as prime ballerina Cynthia Gregory. The Ahmanson \Viii then offer the eight-performance engagement of the National artnese Opera Theater of the Republic of China. by arrang<>ment with llarold Shaw. The Taiwan-based com· The incredible Josephine Baker, last seen In th~ United States in 1962, and direct from her recent celebrated New York engagen1ent. will make her only California appearance in the Ahmanson for eight per(ormances Sept. 25 through 30. Tickets in the fi rst five rows for all performances will be priced at $15. Miss Baker will appear in t .... ·o shows at 7 and 10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday even· ings. Guitarist Carlos Montoya will make his Violinist Yehudi ~tenuhin joins forces with sitarist Ravi Shankar in recital on March 26 in the Pavilion. Other artists will be announced 'i'·hen the engagements have been continned. •' Me One entree atoor =~;b'OO gratis 3901 l Coast Highway/Corona del Mar Phone, 675·0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY Fr11 Y1l1I 1"1rtciftt Prime Rib • Stuk • Lobster For Your D1ncing PlffsUr• SCENE Ill Tuesday thru S~turday 2201 E. 1st St., Santa Ana I s.tweH Saitta AN oJMf N•wpett ...,.., For Re1tr¥<1t io1u C•ll 5'47-070<1 Steak • Lobster • Chicken JIMMY LEE DUO Tvoscl•J ttttv Satunl•r Jolly Ox Huntington Beach IJ ...C.. s..tti .. tlrie S.. .... ,.., ............ I For R1 1tr"•tio111 Ctll 142·55)5 MIKE SUMMERS Jolly Jl.11. Miuion·Vlejo ll.e Pm R--4 -4 tM Sea -., PwrJ For Rt1•rvttlon1 Ctll 130-1220 -WAYNE GABRIEL'S .. MUSICAL WORLD ,...., ...... , ..... Jolly Oa Aneh olm l'-"9 ... -,., ...... , ..... , Fot Re1or11•fi0fl1 Coll '56-11 50 ..... ~flJI ,~. ·CHAMPAGNE E:;i;•:....,, SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. · 3 P.M. DINNER IS SERVED FR~.!::'i»-2770 . c:;Airporter Ginn a.J. ,. 11700 MAC ARTiiUR BLVD. ~note l~ltt tM 1lrpllrtJ NEWPORT LUNCHEON SE RVED DAILY From 11 :00 A.M . DINNER SERVED UNTIL 8:00 P.M Monday and Friday #1 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-2200 ~~~ 1 PUBLIC NOTICE BECAUSE OF THESE UNSETILED TIMES, YAMATO RESTAURANT WISHES TO ANNOUNCE, WE ARE MAINTAINING: THE SAME MODERATE PRICES Dinnll rs $3.95 to $6.05: Luncheons from St .95 THE SAME GENEROUS PORTIONS No reduction in our :;ervings THE SAME SUPERB SERVICE Uy our c rfi ci~nl. ki1nono-clnd \VOitresses ·- WE W ELCOME AND HONOR YOU -- U8D1DtO •so FASl-llOI'! ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER RESl·:HVATIONS llONORF.D : (714) 044-4611 ·~~ ..... ~ can't go wrong with the roast Long Island duck.ling, sauce bigarade, Wild rice. PETITE AUBERGE -Just reopened, in the new location, 3800 S. Plaza Dr., Santa Ana. You would have to go far afield to top this roast duckling, sauce a l'orange. RIVIERA RESTAURANT -South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. Still another winner with duckling a !'orange. but flambee with Contreau. Heady stuff this. lo both sight and taste. NEWPORTER 1NN -fIOT Jamboree Road, Newport Beach. A swnptuous dish. indeed, is the Inn's roast Long Island duckling a !'orange, a.1ontmorency, with wild rice. SHERA TON-BEACH lNN -21112 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach. Only head to the Inn's Caribe Room for the extraordinarily palatable roast Long Island duckling, served flam- ing at your table, and topped with cherry sauce. REUBEN E. LEE -151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. It's to the Sternwheelcr Room aboard the good ship fo r their Long Island duckling, baked and basted with an exciting orange sauce, served with rice pilaf. FIVE CROWNS -3801 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. One doesn't have to have English blood to become an Anglophile with this zesty Aylesbury duckling, one-half crisply-roast'd duck- ling, nest'd on-a compote of apples and prunes. with potatoes and string beans \vith almonds. MARQUIS RESTAURANT -1670 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. On the special dinner menu ent itled "Your ~1ailre d' Recommends," and prepared at your table, it's flaming duck1ing, with wild rice and orange sauce hfarquis. DERBY RESTAURANT -1262 Bristol (near Orange CoWlty Airport), Costa h1esa. You'll feel up to ¥:inning many a race once' you've tried their young Long Island duckling, roasted crispy-brown, with 'Aild rice dressing. BAMBOO TERRACE -153 E. 17th Slreet, Costa 11esa. One of Orange Coun- ty's great dining treats is the Peking duck, hut you'll have to order it in ad- vance and make a small deposit. 'N1e ntost famous of Northern Olinese dishes, it consists of a selected duckling. roasted slowly witil the fatty skin becomes crisp. A piece of the duck is eaten \\'ilh a piece of crisp skin, spring onion and duck sauce, sandwiched between t\vo flour· seed buns. NOW! AT THE NEW Ol ympic skater Janet Lynn is making her professional debut. with th e 1974 edition of the Ice Follies al the Forum , th is week through Sunday, Sept. lb. Performances are 6 p.m. Tuesday t hrough Fridays, 2 and 6 p.m. Saturdays an d I and 5 p.m. Sundays. Tickets are ava ilable at the Forum and t1t Ticketron agencies. ' WHITE HORSE Ron ShJ' Hits the Spot PAUL'S .l :j :g e] RIIS e IEEF e HAM e PORK Served Nightly From S to I 0 p.m. "Ron Shy and Don Kendricks get it together in the lounge. lunch e Dinner e Dancing • Entertainment tor reserva tions: , 642-87.93 --. •• ~· Jo • ~ • •• . . . ••• .. . • . I ' .. .... ··: .. ••• ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING optn 'ti l 1 t .m. .. J, J, MACK THI. thr• Sat. MARK DAVIDSON with RUTHIE LEWIS S.... •IMI Mp. . OPINING-FOi LUNCH -MON., SI". 17th 3295 NEWPORT Bl VD. I Across from City Halli NEWPORT BEACH 673-1374 "HE, ME & THEM" Nightly for dancing and entart•inment It's all happening at [?]~ .. ,_. ... 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach (714) 644-1700 496·5773 499-2626 OYSTER BAR BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, foe1 .·Set. ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR 4 to 7 p.m., Mon . t~ru Frl. Sunday Roy•I ChMnpqnt lrunc.h ,,_hlo• SHw '' MwS.1'1, 12:11, Tt111ncfey. o,_ hftll D.ys. -----' I 3W02 C<.:IAST HWY. , •• ,,..,. v • ._., "''11W"[' LACiUNA NIGU& " .. New ort Blvd. at 17th St. in Costa Mesa · ·' llliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-'·. mITllf.I Mexica1i Restaurant PROUDLY PRESENTS THE CHAPTER II For Your Dining And Dancing Pleasure .,. PlayinCJ Ni9htty Wed. tlwu Sun. ''finest Mexican r ood iii Orange Couttty" OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS 547 W-19th STREET COSTA MESA 642·9764 FAMILY DINNERS SUNDAY BRUNCH DEU BAKERY SPIRITS RESTAURANT 640-0322 630 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE (FnhtOn· Island) · ... , .. • ..... \ f '" • • •' ,• I .. ' • • -DAILY PILOT Friday, Sfpltmbtr 7, 1q73 a , ~,Elto!1 John Seeks ., KA.MS . 1'1IDl1t Restaat(lJlf :Aud1e11ce Ra pp ort ~ (gjl ~ CHINESE-AMERICAN - CUISINE LUNCH • DINNER • COCKTAILS Food To GO -Spt:clal Discounts BANQUETS I CATERING Concert Sizes Rankle Prolific Rock Si1iger . , .. • Dinin9 Sotis{n,lion Gi.ar .nt ecid OP~N 7 DAYS A W£~K DANCING & !NT£RTAINMENT \Yr dnc lday Thr u Sunday 2121 E. Coast Highway lO• IMck W•t el Mac:Attt11arl Corona del Mar 673-9919 ------- f ~r"'r. """"~,-· ~RK ' ,; °" II I • -•• ' • ' '-' • ..tf ••• COUNTRY CLUB ORANGE COUNTY'S TOP ENTERTAINMENT JOE LIGGINS The Origin•! "Honeydrippers" BACK AT THE LARK ROOM with WILLIE JACKSON Wednetday thru Sunday l tru11.1tt F1ctlitit1 lP It-450 Peoplt " 1678Z GRAHAM AV:::NUE IAt Warner! ~.~~-H-UN•f•l•N•G•fO•N~lf•A•C•H-•17•1•4•1•84•6•·1.18•'-•'•"•'•'•'•''.·'.'.''....1 1 ------------·--- DALLAS iUPl l -He pranced across the darkened 1tage dressed as the masked avenger hasking in an in· candescent glo w. He reached center sla!i!:e. turned his back 10 th~ 20,000 rans in the cramped seats and spread his cape. The words "Elton John" embossed in "day-glow" radiated t he darkness. The li,1::hts went up. Elton John waltzed over to and sat down at the piano and whispered a couple or "onc- l\VOS" in the n1icrophone . "OK. here Yte go then." and he punched out the first couple of chords to ''Elderberry \Vine." The 1973 Cotton Bow I spectacular starring an un· c:>mfortablc Elton John v.'as under way. fie spent an hour and 45 minutes on stagr. in- clud ing tv.•o encores, and ex· cept for "Your Song," his first hit. he completely avoided anything recorded on his first fi ve albun1s. NEW A.LBU~1 The current tour is to pro- mote the new al bum. "Yellow Brick Road," the release dale of \l'hich hn s not been set. and to plug the latt.'SI effort. "Don't Shoot Me I 'n1 Onl~· the Piano 'PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT .SINCE THE OLD DAYS r , Now Me 'n !::d's mobile ovens speed delicioos piping-hot piuas to your door in min utes. ~;g;@l?Y. fo< p<ompt !;rvice phon• 646-7136 (Newport Beach/Costa Mtsa-17th and Tustin) , / '" or 847·1214 (Huntington Beach-B.,ch and H;el) .. -fJ/ y;f~ . ' " Get the Pizza with Pizzaz .e;;: 'lm~Sis A mouthwatering mini-dinner that's a giant on value, especially now in times of high food costs. A whole char-broiled chicken thigh & I~ in a tangy teriyaki sauce. Served with our ' specially prepared fried rice and a bed of lettu4e. II you'1e looklng for a dellcious, nutritious. lnexpens h1t meal, lhen you'd Player," which is among the top 10 selling albums of 1973. Elton John . consumate showman in the t.11ck Jagger- CRod Stewart school avoiding the excesses and \'ui(afttles of Alice Cooper, 'v as un- comfortable because, I i k e most good concert r o c k artists, he relies on an In- terrelationship with the au- dience. Rod Ste""·art, who played the Cotton Bowl speclacular in 1972, became so disgusted at At one point he dodi- can't sec an audience I hate it. I gre\\' up in that eru . I 'ves 3 It 's so infur iating to have a or 4 1\·hcn I started listening lo gap be!"'cen r ou and the au· records like that. The first cause i't's the ooly th1·n9 diencc." records my ~-Ion1 brought home that I \\'as reallv knock- 1 can see out there." The Tiic last t\\'O years ha\'e ed out by Y.'Cre 'lloi.ind Dog' cated a song to the "Re- public National Bank be- bank's name was in lights on the scoreboard. &en his biggest as a and Bill llaley's 'ABC Boogie.' recording artist with two "Thry changed m1· life. t smash albums -"llonky couldn't believe it . I hc"'rd Lit- Chatcu u" and ··Don 't Shoot .. Me" _ plus a host or hot sell· tie Richard and Jerry tee Lewis -piano plnyers '"ho ing singles including "Honky have d1·ccctly ,·nflu cnced my Cat," ''Rocket M an. ' ' the arrangements he walked "Crocodile Rock,,. '"Daniel" style :::ind that was it. I just off the stage after performing and the current "Saturday started banging ;1way and for only 45 minutes. N i g h 1 ls Alright For semi-studied classical music At one point John dedicated Fighting." at the Roy:.il Academy of a song to the "Republic Na -~lusic but sort of half-hearted· tion:i.I Bnnk. because it's the BJ.UESOLOG\' ly. T was nl'vcr really in· only 1l1ing l ca n sec out Elton John 's r i rs t pro-terestcd in it ." • there." The bank's name \Vas fessionul gigs ca1ne when he -Elt{tn ,John 's real name is in lights on the scoreboard. was 14 in his nali\'C Great Brit-Reg O\\'ight but he decided al •·r reallv like to be near. ain with a group called one poin t early in his career 1 h1te to be rar away from my Bluesology. th<lt ''I've got to think or a audiences." he said after "Actually it all started when name. 1'1n fed up with Reg per(orming in his first outdoor I became old enough to Jisten Dwight. concert and the seeond stop o( to records, because my "I can't be Reg Dwight if his current tour. "l really like 1nother and father collected I'm going to be a singer so to be able to shake a few records and the first records I I've got to think of a name." hands and things like that. lf I ever heard were Kay Starr He took his present name --·-------, and Billy May and Tennessee from Eltort Dean. a member .• •JI! A.• I •.f, • • j Ernie Ford and Les Paul and of Bluesology and later S:>ft • uPtR StSAME • -~lary Ford and Guy Mitchell. ~fachine. and .John Baldry. .NATURAL fOOD RISTAUUNT. l'ft~'ll ;Pt.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;; ~w CN ... ertl Met111 • • -""" Sever - • UNLIMITED SALAD AND • .• TEA WITH DINNll !Will! 11111 ~PM) • OPIN DAILY • 5:00 te 11 100 P.M. • 2440 W. CHlt Hwy. •' I Newport '"'' 646·7071 II •••••••••• ------- CHAMPAGNE allUNCH 8U~~ET SUH04Y, SEPT.'· 10:JO lo l p,m, &Tuffs1t1if 1 llSTAUIANT 2241 WEIT COAST Ml8HWAT i. NEWl'OllT eaACH '4U051 1• DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY· ltEJtkWHAtE 87"4333 TEMPLE GARDENS ()HNSSB Reata11rant I RICKSHA I COCKTAIL LOUNGE Luncheon & Dinner Da lly I HO ADAMI (et Neri.e1I COSTA MISA Grenadine ef lfff Tenderloin ForHtltr• S1vtRI lfl l vlttr Wi"' S~Uth, k11Utns, MvtflrwtM 111111 Rid WIM AMONG 20 SELECT DINNER ENTRIES VINA HARMER DUO E11tt rf1ining ~ >(! ,t\!11i I-\ a1u1·i n~ Exotic 1 ropical Dtinks 540-1'37 540·1'23 A11cl, lit Gerdel Graw• 12201 llOOKHURST IAt ChepMeitl 621·7020 Opera 7 Du.yt Wtd Doyt: 11 1JO A.M. to 12 P.M. Prl. •ii Sat. 111JO A.M. tt 12:30 l1ntclsyt;1 4101·12 MIDNleHT EXCELLENT MEXICAN CUISINE 909) E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEA~H 96l-79f I NOW OPEN SUNDAYS - lta the 6allerie• Mesa League Sl1ows Off Crafts LONG BEACH MUSEUM O~ ART -2300 E. Ocean Blvd. Sacramento Sa1npler 11 exhibit runs Sept. 9 throu1h Oct. 21 , cross-section of art from the Sacramento area. AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -33t0 Bristol SI.. Costa Mesa. Acrylics by Jane Huffman ("Zula") through September. BANK OF COSTA l\tESA. -Harbor at Baker,· Costa Mesa . Oils by Lucille House through September. BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1640 Adams Blvd., Costa Mesa . Oils' by Olga D. Stearn through September. COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE GALLERY -206 W. Wilson St .. Costa Mesa. Craftl by Kathy Begard, Donna Freiberts- hall5er, oils by Betty Brooks, Cec Coburn, Gloria Gurley, Gloria Schreiber. Lydia Southworth and Ester Ella Work· man through September. COSTA MESA LJBRAR\' -5li6 Cent~r St., Co8t1 Mesa . Olla by Ruth Simms through September. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -J300 Harbor Blvd., Costa l\1esa. Oils, ~·atcrcolors, drawings by Pat Pembrook through September. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -South Coast Plaza, 3390 Bris- tol St., Costa l\tesa. Folk art by Atancl Schonthal through Septe1nbcr . DA.IL\' PILOT -330 \\'est Bay SI., ~ta Mesa . Abstract oils by J..inda Hudson through September. DO\VNEY SAVINGS ANO LOAN -360 E. 17th St .. Costa l\lesa. Oils by Ann Souza through September. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -tl](;ll Adams St .. Costa Mesa. Oils by Joe Dames through September. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 HadJOr Blvd., Costa Mesa. Oils, drawings by Wanda Hein through Septem- bcc. l'tlESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa l\Iesa. Western subjects by La Verne Rosow through Septtem· bcr. PARK LIDO CONVALESCE~T CENTER -466 Flagship Road, Newport Beach. Oils by Barbara Schultz and Dr. Fred 8. Olds through September. TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 171h St .. Costa Mesa. Oils , acrylics, watercolors by AM Routled1e throuah Sep- tember. CLYDE ZULCH ORlGINAU -3800 E. Coai;t llwy., Corona del Mar. Paintings by Jack Hannah. Warren Woodward and Cyldc Zulch lhrough Sept 14. Hours: Tuesd.&y.Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 pm BOWERS l'tlUSEUM -2002 r-i. Main St.. Santa Ana . Paint· ings by Los Angeles artirt u Chen Sept. t through OCt 28. 4GUNA B~~USEUM OF ART.-:I07 CUff Drive. Burt .P-i'octor Re live opens Saturdq with art and memor· abUia . Hours: 11:30 a.m. to 4:3CI p.ril · CHAU.JS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. Wat~colors by San Francisco painter George Post through September, closed Sept. 10-23. Hours : 11 a.m. to S p.m, dally. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Highv.·ay. Corona del Mar. Fourth aMual summer show exhibits the works or Robert Rauschenberg, Kenneth Nolland Donald Judd John Clem Clarke, Tom Holland and Laddie 'John Dill alooi with selections by young talent: Gary Beydler. Douglas Bond, John Balsley, Chrisloper Georgesco and Ted Kersey. Hour!: 11 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. Through Sept. 14. NEWPORT CITY HALL-3300 Newport Blvd .. Ne\\•port Beach. Mired media by Ste\'e Krikl of Fountain Valley. Through September. Open during regular business hours. GALERIE LIDO -3375 Via Lido, Ne..-rport Beach. Wiler-• colors by Bill Harriton of Kansas Clly. Sept. If-Oct. 1. Hours : Monday through Friday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and S.tur- day, noon-4 p.m. l\fJ<;X~CAN VILLAGE -150 Avenlda Pico, San Clemente, Oil paintings by Homer Spurlock. Houra : noon-6 p.m. daily. Through Sept. 30. l\fA.RINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN -1~15 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. "Kid's Stuff," little bronze and clay figuer- inel of children, by Dottie Erdmann. Through September. · Real Cantonese Food· eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Stach ORlale J.'560 0,.. ,.., Ar.-4 hltf 12·1 2-Prl • ..ct s. .. ,. J ..... •NeW NATURIN• "TH& IACHELORS" --· .... -• , ..... s.t. SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. IANfUIT PACILITllS Dl .... r ltrvect Pte• I P.M. ... ....... 11 ·I 11 7 PACIPl4: COAST NWY, HONTIN•TON llACN 536'2555 belter try• Chick-Teri Snack. lt"s distinctive Japanese foOd - a tarlyakl flavored chltken le(I and th igh atong wllh fried rice and /Ii rd ol lelluce, all lor only 97•. And al ~'a' co1t1, Chick•Teri'.s the only pt1ct you'll find wJth i- Leiltdl ""9 1l1H ..... oM. ---IP.M. r _,... ........ .-..-----., A Chinese Cuisine .. -· • • • • ; Cantlntnttl Culolnt GOURMET DINING I ~ · o•t• DAILY 11 AM· 11 •M • CLOHD MON DAY I great lood and 111 1 pr ice ~-9: Httl won't keep you lrom ~o.f COSTA MESA enjoying it. So light lnlltllon 1nd glvt your,e!I a tr11t, gel a ChlCk·Terl Snick -lt'1 rt•I chtepl o""'. '"" (BJ +"'-""'1 _HlWeOAT 8l ACl1 ,. 'i911CK·Telll JAPANESE FAST FOOO wllll tl!IJ covpon f011 ''' entltltd \ Coclct1l11 I ....... ~. 11 s I BJMBN 'TOR .MEAl.S I FREE cun<"<;,!':,:;.a Vinnn ENTERTAINMENT Tlll.liDJ PREPARE.D \\'.m< I -'I ,I "lfoi<du" thmugil:"Situnla• DANCING ~ I . x_---. PARTICULAR CAllE" '•1 I I COKE ; C!~sed Sundays • M•~~.'::.'"' 1 1 .,,-fl'IJ _ 1 ri 1 .. ::~~-=.!,':,I~\-~:. -II *111~ every DUrct1111of1 Cl'llett·T•'' 0 ,. ro 1t1,.ntpd ne.11! tr 600-0 Newport Ctntet Drive Sn1ck.ll'1aocP1e•o-h'1fflll l "'!.t Mt v Co ln Sot1'h Fashion Island -l CH ofEFEERP1NoCs-ps1KnE1M1Cu011U. 'PO"l •, ;,,;', ~ NEWPORT &EACH 644-5060 -· PM01QL ••• 14Wlle ._,... ________ ..., _____ _., NI c .. t. M"'f ,40.3140 A,..~'~'•"'"' • Mej..-Crffltfarft L ·• 1~\ UST 17TH .... (:OSTAMISA! • . ... _________ ,,1, _____ ._ ______________ .. , - - ---':' ~-- - -( ' ' ;110 E .• t7!11 fl...CO.\' \!•U Phone 842-otOO '--- 'Flower' w Opep 11CACTUS FLOWER'' Opening tonight (Or I five- Wtekend nm 11 this light com- edy of • deceptive derltist, playtnc Fridays and Saturday• at 8:30 p.m. at the Huntlnatoo Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St\ ilWltlngton B e a c h . Reservatlofl.' 536-4446. "ANNIE GET YOUR GUN" Also bowing in tonight, for thrte weekends, Is lrvlng BerUh's •iNo Business Like Show Business" musical about Annie Oakley. The Lyric Opera As~iation show plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. in the lrvine Bowl on the Festival of Arts grounds, Laguna Beach. Reservationa: li'i-2014. "CA1\,"11 ti" Continuing its s u m m c r engagement at South Coast Repertory is the ,st3ge version ot Joseph Heller's popular novel, on stage at · 8 p.m. Wedneeday through Sundays in the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations ~1363. . ' ' ' . ' ' DIANA •IGG STARS IN "DIANA" PREMIERE WITH BERNIE KOPELL MONDAY r/JJ,;rllilh a .. Ramos Fm era Bloody Mlly ~ ' EGGS BENEDICT ~BLED COOS Wlfli ,._, dilar. IW7 r ,_,.,,. STEAK& EOGS CREPES SUPREME a-.,_ J"""""" --MONTE CRJSlO A,,."""'"'·•·*" ,,,a.Jty. ~11s fem /Oam-2pm RES~ATIONS 675·5811 TV SEASON (From Page %8J compassionate docto-r who m<1ves from Ne'v York to the Colorado mountains because he wants his patienl.S to be more th an just names and feces. Rotates once a month with "Owen Marshall." "Kojak." CBS. IO p.m. \Vednesday -Tell y Savalas as a hard-nosed New York police lieutenant w h o sometimes fights the rules in pursuit of justic. "Th e NBC W ed n es d a y J\iystery Movie." NBC. 8:30 p.m. \Yedncsday -Three new rotating shows j oint "Banacek,'' which remains from last season. They arc "The Snoop Sisters." a pair of cri mc ·s o l vi n g mystery writers, starring Helen Hayes and Mildred Natwick; "Tenaf· ly," starring James McEachin ; ' ·.··. ~· ·. . ut , ... . ' ·Reuben:s 10ant-2pnt ~';:::::/ 1555.ADAMSAV~ b~ ~\~~-COSTA.MESA ~<· RESERVATIONS .. CALL 540-9672 -;:. - ·I~ f.• • , FINALLY READY TO DEB UT • • • as a compulsively middle-class black private eye, and "Fara· day and Company," starring Dan Dailey as a detective who returns to a much-changed "'orld a(ter 25 years in a South American prison. "Love Story," NBC 10 p.m. Wednesday -A romantic anthology I.hat borrows the ti· tie and theme from the hit movie. Six·time Emmy·win· ning producer G e o r g e Schaefer -this past year for "A War of Children" -\viii guide the series. "Toma .'' ·ABC, 8 p . m . Thursday -Stars 1· o n y Musante in the exploits of real-life cop Dave Ton1a of the Newark Police Department. Toma relies on wits, ima· gination and disguises. "NBC Follies,' NBC, 10 p.m. Thursday -This comedy· variety show reaches back to the theater for its inspiration and guidance. There are no regulars. but Sammy Davis Jr. and Mickey Rooney \vill make frequent appearances. "Adam's Rib." ABC. 9:30 p.m. Friday -Ken Howard rind Blythe Danner from the Broadway stage star in th!s att ractive version of the bat· tling legal couple. It's taken from the Spencer Tracy· Katharine Hepburn hit movie of 1949. "Calucci's Dept." CBS. 8 p.m. Friday -Ja~es Coco • heads up the collection of misfits in a state unemploy· ment office in this wacky comedy created by the husband-wife team of Joseph Bologna and ''Roll Out," CBS. 8:30 p.m. Friday -In this comedy about the Red Ball Ex.press o( \Vorld War II . Stu Galliam is the street-wise hustler and Billy Hicks is the country mouse. "The Gi rl With Something Extra.'' NBC, 8:30 p. m . Friday -Sally Field has something extra -she can read the 1nind of her husband, played by John Davidson. Despite the gimmick it's billed as a comedy of attitudes. "Need1es and Pins,'~ NBC, i U.A. 'Cn'f A"D IOUTM COAST Cffil•MAS-TUaSDAY .Mc; ILAOIU.~! Dl!M AOl!llS>-41'•N TU..,11• l',M. l'Am,,... Cl Ma~"" •I ~5"a1 ·-~~ l'rth ""' 1u'"Z""'-L • c.t · · · ..... , MMl!AVY I• TllAl'l'IC" 1 .. U.. "l'UTM •V • "A TOUCH 01' CL.ASS" ---... trlc .. H .. I t .W •·"" . SWOl'li" 11.00 h1fl Ill c.tffl k •H ''coby • " . .. ,., "•AXTl!llM Cl'OI Tim L•Ufllllll "alLLY 'ACK" "ZACMA lllAH" aolfl 111 C•l9r1 tl'OI la:tlk Trails Baseball U.&A . Cuffed pants ~Mann cluia·kne• p&rmel'l<.l\t pres!> 1'1111 MIWm<llll • "TH.I: MACKINTOSH MAN" "THE CANDIOAT.S:" _.!!..lflJ o_C•ltrl l l"GI M!dllll SKkl • "SlAUOHT&•HOl.IS& 5" "HAllllAD l!XPIEll lMENT" .. Jll Ill Cllwl (Ill ' . .. " • - ' p.m. Friday Spritel.v newcomer Dierdre Lenihan is the girl from the ~1idwest who takes a job in a New York dress fac tory run by Norman Fell. Louis ;.lye and Bernie Kopell. "ABC Suspense Movie ,'· ABC. 8:30 p.m. Saturday -:i 9Q.minute anthology. ranging from comedy capers to mystery lo the bizarre. "Cyborg.'' ABC, 8:30 p.m. Saturday once a month -Lee Majors as a test pilot who is rebuilt into a super1nan -and a superdetcctivc -<irter a plane crash. ---.---·~·· ~&CIP'IC THaAT1taa DltlYa·IN SUPER SWAP MHTS l"•MllJ' W••ll•fttl !"uni ~rotltal •N••lna G•l-1 S•t.& Swt.-aam lo 4PM H.t.ltaOR9'.VD.Drl_.·ln 011AMC11DftW;.T.i tii' ,__.__.. __ -., cw, ....... ltlCOI" ••. , .. 111 of ltnotl 121..-01• . li"'OI" ...... Wit! 01,ltflOlt 111-ltlJ Otllf OIWl-IM MfOWINOI JISU5 CHllST SU,llSTAI .-i Clhot l•uw~/J0l KIDD lJG S1"11 A~I F111•1y ,..,, ClllP"'I" ....... IM-fttt ' ,44 fashion Island, newport center 644·5070 • I ' ' -.. f'rlday, Sfpltmbtr 7, 1<173 DAILY PILOT ·1 TV DAILY LOG ll Friday Evening So tu relay Morning SE'1'£Ml£R 7 SEPTEM•ER I 1,00IJQOll>ll.llliH!lO,.. UOIJ l1l •EW SWOll lht - CI) • Mftl lttMI 8161111111 · 0 m Pl(Ml[ll[ TM MU .. f... ! (I) Collfbh:p of lddif'• f.tlltr lly 0 W111ltd DIM tr Aliw 0 >&M w., .. THatrt m The fll1btoM1 {i) lttckJ I frit!Mh ~ ® St.tr TrK 0 Cil "'lMIOl ltlptr frlt ... I i OJ Lot TtntS Sclloltstlt a.cl al IWl',..ill Lldp Oj) Ylll011 h m n"" ...... m eo11ntry Mule l:JO (I) Htc•11'1 Hcttt• m Seu•• StrMt t D Mtwi•: (to) "fftr1 CtMt IM Eill Spoltutft t. Nt!Mils" (cnm) '52-0uit, Harritt. l :JO R (I) PUMIEI£ l•lltJ'• c:..b 1 01wid 1nd Ri~y NtllOn. 0 \tOl a;) PIOllERE llMrst_.,' (I) CIS Nm W11!1r Cronkitt Ph1t 4 fJ Htvt t1111 WIH Trawl 00 Und1rdt1 ~-.. , 11) Merv lrlffln Show !!I!) All·Prt l r11kt1st liiMlt Slttw / m And1 Orllflth 1:00 I) MEW SO.SON Sttoby·DM ~ ED Sift Yu111 Ylnt Tit 0 \1§) a;) PREMIEIE 1¥tdl C111I· ; a,) Llvln1 Easy dy • C!) Nmla B Mowlt: .. Fll1llt It No11illefl" : (1D IHHtt TIIUlrl (mys) '4&-Alan Ct!rtb, Jiek Holl. ~ ll) littlt ltasc1ls (J) SlmlOn , 7;001J Cl) Cl itJ N1wt 0 (]) PRlMIEIE Lauit's bllUt • R1•1•ri ~ O Bowll11 lor Doll111 @ Movlt: (2hr) ~Amt• In Hit (iJ C1rtoo11 Carnlv•I ; North Allontk" (adv) '43-Humpll· 0 Mcwlt: "A Nia LittM1 lint Thd : Sllo111d I t lobbH" (com) ·~ -• iey Bo1irt. Tom [111111\, Mickey Rooney. .: ({) Anl•ll WorW fJ Wl\afs lilJ U11t? ID Mo.to: "S1kl111t •"' tH Maske• ; m I lM llltJ Munl" (d11) '56-William Forrest . ID M t., i o: "Str11111 Adventure" ; ID I Dftt111 of Stt1111le fl) Shiple•onte Maiil (dra) 'S&-Ben Cooper. ·~ · Cl fll) Mlst1r ll'fl"' NtlcMio1hMd ~ f!'!l Wheels, Killll lod IJ !:30 Q ®') m PIEllllEllE star T1tk t el Munoca (I) Johnny Q11e1t ; ml [rt.tos Lttlnts 0 (I) PREMIERE Citobtr Pd tht·~ IE_._ ·~ . l ·JO 11 INXT s,.dtl "A Dirtr's Nott· CMst Ch1st1t /Sdlolnlk -· j . '~ •• , f)a 1tU11tt Stntt .• book" (R) Holt WVJ" IKI llS 10:00. Cl) PIE M IE II E .. , ,,... : Cil Hot:•n's Hmos O Htllywoof Sll••rts M1rti1111 ; 0 Htlp Tity Ntlpbor 0 ®) m PREMIERE Si1111111d Bii· ·~ (])Cir Cl) Ultrt 111111 ., 0 Ml:s $ M0¥11· (ttir) "The 0 I]) MEW SEASON lrady .W. ~ 11 • , ,_ Uil Clnt u SU tau ' D1111M4 Don't. Cry" (dri) 50-.ru~n lO:JO II (]) PREMIERE Joa1111l1 -~ Crawford. David Brlan. 0 ~a;, NEW SEASON Pink Pan· @l Tht Now Prlcl Is Riaht th - ID That Cid D' MW: "S11idil ltttllitn" (adv) ID Dnptt '58-Mlke C<lanors, .IOhn Ashley .• Em Wtrif Pron ({) YIJlp ti lttttll or s.. I:;::. w.o• o (I) PIEMIEM MlnMll Mqlc I l:DO II Cll SlrtJ Mlnlltn Sdltlllltk lock . CJ 0 m I IBC!AL I Wtltll tu..W 0 M~le: ·.~1 Uttlt Fu&ltht" D Mo'lli: (DrlSM) "Cal Mt ..... (d11) ~1tll11 Anclr~. • " I '53 E htl M ID 11.,.,i 11111•1 .h.!Wltt • 0111 (111111 -I 1<1111n. fD Mi* I • Ml~ O (l)G!JllPICIALIS•t•r••r Q9~J Maml111 S.0111 hall ..... .,. • Q1 Htl I l!I) Mfl GI Tiii' U11t.MKMW.1 11:00 8 (I) l'tlOllEll s,oM lltar Ill"""''-O tlil &lMojo< ...... -m W1 .. 1op11 W.U 111 lnkw 0:; ~:= .= S.-111._"" .. al~ 1.1111111111 rntn• ID M Lil l:lll~llBC!f\LINIC • !::, .. :- 0 mm "' ... ...... ..., ll:lD a 11l 11EW ...... -..... SlrUt In Co11rf' (R) =.: Wlnffw" dll JHtll, 9l MIC fldval ff Stan CD MJ rntfttl Mlflln ID,illltr1 lrlttln Shtw OJ MM: "'Sn' 511,..., (dr1) '63 ! """• ttdlln -Rlchtnl Mlller, Dick O'N•ill. ~ 111111 • ''"' 1111) CIS 1"'1'1 _, (C) lllwl lfl M-Mqle ""' ''"'" A1111.-(611).'10 -.Afternoon Watter Pht1eon, lrt Furstenblrt 12:00 II ()) ["'7t1tl11(1 Atchle Kla11s Kins~i. Mirino Mm. 8 Mmt: '"!llMtw ff TrselW' 0 a;) NBC FrWl;'Mt'flt: (C) (2") (mys) '64-Jof\n B111ttoy. • ~ ... 1plltd" (clr1) '71-clint East-00 Mwlt: "llJ Do1 SM,.-(drl) 'U! wood. Geraldine P11e. Diubeth -rom H11I. 1 Hartman. a ·rn a.ric.111 ltlHlstull I @ h1 111 Te• Lltl fJ jfM; (C) "Mtaum It M_.. 0 {})El•-222: "Wtll wtlil-Cit(' (wt:S) '66--Brad H1rris. I ~-Gon .e."'•ts" <~> m .._... : Ill-(C) <"" ..., !ll> -'"'"' """""""t I MM" (tGll'I) '61-Jtrl)' l..e'lllls. ., ca.pltultlipi Wrutlll& llt Df'qMt IE AIC S.,.,,t.t Mtwlt fE flltbeJ..~ lZ:JD 8 (])fol Albtrt fD .._.,... T11tatn ''The Gol4· f.1 Saa .. strMt 1n Bowl" (R) 1:00 II Cl) U.S. 0,.1 T111is 0)511*-....... ldat ...... fJlt .·.·I fl) 1.,_. Ul!llll harr•• m 1111 Trll• 1:1s m " .... 'Sfttb 11 """ · Hoo mmn. -.. l!I"'""''"'""" I O Ntws . l:JO (JJ Mtwit: "Jltbrm of Wlldlln1 II Citt s.art (dro) '46-Ricllard Arlen. j U1 M~M hllaaa 0 CI) e NEW SEASON N C·A a;) P!11MlerM40 fDO\b1 ll UCLA at Nebr1s~1. lo:to(j) T9'1atrt Z.., D ~av\!: (C) ''al ~.,, ~11 D (})I!!) LM Mtria~ ltrlt (I) C.tlnp" (wes) '6Htn Mtrtm. ' LOY11 tl'ld th1: "Slrt&ll'll $ultof,'' 11t Ct11111plondlp lo.-11111 ! "Wet Ke," "UllftllrN•" fl) Mllttr 1hp11' N•iPMf,_. 1 ·U aorw *'-' n.tn cm r:1nt,1rr11 f11c111 I m MM: "lllCly Stiff" (com) '49 Qj llttll• ~ -8rl1n Donlny. 2:00 0 a m worw Strtn ti (D NIWI 8 lllM: "M1utcn IMI" ( fD Rdti·UM ·~9--Guy M1dbon, Rory Ctlhou11. 10:1s D Ntws m t..'blt l 10,lO CJl °"""-ID"""''"'" I m ,.....,.... •• m Fvtbtl·Socct' i ID Cllibtm 2:30 m Tr• Adw1t1n I ll:GIBDDemm.... J:OOIJI• ... Prt·SI• ... ftltblll ! rn m ®J -rn .,w""' wn1 . 0 lot TmlM'e ltlf hi' Sftrm CJ.) Far Oil fllclt ~ @ PtnY Mt:lttl 0 Merit: (C) "Lt•" ti I C11 at MD: (C) .,;1ttvn ti Ill Atilt llgtl\tr" (1dv) ·~Ron lalldtll II"' (1dw) '67~mtron Mltd'l1ll. m Mcwlt : "R11t1tltu" (w1s) ' 11:15 Im Cln .. t 34 -Rabtr1 'fo11n1. 11:!0 II CIS Ln _, !Ci ....,_ IE) "°'"' ....... ~ ... Yoopl~ .,..; ., l.r' (corn) '56 -Dean .(hor) -Mturiclo G1r1s. I M1rtln, Jtny Lewis. f!1 Futbtl·Somr D 9 m '°"""' Carso• ED Ml1t11 •• , ...... NtlPbor .. 8 ,.,_.., Pm111t1 J:30 i 8 ffiDkl..... 0 AG-USA•isttsf!.e l (()lllpt•.... * DAIRY FESTIVAL lrom ' II w,.,. '"'' WALNUT CALIFORNIA i Ef) Chl111p1tnshlp Wr11llin1 HOST: JdHN STEARNS j llitl 00 Mtnllal Dll\t1 B Afrkultllft USA "Dairy fo1tlnf' I ID Allrld H~t~tcll Pftslnts , 1?:30 OJ Id-:-: (C~ ""~""' " !tit U• =f ~II~ I l •IMWll (d11) 66-Gtorl• Ardlsson. l ·flnt iidrtlrtMtlt lfl 1::....J. a:11a o m1i1111111Pt s,oc1.1 m c..141111 AMntm _,... •• t Mid llavt Slltn•11. 4.00 , ·-' (~ ""'"' ..... ,,,.. ii WHAT'S GOING ON I aot; t•"I ~'°" '""'"' * WILLIE DAVIS HOSTS ' 8f.2l(':.'1'1t '"''"'' W' THE "IM~GE MAKERS" (comJ '66-Micll111 8enllne. of Movies & Television l :JO I)... D '#hat's 111111 0. 1:45 11 Mnlt: "TM 18' 111• _,.. , (fJ Chrttr Lllllb : '(llio) '4-Willllim Bt11dQ, fJjl MH llilft. Mal D t I I It;, 2:MI m•NIJM ... ..... .... "Strt.i111 I Balll'ICI" (II) U..." .._ .. ....,. Mtfld IE Ofe111 J:lO II l6lwlt: '1llt I.,.._ lllfklll· er;, •olllt lallMs 1111 .._. (sci-Ii) '57-'tint wu: Ii) ....,_1 \"'- n1rn1. R1114tJ Sl111rt GI) Vtlcl ti Alfk11lt111t KC>el CHANNEL 50 ) 00 Oltll'llliMll • IC) "(1Hl{ltf0ft aw•1 C"°'r" Ito 11"1111 Stlll. l. If •:>0 p.m. JlJt Cl'flM<llM•• IC) A 11111nout1 M111l<tll-AMll'ltt f0 :11110ttll'I -· 41• MllMI • ...,.., Htltfl ....... J1• lttctrtc CM1p111y t 1•h'* 11,.t •1• l.t'tl Tllllll1 !Cl "'*' S ''lilt 'llallrr" ~ttr'Ttd wt Pros LH CttT1rcl •ncl OOll Cl l'ld\'. •· 4t• llOl'!'ll I ' 11 • ,. ,· ' ' ~ ... I Coast Theat·er Season Opening Tonight . ,, Another opening. ilflOther season on the stages or Orange Coast playhouses. The 1973--74 season of living !heater begins tonight with produc tions in Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach, with six other shows in rehearsal for the first month of the new campaign - inch.tding the debut of a pro- fessional CGmpany in San Clemente. Launching its second decade tonight is the Huntington Beach Playhouse. reviving the 1960s rorncdy · 'Ca cl u s Flower" as the leadorr pro- duction of its 11th season. The show, which runs r i v e weekends, marks di r e c to r Kent Johnson's return to corn- munity theater. Sharing opening n i g h t honors is the Lyric Opera Association of Orange County, which unveils the musical "Annie Get Your Gun" in Laguna Beach's Irvine Bowl for a three-weekend engage· ment. Hometown girl Terri Ralston, now an established proressional actress, takes the title tole. WHILE THERE are no openings on next week's sliige schedule, the following week will bring a trio of newcomer.; to the footlights. Leading off on Sept. 20 will be the San CI em en t e Comm unity Theater's staging of Neil ·simon's "The Gingerbread Lady" under the direction of Tony Brandt. Pati Tambellini gets her Costa f\1esa Civic Playhouse Inter.mission Tom Titus one will bring the Orange Coast-· and Orange County in general -its second pro- fessional theater group. The Hrst . Costa f\1csa's in· dustrious South Coast Repertory, is cu1·rently in the fina l we~ks of its West Coast prcrniere of "Catch 22.'' ~fter of[ and rolling on Sept. 21 with an old-fashioned n1elodrama, "Her Fatal Beauty" or "A Working Girl's Honor." Like the San Clemente show. it's ticketed for three weekends. And, if you didn't get a chance lo catch Golden West College's production of "A a week's respite. SCR lights Midsumn1er Night's Dream" up again on Sept 28 with a the first week o{ August, the revival of Goorge f\l. Cohan's G\'c thespians will bring the comedy ··The Tavern.'' Shakespearean fantasy back \V aiting in the wings for an on Sept. 21 and 22 for an ab-Oct. 6 opening is the Irvine breviated encore. Community Theater. which The biggest week of the new will launch its 1973-74 season season shapes up for Sept. 2s.. of five county premieres with 28 when three 1najor pro-the adult comedy .. What the ductions go on the boards. The Butler Saw ... Directed by Ron first of these is Jerry Koba's Albertsen, this fast-moving staging of lhe Eugene O'~eill sex farce should raise a few play ''Ah, Wilderness," open-eyebrows. ing Sept. 25 for a three-week These are the oJ>:Cfiing shots run at the Laguna Moulton of the new seasori along the Playhouse. coast _ and. thankfully, FM-AM Radio Competition Ranges From Brisk to Fierce-Ask I<PFI( • TllEN CO~IES what n1ay there's no "ganging up" on a well be the biggest event of newly released play such as Channel II, where he does a the new season, the grand last fall 's "Forty Ca rats" or.: twice-weekly news progran1. openi ng on Sept. 26 of Sel>as· "Plaza Suite" the year before· Film maker Daniel Steven, 15, has won a special category in the Broadway department stores' youth film festival with his animated productions. The sophomore at Marina High School creates his own figures and stories at home and shoots them with a Super·B movie camera he has rigged up above a drawing board. He is shown working "D d " on ay reamer. Cal State Plans Mexico Feast Day A lwo-day res t i v a I Baca said. celebrating the independence The art show. which will be of' Mexico will take place at held in the Univ er s i I y California Stale University, Commons, features pr e- Fullerton Sept. 15 and 16, I-6 Columbian artifacts from the p.m. University of California. Los The free, public event will Angeles. as well as artifacts have music, theatrical en-from . other " university col· tertainment, dancing, food , lections and Chicano paintings cultural exhibitions and an art from ,several state prisons. in- show, "La Feria de los eluding San Quent i n . Chicanos," will cover the Tehachapi and Folsom. The green y,·est of the Music-latter arc being shown Speech-Drama Building. courtesy of Centro Joaquin The two-day celebration is a f\1urietta and the Mechicano Art Gallery. cooperative errort Dy campus Also shoY.'11 will be art work and community organizations intcrcstl'd in promoting the from several comm uni t y centers, and a number of cultural heritage of Americans elementary schools, hi g h of Mexican ancestry. ac· cording to Manuel Ba c .a , schools, colleges and art spokesman for the Feria com-galleries from the Santa Ana, Broadcasting f\·lagazine is reporting on the impact of FM stations across the U.S. in ils Sept. 24 issue. An1ong the comments made in advance of the special report: "FM is the new fron- tier in radio ... a medium that took three decades to come to flower ... if you want to buy a station. the prices arc formidable; the competition \Yith older sister Af\'l range s fron1 brisk to fierce .... , KPFK-F'M is a case in point in gro,ving popularity. According to Will Lewis, general manager. KPFK is en- joying its most successful period in its 14-year history. In Conductor Appointed B.lLTTMORE I AP ) -Leon Fleisher has been named associa te conductor of the Baltimore Symphony for the 1973-74 season. He also teaches music at the Peabody Institute here. Fleisher. in 1952, at age 24. was the first American to win the Queen E lizabeth o f Belgium International 'Competition. It is considered the most important in- ternational piano competition. Later, he Jost the use of his right hand for piano playing. He began a conducting career in 1970 at the Mostly Mozart Festival in New York's Lin· coin Center. Scgiu Commissiona is music director of the orchestra. Pomona. Fullerton -Placentia miltee and a staf[ member cf conimunities, as well as com· t he B i I i n g ual-Qicultural munities in the sou theastern Education program at Cal portions of Los Angeles Coun· State. Baca said the sponsor· ----------in~ organizations hope to pro-lyAdditional informatoo about mote better relations among the festival is avai!atile by Hll residents in the Los telephoning (714) 870-2484. Angeles-Orange County are,, __________ _ and develop a broader un-~~ "l'Al'I• MOON" .,M derstanding of a cultural group t h a t is numerically ' large and rich in culture. +: , ,40! "MAN WHO LOVIEO CAT DANCING" Baca said the university, "BILLY JACK" through the B i I in g u a I· a fOU"'TAIN VAllEY ... ~"'~n ........... ;,,:,;-.. -;:;-.;:-.-.. ,-'0''-0!0 Bicultural Education program Plus "IA.NG THE DRUM SLOWLT'' ll'dl , and the Educational Op-"LEGEND OF portunity P ro g r am . is coordinating the festival, in HELL HOUSE" cooperation with such com· 1~~~~~~~~i:;::::::;:::::;~~~~~~~~~~~~I "LADY ICE" munity organizations as Casar Placentia and the Placentia AthleliC ChKl. Proceeds fro m the event. after payment of costs, will be used to advance E . 0 . P . educational programs on cam- pus and in the community, Af'ORT%0· ,. ' ' ( • l HELD OVER "CRIES AND WHISPERS" 7:00 ond 10:40 p.m. also "MURMUR OF THE HEA~T" 8:40 p,m, Coll ttiecm. for S1111doy Scheel•~· MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNO PEOPl£ 11N ~IN• Ol IM '"""' It to ifrlOlflt ,,.,_ • ...., ,,... -Ni/<fY ol ..... COllfMf ,., ltl...,.,, ,,, ltlw clllltltM. ·~~~----------- ® 10 Olr UNOll 1J AOtllUflD IAtli 1111ut ruy ... .,... 111 cwt•l11 MHJJ ·············~·············· .... ~-.... ---o·----·--- _,..._ ~· .... ~· CINEDOME ?D , ' .... ~-~Ll'.'._1. ... '~ -...... STADIUM l :. .. .._ ..... l\~.C::i ... -"' .. _ . .,., .. STADIUM ·3 ';;; ..~&.:.~~ "40 CARATS" ll'G) .... "HEAVY TRAFFIC" IXI "SOUND OF MUSIC" HO RESERVE D Slli:ATS Wltli Julie Aitdrews "WHIT! LIGHTl!NINCi" • "SCORl'IO" "LIYE AND LET DIE" . ... "THE MECHANIC" ll'GI "'Al'ER MOOH" ll'GI ... "HAROLD & MAUDI" "FUNNY GIRL" .... "OWL A•d Tiie l'USSTCA T" I PG I The ' FRANKOVICH """"" """ 40 Cara-ts Liv Ullmann Gene Kelly Edward Albert Bfnnie Barnes -·ll~ li!GE, .... -.J.lf AUIN ,,.,..,,IWlllfl .lH!ff -.............. l)AYIO M(~I( ·-•WIQi(l l(iiilW«» -.. MJ. HWfQ),t){ ..,.,llJ(lll\Wl,\l,r .. IllIIUIItlUISl>OJ;;;::::;-_::i ' • PLUS ''B.UnERFLIES ARE. FREE" WATCH FOR "WESTWOltLD" Turning on Scott Manchester ~~_,,,;;,omen on the Air: KLOS-tian·s \Vest Dinner Playhouse that. As the coas t a I FM has added Toby Walsh as in San Clemente with a pro· playhouses head for l h e an alternate host on Sundny duction of the super 1nusical starting gate. the new season night's (ll p.n1. -I a.n1.) ''Man of La Mancha.'' This looks quite interesting. 'Impact" program. w hi I e -~-------------------­ KF\\'B has naincd Barbara a one-month subscription drive it raised $46.000 \Yith dona- tions ranging from $15 to $60 per year. Total membership OO\V numbers 16.000. All of this must serve as evidence of listener in teres1 and appreciation of KPFK's recent coverage of I h e \Vatergate hearings. which supplemented Jive hearings coverage with interviews, ·commentaries and summary documentaries for an un· precedented 14 hou rs per day. KPF'Kers are now huddling to produce an LP titled. ''The Wit and \V is do in of the response to its "An Even· Fivars as assistant promotion ing With ... '' concert series, director and Susan Mcintyre heard Monday nights (8 p.m.· to its sales starr. Cecilia midnight). The series will <'!-Pedroza, who regularly airs rer a four-hour salute to the mino rity affairs programs on Rolling stones on New Year's KF\VB. has 1~·on the 1973 Eve. While you're wailing, try Pi1artins A\\'ard. an honor the music of Bob Dylan on bestowed each \•ear to an Sept. 10 or Jefferson Airplane outstand ing individual In the on Sept. 17. news media. - KABC's Sportstalk has been ~tac Curtis has moved expanded through Sundays to a 7-1 1 p.m. Saturrlay fron1 5 to 7 p.m. with Tom night slot on Saturday nights Ha\\.'kins handling the bulk of for KFI plus a Sunday 2·8 p.111. the Saturday-Sunday shows. berth. Both prograrns feature 1niddle of the road music. Marv Gray is no\Y at KiTV, !;::=========::-:...:=, Watergate." 'Super Cops' And KLOS-FM topper John -Fo1· W eek e nde1· Adve1·ti sin"' " Phoue \Vinnaman. a modest n1an. is lfOLLY\VOOD (UPI) quick to whip out his latest New York City detectives Pulse report to show how sue· Dave Greenberg and Bob cessful that rock 'n steroo Hantz will act as technical ad· format has become to visors on MGM's ''Super 6424321 The ultimate in adventure and excitement! listeners. Cops." depicting their exploits Also proud is KNAC-FM of,~on~fiilm~.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~I i.-.---..~---~ [illtg] \ ffiB NOW THRU TUESDAY Gene Hocklftaft Shfli.y Wi11ter1 "POSEIDON ADVENTURE" pl11s "HOT ROCK" with Robert RRdford G.ort• Segal lath la Color ll'GJ 2nd Hit "SNOWBALL EXPRESS " 1f'ld HIT "TOM SAWYER" HURIY! ENDS SOON! ·MATS. DAILY '~ •• easily the best movie so far this Year'' -S1eo11en f.a•tHt• • NEW YORK TI MES;.~ ~---. ~ J!W,. ..,.._,.w..youl"l~r . ,.._· • EXCLUSIVE ORANG E COUNTY ENGAGEMENT CINEMAUND & SOUTHCOAST #2 WEEK DAYS 7 & 9: 15 SIT-SUl-•01 2'1 5 .. :31-l:DI & 1:15 NO RESERVED SEATS ruEil ... ,O~OA' .. ,,,., • c-··· .......... •,4., ;n" 01116[ #l sMw slarts •vs• llSO • "llGlND Of FHNCHll m MANN THEATRES All TMIATllS COOLlD IY •lfl/GllATIOH WK DATS 1 & •:tS SAt-SUN 2:1S-4::tS 1 ol'd 9:1S· (lll ~ ~ llGULAI l'RICIS SoP,!!1 ... ~l~!za l }4•·11tl CDJ: ill I ij) ma W .... WOI · AlllACAPlll ·"tllDI T1IE _. l.J~1"1~aWAU:• 1D s.: ~~!(<Jo.("'tl • IBll 14;.0C: Lalo SdilrWl·Wr1:len W !.IV-" Mi Prtw.e.1 ~ Fierl ~.-.I ;r;J P;U f(.,_ il ~Yli1'1 ~0\!11 !).l':lt"'.! IN ~! l.4" ~ · N~V1$0\• l[f,HNQl(fl• .. ._.... -···-l ~""·:~.;Jfl'f ?J.y,!'JQ'tl ~!#'!"" -·--.. -"""-.1.1· ... r..~ CcJmu>· 1:<1'{..~w 1-...-TUCO .. _COOWJl-llt-J Or.ntt • Sf>l.7022 IXC:LUSIYI RUN ORANGE ·c:oUNTY And 110111 the n1ov ie ... •_;perhaps the n\OSl re1narkablefil1n toe1ncrge ~ince Cecil B.De.Mille!ounded 1-lollywood."-vcRNOH sco1r. t.IP1 "JESUS CHRISf SUPERSIAR" .... 'IID NEELEY ,CAALANOERSCN · Y\O'INE EWMAN ~ DENNEN • '"'-"fWMrlvyrt BrllCI ... l"bmrtn .kwin1 ..., _ ... w °""' -Jei,tn O.rist Supc:nur~ · -"'lirn Rief: W"'AndttWLk¥J~ · 1.,.it<-111" Tin1Rice ... ~ll!'~rf:Pltvin •A>ooc'OO'l'-tW.IK•-'Kl'AlMflt ~-~ANJEWISQ'lr • ,,_,.l!I' NORMAN JEWlSlJN '"" ~STIG'\\(XX) A ... ,_ .. ,,._.'ltl'lo~l .... 4(1 1' ..... -"--... , .... ----1 l r:mr..-:,11.;:i .: TRAM TO CLOSE IN PALM SPRINGS l The Palm Spring Aerial Tromway is clqsed through Sept. 28 for 11.S annual maintenance program. When the famed cable car attraction reopens at 10 a.m. on Friday, Sept. 28, it will start a three-day celebration in obser vance ol the tenth anniversary of the tramway's opening in September of 1963. A apeclally designed medallion has been minted for . the occasion. Each tramway rider wiU receive one as a :,ivenlr during the ct;lebration period, Sept. 28, 29 and "rwo armed service bands will give concerts at the . 8,SOO.foothigh i;nountain station during the weekend. On -Saturday afternoon, Sept. 29, the March Air Force base . band of 20 musicians will entertain visitors, while on SUnday afternoon, the 30th, the Marine Corps Base band from Twenty-nine Palms will perform. The tramway's popular evening Ride and Dine spe- cial combination offer will be resumed · starting satur- day, Sept. 29. In October, the tramway will be open from Thurs- day through M.onday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., with the last car ascending at 7:30. 'The attraction is located near lbe northwestern city limits o( Palm Springs off North Palm Canyon drive. ' G WC Course Planned At Coast Theaters 1he best-known theaters in Southern Ca.Jifomia "'ill be the classroom for a Golden West College evening course this fall on "Appreciation of the n,eater." Traveling by chartered bu.!, the d ass will visit a new stage pro&lctioo every other week In what amounts to a grand tOW' ol the prof ession a 1 theater. ln the area, and a beblnd-lh~scenes look at what makes it tick. Before the 'nursday night class attends any play, in- structor Robert Huber will give students background on the produdion, the playwrighl, milieu of the play its slnlc· lure, theme and dramatic elements, and characteristics Mars Added HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Kenneth Man has been added to "The Parallax View " which stan Warren Beatty and Paula Prentiss. of the actors and produ cing company. "Our idea is to dcve!op critical judgmen t amon g students , help th e m un· derstand plays and what is taking place on stage," Huber said. Class meetings will begin Thursday at 7 p.m. PrevioUs classes h a v e visited theaters such as the Ahmanson · Theater, th e Scocyio Ris\ng Theater, Los Angeles, ·the South Coast Repertory 'I'heale< alid the Mark Taper Forum. Traveling by bus the class will not have the hassle o! transportation or parking, or ticket lines for IODd seats. All thJs Is included In the $25 materials fee . The course may be taken for either a grade or for credit-no aedit. Registratioo. for ran classes at Golden West will continue tmtil Sept. 14. To make an ap- pointment. rontact the college admissions office. ·-' Ahmanson Signs Three for 'Cyrano' Three versatile Broadway and motion picture performers -Werner Klemperer, Jane C<inncll, and Kurt Kasmar- have been cast in the CTG,. Ahmanson's production o f "Cyrano de Bergerac," star- ring Richard Chamberlain. Managing Director Robert · Fryer ~s announced that Werner ltlemperer has been set for the role or Comte de Guiche, Jane Connell the Duenna, and Kurt Kasznar as Ragueneau in E d m o n d Rostand's colorful d r am a , which Joseph Hardy will direct as the opening pro- duction In the 1973-74 season at the Ahmanson Theater. THE ATTRACTION plays a six-week engagement opening Oct. 16. when Robert F'ryer sent for her to recreate her Broadway performance as Agnes Gooch in the musical film , "Mame,'' produced this year for Warner Bros., and starring Lucille Ball. She has been a guest on many television shows and specials, but prefers the theater. KURT KASZNAR was train· ed by the famous European director, Max Reinhardt, who brought him to this cowtry for his American debut in "The Eternal Road." His Broadway roles include "The Happy Time," "Waiting For Godot," the original Uncle Max in "The Sound of Music," and "Barefoot ln the Park." • At Greek Academy award win- ner Joel Grey who ba s been entertaining since he was 10, will perform at the Greek Theatre with the Little Angels Monday through Sun- day, Sept. 16. Werner Klemperer is t>est known for his role as Colonel Klink in •the "~Iogan's Heroes" television series. !·le first ap- peared on Broadway in 1947 in "Heads 3 11d Tails." l(OCE to 'Focus' His n1ost recent stage a~ pearance as the tole of Max in the Civic Light Opera's p~ duction of ''The Sound of Music.'' Kl empercr's screen credits include "Wake Me When the \Var ·is ' Over," "Flight To Hong Kong ," "Judgment at Nuremberg" and "Ship of Fools.' JANE CONNEIL bad jusl appeared in the Broadway production of "Lysistrata," starring M e I i n a Mercouri, On Gas Shortage The current JX'Oblem, "The Gasoline Shortage," with an emphasis on Orange Co unty, where ooe out rX 10 gas sta- tions is closed this summer, will be discussed on ''Focus Orange County" to be broad· cast on KOCE-TV, Channel 50 at 6:30 p.m. Monday. This public affairs program will be repeated on TueOOay at 3 p.m.; Thursday at 8 p.m.; on Sept. 15 at 6:30 p.rn.; and Sept. 16 at 9:30 p.m. Joining host Jim Cooper are three people directly con- cerned with the shortage: Procol Hamm at Bowl Jack McGuire, divi s ion manager of Standard Oil Com- pany of California: Phi I Evans, an independent gas station dealer and chairman of the service station and gas committee of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce; and William Miller, consultant to the califomia State Assembly Transportation Committee, which is investigating tbe gas shortage in the state. Procol Harum joins !he Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra in concert at the IIollywood Bowl Sept. 21 . The combined talenls of t!U. rock group am traditional company will provide one of the year's most diverse presentations. The Lo s An gele s Philbannonic Orchestra's 128 memben wiU be conducted by 26-~d Isaiah Jack- soo who during" the pest. summer conducted b a 11 e t performances at Gian-Carl o Menotti's Festival of 1\vo World's in Spcletto, ltaly, and concerts of the T w a i n Television Orchestra. The Lo s Angeles Philhannonic and P r o c o l Harum will perform numerous selections from the las1 two albums recorded by Procol Harum plus special music composed for this concert. Tickets for this performance aie available at nil the usual ticket outlets and at the Hollywood Bowl box office. '111e group will examine various aspecls of the current crisis =.:. along with charges and counter-<:harges as to what the causes are. 1n a filmed segment, KOCE- TV producer-director Kent Jollnson talks with local gas station operatorn about the shortage. TATUM "JESUS CHRISf SUPERSfAR" l'lUS OMA.I SHAllff ''THE BURGLARS" O'NEAL O'NEAL IUlT REYNOLDS IAQUIL WILCH "FUZZ" DAILY un..a 1MIU SUNDAY sm1Mlllt ' ,., . •. I t, o 'I • . . .. ' .,. • Friday, Stpltmbtr 7, 11'J73 DAILY PILOT . . ., . GWC Evening Class: You Bring Popcorn Movie buffs or those who Cost of the evening course is wi ll continue Sept. 14. make an appointment, tact the Golden · West 1nission"i offi ce . just enjoy good films will $6 plus an $8 ma terials discover a gold mine in a fall charge. Registration for fall classes is now under "'ay and evening course, "History and. _________ _ Appreciation of the Cinema," at Colden West College on Tuesdays from 7 to 10 p.m., which begins next week. ' Each week the class will view a feature-length film re~ting the best i n cinema art. "Emphasis in this fall's course is on fiims of the 1960s," said Jotm Wordes, in- s~tor and chairman of the college's fine and applied arts division. ''The '60s represented quite a few changes in content and the way films were put together. They were beginning to work wit h more freedonts in th e '60s and working without the studio system. "To provide con trast we \.\~II use five films made prior to the '60s thal are consid i!rcd classics, such as 'Mr. Smith Goes to Washington' by Frank Capra and 'Citizen Kan e' by Orson Welles. These contrast with Otto Preminger's 'Advise and Consent,' a 1962 film that is timely today in light of the Watergate revelations." Other classic films include "Top Hat" with Astaire and Rogers. "A Lady From Shanghai , by Welles, and "The African Queen" directed by John Huston. nues from the '60s also in· elude "Home From The Hill," ''Lolita,'' ''The Producers," "Bunny Lake is Missing," "North by Northwest," and "Bless the Beasts and Children" Wordes said the intent of the cwrse is to create informed viewers who will be better able to evaluate films in terms of historical, technological and artistic achievements. The oourse may be taken for a grade or !or credit-no credit, and as many as four times for credit. Different films are shown during each of four semest«s. with 16 films scheduled each semester. LI Do HIWPORI BEACH ENTUNCI ro UDO ISL( 673-BJSO WHAT A SHOW! WHATAPAIR ·~~Puhb DONALD SUTHERLAl'VD JENNIFER O'NEILL THEAmE -AND· WIMMll 197i CAMMES FILM FESTIVAL .RllY PRIZE AWARD A iEOllGt llO't' 1111.1 ·l'Alll MONASll P'llOOllt1IOI LAUGHTERHDUSE·F ~ MICMAll WKS · D WllllAl-WILERI PlfllllE • A...,......_. TEQIMCOLOll• Ill IVlS: FROM 7 P.M. COHJIN. S DULY MATINllS 2:00-5:15-1:'41 MATMU ..... Held-over TATUM O'NEAL #1 #3 #4 * SHOWING NOW AT EDWARD CINEMAS * #2 r;11bM Fashion Island Newport Bea2h 1 ' ""!hi "'~ Pltstdll aJZABETH-TAYLDR LAURENCE HARVEY m 1111G1-ff v.ma-t" ... LH MARVIN fll~fS!'BOR!l~lNE K[ITH r.AflRAOI Nf ~~ :~~·~, . ~$~~JS1 "~ ax..oo rrDt~,t I JUltl A~DllWS (G) MATINllS DAll.T · n!IU 9/9 JULIE. ANDREWS DICK VAN DYKE JN 2ND TOP AmACTJON A MUSICAL ADAPTATION ii.~OF MARK TWAIN'S .lVIJl ·· Sawset ST~REO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR • ·~ '· . . ... " •i ... ., i ! I . l I , ' • • ! " " • -' I .. . ' I 1 .. I ' I • l - • • •• ,.-. ·. ·. ... . . . .~ DAJLV PILOT \\ltdnt~, StPttmber 5, 1973 NEW '7l PLYMOUTH SPOIT SUIURIAN STATION ,WACPON Equipped ti.• wey you w•11t it, i111d udi119 •ir co11dltionin 9. S•r. No. PP46 Ml0312807. LATE MODEL NEW C'AR TRADE-INS ••• TOPS IN 9UALITY •.. TOPS IN VALUE! S:JO 4-0r. \t.,, aurorntllc tro11nsmlss\on, radio, hHl1!1', pO .... r lllle<'lng, llOWW Drokrs, WSW Urn. air. •nd ylnyl IOI!. f616FON) '58 FORD COUPE St-e lo E11ll1¥t! V·I, au1oma11c 1r~nsmls­ slon, radio, htat1r, '" cO!'PdlHoniny. ! IA'451tl s495 CLOSE-OUT DISCOUNTS Si r. No. VL79ClG16 1'1l8 $ BlSCOUMl OFF MANU~~~~~~~~CE s\IGGfiSTED '7J l'E1!f 0DEL : .4R END IS THE Tit.ft TO S.4VJ:1 S4Vff ·~"'' 1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER COUPE An exciting, · beautifully equipped automobile. NEW '73 CHRYSLER TOWN AND COUNTRY WAGON '4 DOOR: HARDTO, va. ,tvt~llc. PQwer stetrlno. r&dlo, heater, air condlllOtlll\9, whltt ·•Id• wtll li re.$. (Yll.G7ll) '69 BUICK Skyl!lrk ).Or. H.T .. \I.a, •u!oma!lt lr•111mls1ion, •Ir t ondlllordnf, r.alo, hffltr, 1»wer steering, po-.-br•ke-s, WSW llr11, and vlnyl loll. (YPSOOD) \t·I, auto!Nlllc, R/H, p0_,. steer1119, POWfr brak11, wh1t1 11dewall llrt1, auto-mallc rempera1urt control, 50-50 p0w- '' 11•h, till -~. poww 1ntenn.a. •!Id le•!l'ler Interior. ("6GIVI s1095 '69 CHEVY Wagon .., .. , aufofNtlc: trantml.sslon, r•dlo, htaf-er, power llNl'll'lll, powtr br•kn, WSW !l•ts. •Ir condlllcnlng , tin •IHt!ng wl\ffl, itnd red rldr;. (1"'AE)(J Custom Suburba11 2-0r.. ... ... tUIOINlllC lr;tn1mi11lon, racno. llNlw, povrtor ''"'" Ing, powtf' brakes, WSW llrH, and air conditioning. cVRC511J $695 '67 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SU,llMI VI, au~mallc, power 111111'1119 & br•kts, 111110, "'"''''· WSW, •Ir COndlllonfng. l:JJWl1ZIQ972:2) Sfi95 • NOTICE!. D·ISCDUN OFJI MANUFACTURElt'S SUGGISTEO llliTAIL 1'11 ,ICIE Ser. No. JQ7HOCHl75090 Atlas Chry1l1r Plymouth now has facilities for Mrvlce on AL ~MOTOR HOMES r .. ard- less of sit.e, by •Xpert.nced motor home m• chanicsl WARRANTY work on International and Dod¥• truck chassis. BOTH VEHICLES SUIJECT TO _,PRIOR SALE PRICE AND DISCOUNT VALID 'TIL 0 P.M., SUN., SEPT. 9 THE CPR~ '73 "GO.ANYWHERE'' SCOUT AT AN UNIEUEVAILE LOW l'RICI Pl1t1 l•x And Lic1n11, H ..... Wei.tfH ., lldtl ... N..- '73 SCOUTS RIGHT NOW AT ATlAS INTERNATIONAL Your R1cr11tion1I \lehi•I• Httdq1t1tt1r1 Sir. No. JSl56C6D4 Jll 1 • • ; I l • .. ' ' ... , . ' • • j • . ' . ' . . . Friday, 5,pttmbtr 7, 197) DAILY PILOT . ' FINAL 1973 CADILLAC 1973 COUPE DE VILLE F'ully equipped \\'ilh vinyl roof, c!in1a te control ail' conditioning, fUll J>O\\'f'r 6 "·ay sC'al, A.1\1/Fi\1 stt>rco mulliplcx radio, tilt & telescopic \\'heel, tinted glai:s. door ~u11.rds. Lellthcr inlt>rior, door lock.'!, '"''ilight sentinel, and a ho,:;.~ of many other factory convenience t·xtras. (Stock #7971) • 1973 1 6831 FULL PRICE 1973 BUY OR LEASE LEASE A CADILLAC ORDER NOW FOR 1974's • • SEDAN DE VILLE FulJy JXJ\\'er equip~ "''ith automatic climate control air condiUoning, full pow°er 6 way seat. tUt & tl!lescopic wheeJ, A1'1/FM radio With power antenna. soft ray glass, and white slde\vall tJres. (#9717 ) EL DOllADO C.-\BRIOLET Full power including 6 way seat, AM/Fl\t stereo mulliplcx radio \\•Ith po .. \'er antenna. tilt &: telescopic steering wheel, Vogue premium tires, etc. Very low miles. (363FPW) 1 8331 FULL PRICE FULL PRICE LARGEST ·SELECTION OF CADILLACS IN . ORANGE COUNTY . e .COUPE DE VILLE e EL OORADOS We Sell Over 100 Used Cars Every Month Because Of Quality, Value & Aher Sales Service. e SEDAN DE VILLE e BROUGILUIS e CONVERTmLES Over 75 Quality Cadillacs & Other Select Trade-ins To Choase From. Wiqe Selection Of Models And Colors Available For Immediate Delivery. Just A Few Examples Listed Below. e COIJPES ' ' 1968 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VI~ Gofd/leige, vinyl tap/beige inte rior, factory oir, ·, fvl1 power, leather, loaded, 11737021 1971 DATSUN 510 ~re1t .Grffn/Mkfllng vinyC _interior, factory olr conditioning, 4 spnd, radio, heater and v.ry low "'iles. (571 EBO) ' ' 1971 CADILLAC sm'AN DE VILLE lfonte/whife vtnyl top/white leather, factory air, · full power, ti1t, stereo, low miles, ILLL775) 1970 CADIUAC-EL DORADO Turquoise/ white Ylr1yt tOp/hlrq1JOi1e .leother lnltrlor, full power, factor:r ·oir, tilt wtie.i, etc. Loaded, low miles. (ZQW967) ' 1970 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE smAN White/block vinyl top/ black interior, factory" olr, full power, radio, heater, wsw, etc. Jow mlltt. 1268BOMI ' 1970 MERCURY COLONY PARK Station Wagon, yeltow/rnokhlng interior, factory olr, luggage rock, fully equlpp.dl (612ASJ)' ' 1970 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE ' Green/block · vlnyl top/block leather, factory air, f~ll power, tilt. ster-9, loaded. 1234AG81 ' SALE PRICE 52111 SALE PRICE 51999 SALE PltlCE SALE PR.ICE 53999 SALE PRICE 51999. SALE .PRICE 53333 --~ -. . ' 1970 EL DORADO COUPE . . . . Less Than 25.000 Local Miies Sohl 11tw ' ''"i"rd by UI, Ei qui1il1 boybtrry li11id1 wilh gold ¥i11yl top L lu•u•ious gold lit0ther interior. fa<:k>ty olr (011dilioni119, full power, till 1t11ri119, itultO, door kKk1, light 1•11· li111I, oukuftolic trunk lock, ftlW WSW Ii•••, 1¥1ry 11(1ra & not o nrokh or fllOr 011ywh•••· A "ot11 i11 a fllillion" beovty. (17290E) 1970 MERCURY 1972 CADILLAC ~,:'"·~ ~~~'io!/';]:: 54999 lft19tl.,., lbcl9rr air, hill ...... ,, tilt whff'I, M /fM rMla, .rr, Ht .. cot. llattlt) •••. SALi Pita 1971 tONTINENTAL CPE. -....... , .... , .. ,,.53666 otl"rl '"'· itel• 1 .. 111e. 1 •• lffl..-, fwll ..., •• ,, lo<IH1' •ii, ol ......... l«lio, 1111 .... .-; .... 1111. ... 1 th••··-· ..,,, 16?6a:WJ . . 1968 CONTINENTAL If""", i..11 "wer, •l•YI ·'"'· f,,11 '""~ .. 1"1 •• 1..,, • ... "'*· ... ~·"· 51555 llh wi..-1, .......... . . ltdl, ell '''"" o•d p,.111 •• • plct~ ... tlVOf56f' 1972 EL DORADO ... • 1969 COUGAR XR-7 Red/black vinyl top with block vinyl Interior, factory air, fully equipped. exceptianal. (YIM592) 1970 OLDS 98 Green/green vinyl top with green tape1try·lnlerior, full po~er, factory oir, AM/FM. Loodtdl (793AZZ) 1969 CONTINENTAL 4 DOOR SEDAN Maroon/white top/maroon leather Interior, factory oir, full power; tilt wheef, stereo, '°°ded, (XSW5" 1 I • • 1969 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE Gold/white vinyl top/gold leodter, dual front seat, factory oir, ful! power, tilt, cruise,· etc. (YVA235J • 1972 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE Silver blue eJ11terior/whlte top & blue tapestry & leather inter., full pwr., fact. air, tilt wheel, AM/FM stereo," pwr. door locks, twillght sentinel. (6.CJEAE) 1968 CADILLAC COUPE DE VIU.E llack/block vinyl top/black leather, full power, factory ail', tilt stereo, etc. tx.EU37 4) . 1969 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE COUPE Silver/black vinyl top/l>Jack lnt•rior, fvll power, factory air, loaded, Very k>w miles. IZQL8451 \ ADAMI II.VD, '1 ~ COSTA ~ MUA '"''" ' SALE PRICE 52444 SALE PRICE . $1999 SALE PRICE 52222 SALE PRICE $2555 SALE PRICE 54999 SALE PRICE $1999 !ALE PRICE $1888 - • • 1 ,, • 1 .. .. - . . ·, ' ' . ! ; ' ' · . l 1 ' • ' ~ .. , ' ., . l • ·I ' ' . .. l l l I l ! ~ • • I l l l -i • • • • : ·l l •• • I 1 l .. DAILV PILOT Friday Srpttmbtr 7 1971 ~omem , , .... SOO -S'24 Avto.nob.lel . • • . . • ' . 950 • 9QO Boclh & Manne.-fqv+p1nc:i11 900 914 l1nploy11'1(lfl1 • • • • • • • • 100 • 799 ' finof'l(iol • • • • , • , • . 200 • 299 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . ~ fo.· Sole •••••• 100 . 124 lc»t & found • • . .• 5.50 • S74 IMrc:hondi~. . . . . . . 800 • 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ~" HorNt '°' Soll • . . ns . 149 '~· •• ,., .... SlS -549 P9ti oriel Si.lpplift • • • • • . aso • "9 Rtal Esiot• Gttwiol. -. . , lSO • 19'1 R.ntal . . . . • -. . . . . :JOO • •99 Schook and lmlru<t1on . . . 57S • S99 S«vic ts ond RIPOirt • . · · 600 • tR'1 T1an~ta1kin ••.•..•. 915 · 949 -----=------- General General BACK BAY TRADITIONAL Splcious traditional hame at 2245 Irvine Ave., OPEN FOK YO UR INS PECTIO N. Sat. & Sun. 1-5 P .M. lleavy shake roof. paneling. turned posts. all add to the traditi onal beauty of this view home. 4 Bedroo1ns, 3 baths, family room, with 'vet bar ; office or den separate front n1ain house. Pool in en· closed yard. Priced to sell at $68.500 & owner will finance! DUPLEX, SOUTH OF HWY. \Veil located eorona del Mar duplex. close to swimming & shopping. Fireplace in each unit, plus shag carpets. dens & completely equipped kitchens. A great value at $82,000. SPECTACULAR VIEW ... And a magnificent home on Galatea Ter· race in exclusive Irvine Terrace. 3 large bed rooms & baths. formal dining room, den with open beam ceiling; pool & pool side lanai. A simply elegant home, beautifully decorated. Every conceivable built-in feature from a complete electrical security system to 3 ovens in the gourmet kitchen. $186,800 -Sho"'n by app't. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar ''Selling Real Estate in Newport Harbor Since 1944" 673-4400 •General General - H yoo,'re J>hvlning a Newport Beaclt'move ~rry fol your c~ice~ H alf gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to.see this dist inctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built-in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury. comfort, convenience and qua lity construction. Sundecks. fireplace, wet-bar, e legant Masler Suite, Sun-Lite'-' kitchen. private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities include heated swi mn1ing poo l, lighted tennis courts. sauna, therapy pool. All ext erior building a nd grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest toda y~ Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes from $62,995 :~~..!.':.'...... ........... ._ Financing Available at 7 3/4 °/o * -.. ~,.... l~ I -.. ,,.... I~ r ...... ,,.,.. l~F"'"'"' I~ General 1 ,G~e;n;e;r;a;t;;;;;;;;;.~1 ~G~t;ne;r;•;l;;;;;;~~~G~tn;t;r;a~I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; General EXECUTIVES!! Last of the Outstanding La Cuesta By the Sea Homes • " from $52,900 Conventional Financing including land cost Minimum Move-In $9000 24 Custom bui lt homes in a separate wa ll ed neighborhood. Boat and recreational vehicle sized lot s. ~~ Mile to P acific Ocean and Huntington State Beach. Pres tige ex- teriors 'vith shake a nd ~Ti ss ion tile roofs. Superb a1nenities include auto garage doo r openers. continuous cleaning ovens. trash compactors and 1na ny other extras. lh Mile to 20 l\li ie Bike 1·ra il. Models Located at Brookhurst & Atlanta, Huntington Beach For Further Information Call 968-2929 or 962-1371 1-------- CORONA DEL MAR .'tt.'fl l A'-,T ( (JA-. T HU .ti\/ltAY 644·7270 -BLUFFS- BEAUT. CONDO. .._._, ,._ ..ti;: '.!!"""r -··• NEW TRIPLEXES & DUPLEXES IN COSTA MESA 80 / INTEREST 10 AVAILABLE Li,·r in l hc pr t' s t I g i o u s ON CONTRACTS RLUFfo'S. Nr1v Spanish tile rntry, nc111 t·al'pcls & drn[>f's. Open Daily Placentia Ave. at Wilson pleas~nr rirl'l:ilaec , large ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT ' hontcy kitehcn, ~ bcdroon1s, EXCLUSIVE AGENTS , 547-6791 21~ Oa!hs, rii::-ht on !hr IOVl'-i'1!,;· ... ,..,..,..,.. ... ,....,.~..,, ..... .,,.,..,..,..,..,.., Iv Grt·1'nlx•lt . One ol thc l ~------1~1! &4t1210 JiG~e~n~e~r~al~iiiijijijiji.,. .. ~ 6313 LOAN VALUE GOING -ON THE WATER-14 O UP? CONDOMINIUM AsswnaOlc by anyone rr-SOUGHT-AFTER ~!!!!!!ll!!!!'J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!li!l!!!ll!!""'!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ..-.irdlC"S!i Of ll"I'. l"ih 't' IJI' __ __ TI1is lovrly 2-llt01"' t>n<I unit •· "' VIEW AREA G I G J creed. Pa.vrncnls • on ttu.i enera enerat has evc,...1hin<> • even a 1 I b ·11 -> BOAT si.JP. 'Uitra nlOdern loon or s r~.soo. only St&I. a 3 bedn:ion1s an! <u11u u1 month P .I:r .1. Oh '""· the around nK.v 1)iltio and Jovt-... kitchen 1vith all new boiltins. * *· * * * * *TAYLOR CO.* FABULOUS SPYGLASS HILL \Vonderful NE\-V home for a lge happy fam- ily ! Spacious entry ha ll w/circular stairway. 4 lge bdrrns, Jge F'R, Dn & huge finished bonus room \Vi th balcony. Rm for pool. Com- plete ldsc. You own the land! $125.000. 7 TWIN LAKES CIRC. OPEN DAILY 1·5:30 horn(' is a 2 bt'droo1n + fam· ly pool. l~1y .'i.-•M.'t'llTI 1·i'-"'· -Attracti1•e stone l'i~lace, I 1 r· ···• ;1y room 1vith fi1~pl, anrl o<·atcd 1unr1n~ u! 1cr uw 2 Bedroo1ns, 2!~ Baths. SUNDE....""K overlooking t}l(' n<.'ffis a bit of pnin1 an(I hontL"S. 11::.:·ioo. h. n.c. 1110 h:in1.."' Hd., 11·a1er. All I. Iii can bf> yours 525 500 ;-.,:C'11·porl B1.•at'h '"' ~644-7270 ' · PErt''eARRET T Newport -REALTOR- 11 I ' COM DUPLEX I .rust rc1nodcled front unit F1lrvi1w 11·ith that RUSTIC 1-~EEL,. 646-1811 CQl'DOJ\llNIUi\1 ON POOL l:\'G. Panr!ed living roon1, Aln1ost 11('11· 1 1 ~ ba., 2 lxlrm., I brick fireJ)laC'f'. 3 Bedrooms. (1nytlm1) crpt/df1>s. ?riv. patio , 1 upgi~1df'<I cn11><'ts & 11·1tll-;u1surn(' FllA 71~·,. llun· ' paf)('r. Nt'I\' 1-ear upJ>('r unitl'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lin~lon llartxiu1· a r('1\, 1·11· -BEST BUY-642-5200 "Our 28th Year" 11· lrc P-lop 1•i1•11', or11.•n bea1nl~ cant S23,!Ci0. 4(;&i tlludrid rl WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors "'";,"''· 2 bedroom. mclud. ' ""'" ' d•r• toe ss. CaJl j •16-1165. , ing ovcrsi1.cd muter suite. today ... £42..5618 ---------1 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ~ 01ll' of Corona del 1.tar's G 1 General "Overlooking Big Canyon Cc.untry Club" I nio"t t har n1lng: propcMit'll l-•-n_•_r_• ________________ I < ~." ~t "~-•-En_~_;._~_R_T_c_E_N_T_E_R_, N. B. 644-4910 ~,,.;,:;:,:,.11cx1 to the dty parl<. lrlf*****************-- -i ~I , General 644-7270 ' SUPER SPECIAL-BRANO NEW ONLY $25,950 7 LOVELY Choice of two of finest 4BR, 3BA homes in ... for this 3 BR. 2 BA . hug(' 20'x22' rumpus rm., rxo11· crpls. Close to Eslanri:i High. Priced under n1arkrl. UNITS + POOL -OPEN HOUSE-~~~t1f::~t Beach-Spacious interiors, super ***NEWPORT DUPLEX (3 BR & 2 BR) <IOO Jasn1ifK', Corona clel l\lar. From Pacinc. Coast H ighway c - i'!nd SurX?rlor Avenue (Balboa ,....,.,..,,.,........., BACK BAY DU PLEX HEIGHTS*** im.fffi. '"' & """ i .;. OPEN OAILY 1 TO 5 PM, STOP IN & SEE 1801 Santiago Dr., N.B. Blvd). clri\".? up Superior 10 T u::ondcroga, and directly to 1600 Harrow P lace, N.B. · Nl'WP'Orl Crest \nformalion l:~~!t'.>/. ..... i.1 ...... 11!1 Cenli!r.Telcphonc (714)645-0141 1 BR units. dbl dct. .e:ar. on 1 large 7J'xJOO' lot in country acinosphC'l"t'. Prit·rd ;·ii;ht at I $39,9so. I \\"a nl to m ake n1011C'\'? H \'OU ft'.'C I "Uncle S:.un" iS !<ha1:ing loo n1u1'h in your labors, look :'ll this nppor111nity. SI-1.160 ~'I"Oss u1co111c 1& the 1'l'nts ru·c Jowl. U:x:a!ion is solid. lligh OCCUp;tllC}', Pl'ide of Ol\ln<.'rship an•u. Only $132,500. Submit clown pay· n1cnt. 64&-i17L "-"". 64S.n21 BLUFFS -FIRST TIME OPEN! Let me show you this charming couple home, professionally decorated. Don't wait! See today! 426 VISTA SUERTE, OPEN SUN. 1·5, $63,500. Muriel Barr. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-6 Come to 18691 PORTOFINO, Turtle Rock Hills. See a super 4 BR. & fan1. rm. ·'JJresi- dent" home, only $89,500 in cl. land & par- oramic view. Wray. Tr,tE BLUFFS BEST BUY! l<X " is this super floor plan. One yr. old condo is being o!fered for $69,500 INCL. LAND! 3 BR's, 21,"t ba., fam . rm.; 1800 sq. ft. Call Toni Escobar. BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT Large home, 2 lots. Pier & fl oa t. 5 BR .. den. bonus playroom, 5 ba. Sunday beach. ~love in for summer. Excellent financi ng. $317,000. Russ Fl ynn. CAMEO SHORES Ocean vi ew. Very large living roon1 & master bdrm. w/beautiful parquet fl oors. bean1ed c e i 1 i n g s, 4 bdr1ns., 3 baths. $11 5,000. Carol Tatum. GREAT FOR SMA LL KIOS JUS'J' LI S'fED , 4 bdrn1 ., 21:! bath hon1e on large Jot at cul·de-sac street encl.-Near elen1. school & park. $85,950. Howard Wells. OWNER MUST SELL Elegant 2-story home in Dove r Shores. 4 BR's .. fam . rm.: incredible day & night view. Owner \v iconsider all reasonable offers. $139,500. Cathryn Tenni1Je. COZY COTT AGE Private Bayshores area \\1it h ., S\vimming beac hes. 2 Bdrm. home w/guesl suite. Love· ly brick patio & plantings. $49 .500. Snlcs Office open dally lU a.m. to sunset * Typlt·:i! co11vc-11110MI fi nancin$:: nf ::o y ear loan: ("a.~h prie,• of Pla n 1 $6:],99:'>; du1vn payn11.·11l Sl:!.t-i9~1; :lGO 1non1hly payn1f•nts nf 3361.00 f11rin- c·inal & intcn •,.t / at 8\.~; Ai\':"lt.:.AL PF.HCENT· . . A GE H1\TE. ... .......... ,.. -...., ,,,..., ... ,.,.~._. ... ,._.....,....,,.,~,.-oo~•·•·"i-.,. ._., ,.._.,......., ..... ,._ .......... 1 ...... _.,., .... j ... ~,M• ...... "0 •\,I .... ,._,.....,..,..,_.,......,-.....__.1_11'°"'_•1"~""'-••U .,,,,.,, .. Gttn eral Genel'al OCEAN VIEW CONOOM IN!UMS -NEWPORT BEACH NEW · VACANT NEWPORT CREST RESALES Open House Everyday 10 a.m. • 6 p.m. ALL PLANS AVAILABLE FROM $63,000 OR MAKE OFFER LOW INTEREST RATES Off Cst. Hw y. on Bluffs off Superior REALTOR PARTICIPATION Real Estate Co nsultants 1525 Superior-Suite 3 Newport Beach 1714 1 645-3230 General General PRIME FAMILY ASSUME VA NEIGHBORHOOD $279. P.l.T.I. $31,950 BEACH DUPLE X Extl'r ior nc1vly pa1ntcd. :: BR ,'(,, 2 BR. un it.~. firt•p!. dh! ~N nL 9 . rrs FUN ro BE NfCE! "°r. '" pro'""' of '~"'P ;,. ! ,,,.;oc rle1'0rn l•ng. g.,, buy • on thr beach. I , $76,500 :'-Cl CASH 00\\')I '/A . truly lovely hotnl', !27,.}()(). C:atl .i!"HX"l22 WALKER & LEE H.EA! .. EST,\TE General General HARBOR \'ou don't need a gun to .. Dr-t1w Fast" \vhen you pla..:e an nd in I.he Dnily Pilot Want Ads! Call no\\' -642-5678. 1 Gener1I VIEW HOMES ONE-OF·A·KIND MONTEGO \J'l llU°'211733 WESTCLIFF DR. ~ NEWPCRT BEACH If"******************* General MACNAB IRVINE ~------"'·---~~~ FINER HOMES DOVER SHORES -FAMILY HOME Approx. 3000 sq. ft. of comfort. 4BR's, 3 baths + PR, ~·R -large private yard. $98,500. Dona Chichester 642·8235. (H I I) UPPER BAY Original sales model w/many ex tra features. Professionally landsC'aped, single story. 4 BR, lg. FR, formal DR & breakfast a rea. Jack Custer 642·8235 (Hl2J LIDO ISLAND DOLL HOUSE '· Sharp 3 BR. 3 bath -sparkling fre•h & clean. Lge. patio. ~89,000. Barbara Gothard 642·8235. (H13) HARBOR VIEW MONTEGO Antique flavor & old fa shi oned charm key- note this 4 BR. !·story home. Used brick entrance, covered private patio. spiffy clean for pa rticular people. $74,500 Fee. Joyce Edl und 642·8235. (Hl4l 125' BAYFRDNT I RESIOENTIAL LOT 4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining, creative decor. You'll love the lru1dscaping. Immediate move in. Price reduced to 574,500. Facilities for large power boal. Owner motivated & ready for reasonable offer. Dramatic 3 BR. 3 bath. formal DR. F~l,g. LR. G. Fay/B. Owen.• 642-8235. OPEN SJ\T. & SUN 1·5 p.m. #41 Balboa. Coves. IH15) •I Fifty feet of bayfrontage \Vith fee ti tle & some subordination. Price $4:000 per foot. E. Vreeland. NEW EMERALD BAY LISTING 3 Years new! Spacious Spanish J1on1c w 4 BR's .. sauna. den & wet bar. Beaut. vie'" of ocean & 1noun tains. .!\. great hon1e for $296,000. Call Pat ll11g. l33-0700 ---Coldwell,Bankar ~ 644-2430 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. for Action ••. Can 642-5678 • 2 SMALi. •IOi\1ES on onC' 101, (;()od, ('10111.'·in roe. l\lith 11 J11•y ,'li·('('<i~. S.12.900. \\'11lk hJ l\1M rinA. brR nd n('w * 4 BEDROOM. 2 baths, 11lu~~-cahrix-;s rhi'°~t. roun· douhk• _i.:uragi:. $30 000. B\~l'll fry ~II(' l'l1 1;i~ a I I r> ]fll l'SI or 1('1'1r'I.~. tn.1\l1 1r'l!j: ro:ir tn.ii:. flr~pllu:e BRING YOUR SWIMSUIT ••• when you move into this Immaculate 4 Bdrm1 family room Harbor View Hom~next to commuruty pool & park. Inclpdes : Wetbar, 2 !!replaces, w/w shag & tllany other extras. Submit your terms. $81,500 PERFECT RENTAL Monaco-2 Bdrm & den, well decorated, shows llke a model home. Vacant-move right in at $450. per mo. * COP.11\1ERCIAt. 7.0Nr. _ 2 •. and tx•An1ed t~-ihng11 in Uv. BR lwo story old<c home 1"" room , two hu•'<' b<'d· HARBOR VIEW HOMES mrncr lo!. $24,5(.(J. ' ruon111, ~ vanlly bath!!, a Roy McCardle RHllor """'"'· No riow11 VA tcnns. REALTY CM fn'!X'<'l lodny, i;ubn1tt )'U\lt UHO Nc11·rxirt Blvd.. · • vrrcr ru1d move ln fast. Bkr/ 548-mt Ownl"I' wlll """"''"' for'"" NEWPORT BEACH Rall'. BK R !162-Mll. With Pool $32,500 -ASSUME.5'12% FHA f' CAMEO HIGHLANDS Fi rst offering. Secluded 4BR home - immac. condition! &aullfully planted ya•d. Peek·a·boo view. $73,950. Jack C u s t er 642-8235. lH16) . fOI Dower Ort.e M2·12JI Pnrk l1kr ~';"tt"d, Sharp <I bdrm. :? ..... , \ CU\'.JO., jusl 833•078-0 Fiun lJy r rn, rlrcplurr. Din-t~lrt'OrO tt>d, dbl. ;;: a r I "' ll\if r 10 , KU builL.1ns. . .!lave ~ '"'"~"llf'IW.~"li~ unH-l-1----,INFORMATIQN.ON OTHER HOMES AVAILABLE Hewporl h•oh1Clll(O{nl11211J li4' M•oArthur e.u·t200 In •olMhtiCln. Brk 5-M>-lnQ. ln;n•·~ r».J. f~nlv SZ"i.000. I.,...,,..,,.,....,!'!!!'!!!!! ...... !'!!!!!,....,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TA RBELL I I ., 11·~· ~~1 .. 11 .11 l ~--. I " 'I " ' ** ** ** ·Heritage Collection OLD FARM HOUSE IN ~OSTA MESA YET; -Unusual property, 141 frontage x 107' depth with 3 car garage Two detached multi·purpose buildings and old fashioned farm style 3 bedroom, 1700 sq. ft. home. Don't miss the wine cellar! A steal at $35,000 • may be only 10% down. CALL ~OR COMPLETE DETAILS 546-5880. CHARMING TOWNHOUSE MOST POPULAR large 3 bedroom/dining room model, patio, double garage, bltins. clubhouse & 3 pool s. Best of a ll, no yard · work. Lowest priced big three at $24 300. CALL 540-1151 ' ASSUMABLE LOAN!! LOOKING FOR A LOW INTEREST LOAN? See this lovely 3 bedroom/family room home complete with shag carpets, fireplace, built· ins and lots of extras. Present 61h% Joan can be assumed or new financing avail- able. Full price $33,950. CALL 546-5880 HIDDEN WESTCUFF 4 BEDROOM 3 BATH on large lot with de- tached garage. You haven't seen this before! Offered at $67,500. CALL 540·1151. NE'AR SO. COAST PLAZA MUST HAVE QUICK SALE. Adult occup. 3 BR, 2 BA. w/lrg kit., brick fpl & beaut covered patio. Huge cul-de-sac lot w/many fruit trees & rm for your own garden. Own- er leaving state. O!!ered at only $32,500. CALL 546-5880 GIVE YOUR FAMILY COUNTRY LIVING -Large 4 bedroom, den and pool home on super big lot. Extras in- clude frui t trees, shade trees. dog run & shrubs galore. All this near Back Bay, at $41,900. CALL 541).1151. ROOM TO RAMBLE OVER 1100 SQ. FT. IN MESA VERD"E for only $36,500. 3 -Big bedrooms, 2 baths, huge bonus room with room for pool table. Lots of privacy with low maintenance. CALL 546-5'80 CAPE COD 4 BEDROOM +CONVERTIBLE DEN, 3 baths -on beautiful tree lined street in Newport Beach. You'll love the rear yard and pool! Hurry . $68,500 . CALL 541).1151 . MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE BEAUT. RAMBLING 4 BR., 2 BA. one-story horpe. Heavy shake roof, picturesque atrium, lrg · mod kitch, family rm, beaut carpeting and paneling. Spacious lot on quiet cul-de- sac close to new regional park. OUered at only $49,500. CALL 546-5880 ERITAGE HARBOR VIEW HOMES ,,lt . WE'RE STILL OPEN FOR BUSINESS I But ... we're down to our last few Harbor View Homes in the fin al unit on the hill ... and some of our beautiful model homes! So hurry if you'd like to live in one of these ex~ citing 3 to 5 bedroom Donald L. Bren Com· pany residences priced from $61,190! 1129 PORT SHEFFIELD PLACE IN NEW- PORT BEACH, JUST OFF FORD RD. & MACARTHUR BLVD. (714) 833-0710. BLDR. ~ [Vill1gcs by mi;\ -lHE IMNE a:MW\JY I General General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN JJY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle W.terfront Custom 4-bdrm., 4~ bath home on lagooll. Fu!Ir. equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room . . . . . . $245,000 Lind• Isle Waterfront Lovely 4 bdrm., 41h ba. home with swim· ming pool, pier & slip, panoramic view of main cbannel. Lge. family rm. w/space for billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal dining & living rm. $275,000. Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of main channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel· ing &: 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel- ~ . * BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS * ~ SMELL •••••• ... those wonderful sea breezes, & best of all, you can see the ocean, too! 4 Bdrm., 2 ba. fun home on view lot. $76,500. The best in Iiarbor View Hills. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1.5 1014 SEA LANE IN·LAWS OWN ROOM ... in this delightful Spanish style 2 bdrm .. family rm., guest house home in Newport Heights. Only $59,500. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 338 HOLMWOOD · OWNER SAYS ••••• ''Please sell my fine home in Harbor View Homes, so I can move to my new one." 3 Bdrms., 2'h ba., expandable Portofino model. Reduced to $73,000. Can have short escro\v. RENTALS Available now. Fro"'.' $200 to $650. Call to see R • ,,,, ~. 1 ; !'I General * 675·5930 * 3629 E. ColSI Hwy. Corona del M.r General *OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5_ * 4607 SEASHORE, NEWPORT BEACH Year old, oceanfront duplex. 4 Bdrm. & 3 bdrm. 309 CEDAR, NEWPORT SHORES Priv. community nr. beach, teruiis, pools. Freshly decorated, incl. ne\v carpets tbru- out. 4 & Fam. rm., din. rm. $54,000. 119 VIA LIDO SOUD, LIDO ISLE Pier & slip. Contemporary Higson bit. 4 & a den, din. rm., pool. $195,000. Friday, Septembtr 7, 1973 VERMONT . FARM HOUSE -% ACRE -REDUCED $29,950 Rolling gr~C'n lawns and stately t~ surround pie· t uresqu c Vermont farmhouse. Old \v o r J d charm and architecture. l'orrnal entry. Step do\vn n1aster suite with 5th bath. i\1an size den \\'i!h rugged bcnnts. 1i1aid$ quartPt'S. 23' TAVERN KITCl-CEN ,,·ith cu.U1cdral beams. Banquet fornial dining. E I e g a u t French doors to sl'cluded garden paradise. \Valled patio \Vilh outdoor fireplace and B.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd story in-law aparlntent, 2 guest cottages and covered dance pavilllon overlooking magnificent tree form pool. ENTERTAINERS p,\R.A- DI SE. CALL 645·0303. /OKI\ I I 01\0\ " li'£A~TOR.:, BEACH + POOL SWin1 at home. Stroll to beach. Massive two story living room. Cheery bedrooms. Guest quarters. 'lnrd size sparkling pool. - Heated -filtered. Quiet tree lined street. Entertainl'r's delight. Ca ll today. 963-6~ OPEN SAT/SUN. l·S 4515 TREMONT Cameo Shorf..'if, CdM. 5 n ri ., !atnUy r1n .. fornlal dining rm. Vaulted !iv. 1i11 . r.t;!ll, 3 Cnr gnr. Relinishetl pool plU!i prlv. bcathcJi, VIC\\'! $12·1,!'..00. BALBOA ISLAND 2 l~drn1. t.'Ollagc, Frplc., F .1\. heat. Q\~·nt·1· anxlouli, prk.-e just redo("('d! 3 BEAUTIES Beautiful rorner duplex: 2 studio apt~.. :f BR eac·h: oy,'JlCr's has fan1 1·n1., :l' • ba., wet bttr. Call !<Jr app!. $129.500. SOU1lf or H'V)'. :l Bdrrns., 2•,;, ba's. plus 'l bd1·n1., 2 bn's.; 2 yrs. o!tl. C(•1·1i!tll;; bit-in stove, frples. $12:'1.000. MESA VERDE HURRY! This hon1e is ne\.\' on the market. f)-cshly painted in and nut. 5 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, 1''an1ily Roon1, Fireplace. Offcrro fol' $59,950. Call 'COL\VELL &r<;.-0555. NEWPORT HEIGHTS OPENT/l 9 • rrs FUN TO 8E NICE/ Lots of po.ssibil ities in this ~-'. ~ odaptable home w;th 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, and large family room. Easy ac· cess to park camper or boat trailer. Assume the V.A. loan at 6%% 0\VC 2nd T.D. Ju.<it reduced to $44,500. Call COLWELL 646-(655 DAILY PILOT I~ Balboa ltJanel · Salisbury · k .. ~1·~ *BALBOA ISLAND* Good 2 bdrn1. !tonic with s1n~lc car garage. Open (J(':on cl'il., 1rpL: attr. pntlo; \\'/w carp,; nice 11'.lc. ncnr 1K1y. FULL PRICE $58,500 1:.:iECUS IVE \VITI! - Salisbury R&ally ;115 11ARJNE AVE. RALBOA ISLAND CALL 673-4900 Balboa Ponin.ula BAYVIEW On the Pf'nin!'luln Sf)at·ious J UcrlJ'OOms 1vilh dining roont, toads of stor. a£:"c, built-ins, fireplace. 01\Tt<'r has n1owd. t..Iust be sold, t"VCn the furnitur(' goes. Consider any trade or suh- rnit at $7S.OOO. Good financ- ing. PACn·-IC PROPERTIES G75-6TI2 or 548-8796 *REDUCED* 2 Bdlins., den, 2 t«ths $6.11,500 408 SEVILLE OPEN SUN. 1·5 COAST PROPERTIES * 673-5410 * Capistrano Beach e DESPERATE e TRY VA all terms, on this 3 beclroon1, family roon1, 11e\V· ly decorated honte v.·it.h n peek at the oceH11. $41.000. a RED CARPET, Realtors e · 497-l761, Laguna. Corona del Mar -WALK TO A PRIVA'l'l BEACH ing. Waterfront mstr. suite bas dbl. bath, 2ND TIME ~itting. area, view decks, swiming pool with "G.I. NO NO" NO DOWN· * $56,500 * Two generous sized bedrooms, a roomy kitchen, a living room all done in Lemon Yel\ows and Lime Greens that's so light and BUnny that ll looks like part ot the park-like garden outside. iacuzz1 .. .. .. . . . .. .. . . .. . . .. .. . '295,000. AROUND For Complete lnform1tlon If you miss this home the 1st 0 II H tinle opportunity knocks n A omes & Lots, PleaH C1ll: &&ain! 1st buyer did not BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR qualify & owoer an•;ou• lo sell y ,\ appraised at $32,000. 341 81yslde Dr., Suite 1, N.8. 675.6161 3 Bedrooms, 1~i baths. 1~.,.l!!!~!O!l!l!!O!!!!!!O!"!!"l,,;...,..,..,..,..,..,.,.d large fa mily roon1/kitchen, 1'Gentral G 1 combo, 'vilh built·ins and ::..:.==-------':Cen:::.:ec:.r:::•:._ _______ 1 breaklast b(lr. Vacant -rent MAKE OFFER A motivated owner has instructed us to "SELL HIS HOUSE". He owns this ma.,,U- icent four bedroom Spyglass Hill home c1ear of any indebtedness so he is very FLEXI· BLE. He will lease/option the house, or agree to any other reasonable arrangement. This is the best view home for sale in Spy- glass today. Do yourself a favor-call us- and make an offer. 675-7225 \l.'hllc v.·alting for escrow to c~. 637·9101. 4000 Sq. Ft. Corono del Mar NO COSTS Spend no money r..move into this big home with family room, lnrge bedrooms, huge IJ ~ · yard. Total price is $31.900. f'l()JJI: lf()~fS This v..·on't last -act OO\.\'. IN BAYSHORES !-~~~~§§~;;.\Call 847-«110. and ffuny! TI1is one is/• OPfNTIL9 . IT':\ FUN 70 BE NICE! CALL 644-n11 /Jn NIGEl llnlL[Y ,\ ASSUClnT CS THE REAL ESTATE RS ~~"'!\"' •.i;;,i:.,.~ Irvine Terr. #2 - wUxlows, fukk ~ ,.,._ Front Row ~ OCEAN VIEW pet, used bnck tireplace f!iL 1 and plenty of pa:nding and MAGNIFICENT V1EW OF 1;:::::::::::::::::: beams. lt'son}y 2bedrooms THE HARBOR'S BOATING $~ and 1 bath but in &y-ACTIVITY FR.OM THIS Dramatic 3 BR, 2 BA home shores. Who ean ask for B E A U T 1 F U LL y EASTILUFF h ailed · more? (o1her than John DECORATED 3 BDRM. & s: wand~~;=~ \\layne!) At $62,000. o.nd DEN H 0 ME · YOUR Open Daily 1 ·5 views from breakfast nook. going fast. CHAl~CE TO BUY IBOM I Vi lamll IJ - UNIQUE HOMES A REALLY MOTIVATED 2912 A ta tsta Y rm, vtng nn. and SELLER $129 500 master suite. Carpet.s./drps REAL TORS E. • · EXCEPTIONALLY SCARCE like new. Lots of storage. EASTSIDE - $25,250 :::~·~~:k~1c1NG m~LF:I F~~~~!~{ ocean vi~' -645-6500 -Pl ASE CALL 4 BDRM. & LGE. FAMILY Access to 3 pvt beache s. 6 75-3000 ~DE~~TE/j",;' A~'tir Open Sat/&ln '"· 4733 O>urt- GOOD TASTE COSTS NO MORE ·mn.n ,, 111:\rn llE.\1:1·\· 1\1'. FOR 1 M M E D . QC. land Dr. in Cameo Highlands. CUPANCY. PRICED FAR G73-Jlil. BELOW ANY OTHER START PACKING EASTBLUFF HOME, AT Immed. p:rossess. on tms de- $59,500. Jighttul 3 bdrm., 2 ba. home Good starter home for the new1,y\\-ed1 or pleasant retirement home tor the oldenveds. Walk to shopping &-.bua line. Owner may help nm.nee. 646-rn.1 -open M1. 2043 WeatclUt Dr. 8112°/o INTEREST Gtntrol Gontr1I • PLUS An ideal summer/winter Removal of one non-structur- f~l 111q OiS 100) ' - -RENTALS ;n a beautiful ""'"ng· ;, Corona -1iigblands. Profess. 3 BDR.i.'1 ., 2 BA., FURNISH· decorated, imn1ac. 1.'0nd. ED BLUFFS CONOO. $395. Vte\\• or the ocean. P MCl"d rentnl ooly 6 dooT5 to a al partition e.'Cpe.nds the ~upcr beach. Own for profit eli !) " game room to a full 24x26 or occupy for pll'&SUrt. • I rumpus room. Only $81.500. tdo <I e AND to sell! 3 BDRM., FAMILY RM .. 2 MORGAN REAL TY ~ Tll 11 • "'$ FUN TO BE NICE' Olll' fantastic terms may nol 80% financing currenlly 1~ long, sa call quick. LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family rm., available at approx. Si,t,%. BATHS, LARGESl' E · 673-6642 675-6459 PLA N CONDO. $fi00, CA1.L 644-7211 or 5 bdrms., with 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec~ Top value at 5155·000· CALL 644-nll tacular view! Waterfront living rm. with step-down wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000. PLEASE C~Ll IRVINE TERRACE 675 3000 FRONT ROW • Pan vu home on Bayad'"' /Jn N1 r,r1 l~All fY f., ASoiJL IATlS HOUSES FOR .SALE 3 BEDROOMS 909 Tiller Way (HVuHills) CdM 644·2430 $89,MO (Sun 1·5) 311 Coral, Balboa Island 644-2430 $145,000 (Sun 1-4) 426 Vista Suerte (The Bluffs) NB 644·2430 $63,500 (Sun 1·5) 4 BliDROOMS 1115 Oxford Lane (Westcllff) NB 641).1151 $67,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 4 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 1 5192 Chablis Circle (The Ranch) Irvine 551·2300 $48,500 (Dally) 3619 Surf view (HVuH!lls) CdM '18691 PortofJno (Turtle Rock Hills) 644-2430 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1·6) 5 BR & FAlrlll Y RM OR DEN •2406 Holiday (Back Bay) NB 540·1151 $68,500 (Su n 1-4:30) DUPLEXES FOR SALE 3BR&2BR 400 Jasmine, Corona de! Mar 644·7270 $127,500 (Sal & Sun l ·S) - " * * * * LOVELY custom 5 bdrm., 3 ba., Lido Nord, on spacious 40 ft. lot. Pier & slip, Adjacent Jot also avail. for sale. $295,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, H.B. 675-6161 rJD.NIGl L UAILE\ f,. A'l'lUEIAI LS MOTHER·IN-LAW WALK TO WESTCUFF ... from this 2 In 1 home. Front 3 bedrm., formal din- Oeneral General lng, 1n()(}ern k1tchen w/ ;::.::.:.::;c::.:c ______ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I brealdut aree.: Separate ~3 BEDROOM • rear apt. ror tn-la.\vs or ram· lly student. lm'IJCUlate! Dbl MESS WITH Why Not gar all alley ~lu• room 1o, • • • a ''New'• Home? garden or OOat. $43,500. 4n POOL AND Broadway. OPEN SAT & NE\V range Si oven • NEW SUN 1 5 JACUZZI hot water h'"'"' • N E W ' . · M ........ ificem pool a»d fire-carpeting, NEW clean PQillt, _... NE\V dlsh\taahcr, 3 NEW ring in completeJy priva1e bedl'oom1l, hunily room, llV• Lachenmyer R.•alt•)r Good atarter home tor the IRVINE TEltR. ne.,i.,l)'"'t'ds or p I ea s a nt Beaut 4 lxilm. home, family r etiren1cnt horne for the rm., new ci\l1)els; fee land. older.ve<ls. Walk to shoppini;: $86,500 & bus line. Owner n1ay help finance. 64&--Till -open eves, :a'.>43 \VestcHff Dr. Walker&lee llllL llTlTI JONES REALTY INC. ESt "46 I 2001 W.8albool BIYd. IWwport 8Mdi· C.1llomllo 921550 ' bJll.\\ ,\ 111'.\l'll HE.\IJ'\' l~f . [<."'''.q !.~~1('''', --·ilAYCREST • PROBATE SALE Tf you know the Baycrest area. You're sure to ap-p~late this vnlue. 3 Bedrooms, 2%. beth.~, formal dining area, all electric kitchen. large service porch '~1ilh 11, bA.lh, \)1-eakfast area. Sµecla:l bonus l'OOIU in bati<: thnt \l.'OU!d make (I perfect ho1ne office or hobby rOorn. Slo~ galore. AC:.:! r~t on thls orJe. By app't. $69,SOO. TetT. 4 BR 4 BA gour ki l wi prof "·et bar by owner $195,!XXI, 6T:>-7'586. DUPLE,'\:, corn~r. charmlng, by o\\·ncr. 500 Poinsettia, Open 1·5 rla ily. Costa Me5a A WOW! COLLEGE PARK POOL HOME Just n1adC' llvailable · 3 behloom. 2 bnth surrounded by roses anrl tr<.-es. $40,950. Please call ~nn. yard. Pre-ronditioned by l and 2 ba~ wi~ active ldds .. CUstom crayon 11" l'OOln , uis. u• wans and other , unusual a NEW detached 2 ce.r gar. katures ingk(e. Tu-o baths age, NEW landM.'tlplng and UNUSUAL lj)UALITY C. F. Colnwonhy --~,. as~TS-ID_E __ 1 Realtors 640-0020 5.M. !J)rintdeni, NEW lc-nces and and family room. Great kit· tUl for _ chen 1ay-0Ut. 111e-top island ~· Trelneudous cup. board and smrage spoct. A bo.rga1n at $37,SOO. Mu&ttr , up courage and call 963-6167. OP8I nL t • ITT FUN 'IO BE NtCEt Be one of the COSTA MESA 8 t Add d p I 2Brand New Cu~m Homes. 8 ' resst ~P 8 4 BR, 2 81\, close to Back PRIVATE ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH BY OWNER Ltfl.vlng area, immediate oc- cupancy, 4 BR, 5 lU lwnn'Y 2 year old homt!. Mftl'\Y de- luxe. custom feature• have bectl built Into this out5t&nd· Ing w1 tv1ront home -cus· tom furniture &. 1967 Cruiser Included, Excellent tennA. $279,ln>. AlllO available un- fumlld\ed. For Into • calt m.m. * Newport Htlghl1 * Vacant. Immed, occupancy _, BR. 2 bft. Extra Jge. Jot O>mpletety remodeled. Own- er dttpPn.te! Bj\LBO,( BAY PROP. -* '42-74'1 * Want ad res ults ••••• sci567i $30,490. For the yoong couple \\'ho need a nice home but mu!'lt \\'Atch the budget. 3 ltu-ge bl'droonis. Oversized yn.rd. Roat gute. 0.\'IICI" ·will help \\'hh buycn. rosts. Uiw down payn1e11t possible. On· ly $28,250. Call 1101v to see. 842-2.i35. In To\l.·n? Ila,y. Cpl~. dt1)6, landsc."flp. i\1csa Vrrde exl'c. r:iniily Ing, sp1inklers, fcnc.'f's a 11 home. 3 Br + dl'n, complete You own home ind l1nd Stt le Cutsla VIiia associated new kit. Room for boat 01· inc:llltk!t:H $14,950. Drive by trlr. NI'\\' listinit'. :!16 & 21~ E. 2'lnd St. 6-15-6177 AJl:llk. ER S-RE Al TOl?'i ;OJ\ IN Raith,., ~'l 1J..t1 David Bourke RHr 13\' 0\VNER -Gorgeous 5f6-9950 Me.sa Vertie 5 SR, 2800 sq. ft. I-lug~ rountry kit. Blln -P.iodel 1 block west of Beach Oil Adanis In lluntington Beach. BALBOA ISLAND I! ----=-= -TWO-ON°A·LOT <locuunk oven -' bbq. Ou!. VA icrms, $32.000, Rent $L7U feal'ul-es. 150 yrrls to country THE REAL F.STATERS QUlek occupancy because of credit rejections!! Conventional financing OPEN TIL II • tTS FUN TO 8£ MCE/ ----THE REAL ESTATE RS each. Call fl-46-002:! club. $75,000. ;),)7-8.196. * 536-1445 * $2B50 DOWN!! Trade (or will lease) 4 bchm. custom, dP!uxc corner So. Ba.yfrorrt hom(', for oce:an w AYCREST * vit'\\.', quaHty hon1t ; 3 01• <I \\11v rt'nl'1' livl' fl't'c :11 lhc Biker & lee A BUDGET lxh,,H:., In Corotlll ~l i\tar bcl1~·h. 2 bdr1n hornc plu~ t 111,..~ 11,,..,1 HOME & INCOME or Entt!ntld Uny. $135.000 hd1·n1 upi:u·tmcnt. TX!uhl1; _::::=~=:==~';:::;:::::'.: Large 4 Bit, :1 bn. f1tn1\\y True equily, Ask fol' uar1\~e. ridl' the hike 10 the ASSUMABLE l1on1c on u ll!r., y,·cll locn1ed Chester S1lisbury 1~11eh. 111us 1,.'0n1li1iun i n~idc lot. O\~·ncr Is lcClVlng to\vn B k & 1 • oil l 1 •1·1 P.iv. 71V2°1o LOAN'!' LOAN!! & h'" p'1oed lh• home !or ro tr 673-4900 "" ~ ,.,~, " " •. ~. '' • • FOURl'LEX • 1111 3 OR, 2 BA 3 BR'g l~l baths pool GI qult k ~lP. $69,750. -11'11 I~ ffi'tnl lo ASSUME 7°/o rc~le; no guatifylng' no CORBIN-MARTIN FHA Assumable!! I {! :-~n s1;,p$: f1'.~way~~~N!~ potntlf. QJl!.(fe-ac, W1.ik to Realtors 644-7662 C11iJtom. pm!e!\~\onnl decor! Wa ker· u lee Submit 0t1 cx(.iu\nge! $7J ,!rJ(). school. Won'l lut at $28,500 *BEACH DUPLEX* 3 BR. 2 BA, family iwn1, "'"~ '''"'' 645-!J,JOO. -Call now-! 61'S-340I) Bl k W I huge eomtr tplc plush car· Call M:> 9491 oc to I er I~ tbnirn..rt? Ruhm11 ]O\.\' ----[v••-y ~--' & n-1 l VI ..... Howml & Co. I l\enl cutlet I & 2 Bdrms. """' • $42,:,00. 84.H•IOO. Assume sv .. 1. Loan ::'"' ...:.-.:::::: ""' _ .... ......_..... • Ideal home & Income. · TmmaculAte 4 lxh·n1 "·l!h . . ONLY $5!1.000 !YlsteN llonnl & Co.I tnmll)' nn. fll'('plate. Dining You don't netd a iiun to CAYWOOD REALTY .,..'-..,... rm, built-Ins & dlsh""'llhrr.1 ;B..;.1,;..l..;.bo;;;•;;...;.l;;.sl.;;•~nd"---- "Oraw Ft1fl" when · )'OU * ~12to * Plltlo. N~llr schooli1. $.t1.2riO. RA YVlE\V D'tllJt,t:X place a.n nd In !he Dally Any day 1.1 'tbe BESt' DAY to Jlavc Jomethlng )'tlU v.·l'utl to brk S4D--TlA7>JRBELL 2 liR, 2 llA, one )'ear old. Pl.lot Want Ada! CaU now run an &di 001'1't delay. • soil? ClaSJUltd (tdJ. do 111--·c._...:_.:..:::=='--2 IJhle gitrtt~ -6"2--G678. • call today 642-0078. "·etl -call N0\\1 6'12-5678. Cht~~iflcd Ads ··· 611..$7~. ;\~·nl * t ... 1~2121 MES•\ VERDE NORTH Dh·'Ol'Ce' fon'(';s sale or beaut decorator 3 BR, 2 BA, upgrnd1,,'tl cul-df>·g&C horn~. Priced $35.00J 1!m1 , lo int. loan. 979--0477 cvl!S .~ "'knds. * BY O\VNE~: Bl'ttutifully det.'Orated 4 BR, fain rn1. :; UA, romp \\'tl illins. flrepl X· ll'f( JIOl)l. to.lust ~1't' to app. A.!king only $42.000. 557-4783 TRIPLEX • EASTSIDE 2 btlrm house + l • I bdnn Bpts. Ne\\1ly dl?C .• drps A: crpt~. 1-lui:tf..' lot "'/room to hulld. s~~i.tn'l 645-61~ P:ASTSIOE COSTA ~fESA $4850. dO\\'TI to VA 7% loan, S230 per n10. Agtnt, ~ Pline. only. C·l LOT, Sil'x111' w/3 Ur, houMl, 2 11;ar. owr $1,0CK) in- romE> In heflf't ol Q6 • i:~.iiill. ~I0-2:'1\2_ • • DAU.V PlLDl I _,,. .. @ 1,-1 ---.... -.. ~!~ [ fr1daf, St'Pttmbtt 7, 197~ I~ I l~ ~I -_ .. _ .. ;;;;:l~~~~I -__ " .. ~)~~ I -- Costa Mesa $36,850, l!IESA DEL ~fAH. - \'acant 3 BR 2 U/\, 5potless move-in t'Ond., ('O\"t'red E:tio. Assum. 71,1'~ Jou.n, :4818 Monterey. Huntington Be.ech THE BIG WHOPPER !luge 2,000 sq ft 11i11i;le i>1ory v.·ith Jtia.nl pool, 4 Bl'ciroon1s. 1•~ Mlhs. formal tllnlni,::, rruni ly 1'00n1 11· 'firepl , cov- CIX'll pu!io 1u1d 1;,· x o111· pool. Lovt>ly Ill~!'. too, S-1!),!}'}J. CAl...L 8-17<l584. OWNER TRANSFERRED Newport Beach £bile Homn For Sal• lrvlne Mes• d e! Mar STAIRWAY .•. TO THE STARS OPEN SAT. 1·5 581 DUNNEGAN li'i 01vnt'r, .f HR, tam assume 61..1 ',f CT Loan. Sl()-300l) '"" ·l Bdrms.. ronv(•11. den, 3 1 -.~~---"·'-"=----I FJl'1>nn1 If Ix.Inn. Vundl·rbuilt huth!!: hug•• ran1Uy 1•111. 11 llh M1~~1 on Vi•io ~i1a.rp l\l ontc-go 4 bedtoon1. 2 ~10<ll·I 1'.llh llS ('l'\ll')'·haU "ct bar. \\'hllr .,..·14ter & , • ...~ .. ·-;---bath , \'try anxious O\\'n('J" Harbor View Homes * ATTENTIOH * Mobile Home Sellers Blriun1 1u1d IO\"l'ly float ing coastal vll'\l't. \\fill consider OPEN 1-JOUSb 1-4 vm &11 S: "'ill Je<asf' option f<lt' $1000 11tau'\.\t>lJ 10 th1• r"IHi. .... lcr su11e. rr~de ln \\'t•s \ L.A. $1.J~.500. Sun. 26.'>!12 !..us Tuna!!, l\.lV. option niom'Y and vn.ly $485 \\'t: lli\Vf.; TJ-IE BU'fEllS- l..:1rgt' fnn1ily 1wn1 f"r .111-MONARCH BAY TE~R ~.on. 2 J\J\ •. t·c11tr11l air l'on-per n1on1h 1'C'!11. l"k·lcrw the y Es 1 1 &I l\.l t-: D 1 ATE do"r fu11. tJ.,llghlfu! <l1·ck1ng A i,va nil & frit-m'1ly srillt -Jev«I dt11onh1g, U1g: fl!nccd bnck nnu"kl·t. ,;\va.ilable 11 0 w. BUYl':HS In . !he rt•a.r. ,\ lot or_ f<l'.ll:c·!Jtl I ho1ne of superior 11uality & yar<_I . 1'ake Aver)' Proio;,1,.ay Gl5-n25. Call Len or Boh $33,500. 1't:N nr.1s. 2.000 sq. f't . 5 Bdrms. 2 huth, fa.1n1ly rni, h\•lng mi. ~"'·Jni: rn1. llugl'.' masll"r bdrrn .~dll' or I nu~h<.·l'·l n-18\\' a1>1. Ne\1' 1 kheh, fl1.-"1(' sh11~, sicp. laun- dry 8.f'l."'il. !l.lt)Vl' in at 0111~e. Asi;un\e Joan, OI' 11('\\• \I A - ok. 2959 BnUb. Exactly as advf'rli$t"d & spoll~"H. $41,500. ~IESA VERDI:: -4 BN.lruorn , 2 bath, fir('plal·C'. 1800 sq, fl . on cul-<lc-sac street. One ol a kind. 6 j ; a.ssumallle loan, or 10'.. 00\\'tl. 1653 Palau. Do no! di.stw·b tenant, appt, only. $21,500. CO/'\TlNENTAL CON- 00, 11.B. 3 Bedroom 11J bath. 9655 Durha111 Dr. $25,T~. l\IONTJCELLO ('ON- 00 -3 Bcdroon1, l ~~ balh, $102 per Ill(), 153 YorklO\Vrl, fl'flru1·1-s 11tus ;) \'1••11· fu1• dC'si•lli. Open bl!ani lhing to Co1Y1n11do. BEACH CITIES r>.'E\\IPOHT BJ:o:AClf VIE:\V Say. ,0 , .. 11 1,1, h"•·"ly .. ,,,1 $69 950 ... 1 f II DON CONHAD REALTOll Mobile Homo Roialoi LOT Over looks Bny (lCi.•1u1 " " 11 " ~ ' ' • rui., l!l'. ani Y nu., l'OI\· 802 S. El Dunino H.l'al 9 '-"" 4 bc(l1wn\, 3 hat11 P:.irksidl' Vi"si"on -\l'rL den: 3 brlmis., ;\ l'IU's., San Clenil'nte, <1!12-!):,lo 7676 Sinter Avf'. 1113 & Lirlo Isle, Snc. $3 ,5w t\\'O story. This is rho.> fil\'Or· S\1•ln1n1lng POOi. ~139,MO. 714/8'2-SS45 979-31!}.I ite rn<>del, 11i1h fol'n1al din-VIEW LOT l~1MAC. -I BR, 2 BA air shg GSxUO LQT_ 1667 Corni1·ull Ing, huge fan1ily rooni l'>i lh d h 11 F"Bnlaslic OC<>ean .vil'i\'S fJ'OJn cpls lndstp sprklrs cusl flfOVE 'to llOIV nice Nei\.l)Ort Bench. Nr .. shop-Money to Lo11n V.'et barl P~!e~'<l $48.450. re •• this lot lit the lop of the new drps, {'QV patio,. ll)' Olf!'lel' Lebaron 1972 flfdblle honie. ping. 011·ner. 6~3. Terrific h·rv. CAI), '16.1-5621. fllon .. rch Bay Te,. ra 1• c . 586-4·111. 24x60, Upgraded crpts, wet Mo 1 , D rt FIXER UPPER ' B h •-,, 2 •·-•h,, draperic1, un 11n, est Priot incl. a rchlll'{'lural Ntwpo.-t eac "" ..... 174 1st TD Loans POOL HOME I plans for a stunni.n~ con-GR•ND OPENING n/c, 11lcc all adlt park. Resort REALTY .__ •·1 ~ * B•YCREST * "" Assume sn1l bal. + 11tnJ ----------4 "·"-n• I·' h">h f"">>'ly C 'I h y · lemoomrv •~·nie . .., ,.JUV. "" 2743 BEAR Valley ·"' • -ucu."" · " " · "" A on1pany \"; 1 1sion ? N rt B y T or1 ~wty by owner. 558-or ""' i:i:: .... -.... '-a anrl ,,,,.ht" >h• ''"'of I LARGE FAMILY BY O\VNER. Elt"'nnl custo1n' ewpo 8 ow ~::.,9742 ~-t · UP TO 90% ' • ~ " • Univ. Park Cenlt-r. Irvine ... 1 & 2 BEDROO'I .,...,... area. V»'ner eav1ng coun-the house. On t·ul rll' AAc can i\nylunC', 5:'>2-750:) One or Laguna's largC'st buill .J BR + lrg Fam Rn1 ' try, must' sacrifice le~ 2nd TD Loans sll'Ct"t, IO\'l~ly No. Jlunling-orncr hol!rs s A).1 to 8 P~T fan1ily hon1es. 6 Rclrrns., .J I~ 2 i\las1c1· BR + 2 frpll's, ' CONOO~IINlUi\'[ llOi\lES l\.IOBILE I.Jonie, 2 BR, 2 BA. hold, belo\\• appraised vnlur.. ton Bcat'h IH'l'a i·ln-.;c 1o baths: o\·er 4.000 SIJ. ft., !luge LR. 1''1uinal Dr. Com-Eayfro~t Hon1cs By Ch\>ner. 20x50 \\'/porch, PU['('hnse option avail., \\•ill l owest retel Ortnge Go. Golden \\'{'st Collegc. /fart!-OPEN-SAT/SUN~ 11_5 a r chitrcturalJy de!tii;::ned. I plctcly prh·utc 21)' covered Boat Shps. . . pnllo & sheds. 11 1 3 n ~yspid1 e consider any olfr, s.18'-4971 ly any la\1 n c·:irf'. S'.!'1.900. fa111il~ rn1 . 11•/frple. .~ ou!door Lh·i11g :il'ca \l'ilh lush FuJl Sccur!fy ll1gh1·1sC' . Village, N.B. ,...,.,. 1: \\'ould he 111ueh niore Jt pi'Ori-4282 VALE S_T . S\\'{'l;.'p111g oc1·an vic1rs arc Jandsc-:1ping, 0\1·11cr 1\·iU St~! & L'Oncre~e con8tructJ011 639-2126. Orange Co. Prop. 176 Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 545-0611 &tvini,: Harbor area 21 >'"· -DON'T BORROW 1 'TIL YOU CALL USI Costa Mesa Realty * 548-7711 * Altt>r 6 PM. Call ~7-4617 ei1y ii·as up to par. CALL JGrce111rcc. l'hal'nHllO: 21 includ<-·d. Rc'cluccd lo finwn:" l'l'SIAJnsiUle buyer. PrivateBai<.'on1es ll:<W MOBILE honie \\'/8x20 P_UBLIC AUCTION 846-33n . Bdrn1., s1).•11:ious farni kitch. $99,500. P1·inclr:ials only 64;)..T;i()(I 2garage spaces per unlt. glassene room, C.i\1. Adlt 11•/dlil. OYl'n , bltns. Lt.':l'. liv-* OCE •NFRONT * Root top swldeck prk, pets olc, $ 5 5 ,.O 0 o. September 2.J, 1973 ing 1·111. w1slopcd ceil. & "' Unuaunl Opportunity to Pur-5!1.J--025?. Beach 1'ront re:sldeni ia\ Joi "" I I> I k f I c· ii I -' '1 Furn. unl!s. Lg, SlUlde<:k chase Bayfront Pror-"rly in [~=""~~='°"==~ U9 24th St., Ne\\.......,11 Beach .. ~cc rt rp · r u Y llu· 2 bl \V'll d " NEW 2 BR OOLLflOUSE .. 1 ~1"' """ D . garages. 1 tra e Nc"'port Beach. t.fininium bid $18.500 S<!IXOPE'NJVSUN. 1.5 for income in San Clemente 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. Ne\\'P(>rt Bay Adult Park County of Orange 5041 GREENCAP R¥Miltorw or Da'la. Pt, $125,000. 675-8551 $16,500 ~?m'2 Dept. Real 'Prop. Senicc-s Assumable V.A. a. 7{,~. 3 11105N.CoastHwy.,Laguna BALBOA BAY PROP. BLUFFS 18x30 BUDGER, Costa Mesa rn~) 8:W.~ ' 494 1177 * 673-7420 * Adult Park. $2500. Brhms., 2 ba., spacious farm - -~~-FEE "E•' Amerlc1u1 557-9390 Out of St•t• Prop. 178 kit C"h. Lush shag carp. lhru-, OPEN SUN. 1•5 I ~~~~~~~~~~~ ou t, 'f'\illy •lrap<:>d, land-I ARTIST'S OH.EA~I Elegance in the Bluffs!! The -100 ACRE OJLO. RANOI COUNTRY CLUB + HORSES Borro1v oo your home equity for nny )'.::ootl 11urposc. ~J'\'· i11i: Los Angr.lcs County.for over 20 ye1n~ and NO\V iri Oran~C' Cnu111y1 SIUN!\L l\tORTGAGE CO. (714J 556-0100 Stones th1'0\v to 111'C'stige counlry clu b. II o rs cs wclcorned. Large R-4 lot. Cape Cod 2-slory. Freshly p11inlC'd. fl·Jaids quarters. Older and charn1ing. $3900 + <-'O;;ls steals ii. Call 546--2.113. OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN 10 fJf NICE• '"IM'<i. \v/pario & fire n..... 802 Manzanita .Or ve 1 ~ . ., Sh I R 'd heronit·s ;t 1·rnllty, Luxury & p1'tlft">SSional touch is oh-fle•I Estlte, I ,a \VJLL SACRIF"ICE SJG.500. owp ace . ~SI ence St'1i:·1U1y abound throughout vioUs. A spacious 2:15() sq. ft. GeMrat ~ AU. OR PART Pool ..... $43,750. DAVID D. CARLSON \\1111 1(' v.•aler view plus many !hi~ lovf'ly 6 l)(h·n1 home 4 bt-droon1, family roon1 '--------' Sn\'e over $1300.00 011 each .JO Not far fJ'On1 ()(·can in 1his REAL TOR 833-9293 i!Xtras, f!lakc lhis a. un.iqut! built on 2 Lido Ish• lols. At-hon1e on fee land •••••••••••I acres by ass u nl in::: .J5()0 Curnpus Drive. N.B. $500 to $100,000 for Huslncss or pct!Klnl!.l nc•eds No oollatC'ral rvquired l!pon proof of 11bility IO ~ THE REllL ESTllTERS ran1 bling \lerniont fal'1n-ho1nc. Close' to l>E'arh & hi.i:h 11'•11·1i1·cly pl;l'Cd al SIT9.500. Only $87,500 lSO I paynienls on Colo. nu1ch slytc 5 t11'<11·<1on1 h•Jn1c. \\'ind-Laguna Beach ( ~·hnol, ,1-irh i;u .. sl apl. GRUBB & ELL IS CALL 644-7211 Acreage for sale property. E x c e 11 en I in- ing staircase to n1ash•r $C3,fl0:1. I Realtors · vestnH'nl suilablc r o r ll'illiam f i1x, INC 6 BDRM. MANSION 4uarll•rs 11 ilh 0011vcr:;.~11io11 * C!l,\R~f l-IO:'.U:: * ! V.A. Financing 2863 E ,. ~I Cdrt[ ,_ zi ; ACR ES, Antelope ''"11"Y t'l\liching, recreation, elc. f•rra and vanity b.-i.lh. COR. ~n P.-2. 1?1: 1~11.1 10 a<l.t Ava.ii. fol' $48.CJo on !his :'-I ·,75~7o8ov" · ~ near new Inter-continental Rolling hill country \l"ilh DON BLh:U COUR..\IET anothe1 l!lllt. No1 th l'nd. 2 s1v. 3 BR. hem(' n·i1h \'il'1\·. I -ru4~. }1900. Te r n\ s trees, grass, hunling & ki!t'hm has unique "island ~r000n1. & den, 2 fl·plcs. Pfif'{'d at $53.000. 1 1 fishing nearh)'. Ench parcrl ~ o v· L 'Oceanfront Exchange'~ B • p rty 154 · ked b k rock ccr.tcr." Cou ntry s1yle i,. FABULO US ... ·* ce~n . 1ew ot . u11ne11 rope may be pie up y ma ._ The Aclion Broker Cotlcct flJ 21J/lii6-7433~ 2ND Trust DHcls PRIVATE FUNDS AVAJL. ,,·ith over 4,000 sq, ft. of ultra li\'ing, situated on •,~ ~icrc. Lots of ll'C{';; and l 1, ~ h . lanrlsl'aping. Gre11t area ro I l'aise the kids. A niusl see , 11n oui· rnting. Offered :ii i $7.~.900. laniily t'OO!ll, crackling firt>. 1\lt. views lron1 this 4 bdrn1., Above ~1ctor!a Beac~. wllh Spanish Villa oo (21 R-2 lo!s. BLUFFS Tll'O '~s TOTAL l04'x299' ing t\\'O back payn1ents ol plal.-e in adult li\.;ng room, 3 ba. lmmac. home ivilh house p.ans incl. i27.500. 5 BR. 4 BA. dini)lg rrn, fain ...v1 $73.96 and assun1e principal plus u SPARKLlNG CL'S-cozy ' (nmily mi. Near 4!J-l-7~1 rn1, fplc. i\lay Ix• u~ as CONDO CHOICE LOCATION. Hun-balance o( $741;1.23 at 6~~~ Any Amount * Call 67~94 BKL TO~l POOL. Only $·t:.7JCI. scliools. 2 Patlos for relax-1000 N, Cc!lsl J.h\•y., Laguna duplex! S179,950. fH;)..tloJOO. tington Beach Z 0 NED int. Cail collect for i\tr. buys it a ll. /l.'o gimmic·ks ,-Ing in the sun plus a [ I AT REDUCED PRICE ~~s~r:r~~~~ Turner l:ro:JI 3.S-1-7739. YOU 111'(' C'nlitlcd lo lowesl cos1 to T.D. loan, \V/lg. N1uity in house. Private len- der. 83.l-9-13il Cl't'S. you .own the land .• H~_rr:v, 1t I gardl'ner's clC'lighl I ,1 1 h VlSlM llo-vd & f.o. Lo11est P.liee in the blufJ. ea. TERJ\IS \l'aite: KAN-11·ou t last. BKR S62-:>.-il l. house fl!lcd irith potccd .,.,,.............. 4 bi-, 2~~ bn, kitchen w/fani Raal E1t•!e ALL IN THE I P!li, ~Is. A nius1 sr.c at J\'lnui. liawall. xc •nge ~===::=====:1 i-111, "'\\"' plilll in the plaza. PAK, 1993 Kilhri Rd., Kihei E h lt2 $:)9.:.00. Lo11·est lease tiolrl, taxes & FAMILY _ j * LEi\SE: * OCEAN VIEW nHl.intl'nance iv/upgraded -l\IR. 81'0ker, 11·hat have you '. . Prestige North end Joe. Lux-Tl •-. 1 .1 1 . WATER.FRONT erpt, \\'all Jh<per paneling Commercial fo1 .. exchange for 6 )T. old \\11! have oodlrs of space 111 1 11rious honie, 1111 bll -ins·, 4 ie l!CSI 111 anlly ivin gcat1 .~ fixtures,Offered1iy o1vne1· Pr-rty 151 office bldg. & 3 units on -~• Money Wanted 250 NE~-:o S25,000. 15'::' yft~Jd secured by ri:al estate. SCOIT REALT\' 5.:16-7533 th I ""d L ,.,, h(' ,Yours in this O('l'iln vic1v REDUCED $5000 1'9900 C bl -~ G I I cs~ iuge"" roorns., a . .;e hdrn1s., d£'11, lan1ily rni .. 31~ 4 bdrni. honie; C'!osc to <H -. • . on1parn e to acre )n San ab r e ? fanuly roor:i. Den too. \Vlfe ha'!l.: 2 11·et lmz'l!, 11,lth listings front $.32.500 to Grosses $37,000 yen r . 1 kt h t I schools & tenni" courts. LO.\N 1\V1\JL -BROKER •~= * 3-UNIT * P e_aser . 1 c en . 1 i' fabulous views. $650 l\lonth. 0 2 000 1 1 , . .Nr:;,000. Empty & A'l·ail. DOI\'. 714:644-0016 ulOmate 111 landscaping -\'er • sq, L O ...;iguna 833-0780 Call &t2-45S9. COi\J~fERClAL BLDG. Mortg•ges, ~ Trust o..ds 260 INVESTORS F"ive-separatc homes on a lot. all have' g!iragcs. O\\IN· ER NEEDS AN '"·li\11=::-I DIATE SALE. Doll 'ni up and reap lhe pt'O!i l. Good s1cady 1enanls and Sll'acly 1·cnt. Di\'Ol'l'C' fol't'CS sale. Ca il for acklrC'ss. Jnspe1:r today flfl(I subrnit your offer! BKR. 962-5.."ill. C'OJlvC'nient location. Call SHIELDS living, 1rilh n1any exll'as, -.,,~~~~,;;,;;,..,.,....,.,1 -C~RA~LMOclEL-l ""fl li located v.·/off-slreet Ruf Est•t• Wanted 114 546--2313 for good terms and $64 ,900. f.oRTOFJNO _ H. y .. H.,..,,.. CAR.MEL MODEL perking, 0\\'ller "11:111 carry a 1't'uJ value. REAL ESTATE ~ " ""''" VIEW TD "' 000 HOME or 4 wilts in San WELL SECURED $8400, 2nd Trust Def'd t~ Interest due 3 rrs. Will dis- t'Ount $840, to yirld l:\' t. SIGNAL i\lf)RTGAGE ('O. · I I Year ne1v, niany e.~tras, 3 . · --"'• · Clemente, Dana Point. or OPf:U TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO 8£ NICE' f Forrner!y Englund R.E. f 0 ean BR, 3'i BA, bonus roon1. Outstandmg ll.-V. Homes; 3 Capistrano. Hn1·c Sl),000 lot -, JJS Thalia 49.f.,l!O<)J REAL ESTA'JE AvailalJIC' sch o o I open-bdrms., family 1111., lush * 59'x29' LOT * in gd. Flint Rklge/Pasadcna OPEN HOUSE II'\ in"' O\\"NER 1\ill finance gold rar!X'nng, df.'L-oraior C-1 ZONE area + cash as do\i·n. ll.J-1 ' s*, & s I 1*11 1190 Glenneyrc St. I re~i>. bu~C'I'. F"ce ~"9.500. dL'll.pe~. \'alley \'i('\I', F'irst $32,500. E-Z TER:\IS Panoran1a Dr., A r e ad i a '. ,__, .. • a • un. or ca .;!lt-1-ir.: 5~9--0ll!i 6-1-H.J.JS. 1iJj r-.;e\'l·port Hills tin1e offered. Si.J,500. ree Roy McC•rdle Re•ltor 91txll 895 ACAPULCO Dr. \\I. <:.·ou 01\'ll the Jand l. 11111 ~100 4j{O Campus Or, N.B. ·* BEST of College Park * 2362 FORDHAM DR. 3 BR. & lanai -16x36 pool stnTOunded by lovely trees & shrubs. Overalzed dbl. gar. \Vonde rlul · ne(ghbors! $43,500 • 10 ',~ Do11•n. Ope n house daily 1-5 by o~·ner/Broker 5j6-85J9. $23,250 Cozr hoinc 011 R-2 t'Orn1•r lot. Nl<"c tl'C'es & !111-ge, cll'ar bldg . site for ruJOthcr un it. CALL e 646•2414 "'"~ REALTY WE BUY HOMES I. Cash for yo11r cquity 2. \\i"ill pick up back paymls 3. No charge for appr. CALl. US FOR AN ESfli\L-\TE NO \\' AITL~G CASH NO\V 842-93il Nter Newport Pe1t Office *INCOME* I Two 2-Bdrm. Units ! o,1·llf'r nex1hlC' t~OR sa~ by Oll'ncr 2 story California Classic 3 or 4 Br. 2 Ba, 20x30 sunken family rm, 2 frplcs. 12' b1'ick bar, l\'Ovt'n \\·oods, shag crpt, \\'allpap{'r, bri('k & paneling used extensively, gol'grously landscapro "'/brick & v.·roug hliron fl'ncing. planters, fruit ll'et.•s 2 patios, ,i:, block 11·alls. 50 yds lrom htan1mar ,c;chool. Ask- ing S.JS,900. 846--4059 w1 finn11t."i11i:: $39,500 BALBOA BAY PROP. * 556-8800 * Fountai~ Vall•'t , OLD MEXICO ST ARTS Wl'fH A ~10DER/I.' ACCENT. I mp re SS i \'(' coul'fynrd entry. 2 1vood burning fireplaces, din n\1 for forn1al ca n d J el i g l11 dinners, .J large berlroo1n inc n1aslt'r suite, fan1ily or gan1e roon1 plus bonus roon1. Oct'Oratcd thruout \\•/lhc colors of a J\lcxican sunset. Pl'Cstlge localion. The Real Estate J."air 839-6133 PICTURE PRETTY INTERIOR DECORATOR'S HOME Tree lined stJ"l't't leacls to this lastefu!l y decorated JBR (or 2 + den) honie featuring oodles of extras• • J!eavy shag t'l"plg, cus!m drapes, air-rond unit. moder n kilchen. Arched brick entry leads to cozy dPn. On large lot near shopping. Bargain at S26.0C!O. C1\LL tod:Jy. larwin realty inc. 968-4405 124 hrs) Mini ORCHARD Top area of ll('v.'er horncs., \\larm & Friendly ·I hdrnl Tu·o-slory ehaury has F'R home for tu11-IO\'i11t.:: people. \\'/1\'el bar, Uuiltins. crpls, Prime location, near """' drps, 2 car gar. Vacant! cond .. 22{! 11idng. ctinrretl' \\'filk 10 l11g pilrk. S.17.00J. boHl/trailer access. S38,!kXl. RED CARPET, Realtors, larwin realty inc. 536-8&$. 968-4405 124 h.sl Garden Grove -VACANT- F"IXER UPPER ONL'' $26,500. 4 Be<lrm., 2 bath. /\SSUlllil' 6~" '; f1-f,\ loan. l\1ust he suld in1- medlatcly. SCOTI' Rt:A.L TY a3&-T.i33 Huntington 8e•ch THE ROSE PARADE IS AT YOU!{ OOOR -in !his 3 bt>drm honic. ln1p1'(-ssl ve w&l.lpa~ eniry. gracious Uving nn w U1e ri~·h golden 00\ors of Indian Sumn1cr. Large bcdnn!I, all PUTJIO&C klteh/fam mi tor great gel - togetheNt ~·Hh family ruid 1J1ends. $S3,000. A must to see. CALL 00\v The R e <'i I E8tale Jo'alr 5.16-2551. ASSUfltE 6~fl' /Olln, l 1111. to beach, 1500 sq. fl. 2 •tr:.'. I profellk>nal lnndscaping. $13,500 ""''f1-. P & I $150.74 mov" 1n 1oda.y, $36.500 .• rh. f:t:i'O :-·~f.:5510NS . ·,lr lnfo1·n1.~1101" and loc<ition nf t:.r,c Fii!' l: 'J,\ h0n1es, t'Q '1('1 • KASA!l!AN 962-6644 Real Estate Irvine EXECLTIVE - -EXCLUSJ\'F. - -J::XCELLt::-..·r Ex('('utive honie ~ ex•·lusll·e 'f ul'llc R0t:k. 4 BP.. Xhlt ro- <'arion rwar park & PQ()l 11•lih hill \'irw. Ask for Gcrtrui~ lt33<13SI), , OWNER, Nr. ocean,. 4 Bl\. 2 louted In THE RANCH 968-3563 1 2100 Sq Ft-2 STORY • sty, form dirt. take ovrr 7',: t\ssume 71,J jfi Loan f CI Joan, $51,500. $402 n)tl. Mu~t Sell . $48,500 I Needs woric, ~lim, l've~ I Save Broker Fee 83:9-TI.S. OPEN HOUSE. S51·23<JO j TOWNHOUSE 3 Br, c1jlts, CALIFORNIA hom e ..,J02-4 rtrrig, stove. C h l ld rt•n, Br, 3 00, pool. $53,500. By SWim poof. Bushanf/Ad :uns Appotntmt'nf only. 55l..J824 AHUmo· 1~ f'l~A. Lo rtn. C'nn 11i;!;11n1<' VA. 961<1486. / O"i>EN HousF;..ev owNi-:1t 6 BR + FR. DR. 3 bl, Uy nr;AUT. 3 !)r, 2 bu. on CORBIN MARTIN 1810 Nev.·poct Blvd., C.AJ. Like to Trade? Our Trader's ArC'h Bea«h HC'ights. C11~1om, "Overlooking the Pncific" NE\\' PORT C!'est Condo · • ~1729 Paii:dise column ls for you! Z-sly., Spanish motif, sunkl•n !\lagnilicent l\lonarch Bay "·/spectacular panoramic Realtors ~7662 !i lines, 5 days for $5. Call li1·ing rn1., frptc.; n1su·. Terrace ,I Er, 31~ Ba honie. \'ie1v o~ N_ev.'PQ11 Harbor. NEWPORT HEIGHn-* C·l * today ..• &tZ-5678 _,.,._ bd.nn, suirc, SPQLious sun-All re<h\'OOd & g 1 ass . i\fo\'e 111 . •.n1med. J BR, * 4 BR 3 BA .,o:<J 950 ~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;1 ! decks. Tr iple ari.>h-do uble c u s t o m e ! e s-a n c e formal d1mng rm. $200), • • ,.... .. , $21,500 I" ~--~~-~~;;;;1 door entry. Corner lot \1-ith lhrouglrout. O.ffered at below niarket price, Pri !l.fany e..xtra featu:n<s. [ .• panoran1jc vil'1v of lhe Pa-1"10 ooo Pty. 64().{XX)S, * 3 BR, 2 BA, 139,990 Small house, 4 car gar. CLASSIFIED Hou F I ._, 300 ·r· ' OU 1 "· • • Super sharp pooJ home. Dov.-ntown•eomi flfesa I ... """ s~ l'L ic roas. iC'r io1nl.'s GRUBB & ELLIS LU>.'URY OCEANFRONT PA~ISON ·1'"~,·1•~'T RIVIED• RE•LTY HOURS 1 under ronst1uclio11. }'rom Realtors One of kind, 4600 sq_ fl. • • co'~ .. "-"l '~ c.1" ~ "' Gener•I , $52 000 1 • 149 Broe.~·ay, C.flt. Advertisers may place ... j So1ut1,;·on~c Paclric Corp, 286.'1' E. Cst. H1.\'y., Cdi\I dup ex. Beams, skylight11. &J2-B011 * &12-8001 642.7007 64S.569G Eves. their ads by n-lephone $ OWNERS OF $ Quulity uc,",l(lc[·~-s Qf'._w~·=""::...""~ 1 ~~~='~7~5-~7~081!!0~~~~ I s·r~~~h,~ar ~~':;: c .ONOOMAXIMUM Income p..._.rty 16' 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. $ REAL PROPERTYl $ • I 1(11 • -~ N • ~-'londoy thru Friday • '19..\--06lj, othing finer, 3 Br, 2 Ba l' We're here to serve .......... , -ocE•N BREEZES 8 to noon Saturday _,,,.1.1 Sell-Lease/Option SG9,:xl0. \VILL BUY 2,000 Sq NPT Crest _ Luxury condo, 3 adult PUI~. Pools._ putting. "" . FREE OF OIARGE! 1'1'Y. !\la1-,'llifiC"ent. Ol'l'an vie11· in It. of living on a S30,000 lot. Br. 21~ ha, lofted L-eiling, Sui>flr_ pr1~te. $45,000. DUPLEX ... _ $39,500 COSTA :t.IESA ·OFFICE I Us~ CRH prior to \'Ileane)< low hills, a ft•\~-hlocks 11'0111 'I hhx:ks f•'On\ the ocean, 1naster suite \\'/sun deck. Dcnrron A."90C. 6i'3-73ll ENJOY OCEAN BREEZES 330 W. Bay Don't lose SS. Save Time. ccntf'r of t0\1'11, i\·Iusl be sold Hartl to find in No. L.<b'11na. !kt. 1st occup. \Viii sell BAYCRESI' Exec. 3 BR, :V,~ AND SMOG FREE LIVING 642-5678 I $ ALA RENTALS $ or leased. A hon1e '\'/xl111 vu, 3 BR. 2 SWOO. under n1arkct price. ba, Form, Din Rm, A/C, nearly rent f'ree. ~'O -2 Newpo11 & Bay, O I 642--8383 Los Padres Realty ru!l ba, run1pus rm & sn1J Xlnt financing, 547-967'3, lg. cor. lot, ~ ltollday, bedroom units. Ll\.'e In one-~~:i1J1~ B•lboa lsl•nd b71 So. Coast, Lagwia den. 49.J-3223 Bkr, LIVE in lux oomforts in lg Own, 645--7062. Ore~ ~~;,.~~r.FHTAAKEat 642-5678 494-8833 sun home for $.3000 dn. on BLUFFS .,..._..,,.~ LlITLE Isle. l.ge rxee 2 Br. BE,\lJTlFUL location Laguna Nigu•I sales contT. Imm. occ 5 BR, BY owner 3 Br 2r Ba over-7%% int. No qualifying. No HUNTINGTON BEACH 2 Ba, fam rm., 2 lrplc!l, 40' SOLITH LAGUNA. 1 block LEASE/Option. 3 BR. 2 ba. 3 8'\, 2 .Ir 111, !gc lam rm nu looking bay.' $6~7,500. 426 ~~~~gs:~¥!;! 17875 Bea.ch Blvd. slip. Yr!y nr ·winter. 121 'E. '• ""•ch. Ne"•iy --~eled · 1 1 -1 Sh 1 . cpts blt ins2 prime res. area, Vista p .. •da. •uu~. d "' al 540-1220 Bayfront \\'knds or 53-l-1169 u ""' " ,._,....,., \l'llh poo act. arp anu· $63 000 &l _6889 ... .,...... au .a vantage of luis v ue &It 5. 2 Bdrm, f~niily m1, large ly hon1e 1vith \"ie11•. ' . HARBOR View Hom today! LAGUNA BEACH dl'ck l\1/ocean vie1v, Guesl . PLACE REALT\' THE BI u ff s Beautifully ~1ontego. e, 222 Forest Ave. LOVELY 3 BR, J BA, 2 apl. S62,j{)(J firm. By 01vnl'r. 494-9i0 1 49-1-9729 d<'corntc<l . 2 sto.ry, b~lcony. l level, 4 br, nice viev.·. 7.95'0 494_9466 fireplaces, bar. pat Io . Call 2l.'.-i21-5115 rl a y s, L>'do Isle i\f as t " r swte/m1r;ored In. nu unit 64HS87. Adult!!, $425. Ye a rt)', 213-164-lGSG t•1·rs. Sun1n1cr I ~-'-'-""-'-------closet doors. 3 BR , 2~~ Ba •. j;ii"-0:::."':~i";-'T:;:..---SAN CLE!\IENTE 675--0800. rentals L'OllSidert'd. ONE OF A KIND large kitchen. Bay View. Newport Heights (714) 17M500 305 N. El c.amlno Real WINTER or yearly. Chann-Oc •• n V'·e--$53,500 {)y,·ner-Brokcr 644-4746. 492-4420 ing 3 BR, "°""· patio, ... Lido's last corner lot, s!reet * 4 BDRMS * 9m S. EUCLID Spanish sly]~ 2 Br & den, to slreet 3.ix88, across bC'ach HARBOR Vu J-1 om e s. • FUlJ..ERTON NORm COUl<l"IY frplc. ll7 Pearl. Ba1bJ>a guest nn. o1· s1udy; huge ."-'. tennis cl. $65,000. PalcnFnRo, 22 St1y, 4 Br, ._::_2 2--Story, custom built home dial tree $40-1.220 Island . ot'i!nn vie w Jiv. rn1., lrpt. VIA LIDO NORD Ra, , . p, "·et ....._., with shake roof. 4 Bdrn1s., 2 BUILDER WITH REALLY cu!c 2 Br cottaae, CentraJ kiL, Wtbltns, opens 4 Bdrms. & 5 Baths: S76,900. 5.W.-Lll6. ba. Lge. n1str. BR.; 2 IMAGINATION CLASSIFIED frpl c, front &: back padOB, to din. 1u·c<1. Loe. high up on niagnificent cus!om home. 60' BAY FRONT frpl cs. 500 Sq. ft. recreation Sv.·im Pool & 2 Rental Units. DEADLINES slngll' gar. Sec at 20'2 Dla- Lagunu's Ri\'icra <"OusiJinc. $lS4,500. tor :you ,ti, your ya ch t ~ 1168·n\ •• 500Come s~ & buy! Roo1 m1 for 2 morert. U 1 nusu 1 nJ Deadline for copy Ir: kills mnnd. \\linter. l\11SSJON REALTY 4~-0731 LIDO REALTY !IGa-.000. 3 Br, 3 Ba + rent-nves meot 0PJXl uni Y or I 5 30 lh day be CllA"'IJNG "'LL ~ fast capJtal appreciation. s : p.m. e -n.1~ 1 4 BR. 2 ~· OCEAN VJE\V • 1-lcre's a 3.1i7 Via Llrlo. N'pt Beach al. llur1y & call Denison ...,. ~ ,.,.1,14 Owner nexlble & w!U fore publication, except family home. Blfno. Steptto VC'l"itable paradist• in lhe * 673-7300 * Assn<'. 673-73 1.l. · ~.Jd finance .at B%-Asking for Sunday & l\.londay So. ha. Utll. incl. \Vlniir hills7at 658 Mystic View --$87,000 E"QUITY--cB""L"U°"F"r"s"'x"""'P"l-.,"".-16fl=.""ooo'°"'.~3 1 RE•LTY.. $60,SOO _Make Oller. 1 Edl 58 tionsrda.whe 12 n deadllnt'!" rental, Sil50. 613--4&t8. ! I..ot O' x 114' & you own ii -Bl' 71 ' Ba 1 Id 301 I tu y, noon. 211 DI MO 1 1 .. -• 58 fl C t '· '2 ' yr o ' Near N•wpoct Poot Offl<o A. ND-Furn. 2 b 2 3 & Den & t~.R.-Ne1v plush n P =-·· · a an1aran. \"Isla Trucha. O 111 n c r -..------,"""'.------,,.--•-2 det'f' pile cnrpeted. Jn1-\\'ill trade ror local real CLASSIFIED "'"• car gar. rece n1edlate poSS!'ssion . Open estate or sell ourright. Arc &ID-IO!lO. Vacant-Ocean View REGULATIONS te(fec., 6~fu re:ntaJ $ t~ri. Sa t. & Sun. -QUIN-you ready? TRADE Nev.'port Beach Great 2 Br, 2 Ba, 2 frpJ cs, £RRORS: Advertisers per mo. or TARD REALTY &12-2991. ---GE~M11---Prop. For Out-Of-Town huge !am rn1 split-le"-el ahould check their ads WTNTER rental avail ~· Prop. Bier. 714/673--2058. home. Obie Kar. lmmed daily & report errors Jo"um. 1 lxlnn. cott-se * $42,500 * l.'20-F Tustin J\V('., N.B. JBR hoUSt'! near ocean. low possession to qua I l f I e d lmmediatcly. THE w/patlo & parking, B Sharp 2. BR. So. Laguna RE~\l.TORS 642-1623 I I '! 11 ""yec 10~ d• M st •·II DAILY PILOT •••umes Ameth· ..... hon1e. \\lalk to tx>ach. ( O\\'O paymen ' " e II uu . '0 '" U "" $fNrllng lnVllfmtiftt ~ -"" * $54,950 * $67,500! Larson Realtor. 67J'--3563. quB~~k-1 Only,1 164.,~92?·,., Call Corp IU-J!S44 Uabilitty ~or rtlothe fin!1~!1-l~BCORAL . Very de1iralale l BR. hon1e, Norl h Laguna 3 BR. 2 BA home \V,\NTED, H.V. H. l\.fonaco '"r or app · . ·1'"'U<1't<> COrt'tt mse n o .. .,.,. 3 R 2 BA bouse, sti PLACE REALT'a' Agl'nl , Sla-0123 Corona del !I.far property. ASSUME 1% V1\ 3 BR, 2 ASSUME-7% VA CANCEILA'nONS: OK .Winter or yrly. 19-1-9i0 1 49+-9729 1 =F-ai~Pro'""r~.it=.,""-.~,,.=ined=-c_•_·~be-n Prine. only. 644--7783 BA, Fam Rm, fp, on cul-de-Trl-plex, ff.B., 2 . 2 br & 3 When killing a n . ad be 206 APOLENA, B,\L. J BEAUTIF"UL ocean view lot You sell through result~t-BEACll DUPLE)f .. hard to sac, $45,00) 64&-1514 or hr owncn unit \v/patlo. Jn. 1ure to make a record 3 BR, v.·inter, ulll. ONLY $12,900 ling Dally Pilot Cla.sidfled llnd 4 BR, 2 BA + 3 BR, 2 521-1:>60. no agts. come $515 per n"IO, $56,900. of the KILL NU~ffiER family. $300. 675--6299, Oceanview Really 673-8..iOO .Ads. &12--5678 BA & great Joe_ 673-5!569. Santa An• given you by your ad OIARM'ING Cupe Cod 2 $©\\~}A-~"BtfS " Thaf Intriguing Word Gome with a Chuckle ldi1ed by CLAY I. POLLAN O l!eorronge let!ers of the four scrombled words ba- Jow ro form lour li1T1ple words. I LUBRPA I 11 I I' I I CAMIG ,.i ' 1· I I I . f 1-1 -rD_OT-'-'M Til_Yr-il .r . . A bonk robber changed his I I j5 j mind and d"cidod nor to go - - - -through with tho holdup. He Ir--------., gor -,.7 HUBS LE I I I II /7 O Complete 1he chuckle quot.d _ _ _ _ _ by IUlln g In the 1T1tulno word. '--'-..L-'-...L-.L..-' you develop from 1te1> No. 3 below. taker u receipt of your h-pte, winter, 2 adulll!, OWNER. Nr. South Cout cancellation. This kill 215 Ameth)'!t. 675-2157, Plam 4 BR. 2 BA, Grant number mus t be pre- flomes. S.1500 dwn. $328 mo. aented by the advertiser 2 BR, crplcd, winter le., FHA 7~%. need• \\'Ork, in case of a dispute. no pets, $1RO. Shown aft.,, 5'I noon, 6.lt W. Balboa Blvd1 , 833-1103, evel'i,, 546-97 . . CANCEu.ATION 0 J'? ;Ii Tustin CORRECTION OF N"W Yearly charming 2 lllori,14 "' Br, spacious liv. .-Ii, Sp•rllng Investment AD BEFORE RUNNING: w/fl'plc, S.185, 67l-7397 3 1~~!~ !. '!~'!9!,w Corp IJJ.3544 Every effort js made to 81lboa Penlnaul• NEW 4.PLEX klll or com>e t a new ad under construction and open for your inspection. Feeturet1 include 4 BR, 3 BA, 3 car gar, v.·fbars. 4 Ton A/C, mlct.'O "'ave ovens + every extra imaginable. Carpets and land*!&ping alao lncld. TY.% Loan aVail. Bring )'Olll' own horlle Md move In next month!! ()pen 110\tse Ollfb'. Call Broker ~16/832.5141 or 'dttve bi 12812 BAITett Lane, N. Tust1n HHJa. Brand new, Spanish mout, 3 BR, 2 ba. deluxe unit w/frplc., le 3 2'-BR unit. ea. w/patlo or sundeck . Ea11t1lde Colt:ta life&& nr. Newport J.ltJ. Buytr-geta: lit user tax depredaUon. Ask· tng $U0,000. l'ifake oUerl CALL (i) ,.,.l,t• A.~ r.a:.:.1• Nier Ne•-•ffl P••I o·rrlce NEED TWIN 4-PLEXES? I .......... If r •I Only $44.900. each. Uke naw _ In and oot All unit1 are 2 i'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~/ Bedroom with 111" lx>llifN, jl ' Best buy In o....,.. Couniy. Mobil• Homn SCOTT REALTY 53&-1533 For Salo 125 COSTA MESA .. t.>1ex $62,!lOO tHat ~ been ordered, 1 buL "'-e cannot guaran· BAYt"RONT yearly 5 tee to do 10 until the ad comp tum newly deQOr has appeared Jn the new cpt1. Prl beach &: p . paper. Aecommoda!lona for 1 . • • 2 smeU boats no flltll D'IME.A·UNE ADS : mo. 673-BM!'i; 6i3-ii05.5. These ads are atrictly DELIGHTFUL. 2 BR, fa cuh in advance by mail pk. ·Steps lO bch _I: bay. or nt any one ot our or. week or month. 64()..8.t24 fict1. NO phohe of'd«I. 6751456. Dea~llno: 3 p.m. Friday_, •Cl<ARM!NG.2 BR, JU COit& Mesa office l:l ,.. noon -all branch ot~ Sept. 17 -Juoe 30th. 2 fices. gar., fplo, 673-4'i08. 3 BR, 2\t BA New re THE DAILY PILOT ,._ Int. 1305/MO. Wlnter. ttTves the ri&:ht to·clu-Montero. 879-1Tt6 or 879- tJty, ·edit, censor or ,.. BAY VIEW • Br, , •-, 1rptt fUM any adv._ertllement, " " 0tt 4IS. and to ch&nl'O Jta rates dshwhr, $430. mo. wlntW. &-regulations-without 536-1068 prior notlct. FURN dupl~x. 3 br, 2 ,., ASSjPllD pailo, winter milaL l ~· , 20:; I SI., Balboo MAILING A!>DRESS Corono dol .Mar 1---------$640 lncorile pay1' prln, int. f9 PRINT NlJMSfR EO ltTTERS 2 21' ARISTOCRAT, comp. tax. Ins & utll. lO!ftt dn, no 1 !N lH[SE SOUAl!fS m&.lntained, .all the extru, pt1. 673-$193 or 1-728-2749. ~. O. Box-1560, Cotta ?itMa 4 DR, 2 Ba, lfml fum., U 92626 Ir: dishes adull1. no Dl'f& €) g~:C:~~~~~ tctrc11s .ro I I I J I j J J . ~;~~-ty !~ ~n':~)I ~ Inst•~~~ aptS.- . _ . _ . _ _ _ ThUrln, Apt No. 2, Cobia Ev c...i.lf <111.A..t 0Wnt'f'. 10 M~ 6~. $6.500. I 1•ul-<ll.._1111c. R.V. • ~tornf(', 5$25?1~ 1111 ..... 116.!00. Oi\2"«l511 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS' IN CLASSlflCATION 81B Mc .. or lnqn!no •1 2079 ·~..,,.= .. ;;:o·~~=..;;-.=.,.,~ --------~---~--------------4 ·n.""'u""'rfn.~N~•~O<J~~~ ... """~a3le"".~ Sen ldle fttm• •.. OQ..5671 J<OO. 424 -u •. 61H11l or m:.2«19. ' .. ' ' 1. . ' ' I. • I 1~ I I ' I . I·· • .. I· '' ' .. , " Buy a Border to 'B~rder Bargain Every clo.si lied wont ad in the DAILY PILOT. appears in every edition every day. That means your ad will be seen in papers del_ivered to homes and sold from newsraclcs from border to border all along the Orange Coast •.• all the way from , " I. Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Irvine Saddleback San Clemente Capistrano ' <Plus the daRy newsrack edition) For One Price -With A i DAILY PILOT Classified Ad Phone A2-5678 YOU CAN CH~RGE IT, TOO • I .'11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!- ' I IRST llYS! c . L A s s I F I I D 6 4 2 • 5 ·6 7 8 I rr!Oay;Stpttmbtr 7, 1973 DAILY PILOT 1H_..,..._; __ F_u_rn.._ico"1coled;;.:o._;300.o.; Houses Unfurn. 305 HouMI Un:hi'n. 305 Houses Unturn. 305 Duplexes Furn. l4S Apts. Furn. a.aeon Bay Lido Isle CllOICE WATERFRONT wilh tlne111 view. Pier, dbl sllp, 3BR, 3 BA. niaster suite wfhl: vu deck. Newly l'.'arpeted & dcco r oted . Cumpl. tuntlahtngs, \Vinter or yearly lease. No pe:l1. 714-61:>-1<»6 or 213-271-1155. SALE -LEASE Beaut. home 5 Br, 37' Iv. rm. patio & pool, 70' IDt $UXl mo. 61>-0359 CONTEMPO 4 Br. 3 Ba. lrpl, bltn1. Close lo water. $485 monlh. \Vlnter. 675-4923. L1PO Love!)' ba yfr on t , winter, 2 br, 2 ha, rum. 6Th-4646/213-41M466. 4 BR., 3~~ Ba., den, Sept. thru June $450. 675-7667 Coron• chi fMr Santa An• Cotti Mts. Huntlnpton BMch 2 BR. home, I l>lk tro1n big BRAND new 2 Br,~ Ba. adlt. l.G. New Twnhsu. Dyt>r &: DE:LUXE Ot.•nn 2 BR, nr * 'ii'=~!., BRa.~· * Co1'0na bch, l~~ Ba. den or c.·ondo; nr. beach. Pool11, Ats.in. 3 171', \~i ba, a.11 elect 11cw, t>nclsd gar, quiet, __ c:_.::..:.::..:.::..:...::..;_:_ __ din rm, Jnu1klry oU kitchen, Jacuzrtl, sauna, tennis; carp, pti, P<l(1o, dbl gar, crp~. \Vesll'liff tt re a, $21.0 Coron1 del Mar garden, pt1.lio \\'/gu BBQ, 2 d llo 1~0 I bl · I 1......., 675-1849 0 ••~ lllli: pa . o.o.J mo. ease. drps, nns pol>, «-•.i. 1no. '-'-',--'"-"'-' ------RE "-h lor car gr, Avall A11d ct,~ c•c-•=n • :-l\1ATU , profeu . .,.c e Y'f\T"""lJU;J, $2-0357. Irv In• 30 ( 1nonlhly, gardener Inc, 3 BR , Ba apt., ullll. pd. $1 nlO. Lit 61.rl329 . 1'iii . near \Varner Ii: Houses furn.. or ...._ & lal't) & ~ cleaning. Ne\Yland U f llO 2 REuR00}.1 l ~a bath, ""'3-~'I 3 BR, 2r.i: BA, pa.t1ially tum. * C213l 634-7712 * n urn, bulltirus, POOL. S 2 2 5 u ~ · patio, gas Bar-&Q, gar. I I I n'IO!llh. CALL 6-12-2W7. 2 BR lu111. trplc, opposite wshr/dryr. Publishl'<I in ';rv;;;;•;e;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;l~G;e:n;e:••;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:; CD~[ State bell{.it, security Home Magazine. Ca I I .N __ e_w-'po'-rt __ B_ .. _cn____ gale, by rnonth, S 4 2 5. 64()..8694 or 644.&lM. 3 BR., 2 ha. $400/475 Lido Isle, 3 BR. 2 ba. yearly. OCEAN view 4 bedroon1, 2 1 ~8~33-~169~L _____ _ HARBOR View Hills 3 BR, 3 BR., 2~1 ba .•..•.• $385/450 S400 Mo. bath. Only step.Ii to ocenn. 1 BR, new c11>UI, dZ"pS, beam tam. rm.; lge. comer lol. 2 BR, 2 ba, den, A/C ••. $275 N'pt Be•ch, 3 BR, 2 ba. Un· Dish1\•asher. builtins, M.'ll ceilings. So. Df HY.y. Very Yrly lse $550 fa1D. 2 BR. 2 baths, fam rm. S350 furn. Yrly. $325. cleaning oven, shBI:! carpet, nice S'.aX> mo. 642-5957 . 0 . Franklin R1tr 673-2222 3 BR. 2 baths .......... $400 Cd}.! 3 BR, 2 ba., viCI\', Fun1. 2 patios. Lots o( closet BACHELOR apt, quiet man, HARBOR Vlew H it I 11 . 4. BR. 2 baU1s ••• •.•.••• $475 $500 '-lo/yearly. space. Parking-(or 2 cars. cooking facil, clo$e in. Spacious 5 Br/den/lam 3 BR. 2 ba., air 1.'0lltl ..• $275 \Vlnter or yeal'ly. Call Eric s+l-7701 • - rm, pool, spectacular vk!w. V1'51'on-l\1ueller (2l3) n1-~ or Sn1all Bachelor apt in old $850/MO. 644-2359. '71'U Gl:>-$49l eves. Cc..IM, limited cooking facil. 3 BR, 2 BA, nr, heh, NE\V, LRG, QUIET 2 BR, $95. per mo. 6~7S 2 BR, 2 BA, FA heat, frplc, cpt/drp, nr. schls & shp'g. red h1·11 frplc, di;h\\'hr, self clean. Costa Mela dbl gnr. \vshr/dryr, So. $425. Be!. lOAM Dr btwn 2 .\. Dvcn. 1 ~ blk to bch, i'\P\\'pon patio. Winter. $340. 61;,-7879 5 PM 675-4034 Balboa Island Peninsula. $300. 213/699-7219 C d 0 2 BR, 2 BA, bnck fprlc, dbl SINGLES or families -2 BR c":.:'k::d:::•Y;;'::·-------QSG e ro ---• 1~-\V "nt fncd. house, has eve"'rt-hing, REALTY BAYFRONT 2 BR, 2 BA, UPPER 3 Br, 1 Ba, F'urn, AU. lITILITJES PAID gar., w,.,.,r u•J'•· 1 er •J• Co bef t rental. $350. 218 Via Dijon. garage, kids, pets. Agt. fe~. A Co IV" I V' . house, Noven1lx!r 1st th111 yCeurly lease, S37J 1no11lhly C 1mpad"' I ~d,.elyeo•utur"',·ng" . 979-8430 mpany u 1 1s1on June ht. AV1:1.il n1onthly. ouplPs or Fan1. on 1 y , tlS 0111 es g.... • · Newport Beach Univ. Park Centl'.'r, Irvine $500. 675-7653. 986-4604 or ~981 \\'kends • Spacious kitchen with in---"'--------1 NR Ocean 3 br, 3 ba, den, Cail Anytime, 552·7500 ' · direct lighting BEAUT. Spanish 2 Br, l &, din rm, b!Uns. beam cell., Office hours g ,U1 to S PM VACANT NOW! Lge n10el. 3 \VlNTER rental. lBR, Sl'iO e Separate din'g area dishmaster, prefer teachers Frplc. $~50. ~. 673-3477 Br, 2 Ba, shag crpts, drps, access. tD channel. Blk [ro1n • Ho:ne-like Btorage or bus l!n e s 11 m r n. NE\V 3 BR, 2 BA house. 1 bltns, 2 patios. 675---0158. beach. BM-3523 • Private pallos 213-274-3692 or 675-6595. blk from beach, Avail Sept. YES, WE l fAVE RENTALS Corona del Mar * lST floor duplex. ~'I" BR, 2 • Closed garage w/stora~ 15th GT::>-6215. May \\!e he Dr service BA, tense only. Available • i\1arble n1iJlmAn 1 BR house, singles. couples, •"' $150 Also 2 BR mobile priv. 3 BR, 3 Ba, adults. All new in solving LEASE • now, 213: 790--7173. • King-sz B<irrns beach;..& boat slip, Agt. fee paint, rugs, custom drps, Yow-housing needs? FANTASTIC STEPS to beach: 2 BR. 1 Ba, • l'ool -Barbeques -sur-~8430 frplc, patlD, gar. stove. $395 From S31f>.$450 view $220. 1-BR, $185. \'ear· rounded with plush lantl- OC'EANFRONT, rh11rn1ing Lse 417 Nar ciSSW1. 644--09?.A. VIEW ly. Broker, 6T:i-5200. scapl~ts. No Pets 2BR. 2BA, house. $275 mo. of bay, "":ean and night D I U I lSO LARGE 1 BR, $190 96• -~ 54-1000 Cost• Men ...... up exes n urn. ,...."140• :>-I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;; lights. Beat the high in· 365 W, \V\lson 642-1971 4 BR. Children OK, \valk to I• terest in this spacious 3 Corona del Mar $30 WE Ek & UP beach.~ Mo/Yearly. 3 BR. POOL HOME bedroom. 3 bath hon1e. e Studio & 1 BR Apts. Property House 642-J850 FR w/bar _ Upper Bay . $350 "SINCE 1946,, Formal dining roon1, fan1ily 3 + Oen, $425 lease, ne1v & e TV & Ma.Id SeIVice Avail. 'VINTER Rental, 2BR furn Mo. 1...ai5 Millet• rooni and private .YHrt\s. So. of lh\·y, 1700 sq. ft. or e Ph!lne Service_ Htd. Pool apt. Adlts only. Ca 1 l 6fl..82:G IH18) 1st \\lestern Bank Bldg. Call l\frs. l£c al 673-8550 elegnnee, 673-4760 e\'es. Dr • Cl•il>-,. & Pet Section University Park, Irvine for •ppo•'"tm•"t $''""' lu-615-2656 or 714-737-1078. "· ~-.. · u;vu · S('e at 510~f:: Avocado. '2376 Newport Blvd., Ci.'1 Days 552·7000 Nights month Yo'ilh gardener. 967 YRLY . .Partiall y fun1. 3 BR. 2 BR, $265 mo. Open beam, 548-9755 or 645-3 Blk. to beach. Nice patio. OPEN '1L ~.IT'S FUN 10 BE N/C£! fpi<', paliD. Open Sat/Sun l· (Ad good for SS 00 rent) Agent 6T:i-2699 642..gr,~ Compan'°'4..6200 Laguna Se~ch ~ , ~ 5. 700 '-farigold. S.Kr-161•1. LG. dlx room. w/kit priv. in 3 BR house, nr, the beach <.'001 2 br hse, ckl6e to occ. $300 per 1110. No pet s. ·· · OCEAN view hon1e, Beaut. 2 Costa Mesa B ch s ·boa t yds. Pref * b"73-4012 * VIEW 3 BEDROOM BR, 2 BA, den (Arch Bench '~ l"'-'-""'-C:.:;.;::______ employed n1an under 25. $85 l1Cl1ne In lluntlngton llills. · Hgts) l1Clme, Shag C!)t'g.1 __ ~~------BRAND new 1 story, lrg 2 nlO. 2026 Meyer Pl,. C.M. 1 BU< from bch, 1\'oocl P anel }'amily room, cover(!d & open beam ceilings, Incd 3 BR, 2 BA, charming family bl', 2 ba, dish w sh r · (Q[f W. 19th at l\IcDonalds $150 mo. enclosed patio -$280 month. yard. $311) 1110. 494-7109. home. $450., gardener incld. crpl/drps. Ideal Joe. Gar 646-6228. * 673-1818 * l'lease phone SG-9491 LlL'<Ul'Y oceanfront, Cliff Dr. mo/mo or lse. &14-48$ oU al.ley + prkng space for oC07CTTc"A=G'O'=E-. ~3-roo-m-.-B<"""'hlnd.,- I~ Houses Unfurn. 30S DESPERATE 3 RELIABLE, RESPON· SIBLE, WORKING ADULTS need 4 or 5 Br Hon1e by 9-15. \\!ill take exll'M11ely good care of home:! \Viili.ng to .go lo $300. • 847-4772 LANDLORDS! \\'e Sped4Uu in Newport Beach • Corona del l\lar • & Lagwia. Our Rental Ser· vice is FREE to You! 1'ry Nu-Vit>w! NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 494-3248 llouM•*Apta, * 145•0111 * WaJ.~~.t~.Lee LGE. l BR. fum. $165, pool Mature males for this one. NICE 2 BR. tri. $160. Avl. New paint. singles & pet. i\f. VERDE 3 BR., F.r..f. 2 BA $3~ F.P. BBQ, D/\V, family hon1e. ALA Rentals 642-8383 1500 u. 11 • ,_1 L B h trlr, camper, xtra car etc. •1•00 T"-•tr". Nr. bus. ,,.... ., views., .. ., c, aguna eac No children, no pets. Ya rd "....... '""' ... e I e v a ·to r , "'bt-••an Ma tu-l•dY ~ ~-"' "' ... " \YOrk furn. $..~ per nio., lst '" · '"' .,....,. prk'g. $450 Mo. yr 1 y . '$350 ~IO. unf. 3 BR & den, 2 & last + $7'5 cleaninl{ fee. &fllOking. $100 010. S.J&J.938 494-0015 ba, 2-sty view hon1e 329 Rochester . 642-1264 for NE\V 2BR a pt, util tum. $300 MO. 3 BH. plus den, OCeanfront . ~800 11o. 4 ai>pt. cl'pts, dli>S. encld patio, 2·sty. view home. A g t . ~rmfro., furn,ished$350 1 Newport Boe ch children v.·elcome. 1 9 6 0 49-Hl71» 494-9729 ""'""'an nt, urn. mo. \Vallace Apt 1 ph ~1289 ' . BR. & lort. Lagun• Niguel Agt. 494-9704 494-9729. NEWPORT'S FINEST NE\V 1 BR $190. '-lature 2 BR · h BEACH adultl, no pets. 114 E. 20th * * 3 BR, 2 BA, overlooking . . spacious OUse, ocean St o.o _,7 •'" ·-d k -•-rt lk BRAND NE\V 3 BR, 2 BA,· · '"°""'~ • ~· golf course, $350. monthly. view ec . """' \Va tD Call 832-1654 beach & shop. Perm rental Elec kit. \V/\v crpt'g, drps. * STUNNING 1 BR garden 499-3141 or 624-0481 Yearly. $.~IMO. apt. pool, rec. area, $165. LEASE/opt. 3 Br., 2 B.."l. $48.2819 TIO W. l8U1 St., Costa Mesa. 3 BR, 1 ~~ BA, xlra big v.·/pool facil. $3?.0 l\'lo. Agt. Newport B•o1ch * SHADY ELMS-POOL Flrn1, fplc, gar., almDst '1i 494-971», 4!H-9m . DELUXE duplex, near bench • Adults Pooltiide SEO up. A ! ~. _._ ~-M" . y · . 3 BR, 2 BA corn:lo, pvt. patio, 111 E 22nd St r•i .,0 ~•• . or p111.g truui.s. IJVJts, 1ss1on 1e10 bltns, crpts & drps, pool. & Lido shops. 3 Br, 2 Ba, . . ._.. ~· campers, garden, etc. 1250 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 r·•-pla•-., •ul· $350 213:799-7846 frplc, bltns, dsh\vhr. shng SUS CASITAS mo. 1st &: last mo. + $50. .... ........ ... £'1'p\g. Yrly/n10. $ 3 5 0. 211 5'9jl21S. de-sao. No pe", avaHable Condominiums 545-:wo5 or G13-""3. Furn 1 hr & bachelon. 0 1 l\ULE to 0<..-ean, brand new October 1st $200. S4S-274S. Furn. 315 DELUXE 3BR 2BA, closed Neo.i.1J0rt Blvd,. CM. cond .. 3 BR, new shag cpts 1 ,N~e;;.w;,;.,;po;;.;_rt:_.:Bu;.:::;:c:.:h___ .._:_:;""------= garage. Yearly. Ca I l * 2 ~t~tTifti~!:2° * & drps, $235. mo. 546-4510 ,.HC!::u::n::li::'!ll3':;ton::.:_.!H::•:;•~bou:::::.'--1 642-3188 Dr 642-7914. 213 ....,. NV>O --'· I . -* 646-1809 * \';;cl<, ' ··~--wr 4 BEDROOMS, family TEACHER'S PET 2 BR umura duplex, t block ADULT 2 BR, 2 BA. 1 sty. room, large yard, best Super nice by the surf, $240. ~lhm St~~ase $175. On Do1n• Point ?-fanicured grounds, heated area for growing fam-turn. 833-2'l24. LIVE 1n the all new Dana pool, convenient loc., many ily, Newport Beach. Condomintums ~ Point Harbor at the activities. No pets. $250 mo. Month-to-month rent-Unfurn. 320 f i ct' beautitu.I MARINA INN 666610. al, or lease option.1·C--o-ro_n_o_d_e-IM-.-,--= ;Liiil";';";"';'t;';'";";"";;;;;; l\fotel. M90'2 Del Obispo St. BEAtrr. 3 BR, ca-pts, drps, 2 AGENT: 64&-3255 (496-2353). KI t c h en. Ef- car gar, close to schools, I~~-------ficlenclea & Apartmenta. So h Coas NEW luxury condo. Seclud· H t-> I d' t dial ut t Plaza, $300 mo. SEE ocean 1 BR. $180 fw-n. ed. \\'alk ID China Cove. 2 Apt1. Furn. 360 hoea o::u pool ' · '-~ ~26. Balcony/garage, NO\V! BR, 2 ba. $400 J\.lo. Agent, e_thnesl, te edVtS"'"f ,.;~:a 2 BR, lg, kitchen, service COTTAGE, 1 BR. only $205 642-2a>8. Bo1lbo1 llland ;'eetinga~m.rJos:'t;;'~ porch. Eastskle Costa '-fesa. Big yard & patio, furn. H Clemente 1r; 1 ............ Beach. $170 mo. S.13-5n6 Btwn. 5-8 ON CHA.i.'l'NEL, 3 BR, 2 BA untington Beo1ch * * WINTER DT yrly, delux U<>.6 ... .... $27 new duplex, 3 BR, 2 BA, Come play in our pm. 5 patios, fn<;d .• gar., dck ANYONE FOR TENNIS? beaut furniture. D/W, seU· spor1:1ishing, shopping .!: COLLEGE Park • 3 BR, 2 & 01t. N d I d I · I restauran tB. $60 week & Up: BA. new crpt'g d-s, & ,_A_L_A_R_e_n_l_o_l• __ 64_2 _ _._383_ ew a u t e ux i:oncto - 1 c ean Dven, ete., gar .. nr Bn'•g this 11..i & receive $5 .,. BR, 1 BA· lrg. llv. rm. & Bay & shppng ce n ter. \I B.AOI $100, furn l BR SUS partially furn. 963-4169, 9-f3 TI-IE BLUFFS dining area. Lovely encl. 6/a-4382. DU on first week's rent. O:wnplete. util pd. Av1. now. pm daily. • Ne\\'port Beach smart De\\', 3 service area. Cont. clean _B:::A.::Y,.:F::R=O'-NT--1-B_R ___ d FURN. 2 BR, on beach $'.aX>. VACANT 2 BR, $145, all BR. pool & maint. C\Jst oven· D/\V, 24 hr. security. fl f ' groun Huntington Buch patio wi gat". Util. paid. \.\l!lcome. Plus 3 BR crpts & d,....s, $550 mo. 1st & Best of all • eve'"" hobby oor ront, frplc, paUo, prk· ;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;. 3 BR 211 .,. • ., ing, inquire 400 S. Bayfronl , ,. BA on bay $305 Teahouse $190/Slngles. Agt. In.st. $200.-dep. 833-8635 or incl. billiards, gym. putting N ~ LA QUINTA Kids & pets OK Avail J10'\v, Fee. 979-8430 557-7883. green, lennls courts & use I ,oco0oo·,o'c,· =~~~--= ALA Rentals 642-1312 3 --B-R~home~=. "-lrpl-,-. -,-.,.-.-. -lrg-. ELEGANT vi.e\v home, avail. ~rt milllion do!~~ clubhoCj · P~~~;iu fur:.~intutl~ ~ 2 BR :~D~~~ABATit. 2 $ LANDLORDS $ lot, $230 mo. 139 Rochester, to qua!. tenant, 3 BR, den, 2 TI4.Y·~~9 , n10. a I yearly $210. mo. 673-7219 acres Df beautiful park-like 1,et US rent UR properties. CM. 962-3800 548-6377" BA. sep. dining, patios, : for nppt. eves. surroundlnKs, sunken pool, \Ve v.·Drk with you. FEE NE\V 3 Br, tO\vnhses near So. gardens & fountains. 1 BR, cpls, drps, patio, """"''=c-7,.---o--=~= BBQ. Sparkllng Spanish FREE. l.fany Oients. Call Coast plaza $275. Pool or tot Eastbluf! area. SlOOO mo. pool, wshr/dryr, re!rig. WINTER, New 3 BR, 2 BA, fountains, large privat e Prior ro va-tlltiiv• "· lot, dbl -·. "·" -46_ 675-1530, 644-5510 ~~~ Dven, $160 per mo. lrplc, b!Uns. $375 per mo. . T -"-" Ll . $ ..... ... H .. ~ ~i .....,..1....;:; Util pd. 6T~2099. 212 Dia-patkl. 0'\\'11uu .. se vuu:t. ALA RE ALS $ NE\V 3 Br townhome, nr 2-5 BR Harbor View Home11 .. 1,.:::::...=:______ mood. Open Sat & Sun. 2 BR. FURN $245 Ne\YJ)Ol1 & Bay, CM 642-8383 pool. lmmedlate occupancy, gardener. rent Dr lease op. 2 SI'ORY, 2 BR, 2 BA, [rplc. AIL lITILITlES PAlD B.lboe Island 1285 J k 979-1633 tlon. $560 per mD. I avail refrig, s1ove, v.•nsher, dryer. WINTER 2 Br, Water Front Adults, No Pels ' ac ' ' Oct. ht & 1 Sept 15. A<lult living. $225. on I••. Pt>nthousc apt, sunclcck, 360 3 BR ~--r~ 1 dbl "" 16211 Parkside Lane ,....,,_,, '"'" .Yt , gar, 6#-5441. 962-2913' or 534-3896. Degn-e Bay View $300. 7141847-5441 LOVELY near oew 4 Br, 3 stove re(rig $210 mo 1928 675-1498, Ba home, ~1 bile from l\Iaple St., S48-6680 \'EARLY -3 BDRl\I, 2 BA Newport Beach I ~=~~~~~~-7 {1 blk \V. o( Beach on \\'8.ter, garage°, ll-"tlSber/ BUILTNS. 2 YR OLD LIITLE Is. Yrly, 1 hr, patio, Edinger, So. at 1st signal 1 dryer, diOOwhr. $560. mo. Dina Potnt HOME. STEPS TO BEACH. NEWPORT Crest Sparkling. 1u1t95il;. pa6.,!~81, 93rurn or unlurn. "b"!l~oo~k~.\~~!'l'l~~~'!1!!I \Vlnter Sept. 15-June 15. $350/MO. AGT 673-2058 OR New 7 plan. 3 Br, 3 Ba, im· f~""""""',""''---,.--' Family only. 673-4.194. CLOM ~" toN De.na3 Br Po2 iBan I 642-5610 EVE. med occup. 6@;3400. 2 BR, 2 Ba, comp. furn. Lci'Yi-WEEKLY-RATES ar ...... ew ' ·VERY -• M 4 T h U I 33 1~ Y I Call E utl S 1~ COZY 2 BR home w/F.P. Ideal tor adults or w/1 ... ,arp ootego, own ouse n um. 5 "'"· mo .. ear y. xec v• u ,.s FA. heat, patiQ, 2-c~ gar. child. Lease. No pets. $275. :!r:.°'£~ceHp= y~e: Costa Mesa Avail 9115. 673-47£,6 n7 Yorktown Blvd. $350. Avail Oct. lat Alt. 6 or per mo. Eve (714) 544-7678, patio, only S485 per month. ;.;:;;;:;;...:;;;:;;::_____ LITTLE Is. Yrly. deluxe 2 Booch Blvd. at-Yorlrttrwn v.·kncls, 673-2/:>8. OCEAN View, 2 BR, relrig, Ava.II now. Broker, 675-72'1!i. CAPE COO OiAR!\t 2 Br, hr, 2 ba, patio, garage, furn . 536-0411 J~ B I d 2 or unturn. $375. 673-8193 STUDIOS & I BR' -lw-.-_•_,_y_cr_e_•_______ range, crpt ' car garage. * 3 BR, new Eltstbluff con-1% Ba, patio, quiet adults. s, 1'ICJ' $235 mo. 493-1802. do, for le•se. l••••/opti'"". Washer hook-up, $ 1 7 8 . NEW 2 Br, dee. furn apt. yr· e Fu.Ii kitchen 4 BR, 1% BA. lormal din nn, E Bluff ........ "" &12-1276 ly $325. \Vinter $265. Avail e Heated pool I••••••••• I lam rm, cpts, drps, dbl gar. •st sale. fii~. 644-8765 & -'-'"-'=·'-------Sept. 8. 673-3703 or 613-0110. e Laundry facilities $375, 9 or 12 mos lease, 644-8779. Huntington B .. ch B Ibo e Free utilltl~ Houtet Furn11hed 300 nvnll Oct. 1st. 548-8440 or 5ch~:re:,~· 0~~1=: TOWNllOUSE Nr. beach, nr ;o.:1c.:.:;;1:...:P..:•:.:n:.:i;;n;:;•u:;I::•___ e Free futens Coron1 del Mar 64G-J454. ty dep, Walk to CdM Hi, all Hoag Hosp; 3 BR. 2'Ai BA, ~:8 h~o~~li~~~r 1 ~~~0' $35 WEEK & UP e T.V. & ma.id serv. avaU. Bayshoret ' schls & shopg. Yr lease. patio, pool, $300. Adlts . ....,,......, rec ar~a pool' • Sleeping Rooms • Bar·B-Que ClllNA Qwe, winter lease 3 -Mutual opt to re n e w • 548-3993 aft 3 PM ~-.. ~ ' ' ' H • Phone service CORNER I t L 2 Br -"'"-'=-=~~.::·___ $230. 962-8781. • ousekeeping Roonu br 2 ba, ocean yu. $400 mo o . rg. , Gardener &: water pakt. BLUFFS, end unit, on wlde e Ocean View Apts • 1 Mile to ocean 544-fil3), 6'f3...qRJ8. (rpl., patio, crplB, appl., Avail Sept. 1S. $650 per mo. Greenbelt. 3 BR, 2'Ai ba, Lagun11 Nlguel BALBOA INN Sl~S16S gardener. $385 yrly lease. "644-:o::.:1:::060=.· ------fresh & clean. S475n10. Yra * FOR Lease· Ocean vi.el\' 105 Main Street BAClJELOR & 1 BR., pe.tiol, Costa Meu MS-5430. Fountain Valley lease 644-7409 3 BR, 2 BA, ·fully carpeted it;'5-8740 frplc's priv. gar&get - 1 BDRM tum home. 337 Ogle Coron• del M•r ~MRBOo"l"Rgo"Vi4ewBrH,om,esBa.· & draped, 493-2448. 1 llOUSE to beach. lrg 2 BR. Divided bath & lota of 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car gar., all ",. N B h tu nf 1 1 closet&. Rec. hall. pool & St, Costa Mesa. nss. call• THE BESTI bltns, swim pool, kids OK, Lease $425/mo. ca 11 ewport e1c ___ m Dr u urn. S\V m poo • pool tablea, sauna bath.I. =~:~ Buch ~n !!e ~l;'j B:J~ ~i~l }~~ =~t0~u:4J mo. No 544-IOTI -BRAND-New ~~ '-1:~i;ie:rat~':;!: ~J~or Ln~~11k J:OOJ bat)ls, naturid fire1~l. open H I S..h HARBOR llighlands 3 br, 2 Lease with option to pur. ,613-0640""c::,:::..· ~-----Beach, l blk N. of Slater). OCEAN tronl 4 efr A deck. bee.ms, new Jcitch y,•/bltins, unt ngton ba, yrly lse. $350 mo. Call chase! Top qual ity! YEARLY 3 BR. nicely furn ge.7848 aft 6, 645-n:l4. Avail. Sept. e 2 & 3 "-'-s I d 1 8"8.ut. lum, a 11 l'Oflo new cprpet. An in "aa.ncw" CLEAN 2 BR, 1 8$i hou,. 15 h ~"WV\1111 new Y ecor very c ean nr HUNTINGTON Beach at I Ll with the ~ t · e 2 Car Gar•-" "-y & ~," t s~ ven ence1, ve condition. Waik to bench and w/lrg fenced bk • , $165 ._..... "" ""'" " nope 11 -.. mo Sunset beach aCl'Olll from · 'POWlding aurf now 10 mid •'-'...i $400 ~-1 & 1 $50 Ci BEACON Bay winter-pvt $450. & $475. 673-9045, GTJ..GIXjj, n-.__ ... ...:~t.. J'une. 4~141 or 624-(MSl . ~-.....,.,,ng, ' mo . .,_....._ n-mo. 1st $3t + · ean. beach ~ ttnni.J;. 2 Br, 2 BR, NEWPORT CRES'r beach. ocaut. ...... , l luum dudes gardener and water. dep. Pref family of 3 or lrplc, blt!Ul, patio. Avail PHONE 64>6 l•t FRESllLY furn beach \\i nter cond. 2 1 3 -5 9 2 · 2 4 6 6 or w.:;e~~sR,n~aiiA,cfde':1r~~ Call 644-856'1. less, no lrg dogs. 842-3418. now, $.150. 54l·9534. 1 F "• ~al~!~· 2N~· ~~·par!; 213-330-4fJ67 teachers. 880' Park Ave. LGE. bach. $145 furn. haa kit. 3 BDRM. 2 bath, 60'xt00' lDt, 3 BR, 2 BAlli. PooL ~' blk Dup exes urn. ,,..5 chfklrcn. G44-l51?. LUXURY beach studiD condo 4M-'.6'192. sm. pet OK utils. Pf'kl. dbl gar, bltins, line Joe. beach. r ,l'mily D n 1 Y. BelL-_ lslond tum SZl5 mo. Adults onty. CO'li'AGE l SR.. onl,y $225. $240/mo, Villttae R e al ll3~'5~t'~l~o.~493-5~!:!768~. ---I;::.::;.:"'"':.:.:;..::;,::;,;;;=--Nc\v rum bayfront bachelor. No pelJ. TI4-529-7161. 3 BDRM house. ~ View. Yrly. CID, nice lenced yard. Eslate 002-4471 ..; $2.10 pe r n\O. Slip nvnll. Lagun• &each Utll. pd. $300/MO.· Alao l B'E:AUTY 3 BR, 2 ~ S.115 2 STORY 2 BR 2 BA frplc 8AC1f 2 huge nns fr pl bath EXCLUSIVE LITTL~ ISL.~ 673-7162 ~"!· ~M{.4;.o . :~ :~~ 1 '4~~ f,7.~£~1~~~'. ~~ s~=~,2 :•: :~·1::~~: ~~;~ ~/ri:~'.~; ~~~~;: :1:\l1F~:! 11 ";,:: R~·~t~;f:~~~~~ ~an.~; el 1,e t:s 2 m.# . homes. )Tly. lease. from $2J5-.less f(lr one. 673-56-14 ,..__ a .... den, •ll mod appliances. BDn.mbi Cl'l>tJ, drps. h'plc, VACANT 2 BR, $145, all $275 Mo. Agent, 548-U90. l , BR. 2 BA, All electric * OCEANFRONT 3 BR, 2 BAgt;pt.s, at .... ..,scent U<11 Adultt $350. mo 496-5136 tefr!._..:.:..:~~ Pflie. $300. welcome. Plus 3 BR Newport Shoros kitchen, fJ1>IC. patio &. BBQ. BA, $325 lncludlng u1il. $165 p. SM weekly color QI maq:UC'.Ue.543-S066. Tea hOUle. $1SO/Singles. :.;.:;.;;.::.:.:;...~;;;.;;::_ ___ 1 Leue Sept.June. 638-8410 Winter rental. Ph: 673-4724. TV, util pd. 1435 N. Cout. South' L.•eun• 3 BR., 2 BA., 'f'rplc., crptt., Art. Fee. 979-8430 3 OR., ca111. dl'1>&, frplc. 2 Car ~o::_r.;:~"""""'""'1'-. -----* 2 BR. F'urn. Winter. Utll ncEAN bee.ch front, TBR, 2 2 BED'ROOM &: ~n. Ocean drps., bltlna, agl. 1ar $375 LEASE/o£Uon l Br, 2 Ba, gar., patk>, Atru lts. no ~11. Balboa P•nlntula ~~~·ti~~""°· Ne n r Ba, S3W mo. 741 Ocean-Vle~. Large deck, 1 block to mo. 414 F'ernle&t. 644-0030 • hOme. $500 down $270 mo. Agt nt 6ra-26D9 o..-...,w C'ronl. 494-tEOI., ti-1-1779. ~ach. All remodelCd anti CHARMING 1 BR houac Call aft ~ PM 842-3423.. S•n Clemente 2 & l BR. \\flntt'r. SUS It BACllE."LOR fl.Pl.' for a n'nn, F'URN Studio. $150. UUa pd redccornted. Deluxe. $300 beft.ut. 1nrden. $22l. Aduli.: 3 BR, 21iii BA, CDndo, S:SO -----'--'"----$295/~10. 11<1 F;. Balboo. )'e1trly. Bnlboa, nr 11ton!A, patio. 49!).....1440. Lt. oook. per month Sept. l!ith thnt no pet or child. 613-4100 mo. 675--2456 or 673-$18?11 & 2 DR compl redccomtcd, 879-1776 or fli9-5991. $UO n1Cl. 67H790. en1pl Adult. June. 15tti. SolUh t.quna. ** NEW 2 BR. CONDO. 979--3180. drpt. crpt~. bltln11, l1<e. l3.5 Any day is Uie BE:\'T u~\\' to Don't give up the Stilp! It's a bl"l'eze ... 8e11 -~ 2:13: ~· evet. %13': NEAR CltlNA COVE. Ap. Fa.st rnuJ~ Are JU~t a pnone \\lt1t S.in An t 011 lo , run an ad! Don't delay, . "U~t" 11 in classiOed. Ship items with l!'Ut. use Ol1l1 72l~ll5 _dflll!. plJRnces furn. Ph: 61'34936. cR.U away 542-5678. 71J.....U.1-l.007. call today S.I~. ID Shore Rm11ts1 612--5678. Pllot 0..lfled. SO.-.. - I I I l I ' '--DAILY PILOT f'rld1_y Stpttmbff 7 ICl?l PUBLIC NOTICE PlJllLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUeuc NOTICE PUBLIC ~OTICE • •1CTn1ous 1us11111» • ,,.., JltCTrt10lll •Vt:t••t• ••CTITlOVS .... ,, •• ,, "CTITIOUS IU$1JlllSS , ......... O• tO•• tl!C'TtTIOUt 1\ltlNISI •ICTITIOlll IVllHIJI lfAMI tYATIMllfT '"'''llOlt COUllT or Tltl au.Ml ll'ATaMlflf1 NI.Ml STATIMltlT HAMf STATIMINT ltOTICI Of' ftUSllC Ml,t.llMG N ...... t'TATIMINT MAMI STATIMINT Th4o f(ll owfl'\i oe -lo dolflll NI,.... ITATl 0' CALlll'OllMIA lllOll T1M fdlOWlflO ll"l'loOrl I• cldllt 11111111... Tiie IOI~ --•r• doll'IO TN fol ow no IM"WI• .,. do 11'1 to •• MlllO Ofll tMI ,.Of'OllO the follow"° l*'tOl'I •• dolno b11il11.-. Tlltl lollowllll pttlo(ll'I I• ool119 bu'l flfff •• tMI COUNTY ., OllAfll•• •• Mllln• 11 "°"' 114"• tt U.ND Utl OttTl lCt CMANOIS •• 11 (ti ftAClflllC SERVICE1 n ) ORV Jtt An416 lllo.MIDICA\. "HOT~ 'O THI HEW •f1tAl»A.HCe :Ill MtCICV ~OUSI f?W Flll'bft lllll •11 11i141nl to Ille I' 1nnlnt lfld l~ln11 F 0 It M. l (0fil5ULT.t.NT$ ttJOil COAST H(W.E Cl!HTlll tl1I lolM WA..l.U .U ClllATIVt: Lt.!TllllOltl t)f NOtlCI O• NIAlllNO O' f'lllTIOlll '"' 4111. ,, ... ,,. (•Ill ntt4(11CQ Aml90I "'"''"' AWnlH HtWPOl'f .... di CA .. nll D llu kl 31 L,ff11n• H Ollfl (I I L1111' •• 1"""°4d .... lll'dl el ''" ( tt 1111"'1. ""'"' II Toro C1l I nuo ... ,,.,.Ill W"'1'n\IMll' C1Hl. '2MO FANT All IS UNI.. ..... TlO 1•i I! 1•111 llOll l'IO•ATI 01' WtLl.. ANO '°" 'W•Y Ntwp0f1 ltltfl Cllll ,,..., •2~ ,,.,, cf Nn• ,.,W\1119 CornmluO<'I llOll~•. ltoblrt JlmtS lltynolQI ,J1D• ,,..~ ... ,_. 161 w Sll•Ol'I ltMd ST '"''' MtU C..f f No 1• 91611 LlnEllS o• AOMINllTkATION ftldl•rd t1M11 "•rrtill 10f Am IOI D•" Lt"" t LeVl11 )'1.. Qt1119r M-I( NOii ttt:ll IVY G enn D ,. •llv Q 01Wn ~I 1 p1.1bl1t hN 1'19 w I bl •l•m•t"i: Lent El Toro C•I I ~ 51nlf Ar11 Ci1 f 9'21W M thltl lt.t 111r 80 I ld ! 11 II !I WlfH TMI WILl AMHEXID W.-y NN'OCl'1 1ffCt1 C•NI f2U0 A-ut Co. 1 Mtw Cl I f'JrQI L1QVf\I N(gutl Cll 1 htlcl DV 01111 C""m1nlOll 11'1 1 p 111 11 0-T~ o blitlllltt It tof\dvcl..:i bY •n 11-Th I twilnttt t cewld..C.ltd' bY Ml 11 (;Qt t MMI No 11 (• f t)621 E o lAIU~V Ol~HOFI' 0.U•MCI Tlllt bin!""• • (~ bll •n In i(rltt n AMI LtVI" ' 4f OrlllQt &Ol'IO s Vot 2tSOI v. 1111 kbl• Jill DO• no 0 ·~ ~'Mllt!ION D •• ,, M•Pt div <I.... Cll~ <1111 Thlt 11111IMU $ (OlldVC"' IW Ill " No: ~e s t<Ell.lltlV G VI!"' .,,,, d!ylll1141I Avtfl11t Cot. Mtu C1 I n•21 L•o1111• "'Ill• Ct I It$,, 100 lCI 12$ .,.., U I ,,.., !ht ,u, Robtrl J1rntt Rtynolcl1 Th. :-:·:::nJo: I lld w ~ 1111 cwn • v 1111••. <"•" ,, R•r eo L LLIAN LE Gt1TON II•.· ' ,"!. ",-:.•,·.· RIChl 11 C 1rt1; l'1r 11 Tll ~ b11t fltu t CO<'IOllC td b1 I Otllt I Tll 1 DVI 11111 • C!>t><lllCltd ov 1 gtnl 1 t llocli._ f' lllntd Communlb' 0111 kl Tl'lll t1•l1mtfll w11 l! ltd W h I'll CO\ln ty C.lt k ol Ofinot C01JnlV 1111 AUOUll t2 tl'I I V•l~nl w~'; 1 ltd w)ll'l lnt Coun Piii ! on P obi!, 1 o w th 1i;..tt1 1,.. Th t .i1i.m1111 w1i II M w Ill !tit Cei;n 1Mrln1 tlllp Pt 111~ 0 I( Nll'l'I 1t9911I' on• of Tiii lr'lln• tord"ll CDCI• ty Cit 11 OI Or1n0t Cou111v Ol'I AUQvJI 1 IJT) ,-, Iv Cl«k ot Cringe CUI.in y on $tp •m~ ''" ol p.(lm 11 • ~ onh <" , -••• ,_ tv CIWll llt Or•nt• <;91111ty on AllOVll i It I II ""Ill Lt~ " &:; s VOCI tt 1m1nd9<L rv,.. C1l /Offl • 1171 ., ,, ' l91l llU"' •• ' ,. 10 w.. " ... ... "' 1~n Tl! I l. '"""' Wit ' .., .... " '"' Coun-Tiii• I .......... Wll n tel .... th 11\.t Coun s. d p •n II 11 .. 1011•1.0 , ••• No. n..tc p Jnfl Pvll ·-0 1111,11 Cot• 01 'I p • 1" 11ttJ tur,.. Plr'I cu •• end 1111 tr.. t mt •nctl .. n u•"' ,1.,..: OI Ot• Ill (oun y (11'1 Al,IGUU v c ... OI 0 •n111 COUii 'I on Awu• 20 3 Tur'!. Roe.lo. , •• nntd (O!'l'lll'IUtl '" P!111111'11d °''"" '°'~ 01 Jy p 101 A-Ui!Ull 1• 31 1nd S~p tmbtr ' 4 Pub •l'llld Onmq1 Cotll 01 v p lol Pl•'' O! 1111 09 llW t1m1 llll 111111 "' l"ubllll'!ff 0 •nt• COllll Dt ,., p (JI lt/1 '" Arntndmftlf l'fumbtr ' AllQUtl >I Ind SIPltmlllr 7 u 2 1f1l 2611 73 St!> tmM , ,, 11 ,. 1t1' 1J911.1' lor $IP tmbt 11 ,,,, 11 • 00 • m !11 AUlu" 17 24 >l tnll S111l1mDtr J 1'21"4 F )1111 !tel Ol'ltl 0 ti kl MIPl It$ ff 1~ la! fl~ 210t 13 IM cour oom 01 DIP• t n1t11I No l OI ltJ> 's.2 Jl Publ 11\td 0 •no• Ca-11 D• v P IOI Pvb! 111ee1 o •nllf '""'' 01 r P ol 12$. 11\d lU tr.d ~"to <1111101 I°"' CE PUBLIC NO'MCE .. d CCIII 1 1 700 (l\I c C911 •r Dr v. ----::-:::=-:ccccccc=cc---·l;A11011ll ) ll!G Soi> tlVIOt 1 U 1 A\19"''' 21 J tr.II Safi 1mw 1 U 1n1 Al (Sill G•ne • Ao lc11t1u 1 11 gn PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTI Wtd n Ill c y ot 3•nl• Ant C1 f0tn • PUBLIC NOTI CE m 1n .. 1) 913 1Mll 7) lll:tt"IC'llon1) Dhlt ct IO ttlt PC!S l CM Od A.1111111 29 973 ----o:,;:;;::::~:;::::---1 ---,;;;:iiiit.J.Ci;;j'iTj[cjg--1---::::::::::::::::::::::::---1 ,. lflnld CO!flll'l\111 IV son ltft ti Olll) NOTIC'I" INVITINQ SIDI l'fOTIC I TO ClllOITOltS WILLIAM I SI JOHN PUBLIC NOTICE D 1 rlcl 1n11 10 chlonO• trGm A1n1ndm.,,1 PIC'TITIOUS IUllNISS No• ct , lltt•llv 11 ¥tn 111a 111 ea.rd 01 No. A. 1un coun v c, ~ •lctlT!OUS IUll,.,ISt PUBLIC NOTICE ~umbt '10 Aml'nlll'llltll N11m11t 4 OI IM NAMI STA.TIMINT t ut "' Of tM Coaol Communltv Colltoo 111,.ri.r CIJlll'I of 1119 ALIX GOLO•lllG .-AMI JfATll!MINT Turi 1 Rock p an.ntd Comm11n tv Tll J Tiit fol owlllO !*'Mllll I t do 11D O 11 lcl of Cring& Coon v C.l lorflll wl Stilt ~ C:11Homll lo lh4o ttJ.4 W lhit"i: I vii P~ll!OuN 11111 llTl!tf IOlowng .,..._I doing blllllfl• l'l~:::~o~:A~~~:::· pen POllOlll lo •dd 0) m()f't or ••u Dul8t:r:~N & I EAN 27'6S FQl'~rtl;I ... tMhld oiih UP IO 1100 AM • otc~~:o:e-·"•tsTEVANEZ ...... .,NI C•ll t021t CHEZ ELLE 1'10 ~au 11 Coll Tiii loLlow llQ IM"•Oll 1 ao ng ou1 Mil CITV 0,. KrtJ 111111 "'"' lhl -011 II -OI 1111 A:0t<1 Sult O' L.1g11111 Nlg..,_I Ct Wednttd1y S.ptemW t 1t13 1 l'lt O '",. Tt U )I '11.ft4' Hl,Ol'IWIV LtGUlll s .. c.11( Ci t t '161l 11 fOUNTAIN VA'-Ll'.Y CAllFOllNIA Tu 11 ltoc-I' inned Com n11n V TMe n '2617 Pu cll111111 0.0 (II 11 d 1elloOI d H le! ~•a• 1 t<:l l0t' ol All-V fOI' pt I_, (M 1 l Et11nlll' BoL ria1r 9• I ul THE t<O\JSE Of' GERALD NE ftl\ NDTICI 1Nv 'TINO I 01 c llltd I C .. IVI nc lllltl I'll 111 "'lll't Of ROiiLtf' Lr. GordOn 2"1 Vtllado loc1ltd 11 lllO Ada t ;I.venue C0511 Nol c• 1 he ~llY 11 v.n on c II~! 1 Plllll il'lld O •nu• Coe11 01 I'/ f' lot Lt000n Liii.iii, lt1cn Ct I t26S L•»ln ( 8,,,11 C FOii T"I COHSTllUCTION 0 I" ~· IC e1 of h4I Lii r>trsn Co fQt • I DrlYI M It on V tlo. C1 on I t2•7S Mel.I Cl Ho n 1 ll '1111 ell I me u d bLcls Ille •bO~I ni~ m:".«J,,.• nJt 11, ,, 0 AllQ 31 and StP 1 I 1t7l 11tt 11 f11r1 b!JllM$1 • ((WldU(litd Dy '" II Hu" "' Oii • lllODKHU•S'r 5flll1T l'llOM THI ,.,.,,II propo1,1v loc1ttd bttw1111 '"'Wm Elvin LM B•an 333S1 1(1nWOOd w bt PllD c y Ol>tcl\ed 111<1 fNll IOI' DI 3<)n• .. a ... "" (a h"-----d V 11 .... 1 t'lM6 SAN ..p IGO Fft:fltWA.V TO MlloOll Ae9IOM Pl k 1nd 8Pn • C1nvon Court el• llOl'i Ca lorn I f23JO PHOTOGAAPH C EQUI PMENT decedent I I requ tel .to t e Ille n w I ;1 Eltlnlll" Bo! n11e Gt ILd ne P H°""l'lton al'ld Tham•• FEET lllO•TN OP WA• N I! • Orl11e (1l!t1nll9d) ••• e v of Cl"'Pllt fh • b1Jlll'lft1 'condVCl"4 bY I liltn• •I A 1 bid• 1 1 10 be 11 acco dance w 111 lilt n«••••rv VO\lthe 1 11 M 11 f '0 1 11 PUBLIC NOTICE ,n • sl• '"""I Wll !fled .. II It>• ((lljn c HOUghlon ODS 9631 LtlHll c , P• llltfllllp _.. ht c • k of h• abOve '"' !Id COii 0 -------ty Cit• k of Or111111 County on Sip 111'\bt H\l~I "'on 6HCll C1 I tun AY'fHUI H.UE I Or YI n 1111 Tv I ~oc:k I 11 ( ROiif!' Ltl Goldon he ln1 llci on• ind Condi on1 ''"' IO p 111111 them w lh hi nece1~~ y HO 7t-f1 4 \'13 Tllh 11111 neu s conavc '4 DY 1 Utlll ti "'OT'c'e0'015CTHeNROE&7VtS-0•.,1 ., ., ,., AEQUESTEO B Tiii V ne °""'" Tllli ttaflf'l'ltfl w11 t e<1 w 11 lh1 CO\ln Spec I c °"'' WI! ell I e now on I 11 1"11 \IOllCM 1 10 1111 ullll• 1 gned 8 !hi ot ct lt&SOLUT ONTHE CITY COUNo I' 2Jtlh pe lnenh p ., • ,.. " " pany ty Cl1 k DI Or1no1 Coun V 11n Sep emC>lf' lrllV Ot 11<urtd II 1111 oll Ce OI lllt EN &. MOSER J3 w A ltESOLUT ON OF PubU11\td 0 •Ml• COIJI 0•! y p " Ge I HOUQMO<'I C1ty Coun.c: I OI 1M c IV of fovnl• n The lnclu1 on ot l'lt (oi!IQI I It ...... In-. ltT.1 Pit cl'l•t no Al lfll ol Sii d i.clloO 111 d ~& ~;:.sstll~Ll.p 0 Bo• 20' Gllrdtlll c L OP T~E c~:ceI.fJ>:'~~·t~ Sloltfl'lbl!' 7 IA 2 29 191l 21ft 13 Th • 1 1 ement w~t 1 td w II hi Coun-Vt ey C1 lo n I w I •«t ve wa td P 0-II• ltd by Tiit C Y ol Irv"" P 11111 ng lf2'-0C F 1'NI E1cl'I biddl fl'lull i\lbm I 'II II 11 t b d ii CA mo11 Wh ch Ii lhe pltCI of bu• net• ol ~~L~IF1°o~N T"o OllOl!lt THE VACAT13N Y Cl9<k ot 0 •1111• Coun v on A119utt 30 POW t uni 11\1 llOIJr of IG 00 lie O<:k am Comfl'I '' °" Publ Jlltd Oranu• Coe11 01 Iv Pf ol c11111 • ' dlltk ct tit Id thee~ .,,. bid lie voders on«I in i I m1t11 I petlt nlno o' OJITIOHS 01" li'AU.Ct! AVllN II PUBLIC NOTICE tr.I on Septemo.r 26 tll for ton• r11Ct on o1 S• d 0\111 c hN no on tl'le 1bClvt ~ SIP lf'l'lbtf 7 , 21 21 un 2718 T.I dt t bond mid• payeb 1 lo IM Orel« 01 he t$ 1 1 of t11 d dectn<1in1 w lh 11 lou •I llH HIN•TEINTH AND F11tl"f B ookllvr1 S II I om tilt S111 0 490 POAld pl1n W I bl I'll <I II 7 » P fl'I Of II 11'!11 COis! Commun IV Co m1i11 Ol1lrlct o 1 the f ti p!.101 ~· on of tn t HAM LTON STltEITS Pub IMd 0 In 1 COlit DI y p 01 F ttWIY to 700 norll'I of W• 110!' ti llC tll(WI M 111 er 11 0011 b t Oii Thur\111y Boe 0 OI Trut ... n an 1m01Jt1t nol HJ ml>tllllt 1 t THE C TY COUNC L OF THE CITY tTATllMINT OF AUHDONMENT Sf!oll tmt>t 1 , 2g 71 913 ,,,. 13 cort11nc:1 w n 111 o 1n1 11>d •Pet !let Sfl'lltmtlef' 20 913 n tri.t mu I purpou PUBLIC NOTICE "'" fl~• 09<C_,,I ts 9} ot ht su"' b II 11 no 0~~1<1 Auoull 2 913 OF COSTA MESA DOES HEREBY 0, USI OP ton1 P'"°"'°"'tthll Dto-nte-d\lll<llrroom• Of Unveoty Hgl'I S.ChOOL '11 •0111•nffth•llh4obdde wl11nl9 l11a UN ITEDCALFOltN A BANK RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS ol fie( l"ICTIT OU! •uttN•ll NAMI C .. all'd cove llld "11 bt atcomp•n ed bY C•mPll• D lye I v ne Ct !lorn t 1t ILP U lie D OOQUd Conl 1'1 I Iha umt 1 E•KlllO OI 1111 W SliCTION l The C Y Coun( dttll 1 1 Tiie follow ne ptrlOl'll 11•\ll •b1ndOl\td PUBLIC NOTI E one of 111 fO<mo of b ddl , IKU v .. wh ch me and O •(t I Ptftonl t Ille iUPllllOlt (OUlt'r OF THI 1w1 <19!1 10 II m In Ille evonl of l1L urt lo cf SI d lltcltdl!nl Y o Co• a Ml!•~ d!lel Hel "~: 1 PatlCI hi 1111 11'1 !ht I ct I ous bu1 n11a nemt qu t<1 by Seel on 2 OS ol t II e l•YO no t.>r °"POS no 11 d prot)Oled pion STATE 01" CA.LIFOllHIA '-011 HI er " o tllCh ton oc the orocffdt ot OLA Si ALLllN & MOSlll II Ult on to vntll a 1::° o ~ lor Ill JJ I "''tu II HI c11n ng t 107 Ml n S PICT TIOUS IUI Hl!SI Spec ft• on1 A I p ocx-111 lhl ~ w be heard $ equ11 !Kl lh•I anv THI CO":,"'TX 8r.,OllAHGI! hi Clltek w II be fOf t td or In t11e CISt JJl W G•'*'t1a Blvd ~\IOf'l\11! " "~ tS$a~p ~ n~pec lie Plin 8e Doe; Pen NAME STATIMl!"'T 11 1 ked PROPOSAL ON 8AOOKHURST w nen 11p0n1t lo 1'11 pub le fl.Of Ct be NOTICE OJI Hl.t.a HO OP Pl!TITIOH o1 I bond tilt tu 1um 11'11 IOI w I be p 0 101 2(11• "' r ~~:~:It!! A\lenutt bV At1oh,1! on Tl'li fl et I 01.11 but httt llaml tit Id to Tiie loi f1W no pe ions I t <lolno S TRfET <1/llJ be ma to or 1111 v1 eel so tYbm ltd o he P 1nnl1111 Comm It on FOil JlllOIATI OF WILL AND FO• lt.>rftlle<I Ill 11 d scllOOI d s r ct Olrdllll CA to241 7 -tl Oii NoueMl>tr n 197 SI 11 e~cesi. ~~7;"81 1 ed 11 Dr•no• County lln Ju Y b1Js•""c1o'e'Mv OF LOM• , ••• as o bt In th• 111nll1 ot tlll Deputy C IV p1 or to the Ilea no 111 a ll!TTlllS Tl!STA.MENTAlt'I' No b dde m•v w hd 1w II • b II to 11 Alltrn•n fOI' ll1tcl!lfor gl'll Of wiy 11 111qwn on 1 fT\IP on tilt 11 " " .. ,. ,. 2 03~ C trk 11 111r of ti! n lhl C fy HI I 10200 Ft.>r tu Ille dell I 991n:I l'IG U d 11ro-Ell• 1 of BltUCE W MCCOMB per od of forty I VI ('SJ days 11ttr the 6111~ tilt Off ti 01 '"" C v C e k Jlntt Lou! .. Rltktv 2659 Dl'•tllt l'I ookh11nt Hunt no on BH(l'I C1l I 3 attr Av.rive 11 or bllort 1111 nou t PO'Od pl1n t n ernttd per10t1s 1r1 In Otc11'td di t se Ill 1111 open no lie eof Pyb sl'IMI o r1n;e (Olll tit IY PIO Sl!CTIOH 1 Mondav 1111 11 <la'/ or Ave Cos• ~II flt.4 Jiited 11 wh ell 1 mt el J>Lll' tKtl\leel v I.cl lo (I I 1 hi off ct of Ille C11Y cf NOTICE 13 HEltEBV G VEN llltl Tiie Bo. d ol Trl.J'Sltts eser11e1 Iha Awuil '' :11 11111 Stp 1m1>1 7 U Oc:lobf 91; 11 IM llou of 6 JO~"' 111 B J!tm'~·~'~!n Gui on 11QI B1lbol R (I'll d NUflll •l4 80 t g w Ila (MJl>L (ly Ollflntd ·~•mined Ind l'V,.. Plenn n11 Olpa lmftll lrY ne TOWll SUZANNE JEAN MASON l'las II lld ~n jl Lv ieoe ol •1.ct n11 •nv •nd 11 bL<lt or 973 lW 73 ltlt Counc <.hl"'l>t I "' c ~ r I I1 , Ntwpor B11ch c. I flUO dee. td bV Tilt O.wtv c IY Cll<'k B II CHI ltl' 12Crl Ctmou• Or ve Room ,32 • ptt1Hon for p PINI• of w I Ind fOI' ' 0 WI vt Inv Q!l\11 es °' II F• r Dr.... Cosla Mos• c. I orn. l t .. ~~ 5~u,1 n11• w11 cendix.tlcl by • Jirll•n F L tit m•fl 2no Quell• W•V d!!ri ,1111 !ht pub! c ,,.. Inv Ml 0 bt rv,,. Ct! IOl'fl • wl'll 1 SI d prcpoitd •Ulf'l(I of Le ltfs Tes 1m1n arv to the tormi 1" 111 inv bid or 11 1111 bfcldlno PUBLIC NOTICE 11e.-.11v I AMI a1 IM me a~ fi let 0: Llll\1111 811ch Cl II 9265 d I ' II pltll I on ' e ancl ·~· 1&1111 for pubic In pt!ll oner r•I• 1nc1 IO Wll tl'I I madt for 919ntd NOltMAN E WATSON ht• no • Pt t0ns n e ~st fl 0 Jin It cktl' Th 1 but 111u 1 condue td bY 1 Otfle et P •sent 111 1111 K 1r1 on o u P o.-1 lurtl'ltr II• t cu11rs1 •~II thll Ille me Ind B 1 T t le~ 111 to M p ~ "''c~ ons Fllffl Ill tneri.lllp poseL1 'f>IC °"' P tct of lle11rln; l'lt Slll\I lies tlffn "' Sec'I 1 y oa d o \IS''" HOTICI O' TltUSTl:li'S $AL• SI CT 0"' J Tlltit protee<l ngs sll1I bt PUbl ll\fd Otlfl(lt Coat! Ca Iv p o1 Jtlf tv F L bt mth All bldJ so rece 'fld e•am nMI end C TY OF IA\/ NE lo Safi! 25 1973 1 f 00 om n tht Open Stp embt 19 1973 II 00 Im Ltlll No. l~I UJ5' 11 ltd 1111 •uan 0 111 p ov, oni 0 Al>g111t U, )1 •1111 Sepl1m111 ) • Tl! s s . •mtnl WIS fl .., w '" 1111 (gun decl• ,,., w tit r~• ed bv 1111 Qtp~ly PLANN NG COMMISSION cou room of Dep11 tment No 3 of ••II 811 No 40 T' HO ,, nu ~~~p~~ II Pl I 3 D v' on 9 of '"" 1tn ~'9/,.)] 1, c. k OI 0 lllOI Coun y on August 5 c ly c trk to 11\t c ty Enq -and ht I JER L w LSON cou ' I 100 c y c Ctn. D .... w... n Pub tl'lll'd 0 en9e Co111t 0 • y p OI IMPEltlAL BA.NCORP •• c;lu v ·~ s ff' ftr>d H Ql'IWIVI Cod• cf lie s •I• of 1913 c IV Attom1y for cll«k no Ind eport"' Astlttant SIC,.lft y the c~ Of 31n11 :ra C1 lorn• AU1111st 3 1n11 Sep ~m~ 1 1~11 in s,13 11 ""' T ullff uni!• 1119 tg ll)W nt C• '°'" 1 PUBLIC NOTICE P21Jll lo !Ill CllY Coun( ti ts rqular Id P11b!1hed OftflOI CCllst DI Y Pol Oil ,J~llMI El ST JOHN ~He tied deed of fru~t WLL SELL AT Sl'CT g "'' Thi Cl~MIM~er Oftdl": Pub 'tied Or•nu• Coatl DI y P lo lourntd fl'lttl no on Ocl~ 2 1973 S""•mW 1 1973 219I n County c 1 k PUBLIC NOTICE PUSL c AUCT ON TO THE H GHEST Ca.;';,a°'no O:.! ~·~, ~ 11'~11~ vaci l'ICTltlOUS IUllHlll5 NAM• ITA.TIMINT Aull I l4 31 1nd St PI I :1574 1l P o lo comm enc ng "'g k 11'11 COii WAL Tl!lt R IAIANGl!lt l'I ODEA FOR CASH pay1b e I I m1 ol 1 ons lo !lot co111p cuous v POI ed 1 ono l •ctor •114 • 1ubcon eeto s •I'll I obll n PUBLIC NOTICE 15-1 WMtcHff Or SI• J20 I IMM 13 e n awl11 mOlllV ol Ill• Un eel S • 11 lft d 1 P• or •nd 1111' 11 1111 en Kil '" le 11)'11 fig Pl .on 11 110 no lluslneu PUBLIC f'JOTICE I b\11 n11!> cen\e I om ~• Cly o4 Poun HI.,.., 811Cfl CA 9Uf.O iUPl•IOlt COUAT OF T"'I! a phi If 1 Ind n t IS COl'WtYed o tllVl 111110 1 the di t of U d htl ne S• 11 ,, n \II •Y n ICC0<d1nc1 w In th<! Foun Tll (114) MS-tlJI STATI 01' CALIFOll,.,IA PO• 11111 nDW hid DY II 11nd• II d Offd ol no tel sn•' bi! !Xia e-d not mor• Mn .. !-------·-----It n Vil IY Mun c pol Cod• YOfumt I Tl • 11101 Altor111y tor Pill! -r THI COUHTV OF OllAHOli T us• n "" p Ob' y ht I"'' I! II "' hur.11 eel ()OQ '"'' •Olrt bl.II •n "" TAIKOlt: CATA ~ W Alpine Sen I Anl Ct '7707 Girt Merv n Ltw\1 ~ W Alftln1 S1nt1 At11 Ca "1707 '"' FICTITIOUS SUillolll9 HA.Ml! STATIMl')llT fo ow n; perion 11 do no I. s Chap •• 5 ().j ~nd ~ 08 SUPElllOlt cou•T OF THI! PuDI lhltd 0 a not Coast Oo y " 0 j HO ..... 711J dtlC bid ..... ~, sh• ltH lhln lhr•• (3) nollctt bt bu A b <lt 1 e to bt compl ed on h~ STATll 01' CALIFORNIA FO• Seplembt 1 I 10 1913 l 11? NOTICI 01' N•.t.11 "'G OF PITITION TRUSTOA lHOMAS F MUltCH ANO POI fd Ill h bf • 11••1 bis$ cf 1111 lo f1W ng schtd\11! ol WO k THI COUNTY (IF ORAHGE FOil OltOEll AUTHO•IZO•G l!X KAREN J MURCH l'IU!oband and w ft SEit:TIO"' I Tl! s r~• ut on s I Th 1 b\lt neu 1 conduc1l!ld by '" In ll!~l<lwal G1ry M LIVI s Th • sltllm<tnl WIS II e-d w th Ille COun Y Cl1rk of Ortntt COl'lty on AU9Yll 21 1m .. OEUTSC:H ASSOCIATES AYt Soull'I L1oun1 C• Dinny ll Bu gt 506 &lul!ll d C¥n Rd ,, 92451 Th t bu$ nttl • cOlld11cted bv 1n n div 11111 I" 216n Dannv 8 llu,ge PIJbt111!1d orenuit coai.t D• ly p 0 Tl'l 1 ,111em1n1 w11 ti t<I w 111 tr.. Coun- Auo 31 1r>d S•PI 1 u 2 1913 2709 73 Y c e k OI o 1ng1 Countv on Aug1111 n m PUBIJC NOTICE F CTIT GUS IUS MESI HAM• 9T.f.Tl:Ml"'T Tiii loL ow 1'111 .,. s.on• art Cloll'!O tlUI fltlt .. MULLER S MUFFLER SHOP HS5 w L llCO n Anolll m Cl ti nt()I P11bL •llld Auouat 2., "' •tfnc 0 1noe COit! 011 y P lo l end StpttmDer 1 ll 1~$2 7l PUBLI C NOTICE Aztec Mutt et Inc: I C1I fornt1 corp. Thi or1llon I~ B11cll 81v<I Hun! noton 1, flCTIT DUS SUllHllS HAMI ITATIMllf!T loilllw no p1tton It doing bu• nt11 ltmt N .. A 174tJ PUBLIC NOTICE TINSION Oil LEASE OF •liAL JIROP BENEF c AltV MPEA: AL BANK ;i 1>11b '00, one• 11 lh• Ori~~·,;:!: em l NOTICE 01' H•.t.Rl"'O OF Pl:TITION lllTV Oil LEASE N THI ALtlll Ci IO!'ll I C0<poral Oii Do V ol • new1011>11 Lvmo Sum-Cta lflg ar>d GrUbbng •O• Pll08.f.Tll OF WILL AND l'O• SLPl t NATIVI! lt e-<:ordtd Ju Y 3 1970 11 nil No~ ~U 10 ""c!:edMc.!Zo' ~~n~':11 c':un':: l!IJl'TI 2 t..•TTlllS TISTAMENT&•V l'fOTICE TO Cltl!OITOltS Es 111 of ARTHUR C OAVIS Otctes 2fW26 Ill bC1o1< 956 1 page ~10 o O t c • Ca 0 n 1 7 700 C Y.-fllClVll on a. Emba11k ne11t Eitt11 OI CLETUS MILO K LZEll: 1k1 SUPllt Oil COURT 01' THI eel R:tCO Ill !'J tl'IO otl ce o Ir.. Reco oe of PASSE O ANO ;t.OOPTEO TH S ~ l'I Cl~ I I m 3 CLETUS M KILZER Dtctaltd STATE OP CALl,OltN A. NOT CE IS HEAEBV GIVEN Illa! O angt Coontv llLd di'!<! 01 us cl Stp ember 19n I 600 Ton~tPi'll I CO<'l(rett NOTICE IS HEREIV GIVEN 11'1• FOil THI COU,.,TV OF OltANO~ VIR:GINIA H OAV S 111 Exec11trl• of hi !Iese, bll ltll follow ng p op~ V W LLARO T JOll:DAN I "" • MENllV EDWARD K LZElt h•1 j l(f Ha. A 71'2tt w 0 lhe 1b<N1-11amed dMldtnt 1111 I Loi •l of T ICI NO 2Sil2 •• 11\0Wn on v Ct Mayor of Ille • E•c~u VII' Monumen s I'll • n 1 Pl on for PrOOlte o4 WI i nd Ei 11 ol RUBV p BRUMLEY oecea.-e-d lie " n a 111 II on lo an 0 II• e Map r1eordtd In eool< 11 PIO• Cl 01 C v o CM • M<tll lttm s for rnu11nce ol Lelle s Tt1'1m1n 1ry to ed 1111110 i "II I'll! pt one o en1er no 11 M :Kt •n-s Mips ecorll• of o •no• ATTEST 5.t'S L F -Cv b and Glllltr Ille pell! ontr r1!1r.nc1 lo wh ch ft mM!e NOT CE s HEit EBY GIVEN 0 me w 11111 eden• on of lllt term of Tiit Counh Cll lo n 1 ~ }El°N : J~~NCE~ F CO\~ Mttl I lf!I 6 for fu '"'' Pl c11 1 • ind 11111 tr.. t rn1 creel tori gl he lbOv• nimld Cltc:tc!int o g n1 1111 tc on• ve1 .,,..,,,.., Stll-Eacopl no 11e e om 1 I m n1r1I oll STX Te 1 0 F CALI FOltN ~ us s F -1 P C C S d1wa IC 1r.d i nd ollct of llll1r ng the s1m1 1111 been 1111 11 P• •on• hi v no c,. ms ioa nil 111e lembt :IO!h 1973 affec Mg r1a P op1rly n II•• al'ld olf'll llvdroc• boll •11b1l1nces CO NTY OF OltPiNGE SS Miid an s ab Ill For $tl)ll"'M-r 25 9n • f 00 Im •• d declden a e tQU Ml lo I I l~tm Lo. Anoll•• Coun vend 0 II •n lo Len« ••ved or Sold UJXlf' II~ tOnd ' on CITV OF COSTA ME5A ) I tfl'I I In ll'lt cou I oom of Dep1rlmen1 No 3 cl w th Ille ntee•11o> y voo hers n the Oil ce 1n OPI on o tu rt ht e• elld ht It m cf llowt l!r no r o~ ot en v u1><>11 11e 1 E LEEN p PH NNE v c v c e It ot I E1cll-W1 e Se v ce Conne-c:t 0111 11 d cou 1 1 70CI C v c Ctll • D VI of 1111 cit k 01 ht ibOve 1ntllltd court or I'll 111e tor 1n add ona e m of ont surtice of Ille ~r.11 aj!d ~o 11111 g d the c l ol CO'I • Mts<'I and e•-olf clo em 1 Weit In Ill C IV ol S.n11 Ana Ce II n • 0 presen hem wl II l1t llMesSlry .yur I om $e£11tn'l~t 30!11 1914 UIJOll 11\e lor SU'Cll sl.lbt inc:eJ w nln Ill llPP" }OD C l!r~ o i'1e C Counc OI Ill C Y ol 2 e1ct.-IO.d Ul UI ty Covt ) lo Oiled Sep l mbtt ' 1973 VOllChet'I 0 the ur.dt • onl!ld ti THE LAW $&Irle le ms ,,., cond I Oii) Or II Ille IHI of II <I Ind •• t•e VIM II Ill! Cos I Mesa &nd fl o! 0 Cit k of lhe c F n tlltd G 1dl W LL AM E ST JOHN OFFICE OF KINOEL a. ANOERSON tOM 1 t1r1111 W for 1n Orct., 1utho ilna I'll s deed om F e-d L H•1t(k er.II Ke! e tv Counc cl ~ C v ol Cos.J 1MI•• I em 9 County Clerk NOltTH 8ROAOWAV SANT A ANA t s I • o llV S6 d •• P op1rtv lot • HellCk ICO<dl<I Sep itmllt & 9SS n '::t'f .. ~u 1o':'.. l~ao ~ 9jOO:.:: CIV ,11r~'d ] l l F -R• n!Ofced Con' e I p pe WILLIAM v SCHMIOT CALIF ..... le~ s lie otec• Of DUS"'"' ol term "' on• VHf from Seolllflbtt lO Book l2!CIO pegt lt c 0 I c" Rf'Cord1 11111 • v PIUt<l •od •CIOP iM DY !ht c ty B1tcl'I Cl '2~1 Th 1 b\11 11t•t 1 canducttcl bY 1 '°" SPOllTS USA 10714 L• A\lt FO\ln & n Va ltv 9'17(11 I em 10 Uli 5•" Mlluel Sw 11 JIO 11'>1 und1r11Qld n 111 ml 111'1 perl1ti11g t7J '11 lh •n Op on 0 II lier •-•encl SI Cl and n th1 dl!<td f om E ll'llt 0 Radio d (""'"" o4 ne C \I ol Coil• M.l!'JI l'leLd Of! M• q\lesi 2 E1cri-ca ell B11 111 nc ud no Lot•I NIWWI SNcll. CIHf '26'1 to tht es 11 1 o1 u d lltc:ede-n! w 11 n tour 11111 tor 1 Pl' od of one 'l'it• f om 11rwt Por• Aldl0<d ec•<lld i1Pllmt>t tl'>I ' 11 <laY o Sep tmt>tr m 0.p 111lo1u Tl'I (7 t) '""2!2 mOl'lllU 1ttar 1111 l rs• pub c•I on of this S1Pltmbt lO 1974. IS '" '°"~ n th1 • 19.SS n 8 oolc 3700 P•9t J t Of 011 c. IN WITNESS WHEAEOF ha\lt lem 1 Atlor'My * Pltttt-r notice pet !IOI'\ .-.ferHICI IO wll Ch It mott. lot record• llt tun o Sii my hand al'ICI •I! !led h4o St1I 30 Eecll-Fu t\1111 Ind Pl•C• T '" c Pllb tlltcl 0 .,,.,. Co.ti 0• IV p ot 0•1"4 Auo ,. 1913 fu fl.t P•rl cul1n Ind 11•1 Ille tlmt I nd 1SJ R•• Lane Cos I Met• (1 1111'11 . "'!kt r v ol (0$. MH• '"' ~ h <111 ot S Ons G11 dn Ma ~tfl Slp!1mbtr 6 1 ll 1913 2713"-13 E ~ 9 umley E~ec:~lor pace cf 1111 110 !ht Slfl\I Ill• bttll NI ( f I st eel add e1~ G .iommon ss~:;:ibtr 1973 n l tCOfdlll(I W II lh4o P"IW l OllJ Of of 1111 WI I of tor SIPltmblr" 20 191l: I I 00 I fl'I n c1e511n1t Ot1 1 si'IO'Nn lboVI! no WI •n y EILEEN p PH NNEY Sf'CI on1 1110 Ill 1n1 Ir><: u1 ve 011111 Le PUBLIC NOTICE thl '"°"' n1mtd decedtfll M courlroorn 01 Dtperlmtnl No l o1 11 11 ven 11 to is COl'll$! 1 enen or (O c v c trli: and f~.of c 0 c 1 k bor Code ol lhl 311te (If Cl l.)l't\ 1 lfl.t KINDEL & A"'OlltSON t1111 c91,1rl el TIXI CV c Ctn!.,. D lw t c nes5 o/ ~ c ty COllnt OI ht C l'I por1I Oii AnEc 1"'c L C Zlrnrrier Pres dtnl I" ecl!!r ck L1wtll1 1011• LI MtrqueS• ,.,.,.. Fou"ta n Vt lty C•Ut 92708 • Tll 1 b\11 ness • und\IClltd bV 111 ln PtJt I dlYlllllll Publ l!ltd O'lllQI (Oii DI IY p 0 Frid• ,_ LIWll!t Auou•t 24. 11 Ind 5tr>ltmbtr 7 1• Th I l "..,'"'WI$ I tel wfll'I !I'll Coun-~~7l 'l6531l ty c erk of o 1na1 Coun1y on Auou•I 15 c ly ((lljllC cf "" c tv ol Fovn a II Vil lint JID•TN SltOADW.f.V WHI II ttlt c vol S1nl1 All& (II lorn I l'he btf\l'f ( 1ry undtr SI d Detd ol ol Cos a Me1<1 PUBLIC NOTICE p 11s2:i ltY ll1t 11y ttolu on 11c1t II ned tr.. p.. ~ICTITIOUS IUS NISS SANTA ANA CALll' t17tl D•ltd A119us 2t 1913 T ut DY rt•ilorl ot 1 b e~cn o oa au n Pvb 5fltd 0 •not COflsl ----occc=·cc-cc====---I Pu~ shl<I O anoe Cot~! Dt tv p ~I v• no l'IQl.I IY rlll 01 w1g1' !or f'ilfll HAME STATEMENT Tit (71•) Jft.Jfn WllLIAM 'f 11 JOHN M Obi Oii on' stc11 tel 11 I' to v Sep eml>t I !tJJ DI v 2;i.0/j "' Auouil 17 2' l l Ind Seplembe 1 c all or l'IPI ol workm111 11 mecl'l1n c l~e 10 OWfllQ oersoni 1 • dg no Allorllt y1 IOI' Executor CCMJnlV C ffk ~• e olo e ••tc\I ed and dr ve ta o Ille "~:J:~D~/ ... :~~:::s 91) 2SSS n needed 10 •~e-c:u e '"'con 1c1 w~ ell w I l)llJ B~~O'(;MI N UM PUBLISH NG Pvlll •hid Dr•no• COflsl 0 • ly P ot STANLIY A.. •H PPS 11nde 111ntd a w 1 en Oe-c: a• on of PUBLIC NOTICE T"' 1-------,---------1~ ewar<1ee1 IO tl'le succ1111ur b <kll<" P 1-PAN V COM Augu" ll end Sepll!mbtr 1 14 11 WI Soult! S'1'1nt SI o. au 1nd Dem•nd °' 1• e '"d w on 11 fo OW !\Cl ptl'IOn 1 llolno bY• Mis PUBUC NOTICE v1 ng w•oes In c 1n f cl oni not p o-C ONOOM N UM 913 2no.1J LOI A~ <• t MlJ no ce ol brtlch and ol t ec on o c.t11se ------ COUll.TESV AUTO CENTER l20l S v de-cl for by HOlu on jh&I no bt eu MAGAl NE INTERNATIONAL Tt (tUl lts U11 1111 unde, gne<I o tt I 10 d pope v o SUPEl:IOll COUllT 0~ THE Me n S Sin • An• C1 '2101 SLP 121 ~:::: ,:;:g 1~1~ou~~~ ::':smr>~~ ~g~~~~ N UM L FE STYLE USA PUBLIC NOTICE Al=:h.T o"!~~i:"'cGt' O• y p ot ~~1~;~~ ~.~~td on,!kl'';! ~ :1; t• ~ T~~Al~u~;:~~ 'L:" ... :o"fL\I L:.:::1m ClrF Fou~~!l~o Vt ::~se C1 Slinll "'°' C• TO CRl"DITOltS sllecl by 1111 Un ltd Sii ti Oept mti'I CAL FOAN A CON D OM I N I U M a ~ Awvtl J1 l l'ld Seplembt 1 91l l'21"13 Ind of tlf'Cllon IO bt Re-c:grded May lO Ho I" IJI i.r Tl'I IMnl Olld ltd' ti I SUPllt GA COUil\' OJI TNe ol Lallo!' and n ~g tvellt shO bf! Ms MAGAl NE 1t7J 11 ll1tr NO 32~12 n book Ion: pag, NOTICE OF INTINTION TO Sll..L d v o!11 l!IU ' c \IC Y •n n STA.TE OF CALIFORNIA FOii th•n '"' nllb •l'ltd FHfe,al Mn m11m INDUSTR Al c D N D o MIN I tJ M ,.•,or,,','•'• Tc•ou'•'r"o~o~iE PUBLIC NOTICE 151! ol sold 01 cl1 Aec0<11' RE.&L Pft:Of'l!llT'f' AT PlllV.t.Tl SA.LI WI em C•t! 0 TH• COUNTY 01' Olt.f.NOI: MAGAZINE Std tie w 1 bt ,.,.de llU w l'IOll E• • e ol ALBERT MA1LON Oe<ee\.td Th I.''""""' Wll fled w 1111111 Coun. Nt ... nJU ~ W~o· bid I I r CONDOM N UM. WEEKLY NEWS STAT• OI' CALIFORNIA FOR NOTICE OP TllUSTEI! s IAL• COve<lllt\ or WI any '""!!SS or mpl od NOT CE IS HEl£1lV G VEN 11• •Ill> Et 111 o1 ANSON R HAM n:t o w bl COl'IS dert<I 11n MS I s C TNI COUNTY 01' O•ANG• O M "' 0 "' O', -·-• °"' ~ t1'I !l!C lo lhe c11nn 11'111 on 11'1 he il»'<H"' ty Clttk ol Orll'lft CountJ en Augu1t ll Otct elfJd l'lltdt on the olflc 1 bllll~ form tu n thMI ALll'OR N A SPEC AL 0 STA CTS Na. A 7114t TI N .. IAH SU DUMAIS ..., .,... .... ~ .,,.. "' S C -S -• 91l .__ \k-C --o 0 __, MAGAl NE 5'3 Wtll ltlh Sir.ti (011 OT EY KEN Ot! Septernbtr 28 '13 11 l GO o'clock cumt>r1nce .. o PIY Ille tml n flt.I OI' n YPt "' 011•' Otl ep em.,.. "' NOT CE S HERE&V G VEN fo 1111 <1> '"' " 1'"' 1 mi 1 n •c~,,.uinci Mt1a Cal forn 1 '26l7 Elll e of MARION~~ O~ W KEN p M WILLIAM eElUH V •1 dll y 1p-c Pl tYm of lie not1fll 1ecurtd bY 11 <I 913 ti' OCI AM "" lie e1fltr W Ill n l1lt Publ I/ltd Or ... COllf 0 II JI ~71S: ( eel tori 11'1 the l l>0\11 n1m9d de< eden wLlh "" plOU I O<'IS ol Ills Nol ti Ind Ille Cal forn. AUOCll!ed C(WllU lftn • OOAA~~ 111.~ kl!OW •• " .. KENO·" "'"'" ,.,,,_ 'lldl! a"CI "''-"•nl 0 ... __.. of TN•tl w h lnl&retl •• n •• II mt I owed l)y IW ,,.. Undtfl oned •• I • y 11111 • PlfSOfll 1'11'111111 cl• mt •ti• nil 1111 p _. tlCIU -• Ind cond 'ona Ml .... '"" MA• OH ....... ..... ... ~.... ~ ... • ' fhl w I ot A btrl ..... A119utl 11 24. 31 incl 3tiiltmbtr 7 .., d CltCtden 1 1 flQU ed 10 fj 1 thlm 1or111 undt 3ec:t on l of Ille speclllc• Otlt. Inc: • C1l lorn 1 corp0r1 on 1911 A DK I'll Dlld of Trust 1Corlltll l'fov1m111r' ltl.3 no e prov llllCI ldv1n.c:t1 I 1ny un111 ht ~tc:tJlor o •• OI<. 1973 ZS5113 w1tl'I lh• ntetWI ' YO\IClltrt n 1111 oll t e Elth b ddll'I' musl be Ctflsed " IC Mepft SI'"' Co.tit Mell Cit fOtlll• '2621 NJ;'ci: IS HEllE8Y GIVEN lo tri.e ft\ boott ,,.. PIO' 4' " Ott c ., A_,-(j1 ,.,._ of .. kl Olld of Ttllol fHS.. Cll• \}el de<: ti std w II II p VI t SI. 0 It>• ----------------•·• '"', -• ~ '"' ,-., _ '"' '''' ~ tordanc1 w h appl ctlllt Ste e owt .!.", • bu• Mii • CO!ldvcttd 'trf 1 CO< c,ld tors of tl\t •b<N• n•~ dt<:..S.nt n 1111 o flc• ot the Coun y RICOl'lltr ol 11111 upeflM'I "' 1'11 Tru1 ee end ot Ille lllgl'ln and b11t ntl blckle' r on '~.'!'""' "' ., "' ""' •" "' ' ,.,.. on Orenot ((lljfllV S 1te ol Cal torn I WILL trusl'J ,,..,i.cl DY -. d ~ of Tr..,., and (Ol\d I ono he • n1 er mtfl ......... • PUBLIC NOTICE o p1n.tnl 11'1111'1 witll IM "K'l'ltll'V •n• Spec c• on• ar.11 offci Ca f0tnla Assoc1e-d ll'lllltlpesorul!.o\lnQClilntt1>0•ntlTl!tSf:LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Slid aal• w 111 iield on F d•Y \lh •It'"""'" ot A lltl M11on ________________ ,voucl\tl' .. lo'"' Ul'ldtrsFontlCI ,, THE LAW p °"""11 form. to bt uttd lo b <Ill nv <•n Contul tnl$ Inc ~~.~ ', .. «l'll•n_,~!, ~~"::.ton 'th'.=· H GtH:ST B DOElt FOlt CASH (PIYlb. Oclobef' s 113 ,, l1 00 AM I Ille ol ce dK•a11!d • ~I .... of" I cit• n Ir.II I ' STATIMl:NT OP WITNOltAVIAL l'ltOM OFF CE OF KALMIACH OeMARCO be obll nod on y 11 !I'll otl ee o4 1111 C ty NJ l tnt P 11 denl "'" llKw. · • ti I mt o1 SI e n 1wlul money ot lM 0 TD s.rv ce Company Bank 0 \ll'I I I •nd n trttf he lie ett1!1 l'IH ,AaTNl!ltSMIP OPEJl.f.TINO UNDE• It.NAPP AND CH LLOlGWORTH 550 En11 neer C IV Ho 1 Th 1 111m1nt w11 I td w th tfl.t Coun Ol 11\9 c I k cl 11\t lllOVt 1" l led cou l or Un led 3!1ln) 11 Ille sou h (I onll 111 Amer Cl Towt One C y B vd Wts 1 Q1t l<I n add on o 11111 o declden 11 FICTITIOU5 IUllNISS NAMI: N-PO I Ctn er D Sit 900, Nt wPOff Tl'le cost ot t• 11 :an1 tend I~~ ly Ce k o O •noe County on AUllU" lS lo Pk '1tn! ,'",.em r.11 w 'r.~111 ~·:::~ t 1nc1 cf 11\t old CounfV Cou 1110ult Su 1 o Oft~llt Ca orn 1 Ille me ol nh dealt! n '"' tll pr<>!>t'flV Tr.. fol aw ne perton l'llli Wllhd 1wn 1' 811cl'I Ca I WI'! t i! t Ill• 1>111e1 ot f c1flon1 Is S.t 00 nc: llO •~ 1 1913 \IOOCn• s o u oo'e'oHART & KANe 1oc1 lld 11 Santi Ane end Sve1mor1 DI 1 AIJ9Utl ll 1973 "'' l<I n tne coun v ol 0<1T1Q1 s , , ot a D1'111 11 P41 fntr from It'll Pl Ina •h P bv>lne11 ot "' Und• 1 gned fl 1 I m1 11 1 b dd1 equ., • hi lhl! P ans end I" tJIU ol her tltorl!l!V.. 51 His n l"" c ty o S1nl1 An• l"'P41 1 Binco.-p Ca 0 n 1 ciesc bod o• foLlcrwJ OPlrl :;f llnlle he 1 c !Lout l)llt nesi perl11n1119 to 11>1 " 1te ol w 11 dectllent Spee f eat on~ be \eflf 1>'1' ma I he ma I ng Pub 1119<1 o eflge Ca-11 D1 y p cl 2323 N B 01<1w1y S11 I•,"° Se~• An,.• Co tor11ta 111 111111 1 Ut •rill lntern1 con 11 w 11 T u•" An und v ded twen y t vt ptrc9fll ~·ir: .. w~~o,:oL~~~;;;r. ~ ~~A!;;n": w "n Oii mon hs ., • "' II 11 l>UbL Cl Ind hendl llO Ch1rge 1111 1be1n ad<l I Ollll A11t1u• 17 2• 31 and Sept•m~ 1 Cl IOtn a 97106 wll Ctl ' Ill• ... ec:t veyM 0 11111 now held bY II m 11nd1r ,. d BY TD SER\/ CE COMPANY (15 II e ti II 1nd le Tilt 1 c 1 OU$ b\li nttt ntmi 111 t ment I°" ot th 1 not ct '1 00 Ne "' r.. CQ'l cf lie P 1n1 •nd ltn 2sso.n bu-t nru cf Ille ul'\dr •LOnlld In •I ""' tf'I Dlld 11'1 Ttuit In the prppe ty s tu•lld '" 1 A h8 ct 1 " ra p oo y 1 u. •II lot "" perlne •II p Wit fled on Dec:em1>1 011t11 ~t l tn SPK I cation• nor lie cost of m•I n11 1rld f)f 11 n no lo 11'1e es11!9 of ••Id dtc:edltlt .. <1 CouMY end s o e desc Ibid ti 9oen Ml 1 e M 111, n he c v ot A nine m Coun y of Or- i 1•11 In 1,.. Couniv of 0 11101 THE FIAST NATIONAL 1111'\d n11 w oe elYr.lltd PUBLIC NOTICE w II n too mon1~1 11t1r lh<t flrtt f'Ub <• l ot 50 cf y,,,, ..:iss n The CllV ot Ai1111~"' Se<rt , Y •"V~ 6-" bell •• 0 low\ F~ N•me 11\d Allaress ot Tiit Pt ton BANK OF OltAHGE COUNTY EVELYN H Git PPO on Ill thl1 no Ct Co. 1 Mlll<ll 111nown on I m1p KO!'d ST .... lltl A Pl ct 0 •nd n Ille NO<ltl"" W ll'ldrtw no l!l!eculor o4 1111 w 1 Otouty C 'I C 9<k D•ll<I A119111t 1t 1973 iM n bOOk 1~ pages ll To n lnch,,lvt p bf !hl'll 0 COii! 0 11 p kl! q111 IH 111 tl>fl Nor nwtt Q1t•l'1..,. ot L:~ LEIETo ~l'ti. A:rn !2~5 h •me I ICALM1C:cN"' i:::.'.:;:m&d ('l'C'°""' : ~':...,'. ~ Va ~ C• l•n. l"ICTIT :~: 11ts11o11:ss ~!~1 ~A;.L ~O~E. NELSON 6'r-1n~1 ~~~~.1 ~::~ tCOl'<lt (.f S1pu1mbt 1 '11;g' 1•n I r 11~13 ~:Cw°:.' nn ~:W~!~~..: ~'~u~:": S gfltd NEIL E IOLLIAN, 11141 KNAPP & CHILLINGWOllT"' Dllld June 30 1913 "'A.ME STATEMENT ol I"" 111ov1 n1mtd <lectdlfll Thi slTMI add''' 1nd oll'll, common PUBLIC NOTICE Sin!• An• •• ~· NDt'lhwe• <t1t• te ol J'ubl Wiid Orll!Ot COIJl OI y p ol JJI N•WPOltT c•NTlll Oft STI ,_ ,.,",~'~ TO ,•,~,,• c .... 11 01 Y P Cl Tfl.t loL QW no perton' I e clolno GOIDHA•T & KAHE <1'"1gnell0fl II •nJ OI lllt 111 prooertv tl'>I Niii' l'lwtll q~irte 0 11 11 SKI on t $to tmlltr 1 1, 2 2I 19n 27~213 "'liWPOJIT l•ACH CAlll" nuo ... ,......, 21,? 13 bus lie\) 10 UU Joi • ....,_.,. Sult• l4f dt lCf bid l l>OU• t pu pot Id lo bt ll(M It Rd ct tel Otl 1 mtp ot 111 ~"I' l'ffO!'ll- Tll (ntl ..._.1n FAA WlilST TREE FARMS 2012 S111t1 A111 Ci II f77M Londtnder"I' S Co.le Mesa CA CITY 01" POU,.,TA N VALL I! V fd n bOOk Pl~ 5o1 Reco 11 of Attorney• i.r E•tcutor 811~ n1ss C1n or O \It Su • 2 5 Irv 111 Ttl (7141 SY.114$ Tiii llndlr• gned Trus H II i.cl1lm1 1ny CALll'OllNIA su~va. n 111 11 ee ol ,Ill! County PUBLIC NOTICE Pub! ihtd Oran;e Coest 01 P lot PUBLIC NOTICE C1 lorn 1 92'6• Allon11)"l fOI' 11.lKulrh1 I 1b I 'I' for 111y "'°' ec l'll'li cf 111t 1tr11 NOTICI!" l"'VIT HO I DJ Re-c:or<lff OI 1111 0 11191 Counl\I u 11 ----------------OSf'P!tmbtr T 4 2 21 lt7l J 2176 n Fou 11'1 M1vt • P Ob' les II( 1a35 Publ 1!\ld Or11191 C~st D• IY P lol lcld 11s ll'ld Ofl'ler common <111101111 Otl II POlt THI INSTALLAT ON OF I TRAI'" ptr, .. r,,. fig del( bed 11 fol~ 1•m E111 Nortl'I s '" Se n1 Kan111 61.(ll AV!IUll 31 1nd Septemt>e 7 ,. 2 1nv tl!Own fie t n F c s GNAl SVST!M AT THE IN Bt11 no llO I he n tr•eoc• on "' IM NOTICI OP TltUITll S 9.f.LI CITY 01' Ce o 111 Pie c Oeue opm.ri Z082 ltn 2n113 Se d .. I! W H be tT!ldf 11111 W lhoo T•itSECnON DI" SLATE It AVENUE C!Mi 1 I nl of WeSI Lt Pt mi Aue-. T t Ht M6D PUBLIC NOTICE POUNYA N VAlll!V CALIFOlt:NIA lus netl Ctn 1 O Ive No 2 S. rv nl COVtflllll or WI ran Y ••pre1s OI' mp eel AlolD SUIMAllD ST•EET 60 " .,. 01 in<1 lie (Ill.,. ni cl On De ober l m 1t I 00 o clock AM HOTICE lflfVl1'1HO llOS c~r 10 n 1 92664 PUBLIC NOTICE 1111 d 111 I le POUtH on or en TOP C5 PROJECT T »41 C11U E A 60 1 wlllt 111 1 ~e I ont offlu tnl 1nct In ht man 16:tlf FOlt THI! SIONALllATION OF Th s 1)111 n11a s coodU'Cled by t gene 11 ~u~~ :v~es ot'11th~a":.o:~· ~:'~1':v s:,~d C IV Proltcl 11$ E: :r y ~~;, fttl !' Ol\Q !Ill c:'~ OOllY lo Steur ty T 111 ntu 1nc1 Com NOT Ctl 01' TllUITllE S SAL• THI! INTt:ltSICTION <II' perlntr11'1 p I JUN Otld of T uo ll>-W I S10 '5* XI Wiii n NOTICE 15 HEREBY G VEN 1'11 "' OI We• Lt p~ ma Avtnut llltntl p1nr S2J N S!'OldwtY In Ille C ty ot On F dtv Sfl)lembe 28 1t73 et 9 SllODK,.,UllST 5Tltl!l!T AND iLATElt CA L FOltN A PAC FIC NOTICll TO ClllOITOltS lirMI flllreon 11 pr<Nldtd 11 SI <I note Ci y (IJUl'l(lf cf Ille C ty ol Foollle n Sou lie y 1 Ohl anQ t• o 11 d ctn er 3an • An1 31111 ot C1I torn I SECUR TY o cock I m I tllt Sou h (I on Int ance AVI NU£ OEVELDPMENl COJIP IUf'llt Olt COU•T 01' TMI tdv•llClt t any unde Ille term• ot u d V1 ey C1 lotn I "" K~Vt sta td pro. Int 01 Weil LI Pe m• A~91'\ue 573 lt TITLE NSUltANCE COMPAN'I' I COi' lo 1111 old County CO\lrll'IOll.. n Ille C IV f'ltOJl!CT NO 11S By Dennis A Marl n STAT!: OJI CALIFO•Nl.f. l'Olt OMd of T 11,1 lees Clll 1111 Ir.II t XOtlllll pow I 11n I 1~1 llOll o! 10 00 oc o.:k & ,,, ltt mo e or tl o 1 111 Pl ti II p0<1t Ol'I 11 Ttul l .. 11,.i1r lht Ote<! 11f of San I An1 Ct lorn I RELIABLE Ph.Ill I V ce P es lltnl THI: COUNTY OP ORANOI: OI !I'll T ~t .. llP\d ot lht lrui 1 <'ta .a on Sep 24. t73 0< lu n •~"II and n w II <tnd <Is an! Niii' lie fy XI 00 felt Trull UIClllllCI lw ltUTLAND NIWPOltT eou TIES INC II T UI" \ll!Gtr ll'lt NOTICE IS HEREBY G Vl!M lhlt 1ht Tll 1 ... emtnl Wll I tl!ld w 1111111 Coun N• A""' by WI II Dted of Trull I I ng 10111 I I ht lbcVt-~n onod rntilSU t d e gl'I •110 It 0 1111 BEACH COMPANY I L m 1 t II Otld of T 111 m1de bY EVELYN N C ty Counc: I of he City ol Foun!I II ty CI! k QI 0.•not Coun V on AuOYI 'lt Eslato cf ROV G HAZ'l'ME ilso kflf1Wn Tr.. be'n~lc try undH al d Deed of oc:e D" n 1ccordanc:1 w II he P an1 llR<I No lie y "" ot 1ne 3ou 11 7Z (JG tc h P1rllltflh P rKonflll Deocembtr 31 1'69 K RCHllERG at hH HPllrtll p ooer1~ VI ty Ct forn I W rect VI llt ltd P 0-19n II ADV GUSTAVE HAlVME Otciesed T utl lie elolore IX1<ule-d erld di hi•rect IPlcl Cl Olll P ~1 t tht b C o t~ d Ne hwe• qv•rte ot Ille 11 clocum1nt no. lt170 n bo<* 9111 paff 11111 rteordtd Novell'\Ot 3 1913 n l'loe~ POJ• s un I !ht llou of O 00 o c oc:~ • m F211n NOT CE IS HEllEB'I' GIVEN 0 11\t 10 lilt i.ndtrs gnltd 1 wrl ttn O.Cllr•llon P 111ntld ul'\der sea Id cove 111d 1118 llt Hor hwt' qu~ e 01 S1tl 11~ t lltK !tr. 3 I ol Of11CJ1I RICordt In Ille off t• of Ille 100 P191 550 of Olllclel Rec0td1 of on 5tPI '4 1913 for furn 111 ng •lld In ••rt H M•rlHrt E1q c IM '°'' of lhl '"°"' nemld <lfctdtnl o4 Otli uu tnd Otmand lor s.i1 ind 1 1ctomoanlld bY one cf l'>I 0<mo of b d .., ll><lv• Ilene• wnter y 11 ong •~ 11 RKorot o1 Dl'lllOI Covnty C• fo n I bv 0!'1!'191 CounlV Cl lforn 1 I ven o tecu e ital no s gnals 11 1111 •b<Y t-mtntLened lt.im~cfl tl1M1tc1 11111 1 ptr10nl llav l\O c 1 mi IOI n11 tl'lt wrllltfl Not ct of Oriau t 1,.i E tel on 10 d1r s M'turlty l<IV Hf bv Ill •PM ca p1r1 e 1 111 to tr.. c1n e I ne ot Eucl cl r.tson ol llellutt In ,,.. PIVmtnl Of' Ill llldtbll4ln .. s n l•~or of SCHUYLER otl on In accO<d•flct w fh ll'lt p •n• Ind K11•11P a Cflllll1t9worttl tlLd CIKl<lt nl •• rtc111 ed to I II tlllm iel Tiit \lfldt • Ontd CIUSecl SI d Hof ,, Ions ,0. "'~· t the bf! ml ktd A~enue llltnft Ng ht y • ono Ml II P1rf0tm11>et ol alt! 011 °"' securld ADAMS HAS I( ELL ., rv1IM now owned tPtC f cat on1 p OPQl.!llS 111111 b e uo N-"'1 Ctflltf' Drive .. Ill 1111 lllCltill'V vouchl'1 II lllt oll\(t of Ot11111! ll'ld EllCI on lo SI I Ill be NSTALLAT ON OF T~AFF c s GNAL ctn t n• 0 hi POln QI blgft\lllflg fhertDy lnc:llld no tl'le brMcll Of' dt11u I tnd ... II" 11'1' SCHUYLER AOAMS pr1ienlfd urillt .. , lld cover 1nd Slulll bt 511111 M of tr.. c 1 k Of llll tbClvt enl !ltd cwr1 or rtc:OtOld 11 ri.t coun y wr.. 1 till rtal SYSTEM AT THE NTERSECT ON OF EXCEPT NG THEReFROM lhel por "°'Cl ol Wll Cl! Wll tetonl«I MIV • Im liASKELL ti UI .. lly '''°" of 11'11 1ccompan eel bV OM of Ille form• of lid NIWllOl"I ••• ,~ CA flUO lo P''""' 11'1111'1 w II Ille ne(llll y p optrlv 11 loc•IMI SL.ATElt AVENUE AND l'IUSHAllO Hon '"' "'' dllC l)td •• foi O'Wt •• d<><::11mtnl no. ICU In book Ulllt• PIOe brttch ot ttrt• II Oii 11• IOt11 ttc:v 9d lier• IKU ly requ ed b'I Seel on 205 OI T1"'h6nl (1Hl "'"41\l voucttotl It'"" 111\dtrSOl'lld II, .... olfct 01 I AllOUtl '' lf7] STREET TOP C3 PROJECT T..30• Bronn no •I lie "' Sf'C1 on of IM 70t II JI II Olllc 11 R«ord• wU •• • Ille tllY not ce of Wfl ch ..... fltordl!il '"" specif Cl ont Al pr()llOJI t •1'1•11 bt Puo ll'ltd' 0 6"Gt CGt•I O• •v p tot ol "' 111om1v1 PLUNKETT .. WILLIAM aEZUHLV 2n Incl be ma td or del Vll'l'<I 10 ., Cit!!. "' of Wit L& Pa•m• Avtflllt publ c 1\ldlon tor c111'1 w llOUI 'Ill 1ntv Merell 23 '13 n 8otll 10609 P1go C10 of m• ~Id S GNALIZATION OF lHE IN A1J9Usl 31 llld St plomOt 1 U 21 PLUNKETT ,ll 0 vi Avenue p O Bo• 11 Wiii Tr111lee lo ~ n lie hands cf 11\e Deou Y C y 60 00 1"1 w dt •nd 1111 Ctfl H 11111 of et to tit 1 ~111' Ot1 or enc:umbr1nc1t N d 0 11 ' 1 lte<lll'dt TRUSTEE w sa I TEASECT ON OF 8 It 0 0 I( H U It ST lt7l 211213 1~ H\lnl nglon 8llCll Cil twn 1 '2~ Pllbl Miid Oranoe Cotti Oil y P kl C ttk et llt1' lllflcf In ltlt C lv H& 10200 Euc 11 Avin111 60 00 '"' w 111 a t !11tlnttfell tonvevl'd loJ1 i!Tru11.,.by1t1111t>L c111Ctontotr..hgl!ntb<lde tor STREET AND SLATE JI AVENUE Wfllcll 111111 pllct of Mines• 01 1111Auo 14 31 tnd Sepl 1 1'7J :U00.73S•• Av111vt •or belore he tlou shown on ••d m•o 11enc1 E•terr u II Dffd of T ull n P optrty ' 111111 n c1sl'I PIV•Df• n 1wtu montv of the A H F P NO 6l8 end bl m1 Ml or PUBlJC NOTICE \Inell ilgnlld ~ 1 I mil er$ ptrl• n 1111 10 ii• eel • w~ th 1 me • b d• Kt II«! "'° OCI fee 1 OnQ 11t cen 1 1 ne ol w .. 1 1111 County ot 0 l flt,ll> Sl•t• ot C•I tern I Un ltd' S I ft I lhe t me ot ii I w t'I0\11 de Vt ed so ll II be n Ille ll•nds ol 11'111 lllt 11i.11 o4 11 d <lecldint w Ill 11 lou PUBLIC NOTICE w Ot PllbL c v QPtntd ex1"" nl<I 1r>d LI Pl me Aven111 lll!nce Sou 11 ... ll' lln<. b.a 11 w1 inly •• o I 1 OOS•"'• on or en DIPltly Cly C erk 1t lltr o I ca In lllt C monltl• 1 , ... tl'll 1 .i Pllb t lllOl'I ot 111, d.cle fld bY Ille DtpUtv C Y Cle k B d 349 91 fe.e ft , <lhl 1no e1 w h Mkl Lall 2 3 4 5 4 11111 1 ol Tract No cumbr1N:es,. l!>t 1111 HI (onvtveel lo llld ty HI I 0700 11 t ;I.venue 1t or btlort NOTICI! O" f'UILIC HIAltl"'O n.ol Cl S 1171 Cle s end fl'le Pllb c a t Inv IHI o be ctn..-ne 0 We L~ Pa ma Avtfl .... tO ~ II Tilt ( ty ol NIWOOfl a11ch Ill now htld Oy II d T '"'" Urldl<" SI d Offd !ht r.oor I • !Id ,, wll ch ' me • I II <II NOT CE s HEREBY lie G VEN '"'t ie O•leel Auousl ,. 1913 SUPJft:IO• COUAT OF THE p ettnl al IM dKI• • on 0 •• II p 1)-"' I UI PO n ol lltQ nn "II the Me COi'\ shown on I m1p lh«IOI r.cordtd In of Truil n 11\d Jg !hi follow n1 ditlt bed tee vlld W bl 0Ubl CIV ~ned eK roe~~ I ll~r r~. WC ty ~f ~l:y ~':. 11 ROSE O HA.ZVME 11'A I OF (ALIF01t"' A FOR POH J n\I no SOI tie y 213 I tee t 011Q ti 11 90Gk t30 PtQllll 31 •nd 32 Pf'-1Y to-w I em ntd a"ll dtcle ed bv Ille DtPll Y C IY St!> l'mller 11 1t73 1 Ille llou of 6 ~ Adm 1111lral 11 ol 11\9 t.I ate THI COUNTY OF O•Af!OE Prllll' IO commHIC "II work ht con I ne a lgh 111gH!1 o he cen e 111 o1 M icei 1,,_1 MIPI rtc:11rd1 ot N <I A 11111 rel D"OPtrlV loc:1ted n Ille C trk I dll.,1 end Ille publlc ''' Inv !Id pm 0 •• soon 1111 talle •• thl """1 of fllt 1~ nimed df'Cedll'lt No A 11114 r1cl• •nd I ' subcon acto ' •~• Oil • n Wt!. L• Pa m1 Aven11e o 1 \111 0 •no• County St tie ot C1l ll:im t rOlln y Of 0 11101 lo bl P lll!fl I ht dee I 11 ffl of SI d mav bt llN 11 n 1111 Count Cllamber of f'LUNJtETT & P'LUJtKITI NOTIC• 01" SM.• 01" llA&. PltOJI b\11 nt11 lctnits I om lie C ty OI Fou11 p1r1 ti w Ill Incl 111 1nl NO!' hi y lO 00 Alldr..,.. lor "II property • Pl! ported c"' °' COSll Mtl,) ~tt bed IS PfO!lOll. 1111 c ty H• I n Ft D, YI Calli W!I Sy M1rl•11 ~lllllktlt IAT'I' AT PllVATI SALi ,, II v.u..,. II actOl'd•nct w lh lh• Foun. l•I mMIU eel II gh •nu •• IO 1111 1o bl Hl.._1251 Alli 11111 Ro.II Ntwi;.o 1 fol <>W'S A I II 115 w tc• vtd t•1m nl<I 1nd Co r0<n -!. on fh1 tot ow no l'ml 11, o fw A"'"" n lie Miner ot Thi Ellll• o4 f.Y.•V 11 n Val IV Mun c Pl Codi VoL11m1 I T Norltl• y I nt ot M soo 11 22 oo •c M 8tlcl'I Tiit ul'ldll"slglll<l T u1IN 11 s-Loi 11 o1 Trac Ho '293"1 11 Ptr Map di(. a lld wL I Ill rtfi Id bY 1111 Dtpu y ll!ZONE JlfTIT ON II 7' 11 bl no po llll tff PRISCILLA ALLEH tjSO known '' Ill S Cl'l1pfers S ll4 .,rid 5 OI ol ,, <l No hwe• one q11ar e of I'll c 1 ms any 1b Illy lor lncor 1etn~1 of !'Kt.>rdecl In Boole IS Ptg1 21 o C IY C ... k o ~e Cly Eflg ntt encl Ille 1111 pet llon of R tl'll 0 W ll'ld P~y L N11t11llt19IOll •••ch Cl It f2'41 ~~~l'pL.AALCk~E~ 1 .:i knciwn It Al b <II •I to bt Comjll Id °"' Ille Northw1,1 on1 qua 1 of Se<! on f l JI <I adclttSS M K ii lnf!ol>Ut M1~s re-c:or<11 of 0 llllQI C ty Aflornty l0t clltck llO lrocf tPOr1 fllil ~~ :s ~~ r~~~,:::1:-.fec1':'i Tl4 (111) UWOJt NOT CE l5 HEltESV'& VEN lllel on or ll11la of fllt loltow Ill icl'ltdu I of -~ l!lntl W11litr y I ono u d 01 1 Ill nt !or lh• OU PPM ol PIV"" Ob 011 Ol'l5 County lg !he c y COlll'IC I • lh 1911 II •d ""' p ncelon D Vt from RT ID Cl CP A.II.,..,.. tor Adml11!1trllrl• 1f11r September 2" lt7' ""'Ullll1'110flld lllfl'll to •• d ctnl1r 1 ... of E\ICI d Av«iut llCU Id bV 1111 Otld ot Trusl MIY 1 so tit known 11 2201 £111 4 h iou neel m"I ng on OC'* 2. lt13 •EZON• f'ITITl0H It 71 14 bllllO the Pub<Uthld Qrino.e COlll Otlly 'IOI TITLE INSVltAN(E A~D TltUST C.OM ITEM I LUMP 5UM INST ALLA ltlence No t~ ly 124 $2 fN 1IOllQ illll 01 ec1 Atll)u> 3 tT3 S '"' (Olli MISll Cl I 92621 P of lo commenc l'IG 'llOl'k 1111 <Otl P11 f on ol L.lrlQll 11\dutlr 11 1,.i AllOUll 31 ind Sfl'lltmbfr 1 14 i PANY b'I' Rlcll1r<1 E ~men Trlltt OI T ON 0, lRAfF C 3 GNAL S'f'STEM ctn e I flt to I PO nt wh ch Is II lllfll SECURITY TITLE for !ht Pl/ POii 01 pey "II olll g1I on1 t• Irle o •nll I 1vL>Conlr1c1ort 11'1111 Olllt n Wiii am EllO Ind Cameo Hornes 27 1 lt13 272J..'1 11cll!' ll IP« I Adm n •fretor et llt W AT SLATER AVENUE AND BUSHARD 3ou hH y 1 onQ W 111 ctfl tr n1 'Mt 10 NSUltANCE COMPANY cu ed bv "d Clel!ld Ml\ld no ••eo Chi '1111 bu• nMS (1111" f om '"' c"' of l'Ollf'I Eatl COISI HlflhWIY Coron• de1 Ml ri MARV PR1SCll..LA ALLEN I '° STll:EET lee! from Ille po n 01 llt1I ""no ll'llnct BY Fet d • Ko.Ji.. 1n111 e•Pl!I-111 1r.. Trvi" <'nd ol 1111 I• 11 V1 ev n *C(Ol'<llnc:t w 111 1111 Foun to.r P• m '' Ot'i to r1zon1 PrOf!t ty PtlBLIC NOTICE ~lt'vPtt ~LC~ A!:.1c:N.Jl•~kr:r ITEM J: 3000 3 f REMOVAL OF E•tll<' v 4.)9 81 '" tn • d reet on 1 M to F0<K o.u 1 Office~ Oill'd AllO\/St :19 lt13 11 II V1 ltl' Mun (11111 COdl Volume 1 loc1ltd W"t OI Newport Fr-1v SOii h :t p!'lvlll '! 1 lo !Ill n , .... : 'r>d l)tll ,111 TRAFFIC STRIPES ANO PAVEMENT tl'll: tru. po nl ot big nnlflg !CORPORATE SEAL RELIABLE EQUITIES NC Tit. s (Ila pie • 5 °' •11<1 5 OI ri Pa,11 ~ no ~~r I ·'){'~11 OI B•ktf NOTOCI 01" SA' • OP' bldlltr IW11 tCt to COfl rm•t on bY thl MAltKIHOS Tiii p1optrty I cotnmon y rriM ea to PubL 1llld Ntwpor! Ht bor NIWI Pres1 T Ut lle Al bLclt •• to"' compt l!ld on the NorcErT,.,D OllO~R Tb COMPLY .. •boll• l<'lllltd Suptror Court •ll 1111 n 1ccet111nc:t wllll lfl.t ptOYIOllt ot •• 1020 l ucid A\ltfli.11 ,O.n11\em c;11 C'ombif\llCI w 111 Del v plot Newport BV Mlcl'la• J Pt 1 1 Ills • ol 1111 lo low ne tch11111ft QI work pUrsuinl 10 lecflO!I SOI c 01 Dl llQl!'OU• ltllAL l"ROt'llttV AT rlollt t 1111 1111""1 Ind Hllll o4 !hi Stet 11111 1710 lo 1n lnd111 vi of lht 1111'11 I Bticl'I C• Ol'll 1 Stptitmlltr 7 l • l Pyb tl'l.0 0rlflgt1'.COlt OI Jv p 01 I ems 1!11t Id >'Ills Co<lt II)!' p10!>if1Y 1 lffl "ltlVATI SAL!: <IK«ltnl • I"' t "" of lllr d .. 111 fnd 1,111 L1b0r COIN of 1111 Stilt of Ce llorn 1 lh& T~1 tlll 1 1ub!1H:I to tu en l••H 19]3 2 ., IJ Sf!oll lmbt 1 1, 2 I 271}<)3 ITEM ' Newwt BCMJllV•rll ownlld bY GUI Btach NI Sii" .... llMI rlol'lt 'I• 11111 nl1r111 tl'll "'''' llet, ( tv CouflCI ol lt>e CflV ol Foun11 II co....,.1nt1 cond lion• r • I' 1 c 11 0 ". Music and News of Orange County At The 108 Apex STEREO Of The FM Dial LUMP SUM NOTICE 5 PUATHEft: G VEN !lull ii Su"""" C•tT et fflt Slll9 el bll OPll'll dn of lew Ill' otl'ltl'w19'1 ac~l•IG V• l'f 1'111 bY 1tolut on asetr1& ntd '"' rtaerv1tlon1 rlgl'll gl'I t 01 w•¥ 31GNALllAT ON OF "'d I mt i nd p ICI 111'1' 11111 • Pl IO<'lt c·.,,11r:1111 for ""'.. :::;,~'}"':, %e'i ~~11.!j~.:011:~~ ::: ;::: Of'IVt llflO llou ly • I Of woo•• to etch elUll'llllh of rtc:Otd end •nc:11mb ln<lt cl BROOKHURST StREET ANO 11!1 ts !Id m1v IPflel and bt Ilea II bV (Ollll Lot Alttl f t~ llMt «irl•ln t"i:ll Pr'9MrT'I lottltd In crtlt or l'/'Plt of 11rWkm~n or mttl'llnl' fl(Ofd Tiii pu cllate l o a1111me 11\'f SLATElt AVlittUE l~t C 'i Cound ol tht C ty of Cotta Me11 In 1111 Mtill1r Ill t1'1e Est1t1 llr.11 Gu1r-!Ill City OI Senft Ana County of ort"91 llledtcl to l!CfCUll the cont 1ct WI\ ell w I 111'\d 1 encumb anc:ts of rl'COl'CI n I CCO!'dill(I w lh Ille 0 ~h10fll ot on Ille l'°L~~'lr' ,on~H.:,:;!v d a nth p of THl!lll!SA MOOP NGARNllt ,,.,, Of <• !lorn •1 dttctlblll ., follow. tit IWlrdld to I'll tUCClfl u b <Ide Tilt f»'Optr!y II lo bf to <I on •n •• I Seel on• 1170 to ln7 n I lh c "' c ... k ot II• A M nor LOI :is OI Trac NO. 31, II Ille c ly ol p .. y. lln11 W•9t In , •• ,, .. Clf °"' 1101 pro ~·*· e 111 VI 0 1 C ,, " C••to M-• Nollce It ll•r•llY o Ytn 11111 '"-Un-Sa11t1 An1 11 Ptr Ml?, Tl!t•tof r!corclld \llded for "" rttoLut °"' 1111 no! tit 1ei1 B 111 •1111 "' lf1. 1 1 "' 00 1-,. , -L1bOrCodto1 lheSaeo!C•llonl1 t~e ... .... 0 •-•• 0 1 -• ' ~. v• "'" ·~--C IY Cl)Unc o! Ille City of Fovnl• 11 Publ 91111<1 Or•na• COllf c 1 ly p rot dHt!onl<I will 11 •I p1 vale u I on • M ....... I PIOI b v• '~' •ntOUt thin tr.. Mllbl 1111<1 Ftdtr•I Minimum trlY 11'\d mYtl bt In wrl no 1~ ~I I lie Vil •Y h•• 11~ iso 11 on ••ctr 1 ne-d th• S&i> emtitr 1 1'13 21Jl 13 1t1ar h• lith <lav of llPl•mlllr t73 11 le'a}~VlllT'g 1• ~on:if~1 °"~rlc W•o• f'K1l111d 11 t~ oltLt• ot Bff1 z II 1v•I no 110\I 'I ,. e of U/11111 lor llCl'I lht otl ti of GLASS ALLEN~· M01Elt 1ton1, •1••mtntt f'HltV•llon• rltlll• Thi City of Fountlll\ '111 tl' htrtllv Tlo•rm•n •ttomiY tw 1111 l•klllot ,, at or of m n m II I PUBLIC OTICE n :n WMI O•NI'"• loull\l1rq O.r0111• •nd, 1111 t (II wiy OI tl'CWll 11 iny not 1(11 IL blfdt" 11111 II wlll el 1900 Av1t11ue ot tl'lt Sl1rt S11tt1 1..0 c... ~.., 10 ~i:ttu 1 ~ ~o~tri:: w11fc'l'I •; j' N CA to2'1 Cou111y et Lo. AllO'lln St1te of Bid or ,,,,.,, lrt nv ltd for tllt proPo f '111111Y•IY lnw11 111•1 111 •nv col'llr1c1 Angtle• Col lorn 1 or m1v bl lllld with btl •w• ded 10 1111 J\ICCeitllll b 1111.. C1 torn 1 10 .,,, II 011111 1r>d btJI bllld• 1r1y 1ncr ,111,., bl 111 ,..., , no ,,.., tnltrtd Into our•u1111 to Ill!• •II 1111 Cltrk of .. d 1u0ttlor COllrt or Prl\ll I w I fl SU' ltt 111111 JUbjtc:t IO ~I rm1t on b'I' Uld dlll11trtoe1 lo .... Sllldtl Actml11!1tr1tor v«tltl!Mnt tT!lf\Ol'llV llln nirtt fl'lferp lwt dll ""'llCI to llrl t Tf01fmlt1 Pl"°""'lly v !ltd .:: b¥·~!toiir1'!·'~11!~' ~ ': p:d NOTIC• TO C•IDITOltl $uptrlor Court tU '"' , '"'' 11111 •nd .,. TITLE Prl$¥Jll."Ce Afrr!D TltUS1 COM wlll "' •llordlCI 11111 OOPOf'IUfll!Y 10 IUllfn l •I 1nv llm• •lier 11,11 oub ClllOl'I of tllla !I'll n H IUJ'lltlOlt COUltT DI' TH• ter"I ol u ld Minor In 1111110 •II tlll ctr-:1-N'I'. 11 rinl b.perli'nll'll IOQ North Oldt In re1pon11to11111 lnllll1t on lllcl wlll llOll~ Ind blforl m1l!ng Ml <I 1111 :l'l•n 11'\0tl f'"tC:lnl w8ge <I• irm nit on STA.Tl 0, CALl,O•NIA II n 111 prOPf ty 11!111!1 n 11'11 City OI •ln SlrMI S1nl1 Alli C:I fcWnlt fVDl 11C11 tit lllM: lmlnlltod 10111111 !In tilt Thi proptrtY Wiii bl IOkl on 1111 fl)ltow- bor :::-8's'ri' C°f"':n11,;:•L•~ub ~l'led POii THI COU/r4TY 0' Oll:ANOI Cyprttt County ol Or11191 51111 et 1 111'1' llmt 111.ir !hi tint pllbllc1ltot1 OI grounclt ot rl""-collll' or n1110fl•I orloll'l ll'ICI ttrmt 11\d eoncilltOl'lt ctlll or v 1• h IPl'11m 111 1 1 111 •n 11 N1 A T7UI c1111otn11 Jt,11r!lcul1i'ty dlll(rlbld •• It!• Notice '"° Delor1 11'11 m1irlno 11'1 1h1 111 c-ld111t °" lor en 1w1 d 1st~mo11or1 of 111<1111 ld111t1 OI' Pl 1 clff! ';: lb v~ f.:S1,1 Mn mu'r:il Wig!n IM E1f1le ot EL NOR P STOWE DK111 IOllOWI to-Wit ".J:i.mi Ind cen<llllOl'll Of •• 1 C•sl'I No 1)/d wl I bl cont d'lrtd un ttt It It Ind osrl c...011 1111 ltrmt of lloltll crldlt No b 0 ., 1 " cont dtrtll u~ ni 1 , ed L,of M ol Tr1ct AOOo1 In tllt C 'V OI tiwlul money of 11141 Un led St•••• OI mtdl on tlll Olllc al b lflk f0trn Iv n 1111d to De 1cc1pltbl1 10 lhl Unfit 1 oned tnd to m1d1 on lh'-ol''. blink IOl'Jn IU n lh.0 NOTICE IS H!llEBV G1V6N to lhfl CYDI' ... COUlllY ol Orlflgl •• per m1p AM• ICIJ T•" Pttt4'tl! (1~) Of 1111 by I'll• City ~nd II midi In lttonl•l'IC• 1111 SVjllt!or Coutt ''"' pertlnl (ft,) of 11 1 c 1 '" crtd IOtt 01 tilt lllOYI fllmtCI Otc:«ltt1I re<or<llMWn look 1.io PtOU 20 to 12 In. i mtimf ofttred In Ceil'lltr 1 or C•rlll!ld wllh 1111 111'0111lont of 11 • Nollet •rid 1111 lfll 1m0111ll blcl lo •ccomp1nv l'lf Offtf ..Ji 11hi11. ,;'oYhi'i:nt' Ol,.,~11~: Nr;,. ~~'!.:!i'~f! 11111 • I Pl IO<'ll 1!1111n11 cl•lms •o•lntl tilt clutlv• -o1 d'l111(tll1np1 mlPI tl<Ofdl <hK~ Pl~b. lo TITLE IN!UltANCE "'*"I ffCIUI lll'\ltlll •ncl COl'ld lion• Ml lfld 11'11 be!•~ to lie palc;I oq ~ p I rid NII dltfdl~I • I r1<1ulrl'd !1 I le ll'llm of Or1na1 (f)uflty ANO TR ST COMPANY l'lllltl I( l0<flf'I Urldlf 5KI on 2 of IM SptClllc1flon1. f •m~t!on Of ti I by l~ or Court OOOtl rtqll rtmtnlt 8 <ond ont tel w Ill Ille ntc•••1ry "ovtlltts In 1111 ott c1 Sfrfft Add IQ lDltt Aqutdutt Ori.,.. tom111ny t written bid OI oftlf' Ind t!W E1cll bklclll' m'11I bt llC1nfld 111 IC T1x11 11111 eo• 1 no ~. m1lnt1n1nt:1 ~ort~ u~:; SK'llO~ 2 : 1~1 Sllltll 'i' Ol'I$ ot !hf c 1 k of tl'lt •bovl enl Hid court or CYprt11 C1!1torfll11 t11l111c• m1,11t bl Pl d UP9fl con!l•Jnlflbn cord1nt1 '11'1111 •PP c1b t $1111 llwt. llll>ll'I"' 11111 prtm um1 ori ln•lll'•M• I(: I C ,, fT\U Cl'llMCI II IC Ill prosenl fllltrl ""'' " ,.,. ntOtll•rv T"""'' of 1111 c:ltl'I 111 llWllll moMV Of ot ••• bV •• II S110ll'IOI' Court 1111 .. • A I r,ropottl• .... 1 bl I'll. r ... 0 <tPl•bl• to '"' pU Clllll<" th• be J'l'I< tordlMCI Wlltl •DOI t•bl• ''~'· IWI voucl'ler1 llf !I'll 11nd•r• Ontll It THE LAW '"' Unlllll Sl•I•• Oii COllllNnttlon ot Ml I r.n Dt 111•111 UllOll ,... utu•I "crow $ 01111 lll]fll'I OI ~l1rMCll'11 ., luth<trd r1!111 •• of .,,, Cl.Ill ol cont m•t on OI p Pt i nt I ISDl(llllCllboO~O .. ·n:i o, !t! ! (I 1 I OFFICE OF K NOEL & ... NDEltSOH 1020 (If l)lfl C'ISl'I l lld bel111C• ..,kllntld bY 1.Y,':: pn;1p1rty fltreln dttcrlbl<I 1 com $trMt •r>d Sllltf AvtnUI Proftc:I 7SS WI• E11mt111HOll of 1111 rtcorlllntl OI roo ... lll'm• 0 us or nu ca" HOA TH e•OAOWAV SANTA AHA not• MC\ll'lcl "' Morlll•I• Of Tru11 o.td monly reltl'rld to •• , .,,.. $pt(!! c:1tlon1 Ind ... f 11 (. •I (Ol'l\ofl'lllCI r1111r.r lllM •rill •llY !lit• r llbtl ~l~I~ 111 1111 ollla of lilt CllY (ALll" WI\ Cit 1, Ille PllCI' el Minni of Olt tl!I Pl'OPll'tv 10 told 1111 ~tnl ot S\7 Llll'#Olld $1nl1 Alla (llllOrflll ''tJICIM:I ftnn1 lo tll UWCI tor bllldlfl9 Cltll MIUrll'l(I pol C'I' llwlll bf •1 1 ... ll(befttt ol 1'19 flfff " • lhl undtf11onld In • tnlll.,.. lltfllllllllll 1m0Uflf "II 11) " lflPOIJl'ld wnh bid ll'°' 1:11 Obt•lneid OfllV II '"" oft•c• Of I'll Cllf '"" OUtCl'ltl•f or j)U Chlllf"I. M C:'i of st1 Cl P 1n• 111<1 S!,IC llclllon1 It 10 1111 n11 1 111 11r, <ltctclePlt 'll!'ftll 11 flll!r e td1 • offltl to be ht wrlttno 1r.d wUI 111 ulllltr•lonld '"""°' 1111 rlollt to tnolf!Mr City H• t TM \lf'llllr1l11f\ld r•r.m• the rlotlt to "'111(1 ,. 1• ... If lllt ... Cklll' rlOulll• 11\0llll\I .n .. , .... 111'11 111181tc1tlllfl or tf111 ,,. ~·'"" .. nt• 1tor1ukl Oftle. II '"" l'l''Kf l rt'I' lfld t!f blctt. Coit ot MIO p • .,. Ind IPtC !lcltfOlll II tlltcf 1nv •lid 111 bl I PflOI" IO tnlrv of th11 thl Pltni •rid SPKlllc11Ja111 be .. nt "lltce. 11m1 1ri.r 1111 firs! oullflc11lon llertof 111d OAT&O~ Auou1t 3Ji 1m $2,00, lllduelln, 111 11 lfll tllldl<" r111u11'1 1n «0•' corillrll'l!llO 1111 wl1 In' mi 1111 mt I fig llld llll>d 1111 Clllflrtt D•tld All(I 21 1t7ll beotOl't dltl of 111e t-.JtET ·,~ .. A~V AND 11111 llW Pl1n• •nd StMH:lllClllOllt bl 1.,,I DA TEO AllQutl 21 11'1 •II• bt If\ ldcl I Ollll ll co Hllll'ltf lhl JOSE'•tt NI • PEll:ll!VE 011.0 """' :rt lttt llv Rici!• d r"w1nrr11" D'I fl'\I I .. m•lllllO onl! 1111111 l!jj (~J\'111 FltEOEft:I(: • TAHKl!.L ~Oii al llll ,. 1111 Ind $1,1tell Cll Olll nor l;11te11tl11 If tttt W 11 of lllt HOS I A l tt00•1NGAJl,Nl ll J. Tru1t oorcll' 111111 bl lfl lddll!on1I 11 OI), NlltM the Eo:tc11I01" ol lh4o Wiii 01 1111 COl1 of ,.,. nn0 Ind ll.lfldlll'IO w I bl lbOVI 111mfd dKtdl/11 Gutrdftn of !ht •• ,.,, !.. l"'l!onl '4ot4100 COll'I of "" ..... ," '"" SP«tttc•llOlll "l\OI' Ill• •twit n•ll'lllCI dtc*lnt •llinded ICU•••a. • AHOllJOlll OI .. 111 NL1n.or iLAUOI I . YOVJt• thl coil ot m1IU~11 •nd NIWll 11• w b<t llltT l Tla ••MAN EVELYN H ClllPPO lttt"""" ,,...._,, GU.SS ALllJt & MCKll lleniP!. tw1 :rclll ,.,undid 1* Avtl!VI et 1111 If•,. lllft• IMI 01pulv (IV (i.tk Senti Afll <•Ill IY (NA.Lit outs J• 11~·;.u•!fa,.. Sffwll iVILVf'I H. OltP•O l ..... ,...1., Ctllhll'llll ... , ol , .... City of T•I '"'' IJI 1m "'™""' "'' Ou•NI•~ 11111 .f.1111 C•llfWl'll• "'" 0.,UIY '"" Cltrll ot '"' Ctly of TtttpM!Mt Ult) JU.Int Foun .. " ........ Ctlllofll I Atlorlllft ,., '""'". 11n-oc PlttM Mt..ni ,..,,,,. n V•lll'f C1tll!Or~ I AlllrtltY "" Plllll- 01ltd' """' , 1,1'3 P111>f "'" O!'•flgt COlltt 01 ty Pt OI Publltl'llO Or•ntt COlll Oally , IOI l'Ubllt!IM Or-lf\OI: 1:111'1 D•llY Piiat •ub l•llld Otlflgl Cotat 0•1 v Piiot PUbll•lllCI Or1no1 COii! Diiiy '"" PvD •l'll<I Dl'•flg• Co.ti Dilly PHotj Auo. J I Ind "'' ' ,. ~1 !tr.I 7711 13 S1C11tmbtr 6 1 13 1m ,, ... ,, St11i.m11tr ' • 1.C. ltJl mt 11 Saciltmblr 7 ltn 27SSo13 Augu11 JI Ind $1Ptem1Mf 1 1 1•n :UlM l.!"---------------------------1·s11111mbtr 1 lfl\ ~1931 .-" IA :~p~l-•._F_ur:.:":.:· ___ .,:360:= Aph. Furn. 360 Apt. Un/urn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 36S A.pr. Unfurn. 445 Found {frH 1d1) ~ 365 Room1 GEH.~IA."l Shc11he rd, tt.ppro:ic ROO\I fQr rent. !\latw~ 16CXl Mt ft l~DUST. !I ho 11 10 1no~ .• black & tan, nialc. ~orking-nion. No clrinklna. Sm AJllO 300 !IQ II (1Uicc llaJi ol 1"un1e Tnc1 / F'alr- 400 Business Rental' Le9una 8iaeh OCEAN front , 1 BR , ~llUI fun1. E11:eel tor J <>eel\n lvvera. l..ge patio overlook- ing the sul'f. Aval! OOIY 10 P.tid June. 499-31,11 or 624--0481. Newport Beech Costa Mesa •I UH, 2 Ba. Color i.v. stereo, DELUXE frplc, klni,.: & i1ueen bcd5, APARTMENTS \\'tl.'lhl'l'/clry('r. Award win-. , ning Hv 1m on the OC"enn Air Cond -Frplr. 8 • 3 ~\vim. $450. \\linter or $650 Yrlf mlna Poolt • Health Spn • b"75-I.W.t. · Tennis Courts • Gym and --Billiard Roon1 San Clement• \ BR. FrOn1 $150 ~ Pll1'~Ai\l RENTAl. * Huntington 8-1ch VILLA YORBA APTS. 16000 VlllU Yo1·h~1 J-luntington Bea<:b (O ff San Diego Fl'\\'Y., $4). Oil Beach Bl\1d., 1 hlk. bc-yond f>:dinger to Stark. E. to l\1alaga, !urn rl~hLl 1 Newport Beech PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay C un 1/ e n I Cl\ t location. $~:>. C.Af. 646--2130. vit..aw liaker, 01. ~-Si1U Sl&-OJlO lndustrl•I Rental 450 (Found Thur»ttft.Y l'.~L Aug. ltOO~ts $20 "'k up v.·/klt SltJ [,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[~30th~~>~--.;::::;:::--,,::--:::= v.•k up apts. C\Hdren &: p:t ~1ALE Uusky has coll.tit. t;ection, 2376 Nl'\\'PQrt ll\\•d., NOW LEASING \lllh nar110 & A.dd1·cs11 O\\'n<!r CM. S.l&--975.5, 6-1~967. Huntington Beach 1nus1 1ioitltively I I.I (' 111 l f y BALBOA Isl. f\tcn over 21, NEW M-1 SllMC to clalnl. Vic Santu 11uieL Shr !>nth.If & TV rn1 , 9·l0 Sq, }'~l. & UP Ana A.,.e., C.f.1 . ~IS-03-IT. lost 555 RE\\',\llD lor blnnd rnlm v.'f\\ ht, Joni( hllll~d 12 yr ohl fern cat. i\ruiwttl to f1ulfy. Slrft)'«"ri from f>'orn1o!Ul Dr .. O"N& Point. Sun Sept . 2nd. Call 496-()784. ------ ln1trucUon I~ BEAUT. 2 DR Condo, n«!fln side, 11wlm llOOI, l.l!nnla. $375. n10. Avn l Si·pt. J7Lh, 499--3266 or 4!l:;,...i21a. EFFIC. & Dt'.luxl'.' fl ll!IS, $170. to $300. mo. !ltd JJOOI, Jn<try, maJll Sl!I"\'. VtJht(;(e Inn, G96 S. Coast H\\')', 4!!1-!J.136. j ~ !ilk bc.:h. sunderk ~'it blk ul<>nl 11chl, 2 llR, nrw Med. forn lhru, tlshwahr. No pels. Never ll \•e<I In. Sho\\'J1 Sat only. 236 B Del Poniente. 1 BR & Or;n l"ron1 SIOO 2 BR tron1 $210 2 RR. 'i'l"•llhSCli 1''ro1n $250 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 714/841·9622 Boerdwalk P arkplace Lux Adlt BHch Apts. Luxury 8parlment living overlooking the 1vntcr. C:n· j(ly $750,000 hcallh spa, 1 invlm1nlng pools, 7 lia:htell tcunls courl5, plu!I miles of bicycle trails, pulling, shuf· lloOOa1'd, croquet. Jw1lor l '• ft-on1 $1.9-1.50 nlonthty; also 1 and 2-bedroom p\11.lls and 2-story town houses. EIPC· U'\c kitchens, private patiol or balconies. cnrpeling, dra· peries. Suhttrranean parll:-. ing 1vlth C'.levators. Optional mnld service. Just :iorth ol Fashion Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. Telephone (TI4) 644-19(1(1 for renl&l information \Vinler $20. wk, 1tli0 apls. llan1llton &: Newlu111 I SHi\CGV blu.~·k 01 a It' 67$-3613. 646-0697 or 833-0519 pooc.llC'/Terricr 111111.. 6 I LADY to shnl"I.' nice Con-""'"'""""""""""'""""'"~I rnuntlu, found ~lt1.rbor & Schoo s & 1, 2 & 3 BR, tlishv.'8.Sh crs, llrevlaccs, b'Old shag, tile showen1, private balcony or patio. E nclol'K"d garages. F'ron1 $175, 205 13th StN'et. HARBOUR VILLAGE. Hun· tlngton J-larbour area, only Z7 2 & :l Br. on 2 acres. Adult & Fam sections. Brand nu. 1'~rom $180. 4j(jl Hell St. 846-3166 or S.16-5076. $140 -~~ r.11. N. o! 11.ntg Bch. 2 Br, bllns, cpts. rtrps, pool, play yard, carport .~ lndry facll. Cple & 1 sn1 child ok. 842-4664 aft 5:30 prn. t101ninlun1, htd po o I , 4001 Bl RCH. NB Centttr, Qnita. ti-I es a, instructions Laguna, Call alt 6, 499-1939. 5-ls...';9&4 alter G pnl. 575 LARGE deluxe 2 BR, duplex 2400 llarbor Blvd., C.hl. 2000,20'.Kl,:'\600SQ.h.orco1n-~ . f J· I . Isl JJ.\Y: TuC'.11. Sept. 11th, l''URN. room. Pri. home. ho. lherrof. Avull. 10/1/TJ, FND. Blk ml puod c '"' pui -s.:10 11.111 .. lhe thlltlren·~ E n1ployed gent or student. Mr. Baumgru'dcet· 54-1-50.12. pl~ col!11.r & flea collnr Ion~ ,·/as~ 11ss!gnn1ent!I 11'ill IX' Nr. OCC & shpng. 979-3924. ~·..m ,..,. ,. ' !rut Vic. Hell & Cotbftfd "111·\(\(· knrr-.1.'1'1 to yuu 'it tl1a1 OCEANt'RONT, new 2 11 ITI4) 561-8020 · Bdrm., 2 Bn, °"\\'ood glass all bllins. $300 f.lo \v lnte~' 494--0615. . . Iota y fum. Pool & ocean ~ OPl."'N EVERYDAY vie\\'. \Vshr & dryer enclos-Jlours: Fri-Tues l0-6 ~ '7>f· fl. ••l-1, \.\'/fror1t ot-H.B. .,_ . ' . · , ·' fice. l..Jl{ rear door. SHiO mo. 847_1,..2.> tinH'. 1 here 11 Ill be signs 646-5033 Jay!I Eves 6-MH)681 ;i nnit hclp<•rs dlrt!cllng you to 1791 WhltliPr CM • ' BLUEPOINT Si11.n1eS(' 11•i•h ~pt~1·i lir points for specific cd gar, $190. ~lust see, 204 \Ved. &: Tiiun. 107 Del 1.ado Rd .• 496--0050. --cc°"'.,:::,..:c=,:::..:.~e:.:._ Lido Isle Guest Hom• 415 St\1L. 1 BR l11yvle11·, \\·ln1er $175. EXCLUSIVE rental, 2BR PR1i:i':'i:~;AENAlNPGTS condo Comp! furn. pool &: PRIV. &. Semi. Ava near park, Library & Shpgn TLC .~ Balance diets. 54()-ZJ62. ' · , flea collar & pink rhir~Rto110o• info. 1'hc child l)nly has to P.1·1 Corner, l 2 7 x 9 0 . collar, found Huntin1tton & kno\\ l1l.'L na1nc and the ":/bultdl~g .. 991 \V. 19th St. Pacific Cst H11·y, Jl.B. 8/31. )otf'lUl~· 111· l'f entering. The C.M. $225. 6:i2-3490. 493---029-1. helper!> \\'ill tlntl his nan1e \\'lk lo hfoach. 8.13-1683 all 6. 1838 P lacenlla A\te, Qi 6i:r2:>92 Eves. sun • •I AU. UTILITIES PAID ~ ~ ('\\' i1e~l to_~h, 1 Br, Family Unitl'I -Children ul.11 pald. SIOCJ, 1539 Buena \\'elcome. La.rge 2 BR, 1 Vista, S.C. BA. Refrlg, dshwhrs, btlns, NE\\'PORT l·lelghts - 3 Br, 2 Ba, built-Ins, carpets & drapes through-out, $280 1110. Isl & Jasl 1no. renl & $75 CleanlnK & security. No pct.~. Gas & 1\·ater paid, &16-2723 eves, 6 4 6 - 7 ~f 8 2 Days. 460 SHAGGY blaek nialt> terrier n~ R f'1~ss lisl and direcl ..;.. ____ c.:,;;..._ ....... ..c1 poodle 1nix. Vic of llul'bot' & h1111 lu his room. Vac1tion R.enta1 s 42S FABULOUS BRAND NEW OCEANFRONT 3 BR 11\!n - ll'Bhan tilr/rnri)(>l. 20· eell- ings, (X:enn 1~fh-c.1ifl#: mir- l'Ot'S. el1•1tiint ful'ni11h!n~•. Ster('() lh11111u t, d!ih\\'llhl' 11·11ShPr dryr. \\/Jnh·r or yrlY lse. C1tl] PETE BAnnE:-r r _Ht"nl!y, 642-521"(), p.&!1011, \\'alk-in closets, i;:ar, l\JAUI Spceial to Dec. 15. Deluxe Studio furn. \\'atcr's ('{!ge. Kannapali $400. mo. 1veekJy, 586--5924. Center SI., C.:O.l. Call ottrr 6 RUSSI NG~ There u·lll be M pot ~S-Y.l&I. bul'l'i n~ provld(·d !or the A_·Po.':.:·_U::::.;n:;fu::r_:n:.:· ___ ::36:::5:1 (.•rpts. drps & po o L . -$226-$230/r.·tO. • Lf'RArd studentl'I lhis year. DESPERATE FNO Vic. &>~ch & State:. QlIF.STJONS: If )OU havt> General Call C.J.S, Itea l EstatC'. GREENTREE 5-18-1.168 or 8.?.J...-058.1 Nc•\1' Adult Triplex Unils NE\V ADULT LIVING!! ;i Bil. 2 BA, from $28.'J. BACl-tELOR Unlts & l Bil's CHILDREN OK Spnclous 2 Br & 3 BR. $159 & $199. Crpts, drps, closed ga- r age. Near Beach & Slater. Pool. Pet ok. 8-12-:\546, THE NEW Rent1ls to Share <430 5 RELIABLE RESPON-Blond & A~rico!, lnng hair any questions ab o u t SIBLE, \\i'OR KfNG ADULTS puppy, fle,t coll:J.r, 111&.le. an,1·!luni.: pe11ainin~ t o need 4 or 5 Br llon1e By 962-1331. 1A'B,1.1YI School plea!lt!' feel WORKING girl needs female !1·15. \Vill take extreniely fND • Srn1dl male niL~ed fn.•f' lo call 002-1391 at roommate in 20's for huge, good rai·e of honic. \\'ilJing breed, b1"0\1'n. 1vhite .t: flll.vl i1nc bct\\·een 8 a.m. & ·1 2 BR, 2 BA, from s215 w/l.ofi 1. Frplc'1, beain ~1pl , pa tios, enc1osc<l gar. cell., patio & pool. b!Uns, &: 416 Hurnl!ton, Costa Mesa relrlg avall. $100 to $225. NE\V 2 BR, v.·1tter pd. Crpt/drps, slove, garb d.lsp. Pvt pat, gar, \\'ashr/dryr hookup, I <·hilrt. no pets. \Vkdays aft 6, 962-7295. iSAY\VOOD APARTl\fEN'TS in Nl'\Vporl Beaeh are ready. The sales office Is open daily from 10 AM to 6: 30 Pt\1. MacA11hur Blvd. & San Joac1u in l·lll!s Roatl. beau!. 2 bdrm. apt.,. in Costa to ~'Q to $300. black. Vic, 1'usli11, 20th p.111., ;1sk for Bob Landi Mesa, furnished except tor 847-4T12 C.i\·L a4R-O!l98. Pri1u~ipf1\. G-16-4-tI.; UUI pd. No pets. \\ltNTEH Rc11tal11 -2 ,r,, 3 Dll. ---~~~ 393 Hamilton C.?\.t 2nd bdrm., inclurtes pool & --~------sauna. \Vtite, CJa,.sified ad GREY & 1\•hite kit t e 11 STAltTING hnnd 111 n de i\pts \\'/frplc, over lookini,: ALL NEW 645·44.ll or 642-8520 \\·/yel\o\\' Collar. Vic Me-}'1•r .h•\1·el ry rla.~ses heglnner!<. No. 913 Daily Pilot, P.O. Place & H11n1illon, 6'1!i-7X:~I. A!h·a.nt'e or \Vay Casllng. lf ~1tn. S3.JO pt.·r 1110. 3212 \V . Crp1s, drapes & paint, lovely TIRED OF NOISE? Oceanfront, NB. C a 11 lge 2 BR, 2 BA bl1n kik:h 2 Wilson Garden Apts. 2 Br, 213/79.'>-1985 or 213/:>j5-2-141 1·a r clo~ gar. Adult• l~!i Ila. crpts, drP&. Pool. fut appt. plt'O..oie. $250 mo. RI tr 11aturc adults, no pets. WALK TO BEACH &14-5555 Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. UC 1 d · 1 1 11 "1" "211 92626 u n er R' r a duates, FOUND: Brn & \\"ht yng 11nl ,,::"'c:"~"'=''.c.· "'~'=8c:.:'=~='cc·c.,,~ llratlCI ol'\v l & 2 BR, carpets, drapes & Puiltins 221 • 1Gth St. 847:.39'J7 San Clement• SH.ARE my funiished lrg 2 graduates & faculty will rtog 11·/red collar Vic Heil & r: NG : Convenational-P1i . Br, 2 Ba, Condo, Club need housing beginning mld Bushard F.V. 531-35-12. IC'~!>Ons, qualilied niethud \VJNTEJ{ Rcnlltl. Avnll Sc.>pt. 642-4353. ONLY $162.50/1.IO. NE\V 2 BR, 1,. BA. Ocean ViClv. 1225 sq, rt. + \.\'Ol'k· shop. Alt deluxe features. Walk to pier & shop'g, 314-A Del f.l ar. $250/Mo. Adults. 492-2264. Sept. It you have a room, k' C 1 · trachcr, call 6-12-706-t privilege w/mature \\'Oman house or apt. 10 n'.'nt near \VHIT~ 1tten w I a 1 c.o 3 Bit, clf'n, 2 HA, SJ15 'mo. B•lboa Island 2283 Fountain \Vay East 2 BH, 2 BA $22..1/010. AIM ~ (\\1. of Harbo,· on Wilson ) avail \'e11rly. S.>e at 5000 STEPS F1lO~f BEACl-1 Ca.II 646-2846 Neptune, NB or ph: 6'15-5265 ? BR upper: garage, frplc. DESPERATE I or 114/325-2·176. \early. Rroker 6T~700 Student 25 yrs. old needs YEARLY LEASES 'la Ibo• Penlniult bachelor or l br apt, in PRIVATE BEACH Cocta Mesa, preferably nr. Sc-\'f'l'Rl & 2 hr OCEANFRONT condo, nev.· 3 0CC Sl00-$ll5 per n10 + tlit.iler / C"abana.~. Adult! BR. 2 BA, cpts, drps & ulll. Please Call £-370J or onl)', Broker. 53046..~. 1 hl!ns, underground parking. _9G~2--_I>l8_. ______ _ O\\'Nt:RS' ol"·n s1>acious oon· 6S~5.,~0. · on yrly lea~ $130-Large 1 BR do. Luxurious!)' furn. Alt ~"" cunvenlenc.1.'s. Only qualified 011\Rl\fll\'.G duplex, -2 Br, ~=·:.pcs, stove, ref.rig. & l'tliponslblE" adullli ron-Nc\\·ly dee., adults only, C II Bk · 675 SBOO .!ildel\'d, S.·riO per Ol o. close to ocean/bay/shops., G '• • ~1974. 6~8720 or 985-5.§22. 1 _ 2 BR, 1 BA s ingle story PENTI·IOUSE 1 Br. $185. garden unit shag crp!Js First & last, utilities p:I, drps dshv.·st~ lncd patio' ~ t::. Bay. 12131 697-1496. be~l cell . 0 lrplc, gar: Corona del Mer Adull5. $185. a350 Elden 2 BR, 1 BA apt $150 mo. Adults only. No pets. Cali htv.11 9 Al\1-6 PM. 557-9833. EXTRA lrg -2 BR. 2 BA Dix poolside a pt . Nr. beach. $160. 2320 r·1oride, 5.'\6-5582. BEAUT. 1ownbou5e a1it, 2 Y.'ALK to beach, 2 Br, crpts, BR, 2 BA. deluxe con- lrplc, pvt garage. Sl.90. veniences, location. $210. Avail 9/26. 846-5617. 1-492-1313. ~~~~-----2 BEDR001\f, 1 bath, NR. Beach, 1100 sq ft, 2 BR, builtins. $145 per rnonth. 1 11,2 BA, 4 plex.-Adults, $185. VUlage Ilea! Estate 962-44U Lca9C'. avail 13111, 492.-3i!:l9. La9une Beach Apt• .• -Furn. or Unfurn. 370 40 or over S175 mo. Prefer lhe canipus please rontact J\1.arkings on head and _tail. phone before 11 A f\f Kathy at UCI Jlousing Of-\11c Costa ?<.1esa, 5'18-46W. 499-1477. flee, 833-6811. Free Lisllng FOUND St. Bernard mix FEJ\IALE roomma1e, 24 to 30 Service. doi;f. Vic of 23rd & Newport yrs .. non-smoker, to share 4 DESPERATE 1 l3lvd. Costa f\1esa. Call BR. 2 ba. N'pt. beach!ront 6-12-'ra>6 12 girls Se Student 2.) yrs. old needs -"""'-'::::.· -.------\\' · pt. to June. bachelor or 1 BR apt in St\l. puppy m La Veta area $108 Call aft. 5 PM. Costa ?<.leso, preferably nr. ~! ~a Niguel. ?<.lust 6'11Hi710. occ. $100-SU:>, per mo + 1dent1fy. 831--0969. FEJ\1ALE \Viii rent room in util. Please Call ~71l> or YNG, Siamese cat fod 16th beautiful CcL.\1, 3 Br, 2 Ba. 962-4268. s t, Newport Beach. Ask for \\·asher/dryer avail, ulil LACUNr\ Beach _ 2 Br. 2 ,\nne • 538-61).W, 637-6580, incld. Phone in rm, kitchen $ ~ ""'"' .,=~11 Ba. Oceanfront pref'd. Up FOUND blond male X near priv. 95· .,,......,,:;,,.,, to $300 mo. Pern1. r.tiddlc So Euclid, A 11 ah c i n1 GUY to share 2 Br apt. at age couple. Send info, ci-11~. PERFECT Bachelor pad. B I"--1 1 d beach , ocean vic\v, pool, NB Classified ad no. 935 c/o ='-"=~~-~~= Frplc, 2 biles beach $165. • ,.,..,. I en s135 share util. ~9084 aft Daily Pilot. P.O. Brix, 1560 FND snll Grny & \Vhlte Utlls pd. Man pret'rd. 2 R . .., 5:30. Costa Mesa, Cal1'f. 9"""'". ~?~785.p ood l e . n1ale 49-1-81TI. B , 1v111ter ., .. 55. Yeal'ly = ~......., REr>.'T unfurn. tl\"O bdrn1. $215. Beyfront, view. GOCCAL to $98share condo. pool: ru;· \VORKINC ino1hcr, 15 year FND Afghan apt. $275. mo. Refe rences =---*'-"61"""'10-:65°'3'-'*---· mo. Utils. inc · old daughter , Harlx>r lllgh Vic N B req'd. Phone Cal Orcutt, _C;.:o;;.r.:•;:,n.;;•..:do;•;;.l,.;M.;.;:•::.r___ 5-15-6477 or S48--0912. District, elderly spay e ti &12-TJ23' 1 BR Cabenn trailer, fully LARGE 2 BR quiet, garden -IM--072-1 . 4 BR, 2 Ba, at beach, color house cat, need 2 BR, small . k fu m. Winier . til-June Jj th, N ho 1 Prl !-"-'--=-"--------1 BR GUEST APT. TV stereo, very lrg, $90 ea. yard for petunias approx 2 OR 3 J.·lo. old kitten, Dr $90 nio. 213; 96 2 -2 4 66 ~ ..... ;-i:~1dry~· p!u!p &ng.ga~: lAauna N}guel $110. 6'1'5-7691 673-181.8. $125. Oct. 1st. ~8 eves. gray-fem-vie Oak St., C.1\1 , 537-3125. * LOVEL\' npl. beni::hf1-ont, Beacon Bay, Rl"duccd. 3 BR, 2 IlA. Avnll now to June 15. Ulll pd . r.1orns. 67:l-JR.i5 for appt. v.·kdaya or 966-5-129 eves. & 'l1 f. _ : . -_ Ne\\·ly decor., carpeted. Cost• Mesa FE?<.IALE only. Yrly SUO. ~~c:12:.-67=89:.:·~~~---,,,-- "'knds. ,. ~ draped. Adults. $17,.i. nw. Ulil incl. 1 blk to beach. FND • Black Po o d I e · \\'INTER & Yearly rental~. 2 779 Seo!! PL 6\6-4388 SEA TERRACE THE EXCITING 645-3472 after 6 pm. Announcement• !{-) Pasadena ~I~ rumlf!hed 2 ht-drootn!!. 2ftth 0:-J TEi'I ACRES l\lATURE adulls enjoy ocean PALM MESA APTS. \VRITER, 35 and his son, 6, . ~I .. Nev.-port [Wach. 1ZJ::1 Apt!. lurn./unfurn. Lease brne~ bus Jines shopping APARTMENTS ?<.11NU'l'ES TO NPI'. SCH. seek similar persons to l••••••••••ICAR key, Newport Beach. 7 9 o • t 7 2 ll. 6 7 j -7 3 '.i S 1 l'~in'place I ptiv. patlcn. 1IOO ~ n 2 BR 2 BA ii FURN. OR UNFURN. house hum. 83.1-~. Lake area. 642-oo:H. l11ttkenclsl Pools Tennis Contnl'I Bktst Triplex.· g~r. frpl~. d/w in Callfln 'I HWtlt Unbelievably la:e:e apts, FEi\l grad Psychology sru. Announcements 500 FE!\1ALE bro\.\n dog Vic. 40' UVTNG rn1, beachiront. 3 000 St>a Lant>, CdM 644-2611 $230 mo. No pets. 642-5804. ceast tlWI huge pool, Jacui::i clect bit-dent \\•iU share 3 BR house, Standard & McFadden, S.A. lf'K eoru.t, 2 ba, resp. (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) 1 & 2 BR, 2 BA, $135 i: JIGS. '·--Npt's ideal ocun ins, MAdaulg .~rpts, drps. sauna pool, SJC. 493-8795. Don't a_ , ~96"02-C-"Zl'-'02".---,~,---,-,,-stud~·nls ok, 9 1no lease. $-IOO Crpt!I drp!I bltn range &: -.-etc. '""· no pets. ~ SML t aybe 6 0 tan & 100. s_lps 6, call 548-4757 or • • • • • • • • • 1 oven. 'eovettd ca..:.....rt, clo,. lot1lt. Nurbeaeh with SINGLES From $150 ;Of;;l;;i;co;;;R;;;en;:t;1;;I::;;;;;;;;""°;;. An UNR·EAD MOTHER . ·ca ' m · m C:, __ 2nd Jro.83'0 e ·....... ocean or par\ yilw!, Carpet, 1 BEDR.Ptf. From ,$16S white, long hair -.;:ow,. · · e e to shop., & beach. Children befl" ceUI~ panel living 2 BEDR~l. From $185 Enroll in Lit. 70 Vic Emerald Bay, 497-1829. Alarm System Installation * SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER * Conipletl' Ala.rrn System 'lllat Jnsto.lli. Easily Any- \\'herc. Hon1es. Business, Boats, Mobile Home!J. CU11- to1n fl18tallaLion, Protect Doors, Wlndoo·s &: Incl. Photo Electric Trap, Choi~ of Sensors, Magnetic Ultra- sonic, Smoke. J-leat, Etc. Con1parable to the Finest Systems at a Fraction of Tht>ll' Cost. C.-\'LL FOR FREE llOf\lE DEr.10NSTRATION AND ESTIMATE. 1714) 557-5161 -OR - VISIT OUR r~ACTORY AND SHOWROOJ\1 Alarmtronlcs, Inc. 3001 Rl'd Hill Ave., 5-100. ea.ta P.fesa Baby1ltting DELUXE 3 BR, 2 Ba OC't'Rl1-~EA!t BEAOI, dt>luxr 3 BR. OK. 830 Ct>nter 'St. M8-7ll00. rocrnS,P1tio/bllcony.GE Unlum Apts A;rail From $IO PRESTIGE R«1d & Discuss CAT -all white, {lea collar, fTOOl. pr, l•und. patio. .~BA. Huge ov1ner·s uni! 2 BR, 2 BA, studio+ paUo. kltchen,sellcltanoven, to $15 LESS. OFFICES \icinity' La Hermosa Aye., BABYSITrING niy home Tai.cerully furn. Sept 15'-July •n new cu11om duplex. beam AU new crpls, drps, paint. dishwasher, Rec. Bid&-. pool, You're right, they're under-Fountain Valley, Beauti· Great Ideas Jn Literature Laguna Niguel. 495-5245. fenced yard -loving care l. $425 mo. 6T:>--Otl$4. clnb, vlC'\\', patios, tplc, nr Immcd. occup. 1036 ~1lislon J1wzzi, fire~lde lounge. n edt 1561 ~t Dr tul build1.... d 556-0855 TEACllEll·\Vlnter 0\\'Tler·~. shopping, /kl pets, $425 mo. 979-8TI9. Choice 1 & 2 bedrms. 1, l \;, f'I c · esn · new .. 16, groun at ' LARGE male Se 8 1t>0 1 n t BABYSITrING. n1y home. (5 blks trom Nev.•port Blvd.) floor, 3,IXlO square feet, Goltle11'11TSI c. College Cdarkl altered found H.B. XI I BDR. lt1odern bltn~. patlo. 673-0960 2 BR $15.). Single slory. 2baths.from$205to$32S 546-S.~ wlll divide into smaller Huntington Beach area 9/1. 493--0294 . Ji.Int cond. l.Dvlng care. carpor1 , no pets. s..•e SaL Beam ttil Stove cpt~ per mo. Pnont493-050L PREVIEW OPENING offices. 50c per square 3 UNITS N e\\'JXlrl Beach, &G--0668'. "' ·~· .....,.,.... ~ .. ~ A\vard \Vinning 1, 2 & 3 br oot. me 11 es carpels, Tues 10-11 Thtlt-s 10-12 MacPherson Chevrolet San • ependab e, enc-11 32 \\'. BRlboa. Apt B. 1-· 1!1 • • • • • • • , a.,,•, Couple. p-1. ~.0~003', DIR£C11.w.. Nl.., .. I Rd., 1 I . I d . • o Exams ST. BERN ARD vie ~tATURE d t f \\'INTER Oupl<"x, 3 Bl{, 2 PLUSH EXEC. APT. 646-8882 ml.sovlhofCrownValley apts w/famlly rn1s. No drapes. all utilities, jan.i-l 1R~...,~-SU'~a~ti~on~tl~>~ru~Se~pt~.~H~-1~C~le~m~e~n~tc~-;'92-~ll;57~,;83;1~--0.;~-~25 cd yanl. My home. Re1!. BA upslaln;. S.'50. mo, 3 .~or Uase. NU VIEW ,\PT. 4 2 BR Dupi.,, ca rp • 11 , Pkwy., at Ptci11c Cout Hwy. 1 So 00 t ,.. 1or service. Ca,lJ MarilyD 5 Good lunches. 545-1067. BR 1 BA I IJOO b <>-case. ;ry, pe s. rron1 St U !n4) .,...,.,AA11 Lost SS , , ov."tr, mo. r, 3 ou, tam rm. All elect. drapes X-lrg cloaet!I 00\\'l'.Y • •-•Nlntur.J. just $175. OUR TO\VN 1 ..,,.•v~·~~'!!'!~-~-l':!'!!'·.,.,.C :c.;1.;.'P"="c.'-=•-----f\9&-1709, 5'96-7772. hllnll, crpl/drps. sr:i0 per decoraied. Avail ~·-s16o ....... _, .... _ Family Apts, 1250 Adams GnlEROUS \l.'lNTER Rental _ 3 BR, 2 n10. Too many extras to mo. Adult!I 548-4160. the choice community Ave. !Adams at Fair.•lewl, NEW OFFICES ..,_. If tJJ • tn • l\lAINTENANCE Carpenttt - BA. 1 blk lrom blly & n1enlion! ! Call 673-6992 Costa A1'C!I&. Phone •= "l6tl. Am.PORT C ommercla.l, Re!ldentla.1, e TROPICAL POOL e .......,..., N I . 'd full _, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;1 A .... --.....-. u,..,,... '· bea('h. A\'I Sept. 15. 2 BR, 1 Ba, gar, yrd, a~ll ~Br Studio, l~S Ba. Frpl, Mtse Verde *CASA VICTORIA * o ease req • Be1v1ce, •REWARD• _ ........ ...,., ._.. • 61;>-6().ll. 9/~ $Z30 per mo. No sp•-• 11-... s~. E/"'-!, 2 &: 3 BR, Furn & Unl. drps, cpts, music, air cond., finish Carpentry. liJht elec· t"h1ldN'11/pc!s 833-0821 or ..... .......... DJIJ ......: all util. Single oUices from Personals 530 1rical &: plunililng. Al '\U~Rm; &: 1 rozyrl Bebe.Cohn Bayt 640-0769 · on 18th. 548-1168 Dl...X 2 & 3 BR. 2 Ba, encl CarpePool>" 1drapes525, D/V\y, TV $125. mo. _;, __ _;,. ____ _:;c:,: For retum or an" in!oma-Lusthoff, 5.57-0773. • l"fl c, P sc • en- 2 · · NE1.V 2 br, 2 be., $71!i. lncld5 gar. $170 up. !rental Ofc., ant. • etc. 1ctoria PALISADES CENTER " nls, $295 mo. indds utlL BR \\'/lots of gr as•' gas & i1·ater ?i.1ature adults ~ f\'lace Ave. MG-1034. St. at Harbor, CP.1. 642-897 0 2082 S. E. Bristol tlon leading to return of a AU.. lype11 \\"Ork. 6~1748 or 642-1319. \\'t'll lndscpd. 4 unit bldg. no pets u4 E 20th St. Newport IHC'f\ Ask about P.1ove-ln Newport Beach 557_7010 AmNTION! KOld lour leaf clover pin, remod, add, alter, Nev.• frame: Lie . ~FRdONT 2 lrlBr, 2 Bo. ~~W.· n4. 49fr.33M collect il 54S-0137i~ · · D p ':'Iow 1 anre (campus-Irvine Intersection) ALL B ~~f~j~!.~~he~!s~~ter~ ~t~~. repairs . ... , .,Ill, rps, re g, v.'SJ', 2 BR ndo ~ & •n• otn * COSTA MESA * OA TERS I 1-id I k t dryer. $375. A.,.all Sept 15. DELUXE Cdi\I apt, Danish C'.ani0rtco pri ·i:tk. ~~to BACHELOR APT. ----------N ff b ii Basic Boating Course ~:~:~n ~;ili,l, ~pprox~ fue \\'OODWORK, cab I n et s, C113l 286-5570 or 646-2~. frplc. loft , .v.·shr/dryr, $300 -.. Im poo' I, _ ct'oan. •fesa Near ..... _ Oeean, Ne\\', BRAND nrw deluxe Bachelor t.-w o Jee u ding -Three 1-0 . 1 . 1 ~bed paneling, gen repairs, Duke 834 3635 kd "" ·~er " I.lit!' A t · 4-1 E I room suite availablt>, 700 sq. size o a nickel, nS<.:.l• Da Durka 64&-7598 846-9495 2 BR, yearly • $250. winter -mo. -\\ft ays. Vt>rde. 847-&573 (Kami) Full, Security, Pool. Gym, P · 111 P ex. nc · gar., It ALSO 2 000 ft alt seamanship & boat handling in scr:!pt, FLA. These are ' ' •~ t t ti 0 -$180 k f good kx: 675-1849 · ' sq. · . CUSTOM Wood rk mod .....,.,, nc . ut s. 673--1674 H.ft 2 BR, newly decor Carp, so. of l7th st. t«e. ne\\•ly .:x.una., · As o r 1 ~~~=· ~~=·---or paJ1. All utilities. jani-by deeply treasured family wo ' re · 6 Pi\I wkday1 or anytime clrps, bltru: pool. $220 Mo. dee. 3 BR 2 be. Adltt 00 Maureen, &15-tl242. Huntington Bt•Ch tor service. 2700 Harbor lit Beach Po"-er Squadron mementos & the Joss is ir-&: re~. Vin~ LenhoU, \\'knds. )'l'ly. lease. 6#-7662 Agent. pets. szz,. &ts-i-tl4 ,, .... , ' 0 64 m 2 v_a 14 , 85 R __ obert Nattress, Rltr. starts rep!Rce11.ble. PLEASE , 673--1 1 aft 6. 536-8475. "" & UP I BR 2 BR & B -~ W lk n&' ELUX'E AduH Poolside September 11th at 7 P'" PLEASE I Ip ·r h e e CARPENTRY e ~ · " 1 R g11.1-...en apt. 11 to LARGE 2 Br 2 B crpt!> OCEAN VIEW G rrl B al ie 1 you av Bachelors. Color TV , n1ald heh. Adlts. SllOO. Ca LI drps, bltns. si7o. N:· pets, j 2 B 2 Ba Dl sh a en Fr ung 01,11. N r . BUSIEST intersectlon i n at any inlonnation -642-3589 General Repair ~erv. ~IB!heN~es~~· 64fl..-0)51 or 640-1382 small ctiikl. 540-9722. Fi~place'. n~l, ti~~ahoue:~ =j:,· sa~l~~. ~e~~oi, s ~ NeWpOrt Harbor. Second ~~~r~:n:!ig~ig~l~~.!oo~ Eves. & v.·eekends, 61"':>-5211 t"WPO ·• · · • • I BR, redet."Orated, stove & 3 BR 2 BA bltns cpts dl"p!! area. $385. Ask for Kay, 8~9. s1ory in Unique Hon1es L011'hsri ; FMemal. choc. Bro1\'ll & ~.~~t~a~eE!'w\J~ OCEAN FRONT APT. 142() refrigerator, avail. 9-15. trpl' 25,.•0ra ' ' ·' &15-6242. 1 Bdrm. From Slli Building. 800 sq. ft. at A grcRt opportunity for te an1ute, wearing ,, "'' \V, Ocean l'Tont, 1 Br, 673-8079 after 5 pm. Avactl' Sewpt. 151""h.e~ nJ~. ·L c--''--"=.:::.._:.c.:h""-.::;.::;:._ $350/mo: 600 sq. ft. at all lxlating enthusiasts flea collar & rope. Vic. Arch ~--~552=--83="'---- winter $175 yearly $200 Utll LG 3 hr 2 ba bltiJ .,,,,....,....., aguna -=--•C $300/ino. Both \\'Ith v iews. Beach Hgl.s area. Laguna. Carpet Strvlct 1 i:.Ag...Jg3() • deluxe , lS, 2 BR 1 BA bltlns enclad New Custom Bayfront Gr:>-6000 Information (71 4) 968--0494. 1 "".. time family -1. .:.:::.i::~,::.;:;,;c;.:::;_ ___ , nc . .,.. · dishwasher crptlng drps ' ' ' \\•/PRIV BO{ & PIER. 3 ATTRAC Bachelor apt. $90. · R;:ani . Please c r-11 3 BR, 2 Ba on channel. Large $295 ~84 or 544.'..2251 ' garage, l diild ok, no pets. BR, 2 BA.. Frplc BBQ. Ulits pd, n-fl"ig, hot plate, FOLL SERVICE JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery yard, patio, 2 blks from '· $l55 mo. Call 846-7t29. $4115/mo. Yearly. outdoor BBQ. 494--0397. Westcllff Building SHORT Ba.Id heavy ugly 52 ::2265 days or 494-7002 Dri Shampoo free Stotch· ocean. $275. W Inter. 2 BDIUtl, new rrpl, redec· 2 BR, no pets, $100. \\1111 97J.0631 or 644-4510 Comer WestcllH Drive &: year old while mllll would · . g11.rd. SoU Retardants), 646-6282 oral(.>d. Pool. $225/mo. show Sunday 10 .Mi-4 PM. •SPACIOUS studio, l blk 1-•-e Blvd., Ne•vpo r t lik• to m-t trim "-man LOST 2 dogs nun Poodle & Degreasers & oil color . 673-3850 6S9 I 213 oo BRAND 2 BR N from m11.ln beach. $175-$185. '""'' .. -... .,.., -• 9 b I ht & 10 I t BEACON Bay . Channing 2 iiiiiiiiiiii p umer. : 534--09"'.µ.. ne1\' ' ewport "* 6:i4-8478/494--479l * Beach, l\tr. J-lo1vard bel\\.•een 40 &: 50 that is in a Schnauzer ..... ternoon /3, r g eners m nu e BR tum. apt. 10 mon1hs. 2 BR, 1% Bo, Studio, prv. Helghtsvt. $193,:. !Lgtc living! ~N,--"-'-"-'"B""-=~"'--"--645-6101. good state of decay. Phone ~c~ CrHown VLaalley Pkv.N.'Y &I ~~~~hyouforrmownehlyt'bycasrpeav1ng''· · Sm! hlld N area, P pa 10. s mo ren ewport ••ch 6 7 5 -6 7 o 6 alter 6·30 ._.,..11 wy guna IR\IO ..311.~ .. rg_c~~ccs. SZT.i mo · ~ "";-ff~0·73i J~ o~~ts. + $100. deposit. c a J I -;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::; DESK space llvailable $50 \\'cekdays. · Call TI4-493--02!}.t Rev.•ard. n1e extra trlps. \VIII clean • 1 · T1 b · · · &l&-24.14 days, &12-572'l afl s. • mo. Will provide furniture ST 1 k living rm. dining nn., It MODERN 2 BR, 2 tlA on the " or~$ $160 mo. 2 BR, 1 bl., crpts, 1700 WESTCLIFF DR 1 BR. FURN. $215. at $5 mo. Ans\\·eting service FULLY LICENSED LOh bhooac I cFat. Vlcllot Cd~I hall SJ5. Any rm. $7.SO. bay, $250 per mo. \V lnler drps, bltlna. 2451 Elden Ave. • BACll.ELOR FURN. $19;'.i. 11.vnilable. 17875 Beach Bl\'d. * SPIRITUALIST * igh sc · lea co ar, ap. couch $IO. Ola.tr SS. 15 yrs. rt'ntal. Prlv. patio. 673--4~7 TOWNHOUSE call for appt. ~'7615 2 BR, 1 &'2 BA. Bltn. appli-2 BR. UNFURN. $235. Hw1Ung1on Beach. 642-4321 Spiritual readings 10 am·lO pears to be balding btw, ea, exp. i!I what counts, not or 61J...27c.1, 213: 283--5703. 2 Br fireplace pool private ~ 2 BR.&°1'''· df1>8, bltns, 12;;•::;::;;-e:c· 1;."""':eba=:.· 7:2'"7', =;:1'"~~ik,-,-to ~:~1oo v,;:i. X~~~ 0~~~· 1617 WESTCLIF-F-NB ~r;·N~i;l~~~,!1~:i!~t~ ~S...,;;"";::#,:-:::;6'."'",..· -",..'_· .,.P..,t•,..•_"'_"_ 11 ~~t~ ~-0~0:.k mysell. 2 BR. on the OCt"an. Color putiOs, conttr\ental' break-pnv, pa -' no P e t 1 " " y "1 sfis -' LAS BRISAS APTS. 2300, l200,. 756 & 540 Sq. Ft, Clemente. 492-9136 49)-9()34 NWPT River Jetty area, TV, itereo, ~ w 11 hr' fast. Spacious grounds, near $16Sfmo. »7-5080. ocean. Ask~~~ Mike 5515 River Ave., NB Ample parking. UtiJ. Baum. PROBLEM P regnancy. Con-ye_Uow /gold Oxker/Peking DON'T lake chances with ~ar~drytr. GT~«» yr-!!hopping & l'ine beach. Fur· $140. UP. ~ Br: 3 Br, 2 Ba. JONES REALTY 673-6210 CALL 642-2566 gardner, 541-5032. tident. s Y m Pathetic mL'C, ans to "Pancho." ~~na~:rr:,t_;, ~~· J>~ Y· · nished or unlw.niBhed from Pool, Bit-ins, play yard. 1.,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,... * Corona del Mar, sn1 gn1d pl'egnancy counseling. Abor--979-0624 833-2658. 222 35th Sf. Atlr. 3 Br, dt.'Ck, $240. COrona del 'Mar, 1996 Maple Ave. 642-3813 2EBR, 2 1iRA• 737 Amigos WBay, =•••y lea,. 10 rlglit eou· • Ooor, A/C, uUI, ample * tlon &: adopUons rtf. LOST 8/~ Med. ''· long ~~~Y,,,7:,;,.re. tlolng help you. 21>1katohch.$2'l.i.n10 .. No 6"4~11 BACll"LOR t n!ltbul't attfl, upper ny .1r..1u'-L. • rkg 1145m 67"-* -.,...,,_,, .. "!!!!·!!w!!!!.!Jl!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I i:. ap • no and CanyOn view, adults no ple SXIO. New lower dplx. 2 P · 0· ;ru;iw Af>CARE 6-12-4-1.'."16 hair, \\tl\tc \V/black (Dal~) 1-IOUSE 01'~ CLEAN "'"'.;,':;;'-'orc..:•c;tuo:dcc""'""'·-~--,--;; 1 ~ children, no pets, $75. mo. pets. $230 mo. 644-0008 Br, 2 Ba + den or clin rn1. Coast tlwy. ,I';: Newport Blvd. PREGNANT? Th inking dog. Ans._ to Sun111.nlhn. Carr.: Cle•n~ 3c1~rRg~~~l~~llw~j~ny;l~k~ Co1ta Metl :A<;~~s s;·:2:44~plcx. REl~~RoDlcS-eL21DOl>r 2 AbaR !ErpAtc. ~J:. yd. l Blk lo bch. Re~~~~ic~t.B:S.51i~oo r;~n1~1KiTr~~a·E1~~ f~c~: ~~~~·,:;~r:lan Sht·p., Floor are & WI w1 4Znd St. 213--944-4890. 2 l:ill, l"'"er, gor. .. ,, on bu• Avail. alt. Sept. 15th .. u,. ' • ' 22 Dutch Mei.Int. Serv. 537-l~ v --""& dshwshr, •gar, crp k drps, LUX'tJllY Bayfront rondo. * Bayfront office ti~tc to hrs, 541-55 · hrown, hushy tall. Vicinity LRG . dclwc 2 BR. hl!ln!I, ~~!'!, n~u$:~~n~l 9-15. Eastslde CM. 645-1485 $150. mo., yrly. 67J-.0841 7th floor. Spec!. vu of l.ll\Y & share Boy L1do Bldg. Sl50 ALCOHOLICS Anonytnoos. Old Newport Ht5. a~R OOJ\1ESTIC shampoo, livrrn, fljllc, I blk beach or b11y. pc • LARGE 2 Br, bltnt, dshwhr, DELUXE 2 Br, 2 Ba. Gl\r, 1 ocean, 2 Br. 2 ba, all elect. mo. 67~1220 Phone 542-7217 or ivrlte P.O. 642--0194 642-5503 eves hull SIO.SO. other nns. $4.50 $275. mo. 6T:J-3.'i70/534-1429. 2 . Bit, l~'i BA Dix Studio, adults, no pets. $160. 701 blk to heh. ~11lture adults. w/pool. r~or renl or lease. Buslnns Rentil 445 Box 12'13, Costa f..lesa.. LOST wallet in public phone fast dry, reliable 897-Sl22. 2 BR, tl,ii BR, st~ to $175 uill pd. Shag, pool, 1978 ShalimRr. 642-6168 $280 t Util pd&>HS ·::::..=,.;:c·------Soclol Clubs S35 booth ot Colony Kitchen DiBERNAROO Md SONS I Maple. 64$-5647 mo., year se. ' ' -I I I & sand, Pct OK. Yeary 6-D-4464 before 3, 3 BR, 2 BA. bltns, shag, NEWPORT SHORES =========::.I parking \01. 9/4. Reward carpet sa. es, ln!lta lat on Tom 8.12--92U/~ L.ARGE 2 BR. 1~ BA In D1n1 .. Olnt BEAUTIFULLY decoraled 2 sundeck. gar. ~i blk bch. 700 Sq, ft, $1-75; l!'lOO sq. ft, ,l ~G;ll;;I"';:;;;· ;646-::':'"':;;;· ::;;:::::..;,,;re;:pru;:;":'·';;· :"'"":::E;•;;t.;;963-;;:;;~'.2639;;;~·1 2 BR, 2 BA. all blt-lru, ncitr 1rlplex, patio, g!lr •• $165 . ., Br town•-.. -pool• vt"w 2 S300. 127 4-Uh · St.. N.B. $400; spaces avail. Oct. tst. Learn To Squire 01nce Avail sept, 15. &e-1~. • BR, 2 bll~ trplc1 _&hag cpt1 ,..,.....,, • "' ' 675-117'?\ 6'-St n bay & bench. Av&il. Sept 15. thruout, all ele<: Dit·lns, am. car ,ar. Blutts, $ 3 5 o . ..rv · .&.1ol . &: Paci c Coast I-fwy. Our Beglnnef'I Class start., $275. 673-047:1. New 2 BR E/sfdt bflr, $200 yr•1 lelUM!:, lit, la.st 6f:r-Ol75 DELUXE Ui""•er D p I x, .. , 675-6050 () Sept. tJth OCEAN front 11pt -yrly, $325 $185. Evefl. 640-18371 675-6488 $50 dep. 34005 El Encanto, P==ENT~N".°"w~-,1,-,.-=r~.,,-n-t.~s~,.-,.....,, 3 &yfn11, hC'.h, 2 Rr. 2 Bn. _ _ Each Thurs. 7:30-10 p.m. mo. 2 br !urn. ~ 91'.:AUT. 3 BR Ap~w/fl'plc., Dana Pt. See Joe Nemeth Br. 28' boat slip avail. $325/ $330 }Tly. 221 19lh St. lnq .... IAllMIEllT a .. & Open for 3 wk11.. Trader's Paradise 213-861-.\2GI bllns, .J.n_r., kids K. Avail. Capri l..ftguna mo l ~ 1, winier. $350 yr. 18t'. (TI4) l-'233::::,.::l!lt:;;hc,,;S~t.'-,, 6:1'cc;.-023(;_:,o~· o---, Spon~uo'ri ~ Chi" 4 BR, compl rum. ~pt. 15-now. S25!i mo. 567-()«. Lqune tor key. 548-439S/&U.3SS9. OCF~~FRONT l BR. & 601 DovtT Dr., SU!tt 3 sOOJ""'1roquol11 Rd. JWI(> l!'i. $350 n10. 109 35th St. 3 BR. 2 BA, nrepl., crpls 4 2 BR & 3 BR, all 2" bllll, 2 br, l·blk-«ean; patio garage & u!ilith.'5. Af1 . 6. Nl!."WPORT BEACH \\les1m ln~er 6T5--t1124. dr}llf. dbl p r. $225, blt-ln11, balcony, o c eta n $210 ytcy; no pets; retrig Z131923-741'><1 or·n CE on Newport BJ,·d. Sfl\'c Ad . One F'nle: IA:!i;!!On OCl'.~ru...,rRONT •968-8007 * vlew,Adult1$200-$2 5 0 .1231Ai 46 St: shag; &42-333! Avoll on lease. Partiallyl"'=~=~-=-~="="?11 "P.ARL"'' ,.. \\llNTER 4~'1M/495-671T •· ~ furn. carpeted, nir/oond, * INTRADATA * 'f:• 1 ... . 2 on, duplf'.X, lrg fncd patio A'Ii'ltAC'TivE 2BR 2 BA [ I k1 A 1000 I :J Br,J bli, hple. 612.-6193. very prl. Nr 5klrts, nlce. 2 BR, 2dBA, flll~pUance•, apt, crpts, drps, fpl, 2 stat! """* ,1' ~!~'. Chousc ltt1ii1.~ QUALITY tT\&tehcs $1'1?1 YEARLY, l Bit, ndult1, Al.lulu. No pc11. 642--5392. ~ ~· ~· m 0 • carport ~mo. 644-0079 I ~-mmmmmiiimiii;;;· ;;;; a.van. Ideal for contractor. w/l1HOTO llkt n prlv1t1e hon1e betu·ten LARGE 1 BR, enclottd 7058 a 6 or wkndi. OCEANFRONT New 3 BR, 2 [I 518-2616 ''l..aracst tn CaUf." OCC!Rll & bay; 61.\-&174 g:arftg! avn.U . Huntlntton 8e•ch BA, trplc, crpts, drpt. 400 CUTE ADOBE HOUSE. um (Cl\I NOW for FREE Mm· OCEANP1tONT -Winter reno· * CaU 642.-f33$ * . YtarlY. leate~_675-1536. Rooms &q. n., adj. bu~ cornt'r, tor pie profile on l JITT>ll~c:tt.,.,. ~ 2 Br ~mtely rum. A'M'RAC. 2 BR, b'plc, patio, LRG 2 BR.. 1% BA, STUDIO, DEt.tJX 3 Br, 2 car gar, LOViLv room w/twln btd11 bus neas or office use. C:?il. m·arch. 24 hn .1 • ~· mo. 644-v · utl11. Adult:I, no pets. S\85-encl &llr, lnfnnt ok, no pell. winter rental $350. % blk $15 p!!r \vk. Pref. Emp\ya 645--20'20/642-GSOO. 714 • S..'lS.S.q~ 1 LA 658-628-1 'T'R.AOE 95 acres tree & ' QCEANf'RONT It others 2652 Ortinge, 64M212. • $157.50/mo. 8(2..0300, rrom bch, paUo, 67'.J..mG. r ..:lc::•m::::_. ::.646-:::...:87:.:06=. ----"TJIE Factorv" has 11 lrg LAD'IF..S -Sunln1cr Spec!al 1 ck-ar ht.nd l!l Antclope Val- Wlnltr/Vef'rly. 213/4 BR ElStDE 2 Br, l \i Ba. bltns, * 3 BR, 2 BA STUDIO. NEWPORT'111.ndy bench a PRIVATE room w/bulh It. •hop avail.' $18.'\tnw. In yr mctnbel'thlp $.1. Call ii.")'. value _$50,COO for \'nchl lines times dollars HA\lt'All lot ln Ntabllllhtd subdhri•loo. d~r. $10,<XXI equity !or °"'""" Clluncy home or IOC'On'IC'. 1111 Ptnch. In, Rltr. 6~ml Property JIO!Dt &U-3850 dthwhr, crpt/drp•. e.ncl J195/MO. Maturr l&mlly. .Y0\11' door, 3 bedrm, 2 bath. kitchen pri.,.J. Non ainoker. Cannery Vtlllg(? 415 30\h St. 'PARTN,ER' 836-1271 or 01· ! 49M.l88, CLi\SSfFI•:O ..... &U-!llTI gar, no pOti. Sl.80. MG--0474. Avail now. Ml-0350. Call DolUo JohMOn 645-6500 Nr. OCC. &17-8859 NS._sn-9006 ot 6'12--85:.'0. • .;;r>l:.:S-c;l:.:4:.:19;.,. ------i •••••••••••••••••••I I· • I I I'< • • • • • :· • I· • I I· l· • 1' I •· " ' j. I I I' i I • I· ' • . , i"""'·'Dlll,Y PILOT CUSTOM CollC'~tc \Vork. Remove a.rphalt dri'~"')'S. Replace v.·/co1K:t'et11 6Sc:. ft. No dcla,ys. Free est. \\'alk!I. lllabs, patios. No job too small. 638-332.5. CUSTOJ\t C<-ment \V o r k , Drives, \Valks. Patioa. Lie. No. 255915. ~It. Chlld c.,. C'H:lLD Care, reliable ').tOa.t near Sdiroder School, 89i-<sn CHILD Ca1-e In my C.h-f. home Infants to 5 yn. &15-5791 \frt.L babysit in my honie tor working mother. ~B Elden Ave., C()Sta Mesa. Contractor J,\CH'. Tau1anc, r epai r . rem•xJ, add. Lie B -t 269072. "h1y \Va,y Co, ~l-0036 ' ' -. -Hldoy, 5'p1tmbtr 7, 1971 . ' '" (h'...,ihiilt P1lntlng I. P11perh11nglng J[Il].__t _.:~··_-__,J[Il] ,__( _ ...... _, .... ,;, llill 1., -·~·-QI]! L_ ~""""i:ii ..... ~.~J[Il]~IJ~( ~ ... ~...,,~ .... ~J~[ll1~·1 , l=~ ..... = .. -=fill~J I -H1lpW•nltd/M& l'nt H•h• Wanred. M & F 71 0 Help Wo n ted, M & F 71 0 Help Wanted, M&F 71 0 tfflp W1nted, Ml F 7!0 Help Wi nted, M & .F 7IOHelp Winted, M & F 7 IO 2 O FFICt. ulR Li ATT E NTION coSrA M..., t""""wi""' DONlTt' Sl>op. 6 a.m.-2:30 GENE RAL CLE RK p , ted Circuit Board· NEE DED Coinple:" Hou~,! P11l1n111,i STUDENTS I ~'ek.'On\e 11.11 P/lin1c car· p.m. t""tmalt, u.ac z:i-ti;. Ap-nn • ~io telephone diapatch Cu I ~-1 ply In ""'MiOn, J\tr. Donul, F.xper. "·fwoti1.mam; c.."On1p """l '~ 25, able to drive s10n1 Int, \1'ct1tlu.·r pl'(lO • "'·II t">n"• & l"'l1 tln1e l"J'"h ~~,','-~,., ............ se own M>Un. 17 .. f In I S'lk Sc -~ E' I "' . ,, II I' u "" ... ... .... -o•~ 135 East 17th, Of prcf'd, but 1vil lnl ,Ii llU'll I reenen App~ Jn Pe~ .:<er .• ~o Ju., too ~11111 help /'ll'<.."'<ietl. 11 :3(1 a.ni. . · I ~iii;iiiii;i;ii"""''"'"""""' 1-~ 1 l & fu>t l'Slin1a1~·s Ulcal refs. I 2 rd COOK ror 1 t t I• Pt'L'~n w .,....._ W og · U A I YELL W CAB CO. CERMAK P.\INTEltS :.!:00 P.rt.f. A .so grnveya. .• ~~ c l' e ~ u'" Dr's Ass1'stant abilily to W~'v In knowledge Touch p rt Its 186 E. 16th, Co11ta Mesa "·'l ~2!Xi 1•n1pto~ces full lime 1,o train rrs1 ence. n . .ternoons-. ?)'Ii & responstblllty. Call g.u..775] M hi I ts -~--""' "" for assU.tnnt OUl""""'f, on. 3 da.ys off. lntrn.•1ev.· r QC ft S ORDERLY, expcr, 7·3. San " ~-10 12 M "ou•>g t·,•dy 11'"-281 to assist OJ' uppt. • PROF. 11•:tll to1·ertng st&te Apply iu person am-ooon. on thrn i Clen1entf! -General Hosp. lie. 110. 27951·1, insur-.. 1dl J:\Cl<·IN-TIIE·BOX l"ri. 9925 I.a Alameda Ave., in he11.IU1 spa. \\/ill_ train. no lfNIGARD INSURANCE Platen TI4-496-1122 ext 214. _ t>'PE's of papcl'. 7 t .t : 1205 Baker St., 0.1 r.v . e.xp. t1ec. ,\pply in pe1·li0n I o•'I '"°" a ny afl OJ' eve. 2930 \\'. GENERAL of(i ce clerk, typ-nspectors PARKJNG Attcndu.nlB, 18 & ~" COOKS, no exper nee, just a coast J-hvy., N.B. l11i;:, 10 key add mach. etc., over, full & p/time. $2 per . No l\'asting: AUTO v"111Jngness lo learn t'on1p!ete n1ust be i.'OOtl 011 aitione. Full No recession here! Our business has gro,vn hr. No f!xper nee. Stlll1 ln1· 1( WALLPAPER * 1 SALESMEN training in sto~. Tonk>'s, 210 co. benerlta, Equal Oppty th " d d 'n ined. ~fust be v.·ell groomed \Vb ~n "!\f ,. Nev,.port center Dr .. NB. DRlU. Press & Bend} ~iv empto,·er. for interview, more than 600% IS year, an no en 1 & ha"" p"·ne & transp. Call <'~.~~~";·e.s'. ac Nev.· Car DealerShlp needs 644-2601. • Operalor, Start $2.254 •. 50 call _,,s.1-8595 Laguna. sight. No\V expanding to fill the seco nd (213) ~451:'16re. n1en lo round out their pro-COO~ o-. . .1.I t (2) cded per hr. La.t·&0n EnterprlscslG.-'!Ee;"'-'-n"'-'·~°"'-1"1"·=:::....-.--·k shift and third shift will form soon. U you ANT Pla:.ter , Patef'I , Repair fession.11 ne\v and used car -..... i:;w..tts ne 826-0395 1~E1vu... o ice. ovv·· , PARKING ATTEND , sult-s stalf. f~rience help, lnimed. 1-d a Y s h ~ It• EARLY mom. neivspapei· keeping expe_r. heJplul. ~~· have experience in any phase of printed cir· Lge a.pt coniplex. Clean cut, * PATCH PLASTERIXC • but v.·e ~·ill thoroughly train l-graveyard. A;fust be exper. · ply Sltck S~t No. 25. cuit board manufacturing, apply DO\V. 01,cr 18. Apply 31423 Coast. All lypl's. J''!"'e Pi;tinlatcs nien \vlth good potential. for fa.st operat10n. 646-5304. delivery. ~fust have c~1" J.'ashion Illinnd. No phone So LagUna. Call 5ID-6.52j. Our Benefits include: Demo COOK I HOUSEEzy,EPER, ~~er i~;11i.uyB~!;.pro~'f.;. :~1-"'"~'~'''-"pl~c~AS~<·~·~~~== KILSON INDUSTRIES. INC, PARTS Drivt.•1·, full time, PLASTERING plan. pa.id v A.cation· needed ln11uediately i 11 847:.2300 bet. 10 u.ni. HAIRSTYLIS-TS-TOP xlnt h.-•uerlts & oppty to in or outside or patchin~. h o s p i I a I i z a t i o n and sntall t:'RE--SCJIOOL. Call 1 1 · ing tor tte\V e."f. ,'><lvfutr..'\'. ;iI>l>l,v in p<rson Insurance. Excellent op--675-40'.!2; eveli 673-1735. ENTJI USIA~'TIC people in· .11 ei:'IC\\' ' . 3015 So th Kilson Dr Santa Ana 646-5770 · terested in part tiJnc jobs ll.t elusive beauty salon. Best U . ., 18758 Bear..-h IJlvd. Hntgn Bch. Plumbing Jl?i1UntlY, tor advancement. COOK/Housekeeper, hl's 2-R. P.1cDo1111lds. Shifts avail. area, To be r ca.d y PORTERS WANTED Electrical CO?.IPLETE HO J\1E f.lit!l while you le1u:n. Apply 5 da.ys O\Vl'1 car. Good '--tw-<• 1 om & 3 pin. NovenibE>r. Co_ntact Mai·1lyn d be M . & G t) fn person at ATLAS sal s." d 1 Bo ~ •• ..... B II "'"! 72 (South from Dyer Roa , tween a.in ran Mallll'C. />.Iust be exnr. Fl C[IR"SLER -PLYMOIITH. ary. n .resume o x Sal•ry + nteals. Contact an ·a . ow-::i , p M • N ~· I C 1hno>, Se.,> er':>OnflC gr, REPAIR SERVICE. Plunih· ELECTRICIAN·LiCl/'nse No. ing -Electrical -Cru·p<>nhy - 233108. Small job.s, maint & Appliances • Refrigeration . repairs. 548-5203. Air Conditioning. Usl!d ap- Furnlture pliances For Sale, &i::rt457 aft 6 pn1. FURNITURE Stripping L.R. OTIS PLU'MBING refinishing, repairs, an-Ren1odels & Repait·s. \\'ater tiquing. Chem-Clean \\'est hea!crs. disposa1s, furnaces, 89213S9 dsh\rashrs. 6-12-6263 MIC & B/ A. Con1plete Plun1bing G•rdenlng Set'Vice. 'Lie. :?7269.t. Mow & EDGE PLUJ\'IBINC REPAIH. No job too sn1all EXPERT & * * 642-3128 • * DEPENDABLE TIM 'S PLUMBING Call For Prompt, SERVICE AND REPAIR Fr .. Estimate. LO\\IEST RATES 67~J7S 968-0812 fl wing/Alter•fiXls EXPER. Japanese Gardener EXPERIENCED Restyling It Lan d's ca Per· Vast & Alterations. Reasonable. knoY.'ledge of p I a n I s . e 963-5806 e Former Nursery [I.I gr. Certified nursery n1 an. Alttr atlons.-642-5845 522-0075. Neat aecurate. 20 years exp. EXPERT Television Repair JAPANESE GARDENING COLOR TV Repair, expe.rt, reasonable, most in hon1e. Complete Gardening St>rvicc F t' t H B N B & ~-Estimates "-.. " 0724 ree es nna e, · · · ' ,. ~.:.: .rt1r C.l\I. Bert Ga 11 em ore, GARDENER or 33-·years ex-968-2783. perience seeks 4-j additional Maint. jobs, George Tiie Hampton ----------* 54!t-201j '* CEMi\IIC TILE NE\V & Exp. Amer. Gardener ren1ocl~L Jo-ree est. Sn1. jobs \vel~me. 5::1'6-2-126, 536-8589 Maint, Cleanup, Decor. Shrub trim, Ludscp & Sprnklr Top Soil Sen" 645-1930. -------*QUALITY * REAS. la\\·n & gardeniJ1g * i\fULCH & TOP SOIL * service. Hire a vet. Dirty 586--6930 jobs too. 6T~2652. JAPANESE Gn rd e n c r. Tree Service Gardening Ser\'ice, trin1- n1ing, cleanup. 6-15-1796 l\10\V & EDGE CLEAN U'PS • 5.»-0057 • General Services PORTABLE TREE Trinuninf: including Pahn tt'ees, and t re e removal. Cen. clean up, Reas. &. Insured. 8-17-1791. ._I _._ ••• _,"·_·· _fill 2929 }!arbor Blvd., Costa 0 · """"'' rvine, a. Mr. Sctnchez at ~fcOonalds, HANDY~1AN to \VOrk at Apply In person only Balboa B•y Club Mesa. COUN'l'ER girl, part lime, 635 W. 19th St., Costa i:IIesa. Orange County fair grounds. clerical for retuil sales. \Vork experienced people Thurs-~lon. $500 per month N h 11$ 12Zl \'-./,Coast Hwy., NB BAB~SI'l;'fER wanted In Must be young & attractive, welcome stru1. Apply Sat 9 am at el)· 0 p one C:G PRESSMEN for offset prln· l\.!ariner 5 School area. N.B. able to handle custon1ers. EXECUTIVES tranC(' to Fajr Grounds. l ting equi11; Exper on double for 1st grade1-. 4 hrs needed ,,, .... ,'°"' Equal opportunity emp oyer d tA/" ~,.1 \Viii am & after school. Call -~c:::.:.:~=·------$12,000 to $75,000 HARDWARE s. a I e s m ~1 · hea er '" .. v " · CO 'bl r d & k train on 1250 or AB Dick after 6 979-2614 UPLE, responsi e. or Send resume or call TODAY lilust be e.'<p wor ~Help Wonted, M&F 710 HelpW1nted,M .. & F710 o I 01 all ' managing & niaintaining for c-n"de••tlal NO COST kno1\•ledgc of tools., ~pply 1n prcs~s. pen ngs ' BABYSITrER for \\'orking t b ·id· " u H \V \\ ht Co shifts. Cn U 54~9TI2 n1other, C.M. area. ~ronian resort apartinen tu ing executlvc intervie1v. pel'Son, to · · rig · KENNEL 1\.'Qrker for anin1al litAID for 1uo1el, Neal. close to bench on Catalina EXECUTIVE SERVICES, lai Rochester, Costa !\lesa. ent"rgetie, Lnguna Beach PRODUCTION \1'/cur 1laily l\.1on-1'-l'i, 3:30-Island. Reduced rent & ........ hospi1al. NB-Irvine area. MACHINE 6:30 pin. Other hi·s if avail. centage. Call 7l1~9 I~C. HOUSEKEEPER · Co1npan-F'ull or PT. \Vrite ClassUied resort-, 6 day wk. 494-1196 Good pay. {213l 437-oo37. aft 5. 889 N 1\Jain, Santa Ana ion for elderly lady. [I.lust Ad No. 900, Daily Pilot, P.:fALE w/dependable car 1o OPERATOR BABYSITI'ER needed our1;;;;.;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0 !TI4) 547-9625. drive. $280 1110· Roont & P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. deliver newspapers In N.B. Exper. requil'ed. 17542 Ann· hon1e, Heil & M'"uolia, EXEC. Secretary For saieS Brd. 64Z-0070 aftns & eves, 9'2626 Afternoons. 213-94J.-9670. s!rong Ave., Iniine, 92705. CREDIT CHECKER · •· hi EPER f I c F.V. 2 chil1h-en. 7:30 lo 2:30. dept of aggressive u·anc se HOUSEh.'E e 111 a · KEYPUNCH. :>1% or 9610 MANAGER TRAINEE PRODUCTION Schpol holidays otf. Salary ~ &. business. l\'fust be self Apply in person, The Hui~· ei.:pcr. Pern1, p/t. X.lnt co, NIST open. Start JKl\I'. 83~7873. u!ust be neat accurate n10tivuted \\'/k:J)()\\"ledge of tington Retirt'lllent Res1-,\l! be nefits. 5·Mi--0331. Outstanding opportunity to MACHI Please Contact . advertising plac emen t dence, 18S51· I'1ordia, 1-1.B. advance to managerlnl posi· Dll,)'s only. 17542 Annstro"i' BABYSITIER, full tiJne, lite Greg Neo.11Jand ul b 'I tion in 3CHiO days. Our cur· A I ·"ne 92705 I kk · he\pf ' ut not nee. ".· ust HOUSEK~EPER l1"e ;n, 3 LAKE MEAD V";,, rvi ' · iouse · eep1ng. Ill a t u r e bl t '"' • rent m a fl a g e r :.i ean1 lady, must drive & 0\\'11 Bank of America be ll e to coniniunica e sntall schl. age children, \ranted Coast Guard licensed $1()()().$1500 mo. J\1ust have REAL ESTA!'E SALES ll'ans. El Toro. 830-3323 500 Newport Center Dr. \\'el! on the telephone. Sh & Hunt Bch 847·0915 boat operator for charter & door to door canvassing ex-SUCCESS CAREER N B , typing a· must. Salary cont· · · · I 'l · 1· New orexperlenced. Join the BA BYSIT/housekce""I', 3 ev.'port each ~3505 1 / b·i·t & e IMMEDIATE CASH genera ., ar1na opera ions. perlence .. -n1ensura e w a i t Y x-50 ton license desirable. Call Call M, .. Newman 9~5222 \Vorld's largest and futest children, 2 schl age. 642 9470 SS IONS ·~ l ·•·-tion [\ion-Fri. $30..,·k, CM area. Equal Oppor. Employer per. -· COMMI Harborntastcr (7021 293-3484 growing resa e orga • .._ EXPER. Cook or chef Sell nationalty-fanious Knapp or \\Tile to Lake l\.lead !\lANAGER & ASSISTANT \Vilh a network of over 300 646-lO'i 2 CREDIT Girl \\' 'accts. rec. \vanted. Formal lt"'aining Shoe!! part 01· hill tin1c. i\lal''ina, Box 96 . Boulder needed. Neiv Santa Anu of-offices and become a BAB\'SITTER for teachers cxper. S-f>, 673-J -150 Ol' preferred. Sa I a r y Com-Very hi"h cash coniniissions City, Nevadn 89005. flt"e of ~futual Savings. Ex· n1<'mber of our Millionaire children, inornings, li-1011-833·9471 ask tor i\Jargaret 1ne11sul'ale \\'/expel'. Call plu<. ~·scs, benefits. Your Club. f.fultJ-million doUar l' 1 1'.Iv ho 11c or i\ic · Del "AL" • .,....... "·'"107! ....,,"' LYN or 1'.tedications 7-3, full perlence necesSttry. Call · · Free 1 · ~-1 · 1 sa , ~orc_::C~ra~;~g_______ George, ~".:; or "'-' o\1·n business. No invest-Robei1 Aston, 6 7 5 -5 o 1 o advertising · program. i\1ar. 5:11-1631. 1 4 aft 5, n>cnt. F•·-.-I"·•g and train· or p tin1e. Te1np or penn. guaranteed licensing school. '' ~ '" N rse \·a J.-11 xper Corona rlel 1'.far for np--1 1n· BABYSITTER. ni.y hon1e, Data Pr~ssing EXPER SHOE SHU\'E l\lan ing kit. Ralph P. Kelley, u ·8 '1 es • e poinhnent. Excellent sa es tra llll· Costa !'11esa. Tue.~. ,f, Thurs.. FIELD ENGINEER \\'anted Big Canyon Country !);:!pt. C002 2, Knapp Centre, prefd. \\'ill train mature Equal opportunity eniployer \\rtlat is your license \\.1lrth noon to 6: Sa!. <1!1 rlay. 0\\'11 MINI COMPUTERS Oub Call Swal1y 644-54!}4, Brockton, !\-th.. 0'1401'. person. ·1ntervws l\fon-Fri, to you? Check our monthly h'ans nee. 54.r133."i. Due to a 'ubstan"al In. lOan1~J>1p, l\1esa Verde MAN-ICU--R-IST bonus program which meant u EXPERIENCED Landscaper ConY.. HQsp, 661 .Center SL, $S$ 10 you! Please call B~BYSITTER needed pai:t crease in installed equip. &. apply from 7-5pm INSURANCE SALES CM 54S--5585. Full lime, Laguna HiUs Virginia Jones 83.').4811., hn1e 1-5 i\Ion llu·u Fri. orrler backup, \Ve lmnied. 979-3079 LVN for inedicntions & CoiUw'eS, Leisure \V o r Id , REAL ESTATE SALIS Mesa Verde a1·ea. St hr. require an Ol'aI!ge Co, based 837-2160. • 97g...3H):i. car,.., .. on·ent·" ;nm". w/at FACTOR'Y "'orker .N vhil nurses aides. Call bet 9-2. FREE LICENS& .._.._. <."I.I • Upholstery shop. Clean cut. 0 exp nee., e~ ' e you Mesa Veoie Convalescent MANiaJRJST . Expert. Ex- BAB\'SITTER needed n1y least 2 yrs. expeT, in serv-Apply 898 \\I 16th St learn, part time, eves 6 Hospital. 661 Center St, CM. elusive, N.B. 5alon. Folio\\'-TRAINING home \\'eekdays 8:30 to 3:30. icing ntini computer based· Newport Beach'. ·· 'fi~·~:,i.ds, full dine \Vhen quail-54,8.5585. Ing not nee. 675-4100. F8.mous Real Estate Llcenll· Call Pa10, 979-3598. systems. Ideally this exper = 11,. c.oui'Se noiv available I ·n h · cl d-·• CRT FILE clerk -ntln 1 "ear exp. Farme1-l•o.o•••ce Group 'IATURE femal• •0 nd"·i•b BAB\"SITTER, after school, '\·~ ave in u ~ . • w/some gen. C: ff ice. " ,..,...:~,,1...,. " ~ "" " " thru Tarbell Realton. Free 1 boy, 6 yrs. \Vestntin.ster Disc & :rele<..'01~n1urt1cauons. Pi......,...essive Co. xlnt ben. Ed Lani * ~ o.>'t * * * maker and general coin· Plncenient Service. Fret ai'ea. 894-3076 call aft 6:30. Reply 111 confidence to J. ~... nlissa.J'Y \\.1lJ'k. Part or full T.i;aini.Jig Program. Earn Grimson. Data IJlSlruments &H-1360. tWe .. Starts $1.80 hr.· Call , .... lie ""U team. Call Al BABYSITTER HIX'tied for 1 c p 0 Bo ••05 Se 1 FULL & part t>"me en>ploy I tenned' t l\.fr. Richards · or j\f r . "" "¥ 1 6 ' Cll.ll o.. · · x "" · pu. . . 0 ·-la e Sloan (714J 8:>2-5440. :;f 5 ~:. 51~.i~~IC~}'. veda, Calif. 91343 or Call ment avail. Need very MACHINISTS -Dcliema 557-6232 R.E . SALESMAN :C:C::.2:::2..:::'...'.::;C...::::::c...,_I (Zl3J 89:~. special people ready to ME<;l-IANIC-Expt>r. in e!ec· BAR maid \\'Billed part tin1e Equal Oppor. Employer gro1v \1·ith new company. ACOURt Clerk & MAC. H 1. NE·· trical applications. l\lust he In~stig~1te the new approach at the Lotus R.OOni Earn $500 per v.·k. Call able to read ,,, Ir Ing & innova•lve marketing * S.56-9002 * DIETARY aide, f u 11 tint e 998-5027 for appnt. diagrams. \\'Ill tr a i 11 • ttthniqut>s of THE GAL- BAYSIDJ.; Fish i\lkl needs n1ornlng shift. xlnt hinge ·~LL or p/time, expanding A p bl OPE. R. ·ATo· RS 641>-4187 LERY OF llOi\JES. You young man over 18, steady bnfts. Beverly l'ltanor Conv co. needs 10 people immed. CCOUnts aya 8M .·. EDICAL will he glarl you did; Call job for retail & CilleH.ng. 5 Hosp, Capistrano Beach, Sa.Jes or delivery. No exp. ' ~ 963-5611 for appointment. or 6 da 1veek. Inc.Id. Sat &.1 ~'~"'°"'-""-186=-------necess. cau betv.'ll 4:30 & 7 ·Salary $631-SnS •• TRANSCRIBER LiL-enserl or unlicensed "'t \VELDING SERVICE \Vlll come to you evenings, \l<'i'ekends. No job too Small. MS--3212, 646-1824 Sun. 2800 Nev.'po11 Blvd., DEL TACO _p~m~~· !&1~1~-~1106~.'------l 2 " . A p . d Imntefi.iate openings for ex. N='e~~. Jm0Ulmc~ .. .,_~!,_, lorln "·ill train . Job Wented, _M.le 700 N.B. .irs e~r. in / \Vt ll ata perlenctd i\iaehinisls & 1\1a· ~,,. ·" ~ n.i REAL ES'J'ATE :;.;;;;._:.;_o:.;;:;::;:;:.c;;.:.;;;;;......;;..:;.; 1 ~B~E~A~U-iT_I_C_W_N--.--A-,-,;-,.-,-n, i'~l~;r p~mei-ti~~-c~r e~i * GARDENER * pa'OCesgiXln·"'f,enviroi?.._ment ~d-chme Operatoi:s on our 2nd N Bea<.il. Call 642.6464 PROS. O'F'FICE ALL t)-pes hon'le repairs. Actual time & material . Fast Serv. No job too sm. F&B Home Repair, 642-1403. W 0 OD\VORKING teacher will do various custom ''uodwork, cabinets & furn. built & repaired. Reas. 548-n41. HANDYMAN -all kinds of \\.'Ol'k, smaU jobs ,a specialt)'. 979-4636. 546-9723. Heullng SKIPLOADER & dwup truck work. Concrete, asphalt, sawing, .breaking. 84&-7110. GEN Hauling. Tree/Shrub trim. Gar & Yd cleanup. Est. 531-G317. 557~. LOCAL moving & hauling by student. Large truck. Reas. Barry. 534-1846 or 673-0047. TRASH HAULING GARAGE CLEAN·UP YOUNG 1nan needs part· v.·anted i\Iust be sharp. 979-1030 9 <im & 11 ain. Be your own Boss ess. '11lP•v.1:W pai shift, 3 P~f-U Pl\1 &: 3rd ..::1"'::.c•~p~pt~.'-------opening lop Harbor area. See thne job, painting, lawn Licensed. Call Joe Pirelli, DENT\L . 1 1 . 1 r . ulI 1,. . ~!,itsl di~~:f 1 U1~~:· shift 11 PM-7 1\i\1 in o\.1r D.-lESSENGER lite delivery, dcraii's 'In our 9/6 ad. Call maintenance. construction, &14-2hl · ' assist.an · gir o • ,.-or P une in yow· '"';>"' a ' "'"a e . · l\lills. Chuckcr. Engine &: Ov.TI cyrle 0 1· car, lll.'<1l, Bob StpJth, s-&l66t etc. 979-9621. I~=="'--------lice, 1 yr exp., at least 25 ov.•n area. High incon1e. ance. TurTet Lathe, NIC Drill6 & reliable, 892-2258. Vll-Jf \Ts of age 646-ail-G ranteed Customers Deadline 9/14/73. CMtact Mr. _ Job Wented, foem1le 702 Beauty Operetor1(2) · , · ::i_ Ult No Caih Down lllinklc, Saddleback Valley Grindet"S. MQDEJ.S..?i.'IODELS-MODELS 1 , Busy s11op, 1._.'umm g11arn. DEN 1: AL Ass 1s 1 a 11, t · Unified School.District, Long temt enipk>ynienl \\'Ith 'YlGrnen, Men, Oiiklren Realty, Inc. MATURE v.·oman \\;u do N'l fol101\·ing l'K:<.'. &lS-1050 Chairside. at lea.!l 6 i_:no s Earn N9~~· !aly2 Later 5$-1234, history of NO LAYOFFS;!n ~els want~ for Fall and '• --. -. -. -. -. -. -. -. ~. ~. -. -. -. -. -. -. -. -. -.·, '1 thorough house cleaning job, e'f.per, H.B. area. 846-3540. --W1ntoor Faslnon~ ; 1 phone eves 5 & 7:30 P~t B0A1: ~~RPENTER , DELIVERY, help; Freei,·ay our manufacturing area. Ex·· ...,. · only. Sa't till Noon $2.50 hr. To do f1rush1ng v.·ork on 37 auto ""pply, 27,.1 Forbe .. GARDENER·Newportel' Inn IRONWORKER EXPER. cellent. working co~ltior~ ~~MdEIUDELINCANG ACe~g-rE~ Tl I T Y cht "" w " needs middle·aged or older ORNAMEN')'AL sal•u•v & company pa<d beol. I 6464'fl4 or Message 54&-&Hl. ·av.'DRA1TsMAt~i r:d., Laguna Niguel. • niale gardener for perm. LAGUNA 4~76 fits~~ · * ~ .. ~ Npt Blvd., NEED help at honie? '''t: Full 0 , part time to v.·ork on ·Drctaphone Transcriber position. No p!KJnc calls, 111,.. .. 4 ., .,. ... ,_, ,. have aideit, nurses , a pply in person. Ask for .,... ..,,.., '"'ti Saturday Interviews MOTEL ntanqe~ for w h detail drawings.• .... ousekprs, companions. p ·r Tra 1 Cop 60 11".p.m. typing & good Clay· EUis, head gatuener Sept. 8th ,,, &AM-Noon unlts, ·opposite H otel J~omernakers Up john. aci ic547~;:r r spcl!'ing rcq'd. Exper prel'cl. t107 Jam'boi-ee Rd., N.B. Coront1do & beach on 547--0681. Liberal co benefits. Call GAR lit ENT cutter for BERTEA Col'onado Isl. Dra\v S350 PERS ass1 to Exec. xh11 secy BOAT carpenter & fiberglass 812-7731 for: appt. -wetsuit nifgr. Prefel· e:-.:p'd · · n10. ngainst t.'Ofllmission on skills. Consider lite travel. ntan. ~Just be ex P er· or will train. $2.50 hr. 5 day • _ ~ groa11Jor1 yr. contract. 1 hr Before 10 ,\M 968-6274 Permanent Job, fr i n g e U:"itG,\RD C\'S:URA.'ICE \\'k. Apply 8 am to 12 noon. ~ ·• CORPQRAJJON Apt & ·ut:lls. Exper. & hon. Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 benefit. TI4-337-2501 DISH 1nachine operator, pots 825 \V. 18th, c.M. . , ~ dable please. 6-14-1060 SCHOOL opening at Southern Cali!. College. Students avail. for p/tin1e einploy· nte11t. Phone s t u d e n t personnel ofc. 545-1178, ext :lS. BOOKKEEPER, full charge s, pans, full ti1ne !lion lhru 'RE MOTEL MAID WANTED to handle per so n a 11 y Fri. 2 shifts avail. 6:30 to 3 GENE(RAL Office · \VE • • 18001 Von Kerman will -train, apply in person receivables, pay ab I e. pm or 10:'.1'0 am lo 7 pin. exhausted trying to find a Irvine, Calif. Costa fl'.lesa l nn. payroll & audit EDP Good co. benefits. $2.27 hr. gal that \\·ant<; to \\·ork. 8 R\IJNE. PERSON' NEl 13•1-4 ,_ ----sell-starter. Sniall oUlce ~ ·~ 1 ext "~. MUSl·C-SALESMAN systeni. Travel Agency ex· Apply Food Service Direc· E I 0 E lo perience helpful. Orange tor, 30t Victoria, C.l\I. overlook.Ing ocean, Laguna CCO\IV"'C:C" ~,Arc11..rv que ·PP.• mp yer Music Store Exp. 847-85.16. County localio11, Resume to i\1en1orial Hospital. Equal Beach, Underground park· ~ l\..L> nuu "A.. I ~ RECEPTIONIST Day or night, no exp. nee., easy, fun job. \Vill lraiJI, uo typing or shorthand, etc . Apply in person any a.ft or eve. at 2930 \Vest Cst HI\')'., N.B. RECEPTJONISI'-TYPIST ' >0111 opportunity for right giti. New fully a/c bldln~. Equal Oppor t unity Employer. Disc Instruments Inc. 102 East Baker SL, COlta. Mesa 919-5300 32 FT. FURNITURE Van fo_r I Help Wanted, M & F 710 local f\ll'll hauls -~ gen I A'.\IBITIOL!S people 1ranted hauling. 548-1862, '1J7-2736. 10 earn $100. 10 $1000. per * JIM * 54&-0101 Box 9-11 c/o Daily Pilot, PO opportunity Eniployer. Ing. Company benefits, good 'SEE ·ouR -""' NEED EXTRA INCOME 5tltl Co ear starling w.... Mu:;t be OX· Macb;n;" I Box l · sta Mesa, if DO~tESTtC Help George per type. JO key calculator, SUNDAY LISTING 92660 Allen Byland Agency, 1(16...B accts receivable & aecls CALL TKlSH ffOPKI NS Progressive n1an11facturing . E. 16th St., S.A. 5'17~ payable (peg boar<li. Front JERRI WHITTEMORE company, xln't \\'orking con-Pinkertons, Inc. hi looking tor good PAAT·TIME Security Guards. Supplemen1 your in- come by worldng v.1mcls or a couple of nites a \\'et'k for the world's large&t security Ol'galliZ&tion. \Ve train on the job & fum. au unitonns &. equip. Car & phone esse~ tlal. Apply !\o'ion-Frl, 9 am· S pm. Pintrerton, In<:., 2701-8 S. Milin, S.A. Equal ()ppor. Employer. RECEPTIONIST I Typiat. pan tiple. Must be personable, & ablt: to work Sundays & be available. Call Mr:oi. Russell, 96Z407, pleal!C Jeave name & phone number. Housecla•ning n)(I. pa11 ti111e. out of your ho:11e. 6'J9....6123. .BOYS to sell llov.·ers, $1.SO "\Vl ·t El oh ts" office appearance. Ref. rt!· 488 E. 17th St. (at Irvine) 01 d!tions. Fringe benefits. hr. from Santa Ana & · 11 .e e_ an .. over· do ha Imn1ediate Opening For: HOUSE OF CLEAN e OOES EVERYTHING e Homes, Offices. 642-682·J Dedic•ted Cleaning *WE DO EVERYTHING* Refs. Free est. 646-2839 Anaheim area Call Paul rwuung Your house. Tum quired. If Y?I!-. not ve Suitt 224 642-1470 ,\/Ii Rookkeep~r. HospitaJ, -197-1295 · them into "Ca.sh" ••• seU these qualifications D 0 -· Crt:"<lit & Collect exper. · them thrn a Daily Pilot NOT APPLY'. Call 4M-10Cs6 ~ p1'ef'd. Sal r'Qnuncn!lutate BREAKFAST Cook iv/good classified ad! for appt. Jack In The Box w/ahitity. ~·!rs. Lord , ~~~r·c~\j' 1~~~ f~~pe~j Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Needs assi.slatrt 1nanager •8~4ii7-~35~-1~5ii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. J \\/ebbs Nev.'porter I n.n , 1-trainees. Xln't &alary & pro- 61-}-1700. ·1• motion oppor. + benefits. CASHIER, 1uil or p/time, MEM • WOMEN Quatitied in(tiv. must be ASSEMBLERS AUTOMATI C SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR I Brown & Sharpe or Traub, setup & operate. SHUR-LOK CORP Apply At RE CEPTlONIST-LAW of· flee, typing 60, s/h 8:1, to $500, benefits, ~ to ~. Attractive front office ap- pearance 644-8181 RECEPT J)/I, l\lon-Frl. 12-5 pm. Ans, phones, Ute typing & filing. Univ. Marine. 642-2.83.1. HOUSECLEANING $31 a day, oi;vn trans. 5tl--0467 Ironing I Openings on all three I:.:."";:.;:'-------shifts. Factory exper- 1 ronl"ll My Home. Rees ience helplu~ but not Familiet: onl'.y. 556-0868 necessary. :t>2.15 per matw~. exper. pd'd. Con· EXECUTlure u1.u1 GERS ham """~" w/det•rnUn&· tact i\ir. FleIBcher, Hoel-lw-tNUV\ tion to succt't!d. Exper help. ful but not nee. For appt. seller's, South Coa~1 Plaza. lOK, lSK, 25K, SOK ca.it S31·92ll or 558·9788 ;. ~1~~ per nio. The SALA.RIES • NEWOTIAILE daUy 9-11 am or 2-5 pm, 1 Call be! o 30 • y s k' Jeck In ,The Box · ~~ :r-J5u. . 1 : Ar• You Unemployed Now -,...r• ou •• 1n9 Jlbi.t hiring oleancut lndlvi.d· Rohe Scientific 926 S.. Lyon St. s.m. Ano. NEEDm NOW! RESTAURANT H c Ip • Counler, male & fem. Pirn1. p/tlnte, days It nitea. Apply Burger Klnr, 3)15 Harbor Bl., C.M. L•ndscaplng hour to start plus thlft differential. EXPER. Japan ese Landscape Contractor. Vast AJ)J)ly In Person At: knowledge ot plants. Prlc:ed 10 fit your budget, Slate Lie. 52'J-0975. Painting & P1perhonging Uc. AVERY PRODUCTS Consum.r Division 2620 s .·susen S anta Ana, C•lif. .• PAPERHANGING AJI type& tree est. 263683, full liability. Lesaft>, 6'5-#19. CaJI Equa:I Oppor. En1ployer m. 'f A Change ........ Worried About Your Age --·-• ....... • -~ d CLERK TYPIST U d d d T UlU!I nh=-graveywu Uf· Tir•d of Brok•n Promises ~ n eci • As o Ing school momhs. Apply in Xln't typing req'd. Good tele-A Proper Court• of Action -per&OO,' Tues or Wed betwn phone personality \\•!ability 3 &t 5 18642 Beach BJvd 10 sci~en ca.!111 ror 2 execs. ARE YOU UNDER PAID? t H B pm. · , ., Familiar 1v/ID"1I trunscril:t-ff You Cin Answer The Following Categories ;;ii"ii'i;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii ... ....- ing niachinl.'. C11ll ?.liss In The Afflnnatlye. We'd Uke Aa l•tenlew , ,\buho Ior a.f)pt. W7-9505. Wltlt Yow CLERICAL. med;oat lnu. IF YOUR ANSWERS AH TRUTHFUL ueeiJs dependable ~rl for busy ollic:e. Typing 60 \\llm, -WE CAN HILP YOU ~·s, c1:J1P1~ Soi646ne 71. ~194 dny . A. Do yo" hav• 1tron9 voc•Hon•I driva1i I. tty ·I • 8. Do yow have 9ood natiYo lritall!ga11ct7 Cocktail y,•allreS!es-wa.lters C. Do you ftt l 1wfficiently moliv•t1d to achi1ve7 Janitorial Pr1t.r At• 20-25 6 Days A W"k A~ln- ffi.QUAIJTY, LOW $ State Lk. No. 280044 • .• 542-1101 ••• Asst. Apt. Man ... rs Pantry women D. Do )O" hav• th1 ahlllly to ma•• cl1cl1lon11 f.fatUl'l" Couple. Par1·tlme. BusbOys E. Ari you r1ocly to 11.t • rooli1tit car1ar objactl•a 1 Uve at new 54 unit adult fl.taintenance·Janitor F. If Y'" w•r• con .. l11c.cl th•t holp "''' av;ilobla, 1o1oulcl MACHINIST w/exper on \Varner-Swasey &. Harding lathes. PleaMnt \\'orking rond. In new bldg. Contact fwtr. R. Charlson, ~3993 for lnrerview. 0 ·Co u n er Engineering Laba. AtACHJNE Shop Trainee, shop e."Cper. helpful. Wark in new AJC bldg. Equal) Op- por. E1nployer. DJ 5 c htstruments. Inc. 102 E. Baker St: C.M. 979-5300 •• e DISHWASHERS : ~~~?it.TIME RN full time nights t1-7:;il, Xlnt fringe bnftri Beverly . .Manor Conv Ho1 p . Capistrano Beach, 496--5186 Must be c1ean & neat. Over ~ ~~~ "'"" wr -Reuben's ;\pJ>ly In person . SURF & SIRLOIN 5930 W. Coast Hwy. Newport at:~ llu opefiing for M A.C HJNISTS-PRECJSION Nurses Skilled machinist tq bUil<I RN-LYN·AIDE COOK Ap~ly In Perron l3cl, 11 am or a1t 2: 30 pm WALL COVERING Ah f)pe ... frte est. Call 53&-o;tS complex on tlle beach, New· Now hiring yo11 accept it without cloloy) Joe port.. Lite maint. & Of.lice ror sept :M opening YOU SHOULD KNOW ooverage. Previoos exp, in Dayg-Evening.1 FAR WJST . SERVICES ~-tooling, .Jip &: short run 11-7 &: other shifts, ·Top pvt .e_rod'n ... /or small CM Co. du,ty pay, Jmmt'd. pay ror Exp'd in die.repair & punch floor duty. Co u n Jyw I de preu: set-up. 642-8080 lnfl'Wls. Mon-F'r1 9·5 . MACHt NfST-Lescoolie Nurses R<it,,,.,.,. Lathe.. Pat1 or tult tlme. Day 351 H01pital Rd.,· NB (I.Ob. · .251 I . CtNii t Hl'f NeWjiort IMch the netd not nee. R.efsreq'd. Short houfs...Xlnt pay PROF. painter, bon~st work, FOi' Appt. call 60-2566 bt\\TI Pennllnent teas. Int/ext, free est 10 ain & 3 Pill. Apply in penon or Ref 548-2700 642 3913 phone for appointment e Tho battff Ioli• 1r• not •dvtrthtd e Third p1rty prof.11ional influ1nct i1 1omalim11 naca11iry s. ' -' G A SS IS TA NT Manager SEBASTIAN'S •.. West * PAJNT(NG It STAININ TNlnocs, Counter Girls, 140 Ave Pico, SM Clc.mente e IN1'/D.'T. '1'RI.M, ACCOUS Fry Cooks, Days-Nites. 492-99".JO e Gattlt19 tha ri9ht doo11 opan, at Iha ri9hl ltval ra• quira1 tachnJqu•! E:.aewtiva po1ition1 1ro lillad through 1xac11tlv1 in• t1rvlaw1 f'REE ESI' •.••••••• 9'f9..8186 Craveyd shifts open . f .,,_.--.,.--.s=.:r1:::;::"'"1e1"-"rd;::nt7 PAINTING & Pa""r Hang· F'/tlme 4 P/tlme. Xlnt for Constr upt n • e Ma'' r11uma moilin9, it nol 11ot•I •fltWtr -the /child J $12)0 Mo. Ftt Paid big, c.n ~4 ~hool~ Aop'b,, Jac':~n-The~ Do you h6ve ~r. In condO . .. ~ -il Box, 385 t . 17th St, CM. boildi.nr? Need sharp man ""11:.iwc.•uer, •CCOUI. ce • w/supv ability. RHd blue· tnp sprayed Lie lns Joe ASST'. Manager couple Jor print1'. great co. Xln't l>flne. rdl ... n~t~L~: · apt__compleg.__01.d pre!~ fttll. Also Fee Pos1donl:-Ca:U - CUSJ'OM ~ 2'1 red, will train, em work. Ann ChrisUc:, ~. Con· tn S:.,.. &rN.. state No child. ~. -trot Ca~ Emplo)ltnen!: J'.r.: H<!-U32fl. &e-1356. ASSISTANT Ag<ncy, ~ lrvh,. Bl'd" rat ProOt It •«•'nod ""'" MANAGER NB. ~· .. u 11,...,,,-.....i.t-aet• Appt,· ancr 1 pm, K•otuolcy Oon'l &1v< _IU! the ahlpl (1~ Oelly 1'jlot OUllfied l'rl<d Chl<i«n, :2929. E. "List" It In d..,.Med Ship Adt. &O-lt1I-O>alC Hwy., Coron11 dtl Mar. to Shore Retlult11 64~ .• EXECUTIVE SERVICES, , IHC. , M"Y Hawe Ao Aaw« Fer YMI S11ul Rttumt Or C all Tocfoy -~__;·__,,,.f .. ·~---- NO COST DICUffft INTllYllW IXICUTIVI SIRYlCIS INCOIPOUnD hi N. MAIN ST. -HOMI OfllllCI -SANTA AMA Sacurlty 1111 .. 111/lding Suite 702 PHONE: 17141 547·HZ5 . - or nigttt shift. Top pay, ~~~'k~ BI d,i) . F.quaJ QPpor. Employcl' Cnll S<O·S:!OO •-• NURSES Aides all 1hlfts1 'roONU~' & 1672 Reynolds Ave · · ~nl• ~ Equal OPPOr. Employer _ ~fACHINE work, lathe & x.lnt fringe bn!lts. Beverly ... CtF.'J' PAftTIES assembly. Lire mttrtufl No M,nnor Conv llo&p. HoulJe\vlve!I demonstntton, oroductlon. call 548-5'135 ot Clplslraoo Beach 4Clll.__11.186 , earn to $2,000 by Dec. 1. No JUNIOR SALESMAN: 541H211. ' """ · delivery -no <'Ollectlon. Earn 1"1·$40j)<!r we<k wod<· '":"'MAIDS.WANTED ~llt,~11~.:i~'B~:h"C.1:;'. Freo ~~~.gilt<, ~ Ina after schol?l Md Satur· Mature. Musi be cxJ)CI'. F'/ H08P. 18811 Florida St.. car. ~. Gitta n days selllnr new wb!lctlp-Ume., Ste Pm-son~ ¥er.. ll e 847-3515 "G:;•,_,d'"' .. ::il::.• ------1 Uons tor fh• DAILY PILQT. Bolboo Boy Club • , mffiSE AJd anted m SALES, _aqod OPPl.Y l<4' "'!; , 'l)ls ts not a paper rvute 122'1. \Y CoMt ·I{ . NB es *" . · w hltlOUf vouna woman to Mu and does not lncludr de-· wy., · . _tralri .. Laguna Beach at"eO, 1talionen: ---{\lP-PUe1. 1 n -uver1er or'"t<llle<ttnr.ott<•· 'ldlolDS-· No-.. ,...-. AP' eoJH&••*YllH'or .. ept. -• J@.~ l<acb ...... l<•at tntt·ln COsta Mesa, Founltln ply in Pfl;'IOfl. The~ N~Y Sc~ Teacher~ lk'e. Wiil t r at n , Valley and Sout~ •tunfl.nJiton IM, 1400 S.E. Brtltol, O.ta inature, · resp. Mu~ have Sa a~ + eomm. 1kach Sta· Beach. _Apply now by calling Mesa. 5674700. ~W'ltl')' SC11ool ctrtJOCa.te A tionera, lacr! N~ C.M. 541!-301.l, , MAIO.M~ 1 , exper. Spl)t h7iJf=30-12:30' SALES, mens tumf1h1,_1 A !',qua! ,9P;f!!· Employer N•wport B<ad> Tr av •I l U . c.n !f68. • ,...,......,, Contact Mr· Fut.'nfolts~l't' Just a phoi. ·~., catl &CfM -Need 1a "Pad!'! P11ice ~.ad! Flf!ltdw, lloclscher'1, Sooth call away • &IW613. Clamrified Adtt • • . • 642:t.iit COU. ~ -c.ul· Plua, C.... M,_, • ' .. ·~ . . F'rld.ay, Septe.mbtr 7. 1973 DAILY PILOT "']~ [ .. ,,, ., 11....... ]~,[ ..... ' _ .... _··=-"""~]~ [ I ~---==--;m~IAM~1-~u!!!'"'!!~~~o111~ _ _.!l!_!l:!l I 1iiii3Lmlno.1,lij2iaT1iiiimii•m''ii$ii2iii.DOm lloot1/Morln• l[iJJ I • I~ [ •d I I ml ! .... , .... ' 110 Ml...tla-1111:.:.i: Help Wanted, M & fl 710 Holp Wantad, M & fl '(11 Holp Vontad, M&F 710 Ant.,.... IOO FumltuN SCRAM LETS 3 BEAUTIJ'UL mixed breed Equle. -"'-''-----·~--.............. •-· t • fentale popple1, 11., \lo'ttks _.;;..,....:---,--,--91-,-1 * 5 ·u sMEN' * SHOE SAU'8 -~ "-· FOR Sale AntlQ11e Pier -~~ ~ ~·-* AUCTION * old and weaned. Fant .. llc 12 VOCT Ba I ~ •• " SECRETARIES Lftni On:aa SooP.'ra.shi:~ rl>r Circa 18190. Orig Bevel-· $50 ANSWERS penona.llties. 557-1982. .l>unipe .• c~~~-~· !14·96 ea. 904 oo you take "Sa.le1men & liland. ed gla.u 8' hlgh, very ---~962.._2254 ___ ~1~1~2 (formttiy \\:indy's) · .,.,_,,>Jo> ~1• •d• with a ;rain of oma~. Must aell. Beat oiler Gar•g• Sal• NEED good home for straJ Bo•t1, Power 906 ialt? can't ~ I blame )'Ou. KE YPUNC H OPRS SHOPPJ,NG Center develop-over $650 Serloui lnquirtes I ~""'-""-------FRI DAY 7:30 P .M . Burlap_ Magic_ Moiety_ kinen. About L oir,n ot · I tolJowed up a few my.eU Irvine M(M45CI ment Co. la lookln& for a only pleaBe. 493-1414 a.fl e. OLD cash relfatet $100. Ken· SE PTEMBE R 7TH Bushel_ ALARMED Long hair, black & 'A'hite. I ti.... "'-"•t, The job seldom 1780'1 Sku Parle girl w/good typing & h 1• F nd J\.1ale. 546-5392 n U",...... NEVE~ A FEE, AT TEMPO shorthand skill.II. 640-8l10 ANTIQUE slore-liquktatlng mere, _,;'," ander _;:: .... eca',.' NEW OWNERS· A bank~ changed his ~~~~~~~~~~ tlwd up to the clab'n ln the .,,, everything, oak furniture, e ec ...... ar ...... wm • mlnd and decided not 10 go od. Ternpo Te1nport1ry Jfelp S 'P E' C IALTY advertising braSll bedt, mucb mott. With °!".JI $15. 1 Mlulo 1 n Rud)i l....arld.n and Bob Brown through wfth IQ,e holdup. He 11~1 Do yourself a favor I: ex· !"":~'!!!"!".'!!!":~!\!'""I aalesn11U1, L.A., Org. Co., ....__...iA., Ir: eve". tll *>Id. rocker .:,.... Corva I" eng ne ""'l AI.AR.MED I Mt ..S 5ufPit1 plore tWa one. U you'd like SECTY PART TIME mll*t be ex p e r I e n c e d ........ ~,. .. ..,,, partllllly as.1embled $25. NEW. near-lli.!\v nnd pre· "y ' ANNUAL MID SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE to make $250 a week lm· 6 hrs. day. Secretary for aaleitmtln. 841--0741 alter 6 1740 Newport Blvd .. CM Dishes, clothing, jewelry, owned furniture and appll-~ · medietcty. with an eye to Presbyterian church in p.m. BfG Sale Sat/Sun, lOO's or books, Pla.yboy, E1quire, e.nces. Color TV's, 8tereo5, WATER SOFTNER 850 mUCb more ln the futurt>, Nev:port Beach. Muat be sr"=u"o"E"NT=s,_,-,-.,--rd~.~51-,·.l American Indian Rugs, 3:550: Mad,. PaychOloiY -Today be$"rn sets, dlnet'les •. chest Never ~n U1ec:ll Pets, General I'd Uke to talk to )'ou. lf 8k1Jled typist & be able lo llOClck . bar. Openings at SBe .•• f°"". ~ Hwy Laguna magazloea Much much of drawers1 ~.divans. Ufetirne tactory l,'UllMJltee. your qualJflcaUona match ta>i:e dlctaflon. Ca11 ~r. Qrange Co. lnt'l Raceway. CllU• more. Free coUee. l!M Sat ~ ~ ~~· ~~ ~ly sells for $695. \Vill 9 BABY Bunnies. Beat Pet our requirements, thill could J6hnson, 644-3101 duruig Over 17, no exp. nee. $2. hr. TABLE·bed (ta-bed) believ· 64 &:" ~,-. 230 E. 18th C.M. ireezer', -..'2._ ~. _sell ~che~! ~-18. _ _ ~P.,,,.73pri~ $2.00 eat.:h. be. the cnreer ~u've been d11y or 833-UlB after 5 pm, 10 to ·2Q...hra wk. Apply at ed to~ 190'1 model $100. ......iv "'"•"""""-_ -- --~ looking for. SECRE:rARY Raceway, 838-1100 * 846-al27 * e LEAVINC STATE e dryers, freezers, refrig. ~ Interview 11.ppolntment 1().4 Approx. 6 Months STUDENT niother needs AppllancM I02 Selling while loading! 2 fllJJ\l. era:tors and MUCH, MUCH Mltcelleneous Cits Phf, v.·et>kdu,)ol!I, 586-31!2. Exp'd secretarial &: misc. or-Harper Elem llChool mom ly garage sale, Thurs. thru ~MAIORESTERS!? AUCTION W •nted 820 P~E-RSl_Al_N_Ki-.-.,-,.-.,-."'.C~t-:"'A_n;_g-.. 852 SALESLADIES, exper. Ov~r flee \\.'Ork. htall resume: w/kincterrartCner to pick-up FREIGHT Damage Sale, Sun. Commerc. rug Shain· beautiful long hair, very best the counter sales. Salary + Suite 400. 500 NeWP.Ort &: care for S yr, old fl'Om \va.shen, dryers, ~bigs, pooer, Essex cement mlxer, WANTED USE D pedigrees, $50 & up. bonus. Call Albcrls l-lotiilety Center Drive, Ne \V po r f 12:30-2:30, 5 dys a week. new warTanty. Re b It flr. polisher, fr e II!: z er. CO~IE SRO\\'SE AROUND BRI CKS -CALL * 89'1-:?970 • far appl. S4G-4997. Beach, Ca. S4U285. was hers /dryers trom refii~ .• rugs, misc. !Ats ot 2075~,· Nl"\\.........,.1 Blvd. 870-4564 $39.95, Beach City Ap--J;?oodles! 131 Commercial ,.....dg TORTOISE shell Pe!'sian IMME D IAT E CASH Senior E xec Sec;et•ry TEACHER, Exper tor pllance, 3823 w. \Varner, St., between Superior & Npt Behind Tony's BI ·Mart's, CHILDRENS play h ouse cat. Feinale. Has papers. COMMISSIONS Must he excellent · In !ihort-Private School. S.A. (1 Bick E. of Harbor> Blvd., Costa Mesa; Garages Costa Mesa * 646-8686 wanted, .please phone , Please call 642--0773. Sell nationa.\ty.famous-Knapp hand and typing. Rl"!lponl· Call 646-144-i COLDSPOT Re!rlgerators No. 10 & 28. 544-SSlt BURMESE KITIENS Sl10ff pan or full lime. Very Ihle Girt f'!iday _for Senior TEOfNICIAN Wanted for Kenmore washers{!. dryers GARAGE &a.ill!:. Some very LIKE new 10' Instant awn· l\IAPLE chairs {need not Show stock $50 up h\f;:b cash commissions plus Ex@\!. For tntervu~"'· phone weight l'@duclng clinic. Call Disoontlnued Floor Models good Uem.s for buyers Ing, for camper or motor match) & niaple. desk. 714-5.17-4744 bonuses, benefits, Your O\\'n 833-9002 or apply in person 646-1633 Reductions to $100 \V/good tute, all Uk~ new, home, $50; 2 contemporary 545--1914 SEALPOINT sian1ese rem, bwrineu. No lnwstnient. lo Mr. Martin, age no bar· · Se.an. Roebuck&. Co. Sat. 10 am to 3 -pm. 213 30th Mahog. avocado up h QI .1----------d . Free selling nnd training kit. rier, Grand Pri.x of America, T.RAINEES Adama at MainoUa, H.B. St .. NeWpOrt Beach. Enter chairs, $20. ea: dbl recliner, Musical Instrume nts 822 ~J8;1.w~~2 !~~s. service Ralph P . Kelley, De1J1. 3901 Westerly Place, New-1,,.11 traln d d bl ~ -If '"-~el n ..... 1 pa~"·g hot pink, $20; 2 single bed ·===~~----coot 2, Knapp Centre, port Beach. '"1 epen I!' e wo°"!en .,.._,,o.-. 0 ••Ulnl. -=--c '"lU.11 spreads, l • b 1 a c k, l· SMALL SUNN bass amp, Brockton, l\Ia. 0240'1. to become lnJecnon molding C 0 PPERTONE \Vbirlpool lot. blue/green $10 ea; Portable very re Ii ab I e. Very Dogs 854 SERV STATION-COM opera1on:. Must have own electric dryer. 2 yrs., old 4 FAMILY Garage sale, typewriter, elect. or battery reasonable. ~1746 Aft 4 I•---------ITop Pay + Profit Sharing, 5 car, be able to stand entire $85. Whirlpool gas dryer $35. Sat/Sun, baby turn .. chairs, operated, $35: color camera, Pl\1 e PUPPY WORLD • S700 Day '"k· Sun oft. Prefer ex· shift & ~ able 10 work ?<.laytag \Va.sher $45. Guru.·. & braided rugs, kltCh table, Phototron .w/case $35: Jg.IF·"-0;:,R:...,Sa~l~e-Y~,-,ma,-l-,.-gu~;i~,-,""ln ENGL I S H Bull mix, Secretacy Sales Sec'ys A/P Clede $600 per. Apply, 2801 E. Coast weekends if necessary. tree dellvery. 54$-8672. or lamps, paintinp, dresser, mlrror & king u headboard, perfect cond . & velvet lined Chihuahuas, Ant e r i can $600 H1A'Y• at Goldenrod, CdM Openings on Dayshi_lt ($1.95 847-8115. exercycle. odds &: ends. antique white Med, $40; case 644-7&52 Eskimo (Spilz), Pit Bulls SERVICE station attendant to start), Swing lltnrt IS2.~ l 9 6 8 w Es T INGHOUSE Evcryth1ng 01.eap. 17812 San orange ottoman $1 0 ·I"'""'~:...,=--,,-""'-Greyhound, Bull Terrier, F /C Bklcpr, Corona Title ex: per. $750 F/C Bkpr/Omslr Sf;J(I ca1·Fr11eon1111r bckgrnd t600 Memory Test Trch S4·S5 hr DisitAI Tm Tech $4·$3 hr S.C'y t..esing bckgrnd $600 ReceptloniR l450 Payroll Clr<1< $600 M~ Fm! ore l500 R. E. Scc'y!G. "Fri. $600 Traloee 1525 (3.t>-3.5 O>nege GPAI AIP Cl'rlt (F.V.) t500 ft'/C nkkpr to SS50 NEWPORT Personnel Aeency 13J Dover Dr., N.B. . 642-3170 Secy1nR1eopll $42S.$100 Wltll or wiU"IOUt shorthand Smatt or I~ or~~ Acct CU., a/p $165-$650 ,.REE FREE FREE I.Ji JWlnder'! Agency 4.121 \\'merly rtat'e Suite US, NB 833-nBO For that item WKkr $50, try tbeI'wnnyPlnri>er. 1 All tight & even to S1'8l1) & graveyard stun Refrig 16 cu 11 $100. Good Clemente St., F.V. 54S:-1452 or 6@-U75 LUDWIG Drum set. Base, T-Cup Poodles, .I ta I ian saesmen. 1 • ($223 to start) Railie in 30 ' · snar1!, Prof. peddle, Ziljian Greyhound, Bull Terrier. Ing shift. Expe't'. Ref's. Ap-da.Y. ' cond. 307 East IGth St., C.M. BIG garage sale, antiques, ~ cymbals. $4S. 962-9930, Sat. Coc1tapoo. JOO M IX E o ply2160HarborBlvd.,0.1 A,pp1yl1 am-4pm 646-9741 . oak chrs, this, rockers,\•""-~~~~,...-~\.5~~~~~~~~~ PUPS!! Stud Service 'l\fost SERVICE Station Help. Full * Orange Coast Pla.stics * Rent W•shers/Dryers ~: ~ns!~p~ t !.b~~~ w:7-.:.F Ad Office . FurnTture/ Breeds. OPEN EVES : cir p/time. 990 E. Coast . 850 West ],8th SI. $2. Wk. Full ma.int. store llqWdatlng everything . .AU ~iture appliances Equip. 824 531-50'l7, llwy, Ne"'(IOrt Bch. C'o«t& Mesa, Calif. * 639-1202 * Every day & eves till 90\d . TV' 1 •to doth ' PUPPIES avail resuJts of ii· SERVICE Sia. Attendants. 1 --'72 G.E. Frost free, 2 dr, 1740 Newport.Blvd CM & s._ am~ :Ju USEesri B.Y orig owner. 12mo O:ld. licit love affair o u r Full & 1 p/time. Neat .iD iTr•lnee Lo.n Officer \\'hite, 15 cu. F't. used 6 mo. mrsc. c.<IUr> • Top of the Line. Executi'-e Schnauzer & adn1irer, 2 appear. Can train shaTP Salary $55(1 For SlcL 8.Sll!Oci&· ·846--0l!'il . LIDO Garage Sale, We are USABLES, 2560 NN'JlOrt desks & chalrs. 8' fcildlng male $.'.i ea. 642-~2. man. Apply moms. 2590 tion beach area. Entry po-movlng. Hou a e ho 1 d s . Blvd .• CM. Tues. thru Sat. Ut.bles, folding chain, Misc. ==-=.='"'-'-,7;,;n.,=c; Ne.wport Bh,d .• C.ft.1. sition, goocl potential. FRIGIDAIRE Re!rig. Good. English silver, ~om e ~ shelving, end tab I es , IRISH Setters, AKC, Field, SERVI CE SI.lion, f/time. o~ .. d Employm••t ?<.loving fl.tonday. $&5. furnlshint "s.'tclonlthes:.. ~~!2 EXERCISE bench, weights, bookcases, slde chairs, Show. Pet. Hunting. 42 r..tust be exper. Time+ K~ Afency .. , \VA.SHER~RYER ~taeOPortoNBX~~~ ~~5·tbf~. ;:,t~d1\8c!; ~~~r'la1~e~ks~~~c~~1i ~h~ Good homes . lime & 1 ~· Arco· 191 h &. (213) ~ Portable Dishwasher Richards. w-access. drapes, 4 sets of approx. 40% of cost. Call SAl\fOYED pups, AK C Newport CM. •o:l'I each * ~ GIGANT!Corl tal,.E;lctutts AA _.= 714-833-3741 to see champ lines. 'l\fust f.ind good SERVICE Sta Attendants UPHOISI'ERER with light .,_ en • 1 ...... .., ....... Each \\'-traverse · , ~ale or fem Fun & p/tlme cxper Apply at 898 w. 16th Building Mater1•l1 806 wicker, old reoo • good rods. Girl's clothes 8·10.-12X EXEC swvl chrs $15125 Sec homes, Reas. priced. ~vail. 837-0017. St. Ntt'J)Ort Beach. clothing, jewelry, silver, ~3008. · chrs $8/24-Desks $20/90 545-1914 e 'Surplus. Bulldlnf dblls, books, 1907 Bayof!et, ATLAS 36" Lathe \Vat· Pierce 867 W 19 CM 642-340.! p EK I N G E S E , AKC, * SEWING t.I.A CH IN E WAITRESS NEEDED MATERIAL -lOOO's of NEW plants + much misc. Fri & hmak 18'' lathe' H bco U beaut. Blond male, 1 yr, OPERATORS, S\\'lm \\'ear. I ber pl Sat ONLY. 9-4 pm. 310 c ers • •. Y LRG._ sec. desk w/2 f e Must sell, due to child's ". 760 ~--pus Dr., N.B. ITEMS! Doors, urn • Y· Coral Balboa 'bland. tap gr Ind e-r, Coe.ta drawers, xlnt cond. $150. 1 00 ·~ • 012 ·' ........,.. wood, alum sheeting~ mold· automatic ttre e h an g e r , 645'-4599. ~·::;';;'h"m:o'a°", C-17'."~""--;;;'T.'::" = 540-4511. Ing, windows, etc. RUMMAGE Sale Sat Sept 4'x6' metal utility . trailer, p"·"'-=i"'o~----8=2~6 2 RED & brown Chihuahua SHIPPING CLERK For Our BUILDERS SURPLUS 8th, 10 AM to .6PM, ~ir manual euh register, Fri. & ianos rpns male puppies, 6 wks old & Needed for bmy parts dept. E x ec. DfnllVI Room. 2400 So. Main St., S.A. portine Youth Ser v l c, de Sun ooly. SC-403.5. Fre Onran Lessons \\'eaned very loving $1D ea Previous exper. in automo-.... MOD thru Sat 10.S Center in YV, 18490 Euc I t.t:OVING • Set antique e I ft 642-4928 tive or rnotur cycle ptl1111 TI4: 546-1032 N~ to.San· IMll!ieo ~ M>Oden carpenter'• planes, COUJE pu ps, 9 v.'ks. AKC, dept. an advantag't'. Good EXPER. ESSfJN'J'IAL USED \\'OOd sash windows 567 :J.(DJ SUnbeam Mlxmaster, lge A1 Long A1 Yov Llke l fro1n $3.5. 20281 Birch St., llAI. Costa Mesa. (TI~l lloun lO &m·2 pm complete with frames xlnt TWO families hsho&d I: farbetware frying~· elec. Non-players & p)ayers v.•el-Santa Ana. 545-2536. 979-1550. ~tonday thru Fri. cond. + misc. i le m s . garden tum, com~. baby toa.s~r, lge, bbq brazier, set come to attend Tuesday 536-2983 eqpcnt &: clothe1, much Oil dishes, other household night at 7: 30 PM. We \(•ant See Mr. U.unas (1st Floor) Betwn 8-12 AKC Silky Terriers. 10 \\'eeks old. Champ. background. Good w/chlldren. 675-1195 e ACl l!IC MU:ruAL 700 Newport Center Dr. more! SAT & SUN, Sept. 8 Items. Oill 546-2411. ever)'One to learn to play Fumitu,.. 110 & 9 -9 am to. 6 pm. 18630 3 MINI-bikes, 1· Honda 50, the organ! All materials -----~---San'Tellpe, F.V. 962-1687. Xlnt cond. $70 to SlOO l':a. furnished. AKC Silky Terrier Puppies. Jo~nnhtstlc savings on our 1n. \'enlory at new & U600 bollt11. No reas, olfr. reruscd. Mc!'la Boat Ct>nlf•r, 1595 Newport Blvd., Cl\1. 646-6:169 or &l&-0539 Skip Jack Sale Over "20 He\\' Sklp1 \\'ill be sold thil'I weclcend at Witx' Out Pril'CS. BA RNACLE BILLS !Newport Pacificl 2'200 \\'e11t Coast Higtiway Ne"\vpart BeRC'h. 6-G-3880 CLASSIC 1936 25' Cruiser fully restored ne\v Perkins diesel galley, head, sips 4 }1251) - 18' PARl<Sl\.11TH Hull w/8' bcnn1, gla11s over wood , 4 cyl inlxl n1nrine cng., great h•;n t ror fan1ily w/snmll ehildrrn. $900. 6 7 5 -4 I 6 6 5:~1-421:! 12' BOAT all Glass 5 hp Johnwn n1otor $175. Round patio table umbrelJa 4 r haii-s, chaise l..otmge $40. Call 675-4901 16' F IBERGLASS ski boat & Johnson 75 w/lg. wheeled traller & boot top. MUST SEU.. VERY RE AS . 536-4078. ~· CRESTLL'llER, 221 cu", VS outdrlve, fine condition. Xtras + trlr, .$3400 . 496-3273. 15\i' SPORTLLNE, tisb; ski, /:J Johnson, cover, conv top, trlr, many xtras, rec. over· , haul, xlnt $815. 645-7846 att 5. LBT us sell your tral1erable fiberglass boat. For fast results call Mesa Boat Cenler, 646-6269 nr 64fi...ffi39. 27' SPORT Fisher., FIB, duAl controls, 2 compasses, bait tahk, low eng. hrs. Im· mac. $4500. 673-3388. '38' CHRIS ROAMER PIS loaded. $25,000. Call 83(),....9131. **WANTED** 13' Whaler. reas. 646-5398 17' FISH or Ski, twin 33'a, all the extras. $1295. 96H166 Sale Fri/·S.t/Sun GIANT GAR. SALE: Furn, Electro-static office copier, Tom Dieterich • in charge. To see call, ST'OCK TO ntt CEllJNG appl's, TV's, sewing needs rune.-up $25. MeU Phone 642·2151 552--3717 · Bo.ts, Rent/CMrt'r 908 W/BEITER FURNITURE! machine, auto c 1 ave. Bergama drafting lb 1., COAST MUSIC SILKY Tenien.S females. No Ne\l.'J!Olrt Bea.ch. .. ~ °""""' Employer Full or twin box sprgs & chi1drens furn, toys & misc. comp. w/llght, etc. $295. N rt Bl d at Harbor l'ff.8, offer refused. Call A OOtMN91T"8MOPPthc WAimESSES: ~. mattttss UJ, bolb. Sofas Sat & Sun 9/81c9, 163TI 548--3263 ewpo Cost v ~tesa 832-9422 or 644-6178. ~ ~ FOft THE ·~tllj Exp. needed. $2.25 hr. Con-$.59. Ol8.in $29. Bdrm. sets, Silver Lane, HWlt. Heh. 2 PLATFORM ·roe k er s, a AKC, While Samoyed male, 4 103' ~ LUXURY lall yacb1. Conu>. safety equ1p. 5 state rms. Reas. 'rateJ. 473-6465 tact Jaddl': We11tbrook. complete with box aprinp • SAT-SUN-MON. 6362 Santa Glhlon elee, stove, N.iagra PIANOS _ORGANS.._ mo: old $125. : ... Id SURF & SAND HOTEL mattress $19. Sofa & Love Ynez, Hwrtinctmf Beach, 1 rbu8age -chr. , db 1 e. N • U"• G 1 I tiO" 96H640 For M ad fn Woruer'l~I Wor J5o 1$5 S. O:lut" Hwy, Laguna Seat $139. King aize bdrm. 847 7477 Wuiier. Oryll!ir bd /trame 31. tram 11!i ew "" ......... rea SI': ec n. YANKEE CUPPER 19'12, 41' th 642 •671 xt Be 4 let .-.'Mio, Dinette tablll!i • 4 -' ' tbl • .; · • u" l8 Id Compl':tetlve prices. Open IRISH Setter, AKC, reg. l VHF RDF Call Miry le . ~ , e • ach, ~7 .,..,., couch, chair, boflee , .u w/mattresa, x go Eves. & Sundays, The best Qwnpion sh:e. & Dam ketch, dlese , , • Bo•ts, S.11 909 'r WAITRESSES_ No Studl':ttts = ~~~ ~49~ IJ)d bike, power saw, misc. shag crpl, 9x12 gold crpt. deals are always at: . * 968!-6927 * dl':plh finder. spdomeler, New!D. I SnUCJ Sleepi~t lag ~=~-~:ri; a~~ Sofa and k>veseat, 3 tables, ~ lr:w/~~orndre: ~:II!: very~ clocka: Walr.chs Music City * IRISH SETTERS,.* ~~.st~~· !!°tJ~· =i Coat or ress . . Hamburger Hamiel, 154.5 ~ ... _!!monps~-~ .. ~ .••. Fl-~: Slot car·traek; hand made Grand sOnorte Wall clock, 2 South Cout Plaza 541).2830 AKC, Shots, $80. 842-3158 cond. Xlnt cruising boat. M. 9460 SIZ!S 8-20 r.., 1(f ... i .... 1ff ... ,.. ... Ad A Colta Mesa. "'6a nu"llM:"'W6 ,_..... ise 1 11 Tlppe.r, Berth CS, Balboa A&:i:. M~i'tagan. ~~ON CENTER ~ &;u~V~~'. (nei ~l= 1 cl:Ca~ ~le; MAGNUS Coneoll': 4 5 o o. Fl1h 855 Bay Oub. WArI'RESS exwr. Fantutic 619 E. 4th St .• Santa Ana Mar). CM pr violin. hue Jamps, etc. 0 'Jan. playulckby --~~°!~J:· so GAL a11 ed show 1anks =0,f;! ~H~~J:UU~ cha.nee for a profeulonal Ddy,JD to 7 * SUnday 11-S GIGANTIC 6 family aale. Call 493-«BS. pnced. for q ~ .,......,. wist.and, 14" Arrawana. waitress. Graveyd shlh.. SWIVEL chair & match'g Objecte d' art, brlc--a-brac, TRAVEL Iron, typewriter, 84&-1150 Filters, heater, pumps, 2 10 ~7t.:W.1~tion, $6500. Ph: , ?'!'~-~Pl-Rela r II!: q 'd · recllner, "tables &: nite furniture. Sat&: Sun 9:30 lo ice cruaher, hair dryer, HAMMOND Splnet organ gal. w/l large fish per ~'--"="',-""'""~-:--.::; ~ stands, wrought iron lite 4:3J.. 144 Vla Yella, Lido televtslon. Sat 6 Sun Car-\Ylth pl':rcuasion and reverb. tank. 3 extra pumps, 4 box-CAL 25. 5 salll, barients. full WAITRESS • Exper. Apfly 11--atereo/l'V •c.ornho, Isl~. age Sale, 14812 Rattan, Excellmt, saerifl.ce $595. es of a.s9orted plants ·& racing equip. Hinged mast . • _ _.__ _.,......., Irvine 91'9--0558 n""' m.8685 Vane sell steerer, 9* hp after 2PM. UVUft:" Coe.st porch furn., ladies blke. GIANT yard sale, Sat,&: ~ • figurines .... . Otrtboard $6300 n4-846-1600 • Country Oub,. 1600 E. O>e.st 562-8.517. 9-4. Lawnmowers, lots of ORIG DAU etching $45, BEAUT. Ebony antique HorNli 856 · · · • Hwy, N.B. T C'Ultf'tS fl.lathes stereo junque. «>!;!Emerald Place, Hiroahige Woodblock $50. European Baby Grand. Xlnt 'TI CORONADO 27, rl.y 'd WAITRESS wanted, Exp'd •W/.-m/fm. ndio, Immac. Seal Bea.ch. Clmgall UttlO $5,;. Picasso rond. Saerlf. $795. 549-4Dl OLDER Gentle Ge 1 ding eqpd, 4 :aalls, 91 .. ~ Johnson • Apply now, Carmel's Dining ~e. Med. Triple FR.I & SAT. 11)-5. Furn, Lilho $65. Others. 628 But· BEAUTIFUL Antique oak fl.for g an /Clydesdale in-0 I B · ;J_~ · • & Pie Shop. 628 N. Coast dreuir w/mim:lr & 2 nite hsehold tte~, b Ike s, tom\'OOd, Anaheim. . upright p1ano. Unique. Ask-terested in good home in =55o;'c.'·=7648='-'' "C-~c.·-,,,.,.=- Hwy, J..a&'\Pla Beach -~~'.;~t;f to appreciate. BaclollhHboa,BlvdMlic.Bal ~9 E. FOR SAlE CHEAP I ing $275. M&-1720. · I ~COUlllr>""~"c°>atO:l:-846-7.:3569::::--;;· c;:;;; EBeL 8 Toun·"'1u1' "~~!ocJ ~~~ WANTED • Cotu>ie. retired, , _..J..U'fi,t· • . rc.i. .Ml ttems in good cond. TV, bdio, Himrl, MORGAN-Qtr. Mare in fool, .to. manage 1mall trailer 2'RfXL Ctn w/matchina" 8' YARD Sale, Sat. Sept. 8. 1~ cu Pt mini refrlg. tor bar, Stereo 936 10 yrs_ bred lo Arab. Take Best ot!er over $125. 162 E . pt\l'k. Man should be all coucfi, blue & avocado pf aid Beds, dressers., refrigerator, $35.; portable bar w/2 stoola, ht bid around $400. 54.z...oo.31 ,M_agno~~"~a.'"7"C.~•~'·==--= 1 .around handyman. Ca 11 1-lerculon fabric. id 1 cond., odds: and e~.:.J.87 Vfriinia 6 mos o!:d, $50; Call 613-360'1. RCA, Zen1th, s y 1 van I a ; Livestock 158 ** 14' F IB ERG LASS 548-7U9/ tl!iO. · White Frigidaire, Pl., CM. 642-·,-~. 2 DR frost-tree refrig set of Largest selecUon e o Io r, sailboat. Good condition. WE' H~VJ JOBSI Frost~[, bot~ ·freezer WANTED USED crystal, swag lamp,' maple black & white TV & stereos YOUNG Bantam hens, some \V /traller. $275. 833-Gll WE, NEID• YOU I retrig. $50. 645-4599. BRICKS ....:.. CALL bookcase, miAC. & kitchen in So. Calif. Priced less laying, ottrers ready . ='c0•,0•7n;="C'•'c,·=,_..,.,..,,,-= I CAlL REJ.fODELING, 100 yds red 17." _.564 llll!ims. j 0265 La J{aclenda, than the discounters \\'/3 yr Handsome mini-egg pro-BEAUT. l\1Jnt cond. 3>' Ex· WESTCLIFF 11hag carpet, end tables, -A~pt A, Fountain Valley. picture tube, 1 yr parts &. ducers (small eaters, too). callbar. Sips 4 radio, head, 6 Penonnel Ageoty armoire, piano stools, bar, YARD sale Sat. Sept. 8th 300 c H I L,D REN s clothes, ::~::J't:~~I~ ~= ~ $1. & $2., 4964123 (Capo HP 0/B, Spin gear . ll5l E. Edinger, S.A. corner Saybrook & Mom-Roblnhood Ln, Costa ?o.fesa. refrigerator, hosp bed, toys clear. Cash 90 plan or terms Beach). 838-1329. 548-.".874 (;\J&rlc Ill Center),. l.ngstar. H.B. Lots of bargains. & mtse. l~ Santa Ana to 36 nw. ABC Color TV, GHOST I:!, No. 009. Fbgl, 5f'l.8836 MOVING -Hen red o n YARD sale: cycl.e ptt!, A\-e .• Costa Mesa. 9021 Atlanta, or t 9 o 4 6 ~ sloop used onl'r, rull race kiiigslze bdrm set $600. stereo, etc. Sat & ~un. 604 30 GAL Aluminum boat Pll 8 roo khurst, Huntington I ....t""_.,. 1.1; Jf equip. trlr. co\"er, t llOO. WHO WANTS TO WORK? Italian Prov. dining sot Avocado, CdM. tank, Bonanza sCQOter bike. Beach, 968-3329 or 962-5659. . . ~ 846--2913. OJOO~~A ~ • ...ork S400att ,· ,'!:"'. items. 644-708& G1r1g• S•le s.t 11).5 l.'rlggs Strattm_~ hp mOlor, * Summer s-1.1 * 12' K.ITE sailboat. no 892 A·l I · ..... ... ~-no...-. CdM MS-2843. r--cond. Racing rig 2 sets or youneU, uo: )'OUr own 6 PC. Din rm set. Antique at ""' • "t'YI"• ' · Rebull ... P lcture Tube 8Q,lts, General 900 slills, trier {TI4 ) 673-8548 boss. Me.n or women. Can white w/tbl top in fi"Ult G•r ... S. .. ·S•t /Sun· -DECOR. items, •hoe II. $87.50-21'' or 25'' Color 1.::;::c:;:.,;;.:c_;..,____ S550. 7030 ~ e :~~ ~=~: "'OOd. + hutch; ~Hee tbl, .fl1 Marau:mte ~ S'B-0704 f~~~~~: ~:;; * 2 YEAR WARRANTY Vb, retired. A&e 25 to ro. long Walnut, ant 1 q u t d ; . Hrtir Vw Cdr.1 InstallaUon Available "" f\n.'B 0 SUppl ·""" ... income Stereo oocoole. 673-2103.~ Household, . OOOdl 1)4 ' Rice'1 Television ServiCf' HQd ,_.~•"' e:ment ~.,..... • 1 OR·l·LL press $175.rtinner).yMesaNorthCente.r :;ve • at.'b,6 ~or more• ~~~~G ::ce~ e 2 PATIO tumlt\ll"e-Cba!se · ·& ~<Hner/PlaM~ SS?· 901UJ l Bick s. of Baker 546-600l w1ltp ttiW up.tor campi'lff ytib;;, ~pt Co., Us~ uphol chain desk cb8Jr pad U). >i" round .plate ~ or · open &-.5 (6 days)' trips, txtra ~ al home. St a.ta Meu.. w/eaiters. iea eat l . gla.sa table top, 673--lm. TEAC 7010 R-to-R, 370 \Y. lnt!~~~to~~.: wO~ 35 or ~r. NO~ 615-7465 days. Jew elry 115. ~ST~ 1"f~ch1!~ Sansul amp. Dual turntable. rett tor turUe's tlcatb feet, pet. nK>eBS. Mln. wage dUI" DECO ~" gl~ cott.ee table. ERO S • iats. Sat, 91&, 5l6 32nd )00 \V apeakera & more. features. Ea.!'y·&eW! ra~m lng t r a I n I n K . Deal 3CbcfiO $90. Orig price $300. • 'GEN u • ·sr: Newport Beach ''541""'·25~"',,· =-:-=:;:---::;::: 7030: pattern pk!ces, dlrec-w/~lca1 profesaion by Wal & leather desk $47. " 1 gth ·,.!brown MAGNAVOX COMOle color lions 34 x &T' sleeping bag .. phone trom office In Nwpt 644-{ll.53. REWARD FULL en gre~. TV, stereo, AM/FM combo. • ~-Sch. NO aelltna~ 6-8 bn. MATCHING 5 0 fa . •nd e · e Spanish suedll!i coal lamb Beaut. cabinet $1 7 5 . AU BOATERS ATTENTION! Basie Boating Course ;n seamanship & boat handling by Ht. Beach Po"·er Squadron start!!'. September 11th at 7 pm at Marina High School & Jo""'t. ,Valley High.School LIOO 14 No. .2662 Trailer plus dolly, xlnt. =n LfOO 14. Trailer, full COVll!if. Good condttlon. $800. Call STI-7443 or 21.3-25r>-39-IO HOBIE 16, 1912 \Yhlte, dry storage dolly, $1300 Jett Sinionds ~ DESPERATE Must Sc: 11 Xln'l 16' 505 Sloop complete "'/trailer. 675-6886. llliVENTl''..lllVg ..,.,..., .. 0 Start 3·30 pm, 6t&-40tl 2 1 d lined size 10 best offer &15-709-I for each Pitt.em -add 125 betwn 9 AM&: 9 PM. "" ~~ve9e,at,ld bothmoior 0.,r:l'I'. ~15 after 6. · · " , NE\Vl we•· • .,.··a drcs:a or .. rm ror each pettern or . 5 • ....,.., ~ For ret11n1 or any in:' ··--'-•. d ~ .... "'W11.ined shirt Air Mall and Sp9cial Handlo WOMAN 1 am·ll' pm, Mon-1 fonnatlon leading lo rerurn MAYTAG w_.,er "' ryerl~-----........ Ii>-., this l'QSY, tni;· otbenn.. tll (lay tJn:u, Frlday, $1.65. GIRLJ; lovely white w/t@ld of a gold lour leaf clover $125. for .set. CE Americana I Ifs A great opportunity tor all boating en~husl5sts '70 BALBOA 20, sips 4, trlr, head, l2'V, O/B. Seagull, main $3200 Extras. 646-$32 1972 CLIPPER, Zl, trailer mntor, 1nany xtras. ?i1u.st seJ.L 496-0045. wtyle over d~ ~n!t delivery wJll · take t1ft4! wtnchc\1'1 Oomrt ~p. 253 trim desk. Xlnt cond. pin, approx. 2 tncht!I In 'elec. range, coppe.rtone, dbl FrH to You ~~.1 ,~relontoln ......... 1,. wvd· wetk:I or more. Sm! to E . 17th 51 ., O>IUL .Me&a, y~ · abOIVea unit, diametl'.!r, with jeweled ~·;;•:,•n~$U5.:::::C-'55::7;,;829=:::.,:,··,....,.,,d'-...,...--::::;-~. =:w. -~ #y-,Alke Brobb. the DAJLY 646-4373. ~ · 4 honieshoe in center: at.>, BRAND new, best of ll~~li!l 3 Lin", 2 Times, $2.0Q CHARACTER Bay Boat, ~ p a.t 1 e rn 9'60: PUm, ~l.. Nreodlecn1t WOltfAN/tulu1rm 1al11!: a YNC •. ctrl'• BR .et, gd. mat· gold locket· <wu on chain), pool table, gym equip, U'a5TI Lapstrake, 12', inbd, in Information (U4) ~94 LIDO 14, ancl trailer. J:OOd oond. STOO or olfl'r. ~ Mililft' 51»81 I, lO, ~1 14, 16. Dept., Box lN. y~ Cbe!N-Y clerk, pre! v.ith drugstore & lreta-&: bdbrd. S.pc. A appro«. the me of a nickel, CNsher, houle full ct ~. 6 BABY Klttcns, 6 l\-etk8 old, near mlnl cond .. $1500. 1B XI $».t'l2 (bUll~;K) tak-e-Statlon_:i..}11 ... ,.....,. "'"-.• • • eo&rneUc ~r. 49&--9191 ,J81L $150, tnscrlbed lJ'i ICflpt, FLA. M5--0225. T. Wilder 61'3-4400 "' ~· tMneh taltic. lOOlL'lfk~ .,...w, X..U.Y , * 00.._' &!~• """""•"'· * Tbe.e &re dcepQr. trtuUred COTA De CUa Membership, all colors from ~autlfUI 19'·'72 CARAVELLE tri·hull ·'JiSa' ,L,,UDhERS-ull .!~1~e.!,.ngtn~~l -l" -a--• """"" • l.A.l'f~. tlrnlly memento¥ l the Joq. · reuonable Offer, P .O. calico mothl':r. 646-35?3 full tand trailer · "" 6 "'" ... .. ft·l•W" ,...".... EDLECRAFI' , '12! TECHNOLOGIST neverUltd, both tor$ . 11 lm:placeable. PLEASE. ::: '%18, ())fona. del ?<.lat, ~ KtTTENS surgee~r:~. 165 ~~ .. r..ierC cond. SI~. 496-21]) :...-:.. ="" ~n:: Crocbtt, knlt, ttc. ~ ~ N~ lmmed-UMUJ•\iome. 968-'1'910 PLEASE he1&nil )'OU hive Ca. 93625. 548-8584. ~ Maple No. A In/out, Xlnl cond. 968-8616. KITE No. 135. H!Jhway Atl Mall ml 8plclal Hadlll· ~ SOc. -• iateb' -tor lllf'l'I! radklloKY VELVET burnt cn.nge ·Ill· ~ inr:kenck_ &G-31589. Sl'ORAOE; lot, tocked yan:I . Coala ~1esa PARTNER \\!anted, Scuba trnllcr. fully lied & t:nr; ~ .. ':.~, 'D~ .... ~ 8:" otr:lce looattd In Newport back cbl.lr $8$. Xlat aiad .... __._1 116 .Boeta, trtn, etc. $7.50 mo.** TH{tEE KITTENS, part diving boat, San Diego-Ba· registered $451>. 968-lm de1"U)t wut u•--,.._ ' • ~· 2 )'e&l"9 ll!:xperience, •2t1'1 ·' . ........... Mry N.tll Neon. Inc:., 531-3374. Siameae. Housebroken. ja. ~l&l!t '13 llORlE Cal, 16' "'/1-.eiv 'W'Mb °', men. Send to term.-$1.CltO,.... .J. .-pnftr male. Call 6CU46C for MAiiLf. •Rutdl, exceLftt r TWIN sz. -548c<824 BOAT traile• nd)ustable 18 to lrlr. Sl&ti. \\'ill illlln'tet )larlan Martin. the DAILY • ~-by ...i--1 Pat-appt. coalition UO. ALLEN O.Cllloscope o r DLu l • beginners •194--3307 PILOT .a, Pattem Dtot., _.. .... OO """:'._ .. \ • . YOUNG, aqrea!Yfl, ou~ cin ~ ·• complete Autorootlw tcsllna le MlSC. ITEMS CUTE kitll'.!Tll, l female, ii n . $145/or make oUer. 2!I vi11t 1ldl St., rteW ,tmm, ~· ;...... Gift._. tnc aalfl help· wanted for. • $115. Shopsmlth, includes CALL 642--4m3, n1a1e, box~~· 543-1360 Boilt1, Sllp1/~k1 ~'~ yon, NY 10011.. Prtnt O+J te 109 ~_men '• A ' women'• SOFA.t ·~.;:iad, itlOd v.'OOd lathe, table aaw, d1lc GAS/ELF.C Bl5Q 's at Boats, Ma int./ - llAD. '&Dou:M , Wlth it:-9 ~ ... ~81'4 store openlna: condJtron, ~ • ~ Mnder I: drU1 prtll etc. dtalfir'• COit (whOlesa\e) SllEPHERD Mix, . blk, 9 Service 902 Uni boa PeniMula ' , Sll't llllD and lr'fUI 0-. .., ...,._ ,,... -'°°"' tn ' the new Laauna . $175 call 839--3800 , Only a few1 left. 847-1602. mo's. Good w/kidi. All Prt. dock epace. 28' new Mft ' ~ t k SJ,00. 5 Hlllt Mall. of1 El TM> Rd. ~~ f. 190 MllC9lllMOUI 11i BEAUTIJ'Ut, atrl's tarp;e ahot&. Call M0--9127 EXPER. yacht mD.intcMnce. bl;lat" Adult11. $75. nlO. IEE ~RIC~ :,. lt .nn:r •• ...._ • 50c. In Lftlltlft W~d. Specie.I ~ • ~· 1 t, • . pMn 4 white doJlhouse. 5 Krn'ENS. 7 wka old. Call patntJng, varnishing & .rn=,5--0866~;,·,-,~=.,,...,-hlb~ !Mn r.ciur 8°* .r U Ptll9 ...... ••• 0pp011~' 'i 0 u n'I n rt GOLD 1 foot dn.pe-, wet Bar ·Nt'W m ~3027 S"n-7202 · ge!"lfrftl work. Satisf1tctlQn BOAT slit>. up to 40' 'E~!No Citalotl· All !iii . ·, ·=·~""!! J"~:.=. ftUICK-Ci$r, __ unl.t, t..rn '°"'· b«by 1fill 1!EAunnn. IP1ported •ool eEDIGREE Cooker_ Spaniel guarante•d:.14 !''"hr. Call ln Balboa Co•~•· Power ,-~. I Oiti . -ctdt .... _1,-11 pt.twnl. l3th. Cook tor a bl& tnck "P • walnuhbeU mtem Mt-' andquee.wbltf! area TUl·'A~ w/pllJJll!irl Fen\, 1 year 850' ·645=t~ . onl)" $6()-mo. SS7-o308 ., INll'"NT G BOOK Ille!. -1 , !Mt' wa,y1 ''Tlii Ponlcy" on TH110U•H• A WHEEL Chair • dt-1-'IJtlO' 115. 644-2690 w. :IO!h CM NE\V SW•• VHF Marine Boiti, s_.i & Sid 9 11 ,. ""todl>'. war bn&:tow. M Ud _. lhe IJde. " Danv PILO• ... commode. Xlntcondltkln. 3 PIECE ltCUona1 aood FREE.cute k\tt~nll, 1 blRck Radio Ant/ln~ta»«I only r IL • .. llll•I ., can~ •, 12.!iO I 1 ~)" fem ~la $29950 Bl·Tronlc.s. N.8 . )4' SK.I hoftt I tn.Uf'r, .__ ., A 8H1 ON ,.... tor ,,_, •• lhl• Fit Proftf II atlaln«I when ... .-.NT •D CUUJOAN wattr 10ftner covtr 125, Bed ~.. . ~-e .~~~ . sn..860t. >.101 rond. $000 nrm. INSTN' • • , ·~ ~•·! Our Tratl<r'• )'00 oeU -,...lit-'l'f .. , ,. Camper pot $4. &~-~· tn1 · !ml-Tm ~~ 1::'4 ricm.~-0 I ~~ ":brmn II"'! P.'' ~ ~Pilot Oaoolllod 64z;.5678 Marte u,:"~~· $100 YOU'D lllld tt ID CWo1lled Sell ~· 11..... . . 1142-5G711 Need • "Pad"! ..... ~ '" Rd! -~----iiiiiiil------,1~==-~-' • • .. Ftlday, Stpltrnbe r 7, 1973 l~j ·- lm...,..,ld CAPRI ~. st-cl & Ski 911 16' SKI Boat & Trailer, 283 Chevy, new battery, coil , dlalr, &real engine. Hook up ":~ harneU & pmp ,.......IL $495. m.-2828. Cycl•s, BlkH, Scoot tr• jij]:~1 ;;""';;"'°;;;'"";;;:;l§J~:;Au=t;·=~~=~=·;=LT~9:;70 1 AUIOI, R-12 Truck1 961 ~ Autot, Imported 9'10 NOW ~THE FIAT Autos, Imported 970 Auto5, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 92S * BICYCLE SPECIAi~°' * New 10 11p tron1 ....... $J9.95 Used 10 sp fro1n , , ..•.• $2."l 00 Bike cleaninJ.:: •.•••.•... SI.Ml Beach Bit'yrlc 806 ~:. Riilboa l~lvd., BaJbOa. 675-7ZS2 '64 Chevy 6 'I• Ton 4 DOOR SEDANS Pickup MERCEDES JIENZ MERCEDES BENZ PORSCHE LS' SKIBOAT for sale, good oond. $600. 10715 E I 1't100ron, Fountain Valley 16' Olfl'BOARD w/trlr. Dt!al , of a lifetime $100. Call -Moto r Homes Salt/Rent 940 e SALkS e • SERVICE • e RENTALS e EXPLORER ,, HUNTINGTON BEACH l8h01 !'!/"ti I llol· 841 81!1)) HUN l1 N1.fl)N UE..0.Cti Ft>RD 1969, % Ton Super Van Camper, auto traru, air, heater, radio, fully f"quipped + ll't.>c standing ;tisi priv prty, 11.a . ====G=M==;c=== 30" HIGH Ca m p c r , Motorhomes pass-thru, finished inside>, 23· & 26' v.indov.'S, cabinets, 2 bros, .I.'1i\fEDIATE DELIVER\' ice box, fiberglass outsid<'. \ Orangl' Co.'s (its long bed 'Gs-'70 Chevy Exelusive Dealer or GMC. $150 IW&-&'l56 Bill Barry Pot1fiac ·m \\. T. Camper Spec, Air, Gf.JC REC. CENTER R/ll. Lo. mi. P/S, P/B. 2(XX) E. lsl St., Santa Ana Slps 4 loaded S 3 4 0 0 . 558-1000 646-563> -,-73~C=LEAR_A_N'~C~E~ LEI' us sell your camper or PACE ARROW trailer for you. M e> s u Camper Sales, 20~ Harbor, TIOGoc A Costa Mesa, ~2 \VE rent campers for you.r l:\1~1EDIATF' DEL!\rJ-':RY truck. Mesa Camper Sales, CREVIER BMW nl6 1-larbor, Costa l\lesa, Sales · Se-1-vict' -!..casing .646-4002 a»! \V. 1s1 Sr., Santa Ana FffiREGLASS camper shell 83a.317I I-Year old. Perfect cond. DALE's h1olor Hon1e Rentals Spec ial servi5c lx:d, wrfec1 WITH AUTOMATIC for t•lf!t<'lrk:lan or plunib..•r, l~ cond, (R6Jm,. $995 llfanJlll!• 11\uhll!• (llllU'JQU ~l>l >li'\•• . . ' "' ' ""' .. ... ' . . . . . '6$ 1"0ftD F·lOO truck. COCMl #9IOOObS Cf'lndition. \Vhltc, good tiretl. '-lcdium mllear:e. $650. Call , ,, . . . -. · , , , "'"""-""":::m:.•·c..::644:.:-<...:::'I:;<". -~~I~-~~' l ~~, •-:., '71 TOYOT1\ Pir kup N~ -- steel radials. Xlnt corul. ,. ~} .:: $1700.962-199.l af\5. _,,., l j~d '--.··"' '66 EL Camino, P/S, radio, air, cle>an, $700 cash. Call 557-9596 aft 12 Prt1, 9-7-1973. LEASE A Ni':\V TllUCK All makt>S . type>s . sizes Purch/opfion 64:>-7000. '72-1 11 TON ford pickup, like> ne\'•, 101-1' nil. 5j7-4989. Ask for Brookc> Van1 963 '71 Chevy l/4 Ton Van Auto Trans, Pov.er Steering, Air Corid, 1\-1ag \\'h<!els, 29,850 n1Ues, At.l/l''"?t-t Stereo and Tape Deck, \Vhlte with gold striping. $3295 DICK MILLER MOTORS 120 W. W"RNER SANT .A. ANA SS7-2132 ALFA ROMEO '66 Alfa GTA Blue with <.'Olltrnsting intl.'r- ilor, 5 spd, 4 wheel disc brnkrs radial lil't's, Extra sharp,' Stt & DriV(' (TNE- 436). $1588 . iJJ1\1rh ]lt11p11rt~;· +~ ,, ,, ,., \ '' '"'"'• •,. ,..,.,, IJ< , '' +.I~ "'''" . .. -.... Call' SIZ-<;004 N•w ,,_,.. & Minr, '69 Alfa Spt'der Cycles, Bikes free mileage & insurance Sc ~s 9 Ull 9. 838--0900 3100 \V. Const H1ovy., N.B. Fuel injer!ion, 5 spd, All NEWPORT IMPORTS ooters -r"" L\llifAC 24' Pace Arrow a ir 642·9405 original. like ne<.Y (690AFR) ~f·"~m=·=· ."'.~"··'-·"·"~r"-. ""_'"_"'_"_t _0 '_ 1 -""'·"'1'"'2~FO=~R"D=-7v'""A'"7N~1 SAVE Trailers, Travel 94S llt73 -350 P URSANG Bultaco Blue P r 1 n t c d , Barnett- Diamond Cha.ins, Impacts, 350-450 Tires l\1any inore extras $900. (673-77•19) '72 \VAROS HT lent trlr. Slide-out kilch, sleeps 6, :!JOBULTACO Pursang. SllOO. \\•/tent 9'x12' & Tota-Toilet, Runs Strong. J\fany New w/pvt shelter. $950. Total. Parta. Private Party. $400. 847--5925 Phone 494-4747 =:..c:.=~-~~---GlLES Travel Trailer 26' '70 TRJU?tn>H 650. Im· 4 whl, elect brks, ale, fully maculate chopper. 2 3 0 0 sell cont. many xtnu. miles. Sho\V piece! Alt 5 97S--01.89 pm. 5S?-365l . "23"·'""T"RA"""v=E~LEZE=~=Tr~,-.. _~Gd~ '72 SUZUKI 90 Rover 700 cond, E-Z lirt hitch. Sit miles $375. '66 Honda Benly contd. (213J 592-5187 90 M)5(l Miles $175. Both Perfect 642-9365. Auto Service, Parts 949 ..:..:C'-'.:='-"..::.:::="-~~~1 2 CAT 31h H.P. Slingshols, Radial Tires for Sale like new, $80 ea. Honda 50 Sl.25 set of 4 Auto Tran:s., V·S, carpet!! & "'lllnut graitl paneling. {397- ETXl, $2999 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA lml. BEACH BL. 8-17-S555 llUNTINGTON BEAO{ '68 CHEVY Van 90. Lo miles. Clean. $2500. 1inn. Private party, 673-8297, ~3587. '69 CHEV VAN V-8, AUTO, RIMS. PANELING. Pvt. iJ.l1\trh Jh11p1n1~-t ' +? I' ' ''''" '< ''' "'" ' IL '' \ ' """"' ' . . ---· -. .. ... ALFA ROMEO SAAB Buy or Lease Sales • Service . Leasing • ~ntals -.. .. T!h-arh Jh11pn11~; +~ .... , .... ,, " ' ' • " •.l~ • 1« Pty. S12SO. Call 642-2540 ALFA ROMEO _ SAAB '69 FORD 1 ton, auto, V-8, in NEWPORT . . . air, 32,000 n1i. \Vill trade. --.!'.'..~A~U;,D;:l~--6'13-5507 or &14-4839. $100. cat 4 H.P. $70. 1201 673-6430. Estelle, N.B. 548-33i3 '64 FURD Econoline Van, ·~ MONTESA Cota 247, Ex-4 WIRE Whls, 2 new radials clean, J\lake oHer or trade. . '70 AUDI •J 14", 2 IK'w seats tor sports. cellent condition less than $100/bst olr. 673'.-9525. c~C:.0--0="-"~~-~~--lOOLS 4-0R. FABULOUS 1973 •71 FIAT 124 SPIDER CAPRI COnvt'rt., red w/blk interior, Sport c:oupe det.'Ot', body side 5 ir,kt, Excr-llent t'On(!. t8l9- mouldlngs, reclining !rout Dl''A), 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY ~llt•, t'Ontour rear scats. 4 $2395 11~ traru:mission, power Sharp New Car front disc brakes, style steel Trade--ins \\'heels, bucket st>t1ts, r adial Coming In Every Day ply tires. ax:tk.'C eng. "-k About Our Un ique lGA.ECNB42801L ru OVERSTOCKED! '69 FIAT m Sed, '10 Used MorcodH LHM IMMEDIATE Chevclle, 6 cyl. i;:1ick. OOth Plans DELIVERY ~~'O,,d. Tako trade . H1111se of .Imports GUSTAF$0N •71 >'!AT 850 '''"' """ "'62 Maru:h.,.ler. Bu•n< Park U I Mer U vt."l'Ul:Jlc, tap~ d cc k . un the Santa Ana Frv.·y nCO n• C ry '544-5336. Ex cc 11 e 11 t con· 523-7250 16800 ~ch Ell \Varner dltion. JIM SLEMONS Jluntlngton Beach 1910 FIAT 850 Co u P' 842-8844·* (213) S92-5544 !Aw•red '""""" K 0 n I• IMPORTS "Homo of tho Viking" Abarth exh,t,' M •gs · MERCEDES BENZ CITROEN Mi ci>elins. "9M. rn..5839. Alfl'HORlZED -------1 KARMANN GHIA SALES & SERVICE '72 CITROEN SPORTS :MASERATI 'S9 KARMANN GHIA no eng, $75, 646-8.112 MAZDA ditlicult to find, prestige autD, --------- fully """lpped C300GIP!. BOB LONGPRE i!h\trh Jhnpttt1~; +~ ''"' ,\ '1 ""'''' ., . ,c ,, • 'j '' ,_, . ·-. . . DATSUN 240Z's MAZDA -SERVICE FIRST- EXCLUSIVE MAZDA LEASE ls! Street at the San!a Ana Ff"',!,")'. 2001 E. 1st Str!'f't LARGEST STOCK Santa Ana 5.'>S-7871 EVER 3 R F 1970 th 19n * Mazda '7 otory * rom ru $66 MONTH Various Equipment 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE 4 . speeds Automatics Will accept 1rade-i.ns AU' Cond. Assorted rotors CALL ?.1R FRY 842..6666 Al.SO SEVERAL H . B h DATSUN TRUCKS unt. eac NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. MAZDA 17331 BCach'"Bt. 642·9405 f\1USf S<'.'11 by Sept. 9, 'Tl --~,~7~2'"'-2~4=o~z~--I RX2 Mazda, low mileage, stnd. equip. 536-4983 or YellO\\' wtblack interior, 5.'J&.3i69. Oiris . .Best over !\>Jags, Air Cond, Auto Trans.1_:::12::.,400=.'--~~-~- A 1""°"'-ner beauty ITI7HEJ). "\Veed it & Reap" SALE From treasures lo trash Turn them into cash CALL Dally Pilot Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail Ne\vport Beach 833-9300 ENTER FROM MacARTl-ruR 1\lB '56 190SL. Classic, Grent Cond, convertible, A!\1/Ff'.l , stereo, etc, Priv. pnl"ty 548-5311. 'TI l\fERCEDES lknz 250C. Xln't cond. 23,000 mi"s. Call aft 5 pnl 871--0:'142. '58 220S, eng & body rinC', ne«:ls upholsh·ry, $900. * 5-11-3044 * '72 Mercedes 350 SL Cou1>c Rdstr., Radio, heater, automatic trans., po\\'tr steering, po\ver \\•indows. fac!ot")' air, beautiful bur- gundy v.•ith beige in1erior. 01\[y 13,000 miles. 6.'HETJ. Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail NC\\•port Beach 833-9300 Em'ER FROf'.l l\lacARTHUR 1960 220S MERCEDES Sj()(J, eall l'Ves bi5-4Ji0 Fat Profit iJ atlal"M'd \\'hen you sell through re~ulr-ge1 - ling Dally Pilot Classified Ads. 642-:-.678 ilit·arh jluq11111i; Autos, Imported '970 I Autos, lmported--970 .L-Jo '"'' '" •• ' "·• •' p .......... ''•' .,., ''" '71 Mercedes 250 '66 PORSCHE 911 S(!Clttn, 2.ol,000 nctuill nillt>s. b'O•l.-roui; sil\'l•r, !>lack fnter- Rl\dki h1·:H1'r, 11uton1atic tor A,\1/Jo~t-.f, b 51>d, mum lief ll'lll\8~115.•lon. ractory 11\r. ro ~pprt'l'1atl'. !361.EQPI. p!)\\'f'r' fii'l ('('\'lllg, tx•autiful J SAVE owner tur. l4i1Dl-"I. Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quall Newport Bench 1!11-9300 E.NTER FR0!\11\tac-AR'rllUR ·oo f,IERCEDES lk>nz :,.o;,o:;, 4 dr, air, auto. pis. 1ni1n,\' >:tras. Jn1mac;. contl. ht'sl ofr. &12-filSS MGA 1959 f\1GA, good cond. $~00. 21797 l..akc> Vist11 Dr., El ·roro, 830-7352 MGB . [ll'arh ]h11p1111~; +lf " .. , ... ' ... ~. •' "" .. ,,~-. JUST I>IVORCED · i\IUST SACRl~'JCE '71 f'urS<.'hl' 911T, S ill• .strurncnts a-spJ. Porsche 111 11 .i::s , 'n l r. $6900 . 714-JZ.1-166.1\ If no ansv.·er. 323-1919 & ll'i!VI' n1e~s.a,i::e. P 0 ItSC 111,: 911E, '69 spor!orn:ll ic ti/C. sir/radio & 11!.J>C'. ~·u<'l Jnje<11on 9US Trln1 , xlnt t'UrM.I, drk gn>en, fri.l-{)j05 .1~912 llov11l hh11~. Ailll'r . n1ags, arn/flll ,~ [ilg'S. :1:1i-:t l!l7. * * '64 l\IIGB \Virl' \\"hl'l'ls. lonneau, ski l'IH'k, uri1: ownec. $695. 61>--0730. RENAULT '67 MGB. \Vires, radials, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii runs goorl, lookl'i sharp. 11150. ""z..11" RENAULT OPEL R·l2 4 OOOR'S Au!ontatil· Trll.~i:r.;IOl'I '69 OPEL GT SALE $2499 R-IS Auto Trans, Si!Vl'l'. !ZR!tUT!. ( #aJJ:ll $1899 SALE $2799 BILL MAXEY Dick Miller Motoro TOYOTA ~ IV. Womo.-. S.A. 557-:ll:tl 1~111 BEACl1 BL. s~1.&"J55 I ·r~R~E~N~~A~U=l=J~.--1.1 HUNTINGTON BEACll '67 RALLYE. r/h, 4 speed, 47000 mi. "' nu rndiat' ""''· $699. 5-&-4293 1970 OPF.L GT, nr ne\\' tires. 17 nillcs -gal. $1875., ·192-7883 '11'""7 RALLY KadC't. Xlnt. rond. Near ncy.· rndials and h111tery. $7ll5. :U&-3126. PORSCHE 'GO PORSC.HE 1600 S Cnbrio\el. Reblt enginr, nu pa inL $1600/l>est o f r ~ r , r)25-2598 . 7 2 RENAULT R-12 4 Door Sedan, aulomatic transmission, radio, l 9i4· l''BCI, $1795 Dick Miller Motor• 120 \V. \\lru11C'r, S.A. 557·Zl.32 SPRITE 'K~ PORSCHE 912. ne\\· pnlnt AUSTIN Hf'aly Sprite, Mark .~ engine. $-1100. Ca 11 JI!, '66. Sharp and Clean. 548-8612. SiOO. Private Pany, Phone :-:rf'fi fl "Pnrl"? .Plare an ad! c'c.''-'""1'-'47'--------I Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 100 mil~&. $850. Ph. 552-8404, '62 CYLINDER engine for 1973 GMC Van, V-8, s~ick, Gray v"ith gray cloth interior , 673-2!91. Jeep, some extra parts $150. long "'h} base, lo nules, 4 speed, radio. f654BXRl. ·n HONDA CB 350 Silni 542-5007 a fter 6:30. $3".l:!l5. 495-5827 $2695 ohop...,..-1 mint -condition. .7"'-7CC.O::-;:::.=""--'63 FORD v '' M New ~""ar tire chrome $625. '62 OLDS 98.. needs water an, ags, nu Dick Miller otor1 ~7. , pump, new trans, premium en.g, m~st ~~* 120 \\'. \Varner, S.A. tires. all or parts. ~7680 557-2132 WE'RE MOVING BIG SAVINGS ON '73 IX>mos 5JO's Pio::kups 610's FOR Sale, Im Yamaha, d 650cc Xlnt cond. 19CX> miles. (2) 15" CRAGAR Chrome 4.utos Wante 968 BMW ~113.1,,...h~r :P.tust sell, Wee over pymnts. Ala.gs, lncld!t lugs, caps & °""..;.;:...;~T;;O;;-P;,----'-j ___ _.:~~~---l~{;'' ¥""Vt( t:::-'~~z~:-m ce, mi ~t~ire~,~-~l50~-~-~5688~~~! I DOLLAR ORAN~~Dc;,~NTY'S D~l~~N miles. $2'15. II r-> J PAID & Ncwpoct Boh 894-1.lll AMtolflwW. . ..., 833-1300 Open Sunday GIRI.'i Schwinn bike. 5 IMMEDIATELY 1973 DATSUNS gears, good condition, $40. owto uy neconomyca • Call 64&ffi!I. Gononl 9SO FOR ALL ALL MODELS ·n YA:P.1AHA ntini-E nduro FOREIGN ExC'C'llent selection of Pl"l'- showroom cond. off road. WANTED USED pl"ice re-i!Valuation n1odels. IN STOCK '"''""' 642-4497, $250. BRICKS -CALL CARS S.\l,,g~gxtE~SING BARWICK IMPORTS '69 HONDA CL 3.50 Runs 870-4564 WE ARE IN OVERSEAS DELIVERY 33375 Camino Capistrano cood !250-646-40",,, AntiquH/CloHlcs 9S3 DESPERATE NEED ROY CARVER, Inc. ~-f1Th'.:?'s'3~-~ OF GOOD, CLEAN 2;!,.''&':w1~·;;:,·· ~: R STRAMAN AUTO FOREIGN CARS Costa ~-17th St.5'6-4144 '68 Datsun Wagon Call alt t2 noon. 6"2--!ml RESTORATION TOP DOLLAR-PAID W Auto Trans., CVZU99li NEAR new, •"" Schwi•"' Quality Mochanioal & Cooch FOR OR NOTI CREVIER BM $1099 Stingr.ay. $50. XLNT! "-ork on your prestige Eng-Call or come in to see us. Sales • Service • Leasing BILL M •xEY ** 846-USO * lish Automobiles -Ro 11 s 208 Yl. 1st St., S.A. 853-31TI A '72 KAWA. 759 pen. rond. lloyce, Bentley, Jaguar, cto. USED BMW'S TOYOTA Id Call 83'9627 FUily equipped to work on ~~e · ~ or Contemporary or Classic '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 ' f'.fodels. '72 2002 111 1-fUNTINGTON BEACH 360 BUL T AC 0 • excellent 7'1.A Ohms \Vay, C.M. 548·1i61.l '70 2002 '73 DATSUN 2ID-Z Take over condition, must sell fast! 31()(1 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. '69 2002 1 ~-s·t 172 642 9405 ease or uuy. 1 ver, A/C, 646--0 · 1958 EDSEL 4 DR, ll2 eng. ---·-~~~-t '68 1600 mags, exc. cond. ffl-7320 or 1970 T 500 Suzuki $450. or Clean. auto. $800. Phone: TOP CASH '67 2000CS CPE ·"'°""':.:::..::34:::9:.___~---best orfcr. 3026 \V. Coast tm-4616 -: Hv.'Y, N.B. 548-2431. ~~~-------tor clean late model cars "68 2002 '71 DATSUN 510 \Vagon, air, Recreational and t>"U"k•'· t ......... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. I Xlnt cond. $1850/Best ofr. ~ YAMAHA ENDURO. v h" I 9S6 ~ ,. .,, ~· d , •• OH O • •<.. Howard Chevro"et Bob M"cLaron, BMW ~·~ ays, ~~ •""· Xlnt ro;d~30 * II I '72 DATSUN 4 speed, radio, '71 V\V DUNE Buggy, 36 hp, l\Iac;\rthur and Jamboree nc. xlnt cond. Lo mi. $1800 '71 HONDA Cl70 l\lini Trail Flake body, nc"ar-nev.• tires, Ne\\'pol1 Beach Sales -Service -Leasing 551-2648. Xlnt cond. under 600 mi top. Runs good. Private 833-0555 850 North Beach Blvd., .:::::,,:::;::c.,,.-~--~- $185. 962-1763. Party, $695. Call 49+-4747. l"E PAY TOP DOLLAR La Habra. '69 DA'I'S0~.E4LLd~~~_,.sedan, " (714) 879-5624 r/h, M ST S ~· '71 YAl\lAHA Dirt Bike, BLUE Dunc Buggy, '69 reblt FOR TOP USED CARS * 64~ * Super conrl $32"i. Call C!Ves Corvair eng. street legal, ll your c_ar is ex tra clean. Aul Imported 970 A I 970 ·~91 .. """' ,, •• ,~, os uto1, mportod U"l\T"VV • "'"" ~ .>0 see us first. ::::·:::::::::::::::=;;;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;;::;;~ * 1972 TRIUJ\IPH 500 * I•IO HP. Corvair Sandrail BAUER BUICK 1 P erfect Condition \\•/sand ,t, flotation tires & 2925 Harbor Blvd. $895. * * * 400-1009 , 1railer. Dave. 548-3697. Costa f.lesa 979-2500 3~~ HP 1.1INI DIKE Trucks 962 'VE HUY Run!I; Perfect. S60 or TMPORTED AUTOS Best orter. 6-l2--G<i2~ 'G.1 OOOC:E Pickup, V-8. 8' BEST PRICES PAID ! ·71 KAWASAKI Centurian hed. $975. Good condition. Dean Lewl t lmport1 100. l\1any extras, idnt cond. ___ •_548-_>_lJ()_•___ 1966 Harlx>r, (;,!11.. $37S. 963-2963. 1958 CHEV Can1ero 1 ~T V-8 646-9303 'iO HONDA SL 90, '7'1 Hond a 1'!ick, Body in f'x (."('llent IM PORTS \VANTED Trail 90. Both >:Int cond. Aft s hape. S67.i Call 8J9-'.j'905 Orange County's 5. 962-8108. '63 \'\V PU. Good <.'Ondition. TOP S BUYf:R '70 1-IONDA CB 350. PC'r fr·cr A11xioos lt.t sell $400. Call BILL !\tAXF.Y TOYOTA like new. Xlnt mechanic<1lly _:;S_i-_:'_,920 ____ ~== 18881 Beach Blv :. 5400. Steve, 6-12-5919. C"l:i!i~tfil'rl Ads ... 642-5678 H. Bci ch Ph. M7-855;i I DATSUN SAVES YOUR PRIDE AND YOUR MONEY Sure luxury cars are nice. But with ope11tlng expenses so high, who can afford theM 1n)'!llore? Yau can. A Da tsun 61 B. With around 25 miles ptt 9a!lon 1nd rcmark1blJ ine1pensite m1intenance, It's still • luturious 1utomobile, Tinted glass. luM c1rpetlng, big retfining bucket setts, handsome lin1l·upholstered interior, electric rear window defroster and much more are an stand1rd equipment. The Datsun 610. A iv•WJ economy t•r. An Idea whist lime has come. e SALES e SERVICE e PARTS Ml J.OR. HARDTOP e LEASING , SERVING ALL OF ORANGE COUNTY !ONLY S MIN. SOUTH SAN DIEGO fRWY.I • 1. See how it holds the road. 2. Test its steering response. 3.Seehowit comers. 4. Try the brakes. 5. Drive it on a windy day. 6. Notice if its fun to drive. •"11·---c.-...:• Introducing the New Honda Civic." • BIG SELECTION-IMMEDIATE 'DELIVERY! • ' Motor Homes Salof Ront Mo tor Homes 940 Salo/Rent 940 I llAND HIW '73 VIVA MINI MOTORHOME -·~ .... __ , _ .. -.... ·-·-·~ ... 11 -............ --.-.............. ilioi, ...... , ., .. __ 4 ........ , .... 11 ........... ilf'I ... --.!)-~Ill ~~~ $6.9..8..8 PICK FROM OTHER FINE NAMff ''"•·ll«•w • M•l.M•• • l iov• e '°"' i •or •Vivo • Molidoy W he•I• and olh•"· TAKE YOUR PICK & SAVE! OUR/NG OUR YEAR-ENO PR\CE Bl~Sl~ NEW '73 PACE-ARROW 20 FOOT MOTORHOME ' J""""",.... wlrll -· ...... 1 ..... in.......,..•-" 1.-1....._ ,........ •'-•-.., ~· "'-l••· I ,t1 tlrn, -•Miii, .. 1. ,..,.... ...... (~Olll00Sl03010) . $ NOW ONLY. PICK FROM OTHER FINE NAMES, IMMEDIATE DELIYfRY , .............. M.t-Mar. l lottti • , ... , '"". vi-• Metldoy Whool• ond olt..•• • NEW '73 SIERRA VAN P~U ••n<•~••'>i..n,lo.o~lo ... ,1)00, 117-,-<llw:-ltH,J l l ..................... 1-,_;. ; •• 1.1 .... ,. .. ._ -·· ttlM .... -.-..lio, t h-t tlll, ,, , ... ,1...,, _._ whi,. lo"ooH tlt'Oo, wl<lo -lo, ,,..,,, olt•lt, L<0M•, ,tl<li.rti wl-• .. irh "''-"" .. l~I ... !Mio. jl11AIJJIGI J 10l J ssaaa IMMEDIATE DELIVEIYI '71 FORD I Ull l l l O, Yan Con•enlon \'I. ~u!Cll'tl1' !r•n,m,,~;Ofl, ~ ~l!'rt111<i, r<>Cl•o. 110,·r. I•~~. fcet()J, o ~ellt, power on v~tlO f, li"8:J ll\l)OlllLY '71 FORD MIMl~TOIHOMI (KAM, •INOI v~. tijt""1,l1{ tri!l\1mi11ion, ••dio, -Pl~. •!O-.'fw1tn own. ooub:e ~Jll.:I, .ol~n1y of 1•o•o1<1t ~Oilff, ll'.4t.V ~tl!ff t'1,,I. (WVVOll) ONL V Mlni-Motorhom1 ROQI •l• (°""1lfo•i119 "' IU1. POWt"r VI. •u!om1l•t 1ra"'m:n1C11, reu OlAn!, V-~. dutcm11•C !ri!l\\mos1ion. Odll'I, 10,1r1 l nol ~r,oout>I{' ~1nk1, pe,.~r llf1'ronQ, P!)Wfr br~kn, lroi11 ·i~·~W·1hOWn,IOJ.iELA.I O~LY bull~. mo""' O•llttl~ •• cu. fl. r~lroae<Mor, 1.11 h.ll~room. m.inr aThl'• t•T••1. M•nl concl~iOfl! (5?u n $5288 °$7388 '71 FORD SH>ITS ciJsTOM l'tcllU, & I' SlllM ON CAMl'll. "(ING O' T"£~' hrtJ<I!__. Mts, lhM, W.k, tlftllS I, •4ftl' ~1 • ,,.,.,. ~Mt<"""· I(~). '71 DODGE IUllll (OP VAN cOHVt•stoH V-t, 'ulo. 111M1., ~ 1!ttr""9, jll)flt'r llfl'on, tt010 wJtn retr sPftl · tu, Kt boo. lllM', 1IMk, diM!tf, '~ •, IPll'e tlrt ()l60Ff1 ......... /' ~ I FrldaY, Stpt.tmbtr 7, 197) DAILY PILOr ' l§l ~I _., ... _ ..... ,._l§l '--I _., ... _ ....... _l§l I """"'.. J§l .__I -_ ... _ ... _l§J [ L.. ;;., •• ;; ...... ;;,. ~l§l;;; -;;'"'"•'"-~l§J~l Autos, Imported 97o l•------• •-------• I 1 r1-~ t70 ----~' A11tos for Sale ---~-----1 A uto1, lmpQr1ed 970 Autos, lmport-.d 970 "'u ••· mpo _. Autos, Used 990 At1tot, u sea 990 A·1to1, Used 77V ~I TOYOTA VOLKSVJAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOi.VO BUICK C ADILLAC CHEVROLET .. 1 $2021 .95 '68 VW '67 VW WHILE THEY '71 BUIC_K _ EL DORADOS 1 '70 El CClllllno .1 1 I S"'UAREBACK Factory Camper LAST ! SKYLARK 14 TO CHOOSE '""' w 'b!ad< tnterior. ori&· Pus tax & Ile. ,.-V VS !nal. t;(.•m Top, Auto Ti"al'W, I is the '73 OLVOS , autornallc, radio, heater, COUPES-COr-o VERTIBLES p . •, Air conditioning,-4 ·speed, Refrigereto1', Stove, a 11 • 1,,.9 PQ\Vi?r sle-ering, !> 0 we r Pow1>r Steering, ow e r Delivered Price AM tape, \VTR329. utensils, super clean, new \)'j b k f . d' DE v·ILLES Brakes, l owner beauty. for a e 1•15'11 rn es, ac10T"Y air con •· '73 TOYOTA ~eroJot bMUSTb SEE : \~:. Honing. s2Ti8 38 Tg,~,!!,~SE """'"$1999 COROLLA W TO Now Is The Time To DAVE ROSS SF.DANS ' ' ' l ..,,; " SA El CONVERTIBLES 1965 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 V • PONTIAC !\1any excellent c..'O!ors at '68 YW BEETLE APPRECIATE Chokeol in tedo<S t\ l • \Vc..'E."kend soeelal <WI-'3083l -1\""" [ain:i eosm2~e~arbor B!Yt~80l7 i~~~,'~1; ~f:~~~~tlonlng - Wl eADIA $795 lU«MA Ullle Full power -Choice of: TOYOTA · · ' VOLVO CAD,ILLAC ~~~1~ ~::,;;;~! rndio '69 C dlll Trunk opener & more NEWPORT IMPORTS T!li-.1df j1tnp11i1~; f ot '• • "' , t>I H.q>"'"I ,, • ,,, •• t4'··b-106 1966 J1arbor, C.M. 646-9303 .Order Your Color Toda-E__ 3100 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. '71 Toyota 1200 1-------642·940~ 5 • t '00 VW Bug. Near new blue VOLVO . pnn er flnl•h. good """ (no spor•). -------- Vinyl Top,.Mag \Vhcels (767-recent new brakes, tune-up '70 VOLVO BZ\\I ), & carb. o'haul. Runs good. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 'fi6 VOL VO 1800 A i r , AM/FM, overdrive. )l.1nt cond: $1625. 675-8591 , 838--8127. '72 VOLVO lilOO. ES, Spts Wag. Clean! Stereo. Auto. 646-3582 aft 4:30 pm. $1399 1675 644--0577. STATION BILL MAXEY '68 VW Bug. Radio, rear scat i WAGON "~1i'~o;e~'c1~ir cond. speakers, good tirl'S, nc'v 9100 TOYOTA batlcry, lo1v niilcagc, $975. Auton1atic transmission, air ___ _:644-::.:..::11:::21;_ __ G GC AU in lmmaculare o.,'Ondition Convertible Largest selection in Orange County Fully factory equipl)('<l, $500 N b C d"ll under Kelley wholesale blue G ers a I GC book, AtrrHORIZED DEALER $1895 NEWPORT IMPORTS 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sunday CAMARO '68 CA.i\'l ,\RO 327 4 spd, good rondilion. $1 200. 18&'n BEACH BL. g.,17_8555 c64c:4:..-41i8=1:... ------conctitioning, radio, heater, Autos, Used 990 1-I UN'I'JNGTON BEACll '71 V\V .Jll sta wag, auto air, luggage rack. 23SBEK 3100 W. Coast HW):., N.B. AM/fM "'"'°· rad;als, <f\ L , BUICK ----"64-"2"'-·9405 I CHEVRO ~ET 673--5371 '69 CORONA fuel i1•i. lugg rack. 12.495. -Wt fAN __ .c...;_,;__;___ '72 BROUGHAM _ _:..;.,;.._,;.._ __ Hard1op, auto1natic trnns., &47-592$ VOLVO 1966 BUICK \Vildcat body & '70 CAMARO radio, YQA362. The fastE.'l>t draw in the West White 11/it.h black vinyl top, interior. Both in good ron-bl k 1 th · 1 · lull VS 3 -~ "~out•'ful -Id $1177 ... a Daily Pilot Classified ac ea er in enor, · =>1=-'-', ,....,. .,,,. Ad . 642-5678_ 966 arlxl CM 646-9303 ditlon, Excellent running powf'r. Rolls-Royce trade-In. in color, only 32,000 miles. 1 H r, · · condition. Goo d Gas tS81ETE). S'21CPB. n .... t ... .:. Autos, lmpuned 970 Autos, lmponed 970 cmil='='"''""'e-"$365=·~83= .. -"'=905:......_ $5595 Priced To Sell - WA WllO BACK to school •!>'cial, '69 TOYOTA 0,,.1 Kadett, 2 "' "dan ROY CARVER, Inc. Jim Slemons 1966 Harbor, c.M. MS-9303 Clearance $ale ~~~t~ :1f!Jo~ costa ~E. inh St.~4m ~:PQ~~ •73 TOYOTA '73 SAAB'S '68 BUICK Sport Wagon. '67 CADILLAC Convertible. Newport Beach LANI) CRUISER ~~".!e:~~r:S~~· $1500 gd con~~ * ENTER r~i\i~acARTHUR PRIC ES START AT ~ Cd · · bl H'I', 30'JO 1niles, Warn Hubs, '66 BUICK Skylark HT cpe, ·,., V, Fire Mist ue '66 ·CHEVY Van . Good Radio. 1'acon1a \vheels, 10" $.,.9 95 auto, PS, PB, buckets. Very w/sunroof. 4,000 mi. Load-engine & tires. $850. Tripper '!'ires. (598.JFVl. ~ nice $600. 494-5924 ed °"'/xtras. 673--5569. 979-9621. $4495 '12 SKYLARK PIS. PIB, 'if"'Coupe de Ville '10 NOVA SS, P IS, PIB, BILL MAXEY SUB DICK MILLER MOTORS air, 1 yr old. Asking $2800. Xhrt cond. $495/oHtt. R&H, radials, tape deck, ex .NI. S .. Eves: 673--4093 548·a'i87 or 646-2398 cond. $1850. ~77. 120 W. WA '"° TOYOTA , Like to Trade? Our Trader's '70 CONV. $3250. 12-14 m.p.g. '68 IMPALA. full p\l"r, nc\v 557-2132 Paradise column is !or you! Will accept trade. 673-5507 tires etc. Make reas offer. 18881 BEACll BL. S.17-S.'ii!1 ... !!!!!!!!!!'""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I 5 lines. 5 days for 5 bucks. or 644-4839. · ~9661 l-IUNTINGTON BEACl-1 I ~ . !-=~~--~='---Autos, .Imported 970 Autos, lmpOrted · 970 Autos, Imported WE BUY l~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiii~iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii USED TOYOTAS ALL 1973 MODELS IN STOCK 1tll\Jn1111!; llllll 11P. IU>UI\• ~ J1s 1 >/ill~• . .. '" ~· ~.. . . .. '72 TOYOTA MKll STATION WAGON Radio, luggage. rack, auto- matic trans., only 15,000 miles. Cleanest wagon in toivn. 705FAI,. $3177 aJPWLleW W TOYOTA 1966 I-farbor, C.l\Y. 646-9303 '72 Toyota Mark II Wagon· Auto Trans, low ml, (870ESGJ $2799 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18SSI BEACl·I BL. 847-8555 1-IUNTINGTON BEACH SALE I !Tade ·nToyota Mark II, w/illr xlnt cood. $1.650 or best offer. 9titt-4tiO I . 1969 TOY OT A Corolla. Good condition. Low Mileage. $650., '!\12-7965. DEMO CLOS~ .OUT SALE i 'I :=::::::=:::::=;..c=-,-~~ .... '69 Cf-iEVROl..ET Im~la ::•; C.'yston1 3.'10., pcM'er steering •. 11 factory air, tjnlea gllUIS 1 ! comple1e, automatic trans. in ('On.sole strata Bucket " I sears, Vinyi roof, radial lile ' saver tires, radio, heater, ,. good rondition. Best otter, phone 644-4687. ·57 EL Camino. good tires, mags, and small camper top. Great on gas. $750. aft 4, &12-26 1!1 ~Ir. Quellette. '69 VE1"T!'.:, 1127, •I speed, air, A~t/1-r.t. 1ilt slN'ring. orig. 01\·ncr. S2,500. I 71·11 675-8458 aft 7 P~l '73 ~-JONTE Carlo. Xln1 cond. Fully equipcl, AM I f M, sunrf elc. !\lust s el l 675-3686. 1956 CHEVY, good cond. S250. 1966 ri'lustang, good cond. $500. Call 673-3211 after 7 pn1. '69 CAPRICE. Air, full equip. nu tirt•s, nu paint, landau top, trailer hitch, top shape. 84~5960. '68 EL Camino SS, A/C. $1200. '73 EL Camino SS. All Ex- tras<;C $42llCI. Ph: 645-1317 '69 CHEV Impala, p/s. p/b, air cond, 30,000 mi, $950 Call Eves 642-4312 or 836-1196 ' '70 SUPER clean Nova, • 'i $1648.34. \Vrite owner. P.O. 1 Box 224, Laguna Beach, Ca.. 1 'rhe fastest drav• in the .WesL .a Daily Pilot Classified Autos, Imported 970 TRIUMPH '66 TRIUMPH TR-4 DEMO DEMO DEMO V f'ry Good Condition! $1295 1Ttl1654! Dick Miller Motors Ul W. Warner, S.A. 557.2132 '68 TR 250 Conve11., new top, radial tires, $1300. Very good cond. Pri pty. 968--403-1. VOLKSWAGEN 1913 VW Supt>r Beetle Ex· Cf!'l.lent coMltton, $2,150 eves, 99M3ll. '68 V.\V, dark blue, white int. Excel condition. $850. or of. rer, 497-1474. '62 V\V $225 RUNS GOOD CALL rii7--8870. 169 VW factory camper, good oond, rttdlafs. $1900. 499.3188 '69 BUG. "1nt cond, Nu radial.I, Wood inter, radio, 50,001 miles $1450. 548-tm 1970 VW Camper. Xlnt concl Stereo tape deck, $2500 «· best. Call John, 646-8798. * 1m vw Convertible, Super Bug,· AM/FM radio, $1750 or best offer. 673-8730 '59 VW Bua. runs good. Needs trans. $275. 546-3888, 3264 Nebraska, CM MARCH 1971 VW BU!! 2'1M miles. Good c ondit i on . 642-9396 '63 VW, gd cond. $395. Call 979-6722 before 5, ~ Mt 5~·~"'=~~-.,-,--,,-'ii' vw,-1 of • kind $1000. 536.2419 '71 VW BUG best oder, Tu mileage - 645-'m; 'ff VW BUG m 4l 842-6001 Ml 5 Llkc to trade? Our 'trader's Pll.l'edlse column 1!1 for you! DATSUN 610 DATSUN 610 DATSUN PICKUP Service Mgrs. Demo., 4-door sed an, full fa c:· tory equipped, plus mag wheels. '67 KARMANN GHIA -4 speed, radio. Bcaull!ul tan car \vith ]O\v mileage. {UIG861). Like nC\V. Rev. Ru ssell's Demo., 2-door, •ufom•tic trans. mission, fu ll factory equ ipped. Plus mag wheels. 5 287910 1970 DATSUN 510 WAG<ON \Vhlte with red Interior, 4 speed, radio. Like now. Super Mex Ru dy's Demo., Autom•fic tra nsmis- sion, rad io, mag wheels, chrome bumpers, and cu••2g993os HUGE SELECTION OF QUALITY USED CARS AT SALE PRICES! -&. ... llNJ Dolly h wtah- s ..... 1 ....... _ --SA:LES HOURS " Mon .• Sat. 9 o.ttt. to f p.m. Su•doyt 9 o.tn. to 6 p.m. S!RVICE "HOURS Mon.-Frl. 7:30 o.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdoy 7:30 to Noon CALL 493-337~ OR 831-1375 • ·I t ' • ' - " , .. • • ~!!!!DAll!!!V!P!lt!o!T ~~~T~~~r,~,~~'!'s!''~"~m~M~•:7,~1~q7~l ~~~~~~I ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~1 .............. !!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!,l~~~~~~~\~~~~~~1 ,~~1 _..,_ ]~1 .:.[ _ ..... ~'°'""..:l~§J . I .,. .. ,..... 1§1 1 -... -1§1 ~[ _.,,. ........... ~ ~1§1~1 .;i _ ..... _ ... _ .... ~.l i;;;;;;;;m ..... _ ... ,._ l§l I ., .... ~.... J§JI ~ _.,,. ........... ~~~ U.. 990 Autos, Used' 990 , Autos, Used 990 Autos, Und 990 A'utos, UMd 990 Autos, lJMd 9o0 Auto•, Used 990 Autoo, UHcl 990 Autos. U>td , 990 CHEVROLET CONTiNENTAL CORVETTE ! COUGAR DODGE FORD FORD FOnD MERCURY n:v. '64 lmpRIA, n 1ns "·~!· 1 '72 Continental !'.!&\ CUl{\'t-.Trr. Rrntd!oll'I', :! 'Ii.II COUGAR XR7 '73 DOOOE 400 1.1 a g. '63 F'Al.RUNE has smog '66 MUSTANG '72 FORD ftlll PG\''er, P\'l party. $11.J. tnps. 1un/fn1 radio, 317 I :\Int l.'Ond. Make ofter Cha.rgt,r f'ul.ly Equip, a.Ir dt>vice & safet)' i..·heck i l2>. 6 eyl, au1001atl1 1ran1., pl)\\ i•r Station . WCMJO n 53S-«JOO. TOWN SEDAN SJKI, ~1 ~ L'S lnd.v n1ags. rul! * 960-1034 * cond. T.O.P., 642-7900 aft 5. 5.S7-8S7'0. 111eerinG. SUY5.>I. . CHRYSLER \\h11._, u1th bhll' \'ln,\•I iop l'ht'l)111r .tti1lc pl~. 40,0CKJ ~m& wkdays. $995 9 passt'llg1:'1'. vtl. automat11.." ".1u! hlth·, l•·a1h"r 111to't'w•1_., nd!<'". S:!iOO. S:!l-171i!l I DODGE '51 FORD \Voody, l\1ust sell radio, h\•atrr, IX'\l't'r strer-}'lathead V-R, \\'Qn 't storl i. " f 67 JlilPERI L ~ ull !)01\l'r. Roll!l·RO}l! FALCON . $100. 494-3257. Jim Slemons I"', IX)l\'t'I' ur'J.ftt'S, J'QO · dr, full po:rr, ~~~1,1ir11~ tiadt·-in. $1""4-'9Es9>=5'· 1 COUGAR 'LA'rE '73 Dodge Polw·a 9 ·ss 1'"0RD LTD . v-s. hardtop, Imports t·i1.ek. 1369$. o2s9F7'· 8 , adjustable stN'ring, letllht'r \ pa~s. \\•agon, loaded niusl 1964 p/• p/b · /I •~ • int Xlnt cond. $950. 963-1070 ROY CARVER Inc 'Ii~ COUGAH ;-=rt.1. rul_I p\1•r .. !<ell, div.or't!~ eo.1.' $5660. FALCQN SPRINT Ru~ ~rY 11'::i. ~zfl;,. 1301 Quail evH. , ~ , • • ;11r, ~·~ui.i(•s, S!ia.1-y. $1375. I '.11.1Jy S4495. Jim, :»f-9470, ext 2 door harrl thp, rnctory hi .69 FORD. W8t:on. Clean N1..'\\~~::uch COMET 231 E. l1 U1 :::;1.~ £.lj....8614 ur1~1 G prn .\l.i. pt.•rfornu1nce 271 hp 289. 4 Great cond. Auto, p/s, p/b, ENTER FROL\f l\1acARTHUR Cu.•ta :'<If-Sn Jo-Ml-I I.ti I ~ buckets British rnc-See to appt'ee. 348-1240 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC '68 Cougar XR·7 Auto 1'11u1S" Air Co!Ki·' , Poll'i>l' Steering, origuwl 't'llow laclory flnii;h 1,1•1!h b1uck interior, extrerncly luw nlill'S 1 owniir, YOU l\IUST SEF.: 1lllS CAR $1495 . I -l'O:\T. 'C l 4 on.1:-.:fill ' "\\'('NI it ,t, Rt•11p " 1, .. , \\'OODY ing iircen wlih black in-'67 Ford Custom 500, 2480 Harbor Blvd., ~ '"ry COJl.IET, air, all xtnu;, 1 s,.;.·,o. All l:xtras 1 from treusurt's lo tnu;h a.! Dodge 1 Ton 18 pass. stat teiior. $HO). ot· n r fer. Any day Is the BE~ DAY to $550 S4S-20'11 Costa Ml'sa · 516~i\lll7 ~ like nu, I Pi·ii·au• Partv IHG-2:>21 Turn thc1n Into cash I "'pn .• Ne.w eng V.»/war.] of 673-4266 After 6·30 pm. !1.IO an ad! Don t delay. . LINCOLN NEWPORT IMPORTS · · * 6T~3809 • · 1 CALL Daily Pilot a kind. 673-8439 · · · I Can today 642-5678. i\rl'd " "Pad"? Place IOt ad~ 3100 \\I. Coast llwy., N.B. ~Autos, Ne'* 980 Autos. New 9BO !Autos, New 980 Autos, 'Me• 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 , -05-L-IN-'CO_Ll_N-,.-,.-_,-,.,-i\Jl<', __ ...:.64=2·.c.MOS_c._ __ _ r_, goorl runnin~ cond, 1w11 loµ. ,72 MAR"'UI o,:: .. ~· •• ••• :<' ~~ .. •• •• • NNELL YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA ~, Your Factory Authorized Chevrolet Dealer SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR ALL REMAINING ' 'S CLEARANCE PRICED OUR BUSINESS HAS BEEN SO GREAT THAT WE'VE BEEN GIVEN EXTRA SHIPMENTS FOR · · LEARANCE! HIGHEST ALLOWANCES FOR YOUR PRESENT _CAR TOO! e MONTE CARLOS <LARGEST SELECTION> IMPALAS CAMAROS e CAPRICES WAGONS ALL REDUCED FOR FINAL CLOSE-OUT NOW! ---------.-. --..-.. ----....-.. ----....-.. --------- BUY WHERE THE BEST USED CARS IN TOWN ARE •• . ~ . • • '72 MALIBU WAGON 6 pa.~senger. Good miles, ~uperior car. air cond., r1011·er stec1·ing & brakes, automatic, \'8. t479£HO, $3199 '71 CAMARO COUPE 6 l"ylindcr. automatic, po1\·er steering. 20,000 1nill'S. Nice blue car. (033Ellli l $2699 '71 IMPALA CUSTOM CouJ)f'. Good miles. A 1"t'nl nice car \vilh air, P.S .. autonu:llic. l'eg:. gas VS. t09300h:) $1999 '70 CHEVY II NOVA Cpe. Auton1a1ic, :m.ooo one 01vll(>r cal'cfu l n1ilc~. r actury \VaJ'l'Rllty. (127AGDJ $1999 '68 CAPRICE COUPE Air cond .. \18, JXl"'C'I' ~tl-ering, po1ver hrakcs. vinyl roof, nice cru-. 59.000 miles. 1Xffi.·13U9/ $899 '70 CHEVY II NOVA Coupe. Sn1all VS, stick nn tlle floor: radio, good mi.lcs. Low price. (:l42EIS) $1699 '66 CHEVY 112 TON Pickup "'ith 8 ft. camper. 4 speed transnlis- sion, VS engine. t U30075J $1199 '68 OLDS CUTLASS Coupe. Vl:I, automatic, po\ver steering, air cond .. <1<1,000 miles. Thi.s is a great buy. (VHZ- 7071 $1699 '71 BUICK CENTURION ·I door sec.Ian. Full 1xnver, air cond., nice car. Vinyl roof. Lo<1klng fnr a s lcal. t542CXT) $2399 '70 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE 4 Dr. Scd. Full 1XJv.·cr, alr cond .. vinyl roof, 33,000 miles. Steal this one too! t158AEEJ $1799 · '73 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Coupe. 8800 miles. Air cond .. power steering, automatic, VS, gorgeous. Bronze car wi th beige intl'rior. Nice. l318GNK) $3099 '70 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT 4 "·he<'\ drive. Ttaveltop. Extra seat, 33,000 miles. Radio. Nice. 1679ABW I $2799 '69 JEEP 4 WHEEL DRIVE Commando. Extra scat, V6, 10,000 careful miles, 1XTG575J $2699 '70 FORD 500 Cusl orn <I Dr. SC'd. Air, auto., VS, power steer· ing. LIJ,,., lo\v price. ( 3J50Cl J $1199 '71 FORD WAGON Countl'y Squire. P.S., P.8., VS, automatic, air, roof rack, nice car. (772CTKJ $2599 , '73 VEGA WAGON Turbo hydramatic, radio, 2823 n1Ues. New car wan-anty. (19341 $2999 '73 CHEVY II NOVA Coupe. Small VS, automatic, power steerin.i:;, radio. Sharp buy. Sha111 car. t596GA\V/ $2999 '73 IMPALA 4 DOOR SEDAN 5600 miles. Factory \\!Btranty. Neu· car condi· tion. Air, IXl"'er steering & brakc>s, V8 (reg. gasJ '"hale of a buy. (0977) will trade. $3299 '72 VEGA WAGON Right one. 4 speed, radio, like new. t331GNI) $2099 '72 VEGA HATCHBACK Ai,r conditioning. radio, automatic transmLs.. s ion, nice. {965f'LW) $2299 NOTE: WE ARE NOW TAKING ORDERS ON '74'S. ORDER NOW FOR FIRS,J DELIVERY! - "Quality Is 'The Reason Why Connell Is· The Place To Buy" 2828 HARBOR B~VD., COSTA MESA -546-1200 --- ~ .- goo! !ires. $550. r..is-a.1.-11. ,,. BROUGHAM MERCURY '69 Mercury Cougar XR·7 <I spd, Air Cone! .. yl'llo11· ~'ith black intl·t·ior. 1011· 1111h•s, rantaslic 01·igi11nl condition. $1895 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast H1vy., N.B. 642-9405 ---c Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! ('...all &12-5618. Full Jl(l\l't'r , fac1ory air, 0.6- DTA . $3195 Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail N1•11·11ort Beach R.1:\.930() EYJ'F:B. FH.01\11\lari\RTHUR fj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Autos, Useo 990 Autos, Used 990 Auto. Iran,., 6 cvl.. a raal 9a1 1av•r, ha rd lo find. FALCON 6 cvl.. air cond., p1r· feel 11cond car. ( UZT 9691 low mil1e91, ,harp condition -MUST SEE! ITZY21l l $995 '72 Javelin SST Full power, eir cond., low miles. (II t lADJ Mt9 wh1tl1, tonn1au cov1r, 1•e to 11ppreci. •••• lfttermldiata ii1e w19· •"• fvl pow•r, air con- dllionit19 . (ZWJ l411 2 to cho011 from, like ntw, lTEY527 1 I RSZ- 6721 1t74 GllMLIMS & HOIMm IN ,STOCK • f ull pow1r, lair cond. l919ANEl $1595 '69 YW SQUAlllACIC Au tomatic h•nuni1- 1ion, nice family cir. 1720ASl ) $1595 B1 low Blu1 !l ook. 4 dr., full pow1r, air condi· lionln9, v1rv low mil 11 and balanc1 of 5 vr. • 50,000 1T1il1 1l!vice policy avail abl1. '69 Volwo SEDAM A 1eal 9•1 11w1r. IYC. N9141 $1695 '71 .S1baru WAG6N low mit•a91, "'"' loh of 911. ll91Elll $1495 ·n Ford WAGOftl Auto. t•ant., pow1r 1leerin9, power brak11, 11-lnt tran1portalion, !OZN529l $495 CLOSl·OUT PllCIS 0• ... " .,, ............. • . . . . . . . . . . • . . -. • • ' • • . • • . . • ! . . . • • . . . . ·: _ .. "; . • . :: • ' • . . • • • . • ; . .. ~~· " :· • •• .. " ' ., I . . .. BRAND NEW 20' MINI MOTORHOME fling by Rodman 360 cu. in. Dodge \18 •ngine, e uto. trent.1 4 b1Jrner r•nge, b•tfi. room, dual roer •heel1, b1ltery conv1rl1r, power 1t111rin9, power breke1. IS 20l003851 55688 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . -• BRAND NEW 20' Roadliner MO.TORHOME 28' Roadliner MOTORHOME 1 burner t11191 with oven, bet~room, fur1'1ce, D.0.H. t19, Dod91 (.h111j1, \18, 1ulom1lic tr1n1miition, pow1r 1leeri119, di1c br1l11, tilt wheel, d_;i11I re1ir whe1l1, 1lechonic igni tion . •s688 BRAND NEW 24 ' Roadliner MOTORHOME R1n91 with oven, b1throom, furn1c1, 0.0.H. t19. Dod91 Ch•1- 1i1. VI, 111tom1tic ff1n11¥1ht ion, power 1f1erin9, disc brakes, tilt wlleel, duel rNr wheelt, eleetronit ign ition. 56988 ORDER YOURS TODAY SEE THE . ALL NEW • • 1956 HOUSECAR "Classfc" '"'ii'2'iii"" • • Dodge <140 cha11it, \18, aulomelic tran1mi11 ion, plu1 full fectory equipped . 5 7988 ORDER YOURS TODAY , 73 DODGE-All Star .van Conversion VI, automatic tr•n1mi11ion, bubble top, l bu•n1r 1tove, r1fri9· 1r1tor, butar.• .... d r1p11 ancl Ioli of 1tor191. $4188 ORDER YOURS TODAY • • • • • • • c ?; VICTOR I ST • .. I •• • l OAJLV' j\OTJ I .I DAILY PILOT fr1d.ly, Stplfmbtr I , 1973 r-; I (t , i • 1 ' • • • s f -/975J • • : • • I :: •. :: ~ •: ,, • :: •• •: ~ •• •• f. , . •• •• ~ ,. i:: i: .. " .. ,. ,. ~ ,. ~ G i: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ s E ,. ; ,. • c ' ' DICK JOHNSON CLOSE-OUT •ALL 1973's e FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS • TREMENDOUS . SELECTION TAKE YOUR CHOICE FROM. • • E: SA VE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS ..• -~ ,. ,. :: " ,. " • . • -,. • • -. • • -• . . • ~ . . . . • .• ,. .• " .• . . . . . • . . ,. .• • . I . . . . . . . . . • • 40 Lincoln Continentals & Marks EVERY CAR IN STOCK NEW & DEMONSTRATORS 7 5 Mercurys, Mo11tegos & Capris SPECTACULAR USED CAR SPECIALS '70 IMPALA COUPE LOW MILES VB, auto. trans., radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, factory air conditioning. (287- CQD) $2227 '71 CADITTAC BEAUTifJJL SEDAN de Ville, Luxury equ1,ped thruout. full power auto. temp ., air con ., 6 way po\ver seat. AM-FM stereo radio, tilt & tele steering wheel, landau roof. (610CXV) ' $4575 J.lome Of The Ne• Car , • • "GoJdeta '.l'-cla" '71 Mod.I s.11 off 55 br1ncl 11•w '7) l11lc~1 wrll b• 10IJ 1t c!i1c•11nt1 vp to SI 156.00 from winclow 1lick•r pric•, •~•n mor • on demo'1 •nrl •••c11ti•• c•r1. '7<4'1 will 1oon b• h••• with prob1bl• high•r pri(et, buy now . I D. C. Tt rry lulck Inc. ~AW ..... , H111tl"ttff lt•tl IJ6·6511 '69 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARDTOP '70 CONTINEN T AL 4 DOOR SEDAN '71 MONTEG O MX 2 DR. Sold by Johnson, serviced by Johnson, air cond., Automaitc transmission, factory air, radio, Full power. factory air. landau roof, leather auto. trans., power steering & brakes. (213DFC) heater. power steering & brakes, vinyl roof. interior. Always serviced at Johnson & Soll. (417AGH) $1475 (288ASH) $3475 . . $2175 '73 MONTE CARLO '69 ~1 ARQU IS COUPE '71 MARK III EXQUISlTE-14,000 MILES V8, air cond., P'Vr. steer. & brakes, stereo ra- Auto. Trans., power steering and brakes, pow- er windows, air conditioning, landau roof, rltt,. Full power, auto. 'temp. air condition.ic::J, 6 way power seat, leather interior, landau 'r , stereo tape. Sold & Serviced by J ohnson & Son. dio, heater. landau top. (868GNJ) dio, heater. (XKV707) (722BSW ) Sale P1~iced $1975 "Orange Count~·: Famitv of Fine Cari'' 2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA e 544).5630 $4975 Hom e 01 The New Car , • • "Goltlen '.l'ONc:lal' --------_..;.._ ==...;:;.:=--.....:.990;.;; Autos, UHCI 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos. UN<I 990 Autos, u.... 990 MERCURY MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PINTO PONTIAC PONTIAC '7'.! i\JONTEGO 2 dr, full po11•cr a/c, stereo, new I ires, \'inyl top, jusl tuned. &l•l-5389 '71 i\1USTANG Grande. Must sacrifice. Loaded, like new, i\fusl. sec. Prl/Pty. 714 : 558-1183. '73 OLDS DELTA ·n PINTO, 2000 "" eng, '69 Grand Prfx MUST .en 1 "''· Choole o--le Cpe. Beautt!ul bl•"' stick, low mi; Very clean. f.rom 1970 Pontiac Bon-'"'¥" "" r.tust sell, 54s--0032. run JlOWt;1' phis factory air nrvllle 1970 Flreblrd 1988 intetior \\·ith \vhile vinyl top, condltionuw. rally 1vhecls, LTD All loaded ' Lo MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE =.·.,...~:;.,i':~~= PLYMOUTH -1 """s·1'1zt.U16795 '· mileage. &n..985 •• -------1 ---'------1 brak .. , power windows & RAMB' "R '69 •MUSTANGS 70 Torino Stotlon Wagon factory air. 1'500 actual 72 PLYMOUTH w; •·•· h miles. 816HOC. • ....... CUDA DAVE ROSS 2 TO CHOOSE ~ '°• eater, automa"c $4695 ~ ""' PONTIAC '63 RAMBLER American. trans., power lrtftring, lac. VB, automatic, radio, heater, Nlce famUy or 1tudent car FROM tor)' air. OJOAQJ. 25,000 •« Jim Sle--power steenne:. pow er 3480 Harbo< Blvd., auto 6. One owner. 1415'. dlo tual mil... .,...,,. ~•es. -~ -~·--. ~ M,.. ·--1 ··~-v.. ou101natk•, ra • heater, ,..~ -· \.NI•"• ......... ~.1. ~'"" $2295 Imports (887E!F) . --:;-;c:-,.,....,,---1 1xm·<'r steering with & with· -· 1969 • GRANO PRIX SALE 'tlO Rambl aU t:Jr part, OU! ul r 1'0!1dit:lonlng. 1683-Jim Slemons · ll'.11 Quail ' S-J Model New trans. radio, tfm: ' Af"Xl (YNG398l. Newport Beadl Gold w/black vinyl Interior other new pe.rta. 847-4411 YOUR CHOICE Imports 83.1-9300 D•YE ROSS anti top thlrd car so mutt $1680 ENTER FROM MacARTHUR ft sac. Make otr.,. u~ ... 1~ Quan PONTI .. C . --·-VEGA DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Nl!\\1>0rt .BcaL'h Sal " '63 PONTIAC LeMllnt, Jo----------833."'~ • es l 5'rYlce ••-11-~ Bl··• mil •-I t ·" N '71 VIOA· · -OLDSMOBILE -~-••·· •--. x" oo1~. ew ENT1'R l'ROM MacARTilUR OMC TRUCKS ~BARRAMosa'--A. ~~m1!1l119l1• ~ks 6~ tire&. 1900/of· HATCHIACk 1968 VISTA Cruioer 9 ..,... HONDA c•RS •• ~uu -, · 4 llJeed tl'INml-rodlo 24.iiO llarbor lllvd., F\tll eower. air, new tlrei, "" terrttic buy, See at 'MM! SffARP 67 GTO, bucket and heater 189501.i) Cos!a M... $16-8011 lo miles. Xlot cond. $200. UNIVERSITY OLDS S!>Blhettl O.nder '25 0 0 . ..., •• •Ir. Pl .. P/b, orla:. s1·11 . belOw wholesale Blue Book. 2850 Harbor Blvd. cult. M5-0&IS1. owner. m.2121 or 982-2275 '00 tllUST. Cbnv, p/s. p/b, 83C>-0174. Costa A1esa $1!):9NO SACRlFICE! ('10J 9 peaa. '64 PONTIAC UP, Atr, P/S, radio, white w/blck top ,67 OLDSMOBILE a.u 4 ,67 CUTLASS Supreme 4 dr Salllllle wq:., lt!~t com. Pia, auto., $400. Pvt. Pty. DAVI ROIS .~ck lt~nt. S!¥. 8J3...8248 dr, vtnyl top, Ur, auto~/1, HT, UH. auto, air rS, PB: Xtru, low mL $1;850. ·~~7~ -PONTIAC MU ANG Convertible. p/b, am/fm, new motor. vinyl top. XJnt lnatde A out. m-«m. 1'4 OTO, POO. )t , irbor IMvd AU xtraw, 4.000 milc1. Sht(rp. $895. MS-5306. Th1A model &: CM(!. 1ellln1 lteS VAUANf, llant' 6, runs fOOd (i4S.82')4, Aft 6. Costa Mna $is.aoi7 Sacrlfle<. 548-1928. '10 OL!>S Della Custom 2 Dr $895. to 1i900. WIU Slcrlllce stlck, ndlo, to mUe.,., xlnt "Weed It .!> Roap.. '.7'1 KAMB ACK W1n '116 MUSTANC, 219, auto. fully loadod XJnt t'Ond. u,.; l'l50. 494-mG " ooacl. Owner. l8llll. 116.m\ l"rom.. tt<uures to truh -Mu 'T.I. 5IOO m< d!Ac brks. con!Ole, gtlllifl, mileage: Mutt, Aell alter 8 White Elephant Dlmt-A·Llnt rut r-111 IN )Bit a....,. Turn tblm ....., aulii 1 xtnt cond. S21S). --· ClcAn $650. 494-"'.>924 pm. 557..fJOOO, call today' MM878. dll awy en-etrts. CAU. 1>811y Pilot 847~. vi~. " I . . . . ' ',' DAILY PI LOT Se ptember ' l q13 • • Stptem~ , 1 q13 PILOT -ADVERTISER ·• WE STILL . HAVE ALMOST 1 50 '73 MODELS TO GO BEFORE THE '74s ARRIVE! BRAND NEW '73 OMEGA BRAND NEW '73 TORONADO BRAND NEW '73 OLDS 98 $ 1#1176201 OVER DEALER INVOICE '66 OLDS 88 1#7393061 $77 OVER DLR. INVOICE Ask about our 3 Year/36,000 Mile Warranty. Available on every Used Car we sell! '68 OLDS l>ELTA 88 '68 JAVELIN dl!lotllng, (TGK204l dlt!onln11. (W)(L~24 ) $ ''"' "'"""· ''' ~· $477 ''"' ,;,,_,, "' <O•· s577 M'" ... '"'"" $677 '73 OLDS '69 TOYOTA '69 CHRYSLER · ...... ..... ....... 5977 (lWAOIO '69 OLDS 98 COUPE ~·:.::-'· ,,, $1277 TAKE YOUR CHOICE . '70 OLDS '70 OLDS 98 '69 CAD. '70 MERCURY 98 COUPE LUX. SEDAN Coupe De Ville MARCj)UOIS Fwll y tq11ipped, •ir condi. fvlly equipptd, ,;, co11d i-Fully equipptd, t ir condi-Fu lly •quipped, 1lr c.on- tionin9, Yi11yl top. 11 65-tioning, winyl top. 17 26· tionin9, ¥inyl top. !VZS-dilionin9. (54 l EIGI HOEi APM l 226 1 $ DN.· 77 MO. $77 ;, t ot1I down pyml. $11.11 it tot1I monthly pymt. incl. f•t, lic•n1•, •ftd •II c•rryin9 ch•r9•1 o n •pprov1d cr•dit for 16 monfh1. D•f•rt•d pymt. pric• i1 S21761f2 iftcl. 1111 I lic•,,se. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 15.<tO'/' •. Tot1l c11h pric1 is $2200. Cutlass Supreme 455 V8 engine, 4 speed trans- missio n. ( 128177) '68 Ranchero '69 DODGE '71 MARK Ill GMC TRUCK COUNTRY WITH CAMPER Loaded lncllldirt11 11' colld. '"'"'$1577 POL.ARA Loadfd 11\Cludlfl!I 1Jr tond. CXXAOSll '1477 Ginger wl6rown IOP & In. terior. Power & •it. !l.S2ETE) WhOleute price S502l $ BRAND NEW '73 SPRINT HONDA CIVIC CENTER $ 1•5019501 ' '73 HONDA CIVIC I #l 90HPD I $1977 OVER DEALER INVOICE WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS ' OVER DEALER INVOICE I ' I • , ' DAILY PILOT Friday, ·stpt.tmbtr· 7, }q73 • learan~e of the ' FORD ,-.ear~ • ·~ -• }>fii .... '-. 0 the ~ar of the ,-earl • BRAND NEW FORD GAlAXIE 500 4 DOOR PIUARID HARDTOP lNClUDfS cnoll1-o-11otic, power 110111 diK br11k111, '°""'., ''"°""" 429 \I .I , .,;,.y1 1101 friM, •i11yl roof, 1t11!-b11ll1d WSW liret, COftHft. Mn<1 group, dtlu•• ltu111,,., g•oup. Alt CONDlTIONE~ElfaAll(, AM/fM STEIEO IADIO, linred glou, li9h1 group, delv•• wflnl cO'fen, end lllor•I Slk. 076. Str JJ4N\1UU Save 51100 FROM MANUF. LIST PRICE BRAND NEW '73 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE 8 PASSINGIR WAGON INClUDES trull•-O·l!lolic, pow•• Iron! din broke1, pow•r ,,,,,;n9, 3 . ....,y d00<9ol• wfpo .. •r window, •lectric doct, wh•el covert, d11al fodn9 "or 1eot1, 409 CID 2 V·I, 11,,1.belted rodiat ply w1w tireo, conw1nienc1 t roup, front eofner int la111p1, d•h1-luggage rock, deJ111• coriro Oreo, d11111 bum per ittoup, All CONDITIONEl-SElECTAtlf, AMf fM STEIEO IADIO, vinyl in11rt body 1!d1 111oulding, oppeoranc• p"'tectian gro11p, del111• i•al o.nd 1houtder b11t1, lint1d irla1.-ompl1t1, •l1ctric power 8-kxk•, pwr. 1id1 wind., db. whl. covert, h1avy·d11ly 1111p1n1io", Sltl. tM Stf. lJ7652:26U4 Save $1300 FROM MAMUF. LIST ,lllCE now at 1973 FORD l TD 2 DOOR HARDTOP DEMO . INCLUDES trui11-o-motic, power fronl diu brat11, power 1teering, 1l•ctricat clock, 400 CID 2 v.1, vinyl roof, CoHfornia eml11ion1 teoli"i· 1tetl-belt•d rod ial ply w1w lir11, conw1ni1nc1 ir•oup, lront corn1rinit lorn.pi, delu•t bumper irroup, oir candilion1r-S1leclo;,,, AM/fM 1tereo radio, outomotiC 1eol bock r•!eo1e, op,.atQflte protectior1 g•aup, del1111 110! and 1ho;rldtr b11t1, tinted glon--<omplet1, ltiflll group, electric power d-kKk1, po('' 1ide window1, d1l11~• whttl CO•I" & mor•t SALE '4195 PRICE !Stk. #006, Sor, #3J62S103212) SAVES S 1973 FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT 2 DOOR SPORTSROOF DEMO MonlKll fronl dioc brok11, tri"' rir,g1 wi!h hub copt. dwol rocin9 rn irror1, co!a•·key•d ca•p1ting, pleo!ed vinyl 1eof t•irn, metallic 9low po int, 400 CIO 2 V.8, lo1er 1h'ipe, 1elec1.1hih cr11l1e .... rno!ic, G7D114 .,;o, owol belted 8.SW iJ), ro i1ed whii.. tert1,., po"''' 1!e1rit\g, power lront di1c broke1, delu•1 b11rnper group, All CONDITIONEl-.SHECTA.llE, AM/HA STE~EO IADIO, wi1ibil;ty ll"'"P· !itted 9lo11--<omple11, d1l111e whtd cowers. SALE ltRICE • • BRAND NEW '73 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE ' I PASSINGIR WAGON tHClUDfS cn1l .. +111otlc, pow., 1•011! d lac .. ,.,,,, ,....,. 11Hri.t. ;._., ~ .. w/,,....•• wi11llow, al•ct•k clMt, 111191 lochit ,_ ...... 4or" tff911 111tiolll<, •OO CID 2 V-1, 1~11it1 b<ou9ho11 ,,11oto, C.111•"'-1•h- 1i...t. Mtlifl .. .lf71•15 1 .. 11-l:Mlttd todiol ply WIW t1 .. 1, dM'ellloc"O r'"I'• ,,.,...,, 1eoi-+woy, d1lw•• k1990t• to<k, d1!1111 C...-..... 4ti••• IMI•,., .... ,, All CONDITIONING -SfLKTAllf, NA/""- STflfO IADJO, fflw11 uot 011d 1!1o.lll1• H iii, li11IM tla•-••'4• ... lltht l'"'P• 11.drH: ,._ do. kK•1, d1lw11 wll11I c....,.. &. .._..,.,.. ..., ...,,."" ..... s-. 1$47 Ser. l..11'52»9U Save 51300 f ll.JIA MANUF. LIST ,RIC• BJlAND NEW '73 CRUISAIRE "LA PAZ'' INClUDfS ,,.clot 1Ntinl, g .. 1n t. gold, ''°' .._.. t ... ""-'lcH , •"ti• 302 V-1, IH c•arto d-t1011-li11d, CUSTOM EOUIPMfNl'·PACXltot. 1700 Ill, GVW jMlc•qe, odj111labl1 po111n9er , .. 1, ,...e4 t.11N ..... "'"''· l11U width, o!ll"''"" & oil pre111"1 fllllfM, llNll 1)'119• ....,. o•lnloft ~ntrll, lron1Ml111oft crwi11-0.111otic 3 1,.M, ..,tiollel ,,.fto ,_ ode, 12) 1.0.16.S C 6 'I Iron!, (2) 1.0116.S f 10 ,. ,_ ISW,....,. tide ll'I0111dlnif1, brl. 1wi119 lok low lin• 111irror1, iiow•• ~ ... Ndltc .. M11nd level n ho111t. rodio-pu1h b11tl0!\, tinl•d wind1hi114, odN fflll.. Mg ... diatar, JJ omp olten1ala<. 7D amp ball•ry, l•ont & ,_!tony •tr 11\o.ck1, J'OWI• 1tffri~g. Novy duly fronl 1prin91, and "'or•I Sii.. JUI Stf', EM9H6lU4 Save 5930 l'ROM MANUI'. LIST PftlC• . ... . ..._ ~-;•. ... NEW CAR SALES .HAVE 'PYERSTOG~ED O.UR USED CAR DEPT .! SAVE NOW ON OUR ·21/2 ' ACRES~'OF·· F.INE TRADE INS! '71 PONT. LE MANS • ERICK·MUSTANG·TORINO Radio, he•ter, <1Ytometic trnn1mi11ia n, $17 95 GALAXll·LTD·WAGONS '70 DODGE DART s1595 power 1ieering, end low mile1. ('83· SALE! MANY TO CHOOSE FROM '65 THRU '73 MODELS R11dio, healer, •uta. tran1., power OCll 1le1ring, a ir co<'ldiiioning. 1447CEKI Sqoolr ... 2 0-I 4 D--I Hardtops. Wllto I Wl .... t AW Coioijltl• '68 FORD LTD 4 DR. H.T. $1 095 ... 4+I cyflodon. WAllANns AYAILAILL '69 FORD XL HARDTOP R&H, aulom.itic, pow•r 1letrin9, .,;, EXAMPLE EXAMPLE EXAMPLE Rad io. he 11lo t, eutom1tic, power 1t1•r· $1395 . conditioniru;i. (WIC64') '73 FORD LTD H.T. '72 GRAN TORINO WAGON '72 CUSTOM 4 DOOR ing, vinyl roof, a ir cond., 1747E IA) FORD PINTO MAY 11111 power, loctory oir ta"ditioninf, AM/ lodio, heoter, 011lomolic lron1rnl11io". po .. er l••·· Rel AulOMO!ic, power 1!1e•in1, iool '67 IMPALA WAGON IM, vill')'I roof, power d-loc k1, and o"l'f llll•l"g, factory oir tondiilanl"i• rool rack, rnil11: 1 to ,chao•• from. (135•0ZI j1 50ti., '66 CHEV, J,'4 TON $995 •.ooo ,.,a, •. ra1201u) ond 2.J,000 ~ne1. (293£Gfl 51095 Radio, ha.iter, automatic lran1m i11ion, $3984 $2984 $1684 1/.8, <!Ytomafic, rad io, hoat1r, air can. power 1leerin9, air cond ilioninq. ITYT2 I I J diti anin9, now p1int. (U289'461 . . '70 MUSTANG H.T. $1595 '73 PLM SEBRING Plus '70 CH EVY WAGON '71 TORINO G.T. HARDTOP s1995 6 c.yJ inder. Ecanomy special. Ra di a, 9,000 mil11, radio, heeler, eulomalic HARD TO King<wood. R&H, o111tomatic, power $1995 R1dio, h1•tor. aufom•tic, power it.Ir• tra.i1mis1ion, power sl~l'ring, .itir cond." ht<'ller. 1773BFC) itioning, ~inyl top, end low, low mil11. fl ND USED · 1leering, roof r•ck, •ir conditioning. ing, •ir condit ioning. ( l06DI M J (927GNNI (I 76CAXI . . '71 CHEVY MALIBU 2°Dr. H.T. . '68 IUICK SPEC. W.A50N $1195 Rtdio, hotter, automatic lr.sn1mi11ion, $2295 '70 BUICK ELECTRA H.T. '71 T-llRD LANDAU ONLY•3495 l•dio: h1•t1r,, ~ulom•~c, pow1r 1t11r· 225. R&H, a uto., pwr. 1lrg., wind1. &$2795' Lcade'd; lo miles, m•ny 1xtr••· pow•r 1l•orin9, a ir conditiani ng, i nd 1eah, tilt wh•1I, vinyl tcp, AIR COND. Jn9, •tr, roof r•cli. lllOEXX) (5,lDTAJ !7968EUl (93 .. DCHI • , •••• , , .. , •.•.• '. ' '71 AMC JAVELIN '73 C.AMARO H. T. MAKE $ 395 '68 CHRYSUl NEW YORKER $995 '70 TOYOTA MARK II $1295 R&H, .iuto .. pow1r 1!11ri n9, vinyl raof, 4 1pe1d, •ir conditioning, redio, he1I· F111l pow•r, factory air eondltlonin9. OFFER Al ~ COND ITIONING, lo mil11! 1836 '4·DR. HARD TOP, full pow1r, •ii.can. er. I 2l8ASI I Vary low mil11. 1'4'4'4GOPI c Tl d itio"ing. IYCN511 I :·t@il -------· --·. . . . !!!!· -• SALIS DIPT. HOUIS: • ......, ""'MM . ..Prt.; I anM'"' S1t.1l09'""' ""sun: P.UTI llRV1CI HOUU1 1 _, ... -.; 7 .-· ... T-..,rl. ,...,.. .n. ONLY1 t """I "" ... , • , ' . . '· .. .• . .. •• ·-, . --.... San Clemente . . -----Today's Final Capistrano ' EDITION N.Y. Stocks ,VOL. 66 , NO. 250, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEM BER 7, I 973 TEN CENTS ) Trustees to Probe Bremer Coastline Letter By JAN WORm Of tJH, DlllV ,lllt l llH Two members c( the Saddleback Com- munity College District board of trustees SP.id today they will ask for justification at Tuesday's regular board meeting for a letter written by Superintendent Fred. E. Br;emer urging coastline development. '1 would IUte to know why Bremer took the authority for this lt!tter on to himself," said Jlans Vogel, a trustee f~ Santa Ana. Wholesale U.S. Prices . ,,. , .. . J :;. . ' . . ,,. SkyrocJfet WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wholesale prices rose 5.8 percent ln August, the big- cest advance in a single month since 1946, the government reported today. Fann prices, freed from the restraints ol the price freeze, also shot up by 23 percent -more than three times the privious recxird for a single month. Grain prices and many animal reeds increased dramatically -in the case or gnin by 70 percent. This was viewed as an ominous sign for shoppers at the meat markel because U.S. JOBLESS RATE SCOOTS UP IN AUGUST, P•go 14 farmers paying hightr costs for feed lJ!!Ua!ly pass the burden along lo con- StUners. The wholesale price· report by the. departmenl'• Bureau of Labor Statistics came five days before the scheduled lilt- h!a of=:.:il on heel prices alld bore atil ~ -~ . y eoonomic ofllcWs last monllt • The report broucht an=:tenstul · elltion -' Admlniltrlllon. 1IOlldes by AF'IA;IO • Geor!!• Meany. He called the latest figures 0 beyond belief." 'lbe BLS said the overall, unadjusted In· c~ase in wholesale pri~ of 5.8 percent in August was the hlghest surge for any nionth since July 1948. The rise that month was 10.7 percent, reflecting an ln- Q1Uonaey__ pattern that followed World War II.· ---- The August increase, "'hen adjusted for seaaonal fa ctors, was put at 6.2 per- cent -largest hike for any month since the government began taking ,..IOllal CODlidenlionl tnto accot.mt in lt47. Auguot wholesale prices stood 19 per· cent above the level of August, tm. -The big Aucusl wholesale price rise followed an ...,..al 1.3 perC<Ol cl<dine In July, When nearly all commodities were oomtralned by the freeze . Administration economists said at the time lbat the 'p;tce lree2e caused this and predicted a ·.surge &tter most restrictions on food were lllled July 13. lndust.rlal prices, which remained \mder the freeze until mld-August after the BLS took Its latest liUCVey, rose a lllOdelt 0.4 percent. Bigger lncreues are expected later this fall as pricing con- (See PRICE JUMP, Pale I) • Vogel to Study ·District Issues 'In Tustin Area : Hans Vogel, a Saddleback Community • ~e trustee repreSentlng Santa Ana and Tllstin, said today he Will appolnl a , .,erlOllll . advisory cornmlli.. to study Soddleback·N!lated problems· In Tustin. · A drive to get Tuslln out of the Sad· dlebOck dblrict and Into the Rancho San- uigo Qimmunlty Qillege district has ...Wied In form ation of a llO·member commlttce·and a petition drive. . Vogel said he would commission the , ,'.penel to ~tudy what th_e.problems are and .:0,1•hat Alternative solutlOnS are available. He 'aiid he v.·>as Initiating the com- 1 rnlttee through recent new· legislation \ hat allows truslees of community col· egcs to have their own advisory bo&rds. · Tustin lfladers o( the drive, led by S~ity Kanerak, have cited excessive distance (20 miles one way to the Mi.sston Viejo campus), inadequale facWUes, and inapleolenl coune • organization as ,._. for their action. 0 J''fl been harPlna on this altuaUon for ibe last two or three yean," said Vogel, a lnlltee on the boOrd since 5addleback opened six year• ago. . : "Bui It has~ tonllltual!!' qver!qok<;d end tgno"'4,-J\111 'Y•!7 ~dtd.aboiil the Mck. of attentlon. 11 • ·; Vogel said he •uPl'Ofls •teps the sd>ool has taken re<ently to set up extended campus courses a{ high schools ln outly- ing area s. "Our ~ll step should be to establbh ~ is.. vooEt, l'lre 11 "We've always' had the policy that the president of the board is our spokesman. In th.ii case, Bremer said he wrote the letter at the urging or John Lund , a trustee from Lag1Ula Beach who was not present at the time, without asking the rest of us about it." Vogel added he believes the superinten- dent does not have the authority to send letters of this type. "I d.on't believe this is an area where the board, the president of the board, or the 1uperintendent should take a stand," Vogel added. Trustee Patrick Backus of Dana Point said though he would not bring up the maUer for discussion he would also like to hear a justUication by Bremer. The letter, written two months ago to the Citizens Direction Finding Committee of Orange Q>unty, did not surface until last week when the Environmental Coali- tion of Orange County saw a copy of it and fired off a critical reply to the Sad- Avco dleback su~rintcndent. Bremer said in his le!ter that coastline diV°elopment i' the Capistrano Beach area "which would not adversely affect the environment" was desirable from his standpoint because it would help the col· lege district's tax: base. '"We work with the assessed valuation , of our district. ?(e're not here to create it," Vogel said. "Our concern is to , educate the. students, not to raise funds." Backus, who represents lhe area {or development , stood by earlier statements that he does not want development in the area. "As a board member I would never seek any construction company lo come down here," Backus said . Both Backus and Vogel said they believe attention should be given lo im- proving the schoot:s public relations - both in the Tuslin area y,·here an effort to get out or the Saddleback district has been gaining steam, and in Capistrano Prepares to Niguel Denial to Steeple JIU Mary Ann Quinn, 45, of Los Gatos, calls herself an aerial engineer. She bas state license that says she is a steeplejack. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. T h u r s d a y, she painted the Newport Beach City Hall flagpole . She does it every two years. Kissinger Mute 011 Phone Taps To Senate Panel WASHINGTON CUP!) -Henry A. Kissinger declined loday to tell senators the results of taps oo telephones ol 17 of his aides beginning in 1969. Two members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said they would at· tempt to block ·confirmaUo1. as secretary of State until they got an FBI report on lhe matter. Clemente Marine Flees Fire A Camp Pendleton Marine suffered burns and a severe cuts early today in panicky Dight troll> his bl~zing apart· ment. Ralph Simpi90a, 35, jumped from a win- dow lll feet •-the sround to Dee the heat and smoh from the fire which erupted in bis living room shortly before 3 a.m. Witnesses said the injured man beat his way through the pane of glass and then barely missed another pro- truding pane of glass and a jumble of gas meters on the ground level. Fire Oiief Ron Coleman said Simpson was awakened by the smoke from a smouldering easy chair and grouped hls way into the bathroom of the apartment at 103 San Luis Rey. Simpson then realized that the blaze was too far aJong, panicked, then dove through the window. When firemen arrived they found the Marine dazed a n d wandering 1n the yard of the aparbnent building. Simpson was takdill to San Clemente General Hospital by flte department am· bulance for treatmenl of bums on the face and chest as well as the 10-inch-long gash in his upper thigh. After emergency treatment there be was transferred in satisfactory condition to the base hospital at Camp Pendleton. Coleman said a cigaret apparently sparked the fire in the living room chair, and bad the smoke not awakened the sleeping man, Simpson could easily have been killed by the intense heat being generated. "The whole place was at the flash point when the firemen arrived, and it had become so hot in the apartment that the phone. radio and , other plastic ap- pliances had melted flat ," he 88.id. Damage to the furnishings and to the carpet of the dwelling was set at $1 ,500. Age No Bounds Groom, 19, Marries Woman, 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) - A 19-year-old Bakersfield man says "age does not matter11 in his marriage to a widow h.ali 1 ~entury >Ider. Leonard W. Comeau said in an interview today he and 72-year- old Eula Mae Fisher bad been thinking about getting married "for a long time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues- day. Comeau was maintenance. man at Mrs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been.'1living together for a while,'' he 5a.id. "Age does not matter," Comeau added. "Ji a woman is older than I am or younger than I am don't make no difference. Ii you love a peI'SOD .like I love my wife , that's ·ill there is to it." Tbe bride'• second hmband, Cyril; died' In January and ColM!IU was orphaned several years ago when ·rus j>arents, sister and two brothers were killed In a traffic accident. Two older brothers were killed In Vietnam. J'empOf'arv Rental Clemente Will Negotiate For Minibus Trial Use By JOHN \' ALTERZA Of TM Dlltr ~ Stiff San Clemente City Manager Kenneth Carr soon will begin negotiating with the city of Laguna Beach for a temporary rental of one of that city's minibuses for a trial program along the South Coast calculaled to convince county officials that an interest exists in a full-blown local bus system. City Councilmen learned \Vednesday that the city or Laguna Beach might be interested in renting a \'Chicle to San Clemente for several monlhs at an ap- proximate cost of ~1,800 a month. The plan is to send the tram on an hourly route looping through the city and show officials of the Orange County Transit District that San Clemente citizens are willing to support such a route on a perma~t basis. Carr told councilmen that initial con- tacts with officials from Laguna· .Beach pointed to the distinct possibility of a short·term rental, because the peak of the tourist season is over in Lagwia and lhe cily~wned trams are less busy. The experiment's strongest champion on the council is Thomas O'Keefe, who first suggested the pilot project at a joint study session two weeks ago a(ter hear - ing the progress or a campaign for the bus network launched by the city traffic- parking commission. Councilmen were unanimous in their support of the negotiations and the Possi- ble pilot project and did not balk at Carr's estimates for the cost ol the rental. The only drawback which councilmen ssnsed was the open-air construction of lhe. trams, raising concern over the public's willingness to ride the vehicles in the cool fall mohths. The pilot program is one of several ap- proaches contemplated by local officials (See BUS, PalJ< I) Testifying .before a congressional com- mittee for the first time in his 41h: years as. President Nixon's top foreign affairs adviser. Kissinger was questionl'd closely and at length about surveillance of his White HouSe national security 1laff. 18 Pueblo Men Decorated Kissinger preswnably acknowledged approVing the wiretaps as part of a general White House effort to fmd the source of news leaks of sensitive mat- ters. ' Navy Cites Crew of Captive Sliip for Bravery Kissinger testified that 19me security WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy to- leaks rrom hi9 stafr were d'tScovcred. and day decorated for bravery 18 crew "appropriate· action was taken." But he members or the intelligence--gathering said ,.,1 would pcrfer not to go into In· ahlp Pueblo, captured more than live dlvldual cases" -even in execullve years ago by the North Koreans. session. ~le contehded that the decision whether The ·ship's commanding officer, Lloyd M. Bucher. now rtlircd from the Navy, to make the information available rested was not among them. with the FBI and lhe Justice Depart-The · Pentagon said Bucher recom· mcnt. . mended the 18 awards: and decorations Cli8innan · J. William Fulbright CD-for actions on Jan. 23, 11168, tbe.....day Ark.), said be 8$ked the FBI prevlOUJly North Korean gunboatS surrounded and for a wrilten 1ummary IL prepared oo the boarded the Pueblo. wiretaps and his request was turned Secre~ry of the Na-.y John Warner down. $8ld other recommendaUons for awards Sen. CllDord P. cas. (R·N.J.), t 0 Id" for actions wbllc the .... -lm- Klssinger If the FBI .riport b nol pro-prisoned by the North Koreans are being vided, ")l abould be clear the commlllie considered. • will iliil.:lie-W.:·a-ji/Jlil\llllt• lo" iCI •·the -· 1"'1taP> spokmllaii Jerry IV . nomlrlittlon." FUl6rlgh said he ,greed. Frtedliefm said the dclaf !n •honorlo1 the But Sen. George D. Alken (ft.Vt.), urg· men resulted..from a Jcar ibat prboners ed lhe committee not to delay. con-held by Jhe North Vletnameee mllhl be flrmation . He noted that the U.nlled Na· harmed if the Pueblo crew was tions oonvcnes at the end of September decorated white the Indochina bosthlti~ and ~Inger's presence will be,requtrod continued, Many ol the Pl\eblo enwmen 1her!" who were·honored hava tefl the Na•,)'· • Bucher was subjected to an intense in- vestigation into bow he lost the· Pueblo. an electronic surveillance s h I p camounaged as a scientific research vessel . It carried a crew or six officers. iS enlisted men and two civilians when capti.lred after being fired on by p.1trol boats and planes. After a year of negotiations, ihe crew was returned by the North Koreans Dec. 22, 1968. The Pueblo remains anchored in a North ~orean harbor, One of two Silver Stars approved by Warntr goe.. posthurnoualy to Fireman Duane Hodges, the only crew member killed during the altack. Numbers Game Urged WASITTNGTON (UPI) -A lawyers' committee . Thu r 1 d a y recommended legalizing fhe numbers racket In the nn· lion's capital: Mayor Walter E ~ \Vashington previously indicated support for legalization U a{udles predict gambl· Ing ""'Id profit the ~lly. The other goes to Lt. rj .g.) Frderick C. Schumacher Jr. of St. Louis. Mo .. who has left thfl Navy. The commendation for Schumacher s3id he led his men In the "destruction of all classified mat erials W1dcr his purview.'' "Through hi s inspiring leadership, courage and dedication in the face of hostile fire , he renected great credit upon hlmself and upheld the highest tradition of the United Stlltes Naval Service," it continued. During a Navy ioquiry into Bucber's actions, critlct said the spy ship should never have been surrendered. Three crew memben received the Bronze Star Medal: Ensign Timothy L. lfarrts of Jackson"Jille, Fla.; C.Om- municatlons Tcchnlc!an 2.C. Peter r.1. Langonberg of Clayton, Mo., and Signalman J.C. Wendell G. ·Leach of the Naval Communications Station in Norfolk, Va. The olher crow members cited rccelv· l'd either Navy commendation medals or Navy achievement medals. • Beach y,·here Bremer's position has a I i e n a t e d some anti-development residents. "It's imperative thal \\'e work together," Backus said . "For Bremer to take posilions on development in Capistrano Beach is like pouring salt on a wound.'' Ques tioned about the matter last y,•eck. Bremer said he was "astoWlded the Environmental Coalition is so upset at (See LE'M'ER, Page % I Take Court • State Pru1el Turns Down Big Project By CANDACE PEARSON ot tlle EMiiy l•Hot .,.,, , As some environmentalists celebrated, Avco Community Developers today prep~ed to fight in court Thursday's state Coastal Cornmi!sion denlaJ of a La~ Nltuel ~ project. Other commlBlity members blamed Ave.o's defeat _. .. , wttpellY itaelf, saying it waan't willing to postpone 1 declaloa on the 117-unll project to allow a compromlae. Not one Vote wu cast 1n favor or the development inland of Pacific Cout Highway at Crown Valley Partway. And in their action in San Francisco, the commissionert indicated their reluc· lance to allow any major construcfton on the few remaining open space areas along the Orange Coast. A second permit for 115 single-family homes in Dana Point by Lantern Bay Development Company also was lumed down by the commission Thursday. Two other large projects within the l,000 yard permit wne -the 213-unit Mira Costa Villas condominiums in San Clemente and Avco's 1,218-unit oceanside Laguna Niguel development -are up for action at the commission's next meeting. It will be Sept. 19 at 9:30. a.n1. at the Hollywood Park Hotel in Inglewood. The state com.mission 's staff noted that Orange County is the most rapidly grow- ing county in lhe state and that developmenls like •AVco"s could have substantial effects on air and water quality and on recreational lands. "We are definitely going to court ." Avco project manager Ray Peloso said today. "\Ve hope to file as quickly as poMible . "Proposition 20 wasn't designed to cause a moratorium on construction along the coast," he said, adding he thinks the proposition that created the commissions has done just lhat. "Ifs somewhat discouraging," h.e said, repeating his previous offer that the stnte can still· buy the property at a fair (See AVCO, Pag• II ' C.Ut • Weatlaer The Los Angeles Weather Service sees a foggy v.·eckend for Orange Coast residents and visitors, clear- ing by niid,aftemoon. Highs will range from the mid·70s at the beaches to lhe low 80s inland. I NS IDE TOD/\\' Celebrities will play te1u1is for cl1arii11 this wte~nd tn New· port Becich. The event tokes place in the Biilboa Bay Club. See today's Weeke11dtr for de· tails. Al Ywr hnl<• I l..M...,. • aNlllll I Cellftrlll9 I Cll~~llttl U.... CIM!n 11 (........,. If Ol'l'tft•• , l"•lttNI Pitt ' ,.._. ,_,.,, Iler "" tttuni J "-t'" ,. AM l.I,.._,, 11 .... _ . ' ' I • • 2 DAILY PILOT SC Fri day, Stplembtt 7, 197.3 Prosecutor Protests FromP .. eJ • • • • 'Brotherhood' Pair F:reed AVCO price. "We feel the courts are going to be rnore opcn·minded," he said. Two men labeled on their arresl as. principals In the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug distributioi1 rlng allegedly headed by imprisoned Dr. Tin1othy Leary were freed late Thursclu y nftcr ser ving: less than three mon th s of !hei r sen· tenets. Orange Counly Superior Court Judge Raymond Vincent's action, taken under a f!fnal code provision that permits judicial r~•view l2Q days after sentencing, brought n howl Qf protest from prosecutor J ack Hv:tn. ···He's gone against the report prepared by the Department of Corrections," com· Berkeley Scl1ool Groups Seekh1g St1·ike Sanction From AP Dispatches Ylith Cupertino and San Francisco already facing school-opening problems, Berkeley is trying to stave off a similar si tuation. Representatives of Berkeley school employc grou ps arc recommending that · each participating organization secure a sirikc sanction . The recommendation, carried in a vote Thursday night. op('nS 1he way for a possible school strike within two weeks unless an agreement is reached on cmployc dcmand.ci, They arc seeking a 5.75 percent pay hike. a voice in hiring school ad· n1 inistrators and more adequate supplies for class room teachers and custodians. Some 500 persons allended the meeting sponsored by the Berkeley AILiance of ::ichool Employes. a coalition of Berkeley teachers and noncerlificated employes. Represen ta!ives at the meeting must now· convince their organizations that they should agree not lo 1 cross picket ~ Jines if a strike is called. Participating organ izations included 1hc Berkeley Education Association, Berkeley federation or Teachers, Local 10 of !he Public E1nploycs Union and the Cla ssified School Employes Association. In Cupertino , more than 100 noo- teaching employes joined almost 800 teach ers loday in !he tw·o-day-olci strike against th e 22,000 • student Cupertino Union School District. i\laintenance employes set up picket lines at 7 a.m .. and spoke smen for the distri ct's remaining 300 c 1 er i cat, 1naintl'na11ce and custodial employes said they \\'Crc expected to follow. The schools continued to operate with substitute tea chers and enrollment re- mained about 90 percent !or the second day. school officials said. The second strike was called by f'i'lw1icipal Employes Federated Local 101 which rejected a schoo l board offer of a 2 percent raise and a 2 percent cost-of·liv- ing bonus. The strike also wos described as a sy1npathy strike for the Cuper~ino Education Assoc iation which walked out Thursday on the first day of class. The non-teacher strike was expected to limit deliveries to the school. but there was no early word of trucks being stop- ped. Cupertino is the state's largest elemen- tary school district. and the strike is believed to be the first teachers strike against a public school in Santa Clara County. In San Francisco. a settlement has been reachL'd in a strike by school bus drivers which forced some 20,000 elemen- tary grade children to find other ways to class sinCi! school opened Wednesday. From Pagel LETTER • • • 'rhat I thought was a letter written in a friendly, ethical way." ··1 "·asn't trying to tell them how to handle their business." Bremer said. "The tax base is my responsibility. You can't ha\'e quality education unless you ha\·e the money to pay for ii ." Tru stl-e Lu nd said . ··1 discussed the Capi strano Beach situation with Bremer a fe\\' times ... lhe wording of the letter 1s most\\' mine. \Ve didn 't discuss it with the rest. of ihe board. ~le said he didn't ra te the matter as "that big a deal." OU.NII COAST " DAILY PILOT Thi Or•IJ'll Co.ii OAILY PILOT, will! wlUC:ll It COmbfNd 1111 Ntwi·PftH, It 111>1>11""" .., Ille Or•l>O• (o.1$1 Pl,lf!U1lll119 ComjNny. ~ r11t tdlllol'l1 t rt PV!llltlllld, Moncltr ltifllUllh F•idtr. ror '"'" Mnt, NtwPOrl 8t•dl, ttunlll>Qlon 8ttcll/l'ounltln VtlJtr~. i.:..~ 8Ncl>, !,....lntlkddlfti.ck 1tw:I S.n C.......,!tl >•n Jv111 C1pl1!rtno. A tlloglt "91111-1 lldl!I011 11 Wl!ll1Md St!Vrdt" •tw:I $urllltr1. Tiit p•l»CllNll Pllbllflill>O pl•n! It tl DO Wnl 8tr 5''"'· C<Kll Mnt, C.tflomlt, mar.. Rob•tt N. W.M Prt1iit.nt 11111 P!i*llallet Jeck R. C"'rl1y v1,, Prnodlflt •1111 C0-11 ~ Thom•1 ICtt•ll ElfllO< Thom t t A. Murphint MtM1111no;i EdllOt Ch1tl11 H. Loo' Ridi11J P. Nell •AUlt1tll! MIM111if'4 Ef 1klo't s.. c.._... OHke JDS North El C•ml110 R11 l, •l67Z 0...... OHie" CO.I• """'' UO Wn1 &tr Strn t Pffwpill &N<ll' ~ NtwPOr'f llou-rd W....!lnolofl &Md!! 17911 •••ell &o!;ltvtni '-"-eetcll! m "°''" •.....U. , .. .,.... 1714J ·'•2 .... J21 Cl-""'4 A"'-tf .. '42·1671 ~ S-C ....... All 0.,."-tltl: 'T• .. 11h1• 4fZ .... 420 C:W...rlfM, ltl"J. Or1111111 C.0.11 "llblltfl1"' ~. ,.. -,,.,.... 11111llltll0ftt, ... r..,.,, !Miter .,. M¥.rt11-.., n.r.i.i mtr "' ""'1idlll'td Wlll'llut .. lfl -l'lll••• OI Oflrtlpflt o-r. ....... tlllM ....... Pllllil tt COllt MtM C.ll10tn'1, lllbtc'rll'llorl .,_ ttrrW tt.d -1111r1 tr -H IJ 1J ,,...,11'11,1 mll,,_,., ... llNlllOm u., .._ ... ,.. The 230 striking drivers were lo vote on the proposed agreement tod3y. If ratified, a union spokesman said . bus service will resume on Tuesday f..1onday is a school holiday. Council Weighs Improvements 111 San Clemente San Clemente's annually computed five-year capital improvement program "'ill lead the list of topics al a special Sept. 18 study session of the city council . Councilmen agreed Wednesday that the ann1.1al li st of items on priority schedule would be examined at the informal session starting at 8 p.m. in coundl chambers. The list is compiled each year by plan· ning commissioners , who pore over diverse proposals for city improvements and then recommend which should be tops on the ~hedule. This year's top- priority category calls for major sewer transmission lines In several sections of the city faced with heaVj' development. · · Other items set for 'l'liscussion at the specia l meeting will include the bid by San Clemente Cablevision to explain the firm's need for an increase in its monthly service and connection charges. Spokesmen ea rLier this year were denied the rate hike by councilmen. This latest request ls essentially an a~ peal of the decision by the council serv- ing as a utilities commission for the service. Yet another item -the growing crime rate in San Clermnte -is set for discussion as well. Councilmen last month agreed to seek a rationale from police officials on the sud· den incre3se in felony and misdemeanor offenses in the city. A major rise was noted during the summer months, but police emphasized that th e arrest totals simply renected in· creased palrols by p\ainsclothesmen on the city beaches, providing more surveillance. Plans and specifications for t h e new city yard complex on acreage near the city sewage treatment plant also are on the study session schedule. From Pagel BUS • • • to v .. in support of a route in San Clement e before next summer. The county agency this week ordered more than 60 new buses to be used in transit networks throughout the county. San Clemente wants one. Another idea is a straight job of selling the concept to district board member.J . Councilmen and traffic commissioners plan to invite the board to the South Coast for a luncheon meeting to explain the need for a bus route linking several communities . Spokesmen for the district have already suggested that if the board ls convinced of a strong public acceptance of the concept the district could allocate a new bus to the cily before next sum· mer. One measure or the acceptance could be the receipts from the rental trams from Laguna Beach. Another, said traffic Commission President \Villiam Waddell, would be the amount of letters from citizens urging in· ception of the bus service. Tv.·o letters ha ve come to city hall so far, but 'OKce!e said contacts he has received show a much more abundant endorsement of the Idea by· local citizens. From Pagel PRICE JUMP •• strainls are lifted on the nation's largest corporations. The biggest jumps in prices in the fann sector were for livestock, grains and oil seeds. Prices of fresh and dried fruits and vege tables dropped sharply. Council Denies Free Rent Bid ~n Clemente's Adult Recrnation Association lost 1 bid this week to ~ t~ city's community clubhOuse renl·free to entertain visiting shuffleboard tenms. The group, which scht.>Clule11 play at the city courtl at the clubhouse complex, first asked parks commissioners for a favorable rccommendAUon on the free rental, 'but that group recorrunended denial. City council men Wednesday concurred wlrh lho commiss1on un animously. mented the astonished Ryan. "I l'all this an abuse of discretion and frankly I um wondering why Judge Vincent took such a personal interest in these two men." The two men are James Leroy Crlt· tendon, 30. who was living in Long Beach when arrested, and John Charles Cale, 26, a Laguna Beach surfboard maker "'ho v.·as marked down in the Grand Jury indictment 3S a persi~tent peddler 0£ LSD at rock concerts. Crittendon earlier drew a state prison term of one to ten years after pleading guilty to possession of dangerous drugs . Gale got the same prison term after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges. Neither Ol8Jl should start celebrating just yet, the somber Ryan warned after Judge Vincent's ruling. Ryan told the judge that he Intends to go to the Fourth District Court of A~ peals to challenge the dismissal action on the grounds that lt Is contrary to evidence and the recommendation of the state Department of Corrections. If Judge Vincent's ruling is upheld , it will mean that 18 o! the nearly 50 persons indicted by the Grand Jury ten months ago have now been cleared of all charges or had their sentences commuted. Several of the indictees are still on the run, with police throughout the nation still keeping their eyes peeled for the man they describe as "Mr. Big" in the conspiracy -300-pound Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist, 30. He was last seen in late 1972 in the Hawaiian Islands . , Lawmen said Crittendon came· next in order below Leary and Andrist and iden- tified him as the man v.•ho peddled 250,000 LSD tablets in one tr.ansaction . They said Gale was best known to them as a •·traveling druggist" who toured Southern caltfornia rock concerts distributing free samples of LSD to young onlookers. Both men were said to be confidants of Dr. Leary, 50. the LSD cultist who is now serving a term in Folsom Prison. Arraigri1nent For Accused Rapist Delnyed UPIT ....... Ro11alty in R11ssia Britain's Princess Anne and fiancc. Capt. Mark Phillips, attend Eu- ropean Equestrian Chan1pionships in Kiet. lier visit to Russia is fir st by British royalty in half a century. Officials W a11t to l\.now . . If Nixo11 B11gged Brother From \\'lre Services on 's telephone for more than a year at Avco attornies already have Indicated they will try to 1et the proje<\1 through on claims they $hould be exempted rrom the new law passed by voters last Noven1ber. Now they will sue for the permit also. Peloso 1aw one encouraging sign at Thursday's commission mceling. Com· missioner Richard \Vilson said the panel should advocate legislation to allow lower tax assessments along the coast. Dale Secord of the Orange County Environmental C:Oatilion said Thursday he would try to get citizens groups to support such a move. But today, Secord was both happy and bitter about Thursday's vote. "They brought it on themselve.s," he said or Avco. Secord, who has opposed Avco al coin· missions and in court, said, "If they had held off for another two or three weeks. they C<Juld've gotten it through." Avco's original plans called for up lo 917·Units on 46 acres within l he ocastal zone. The total tract, most of it outside the 1,000 yard line, was 2,488 con· dominiums on 192 acres. Late last week, Avco officials sug· gested a compromise. It would've reduc· ed the coastal zone units to about 742 and 1he total tract to about 2,000 and add five acres to il park. Joseph Bodovilz, commission executive director, said the staff needed more time to study the pro~al and "'ork out a solution. Avco pushed for a decision Thunday and Bodovltz recommended denial. Secord, a professional planner . said h~ doesn't think the Avco and Lantern Bay votes spell defeat for all other Jara:e proJ· ects. The commission Is looking f o r alternative, not for arbitrary rules, he opined. The Lantern Bay denial alao was unanimous. The 27.S.acre project w1s granted a permit by the South C.OUt Regional Zone Conaervatk>n C.onunlsslon, as was Avco's. Negotiations by a La Habra attorney Th e chairmen of t"·o congressional the President's request. who may defend accused kidna~rapist subcommittees arc trying to find o u l Me&n\\·hi\e, Sen. Joseph M. Montoya Sucee.asfully appealing the Lantern Bay pennit on grounds of density wtre the Los Angeles chapter of the Sierra Club. the League of Women Voters and thr Environmental CoaUUon. Kenneth D. Kelley, charged with the ab-y.•hether President Nixon "'iretapped his 1D-N.!>.1.), and Rep. Tom Steed (D- duclion of a teenaged girl in Corona dcl Ne"·port Beach brother, Donald. The Okla.), chairmen of subcommittees Two Conventi'on Mar eight days ago stalled his ar· \Vhite House isn·1 saying. \vhich allocated funds to the Secret raignment 'Thursday. Donald Nixon ha d no comment Service, said they want explanations in Kelley. a tattooed trucker from Pico when contacted today by the Daily Pilot \\'riling from the Secre t Service. Tn'ps Approved Rivera, appeared before Judge Calvin P. in Los Angeles at a hotel ceremony. He Sclim1dt in Harbor Judicial District Court also declined comment there Thursday "The wiretaps being reported would Thursday afternoon to hear formal when ·asked for comment by reporters seem to have no connection with natlooal san Clemente City Muiager Kenneth charges read against him . covering the program. security and would seem to be outside of Carr and two members of the city coun· C:Omplaint.s charging the .suspect with Deputy White House Pres.! Secretary the scope of Secret Service respon!lbillty ciJ wiU attend convenUons this fall. k.d · th h th t I bod·ty Gerald L. Warren said Thursday that if CaJT won permission , __ --•I-•• ·1 napmg , rape roug rea o 1 ror the proteetion of the President," UU1n ....................... . ha m Sex perversion and assault With a nionitoring or the President's immediate w~-Asday to attend an 8MUal con-r • Montoya said in a letter to Secret Service ewic deadly weapon were issued Thursday family took place "it would have been venUon of the International CJ t y· morning. related to the protective function of the Director James J . Rowley. !>.tanager's Association in Bolton Sept. 2S Arraignment was continued until Mon-Secret Service. I'm not going beyond Steed said he, too, would ask Rowley through 27 at city e1.penae. day morning, however, at the request of this ." for a written statement. ln an allied actioo, the council agreed the Orange Cowity Public Defender's Of· Warren said that after talking with the He and Montoya said they "'ould await to stnd Mayor Clifton Myen and Mayor 1. Presi".lent he would have no comment on Pro-tem Arthur Holmes to the League or ice. Sch d .~ h ·1 ''any specific charges" in a Washington the Secret Service reports before Calilorru·a CIUes conf--late In Judge mi t agr~ w en 1 was ex· .............. plained that La Habra attorney Stephen Post story quoting sources as saying the deciding on whether lo order sub-October. 111.al session will be in San A. De Sales is considering representing 1 _Se_c_re~l=S~e;r;v1;·c;e ;wl1l·r.et;a;pped;;;;;Domna~l:d;N;ix;-;;;'°;m;m;it;te;eBhelalr;in~g~s.;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Fr;ano;;·;sco;. ;illi;;;;jjjiiiiiili--~--Kclley in th e four-count crim inal case. Kelley was subsequently transferred to Orange County Jail, with the stiff $100,000 bail requested by Newport Beach police remaining in effect at Judge Schmidt's order. Kelley, who also uses the last name Blahosky, was arrested in El Monte Tuesday afternoon by a patrolling police sergeant who recognized the suspect and his white van from a wanted circular distributed by Newport Beach police. -Frone Page l VOGEL • • • some joint enterprise to f u r n i s h transportation," he said. Vogel. long a staunch supporter for ~he pennissive tax for cons.tructton ~h1ch community colleges can impose without a vote o£ the taxpayer, said he ha s changed his mind and now opposes any more construction without the approval of the constituents through a bond issue election. "We have the basic facililies we need right no\v," Vogel said. "Now we should concentrate oo using facilities in outlying areas to bring courses to the people . Right now improving our public relations image is most important." Meat Cutter Sues Employer After Oeared of Thef t A veteran meat cutter, cleared of multiple criminal charges after belng ac- cused by Laguna Beach employers of steaJlng quantities ot meat, has sued the market and two Conner co-workers Thursday for $1.2 million. Albert W. Pauly, 55, names Albertson's Inc., 700 S. Coest HJghway and marktt employes Eddie Hobbs and Fred Prendergast as co-defendants in his Orange County Superior Court action . Pauly claims he was falsely accused on Sept. 28, 1972, or smuggling meat Out of the market via a female accomplice who has not been identified. lie was later cleared of charges of assau!J and bat- tery , res!Jtlng arrest and petty th<ft, among others, in South Orange County municlpal court action. Pauly claims in hls lawsuit that he was attacked by bOth Hobbs and Prendergast at the time he was fal sely nccµ.sed. , WOODMARK CHAIRS A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price WOODMARK FEATURES .I • * LUXURIOUS 25 '/. DOWN & 75 -;. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC ' *EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE COWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE • , • ON DISPLAY NOW LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES START AT $215. DREXEL-HERITAGe-HENREDON-WOODMARK-ltARASlAN NEWPORT IEACH e INTERIORS WEEKDAYS I SATURDAYS t:OO .. 1'10 HIDAY 'TIL t :OO -· 1727 WlSTCllF' Da. "42·1010 to,.. Sv"41y 11·11JOI LAGUNA IEACH e t4S NO RTH CO.t.n KW'f. IOp•11 S11"41v 11.11JOI 4t4·6111 TORRANCE e 11'4• H•W1HO•NI ILVD. J71·117t • • ...... , • ) Frld•y, Stplmbtr 1. 1973 DAILY PILOT / IJ Prefab Homes Started Off Great--But OVER THE COUNTER D> TllOMAS D. EUAS Prtfabr1cat~ housing tw,s long been thought a likely ao lutlon to the ever·increaslng co.,t of building new homes. But at least in Southern California it is not working out that way, In spite of a four- ycar..old sta te r eg u I at lo n- dcsigned to ease the path to Telephone Service - Hilie Told LOS ANGELES (AP ) - General Telephone Co. has outlined a number of service. charge increases that wi ll go into effect Sept. 23 as a result of a $5.5. 1nillion increase granted "by the Cali£omia Public UtlJIUcs Commission. Service connection charges will be hiked from $12 to $18 lot residences and to $25 for businesses. fl.fo ving charges and changes "'ill be raised from 15 to !6- Customer uested. number changes, ~·hic'.1 currently are free of charge, wil l cost $5 for l'f:lidences and $10 f o r businesses. Cert ain monthly charges associated with key sys tems will be hiked from $2.80 to $3.30. An additional charge of 15 cents a monlh will be levied for unlisted phone numbers, and a five percent surcharge will be im(iosed on private channel rates. pre-fab, or "modular," homes. IN lllt, a lmo s t sln1uJtaneowdy with the begin- ning of a federal low-cos t housing program ca 11 e d · ' Operation Breakthrough ," t he n ·A s semblym.1n Pete Wilson (now the n1ayor of San Diego) pu"1ed through the Ugislature a law calling {or ~Taki11g Gas' statewide standaros. modubr housing This allowed manufacturers to bulld units to mttt a single set of standards without wor~ rylng about relatively minor k>cal building oode variations. WilsonJ now touted as a potential Republican c .. dldate ror the U.S. Senate seat be.Id by Otmocrat Alln Cranstor\, felt the new law y,·Ql.lld rt$uJt In a flood or I01'1·pri«'4 a.ssembly·line housing in w-ba\1 areas of the Southland. 8UT THERE hu tuu~y been a trickle, let alone a flood . About the only areas where prefabricated homes h ·a v e made any dent at an lnto the Soutbem Callfomla housing marke t are rural porti003 or the region \\'here building materials and h:1bor are scarce. "Manu!ac turlng th~ homes ls only a small part of a hous- ing project,'' observed Jerome Harris, Southern California DETROIT MOTORS ~NASO Li1tin91 fo r S.pt•mbtr 6, 1t73 administrator ror .~ s•·te l"l k •• 1~ 11.., !'! .... , w ., n ... s1,. l tc ! ''" lUV .. ~Mi-l"ll!el l 04 II~ Ul4 ~ ll'ld 'J'• 11' ""°1• !~ ~ ' Department ol llow:lng and .. ~::.fi'·'"-.. ~~~-·-"•El I~ '"" Pllnd Mk J '• J) S•Mr Co l U'• ~ •-' ;f\i·-" !fl_ ...., ""' "' 1•~ ,.,,.,,. 9ro J ~~ $1t ll4 ~If ' ~ Community vcYt..,,.ment s . ;ir.,• ~, 1c: 1M i ... ~.,. Gou ,.~ 1• ''"" C•• , •l.o ch and I I -I .. ,;:ij Pr Kl'I fl U YI Ul'I Proor11. 11'1 1•• TM!llll • resear _ a 1 1 s an c e ,~ iN11 .. ,· ,.,,. "aE ... '"' P!.K et, 1o•. 11" • 1 10,~ division, which administers ffi•'•• -""•,~•, ',~',',",...,. 1)v. 11 P .. 111 c~ 11, 1i.. 11v1or w ' .. I •h • loo.\,.._,. Cot!~• C11 I •~• flflt<"' ~ O<> the 1969 Jaw. =· tk T= '-<I ',',"', ... " w .. 11\lo O..iir.• Cl'I Il l , ltl. ''''~1 .... r1l1•I ,...,.,.,"'I ·fin U"' lllJlo Ql.ie.-. C.. J I•, '1'> f ofM DC Ill'~ •,,., -,,_, 111 LtJ 1'" .... R1t111 <• ,, ,. "''n ll'.'t "FINANCING AND land t1H: 1'MI 110 111.I Gllc1 co 1i "' 1ii! R1ycl'fl 111 ... 1H ... Towie Ml '! • "''""' '"'" •lo. "~w11t --1ctu1 n Aull'fl l9 )9 R~vma 1• M f •11 G~P l 1 fll rosts are IO l~I .. ..,t u.iC 1r•inM&1 ... t. ".' ~uJO.P II ltl/.I AllM P•c l~ ,t'., f"' OC>rll 1ti: 'h.--- modular builder often. can't "1,:'8""'i.~:;rz,. ~a M~ ]l~ ':~ ::~<lllE,~co. 1l u:~ u~no11c.!';. f:' • Improve at all on the cost of ........ ,..... '"'"..,. ~ 111.o 11 R111 u..... 111, 11·;, v~oci !11>1 ~ 1.1 "'' '"" ""'' >< '-" t>.:, 11~1 Pl11 t.'o t~o U~Afl Ill , I conventionally-built housing." Sel>ltrllber •· nn ev Adv ' •1• R~y" ~ 111, 0•1 u !o 8., Nt 11. ~ iolf'll Cl! o1•V> lS "••~I Ml 1t l9 J• l.IS l fk L U'• lt"• he said in an interview. ··So H•ll11 EW qa •• 1 E• J1'\ ,s,, univ Fd• uJ, ,,,.,, tho h 47 ' •11•1 ll't i:tol>•t 0•~ I)'• lb'" Unv MObl •'• .... even ug companies H.tll l'nk n\o u•. 11ou, .. , 8 1• 11 v 1QM Ha .1. 11-. have been certified to build ,, .. ,,,, ,',!~ ,•,•k "'"'" 8• 10 11 "~"'' Co n'1 1>•1 Y•n'• Sn ', • SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA FOCUS modular units, they have not forged ahead a.s we hoped they \\°Ould." Nevertheless, there a r e almost 20,000 prefabricated home.s standing in Southern California. Most cost between $17,000 and $25,000 and contain either two or three bedrooms. But almost all are in rural, mountain portions of San Bernardino, Riverside, Santa Barbara, Ve ntura , Los Angeles and San Oeigo coun- ties. "In a rural area, the cost of building conventional housing is about double per sqaare foot what it is in an urban area ," notes Richard Simonian, presi- dent of Environmental O:lm- munities Inc. of C.Orona and Fullerton. • .. Hi1rl111 p \\ .. s-.. Iii;> .. ~ f'nt ''• 10 Y•ll OY~ II .. 11-. Alt • it.I• l)''i l!'.4 H1r~r ll •'• •'• Auc ~r Pf! l••o 1• Y.tn !o~k fl.lo '"' it.11(0 l.ncl IS n • HA .. tll Fl ''• a•. ""'' !>!Ow n T1 Y•r1or• SI 111 .. ul.. :::~<O ~1°j 1 1 0;: I:~ Ht•li9 M~ •>o I'• \.t!I~ A1• •. , I• Y•dto Sy\ t•~ 1 it.ll•ll 81 '" \\ Ht•,tl C 1' UJ.. ~1 • .., (p I'• !', y,.....,,, ~ ·~ fl• 1.m' APl1l 9 t\ Hom .. o 1•1, 1•. S.Cl'l••t• "" J 1. vol s-14"• u A "''"' O' ,,. HOOYt• }Ill. 1• ... ')(.1'1~11 l'I 1''• 11'• Wa\ft NG 12'11! IJ """El LO 1;;: ~·H ..... 1 Ml13 11•, n S.Con Inn ''•I'• W••le Mt 1111 1~ :::: ~·~ ~'" OI . ~::::r C C ;~~ ~~~ ~~~~~ ~ 1~'.: I~'. ::~;'nll~ ~ !:~ ,..,, '"' lll<lil W,11 ll'l 19 'if'•OIO I 1 1 !1o W •tO~ll ..... •1• Am ,,,,.. •ll< 1 ll!Cls NU(I J1'. 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JO\IYll M \ll• 1~•, •M At:i;\ 11' 1 It'> Wri~lll W "'• 41• I.n o COii !tl l S'h ICi lur 51 u •, 11•, ~1~ 'l .,l.f 11', 11<. llom• Cl> .,. •11 I.II G1 LI ll~~ H KtlY•r (_ J•o l'o ~!O N Brw /'o I"" Vt110 fl! 'i •!'• Auto T•ll 9'!1 '"-IC.ti'" Tl! s~, '" Sl~;i~ N 5 l'o l:\oo Zl~r Co I I '• ::t~~ !:: ,:j': ~~ Ke1twoc1 114 1s• .. 8•~t' Fe J\ ]SI> O:en C~n 11'l II Bald-L '''• 101 -<•y 0.>l<'I 6 &'' I • Wii y M!t Sii.ii S9'1, O(~ye~ Fb 1)\t ,..,. New Yoo . <UPI) -Tftt follow 119 I"' Bnk 81dQ u 1 .. n .. "•Y cu1t 1 1•, 1110w1 tl'le 110<~1 111~1 ,,..we 9a1ned Ille sa11k lh l ?~ ?•V• ""V~! 1111 17"• '''• "'<>11 '"a !<>11 1111 moil ba~d on perr.t11t. 8a•ne1 H 1i•1t lSV• o:MS • Ind •'• •'• ol c~illlQt "" tne Ow1r-t1Mo·c;""111tr 8•1\ett F 11•11 11'1') ""'Pll Vt 11''1 u·~ tnllfkel ti 'lllllltd by '"' NASO. Biyless t•o ID'ft O:oqcr Pr 11 21 Nft 111d 11t•Ctntaqe cll""r.' ~te ti.. Bet llllO F' p,1 •i.. O:r ut qer 8'• 9 aUtt11nc1 betwe111 f ile pr1v""1 l.ti!I .,;.:1 8 ekln Cp s"' 6"' O:u11<n El ,,. I•~ prlc• lllCI !M '""'"' tail 010 .Pritt. Bently Li J6''• ,,~ L~aa Pe l 8''• '''• GAINERS • 8111 Ptd 't4«i t• '.~rl<~S! t 1•1 1D? I M!q Tlu't wl~ '.·1,_ Vt Ut Beu Lall l'I •l t•nco ?••~ 11~) ) GsnCmptr Sys I>•,. l'h Utt 8il>t> Co J'I) a ldW1tr c JI'. n l Ofhll« LOQl,i , 1 .. J Ult 919 O•.., ,,,.,, 11,,., Ld1Y Bov 1~'• ll\~ I 01ro• corp J + "' u0o Bird Salli 111'1 ?l'h ~~qqet Pl H ' 1 U s l'rtdHerr .1611 B .. 1•• • 8ob EYn1 11 "· 11 l.•be•ly It 1'' 1'• • Cl•Vtllo'k .)Ob n i; .. 1"4o UR Boolll 0 Np It~~ ll''> ~·I c11 ... p a•. '"• 7 CllYTfllllv "'' 1 .. ~' UO, 8•e11,0 1 11 '' 7l'to ~•n< B~<! •'• 6"• 9 Pl•......O MklQ n o·, -2~~ U~! 8•l11k1 In ii" 11 l•on C!~ l > ' ' Sllortwooel Co ,,, .. '• 9,0,.,11 1..r s ' s14 Locllle Sl' • s••-, 10 Ody11•v Inc s·~,. ,,. 8...ckbe ,., .• lS\<o Loew1 Co v•, St 11 Into••• lncorp 1 \o UD 811ckey 6V· 614 Ma!I G~1 u II''> 11 B"'"' RLCo•o ,..,, .. I Ult 8u•nt1 SI }6"' 11\\ M11 .Ally t 'o I'\ IJ ()pl~ Corprtn '"• • 'Ill UP 8utte, M 14 •S M11l(I<! IJ IJ It h i Mis' Corp 1•'· .. I'• Up c .... Ta9 ?~...,, 11''< Ma"I f•t " ,,,,IS !ou11UleOU l id •'·--'• Utt C•Pi s.ow s S' M5fY 11;, JI'~ n 1' ,. P111tai• lllCl .. 1! a•o+ -'• u.; Cell VIP"!o 1\Vo IS'~ Y.C Cmt lt •1 ~, 41': 11 R1o;ienP•et In 1>1 .. •0 cnmo Pt 11 1s:i. ..,<Q""' 11 Bt YC-r• .lt •'•'" "o c11a11c1 A 11•11 11 .,,,_ "1\ 1''· 1• H••<lwC~Co 111 •'•+ .._ "' II"> 1\'. I) T111y C.Otptl11 J''l.o. :\e C/linl Co S"<i tllt M'~'''" 63 , ~1 '• 11 l.nllllQ Oewl(t 10'"'" I C~m CP Jl .... J)Vt Mt rid In '', S . •1 Emerlon\ Ltd 11''• ,. !"lo UC> Clll Br 1r tl'N tl~ Meyer fr n 19•--, ll F•bl'l Tel< inc 2•. ,_ •, Up Cllrlt Ste Mi11 ipor St SI 14 Pl"' Proo .HO ,,._ .. "• UP Cillr u A UJs 1~ .•r,,',' o,•,•, 11 n•., is Zenllll 1.m Cp ,,.t-'h UP C • i ''> LOSl!llS tew111• 11"" IW. M.Ooul Co 21 l l 1 T1111W1y Int 1•.11-~• 011 Clo .. Cfp 10'11 ll'Jo Mole• In lll''l l i11) 1 Pelore• Corp IS -• 011 Coc1t LI 11'/a 11 .... MD<ltf! S.. ]\~, ]6>, ) Fu"dlllQ 'Sy\j 1,,_-~ Og~ Ce>ml '>~• l l>llt 11"" MDfri~n 10 l l 1 Madern Mere 11 ~•-l CmwTI p 11'4 JIY. Moto• Cl i 'lt ''1 s PIYU•t Ct!ld l"l-v. Contl111 P ll'to 1S.\oi MS! 0d!a a .. ''" • Prl"'l'Y Med 1 ~0-'"• Off Cro•• Co ll'I) l t"' ·Na! Lll>h S'lo I'') I BtYI\ lnd•tt l\ l -'lo C•ul'll R 9'1'1 '°" NI Md1Cr '''• 10'• t C1lorop Corr. > --Curt NDtl ' 1~ 17 N! Pate11t ''• 9''• 1~ USI' lnve• w, 1 _ °"' Of Oanl Intl 36\lo 36:W. r.ieea~m •~. 10'• 11 A.,ow l.ut!lm 1!''1-1\') Ot 0111!y M A a .... Newu c.o ~, 10 IJ CC1mr1b Ci:>m 1''1 -Vo 0 411.o' )S.O "' ?G.0 11.S ts,q It.) \I , I 11,0 .,. 11.0 11.9 II, S 11 .1 11,' 11.l 11.J 1a.t ... 10,I 10,S '" IQ,~ 1~.o 1Q.O Jl.I ]I. I IS.I u .s H .1 1!,S u .s " ' 11,1 General Telephone said the rate increase 'was necessary to offset recent wage hikes. Retailers 011 Losing E11d of Phase 4 "THE AV AILABILJTY or building materials and labor is so bad in places like the San Bernardino MoWltains that even If you're willing to pay the price, you often can't get a conventional house built. But since a convention~} home in an urban area costs about the same as a modular one, modular homes aren't very well accepted in the cities . Rural people are much more willing to accept them." Just as the state law aimed at facilitating p-efabricated home-building hasn't produced a housing revolllt..ion. neither has tbe four-ye.--old federal "Operation Breakthrough." C""llllt ll:W. 23\ll N11 Cnv!ot • ''" 1 Uld Coln S.rw 1'1.o-'• Ogl Oart Or9 It\ 8 NEnQ GE ll'o 16'" 11 Ho~<a5Yt Ga JV•-\~ O 011a Oe• l'I> 3"'-NJ Nit G 1110 I&'" 11 OU 5hlll! Co•i> t'o-11, 01 Oat11 Gen U 'lo IS liicalet In 1 8 IS Ol<altCa...o C•I l ''-!/, 0 Oecit Oa 1S,,. IS'-NIP.11e" A 3011 1\ll 1• Ridlilon Tecll II\-\lo Ott Otto• In 1\1 I Nle11en 8 )\\, ll" 17 8trkly Bio En \!,;,-v, 011 De~lb l.ll SI SS No•Cl•t• 11 11'·1 19 Ener!' Venlr 6"1-Va 0~ Dtllll lnll \'Ao S~~ Nw• N1G 9" 10 Oe lu •t C 1• l8>t, liO•!ll Cl> ~$'' !D 1• Am lee! LIO 1 .. -''• 0088~. 11, I I~./ 10.0 10.0 "' '' '·' ••• ... Soutliland To Get Gas From Jsl,e LOS ANGELES (AP) Nalural gas from the island o( Stunltra in Indonesia may be used In Southern California under a new contract an- nouoced T!riinday by officials of Pacific Lighting Corp. The 2().year contract signed with Pertam\na, Indonesian national oil and gas company, is the largest single purchase of gas ever by the Pacific Ughting companies r o r Southern California, company officials said. Irutial deliveries are ex- pected to begin in 1978 or three years after needed ap- provals are obtained from the Indonesian and United States' governments. By 19a:l the volume provided will be equivalent tc> 550 million cubic feet per day, of· ficlals said. The gas wlll be liquified and brought lo the United States on specially built ships, a spokesman said. The value of the contract was not disclosed. 8y RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1119 Dlllt Pll<tr llillll The man who fiU s up your tank, washes your windshield, patches tires, and comes to the house on rainy mornings to gel the family statio.n wagon started, is wearing a frown. His friendly service smile is gone because, as of Saturday morning, he will be taking gas -not only from the oil com- panies but also from the federal go~vernmcnt. f ' THAT'S WHEN Phase IV starts for the gasoline in· dustry. · Chief Justice Warren E. Burger refused Thursday to •exempt gasoline retailers from the contro.Js, From the consumer's point of view, that means a ceiling on gas prices. But from the dealer's poin t of view it is a threat to his livelihood. "I'll suffer a monthly profit drop of S2,499 under Phase JV," fumes William H. Bay, operator of a Pt.fission Viejo Mobil station. Bay is a direclor of the lnternational Service Station Dealers Association w h i c h claims between 70-80 Orange County members. The associa- Uon 'is trying to get its side of the story heard by the public. "PHASE IV will prove to be the death blow for most service station dealers and open the door for fully· automated, oil company~­ ed, self-service stations,'' l\ay predicts. 1be root of the problem i.t that the dealer's posted price will be frozen under Phase IV according to a c o m p 1 e i: mathematical formula. But any price increases passed on by the oil companies after Aug. 1 cannot be passed to the consumer. 1bey must l>e absorbed by the dealer. Meanwhile, the oil co.nr panies have already increased tankwagon prices of gasoline , putting the dealer in a squeeze between the oil companies and the O:lst of Living O:luncil. Ex- xon USA, the domestic branch of Exxon Corp., aMounced a one cent per gallon in&eue Thursday, in the wholesaJe price ol gas. RETAIL DEALERS are the only statiom frozen under the fonnula, which is computed on the bas.ls of Jan. 10, 1973, ~ fits and Aug. 1 tankwagon prices. Oil company-owned stations go into Phase IV with a different formula and a "better break," according to Bay. Under Phase JV, t h e BUY SILVER BULLION To Secure Your Dollars Against INFLATION 4.00 4.00 IOOLLAlll• 11(111 OUNCI:) : : 9.4.7.: .. I 3.00 SILVER PRICES 3.00 1900 • 1971/72 fYEMILT A\tf.-'G[) • 2,00 t.00 !.00 t.00 • I • • . .... ~-"" ...... "'' ~ fV- 0 ltoO -. 1110 1tto 1110 1140 IHO itto 1110 0 .... AVAILABLE IN 10·25-50-100 & 1,000 OZ. BARS ON DAILY 9UOTED PRICES- 3 T.O 5 DAY DELIVERY FROM NATIONAL ~INC. PRODUCERS AND REf!NERS OF 999 + Ri. SILVER - C.11 ., Wrltt1 NATIONAL SIL,ER SALES, INC. UJJ W. COAST HIGHWAY, SUITI 401 NEWPORT lllACH, CAJ.IFO•NIA. HHO rHONE 17141 645-4450 '. • -. deale-'s average net profit per brand after rents paid tQ the oil companies will be 4.9 cents for ARCO, 6.1 cents for Mobil, 5.7 cents for Shell. 5.8 cents for Standard, and 6.8 cents for Union. Not enough, according to Bay who says about 2 cents a gallon more than Phase IV allows is needed to make pumping g.. profitable. In fact, Bay insists the profit margin for many dealers will be less than rt was tn 1920. Then net profits ranged from 6-7 cents per gallon. WHE'm.ER BY design or accident, some members of the International Service Sta- tion Dealers Association are beginning to feel that the whole Phase IV pri c ing system is greased in favor of o,il company-owned stations. "Jf the automated stations take over then the oil com· panles will have the whole cookie," Bay maintains. What's so bad about that. if prices are kept · lower at seU- service stations? THE DEALERS say it will leave the motorist on his own by eliminating q u a I i f i e d persons who can prQvide them with service while they are out on the road, or on weekends when garages are closed. Dealers fear the automated stations because in mid-l!n3 the oil companies announced that they were the "hottest market item" and that by the late I970's and early l980's up to 75 percent of all gas in the U.S. will be dispensed by them, aooirding to Bay. Your Money's Worth That project has brought nothing to the Southland. Its only tangible results in the en· tire state are 407 homes and townhouses in the Sacramento area which are just reaclllng lull occupancy, Olam C•i lP~ 11•1, Nurlr Re 1,' 1·· 10 C1y...,.n Corp l'•-~. 011 ... Hd 10•. 10• .• O.o\ .. d H 8'. ii'.' JI M1rk IVHom• 1•-.~ '• 0 , • • • ' '' ' • ,"' J2 $0l>nC11<rit>er 1)·, -01 c ~"> 'Xtdll O• 60 •" • 11 Unlta•t H111'15 1•.-'• OiYr~ Sci •1• 10'" ocean E• •• 1• Oocu1e1 l~Vl :iov.; Cknqr Ml 1•: 1,: 24 I.ES T1,1111o10 s•o-~. Ooll• <n11 1'h It\ Ofh ll Lq• 11 1!l, · , Donlllf• 17\<o 11 \'a .)Qi1v y M 11 11·, 10 ~loat. Actiue • '" ... ••• '·' .., '" 0o .. Jons 2!'r. 11 01> FffrO 7 1•. · ' 0Dyle 08 111 ... 1l'lo OPll C~•l 1~ 7) NEW 'f'ORK (UPU -Tiie II).! mot! Ou11kl11 D Jl'o l'lo O•mont ••o /'• •ctlw1 UOCk• t•1dtCI on tl'lf OTC ..,.,ket Econ L•b ., ... _fl'~ OY•myr 6'. • .... TlwrMla• 11 Sl>fll)lltd bf NASO. El P1w 11 ll•'o Over• NA o ''" V1thom1 a hl l.ikff (~It. E1 Nuctl ~>.:. 6'.'< 0 101e C•D ••• 6'• 81DCk DruoA U6,IOO ,. .... u + r;. E11t1g\ C '''ll lD 1>11>•! 8r •I'• •1 .. "lllionwlClt A 101,100 Ul'o llh;t '• EQ\J &L lJ• ll~ Pat <11• 39•, lt'~ 8111¥ Mlg tl.t OO J!VJ Sf"~ '• Ell11n A Jl'llo Jt\;, Pac G1m 11 •1 nv. Penruoll UT•I. IS,?00 J"' J'.\S ..... El Pil!fll S''i .-. P1So B<CI t 10 StllW1l•11 LUI lo$,SD0 •J •J t, E••cu In l~'o 3..., Pac Lum ll<~ 1' Am E•P 71,IOO Ml Mil '' l'1lr L1'! a•'o tllt Ptn OcOI 11o;;, 1S''t flr111kll11 Lill S',Joa 211'1 21• '• EVEN SO ~ t hoo . d ,.,ion El n JI Paul Rew U ''o lS•'o ~ .... Lill St.too ''-I •-;, , 1n8 e SlD.g 3 -l'ar.., er ll'io 1l P1 .. 1ey. P 1'':1 l "-011 St>ile CP S5,IOO .... S V. minlstr •~ ll--' Fays °'9 • I P.Ylss C.15 l l''ll 16•.; Pt.Hips Gla1i1 S•,SOO 19'h 1t \<o a.... .CUUTIS sees a Fi119rllt 1••r. IS P1y N Sw IS U''> -' coming "evolal.ion to greater "" 80'\lfl 11 """ P4GW-w 11•• """ NASO voiume Tod•v •.1n,JOC1 1 •tt T•l'in 1• lHl Pel H&H ll Vo J••• l..dv1nce$ , 1fl usage of factory components .k1 w11F 1~ 2 Pr1•0 1.... a a~ o.c1111es •. ., . II I f ~-··l .. n ,, .Fl,c;o Inc A'h ,,,. PicH Sfy ~·, J•~ U111;11111~ 19~ ma ypes 0 )uuu,')"'6· ~iii'1'ii'o"o'a'•'.a"i'iii'~;,~·1''>"m1'ii'ti"li"iioiooo"ii"o'•••••••••~';,"ii' Components '8c!l .. com-· plete kitchens and' bathrooms MUT" "u A U are already being built under L F ND S · the same 111&9 law which ~lllllJ~iiil! ..... ~~ ........ ---------.... allows unifonn comtructlon of , "', • 0Yo•k ,,-,"•,· •'"I Fa 1.a1 1.10 • .,,_ i.tt 1.:i. 1ny 9.1 111.•2 modular ho.tnes. Builders can o~d' ":M' .:tec1s .. ,~. s~'1.,,'r:. ::i'' l~i1! '"' u1 l .u ... ~1,•,•,•,, ,~:J u,s• .... , 0 10.SI 11.SO these ~"'I ce1 Ol'I ~ u1 l rO '''' 10 >> oo >l '''' S• I> .. << 10 '''''' F o lo > •• use pre-lAW roonlS as Fllfld1 •1 111>0t•cl oy ca.e Mu 1:11 i:11 111e1 FllCI 21 :s. ?1:11 Rlnl•t ·c ·"" cores for new homes then 11111 NASO 1111;, E•q•e &• 1.H 1.a1 ivy Funa '·°' '·°' tet Ect 1 ::11 •'.ii . , ' --EATON & J P G•lll t ,l) t.tl 9!1!1t 2.lJ l .Jl build the remainder afOWld TllwM11' MOWA•O: Ja11us Fa 11.11 17.11 llu~ fd 1.51 t ,)0 them Septtmbfr 6. ltll 81111 fd t .SI l~,41 J H111 9tll 7.tl I.II hui Sp I.lit t ,tt . -·•~a•-~W•••=~•-•" AIJ l111;me S.t7 t.S1 JOft1!11n 14,lt l• lt Int• t11w lS,111!.ll ADM1•4LTY: Sl>eCil F 7,)7 I.OS ICl!'l'lliTONl: . 8111111; 16,1' !&,It G•wlll '·n 4.6 Si<k fd 11.8' u .os Ctnl Bl II.JI 1'.11 Corn 10,1S 1a.1s '"'om l.•• I. El>e••!CI 10.'1 11,Jt '"'' 81 lt.47 u .11· ,~•l tt.11 tt.59 lnsurn 7.tJ: I. EOlE So 11.'Mt tt,tl CU11 81 1.06 I.IC ~-Le~ ,_. 4,71 Mwittr •.11 4, l!FC MC.MT GllP; , C"'t Kl 1 OJ 1.10 lC:UltlTl' "9lli: AtlN Fd t ... t .! E11ty Gr 7,M I.SI Clr'll Kt 6 ~ 6.61 Eqully l.,t 1.H I.tin.ii 111 1),1' IS.Ill Eqty Pr 3.0S 1.11 Cvu SI ll.Tl Jl .H lllvKI •.U I 11 Inflation No Longer Just Aluturt 10,21111.11 f11d Am 1.116 I.JI' Clril Sl 1!,6" U.1• Ull•I F 7.JJ 7.91 I.GE Fd s.01 S.11 EQ•tl Gt 11U1l.SO CUil Sl l .(M I.ti SlLE(TED P'DI: Alt\lalt 11.t11l.9S Ellun Trt 16,)f •.. C"'t 'S4 1.l t •I I A"' s~ 1,12 9,)J Alpltl Fa ll.U 1•.lt EmerQ J .• , •.OI I.POiio • 10 s I! Opp fO •.11 '11 Ar111;1p F t.I S ~.JO E"'rly 11.14 II 14' Pollr' ) 11 • 06 Spl Slit$ 11 U !l !t Am Ovr,. t.lt 10.21 Ftlr! d . 9.J:Q t,01 1(11lt'' 6 i. • 16 'ienlintl 10.01 1' tS ""' Eqty •.Ml J.O<I F"m B ............. K11•1 Gth 7.19 1.11 Selll•Y .. u ." IS.I~ AM EltPltlESS Feel llRs t .U ... Ll'lllm..k •.11 1.u SMAltEHLO GlltP l"UtllOS: IDl!LITT Lttn Fd S.ll S.JJ Cam\! l.O l IS C~!ll 7,SI L:tl llOUP': Ll!lt GROUP: En!rpt SU t 7' lncom I.~ t .11 bric! Dell I.It t.t1 Cp Ltelr 1'.19 14.7) -Fltl fCI J.tl 1,1! ln¥1111'1 '·" l .S• C.o••• 11.61 11.69 Grwlft •.•5 'OS H1•bl' 1,3'1 I 'l!I Specl 7.UI t.•l Con11a •.U .. . Resrc11 ll.U ll,t! LPQ•I L l .19 •.H Stock 1,S6 8.1• Cv SStc 7.16 7,19 Llbty Fd S.16 S 11 Pl<t Fd 7.61 9.ll Am Grill ·s.t'! 6.SO 0.,1 6 U ... Li l~ 1"1¥ !61 .:.1 SMEAR50N FOlli: Prediction-It's Here Now By SYLVIA PORTER "Prices of raw agricultural products at the end of 1973 will be no higher than at the beginning. of 1973," pledged Treasury Secretary George Shultz at a luncheon in New York City early this year. "A vitally importa nt pledge,'' I reported in a February column, for, as I ex· plained, Shultz was trylng to call attention to "the extent lo which the administration's farm policy is now con· centrating on increasing the supplies of · food ." SEVEN month.! al· ter th eoo- onomlc "czar" of the Nixon a d ministra- tion natl)' -p r o J e ctcd POan a stable food pr ice'!!, the figures are comi ng out on the calamitous post-freeze spiral In wboleiale prices -and we are deeply Into the most severe, most prolonged in- fiaUon of our hlstory. Even II we close our eyes to the frightening A u g u s t upaur1e, wholesale f a r m prices rose at an utoundlng annual rate of 65 percent In the llnl half of 1973 -and many of the lricreases are still to be pasaed on to us at tho retaU counter. The spiral In food prices In 1m pvor 1971. probably will reach 11 to 22 percent! Our overall cost of living COu1d ll1m out 6-8 percent higher this year than last - triple the rlu Nixon forecast! • How could the White !louse I" IO wr:,ong tn Ila pn>JecUons a~ therefore, its resulting policies? W h a t happened? Why ? HERE ARE six major !ac- tors: (1) The White Rouse failed to understand the power of today 's worldwide eronomi c boom and the subsequent ex~ plosive demands for our foodslulfs , goods and services. We are in a global boom without precedent. All over the world, people are eating more food and eating better food. Hundreds of millions 0£ customers are clamoring for our production in Europe, Japan, Russia, China, un-T derdeveloped lands around the globe. , This boom mark.9 a water- shed in world history, is among the most fundamental, historic developments or our age . NIXON HAS encouraged It 11nd perhaps he does indeed full y ---appreciate it -but the economic policies he has pro- posed for our country have not matched it. (2) Th e administration underestimated the impact or its foreign sales of !oodstuUs -partJcu1arly of wheat to the Soviet Union -on food prices here. A. a result Nixon did not simultaneously fight for an overhaul of our agricultural policies to bolster our pro- duction or foodstuffs and, thereby, to offset tho ln- flaUonary Impact of I h e lortlgn sal ... (31 Bad weather, droughts, crop failu res, acts of Ood 6ave Interfered with food pro- duction all over the •world. Shortages of fuel a n d lrnmportaUon facilities have advcmly affected prices. NATURE ITSELF h a s helped lo restrict the supply of vital raw materials at a time of exploding demand -and thls excess demand pressing against inadequate supplies is the basic cause of Inflation. AM ln,ln S.00 5.16 E'1•• 10,IO ... Linc Cao 7,12 /It l.C>Pfc 11'6 1061 l.m lllYSI '·" •.W Eve•tl 11.H ll.l] LOOM IS Inc.,.., 170!ll!~I 1,.., Mui 9.J1 1,91 Furia 1S.SS U.tt SAYLES: t l11vt1I t .U 10,10 1.mNI Gr l.16 '•1,51 Purl!" 9.1! 10.01' Ca11 Ov O lJ ll 10 S~ Oe~n 11.02 !l ~1 -'NCNOlt S1!em F •,1l 4,61 Mulu1! U.S1 II.St ~Ide f d !O 1:1 GlltOUP: Trend l1.1Sl6.lt LOlllO All: 51Gr.ll. FUNDS: C1p111 '·" S.22 INl.NC:ll.L l.llltil 6 •1 1.1• Cap Sl!r l.U &,Ji F"d lllV 1,6S a.le ltOGltAMS: Am Bu\ 291 J.lt lllY 10.)t l!ll Grwth 1," 1.16 l'ln 0fn •.11 •.11 Bnd aeo '11 10.11 fn l 7 u 8 n• t11com 7,10 I.la Fl11 Ind •.11 1.11 L"fftt•n I0.•111.63 Y•nlur 9 ... I It Vt lllur 1,19 t.•l Fin Inc S.•! 1.61 LOJ!~11 In t lJ 10.JO S"'llll B 10 16 10.U WI Ni ii 1f,IM ll.1• Vent 111 •.ll M1n11111 1.96 •.l l ~8 l&G• 10.•s 10 SS it.11,Clfl l.ll 1.01 hlFd \ti 11.11 11.11 "!_ASS CO: !>3 GenF 11.61 U ll l.u.:111 F 1.00 I.II FlltST freem J.11 I It 'i .. 11 l"w 1.10 1 1> (4) The successive devalua-axr 1Nv1EsT0tts: 1r>0p, 1.n • u s w 111w G •·• ,,, · f th ll NOt.IC»tTOM: Oht Fd S •O S.911.~1' F 11,\.lo U,tl SoY• In U,ll 11 1S lions O e do ar to the point Furia " 1.~ s.Ol Grtn Fd 111 1 t1...,Ass ,. .. C:L : Sl)ecu• •" s 11 h 'I ha be f P'lllld 6 I.OJ 7,6) Stack F I.II I.II Mil II JI 11,lt S!.P lnO 1'n 6 19 were I s come one 0 Stock S.113 t .l• 1\1 Mo.lltl t .S! I.SS MIG U.01 141' STATE INO.Gll:P: the most undervalued cur-Ail Sd 1.1• •.SO FOllUM GROUP: MIO IJ J1 11 •1· Com f(I •st S JI 8 LC G1h 11.19 U .6S 100 Fl'WI 10.99 10."' MFO 1l Jt 14.•l Olvn lf \ 21 s ~* rencies in the world have 111Ko11 11.1s 11.1s 101 '"° 1 os 1.as Me o 11.11 1•.!18 Pr09,, s.n s ~ 61yroc 1.11 I ... COlu.., ·~ t.Ot .... l lt• ly 110 1.10 SI fr Gr 1.n t.ll vasUy stimulated our exports 81'(1\ .. S.IS l .lt 21 '""" •.n 6.IS ~.•tl'M1' 11.,11., 51 F• Inc t 1) • I] -a trend devouUy to be wish-Be1<11 NI .... 8,t l FOii Gr 1.14 l.Ot ill Am S.JI !.II !olltt Str ••.• , •1> '~ hl<Ofl 11,ltll,lt!OUNOIEltS onv FCI 10M l1,6J STl!AOMAN FOS• .owl which is putting our l•roaer K 11.11 11.u ... RDt.IP: ~!>8 FCI 11 06 14.06 A"' lllCI l.o:t J . .ri ......., a.r•w 4,10 1.t9 Grwtl'I S.lll S.M MU lftG •."J IQI! .. ,.., I'd 1.11 1 11 balance of trade back in the 811t11htk '-'' 1.111 1111;om 11,11n.111M1F Fd r.16 1n 111weu 1.>6 1.l6 8 051 Fein '·"IQ.ta F M1 .. 11 1.9) •.u Nl lF Grft •. ,s • t 2 STEIN ltDI! l"DS· black -but the ironic fact ls 8 r-11 01 hi "' S1>ec11 11.1tt n .ot lilluO"I 91 • 1s s.11 1111111( zo.'9 10'.tl th 'cul I IULLOCIC Fovrsq F I.la t .10 MuOm 111 I.II • 64 C10111 io 11 1D ., at agr1 tura exports lead P:UNOS: , ...... KLIN """'' Sftrt IS.IS IS.ls S!O<k u .tl l•.tl th II t Ith 81 I , 8utl FCI 11.0t U.I• GltOUtt: M1i1U lr1 I !16 1 !16 SIS OltOUP• e s w an percen lR• Un Fd ll,IJ 1l.to" ONTC l,t1 l .i1 Nit lndu 10.01 10.0) GrWlll '1• • Ill crease over a year ago Otv 5hr l ,t1 •.o:t G•111 Sr 1 ... 1.11 N-'T sEc FOS: tnr:om 1'21 •no • Nltwt 10.01 10.tA l'r l1Km I.ti! J,!18 81la11C 1.17 t •t sm..,lt 1:9' 9ss The dollar deva1uatlons may NY ve11 11.11 12.>s us GY s '·" 10.11 lor!cl St 1.11 s zo Teclll'li • ,. , 00 8r"'1m Ill.OJ IQ,1)1 U!llitlt !. II S.il Olwlel!I ),SI l.t4 jYllt ro F .:11 , 16 have been essential ah9ck CG l'Ufld 10.40 11,U Rt1 CllQ '·" , lS Prel SHI •.O) •. ,~ Mlt 1.p I 15 'Sil ed 'cln b h ha (Ip Trln ll.lf1J.S 11, EQlv ~ •. JI 1.1• Jll(om •.tl I.OS T1m01 G I l l 91~ m 1 e -ut t ey ve cen1 'Shl (U 111 , Fk1 LIEq 11.1111.to S•oc• St 1.11 1.JI' Tow•• c ,·., · scarcely helped the squ ed CMANJOMG Fd Mt Oii ... t.JI G""t" 1.11 '·" Tr111 C.1> , .• •n American consumer. 0neetie ':.~,e:~: 10.•111.st ~-~~e~:1 "cP Ne"11~11:"° 1~.~j 11.u l~ £.1 :ft;::;~ 8ria Fd I." •.I] Comm 8" t.ll Grw111 10.lt 11.1110!1'1 Cl 1'•1 •'1s contrary. Com !Ilk 1,19 1,,0 r..,N< 1.ti l .6• Side 1i.tt11.u u .. iu,d 1-" ,.., (51 Until recently' the White Grwlll SJ?·i,11 lndu' Ir 11 0111.10 liEA Ml t ,Sl •.n U11lll111rf ··u t'1) l11t o"' 6.69 I.JO Pilot 1 ll Ill N1u C111t S,JO l.10 UNION Sl!ltoitel' Hou'. has followed a P~ln-SPtcl 1.11 1,tl Mlew\ 1,11 1,16 li111 .. 111 t.1' '·" GltOUI": , • ..,.. v'""l\lt' I.ti t ,U ES· I> )6,)J ,,, lil•lon U,l!IS.418rdS1 .. l)Mllt) flationary ll!cal policy The Ct11Asa ~n sec 1 ss •.1s liw P,,, 11.11 11.u Nill 111y ,·"' ,·., • llJ'!TOH: ltOUP sac: lit .. Wirf n 11 u .n · Ull Capt '°' .... budget is approaching balance lid ~ a,11 •.s Acot• " s 61 • 1s Nl'~''" 11 oo u.oo Whtft.. 1t;. 13 '" """ Cp j.JS t .01 811 1'110 1,11 l.•l Ne1• lvtr lt,IS U.1S' UNITIO i-Mos• now only because extra ta xes SllTr 6$ J.l2 i-Oi com Slk 11.nn.16 >iltlll'lt 6.t1 •·•' 4ccvm '" itS b •·· II led tnfl led Soe<.1 · •.os •.•1 tft FAm 11• ••• ~ 1.10 1.11 er>0 I'd 7•111 .:111 ave~nco ec on _ a '-'*" l"\t 10.r.e11.11 ""•'WI to.•110 •1O Neu 111 11.11n.n eon1..., .:,.,11,,. Pr., ... and profits COLO~IAL :iu••O l l.U 1).1• ()fie Wit! 1&.M , .... Cl)flt fll( •.ti IQ.I~ • filUNM~ NAMl\.TOM Oll:P: 01'1"1: .. NM ttO• ll'lt.-1!.l l S't CM...., t.,.10.t& 1'1111(! •.Ot 4 U Op ....... 10 .t 11.1! SC lenc. •'.M 1'u THERE llAS been no anti-fQUllY J n 1.•1 G'•111 • t11 ' s• oo Fr>0 ' n •.» v1"9d -•" , ,, l"ulld t.'4 I0.11 lnr:om i 1S i I• 00 lrne 7.SO 110 USA.Ii CA 1104 11 IH' innationary tax rate hike nor G,....., •.11 •·" H1r1-1 10.•1111.•1 ore s.c •.tf 10'11 u s ow1s •• io.oo ! Ill(-t.iS IQ.SS H1rt L" I.IS I.I! P1r-1 I M I Jt V&LU I Ll .. l ••OI• even a request for one: no .. ~"'"r >.n 1.11 ~ 1 u 1 ... P1111 "'" 1.11 1 to· v 11 L"' s.• •. ,i " fl • lid ...,..,.., G 11.ot U.crt Hecl9f I 14 .• ~''"" P' J 01 117 \t1t 1tw: t ):t 1 I} anu-1n atKNWTY on govern-<DMMOHWLTM HHll~ 1.11J , '' ,..,,.. Mt 1 n Lew Gt11 .. .., 1 n I ...... Minn• .... TltUST: K0<1<• 11.lllt.•S '"9M SQ .. ., .n Vtl ~ i , J.!.I men .. ~ ..... 16, no cur""" on A6 a 1.n 1.11 t"""' ep •10 10.&0 P11111 Fd 1 n ,.,, vANCI! -·l•e Instalment buying c 1.•1 1 .~ •rno Or 1,11 I.ti PILGltlM OP• . lil. .. Dlltlli• • ex ... ~-' Como ... ..,. 1,JI lllC ICIAm IJ.n U.QI C11t111l , ;, l IJ lll•t"t • ' !t ' tJ Fiscal policy wu exceedingly l-.. "' ~~ i·:: :~ It;:, t,:; tH ~'!'-'·" .... ~Cttfl ';u '·" stimulative' and lnOatJonary ,:;: n 1: .. .:u lfltt9M t .l'l ..... Pl~r;, ,: ~: ,1;:1 Vndl'~t :.,, tt nd thro h ~rcr •.u •.,J 111 1nvn1 li.ot :n.n P111 T1• t... ":::!'a 1 u , ,. an through 1972 a ug (Ol'lt lllv 1-1'1 G 1111 ..... PIONllEll l"l>· ••• \t 10'0 "°' ' th ~2 I ti •II.ft 11.t t11v C• A IJ.ltt 11.J• lll!on En J -.0 '·" v 1ritd 1 >.It 1,1i e ' c ec on. '"'1" ..,. ,,,, ~·!I 111., Gu!d 1.11 1.11 "°" "a 11 s• n .•' 1'1•rtG. c;, '·'' t.•i (81 ,..,,.,, the Fede r a 1 '°"'"'' 1n ~.•1 1.•111111 lf\Gi e i.n ... "'"'r 11 ••. 1110 • w•ust" , ... '-" v •w.J COl!l<l ll 1 .• l ,U lft'll ISO\ 11,Q 11,DS P1l l'lllCI 1 •1 t 14 W1\JI """" 11at 11.Q>I Reserve has been fighting In-!Ol'llrt c ,,,'O 11.t• ,•Nv•,•,•,, !:!-I 0 1to n ·r.e 11 ... w11"' ~ 11·10 "·" Wfl Qlll l.1"9 •.II OU ... t<t lltOWI • •ILLllolGTOll nation via a tight monetary "'" Olv s.ss .. ~i S!N'" 1,. '·" O•w111 u ,; u,.e c1to11'1 /!>. I. Wh I' loci ' gtllM l,19 ... C.llit Iv l .11 J.oe "• Er• 11M11 ~ ll!:~olor 1t Q )t to! po tcy. a s more, ay s ' •wlc10 1.• 1'.ii t.t.t S11 "'' •.11 N• "°' 10 I' 1o 1, ,,,11 '·" 1U1 historically high interest rates o1ELAW.t.1tl!i '"os'W o1toul": Pro 'o 1· l 1.11 Mt>t"' 11.M 1tn Ol'0\111;. '" ··"' '· I Ill •·'' ... P•Dvi!lt t OJ 110 TtlllllY l,t• add to the cost of living and o.,,, t .11 10.l1 100s,.•o ~ '' • n ProYo a.1 1 s• , lO ''"" llj I _ g:!• I" t .1110.lt I_ ""'------t.4~ t.11 Prl,O;l SIP 10M llM .... t.I ... dolngd busbl1nc.ssk. A1n~ there'a .. .,~:~' .:::; J:O ~~~·· 1;:;& ltU ~~~~~ :T~':." 0ii· "t. cons! era e s ept c1sm about Qre(r Ct t.oa 1.~1 s..1•c,1 •.11 t.li Conver 1i 11 n.n w.,. ,,.. ho rr ti this II Qodeer 1S.rt IS.t9 \t1r IY '·ll .. ~ 8rilty 1,tl t IO w ,11. Of w c _cc ve po e.y can ti•••• t .,~ 111 111,, •n t i..so is 1~ ,, ,. ••""' I be in the face of a worldwlde °'~'W 10.Jn.•• ·~ 1 ..... ., 1:c_ th ':.~ 'fJ; !~ boom. ' . .. I ,. • ' J'k DAILY.PILOT Nation's Jobless Rate Up Microdata Acquires NY Firm SC Al i c r o d a l a Corporation of ' Irvine, announced that it has acquired Tcloglc Sys tems. Inc., developer and 1nanufac- turer of computer based telephone monitoring systems. Doriald \V, Fuller, ti.Jicrodata president, sa id that lhe ac· ql\llltlon or Telogic "marks our entry Into the telecom- nluni cations ma rket a n d renects the dem and that we see for th is kind of equipment in. th e futu re." felogi c, bas e d in R<Wlkonkoma, Ntw York, will operate as a division oC ~ata. Solomon Alter. w¥> founded Tclogic, wilt befome division g e n e r a I '!lPager. He reports to o m e Olenik, Ailicrodata gr6up vice president. Jn co njunction· ""Ith the Telogic n c q u I s it lo n, Mlcrodata also announced that Jt-'bas received an order fro m Norelco division of North American Philips Corµoration for th e new tel ephone n1onltor· ing systems, The initial con- tract rs valued in -excess of 1200,ooo. iiiiiimiiiii~-1 PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE fOA AUL. ESTATE L.0AN$ 1•1 I 2nd TRUST OEf.DS 11 .llOO To 12Ml,000 UP TO 90"'-LOAMS OH 'mU5t OtlD COLLATEAAL WEWPOllT l!QUtfY 'UHot N•WPOrt C1n!1r 620 N1wpon C1n111 Ori ... H""P<>rt 8e1tll, C1llf. (114) M4.M2,4 or o. " ....... •••<•011 .. _, • Frl<Uy, ~ 7, 1973 l11vestme11t Move Told •' • • Complete New York Stock List '"'t "" ,-.e flllllt Hi.ti Low 1.ttt 0... I I I I I I I I ' I I I I ! • / • . " ~ .. -. . . . . ' ' , frld•Y, Stpttmbtr 7, l'i7J Friday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchan ge List Repo11 Dampens, Not Sours, Market SC DAIL V PILOT J# ; ' Finance Briefs • O Allstate 81111• Special lo llw Dally Pilot SAN FRANCISCO - Allstate lruuranct Co reports it has purchased the outstand· ing capital stock of P M I , Investment Corp, a San Fra~. ~laco-based private mortaage ·: lnsuranct firm. • • P M I recenUy wae organJz. • ed by Preston ~Jartin, formtr chairman of tho Feduaf • Home Lonn Bank board, woo .. ... wm ~nlJnue u the company's,..\'" chief encutJve ofDcu. -·' e Dollar Rises :~ LONDON (UPI) T~s ,,.Jue of tilt U.S. doDar ro~ moderatety against m o s l • European currendes lOda~ and gold fell In price at end of a becUc lef:.aaw w~ ~ for the American cumnc:y. • Tilt doDar cloaed lllel>or Parts, M1lan, Tokyo .00 ot currency excbanp cente Rite change~ were small a buslneaa wu slack, dn1e said. e IBM Ottl!J ~· :::.. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The'' Stnatc Finance Committee h11 approved leglsiaUon that would permit Call.fomia to ac-. cept a single bid -IB~t·a -~· for aboul 140 mllUoo worth of • computers. ~ Tbt commlltee 1eted Thu,... ~ aay aflor the Unlvx Di.Yl<l~S of lb• Sporry Rand eorp. a pOlled for COnlldlratlon ol 1llt M11tlve plan. • I [ I I J r ,... OAllV PILOT Friday, Stplt'mbtt 7, lqJJ Not H~mo sexual, Says Liberace SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Liberace, the flamboyant mid- dl&-aged. pianist idol , says he's not a hOmosexual -and he's against homosexuality .. because it offends convcot\on and offends society." The 53-year~ld s h o w business phenomenon s a i d here he decided to tell all about his private life because "I'm so tired of people writtng stories · about me that are dishonest and cancerous with innuendo. "NO, l'Ptf not a homosex· ual." said Liberace, who is known for his elegant $10,00/- a-year wardrobe that include velvets, ruffl es, laces and spangles. "As l told a' British court in 1959 when I won a $20,000 libel judgment againS1 a London Piano Idol Scores Innuendos, Attacks neY•spaper. my sexual feelings are the same as most people. I'm against the practice of homo.sexuality because il of- fends convention and society,'' he told a news conference here to discuss his upcoming autobiography on how he and his family struggled during the depression. · THE CONFIRMED bachelor said, "The only reason I never got married is probab l y because I come from a family of divorce. My parents, first of all. It put me off from mar- riage. It was a deterrent." He said the iMuendos about him started "because I was the fJrst in my field to dare to be a nooconformist , to wear the fancy clothes I do. "NOW, if I were to. eblerge on the scene, 1 would irobably go unnoticed. •.. A lot of peo- ple nowadays, they can wear sequins on their eyelids and nobody puts a sexual label on it. "I t'OULD HAVE given up ' many, many times professionally and personally. ... \\'hy, I've been· ,-ooounoed deed three times. I 've had the last rites of life. I've been the victim of an intematiooal kid- nap attempt. "Oh, mind you. I wouldn't trade my life for that of anybody else," Liberace smil- ed . The entertainer earns an estimated $3 million a year. He suworts four houses, 14 cars, a private art galk!ry, a 24-carat gold-leaf t h e a t er organ and at least 12 piano.s. "I'M A PERSON who was put on earth simply to bring happiness and love to other people," he said. ''And I get it back in abundance. Ifs what n1akes me go on living and doing my thing." Liberace is appearing at the Circle Star Theater in nearby San Carlos. STEEL f 7811 4 STEEL 671/14 STEEL H71/1 4 STEEL 678/l S STEEL H78/1S ' . . . HE TE LLS ALL • Liber•c• 195/14 '33" 205/1 4 215 /1 4 '36" 205/1 5 '35" 215/15 '37" . ' ' M e nu Varies Price Updated lf eekl y RENO (AP) -Rather than price increase, restaurants In Harrah's casinos here and at ~ke Tahoe have started adding a surcharge to food bills. The weekly tharge . is listed on Harrah's menus on a white card headed "Cood cost increase." This week, for instance, 4'h percent is added 'T the menus P.fices. TAD DUNBd, llA.RRAH'S· publicity chief, said the sur- charge is com~. •eekty based on the increase in costs for all food stuffs e1cfpt teer. "There have 1been IUbstantlal increases in· food costSsince Jllne ":Dunbar Said. · 1 '( ·~ The surcharge will be recomputed every week. T~ SURCHARGE CARD tucked inside menus notes, "Everyone Is aware that ln the current inflatlooary market, food costs are c}\angi.cg·dail y. ·"Naturally it is impossible to reprint our menus constantly. Therefore,-we must ·add a small charge to the food items on the menu to reflect thls added cost .. " ts ts STEEL L71/1S 235/1 5 543" RAISED WHITE LITTIR "lUnl ClfAU ll .. .._ • 11.,. DUU-.. u.u SIZI llfCMU WIOI GS0/15 ·11 1"'"' WO . LS0/4 5 •.• IMCH w ... SPECIAL New 78 Series DUAL WHITE POLYESTER TO FIT MANY . Amb••••dor1. Bulck1, Chry1lers, Dodges, Fords, Ponti•cs, Olds, Sl•lion Wagon• 6 others. """""'•" lltmtnt ...... l.00x16.S 1.1s x1•.s COSTA MESA 3005 HARBOR ILYD. (corner of B1kt r and H1rbor) (7 ~4) 557-8000 .......... GARDEN IOROVE 14040 lrHk••rst lcorn•r w •• t1nin1l•r •11d lroolr.h11rtt ) EXTRA W·l·D·E 60 SERIES OUR CONSUMER POLICY O•r c .. tttMr ,.licy is t• ffttt r • ..,,., r••· If ,.. h .. ,, • ~ut1fio11 co11ctt"11iq ,,elll1tct1 er 1tnicts re"41recl .. r1•, •'•••• c•ll ••r Oim ter .t Co• ••mrr Aff•in, Mr. S. Ar1lli1• (2 13) 170.1737 •r )91-1211. If WI fhl•llll llfl ••I ef ye•r lilt ,• "1•11 Cht cllH will !It h1Mlll t11wi•t 1 lftrr Ill• li"'l'. n tlte Hwtrtis.4 ,..ict. 6.5011 3 7 .35/l;J 7.75/14 8.25/14 8.25/15 8.55/14 8.55/1 5 878/14 878/13 1.73 £78/14 F7 /14 G78/14 G78/l 5 . H78/l 5 II (.j\·fJ 2·•3 w1un wAU.1 U.11 11r11. WE NEVER SELL SECONDS OR BLEMSI •• ONLY 1st QUALITY TIRE.S I. I LA HAllA . IUENA PA~K FULLIRTON 2000 Wlllttfft llYi', 1942 Lh1eol11 llYd. 1121 So•tti luclld (corntr of Wh/tt11c l<Oflltr of Uncoln 11 lloclr. Nolffi of ' •11d l11chl •11d K1101tl •1,.r1iJ, Frt11••v l I HEAVY DUTY SUSPENSION SERVICE "SO.-.Mtl.l,J.YIAI · PllrOIMAICI Ph . $3 s·s. 4 MOST U.S. C.UI 1. W1Ull AUllMl9ff POUCY J.YIAl,SO,•MU 2. MIAVY DUTT nr IOI IUIMIMS 1.4 WMllCM,,,.. ITAIU'ltl . 4.. llAU AIM1WIT --IOJ:fl ..... o6"1 ~,4i01U.11:' OIANGI 4TO Notti. T"HA A.Yell• (714) 6lt"4J21 T•LIYJSIOM • Al'~LaAHCft Slnco 1947 SONY.TV Excellenoo Black & Whit.• exoe nenee-tha alal6 or conalstentty belrio aboYe the crowd-ls one reason why lht Sony name on eny product le StOtK wuranc• of the 11,.~lll electronlca. AJ. Sony there Is newr • compromise with quality or ...-e ... .y - uct moat tn96Stlfa up to the highest atandards of QUallty before It ls olfettd tor porchaso to you, the consumer. Hera's another example Of Sony exctl• ....... 'T"UtOU Bl.ACK & WHITE PORT ABLE lV • 5-lnctt 8C111811 llMl81Uff:d dlagonalty • Weighs 7 lbl!I. II ot. • Operates on AC or DC (with optlonal acceasorlel) • Solid atate rell1bllity • P«aonal earphone •White and blue cabinet •llh Chfoole ttlm SONY.TV Reliabili1y 1V-760 el.ACK& WHITE PORTABLElV • 7.1ncn 1c,..,.. ene11ur94 d!agonaAV • We!gh1)!*10 !bl. • Qpe111n onA.C or ~ {With ootlonal IOCM • Solid atata rellablllly ii Personal e1J'J)hon. J Black cablMll wlth -Chrome tr!m 'SONY.TV Precision ,._,.. !>I.AC< a WHITE ... '°"1'A8Li1V • 7-lnot1'-m111 arid dltl10t*llV • Bulh../n bdlfr/--.. COlfll)I~.:, •W11Qti1odtfJtlbs.7& (15 lb&. wMh otftlonll ti1n1r1e1) ' • Oper1tes on~orDO • (With oPl:lonll ~ • Solid 111tt r.H1tllUty • Peraonll nrphOne •While or gray cablnt t With chrome ltim SONY.TV Precision 1V-950 BLACK&WtV1m POATAB~lV • 8-lnch SCf'llln....,,.. dl1gon11ty • W1igh1 Juat 11 ll>s. 7 or. • Opermtes on AC or DC {With optional llCC~ • Sclld etat1 tellablllty • Person11 e1rphon1 SONY.TV Q..J ali1y ' 1V-112 Bl.ACK & WHIT! POATflBLE1V • 1 t ·Inch Picture '""""" dlagon1lly • W1lgh1151b8.10ot. • Op1r1111 on AC or DQ (w!th oplloMl •obe11QMll • SOlld 111te rell1blllty • £aey c1rry haDdlt lor pOrtfblllty WE .as....- T11.&Vltf0tl • ~WICll COSTA MESA 41, t ... .,th Sr.: Dail';' ·-· $et. '"' 'EL TORC 11 ,.,. a11: et ,._..,, IN•n .. ~1 ""' •.• s.,, '" " 1 . I 1 • .. • .-" ( I Laguna Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 250, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1973 TEN CENTS Trustees to Probe Bremer Coastline Letter · By J~N WORT.ff 01 tht p.i1~ 'llot Sltll Two members of the Saddleback Com- munity College District board of trustees said today they will ask for justification at Tuesday's regular board meeting for a letter written by Superintendent Fred. E. Bremer urging coastline development. "I would like to know why ·Bremer took the authority for this letter on to himself," said Hans Vogel, a trustee from Santa Ana. • "We'v e always had the policy that the pre~ident of the board is our spokesman. In lhil case, Bremer said be wrote the letter at the urging of John Lund , a trustee from Laguna Beach who was not present at the time, without asking the rest of us about it." ' Vogel added he believCS" the superinten· dent does not have the authority to send letters of this type. ''I don't believe this is an area where the board, the president of the board, or the superintendent should take a stand," Vogel added. Trustee Patrick Backus of Dana 'Point said though he v;ould not bring up the matter for discussion he would also like to hear a justification by Bremer. The letter, written two months ago to the Citizens Direction Finding Committee of Orange County, did not surface until last week when the Environmental Coali· lion of Orange County saw a copy of it and fired off a critical reply to the Sad· dlcback superintendent. Bremer said in his letter that coastline development in the c'apistrano Be3.ch area "which would not adversely affect the environment" was desirab1e from his standpoint because it y.·ould help the col· Jege district's tax base. "We work with the assessed valuation of our district. We 're not here to create it," Vogel said. ''Our concern is to educate the students, not to raise funds ." Backus, who represents the area for development, stood by earlier statements !hat he does not y.•ant develop1nent in the area. ''As a board member I 1\•ould never seek any construction company to come dow n here," Backus said. Both Backus and Vogel said they believe attention should be given to im· proving the school's public relations - both in lhe Tustin area where an effort to get out of the Saddleback district has been gaining steam, and in Capistrano atn I I eac ears Steeple I Ill Mary Ann Quinn, 45, of Los Gatos, calls herself an aerial engineer. She has state license that says she is a steeplejick. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. Thursday, she painted . the Newport Beach City Hall flagpole . She does it eyery two years. ii.issi1iger Mute On Plione Taps To Se1iate Panel WASHINGTON (UPI) -Henry A. Kls1inger declined today to tell' Hnators the results of taps on telephones of 17 of his aides beginning in 1968. Two members or the Senate•Forelgn Relations (4>r0mitiee said ihef would at- tempt to block confirmatio1. as sectttary of State until they got an FBI report on the matter. Testifying before a congr~ional com· mittee for the first time in his 4 ~ years as l>resldent Nixon's top foreign affairs adviser, Kissinger was questioned closely and at 1englh about surveillance of his White House · national a<curlty si.if. lllsslnicr presumably acknowledged approving lhe wiretaps as . part or a gcnllral White l!Otl36 effort to find the 90Uf'Ce of news leaks of senslUve mat- lfrt. J Kissinger testified that 80me security lcak1 from his staff were dilcovered and "epproprlate action waa tall.4'n." But he said "I would perrcr nol to eo Into In· dlvldual cases" ~ even in executive session. ; He contended that the decision whether to make the lnformlttloo available realecl "Ith Ille FBI Ind the J..Uce ~ ment. Avco Plans Fight Over Niguel Ban By CANDACE PEARSON Of t1tt Ollh' Piiot Sltff As some environrhentalists celebrated. Avco Community Developers today preparOO to fight in court Thursday's state Coastal Commission denial or a Laguna Niguel condominium project. other community members blamed Avco'1 defeat oo the con1pany itself, saying it wasn't willing to postpone a decilion on the 917-wllt project to allow a compn;mise. Not one vote was cast in favor of the development inland of PaciCic Coast Highway at Crown Valley Parkway. And in their action in San Francisco, the commissioners indicated their reluc- Unce to allow any major oonstruction on the few 'remaining open space areas along the Orange Coast. Dllil'r ,, ... $fMf ....... A second permit for 115 single-family homes in Dana Point by Lantern Bay Development Company also was turned down by the commission Thursday. Two other large projects within the 1,CMX> yard permit zone -the 213--unit Mira Costa Vi11as condominiums in San Clemente ~d Avco's 1,218-unit oceanside Laguna Niguel development -are up for action at the commission's next meeting. IT'S ALMOST BLASTOFF TIME FOR OCCUPANTS OF LOVE ANIMALS DON'T EAT THEM The Laguna Beach Tribe Is KHping Track of Number of Days Remaining in Art Colony It will be Sept. 19 at 9:30 a.m. at the Hollywood Park Hotel in Inglewood. The state commission's staff noted that Orange County i.! the most rapidly grow· ing county in the slate and that developments like Avoo's could have substantial effects on air and water quality and On recreational lands. "We are definitely going to court," Avco project manager Ray Peloso said today. "We hope to file as quickly as possible. . "Proposition 20 wasn't designed to cause a moratorium on construction along the coast," he said. adding he thinks the proposition that created the commissions has done just that. "It's somewhat discouraging," he said, repeating his previous offer that the state can still buy the property ut a fair (See AVCO, Page !I Judge Releases 2 'Brotherhood' Drug "Cultists Two men ,labeled on their arrest as principals In the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love", drug distributiOn ring allegedly headed by lmprisoned Dr. Timothy' Leary were freed late Thursday after serving Jess than three months of thei r sen· tenets. Orange county Superior Court Judge Raymond Vincent's action, taken under a penal code provision that .permits judicial review 120 days after sen·tcncing, brought a howl of protest from prosecutor Jack Ryan. "He's gone against the report prepared by the Department of Corre<:tions," com~ mented the astonished Ryan. "I call this an abuse of diserttlon and frankly 1 am wondering why Judge Vincent took such a penonal Interest In these two men." La guna Writer Remlow Ha1·ris Succumbs at 77 Wcll-knowo Laguna BeaCh writer Ray RemJow Harris died th.is morning at a Capistrano Beach Nursing home. Mr . Harris was Tl, arid had been in the Art Colony siOCi! 1938. Mr. HaITis was a humorist and column· ist for Laguna Beach newspapers. Hls latest assignment was as a columnist "Rambling with Remlow" for the Nen•s· Post. Burial will be at sea some time next week, according to Mr. Harris' wish. Dil- day Mortuary of Huntington Beach is handling arrangements for burial. Mr. Harris is survived by hi~ daughter Mrs. Susan Blevins and a grandson. He was b o r n in 1896 on an Indian reservation and was raised as the only white child there. He was a veteran of World War t. Richard Jahraus, owner o( Laguna Lumber, for which. Mr. Harris wrote a weekly column, remembered the writer for his humor arid good nature. "Why' I'd known Remlow for most or my life," Jahn.ls said. His columns were popular and "Rcmlow" tried to mention everyone's name in town al one time or ;inother. Jahraus said. Laguna Trustees Se~ Study Meet The Laguna Beach Board of Education agreed tnls week to hold a study session Sept. 25 to dl.9cus1 future priorities with Supt. Oon•ld Woodington. The two men are James Leroy Crlt· tendon, 30, who was living ln Long Bcac~ Among the areas to be discussed are when arrested, and John Charle! OalL curriculum •. !"'!adlng program11, 1tudent 26 3 t.nguna Beach surfboard maker testing. rev1s10n or board policy, master wiwi was marked down ln the Grand Jury plan ror school district faciliUes 11nd a indictment e.s a persistent peddler of long·tcnn mainlenance program. LSD af rock concerts. · , Woodington said he would Ilk• lhe Cri'\cds 11rUer drew•a s<ale prl1<>0 mcotlna to be the 11~1 of inlll)I Sludy ,._ ftJO n:tlll .. Pa~e !) sC!Ssions for priority aettlng. • Ladetia11s Trek Te1nple Dwellers Leave in 16 Days ' By · FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL _Of !ti. a.Uy Piiot Sllff At Love Animals Don't Eat Them, the 'Word today is T minus 16 days and coun- ling. The "16" refers to the nwnber of days before followers of the one time vegetarian .!Btery plan to blast off from Laguna Beach. They've opted for a reconditioned school bus rather than a Salum V for thei r Sept. 22 departure. The LADET tribe is keeping the countdown in large white numerals painted on the black front of their home at_ 782 S. Coast High\vay. The numbers are olearly visible to passing motorlsts. The group's journey to new frontiers was announced following a July meeting at'the Orange County District Attorney's office. 1 The Love Animals folks said they would· leave Laguna if the district at- torney w.ould drop 30 criminal charges now pehding in court. The DA said fine. For a time, it appeared the Ladetians \\'ere going lo begin their earthbound version of "Star Trek" last month, when city officials came close to boarding up their "temple." After · several meetings. the group agreed to comply more full y with the city's' fire and building codes and were allowed to stay. Following the tradition set by more serious voyagers into space, the tribe now is making preparations for their launch Crom mission control west. They're collecting winter clothes, sleeping bags-and rood. They're also fix- ing up the' bus. After· all, one does not head for the unknown unprepared. Prices Skyrocket 5.8%- Biggest Hike Since 1946 WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Wholesale came five days before the scheduled lifl- prices rose 5'.8 percent in August, the big· ing of ceilings on bee! prices and bore gest advance in a single month since out predictions b y Administration 1946. the government reported today. ... economic officials last month. Fann prices, freed from the restraints The repart brought an ~tant denun· of the price freeze, also shot up by 23 clallon of Administration economic U.S. JOBLESS RATE SCOOTS policies by AFL-CIO President Gi!orge Meany .. rte called the latest figures UP IN AUGUST, Page 14 ,.boyond oollel." percent -more than three times the The Bl.S said the overall, unadjusted in- prcvious record £or a single month . crease in wholesale prices of 5.8 percent Grain prices and many animal feeds in August was the biihest surge for any increased dramatically .-In tho case of • JllOnlh since July 1.M6. The rise that grain by 70 percent. month was 10.7 percent, reflecting an ln- Thls was viewed as an ominous sign Oatlonary pattern that followed World for shoppers at the meat marktt ~use War 11. · . farmers ll3Ying higher C'Osts for teed ---rhe. August Increase, when ndJusted usually "pass the-burden along to con-for seasonal factors, was put at 8.2 per- sumers. cent -largest hike for any month slnct 'l'he wholesale plice report· by the the government. began takhig seasonal department's Bureau or Labor Statistics co nsideraUons into account in 1947. ' l ' . . Beach where Bremer's position has a 1 i en a t e d some anti-developmenl residents. .. It's imperative that y.·e w or k together," Backus said. "For Bremer to take positions on development in Capistrano Beach is like pouring salt on a wound." • Questioned about the matter last week. Bremer said he was "astounded lhe Environmental Coalition is so upset at (See LETTER, Page ZI Project Now Fach1g Test By JACK CHAPPELL Of ltl9 IMllY Piiot Slefl Laguna Beach's Main Beach Park cleared one hurdle Thursday as the State Coastal Conservation Com mission , meeting in San Francisco, refused to hear an appeal or the park's permit, but the project now faces a court test. John Gabriels, the man who took the appeal to the state commission, said t1r day he plans on filing suit against the Main Beach Park's permit granted by the R~ional Zone Conservation Com- mlssion. Gabriels initiated. the appeal against the park because he claims the Regional commission bad not considered the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for lhe project as required by law. He said that will be the basis for his court test. lt was not immediately clear· whether he wouJd be filing suit against the city of Laguna Beach, the coastal commissions or all three. He said that while he personally agrees with the park project itself, the principle under which the regional commission ap- proved the project and granted it a permit in July was wrong. He said he hoped that a court action would not hold up completion of the park. In all likelihood, an extended court ac· lion will hold up the construction of the downtown "window to the sea" for which Laguna Beach citizens have fought for more than a decade. Gabriels said he· had not yet contacted his attorney. If the threatened legal action is filed. it will be the first time a citizen without vested interest in a project has filed suit under provisions of the Proposition 20 act approved by the voters last November. Several developers have moved ap- peals into the court system. "It's the ki nd of lhing that a lot of peo- ple would like to see done," Gabrie\s said, adding he wil l bear the legal costs himself. ;,I particularly don't \Vant to see it hold up .our beach park and 1 don't think it will. I'll try and shove it through as quickly as possible," Gabriels said. It is not clear what action the courts could order in the Main Beach matters and much depends on the legal attack (See l\IAJN BEACH, Page %) or .. ge • • Weather The Los Angeles Weather Service sees a foggy 1,1,·eekend for Orange Coast residents and visitors. clear· ing by mid-afternoon. Highs will range from the mid-70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. INSWE TODA l' . Celebrities will play ten11is f or charitu th il weekend tn New· port Bea.ch. The eve,it takes 1>lact in the Balboa Bay Cll tb. See todau's Weekendt r fo·r de· toils. Al Y .. f S-ICI ' -l1 ·2' t..M • ..,. • l!Wlt11I ,.., ... " IM"M ' Mttl .... ...._ • C1lll9nli. ' ~-CM!tt ' Clll1llllM 0>4 •ffllYtlfllt ..... C...,lc1 " SYl'lll ~Hltor " CN-.. ...... -.. _ ' $locll Marhlt , .. 1. 1161 ...... 1 '"' • ·--• ,,_ IJ.11 ""'"" .. ... .... IM atcft ' WN-• --" ._. ....... ,,.,, -·-" ·--• ........ • .. _ ..... ' , . ' 2 DAIL V PILOT 18 Pueblo Men Decorated Navy Cites Crew of Captive Sliip for Bravery \VAS~llNGTON (AP) -1'he Navy t<r day decorated for bravery 18 crew nH.'nlbcrs of the intelligence-gathering shlp Pueblo , cupturcd more than five yea rs ago by the North Korean s. The ship's commanding officer. Lloyd M. Bucher. now retired from the Navy, Y•as not among them . The Pentagon said Bucher recom- mended the 18 av.·ards and decorations for actions on Jan. 23, 1968, the day 1'orth Kore an gunboals surrounded and boarded the Pueblo. Secretary of the Navy John \\lamer said other recommendations for av:ards for actions while the cre\v y:as im· prisoned by the North Koreans are being considered. Pentagon spo kesman Jerry \V . Friedheim said the d~lay in honoring the men resulted from a fear that prisoners held by the North Vietna mese might be harmed if the Pueblo crew was decorated while the Indochina hostilities continued. Many of the Pueblo crewmen who were honored have left the Navy. Bllcher was subjected to an intense in· vest,igation into how he lost the Pueblo. an electronic surveillance s hi p Camouflaged as a scientific research vessel. It carried a crew of six officers, 75 enlisted men and two civilians when captured after being fired on by patrol boats and planes. . After a year of negotiations, the crew FronaPagei AVC O • • • price. "We fee l the courts are going to be more opcn·mindOO," he said. Avco atlornies already have indica ted they wi ll try to get the projects through on clain1s they should be exemp ted from the new law"' passed by voters last November. Now they will sue for the permit also. Peloso saw one encouraging sign at Thursday's commission meeting. Com- missioner Richard Wilson said the panel should advocate legislation to allow lower tax assessments along the coast. Dale Secord 1Jf the Orange County Environmental Coalition said Thursday he would try to get citizens groups to support such a move. But today, Secord was both happy and bil!er about Thursday's vote. "They brou ght it on themselves." he said <lf Avco . Secord. who has opposed Avco at com- missions and in court. said,'·!£ they had held off for another two or three weeks·, lhcy could've gotten it through," Avco 's original plans called for up to 917-units on 46 acres within the ocastal zone. The tota l tract, most or it outside the 1.000 yard line. \vas 2,488 con- dominiums on 192 acres. Late last week, Avco officials sug· gesled a compromise. It would've reduc- ed the coastal zone units to about 742 and the total lract lo about 2,000 and add five acres to a park. Joseph Bodovitz. commission executive director. said the slaff needed more time to study the proposal and work out a solution. Avco pushed for a decision Thursday and Bodovilz recommended denial. Secord, a professional planner, said he doesn 't think the Avco and Lantern Bay votes spell defeat for all other large proj· ects. The commission is looking f o r alternative, not for arbitrary rules, be opined. The Lantern Bay denial also \.\'as unaninlous. The 27.9-acre project was granted a pcr1nit by the South Coast Regional Zone Conserva tion Commission . as was Avco's. Successfully appealing lhe Lantern Bay permit on grounds of density were the Los Angeles chapter of the Sierra Club, the League of \\'omen Voters and the Environmental Coalilion . OlANCJI COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tl'I• Or•nvt Co.11 0,t,ILY PILOT, wllh wl'l kl'I 11 <O.,,blnfd 11'1• Ntws-P•H\, !1 Pllbllll'ltd l>Y 1'1141 0••"'11• Co.t111 Puc11y,1,,, Co1T1P1ny, s.p.. r11t N ltlon' 11rt P<Jllll•'*I, MO<'td•y ll'l•l>Ulll'I Frk11y. !Or COl!f Mti•, Ntwoorl 8fl(f\, Hun!lng!On " 8et1'h/Fount1ln V•llty, Ltll\llNI 811c11. ll'Ylntls.dtlltbtc~ ~ San Cltmtntt/ Sin Ju•n C"'tpl1tr1no. A 1lnglt r19lonal idlllo<I 11 llllO•lllled S.•urd1y1 '"" Svnc:leri, "" Jlllntil>'ll P11bll1Mno Pl•nl I• II ~ Weit "81y S!rHI, COlll Mtit, Ctlltor .. t1, tn1'. Robert N. w,,d Pr .. ldtrt! Ind PUbll1l>U J t~k rt, Curl1y Vic• Prt1k1111I tl'lll G<iol'!ft.r M•"'lff Thom 11 11(,,.,;r Editor Tholl'l •I A. Murphint M•nli!llll E'llor Cht rl11 H. Locit Rich1"' P. N11ll Aul1l'"I M-Olno Edltor'I ............ Offke. 222 For•tf A••nut M11ilin9 Addr•ui P.O. l o• 11116, f 211S2 0--CO.lt M"'I lll Wt1I I•)' $1't111 "lt wport lttdlr ~JJ "''""'°" lloylt•tr11 H.,.,r!flotoii •••ell: 11'1J ltKll lou.._,,. S•n C:ltmffttt: JllJ Niltlh El Cimino ltttl , ........ l714J '4Jo4J21 c:a..11W A"""'91., 642·1671 ~ ......... o., ....... , , ......... , ..... ,, COPvrtell!, 1,f), O••"'llt Co-.JI ,.111>1l1~""9 ~-,., "' .... •tot•. Ill~"'"'"'· .. ltorltl rMl'ttr OI' ffVlf'l--h l!frl irl IN)' M ,..,,..... ...t"*11 NllCltl ,.... tniMllll ., CllllPYl'~I .-. --~· Nld •I c.d• t.\ftl, C:•IU1n1Ja., 19'1 h' OllT"' U-'S ,_ .... ,.,., w ""' u .11 minlfllri 11tt11Ttrr eitt11M1i.w 11.u "*'9\lf. \\'as returned by the North Koreans Dec. 22, 1968. The Pueblo remains anchored in a North Korean harbor. One of tv.·o Sliver Stars approved by \'lamer goes pastbumously to Fireman Duane Hodges, the only crew member killed during the attack. The other goc:; to Lt. (j.g.) Frderick C. Schumacher Jr. ol St. Lools, Mo .. \\'ho has left the Navy. The commendation for Schumacher said he led his men In the "destruction of all classified materials under his purview." . '"Through his inspiring leadership, courage and dedication in the race of hoslile fire, he reflected great credit upoo himself and upheld the highest tradition o( the United States Naval Service," it continued. During a Navy inquiry into Buche.r's actions, critics said the spy ship should never have been surrendered. Three crew members received the Bronze Star . Medal : Ensign Timothy L. Harris of Jackson·1ille, Fla .; COm- mwiications Technic~an 2.C. Peter I\1. Langenberg of Clayton, Mo., and Signalman J.C. Wendell G. Leach of the Naval Communications Station i n Norfolk, Va. The other crew members cited receiv- ed either Navy commendation medals or Navy achievement medals. Te11apornry Re.atal Clemeiite Will Negotiate For Minibus Trial Use By JOHN VALTERZA of ttlt Cl•llY ,ltcrt Sl~I San Clemente City Manager Kenneth Carr soon will begin negoti ating with the city of Laguna Beach for a temporary rental of one of that city's minibuses for a trial program along the South Coast calculated lo convince county officials that an interest exists in a full-bloY..TI local bus system. City Councilmen learned Yi1ednesday that the city of Laguna Beach rriight be interested in renting a vehi cle lo San Clemente for several months at an ap-- proximate cost ol $1,800 a month. The plan is to send the tram on an hourly route looping through the city and show officials of the Orange County Transit District that San Clemente citizens are willing to support such a route on a permanent basis. Carr told councilmen that initial con· tacts with officials from Laguna Beach pointed to the distinct possibility of a short·term rental, beca use the peak of the tourist season is over in Laguna and the city--0wned trams are less busy. The experiment's strongest champion on the council is Thom as O'Keefe, who fj rst suggested the pilot project at a joint study session two weeks ago after hear- ing the progress of 1' campaign for the FromPagei LEITER • • • what I thought was a letter written in a friendly, ethical way." "I wasn't try ing to tell them how to hapdle their business," Bremer said. "The tax base is my responsibility . You can't have quality education unless you have the money to pay for it." Trustee Lund said, "I discussed the Capistrano Beach situation with Bremer a few times ... the wording of the letter is mostly mine. We didn't discuss it with the rest of the board. 11e.said he didn 't rate the matter as "that big a deal." La gtm a Planners Will Consider Open Space Nod Approval of the open space and con· servation elements of the Laguna Beach General Plan will be coo.sidered Monday night by the Laguna Beach Planning Commission. The elements encourage preservation of the Laguna Greenbelt and urge the ci· ty to embark on a program of land ac- quisition with other government agencies and private property owners. The proposals also urge that open space be v.·oven into already-developed areas of the city. One major recommendation of the open space element is that the Sycamore Hills region in Laguna Canyon be preserved. Currentl y, Newport Investments Inc. is seeki ng to place 2,016 units on tb~ prop- erty. The plan would leave 72 percent Opt.'n space, according to the dev€lroper. Co1nmissioners also ~·ill be asked to 1nove ahead with "prezOning" of a por· lion of Lllguna Canyon tha t may soon be annexed to the city. The land is <1n island of property under c:ounty jurisdiction near the Big Bend area. J:>rczooing \\'Ould allow light industrial and low-density residential zoning on the property when it comes under final city jurisdict ion. I Me rm aids Ho st T eacliers' Luncli The Mermaids, women's division of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce, y.·ill host the aMunl New Teachers' Luncheon at noon Tuesday at the Hotel Laguna. The chambe r group this year has cx· tended a specl"l invitation to new school Supt. Donald Woodington. Teachers from both th< Laguna Unified •chooJs •nd St. Cathcrl~'s-St. NI ch o I a s Elementary School \\'ill attend. Reservations may be made by con-- tactlng Edna Axelrod, I u n c h e o n chairman, at 494·2546, or from the Cham- ber Of C-Omme~ office at 494·1018. bus network launched by the city traffic· parking corrunission. Councilmen were unanimous in their support of the negotia tions an d the possi· ble pilot project and did not balk at Carr's estimates for the cost of the rental. The only drawback which councilmen ssnsed was the open·air construction of the trams. raising coneern over the public's willingness to ride the vehicles in the cool fall months: The pilot program is ooe of several ap- proaches contemplated by local officials to win support of a route in San CJemente before next summer. The county agency this week ordered more than 60 ne w buses to be used in transit networks throughout the county. San Clemen te wants one. Another idea is a straight job of selling the concept to district board membe rs. Councilmen and traffic commissioners plan to in vite the board to the South Coast for a luncheon meeting to explain the need for a bus route linking se veral co mmunities. Spokesmen for the dist rict have already suggested that if t h e board is convinced of a strong publi c acceptance <lf the concept the district could allocate a new bus to the city before next sum- me r. · One measure of the acceptance could be the receip ts from the rental trams from Laguna Beach. Another, said traffic Commission President William Waddell, would be the amount of letters from citizens urging in· reption of the bus service. Two letters have come to city hall so far, but 'OKeefe said contacts he has received show a much more abundant endorsement of the idea by local citizens. l'romPagei ·TWO FREED ••• term of one to 110 years after pleading guilty to possession of dangerous drugs. Gale got the same prison term after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges. Neither man should start c!'lebrating just yet, the somber Ryan \Yarned after Judge Vincent's ruling. Ryan told the judge that he intends to go lo the Fourth District Court <>f Ap- peals to challenge the dismissal action on the grounds that it is contrary to evidence and the recommendation of the state Department of Corrections. If Judge Vi ncent's ruling is upheld, it will mean that 18 of the nearly 50 persons indic ted by the Grand J ury ten months ago have now been cleared of all charges or had their sen tences co mmuted. Several of the ind ictees are still on the run, with police throughout the nation still keeping their eyes peeled for the man they describe as "Mr. Big'' in the conspi rac)9-300..pound Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist. 30. fie was last seen in late 1972 in the Hawaiian Islands. Lawmen said Crittendon came next in order below Leary and Andrist and iden· tified him as the man who peddled 250,000 LSD tablets in one transaction. They said Gale was best known to them as a "traveling druggist" who toured Southern California rock concerts distributing free samples of LSD to young onlookers. Both men were said lo be confidants of Dr. Leary, 50, the LSD cu ltist who is no\\' serving a term in Folsom .Prison. Mea t Cutter Sues En1ployer Af tcr Oeared of Th eft A veteran meat cutter, cleared or multiple criminal charges after being ac. cused by Laguna Beach employers of stealing quantities of meat, has sued the market and two former co-workers Thursday for $1.2 million. Albert W. Pauly, 5$, names Albertson's Jnc., 700 S. C.oast Highway and market employes Eddie Hobbs snd Fred Prendergast as co-defendants In his Orilnge County Superior Court action . Pauly, claims he was falsely accused on Sept. 28, 1972, of smuggling meat out of tho market via a remtde accomplice who has not been Ident ified. }le was Inter cleared of charges of assault and bat· tery, resisting arrest an d petty theft, amon~ others, in South Orange County municipal court action. · Pau ly clalm9 In his lawsuit that he was atlacked by both Hobbs and Prcnderg1st at the time he was falsely accused. • • • Helpitag Ha1ads Motorist Linda Crenshaw, 27. of 3 1959 10th St .. South Laguna, is aided by passertiy .at three-car accident Thursday evening on La· guna Canyon Road south of San Diego Freeway. She was admitted to So uth Coast Community Hospital wit h face cuts and fractured nose. Investigators say Lee Baker, 34, Sebastopol, Calif., was southbound when he reached up to lower su n viso r. ~l is small :ar :olJided with and glanced off big northbound sedan d riven by Earline Ulric h, 32, Lo ng Beach. Baker car then spun around nort hbound Crenshaw car. Age No Bounds Groom, 19, Marries W oma1i, 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A l 9·year·old Bakersfield man says "age does not matter" in his marriage to a widow llalf 1 :entury Jlder. Leonard ,V_ Comeau said in an interview today he and 72-year· old Eula Mae Fisher had been thinking about getting married "for a Jong time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues- day. Comeau was m ain tenance man at 1rfrs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been "livi ng together for a while," he ia.!d. "Age does not matter." Comeau added. "Ii a woman is older than I am or yo unger t han I am don't make no difference. If you love a person like I love my wife. that'-; ill there is to it." The bride's second husband. Cyril, died in J anuary and Comeau was orphaned several years ago when his parents, sister and two brothers were killed in a traffic accident. Two older brothers were killed in Vietnam. • ; From P .. e i MAIN BEACH •. prepared by Gabrl<ls. City otncl11J, elated by the declslon·of the State Coastal Commission not to hear an appeal from Gabrlels, y.•ere hit hard by news of the new challenge to the Main Beach Park. Mayor Roy Holm was not available for ca mment, however, he has been in- creasingly annoyed by some crit ic's con- stant picking at technicalities and delay. ,lng creaUon of the park. The State commission had voted 8 to l with one commissioner abstaining not to hear the appeal. Gabriels charged that when the matter was heard by the.J;:egional commission in Long Beach, cdlhmissioners ~d in· correctly approved the park and issued a pe rmit without considering a!l en· vironmental impact statement, which the ci ty had only just begun. He called their actions "sloppy" and said he ~as filing the appeal lo t~ state commission lo "get them to straighten out their procedures." Vogel to Stud y District Iss ues In Tustin Area !fans Vogel, a Saddleback Community College trustee represe nting Santa Ana and Tustin , said today he wi ll appoint a personal advisory committee to study Saddleback-related problems in Tustin. A drive to get Tustin out or the 5ad· dleback district and into the Rancho San· liago Communi ty College district has resul ted in formation of a 150--membc.r corrunittee and a petition drive. Vogel said he v.-ould commission the panel to stud y what the problems are and what alternative solutions are available. He said he was initiating the com- mittee through recent new legisl~Uon that allows trustees of community col· leges to have their own advisory boardS. Tustin leaders of the drive, led by Slank!'y Kanerak, have cited excessive distance (20 miles one way lo the Mission Viejo campus), inadequate lacillti~. and inconvenient course organization as reuons for tJtelr action. "I've been harping on this situation ror the last two or three years," said Vogel. a trustee en the board slnee Ssddleback opened six years ago. "But It has been cootinually overlooked and ignored. I'm very concerned about the htck·of attention.'' V<>gel said he supporU steps the school bas taken recenUy to set up extended campus courses at high schools in outly· ing areas. "Our ne.Jt step should be to establish some joint enterprise to f u r n i s ti transportaUoo," he said. Vogel, loog a staunch supporter for the pennis&lv.e tax for CXNtructian which community colleges can impose without a vote of the taxpayer, said he has .changed hLs mind and now opposes any more ccnstruction without the approval of the comtltuents through a bond JaOue election. "We have ~sic fa cilities we need right oow." Vogel said. "Now we should concentrate on uslng faciUUes tn outlying areas to brln1 courses to the people. Right now lmprovlng our public relaUOIU image Is most lmponant." WOODMARK CHAIRS • • A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price WOODMARK FEATURES t • jt . . 'j ~-1 ![,~; ! ,.. I * LUXURIOU S 25 ~. DOWN & 75 % FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVER S * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEAN ING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRLC * EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE ••. ON DISPLAY NOW LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES-START AT -$215. DREXEI,,-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-«ARASl AN • 1tt1. INTERIORS WUKDAYS I SATURDAYS t:OO re l :JO PllDAY 'TIL f tOO NEWPORT IEACH e 1727 WfSTCLIFP Dll:.. '42·2010 IOp111 Suitdey 12-11101 l.AllUNA IEACH e J41 NOltTH COAST foM'Y , IOp111 SulMl 1y 12-11101 4f4·6111 TORRANCE e 21Mf HAWIHOIU(l ILYD. IJl •l11t ' . . . ,-.... Saddlehaek Today's F inal N.Y. Stoeks • EDITION TEN CENTS Trustees to Probe Bremer Coastline Letter By JAN WORTH Of Ille o.llY l"llM lllH Two members or lhe Saddleback Com· munity College District board of trustees sald today they will ask for justification at Tuesday's regular board meeting for a letter written by Superintenden$ Fred. E. Bremer urging coastline deve}op~ent .• "! would like to know·wby ·Brerfi~r took the authority for this \utter on to himself," said Hans Vogel, a trustee fro1n Santa Ana. "We've always bad the policy that the president of the board is our spokesman. In this case, Bremer said he wrote the letter at the urging of John Lund, a trustee from Laguna Beach who was not president at the lime, without asking the rest of us about it." Vogel added he believes the supcrinten· dent does not have the authority to send letters or this type . "I don't believe this is an area where the board, the president of the board, or February Suggested Earlier Election On Parks Urged By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tM o.lly Pli.t S .. 11 A February date ror the city or Irvine parks bond election has been urged by the community services commissioners. Chairman Sally Miller said the com· mission will urge city ""°uncilmen to set a February date rather than the June da:te. C.Ommissioners Wednesday night voted unanimo\J8ly to sy:k the earlier election. The acti~v e r t u r n e d rccom· mendatio~ m C.Om~ty Services Director Paul ·ana parks bond con· suhants RJbera and Sue. Staff members favored the June date saying people then are more aware of parks and recreation needs and more likely to vote favorably fOr bond measures. Commissionen saw a eon f Ii cl. however, witb the 1tatewlde parks bond measure to be placed on the JWle ballot. As much as $20 nlillion will be sought for Irvine parks iinprovements being 1tudied by lb< Ribera 11111 li<le COO· 11.dtanLs. Navy Decorates ·Pueblo Crewmen, But Not Bucher .. . IYASlllNGTON (APJ -The Navy t .. day decorated for bravery 18 crew members ol the Intelligence-gathering ship .Pueblo, captured more than five )'fAf'S ago by tbe North Koreans. 1be ship's commanding officer. Lloyd M. Bucher. now retired from the Navy, was not among them. Commissioners Wednesday looked at a listing of possible ways the bond money might be spent and determined that some of the funds would help pay for a joint UC Irvine and city cultural center. A possible site for the project might be at the comer of Culver and Campus Drive on the UCJ campus, Mrs. Miller said. Commissioner Sandy Freud of Turtle Rock opposed the location suggesting it might jeopardize Turtle Rock hopes for a community center. The site is across the street from the edge of Turtle Rock Village, and kitty-corner from University High School. A University spokesman today could not confirm that UCI is committed to that specific location. Neverthelss. the UCI administration remains interested in working with the city on a joint venture particularly one which enhances th~ city's cultural opportunities. t he spokesman added. The cultural center is the Jone ~rks bonds proposed project which involves only bulldlngs. Two other parks -tbe 15- ad'e tlle ·lii Uillverslcy Park and another along Jeffrey Road -would see no im· prov~ents other than typical park amerut1es. Four others would be a com- bination of both recreation buildings and park landscaping. Those parks set for dual development are; -Adjacent to a central Irvine high school, possibly north or Walnut Avenue at Yale. -Adjacenl to a Culver Drive high school. -Next lo Valley View junior high school in central Irvine. . -The Harvard Avenue ball park in Walnut Village. Solution Sought the superintendent should take a stand." Vogel added. Trustee Patrick Backus of Dana Point said though he would not bring up the matter for discussion he would also like lo hear a justification by "Bremer. The letter, written two months ago to the Citizens Direction Finding Cqmmittee of Orange County, did not surface until last week when the Environmental Coali- tion of Orange County saw a copy of it and fired off a critical reply to the Sad- St e eple Jiii Mary Ann Quinn, 45, of Los Gatos, caUs herself an aerial engineer. Sbe has state license that says she is a steeplejack. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. Th u r s d a y, she painted the Newport Be~ch City Hall flagpole. She does it every two years. Tbe Pentagon said Bucher recom· mended the 18 aw~d.s and decorations for actions' on Jan. 23, 1968, the day North Korean 1unboats surrounded and l>olrded the Pueblo. -Secretary of the Navy John Warner said other recommendations (or awards for actions while the crew was im· prisoned by the North Koreans are being considered. 'Vogel Panel' to View Pentagon spokesman Jerry W • Friedheim said the d'!lay in honoring the men resulted from a fear that prisoners held by the North Vietnamese might be h#med Ir the Pueblo crew was cecorated whiJe the JndoChina hostilities continued. Many of the Pueblo crewmen wtw were honored have lert the Navy. :Bucher was subjected to rui intense in· V'e:stigation into how he lost the Pueblo, ' (See PUEBLO, Page I) Coast • I • Wealller The U:is Angeles Weather 5ervlct sees a foggy weekend tot Orange ,Coast residents and visitors, clear· , lng by mid.afternoon. Highs will range from the mld·'10.s at the beaches to the low 80! inland. INSUIE TOD,\\' Celebritie1 will plat1 tenttl.s for clWJritu this weekend fn New- ,port Beach. The evmt takes place in the Balboa Bau Club. 'See toda111.s Weekendu for de· ·wi.. I ' At .,..,, I.nice i WI\. • ..,. • • ........ J C..llfWl'li. I c .. _.lttf »411 i> Clftllla 111 ,..........,. t -· ' .... '"".' ..... ' ~~ ... ,. ,.. .,.. fttctnl 1 __ .. ,, .... ~ ,,, -. Saddlehack-Tustin Flap }fans Vogel, a Saddleback Community College trustee representing Santa Ana and Tustin, said today he will appoint a personal advisory committee to study Saddleback-related problems in Tustin. Judge Releases 2 'Brotherhood' Dn1g Cultists Two men labeled on their arrest as principals jn the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug distribution ring allegedly headed by imprisoned Dr. Timothy l,eary were freed late Thursday after serving less than three months of their &en· tences. Orange County Superior Court Judge Raymond Vincent's action, taken under a penal code 'provision that permits judicial review 120 days after senlencing, brought a howl of prottsl rrom prosecutor Jack Ryan. ' "He's gone against the report prepared by the Department of Corrections,'' com· mented the astonished Ryan . "I coll tlils an abuse of discretion and frankly I am wonderlni why Judge Vincent took such a personal Interest In these two men." The two men are James ~roy Crlt· tendon, 30, who was llvlng In Loni S.acl> when arrested, and John Charles Gal~ 28, a Laguna Beach surfboard maker who was marked down In the Grand Jury Indictment as a persl.stent peddler of LSD at rock concetts. Crittendon earlier drew a state prl80t (See TWO FREED. Poge II -- A drive to get Tustin out of the Sad· dleback district and into the Rancho San- tiago CommunitJ College district bas resulted ,in fonnatioa of a lSO-member committee and a petiUon drive. Vogel said be would 'commission the panel to study what ~ problems are and u·hat alternative solutions are available. He said he was initiating the com- mittee through recent nc\v legislation that allows trustees of community col- leges to have their owri advisory boards. Tustin leaders of lhe drive, led by Stanley Kanerak, have cited excessive distance (20 miles ooe way to the Mission Viejo campus), inadequate facilities, and lnconvenleut course organization as re890ns for tbt;ir action. "I've lieen harping on this situation for the last two or three years," $aid Vogel. a trustee on the board since Saddleback opened six y~rs ago. "But it has been continuall)looverlookcd and ignored. I'm very ·corn.-erned about the lack of attenUon." V011•i said he supports Sleps the school has taken recently to set up extended campus cou~ .at high schools in outly· In~ ...... •our next step should be to ••tobllsh some joint en(erprbe to I u r n I s h tral!Sportatlon," he said. VOl(tl, loog a ltauncb supporter !or !he permlaaive tax lor. conetruction which community collejes can Impose without a vote of the taxpayer, said he has changed his mind and now opposes any more 'COl'lstructlon without the approval or the constituents through a bond Issue election. dleback superintendent. Bremer said in his letter that coastline development in the Capistrano Beach area "which would not adversely affect the environment" was desirable from his standpoint because it would help the col· lcge district's ta;w; base. "We work with the assessed valuation of our district. We're not here to creale it." Vogel said. ··our concern is to educate the students, not to raise funds." Backus, who represents the area for develapment, stood by earlier statements that he does not want development in the area. "As a board member I would never seek any construction company to come down here," Backus said. Both Backus and Vogel said they believe attention should be given to im- proving the school's public relations - both in the Tustin area where an effort to get out or the Saddleback district has been gaining steam, and in Capistrano Beach \\•here Bremer's position has a 1 i e n a t e d some anti-development residents. "It's imperative that \11e work together," Backus said. •·for Bremer to take positions on development in Capistrano Beach is Like pouring salt on a wound." Questioned about the matter last week. Bremer said he was "astounded the Environmental Coalition is so upset at (See LE'M'ER. Page 21 Prices Soaring Highest Wholesale Rise in 27 Years WASHINGTON (UP!) -Wholesale prices rose 5.8 percent in August, the big· gest advance in a single month since 1946, the government reported today. Farm prices, freed from the restraints of the price freeze, ·also shot up by 23 U.S. JOBLESS RATE SCOOTS UP IN AUGUST, Pago 14 percent -more than three times the previous record £or a single month. Grain prices and many animal reeds increased dramatically -in the case of grain by 70 percent. This was viewed as an ominous sign for shoppers at the meat market because (armers paying higher costs for feed Ki ssinger Quiet About Phone Taps Iv ASHINGTON (UPI) -Henry A. Kissinger declined today to tell senators the results of taps on telephones of 17 of his aides beginning in 1969. Two members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said they would at- tempt to block conlinnatioi. as secretary of State until they got an FBI report on the matter. Testifying before a congressional com- mittee for the first time in his 4%: years as President Nixon's top foreign affairs adviser, Kissinger was questioned closely and at length about surveillance of bis Whi~ House national security staff. Kissinger preswnably acknowledged approving the wiretaps as part of a general White House effort to find the source of news leaks or sensitiv·e mat· W"S.- Kissinger testilied that some security leaks from his staff were discovered and "appropriate action was taken." But he said "J would perfer not to go into in· dividual cases" -even in executive session. He contended that the decision whether to make the information available rested with the FBI and the Justice Depart- ment. Chairman J. William Fulbright 1 D- Ark.), said he asked the' FBI previously for a written summary it prepared on the wiretaps a n d his request was turned down. " usually pass the burden along to con- sumers. The wholesale price report by the department's Bureau 'or Labor Statistics came five days before the scheduled lilt· ing of ceilings en beef prices and bore out predictions b y Administration economic officials last month. The report brought an instant denun· ciation o( Administration economic policies by AFL-CIO President George Meany. He called the latest figures "beyond belief." The Bl.S said the overall, unadjusted in- crease in wholesale prices of 5.8 perci!nt in August was the highest surge for any month since July 1946. The rise that month was 10.7 percent, reflecting an in- flationary pattern that followed World War Il. The August increase, when adjusted for seasonal factors, was put at 6.2 per- cent -largest hike foi:-any mo11th since the government began taking seasonal considerations into account in 1947. August wholesale prices stood 19 per· cent above the level of August, 1972. The big August wholesale price rise followed an unusual 1.3 percent decline in July, when nearly all commodities were constrained by the freeze. Administration economists said at the time that the price freeze caused this and predicted a surge after most restrictions oo food !See PRICE JUMP, Pa1e I) Age No Bo1'Iids I t I 't • ~ ! Groom, 19, Marries Woman , 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) - A 19-year-old Bakersfield man &ays "age does not matter• in his marria'e to a widow balf l :entury >Ider. Leonard W. Comeau said 1n an interview today he and 72-year· old Eula Mae Fisher bad 1ieen thinking about getting married "for a long time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues· day. ' · Comeau was maintenance man at Mrs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been "living together for a while," be •'lid- "Age does not matter," Comeau added. "If a woman is older than I am or younger than I am don't make no difference. If you love a person like I love my wife, that•, :ill there ls to it~" The bride's second husband, Cyril, died in January and Comeau was orphaned several years ago when his parents, sister and two brothers were killed in a traffic accident. Two older brothers were killed in Vietnam. Irvine Planners Approve I €ampns -Valley-€enter Irvine planning commissioners ThUrg.. day night unanimously approved an lrvine Company subdivision of the 21Z... acre Village of Valley View, 1be prop- erty is between Culver Drive and Yale Avenue, north of Moulton Parkway to the Santa Re Railroad. The parcel is now subject only to \inal tract map approval and lssuance of building permits before Its .636 lots may be developed to house 3,1161 people. Prior to that approval, a list of some 40 conditions attached to the development must be met by the Irvine Company. Many o( those ccnditioos relate to drainage and possible nood hazards. The land is within the San Diego Creek Flood Plain as defUled by the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers. An earth benn and walJ Crom six to eight feet In height Is planned to protect the homes Crom sheet flooding that would occur an average of once ID 30 years. Irvine Planners Grant Daily, how~ver, the landscaped berm and \\'all will protect future residents "'hose homes wiU. back up on Moulton Parkway, from noise generated by the crosstown street, city planners observed. Valky Vietv Subdivision A new shopping center serving UC Irvine. students and Turtle Rock residents received Irvine planning com- mission approval Thursday night. A tentative tract map ror the Campus Valley Shopping Center development at Campus Drive and 1.ec St.reel wt\$ a~ proved unanimously on condition that the nurnbcr of parking spaces be reduced 10 percen . About 38 "head-in" spaces near the future Albertson's Market will be deleted, on ln.structlpn of lhe plaMlng commission. · The map provides for location of buildings housing a bank, a1o fast-food restaurant, a slklown restaurant, small shops and services, along with the $UJ>CnT18rket. Campus Valley was the city's first city· Initiated rezoning. lt came about rhen Turtle Rock re~clenta success!u111 pro- tested against a propOsed shopping • center in their Village, near University High School When the Turtle Rock neighborhood commercial center was deleted from the village plan, city plaMlng commissioners launched rezonillg !or the CampuJ Valley center. Residents had said they preferred the Town Center location. Campus Volley will be built on about t2 acres of the 250 acres incorporated ln the ultimate Tbwn Center village zoning plan which Is due to face city scrutiny later this month. Town Center Is expected to eomblne cultural, commercial, apartment and single family home development across Campus Drive. from UC!, between University and CUiver Drives. An Irvine Company spokesman today said occupnnts or the remaining campus Valley shops would be made publlc In the next .GO days, pending final city approval bl tho pro)ect and compleUoo ol lease agree.men ts. · • During the worst poosible ralnstorm which might·strike Irvine, the site would be expected to be partially covered by water ranging In depth up to six inches. An allemati,.ve to the gra.ss-covettd earth berm would have hem a concrete channel aJong the northerly .side or f.foulton. Commlmity Services Com- missioners Wednesday nlsht viewed both alternatives and urged approval or the ear1 h be.nn Oood protection system. Planning staff members lncorpor<1ted in the list of coodlUoos the mecbanbms necessary to require construction of the bmn by the Irvtne Company. Other conditions denllng with drainage w'rc termed minor and noise attenuation ranked as the sta(f and commissioner's second major environmental coocern. judging by numbers of condiUol\S at· tached to the tract map. ~ The property Is near the hellooptu flight path across central Irvine. Measures to reduce llOund levels in homes were requJred as well •s ln~ sulatlon against 50Wld tranamlalon between att.aehed units. The project Is the flrSI major resldet>- tlal development by the Irvine Com- to be approved by the city of Jrvint linC9 the city incorporated in 1971. • ' I I ~ I I • .... • LDAllY PILOT ___ IS ____ Frlday, 5,ptembfr 1 • ..,.,,, UPI T1l11'11ol1 Royalty it1 Russia I Britain's Princess Anne and fiance, Capt. Mark Phillips, attend Eu- ropean Equestrian Championships in Kiev. Her visit to Russia is first by British royalty in half a cenhlry. Avco to Fight De11ial Of Condomini11m Project By CANDACE PEARSON 01 ttie 1>4111\1 PUet Sletf As some environmentalists celebrated, Avco Community Developers today prepared to fight in court Thursday's state Coastal Commission denial of a Laguna Niguel condominium project. Other community members blamed Avco's defeat on the con1pany itsell, saying it wasn't willing to postpone a decision on the 917-unit project to allow a compromise. Not one vote was cast in favor of the developm ent inland of Pacific Coast Highway at Crown Valley Park\va y. From Pagel PUEBLO ... an electronic surveillanc<:! s h i P camouflaged as a scientific research vessel. It can-ied a crew of slx officers, 75 enlisted men and two civilians when captured after being fired on by patrol boats and planes. After a year of neg~tlations, the crew was returned by the North Koreans Dec. 22, 1968. The Pueblo remains anchored in a North Korean harbor. One of two Silver Stars approved by Warner goes posthumously to Fireman Duane Hodges, the only crew member killl'd during the attack. The other goes to Lt. (J.g.) Frderick C. Schumacher Jr. of St. Louis. !\lo., v.·ho has left the Navy. The commendation for Schumacher said he led his men in lhe ·'destruction of all classified materials under his purview.'' "Through his inspiring leadershi p, courage and dedication in the face of hostile fire, he r enected great credit upon himself and Upheld the highest tradition of the United States Naval Service," it continued . During a Navy inquiry Into Bucher's actions, critics said the S?Y ship should never have been surrendered. OU.NGI COAST II DAILY PILOT The~ C""lt OAILY PILOT. will> wllld'I " combined "'' ,.,...,,p,"'· 11 pUtill...,lld b'I' lt>e O•~ Co•1! Publl1~1r19 Comsi.ny. S.S..· rtt1 allrlln1 ere Pllbll•lled, M-•, ll1t0Ufl'I l"rldty. for Colt• Me••. H1wporl Beedl. H""ll'lflon 8Htll/Fo....,t•in V•lloy, l-ouN e .. c ... '"'IMIS.ddl•l>K-•lld S.n Cllmetl!1/ »n J....,, C1pl1!r11.o, A 1l'lgl1 r191on1r tdlllOft 11 IM/bl+111"""-S11urd1,-. •nd Sll<ld•rs. Tiie prl,,.;lpel PllOlltilflllf pi.nr 11 11 l.10 Wtil 11' lt•tt!, C11l1 0 M1w. C1lllorn11. HUt. Robert N. w •• e Pinkltoot Ind Pllbtnt>tr J1dt R. c~·t•v V'te:t Pr11klltll •nd C1ntr11 Ml~tfff Tlto1r111 K11 .. il Ed•to• llio"''' A. M111plli~1 M1nq!f11 EcMor Cll1.i11 H. Looi Ricll1,~ P. Nill l1o1!1t111I M•llolOlr>O Edl!Ofl °""" C..t1 IMH! 2lll W.>1 B•t Strut ,.,_., Offd'lr ll1J NtwPlfl 8oulev1rcr llot..,,. 1-1'1; m J;ornt ,..,..,.,, HWl1'"9'°"' ludl! 11•1s INch IOUll YMd ~~·I IQ~ El C1m .... 111111 ,.,.,.... 1n•1 6•2 .. 121 Ca..tfW U...fl .. 642·1671 S.. Ch••• .. Al .. ,.,, .... ,,.: Tels1l 1 I 491-4420 C...,rlt"I, lt'J. Orlflllt C.1! PuDtbl'llnf ,.,,.,,...,, Me "'*" llOl'ie.. lllu1t•1tioftl, ••lltorJlll _ •• ., .... lll-1lt8'ttnl1 l'lt<'l ln .... ,. k r'IP'1ldWClf WHtlovt ll"IClal -· mlHle!I of <OPJ'rlfl'!I -· li(ll'tll d•ti M'Ctl• -,w •• '°''' Mew. (•~~. ............. .,, "'"ltr b ,il '"""""'WI .,, -'1 U.lf ~I .....iillt'Y °'""'Iii..,,.· PM ._..,,. And in their action in San Francisco, the commissioners indicated their reluc- tance to allow any major construction on lhe few remaining open spare areas a long the Orange Coast. A second permit for 115 single-family homes in Dana Point by Lantern Bay Development Company also was turned down by the commission Thursday. Two other large projects within the 1,000 yan:I permit zone -the 213-unit ~1ira Costa Villas condominiums in San Clemente and Avco's 1,218-unit oceanside Laguna Niguel development -are up for action at the commission's next mealing. It will be Sept. 19 at 9:30 a.m. at the llollywood Park Hotel in lnglewood. The state commission's staff noted that Orange County is the most rapidly grow- ing county in th e state and that developments like Avco's could have substantial effects on air and water quality and on recreational lands. "We are definitely going to court." Avco project manager Ray Peloso said today. •·we hope to file as quickly as possible. "Proposition 20 wasn't designed to cause a moratorium on construction along the coast," he said, adding he thinks the proposition that created the commissions has done just that. "It's somewhat discouraging," he said, repeating his previous offer that the state can still buy the property at a fai r price. "We feel the courts are going to be more open-minded," be said. Avco attornies already have ind icated they will try to get the,.Projects through on claims they should tie exempted from the new law passed by voters last November. Now they will sue for the permit also. Arraig11rnent For Accused Rapist DeW.yed Nego tiations by a La Habra attorney ~·ho may defend accused kidnap-rapist Kenneth D. Kelley, charged with the air duct1on of a teenaged girl in Corona del ti.far eight days ago stalled his ar· r11ii;nmcnt Thursday. Ktlley, a tattooed trucker,. from Pico Rive ra, appeared before Judge Calvin P. Schmid t in Harbor Judicial District Court Thursd3y afternoon to hear formal charges read against hi m. Complaints chargin g the suspect with kidnaping, rape through threa t of bodily hArm , sex perversion and assault with a deadly weapon ~·ere issul'd Thursday morning. Arraignrticnt was continued until Mon- day moming. ho wever, at the request or the Orange County Public Defender's Of. lice. Judge Schmidt agreed when It was ex· plained that La ltabra attorney Stephen A. De Sales is considering representing Kelley in the four-count criminal case. Kelley was subsequenUy transferred to Orange Cowity Jail, with the stlf[ $100,000 bail requested by Newport Beach police remaining In effect at Judgi Schnlidt's order. · Keltey, wbo also uses the lost name Hlahosky, was atTestcd In El Monte , Tuesday afternoon by a patrolling police sergeant who recognized the suspect and his ~·hitc van from a wanted circular distributed by Ne wport Bea.ch police. ' Saddl.efJaek District Highest Student Enrollment Seen A bumper crop of 13,180 stud ents are expected for the first day of th e 1973-74 school year Tuesday in the Saddleback Vall ey UniHed School District. John Cooper, coordinator of research end development for the newly·unlfled district. said the figures for every school indicate the biggest enrollments ever, up 2,000 students over Jast year. ln the 13 elementary schools an enroll· ment of 7,265 students is projected. In the t~·o intermediate schools, Cooper predicts a total of 2,117, and in the district's two hi gh schools, v.'hich will be operating from the same facility, f\.1ission Skylab Due For Vieiving Along Coast The Skylab space station containing astronauts Alan Bean. Q\\'Cn Gan-iott and Jack Lousma \11ill be visible for four minutes tonight begiMing at 8: 18. According to a schedule prepared by TRW Inc. oC Redondo Beach the orbiting laboratory will appear in the north and move to the northeast at an elevation about 15 degrees above the horizon. With the ex~ption of next Thursday when the Skylab will pass overhead before sundown, . Los Angeles area residents will be able to see the space station each evening next week. The schedule of expected sightings is : Satun:lay:1appears at 7:35 p.m. in the north moving to northeast in two minutes and 42 seconds at a maximum elevation of 11 degrees. Swtday: appears at 8:20 p.m. in the northwest, moving to the east over a period of six minutes and 34 seconds at a maximum elevation of 42 degrees. lvtonday: appears at 7:46 p.m. ln the northwest moving to the east, visible for six minutes and 29 seconds with a max· imwn elevation of 40 degrees. Tuesday: appears at 8:40 p.m. in the northv•est moving to the southeast and visible for six minutes and 29 seconds, maximum elevation of 40 degrees. \\'ednesday: appears at 7:57 p.m. in the northwest moving to the southeast and visible for si:z minutes and 48 seconds, maximum elevation of 69 degrees. f<~riday: appears at 8:10 p.m. in · the 1vest moving to the south and visible for "'"four minutes and five seconds, maximum elevation of IS degrees. Saturday: appears at 7:27 p.1)1. in the west moving to south, visible five minutes and 35 seconds, maximum eleva· lion of 23 degrees. From Pagel TWO FREED ••• te rm of one to JO years aftc1 pleading guilty to possession of dangerous drugs. Gale got the same prison term after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges. fS:either man should start celebrating just yet, the somber Ryan warned after Judge ~ncent's ruling. Ryan told the judge that he intends to go to the Fourth District Court of Ap- peals to challenge the dismissal action on the grounds that it is contrary to eviden~ and the recommendation of lhe stale Department of Corrections. If Judge Vincent's ruling is upheld, It v1ill mean that 18 of the nearly 50 persons indicted by the Grand Jury ten months ago have now been cleared of all charges or had their sentences commuted. Several of the indictees are still on the run, with police throughout the nation still keeping their eyes peeled for the man they describe as "Mr. Big" in the conspiracy -300-pollnd Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist, 30. He was last seen in late 1972 in the Hawaiian Islands. ,, Lawmen said Crittendon came next in order below Leary and Andrist and iden- tified him as the man who peddled 250.000 LSD tablets in one transaction. They said Gale was best known to them as a "traveling druggist" who toured Soulhern California rock concerts distributing free samples of LSD to young onlookers. Both men were said to be confidants of Dr. Leary. SO, the LSD cu llist who is now serving a term in Folsom Prison. From Page J LETTER • • • \vhat J thought was a letter written in a fri endly, ethical way." "I wa sn.'t trying to tell them how to handle their business," Bremer said. ''The tax base is my responsibility. You can't have quality education unless you have the money to pay for it." Trustee Lund said, "I discussed the Ga pistrano Beach situation with Bremer a few times ... the wording of the letter is mostly mine. We didn't discuss it with Jhe rest of lhe board. He slitd,hc didn't rate lhe matter as "that big a deal." Educator Won't.Run SAN DIEGO (AP~ Pepperd~e University President William S . Banowsky said today he hns been en· couraged to run for the U.S. Senate next year but "J do nol plan to be a can· didate." Viejo I-Ugh School, on double sessions, Cooper predicts 3,605. Bus schedules for all schools have been sent to parents, Cooper said. Anyone not sure of the schedules should contact the child's school, he said. Som~ 192 students will be enrolled in special education programs and 80 in the district's third hi gh school, the con- tinuation school opening its doors for the first lime. "We're proud or one thing, that the continuation school will be finished right on the nose to start on schedule," Cooper said. The enrollment figure also iocludes the tiny Trabuco School, a one-room school in t he Saddleback Mountain foothills \rhich expects 70 students in grades kindergarten through eight. - One new eJCrrientary school will open near the recently finished Barcelona and Seville homes on Santiago. Cooper said food services for the new year will require some price hikes, because or price spirals on most staples and cutbacks in government surplus sup.. plies. "We apologize for the double sessions at the high school," C.ooper said. "It's going to be crowded, we know that. But so far construction of the new El Toro High School is ahead of schedule and if things continue like they are we'll be able to open it next ran ." Students at Mission Viejo High School will attend from 7:30 a .m . to 12:10 p.m. E l Toro students will attend from 12:15 p.m. to 5 p.m. 'Ibe $6 million El Toro High School is being built at Toledo way near El Toro Road. "I've visited several of the schools and teachers seem deep in preparation," Cooper said. "It looks good. I'm sure we'll encounter problems :is school opens, but we expect that." From Pagel PRICE JUMP • • were listed July 13. Industrial prires, which remained Wider the freeze wttil mid-August after the BLS took its latest survey, rose a modest 0.4 percent. Bigger increases are expected later this fall as pricing con· straints are lifted on the nation's largest corporations. The biggest jumps in prices in the farm sector were for livestock, grains and oil seeds. Prices of fresh and dried fruits and vegetables dropped sharply. Wholesale prices for coo.sumer foods jumped 9.1 percent last month but con- sumer goods excluding foods edged up only O.l percent. Consumer-finished goods, a sample of commodities that compares with the government's ·con- sumer price index, gained 3.8 pe.r~nt. The August farm prire surge was led by a 57 percent jump in the price of hay, hayseeds and oil seeds, which play a key role in livestock feed . Egg prices 35 per- ~nt and live poultry prices 42 percent. . . ' ' t Belpitag Ba11ds • . . ' '.!; •• • ~ 1 '• Motorist Linda Crenshaw, 27, ol 31959 10th St., South Laguna, is aided by passerby at three-car accident Thursday evening on La· guna Canyon Road south of San Diego Freeway. She was admitted to South Coast Community 1-lospital with face cuts and fractured nose. Investigators say Lee Baker, 34. Sebastopol, Calif., was southbound \Vhen he reached up to lower sun visor. Hi s ~mall ::ar ~ollided with and glanced off bi g northbound sedan driven by Earline Ulrich, 32, Long Beach. Baker car then spun around northbound Crensh.aw car. • Berkeley Scl1ool Groups Seeking St1·ike Sanction From AP Dispatches \Vith Cupertino and San Francisco already facing school-opening problems, Berkeley is lrying to stave off a similar situation. RepresentaUves or Berkeley school empfoyc groups are recommending thal each participating organization secure a strike sanction. The recommendallon, carried in a vote Thursday night , opens the v.·ly for a possib)e school strike within two weeks unless an agreerncnt is reached on employe demand~. They are seeking a 5.75 percent pay hike, a voice in hiring school ad· ministrators and more adequate supplies: for classroom teachers and custodians. Some 500 persons aUended the meeting sponsored by the Berkeley Allianoe of. School Employes, a coalition of Berkeley teachers and nonrertlficated employes. Representatives at-the meeting must now convince their organizations thit they should agree not to cross picket lines if a strike la called. Participating organizations included the Berkeley Education Associ~Uonz Berkeley Federation of Teachers, LOCI.I 10 of the Public Employes Union and the· Classified School Employes Association . WOODMARK CHAIRS \ A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price WOODMARK FEATURES ·I ., ... " . r 'i, t 1 ' . ' . ( ' t • { * LUXURIOUS 25 % DOWN & 75 % FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC *EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE ' * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE ••• ON DISPLAY NOW . ' LOUNGE CHAIR PRrcES START AT $215. DREXEL-HERITAG&-ttENREDON-WOODMARK-kARASlAN INTERIORS WWDAY( & SATURDAYS 9:00 to l:JO NIDAY 'TIL 9:00 • NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 W"STCrlFF DR. l<t2·)010 fOptn S11M1y 12·11JOI LAGUN>.-l!ACH ~ )4~ NORT"t COAST HWY fOp111 S111H111y 12.11101 494·6111 • • • TORRANCE e . 21Mt HAWfHORNf ILVO-:- J71·11Jt I " Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley VOL. 66, NO. 250, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES , . ' - J . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Final N.Y. Stocks FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1973 TEN CENTS ouncil Approval of --Edison ·Expansioi, Hinted , By TERRY COVILLE Of • D9lt)' r1111 11.tt '.There were , indications today that them Calilornla Edison Company will · able to win api>roval from the city uncil for expansion of its lfunlington ach power plant despite pl)JlDing com- ssion reje<:tlon of the plan. Councilman Ted Bartlett said today he pports power plant expansion and he Ir''" ___ the council to vote 4-3 or 5-2 in vor of It. • • zstrict nrollment igures Up By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ftMI DlllY P'lllot Slaff . It "'ill start as early as 7: IS a.m. Tues- day and by 5 p.m .• soRle 18.SOO stu®nts vdll have completed their first day of 1 in the Huntington Beach Union gh School District. The 1973-74 school year promises to be a -recortl-~reaker for the school district's 'x schools, with most expected to have · re students on campus than ever fore. District officials note that this year's tal projected enrollment is the highest ver. Only Fountain Valley High School, due a few boundary ·changes, is likely to "J think we need it as a tax base ror the city," Bartlett said. "It could mean $1.5 million in taxes. Without it, we may face a tu increase ~t year." No councilman has yet· declared outright opposition to the "110 million Ediaon ·eapanslon plan, although most preferred not to conunent today on how they might' vote. EdlSOll officials have not yet ap~led the planners final Wednesday night ac- tion -6-0 denial in order to allow the a p- peal -but are expected to do so within the lQ-day appeal period. The ci ty clerk's office said a public hearing on the expansion would probably be set fo:-the council's Oct. I meeting. Councilmen Al Coen, Henry Duke and Norma Gibbs all said today they have not yet made up their minds on the issue. Mayor Jerry Matney could not be reach- ed for eomment this morning. Jack Green, director o! environmental quality for the city of Los Angeles, said hil.ve a reduction in the student popula- tion , which is expected lo drop from a k enrollment last year or nearly 4,500 an estimated high of f,300 this year. The large numbers of students' have led to a variety of changes at each of lhe five high school campulNt lncltxlillg use .. • ol addillonal portable -· ..... oil-campus clauee and the lmtituUoo of e1tended day scbeduln. .For instance. at Edison High School, tffe juniors and senion start their day at 7:16 .a.m. and leave ahorUy after noon. when the lower classmen come on cam- pm. Tbt last classes of. lhe day will be out at 5 p.m. · Principal Charles Wiese explained lhal the staggering of cWSes Is the onJy way the estimated 4,llMI students can be hous· ed. at the campus, which will not be using any portable units this year. 1 At Fountain Valey, the students are also on an extended day which starts at 7:30 a.m. and ends at 3:30 p.m. The large student body there Is housed in 30 Portable classrooms and sbutUed to a vulely of off-campus classes ln local city he.11•, hospitals and even Huntington Cmter. . Some of the students that used to be 1n Fountain Valley's attendance area will go to Marina High School thil year, where entollment has been projected at 3,800 pilplls. Because of the large number of students, Marina will be getting eight portable classrooms to help house the e.1- lra stdents. On that campus. students will. start at 7:SO a.m. with classes ending at 3:40 p.rn., on a nine-period extended day, Mother means ol providlng more (S.. ENROLL, Pase 2) Police Seeltj.llg ''apists of Girl ')n Huntington : , , Two men who' kidnap!d a young -an at Jmllepolnt 1bur11day night, thin beat and raped her before dumping bet in a field in Huntington Beach, are being sought today by police. u .. 1 TeltJ!hOlo HEADING FOR TROUBLE OVER TELEPHONE TAPES? Henry Ki11inger 1t Senate Committff Confirm1t ion Heiring Kissinger Def ends Taps For National Securit y • WASHINGTON (AP ) -Testifying to- day oo his nomination to· be Secretary of State, Henry A. Kissinger defended the wiretapping of several ~des as painful but neces&lry to protect national securi-ty .. The "bugging" issue and the fact that Kissinger would keep his White House ~ added a note of discord to the hear- inls held -by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in the same large caucus room that housed the Watergate probe. The chairman, Sen. J . W. Fulbright {D- Ark.), told l\isslnger the wiretapping ol 17 Ni.Ion administration officials, In- cluding members of the National Securi· ty Council .s~aff, tests the "mutuB.1 :trust" the nominee pledged In the shaping ol foreign policy. And sen. cmforct P. case <R·N.J.J. said he assumed the commiUee would oot proCeed tmtil -the FBI turned Over to il a report of., the wire\applng KiSSinger sakl was conducted between May 1969 and February 1971. Fulbright said he would call an ex- ecutive sessloo ol the corrlrnittee Monday and ask Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson to submit a summary report on the wiretaps. Sen. Charles Percy (~JU.), eicpressed concern about "the civil liberties of the 17 individuals." But Fulbright said he believed that the "civil liberties of the wiretapped in- dividlials have already been com· promised," and that Richardson would be giveq_an_..opportunity to express any reservalions he had about the civil liberties question. This could seriously delay Kissinger·s confirmation by entangling it in a larger. legal displite betwt>en branctles' of the govsmment. \ Fillbright announced that the Justice Department decUned to provide him with requested data on Richard Moose, a staff member of the committee who 'Worked for the security council. And Kissinger declined to disclose details of the wiretapping to the committee, even in secret. "It would not be fair to discuss in· (See KISSINGER, Page Z) he fav'lrs expansion as long as the plant meet!\ lhe requirements of the Air Pollu· tion Control District (APCDJ. "If they (Edison ) meet the standards of the APCD, l can't see where the city can impose additional air quality re- quirements," Green observed. '-'I just don't agree with some of the con1- missioners' reasons for denial, though { lhink their concerns are justified." Green said he needs to study the lengthy list of conditions for approval recommended by planners lo see if he agrees with them on an individual basis. Donald Shipley. who labeled himself the ··n1ost ecology conscious coun- cilman," said he generally ravers ex- pansion v.•ith maximum controls on the new plant. .. I don'l• really know how th e council ~Yill go." Shipley said today ... But as far 3.S air pollution goes. 8S percent Of it is from cars and that's where we really need action." Shipley is a bi ology professor at Cal Slate Long Beach. ~!rs. Gibbs said. she has fought the plant expansion a!! along, but does feel she has accomplishl!d muCh or v.·hat she v.·anted by ge,ting Edison to switch 10 low sulphur fuels and place filters on its smoke stack s . ..I'm going to research the iss ue a lot 1nore before deciding my vote on it." she said. '·I \\'as surprised by all the con· (See EDISON, Page 21 Prices Soaring Highest Wholesale Rise in 27 Year s WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wholesale prices rose 5.8 percent in August, the big- gest advance in a single month since 1946, the government reported today . Farm Wices, freed from the restraints _of the price freeze. also shot up by 23 U.S. JOBLESS RATE SCOOTS UP IN AUGUST, Page 14 percent -mQ.re than three times the previous recoril' for a single month. Grain prices and many animal feeds increased dramatically -in the case of grain by 70 percent. • This was viewed as an ominous sign for shoppers at the meat market because farmers paying higher costs for feed Facts. Soug ht l1i W iretap Of Nixo1i K i n - From Wire Services The chairmen of two congressional subcommittees are trying to find o u t whelher President Nixon wiretapped his Newport Beach brother, Donald. The \Vhite House isn't saying. Donald Nixon had no comment \\'hen contacted loday by the Daily Pilot in Los Angeles at a hotel ceremony. He also declined comment there Thursday when asked for comment by reporters covering the program. IX!puty \Yhite House Press Secretary Gerald L. \\larren said Thursday that if monitoring of the President's immediate family took pl ace "it would have been related to the protective function or the i ~cret Scrvi~e. I'm not going beyond this." \Varren said that after talking with the , President he would have no comment on "any specific charges" in a Washington Post story quoting sources as saying the Secret Service wiretapped Donald Nix- on's telephone for more than a year at the President's request. l\1eanwhile, Sen. Joseph M. Montoya (!).N.M.), an!I, Jlep. Tola Steed (!). Okla.'}, chairmen of subcommittees which allocated funds to the Secret Service. said they want explanations in writing from the Secret Service. "The wiretaps being reported would seem to have no connection with national security and would seem to be outside of the scope of Secret Service responsibility for th'e protection of the President," Montoya said in a letter to Secret Sef\'.ice Director James J . Rowley. Steed said he, too, would ask Rowley for a written statement. He and Montoya said they would await the Secret Service reports before deciding on whether to ·order sub- committee hearings. usually pass the burden along to con- sumers. The wholesale price report by the department's Bureau ot Labor Statistics came five days before the schccluled lift- ing of ceilings on beef prices and bore out predictions '-by Administration economic officials last month. The repor t brought an instant denun- ciation of Administration economic policies by AFL-CTO President George Meany. He called the latest figures "beyond belief." The BLS said the overall, unadjusted in- crease in wholesale prices of 5.8 percent in August was the highest surge for any month since July 1946. The rise that month was 10 .7 percent, renecting an in- flationary pattern that followed World War ll. The August increase. when adjusted for seasonal factors, was put at 6.2 per- cent -largest hike for any month since the government began taking seasonal considerations into account in 1947. August 'o\'holesale prices stood 19 per· cent above the level or August, 1972. The big August wholesale price rise followed an unusual 1.3 percent decline in July. when nearl y all commodities were constrained by the freeze . Administration economists sai d at · the time that the price freeze caused this and predicted a surge after most restrictions on food (See PRICE JUMP, Page 21 Grooni, 19, Marries Woman, 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A 19-year-old Bakerslield man says "age does not matter" in his marriage to a widow half l ~ntury 11der. Leonard W. Comeau said in an interview today be and 72-year- old Eula Mae Fisher bad been thinking about getting married 'ifor a long time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues- day. ' Comeau was maintenance man at Mrs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been "living together for a while," he said. "Age does not matter," Comeau added. "If a woman is older than I am or younger than I am don't make no difference. If you love a person like I love my wife, that'-s .lll tliere is to it:" The bride's second husband, Cyril, died in January and Comeau was orphaned several years ago when his parents, sister and two brothers were killed in a traffic accident. Two older brothers were killed in Vietnam. Council Adopts Report On Natural Resources A seven-page report outlining goaJs and objectives for the de-.;elopment of parks, open space, natural resources and the shQreline, was adopted as city policy this week on a-6 to 1 vote by the Hunt· ington Beach City Council. Al Coen, casting a nervous glance ahead at April's city council elections, was the lone dissenter. "I 'm concerned our sue<:essors might misinterpret this and ap~y It as a policy with ordinances , not just a guideline," Coen cX"plained. He objected to some specific goals which he said are "unreachable." For example, Coen cited one goa.t which indicates the city sbOuld strive to obtain eigtit acres of city parks for every 1,000 residen ts. Nearly all counciltncn agreed such an effort could financially break the cny. The current standard in Huntington Beach is five acres per l,000 residents and so far . the city hasn't been able to attain that. Mayor Jerry ~fatncy said he shared some of Coen's concerns and considered voting against the policy plan. but (See RESOURCF.S, P~ge %) OJ:'anlfe • Weather Coast ' Of Heers said the nearly hysteria!. woman walked Into the police station at about 9: 15 p.m. and related her ordeal to them. . . h Purloiner Pirates Plants B uses to Begin Beach Bottlevard R im on Tues day The Los Angeles \Veather Service sees a foggy Yteekend for Orange Coast residents and visitors. clear- ing by mid-afternoon. Highs will range from the mld·70s at the beaches to the low oos inland. .. -The 20-year-old rape victim said s e had been with ·girl frle~d!I at the "ij,obkcr's Bar, 2HJ94 Beach Blvd. At about f '6.m. she left alone. 1Sha saki she wes accosted as she atJrted to leave by two men whose van ,._. parked next to ber car In tbt park- Iha lot. lccordlne to her statement, one of the men pulled • bimttns Jmlle and told her 'e ii6I to ocream. When abe he!ltated about pl:tJnc into lhe van, she aakf 1he was . 1tn1cl<' on the aide of tbt head . wt th a be~vy object. • The woman told officers that one man trove the van wh.Ue the other raped her ~bile holding the Jmlle to btr throat. Alter a w&lle she said she was ptlihed out of the van into a field near the .In· !crte<tloil of Oranse Aveiue and 21st Street, and wall<ed from tbore to lhe (>Ollce station on Prange at Flflh Street. Olllcen ~p-llolpltal •for u.a-t el ber inJur1es, • ,, Lagu1ia Plagued by Thefts Fro1 n Yards, Porclies By JACK CHAPPELL Of "" De11Y1 ~ ... 11.tf • ls there a creeping Charley tn your front yard! Do you have a •Plder plant hanglnJ Crom your porch beams? Do you bJve a planted crook, or wt on display outside? Jf so, .you may .have tr,ouble. / Laguoa Beacll Is and has beea lhe hap- py belsUng ground for a pol~ plant tbtel ·-.. Jn the last three months , scad! of stolen potted planlJ have been reported to Laguna 'Beach police . It's suspected . many more go unreported as residents Just don't ,want ·10 go to 'the lrouble· ol c:ontacllng ~..... ~ itowever. one lady recently went to the expense and .troubl e of placing a classified ad pleadlng for the return of h<r Creepins Charlie. Most or the thlclts involvo pilfering or hanging or potted plants sitting in plain view on private property in resi<lential neighborhoods. • Most therts have been small, ailbough several have involved 1planlJ valued al more than 451). · ~·nu1 Is ·nOl something we're toking lightly, 11 Laeuna Beach Det. Tony Smilh said Thurstay. "We've gone to the trouble 91 con- tacting other agencies. Wc'rtiio( the on- ly one plagued wllh !his. All lhe beach clUe1 are lnvol_vtd," Sm lb aaid. He speculated the pirated pl;JJ!tS were being hu stled off to swap meets. or taken to the roadside plant ·stores where they arc sold. · "It's hard to idenlil)' stulf like this uniess the public puts special markings on the pots. Th.is is quite & problem. It 's going I<> oo a bard one 19 solve " he said. ''It would be a very dllUtuit t~ing to prove that somebody took somebody else's gcraniuins and put them In a dif- ferent. pot. "What we have is somebody taking ad· vantage of a populnr item that is readily • accessable for theft. "\Ve've hod them taken off front porchOi, from. front yards, back yards IS.. THIEF, ,... ! I ' Orange Coun:~, Transit District buses \\•ill begin reguiar runs down Beach BQuJevard from La Habra to lluritingion e.,,ch Sept. ti. The new route wilt serve Ule cities or Anaheim, Bu~na Park, Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Stanton a n d \Vestmlnster and will connect with other OCTD lines in each city. The new route will provide the fi rst regula r bu~ service to Golden West CoUege from Beach Boulevard, OCTD of- ficials 'Said today. The Oat. 25-cent rate will apply on the l}('w line. The stopping times Or lhe Beach ~Jevard route have ·been included in the new ocro schedul~, which will be distributed to every .resident wtthhITThree bl0<k1 of the new roulO. • • ' INSIDE T ODA\' Celebrities wHl play te1111is for . charity this weeket1d ill New· port Beacll. The tVe1U tC1kes place In Ille Balboa Bay Ct11b. See today ·s \Veektnder for de· tails. II.I Y9"r Stl"l'IU J L.M. tff• I .,,.11.. J Callfenlill J Ci.ttUI... »4 Cetrllc• lt c'"'_... 12 ........ ' . .,..,... ..... ' l"lllHCe l).IS "'" "" l:ectnll 1 """'-11 Ami L111fwt 11 .> MltilM• I ~tt JI•» Mul9•1 '""""" 14 NII'-"'! N-• Or"tftM Ce¥11IV I ltttt111n11h tt.U 111'<•• ,..,,., ,, ,,.rtt ..... llK~ Martt... , .. , • T•I"""" J1 TllNlen ft4J .... """ . W-.it'• Ntwt ll•lt .... " ...... . w~ t7..)I " • 1 " I • _2 DAil Y PILOT H Huntington De11sity Deliberated Rapid development and high densities in Huntington Beach were the focus ol the South Coast Regional Z.One Cooserva- tklll Commission deliberations this week in Long Beach. ~The issues v.·ere oompoundcd by the somewhat-unresolved status of right4· v.•ay for the Pacific Coa st Freeway, which Ylill not be built. • The commission established b)' Proposition 20. the Coastline Conserva- tion Initiative, has ht-en approving large numbers of apartment projects in Hun- tington Beach. "It's the cumulative effect that will destroy any effect we have," said Com· missioner Don Wilson of Torrance, In arguing against 10 four-plexes proposed at Warner Avenue and SlJns Street. "I'm concerned if there will still be va- cant land left for us lo plan," Wilson ad- ded. The commission, along with one state and five other regional panels, ls sup- posed to develop a coastal master plan by 1976. The fourplexes planned by Louis Graziadio III were right between the "third and fourth lanes" of the onte-plan- ned freeway , one commlssiooer pointed out. The commission staff recommended denial of the project until studies by Orange Ciounty 'and the State Department or Transportation of alternative uses of the old route are complete. Plaruter Rick Fitch said the Orange County Road Department baa said new tra~rtalion corridor studies should be given top priority .in the coastal zone. Grazladio, who said he fought the original freeway before he owned the land, contended the state has no plans for his property. Any ~rridor would disturb a nearby wildlife preserve at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station, he pointed out. Commissioner Ronald casper.s , who is also chainnan of the county Board o! Supervisors, said the county has tried to "stay out of the corridor and downzone adjacent property." But he also caUed the road department effort a "never-never study," and aimed his salvos at the project's density of 16 uni!s an acre. "Jt never ceases to amaze me that so many city councilmen in Huntington Beach get elected on tbe platfonn of low density and fewer apartments," Ca,,pers said, "when thfs man comes in calling 16 units an acre low density." Graziadio said city i.oning would allow him to develop 87, not 40. units . "l probably shouldn't be so protective or it (Huntington Beach),'' Caspers said during his arguments. "Only one-third of it is in my (supervisorial) district.'' The freev.·ay question seemed dispensed with w h r n Commissioner Russell Rubley of Long Beach said. "The freew ay is dead. It's a dead issue." It isn't fair to developers to ke e p "kicking" it around, he said. The only South Coast Commission member wOO lives In Huntington Beach, Robert Rooney, favored the project and said it is "so remote from the beach" the commission shouldn't worry about it. Dale Secord of the Orange County Environmental Coalition said between February and June, 10.8 percent of all pennits approved by the commission were in HIDltington Beach. "The cwnulative effect or develop- ment," Secord said, "is someday going to catch up with us." The city has grown 909 percent in population from 1960 to 1970. said Secord, quoting from a report by the Southern Californ ia Association of Governments ISCAG ). Such rapid growth will have an adverse effect on circulation systems and recrea· tion. he contended. Rooney replied that mucti of that surge \\'as outside the coastal permit area, \Vhich ranges l.000 yards inland from n1ean high tide line. ·'We're lookirig at the wrong place," he said. adding the beaclH>riented area bet"''Cen Palm Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway is more important. OltAN•I COAST Ml DAILY PILOT Tll1 O•a"'lt Co.1•1 0,lill Y PILOT ,.lltl·Yi'll lc:ll 11 (OITll>oned lllil Ntw•.Prt u . h -llll'IH llY 11'11 0••"111 '°"'" P11D!l•ll•n; tamp.iny, ,,_ ••rt Hl!lon1 1r1 Pf,jbll1lled, Monday ltlroutll Frlt 1y. ~r (0111 Mti1, Ntwporl 8Ntl'I, 14Uf'llf111!~ Se..:11/!'Mlftll ln V1lltf, l•G- ll••tll. lrvln1/$-l111tt-11111 $1n Cltml<lltl l•n J~n C.J>i1•••"'· A 1lncr11 •'11ioMI edlllOn 11 plObll•-~l11rd1y1 1rc1 S"""lyt. TM ptln(il'll P\ltl!!1lllfl0 !>lanl It ti JJO Wnl ••v I""'· C01l1 M111. C1H!orn11, nu.. AoD1 rt N. W11oi Prn'ldlllt •fld Putillti.tr J1c• I . C11rl1y v ," Prnlfffl• .riO Gf:llt•al ~......,., Tlio111•1 K11vil Editor Tiio1111t A. M11rphiR1 Mtf\otgln3 l'Ol!or Ch1rl1• H. Looi ll.i1h1r4 I'. Nall ANIU•rir Ml"'91ne E.i1ete T1.,v Co,,.il!1 W11I Or•~ C-1r E•!IOf Hllllft ... leecll 0Mc.t I 7t 7S l 1•c:h lo11J1,,.1N M1illrig· A4411n 1 l'.O. 11• 7t0, t2641 --L..,,.. l11dH tn .. _. A- (01!1 Me1.11 UO w,11 81y l!rllt NewpOtl l19Cllt M» !'ll'Wp0<1 80ul ..... ,. koPI (ltmlMI: as l'ltrtfl l!I c.t!llM llMI t•••• C714l M2-4Jl1 c .......... "'"''' I • '42·1671 '""' ..,. O!oMft c..., c-........ -•uo (Of'Yl'itflt, 1m. °'"'-C...t ... llitll .... ~. Ht ..... '""'"· ...... , •• ,. .... , .. tlwl11t '"""" ... ..,._......._. .... .... '"""' .. .......... '#!"""" ""ltt ""' '"'"""' .. _.,,_ -. ,...... c• ....... 1111111 11 Colt• .....,,., C1llf!OnlW. ~• .,. ~ n.u fl'IOftlMJ'1 w '""" n.u -"'"' '"''""" .... IM!llftl f2,jol ..-l!llY. ' Frida)', Stpttmbtr 7, iq73 Price Boost- 'Worst Over' WASRJNGTON tAP ) Secretary of the Treasury George P. Shultz said today the increase in wholesale prices during Aua:ust was "a terrible drama" but Aid he hopes the wont may be over. "My instinct Is we have aeen the worst of the food price problem," Shultz said. Shultz said wholesale prices of many commodiUes have dropped sharp1y since figur es were gathered for the August index, which .showed prices of farm product3 were up 23. 1 perci!nt · 1n August and an overall increase in wholesale prices of 6.2 percent. From P.,,e J PRICE JUMP •• were listed July 13. Industrial prices. which remained under the freeze tmtil mJd.August alter the BLS took 1t.s latest survey, rose a modest 0.4 percent. Bigger tncrease.s are expected later this fall a.s pric~g con· straints are lifted on the nation's largest corpora tiara. The biggest jumps in prices in the farm sector were for livestock, grains and oil seeds. Prices of rresh and dried fruits and vegetables dropped sharply. Wholesale prices for consumer foods jumped 9.1 percent last month but con- sumer goods excluding foods edged up only 0.1 percent. Consumer·Unished goods, a sample of commodities that compares with the government's con· sumer price index, gained 3.8 percent. 'Ille August farm price surge was led by a 57 percent jump in the price Of hay, hayseeds and oil seeds, which play a key role in livestock feed . Egg prices 35 per· cent and live pouJtry prices 42 percent. ,. ....... r-.e J THIEF .. . and carports," Det. Smith said. He asked for the assistance of the public in stopping the spree. "If anybody has observed in the past persons or vehicles they su.spect might have been involved in th.is type of theft they coold help by giving this in· fonnatlon to the police, either detectives or patrol. We do need this type of assistance in the city," he said. He at90 suggested that plant owners mark their croc:.s or pats with initials or other ln9cripUODS. He said persons spotting a suspected plant theft should try and remain un- detected, and call police lnvnediately. And, observers should attempt to remember a description of the person and vehicle, with the license number being especially valuable for officers. f'l'Otll Pqe J RESOURCES • • • because it is policy, and not attached to the mast-':r plan as originally proposed, he voted for It. "I recognize that these are only words, but that ls all we can communicate with ," commented Coen. ''I fear that some of these will become more mandates than objectives." Coen then said thai because he is up for re-election in April he want! it made clear why he voted against the policy plan. "rtly negative. .vote is not because I don't recognize the effort, but I just can't agree with some specifics , and I can't see any way to extract them." Another specific goal he opposed is city·sponsored tree farms in the Southern California Edison C:Ompany right-of-ways. "We've already been told by our own tree expert lhat.lsn't economically feasi- ble or practical." One goal along the shoreline en- courages clustered housing and high rise, ralher lhan spread-out development. "We've had 12 drafts of a high rise ordinance and we still can't agree on that," Coen complained. "Some of Al's comments a.re well taken and whatever we do should be sub- jecttd to considerable review,'' sug- gested Councilman Jack Green . Councilman Henry Duke asked the city administrator to constantly Inform the council whenever any propased action "'ouid affect a portion of the pali cy 'plan . lie also asked for at least an annual report on steps taken to implement the goals in the policy plan. The env ironmental and resource.s goals were developed by tbe citizens Goals and Objectives committee (GO) which spent mQre than a year surveyin g and In· terviewing residents to find out what they want for their city. 29 Saved From • Grounded Boat SAN DIEGO (API -Twentyolne persons were rescued today from a ~ foot .sport.sfishing boat aground on rocks or South Coronado Island in Me1lcan waters. The Coast Guard cutter eo.int Stuart carried them to another ftahlng boat and returned to reno.at the stranded vessel, Nova. Bruce Barnes of San Diego, Its owner, was on the other sportsOsbing boal with lrlends. No Injuries were reported In the ml,hap which look p1oce _ lJO mlles 50Ulhwt.st or San Diego. .. Steeple Jiii Mary Ann Quinn, 45, of Los Gatos, calls herself an aerial engineer. She has state license that says she is a steeplejack. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. Th u rs d a y, she painted the Newport Beach City Hall flagpole. She does it every two years. Deadline Nears In Valley School District Race Four candidates had d e c 1 a r e d themselves -with time running out - for the race to fill the vacancy on the Fountain Valley Elementary School District board, according to the county Registrar of Voters. A spokesman said the deadline to file for the election, which will be held Nov. 6, was to be 5 p.m. today. ' 'nle election is being 11eld to fill the wierpired t""O years in the term of trustee Mary Hix, who resigned last month to move to Philadelphia. Listed as candidates are the following : Karen Ackley , 17303 Ash St., t-,ountain Valley, president of the district's Superintendent Parent Council. Kris Roggenkamp, 16817 Redwo;od St ., Fowitain Valley, a housewife. Stephen Held, 9122 Madeline Drive, Huntington Beach, an educator. Helen Schoelzel, 19511 Brookline Circle, Huntington Beach, a hospital ad- ministrator. Football League Seeks Managers, Game Officials Young men Interested in football will be able to become league managers and game officials for the nag football league in Huntington Beach this fall . Parks and Rec reation officials an· nounced that applications for both managers and officials are being ac· ce pted at the City Gym, 16th and Palm Streets, Monday through Friday, between 2 and 4 p.m. The nag football program will be con- ducted on Saturday mornings l!lt various school playgrounds in the community. League managers. who must be at least 18 years old, will be selected from those wilh a good understanding of foot· ball and practical game experience. The beginning salary is $2.85 per hour. Game officials must be 16 yea rs old and un- derstand football rules and regulalions. Officials' salaries will be $2.40 per game. Front Page J KISSINGER. •• dividual cases," he said. The nominee opened his testimony with assurances that President Nixon, who nominated him Aug. 22 to SUOO!ed William P. Rogers as. secretary, Intends to make foreign pollcy "more acces.sible to the tcrutiny and the views of the Congress." Fulbrighl, while prot.lng the nomlnte's mental ' skill and "Iron ®nstjtuUon," complained lhat lhc April 1970 U.S. military lncUr.sion Into Cambodia. came a"s a surpriie to him and seven other unators who met informally with Ki. . ln~er a few dlya earlier. - He Md Sen. John Sperkman ([).AJI.), said they also were concerned about Kissinger's retainlng his poll 11 a White House adviser wh1le htadinf the state Department. "Every president," Kissinger replied, "has a rl&ht lo conc!oct foreign j)Ollcy In a way that helps· him most." F,.....r.,,eJ ENROLL • • • classroom space for the addltionat students. Huntington Beach may be faced wilh one of the most d1frlcult physical p~ Jems as construction begins on lhe two- phese project de8lgned lo give the school a new classroom wing and to rehab.illtate the ext.sun~ auditorium. 'Jbat proJKt will not be ready ror oc- cupancy witll next school year and Prin- cipal Larry Lucas says the campus '\I.i ll be short two classrooms that were previously located In the auditorium while construction is underway. Lucas said this will be the first year the old high school has been overcrowd· eel, but he added that the anticipated 2, 750 students will be housed through the extended day schedule which begins at 7:30 a.m. and lets out at 3:40 p.m . Westminster High School. the second oldest in the district, will also 1;et some of the students from the changes in the 1-~ountain Valley attendance areas. No physical changes are planned for the campus this year, a1lhougb school board members are expected to approve a major renovation plan for the campus in the near future. ConstrucLion on that plan will probably begin after tbe first of the year. M&nwhile, the 3,800 students an· ticlpated at Westminster High School will al.so go on extended day, attending classes begiMing at 7:30 a.m. and at 4:24 p.m., the school day will be over for the last students. Front r-.e J EDISON •.. ditions (about 55) the commission put on the plant and that Shows a lot of research." , She was skeptical of a recent letter senl by Edi"'" lo a locally proposed 100- unit apartment project indicating the project could be built as an "all electric" environment without any fear about a power shortage. "I just doo't understand that," &he mused. Bartlett, who strongly supports Edi>on, was angry with the three commissioners who adamantly refused to approve ex- pansion. He suggested that at the coun- cil's Sept. 17 meeting he might a.sk for their removal. Other councilmen, however, indicated they wouldn't support such a request. "I can't see removing any appointed individual on the basis of a disagree- ment," said Coen._. "There is no way I'd support that," ad· ded Duke. "I'm not fully in accord with their negative vote, but I certainly Vr'Ould not remove them," Green said. "That's like having a recall everytime you disagree with the council," com· mented Mrs. Gibbs. "You have to respect other opinions.'' UFW Pickets Freed ~fERCED (AP ) -Thirty seven United Farm Workers Union pickets accused of trespassing at a Gallo Bros. vineyard were ordered released Thursday from jail without ha ving to post bail. Merced Superior Court Judge Donald Fretz ordered 27 men and IO women released on their own recogajzance. U,I Ttlffl'ltll .Oldest Matt Dead Shirali Mislimov the Russian peasant reputed to be 168 -the world's oldist person ~ died after an illness in the mountain village of Bar- zavu. Mislimov is shown with Mehpar, one of his great-granddaugh· ters, in May of this year. Nixon Cites 'Good Job' By Cong,ress-Mansfield WASIDNGTON (UPI) -President NtJ:on told Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield today at a private White House meeting thal be felt Cc¥1gres.s bas · done a good job overall. Nixon and ~iansfield met o v ·e r breakfast two days after the President said Congress compiled a "very disap- pointing performance." Mansfield told reporters on capitol Hill 'PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS VACATION'-Column, Poge 6 after this mofl\lllg's meeting that Nixon told him ''Congress overall has done very well" although Mansfield said Nixon '\l.i:>uld "like his proposals to be given more consideration." In a comedy-like situation Mansfield at first denied to reporters that he had met with Nixon . But after being told the White House ao.oounced ..t0e .meetlnc, Mansfield COQ· finned it, exPI~inC it was bis norm1l practice not to talk about such prlv4le conferences. Mansfield said the meeting, over poached eggs and hash, was mainly a business discussion covering foreign af· fairs and the President's State ol (he Union message. Nixon also plans to meet shortly with House Speaker Carl Albert . "I sense the beginning of a greater degree of cooperation with Congress and more of a give-and-take attitude on both sides," Mansfield said. Nixon will send his new message - setting forth his views on critical leglsla· ti on -to Congress Monday. Nixon "'iii urge the lawmakers to hold the line on the 1973·74 federal budget to slow the continuing high rate of inflation, which "'as re-emphasized with a wholesale price report for August today showing record price "'as in fann prod· ucts , among other things. Valley Mothers· To Meet Police Fountain Valley mothers are invited for a Mommg Out session Monday to hear a Fountain Valley Police Depart- ment representative discuss shoplifting and its effect op. the community. •. 'Mte discussion is part of tbe ~tethers' t Morning Out club, a group designed lo give housewives a break in their daily roullne. The meeting will be held at the Fount· ain Valley Community Center, 10200 Slater Ave., from 10 a.m. to noon • .In ad- dition to the officer's comments, the.re \Viii be a fim and a question and answer ' periOO. ~ Baby-sitting service wjll be provided in , an adjacent room for SO cents. • WOODMARK CHAIRS , A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price WOODMARK FEATURES * LUXURIOUS 25 ~. DOWN & 75 % FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL ~. SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRLC *EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLtlSIVE ••. ON DISPLAY NOW LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES START AT $215. DR£XEL-HERITAGEi-HENRE DON-WOODMARK-KARASl AN 7tJ11111 • INTERJ 0 RS - wmtDAYs & SATU•DAYS t.00 le S:IO NIDAY 'TIL t:OO • --• . ' NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCl/Fr; OR.. 642·2010 IOp111 S11M1y 12·1 rlOI LA6UNA BEACH e l•S NORTH COAST HWY. 10,.. S11JIMl1y 12 .. 11JOI 4t4.6111 TORRANCE e ll'4t HAWTHOlNI ILYI>. J71.127t . • ' "· " lh Fl the ;ta lw th ho to 11 ho ol d sl I D la lh es I .. 10 .. ;n to 1· ol b b • h • • l ''.At Your 1Service A Swidily, W«lnelday and Friday Feature Of lhe Dolly .Pilot Got a problem? Thtn Pot Dun·n. Pac : n 11our Q'Ufl· l: . tionJ to Par t. . Dun" I Al our sennc~. Orange Coo.at lllJ Pilot, P.O. Bo% 156(), Cosio. e1a, t.:a., 92626. l nclud'l' ~our ~lcpllone 'NUmb1r. Jt,liijre Jtloblllty Here DEfUl PAT: My parents retired to a mobile home pntk in Florida a few years ago and they ~isilld us thll summer £1>r a driving racation through California. My mother was amated at the number of mobile homes in UUs state, but she Insists there are more trailer and mobile home parks throu~hout the south, especially in F'lorlda. I always thought California led !he nation in mobile home Jiving otatistics. R.C., Fountai n Val!P.y Ca!Uornla doe5 lop Florida lo mobile home and trailer dwelllngs , according to lhc 1970 census. This, state's number of household s llvlng · in mobile dwellings Lotaled 197,504, compared lo Florida's J71,C69. The south bad lbe mo&t mllbile homes , 167,768 ln the regional breakdoW?J of more lbaa ! mllUon American trailer dwellers, but California ranked lint la slate figures. W•n(ed: f'rlnadly· Bu111 DEAR PAT: I'd like to know where I can purchase ladybugs 'and praying mantis. I've heard they can help rid a garden of pests, especially ants and aphids. I'd rather US& "good'' insects than chemical controls. L.0., Dana Point Contact the Bio Control Company, 10183 Lady Bird Drive, Aablll'D, Ca. n.603. Both ladybugs and praying mantiJ clusters are avaUable In various quan- tUles and deUvery Is via air m•li. Rare bit or Rabbit? DEAR PAT: My mother-in-law insists the dish that I've always called Welsh Rarebil is re8.lly named Welsh Rabbit. I've shown her numerous cookbooks with the .. rarebit'' spelling, but she says they a~ Incorrect. It would seem to me there has to be some buis for the spelling J use. J'd like to find out once and for all which of u.s I.! correct. J.T., Newport Beach lf yoar motber-tn-law Is En1Ush, ahe will undoubtedly stick by her 1pelUa1 of tbb dlsb wblch, as you know, ls toasted bread covered with toasted cbeese and topped with mmtard and pepper. Not one bt&e of nbbtt ls lacluded. Blckiroand on this spelllng disagree ment, as stiled in ''How Did It Begin?" by R. Brasch, ls baled on an old Welsh·En~llsb fend. The poor Welsh contryslde lacked almost everytblDc, even rabbits, which were numeron elsewhere, but anaffordllble for tbt Welsh. The dish 11 a "synthetic rabbit" meal made from the cbeaput ID(f'tdleatl avaUable. The Enitlsb d.116 da1nfally called the Welsh oatloaal deJ. lcacy their ''rabbit." The Welshmen In. evltlbly came to resent deeply au tbat wu 111ocltted wltll their "rabbit" and bepa referring to tbe dish a1 1 'Tare- bil" of deUclous food. ' Lemon Club Menaber DEAR PAT: I remember reading about the man who t>Kame so disgwted with his Lin- coln Continental that he burned it and then formed a club for car owners stuck with lemons. I'd like to get in touch with him and join the club! D.C., HuaUngtoa Beach . Edd~ Campos 11 the man you are look· 1.Dg-for. Write to him about bis 11Lemoa CIM" at 13%1 Ironwood St., .I.A H1bra, CaJIOl31. • l\I• Baseball Cards D~R PAT : I sen~ a SS money order March 21 1o Spofl Hobbyi.sl In Delroil, Michigan ror slx ' packetl of baseball cards. I ordered tll!t. lhrough 1963 and 1965 TOPPS cants, bu( they have never arrived and my Jet- teri aren't answered. · S.D., Corona del Mar ne firm hasn't aarwered my letter tltber and there Is no other way to COD• tact It since the only address avaUable 11 1 postal box number. An Orange County club for collectors of baseball cards and other sporb memorabilia bas an active memberahlp of 150 and perbapt )'Od cu arruge a swap to get the cards you wut. Contact John Parks, 431~. for furCher lnfonnatlon. • CJiina Deploys A.tom Rockets LoNOON (UPI) -China has deployed nuClear rocket.• that can reach Moscow anc! moM pa~ of Asia, the Jntemattonal lnstltule for Slraleglc Studies says In ils l1ltllt world defeme survey. II •lso said Thursday the Chlntse have deY<lopcd an lnlel'Cllllilnenlal bolllsilc mlSBile capable or reaching lhe Uniled S1a1e1. . The aurvey, enUiled ''The MlllUifY Balance 1973'74," said China COl\tlnued lo develop her nuclear armor.y while the \ , Soviei Union had one quarter of Its anny 1 dlvision.s concentrated In the Chinese border are ... • -, Ftlday, Stpltmbtr 7, 1'173 H DAIL V PILOT 3 18 Pueblo Navy Men Decorated WASHINGTON !AP) -The Navy lo- day decorated for bravery 18 aew members of thts Lntelllgence-gat~rlng ship Pueblo, captured more than five years ago by the Norµt ,KoreaM. The stup's commanding olfl .. r, Lloyd M. Buchei', now reUred from the Navy, was not among ttiem. The Pentagon said Bucher recom- mended lhe 18 awards and decorations for acUOM on Jan. Z3, 1968, the day North Korean gunboats surrounded and boarded the Pueblo. Secretary of the Navy John Warner ,, . ' • ' . '. said other recommendations for awards for acUons while the crew was ln1· prisoned by the North Koreans are being considered. Pentagon spokesman Jerry \V . Frledheim said the delay in honoring the men resulted fr()m a fear that prisoners held by the North Vietnamese might be harmed If the Pueblo crew was decorated while the Indochina hostilities continued. Many of the Pueblo crewmen wh.:i were honored have left the Navy. Bucher was subjected to an intense in- Ul"IT~ Royalty in Russia Britain's Princess Anne and fiance. Capt. Mark Phillips, attend Eu· ropean Equestrian Championships in Kiev. Her visit to Russia is first by British royalty in half a century. Avco Will Fight Denial Of Condominium Project By CANDACE PEARSON Of 11111 O .. tt Plitt Sl•ff AJ some environmentalists celebrated, Avco Community Developers today prepared to fight in court Thursday's state Coastal Commission denial of a Laguna Niguel condominium project. outer community members blamed Avco's defeat on the con1pany itself, saying it wasn't willing to postpone a decision on the 917-unlt project to allow a compromise. Not one vote was cast in favor of the development inland of Pacific Coast Skyl.ab Statio1i To Be iii Vie ·w Over Soutliland The Skylab space station cootainlng astronauts Alan Bean, Owen Garriott and Jack Lousma will be visible for four minutes toolght. beginning at 8: 18. According IO a schedule prepared by TRW Inc. of Redondo Beach the orbiting laboratory will appear in the north and move to the northeast at an elevation abou t 15 degrees above the horiwn. \Vith the excepUon of next Thursday when the Skylab will pass overhead before sundown, Los Angeles area residents will be able to 1ee the space station each evening next week. The schedule o[ expected sl&btings.is : Saturday: appears at 7:!5 p.m. in the north moving to northeast ln two minutes and 42 seconds at a maximum elevation of 11 degrees. Sunday: appears at 8:20 p.m. in tho northwest, moving to the tut over a period or six minutes and 34 acConds at a nw:imum elevation of 41 degrees. Monday: appears at 7:4& p.m. tn the northwest movtng to the east, visible for six minutes and 29 seconds with a max- imum elev1tlon of 40 degrees. Tuesday: appean 11 8:40 p.m. In the northwest moving to the aoutheast and visible for tlx minutes and 29 seconds, maximum elevation ol 40 degrees. Wednesday: appears at 7:57 p.m. In the northwest moving tO the aouthe.ast and vlalble tQr iii minuter and 48 seconds, maximum elevation o{ 69 c1e.-. Friday : 1ppears al 8: 10 p.m. In lho west moving to the toulh' and visible for four mlnutee and five HCODdl, maximum elevation of 15 degrees. Saturday: appears at 7:27 p.m. in the west moving· to 90uth, visible five minutes and 35 seconds. muimwt) eleva- tion Qf 23 clegnes. HighWay at Crown Valley Parkway. And in their action in San Francisco, the commissioners indicated their reluc- tance to allow any major construction on the few remaining open space areas aJong the Orange Coast. A second permit ro'r 115 single-family homes in Dana Point by Lantern Bay Development Company also was turned do~·n by the commission Thursday. Tu·o other large projects within the 1.000 yard permit zone -the 213-unit ~Ura Costa Villas condominiums in San Clemente and Avco's l,211J..unit oceanside Laguna Niguel development -are up for action at the commission's next meeting. It "'ill be Sept. 19 at 9:30 a.in. at the Hollywood Park Hotel in Inglewood. The state commission's staff noted that Orange County is the most rapidly grow- ing county in the state and that developments like Avco's could have substantial e!fects on air and water quality and on recreational lands. "We are definitely going to court," Avco project manager Ray Peloso said today. "We hope to file as quickly as possible. "Proposition 20 wasn 't designed to cause a moratorium on construction along the coast," he said, adding he thinks the proposition that created the commissions bas done just that. 11It's somewhat discouraging," he said, repeating his previous offer that the atate can still buy the property at a fair price. "We feel the courts are going to be more open-minded ," he said. Avco attomies already have indicated they will try to get the proje<.:ts through on claims they should be exempted Crom the neW' law passed by voters last Noveniber. Now they will sue for the per.mil ablo. Peloso . aaw one encouraging sign at Thunday'a commiMlon meeting. Com· mlssloner Rlchard Wilson said the panel should advocate leglalatlon to allow lower tax aS!eSSments along lhe coast. Dale Secord of the Orange County Environmental Coatltlon said Thursday he would try to gel citizens group! to support such a move. But today. s.conl was hol/1 happy and bitter about Thursday'-t: vote. "They brought It on themselves," he said of Avco. - - Secord, who has opposed Avco Rt com· minions aOO In court, said, "lf they hnd held off tor another two or three weeks, Ibey could've gollen Ii lhroogh.". _ Avco's original plans called for up to 917-unlts on 46 acres within the ocastal zone. The total tract, most of It outside the I ,~ yard line, was 2,418 con· domlniums on 192' acres. • vestigatlon into how he lost the Pueblo, an electronic surveillanc'! s b I p camooflaged as a scientific research vessel . It carried a crew of six officers, 75 enlisted men and two civilians when captured after being flred on by patrol boats and planes. After a year of negotiations, the crew was returned by the North Koreans Dec. 2'l, 1968. The Pueblo remains anchored in a North Korean harbor. One of two Silve r Stars approved by \Varner goes pcsthumously to Fireman Duane Hodges, the only crew member killed during the attack. The other goes to Lt. lj.g.l 1'~rderlck C. Schumacher Jr. of St. Louis, Mo., who has left the Navy. 11le commendation for Schumacher said be led his men in the "destruction of all classlfled materials under his purview." "Through his inspiring leadership, courage an d dedication in the face of hostile fire, he reflected great credit upoo himself and Upheld the highest tradition of the United States Naval Service," it continued. • Prosecutor Protests During a Navy Inqui ry Into Bucher'• actions. critics said the spy ship should never have been 1urrendcred. Three crew members received the Bronze Star t.1edal: Ensign Timothy L. Harris of Juck.soo-..ille, Fla.; Com· munlcatlons Technic4.an 2.C. Peter M. Langenberg of aayton, lt1o., and Signalman 1.C. \Vendell G. Leach of the Naval Comn1unicat1ons Station in Norfolk, Va . The other crew members cited receiv- ed either Navy commendaUon medals or Navy achievement medals. 'Brotherhood' Pair Freed Two men labeled on their arrest as principals in the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug distribution ring allegedly headed by imprisoned Dr. Timothy Leary \\'ere freed late ntursday after serving less than three months of their sen- tences. Orange County Superior Court Judge Raymond Vincent's action, taken under a penal code provision that permits judicial review 120 days after sentencing, brought a howl of protest from prosecutor Jack Ryan .. "He's gone against the report prepared Berkeley School Groups Seeki11g St1·ike Sanctio11 From AP Dispatches With Cupertino and San Francisco already facing scbool-opening problems, Berkeley is trying to slave off a similar situation. Representatives of Berkeley school employe groups are recommending that each participating organization secure a strike sanction. The recommendatiOn, carried in a vote Thursday night, opens the w2y for a possible school strike within two weeks unless an agreement is reached on employe demand'!. They are seeking a 5.75 percent pay hike, a voice in hiring school ad- ministrators and more adequate supplies for classroom teachers and custodians. Some 500 persons attended the meeting sponsored by the Berkeley Alliance of School Employes, a coalition of Berkeley teachers and noocertificated employes. Representatives at the meeting must now convince their organizations that they &hou1d agree not to cross picket lines If a strike is called. Participating organizations included the Berkeley Education Association, Berkeley Federation of Teachers, Local IO of the Public Employes Union Md the Classified $chool Employee Association. In CUl>eftino, more than 100 nOn- teaching employes joined almost 800 teachers today in the Lwo-day-old strike against the 22,000 -student Cupertino Union School District. J\.taintenance employes set up picket lines at 7 a.m., and spokeSmen for the district's remaining 300 c 1 e r i c a I , maintenance and custodial employes said they were expected to follow. The schools continued to operate with substitute teachers and enrollment re- mained about 90 percent for the second day~.school officials said. · The second strike was called by 1.1unicipal Employes Federated Local 101 which rejected a school board offer of a 2 percent raise and a 2 percent cost~·liv· ing bonus. In San Francisco, a settlement has been reached in a strike by school bus drivers which forced some 20,000 elemen- tary grade children to find other ways to class since school opened Wednesday. The 230 striking drivers were to vote on the pro~ agreement today. lf ratified, a union spokesman said, bus service will resume on Tuesday Monday i3 a school holiday. , The settl ement was announced Thurs- day night by lt1ayor Joseph Alioto wbo helped mediate the dispute between United Transportation : Workers Union Local 1741 and the Associated 1.Chartcr But• C-0. Terms ()f the pact were not r disclosed. by the Department or Corrections," com- mented the astonished Ryan. " [ call this an abuse of discretion and frankly I am wondering \\'hY Judge Vincent took such a personal interest in these two men." The two men are James Leroy Crit· tendon, 30, who was living in Long BeacP when arrested, and John Charles Gale. 26, a Laguna Beach surfboard maker \\'ho \\'as marked down in the Grand Jury indictment as a persistent peddler of LSD at rock concerts. Crittendon earlier drew a state priso11 tenn of one to 10 years afte1 pleading gu ilty to possession of dangerous drugs. Gale got Lhe SC1rne prison term after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges. Neither man should start celebrating just yet, the sotnber Ryan warned after Judge Vincent's ruling. Ryan told the judge that he intends to go to the Fourth District Court of Ap- peals to challenge the dismissal action on the grounds that Jt is contrary to evidence and the recommendation ()f the state Department of Corrections. If Judge Vincent's ruling is upheld, it vrlll mean that 18 of the nearly 50 persons indicted by the Grand Jury ten months ago have now been cleared of all charges or had their sentences commuted. Several ol the indictees are still on the run, with police throughout the nation still keeping their eyes peeled for the man they describe as "Mr. Big" in the ronsplracy -3(1().pound Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist, 30. He was last seen in late 1972 in the Hawaiian Islands. Lawmen said Crittendon came next in order below Leary and Andrist and iden- tified him as the man who peddled 250.000 LSD tablets in one transaction. They said Gale was best koown to them . as a "traveling druggist" "ho, toured Southern california rock concert.a distributing free samples ()f LSD to young onlookers. Both men were said to be confidanta of Dr. Lear-y. 50, the LSD cultist who is DOW' serving 8. t.erm in Fblsom Prison. GREEN HAVEN • Sunahine for your prden MARIGOLDS Flrat Lady, Gol4 H....,, 29' Flfftroclr:IH. Su11Mf, etc. 9t. R-.. 69c Showy summer flower VINCA Ev.ritlfffl!l'"J •• ._ colcir99' ... Mnlen, """' Mc., Gol. ht· 1.fl R1inbows of Color PETUNIAS ...llfff11I bl00Mi11t phtMI 39' 111 •II colon fer edl'y .. ,._ , .• ro11y. R-.. 7fc Natur•I Organic Fertili'ler GRO POWER Per fl._.,., IGWM, trMS. c...r.ln •• 11111iso•, lllMC· ricid91, sl116te1, etc. 25 lb. $445 NAME BRAND PATIO CLEARANCE TROPITONE $114'5 1 rlec:• Set ,.---. · • ..,. 5222.00 • "' ••••••••..•••••• TROPITONE Y2 .&110"*4 d.lrs a 1•»"9" 111tk• ., ... 2123 Newport Blvd,, Costa Mesa ,..._ H2o410J - N"'"'Y '4&.JtJI OPIH -1 DAYS SUNDAY I TO l r)O-DAILY 7:JOTO 6 ELECTRIC HG. $9995 BAR·B-QUE ""·".ow srlCIAL I.ARLY IUY DRIFTWOOD GAS LOGS $19'5 .... SJt.tS • I I ( • ' ' • . 4 Oll t V PILOT Friday, Srpttmbtr 7, 1qn Terrorists Threaten to Drop 5 Arabs • . .Seeks Dlvoree Sea n Connery, known best for his roles in James Bond rnov· ies, is suing actress Diane Cl· lento for divorce. Con~.,.43, married M.iss Cilento 1n 1962, the year before he played se· cret agent 007 in 'Dr. No.' The couple separated 18 months ago. KUWAIT (UPI) -Five Pale1Unlaa guenillas who have thrf:ateaed to throw their five Saudi Arabian diplomat hostages out of an airliner la fUgb& agrud Friday to leave Kuwait for an ua· nanttd Arab NU.Dtry, the Middle East News Agency sald. BEffiUT, Lebanoo (AP) -Palestinian gunmen seeking the release of a guerrilla leader from a Jordanian prison released four crewmen from a Kuwaiti plane to- day, but still held onto five Arab hostages, a Kuwait radio broadcast said. The release came as the Palestinians resumed bargaining with Kuwaiti ol· ficials over their demands. The five gunmen returned to Kuwai t earlier wilhout carrying out their threat to throw the five Saudi Arabian hostages out of a circling airliner one by one. TIIE PALESTINIANS had taken orr a Kuwaiti airliner to circle Riyadh, the Saudi Arabian capital. They said unless the Kuwait govenunent assured them it would arrange for the release within 12 hours of guerrilla leader Abu Daoud, they would first drop the hostages of Riyadh and then would blow up themselves, the plane and its four Kuwaiti crewmen. An infonnant at the Kuwait airport said the gunmen on!ettd the plane bock to the Persian Gulf she.lkdom after the KuwaJt control tower told them no govenunent ofiicial could be reached to receive their ultimatum becat.15e tt was Friday, the Mookln aabboth. The source saJd the gunmen were "furious!y insisting" on radio contact . with Kuwait's defense minister, Sheikh Saad Abdullah el Salem, or some other top government official. The gunmen and their hostages arrived in Kuwait early today from Paris aboard a Syrian airliner. Sheikh Saad told them he could not gua rantee to obtain Abu Daoud's release, and ' the Palestinians ac- cepted his offer of a Kuwait Airlines Boeing 707 jet to take them to Riyadh, since the Saudi government might have more influence with the Jordanians. MO~IENTS BEFORE Iakeolf, the gun· men radioed their uJtimatum to the con· trol tower, Abu Daoud is serving a life sentence for plotting to overthrow King Hussein. Jordan's foreign minister refused on Thursday to arrange for his release. The gunmen, reportedly led by a 35- year-old Jordanian doctor, had held 15 persons captive in the Saudi embassy in Paris but Jet nine of them go before leav- Ing the Frencb capital Thursday ar- ternoon. So\lfC<S at the conrerenoe of oooaUgned nations in Algiers said the 8audi govern. m.enl had expressed disapproval lo the French government because it let the terrorists get aWay with the Saudi hostages. But French officials said the Saudi ambassador in Palis agreed to the arrangements . The Palestinians entered the embassy shortly after it opened Wednesday JnC11r ing, took it over and demanded that Abu Daoud be freed and that they be given a plane to fly them to an Arab capital. AT FIRST they said they wanted to fiy to Algiers, where most Arab chiefs of state are attending the oooaligned. COO· rerence. But the Algerian government was embarrassed by such an incident while it was host to a major inte:matiooal gathering and indicated it would not allow the terrorists to land. Although Abu Daoud is a leader of Al Fatah, the largest of the Palestinian guerrilla organizations, Al Fatah chief Yasir Arafat and· the leaders of all other major guerrilla groups repudiated the terrorists and said they had no con. nection w i t h their organizations. But President Hafez Assad of s y r i a personally ordered a Caravelle jet of the Syrian Airline to take them and their hostages to the Middle East. During their flight to the Middle East, Illinois ln1n .ates Free Hostages After Th.reat JOLIET, Ill. (AP) Rebelling : prisoners at Stateville Penitentiary : released IO hostages and returned to : their cells after officials threatened to ~ send in state police with tear gas. Their demand for amnesty was denied by Gov. Daniel \Valker, but they were ('-_IN_SH_OR_T_._· ·~) promised there would be "no reprisals in terms of brutality." The prioners seized control of a cellblock Thursday, taki ng 10 guards hostage during the -noon lu nch hour. With r iot-equipped police standing by, the in- mates yielded eight hours later to Vi'alker's demand that no negotiations u·ou /d ta ke place until the hostages were released. e 'EHd of LiHe' \VASHINGTON (UPIJ-Former mine union chief W, A. "Tony" Boyle said Thursday he is iMocent of state and federal charges he ordered the assassina- tion of his rival, Joseph A. "Jock" Ya- blonski, foui years ago. Boyle was arrest- ed Thursday by the FBI after the indict- ments were handed down. "This is the end of the line." said Richard A. Sprague, the special pros-- ecuto!' in the case. "I do not expect any more arrests ... This is where the case began, and this is where it ends ."' e l\'lxoJl Tapes \VASHTNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on's fight to keep Watergate tape recordi ngs secret has reached a tederal appeals court, which agreed to hear the case in an unusual nine-judge session next \\•eek. White House lawyers Thursday asked the U.S. Circuit Court to nullify U.S. District Judge John J . Sirica's demand to listen to the tapes, which are sought as evidence by th e Watergate grand jury. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Daily, Pilot is 9uaranteed MolMl•l'·l'rld•Y: If YOU d• ... , ll•Y• ,,...,, P•11tr •Y S;H p.m., c•ll ·~· YtUr c•Pr will k •reug/11 rt y.u, t•ll~ ••• 1i11t11 wnul 1:)1 fl,m. S•tv.-11 '"d S1111d1y: II yo11 ... not rnt1¥t rour (•PY •v ' •.m, S1111nur. •r 1 1.m. Sv11d1f, <•II 111d 1 copy will IN f>r't\19ftl tt you. C•ll• l rt l•~tn 1111111 10 1,m, T tltplionts Mo1t Ot1119~ Ctunlf ,lt11• """' 6.41.(#1 Ntt!hw11t 1'111nllllfl1n lt•C~ 111d l'V••lml11t11r --· ,, ...• J.*lllf S111 tl1"'1!11t1, C1p111r1"" B11c~. !>111 J11•11 Cl,illrtno, 01111 Pt lnt, Stulh L1g11111, l•flHll Nlf11tl .... tJl·4Uf The appeals court gave Sirica and Special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox until next Monday noon to reply to the While House arguments that the courts have no txnver over a president. A hearing was set for Tuesday at 1 p.m. e Sun Blasts HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts today photographed a mam· moth eruption of gaseous energy off the surface of the sun that appeared to be even larger than a giant explosion they saw Thursday. Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma all rushed to the con· trols of Skylab's battery of solar observat· ion instrumen ts to reeord the Oare, which scientists on the ground classed with the largest of the mighty explosions. e Airline Bid SEATTLE (AP} -Agreement on a new contract for Western Airlines pilots was reached minutes before a midnight strike deadline, the Airline Pilots Association'" announced early today. The association's local vice president, Dick Welsh, said terms of the two-year agreement were being withheld until the final language could be worked out. Henley Charged In 2 Additional Texas Murders HOUSTON' (UPI) -Two more murder indictments have been returned against a teen-ager '!tcUsed in the sex and torture slayings of 27 young men. The Harris County grand jury Thurs· da y indicted Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, in the deaths of Homer Garcia, 15, and Frank Aguirre. 19, both of Houston. HENLEY NOW {aees m u r d e r in~ dictmen ts in six of tile slayings. He ls ac- cuSed of assisting Dean Corll , a bachelor electrician, in the killings ovet a three- year period. Garcia's body was one ol four unearth- ed last month near Lake Sam Rayburn in East Texas. He vanished last July 17 while hitchhiking in Houston. Aguirre disappeared Feb. 24, 1972, v.·hile on his way to work. His body was uncovered on a remote stretch of beach near High Island, Tex., along with the bodies of five other young men. The bizarre tale of murder became known when Henley told police Aug. 8 be shot and kl.lied Corll at a dru g and sex party after Corll threatened him and two companions. Tops in V.S. Posing wi th their trophies are the talent and swimsuit winners in the Miss America Pageant, under way in Atian_tic City, N.J. In swimsuit is Miss Washington, Leslie Ann Mays and the talent winner is singe r Debbie Ward, Miss Louisiana. Two Delia-soaked States Might Still Save Crops GALVESTON. Tex. (AP) -Orficials hoped today they could salvage most of the rice and cotton crops in water-logged areas of Texas and Louisiana as Tropical Stonn Delia, reduced to a mere depression, abandoned its seige of the two states. Observers reported remnants of ,the stonn, which triggered deluges of rain after coming back ashore early Thurs. day, drifted into Mexico early today. IN HER WAKE Della .left potentially severe crop losses in southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana, and high water which chased hundreds from homes near the upper Texas coast. Four deaths were reported attributable to Delia. Texas Agriculture Commissioner John White said rains spawned by Delia hit hard at crops in 21 counties where about three-fourths of a $60 million cotton crop and about a fifth of a $60 million rice· crop are yet to be harvested. As much as 10 inches of rain !ell in rice-growing areas of Texas and Louisiana. "If the rains stop and the sun comes out, much of the rice crop will straighten up and can be harvested," White said. New Englan~ Areas Lashed The rain had stopped 1n U:>ulsiana. but Rep. John Breaux said be was inves-- tigating the need for federal aid to rice Canners. Forecasters cancelled flash flood alerts today for 4Q counties in central to west . ' Tor1iado Touclies Down in Mancliester, Con1i. Temperatures cool m<1rl111 1lr In ltJ wekt, Tiit wnltter 11r11lt• Mid hlgri1 wtitcll i'NCl>ed II Thu•sd•1 In dawr!IOWll LOI llnotol11, wlll r1r.oe atvn:1<1v from !If.tr 10 along Ille bff<M• end rr, "" -~ .. 1 .. , fo "''' to In tt>t In 11>11 vtlllyl t nd JO IO 110 In ""'dtstrh. Al~"V ""'"'' !IOSIOfl 8 11tf<1la CNo11e,lon Chlc<IO'O Clnt;l"n•U Cl•wlend Oe"ver Otlroll Honol11h1 "~"" lncll•ntDOlls '1ck1onvll1e 1n1~1 Clly L•s Vt11<11 Lltne ltotk L:f.:ltvltrt M~mr MlfWIU.lkff Mfflnt1Mll .. St. Ptvl Ntw Ollltt"' Ntw Yoo-k O~lthon'!t Cl!y Omt!\I P1lm S11rl1191 il"fllll!MIDPtlt ,.i.p.,.,~ 1'111="' "'11 • QA:, 111'1(11~ SI, Loul• Sall ~lkt City t<t11 r111t;h<o "''"'-Tllt1m1I Hlt ll low n " " 10 " " " ~ M n ,. " • " " " " " .. .. .. " " " " " .. " •• ll ·~ .. ,, ll " ,, " " ,, • " ~ !l .. .. .. " '" " .. .. '" ,, " ~ " !.1 " .. " ,. " " .. .. ·ii "' ''· ·" ·" .... ' .11 .n . ~ ,. ·" ""wt •11fl t tOIOC.ASI • €aHfornla .. l lGIMf·----~ flltAIN l;•,;;;li..ow ~ .._ ..... l.£l.:J SllO'W't tt ._, 11 OW Lowa will INI ffOM ~ 111 COflJtal set llont to 1"-.M)s 1nd mid 50s In lllt mounltlns. lJ.S. Summary Texas. • THE WARNINGS baa gone up as the depression, stalled much JA Thursday evening near San Angelo, dropped rains measuring up to four inches across much of west Texas. Weather experts said there sUll were prospe<:ts for flooding ralrui ln the Big Bend country or Car welt Texas. The dowpours aiao stopped today in the Jtouston area, where tome 1111:Aaban residents who w.ere evacuated rtom their homes early Thursday began to wade back. "" overtaxed rivers and creeks in southern secllom DI Texas coollnlled to overflow into low areas. The sltuaUon was not expected to fnlirove · much before the flrst of next week, officlalJ said . Prop. l Foe Named LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tho chairman or the C.llloml• Education Congreas. Jane Fiala . or Vlsali•, 'Thursday was named acting chaitman or a group op. )J08ing the tax and spending liIJlltatloo ii> Iflatlve. · '• • • A F LIBYA R C A . . • U.S.S. R. SAUDI ARABIA : GUERRILLAS ROUTE MARKED FROM FRANCE TO KUWAIT \ Take Circuitous Trip Acro11 the Middle East the tbreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, nection ·with the gunmen. Kuwa\!, Syria lllld Iraq met with Jorda· nian Foreign Minister Abdul Hamid Sharai at the Algiers c:oolerence to try to persuade his govenwnent to free Abu Daoud. Shand pointed oot that all the major guerrilla groups had denied any con· Ffs.hting Bitter HOW COULD Abu Daoud be turned over to persons who might tum out lo be J~raeli agents?" Sharar was reported to have said. The Syrian plane made a 55-min.ute refueling stop in Cairo, and the terrorists let the t\\'O Syri'an hostessrs get off. Khmer Rouge. Rebel s Enter City, Thrown Back . From Wire Servi<ts PHNOM PENH -communist • led Khlner Ro\lge rebels swarmed through the southern ball or Kompong Cham io. day, but reinforced government !l'OOps pushed them out in a nigh~ ol. Ditter Bullets Fly In Apartment Fray; 3 Die DETROIT (UP I) -Three men were killed Thursday night in a shooting spk!e at a higbriJe apartment buildiog where the l<Oal!ls include Leooard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers Unioo, and Jim Campbel, general man· ager of the Detroit Tigers. Stray bullets from the shootings on the 16th floor of the 27·story building near the heart of downtown Detroit pierced the walls of adjacent .apartmebts. Pedestrians outside thought they were being ftred L1poD by snipers. WOODCOCK LEFT the building under police escort shortly after the shootings, which happened shortly before 3 p.m. (PDT). The three victims were pronounced dead at the scene by the Wayne County Medical Examiner's office. A fourth man suffered injuries from broken glim, and his hands were "pretty badly cut up,'' a police spoke.mum said. Two men were arrested, including the tenant in lhe $47~a·month three-bedroom apa rttne!lt wheTe the !booting occutTed, Robert Lee Ridgeway, 51. Two women were also being questioned. by police. Ridgeway was quot..i as telling police he killed the three men when they drew revolvers on him after he adm1tted them to his apartment. CAMPBElL, WHO rents an apartment across the hall from where the shootout occurred, said a bullet slammed into the wall just eight Inches from his h•ad, land· ing in the middle of a baseball pictµre and spraying plaster acroe:s his dining room table. "I wis going to have a drink and then eat dinner,'' he said, "and then all of a sudden I heard this noise and there was dust on my head. - "I got down on my hands and knees , crawfed over and called 'the pollce, They (apartment residents) were screaming, 'Don't !hoot, don't shoot!" fi ghting, military sources said. Heavy fighting also was reported near Phnom Penh and the airport vlas shelled. TIIE COJ\UtfU~'ISTS temporarily !leii· ed the city's market, university and city hospital and fought a bitter battle in the st reets only a re,v yards from the governor's residence. the sources said. Some government troops \\·ere sur- roWlded, but fought their way out and recaptured the three positions, the sources said. Fresh troops ~·ere no~'Tl in by helicopter and helped in the coun· terattack, sources saj d, The sources said government troops were backed by artillery, mortar fire and close air support from the tiny Cam· bodian a i r force, the first t ime th e government's propeller-driv'1' T2Bs were used in cl~support operatiOns since the halt or Ameriqn bombing Aug. tS. High Command spokesman Col. Am Rong described the situation at ooe point as "grave." The road between the city and its airport -a single blacktop strip -was also cut. THE COMMUNISTS have surroonded Kompong Cham, a market center and once Cambodia's third biggest city for 3*' weeks. The city sits on the Aiekong River. Military sources said four government troops were wounded shortly after daY.11 today in a Communist mortar attack against Phnom Penh's Pocherrtong air· port. On Highway 4, Phnom Penh's overland link to its sole deepwater seapart, 700 government troops backed by 40 tank.like annored personnel Can'iers, were unsuc- cessful in a new attempt to open the road today. The highway has been cut since Aug. 26 'and the government has tried for a week to break through. In South Vi etnam fighting, government troops opened fire before dawn today on a company of about 100 Viet Cong troops assembling 12 miles west of Saigon, the government azmounced. "Govemment artillery wa s directed in· to the area to prevent the enemy from concentrating in that area," U . Col. Le Trung Hien, the government's chief military spokesman told the daily press briefing. IDEN SAID the number of Viet Cong casualties was not known because "y,·e haven't received the results of tbe artillery fire yet." Jt was the first time since the January cease-fire that the South Vietnamese govemment had admitted opening fire without the Viet Cong or t · ie North Viet· nru;nese shooting first. D .anky, Pa11ky? GSA Probes Federal Love Nest w ASillNGT6N (UPI) -The General Services Administration (GSA) Th~rsday said It ls investigating hanky.panky at the State De- partment ....,. speciilcally, a janitor's closet on the. third Ooor appar. ently used by employes as a lover's rendezvous . · THE INVESTIGATION was confirmed by press of!icer Paul Hare at tbil department's regular news lirtefln~. The reporter whp asked about It said .he had been Upped by a White House 1ource. , The room ls In the section oe<:upied by the Agency for Inter- national Jll!velopment (AID) . The State Department posted guards at all enlntnCA!s to the building In the early 1960's, after several women emplbyes com. plained· of attacks by molesters In the department parking Jo~ bQt any employe with a pass would have no trouble getting past the guards and flndlng an empty room in the building. ' ' THE BUILDING IS largely deserted On Saturdays. Most of the building's olllces usually are left unlocked, although classified documents are locked In file cabinets at the end of the work day and Marine guards~ make a security check of the entll'I! building ID the early ev•lllni·-_ -· ' I ' r N d a I ~ 1 j ~ ,, • t • ~ t l ) '. • ' • I • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 250, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY , SEPTEMBER 7, 1973 N TEN CENTS Newport to Reopen Apartment Density Issue By JOHN ZALLER Of Ill• Deity l"llet Stall Planning commluioners voted Thurs- day to conduct'bew'hearings to consider revoking all a)>artment wning in the Newport l}e;ac.h;general plan. The 4·2 decisiop follows 'an order to the cofnmission last:. 'week from the city coimcU to c0nslder liml!IOg all new deYelopment in the;city to Olght units per a~. The current ~ensity limit tA 16 units per' acre for aparlments. * * * n ·ensity Cutback Po00ered What would it mean if density in Newport Beach ls limited to eight dwel- ling . units per acre on· all future developments. The suggestion, set for public hearing ....-by the planning commission later this me.nth. would mean the virtual end to . apartnient construction in the city, ac- cording to city officials. But it \\'OUiu have almOS! no effect on most single family developments. The Park Newport apartments, for ex- ainp1e, have a density ol nearly 25 units per acre. 1be Versailles apartments, on the bluffs overlooking West Newport, have a density of abo ut 21 unlts per acre. Jl'he general plan for the city, as revis· ed by the city council two _months ago, riow limits density to 15 uruts per acre. Tbef.efore, bit complexes like Park Newport ud Versailles are already ruled Of1 !or the lulllre. :Jlut the ..W Haywood apartu*11' at ~ ::i~~~~c::= .,,,.,t on Superior ·A-eocll have c!!!!sitles 'Of about 13· units per acre, ud ~Id still be possible under esi1Wig erdioanoeS. -However if the density is lowered to eight units1per acre, as is now suggested. the. highest density development... would compare to the existing Bluffs proJect on the east 1lde ol Upper Newport Bay. Slngie family homes woold not be al· fected. some like those in Eastbluff, are •J sparse as three units per acre, and eyen the relatively dense cameo SOOres ind Irvine Terrace ams still ~out to abolll five to six units per acre. 'Ille pro. -1 •llo excludes duptu lots, Iii<• those oo ·Balboa Island which have deaslUes •1've 30 units per acre. * -{:? * Homeowners Win ~ Delay on Bluffs Gondomi~iums 1 band ol Corona del'lolar bomeOWllel'S lWll a 4·2 decision from the Newport Bech PlaMlng COmmlnsion 1bJnday tolbold up construction ol an llkmtt coo- domlnium project on the blulll overlook· tni Newport:Harbor. ~mlssloneta refused approval to the pfdject despi,te a staff report that ~d t~ project conformed to all city ordin- ·~r decision was applauded bY home- owliers in the audience w~ had argued tbit the tbree-sl<>rY condQrvintums -Id block their harbor views, ahr.f,surround-1"' •ingle ramlly homes, and Increase ttarflc congestion in the area. '"'*' decisloo lj> delay tWe l>tOpooal wu made on the adinllledlY narrow grounds tbal an envtromen!Bl .Impact. statement ro0 the propecl is inadequate. Commissioners also refused Thursday night to 'approve a Corona del Mar con· dominium projett even though it met the city's existing density codes. Several commis.tjoners indicated those density li~ts might change in the next few months.. But in voting to hold hearings on the apartment density issue, commissioners made clear that Urey would not necessarily invoke lighter density limits. "~e are opening Up .the wl)olc ques- tion." said Commission C h a i r m a n William Agee , who voted with the four- man majority. "But we may close iL up again without doing anything after a public hearing," Agee added. The ci ty council order, which passed on a 4.3 vote, was proPosed by councilrilan Carl Kymla, who argued that large developers have had "their piece of .the action" in Nev.rport Beach aJ)d now ·the city has, to Worry about the" long range U,I lelePftoto, HEADING FOR TROUBLE OVER TEl:EPHONE TAPES? Henry Kl11fng9r at Senate Committee Confirmation ·Hearing K~~inger ·Defends Taps Far National Security • \VASHlNGTON 1.4.P) -Testifyi ng to- day on tiiJ nomination to be Secretary of State,. Henry A. Kissinger $1efended the wireta pglqg of several aides as painful but ne.cesiary to protect national securi-ty,. ' • \ ' The "bugging'' issue and the fact that Kissinger would keep his White House job added' a note of discord to the hear- ings hela·by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in the same large caucus room ·that housed the Watergate probe. nte chairman, Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D- Ark.), told Kissinger the 'wiretapping of 17 Nixon administration officials, in- cluding members of the National Securi· ty Council staff, 'tests the ''mutual irust" th-0 nominl!e . P)edged in the sbapUl'g or roreisrt po11ey •. And ·Sen. C1l!lwd P .. case (R,N.J.J, sajd he ·""°'!led the .,,;~~".would not proceed until ·the FBI t~-over to It a repqlt ol ttle wllelapp!ni· Klallnger sald was c:ooducted bet..,.,. May 11189 and February i971. ~ , _ Fulbright•. said he would• call an ex·· ecut~~ Seasion of the committee.Monday ' . ' and ask Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson to submit a summary report Oil the "'iretaps. · Sen. Charles Percy (R-111.), expressed concern about "the civil liberties of the J 7 individuals." !l<lt Fulbright.said he believed that the "civil liberties of the wiretapped in- dividuals have already been com- promised," and that Richards!>!' would be given an opportunity to ekpress any reservations he had about the civil liberties question. This could seriously dela y Kissinger's coofirmation by entangling it in a larger, legal dispute between branches of the goverpment. FuJbri&bt announced that the Justice Department declined to provid~ ~with requested data on Richard Moose, a staff member of the committee who wQrked for the security council. And Kissinger declined to di9Close · details Of the wiretapping to the committee, even in secret. · "It would not be fair to discuss in- (See KISSINGER, Page %) effects or too many apartments. In voting to set public hearings for Sept. 27, cominissioners; in effect, reopened the land use and residential growth elements of the city's new general plan. Work on those two elements \Vas com· pleted in June following 18 months or study and pub lic hearings. Votlrg to re-open hearings were Chainnan Agee, and Commissioners Joseph Rosen.er. Don Beckley, and \Villiam fl aze\vinkeL Commissioners James }'>arkcr and Jackie Heather voted no. "I don't think Councilman Ky1nla of- fered us any new evidence as to why \\IC should reopen the density question after all the time we already spent on it." Mrs. I-leather said." .. I think that af ter 1a or 20 public hear- ings the whole subject has been reviewed arnply," Parker agreed. ' "The council di rected us to consider the e_!ght-unit density limi t," he \\'cnt on. .. But \re don't need a public hearing to do that. \Ve cou!d reconsider it right now and decide that \VC don't think changes 11·ould be a good idea." Con1missioner Beckley d i s a g r c e d , arguing that the commission could not disiniss ti ghter density reg u I at i o ns \l'ithout n1ore study to determine the ef· feet liiniling aparttnents might have on (See DENSITY, Page 21 Prices Soaring Highest Wholesale Rise in 27 Years WASHINGTON (UPI ) . -Wholesale prices rose 5.8, percent in August, the big- gest advance in a single month since 1946, ·the government reported today. Farm prices, freed from the restraints of the price freeze, also shot up by 23 U.S. JOBLESS RATE SCOOTS UP IN AUGUST, Page 14 percent -more than 1hree times the previous record for a single month. Grain _p.Jif~ and many anim.al feeds increased dramatically --in the case of grain by 70 percent. This was viewed as an ominous sign for shoppers.at the meat market because farmers paying higher costs for feed 'Emerge11cy' . _frot.edures Outlined Newport Beach acted properly and fol- lowed established procedures in clearing the beaches August 18, when they were \va rned th at a noxious gas cloud wa s drifting toward Orange <A.>unty, City Manager Robert L. Wynn said today. Wynn said the Police Departfnent will still make several changes in its proce- dures as a result of the incident, that alarmed thousands of citizens up and down the coast. He said they will advise radio and television media before using public ad- dress systems "in order to red uce the number of inquiry calls to tbe police statioo." Secondly, they will prepa.re specific guidelines for the statioo Watch Com- mander on the \vording of any such pub- lic announcement. And, Wynn sa id. the department \Viii "determine the proper flying altitude and volume level necessary for clear an· nouncements from the police helicopter." However, Wynft stressed, "all indica- tions are that the county and city staffs followed established procedures and the situation was handled properly in light ·oi the information available." ' Wynn explained the departmerit was first alerted to the gas cloud erupting in Carson -which never even l'eacbed the county -by the newly established Or· ange County Communications. Center. ';In acco rd with county procedures,"' Wynn said, "the communications· center broadcas t thi s information to all police, fire and highway pal.ro{ offices in the county. "Control One \Vas in contact with the Los Angeles Sheriff at the scene or the incident," Wynn said. "Control One is the central disseminat- ing point for alJ communications of an emergency nature. However, the ·center does not tell local authorities what to do with the infonnation. The decision-mak- irig remains with the agencies. usually pass the burden along to con- sumers. The wholesale price report by the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics came five days before the 'scheduled lift- ing of ceilings on beef prices and bore.. out predictions b y Administration economic officials last month. The report brought an instant detlun· ciation of Administration economic policies by AFL-CIO President George Meany. He called the latest figures ''beyond belief.-" The BLS said the overall, unadjusted in- crease in whollsale prices of 5.8 percent in August was the highest surge for any month since July 1946. The rise that $225,000 Plan month was 10.7 percent, reflecting an in- flationary pattern that followed World War II. The August increase, when adjusted for seasonal fa ctors, was put at 6.2 per- cen t -largest trike for any month since the government began taking seasonal considerations into account in 1947. August wholesale prices stood 19 per· cent above the level of August, 1972. The big August wholesa le price rise followed an unusual 1.3. percent decline in July, when nearly all commodities were constrained by the freeze. Administration economists said at the lime that the price freeze caused this and predicted a surge after most restrictions on food (See PRICE JUMP, Page%) NewpO.rt"·Manager Urges Expansion of City liall By L. PETER KRIEG Of 11141 o.llY ,llDt St"' City Manager Robert L. Wynn today announced a proposal to expand Newport Beach .City Hall that would cost tax· payers $225,000 next year. Councilmen had instructed Wynn to prepare the proposal ·as they reviewed the 1973-74 City budget. Wynn's proposal involves the con- struction of a 30 by 40-foot addition to the northwest wing of the existing main building; expansion of the city council chambers, and remodeling and ex- panding the existing police _quarters for offices for the Community Development Department and city attorney. .- In addition. he Proposes the demolition of two small structures at the back of the existing police facility. Police will be moving to a new head· quarters on Jamqoree Road next year. Wyrm said there will also be a need for additional expansion within five years to provide more room for o t h e r departments. That. he s'ays, would cost an additional $128,000. Wynn said the 1,200-square·foot finance department expansion that would include air conditioning would cost $32,800. Expansion in remodeling of·the council chambers would cost $59,100 and the remodeling and the $9,300 expansion of (Ste P!µJPOSAL, Page 21 Newport Rock Concert Accounts 'Conflicting' Newport Beach police and the pro- moter of the Aug. 24 rock concert at Newport Harbor High School today issued conflicting accounts of the event and the planning that went into it. Police Chief B. James Glavas, in a report issued. to councilmen , says his staff tried (or a week to have the Newport· Mesa Unified School District "r~ evaluate its approval of the event.'' However, Michael R. Lawler, the event's promoter, said he worked "in a cooperative atmosphere" with police the v1eek before the event and said Police Capt . Richard Hamilton told him "this is the kind {)f thing needed in Newport Beach." -« police. Glavas also said the concert was terminated early at the po I ice department 's request. Lawler said it was stopped at 11:30 p.m. -an ho u r ahead of schedule - because a member of one of the bands (See CONCERT, Page %) Oruge Cout • • Weather w h 11 e commlM,loners \Dlanlmously praised the project 83 an ••ex~llen~'' one they left little doubt that a prime ts- iui In their minds was dc~ity -an Is- sue thAt t.hey were £orbldden by law to C(ll¥lkter since the. proposal confonns 10 Purloiner Pirates Plants Glavas' report also says Lawler had hired 10 private security guards an~ five New'port Beach police to patrol Davidson field the night of the event. Lawler said he hired 20 guards, besides the uniformed The Los Angeles \Veather Service secs a foggy \Veekend for Orungc Coast residents and visitors, clear· ing by mid-afternoon. Highs will rang~ from the mid·70s at the beaches to the IO\V 80s inland. all,J?xlsting city density reglllatlons. ,,. ·~ftl'his is an excellent plan/' t1aid Com- mliaioner Joseph Rosener. ' Dul we have &on directed by the city council to look lillo denstty. . ,•~ thl.nk it would be unfair lO hold up . me projects over density (the Big ~yoo development ol the Irvine Com-Plal'>' and at the same lime lei other> ci lhl'®''"' • 8, Richard Hacan, dirootor o! -munlty d"°'opmont , ,.minded co111mlS8l°""" lb6t the ~ntum pr0Ject oonlormed al JI' dty~densltY· rules and. that lhe. ""'1m1Jslon could not deny the project °"' ....... ds that 115 density was too hl~h. 'Asslstadt City Attorney Dave Baade . 'blOl<ed up 1!ot1,n'1 oplolOA.• saying that ·11 ·Ille envtionmen~al i!ppacJ. 1taitmenl IO<'ihe project wll 1ccOptab\e0thM:om- 'mllslea. bad UtUe 'chc>lce blll to approyo . tSooDJIUY, .... J ' ..... _ --\ ·I Laguna Plagued by Tliefts Fro1n Yards, Por~hes By JACK CHAPPELL -Cit ... 'b .... ,. .. lt•ll ls there a creeping Charley la your front yard? oo you have a spicier plant hangina from your porch beams? Do you have 'a pllnted crock, or pot oo display outside! II '°"you 'l)•Y hllve trouble.' Lag1111a Bead\ Is and has been the hep. • 1)3, heistinl ground !or a goiled plan,! thief. ' Jri "the last' tine monthl, scads or stolen Potted plants have been reported to Laguna Beach police. It's suspected . many more .g.o unreported as residents ju.&:t.,.~:i want to go lo the trouble or contacting· lawmen; .. • ttowever, one lady recently went to the expense and trouble of placing a class10ed ad pleading !or the return or ber C...plng Charlie. Mos! ol the thefts involv.e pillering o! hanging or potted plants sitting in plain view on private property in residential neighborhoods. Most thefts have becn-1mall, although .r;evtral have. involved plants value(! at moro than ISO. "'l1lls is not iomethlng we're taking lightly," Laguna Beach Del. Tony Smith said Thurstay . "We've gone to the trouble of con- tacUng other agencies. We're not the on- ly one plagutd with this. All the bcacb ciUeo m Involved,'' Smith 11ld. ~· ' He speculated the pltated plants wer~ being hustled ofr to swap meets, or taken to the roadside plant stores where they are sold. ., ")l's hard to ld~nU!y stuff like this unless the publlc puts special markings on the PQtS. This ls quite a problem. It's going lo be. a hard one to solve,'' he said. "It would be a very difficult thing ~to prove that somebody took somebody else's geraniuftls and put them in a dif- ferent pot. . "What we have is somebody taking ad· vant age of a popular item that is readily accessable for theft. • "We've had th<m taken ofr front porches1 from f~nt yards. back yards IS.. TIUEF' Page II l l Freeze on Beef Lifted Earlier WASHINGTON (AP) -TheC..lo! Liv- ing C.ouncil thl.s afternoon ord~~ed ·a 10- to 30-percent cutback tn scheduled price increases for 1974 automobiles. tt also lifted lhree days early the rreeie 011 beef prices. · · 1'~ council finnounced a numbe r or r ntajor actions under the new Phase 4 and-inflation . program, including .new rood regulations t:o go into elfect along will) lifting or th-0 price ceilings on bed at midnight Sundiy, Instead or Wed .. •· day as originally ICll<duled. - ,\ INSWE TODAY Celebrities will play tennis /pr clw1'ity ihis weeke11d i'ri J"../ew- porC Beach. The eve''' Uikt s place i-n the Balboa Bay Club. See today's WrekendeT for de· tails. Al Y.ur hrvltt ) Movltt ll·U L.M. .... ' Mui••! ,ullft It 16-llllf ' H•lloMI New• t C•Mltfl!Jm S C: i.1ilflN U.• Ortfttt CllVllf)' 7 fttt!H r•nt1 tN1 Col'nlct It S1NIA ,.,ttr lJ crn,wonl n Olwtrctt ' ,,_,., .. ,.. SIKll Mtrtltlt 14-IS E•l .. rl•t ,... I y·,1tv•m11 ,, FlMMt 1)-U l'tr tM lt1Ktrlf 1 TbMten '1.U WNfhef' 4 ...... «.... ,, W-..i's ...... IJr>lf Afln Ltllll"' 1' Mtllllt K •, ' WWl4...... t w........ ,, .. ' I -. . . ' I 1 l ,, •' .I • 2 DAILY PILOT N Frldayi Stpltrnbtt 7, 1971 Age No Bounds Groom, 19, Marries Woman, 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A 19-year-old Bakersfield '!Ilan says "age does not matter" in his marria$e to a widow b.ali 1 :entury >lder. Leonard \V. Comeau said Jn an interview today he and 72-year- old Eula Mac Fisher had been thinking about ge\Ung married "for a long time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues- day. Comeau was maintenance man at ?.1rs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been "living together for a while.'' he said. ''Age does not matter," Comeau added. "If a woman is older than 1 am or younger than I am don't make no difference. If you love a person like I Jove n1y wife, lbat''i ill there is lo it." The bride's second husband, Cyril, died in January and Comeau was orphaned several years ago when his parent!:, sister and two brothers were killed in a traffic accident. Two older brothers were killed in Vietnam. C0111plai11ts Issued Arraignment for Coast l(idnap Suspe t Stalled Negotiations by a La Habra attorney who may derend accused kidnap-rapist Kenneth D. Kelley, charged with the ab- duction of a teenaged girl ln Corona del ~far eight days ago stalled his ar· raignment Thursday. Kelley. a tatlooed trucker from Pico Rivera, appeared before Judge Calvin P. Schmidt in Harbor Judicial District Court Thursday afternoon to hear formal charges read against him. ' Complaints charging the suspect with Topless Dancing Law Overturned NEW YORK (UPI) -A federal court judge has ruled unconstitutional a North Hempstead, N.Y., town ordinance pnr hlbitlng topless dancing. Judge John Bartels said Thursday the Jaw, which prohibits any display of breast! in public, was so broad as to be "constitutionally Invalid as an in- [ringement on First Ame n d m e n t freedoms." A suit challenging the Jaw was brought by the owners of three taverns in t~ town. In a lengthy decision, Bartels said the ordinance, passed this year, would prevent the performance of the "Ballet African" or the musical "Hair." "" At Least It· Wasn't Pi1ik ?\i1UN TCII Germany (UPI) -Police rushed to the city's English Gardens after passersby reported spotting an elephant standing in front of a tave rn. Jt was there all right, and police said Thursday they found the owner inside drinking coffee. The caretaker of the local university's animal research clinic explained he took the ele phant on a convalescence walk, wanted a cup of coffee and tied up the elephant outside. kidnap· , ape through threat of bodity "iulr: rveralon and assaul t with a dea y weapon were Issued Thursday morning. Arraignment wa! continued until ?\.ton. day morning, however, at the request of the Orange County Public Defender's Of· fice. Judge Schmidt agreed when it wa.s ex- plained that La Habra attorney Stephen A. De Sales is considering representing Kelley in the four-count criminal case. Kelley wu subsequently transferred to Orange County Jail, with the stiff $100,000 boll requested by Newport Buch police remaining in effect at Judge Schmidt's. order. Kelley, who also useJ the· Jasl name Blahosky, was arrested ln El ldonte Tuesday afternoon by a patrolllng police sergeant who recognized the suspect and his white van from a wanted circular distributed by Newport Beach police. From Pqe l PRICE JUMP • • were listed July 13. Industrial prices, which remained under the freeze until mld·Augusl after the BU took its latest survey, rose a modest 0.4 percent. Bigger increases are expected later this !alt as pricing con- straints are lifted on the nation's largest corporations. The biggest jumps in prices in the farm sector were for livestock, grains and oil seeds. Prices of fresh and dried fruits and vegetables dropped sharply. Wholesale prices for consumer foods jumped 9.1 percent last month but con- sumer goods ez:cluding foods edged up only 0.1 percent Consumer-finished goods, a sample of commodltl~s that rompares with the government s con- sumer price index, gained 3.8 percen t. The August farm price surge was led by a 57 percent jump in tfie price of hay, hayseed5 and oil seeds, which play a key role in livestock feed. Egg prices 35 per· cent and live poultry pc1ces 42 percent. Fre•P.,el KISSINGER. . ; divldual cut1," be aald. The nominee opened his testimony with a!Surances that President Nlz:on, who nominated him Aue. 21 . to succeed William P. lloim as ...,.tary, tni.nds to make foreign policy "more accnslble to the tcNtiny end the view• of the Congress." Futbnght, while pralotng the nominee'• n1ental skill and "iron constitution," complalned that the April UrlO U.S. military incursion into Cambodia came as a surprise to him and seven other senators who me t informally with Kiss· inger a few days earlier. He and Sen. John Sparkman (!).Ala.), said they also were concerned about Kissinger's retaining his post as a White House adviser while heading the State Department. CONCERT ... "had an appendicitis attack" and the manager of the same band was arrested on charges of possession of marijuana. "That left them sort of messed up," Lawler said, "and the other band had played for two and one-half hours straight &o we decided to end It early." Price Boost- 'Worst Over' WASHINGTON (AP! Secretary o! the Treasury George P. Shultz said today the Increase In wholesale prices during August was ••a terrible drama" but said he hope! the worat may be over. "My Instinct is we have seen the worst of the food price problem ," Shultz said. Shulli said wholesale prices of n1any commodities have dropped sharply since figures were gathered for the August index, which showed prices of farm products were up 23. l percent in August and an overaU increase in wholesale prices of 6.2 percent. Facts Sought l1i Wiretap Of Nixo1i Kin Glavas said, however, "at 11:30 p.m. Frtlm Wire Services Lawler announced that he wished those The chairmen of two congressional in attendance to leave since he had been subcommittees are trying to ftnd 0 u t inrormed by the Police Department lhat whether President Nixon wiretapped his numerous complaints had been received relative to the ez:cessive noise." Newport Beach brother, Donald. 11te Glavas and Lawler agreed that the \Vhlte House isn't saying. dispersal went smoothly. DonaJd Nixon b a d no comment Glavas said the 29 arrests were made when· contacted today by the Daily Pilot in connection with the event, most of them outside the gates. in Los Angeles at a hot el ceremony. He He said while the crowd "was also declined comment there Thursday generally well behaved," the department when asked for comment by reporters made five arrests during the first 15 covering the program. · minutes of the concert and had to remove several juveniles from the field Deputy White House Press Secretary "who had pa:ssed out due to an over:in-Gerald L. Warren said 'Thursday that if dulgenc.e of alcohol." monitoring of the President's immediate Glavas said there were two persons family took place "it would have been who needed medical treatment for overdoee of narcotic8 and he added "the related to the protettive ·hmctlon of· the use of marijuana, alcohol and narcotics Secret Semce. I'm not going beyond was prevalent." this." Glavas said, however, that he did not WSITen said that after talking with the think the clty could, or should have stop-President he would have no comment on ped the event from taking place, even though It was sponsored by a private in-"any specific charges" in a Washington ,,.._ Pqe l DELAY •.• the prolecl. Commissioner Don Beckly, who earlJer said the traffic element of the impact repor) was better than the traffic anal· ayoea contained In mist reports, MIU.! that the lmpa.ct report had given Inade- quate attention to the tralflc problem. He also sald that the Impact report gave in- adequate attention to the problem of the obstruction ol views of surrounding homes. Commlssloner R~er. in agreeing with Beckley on the impact statement, said he didn't feel legal technicalities should be permitted to interfere with a sound decision on I.he basic tssues. The condomlnlum project would Include 18 units to sell betWttn $14:i,OOO and '200.· 000 each. They would be built on two Jots at the intersection of Bayside Drive and Carnation Avenue. Ste\Yart Woodard, architect for the project, said his finn had worked wit h the city for eight month,, to bring it into conformance with all city ordinances. "\\'e're not asking for a single vari· a nee ," he sald. "We have done every- thing we have been askd to do!' Hogan told planning commissioners <hat, il the coodominlum project had been an apartment project instead, "it could have a building pennit tomorro'v morning. But as a condominium project, it needs co mmission approval for lot sub- di vision." "ln other words," said Comml•loner James Parker, "we're being asked to rule on thls only because of the manner in which the owner wishes tq market bis project." "I think we're obligated to approve it,'' Parker said. Parker and c.ommissioner William Hazewinkel voted to approve the project while ~ Olainnan William Agee, Jackie Heather, Beckley, and Roreoer \toted to delay it. The project can come up for rehearing alto< the property owner does addiUoo"1 work on his enviruunental impact state- ment. Expensive Way To Beat Heat dividual. Post story quoting sources as saying the "It was our belief that outright re-Secret Service wiretapped Donald Wlz:-MIDLAND, Mich. (UPI) -Bernard jection of the application would have on's telephone for more than a year at McLain, 44, found a way to beat the beat, Steeple 1111 Mary Ann Quinn, 45 , of Los Gatos, calls herself an aerial engineer. She has state license that says she is a steeplejack·. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. Thu rs day, she painted the Newport Beach City Hall flagpole .. She does it every two years. Fr!)mPagel THIEF •.. I I the President's request. but it cost' him $95. been ill-advised in view o the schoo Meanwhile, Sen. Joseph M. Montoya d hortly be! and 'd district's approval," Glavas said. McLain was arreste s ore carports," Det. Smith sa1 . Lawler said that district officials had ([).N.M.), and Rep. Tom Steed ([). midnight Wednesday after poUce spotted He asked for the assistance of the Okla.), chairmen or subcommittees him riding his bicycle -with nothing on bl · he granted two permits, one naming the which allocated funds to the Secret but his tennis shoes. pu ic in sloppmg I spree:. , • • higdh slchool's ~tte:thochi~ ~.a sponsor Service, said they want explanations in He told police it "was terribly warm "If anybody has observed in the past an a ater permi Wl u eir name on writing from the Secret Service. and the heat was unbearable" in his persons or vehicles they suspect migflt it.HSoe sdial'dd thhee 0c~ginal·. ly bad talked with "The wiretaps being reported would apartment so he grabbed his tennis have been ln\ltllved in this type ol theft seem to have no connection with n11UonaJ ...._D b.k nd t k off the -··'d hel b · · hi · the tennis club arm or the boosters club be ·c1e 1 s1~. ' e a oo · Y 1.V\14 P Y g1v1ng t s in-security and would seem to outsi o McLaln was taken to the city jail r. and that group wanted to back the event the ·-pe of Secret c.o--·i-...... rrvmc!bility lothln H 1ormatlon to the police, either detectives f th I. -.v .-x:.1¥ .... ·~~,.-where he was given 90me c &:· e for SO percent o e pro it. for the protection of the President ," was then fined $9S 00 a Charge or inde-or patrol. We do need this type of But that propMal was rejected by the Montoya saJd in a letter to Secret Service batl f assistance in the city," he said. parent organization "when school of-Director James J, Rowley. cent expo3ure and put on Pl'O, oP or H 1-~ led tha 1 1 ficials advised against it,'' Lawler said. Steed said he, too, would ask Rowley two ye'".. t e al.W !ugges t Pan 0\.\11ers Glavas said there is one "plus factor" for a written statement. mark their croc:.s or pots with initials or he sees as a result of the event. He and Montoya &aid they would await Ed W ' R other inscriptions. "It has pointed up the need !or closer the Seoret Service reports before UCRlOr Oll l Ull He saJd persons spotting a suspected cooperation and more careful delineation deciding on whether to order suf>.. plant theft should try and remain un- of responsibilities be.tween school of-committee hearings. SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Pepperdtne detected, and call police Immediately. flcials and those of the city,'' Glavas The Pos t reported that the wiretap of University President William S . said. Donald Nixon during the President 's first Banowsky said today he has been en-And, observers should attempt to There was another plus factor so far as term apparetnly was a result of fears couraged to run for the U.S. Senate next remember a description of the person Law1er was concerned. Donald 's financial activities might em· year but "I do not plan to be a can-and vehicle, with the Ii~ number He said he made enough money on the barrass the Nixon administration. didate." being especially valuable for o(fieers. event to buy himself a new Porsche. 1--------·------·--------------------·-------- He saJd the Newport concert was his first, but now he's got three others plan- ned, including one in San Diego and another in Hawaii. WOODMARK CHAIRS Welfare Dole To Continue Nixon Cites 'Good Joh' A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price SACRAMEN70 (AP ) -Faced with a legislative controversy, the Reagan ad· ministration has moved on Its own to continue welfare benefits to 500,000 aged, blind and disabled Californians after Jan. I. Health and Welfare Secretary Ear1 Brian Jr. said Thursday I.hat benefits \\.'ould be C{)ntinued, and increased, by adn1inistrative action. Legislation to continue benefits after a Jan. I federal takeover of the program fail~ in the state Senate late Thursday. OU.N•I COAST H DAILY PILOT Tiii 0r.,..... eo.u o ... 11..1' PILOT,"'"' wlllc~ 1$ comblntd lht N .... $.Pr~u. l• PUllllllltd ~ "'' 0••"91 c.,_,, "utl!l•hlflg c...,_iw, ~ ••le eoltkl<l• ••• PUlllllhe.:I, MOnd•r fllfMll Frkl~r. !Or CO.II Mti.e, NtWIJt!'I 8tN;ll, liu~llnglon lletchlF•unltln V1ll1y, L111Uftt 811th, 1r~rnt1S1ddft.ll.tck t nd 5tn Clem.nte/ 5•n Ju•n C1p!1tr1no A 1111;11 'Ill'°"'' 9dl•I011 II ""Dll1h9d !.ttura•r• •rid 511,,.,~y1, tht llf ll!Cl ptl P110tl1hl"f llllM Ii 11 UO Wt1! 81y llrffl, (IM1t MtM, C1Utor11ff, tl6lf. Rob ert N. W•t4 Prttldffll ..... PuOll1ht • J1ek R. Cvrlty YICt itr .. kltnl lfld Ge!>t rtl MtlllOtf lho11111 Ket¥il l!llltN' Tho11111 A. M11•phi111 MIMtlno Editor L P1t1r Kri11 N--1 8ttdl Clry Edl!tt --"""" JJJJ N1w,ort l tvlt •t r4 M1illt19 A44tn11 ,,0 . 101 1171, •2661 .,__ Cllll Mn\1 lJI Wnt ••v lhttl UllU!tll lffdll nt l'Ot'°'I A-Hvnllnll!Ol'I 111(11: 17'1S 8NCll toultvtr'f ~n C~nwftltl JU MOrtrl •1 t1111lflo Atll , .. .,.._ C7141 MJ-4JJ1 ClwffW A,,_..11 '41-1171 (Oflt•loflt, lf'1, 0nlll!I ~I l'!IM!ifllllf (Oll'lptn,, No -•••· !ll111lrtlltftl, "'llof•ltl rntlt... ., OldwrtlMfl'ltn!I ....._ ,,., .. ~-"""""" ..-:Ill ..,. 111r111o<i tf ~ ._, ·~ "'" ............ c..,. ..... C•l!lt,...~ W.Wr.,_ _,.. c.t.,ltf' llM -•111¥1 .. _., UIS -Hllfr IJlll"wt .. UIN!'-•M .......... ( By Congress-Mansfield WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon told Senate Democratic ~ader Mike Mansfield today at a private White House meeting that he felt Oxlgress bas done a good job overall . Nixon and ~fansfield met o v e r From Pagel DENSITY. • • the city. "\Ve haven't even bttun to explore the subject," he said, "and I think we were directed by the council to do so." Commissioner Rosener was the most outspoken supporter of reopening public hearings. He argued that the land use and residential growth element! qr the city's general plan were deficient as approved because they considered only the densities of specific projects , and not ''average. densities" of the various parts or the city. Rosener cited West Newport as nn area where the cumulative effect or many small projects created an "average density" that was unacceptably high . "Density and transportation are the top issues In Newport Beach," er said. "It Is lnconcer,le to a t we would set aside e density 'estion without a full public earing on It.'' Chairman Agee • said he favored a public bearing became "It will give us nexlblllty. U we want to make changes, we can, but 'we don't have to." Comn'ilsaloner Hazewlnkel voted for a \>ubllc hearlng without giving his reasons. Commissoners also voted to set a public hearing for Sept. 'IT on the Crvlne C:Ompany'1 pro~ ph1nned community development in Big C11nyon. A proposed d • n st t y of 15 IDllls per •ere In Big Oln)'On wlli reltmd bock to the plannln1 ("Ommlislon last week by l~e city council ( • breakfast t\l.'O days afler the President sald Congress compiled a "very dlsap- pointing performance." Mansfield told reporters on Capitol Hill 'PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS V~CATION'-Column, P1go 6 alter this morning's meeting that Nlxon told him "Congress overall has done very well" altb::lugh Mansfield said Nixon "''OUJd "like his proposals to be given more consideration." In a comedy-like sltuaUon Mamfield at first denied to reporten that be had met with Nixon. ,.....Pflflel PROPOSAL. •• lhc l\l.'0-story police building \\'OUld cost 1126.600. Wynn is propo!ring lhA t a \l•all behind the council dais should be moved to give councilmen more room and lhnt the en- tire chambers can be widened by eight feet by removing the east wall and the exterior planting area. This would add a total ol 27 sc&ts to the chambers that would give. a IA>UI capadty of 100 seals. He Is also proposing that a new <'<lllng and new lighting system be Installed In the clwnben and that carpe11J11 be l&Jd on the floor. Wynn llld In hi s ~ aeoond pbu< exponsloo the e ~mporary redwood building behind dty hall could be sold and a perQ1Antnt two-story struo- turo built In Its place. He uld that would give the public worn deparl!Jtebt and other city omces about 4,000 rriore square feet. W)'nn pointed out that all his cost eaUmatea are based on current con· 1trudlro cosaa and "do not renect possl· ble lnllaUon/' ( WOODMARK FEATURES * LUXURIOUS 25 "/, DOWN & 75 "/. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC * EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH , MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE ••• ON DISPk.A Y NOW LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES STAJlT AT $215. , DREXEt--HERITA6~ENREDON-.WOODMARl(-KARASlAN INTERIORS WUIDATS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 1:10 FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 ... NEWPORT IEACft e f7J7 WiSTCllP:f Dl.. 64?·1010 10,.111 S11"4•y 12-IJJOJ LA6UNA IEACH e MS NOltTM COAST HWY, CO,.n St.111cl1y 12·11JO> 4•4·•111 TO~ltA'NCE e JJMf HAWIHORNI ILVO. I J71•117t " g I 0 g r f • • . '· • I Orande Coast ~ 8 EDITION VGL. 66, NO. 250, 4 SECTIONS, '48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ,CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1973 * * * Wlwlesale Prices Soaring WASlflNGTON (UPI) -Wholesale prices rose 5.8 percent in August, the big- gest advance in a single month since 1946, the government reported today. f,ann prices, freed from the restraints o[, }tte pr1'e freer.e, al!O shol up by 23 percent -more than three times the pt_1viollS recOrd for a single month. 'Qrain prices and many animal feeds inCreased di'amatically -in lhe case of grain by 70 perceil.t . (Related column, Page 13 .) This was · viewed as an ominous sign U.S. JOBLESS RATE SCOOTS UP IN AUGUST, Page 14 for shoppers at the meat market because farmers paying higher costs for feed u'!lally pass the burden along to oon- sqmera. The wholesale price report by the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics came five days before the scheduled lift- ing. of ceilings on beef prices and bore out predictions b y Administration economic officials last month. The report bn>uPI 1111 1mtan1 .....,. ciation of Admlnistration economic poUcies by Af'L.CIO ~t Goorse Meany. He ca lled the lateot llguroa ''beyond belief." 1be BLS said the overaU, unadjust«l in· crease in wholesale prices of s.a percent in Auguat was the highest surge for any month 81.nce July 1941. The rile that month was 10.7 percent, refieetinc an in- Oatlonary pattern that followed World War II. The August increase.. when adjusted for scuonal factors , was put at I.I per· cent -largest hike for any month slnce the government began taking seuonal conaiderallons Into account in 1947. August wholesale prices stood 19 per- cent above the level of Augult, 1972. Tbe big August wholesale price rise followed an unusual 1.3 percent decline in July, wben nearly all commodities were con1trained by the lreeie. Administration economists said at the time tha( the price freeze caused this and predicted a 1t1r1e after most restrictions on food were listed July 13. Indu!triJ!.l prices, which remained Wlder the freeze until mld.August after the BLS took its latest survey, rose a... modest 0.4 percent. Bigger increues are expected later this fall as pricing con- str1ints are lifted on the naUon's largest corporations. 1'le biggest jumps In prices iD the f.ltnn sector were for livestock, grains and oil seeds. Prices of rresh and dried frWll and vegetables dropped sharply. Wholesale prices for consumer foods jumped 9.1 perc<nt last month but coo- IUl1ler goods excluding foods edg!d up enly O. t percent. COnsllllM!l'llnilhed 1oods, a sample of commodities that compares with the government's con- iumer price Index, gained 3.8 percent. 'nle August farm price sarge was led ~a 57 percent jump in the prlce of hay, seeds and oil seecb, which play a key r e in Jlves!A>Ck [eed. Egg prico 35 pel' cent and live poultry prico 42 percent. Pr ice Boost.- 'Wors t Over' WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of the Treuury G<orge P. Shull• said 1"day the lncreue in wholesale prices durinl A\111111 •as ."a tt!rrlble d..,ma" but uld. be .bopes the worst may be over. "My Jnatlnct Is ,.. have _, the worst of the food price problem," Shultz said. Shull• uld whole .. le prices of many commodities have dropped l/larply since Qgures were pthered for the Augusl lnde1 1 which showed pricos of [arm prod\lll!I """ up 23.1 percent In A"""' 11!11 ~ . overall increase In wholesale prices o[ U .per<enl. ' • reeze ENll'I' Pilol Sl•fl P~a!O CITIZENS FOR OPEN SPACE VICE CHAIRMAN ARLENE SCHAFER STRIKES BLOW FOR THE CAUSE WITH HAMMER Und in Background Will Be NorthNsnrn Park If Coit• Mewns Approve First City Bond Issue at Polls Tuesday ~~-'-~~~~~~~ Bond Issue to Voters · Hist.ory Will Be ~,ifl> Cost.a Mesa Tf!.esda y .., RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ...... Dlflr Plllt S19l'I lUstory will be made in C.Osta t.1esa Tuelday when voters go to the polls to decide the first bond l!SUe since lhe city wu incorporated in 19$3. On the ba11ot are two questions: Are they willing to spend $2.8 million for 70 acres of open space? And do they want to spend another $1.3 millk>n ror sprinklers, I turf, trees and shrubbery? But just what kind of history the vote count will make Is very much in doubt !Oday. Proponents ombe boad issue are con- vinced that they .will hive a majority of lhe vote!; but~ !hat the ouJcome will be "close." The rea90n ia that a two-thirds ma- jority is required for passage of a bond meanre and that is just about the tw<> to-one ratio indicated in a recent clty- spoosored survey ol Costa Mesa's :U,000 registered voters. Bond elections were mt required to finance two other large municipal proj- ects. the [ive -sb>ry city ball and the Costa Mesa GoU aad Country Club. Both are being paid off through revenue bonds sold by a private non· profit corporation, but retired by Costa Mesa tax.payers. That makes next Tuesday's election the fir.it bond issue over which voters have a direct say. lncluded on the ballot are the following pieces of land : • -a 10-acre surplus school site adjacent to the Fairview Park property. -20 acres or surplus school property across from Estancia High School. Green Tlautnbed Thief'/ -a 10-acre surplus school site oorth of the San Diego Freeway near the Mesa Woods tract. -Five acres of surplus school land ad- jacent to Tanager Park in the Mesa Verde tract. Stolen Plants Driving Laguna's Police Potty -15.S acres in southwest Costa Mesa . -Six acres on the east side of Costa Mesa. -Three acres in northeast Costa Mesa . It is argued by the Citizens for Open Space Committee that the bond issue is required to preserve the land from development as housing, industry, or for commercial use. By J ACK CHAPPELL Of "'' DallY ...... ll•ff ls there a creeping Charley in your Croat yard? Do you have a spider plant hanging from your pQrcb beams? Do you have a planted crock, or pot on display outside? If 'so, you may have trouble. Laguna, Bead> Is and has been the hap- py heisting ground for a polled plant thief. Jn the last three months. scads of stolen potted plants have been reported to Laguna Beach·pollct. It's suspected many more g o unreported as residents just don't want to go to ,the u.uble of contacting lawmen. However, one lady ncently went to~ expense and trouble of placing a classified ad plel!dlq for the return of her Creeping Charlie. Most ol the thefts JnvoJve pilfering of hanging or potted plants sitting In plain view ot'I private pf'OP81'lY in residential -neighborhoods. - Most thefts have been small, although several have involved plants valued at more than $50. "ntis la not something we're taking lightly," Laguna Beach Det. Tony Smith said Thurslay. "We've gone to the trouble of con- tacting other "l!encies. We're. not the on- ly tJno plagued 1'1th thb. AU the beach ciUea an involved,'~Smlth said. He apect!lalejl the pirated planta wen belnl hualJed off to ""P meets, or taken to the road.side plant stor<s where Ibey in sold. "l\'1 bard to ldenU(y stUll like tbls uni ... the public puts special marklnp ... the pots. '11lls 11 quite • problem. lt'• p ng !•"b!>. lwd ooe to aolvo," he Aid. "II TIOlll<J'be a very ~lfficult lhlng to prove that somebody took to1nebodY else's geraniums and put them In a dif- ferent pot. "Whal we have ii aomebody laklng ad- vantago cl a popular Item that Is reedlly -bl• for lhefl. "We've had them taken off front por<hes, from fronl yards, back yards and carports," Det. Smith said. • He asked for the assistance of the public in stopping the spree. "If anybody has oboerved in Ille past persons or vehicles they suspect might have been involved in this type of theft thef could help by giving this in- formation to the police, either detectives or patrol. We do . n<ed this type of IS.'listance in the city," be said. He also suggested that plant owners mark tilelr croc:.S or pots with lnltlab or other lnscripdoris. He said peraoos spotting a sU3]1CCted plaul theft should try and rtmain un- detected, and eall police irhmediately. And, observers should attempt' to remember a description of the person and vehicle. with the license number being eapeclalty valuable for officers. . Projecting its rapid rate of disap- pearance through the year 1980, the bond proponents argue that most of the city's (See VOTERS, Page!) U.S ., Soviets La unch Hotline MOSCOW (UPl) -The United States and the Soviet Union inaugurated a hot line for health today to exchange in· fonnatlon in their joint medical pro- gram. A communique issued at. the end of a five-day visit by Caspar W. Weinberger, the secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, said also that the two countries agreed to add arthriti s as a research neld in the program. S~hool Wins Mesa Gives Lan.d Ba.ck A surprise ending bas been written by Costa M<M City Attorney Roy E. June to a prolonged conflict lnvotving the city council, a Wilson Sireet pre· school, and a nel~bood uniied against the prNChool. • JUNE RULED that the city council was legally obligated Jo return 10 feet of property fo Mr. and Mra. Wallace Remsen, operator~ of lhe Cardcn-4 School on 2141 w. Wlbon. ~ The city had obloined the JO.foot strip Cree of charge several )~ .. go in exchange for giving \he "Remsena a zone exception to allow the &CbOOI in a resldeatial.nelll>bori-1. ' - ' MOtlNTING PRESSURE from neighbors of the school earlier this year resulted In the COWteil'1 decision to revoke the zone exception permits, The Remsen! promptly filed tor return of the dcdlcaled property Md the reque91..,. austalned by the city attorney. Now lf the clty want• lhe JO.Coot strip to widen Wilson, It will bave to buy IL -• • Kissinger Back s Wiretapping For 'SecUPity' WASHINGTON (AP) -Testifying to- day on his nomination to be Secretary or State, Henry A. I<issinger defended the ~·iretapping of several aides as painful but necessary to protect national securi- ly. The "bugging '' issue and the fact that Kissinger ·would keep his White House job added a note of discord to tbe hear- in gs held by the Senate Foreign.R~ations Committee in the same large caucus room that housed the \Vatergate probe. The chairman. Sen. J . W. Fulbright (D- Ark. ), told Kis.5inger the wiretapping of 17 Nixon administration officials, in- cluding members of the National Securi- ty C.Ouncil staff. tests the "mutual trust" the nominee pledged in the shaping of foreign policy. And Sen. Clifford P. Case (R-N.J.). said he assumed lhe committee would not proceed unHI lhe FBI turned over to it a report of the wiretapping Kissinger said was conducted between May 1969 and February 1971. Fulbright sa id he wouli!_ call an ex· ecutive session of the committee Monday tind ask Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson to submit a summary report on the wi retaps. Sen. Ch<i"les Percy (R-111. ). expres.sed concern about "the civil liberties of the 17 individual s." But Fulbright said he believed that !he "civil liberties of the wiretapped in- dividuals hav e already been com- promised ." and that Richardson would be given an opportunity to express any reservations he had about the civil liberties question. · This could seriously delay Kissinger's confirmation by entangling it in a larger, legal dispute between branches of the government. Fulbright announced that the Justice Department declined to provide him with requested data on Richard Moose, a staff member of the committee who worked for the security council. And Kissinger dcclint'd to disclose details or the wiretapping to the committee, even in secret. 1 "It "·ould not be fair to di scuss in· dlvidual coses," he sa id. The nominee opened his testimony wlUl tSet KISSINGER, "l'agt ZJ Early Childhood Openings Told Several openings remain for 4-year-old childrtn In the Early Childhood Progran1 ;i t Canyon and Victoria Schools, Costa ~1esa. 1'o qualify. childrt'!n must be 4 years old by Dec. 1 and must have had meaS1e5 . polio end OPT vaccinations. fiegi.!llratlon for lhc progra1n Is· no\V opc.n nt bolh cnmpuses. Testing will tak(' pince Sept. 11-14 and regular classe.o; ~gin Sept. 17 . Parcnts·seek.lng mor~ in· formation should Inquire at eHber Can· yon or Victoria SC1'1ools trom t a.m. to 4 p.m. ~tonday lhrough l'"rlday: -.. Today's Final N.Y. Stocks c TEN CENTS Cost Panel Also Ci1ts Ca1· Prices '" ASHTNGTON (AP) -The Cost or Living Council this afternoon ordered a 10 to 30-percent cutback in scheduled price incrc;ises for 1974 automobiles. ll also lift ed three days early the freeze on beef prices.' The council :innounc8'1 a number or major actions under the ne\v Phase 4 anti-inflation program. including: -New food regulations to go into effect along with lifting of the price ceilings on beef at midnight Sunday. ln.~tead of \Vednesday as originally scheduled : -That the Atlantic Richfi eld Oil con1- pany agreed to suspend an increase of one cent per gallon in Its wholesale price of gasoline and two cent s per gallon in· crease in the price of home healing oil : -That it direcled Officials of Exxon Corp. to appear in Washington next week to justify a proposed increase in their V.'holesale price of gasoline of one cent per gallon. -A temporary suspension of scheduled price increases by major tire, paper. soap and detergent companies; -That it will hold public hearings in l\VO weeks on the proposed price in- creases by tire, paper. soap and detergent companies, beginning with the rubber industry on Monday, Sept. 19; -The reductions in proposed price in- creases by the four majOr auto com- panies. Council director John T. Dunlop said it "'ill anoounce a decision Monday on pro- posed price increases by JO steel com- panies. The auto price reductions hit Ford and General Motors hardest. Ford's request of ·a $106 per model in- crease was reduced to $74: General Motors, from $102 to $73; Chrysler, from $70 to $51, and American Motors, Jron1 $6l lo $55. The reductions in the proposed in- creases are 30 percent for Ford. 28 per- cent for General Motors, 27 for Chrysler, and 10 for American. .. The increases can go into effect 30 days after they were requesled under Phase 4 controls. The first increase would be Chrysler's on Sept. 14. But the council ruled that American Motors. which wanted to increase its prices effective Sept. 5, may bill its dealers tor the higher amount for vehicles shipped prior to Sept. 13 if it wishes. Dunlop said one reason for lifting the ceiling price on beef early, was to head off possible sbortages that could ha ve resulted in the last few days before the (See FREEZE, Page 21 Bandit Ge ts $100 At l\fesa Restaurant A Costa Mesa Kentucky fried Chicken restaurant was robbed of approximately $100 in cash Thursday night by a lone gunman who fled on foot after collecting his loot Police described the man in his 30's and wearing a ski cap and blue jeans. and a jacket. The robbery occurred around 9 p.m. al 2909 Harbor Blvd . Orange Coast • Weather The Los Angeles Wcalh<!r Service secs a foggy \\'eekend for Orange Coast residents aod visitors. clear- ing by mid-afternoon. Highs will range from the mid·70s ot the beaches to the low 80s inland. INSIDl:l TODAY • Celebntics will pl<iJI tennis fo r charily this weekend ht Ne.w · port Beach. The eveut takes place in t/1.e Ba lboa Bay Club. See todau's \Veekc11cter for de:i· iaiL.s. •I Y.ur S•r'l'IU l 'Mr#n U·n l .M •• ,,. I MYIYM '"""'"" 14 IHli.... J (1l1!1t01it ' Clou1UIM JJ_.I Ctlftl~1 lt M1!1.n1I .. .,.., t Or1ntt (CN1111 I 1tn1•iir1nh Jt·JI ,,.~ .. '"''"". n (,.,,_,.. It Sotr11 »M DIV901:01 1 ttt<• "'9tlth 14-IS Wd!•orl•I Ptte 1 T'.+tri1i'" n FIMl'tf.f 1>-IS Tlluttn flllJ '""" tr1t lllec••• 1 .. _..,, II w""'"" • WCl!tl"''' ,._, 11·1t Aft11 Lt'°'"" 11 M9Ui.ti • WIMU Iii... 4 WMkMltt 11·,. -- • j J l , I .. 2 D~ILY PILOT c Nixo11Lauds Co11gress- Ma11sf iel(l \YASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon told Senate Dcmocra lic Leader ~fike l\fansfield today at a private Whi te f-lousc meeting that he leh Congress has done a good job overall. Nixon and l\·lansfield met o ver breakfast tv.·o <Tays..alter the Presiderit said Congress com~i!Cd a "very disa~ r>ointing performance.,, !'11ansfictd told reporters on Capitol Hill 'PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS VACATtON'-Column, Page 6 after lhis morning's meeting that Nixon told him "Congress overall has done very "·ell" although Mansfi eld said Nixon v;ould ''like his proposals to be given n1ore consideration." In a comedy-like si tuation fo.tansfield at first denied to reporters that he had met with Nixon. But after being told the White House announced the meeting, !\fansfield con· finned it, explaining it was his normal practice not to talk about such private conferences. Mansfield said the meeting, over poached eggs and hash, was mainly a business discussion covering foreign af- fairs and th e President's State of the Un ion message. Nixon also plans to meet shortly with House Speaker Carl Albert. "I sense the beginning of a greater degree of cooperation with Congress and more or a give-and-take attitude on both sides," !\1ans!ield said. Friday, Stpttmbtr 7 1973 U~I T•l•pl!OIO HEADING FOR TROUBLE OVER TELEPHONE TAPES? Henry Kissi°nger 1t S.n1te Committee Confirmation Hearing Newport Rock Concert Accounts 'Conflicting' From Pagel KISSINGER. • • assurances that President Nixon, who noril.ioated him Aug. 22 to succeed William P. Rogers as secretary, lntends to make foreign policy "more accessible to' the scrutiny and the views of the Congress.'' Newport Beach police and the pro- moter of the Aug . 24 rock concert at Ne\vport Jiart>or High School today issued conflicting accoW1ts of the event and the planning that went into it. Police Chief B. James Glavas, in a report issued to councilmen, says his staff tried for a week to have the Newport· Mesa Unified School District "r~ evaluate its approval of the eveiit." ffowever, Michael R. Lawler, the event's promoter, said he worked "in a cooperative atmosphere" with police the v1eek before the event and said Police Capt. Richard Hamilton told him "this is the kind of thing needed in Newport Beach." Glavas· report also says Lawler had hired 10 private security guards and five Newport Be:ich police to pat :-ol Davidson Field the night of the event. La wler said he hired 20 guards, besides the uniformed police. Glavas also said the concert was tern1inated early at the po 1 ice depa rtment's request. , Lawler said it was stopped at 11:30 p.m. -an ho u r ahead o.f schedule - because a member of one of the bands "had an appendicilis attack" and the manager of th e same band was arrested on charges of possession of marijuana. ''That Jell them sort of messed up." Lawler said, •·and the other band had played for two and one-half hours straight so we decided to end it early." Glavas said, however, "at 11 :30 p.m. Lawler announced that he wished those in attendance to lea ve since he had been informed by the Police Department that numerous complaints had been received relalive lo the excessive noise." Glavas and Lawler agreed that the dispersal v.·ent smoothly. Glavas said the 29 arrests v.·ere Jfladc in connccrion with the event , most of lhem outside the gates. He s:iid v.·hile the crowd "1\·as generally v.•cll behaved," the department Made fi ve arrests during the fi rst 15 minutes of lhe concert and had lo remove several juve niles from the fie ld "who had r assed out due to an over-in· dulgence o alcohol." Glaves said there were two persons OU.NIE COAST tM DAILY PILOT '"• Or•noe (NII OAILY PILOT, .... l!h wll~h 11 CO<l'lbln.d !flt Jrj•••·F'rt"• ii pybll-~y ""-°''""' co11r P111>t .. ni~ C-nv. 5tP9• rtt• fdillOn• lrl PllbloJ"-<!, Mor>d1y lilroll'tll Frld1r. lor Cool• M~w, Ntwl'Orl !lrl<h. liunl/~lon lltite~/F......,!1ln V111ov, L•llUM Bt..:h. lr;!ntl ~adltlMCk Ind ~n Cltm1n!1/ Ion Ju1n Clbi•!•1no, " 1lnel1 r191()>11I llll!lon 1$ publl11\td S.1urcl1y1 aria ~uri<l•y1. Ille prlnc!pol pub1l,Mno pl1nt h 11 JXI wn 1 ltY Str .. I, Cn111 Mti.,t, Ct ll!o,..lt , '2U6, Robtrt N. W11il Pr"i<lent trot! rubll1llt< J1,k R, C11rl1y V1CI l'r••ldM! Incl Gft\ltt! M&111,... Tholl'•• K•t¥il Edl!Ot T1it"''' A. M ~rphf111 M111191fo9 £111tor Ch1rl11 H. l1•1 l lch1rJ I'. N1U ,i,uJ111111 MtNtlt>t E•lllo<'t ,C.. M .. OHke JJO Weit lty ih'ttl M1ili11t Adtfr1 11:'1',0 . lo• 1560, •2•26 -. °'"'" NfWll!lf1 lllcl'I: JW Ntwi-t 1oui.v11"11 l.•OVM le«ll ~ m Fornt •-....,,lllG•on Ifft~: ·11uJ l tKll I OUllYlnl S.11 Cltl'N'llO: as NO•"' El (.t"'lftO llffl , .. .,... 1114 1 64J ... JJ1 C ........ ~ .... MJ.1671 C.,yrlf"I, lf1', Oflf'IM (OIJI l'W!l&lllfll COomllMY. Mt -'""""· li11111t1111N, .. llOtitl m,ettw ... Ml~tl!M,,_l'I "'"Ill -r De r.,.,.odllClll wl"'OUt IOllltl ,_,. "'llllon Of *""'..,.' ·-· ke1oN1 clatt ,..1 ... _.14 tt C•lt MtM. Catlfw11l1,. ~-lftl ~rllr Q.6' """"""' lftl !NII U.11 nwn!lllJI "'lllttry •1111111"'"' .,, .. """"'"'' who needed medical treatment tor overdose of narcotics and he added "lhe use of marij uana. alcohol and narcotics was prevalent.., Glavas said, ho1vevcr. that he did not think the city could, or should have stop- ped the event from ta king place, even though il was sponsored by a private in- dividual. "ft was our belief that outright re- jection of the application would have been ill-advised in view of the school district's approval," Glavas said. Lawler said that district officials had granted two permits, one naming the high school's booster club as a sponsor and a later permit without their name on it. So did the city. 11e said he originally had talked with the tennis club arm of the boosters club and that group wanted to back the event for 50 percent or the profit. But that proposal was rejected by the parent organization ''when school of· ficials advised against it," Lawler said. Glavas said there is one "plus factor" he secs as a result of the event. ''It has pointed up th e need for closer cooperation and more careful delineation of responsibilities between school of· ficials and those of the city," Glavas .said. There was another plus factor so far as Lawler was concerned. He said he made erlough money on the event to buy himself a new Porsche. He said the Ne wport concert was his first, but now he·s got three others plan· ned, including one in San Diego and another 1n Hawau. • f'ro111 Page I VOTERS ... existing open space will have been developed by then . Another group called PLAN (Preserve Land As Needed I has taken issue with the bond proposal and describes it as an "attempt to ind iscriminately bank land for some possible future" witho ut thoroughly studied planning. Among !he key arguments PLAN members level against the bond issue are that Cos ta !\1esa already has enough open space: that the taxpayers will not be able to afford maintenance of th e 60 acres (maintenance is not included in the bond Issue). and that re-purchase of the school sites is questionable since they were already once paid for by local taxpayers. 1 Fulbright, while praising the no1ninee's mental skill and "iron constitution," complained that the April 1970 U.S. military incursion into Cambodia came as a surprise to him and seven other senators "·ho met informally with Kiss· inger a few days earlier. He and Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala.), said they also \11ere concerned about Kissinger's retaining his post as a \Vhite House adviser while heading the State Department. ··Every president," Kissinger replied, "has a right to conduct foreign policy in a way that helps him most." Expe1isive Way To Beat Heat hfIDLAND, hlich. fU PI) -Bernard McLain, 44, found a way to beat the heal, but it cost him $95. McLain \Vas arrested shortly before midnight \Yednesday after police spoltt>d him riding his bicycle -with nothing on but his tennis shoes. He told police it "··••as terribly warm and the heat was unbearable" in his apartn1ent so he grabbed his tennis shoes, bike and took off. McLain \Vas taken to the cily jail where he v.·as given some clolhing. He was then fined $95 on a charge of ind~ cent exposure and pu t on probation for two years. .. .,,, .. TONIGHT MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8:1S p.m. "CATCH Z'l" -South Coast Repertory Theater, lhru Sun. 8 p.m. SATURDAY AND SUNDAY CELEBRITY TENNIS BENEFIT ~ Newport Beach Assistance L e a g ue Celebril v Tennis Tournament, Balboa~ Bay Clu b, from 10 a.m. t>oth days, Re se rved seats SIO. gen. adn1. $5. Sec \Veekcnder for details. Age No Bounds Groom, 19, Marries W omart, 72 BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A ·19-year-old Bakersfield man says "age does n ot matter'.!..ift his marriage to a widow ilalf i :entury >Ider. Leonard W. Comeau said in an interview toda)L he and 7Z.year· old Eula Mae Fisher had been thinking about getting married "for a Iopg time" before they took out a license and were wed here Tues· day . Comeau was n1aintenance man at Mrs. Fisher's boys home here. They had been "living toget her for a whlle;" he ;a>d. "Age does not rnatter," Corneau added. "If a woman is older than I am o r younger 1.han I am don't make no differen ce. If you love a person like I love my wife, that'• iU there is to fl." The bride 's second husband, Cyril, died in January and Comeau was orphaned several years ago when his parents, sister a nd two brothers were killed In a traf!k accident. Two older brolhers were ki lled in Vietnam. · · •• Nixma's Brother Facts Sought lriWiretapping From Wire Services The chairmen vl two congressional subcommittees Hre trying to find out whether )>resident Nixon wiretapped his Newport Beach brotber, Donald. The While House isn't saying. Donald Nixon h a d no comment when contacted today by the Dany Pilot in Los Angeles at a hotel ceremony. fie also declined comment there Thursday A rraig1t1lte11t Date Delayed For Suspect Negotiations by a La Habra attorney who may defend accused kidna~raplst Kenneth D. Kelley, charged with the ab- duction of a teenaged girl in Corona del h1ar eight days ago stalled his ar- raignment Thursday. Kelley, a tattooed trucker from Pico Rivera. appeared before Judge Calvin P. Schmidt in Harbor Judicial District Court Thursday afternoon to hear formal charges read against him. Complaints charging the suspect with kidnaping, rape through threat of bodily harm, sex perversion and assault with a deadly weapon were issue(f Thursday ' when asked for comment by reporters covering the program. Deputy White House Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said Thursday that if monitoring of the President's immediate family took placj! "it would have been related to the protecUve function of the Secret Service. I'm not going beyond this ... Warren said that after talking with the Presi'.lent he would have no comment on ··any specific charges" in a Washington Post siory quoting sources as saying the Secret Service wiretapped Donald Nix· on's telephone for more than a year "!t the President's request. !\1eanwhile, Sen. Joseph 1'-1. Montoyn (0.N.M.), and Rep. Tom Steed (I). Okla.), chairmen of subcommittees which allocated fund! to the Secret Service, said they want exptanatlona in writing from the Secret Service. "The wiretaps being reported would seem to have no connection with naUonal security and would seem to be out!lde of the scope of Secret Service resp:inslblllty for the protecUon of the President," Montoya said in a letter to Secret Service Director James J. Rowley. Steed said he, too, would ask Rowley for a written statement. He and Montoya said they would await the Secret Service reports before deciding on whether to order sub· committee hearings. The P~t reported that the wiretap of Dona1d Nis:on during the President's first term apparetnly was a result of fears Dona1d's financial activities might em· barrass the Nilon administration. morning. • ·~ .• -·i l Arraignment was continued until Moll-Ji'rona PG9e day morning, however, at the request of · REEZE the Orange County Public Defender's Of· ~ • • • . . ' 117~ge .Schmidt agreed wb~ jt ~as ex,~ scheduled lifUng of the ceilings on Sept. plained that La Habra attorney Stephtn 12. A. De Sales is considering representing He said one reason for putting the new Kelley in the four-count crimina1 case. food price regulations into effect three Kelley was subseq~ently .transferred _10 days early was to give businesses the Orange ~W1ty Jail. with the stiff benefit of being able to start the new $1~,000 bail ~~uest~ by Newport Beach controls at the beginning of the week. police rema1n1ng 1n effect at Judge Tiie new food controls will allow com· Sc~midt's order. panics to pass through all of their justi- Kelley, 1vho also uses t~e last n:ime fied higher costs in prices to the consum· Blahosky, was arrested 1~ ~I !\lo~te er. instead oC just the higher agricultural Tuesday a fternoon br a patrolling police costs, as provided by the current regula· sergeant who recogruzed the suspect and lions. his y.·hite van from a wanted circular Asked what impact the new regulations distributed by Newport Beach police. \11ould have on food prices. Dunlop said. Radio City Troubled NEW YORK (UP0 -Radio City r.,,1usic Hall, whic!l for years has featured family entertainment, including the high- kicking Rockettes, may board up doors next V.'eek i! labor problems are not solv· ed. Radio City management posted a notice Thursday declaring that it would suspend operations Sept. 12 if contract seUlcments y.·ith four of seven unions representing employes had not been reached. "\Ye expect there may be a bulge, but I think it's fair to say it will be much smaller" than occurred after the price freeze was lifted on July 18. J>un!op al"' !8ld M wat1 -y there would be higher beef pried' but said he expected they would be lower than the increases that occurred previously for pork and poultry. Asked if this meant the worst of the price increases were over, Dunlop said , ··rd like to think so." The price increases announced by tire. paper, soep and detergent companies will be suspended until after the council has held hearings on the increases Steeple I ill Mary Ann Quinn. 45, of Los· Gatos calls herself an aerial engineer. She has state license that says she is a steeplej4ck. Mary Ann looks more like a steeplejill. Thu rs da y, she painted the Newport Beach City Hall flagpole . She does it every two years. At ieast It Wasn't Pink hlUNlCH Germany IU PI) -Police rushed to the city's English .Gardens after passersby reported spotting an' elephant standing in front of a ta\'em. It was there all right, and police said Thursday they found the owner Inside drinking coffee. The caretaker of the local uni\•ersity's animal research cUnic es:plained he took the elephant on a convalescence \ltalk . wanted a cup of coffee aod tied up the elephant outside. Educator Won't Run SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pepperdino University President \\'illiam S . Banowsky said today he has been en- couraged to run for the U.S. Senate nex.t year but "I do not plan to be a can- didate." ~~~~~~~--~~~~~- WOODMARK CHAIRS A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price WOODMARK. FEATURES * LUXURIOUS 25 % DOWN & 75 % FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS . * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC * EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE ... ON DISPLAY NOW LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES START AT $215. • DREXEL-HERITAGC-HENREDON-WOOOMARK....:KARASlAN ---------- INTERIORS WDkDAYS I SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:30 FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 a--•- • ' NEWPOR I BEACH e 1121 WESTCLIFJ DI. Ml·2 050 COpe11 Surtd•v l,2·l 1JO) · LAGUNA BEACH e J4S NOltTH COAST HWY~ IOp11t S111M11y 12-51101 '4•4-611 51 TORRANCE e 2lM• HAWTHORHI ILVD. J71-127t ... -. • , I I I , I ' I • •