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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-09-14 - Orange Coast Pilot. ' ' , Police· Seeli Suspect"# ldn,atity -. -- ~ . - • - Station Shutdown Protest on Coast Runs Out of Gas' i DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 14, 1973 VOL, W. MO. 1Sl', f SECTIONS, 91 l"AGIS ~~~~~~~~--~~- ··~ .. . ' ' " Station Protest Runs Out of Gas By RUDI NlEDZIEUIKI ot Ille o1i;;-~..;e: ,,.,.- A movement among Orange County service statiQn dealers to protest "un- fair" Phase IV price controb with an organized shUtdown has nm out of gas. Dealer plans to lock up their pmnps for a three-<iay . period beginning Monday conked out 'Itiursday night when leaden of 1 gasoline retailers association con- vinced them that they would only be hurting lhem8elves and "the guy who has supported you au these years." Instead, t1le:f decided to wait for the outcome of iti lawsuit now peQ:ling before a federal c6urt. The auli 1 alJePs tba~ service atatltn owners are being treated unfairly ~use they lu v e to absorb price increa.-s passed on by the oil com- panies under Phase IV. After the suit is heard in early December, 1.othere is oo way we will not be out from.: 1,1nder those ridiculous price cootrols," John Devine, preoldent of the International Service Station Dealers Auoclation i(ISSOA) pre d l ct e d en- lhuslasUcailf: Independent dealers across the natiOn are rumint over the Phase IV controll because their retail prices are.frozen. but the wholesale or tankwagon prices of tbe oU companlt3 are not. Several of lhe ma- or .. ;e ' •• Weatller jor oil companies bllve increaled their tankwa&OD prices as much ls one or two centa a gallon, whicb, in the opinion of many dealers, drives their profits IO low lhat they may go out of business. Scattered clnsinp ·of ..mCe stations began trus week iD 1everaJ parts of the country, including Sin Diego where about 25 percent of the stations were reported closed Thursday. Orange County's moderate approach was underscored by fear of potential anti-trust acUon, according to Devine, who warned the dealers that they could be "opeil to charges of mtraint of trade and conspiracy to dbrupt business." 'lbe only sugtllUan of a shutdown ·was made II)' Coota Mesa Standard dealer BID Caruilill who • lfabbed the ' microphone from tie speaUr ~ said, "[ dare an yov guys to abUt down for three days." Canning ~Y Jell tbe meeting :wt"'!' hill call (O< • iaJes boycott Called to ...... the 300 dealtn who attended the stratec session_. , Moil _appeared lo', go . along with, lhe r'ecOmm<l)<latloo,ol. Mm.im"Vlejo dealer William H. Bay and ·dounly Supervisor Ralph Clark to u1e their polltk:al (lOft' and to COllvlnce tbe Hllat!ftd ~ drivlng !broulh their 1tal1Cii 'tili!"theY . have a problem. , Clark, himself an ARCO dealer and former ls.5DA presldoal. urged the angered dealers to remain wllted, be genUemen, and to "jllll hang tllhl, because 1 think We're iokic to Wblp Jt." The fourth di11tllct 1u p e r Vt1 o r, however, lashed out at the arcblt~cta of the Phase IV gas price coatro1 plan which allows dealers a maximum seven ecol• ,-prolit wr gallon. "'11!ese Idiots In WashJniloo have no !See GASOLINE, Pqt l) "'f .. Deadline Near In, Auto Talks DETROIT (UPI) -Chrysler Corp. and United Auto Workers negotiators sought to iron out the ma}or issues of wages and volun- tary overtime today and reach agreement On a contract before a strike deadline tonight. Among the problems facing tbe negotiators, which began July 18, was not only a wage increase but also tailoring il to meet the guidelines of the Cost of Living Council. A lengthy bargaining session that began Thursday morning ended shortly before midnight with no in- dication how the negotiations were progressing: Judge Uphold s Marin e Hair cuts; Hearin gs Set T,u,LAllASSEE, Fla. (UPI) -A federal judge has qpbeld the right of the MU1ne Corps to require short haircuts, ·but .,reed to hear arguments from 10 reornllts that they are being punlshed for +"•c.,;~ p(Ula~. . U.S.1· Dillrlct Judge David L. Mid- dlebroOu mac1e the unexpected ruling ,.,,.l'lday at 'the oUtset of arg»ments on pretrial motioni In, tbe.reaervists' case. "Let me bunT to tell you lhat lhese regulatlODB are not UDCOPStltutlonal -let me tell you that right oow," ..ad- dlebroou told defense attorney Kent Spriggs. . "The commandant has authority to set regulations that are reasonable -and I comlder these reasonable." Spriggs said the corp11 ;,, ''punishing them for speaking out against the hair regulations and for coming to this court It'll bt a cool, driuly Saturday -at least in the momlng hours along the Orange Cout. Beach :· lri&J1s will be in the 69' rising to the mld·'IOI inlond. S d ' Kin with their complaint" We ell 8 g The men, all members of "C" Com-INSIOE TOBI\ Y . , pany,. Ith Tank Battalion, USMCR', bead-' J D . Co quattered In TalJahassee, are suing Gen. Ti>e 1/rvine "Comm1t11ity Tht· ll eep filft Robert Cushman, commandant of lhe ottr U offering local pl.aygoers Marine Corps. &omelljlng MW lhis yeor -a HWINGBORG , Sweden (AP) _ • ~ plaintiffs, Ben Sellen of Jackson· sea.!on of 0<11nge ·County 1"'•· Swedell'• •}'e&N>ld King GuSlllv' vr ville imctDa+ld>McMullen•ol"f1lahusee, miere1. See lntenntasion column Adolf lay in a deep coma at the city' have been threatened with recaU to the in tod<ly'•, Weekender. hospital hue again today, his life ebbing. regular Marine Corpo because of , At y~.s-.~~ 1 Me¥1e1 lt41 The q«l monarch survived ;four . unsatisfactory drllta. ~:."' ;: =• "= ~ aettou. cNes after a 1utdc ulcer oper8& Spf'fu.1 cbarged the recall was because c...,.,..a • °""" c...,. n ilon but the late1l medical bullellnl In-ol their opposlUoo to the hair Miies, not ...... --·-~=!,-n.r,-:-,:.~=.r 111r:-l-'1111Cite'1hrend-tirnear. . .~ce_, and ae'ked c 11 '"'" 11·1• The king Thursday suffered bis third for an injunction to prevent it. , =..,,...,., ~~ ~=.=rtt• n·:: attack of neumonia ainCe the operation Capt. Alan Ryan of the Marine Corps . . • I Mlttlr'IM ''" • ri-fln •11 and sank Into i"deep coma. Crown Prince Judge Advocate Gcncral'a Office In ::-:Z ltcft ~·?: :=. """ ,,.,: Carl Quataf bll grandson and the heir to Washington agreed to po1tpone recall -" -• -• the th,... 'rushed to the hoopltal from proceedings against Sellers and Gary =,.:........ 1 : wre '' twl ~Slldtbolm' aftef bokllna: an Gma1eDCY Gny, anoUter reservllt who dkl nol join cabinet meetln1 at the airport. the suit, pending the outcome of lhe ...... -•' I . ' Fou~tain Valley Child Molesting Suspe~t Captured ~oas DA Readies Sl1ootout Complaints SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -The teachers association here has voted 747- 27 to approve an 8.5 percent salary boost 'nding several month!' negollatlom, of • ficlals reported Thursday. \ ·' Chemicals Floating In Barrels UNWANTED HA.UL ' • ROME-(UPI) --Foir~. two bank clerks at ....,..,.1 ~ and took the bags lbof .,... ....... ca an annortd car, pol.iCle Uld. 1 The bogs cootalned bid -. .,. coote1tei! promlsoory -• • . . 1 I • . ' ' --. ' .. _I DAIL V PILOT s (.,qgu11a Crash I Successor ;iTruck, .Trailer To Agnew 'Innocent' ' ~Fly Into House .. By JACK CHAPPEIL Of ..._ l>MtJ l"tflrt St1H huge semi truck and flatbed lrailer rf hauling a Caterpillar tractor and rfller went out of control while descen- d-a steep Laguna Beach l'e.'lidential 1diliet and crashed through an exclus:ive hl!lside resldence . ·lbe driver reportedly suffered only a ti!lllaed hip and although the cab of bis School Board , Jftember Seeki11g $moki11g Ba11 • ~-time Orange County School Board member A. E. "Pat" Arnold of Cyprest-vibts to do away with "smoke-filled rObms" at the board's meetings. So Thursday he asked his four fellow board members to pass a rule banning smoking in the board room during meetings. "I don't like it personally and I know a lot of others who donlt," Arnold said. "I've gotten some complaints about the smoke hurting people's eyes and it's a proven fact you can be harmed just by breathing somebody else's smoke." Trustee David Brandt of Santa Ana , a amok.er, said he wouJd go along with the wishes or the board to stop smoking by board members but would strenoously object to imposing a ban on people who attend the meetings. "As for myself, I can just slip out into the hall. But the philosophy or govern- ment telling people what they can or CfPl't do when they enter a public building they paid for is not right," he said. Arnold backed elf Oil h i s proposal ~ying, "ICs up to you and I know a lot of j>eople like smoking. But a lot don't, • too." ·Other trustees avoided the discussion and it faded back onto regular agenda items when Arnold grumbled, ''We'll just forget about it ror now." Motorist Killed By Auto Fleeing Pursui1~g Police "WEST COVINA (AP) -A 30-year-old nian was killed when his car was ram- nled early today by another motorist fleeing pursuing pol.ice cars on the San Bernardino Freeway. f The driver of the neeing car suffered" <ttly minor injuries, police said. : California Highway Patrol Officer John Waggoner identified the victim as Mer- dtt D. Finch of West Covina. i Waggoner said the chase began when ?f:ontclair police attempted to stop two q.rs for speeding. One car el'ltered the ~ay in a bid to escape and sped oft !faching speeds at times of 110 miles an lfl:ur. Waggoner added. He said a West Covina patrol· car, Jruch joined the chase, attempted to stop tie fleeing vehicle with a rolling block, 1fhjcll involves slowing down in fron t of tfie wanted car to force it to a stop. I From Page 1 e~:.~:!~~is~" ·~·~id. ''1bey doo 't know that our people would i;.; tickled pink with a seven cents net." ~. Clark added that he thought the Cost of ving Council needs to underst.and that ytlme an oil company ratses the IBnkwagon price by one or two cen~ a i allon the dealer's profit takes a dive ijecau~ he must absorb the increase. I "They're asking us to operate in the ;ost-World \Var II days or profit," he qtiarged . OU.Mel COAST " DAILY PILOT '111 O••llO• Co11l OAIL Y P'IU)T, wilt! wllldl .. '9mC11Md lh• NeM-P'm1, It -llllMll lly w. 0r11111• i:: .. 11 po1111111111nt eemoe11r. w..- ,.i. «llllont .... publltl\4ld, MlllMY ltl,...,.tl ,-rltMly, 1or Cotl1 M-, NfWllOrl aMdl, "Y!'ltlllolon ltK!llll..,,,11111 VIit.)', ~ ••~· 1t¥1M1lHcl11tKt .,,.. 11111 c~ hll J~11 C111h1t1110. A 1111111 ntlolloll Mllloll 11 llUlllll"td S..IVl'de\'S Mii ._..YI· T"" ll"lr!cl"I 1111111i.h1r1t pi.ftl ll &I SJI WHI ••r str.tt. ""'' Mne. C1t11en1i., .,.,._ lob1rt N. W1..d "'"''""' ll'Od P'ullll&h&r J1ck l . Curley Viet P'rlllf"'1 1t'Wll ~-•t M-..r Th•"''' K11¥il Editor Tli1"., A. M~rplii111 ,_,...... llf\W' Ch1dM H. lfft lt11.li.1r4 .,. Nill ANlltllll ,.,,......... , ...... -Cll .. Ni ... : nt W.t lly • ., ... ,....,.,, t11d11 im ·N...., llilllnt"' ~ t..cfl: m ,.,..,, "-"""'"*" t!Ndl1 11171 Ind! loullv1,.. Siii °"'*'Ml •I HO!'lt! II C.."'IN .... I T"••••• 11141 Ml ... 111 Q ~ A4:z1lals; Ml-1411 ~ Cllmflll ~ .... " ........... ......... ,.,.. lilfl'9 ...... tiiiiiff...._._._ ..... saii -_, ... = ...... c-i ..... ............ ,...,,....., • --flt .................... """' , .. r+:Js 4 ......, .-1111 -...... -"""',,... --· ........ ~..w•c•--. ~ . t· a 1a•r ., °""' ••· ...... ,·.,, ....... ,. ,....,.., .......,., ...... ,... ........ . ... big rig was crushed. Residents of the home. Dr. and f\.lrs. Charles strong, were not injured. The huge combination truck, crawler lractor and spiked "sheepsfoot'' earth compactor narrowly missed a butane lank for emergency power supply for Dr. Strong's bomb shelter, police said. The incident occurred on Temple Hills Drive in the 1000 block at a treacherous hairpin curve. Fire department officiaJs estimated damage to be $40,000 total. The hillside home at 1179 Temple Hills Drive was struck at the northerly comer art.er the swifUy moving truck and load smashed through a center barricade, across an opposing traffi c lane, and down a small incline jarring an entrance col- umn from its foundations. BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -o,io Anderton, the man who 11,JCCeeded v1oe president Spl~ T. Agnew as chief ~X· ecutive of Baltunore County, pleaded ID· nocent in U.S. District Q>urt today to charges of conspiracy, extort.Ion and bribery. Anderson, one of Maryland's most powerful Democrats, wall released on his own recognizance by Judge Joseph Young on the condition that he not leave the continental UnJted States. Tentative trial date was set for Jan. 7. Norman P. Ramsey, Anderaon's attorney, told the judge that he wanted "a prompt FOOO GIFTS . TO AGNEW REPORTEO. Story, Poge 4 trial in this matter." The hearing lasted seven minutes. "I thought it was an airplane coming down,·• P.trs. Strong said as she surveyed the destruction wrought in her front yard, The Caterpillar tractor toppled from the flatbed trailer and landed upside dO\VD, stopping just short of a home. The big roller also jarred off the trailer. D911Y l'ilmt ...... " Jldl Ct111>Hll LAGUNA BEACH FIREMEN EXAMINE TRACTOR THAT LEFT SEMI TRUCK, TRAILER THURSOAY The Accident at Sharp Curve in Temple Hills Drive Did $40,000 Dem1ge to Home Agnew is under investigation by federal prosecutors on similar charge1 - all involving a11egations of illegal payoffs by architectJ and engineers for non-bid contracts awarded to them. But no evidence involving the vice president has gone before a special grand jury probfn& political corruption in Maryland. No figures of the rig's weight were available from the Pieo Rivera hauling firm of crs Contractor Transport. "I don't have any estimates on anything," said Earl Hodson, firm owner. He said he did not know where the rig had been "'orking, and tersely referred all other questions to the insurance com- pany. Police identified the driver as Larry Cox, 22, of Covina. Cox told officers he was coming down Temple HiUs Drive with the truck in low gear, when the rig suddenly started to pick up speed just before it entered the sharp curve. "He observed be couldn't make the curve and all he could do is hang on," Sgt. Norm Babcock said today. Crews from a special towing firm worked until midnight to remove the rig from the Temple Hills residence. Traffic on Temple Hills Drive was heavier than normal because Park Avenue, the only other access road to Top of the World, was closed due to street construction. With the traffic restricted to one lane on Temple Hills, the city was forced to open Park Avenue, and officers reported today the fresh asphalt on Park Avenue was damaged by the heavy traffic. No charges are being considered against the driver at this time, Sgt. Bab- cock said. From Pagel CYANIDE ... \\"ere placed on alert. "A major concern to the Coast Guard is that people along the coast -swim- mers and boaters -migtJ.t spot one ol the barrels, think it is something valuable and drag it ashore," said a sixikesman. '"We're also concerned that com- mercial fishermen offshore could get a barrel tangled in their nets or run over one," he said. He added that the Coast Guard fears lhe drums may berome corroded in the salt water of the gulf and be in a weakened condition if they drift ashore. He said Coast Guard units are operating under instructions calling for them to wash with fresh water any bar· rels they find and to coat them with an anticorrosive ~hemical. With.in minutes of the first report on the floating barrels. a Biloxi. 1ftiss. radio station and the Coast Guard unit at Biloxi received calls at about the same time from persons who reported having seen barrels resembling those described by the Coast Guard. However, they turned out to be gray· green colored gasoline drums which ap- peared to be blue as they floated in the water. Stewards Probe Navy Perso1111el Cater to Nixon? "-WASIIlNGTON (UPI ) -Sen. William Proxmire said today Navy stewards are catering food and serving drinks at private parties while assigned to the White House to provide personal services for President Nixon. The Wisconsin Democrat asked the General Accounting Office to investigate I.he legality of the Navy's assignment of 53 stewards to the President and two to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. According to information provided Proxmire's o(fice, a civilian employe ol the White House directs the stewards to "'urk weekends and nights at parties in private homes and the Executive Office Building at the request of the presiden- tial staff. Proxmire's office has been told the catering services are in addition to the stewards' normal duties and that they are seldom paid extra compensation for their bartender and c I e a n • u p assignments. In addition, food £or the parties is pro- vided at cut·rate commissary prices. However, the government is reimbursed for the r~ Proxmire said he intends to introduce legislation to prohibit the assignment or stewards to the personal use of the Presi- dent and vice president. He asked the GAO, congr~ssional watchdog on goverrvnent spending. to determine the stewards' activities "and whether they work in San Clemente, Key Biscayne or other presidential retreats." The senator also released a list of the names of ranking Navy officers to whom are assigned 570 stewards. 98 percent of them Filipinos, lo provide for the of- ficers' personal services. "Why can't the officers make their own beds and keep their rooms clean themselves?" asked Proxmire. He said the "hiring or foreign nationals classified officially as 'Malaysian' is particularly offensive and smacks of old£ashioned colonialism." The senator said there are 11,407 stewards· on active duty serving in of- ficers' dining rooms, mess halls, clubs, kitchens and other places. Proxmire said the program costs $92.2 million annually for pay, tr ave I allowances and training. Those stewards assigned to the personal services of of. ricers and the While House cost $5.8 million annually,.he said. Bay to Wate1·9ate Sunday Features Letters On Hearings, Ecology . Here's a rundown of stories appearing in this week's SUnday Daily Pilot: UPPER BAY -A multiplicity of government agencies is working to preserve the ecological vitality of Upper Newport Bay and most officials aie op- timistic that results of their work will soon become evident. The main problem they have is coordinating all their ef- ( Sunday's Best) forts. Staff writer John Zaller rcporu In a YOU sectlnn feature. ART FOR TABLE -High food prices tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo Olson in a women's page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judg;ng from the mail response, the Watergate hearings may be the most closely- listened-to series on television. From hate mail to near love letters, it pours in at rate tt(at Is too high to keep track of. For sami!es, see the Sunday editorial section. AMERICANS IN DEBT -The averag• citizen's ideas on borrowing may not be as liberal as is assumed. A University or Michigan study shows mlddle-lnC<lme families borrowed at an average or 12 pe~ent of their yearly income. and most don't want to borrow any more. 'This feature appears in the YOU section. rip ffinted WASIUNGTON !AP>' -White House sources indicated Thursday It was "quite likely" that President Nixon would. at- tend the dedication ceremonies or the huge new Dallas-Fort Worth Airport In Texas Sept 22. not only are keeping some meals off din· ner tables, they also are keeping art off gallery-walls. For ~ l>r<>llle~r-.-eos111 -.. • .,., Mesa art1st who works with organic materials read this week's SUnday Special by Jacqu•llnc Combs Lllnd. . - TALENT SCOUT -JeaMe Haliburton watches for potential "Stars" of stage ~ tc1-een in eessions every Saturday in ·1 Newport ~ch ballet achool. M,.., ltalibarloJlrv~gcnt 100 form er ac- From Pagel SHOOTOUT AFTERMATH • • • forearnt and ston1ach and is listed in gunman and his captives burst into the serious condition following his operation. home of Lynn Beatty at 1986 Port Trinity About two dozen shots were fired at the Place, commandeering her car and keys height of the confrontatiOR when the gwi-for the last leg of the bizarre chase. man -holding Miss Ba.eseman in front Police patrol cars and a helicopter with the pistol at her head and OeSilva spotted the getaway car - a bright red behind him -continued his advance foreign sport coupe -at ford Road and MacArthur Boulevard and initiated the toward police in a futile effort to flee. chase inlo Santa Ana Heights. Technicians at the Orange County The difference in names obtained for Sheriff's Department crime laboratory the suspect slowed the quest for his iden- toda y v.•cre rushing to complete ballistics tity somewhat Thursday. tests on the guns involved in the "We've 11;1ade the usual routine checks shootool. under' that name (Heidlage) but have so Investigators so far have declined to far come up with nothing,'' Capt. Oyaas say how many shots were fired said afterw'ard. "We are as puuJed altogether Wednesday night. come up with notlilng. We are as puuled DeSilva told one newsman he believed as anyone else as to his motive in this he was hit by ixilice bullets after the ab-whole thing." ductor's gun fired during the sudden The suspect reportedly told DeSilva struggle, which diverted its barrel from and Miss Baeeemann he was wanted by ~1iss Baese man's head. lawmen and had to get lo Orange'O>lmty Witnesses and police said the man bar· Airport to catch a plane or helicopter to ricaded in the otherwise-empty home of freedom. the Howard Feichtmann family st!Ol at l)Jring the standoff in which the trio officers at least lwice. was barricaded in the Feichtmann home, He first approached the youthful couple the gunman demanded to speak to a and another girl, Angelica DeSilva, 17. newsman about his demands for safe who managed to escape as her brother passage. and Miss Baeseman were taken hostage. Orange Coast Daily Pilot St a ff The suspect alternately identified as Photographer Richard Koehler entered Heidlage and Gray allegedly claimed he the home at the end of Orchid Hills Drive was wanted by the police and needed a which is a cul*sac street to try to ride to Orange County Airport but chang-reason With him. eel his orders later. o:-Koehler sakl ,afterward the ma* with ffe forced DeSilv"a to drive into tl'\e whom he Conversed down a hallway as Harbor View Homes tract, where Mrs. both stayed out or sight or each other Mary Witcher, 33, of 1979 Port Trinity wanted a fully-fueled helicopter and Place, was forced to join the terrified female pilot to fly him to safety. hostages at gunpoint. "There are no female helicopter pilots She later escaped at the Feichtmann around," Koehler shouted back. home. During the exchange, the kldnaper told Moments after she was kidnaped, the Koehler his name was Ignacio. The 56-year~ld Anderson, In a J9.eount indictment returned Aug. 23, was ac- cused of extorting $46,420 from eight firms doing business with the county. He has denounced the charges as a "frame- up" and "phony." Agnew also has denied all chargea of wrongdoing. Andenoo is the only penon Indicted • far in the Investigation, but courthoule sources said others would be named. The grand jury met for about three hours Thursday, sealed off from public contact by unprecedented 1 e c u r i t y restrictions. The corridor leading to Its fifth noor room in the courthouse was guarded by federal mmhala who blocked oUorll of reporters to see who was cominl and going. U.S. Attorney George Beall, who beads the investigation, said the secqrtty measures were ablolutel,y necessary. "By tradition and .Utute, grand jury proceeding• are secret," Beall iold newsmen. · Welfare Grant Hikes Opposed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Republicans stiffened opposition today to proposals to IUke welfare grants for 500,000 aged, blind and disabled Californians as the 1973 legialative sealoo entered ill llnol hours. Senate Democratic floor leader George Moscone said he needed juat two more Republican votes to send to Gov. Ronald Reagan a measure that would hike the 500,000 welfare grants an average of $23 a month; The Reagan administration continued to demand a more modest plan allowing hikes Jan. I averaging just $9. SLEEP SOFAS I • Every Home Should Have One --""""'-~, Exeollont Selection Now On Oisploy. Al Reasonable Prices. Stop In Tod1y. OREXEL-HERl1';6r-HENREoON-WOOOMARK-KA!1ASlAN INTERIORS WIRDAn & SATURDAYS t •OO le ltJO FlllDAY 'TIL t:OO l NEWPORT IEACH e 11l1 WESTCLIFf Dl.. Ml·20&1 10,..11 s~11111 • ., 11.11101 LAGUNA IEACH e 341 NOllTH COAST HWY • ~--10,., SoM., n ;fifDJ •"·"" ~ TORRANCf e 11Mt .-.AWTHOkNI ILVD. a11.1an - ' • • ) F l t I ' U1 0 unu 1 \~hE \\'00 hu~ eve I on• pie< bac if I Nia Cou gel( Aus pag Cat Rat An! rep \'isl are join and H l wal can ary It 15. am· scr• lin11 ban con FoC 1ui cen! "" pit! Pol ed I tor "' [ Mu wri anc arc rec YOl or coo mu rel ch• v.•a; ~ Ii~ to ' ·~ 181 v~ avi le< F1 I (pl '"' SUI m~ am ha lh< I pr lri A@ vlj '"' ~ :l ' pr •• I P! " 'tl 11: ,, A.t Your Service A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday Feature Of the Dully PUoc 11111011 S11il Wn11ted DEAR PAT: This rcqucsl probably is unusual. but I am desperate to learn \Vherc I might buy some one-piece. all \\·ool union suits. I am 68 yea rs old and have arthritis in n1y spine. I've tried every place I know, but can't find any one-piece suits. I can't wear the t"'~ piece suits due to forn1er stomach and back operations. l 'd also like to find ou1 if there is a branch or salesroom for Niagara Cyclo-l\1 assace units in Orange County because I can't drive to Los An- geles . F.G., COSTA !\1ESA ''uu'll find one-piece 100 percent Australian 'A'OOI union suits ad\'crliscd on page 643 of the ~firs Fall & Winter Cutalo)!. Other selections of "Weather Ruled Union Suits" also are listed. A Lo6 Angeles Nla~ara Cyclo·!\1assage re presenlutlve is contacting you and will visit you al your hon1c, U you wish. lfl1nt Cnn I Claim? DEAR PAT: Since our two children are in the.ir teens, I have decided to join my husband in the working world and take a full ·time job. Is it true that if I hire a maid to clean the house and watch the children when they're home. I can claim a tax deduction ror her sal· ary? D.!\1., LAGUNA BEACll Ir your dependent children are under 15, you ma)' ht entitled to a deduction for amounts Jlaid to a ptrsoo for household ser\•ice, but there 11re 11 number or limltatious IDvo l\'td. You and your bu&- band must not h&\e morf' than $11.000 combined int'flme for a full deducUon. for e\'ery dollar )'Our income exceeds $18,008, your deduction ts reduced by SO cents. This meam lbat U }'Our income r~acbes $21,000. your deducUoq, wlU co.rn· pletely disappear. Request a copy of IRS Publication 583, "Cblld Care end Disabl· ed Dependrnt Cnre," from any IRS office for complete tnformatk>n. 1H11rnl• for Amnte11rs DEAR PAT: I have a 1965 cat.alog from !\lural Arts Com{Xlny in Tanana. I've written twice recently for ne\v catalogs and price lists and although the letters arc not returned undeliverable. I haven't r~ivecl any acknowledgement. Could you find oul the status of this company, or refer us to another source where we could purchase large paint-by-number murals for amaleur painters? We ha\'e retired 10 a new home and prefer this chall enge. rathet than purchasing a \\1allpaper mural. A.C., SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO s DAILY l"ILOT Sac(dleback. FadHt11 Nixed Contract Delays Hospital Openhlg ol the $1~ mUlioa Seddleba<k Community Hospital wlll be delayed iA· definitely_ .by cancellail_on of a manage- ment contract with the Llltqari Hospital Society or Southern cautomla. The Los Angeles-based firm, hired to handle construction and management for the non-profit ·Laguna Hills facility, gave notice that their contract will end Sept. 28. ''It was pretty much by mutual agree- ment," Semuel J. Tibbetts, president of the Lutheran non-profit organization said. 1 Tibbetts said LHS oflici?-ls believe the Sadd.Jeback Board has failed to meet its agreement to raise its share of funds. The final decision to withdraw came after the hospital's 20-member board voted not to allow the management firm majority control of the board. "When we retained the LHS to provide Seoul Cracks Do·w1i on Hair SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Police rounded up 15,714 males, most of them young, in a na- tionwide crackdown Thursday and today on hippie-style long hair. The police said they referred 645 or those arrested to military courts and let the ~ of them go after cutting off "decadent looking" lengths of hair. J\ten whose hair covers their ears can ~ jailed for as much as 29 days. Ba11ender Sued In San Clemente After Assault A bartender at a San Clemente tavern and lhe operators of the premises were sued for a total of $330,000 in damages Thursday by a former patrOn who claims the barkeep attacked him twice in a l~ minute period and inflicted serious and permanent injuries. Named as defendants in the Orange Couhty Superior Court lawsuit are Roland C. and Eleanor V. Andel'IOO, operators of the EI Camino Room, 220 S. El Camino Real, bartender Gilbert G. Georis ·and Gerald Horstman, also iden- tified as a bartender. Plaintiff Charles C. Britton identifies Georis as "violent. vicious and dangerous" and claims the bartender was drunk when Britton allegedly was at- tacked by him Jan. 17. The Andersons and Hontman are sued for their alleged negligence at the time Britton was att.acked. total management services in June, 1970, the agreement spelled out the services they· were to render,'' said Bernard Ingram, president of the board. "When the board wartold reeently or a need for additional financing, LHS also demanded the right or option to select a majority of the board members in ex· change for guaranteeing their m... debtedness for the needed funds." But Ingram said this represented a "breech of. faith .of residents in our com- munity." Tibbetts said "We probably never would have used the option -but since- we had to guarantee the financing we wanted the security or knowing we could ha"e a majority vote." Ingram said the hospital board has ar· rang~ .alternate financing which will provide funds necessary, with "less cost- ly oonsequences than surrendering com· munity control of the hospital.'' Tibbetts said the oi'iginal contract agreement was that $5.2 million would be borrowed. He said construction estimates turned out to be low, so the amount had to be upped to $7 million. This swnm'er, eve~ that figure proved too low, and the Society called for more financing. "The board fell $3 milliOn short of the sources of funds they stipulated," Tib- betts added. "The la.st 18 months we had been warrurm them that something had to be done, and in the last four or five months it came to a head.'' !he ISO.bed hospital has1 been plagued with delays since construction began two years ago. Opening was originally scheduled for June. MRS. KATINKA PARKER, 52, SAYS SHE'S NOT READY TO GIVE UP TO THE GHOST Malevolent Spirit Pushed Her Downstairs Twice Since She Bought The Home in Denver Ghost Plagues Housewife Neig ltbors Blame Evil Spirits on Faulty Plumbing DENVER fUPI ) -Katinka Parker husband the house to break up after 22 "I couldn't wail to move in after w~ says the thing that goes bump in the yean; of marriage. She says it also bought the house," she said. "But as 5001\· night in her home. is a ghost. Skeptical almost ended her n1arriagc. as \ve did, I became very depressed. 1 neighbors say it's bad plumbing. began to hate the house and hate my hWi-.' "I can't explain a w a y my personal band. I told him 1 hated him. The spititJ El C reeling that there is something evil in Teac}1e1· Strikes just 1 didn't want anyone to be happf· eJttrO Qlfilke this house," said Mrs. Parker. "I can here." feel it. I c<in sense it. f'in very skept ical D } • S h l Mrs. Par'ker said she and her h LISban~ Hits Witl"out . bynature.1·m not1hetype ofpersonwho e ay1ng c oo saved their marriage by ta1king aoo~. ., sits around and dreams up these sorts of the sense of evil in the house but sh!'-' C . things." In Five Stat.a.Q. came to despise the home so much they ausf,ng D The ghost has pushed Mrs. Parker ~ ~ UlllUge down the stairs twice, she says, once moved away for two years. The couple~ because it was angered at the new red By The Associated Press returned in May after Mrs. Parker decid-. EL CENTRO (AP)-A rolling earth-wallpaper in the master bedroom. Both Hundreds or thousands of public school ed. "I was going to 'fi ght the ghost. It wai quake hit without apparent damage times, Mrs. Parker wrenched her back. pupils continued to get extended vaca· my house." Thursday. Californians felt it as far as The malevolent spirit, she said. tions today as teachers stayed out on The house, gabled and surrounded by • Huntington Bea~. about 150 miles away. mumbles to itself as it glides through the strike in Michigan, Ohio. Rhode Island, shaded veranda, was built on the site m but at the estimated epicenter Edie eighl·room house built in 1908 and oc,. Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. an old farnlhouse. Signs said: casionally knocks on walls in the dead of State officials in Michigan reported The first owner of the house walked o~ "Some felt it. and some didn't. It was night. Thursday that w'alkouts were under way to the front lawn in 1912 and put a bullet" just an earthquake." "One night. I was awakened by a in Detroit and 23 school districts serving in his head in an unsuccessful attempt at Tbe operator of an Ocotillo Wells Cafe man's voice calling from the foot of the aOOut 544,000 pupils. suicide. ~ Mrs. Signs said no damage was reJX)rted: stairs. The voice said 'Mother' or A hearing was to continue today in t1rs. P arker said she didn't know whG" None was noticed by residents of nearby 'Brother.' I couldn't understand which it Mahoning County Common Pleas Court the ghost might be but that it could have communities along the San Diego and was. When 1 +looked there was no on on a request bv the schoo, l board . in been someone "who lived in the oMl Imperial County line. the...,." l v v ,,...._"<,_ f 11 ·1oung1town, VlllO, for · an Injunction fannhouse. I've beard spirits o ten r~ ltl magnitude was moderate on the Mrs. Parker. 52, blames the ghost for against 1,750 striking teachers and other main "With the land. Ma ybe it was u~. Richter scale at seismographs in causing the couple that sold her and her school emplQyes. that the old fannhouse was torn down.·~~. California Institute or Technology in 'T,_,_,_,_,__,,_,_,__,_,_,_,_;,;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~~~~~ii;;i.,i~~;;;;;;;;;;~ Pasadena and the University o t 11 California at San Diego. GREEN HAVEN In El Centro, the oounty jail matron · said, "J felt my chair shaking -it just shook.'' Linette Martin, added "it felt like you're dunk." James Shaw, a farmer who lives west of El Centro, said several pictures fell from a wall in his house. A sheriff's deputy in the La(W1a Moun· tains said a meeting was disrupted by the rumble. A resident of Lakeside said water sloshed out of hls pool. A cup of coffee spilled in an office in the San Diego County courthouse. Fae· tory workers in Huntington Beach telephoned authorities. • Ranunculus !\1ural Arts Company ha• no telephone listing and Is out of bus~ss, according to several other Los Angeles area mural art firms I conl{lcted. !\1uralmast.er, Inc., 1. t8HH !\1ount \ie'ashington, F o u n ta In \7allcy. bas paint-by-number murals availabli;. They measure from three to l! feet In length and oil ore three feet blgh. In 1940 an earthquake centered a few miles east of El Centro killed 40 persons and caused an estimated $5--million pro- perty damage. Another quake centered in nearby Calexico killed six persons in 1915. Baby Girl Found In Garbage Bag ONION SETS For refreshin9 Sprin9 Color ENJOY FRESH ONIONS GROW YOUR OWN 2~ 100 FOR 69~ ' Feeding Fr111t Trees DEAR PAT: I have three fruit trees !plums and nectarine) in my yard and they bear fruit -more or less -each summer. I'd like to know the best n1elhod possible to feed the trees this fall and winter for growth '1Jd a good harvest. but mosl of iill . what do t feed the trees to muke the fruit sweeter? R.R., IRVINE Information on ell.re. fertilltlrig 1nd pruning fruit lrees Is being malled lo you from the University of California Agrlcultural Extension Serflce. Farm ad· vlser Kenneth f.· l\1ueller satd tile rda· tlonshlp between the en"lronment and 1•e \'flrlely of fruh il'ee plilya a large pan Jn determining t~ fruit's 1weetne111, with cool summers tending to produce 1 sour rrult. It IOOks llkt you'd better pl-epure for1 a iurl crop or Plums and n~tarlne! rtom this year's "summer." Slot Jackpot Hit: $47,244 RENO, Nev. (UPI! -A woman lw hit a 147 ,244 jackpot on a dollar slot machine here, officials of 11arold's Club casino &aid. The-Sacramento, woman was not lden- iillcd. A few days before, a record slot machine jackpot of $6a.093 was won by a retired San fo~rancisco accountant. casino officials sold. Car Cras i Kilfs 7 MARBLE FALLS, Tex. (UPI) -Seven persons, including four children, on the w~y to a !ootboll game, ...,.. tJUcd Thursday artcrnoon when their car col· llded wit~ i truck In a blinding ralnslonn ,:ix miles sooth ol town. --------Weekend Specials-------- NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -A newborn girl rescued from an ant·in· fested gar~ge bag was in satisfactory condition at Charity Hospital. She wu 1potled Thursday in a debris· filled garage by Odessa Weber, who was attracted by what first sounded like a trapped cat. Mr. Weber said she peered through an opening in the garage and saw the child's arm waving from the paper sack. NAME BRAND Stock or Petunias Pooy poc. oll colors Req. 7tc TERRIANIUM BOTTLES l'hl"t your ow" 1 Z tal. •Ii• .... 995 17.tS WICKER BASKETS 10"110" •at11ral cofor, ldiNI for plo•ll~ wo1to beN:et, "'· Re,. 2.•S 149 TREASURE HUNTER la....,... F. Loe Bolley Attorney Bailey Seeks T1·easure At Missile Site An emergency unit took the child to the hospilal, where officials said her face was covered with ant bites and she had a small cut on her chest, but "she seems to be In satisfactory condition." Patio Furniture SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI) -Attorney F. Lee Bailey has '8.sked the governor of The garage was owned by a man who told police he knew nothing or the bo~y. Pliotograplier To Get Closer New Mepco to help him gain access to NEW YORK (AP) _The U.S. Court or the Whit~ Sands Missile Range to look Appeals has reduced .I.he distance froo- for an old Spanish treasure his ellelll! lance pbotograpber Ronald Galella must believe Is there. keep from Jacqueline Onassis and her A spokesman for Gov. Bruce Klng said Lwo chlldren. Thursday "the gove11JOr said he would do The appeals panel said an Injunction what he could." · • ed 1 · t G 111 t Bailey represents about 50 clients 1s.su ast year aga1ns a e a was oo claiming ownership of allet1ed cache, "!'oad and reduced from 150 to 25 le<! tho which tl)ey say contains tilo tons of gold. dJStonce he must put hotwcen himseU Klng'Jpress .. cretary Pete .l'tllCO".IJlid-Q11Jl.MfJ,_Qna.S§.ts. ~ I REDWOOD FURNITURE ly HoKock 6' 119 TAILI w/bHck 16 Mf'I Mttl I R99. $44.95 yo•l't 011ly 4' UMlllLLA TAILI w/> bMc:._ tl ..n o•llyl •tt· Sit.ts Now IND TAILIS -COCKTAIL TAILIS, ASST. STOOLS-llNCH. 1911. YolMI to S2•.tS Now $29.95 $39.95 $11.00 .......... $24.00 CLUI CHAii 14 .. ,.,, LOYI SIA IJ e11i.1 l'ADDID CHAii I> CHAii CUSHIONS • .... "'"' $32.00 "lm $3.00 the governor is "rather doub\fultrthi.f a The court also reduced fror1 225 to 3l. ''""'"' ex!~ on the 1'1111" but .. 1c1 leet tho distance be mu s) s tay rrom Mrs. 2123 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa that •ju far as he's coocemed, it might Onassis' children Caroline and John. 1con1er of '•tlo 64Z·410J ht worth a check." U.S. District Co'Jrt Judge Irving Newport & Vlctorlo N11FMfy 64,.Jtzs Military olOclals have resJsted at· Ben Cooper ruled last year alter a six· BARSTOOLS BARSTOOLS tWt1t'")h bOll Swivel loot Fro1n $19.95 Wr/lro11 •/•ph. boc:• $49 95 l '""· .... $69.95. • TROPITONE HI 9UALITY OUTDOOR PATIO FUINITUIE TAILD,..Atlt. 111111 • 5Hpee CHAIU. s. .. locket• ASIOlTID LOUNGIS IAI STOOLS with IUFFIT IAI 40 00 50°/o o .. • tempts by ctvlllans to go onto the land to week trial that Galella ha<I "relclitlessJy O,IN -1 DAYS SUNDAY. TO S:JO-DAILY 71JO TO' search for any lreasure. Invaded Mrs. Onassis' privacy." IL _____ ,;,';;";.•.";'.;";.' ,;;U;;•;;",;,";.;.";.;.''.;.";;';.0;.'..;.",;,'.;'';.. _____ .::::::::::==========-J • ' . • \1 } DAIL V PILOT frlday, Stptembtr 14, 1973 • :John ·Schmitz In Comeback? POLITICAL TRAILS DEPT. - §verybody from pol itic ian s to sewives have been bee£ing about the situation in this Year of Our Lord 3. l.ittle wonder. When it comes to trying to get a round eak oo the family table, you seem tO ce one of two situations. Either you can ord the steak but can't find it, or you find plenty of it but can't afiord it. it has gone. ·~One of our Orange Coast's better politicians summed up the bef:.f ation this way in a recent newsle)ter: "In 1965, WIULE out of office, Prest· t Nixon himself stated, all too truJy: lesson that government price-fixing sn't work is never learned.' But if \Ve d even learn that lesson -and surely me of us can -the extraordinary "story of beef prices and supply in 1973 ould prove it." Now the newsletter writer who was king a Uttle jab at Mr. Nixon and t,he ent governmental efforts to curb in- ation wasn't a current officeholder of e loyal opposition or somesuch. He was John G. Schmitz, former state ator, former congressman from our ·on, and former presidential candidate the American lndependept Party.· rise. Anyway, because he is currently out of ice and back to teaching at Santa Ana lege, it may come as a surprise to some political observers that John Schmitz is still circulating a politica l newsletter. He happened to drop by the offi ce the other day and questioned on this point. Schmitz indicated that indeed, he stiU circulates many thousands of the newsletters on a regular basis all over the COWltry. TALK NA11.JRALLY turned to politics and what his plans might be for the future. Well, yes, John said he had taken out some papers for a state office there _3,)ihile back, but he never turned them /ba_~ in; never officially filed. Yes, he said quietly, he would consider running for public office again .. , some surveys had been taken on public na me identification and the like ... he kind or trailed off. JOHN SCHMITZ seemed rather sutr dued that day when compared to the wit- ty, quick. confident and perhaps even cocky congressmen who used to charm audiences from the political podiwns of Orange C.Ounty. Political opponents might attribute his current low profile to the fact that , Schmitz has lost his last two elections. I don't think so. I think it is far more attributable to the personal tragedy of last August ¥:hen Schmitz lost his young son , Philip. in a swimming pool accident at his Newport Beach home. And Schmitz is accepting this tragic loss as a 1nan or deep religious conviction. AS FOR THE political fron t. time may blunt the sting of personal tragedy. And I suspect \.Ve will see John G. Schmitz' name on a ballot again. Russ Launch Cos1nos MOSCOW (AP) -T1le Sovi:t Union launched. today the 586th earth satellite in its to1>-secret C.Osmos series, the of· ficial news agency Tass reported. "Cosmoo" has been used as a , cover name for a wide range of Soviet space missions from collection of weather data 10 tests of fractional orbital bombs. . Chile ~ Junta Reports Calin Restored Death of Syrian Jet Middle East skies were quiet again today after Thursday's biggest air battle since 1967 six-day war. Israel says 13 Syrian MIG21s were shot down. Syria said it shot dow n five Israel planes and lost eight of its own. Laos Agreement Signed; Phouma To Take Cl1arge VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -The Vien~ liane government and the Communist Pathet Lao signed. a political peace agreement today making them partners in another coalition govenunenl for divided Laos. Premier Souvanna Phouma, who will head the coalition, said he hoped the new government would meet before Oct. 10. The 2&-page agreement, hammered out in negotiations since a cease-fire on Feb. 21, was signed at Souvanna Phouma 's residence beside the Mekong Ri ver. The diplomatic c orps attended , the usual champagne toasts \vcre drunk. and t\\'O air force helicopters circled overhead. BUT ONLY A small detachment of guards was on duty ~und the house, and the only •onlookers outside were newsmen. After nearly 20 years of sporadic warfare and political upheaval, the public showed no interest. In Gambodia, rrif:anwbile, hard fighting broke out in -Vihear-Suor, 13 miles norlheast or Phno111 Penh. Only light ac- tion was reported in K001pong Cham. Col. Am Rong,.the Cambodian military spokesman, said the garrison in Vlhear Suor was surrounded and an infantry col· umn had been sent to relieve it .. The little market town is part of Phnom· Penh's eastern defense line, and shelling and fighting has been reported there for a week. A communique said the government's forces in Kompong Cham, 47 miles northeast or Phnom Penh, were con- tinuing to enla rge their perimeter and were encountering only light harassmenl DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otlivery of tht Daily Pllol is quarant~ed M•llO•¥·Fricl1r: II VOi> clo ftOI ~··· """' ... ,., l'f J:» ''"'" clll 11111 'ftllr CO.., Wiii M l,.qftl .. ,...,,., Ct lll Irr l~~tn llftlll l ;:IO '·'"· S•hl<dlt 111<1 S111M11y: II yfu do no! r1cth1• y,,,. copy 1¥ t 1.m. S"111f'111,, or I 1.m. Swntlty, Cl11 .. \ti 1 copy will I t bnvgftl i. Viv, (1111 1r1 l•-tn Un!ll 11 l ,m, Telepllone~ Most 0•••9t Co11oly ..,,.,, •. . .. to2~l11 NorthWtll HUftli•tlt• II••<~ ••d w •• , ... 1n.1.. .. .... 1•t-1nt Sin Cltrn1ftlt , (1pl1lr1"" It•<~. ~•n Jw•• C1pl11rano, 0••• P1lnl, St~ltl l.1911111, lltUM Nfttlf'• ,.., .,JMH NY Ti;~-s;;A~-=! Received Food Gifts BALTIMORE (UPII - A rich and politically influential super- market executive here has regularly s upplied Vice President Spiro Agnew and hi s family wi th gifts of food, The New York Times said today. ~ The Times attributed the reports to a Maryland political figure wlth contacts on Agnew's staff. The vice president's· Washington office did not deny the stOry, and neither did Joseph H. Rash, the reported donor of uie food. Rash is a vice president of Food Fair Stores Inc., third biggest supennarket chain in the country. RASH, IN AN interview at his corporate office in the suburb or Towson, warmly defended his donations on the grounds of a 12.year friendship with the Agnews. He told a reporter that he never, sougbt favo rs from the vice president and that he never made any· money (~ with him. He emphasized that the food donations were exchange S .· gifts Tamh ong friends. '. ·. e Times reported that Agnew's press secretary, J . Marsh Thomson, when reached in Washington, said after consulting with I the vice president that Agnew would have no comment on the gifts. Efforts were unavailing to determine the specifics of the food gifts sent by Rash to Agnew. Rash refused to specify details about the presents which he said he had received from the vice president. Rash. a Democrat. has close connections with Maryland Gov. ,, M~ryin Mandel, for whom he has done considerable campaign fund· ra1smg. Sen. Ervin Would Listen To Tapes With President NEWARK, Del. (UPI) -Senate Watergate committee chairman Sam J . Ervin, Jr. says he would be willing "to compromise " with President Nixon in order to end the ensnarled court battle over the White House tapes. Ervin sai d Thursday night he is willing to renew .his offer t;hat he and three members of his committee listen to the tapes privately with Nixon, to determine if "John Dean was telling the truth," and if the Presklent was involved in the scan· dal . The North Carolina senator, speaking at a lecture series at the University of Delaware, said the Watergate affair can't be ended until the tapes are heard and said "I'm willing to hear th e tapes with the President as a compromise." ERVIN SAID, however, that he expects the battle of the tapes will probably end in the Supreme Court. He said "I'm con- fident the court will rule against the President. And I'm confident the Presi- dent will obey the oourt." Under questioning, Ervin s~ that U Nixon refuses to obey the high court, Congress may have no other choice but to move towards impeachment. He said however, "the court would first have to ind.let him for obstructing justice and then it would go to the House, where hn- peachment would begin." Radio Says Re$istance Breaks Up SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Lile in Chile ls returning to nonnal and resistance has stopped, the new military junta an- nounced today over its rad.lo network. The broadcast said commerce and transport in Conceix:ion js operating at 100 percent and port activities are back to nonnal. "Industries have resumed and the peo- ple are absolutely calm," it said. "AcUviUes In all of the country are normalizing and mopping "up operations a1e going on without any type of it!iistance," the broadcast said. THE RADIO DENIED claims or sup.. porters of the late President Salvador Allende who fled to Buenos Aires that retired Gen. Carlos Prats was leading army units in a counterrevolution. It said such reports aimed at dividing the armed forces. The exiles said Prata and his force were moving north from C.OOCepcion, 250 milff south of Santiago, to attack the ca pital, and that the anny in Punta Arenas, the southernmost proVi.nce 1,400 miles from S8ntiago, was still loyal to th~ leftist ·coalition. But nothing was heard in Santiago or Prats, and a Chi.lean newsman in Punta Arenas reported that the. situation there was normal and that stores and schools reopened despite a heavy snowstorm. IN SAN'l1AGO, a few sidewalk fruit stands were opened on Alameda Avenue. The vendors charged twice the normal price for their apples and avocados and still sold a day's supply in an hour or less. One delicatessen owner opened bis doors and a long line oC shoppers formed. "What does he have to sell?" ooe woman asked another. "1 don't know," the second one replied. The first one cllecked out the slluation, returned, and said.J'He bas no bread." "Ob, I knew lhal," was the reply. The mili<ary chiefs, led · by Gen. Augusto Pinochet, who overthrew All<nde Tuesday, pined a stroog but lemporary polltical base Thursday 1lfght. The moderate Cbrlstlan Democratic party and the right-wing ·National •party, which together won nearly 64 percent of the votes when Allende was elected ln 1970, expressed approval ol the Tuesday coup. The Christian Democrat.!I, CJille's largest party, said the junta's goal "to restore peace between Chileans ... re- quires fair and unlf1ed action by everyone." But the statement signed by party president Patricio Aylwin made. clear that the endonement of military rule was temporary: It said ~ 1Ddftions of lhe armed ,_ "~coolldellce lh3t ......... Ibey flnt8b 'the task Ibey underloot '• ... -..m -. to lhe _ .. ~.. . l""'t""• • Serpj Oriclie Jarpa, pmtdeDt ol the Natlailal JIOIV, llid A1lenclie'1 -~ rule hid (ll'Oooked ''tolal crisis,!! ilDIU1e called Oii all adleans ''lo llUP(JOrt ·withOut reservaUcns the corrective aciicm{clt the junta." ~ Ruckelshaus .~acked W ASlllNGTQN (AP) -William D. Rucl<elsbaus bu -WIBllimously al>' proved by the Senate Judlclary Com- mittee w b6 deputy attorney general. The vote Thursday aent Ruckelaba115' nomina~,-to . Qae Sen'a~ f I Oo.p_. Ruckelsbaus1 a .former Indiana l~tllf, hu oerved in lhe Nixon admj111'ttotlC11 since early 111911 wlieft he wu apPomled an -t atjarnef ,...ml. . • I "". '. VPI TtlfllhOte NEW CHILE CHIEF Gen . Augusto Pinochet Pilot Raises Hijack Fears For Selassie BONN. West Gern1any (UPI ) -The pilot of an Ethiopian airliner carrying Emperor fl ailie Selassie home fron1 a three-day visit to West Germany today apparMtiy hit an automatic hijacker alert button accident- ally touching o{f a scare that Selassie's plane ~s hijacked. The alarm proved false. The official E1hiopian ne'vs agen- cy said "the emper· s1LAss11 or's aircraft touchecl down exactly on schedule at 3:20 p.m." Cologne airport officials confirmed that the emperor, his wife and two uniden- tified companions -.·ere aboard the special flight. e R11mboughDiseollered EAST HAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) -The body of 2.5-year-old Davld Rllmbough, son of actress Dina Merrill and industrialist Stanley Rumbough, has been recovered from the Atlantic Ocean. Police said two fishermeri found Rum- bough's bOdy Thursday a~t three- fourths of a mile from wher~ he disai:r peated Saturday: e Spacemeu Vletcl Baja HOUSTON (UPI) -rn ex'eellent health after 48 days in weighUessness, the Skylab 2 astronauts trained their· space cameras today on natural resources fron1 Baja California to the nmh central Atlantic Ocean. Alan L. Bean, Owen K. 'c arrlott and Jack R. Lousma were collecting in- formation from their orbiting space home on storms for weather scientists, urb&n growth changes in Dallas for the U.S. Geological Survey and ecological changes around highways for the state of Maine. e Deflcleneles Cited PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Pennsylvania Gov. Mil too J. Sha pp Thursday said a nursing OOme where 11 old peOple di~ in a fire had "many safe- ty deficiencies" when inspected. last month. e Freneh Halt Tests PARIS (AP) -The Fr,nch govern- ment announced today that its 1973 nuclear weapon tests in the South Pacific have ended. The announcement came ih the form of a notice in the of£icia1 jo'urnai cancelling the warning, to maritime traffic lo steer clear of an area 60 miles around the Mururoa Atoll. . ·• . ' Cold Comes to the Plains Mean"1lile, former Attorney General John N. Mitchell tried to subpoena 8eO'et presidential tape recordings Thursday to use in his forthcoming perjury-a>n- spiracy trial. The White House promptly asked ·government 'attorneys to fight the subpoena. Mitchell's defense attorney, Peter Baille Joined -... ' ' . ~~=~rii!~~~ .. ~r~ New Cereal Called 'Junk Fo(>d' Temperatures irt 50s Extend to Panha1idle S. CaHfonala " ·" II » n '" " • ID••IN ~loNOW ~ ,.__ ,,,. ~$HOWtllo • .,. ri ow QnwiFI• .. fl Phll1<1~11:1l'!l1 • PllOenl~ '" " 1'111•1111,,:.P.l'I •• ,, Porllft , Ort. ll .. lt/{11....,,.cl " ~I. Louh n .. I .01 •• "' N .. ~ t .. " " " ll.S. Summarv .lt (Coastal weather mary wilt be foutld on Page 20.J SU1'l- today ,. regarding his client's Case between Nov. · · 1 and 'Jan. 31. The rtquHt was unlike WASJUNGIMN' (UPI) A -·p of other reqll<!sts, which have c I t e d nutrltlo!ilsts ;;:;i·.......; or.-Uons particular single dates. today attacked-a new. ce.reill, being test 'Jbomas J. Edwards, chief of the U.S. marketed by General Mills, as a sugar· attorney's criminal division in New York, filled ''junk food,'' and urged the com. called the subpoena1 a "broad ranging pany to IJCJ'&p ll1e product be.fore It works blunder""8s fishing .eipeditioo" and filed ti. way 1n1o tbe Ammcan diet. a countermotlon to'Have Jt thrown out. The product, called Hft{i, Wcnderrull's I Surprlie," Is being sold so far only In , Bufialo, N.\'. It consists of about 30 per-w d W rul ent ..,., ond 14 Jlel'«llt saturated fal, en, y e . S acconlinc to ihe Centel' for Sclen .. In the Pilbltc Interest, a privately financed con- sumer l[1'0llP wmch hoo~ to kill the pro-Her way w es. t duct·before It gel• out of Buffalo. The cereal conslata of hollow 11pufl1" . • wttb =wed celitm, and reportedly w~u~:~~2s~!'tio (~~ ; . tastes no~ up ke a aandwlch coolcle. eucUon off her blklnl top near lhe GENSllAt. MDU spol!eanan Qnham University of New Mexico campus, Molllar. •Id t11e elllClt -1 ,... of Jiii _fined @ Th~ for CO!)'_ -"c:lwllll ~willl llodlo lp;np1M1J " aualng a sale Iii a pub c park Oerea! ,.._ -..,. and rice -are without a license. the ·~nl pari of .the Jll'Odllct, Magi.strate Judge Jerry R®lno Mollfat aald; but becluoe lthere are two !lned both Wendy and her song--of .,.in they must be Hsted writ~ husband $50~, but au nded le[)8Tlltely on tbe !Jigredlent pone!. Thus, 1he fine and wished lhe e11 "'" tbauill com and rjce tog~~ ·~ !heir trip to Holl . · count lor ;;m llO percent of the toll! pro- duct, IU&•r ts Usted as the predominant • • ingredient, since neither gz:ain alone I!! present in a larger quantity than the sugar, Moll tar said. He said the amount of sular in a one. ounce serving of the cereal ;.as the same as that in ooe .t.e~spoon ol Jqily, and that the tat coiltent 1n one ounce is four grams,,'compaffii to six ~~runs In on e egg or nine gr:ams in two 'iices o( but- tered toest. , • DR. MICHAEL 1AOOBSON, co-d[,..,_ tor of the center 1 said a Ittter urglng Cl<neral "WU to scrap Ill!> ~~UCI 1!'.'S siened by 'tn<t'e than 125 nutr1tioritsts· dentilt.s! dl etlci8,!la· arid ctUzhrls kroUpn'. Among lhem wl!le Dr. Jean Mayer or Harvard, the; Consumer Fettera.tlon of' All)erlca and lhe Nallonal Welfare Rlghtl Organization. • \ ''Once.an.~r:unw~oct ls marketed naUQrially, It ls vihuillly Im- possible lo• conaumer gr<>\$• w ef- fectt .. ly lnl•M1! the public about \he dangtta o! the product and ~lscourage purcbas~, ", ,Ja~ said. "W.e hope to d,o the manufacturer • favor by hlirUng sales befode the company lnvesls too much money In a bad product." ·- SAC Assen ti sa; Jeast.1 didat1 but "1 .Th.• disc lo totalil his C inclt.M or lai 121,6( A I c monE what "Y fluen said. good posit •: SA san Au th soft Calil 1975, som• filtr1 read Tl: 22 ' wah mill day Riv~ 197~ pre' • SJ Alte a"' lhe Gov day A Will cisc plai coru slnl leg! sac ty . mo1 lhe Ca~ • & Rul legl be a I gov T Sen pro tloc (R· • 5 Cal prl ne1 tyi 1 Ra Ba Tb• ( baJ tio the ol! i!li!l ;;;: , 3 N ii Cash Not His Thing -Moretti SACRAMENTO (APl Assembly Speaker Bob Moret· ti says he probably is the Jeast·wealthy probable can· dldate for governor next year, bul "inoney'a not my thing." Th_e Vau Nuys Democrat disclosed net personal wealth totaling $39,747 to newsmen in his Capitol office Thursday, including two-thirds of an acre of land in Jamaica valued at $21,600. A reporter asked Moretti if ( BRIEFS J money wasn't "his thing," what is ~ power? "You could say that -in· nuencing what goes on," he said. "I believe I can do some good thin~. I want to be in a position to do those things." e Soft Water SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego County Water Authority has voted to pipe soft water from Northern California into hoftles here in 1975, despite warnings by some member agencies that filtration plants won't be ready by !hen. The authority, composed of 22 agencies which distribute water -to the county's 1.5 million residents, voted Thurs- day night to order Feather River water from the state in 1975. two years ahead of its previous schedule. e Capitol SACRAMENTO (AP) - Alternative proposals to build a new stat.e capitol or rebuild the existing building were on Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk to- day. • A bill by. A.ssemb1yman Willie Brown (D-San Fran- cisco), t'OSltaiM the two rival plans. His measure calls for construction of a brand new structure to house t h e Jegis1ature in d ow n to w n Sacramento, unless a feasibili- ty study shows it would be more practical to recomtruct the e x is t i n g 103-year-old Capito[ eOpenMeets SACRAMENTO (AP) Rules for open meetings by legilllati,. committees wOllld be placed into state law under a bill that bas gooe to Ille goveroO'r's desk. , . ·11:1e Assembly and the Senate both gave final ap- proval 'lbursday to the legtsla· tion by Sen. Donald Gnmsky (R-Watsoovrue.) e DrtlfJ Lflec SACRAMENTO (APl California would give llfe in prlson to dope peddlers if a newly-introduced New York- type measure beeomes law. The b!D, by Assemblyman Raymond Gonzales ( D • Bakersfield), was introduced Thursday. Gonzales said, "New York has had a lot of positive rtac- tion to it. The reaction is that they have scared the pushers off the street." .ID ----- :j @!I illJ'· 'lj :1 1,0:1 :11[::',~l,.iJ 1.-11 CALIFORNIA Se~uality Text Just Not Selling SAcgAMENTO (AP) -A duplicated edition oI the revi>- sex education textbook that eel book had been exhibited In triggered arguments across ' 66 textbook display centers cautomia this year probably across the state for public won't be UJed after all evaluation and reaction. because not enough orders for For severa1 months in a row It have been received, educa-last spring and summer, board Uon officials say. members wrangled over Only about 2,300 orders for whether parts oI the 164-page the telt "Human Sesuality" text were too explicit for have been received, deputy eighth graders. state school superintende.nt Ed Board member Eu g e n e Harper said Thursday. Ragle of Rosevil1e called the TIIE AlllERJCAN Book Co., text a "how-t~it" sex boOk. Police Seek 'Stash Pad' For Hetoin SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Police were searching for a so-called "stash pad" where a couple arrested on narcotics violations here may have kept a fortune in heroin. . -pub11sher of the text, has said it needs at least 25,000 orders before It will proceed w~h revisions specified by the Califontla State Board of Education . The revisions were ordered to tone down sections that board members con- sidered too explicit for the eighth graders who were to A resolution urging Gov . Ronald Reagan to "speak out strongly" against the book was presented Wednesday at a San Francisco convention of the Federation of Republican women. EVEN THE watered-down version "has the efreet of en- dorsing premarital in- tercourse, abortion on demand and illegal drugs," said the resolution from the Lafayette Republican Women. Leon Cooper, 29, and his wife Cynthia, 26, allegedly sent teenaged girls to the stash pad each morning to bring back up to $3,000 worth of heroin, police said. The Coopers allegedly used the older of their five children, ranging in age from eight month! to 11 years, to sell the drug in their Potrero Hill neighborhood, officers said. 1be couple was to be ar- raigned in Municipal Court to- day on charges of possessing heroin for sale, keeping a house whert heroin is used and furnishing heroin t o minors. Charge Filed In Crowding On Steamer SAN PEDRO (AP) -The Coast Guard says it has filed charges accusing the captain and chief purser of the S.S. CaLalina of violating mariUme regu!atioos by carrying too many passengers Aug. 5. The incident occurTed oo a Sunday return run of the Great White Steamer, which plies the waters between the Los Angeles Hamor and Catalina Island. The Coast Guan! set a hearing for next 'l'bursday. The eo..t Guard said the ahlp carried 2,2&'1. peraons, 43 more than authorized. The Meamlblp company said only that problems exist when too many passengen try to catch the return voyage from the island. use the book. . . Asked if there was a chance· a sufficient number of orders would come in by an Oct. 1 deadline, Harper said, "It cer- tainly doesn't look like it at this stage. ''The indication I got was that disbicts were ordering it out of curiosity, more than anything else," he added in an interview at a State Board of Education meetizl,g. A PATCHED-together A rewritten version of the text was finally approved by the board for classroom use in September, 1974, if extensive changes were -made. But American Book said because of the costs of the revisions ordered by the board, it n<ed- ed at least 25,000 orders to break even. Packers, Teamsters Official lndict,ed • ., ' •i !..,:-... mi · ' • ' I Friday, September 14, 1973 ) DAILY PILOT IS Heart Transplant Raising ·Legal Queries in Murder STANFORD (UP!l -A 52- year-old man who received a murder victim 's transplanted heart was described i n satisfactory condition Thurs- day. The unidentified man, a heart disease vicUm front out had removed the heart, kept beating by a machine, from the body of Samuel Moore, 29, or Oakland, shot in the brain l\1onday. Moore's heart was flown by helicopter from Oakland to Stanford for an im- mediate transplant. The victim's tl'JDIPlanted kidney 's were keeping a 62-- and a 62-year--old woman a1fve in S8n Francisco.'s Presbyterian Hospital as part of the unprecedented three-- organ, three hospital tramplant swap. _ of state, received the heart in a four-hour operation Thurs- day by transplant pioneer Dr. Norman Shumway at U1e Stan- ford Medical Center. M'eanwhile, in Palo Alto, at- torneys are girding for a legal battle over the definition of death in the case of a living heart transplanted from the victim, whose brain showed no sign of life. THE TRANSPLANT opera- tions have raised legal ques- tions because Moore's kidneys and heart were removed before doctors disconnected the heart-lung machinery that kept him alive. U"I T .. ffflot• SUSPECT IN RAPE SHUMWAY HOURS earlier Eddie Bohn .. ck Tri<> Nabbed In Kidnap, Rape Case VALENCIA (AP) - A 21- year-old Milson City, Iowa, man and two Las Vegas, Nev., teenagers were booked Thurs- day for investigation of kidnap and rape in the abduction of a 20-year-old Las Vegas woman and' her 1S-month-old nephew, authorities said. I MOST with GREATER AVAILABILITY! ~~~l ~YEAR PAID MONTHLY '" $5000 CllTIFICA TIS 5% INTEREST PER YEAR + 1.75% CURRENT BONUS = 1.75% INTEREST PER YEAR PAID MONTHLY " $25.000 CIRTlllCAllS 6.25% INTEREST PER YEAR + 1.75% CURRENT ·BONUS = l.OI% INTEl[ST PER Y£.U OOMONTHLV $~7:.'~ INTallBST :J, '.;J CHECK SIEHT YOU! l\INDS •YAIWLE ANYTIME! MO lGMQ.T(IM IE•Ull£M£MTS. When 11110 Its• th1~ 6 mo<1lh1, pri11CIP1I r•dueed by Interest checks previously plld. All~urh bonus nl1• m1y be lnc1e<1sed or deer1aud on p1ior notice, 5lnc:1 ·foundlnr FIRESIDE Tllrlft 11&1 ••••r rHllCt• 1 r1t• '-'• snws. !t •CERTIFICATE FUNDS in thru 25th ANY MONTH EARN from 1st ol THAT MONTH ! ~ $106.93? The Facts about Gas Economy! A WATCH FOR ALL TIME Olstin9uished Rolex wetchts. A. Day-date, 1elf.windin9 chronometer with "President'•" br•••let. $1850. B. Oyster-date, self-winding chronomet•r in 1teinle11 1te•I with matchin9 brac•let. $311.50. C. 01tt-ju1t, 1elf·wtndin9. Handsome 14 kn•t fluted beul with slHI, ind 14 kuet 9old bond. ,510. ~ Solillll*111 a.utlfuf._ SLAVI.C ""'K::.-..'°""8 ___ 1 ----cn;wi,tttY"SI""" Hair mUclt-ibt and safety are yau wilr.ng to gi..t up for $106.93? Here's the real llory on gas economy using two hypolhetical cars.., regular fuel. PER GALLON* Car"B" 25m .• 267.73 160.60 10.000 Ml.-$106.93 And It could be_.. leot if yau dn.e ~ly. Ol coune, a llltle .,... cxin gr.. yau bettw mileage. It can also be--, crowded. And • wh<d'a the pb of oafely? Consider the llCUl'ify of -CXll' ·-.... M>lid pcolldlon for Y"" and pw family. as Mesa ) I ' Consider Clirysler. It's bvik to last ••• today and fomomlW. Chry>ler offen solid engi.-ring eiallence. Fo{ .!'>«1mple, yell get unibody conslNction, fl:Jnion bar suspension, extra-pcol&dian bumper system, fuel-tank impact prolec~on, energy aboori>ing steering column and more. . Right oow, the fuli..ized Plymouth Fury does offer special savings. The exdusMt electronic ignition system is designed to reduce maintenance COlll. And, despite Fury's solid Chrysl. engi.-ring, big ,_,, and oomlort, --it rurw .., rwgular fuel. Bell of all, now\ the time to buy during Clean Up tinie. •s.i-, r.d.rrel ~ C8Mfllll9'oll "" ........ .. ....... .-.... ~ ... .... Chryder Plymouth a. •• Up We S..•forl'ffl~ -Huntinl)tan-Beac:h ' > .. ' ' .. ' ' ' . '· • 11 MIHION ISLAND " NEWPORT llACH -644-lltO Wlfll llcAltMt 9'1 ~.~Lt C ........ I.I H..,_ ""'' IN D ........ '"" .,.... AtlaJ Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor. Boulevard Huntln9ton Beach Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.. 16661 Beach Boulevard • -· 1 DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The True College Role The extended campus program beginning at Sad- dlaback Communily College this fall ls a slgni!lcanl and well·timed response to needs of the area. ln..!he program, faculty members will teach eve- ning cow,rses at five high schools in the district -so not all Saddleback students will have to commute to thp Mission Viejo campus. For starters, the .school is offering no more than five courses at each school The selection is limited for the trial term and the hope is that the choice will be ex· panded for future terms. Dean of Instruction R. L. Platt said the program conceivably could offer up to 100 courses -depending on what students need and ask for. This program lS; one step toward realizing the true role of the community college. The strength of a community college lies not in how many expensive buildings an ambitious administration can wring from taxpayers, but in how well quality edu· cation can be made available to more people. A Welcome Choice lt always is a pleasure to see devotion and com~ tency justly rewarded. That's why the selection of Charley Kuhn as Laguna Beach fire chief is welcome. door-to-door on a regular basis for courtesy fire hazard inspections and to answer residents' questions. Sele<lion of a high-ranklng departmenl ollicer as chief also spares the force the trauma of the obligatory shuffling which traditionally follows appoinlment of a new man. By all accounts, congratulations are mutually in or· der both for Chief Kuhn and the city of Laguna Beach. Bits Experiment San Clemente City ?.1anager Kenneth Carr will soon seek a round of negotiations with the city of Laguna Beach to see if one of the Art Colony's open·air mini· buses might be for rent. The aim of the bargaining is to obtain one of the nove~ehicles idled after the busy summer season to introduce public transit to San Clemente through a vig· orous pilot project. Councilmen recently heard initial price quotations of about $1,800 a month for the possi ble rental. If one of the buses could be used in San Clemente it would be placed on an hourly route on a loop through the city to assess how much the public would use such a convenience. City councilmen appear solid behind the plan as a means to reinforce their bid for service from the Orange County Transit District. The pilot project has strong merit in the campaign for bus service. Kuhn is a fine professional !ire fighter. More than that, he is in touch with the Laguna Beach community be is -sworn to protect, having been a resident since 1946. The rapport distilled through the years is something mighty important. Chief Kuhn's first annouced policies indicate that concern for communication between the department and the community -Laguna Beach firemen will be going Initially it would convince transit district directors that city government in San Clemente is serious about such a service. And would also show how serious local residents would be about taking advantage of it. 'Beat it; kid! Tliis is no penny-ante game we've got going here!' Nuclear 'Parity' Called Irrelevant I America ltas far more nuclear weapom than it could cu11ceivabty use to prouct its security. A11.d it's build· ing more at the rate of almost fo11r a day. This is tiot tlte assess1nent of a pacifist or a nuclear disarmer. I t is rather the view of retired Re~r Adm. Gene LaRocque wlio today l1ead.s the Tespected Ce1lter for De· fense Information. He is inter· tnewed by editors of The ~Vashing. ton h1onthly. Q: When It comes to nuclear wea pons, bow Important today Is parity -or equality -wHb the Russians ? A: Parity is a ridiculous . outmoded 19lh century idea . It ls no longer relevant in an age when we can destroy the Soviet Union so many times over that you can't even count them. And they can do the same to us. As a result of last year's SALT {lgreements. "'e need less and less forces to defend the United States from attack. By signing the SALT treal y. v.·e said in effect that the United States will make no attempt to de£end itself -an almost unbelievable thing to tell the public - against a Soviet missile attack. And the Soviets have also agreed not to defend themselves against a U.S. missile attack. lt could be called "security through mutual vulnerability.'' Q: I take It you are referring to the clause lhat strictly Umits the deployment of ABhb, or defensive missiles. A: That's right. Q: If equallly is not an important measuring rod, then y,·bat are the minJ... mal force levels we ne ed to protect our security? A: Back in November 1971 the United States had 4,700 nuclear Y.'eapnns and the Soviets had 2.100. Now we have 7,100 nuclear v.•eapons. That 's a 50 pc.r cent in· crease in 18 months. Q: Thls Is totally independent of any producUon on lbe part of lbe Russians? A: Yes. The Russians had 2.100 nuclear weapons in 1971. Today they have 2.300. These are all figures provided by the Secretary of Defense. Q: Although we bave the lead in the nun1ber of nuclear weapons, tbe Russians bave a superiority "'·ben ft comes IO · JCB!\ts. Why are t.olal nuc lear weapons a more Important Index than lhe number of ICB1\1s? A: All this means is that the Soviets depend largely on lend-based missiles while we plJtce our primary emphasis on ( WHERE THEY STAND mi ssile-carrying nuclear submarines. For example, our fleet of 20 Poseidon sub- marines carries 1 6 0 independentl y targeted nuclear weapons y,•hich can destroy 160 Soviet cities. Q: That's more than 3,000 Soviet cities "'ilb the 20 subs. A: And there are only 220 Soviet cities with over 100,000 population. One thousand nuclear weapons, one-~venth of what we have today. would be more than enough to do the job. Thia is especially true because, a5 Henry ~ singer said after the SALT agreement, "they'll all get a free ride." 'Ibere won't be any ABMs to shoot them down. Q: But isn 't the reason we have so many nuclear weapons because a certain percentage of them won't reach tbelr targets in a nuclear exchange? A: This is an old idea dating from the time y.·hen bombers were used to penetrate an enemy's defenses. In those days you had to remember that bombers could be shot down with guns, with missiles or interceptor aircraft. The limitation of ABMs means this is no longer the case. Americans are still hWJg up on this outmoded mental attitude. Q: Since the SALT agreement made It easier for missiles to reach their targets, shouldn 't tltis have led to a voluntary reduction In offensive weapons? A: That's what we all expected to hap- pen. Instead the military has unveiled a host of new programs •this year. The Air Force wants $500 million for a new B-1 bomber which eventually will cost $11 billion; the Navy wants a new Trident submarine at a cost of $1.3 billion as part of a whole new program which wHI even- tually cost $18 billion. And these pro- grams are just tip of lhe iceberg. Q: Wha counts for this momentum to~·ar ntlrely new weapons sy$1.ems? A : artly bureaucratic inertia. The mill ary has been planning these w s systems for years. Last year Sen. Symington asked Adm. Zumwalt, chief of naval operations, "Admiral, when did you start planning the Trident su bmarine?'' Adm . Zumwalt smiled and said: "\Ve started planning il the day the United States Senate apprOved the Polaris sub- marine." The Decline of a Giant J\1ark Twain: God't FOGI. By Hamlin Hill IJ arpe.r & Row. 308 Pages. $10. The twilight of any mortal, parti<.11larly lf he or she is a genius, can be both in· rormative and distressing. 'I'ht story of the last JO years of Mark Twain's ure. which IJamlin HUI describes in this latest study based on comk1erable private material hlthcrto little u,,ed, is more than typical. ALmOUCll he continued almost to the md as a very successful writer. Twain was past blJ creative peak. The mask o( Ille chroolcler or mld·l91h-century fron- tier Ufe In America's superb innocence -when he paraded as a bufioon It was --ei1-1-9rad buffoon -was slipping oCf. Revealed 11t last was the true coun· ttnaoce of one of our most 'complex u...,, utllll, Samucl L. Clemens ~: 11111 brlDl•nt but 'declining In 1leollh of body and mind, yet delermlned IO till md IO fulfill hi• reputation as a ~ WTlter. ( THE BOOKMAN J For yesu·s personal tragedy had stalked the m11n : his only son had died in Jn. fancy: his eldest daughter, Susan, also had died young. Mr.I. Clemens, the be- loV<d Livy, who despite her VlclOrlan censorship of her husband'• writing really had hel ped guide him, died beloro him. Their youngest daughter, Jean, drowned during en epileptic seizure. I\ CillEF source of Hill's accnunt is the journal or Clemens' secretary, Isabel Lyon, ad~ring and adored until she joined the company or assOclates h c neurotlcall) conceived as enemies. Hill f! hardly an lnsplrf!d writer. But he h115 done a Ulclul. study of the decline of a giant Ronald C. Hood, Auoclot..i l'r<ls Dear Gloon1y Gus While Watergate conspirators Mc- Cord and Magruder have been barred by court order from the lecture circuit, crime seems to be paying for their colleague E. How· ard Hunt. Re-prints of his spy no\'· els, with big by·lines, are selling like hotcakes in the supermarkel"l. ' A.V. Gloomy G\lt o;Otn"*'l'f •re Mlllmltt"' lty r•tffn and d• ntt -ut11y reflKI lh• vi""' of tM _,.... Stftd y.ur "' PHV• to GloOmy Gus, 0.ll'f Piiat. Free Transit Experiments Cost Plenty 'There's 1ittle to be said for dri ving a car into th e city. Parking is scarce and expensive, tr:afric congestion is nerve· wracking and air pollution caused by automobile fumes is becoming in· sufferable. Yet Americans continue to re· ly on private transpor tation. The Urban Mass Transit Adm inistration estimates that 86 per cent of the nation 's com- muters go to work in automobiles \vh ilc only JO percent rely on buses and 4 per· cent use subway trains. DRIVERS complain that pub 1 i c transpnrtation is slow, unreliable. in- convenient and costly. A number of cities have moved to counter these crH.icisms hy se tting up express bus lanes during EDITORIAL RESEARCH rush hours, raising parking rates lo a level that would discourage motorists reducing transit fares , and allowing senior citizens and tflose traveling at ccr~ taln hours to ride free of charge. Some urban planners are demanding .,more -· they y.·a nt cities to offer fre~ public transportation to all. This month. Seattle will become the fi rst major An1erlcan city to offer free 1nass transit. During ,the one-yea r ex· perimcnt. riders will be able to boa rd buses in the oul'cr city and the suburbs. Commerce, Calif.1 provides the nation's only long-term free transit expcrln1ent. Advocates of the no-cost service argue that Commerce·s expe rience, where only about 7 percent of all residents use the buses, is not applicable 10 large cities. When Rome tried free transit in 11172. they argue, ridership i n c r e D s c d enormously. ROME discontinued Ur service, which had cost the debt-ridden city $2.S million, after two months. &!attic's very limllOO experiment will cost $64.000 white Com· mercc, with a population or only 11.000, pays $130,000 a year for Its free blL~. ll ls questJonable whether taxpnycrs in large ciUer, particularly those who do not use public transportation, will be willing to subsidize a no-fare plan. If the federal government pays the bili. the cost of free transit, coupled with Improvements ne«i· cd to attract motorists, could run to $10 billion a year. Unlll lhe public decides thst the benefits are worth the prlco, free mass transit Is likely to re.matn the exception rathc;r than the rule. s Scfaool Repo1·t Wate1•ed Dmv11 FTC Yields to Pressure \VASHINGroN -The Federal Trade Commission produced a dramatic booklet \\·arning against unscrupulous practices by vocational schools, then secretly deep- sixed almost 100,000 of the books when lhe schools protested. This buckling lo the industry he is sup- posed lo regulate was one of the first tests for FiC Chainnan Lewis Engman, 'vho was recenlly appninted by President Nix· on to protec t consumers from voracious business practices. The 2-l-page booklet had been painslak· ingly put together by FTC staffers and was handsomely printed for distribution IQ the public. But the vocatk>nal school industry got wind of it and beefed mighti· ly to the FTC. WHEN THEY complained, Engman called a special meeting of the com· missioners. who we r e on vacation. Not all shov,red up. Those present quickly voted to put up the money for a revised booklet. v•hich looks identical but ac- tuaUy leaves out some of the most sling- ing criticism of the profit.making schools. Although most of the original 93,0()(). copy edition is now moldering in the (JACK ANDERSON) F"I'C 's basement, \\'e managed to obtain one copy and found it is substantially stronger than the second versioo, which is being released to the public with the blessing of Engman and the vocational schools. FOR INSTANCE, in warning about phony degrees granted by some schools, the original pamphlet stated: ''The value of a degree or diploma granted by a junior college, college or university is reliable. The worth of a degree or diploma given by a private, profit-tnak- lng vocational school is sometimes m<1re que stionable.'' That .passage ls deleted in the second booklet and its absence is not eworthy. Many stales, following a model program instituted by North Carolina, have established communi~y oolleges and vocational schools that are often superior to, and competing for lhe same studenls as commercial schools. Another caveat expurgated by lbe FTC says. "Vocational schools olten have na.mes which are \'Cry similar in sound or spelling to famous organizations just so you may confuse the two." The com· plaint is nonetheless valid: ·Finns like IBM are continually pla(tlled by educa- tion hu cksters trad ing on their easily recognized initials. THE ORIGINAL text contains th is warning: "If a course has a very low drop-out rate. it may be too easy and the sc hool may be a ·diploma mill.' Some courses are designed lo be easy so students '''ill complrtc them and schools v.·HI get all the money." This was deleted entirely from the revi sed brochure. FTC Cornmissioner Paul Rand Dixon, v.ilo was not at the rush meeting on the booklet, said. ··rve got kind of a soft spot in my heart ror correspondence schools. Not everyone has a rich daddy (but l some of these places arc just out and out diploma mills.'' Joan Z. Bernstein. acting director of Fi'C's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said the commission had •·planned a sec-- ond edition any\\'ay." She insisted there v.·ere no prc!lsures lo al1cr the text, but admitted therr w e r e object.ions rrom representatives of the vocational schools. An Obsession with Records \VAS!i!NGTON -\Vhen \\'e're not thinking about how to find food and then how to pay for it, this year's preoccu· pation seems to be the exhu mation of bodies, political and literal. The f005t spectacular dig laid bare by the criminal archeologists is still. of c o u rs e , Watergate. Howeve r, the Agnew find is the equiv'alent of the discovery of the un· touched tomb of a late dynasty pharaoh, and then lhere are minor but promising excavations like the unearthing of a fortune in unused Air Force inventory at Charleston, S.C. In addition to the "Waterhole Scan· dli!(I' as the enlisted ~n on lhe ba.Se re- fer to it, deep sea divers off the coast of Massachusetts wtre attempting to recover treasure from the long sunk· en trans • Atlantic liner, Andrta Doria . A party of diggers from the Houston pnlice department must be given credit ror the most horrifying of the sununer's e1:humallons. the bodies of 'Z7 boys, most terribly murdered . Jn repnrting the news the media have made it a tasteless point to tell U! that the Houston dig representt a new re.cord . In due course, we can ex· pect to open our Glllnness Book of ltccords, page through to '~urdera, Mass." and then on to "murdePs. mulU· pie. non-polttical," where It will read someUUng like, "Houston, Te1as, U.S.A 1973, 27 -modem record." tn baseball, homicide and track "''e divide our records into the categorlts of ancient and modem, perhaps because anyone who flourished before 1900 partakes of lhe legetljjarY. as though we believed that prllH' centuries were p<a- plcd by deml-g«ls and devils; creatures sufficiently different from ourselves to make comp..irtson a fonn of deception . KEEPING RECORDS of athletic leals or such s.ccomplishm~nts as the most standardized IQ.ounce mugs of stout con· sumcd lh one OOur'S sitting Is n form of celebrating exceptional achievement. That Is one way We make feats famous. just as record-kecplng supplies us with a standard IO strive !or, bul why then treat the bloodiest crimes 1n the same way? A taste ror the macabre. or perhaps an I ( VON HOFFMAN ) abstruse passion for the measurement of the largest and smallest of anything. We are a bookkeeping civilization. The most marvelous of all our machines, the com· puter, is primarily used for our records which are so voluminous that even when shrunk iO microfilm size they overtax the capacity of thousands of warehouses and caves. Much ol our digging is explained by our love of records. The "record of the past," the records of other peoples, other societies are as Important as our own. We go so far as to construct records for vanished nations whose poptJ1ations didn't have our taste for writin~ 'down and storing their acts and statistics. Records also comfort us. We need an explanation ror everything, but there is no usable one for w h a t happened in Houston so we consult our records and they tell us that such savageries have been committed before and, if that doesn't explain anything, It makes u~ feel better. No crime Is quite so bad if It's been comml tted before. l\.tANY HA VE reacted to Watergate in the same mode. PoUUclans pull that kind of stuff all the time, ergo Watergate Isn't so bad. If they concede thnt Watergate is what It Is -a uniquely foul series of in. terconnccted crimes -they leave thcmsclvei open to disturbing specula· Uons. Could It be then thnt we . as a peo- ple, have changed for the worse, that such things as Houston and Watergate could have takep place for the Hrst time? it. We must explain Jt ond lhus, as v.·e first dug up thc> crime. v.·e try to dig up an e)(})lanatiGll for it, if not in our record books then in our social sciences. JS WATERGATE. we ask, a sign or a defect in "the system'"? Shortly we shall be asking t h e same questions about Houston. We did it with Charlie Man6()n , whom we explained away by calling him lhe Hippie Kill er. Maybe we'll ca n the Houston culprits lhe llard-Hat }{jJlers, or some other nonsense name. More likely, we'll have recourse to psychiatry. The plci!. of not guilty by reason of insanjly probably shouJd not be allov.·ed in our criminal justice but in a society that feels guilty about ' gullt and yet must have some plausible ex· planation or guilty ' acts, psychiatry is a most serviceable device. The head-shrinkcrs e1cavaling the skulls of the wicked for the causes Of their crimes, however mijisfying to the imagination, ls about as scientlfi!j as eJC· orcism. Others will prefer lo ibitinue digging for harder facts and better ex· plana.tions with the attendant risk thot their shovels will not unearth better knowledge -but worse crimes. OIAN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PubUJlur Tlloma.r Kttvi!, Editor Barbora ltfeibich Editorial PaQe Editor ChrL!tlarui, conservatives and others wh<>-1e philosophy teaches them the reali· ty of sin, or at least the infinitely lm· perfect nature of human beings, don't have that problem. They can accept a Jlouston or a Watergate, not as a sign that our Wlll"J> 'ls oomlng apart from our woof, but os evll done by specUlc in· dlvlduals who mu>l take the guill lor 11' The-doctrine of ndlYldual-gulll- The editorial ,pap of the Dally Pilot ·-.eeks 10 lnfonn and ltlmula.te readtts . by pmcntlng on this pqe dlvtne •comml!ntu)' on topics of 1r.- lft'!St h)' 'Yndlcaled cotwnljlsts and cutoonlsta, by provldlnc a forum for rcadera' vlnis and by p~lna this newsp.pn-'w oplnlonl and kfeu on C\l?TCnt topics. The edltarlal oplnlonl of lhe Daily Pilot a~ar only tn the tdltor!Jll column at the top at the pe.ae. Opinions bl!Prt!llml by.the: cof.. 1lMnfstrand-c.rmonllt.rPrlitttt' WTltm are their own 11nd m tndol'tt-' rntnt or hit "'"',. by ate 0&1ty Pilot ""'ld "' w.....i. absolve MClal guilt and the need to dig arowtd for larger explanations. Most or us o.re loo much the children of modem liberal culture to eccept evil as a coo· sequenCf.I of our humanity, and therefore be coni.nt merely to pUniSh It llld lhun Friday, September H, 1973 •, • T ic A b ti SI - - I «J ,J " " HI •• ' •• Al ~ ;J " 'I " •• M • " • • v· • ~ ,, • ~ G " 0, c v ' ~ ' ' • K J ' ' c • c l • • ' ' ' I ' • ' I I ! • _r_,,da>;;;;.;•.;.S.;.••.;;':.;'m.;;b.;;"..;.I•::.· .;;l:.;97.;;J _____ ----_DAIL y PILOT Lost fn Though t This is David Roe, pres- ident of the Minnesota AFL-CIO. He seems to be caught up in some- thing heavy. For what, see photo, Page 8. For .the Reco1·d Dls sol11tlons Of Marriage 'llM A111u1t JD Slllrlty, Sll1ron LH Ind Edw1rd Allin 8erry, Kiiiy Lwllln• 1nd E11w1rd S11~l1, Ol1n1 M1rl1 Ind Edw1rd "'n01any HUltnbrtnd, Jo11ph Frink tr'ld Liie Gtbr1t ll9 Ptr1tl11en. D1r11r.e J ove• t l'ld Adrian lltueben Ponzio, Amy R. Ind S1mutl Ptlrkk Andrsws, ll1r1>er1 LH tnd Mtrlln ....... Grimm. Oonnt G. tncl RatJerl L. Malley, Aull\ l . Ind Rot>trl H. ""IM, Lindt J1nlc1 1nd Fr1ncl1 Don11 Jor.nson, Ptlomt J. I nd RcM•I AUi..,.,, SMrtn A. Ind David L. l11<1tort1, 8rend1 D. •nd Nick R. llrtztr. Gtor111 Herbert 1nd Miry K1tll1rn Mtdrlo, Oomlng1 GtrCll end h ldro Qllln19fO P11oe1, P.1ul V. ind J11n1 E. 81rnl\llrt, LI~ Mllrlt 11'd R!cllard Cllarl11 NtiOll. C1mlll1 SUll Mt Incl Rontld McCorm1tk. Mtrlfl1 L. Ind Cll1rl11 L. Vinion, M1rg...., $. Ind Robtrl A. Etdl, JCIM All ll tnd K1lhlHn Yvonne Htrrll. Wlllltm Ind Suwn A, Gr1n1I, Jo.n M . Ind J im.ti H, fetldt no. Jt ck end Anll1 J. R1smu1nn. Ed'#lfd F. l l'ld .An!"lt! M. WIJU1m&, P1trlcl1 J . Ind Hlrry L. Gt•l'llrn, Tl'IOm•1 H-11'1<1 Jlldllll E. Srnllh, lt0<non1 k•v• t•d H..-rn1n Guy C>roiaco. ltom1lda G. 11111 ll:1"f'TTIOl'CI Cr1wton1. ltooer1 A. l l'ld Jll\ICI H. V•n DVkl, D.rn11 E. •l'ld Flortf'IC• F. I'~. Mtlonl A11n1 •l'ld Otnnl1 J1ma Wldm1n, Nll"oC'I' A. 11\d J•mtl D. Sllktr, lton1ld 11:\llwrl 1nd 0.11111 ·-Smokllf, Phlllll Incl lto Tyr,..u. Tffr1 L. 11'4 G••V L. W•!ttrs, k.,llltffl D. 1nd ll:onnll O. KlllMr. Mrl1n!1 K1y 1nd Sl1v1n l rlCll9Y 'llH A111111t JI Wrl91'11, Sllloron LM tnd Cl'llrlts H. II WOOdrtd91, Dtvld Arlhur 111d Mlrlt l 1r1>1r1 V1le111utt1, Robert It, tnd Je1nnl1 M. C1ln11, Jn 11 ... LOll(ll 1nd 0.verlty LI CMrl!Y M""6oll , $t1•lll Ind Jolin 8. Dtvb, Slll1uko •nd E119t,.. Ellloll, M1lorl1 L. Incl Norman C. Mu!h, Sht ron L. Ind lt•Ymoncl LH Mickey, Htll'll RH Ind Jlmts Otvld All1no, $UUll M. I/Id MlchHI J, T10U11 Dorotfly Mii Ind ll:ou J1rnn Steplllnton, WllU1m Kttll'I' 1 11 d 0-111 J11n Hoer, Ev1rt Hov end P1ul1 M1rl1 Dudley, Ottnna K. Ind Jty It. Kffr. JIM! M1rlt Ind J1m11 Pllrlck HMektr, Shtron An11 1/ld H1rrv Lron1rd , "UNI All9Vll JI Goodwin, Clltrloltt An11 11\d Ao!Mrt Clllrln L1rkln. S1111n MtlodY i nd Howard --St1nfln. On• E. ·•lld Trl'llllH L. Kl'llMU..,, Chtrll Htlt.,. 1nd 01vlcl J1ma1 HU'Ck, l1rl>lr1 J, ll>cl C1rl C111fllld, Cllnton E~ Ind Hiney ..... Htrwood, Erlltll H. tnd P1rntll A. Aourro. Judlll'I A. Incl ltog1r L. Gt-.11.1, Hiney and Jtrnn Aobtr1 S1!'1dtr"s, LHJlt Lee Ind Grodorl ....... G"""'. Mlcl'IMI Ktnl lfM:I Jtcklt Jo $! ...... 1rt, Kt nnetll Ind Otilt M. Ekn, llll'IClll L. 1nd Ge«9t L. H191nn1n, Mtfft Luclll1 tlld Donlld McD1nltl, Jr. K111n1th fll'lftM 1nd Glol'l1 AIVI (l l1ntonl Jennl1191, lt•l>lrl 11:. tnd Oontld w. ll:1mlr11, Vtllt ll1rbara Ind Rlcllt rd ,_ Mtltllllmtf", Ruth Incl Robtrl G. Cr1l9, J•mn !. 11'1d Crvs!1I J. Wint Currv, Ci ro! A11nt 11111 Rot11rl Pllt r M1tnew., Ell~ N. Ind D1vl1 L. Cotter, Lindi Jo tnd Jonn Arthur l'"Mltnt9ut.r, llrttrly Ann encl Nor· """' ~ire O'W'99', Jr. Ltwr911« E. Ind Shirl Lynn Lullnh, Sr. Rlc!wlrd C. tnd l1rD1r1 J, Die,,,_, Jtromt Edwt rd 1nd Ann Merit SCott, J111tl L. Ind J1rnlll C. C1rney, Fofldl A. Ind Elrl E. CIU1gl'11<", Adrllll Q1yl1 tlld Otnnl1 H1U M"'91f, lllontld ThOft'lll t nd Al'llt1 Lynn A/IClll'"llO!'I, Clllrl11 W. and Rtbtct1 L l!'Dtl, Htl-E. i nd ll:lclllord L. Guido, Jlllln M. I nd San[ll F. H111111ts, Ptlrlck Ardtn 1/ld K•llllrlnt L1urlt l'rlnct, H119h C. Ind Emmi F. llltwH ......... , • McMurtr11, 9......,.ry J un 1/ld Artl\uf J1m11 NIIMI, lttOlnfl Cltlrt i nd Edw1rd Ptul Sheptllrd, P1m1l1 0. 1<KI T110m11 M, Alltn. lrvct M. I nd Alie• Wiii, l!'ltl!'IOI'" M. "'Id Rlclltrd W. Sh1nnon, Dltl'WOlld Mllft Ind C111'11rlne Ellrtbtlh Wtl11, P1lrlcJ1 Ann Ind Edwl11 ll:tyrnond JohnlOfl. luunlle Lrllt'I end l ruc1 WIVJ\e S11w1rl, P1ultllt EIOIM llld L.lrl"f D1l1 Pillon. DoroflW EUtn •nd Slmlilll l rldY HtrMr, Victor Ind Ann• (01111;1, S1ndr1 LoulM I nd Den1hS Wtli.on 'Nefldtl, L1ur1 P. I/Id H1nry Anthony "lnk, A<lllMn A. Ind Orovt J. tlf LMOI. \llcklt L. 9lld Dtlt A. C11ttfl111, Ml1'9trll1 Ind AtltOlllllO C1bl.rn«, Jr. Jtrrv St1n..., i nd sv1111 Mtrlt T1nlg'ix;111, Mllsuko Mltll tl'ld Gt0r11 11.lvodll Or1111Mm. M1r1l1'1'1 D. l l'MI Niii A. ft9l'lftlflflll~S•ndr1 k1v i nd lllONld LH lrlw, 811rblr1 JOlln 11\d Jtck N11t Tlllolkl'll. Chtrln It. 1nd K11h1Hn Alm1 ll:lcJ'llrdllM!, Thtr1 Ind ll:ov IC, lniwn. LIMlllll Ind ll:lclllrd Evptnt Scoff. Lorn• Mii Ind ll:ooert LM Mof!Oll, ClrG!yl\ An11 Ind !!:Obert Oltn WUcOllen; Urry O. 11'1d 1.-J, Just wait until United's Midweek Fare goes into effect October 16. What'll you save? Check this chart to determine your savings from regular round-trip Coach fares. (Our round-trip Mid- week Fare is $179 .95 to each city below.) Clly s.,·e City Sa\'t City .... Akron $106.05 Charlolle SI 12.0S Philadelphia Sl411.0!I Allen1011n 146.0!1 Cleve land 106.0!1 l'iH,hur1h 118.0!I A~hevllle 100.0.S 1)(1roi1 98.0~ Providcnco 168.0.S Bahimo1e 111.0S Flint 98,0!1 Kalei1h / Hrn;1on 161.0!I Cireen~boro I"·•• Durham 124.0!1 Tri·1:i1y Auporl Htnford 60.0~ Richm ond 138.0!I 'l"enn. 1 !~.O!I New York. 1!16.0!1 Roche5ter 132.0!I Buffalo 124 .0!I Norfolk 148.U!I Sa11intw 91,0!1 Charle5ton llM .lb Waihin1ton 118.0!I from Los An1cles round-trip Cootch. Wilh ta&, not security. .. ' onited'~k fare ~- Uni~t Rou•lrlp MW.eek,ftre to 22~othtr vaeatlH elffH n-•• you ®~tiJ®® to®~®®®® How do you save? Starting October 16, here's all you do to get United's Midweek Fare: Buy your ticket at least 7 days in advance.For a Tuesday, a Wednesday or a Thursday departure and return. for a stay that lasts 7 to 9 days. That's it. Of course, our bargain days won 't last forever . The latest departure date with United's Midweek Fare is February 28,'1974.And it does not apply November 20-22 and December 7-January 7. Plus an exclusive deal from Hertz and United . An air-conditioned , standard-or intermediate-size Hertz Ford for $119.00 for 7, 8 or 9 days. Return car to city of origin, and get un limited mileage. Pay only for gas. (Cars are no.t available at all cities offering the Mtd".Veek F~~e and some ci.ties may require additional charges if car is not returned to city of origin.) Specify "United's Midweek Fare" to yo ur Travel Agent. Or call United at 482-2000 . lhumtktl'. C'flltfl'• Luclllt I/Id IUck --~w*•~ C1rol1 1'1111 1fiif1tli'iif"::!'!'O::~t"----------':...__ ,.,....,., Jr. torte &V1re1t 1rw:1 J1111r1 The friendly skies of your land. f]l1ited-Air£iD.es -C1rroll SMtltf, Jtflft'f OOllll•• llld k•rll 1 "" MllMf, l:tltltt" M. I nd 111nl1w D. a..t. Im.I ••v 111C1 Jlmmtt Jot IUD:!;. Jr, CMM, M, I nd Jl't'Clt Mln., °"'' ltt 111(1 Stevtn Dovtl11 Irie.-, Jllllfl Armow end MIOllll11t, ·- • Partne rs in Travel with Western International Hotels. • 11 I 8 DAILY PILOT Friday, Seplen1ber 14, 1973 .. Bubble Bath Probe Sex Film Mistrial Declared French Doctnrs ; Yov'll Foll For Our Clothes A Acce11orl11 Under Way by FTC Admit Abortions ST. ETIENNE, France (AP) police, a fact underlying lhe -Risking IO.year prison sen-autho,rities' changing approach tences and big fines, a gyoup ;;ito;i;;;ithiieiiliissiiuiieii. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:= :::JL- BIDTIQUE 1467 Yio Lido ""'°" IMci 67)04110 WASHI NGTON (AP\ -The _1ederal Trade Commission, in /response to persistent com· Fa111il11 Circus plaints of skin irrltallon and infections among children, has launched a nationwide hl· 1111 Bil Keane "'You don't know HOW to sleep over, Mike. You're not s'posed to sleep-you're just s'posed to TALK." Nixon Insists It's Hay Fever From Wire Services WASHINGTON - President N"lXoo bas told reporters he was suffering "my usual bout" of hay fever. His doctor said Thursday it W'aS not hay fever, but he was tired of arguing with the President about it. lt was Nix· oo'a first public admi.Ssion ol the problem. NIXON SAID his symptoms Civil Service tapitol News Service SA CRA MEN T O Permanent em·ployes of the California Coastal Cooserva· tion Commission and the several regional commissions m ust be mem~rs of the stat.a civil service. Atty, Gen. Evelle J. Younger ruled. were similar to an allergy he said was called ''walnuts" in California. His physician, Dr. Walter Tkach, said ·he had never heard of "walnuts." "I'm not going to argue with him any more," Tkach said. "In all the years I've known him, he's never been known to have hay fever." As a few reporters and photographers were admitted to the Oval Office for the start of a meeting by Nixon with some congressmen on trade legislation, the President remarked: "nlE PRESS is always in· terested in presidential health. If my eyes are swollen ... I'm having my usual bout-with hay fever. "It starts about the 5th of September and lasl9;? till around the 3rd of October. I don 't get it in the spring. vestigation of bubble baths. The FTC investigation, in· iti<tted this month, represents a resurgence of concern over a problem originally tackled by the Food and Drug Administration three years VP'I TtilWMi. ago. Dlshb1g lt Out Hubert Humphrey rips THE FDA SAID then that into President Nixon the major producers o f and demands defense children's bubble baths agreed spending cuts. One of to reformulate products to use his most attentive lis- Jess detergent ingredients. teners was Roe, the fel- But an FDA offici<ll said low with the rapt ex- Thursday the action did not · · p 7 h diminish the nwnber of com-pression I!J. age P °" plaints to the agency con· _t_o_. -------- cerning rashes and urinary tract infections among small children. Heinz Eiermann, head of the FDA's division or cosmetics, said that of the 1,262 cosmetic reaction complaints received since January, 1970, there have been 85 involving bubble baths. 14 Receive Cal Poly Lam·els ALTHOUGH m E number is relatively small, federal of· Fourteen Orange Coast ficials feel. they receive com-students bave been cited for plaints in only a slight fraction academic excellence By Cal or the irritation cases. The POiy, Pomona. FTC tested the issue last year Honorees include Robin R. by soliciting bubble bath com-plaints from Cleveland area Ancell, Bruce W. Dye, Will iam residents. In the few months J. Felgemaker and Ali K. the program lasted, the FTC Ghavami, Costa Mesa; Can· received as many complaints dace L. Drayer, Craig D. ~~~ :~:~i!~i~~a a;~:1:sy!~~ Logsdon and Scott ~fcNay, nationwide. Huntington Beach and Keith Now the FTC has a.!lked all Kling of Irvine. LI'M'LE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -Judge Richard B. Adkisson of Pulaski County Circuit Court has declared a mistrial in the case of four men ac- cused of exhibiting the movie "Deep 'I'1troat" when a deputy prosecutor made reference to a previous 'judicial detennina- tion by a North LltUe Rock municipal judge. The defendants, James H. Herman, Andrew Chaja Ran· dy Green and Donald Lowe, were charged with exhibiting "Deep Throat" at the Adult Cinema here. A jury of nine men and three women had be e n selected to hear the case and Deputy Prosecuting A t t y . \Vilbur "Dub" Bentley was nlaking his openiug remarks to them Thursday, when the mistrial was declared. of French doctors have an-11 ::.~med~~~ ~r a:l. TEMPLE SHARON tlons in defiance of the law. 617 'W. Hamilton, Costa Mesa • ••• • • • At a press conference, they Con11rv1tlve said they carried out more than 2,500 abortions In the past year free of charge. THE DOCTORS, operating L'SHANA TOYAH TIKATEVU HIGH HOLY DAYS SERVICES In St. EUeMe, Lyon and ood Grenoble, said dozens of abor· eonducted by Rabbi Garson G man tions are performed every Cantor Meyer Liss a nd Temple Choir week, with a backlog of morelJl.,,~~~~""F""o""r""l""n""fo""r""m""a""t""lo""n~co""l""l""64""6-~55""5""2~~~~~ than 1,000 women waiting!· their turn. \{Jnder a 5.1-year-old law. the doctors are nominally liable to 10 years in jail and a fine of $14,500 each, The open de- fiance of the law was meant to prod Parliment int.o modi- fying it, their spokesman said. None or the doctors has been arrested or charged by the .• .. ·' ... • ..··..-' . -. ' . ... • . WlffTI WAL '16 OIAVOWIO HARDWOOD CHEST BED$99 12 of its regional offices to Also, Dennis C. Bartlett. gather information on bubble Vincent J, Healy, David 1 balh problems. T h c in-Muslin, Jeana A. Philbrick the easury vestigation is still in a preliminary, non·public stage. and Floyd W. Hart 1 e Y' DRY CLEANING IMATTllU IXTU) CLOSED TUES , WED. & THUR. TO CUT COST The FTC's p r imary Newport Beach: Rebecca J. I d J h h GRANADA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth St. "!OltltANCE Sepulve<la and Ha~·thorne responsibility in the area is Enquist an ° 0 a t a n WOODLAND MILLS 21500 Victory Blvd LAKEWOOD C.-son St. and Paramoonl Blvd. advertising, a I t h o u g h in Oberson, San Clemente and llVEltSIDE 3520 Tyler St. IUINA PAIK B,JC~ and OrMgethorpe earlier cases involving soaps Robert C. Santini,· San Juan 5AHTA ANA J900 Sou1h Bri~tDI SL OIANGI Gardtn Gro1e Blvd.111d M1richen. and detergents it has proposed -;C;a;p;is;tr;an;o;. ;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;O~•;'";";';'';';'';';'';'o;';';'';'o;-;;;''•'•''~';;' '•'•"•'··--..-labeling provisions, I , SPOKESMEN FOR Gold Seal and Purex, whose Mr. Bubble and Bubble Club Fun Bath, respectively, are the leaders in the children's bu)>. ble bath market. said the number of complaints con· cerning the products are small. FDA officials said they ex· pect part of the problem might be that as manulac· turers cut back on the sudsing ingredients in the products, users simply dumped in more bubble bath to get plenty of bubbles. The probl em might also in- volve parents letting children play too long in the tub, the of. ficials said. MR RT'' RESTAURANT & f/C.(I.& /'Ull&(. LOUNGE BILL ~!EDLEY INTRODUCES ROSE MARY NIGHTLY 10 PM I; MIDNIGHT ENTERTAINMENT BEGINS AT 8:30 PM IJAf\flSG CO\KTAIL."i DINNERS SPANISH STYLE MASTER BEDROOM SET INCLUDES , 9 DRAWER DRESSER, MIRROR, STAND & HEADBOARD I 4-PC. SET $139 ANIMALogic¥1r....,. "It hits me in the eye. They say take shots. But I find the shots are worse than the hayliiiiiijij .. iiiiiiijjiijijjiijijiii .. iiiijijiijijjiiiiiiiijjjjiij.jijjjijiiiiiii fever." THE PRESIDE~"'T did not say who recommended shots. He gets relief from the ir· ritation. Nixon said, when he goes out cruising on the Potomac River aboard the Navy yacht Sequoia. He has been doing that several times in the last two weeks. on deposits of $100,000 for six months to one-yea r % The number of these accounts that we I cu accept is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN A.radii #C1rritos L1 Crncen11 •orange W G11dtns •com MISI Les An1el11 121 · •sin Bern1rdi,no •t11K1fl P1rt DOWMY {~) Mo111er1y P1rk Whittier file AdditiHll Oflius i• Ntrlftern California PlllSHI Hill SatBrano (0,uiq SoH) Fister City M111t1in View San Jtse '· ~ TD ., ,. CARPETS. DRAPES. WALLPA.PER. LINOLEUM WAFFLE FOAM CUSIONING SEAT AND BACK t WOOD TRIM LARGE 60 INCH. COFFEE TAILI PLUSH FAKE FUR ' DEMI SOFA 7 COLORS $9l l • :·~u - l 1 By ; High or ure ~., WIChE = .ptudet .... ram. , ... No ' studer , 'about . 1igUre .~per• .• way o :progri ' :ciistri< -,. "WE gone s u b l Patric tingto ,Schoo .EIJ t"ed by "bi ch Cl\lldl the i1 j Cou Youn .. ·~ash· lt&-yea '1,pan~ Mr. ,.,= 4~'stl legs · ~ rerus in Cl she s "! Wh 1 of Id• I the c : IC I .He' I are t: An• . p ng pol SUJ no&ti· whos 1 year I u.s, tl!i! • ! Jlit b I j t· ' M (AP lias '11\ai A!ri Pl flea• Iron /Jri iloo 'mor ''Lunch Program Food Prices Vp, - But Not Subsidy By JOANNE REYNOLDS ' per month for a f8mlly of ot HM oa11y P11.e ''*" lour. Reduced price lunches lligh food prices are a fact are available to cbildren from of life for consumers, but are a family of four W'bere the ln- presenling what may be a come is leSJ than $531. costly problem to school ad-School officials note that ministrators in west Orange families who do not ~ the County who want to give Income criteria but who may underprivileged students free be burdened with other flnan- or low cost lunches. clal problems such as large This week more than 20,000 medical expenaes are also students in the Ocean View, eligible for the program. ..;r .. Seal Beach, Westminster and One problem encountered in Huntington Beach CI t y the program has been giving . (Elementary) school districts the lunches to the children in letters ,to the'lr parents such a way that nQ one is •· 1a1ning the I e de t a 11 y aware they are receiving idiied program. special consideration. ~· ' :~SQIOOL administrators say t in spite of the difference . tween the inoney given for ·Program ~nd Its costs th~y continue, to operate it. 1• t year, about 1,500 hot unches a day were given to jfudents eligible for the pro- ~ram. ... No estimate oJ eligible ~ students will be available for . about a month and unt il that . l igUre is in, food services -~vi sors say they ha ve no .• way of knowing how much the · %Jrograms wiU cost their Wstricts. : "We do know prices have gone up quite a bit and the s u b s i d y hasn't," explained Patricia Emmert of the Hun- tington Beach Elementary .School District. . EUGIBDJTY IS establish· red by the federal government :-thich allows· free lunches to cfilldren from families where the income is less than $443 Singer Sued Parents Cit,e Spanking From Wlre Servlctt Country music singer Faron Youac: was sued for $200,000 in ·l'(_ashville by t~ parents of a I-year-old girl they said Young spanked during a concert. ft.tr. And Mn. Josepll Cadett )IOCused YOIJllll Of lllrlldng ' t!\<ir,4&ugblel!-Nora. Jo "15 to strokes or ms hand on her 'Ibe Michigan State University pottttcal science professor began predicting the outcome of Supreme Court cases in the spring ot 1970, not long after the 'court began lo take oo a more •Conservative image. ' * White ·~ 'assistant JWI RuckelilM• 1:WWettof acting Depul( oA'ill:illt\y .Ge a er a I Jegs and buttQcks" \\'hen she re!used to join Young on stage in Clark~ W. Va. while she sought his autograph. * What's Gov. Cecil D. Andrua of Idaho doing drivu\g around the Capitol complex at night? ( PEOPLE ) ' .'!fl I 'll am Jt;i ·e t e 1- sbau, pre- d lc l s tbe E .q u a I rugbU for W~o men Am e n·d· meot to the U. S. QJnsti· r .He 's malting &W'e the lights I are turned out. at,K1t&1MA1t1 tution will be notllled by tho llal'3 be- !cn 1971. Andrus ordered state 1gen- 1 cies to · cut electricity con-"It took eoair-50 years of dllC''•ion and bearings to pau the ·ERA," ,said Mrs. Ruaelshaua In Blrmlnglwn, Ala, t ' I I ~91Jllplion by 10 percent after ~ing told the Northwest faces 1 power shortage. * Supreme Co u r t prog- nosticator HarWd J. Spaeth, whose computer bid a perfect year last tenq, predicts the U.S; "Sul>ttm• Qiurt will take tbe side of Preildent Nix.., in tbO baitle of · tapes. "II Is not surprising to me that tho states did not rush to pall tbls." * 1be deaUt of author Rlcbard jr------. Tnpllds In Hawall, has been Ustad olftcially U caused by I heart attack. Tregaskia, 56, was found dead in waters off Ala Moana Park Aug. 15. I ~Playboy . Banned ~mABANE, SWazilan<I (AP) -The government tias banned PJ1yboy i'fNgazine from th Is African kingdom. . Playboy sales had been heavy among visi tor s jrom neighboring ,South Alrica where the publlca- llon has been, banned !or 1 flore than a de<:&1de. · ' He was best tnown for his World War ll book1 ''Guadan1nal ~." * David GrU!Hlio staked a dollar in the Brltisb soccer pool, and correctly selected the only MMD tle games in which goals ,..re acored. For this feat, be received a check IOI' the equivalent of tJ.47 milllon. A storekeeper in a n engineering !Inn, Grllfilhs, 60, announced 'that lie's quitting bla '7$-a·week. J o b Im· mediately. NOW! AT THE NEW . WHITE HORSE PAUL'S ' l:J:jel RIIS e llD e HAM e POAll Served N!9htly !FTom 5 to 10 p.m. fHTllTAlNMIHT lo DANCING J,_J MACK ....... \ffn ht. .. MAIJ( DAVIDSON • -allfllli"hwrs--• ........ ~ l, NOW OPE"! FOR LUNCH '. 32'1 NIWPOIT ILYD. lA..-'-' City It.Ill E»ll't' Pllet staff ....... Ads.Plaeed ~-.. Tourists Wooed By San Clemerite San Clemente Chamber or Commerce directors are forging ahead with pro- "motional campaigns to attract two groups: winter tourists and adver1lsers. Phil Ellsworth told the board or direc- t.rs tbla ""'k he bas placed ads beckon- ing visitors to San Clemente In travel sections of newspapers in Los Angeles, Phoenix and Tucson and in corporate magazines. .. reviving a promotion in 1 past years, a combined brochure with Dana Polnt and San Juan Capistrano. The pamphlef showea San Clementc·s beaches, San Juan's Mission and Dana Poinrs Harbor. The chamber is looking locally for advertising support of its 1974 South Coast Area Directory. NEW PROGRAM LEADER YMCA'1 Lehman In addition, Ellsworth rePorted, the chamber has installed a display of color pictures and a tape recording describing sights and sounds of lhe city at a highway reststop. Bob Evans, former chamber manager, is in charge of advertising for the mini- phone book. He urged local businesses to turn their advertisements in early. The 1974 edition , coordinated by chamber director Bob Oakley, will have 20,000 circulation. William Lehman Selected YMCA Program Chief It is located orr the northbound lanes or lhe San Diego Freeway between San Clemente and San Diego. Ellsworth said he would investigate Capistrano OKs Open Space Bu y Oakley said he expects to make more than the originally projected increase o( '10,000 over last year's pro(its. Two years ago, chamber officials n1et with printers, eye specialists and paper producers to com e up with the most readable book possible," Evans said. "These things are paying ofL" Prices w~re nev.er lower! -- ·17'' PORTABLE 100% Solid-State Zenith Titan 275V ' chassis. Solid-State Super Videi> Range Tuner. Telescoping dipole antenna. New Advanced Chroinocolor picture tube: , A Great Enltrlainmml Yalu~ Ill •aaa 11* 19" TABLE MODEL -23" modem sfvled CONSOLE -oncallon 100% Solld·Sta\e Zenith Titan 300V chauls. Solid-State Super Video Range Tuner. 30,000 volts of picture power (d1$ign averap). Exclusive Zenith l'Ower Sentry SY$t•m. Chromltic one·button tunlns: 21nd AFC. Now A<tvaneed Chromacolor Pieture 'IUbe. Sensationally Priced- (' 100% Solld·State Zenith Titan 300V , Olfly chulis. 30,000 volts of pli:ture. , ,57911. p<Mtr i=an average), El<clusive Zanlth r Sentry SY$tem. Cllromotlc one-button tunlnc. AFC.. • Solid·Stlte Super Video R111n 1\Jner. New Advlnced Chromaoolor Picture 'lllbe. r WHY IUY AT ABC? c91.0R "fELElllSl~oN '10 YIAllS " C)IWIGI c:QUllT'< •439n· f011 ATLANTA ST; 1ft.u llOOKHUaST ST. CM MfllMl'I) HUNTINaTON l lACH HUNTIN•TON MACH--•. HOUAS 1 HOURS t MON •• Fll. 10.7 DAILY 10-7 SATUADAY IO·l:l O SATURDAY 10·5:)0 CLOSED SUNDAY SUNDAY 12·1 OPINTtMl'a!ilAY "'DlJ 962 .. 5159 968·3329 NIWl'OIT llACH 671-1374 O'ur W1rnnty 11 Not Pro-Roted! . .._ __________________ __....._ ____ ....;;..... ________________________________ __., Friday, Stpttmbtt 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 _IL_ --, I M D _IL_ --, I "® I • SPRUCE UP A SOY TUB. Hand-carved wood- en tubs, used fo r shipping soy sauce in the Or ient. Put one-to work growing green! A short cut for shallow-156..399 rooted plants ......... •••4 Sprout a hanging herb pol Little herb garden. Ready to grow -add · \'¥'ater and watch it ~o! Painted clay pot, soil pellet, seeds, rope fo r hanging. Assorted herbs. large and small sizes. SHOULDER THE GOATSKIN. BOta. skin bags! They're handcrafted in Spain. Inter· lined with latex to contain your favorite wine. Enci rcled with rope so that 4•t lhey're easy to tote. . ... , ....• GIVE THE PARTY A BURST OF FUN. Piilap tas! Bulls, parrots and burros. Fill them with . goodies-to the bursting point! Bright col~ ors! 18" big, they're just ready for 2" the king of swat .•............. MAKE .A CLEAN SWEEP. Do magic tricks. wi~h a' broorri from Italy, Special bristles draw dust like a magnet. Pouf! It's wooden han· died. Washable. Hangable. Comes in a .wide range of bright colors. 299 POT YOUR PLANTS .. :in hanck,.fted earthenware pottetY frofri Mexico. A variety of sizes: 3" to 1•. Yo u buy the • plants, we supply the pots I . . . PLANTS FEEL BITTER WHEN THEY ARE" POTTED BETTER : .. Try these hand .. painted planters from Mexico to ~pice up your plant-life. 4 stzes: 5" to 9" a,., l .H.J.U 200/o OFP 1er --·-COS'TA MllA ....... m· ttMIO. coAr1' HWV. l.AOUMA l lACH 4'M41•1 etnMOPPWctNT'lft ....... il'"" ... UTll.U.A'tl. AN»lllM ...... • < ,.' . . ., JO DAILY PILOT Friday, Septtf'!lbtr 14, 1~73 TUMBLEWEEDS DUZ FRAWGS f\ILIX OAT i;uGS1 ~CK? MR CA'SnE?M, T~E CASTANO ci:n:w, SOUGHT VOUA 1.lNlE 61FT! FJ.EES IS !'UGS,AIN'I -m~Y? ...... MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY HEV: M ISTER ··· YOU'LL GET IN TROUBLE _) Y OU'R E NOT ALLOWED TO SWIM IN THERE TODAY'S CRDSSWDRD PUZZLE A CAO SS 50 ,i.,c1or :...._ c""'" 1 Fer1111ze1 52 Claims falsely 5 SIOP 5.t Kind or 8fbQr lO Arabic namt1 56 Bum ,.(1n tor Slleba -.~ 14 Moonla1n 59 Female bird Comb. torm 60 Eoght: Preli~ 15 Exlsting 62 Deise•'""9 16 B•bhca! son confiGence 17 wa1erproor 65 ''Yo1,1 oon t ca1was say!"' tnlomi<>I 67 Oeoend 18 E~plOS1 •e 69 Terrible devices 70 Tim__·N,V. 1* Srri~e Gi&lllS VIP repeat&dly 71 Church oftieer 20 E~l•acts 0<e 72 Paradise 22 Proceed !J FVll o! certaon 10 ~el• 39 Eocoorlt{IU llll'l!lly trees gradually • 1 Swiss hero 2• Recline I• Garmen! 11 Asclear as _ •J f>tlmltoms 25 Braid of h31r lea!ures .t6 G-Dleyed 27 F1&herm11n 75 Esllbli5he$ t2 "1•Mf!D•e:ief'I on l'lOrMb&cil. 29 Keyt>oard 13 Make di,erenl '8 Celestial bodr lfllllnlfl'll!<11S DOWN 21 Orlen! 51 Well reee.sa~ 32 PllM of e socll 23 Solnd a oom S3 Ballle5 33 Eggl 1 C ool111ne<S 26 Man otbrass· S. SUl>je<.1 3<I Narrates 2 The "E"ol Mylh. 5S Roy;tl 36 fum1111re "Q,E.0." 26 Plant p.ar1 S6 EQU•P wilt• article :J Flying ;>g Policemen W89DOOS «> Un•t o! machine: Bt. Slaflg 51 Wa•nscottno capac1!y t flush over 30 Sontlll section 42 Sm.KIQes.int 5 Weir locallons· 31 Sadong boa! 61 Time __ half . ., 2 wor<ls 35 Too·notcn 63 We•ohl 4" Pennant 6 High pr!$ Sltlteles allowance •5 Perioo 01 •est 7 A trace 37 Vulne•able 6' J&D.,ese coone 47 ci.M11M1rs !I Tum outww<ls ;ire&: 2 worcll 66 Perioo ol Hme 49 Vettl e"'d'rllJ 9 ABGour5-36 Rea.I est;ile 68 V1luabl8 thing • by Doug Wildey .-----....-----, 1 .. .. ' ' • by Tom K. Ryan MISSISSIPPI? WHERE ARE Tl4E DOTS OVER. THE "i·s by Dale Hale WHO'S ·PEANUTS l1 JUDGE PARKER 17~==""5::':::;:r,T:;;HcERRiEii'LLLL:OeE'E., YOU LE'FT 'r'OUR CAR EITHER ONE OR TWO MEN COME 8'1', PARKED IN FRONT! PAUL! !EU. THEM THAT SOMEONE PICKED ME UP IN A CAR, THAT YOIJ DON'T KNOW WHEN I'LL BE 6ACK! OKAY? MISS PEACH r'i(ei.L-'f ScHOO 1)1SGF?ACIS I C.OMM1f-r~ ~ Mff'f<; Hiiize- ... Ne> .SO, l"4, AFTfll: f.VAt.tAATrNGr AL.L THE' DoSC.RA,iFUL TMINGS YOU D01 WS Hfi~&&Y DECLARE YOlt A PJASL.IG D~~ ! aeiJE:VING lo4E'S,((M.IED. U_$. INTO CMANOING MIS LOOKS R>R SMOW\JP MES WALK- ING INTO A ~TRAP.• DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS tJfJOIT TH ' DlcKeNs aReYewuPTo'? GORDO MOON MULLINS """' 'JlOUf '""'"'' JO SF-A l.IT'fl.£ MOfl# coMS!PBU ff l TJ-llNK 11 Jus-r MeANS We lfZE A8i..E /VSJ!lVJVE MORe »EAK-- MISSE.5f by Roger Bradfield ,..----........ _ By Charles Barsotti "THaT F"et..leR olJGl-lT To TaKe a Taxi. .. sur tT, TA1<es rrs TOLL, I.IJ.L ieJ_J_ YAr • ... Ile .;JiN 'T 111eveR G o/NG lo Ge.T eack aT THe P,<ire ~e·s GOIN' by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson SOR!>Y·""· FRIEND. I NEVE R I-END MONEY 10 FRIENDS · by Roger Bollen • ' ' ANIMAL CRACKERS HO\ll DID 400R Ar<rPROF i.Jl'E QCXlR PAI t.lT1J.le? HE ~ID THE sos;recr ll)AS WJTE 1 Ttle DRAIO~ UJAS HEW<.'-HMlDED, THE COLORS weRE M~ THE CCMP0Sm01'l W.S WEAK At.JD THE FRAME \<)AS ALL WR~G ... OTl-lER tlAJ.l TtfAT,HOW DID HE Lli<E IT? u II .. , . . ~. by Charle~ M. Schulz A~R'1 00 YOU DO ANY Dl%~cE~UL THl~f WIN Ml>SN'T HI TMOUGMT , OF "lllAT'I' by Harold Le Doux Yli~, 9UT r<oeoov ~ow~ ASOU,. 'Tl<EM., by Mell -IF lHEltE.'S S~Oi A i~1NG, l.'M A P"-IVATE D1Sbl<ACE •. .... ·~ THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE r ·rMEveRY IOEA .•. ~..W A PERFECTLY GOOO~MWAY I' .. ' ' l • • I Diss Of 1' • HKll.llhorn, "/."' \ttlm Rdd.n.hl C~nl/I'• Pl! Oo11n. C1tto At'ldtl'"'°"'• IC HMfl', Nl lh C1mpbifll, \o LIWIOll, Doi GrMn, JO'o R1cl'11rG McQuown, ! Andtri~. f<l Adami. L10"t Tormey, Mt Rot>erl10fl, I Hi:lnl tln, R M•rf• Llttl•, Br11e1 H1mpl011, J St1pla1, Wll MtredlU1, G 8011d1e1·, Dt C1rm1an. L Boudre11u, ~ s1011en1>1ch, M!)l'llQue Wipf. 11111• Gr1!, e:ve Large, Merl Ro.vier, c~ L", Stvet"I ARBI WESTCI t27E.1i : BAL1 FU~ cfrona d· cf1ta M' . · Billi . ~ ~OBroa . 'DILD , M· 1791 !Willngl< . ™ Long Bel McCOJ BEAt Jllll LI Pfl ME• Ceme\4 Pl COLO 7& West SMIT' I Hw NO ~ NU wr ,. Nuvc new bottc ,,.. flt •• '°"' -t dlolo tuhl e LIG f .. . " ILU • IU • SA • M• e W I •••• hol c f • •: .. -- For the Record Women's Lib lssolutlons f Ma~lage Other Deatlis Sweeping Nation .. 1 ... ..,..._...,.' ~11\a'n, L.nlfl' IC.. 11'111 C•l'lll• A. I""• \/ti~ J. 111d ~rd L !ddwt, S..Mr• IC. •l'MI W•v~ K. Oftl'IOI'. , •••• ck, T. Ind Vlrtl• J . 'li 1n. c11~1,.. E. ind J1rnt1 M. f'Atrson. Karl 0 , i nd Wl1m1 L. OHlll, N1lhanl1'1 Ill. Jr, Ind IC1l1uko 1mpbtll, \/kkll I nd. lll lpll [)tYld 1w1on, Oonchlrl" Ind \/1111 r.en, JO¥c1 J"""' •nd M1lvln 1111c111rd ovown. sir.,, l>lld wuu.,., nderJOn. M••llM ~· and Menoln L. c11m1. LIOYd Mlle I nd httv• J1111 M,,,...,. Mi ry ,., I nd Wl1ll1m J, obl-rlson, GIOl'Oe D. Jr. •nd ll1Uy Slit tinlell\, Rollen Ar!llUI' and "•trlclt M1rl1 BALTIMORE !AP) -John F. MacLean, 52, a veteran sportscnster who served as the broadcast voice or t h e Washington Senators in the 1960s, died Thursday following open heart surgery. Rv TOM BARLEY Of thtr Dtll)' l'Ull S11ft ANAHEI~t -America's women experience m o r e poverty and discrimination than any other group In the nation and the only answer tQ a male-dominated society is for women to vote for women in all future elections, a Los Angeles woman judge told a State Bar of C a li forni a meeting Thursday. Ut11, !lrll(I I(. t lld M1,..,, Ann 1mpfori, J111l1 Ann .nd Fr•n• Otle llplr1, Wllltrd O.le 1fld Sh!rltY M1r11 tredlth, Gef"tldlN \/. t hd GlrY N. ouc:IM'r. 0on Ii. I nd N1t1CY Aron 1rmun. Lob I), end l"i".O.lc w. owor1111, Anita l . Ind a1rry A. tolrenbach, Chtrln f r.Oerlck Ind Monlou• pl, l lUlt L. ll'ld Alt •t lldW W. r1I, !.YI Ind Bruno 1r;t, M1rt1n1 Diii Ind V•non FIVd Ml.Ml', Chrl1tl1M G.I. Ind Don1ld (. ... a.verly J, •<Id L•rry W. SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)-, "The women's movement is The Rev. Howard J . Kenna, P a grass roots ground swell 71, head of the Indiana Prov-that ls sweeping our state and ince of the Congregation of the the nation," Municipal Court Holy fross from 1~ until JUdge Joan Dempsey Klein Jime and a former president told the Women Lawyers Aor of the University of Portland sociatloo. in Oregon, died Thur&ll.ay. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 116 11188 -· BALTZ-BERG ERON FUNERAL HOME TAIPEI (APl -Dr. Sun Fo, 83, only son or Dr. Sun Yat- sen, the founder of the Chinese Republic, died Thursday in a suburban hosp ital. He was a University of Ca li fo r n ia graduate. na del Mar 673-1450 Death Notfees . 1ta Meg 146-UU )1 -----c~----- ~ AllOTT ' Ill•• L. AbboltJ lh1•ldenl of NtwJ>Ort : BELL BROADWAY e .. ctii dai. ot tte•rh, sepl•mt>tr 11, 1973. MORTUARY Surulu..:J by Wiit, Jn111, OI IN hom1· • Min, WJH!•m P. Abb(lll, WI Kon•ln; ..... n HI Broadway, Co1ta Meta 11r•ncklllJdr1n. Prlv•ll t•mlly .. rvlcn .• U g_•J•• will bl IWld loo:l1y, FrlCl•y, WtllCllll .n...i Ch•IMI. WHtcilff Cll~I Mortu1ry, • •~JI. Olrtclors. • JARVIS • • ; DILDAY BROTHERS Sklnr, M. J1rvfa. l'IO w. 1Sftl SI., NIWflO<'I MORTUARIES l loKl'I. 0111 of cl-.11" S.plemblr 12, 1973. Swvlwd by wffl. L90tl•. S.rvk••· S1 tur· 17911 Beach Blvd. U y, 11 AM, hll!·B•r ... Gft Cost• Me•• C~Ptl. Prl"''-lnl•r~t. lngl•wOOd tlagton Beac:b IC-7771 '•rlt C•rn.twv. 811llr·hr"'°" Fu111r .. U4 Redond9 Avt. Hom., Coco•• ~· .. ~Gitora. ng Buch Zll-431-1111 AllN!'t• M .. L• Plff, Ave o, of U•Sl S1n11 M1rl1 SI .. FouM1ln v1111v. 0 111 or • d•tth, S.pltmblr ll, 197J. Surv!vtod by McCORMICK LAG UNA _,, Don•111 urb1n; 01uc,1M1r. Jo O.•n Urt»n; motnw, e.vl•h llftder1 .iar .... BEACH A-10R11JARY P1ulln1 NOd1y; btolller, Jonn T"vlor. 17N Lacrnna Canyon Rd. Servlcn. s1ture11y, 12:» ,M, PHlt F•ml-e -ly Colonl1I Fun.ral ttom1. 4N-Nl5 LOVELL , • P1uU111 J11M Lovell. Rn ldenl ol Hun· llngton B••tl'I; d1r1 of a.•tl'I, September PACIFIC VIEW n, it73. a o1......o wife or or. c111r1e1 T. Lov1ll; mother ol Jl(k J.s .. 1nd Mra. l\.1EJ\.10R1AL PARK Pollyanna Sllepl\erd: 1l•pmo11>1r ol C CMrlH LH Ind Thom11 F. L0\1111; 1l1ter emelery l\.fortuary 01 Mn. ECll!h Ar11<1o11. Mr1. M••r Cha~ 8Ucken1l•ll. Mrs. Riie• Wnt;.tt . Also 1urvlwd by fourtH n 11r•ndc:lllldl'9fl. 3IOt PlcUlc "" Drive S•rvk1s, s11u~y. 2 PM, Lltt11 Clll.lrcti of N'-rt a-c•,· "-.HL.-1_ llW Fl-rs, l'or•st LIWfl Gl1nd•l•. ~-....-• "9IUV1uq; For•ll Llwn Morfu•r[. tff..Z'111 L YT I Oli ve IC. LYll•. Aoe U I Resident or • L11;1un1 HIU1. 0•1• of dHlh. s.¢tmti.r PEEK FAMILY 13, ltn. Survlwd tly dl119hlfl', Mn. John Lyons, U11un• 8••ctn '-11r•ndc:hlld~, COLONIAL FUNERAL J•nM• o. Lvon1. i...g ....... llffdr1 Mr., O.vld Young. L• llMMJ fllrff trt•I· HOME j'•.,.,.,hlldren; Motl\er, Derlvs F . 7 .. 1 Bol A °""'°"· City Of Industry/ _,_ la Vt . COUJ.lnt. PrlYl !t l1mlly tr I y •I Id • We•tm.iaster m.sszs servl<:•5. S11ure11y. Sept. IS. 11 AM, • Hlll1kH Mtmorl1I P•rk, Rldl•'IOI. Slwirtt t...lluN 8HC:tlo Mortuery, Dlr9dorl. S!\IJTH'S MORTUARY 01!t'f Mer::~1~:i~.~T~!~:!1 of C051• U7 -Ma in St. M•••• <1•t• 01 d••'"'· s191 .... ii., •· 1tn. Survluld Oy 1l111r, Mrs. Ct rmleti.el, ol Huntington Beach Tucoon. Arl1-. s.rvk e1o tony, Frid•/· 531-Wt ID AM, W.llelllt Cri.pe1, lnterm1111. r NOW- (L®WIJ~• NUVO'S" WITH CUFFS Toro Cenwt1ry. Wtll<:llff C II 1 p •I Morlu1ry, ~. OirKIOrt. C O NDEMNJNG statistics showi ng tha t only 25 of California's 1,117 judges are women, Judge Klein urged 3ll women to adopt the concept that "if a black ca n bet ter represent a black or a Chicano a Olicano in the political proc- ess, then the same theory should apply to women." "We now have a climate where women will support and elect women poli ticians in numbers for the first rtme in history," the pert, strawberry- blonde jurist said. ''Women lawyers by reason of interest, education and inclination will assUme a leadership role both as candidates and a s organizers. " J udge Klein is 39 and mar- ried. " "Women must overcome Cal State Launches Law Course FULLERTON -Cal Stale F ullerton has launched a new undergraduate degree pro- gram o(r students interested in criminal jlL'Stice careers. 'lbe criminal justice pro- gram for students interested at Cal State, will provide a higher ~ucation background for students preparing for work or advancement in criminal justice fields. Dr. W. Garrett Capune, director of the new program, said the main objective is ~ enable graduates to operate in a conJtructive fashion by acquainting them \'Vith law en- forcement, courts and cor- rections. fears of defeat and be willing to nin again and again. if necessary," she urged. "'Ibey must gain confidence i n themselves that they ca n do the job and impart that sense or confidence to the electorate. '"WOMEN HAVEN'T yet learned how to compete but they must be willing to do ex- actly that because politics are competitive and b ecause politics are not for the faint hearted," Judge Klein said. "Wo.men candidates are li ke me!l candidates Jn that they need encou r agem e nt . organizational support and money. ''Exi st ing po l itical machinery should be made available to us," she said. "Alternatives to our func- tioning within the two major party structures would be div isive and less productive." "\Ye women will not be denied our opportunity," the slender jurist stressed. "It should be recognized that we provide a tremendous source of untapped and unutllized talent and this talent can benefit our society as a whole. "WE RA VE lea med from our traditional roles a sense of humility, the art of com- promise, co.operation a nd persuasion and an empathy for other people and their problems. Polltlar would cer- tainly benefit by an infusion of people possessing such vir- tue. "The image of the male politician and the m a I e lawyer-politician is at an all time low in the public mlnd," Judge K1ein said. "Elected women officials could help remake that image with what wo.uld be . . • a new and fresh approach to the world of poli tic... 1st Event Scheduled For Alumni SANTA ANA: -'Ibe newly- organized Santa Ana College Alumni Association will hold its f1rst event Saturday at 4 p.m. The kic koff receptioo is designed Ki sttmulate interest in the <irganization, which is open to an)l of the more than 100,000 people who h a v e graduated from the ·college · since 1915. ORANGE COUNTY Are. Courts Shackling Newsmen? ANAHElM -Current and contemplated court attitudes towards the press may well lead to the Am er ican newsman being shackled by the kind of rigid censorship imposed on the Br i l i s h co u r t ro om journalists, a veteran trial lawyer warned Thursday. Los Angeles attorney Robert Warren told a State Bar of California convention audience here: "Jt's no secret most of our attorneys and judges ad- mire the British system and would lite to adopt it." DIRECl'ING most of his flf'e at what he said was the in- creasing tendency of judges to impose "gag" orders on newsmen, Warren warned his fello\v lawyers that justice is best served when the public is informed. "Gag orders are being issued on a routine basis." he commented during a "Fair Trial, Free Press" panel discussion. "We may be very close to the day when we see the advent of the secret trial in California." Warren, who represented the Los Angeles Times in the contempt action taken against reporter Bill Farr and who ap- peared for the Irvine Com- pany in lengVJy Orange Coun· ty Superior Court trial action on the Upper Bay controversy, reminded his feUow lawyers that there are alternatives to gag orders. '4IF A JUDGE feels there has been prejudicial publicity he can order a change of venue,'' Warren said. Warren said many judges and attorneys are moving toward management of the news "in a way that is not coosistml v.11.h our American system. DAILY PILOT J J James Roosevelt Supports Reagan's Tax Initiative By O.C. HUSTINGS Df "" O.lty '11•1 ll•tl Former C o n g r essman James Roosevelt, a Newport Beach resident. has joined Governor Ronald Ragan's bat· tie to lower state taxes at the ballot box. Catlrornians for Taxrs an- noW"Jced tha t the son of the former president has been ap- pointed to a 12-memher com- mi tlee which will lead the campaign on behalf or the Republican governor's plan. Roosevelt, 66, li ves on Spyglass Hill a bove Corona de! Mar. He headJ a financial con· suiting firm In Los Angeles. The Reagan tax plan ill designed to put stringent li mits on the state's taxing a uthority. It has been criticiz- ed by opponents who claim it will only shift lhe tax burden to local governments. Californians will vote on the plan Nov. 6. • OR ANGE C OUNTY Supervisors have endorsed Assembly Speaker Rob c r t Moretti's bill <AB228.1) thnt would establish a regional South Coast Air Pollution Con- trol District. The measun! would do away with local APCD's. Instead. a single agency covering the en- ti re South Coast Air Basin \\'oul d be set up. t-.1qretti 's bill has cleared the J\Membly and the Senate Finance Committee and is a\vaiting action on the ,$en~te floor. Supervisors did object to one provision of the bill \.•:hich calls for a 10-member govern~ ing body wit h fi ve 1ne1nbers from Los Angeles Coun!y and only one each rro n1 Orange, Ventura. Riverside. San Bernardino and Santa Barbara Counties.· They said Orange County should have two represen- tatives on the board. They also suggested that thl• board should have JI mcrnbcrs to avoid tic votes. Supervisor Robert B<ittin of Sa nta Ana . \.•:ho sui;gestcd thllt his colleagues back th e f!JJoret· Ii bill. said it is unlikely the assembly speaker \Vill amend it . ' In backing th e l\toretti bill. county supervisors snid they no longer believe air pollution TOMORROW ONLY! Your Choice Is a matter for local conlrol * ORANGE CO UNTY Supervfson have backed a second bi ll (.uni31) dealleg wllb air pollullon. It pravldf:s increased penatiles 'for. Ila· tionary sources of air pollution lhnt violate standard,,. Previously a flat f500 was assessed for each violation by plants. The new propostd regulations call for $500 for the first offense in a year. $1,000 for the second and upward tG $10,000 for the sevenlh. Orange County Air Pollution Control Officer W i 11 1 ·a m Fitchcn opposed the new penalties saying it would only throw ai r poll ution problems into the courts. * ANTl·Sl\IOKING crusader John Briggs. north Orange County·s assemblyman, has called on the state Public Utilities Com m i s sion to "guarantee every non-smoker a seat on the no smoking area on California airlines." 2 PAIR PRE·FINlSHED SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 KNIT SLACKS OR ONE PAIR .,:,:~.. KNIT SLACKS PLUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ONE DRESS SHIRT PLUS . . . . . . . . . . . . ONE TIE With Th• Purt.h1111 Of A SPORT COAT AT OUR REG. PRICE OF $85. Coats Are A Group From Our Regular Stock. Limited Oua'ntities. Come Early. BIDWELL OF NEWPORT J467 Via Lido-Newport leach 67J·4510 i Popul•r LEVI'S Nuvo l••na In a new cutled bell bottom.a-. great LEVI'S 1be criminal justice ·pro- gram will be accepted as a pre-law currtculum a n d Capune says those w i l h degrees will be eligible tor employment in many t.cets oC law enforcement, counseling The reception will feature a social hour after which the group will travel lo the Santa Ana Bowl for the school's foot- ball opener with Rio Hondo ~tmiQI' College. Tickets will be available at tbe reception. "Our system of Democracy demands and requires an open forum of government and that includes the courts," Warren 1--========================== said. "But judges and lawyers tit ••• St.Pr9lt" 10theylt1y neaL Terrific choice of tahlon colora. - e Liii-HT ILUI • IUR•ANDY • SAND • .... • WHITI • llOWN s .... c....,... CMte Mn• 140-1 101 • I ' I "" C:.rltff ~ C.n+f11 .... ,,,. or corrections. · , are rapidly moving in the o~ posite direction in an era when gag orders are becoming com- monplace." OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: 10-6 Large AA E Washlnc.iton Starking DEUCIOUS APPLES TOMATOES ..... for LUNCH BOX SIZE s100 Whalesale To Restaurants Daffy 2016 NIWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA lNµR IAYI PHONE 646-5718· " I agram's 7Cr0 • It's America's Whiskey. In America, 7 Crown outsells the leading Canadian and Scotc h combined. And for a very good reason: the light taste. It's un iqu ely and consistently smooth. Taste 7 Crown yourself. It's the only way rou'll be able to understand its popularity. Thriyou,Amcrlca,for making our wlllsl•y your Whlsi.,. • ss.39 'IS QUART ' i2 DAILY PILOT Friday, Septtmt>tr 14, 197.3 WtlNlt • lly Phil lnterlandl Mii'• days like this I wish they'd ·stop phasin& me CX1i and just dump me." L. M. Boyd Too Much Sleep Could l(ill You , The science boys say 16 hours of uninterrupted sleep actually might kill some citizens. Because of the carbon monoxide that builds up in the blood. To replace the oxy- gen used during said sleep. Doesn't happen, though. You and I have little alarm clocks of our own that jangle us 8\vake· to keep us from getting overly carbon monoxided. Nearly all the world's rubies for years came out of the Mogok Mines of Burma. And for years nearly all of the miners who la· bored therein were called upon to wear Jocked steel mesh cages over their heads. So none could swallow those little gems. Hard labor. Understand a Missouri nurseryman has put together a tree that consistently turns out twc>pound apples . . . Among parakeets, it's the male. not the female, who does all the talking, surprisingly ... It's tlie claim.of some Lon- don card players that the actor Omar Sharif is one of the 40 best bridge players in the world ... Mister, your chances ol bagging a white mallard~~ are.now calcu.. lated to be one in 20 million ••• Did yoU know fuel inakes up just about hall of evefything now that·'s transpQrted in this country? QVE~ FROM C~1 .Q. "How many of the 25 tallest "b{dJdlnas in the world are in MOSCO\V?" A. Just one. And another one in ~Watsaw. And two in Toronto. And the rest in the United States: Q. ''Has there ever been a tribe Of people in recorded history who didn't SI>Ef:k some sort or language?" A. Not a one. · Q. "How many children have lived in the White House?" A. One hundred seventy-eight. Q. "Who originated the term 'inferiority complex'?" A. AJfred Ad.Jer. After Sigmund Freud originated the term "compleI." OPTIMISTS 'Vould you like to live part of your life over again? When pollsters put that query to a sufficient sampling of souls arowid the country, not just some but most said "yes." Specifically, about 57 percent ·agreed they'd much wish to have a second chance at some performance. The 43 percent v,:ho said "no" showed liUle faith they might fiI whatever went wrong. some scholars interpret the fore- going as a fair indication of how many are optimists. how many pessimists. Address mail to L. 3f. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875', New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. Householder Tax Break Forecast SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Unmarried heads of household would get a major tax break under legislation sent to Gov. Ronald Reagan. THE 8ILL woold reduce state income taxes for un- maITied heads of household - primarily women -by an estimated $14 million a year, Assemblyman Robert Cline, (R.Canoga Park} author of the ·WEEK DAYS measure, said Thursday. It \\'Ould taI unmarried heads of households at the same rate as married couples. A FINAL DRAFT of the measure was passed in both houses Thursday on a 27--0 Senate vote · and a 63--0 Assembly vote. Backers predicted G o v . Ronald Reagan would sign the measure. SJ(T. AND SUNDAY 7:15 AM -1:15 AM ' 108 ON YOUI FM DIAL A-PX NIWS AND MUltC 10 ........... _.. "'' STATI MUTUAL SAYIN•S 611_ L JllST ST. IUI LA JOLI.A II.YD. TUSTIN J.A JOLI.A ' - WHITE BIG DEJERGENT VALUE AQUA NO HAIR SPRAY . .... OUR REG. 2.99 Powerlul whilen 1·99 ing action leaves your clothes . sparkling clean. Stock up now! OUR REG. &le Keeps your 3 I c hair the way you want it. RegullJF.' superhold or un. scented. 13 oz. 2 GAllONS afOUIR, Oil .~· ~, ARDlllH!_ · OUR REG. 1.99 Save m6ney wi!h 147 ·. DUI IEG. 1.l! •.f~ribUiiilli this quality oil from Pennsylvania. pri~ts , in machin~-wa~ha~~; ;' Not reclaimed. Reusable can. no.11on cotton. 44' /AS' Wide:' Nqt ~( JelfmOI, MOHAWK .22 AMMO For the keeneyed sharp.shoot- ers who li~.e lo test thei r skills. Good time to stOck up. 5 I c·¥ ·a.ox OF .50 .. ' i 1'." ' ' • MBl11 BOYS.' PACI REG. 3~99-4.99 Sturdy, insulated 296 boots with steel shank : re in- fqrced loe. Youths t t 1, Boys ' · J.6, Men's 7· 11: ' yaur~ha(ce BIG BACK· TO~!;H• ·IPEclALI 300-PACK FlllER1ft BINDER ea. OUR REG. 69c Get a couple of these-. OUR , REG, 79c Sturdy blue ·canvas big_packs of filler paper and get set binder is made for the tOugh wear it's for · sc ool. Wide or ,colfege ruled oound to get. Big. capaci ty ineans it ' 100% stretch nylon fo1 great fit. shapely super·styles, zip fronts, bottom cuffs. plackets. Fashion colors. S·M·L.· ·~ ... GIRlS' BODY .SIJ.ITS, -' ·,Colorful b~dy huggers. zip 2 s fronts. ptaCket fronts. Short sleeves for all. Acetate/ . nylon, /.14. fqr OUR RIG. 1.19 The big; extra fancy show male Betta is the exciting Siame se fig hting fish. Don't buy ·two! 8x 101/2".sheets. Tray a pack of each. .can hold one full inch of paper. • • ' ! ' ' ... , MEN'S POL YESlll'INITS . r. .. • 100% textured polyester flare·,~nils s7 have smart western tront poc~ets,· super wide cufis. wide waist band & belt !oops. Choice of colors: 30 42. /-. MJll'l,,INIT SHIRTS 100% combed totton with co11· 144 trast rieckband. short sleeves & lrim scalloped bottom .. Gieat color selection. S·M·l·XL . . RIVAi. "•K POf' • OUR REG. 1 D.91 . . . Cook I 48 , stews. soups -ma~.e Casse- ~oles. P~e~are th~se slow.coo~~· • 1ng delicious dishes. #3102· . $TORE.HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.-SlfNl)AY to 4 T0.·7 P.M. , . t-l01 !iHDP WITH CDl\IFIDEl\ICE •• :!iATl!iFACllDl\I 6UARAl\ITEED. ml · MDNEY 'B~:_- COSTA MESA • • ' us1 roli1 ~·· 3088 BRISTO~ n.: •-.. · !~·=·==-••••t&!Dt • ·- '; 'l•' ••• • ' •• .. •• .., • • ' " .. . ~ ' ,.., ... • • 'f)E Prfnt kook.! madE an be leo,n pi ... I• send ,SW'e howe wool• DI> ~­• ln(th t alter feel 11111 6 ..... -~. ..i,.t tl!ef ¥Giir ,;,,iy ' flOI ibOU) ·H ~ Di: -near;! convi V..\a agreE on a --<lye in A~ _._I ateP y4'J I treat boull( Iii!! 1 IO fw ·- Engine Noise? Catch It -Now i I . .._ • ' ' " .. • • •• ' • ' • ,• •• ~ .,. .... • , ~ • I ,. BEA ANDERSON, &;iitor l'rld•J, lnlemffr U, 1t1l P'Ut ll ' ' ,, ,, ' Bride Indebted • ., ' ~ • cJ)EAR ANN LANDERS: • You have P11nted lelters Crom all sorts ol far-out kooks--some so nutty I was sure you made them up. 'tiut now I am faced with an honest-to-goodncsS Ann Landers prob- le1p and I -need your advice. Will you please be a good sport and help me ? T was tnviied to a wcdrung and did not send in an acceptance because I w:isn't Sll'e I could.\ attend. I telephoned, however, and told the bride-to-be that 1 would try to be.there, if it v.·as possible. Due to circuinstances I v.·on 'L go into hce, 1 wu not able to attend. Three dap later· I received' the foUov.ing letter ln!ihe mail: ' i)oer .. t ::.~ f •• - ' / y ~ '" ' ·~ , I believe so1ne women want to look yoWlger than their husbands, v.·hich is why , they <lye their own hair but they don't offer to dye their husbands'. \Vhat do YOU think, Ann-A FAN IN EL PASO DEAR EL PASO: I tllJnt lf I ever "'II· gested to my husband OM lie let me dye his hair be wollld· send me ln for a ..Uva test. ll YOUR basbaad likes It, t.bat'1 bis busineu. To each hit owa , Since Y91! dl<I: not attend 11\Y wedding alter you had c+,n11tmed the lnvitaUon, I DEAR ANN J..ANl)ERS: My husband f~ that you 81/Quld contrtoole toward and I are very Pfl"llcular •bol\t 911' dlet. Ibo food . 'lbe c!llt o! eedl j>late was $5 We eat only ·freth .... blH from our 'a&a we ii,d ~ ~Y rOr yc).u. r~erval~on garden, a ;lot' of · fiult/1 1pd )'OIUf't, .... lbouih you,' did oot attend. I would homemade whol .. wheat .and llut•bread, nD\' uk you to do this but we are over no meat a~~ vtp ~~le ~, , li!Jl ln debt ~use people llke you oald A problem '.atlseS ·whe!j,W. -t to In· 'l!er ,..~ tomlllg •nd did not sho w up. vi te our parerils or nelglll><lft f<M" dinner . YGl:lr conlributJm would help a lot. Very \Ve never ~w if we ahould serve· t.hcm tiuly yourHlgliltun of the bride. what we eat, or if we should buy meat , 'Wefl, Ami: Did you EVER??? What etc. 1 don't.tlilnk ~e-have a right to --,,.... "'""" impose their ll(e· style Qll Olhen. Bui =....'...""'"'·-~ED 8.S.: Ho, Netwllllll Now, fot-cooking two diHerent mu!o ,la,a. lol of 9* 11'. ' • trouble. ' ' ' ! ~ .. • ' ' ;.o..k ANN , ,.....,....': , I dye my Wbll-'llo ,.. 117!-YDU ARE WHAT "°""' -·--·,.. . YOU EAT . '\<:., =~';.':~~~ ~; ~=,:~:~ ~~ DEAR V. A.: It 's not !num. tllllible to coovtncod him tt wpuld be to his ad-throw a 1teok or a pleoe of fish under the Vantage to ' look younger. Finally he broiler for ~tsts who doo't caro for agreed. Now ho wou ldn 't have gray hair yogurt. Why Oot come right out and ask on a bet. l~e·re are the advantages of your guests what they would prefer? dyeln'g;-as-ile"-!teeS"'lhem. -" ts no always easy r r.e ove, ~A •man who looks elderly I' consfdered espcctally the fi rst time around, Acquaint o,...U.O.blll, t;rrlbly aquaro and oul al yourself with the guldellnea. Read Ann ateP with the times. When people think • Lander '• booklet, "Love or Sex and How yilu are mlddle-sge<I fnstead of old, they to Tell' the Dlfferenct.'' For Cfl!Pf, mall treat you like a contemporary. Thia J11 bouod to make a man more cheerful. It 35 cents in coin and a long, stamped, lelf· lifts his spirits and lmprovea hia ability addrossed envelope wllll )'Ollr reqliOst to to Cllnctlon aexually. 1 the ·oaily Pilot. 1 ' Taking a rea,ction tim~ test for W illiam Nupp , exercise physiologist ' is Pat Pritchard {above ), Below, she has . he r pulmonary function checked. James Harkins rides ·the bicycle ergo- meter for Gene ; . Adams, exercise physiologist, and Sally Daugirda , technician. Harkins is personnel director. for city of La Habra. ' ' - • - By JO OLSON 01 1/141 D1ilr 'ttot S111t Check the valves. 1'hcn see how much spark there is. Whal's the mil eage from the fue l? Are all the pumps in working order~ .. Good idea to have your car c'~ed once in a while. But wait. This isn't a garage. This is the Health Enhance1nent Institute and this is where people are cheeked. Their valves, pumps, spark plugs and mileage are evaluated through a sophisticated series of tests, then a con- ference is held so the patient knows ex- actly where he is and where he has to go to m.nint ain his health. For an investment of l\\'O half-days and a fee or anywhere from S75 to $1.000. a person can have his eyes., ears, heart, lungs, grip, responses. body fat , blood, glands, organs and 1n ct a b o I i s m evaluated, and a diet <ind exercise pro- gram .t~ilored to fit individual needs. Further medical helµ also \l'ill be prescribed if needed. USC ~RANCH The institute. one or only five such centers in the United States, specializes in preventive medicine and \1'as started as a branch of the University of Southern California .Gerontology Center. It new is loca ted in Leisure \Vorld, Laguna Hill s. but 11•ill move soon to the Newport Beach area, according to \Yilliam Nupp, an exercise physiologis_t and one of the staff members. "This is a new concept in medicine." he said . "1-lbpefull y. healthy people will come to us to mainta in that." h-tedical director is J(ishorc A111be. f\10, PhD, and other stalf members are Jcscph Nargic, f\1 D, ca rdiol ogist, and liene AdanlS, exerciS<:: physiologist. Though it is a profit-making organ iza. tion, it has ·a nonprofit research br anch "'hich is called !he Foundation for Research in Aging. Exercise Physiology and Preventive Medicine. MAYO RIVAL Slaff members would 1lke1 to. eventually rival the famed Mayo Clhllc in their diagnostic ab ility. and they hope lo en.- courage population groups such as police and fire departments lo come for testing and research. Recently, 130 firemen from Huntington Beach \vere tested and the department \t·as very enthusiastic about the res ults, according to D.l)'ision Chief Frank Kelly. "It's a cost savings to the city,'' he co1nmented. Their tests gave a "bench· mark figure" for respiratory disease for younge r firemen and detected any problems the older ones had, crucial in- formation to the department because or the high incidence of respiratory prob- lems among firemen. The tests also indicated the firemen's lifestyles a.nd the institute described the kinds of food I-hat shou ld be cooked in the station to give maximum health benefits to each of the men. OWN PLANS "Each individua l was given a complete packet, telling what he needs to do lo keep healthy.'' Kelly said. He \\'as impressed with staff membe rs at the instit ute because "they know \.\'hat stresses a fireman is under" and coun- seled accordingly. What about the private citizen who feels fine an d believes lie is in top physical condition? "Each of us has sOmethlng to be im- proved.'' said Nupp. "Basic hygiene is \vhere it 's at." The former e0;llege coaclr'said obesity is one of the major Problems the institute finds in its examinations. To calculate body rat, two methods are used, an underwater weighing which can accurately estimate the perCflltage of body fat, and a test with skinfold calipers . The mirror test is helpful ' too, the in· stitute said. "Simply looking in the mir· ror should giVe you a good idea where the fat lies." STILL FAT Mike Turin, a Newport Beach resident who lost 120 pounds and now is a• lecturer in "·cight control with his Pounds Off Permaneptly program, toolc the ~ttery of lests ahcl rotAfd ,tbat he still was :a lit- tle overweight. Instead or being intimidated by the results he was exhilarated. .. It gave me a tremendous amount of confidence. I knew myself instead of guessing ," he explained. "I had a place to measure from." Turin believes people should be evaluated before beginning an exercise program so they know just how far lo go. Joggers, for example, can lake their own pulse rates and stop within their limits. At 51, Turin knows he is "going uphill'' instead of down because he has been thoroughly tes ted. "Middle age is now 27 in our country," be lamented . "The fellow sitting in front of the TV . saying ·t feel all right is using self- diagnosis and he has a fool for a client.'' RISK FACTOR Smoking also is recogni~d as a prob- lem by the institute and this is .included in a group of cardiac risk factors which are _checked during the exam. Potential stroke patients can be discovered and the institute. is i;.>ping to get into cancer research. Wi£h early identification of disease or prediction of disease, changes can be made in lifestyle or medication can.be given to prevent serious or fatal disease, Nupp commented. • But unt11 more phyticians recognize the value of preventive medicine and change from a treatment-based practice to preventive practice, and until insurance companies begin paying for diagnostic work, the inroads institUtes such as HEl can make will be few. · In light of statistics compiled by ifEI, thi s is tragic: ' CHRONIC DISEASES !'It is estimated that by 1975 there "·ill eb some 70 million penoas over -45 year~ or age. and with the present morbidity · rate, one-third of them will be d.isa bltd \\itb some chroni(: disease. ··ovf¥' five nu11ton of them will be stfick~ '\Vith heart fisease a[Mf about seveQ. million with 'high b.lqod pressure, and lbe remainJni "fl! suffer fron1 arthritis, cancer, .diabetes, Ob6sily and stroke. • "There Is conslderable evide'oce to in1- pU~\e affluence, lack ot physical ac- tivity and lhe alre!ses or modem lit~ as Important contributing £actors in the w genesis and' or progression of these ~gener,live diseases. "What good Ira lengthened lif1• !!pan of some 70 years if the Jnuer half of it I~ to be SpcJtt between the doctor1'1 office and t6e.:JiollpijaLoniy to bo fin.ally locke<I up ,J~ an 11Jstit~µon ? - "'lbe culy ans\vcr to th is dll ernma , ns proven in the cases of Infect ious diseases, once again hns to be a syst~tic and massive att1ck on &he ~lc"on a~d prevenUon .of thtse .ii;.~ blloa disense,..-,vhJch have re• c h e d epidemic proportlpns." the institute *1'f eoncludes., ' I !/... DAILY PILOT Women and Money: Interest, But No Control 1 By ALLISON DEERR 01 '"-0•11¥ P/101 s1a11 JI your husband walked out on you tonight, where 'o'o'ould you stand financially? This question posed to lawyers' wives at a session of the annuat California Bar Association convention in Anaheim brought a surprising response. 1'1any simply were no l sure where they stood. Santa Monica attorney Sara Radin, who teaches courses in family law and women's legal rights at UCLA, cited some reasons why wives and single women should be au•are of their status. "ln 1970, 3 million California \\·ome n, 42.2 pertent of all California \\'Ottlcn 11·ere work· i11i.:. 'rhcre ts a steady upward trt>nd. "Bel1reen 1960 and 1970, lhe oumlx'l' incrc1tsPd 55.5 per· cent. a majorily ou t of economic necessity ," she said. "More than half of todav's teenage girls will be emploYed for 30 years and 9 out of JO \\'ill be employed for olher significant periods.'' BA~K TO WORK Mrs. r~din noted that lhc number or dissolution5 or mar- riage has increased 148 per· cent in the past 10 years and SO pcrCfflt of these dissolutions in\'olved children under 18. "\\'on1en can expect to Ji ve 2~ years longer than their life expectancy at tilt' turrl of the <:entury with 40 years of life <ihl'atl whl'll their youngest child sta rts school.'' We know now. she added, "that when Cinderella ma rried the Prince and lived happily ever after, it "·as a fairy tale. Today a woman must learn skills so that she can be economically independent.'' The attorney feels that "the t'OOJ"lS arc 1nak.ing women economically independent ra~ter lh:1n lh<'y <:!In ye t cope.,, \~·hen a couple marry, 1'-lrs. Ra din ex plained. ronunon law asswnes that the t"·o persons becon1c one, n1caning the bus· band, ''because lhe \\'ire just didn't have any experience in fi nancial matters." URGENT PLEA How orten. she asked, have you had the phone ringing. someone at the door, so1ne- thina: burning on the stove and a crying chil d underfoot Yihcn your husband stuck a pi ece of p~per under your nose and said. "Sign here'!" Your independence begins when you answer, "Afte r I r<'ad it. dear," the attorney suggested. "The urgency that is always lhere, becauw it sho uld have been signed yes terday, is mythical and high pressure tactics. Once you t'Slnbllsh yourself as a thinking pcNIOn, you nmy even be cmsulted and get a copy for )'OUr own files. You must know what obligations you're gettin g with that signature." She cited some examples or h o w m a rr i a g e c an di scriminate agains t women. PERMISSION "Have you ever tried to get a credit card in your own name, witho.ut your husb~nd's permission? "Have you tried to open an account with a brokerage firm to buy stocks? Your husband ha s to sign a ·hu.sband's permission for \\•if e's account' sheet. Doesn't that sound Uke getting parents' permission for a chHd." In dealing with real and personal property, types ol Qwnership, assets and debts, wills and powers of attorney, Mrs. Radin emphasized that In a community property state the husband has control over the couple's community prop- erty. For example, the husband can sell, lease or ren~ property held by the couple without her signature. The woman is granted neither the power or the ri ght o:f such conveyance. Although the h\lsband i s regarded as a type of trustee, he does not have to be as pru- dent or, keep as t •reful records as a trustee ahe said. TO COURT ·•1r he destro)'I, disslpates or mismanages the con1- munily property, the "·ire bas to take blm to court with a lawyer, try to influence hint to act or get a dissolut\Qll for haU ol what's left ." Regarding community prop- erty, if the ~·ife dies before the husband and there ls no will, the estate does not go through probate. If the hus- band predeceases the wife, it does. The husband can deal with con1mwii ly property as if "it were hi& separate properly" ••«pt 'aelllng tlle furnishings of the borne and the wearing t1ppsTf1 of wife and dependent children." she added. Legislr;ition now pending in the serulta \VOUld give busbaod and wife equal power to en- cumber the estate. A com- panion bill would equalize the inequity regarding probate. J\1rs. Radin emphasized \hal her talk just skimmed the surface, but its purpose was' simple -to make \Vomen &"'-'are of their legal right s. "How many rights have you signed. away lately?'' sht' asked. Parent's Time: Apply • Little Doses , ,, '" • l UPI TeltphOlo By CAROL MOORE Of th• o.aotl'r POlf $!1U Are you chatting \1'ith your child after school'! Really taking the ti n1e lo li sten and learn about new courses, friends' interactions and developing opinions? •·You don't know the content of children's thinking unless you talk to them st leisure," said Dr. Suad Ke sler. "For a parent to be a positive in- fluence, the rapport must be established in little doses o[ conversaliod and events that build self-image." 'The Lebanese-born psychologist, y,·ho will lecture Monday evenings for UCJ Ex- tension on Child Guidance in Natural Settings, practices what she preaches. She only instructs parl·time in ord er to be home when her 10-year-old daughter arrives from ifentally Gifted Minors classes in Garden Grove. Dr. Kesler's particular con- cern is \veil educated parents who can't integrate "'-'hat they have read into their daily routine or who have been swayed by one book that doesn't quite work. New Adjutant to Arsenal . ' ..... To Marry CnlYer3ily of Co Io rad o st udents. Karen Elizabeth H1h- bard and Frederick Ii. Phelps are planning to ma rry Jan. 5 in St. Andrew ·s PrE'sb~ te ri11n Church. Xe\\'porl Beacl1, A graduat.c of Corona de! ?.far High School. ~liss Hitr bard is the daughter of )lr. and Mrs. Da\•id N. Hibbard of Corona del Mar. Her CIBnce, son of r-.tr. and ?.Ir!!. Nortis Phelps of \\"illlarnsto~.n. J\t ass.. i~ a First Lt. Nancy S. Taylor broke lhe 160-' year tradition of the \Va1tervliet Arsenal · by being the first woman to join the staff . The new adjutant, whose husband Capt. John Taylor is stationecl there, poses with an antique cannon . . . Debutantes Embark On College Careers Vacat ion fun over, the 19 debutantes ch os en by Children's Home Society for 1973 are heading for campuses ranging from three University of California locations to lA'wis and Clark College in Oregon and Oral Roberts University in Oklahoma. They \\"ill reunite in the Harbor Area Dec. 28 for tl1eir for1nal bow at the Balboa Bay Club and acco1npanying parties. During U1e summer the young women and t h e i r parents alterna tely ho s ted theme parties. Dr. and J\1 rs. John Kenneth Hamel and J\tr. and Mrs. John ~liUer Reed arranged a bicy- cle picnic with jazz band at UCL The Hans Lorenzes pro- vided a luau. A tour of the Brig~s Cun· ningham Auto 1\tuseum \Vas follo \\·ed by dinne r at the ho me of Dr. and ~1rs. ltansel Full Field U.S. OffiL'e of Educali on 1USOE) es timates that com· pe!ing for the t.9 million teaching vacancies occurring betv.·een 1970 and 1975 are more than two million new teaching graduates . a n d Benvenuti. Oebutantes and their escorts rode a double decker bus to an old-fashioned picnic as th e guests of Messrs. and Mmes. Lloyd Massey and Walter Thomas Watford. An ice ska.ting and taco pa r- ty was given by Dr. and ?\'!rs. Dean OQuglas Reavie. The William Henry P at rick s helped the George Yardleys pre:ient a Mexican dinner and roc k band. The debutantes and their schools include the Misses Jerutifer Booty, Mered i th 1.1assey. Diana Sammis, ~lar­ riet t \Vatford and Marilyn Yardley, Uni v er s ity of Southern California; Cynthia De ti.Iott, Donna McMullen and Diane Patrick, Orange Coast College; Deborah Newton and Cynthia Trane, Lewis and Clark, and Carla Be nvenuti and Heidi Lorenz, UCJ. Oth e r s a r e D e n ise Newcomb. Westmont College: Judith Storch. Un iversity of Santa Clara; Marilyn Reavie, UCLA ; Les lie Reed, UC Santa Cruz.; calene Ward, Oral Roberts University; f\-1 a r y Hamel, California St a t e University at San Diego and Susan Wattson, Golden West College. between 250,000 to 350,000 1-;jjiiiiiii teachers returning to the field. I CHRISTINE MOORE Wedding Planned Dr. and Mrs. Emory S. Moore of Balboa have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Chri s tine ~!oore to Dr. Stanley R. Ga rlson of Loog Beach. The betrothed are planning lo marry ~'1arCh 2 in St. J ames Episcopal C b u r ch , Newport Beach. Miss Moore a ttended Ne\vport llarbor Higt1 School and is a graduate of the Santa Catalina School · for Girls, i\>1onterey and Northwestern Uni versity. Her fiance, son ot t11e Stanley C arlsons of Bakersfield, is a graduate of East Bakersfield High School and the University of California . San Francis c o Medical Center. Short Cuts • llnve you noticed ho \V haircuts for males, especially the younger ones, are tending to be shorter than they were e year aao'/ gradua te of Mt. Greylock lligh' Ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; School. \\'illiamsto"11. '--',. __ _, __ . ¥ou_HU_~li••n F•ll FH hlon1 Until You'v• $Hn ~...._ BIDTIQUE 14'7 vi. LW• .... ,... ... . .,, ... ,. crnon·s SPORTSWEAJl 81~1 infl1Ho11 l A good i1l•cltot1 II"~.- •' new loldwln piono• 111d Or· 91 n, •••ll1blo 11 a •••fn91 of up to mo. ~, .. -•~,-.~.~ ... -.. -C~--.~ .. ~M--~.~--~.~.~ ... ---.~,=-~.~ J~ Hew 'HM •.•••••• .. Atturn from ll'Mldfl hOIM Mou as "-oo•WORTM ~II.""'""·' 1• ... ,,... l1f\IN1¥ 'tll I ,,li•O •NO 0l0.llf 1.ll.ll 5Yortlllfl 01 pt.It COllVmllMI SIS llOITH MAii, SAlllA AMA • 547..SISI Or. Sued Keiler "\Ve need to make use of all disciplines -understand the develo p mental process through reading and behavior through observa tion. When a parent feels confid ent, it rubs off on children. "Behavior forn1ation J s Your Horoscope Tomor row easier than beha vior modif ica· tlon end education is less ex· pe.Mive than therapy." She believes parents who are disappointed with their teenagers generall y d i d n ' t budget enough time to develop total personalities. "S<>oalled 'learning through experience' is a fake way that actually endangers a child in the early years. "Teach a child to be ef- fective at his level and aim for what you want the re!lllt to be. If you want him or her to be loving, you can't beat it in· to them. I! you want them to be independent, you can't always tell them what to do ." Parents' att itude at play lime also is i 1n p o rt <1 n t although "children. even in their first year, have a Jut n1ore in their minds than con· ditioning by ad ull s.'' Dr. Kesler believes parents should interrupt games if it is ne<"esS'ary 10 restore fai rness. .. No use lett ing a child be bullied. One ls being defl ated by une ven odds and the other is ga ining by unfair ad- vantage; neither of whic h is c on s t r uctive for lh" future ." And she considers co mpul 3ive order' a handica1> in childhood. "\Vhen a child turns out the hall light, turns up the stereo and lines up all her dolls anti animals for a 'concert,' that's far more valuable than a clean corridor." As mea.surerqenls for <t total personality, Dr. Kesler listed ability to play and enjoy oneself. competency in the skills of society artd will· ingness to live actively \vith others. She ls pleased with her daughter's academic at · celeration because the curiosi · ty and sociability progres~ togPther. The n1ore \·alucs and topics she discovers. the more she is able and eager to talk "'ith pcopl ..: of all ages. ··outside influences come n1uch earlier these days and there's more exposure lo thern. \\'e don'I have oUr children for very long," Dr. Kesler said-1 The class starts at 7 p.m. Monday Sept. 17 in Rush School, Los Alamitos. Aquarius: Keep Resolutions SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 15 By SYDNEY 0"1ARR Fathoming the depths or a Virgo or Pisces is an almost impossible task. Virgo has layers and layers which cover sharpness, pretense and an in· nate desire to "do good ." Pisces conceals and reveals at one and the same time. These two signs are opposite but can delight in each other's company. Pisces is Neptune and Virgo is Mercury: Together there is an articuJation of the abstract, And that is not easy -but Virgo and Pisces often can achieve what appears to be the impossible. ARIES (Mareh 2l·April 19\, Avoid extravagance. 1bat's valid advice any time -but is especially pronounced RO\\'. You see m to feel you can buy . give and give and not worry about paying the pi per. That is a pipe dream. Pull in reins. Stop cllasing a bad dream. Troth Told By Browns J\tr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Brown of Cos ta f\1esa have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Deborah Ann Brown to Albert Charles w. Smith. His parents are the Allen McKay SmiUts, al so or Coata Mesa. The betrothed. \Vho are planning to marry in Sep- tember nexl year, a re graduates of Costa Mesa High Sdtool. She is att·e nd i n S: Orange Coast College. TAURUS iApril 20-~!Jy 20 1: You . n1ake progress. \'ou stride tov.·ard goa l. Cycle is high and judgnlCnl is on target. Take initiative. i\laiie new start.s in new directions. Leo, Aquarius persons could be featured . Create a nd originate. Good nL'"'S proves !timulating. GEl\11Nl (!\1ay 21-June 20i : Study Taurus message. You receive credi l for past e(fort..<i. One who appeared to be ig· noring you ""ill pay mean- ingful com p l i ment . Be gracious. \'ou arc du e to get your way. Hu nch is accurate. Follow through on i n n e r feeling. CANCER (June 21·July 22 ): Keep track of belongings. Depending too much on nthers now would be-an error. Some friends arc confused. Socialize but don "t lose track of ultimate g o a I . Sagittarius, Gemini persons figure in itn- partant "·ays. I DEBORAH BROW!'! LEO (July 23-Aug. ?2 1:. \Vhat appears <!. sC'tback \l'ill boomerang in your fa\·or. \"ou can get rid of dC'bris. e1no· tion al and othcrn'i:>c. Aquarian could f ig ur e pro1ninentl v. Check detall~. Be thoro ugh . Maintain steRdy pact'. Ignore one \\'ho, in pique, 1nay arcuse you of being relentless. \'IRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22J: Change in basic rclnlionsh ip Y:ith dependent could b c featured . Open lines of tom· munication. Broaden scope. Refuse to be painted into cor· ner. Strive for gr ea 1 e r freedom of thought, action. Gemini i n d iv id u a I has something or in1 por1ancc lo say, Listen! LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22" You enjoy yourself -you may be "\\'lned and dined. There is an abundance of fl attery. \'ou 5hould be select!ve. Don't finish v.hal you start. Find be tt er n1c<1.ns of di spiny, distribution. S t r.i ,, e for 11ni\"crsal appeal. Affair of heart prov('s satisfying. AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feh. JIJ 1: llcmcm ber resolutions concerning hca llh. diet. Avoid extremes. \'ou get proverbial second chance. ~Jake the most of it by rebuilding on solid bttse. Lto could figure prom· inently. Element of timing is in your favor. PISCES ( F'eb. 19-~larch 20 I: You can make important con· tact thro ug h; family get • together. OQn "t permit pride to block progress. Be receptive. Olde r individual does hi ve your best interests a~' heart. Be mature enough to know it. Ttc lative imparts significant message. substitute "good feeling" for actual accomplishment. f ami-r;;;;;ir;;0;;;fp.f~E;mlll~':;;;;~ ly member makes gesture of reconciliation. Say "yes." UPHOLSTERY SCORPIO (Oct . 23·Nov. 21 J: W.... Ye• We11t Lie lo\\'. Play wait ing gan1e. n.. lett Avoid rushing to judgmen t. Be 1t22 Hetlltr IM. sure you are correctly quoted. Ctitte "'"' -14f:021t Some may be careless -with .... ~~i;~~~iiii~ your words and money. See in I light of actuality. Pisces, Virgo persons could be in pil'- ture. SAOITT1\RJUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): You \Viii be given green li ght by one in position of authority. Ac~pt l)ddcd respon:iibility. Money picture can be brighter than you im~ agine. Special messl!lge, call provides valuable key. t aPrteorn could play vl!JJI role. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19 l: Cooperate \\•ilh Saglt- tar1lll. Accent is ott ga in through creative e f f o r t s . For A Career ... NOT JUST A JOB BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE" NEW CLAISIS STARTING D•ri s.,r. 17 lv•!\11111 Stpt. 17 Lifetime Ploctmtnt Assb!anc• 'l<YMfHr ,I.ANS AV4tl.AllJ 623 W. 17Jh, SANTA ANA 541-4461 Vl1llt-'N'S lrNflfJS AVA/IAIJ.l Done b.y_D un Pal Dunn gets lhlllgl do"e. TIU'OW her your cballcngt: "l'I" ~'If' hnw <!he tuinl'l!Ps tt In her "At Your Service'' col- umn. now appearing every Sund•y, We<llitoday And Fri· day In The DAILY PILOT. HC outfi gel~ HOU! and · He sixtt $ept. S«ot. '.SeP!. penr app< Ang' Be · Astr Dod; · pitcl !~I( w. .R H A TI .-·his · ~ B1 ~ In o ~ "] ~ US B ! hap ~ .. , · .. cert • Mel ·~ , J• Cl~ HN ~ • " • • • UPI TlltPIMt" Area Coach Scares Olmedo By 110\VARO L. HANDY 01 tM DIU" l"lltt Sllft Bob Duesler of Cost3 Mesa threw • scare into former U.S. Davis Cup star Ale1 Olmedo before succumbing, 6-2, 7-&, In a fourth round match in tbe featured Juni<W Veterans division of t~ Pacific Sooth\\·est Seniors tennis toum.sment at ti» Newport Beach Temis Club Thurs-- day. Due~iler, a sophomore baskeball team coach at Marina High and recent winner oC the Huntington Beach Open singles championship, began his match with Olmedo in awe of the tennis great. When it was over, Olmedo paid him a great compliment. "He's a very good player. He was a lit· tie nervous lo start and then I got the breaks when they counled at the end." Duesler concurred In being nervous to 1tart lhe day. "I thought the dirference was In his serve," Ouesler said, "J'd really like to have w<>n that second set. I think he was getting tired and I might have had a shot at beating him in a third set. "But his serve was big at the beginning and be got a few aces. It "'asn't quite as big at the end and I was catching on to it. "You can't get down by two points in that ti~breaker. however, and win." Duesler, a v e r y deceptive type of player, broke Oln1edo's service for one of his first set game victories. In the second set, neither player "'as able to break service Wlli l Olmedo went in front 54:1on a rare foot-fault C:t!l on tbi;;. llnal point of Duesler's service. Duesler came right back to break Olmedo's service with some outstanding front court play then "'ent in front, 6-5, on his ov.n serve. After Olmedo tled the score at six, Duesler served the !lrst two points in the 12-point tie-breaker after a mild protest by pro-oriented Olmedo. The points were split to 3-3 before Ducsler knocked ooe out-of-bounds by a narrow margin. He was long on a return of the next service and fell back, >3, losing the overtime decision, 7.J. In earlier matches, Roy Emerson of Newport Beach displAyed a devastating serve in defeating Jim Bisch, 6-2. 6-1. ·•1 served better today but It'' still hard to get my timing down just right . I've been away from tournaments for 10 \!.'eek," says Emerson. Agi ng. yet ageless Pancho Segura, the No. 4 seed, battled Sven Davi dson on even terms for the first !our games then broke service twice to wi n, 6-2. Barry MacKay, the No. 3 seeded player, had an easy time in disp<>s.i.ng of Fred llagist. 6-3, 6·1, as the field '"as narrowed to the eight quartcrfinalists. Others reaching the quarterfinals or the $10,000 Jr. Vet bracket include For- rest Stewart, Don Kierbow, Robert Perry and Vladimir Petrovich. Each "'ill receive at least $200, the loser's share to- day. * * *, Seniors Ne t Su111maries MEN'S SINGLES !JJ) Tlllrd Ro1111'1 Alt~ Olmedo aef. NGrm SlftUQhl, 6·l , 6·3. Fourtn RDljlld Rov Emtr~on de!. Jim Bl:i<~. 6·7, 6·1; Roll<'r t Per-r~ <!el. S.m Male~. 1--6. 6·0; Oon KlerbQw de!, Ron LlvloQ~!on, 6.0, 6·3; Pancho SeQuro dtl. SV<l" Davidson, •·2. 7·5; Forr11~1 Sltwarl de!. Gorddn Da~ls, l--6, 6_., 6-0; Vladlm!r Petrovic del. Wn11ne~ R~. "3, 6·•· 6·<; Fred Hll{ll,t 11111. B•"Y Mftcl(ty. 6-3, 6-1; Alex Oln111<10 de!. Rot>erl D~ler, 6-1, 7 ... ME N'S SI NGLES (4SJ Outttrill•l• Dkk Miii~• dtl. J im Bisch, 6-1. t.-l; ~am Maltll Mt; Jack MtCo•~le, 6-l, 6-I ; Fr11nk l(els!er oet. Fred Htrmann, 6-1, 6·1. MEN'S SINGLES UO) Thlnt Rourill Wftrren Low Mi. Ken Wiison, 4--6, 6·1, 6·1 Q11arttrtln111 il.oger Cessnft dri. JKk l<.e<"r, 6-l, 4'6, 6·11 l ony Proelftl'I llef. Bot! Hol1I, 6-2, ._2; 0.vlll M1rlln def. A•lttuf Gr•'(blll, ._1, 6-1, ._1. MEN'S SINGLES (151 CN•rt•rfllllll JilC"k LYJl.Cll dlf. Robert Gfttklw1~. 6·1, 1'6. MEN"J SINGLES !'411 0111rt1rlln111 B!ll Lurle def. B•rney Waterl\ovle , 6-2, °"'' 7'61 Miki! Cl'IQ!.t n del. JDl\n .Sl'lelton, 6·1, 4'6. '-?: Don Murdy del. Don Johns.on, J--6, 6_.; Nick Lavanerl det. Pal Murp~y by delftull. MEN 'S SINGLES !6JI 011•rl•rlltl1ll NEW YORK METS MANAGER YOGI BERRA SCREAMS .•• Lff Wanee dt l. Gerftld Riordan, 6·2. t..(I; Al Moller de!. Stftn MftlOM'/, 6.(1, '-1; Ron Brendon dtl. John Light, 2--6, 6·2, '-•• James Denham def. Fr11ncl1 Minh by delautt. L A Wi11 s, 8·6 WOMEN'S SINGLES !~) Ou1rt1rtl111ts Evelyn Hou1emftn del. LIL Scl\warh, 7.5, ~; Dorl~ Clftrk def. Calherlne Dvke, 1 ... 1·6, 6·21 Eth•belh Harper Ciel. Mary Llpyanlk, 6-1. 6.0; Mftry Rftdftbeug~ def. Lois Horton, 6-2, 6·1. MEN'S DOUBLES IJJI Fourth R11111d Pennant Race Not Over, Emt'f"son ftnd DIVIClson def. PllUPOI and (ftrrlco, 6- o, 6-: M.ovldl Ind Yllchary <!el. Pl•I! Ind Kllldy, •.•• S.7, 1--6; Ntlson 1nd Pet"ry O.f. Tur~r ftnd Rowt, 6-7, 1·5; F••flkl ftnd Stew1rt dlf. EtllJ 1nd Jot1n1on, 6-7, M ; S1M"ing1r ind R111sel1 Cit/. Zinger and 0.IQllOO, 6-7, 6-7; Limbert 111<:1 Dual•r def. GrMJbero •nd St6<:ev, 6-1, 6-<I; Olmedl Ind Sequra del. L11.19llr11n Ind Lewis, 6-1, .. 2; Rogers Ind Bl"l'ftnl Clef. Dtvh 1fld C111, 1'5, U . Says Dodgers' Russell MEN'S DOUBLES {4SJ First lt.11111111 Permut In.cl Coo~n def. BelQhlol ind P:IM b"I' dei.ut11 Hlll~n and Bracco di'!. Gl11 •nd Holzl, 6-J, 6-11 Hcdgts ind 8,_. Clef. ~II ftl"ICI Mlllnoff, 6-1 • ... MliN'S DOU8LIES IJll 1"1111 ltOlllld HOUSTON (AP) -Just when Houston outfielder Jimmy Wynn had the Los An- geles Dodgers seeing doubles, Charlie Hough tpronounced huff) came aloog and blew the Astros down . Houston rallied for three scoret in the sixth Inning to pull within one run of the Do dger s S late All Glmft Ml I(,; ( .. ) !:U P·'"· IO:IO 1.m. 11:.U .1.m. pennant-chasing Dodger! before Hough appeared to shut them out and help (.(II Angeles to an M victory Thursday night. Both teams square off in the ' Astrodome again tonight with , the Dodgers' Andy Messersmith, U.10, pitching against Houston's Jerry Reuss, 1$-10. Wynn. who has slumped badly this .Ro yal s Still Have Shot At AL Flag The odds do not ravor Jack McKeon or :·bis Kansas City Royals. ~ But Jack McKeon is not a big believer i in odds. ~ "I know things don't look too bright for ~ us at the moment but fWlfl ie.r things have ; happened to this game. ~ "We're not eliminated yet so there ls '-certainly no point in giving up," said • ~1cKeon after the Royals hung on for a 5- Angels SIGU .. "" ....,.. M KMl'C mn 7:5.S p,rft. ,,,s,p.m. S:St 11.1n. :.ttot. 1• K•nw1 City •t C•ii"''I' ~!. 15 K-•• City 11 C• l~l'I I ~1tpt. 16 KlllWS CllY •t C•Hlornlt •• : ~ victory over the California Angeh :'rh'ursday night In the opener of a four-- ~ ame series at Anaheim Stadium to stay ;~games behlnd Oakland. :~'Cookie Rojaa ·delivered a seventh Jn.. :rung single to drive In a run and that wu :,.l he run that proved deciJ.lve. lt gave ~ J(ansa, City a 5-0 lead at the Ume but the }...Angels erupted· for four nm! ln the home !~If of the eighth to make It nervous for :,:McKeon. ~ Ex-Fulierlon Hl&h and USC pitcher teve Busby (14-IS) laces rookie Frank ··IJ'anana (0.1) lonlght In U.. second game :""-« th• series. ··'. • ~-0'1 fl) Ctll..,. 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I 0 a 2 7"'l:Mltf l~Jatt s.11t m o•••• 8.,..,.,_ I I I 0 I I ........ 1 1nt '" 1-11M. A-f,•t sea.!00, drove in three runs with a pair of doubles and also had two singles in a !our·!or·five perfonnance. .•. OVER FELIX MILAN BEING CALLED OUT. TH E 0METS WON THURSDAY, 4-2, IN 12 INNINGS. K1llo011 11"111 E11i111•h def. er1y 11"111 Brlda•s . by dlfault; P14inclft ftnd MoY9r def. Welch 1nCI Mftn. rnond, M , M ; Plftncl1 111d M•Y•r d•r. Hensler 1ncr SwNI, 3--6, 6-~, 1--6. Ml!N'S DOU8L._S ('SI Q111rt1rfln•ll WY"'\s sixth innihg double chased Dodge'1 starter Tommy Jolm and brought oo Hough with the tying run at second and the go-ahead run at the plate and one out. "I've got more confidence in myself now and I think the skipper (manager Walt Alston) bas more confidence in me too," said Hough, who narrowly escaped a trip to the minors in mi~August.. Negative Results Predicted McC1H ftnd B. Smith ckf. ProulK and C".IJl!!lkr, '-,, t..2 : W111t1r and Chagnon def, Hao•v •nCI Pu111111", 6-2. 6.(). MEN'S SUPll!lt U DOU8LliS Q111rltt1ifllll Zerbel and Llollf Cllf. Lor!more Ind Moore1 t,.O, •·· M; 8rftndon ftnd Mlfl1r Cle!. Bournt ftnd We(KtrlV, 6-J, 1-5. WOMl!M'S DOUllL£S 1401 Q111111rfl11••• Hooch got Ille next two batten out lo retire the side and, although be yielded singles in the seventh through ninth in- nings, be held the Astros scoreless the rest of the way. For Blackout Ban-Rozelle SthMlder ftnd K1tttnbero del. Toul 1nCI Btnhem by llel1utt1 Amllng ind Mlcktlwllle de!. Mftldlcll ftnCI Tonkin, .. I, .. 1; Mtlt!ewt 1nd Rlelabe"911 dlt. Wakt'fltld 1nd Grevbln, 6-1 , 6-1; Hou11man •nd Wln1ns def. Prl11111 •nd Lowry, .. 7. 6-7. MIX&D DOUBLES !UI QNrNrtl111ll Goldbti"o and Bradlh1w *'· Lln<:lbor O and Kftl1. 6-1, 6-2; $ctlbner •lld Sltlltrd Ciel. Rill Ind SCl!oOp, .. •. 6-2. "I seem to pitch better from !:he stretch," Hough said. "I've been doing so much_ changing around, something is wrmg with my windup." But each time Hough got 1 nmner on base and went to his stretch windup, he had Ille A3tros groping for his breaking knuck1er. "We loot a couple of tough games to Cincinnati before we came ln here but we proved we can come back so this thing is not over," said Bill Russell. "We were pretty down alter losing lo Cindnnatl." Houston jmnped lo a ~2 lead in Ille third inning on an error by LA's Ron Cey, Wynn's f1nt double and Doug Rader's single. Russell's double In U... second gave the Dodgers two runs. But Los Angeles got 1o·uous1on starter Dave Roberts ln the fourth. Roberts walked in tbe tying nm with the bases loaded and Dave Lopes clubbed a two-nm d<iuble lo put Ille Dodgers ahead !or good. Let MttM Il l H"'tlft l'I •rlllrM •r•rM LoC*. 211 s I J 1 Wyn!!, rl S 1 4 J Mot•,11 4 I 0 I S111t1r1d,2b f 0 0 0 HDl.lvfl, 11 I I I 0 CfldlM.. 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T~:-. ,._.,:I/4 WASHINGTON CAP) -President Nix- on was expected to sign into law today legislation that would enable sold out Na· tior.al Football League home games to be telecast locally in the city in which they are played. CongreM gave speedy final approval to the legislation Thursday so that most of the NFL's 1973 season's openers Sunday and h!onday could be telecast to local pro football fans in the comfort of their homes. Shortly before Congress took its final action, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle said that although the league opposed the legislation , he had informed the 111ajor television net works to lift the TV blackout ban on sold-OUt games. R®ts Linehacl\:er Hurt; Collegians Tap er Off LONG BEACH -The Los Angeles Rams may be without rookie linebacker Jim Youngblood !or Sunday 's opening NaUonal Football League game at Kansas City. Youngblood, !rom Tennessee Tech. suffered a pulled hamstring muscle in Wednesday's workout and was listed as questionable after undergoing treatment. Youngblood was the middle linebacker understudy !or Jack Reynolds. Bob Stein, a former Kansas City player, may be pressed Into SFVice as Reynold's un- derstudy. 8 SC bt Steea ts Los ANGELES -The SOulhem canromla Trojans , tapering off drills for Saturday night's season O{lener against Arkansas, worked out Thursday without pads and concentrated on their kicking game. Freslunan Brad Rice kicked off to Anthony Davis and Dave Boulware punted, mainly to Lynn Swann. All three Trojans tailbacks -Davis, Rod l\fcNeill and A11en Carter -took part as the Trojans ran through plays in sweat clothes. 8 IJCLA Passl11g WS ANGELES -Tbe UCLA Bruins \l."Orkcd on one of their problem spots and 9n one of their strengths in drills Tburs- ilay. l\fark Harmon threw nine times com· pleting five of I.hem while backup John · Sciarra connected on five of 10, three of them•to split end Steve Monahan. 8 S to11ford Drills STAl!fORD -Stanlord"s cardinals had a· lit ht workout in shoulder pads and shorts Thursday, to add final training touches for Saturday's football opener here against Penn State. Running back John Winesberry and wide receiver Bill Singler have bruised le.ft hands and could take only limited drill, but coach Jack Christiansen is pl<:nning to use both in the game. About two-thirds of Sunday's games and the l\!onday night contest would be covered by the legislation and would be televised locally. House and Senate leaders worked out an agreement on the bill early Thursday, even before the House voted on it, an un- precedented legislative maneuver design- ed to speed the bill's passage to permit Sunday's telecasts. The agreement reached between the leaders ironed out differences between an earlier Senate-approved version and one that was due before the House. The Senate version provided a one-year trial of the legislation to prohibit television' blackouts of home games if there is a sellout 72 hours in advance of the games. The House bill that came out of the Commerce Committee called for a pe.,nanent ban on television blackouts. The compromJse agreement called for a three-year trial period. 'The House passed the measure 336-37 after an hour-long debate with little dissent. The Senate, which had passed a bill last Thursday by a vote of 7fl..(j, adopted the House-passed version by voice vote. Rozelle told newsmen In New York that the NF L believes ;'there will be ex· trcmely negative results to this legisla-tion .. , He said, "\Ve feel that during the period of this experiment, it will be shown that a great number of people who purchase tickeL11 will not go to the stadium. "The sPort hns thrived on the crowds," he said. "\Ve think lhe sport feeds on the ent husiasn1 of the crowds." A sin1ila r argument was made during the House debate by Rep. Jack Kemp t R- N. Y. ), a former pro quarterback who played for the Buffalo Bills before being elected to Congre~. Blancas Rips Mean Course, Assumes Lead lllLTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) - The touring pros say you have to hit it straighJ. and sweet and pure on the HarboUI' Town Goll Links. Get it a little off line, they say, and you're dead. "It's the greatest course -for a pro- fessional -I've ever seen anywhere as long as I've been playing golf." said globe-trotting little Gary Player of South Africa. ' .. But Homero Blancas conquered it with a 66, five under par, for the first-round lead Thursday in the rain-plagued and darkness-halted $150,000 Heritage Golf Classic. And the happy hombre from Houston did it in a fashion no one thought poss~ ble. He bounced il off the trunks of moss-- hung old cypress trees. 1~c put it in traps. He "'andered throu gh the alligator·ln· fested S\l.'amps and ~Joughs. lie rattled It around in the branches of gin nt oaks and pines. He got lucky bounces olf pine cones. Billie Jean Wants Sy111pathy-Riggs And he needed only 23 putt s (n the wet and soggy adventure that left him with a one-stroke lead over John f\.fahaffcy and big Jimmy Wiechers, tied oil 67. For Wiechers, who has threaicned con- sistently in recent \veeks. It wois hb: foorth consecutive ro und "'ilhout a bog•y. Bert Yancey was alone \\'Ith a 68 in the round that \\'as held up for two hours by a pair of 1bundcrstom1s that delai_ed ' HOUSTON (AP) -Bobby Rlw, who Mts. King 1vos ·roiiied· to withdraw mod..i!y labels hlmlel! 1 mqter ol U.. !rom U.. U.S. Open Tournament and psyd\ out, figure1 he knows a line when earlier this week underwent blood tests be heirs It. I whlcll doctors said revealed she may Riggs says the reported lllneu o! Billy have hypoglycemia, a blood d!Jorder Jean King, his opponent DUI Thuncloy In which I! th< opposite ol diabetes. a11oo;ooo-wt1utel'talcWU teM!nnatcb, -Altrodome -officials announct<I that Is merely a ploy lo .. t htl """"lhf· Mn. King would be abl• to play Riggs "Sbe'a Juat trying lo 1•1 IYll\pilhy but woold have to miss the Virginia lrom me and U.. publle)lut lt'p not ping Slims loumament In St. Louis to rest up to work/' the OamboJant JUgp Aid f!or tbe match. Thulsd•Y prior to a spuklnt _,.. '""Rlaorthe·""'"'°ter, milking U.. new menL twllt lo the hlgbly lllllllic!ud..match for "Sile's trying lo psych me out blil It , an It wu worth, added, "She's trying to won't work. I'm un-psychable." get l)'lllpllhy !rom the public and fro m T • ..-- me because she realizes this is the most Important match of her Ute. "Basically, what she's doing is ap- pealing lo the Vlrgtnla Slims p&pie to let her out or the tournaments so she can aet reftdy for me.0 -- Riggs wasn't saying Mrs". King laked an Illness when she withdrew at ~·crest Hlll1. "It was hot and muggy and the hum idity got lo her," be said. "But I ex- pect her to be In lop physical condition when she pla~1 me li_tbe.Altrodome. "If she does hav.4';.,c.cemia, that's not a ''"!Olis di !$-year-old self-proclaimed hustler said. "I've got It play so much that the last group of three myself. I'm sure a lot of people are walk-players "·ere stranded on the course by lng around today wlth It and don't even darknes.s. know It.'' Jim 1\-larshaU, Bob 7.cndcr and Tommy ft1cCIMis htld one hole to play when Riggs then went Into his Rotary Club darkness -and anuthl!r rainstorm - speaking engagemenLdresled-in tennis descended and were -1ehcduled to flniab shorts and sweater and carrying hli ten· this morning. nis racket to tell the b\lBlness-sulted club Player, the \\1.nner at the Southern members how Billy Jean didn't have a Open last week, was one or o heir dozen chance. at 69 as the rourse yielded the lowut "l already see signs that Bhe'.s coming scores in Its history. Others at thal Ogure apart at the. seams," Riggs sald.. "Why, Included 21·year-old rookle 8 e a •he might ••en dl•solve and break lnlo _~haw, Hale Irwin, Jerry Heard, tears durlna ~ 1"alch." Cesar SMuclo and Bob Wynn. ' y ~ • J • 16 DAILY PILOT Fridl)', Stpt.e.mbtr 14, 1973 Top Seeds Stop Fo es At Seattle SEAm..E -The top three seeds ill the Seattle lntemational TeMis Tournament -Arthur rube, Tom Okker and Tom Gorman -all advanced to the quarter finals with: victories Thursday night. The top-seeded Ashe downed Houston'• Sl'lerwood Stewart, 6-1, 6--4; Okker routed South Africa's Frew McMillan, 6-1 , s-4, :ind Goonan outlasted Australia's Kim \\'arwick 6-0, 2-6, 6-3. Ashe broke service in the seventh game or each set to stop his grilly op- ponent. Stewart, \Vho qualified for the Seattle tourney by winning at three of the four stops on the "''estem Satellite circuit, stayed with Ashe surprisingly well in the crowd-pleasing contest. e No Upsets APTOS , Calif. -All eight seeded players were out of the National Hard Court Tennis Championships today as the $37,500 competition narrowed down to four recent Pacific-8 Conference players, plus John Lloyd of England and Onny Parun of New Zealand. Lloyd, 19-year-old English Davis Cup Player, and Panm meet in ·a quarter· final match whi ch will further reduce the array of foreign talent that started In the field of 32 when play began Tuesday. ln today's other quarter·fin'al, former Southern Cal teammates Mike Machette of Belvedere, Calif., and Dick Bo\lmstedt of Redlands, are opponents. In Thursday's quarter-finals, Erik van Dill en, seeded No. 7 and the only seeded player to get past the first two rounds, \Yas beaten 7-5, 6-3 by Je(f Austin of Roll· ing Hills, a UCLA dentistry student. Haroon Rahim, a UCLA graduate from Pakistan and close friend of Austin, ·won the other quarter-final Thursday, beating Tom Edlefsen, a 1964 USC graduate, 7-5, 6-1. Edlefsen, 29, the oldest of the quarter-finalists, won the $10,000 Aptos Open here last year. e Cnsats Sails ST. LOUIS -Top.seeded ·fuioemary Casals moves into quarter-Cina} pl ay to-- day in the $30,000 St. Louis Women 's International Professional T en n i s Tournament with a match agains t eighth-- ranked Kerry Harris of Australia. "I'm playing as well as i've ever played," said f\.1iss Casals following an easy second-round \\in Thursday over unranked Joy Schwikert of Las Vegas. The 25--year-old San Franciscan took only 36 minutes to crush her teen-age op- ponent in straight sets. 6-1, 6-1. f\;tiss Schwikert, 19, \\'as unable to break 1'1iss Casals' serve. Miss Harris advanced into quarter- final play at the exgense of Mooa Sc hallau, Iowa City, 6-4,"7-5. e Tourney Resumed CHARLOTIE, N.C. -The $40,000 women's tennis tournament moved into the quarterfinals today at Olde Providence Racquel and Swim Club v.•lth some unfinished business carried over from Thursday. A late afternoon rain wiped out four scheduled doubles matches, halted one singles mlitch and left another at the starting line. Top-seeded Chris Evert o! Fort Lauderdale, r~la., and her Soviet op- ponent, Yeugeniya Biryukova, start their match from scratch, with the winner moving on to the quarterfinals. Veronica Burton of Great Britain and Ilana Kloss of South Africa resume their match where rain stopped it, with 1liss Burton leading 6-3. 3·1 , DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! 1964 VOLVO 122 CPE. 4 cy1 .. 4 tPHf, r1dlt, llultr IOTS~t "'" ttd ,.1n1 llikll llllfihl. $877 19'1 TOYOTA $1199 1f67 VOLVO 4 DR 144 4 cyt., hl9. trnt.. rHll, llMttr Uflll411. WMtt Ill., •Ill Int. $1177 COSTA MESA HIGH OFFENSIVE STANDOUTS BRUCE SHARP (22), DENNIS DELANY (31) AND PAUL DESMET. Mustangs Show Balance Key Offensive Players Returni1ig By STEVE BRAND 6t lfM Dtlly 1'1 .. 1 St_.. In 1972, Costa Mesa Hlgh's virsity football team was blanked three times, scored just one touchdown against two ottter opponents and amassed only 66 points during a nine-game season. AJ an offensive machine it resembled <':I rotary lawnmower. Or maybe a go- kart. Third year head coach John Sweazy promises things will be different this season. "There are a lot of question marks about the team," says Sweazy, "but one thing we 're sure of, we'll move the ball. We have the people returning to throw a balanced attack at the other club." 'Steve Sharp completed 46 percent of his passes and tossed for 780 yards," says Sweazy ol. his returning quarter· back, "but be led the vrorld in intercep- ~ lions. Behind Sharp is defensive starter Rod Figgatt. 6-1,2, 178. Figgatl has outstand- ing hands, according to Sv.•eazy, and because of it he's also making a run at tight end. If Figgatt fits at tight end, junior l\fark Kennedy, 5-9, ISS, will move into the No. 2 spot at quarterback. Sharp has lots of expe r ie nced receivers, the best of ~·hich is Steve Teregis, whom Sweazy says, "didn't make a mistake aH last season." At 5-9, 165, he 's a two-way starter. Backing up Teregis at flanker will pro-- bably be Paul Desmet, the fastest player on the team, who will have to move from running back to flanker because of an in· jury. Brian ?<.tcCormick. 5-10, 190, started five games at Light end but he 'll be push- ed by Keith Joseyhson, a s.3, 190 pounder. Bill Valentine started at split end and the 5-11, 165--pounder is called perhaps the best receiver Sweazy has ever coach- ed. He lacb great speed but has outstand· ing hands. Sw~ is deep in running backs. Most valuable player Dennis Delany (182 ) will move from his tailback spot, where he gained 249 yards, to fullback. He's added 18 pounds. Bruce Sharp, who started hali of the games et tailback, returns. At 5-8, I~ he Is described as a scatback. Tony ?<.1artinez, the top runner on the sophomore team, moves up to challenge at tailback. U!tterman Joaquin Chamberlain ii the backup fullback (5-10, 180) while Arizona tral)Sfer Dirk Whitaker (5-ll'h, 185) is also given a good chance ~C starting. The line, too, Is soUd with three starting tackles, Jim Davis (&-0, 182 ), ?<.tark McDonnan (&-0, 215), and Gary Perez (6-1, 218) returning. All have added at least 20 pounds. Wrestler Jerry Schepens, heads returnees at guard . At &-0 and 187, he 'll be joined by another starter, Kim Josephson, 6-1 , 180. Linebacker Mark Nebecker (6-0, 185) and letterman Craig Brunton (5-9 and 185) are backup guards. Starting center Paul Farris (6-1, 1701 returns with backup Rick ?<.forse (5-10, 161) also back in the fold. Saddlehack-Cypress .Tilt Could Be Defensive Battle . "ft'll be the loughest Cypress team \Ve've ever faced," says Saddleback College football coach George Hartman abou t Saturda y nlght"s apening foe at Buena Park High. "Cypress has a very tough defensive line. That's its strong point. And we have to stop Brad Hillman (quarterback) and Bobby Dapper (running backl, The y're the biggest threats on oerense ," adds Ha rtman. The Gauchos coach figures that the team that makes the least amount of mi stakes will win it. "That's usualJy the case In the first game." Saddleback defealed Cypress, 7-11, last season and Hartman figures it might be another defensive battle again. "Our defense Is In good lhape, but \\'e're still "urried a little about our of- fensive line. We're still moving personnel around and that's the problem." With 1etterman tackle Dom DeRado {250) just getting over a knee injury, Hartman will use Bill Madden (235) bolh ways. He'll start at guard and linebacker. Baseball Standings DeRado will suit up, but probably will be used only sparingly. Randy Paulson (225) is expected 10 move from his tackle spol to guard when DeRado ii fully recovered. Other offensive starters include tackle Jim Dimmick (240), guard Bill P..fcNuJty (210) and cenler Wayne Ordoo (195). Baltimore Boston Detroit New York l\.1ilwaukee Cleveland Oakland American League East Division w L 86 59 Bil 67 77 69 73 74 70 77 64 64 West Dlvlllo11 64 81 Kansas City 80 66 Chicago 72 74 Minnesota 70 14 Angeli 67 76 Texas 51 G.15 Tll111'1Hy'f llt1Suh1 Ntw York 2, I01lon 1, 12 lnnln, .. e.rtlmore 1, MllWtVk" t. 1' lnnlnoa IC1m1t Ctly S, ........ • Only l"mft Kl'ltdiulfd TH.n .. .,... Pct. GB .593 .544 7 . 527 911 .476 17 .476 17 .432 2311 .579 .543 411 .493 1211 .486 131> .4~ 18 .304 3211 Pittsburgh St. Louis ~lontreal New York Chicago NaUonal Wgue East Division w L 72 71 72 73 71 73 71 75 ~ 76 P~iladelpltia 65 81 West Dlvillon Cincinnati • 89 S7 llodg<n 85 62 Sin Francisco 81 64 llouston 74 74 Atlanta 72 76 San Diego 53 92 Pct. GB .503 .491 ~.493 1~2 .~ 211 .476 4 .445 811 .6t0 .578 411 .559 71> .500 18 .486 18 .366 35\\ Jerry Charbon (165) ~ill be the split end with Jimikackett (100) at flanker. John Springman (175) wUI be the starting quarterback with veterans Joe Jones (200) al f u 11 back and Aundre Holmes (185) at lallback. Of the offensive slarters, ooly McNully and Hackett are freshmen. OefensiveJY, Rick Jacobs (190) and Jim Wand (210) will join Madden at linebacker. Up !ronl, Jerry Wight (215) and Joe Knox (!ZS) will be the ta<kles witb Gary Roberts (200) and Don Roy (210) at the guanls. · Clark Jarrell (170), Brian Hester (175). Jim Poeltgen (170) and Kea Goldslooe (160) will be In the backfield.·, WJabl, Roy, Hester, Poetlg"1 and Golds1-""' - Gauchos Tubed Mistakes Play Important Role -Shackleford Saturday night's annual football battle betv.·een rivals Golden \\'est and Orange Coast proba bly \\'ill be a low-scoring af· fair. That's the opinion of Golden \\'est coach Ray Shackleford. "Because it's lhe fi rst game of the year and beCause quite a fe 1v freshmen will be playing their first coUcge game, there probably will be a lot of mistakes. The first game is never quite as polished as you v.·ant lt to be," says Shackleford . And. since both teams reputedly have good defenses, there probably won 't be a lot of points on the board, adds the Golden West coach. Shackleford says he fears Ol'aQge • Coast's overaJI balance more than anything ~lsc. "A year ago they had Alvin White and Steve Monahan, but th is season they have 'a good Ol'crall footba ll team. Defensively they haven'l changed much. They always seent to have a Pat Sweetland or a Grant Ge Iker." Golden West will open with an of. tensive line that Shackleford calls talented. but inexperienced in jUDior college football . Only tight end Larry Hirt, an All· Southern California C.Onference selection in 1972, has any experience. The rest of the starting offensive line includes right guard Robin Luken (215), right tackJe Bryce Adkins (225), left guard Kary Yergler (17S) right Jackie ?<.tike Domas (215 ) and center Guy Car· rozzo (195). Yergler and canouo are the only other sophomores. The wide receivers will be either sophomore Rod Brown (160), or freshmen Rick Hoover (175) or Walt Maddocks (190). Freshman Dan Accomando (175) wUJ open at quarterb11-ck with sophomore Pat Thorpe (165) and freshman Rick Qlrry {200) as running backs . _Defensively, Jim Potter (220) and Gary Jennings (235) will be the tackles with LeW Chuntich (185)' and Bob Bonnett (190) al the ends. The linebackers wlU be Bryan Kem5 (180), Terry Young (190)' and either Jeny WUllams {185) or Larry Grady (200). In the secondary Ky!< Van Amerslort (165) and Randy Rehrer (17S ) will be at the comers with Mike Purcell (175) and &lark Pierce (175) at safeties. Potter Is one of the better defensive t,ackles around and [reshmen Chumicb 8.nd Grady are1AlI-ClF honorees. Bonnell, Jennings, Van Amenrort and Pier~ arc also freahmm. N"" York !Sottftm'I'"' \).IJJ •I 81tllmort CJtff. efton .....s OI' Alt••l'llttr ,.,, Clf\ltltnd ITkl,...,. ,,.,., ,, &oetOtl ''E'·lfi Mltwt11~H !C&lbom It-fl 11 a.troll ( &II l.j:f'J MlnneMl!t (ll~ltvtl'I 11·1SI II Cl'llCIOll IA , .. "' Te•11 !81bbY 7.f) ti 01klll'ld !Himll'I' 1M) K1m11 City (811tbY 14-lll tt A•l:I (T-ria 0-1) .. ~ ...... Stt\lnllY'I O•mtt ~ltlledlf~lt ti Montr111 . Pirates ~avored by 8V2 T, ... It Otilltlld IClllMt CJty et A..-Mlnnnotl ti ChklOO Mtlw1ull;tt ., o.tn)lt New YOik ., ••rtlf'l'IOl'I c1rv111nd 1r 111111on Cl'lkffO •I Ntw York '""""'11'1 II SI. LOllll Alllnll I Clric:lnntll -.. 'I"-"" :11n l'rl!IC ICO ., S•n 0!190 De1ense Has Top P1iority At Laguna By RON EVANS Of ... o.i~ ,, ........ Defense is a priority Item for Laguna Beach's footbell team this season, and coacl) Hal Akins feels lhal barring lnJury the Artists could be a sound defensive team. ''Defense comes first right now," Akins says. "If we have a player who could 10 both ways but we can substitute for him on oCfense and not lose effectiveness, we'll ~o It. l l ttl "f lhought we played good defense last season, but In most games we were on defense so much the players didn't get much chance to rest. This year I think we'll be a better defensive team and I hope the offen.se can do enough to gi~ the defense more tlme to rest." / :. Again this season, the Arililts will employ an "Oklahoma" type 5-3 defense. The key man will be middle llnebacker Dave Martin, a 230-pounder who W81 an· All-Orange League selection last season. Aklns has moved Martin to the middle where be11 line up at linebacker or in the line. 1be move is designed to keep op. ponents from running away from Martin as they dJd last season. Another plus for the Artists is defensive end Jolm McCall, a 19Q.pound Junior. The Laguna Beach defensive line could 1 be the biggest the Artists have fielded in several seasons, but It's likely to be com· posed mainly of two-w,ay starters. John Wills (200), an offensive center, and hefty Larry McCann (255) are po ssi· ble starters at the tackles. Mark Shipkey, son of former UCLA great Ted Shlpk ey, could work in at a tackle or guard spot, and Brad Emery (6-3, 190) is also a possibility either ·in the line or at linebacker. At one of the outside linebacker slots, jwtior J\-tark Johnson (l65) holds sway, 11•hile six different pla,vs vie for the other linebacking spot. Offensi\'e guard ChrL! While (170) ts ahead of !he other candidates on I.he basis ot experien ce, but Jeff Johnson, Scot t Leebrick, CUrt Greenlaw and Scott Westgaard are pushing for the job. In the defensive backfield two starters return from last season. and three of !he slarters are probably going to be used on defense only. Eric Heard (lliOl returns at a halfback spot and Jim Sims returns to the start at one sa fety position. f\.11ke Serrano. up from the sophomore team , is a probable' starter at the other halfback, while one safety position is yet to be filled. Hank Miller and Robert Wood are the front runners tor the job, but offensive backs Pete Cottam and Mark Mazzarella will also see occasional duty . Defensive Ullit For Monarchs I Called Green Last season the most points ?tlater De~ Jligh allO'o\'ed in a single footbaJJ game was 16. The J\lonarchs will be hard-pressed to n1aintain that record in 1973 iI numbers or returning players is any indication. "Our de!ense is untested," says coach Gary Carr. "We plan to spend a Jot of time working with the players trying to get them coordinated. ., "While we have a lot of kids out we'nt terribly small this year. We on1). bav(· one player over 200 pounds and in th;. Angelus Leagu~. that means trouble ." Deplh Is also a problem and alread1 lhe Monarchs have felt tbe pinch wllb Ibo lou for at least two weeks of_ No. 1 mid- dle guard, Hector Delgadillo (6-1, 196), v.'ho broke his foot. ~ That moves Don Waters, a 5-lJ and 170.pounder up from the sophomore team, Into the middle of the deltll&lve line . That's very llghl for 1 mlddle gum! and lhe balance of the Hoe reflects a similar problem. Mike Beeuwaaert (&-0, 180) and Mork Slemmer (&-0, 175 ) hold down -delen~ve end spot while aopbomorO' Barney Rumpi (&-0, 170) and Jeff Farano are listed on the _.Ile tilde. Mike Wlnthel,.r (5-8, !SO) may be the" smallest starting defensive Jackie In 1llo CIF bu t his backup, Jim Ridge (&-0, 110): lsn'I must larger. On the other llde, sam· Lopez (&-O, 180) and Tom ~le (5-8, IJO! are lhe leadl1111 candidates. Bob Macauley (&-0, 188) buds )hi' Unobacklnc corpo comlllt! ¥ u .. starter on the left 11de. He's backed.up by Frank Wood (5-1, !Bil). • BUI Waldron (5-8, 155), who l'll)'ld Oil the speclalty teams a year ago;-i. the Na.~ 1 candlclale at riJht llnebocter wllb Dkk Culv.,. (5-11 , 165) the top i;l>allenter. Coach Corr says his -.iy la thi strength on defenae. ' • Jolm Dudelt (S.11 , 165) was a vanlli pJayer as a aophcmore and he holda Ult" top spot at right halfback ahead of °"*1 Viviano !!Vi, 171). -·' --'--, Pit Henderson. (5-8, 140) the standout receiver. 1$ alao lhe No. I left hallbock, on defe111e, with Mike Gage (6-0, liiO) In a backup position. · ~re IB~)_.(~l~ll pencllldTn 11 the top candldale at lef\1 safety wllh quarterback Sieve MMlh>'' dale ·In .-rve. Dave Nojera (5-9, 140) II the lop rJ&blllde l&fety wllb Joe Ballellen> """" renlly bi the No. z opo~ "'Ille lnlerl« line Is reilly peen," Ill" CarT. "The pl11Y•re lite to hit 11.i they're touah. We're just hoping with oor ( ~pth the size lsc!Dr can be neutrall"'ld." • • "' . tl~j ~~ !\tis~ ed v.·i~ has re Ing t~ Rcy1 y,·elt s hiuini perien ''\VE good I key iI playet Hi'vne A Pl lhe I Hlckc' 0. 19~ pcric11 Ji mite The elude. . I ), MISSION VIEJO VETERAN LINEBACKERS RICK CURTIS !LEFT), RICK WHITE. MV Seeks Right Combo By HANK WESCH Of tht Pall"I' Piiot Sllll ~·lission Viejo coach Bob H,i vner is fuc- ed vdth the saine task defensivel y that he has regarding the Oiablos' offense-find· in g t.he right combinalion in the line. Beyond lhe fron t line th e Dia blos ;i re "'ell set defensively with a pair of hard- hitt ing letterman linebackers and an ex- perienced defensive backfield. '·\\'e have a fiqc nucleus and 90me very good ball players coming up , but a few key injuries could hurt us. and some players will have to go ty,·o \\'ays,'' H"l"\11er says. A p:iir of probable t"~way starters in the line are lettermen tackles Jeff Hickey <Jnd Jim llausaucr. llnusaucr 16- 0. 195) has two years of varsity ex- perience y,•hilc l·lickey tG-1, 195 ) sJw limited action last season. The other interior line candidates in- clude seni or tackle Steve \\lcstroin i&-3, 195) and underclassmen Jeff Evans (S.11. 110·1, ~lark ~lerwin (5-11, 175) and Brad Silva 1 ~3. 200 ). Evans is an1ong five candidates for llivner to choose from at defensive end. The otht>rs are Greg Butler (S.10, 180 ). ~lark t.1aurer 16-3. 100). Guy Reeves (5-ti. 185 ~ and Rick Fischer (6-1 , 175), all S<!nLors. .-Linebackers Rick Q.111is (5-11 , 185) and Rick \Vhite (5-11, 175) ranked among the best in the Crestview League last season and should be even better as seniors this ye~r. Cu rt is was an All-league first team selection la!lt season. and Hivner feels that the play of \Vhite was of equal cali!lt'r. Curtis will be a backup at of- fen!li\'c quarterback, while Whhe is a reserve running back on offense. Both "'ill be used sparingly there unless in- juries force a change in plans. JuniOrs Tony Richardson 15-9, lGOI and Aman Jeff Roletti (6-0, 170) are the reserve linebackers. but both have shov.11 good hitting in practices and could possibly be used in the defensive line if Hivner feels its necessary. Three of the four defensive backfi{']d spots are filled and Hivner is confident the Diablos passing defense will be im- proved over last season. Kevin Eaton. (6-2, 170) has the speed , size and tackling ability to repeat as an all-leaguer and will be used offensively as a wide recei ... ·er. Returning lettermen Dan Reeves (6--0. 175) and Ron Freed (6-2, 175) are set at two other defensive backfield spots , and four players may be u se d in- lercha ngeably at the remaining position. The four, Mark Batza !S.11 , 1701. Rich Rommel tS--9. 16.'Jl. Bob Bates i5-7. 1451 and Ken Robbins (5-7, 145) are all seniors and are all expected to log some lime ad- ditionally on offense. ·Iikes to come home to Black \elvet. Every manwant:stofeel the smooth,importedwhiskyfrom Canada · And everywoman,too. L ·1· \', I j' /I, 11 •.1 '" 'J I~! " 11•·1 ' ·' !i 1 11. I'! '[' ' ' ii : 'I ' 11,1 ·1 , '1 I, . ~ \ 1 ·1 \i Ii ' . ' I ~ ! , I I .11. !11: I /j : " " .. ' •' 11 I I ii I, . ' /I/;/ JI! I -.J) .. Friday, Srptrmber l~, 1973 DAIL V PILOT J · ... -::.:..-'_~ .-. . ----. _, , . _, .. .. -_ _,-----. -__,,,.. . SATISFY ALL YOUR HUNTING NEEDS AT THE GRANT BOYSI EVERYTHING YOU NEED FROM GUNS TO CLOTHING ARE HERE WITH TRAINED PERSONNEL TO ANSWER ANY QUESTION YOU MIGHT HAVE. SEE THE EXPERTS AT THE GRANT BOYS FIRST AND MAKE THI S THE BEST HUNTING SEASON EVER! FINANCING AVAILABLE AT GRANTS! • I • __ , ___ ... -·--. ~• .. ~ ... I -----REMINGTON 100 ADL BOLT ACTIDN RIFLE ~·-v·· .. in standard callbers ....•......••••••...•... $131.25 in magnum caUbers ...... , . _ .••••.....•.... $142.50 REMINGTON,700 ADL BOLT ACTION RIFLE in standard calibers ..•••••••.•••••.• :. , •••• S 116.25 in magnum calfbers , • , . , .•••. , •••••.. , .•. , . $127 .50 --s','tt REMINGTON 760 AIJL PUMP s 12 0 DO ACTION RIFLE In 1t1ndard cellbers .......... .. BROWNING GRADE I SEMI· s 1 I I 88 AUTOMATIC RIFLE . . standard and magnum • , •••..•• DOVE SEASON IS STILL ON RIFLE· SCOPES ~Rad,lald REMINGTON 11 00 YENI RIB SEMl-AUIOMAllC SHOIGUN s 1 B 1 !5 I 2 61. >nj 20 GI. in lielj chohu GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE .. '. ........... Ma1nu•s lll&.25 REMINGTON 170 VENI RIB PUMP ICllON SHOIGUN in lielj choles 12 GA. & 20 61.. ...... , ........ Ma1nums 1135.DD MASTER CHARG E BANKAMERICARD REMINGTON MOHAWK 12·20-410 GAUGE GRANTS SPECIAL PllCE . • COOL SIOOLS INSULAllD HUNllNC SIOOLS GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE sgaa RELOAD CENTER FOR SHOTGUN SHELLS • RFLE I PISTOL CARTRIDGES RCBS JR. PF1£SS COMBO ••. $21.11 RCBS OIES NOW ......... ,,.11.H MEC 600 JR ALL GAUGE SA.LE.... .. ............ IAl.lf CHILLED SHOf PER 100 LBS ............ ~s.oo SHOTGUN PRIMERS PERM ................ St.SO RIFLE & PISTOL PF11MERI PER M ...... , ... , •••• , .. SS.SO A1.L SHOTOUN WADS ~ SCOPES = 0 REDFIELD "fronller" 13"751' 41 Rllle Scope . . . . . . . • ,, -- a •• ~~~~~~.~~ ....... sa1n ((!?)) LEUPOLD SCOPES ~:~~~~ .~·.' ...... '73" ' ,• 1 · ' \ ' '·' '·' ' i ·" .;.:! .. ' '' \ ' I ' • ' 1/ ,, \ \· ' \'.· • • • , . • • • . . . ' • . • . • . . I •• • . i • . • • . • ' . ,. j ; I B DAIL' PILOT Start Your Engines! ' WITH DEKE HOULGATE·· . As the Star Spangled Banner was ending at Ontario Motor Speed"·ay, car owner Lindsey Hopkins. leaned over and wrus: pered to columnist Jlm Murray : "You heard about the fuel hassle, didn't you?" ~1urray hadn't heard, but he wanted to. And be did. Hop- kins told bim that oUicials fotu;Kl all of the pit storage tanks 24 ..gallons over the prescribed 300 the day before the Cali· fomia 500 was to start. The rea:son they found out was that one of Hopkins' men told USAC chief technical inspector Fraqkie Del Roy. Del Roy acted quickly. He ordered all the tanks emptied and re!illed correctly. He checked the fuel company metering device, found it to be inaccurate and bad that corrected. But the reason the tanks were overfilled was that Del Roy had accepted on faith the word of someone, identity un- revealed, who claimed that all of the speedway's identical tanks had 308-gallon capacities, rather than the correct 332 gal· Ions. "We took somebody's word for it, and we shouldn't have," he said. The \\'ay Hopkins saw it, not everyone knew the tanks had 330 gallons in them, and since they didn't probably some competitors did. That would mean an unfair advantage exist· ed. Hopkins is widely known as a man who would rather lose than cheat. His whistle blowing ¥las commendWl._ by most other car owners. "All of our planning was based on the assumption that we had exactly the. amount of fuel they said we had," one car owner reported. "There are three fue l companies (Valvo- line, covering most of the cars, Castrol and Gulf), and they are not the best of friends. They are not going to trust each other. "If our fuel company is going to make a mistake, it would hope to make its error in favor of our team. I'm very pleased that Lindsey did what he did. He should be commended fo r it." Nem Era of Co0 operatio11 There Is a new era of co-operation among owners of lh e very expensive Indianapolis race cars. They have banded to- gether in a sort of protective association to advance their special interests. Car owners are mostly concerned abou' the costs of rac· iog these days. High costs are aggravated by the safely crises. l\1ore expensive cars go fas ter, but the demand ror speed creates more expense. ThJs In turn leads to the demand ror wealthy sponsors, hut when safety becomes a problem, they get scarce. Jn the words -c>f one. car owner: "It is just a vie.ions circle." l\teeting secretly at Ontario a "'eek ago, owners decided to organize. Their first formal meeting will be. this Saturday at l\Uc hlgan International Speedway. One of their first orders of business ii to decide which of t he severaJ methods propostd by USAC to lowlr ~rsepower will be s upported. The method Ibey appear to favor at tbls time, reducing the fu el allowed for a race, Js the simplest and least expensive. But, as the Ontario fuel fiasco proved, it carries wl~ Jt an enforcement problem. That probleJJ) wi~l ,presumably be gtven a high priority fl!: the car owners Satucday. "The fuel thfug at Ontario," $;81d.one of the ewaen, ''war jus.t the Up of tht Iceberg. We plan to be lookln{,41.t·a Ill more of tile iceberg from now on." · Belgian Beauty /tlotorross Wldo10 1 \Vhile Pierre Karsmakers goes away to his job on week· ends, his \vife sits at home alone with only a tract house and a 3-year-old daughter to occupy her ~ttention. Denise Karsmakers, a Belgian beauty, is a motocros.s wido'W. Her dilemma is compliCated by the fact that she barely speaks English, and her address is in affluent Orange County, hardly Ole place to find fol~s from back borne in Benelux. Right now Mrs. Karsmakers is back visiting relatives in Europe. and her huSband, a three-time·'Dutch national cham· pion, is continuing lhe summer grind that b;'ings them a healthy paycheck and some bonuses in the form of·prize mon· ey wlien he does well. · · · · ' · l\1oving to America has been a rough adjustment ·(or. the Karsmakers family, but the Yamaha team mentor and .lead· ing competitor likes it here despite the drawbacks. For one thing, he still has a house in Achal; ~gium, near the Dutch border. It's vacant, and he worries &bout What is happening to it while he is gone, even though his family stops by regularly.to check the place out. Flo~d of Fun Jtluil Reduced ·· For another, his Hood of fan mall bas been reduce'CI to a t rickle. The day "'e talked he bad received three letters, but some days be gets none. At home be Is a celebrity, a nation- a1 hero. llere he is only beginning to receive fan mall from Americans. Karsmakers' presence here is to build Yamaha's prestige la the fast.growi ng sport of motocross. He t.ests new equip- ment for the factory in J apan, and bis suggetsed cba.nges are usuall y.adopted. The most important reason for Karsmaken: to be ltert, according to a company spokesman, Is to d.evelop Yamaha's promising young U.S. rider, Tim Hait, inlo'8·world class con1- petltor. Karsmakers bas been doing this by O bjecting. Hart to a rigorous lralnlng program largel.f"uaknown to ni~&.~Amerl· can riders. The routine Is similar. &o the one tW Sweden's Rolf Tlbblln bas laid out for HusqVatba rlder epJ;.1Gi'ossl. Uarl's Thne Sci1e d11ie ... : DmllY '°'lol Sllff l"~ot. WESTMINSTER STllNDOUTS TOM GALLAGHER (LEFT),. RICHARD BLISS. Lions' Defense Carries Load h1 Early Pa1·t of '73 Season By JOHN CASS 01 lht Offly Piiot Sl•tf "Our defense will have to really be tough if we plan to be in our first two games," says Westminster Hi gh foot· ball coach Bill Boswell. "The defense is where we have the veterans and this air pears to be the mo s t coachable group as a team that we 've had in a long time -mayte 3ince the school opened. · "The defense is quick to learn and v.11ile I've had better individuals, this group works better together as a team than any grouP:·" What ~also prompted Boswell's -femark about /\he defense holdipg up the team in the first few Outings is the fact only one starter returns on of~ fen.se. Meanwhile, hiS defensive unit could start six players 'vho were in. right after the kickolf in 1972. Only it prob- "ably won't happen since three of those players have swtiched to offense. The top returnees are mid· dle linebacker ruck Shirley (S- O, 180), safety Rick Glass (S-2, ( 185) and Rich Bliss (6-0, 185), who wiU move from defensive end to safety. Sub Rac es for Wiebe In OCffi ·Drag Classic · Returning lettermen Tom Gallagher (6--0, 187) and Ken Tew (5-10, 184) are the reasons Bliss can move so easily. Gallagher and Tew are expected to man the defensive end positions. r'.etterman Chuck Lanning (5:-11,• 225) ·and junior Scott Klamer ( S-4, 220) are the leading tackles with Klamer rated an All-CIF possibility. Bolh will . he pushed by Mike Bauer (5-10, 212), a junior. John Wiebe may · win the Western U.S. Grand American drag racing competition this weekend at Orange County International Raceway without even attending. Wiebe is currently recuperating lro"m a badly broken right leg, stiffered lv.u "·eeks ago \vhen his Donovan~ powered AA fue l dragster practically disintegrated dur· ing an accident in Tulsa. vq_ebe filed a petition with Ame'.r~an Hot Rod Association ptesident Jim i}ce requesting a special substitution for the OCIR competition which started at 3 this afternOOCl, resuming Saturday. again at 10 a.m. liis petition, in a rare ac· '11le linebackers could be a lion. was upheld. pair of teammates off the 1'hus, veteran James War· sophomore team a season ago, ren of Bakersfield will make .Ron DeCaprio (~10, 175) and another or those per1odic vi'sits Rick Brown (5-10, 170), over the Ridge Ro\lle with his Quickness and hard hitting are powerful Rain for Rent Special their forte. lo run for Wiebe. Lettennan Rick Rosen (5-10, l t's a reversaJ o! roles in the 170) heads the list ·of cor· tight AHRA poirits chase. nennen although junior Jeff Jn 1970. Wiebe \V.1S leading John.son (6-3 , 175) is listed as a when Don Garlits injured his sure starter at either corner foot in a mishap .at Long or salety. Beach and requested·a similar Tim Richards (6-2, 175) is a substi tution. Wiebe bar c I y strong safety 'vhlle Tony Ac. hung on for the crown. comando (5-10, 155) t he No\v Garlits, \\'ith 6,300 outstanding Lions run n in g points, is leading with Wiebe back, is rated a solid backup within range at 5,550. at free safet y. F• h R · 1 In addition to the top fuel "What depth we have is on I~. ~pot comptitition. the popular funny defense." admits Bos w e 11 . ·. ""' .... car eliminations are set Satnr: "Until the offense is able to :O~YIY's Lqe1cl!-:... 74 •11;1e•1• 196 day at g p.m. with the cham· jell, I see the defense carrying ~70; l:JD bftt,, 20 y.tllOWl•fl, 12 rock cod, a Kulpln;3 sl\ff!)Sl!f,lld. pionships Sunday at 11 a.m. the team." "'- LOWG I E.I.CM (8 flmD111 Pi«) -U\r;;;:;~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11 .1<19te"'' 10 v~•ll, 200 r«k cod, ts bonito. ••111• -33 q l1r1: 4 ~r-,rec~oa. • ~nd INtlS. n bOflflO. 6 SPORTS SINCE 192, halibut, 140 mackerel. IPJ.,-polnf L11r" l 4 dll'l!ll) -S4 .1119l1•s: 10 yeUowr~u. 17 GIANT t>onl!o, 4 e•lico ~s5, 231 rock cod, l halltlllt. ea I DANA WHARF -1$3 .1n;l!rs: 3$2 i~~.~· =~;; '~"':;":~,~:.·~:. ~~!'11i1.L•:r0.~=J~~!r;::;~~:e1.~ ANNUAL halibut. 11~11"9• -60 ~!ers: 6 bl!•· recudf, •25 bonito, U, ,.Hnd b<IU, tl hallblJT, 2 Wfl!l e se1 be"-~8 mackerel. SAN DIEGO (M1111/cl~I f'i.r) -121 .1nqlerl: 360 vellawlall, 21 bonllo. OCIAfnlDE -U .. 119!er1: 26 bonito, 98 sand INtss, 3 h•lllwl. !1!2 roe• cod. 1 yellowt11t. , SAMT.t. MONICA -5' anpltts: 124 1an!I bass, 29 hallblit l3 bonito, l;trt• -53 '.l(llllers: UO m.\~kerrl, It bonl!o, 9 Mllblil, s bass. S.KI SILE Every Tuesday and Thursday morning ~arsmakers puts the 23-year-old Califomiarl through two hours of exercises and running, and in the afternoons t1vo hours of riding. Only on Wednesday do teacher and pupil take a day off. The other days of the week are devoted to travel or compelilion -Mou· .. day and Friday to fly, Sat urday and Sunday to race. COME EARLY 1 nnnmn PARKING ·LOT ' .AT Nt\V tQC~IO"J, 2722 NCiRTH MA_IN Stilftt , SANTA ANA-IN Fl$HION.~NI NIXF TO •i: ;AsklON . • ' SQUARE · < • 1 DAY ONLY' Sun. Sept. 16 10 am· Karsmakers makes a favorable assessment of his student's chances to reach !he big time of international motocross raC: ing. .. :; "He has the potential right now.'' ·Karsmakers said. "Tt all depends on his own will pov.·er, the: drive.to win. That Is very important, because when you are goihg faster, cooce~ tration is everything. ' "In motocross you get tired, and when you get tired you lose concentration. That is \vhen you find out i( you are a \\•in- ner or not." Currently. Karsmakers is negotiating a new contract with Yamaha ; t.e stay Rnother:year. We -have a Up for the manage· ment. He'll be a pushover. Karsmakers likes the weather here. Pickeroo Contest Nears Every high school And col-readers a chance to win $100 a Jege football conteM involving week in cash prizes -$50 for Orange Coast area teams is top winner, $'l0 for second -1JK?IUded"i1rt111r •'pick ·list" -of"'"" and-110-e•·ch-fo•,hltd ' the first week of Pilot Pigskin fourlh and tilth ·places each PlderDo ccmpetltioo which wee k. · · • " t.:eab SUnday , In the Dally Sunday's player form also Pilot aporll oectioa. will test the college and pro 'l1lo 1m edlllon of the pick-knowledge or conlM'tanis: The tht-wlnn<n--contest, -co· :JO.game-list wUI Include top ...,..,..i by Coria Mesa's . 0011teals from the naUooal Harbor Boulevard or Cars scene, along with the area Auociatloa, olfero Dally Jil•t games. SALE! Sat •• s.,t. J,Stll V 10 •·"'·to 'I ·"'· Sllort & Lo'MJ ~~ SHIRTS $3.50 SLACKS :~tSl4 $9, 95 SHIRT SALE JJJ I . t7tll St, COIN M... 642·1711 ' 'I ~ ALL LAST;.YP.ILJ~ gOoDLIS~_,_1 SACRIFICED SAVI-UP TO ' 40·800/o OFF ~-"'KIS~P-OLES..!..SWIATEIS..l.IOOIL~-1 l'ANTS • l'AllKAS • WINDSHlllTS • GLOVff " , Pirates Improved -- With four of his top five run-yeer•r 'squod. ~van Jones. the ners hick from Wt season. number two runner who set a and a llno looking crop of new ·ooc !<()()I'd in the lhree· fnshmer!, ~ Co 1 s t mil• lut track season, is also College cross ciiantry coach -back. also joined the Pirates !old. Waltmeyer bas a two-mile best or 9:39. Jim Mcllwain is looking for an Mcflw~in al.so hlli l h e improved reeord,tn 1973. services of Tim Rudy, who Mcllwain's Pkiites, who have was last seam's fourth man suffmd lhnlugll oome loan and flnlshos third in lhe Soulh years since 1988 when they Coast Confereoce baU-milc werit 10.2, will be ~ im· track finals. Steve Schureman, proved over last sea.900. In the fifth man, is also back. fact, Mcllwain says it will be Schureman had a best four· Kerry SCOtt is a freshman out of Newport Harbor who has run a 9:50 for three miles. Jerry PlAll of F'ouotain Valley is a good distance man who has turned in a 4:41 mile. .• the best team since 1918. mile time of 21:48. "'Ibis will also be our Top frosh prospects include First Annual HOBIE 12 REGATTA largest squad since 168," Tim Fitzsimmons and Larry Mcllwain said. •·w~ expect to JoUy, both from La Quinta have between 15 aild 2G run· High. Fitzsimmons was the ners. We bad 11 last year and best La Quinta distance man seven in 1970. '' and ran a 4:26 mile. •• Lake For est Sept. ll, 1973 ..... betht Heading the list o( returnees Duane Waltmeyer and Ran-- is Owen Conn.an. the 44 year-dy Roffma, the top t\yo run- old Coma Mesan who was the ners on Estancia High's cross number one man on last country squad last fall, have or lZ:OO N••11 DICK LEWIS PRESENTS FOOTBALL FORECAST ,,.. 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If '1J ... ...._ TWll Mt 1111tttltM1 '•N Plldleri ~ .... fw ...... , • -Chi I Hll!Wltrl f1f ..... ,..... IM lffft T .. •, • Nt. ...... ,....... , i · ®~oo ·~oo®~rr ··~moom · • '' ( . . ~ , l • " r l • • •• ·-' . j' I ! • i • • ! . • . • • • • ' • • ! . l . . • l I ! • I • I ' l • ' ! l I • j I I j • t • • • • I • • • • • I l • • • ' • " ' . • j . I • • I • I l ' l I ! ' ' I .. • ! I l ~ - Estancia Defense Big Key By RON EVANS ot Ill• Dalty Pli.t •t•ll Defense could be the key if r Estancia High gets off to fast start this football sea.son. l . I i "We've installed a whole new offense and defense," ex· plains new head coach Jim Hemsley. "We have four or five players who started on defense last year so with their experience we've seen the defense adjust much quicker than the offense. "I suspect It'll be that way for several weeks, at least w1- ; til we've decided who is going t... to play which posiUons." •• " " • ' I l • . l ' ' ' .. • . • • • • . ' • • ' ' . • ! • j • • ' • l ! . I I l • Hemsley says he's em· pbasiz.ing defense every bit as much as the oU~. "The difference iS that the defense seems to be learning more quickly. which ls usually the case anyway since there is Jess to learn," he says. As on offense, he list1 his ends as the iilrongest part of the defense. Pass-catching star Dave Gibbs (6-1, 170), Doug Kirby (5-11, 165), Jon Hartley (5-10, 165 ) and Jim Parsons (5-11, 175) form the stroog nucleus. Inside of them, M i k e Edwards (6..(), 230), Steve J\.1c7'-1asters (5-11, 195) and Gary Petrina CHO, 165) bold down the tackle JJO.'itions. A search is on in earnest ror inside linebackers with Dan Beavor (5-1. 155), and Irby Haydon (IHI. 150) holding down the positions now. The outside linebackers are listed as Charles Lopez (S.11, 165), Tim Sweet (6--0, 170) and Art Galvan. "Our major concern at linebacker ls a lack of depth and size," says Hems1ey. "We must find backup people knowing they'll be Wlfamlliar with the position." , 'Mle defensive Secondary Js more solid with N e w e 11 Bischoff (5-7, 150), ll.fark Deven (5-9, 160), Jim Glancey (M , 175), Roy Butteling {S. 7 \~. 150) and sophomore Gary Confer. "The important thing is that this defen.!e work together," says Hemsley. ''We have some weak spots where we could use some depth but you have to work with wh8t you get. Friday, Stpltmber 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT J9 ' Late Deer Cooperation Helps Moore-cM cyclist Season ·To Begin B "ld El T .. G. id P Favored ui · oro r rogram T . ·h ByHANXll'~ DI ... DMIV ,. .. St.., · omg .t the Dlablos omnplled a 4-1-1 mart, Ibo !Int oon·lclolng season in the school's bl.story. O•llY "'llot S..., PMtt ESTANCIA DEFENSIVE END DOUG KIRBY. Checking Coast Area Women's Golf Results Members of the Laguna and Jane Schaefer of Irvint Beach women's gotr club stag. Coast CC took low gross with ed a better ball •Of foursome 187 while Josephine McLain tournament this week. and Valeiltine Brooks of Lo.s In Jirst place was a team Angeles CC were net winners composed of Virginia Beals, with 135 • Frances Blake, Rita Reinholdt Cathy Freeman of Irvine afid 1\1arylou Yager with a Coast CC set a course record score oJ 50. · · or 74 in. aiding her team to vic- Second place went to Jean · tory. ~~!:idG:g\v~~~~~ Mission Viejo with 51. · · It was a blind holes tourna- Big COll!IOH 0 ·1\!embers of the Big Canyoo Country _Club women's . golf group staged a better ball of partner's event on guest day with Mary Kay Howard ahd Cathy Freeman of Irvine Cpast Country Club winning with a 161. L-Ow-net honors went t(). Edna McHugh and .,Gwen Sayers of Santa Ana OC with 139. In B flight, Carolyn Mas-On rient with half harldicap for members of the 1\lission Viejo Golf Club wo,men's golf group this week. In A flight, Jean 1\1etcalf won with 36~~. followed by Marge Cypqt with 381'. . Sallie Meyers and 'fl.1adeline Stanley lied for first in B lljght with 381'.. Ruth Jenkins was the C flight winner with 41 .. Next week's tournament will be a strokes to the green evenL Alxlxlant water and a plen- llful llUpply ol food !lave im· Mack Moore baa the dllllcult proved the quallly ol Southern task of bulldfug a football pro- ·Callfomla and. Iny~Mooo deer gram from scratch at newly h d ' fanned El Toro Hl&)> School. enb urlng lhe. paJt year, It's a lot to ask of a 27-year- bul Ibey p>se a opeclaJ prob-old coach holding his nm lem for the hunter. bead position, but Moore says Becau,,e of good forage con-he's got a lot of help. • . diUons lli most areaa, deer "Starting a program is will be dispersed for the open--reaUy a hassle unless yoll get cooperation from the ad· Ing ol lhe inland and late deer rninlBlration and the school sea.sons, both of which begin district, and they've been very Saturday, Sept._ 22. cooperative," ~1oore says. '11te Areas ln the inland deer Chargen share the Mission sea.son, which concludes Oct. Viejo High campus on a dou-ble sessions basis. 22, of special interest to "I'm very pleased with my Soutbem Californians are assistant coaches too, they all Mono, I n y o and San communicate very well with Bernardino counties. the players and have their 'Itle late sea.son, ~hi ch ex· respect." tends through Nov. 11, in· Moore has five years of eludes the Southern California coaching experience, having COlDlties of Los Angeles, coached where he played - Orange, Riverside, Imperial East Los Angeles College and and San Diego. '!be Omit is Bell High in Loo Angeles, ono buck, two points or better before coming.to Mission Vi~ in each season. jo as an assistant coach last ' All deer season areas and season. regulations are shown in the Moon now weighs in at 6-{), 1973 H u n t I n g Regulations 2lll poands, just five pounds booklet, available fro m less than bis playing weight. Department ol Fish and Game He was an offensive and offices or wherever hunting defensive tackle at Bell High, licenses are IOld, including East LA and Whittier. College, most sporting goods stores. · earning all-o>nference honors MACK MOORE Having beeo associated with such winning teams , ltfoore feels be knows what it takes to make one, and the rualn in- gredient ls time . "The coaches are new to the players, and the players are new to us, ao it takes a little time to rtnd out •'ho can do what," h1oore says. "But in tenns or responding with hard work and a lot or it the team has done very wen. "A problem for any first year school ls that there are no seniors to assume leadership or the team, and that has been the case here. "We feel the leadership quality is there, though, it's ju.st a mattei of time to bring it out and ftnd who the leaders at all three levels and being will be.,. selected to the all-Pacific Coast small coUege team in his senior year at Whittier. In Moore's three years as a line coach at East Los Angeles the Huskies advanced to the state junior college playoffs one season, and in his one year at Ben High the team compiled a 10-1 won-loss record . Assesslng this year's team's chances, Moore feels the Chargers will field a better· than-average first year team, mainly because of t he schedu1e. The Chargers will be playing against junior varsity teams from established schools, first year schools and s m a 11 schools, and Moore doesn't Last sea.son while assisting feel they 'll be physically Bob Hivner at Mission Viejo ov ennatched in any game. Rick Woods ol Colla Mesa hopes to extend a hot streak which has seen him winning heavily in the past two weeks as Speedway Motorcycle rac-- ing continues tonight at the Orange fumty FairgrOlllds (8 ,15). \Voods w a s wheel -and • handlebars above the field Jn last week's card, winning the fQUr-lap .main event over Steve Bast of Van Nuys and later taking a tow-lap match race. In the previous week, Woods had been half of Ibo winning duo in a special two-man team match race. The Bast brothers, Steve and Rick, are expected to pre>- vide much of Woods' com· petition, other thrills oouhl be provided by the likes o! Jim Gresham, the winner of last week's fi ve--lap handjcap main and Topanga's Sonny Nutter, who was the handicap main event runner-up. Crowds remained good for last weeks races, 8,666 show· ing up for the card, and that many could be on h8Dll again tonight. Ifyou'veh that most new cars have a performance • proble1J!, . dnvearo -e . eMazda. Mmy people are finding out that ne1r cars don't ron llS well u-the ooes they traded in. . One proof.o{ strong perf<im]iince is high-speed ~er~tion-so imporqmt to your safety when passing a truck or a line of traffic o<i the highway. Atrording And Ma2ila makes laJg trips seem ·shorter, less tiring. Its rotary engine""" with uncanny smoothness at speeds fastu than you11 ever drive. (lt11 do over 120.) : l "We have only one lineman over 200 pounds and the lineb.e.ckeni are particularly smaU. They're quick, however, and we're counting on that making up for lack of size." ,---=-....,.===--=~=-.-,-=--=:-==--=~-,-=---I With complex smog deviC!!S, they're hanler to stlrt and morerel1lClllllt to move. They ronk ont·in traffic.11iey're anemic passers and hill-climbers. And new JDOdels have been using more gas. to Natioruil Highway Tuffic Safety· A4ministrationfigures, the Mazda RX·2 with standard transmission beats Jaguar XJ6, '.I'bunderbird and many You can P2Y a lot more for a car an! still not get Mazda's kind of performance. Will! the rotar)"tin&ine Mazda. the thrill • I • • • ! • l ' ! I • l • • l ! • • • l . • • I ~ • • • ' ' I ! ' ' : l ! i i l • ! ' , ! I I I So11thland Trout Plant 'Mle following Sou the r n California takes and streams. listed by county, are scheduled for restocking this week with catchablH ize rainbow trout : LOS ANGELES -Big Rock Creek. Bouquet Canyon Creek, Crystal Lake, San Gabriel River (East and West Fork ). RIVERSIDE-Hemet Lake. SAN BERNARDINO -Big Bear Lake, Green Valley Lake, Gregory Lake, Lytle Creek (Middle and North Fork), Santa Ana River, Santa Ana River South Fork. All stocking is -scheduled road and weather conditions permittiJ'lg . • HU•H MYNAn Now's Tiie Time! MARK IY't '. LIMCOL"S YNr._. ... -. Pat1fflttlc ff" """"11..._ Ott "" ur \'91f"' .............................. ftflll, Ctmtw1tblt, Q11ftt, -.. ,.ti! tw tMlfl M .... ft ... 140·16JO JOHNSON & .SON Lincoln· Mercury 2626 Korbor Blvd., ' Cott• Mes• OAILY PILOT At'You·r , Service · ' hilday, w.clnoliloy oncl l'rlcloy In tho But there's one car that's not suffering from all these problems. Mazda. With its rotary 0{!8ine and thennal reactor system, Mazda has proven it can run clean and still run strong. • • I other high-priced ......,-ni7"""'1""rl" performance cars in high-speed passing (~0 to BO mph). • • • _mlCllMIZDL 2150 .. , .. •VD. COS1AMISA (714) 64HIOO is back. " .._...._...,_..._..,..,)llF , • • -,_ • ' . 20 D#Jl Y PILOT ;:Weekead Yaclatlng Calendar 4 Coast Y acht_s ' • Voyagers Host Two Races Vie in SF Race The Voyager< Yacht Club ,--------Nt:wport-Ba1boll San Diego SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB -Waterman Serles (ORl Sun· day; BALLAS SERIES, J\lORF, Sunday; Fall Series, Star; Sunday; Crew race, 110, Sunday. "'\our local yachts are stand· Ina b)' In san Francisco for the start of three major series Monday. thiun Yacht Club, NcwpOrt Ileach, and Theo Stephens 57· foot sloop Lightning from St. l<~rancis YC. hosts two ot the oldest and m05t traditional yachting events in the llarbor Area this weekend the A 11 e n ·campbell Perpetual Trophy race [or Luders-165 on Satur· day and the Jane Schock Memorial Trophy race for v.·on1en skippers on Sunday. The Luders-16 race on Saturday is a sudden death feature with the warning gun ·at 11 :50 a.m. The Jane Schock series is three races in Lldo-14s, the ·first race getting the wa rning BOATING VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB -Allen Campbell Troph y race, l.Axlers·l6, Saturday; Jane Schock Memorial Trophy race (women) Sunday. . NEWPOR T HARBOR YACHT CLUB -Dobie Beer Gaboon Regatta, Lehman-12, Sunday. SOlITH SHORE SAILING CLUB -One-design cham- pionships, Cal-25, Santana·22, Santana-27, Cal-20, Sunday. CORONADO YACHT CLUB -Bissell Series, SDHF. Sun- day : Jessop Series, PHRF, Sunday. . . SOUTHWESTERN YACHT CLUB -Fall Trophy race, 470, Saturday, Sunday. North and Inland ANACAPA YACHT CLUB - Scripps Regatta, Saturday Sunday. Rwming ooncurrently will be the st. Francis Perpetual Trophy Seriea, the Robert Rheem Series and the City ol San Francisco Series -sll considered top fall . season West Coast competitiOn. 11ie City of Siln Fr::inc:isco Trophy series will rcalurc Class D yacht s, eight of lht!n from Southern Califo111ia, in- cluding three from Newport Beach. :signal at 11:50 a.m. , ________ _, Loi Angeles-Long Beach CABRJLLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -YRU Small Boat Champloosh.ip Regatta, Satur- day, Sunday. L<JNG BEACH Y A C H T CLUB -Isthmus R a c e (Catalina Series) IOR, PHRF, MORF, Saturday, Sunday. SANTA BARBARA YACIIT CLUB -Wilson Serles Race No. 4, Sunday. Competlng for the St. Fran- cis Perpetual for the second consecutive time will be the glamor compaigners Mark Johnson's 73-foot ketch Windward Passage, and Ken DeMeuse's ?>foot k e t c Blactfin. Passage will representing the N rk Yacht Club and Blackfln wUI be sailing under the colors of the host St. Francis Yacht Club. I Local boats in the City nr San Francisco Series arc Swift, a CC.4 1 co-skippered by Jack Mallinckrodt and Gayle Post of Balboa Yacht Club and Vince Arrigo, Newport Harbor yacht Club; Blue Streak, a Cal-43 ski ppered by Gary Myers, NHYC, and lAlcky Puff. skippered by Dick Foxx of Balboa YC. ON SATURDAY night VYC will have a steak bake for the participants of both events at the clubhouse. South Shore Sailing Club wi11 , host a series of· one-design 1 classes Saturday and Sunday for the Cal-25, Santana·22, ~Santana-27 and Cal-20 classes. . 'l11e Lehman-12 dinghies will be busy at Newport Harbor . Yacht Club which ls hosting the Dobie Beer Gabboon series on Sunday. Top feature elsewhere on ·the Southern Cali f ornia YachUng Association calendar • is at Cabrillo Beach Yacht Oub in Los Angeles Harbor, • host to the Yacht Racing Union~s Small Boat Cham- pionship Regatta. The event will feature high performance Olympic dinghles a m o n g others. TIIE NEW Hobie-12 mon<>- cats will be seen in thelr first major acUon at Lake Forest, El Toro Saturday and Sunday . High Speed powerboat jockeys will race f o r thousands of doUan in prize money ln the Lake Elsinore 250-mile eodW'O Saturday and Sunday . The SCYA calendar: Santa Monica Bay MALIBU YACHT CLUB - Beachcombers Regatta, keel, ORCA, PMA (Commodore Series) Saturday, Sunday. WESTLAKE YACHT CLUB l -Fall Regatta, Sunday. We co1ne· Aboard SAN LU IS YACHT CLUB - Fall Series No. 1, Sunday. SAN FERNANDO VALLEY Invitational regatta, Ventura -Marina, Sunday. Charlene Westrope, the diminutive queen of the Lake Elsinore 250, will welcome spectators to the powerboat regatta Saturdoy and Sunday. The 4-11 beauty has specifications of 37-2~35. CONTESTING for the Robert Rheem Per,>etual will be Al Cassel's 5<>-foot sloop Warrior from Bahia Corin- SAVE 30% • 50% ALL THREE series will be sailed at the sa1ne tlme with the first race scheduled Mon· da y, the second race Wed- nesday, the third race Friday and a fourth race on Saturday. Passage and Ragtime To Collide for Cup THEWES'l"SMOSTCOMPLETE Do-IT•\'OIJRSELF AIJTO CENTER AU .TO PARTS PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU TUESDAY, SEPTEMBE:R 18, 1973 OPEN SUNDAY 9 -6 California Yacht C I u b' s ' once--canceled California Cup yacht series is on agai n wit h a new pair of antagonisls. Commodort: Ed Sundberg announced that a match race series has been arr&nged between Mark Johnson's 73- foot ketch Windward Passage and the long Beacb Syn- dicate's fj2:foot Ragtime for Oct. IZ-13-14. Originally, the California •Olp series was set for last June between two CC-6ts, but 'was canceled when the New ''ork entry failed to arrive on the West Coast as scheduled. TIIE J\.1ATCD b e tween \Vindward Passage a n d RaE:time will be a short version rematch t h e i r dramatic duel for first to fin ish in this year's 2,225-mile llonoJulu race when Ragtime beat the favored Windward Passage by four minU~s and 31 seconds on a midnight drive to the finish li ne. The races will be sailed over a triangular course off Marina del Rey with the starting line I ~2 miles offshore, according to Doug Levi, CYC race . chairman. The races will start . at I p.m. each day. Bahia Ouh Hosts Race For Ladies Over JOO \\.'omen sailors are · expa:U!d to gather at the Bahia Corinthian and Balboa yacht clubs next Wesnesday for the third annual Nev•port Beach Little Old L ad i cs Regatta. The girls will he sailing in three divisions of Naples Sabots, two of \Vin 'ard Sabots and a fleet of Lido--14s. A three-race series planned with the rirst ra ce starting at noon. The Naples Sabot nee! is ex- pected to be the largest as multiple boat trailers will be coming from San Diego, ·Mission Bay, Alamitos Bay and King Harbor. Sabots have become very popular among women sailors Jn these areas and some ex- cellent talent has he e n . developed. according to Dick Sweet, rcga1ta chairman. Registration and brunch ""ill take place at BCYC between 9:30 and 11 :30 a.m . A $3 entry lee is being charg d. The races will start off the BYC comm II tee tower. A 360-degree role will be In erfecL for fouls. ~ . ' Cout•I Weather O'ltrc:••f with chflllCt ol' drlnltJ le> city. L.Jont .. 1t11bl• wllld• 11IOhl 111<1 "*"''"" "°"'' 11teomr1111 wtii.rt¥ 11 lo '' knot~ In tl10f'noont IOCM~ •nd S..1\lt• LeVl said the course will consist <lf <lne short leg to windward and two longer legs to the south far off the wind work. This type or course is expected 4> bring out the best in both yachts · which were designed Io r predominantly reaching and running speed. Twenty miles w I II be the distance for each race, which includes two lips o1 1 h e course. WINDWARD Pas sage typifies the ulitmate in the so- called "goldplaters." She was developed to the 73-foot limit set by the Cruising Club of America fOC" the Newport HEAVY IJillY AN» RUST I QUART DOT·3 BRAKE FLUID HJ- POWER ANTI RU ST P11v1nt1 Corra,ion, A,..! K11tp1 Cooling System Cl11on 29' H 1- POWER FAST FLUSH Cl10n• In M111Ull•, Fast .S. Easy 29' --- •'!l- ioou110 s•rn• "°""' ~·oio"" ltoclAllD 1otl •.,.n.1•UII • HI- POWER SEALER S1op1 Radiotat l 1ok1, &. Los• Of Anti·FrM11 1.5 f[, o,. biennially attracts some of the c ~ t (R.I.) to Btnnuda race "1lich 9 9 fa stest yachts in the world . '?~ WP was built in 1968 at Freeport, Gr&nd Bahama, by BATTERY BRUSH 8 CYLINDER ............ , .. HI· POWER HAND SOAP W1Jtt rlt1• Woy To Clffn Hanch Of CH101t, And Oti..r Dirty D1po•il1 -' ' - .~on llUDPRll . ,,,, .. _ llll llLTll ..... the late RObert F. Johnson. & TERMINAL POST CHECKER AUTO SILICONE She was built o1 wood an d CLEANER LIFETIME WIRE GRAND PRIX 6 AMP BATTERY CHARGER HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL 20 &. 30 WEICHT~ Rl.L. J'i( 1,(f. GliMOUT CARB URETO R CLEANER Cltont CarbvrtlDt While Yoo o ..... covered with dynat and weighs .,,.,,, BATTERIES19. 99 SET OIL FILTER 80:ss=d~s ~ elapsed 77c ¥~:·~~;::,!!Of w;,• :i~~~~~., 599 ~:lt6s~.:?m. 1299 F~~:i~n°~ 99c 99' time record for the Los Yaur P1e1•nt Car E.%cl:lf,.,• Cai• ........ Do;;,',*;, EA. Angeles to Honolulu race of t"---":'.:~""'""'""'""'i"""'""',,;,,""'-""'--""'~""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""~"""""".w.wNY.-._._._~.,.,,;;;.w-_ ____ .__.~_._._,_,_,,.,,..,.,.,.,.,,,.,-l nine days, nine hours and 48 secoods set in 1971. She also has set elapsed time reroi-ds In a runnber ol cthel' loog· distance races. Ragtime is the largest and most successful of the new breed of "ultra-lifht displace- ment boats" that raised such a furore in Transpec cireles this year. She was designed and built in New Zealand of plywood in 1967 and came to California under the ownersh1ip ' of John Hall of Newport Beach. Hall sold her to the Long Beach syndicate or six well-knQWll skippers for a reported $30,000. The syn· dicate spent another $20,000 refitting and tuning her for the 1'ranspac and beat WP and other larger vessels. IN TIUS YEAR'S Trarupac, WP and Ragtime r o u n d themselves virtually even with 50 miles to go and engaged in some mat.ch racing to the finish with Ragtime winning the duel. Although Ragtime has been sold to a new group, Stan l\-liller, one ol the members of lhe Long Beach Synidcate, re- mains on the crew and will skipper the yacht in the Californi a Cup. \Vlndward Passage skippered by J\lark Jonson u·ho has been campaigning the boat since his father's death iQ 1971. This year's Celifomla Cup will be the third time around for Passage. In 1969 she was matched w i I h Blackfln just prior to the Transpac. Blackfm won the California Cup Series but WP beat her to Hooolulu. Jn 1972 WP and BF 'A'ere matched again and WP won ll and went on ta pick up line honors In the Sanl>iego to Acapulco race. 16' BOOSTER ~~B~~ 99,.9,. r .. ,.1. fir.of " 12 INCH JACK STAND ~.ooo Lb. .Copotify Pff Stand Adju11ob!1 He ight P11¥tnt1 Cab Ov•r Camper• '•• Ba,,.r1e1 & Swoy flr'r•IM ''·'' CREEPER W1TH PADDED HEADREST Angled Caste•~ Fot Eo sy Mobility Rtt• 7,9'1 S«v• l l.00 599 HERCULES DOUBLE ACTION SHOCKS Ta119h, Lano lolling lnlu•ll Smaatli E,.,,, Ridt 1% TON SCISSOR JACKS FWAll "''' Tr11ek1 CAR RAMPS "''" l!~'""'' 30,000 MILE BRAKE SHOES FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS ONE GALLON GAS CAN 12 FOOT TOW CHAIN Si'""9 Stttl ConJtr\ltlian With loc•r111 Volvt Clo111p l111w11 Al• Tltht Fit 2~? POWER PUMP • AIR PUMP 288 C.1tal C11•!1H11 L..i. 99,'..,, dty. Hlflll,todtY 711. ----------1 c .. ,,,, ltmPll•ll\1"11 r.ariot Imm '° tv ... '"l~l'ld twm~rtt\l•t• •f"Ot l•om t0 lo 7J. W•ltt lll'l'IPttilt\l[.I U . E••Y Do-II• Y•••lf R1plaCH1ttll ttHe1 Su11, Moo11, 'J'ldes -~JUDA't S«flM ri!oll . ,. .. 11;10 p.m. •·• $econd low • S:CM P·"'· 0.$ SATU•OA't Flrtl hl9h •• ll:Ot ,,,.,., S,f ' .. ,,.., lew • .... •• •:!J ··'"· l.l hconcl l'llfll ......... 11;02 p.l'l'I. •.I ""*"' tow s:U p.rn. 1.5 SUNDAY Flf'lt l'lltft ,.,... . lt:ilS p.rn. S.I ll'fnt low • ... .. • S:11 11.m. I.I korld 1oW ,..", .... l :U ........ o.• &WI l fMt l.l)l t.M. a.fl 7!t2 p.rn. INtft ...... •:• "'"'' .... 1:4' ··"'· ASHES TO ASHES, ETC. AMSTERDAM (UPI) Jasper Grootveld buJlt a boat out of nil the debris he fi4hed out Of Jlolland 's canals. Recently, the cl e 11 n i ng department came along and took lt away as "f10a Un1 refuse," Grootveld said. GENERATORS STARTERS ALT-ERNA TORS 10~? Pholae 645·1264 1 -2~! tf/Tll IJXC/IAHGf; 16?! ' 111 Ea-' 19th SJRllL OITA MllA=--- JUST OFF NEWPORT ILVD. 11•1M·M-~··- D•lt•Ytllfttlf Jvtd SoYt --..,_,,,. .. ' N SUN. M • • S: ' r I \ I I • l \ • • I I •' ( I I ( ( I I • MexirJJns . Floodi . llg State FRESNO (AP) -Lured by higher wages than they can make at home, Me%1cana are pouring Into Call!ornla to work the fields and ere being .,.. ~ rested ln record numbers. Sniffle Sanaple Inspector Roger Perrier inspects portion of !, 705 pounds of hashish intercepted by law enforcement officials at Montreal International AiI1>0rt. The drug cache, estimated worth $2.5 millio n when sold on the street, is the biggest hashish seizure ever made in Canada. His Pe1·sistence Movecl Mountan1 . MT. LAGUNA (AP) -In his 20th year in this nation, Pat McEvoy, a jolly ex-cana- dian, is proving perseverance can move a mountaintop or at least spruce up his wooded niche. After pushing government agencies and San D i c g o mortgage hoU!es dogged ly ror three years. rt1 cEvoy i s watching his Laguna f\1ountain lodge be raccliftcd in 90 days. ntE ll\fPROVE!\'IENTS cost· ing $300.000 arc being flnanc- e<fby San Diego Federal Sav- ings & Loan Association with what is described as the first Laguna "lounfaln lodge fo lie faC'e• lltfed. title insurance policy ever ap- proved for private v.·ork on U.S. FOres t Service land. t. SoMy Vigil , chief title officer of First American Title & Trust Co .• a Santa Ana-bu-- ed firm , said l\1cEvoy himself drafted the n ecess ary docun1ents and satisfied San Diego Federal enough to make the loan . A spokesman at San Diego Federal said the process was "so involved that it took us about a year to put it all together." ' plete with plumbing, were placed on ready foundations and wiring hooked up. There is a double bed, a pullout couch, a kitchen, bathroom and a firep1ace in each of the pecan- paneled unlis. McEVOY FIGURES he sav· ed $40,000 by having th e cabins installed in sections delivered by truck , compared with the bids to build them on the site. At least one other such title policy on forest land has been written in CalifroQia since, Vigil says, but it'! difficult. "McEvoy was persistent enough to satisfy the lender," Vigil said. IN NOVEPtfBER, a meeting is scheduled in San Diego by lessees of U.S. forest land In 12 western states to discula problems such as the difficulty of obtaining the required title policies. McEvoy moved his family to Detroit from Port Lambton, Ont. in 1953 and in 1958 became a wholesale food salesman in San Diego. He became a U.S. citizen in 1982 and the rest of the family, in· cluding five children now, followed suit. 1be U.S. Border Patrol reports a jump of 24 percent between Kem County and the Oregon border where 33,000 were arrested during the fint six mooth8 th.ls year. WE'VE GIVEN OUR EXPERIENCE A NEW PLACE TO LIVE ' New seTvice depattment facilities 1111mss•wsmui . ~ ... ,--- --New caT:r,-tTucks, Z:r aritf-:rtation,wa11on:r-Bold · ew ~rehlteeture Ne1111 and unique location · , · Rialng at South Coast Plua over the past few montho ls this '9 mllllon Bullock's New and lont1t1T guaTantee foT all Dat:run:r 1tore, which 11 llCheduied ta open Sept. 26. Th• three-level store feature. slopin g walla of a speelal -1 which· I• designed ID rust naturally, giving the pyramid· •1xc.pt our guaranttlld p11-ownld Datfunt lilt• building a deep bnilwn color. Interior altnctlons Include a wood and oculp- Wllm !lo<Arthur ind J1mbo11t m•L Ill Do;1 St, N...;1111 I•~ , Phone 133·1300 IW'e\l brick.escalator well ind an antique altp1-ne that Is suspended •from the ceiling. . "" • f t • Frld•y, Stpttmbft 14, 197l DAILY PILOT ZJ OVER THE COUNTER NASO Uotl ... for TllunNy, Sept. lJ, 1m • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • l • • • ·! j : t: •l .. I ;, "' ' I ri I 4 ~ •: "' / f ' ' " -- --. -- _,- ., '· - " .. • ,. • ' • • ! ... ' -. • -· , I Friday, Stpltmber 14, 1973 Buiek for 1974 Consumer Resistance Aids Cost The ultimate in styling elegance in the Buick line is featured in the Riviera with its pillared roof design and the squared-off rear deck lid. Interiors have been redesigned lo complement the exterior styling with 29 choices of trim includ- ing cloth. vinyl and leather. ' Optim.is1n Expressed But No Agreeuient LIL • A uto Negotiatio11s DETROIT IAP) -\Vith the remaining hours in the United Auto Workers' talks wlth Chrysler Corp. d wind I i n g toward a Friday night strike deadline. a union official says there· has been "a feeling of progress." But the expressions of op- timisn1 \Yere 001 1·enecled in agreements on any issues &till dividing the company and the union after nearly 12 hours of negotiations \VOOnesday. "THERE \V1\S a feeling lhal progress had been made although there is nothing definite 10 report." UAW Vice Presi~eat Douglas Fraser told newsmen . Fraser's remarks were echoed by UAW Piesidenl Leonard Woodcock, v.·ho said, "I think ii is fair lo say \Ye have had a very good discussion without reaching any conclusions." Woodcock added: "We are still hopeful that there will be, and can be. an agreement." Chrysler apparently was op- timislic. too. TIIB C0~1PANY scheduled 80,SSO of its 127,500 union employes to work overtin1e Saturday, the day after the CHRYSLER C1 'JUST PRACTICING' The Ne\YS did not provide further details of the reported offer. The a\lerage assembly line worker at Chrysler 1nakes $4.48 per hour. !he company says. According to the UAW , the average au!o worker gets $5.12 al the Big Three auto make~. CHRYSLER'S PREVIOUS offer would have give auto workers about a 3 percent in- slrike deadHne. ·----------~ The DetroiL News reported Thursday that Chrysler sub- mitted a new economic pro- posal including a wage-benefit increase ranging fron1 6.2 to 7 percenl in the first year. n... 00~• ~ ., •. ,,1...,. ona/I"' "'wR """"°""""'""""'"" "'l~•lobm """" n,,. (>/i.t • niado-"' II>< u/~ c...:ubt. OWN APART OF WEST LOS ANGELES Moss & Comp.anv. lhP fin., ... , .... ftn fn>i.,Llp 12·\~ilr h1•IQfV of ln!l'griry, ~•;,bihty & ·"""'<.! n111n~9~~n1 , pf~>t·nr• .,. New lrt\le.bnenl Opportunity. Brand New Apartmenl Building in Growth.Oriented West LA. Objecdve•: 1. Cash ftow from operarions 2. Appreciation 3. Certain Ta); advan1ages UMrrED PARTNERSHIP wrnt $4,7 50 MINIMUM INVESTMENT @!)Moss& Company .... , ............. -... -... ·-- 1850 \l.'l'M,.11(>(! 81\'d. l.o• AllgPll'~. Calif. 9()()25 !2131.J74·5527 1213) t!79-0626 C.ill Or \l.'ri•t Toda For lnfttrmation C<1 17 14 ) 557·7 12~ '"''~ .. ··~~~olr;J • .• 1,, .. ,~··" J,1'1) ""'· .,,.1,, .... ~ ...... ,.1,. ... ~., """'" n"n"'""'••'•·•'•~· "'"' * Ba1iks Aid Russi<uts SAN FRANCISCO (AP! -A syndicate of 10 U.S. banks headed by the Bank of America has announced the signing of a protocol with the Russian foreign trade bank to provide $180 million to finance con· struction of a fertilizer complex 350 m i I es southeast of ~1oscow. Bank of America said \Vednesday the loan will support U.S. exports or equipment and materials to construct ammonia and urea manufacturing plants v.•ith storage and tnnsportation facilities .\1- the Russian city of Kuybyshev. .31 ACRES Beoutiful Produ cing Orange GR SIDE, CAL .. WED .. SEPT. 191h, E IN RIVER - !, O PM. S.E. Cor. Coli!. & Spring Sts. in Riversid Highgrovo area. Wril e or c.all for fact sheet of pro . ecords, terms, etc. PHIL HANSON Auctioneers 558-1929, 902 E. 17th St., Santa Ana Broker c~-operation invited Alst 50111,-Mtn:tlts 11 jjsplay ·-·- crease. Other issu0s include UA \V insislence th a t Chrysler's plan1s be mad e safer, \•:orkers be al lowed to retire on full pension after 30 years in the pl8.nts and the company pay £01· dental insurance. CHR VSLER'S FIRST olfer of the 3 percent wage increase in each of the ne.xt three years was rejected by Woodcock as a "1nockery of the collective bargaining process." T h e UA \V has not made pubi\c how large , a \Yilgc increase it wants. Ceilitig Set Mexico Officials D1·01J Meat Price TIJUANA. ri.texico (APf'- Baja California meat prices, pushed upward by beef.hungry American customer.i, a r e being lowered by an agency of the fl.1e.xican slate. A food price commission composed of state and federal officials, union leaders and public members met here \Vednesday and decided to set a ceiling on retail beef prices. THE CEILING will be higher than the present of· ficial limit of about $1 a pound for most cuts and $1.15 for filet, said ttector Gracia, the Baja California agriculture commissioner. But he said it will be lower than the illegal prices of $1 .30 for regular cuts and $2 for filet charged by s o m e markets. "Altho ugh this i! below U.S. prices, it is considerably above the approved Mexican governn1ent level and prices must come down," Gracia said. "\Vholesale prices will be established at $1.76 per kilo (2.2 pounds) for dressed carcasses." \VHEN THE NE\V ceiling is set. he said. "some increases will be permitted because costs are up at an levels of production and processing .. , An1erican bu yers, primarily fron1 nearby San Diego, in· vaded Tijuana and Mexicali •markets in large numbers this summer as beef prices north of the border soared and sup- plies dwindled. A U.S. Customs official said meat buying by Americans in Baja Califomia has dropped about 30 percent in the last week, as larger domestic su~ plies appear with the end of the price fr eeze. But he said buying probably won't fsll off much more. Batik ln.troduces S""te~ ' SAN FRANCISCO ~ker Bank Thurs- day introduced Ibo metric system to motorist.. The bank palnted Its slgnboarda on lbe SkJ· way to give the kilometer distances from here lo ___Jlerkeley, Stockton, Daly City, Los Gatos, Salinas ariCIT.onc1on. Bank officials said lbe metric aystem would be common in the Unlted States within a decade. "Inches and ounces will be shed In favor' or meters. grams ind liters/' they saJd. One mile equals 1.60934 kilometers, and the Crocker's signboards point. out that the distance from here to Salinas Is 164 ldlomelAOrs. I • I Complete New York Stock List • .. NC' •• ... ·~ •• •• "' "" "" "" "" "' llor f:~i "'' N-.: c:1 •• "" ""' ~; ••• ~~ ·~ "" "' 14,, '" H\'j Ct' fil~ °" ~ 81:1 '"" r:: ... , •• 8? .. ,. .,1 .,, 8~. 8: •• ••I ... ... ... • • ... " ... .. , .. , .. , ... ;:1 .., ... ... ... .,, .. , ... ... •• -•• :~ •• .;~ •• ::: .. , •• '" .. , .. , ... .. , '" '" "' •• ... . ., " :~ .. ;~ " :~ " " " '" '" '" =n "' "' .. , ,It '" i :! ~: .. •• .. •• . :: ,, ~: ;; ~· " " E! . ,.~ " ., " " ~J ,, ,, ,, " " " • 0 & • ~ ' • • • I 1 ' ' . Traders Remain On Sidefu1es NF.W YORK (APJ -The •tock market trodeed aimlessly alon.g a fairly straight line Thursday, with only minor dip• and climbs and most traders re-n1aJn,ed on the sidelines. ' 'The key factor continues to be the quesUon of when int~rest rates will peak " said Larry WatcbeJ nnalyst with Bache & co. ' ' From Indications by Federal Reserve Board Ch~lrma~ Arthur F. BtLrns. a restrictive monetary polic,~ w~ll continue in effect for a while . . This rne~ni at1y short·term hopes for an Im· mediate peak 1n rates is dashed," siid Watchel. A@S •' Stp1tm11t' 1973 s r • DAIL V "LOT Finance Briefs e Wh1~S11lt RIPON f AP) -Fraozl• Brothers Winery Wednesday reported disnUssaJ of it.! tJO million suit against th t F'Tlinzia family and approved an agreement to iell the 1 '4'inery to C.OCa Cola Bottling Co. of New York. The suit had been filed Mon.- day in San Francisco ag&inst five members of the Franzia family, accusing them of obstructing sale o( the winery. G Forecast SAC~NTO (AP) Grapes, rice and sorghum groin production should past sharp increases in California harvests this fall. but total p-oduction of 10 major cr-0ps may stW drop eight percent below last year. the slate Crop and Livestock R e porting Service says. The service sald tn IL~ monthly foreCti st that August was generally favorable for crop development and the start of harvest. e Levi Hilce1 SAN FRANCISCO (APl Levi su·auss and Co .• makeri;. or jeans and shirts, is one or ~-even No r I h e r n California firm s which has filed price in-. crease requests. the Internal Revenue Sevrice S3ys. The prenotificalion rorn1:i1 $ubmitted from Aug. 22 to .Sept. 7 cover 44 product line~. Cornelius Coleman. acting I RS district director, r e po r l c d Wednesday. e Signal Cos. LOS ANGELES IAP) Signal Companies Inc. hall been dtnied a preliminary In- junction in Its suit to keep an lntcrna1 ional investn1cnt group fron1 consummating a tender orrer for up to J.5 million or Slgnal's 19.7 million shares outstanding. U.S. D~trlct Courl Judge Lawrfll'ltt T. Lydick ruled \Vednesday tMt the Bevr.rly liills·based . oil , truct manufacturin g ond acrospoct firm had failed to show that it \\'OUd suffer irrep.iral>le harm or to prove iLIO a\leglitioos of wrongdoin!: on the. part of the Investment group. e Air Swap WASHINGTON fAPl American Airlines and Hughe.." Airwest aslctid the. CI v 11 Aeronautics Board "A1edne.!lda~ to let the1n s"·ap some or tti('ir air ro\Jte11 in the wcst~m ;ind !OUthwestem p;irt or Uic Unlltd St~t r!t.. Under the agrtt1menl Y.'011':· ed out betwttn the tw·o air c•rrltrs. American ~'Ould l!lka ove.r llughes· alr rout e.' bctwttn Los Ange.Id • Salt IJ1ke Cll\'. Utll!. Los Anad•.•· Palm Sprinp. Palm !plings- Lu Vrga • N<'V., and LOi.i 1'1p..S.lt Lakr <;ltr. 1 r • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .• •• ~= ': • .• .; • •• ind: I • I . I :!l •" "'~ ~s: "'" •: ·: .. ., ( .• ' \ • • • • • • • • I I I ' ' I . I . I ' .. . . ' .. • J ,.. r ;l.j DAILY PILOT , Douglas ~Help s To Save Record s State l~ossil Sa.ber Tootli Gets Nod SACRAMENTO !API -The S1nilodon Califor111cus -bet- ter known as the saber-toothed cat -\\'OUld be designated aJ California's official state (OS.!lil under legislation sent to Gov. Ronald Reagan's de sk. The state Senate gl.l vc final legislati ve approval to a biU ST. LOUIS IAPJ -Space- age technology is helping to salvage some of the millions of records damaged in a rour- day fire at the Military Personnel Records Center in Suburban Overland last Ju)y. A SPOKES711AN said that Uie records. loosely packed in o'pcn cases. are sealed in the chamber and put through a freeze-drying process. Tbe v.•ater-soaked and material is again heated with warm dry· air and a \•acuum pumping system eliminates the water from the chamber. "Tfie reconts come lhrough the process legible and ready to go back Into use/' 'a com- pany official said. SerYices Administration, said that "about ome-third of lhe sixtli"noor has been cleaned u1> and as many records as possi- ble have been salvaged.'' ... 1his week on a 27-1 vole. Officials of the MCDonnell Douglas U>rp. said fl'hursday that a space ch a m be r , previously used to simulate temperatures and pressures encoun1ered in the 1'1ercury and Gcnlini manned-space n1issions. is being used to reclaim the records. scofcht:'d records are initally heated to 140 degrees and then frozen .... ·hilc the pressure in the t:harnber is gradually lowered to a fraction of the normal 15 pounds per square More than·20 million records or former servicemen and women \Vere damaged or destroyed io a fire primarily confined to lhe sixth noor of the one-block-by-two-block federal co1nplex. Office1· Na111eil LOS ANGELES IAP J _I T.E. Durkee ·has been air· pointed chief admipistrativc of rice r or San la Cruz County. I -· . ,., , .. ... , ... :• . " •.I .,. •' ,. .. ... , ·. :·. ··t ' .,. I ' ' ' • ' ' • ' ' " ~ - 1'he Joqg-t:xlinct creature's remains <ire co1n1non in 1he famed La llrea Tar J>i1 s of Southern California. Assemblyman Alan Sicroly ID-Beverly HdlsJ <1Ulhored the measure. AB 940. WOIEI PLANT mms 97c Tltey don't say "macrame." b"t I think that is what they look like. Me. who couldn't pick up a stitch without dropping ii. (( ln'AL LEAF .. · IAIE ' ' .. Some jolly rak .. in thi; cr~wd. If the worli ia light {ar·all yoU care lorri1'.Jht nOw if light work) thii will 61 the bill.> \. . . ' ,,,. j (. ' • 24 TDIE tJ.JJ.l>""l\ ·, DELm inch. · The drop in pressure squeezes the \Vater from th e paper and the co ld tem- perature f.t~ezcs it. T h e Jeffery P. Hillelson, regional administrator of tbe eneral ' Durkee, 50, has been Los Angeles County's assi&lant chief administrative o!ficcrl s1nce ~1ay 1969. DID: YOU .IU·ST HEAR A LEAF FALL?\ ~,~~ " .. l ' ' 32W. UASB CAI 2•1 They beat th• metal kind and are •aaiar to keep from smellin1 like an. old gymahoe. Idea: buy r om~ of our fancy bath aecals and dre35 one U') a bit. Might win you an arl ach':k:rrliip. BLACI OB BUSS mmi; BBAf.lilS I I ~ IEllFOICED C.tting stronJer nOw, so talce all your Yitamins this-morning Qr the .l~aves will end 'Qp lauJbing al you, inatead of Yice-ve~ Did you notice how smoothly we moved into this item so nece~sary ii you want to han9 the pot. But, here's th'h good part. t ... price is Jess than re3"ular. BAHDlll POnntG soa 9tc You wouldn't put plain old adobe or sarid in that planter pot. We think of everything (except how to make sure you w ater them). BOW SAWS 21" 1.99 24''. 2.49 30" . . . . . . 2.99 This year really prune that Ire~. Don 't baby ii. Fr uit or flower, pruning provides new wood and keeps limbs 1rom breaking olJ. WEN ELECDIC CRAii SAW 4400 WelL 1 didn't mean you had to cut the thing down. but we cc:t a lot ol these. Maybe some ot you people are lumbering on the side. Hope your mill prices cu• qood. . -:--•· master charge " . IAIES 97 . •' '.. '"I ' Buy one. you shouldn'I h ove lo buy another, Beinforced doesn't meaii you cari move rocks with it and the only thin3"S that Jcu:t a llietime are taxes and politldan's prombies. ,. " ! ' . (C m.tY wHttLIADOW 597 Gelling paranoiac again. No funny jokes about the Kell"P's. With my luck the guy a eight · .. ·\· feel tall with no sense ol humor and • a biq fist. '. ·~ ' .. . -·. ·-.~-· .. ·-.. · .• :, •. ,7',··. . ":s .····. . : . : ........ .. . , WAm BUBBLER 77c For deep but gentle watering. this egg shaped thing will do it. {and ours is probably shaped like ( a cylinder, so what). DAISY POICB .IS After all that pruning you should be car•ful'not lo track the leaves in or the Mrs. (or M1.) will prune you a little. .. mm DD mis 37c Bring a little growing thing into the houae (I got a couple a lready and they both think tbe TV is their father). 'erbs are nice loo. BUU1mus IOI.BS 2t.. You plant thia when you should, mulck them nice, and come spring you11 thank me fo r the advice. These are beautiful The rich color like a tulip. but le11 work to qel g oinq. muccs .r.!::i llYMllDS ~ ,:::. ' -1a~ .iy 2 cu. IT. Enry Umo I road tlWo I think of the breakfcut ceteaL Showa I hcrve a whacko aeme of.humor (and whr la it oo many Pl'•P, pronounct it "you.more"). Doza't put it on your 1trawb«rin. (except on tbe plantt). , ' I And Aow many in a pack, y:.iu c.s!:. A!id l reply, plenty for the money. And you accuae me of bein!) t Yasive w:1e:i I' ·1 :i.ot sure what that really means. PUSHY 12" ~~O~ 97c ~ 14" •. ". ". 1.47 18" .. " . " .117 24 " ........ 3.87. 30" ... " .. 5.97 Got one lorthe Daddy. the Mommmy. the kiddies. (And ii I could train that biq dumb doq rd·malce sure he gol lhe first one.) IOSS UOT J97 Thal settles it. Thia year I'm buying one. You water and feed the tree and the grau 1tealt it alL Put the nutrient and moistwt where the roota are, • FDl.lllC wms 11m I" What a dumb finllh to a 1~acular ad. (I write this both at 3 AM and you know how weitd,lt ls that time of the morning. •· Especially U there ls a full m6on, -Dr. 7olrrUI. • • Tl!Ll!"VISION ........ LIAflilCl!S Since 194·1 COLOR SONY.TV Croftsmanshi p In this age ol mass p10- d uc11on with its emphasis on quanli!Y ralher lhari Qu111J1y, Sony re1alns an inlen:;e pride of cn1ttcman- sh1p. Examine a ny So ny product and ~ou"ll see why the c lose attention 10 even the smalle st de tail ha s earned for Sony an env1 - sble worldwide reputation for linfj>Cra lrsmanshlp In elec1ronlcs Hero's onottiar example of Souy crahs. nn111ship. l<V ~OOOTl11N ITl10N "' ' PORTABL( COLOR 1V • !.i·•nr.h ~troen mea~ured d i gon;.lly • Trin.:1011 one nu11 /011 e lens fl'/Slc-n ior ~harp, llrooht l1fc·tl.1;1 1;o:or • Opc1alCS en AC or DC w11h 001.011.i! ;icr•.>$~Ories • .-.u1omallc 1111e 1un•nq, 1rid hue 111 one o"~h ( onunl • sot.d r;tate rc!i~h1!ilv • l11s1ant p1ch;re nnd sound SONY.TV Reliobili1y l<.V·9000U THINl l AON "' COLOR rv • 9-inch screen maasi.rcd a1agonauy • l1in1tron one gun/one !en::. 11vslcm tor sna1p, b1•ght, l11a-t•~e color • Ll1;1htwe1ght ( 19 lbs. 13 or .) ·• Solid slate 1ei1ab1h!y • lnstal'lt 01tlu•e and sourict SONY.TV Craftsmanship '>-./ KV·1212 TRINfTRON8 COLOl1 TV , • 12-inch screen measured diagonally • Tr101tron one gun/011e 1en1 llii\'Stem !or r;ha1p, bright, ht1-hke color • Pvsh bunori autormit;c hn11 .. n1ng , colOr ana hue tonlrol • Solid sHtle reriablli1'f • Instant p1c1ure ana sound • l1tum1n1t.ed tuning dials • Walnut grain wood cablne1, lnmmed in throrne SONY.TV QJoli1y KV-15 10 TfllNITRONS COLOR TV • 1 5-"'ch screen measurKI d•1gona11y • • Trin1uon one gun/orio htnt svstom for lih"llrp, b11gh1, lrle-hke color •Push buuon e11tomai"c hne 1un1ng. colcr and hue C'Jntrol • !;0!1!1 ~ta1e reloatuloll' • lnsl~n! p1c1u1e Rl'ld sound • W1 lnu! U•Ril\ wood caornet 111mmcd •n ct:rome SONY.TV Precision KV·l172 TqlNllRON• COLOR TV ~ • 17-inch sc1e1n measured c111gon111y • Naw,1llm·tine picture tube . • Sp1ce-aav!ng uprlgh! 1ty1lr19 • Trlnltton one gun/ona 1en1 1y11errj for eharp. bright, llfe-Uke color • Puah bcUon automatic tin• tuning, co.lor •nd hue con1rol • SOlld 11a1e ~llebl!llY • ln1tan1 l)lctur•ario MUnd • We!nU1 gr1ln wood • cabtn1t, lnmmed In (;hromt TliC.11Y1 8 1 0 N ·A,-"LIAHC• 8 c::isr A MUSA Dt~: ~~~t.5:~ L T0'1Q IH Toro Rd. •t Fwy. (N••t to S1-w-on) Dall t-9 Sat. t-41 / 1 ' . ' l ! . l • • I • ! ' l I I ~ f ' • I • • . I I I I l t ' - .. .. ... . • • . . • Ans/Dining Out Entertainment Friday, S~ptembtr 14, 197) DAILY PILOT • %5 • • • • • • • • • -• • • • • . . Museum Exhihil·s the Last Two Decade·sl ''Canary B1n9," is an acrylic on canvas by Geno Davis. It is part of tho now exhibit, "In Continuum" U.Iajor works or art from the '50s and '60s, "In Continuum-The Avco Coll ec- tions of Contcn1porary Art" opens the n~w season at tho Nc\vport flarbor Art Museum Wednesday. The exhibit, which will be in the museum through Oct. 21, consists of tv.·o sections. One is American contemporary artists and the other is current California artists. Thirty four works of art by leading American artists of the last two decades comprise the original collection gift presented to the museum in 1971 when Avco Financial Services moved its cor· porate offices from Ohio to Newport Beach. The original collection was acquired by Avco in the late '60s. "It was an attempt to choose works of art which \vould in- terrelate With the architecture, breaking •down the barriers between fine and ap- , plied arts to 'create an aesthetic entity,'" t said Mrs. Phyllis Lutjeans, musewn , spokesman. . . phasis on the cool elegant imagery V<'hidt marks California art," said Mrs. Lui: jeans. Both collections have paintings ; sculpture, ~vatcrcolors, drawings aocl graphics. : Among lhe 35 selections froni. thi present collection are works by welt established nationally r e co g n i z e 4 Califo'ma artists Karl Benjamin, Ton~ DcLap, Claire Falkenstein, Sam Francis: Craig Kauffman, John McCracken an4 John McLaughlin. : Emerging newcomers included are Joei Bass, Doug Edge, Vlja Celrnins, anct Ned Evans. &;tdptors Peter Alexander and DeWain Valentine are also wetf represe nted by major y:orks. : at tho Newport • Harbor Art Museym. -Internationally recognized architect ,·. Walter Gropiu gave guidance to thls philosophy and to the collection's selec- , lion, she added. Gropius designed Avco's . Cleveland, Ohio office building. James B. Byrnes, newly appoint~ director ~t the museum, is renovating the present musewn space ! ~ permanently house the museum's Avcca gift collection. He hopes to involve moN corporalions in the activities of ttMi museum. i "Corporate support bas traditionally. and understandably gone to health, welfare and education but with the enthusiastic support of Avco President}[' Wallace Merryman, we find other cor· porate businesses taking the lead and emerging as important cultural ID-: nuences in our commW'dty," sa)'ll Byrnes. ' j • 1 '1 . ' . A · · s··1t f c .... · ct1n~~ ,1~s o · oll)mun1.ca,t1on "Too many people just u .. words, words wopls to try to say' somet~ing ••.. It doem:t mean anything unless you show it," deaf ·actrels Linda Bove says. BJ JAY SllARBUTT , .. NEW. YORK (AP) -Lillda Bove has been actibg in \heaters for more than five years, but she's never heard, the happy sound of apPlause. She can't. She's been deaf since birth. But at rt 1 the petite, brown-haired ac- tress is moving into another facet of show 'business. She's become a 1cast member in the popular CBS-1V soap opera, "Search for Tomorrow." She plays a young girl who wort,, at Henderson Hospital -the focal point of the show. She loses her hearing as the resuJt of a car· accident, and, during her recovery, meets a young doctor and fall s in love. It's routine sturr for the long-run· ning setjes. . But its not routine ·for .1Linda,) who ·• hopes what she's doing will open up other television jobs -particularly in com- merclals -for other deaf actors and ac· tresses. • "°We are born actors because we have to express what we want to say through Our hands and bodies," she said, getting the thought across strictly by the sign language of the deaf. She mW"mured constantly in a soft, gentle voice, her fingers and arms mov· ing all the whi le as her close friend and "interpreter," Jean Worth, said in words what Linda was saying wi~ he~ .bands. Born in Passaic, N.J., both her parents were deaf. Sbe became lt.IMl'.f!ltirtruck while a student at Gallaudet ·\~e in · Wa shington, D.C., a liberal ~1 school .. ' ... (See DEAF, Page 39 1'.( Irvine Launc.hes ~:e.remiere Season ~ Jt'1 rather hard ~ visualize a community theater· group , going through aa entire seasoo wlthout P"lling on at leut one obow that's -done previously in that theater's partiCular · area. Along the Orange Coast the reverse often fl the caae. Tbt Saa Clemente Com· munlty .'l'b..,tel' o.me clooeat to thll Coal last y,ar by stq. Joa ols ~lJVe COUDIJ premieres over two 1euons before "Walt Unlll Dark" brol:e the llltlng. Now the lrvlne Commualty Thea!« II out to Ue, and poalbly better, tblt feat. The Irvine players hln,an-. nounced I 1fn.7t aellOlf «m- posed wholly of co u h·I,. pmnler<s -11 .. of u.,m,- whlcb, coupled with the -. lnc-ohO'\f:-ol lut ..-... "SUrprioe, ~will equal !he· Soil Clemente 1ccompllabmeat., A • local premiere to kick off Ille · lollOw1nl INIOll w 0 ••• t .. , • . • • ' lntermiSsion Tom Titus ... · dy'' manner in the office of a sklrt-dlutng, psychiatrist: Ron Ail>ertsen, who's d1rec· Ung "What the Butler Saw." doesn 't view the show as llhocklllc, only as ex<"eptionaily f\Jnoy on an adult level. "The laughs come because of the • very Britieh reactions of the~ presumably, establish iome hands of those patrona wbo , ch a r act e 'r s t·o th e oort ·G( lllllllflclal record . signed the xc:t' guest book lut rldk:ulouan,.. of the situations 1'e m'awblck in mounting · aeuon. and the fl!ltlendlsh dialogue." all Dew prodUctlons, or course, The fint shot in JC'I"a Albertsma 'explains. ls the' ever-present danger lhat .. 1 .. UI be · • a theater's audience in its un-prem ere sea.son "' THE IRVINE theater - famWartiy with the 'plloys, will , !Ired in three weekl when the wblCh bis broken dramatic not bi! quite ~ intrigued as it -1ail (oome mlgbt oa7 ~ groui\d ilaithe past .tith classic would lilth a more ldenUllabi• ~) au fllflll' "What the plays like "Death of a product. The people ·who uuuer Saw" opens at UC . Salesman" ind·"Who's Afraid oper.i.·lh• ,...,._Community lrvtne'a Humanities Ha I I • of Virginia Woolf?• -Ms Tllelllt ~ ·;;.,idetW thlll • Playbouae ,tw·a· fouM•eehad im0thor'¥ ·lto•'l' • one ~b y l•ctlt'. 'b;"'" In. ,,w,:I tun. • -\ • a:u·: 'pi~ttirllht .E;dwanl .._ a,..""::. ·1· ....-:! 'l1lll one, 1cr C.~11 I .., 11.P ,tot its .eoon<1 ' • ~ for mat.a.I audleocel and -f.H'qo. 1'bal ,..uld be 'TREY HAVE • ft. suaon theater ,II dllcourqing "-• ' tn ~Garden"' a brodt\D•,nodY to n\all<l>ut to •• ~ 11)1--..young cPCioi>le -.' · slln1pjlo~ iillddl .. a~ WhO drops a can! to taider lliCi\ IClloOl qt. ti ~O. • cl.. lkr lit .. IO<iety the p"1p (at Box 4'HG, Irvine Oftoh ~~ ~v,. lllOllld .,.-laolied by the punuit of ·-) ·~!Ing it. Th.,. a J,.rt,., '.of ~l1><beek "-J'\ind status. .....,. ~·ale in the seouCtloM'niuci\ tn 'the •1ean. The lhlnl·and flflb olots on l -:. . . ( ' • •• the schedule will be ~by comedies which ICT's nt director disc ov e r~e · on Broadway in the early es but which never really t fire like a Nell Simon - '"The . First Fish" d "Harold." Balancing oqt the slate is an original dra!J~ en· titled "?.1onday's Hero," to be directed by Herman Boodman who mounted a production of lhe pl ay several years ago in another area. The new season represents a sharp change of course! the Irvine group -w .. .J two years ago present • a schedule o f super.( ' liar titles ("Salesman / "Vh'glnla . Woolf/' \~Batt.foot ld, the Park" and ••vou Can't Take tl With You"). Wbetbor IQ!' will continue tn a traU.lazhlg dlrtctiotLor _wl~t to more recognizable t h . • t e r fare depends to a lar ~tent upon the reception t,florded thi!, its "premiere sealibn." The gift collection includes major works by Josef Albers , Richard Anuszkiewicz, Gene Davis, L u d w i g Smder, Julian Stanczak, Gyorgy Kepes; ·1 sculpture by Harry Bertoia, Louise Nevetson, and James Wines; and prints, drawings and multiples by Adolph Got- tlieb, Ray Parker , Victor Pasmore, Otto Piene, Jack Youngennan: tapestries designed from works by H e l e n Frankentbaler, Joan Miro, a nd Theodoros Stamos. A slide presentation of the works D they appear in Avco's executive offices and lobby areas will be part of the-ex' hibilion. :. • The Newport Harbor Art Muse11111 :Js located at 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., Newp<it Beach. Museum hours are 12-4 p.Jj~ Tuesday thrugh Sunday and Frid!CY., nights 6-9 p.m. Free docent hMp Thursdays 12_. p.m. Admission by dol!a- tion. ·: ~ "Avco Financial Services' current col· lection reflects the basic intent and theme of the original ccllection, with em· :--. :: ' ·: j . .. .· . Suspense, Not Art, Keeps Film Th.rilling -;~ By DAVID STERRITT ChrtltlMI klMK• MM!lter Serrl<e.__ .. Devilishly clever, that Jackal fellow. So clever, that his evil plan ·• would have to succeed -if the police didn't have on their side all the forces of coincidence and unlikely plot-twist. It would also help if the potential victim weren't ~rlfs de Gaulle. Since he wasn't aSS;aSSinated in real life, it's easy to guess that be won't be cut down in "The Day of the Jackal" either. But it doesn't matter that we know the ending in advance. The "Jackal" thrills and chills come from watching a sinister plan unfold . . · ' ' • in all its ingenious detail, and from wondering bow the police will ac-~ • complish the nearly impos.sible task of halting it. IT ALSO DO~'T matter very much that director Fred Zinneman d~velapa the thriller w_itb a· plodding disregard for cinematic niceties. Suspense, not art, is the order·of the day. And the labyrinthine turns of '1Jackal" will challenge the abilities of any what-will-happen.next-guesser. ··J Jackal is a code name, of course. It makes a neatly atmospheric . .o:. title for Frederick Forsyth's ·best-selling novel, and for the slick new nlovie version. It also masks the identity of the villian - a likeable cQap, so suave and engaging that you'd never suspect him of being an experienced political assassin. .- Jackal gets an assignment, and a gigantic fee, from a group of Fr~nch fanatics led by a former paratrooper from the Algerian v:ar. His task -to murder DeGaulle, and get away with it Like most clever movie villains, he goes about lhe job with maniacal precision. "Jackal" follows his diaobolical plottµig every step of the wa::. Meanwhile, the other hall ol the intrigue swirls about a folksy, home- spun detective who cracks the case. AT THE OUTSET, his only information is that someone, somewhere, nlight try to assamnate De Gaulle, sometime soon. This isn~t much to go on, and some or the plot breaktbrough! be- come pretty unbelievable. But the suspense builds rucely, despite the preordained ndiJW;, the pace moves along at a steadily frenetic speed; and occasional credibility gaps soon get lost in the shuffie. Director Zinneman is one of Hollywood's most experienced crafts.. 1nan, if not ooe of the most consistent. In "Jackal" he settles for a nov· elistic approach, transposing Forsyth's best-seller into a complex but J .. forward-thrusting yarn in which nothing matters but the narrative's bare -: bones . And he has cast this Forsyth saga immaculately. Eric Porter -of . : TV's "Forsyth saga" -gets the ball rolling, as the madman who wants I De Gaulle dead. Edward Fox is bright, blond, and steely as the fiend- , ishly brilliant hired assas.!in. Michel Lonsdale portrays the folksy de- tective with superb economy of gesture, deftly building him into tbe movie's most warmly human flgUl'e. .-, THE SUPPORTING PLAYERS are no less impressive. As an ec-- centric gunsmith, Cyril ,Cusack develops an odd, twitchy, and utterly credible character in a couple or brief scenes. Delphine Seyrig is her ut- ual lovely self an an unWittlng tool of the villain. Ronald Pickup, Anton Rogers, Barrie Ingham, and others perform with similar aplomb in a .. ·= variety of small roles. Zinneman also deserves commendation for imbuing "The Day of the Jackal" with a sense of tasteful regard for his audience. The vtllaln'a ends are dastardly indeed, and a few corpses turn up along the way. One also spots a few seconds of partial nudity, and a brief torture scene - though torture was a very real issue during the Algerian conflict, which sparks the plot. But Zlnncman has largely avoided the current movie taste for obses!ive sex and graphic violence. In so doing he re<:alla the days of the old-fashioned suspense epic, when chills were sblvertna:ly ~ed rather than sledge.hammered home. • • • LESS CAN BE SAID fCJt 11Swecl JesUll Preacherman" and 1'Cofty," two rte!" entries in the black·aei.·and-vlolencfl ienre. . \ And more'1 the pity. ~ .... their plots offer ~111 for twitch- -eroos !'." to<fay's '!'Ore decadent entertainmenurenl!! . .Jl91h aatl-J:lo'lea nave • chance to operate aeconling to tlitirbest, lnsteod "' t!Mib'worst. lhstinct~. ln the lalMt style, bowever, they bungle that cbanct. 'lbc re- sults are as sleaq as can be. . • • . • ' • • • i -\ I I· • ' J ' , . . %1 DAILV PILOT t Friday, September 14, 1973 ' •:· . ' ,;; ' \ ,, I I -r.-~~ I ..,._ .. ..-= . ; I • •' ' I :..!!Yf~· I. :.' I ~'" "" : ·~VI' :;.-I IOVP : ' ' "''"" d ' c-MltE~·r ·: ,~ J I "~o~-~~ i "' ' •. "' ·i.l;:= ,, _,,,,_ .. ,.. -"' ----~--_, __ ' -~-·- • -r ' ...... ~·,_·•1J : AS,,u,...v .., ,. '°"' . ~-· " ' l'f 'lw arhol Work: Sociology, But Art Too? By SUSAN LITILEW'1QD Cllrldf111 Scl...ca MOllllor S.nfce I T?ie first thing that .occur~ to You when confro~ted with Wilrhol's Campbell soUp can paintings.in a museum is that you mlgbt. be in the wrong place.:..._ a.supermarket instead of the museum. Once you're sure that you are in the right ,. place, the next question is, "Are the paintings in the wrong place?" ~'· Wait a minute. It's not as if food had never appeared .. • ~ in a work of art before. What about all those delectable foods and beve rages in Dutch still life paintings and those savory impressionist picnics and care luncheons? Is there f really an important difference between a bowl of fruit and l a can of soup? Is natural food not only' more nutritious, but ~ also aesthetically better, than a commercial produCt? .~ Maybe what is so unnerving is that Warhol's soup cans ~ look so much ~e the ooes on the shelf at the supermarket -symbols of throw-away society, a cheap kind of ~d· , vertising; as di able as the original cans they are copied '1' from. Shouldn't an object from the everyday world -es- , peciaUy one as prosaic as a can of soup -be transformed 1 in some ways to be considered an art object? Or, as pop art enthusiasts argue, is the choice of subject matter, put in· ._ to a rme art context, the transformation? . POPULAR IMAGERY may have appeared in art before, but a new source of imagery is present for the artist, pre- viously unknown-the mass media. Our senses are bombard· ed daily with images of mass-advertising for a mass-produc· tion , mass-consumption society, and this brings on an ac- ~leratioo in the multiplicity of images we are forced to assimilate in a short period of time. Warhol seerrui to be communicating this fact in his use of serial imagery. So much variety -cream of asparagus, chicken gumbo, beef consomme, clam chowder, minestrone! With the speedup, however, comes a dulling effect from the constant repeti· lion, and Warhol's repeated images of soop cans (as well as his multiple images of coke bottles and celebrities) seem to symbolize the monotony. Like rock music (which also bloomed in the '60s) in \vhicb the same value is giveii tO the notes, lyrics, and beat" going arout1(1 Bod around in your head, losing all meaning and anyi element of surprise or resp:>nse, the monotonous repetition of a Warhol image finally loses its power to communicate anything. Alvin Toffler sugested in his book, "Future Shock" (which seemed to sum up the 'liO's), our artists may be behaving like primitives who, In awe of a power they cannot comprehend, try to gain control over it by simplemindedly imitating it . MEDIA IS "an extension of man's senses" we heard from Marshall McLuhan last deC"ade, and in a way pop art is media, as well as an effect of it, since it extends man's senses to include the public symbols and icons or the mass media, rather than focusing on a private ideal or a personal view of the world, as in past art. And, as in all media, "the medium is t~e message," (to revive the cliche ). The message of pop art,~ not its content-coke bottles, hot dogs,.Campbe1l so~p,cans, etc. -nor a moralist social statemen.t about th~' symbols of our ma.98-produced culture. Its message seemS to be its own existence as a Symbol of the mass-advertised, mas,,. produced, mass-consumption world it reflects. , W'1'hol and other pop artists are not satirists. Pop art is bold and positive; it seems to accept, not parody, its en..virooment. Most pop artists really like pop culture and revel in it. Warhol said, "I delight in the world ; I get great joy out of it ... The artificial fascinates me, the bright and shiny. '1 These slick, hard-edge soup cans ap- pear to reflect this acceptance. The pop artist -with Andy Warhol as the supreme example -seems to be more of a medium (to use Marcel Duchamp's attribute of the artist), picking up the waves of a ,l)Ublic consciousness saturated with mass media images and faithfully transmitting them back to us. Andy once said,."! want to be a machine," and in many ways he functioned like one. He got most of his ideas for his paint- ings -including the multiple-image money pictures and the Campbell soup pictures -from friends, then had them mass-produced via the mechanical method of photo-silk· screen printing (although 0 32 Campbell's Soup Cans" are original oils) in what miglit be called a Warhol art factory. As Calvin Tomkins so aptly put it, "Warhol became in the 1960's a speechless and rather terrifying oracle. He made visJ ble what was happening in some part to us all." It makes interesting sociology. BU.t is it art? Do we need to change our view ol what art is? Art critic Law- rence Alloway suggests, "instead of reserving the word for the bigh<st artifacts and the noblest thoughts ol history's top ten, it needs to be used more widely as the descripUon of what a society doea. Then unique oil paintings and high- ly personal poems as well as mass-distributed films and group-aimed magazines can be placed within a. continuum rather than frozen in layers in a pyramid .... The new role for the fine arts is to be one of the possible fonns of communication in an expanding framework that includes the mass arts. The idea is of a fine art;;poP art contin- uum, in which the enduring and the expenda ble, tbe time- less and the timely coelist, but without damage either to the senses of the spectator or to the standards ol society." Maybe we need to be more democratic. Why can't we enjoy Warhol without turning off ~1ozart? ....,. OR 18 l'QP art llOtbliJg more tllan kitsch, "ersatz cul- ture,'' as Clement Greenburg (Alloway's conservath'!I op- ponent) calls it, "destined for those who are i~ble to the value of genuine culture." Does pop art enforce this insensibility? If pop art is art, then are movies, a!!s. comic strips, and fashion also art? (Many modent mu- seums now have ftlm departments, the art of the comic strip is in current vogue, and witneM the Met's Balanclaga exhi bitloo.) ls art only a microcosm of a society and it's times? Or is it a reflection of a univenal truth? Wiii Campbell's soup take its place in 500 years next to Michel- angelo's "David" and Picaso's "Guernica" -all sym- bols ot the civilization they reflect? If we don't like Campbell's soup as art, then as a society do we need to change our ideals? (Susan LitUewood has done graduate study and museum work in 20th<:entury artJ WE'RE PROUD, we 9ot 2 letters from the Wh ite Hous e tellin9 us how t hey en· joyed our strawberries! An d signed by Pat and Richard Nbiconl!I Th ey're fra med a nd will always be in ou r produce dept. as our most treasured pieces of literature ! Thank you , Mr. President and Mrs. Nixon,•we're 9lad you enjoyed th em. Sincerely, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Camp ··········~···················~ • LAST OF THE YEAR • La1t Of The S..ton • OUR IUNCHES • ·santa Ana :Barrio Plans ;Celebration YOU ARE CORDIAllY IRYITED • LOCAL GROWN • BART LETT PE,ARS ARE 1101 I P DELICIOUS APPLES • MARGARITI • • Be I eppers • Fa n sroN• PEACHES • DAISIES • • • • • 10¢ Lb. : 5 Lbs. I 00 : 49' .:::.. • Limit S Lb1. a \1mlt 5 Lb1. • Limit 2 l ch: • • With Thl1 Coupon • With Tf!ll Coupon • With Tata. Coupen • 1 Mexican Independence will t>e, celebrated in the Fiestas fatrias· in Santa Ana tonight through Sundlly. . The cultural event v:i11 be hosted by Delhi, a barrio \\'ilh a community center i n southeast Santa Ana, 541 E. c.entral Ave. Orange Cl_)unty resldenls are invited. , Mexican folk dances will be :~ormed and there 'viii be '~des and games for children . 8od adults. Mexican costumes :itn be wom. · ~The cry for independence •lll be re-enacled by Bishop < . 'J\lln :Anubt. to attend our week ly "Hot Stove'' sessions on contemporary art, every Sat urday afternoon, at the Jack Glenn Gallery, Corona del Mar. Over the past few years, a tradition has developed with collectors, artists, museum personnel, other dealers, 4!1tc. of dropping by on Saturday after- noo ns, u11.11lly between 12 and 5, to discuss contemporary art. We hope that you will join us. We'll look at the current exhibition, the "back rooms," the print cabinet, etc. Bring nothing but an interest in contemporary art and we'll examine art frorh the period that interests you most, up to the present day. JACK GLENN GALLERY ~-··················~········· ' ·······················~······ ! BY POPULAR DEMAND • OUR PAMOUa · • I MALL HAAS 8 • • CALIF. VALENCIA • . AVOCADOS • • • • Canteloupes • ORANGE JUICE!• • • • 5 "°' I oo : ···5·;,. : 5 "°' 1 oo • Limit 5 • Limit Yi.Gallen Only • Limit I u • Wit h Thl1 Coupon • Wltfl n l1 Cffpon • wtth Thie Coupon • ··········~··················· COUPONS IXPIRE SIPT. 19, 1973 . 'In their c:onstant search to 9iv• their customers the fintit food tf<i ese resttur1nt1 serve Newport Product. They know quo11ityl Try them, you'll l~vt the fo~d et ···· Crown House, La9un a Ni9ueh Woody's Whtrf, Newporf; Vu:tor Hugo Inn, La- 9une Beach; Spaqhettl Bender, Newport; Alley West, ,_.,•~port; end 300 others! Why don't you try us? • WE WIRE FLOWERS AROUND THE CORNER OR ARoUND THE WORLD BY. F.T.D. ' "Orange Countv'1 Most Popular Produce and F~r Howe" NEWPORT PRODUCE • L . .t. ~ fiestas ls the source of .ljlll<llng to pay for self : "~velopnent l!""lecls at local ,: rrlol. NI -of the barrios, 2831 E. Coast Highway, Corona de l Mar ,__ -~ ~ Orplli?Uon offers OTHfft LOCATtoNS •}llrricM IUCh as used clothes SOUnt COAST VILLAGE. SANTA ANA FLOWllS IY DOllA 0. rflfi(t: .rw M11-t-a.in:-to-1 ..,.. 261' Newport ... .._.. .. tho PN l-lo -67M7tf '1M711 '7H2fl :-.S flll'llltUre, rtl~ and in-424 FASHION VALLEY, SAN DIEGO :)..nnation and leadershl~ In I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::~~ • ud ICbool dlrtrict al• . , ; • • 35 Years of Produce KMtDHoul" IONDED FlUIT SL41Pl'EA FOR ll YEARS r "ll'her• Quol!tv r. Ill• 6rdlr of th4 Howe" 1· • I 'Catch 22' Winds Up Run This Weekend Completing a swnmer-lot1g engagement with f i n a 1 performances tonlght through SWlday Is South Coast Repertory 's staging of this Joseph Heller military sati~e. Curtain is 8 p.m. at the Thtrd Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa . Reserva- tions 646-1363. o'clock. R~servaUons 4974014. "Caet.us Flower" 'lbe Huntington B e a ch Playhouse is presenting ~ Burrows' comedy Fridays fild Saturdays through Oct. 6 with an 8:30 curtain at th e Barn, 2110 Main St., Huntington Beach. Reservations 5.16-4446. · "The Gingerbread Lady" "Annie Get Your Gun" Neil Simon's only serious Entering its seL'Ond of three weekends at th e Irvine Bowl in Lagima Beach is this Jrv~g Berlin musical from the Lyric Opera Association , on stage tonight and Saturday at 8 play opew next Thursday for three w~kcnds at the San Cle mente Community Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente, with an 8:30 cur- tain. Jteservations 492-0465. Oil, watercolor~ .ind pastels by the distin· gL1lshed Arizona artist will be on exhibit thru Septe mber 23 . A limited number of autographed i;opies o( his latest book are also available. MARY LIVINGSTON'S GALLERY 2 1211 N. BROADWAY, SANTA ANA • 542·8947 . squTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH . POND GOLDFISH & SUPPLIES .. ~ Baby Koi Carp 75c Wstw Lett•"• e w.,.., H.,odl'lttl Pond Sn•lls 9 Gol~flsh food Kol Food e P•rnp Flltrotlon U11fn All Siaes & Yorletln of Goldfi•h RESTAURANTS and INSTITUTIONS PICK-UP AND SAVE R~ET POTATOES '"~;:, .. TOil\ TOES LEnUCE .... .., ....... . . . ROIAllE .............................. . U.S. NO. I CAGUGE ................. , .. ; ..... . s900 s21& s300 s300 s42s ... s32& .tUMto OllOIS ..................................................... s32s MAll:IM•UltN CARROTS .. .... ... s200 MESA PRODUCE 1854 NEWPORT BLVD. e COSTA MESA Corner of N1,wporf 1' Bro1dw1y 642-6025 • ICE·· .SKATING ' IS POISE&. POSTURE . An Ice akatrng course of l111on1 with· tht f1mou1 IDe C.1p1d11 method gl\ltl · ybu or your C~lld pol111nd po1tur1 training, ,rhytt\rn and coordlnatton. Rl!GllTl!R N()W Miii Vlfdl Shopping C.nlor Hlroor and Adami. Coett Mtsti Toi. (71 4) 97,9-8880 --- • t -" • . . • • ,. Friday, Septtmber 14, 1973 .. DAILY PILOT !7 Tasty Bite of -the ,Past on Riverboat There's no denying the claim that the era of. Mississippi River sleamboats ac- counts for one of the most fascinating chapters ol Americgn history. Or the ~act that .they now figure prominentl y as a roma~tic part or our national nostalgia. ' . I Out 'n . About iNorman Stanley ' Here In Southern California, rather far rrom the setting or their lore and legends. we're fortunate to have three replicas of these boats for first-hand' study. Bcyood invo king the bygone hey- day of the riverboat. two of these also provide the opportunity to settle dO\\'fl and enjoy an excellent meal. The riverboat as restaurant, of course. ca~ls for an outing to one of the good ships Reuben E. Lee, either in Newport Beach or San Diego. If you're only in- terested in taking a ride. regularly scheduled departures are made by the third boat in Disneyland. As one or the star attractions in the chain of restaurants operated by Orange County-based }l~ar West Services, Inc .. it can be counted on f•r superb dining. Equally rewarding, it stirs 11 genu ine reeling for the less co11plicated days im- mortalized by Mark Twain. riverboat. th t' span of more than 130 years had itnposed a sophisticated ne\\' construction tec hnique upon an old art (orn1. TO l.'\llTIATE construction of a stean1- Uoat in the old days, the boss gathered his men around hi1n, described what he wanted done and assigned to each foren1an as segment or the work to be accomplished. The job was then ca rried out to completion by eye, instinct and ex- perience. A recent visit to San Diego's Reuben E. Lee, open since 1969. rekindled sen· timents of the romaocc of Mississippi River stcamboating. NO l\tATTER how pressing the schedule, v.•e always manage to drop by the Reuben E. Lee in Newport a couple or limes each year, for several re¥ons. In 1963, when f'ar West Services con1· missioned architects. artisans and con- tractors to duplicate a Mississippi Al that ti1ne. blueprints, plans and even written specificatons were unkno1vn Radio Stations Carrying the B.all Turning on It's Boo! Hiss! Rah! titne for football fan s with KABC Talkradio follow ing the USC Trojans this season. The first game is Saturday, when USC faces Arkansas at 7:15 p.m. Scott Manchester Radioth-On was so successful that another one is in the p\au- ning sta ge for next year, reports Larry Vanderveen. pre sident of the National Leuke1nia Broadcast Council. KMPC does the same for the UCLA Bruin.s and KLAC is getting into the pro end of th e sport with an upcoming ri+lon· day night NFL 12-gnme series, It starts Monday when the New York Jets battle against the Green Bay Packers at 6 p.m. Tom Kelly and Don to-get-hung.up-on speci a l feature reports. in charge of the 80-minute pro· grain which features live guests, occasional o p e n phones, plus musical breaks and live and recorded jazz. A rather interesting mix of pro· gramming elements. Many public-service-minded executives are lending their assistance in the preparation, including broadcasting's "Big- gie" Nevins, KFl's program manager, KPRO and KVEN 's Robert Fox; KFWB's General Manger Art Schreiber and KABC Talkradio account ex· ecutice Lois Weiss. Andersen wil l call the action for KABC. Fred Hessler is mikeside for the Bruins and Don Shula, Van Patrick and Jim Healy divide the action for the NFL schedule. Th ey include its recent e"" ploration of the fact that plants. fish, nower.; and many other living things experienCf such emotions as anger and fear, using the title, "Yogurt Has Feelings" to illustrate the AND KJIJ rocks on with its point. Do you care if yogurt cu1T£'nl !'chedule of rock hosts has feelin gs'? f'll pass, but looking like this: Charlie Van press on. fellows. Dyke 6-9 a.m.; Bill Wade 9 KPFK-FM is dea ling with a.m.-noon; Danny Martinez 3-6 special reports, too, although pm.; Captain John 6-? p_.m ; their new week ly series deals Bobby Rich 9 p m:·m1~rught, with the latest social cultural ~ and Johnny W 1 l l 1 ams and politically relev'ant hap-m~dnight-6a .~ .. \veekends it's penings around Los Angeles., M~ke Valentine -for all ST I LL ANOTIIER worthwhile cause is KMPC's upcoming annual "Show of Shows.'' slated for Saturday, Sept. 22, at the Forum, with proceeds marked for Permanent Charities Com· mittee of the Entertainment Industries and the 2 8 0 charitable organizations i t supports. lll>CONCERNED W I T H such coverage, outside of its excellent sports reports KIIS continues on its way "-'ilh its easy listening music and easy- Series is aired on Saturdays shifts! • . . at 4:30 p.m., with Earl Ofari February s first Leukemia •~ KA.M'S J81! DI~ Restau'ltJHI ~~ [!?tff ~ CHINESE-AMERICAN CUISINE LUNCH • DINNER • COCKTAILS Food To GO -Speclql DlscoYnts BANCj)UETS /CATERING Dining Satisfaction Guaranteed OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT Y/ednesday Thru Sunday 2121 E. Coast Highway ( 0.. llec:Ji West of Mec.ArtfMtr J Corona del Mar 673-9919 mITIIf.I Mexican Restaurant PROUDLY PRESENTS THE CHAPTER II Por Your Dining And V,OOlng Pleasure Plcrytnt Nl91ttty Wed. tllnl $on. "Fintst Me xica11 Food in Orange County" OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS 547 W. 19th STlln COSTA MESA ' 642·9764 MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB ORANGE COUNTY'S TOP . ENTERTAINMENT JOE LIGGINS The Or1sllnal "Honeydrlpper1" BACK AT THE LARK ROl>M with "~~----- WILLIE JACKSON Wodneldoy lhrv Sundoy l •11Ci11I Ftcllltite \Ill fo 4SO People 11111 •RA.HAM AYJNUI IAt W....-J HUNTIN.TON llACH 17141 '46-1116 11111 IH-1'14 .. • 496-5773 SPOUTER SALOON Victorian Bar at ltEo/ 1kWHAtE .,...... 499-2626 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, T ..... s.1. ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR 4 to 7 p.m., Mon. thru Fri. Sunday Royal Chllmp19,.. Brunch hsfllH Sltow lty M•rt.f't, 12:15, TlnttN.,. °'*' s.... Deya. 32802 COAST HWY. {&I CNWn V1lltY Par1tw.1yl LAGUNA NIGUEL Steak and Ale in Santa Ana invites you to join us. Nearly Everyone Listens to · Landers • • to the builders of the River Queens. COm· pared with the complexities of today's <J pproach. the ordering of a steamboat in those days was relatively simple. \I/hen J.~a r West decided to build its first riverboa t restaurant in Newport Beach. the plans were submitted, t<>gelher V.'ith an HppJication (Or the buildin{l permit. The plans described a boat of specified dimt:nsions with two m;-iin decks, a Texas deck and a ~l"h<..>clhouse. 1·11E 1-'EHM IT 1v11s su bseq uently issued for a ··three-story building with pent- house." This is pretty much \vhat follo11·· ed. \Vith the lleuben E. Lee in San Diego and later the Lt. Robert E. Lee, con- strucl ed dockside on the f\•lississippi River i11 St. Lou is. All three boats required about eig ht n1onths to build. 1111 California the steel hulls \\'ere built al Todd Shlpyards in San Pedro and float ed to their presl'nt sites. \Vhere the superstructure and fini shing \\"Ork w;is done. The plans for each bo;it weighed over 65 pounds. requiring more than 50 p<iges of drawings. The Nc"'port boat, 190 feet in length. accommodates 450 "passengers." The San Diego rcrsion, 204 feet, will ac- commodate atKM.1t 600. \Vhilc the al"crage life span of the old4 {ime rlvl'rboHts wa s a little 1nore th<1n four years. f'ar \Vest's riverboats were dl'Signcd an:: bui lt for a lif~ ~xpcctancy of a c~ntury. The i11tricute rococo style or orna1nen- 1;1tion e<1rncd the early steamboats the 113111t' or .. flwting palaces." Some studl'nts of architectural design maintain that the "gingerbread" of !he riverboats \Vas :i n1a jor inrluence on houses and in- terior decor of lhe era. . LOOKING . .\T the Reuben E. Lee in San Diego Bay, the "floating palace" ap· pears incongruously picturesque against a background of naval vessels and the n1elropolitan high-rise skyline. Like its Ne\vport Beach and St. Louis sislerships. hO\vever , it is authentic in detail uud handsomely finished wilh a Stem Wheel~ er room , one or several individuul res-:: taurants aboard the vessel. Eleven entree.s are offered in the Stern \\lhceler, flt prit.-es ranging roughly fro $5 to $7. ,(Quoting exact figures. we'vo learned. iS a risky business at the mo 1nent of nuclualing prir ..:$. J The main murses all served with choice of sour .!rom thl' kettle or one of !\ vari ety of l05sed sa lads, arc Long Island .. duckling. roast prime rib of beef. stea~ Oscar, Ne1v York strip steak, choice top si rloin steak . scampi Italiano, bee.I slroganoff, stuffed mush.room s (giant. mushrootns filled with deviled crab andl topped with hollandaise sauce ), st uffl'd baby flounder. mahi·mah l and a ste<.1K ;ind enchiladas combo. l If' \'OU \\'OULD rather report to th~I boat's seafood restaurant vou can take' your pick of approximately ·20 enlrees. or one or thl"ee di shes designed for the becf-1 eatcr'i; pleasure. - (See Out·n• About, Pai'.e 28) .f ., I l •• r Gov. Ronald Reagan will appear in the season pr•.1 miere of NBC -TV's "The 0.n Martin Comedyc Hour" at 10 o'clock tonight. The governor will be·• given a roasting by guests Don Rickles, Phyllis Dil·:l ler, Jonathan Winters, Jack Benny, Audrey Mea-~ dows and Mark SpltL :I Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. -3 P.M. DIN~~~~:11.~:~770 . c.,Airporter qnn ll~u~tall Lunch Olnnff COdUall• Enterl1lnmW1t CJ-Iotel 18700 MAC .ARTHUR BLVD. 111 21sl Pl., Newporl Beach ' ORiole 3-9560 o,.. Teen Aro1111d Dolly 12·12-Fri. olMI Sat. 'tH J ..... a~JAC~ fiUNDAY BRUNCH eC ABOARD THE ~ ~ubenE.Lee fi(elojWitl. a ... Ramos Fiu ora Bloody Mary ~ EGGS BENEDICT SCRAMBLED EGGS . With"""'· di/dint liven01"~- ST£AK & EGGS CREPES SUPREME Oioou •~ j JtJigftJ{wJ .... iMtiOMS. MONTE CRISTO A" tx.citing ""1tiwich "'f"'lty. ; '5'!!Jn11s jvm 1Qam-2pm RESEJWATIONS/675·5811 TO INTRODUCE the New Po~ ~··· One entree at our regular price , •• "'"" ""'' and the second entree ~is 3901 E. Coast Highway/Corona del Mar Phone: 675-0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY MICllSll I FAMILY MEXICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO I • ' "Y OUR BIG PARTY IS OUR BIG PLEASURE" • -296 E. I llh STREET •· HILLGREN SQ. COSTA MESA PHONE 645·7626 • COCKTAILS • • • • .. • I • ' I I I ·. , I ;• I I I \ i ' .. ' . 28 DAIL V PILOT Friday, Stptember 14, 1q13 In tlae Galleries • " I ; ' Laguna Honors Burt, Pro~tor and Work N~E~;R~0~1: ;REI 810 W. 19TH STREET COSTA MESA 646-2823 PARTY SEPT. 13. FOOD e ENTERTAINMENT e DANCING W~trongBrotheQ> * 11,ow thw Sept. 29 1_af !Jie_uporl J7Re"o"'""' HOWARD'S GOES MEXICAN HOWARD'S HACIENDA Serving Newport's Finest MEXICAN · FOOD • SEAFOOD CHARBROILED STEAKS o,.. 7 Doy1 fof BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER ' A.M . -Mid11ltht, S1111doy rhr11. Tt111r1doy 6 A.M. -I :00 A.M., Frldoy 011d Sot•rdoy FOOD TO GO-WINE MARGARITAS 4001 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH 673-77.SO I LAGUNA HEACll fllUSEU~I OF ART -307 Cliff Drive. Burt Proctor Retrospective opens Saturday v,oilh art and memor· abllla. Hours: 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m LONG BE1CH MUSEUM OF ART -2300 E. Ocean Blvd. Sacramento Sampler II exhibit runs Sept. 9 through Oct. 21. cross.secuoo of art from the Sacramento area. AVCO SAV[NGS ANO LOAN -33 10 Bristol Si., Costa Mesa . Acrylics by J ane Huff1nan ("Zula") through September. BANK OF COSTA l\fESA -Harbor at Baker, Costa "'tesa . Oils by Lucille House lhrough September. BRENTWoQO SAVINGS -1640 Adams Blvd., Costa ~1esa. Oils by Olga D. Steam through September. COSTA J\·IESA ART LEAGUE GALLERY -200 \V. \Vllson St., Costa ti.~sa. Crafts by Kathy Begard, Donna Freiberts- hauser. oils by Betty Brooks. Cec Coburn, Gloria Gurley , Gloria Schreiber, Lydia Sopth worth and Ester Ella \York· man through September. COSTA J\1ESA LIBRARY -566 Ceu ter St.. Costa l\tesa. Oils by Ruth Simtrla through September. CROCKER CITIZENS B,\NK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Cosla Mesa. OUs, watercolors, drawings by Pat Pembrook through September. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -South Coast Plaza, 3390 Bris- tol St ... Costa .~lesa. Folk art by Manci Scbonthal through September. DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN -300 E. J7tb St. Ca!ta ?.1esa . Oils by Ann .. Souza through September. ' . FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -16'-0 Adam! It., Costa Me9a. Olis by Joe Barnes throu&h September. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Bl ... , Costa Mesa. Oils, dra\vings by \Vanda Hein through Septel)· ber. · l\lESA VERDE LmRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive Cosra ri.1esa. \Vestern subjects by La Verne Rosow through sCpttea}i ber. r· PARK LIDO CONY ALESCENT CENTER -41JQ Flags~ Road, Newport Beach. Oils by Barbara Schultz and Dr .. Fred B. Olds through September. ! TRANSAl\tERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St., Costa Me$,. Oils, acrylics, watercolors by Ann Routledge through S$- tember. CLYDE ZULCl1 ORIGINALS -3800 E. Coast Hwy., Conll1'. de! Mar. Palntihgs by Jac k Hannah, \Varren \Voodward and Cylde Zulch through Se.pl. 14. Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 11 a.in.-5 pnt I BOWERS i\tUSEU~t -2002 t\. Main St., Santa Ana . Pain~ ings by Los Angeles artist Ll Chen Sept. 9 through Oct 21; CJIALLIS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. \Vatercolors by San Francisco painter George Post through Se ptember, closed Sept. 1~23. }lours: 11 a.m. to 5 p:m. daily. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Highway, Coron~ dcl l\lar. Fourth annual su mmer show exhibits the works d Robert Rauschenberg, Kenneth Nolland, Donald Judd John Clem Clarke, Tom Holland and Laddie John Dill along Y.ilh DAJLY PILOT' -330 \\lest Bay St., Costa Mesa. Abstract selections by young talent: Gary Beydler, Douglas Bond. oil s by Llnda Hudson through September. John Balsley, Christoper Gcorgcsco and Ted Kersey. Hours: l '"ii~~~~~~~~~i..~1~1 ·~·~m~.-~5~p~.m~.~d:ai~IY~·~T~hr~oo~g~h Sept. 14. ' •••• o·p[•N•slJ..'!ME •• ! • --· t~ 1 NOW OPEN SUNDAYS .NATURAL fOOD :RESTAURANT., Lew c1w11 .... ~1 MH• a -Heart $4pft - • • • • l u1in•s,m•n'1 l uneh $1 .3 5 a • OP'IN DAIL 'f • 1 • s:oa •• 11 :00 1r.M. •f · I . • 2440 W. Cod Hwy. •. ••;r•rt aeoch ,.,.1011 •I 11'. • ••••••• LtHtd FroM 11 :JO Mo11.•Prl, Dl1111et Ni9hfly FroM I P'.M. GOURMET DINING ENTERTAINMENT · DANCING Meltdoy thr• S.f11rday "•"' 5 P'.M. For Weekender Advertising Phone 64°24321 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGffi· A LOT t 600-D Newport Center Drive Fashion Island NEWPORT BEACH 644-5060 Mo[or Credit Cords SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious piping·hot pizzas to your door in minutes. -For p'°mpt service phone 646-7136 (Newport Beach/Costa Mesa-17th and Tustin) or 847-1214 (Huntinfl\on Beach-Beach and Hie\). Open 7 Duys NOW flATUllHG "THE BACHELORS" ltUie .,., ••• .,, -.m. f•et. tllr• s.t. NEWPORT CITY HALL-3300 Newport Blvd .. Newpor l Beach. Mixed media by Steve krikl of Fowitain Valley. Through September. Open during regular buSlness hours . GALERIE LIDO -3375 Via Lido, Newport Beach. Water· colors by Bill Harrison of Kansas City. Sept. 14-0ct. I. Hours: Monday through Frldny 11 a.m.·5 Jtm. and Satur· day, noon-4 p.m. l\IEXJCAN .VlLLAGE -1$0 Avenida Pico, San Clemente, Oil paintings by Homer Spurlock. Hours: noon·6 p.m. daily. Through Sep\. 30. l\IARINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN -1515 Westcliff Drive," Newport Beach. "Kid's Stuff," little bronze and clay figuer· ABOUT ... (From Page %5) Among the seafood posslbili· ties are filet of sole, ea!lem scallops. prime chinook sal- mon. rainbow trout, lobster tail or thermidor, Alaskan hal· ibut, boullabaisse and boned Astoria sand dabs. If you can't n1ake it doy,11 to San Diego in the immediate future, you'll find pretty much lhe same bill of fare locally at the Reuben E. Lee in Ne'VP'Jrt Beach. One SJX!l or the other (and doubtless the same for those affluent enough to fly off to Sl. Louis for dinner ), you're bound to enjoy the same sense ol fulfillment. Open daily for IWlch and dinner, In San Diego you 'II fin1 the Reuben E. Lee anchored at 880 E. Harbor Island Drive. (Follow the hlgh\vay signs di· reeling motorists to Harbor Island.) In Ne\\•port Bench you board ship at 151 E. Coa~·t Highway. SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.fil. / IAH9UIT ••CIL1n1s Dl•wr 5-fqd ,,.. 5 P".M. Democrat Teletlion On Saturd<1>y The Democratic National Telethon II goes on th e air Saturday. The seven-hour event begins at 4 p.m. on Channe l 4. Along with {he u s u a 1 telethon activities, entertainer Steve Allen has resurrected important visitors rrom the past in a nine-part series en- titled "Meeting of Minds." D i s t i nguished historical figures will be impersonated di scussing the presidency, freedom, democracy, women's llberalion. civil rights and law· and-order. Among these remarkable \'isitors who y,•ill be enjoying a "~feeling Of 11inds" are George Washington, Thomas ' Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin . Abrahan1 Li ncoln, Thom as Paine, Theodore Roosevelt . Queen Cleopatra of ancient. Egypt and-from the 13th Cet\· tury -King John of England. In tbt finrst 1raJi1ion I .of tht ''"' innkttptr's art. r lFIVE 1 ~ J17 'ACl••c COAST HWT. HUNTINGTON IEACH 1 1 Jl40! EAST COAST HIGHV.'llY ('0110"°A br.L ,,IA•. (o\Ll•U•S IA I Puo:-.:t:: (714) 67S-IJ74 536-2555 CJ+ G~t the Pizza with Pizza@..l:h '\00~~--------- TEMPLE GARDENS "Eating out" is not ~ necessarily dining Dining at the Nawporter Inn 's Marine Restauri is a totally pleasurable experience. Excellen\ cuisine, rang ing from our superb Rack of L b to Salinon Steak in Salsa Verde, painstakingly prepared by our European· trained chefs. A win e list of disti nction to 1 complement your en!ree. And, in an :1 atmosphere of continental elegance .I unmatched for re laxed enjoyment Dining is The Marine Restaurant at Q/~LWEEES i 1 1107 Jamboree Road, @J Newport Beach /714-6~ ALSO, THE LIDO LOUNGE/THE WINE CELLAA fTHE BISTRO/THE CHELSEA BAA ' I Week Doys: 11 :lG A.M. to 12 f'.M. Fri. a11d Sot. 11 :JG A.M. ro 12:30 S111tdirys: 4:00·12 MIDNIGHT EXCELLEtfT MEXICAN CUISINE ' 9093 E. ADAM S, HUNTI NGTON BEACH 962-791 f DINNER ENTREES ----------·--Sauerbraten e l"toul aden Champignon Schnittel Wiener Sch nitzel e Cordon Bleu And, t;,r Beef lovers Burgetmeis ter Steak {?oc~1t of fil•t filled with m1uhroo11n l Filet Steak • Rib Eye Cut lunch e :>anciwiches At All Hours Imp. Wine e Beer e Wine Cocktails theBERLINER DELI RESTAURANT ' 18581 BlACM Bl VO ~L·~l!ll GION B!lC~ ,TOWN ANO tOUNTRY Ct~·!R • 968 ~a ce '" ... , .......... . l ~ u• ll o ! It•• ' • ''"'"''""' '"'"' • • Q-HNSs:B Re•taura111 RICKSHA COCKTAIL I . LOUNGE ~ ... !\!If . Featuring Exotic Tropical OM.nks Luncheon & Dinner Deily 1500 ADAMI f9t H ... i.c1rl COSTA MllA 540·1923 I ~1937 ........... ,... 12201 lltOOIHUlST • IAt c•.,••) 6Ja.70Jt I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ron Shy Hits t Spot ·Ron Shy and~Don Kendricks got it togeth in the lounge. l unch e Dinner e D cin9 e Entortainment for rosen'atl~: M2·82U • d•tedj SuittMys op•11 'tll 2 •.111, The 1 • aaTAUllAN1 e4().()322 830 Ni!WPORT CENTER DRIVE . , (Feeh!On ~ -, . - Excellent Seafood witl• Ocean VU!w Di11i11g SHIP AHOY OPEN DAILY 11 :30 31727 S. Coast Hwy. INel\r Monarch Bay) S..tll J.otooa 4H0 HOO VEAL CUTLl'T OSCAR Gfrni ...... wltll At~rlW'llt T\111, C,.~ Ltils. SfllCf .. rdtlflM T.,..S Wltll IN- AMONG 20 SIUCT DINNllt INTllll VINA HARMER DUO Ent1 rt1inlng RMEU ltE&fAUMNT Corlllnonl!l Cuisine Coekllll1 Senn1111 ~ '"LunchM and Dinner Munda11 through Saturtt(iw. C!osed Sundays We . are IO'tatt-d next to' the May Co , in 'South Coe1t Plau ,UU~l!W c:........ ....u .. .. Sins ion Coo join Wai . .. Cou sic Sop Rlvt 1 ( T Col Fe! 22' of ~ H wi[ am anc at t its We c Wa eo. Air 1 I r I I ~ I .. I I I L ' ... IC ci t . • ,, '" ,, I Slnee.,r1 Krl1 Kristoffer- son and his wife Rita Coolidge, left, will be joined by Jerry RHd, W1ylon Jennings ind oth• er1 when the Outdoor Country and Western Mu· sic Fe1tlv1I takes place Sept. 22 at Voll Loki, Riverside County. • ' • 'Dream' Back on GWC S~e ' . Theater aoers who missed tur,e Shakesp•are 's Golden West Collcge!s sum-Elizabethan concept of dreams mer production of ' • A e.nd really and world of. spirits. Midsun1mer Night's Dream" adding his own interpretations can see it Sept. 21·22, at ·8:30 to the meaning. p.m. "While the play may be like Th a drea m to Shakespeare," said e repeat nights 0 f Mitchell, "he also implies life Shakespeare's classic comedy Is like a play and its style is will utilize sets, cast and mostly mediocre comedy. He technical crew from the sum-sees all of us mortals playing mer run to kick off the roles tllat we chooSe or that college's 1973-74 th e a t er are forced upon us, havin g to ,.... season. ad-lib quickly when we forget inhlt...,S..Cllif . ...,. I. · I 1nct ... Mrtrl•pbltllt Following the Shakespeare our mes, trying desperate y to c.MCM MIU ..,..1.,1t reprise, "Androcles and the be good actors and usually ..._....,, •••,.. •• Lion" will be staged, Oct. 26-failing. But every once in ,.._ • ._. .. 1' ...... 27, and Nov. 2-3, with in· awhile -like a beauUfµl mo-~~~~' ~.~ structor Robin Huber making ment on the stage -we, Mot•I i:•• 0~ his local directing debut: a almost by accident, attain the 7~~t w.ttldll • UwtJ. children's play directed by sublime, feel true, sincere ~'::".:''c:"::"':="""'=:::'~----./1 Charles Mitchell, Nov. 30, Dec. emation, amf our performance -=====:'::::.::===~! 1, and Dec. 7-8; • 'The for a fleeting moment turns r Firebugs." March 8-9, and 1> great." 16; and the "Fantastiks," May Frank A. Pendle will again 24-25, May 31 and Jwie 1, 1974. reign over the court ol Athens In the swnmer show, direc· as Theseus, Duke of Athens. tor Mitchell attempts to cap-· In the world cf the spi rits. DEAF ACTRESS ... MOillE IW1Nos FOR PARENTS AND YDUNO PEDPlE 1.W ob/K,.,. 0, In• "fi119' ft: ro illlottr1 ,,.,._. -... rM MilMili!r o1 1110•1• ,..,,,..,, '"' .,.,.., ... by ,,,.. '"""'"'· ALL AG(S J.OllllTllO Gt~1rtl Allll1tnc11 . . ~·· Riverside County Hos~· (From Page 251 Miss Bove was asked how pecializes in teaching the deaf. sbt got her job in "Search f01 "WhiJe I was a jwtior I.here, I Tomorrow ." sa w pc:mers that said there "The p r o d u c e r John \Vere going to be tryouts f!lr Edwards asked David Hayes, "The Three·Penny Opera," she the director of NTD. if he said, smiling at the memory. could recommend a deaf ae- "I just thought I'd try out for trees for a part in the show," it. she said. "DaVid sent some -------------------- Country and Western. Sho,w .[!!! llSTl1CIED R \l~I' 11 ,...~1r•n K~Olllg.al!V•llJ P•,..nt or 1'.llt Gu11'111llII 0 The first annufll Outdoor Cauntry and Western Music Festival will take place Sept. 22 at Vail Lake, 35 miles south ol Ri verside. 1\1ark, The· l\1emphis Six and Montezwna's Re venge. "This is the first truly out- doors country and wes tern concert," said' Neil Plumber, concert producer. "It bas been done before in rock concerts. such as at Watkins Glen. but never for country a n d western ." Kris Kristofferson and his wife Rita Coolidge wi ll be among the top stars of country and western mu sic perfonning at the ei ght-hour event. first of its kind ever presented in the West ern U.S. The lake-front' facilities can handle as many as 100,000 persons for the concert, she said. Others are Jerry Reed , Waylon Jennings, Co1nmander Cody" and His Lost Planet Airmen, Arlene Harden, Brian "We'll also have space for 600 campers." she added, LORENZO'S SPAGHlnl BENDER Will Be Closed For Our Annuel V•e•tion ShortllMJ S1pt1W1ber 13 We Will Reopen The First Week In Oct. 6204 W. c ... 1 Hwy .. Newport looch However, our new: food to 90 pl•c• will be op.ell ~v ery dey in HUNTINGTON BEACH 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. " ' IH EAST 17TH .... COSTA MESA I --0----- ' SAM'S SPECIALS Selyld Monday, Tu...i,v,, Wednesday, Thursday dlllMrs inclut/6 salacl, _garlic chltM toast. choic1 of baked potato or ric1 Hawaiian RED SNAPPER . , , . , . , , • , .. , . • . . • 1.95 MAHI MAHI . , .. , ..•. , , , .. . . . . . • 2.25 GRl.LLED SEA BASS •. , . . . • . .. . • . 2.55 TOP SIRLOIN ... ,.,., .... ,.,,... 2.75 NEW YORK STEAK .• , •.. ,,,.,, .. 3.25 LOBSTER TAIL ........•..• , ... , 4.45 STEAK AND LOBSTER .. . . . .. . . . • 5.25 ·~:~ 16278 Pacific CoMt Hlghwloy, t1Untll'lfl0f' BHch 12131192·1321 luncheon • dinher • banquets . , .. U. A. 'tlTV AM DIOUTH COAIT CIHIMAS-TUl$0AYS $OC (U.ol•S.AND "'-DIHAO•lll)...OP'IN TtL l•ff P'.M. ' ''"' ,,., MllllMOf '"""" , .. ~ .. f •I vY ,.. .. , ttr '•'t'i.tTMIY tWOPI'' • • .., In c.!ttl ,., .llMll C...... 'MAlll'I" IN YOUlt. l"OCKIT" •· • .,.,,....., •. w• "'UU" c• (I'll . I ' M~dl..n.ctlt "•U.UIM?illHOUSl4" ""'""' ··~ ... II c.lffl I~) "and they will be able to start "I really was surprised that pictures and three of us audi-® 110 011( IUIDll 17 ADlilllTIO 1-~ urnn rt11y y1ry 1~ Ul'lll~ ll'ffl) moving into the area from I got the part and I just fell in tianed." noon on Friday, Sept 21." love with the theater. I wanted Before she came t o • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • There will be adequate park· to stay in it from then on." television, Miss Bo.ve said she •a Ill! -i-Ill,.,,._.,,,, ing and water facilities, food After graduation in l96B, she had toured with the NTD in a _.=..,. ..... ~ ... : ...... ._ servi<15 and conveniences. . 'ned th production called "My Third1 ~=========:::'I Entertainment will begin nt JOI e National Theater of Eye," a series or ftve vignet.l- 4 p.m. on Sept. 22, with the the Deaf, a New York-based tes about tbt lives and outlook main show Underway at 7:30 troupe that recently had been of the deaf. p.m. form~ wtder a foundati 9n Miss Bove, who can read Reservations for camper gran · lips. said she doeSn't go to space can be n1adc now at the The 14-member t r o u p.e, many plays "because too Plumer offices in Hallywood, which has anly three members many people just use words, telephane 213-4S9-1694. \vho can hear, now tours the \VO.rds, words to try to say Vail La ke is sit uated eight United States and Europe. something. You don't need to miles cast of Temecula, a presenting its own works and do that. It doesn't mean town abO;ut 30 miles south o( those of es tablished authors in anything unless you show you Riverside on Highway 395, and 1 _jajfoirmiiciaiilliiedii"iSi!GiNiiMiiMiE,ii'i' iifeiieiil iiiti.'i' iiiliiiiii-I some 4S miles north" of San Diega. m\'I• •1l")''* ~-:.~~~~:~· NOW JoNH C!~Ur" "HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" (PG) 7100 PM & 10;16 PM ' Who zaJ)ped the straps? · GEOllGE C1 SCOTT I I Mt~.· ' i" ... • , San11 An• "'"••Y n•or Ch•11m1r. Avo, 551.1022 S1n11 An~ f',.•••1 nt~r Chtpm1n Ave. ...... - Friday, Stpltmbtr 14, 1~7.3 DAILY PILOT l ~ ' TV DAILY LOG ~ , ' Saturday 1 Morning l Friday ' Evening SEmMIER 14 WA1[1tGATE HW:INCS SEPTEMBER 15 · ,_ 00 !OJ ID "'"'" j I • II ltl• S.n1t1 W1tet11t1 Ketfilp ft· tu•• till1 moiith, 111 jlllllflllltitn& will , Ot klb)ect le th1111e wlthlllt notic.t 111 I om,,,., I 7:00 I 8.lckr1rd Sllaii 6 TtnflftMt T111•dO l \11. li.J Burt Bunnr/ScflOlutic , Red 1 l t'lao...... j Brother luu 7:~0 fh1sll'._s TrttMU• ~ (!)EI) llldl HIO, rrl••M c.11=:.~ ti EMlt'• F1Ultf ~Mormon T1ben1xlt ChM Tiit LllCf Sllew' ('ti Uncle Waldo 1"' ~-8 [Ji) l:ll Yori'• C•nt Star Tt•l Doubl1 ftaturt Movlu: "flesh LN Torr" and fury'' (dra) '52-Jan Sltr!in1. :' Movlt: (C) (211r) "Wt'rt NI lony Cul!is. "Forblddtn" (dril) '54' npl•" ~) 'SS-Humphrey Bo· -l nny Curtis . .k11nne Dr11. e.rt. lf 1 Wo1ld 111 Wondtr tD I 'Fli!4~ NltltttlM In MINI El1ment11y Niwa ~rt Niljibodlood Country Music OJ Thlff Stoll'I 8:00 119 (]) Tiie Fli11tsto11t1 6:30@ @ IJ) Ho11n's Heroes ,fi' (0) a;,) Tht Add11111 F111ily 0 Movie: (90) "Hush Hush, Sweeti John Wa,nt Thtltre Chadatl•" Concl. (s.usp) '&5--Bel1e' 6 ROcky & Frlen41 Oavi~s Olivia d1 H1vil!and. ' li1J ClJ SUJH!r flitnb/Scllel11-~ i'oiiiil IT\ N tic Rntk 8 lli 'eJ ~ ,., iJ Vision On • Concentntkln Jack M1rt)losts. IAovi•: "The l•MMI Pfi10n" Men griffin Sbow An~y QrifflUt (dr3\ 'SS -Robert Fr1ncls, • Llvinl '"' I Voice o! lokyo Novi 1 Se:saine StrMt DuertTIMttrt 8:30 Sfo~T.11-::1 Co!Hb- Llttl1 R1scal1 Boodi!m E11 1ri11cy 7:001 (1)0a;)Ntn P\us 4 Bowlin1 for Delltn @ Underd11 6 Mtvie: (2hr) "Alllllln1 Dr. C&it· (l) MllVle: "Dollbl1 ko91rd(' (dta) lerhou11" (dr1) '38 -Edward G. 'SS-Rod Cameron, Jtck Kelly. Robinson. I A!1 Pr1 lre1~ttst l11st Shw Animal W•r1d 00 $ flJ " Wlllfs Mr Line! 9: ~-1 · ill m Butel! Clnidy ~ ~':t.1111 11 Junnlt Mo~le: Tl'fll Get Ya11" (mys) : ~.lfmenll Miri• . '53-Gaorge Rall, Sally Gr1y. • 6 SltlllOll .. ~:.'ii~s 1 CllJ ?.~ 't:::1Retc111 ... Pn i' rn '1111r1ct Mimr hr"' r..irtt...-. . , , ~;!=Latinos 9:30 · Sllmllfld tM S.. lilelldm • l"'!f. Qom • Spetd R1ur @ l3J loober l tM IMtl !: 7:30 IJ PREMIERE Dusty'a Tr1ll _ IHll/Scholastlc Red! ~ - 0 OJ lll...,l!!i NIW ·~· .. ,,,. ~ID 00 !!J "" ,... • d~ Q) Mo-.Je: .. IOrw It It W' (d11) j ~i E.""' . IOOO ,-i~E::.::·;::.=· I lk11ntt Ultra M•n 1 1 rf) To Tell lie Tnrftl (f1J {])The lrldy Kida .j "i'"°orld Pnu MO*: "lacktin" (1d~) '6S- , Unt111M Wefld Jean-P1ul 9elmondo, l•1n S.bers. · Estt1arie I Sat 1Me111 Htppenln1 n. Md11111 f111lly , c .. ~1 St11ctn1 JuMl11 1:00 9 Cl) P R ( M I E R ( CM«i'I (I) m SlpiuH • th• Sn pl J1mts Coca Slll'S II '°' C•· Ml!Mttts ' lucd, the superiisor nf 1 1ed·l1pt-p II.Ids t.f CMist bound, psperwork·laden state unem-I Clnt en Sa C.W ployment office. lO:H eHJ fl) Je111nlt 0 @ (j) (fOl m NEW SEASON , @(j) @D Pink hntlltr Sinton! 111d10n Movie: (t) "TIM ll'Ht 11111 0 Movil: (C) (211r) "Tnpea" J11ntt RaW" (wts) '54-WllllAI rlri~e; ~tiW'~N l1HJ ti)kio~1, Berti~~~ SN lunif ''liihn, John~ Bt1vo" D 'I) Mlltitll Milk I 0 MUH1n $ Mtwle: (211() "Ill.... ScM Iott et hubt" (mrs) '43--Tereu Wrilht. (\& l11llafd: I hbby l•!'lbero Siew • . , fji Joy 11 Sewln1 TIM Untouellllllu fT:) Mister Rtpn' Nel&fliortiol4 LI Sinon Mwll Ip •n MtWle: (C) (2hr) "Coun""-ft 11:00 (I) Spff4 IMAJ ..... (dro) '62-Wllllom Holdt• • 00 ®J IJ',l ... , ..... IW...i1ttt1Wt1blaltftln l hse 'II ' ......... B lit Cil l!DAIC -· -. R................ •·'!irt-.. IM-.. l:lt (l)CIS frldo! M•"'' (Cl 1-· ( \\ ........ , ......... (ocl· ...... .,.~ ..... e'68 -Chariton .Heston. st.... StrMl lill llll!§l lll1"DIJm nuuo l!ll(l)JoM •"' - if\ Yflth ~fib• Silly Fl•ld 'Ir..-: """" " lM Stltll and John Davidson 'star as. newly· GI M lA W9dS wllo ftce an unnefVinl prob· m McM1: "'Ml 1114 Pl Kittle"' lem-111• has ESP. (com) '49-N1riorl1 Main. ill[! lllt111•lttl M the Ill Tnt. @ l. lrW(ls' Wlbf W.W B Ill ID •IW SWOll 001 ·eo "Glcli• M~ tn" Afternoon Mll'Y Cl'lffln Show • -J: Cit)'watclien . 12:00 IJ MJ (j) ~weryth!l(I Ardllt ;~; 0!'1111 0 Movie: Pfl'ir•it ,, • S1111r" ~. 9:00 ~(I) 1]§1 m amm] Nfl (d11) '~9--Wltllam 8tndix. 1: fl AaOClatiOl AWifiil (}) Mow1t: "11.nvtl hcllM, Al6 hltr• ~Th told 0111 lean" (dr1) '40-Ronald R111111. (fi) crJ fl) NEW SWOfC looit 8 ~ Adlon ,,._,,II ... • .... : (C} "lll .......... (wtl) I Thi• Wtt• la Prt F..U..Q '54--Audle Murphy, Lori Ntlton. Futllol.Jocar •. l.aftclr M11ttfl1ilct Theatre ['l) Pro Wide hcthen Super Show I i'lit Sctne Japan111 ¥1""7 Sllow ; Ml,s,tft Ra11n' NlfCMlorillil 1:15 Nevn/Spolb: Clltl!OO]stl' Wrt6t; !:JO (llJ (]) m l'IOUU[ Ad•'• lZ:IO a · Fil Albert Rib A rom•nllc tomedy about mod-(Ill GJ NCAA f..tHD · ern marrl11•. "1111111 .f.14'.' . l• nvh10'• Ctlf I Mud1ach1 1t1U1n1 S-111111 Stmt Pre11itr del 40 1:00 ~ @ fltlarlbero CllJ fllr1I 10:00 ~ @ ®) m NEW SWOfll Ri ce . Dean M1rt!n Sllow I S.ul Tniln ~ I n mm-""'""'"'"' mNJi iil1U1ry hlle1 ,, ... ·•EW tosON Lm l:lO Mnit: "ll'ltMr Rlr (dti) '31 A11e cen Ron•lll Re111n. Milt IOll'I Mttk Circa IJ lkrit: (C) "Slatkl ....... nr1111 U111 (wa) 'SS--O•na Andrews. 10:30 Tlllt l1e• I Mi.fir h(ln" fhi'""'"' T'lllcltt z.,t F...ttmt Ftklw C-tr"""" 1:00 ~'..!..~ =· '-:!.:-i:t.:-(WU) 'St 11~1~•1~~ --:.:,. .... ~"",,S:~· ... TwlllPt Z0111 ctll~ 6 PertJ Mason CoMed; CllJSics D~ Y•~ Dyk1 fl) llktllfitld Cl'ric Thttt11 -,, Teti tfM Trvth · · fela1111 StMt (g M1t!e: ''Thre! llondQ in His m lot1tta Toi1111 TH1t11 Uft" (mys) '60--Jock M•honey. r.i:Ml-SHciH I(}) The Wor1tl Tod11 Trntlutl A"'lnd H'.ttlleld: P1t1111ts 2:30 J~ Ntt11nl ({) T1ai!s West' Eipmslon: tEJllJw.e 11:15 C11em ?• . llnte If tht WMll 11:30 ~(()CIS Ute Mtm: (Cl • liJVtlce 11 Acrfclltwt (~i-fl)i '70-Joan Crawlord. , • ~: "llM •Phf _,,. (mya) (!) lJii m lohnny Ca1111n w1 .. 1r 1ttl11u. &,,,,.... ''"l"'-ln C.1ttlt 1 '""""'" USA ttrt 111 MW Wl1' Wtst """" Trtln Mn!1: {C) "W•r of tM Wtrl~ . . !'lliPI'• Herou (;ci.fi) '53-Gene Bany. U. Ole llw ..,...d / 0 Movlt: (C) "Cal1111b' J1111 I ~ ~ ~ Mlli*od P'reHlb Sim l1ss" (Wf!) '49-Ywnn• 0.- ·Jt:• llMI: (C) .,.,,llolt Co11tttr· Ca1!0. Ho"•rd Diii! . ....,. (dt1) ··~~or~• Ardl*ln. ~It Tekes a Tllltl 1:00""' • m Movie: "Ablft Su.,icm• (tdil) D ur.(fDNIGHT SPECIAL'' 'T"3-Jo1n f:l1wtord. * SEASON'S MUSIC HIT ~ f;l)';!;::::. · IJI ml WOIPt s,.d1I Curtis :ff Wresdlnl ~~~· Ff:} Mister R111n' ftel ... -.; "Ptbl If Anis" (111)1) @) (lJ A letter Wtrld 1n\q 81k1r, Tom 9811. J · 1 °'"' ~1tchwol'll f111tl1J ! m ID Cil N.., l"I w''" Color o. iiwli: 'if"llYlllW. ltr. M1blt1" f:' S'fll!Olll' Pft1111t1 a) '60--la ltrker, Al1n Dijon. El Th• Y!rf{nl1n 1:4S8Mwll: (C) "A 111ne II lovt 1/ld 11~ ,..l)Fll111 f1tt11,. , i.ll• II Oii" {d111 '53--Jock Mi· f."'I F·rn Aitve11tum bl 1111,,..,.... hont~. Ke1n1n Wynn. ~ (j) Jim Tl1111111 htllMn: KOCE , CHANNEL 50 J;OG ,rtllCh Cllel (C) "Chfflt SOt.iffl1" Otcet .... mHe bte'IVM II dlclirt Coo1111cf '~"1nlQvtJ <lel!IO!ltl•alH llY "-P'*1 to him. JvllaCnlld. •·OOL-t.-il• CC I ''Oevbl• J1• M•tlllf TllllMU •row tC) "Sllrn-. Slr•lttY" • mor HOIJ .. l"l1tnt1•• -Cl•rdtnlno •:30 111'111(~ CNf CCJ "C""" SWfflt'' hlnh by Th1l1s'• Crvt0. 1100 CW.... C ..... IV • ..,.._ ta , ... 4:0G Nib'-:!' llottn' NfJllllMf'tlMll ICI 11'91no TVftd•Y· StPl.mblr lllfl ., Trylf!O to wnc:1er•l1nd w"-11 • th!ld 1100 p.m, ' 1t rtf'Y to do or ••• ,,, -•lhlno. 1130 Oln!llM • lCI s .. lltU .... T- 4:30 llKlrlC ClftltJlllY (CJ "' '(Irv dlY• SIPltfl'llM' Ut~ tt 1·a ~ Short 9001'.r "l ltt!t Jtc.lt Horner." 1:90 itKvt OftfltfJ c:...t, (CJ LUI• AYelot <letcrlbel "'-lt!f of "G1MlllM Short..... lie lltllflt •.~~ Jec1'. -"-'•flt PVll• wt ·the Mo!'ldn, act!Mlbtt 1°"", •• 1:3t """' •·""· 5:00 Stttll'lfJ Slrtet ICI Wlllfl II II.Ml· 1:>0 llle hi"-CCI "lr-¥11 ,, cttnly t11ttl• to rain. Lui• '"lo fflt s .. ton" SM 11111'! Mo 11 t 1 ,\ll~td •Ml too'• 11\ltl<lrv .... W..1, s~ \Ott! .. ,,. , m ' ' I . ... . . . r I • -· .. ,. '" ' ; I ,., I '·· , .. " :.•. ... ' " ,, r;. ·.' V .• .,. ')• ,. " •• ., , . .. , " ; ·1 .. ' " '" ,. • I ! ' . • ' I • ' t • • I ( l I • I ·• • . . . . . . . ' . DAI LY PILOT . . . ' '· • • l 'Cactus Flower' Has Gree n Thumb Country Joe McDonald , lead singer of Country Joe a nd the Fish, will per· form tonight throu~h Sunday at the Four Muses cabaret · theater. The biggest hit was an anti-war song "I Feel Like I'm Fishing to Die." He will perform with his new group, All Star Band, at 8:30 and 11 p.m. night· ly .-.; 302 Avenida de La Estrella, San Clemente. Reservations, 492-4909. By TOM BARLEY Of I ... o.\ly Pl.., Sletf Any gardener will tell you that you 've won more than half the battle if you provide the right soil. congenial sur· rouudngs a n d receptive climate for the plants you just might be able to persuade 10 share your life. Whoever chose the l·lun· lington Beacl! Playhouse as the site on 1vltich the lush ''Cactus Flower" might be persuaded to display i t s substantial blossoms chose well indeed. A clear case of green thumb, you might say. Abe Burro\vs' haray peren- nial of a .play sported some particularly fine foliage open- ing night at the Barn with an enthusiastic audience getting to the verge or what could have been and should have been a standing ovation for a Wliat to Do, 11'11e,.e t o Go Solvang Has Danish Days St<:P'f. 15--16 DANISH DAYS -31th annual Danish Days. featuring 1nusic. Scandinavian costumes, street dancing.acbleskive. breakfasts. Many free events. SEPT. 14 • 30 COUNTY FAI R -46th annual Los Angeles County Fair takes place in Pon1ona daily from Sept. 14-30. Event offers parade. horse shows. rodeo. horse racing. arts and crafts show. home shows. garden and carnival. Senior citizen days are Sept. 17 and 24. THROUGJI SEPT.• 16 SHAKES PEARE -24th annual Shakespeare Festival has alternating performances of "'The f\'lerchant of Venice." "T\VO Gentlemen of Verona" and "King Lear" in Old Globe Th eatre, BaJboa Park, San Diego, June S.Sept. 16. TllROUGH SEPT. 16 ICE SllOW -Shi pstads and Johnson Ice Follies. featuring Olympic skater Janet Lynn. takes place a1 the Forum night- ly through Sept. Hi. Tic'kets for all performances. 8 p.m. Tuesday through Fridays and 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and l and 5 p.m. Sundays, are available at the Forum box office and Ticketron agencies. SEPT. 16 PHOTOGRAPHY -A one day showing of photographs by David Dows, a Cal State Fullerton graduate and currently a Peace Corps volunteer in Honduras, will take place Sunday a t the Muckenthaler Center, 119 Buena Vista Dri ve, Fullerton. Hours: II a.m.-5 p.m. Dows photographs reflect everyday life throughout Honduras. SEPT. 17-18 CIVILIZATION -John Kenneth Clark's 13-part series "Civil- isation" is being shown at Southern Cali fornia College ()n Mondays at 7:30 p.m. and Tuesday at noon in the college auditorium. The screening is sponsored by sec and the Mesa Verde Library. The hour-long color films are open to the public free. Some of the showings and dates are : "The Great Thaw," Sept. 17-18 ; "Romance and Reality," Sept. 24-25: "Man-The Measure of Things,'' Oct. 1-2 ,and "The He ro as Artist," Oct. 8-9. SEPT. Z0.30 EGGPLANT FESTIVAL -First annual Eggplant Festival. featuring art. graphics. recipes, handy hiqts at the Little Spaghetti Factory, 11613 Santa Monica Blvd., West Los Angeles. SEPT. 21·23 ART FESTIVAL.. -Catalina Art Association presents its annual Catalina Festival of Art. A dinner dance Friday night in the Casino will be followed by two days of arts and crafts displays and demonstrations. Amateurs and professionals wi ll compete for prize money. It is a non-juried show. SEPT. 21-30 PETER PAN -Fountain VaUey Community Theater returns "Peter Pan" to the stage, starring Joel Strauss and Sharon KeMedy. Reservations. 962·5189. Tickets, $1. Matinees, :J p.m. Sept. 23 and 30: evening performances, 8 p.m. Sept. 21, 22, 28, 29, 30. SEPT. 22 COUNTRY J\1USIC -Kris Kristofferson and Rita Coolidge v.•ill join \Vaylon Jennings aud Jerry Reed as headlines for the first annual Outdoor Country and \Vestern Music Festival, which will take place at Va il Lake, 35 miles south of River- side and eight miles cast of Temecula. off Highway 395. Ad- vance s<iles are $8.5-0 and day-of-event tickets are $10, all al'Hih1blc ~;t Lhc usual ticket agencies. SEPT. 23-30 FES'flVAL.. -San Diego's Ca rbril!o Feslival, a weeklond event. comn1emorating the discovery of San Diego Bay, t;1kcs place Sept. 23·30. SEPT. 26 OPERA STA lt -Joan Sutherland, world renown soprano, 11·ill open the Claren1ont College celebrity series at 8:15 p.nl . Sep!. 26 in Bridges auditorium. Miss Sutherland will be assisted by Richard Bonynge. pianist. Tickets available at Bridges. the usual ticket agencies. Information. (714) 626-4523. THROUGH SEPT. Z9 FREE SHAKESPEARE -Shakespeare•$ "As You Like It" is the Free Shakespeare Fesival's ini tial offering. Both parking and seating is free at the Pilgrimage Theater, on a first come. firs t serve basis. Doors· open at 7:30 p.m. and the perforn1ance is 8 p.m. nightly except Monday through Sept. 29. 2580 Cahuenga Blvd., Los Angeles. (Across from ~Iollywood Bowl). SEPT. Z9 DANCE CONCERT -Gloria Newman Dance Company will perform at 8:30 p.m. Sept.· 29 in the Orange Coast College auditorium. Admission is free. Miss Newman and her dance company will be in residency a t OCC for six weeks. SEPT. Z9 • 30 FALL. FESTIVAL -St. Andrew's Priory in Va lyermo, An- telope Valley has a two-day festival, staged by the Bene- dictine monks of the priory on their 500-acre ranch and mon- astery. An opera, art exhibition, Hopi Indian crafts and dances, ceramics and Pottery displays and demonstrations and six cafes with international menus are included In the event. It takes place Sept. 29-30. \ IBROUGH SEPT. EUR!EKA -Burton's Tropical Gold Mine, Rosamond, offers public tours of gold mi ne and museum, Thursday through Monday and legal holidays, 10 a.m. -4 p.m. North of Lan- caster. -... --" ~-· SrAotuM ·J .~· ... .&.!lilll..L..L.J '"'--"-'-' "HU.VY TIAfflC" ... "MYRA lllC:KINltK r IXI "SOUND OP MUSIC'" ... "CHAILOnrS Wll"' "SLAUGHTER HOUSI I " fll ... "Tiie' HarnMI ..,_.....,., fl) "LIVE AND LIT Dll" .,, ''THE MECHAN IC" Cl'GI "l'A,IR MOON" ll'GI ... "HA.OLD & MAUDE" "NAIUtY JN You• "0C.KIEt ·• ,,.G, ... "IVl'RYTNING YOU EVElt WANT'IO TO KNOW ASOUT sex• (It) "A mo1terpiece. Sovo9ely funny, II ;, 101i'e wilh o poinl of view, ! ond ii moke1 for fresh, surprfsing relevonl enterlolnmenf. Alon • Price ho\ conlribv!ed brilliant music interlude5. lind\Oy Ander- son's~d;1ection is o mojesiic ochieve menl. The mos! 1ignificon!ly importont motion picture I hove ~een in o long, long lime," -•., ••""· """'Y•"o..lt, "•- THE IOtoK.· RUN CO'lfDf HIT '' 'O lucky Man !' has a ceaseless pow er of invention and surprise.'' C0'1ffl0 THE ' JCREENI •' 1:ft A FRAHKOVJCM PAODOCTION 40 Clir a1:s 1" : '-Ullmann.1 lelly Uwlli ' -Albert ! Barnes •~il11181 ltl\llS JPOI • •• GokJI• .. _ -£11. A'"'' "IUm l P:LIQ_All_ FRIE" J ..... c.t. S.t. & ...... 1 ,.,M. Wffkclltl Kuu Like To Ask A11a y I o fXCLUSIVE ORANG E ~OUNTY ENGAGEM ENT •· s....:.i.. ~ ~If -.-.· t- lrl-.Mt ~If ~-· c E""-~"' .,....,. fo""'' it 1-\A~'• , ...... "'-·- • • Aatoh R1c1."'Cl"~~ · n ' .~1 Roberts · 1\rttiur Lowe· Helen M1rren ·Dandy NlchOls ·Mona WaShboome P11·~1. ·.: ... ,_-1•_ ·,· .. :,·1 11 ,1'J L:indsavAr1ue1son .~rll\' Dav1dShetw1tt·UrlC*1trrl.lndsayAnderS011 Ai.'1,mor ~,, ;,;1· ".' ll')S. F~m:.Q"i11!\Jt Souriatiac~ Oll.WJmel'BfoS.Fleoortis cll(J1;,~ -..................... ·-----o. _ c_ .. _c_....,. ...,. *ALSO Thi1 2nd HIT s·rA•tlMG ~::~ :::",.::""' in "STI R YARD llUIS" * I clever caat who so ably ex· ploited every second of hilari- ty in a play studded with theni. ORANGE c 0 u NT 'V au- diences being the apathetic lot they invariably arc. that lapse in appropriate appreciation. will be overlooked in this review in the cases of all but two members of director Kent Johnson's impeccable cast. John Lougtunan and Beth Titus just have lo be those two exceptions and that s1)Iendid opening night c h a in p a g n e would have been left on ice a little longer if this brilliant pair had been given the cur· lain calls they deserved. "(ACTU5 l'LOWI•" ~ A com~v by Alie lhlf'°"''' dlrtl:te<t l>V Kent j ohn1ot1, lec;l\lllc.al director Burl H•••l1>11I011, •t•!I• m•n•o•r· Frank Ttrdlfl. preltflittd FrldlYI 11'1 cl $1rurd1y1 '' t :30 11 trie HU11lnol011 eeocll Pltyhouse. ?110 Mein SI.I. Hun- 1!ng1on e11cri. R•s.tr11•11ons ™r· THI (AST ~ Or. Julian Wl11t1on . , Jl>tln 1..oughman Sttl)ri..nlt OlcklnlOl'I Bttll Tiius TOlll Simmons ... LeOOnnt deBtrro. •oor SUlllY•n • • ROii LOl'l9 Mrs. Dlcbon Our1n! . , M•rv MOclltno Hervey Gr.enfl1ld • . . Hank Sorkin Arturo ilnc:hei , ... G11>rltl MOCUnlk1r BO!lcrlll'• Sprlnonme , Carol•C•ml!bllll Wall11"/Mu1lc Lo,,er ,Jlm c:;r1m,1cw, T1r.-.nc1 Mclntvrt Flower." you jtiSt have lo pick out the nnn:c l.f 11 ank Sorkii1 ror his first class portrayal of J-larvcy Greenfield . the bewildered roue who rC'alizes long before plny's end thnt ~citing invo lvfd in the good dentist's sex lire wasn't worth the fr~ dental service that got hint i11to the act. . Like Lough man. he 1n1- proves with every outing, 'This critic's only rt•gret is that Han~ ,was unable in_ this play to utilize the Armenian accent divan at the drop of a female that fractured this critic and eyelid. manv others in one of this! THEIR NO.HOLDS-barred clever actor's earlier com- confront.atione were the high mitments. sct:ne and thal tempo workl'd like a chJrin ~·ith ··cactus Flower": Burrows' punchy dialogue thrives on lhat kind of form.ut £ron1 a \veil driUed cast \vho gave Johnson the kind of con1eback you d1·com uhout. If 50 percc.r1t of our com- 111unity theatt'rs could put oo th.is kind of entertainment you might eonccivably lure this ntusic critic away from the concert hall . "Cactus Flower" was that good . The sho\v con! inues for four more weekends at t h e. playhouse. 2110 1\1ain St .. Hun- t i n g ton Beach , \vith perforn1:1nces Frid.'.lys and Saturdays. They should have been given the freedom of the city before anyone got to taste the bubhly. Miss Tilus for her flawless depiction of St ep ha n ie Dickinson. the not-so-<1!oor nurse \vho packs plenty of passion behind the pince-ne;· · and Loughman for hi s hard \Vorking portrayal of Dr. J ulian \Vins ton, the dabbling dentist \vho'll trade his necrlle and drill for a duet on the water marks of a play that DIRECTOR JOllNSON hits was packed with them. And a fast pace froin the opening Beth gets this critic"s star or,------------, the nlgbt for a hii>-swing ing ~----------, night club session that made \llll~~=~=~;~ll A Now Film Trilogy •.. l •er coMlderH pulli119 off • 1fll•ll :tea111 7 lef•re you do, ... "HOLDING" "A11 excello11t. harrowing docu• "'""ta ry ef you119 Afllerican1 obrood." Kevl11 Thoflltn, L.A. l ime• '"' "OIL SPOIL" "' "EXPRESSION II" COMPLITE SHOWS 7:)0 It 9:JO Eocll Eve ~i 119 THE SURF THEATRE P.clfic C-t H'w•y at !itll St. Hw11tl11po11 lffch -!IJ6-9]9' you "'onder if thi s turned-on broad could possibly be the schoolmarmish nu rse who ca1·- ried her name in the previous scene. Looking down the cast list of this magnificent ' · C a c t u s lllliiitl'l""'11111 ~,! fR'0o '·~~.' .~ - BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR .,, HAROLD and MAUDE '~ •• easily the best movie so far this SOUTH COAST PLAZA I Wlulays-S:lCI·': »t :lei 111/Swi-11,..:t:>f.J:Jt J:•t:M EXCLUSIVE ORlllGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT llillBI -'"''o"'"'"''•·-• 1· ' '"' ,...,_, ·:!>.rf. ,, " And now the 1novie ... "_:perhaps the most remarkable film to emergesincr C«iJB.DeM.illefounded Hollywood." -VERNON SCOTT. UPI Univets.11 Pi:t ura """ Rdlert Slig\wod -A J'l.IORM'AN JEWISON Fitrn "JESUS CHRISI' SUPERSTAR" TED NEEl£Y·CARLAN!BSa< • Y\WNE ELLI MAN iARRY DENNEN ·11...:.._.~Bna:• ~n.Jcwhoo " ttllWlll • UTID G • Try\ Saturday's Ne~s Qfz We Dare Y ou I "OOLLJ.as·· Ill.I -THE LUXURIOU S NEW BALBf/A THEATRE -~~ [pIY1ll-. w;J)W.\li:;l IN THE LIFE AND TIMES OF ~ ll?~ Ope ns Tuesday! !AUSIC (;"ENTER PRESE-ffiTiOMS- fro m the Republ ic of Chin• TAIPEI TAIWAN br a1r1ngeme~1...-i1n HARO LO SKAW NATIONAL~ Qf~A\'lrel.ISAfiR'E e..,.-,f/ID 8 PERFORMANCES Mu°C CTNT[l:. s.p1. 1• 1t1n1 ;>I S1pt. 23 •I l :a OAHMANSON S•pt. 21 I H lH1:AH([ Meli •I 2:30. fo< Info c11t: 21 ~) 826-721 1 NOW SHOWING< "A Separate Peace" "***l/2" '"One l)f The &e5t Fllm5 Abo11t Y oulk Ever Made" Re-. Reed OIM A ,\tOTil'J'\! Plf'TI .fl[ Tit.\T f0.£HR l\lTS ntt: TtW.:U:SS JOY or ORK.IN-'l N\OCL\U. ........ ~._.,, ... ".''"'-........ FraOCO z.eFFlreuJ HISflR51 lllM ~1--.CI -~O.U:O & llJtlt I" ·eroTtter sun s1STer Moon· M1:(llJEEN/ lllla1:UIJAW THE (if:rAWAY -TOGETHER AGAIN, FOR THE FIRST TIME · NOW-AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS ' ' . ! 1\1 11\ (J \I fl\ >;:.~~O~ Al ADA-.A~ <.._Q',lA "4 FSA • 9794 141 RATED PG JAMES colilRH··MICHAEL SARRAZIH TRISH VAH !>EVER£· WALTER PIDGEOH "HARRY IH 'rt>UR POCKET" I .AtaaUlUR ~!IOlf • w.l.r.,, f... )A\T" !)Allll)" ~\.C.IWIAH ~ il!)ICAtJSTIH ,,oclli:lld ,,.,~'r~~!~I~ • !o1N-t>l0$CHllRI"! PlUS THIS SECOND HIT I r ' I 1 l F1 is ra 27 )'<l th cl: sh .. "' tu wt w: re "' ell cl '" "I M b• lb N· SC m gl fa "' "' lu In " lb bf la N ot It oc p tl lu pl ot ti "' .j w ~ p ... 'ii ir I Richard Benjamin Looks ·~ Future, But Talks of Past • By LOUISE SWEENEY cllf'h•• khnct Mtftltw Strvlc• ST. PAUL de VENCE, France -Richard Benjamin is slttlni' at an empt)t restau- rant table giving hfs probably 27th Int.Mew of the day , and you have to hand tt to the guy. He manages to act as though he's Just dropped In to chat around the kltchtc table, shirt-sleeves style, about something you both happen to be interested in: "moom pic- tures." He is weari.ng a blue-and- white-checked cotton shirt. with short sleeves, slacks, a really disarming grin, and his newest ornament: a serious, dark moustache w h i c h changes the race familiar from "Goodbye, Columbus," "Catch '22," and "Diary of A Mad Housewlle." life is married to actress Paula Prentiss. says that as actors "we start off the ~ way. We start out in the same place, whl ch is 31ways, listen, real life. That's it. There isn't anything else. How can acting be anything but saying this Is the way it is in real life? "C see other people acting and I see how it W(lrks and I see where tbey get it from. With Paula, t don't see how she goes to the depths of the emotion !!he does. We start (with real life) '311d then she does some other kind of proc- ess. I say, 'What are yoo doing now, are yotJ thinking abou t your father?' THEATER PERSON "She used t(l do harmful things to get her In an (acting ) state, painful things, really er· traordl nary, which she no Speaking ()f the moustache longer does. I mean she would he say~, "It does change, sc;im~ do anything ir a scene things in my face, doesn t 1t? demanded a certain kind of Not angles, but a balancing. · emotion. She broke her ankle some kind of balancing. The in Hawaii in a film called 'In moust>ache seems to h a~e Harm's Way' getting herseU given the lower part . .s>f his \\'hat she thought Was ready face a more commanding ap-for the scene She certainly pear~nce than hi~ som~tlmes \vas ready for. the scene ... nebbishy roles 1n p1ct~es (British critic) Kenneth Tynan have allowed. And the voice, said in his review that 'In this In person, matches. It is a picture, wh.ich is mediocre, resonant baritone, rather than there Us just one performance, the n er v o u s , · lncr~ulous. by Paula Prentiss,• and then higher register of his best he mentioned the very scene in tnown roles. which !!he had just done this NEUR011C PARTS "Playtng the wacks in some other pictures you got up into this," his voice cracks half an octave higher. "Because the penon is not in touch with themselves, I mean they're having these Interior neurotic problems ... I've enjoyed the other parts I've done but I tl>ought I've gotta shape this up, l'rn ...me a kit ol the kind of stuff I've -(before). I want to get loto other things." I One of the other things he's gott~ into is the role of a dap- per, ice-<:ube cool villain in ''11le Last of Shella." a W amer Brothen thriller 1bot in ihe South of France. I • I Beolamin, who In privste • l/srJ WOl:/ltj Allen's ''lnrytill•t Yo• Alw9J1 WHtMTobtwAkot S•L .. " MitAndr.wt IN 2NO 10P ATTIACTION A MUSICAL ADAPTATION ~OF MAAK TWAIN'S lV.llJ. .. Sa-' (0) thing to get bemll up for It. But now she can get herself up without doing · tbat kind of thing. "You koow, I would never go that far. I would jus\ come home at the end of the day and say I couldn't do the scene. I'll tell you an example, for a heavy scene Paula will not sleep much the night before. She feels more raw ends, you know. But I say, "1 gotta get to sleep, I gotta big day tomorrow'!'' Sbe siys; "I have a big day tomorrow, I can't go to sleep!" Paula Prentiss and he met at Northwestern • University, where the y were classmates. He majored in speech, although theater ,was his love: ..... I A ' ' . ..::..--=. ..... _ MAii" ~-­--.. R1VAN O'NEAL Pl11 8"rfR.,...;h~ ''Tlte Ml• Wllo Lovetl (at · Da11ch11" ' ' FROM F ashion-lslana N ewpor.t Beach • . . . . . RICHARD BENJAMIN'S NEW Lc;>OK "You wer~ not allowed to be a mindl ess theater person, so 1 had 80 hours of liberal arts, 100 hours: of theater." That was 'llftCr his . first role, lfS Scrooge in a Christmas play at P.S. 87 in New York. Mr. aad Mrs. Benjamin's dual interest In acting began professionally on their honey'· moon, which was spent on location in Europe where her first film was being shot. They have appeared togelher on televishm in the sitcom series "He and She." The "he" of that program feels Uie short- 1ived aeries would ~have a warmet• reception ti1w In an era when there'• m o re sophistication JX>S!lble in TV series. DANCING PIG "Y(lll have to remember we were on at the end (lf the farm shows. We followed 'Green Acres,' and when we'd tune in just before our program, there was this pig dancing, a little pig was dancing! Then our show would come on. Now f0lks who loved the pig dancing are not going to go for our show ... I think we would have probably had a better shot at it today ." Benjamin's career began to rocket shortly after "He aOO · lxclosl•t AIU Sho,.lot She" with his bull 's -eye performance in L a r r y Pee rce's "Goodbye, Colum- bus." Speaking of shooting that film he said, '"It was like being a,t camp, we all loved each other a lot." He also speaks warmly of his filmmaking experience v.·ith director Mike Nichols on ''Catch-22." Richard Benjamin was asked how he came up with the wooderful Cheshire Cat smile be wears for bis'i'ole in that film. "Oh, that's Mike's smile. I really like him, he's one' of the best to worlc with that there is." Richanl Benjamin still sees Hfe through a "Catch-22" lens some times . "l mean Watergate, look at ii, it's all 'Catch-22' come true." Richard Benjamin's very promising career ~ had a couple of slumps:' "Marriage of A Young Stockbroker" and "Poctnoy's Complaint." He is asked if he thinks 1 n retrospect that accepting the starring role in the tasteless fi<>P "Portnoy" was a mistake. He answers. "Gee, I can't look at it in retrospect because that picture was not a successful · picture. I mean. I only want to be in hits. I don't want to be in any pictures that aren't bit!." He Ia:ugh.5. "I'm no dummy" "JESUS CHRISf ~· ·PG· Symphony , . Tickets Available The next weeks will be the final opportunity to purchase season tickets for the Glendale Symphony's 1973.74 series or concerts at current prices. All single ticket prices for the season tater will be substantially increased as will season tickets for the 1974-75 series of concerts. Music Director C a r m en Dragon ~augurates t h e orchestra's Slst season in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of the Los Angeles County Music Center on Saturday, Oct. 27 with an all-Tchaikovsky pre> gram featuring pianist Earl Wild. Five other monthly con- certs are scheduled thrpugh April, 1974. Season tickets to the s.i.J:-con· cert series offer t h e subscriber six concerts for the price of five plus guaranteed seat locations a n d op- portunities to meet t h e orchestra, conducklr, and f'rldat, StPltmbfr 14, 1973 Fi.Im Series Opens · Wit : 'Whispers' Th.. µ,j,g sJ.i.F:Ilm Society in assoclatloo with the Art TbMtre ~t_i, Will open Its Fall 1973 lnternatiooal F'!lm~ ~Art Theatre, Long Beach, Wedn.,. day. • . elve fllrils wiU be shown with the programs c;hafta:J..6g each 1Wednesday. Shows y:ill begin at 7 p.m. MOOcfay ~ saturday and at 5 p.m. on Sundays. Each malof film will be accompanied by a second feat~ or.prfze-winnl.ng short subject. Tbit opening• film will be Lngmar Bergman's "Cries and ~pert,'~, 'Tlils 1rill ~ followed by Bernardo Bertolucci 's "The Spider's Stratq:em;" Richard Attenborough's "Young Winshm;" M~ Mizrahi's "1 Love You, Rosa :" Alain Tanner's ''La1JSalamandre;'' and Stanley KtJbrick's "A Clockwork ,OJ;tmge." 1 Later Ldis Bunuel's "The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie;" Gillo Pontecorvo's "The Battle of Al· giers:" WUliam Fruet's ''Wedding in White;" Claude Lelouch's "Money,•Money, Money;" Milos Fonnan's ''Taking Off;" and Philippe De Broca's "The King of Hearts" ,will be shown. Tickets wlll be $2 at the door. 1bey will be discount· ed to $1:> for all 12 shows, $14 for nine, and $1 for four shO\VS. For additional in{ormaUon, call 213-431). 4718. DAILY PILOT :Jl CJ1anni ng r ' Returns In 'Lorelei, The box office of the Shubert Theatre, Century Cl- ty, opens 1'-fonday for tbe general sale of tickets for Carol Channing In her new musical hit "Lorelei." 1 Matinees during the seven week run will take place on ' Wednesday and Saturday• 1t 2:~ p.n1., excep t the openlnf' week when the schedule wlll include a Thursday matinee instead of Wednesday and Sunday evening performances at 7:30 p.m. There will be AO Monday performances. Even-- ing performances Tue9day through Saturday will begin at 8:30 p.m. soloists. "----------ilr:~"' .. ~r.i1' "Lorelei" is an up-dated version of Carol Channing's previous musical hit "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes." Seventeen new songs have been added to the musical and songs from "Blondes" are also highlighted. They include "A Little Girl From Llttle Rock" and of course, "Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend." LA Philharmonic Gives 3 More Bowl Conce11s Although its 1().week, :ID-con- cert season at Hollywood Bowl is completed, the I..os Angeles Philharmonic will perforpl three more Umes at the out· door amphitheater -Sept. 19, 21 and 22 -before returning to its winter home at the Los Angeles Music Center. Jazz trumpeteer Carl "Doc" Severinsen joins the OfChestra as soloist Sept. 19 in a concert of pops favorites. Leonard Slatkin will conch1ct th e Philharmonic in pieces by Rossini, Falla and Bernstein and Severinscn will perform Lovelock's Qmcerto for Trum- pet and Werle's "Rhapsody for Now." ' Sevcrinsen ls known to millions of late-night television viewers as leader (lf the "Tonight S b o w ' s ' ' NBC Orchestra and one of the entertaining 'personalities that nightly surrounds Jo h n n y Carson. "Doc" has played with the Tommy Dorsey, musicians. _ 2 •1u1 IOUffl, DF JM Dll'ltQ. """ • NOW SHOWING • e All FAMILY SHOW FOR FIVE BIG DAYS e • CAMPOS • MOTOR HOMIS • • TIAIUU e CAMP'INO IQUIPMINT • e IOATS • SPOITING GOODS e • VAH CONVllSION5 e DAILY INTIUAINMINT • Af ANAHEllll STAOll.IM UNDER TME·llG "A" ltATEU.A •STATE COLLEGE 81..VD. SHOW HOURS: S-11,.n1.W~1 11 ....... 11,.-. lfotvrMp 11 ........ ,. .. ~ ADULTS $2.00 -JUNIORS $1.00 SAVE 50' :t' llCI ·VU IYI• ALSO •THIS HIT e v ONUCll-1--·-nan.-----·--_,. ---u--. This we;k GEORGE c.scorr FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANCE .(PG)1-moji,,_,_ .... OKL HOMA , CRUDE Also Ornor Shorif ond Dyon Camon in "THE BURGLERS"· #1 #2 c:-.., t.rCNe.AI ·-#J.M.-... (.;.._...., & l•wH.DAlOF~· ~.~.~~I " ,"lift' ... t1 T(mtsof Judvtloy lffn" STE RE I -'4 Plus Robert Mitchum in "THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" ·R- SICOND HIT ALSO BURT REYNOLDS RAQ\JEL WELCH IN "FUZZ" -PG - ·1. 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HaYe IO -lo belleYe (CB~16&S.5) $695 '69 BUICK Skylark ~·Dr. H.T .• V.,, autorNllc lraMm!sslon, ••• CondUlonlng, radkl, t>N le•. ~· "eerlno, power brakes, WSW !Ires, and v.,,yl toll, (YPSOODI v.,, au1om11tic, R./H, POWl!'I'" 1tnrl119, POW1!• bralr.e•, while s'<lewaU tlrn, 1u10- maric 1emi;er111.....e conlrol, 50-JG p0w. er SNI\, lilt wne.,, POWi!• 11t1ten11a, and '"'~· $'1 8'9 5 .,. • NEWPORT 2 DI. H.T. 1/1, 111"'"1etk. rKio. IMM*r. PO*el° stiw-IPG & br1k-. WSW, 1Lr cond., ¥111yl lop, CZSY622l $1395 , ss95 '67 OLDSMOB.ILE CUTLASS SUPllMI VI, a utom&Ut, power steerlno & brat:ts, radio, l\NI~, WSW, 1lr c:ondltlonlflll. ( :JJ101n 10tn2) • se95 I • ' ' DISCO UN 01'1' MANUl'ACTUlle•·s IUM•STIO ltlTAIL l'tllCf: Sir. No. lQ2HOCH875090 NOTICE! Atl•1 Chrysler Plymouth now has fi1cilifies for strvlce on ALL MOTOR HOMl!S r19ord- le11 of size, by experienced moter home .,,._. chanlcsl WARRANTY work on lntemi1tforMil oncl Dodge truck .choNla. BOTH VEHICLES SUIJICT TO l'lllOR $ALE PRICE AND DISCOUNT VALID 'TIL 10 P.M., SUN .. SEPT. 16th • . . ' THE GA~ '73 "GO.ANTWHIRI'' SCOUT AT AN UNllLllVAIU LOW PRICE ' Plus Tall' And lic•n1• ' H1 .. Se...,._ 9f lxcltl .. Ntw '73 SCOUTS RIGHT 'NOW ·AT ATLAS INTIRNATIONAL • . ' Your R1cr11 tion1I Y1hicl• He•dqt.1 •l"t•" JSIS6CtiD<4Jl10 • . . I ' • ~ ' . . . ' ' ' ' " ' • , . I t I ' for 1974 Thursday, September 13 • Cl ' I Frid.,-, Srptembtr 14, 1~73 DAILY PILOT 3S - READY tfO · GO .) t ON DISPLAY - 1970 CADILLAC ·-- . ' COUPE DE Vll...LE. Gold/beige vinyl top/beige Interior, leather, full jlO\\'Cr, factory air, till \\'heel. IORded. t380AGCI 1971 OLDS l OROHADO )'cllo\\•/\vhite vinyl lop/ gold interior, full J)O\Ver, fllCt.ory nir, till, i;lereo, dual front &eat. loaded. i325C.'XD) · 1971 CONl ltlENTll Cl!l ,, &au tiful . gold, .W /1>e1ge • v1ity1 t9}), _gold "Jiea tti:ef1 interlOi'. (1111 po"•cr, factory air, 11te~. dOot , · locks, tilt wheel, exceptional throughout. 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Exquisite byzantine gold with while vinyl top & plush.luxurious gold & tapestry interior, Factory air conditioning, fUll power, tnt & teles~pic steering, AM/FM radio, wsw tires, & many other deluxe factory convenience extras. Absolutely beautiful & shov,..- toom new as can be, (&:l3EYY) " ' A SOLID SHIELD OF SERVICE W"rth Every Sale Larges~ Selection of Ute Model . I , CADIIJ,ACS • in Orange County ' I I 1972 EL DORADO CONVERTIBLE. Exeeutive black, black vinyl top, black full leather, full power, factory air. at.ereo, door locks, sentinel, every deluxe extra, new tires, etc. {348FVY) 1972 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE. Ennlne '"hite/blue vinyl top/ blue intcrior, factory air, full po'ver, tilt "'heel, Afd/FM radio, e tc. (188919) 1973 BUICK REGAL DELUXE Century J-la11itop Coupe with only 13,900 milt>s. Ern1inc \\'llile \vith black vinyl top & black vinyl interior. PO\\'Cr steering, b1-akes. Fa<'10ty air cond., auto. 1rans., radio, heater, "·sw, sj)Ort v.tiecls & sho,,Toom fresh. 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Extr9fl'ltlY low mllC$. lltlTWllnlrig l11<;lory warr. 12571111 COSTA MISA SALE PRICE s1999 SALE' PRICE ' •' ;J,I [io]LY PI LOT <=-Friday , )fp!r,,.titr 111, 197.) The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange Coast • Annountt!f1'111th •• , • • . ~ S24 ' ... , ... • Mobile HoM.1 lot Soi. ' .• ' 125 • 149 /wfornobi~ . • . .. • , . 950 -990 ~h & Mu•n'IC ((IU!PfT"-"" 900 • 914 f1npbyn~11 ' . . • • •. 700 . m finonciol . • • • • • • • ' 100 . m DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED '"ADS· ,,!Wfl(lk. . . . . . , . . ~2S • S"9 Pih ord ~in . . . . . . ISO • 8'9 Rtal f1101or Geiw1ol. • • • . 150 • 199 H<MC~ '°' Sole • • • • • 100 . 124 l~t &. ~id ' • . . sso . 514 Mo.!td><mdi~. . •. 900 . 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] \ One Call service ' Fast Credit Approval a.r.tol ' ' • • • • • • • • • JOO • <1199 k'->k aod ln1tH;<tion , . . 575 • S99 Set¥1(tS ond Rtpoi.1 · . 600 . Vl9 . 915 • 949 ~-------.-------- General Gener et ' l I I . Jl11c/a !J6/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Cuslon1 ~-bdrn1 ., 41h bath home on lagoon. f'ully equipped island kitchen, \vaterfront fan1ily roon1, billiard roon1 ... __ $245,000 Linda Isle Waterfront Lo vel y 4 bdrn1., 41fi ba. home with swin1- n1ing pool. pier & slip, panoramic view of n1ai11 chcuinel. Lge. fa1nily rm. \V/space for billiards & fa n1 ily dinin g. \Vaterfront for1nal dining & living rm. $275.000. Linda ls!e Waterfront Custom 4 bdr111 ., !) bath ho111e \vi th vie'v of main chann el. Soft colors, rich \vood panel· in g & 3 frplcs., give a \\1ar1n intitnate feel- in g. \Vaterfront instr. sui te has dbl. bath, sitting area, vie\v decks, swiming pool with jacuzzi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $295,000. For Compltte lntormation On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Or., Suite t, N.8 . 675-6161 I General ' General I I I I ** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.* ASSUME 6'/•% LOAN! TURTLEROCK First day on 1narket. Beautiful \Vood panel- ed family r1n .. choice decor & lovely patios are features in this near-ne\v 4 BR .• 21h Ba. best Broadinoor 1nodel. G real financing & value. \Vo n't last at $57,000. "Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ''Overlooking Big Fanyon Cc.untry Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General ~ener,al SHOWS LIKE A MODEL l:lu rry before it's gone! 2 BR., den. custon1 patio & landscaping; arbor. floodlight s & sprinklers. 1947 PT. CARDIFF', Harbor Vie\v Hoines. OPEN SUN. 2-5. $65 ,950. Rus s Flynn. BLUFFS-FIRST TIME OPEN Let me shO\V you this charming couple home, professionally decorated . Don't \va it! See today~ 426 VISTA SUERTE, OPEN SUN . 1-5. SS0.927. Muriel Barr. SPACE FOR REAL LIVING If yo u need a good 8 room . 2 ~r:.t bath Broad- 111onr I home. drop in at 2722 \VJNDOVER (Off Goldenrod1 CdM. SUN. 1-5. S97.500. JV!ary Lou l\·larion . EASTBLUF F Sharp Lusk 3 bd1·n1 ., ideal pa rk Joe. \Ve reco111n1end th is highly! Come by SUN. 1-5 & ser for your.elf. 2626 8,\SSWOOD. ~69 .000. J in1 ?Yluller. BACK BAY VIEW ~'.ilOO Sq. Ft. in thi s f'un f<lmily l10111e fealur- ,tng s~p.vrate 111aster suite & livin g r m. & den-d ining rn1 .. 4 BR . & 4 baths. 5125.000. WATERFRONT BARGAIN Baylron L 5 l::lR., pie t: & float : 2 fl·:l lot s. Spec. financing. Write .vour ter1nS-seller ~'ants offer or trade. Choi ce opportunjty. $<lli .001t Paul Quick . OCEANFRONT-VIEW CONDOMINIUM On a pr·ivate l .. aguna beu ch: \vith tennis, 2 pools. beautiful ground s: 2 bdr.m s., 2 baths ; lots of parking. Spotless cond.ition. ~Jurry! $58.950. BEST BU Y IN HARBOR VIEW HILLS 4 BR., pret t.v honte . L'Ollrt vnrd entrance! Large pool sizc corner lot fOr fa1nily fun . 3 Car garage. ('.lose to be~t school s Call Jfar- riett Da vies. $89.500. SPECTACULAR BAYFRONT Million dollar vie,v. Ori ginal ll '11 boan on 60 ' sand y beach & dock: lots of rm ·s & maid's qtrs.; off-street parking. Use now, build Inter. $225.000. SPECTACULAR OCEAN VI EW • 4-Plex , high on a hill in Oann Point. Still an in fant at l 1h ye<1r s. Call Dean Kring . 8105,000 ~ Cold\Wll,·Banl(er m:o100 ~ •551 NIWPORT C!NTER DR., N.B.' • • ' ' Two. Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes from $62 995 ~·~\'.;'.:,~., . . -- Financing Available at 7 l/4 °/o * From Pacific Coasl High1v3v H~~"'-1 <1nd Superior Avo<nuo> (Balboit Blvd). drivli' up Superior !o ·r,coodc1oga. and directly !O Newporl Cre~t lnfnrmallon Co>nl('r. Te\ephont> (714) (">45-6141 ,S,,1,., C'lh1cc Opt!n dailv 10 a.rn. 10 ~uo~"t * Typical cullvC'n1 ional financing of JO year loan: Ca:;h pril·r of Plan 1 S6:.!,995; do11'n paynient :ii12,@3: 360 111011\hly payn1('n!s of 5361.00 (prin- <'i1..a! & interest 1 at 8 '"' ';, ANNUr\.L PERCENT- ,\GE HATE. ,,._,.,.... Weot '• e ll'Of11d <If Pocilk NC. Inc, ,fi Ci:?:--·-Jll.O.rtH.O...,tC..._e_,c;.....,,a1c..,n-.:1.,._ ~·.:="'-' ........... ~ ,.., "'"" ••• ·~·~ ... i. ...... '1 ,.,,, ...... " ''''~"-·~--' ....... "'"" ... .. ,.,,,,.,.,,, .. ,. •• ,. ,,,., .... ., •. " "''"" "''"' ..,..... ... 4 .. ~ •.• ,. ' ,_, ~ ...... ............ " .... "'"'"'I'"'""·-,.~··-.. ·~'"'·'"""''"'"'' •"'"" ,, General LIDO \Vaterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. fn1nily rm., or 5 bdrms .. \vith 6 l>aths. Lido Nord . Spec- lacul<1r vie,v! \Vaterfront li vin g r1n. \vith step-do\vn \Vel bar. Pier & float. ~273 .000 . * * * * LO VEJ, Y custo1n 5 bdrn1 .. 3 ba .. Lido Nord, on spacious 40 ft . lot. Pier & slip. Adjacent lot also avail. for sale. $295,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 S.yside D•., Sulto I, N.B. 675-6161 La EXECUTIVES!! Last of the Outstanding Cuesta By the Sea from $52, 900 " Homes ,f ,.:·- ' .·1,<,. -· -_ -_,.-... ~.~ ~-~ . • . NEW T~IPLEXES &'bui'lnis IN COSTA MESA 80/0 INTEREST AVAILABLE ON CONTRACTS Open Daily Placenti• Ave. at Wlls°" ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, 547-6791 General General A. UlllllVUI' ti()MI' ' IN HARBOR VIEW HILLS-Truly unique! Outstanding cabinet \VOrk as evidenced by \vainscot ing and a den built like a ship's cabin . This Lusk-built 4 bedroom has an ex· ceptional vie\v of Newort Bay! Wonderful yard! $98,500. A listing of Lyleen Ewing. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 67S-6000 2443 E. Coast H'wy .• Corona del Mar General General r/ewpo1•l Beach ::Duplex SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT .1 br & 2 br. I blk from beach. I blk from shop- ping. Open bea1n ceilin gs, freshly painted in· side & out. Ne'v carpet & drapes. Ready for show . $76,500 DALE WULLNER 556-81&1 General . Agent or 642-1771 . . > Goner•! BE ON THE WATER CONDOMINIUM I This lovC!y 2-stol'y end uni1 1 has C'\'•'t;.'lhing -evl'n a I BOA'f ~LIP. Ultra moden1 I I kitl'h('ll \\'ilh <di ll l' II' hui!tins. A111·11c1h·e stone I I rire1>iac1•, 1 1:>,~un.11J1ns, 11 ~ I Baths. SUN DECT< overlook· t ing thl' \l'1Her .. All 1his tau I be yours tor $86,5j)O. 644-7270 General HARBOR VIEW HOMES WE 'RE STILL OPEN FOR BUSINESS I ]~ Bul ... '''e're do\vn to our la st few tlarbor Vie\v Ho111es in Ute .fin al unit on the hill ... and so1ne of our beautiful n1odel homes! So hurry if you'd like to li\'e in one of these ex· citin g 3 to 5 bedroon1 Donald L. Bren Co1n- pa11 y resid ences priced from $6 1.190 ! 1129 PORT SHEFFIELD PLACE IN NEW· PORT BEACH, JUST OFF FORD RD. & MACARTHUR BLVD. 1714) BlJ.0780. BLDR . Whtn you list with us, YOUR HOME is advertited in Home for Living maga- zine in more then 900 areas-and cus- tomers ere sent to y o u as rtferrel1 from our ovtr . 770 affiliates of NMLS . Have somethrrtg ypu \\'ant to sell? Classified ads do it \\'ell -call NO\V &'2-5678. Walker &lee ···~ .. ,.,. 2828 E. Coa1t Hlway j-CoffRMONj., I i FARM HOUSE I % ACRE · REDUCED $29,950 • MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES HARBOR ISLAND Cuswm 5BR, 51', bath home. Lg. formal DR, panelled study, FR. Bayfront terrace. pier & slip. $425.000. Barbara A u n e 642-8235. (Jll) "EARLY BLUFFS" Customized 2BR +Den Blu ff Condomin· iwn. Runnin~ fountain s, 2 custom fire. places, walk·m bar. VIEW. $89.500 .. Jack Custer 642-8235. (Jl2> MANAGERIAL RETREAT 4BR ranch style home. Exotic firepil for entertaining, formal DR & active FR. $69,900. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. {Jl3l , "INVESTORS" 80' frontage on Orange Ave, near 17th Sl. Zoned A·P medical or professional offices. Income $2100/yr. $42,500. Harriet Perry 642-8235. (J14) DOVER SHORES-FAMILY HOME 1 4BR, 3 bath + PR, !CR, gourmet kitchen. 8/J vacuum, Coppe r plumbing, automatic spr\nk\ers. $98,500. OPEN FRI. & SAT. 1·5 p.m. 1209 Santiago. (Jl5 ) BIG CANYON CONDOlillNIUM 2BR's, 2 baths + FR. Cpts, drps, profes· slonally landscaped. $85,000 or lease ® $700/mo. Billie Mattson 644-6200. (JI&) BLU~FS-RIDUCID PRICE 38R, 2\.1 balh Bluil's beauty. Lovely Trina Model w/decorawr carpets & drapes. On , almost private greenbelt. Now $72,500. Bob Owens 642-8235. (Jl7l .... ---~-lliVlna I M .... ,.~ .. ~ .... ,--1 ~ ' IOI -Drho 14~·HH 11441UM-144·- . ' • { • G - • G • • (! E s . . . . .. ' ., General General Gener•I GeMral Gentr•I Goneril SPECTACULAR VIEW Right over the harbor entrance! Lots of boat· ing activity plus beautiful lights at night. A classic Olde English style home with 4500 square feet of luxury, including 3 large bed· rooms, a get-away1 book-lined den, a fa mily roo1n "pub" with wet bar & adjoining wine cellar, and a large gourmet kitchen. OPEN HOUSE Sunday 1·5. Sec 2501 Ocean Blvd. in Corona de! Mar .... , ... , ........ $296,500 BAYSHORES Spacious fatnil y hon1e on prime corner· Joca· lion. 3 Large bedroon1s plus large recreation roon1: beautifully landscaped patio. A great buy at , .. , ..................... $83,750. ADD INCOME \Veil located, s1nall home, on R·2 lot, \Vith room to add on. Good starter or retirement hon1e. Only . , .............•.... $20,950. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Ma r ''Selling Real Estate in Newport Harbor Since 1944" 673 -4.laOO General General * BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS * IT'S REAL FUN . . . ... to live in the Bluffs. No yard to care for, but lot s of green area plus pool. Near Village 1narket & schools. 3 BR .. 2 ba ., sunny patio; all for $50.000. · OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1.5 2428 VISTA HOGAR DON'T WAIT TO MOVE •.•. ... to Ne\vport Beach & miss this fine ~ir. a corn1nuni ty alive \\'ith g.i·o \vth. the best in re· crea\j onal opport\lnities. Buy t~is l>eaul. 4 BR ., 2 ba. in the heart of everything. for only $76.500. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5, 1014 SEA LANE A RARE OPPORTUNITY Q\vner 'viii lease/option this fi ne 3 BR .. 2 ba . J-larbor Vie\v home. So. don't wait, call us to preview! Generel * 675·5930 * 3629 E. Co.,t Hwy. Corona del Mir G9neral ** ** ** Her:itage Collection FAST MOVE IN NOW VACANT - Charming 3 bedroom and fan1ily roon1 , shag carpets. builtins and fire- place. Excellent location on quiet cul·de-sac. L<>'v interest FllA loan may be assumed. See today, CALL 546·5880. HIDDEN WESTCLIFF 4 BEDROOM 3 BATH on large lot with de· tached garage. You haven't seen this before! Offered at $67,500. CALL 540· 1151. OLD FARM HOUSE IN COSTA MESA YET; -Unusual property, 141 ' frontage x 107' depth with 3 car garage Two detached 1nulti·purpose buildings and old fa shioned farm style 3 bedroom, 1700 sq . ft. home. Don't miss the wine cellar! A steal at 835.000-may be only 10% down. CALL 546-5880. WALK TO SCHOOL ANO THE MARKET ~ 4 Bedroom with fam- ily room and bird aviary. Gate for trailer or dog run. See this today. $33,500. CALL S40·1151 . ITS BIG IN TURTLE ROCK -Private yard, spacious cul-de-sac hon1e . 4 Bedrooms, 2112 baths, for· ma\ dining and family room. Massive fire- place, kitchen is a culinary's delight. Estate size 3 •car garage. Offered at $61,250. Vacant and ready for your inspe c lion. CALL 546-SS'BO. HEAVY SHAKE J BEOROOM, 2 BATH -fireplace, all new carpets and paint. Terrific decor. Big, big lot , room for boat or trailer. Owner must have fast sale. A ski n g $32,600. CALL 540· 1151. . MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE BEAUT. RAMBLING 4 BR., 2 BA. one-s!<Jry home. Heavy shake roof, picturesque atrill!D, Jrg. mod. kitcb., family rm., beaut .. carpeting -and paneling. Spacious lot on quiet cul-Oe- sac close to. new regional park: Offered at only $49,950 . CALL 546-5880. MESa VERDE OOLLHOUSE -3 Bedroom, 2 bath,,fireplace, big country kitchen. A real pleasure to show. Qnly 3'h years young. Asking $39,900. CALL 540.1151. ERITAGE REALTORS Pete. Barrell feaft'I pre<Jenl<J CHARMING BAYSHORE conAGE LIGHT AND BRIGHT -Open beam ceilings and. cozy fireplace. View of enclosed patio thru Dutch doors and picture windows. Loads of closets. Custom construction -beautiful· ly maintained. . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . . . $65,0-00 BEACON BAY PRIVATE COMMUNITY BEACH & PIER - Just a few yards a"'·ay from this lovely 3 bed- room, den and dining room home. Nice patio for entertaining and privacy. Only $69,500. ALL YEAR AT THE BEACH WEST NEWPORT R·2 -Existing 2 bedroom beach house brings excellent Summer /\Vin- ter income. Ocean side of Balboa Blvd. Call for details. VACANT· IMMEDIATE POSSESSION PLUS NEW CARPETING -an attached workshop, 4 bedrooms, den, formal dining room -all this on best street in Westcliff. 1506 Lincoln Line, Newport Beach Open Sun 1·5 MORE CHARM THAN DOLLARS CORONA DEL MAR OUPLEX -South of highWay -just finished. Cheery and sunny, spacious new .2 bedroom unit up. and quiet, private 1 bedroom plus den unit and 21h car garage down. Cozy patio, laundry and storage room. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $85,000. 703 C1;netion, CdM Open Sat & Sun l ·S ' COMFY COT.rAGE NICE NEWPORT HEIGHTS NEIGHBOR· HOOD-Convenient to schools-4 bedrooms and large fa~ily room \~it~ pa.11eling and used brick_ fireplace, bu1lt1n kitchen, en· closed yard-even dog: door fo r Fido. $51 ,500. 427 East 16th Place, Costa Mesa Open Sun 1·5 Office Open Saturdays & Sundays REALTY j PETE BARRETT 1605 Westcllff Or., N.B. ~ 64~5200 ,....,.........,. .. ....,_............, General ' General The Reel Estate Fair -EXHIBITS- * * * MESA VERDE FIVE BEDROOMS NEAR THE 400 ACRE PARK THE REAL ESTATERS 80.Y.' financing currently ~v».ilabie l:\t approx. in~'!~. Top value al $155,000. CALL 641-nll ::: Salisbury R" •lt; *BALBOA ISLAND* COOfl 2 bdrn1. home wHh single car garage. Open tieam oeil., frpl.: ahr. patio: \1·/w carp.; nice Joe, nt>ar bay. FULL PRICE $58,500 EXCLUSIVE \Yml • Salisbury Re.tlty 315 ~iARINF: AVE. BALBOA ISLAND CALL 67J.6900 I ;:;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;~~~~~~~~=~::;:;::;;;;;;; I OR Four Bed:n:n + den + 11 family rm. Plush tv.'O story * CUSTOM, DRUXE BAYFRONT HOME * :;o:.; •. 'n i~r;:,1<><;: .~":.'r~ 1 _____ *-OCEA.NFRONT * "''/\\ 1aterfall. huge !\'laster I·--------You've seen the rest, now see the best! 3 bedrm W/firepl, mode1n 11 ~N :GEL ·-. GAILEY & , ASSOCIATES Bdrms, plus lge. guest room, maid's re>?m convenient kit.ch, and a 3 car $29 500 OPEN SUN. 1..S or playroom, over full 3 car garage. Parking ~arappt~~ai?'~iJ.~~So.url:c0~ I ' • 916 E. OCEANFRONT for 6 Car •. Lot 50xl68. Large,' private fio8t Sharp ltt>\'I <luplex! Owner Realtors 4 Bedroom + farnily roo111 + 11106, :ul':'.&:.r·~ !or olfer! with shared pier, wbicb is in xlnt cond., "(iU> '* * * 16' x 38. Blu. Dolphin HIF· B<!ILBOA BAY PROP. steel. pilings. Hwne completely rebwlt wlih pool. located No. q>"• "'""' '* 675-7060 * everything modern & the best! Hot & cold, BOAT LANDING on '"'"' tread coid sh-eet. _ . · Submn your tern" • '* % IRVINE TERR. &nut. •I hdrnl. honlc-, fan1ily tm., ne\\' eiu·rJ<>ts: [et_• lllnit. $.56,:.oo TERRIFIC BUY! G oral G-ral As.~un\{' exhiting Fl-{i\ loan "-;";";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I large custom tnade bar with ice-;maker, in-+ WORK SHOP loan avail. on cash to loan Coron• del Miir duded in sale is made of solid Oak by ba;.-is. CALL . ----------1 master cabinet. maker~ Kitchen has all ac· Land your boat in Uie back OPEN SAT~SUN. 1-S with 601ull amount tlov>n. ; Nn """lil)·mg ;, ""~~''Y * ATTENTION'•'• * & yard or this Newport N rt 4515 TR MONT cessories avail. incl. kitchen compactor Heights cozy c 0 t ta g e • 1wpo r,adar range & everything else to delight the charmer at a ridiculously at Cameo Shores home; lge. to ino~·e into this super col- 111i.:t•-llkc hon1c. Large 11~ liomemaker ! A view that cannot be sur-low price with E·Z tenn.s. living & dining i\'m.: 5 JONES REALTY INC. '""" i" ··~·" loc.iioo. INVESTORS WITH IMAGINATION {)nn'I n1iss this ~ only J ust listed "A"7111 "pen F1lrvi1W lx1rms., den: 3 car garage. Passed. Only •250,000. · .......,... u Pool & view! SJ24.500. "' eves, 2043 Westcliff Dr. 1.1.1. •tlt Open HouH Sat. & Sun., 12 to 5 p.m. '"~ OPEN SUN. 1·5 2021 Bayside Dr., Corona del Mor (onyllm•) 3449 QUIET COVE $30,500 1otal 11ricc . 847-6010. Call No"·: ""' thk kClfldy directory wlttl yo• thk 1!ffk•11d oi yo11 90 lloin.•11Jtl1NJ. All tlMt foe.ti-llstff below ore dncrlbH ht ,,...., dffoll by odftftltl"t •lff- wMr• 111 today'1 Dolly rHot WANT ADS. Patro111 allowltNJ .,.. •o.us for Ml• er to ~ ee wtH to lltt Micll l11fernt0tl .. I• this col•M1t .-cfl ffJclay, Sot• urday & s.11ctay. ' HOUSES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOMS Sun Vall ey Or. (Laguna Canyon) Laguna1. 644-2430 $72,500 (Sat & Sun 2-5) 2 BR & FAMILY RM OR OEN t 426 Vista Suerte (Bluffs) Newport Beach , 644-2430 $55,927 (Sun 1-5) , 1947 Port Cardiff (HVuH ornes) NB 644-2430 $65,950 (Sun 2-5) 3 BEOROOMS 21612 Ocean Vista Or., Sou th Laguna ,' 4!14·8681 (Sat & Sun 1-4) 4 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 19392 Bethany Or (Turtle Rock) Irvine 54t;.5880 $61.250 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1939 Sanderling <Mesa Veillj,) CM 546-5880 $49,950 '(Sat & Sun 1-51 18691 PQTtofino (Turtle Rock) Irvine 644-2430 $89,950 (Sun 1-51 27'li Windover (Broadmoor 1-HVHills) CdM 644-2430 $97.500 (Sun 1-5) CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE 4 BR & FAMILY ROOM 435 Vista Trucha (North Bluffs) NB 644-1133 (Sat 1-5) DUPLEX FOR SALE 3 & 2 BR 118 Garnet, Balboa ISia nd 673-6918 $140,000 (Sa t & Sun 12-6\ HOUSE-FOR -LEASE - 3 BR & DEN 3039 Carob (Eastblu[f) Newport Beach 644·5510 $1000 month (OaUy) * Pool Wt t•rtront W1t1rfront & Pool R~tire-develop-or hold for the future I Riverfront acn!'age 3 Hrs. North of San Francisco. Serene setting. Perfect for camp- ground or??????, SALISBURY REALTY 673-6900 SALISBURY REALTY, 673-6900 W lk & l 7r!:!:u;~:,"'x;.~.;,_""';,; 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND a ... ~,t . ., ee lots ot oars. """ntial tennis BEST , BUY .. IN "'··putting gre•n.·""'1 ...... Genoral I General 4 BEDROOMS • HARBOR VIEW JA.llc'>u';'u'Du~L~'im f,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; FAST $25,500 HOMES FANTASTIC "'OSSESSION All •loo"1e "u i I t . i" s. A '"'"'"' '"' ""'"" 2 REDUCTION r Carpeted and draped, E.\:· bedroom and convertible --· \:acn.;.. clean and ready. cellent E-Z care floorplan. den home. Sincerely the 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA .ISLANO G~::•:::•~•r:.;a:;I ______ $10.cro REDUC'TIOi'l ON Four large bedroonts. Big, Some pe.lnt and love will most immaculate "Monaco" 1 ~:;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I THIS BEAtITIFUL IRVINE efficient kitchen. Decorntor convert this cottage to a in Harbor View Homes plus I• BEST BUY IN TERRACE, FRONT RO\V livtng room is ultra sharp castle. Hurry -call 963-6767 an oversized Jot (1/4 acre) LAST CHANCE To pick up 11 bargain like 1his in Aa ycrest. I Bcdl'tns + S('pRl'alc office a nd formal dinir'lf!. $1!1.000. u n de r pi-iced! Needs <1.<'COl'aling. Cnll no•" f('T' P.n"'"l•ntrn.,.nl. CREAM HOUSE Cu!ilnrn :i Bl'drn1, be1u11 ccil· in"s fa111ily 1oom. Back B~~,: ~~ll.~ BEACH ORIENTEO \~'alk 10 bc:ach or usr J.lO(H 41 1.ido S.1 nds. \\'oodsy pntio. 3 Jxodrn1 ho1ne • bean1ed cen. in~. ne\v carpets & paint. S...""e thi~ for $49,900. Newport Heights -Area - 4 Bdrn1 2 balh hon1e \Vilh hug4) cul-de-sac yai'(t, R·2, e\ose to schools & !<hoppi11A:. Ne"\V crpts, fl'('b111>ainl. Qv.·n. er \\•ilf heh> fin. S:12,500. e ANYTIME e 646-3921 or. Eve 545-3483 Lache nmyerl Re.1lto1 I rARBOR VIEW HOME. CUSTOM BLT.. with brand lle'IV shag and OPENTIL9. rrs FUN10 BE NICE/ beautifully landscaped with \\ilTH 3 LGE. BDIDvtS. & ch-apes. Prim" location, ex· ~-I a large covered patio. A ,,,,u~O,t:!E~,mer 2 r~ss~i = =~i:.'~ ~~,J~~ 11~1111~1 ~~;:~:~i~a1~;,~~i ---------• bedt'OOlll and convet1ible &,BAY VJE\\'. NO\V $127,000 OPEN 11L g. IT'S FUN 10 BE NICE! . ----· ·-·-~ land. &'l' it. you'U love it. dell horn~. Sincerely the · $5 000 ~-p Call r10\\'-67J-..8;)5(1 niost in1n1aculate "lfonaco" • DU LEX OPEN nL II • 1T'S FUN ro BE NICE! in Harbor View Hom., pl w; REDUCTION 90010 FINANCING an oversizccl lot ('if acrel /I beauli(ully landscaped \\oith BROAi;>r-.tOOR HARB 0 R 81/20'0 INTEREST ll laJ-ge covered patio. VJE\V H~. \VlfICH H.\S 11 Carpels, drapes, and BEEN EXTREMELY 4 BDRM An Ideal summer/winter I>======= \\·al.lpaper all top quali ty, SCARCE, THIS YE AR· -rental only 6 doors to a Only $65,9JO And you O\vn LOVEL~ 4 BR. HOME $26,500 super bench. O\Vn for profit PRIVATE ISLAND t.hc land. See it, you'll }(Ive '\\'TTI-1 LGE. FAr-.t:ILY Rr-.t. or occupy for pleasuro. NEWPORT BEACH H. Call now. 673-8550. & FORi\lAL DIN. RM., ALL Cnn't beat this combination Only $84.5CO. BY OWNER oPEN nl 11 • rr-s FUN rb BE NIGEi BEAUTTF1JLL Y D E C 0 · with large bedrooms, 2 Our fantastic te1ms n1ay not \Valk to a private Beach from this Bright, Light and Charming 2 Bedroom Home in Corona Highlands. Open Sat & Sun. 1., 5 Call 644-7211 ~NIGEL [lAILEY & ASSOCIATES I ·RATED & LAf'."'DSCAPED. baths, huilt·in kitchen. dou-last long, JtO call quick. Leaving area, immediate OC· 111Jll'l~:ll NOW $89,500. ble car garage, \VI w CALL 644.nll cupancy, 4 BR, 5 BA~JIL'CU.l"Y :JiW• U,j ' PL6EA,~.5s~30COAOLL ~=t~hi: or~~a:Uts.ro~~~ fui:~~1~~~n~Te~-tu~:sn~1::~ 1.-..--..--...,-., . ...,...,...,..., ... ..,.! .;:::iaa~••!;===-· &16-77Ll. open eves, 2t»3 been built into 1J1ts outstand· POPPY AVE. DUPLEX ER SHORES \VcstcliU Dr. ing \Valel"h"Ont hon1e . cus· 1 bdrm unit w/l'.rplc It pvt DOV tom fw11iture & 196i Cruiser brick patios + 2 lxlrn1 & 5 •. DRM. included. Excellent te11115. bath guest quarters, 2 car A TOUCH OF $279,000. Also available wi-garage. Garage apt has VIEW liOME Walker & lee furnished. rol' info . call ~:!(If ocean. Must sell im· Designed & built· by Ivan ~ .:;:; ... ;•;"~'~'~'~";';'::;;iii~ COUNTRY .... G73-TI82. &U-Zln or 673·7~ Bkr Wells for exet."lrtive ent~ Yet very close in • Ne"'ovpo11 LIVI! IN IRVIN~ tah1iog & romltn1abl• tam·1---------OUR BEST BUY Big """'· ''"'°' yaros. $32,SOO * s·PECIALI *-ily living. 5 Bedroon1s or ASSUM 3 lJdnns., 21,1 Mths; spotless ~ds .of ._roon1 in this 3 l..o\"r.'ly 3 bchm., 2 ba. home use one us a convertible den . E ~. Near 1-foag 1-l(lspital. """11'00111 nvTIJe. Firsl tinle Sharp 1 yr. old ho1ne & pl1c· in old Corona, on R-2 lot. or study, 3 batlm, formal FtfA 51;4 0/0 PoOl & recruution area. uclvertio'led • $31 ,950. eel r ight ? The kids go to Nt>\Vly painted, \'/ilh tle1v dining rooru for elegant state Doctor_....,,,_.. •n" ,, ,. n.. 646--7171 Turllerock -Gra111n1ar & '-'"''"'' & rtrs"""• Jmmed oootslons, tl"lendJy \vet bai' N01'th Coliilll Mesa, 4 ""'""'" "' .. ·~ ,,. ,,._ · · ~roo~s 2 bnth AIR Priced at $37,500. Rllllt~ho Jr J-H, and the ne\\' ~!!. S72,500. In th(' .,varnf fan1il:y roorn . ·~ • · s. Call: 6TJ.3683 673-8086 Eves. u 11I 1·.e r s it y H: 1-n ca r MORGAN REAL TY Front couity31'(l patio \\ith CO!fl? to~D, ~:all to Unil'erglty of Ct1lifornia td 673-6642 hC'atcd ~I. Forever view , ..... u ca~tulg thruout. AJI Irvine. Call 54G-OO'l2. 67s-6t59 O( night lighL'I & upper ~. the bul tins and IUI a OC!o:AN Vlt<W 3 BR.. 2~1 &. Best value In Dover Shores BONUS you aet the Dough--fam m1, din rm, 2 patios. ___ 01 _ • _ 61 S1~7.500. , Boy-~ 8~ no1 ~d~~;' roon1 for PoOI, BY owner .. ,. * BEACH DuPLEX * c. F. Colesworthy ""'· p ce "' . ' . Condo Splciallstsl Walker 6 Lee .~"-'--""="'·-----! BloCk to W4t,r R It ... -• cA•fs !!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!i!!!!!'_ .. _..., ........... Have one tr> sell? \re C.(lll ··~l •• , ... ,. DUPLEX by O\\'nOr, 3 Br 1 Real cut:ii'I! t & 2 U<h'Tn s. ea ors _._ ... ., C -& * BAYCRE~ST * do It! \Vanna buy on~? BA . + Bac:h apt, nn to b\illd Idct\l hoi)tc & ineonic. N~ GREEN WALLA.Cl BY OWNER. Elegant cust(lm We've got:cm! 2 to 4 Bed· -3 + POOL + VA-11•1\I cRIT)' cont. $69,500, CAv~~~rALTY SHAG CAIPD · REALTORS b~~:s:~;R1zi·f~1~1~~1• ~~r! :.!!~!xt~1~~~~\~ ~~rv,~i~~"~Yon1~~7~ c1i~; ~~view J"BR. 2~hft. -~ 548-1290 * thruoui the large 3 bdnn. 2 54, 4141-Jtuge LR, Formal Dr. Con1· ~: l~M~~. O:!'stsa~: 3 Bd, 2 BA doll house 11.:/ !nn1 rm . din rni, 2 po.ttos, lmth honie "'Ith hnrdwood (Open EvenJnes) plctel)' pri\'Bte 28' covered il & F pool In Nev.•po11 roon1 for pool, by owner, 71/2 °/o Financinn! 11_1.,. Con•i>letelr, ""int-.. outdoor living' 11retl 1vtth lush tf'<'tion f0t· you when ~Piling tlt>lgti1i:. \\'antll fnst !ialcl 6"4--200l ':I ..,., ...... ""-' I• , I o Ill Ol' lis1 Ulft your ho1nc or ln-F ti · 149 500 0 -,,==__,.,....._-.,---,~1 H V H VI !!!.--Inside. Cozy flrep nee. fOl't.'" n"seap ng. \vner w c:oille pi'Opr-i·ty . u pricC" · · P" 11 DUPLEX, comer, charmi.:.-. • . • ew r1rW eel 11ir heat. Nice FU'tfl, wlth & H finan<!l' !'Cl'i p<lll!dble huyer. House f'111S:ll ~tin l<"i. ~ by 011·1ie1· ... 5(.() Poinset'U:. Lovely four bedroom home hug<! back ynrd for kicb; & Hllh ' on" Prl.nclptll!t only G.Jj-TJOO larwln realty Inc. &ltt 8t'n1ardino. Ot' l'.'all Bkr Open 1-5 dally. on pool 11b:cd lot wtth fnmlly bud11:tl .i;u.rdener. Ob i . 3 Custom v1~' homes !W'V * BAYCREST * 968-4405 (24 hrs) cii-L>-:..::.S&:::·c:\6:;.·------ roon1, bl'tnkta!!l nook, laun. J;aroge, y,\ loan of $230 pe_t under coMITUr.tion nnd open ·ON A BUDGET Bick B•y RUSTIC 1 BR. w'=. dry roo1n, lllf'Ke 11uun:t patio n1011~h .• pcl<.'ed ro tWll at tor your ln!J{leciion. Features Large 4 UR., 3 bit. fanlily N O-CASH-DOWN-Cltl R·2 Loi, $45.000. · with lolM ot privacy -180 $28,950. Cnll )4~. incl~de 4 BR,,3 Bi\._!:11.r ....boIDeJnLa.J.iC.., \\'Cll IC>1.·iit\:f.I VA • tl'u ly lovt!\)I home, _Motse PtoP-erh.i! only. Chvner 673<1I6tt. c1egJ'ee ~~noran111c vlew. ill, W/.'birr. 4 T<ft'\ 11../C': l"I. Owner 1, Jcnvlng IO\Vll $21,!!00. Qi:ll-546;;;()t)'l2. !..!...f Cost• MeM And (ce 1nnd tru y prtced 1 " 3 BR fixrr lmuse oo ~ MM'tl --'--'-'=-'-'----! below mllrkel. Call no1v-.. m. cro v.•aVe; ovens ~e~ &: h•• priced th e hon1c for R·4. (6t unll sltl'. A$Sumnblc 1 2 STORY. 4 er. 3 Ba. "•~ W lk & La extra tmaiin&ble. Y""Y"'' quick 8fl lc. $67.1'".>0. .... 673"-8550· 8 er B and J.andl;cnplnr alto lncld. CORBIUMARTIN 6'"' loon. O•'!llo•r '"ill "l~ITY m. $48,500. Open Sat A 9: OPEN Tit. 0 •. 11$ ,UN ro 8E NtCt/ 7\il't. Lodn AVllll.. Brfn<r '"'"f ,,.. Walker " lee 2nrl Tr. S41.!JOO. r !\ 111 1-3. 1874 Pa.rkcn!rt D. ·1 ~ ~ 2::::=;;:'.'::';"::':=';:"';:'::'::=;::::'.. I ..,;' hOrte •nd mov• 1~ ~~t Rullon 641-7662 11 64l\.8"lll. "nrbcll Reall)I, 613-61126 llll~:l!llJI .. Wet<! II A !Wop.. montl>!! Open H.,_ Dally. BtG -CANYON UY!' on golf ~:;=::::::';:'::":'.':'':':'"::';:' =~ [ 1171.% l'lNANCINGr br °"""' fjfi,jj@ FT:n°=~~~o: ;.a11!~e~~~ ~~trei::tt:."I~,:: ~W~t"gll~~n ~fau~~:a.s~~Vll~,_U::&Co. I ~~· ~·~?ndt:t ---=CALl.=::...;;°""'il"y-'Pl"lo:;.:..I _ .Lane, N. TulJtin Hilla. !10,000. 640-llW lo ShoN> Resultl! 642-5613. I========= $38.00) .. llr<>l<tt ~ I i • '• 31 DAllY PILOT Friday, September 14, 1973 1----I~! l~I .......... _ ...... J~[ --.. ~I I ~ I _ ..... ~· Hol.Ms lorS. -·-""990 3 BR. 2 bA, huge lam rm. w/pool tabl.t, stone trpl Shake rf., dbl-e car .. inltr· com, lots of tr'l-C•, xtnt Ind· sp. Quick Qet.'Upant'Y. ltfay consldf'r V.A. buyer, 1l08 Puente. $33,500 • S BedrnHI 2t~ ha + tllln rm, tiv. m1, dt'fl, din nn, ne~· kltch, nev.' shag. A\rflil at Oil('('. Assume VA loan or new VA • ok. 2959 Babb. $36,950. ltfESA DEL MAR · Vacant 3 BR, 2 BA. spotless. Assume 1~l'1~ loan. 2878 ?ilontere-y, Cost• Meta Re11lty * 541-nn * After 6 PM, Call 557--4617 CUSTOM BUILT HO~!E On corner lot. CM Back Bay area, 4 Br & 2 Ba up11tairs. !Iv rm., din. rm., kitchen, Fain .. den & Ba dov.•nstairs. l..0111 of closet space. Lrg dble car gru'., 2 patio covers. Citrus 1 r e ~ s , \Voodland Sehl d l s t r I c t . $87 ,500 Owner 54S-4 TJ2 or 531-0060. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA 2 Brand New Cu.~tom HomM, 4 BR, 2 BA, close to Back Bay. Cpts, drps, Jandscap. ing, i.;p1inklers, fen('es a 11 included! $44,950. Drive by 246 & 248 E. 2'lnd St. 645--6177 EASTSIDE VA VA terms: otfe-red on East- side 3 BR, 2 Ba home, fam rm. fplc, hig tt beams, lge yd on cul·de-sac, full prit-e $33.900. 645-6646. Broker. ~IESA del ~Tar. Assun1e 6%% loan. 4 Br, 1% Ba, covered patio. $ 3 8, 5 O O. 540-3000 BEAUTIFUL Mesa \\'oods home 3 BR, 2 ba, atrium, fountain. 979-8380 f'ves. Fount11in V1flt) OPEN HOUSE 10686 La Rosa Lane {Clttn Valle-y Condo. I SAT & SUN, NOON • 4:30 Super sharp 3 bdrm., 2~~ baths. Only $30,500. ~ -106>-- IMMED. POSSESS. 3 BR, 2 ba. Comp. redecor .. ne-.i.• carpets. Fireplace. Shady yurd. , S.15, 750 • lO'f,, 00\VI\' BALBOA BAY PROP. * 556-8800 * PICTURE PRETTY Top area of newer homes. 1\.:o-story ebaury has FR w/rvet bar, builtins, crpts, drps, 2 car gar. Vacant! Walk to big park. $47,000. RED CARPET, Realtors, 53&-S836. . -MUST SELL- t.uxtlRY LIVING 4 Bed., 21h bath, fp, GREEN VALLEY CONDO, at 1TI55 La Rosa L.n. VA or FHA. Only $34,900. OPEN HOUSE Sat 1·5 p.m. Call anytime. SCOTT REAL.TY e 536-7533 VET~ODOWN Super Sharp Green Valley Olndo. 3 Bdrm., 2i,3 baths. Only $30,500. Call now 1or details. ~ ~ """""'"'63""' Huntington &Heh Gl/PHA BUYERS WANTED \Ve v.il) ftnd you the home YoU have been looking for. Let a specialist help you. \"JU.AGE REAL ESTATE. * 962-2456 * H untington lle•<h =L~~~";"";;:;:;Be;;•;"'::::;:=:::'L~•=!~u=n•=B=.e::•::"'==== ;L;•!t":"";;;;;N;lg;;ue;f;;;;;;;;;;L;•;t:;-;;N;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J Newport BNcll . THE RAMBLING NOTHING will ever obstruct. the sweeping FAMILY APPEAL SUPER SHORES! Income P".'f"rly 166 Mo:;~:;• o-rt 17• ' OCEAN BREEZES __ --- DUPLEX .... $39,500 CoMPLETELY~ ENJOY OCEAN BREEZES 0 AND SMOG FREE LIVING EQUIPPED CAMPIN ROSE vista enjoyed from this ocean front lot on ProteuionaJly detm11ted 4 ..• single-111ory " bedrorun, lovely cove in SOuth Laguna , ..... $180,000 Over 2,000 sq. Ct. of beautlful living space. BR, 2\.ii BA, split Jew!, 1%. bath, formn.l dining, BEAUTY ANO T HE BEST of construction View lot, 4 bdrms. plus lge .. family r oom & beams, tp!c, Spanish di(' family tQO!n, ivith 200> sq and loc,atlon, new duplex, ocean view. 3 bd· encJosed sun room. Beller than new. Only floo1"· clo6e to pool and nearly rent free. Tu'O -2 FACILITIES tt and a hugt-pool. Own1•r h <;O\lrtt $51 500 Can 645 8400 very anxious; Is fnstaUing rm, 3 bath & 2 bdrm, 2 bath apts, eac with $48,000. · · • · -· bedroom units. Live in one-. ~'O !l'.l'lmmlng pools, 10 rent the other. TAKE carnp s.ilt"I, llw.11 to11et1, OVER existing t~HA Joan at ranger nnd camJ' directors 7~~·~ Int. No qualifying. ·No home,. J<Ull conunissary and ne\\' loan costs. BEST BUY kitt-hen. Tlnibered with oak, JN TO\VN AT $39,500. Take cedar & pir1n • over 400> t't. advantage of thiJ value elev. $300,000. ,,,w """"' thrnou1. Th~ fireplace, lots of decking .. · · · · · $142,000 FINANCIAL APPEAL [VII~.., .... " ....... --·~ & Co.I ho1ne wH! be In 1n1W~·in con· 180 DEGREE white water view in lovely 3 ...,. •"""'"' dition. Jo"'ountain Valley area. Arch Bay. Lar~e fam ily home, 4 bdrm, 3 Beauty, ins ide & out. 4 Bdrms., 2 ba. Xlnt $45,995. CALL 8 ... 3377. bath f'•eplace pai1·0 ..,9 ~ cond. Good terms. OPEN SUN. 1-5. 30032 • u · • · · · · · · • · · ·•• ·-BELLO PLACE. Newport Heights i:,;o;,:~!&~: ;:~ MA~~~~L~! .. ~~~9!J!~TE LORENE HUMPHRIES, BROKER G~~~n~~~~~ ,v::_~ •. 5 Bedrooms. 3 ba ths, family Laguna Be<1ch, California 92651 l !"!"4"99-"'"2139~"'!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'"~"""'""'""!""'"4"9"S."1"'40"""'I huge Cam nn, spllt·level roday! CaU HIGH COUNTRY, rorison UNDEVELOPED AT LAST! Water on properly. 200 At·res • -"~-·TS timbered '.l.'ith pine, oak &: ~!~I !I 1'00111. formal dining and aJI Phone 494..aSSI home. Obie gar. lmmed the electric builtins. Profes· ~-----_:..:.:::::::_..::_:..:=::....~-----Mesa Verde Newport l••ch possession to q u a I i t i e d ar u,vr•··i i•ir.n 1..-edar. Great for motor or s\onally landscaped front & Irvine lagun• Beach buyer. Owner may carcy 1st rear wilh sprinkler systt'm. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ASSUME 7\1'/c GI loan on 3 'DRAMATIC DESIGN' TD at 7~%. Mum sell quick. (714) 870-6500 n1obile hon1e sites. Prked 905 S. EUCLID Pres:t1ge area. $-17,500. cAU. I' OPEN SATURDAY l..C BR, l~~ BA, ?o!esa Verde Only $&1.900. Cati Brkr tot· 963·56ZI. Take Tht Plunge 1305 SKYLINE DR. · Pool Home. By owner. Perfect home f or en-app't. 645-6646. FULLERTON at $350,000, --.B"'u"'1L"°'D~li~R 7.W~IT""H.-PETE BARRETT Buy th.is 3 bdrm. home 1vill1 A stunning contemp. or 3 $36,900. MG-3866 tertalning & family living. D II H ·-.,7 500 SPANISH VILLA POOL~ You'll enjoy tJ1e up. Built for fan1ous ""rsonali· o ous_..... ! . BR., 3~·1 baths, billiard rm.. .--" BR 1 -• t I Five year old home ln hf.au!\-graded quality, the n1ru1y all \\'ood & g 1 a 5 8 , r-:.io:.sinn Vltlo ty. Excellent location on tip ;, ., ovo:iy ge. tv rm. IMAGINATION -REALTOR- sv.·im Pool &, 2 Rental Units. 642·5200 ful beoach area wi1h a Span· extras and Its excelletl! co11· Tnlet'C'sting angles & tex-I of Udo double -lot. 5 w/din. area. Blln. kitch. ish flair. 4 Bed11)(1n1s. JI){ dition, Price is only $43,900, ture!, miles of ocean & mt. OPEN HOUSE 1-4 pn1 Sal & bedrooms, 5 baths, vaulted Lge, backyard. Dbl. gar. barh. wi 1h fan1 ily ai't.'a off don 't v,.·ait, you'll be glad vie\vs. $150,000. Sun. 26592 Las Tunas, M.V. celling In 36' Uvlng room, Decorator's dream! Room tor 2 nlOre. Unusual _____ _ investnient opportunity for ......._.._----... fast capital appreeiation. Real Esta~e the kitchen. Love ly neighbor-you d'idn't. SOUTH LAGUNA 3 BR, 2 BA. central air con· spacious family room. ex-BALBOA BAY PROP. hood, cul-de-sac stree t wirh Vi"si"on-A Laiuna Oiarmer In top dltioning. big fenced back ceptional master bedroom * 642-7491 * Owoer flexible & ~ill Exchange 112 finance at 8%. Asking1-====----"" $60,500 • Make Offer. BIG Canyon Condo -2 Br, 2 an excellent a~sumable Joan. _._ 2 BR 2 bath b · k yard. Take Avery Parltway suite with 2 dressing rooms. ""ape. ., s; n c to ~-ronado. DI I I •-I h 1 HILLSIDE w/v u. 3 BR. FR 6'7c VA, $195 ""t 1no. PITI. ........ nngoveroo~ us cener • · · Ba, $30,0CO eqty for vacant 01· ln1proved income prop- erty. Owner, 642-3364. ··~ terraces; fantastic coastal DON CONRAD REALTOR rty-~ Maid' 1 $88 500 0""n Sun 1-5 612 Move in cone!. $36,995. CALL. d cou ......... s quar en. • · r-• 847-3584. re hi·11 & white water viev.·s. WUh 802 S. El Camino Real Unbelievable storage & St. James PL ~10 "INSTANT HOME" IN SUBURBIA PARK Instantly enjoy this 4 bedroom home. M o s t desirable neighborhood in Huntington Beach. Features formal di ning, family room and seamstress' drean1 · sewing center. ll1Ul1acula1e condition throughout, with ma n i cured landscaping. Near elementary SCllOOI , park, tennis courts, beach and bike o·ail. $51.900. Please call 546-2313 for ad· ditlonal Info. li "ltf 'ft It WE BUY HOMES l. Cash !or you.r equity 2. Will pick up back paymts 3. No charge for appr. CALL. US FOR AN ESTIMATE NO \VAITJNG CASH N0\\1 842-93n 2 Story Colonial Pennsylvania style home features heavy, v.•eathered, shingled and used brick ex· terlor . Winding staircase to 4 huge BR's inc. a ptnt- house master !Ulte. Big paneled fam nn "'/a roar- ing fpl. gourmet kitch.. has cushioned flooring. A 11 decorator drps and gold plush crpt. Loan is assumable, and owner will consider a second TD if you need help with down. It can't be duplicated at $44,500. BKR. 962--5-511. Huntington Harbour Realty REALTY A Company With Vision Univ. Park Center, ll'vine CaU Anytin1e, 552· 7500 Office hours 8 A.7\f to 8 P~t PACKAGE DEAL Turtle Rock home, a view and the low price of s;'AJ,500. Call us, we'll "wrap it up". Vision- red hill REALTY A Company With Vision Univ. Pal'k Center, Irvine Call Anytin1e, 552-7500 Olti~ hours 8 A.!'1 to 8 PJ\.1 L•guna Be•ch -OCEAN VIEW Panoramic vie\V tron1 this lovely upgraded 2 bdrn1. home. You CIV\ see the sparlcl.lJ'lg city lights of La. guna Beach & all the way to Palos Verdes. ~cious living room with fireplace, brand new w/\V carpeting thruout. Quiet, peaceful area. $55,!XXI. .AS/an REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenncyre St. 494-9473 549-0316 $25,!XXI down, owner 1 w~ll San aemerite. 492-9510 built-In archi t ect u r a I San Clemente carry 1st T.D. at 81,,11.1 --=:.:...:===-=::..::.::..._ feature1. Impossible to OPEN HOUSE Sun Sept 16th, 1-5 P?o.t Fino"''" 11 • l 1n1 Calle Alcazar .. . $42,900. Sparling Investment l';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:;i;; S57·~EANFRONT I Newport Beach duplicate at this pr l c e $179,flOO. 3 BR., 3 baths, resting on GRUBB & ELLIS deep piling!;, directly on the • Re•ltors 3 BR 1% BA Corp 833-3544 II • Beautifully decorated --2-0-N-EW-U-NIT_S __ Business • sa nd. Brand new. using tile, BLUFFS s1<iined glass & "''ood, 2863 E. Cst. Hwv., Cdnt $187,500. 67S.7080 VIEW LOT In tree studded area above Victoria Beach. Great ocean views & the O"''ller wiU ac· cept terms. $18,000. 681 VISTA BONITA OPEN HOUSE SUN 1·5 PIHH Coll: 644-1150 Chorlotte Long Rt•ltor Since 19SO Close to everything 0 Plus ocean view. Costa Mesa. Accelerated _pportunity 200 GRAND OPENING rn~"s~~!~m:a~al de pre~iation opportuni.ty: PACIFIC BUSINESS Newport Bay Towers A""""""' &•hed. uieomc $54,000. Price SALES 1 & 2 BEDROOM ="'"°"...., $385.000 15'/, down. Over CONDOMINIUM HOt.1ES San Juen Capistr•no 40'/~ renterl l,st \veek. For 645-1770 833-11-11 Baytront Homes details call * * Boat Slips Mission Glen open house by CJS REAL ESTATE Liquor S!ore • $56,000 Full Security Highrise owner. Sat & Sun 12-4, 4 Br 548-1168 or eve 557-6244 + s:ock. Old issue licenses Ste-el & concrete construction home. lmmed occupancy, * 8 UNITS * * * Private Balconies $38,500, 31221 Calle Villa, O>tfee Shop $6000 mo gr. 2 garage spaces per unit. Clara San Juan Capistrano 2 BR each unit Seats lOO. Beac.1t area. f • * Roa top sundeck . South Laguna $1,176 Mo. Income Coffee g"'P. sniall, Unwual Opportunity to Pur· $110,000 • ~ts 35. $6000 full price *CHARM HO~lE * RMS chase Bayfront Property in BY OY.'ller charming 2 Br, RIVIERA REALTY * * On R-2 lot. roon1 10 add * 4 ID • * Newport Beach. d NB frplc, ocean view, patio, 149 Broad\\'By, c.M. Donut Shop, gross $4000 mo. another uni\. North end. 2 2-Story. CU!ltom built hon1e 31° F6j~r:i ·· ' ' liiw;i/wi;j'jihagii;j.i 4i99-i;i;l4jjS6ii;iiiil 1642·7007 645--5609 Evtl. Nets $1300 mo. A6king $10,CMXI Bdnn. & den, 2 frpl cs. v.·ith shake roof. 4 &inns., 2 --=~~~~===~ In 165,000. ••. Lge. ""'''· BR.; 2 BEACH DUPLEX * TR.IPL EX * . ' .• * r~ABULOUS. , , ·* trplcs. 500 Sq. ft. recreation I --I~ Custom pride-of-0wner.1hip. Cotkta!ls. Cross $800() liq. ill!. views from this 4 bdrm., rm. Come see & buy! Exterior newly painted, 3 BR Jllil all UC\\' Cf1rpets, drapes and $2000 food. $20,!XXl dn. :I ba .. imn1ac. hotne \\1th $68,500 & 2 BR, units, firepl, dbl • . paint. Large O\\'ner unit * • cozy family rn1 . Near CALL • 646·1,14 gar. 1n process of comp in· elegantly furnished, builtiJ1 PACIFIC BUSINESS SAI ES schools. 2 Patios for relax-91~, terlor decorating. Best buy Mobile Homes kitchens, closed garages. :cffi2 Ne'.l.'JlOl1 Bl., C.OSt~ M~~ ing in the sun plus a d 1'a ·on the beach. F •-I 125 CALL 642-4"53 for detail~. H.-.--,..._ gardener's delight 1 a t h a~L~....., $76,500 or ~ e BARRETT REAL TY inning -•1v house lilied with potted N11rK1•port P••t Office 1797 orange, C.M. 642-lm TRAVEL Season Over? It 's TR I PL.EX San Juan 25642 Chrlnnt• Dr. plants. A ntust see at ~~~-~~-~= Ontu just itarted for the older Capistrano, income $6900., Mission '-:leJo $.59.soo. Duplex Dandy!!! citizen who loves to travel. large lot tor additional units Yo · ri· · ' ' " r "' *A J.!Ol\.lE · · · · * ~ Here's a maintenance tree. or storag•, $73,'00 ., TWO FREE TICKETS . . . that is ·more than a Lc:Y.vest pri~ on Peninmrla! 21 • 2 BR •-·--3 BR 2 BA completely contained 21' 492-8264. :o !'ie house; huge liv. nn., e-bony ,......_ + . ~ mobll ho · ti to' _, RECREATIO _, oak fl 3 BR 2 -aJ Be fpl I e me m P" p COuu. 2 E •~JOE hou-•• on R·2 N pegg~ rs., · ·• reon · ams, c, pane · Price reduced to $2850. Just ~1" "" VEHICLE SHO ba., office area. Ocean & ing, super sharp!!! Excel-hook up and you're on your lots $39,T:iO. Jnconte $425. W hiUside \'ie..vs. $69,500. I lent location. Cal! no\r --A~--~be71---I \\'ay. 2079 Thurin (off Bay' per n10. Ne,·er \'1IC'ant . SEPT. 19TH·23RD 645-8400. $69,CMXI. SSUma e-Costa ri.1esa Carey Rcaltqrs, 6·1&--7-11·1 or ,\t 1hr SHIELDS Oceanfront! Lioo PENINSULA 83.>-0121 ANAHEIM STADIUM REAL ESTA TE I YllleH .... _Howard_ & Co.I Ro/c Financing owe 2nd TD. 2 BR, custotn bath, dining Balboa Peninsula 2(XX) State College Blvd .. -h v·n ~~ (2) nn Fr nklin frpl I' G Units, 5. 1 br & 2 b1· /Ulaheitn fFonnerly Englund R.E.1 J ,:..Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~ Spanis 1 a uu..-ex on ' a c, pa JO, on owners. Bes! area. $152,000. Please call 642-5678 ext 3.39 318 'Thalia 494-8093 R-2 Jots, 3 BR O\\'ner's + pvt beach nr. Udo shops, l 1 1 2 BR, din nn rental. An· $11,500. 673-4764 Agent. 66-4203. o cam your ' tickets. OPEN SAT/SUN. 2..S Lagun• Hiiis ~~~'Ei Jdous owner. &Jbmjt on E'X· 20 x 40 VISAILlA 3 BR. fncd WANTED ~~or:!r ~o~220~ll tree ~ .. ~~~ ~~l!~~Dr. ~ Large comer kn. Un-=· $ 1 G9,000. ca 11 ~~d'.n ~~~!~afu~k. c~ 1:::. frs'ti~i:::.~ MOBIL OIL CORP 3.3 Acres • horses pennitted. S~f,ld~U~t!~· ~ 1:'b ~~~ usual t'Ulltic charm. Open 493-3624, aft 5 PM. Norm Ross. 213: 644-1171. Has high volume .9ef'Vfce sta-~~;tu!e ~J ~~~~e~ ~~~·drp~~;· ca~as=~: 1 .. t?::.,..,'.,00.,.3.,n,..+.,rn..,'°".,1.,o;;""" . .,··.,"' ... """,.,.. I· [ ~~ r-1:! a CA. I New N2E:'i,~~I ~~ rm. lk~~~sC~i fo~ 3 2mo;: ~=~:~t:~a~i~k P TI1 , .. "'2430SELL! S '130•700 $27,900. nIA, assume 7 11. SALE-$ a RENTALS Adul'tpark\v,'privatebeach Gt'Ol!s $1875/mo. Call training to ~tar t im-_.... .rv By Owner. 586-1607 · $16,500 54{}.J67'2 owner &12-8520 2 Bachelors ,, ..... ,, .$.52,500 BLUFFS I===~· ""'=""'°·~~=~ media1ely. Phone Ron -~un• Niguel 2 + I-Bedroom ....... $71,500 SINGLE, w/cabana, n r COSTA MESA 4-plex $62,500 Co r s enlino, 714-521-1381 .........--. .............. 2 + l BR + vac. lot .. $97,500 FEE "E'' Bch., lo rent. 841--0485 days $640 income pa:,•s prin, Int. days, 715-5-I:G.1 ~ & . k * BY OWNER -Niguel Sea 4 I-Bedroom -, SI25.000 or 53&-7743 eves .. $4,150 or tax. ins & util. 10{/o dn. no weekends. Coldwell;Ban er . TetTace townhouse. Prlv. BALBOA BAY PROP. Elegance in the Bluils!! The make offer. JP1!'!:'·_!6!:!73-~TI':!78~o•>:i1·:!7"18-~27~49~.~l'.:":~~~-~---1 REALTORS ~:~~. Bh~J~•~t,· :~~: .i ... ii*O..ii6ii7.i3-ii7ii4ii200....it... P!'Ofessional tou~h is 00. 12x=40=-M-=o"B"1t.E--l,.-m-,-w-/_8x_20 Industrial Property 168 • Mfgr Leiaun-Items $42 500 v1ous. A spacious 2350 sq. ft. 1 C M Adi! :.:.:::.:;:.:.;.;;:.:.;...;.;:.::::;.;,_.:.:.~1• Beer Bar • $5000 nlO. etc. • · 496-7361 or 4 bedroom, family room g assene room, ·-· • Butcher ShOp try $12,500 644-8'5<> I HARBOR VIEW MONACO home on tee land prk, pets ok, $5500. :>44--0257. BOATS OR ?? • Interior C>e«lrator Serv. * OPEN HOUSE * DISTRESS sale. $311,500. 4 For S3.lf' or rt'nt Only $87 500 NEW M 1 10 500 h I H II nd B I BR. 2" ba. L.ge. lot. cul de HARBOR VIEW CALL u."7211 . · · sq. · coo o a us nt11 Sat. & Sun. (or call) -n -fh E !Al w/side C.M. Big yard · 645-4170 SALES 54()..(&)8 895 ACAPULCO sac st. Close to schools. HOMES REAL TY ~~!1t•. Sharp offices. Leue or sa!e.t'""""'""""""""""""""'I Place Realty 833--0780 Broker '-------__, ED R1DDLE REALTY,1' Arch Beach Heights. Custon1, 4~9704 494-97~ I ~~~~!!!!!~~~!!!!!~ I -646-S811. Money lo Lo•n 2-sty., Spanish motif, sunken I; r . frpl lido ,.,. HARBOR VIEW HOMES =· !u":i~. spa~i~s m~~: ----------1 Monaco, lee land, Upgraded. t --~ Acreage for ••le d<clu. 1ripl, •noh-doubl• ONE OF A KIND $59.500. Princlpala only. * LIDO-SANDS * -VIEW * VIEW door entry. Corner Jot 1\1th Llclo's last corner lot, 1tree1 644-0408. Newly painted 3 BR 2 Ba pe.norarnic view of the Pa-to street 35x88, across beach LUX'URY • 4 BR, 2* ba con-' . ' · · Exchange $16M equity in 2+ 150 & t'nni• •t. $6',000.~ d P,rlv. conunuruty. \Vallung acres view Vista . R·~' cific coast. Other homes " " o. Lrg. master suite. distan('(' to beach Leased • ' Expands Off-Shore und" ronstruction. VIA LIDO NO D Downotain. Ownr/Agt. land $48750 · '""'· 1rad• '"' Income T\vo resale offices o....,ning From $52,000 4 &inns. & 5 Baths: 641).0].66. . ' , NP~~~lS'ZJ. •' South p 'fi c magnificent ''"•tom home. ~ ... ,.,-.. ,.-.ia . .u sa'les.men for ::.;;L°''"'-'.:.::'°'-' s;.;;c•:;..••--'1:;;10 1st TD Loans r;f~~B~~r1=: 2 duPfTDo 90l% Tees & Fa.!Jway•. Thia ta ft oa ns the number one view & bulldlrig. ·site ln S o . Lowest r•tas Or•n9t Co 00\v! Ground noor opportun-coast acr c Ofl>. "" BLUFFS X Plan, $60,(0), 3 JIDES new dllice ·ry f bi'1io· aJ Quality Builders or Laguna Sl64,500. BR 2" Ba 1 yr old 301 Ch 5· I 1 or am us s es peo-LIDO REALTY • ~ • · LTYJNC arias treat, Rae tor pie. Immediate noor time • .., .... ii*.04'4-0iiiiiii301ii;;;i*;.....,.., Vista Trueba. 0 w n e r available. Immediate earn-3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach 640-1000. ESCl9o'6 66-3021 ings possible. We have solid "Overlooking the Pacific" * 673-7300 * BIG Canyon Condo. 2 Br, ~ • (714) 073·0210 Buslntll Property 154 referrals from new home Alagnilicent ?ilonarch Bay * *19'-soo=*--Ba (Dover) model. $85,000. sub-divisions of the auisti· Terrace 4 Br, 31,i Ba home. ., ' Ow 200.w . ..-.ltwd. 1WO LOTS TOTAL J04'x299' ana Companies. All red"''OOCI & g I as 5 . 4 BDRMS. Plus nu1id's, 4 Ba. ner, 642-3364 Hnpor\telctl·~•21160 otOICE LOCATION, Hun· Calllorn1a'1 mo5t exciting S I • golfing community. $125,000. •tt er Mtg. Co. LINGO REAL ESTATE 642-2171 545-0611 31700 S. Coast Hwy, ~ Harbor area )4 yn. South Laguna 499-1391 °DON'T BORROW-Lagu~o~~~~~eyre ~~-8086 'TIL YOU CALL USI p I VI Borrow on your home equity ~noram c ew for any good purpo&e. Serv. CALL SIU. COMSTOCK custom e J e g an c e E I e g an c e personified~ TRADE Newport Be11.ch CARMEL MODEL tfugton Beae,h z ONE o CASH -CASH -CASH <TI.fl 846•1361 & (2l3l :-S2-l361 throughout. Ottered at Brand new. Call !O(lay? Prop. For OUt-Of-Town VIEW Bus I N G s s, PRO- WE BUY H 0 us Es ' $310,rro. --GENMI---Prop. Bkr. 714/673-2058. Ou-anding H v H 3 FESSIONAL OR omCES. to l~ne Park area • Lemon ing Los Angeles County tor Heights .6 acft seeluded lot. over 20 years and NOW Jn Horses OK. $23.CMXI. Trade Orange Countyr QUICK SERVICE CALL I BOARD AND GRUBB a ELLIS 3BR hou" "'"' oc.an, low '°' · · om"; $11,500 "· TERMS wnt" 120-F Tllstin Ave .. N.B. d bdlnnd B., tamllnily nnd " lush KANPAK, 1993 Kllhei Rd ., FOR l/'.'1''0. MR. DIRK, Rtaltars REALTORS 642-46ZJ own payment, Mi I es go carpe g, . eco~tor K1hei Maul Hawaii. L A~ENT. ' CARE 286J' E. Cst. !hr\'., Cd~1 ARCHITECTURALLY spec-Larson Realtor. 673-8563. drapes. Valley Vlei-\'. First """°"C.:::~!,,' =:;::;""'"-- e trship e 842-4466 , Licen9ed Cor 5 unrelated 675-7080 tacular! 3 Br & Fam, 214 3 BR, den, 2'ifi Bath, steps to tlme ·ottered. $72,500. Fee SALES-EXCHANGES-MGMT people . Huge cuBl.om, new ~~!""~'!'l!' .... '!l"~""" Ba, 126 Via Orvieto $112,000 ocean. $15.000, Will consider (you own the land), K.V. DIU.S CO. REPOSSt:SSiONS crpt.S, air cond, plus 11· x 3 Bdrm With Prlv•cy 6~7262 local trade on TD '•· CORBIN-MARTIN m...7652 36' pool, roon1 for horse Beautiful home on large over-Mes• Verde McNaih Realty, 642---1334. Re•ftor1 ·MC-7662 Commercfel :·'IJr lnforn1"'ti•1" and location plus large yard on a corner. llzed Jot. Lovely rolling ----------BY O\l."ner, Duplex, ocean w, UR to Trade? Our Trader'a'l:;;;P;;r;;ope;;;;;rty;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;151;; of l~.i·.~e Fil.-' :'c 'IA homes. Thia is a mw:t to see~ BelOY.' hills & valley scenery. 6% FHA assumable loan. steps, to b e• ch • $85,000 Paradite column is for you! c.'Or:::·!'t • market, Scrttned family nn, Patio Immaculate! $43,900. prtnc. only. 546--16'22 Iii l.lnet. 5 Clays for $5. Call K:\SAtllAN Briok BBQ. H.ndym.n's • -• CLASS!FJED will aen It! today • ._ - Real Estate • 962·6644 If \\'orkshop & Jots of storage ==;,'-";:~==---~.=;:;:;;;=:;:;:!:;;;,:;_:.,;;;;;:=,:;;;:::::;::;== • area. Large yard is coin -* RAZOR SHAR_P_ '62-4471 ( ::r.J 14M1DJ plct•fy •PMnkl"cd. 145.000. 4 BR, deluxe crptg, sun.shine I'""'""""""""'""""'""'""" bric, 494--8003. kitchen, ()n quiet fitreet, tush , \\'ALK to the bch. $6000 dn. 4 TARBELL lds~pg \\'{secluded yard ,r.: Br form! din nn, 2 sty BEAlITIFUL location f:Jios. Flexible terms -prestige home Take over SOUTH LACUNA. t block ~ERSHIP 842-4466 ~8·~~71G~"' loan. 833-U03, eves to beach. Newly remodeled =--..., 2 Bdrm. 1amily rm, la.rye ASSUME 6~~ loan, 5,00) feet beach, 1500 sq ft Z story. Irvine prof. lndscaping, $13,500 1.c..;.;.;.c;_ ______ _ (twn, P & I, $150.74. Move 0\VNER agrees to pay Quin· In today. $36,500. p h , tard Realty 4% fee to sell .91t-356J lhi11 4BR, 2BA, $44.81Xl. ii Own~ _ 5 Br, 2% ba, ~take offer. A comer in ......,_ thruout. Unique llv. Colony Park. Open today. --. (Take Culver to Walnut & nn.' leP" din. W11.lk to all tum West to Mall &: rtght to ~ nii. bch. $49•500• 14201 Ave Mendocino. Pool, tennis COW'l!I, etc. 642-2991. I· BR Townhou!!.e. R.etrig, IRVINE Townhouse, b y DOal. dilldren ok. Auume owner. Univ. Park LaSalle. '" · ntA, low down. ~BR '"BA d -..1•. , . ,11 , in nn., fam rm., bitns, X4it cond. -A.S81JMF$ 51' 'fo Uten, $59.000. Prine. o 11 I y , .$22,000 Full Prtte. 3 Br, din. 1 -=-=,::;;o;,· =~~--- nn., ~ ~trlt, ~ ba, pool RENT Al. SER VT CE a nrc. • co urteo us, profe1!Jlonal ',!_1_~.!I O: CONTINENTAL 1ervice av a 11 ab l c to WNLJU. VaeaM. J Bedroom, landlords & tenants. BKR. 1\6 ..... llOG...D.artiam-Dr., ~ OL-675-Tm. deck w/ocean view. Guest apt. $62,500 firm, By owner. Call 213-721·5U5 day 1, 213464-4686 eves. Summer rental& coo.ddered. Ocean Vlew-$53,500 Spanish style 2 Br & den, guest rm. ar 1tudy; huge ocean vfew Jlv. rm., frpl.. Central kit., w /bltns. opens to din. area. IAc. hleh up on Laguna's Riviera coutllne. MISSION REAL TY 494--0731 * $42,500 * ~arp 2 BR. So. Lagu11a hom1,1. Walk to beach • * $54,950 * 4 BR. homl', North' 1.Quna PLACE ltEALTY 494-970! 494-9Tl9 BY owner, 3 BR hol'J'le in •l)adoua-prdtn 11tunc, quiet al'W!a, Iota of privacy. f'antutlc white waler view, quick po1a:eMlon. Principals only $."611 *,:I-UNIT* COMMERCIAL BLDG. wen located w/otf.atreet p«rtdng: Owna 'will'cmy T.D. $59,000. -* 59'd9' LOT * C·l ZONE $32,500. E·Z TERMS Roy McCardle RHllW 1810 N._,., IDY<i., 0.M. 541-mt lncome conslde1-ed. M2-5766. SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO Need Christian sa:lesrnen for (714) 556-0106 • new oUice, 4500 Campus Drive NIB Ch1rlt1 Street, Re1ltor S500 to $l00,000 for • 645-3lm Business or pel'llOnal needl NEWPORT BEACH VIEW No collateral required LOT Over lookJ Bay ocean Upon proof 9t <1bWty to "'1 & Udo Isle, Sac. $39.500 9~Ul4 JI i/Jia111 /iq 0 INl ' - 8KR.. sta-mt. CAt.IFORNIA borne 102--4 f Bil + blllrm A oUJoe are• Br, 3 ba; p:IOI. $53,500. By tn ~Nut 1he Ntw Appointment only. 551-3834 ..a,. ant.. ~ 'tO Can auume VA. 1.:;111A::~loln.:'i::~i:-4315~===1 ASSUME T'ii> GJ I o an, c ar, 'i. -Pl,,,.... sm per mo. 3BR, ..,.... 1H1tl MaUllO Lo ~,J.mmoc home. blUns, BEAUTIFUL ocean vlc.w kit ONLY $12,900 OcwMew Reftlty m..8500 "While Elephant11" otJW. running ,.... houoe! 1'n them lnto "Cash" • , • lill lh<m -• Dolly PUqt cleg!fled I CIJ ·1 511 SJQ ...... _ ' I .,._ ' Ou•tnlld ""' •.• -- • • ' • [ • Ha -G• -' 241 Tl A 2 Pl< to " "' $00 In d< I E m B1 4 I m S' a " (2 LO " w' ... le 0• 4! n ' fu 1. 211 ' " 1: 61 \VJ lo fr '" MC p1 B (1 4 d• •• 1; BA bi g. " SE B SS: 41 f Rl N $! B. Fl. c \I s: ,. ()( • \I C• HI B y. d ~ 2 ., s Bl ;: L• SL " h ~ ,, " 2 " • c. 4! ()( E ex n ~ CF " d n 11 c 2· ()( b 0 s; -2 y b ~ -S• 5 ~ C( h ~ TI cc h • \I n £i ,d 4: -• ·a ' • Frld17, Stptembrr 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT a'f 1....__-_'"_"""__,i~ I l~I _ .., .... _.., _ l~1iill· ,, .. -..... _-iiiiiiiiiii11 . ..,......... l~ .. 1 .... -.-.... -.-.. 1.:. .... iiiiiiiiiii;;i"'°"'iiiiiiii··"-· ... ~lf!l~ I .. ~ ....... I~ I Hou ... Untyrn. 305 HoUtoe1 Unfurn. ~C:on:d:a:m:lfl:tum::.;;;;; Ap~•-s._F_•_•n_. ____ uo_ A pts. Fu rn. --- ) Houq1 Furnished 300 _ttouns f urni1hed _______ ;,; 300 C-0"'"...,'"""""'0-de"-l '!Mo-...r'--"'"'-L•gun• Beech Unfurn. J20 G_ono_r_o_I ___ ---C'o1t1 Meu 360 Apt. Unfum. J65 • G•n•ral Lido ti le Mrs. R. G. Bertholf 24551 Alta V ista Dr. •3 r Dena Point Yott 11re t.tt> , nne1· of TWO FREE TICKETS lo the RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW SEPT. 19TH-23RD l\t !he ANAHEIM STADIUM 2000 Slat<' College Blvd., Anuhelm Please call 642-58'JB ext 339 1<> tluirn yow· tlcket1. i Norlh County Toll free number ls :H0-12201 . RENT+LI Hou111•Apll. * H5·0111 * 4» W. 11th COSTA MIES4 $90 Oceanfront bl11::h. fut·n. lncls, utils. ldcul fQI' stu- dents. 1 BR furn apt, ljtlls. pd. $115 R'l(I. 1 adult only. Balboa Island 4 BR house avail r.ow for 9 n'lO. lease. Lots of roon1. ST UDENTS \VELCOtiIB. Call t213; 289-8366. 11 uo an~·cr lcnvc m e s sages t2l3J 582-52l!t LOVELY near new 4 Br, 3 Ba home, ~~ blk Jrom water, l(al"Bgt', \\•asher/ dry- er, dish11•shr. S550 n10. \\'in- ter Sept. lf>.Jwie 15. Jo~a1nily only. 673-tl94. 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 frplcs, sep din rm. $415. or 3 BR, 2 BA, charn1ing home & furnishings. $385. Y r I y lease. Call 673-39'.VI aft 6. 211 Dia n'lOnd, furn 2BR, 2ba, 2 cn1· ~ar, re ccn t lr redf'COrated, \\'l nter rcntu . $275 pl'r mo, 673--6733 or 67l--3·127 \VINTEn or year!:-". Clmrn1- i~ 3 Bit, house, patio, frplc. 117 PeiH'I, BalhOll Island. MODEl?N 2 Br, 2 Ba house, priv pl'ltio, i:nr, \11/d nr So. Bay, $325. t213l 935-9698 or \7141 675-5637. 4 BR, 2 BA, frplc, ne"·ly decot-aled, patio, laundi')', g&r, $375. f21 3) 935-6501 or (71~) 67".>-5637. BA YFRONT 3BR. 2 B A , bitins, frplc, garage, &>pt. 8-June 15. $350 per n'lO. 6TJ...3'>...59 SEPT. 15 to June 15, 3 Br, 1 BR patio, gur, no pets, $16.'i mo. 675-2975 $650, furn. Bayfrun1 I.: Pier 4Bll, 4BA, giu-1tgc, tilOJCE WATElU.RONT v,oith flnc11t \/lew. Pier, dbl s.llp, 3BH, 3 BA, n1aster 11uite wflrg vu deck. Ne\vly c11.1-pet~ & decorated . Co1 1111I. ful'nlshings. Winter or yearly leai;e, No pe1.s. 714 : 675--0.)20 or 2 l 3 : 271-lL'li'i. \VINTER lease, beaut. So. ha.yfl"Oflt home: 4 BR., 5 ba. Salldy bet\ch, Pier & Ooat Sl,650 MonU1 Bill Grundy Rllr. 67S-6161 --CIVE-ON l lD0- 2 BR, 2 BA, brick fprlc, dbl gar., wlllhr/dryr. \Vinler remal. $350. GTJ.2'1'17. NewpOrt leach --··--·-- TWO BED· ROOM, Win· t e r rental. Dou b le ga- rage Near ocean. BAR· RE'l'T REAL- TY . 642-5200 WINTER Renta ls · \Yest N.B. Oceanfrnt 3 br, 2 ba - $325 1110. 3 Br, l ba , $250 n10. Both hon1es beaut, decor. Crpt/drps, frplc, patios + xtrtts. Open llnn1- lpn1 Sat. See r<tgr, 6201 Se11shorc Dr. or ca 11 646-7971- OCEA NFJlONT 3 BR 11,:i, BA. No students. 2 car gar. Winier $325 n10. &12-9809, 871-littl. 2BR, 1vinte1· 1~ntal, steps to beach. S27S mo lnclds utils. ~1622 3 BR house, nr. the beach $300 per 11\0. No pets. * 673-4002 * Hou••• Unfurn. 305 3 BR, $185, Lo\'ely patio, ideal for child. l BR, $135. Sundeck, small child or pet OK. LANDLORDS! \Ve SP"Ci1'llze in Newport Ikach e Coi'Ona de\ ?.far • & l..'1,!tuna. Our Rental Ser- \'iCt• is }"REE to You? Try i-;u-Vil.'W ~ NU-VIEW RENTALS 6TJ..iO:IO 01· ·19-1-32-IX 2 BR. cp1. drp•. "°'" =~oc BE THE FIRST Bob Alexandar $30 WEik A UP 610 LARKSPUR. 2 BR. & ffitec. no pet11, So. Laguna, BRANO new witum 2 BR 133 Grin ed• e Studio A:! BR Apts. htd. pool. Lease $.150 Mo. $300. 4~1496 (.'ondo In II u n t In ir t on S.n Clemente • TV & Ma.Id Servk:e Avuil. BOYD Ree.lto1·1 6~ L .. un• Hiit• Cardena, drp1, 11ovtt, oven You IU'C t KO: ,,inner ot • Phone ~rvlce -Htd . Pool CH.ARMING 3 Br, 2 Ba.I -..:;,.-------& DW lncld. 16687 View. TWO FREE TICKETS e Children & Pct Secllon crpts, drps, f1-p~e1 gar. $350. 3 BR.,2 Ba. Pool & yard polnte OriV1!', = n10. he 2376 Newp()rt Blvd., Cl\1 718 Poinsettia, b44'-0170 malnt. loci. No pets. $250 wJy~an lea11e. 2 Blckii N. to 1 MS-B755 or 86-3967 Cotti MMt Per !\to. Agt. 644-7525 of Warner, 1 Bick w. ol RECREATION (Ad good tor sa on rontJ L NI I Beach. 847-9914 675'-1500 VEHICLE SHOW Din• 11-lnl aguna guo CONDO. 3 Br, 2 Ba, bulh SEPT. 19TH·23RD rv PRIVATE N1GUEL SIKJ1-es, 33681 \Vtnd· ins, carpetinJI:, drapes, rec. Al the LIVE ln the all new Dana. ENTERTAJm1ENT POOL jam1ner. 2400 8q. ft., 4 BR, rm, tac. & pool. Qintact Mr. ANAHEIM STADIUM Point tl1U'bor at t h c HOME. Upper Bay • nev.iy pri gate, beach, po o I . Queen at 549-2132 2CXlO Stalt' CciUege Blvd., beautiful l'rlARINA INN painted ~ 3 BR/lo~R . $3.iO $-130/ino. 831-1453. Huntington IMch Anaheln1 Motel. 34902 Del Obb;po St. Mo. Loia MillC'J' 642-8235 J181 LEASE/opt. 3 BR., 2 Ba. __ _..._ _____ Please call 642-5678 ext 339 f4 96-2353). Kl l ch en, Ef- Macnab -Irvine v.•/pool fa.cil. $330 r.fo. L I VE L I K E A to claim your tickets. fi clencles &. Apartments. 494-97{M 494-9729 Aa:t. MILLIONAIRE. Over .wt (North County Toll tree Heated pool, direct dial Comt. joln ua at New number Is ~l220l. phones, television, IBW\8 lb>al'!y Comperr-Linda Isle Landmark condol. Play ten-Balboa lsl•nd bath, I au n d r 't facUities, 642.t23S 644-6200 1"1-0-R-,-y-,-. ,-,-.,.,-. -p-,,-,-&-,-U-p, nil, blllards, iwim, KYm & • 0meeting ~ml.a, close ~o-Sah" choose yoor hobby. Planned INTERIOR Designers 2 BR emente ""' guna .ct:ac . VIEW 3 BEDROOM 6 BR., 4~ ba., air cond. cttvtti pd lat dircc , Come play In our 7,000 Sq. ft. $.1,000 Mo. a es, ex .IOC • llvinf:ldlning area, kit., sportfuhlng, shopplnR & hon1e In Huntington Hlll1. Bill Grundy Rllr. ~161 tory. Cute 1BR w/d1b/w11.h, $2'25 winter, $275 yrly. restaurants. SGO \1·cek & Up. f amily room, l'Qvered & M V prl laund, encld gar, all tl75-3412 or 613-0UO hi d , £'nclos<!d patio_ $280 month. .,. lrde new, next to million dollar DELUXE 2 Br 2 Ba :~~~ ~~ !eek·s~~:~e SJ Please phune !'>45-9491 club house. Le8M! $235. mo. d h hr l k• . • -· tr• LARGE Exec. 4 BR, 3 &JO..ro18 s ws , ce nta er, patio. NICE spacious 2 BR, $21:'1. BA, \'ery clean, \'acant, $3$ Wlntt'r $285. avl )Tly. 2""ol ·o· Lac ta St BRANO 11 e w Huntington 673-7178. nio, ;io,;o • res • mo. 546-5022. Landmark Exec. Condo. N.~E~W-~2-B--dec--,---lnq. 494--6848 Welker & Lee Newport Be•ch compl recreation facllltle1, r, . · um aP!, Huntington Beech locldlng arts & crafla yrty 1325. Wm>er $265. Ava>l 1----='-------111"~ '''"'' $95 On Oct'an . Util pd, Kit-beau tltully landscaped: Sept. 8, 67r>-3412 or 673-0UO $145-$16J SINGLE Hse $.'lO "'k util pd. Cht>ne1.te. l<~or' ~inglL-s. Wf&'U8rded entrance. Adlls CUTE l Br, crpts, patio, nr BACl!EU)R & 1 BR., po.!101, 1 r,rson Stove & 'n.etrig RARE l br $150, fwn w/ only, $290 mo. 968-2549 new stove & l'f!frig. Yrly trplc'B pMv. garages - R 2 ' · utll. s1.....is/sn1l n...--t ok. 1195 Ut•'l pd £~7178 DI lded bath & I L or A E br $145 Now. Child NEAR N5~ _ 2 br Si9S in I-ITS BEAUT. SURFSIDE 3 Br. · · •..:i-• v 0 11 & pet ok. Ga.a-age. fncd \\'!gar child ok pool, fenced p&Uo, club 2 BR, apt. $2'l:>. Winter. $280. closets. Rec. ha.II, pool & O~EN Beam 2 Br & den S200 SUND.l"'CK 3 br 2 ba •JOO now priv., $250, 968·5485, 5J6.3m. yrly. inclds u t 111 t I es . pool tables, sauna llaU1s. b1i; rlo;;ets sntl IX1 Now. . " · 673-1007 See Jor yourself. 17301 PA'f!O 4 br 2 ba im lse F1i1I, P'1D], PAlio, Sf'~is nk. Ntwport a..ch ""~°"·~~--~--Keel!!On Ln. (1 blk \V. of !rp:, kids'pers. tiiovi•-ln. ALA Rentals 642.8313 -'-'-'----N----4BR, 2BA, frplc, pa.tio, 9 n10. Beach.1 blk N. of Slater). BRAND EW lease al $350 monthly. Year· 842-7S18 ALA Rentals 642.S383 N.B .. CHERRY LAKE Lease with option to pur-ly lease at $-IOO mo. 67a--0797 --BRANO NEW--Mt. re~11 atn1osphere chase! Top quality! NEW 2 BEDROOM. Adult~ MEN, small bc1tch ho1el. wfboating & s\1·1n1mlng. . " Riooms $21.50 per \\'k, Apts l.gc 2 BR, 2 BA, D\V, cpts, Great 3 BR. llurry: $525 • 2 &: 3 Bedrooms $225 including u ti Ii t I es . 595 per month. 53S-7l66 clrps, ideal loc. ~:lli.1sidc. l\lo. • 2 Car Gara.gts \Vlnler. 673-9023 Gar. orf allC'y, prkg for lrtr/ JOHN P. CAREY $450. &. $415. \VINTER, new 3BR. 2BA, Laguna Beach camper, gardener turn. REALTORS IH&-7414 N'"EWPORT CREST !rplc, delux bltins, $375 per Adult1 only, no pets, $785 E bluff PHONE 645-6141 mo, utll pa.id. 67>2099 mo. 1st & last + $75 cleang. a1t , SBR, 3BA 642•1264 Executive 1101ne, New pa.int 3 BR, new, Ea1tbluff O>ndo, $375, UPPER, Bay t ront, HARBOR. V>"w HI I I , . in & out. \Valle to Cdr.1 High, lease, leue/option, sale, Pler, 3BR, 2BA, no garage, . . " Elem schl & shppng. Yr lse ~. 552-8236, 6#-8779 67>1909 or 673-6900 SpaclOlls 5 Br/dcn/fa.m w/opt. to renew. $515 mo. Condo. Furn. or Belboa Penln•ula rm, pool , speclacula..a· view. Incl v.·atel' & gardener. Unfurn, 325 $850/MO. 644-2:159. '44-1060. $35 Wl!l!K A UP LOVELY 3 Bdrm, frplc, --.,TH=E'"°"B"°L"U'°FF=s--Corona del ~r e Sleeping Rooms QUIE'l' Furn or Unf\Jrn Bachelor $95 lnduding ut11. Walk to beach & stores. Mature l&dy pref'd. Call n4/49+-6458 wknd1 o r 213/~l wkday11. FURN new lovely 1 BR avt, view, nr. beach. $23;>. AlitO sm. cozy place ror 1. $115. Utils pd . Responsible, Newport S..ch Sharp-R-oratod 4 BR, 2 BA . Frplc, !l'onl pol'Ch & 11'¥ N!lll' tcrra<.'e. Nr ocean & bay, heuchl't. Adults only. l~nt $350Jn10. \Vlnter, A11nuaJJy S 3 8 0 . 6-1~211. PEN[NSULA. \Vinlrr -11.ttr~ 2 BR, 2 00. $22.'i J\Jo. Slcp!t 10 Ocean, Bay, Tennis. Selecl rentals & salei;. Balboa Real Estate Co. 700 E. Balboa Blvd.. Balboa, 673-4140, 673-3596 Eve TEACHER \V In l e r. Ov.-ner's I Br, modem bltns, patio, sundeck, carport . Sngl adull. no pets. &>e Sal & Swi 1132 \V. Balboa, Apt B 0 \VNERS' own spacious con- do. Luxuriously turn. All L'Un\"\'n:iCTlC'C"S. Only qualified & resp. adult~ considl•1·ed. $450 mo. 646-1974. Bachelor Apt, F~u-r-n.~N-B $100 (Z!Jl 791 -JUTI. STUDIO, s ingles only. 1 Llk lo IJCh & i;hopping. Clear\. $1.Xl. Incl util, 1st & last. 492-5607. Apt. Unfurn. 365 General ALL NEW CPt:s. drapes & Jxtint. IO'.'tly lgc 2 BR, :l BA bltn kitrh, dJ.in1·shr. 2 ettr t'IOl:ietl gill'. Adult's pleMC. S~ 1110. rutr_ 642--t:'.53 3 B1t , 2 BA apt. So. uf H\vy. tplc, pat'a, \\'asher/dryer area, $32.J. Call Agent, 675-6900 Balboa Island STEPS FROM BEACH 2 BR upper; garage, trplc. Yearly. Broker 6ra-6700 ··.1lbo• Penintula enclosed )'rd. 2 ca1· enclosed NeV.'J>Ol'l Beach sman , ----------1• Houaekeeplng Rooms ~ll!· gardtnt'r. S 31'0 . BR, pool & nlaint.ne~sf BRAND NE\V, 1 bl.ck to e Ocean View Apts 67:.-1849. ci-pts & clrps, SJ251no. 1st & Bcad1, 2 'BR. 2 BA, OW, BALBOA INN NE\V 3 Br, lownhse!J near So. last. $200 dep. 8J3...8635 or fple, W/O, dble gar., $425. 105 Main Street Coast plaza $27!'1. Pool or tot 507-78&'. 675--2763 675-8740 -lo_t~, _•IU_l~""~"-_, __ 14_6· ___ 1ELEGANT view home. av .. iJ. WINTER ""' "--.... Townhouse Unfum. 335 renuu at D<:'t!.Ch. employed adlt. 49•H200 LIVE 1~ block lrom lhe ROOM & bath w/pll'ivate en· ocean In new 3 BR, 2 BAI trance, Northend, nr. beach, laundry, duplex, Deslgne< bus & shopping. 494-7079. tor tan1ily living $375 to $400 OCEAN beach lront, 2 BR, 2 ' n10. Call 979-3165 ~'kdys. Ba, $350 mo. 741 Ocean-OCEANFRONT new 3 BR. 2 front, 494--4601, 49-1-1279. BA, lrplc, crpts, drps. Yearly h?a.se. 675-1536. Dan• Point to qua.I. tenant, 3 BR, den, 2 --------'---I Oompletely furn., j u 5 t ---'-""'"-----·I BA, sep. dining, patlOs, C ti ,.,... decorated duplex. 2 Br 2 Ba. 3 BR 2 BA ho larg fam gardens & f o Un ta 1 n & • -"'o_sco..==-----1 trplc., lrg patio. $300 per APTS; $150. Up Hotel r1ns. rm, 'liv rnl \l.'~lc, d~l car ~~ff ~io $!000 mo. NEW 3 BR Townhouae, 11,1,1_m_o_. ·_644-_15_17_____ $100 up, cable TV, UWs pd., F;Rr. Fncd yd, $300. plus.1~=--·--~---BA, S. Santa. Ana nr. So. *2 BR, furn. winter. Util hid pool, 494-3537. caJI 496-21165. 5 BR, 3 bath, 3 car gar, Coast Plua Shope Oitr, tncld'd. S225tmo. 3 br. 2 ba, BEACH FRONT f\.irn &pt, 3 fount•in Valley -. ~I~~ ~ 1;;,l.n1=m 552-7112 or 6'4-181.9 wocelnant•r.· J,,.."Z}!!.::,.,o. Both near rooms, for maJe studt!nt C "'" ~ only. SlSO. mo. 833-1355. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car ~r., .i.n Port arlow, N.B. $.'i7Sfmo.H __ u_n_tl_ngto~-·----h ___ 1PENINSULA Point 1 BR sruDJO Apt, close in. Adults bltns, S\\'im pool, ds OK, y·"'!2:"=n==,~·-~=R~~-NEW 'l'o\\Tlhouae close to partially furn., util pd, only, no pets, $150. Utlls pd. like nc\\', only i249 mo. No 1:.1uu.Y • 3 BD ?wt., 2 BA Hunllngtoo Har..:.. .• 3 Br, 2 yearly $210. mo. 67l-7Z19 , ,.,-~7'-'4U=o------fee. Agmit MZ-4421 ~g~~~ds ~RBJ>/: Ba, II.hag crpt, d$. dshwhr, "',,",.,'"· =-,,-,o-==----= i l.ldo Isle Huntington 8NCh $.'l50/MO. AGT ti73-ao8 OR pvt patlo w/pool. $1'65. mo SPACIOUS 2 BR, ocean 100 CR 963-2669 EVES. lse. 8-16-1509 yds. gar. 0 .A., pie \\'indOw, TERRIFIC Bay View. 2 Br, 31~'i;,..~Bi\,T·11i:;f8uJ>~S: tr SHARP 4 BR, 3 BA, fncrl frnt yrd. 3609 Balboa ~r;n ~~~8.Iu~ 1re~~: Capl1tr•no Beech OCEAJ.~ vew. Brand nu 3 Br, 2 Ba. Sundeck. Gar, ds\11'. $2&.'i. tm-2574, 675-3760 Corona del Nwtr re~~~~ ToWNHOUSE Coit• Mesa DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond • Frplc'a • 3 Swim· nilni Pools • 1-teaJth Spa. • Tennis Court~ -Gym Ind Billiard Room. l BR. F'ron1 $150 1 BR & Den From $190 2 on trom s210 2 ~n . 'l\vnhses From i2SO MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 1714) 5S7·80~ OPEN' EVERYDAY lloura: F ri-Tues lo.ti \Vet!. & ThUl'S. lG-7 2 RR, 2 DA, 11tudlo + patio. All new crpts, d11>11 & paint. 2 kids & small pet ok. Im· 1ncd OCt!upy. Near OCC. $1!18. 1036 Mission Dr. J BR, 2 Ba, kids & small pet ok. V. lrg Y.'/crpts, drps &.I hllnM. NelU' schls & shopg:, S190. lL11n1el.I occupy. 1039 Valcncln St. l\1gr. 979-8TI9 SUPER DELUXE- NEW UNITS 3 BR, 2 BA, IX"amed (.-eHing, fj)lc1 DW, patio, $275; 2 BR, 2 BA, beamed celling, D\V, p.'lt:lo, $210: 1 BR, lower, D\V, patio. $1 60; Nr Estancia J Ii & golf course, Water pd. 540-9255. TIRED OF NOISE? \Vilson GardPn Apts. 2 Br, l~:i Ba, crpt.s, drps. Pool. ~fature aclulfs. no pets. ONLY $162.50/MO. 22.n FounuUn \Vay Ea.at {\V, ot Harbo.· on \\'llilonJ Call 646-2846 IM1fAC. 2BR, ZBA (1100 sq. ft.) Blti111, dshwshr, Fla.Ir, wfw cpl.I, drps, lndry, garage & storage plus park· ing. Lg. balcony. Adults/No: pet11. V&canl. Must See! I 548-1098. WANT TRANQUILITY? , l{cre's the apt. fur you. 2 BR, encl. gsr. w/srorn&e & laun· ·dry tactHlies. Adlts only. No pet·!, $11l) n10. 646-0911 or 646---I c~~~;,:.~:..~ re~~. lfeated pool. Call Bkr. 675-5800 FOUR SEASONS APl'S. Spec. 2 sty 2 BR, l~\ BA. blbu:, crpts, drps, prtv ... pet'a, pool , conv. loc. No pets., for Oct. ht $165. 73.l 1 Joann St. C.M. 646-1450 SPOTLESS 2 BR. new cpts, new drp1, new paint, bltn5, small· child OK, no pets. $160. 786 Shalimar No. 1. -8907 ~---------. 67$-l!m or Cii::Hi9<X) RUSTIC 2 br ro!tub~· Nr. No. bay. Pr\\'. pnt!o. \'rly. $250. sr.>-OJ7'l l_~:\L1 r~ .~-Sm. llses. J8j to $135. sng\s s1udt11ls uk. Now ON CLJF}' 2 bi• $1!15. Ntl'lv. Brini:; 1x·t & thikl, JiKru.ge. COTfAGE in Crtr.1·$2:'.5. F"rfi', p1iv for matUl'l.' single. DELUXE 3 Br & den $425 yrly. Cd~1. Frpl, appl, all <"US!om. 1\VAIL NO\V. $275. TO\\'f\house Back Bay, Pool. Duplex•• Fum. 345 _-9~'·-'~·~~=~-=~ Ph: M8-78:M or 646--4.750. RED C,\RPET Rf:Al.TORS. Frplc, self dean oven, dbl 2 & 3 BR. Winier. $245 & ARLENE H9J.-l:iS1 gar, $.'l75/mo. 833-8974 or lalbN P9nln1UJI i29.':i/MO. 114 E. Balboa. FURN 1 BR, lncld util, gar .. 2 Br, ttrepJacc, pool, prlvatc IP---------il patkls, contlncntal break- fast. Spacious grounds, near shopping & fl11e beach. Fur- nl!hed or wilurnished, from $250. Corona de! Mar, B.lboa P1nln1ul• WINTER lEASE- PEN POINT Jo"um. 2 sty, 3 Br + 3 Ba, Cenl. hi, J".P., 2 car gar .. \V. & Dryrr. 1\\'1til. Imm. $375/rno. Call coll ct.>t; i2131 .,.49-6173. OCEANFRONT -2 BR furn. garag1!, palkl, UlO n10. Winter. 6r,,...1632 2 BR hoUSt>, \\inter, util included. """"' lritehen. SZXI mo, 6Ta-3008 flARBOR View Hills, 3 BR. 2 BA. fain rm, chlldren'1 yard & equip. B e a u t d"corntt'd. l':'ardcner lncld. $550. 64-1--4895 2 BR deluxe cottl\g:C, flrepl. 'tll June L'ith. $285/nlO. 3210 Seavlew, CdM. 6-12-2222. BACHELOR house }'early, $100 per n10, utll lncld. 5161.~ Narch111us. ALA Rantals 642-831.1 $°'OWNERS-OF $ $ REAL PROPERTY $ We're here to serve you? F"REE or ClfARGE? Try Us! Call prior to vacancy. Don't lo'"' S$. Sa.v<' Time $ALA RENTALS$ Nc\\·pon &: Ray, C~f 642-8383 BEAUT. ne\\' -iBR home on Ballx>a I~land . 3 be. w/w crpling, v.·et bftr & trplc & fnrn rn1. bltins In kit.ch, dsh/\\'lh. Everything brand JK!v.·, It's a beauty & a bal.'gain~..a1 $.150 mo. call 54~2473 alt 5pm or bel. Sam 2 BR, C.~I. $140. ltunt Bch 2 BR $150. Balboa vacant 0t..-ean vleY.·. Npt. &-+t. 2 BR, sngts or families OK Agt. F!!e. 979-&4XI. m-1Q>3 • 879-59!Jl or 8'i9·1TT6. 1 udult, no pets. i m mo., 3 BDH.1\f, 2 bath, GO'xlOO' lot,1 ~-~~-~----NEW 2 Br, lrg deluxe, yearly, 673--08.17 dbl gar, bllins, fine Joe. )-5 BR. Hai-bor View homes, winter or yearly &teps to New furn baytront bechelor. S240/nw. ViUage Re a I v.·ater & gardener inc. Rent Bay or Bch, <2ri1 699-1219 $250 per mo. Slip avail. Ni-rt BNch Estate 962--44TI or lease option i 5 4 5 . wk daya 675-2361 Sundays 67l-2162 ~ ....... COMF'Y 2 BR, + guest room ,;~c.===4=1 ~.,,----,,---OCEANFRONT, ex-1,e 3 Br BAYFRONT • 1 IJ:R apt DELUXE 1 BR apt, a Is o &.ba, crpts, drps, ynl, v>'lk HARBOR View Homes -le dt.n, 2 Ba, frplc, gu, overlooking bay, patio, gar. house for 2, stcpg to ocean !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! to beach & town. No peta. "Montego" 4 Br. 2 Ba. winter. Utll pd S 4 o o, uUls pd. $300 mo. 6'13-6790 w/view, $160 100. + util, * * * • * * $275 1no. 536-3.107 Lcai;e $4Zi/mo. Ca 11 846--8631 LUX. 3 Br, 2 Ba., Jurn, 6~TI (winter rentals) VIEW LEASE/BUY, 11 ssun1e 7'1~.1 _"4-_l_OT7_~--~--sundeck, carport, extra ON ·the beach. 2 BR duplex, *NEAR BEACH* Near beach, patio, upgrad· BEACON Bay "·inter-pvt Newport Buen "clean. $330 yrly. 673-2285. lower unit, \\'/Wash/dry, Deluxe 3 BR. 2~ BA. Hlij{£' ed. 3 BR, famldln, o\\ner beach &: tennis. 2 Br, 2 Ba, OCEAN vl•w 1 ~--m, 2 Beacon Bay all utll pd. $.JOO. n10, avail owner's unit in new custom 968-7Th0 frplc, bltns, patio. Avail ucw.vu now thru June 1. 645-8569 duplex, ht.am c e i 11 n g , 3 BR. 2 h,'l, crpt/drps. Fenc-now. $350. 541-9534. hath. Only atep.5 to oceanil COZY bachelor apt w/cook-NEW Uooirlous 0 c e • n patios, fpl c, nr sbOpping, no ed yrd. Close 10 schls. $250 3 BR. den, dining, plus lg DiahwaAher, bullUns; se ing facil. Priv patio & en-Front{Vit.w 3 & 4 Br, fl'om pets, $425 mo. mo. 5.16-2914. · fam nn w/fplc, bltns, nr cleaning oi.-en, shag e&rpet, trance. All ut:ll paid, Sl2S UXJ vi:sl't ".llOf w. <keen 67J..0960 be h $.'l50 673--0852 2 patios. Lots of closet mo. Avail ill 7-1. 6'13-1:>35. Front dally or call 646-3ll4 * * * * * * 3 BR. v.1\ler J>flid, carpets, ac • · space. Parldnr for 2 ee.rs. * $2Z furn. 1 BR apt, * h'K kitchen, $200 cleaning BACH 2 huge rms lr pl be.th \Vlnter or yelll'ly. Call Eric 62 D--con Boy PLUSH EXEC. APT. fr-e 962-880.j porch. iar $175 available, Mueller C2l3) 72f..s880 or -----'-----'-~ OCEANFRONT + bay vu. For Lease. NU VIEW APT. 4 lrviM • . GU-Gj89, <n4) ~91 eves. I.: ~·lends. Corona dll Mir New 2 BR. 2 BA Condo. br, 3 Ba., tam nn. All elect. • y t doo Frplc, full security. Lse bltns, crpt/drps. $750 per BA SHORES, ew rs to WINTER rentaJ, Upper 3 Br ~·-,. · $450. (21JJ 2n-U7G, C7lf) mo. Too many extras to priv beach. 2 BR, 2 BA, )Ir-Stepa to ocean. $250. 813-4060 BACH apt. Clean, cute, 673-4lll mention!! Call 673-6992 3 BR., 2 bo. · .......... $400 ly. $425. s.ta-4751 . or (213 ) 966-7751 (coUectJ. newish, uWs. incl. $131'.1 mo. 3 BR., 2~ ba ........... $450 Hatbor Vi l-lome Wti See.shore, NB. ?t.fa.n prelerre:I. 675-5720. WJNTER Rental -3 Br., 2 NEAR Ocean 2 Br, bltns, 2 BR 2 ba d~n A/C •.• 12'75 ew 11 ,...~1 Ba., 1 blk -m ..... ._ #-tc. Newly decor. patios , ' ' ' -Beaut Oeror 4 BR Fam 3 BR. Bit-lo•. -••· d-. FUN'!. apt. 'i blk to ocean. uu ~ • .... .,. 2 BR 2 baths tani rm $350 • · • -·.. ..... .__ r A il Sc 1 15 Ph pool , prlvl. S 2 3 5 Imo . · ' · Rm & Fonn Din GH-0396 Sundeck. View. 2 doors to Utlls. pd •. $185 mo. .~~~! va · P · · · ,,~A -10 4 BR .. 3 ba .••••••.•• , • $425 ' . , 2500 Se Cdlil ,.,...,.,.. 1J't'rVO 4BR.2hfllhs .......... $4753BR.2BATH.Pool.%blk ocean. 112~) 36th NB aview, . lBR ! p . Ull 2BR 2 Ba -lc built In• 3 BR . 2 bu., a.ir cone! .•• $275 beach. FamJly o n I)'. 6'7J.-25n OIARMING birds nest 1 br utn. alto, gar. t • • ' .. ., • • eves. £44-2611. washer & dryf!r, '$¥);'• Npt fantastic vie"'· \\'8ik to heh, 4 BR. 2•L ha ........... "175 $375/Mo. 493-5768. bath apt. DrJ>s, crptg, adult• 00 pe'· '·"' mo ARE d r I ~ ~ D I U I 350 t Q di "" '"76 H•lghts, Adulti;. mo. ...,, ~ · you rea y or schoo? 4 V' • SEVERAL 2 & 3 BR. bea-• up eXff n urn. coset1. uiet a ti.~.._. £7" ""7 Br 2 ls.on = O•< W<0 •••• i!AA I\-:7"JJO h' 1 BA1• 1•,iear shopp1ing & -homes, yrly. lease, from SO. of llwy. Lovely 2 BR., ll'W'"'J'tlJ'1 ""'t"'\I".., sc oo s o of Ne\v and.). $275 Mo. Agent 548-1290 C.o_rona ___ ... _1 _Ma_r ____ 1 1pl, 2 patlO!J. $275 Mo. $35 & UP. l BR., 2 BR & 3 BR, 2 BA house, So. of L •• un. BN-. 1325· Lease. 6.i&-ln2. d h 11 SPECTACULAR V'-w of 67f>...6497 or 673-4005 Bachelors. Color TV, maid H wy, f plc , patio , '" SPACIOUS 3 BR l" B e N n: 1erv, pool. The Mesa, 4.15 N. washer/dryer area, $jc'.?5. • '' tt., re ewport Shor11 Bay, ?ilodent delux 2BR, CHARMING bachelor apart-Newport Bl., N.B. 646-00,,l, Call Agent, 675-6900 SUNSHINE bright '1inter S200 1st and last plus $50 I 2BA. So. ot Hwy, deadend ment with loft. $180 mot1lh -ta! 2 BR 2 •··-' d•~IL 0 '7 -3 BR 2 BA cprt oew •-· 2 ~-•t ~ "~' 1 BR. cl-to beach. w•'oter 2BR. rehig, stove. new shag ... ,. · • • """"· ..-~ °" """""'°' • • • .... ...,., 11treet. '""' room1,o!Ylc. .._.. <;!,.,.....,,,,. .,.,.. •-•-,u-"-k patio Rec -r garag• patio Adul" -• 1 ... 1 or couple. No peto gar•u•e, wuh/dry, 620',S .. ., "'" '"""''" • · · • •Albol lsl•nd REALTY "0 ' • ' Adlts. $350 yrly, 400 la. SPAC. 1 br for m•lel man. -rm Or 3rd BR CO Pl.tel" --pets 1213! 698-1383 or '" Sl'". wa•·r ~ld, 120 361h St. Iris, $240 yrly. 673-7079 · m ,. "" · 67J-600.I Walk to heh & stores. $200 "" "" r- furn, ia:u. mo. Phone CUSfOJ\r, deluxe 4 BR. IKlme u~1~';!:Cnyc~~l1~r.VI~~e (213) 696-0018 3 + Oen, $tZ lease, new &: yrly. util pd. 6n..«ITI NB CHARMING newly dee 1 br, 494--0-124. ln lmmac. cond. On comer HoUHI Furn. or BEAOIFRONT fO' Uv rm . 3 \\'/!!Wldeck. % dbl. gar. 2 BR, upstairs, furn. lge lot. Good beach. $1,000 per 0~~·=~;w~7~M Unfurn. 310 ;f~i~.~~~~e~.' ~1C,_o_s_l•_M_,. __ ,._~---lrg. BR. 2 BA, thru June $195.mo.673-8l'79art5 sundcck, Nr. Pottery Sha.Ck. month on ycal'ly lease, to ---------t 510% Avocado I K y RATES 31st. $360, 548-4757/&lS-8350 2 BR, nev.•ly decor, bltns: \\'aik to beach, prk) for 6 reliable family. Oeneral tee a · LOW W E L pool Adults only S720 1\to •·k r Cl •-"·bury LARGE 3 Br 2 Ba carpel E utlve Suites 2 BR, $300, util pd. . I ,,, •• ......;,, . cars., Lease at 3 5 0 . 1'6 or tt't .:.ull.3 YES. WE HAVE RENTALS! ;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;.1 t' • I • J:~ 3704 ScRllhore Yrly ease ~1\JIU Ag<!nt 497-11X)9 or 21l-4T;,-6064 Broke r 673-6900 J\.h1.y \\'C be or service I' drapes, frp c, year eue 2080 Newport Blvd. -=-~~-61=H5~18'=-=-=-1 BR, close to beach. Seclud· OCEANFRONT $800 n'lO. 4 COZY 2 B1· hon1e w/~. in 90Jv lng 2 BR :l ha. turn, "'1nter $275 $325 + C. I: B. 644-1'661. Beach Blvd. at Yorktown LRG. delux 2 BR, blUns, ed, adults only. Recently BR .. 4 ba .. furnished FA heat, patio, 2.car pr. Your housing needs? • Newpcnu~·-' BeaYr•~·~R. 2 be.. OCEANAvall att.,0ct.,:t.BR.t 2 BA 642·2'11 f~o, 1 blk beach or bay. redec. $4100. 640-<l851. OCEANJo"'RONT furn. S330 $325. Ava.il Ck1. 1st al't. 6 Fron1 $31»450 111''11'"· &J· .-.w. v ew • STUDIOS A 1 BR's. Prlva,. ·-~ ----S :>. mo. 675-3570153+-1429. 2 BR. clean, f'tplc, gar, South mo. 1 BR It loll A deck. or wkcnd.s. 673-Tr;iS, , ... u, •-.-.~. • e Full kitchen 2 BR. 2 BA. all bit-Ins, -ar ot llWY, Call "-. 49+-9704 494-9729 drpg, uw•-u:;o mo. 644-5630 . HeaL• pool ·-1213 43111-..... B1ycrfft 1~ bay &: beach. Ave.II. Sept 15. * l -;,;., * CRESCENT Bay, VI e w , 1 -~-------Huntlntf'on luch e Laundry facilities $275. 673--0473. C~tl Meu steps to ocean. 2 ·BR. 2: ba. 4BR, 1~ ba, forn1I din rm, I,.'""'""-='-..;.;...."---I• Free UtUltlea den, 1tppllancc1. Adults ~ dbl Rarnge. g....12 mo Jae, $145 • 2 BR, bltni, ct'J)t•, • Ftte llnens $ll5-l.« 1 ' br, waterh'Ont, mo, wlntl'r rental 49&-57'J6 $375. 548-M40 or ~1454 l'li'~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!l'"'I drps, frplc, pe.tlo, carport A • T.V. I: maid i'e.n'. avail. :~~). ~m:.lsr~7 yrly, 1 BR. l t,; biles heh. All util + B ho "SINCE 1 t&undry flM!ll. 1~4 1 trdant e Bar-B·Que , I~=.;..,,~~~~-~ bl 4n• .,,..,., ltHI • ..,. re• k N Ot 'l...Aili>t • ""---service LRG 3 Br, 2 Ba. Bll·lns, Un. ca e. .,.r-.N•• or ....,.: I_...,.., _ _.______ lat We~tern Bank Bldg. DELUX Spucious. JiJR, shall o . o pe ta. ......,.......,.... ~ c-•Anie .. 244-6..186 CORNER lot. Lrg. 2 Bl', Unlverslly Park, l 1v\11c crpts, wlk in closet&. $335 aft 5:30. • 1 MUe 10 ocean f:i~ter~ ~~TI:;c~~f· OCEAN vu -walk to bch. 3 trpl., patio, crp11, appl., D1y1 552-7000 Nights nio. 130 Pearl, 675-0158 $135 MO. Deluxe mobUe br. $295. Ulll pd. Inc.Id ~ftler. $383 yrly Jcaae. I ~""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!•liijj;~-P;;;;>~d;"~-N1'*l!rt leech homf!, turn. Htd. pool. GIRL roommate nffiied ror cable. 494-5572/213-244--0386 646-5430. u NI v ER s IT y park Bilbo• Pen)nsule Mature adllR. No pets. 4 lgti 2 BR on Peninsula. Ask Sou BalbOa Pentniula t nho 3 Oil 1 ~ 81 DELUXE duplex Mar beach Sl!luona, 2359 Newport for Jlm, 6"5-8040 ti! 5 pm. . th L•guna b:~ u°'.\\' ,_:1 pt'' BAYFRONT-Yrly Ot \Vlnttr. & Lido 11hope. 3 BR, 2 Bl, 81\•d., C.M. MS-63.1'Z. MODERN 2 BR. 2 BA on the P~·~•su" ~nt E., c · 1 uv e, c s, ~BR, spac big patio. Frplc, trplc, bltna, dshwhtj shag A'M'RAC. Furo. 2 Br. lll!O. •·•·, w~ per mo. Wlnter 2 BEDROOM & Oen. Oct&n ""''•'" L.A rvi "' drp1, patlo. Acros., from oew crpts, dshwhr, prtv. alftg, Yrty/mo 3 2 5 v.v ....,., View. Ln.rgc deck, 1 block to home, 1 block to beach or ft.nnl g court.8 & pool. J yr, beach &. pit'I'. ~apon. •rel 563405 ib-· · Sltnl, w/w pool. Adults, no rtntal. Prlv. patio. fl'13-2706. bcacb. All remodt.led and I)(\)', 2 llR & dt'n or 3 BR, IM.'. $39 1 5 mo. 528--0626 bet. 9 yng adult• ok. No peta. or 6 *3. Art S pm pets. 64Z--8520. \VINTER: 1/213/4 Bdrm.a. redecorated. Deluxe. $350 indoor/outdoor patio ln1er-A!\1 -1 IM. $700. 673-~ or 673::6IX6 3 B~. * BA, tn.nd new, Up. * snJNNING 1 BR gardrn AJao yearly rentals fi month Sept. 15th thru l'Om, frpic, all bltns lncld 1 R v IN E c 0 ndo-\Valnut Ntwport Beach per u~ ~· ran&e A apl. pool, rec. &rel\, $165. Property House 6C-38SO te 15th. South l.aiU~· rtfrl,/tre~?S:i.33°¥ ~75 Squatt. 3BR. 2 BA. crpts, oven~~ 1 ~$395 now. 18th St .• C»sta J\It'!:ll\. FURN. 1 BR apt, Ntwport : 464-4686 cvts. ; mo. ~. • • drps &: exfnur. $215 ~-3 BR, den, 2\\ BAlh. SlePf to mo. •· SUS CASITAS Ialend, $165 per mo. Avail. '121-5115 days. Corona del Mar Lease. NO PETS. 552-$19 ocelln. S 4 2 SI turn or LARGE I BR, i BA duple."<, f'U I br A bachelo 2UO Immediately, 673-3247. Lfdo Isle aft 3 pm. S 3 7 5 J u n r urn. 1'.fcNaah fplc, new cpl 6 drpl, $WI. ,., m s1--..1 CM rs. 1 ROOM apt. $90 y..,.ly. util OPIN HOUSE H PM UNJV p " 3 Br 2 ea ... ... Y•arly. 61}.1tlll al\ ~ .. ewport ••·· · • . Rr11o , , Realty, ......-1...,.. I BR LRG •·• ~. 1!&5 inclded, on beach, SALE -LEASE Beaut. home 41A Fernleal Ave. atrium. Nr pool &: 1ennit. :r BR 2 ba lwnh8c ocean DELUXE 3 BR. 2 BA, clOl<!d • '"''n ~-• 8~12Al S Br, 37' Iv. rm. patkt A ! BR. 2 BA. & 2 BR. l BA Newly _p1\lnted. Avail Se.pt. front'. Elcci Kil $300. m : ga.ra.se. Ytarly, Ca I I l<le11I for bachelor. 1993 pool, 'm' lot $\~ tno. Call 644-oo.30 15th. 552-mt a fter 3:30. 44G--lTIO/G'i5-U45 60-3188 or &C--791•. Olurch 548-9633 Br.t-8359 PF;RFECT 3 Br, 3 Bit for LOVELY 3Blt, 2J3A ~ , lITlL Pd -U11ch. Of( str .• prl COMFORTABLE J Br. 2 Ba adullR. 16eAI locl\llon . R~lu.m homt1 crptcd, drpcd, Condominiums DuplexH, patio, t adll. $1.30/nio. No houi;c open Sun 11)..5, 107 Vin l.cn11t>. 417 Narc t 11u1 • trplc, nr eehls. roo1" & ten· Furn. 315 'um. or Unfurn. 355 pct. !i4M251. ~I406. Yell11 Lido ot call (213) &14--092.4 Open. nlll prlvll. $375. 552-7855 LARGE Sachtlor, $125 mo. LRG. l Br, 1 Ba opt. 1 blk to Bay or Ocesn. Yearly $185/mo. fi'i'5-46((l ()6:,\NFltON1' 2 ~R. I DA, ftplc & ptH\o. \Vlnler 9/22 to 6/t!!i. 6'5--0668 LG 2 BR, 1 % BA, shag cpts, bltn.!J, fplc, priv patio, encld gar. 634 Hamilton. ~05 e ves. or 83Q..0900 allk for Toni days, or 645-6345 eves. 3 ROOMS. $85. 1no. Fun1. f.)'.l. nlO, Over 3.j yn:, 110 pe~. 2037 \\testmlnsler Ave, lnqu~ at 240 Sierlcs. NE\V 2 br, 2 ba, $215. lncld11 gn_, k 'Vo'ater. P,,1atlltt 11.dults, no pets, 114 £. 20th St S48--013'1 /64H005 3 BR, 2 ba, like ~\\', Shllg cpt, drps, bltns. 1'.lature adlls, no pets. $2:25 mo. 271 16th Place. 646--2414 agt. 1 BR unfurn, lo'A-er, no pets or child, heated pool. SI.SO. + s.;Q ICC, dtlp, ~!Q\8 LARGE 2 Br, bltw, d11hwhr. 11.dult1, no pets. $160. 101 Shallmnr. ~168 $140. UP. 2 Br: 3 Br. 2 Ba. Pool, Blt·lns, pl1ty >'Ard . 1996 1'11\ple A\•e. ~2-38t3 1Mr.-1AC. trlplex on quiet 1t, 2 795-5886 3 BR, 2 BA, nr. bch, La1une Be•ch Huntington 8e1ch , Coste Mna Heated pool. Adults, no COl'TEMl'O 4 BR. 3 B,A, iU{arp, n.:--1<hlrt.-slip"f:" -·"'4 ' • . !DR, pool, 1180 mo. SLlf DIJPLEX 2 Br d pell. Call ...,_, 'fl-pl, bllnl. S48S/month. Bet IOAM or btWn 2 &. EMERALD BAY avaU. mid Pawtuckt t (nr Bfl&ch A · • en, ne\\' CLEAN 2 BR APT, tum., W l n t er.· 71 41675-4923, 5 P,M 87MOa4 Sept. thru Jun.i. $850 rno. 2 Atlanta) 2l3: 356-0J7g eup, new drpa, 1love, adul(a:, no petl Inquire 179"' 2 BR. Fum. St~. Stna:le Br. bulltin1. ltlU'lllt. laun· 1toey. Seam eelllnc. Couple ,,:d;,ey,_.c.6;,;73-'364~~~~~~- pref. 646-9243, &46-8812 $EPi\RATF. 1 br. 2 bn hso, n4~·7100. HARBOR View Hlllo 3 BR. :bs.Pr1•. beach ""' & cuport. Small pet, adult" Roch<ster. LIDO 2 Br, ' Ba borne. frpl., lam. rm: iae. -lot. nHll2-1030. QUICK CASH 646-'4:& 1 BR ..,.u.,., 195 mo In· ,dbl pr. Wln"r $340. ••· Oc<an w . S!50 Mo yrly '"" $3!0 MO. 3 BR. plu1 deo. THROUGH A "'Malt• Room For llod>ly" clodlng ut11111!!1 odlll only. •:30: 675-7879. D. Franklin RJ!r. 673-2222 2-ety. view home. , , • deln OUI the prqe no pctt1. 646-lllU'J • en., 3\1 Ba., doo, Sept. NR. ""''" 3 br, 3 ha, den, 494-6701. 494-9729 Agt. _DAILY PILOT ... turn that Juntt "'"' QUh Do;f"-n"°·1 '"""'111-·•~u~p"'""'1Mc:-""s11"1'"'01 11\N .rune 14511. din nn, blllns. bun> ceU:, A tlOOd wtu>t-od-ls • &ood t:> -WANT AD ---wi111 a DallY Piiot Claulll<d "L~1·· tt In cl...nted, Ship m.7ll67 "1>"· 14111-i.... S!3-34T1 ,.........,.. •d. c.n 61Hm. ., Shon;Rm11"1 S42-fi618. I OCEANFRONT dbl gar, pri. yd, $2135. mo. Winter, :\ BR, 2 BA. 645-0n Wiii take at!Jdt.nll. 6'U-6793 "-"u'"·'U~~,c-,~l~B=r.-. 2=BA,~ dt.luii. OD.UXE OCF...A.NntONT prlv. p.'tUo, ~p.1, drps. $X:JO. 3 Br, 2 e., hltns. ftillc , )'fly &t&-1908 fl51). 838-H9J; 67~28'.llm --1-1.-E=le-µhan--l-Dlme---A-·~L.lne­ CLAS!.1>1EO ...... SU.Im caU loday 60-5618. CLASSlfllD HOURS Adver Usert may place their ads by t elephone. 8:00 a.m. to ~:30 p.m. Mondlly thru Frl4&y 8 to noon Saturday I COSTA MESA ' OITICE I' 330 w. Bay 64:1-5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newpo1'l Blvd. J 642.5678 I j. HUNTINGTON BEACH I i 17875 Beach Blvd. I ~0-1220 I LAGUNA BEACH 212 Forest Ave, 494-9466 I SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Rt tl 492-4420 .I I ' NORTH COUN'IY dial ftte 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for COPY &: kll.la I ls 5 :30 p.m. the day be- fore publlc&tlon, exttpt for Sunday A Monday Editions when deadlllle ts S&turday, 12 noon. CLASSIFllD REGULATIONS ERRORS: Adve:rtben should check thf!lr ads daily 6: report elT'On lmmedlatelY. T HE DAILY Pt:1.0T usumn UablUty for the flnt In- correct insertion. onl)t. CANCELLAn ONS: When kllllng an . ad be !SUn! to make a record of th& K1lL NUMBER given you by your •d t&ker Ill receipt. ot your canttllatlon. This kill number must be pre• sented by the advert..laer Jn case of a. dl.spute. CANCELLAnON 0 R I CORRECTION or NEW I AD BEFORE RUNNING: i:."very effort Is made to kill or correct a tiew ad I thl\t hns been ordered, but we cannot 1uaran- tee to do so until tht. ad j ha.s appeared Jn t he paper. DI!\.fE.A-UNE ADS: Thele ids are strtctly CMh In adv~ by tnail or at aiiy one of our of· !lets. NO phone orden. Oea4llnf!: 3 p.m. Frid.a¥, Costt. Mtsa office 12 noon -all brp,nch ot• fleet. TIIE 0;\IL\' PILOT ff.. soro.'t3 th@ rtaht to clu- 11.f)'. edJt, ctntor or f't'oo fuse lln)' advtrt11tmtnt, and to chance lti n.tet t · regula1kml without prior no4ce. CLASSlfllD MAILING ADDlllSS P. 0 . U.X 1560, C.0.ta M- 92628 • 3• O~LY PILOT F-. S.pl<mb<t 14, 1971 .: ......... -. JrtJ I [ --b··-!rt] I ~ .. ·--lrtl I 1~11 --)~ Apt~-· _Unfu __ m_. ___ 365_ /Apt. Unfurn. 345 Apts.,Om ;;~tceiiiiiiRiioniiiiiitii•,iiiiii.:;m440~ lndu•trl1I Rtnt•l 450 Cost• Me... I New port hlc:h Furn. rtr lfnfurn. 310 1S--PA-(-•. -,-.-,-.-,-,-•• -.-,,-<l'P-"· PARK NEWPORT Loguno BHcll DENTAL SU ITE <IDO i BIRCH, NB drps, bltin """.,.. & ove-n, SPACIOUS tud' I blk ·-~-APARTMENTS ' ~. '0 C'Td carprt. ctUldJ't'n ok, main tx>ach. $17~. 641-8'178 E3tablished dental suitt> lf'n" 2000, 20CKI, 3600 11q, ft. or com· l°" Newport Beach &: CoJUi bo. thl!rool. AvaU. 1011173. t.IC'llB., 3 Opera101ics, Lab, /llr. Baumgardner, 541·5032. ~~k ~m. private ot!lce & Sl.IALL t.1 an u f ll ct LI re r , xeptJ?" roon1. ~It C'Ab-desires space to share inetcy ~1u;t-dJ.le<l. Ad.J&ll('nl 10 "-'/otllt"rs. Airport are 8 MD. ?fflC"I:'~ & pharmoC'y. A.II 673-5711 or 67'J-861T Close to 1hopa & besch. 830 4•• '191 C Onthebay or~. ('ntt•r St. 348-7900 SPACIO US 2 BR in 4-plex. l.uxury apartJnent Jiving Newport bMch A\'l\il. alt. Sept. 15th overlooking lhe water. En· Ee.sUlde Q.1, 645--7485 joy STJCl,CWXI health ,;pa. 7 1 BR. F"UltN. $115. u1 lht1cs. air <-'Ond., mui;lc &t :-~~=-~--= janltoorlal in<'lucle.-1. FuUy Rentals W•nted 460 cai•peted & draped. Corner S2lS. - 2 br, 11 ~ I.la. 3 car 5"-iniming pool s, 7 llghted d d h hr tennis courts, plus mile!! of BAOIELOR .fUR:-J . Sl~J.i 2 BR. UNFlJRN. $235. \Ve,.1cllff Dr. & Irvine Blvd., UC I u n de r gr " duntcs, NC11.·po11 Bcat·h. Phone ;>.Ir. graduates . & hi.~.ly \\'UI llO\\'l:Lr'd, 714 : fi.15..610! nf!('(I how1111g bi.>g:1nn1ng mid ,....,..,..,..,..,;;;;;;;;;i; .... ..,,I Sept. Ir )'OU have a room, pr, crpt, l'Jl'!I, s 1i.·s ' bicycle trails, putting, shuf· pf1Tki, 6T.'J-4167 Ckean View. Yearly lease. lfeated Pool, Adults Onl )'. LAS BRISAS APTS. Deboard, croquet. Junior l'a :! BDR~1 gn rdC"n duplex. !rom Sls-1.50 monthly; also I Quiet non.hskle near Bay St. and 2-bedroom plans and Adults. Sl~:l. ;;.is...142.l. 2--story town house!!. EIPC· LG. 2 hr, attacbed gar, $IJO. Irie kitchens, private patlot 2118 Placentia. Apt B, A\·ail or ~conies, carpeting, dra· 10/1. Slj.-7983 peneii. Subterranean park· AVAlL Oct 1, J br. 2 ba, ISi ing \\1th ele\•ators. Opl.iona.l Zlst St. Apt B, Sl&a. per 1110. ma.id service. Jusl ~rth ot Phone 5-16-6~ Fashion JslanJ al Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. 5515 River Av,.., NB CALL 642-2566 DELUXE lo'>'·er D pl x. Bayfrnt, bch, 2 Br, 2 Ba. $330 yrly. 2'!1 191h St. lnq. 233 19th St., 61:>--02:36. OC'EANFRO;\."T 1 BR. & garage & u1illtlt'!!, Aft, 6. 2JJ/923-7-IG-I PRE house or npl. to rent near STIGE the campus please contact OFFICES Kathy at UCI Housing Of. Fountain Valley, Beautl· fice, 833-681L Free I.isling ful new buUdlng, ground SerYice. floor, 3,000 square feet, DESPERATEI \vill divide into smaller Student 25 yrs. old needs oUices, 50c per !KfU&re bachelor or 1 BR apt in foot, includes carpets, C.Osta i\ft'sa, tirefer-.tbly nr. 1 & 2 BR Sl:U · SI :». S10,·r, Telephone fTI4 J 644-1900 ref.. crpt/drps, hid pool. for rental information drapes, all utilities, jani. occ. $100-$1 l:i. per mo + tor St!Jvice. Call l\larllyn ucil. Please CuH ~705 or Adultit, 110 pets. 61s--s96.;. T HE NEW Da na Point YF.1\RLY lease $.~. 3 BR I~ ba, ne\v Jo"·er rluplex'. hlk to l>ch, 675-88.19 ;i f\ 4 StovnU (TI4) 812-5440. 9tit-l26S. B1\ \'1\"00D APJ\RTJ\;tE:o;Ts 34L"'1 La Serena. 2 BR. 2 BA, in i"'t"'Pol1 Beach ar't' \l'f\arge enclosed patio. I rt'ady. The sales office is Other Apts also avail. open daily rmn1 10 A:'II 10 493-2-tSG. 493-0761 . I 6:30 P~I. l\lacArthur Blvd . & San Joaqu in )!ills Road. Huntington Beach I 6l-1·5555 San Clemente * COSTA MESA LAGUNA Beach - 2 Br, 2 * Ba. Ck:canfronl prefd. Up Ne<.v office building -Thi"(!(' lo $300 n10. Perm. /11iddie room suite available, 700 sq . Mge couple. St'nd Info, ONr. t:b.gle furn, util pd. ft. Al.SO 2,000 sq. ft. • al! Ctai.-sified ad no. 935 ('/o S1 6.i mo. Unfurn 3 BR, 2 or pwi. All utilities. jani· Daily Pilol, P.O. Bo.x, 1560 HA. $210. mo. Close lo shop-lor sf'rviee. 2700 liarbor Costa l\lf'l>f.I, Calif. 92626. ping, schools &: beach. Blvd. Robc11 Nat!ress, Rltr. \\'A..'ITED· U fu . 1 Limited Income? BAY .;. mountuin vu. Prime 493-383j 979·65TI . · n rn. singe. ~-· I •· ·1 " G·-••belt l'"'"l'•n fm•n-1 -~=='~ ----UUI. ))II. Pl'kg. Nr. stores . .,.,..1it .xcuri y. ..... """"' · .. , NEW OFFICES !\lax $110. i\lrs. Qttltzo1\· Adults Only-No Pelt occpy. Brand nu Jg. tri-lcl'C'l AIRPORT 61&-9~77 Cl Sho j & L>u "R" plan. Bluffs condo. :1 ose 10 ' PP ni,: s br 21 ha fr11lc "·ct "~ l!,,,.J INo leaire rcq'd, .rull service, ,-,,-,,-N_T_E~D~.-,~B-ll-ho-.. -.-.-,-0,-.-~ .. lines. Unfuni, ltitove, re[rig · ,:r • ·' "' ' .._.._._ ,,,_ t 1 .. ~... "=" pool. Leuse $650 mo, ".,..... . ,,s, cp ~-niusic, air cont·· ror business or sn1l sloi-e incl~ll Util's P1id 644-1133 ~--'iiiliiliiliiliiliil~·;;.m; I s-:~~'~;o Single o!bces fron1 v1Jh\'1ng qua1·tcrs. 635-6009. 2 Br. 1 ha, 2nd floor, $144. 2 New Custom Bayfront ~ PALISADES CE:'l.'TER NEr.:D .i;torag:e garage that Br, 2 ha & den. ground floor "'IPRIV BtJI & Pll::R. 3 Rooms 400 I 2082 S. E Bristol lock.~. East of Ney,·port, $1&1. 714-842-9622, ,.1on·Sat. BP., 2 BA. :Fl·pic BBQ. Newport Beach 557-7010 16-12-716.l 801rdwilk Pirkplice $4R5/mo. Yearly. E1rl Haskell ICampus·frvine JntcrsectJon\ ~~~~~~~~~= Lux Adlt lle•ch Apts. 979-0631 or 644-4510 13 B•t Island '--*D EL UXE_* __ ~ 1 2 "-J BR dishii"ll.'ilK'rs LUXURY Bayfront condo. . Balboa Isla nd Air-Conditioned AMouncementl JI ~I fi""!>lacr>«, 1ii1d shaii;. til~ 1 7th lloor. Spcct. vu of b<iy & I \ou arP the "'1nr11•r or 500 Tf) 2.000 S<J. fl. offices 9hcrv,·e1-s. priv11te b&lcony 0 1• ocean. 2 ~R. 2 BA, all ete<:L 1 TWO FREE TICKETS C.A!\IPUS DRIVE putio. Encl gar. From SlW. 11·/pooJ. }<J r l'cnt or lease. lo lhe At·ros:; fron1 O.C. Ai1'T)()rt 2ll> 13th St. 960-l07Y. 61J-£166. RECREATION TRI-CO. REAL TY Announcements 500 3 Blocks to Beach BALBOA Pen. Ocean front, 3 VEHICLE SHOW * 645-0621 * Deann Holder BP.. 3 Ba, Den, dsht11·sh, SEPT. 19TH·23RD 3 Lrg BR'111, 2 l·ar gar. \\' \\' ci·pts. BH·lns. Drvs. J"l~h11·hr. No pets. ~o sim:-J1·ii. S251! per n10. Call 5.'!6-1711. SPACIOUS l BR, ('pl!'I, drps, ne1\'IY r,.. dt>e. Children & pc>t '•l"cl· conic, pool. $1 99. 8-12.35-16. WALK TO BEACH B1'11nd nc11• 1 & 2 Bil, carpets, drafl"s .~-hl•iltin~ 221 • 16U1 St. 847-3957 l BR, nr. l>each, shai;:: cpl, trplc, gas & \\'&ter pald. $165 539-1661 or 536-2042 DLX 2 br cpls, d1J1s, gar, $150 per mo. Call Pan1, S.16-4761 , Bill eve5 979-44.12 NE\V building 2 br apt, 1 blk rrom bch. sm mo. Call 5.1&-0613. Lagun1 Beach SPACIOUS l BR. Panoran1ic ocean viC"11-, cpl, drr1s, Adulls, U!ils pd, $200. 2l 3-92S-82'J5. SEA TERRACE APARTMENTS In Cllllornla's •••u l caut taw1 tJisposal, [rplc, 2 porchl'S. 1 Af !he lll:SIE5T intersection i 11 721 Kat1lpa Lane view of occ&.n & Bay. $550 ANAHEIM STADIUM l\ew-port H~~r. , Seront~ Fountain V1lley nlO. ye11rly. 67'.',....5729. mi St 1 C 11 Bl ,d slory. in Unique l-lon1('s You are the 11inner of CLEAN attr-dC. d"C lownr I 'A'nah',,·~>!,e \ ., B~~llchng. SIX) sq . rt. at TWO FREE TICKETS .. '-• ,. " $,lJO/n10; 6()() S(j. fl. !1! dupi('X, 3 br: 2 ba, frplc, Please c.1111 6,J2-.'"i678 l'XI :;:;9 $300/mo. Both \\ith vle11·s. 1o the dshl'.·shr, bltins, ('lose 10 to clailn your Tickets., b'75-6000. RECREATION bch. Yrly, $300. 207B-4lst I iNor1h County Toll fi·ee NEWPORT BEACH VEHICLE SHOW St, 6Ta-150M 1 nun1bc:r ls 5-10-1220 •. YF."AflLY 3 BR 2 4:-X: ft. airport area. f'ul! SEPT. 19TH-23RD --'• BA. SL[EPlNG 1wn1 abo,·e scrvii..-e. Sui1es overlooking Al the carport. !lalio, CC!Ck, no I China Cove Co1~na cJel r 1 ANAHEIM STADIUM pets. Ref's. Avail JO/L See I J\lar. ' uture go f cour.--e. r.-lull cn Sat & Sun 1132 \V. Balboa,, 67j-2698 H.cal1y, ;>.10-296(), ~·-100 2000 State College Blvd., A B Irvine, NB Anahein1 pl . ROO~·IS $20 11·k up 1\•lkit S::U SlJB-ler 11t>w 113--1 sq. ft. of-PleasC' c~ll 6-12-:X:78 e:ct 339 Sin Clemente i 11·k up aprs. Chi!drt>n & pet Cit-e suite. ten an 1 hn· \() claim your 11ckers. * NO\V A\rAJLABLE * section. 2376 Ne\vport Blvd., provenienLS. Koll Business jNorth .c~unty ToU free I' C.\I, 5-IS-9Ta5. 6'15-3967. Complex Bin.ta &. \\'alk to1:~"~""~'~""~'~"~54f>-~~l220~~l~. :'!~~ Brand new Garden Apts. Xlnl San Clemente area LRG room for rent. Pn.'Sli~e Air Port. Allrac1h·e lease 2 BR, 2 Ba. $195 area, lluntington Beach. arrangements $673 per mo. :1 BR. 2 B,\, ""/dsh\\T & Pl~ase call me aft 6pm, 1DESK space. a.vatl&ble S50 I J[ta.] frplc $250. 8-16-7.lll nw. \Viii provide fwTtiture 1. Personals "5J All apts. ha,·e priv patios I\11\~i'ER bclrn1. O"·n ba1h, al $5 n10. Ans1,·cring servicel ~jiljiljiljiljiljiljil;:;~~ n1any other fcatu1-es. en1ranc.-c. Good location, available. 17875 Beach Blvd.J I Sec at 6li6 Can1ino De Los patio, yd, lit(' kit priv. $!18. Huntington Beach. 6~2-4321 Personals 530 !\!ares, just !IOulh San 518-5998. 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB1---------- Clemente Genel'al Hosp. f"UR.i'I Room, priv home. Z:iOO. l200. 756 & ::.•n ~~-F"t. 1 Use Estrella Off.ramp I E 1 ~ ~, Phone 492_1071• 492-8700 nip oyed gentleman. Near Ample parkin~. Util. Baum· A TI'ENTION! NE\\' 2 BR, 1 ~ BA. Ocean Vic11·. 1225 sq, ft. + "'Ork· shop. ;\JI dellL~~ teatures. \\'alk to pier & shop"g. 3L4·A D<·l J\:lar. $250/Mo. Aclults. 492-2'l&t Apts Furn. or Unfurn. 370 OC'C & shopping. 979-3924. g-o1.rdnC'r, 5-11.50::2. Room & Board 405 NEWPORT Con tor, o..;gn ALL BOATERS Plaza, priv office & recC"p. Basic Bonting Course tlon rm, $l7Slmo. 644-1150 in Business Rental 445 seamanship & boat handling by Corona pel Mar !·It. Beach ~~~~ .. Squadron T"u unique opportunities! Sc111cml.lcr 1 llh al 1 pm Buy. lease or order n build at Li iuna Niiuel's ideal ocean locale. Near beach with oce1n or park views. C11pet, bum ceiUnp, paBel livin& rOO'llS, j)ltio/balcony. GE kitchen, sell clea n oven, dishwasher, Rec.. Bldg., pOOI, .s.tuui, lireslde lounie. Choke 1 & 2 bedfms. 1, I 'h, 2 baths. from $205 lo $325 per mo. Pllone 493-0501. OIRECTIONS: Niguel Rd., 1 ml. south of Crown Valley Pkwy .. 1t P1ellic Coast Hwy. j ealboa Peninsula FEMALE co I I ege student-live iv/family in Crll\1 area. Room & board in exchange for child care . ~irl 14. boy 12 from :)·: 30-6Pi\:I Mon-rrl. Some fl exible household h e I p . \Vknds. & eve!'i. rree. 01\•n roon1 11·rrv. Non-s1nokcr. J\lust have ca.r. G-MHl25.:> aft 6P~I to suit on this well located ?>lal"ina lligh School & 47' vacnnt lot or lease fol' • f't, Valley High School only 2..'lc a loot alt or part of 7200' building. 6T~722i Laguna Niguel • the choice community 2BH. <..'Ondo,o;;-f.,'Olf t..YJun;c, detux .shu11:, bltlns, 11·ash1•r. dryer $200. Pref le1ise, 6T.J""0038, 83l-129il Mesi Verd• DLX 2 & 3 DR, 2 Ba, encl gar. $170 up. ncntal Ofc., :1095 i\facf' Ave. 5-16-103'1. M ission Viejo NEW 3Blt Townllouse, "ilh air cond, $250 n10. days ft.17·9300, 11!1es ~- Newport Beach 1 BR. $185; 2 BR. 2 ha. $250: unfurn. :~ BR., 2 Oa. $350. Call: 613-9591 Guest Home 415 Costa Me11 PRIV. & Semi, Ava near ----------' park, Library & Shpgn TLC I & Balance diC"ts. f>.lt}-2562 . REALLY LIVE AT PINECREEK I-~oll01v the garden paths thru fabulous 1rres. past running streams & \.\'uterfalls to a beautiful 2 BR, 2 BA &]JI. Enjoy your sauna, play pool, Rentals to Share 430 ITJ\IALE 11Xlmn1ate, 2-l·35 yrs to share beaut. 4 BR, 2 B,\, apt. Nl•11•port OC'ean· front "i th 2 gids. f"rp!c, VlJ, yrly $168. 6T:>-6846. Tl\.'O \\'orking girls to share nice up!. in NB "'/third girl. 2'.l lo 'l7 $90 Ulil inc. ~1'18-0407 rel.ax your nerves & body FEAtALE ci('sire1 sa1ne, in the jacuzzi or S11·im in 21 -25. eitlx-r of our 2 pool s. Just 2 BR. 2 BA, $105 mo. incl J of tlK'.i;e ultra C'hoicc apts util. Diane, 640-.1176 (841 W't' awilable unfurn at S230 / l\1ALE to share beaut. beach per mo. or ""/color roon.tin. home. $LIO. all incl, no ated furnitw-e for s:ntl per drug!'i. So. Laguna 499-4329 mo. 2300 fairvie\v Rrl. Costa A1esa ~5-2300 \V 1\NTED 1 straight male to share ne\v home, In Lagwia Beach 83J-96'n, 499-4290 601 Dover Dr., Suitf' 3 A gr<?nt opportunity lor all boating enthusiasts Info1mation l714l 008--049t OVER WEIGHT NE\VPORT BEACJ-f FULLY LICENSED * SPIRITUALIST * OF;IcE on Newport ~lvd. Spiritual readings 1D am·lO A\all on lease. ~artrnlly pni. Advict' on all matters furn.. carpeted, 11.1r/cond, 312 N. El Camino Real, San ~~rking. Approx. 1000 sq. ft. Clenicnte. 492-9136 492-9034 $Z:.0/mo. Warehouse also avail. Ideal for contractor. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con- 5"18-2616 fident, s y n1 path et I c . . pregnancy counseling. Abor-SPACE a\•aliable f~r lease tn tion & adoptions ref. Board\\'alk Shopping Center APCARE 642-4436 at Huntington Harbour. CaJJ 8-t&-1361. -1\RE you single & alone, 45- ClITE ADOBE HOUSE lOCKI 55? \\'ant. a Date? \Vant to BLUFf'S eust. hL'l:Ury 2 Br, 2 TI-lE EXCITING . ' get married? ,_1any people car enc. i:ar. $.125 f\1o. PALM MESA APTS. S~~~L be~h. ~~'PO~; b'' .ft., adJ. 1('rf comerC, ~ this age group. l''rec lnfo. 2 BR, pool, Cdlil chiu,n $27.i A'fINUTES TO NPT. BCH. 675-:ir5l5 ~M3t:.f?~~ use. · . Box 1148, Garden Grove. Orange Cc»tsl It.I::. 6~1-1848 FURN. OR UNFURN. = PREGN"'~' Th · k I n g G f R t ••s "TllE r t .. ha 1 l'U,,, in Deluxe 2 Br, 2 Ba. Gur. 1blk1 Unbelievably Jaree apts , •r•g•s or en -....ii · ac ory s a rg abortion? Know all the !&.ct. to l.M'!ach. A1arure adults. huge pool, Jacl.ll::i elect bit-shop ava!I. $185/mo. ln fin;:t! Call LIFE LINE -24 $280 1>er mo, year Jsc. Ulll Ins, shag crpts, drps, sauna Cannery Village 425 30Ui St., hrs 541-~ JXl . 6-12 .... 14&1 tierorc 3. etc. Adults, no pets. StorlHlle Gar1ge NB. 673-9600 or 642-8520. ' · SINGLES From $150 -• BRAND t / u· ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. 2 ,BR. 1 ha. Blk. to ocean. 1 BEDR"!. From $165 00\VN'l'O\\'N HUl\'TlNGTON nu sores o ices, Phone 542-7217 or write P.0 "' a~·\Cl l $~ lh CALL $125. up. Elevator. 17301 ,..__,, • 'li early~Sk~o~f~ike 2 BEDJU.t . . From $185 ~ . · ""'· nlon ' Beach,~ Huntington Beach. Box 1223• \..U8ia Mesa. JONES n.EALTY fiT.',....G210 ~~fus:11 tt1S.A1a1J Froin i10 53&-1'53.'I. 842--2834 . Social Clubs 535 ... ~!!0!!!0!!!0!'!'!"!!0!!!0!• ll600 "I It lNDUSf. shop * \VESTCLJF'Jo', 2 BR, 1 1 ~ ha. You're righl, they're under· Single garage $2j mo. $225. Also 300 sq ft office * INTRADATA To...,'nhousc. AdltH only, no priced! 1561 r.les.:i. Dr. 1$.1 Del MAr, Costa Mesa 19· c., "'"2''30 I A 'l Oc $2-O a. ·1"· in...-... • QUALITY mntchcs pe s. va1 I. 1, 'I mo. (5 blks from Ne\.\•porl Blvd.) 548--0919 1~ llARBOR. C,',f. w,..,.HrvtV""o 1728 Bedford Llln<!, 5-18-7:>ll 546 9,116{) """ " 'r v • v * Ov,erslu>d Double Garugc, 1440 sq. ft. each bay. "Largest In Calif." 1700 WESTCLIFF OR. PREVIEW OPENING near Daily Piiot, Costa Automotive use. 54~9892. fCA.11 NOW for FREE sam- 2 BR, I &. 2 UA. Bltn. appl!. A11•a1'd '>''inning 1, :! &. 3 hr l\lcsa, $3j. ~5-7361 . lnduitrlil Renta l 450 Jile pr'QM!c (11'1 l prospective an<.'C!!I. Pool. &ri-6274. 11pts 1v/fantlly m1s. No Office Rent•I 440 ----------·I match, 24 hn.) BAYFRONT yrly lease 2 lease. SotTy, no pets. From 1 --~-------500 SQ. FT. M-1 714. 6J8.59a> I LA 658-62.83 BR, 2 BA, r111Jc, 2 )'nt old.• jUij:( $175. OUR TOWN SPACE-Office, club study 1"ulJy SprinklC'l'l.'Cl LADIES -Summer Special 1 J"vl heh. $450 mo. D1ty5 1-~an1ilv Apt!I, 1250 Adams group, etc. S65 mo. Ise. On 3 I'hasc power yr membership $5. Call 52S-Jli3, Eve11 697-1336. Ave. (Adams at Fairview), Broadwny, nr. Ne \V po r I lndu<k.'!f 'PARTNER' 1136-1271 or LARGE lBR. 2BA, firepl, Costa l\1esa. Phone 55&-0100. Blvd,. C.l\1. 615--8761. 500 Sq, fl . o[fice 54S-1479. bltlna, dhAwshr. Nr Hoag * CASA VIC(()RlA • 4 DELUXE offices 18c 16th &. i\1onrovta. C.1.1. Hoe:p. $250/mo. Adult 1 . 1, 2 & 3 BR. Flihi & Unr. PLUS' 400' \VArehou11e space TRI-CO REAL TY 6Q...43.S7 Carpets, drape~. D/W, TV U70 D Logan C.01la l\1csa * '45-06 1 BRAND nu octan or bay vu, 11111. Pool, tic. 121 Victoria &W-2228 &1~1'.l52 2 * 2 ft-S350 ~ le••• 3 Br St, at llarbor, Cl\1, 642-8970 C• .. •t II•~.-· N--~rt Blvd . .IX", · -1" ..-., • Ask about Alove-Jn """' -1 "''i .... ,..~ NOW LEASING, $350 winter renbd, 9 n10~. All 1100 Sq. Ft., 30c Sq. Fl. H I ft_ h 625-«J23, 67rrl455, 646-4101. OW8nrc Rtalonomlcs, Bien!. 61~700 unt ntton u.eC WALK to Wertcliff . 1 A 2 br, Dina Point * Bayfront orfice space 10 NEW M-1 WOl\fAN'S watch found C.M. pool, adulla. !"'tlrn Ir. unlurn. BllAND n(iw deluxt" Bachf'IO" share Bay Lido Bldg. $150 ·g.10 Sq. F't. &: UP 1-Ugh&chool parking Io l . CalJ Dorotl"' for uppl to tee. • mo. 675-1220 Han1Uton It Newland Please identify, S40-0144. v Apt. tn +plcx. gncl. gar., 646-0697 133-8519 f&.TI71. 646--6075. kOOd lo('. 675-1!'149. OLX. 2 rm. ofrice. Best deaJ 1 '!!!!O!, !!!!!O!!!o!!r!!O!!!!!!!!! .... IYOUNO cat, Gray & Whl1t•. PENIN. Weter Fron'-', Spac, 3 In o.c. Airport areH , 2172 11 clear flco. col lar vie Irv DC Br. 28' boat ollp-avatl. $325/H __ un_t_l"t_._1o_n_B_•_•_•h __ -DuPont No. 8, 133-3223 MISSION-VIEJO & Santa !snbelc-3. ~~~l~"E.~· Ito. ln-4) OE!,UXE Adult Poohild.:? 1 * Corona dcl Mar, 11n grnd 1000 & 2400 SQ. FT. FNO: TQrtolse wtc1hlpped _,._,.'1 _...~. Garden Bungalow. N r . * Floor, A/C, utll, ample• AVAi LAB LE NOW 1hell at 22nd It Tusl n CM. riiARLY. 4 BJV3 BR. on ()Cttl.n, F'rp\e, lrg pnr\o, 6 * prkg. S145 mo. 675'-6900 * ON SAN DIEGO ynwy. =54"'841="';,11:-,..,_.,-;:,._-,= Stufp:>re, $37' A $300 ~9 aauna, ten n Is. I Coa11 Hwy. &: Newport Blvd. 27992 Camlno Capistrano F'NO: Wflteh at Stan Cotta Proper1Y Howie 642--3850 · l160 Sq, IL. :n: Sq, ft. 831-1600 Mew11. Ladles. Sept. i.t. 2 BR duplox. m + utJI. I Bdrm. From $13:>. Realonomlcs, Jlkn. 67'"~700 Like to li"ade! OUr Tradt:r's PlcaH Identify 54lH649 la) ........ - 556 ~ound (frM 1d1) Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Hands See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove :Z. Guitar 3. Boby Crib 4. Eleclr1c Saw 5. C1mer1 6. Wisher 1. Outboard Motor I. Stereo S.t 9 . Couch 10. Cl1rlnet 11. Refrlger1tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Mlchine 14. Surfboard 15. Mochlne Tools 16. Oishw•sher 17. Puppy • 18. C1bln Cruiser 19. Golf C•rl 20. Blrometer 21. Stemp Collectlon 22. Dinette Set 23, Pl•y Pen 24. Bowling Ball 25, Wotor Skl• 26. FrHzer ' 27. Suitcase 21. Clock 29. Blcydo 30, Typewriter 31. Ber Stoolo 32. Enc}'<lopecli1 33. V1cuUm Cleaner ,· 34, T ropicol F,fth 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 36. Filo Coblntt 37. Goll Clubs 38. Sterlln9 Silve r 39. V lctor11n Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41. Slide Projector 42. L1wn Mower 43. Pool Tobie 44. Tires 45. Piano 46. Fur Coat 47. Drapes 48. Linens 49. Horn 50, Alrplono 51, Orgon 52. Exercyde 53. Rore Boob 54, Ski Boots 55. High Choir 56. Coins 57. Electric Train 58. Kitten 59. Cl1ssic Aulo 60, Coffee T1blo 61. Motorcycle 62. A ccordion 63. Skis 64. T V S.t 65. Work Bench 66. Diamond Witch 67. Go.Kart 68. Ironer 69. C1mping Triller 70. Antique Furniture 71. Tap• Recorder 72. S1ilboat 73. Sports Cir 74. M•ttress Box Spg1 75. Inboard SpHdboot 76. Shotgun n . Saddle 78. Dirt Game 79. Punching Bog 80, Boby C1rrl199 81. Dr ums 82. Rifle 13. Desk 14, SCUBA GNr These or any other extra things aroand the house can be turned Into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD So •• • • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 \ ,I 'i " Cati 979--79.58 &ft 3 or Da)'I For lhat ilem Und4T $00, It)' A iOfXt wan1 ad IS a Rood h._ PftradlJC ('()lumn I• for )'OU! The lute.at draw In Uw Wut. t2U) 338..tf-1.'1. the Pfnny Pll'<'her. ve11men1. 5 lllft. 5 day11 for 5 bucks. ··..:.o~DoJ!!!ll'!y_Pllot~!!.,!Cl~...tllod~i!!!l:;.i•••••lil•llllllilll•ll!l••lll•••••lll! .. ••!1111••••••1!!1••••i;i ~ ' .. .:....==~=-------... • J I ' 1 • • • '"'· l l ' JOIN THE • 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU •• ·• ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ c-;r-1 ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directof¥,••you're doin9 ' business the hard way. The S<!rvic e Directory I classifications 600-699 in the classified ad se ction daily) 9ives you an advanta9e you get throu9h no other advertising medium. It reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into th ~ market looking for-the 1ervices you have to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start a cate9ory just for you. Pi c;k up the phone right now and reserve your s pace in the "Sellen Circle" ..• Your Direct Line to Directory R·esults ' 642-5678 •· CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT I DAILY PILOT Pound (frff ads) 550 Found (fr.. Ml1} :..:.:=-"'=="--...;.;;.:1 550 SEALPOIN'l' mnle cat -1'"NO: Cn.1 -Ught Brown with altered and declawed (very dark brown ea.rs &: lllU dark I vie. 11.B. 11 re a Slamc~ type. \Yhlte ma11<· ~ inp. l'ml "'/wht flea COi· CAT -yng n1ale. SOlld gray, JIU". Vic Po1nona & JO&M on Tu!Un Ave. -Newpo111 -'C~M'-'64~:;.."-'352'------- BJvd. LRG black female _ . &12-1927 dachshund -Vic : Irvine VERY Ire le German lndusbial area, Gillette & Shepherd.0 e1~clc & tan-Tnl! Kettering St., 557-9408 bill 9 curia up • \'ic Slater & & 5. Harding -Post Con1- Springdaie, H.B. 842-0478. ,PM~Y~----~-­ FOUNO· T 1 Rock bla ··k FNO: prescription g\aases -· un. e • i.: reading glaases -Ben mule dog Lal>-.shcp type, F'rnnkrn type Bayside Fish friendly, you11,g. R.1.'J..8227 Mrkt, 2soo NPt Blvd. NB. SMALJ.. female Irish Setter, 673-73.SO North Mission VI e jo •1-SCH=~W~l~N~N-S-Un-gray--8-lcy-,-l,-­ ~4 or 002-l311 OY11ter please Identify -&iv· Ing serial number, color At [a.-NOEX] 11ize. Huntington Be a ch ~ ..... 1 Police Dcparlment. .--.-... _':I FND: Blk hnl puodle v.·/pur- plc collar & nea collar long !all \'ic. Heil &: Gothard I Re11E9*'1efcwS.ie }[~] l-1..B. 8-17-1525 FOUl'\D: Vic. o( Laguna H.u .. tw 1111 .............. 1ot Bea"h City Hall G!'ccn MHlritrf,.r.111111 HolM• , ... 121 " • ~It Homn ,.,, so10 •.• -.. 1u male Parakeet, banded. .t.c,...o tor '-''• ............ u• Call J ackie \Vas h burn A"rt"""" f9r wl4 ... " ..... 1J2 968-2:.lll aft 8 pm l11t1Ms1 '"°"rty .. ., ........ 154 • Co"'et•ry loh/Cryri" ........ 1u GERMAN Shepherd puppy, C.mm•rclol ""'"rt' ... •• .. • u.. !rt v· f s " Conffml11h1m1 lor silo ........ 1U 4-6 mos o . IC o pt 1n1t- 01111MxHIU111!1 111.. . •..••••. lU da1e & Edinger Bank HOlllff .. DI' movM ........... 1'4 846-£23ti 111com• f'roHrty .............. 1W:i~===--------- IMlll'1'141 'ro""' ........... 1" FOUND Brittany Spaniel, 7 ~l'I ,,., S•lt ................. 110 . I . l . & Mtltllt Homenr11i.r "'"' .. 111 months. VIC nlly rv1ne M01111t1111, 0111rt, "''°rt .... 114 Palisades Rottd, C. l\l . or1111• C1. f'ro"rty .......... 11' "~" 5357 ask for \Vendy 0111 Of SlllO ,l'Optrt't' ., .. , ... 111:1 ,.:-=:::;=• -';='-'-"---'-'='--- R111chef, '•rm1, Orov11 .. ... u o Sl\1ALL ntlxed breed dog • 1t .. 1 E111to e.c111111• ........ 112 1 . lllHI Eitel• w111ttd ........... 114 bro\vn/black. mac. Vic: Garden Gl'OVfl & GUbert. ~ 638--01?.5 I • FOUN~ fernalc Shephet'd '----------'· mix dog. All tan. Vic. or 1u1i11n1 Opit0rtum1r .......... 200 ?.1esa \\'oods, Costa Mesa.. llJlnlM• W111t'111 .............. llO Ca11 557 7412 111v11tm111111 o,it0rt1111lly ·••··· 220,l-'=C:::~--'-'~-----111v1,tmont W111led ............ 2)0 ~ to Lo•11 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 140 Lo,t MOllt't' W111ltd ...... , , , ....... lit 555 Mort11111, Trutl Deed' .••..•• 2'41----------- Houi1s rum lo.MC .............. ,.. •REWARD• •GENEROUS• ,___ .... _. __,J~ Hou~ u11tum. • .. . . .. .. .. .. .. lH """'"turn. or 11nf11n1, ••.... JID • Condclm111111m1 turn ........... Jll For return or any lnfom11- C0110c11•"111111m1 un111m. • .. • .... no tion leading to return of a COlldo. tum. or unlur11 •.. · · •· •• m Id f I f cl · Towr1Ml11•• h1rn. . .......•.•••• JJO go our ea 'over pin, Tow11tio11 ... 11rt1ur11. , ........... lU approx. 2 inches in diameter, TOWllllew'•· tum. If' llflfwm. · · l4f 1~·ith jev•cled horseshoe in Dupl•n turn. . ............... J4I I al Id lock Du-11 Wflt11rn. ............... uo cen er; so, go et O~n. furn.•• 1111111m ..... Ul (\\'8S on chain), approx. the Aplf.. •~rn. .. .................. * size of a nickel inscribed A#f. lllllum. .. ................. Ml , A»11 .. 111rn. or untum •......•. 370 in scr'.pt, FLA. These are ... "" • ........ ·.. .. .......... 400 deeply treasured family •""" & IOI rd ................ 401 &. th I . . H1111t. Mt1e11 .................. 41t mementos e oss ts 1r-o-1 Kem• .................... 41J replaceable. PLEASE, S11tnmtf' llnt•I• ............... «II PLEASE help if "'"'U have lfl(lllol\ Rlllflll ,.,. ......... , 42J ;v a..,1111 ,. SM rt ............... •H anv iniormation -642-3589 01r1911 tor •orrt .... · ........ • 411 EVes & weekends Offk• 11111111 ..................... --• ____ =~· --- ll'Mlu1tri1t Rant11 ............. 4Jt LOST -SHAGGY DOG sior111 .......... ,_ .. ., ........ 41J ,, '' 1t1111111 W•nled ............... 161 DAISY TYPE DOG MIK•ll•11-"'11"11 ......... 4fJ T11.n \\3\'Y hair, med. size. <h\Tl(>f" ~arflU. 545-0904, t ~.......,..,,..~~~-·~JlliiJICJ,,~~''4--'-''809~-·'~~~~~:..:..:.rr:___ _ . '· REWARD • $50. A11-•tn111h ............... soo LOST silvt•r dollar 1noncy O.rd "' T111n1111111 M1morh,1m SOJ clip. holdirw approx. $600. LOlll NOlkff ...•... , ..•.... ,. J\0 Fri. nite, 9/7, Vic. of Royal L _______ ,I~ llal'i'Riian or Ben Browns [ .... oMls Restaurants. Laguna Beach. Reward. Please Ca 11 493-m8 · ~::.:~·~·~~~'.~.~.::::: :: : ::: : ~· ·R~E~,~v-AR=o--1.-,-1-n-!"-.1-,-,-.-1. Soci11 Clutts ................... JJJ brown tiger, \\•ea.ling llca tr1vt1 ....................... MO collar Vic. Victoria &: Alnerican. Plt'ase ca I I Schools & in1truction~ 575 TOM NEWMANN Voice J~'lon Beginners or Advanct'd. All styles. ?.lore than 20 yrs e1Cper. With or wtlho\Jt col· Jege credit. Auditions free by appt. 83.'\-2320. P IANO TEACHER Nola Bennltt. E.xpt>rlenee<I successful. N11I !!arbor area. 1\Milll Teachers. Univ. CT ad. • 51S-.2784 • PL\NO Lt'ossotia, chilrl/lidul!, bcginnerx only, Univ Park Irvine. !l.1y ho1ne. 552-807-1 Babysitting Paula Oberstein 211 Nata Newport Beach You are the \\'Inner of TWO FREE TICKETS to lhc RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW SEPT. 19TH-23RD Al tilt' ANAHEIM STADIUM 2000 State College 81\·d., Anaheim -' Fr iday, S1pttrnbff 14, _1973 Driveway• Pelnting & ;........;.;_"-'------, P1perh1nglng A!!phall·Rcmovcd &:. l'\:placed with <.'UstDm toncf"\'te, 6j(> ft. IN"'tF.RIE:X!f'r, l\C'C(}U,,. C('tl- F1'Ci' (.'SI. 638-1'17.! lngis llPl'l\)'Cd. Lie. 111!!, loc. refs. f'tee l!!il. ~>-0809. !ilectrlcal P/~OF. painter. hont'.n \\'Ork, rt:u1, 1111/ext, !rec i!SI. ELE'C'1'RICl1\N-Liceme No. f«'ls-. 5-18-2759, &12-3913. 233106. Small Job.~. malnt & IN"I'. 'Painting & C'nrpcf ;•~~~pa~,~·,~··c..=."'~s-;,o:i~·=~·----Clcanh11:. F'ret> Ei;t , 518-357•1 DAILY Pilar n Help Wonted. M & I' 710 AJ\IHITIOt;S f,ll.'Oplc v.•11.111cd to C<'MI $100. to SlOOO. per n10. part lime. out Cl( your home. ti:1!4UJ. ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER DRy~ for animal 11heltPr. Good OpJiOl'. for rru1ture n1an, Perm pos. Must ha\'e or 642-7059 G d I S:t"XXI drlvinit ret'Ord & VAiid Ir tn ng Ctllif. drlvi'NI lie. Apply al MOW & EDGE ~la:.ter, P1tCh, Re~ 20:il2 Luguna Canyon Rd., EXPERT & Lag. B1:h. * PATCl-1 PLASTERING * DEPENDABLE AH tyJ>('s. F'ree Pstin1ates ,\,\1$\VF:H ING Serv. "-' i 11 C.11 For Prompt, Ct1.ll 5·10-682Zi. 11·:1111 p/lirn<' eve & gravtyd 1't'llef 11hift. 640-8073. FrH Estimate. PlumD1n9 APT ~1gr. Couple ovf'r 40 for -___ 5_J4._7_11_7 ___ C 11 0 • E w L:nits, Costa r.Iesa. Call 0?-.1PLETF. ul ~ ? ,... PROFESSIONAL garderiel', REPAIR SERVICE. P!umh-llol.-11-'~'·-------1 11~ \vork, Pruning . ing. Electrical. Carpentry. ARE YOU READY spnnkle1'11, t:leanup. jobs, App!ian(·t>S . Rf'(rigerntion -FOR A REAL I a n d ~cap 1 n i; -C.cort;c, Air ConditioninK. Ui;erl ap-CARE ER? &Wr5893. pliances For Sale, Gl:r-l ·l:t7 • . GARDENER of 23 years cx· urt G pni. SJICllfl a dln1c, 1t n1ay be tht• l\'lse:st 1n\'C8llnl'nt you have perience SN"km ·1·J addilional L.R. ()TIS PLU~llll:\G f'\'l'I' mndc. Call 53+-9092 be! 1'1aint . job.~. Geo t' Ke Rcn1(1(]els & Re11airs. \1':ttf'I' I · ' 7 II I -':"-"'''.'..~p~m~·------an1p on ~ hra!ers. dlsp.11u1.L~. furnu{·es, I * Sl!}-201.i • <lsh1ra1h!'s. 642~i26:l l\1/C & ASSEMBLER ,,10\V & EDGE D/,\. Complclf' Plunthing 1 CLEAN UPS Sf'1'\ice. Li1•. 2T.\I~. e 5.).J--06j7 e Tli\l'S Pl.Ui\lBlNG EXPER. J apnnese Gardener. SERVICE AND REPAIR Yard serv. Cleanups. Relin. LO\VES'r RATES Gi'.i-6:)7~ .t-llf'llt. F r't'e est. &12~3.~fl. General Serv1cts PORTABLE \\'ELDING SERVICE PLllillBING Ht-:Ptdll. No job too sninll * * 642-3128 • * S•wing/ Alterafi?ns Lite Mfg. ~·a:.cr ~'l'O\\'lng CtfRTSTfAN plant offers good future ro hai~-1 1\urking inchviduaJ11. Day or nlght stiir1. No PKpcr. J'<'!ftl. Plt>asnnt ('Qlldilions. B1un~ line or nurlin casscllc 1ic·oclu1·t.~. Con1act Mr. John Styll. &15-7868. Please call 642-5678 ext 339 \\1111 ron1e to you evenings, EXPERIEN'CED P..csl}'ling ASSEMBLERS to clahn your tickcti;. \veekends. No job too Snull!. & 1\lteration1>. R('asonable. (North County Toll free 548-8212. 64G-1i;24 e 963--5806 e number Is 5'1!)..lnJ). HANOY11AN -all .kinds o( Alteritlon..--642·5845 NEEDED NOW BABYSITilNG by fernier 11·ork, iimall JObs R Neat •CC"" t 20 uenrs ex teacher, my home. Exp. spcci:ilty. 979-4636, 546-9723. ' ...... a e. ~ -· p. Call .54C)..4450 .F'ull-part tlmC', 7M1-5PM. Hauling Televi,ion Repair Never A fee At Tenipo r.tesa Verde. 54!)..17(}.-) ·r .. ·tnpo Tcniporary He\p BABYSITIJNG, my home. RUBBISH .Haullng: Yrtrrl, COLOR TV Rl·pnir,. exper1 . , ............................... 1 Xlnt cond. Loving care. garage, '\'arehouse & con-rcasonahlt>, niost in lminf'. A S SE?.1BLERS. Capasllol' Newport Beach, 645--0S68. struction cleanup. Remove Free estlniate, l-1..B. N.B .• i:: 1nanul. needs f e ma 1 c lree•, ~'-rubs, u ns i g h II u C.M. Bert Ga II e mort>' . N C I ''" ~ 9M-2'183 lratriees. o expe:r. necess. 1rpen tr trnsh & debris of all types. 7 ;::;::..:.=~· -------Full lime days. Start at days a \\'eek. F11.st. Reliable. Tiit $1.90. 549--0241. CARPENTER-painter, a 11 Reasonabll.'. Soutli Coastl-----------1 -"'='-"~="-----­ home repairs, reasonable llaul!ng. 673-9036_ CERAMIC TILE NE\V & 1\ SS IS TAN 1' "tanager rates, 25 yrs. exp. ph. GET RlD OF UNSIGHTI;"i.' z:modcl. Free est. ~m. !Obs Trainees, Cowrter Girls, 54S-3'06 T" •= ,_ DEBRlS. 112 v.elcon1e. 5.~2426. 536-8589 Fry Cooks. Days -Nit'es - WOODWORK b . ·~1. .,. Grav(.'YfU"d, shifts open. 1',/ , ca 1 nets, , nAD. COWEGE sru. Top Soll paneling, gen repairs, Duke 0~EN1'. ~· "~. _.:.._________ ti1ne & P /time. Xlnt for Da Durka, 616-7598, 846-9495 .no-vu.<:1 * QUALITY * mothers w/chllctren in LOCAL · & h at· b !lc:hool. Apply, Jack-ln-Th4"-ALL typrs "'Ork. Nl'w, moving a inp; Y * ?.fULQ-1 & TOP SO IL * ~c"' ,.. od dd 11 fr stUdent. Large truck. Rcai;. "~" ,,930 l~x. ,,.,,,, E. 171h St. D 1. m , a , a er, ame, Barry. "'4-IS·f6 o• 67, ~17. ~ "·'-h -pal L'" 96°1961 ....., • ,,..,,..,. ASSISTANT ManageT, xlnt U-l~ • ... rs. i... "'" 32 F-. FURNITURE \'a" fo, Tree Service · 1 .. position for student, neat Carpet Service f bl • -:.::!;;:;,..:;::..::.:;::_ ____ 1 loc-dl f~ hauls ~ g('n'I TREE Trimming including appearance, pre era e. ·~,. JOHN'S ,..~_,_,t & Upholsle"" hauling. 548-1862. 557-2736. Palni treei;, anrl tree over 20, will train, apply afl ........ l"" "J 7. South Coast Plazl\ Dri Shampoo free Scotch· SKIPLOADER & dump truck removi:it. Gen. clean up, ·rhcater No. 2, Sunflower & gard. (Soil RetardanlsL \\'Ork. Concrete, asphalt, Reas. & Insured. 847-1791. Degreasers &:. all color sawing, breaking. 846-7110 BMstol , C.M. brighteners & 10 minute HouseclHnlng AUTO bleach for v.·h.ite carpels. If i j I Save your money by saving HOUSE OF CLEAN lnlplu)11•tl Bookkeeper, payroll, quarter-me t>xtra trips. Will clean ly reports, journals & llChed- 11 · e DOES EVERYTHING e u h~. Mull!. be able lo oper-ving rm. dining rm., & ~fon1es OHiccs. 642-68-24 . ute NCR bkkpg machine. hall $15. Any rni. $7.50, · J b W I d M I 700 p r " bu couch SlO. Chair SS. 15 yrs, Dtdicettd Cleaning O In I , I I n-er automouve exp., t l I l ,_ t 1viU train qualified .,._..n. pxp, 11 1v 1a <.'OUn~. no *\VE DO EVERYTI-IING * Wayne Smith •-·-!hod I -•-k U F .,.,, ""~" Cail P.'ll'S. Brant, John80tl me . uu v.·or n1yS(' . Refs. ~est. O'IU-~ 18011 Unnarl11kt Cr. & Son Llncoln·M""'""~. Good re(. S.11--0101. I i r-r-Si0-5&10. ---; DON'T take chances 1vllh ron n9 Huntington Beech ,·our """'Jet, 1 e I pro-RELIABLE 1... •• • Yuu MC tnc 1vlnner Qf l:JABYSIITF.:R, hOU8l'kceper. ...... , . """!e uoning TWO FREE TICKETS L' -W Id fessionals who kuow what q u 1 e k 8 e r v 1 c e a n d 11'!' 111 or out. . Qr ng they are doing help )OO. reasonable, 847-93.52 betl'.'11. to The n1other 1v/2 schl age 5-\6-.57'13 9 & 6. RECREATION 1·hildrcn. Mon-Fri $40. wk. HOUSE OF CLEAN VEHICLE SHOW a ft 4 pm. 837-6885, Miasion Landscaping Viejo. Carpet Cleaning SEPT. 19TH-23RD Floor Caro & Windows Patios At the HABYSJTfER lot working Dutch Maint. Scrv. 537-ISOS :..::~=--------I ANAHEIM STADIUM ~7!el'·d~i~.M~Fr::°f~ St •• m C.r,,.t C-1-000 P~TIO covers, spaced lat-2COO State College Blvd., 6 30 P"• Ol'"A'" '--" all lice. Unique we~l. planne<l. Anaheiln :. "· ·~· 111"' u av . l[S] anytime, 5:18-8466. Cement, Concrete * 6-16-78ll * Block 1vall.i!, retairu!li \\'alls. Plt>ase call &12:-S678 t'¥t 339 Good pay. 1213} 437--0>37. cqncrete etc. Quality only. 10 clalni your tickels, B ABY SITTE R, 11 t e St. Lie ~o. 180060. fl.es. <North County Toll treC hofl!leWOrk, 3.fi PM wkdys, Lost and Found LOST l pr. ol reading glasses in brown case. Vic. CUSTO~I Concrete \Vork. 642-1'170, Ken. number ls 540-l220). some evl'.!ll & wknds. Foun-~ uree adll ............ 1$0 Tustin Ave {Btwn 22nd & Remove a.~phalt drive\\'YS. l••1 .......................... · .w Holiday) or nround the Boys Replace '-''/concrete 6.~. ft. I 1 1 ~ l club Reward &12-9612 No delays. Free est. \Val ks, lnltructJoft . ?.fAL~ Slan1e;e kitty' 6 mo. slabs, patios. No job too · -Newport Shores, kink in small. 63&-3325. SdtMls & 111,1r11Ctloll1 ........ 111 tail, wearing clear plastic .•CEMENT \\iORK* [ Tmtr1c11 ............ 1 .[ii ~~-a~~~~~J·6~8s~: &:CC:~~~I~ ~!Jild~ Senicn 8nd...,.... . ~ _cN=·=B~. ~=-7""~~~-PATIOS, "-'alks. drives. Saw, LOST 2 Allcred Male Cats. break, remove & replace Service OlrKTVry ...•.•..•. , •.• 60I one v.·hllc; one grey & <.'Qncrele. 543-8668 for est. .t•o w1111M. Mfl•-............ 7to white: w/tlea. collars, 1'>IO Ch.Id C JM W1nfld, f'1m1t1 .......... 102 I are . .telll W•nted, M&fl .......... 7114 D Iowa, Costa !\1 e sa, 1----'---'------H•U• W111lell, M&F ...... 110 557-4605 CIJILD care; my home, 11~ l RJ:.\VARD. Blk TerriPoodle Mon-Fri. Love children. llletcMdMt y mix, vie Harbor/Adams, $30. 1\•k 235 Lo ... :er Cliff Dr, '--------brn col w/metl studs, tlea Apt l.Zl, Lagurm Beach. col & rabies 1ag. Please call C t ct A11Uquo1 ...................... 100 557 9993/6424i908 :.:•~nc;.:r•:.::~·~·------A11~n1nco1 ...... ., , . .. . .. .. • .. • IOt -· Auction ............... · ....... • 1"' $25. REW ARD, Jost min II G E N E R A L Contracting, ••INl111 Miterl•I• ·· ········ ·· 111 <9") b J k J h remodeling, room additions, c1mlf'•• & li'ulpmllfll ... , ..•... 1• ro1vn iaw • eat er f'untrtur1 .. .. .. .. .... .. ... .. .. . 110 jesses on legs, wry vocal. house slabs. Free plans &- oir.,o s1i. • ............ ·.... •11 call 49&-9m Dana Pt aft ··~·~1~;"~"~'~"~·_::',._,"°""-""'-----No11tt11okl Gooct1 ............. 11' • _ J1w11ry ......................... 111,,~5,;P;ch=f·~~-~=-~~ L.B.J. Assoc .. room addition, Mldlin1ry ...................... 1"1LOST bl k I VI f CdM P11.tio & t't'n1o<leling, con· Mlsctllil11tc111• .................. 111 ac CH • c o %:lsttlli11110111 w1n1ec1 ........ no high school. Flea collar, ap-c r ct(' \\'or k. Of~~~1~11~~l~~~!1,;:·:::::::. :! pears to be balding btw. ea. G42-86:l8/847-5051. f'~Or,Mt ................. n• eye & ca. ear. Please call JACK Taulanc, r e p a Ir , S.Wlnl Modllael .............. °'l='644-=~7776'='0---~~~-~-remod, add. Lie B-1 :r:,~~=ni;"ilir ·:::::::: :~ RE\VARD, Gold & Gm:!n 269077. My \Vay Co. 517-00.16 P • ti & lain' Valllly, Green Vlly $1 opin ngh I BARTENDER, exp. Mature, hr. 968-..'W32. 1per 1n9 "9 wishes steady emplym't. Home owner thi.~ aren, 12 BABYSITTER w a n t e d , PROF. wallcuvertng slate yrs. Write O assUicd· Ad No. reliable, my home, nites, 11!!. no. 279514, Insur., all 926. Daily !>ilot, P.O. Box B968-~~rt & Adams, 1-IB types ot paper. 714: 1;,so, Costa Mc.sa, Ca 92627. ~ 842-4386. RETIRED businewnan, neat BABYSIITER. m.v home, No Wut\ng pleasant personality, part Costa itesa. Tues. & Thurs., * WALLPAPER * 1t1me or relief. 61a-5673 noon lo 6; Sat. all day. Own When you call "Mac" tram nee. S0.133S. 548.1444 eves. Job W1nted, FJ:male 702 BABYSI1TER _ bousekeeper • PAINTING & repair, 3.5 yni NEED help at home? Wt> live in, pr!. rm, b&. 5 or 6 v..-orlanaMhlp guar. Tal<e h:tve aide!f, nurs e l!, days, $12 day. CD M, advantage of n1y e.'l:p. h o u s ekprs. companions. 641-4150 536-7006. Homemakers U p john, B AB YSf'M'ER , E1u1tblut( PAINTING & PAPERL'l'G 0M"~7-00l::;:o:::l·c,...~~~---area. 3 to 6 P?.f, Mon. thru lNTERlOR -EA"TERIOR COU.EGE girl desires pa.rt FrL 9 Yr. old girl. 644-0987. Ins. Guaran. Lie no. tinie work after 3:30 pn1. Babyslttcr-3-Gpm, 6 yr old 225398. 1-1.arrl<;, 642--4558 Mon-Fri and an Y t I n1 e boy. Me!la Verde area. Call PAINTING: Int, ext. Res: weekends. Call J ean n c aft. 6 evl.'s ~7-2090 Comm. Clean &: Rel. Ref's. 979-962'1 -B~AB:::.Y~s"'1~TIE=~R::.:..~N=,-w-p_o_r I Llc. & insured. Paul; (213') Help Wi1nted, M & F 710 Elementary ares.:/ to 5: :30. 592-2578 Sunset Bch. 2 mo. only. 6~2012 HI.QUALITY, LOW $ ACCOUNTING CLERK BABYSITTER. for S YT old -~·~ ~.·1 -s-• . .. M:Z..1701 . , . C.M. 64~ * PAINTING & STAINING lNT/EX"T, TRil<f, ACCOUS CLA-YAL CO Sw•ps ................ -....... ™ enamel link brarelet. Lost TV, RHIO, Hl·f'I. sier.o • · · · · • •H Festival ~unds, Fri night. [ I~ Very S<'nlimental, PLEASEl FREE F..s'f'. J im, 979-8186 Hns ilnmcdlntc open I n g ! It's a breeze .•.. IK"il yaur CUS1'0M paperhanging 21 A/P &per. \\"/computer Jtenl!I with case, use Dally yrs. in Harbor area. Stale in-put kno"'•lcdgf'. Xln't co. "P;l:;lo~i ;;C;;l•:;";;;;lf:;;ed;;;;. ;:M:;>-;;:5678;;;;·;;;::.:,;;L~k~. ;;N:;•~· ;;1;83;:28~1;:·;;642;;:;·;::2356::;";;·:;;;;;,i benefit!!. Apply 8nm-1pn1, BARM AID, nile5 & \\'ffkendii. Top s a I a r y . Queen Bee, 1562 Newport Blvd., cr-.t 646-~ DAR.MAID wanted. Apply at Knotly Keg, 2125 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. ~9910. 1 Pet• Ind Suppitl .._,, 494-2037 .'- "" ~fATURE cat, b I a.ck f'oh, 01nlf'tl .................. uo \V/whilc nt throat, spayed c111 ........................ 112 fem, notch missing ear, Oot• .......................... "4 "'hile flea collar, H.B. area. "1'11 ..................... ., ..... '" .. ~"9780 Hor1n .................. ., ..... IU IC::-'=~"==~~~~-~ l fVH!Otll ............... , ..... tN LOST In CD?.f. on f'ri Sep! 7, I~ Bluepoint Siamese altered Boeb.nl .,p male. l yr old, vie: Broad· Mlrinef.qulpMnt • "'-moor I. Harbour Vu Hills, 644-8177 Olntt'll .......... ,. .......... ,_1,.::1.:..,:::..:.:....~~~-=-c 1 .. 11. M11111.111,..k• ........ Ni LOST male ?.fed . Blonfle IOlll/Morlno •111~1p ........... t04 Cocker/tcn-ler mtx. (o\d). "'tt. ,._ .................. "' Vi Fl I NB •-· '""' 1t1n11c111,..., .......... * c n ey, . ,~ .... to '""· 1111 ...................... '" r~cathcrs. 6T.J.-I015 "' 1701 Placentia, CM Equa1 Oppor. Employer m/f Trader's Paradise lines times dollars BEAUTY QPR, lop stylist. top salary. So. Laguna Salon. 4{19...3165. Accouritent Tfne. to-$500 1' .. ce Paid. Bookk(>(>ping back· BEAUTY Operator, 1 shal11· g1'0und. Opportunit:; for poo girl, 1 nuistant, mus! gl'O\\'lh \V educa1iun11I ro. 1 ~heii.il~k~.~~~2-i&39~70ii.iiiiiii&iiiiiio l Also !''cc Jobs. CAii Ann I 1 Chri:stie, ~8fi>5. Con!r,Jl BOAT CARPENTER Cnrccr E n1 fl 1 i:> Y n1 c n t I Do finikhing v.-ork on 37' l\gt'ncy. 3400 hvute Bh•d., Tt':ll'i·li"f typi.• yachts. lolusl N.B. . have ('Xfl('rlern.-e to do hlaf1· ACCOUNTING "" <1•mllt)' woo<1"wkl<>l:, K Pacific Trav.1cr Corp. CLER 547.._'!08 10111. su1111Deek• ............ •t• '""' SPMf & Ski ............ tll LOSl' or ll'.lolen, 0 ra.ngc ''--------------------"'! Experienc..'<I t'OSI: & inventory ---'"'" ll•••e• ....... , ....... · '11 Varsity JO speed. Vic. Lido clerk. ,\dd1ng m1tchin~ Boat Repairman l[iJ Isle. Rc\\'ard. C111\ coll~ct 3UB~tlT lrnde lmotorhcnne l\TOBILE hornc lot in Palm touch 11)1'1en1, typing ,ir, optf. \\'ri.fC'l"l-'ront cxpC'r. pref'(t. TrJl'ISPOfletion fth. l213) 44~1386 or ?) for 1 or all. Ste1,hcn11 fK:9Ctt Gree.nt, loc. on golf tut.le \\'lfi&Uf'l"!'ll J'eQUired. 1'1l Pmn. rull ri1ne. l\lusl havt- '--------.. BLACK Persinn cat iv/white 40' TSrr~ Crui5t'r, 2 A11'0W0 ttltlr'SC, Incl mbship, l)fl.)"Off Sat. l'(lltS pll'ft!IE". 11hn11 hair l-t'lran rot'Ot'd. •. .., ''' PR\\'& & \\'dhl1te bib, fem. An1 hd inc. prop. I'll carry note. $8,800. E4· $7,i'OO. for very GULTON 1"'1 :~. d1~~.','.':' PNl~po· •811~~1',• -rtr ........................ ''Scu.n e''. Re1vP1rd, 2516 Vlstn d€'10t'o,N.B. ioodalJto.8•!0-1090. ""'l 1 .u, • ... ~ • Dt."ft .. • """"-,,,.,.M, .......... "' M"-7427 o' 54:;..1"16 INDUSTRIES ·eoAT CARPENTERS .,., ..... u. "°""' '"""'"' ll•vc 4 b,, 5 i>a, pool home. · l+octrk cir1 .............. ., .. t• LOST in Au••ust 2 kitten~. ln •-'h-11111.rlno. $1IT,500 v.•/ \VlU.. trade 5 acres or lSH Whinier Ave., C~I Ex-Mcnceod, 566-8920 Mlllllt """" ................ tu "'-"""'-'' t 1-·--1 ro..lo RI .-"'*r Ho'"" .................. '* MPlle Tabby, f cm a 1 e Q\ler $100,COO «llllly. Want more OU ., .. ...,,,_. "-" • V• &0-2400 BOOKKEEPER, Exp'd. alao Tr111or1, tro¥tt ................ NS Siamese, reward. Vic. Cd!ll. home In Can1eo Shores, er. Clear. For home equity, An Equal Oppor. Employf'r Cerwnil ore v.'Orker w\lh r=~:·~' ... .:r;. .. :·::·::::.::: Plca~call67)-2075 Sho1·e Cllflii or ? likr, :;:e~~ or hlle model ACCOUNTANT/ 88.leit ability. Otll r.111111 ~1INtATtJRE Poodle. Sat .. 1 :6:.:15-e::m:i=::.· ------Ntlelf 49!).2'17S tor lnttt-[ [§] while wearing nca coUnr, e e e Prime oce1tntron1 deluxe IKPR viN'. AlrtOlfof'Sllt ~ vie. Orange nnd ~Camt.·lia S140.000 1~1 trust d<'ed. duplex, N'pt, Beach, vul. 01\·ei~i[ylna Oirt~r1tin t'Orp. OOU't'IQUE . Sa l esrtTI '---------'· La .. 01. Rcwarr:I. ~18-1797 \Vil] rrtl411· for 50' ro 60' $115.~; Ire.do Up for larg. offers ground noor chn). \\"MW<l. JX!rmanent poil1ion . ...,., ........................ "' Bl.ACKTSII g.l'ey A white kit-yachl or 7 ~ units. BA.lboo Bay Prop. trni.:v to t>XtJCT. accountant. exp'd only ttPl)ly. ~ or AMltl ... /Clft.ic.• .............. tsl 1 M I I Ii .onn ""'""' 75-~-"' n -n-hfto '"'* .................. tu t>n. a e \\' gn!en co a r, -.:i.,...;_, ) rvw Crow to 1,-'l>lllrollci-. C!'n ron-over uo:Rctt a~. ,...,. ""'1 ... ltKo. ltOd' .......... tit vie. lit1J'bol' View !till$ nre:a. TRADE Cl1S1'0M-DIA· \VALK-lN <.•tunper ror 6' Alder 3-4 d11yi1 per wk. Con. no 9'1!1, C/O Dally PUot, PO J~• ;;;::.::::.::::::::::::::. ::ll-"'33-"-'2967=-.,.,.=----l¥10ND RING, SS00 V,\LUE, pick-up, all bllnl, trade ro1· '11<.1 &ho.Wei Banllow, Pl:\>. Bo'( l!JGO, COila. M,eq, Calif Atf9 LOlll"I .................. tt4 LO$!' l!"'OR STATION \VAGON \\-Tirkshop pW1' tnol'.11', stl"N'O, medll\ lnc. &i5-1'861l. 92626 ,._,.. Strtl(• I Pim ....... -, ... RED ~ox -In c.•1,.11 ~·-d -"T RUNS. ~-n "Q pl f , = BUSBOYS &"'8t WMtM ................ '" '"' " •uui• •nrt ,._ o-o--, ma 11 uni or · 1\lRC"-'U' 1 Ptlrts nian ......, 1~ .............. t1f c1U 5$.2193 nfter 5 pm 546-0089 • 642-3414 • exp'd. Tallmantz A\'iafion: Exper. t8 or owr, D t .. Can-= = ::::.::::::;:::::::. = LOS'T male Etiall1h Pug, 20' Cabin Cruiser deprncl. TRADE: Pm.Im SlJrlng, hn1e, Ortuwe Co. Airport S.1>1193 yon Country Club,71 B\i You don't nct.'<1 a gun 10 C.M1 SAnta Cl•ra Co. dog C1"8y lnbd. Ni!oeds 'Ao'Ol'k. $35,000. °'°IL~ South end AL.L tnvund baker or C'X· 0.ll)'On Dr., ~'B, No ptlanc "Draw Ful" when you lie. Call M'J-1612, Al.o;o campPl· 8t'rp van xh-us Spa.nl$h, 38lt, 31:li\, h'I k>I. perkon1-:t?tt ~nch man. Ask cl11ii: pl~lR. Apply !!Ir, Jfof. place an ad In th4" Dal~ L.OSJ' ten 1pctd bike f'!'li Le trade for car, !ll.'Ubu, dune Clear, for honu• NtwJX)l1 or tor ~1r, uutton bf>tv.·een 9 &. i ,.:'~"~'~"~'~· ~9-~5:...:.P~M~·---- fl'llot \VRJ1t At.la! CaU now MMs CC'Ao•t, O"'nf'r d~ bui!D' or T 8r2-M . ruM ftl'l!8, °"'"r, M7-n09. 2. lt1rhonf1 l\-1 " r k ~ t. .~lltt rtsuJtJ Al"9 }Ult a t>hOne iillll•••••••••lllli•••••lllililll•••lllllilll• .. l '..:-~64!:!2!:-"6:!!:!!'18':.· -----, alt, ""'"an!, 96l-6888. !•••••••••••••-----~Jl.~11..-.="'-------,,.u nw._v 6'1•:.s'll. I l\ J IJAILV-PILOT· frltlu, --14. 1971 • PUBUC NlmCE \~ PUBLIC NM.CE PUBUC NOTICE I PUBUC NOTICI! PUBLIC N<mCB Pl11IUC NOl;ICE PllllUC NOTICE • ::_x PUBLIC NOTICE la "';Wl.r:':.:~=:• •KT1t~ous •U11Nts1 1 J'ICTtt1ou1 •u1sw•s.s 1u,,1.,.,_~1 w TH• JTATIMllff w MA•DOJIMllfT ,intnOUI •vt•••u l'KtiliOU'S llVI-. -1 •.t.MS ITATIMtlJIT MAMI ITA'nMMT nATW OJ ( IN IA ,.,,_ W VII OI M"8 fTATl"'-IMT •AMI STATIMllft' 0 ,_ ~fll ,,...._, N• ooll'IO ~ht loll~nt l*'tofl \1 doi'IS DullMU TM follOWlftO ,.,._ ta 401ft1 ~ TMI <6i#1 ........ PtCTnlOUI 8UllUll UMI TM taaowl"' ,..._ i. dOlnf ~MA PICnTl~A.!,"!f!tiy S Thi IOtlowlftl ,__ It .. ,. ......... J >WI""' at , 1'· ••• .... n. fdlowlftf MnOM M,,. ~ ,,. • MAM •• • -· .. \ Tl41 NEW •!NA1$$AHCE, 2111 CHEZ £LLG, tf10 Sollfll C1Ma1 ' lllOTICW OP ULWi ~ aaA\. ... ~ tlv -tif JN flcff'*-~ . TIM t.Uowll'll Mr-' _,.. 9041'11 1 llALl'H'S MO E HOMI Sa• \ '1 \.eltytltt A¥-. N-p0rt lt•cll, CA HIO'llWtl', L~ INCi\' c.i11, twl THE HOOSE Of' OE•ALOINE, ...,, ••TY AT ... IYAT• ...... JJ'I N•Nrtl Htlr<\lttlng ti ""' Met Ti .WLLllt HAYINS ENTt'lt"IUSEI. bo;tl ..... 11: JlllVlle Ill .. ,.. Ant~· ""° L (Mt1,j ElttllOI' loll neef'· " l lut LtlH" Cir,, H\lflff/IOtOll ... ell. (Ill!. I ITlot Mtll• DI' ,._ IE I l DI' ,.,.,..y .. ltM» """' ~ ~ 1t'4 It~ A-No. 1. Cotti MICKY HOUSE, 17W '°""' Itel., :IOI ~ F 't Aw., -· ' ' ·--L .. • ,, ·o ~. LtOllflt lkldl. Ctlt1 '2611 '2"" ' " c • • ..... I. I TM --... MMI, C.llfond1 f'Jl:al VNf D a u1w. JI • ~·~ Nltu.4. Ctllf It•-0t• l llltll p. 301 w. , , ,....., t 1 l.t~•fl· *' rtl'IQI Tl'lrl 1)1.ffiPle•l 11 cON:l\l(teCI by '" I~ O.rtld1111 I' HqMon 1114 Tl'lotrl11 JtlS IL.,.. ,....., • l llO e-It ''"''"'-l\HI ,,_,... ,..twn.r ~ DIUNO " MILLElt D ltst 1'th fU77 ' --' J11111111f' A,,., Stfllt Ana tl1'01 ' "'=~co;;~',,. M41t'~.,,~~11'·2~u1 Or•not CllVICIUll... '· H01-91\IOfl, . oos. trai' L•Htt CJr •• ~1~1';.':'4'Al.t~~~· .. .:.. "°""" •• 1:oi'm~1 fl.ltllil lft °''flM C-ty Oii J!,11~ '"""· CO.I~ "'-· c1ilfol'nl1 mv ~ IC. Nd\. 2'Q1 ,...., Oienn Dr.. Tllh butl,..: •• COMllCMd .., t ll "' "'"'-· CK1I Met, C.Uf, '2•21 Thlo 1f,J:ni'.:4!~~ wit~ lht C-· ll..,l\llnfton IH<ll. C.nl. t1'4 NOTICE IS HEASl~tVEN tl"I Oii O!' JIN!f 1.tcAM ak;t;..,, 2Ut C>rintt Tl'lta bil'll-k Ml,_ i:anduclld by • IAfUN Nkl!Mt. Clllf, dlvklual Tlllt bt.ltln•lt ft ctndllCltd b'f 1 ,,,..... .. ty Clttll of Orll'lill Cwnty on Se,:ittmber 'rhlt blltll\eu I• COl\dUCi.ct liY I g-rtl lfl ... Sloll!"'btr 2~ 1'1l. lt\I IHldtr1lgMCI, Avt .. Coal• Mas• ... llf'Ollfflltor 1011f 1. Yoo. JH01 VII Sall Stbtlllln, lttlpl! I". lltriktn.,.IP I 1llrln tfll 6, \fr.I. p1rtll4f'1hlp, TITLE INSVll:ANdE AN,S TltU~T COM-Jlmtl CIUtonl Gdloll. ll'GO lllbOt Ol'lno P. Mlllll" LasJllN Nlewl, Cillf. TllJI lltttomtnt Wtt fllH Wiii'! Ille Couft. "Krr~nn Annt Ltvlfl ""51 Gent Hauohtoft ~t.~Y.,'1 ll~~Ae1~1,,f.1,~~n0. :;:'.Jti SIWw t1lbol Pll\. Tiil• "".,..,."' flltd wlll'I ""' Ctcmty Tiii• bullnou 11 cond11Ctt4 bV 1 illll••I tv Cl1tk of or11191 '""'"'"" on ~'"""" • Ti.It lllltmtnl w11 •fUeCI wh~ lllt COi.i.... Putllhhtd Ortl\Ot Ceo&tl DlllY ,,. Thlt '"'-' ..... llllod with lh<I (Oull-Of M,..1t~l'ltlS~Ll.A ALLEN lllO Thi• bllalntta .... condudfllf br t ''""'"' ~ ... Countv on Jtpt. IL 1'71 ptrtnlnhlp. 12, ltn rr Cl ... k of C>rtl!9t County on Aug u•I l, St'Pltmbw 1, 14 i1, 21, 1,), 21"· I)' Cllfk ol Orin~ COUlllV on Al.lllUll lO. 1r,_.., ,, PltlSCIL ALLEN.tl.0kfl0Wn P.rlMn~lp l'lnll • Mooll I(. NOii ... 1ft llt'11 ltJ1, 11 M>Jt,V "· ALllt dKtt ttd, Yo'l11 i&tll Jin •ltk.., tUCl:llY, UJl"ft'Z .tJllD l•ICICNI• IOllO S. Vto "vlllt111M Ol'•1191 COlll O.llv Piiot, f "''™ PUBUC NOTICE P11ert 1t prlv1t1 1111 10 ...... lfhtlf tnCI betf 1\11 ..,..,. A,,..,,. tf Law Thlt •••i.n-t we• 111..S with tlll CIMI~ ~Mr I(, 21, 2t, 11\d Ckfoti.f s. PutlllsMd Oruiee CO.it DtllY l'llol PUl!ll1~ Ot'lftOI (Oltl Dtllr l'llot, tllOO.r, Wbllltt to C11ntlrm1tl011 bl' tM "Ublllllld Or1not Co1s1 CNllY pfltol, "'""' T-~ ty CIO!'ll tf Or1ntt C-IY on AUOlllt 20, lr)J 2al·7' ~ugull 31 tnd Stpt be f u 11 ' St'PltmlM• 7, 1~, JI, '21, lt7J 177•1' lb0V1 l'l'llltld 4UOtrlor Court, tll l1'MI Aug111t U.. 31 -'Id Stl)'ftmbw 7. ll IMn Mt<ArtllW 11...... Im. • lfTI ' • • lllCTITIOut IUfitNllS •lilht, 111111 lnlt rnt •114 1rt1t1 ol Ill• 1t7.1 nK-ri ,.,.. 471 '47411 PUDUC NOTICE lt1J 772t-7J N.r.Ml: STATIMl:HT PUBLIC NO'l1CE dtetditnt • IM tt'"* of h~ d .. 111. and 111 1,.....,.. Cl'""""' tr7t1 "VlllllMd Ortl\O* Co.It! a.Uy Piiot .u • I C Tll• 1o110W111g ptnOfl 11 dohio 11u11,..~1 ~· ~J11~1:,•1~ '::'~~ •• ~·~•c':J:.':i PUBUC N011CE Pvtinlhed . ~a co.1it D•lt"' Piiot, A1111int t4. 31 11\d &tPltmlW 7. u.:l -----=,ct<T=,,o,c""ec,--=,c,c,c,.c1o0c1~-- PUBLIC NOTICE 11: NOTICI Oii Taun11•s SALi ofl>ar 111111 « In .Odlllon 10-11111 of tt-. lt>Pf1mll9!' 14 11, tt. 1ne1 OCfobt• l. 1'13 H411•73 NAMI STATIMIMT DEUTSCH ASSOCIATE S, l llSf Ith L ....... l•l II.JM dKtdenl t i ltit llmt of Mr M1tn 111 11\d ,ICTITIOUI tutlNllS ltn •»'3 TIM follO\OtlllD per5llll 11 dolOO bvtl-•• Avt .. Soun. L•Q11fll, C1U I. • to '"'' COttttll\ real ~ 1ot11.r lh ...... '(IC • SLl'·IU ~fll'IY ...... Bur;e. l06 llueblrd (YI\. T.S ..... fl.nu lht City Of S.flll An1. coum ... of Otll'lllli MA.Ml t TATIAUNT PVBUC NonCE t i : 1¥:~:1g= cC::.~=~.:r ... ~ii llCI •• C•. t'.16$1 IMPEltlAL 8.4.NCORP ., dul'<' •P. Sltlt of C1tl!Ol"l'tl•1 dMcrlbld II lollOWI: The tollowlno lllBOll Is dol119 bw;lnftl .PIJl\LIC NOTICE FUANITUlllE SLEUTH ING,'°' C1rc!1 0 . This bl.lllntss I• CoodllClld by In I~ point.a Tru$1H l/l'lellr lht following Lot 1$ of Tr1a No. ~1•1 11\ the City of Q : ftl .• NIWPOrt ltKh ""° THI! C 'f.':."I g:.,oltAMOE CllwlduaL dHCTlbtd <lted ol lrl.llf WILL SELL AT S1nt1 AM, 11 ptr M1r. t11ertot rt«ln:IM INTEltlO• Dlltl;CTIONS, 16 l ) Htltn A. K_.t1, tol Ctrcl1 .. I., lllOTK:I OI' Hl:A•iNG OI' PETITION 01nnY I. 5uriJt l'VILIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ~Book l!:JI :f''J J..~ "'-J~tU1neou1 WKldllt OT .. $Ullt 206, NtWpOrt ltlt;h,. IU,••IO. ·~:-J~T 0,. THI N-isort INCh, Cal, tH60 • l'O• l'ltOIATl: 01' WILL ANO "Olt This 1111tmtnt w11 fll~ with tnt Coun--llDOEA FOR CASH IPW9blt II tlmt of m}'l'CT 1TO·u c~fn::. -hrti-t ""'° lUM ITATO Of' '"Lt•OIMt• '°' T1'111 -..!Mii 11 Cond\ICtM liY t n In· LETTE•S TESTAMENTA•Y ty Cltr1t of Ort"'lll COYnl'I' Ol'1 Alleuil t2 wit In ltwlul montY of !I'll Ulll!ld Sllltl) ti 1 """". l)O!' tt • ,,, c-Wllllto"'' C. Ht~nkll, )l)O The NOTICI M T11U1Ta1•e IA\.• -" dlvldutl E111re of lltUC:E w. M(COM8. 1m. '•II rlell!. tltlt t.flod 11\1 .... t C:Oll'<'tYtd to •="tt-oi'll':'of WI~~=. 'ir•rw~ gtits lt1.4lfo. N~ •·am. C1llttitnl1 ttuo T.t ..... ,.. TH• COUWTY OI' O.Al'l•I "''"'A, KOOllll Oec:11!.ed. "1H74 Ind -... Id l>Y II vndtt Hkl Oltd "' l id ... otlfl'f l tl l/l\lllld tor .... ~ TNt blnlneu 11 condllct90 by tn l!t' °"' Ott. 5, ,,,,. It 11 :GO A.M., Nltl011111 ... A-nSff Tiii• f!tltmtnl WI• ttlld wlth "11 c-. NOTICE 15 HEltEllY GIVEN tt1•1 PublllJ'lt4 Or•llGI• Co.U P.•lly .. 1101, T•\111 ' In the propto'ty l\lf'lllllnlf -rty tfld m~ i. In wr111.,.. ttld dhotdu.I ltHI· .. ,..,.....,. TM!tt c-•• duly ·~ MOT1C• °" HIAIUNO 0" .. tTITION IY Clttll ol Or•'19• COi.iniy Ofl Stpr.rnbtf • Sul.ANNE JE ... N MASON .... lllllcl lllrelll Au;u11 24, )I, Ind S~t..,nbt( 7, 1,, dtKtlbtCI: dtU....,td to "" Sptdtl AQlll'tl•trator Wlllllr'I c. Hl.c.tWlrfltl pelntM Trust ... \lfldtr •rid Pllt-nt to POI: ,.OIATI Off WILL AMO l'O• u. 1m ... PtllUon ror )robl" ':' Wl~\ ttlCI '°',1$-1'13 ?~S'-73 TRUSTOlt : TttOMAS F. MU ltCH AND TITLE IN5UUNCE AN D TltUST coM. Tl'll1 W1ttmtn1 Wll flhod W1'h .... COUit' DMd"' Tl'\ld ,_.... Oct. 7. ltM. "" LWTTlltS TlnAMVfl'AltY "*lb :~m:,,.~ r'J~,:::. ',: .:i.i~ t;rrn;:. ,'; )(AAEM J. MURCH. lllK!Mnd lrw$ WUI ""NY. 1t Trvll °'Pl""""'· IOD NON!'I ty Cltrk DI' °"'"'' COllll!y Oii S.pi.n!blr boN '1'4 ptgt '"· ol Otflcol•I ltteonb 111 Elfllt "' ELEANOll M. CltlSI'. P\illllltlld ar.-Cull 0.lly "'"" lo,1r1h•r iMr11cu1~r1 1nc1 thi t '"' 11rn1 11111 PUBUC NonCE llEHEFICIAltY: IM,.EltlAL IANIC. • Mtln Str"'· S1n11 1.111.,, Catlfornl1 '27011 1:1, 1m ll'lt tf'flct tf . .,. Cwntlt fl-.ltr "' Dtt .. ltcl. Stpt. 1,, 21, 21, tlld Oct 1, 1'13 tt11-7i r.ot1<t of hel rl11t i111 1tme til l bffn tet C•lll0tnl1 C0tP01'1tlot ti I~ tlmt ttltr !ht nrll P11bllc1ltoll Of -"211• ar.,,,. O:lunf'f, St"-f1f C111Mm1t WILL NOTICE IS HElllEaY GIYEN lhtt . ., St1>I. ~5. un . 11 •~oo 1.m .. In 11\f! RKOl'Cled Jul, )I, 1t7fl ., ln1tr. No. lh111 of1(1 "Id be+ort lh<I miking af !hi l'ublllhld Or111t1 COilsl 01Uy ,.llot, SE\.L 4T "UI LIC AUCT ION TO l!LEANOll MAR.GUEltlTE SAYE l'lls fll-PUBlJC NOTICE • covrtroom of D~rlmofll No. J ol $1ld l'ICTITIOUI IUSIN .. 11 :!0926 In ~ t "61 !>I'll• •20 ol Olflcltl 11 '· , $.tpf. 1.f. JI, a, tll4 Ocr, S 1m n:»-73 HIGHIST 9 1DOflll llC)m CASH (~lltlt 9d harlln 1 t>tllllon lor problte of Wiii • court. ;ii 100 Civic Ct nltr Drlvt West, In NAMI! nt.TEMINT Rteorcl1 Jn 1111 ottlct of I~ R-.c:ard ... of ,,~m•rn:,:t, ~~Oll'un~M:l"~;,1~·~ 11 ,.,,,. "' 11t• lft lawt"'I montY ti ft1t •nd for ls.tUtnc:t of Lltttr1 Tt1Ta1M11l1rv·1----;,::;;::;'='~:-:::-::::;c----- • the (~ ot San11 ,.na, C1IUoml1. T"' lollowt"'f Ptr$Ol'I 11 dol/111 builntll Or1ni11 County ; .,.111 dtld of trust ArntrLct ; Ttn Ptrttnt 1101'! ol tht PUBUC NOTICE U111hod Sl•t•I 11f 'ht Sovlh front lfltnnct It 1111 P.tl!IOllll'. rtfef'lft(t to wl'lk h Is '1CTITIOUI IUIOllfl 1 Oil S~o•. 5, 1973 t s: dt\Cl'lbtl t1M lol/O'W'lflO l>fOPl•IY: trnounl olltrtol, In Ctshltr'• or Cirllntd to the Old County CwrltlouH, In lt'lt Cll'r maclt f« lurtller P1rlleul1r9, Incl !hit Ille NAMI nATIMINT '• ~IL~IA~I~ J.T JOHN, F 0 AMS' CON~ULTANTS, :r.171M Loi .a of Tree! No. 1U2 '' tl'IOWn Ol1 chtek. pay11!11 to TITLE IMSU•AN(;E ol S.l\f1 AAL c.fltornll, 111 right, tit!• 11 ..... trld plKt of ~Nrl1111 !ht '1me lits TM lollow111f l)trlOl'1 11 dolrwil 111.KIP1es1 l '*WALTll!'Jt ~n ~AUfrllGf!• lst1mar1 L1rie, El Two. C1llf. t26:l0 I M.IP rec:orcltcl 111 look II, p1g1 '3 ol AND TllUST COM,.ANY, mvwt t c-l'ICTrTIOUS lUllNl:SS and ln"""t cvnvwllcl tt Ind flOW 1ltld bY been HI IOI" Ott. 2. 191'. t i f iOO 1.m., In 11: 'ltSOT Wutcuii Of SI• '2t RObtrt J•mH lltYnolds. 2 ! 70 4 MIKtll1n-.r1 M1p1, tlC«dl of Orlllft com~ny lht written bid or ""9r. end the WAMI SfATWMa•T 11 v110tr llflf Ottd of Tn11! In fl'lt lllH-!ht courtroom of Dlj»orlfMtll NO., l of THOMPSOM H1'ND CRl.l<TS, '0021 f !Mt...,..., luth, (!4 tiu1 ht1m1r1 Line, El TOl'O, C•lll. t'/430 Count'<', C1lllor11l1. ~11"'f' ,musl1 bl5 Pt161 ,_C C011flrrn1tl011 The lolkrWIAO Plf'Smlt 1r1 dolt19 ...rv .:!tu.ltd In Ml• C:ounl'Y i rld Se.It 11ld aivrl, ti 700 Clll1c C1nltf Orl'<'I lltllo Pl .. LlllUlll NIQveJ, Ct. '21617 , -,.1t.: tn•J 145.ust -• Ttilt 1>111h1111~11 cond11Clacl 111 t fl 111· Exetflllflll lhtrtfrom 111 mlhtr1l, on. wll~'b. V :'~ U~t 'fh ourt. f•ld Ml• bllll""' ts: Cl"ctlbtd tt: W"'' lfl llM City di S1nt1 Alla, CllllOfl'll•. Edwtrd Ltw11 Thompaon. )0021 ltllt ' )lltlfn•1 '"' ... ttt•-· CllVldu11. g11 Ind oltltr hl'dfOClotbon 1ubst1ncn ltrlT\I m VPOll • usu• llCrtw ll OOltoor ·" "IEAN. 11~ Fllf'btl LOf 15 " Tr.ct No ... ,, boolc 1'4. Dtlld Sl'Pf, It. tt13 Pl.. L111u111 Nlgutl. Ct. "'" : H P11bll• ed • Or•11<1t Co1st Dall'<' Piie.i, ll:Obert J1rn1s 1t1ynold1 ..,,,td or lold \/poll Ille condition Ttie' properhr llfloreln CllKrlbtd Is com· ,,'lf/• Su It D • LlllUlll H fUl'I, Ctllf, M11ff 12, n, U & u ' (it Mi"tltiMOUt WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, Thi• ,llusln-It tOl'lOuclld Ill' I I\ In• , -S•~lernber 1, 1. 14, 1913 ~111·13 Thi• 111t1111'tt'll w1s Hiid with !I'll Coun· tlowtvtr, no right of tnlrv UllCA lhtl rno.nty rtltrted fg 1s: "°'"' L .. Gordon 1U71 v MIPS. fOOtlhtr Witt! 1n<ulldtvtdtcl l/ffrll Caul\IY Clttk dlllldu11 \ -, ---ty Cltr1C of Orlfl(lt COUfll'Y tl'I AUQu1! 7, turl1C1 ol tilt ltild 11\d r.o rleht to drln 516 UnWOQd, S1nt1 An1, C1llfornli Orlv1, Mh&lon V!tlo. ~1ttrornlt f'J:fr'° l'lttrHf 1n Laf" of Niii Trld "°-4"1 ALIC:I MOO•• Edwtrd L. lhomPIOfl • PUBLIC NOTICE 1973 j tor 111Ch tuti.l111en wllllln 111e tiP!>I• 50!I 92701 Erv111 Ltt I NI\ msi KtnwCJOd Tiii ,,,.... tddl'l59 ~ Cit'-commori tX M911""" Nt. 1•1 This 11111rn1nt w11 fllacl with the COi.in· I P·t1J7f let! of ukl 1111c1, •• ttllro'l<I ln fhe The U11der1lttltd restr'<'tt !ht rlallt to Cour1l..~l1l11ot!, C1llloml1 tU30 deil§ftitlOll. It ~r. of tf1t rtt1 Pf'Of"rtYlfll'MI • Mir, C:tlll, '262S IV Clerk of Ortl\fl County on Sl$11tm"8r i Pl.lbllslled Orlfl!lt COi~! Diiiy PUo!, cited trom FAd L. H111Ck end Ktlle rtlett inv. tnd tll bld1. Ttllt :&;i~ltltli t conll11Ctld lrV I .-.1 dtJ,Tlbtd tboft It pllrPOrfld fo bet .w7rTth mtl tn4Ut 12, 1911 1 • sLft·n• Auo11s1 11 •ncl s1111ernber 1. ''· .21. H111Ck. r1c«dtc1 September '· 1tss 1n OATEfrrtr'rJ~G~,.,'~re AND P••1n"t' P. !lottro W1v. Newport IMc;tl, C1llforrll• Att-y "'' Pttt11_, ' Pinn I FICTITIOUS IUSINESS 1913 2709·7) 8ook 3200, p1g1 3:11 of Otllcltl Records TRUST COMl't.NY Thi• .,~r -6:':1i:t wllll '"' ( Tttt Ufldl.r•lc1111d Tnilftt d!ICltlln'J 11\Y ftl.lblllll'lld Or•t111• Co.1st OlllY .. 11o1. ,ublltllld Or111111 (Ol•ot Dilly .. uo1. NAMR STATl:MINT ,. 1nd In llM dttd from Elmtt G. R.tdlotd By ltlchtrd E. Wtl1rn1n. ty C1fl'll of Otll\fl County on Stptem~ 111blllty fot lll't 1Morffel11119 ti, "9;1=·~·~ .. ~-g"'~~U=,~"~·~'~"g"~"g~~g-~~,13~5~ ... g· ~"~·~>~>~, ~21~o~"'~Od~-~·~·~,,~·~~B~l~•-~13 +: TM follow1no Ptrsons 1r1 doing PUBLIC NOTICE Ind Dor• AldfotCI, rec:on::ltd StPl•rnbet Tru1! Olll(fl' -" ltn.. stl'fft lddrtu 1114 othtr commOll .... I 'bu1lf1HI .. : '-1tS5 In look J200. P101 )I' of Ollltltl CL'•DPhone: 11.UU 100 llU« l\lllOrt, It 1n,, .-.own l'llrlllll. 1 FAit WEST TltEE FAltMS, 10t1 rKorcls. " e: e:. l'O NG "·Im! Slld ult wllt bt mldt , but without l511•lnt11 C..,.1,r Drlvt. Suitt 21S, 1 ..... 1111, I nMS l53 ltOll LtM, CMll Mesi, C1lltomt1 A~~~K~i:rcl•I "UDll1111d Or111C11 Ceei l 01/ly "llot COV9111nl Cit -n-111ty, ... ..,..... or tmptlld, C•lltomll '2'61 MOTICE TO Cltl!DITOltS "(II 1 alrHI eddrtu or common ns Wiit TNrd l""1 Se.pltmbw 7• l4. lf, 21, Im t1111·l1 ttGlrdlnf tit .. , po$1Mflon, or - Fourth Ml,!!11 PrOPtrtlttl, Inc: , 1&35 SUlllltlOlt CO"ltT 01' TMI! dt sl11n1tlon 11 lllow11 lbc>llt, no w1rr1nty S.lt Alll, Ctllflnll1 '2711 ' cllmbt'anc:llS, lo PIY thl f'tlNlnll\9 91'1~ I E•sl Nor1h Slrnt, S1ll111, KtnHI '71t11 STA.Tl OP CAl.ll'O•NtA P'Olt 11 given •s to Its c:omplt1111111 or COi'· fthMI• Ml-Gn elptl l\Jm of 1ht ndtf1) llCVftd br .. Id • C1Utornl1 Plclflc DtYtlapmenl, 7Q12 THll COUMTY 0, OltANG l: 1tetne1sl." Publlshtd Or•11t• Co111 D1Ur ftllgt, PUBUC NOTICE One! of Tt\nt, t~I': 11.17f..06. wltlt '"' I.. BulintSI (tflltr ort .... , No. 2\S, lrYlne. H .. A•m ti Thi b1Mflcl1ry undll' Hid Deed of St'Pttmbtf 13. 1•. 20. lt73. 2712·71 ,....,. "'•tori. "1'nrtl61d lh Mid not.I'•). C•lllornl• f'26'I E~l1le ol MAR.ION WHITNEY KEN· TnAI, bV r11son of 1 bn1eh or dt ltull In tdvt nc-If 1ny, undll' 1111 .... ,.,. ol Mid I Tl'lh bvllntll 11tondudlcl11y 1 gentrtl OA.1.L, tl!o known es MARION W. KEN· 11'11 otJllg1fh1m S1Cut9d tht r tb'<', PUBUC NOTICE '~CZJ:I~OllJ.!All/..':::• Dttd o1 Trvst, tet5. cl'lto1'9N •1'111 "'"""" I pertnerstilo. DALL. 1114 IS MARION KENDALL. lltrtlolore IXl(Ultd• Incl dt1J'<'••ed to '"' Th tClllowl I llCll bvsi of ... TrustH •114 ol the trutl's ,,..et.I QI. CAllFOltNIA PACIFIC ()e(•e5ed. uncl.r1lgMd I written Otcl1r1llon of STATEMENT OI' WITMDflAWA\. "JIOM 1,. 1 no Pll'IOll 1 l\f lll'SS bV M1d Ottd of Trust. • OEVEL~MENT COlllP, NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN to 1111 Dtl1ult 11\Cl Dem1ncl tor Slit, llld written l'A•TNE•Utl,. Of'EltATIMG UNDllt . COAST HOME CENT!Jt: tlri I r '""' btntllcl1rv undtf' N ld Dlld of I . lly: Dennis A. Mlrllfl, credltDl'S ot Ille l bO\'<I n1rntd d&e:toltnl llOl!Ct ol brtlCll •rwl of 11.ctlOll to Caull flleTITIOUS IUSINess MAM• AVftllll WWl!nlrt11 ... Ctllf,,,.., 0 5' Tl'l.lll MrlfOfort 11!.Kl/tld •rid cltll--.d Viet Prnldtnt 1ti1t 111 per1011S l'lto'<'lflll cl1lm1 l{lllrist the 1111 llnd1rtlgnacl to nil ukl propt:rf'f to 'Ole lollowlno l>tl'son h1' w1tt1c1r1wn 11 Mt•I' J 1 ' · to t11t \Hldtr'lllllld •· wrltltfl 01dtr1llon ._This 1t1teme11t wit nltd wlll'I tile c-Hid dt (edenl 1r1 rt0:ylred to 1111 tt1tm, w tlstv r;11d obllg1!I0111. incl lhtrNllK Ille• 11-r•t Pll'lrMr from ftlt ~rlntrllh!o Stnlt :, ~; ::lo,,W· Shi •011 ROid, of Otf1ult •IMI Ootrntncl for S1t1, Ind I ft c1 ... 11: of Or•nvt Count'<' on A1111u1t 21. wllh 1111 nteelStl'Y vouc:ners. lh th<I offlu undtr1lfhlcl ctl/Hd Hiii l\Otltt of llA1dl oper111no llftder Int llctllloin ~l111S1 Tl'll• b\111,;. 1i ond\Kltd b 1"' wrlttM1 Ntltlct of o.ltutt lftd EltetlOll t. \• 1m of tilt tLerlr. of tt1e lbO\lt tnlllled cvurt, Ill' •rwl o1 tlectlon lg bl ltKorded MtY 30, flt~ of MANOR: CIJl:PET I. OflAPEltY dl'<'lduli1 1 c y '" St11. Thi IH1dtr1km<td Clustd ttld Hollc;i ' '""'" lg "'"""' ""'"'· with lhtl netHSlfl' lt7J II lhslr No :nm In book !Dm page 11 27t5 Wl!ll Lln«lln. An•l'lllm. C1lllemL1. M' I J ol Otflllll 1114 Ellcilon to Stll ,, bt I-" H ·--• h to --.-.. I ed I '"' ottlet , •• •• . ' '1 Thi flctlllous buslnt!ll fllrnt stt'-mtnl 1)1; "' -_... ' .. ........ • ....... -. ~· \ICU( trl. .. ... .,. ... trs 11n I .... ••Id Off (II lttellf'lh, fOf"" PlrlfitrshlP WIS flied Oii D9Cllfn.btr llll• d lllll'llfll ..... llltol wlll'l IM COUii• rec: ..... ld n I nvnty -· rM rMI 1'.'Ml{1lmNcl!. OIMlrto. ol htr 1tforfl..,t. GOEDHART & KANE, Stld 1111 w111 be medt. but without 1 lm ifl !hi County of Ort ty Clll'k of Or1n111 COUnty Oii AUOIRI Z2 propef'ty Is lec:ltld. 1 :11:1111111 a Chlllllltwwtll 232J N. l rOIClwev, Suitt 4'0. S1n11 An1, cove111nt or w1rrelll'<', tlllll"HS or trnpHed, 'i<un NllT\t lllCI MdrHt 7tht llttSOll ltn. ' ,0111: SIQftmlMr IGI, 1'13 ...Jll M""'°" Ctllhr Ori¥• C1Ulorfllt 92104, which Is thtl pltct 'Of r1111rdlng !Ille, Pll&'tHlon. or . tn-Wlttldr•wlnq~ '27•ts Nill-I ltltl "rwer!V '-~.n. fill buslne11 of "'-' Unelef'Jlf!lfcl In 111 m11t1r1 (Umbr1nc:1t , lo PIY 11\t remtlhlllG prtn· NEIL E. KILLIAN, 2261J bl1m1r1 .. Ubtl&htd 0•11\fl Co.st Dilly 1"11ot 1"111" Ctrp, *"twpOff SHCll. CA '1'44 oer1tlnl11t to 11\e est1t1 ol 11ld Cleeedtnl, clpil sum ol !tit nolt!IJ HC.ured by s•ld L1n1, El TOl'o. c1ntor11l1 Auourt U. 31, 1r.d St0t1rn11er 7, 14: '' uld Tnllltt. 1;t~I 17141 14Ml11 wl!llln lour montlll 1tt.r tt1t llrsl publlct· Dttd of Tru11, w1tt1 lnttretl ts In .. Id Sl;nea: NEI L E. KILLIAN 1t7l Ull-13 l y D1YICI Gllnon Publlll'ltd Ortnvt Co.st 01llY Pllcl, llOll ol 1111' f!Otltt. "'°'' provided, adv1ncei, II 1fly, Ull(htr lllt p 1 1'·14UJ A\llhortlld S111111\irt •,Augu'' 31 1nc1 S1pt1m1>1r 1, 1'. 11. 011•d Auau1t n, 'Im 'i. •••ma.of 11ld ONd 01 Tn.n.t, 1-. c~1r11•' 5.J~:;':'1 ~~·~• 21 c~g oiuy 21~:1~ PUBUC NOTICE l'ubUtl\td M.wPort H1rt1or N""" P,..ss 1.1971 1712-IJ MAllY GAllLMOll:E "ELSON 1nd ex11111111 of !ht Tru1tN trld of lht • ' ' • combln.d wllll D1llr ,.11111, N~ E~•cuirlx of tllt Wiii trvsl• crHlecl bV 11fd Died ol Trust. PUBUC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUI IUSIWl!!S lnth, C11\lorrll1. Stl)tlmber U, 11, a . ot the etiovt n1med dnced~nl S1lcl 1111 wilt bl held on Frld1v, NAM• STAT•MENT \f7) 21-1(1.13 GOl!DMAltT .. K1'MI! Ocrol>tr s. 1'113 al 11:00 A.M. I I tllt office The toUowlno P«SOA Is clotne bWlneu·l---------------1 7lU N. lniHwar. s ... l!t... of T.D. StrVkt Companv. l allll of l'ICTITIOUS IUSINess 11: PUBLIC NOTICE ·' PUBUC NOTICE S\.l'·llt Slftll A"'' C•I ... l17W t.merlt1 Tcwer, 01'11 City l lllCI., West NAME ITATIMl!NT Ill l'ACll'IC SEllVICES. (21 DllY· NOTICE TO CltaDtTGlt5 Tth (1141 IM-7US Suire 1110, Or1nge, C1ltlotnl1. Tl'>t folltwlllO penona lrt cloino bul ints$ WALLS.AS CJll:4TIVE INTClltlOltS, (3)1---------------1 IUftlllllOI: CO\lltT 01' THI'. All-YI for l •Klllrlx 011e: Augu11 31 , 1913 IS: FANTASIES UNLIMITED, US E. llttl 'ICTmOUI IUlf•nt STAT• 0" CALll'OltNll. l'ubHll'lld Or1n;e Co.st Dally Piiot, tmptrlll l1ncorp MULLEJll:'S MUFFL£11t SHOP, ltsS SI., COii• Mtq, C:tllf, No, 1' 92627 IU.Ma ITAftMIMT l<Olt THI: c,•,•, ~T_!..!," ORANG!: 1.u;11sl )\, Incl Sep!ember 1, 14. ?1, 11 "ICI TrUlfet, W. \.lnc:oln, A"-tltlm, Ct tlt. "9111 C~>'•"'°M·-·-•• i•°"co'li<'.'!.,~ 1111'1 SI., ... !_11t,,_,~ ... , ,.. ....-t rt 4or!'ltt ~ .. .,... 197' 2n,.73 .!I~ T.D. SERVICE COMPl.Nl', A1tec Mvflttr, l11t .• t Ctlltornl• corp. ~ ... 7•., """' •••• E11111 of RUBY P. IRUMLEY Oe<:lil• eotnl or1tlcn, 1'30$ 8Mch llvd., tlLll'lllMfrtl'I Th!I bul.llllU It conducted tlY In 1,.._ DUANE ti. HAUGEN COM,.4NY, • ,.ed. PUBUC NOTICE By M11l1 E. Miiier, ll11ct>. C1. 92M1 dl'<'ldu11. . 11050 W......,, "'"''" Sl111ton, Ct llloml• . NOTICE IS H£AEBV GIVEN to !Mt Aubt1nt Secretary • This bllsll'llll 11 «WICh,odld bY I cor. Mlchell Ktlnll" •on '°"' crtoll!ono Ill' "" •bow nimtd cltcedtnt • 7,... tTA-u•2 por1Hon Tiit• ''''"""''Wit flleel wltll lht Coult' 1. MUo I. Jorct Hunt, ll.!2 ~ ~t •II ptflOllS h1vln; cltlm• t.gllMI "" NOTICE TO CltlOITG•S .. ublllhld Or•no• COid D•llY lltlot. .t..nEc. INC. ~ f.)g_k of C>r•llllt C11inty Oii .Srpltmblr Grthdt. LOl'4' •N<h. c.nt. uld dtetdtnl 1rt required to 1111 them, 1u,.e:•10tt COVttT 01' THE Seo1tmber 7. I,. 71, 1913 2745-13 L C. Zlmmtr, ftr11kltn1 fl·111'12 2. Im I. J~ lmbodtn. _,,. v- Wttti lht lltClllal'l' vouei.er1, '" IM office STATE OI' CAl.lllO•NIA •o• "27fU l"vbllsllld °''""' Co.1sr D1Hv "ILot dllt, Llll•-.d. c1n1. ol lht tltrlr. of lllt 1b0\lt 1t1tlllld cGWt, or THE COUNTY °" OllANOE PUBUC NOTICE Published Or1ng1 Co.st Deity Pollo!, Stoltmbtr 7, 14 21, 21, 1tJ1 :mo.n J. John & IN Gro:ltlll. m• W. Asl'I. lo pr111n1 th1rn. wllh !ht nec11s.rv ..._ A-J7Ut Auo"'Jt 24. 31, tncl S.pltmblf' 7, lt Plolll~. J:tlH. WlllCl'ltlrs, to !ht urldtrslgnld ti THE LAW Elftlc of R.OY G. HAll'ME, else l{nO"ll'n ltJJ 2'9-J':i I. Kttb • JHll Ilk ... , 22f St. ef11r, OFFICE OF KINDEL & ANOER.SON, 10'70 11 ROY GUSTAVE HAZl'ME. Dte1;ised, NOTICE OF PUlllC H EAR. I N G PUBtJC NO'ITCE Fulltrten. Clo/If, ~ORTH IR.OADWAY, SANTA ANA, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN I<> !ht RELATING TO AM 1'MENDMENT TO • PlJBUC NOTJCE Thl1 tMlll-i. corlduclllf bY 1 L!mltM CALIF .. wtllt h 11 !tit pl1c1 ot bu1lMS~ ot credllort '11 !hi 1~ l\tmtd dlc:.011'11 THE C"PITAL IMPltOVEMENT "RO-NOTICE O" 5AL9 ,ll'tMnMp, tl\t> unden/fned I" 111 "'''""' ptrltlfllllll 1t1il tll ptrlOl'1$ h•vlng ct1lm11111lnsl lhe GltAM TO PROVIDE AODlrtOtlAL l'ICTITIOUI IUSINISI Nlllk t Is htrtby given Pf.JTSUlnl to I«-Miit Hunt to tM •l•tt of uld deced!"'I, wl!llln four uld clec:llcllnf trt reqytrtol to ttt. tl'llt'n. ,.UILIC TR.ANSllORTAT ION S!•VICE HAMS ITATaMINT 11'19 JOTI trld .x>n of fht Clllll COX!e of lht lllls steltmtrlt was fllld wlll'I 11\t Ctt1t1' monlhS ttltr lhl flr1t P11bllc1ll011 of !his win. the lllC:llWl'l' VOllCherl, In 1111 otnct ,•H orANGE COUNTY ~•r TM lollowlllf ptt&On 11 c!Ol"ll blllfl\CISI Sl1!1 o1 C1llfot11l1 the unll1rll0ned ty Cltrlr. di Ot't "llt COUfllY en Stpltmei.tr nolke. o1 !tie crerk ol lllt 11>ovt-entlllld court, °" · Nol ct 11 htrtb'<' elven t11it i pu ... e 111: 05CAlt MAltT 1122 s E SkVHl\I o 1 ' 11. Im. O.llcl Aug, 21. \f7) ro prtsenl lll•m, wtlh !I'll l'IKHll/'V he1rl11t Wiii bt htld ay tilt Or1nge Counl'Y TAIKOJI DATA, a W, AIJ:ll/Mt, &i nti S.lltt Alll, C~l1fllrl'lll . f'Jioos wlll ~ y:; IN4Y, m•LUIO 6 E.P. llrurnle .... E•KUIOI' '<'OUCll«t, lo "" underJ.lgnlcl ,, , .... tff!Ct Tftnslt ~l•lrlct •I tilt So.1rd "' An1, Cl. '2707 pul>lk 11Ktton •• , tot ~"''"°"· Stn,. JOll ... Attn. of thtl Wiii of of Alf' t ltorntyJ, l'LUNKETT 1. SuPtrvll«s ht11r!ng room, Fllfh Fll)IJI', G1rv Mervht Lewi .. 401 W. Alpll\I Aflt Ct HtDl'nlt If 1a t m ~ SINnll, -It. ..a SIW .• Suitt A. the 1bove ntmed de<:edent PLUNKETT, '12 Ollvt AYIAUI, P.O. Sgx SIS ~ MDl'tt1 5'<'Cl~I. Sinti A~I, S•fllt An1, Cl, tt707 ' tht '?tth d1y •of 5ep1tfnb.,, ltn, In~ \.I M ...... Cllf. tNJI klNDl!L a AfrllDERSGN , llo9, HunllfllllOll ltlct'I. Ctlllomll '2641, C1Hf«nl1, on Oclobtf IS, l973, ii t .(1(1 Th!1 buslMss Is «nd11Cled by Ill In· foHowlllll Gtse:r1btd Pf'O!!lr!Y, fc>.wll• ,-. ' Pllllt 102t NOltTM S•OADWAY' which ls tlll PllCt GI bulln"5 of tlll 1.m, tor 11'11 pUtpoe.t ol COMlderlne I prot. dl'<'klUll. Yur of Cir• IM I M1•1 of, C , 11n.OC: SANTA AN ... CALIP .. ntn uncMrllolltcl II\ 111 mitttrl ptrt1ll\!llQ to ec:t tor which flntnclil t islt!t nc1 IJ Gtry M. L-IJ Chi\'./ Nro!O!' No.: TOf'JIODC: Lie.:;.; l'ubll&hld Oranot Coast Dtlly .. Hot, T ... (n4) Ul-1171' lht t lll l'I (II 1eld dettdtnt, within four btlll(I '°"'111t from !tit U~n MtlJ Tiiis st1t111'1tfll w11 flltol wllh lllt COUii· No. CSt1i.): OKLAHOMA 72 JKttU S-.rtm1191' 14,, 11, 11, l!ld Odettlf' l. 4ftol'MYI ter l •tctrlw rnonllK tlllf "" flrll pUlll!titlon of 11111 Tr1naporl1tton Mmlnl1lr1t1on, pur1Vtlll hr Clerlr. of or1no1 C011ty on Auou!!I 21, s1ld 111111 tor f11t OUf'lltSI o1 .. llstvlnoo •_m ____________ "":.::_:.:;'" Plll>fllllld Orll>Qt Coa1t. Dilly Piiot, nollee. to !ht Urban M11s TrllllPOf'ltllOA Act ll'I 1'13 11th at fllt ~lgl'lld for m-y owedr Auoun :n ~md September 1, 1,, 21, Ptlld AUQUit 2t ltT.I Ht.I. 11 1mefld~, 01n1r1lly dHerlbtd •• ,..17m •1'111 11tor111 '" ll'lt 1mount "' l200tll PUBLIC NOTICE tf91J 2710-7J ROSE o. H.t..lYME !otlowt: "vbllshtd Or1ng1 COl!il Dilly Piiot, t11111'1111r wlftl «lSb ti ldwtrtfslnit Ind ~X··l--------------Admlnlstretrtx of ll'll estate /i., DE.SClttOTION DF "lt0JECT: AUii. 31 IM 5!1)1. 7, 14, 11, lffl 21Cf..13 l>lfllll of Hit. "ICT'fTIOUS IUSUlllS of 1,,. ibcrtl nirntd dKedll\t Th• Or1nae Count'<' Tr1ns11 District ft'lrDI •c NOTICE Dt lld thl• IM?I d"' tf 5tp11mbtr', !911. •AM• ST'Aftutn' ,.LUMKITT a PLUNKaTT tits 1oo!ltd ICI' 11\d rtctlv.O t ftd1r1I CIUDLJ. OICAlt HAltT TM fol!OWI I dol •w1 Mll1111 .. 111n•ttt l llllllnct II''"' In •11• lmOUfll of NO'nCI OP DllSOlUTIOlt ft11bll1111(( °""" Coe.st D11ly ,llot • 1111 ~ I "' bull111$1 SL .. •1» 412 011\"I A'<'•-Sl0.90l.C1\t to t wlll Ill flntnc:lng !M llYe 01' "Nl:TMl!ltlMI" Sepltmbtr 14. lt'/3 t15J-73 es.US A MAGNETIC SIGNS 1711 PUBUC NOTICE NOTIC(: TO CltlDITO•S ,,0 .... tit yur ctpllet lrnprovtmlfll "rcgrim lhel .. Ubllt notlet 11 ll«tb~ alvel\ ftlil Nt...;.~ BIVll., COlll MMI, naf tUl'EltlOlt COUltT 0,. THI Mlllltl111i. IHcll. Ctllf. nw "'' bftn ldOPlld by tl1t OCTD Board ot ltllbft't A. $1111\f, •1111 Ktnt Allen, PlJBJ.JC NOTICE Arlhur S. Ttl'ldltr, 151 ltlbot, ltlbo9 ITATI 01< CALll'DltWIA Ttl: ln4) nwut Dlttc!Ofl. Tttt Otlnvt COl.lnty Trillllt htrelolort 4111 b!.111 vncf II\ llYnd (:1Ut f'J"2 l'G• THI COUNTY 01' OJIAMGe Atl~YI !tr Admllll•=· D II !'llot ~11;~c:, 7!1Z'~ :':11~~·~~hl! :1:! lllllMll fl"" ..:.. tnd~t'l't. of., Stl~ll~ STATSMSMT OI' ASA•OGNMINT lht1 bull,,.;. II c:onduclld bY In fpt. He. A·7nll Pvbl 1~ btr ; YU. 71' fDf' tht 111.p1n1lon of Ille District's publk Allin •NI e1t1te, ti 3)1 N. fW#oort No. Of' USI 01' dl...tdv.t Elf1lt of ELINOJt P. STOWE, Otceil~· ~~~ust J • Ind S "" ' 2ns.J':i Dtll·A·ltldt lrtntll l'<'lhm Ill Oringi A, City of N!'WPOl'f llt lCh, COUllty of ftlCl'movt SUllN•ll •AMB Ar11\ur S. Ttndltt' Ml. T CE IS HEREIV GIVEN to n. CounlV. DtK rlbed below i re the lleml 0.-111111, Sl11't of Ct lllorn!t. did on fllt Tiit fol'-111!1 ptrMltl hH ibendoneel Ille Tl'lls st1ltrntnl Wll nltd wtftl !ht (IU,._ ND 1 1 PUBUC NOTICE to i. 1equlrtd, wllfl lhtlse iCldlttonet 10111 d11 '11 St'Pt.mbtr. 197J. by mulvll 1111 of 1111 flctltl-IMl1rlfts ,..,...: tv Clerk of Ot•llCll County on 5tpftrnbW crtdllCl'I Cll !ht I D0¥1 ntmtd dec~Hil lullds. evtr lhtl nelll lwo yH rs: c_..t, dlJCOlllt tllt "Id P1rtnenlllp t nd GALLEltV l<JIAMES, mn< Cl m.lflO 12, 1t11 lh1I 1n """'" lllvt119 cltlrnt 1g1lnst !ht 1 ' ., ttr1T1ln11t ttltlr rt11ttons 11 p.1r!P1ere c ... Ir s J c ...... '211M itld dKIOtnt ire rtQu-lrld 10 1111 tllern. ,,-• " urch••• of O -12• P•lHflGer, tlle!'el 1"'1 •no. in u•n • .... ~·•t'IO. Cilll. Pulll!JllM Or•l'IOI Coast o ll'r Pfki 1111 1111 tit 1 tl'lt offl "' 1lr concll!l-d, 1m1U lrt!Klt blllH n, f'H75 Sep 1 1 '· ,:f I rr=::~ vouc ~tt!t rl ce MOTICe. 0" T•USTIE'S SALi 2. l"vrc:NH tif 1 I' 1 re 111glnes, Stld bu$111ns In IM luturt wlll bl can. Tiit "lctlflOUI I U1l111tt Nltnt relerrl!':! ltmblr .t. 21. 21, arid Ol:loblr S. 1111 c"' •llrr\"I cou • OI' Ofl Frtd1y, 5"oftmbtr 21. ltn et ' tr-mut011t. ttc for 1111 Q l'llW bt.11'S dllC!Ocl bY Robert A. S.11111, who Wtll lllY too eboYt w.s tiled In Onillft cwniy on ltn 2'17·73 to prew11t lhtlm, wlttl 11\t nec:is.-rv o'clock 1.m. 11 the South UrOlltl tt1tr1nc1 ,_ ~111.H ol 'o locktblt l'ri:-l•rt •nd d1Klltr"9 111 ll1tllllll• encl ~ C Mlrcti .10, 1m ,,wuchers, to llM undtrslentd 11 THE LAW IO 11'11 old County Courtl\ouJI, Jn 111t Clty boatl the flnn tlld F'IAI.,. 111 '"°""' Ptl't &i. t ttfy Jl llt Alhn. ltft _., ~ ta. PUBUC NO'J1CE OFFICE OF KINDEL & ANDEltSON. 10'70 of Stlllt Afll, C1Hfom11, ltEL1ASLt 4• ,ll!'Chl,. ol S2 mobllt rld10I lrld lo tllt firm. 2tOOO A'<'tnldt "-Ulftl:I. Se" JUlll>l-=====~=~~~----1 ~~~iF" ...!r~~~~tt!y,11 5~N~lntAM~ EQUITIES, INC., II Trus!ft undlr ft'lt dl1Htc~ Ce!lllf '0 rn mun I c: 11 1 0 n w:Ul'thtr notlu I• '*""'al ...... tl'llt fht C.olrtr1no. e1nt. nus ....... \.tc:.&Tlt* ,.. ·~" Ol'f'tel tt,. under II ned l P Ct rl Dud of Trusl !Melt 1JY EVE\. YN N. tqUlpmenl ... alllned Wiii not M r1tpoJ1Slblt, from Tlllt bt.IJ.lrMU Wll condudld Ill' tn ll'lo Well• ""'" llM N.A. "-flleill tit .... to lhtl Hit: of .!'1d·~r:::e:s i:::;r· ';: KlltCHllERG •• , ht• Wpttllil proptrty J. P111'Chl$I of 5, Dll l-A·Rldt IMlt ZOllt ~· dlY Oii tor .,,,. ot111g111on. l11CV!'rld dlYldu1I. Plkttkolt • .., A •. ,,, tf7J wlll\ '1111 h • w n r encl rKOrdlcl No...ernber :i.. 1t1) 111 &DOii 11g111 "' Kitti AMtn II\ hit twn P1err11 or In !hi Thia .i1t.m1At -fll«I with the c-Complt'ol~ ot tht Cur•.nt'f' ~ 1 ~ kt .,m~th1 11t1r the tlr$1 publlctllon of lhl' l<MOt Ptgt ssa Of Ofr1clit ltecordt of '· ,.ureheH ot shoit equtprnelll ntmt ol 1111 flnn. ty Cllfk of 0r1na-County on Stfllll'llbtr llf!IOI '' 11'1.t IOU111Mst torflll" 1111 ~ ;:e no0 ci'~ AUii 29 ltn Or•no• countv. Ctllfornl t, ,,..,.,.IO llt('Urt 7. ,.urchtu of 7 iervlce '<'tflkln, lit' 1:AT£0 AT Cost• Mesi, C1lllomlt, ""'' 12, ltn. • lt rltctlon of Stn JotQllffl H!lll it;o.d t fld 1 JOSEPH.INE 'a P!R.EUE, '" lndebledllnl lh flYQf ol SCHUYLEll c:lucllllll -wtstl truc:k. ant tow tr\ICk, dty of Stpltrnblr, 1m. "429J Slltla Cl'VI 011'<'1, N.-,rport ... cl'I. Dnntt •' E~tcVlrl• ol llll-W'll ol lht ADAMS HASKE\.L, 11 lrllllet now OWntd fwo 11rvlc1 tr11Ckt. tncl thrtt P'Ubll It~ A. Stlfnir ,.ubrlillacl Or•not COltl DlllY 1111ot, ,CO\ltlty, Cetttornt11 blWe fltmed dtctd' I 1nd ho:'ld 111 SCHUYLEllt ADAMS automobll•s ~ stied Dnlllff Co.1d O•llV ftlklt, 511J!ltmblr 14 21, 2'. I nd ~ S. "-blls.tlld 0nllO'I Cotlf Deity P'llof •' 'ICINOl!L .. ANDElllON '" H ... SKELL ••• tru1111 bl' r•ilOll of lllt •• Purchlll of 0 111 A-ltld• contro i!pltmbtf 14, ltn -.1.n1m 2155-13 Stpltmbtr 1.t. lm m1.n 1 1~10 Ntr1h lrGHwlY CrHch of ctrt1lfl ObllOlllOllt •ec:und room 1qulpm1nt lnciUc1l1111 turnl1hlng1 PUBUC NOT!. CE -Si•lt Aft• Ctllt lhtrttw, nol!et of whlcll w11 r.c:orCltd dl~lclllllll equ1pmenl end mtttrltls, PUBUC NQ'J1CE PUBUC NOTJCE , , .. rTtt (7111 SJ..1111' M1rctl 23, 1913 111 l ook lll60t Ptlll 430 ti tie. j Att;.,.lllYI for E•tt.vlrlx . Sild Olfl c!1I R1cord1, TRUSTEE wl11 1111 Tht proftc11t loc.lld Ill Or'9/\0t Counly, ; Pulllltllecl Ortnge Cct ll Deity Pllo!, nt publlc euc:t!Oll to !he lllglltlt tlldOtr I« C111forn11. The .. tlllll'lld Cbll of tht prol· JI "A 31 Incl S•pl. 1 14 ~I 1t13 2111·73 ( ... ~. pav•bl• In ltwlul money of lhtl Kf ll'ntAdrntflf It $1.A77.W. A ledtrll I up. • • ' U"lttd Sllfll ., tl>e llmt of ul•. wltllwl o••"' 11 ttquttled tor Sl,111.192 from tllt lfH ~:.·~":Cit w1rr1nty ••to t1111, possnslon «.,... urbtn Miss Tr1n1port1tltn -"''-'"-''-"'-"''------,roz•1•,~•t•in,,.m:=;0;~~W'it.:'W~ curnbr1ntff. the lnltrfll COl'l'<'IYllll to l rwl Mmlnlstr1tlon of thtl Ftdtrtl Deparlmtlll ~ now htld In' w ld TrvslH under .. 111 Otld of Tr111SPOrllllon ullcltl' 11'11 U~fl ~ of Trust. 111 t rwl lo tilt lolltwll\f dttcrlllllll Tr1n1Qot11llon Act of 1t64. ,, emtndld, ·--------~~~~~-.J!~...J:!!U' '"• NOTICE TO c•1:01To•s pr~. lo-WI!: lo http In 11111nc:lnQ ttlh projKt. The IOC:ll io l~d Alita tSroJ «iut:fO""' I NI, A·7"n AM lh•f rNI prOPlfhr loctlld In !ht contrlbllllon ot ms.m wlU bl 1v1ll1bl1 PUBUC NOTICE ..... .... '-L. •• , •• 0 ·o ,,.~~ •. f=.",....""j,,. Sltll ot Ctllf«rtla. COVlllV of O••l'ICI•· from !ht D11trtcr1 propertY fix I UllS· !'·-CllY of (OSI• Mesi, dtKrlbtd II mtnl Incl 1111 0<'111111 Countv,_ -C-IY ti Ort111t lolllM's: Trtn1Por11ll011 Ful'lcl 11 tptclllllcl ~ 1M · (/, 1'111 __ ,.....,,....,_iu-Mfl""""'- ' Esltll of LEONOltE EST EV ANEZ. Loi 11 of Tr1et No. n:w, 11 Plf Mlp Sl1t1 of C11lloml1 Tr 1nsport1 t lo n q;;;,: 'l0'"61£ S IO!IJMl,fi~~: 1111"1 _..,.. llNtdi,., o:oll..lq -~°'II-.~· .•Otct111d. rec:ord-ecl 111 gga1r, 1~ ''Ill 77 ot O~tlopmenl Act of ltn. " 011N'Aol i'<'lf1ll, """~"""-'"",. b ...., "I -....... ,. t Notk:t l• tltrtb'f elwn lo (rtdl!Ol'I ol MIKtllll\ICllll Ml .. record• of °''""' •. •ELoc·••o•·--------+-----"iD Altlftllll ..... ~L ..... ,. u ... _ .... ·-I tl'lll 11:1ow 1111T11d dtcllclent tl'llt 111 " ''PtnOfll hawing clt1rM 1111lh1t 11>1 Hid CO!Jflty. No PO!'IOl'11, ftmlUu. or bullntUn % % % % S ·--~ .... ~ cltcedlflf irt ttQUI,.., It 1111 ltltrn. wltt1 Mrt t lMI be 11-n :Ml !1st 11th win bl e111ollced b'I' ft1l1 proltct. ---+---+---+---+-------i•""-"" .. ""~""~U tht """H/'V 'IOUCl\trs, In 1f1t offla of Sf!'lt!I, COiia Miit, Clllf. nll7 C. £NV1AONMENT: '.tupftn9 .... - -""""' ... -1.-MIA -l'tdt• ttlt Cllflr. ol tilt •bovt tn!Lllfd court, ... tor Ille Pll'PIKe DI PIYlllll obflge!IOlll ... Thi• PfOlld will 111.... • slahlllunt " " " " t ~NllU0 1 IN ,. -................. --I .,..._.,. to pnHnl lhtm, wllll tht 111c:tss1ry cw.O by "Id DHd lntllldlno ff•· clllf9" IJIOllH.,. ""'ltrOl'lmtr1tal Impact Oii fllt I ...,...,. ~ '""•"""""""""' wtlll -i .-. 1p11,. t \'Wthtl"S lo tt1t \lfldettlentd ., ""olflCI IN/ tl!"8f'IMS of 11\t> Tl'Vllft tll4 of Hit. urbolll trNt. Thi ICld'Ulonel trlllll(IOl1• "' " " "' "9ll't>• ' M.IHi'lf M*t ....... '·",.,.....-..~'!PM -totL ·llf Gl.A55. 1.LLEN .. MOSElt, 1J:ll w. Dtted; AUOlnf 29, Im tlon llf\'\cts provl<lld b'I' tlll• projld ti-. ' 'G•rdlfll BIW., P.O. lo• 201,, Gtrcltnt, RELIAILE EQUITIES, INC. wlll 1111 In Ille rtd11Ctl011 of tlr flOllvtlon llfN ! . ;;: :,~::,e,:. ~,,'t:i,p:=.:.::s ~=lfl~ ~O':~clll•I J. "'"'• ~:-'c~::~~::~,~t1~NING: -"---+"---+"---+"---+------'+-·..,.-~"-"__, 10"°"""*"'•-"flllj "'tMtnHY (NI t·· lt 11\t 1tltl• ot Nici cttanclllnl, wltllln lour l'ubllshed Or&r1111 COltf 0.HY Piiot, Tiii propoMd P'OIKI contorm• to the -.,. .uur1 ~ ,4. n'IGl'lltis tller Ille: flr11 publlc1tton of lh11 Seottmblr 7, 14. l1, Im 217~13 ofllt11I rec:oonlrrd Reglontl Cotr1< -~:----t"::---t"::---t"::---t------'+, o 0 1 no11c1. ' Pf'lhtnl1Ye Lind U11 tncl Tr1n1port1flon _ _ _____ __:i Oiled Augu1l 21 , lt7'. PUBLIC NOTICE Pl1111. Tht 1pprovtd grahl w11 tub-% % % " I ,... ~"W.,~ 1t e1 1 Nouw,\!1:1 ! UNITED CALIFORNIA IANK mllled I« 1t111lon1I r~ltw bY t1M u 18 19 t . E•etUIOI' of Ille Will Sollllltm C1lllornl1 A1socl1llon of .. of Hid dtctdlfll. 1•nt Oovernmtnll Ind ,.,, 1111 Stal• of " " " " •• -=~. " " ,1·0;,wfl= GLASS. A\.L•N • MOlllt N01'1CC Oft T•utTll!'S SA\.a C11ltornl1 Clfl•rlnghouH , .... ,...... lflcl '1i ---+---!--------+-----"' \• , 1»1 W. GtnMlll ll'td, On OttObotr 1~·~ ~t ~OO o'tlock A.M, the Ullllld Slllf Offlct of Mlflltll'lltl\I % % " " I JMt~ .r. 11 t niew•"o ft.O. 1111: .,, it 1111 f10flt Gffl(I lflllrlnc:t In !Mt rniln 1114 S\Klltll A·tS Clt1rl1111ho!.IM Ind 204., ----j---j---j---jf--------l-l'~=~-~~"0 111' '9 ,_ G.11W111. C4 ""' revltw llltfld•, ...0 wet 1ppro\'td-1 ---1----1--------+-----• I , Alt#MYt Ill' alltC91ll' lobOV lo Slc:url!y Tiii• h•urlnct Com· lhi trntndrntnt repr-nl• 1 mll\OI' % % ll ll 1 lHll'WcruJG ll NCM.LYlll~h Ull'I PlllJ'• IZS N, fl'OtCIWltY. 1ll 1111 Cit'<' of dllntt 111 IC!lpt •nd SCAG 1pprov1I 11 -,:--f--:-:-t-:::-:f-'--f--,;:::::-;:--,:-__:!--,---""°'__::nm_::__-~"-=---t--------='+----~· ' "ullllllltd DrlftOI Cotti Dilly l'llot hnlt Alll. $lilt of Ctlltoml1, SECVlllTY tnllclptlld, ~ 't1 AugUll ,,, 21, lftd Stpternber I, It, TITLE IMSUltANCE COM,.ANY, • c:or• £. l!\.DEltLY AND HAND1CAPl'l!Di % % t'. % 9·~ % "SZ6 'tol9 f tfOl l\'ll/OollNW0j " .,. I Mmltl ltn 2'-11·1' por1ll011, es Ttusltt under lllt DHd of .J The OCTD In ft1t IPICllltillon tor tl1t ----f----'-f----'-f----f-------1----~_::_~c_-~'"'---\--------+-=== ' • Tl'\111 IQCU!ld b'I' RUTLAND J.IEWPOR.T lllW DvMt wlll proylde belltr htnclrttll, % .. " M1.i1'1t1 ., 1-llOU'fW~-PUBlJC NOTICE IEACH COMPANY, a Llmlttd torw1n1 ftclng i11t1, PKktO• r1<k1, % ,. • ri " 711 """ P•rtntrslllp rtctrded Olctmbef 31, '"' •ncl wtdl!' tflll lllOA comtortlb\lf 1Htl1'111 -------::,7 .. ~-~m=------II clo(urntAI l\O. 1t110 In booll tln. Ptlll to htlp lbt tkltrly •rid Ille htll4lc1ppld, " % " " • "°~ " " • • l'nMI" i\1' MOTICI TO c ••OtTOltS ~H el~~ R.«Wd' In"" otlk• Ill' Ille Ntw ~loA-ltldl .. rvk:u would bl -,----'1' f---+~-+----+-------j~-·" c. "7-h-~--,1-----,---+------'I SUPl•HHI cou•T Ofl THI ~ol .. ·rr fou~ Ctlllornlt. tnr dHlfntd to pr'6\lldl Mrvlct to tidtrlr". . r--1 • S<fATI ~ CALll'OJ:WIA !<Ott •Htofl IU I ,, Pll'rntnl fJf' •lld htndtCIPl>ld orowe "''' door"11Hioor " ~ " • " " ~ , ./ I WIM'""" TMI COU.rY Of' OltANO• perforll'\ltlet ol olllle1t10fl1 HC.urtd lrll\lporttllOll In lttts ol C011Ctnlr1ttc1 ·--..+---.f--,,1--..1-------+-• •·. ~·1--~-----+-----il' Mt A ltltrttrf. frldllcllno tt11 brll<:ll or dll•ult, llOPUltllont of th-fllll.,ll>I-.~ _ • l--....: .. Ml IM ~ .. :-1 _, Mll•OlliY' Et&m "' ANsON ·~~HAMNElt, Jlt .. :::'1~wr;.;.~ ~.~·,:::: 11.-Al tlll~ pUl>lk tlt1rl1111 tn ~..,, ~~ -~ .... ll'WlWOMMlll llOfVIW '-' -~-IW~· r..11 DotcttMd. 1'Clll of ttld 0tttct1l ltlCOnl .. will lt!I .. wlll llt lftord.S for lnltrt>ltld PtttOl\I or Nl:> CllNINW ' r-,,_,.,,. - kJ NOTICE IS HEltllY GIVEN to IN publlc evtlltll for~ wlll\Oul w1rr1nty ·~1-"' llot htl(d with .... Pf(! to""' :=::'.'.'.:'.'.'.'.'.'.".'.'.:~5·~·!•ru!fi!~~MU~<>!!::'IV[!jWY:>~'[:====;:-:;=jit:::5affi-!!!1·~~_,~~~-~·~~~··-!ij!!!-·!~-!!:ii1!~;dl''J 't crtcllfo,.. of tilt 1bOVI l\ltntd dtclcltflt 11 to tlltl, POAetllon. or enc""'11DfenUS Ml( 1 • ec:-k. end tll'llronrntllflf _... ....,.. -··~.. •• 'ii; thtf tll ptrtonl tll...tl\f c:ltll'l\t fftlMI llM tlll lflttrnl COll'<'""td to Nkl Trvslw 11.f t ll>tdl tf lt'lt Pl'OIKt. lnltrnftd jllrWl1t 0 ril~l\IJC\'D tf Mid dleldlflll lrt ,_,jrld It i!lt ""'"· Mid Dltd Gf .,,_., *" Pflll)lrtY lllvltl In ll'llW Mltiollllt or1ltw fJf' lrl Wtllll'lf rildMc:t J:iUOUllllW•Ol.llOOIOOl ·~JJlllrNol'IWll, wtlll "" ,_...,., 'f'lllldltn. In 1111 Gf'flC1I 1111 '°""'"" ., Or Sl•t• C..flonll tnd NCOl'fl!MMtlloM wltll rllptd to 11111 1 'ol 11'11 (ltft!:ol t~ 1flon 11111t!ed cwrt, II' dllcftbtd ... '•· 11 OI .. ,.-O[ICt tt Ille jlUllllC: lwlrlng, Written • ~nt•~o _ 111¥1.llOMl•'llfflWrxi to ,.,_r ""'11. will! tlM 11tet1MN Loll 2. i, 4 s. • I/If 1 ti TrKI No. •••l•rrllflft ll'll'f 11t Mbnllled prior lo ttlt A'fl• JIJn VlJit V.1SP3 T 1'1-.-.Tt•UJ ~to tlw Ulld"tlllllld ti THE LAW *'-111 ni. City ti N...,,ort le 11 publk 111«1,,.. 00Zl 109 0• 4 :'ll\'4=~ 0 ' ~ ... Joh,.Q OF,ICE 01< KALMl..i.CM, DtMAltCO. ~ '" • flllP ftitrtof rrcO:.d T~ ,,.!11;.!.,.c:" If ':" i::::: :"""''"'· Ol'WIMI' 111' 1 • llW.lo etlCl'IOtll .,._""' •• b K,.,,,, ANP. C:HIU.lfolOWOflfH, '"° Book a · hie• a1 •114 :t:l. YI """' 1 .,.n' •n ~ Al.I) .Ybt V.1$00 I , ....._ ...... .....,~~1=f ., ' \ti~=:' ~m.~ .!'ki. S':.:: :.:'°'o: ~==trN.lpt, rtcOrdl Of .-Id tt11':it -~~ ;~:w·:,:: I -.. • ... ""--·.-•• ...:=t' ..,,.. ..... _ ~----1 bu""'" .. Uw ~In I ll ""'"'' Ml:INM IW -"""""I p.ll'porttd CWflty •lld""' r1111oMt 11'11. Is l '<'llltblt IUIW'~ -· ~.,. tflt •lllt °' Mid 04C'ldtftt to btl llU.l2M lltliMI Ill 1 for'pul>lfc ~ 11 11110t1119• County toO OC1I z ~ ~bahwfil · B w1111h1 low -IN,,..,."" llrtl P11bllc1'. ...... TN undtnlo':ci °-PM~"":~ Tr•nllll Dl1trlct olfltft II Ill Clric Cllltlr 'Off~ •• ' .. ""**'.&1911..,.., . 111111 fII tlMt fW'lk'I, c:ltlfN ..., llaefltty rw 1 ttd"911 " Drlvt Wftf. S1n11 A111, c1nf0tn111, + • OLH;:: . O.ltllls.,l • .t. ltn, ukl ........._ rcor ~ l:CCI 1.m. 1r.d S:OO p.fTl. • 'l•"lll I 101, , _ ,.& . Ofll II ,, .'~*ut;0'011M0 • THI ,I.ST NATIONAL 1 tM of tyf .._...,i)'t. • .LOl GUVWUll 1 -~· ...c.__ __ IAN& Of' Of'AHG• COUNTY ~ ~"':' OMcl J9tr Ill tbltfltlOllt Thi pulltlt f1Hr11111 11 tt(IUI"*° Irr the ' '. , --·==· ~~~~ .. .,_• -· llllClllW el 1M Wll Olllf ~I )l \t7J "'"' I Urbtn M111 T f I 11' po rt 1 Ilo11 Wf NCMI otn'I VIMHVW ON!MO'l'lOl llll fl! , I'll ~P. 1 .. • .... .. ,._ *"' ....... t'tUftlll SICUtt:trf Tnil Actr;l~l•tftllCll\ of tllt ~II °'P•rtmtnl tlll •oc tlft(' ONIONI llNV tt6l 'l, ll'I(' • ...._.:..,... ' • tc•&W'C'll. .-CO, INSUlllANCI C::OM,ANY ~w:=:-,':°".:.9:. le~r~ C::: • ........ , & CMQ.U•tal.,.,. It 'Mld1 Kollk. •l'MIWment TM "9CWdffltl wlll be ORIMlllOOllNiNINl'UUtnltMJ.•N NI0&'3'0==-' -•ar llllT ctllrfU .... ITL .. l<ondolur1 Oltkl!' lrt wrlbtll •Mid tutlnll"ell to UMT 14. NOUY.XmY ....... ,,,_,,. 111 CINNIQ Ol 'tNV\I =.-· •I W...,_T •e&et«. CALI,.,__ tt'Oltl"ORATt: SRALI JACQUI MOO • 1"' ~ v1-' • litltG *ODW'fO na.1 IM...... flVDfl"*ll N""'"'1 Hwt1or ..... "'"' c""' « 111t or.,... ....... ,._ ' -INlilOAIGllWIWM -~ ... ._. """"""" w'llll Ottlty Piiot, .......,. (M!ly TrlMit DUtrkt --• ~ . ! S!,'!_ ~i111191 Or.... c:ea.t IN"' ~I IMd\, Ct-fwl\lto ,...,, .. ,, If. '1, f"ldll'IM Of'9• (e.f Ollly .. 1 ... , .. ••] ' If] ... Ill.I. I ,,,1 •• '· 14 ,.,, -. "" m .. ,. im 1111.n 1.,...1..., 14 •· ,,,, mt-n ' "!lot• llPIO:NM 14. • "" l DON'T PINCH YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) •• • ... • . ' But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES with a PILOT Classified Ad PENNY PINCHER 3 llNES 2 TIMES s2.oo Any Item Priced S5l or less !If ~ ~ -....... ,,,. <Mllilnod ..._ ~rwt-,;•'11' ..,------1-- '6f 2-561B ' I r,1d1~. Stpltmbtr 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT 4J ---·-·-· l[Il][ ~ _ ...... _,,, .. _l[il) ._I _·--·-·t_J[il]1[ ._,, ... t .l[Il] l .,,,_.,,. l[iJJ [:. _ ...... _,.-~jlHJ~\.L-[;;;-;;;;L''-;;;;' .. _";;;..1rnJ~I iiiiiii'"iiiiiii""'"iiiiiiii·• ~l[fi]~l•,1.;.;: ;;;;-;;;;;;;;··=;;• ;.;][ll);;fJ Halp W.m.d, M & F 711 liolp Wanted, (ti I F 710 Holp Wan1ed, MI I' 710 1 Holp Wanlo<I, MI F 710 Halp Wanted, MI F 710 Holp W1ntod, M & I' 710 Holp Wanted, M & P' 710 Holp Wanted, MI P' 710 Halp Wanted, M&F 710 BUSIJOYS w/d!n. rm <xper. DISHWASHER HICKORY KEYPUNCH OPR IM.cHINISTI< • Pn'!lC!SlON NURSE'S Aid"; exp'd P"'f.. TRAINEES WAITRESS or Cook helptr. Ch·er 18 )'fl of q:c. Imme<!. full time citll 642-0598, O~rat11 JB!\'.I 629, Keypunch Skilled m1chlnl1t lO build Shift.II 110 3:30 & U lO l~J:J. v.111 1raln, 9-5, full tfme. open1~1. Afply In penon, OtS!f\\'AS!tER _day & nlte FARMS & IB~f OOiG Vrrltter~ Mt1$ler lOOllni, JI&:• ' short Nil Beverly titano11, 24152 Via NOW HIRING Pl'eferowr 21, Tlno's Pbu, LaguM Hll 1 llllton lnn, The Ancient MarillC'r It you're .,, nuilui-c Pt-Mn & Specht.lltlc1 Co, 1 6 4 U prod'n for amall CM Co. Eslrsda, Lquna HWs. G. 8. INDUSTRIES 30il.2 Cro\\'ll V 11. 11 e y ~205 Lu. Pu Rd., Lag HUit. ~7 \V CoiHit lh\'Y Na \i·ould llke p/tinu.• selling in tilop.rovla, C.M. Equal Qp-Exp'c! 111 die re.pair & punch * NURSERYJ.L\N to work at FULL TIME PART TIME Parkway, Lagu na NllCIJel. BUSBOY wanted; Exp d , ... 646:0201 fr · ' plellsa,nt, \U11'0u11dh1ga dur-_por. E'rn1iloyer. pr·~11 set-up. 64~80. l.reC farm . Operate ml.&e. $4.$1.$640 Mo. . $300-$410 Mo. \VAITRESS v.·:u1ted, full ot over 18 who can v.·ork any DOMESTIC Help Geoi e Ink duyllmt:. Contll.ct rilr. KCYPUNCIJ. :>1!16 ~1· 9610 M,\IOS ,i;, Luundry help. Ex· equipment. PJ:efer 1 year Le•dme,,..Supervl10r1 pal1 tlme, must he over 21, sh irt, Ctu11 or Steve, Bench All <.'11 Byland Agetlcy i<IB Thompson Rt So. Coo~l cxper. Pemt. p/L Xlnt co. l.ll'r uiu1et-e1111. Perman£>111. exPf'l1encf'. &rl-8866. $110 &. Up 11.pply in 1wr,on ll.I House Inn, 6'!' ~eepy E. lGth St., S.A. a.t7-039!i J>lnzti, U1\\'cr" Uvl!I lot· in -ALI l>enetlts. S.10--0~.-Apply at ~11ltel 6, 6266 NURSES Aid~ .U shin s, Portollno, 2:i9'll ti1ulrla.nds Hollow \Vay, I..aguna IJ(!a1:h. OONU~ k a.. 1erv1e .... '. KITCHEN HELPER "re:11n1\nster. We11tmln11ter. xlnt fringe bnfts. Bever!)' Second shift work. No experience necessary. Blvd,, SofC\\'«l' Ce n le r. *. r•V£ "e·-rator '"'' • Ma f'r, exper. Top Ho s~ESS / c ··'ler no" · · · r 1 s N A 1'-1 ano•· Conv Ilosi;; •r alnln ided, ii ted M"·•'·n Vl•Jo ....,..., ... ....... . pay. Apply Dolly 0 Donut . • ..,,.1 . :lOW1g.nur.n lO 11.1(1 che ij am-ti1A D. • o ex.per. nee. P-· • r g prov accep . ie w • t Ume, Xlnt \\'Orklng con-19148 Brookhul'lll, J.J. 0 : 11tudent1 IJlease, ni11t urc. 3 pm. Mon-Fri. Oo,,;er 18. ply In perlK>n, The Rodeway Co.pls lra.no Beach, 49!J....67 · -WAITERS &. dltlont. Newport ll c a c h Betv."een 10 & ll ft.Ill Some cxpcr n~c. ·Apply $2.~ hr. Ar1ply at OC R.u.L-e· Inn, 1400 S.F.. Brh1to\, Costa Call Saturday to make appointment with LUNCH WAITRESSES area. &IO-O'n2 • Hamb!U'gt>1' lhunlet, 15'1j "'a)-'. 838-1103. r-.1e11a. 5.'>7-8700. 2 OFFICI:. GIRLS personnel director -in Anaheim area , Jolly Ox CASJ-UER, t:>elaney's Rest., Dr's Assistant ~~:1r:r t;~·,,~~~~a i\lCSll. LANDSCAPING HELP MAIDS N~fDED. llPfll )' 2U NEEDED 776-8551, JOAM..SPM. Laguna Hiiis 130-8220 ~~y ~ =: ~.ft'11~~: Young Iudy t1S-28i to assist Housekeeper Wanted Takata Nu~ry 546-0721 ~icu~:'5ika:·· <1!U-753:> ~ud~~ ~lif,~~~ 1!•:~: Help Wanted, M &. F 710 \\',\NTED: ?lfa!e • dally, In health spa. Will train, no Gen l l e, In ti' t 11 ¥en t, L-siel Secr.ttary !\!AIDS 1or r.1otel needed, Apply ln"Penon H•lp Want~, M & F 710 Apply aft l Pl\t 1> CASHIER, part time, 7-lt exp. nee. Apply • In ptrt1etn tr u s t,w" rt h y, live.in Exper. Corp. v.:•I!s. trusts. \vkday&. J...agull!l Shores 419 YELLOW CAB CO. RN tuU tlml!: ni'a:hti 11-7:30. · K ENT UC K \' Jo"' RI E Food Slore, Zl50 Placentia li11)' aft or eve. 2930 \\.'. housekpr for ~ood nan.ired !\fag card or w1lhngncs.s to · N. Coast ""'Y· Laguna 186 E. 16tJ1, Costa Mesa ,.,,1nl h1n~I!: bnft1. Beve rly SERVICE CASHIER OllCh"EN Ave., C.?.1., Apply in person Ctlaat Hv.'Y., N.B. (elde.rlyl gent11.'man in his leern. 31 Days ~ week l\IAID \VANTED ORDERLY. exper, 7.3. San 1\1 a nor Co n v Ho sp . Local auto rlealer needs in-29:.-'9 E. Coast Hwy., CdMJ -,A-R_W_ ASH-JOB-S bayfronl home. l\futt be \V/p()S!(il.J e expansion of St d w k LAGUNA Clemente ~llel'lll Hovn. C11.pistrano Deuch, 4!J6-j786, dl\•. \V/auton1uu,•e 1•X[Jot!r. Y.'A.'JTED l.'xp S&IN aem canab\1!: of n1 11. 11 ''gr n g Unte If dl.'sin'Cf. 1'll!\1,onnrt ea Y or ··-.. , l h-~ __ ._. · do & ' ALL KI NDS '1JLL Dn•PERY M"FG ~ C ,. ~ 4°• 0•53 il.j-496-U2'l ext 214. ROUTE 1na1t n-.. -~ for LA 0 "'''·11.e c=111er ·v.111 I\' Full & f6rt Ume, must._ • * TJ~tE """' household, & R <.-om ..... leot enter. a~k for Laure, ;1'f'"9't '-~ --" <.:: I ·~" .,.. ,.... TUnes Aul rout i H B -.....,,lLJJues ... a ary lo .,.1V1J, 18 hl"ll apply m•=-20Cl(I HBJ·lxl'l·, Cos'ta l\1eH:.t nel'ds exper. or tralnee.5 cut · dl'l\•er, Refs reqd, Cu.II r-.11·s. !W0-11510. MAID \Yunted • Seacli1t PAINTER 'h' a n I e d · Ex-· u e. n · ' Cal! ?-.larilyn Llghl, s.10-roSJ, Gl·l~rt, Sto' -, ~r ·~-:.-1 !7th-· !in<> tabling • h D I •1 I ,~ · "~ 661 S n ... fl ""rlenced. Res. W0t1<. area. J>ref. adult \\'/econo-"" '"' o.J """" CHEMICAL ..... ..: mac · av s, "on t u'U 1·1 :1-.i, LISTING secy/>-.c<plionlst titotel, l . . ~st v.'Y.. .,.. I""" Coutal Petwooel Agl't\\..')', st., n .. 11a '!esa. ., uperatol'lt. Good pay . 6-f2....1626 La Be h 494-4892 548-2759 or 642-3913 1ny car, .:;\Al + per 111<.1. :J~ ........,. ..._ ......, " OPERATORS Holidays &. ,. a cations. . . for yucht brokerage. ~1ust ~:"":;:;;"';::•~c;:, ::::~·;:;I '";:'~:::~t::::::::-1 hrs. per AM. 847-8979. "''"" HarQl/1· Bl\'d., CM. \VHO WANTS TO \VORKl ~~r S:~~;ri~,/·e~;~ ~7~~c~t~C.~'.)' Serv. 900 \\I. ~~u!~~~~~eE~·o~v~Jc~~1~~ ::k:cc~:!~~~r.!1st f aalb~er1~ • P /time Employment * SALESMEN * sini~~d:a!~~t. ~~~~a:i~ rnoo~~urA ~. ~~k lstry background ln school hospital. Flexible hours for depends on 11hillty. Call MAINTENANCE Offered By Do you take "Salesml!:n Ute mech. v.·ork, 1~refer for )'Ourself, be your o_wi or past exper. nee. Good L'O. DRUG 1W.ies lady -1.:a1hler, full or pa11. tln1e en1ployel!~. Mrs. Nickel11. 61J-52j2 MECHANIC .,..·anted" ads with a &rain ot SlllOg' Uc. Sal + coinni. boss. Men ()r v.'()mel:I. ctn benetits. 213192l-7464. matw'I!. Dmviitoivn Hun!· Xlnt worktng <.'Orld . & paid LOVING CARt· FOR TOD· Irvine Unified snit ? Can't say I blaml!: you. Don's Gulf Service, 500 S. be slightly handicap~. lng1on Beach. 536-2701. vacation. Appl y at 11145 OLER IN M'I' COSTA Sw!ng Shift Sc'hool Dt"strlct I followed up a re..v mr,self Coast 11\\)', Lag Bl"h. Ne a t~lean Appe~· , CHILD care, n1ovlng to N.B. EARLY Supel'lor Ave .. New po r I MESA HO•t•. "'1~97"' · h Tl · •· d Nttd t"ellable f e n1 a I e inorn. newspaper Beach, ur cn ll &12-2410. "c. !,1't' ;, Must hu vt>,eXl>C'tience in lhe in 1 e past. le JOu lie oin SERVICE Sta. Attendant Vts, retired. Age 7i to O. w/reterences to care for 18 delivery. tilust have car. LVN-D<ly shil.L Aides .~. n1:..dntPJ111n("c uf p1\1dU\'tion e Food A1sl1tant lived up to the claim in the p/tltM nites & wknds. ?-.tust Supplement your &noome. m<:1 old boy. l\-lln. 32 hrs Over 21. Pay approx. $200 IIOUSEKEEPErt -llve-iu. 2 Qrderlie5 all sltHls, y,'il! niachlnes and iilant equii:.. L I I ad. be exper. llou1·Jy \.\'age + Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a nto. Hunt. Bch. are a. c h 11 d r e n . J\tusl ha"e t · ,~,,~-'' 'e c evt Do )·ourself a favor It ex-comm. Don's Gt•lt c--......... , duy. Apply In --n. \\'eek. Ov.·n tran11p. pref'd. 8,7 °'~ bef 10 rain . ""'""''l eru onv, m,.nt. J\lus! IHH'l' n1ec!iri.11ictil 2,, d 'I I ,x:,,,,_ • .,... ...... Writ. Cl •• 'lfled .d no' 936 " -....,,,,,,, . a .m. references. SpaniHh sp(?ak-~'·'~' . 3 00_ 1 c_entel" st.. CM . . 71-4 hrs 111 y, $'l.j7 per hr. Pore this <lne. If you'd like 590 S. Coast Hwy, Lag. Bch. Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th In OK 61 •. .,~1 . ttp.i1utl1>. \\1ill intet'\'JC~ e Food A • t to •-•~• k I c/o Da.lly Pilot, P .O. Bo)( ELECI'RONIC Test Tech. g ' V"'\10..I • evenlngi'l and \.\'l'l.'kends. Ap-1111 ent maiu: .,.J'J a wee Ill-2 SERVICE Sta. Attendants. St'., CMta tiles.a. 1560, Co!tta. f\.lesa, n .. 'lf, Growing Orange Co. l\1lg HOUSEKEEPER -babysit· •·VN 3-11 ot· ,.,,·.1. X'l•tt ply ,·n 1~,· .. n·. Level 11 niedlately, v.•ith an eye to I ~·11 & 1 /tl LI \l'Oi\tA..~ to care for boy 2 uu firm located in new fully 2 u •L .. ,._ 2~-4 hrs daily 12 T1 ""'I' hr much n1ore In the tutlll"e, "'" P me. le ' ' 92626. l ter, live-in, 5 da)"j, Dad & benefJ t!i package. 2 \Vks pd e Food A " . r-• I'd Hke to talk to you. It ml!:ch. exper. Apply Laguna rrs. 3-4 day5 \\'klf. Pre$IT CHILD care:, my home after-ale b dg desireA lndlv. BoyA -5. & 8. San J uan va.e. Please call &12-.2410, or AVERY s11stant I your qua.llllcations match Cbe\tl"Ol1 , 604 s. Coast H\.\y ho1ne w/otber children. noons &. ~vional mom-\v/eleclronlcA tra in it) g Caro. alt. 6, 496-1144. 11pply, 1445 Superior Avc., Substitute our -ulrement"' this -uld Laguna Beach. ' Ci\t-NB. 6451313, 557-2223 &/or l'Xper, Xln't oppor. HO SEKEEPlNG II · -N B PRODUCTS · ·~~ ... ... .... inp. 3lrd & Ba Ib o a . Sal&'Y & benefit1. Disc u \ · te, ·1 1 '°';;,·oc·'=--~~-.,.-c-..,, A\'ail. on cllll, $2.57 per hr. be lhe career you've i>ttn SERVICE Sta. Attendants. l YACHT SALESMAN ~ 8\U : ln~Jni!ru'n{15, lO'l £. Saker, 11fternoons per .... ·eek. Top L\'N-Oiarg:P Nurse,. :i -11 Consumer Division A IOOldTJ&' for. run U.9 pn\ &. 1 p/tin1e. full time exp'd. Salesman to CHn..o Cart' for 3 girls. CM gm..;;aoo, ~l':,,,.!11usl have c 111' • ~hill. II. B. Convalesi·rn1 2620 s. StL'lllII l '"""' Sandpply Cto Intervll'.!w appointment 10.4 Neat in appear. Can tra.ln sell top' quality line of ne\\' \Valkin,i dbil. of Aines L. ..~=-..:-;:~~""'==~~-~ Hosp, 18811 Florida, H.U. S.u1111 Ana , Cali !. 9270-t I::~ ii'\-ine, s:i= PM, \.\'l!:ekday1, 586-3182. sharp man. Apply morns. sailboalll and broke1-age list- Sinith SChool, ll.B. 536--09-l2. EMPlJJY~tENT OFFERED H 0 USEK EEPER, Jive-in, 8-17-3.';171. an cqu1:1I oppol' employer n1 Sa.lea 2590 Newport Blvd., CJ\1. ings. 6'U-i722. t 1\111.le, small Ille n1fg oo needed for fanilly r,, I ~~~-~~~-'-----TOY • G CLERK/Typist, iQO(\ v.ith neet18 i"elJable r t t i me LVN Equ.."ll 0PJX)r. Employer "" Il"T PARTIES SERVICE Station Help. Full firurcs. Travel agency exp employee. Oppoc. to gro'v NewpOrt Beach. S3 la r Y full ·'= part "lime. Con-;\1Ali\~NAJ\'CE ~·I an 40 hrs !!' ... !!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!~I Hou!te\\1\•es den1onstrator:s, or p/time. 990 E. Coast!,.--------,~ helpful. t>rtven 11 c en I I!: w/ro. tiUn. exper. i'£'q'll. 1 _,g~ood=·~-~~596~1 ____ Ylllcsccnt J~ospital 612--0j9'1. 1.cr .v.·eek. P/time Service Stallon At· darr to $2,000 by Dec. 1. No Hwy, Newport Bch. I -I "' req'd. Call Lucille, 83.l-2970. 919-2290. Jim Ct in e, HOUSEKEEPERS1Sl'ITERS LIVE·In compani~n f 0 r l --'C~a"Il~Ol~S-~lfi08=~"1~t-3~p-m__ tendant. Niles & v.irnds. ~very -no collection. SEWING MACH I N E:i;~----;;;;~· ;"#;; COCKTAIL Waltren 8:3G-2, v.-eekdl\)'s. Orange Co. Domestic Agcy senior lnrl.1·. Share li lc hQusc Mt\LE/Fema!e G ~n er a I :P.lust be exper. Hrly wage I!: Holll:te11 J1:ift1, need OPERATORS, single nee- Tues-Sat. &XECUTrYES lo.Mi N. Tustin, Onz. 997-0500 duties. Goud hon1e. Cull aft Elecb.'Onics A."11en1bly Work. + comm. Don's Gu 1 f car. 523-5484 GUts 'n die, overlock, lop rate1, exp INS .. PECTOR o".30. ""2-74"·'. 11 "" 1 EXSAR Ser.vice, 590 S. Coast Hwy, Gadgets only 1163 Production Pl., Antique& Hn CASHIER J..2pm-2pm, !\Ion-$12,000 to $75,000 "" O"> ...... per lr start. Lag Bch. SALES ~~·g;;~"~~ ~~-~~-,;-==;J,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;T~I Fri ~4 ... _ d LlnC. S years minimum l!:X· Cu1-p. 6•1!>-10Z1 . ~ · · .x-n rc.~ume or call TODAY petience in Process & Firs! PART-Ttl\fE .sales clerk. Ex· ?.1a.nagl!:r tor Medical Reduc· •SEWING rtf ACHIN E • CONTROLLER for conridentlal NO COST Article Inspection. 10 hour .MACHINE ~!AN -train for window tin· per. Please a.1>ply In person; 1ng Clinlc. ?-.Just be slim & OPERATORS, swlrn \.\'ear. *CONTAINER SAL~W SmaU but tast Jil"OW'ing non-~m~~ten.~e;~VICES, day. !1 ,day \vork Y.'t'ek. ex-~~fs!~s~~1:%.s8'~Jhi~~·~ ~: Paul's Sewing Bee have ha.cl recent sales ex-3760 Campus Dr., N.B. S•t 10.6~* Sun 12..<. d"1en11eo mRnufac!um-IO('a.. INC. cellent C<lmpuny paid ben1'-OP~ TORS Over 2.i, rnll, neat. Sonjo', no 10041 Adams Blvd .. H.B. ~~~· Phone J 0 y c e I . 540-4511. J~ arrlvedo\ro. nw' Scorl•""""A tion in Irvine, icft<a young 8SS N ?.fa.in, Santa Ana rtt". Good paid \\'Ul'klng <.'On-Coalt"' ,,, ... ,,,.,,,, 11.,.11 .... ,·n. Jong hai r8. 644-8-1\~1. PART time mei.-sengl!:r girl STATION sttendant. Day 11 piecesp . 0 xlidn· aggres.$1ve 5hirt-lteeved con-17141 547-!!62.i. dition!. · ·• "" u 18 to 22 yrs. 1.fust have O\\'lJ SALESLADY \\'anted; shirt. 40 hr. ~·k Che\'J'O n qU"5. iinie l'?f . on troller. CPA delree pnofel:'-Rosan Inco rpora ted on ou1• nial·hincs, but inc-~IANAGF.: 38 units Newpor1 ca.t. til!leage allowance. Call mature &: exp'd tor part Station, 3000 Fairview ' ltemH lnclUctl:<J: Chifklni.er, red but accounting degree Ii EXPERIENCED outside TV 5.18-riJ33 <'hHnien! aptitude neces..~ary. lJelghts. old7r bondable <.-OU-Jennifer, 83.'l--l190. time \\'Ork In Laguna dresi; Cotta ?\-less.. tables, annou-e, oak ca_b- professional ability n sential. repairman. Send resume to Equal Opportunity Employer Paid insuran<:e, exc·l·llent pie, hnndy fi.16..-4664 or, (213) PART 1. !ti gt 1 shop. 494-239·t lneta, marble plet.""H, nttr- 'l Rodney Hopkin """"" Pu•·· l-n"f•''''· ,•pp1y 9.11 A.'.1, 1,,. 1 877-1606 1213) 762-9873 1n1e o ce r , over roN ,,_,_ w••I• -·"• "u.st havP. henvy industrial ' ~· Insur~ Agency Girl· "' ' " " 1B will train SALES TEUIR ! ..,,._., ..... C'3, """ '"..,"" ·, l!XPfrlcnce tn all phases 'of pie Sage Lane, San Juan Sell starter, pc1·9011al Jines, 2-' P.A·I. \Vill also intci"\i ew MANAGER ' • 54i,7479 * TROPICAL "ISH MAN sev.ing machin<?, coe.1 boxes, __ , ,-.. ~-. __ ....... Capistrano 9'.!675 . Ex l'VC'nings and \reekends. Put-Time brass pieces. des k s, .~,..,,,..,,. ........ i.uiu.,. t.'\m>I ..... underwriting & ratings. p. '-'Ml"~ Ovo-·-,·1es Cnm P /Tl'!E Exper or ~..iM. ~..i... COW1tin&, It tu rt'tum prep. FEMALE, warehouse gtrl, · m 1087 .;><>. -,, • • ... , • • • " eves &. Sat. Ideal . · ,...,.,...,.&.>< ..... ~,., Downey Savlftll & Loan tapegtry, cash registeric. aradon. Should be thoroua'h· good driwr, full time, nee. f\.lrl . Bracftey, . A VERY &m;.:~· Benefits. Immediate fboor atud!.~''m' G,uarn wage + f/time. 642-55Z2, HaA opening in Kunting1on 9C8.tes, oak kettle. (]2W ly t'OTTWt'Sllnt w1th EDP. •-permanent, no students, INSURANCE SALIS l'RODUCTS nus. ·=-r SALESMAN lmide exp pref Beach tor a p/llme teller Pleet!: Colleetables lot). , ~ k 5 d positKln ava.llable for , In b 11 d I Anti of th W Id t_,.;~ & ----~ tu-non-smo er. e y s, PARKING Attendants !'lel!:d-mamnry u n I w/sa.vJn ... ._ loan or bank· ques t or --~w~ •-MVW 6 JOAM 3 31JP'I $1 ~,hr ·c D' I I individual ~-Ith Life &. Dis-I . ,_ I ed _,,.. . ... . ture. S@nd rt"SUme to .,.· j. : -: " • .iJ . onsumer IV s on b"' 1. & cd Part time e\~S & ma ena.... mm o_. ... ~. Ina exper. Xlti't pay & * 22 Rooms of Antlq' """ •-~ 1 1 " 3 5 p 't ·r· e 1ty 1cehse p1'0ven "'8-"~ fied Ad •·o, ~. ~·~Pilot, s ..... ._ n en;·,ew . · ., . hll 2,·20 s. Suoon 1veeken!h .,., br start, must "" .L.J..W, v.-orw~~ co-.1-. n->t 'Ir. * From 22 Countrle& • " ~ ~ \\'Ind De · . 737 8 . No exp nee., cam w e )'OU .... track re(.'()rd 10 manage our .,.... """" ·~ ........, " P.O. Bo."< aiO, Co«a i\fesa, ' ow signs 3 n-ch Jean'I. · pan. time. r.ves · .l Santa Ana. CaJi!. 9270-I slltrfccl Laguna Niguel OHir.:e. be reliable. 557:-2917. S EC RETA R \'/O f lice Head, 962-2407. 1957 Nev.rport Ave. ' Calif. 9'JJ35. St., NB \1·1tnds, full lime v.•hen qual~ an o..'(fu11I oppor cmploycl' n11r For inteivle"'. contact John 1.tanager. Ch.alletl(ing re11p. Equal Oppor. E1nplo)-'l!:r Costa l\1esa 548-0033 COOKS It. clean up pe<iple f'OOD Service Worker. exper tlod. \'oung, 9-11 Ai\I, 534-8000. Pattern Shop Clerk position v.·/fasl · i'l'0\\1ng -~~~,~~:.:!!~~~ ~.';,s~~1.,,.~~~~i .: .. ~" .. F.d~~ .. ~·:~~~u~ * ' * * ;~;:.~1=~:~ CLA-VAL co ~t~:·Sfd;~z ~~.:i: ~·Jr~~. :1 "J:s::d~!~I 832-9 and7!005 \\ttk tlayt betv.·een Equal Oppor. ~lo•"'r. v·--'"'•" --w~ ·• , r t 34)...60 d OUr Immediate opening: Clerical de'd'r;ble, but ncrt' ... m~ • Se ' You lllrP. t"" \'•1nner of -J~ ' :. ::1 n?;l'lina~:·r a e~~ llblllt (es, v.00!;! .& pattern datory. Sal open r,q~P t~an·~;.!e"C: TWO PREE ·TICKETS , COOK/Houekee:DeT, hrs 2-8, * GARD . ER * MACHINISTS $1000-$1500 mo-. Mulit hav~ training helpful-. Xln't co. Spectra Systems, CAI ,progressive set up & to lhe 1 5 days, own l cer. Good h your owl. lkt11 door to d1<Jr canvRBsing ex· benefits. 4/40 wk. · 979-3400 • malnll!:nance. RECREATION ,, salary. Send retu~1e to Box Full or p/ti u1e tri your · pcrlence. 1.70l PlaCentia, Costa Mesa. • Operator for tr an a le r VEHICLE 'SHOW • No. 4083, Irvine, Ca. O\\'ll area. High iocome. ' & · Clill Mr. Newma.n 979-5222 Equal 0pIX>r. Employer nl/f Secretary $700 pres.es. It: pro~Sslve die SEPT. 19TH·13RD·'~ * COOK* Gu•r•ntffd Cu1femer1 er · FIC Bkkpr, Corona. ~t up. At the For Jlallan Dell. over 18, "' No Caih Dow·· n M. · 'At'"RIAL PRODU ION helper: clean Title exper 1150 Sp1ve-co ls a a,mall business ANA i. per1enced. 9G2--i!l2. II" I:. tableting ntachine, polish Med Frnt Otc S500 which \\111 'soon be nioving HEIM STADIUm Earn Kow, Pav Later MACHINE HArNDLER stainless steel, punchea, Train · $52S to a ·new faclllty. \Ve 8..l'C ~ State College Blvd., COOK WANTED. ~l ust be 5~7117 asgist In. shipping dept .. box ee near State College & tJle Anaheim exp'd, Ateady v.·ork, LagUna, 1----------& weigh vitamin, tablelll. 13·0;3·5 Collea-e GPA) t-UJI Rlvei-ilde F,"rel!:v.'11.y in Please call 642--5678 ext J:"{tJ -494-9-15S. GAS Pump At t f! n cl a.n t , !RYINE P.ERSCJNN.El i\Iw.1. have fork!Ut exper. · Apply in person 0 n 1 y, Secy· Re<:eptlonlst ._,., Anaheim. Ple&M call for to claiin your tickcls. COUNTER girl Batl<l\.\iches, ~~n1e;,,.::.;,r· ~Sta H~~= C'CD\Jlrot'"r .. Ar~.,. ir.v OPERATORS 'icnt..-e. l{L'O.\'Y ,Uftir1g. Excel-Llnwllco Labratortes. 2148 Penioonel Cleric $400~ .. further (\etalls nf-956-2093 (North County Toll b'ee put time days & nlte1. A?-.;11;.1\Y'!'---~ ~~J lent benJ:fits. S\\ing imd Ne\\'Jl011. Blvd, 8:~10:00. J:?ictaphone Opr 8-4. '.number it :,f0..]22()). ply In person at Statk>n LI· i iiBii;lviiidii"oiciO.'ii'&· ... iiiiiiiiiiiiii SEE OUR Crs\f(>'}'artl· shifts ewilable. r~riday Sept. 14. Ke)-,,..mch' ()pr S565 21ST ANTIQUE quoo-, 60ID Warnec 81'~" ~llERAL LABORERS Sl.INDAY LISTING ~P;r.~~1 \o~~!'. :~:; PUBLIC REL'ATIONS \~'\~l~) to $'100 TRAINEES SHOW & SALE H.B. Utn CALL 'fH.ISt l hOPKit.s lmmadiGte nnd \\"eek.ends. Need 4 attractive v.'0Jl1en for Elecm>-~t~cal $4.25 hr Will train depen8abll!: v.'Olllen $J MU Dlipl•y COUNTER g1rl p I t l nt e . JrftRJ \VI HTTEl\;IOR E 0 I up to 6 wks project to in· NEWPORT to bec:om.I!: injection molding 100 E hlblto 10:30-J:JOpm . A.pply 1087 u·. 1 4~ £.17th St. tat In·ine) Ci\f pen ngs Apply ln person: troduce nev.· ba,nk service ·p•rsonntl Ag' enc~ opera.tora. Mull havl!: own • rl &.kl!:r, Coslll 1"11!:sa. 1Jj Needed i\OI\') fo E • d AVERY to San Juan residents, Sal· car, .be able to stand entire Long Beach Arena. COUNTER help Dry cleaner. Suite 224 642·1470 f xpe.n•nte ary, no selllng. \•lark 9· 10 133 Dover Dr:., N. • .shitt &: be able to wonc Ocean&. Long Beach Blvd. 9-3 p.in. Tem~~"!Al%n,onl ~ PRODUCTS :::30. Call l\Irs. Carlson, '424170 week@ndt if neceuary Sept. 13, 14, 15 & 16 Olli 6'U485 MACHINISTS &, Consu1111r Division 493-0601. Openlnp on °"'1bllt '111.95 ThUN, Frl. Sal, 1 pm-JO ~m V()L.T J. it ' I 26lll S. Su'"'" l!EAL ESTAl1' SALES SECRETARY to mrt), Swing ll>llt ($2.08 Sun 12 noon . 6 pm , ~~n1nr!~:,1~~~0r. ln1t•nt ~•rsonnel an aria MACHINE OPERATORS Sa.nltt Ana, Calif. 9210-I SUCCESS CAREER . to vi~ pretident " ,enen.t to(S2St2lart.,) ~~) \~~ 1n""JO'lt ~G~-Prtv.,ate ~ 644--0893 Temporary Service · 8..n cquaJ oppor einployer mft New o~ experienced. Join the nll(r. 8 to lJ) yn. exp. w/iop · · ,......,,, · n.&Ule • -·"'t· a.as. £""~.....:u. 3848 CRmpus Dr .. Suite 10fi \Vorl~ s laJ'iest and fuleAt secretarial llkll]s. Minimum da,yr. Pat, Ctystal, CUt, l\.fllk, OOUPLE to mann.ge nev.•er Newport Bc<.ach 546-4741 P refer Age 10-25 lPM-llPM Import MIChanlc growing ,rel!lllle organization 2 yrs . ln eiectronic field Apply l am4 pn1 Stem.,..·are, etc. Much 10 unit apl , Snn Clemente. Equkl 0 " • ...,1 .. J!:inplo>•rr 6 D•ys A Week 2nd Shift with. a netu·ork of over·300 Chn'-u ••k ~· w/r, 1· * Oranire c.oa.t Pla&tics * Porcelain incl. 50 Pc , Good compensation. Lal°i'! 1 ... ,,.., 3rd Shl~ 1 IPM-7AM ln1J1.ll'I nu10111ob1Je n1ech1u1i<: otflces and become a k """ ti . u!,!_ . . &SO Wes! lSth St. l..1.moee !te't. Lampe:, By appt, BR apt w/beautlful ocean S&Giif E-RALCLERK AJiJil)' hi pcr110n sf)l"l.-ialUj:!. We offer the best meinber of our Milllonii.il'f: w s vaca on a.,.,r nto. -Costa Meo, Calif. (2131 592-Hi75 .Huntington view. Sonie exp1?r, over 30. To Operate -\\u1idng condit.loni;; "'Ith lop Club. Mulli-inlllion dollar G~ tna. e'ffect.lve on day 1-farbour. 1 W'rlte, Clauitled ad No. 9-12, Exper. v.·/l\·urkuuuis cunip fAR WEST puy and bc"lcftts. advertising progrllm Free ot h re. Doci.imenlor, 2911 TYPIST, full or p/timl!:. v J CT ORIAN rectangular Dally Piklt, P .O. Box lfl60, pref'd, but will tni!n i.hnrp Miii Ch' k D ick Miller Motors guantnteed llcenslng 'school. Da.lmler, Santa Ana, 546-300, $2.50 hr. 620 Newp::irt Center table w/5 lellvei + 6 Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 I S · UC el" · l~ \\r. U1an1l.'r, S.A. Excellent sales lralnlnir. Equ8.J ~unity employtr Dr. no. 211. 64+-8824. chain, apprabe<l 11'150. c--u CUSTODIAN "' I .. peraqll w ""°" ty ping & SERVICES En•l.no Latho 557-2"12 \\" 1 u rt! · ~ • -. \N ,,.,, nblllty to grow Jn knowledge . • ·•tat s your ctmse Y.'O 1 s~CR1t•• TYPIST -Rl!:C. Tues thru $975. ~ call 64&-9742 from 9-5:30; It relpoo1ibllity, Call 842·7751 Turret Lathe MESSF:NGER p/tin1e 3-5 to you? C'heck our IJlOllth])· ~ llftl\ Y Sat. 9-5 Fronl office a~ ruEO. Haviland, cut glass, M;>-63S.I eves for appt, N /C Drills Grinders hrs. Mon-Fri, Orange Coun-bonuA program which m@anA \Ve ar@ Jooklna: for a .top pear&ne"e 549-0377 ml!IC. DOCK hand w/yachl cxper. 1672 Reynold1 Ave Long Term Emp!Oymcnt ty fll'ea. Neal appearance, $$$ . 11? YoU! '?lease call notch Rcretary to learn the Unique> Siltlperton Call 842-8993 Good mechanic & painter. UNI GARD. INSURANCE S•nta An• WI I 835-3140. Vi rginia J ones 835-4Sll. .ct biz. If you lake A Fine Men I ~.·, •·~ In atter 5:30 Gen'! malnt. \\'Ork f/tlrne. GIRi: FRIDAY 'h ~ i~tory Of i\11LL & Lnthe Ope1'f\tor. R.E . SALESMAN sharthancf, type fnst l ac-....,:t ~ ....... Ya c ht ''Sun downt.!r." Steady reliable w / 11 o 1n e Equal Oppor. Emplo)-'Cr NO LAYOFFS . Esp. l'al. 17~ Armstrong rnve!rdgate the new approach c:~tely &. would like a rie~;vt;ht~~pl:un~1.A_pMp~l_la_n_<_M _____ I02'- M&-4013. bkk~. typing & ability to Ave, lrvjne le lnnova1ive fuarket1ni c enie, !lend us your Pl!:l"!IOO v.·ho haA had ex· COLDSPOT Retrtgerators DENTAL Sec, "per offi~ han<lle detail \\\111'. J::xcel-JANIT6RIAL-hlll tinic, only In Our ,\lnnufact""uog A•·co MILLWRIGHT techniques of THE GAL-rtmme today. P.O. Box ..... ..ta ._ • tall K .._ ._ .....,, local eves, $2.40 hr to atart. ..... LERY OF , HOMES. You 1691. Newport Beach, Cllif. .-= ... nee "" ellJOYS re enmore \\'ilti"°n .,., ... ,ers manapment, bookkeeping, lent advancement. E It W k' 1 \'r recen t f'Xper. ln \\'OOCI 921663 .W~ to join our stall <lf Disconttnued Floor J.fodela &: lnauo, pleuant mab. of-CaU l\1!"ll. Davi& Exp'd adult. 9'i9-3923 xceCondant 1 , or 1n9 . niillinsr nial·hi.nery & e.sseni-will be glad You di~; Call · Unique Storekeepen. Reduc:tlom to $100 flee, id Joe, 646-2481. 838-0005 JUNIOR SAL!SMAN: t10n1 bl)., 6-t.6-7~34. 963-56ll tor appointment QUALIFICATIONS: Desire Scars, Roebuck a: Co. DENTAL UAlatant, chail'!llde GlRL Frld11.y · Exciting Earn S20-S40 Pl!I' week work-Combeny P11d B•neflts • Islander Y•chti LlceMed or unlicetl.J4!d Y.'e · SICRITARllS &: )VUlingnl!:sa to serve Adams at Magnolia, H.B. I: x·r•va. Non smoker, pref. airport business needs gal Ir,... alter school and Sn.fur-\. . \\'Ill train.. . & others. Pride In Job 96)--nBl ~ e S . d I I 777 W. 17th St., CJ\;! Pl!:rfonnance Abl to rk under 30. 644--0611. to be i;ecretary to pres., days saUing ne\\' subscl'ip-a tur •Y nterv tWI l\IODEL.I\ -l\10DEL.5 -c• KEYPUNCH OPRS . e \\"O REFRIGERATOR. Fr I 1 j - 0 ENT AL ,A 8 11 s la n l , assi1t wtbkkpn&. Send v.i·lt-Ilona for the 01\ILY PILOT. hpt 1Sth . , .IAM-Noon . MODELS RE 1:.IYINCi from 9:30 to 2:30 ?.londay daire runs \\'el:l smaJI chalrside e:rte~ duties. ten resume to Gal, 195.11 ThlA Iii; not a pnpcr rout!! CLERK Irvine 17802 m. .. Park 54GM50 thru Friday. Aae 1B to 30. treezU. sell ctieaP. make E•p only. 1,1;8 . 84&..ooo1'.,. 'Airport \Vay So., Santa Ana. and · does not Include th~· BERTEA \\'o,n1en, Men, 01lldreu .,...,...,..... ~...,. Looklng forward lo your otter. 673--4~ mom.Inga or ~·""'='"""'~-~•-"·-~ ">'Ca 92707. livt:rles °'' oollecUng. Open-, ~IOfte • v.·11n!L-d for ·Fall nnd l\linlmuni O'f 1 )-'ears exper-Ni;.v c.u. A FEE AT TD.1PO reply. Uniqul!: Salespenon, evenlnp DENTAL A• &1 • t • n,t Gl ltL Ji'ridAv _ wlll,traln, 9-3 mp In Collta lHesa, I"ountuln Winter rash.Ions lence 111 11 shipping and/or Tern~ Ten1porary Help 1820 lnotne' Ave, Nl!:wport ;=~,..· -,,,-------.,.-,- Chal ... t·'· al leUt I mo• f ~ V II d So I H •· AMERlC1\N BE1\UTIES •Beiiii"ii'iih,iiCiiaiiii9211tJOiiiii'-iil•-I FREIGHT Dainage &lie, uc, • • daily, I ltllll be dependable. a ey (In ut.1 untuigton · re<:eiving department.·Fork-ash d fr! exper. H.B. ru-ea. 846-3540. Mrs. Ca mp, 6~291 Beach. Apply now by call!ng CORPORATION fl-IODEl.ING ACADEMY lift. Heavy lifting. Stable S.cy,..Rectpfl $4254IOO "' en, ryers. re gs, Dent•I Rec:tp,1on~1t., HAIRSTYLISTS 54".t-3013. · '675-8-1'12 * 3700 Npl Blvd ,. 1na11ufacturlng·., compnn;y, WI~ ot v.1thol.Jt shorthand URQENTLY ~e:sh~~~%;c~ Rl!::O~~ Exp'd., ~8844 . 1 .. , AulM""t wanted. ~1usl be Equal Oppor. Einplorer N.'B. Paid insunrnce and bcne-Sinai! cr,latlel!: om~n $39.95. Beach City Ap- 1 .... SI ~ 'I'-' 1~1' Von 'K•rman ti1CYl'EL i\fRlrlJ.5 hrM \\'Ol"k 11'1 rlts. LoU of OV("l'tirne. Apply Acct_ enc, .,,, ~ NEE pllance, 3623 \V. \\tnroor, D •mo.~· Im. ~ ,Ile:&. shw:p, 613-ll66. KIY TAPE I J C If r:<chftll.btc.for up! or aalafy. In J)en\)11 at Peno1mel De· FREI FAWI 'REE _ OED S.A. (1 Bick E. ot Harborl &pet1enctd 1 .I 1i rv ne1 . • I • Exp"r!. 2376 Newport Blvd.. purlnlfllt U Relnd , A .. reo Pal41Aloo >'•• Joilo OPERATOR 133-1424, oxt294 CM.>18-'7:.5 A. VERY ;tf,i w ""r1' r"i""" *TRAINEE A>IANA h~e,.r, uprlrhl WISTCLl,,F HELP' E•uol· Opp,•Employar ' · • eitte l-' ace $100. Coldspot, 2 dt ref'r1a . , l\tO'rHER!o; Helper or s itter. SU'te US NB 833 !100 .S: 1~ersoEn~11 ;\genScy • \\'<? need an expcrfeneed _ a ;\f!dd lt' Rg«i, ln 1-1.B. Nr PRODUCTS 1 SEC• RETARY . 64~Both 'good con d . 16Jl . r..tl naer1 .. A-. Keyl11pe operator lo v.·ork MACHINIST ll1u11\llo11 & Rrookhun;t, 2 COJ1,;SUi\.1t.:R OlVTSION ASSEMBLERS · (?11nrk III Ccnltrr) .. flnil . g h l ft on our Au1o &t'e'\' i\1rtchlne sn1l l'hlldt'en, 11nl'e a v.·eek. 2320 S Su * * REF RI GER.ATOR ~ll-8$38 Volt Instant ~fohav.•k/NC!l. Con11lutc·rs. J.lonli•Htt• C'-1 Up '· o-rato1·· O\\'lt trnnsp. 5:)6-1721 • snn F'rl;idotrt, aoud condition. II •· fl ka ....... ""' "' ...... Slmta .\ntl, CaIU. Top sldllt required •!;I\ De1'9ner Gr•phlc1 E,'l;ce ent ..... ·n\! 111 pac gc. Cticlan Set t:p & OperntC' NURSJ!:S 1\ t de•. Con-tNenr Harbor & \Varner) C\latom"·eave Carpets Inc. VOLT ....,. Estab. Inter dt1lrn tlrm In p I Call for appoln\inent. Thread Rollers. $(it up & vnle11etnt hon1c, all •hilts. 962--8Ml 1'1r. Rupp IRJt•nt Penonnel N.B. area teelu deslgnPT ersonne Personn'I Department operate Plt!a,se call 642--0J98. an equa.I oppot· employer m/f SF.cR.tTARY. part thne. Temp:>rary Service LADY Kenmore washer and expf'r. In d Im e n• Ion a I 1n'> 540--IO'Jl Ccntt.rletUJ Grinder Nurses General office work, 3S48 Campw: Or .. Su.ile l06 d~r. ocellent condition 'f1'11phl011 r!ndcr1ng A Nec:os Imniedlale oi.w1W1p In 1st & R•'LVuAIDE ~-tall Newport Beach ~741 $300. Phone ~7499. Al~r 5 architectural Inter. r.i~. , °' AVERY 2nd shl!tt ~ ~ RICE"10NIST N:-pecoc .';=. ra151e·.~'P~,· i i'!l"",.';,,,•~al~Opiipor .... 11 E!imlipmlom!i.!!•I _Pm movt..., can't talro 'em. 200 Fhicher, C.J.f. • S I , 10 hour dny, 4 day v.'(11"k 11-7 & <lther 11hl1t1. Top p•;t .,....... uo• ,,. R t W tih /D ecretar H PRODUCTS week. Xlnt ro1npany pa.Id dul.)' 'PGY; lmmcd. pay for Day or night, no exp. nee., v.1c. 2:30 lo 5:30, l\lon-'Jo'rl, en • •rs ryer1 Dlct•pftone lr•ntcrlbtr • y-i..ts btncllts, KOO<l v.wk.11'1 <.'On· floor duly. Co unt l-' "'Ide f'MY. tun JOO. \\1111 tnt,!n, 00 833--35J7 \VANTED : $2.. \\r'k.. f'ull m111ln1. rr-Cor\iUml'r Division tUtlons. !ht~. r.ton-Fr1 9-5. t)lp\ng or ~rthand, etc. SlcJtETARY 8o)'ll ot gtrla: lO-L'l )'t!llfl: old • 639--120'1 * ~pe)~.i~(m~.~~E~Pf: JJ~ • Keypunch " 26~ S S RoAA.n 1t1oorpor11.ted 1..elK.'OOlil! Nur11cs Regl~try, Apply in i>e:f'l?n any att or 1'YPP. l!O, th or dlctaphone. ~t ~th pt~~l' ::':;~~ 1\P}' Slze Refr1&1 xlnt eond. Liberal co,, 1'enen111. Call • &\~ta Ani.~ ·~~~n1i11 j.JS-OO:i3 351 llospltal Rd., NB I Lob evl". 1\1 2'930 We11t Cst Hwy., Cen'I o(c e1tper.' 8:30-S 5 Detv.·een l\laln It Faln1ev.-. $65. Apt n pa ltove $')). 8(2..77fil tor appt. PBX Opn (Ne11:r llarbor k \Vllrne.rl E<111al Opponunity En1ployl'r ~l~~~k ~ . .B I tis; l N.B. days \t.'k. 83J..826i'5. • \\'arntr &. San Dlerco Fwy. 1 _Ra~tt~•~n=tu=m=. _615-Jm~==- 'UNtGARO fNSl.JlUNCE ' 'rt mpot"IU'Y Serv1ce Eqlial oppot~~i:ty cniployer ~N~U~RS:!'ES~-AJ~ld~a:!', 7!2'3!:._p.-n-,.,-II--7-~!!R!!E!ICE!!P'M""'"o"NI"'sr""'"1""'fyp""1"11".11;;S';il!:~Cc'iRi'E""T"'ACiR~Y""·0S"1"o-:;c 1' ~n 6::~~ ~~~: ~:= DIE"l'AnY .Aid • to "'Ork In 3843 C8Jnpug ln-., Sulte 106 \ .,""'-""'"""""'"'!!"!!"""' QUICK CASH a.ni. \Ve. wlll b·a.ln hew pa.rt ti1ne. Musi b e ~en.re t)c'Pl'[.. pretered, District 1r1analf'r SOO each * 6*4M8 1 11 r active Convt1leacenl Ne\\'J)orl Beach ~474.1 THROUGH A pon;otlrM!I. Xlnt . bcn~l.ll1 pertonnble, 6 able to .,.,.'Ork area, ta ry open. 1>'.nt.al OptJOM.Ulllfl' Empl())'er REFR.IG 18 "·blc Ft, llot-F.qual Opl)Or Employer D & ILY PILOT whlcti Include 1 n co ni e Sundl\ys le ht 1tvalluble.1.::.64:::1>-,.:L:::400=· ------= '" hoiplta' Flexible hoora 1or " DAILY. Pl-LOT n>Pln"1m<ril & 2 wk• vnco· Call 'Mn. Ru,..11, ~. SECT'Y/Bkpr, fl>r Arch. **WAITER. !Or Chine,. point 140 -1<1 p>d. tuJI or'Ptirl tJme employee. . llon after l ~· Alfply at 1~4!1 pleue leavt name I: phone firm exper., nee. 11'\111-.e Call Re1taura111. Cost• Neu cell • 979-~ '* Benefttl lnclllde paid VICI • You don't -• .,aun to FOR ACTION WANT AD ~-.. ~-·1•9'1 -· -nr~ G tlons, l tnr.Ome ioeplace-"DraW Fut" iwtten )'OU • • • superior Avt.. ewpor t 11um"""". _,......._ • .,.,_, · ~"t .Ucu.tt.coppu.2 nient pta11. Appfy 144.1 tiilaec a,n &If tn tl'fie' Dally 642•5678 Brn~h. or call1g..G-24W. RECEPTIONIST -Law ofc. Don't itve up the •!ilpl \Vi.ttrt"'"' P fline door frolt rree, New. SE. Stlperlor, Ntwport Dcach or Pili>! WAnl Ms! Call now CALL 642·5678 F .. t reoultt ~a pnone Neat •ppearance, typlni. "Ual"lt lo claulfted, Ship • BLUI DOLPHIN • 1-::-~.,,...,.,...·-,,.-----,=-=: call 64~3410. . , ------~-----·----------·---------, ·-'"'"=.o""°"='-·-'-''-"-"'-;--Call ft.1()...(JID). to Shore Result.II 64>-56711. ttii Vt& Udct. N.8. Sell \die U m. , , • .wl-~ lnfk;ocA -~ ---- ~1 r 1 -I ' 1 \ , 4! OAILY, PllOT Friday, Sop\tmb<t 14. 1~7' .. FREE PASSES Find · Your Name You Could Be One of Today's Winners 10 Pairs of $2 Tickets Given Daily If your nam• (1 listed in a 1pecl1I ad -It could appear under 1ny classification, 10 look at them 111-phone 642-5671, Extension 314, .,... twHn 9 a.m. and l p.m. to ma ke arrangements to pick up your 2 free 1how tickets at any convenient DAILY PILOT office. FOR THE' BIG RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW Be The Guest of ·the DAILY PILOT ' I [_---~'~ ~[ -............ ---.,~( -I~ -l~I Appliances 802 Jewelry 8J5Jewelry 815 Hi Fi, Doil• 854 I-'-'"------- h.~NMORE dryer, 2 ~'I'S. old, ~OOrl •.'OO<l. 1ll11st sell, only Sl50. Call !162-S700. •••••••••••••••••••• INDIAN JEWELRY 836 e PUPPY WORLD e ~~-~-~~-~~ Boats/Marin• Equip. 904 Building Mat,r1af5 806 • Surplus . Building 1'fATERlAL . IOOO's of NE'V ITE~tS! Doors, lun1l>cr. p\y. l\':xid, alum sheeting, mold· ing, 1\'indo11•s, t!lc. BUILDERS SURPLUS THURS/ FRI/SAT /SUN. 11 A.M. lo 9 P.M. Wholesale -Direct fron1 reservation. Being sold by Running Bear, at NAVAJO TRADING RCA, Zen1U1. Sy l vania: 2406 So. ~1<;1.i11 SI., !'i.A. Largest selection o o I o r , black & while TV ti. stereos in &>. Calif. Priced less than the dist.'Outltets 1v/J yr f)icture tube, 1 yr pnrts ,fr service. Pi1ost '74 1nodels in stock. ·73 n1odcls priced to cleat'. Cash 90 plan or tern1s 10 36 1110. ABC Color TV, 0021 A1lanla, or 19 O 4 6 Bro o khurst, Huntington Beach, 968-3.129 or 962-5559. Mon thn1 Sat 10·5 2432 Newport Blvd., "Costa Mesa 714: 546•1032 642-7251 ]~ 1 ]~TOSHIBA :i' \vay Speaker JF.T Glass 30 gal \VII' !!tr $3.'). I Merchandise ""'-I ]~· _ MffchandiM ""'-system, like ne\\' cost over \1'/faucet $45, 6~2175 ;-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ $U1hd°'' slce} dbl ,;,.. •••••••••••••••••••• _ V M•"h"di" V ~;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;· ~V;;;\ $200 '°" $125. 646-lOZJ. Furniture 810 I Furniture 810 Cameras & Garage Sale 8.12 IMiscellaneous 818 ~iscellaneo1.1s 81~ [ · 11 s Equipment 808 ·1.~" cu s To 111 n1;11le Sale Fri/Sa t/Sun ., ~ · -Free to You Fiuit11·ood 1-lulch. Glass STOCK ·ro Tl-IE CEILING GARAGI'... Sale: caniping SCRAM LETS FILM sound 8 Super 8 n1ovie doors. Like nc1\", cost $87:i. \V/BETTER FURNITURE! cquip'n11, ca11011y bed .~ *Publ' A • • ~3-------J canwra, n('vl'r used. Ilnn1efi Sell $250. ;1:12-9-183 l''ul\ or l\vin box sprgs & dresser, \l"hite, A~tq. vanity IC UCt1on Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 sale. Movie screen. 642-t476 FCNE 9 light Cr Y s 1a 1 ri:auress. OO!h S30. Sofas S:. stool .. typ1:e.\.\'11~er, desk, ANSWERS Furniture 810 Ch d r 20 .. ,11 36 .. $59. Chairs $29. BcJrin, sels, ~lass1vrue, bicycles. n1nny DEALERS WELCOME! FRIENDLY Spayed Calleo hi ~n e:;t $'so0-<$25o contplete 1vit h box springs & 1tcn1s ~1n?t'.'!' SI. l'ri .t 7at. FRIDAY 7 :30 PM .. • tiger cat, n~ son1eone QUALITY furn 2 Castlewood chairs, 10' pillow buck sofa, c.-offee table & lan1p tables. 64!>-7754 67lt591 · n1attress $79: Sofc,t & Love J~ .~o ~1 . 2R,,I c;11;;1ea11 \\ay, SEPT 14th _l\ldnap -Lease -Vaf,'Ue -Sf>('cial love & attention &-at $139. King-size bch·nt. La ... u11.i, ·197-13.19 I i\'Josui~· -J>JCKLES (Vl2--0.J58 9 PC. Corner group, comp!: ~n naugh iv/floral f."OVel'S, Shep casters. Xlnt, $100. ~'3-2!HS. GAME sel 4 upholstered tuh chairs, 2 leaves, modern nev-a·n1ar l\'alnu1 Io p, Reas., gd. cond. 960-1322 DREXEL Bedroom set, good cond. inclds t"in beds, box springs. n1attresses , dresser, nite stand. 5:J2-89C9 BEST Offer • Takes Horr. nlan i;!e1w, 18' Fr Pl'Ov. sofa & upl10l chair. &15-12.'Yl. * DOUBLE bed, f.-oinpl, x!nt cond $20. Beautiful antique dresser $-15. 545-7361 LRG. round Spanish tb!. \l'/4 anlitJUe chrs. refrig "'/ice maker, Armoire 675-1708 Biege Sofa & Chair X1nt cond. S75. 549-3793 PR Dis!ressed entl table's, Early American L.'ln1ps, pole lanlp, coffee taUle, 837--0-122 HlDEABED. \Ving chah', recliner. tables, tu'in & dble beds, diOO:cs, Relaxaetwr elc. 20812 3.qfh St. N1vpt Bch DREXEL hutch & dt'Op leaf din. set. Coffee tbl, tier tb! & drop leaf desk • solid 111aplc. 644-4399. CHINESE liquor cab, an- tique desk, braided rug, J2xl5 l\laple tblcs & misc, 979-4303. HAVE beaut. 1920 (]resscr \1•/1vood c:1.l'l'l1Jg around n1irroi' good r.:011<1. $600 or hcst ofr. 642--956;1 11 fl 5. ROLL TOP DESI< $80. '192-1145 lill 6. After 6, '196-4785 * COUCH: & LOVESEAT * nl'vct' used. both for s1;,J, Usual!y ho111e. 968-7910 A CONVENIENT SHOPPING ANO S[WING GUIDE FOR THE CAL ON THE CO. se t S139, Dinelle> table> & '1 SAT & SUN 9 10 G, stereo, l\lE:ET NE\V O\\INl:RS: [ · ~tl.Sl'.'~Ss man lan:ents: "l 1'~'~R~E~E"'-~So~' 7fa-~8~·-7t-0-,-.-, chairs ~39. Sofa, chair. 3 Fa 1· b c r 1v are rotisserie, Rudy Larkin & Bob Brown f~~ll~~1l~i~·taS(.~~1~1~r'£~ar~ naugahyde, blue green l'OI· tables 2 lamps, ;:ill Sl49. n1ens suede Jacket, 2 B ,~ \V or Sofa and Joveseut, 3 tables, TV's, d 1. a f 1 in g tlil, Nl'll', vrc-01vned and used, a n1a!enl.ity l\'ard."' · · * 962-9G2G * ~ la111ps , $199. Special s..1v· bedspreads, elothing, J1ost bf'<ll'm scls. li\·ing 1·111 Sl'ts, COLOH. TV 25" S1~i0. l\ing 3 B . y .. 111gs on houscJuls! ! ! Cash & carpel cleaner, 1oys. ~allies coflcc-tables, chcs!s o[ bed Bca\1!y Rest $100. Coin· AB h.ltl.cns, 7 iv~ks, Financing available. & Jots 1nore. 276 Shcn\'ood dra1ve1'S, rcrn1ica and n1aplC' p1-s1· 2 I-IP 38 , .. 1 &-12-5677 (roni beaullful C.a I 1 c O • ·" 7 " 1 c .. ... · n1other. REPOSSESSION CENTER SL. C.l\1. 61j-S812. :) ar.._. pc ,.111et e sel~. hl't1 tcs. e G46--3573 e 61~ E. •Uh St., &u1la Ana HIDE-A-BED h 1 bl "· n1aplc 1·01:ke1·s, n1 a p I e FOR S I H d ,, ~ O Daily 10 to 7 * S"ndoy U-5 couc • a e '" \l'l'Stlc tables. sl"l'C'O,, Col"!' · a c, on a -;i KIITENS 4 all 11•hitc I ===~---~·-~ .. ~~·I chairs, lan1ps, baby .;:,, tod-& B .~· \V -rv·;. l"ee!inei~. St.:ran1bler, Excel co n d -blki\vhi!~ 6 ·, ks 'Id CHERRY wood Bullet, One diet• 1:lothes. •11or1.s coa!~·. Si).).; 6 piece Dtuni set or;::;, r. • ' 1'. · 0 · ., \1 ashers, dl'yl'l'S, n•higer-.,.... 536-9665 Queen Ann bu!!el. Onr girls d!'csses 10-l·l Poy,·e1· & o"~!t'.."_5~4~94--~5ti40~·"'-------liTciilJSEi'iRi<N:-;;~>;:j;;;;.:;i Q A I hi 0 · · 1 a1ors, niatlrpsses, ne•,v car-JIOUSEBRKN JI c-h -" ueen nn ll c, r1gina push 1no11·ers, nerd rcpHir, , we <11: a\'t:U antique spinning-\\' h c e 1. misc ill'nis. Sal/Sun 9-6, pe1s, desks, lan1r,;, hidf•a-M'1scel1an&0us 1 yr old dog. Very siveet, Seven ralt:in chairs, all 7~0 \\'est \\lilson. C'!\l Ut~!s, los of i\!ISC. and Wanted 820 needs good family. 532--0751 I d. · K !\1UC!-l :.JORE!! g(l()( con itinn. "nit king, THRIFT 0 -PLAYFUL bl & ,,,·ht kittens, ;iuton1atic knitter, very good H UNO WANTED USED 7 \\'ks, hsebkn, soinc Uuf!y oood\foo. 642-1'33. 20 27 SALE MASTERS AUCTION BRICKS -CALL G<J--0903 Orange Ave, C.1\1. fui·n. 1·lo!hing, sl\i l'quipl. 8704564 ~=~"'°-co------ LIMED Oak din. nn set $500, ~aby furn & ace(·~s, ~Hrs, I rormcrly \\'infiy's) 4 111yNT~ olld n1ale puppy rolor TV. $50, niatching sofa \H"f'S ~'\: 11·ht•el~. l~~ Corn· 1 COl\'IE BRO\l/SE AROUND CHILDRENS play h o us c nee s g 1on1e. \Vire hr & love seat $450., slide pro-wall Ln,. NB. a.JS.-C::i i2. 10751,.J i\"f>\i·port Blvd. ~\·an!~d, please p hon c , Ten-mix. S.1~2195. jc~tor, stereo, cpt, $2 yr~. & GARAGE Sule: cloullle oven,, Behind Tony's Bldg. i\lall's. .i-l~S7·1. GOLDEN Reti;ever to ~ nHs~ treasures. 681. V1stal range top, d 1sh 1\·a s h c1· Cost;1 i\lesot * &t&-i15.'«i ORIENTAL RUGS home.Fem,2,!i.yrs.~pl\le<I, Bonita NB. &14-1150 or yello11', rlinc!lc set S2'l. sof[t /Private party needs sel'l'l'al shots, xlnt w/kids. 5-16-6767 61·1-10·18 ~L). each. Patio furniTurC', 2 I used rugs. &i-1-5326 &:'.S-2700 PLAYFUL bl & wht kittens, PIANO, \Vulitzer Spinet $2.-)(). doors, Odds ,'\: t'.'nd s , DECORATOR piel·es: 2 . 7 11•ks, hsebkn, some fluffy Conn Sludent Alto Sax anyliine af1er noon. 2'210 f.-ouches . chairs, des!<. 3 sgl. 'Musical Instr uments 822 644--0903 \v/case $75 Slurdv metal Golden Circle. N.B. beds, l canopy: dra]'l('s, I REYl'\OLDS fl . I co=7L~D~,-w7h~ite_m_a~1~,-kl~---n-.-, bar stools \~•ere 84~ Sacrit GARAGE 0-•0 Xlot "·bv s~reads, patio f~rn., 2 l:idies 1 l'~l5lc l\'ll 1 case healtl1y' lovable s ho t ' ' • · ~... "" · bikes son1e antiq Off' ~1 ' ' · $15, ?.1isc. Furn. &ID-1079 articles, new .Ping ~ng: size 're[rig., pe~: sl~~~ 531-1317 Mature home, 549-18-16 BEAUT \'elver 6'9" loveseat table, sml apph_ances., nice golden n1aple spindle iop l'' STR(NG l\1artin h'Lrtl case 4 BEAUTI1'~UL female kit· "'/overstuffed pill~1vs & t~ys, I~s. niovie Pl'OJ5•ctoi: e.xec. desk \\l / b I t -in De.\r;innd pick-up '~ 3 7~ tens. Free to good ho1ne. Pecan \\'oorl, n1ull1 color, ~t:. n1an), rnany more iteins boqkease 1natclti ng s1~ ft u 675-7444 tau 847--0786 JU S 'r TAKE 0 VER in top. eond. Snt 10.4. Sun !). cnxll'nza'. 11 Greenb1·ie1: ~·~ -· ' paymen'!'I alt6·306-16-4982 12.1356\VatsonAve .. C.M. L . C , .· . HAYNES FLUTE 5 ADORABLE .kittens. · · · n., Big an}on, NB. 10-J Bur111esc / lfln1a1a,)o"l.n 6 VELVET Sofa & Jove scat: 10 ~E~D. S~hwi:1n '!ars_ity Sat. & Sun. 644-81l70 494-74-!4 i\·ks. c';.n 6,l;J....4166 ' . soft vinyl hide. a -bed , mens bike ~~iO. V..elsu1t, hke ~ GEl\IEINHAP.DT Flute, used lDV ABLE 1, . ki 1-lercu.lon so(a, color TV, ne\V ~15. Never used baby lOo/c OFF one year. part ers~an I· l01n1ps, etc. All like nu back pack 810. Corvair W'th •Th' Ad. 64.:l-2-190 ten~. S weeks~ .. t~ined, 2 Chihuahuas, Tiny Poodles, An1erican Eskimo \Spitz), Pit Bulls, BuU Te1·1icr, Chow, Cockapoo, Kecshond and English Bull Dogs. 100 f\'llXED PUPS!? SI u d Se1vie-c JVI<n>i. Breeds. Open Eves: 5.11-50t7 DOES YOUR DOG H.\ VF~ YOU TRAINED? Joln 011r obedience class starting Sat. Sept. 15th. 962-8000. Pic·A· Pet, 10009 A<lanis (L"Ol'llCl' Adams & Brookhurst) H.B. DOBIE, 2 1nale, 1 red, 1 blk. Gr. Pyrenees, 2 sho\\'. 2 fll'I. Love Priced. i\larlincrcst Kennel s. 5'16--09$9 SILKY Terricrs·5 fc111ales. No reas. offer refused. Call SJ2.94_?2 01' 6-14-6178. GENOA, ne1v 5.5 !r1., .U.'9" Lull, Coi>t S!JOO. 21' ft. Spin· naker ~~ o:i:, 1M' Luf~ 26' r oot. St11y sail, 1;· 1.urr. 19' fool. ri·lake offer! G7:1-2-190' OU1'BOARD n101nr, :1 HP Seagull. \Vot"hl's bl'Ctllcst outhoai'd 1nolor. Only $150. ·196-1155 or .ffJ&-6000 12 VOLT R:i1! ,.. Bilge Puinps. Close out, $14 .. 95 ea. * 548--03;'!;} • MON01\IA1'1C tnodcl A-~ toilet. Cost $1!15/make ()f- fer. 6-12-4780 r 1; eve or Sal. Boats, Power 906 MAY-DAY MAY-DAY Ne1v 23' Belllxiy fG Express Crui~r. Sips 4. fully equip \VEIMARANER Pups, ARC, \V/bait tank. t.'Ompass, gal· 7 \\'ks, show quality. Redhill Jey, slcreo, db\. batlerieg, 2'.5 Line. 646-5054 Oi\1C, I/0. Prict~ ~king to 1\KC Silky TeITiers. 10 \\'eeks $ST::i0. (lncl<ls 1raile1·). Roo- old. Chan1p. background. 1 son for selling, too nlany Good w/children. 675-1195 friends, need bigger boat. IRISH Setters 6wks & up, Pr}vate Party. 499-2416 or Xlnt quality. Various p1·ires I 496·9081. & tet'JJIS. 897-88-H 1970 16i TAHITI Torino A.KC Yorkshire p u Jl pt es. ...._. 1971 135hp Jl.lerc. PO\ver Cllamp. bloodline, 6 1vks old l1lf'. ~ll•rcuthode 2 .props, Call M.5-4400 cover. Must i;c.IJ golllg to Tahiti. No reas. offer refus· ed. 5.11-5725, 6Ta-3801, ask for Greg. BEAGLE, 2 females, 9 "'ks old, Champ bred, $65. a.fter 6 PM, 962-6583 2-1' SEA Rny '71. Cuddy Horses 856 cabin, 1/0, 235hp, OMC, -----------Co\."el-s, u·ailcr, CG equip- REG." Bay. Arabian Gelding, yery genlle, \1·cll bt-oken, good horse for entire fan1!· ly, $600 fllT11, nit. 6p1n, 49':;...tll6 BEAlITIFUL Dapple Gray, 7 yr old mru'f!. Regis. l~ Ar1:1b, 1,;, Morgan. $575. lncl tac. 536-ro'lll OLDER Gentle G e l d in g M o r g an /Clydesdale in- te1'ested kl good hon1e in country call ~3569. CHESTNUT Colt, 11,; yr old, Reg., 1 ~ Arabian. Trained. Best offer. 963-2137 * 9 yr. bay gelding, girl's riding horse. $.150 Vi/tack. 847-!&4 p1.'tl .. VHF rcldio. $ti000. Days jSQ..1610, CVQS & wkendS 544.-3574. 1•1' GLASS o\'er \Yoo d. Runabout \\'/18 hp Evint1.Kle. Xltit cond. Is both 1 boat & trlr -unique $4;,(), 557-.."i089 LET us sell )"Otll' trailerable fiberglass boat. 1''or fast results call ·l\lesa Boat Center, 646-6269 nr 646--0:539. SELL or trade 2-1' Sportllsher, Chrysler V-8, clean, oU-shore mooring. 675-854!1. SKlPJACK 20' Open Cruiser 2IOHP OMC $.MOO/oiler. 673-2370 private party '38' CHRIS ROAA-lER PIS loaded. $25,000. Cull YOUNG Banta1n hens, somf! 830-9137 .. ---~------·! 8S8 Livestock laying, oUlCrs re a cl y . 16' NOR\VEGI1\N Lapstak~ Hand!IOn1e mini-egg \>l'!l-· ~·boRt :so. Completely ducenl !small eute1-s, 001 l'ebl l. !wlint. ~. 536-3647. $1 & $1., 496-4123, (C1po Beach·l. Boats, Sail 909 For an ad in Worr1an·s World C1ll Mary Beth 642·S678, ext. 330 Brownie Uniform Crochet Two! 67?.-."1478 or 671--12-l7. engine 11·/V\\' ad a p \er . I IS . • \\'hlte, 1 grey. ;>O,T",r.1111 ZE"11.11 1,.1,_. C 1 548--21;')3 All furniture, nppliances. Oft1ce Furniture/ 9 BABY Bunnies G weeks LIDO 14 -No. 630. New rig· ' .II • -• · ~l I le r r \' TV' I I -I ih E ' 824 ' . \l'~~I Con:;:ole.' xlnt cond, GARAGE Sale Sal~ Sun. 9-5 & n~'isc~inJ:~ds 0l/1'8.c ~1s~B quip. Fr. t~~31io:es l · II• ,p I ~~· ~11=~ ~v~l.erinc?J~: S:IUO or bst our, Sat & Sun everybody. \\lil.1 ac c e .Pt Blvd., Cl\'I. Tues. thur Sat. chrs $8/24 Desks $20/90 · m 0 ( pf'rfer·t fr\r bar or server pn1. S 0 n1 e ~ h 111 g for I USABLES, 2560 Ne\vport I EXEC SIVVI chrs Sl:'i/25 Sec '!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!i!i!i!!!!!!"!!!!~ I :~;lla~:-;~~"';";;i';m;"";;;"";; good traller, SI,000. 675-7751 KING .·., , Ito & everything goes. 396 ~·--~------=\ Pet&and ~ sloop, alum. spars, dacron _..., !H~-lG.~9 almost any.offer. Anytl11ng ~ Piei·t.:eS67 W 19 CMG42-3408 ll~l l ·----------KORALLE 12' fiberglass 1 • i<l:t.<.< niallress, x Princeton Dr., Costa ?vtesa AUTOMATIC GAR AGE Pianos/Orga ns 826 80..ts, Gener1I 900 sails + extras, trlr incl, 1 ) s P L' 111 ;,:" & fl' a n1 c DOOR OPENER. }'inest ~~~~~~'j:;;.;::~'l~jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj.::~~ Like new. $600. 839-3076. l ~ \\·/:;hPph1•1·d cnste1·s, lil\e SUPER Bargains, rurn, hltn lol011'J\ brand. Reg. $200. If 0 l JI('\~'. 5150. 586--0S67 ran~e. 2 ovcns, hood, tables. Special $139.95 installed ree rgan essons Pets, General 850 ALL BOATERS LIOO 14, liiway Trlr, new TP.UNDLE 1 1 k 2 cha irs, beds, c Io the s, \\•/S yr ,.,,.ar. 893-3.'i77 01, CO\'t'l', + extras, nev.· • 1 W ( • nla ·es, ga1ncs, an r i q s . 1801 1 .. ~ " ATTENTION I sh1'0ud lines. Clean. $8.)0, &'els_ . + 111~\lr~sse~. Xln,t Glcn\.\•ood . N.B. {Olf San-5.10-1·115. As Long As You like! .7 qA~. _fish tank . • 673-2912 ~ond111on. $4J. 613---1112 all. tiago Drl J~J~O~U~S~E,--,S~O~L~D~.-,-,,~til_<_"_"_n· Non·players & playt:'I'S wel-\\'/Hethe~m filter system & Bwiie Boa_ting Course ..:?· tents must go in h\'O \\·ks, 'COn1e to attend Tuesday sla.nd. Like nevi. $100. Eves. 111 RHODES 3J-Classic racing \VATERBED Xlnt cond. Household Goods 814 inc. custom bar, tools, ap. night at 7:30 Pl\1. 'Ve 1\·ant =G44-<834~==-~-----sean1anship & boat handling chan1pim "HA·N1\HUl.J." 11qua static, heat, fraine. , , plic, garden furn, son1e an· everyone to learn to play TALKING l\Iynah b Ir d by Top condition. $6500. Ph: Bl'Own ivood, $160, 675-0685 PATIO chaise.~ pad $20. 24' tiqut'S, 8-12-2427. 17451 Santa the organ! All materials w/new cage & stand. $200. Ht. Beach Po\\·er Squadron 673-1232. ALL F" . n' f round plale glass table top Isabel FV furnished. Eves. 644-68.)4 1ta11s KORALLE 12' fiberglass urrus ings or I S12. 673-1771. ' · . To o et n-h · h September llth at 7 pm J al d Ek'droon1 ap!. Reasonable. FALL clothes, g1ftware , m 1 e .c ·inc arge. C•ts 852 soop, um. spars, acron 642-5388 •l SOLID i\Iaple bar stools, 1 houseivare. turn i 1 u re_· Phone 642-2_851 ----------ut sails + extras, trlr incl. G 812 ycllo1v vinyl 30", 2 n1irrors, Refreshmenls. Daily dra"" COAST MUSIC •Persian Kittens, CS1\* Marina High School' & Like new. Bst/otr. 839-3076. a rage Safe 24x36, 2·1x10. 962-281H ings for prizes 10 am 10 4 Newport Blvrl. at Harbor $50-$75 Shots. 1''t. Valley lligh SchOOL J CORONADO 25, 6 hp eng, 3 FRENCH Prov. seclionat, s:1. Jewelry 815 pm, New Thrift Shop, 145 E. Costa Mesa 893--0349 A great opportunity for sails, $4400. 6.J5-4508 m· 5 child's dresses, household l----'--------' _1_81_h_S_l_ .. _c_.~•-1._____ Dogs 834 all boating enthusllliti> 830-M"G. il ems, surfboards, ladies e GENEROUS e li1APLE dlnin.1: roon1 tbl, 4 PIA.NOS -ORGANS 20' OUTRIGGER. Aluminum elothes, Sa t/Sun, UG Pearl, captains chairs, hutch, $150. New & Used. Great selection. MALE l~sh Setter pup, AKC Inforniation (7l4J 968-0494 1na.sl. de.cron sails, $125. Balboa Island, 673-8408 Couch $25. Stauffer E:-.:-Competetivc prices. Open $100 or · lifust sell. * 673-8043 * STEREO S1>eakl'rs, hand e REWARD e erciser & belt S50. ea. Pony Eves. & Su1ulays. The best MS-1956 alt 4:00 David Abr•hams LIDO 14 No. 2662 Trailer tools, \\'renches, sockets. & saddle & bridle $25. All in deals are always at: AKC Silky Terrier, niales, 17646 Will T L plus dolly, xlnt. xlnt r.ond. 5;'>2-ffi91 aft 6 Woll'1chs Mus"tc Ct'!y $HJO. 6 wks, darllng! ! ! I owl ree ene 67'5371 aJl. kinds of stuff . All day For return 01• any 111. S45-0090 rv ne 1 ~~=-~~------ f 11· Sat & S}ln.._.3001 Royce formation leading to return ~ South Coast Plaza 540-2830 BEAGLE puppy, AK C You are 1 1<• 1\·inner of 28' \l/OODE 5 N.,.,;:?_oo. p. ln~ard. Ln .. C.l\I. S4$-S i::i4. of a gold lour leaf clover ~~~~'""'""'""· "'!".""'! registered. Female. 41ni mos 1 TWO FREE TICKETS •-AN REFRIG.. IJOOt.:1;!:\Sf', I g e pin, appn,ix. 2 inches in Never Been U sed! B~LDWJN Acroson1c Spinet okl. $50. All shots. 58!H:>586. :o L\C 55..'i-0736 g-reen la1np, household & clia1netct', 11'1\h j e \\' c I e ti -Lifetime factory guarantee. -piano. $750. Call after S;30 . RECREATION 18' CAT, xln't cond. nsttio, :;;<11/Su11 1 0 -;, . horseshoe in center; also, Regularly sells for S6!.15. \Vi ii pm, 644-8853 TOY Poodle Stud Serv1cc. trailer, J\.Iust sell. Sails, $700. :161.I-2nd A1·e .. Co1'011a del gold loc~et (was on chain), sell cheap~ 642·097fl. WURLIT'.lER, 120 electric Af{C. Reg._ Day or Night, VEHICLE SHOW 645-0258 J\lar , 1co1'. Poit'l.Sf'ttial. appl'OX. the size of a nickel, ~ piano $200. or best offer. call 962--0:"1'9;, SEPT. 19TH~23RD GARAGE SALE: Sut. & Sun ~=t.M!d i? s1ri~t, FLAi 11,. TN. Dr. 1 n g c rs o I 5'19-2193 after 5 pn1. BLACK, Lla.i;o Api;o, n1ale, ANAHE JAMI t5h•TADIUM Con1mel'. n10\1·e1-. ant . . are c eep Y reasurec 1Rancl impact \\Tench $10, * 1-lAMMOND ORGAN * papers reg. $150 or best of· addng n1ach, tires. je\velty, fa~ily menic11tc:: & the loss Unh'. to1v har safct.v chain Like new, Best oUer. fer. Call TI4/897-2652 20IX> State College Blvd., other items some tools is irreplaceabl~. PLEASE, U-Haul 2nfl hnnd, $60. 6700 GERMAN s h d 1 Anaheim ~2 C 1 bl' · PLEASE help if you have 492-7874, Mornings & EveM. hep er , ma e. Pleaee call 64• ~78 e•t ":!!I "~I> ' 0 um a Dr. C.J\f. .... Y !nfo>·n>ati·on -642-3589 , -"-'"-"-"'-'-' _A~p_t._ZJ_A_____ p o s · p _ _. Beige tan & blk Shots & -,.. " <11• , -IAN -p1nct er1ect COuu, -' to, claim your tickets. GARAGE Snle, glass top Eves. & \veekends. 10 SP hoys bike, bra nd nu, 11 years, Fl'Uit\\·ood, 111ust license. $50. 847-7029. _ (North County Toll tree Con1bine poster·bright-col· :~~~~· ~~13j1•111~~nl~t/~: Ma.chlnery 816 S55: Elccl. rani Sl2: 3 Sacrifice $375 979-9532 CM REG AKC Sasafras Poodle 11un1ber L~ 54~12201. ors for this t'O:i:y ou!fil. 10 ~• 00 ----~-----Chertille tlvin bed spreatl11, -PIANO-W-ANie ·o--Puppies. ~ Mynah Bird WANTED: 13-25 hp. Out Flare-sleeve top plus pants Dt:C"N·'B , 121j Highlruul :i H.P. Compressor SJJO. ~~: ea: Odds & ends. (TI41 .ggf.O'l59 that talks. 531-7~--board engine Y.'Ol'king or add ur>-to rozy, practical 2· · ' · · Undercoat gun {air) Sl:iO. SAMOYED PUPS not. Call pi('ce set for lit\I(' girls! GARAGE Sale ~a t IS u n . ~10-3672 t2J1973 SUZUKI 'l' S -12'5, Se.,ing Machines 828 Jo'EMALES. Ah."C 545-UH•I 536-3410 J\;lainly singl<' crochet & kit· Refrig., $20 •. ~Jishes, a~ca M·=1,-.-.~l~la_n_e_o_u_s ___ ~8~1~8 under 6nO mi. ea. Xlnt cond. Here's the Offi(·iol H1\J1\·nic ten, too. Use v.'Qr.:ited. Pat· rug, 1wn1 d1v1der & muic.i-----------S975 both, or $500 ea. * 3 DAY SPECIAL * Classified Ads ...... &12-1678. ~eed a "~ad"'?' .... -are an 11d! Girl Scout Uniforn1 -ju1nper, tern 7U6: sizes 4, 6, 8. 10 in-2:-l2 Villa N'ova Rd .. Costa INTERIOB. dcs.igllCr selling: 673-1727 $3.98 Tuneup & adjust any -.... tunic blouse, 1uu1ts and eluded. l\1rsa. oivn Sylvania rr.1 stel'('() & S' COUCH & love.seat $30. lam i'I y mac h bi e. --•-rts'. So cln•"ic. You'll CENTS · Fn'/Sat/Mon •·~ pick11p ~"' " SE\'F.?l!'Tl'·l"l\'t!i · GARAGE .sale: Baby & phono 11·/Garrard changer, rf'frlg. $15. box spring & ' r • .,,. 1\'atll to se\V this \l'(trdi'OI,.~ for each pattern -add 25 chi l dren's c l othing, antique green 7 d1·awe1· mattress (dbl bed) $10. & deliver. No Gimmicks!~ again in, other fnbi·ics. All cents for each pattern for ftn11iturc, many misc Hems. lingl'rie chest, 2 0U-1vhitc 64!i-&!31 SVincere1818Se,vlll11g 00J1Iach C~ sew-easy. Air fitail and Special Hand!· Sat & Sun, 20631 Ilorv-town derorator shades & vHlt~n<:c ac, ar r , ' Priotcd Pol tern 9 0 8 l : · ,,__ I th'rd la.% , . HB .. -FRIGJDAIRE rt"f 13 ft. 646-9742 6 8 lo 12 14 1ng: Ou1t:f'W !le I -C ...,1., . lo fit standard 6' X 4' \Vin· ] 't L 11 1100 $100 ] 1..:c::_,::c=,..~--~-~-Girl.6' Sites • • • -• · delivery \Vil! take three . dow .......t """"' eb · 1~k ,,. ·11 e. · · r · niar c SEARS SCwin" n1achine, has See pattern for yardages. ,1,eek:s or more: Send to YAJ>lD sale, Thur., Fn .. Sat. • '""" n,~.. air w "' table 1CHG6 S1noke River Ct.. i. 8¥vztlfl"'-·••Yg CENTS Alice Brooks the DAILY ·· dishes. pans. funL, nnllquc ~l~e \\'Cltiflt, &10-0'15t5 aft. 6 r·.v . 002-8190 f;~~~hi~!bi~~ ~~1.$1& for each pattern -add 2j Plthl' 10,~· Needlecraft l'OCk('r, 1\nlli1ue clocks. &1,,,~· ~·=~--~-~= 19" TELEDYNE pol'lable h 968-8481 cents ror each imttcm ior Dept .. Box 163, Old Chelsea snuUI anllques. 122 Slh SI., C:AMEO. Shores. Over 300 B&W TV, new $79: 22 mag cas , Air Mail and Special Handt-Statton, New Yorkt N.Y. J.lu!'ll. Bch. items. 2a "~.se12s dresses un· rur1e, exc cond $ 7 5. , TV, Radio, Hlfl, tnr. otherwl9e thlrd·chw t001l. Print Name, &itdf'e!l11, ~10VTNG! Turtlet'flck, 19261 ~er S25, ~c &· 14. Table 49'l-1847 Stereo delivery wlll take thrH Zip, Pattem Nnmhflr. SiMTa Geronn, la,Jt unit hnens, placen1als ~ ,Sl)c. WORLD Book Encyl. .7:1 & ··~61 .. or more. Send to NEED L ECRA.IT '721 r,urn to;ys clothes niili'C $6. Mesh &creel! :w:. wide x GIANT :"""",-~ •• M6 ... 1 .. the DAILY 'Crochet, knit. etc. Free Sat s'.s to T~cs. 833...92.10. , 23%'' higl1 $61 PhofJI! thru Britanriica unu~e<l Great • l' a--,..... .... .... ~ c.-.. .,,. s-'17'11 10 .II Books & Jr. Sac. 838--:.\643. SIDEWALK SAL" PILOT, 442, Pattorn Dept, d~M, 50c. YARD ..to. VIV. Chow ~., • .-•~ · am~ * WATER SOFTENER * I" 232 Wetl 18th ·St .. Hew lutant .,Maefahle 'BftOk. pi.irtci turn gulttir watei-1;;;•::-:· ,.--.,----,-,,.--•Black k white portable York, N.Y. lOOlL Print ~~·$Lfan00cy knots. pat. ski, M~. 1515 MaM.nc1i;, OBLt box sprg/mall"'°ss SCECO. ~~nfdition t75. TV's . Sti9. : Nlllli, ADl>ftE&8 with t• t rirocllfit Rook N.B. $20. Rattan fum. 2 Day beds Call 6.1}D.-.. a ter 5. e Component ilt~. $50.88 aP, SID~ and 8'l!YLE Le , 1 b t Pa -GAftACE St I F . $25 &-f\S. Fire tcrecn & REFRIGERATION unit $."JO. e 19" color T\1'11 • $253 N1JM1SL arn Y p cturt'&I I· ·l c: urn,1tur1.\ toolil $10. 67r,..J758 Sort booid $1$, paned class e 25" COT1$0lc cdor TV's • ~ "ORE Q u 1 ck f:llmll. Sl.00. appllancetJ, baby !It u r f , GO' LF doo'I, "· 5'1S!40la 1397 ~ -Complete I1t11lllnt Gift Book clothes, tJlerto. 18653 San playing., class..A taml· ~ Fub&onl and cl'°'1lt one .. 'more thPJI too gifts _ Antonio, FountaJn Valley i.Y l'!}Cmbcn;hip, Irv.loo CAI Sm. apt 11love $15. Decoralor All nmv. fulty guartu1~. ~ .. -"!" -!!':'!".,. 'l'[i SJ.00. WANTED USED 4C0~1i;:i;:74Cl"b~ prle<d to .. u. lamps I~$. Men'• stilll GRANT CITY ~r~j« ~~ .. --d ,11r'·ie' 'Al&UD Book • .,..-""1 xlnt. sz 40 $15. 673-4169 Bto0kl1ur Ma-0111.-tta _ OillY !!Ile. BOOK $1 00 . BRICKS -CALL MONTEREY PINE i ..:.:::;c"'u1,::11g=-• .::,c.;l\i8:;;:;.r.:;k ~s."'a"'q'-,.-Friday, Satunbty ... Sun<lay ~STANT SEWING t1' 1i1q llqg Book11 • 50c. 870-4564 B<!aut spcr.lmo.n lrtt. 9' tall, sensor Water Sl>ltne.r. LARGE 1creen Macna.vox 8 ;r' today, wee.r tomorrow. ~ o1. 11 Prl• Ar,nan., * GAR Ac E 5 a 1 e ln 36" tub. $125. 008-3118 , $200. 846-6721 tt w TV. bei.utlful con,,01,, ~STANT F A,S RI 0 N ~Ut 9oo11: J • l& Pl\tlerns. F\rmiturc, etc, Sat & Su 23" COLOR TV. xlnt cond. SURFBOARD, Gorden &: st!ldom used, $35, 646--199'.J BOOK ffundrtal of 50c. ~l2 ~1olok3J 'Dr.. II B Dou~ bed, used bed. M!se Smith r W.attnkate Din-, GeneJ't\l Elech,1_s: 40'Natl 1aahlon tact1. SL 61_., ~111 .,.. 1 • 962'-4397 1te11U1, ~18-8301 mood Tan, !J9..1285. . , sler«1 ~·pi. 33~r. hirt ftllllta ar:e Just Q phone 50c. SAT ONLY lM PO\VER n1ower, professional SOLTO,Tellk Dl.11 tm tbl, $50. ~i* cUI. •wt¥~·~ _. I• :r~·~~-J"• Llwlns_: .Tm. boolcs.-diahcs. etc-11!CJ.-. t>'l>ll• Fronl calc;her. Schwinn Cont. &Ike. $.'m. tlke to Trade? Our 1mder'• t.'>1 E. 16111 Ploce, 01 New n101or. S95. 5;1T•1.431 R<!frlf( $50. 6f6..3843. ParadlMl c61umn Is for )"OU! '-"'""""-"~"'-''-"'-~ I 836 • I. CAL 25, Spinnaker & Gear. + :i SallR. 6 llP OB, new int. $5500. 5al--0441 LIDO 14 "'/trailer· & cover. $600. 644-2823 Flipper very good cond $22). 646-9570 You don't need a gun to "Draw Fut" when you olace an ad In the Daily Pilot Want Ads! Call now -64M618. ' I ' ' " i I I I ' I f I -c; -~~.I! NEW ()Olpl 1\nlt:I 1ional c1H l !il41 ,~ " ' Geno 8: wh ~lust ~nc. rur C FM r1~110· 111 (;.( Natl< I 1 •11 sell - &nut ]l1Lrl: sumr -mo. fht<l( CAL: race hp 0 ~;'9(l(l X-16-1 t.xc jib, ; '" w Sum l'lf.:&1 67IH ** i;ailt \V/h ll\'Cfl Boe1 HEi..c ''"' spot NCI\' Mill 644- Bill F"Ql' '74. {acll :;o· s: Mar Bolt \\'00 18'. '1'.I I l:..iO 01c· bar< ;i.J2-locl 1'KlE ilbe .. ,. drlV pm. Sl{l Hyd Joh: Xln ITT lfPJ $28' B .. • J14 -[ -Car TE can equ LET tral Ca< ~ '"'' :ll ·i;i; aul sle• Cyc s l!O! '°' Ga 519 (21 u .. "" 87l ro ~r. ~ •n1 m• m qr-: ml 00 10 NL ap "'ii I rn u: or i9ii WI 64: YA: • .....! 19t 19 64: LA' P1 Pl '1i Ri m Hli u th ' '7f ·~ • , IQ! .- ' . Friday, Septtmbtt lA, 197l DAILY PILOT I~ I T-tat• J[i] I ;;;;·iiiii';;;;;;~1~~I f ~1'• 5111 909 CyclH, Bikes Motor Homes Antlques/Cloula 953 Vons ][i]ll Auto1 fOf' I* l§l I J§1 I ]~ [ I~ I l§l 1 ~' _ ... to_ ..... _ai. ~ .......... _ ... "" Autos '°' 5al• 970 AutOfi, Imported 96.l Autos, "1mponea 9711 Autos, Imported INEW :lt' 1973 Yank ee Scooter1 925 Sale/Rent 940 --'-"'-'-"-'"--'.:;.;; 910 Autos, Imported [)Oiphln sailing sloop. In _ ----------TOP $$$ '6:!1 FORD E-300 Van, custom wheels, lire$, seats. Special tog lamps, pipes. Paneled & cal'peted, stereo system s:.ic. appreciate. 675-1673. ALFA ROMEO BMW 11·11ter only 4 mo. Loli ~(op. SCllWINN, hcnvy duly blkc NEW 11onal equip. Lge diACounl tn very good condltio11. Ideal BC'ach ln1port "'111 buy your oU list pr:lce. By owner, for ncws1iuper boys. Cost 20' Mini.Home tu1Uque classic, paid tor or !7 1·1J 496-9390. lll'W $87.95 \l'ilhout rack, Ful1y loaded including air not. For top dollar, see Bud ., SCHOCK 1 .. b ttllt one $A5 with rack. t.'Onditioning. or Bob at Beach Imports 2Gcnoa, & spinn.~r~' nfte; 893.&IOO art 6PM or Sat-Sun. $7495 today. & whl stmg, seagull outbtd. * BICYCLE SPECIALS * SCOTT'S CAMPERS l\lusl seU..golng 10 Tabitl. New 10 sp froo1 .• _. .... ~.95 S sac. 531-5'm, 675-3801 ask Utied 10 sp 1rom , •• , ••• $25.00 1051 . Harbor, S.A. fnr Greg. ' BUtc c1ci0Ung ••. ;".:. ;, .$t.5o 839.-337lol . . - 'Qh\1rl1 ]l111p11 rl!i l +~ ' ·ALFA ROMEO CLEAN ·68 Ford, V-8, bed, \Vhy buy an al~ ran'! reh1g, porta·polli, rh'P5, BUY a Winner! crpts, htr, spkrs $1750/of· TI~ r~e1o1.· '73 AUa-RomeO, 'Tl fer. 644-7192 B1•rhna d('n10. S3795.00 NOW AT F'OR Sale Kltc No 910 Beach Bicycle 806 E. Balboa 14 ntl les N.·San Diego Fv.'Y.) ~cllow & ~hite wry .la.et i_ Blvd., Balboo. 67S-7282 e oaJc's i\1ol0l" Ho1ne Rentals 111 gd cond. winner of Kite A Gr1•t.Blk1l 'TJ ~:;!;· M.H. & Minis 'Si otEVY Step Van, self contained camper, $1200 ph 646-6215 aft 5. 1948 PACKARD Club Seda,n., '65=ro=RD"-'"-1"v"1n~dow~V~an-. ~i=m' 8 cyl., overdrive, rad.lo, ti:M Call •~ ••10 Nntlona11; '(Sliver K. on. Kelr 1'70 Kni•i•kl· ''° ~ \ ,Free m.1les 9 1119, M..~0900 ten Ho.ffen racing ttaJI} 2 Xlnt ooril. uio. Call Jlm sets sails, Call -'l'M-SU6. • 536:-7B67 • Trailers, lr1vel 945 FOUR SAIL 1970 llONDA 450 Cbo"ll)er SPnuliful 13' Sal I boat . Good cond. inquire 2117 I !arbor Fun for four · End o( Elden Apt 10 Costa Mesa sumn1cr, dh1counl. p 1· ice alt 6 ' ' ' $7'"JO. Tilt-up trailer in--~·------­i·lurled. :i>l-3497 2 BICYCLES for sale. both 1 L ' • 5 1,_ •--· t f II yi·. oll. Stingrays, 1 orange, l:A ;i .• sa ".'· uo.aien s, ~. I blu<-., fastbe.ck cost $120. 1·11.L'l' equip, lunged mast, 9 ra ca sell SGS 64G-07Tl hp OG, Vane 5leercr. $6.100,1 ~~·=~~. -·-~--­~;ooo \vithout 1 tee r c r . IO SPD, like nu Jacques An· .~Hi-1600 <1uctll $300 Racing Cam· NEW 24' Fully self contWne<l. S3150 SCOTT'S CAMPERS 1051 S. Harbor, S.A. 839-33TI (4 miles N.~SM Diego Fwy.) newly painted, orig. maroon eng . .,...,.,. J.)U-~ fiuish. Ca.r In ex.tra nice Autos Wanted · 968 condition. MUllt sell! $le«>. 64&-5412. Recreatlonal Vehlcles 956 140 I-IP. Con.•alr Sandrall \V/sand & flotaUon tires & trailer 01\\'e 548-3697. Trucks 962 '71 Chevy >/4 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS ALF A ROl\fEO • SAAB TOP SSS f:k>a«h ln1pori!'l 1vill buy yvur .\lfa lt un1L'O. pnid for or not. l''o1· top doUat', sec Bud Ol' Bob at BL'ill~l Impo1'11:1 loday. [h·arh Jh11p1111!i +\) I,\.'() 'lo (i"'" "·1'"''' l' '«"''""' [\~ .• ' •A t-101; --' ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & Exi::ellcot selection of pl'e· pt·ie1.; re-evaluation modf'ls. DEMO $ALE SALES·SERYJCE-LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc:, DATSUN WE'RE MOVING BIG SA VlNGS ON '73 Dcnl011 510'!! Pickups 610's ·NE\trro~r DATSUN 88S Dove Newpol'I l!ch S3.1·1300 Open :;;unday TOP $SS DATSUN '72 240% \'Pllo'v w/blal.'k interior, ~lags, Air Cond, Auto TranS: A 1-owner bt'autY cnmEJ). SALE [h•:1rh _i l11q111rf;, tt ... ~.... . . . -. - T!.l1-.1rh Jh11p1111~; li •JO<.,· _, ....... TY ~.,., .... I ~· '.:: : .•• , I '70 RAT ---,-1' VICTORY f~~~~I equip, se ll F:XcPll<'nl L"onU., 2 nut.ins, jih, L-;()% Ge1l00, outboard FOR year rou11<1 camping fun . 12' Sunlit Fe Tralle1-. Bu lane . refrigcr11tor, three burner 1tove & oven. 8' x 10' zip on canvas room. $650. ~1-3497 Ton Yon Auto Trans, Pov.'er Steering, Ai1· Cond, Mag \Vheels, 29.850 miles, A1'1/Fl\1 Stereo and TapC Deck, While \\'ilh gold striping. WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS '66 Alfa GTA Bl'tl~ :1 l1n1~• I 1vill b11)' y~u1· i 124 SPIDER Da.su11, paid fol' 0 1· 110 1. Jo or ;1 spi'<"l'I. i\i\1/Fr>.I radio Jug: nnd trlr. Dir. &12·7Tl2 Blue l\'ilh contrasting inter- ior, :J SJ><I. 4 \\'hf't'l disc brakes, L'adiW tires, Extra sharp, $(>C & Drive ITNE-430,_ !O/' c!GJ.,l~I', Sl'l' Bed or Bub ' ''l!J.:C lllCk t •P120J ' ~·. &al.11 Jn1purt.; ludlly. II " 52195 NEW 18' ''"''' i~.f~s'""' $3295 TOP DOLLAR-PAID FOR OR NOT! Ca.11 or come In to sec us. CAPRI 'Qh•arh Jh11p1111~i +if \.00 .\ ~T rl"Jl""~J • -~ .,.,"-'"' I • ~ ~ •.\~ • V'.l>, ' I Dick Miller Motors 1 ~;; \I'. \Varnr-r, S.A. 557.2132 *. *: 14' f' I B ER A.S S '71 BSA 440 Viclor Special sailboat. Good_ concllhon. Needs assemblins:;, buy as is SCOTT'S CAMPERS 1051 S. Harbor, S.A. 839-3.111 NEWPORT IMPORTS NEWPORT IMPORTS $1588 .. , I ~ .. ·-... ======== '71 FIAT 124 SPIDER I 1"1nvert., red w/blk interior, 5 ;:pd, Excellent cond. l839- DF A J. \Y/tr1uler. $27:i. 833-8209 $200. 642-0458, 675-3712 •~ven1ngs. 'Tl HONDA 350 CB 1n1n1ac Boats, Sllps/IJocks 910 condlUon, n1nke o f re r, 1""-"""---'-'-----1 642..£087 call after 5 pin. HEi..ocATED Easl('TI1 ex· '71 llONDA CT70 Mini Trail ccuUvc \VOUl<l like lo rent a Xlnl cond. undcl' 600 n1i ~pot on private beach in SHG. 962-1763. NC\VJ>Ort urea for sml -,~7H~-d~C=L~35~0~-11nllboa1 pl ease cllll 71 an a 64"~444~ SGJ. !i46-~1 BALBOA Slip for 40' ~11 Electric C•rs For Sub-lease. Oc.1-June 15, --------- '74. Ample parking. Full ELF.er. shopper car, 2 seat, f11cllities. 673-7950 top & side curtains, gd. ~· SLIP for rent, llunlington ~nd. $250. 552-9367 eves. llarbOur An!a. Motor Homes 84&-8694 Sile/Rent 940 Boots, Speed & Ski 911 NEW \VOOD Palter1'Dn -S.K. 52. 20' Motorhome 18'. 4 yrs old, plae<'d 3rd al 413 en~ine, raL1< & ladder ·7:1 DiVislona1~. $!1,00J comp. fully s. c. 1:;.;oo '"" 400" Dc•trokro S7495 Olcvy. $1500. Dis man lied bare hull .'< 11·\er. TI4: SCOTT'S CAMPERS 5.}2-9278, Z13: 963-6125 col· 1051 S. Harbor, S.A. lect. 839·33'n S!<LERS a!lenllon? 18 • f4 m11es N.-&n Diego~')'.) fiberglass. 455 Olds Jet tor e SALl:S e "'"' 0' trade 10' • wheel • SERVICE • drlv(' vehicle. Call after 6 {4 nUles N.-88.n Diego Fwy.I NEW 26' Fully self contained, double "'-"'· $3195 SCOTT'S CAMPERS 16'>1 S. Harbor, S.A. 839-3371 (4 m:1les N.-San Diegq ~')'.) Autos fOf Sale l§J General 950 • FlEET SALE • Sell or Lease '73 PONTIAC Granville 4 dr h.t. loaded, like new, $132.50 mo. 'TI FORD LTD Brhm 2 dr, kJa.ded, like new $89. mo. . '10 CHEVY Impe.la 2 cir h.L lo miles, $79. mo. 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 Saturday Special 70 FORD ~ P.U. Service bed, automatic h-ansmission, JXl"·er steer· ing, power brakes, air con· dltioning, low miles, and "·ell kept. Elect. or plumb. Dream C27250G 1 $2142 lll;in1111~·, ll\ii1t1r" !l!•J'l•l'Gi:> '"".,1i .. , . . . . .. 4·\VHEEL drive, '62 Scout Pickup excellent condition. l\1usl Seti. Sec-a1 UOO \V. Coast H"'Y· unUI 5 pm: 507 Poinsettia, CdM after 5. '73 CHEV % Ton camper special, 4 spd, ps, split rims, 8"'' Eldorado Cabover camper, slps 6. Divorce forces sale! 552.-9483 1973 F·250 FORD Ranger, 4x4 pickup. All extras, Wider warrty, 536-6388, aft 4 '70 FORD Ga.Ix 500 4 dr, xlnt 1 ~p_m_. _______ _ 31CK' W, Coast Hwy., N.JJ. 642-9405 \VE l:nJY f~WORTED A tITOS &EST PRICES PAID! Dean Lewis t'mports 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 IMPORTS W A?\'TED Orange County's TOP S BUYER BILL MAXl-~Y TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blv :. H. Bt9.ch Ph. &47-8555 TOP CASH -. . - [lrarh Jhnput1!i +·~ 11[\<> ~ ( "' 11.,, .... IJ)' " "t•<' '" •' •A-o 6400 NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS IN STOCK . -" .. -. -Spar( L'OUJ~ decor , body side '61 ~A Rom~ Sptint MinlJ n1ouldings, 1·cclinin& rron1 BARWICK IMPORTS ~~d1!1?11. $950/Bcst offc>r. I SL'al~·-eontour 1·cu1· sC'a:s . .j 33375 Camino Capistrano 536-4,62 spcrd 1ransn1ission. ix111•c1· San Juan Cnpistrano • iro111. disc: l>l'nkes, s tyle sh~el I 493-3375 or 831-1375 AUSTIN HEALEY I wheeb,, hud <el """'· '''"""11 '68 Datsun Wagon ply lu'CS. 2000cc cng. '66 AusrIN Henley. In good lG·o'Ev.cENBR<S280T010C. KEOI I .\toto T1s'""1'0·· 9"91zu9:n 1 conditif'ln. $2200. or bes1 or- '" 5.1H149' 1 1~~~~~~1:,E BILL MAXEY BMW GUSTAFSON TOYOTA L• I M \SSSl BEACH BL. 8.17~ Bob Mclaren, BMW tnC:O n• erc:ury HUNTINGTON BEACH Inc. l:;so{l Scacl: :it \\"a nic>r 1973 DATSUN pick u Jl, for clean late model Cru'I Sales . Seivice • _ t C.asing l£Lu1ling1011 Beari1 Am/[m, Tonnenu, niags, Hand truckd•! Ch I S50 Nor1h lkach Blvd., 842--8844 * (213) 592-5544 \\'ille ovnls .. cust. buniJ)el'. owar evro et Lu 1-labra "Hom~ of the Vi king" 3,000 n1 L Tnke OVt'l" pymn~. " !71 ~) 879-5624 .,,_ .. ::.-,6 ...... ,, nlacArtl>m· and Jambo""' DATSUN =-c'"~=.n'°''~=-~-N~~ach Fat Pro[Jt is attained ivhen I · , 1973 D.1\TSUN 2WZ, Ornni:e. 7you sell through result-get. '69 DATSUN. I door .'<{'(Ian. Compclition inags, Scmpcril \YE PAY TOP OOLLA.q ·1 I Cl tires, NC. 6+1-ffi92 FOR TOP USED C rt_S ting Dai Y Pi ot assified l'/h, !\!UST SELL, $600. A. Ads. 642-5678 * 6-15-18.10 Afl 4 pnt * L'.LASSIFII:::O · ...... ti-12 -fitrl!S If Your car is extra clean. ·-see us first. Autos, lmportea 970 A1.1tos,_ lmoorrva 970 Autos, Imported 970 BAUER BUlCK 29Z Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-2500 Autos, Imported 970 $2395 ~lllanp11,; llln!t11» tlll(Fl'll io\Oa -\ ~i\tl .. ' ' .. ' " . ' . '71 fo'IAT, 128, Blue 2 dr, 19.000 n1i, Orig 0\1•ne1', Ex- cel cond, shorter lhan V\V !Jug but more inside room than merliuin American cars. Front \Yheel drive, radial tires, disc briar, overheud can1 eng., 35 ml gal. $1200. 494-5668 1970 F'IAT 124 Spyder , if you 11"ant one this is it. ?\ly love atrair for 211 yrs. Is for sntc>. BcYond description hC're, see it to believe ii, t'llll 497-2251. . 1971 1-'lAT 124 Sport Spyder 1600 Jllpci, burgandy 1\·/hl'ige int, am/fm stereo, 2.J,!XX>ntl orig O\vner, $2MIO, aft 4, "'kdays 714-979-7483 Autos, Imported 970 s~7· ~ ""'"''•" mo e ROOALS e cond $69. mo. '54 % Ton P.U. Red-223 cu. Hyd~·L't \Y/115 hp John.son outbo.11111 motor. Xlnt cond. $1500. 6T.r3220. l l FT. Boat y,•ilh trailer, 25 1-lP/outbo:mt Nc>\v pa.int. $2g:j, Call 586-1632 912 * GARAGE SALE * 374 F1™•er St., Costa~ Saturday only EXPLORER . HUNTINSlliN BEACH I~, I"~"'" ''• 1 t•l'"·' "' lt '~· _, ... ," GMC '70 FORD Torino 2 dr h.t. $69. mo. '69 FORD Torino 2 dr h.t. ioo. mo. In. Camp" shelL ALFA ROMEO Runl/needs work $400 .1 _________ _ Cash/offer, 646-9'»1. LEASE A NEW TRUCK '69 Alfa Spider ..µ1 makes • types • sizes Fuel injection, 5 SJ>d. All Purch/optlon 645-7030. original, like new (690AFR) '73 DODGE Van, V-8, sttclc, SAVE S3800 cash or take ovel' Motorhomes ·m CX>'IBT t dr · 29 payments. 53G-U34. 21· & 26' ~ , ong. ,CXXI mi. $%JO. CHEVY 19-17 panel. 1953 IM1.tEDlATE DELIVERY South Coast Car Leasing Chevy eng., stick Ahift, big Orange Co.'s 300 West Coast Hwy .• N.B. rim! $650. 213-131-7572 Exclu1:1ive L>ea1cr '&IS-7182, after 5, 673-8269 BiU· Berry Pont.i•c 1960 CHEVY 1.~ ton plcl..-i1p 3 --=,=:===:;:=;;:::;:;:~=:: n owto uy economy ca GMC REC, CENTER. WANTEP USED spd, beau,,, good cond. i100. ALFA ROMEO 21XX1 E. Isl St., Santa Ana BRICKS -CALL _536-3446=-=~-----S.AAB ~1000 870-4564 * MUST sell! '52 Dodge Buy or Lease -pick-up. Needs m i n o r Cim-rs, S•I•/ Rent 920 '73 CLEARANCE Antlqye1/Cl111lcs 953 engine "'Ork. $250. 545-1840 Sales • Service· Leasing . c-PACE ARflOW -·-----"" Rental• TE ARD RO p Cubover or '66 eorlune.nw Convertible. '66 CHEVY %T pickup, ;u1 c11mper. ~ll'{'pll 4, fully TIOGA Antique eold w/lealher int. !~ck,:,...~ cond. $900 firm. • ,..,.,i •~""' New tires. Mint condition. --~-~~~-~~-equipl"'-"'· .....,.,. Jl\IMF.n'"-JI l)f:LJVJ:RY * 54.i-5747 * CREV ER 'BMW Best offer ove.r $2(0). ·62 FORD %ton V-8. C.ood --. [h\trll ]h11p1111!i +~ . . •/"'• • I • " •>-! ' '~L· 586-0867 tires &. engine. $525 Or best LET us sell your camper or Sales • Servi~ . l..eflslng Fat Profit is attained 1o1.•hen o11::;::'::.'·:...::64&-='..:1&t{lc:.:ec,,.-~--ALFA ROMEO • SAAB traOer for you. Me s n :aie \Y. 1st SL, Santa Ana 1 ::-in NEWPC.FtT Camper Sales, ~ Harbor. 835-3171 YoU. 6E! I through result-get· Like to Trade? Our Trader's ~-_.:;;c:.::=.:..::c: __ _ . . . -·· ta Mesa, 61&-4002 d 1 ,,.~ .. .,,_ ting Dally Pilot Oassifled Paradise column ls for you! Fast results aN Just a "hone Want a resu ts · ... ,_..,,o AdL M2-S678 5 llnes, 5 day1 for 5 b'Jcks. call a,vay 642-"~·---~~ rent campers for your ---~~---~~ , truck. r.tesa Caniper:. Salct, Autos, Imported 970 A~ot, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmported 970 ~bol', Costa ~1esa, '66 FORD 8' Cubover, V8, ··-------------------------------------· aulo tran•, Ice box, stove, :J' ~ ~~ -7 ti) "'y'' . f ~ y ti Aleeps 5 or 6. 8'17-2~23 - Cycles, Bikes Scooters 925 10 apeW Sch,vinn SuQC!t' Sport, 19~!", ladies ft'Rm2 xlnt cond. Asking $125. 64&-8Xl8 eve~. •ni,, AJS 250. Xln\ cond, many xtra!§. Must see! $575. 1n41 673'-JG.18. 'i2• BMW Silver RG0/5 500) ml, Full dress, J 1 9 5 O 642-49lll. 10 SPEED, bl'Rnd new NlsblkL Comp. Must see to appttclate. nm ~1237 '12 Y AMARA 350, lo miles, llke new. 1 owner. $575 • 983'-tiOZi: 171 YAMAHA 90, only 800 ml. Like new. Call Ken, 494-0052 ()r eves, 497-18a2. 1971: HONDA 450 CL, $450. with 2 helmets. C a 11 64~2661 evening$ YAM 360 MX, 38 Carb. Lot1 dxtras. USO/bell offer., ' See to apprCc! MB-1250 1 1972 HONDA TRAIL 90, $295. tm Honda Trail 70, $185. oo.tll:lO t::AtE 'Tl Bultaco 125 Pt$'sang, Mllrunl 1615 art 5 PM. * 646-5177 '*' '12 YAM 1.00MX, xlnt cond. Runs pert. Never raced, lo m11H, must sell. ~ 1 HONDA 90, jUBt overftn,ulcd. LOls of spare parts, 2 Xt:r'l ttre1, $100/belt ofr. &15-1638 '71 HARLEY O.vldlOO" 12! ()(!, IUI), Good tranopor1&· !Jm, lll&-5210 4 PM. '1' DKW 125 MX :Tl eng!nt. l\tino xln'L Alavota, loll al "!!!!· $125, 114&-1'91. ... l.'l°_!AMA~ Enduro ,.. ........ XlntCOlllL lll!O. -,' Specializing ,, in 2~Z Service ~··A "t-* •, ' l See how it holds the road. 2. Test its steering response. 3.See how it corners. I 4. Try the brakes. 5. Drive it on a windy day. 6. Notice if it~ fun to drive. Introducing the New Honda Civic: ' BIG SELECTION-IM,.EDIATE DELIVERY! ~ 11 ' .! Jl _, -' I .8 , ~I " ' )' ' ' " ' ' I ~l ; I , I ' , I : I ' ' ' " ' ' • ' ' ' " " ' IA ' ' ' ~i ~I ,, ' I I 'I I ' \ \ " j ' 'I • I , T + ' ' .f4 DAJLV PILOT Friday , Stpltrllbfr 14, 1973 • !§1 1 1.__ ~_ ... _ ...... ___,\§] I lliiiiiiii 970 Autos, Imported 970 __ ..... _ ... _ .. __,!§] .-.,t.-.... -.... --,I~ i 1~~ .... ~. t .. ~-~!§~1 ~1~ .... ~ ..... ~~ ~l§l~~~1~! ~.~,. .. ~ ....... ~!§]~ .;I ;;;-;;;"';; .. ;;1~1@~1 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, 'Imported 970 1 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, tmertect 970 ~ lmporttcf 970 ;;A;.;•;.;lo;.;•.:.• .;;lm:.;.;<po.;;.;•l.;;ocl,;:.._._~,;.70;1 Avto• tor Sale Autos I« Sal4: JAGUAR Autos, lmponed --'--'-----MERCEDES BENZ MERCEDES BENZ 1--PO_R_S_C_H_E -i PORSCHE '-vOLKSWAGEN VOLVO MERCEDES BENZ MASERATI TOP $$$ • '72 Mercedes &-•ch Impons "'Ill lluy vnur Jaguar , paid fo1· Ol' nor: 1''or !OJI doUar, 9\.'l' l~ud nr llob at Beach Im1ior111 tod.1y. 1963 Ii!ASERATI, "'" t•ngint•, lk'W rucini: n1u.~.s. )\(!\\' lll'I'~. Ill'\\' t<onl SIK>«:k~. n1•\1' alr l•lnd., •·h·1· \Vin· rh111 l(. rx•1v puint j o IJ. l~lJ~7'171 . 350 SL JIM SLEMONS TOP $$$ '66' PORSCHE 911 '"" P!>RSCHE 912, o'"""" '67 VW WHILE THEY . new ttres,•33,000 mi, for sule LAST' (;CH!J)•• Hd~1r., Radio, hl•11.l<'I', 11u1nn1n1 ic 1 rans., JlO\\.'t•r .-.11•1•11ng, Jl(l\\"f'r' \\'lllrlO\\'S, f;i1·101·y nir, t>..·au!lful IJ1t1·· i.:u11dy 11 irh bt·igl' 111ll·rlo1·. Only 13,000 111ilcs. 6:l·IET J, IMPORTS Bt·llC'h ln1porr:. 1\Jll huy your gorgeous s1lvt'r, black 1nter-hy owner. ~5000-67~1n4 or Factory Camper • MERCEDES BENZ Mi·rTt'd(•s J{.,ni, puid ror or i1>r, A~1 /FM, 5 spd, rnust see 645-7556 R.efrlcuo1'8tor, Stove, a 11 '73 VOL VOS -, --Q•rilrh Jhnpurt!i ~ , ....... , w .. ~J • ..,.....,,.. "'W<>-•I I~ •I "'1'> b406 . -·· --· MAZDA Jim Slemons KARMANN GHIA * M•$zt,• J.JN~::•v * Imports 36 1'.10NTllS O?EN Lt:ASE 1:101 Quall 69 \\'ill acc«pt Trnde-tns I 1'clVJ_>?l'l Hearh KARMANN GHIA CALL ~lft. FHY fi42-G666 iU.l-93lKl couPE Hunt. Beach lcc,TER mo" ""'ARTHun oi·an)'.te 1vi!h rari10 und ht·ut-'65 Mercedes " '"''"sAvE MAZDA 220 ~~c:oR BILL MAXEY ,\ ll l 0 ma I 1 {' 11"artSl1\IX..-;1on, 1 17'111 BP.11'.1 !{! .114'.1·66'ifi 1:oow1~r sll'Pririg, power TOYOTA -B-08-[0NGPRE hl'Hkl'S, au· l'OndilioninJ':, and 1s,gg1 Bf:ACH BL. X.t7.l(i.'li II MAZDA Ai\l F.\! radiu. 1PJV55.i1. HUNTINGTON BEACH $995 MASERATI -SERVICE FIRST-Oick Mill" Motors >--------EXCL USIVE l:UJ \~'. \Varnl'r, S.A. '72 CITROEN MAZDALEASE 5'7~12 SPORTS 72 MERCEDES MASERATI rliffif'll]l hl find, pl'l'Stigp nu1o, !ul!y cquipp&I \MIOCIPJ. . -. ilh\1rl1 ]h11p11rt[; .J.<lo >:le);' IV l "t •1>;w•, ~ r .. ,...,_1~•• ll< • r r,~,, ~4'"' 1 ---------~l lkn1onstrator Sul'-' I 280 SEL 4-DR j\"oll' In Pro~n·ss . '. . , s 1 ,. :\ L' 1\ u ! o 111 a t 1 1: transn11ss1011, usl · l. at t ic ·"·' · ,. riry. radio, heater, po11·1·r sh't'i'- 2000 E. 1st SI., S.A 558-7871 in..:. far·1ory air L'Ondilioning. '1'1 i\lAZDA 1 1 ~ Ton. !432f'Uil11. 12,000 n1i. Clean! $8900 Sl 795 * ;,.i~77J :-.( •. 11 a "Pad"'.' Place an ud1 Jim Slemons Autos, lmpuned 970 Autos, Jmponeo 970 Imports Clearance $ale '73 SAAB'S PRICES START AT $2995 1301 Quail Nc11'port Beach 8:13-9:1,()(} P,NTER F'R.Oi\! 1\1acARTHUR AUTIIORJZED SALES & SER VICE Jim Slemons Imports 1 \~'e'rl• lop buyer for any u:>N i\1e1·ccde.s Benz.~ 1301 Quall Newport Beach 833-9300 E!\"I'ER FROM l\lacARTf-:IUR 73 MERCEDES 450 SLC COU PE Au I o ni a t i ,. tra11~1"'11b.siun, 1·udiu ht>alc1· power slecr- irn;:, rii.c:tory air condilionlng, and only 5,000 actual n1i!cs, I# G..~7:ll SAVE Jim Slemons Imports ·1301 Quail i\\·11'fl0rt H<!il\'il ::t"~1·W«X> r.:-.·1'F:R ,.,B.Oi\l j\:JncAB.TJJUrt ~ EFFICIENT" " • 1101. For 101' doll~r .. we Blld to "PPr"'·iale (""lEQPI •· ' •. ,, ' ->V · • RENAULT utensi.UI, super clean, new • l EH '• 11t' Uob at Bf'rtch Jmriort~ SAVE Jodiiy, bright paint job e 145's MUST SEE e 144" --. - i!lritrh Jh11p1111~;1 I .ft ""'" l'I ( ''"' ,..__,,.,., .. ~:••1 H• ~I _•:t•'..!A? ] '73 4j0 SL, full flO\.\'l'J', lo n1l!t•ag•'. Sharp. pd ply. G:!';-9141 days, 99~--0lflti eVl'~. ---'70 :!SO SL fl'lt'i'c~d•'i; CorK~U.JJ'Sl' cond111u11 • :1.)1'1-J:JOO ur &16-ltl~ MG '69 MGC • GT RARE 6 CYL . i!h•ilrh Jh11p1111~" RENAULT R-l2 4 DOOR'S TO • t42's E • 1800'9: APPRECIAT Now h Tho Time To f ill' l ~' ,, ", ... I/. "'. • • '" • t• ' ' • "' • Aut0ll1attc TN1n11mission SALE $2499 '73 911T coupe, black R-15 \V/hlnck leather iuter, air (#51121 NEWPORT IMPORTS «ond, koni"s, a!! extras. SALE $27'9 ,\ •. k,·ng $10 000 ,.,,~,,"'"' ,.. 3100 \V. Coast 1-l~iy .. N.B. r,,a"'2_3!:1:-)2 ' · lH.rv.>olU • Dick Miiier Motors 642-9405 ' 120 w. Wamor, S.A. '69 VOLKSW°'A~G~E=N~ 73 POR. 914, nu gold niet 557·2'132 !:!~(;;; "':: .. ;;"""$,'\'9'~: IRENAU[Jtl Slj)UAREBACK >l/l.-04"1, 7-IOpm 4 ,,_ tran~ni•~lon, mdio '68 PORSCHE 912, llC\I' paint . _ . and hea1(!1, SAVE! :OtMl.uuu -VOLVO 1966 Harlxlr, C.1'.f. 646-92.03 1961 VOLVO, Classic 5'14, 11.ll cn·iginal, $300. 837-~ .~ t•r1gine. $·1100. Ca 11 $1225 Bt'at!ly . O\Vn somelhing 5-J,IH\612. sp1."'l·iul. "iO, Por.;-,~h.~9~11~-T~.~Spu-,.l-o. SAAB DAVE ROSS Autos, U1ed SAVE 1011 miles, llltlh'S, an1-f1n, PONTIAC 1·'""""" ~.;,oo. 49·~""'-'63 SAAB Sam Neve 766 Shllmer Dr. Costa Mesa * P.ORSCHE-i96i .* 96 2.DR Hl:11to1'L'd. ln1111ae. ;152-1.l75 , I I d. '("~ll!OF' --.. spce( , an< ra '\O w J '71 PORSO-IE 91·1-t inngs. $495. A~J -~'!\l. appl". group. Priv. 2·180 lltt.rbot• Blvd .. Costa Mesn 546-8017 68 V.W BUG '{ f"IU a.re tlie winner of !\!GTF "19.-.·I" Clas~ic. ! Pty . 'l~l&-6189 Dick Miller Motors Con1plctr restoration, finest 'j(l P<1HSCHE 911 T. \'!'11011·, 11.0 \V. Warner, S.A. R('d sedun 11·ith: 4 speed, 1'A./Jio, ht>il!!'r and lv1v I niilt•:l, (\\'QJ890l. TWO FREE TICKETS .. the RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW SEPT. 19TH-23RD in So. Cal 6-l·l-66SO I llHl.:!S. xlrHs. in11nac. Call 557:zi32 '69 ;\1G l\Iifigct S:HOO. 49'1-1077. SUB $1149 BILL MAXEY At the ANAHEIM STADIUM 2000 Stale College Blvd., Red, A-l l'Olld. $1150. Call PORSCHE '72, 9ll'f, Sepia 6-12-4-191 brov.·n. Excel cond, must TOP $$$ l3•·Ul"h J111ports 11•ill buy your :\JG. pair! for or r.ol. F11r 1\)J• dolia1', Sl'I.' Bud 01· Bob al lieach ,Ia1ports tO<lay. scJI, Dest offer, 494-4968 '60 F'ORSCHE $1600 X!nt n1ech. conrl . Xtras. * 979-914-t * TOP $$$ B,•::u·h Tn1por!s \Viii bu~· your Porsche, paid for or not. For !11p <lollal', see Bud or Bob a1 Beaeh J111porh1 today. '].h•arl1 ]lt11p1111!"' ~.'L1i 1;>00 v, l ,,..;1 •bgl""'' TI ""'"•~·• " x" !-1', 0,-106 · . . . .. -· .. . TOYOTA Anaheln1 Ride In a differen1 Y..'Orld ol 18881 BEACH B L. 847-8555 silcn1't', coin!ort and JX'l'· f-fUNTlNGTON BEACH Please call 642-5678 ext 339 to claim your ticketJs. 1 North County Toll tree uun11X'r Is 54(}...l.Zlll. formance. The nc11· '73 SAAB ---==-=--=="""'"-- fron1 S'.l•edcn a·t Beal'h Im -TOP $$$ ports, etc .. • , Bctu:h ln1ports \\'ill buy your Vo!loo1"agct1, paid for or not. For lop <lotlar , see Bud or Bub a i Beach Import~ today. -BARRACUDA 'H.h·ar!1 Jlnqn111~; .1.~ I <XI , < .~r 11'1'""' n "".-.-·' +"., 1o1 ,,1(,,., .. --------ALl~A ROMEO -SAAB in NEWPOR'I'. illl'arl1 Jl111p1111!"' f l!' 1,'<',. '" • ~ oc.,,.,. ' """" ' '" ' '' > \'. t Ii~ . -· . --' TOYOTA $2021.95 plus t:Lx & lie. is the 1 Delivered Price tor a , '73 TOYOTA COROllA at ..tlWtleui& • TOYOTA ·ml'arh Jh11p1111!"' I +~ ' ' • " •' ,'," ',", ~ '71 vw VAN * 1971 VW Con\•ertible, Super Bug, Mt/F?wl rarllo, $1750 or best offer . !l19-.s979. '63 V\V Convt, ne• p. }~resh paint Runs, but eng ncerls work, $250. 646-6(l)t. '65 'CUDA 1-llgh PerformallCe V-8, auto, A?.1-Fi\1 tape. 60 series tires. p.,,·r brakes. Extra trans. $425/best offer. 84&-0038 CADILLAC EL DORADOS 14 TO CHOOSE COUPES-CONVERTIBLES • DE VILLES . 38 TO CHOOSE COUPES SE DANS CONVERTrBLES riiany excellent colors Choice of Interiors {Cloth &. leather) Factory air condltionln& Full power . Choice of: Ste reo AM/FM radio Cruise control Trunk openl't' It more AU ln Immaculate 1..'0nditlon Largest selection in Orange County Nabers Cadillac At.rl'HORIZED DEALER ~HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sund~ '72 CADiLLAC Sedan de Ville. MWlt · be M>ld at a aacriilce. Hu been lovingly cared for by o~ owner slnee birth thn.t 16,cm VOLVO mile" c.11 6'6-72ZI '" det&ils. '68 VOLVO 160 ACRES ol produd "i 142 2.0R. ••heal land In Canada at $150 per acre for be1t A u t o m a. t l c tra.rmnlsslon, Cadillac wanted. 642-3002 chrome v.irecls and J'Rdial tir...~. (h\\i'\'444l. '62 Coupe de VIiie $1495 Xlnt cond. $4$/otter. I96G Hal'"'"· C.M. 646-9303 548·2687 ,,,. 646-239' Drrler Your Color Today! Dick Miiier Motors ·n COUPE de Ville, blk '73 TOYOTA l:aJ \V. \\'arnC'r, S.A. ~·/leather int. 1 o ad e d 557.zt r.l ~·/xtras $4100. 53&-4563 LAND CRUISER 1!167 VOLVO ms Wagon, '"' a broeio ..... u your !IT ?.000 miles Warn Hubs auto, R&H , service record. ltems with 1!8.se, use Daily ~ctio, Tacom~ wheel11, 10': $950. 551-1368. PUot Clalllllfled. 64i-56'18. Tripper Tire1. <598.JFV). Autos, Imported ~-.Autos, lmeerted 970 $4495 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA DEMO CLOS·E OUT SALE 18881 BEACJ-l BL. 847·8555 i-IUNTINGTON BEACH '71 Toyota 1200 Sprinter USED CAR SPECIALS DEMO DEMO DEMO DATSUN 610 DATSUN 610 DATSUN PICKUP Service 'Mgrs. De mo., 4-door sedt!l n, full fac- tory equipped, plus mag wheels. Rev. Russell's Demo., 2-door, a utom atic trans- mission, full factory eq uipped. Plus mag wheels. Super Me1t Rudy's Demo., Automatic transmis- sion, rt!idio, mag wheels, c~rome bumpers, end '"'$2 9983°5 5294960 '67 KARMANN GHIA ·l sp .. (·d. r;1rliu, B<..'1111tiful, tan .;·ar 111!h lov.1 111ilt'<H..'1'. 1i..:1vs1;11. LB;(· n•·w. l'OI Now r. Used Car Soln . 5 287910 1970 DATSUN SlO WAGON \Vhite "'i!h J'('d interior, 4 spc·cd, rndlu. Lil<c nt•\1'. SALES HOURS SERVlCI HOURS -1;-nl"4 0oRy R•tatst MH.-Sat. 9 a.m . to t p.m. s .. c1o,. ' o.m. to 6 p.m. MOft.-Frl. 7:30 a.m, to 5 p.m. Senlc....,_,. Saturday 7:30 to N- I • f ' HUGE SELECTION OF QUALITY USED CARS AT SALE PRICES! " CALL 493-3375 OR 831-1375 1' .. Vi nyl Top, i\.1ag Wheels (767. BZW!. $1399 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 HUN'rING1'0N BEAOI PRVT ply, '72 Toyot.a, 4 dr, stk shift. 4 spd, buc: seats, 1 owner, lo miles. 54S-4667. '71 TOYOTA Corolla deluxe station wag. Xlnt cond, $1Zi0. 675-1275 TRIUMPH TOP$$$ Beach Import.~ will buy your Triumph, pa.Id for or not, For top dollar, see Bud .011. Bob ,at Beach Impm11 today. i.!h-.irh ]lt 11p11rt~. +' . -• ,. • l 1 • '70 TR-6 GT COUPE 4 ~peccl and A.i.\f/Frtl rH.dlO. (li1CQEI. $2195 Dick Miller Motors 13) W. Wat1t('l', S.A. 5.17.2132 1973 , TRIUMPH 750 . Bon· nMtlle, $1350. or trade for van or .l>iPk!Jp. 492--1145 tlll 6. After 6, 496-1785. VOLKSWAGEN :.-~~~-~~-~ '69 V\V Sul, a:b@olutely oerfect! 8 Track, Adlai~ konl1, S2400/0fter. 64$--3498 ·es vw Bua. MW ens. ntW clutch, new tlrtl, xlnt cond S1300 Oll beat otr, 675-6368 '61 VW BuK&mper, fair cond, rebuilt 1600' 1315 euh, 64:l-OWT '&I vw Stdllll Good Cond ition • 546-1856 '72 CHEVY VEGA Sed•n Slic• 1hift, AM rtdio, nic• cir. #bOIEPC. '64 CHEVY V2 TON PU •cylinder,) •P••d i nd imm1culat1! ICZ0075 ) s1795 s395 '71 ~.~.~.~ ..... , ...... "' s1795 low mil1 1. l 55JDJI ) '70 Toyot• L•nd CrulHr s2755 (978AS0l . FREE VINYL ROOF WITH THI! PURCHASE OF ANY New DA'\'"· SU N tlO IN ST()(IC THIS Wl!EKEND, PAI. SE NT THIS AO l'OR FREE OFFER, '74's ON THE WAY.· NOW 15 THE TIME TO IUY • YOUR NEW '73 DATSUN .-* DATSUN SAVES. -.;(; Ytur "tkl• """ Ywr M'-y ''"' ~IWry Clf't 1"4·nli1. But J... opertll"'I ••Ptnlff ,to hi91'1, Mio tl l'I tlfot>f thtm •nYf'IOr1? I You C•n. A c.111111 110, With •round U mlln ptt 11•ll0fl tnO ,.. m1rlt•blY lnexptn•lv• fNln!*llnc.t , 11'1 0111 1 lu1tur1ot11 '""°' mobllt, Tlnled f ltA, fllll ~rptllnQ, Oii rtellnl119 bllcktt ••It• htndtO!'N vln\"I·~~ lnltrlot', tltclrlt: ~"' window,..• 1t'"ttr Ind """"' mote ltf 111 1ltlld•N llOUIPfl"tlll, Th• Dt""'1 t10. A lllllllP'Y eooMIJl'IY c.r. An IOefl 'llfleil• ti,.,. llh come, \ SERVING ALL OF ORANGE COUN TY j !ONLY 6 MIN. SOUTH SAN DIEGO FRWY I ' , I " " .. . . '' ' . .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ,, ;I I I ' ' . . . ' . . ' . t L ' • . . . ' ' :; ' . :{' • . . ' . . . • • • " • . . . • . . ' I . . . . . ' . . . . ' . ' i ' i ' ' • ' ' ' . .. ' • ' ,.,, " . • ' Huntington Beath Trailer IS HAVING ITS 10 DAY CELEBRATION Friday Sept. 14th thru· .. Sunday Sept. 23rd ' ------------------------------------------------~ I Spetial Drawing for the Kids l I -Mini Bike Combination Rod &. Reel Sleeping Bags &. Much More ... I I I I I I I I I I I I ----------------------------------------------~-~ SPECIAi Come In ' &. Register K9n One ol Tllese Grand Prizes! • Duo Therm Air Conditioner • Motor Home Weekend • White Metal Detector • Thetford Porta Potti • Motorola Quad Stereo "~--.. • Plus many other prizes & gift certificates · Daily Drawings No Purchase Necessary! :· GRANO OPENING The Biggest, ' ' :. PRICIS IN :·: :·r All OEPAR1MENTS. 11'-""'1. • . . . " . . . • • • • . . ' . . ' . ' ' . ' ' ' i ' 11.RIZIS! Most Complete R/V Store ®SPORTING GOODS © WELDING & LUBE " ' . BA INS TO THE WHOLE SOUTH COAST! 16242 BEACH BOULEVARD '' ' ' ' ' I I 'I ·, I ' I I • • } ' 1/4 MILE SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FREEWAY HUITlilGTON 8EACll I . (714) 556-8500 ' -. Friday, St-pttmbtr 14, l"J7l ~~~~~~~~· • Auto•, Now 980Aulo•, New 911Biiio!ii•------~'!!!'!!!!'!'!!!!'!'!!!!'!'!!!!'!~!!!!!'I~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~1111111~ 11-------• ~~~~~~~~ ~ ,_, -'---~:.:..:..c:.;;_--= I -:w-!§l I .......... l§J I ............ l§l I --l§J I ~.. ...... l§l ;;;;I ;;;;--;;;;-;;:]~§) I -·--I~ D.\JLY PILDT ~ 50,000 WORJH~ Autos~~:ARO 990 :u:~?.~!O. ;n ~p, Auto~~:ROLET 990 Auto~~;ROLET 990 Auto~~;:ROLET 990 Auto~~~~ROLET ~ A~~~;NENTA~ .... OF ,41 '69 CHEVROL.ET Iin1mla • * '68 CO~TINENTAL. 4 ..,._ '70 CAMARO ~i 0J::~i400~~~56breen, 1~ M~~l~ ;;~1~=-'70 El Camino '71 VEGA Custom 350. JlOY.(>t' ste<>ring, ~ii ~~7i· aoo<I co~ltioo, •t.RSVE LI NLV EONTUO. TRY ...... :: .. V~l~~~;r.··$~~2;Jy2hr9:;25~~u11nTI~~'. '61< fCCLHCEanVtlnoRO SLSET, A/C. •w'.~:· B~9~R. nice t~n· ~~:~ Ge!a~P'.'T:r;.:,i1~: 3 =·1~~ lt1~~~i\~lon, rut!lo, ~~~1'i~~i~:i~U~~~~;~i~ n'!~E: ~~;1~~~~~lux~~~ ~: clition. '73 Sn1oi; ccrtl!lcale. Power Steering, Po\vcr $1310 s1•ats. Vi11)-i roof, radial Ille li73-5177 ~5. 01;~7.~1 B 1 ,';"<900G"·). 1 OY.'ller beauty. , . h ._.., ,,., v. suvt'I' tires, 1i1d10, caler, (.'ONT. '&I 4 DR.0brt ~ ....... Jim Slemons SJ,(f.)11. '62 I1'1PALA, auto, <1 dr. $22.i 51999 DAVE ROSS i:;<lOd conrtidon. Beat olfl'l" $550. All Extro.lii -• ...._ '73 r-:1. Cnn1ino SS. All F.x-Cail.~fi.55695, . PONTIAC JlhOnt' 6.W-'1&~17. Privnte Purly C:otS-2521 ,.... • ~ "" Imports "'" 10.950. eh, "'""" .. -._ CHRYSLER '69 SILVER-Grey Llncol" r,...-_ .._ _ "'11111111 J:{(ll Qua.ii '6.J EL C1\.!\£1NO. V8, nuto '69 C1'1EVY Malibu ituto, V-8 Z.L'iO llurUot· Bl\'<!., Qintlucntal, top condition. ' 4'1~ • ~ Nl"i\'f)(lr1 H1·ath 1ran.~. p/s, Jl/b, $795. alr/cond. air shocks, very Cosra M1'"-l. 516-S0\7 Sl800. Call 638-3739 , ~ , &'!:1-9300 • 9G2-4~tl i..'OOd c.'Ond. 642-5837 'G!J VE'ITE. m, <I speed, air, 1971 Q{RY SLER Ne\\rporl, ENTER FJlO.\I i\tac.\RllfUR Any d;iy is the BEST DAY lo 'iO NOVA, lo nii. Xlut cond. Ai\11.f?-I, tllt sl<'<'ri rig , orig. xlnt running t'Ond belciw Don't give up the ship! NEW 1973 SIERRA VAN I ~u v•n ton"""'on. bubblt: 1<11>. 8 ·:!00, 111" wi-llMIH'. Iron! disc I><••••· 311 v-t. •"tom•hc l••n•miulon, trim ... ,, •m r..:lio, cnrorntt Q"ll. pawer >T••r•n(I. mau wtiee11. w~llt: lt:tt•rf'd 1;,.,.., cu1tomc.lnt, """' ov~I,, llov•. i•nl<, lceoo .. ~ll<tlr.g wlnoow!o w/sc:rl!<:'n$, olni<19 !•DIP. (811 ... EJXOIJIOJ) SELECT FROM OTHER FINE NAMES: Gypsy, tt.liN y Wl'lnlf, Cru!_l,.J, k•ra-""-.. .Si9n'cl V•n, F.ntily w_,.,.,, S.l«t V9111 NEW '73 A ••o•n•li< ''•""'""'o"· 1x»•••r ~•Mring, pg~r bl'•~.,..·. wall 1""''""'"•'· c•t> •"•l>I'' "''•en <toor, ..-ic;~ Cd~, au~lli1ry ti~"~'' ""'em, tr on! n •<..bf•~"'· e.r. 12 ...oil, n.ghl 11~1 ;Jnd camtlCI 1.wn~ I IPVOJ1'\ $69y88 SELECT FROM OTHER FINE NAMES: ,....-Atn>w t "'-I·-e ,..,.. • ,_ St. • ~ t H91W.y Wheell ... . "'~'! ...... LATE MUIJtl RV SAVINGS! '71 FORD IUMll '°' voft c-•ion '70 FORD MtH~TotHOMI (KA.Mii KING} \I-I • .tulO'"l.i ( ,,,l'!onl•\' GI'. IV<o"' \' l, ..UICl'lahc lf¥1Sm•SSion. 'o!ef.o, 11~1,riq. •..i -o. 1to~e. •"' oe~re· \1 ... i:isi 110...,.,.••Mo~n.double1int~. d1n•'I• 01w•• jn~··r~t. llltt'''o'MOt-SIJKP,m,...,.Olher t14: \ C~I ' <•'•• 11'.V\'Oii O~LY ONLY ONLY s39aa $4688 MJ•Wotorho•e V-8, .-Jutom.:itic Tran•mlssior., rear bath, toilet and !.l1ower, double sinks, stove wlHi oven. (058ELA) only ONLY $5288 '72 PACE ARROW "-· Rool 1fr undllowig "' itlllL °""""' '71 FORD Sl'Oln CUSTOM l'fCKU' & I ' JUDI OH CAM'll. Sell idle items . ., ... &U-5678 I run an ad! Don't delay. . Musi flCU, 6 cyl litick. R/H, o~·ner. $2,500. 171 ll 67".>--8458 Blue Book 5-18-2614 'att 5 or "List" It in clusl11ed, Ship -642-5678. call loday 642-5678. pvt ply. 675-7432 5 lines, 5 days for 5 bucks. ult 7 Pl\1 days 64tr9is1 to Shore Result.I! 642-!i67S. --m--mA--~--m--m--~--m ON NELL Your Factory Authorized Chevrolet Dealer SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA FOR 13 YEARS LAST .WEEK lO ·CLEAR OUT ALL REMAINING '73'S 'l:'l i . . We must ·~,nrake .. reoin! · 1:974'S ARE ARRIVING! ·· ALL '73 DEMOS & EXECUTIVE CARS NOW PRICED TO MOVE 'EM OUT! BUY NOW AT ONCE A YEAR SAVINGS BUY WHERE THE BEST USED CARS IN TOWN ARE •••• '70 CHEVY WAGON J\ing:s,vood. V8, automatic, po\\'cr steerinr.:. air C'onditioning. 44,000 miles. Lnmaculatc. t9SSBTJ ) $2199 '71· •eAMARO COUPE 6 cyli nd er. ahtomatic, "llOw« st£'<'ring', 20.000 miles. Nice blue car. (0!3ZHH> $2699 I • ;:.;1 / IMPALA t\!STOM Coupe. Ql&J.· mlt s. A ~ nice car \\'ith air, r.s.: 11.ut'nn1atU:, reg. gas· V8. 1093001\J $1999 '72 PONTIAC VENTURA 16,000 miles. VS, automatic, air conditioning, pov.•er stC<'ring, vinyl top. 1335383) $2999 -· '68 CAPRICE COQP.E. ' Air r.ond .. \If!, 1)1)\\'C'r sl~rin~. IJ(l\.Wr brnkes~ \'inyl 1"11of, nice car. 59,000 n1iles. tXHl\f369J $899 I. '70 CHEVY II NOVA Coupe. Srnall VS, stick on the floor, radio, i::ood n1ill's. Lo1v pricC'. (242EIS l '73 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Coupe. 8800 miles. Air cond., power stt.-ering, automlltic, V8, ~orgE"Ous. Bronze car \\'ilh $1699 b<igo '"""°' $29"99 < '66 CHEVY 112 TON .. ___ ...;... _____ _ Piokup with 8 It. campcc. 4 •OC<ll ,;..,,.;,... , · ''68\fONTIAC ~E ~AllS sion, VS C'nginc. IU39075) Cou1X'. VS, automatic, rndio, heater, f!O\l'CI' $I 099 ..... ,, .. ""0$'1699 '68 OLDS CUTLASS Coupe. VB. automatlc, 1><nvcr steering,, air¥ ' \"!O~RD~A~ERICK cond., 1J4,000 1niles. This is a great buy. lYH~' 36.~'ritil....~v1Jndct.'3 '1Jpced transmission. 70iJ ·~ ~ c:~ttrn'\~ES)'·i ._'' $1599 $1699 '71 BUICK CENTURION '70 FORD 500 4 door sedan . .Full power, air cond., nice car. Custon1 4 Dr. sro. Air. nulO., V8, 1XJ~·cr st('('r· Vinyl root. Looking for a steal 1542CXT) ing. LJ\v, low price. {3350CIJ '73 VEGA WAGON Turbo hydramatlc, radio, 2823 mile!\!. NC'\\' car 11·arrant>. I 1934) $2999 '73 CHEVY II NOVA Coupe. Small VS, auto1natlc, /lO\\'Cr steering, radio. Sharp buy. Sharp car. t596GA\VI $2999 '72 FORD MAVERICK VS, JlO\\'l'r ~tcC'ring, air conditioning, auto. n1atic transrn ission. t529ETEi $2499 '72 VEGA WAGON Right one. 4 speed, radio. like new. (331GNI) , .$.t399, , .. .. s.1,pyp 1_., ~ "',., rS2099 • 1'18 1ulcK WAGOij\ ,, ' .; •73 cAMMO.JcoliPt ~ [1 ~ ·12 v'JGl HATCHBACK Sport \\'ll:gon. Vs. a1Tto .. R&Jfl, ... J,ower M:~. \'8. auton1atlc, R&Jr, J)O\Vl'r slf'Cring, alr cond.. AJr cunditionlng, rndlo, automatic tro.nsmis. air cond., roor rack, 48,000 miles. (WIB559) custum interior, vinyl top. 11473191 slon, nice. t965FLW} $1599 ; I . •: $3599 $2299 f.,.> ____ ,_...__..--..--...--.::..---.,,_ .............. __ ..._ ....... _, ''Quality l s The. Reason Why ConneU I~ The Place To Buy" plffc. V4 .ll,llorNI•~ l!•n11T1i11u;111, """' llff'\'"19. -brllft, ,,.,,,. ... ' """'' fl!p Mil Olntt1t, P <U. tl. ••OIGO'fl![l'O.lrO''b°•'~!"°'-'«t-I •l"'·""""' ,sl!oeloll.••i<"IU:lpl ' •-In. 5-Mll.!E!o1"6l, Ii ~ rltr9'J110t, 1\111 bllh'ofl'n, INny "'* ntrn.. Mint ccint:1,t1011! !~?NII ... T7388 ONLY $2988 • . ' 2828 HARBOR_ BLVD., COSTA . MESA . -546-1200 I • • • • ! • • • . . ' • ' ' < ' " ( , ; ' ' ( ' ' • ( f ' f . ' ' " f c • t . l l ~ " • • '· t t f ' ' • f ' 1 ., "' [; ~ t I f i ! f I i I ' I I • BRAND NEW 21' lo1dliner MOTORHOME byR-..." · ) b11rner r•n9• wilh ov•n, 1:>•tl1room, furne t e, 0.0 .H, ft9, Dodge , 1.heui1, VB, eulom•tit tren1mi11ion, power 1teerin g, di1t brelc•1, .,, ....... ,~5.iiB OllDEll YOURS TODAY Ill.AND NEW · I 20' ,MINI MOTORHOME flin9 tiy Redman 360't u. in. Dodg• VS •n9ine, tuto. tr1n1., 4 burn•r range, btth- room, duel rear wheel1, bett1ry t onverter, power 1l~e1in9, power br•kc1. [$2 0300385 ) 5 5688 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Frlda:y, Stpltmbfr 14, 197.l BRAND NEW 28' Roadliner MOTORHOME by lledmon Dodge 440 c.he11i1. Ve, 1111tom1tit tr1n1mi11ion. pl111 f11ll factory equipped. 5 7988 24' Ro1dlin~r MOTORHOME by lledMCtn R1n9 e with ov1n, btthroom, f11rn1et. 0.0.~. te11._ Ood9e Ch1_1· 1i1. VI, eutometic lr1n1mi11ion, power 1teerong, d11e brelce1, tilt wh eel, dual r11r whe1!t, 1l1etronie ignition. Sii.AND NEW ' '73 o·oo· GE· All Stu vfn . C•nverslen '56988· ORDER YOURS TODAY br ALL STA ~ 121" wheel b•se , Y'S , power steering, power brake1, U di nette, 1tove, ice box, sink, 6ut,ane, bubble top. {40732) VI eufomelie ff1101mis1ion, bubbl1 top, 3 bYr111r 1lov•, lee bo•, buf11ne, dreptl 1nJ loh of 1tof;9 ,. 54188 DAILY PILOT .f 7 . ' '8895 ,_=NTH WAGONS . WEST Custom Vans ' . . JMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~ . ' . " I* Is 11>1•1 "" pymt a. •t.s '' to1•1 mo. pymt. Ind. •••· Lle .. a. all c1rrylno ttwirgn on tl)pl'crwd crtdlt t0, 1M monl..... Dtf"1'ed pymt. prk.• M15'.IO lllCI, ltll & lk:"1ff. ,ANNU4L PERCENT4GE RATE 9.mt. VICTO~IA ST. OVER DEALER INVOICE I . . ) ' DAn.V PILOT Friday, Sfpttmbtf 14, 1~73 SA VE HUNDREDS OF D.OLLARS .•• ' ' ' EVERY CAR IN srrocK NEW ·&DEMONSTRATORS \ .. ,, . . ' DICK JOHNSON CLOSE-0.UT •ALL 1973's • • FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS TREMENDOUS SELECTION TAKE YOUR CIJ.OlC~ FROM ... , , t ~ .' , I • fr .. , •' ' ,. ~ . . ,• . . ' ' 40 Lincoln Continentals & Marks . . 1-...-, ~ • ' 7 5 Mercurys, Montegos~;;&'1 Capris SPECTACULA.R USED CAR SPECIALS '71 MARK III Full power, auto. temp. air conditioninf, 6 way power seat, leather interior, landau roo , stereo ta~ld & Serviced by Johnson & Son. (7 ) $4975 '71 CADILLAC BEAUTIFUL SEDAN de Ville, Luxury equtped thruout. full power auto. temp., air con .1 6 way power seat. AM-FM stereo radio, till & lele steering wheel, landau roof. ( 6IOCXV) $4 375 Home Of Th<! Ne• Caf' , • • ''Golden Touc.Ji'' '69 MARQUIS COUPE ,. Auto. Trans., 1,>0wer steering and brakes, pow- er window s, air conditioning, landau roof, ra- dio, heater. (XKV707) '71 MONTEGO MX 2 DR. Sold by Johnson, serviced by Johnson, air cond., auto. trans .. p<iwer steering·& brakes. (213DFC) $2175 • $1975 '69 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARDTOP Automaitc tl'.ansmjssion, fa.ctory air, radio, heater, power steerµtg & brakes, vinyl roof. (417AGH) '73 MONTE CARLO EXQUISITE-14,000 MILES VS, air cond., pwr. steer. & brakes, stereo ra- dio, heater, landau top. (868GNJ ) Sale Priced $1475 . ,I' . • ., . . "Ora nge CounttJ'.S Fatnilv o] lint Car.r" • 2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA e {46-5630 . . .. " ... ' '70 ·CONTINENT AL ', 4 DOOR SEDAN . Full power, factory air, landau roof, leather interior. Always serviced at Johnson & Son. (288ASH) $3475 . '7 0 IMPALA COUPE ' ' LOW MILES V8,,a'1lO. trans., radio, heater, power steerin~, powet brakes, factory air conditioning. (28 • CQD) $2175 Home 01 The New Car , , • "Golden J'owcltl' . . . • ; • • • • • . • . • • . . • • ·1 I ' l i I • • • • • • • • . . . . . . : i ~ ' • • • ~ , , • ,. . ~ j i , i ~ l ~ ~ s .. . ' . ~ .. • j • • , . • . -'-_.. _____ 990_ 1Autos, Usect 990 Autos1J UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, ONG WO Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 .; CONTINENTAL DODGE · FOR~ LINCOLN MERCURY , .. OLDSMOllLE OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH PONTIAC ~ '72 CONTINENTAi •. ""''k 1910 DODPE Clmlle"'"" '61 FORD 1913 "'RK IV. Lo mii;; MONTEGO MX. ~ "" lull '73 .OLDS ... L"A BELOW BOOK-'13 PLYMOUTII Du'1er. Full '73 LE MANS a IV, White lv/1vhite vinylt_op. Conv., A 1\l/1'~J\.I radio, 383 G ,._. pwr air cond stc!reo Jo ml UC I, I di I 10 000 'l Royal blue lcalher int. engine. $1450. iol·l7-52.11 a rt 6, ALAXIE 500 Vinyl top, mint cond. Call Bcsi offer ~ ' • RoyaJe Cpe. BCB.utl!ul blue Low miles Good milee.ge pwr., 8 r, ac, e c. ' AutomatJc radio heater Stereo. A;ll power. Very fme or t21 31 773-2401 dAyli 2 Dr. Jf.T. V8, automatic, G4CHI073 all day Interior \vlth while vinyl top. 1968 V1sta C'hllser, 9 pass., mi's. Sac. $3NTll50. 97!H>838. prnver ste'.enn~ .\ braket, ai; j' cond. Priv. Pty. 54&--08ll radio, heater pcw•Cr steer. MUSTANG Radio, heater, automatic tull power, air, xlnt cond., PO AC l'OGXTndl)tloni,.., ' wbeeh:. um. '69 CONTINENTAL n 11 FALCON ;ng, foctory air oon<titionlng. MERCURY trans, l"""'1' ste@rlng, power """ tl..,., 830-0!14. powee, 11ereo, .wn roof. (XDM'1621. '61 MUSTANG braluro, power window• & '68 OLDS CUU&11 Sup'""'e '69 PONTIAC NO MONEY · clean, lo ml, $2595, &l·l-1155 '62 f'ALCON wagoo, I ownee, $887 '72 MARQUIS V8, automatlc, radio, heater, lactoty air. 'l!iOO actual 2-dr. Xlnt cond. $995. ' CUSTOM "S" DOWN I or 644-0097 r 63,000 reg miles, auto gas BROUGHAM power &1cering, powe r mllea. 8154695 * 645-2396-• ~~ ;~1 ~~~ ,.!X;,.B~~ ::.'oil:i~~ .. cs"',;'~•r. Ph DPAOVNTE RIOSACS Fun power, lactDry air, l>fi. bnkes. suim . Jim SlelllOlll PINTO V8. • .,!!G,2!"'°"· $103.74 per mo n>J. Mint $8500. '"'.,;159. FOnD OTA. .$2795 llilwww. ts ·n RUN-A-BOUT. Au t o "'dlo,~':""953• pov/er """' 36 ""'· DEL on 9P· cred!L !' 2480 lfarbor Blvd., DAVE ROSS ,.~. tran~ D!Jcc, nu liret, tng, "~s.1283>. • DAVE ROIS COUGAR 70 TORINO co.i. M.,. 54&-9017 Jim Slemons PONTIAC N~QI&~~ ~mu... Clll Jim · PONTIAC. 'II co U GAR xn1. "'" STATION WAGON JEEP Imports c!: ~".'!:"' ~ir 133-9300 DAVE ROSS = ~".:"' ~1• ' -75.· alr, gauges, Sharp. Hadlo, heater, 'a"utom11tlc 1301 Quail ENTERFROMM.cAR'nfUJ\ PLYMOUTH aANf1AC I;>=.;;;:~;;-'-;"""+;~::_. '137 trans., power stecrln.r Inc· '71 TOYCYI'A Landcrulser Newport Beach fl.1USTANC '69 Convertible. rv ,u;MANS '71, 6 .eyl, 1u1o ti45-8614 toey nlr. OIOAQJ. 25,00o 3'· w/Wn•~ hubl. Crpt'd, tool 83.1.9300 p/s. P/b. l'lldlo, 60,000 ml, SalaoSlrM-O .• ILI ,72 IARRACUD" 2411) Harbor Blvd., p/1, lo mlteop. lib rUl&lo, DODGE tual n1llcs. boxes . Xlra gas cans. New ENTER FROM MacARTHUR white w/blk top, blk llhr OLD , , " Co.ta Mesa 546-8017 xl.nt cond. $2100. INf..'1021 1 $2295 Arm<trong tires. MUJI sell, · Inf, 11.:IXJ, call D Crowell . OMC TltUCKS VI, automatlc, r'odlci, hcai.r, ,70 . LE MANS '67 F1REBIRO, thtyt W. leaving country ncxl wc•k. '71 COUGAR ~246 HONDA CAltS power lleatoa, power voryc1~40,000mlleo: i ·~.,~~ ~~N Jim1 Slemons ~~;i;".'61"~. ~°1.; .XR7, *good•·a1_~~"·nAN~·a11" auto, UNIYDSITY OLDS ::;!'";i~ui8=~· ~~~;_~~ ~"'!1• 11~· " j '3295/Be&I OUor mpo"5 Greg. -~~ ~ ----llhd. --$3042 ~.... ~~.... -~~. T llRD •Aa.JIMO V8, automatic, radio, heater, tion2nJ, vtruit top. 3 to d100fJe • ~ 1301 Qw>il LINCOLN factory air conditioning, Oorta "'--from. (!MAGE:J, (lllSAUG) 1:1968:::--::::::::r:=:=:-:~--l l 'ff DODGE. 383 -bucket Newport Bench • v\o)'I -, (7113112), "'UICK CASH .13 OLDS CUtlaa &Jpnme. DAVI ltOIS (681a'll. • , • .,E.!UNDEllBlllD, 4 dr, oeatr. bocly clan. only l!l1·9300 '13 MARK IV Lo ml vinyl fWM!I 'P' Cl'anbeny A White, o/c, tffa ---. --lhocb l Jl,000 mL on tbla ear. iiso. ENTER FROM MacARTHUR t~p. mint 00.;,i 6«-5!a1 alt tlUUU THROUGH A . ......,, am/bn t 1 P e... PONTIAC """"' Xlnt cond ruoe. • mo · ........,., '72 GRAN Torino Sq, \Vi;cn. lOpm or Write QauUled M bucke~ Jo ml 1 3100 "WWI H·~ Blvd YA"&NT ii !ffA Oii w;;; lull ' Llk• new. Air, """'· wit\. No. 007, Dall¥ l'llot. P .O. DAVI, ROSS DAILY l"ILOT !l6HZI ' · o,;i; y-;:;' 5iM0i1 DAVI !KISS J ..,. 'l!I""!"· '* cOnd. xint do!"' "" 1!?>9, 4.?4-41m Box 1000, c.tta M-ca. PO,NTIAC " WANT AD ,.,.... -·-,. tn"~ w·~ _ ·-o-_• . PONTIAC • v .. ,._. · Allltotr.~ Nffidfl ''P11d''T l'llct1nadl 9'l6'6 ~ .......__ ~, ...... UR..... ....1.4..,.._ ..... .lr. _..., a.,..;n·' A"· ... ~, c II '12 ~ li•·~ Blvd.. 642 5678 .. ·' Dolly PUol Cl-lllod . Sacl'lllce * Hutiormv.i. ....... -· --_,..... cu WI • • • ..... ..... , .fl O' -..... g. You'll nnc1..it Ut ClusirJed Colla ~fcsa s.y11 • Ad. 6G-$t8. . ~ 5f5..ll)2 Colla Mt'llll 15"!17 ms. • 10-1180 • • . . I ' I { • • ' • • • ' ' • ' . • • " . . . . . . . • ' . ' • . . . • . '• . • • . • • • • • • . • • ' • .. I ! ' ~ \ l • \ ' . • • • • • ' • • • • • . . . . l • • E , • • • ~ ' ~·' l j j ~ ! ~ l ' ' ' ' ·: '· ·: . ' ~ ! .. . • • • ; • , . ' 1 • • ! LAST CHANCE ON 1973 . , DRASTIC OLDSMOBILES . REDU CTIONS BRAND NEW '73 OLDS OMEGA 11 171171 BRAND NEW '73. OLDS 98 $ OVER DEALER INVOICE DE.t.LEll IN'fOICE INCLUDES DLI. l'llEI'. + All lEIATES $ OVER DEALER INVOICE BRANO, NEW $ '73 . OLDS TO RONA DO OVER DEALER INVOICE 17551111 DEALER INVOICE INCLUDIS DLR . PIEi'. + ALL R!:aATE \ BRAND NEW '73. G.M.C. SPRINT $ OVER DEALER INVOICE IJ,159tl 0£.).LEl INVOICE INCLUDES DLR. l'RIP. + All lEIATlS I 501950,1 DEALER INVOICE INC LUOE<,, DLR. PllEI'. + All REIATES . ASK ABOUT OUR 3 YEAR . . . LEASE BRAND NEW 197 4's ~ONDA c1v1c CE~!ER CUTUSS · · 59895 •· OLDS 98 Sl38 52 •• '73 HONDA . CIVIC 1390HPoi $1977 36,000 MILE WARRANTY ' ' ON EVERY USED CAR WE SELL OLDS 88 s12sss.. TORONADO si57ss .. FREE HONDA T-SHiRT GIVEN WITH ORDER NOW FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY ALL )I MONTM OPEN ENO LE4SE OH 4 1'PllOV ED CRIEOIT YOUR HONDA DEMO DRIVE! . ;;.,~~~.~~,.-·;"····· $477 TAKE YOUR ;~.~~~~·~~~~~. $6 77 . CHOICE! '69 PONTIAC BONNEVIL LE. Loodod . l°lEN25J I ;~yll'~~~~y ~ui ppod, ,;, coodi. $8 7 7 Fully equipped, •ir condition-Full power. fdcf ory air, Yinyl tion ln9. !VDX51 2 I in g.,,vinyl top. I 165HDE J t op. I ZVEO I 5 J '70 OLDS '69 CHRYSLER · NEW YORKER 98 COUPE • COUPE DE VILLE '70 DATSUN '70 MERCURY -'68 RANCHERO MARQUIS WITH CAMPER <4 speed, r•dio, he11t111 r. ()OICIOI $877 '69 CAD . Fully equi pped, air condi tio n-Fully equipped, .t ir condition- ing, vinyl top. (YZS22 61 ing . (543EIG ) lo•ded incl•Jdin g •ir cond. !85255A I :~:::~:.~~~G::diliooio9 $977 s77 down IXXA DDl I '69 DODGE $1477 POLA RA ~~i f •d includ ing •ir cond. I XXA - · · · ·5 7777 morith :~!p:~~~~~OZ~l~ipped, ,;, $9 7 7 "' " ""' ,_, ,.., ""'" '"" "~""" .,., •~• ,., """" ... "" """~ '"""" ~ '"""~ ;~:~~~~=~~~co od iliooio~ $14 7 7 condition i,ng. (770A . crt'11•1 tor )Ii .--1~ •. Oei~rrl"!I 1>vm1 11··~· ·~ 01/i l) lnrl ••• &. 1k. ... l f //INNU//IL PE RCENl ... GE RATE IS,..,..,,, TOh•I c•il> Pl'k~ Is l1:ZOO. WE . APPRECIATE -YOUR BUSIN.ESS •I I )i ' l , ,' ' '~ l i~ ' ! j ' ' ·- ' Friday, S!pte1nbtr 14, 1973 • • learanee of the yeftir.:;, · .. . · .,~; . . . . . . ~ For the ~ar 01 ·.-111~ yeari·:~:c~ BRAND NEW FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DOOR PILLAllD)IAIDTOP INClUDfS cr~;,..o.111111ti<, power front di1< b1ok11, ,aw.,. 1h1rln1, '' A19 v.1, •i11yl 1101 ,,;,,., •inyl roof, 1lool-b1ltod WSW ti•••, con••ll· Otnce group, d•lu•• bu111p•r group, All (ONDITIONEl-S!lEC:fAllf, J.M /fM STElfO IAOIO, linl•cl glon, lighl 9rou,, delu~• wh•el covtri, •nd itt0<1l Slit. '''· Ser JJ4N111S11 Save $1100 FROM MANUF, LIST PRICE BRAND NEW '73 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE 8 PASSENGER WAGON INCLUtHS cruitt.O•motic, powtr front disc brokt1, powtr 1leerl119, J .woy doorgor. w/powtr window, eltctric clock, whtel <o••ri, duol locing ••or 1eo1I, 400 (10 2 v.1, 1teel-b.i11d todiol ply wow lirt1, conweftlenc• gro up, front <O•,..ri119 lo"'pl. delu•e luggage tock, dthue <orgo or.o, deu•e b•"'P'' group, AIR CONOITIONEl--SflECTAllE, AM./fM STElfO lAOIO, vinyl inoul body 1id1 "'oulding, opp.oron<• prott.;tion group, delu•• 1eo1 and 1hou!der belh . tinted glon--<;ompl•le, •l•<l1i< power doo.-1o<k1, p .. r. 1ide .. ind., di• .... 111. covert, hea..y.duly tu1ptn1 i0fl, Save $1300 FROM MANUF. LI ST PRICE now 1973 FORD LTD 2 DOOR HARDTOP DEMO INCLUDES crui••·O•"'Olic, pow•• Iron! diic bro~t1, power 1tee•ing, electrical clock, 400 (10 2 V-1. vinyl roof, (olifo•n io •"'i11ion1 1•11:,-,9, ole•l·btlled tadlo! ply w1w lfreo, con•tnitnc• group, front <otntring lo mp1, deluol bumper group, oir cot1diliontr-S.lectoire, .AM/fM 1ltreo radio, 0111omolic 1eol bock rt leo1e, oppeoronc• prol•d ion fl•Oup, dthue 1eot and 1houlder belt.. linltd, gfo u--complt l•, lighl group, t ltclrl< pow•• door Jacki, powtr oiclt windows, delu•• whet/ «W•ll &. "'°''I SALf '4195 PRICE (Srk. ~006. Str. t:JJ62Sl032121 SAVI• S 1973 FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT . 2 DOOR SPOITSROOf DEMO Monuol fronl dloc broke1, lrim 1ing1 with hub cop1, dllCll racing 111iffort, color-k•t•d corpeling, pleated win)'! ttol tri.,, 11111ollic 9low pcii~I • ..00 (10 2 V-1, 101.., 1lrip1. 1e!.ct .. hlfl cr11i1t.O•lllO!ic, G70•1' wide oYOI b•ll•d ISW ISi, roi11tl whit_. lttt.rs, power lle1rin9, power fronl d isc btoke1, dtlu•t bumper 9•0Up. All CONOITIONfl-SElfCTAllf, AM./fM. STElfO IAOIO, vi1ibilily group, linttd 9la1i.--<G,,,pltlt, dtlu•t "'httl SALE '3695 PRICE (Sit:. ~IU, Ser. ~3HJ$Sl5l4011 SAVI SS BRAND NEW '73 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE , I PASSINOIR WAGON IHClUDIS t1uh•·•·11tetic, pew•• lrt1111 llllloc ltra•11, ,..,,, tl111h1f, J._., · lllleor9ot1 w/pe-r wl11ftw, oltdrlC; cle<•, '\!<ti fecl11t• ,_ '""• 4ef' 9r1111 1111toltk, •OO CIO 2 V-1, 1qui10 1t .. 11tllo111 .,iit-11, C.llf9n1Mo 1•li- 1ICN11 "'1lifif, Jr1l1l.5 '1l11l-bet1 H rodiGI ,1y wtW tin1, -110..Co ,....,.,, ~er , • ...._... .. .,, d1lu10 kltfOO• 1'1K•, 1111•1• corf" •••· cl1itl•• ltu111pet f"Nil'· Alt CONDITIONING-SllK1'Alll, AM.lfM mt!O IA.010, Hle1e MOt e11tl 1lloutlll., b1U1, linl ... tolo11--c-p14i., IJ.tllt f'~'' 1ltchi< ,ow• ._. 11Kl1, cl1h11• wh11l ff'fen &. """" llllwty ••• ,.,..1o.1 Save $1300 FROM lri.,ANUF. LI ST Pltl(I: BR.AND HEW . 173· CRU(SAIRE · ''1.4 . PAZ" CAMPO VA-WITH IUMLI 1°' INCLUOIS ''"itil pelnl, 1•••• l 901111, r19r .... 9l•1-4b.•ll, 111111• :JO! v.1, IH «or9• 4-91o1-li•ed, CUSTOM IOUIPMfNT 'AOCMil. 1700 llt, OVW ,.,.c•o1•. odiu1loble pci11en9•r 1•ot, Jllllddff i111ttu-.t ,.net, full widlh, 111111111 .. l oil pr•nu•• 9011901, fuel 1y11e.i. ._ -i11l .. , ~1rol,,"111111i11ion "ui••·o-.,ollc J 1pe1Hf, optlonal rolio ,.., 0119, (ZJ IJ>.IU C 6 ,. f•Olll, (2) 1.011• . .S f 10 Pl ,_ ISW, Mttp 1idt ....i,dlego, ltf1 wlit, lo• low lin• Mirror1, ,...., WokM; ffd"'o4 .ovH i.ro.I ••hou•I, rctd;-pu•h bunon, linled wh1d1hi11'.d, ffh -4· illg rodiolor, $5 amp ollernalot, 70 0111p llott.•y, lrtfll l -h-i lfvlJ' 1~ecl1, ,.ower 1te•ring, h•O•y duly l•Onl 1p•ing1, ontl 1110tel S!k. lllO 5•r. l~GH6Ul4 , Save 5930 NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DEPT.! .. SAVE NOW ON OUR 2 1/2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INS! '67 IMPALA WAGON Radio, !>eater, 111lom1+ic lten111'1i11ion, power 1l1eri119, air conditioning. ITYT2 t I) '69 LTD 4 DOOR ¥8, a ulomntic, rt d io, healtr, powP• 1teerin9 & bre~e1, d:r cond., vinyl roof. IXXZ8b9 ) '70 MUSTANG H.T. 6 cvli nd~r. Economy 1p eci1/. Radio, heater. !77l BFCl $1195 PINTO·MA VERICK·MUSTANG·TORINO GALAXIE·,TD• WAGONS '68 IUICK SPEC. WACiON FORD SALE! MANY TO CHOOSE FROM '65. TH.RU .'73 MODELS' . Sqolr11, 2 D-& 4 -s ..... & 'H•dl--& ~ Air. Co;lllliio Inf> 4-6-1 cyllod..., WAllANTYS AYAILAIU. ' '69 FORD XL HAIDTOP EXAMPLE '73 FORD LTD H.T. full po,,.u, facto..,. o ir condirion<ng, /\M l fM, ~inyl •ool, power door lot~•. and only •,000 m~e•. [171GIU) .. EXAMPLE EXAMPLE '72 GRAN TORINO WAGOK loclie, ~""'· oulo,..olic lron1..,l11io11, poorer 1leerl11'9, foclory oir condiiloniftf, roof rot•. 1tnd 23.000 rwlle1. (29.S[GfJ '72 CUSTOM 4 DOOR Ii~ .. l•I. A11lo,,,olic, power 1Nerin9, 9004 ,..i!t1: 2 la choo1t tro"'. 113.S..OZJ 11.50l:l9t $1684 ' R•dio, h••I••· 1111tom•tic, power 1l••r· in9, vinyl roof, air cond ., I 747EIAI '71 TORINO Ci.T. HARDTOP i• Rad io, ha1l1t, •11iom1tic, power •l••r· in 9 , eir co11ditionin9, (30601M ) , '71 CHEVY MALIBU 2-Dr. H. T. Radio, healer, <11 ulom•+ic lrantmin ion. pow1r "•ering, 1ir conditioning, end (593DTA) $2295 '68 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4-DR. HARD TOP, full pow•r. 1ir·con· ditioning. !YCN511 ) '71 PINTO • 4 opood. ,.;;, .,; '""'· whlto oido $1·995 .Ve, 111tom1tic,-r•dio1 h••t•r:. •i1 con· •1 59.5 .·.·.".".".'·.'.,'.·~',.'C.'.'.'---------------· '69 FALCON STATION WACiON I '71 AMC JAVELIN R&H. 1uio., power 1lee•i~9. vinyl roof, AIR CONDITIONING. lo mile1! (83b CQTI '2395 '70 BUICK ELECTRA H.T. . 225. R&H, auto., pwr. 1ttg., winds. iii •2 795'· 1e1h, tilt wheel, vinyl top, AIR COND. l 79b8EUJ . 'd itioni119, rOof rocli::(l54lEEKl · . ... , ___ .__.,:•J._· .;.'---·'--·-----· ·..;·;,.t· 71 Pl. YMOUTH DUSTER '69..MUSTANG MACH 'I br1ke1, 1~r•o r1dlo &· l•p• fl•yl!.f'. . (Auforll•lic, rediO, ho1!er, power 1f1••· i~9, •ir conci1tionin9. llOOOLKJ VI, eutom•tic, po..,.r 1l1ering, power $1·8· ,. ·,·,· ~219ASJ): ' ' ' .' ~ ------------------173 PLYMOUTH SEIRINCi Pl .. · • I·-----··-·-···--··-..;,'-.;'.;.· ···.ol '73 CAMAIO H.T. '71 COUGAR $2995 9.000 .• n ..... ., ... , ...... ".'•••"•HARD ro · ;71 ·r.i1•D LANDA'u "• ' .• •.• '. >:· i 1 tran111111s1on, power 1feer1n9, 1 ir cond. $3 495 Fi.in pp.;i;r, f•etOry ol• conditioning. VI, 11utom~tic. r•dio, healer, power iliorting. vinyl top, •nd low, low miles. FIND USED lo1d1Jl,.l11 mil1s, m1ny •xt r••· 'Very low mil••· 1444GOP) 1!1erin9 & bt1ke1 air cond. (J75JETJ ' .... ---' . . ,. $2195 N\AKE OFFER .IALll DI". HOUll1 I_,"" _ _.rt.1 l -"" kt-111-,.. .... ..... Tl IUVlcll HDUll• 7 _,"" -., 7 -,.. T--P~--, . •MT& DI". ONLY1 I-· ,_lat. , .. •• t • ~ .. .San ~lemenie . . • • Today's FIDal ~apistrano EDITION -" N.Y. Stoeks * -. ' --'11($,-4, NO. 257, ·.of -SECT19N~, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1973 TEN CENTS • "i~ , '. Dads .1fC'old Haw ,to •Beat!) Wonaen!)s Lib • + i t •· ' ' ' . -t • '. ·' ,ByJOHfi .ZAUER Of ... Dell( "*' ... -.. A woiftail Tlltirsday c Ii' a I I e G,i! e d members et.the all-ma1e Exchange ·Club ot.'Newport Beach to put· Women 's Lib out of business -if they dare. . "You can do it," slild Joan Brick. a mother of three, professional publicist, and wife of the superintendent of the F0tmtain Valley School District. "You can do it by spending enough time with your little daughters to keep them from growtng up as querulous, nag- ging and frustrated," Mrs. Brick declared. Mrs. Brick said she was basing her ad- vice on one observa.tion: "Most women have poor self-images, lack self-confidence, and -are generally frustrated," she said. "li they try to raise their craughtf!'rs alone, their daughters will grow Up to be like they are -frustrated and insecure. "Men make much better models for daughhi1·1 to learn from . Men go out in lhe world and produce, they have self· confidence, and they have an internal stability that most women do not. "A good father is the most important think in a little girl's healthy develop. ment,'1'Mrs. Brick. maintained. The 40 members of the Exchange Club listened quieUy While Mrs. Brick spoke, ' and when she firiished, they gave her an ovatiqn. One member said privately ar- tcrwards: "In at! the years I've been coming here, I've never seen the guys give so much attention to any of their speakers." Through her speech, Mrs. Brick repeatedly urged the men to spend as much tlme as possible with their daughters. "Try taking that little kid on a business trip some time," she suggested: "I bet you never thought oC that, but your little girl would love it. uns Ba:ards Cited Atomic Fusion Research Urged WASHINGTON (AP) -An Environmental Protection Agency radia· tion authority says the Administration should press research on atomic fusion power "as fast as possible" because or possible health hazards from nuclear reactors in use and plaMed for use. William 0 . Rowe, deputy assistant ad· C~mente's Ambulance Indoctrinated ministrator for radiation programs, said the expansion of atomic powerplant technology and the advent of the "breeder reactor" could. unless carefully controlled, cause anywhere from 11,000 to 33,CXX> wmecessary deaths from cancer and birth defects over the next ISO years. Rowe said in an interview that the teclmok>gy to prevent radiation escape from nuclear facilities exists and must be 8)lpiied, to pttveot public health.prob- ~· ·~ . Bui -aaia the bttedet rtacfor poses many envin>mnental and safety haaanls lbal _...,q;:wwld tiie:Jmll<I. ed almost eojlrely fly --..in. lhe new -and lllll' elperimental- lllsloil approach. . ''Or go over to her high school some day at noon and tell the principal that you want to take your daughter to lunch. I can guarantee you, she'll be thrilled. "No woman can do this for you. They Jack ~ internal stability, and besides. your daughters are probably jealous of the time their mothers have with you. Don't forge~. your daughters worship you and need you. , "Even 1 -who am a super perS:OO - can't give my daughter what she needs," IMftr Pilot '''" ..... San Clemente's new auibulance was only a few hours old when it was pressed into aervlce early this morning. An utbma viclim IUMI a _.., woman -her labor pains oaIY'two mm-. utel apart -were roshed to S a a Clemente General Hospital in separate trips in the $13,500 vehicle. PreldeDt Nixon , foreseeing practical f uslon-power no !IOOOel' than the end or. the century, has ontered ·a massive p~ gram to deVelop the breeder reactor for commercial use by 1985. Howe said, however, that the Atomic Energy Coljunlls!oo, deet>b' 'involved in "breeder" development, bas already ad- mitted that fusion power might be achieved by 1916, only 10 years ·wt the tarBel date for fUslon. IT WAS A BIG DAY FOR KINDERGARTEN STUDENTS AT PALISADES.SCHOOL ON FIRST DAY Mrs..a.tty $imon son, Teacher, Helps Youngsters Get Adiusted to New Environment Tiie ambulance -the first result of the city's share of federal revenue sharing funds -was delivered before nooon Tbursday. ctty firemeq, after admiring what Fire Chief Ron Coleman called "the most modem ambulance you can get," ptepated it for its first trips. Tiie ambulance will become the prtmary medic8J care vehicle for the ci- ty. An old, smaller van used as a am- buJance will be put into reserve status at the rue department's new sub-station at 670 Camino de Las Mares. Firemen !eel the new ambulance Is assured to give acctdeDt vicUms and oilier injured peraoos a smoother, better ride. 'lbe old ambulance' was converted to ill emergeocy use apd doesn't have Uie Oltra shocks or slablllty or alreon- dltioolng, Important to provide a slable isnvirooment inside. A full 111-incb wider in tbe worl<lng ~a. the new lmbulance. will live llrtmen a better cbance at aavlni heart attack victims. · A lol of spsce is neeOed to do cardlo- ""imonlrY maaye; Clilel Ooleman ... Pialned. " . ·It can also carry up to five supine vie- . (S.0 AMBULANCE, Pqe IJ ' State Welfare, Health Secretary · To Speak Tonight ' , Dr. Earl Brian, California secretary of health and welfare, will meet lnlormillly With members of the public and medical ,..,....,. at thli Santa Ana CoUntry,Club - t&laht at & p.lll. ""!rlan II coml1t1 to Qrange Co\Jnty for Ille purpooe of having on oj>porttmity to -tba tubjecl of heilth' .... ·in Cllilorn1a.'' aald Dr. V1Dcent P. Cl.rroll llf JAIPJJla ,Beach. Camll aald Brian will be prepared to ' dllcu• tba ~ of lila office In slate , ... .,..,..t and wtll be open 'to questions Gil Med>Cal, teaddng bolpllals ond olhor -health matters.- Tiie meeU.W Is open to anyone in- tertsted In Health services, not uily pb111C11n1, dentllll or otbera In the lleld cl rii<dlcint, Camill ' .. Id. Tiie mly chars• wtll be for tile no bolt lief. . And former lntalor Secrejary Walter J. lllc&el recently aald some scientists have told him pracUcal fusion power could be achieved within five to 10 years. Existing nuclear power plants bring together masses of Uranium-238, a heavy metal whose atoms split spontaneously and release the beat to drive power- generating steam turbines. _ 1be planned "breeder" reactor is so named because the reaction would be stepped up and used to convert low· energy fueLI into high-energy Plutonium, thereby "breeding" more useful fuel than it comumea IUMI greaUy stretching the available heavy-metal atomic fuel su~ ply. BA NDITS MA.KE UNW A.NTED HAUL ROME-(IJPI)"-Four bandits beld up lwo bank clerks aL gunpoint Thursday and toot the bop they were loodlnl, oo an armored car, police said. Tiie l>qs contained bad checks and contested promlJ8o!Y notes. • Toddlers Be~o111e Kids Some Fears, Sonie T ears as Kinderg artel]-Opens By CANDACE PEARSON Of .... 0.ilY f'lltt 119ff They clustered about the kind.ergirten room door, nervously shuffling their feet, smiling or bare1y keeping back the tears. After consulting with teacher Betty Simonson and making sure the name tags were correct, they looked a lltUe lost and fioally drifted away one by one. The first day of kindergarten at Palisades School in Capistrano Beach seemed to be harder on some parents than oo their offspring. .. A:re you going to be all right?" one father asked his son, who was more ffi.. tent on his Abba·Zabba candy bar. ~'Is it okay if I leave?" ''He'll be okay," assured Mrs . Simonson. • "Bitiy, Come here, I want to say good- bY,e. ,Come over .here," one mother called to her yoong son. He was already at home on the playground slide. other cbildren were climbing on the jungle bars or swinging or playing a . ' _solitary game of ldck'-ball. A few stood .shyly b~" .themselves unt~ Mrs .. Simonson raQg a s.maU .. bell, signifying the begin- nfug pf .class .in room three. Each child was fitted with a tag shaped like a shoe, for walkers, or a bus, for riders, and then assembled cross-legged on the carpet. · f\.frs. Simonson outlined the rules for the new , wide-eyed st~ts: no talking while on the rug, raise a hand before speaking and no nuining to tile batl>- rooma. All were bro~en in the space of a· few minutes, but it didn't really matter. Not .on the first day . Theo a minor tragedy occurred. \Yl'lile Mrs. Simonson was in the middle' of reading tile time-honored ''Gingerbread Man." small sobs were heard. By the ·ume the story was fbllshed, the little girl who had arrived late was' prac- tically wailing, "I want my momma." The crying was soon stopped by tbe sight of a tray of colorful crayons, some construction paper and later, a gingerbread man puzzle. Other children were bolder from the . beginning of lb&. ·new adventure .. "see ' tiJy shoeS;" 7 a ' uttle boy said, proudly.stickinii:.out hllrfoot for the teach- er. 'Ml.e shiny broWIP leather almost re- Dectjid· his equalfy ¥ifb! ra .... The students tried _:.,.·sort of -to be quiet on the rug, but showed their truer natures during play period. The ·large room held many treats, in- cluding building blocks,, paints, games, ..a pJayhoitse, books, a liilening post with stories, records and tapes and Unt6ld ob- jects to touch or smell or look at. Marianne got paint in lier half •. David built a farm. Wayne dressed a baby doll 'while Andrea ironed and Kevin brush- stfoked a solid white· "Jl\8sterplece," An argwnent ensued over at ihe crayon table. "What is one plus one?" one boy demanded of another. Count1 f,odges Vo(e · "One," the second aMwered. "Uh, uh," the first replied. "It's two." Leaming was beginning. •, ·4 Elks Drop Color Barrier . ' By WIWA~I sCHREIBER Of t11e o.!ty Pl'91 ltaff Official• of lour orange County lodges o( tho Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks said today they ha've voted to do away wtq. tbe "wbltes only" restriction that lies been In effect nationally for 1115 )'tin. t : ~ at four other county Elks' loditl COllticted 'today !>?. the Dally Pilot nlolad to commosit /,;, UJOlr \'Olea, whlob ..,U help dolerllllna' the n a tl.o n a I memb!nhlp policy of the charitable orpnizations. h ·more tl\1111,JOIJ lodces·end·l.5 mil- lion .Elks in tho Untted ~.~must vote whether or not they 1upPOtt an amenct.. nient paaed by the naUooal convention . Ill' July that ....,)d strllie tile "°rd ''1111ite" from tba orpillzatkln's application forms. ' • Since the lodge organized. its con- stitution has restrict ed membership to , "white American citizens:" Recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings have permitted courts to yank li_quor UceDJll from discrlmlnatory private clubl unless tho rules are changed -an action termed a ••death threat" by one Elks, spokesman. Tiie Santa Ana Lode• al 211 Elks l,ane, largest iq llio anmty \\'Ith !,500 members, •Ole4 °'" wlMiliinl!Y to do away with the dla'd'Ulllnatooi -~. according to lodiie manager Oliver Clark. •The membenhlp of Hunilngton llellch IA4D~-at l°'80..!falbert...Ave.,.-f.oun- talri-vmley, al90 voted to •trike the rule. Exalted Ruler Larry Schley said today his lodge voted Sept. 4 ·to rali!y tbe tmendme'nt, "d<letlltf lbe ..... d white from membership quallflaiUoas." 'Schley stressed the fact that his lodge's decision Is only one vote. 1be national convention, however, vot~ to kill ' the qualification by a 3 to 1 margin. . Two other chapters, both of which have memben from th e Orange Coast area, also voted to rescind the qualification. Spokesmen for Garden Grove Lodge t9$2 and the Westminster L<>dge said te>- day their membership also voted by wide margins to do away with tho rule. It was a different story with . several other county lodges contacted today . ·Art Kroening, exalted ruJer of the ... Newport Harbor Lodge 1767 in Newport --ee.ch,rald hit only ... mmaot.oo !be vote is, "no comment." .. Exalted Ruler John McDowell of lhe llcdgling, l(Jl).member Mission Viejo Elks Club said be won't oay how bis chapter tSee ELKS, l'ICe 1) . ' • The room was noisy with new ex- periences, 'but Mrs. Simonson, f~llow teacher Ruth Kayser and parent aide Shirley McCormack seemed used to it. Friendships were made qul,ckly, even among the shyest. PlayUme was ended at the afternoon session for a snack break of milk and · graham crackers. At that announcement, one bo;' licked his lips and said, "Yum, YWn" which may have been many' of the students' feeling about I.he whole first day of school. Disabled Win Jlelp SACRAMENTO (AP) ->,cling only holjrs. alter 400 ·handicapped peraoos staged a rally, at tbe Capitol, the Le~alure Thursday approved a '3.2 mtftiOn bill to aid "sheltered workshops" !or tbe disabled. The bill b y Assemblyman Frank Lant•rman (R·La C.nada), "'"'Id replace an expected Nov. t cutback In federal funds. '· Mrs. Brick quipped . "Women just:~·t have it." , ~ ritrs. Brick contlnued: ''How miny of you have wives who expect yoO to "'m'ake them happy, so you give them children. or give them a silver Rolls Royce, and they're still not happy? "The reason they 're not satisfied is that happiness is an internal thing that nobody can give you , -' "You've got to gro\v up with it. You've (See EXCHANGE, Page ZJ as Station Attendants. Reconsider By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI -: : Of 19111 Dlllly ""' ..... A movement among Orange Counly service station dealers to prote!t' ~WI-. fair" Phase IV price controls with an organized shutdown has run out of gas. Dealer plans to tock up their p~Q.i 1iir. a three-day period beginning 'Motidtiy conked out Thursday night when leaders of a gasoline retailers association con· vinced them that they would oqly _be· hurting 1'temselves and "the guy who has supported you all these years."_:::··. - Instead, they decided to wait for the outcome of a lawsuit now peqding ~Ore a federal co\ll't. The suit allegef~ that service station owners are being treated unfairly because they b a v e to absorb price increases · passed on by the c;iil com- panies under Phase IV . After the suit is heard in early December1 1'there is no way we will not be out from. under those ridiculous .Price cootrols," John Devine, president of the International 8ervice Station Dealers Association (1$DA) predicted en- thusiastically. . , Independent dealers across the n.Q.tiqn are fuming over the Phase IV controls because their retail prices are frozen, but the wholesale or tankwagon prices of the oil companies are not. Several of the ma- jor oil companies have increased their . tankwagon prices as much as one or two cents a gallon, which. in the opinion of many dealers, drives 'their profits so low that they may go out of business. - Scattered closings of service stations began this week .in several parts of the coontry, including Sao Diego whereJlhouf 25 percent. of the stations were reJ)orted closed Thursday. --• Orange County's moderate apptoaeh was underscored by fear of ~tentlal anti·trust action, according to OeVine, who warned the dealers that they could be "open to charges of restraint of trade and conspiracy to disrupt business." The only suggestion of a shutdown was made by Costa Mesa Standard dealer Bill Canning wlio grabbed the microphone from the speaker and said, "l dare all you guys to shut down for three days." Canning angrily left the meeting when his call for a saleS boycott failed lo rouse the 300 dealers who attended the Strategy session. Most appeared to go along with the recommendaUon of Mission Viejo dealer William H. 'Bay and County Supervisor (See GASOIJNE, Page I)'. Coast • Weailter lrll be a cool, drizzly Sa1urdny' -at least in the morning hours along the Orange Coast. Beach highs will be in the 60s rising to the mid-70s inland. lNSm E TODAY The Irvine Com1nttn ity Th e· ater is offerino LocaJ playgoers , something new thi8 year -a: Sea$01& of Orange Cou1tt¥ pre- mieres. See ln~rmission column in todat/! Weekender. ~ -...... --·. ........... 4, -....c--''" :.,:: ::... ·;.~ ..... ·•lt .... ......... ..,. -----..... :· ·• '· .... ,.,,: ........ ~. - ..... • ( ' , • • .Z DAJLV PILOT SC ~ .--t--Sbo reclif fs' ••• . . .., ~l Zoning ' . , -~=:ggested ~ .. · ., .. !. .~CJemente Planning Com missioners l'l\l:J~k told deve loper John Sepe lhcy ~l!tlY single-family homes on his 23 aeniaZ.ad:Jacent to Shorecliffs golf course. ~loners said they would rccom· ~ lba.t the· now wiclassified parcel aliJii:~vcnlda Vaquero be zoned R-1, ~:: ~:·means Jhat any single-family ~111ent woWd have to rome to the P.~ commission Cirst for approval. ~d wanted to have a higher density ~)XI the land. ~]l<!tion \\las the last part of the p~zoning plan the city must adopt a~leJt Of the conservation and land use e~ of the general plan. ~~tate requires cities to zone all °"":Wielassilied land. Although lhe c · ion has acted on the whole :.1 lhe city council hasn't seen any 0 ti~. touncil wants to study the entire z ' J)ackage at once. City planners ex- t to happen in October. Tbe" commission Wednesday approved a one-Joi subdivision at 231-233 W. A venida Marquita by Darrel McKibban. He plans to put nine condClminium Wlit s on the half-acre. AU use permit requests on the com- missioQ's agenda were held over until it s next im-eting Sept. 26. Those include •a 118-unit condominiwn on 7 .2 acres by Condor Intemationcil Corpor~tion at 120 Avenida Pizarro and a 24-unit motel planned by B & D Develop- rnent Company at 614-624 S. El Camino Rea\. AISQ delayed until Sept. 26 is a pro- pdsed annexation of three parcels of land adjacCnt to Harbor Estates in San Clemente and a division of land into four parcels' at Calle Alcazar and E. Avenida Cordoba by South Coast Community Development Corp. School Board . M~mber .Seekirtg S~okirig Bart • Lohg-time Orange County School Board mem~ A. E. "Pat" Arnold of Cypress wan~·"to do away with "smoke-filled rgofns'' at the board's meetings. ,,So:Thursday he asked his four fellow board members to pass a rule banning SPlOidn'g in the board room during meet~gs. "I'tldn't like it personally and I know a IOt of others who don 't," Arnold said. '<I've gotten some complaints about the smoRe hurting people's eyes and it's a proven-fact you can be harmed just by Drfathing somebody else's smoke."· : Trustee David Brandt of Santa Ana . a $11.oker, said he would go along with the wishes of the board to stop smoking by board members but would strenuously Qbject to imposing a ban on people who ~ttend the meetirfgs. From PGfJel EXCHANGE • • • got to develop ii as a child. "So if you want your daughters to grow tip with internal stability, you've got to give ii to them. You've got to spend time talking to them and listening to them. · "When they're young, it can be boring. When they're older, it can be annoying. "Bulyou're all your kid has got." ' ~-Brick ended her talk thusly: "If JPU men don't care c;.bout your daughters, maybe I can impress you by putting it this wa y. "Y&lr sons are sf)me day going to have to live with these women. And if they're going to have decent \\'omen to live with, you're going to have to raise them. . "11tis is your chance to put Women 's 1-iberation right out of business, if you'll just Lake the time with your daughters putt Cl)ey need." . ' OIAN•I com IC DAILY PILOT i'llt Orlf'OI! C-1! DAILY Pll.OT, Will! wl11cn 11 COmblnecl l~t Nfft'l·P••u, It t111bU1~ .. Irr h Orlngt Co.11 P!MW!i119 ~11r. s.p.. ,.11e lfdfllona ••• Pllbliu.. Maindar ~ Fr~r. !<Ir Coale M.._, Hewport aue11, H1J11ll11910n 81ldl,IF-t1ln Vollt>y, 1.•~lllnt llffal. 1rvrne1~1eMcti enc1 s.n c...._111 $111 J11111 Clpb:lr-A 11r191t< rtOloMI tdllkin i. .. ~. S.l\lnlt-,. 111111 So.nO•ya. flit ~ ... I ~ltli"'9 pi,,111 11: ti .U0 Weil l•r Slrw!, c-ta "'-9; C.llferrllt, '26». ... Rol...-t N. w.~ f'l'Hllltnl Ind P1101l111tr J1c~ JI:. Curl1y ~ • Viet ~llMnl ..... G.Mro1 ~ Th-•• tc •• .,a '""' Tho111t• A. M1,1rphl111 Mtilt1il"f Edltot Ch1ti" H. Looi lldi•t4 '· Nill ...,_lflotnt M ....... Edt"'1. ,.. __ JOI Nttfll El C11111f10 l1el, '?612 ,,_ °""" COiia M-: U11 Wt1! 8tl' lff'ott N"'fl!lrl IMCllt )UJ NIWPOl"l IO\lltv.,d "-"ll'to'°" ltKt11 17'1S 1-..ctl Mvltv1rcl ; : : ......-lttdll 222 ..., .... .,.,., .... • ,.,.,._ <n4t u204321 Cf•lftH A4•••i.1 '4Z.U71 ... a.-.. Al D., I dW ,, .. ,,, •• 4'2-+420 • lttJ. Or... eo.11 tl"W!Wtlrll , l<je ntwt 110f'hn, 111w1rt1-. _....,. Ot """""'"'"" MM! '-"---~ ""'---...... "" .. _,,"""' ....... ct-. ..... llO¥ " e.t1 """'· Meorlftoli91>• trio Orriw UM I ilJr -ft N,l.S .........,.., •llltlf"I' u.u "'*""""· fl Friday, Srpl~mbtr 14. P~~73 • • Dairy l"llot Sit!! l"lttle Fr .... P .. eJ GASOLINE .•. Ralph Clark to use their political poYi'er aiid to convince the reab:tered voters driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, hlm..ell an ARCO dealer and w former ISSDA president, urged the angered dealers to remain united, ~ gentlemen, and to "just hang tight, because I think we're going to whip it." The fourth district supervisor, however, lashed out at the architects of the Phase IV gas price control plan whlcl) allows dealers a maximum seven ~ , cents' IJ"l8 profit per galloo. • ~ "'ftlese idiots in Wuhington have no - Idea what the problem is," he said. "'n,ey don't know that our people would be tickled pink with a seven cents net." Clark added that he thought the Cosl of Living Council needs to understand that anytime an oil company raises the tankwagon price by one or two cents a gallon, the dealer's profit takes a dive because he must absorb the increase. "They're asking us to operate in the post-World War II days of profit," he charged. From r.,,e J a.II' 1"1111 Stiff ....... GETS SEAT ON BUS BOARD Fountain V•lley'• Hollinden GLEAMING NEW SAN CLEMENTE AMBULANCE HAS ALREADY ACCUMULATED SOME WEAR An Asthma Victim and• Pregnant Woman Were Fint Patients Jn Safety Vehicle ELKS • • • Valley Mayor Wins Transit Board Electiori Ft'Olll PGfJe l AMBULANCE ••• tims and more seated. The old vehicle carried only four. EmCTgency lights on the back come on when the doors are opened, guarding against other accidents. Extra lights are installed on the sides, facilitating work on freeway crashes. Capo Officials Air Arguments For Businesses Business owners .aren't g~tting a fair shake from the United South Orange coa:st CommWlities (USOCOJ, members of the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce complained this week. "It may or may not be true that Mr. (Paul) Sayre may not want to see the point of view the business community represents," Stan Wiseberg commented. Paul Sayre is the head of USOCC:. formed months ago to be the "voice of the unincorporated area." Wiseberg has been ·the chamber's representative to the USCX::C committee on planning and tand use. A recent change in USOCC by-laws says that people must be permanent residents in the area they represent. \Viseberg is not. 'The chamber board of directors ques· tioned how the bylaws were changed without lbeir getting notice. President Georges Narbel said he had sent a letter ta USOCC asking for mare information, but hadn't received an answer. Harris Angell said it's common to re- quire residency on city councils and other bodies. So much of USOCC's interest, Angell added. "is in homeowner aspects rather lhan the business aspect." "lir.re comes the question -we're a business organization," Narbel said. Other directors suggested the chamber has to make its views kno"n or USOCC might be oncsided. "Maybe the business community has to knock heads with the homeowners before we can get a synthesis," Wiseberg, an at- torney. said. He added it is "very important" for the Capistrano Beach Chamber to be able to ha ve the representative it wants, rather than give USOCC that power. Rezorie Impact Study Requested By Sari Juart San Juan Capistrano city councilmen want Orange County to study Impacts on scJ,ools. traffic and land use before it rcwnes 91 acres west of the city. The council has concurred with a re- quest by San Juan Capistrano planning commissioners that action on the large parcel off Camino de! Avian should wait until the current update of the Capistrano Valley general plan is done. The property, part of the Bear-Brand ranch, is proposed to be rezoned from agricultural to planned development. The specific request is for 300 single-famlly clustered homes and 100 condominium units. Dave Smith. director of city planning, said he is concerned about: -Impact upon school crowding. -Increased traffic and changes in road patterns. -The desire to mnster plan the com· munity before ltirgc, Ind i vi du a 1 develof)P'l ents are approved. The 91-acre site is in nincorparated area, but the Orange County Planning Commission referred it to the city for comment. Smith saJd the city is trying to Identify school 1ltes in the area with the coopera~ lion ol -lhe-C.pislrono Unilkld School District. In addition. Smith said a hiU,,lde development regulation focusing on the preservation of major rkfgc lines has been enacted by the city council. voted until the natiooal results are known. · Bay to Waterga~e Lodge Secretary W. E. Pennington or the Anaheim Elks said he alSo has "no comment" about his chapter's vote on the rule, as did a spokesman for the lodge Mayor Al HolliDden of Foilntain Valley was selected to a seat on the Orange CoWlty Transit District board Thursday night in a close vote by the Cities Selec- tion C:Ommittee of the County League of Cities. Sunday ·F eatm·es Letters in Buena Park. · The statements by Orange County lodges follows rf:parts from the San Francisco Bay Area and lodges in the San Diego area that have voted on the ban. On Hearings, Ecology The 1,200-member San Rafael lodge voted 3 to 1 to drop the ban as did the 2,00'.t member San Mateo lodge. Hollinden won out over La Habra councilwoman Robin Young by 13 votes to 12. It took three ballots to make the se lection. Here's a rundown of stories appearing in this week's Sunday Daily Pilot: UPPER BAY -A multiplicity of government agencies is working to preserve the ecological vitality of Upper Newport Bay and most officials are oir tirnistic that results of their work will soon become evident. The main problem they have is coordinating all their ef. (Sunday's Best) forts. Staff writer John Zaller reports in a YOU section feature. ART FOR TABLE -High food prices not only are keeping some meals off ·di.n- ner tables, they also .are keeping art off gallery walls. For a profile of a Costa Mesa artist wha works with organic materials read this week's Sunday Special by Jacqueline Combs Land. TALENT SCOUT -Jeanne Haliburton watches for potential "Stars" of stage and screen in sessions every Saturday in a Newpart Beach ballet school. Mrs. Haliburton, veteran agent and former ac- tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo Olson in a women's page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mail response, the Watergate hearings may be the most closely- listened-to series on television. From hate mail to near love letters. it pours in at rate that is too high to keep track of. For samples, see the sunday editorial Judge Upholds Maririe Haircuts; Hearings Set TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!l -A federal judge has upheld the right of the Marine Corps to require short haircuts, but agreed to hear arguments from 10 reservists that they are being punlshed for challenging the regulation. U.S. District Judge David L. Mid· dlebrooks made lhe unexpected ruling Thursday at the outset of arguments on pretrial motions in the reservists' case. "Let me hurry to tell you that these regulations are not unconstitutional -let me tell you that right now," Mid- dlebrooks told defense attorney Kent Spriggs. "The commandant has authority to set reguJations t~at are reasonable -.and I consider these reasonable." ' Spriggs said the corps is "punishing them for speaking out against the hair regulations and for coming to this court with their complaint." The men, all members of "C" com- pany.-8th Tank Battalion , USMCR, head- quartered in Tallahassee, are suing Gen. Robert Cushman, commandant of the Marine Corps. Two plaintiffs, Ben Sellers of Jackson- Ville .and David McMullen of Talabassee, have been threatened with recall to the regular Marine Corps because of unsatisfactory drills. Sprigg1 charged lhe recall was because of their opposition to the hair rules, not because of their performance, and asked for an injunction to prevent it. Capt. Alan Ryan of the Marine Corps' Judge Advocate General's Office in Washington agreed to postpane recall proceedings against Sellers and Gary Gray, another reservist who did not join the suit, pending the outcome oI the case. Reagan Against Hike ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan said Thursday the JO percent tax Increase President Nixon reportedly rriay ask~ of Congress-would give the govem- mQnt more spending money, but won't cure inflation. "The great problem in just raising taxes to reduce purchasing power and inflation ls that Congress doesn't look at 11 lbat way," he said here . section. AMERICANS IN DEBT -The average citizen's ideas on borrowing may not be as libe ral as is assumed. A University of Michigan study shows middle-income families borrowed at an average of 12 percent of their yearly income. and m~ don't want to borrow any 100re. Th.is feature appears in the YOU section. Fire.arms Curbs Due in October A new ordinance forbidding the discharge of ri.rearms and other weapons in San Juan Capistrano will take effect Oct. 12. The city <ouncil adopled the ordinance th.is week after ouUlning five exceptions. The ordinance allows use of weapans by )Xlllce officers or .other persons performing in an official duty, for the protection of human life and property, hy a farmer to protect his crops or livestock from predators, within authorized target ranges or hunting reserv• and with prior approval by the council. The hew rule makes it illegal for 8(1yone else to discharge any gun, rifle, pistol or other fireann, air gun or sling-shot. ~kesmen for the 20 Bay Area lodges said the vote appears to be going about 2 to I in favor of dropping the con- troversial requirement that has kept out minority members. One lodge in Southern California, the ~~de branch, bas voted in favor of continuing the ban . while two others - those in Endnliu llod San Diego -voled · to drop the ntle. The votes are expected to be tallied by the national headquarters of the Elks in Chicago next month. Welfare Grant Hikes Opposed ·SACRAMENTO (AP) -Republicans stiffened opposition today to proposals to hike weUare grants for 500,000 aged. blind and disabled Cali!ornians as the 1973 legislative aession eote<ed lta final hours. Senate Democratic noor leader George Moscone said he ·needed just two more Republican votes to send to Q9v, Ronald Reagan a measure that would hike the 500,000 welfare grants an .average of $23. a month. The Reagan administration continued to demand a more modest plan allowing hikes Jan. 1 averaging just $9. The Fountain Valley mayior will take the seat vacated by Derek McWhinne)' of Westminster. Two other appointive posts were filled by committee votes. Robert Nevil, a La Habra councilman, was named to the Local Agency Formation Commission and Mayor Donald Mcinnis of Newport Beach was named as alternate. Nevil has held the alternate's post on the commission since April 1972. The seat was recently vacated by Tustin's Clifton Miller. Both Nevil and Mcinnis were elected by big votes on the first ballot. Cypress Councilman Robert Harvey was elected president ol the League of Cities by a 13 to 11 vote over Fountain Valley Councilman George Scott. In a contest for vice president of the league, Orange Mayor Jess Perez was elected by a 13 to 12 vote over ~tin f'l•yor Donald Salterelll. · PlaCentia City COuncilman Robert-Fin- nell'retiree 'tl'fter 'two yean as president. Fullerton coWICllman Duane W-mters was elected to a fourth term as state director with no opposition. A discussion on the proposed Chino Hills airpart was postp:>ned until next month's league meeting. SLEEP SOFAS • Excellent Selection Now On Displ1y. At Reason1ble Prices. Stop In Today. i D~EXEL-HERITA6E-tiENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASlAN • I > ' ' •INTERIORS Wllllii1"•il111mvs-''°' 1e ,11J1 ' ' PllDAY "Ill t:OO NEWPORT BEACH • 1711 WJSTCllff" DL. M1·JOIG ' t0'9• S1ll4ty lt·l:JOl ' IA&UNA BEACH • J4~ NORTHtCOASt t<WY. IOp•l'I '$11"".., 12-l:JOI 4t4-6111 TORRANCE -. 2J•"4trHAWTHoRNE"ILV0:--- J11·127t j I , . . . •• • %2 DAILY PILOT SC Foday, S.pto-14, l91l 10% Prinae Rate Complete New York Stock LiSt 2 Banks Orde1·ed .=.w_..v:e\.!!'~'!ti:"'i..:'~~ ,...ff:tMliti \M'lMttM. , .. f~._ uwl.M(~ , .. i=~ i..-U11l1:. • . .... ...= ,,. . "' .... l .. !f:t·. -· 2.M • • ........... =~ ··~ , ~ ~ IJ! mi: ,..£ (llds) HIQll LM UUCtts. «tno+d .Jf ' • IM NI 4' FltklMI 1...0 I I 1.-~ 1~+ YI .-... ·-11 ?1 W. J~ YI ... e 11t ui;, 2:) 1' 14 jlllllrlff;O M II 1 IS I~ IJ + YI jj' ;· ff .. --' "-'5 .. •• ~ ,,. '"' .. F~ F.o Sir. I • 1a 1w. 1M+1v. Ii'~ 1"' ·'°: la " "" TN -'*"L 1.20 20 ff IJ4'. ~ .,Vt+ lledtlum • ir. ... 2~ , Fi;Hhlft .U l'tl ~ '°" 20!-YI I~ {r:f 4 4 ~ .. , ACFlnd l.40 II 11 ~ ~" 4~ \'J. Int , t l!li i: ~ "•l(:lwlrtr M f ..i 17" "\1 17~+1111 1U' 111tt 7J \1 ,. ~ L + " Ac;IMCh' N J4 U\11 ''°" 13 • • m· llif I, •• ' ll1fChlc 1 .. 1 16 G .. ~ 61\'t+ 'Ml IU 11111 cP A 1 1' "" "'-Mk' I 1 1 lit,<) ?IV. ''a.. lfl Wt 1· •II• .,y, 1 ' Fallaktl .IO 21 114 .MN ~ .501J1+""' JU lntlol 111< •• J ~ I MIX.P '·] '' 111.rO 12 11v. "' ,. .n • us ,,.,. l"•l Ml ,_,,_ f v ''"' "v. 14~ ,_ · ·__,, >--AdMllll• I 10 tV. I IV1 \o Chltf C.. .lO I t ti\.\ >CM tll'tt ~ 1"1it.., l.tJ I d 41YI "°}~ .-,+ YI J•nvt F ~ 11 " l" I"' ~ ~ .....,.... . > ho1 'fi: 11~ l)h 11 .. Cn.iir1r NY 1 • It .... 9" 111\i+ YI F•tHilty .n 'I ~ ~ "" ..._ i. l•PFd 1.7 . • .., l~ l2t't Admlr•I $ «I I ._ 1°"' lOVIT iii CllKFNI .n I 10 ~ ..__ \Iii l'tlfoj ll'IC t :I 1t\• 211• •"'-" \11 Jfllfll'llot fl .. l!~ -* To Justify Hike NEW YORK (UPI) -Tho 'Federnt Committee on lntertst and Dividends today ordered two large banks that raised the interesl rate for prime r a t e from 93,4 percent record 10 percent to justify the boost. The committee telegraphed its demands to First National City Bame of New York and Wells Fargo Bank of San Francisco. llnued until there are definite signs that inflat io n a ry pressu res are receding. "The combination of all these inOuences on the money market forces thls increase In Wells Fargo's prime corporate lending rate." Aci'#lll\I •~ 11 1 ... :. ~ 10'/f ChilMM.., t 'I "2J "" SlV. :i::~ 1'I Fii !<Mt Stt1 10 In.to 114\ 1n. . J--.1 c 1M o '4 !"" ......,. LI,. 1 I' "' ,..,.. ™41 14 -v, CtiUoAo '» 1 • m. u -1 F~.tp 1 311 ii i.. "' w .. ,. + "" Jlrnw,11 ., , "' ,..., 1111 ~ ,. ~'" 1CO '• l 1!,. 11,. '> -\~ Ch1IM1 .» $ I 71.\ 7V» + \i lltPMI 1.leo t '' It 111'11 If + \o1 Jl1T1Wt1t11t' I . JIOO 12'1 ll"" ·•• .. 1"' "' -! ... I 'lltl\' Chell'ltln .ao 7 12 1~ 15\it I~,.. "•tlHUE ,. 14 24 11 I~ 11 J rnWpf 1 '° 21 DJli \II •:z ,.~ ,, ll -,, l \\ I' 4V.+ 'ChmNY 2 II 10 1'1 4m 4''4 d\lo+lllo Fd\ll k '311 12 ,. l'l II \II n + \lo JHnlk 61& . . 41 Ith lt ~ p Alrwlnc 'to 2: fl 1l: ffi: ff"~1~ g::~.f /'tf lT 1J ~"' j~ ~ -JU ,.,w11• i.n e 1 3.1.,_ ~ 3',..__ lll Hnlnv 111i11 : 1• 1:4\.'J ):l:U'.'-id ••.• AJ ltlcl1ult'$ ' 10 :I'\' 2 2 .... Mill ifb ' u 42'\'J ,,, • .aM "'ll•W• l.OhJ 10 t )I l7U,. •• JOl\flMv 1.20 , ,, 1~ 11\4•s·· ~''§! •·110 10 J 21 271, 2) + \' ~hi e 1n ,26 ' 1 10 10 11!' . l'l«tll.M .ff 20 2 SSU 5~'!' 55~+. 'Jo jOll~Jn ·:: SI 100 I fV. I I' lft!E'" " • •• 1. 1 , " 1$1;• u•u 1~ c1i1 Mu ... 0 4 ,. tu ,~ -+ ,, po:1,_"'''".20o , " 10111i "'• 10 ... r~':.s",,c,; 1 t 1r ~.,., •"' t • lnlsl 23 102 3~ 21 lO +I~ Ch1MllCO Of S 1.-., ,, • I' ,li 10 " fflo 1:W. 1~ "J, Jl'h \i •1Mr!OC .J5 1 21 '"" ' • _.,..ChPf*!l'l'I 210· n !llj l'" lm~l"Flwt£"1 ·" f :w IOl• •i· 1014-f, J:;.°t"!~~ ' ~ l}lh f .: II Dlrtlll .iO IO t 15 U 15 • ~htll:I (f UP 1 iv. 3 t\ p;IWflll OMI I I 10 10 10 -t '~ .!,!! ~· ... ... JC.n "lu1! 17 '112 1.l\lli '"'' 3'1'&+ '-h Rici HW • 10 I 121' t •.• F"'111V.n lk 11 2' '"' II~ ltU+ '-~~.:. 1.3'1 ~ ; fh~ tm 17't +(i Atco Sid • " • n. I + \t llo!:kF 10. 11 1 5\.'J 5"' ~ Fllnlllot I.GI 1 11 11\4 ...... Ja"4+ .,.. J MIO I «I n '° 'SI UV. 11 +fa Main l.0 .I 4l 14 32\ .. JI" 32V.+ "Ch(1l Cftft S3 S6 4\\ ». W.+ !) FNitltl of ·~ • 1100 51"'1 S1V. !~ 't OV • k K-A,lex•ll .\Ob JJ 211 lV• S\.. .S\-~(IV 811f !.'° 3 l\VI llV. Iii.,-\:. 7'1t Ctt .1$ ' Jf llU IJV. IJ1'>--\lo IC•IH(AI jO 17"'111 :l2Vo 22111 J2lO+ ,. A l:Ll·~~ 1: ~~ 1ru 1;£~ 1~ .! t €= 1:: ~ I~ ~1: ~t: ~t:+1~ ~= t~ 1: ~ ~ ~ =+ ~ ~t~~ ;~ l t 1f• I= 1~'" UPI Tl...... Al~• .IOb I Jt ..... ' t \._ ,, Chl'Y•I ... wt m DI N Mo+I Flt Sii I JO 5 ~ 2214 n nv. IC-Mii ,3 ·, 17 II I,,. • THE RArE pal'd on federal ~I~~~~ 6 lg 11" mt ~~ ~ (IMIO l.S5b ·, J1 1A 16\\ '~~ \.\ Fh1Cll' Cp Sic " llO •7i. ~· *'•+ ·v; ~Citl.t 1·'10 ' 1 " ~ ....... ~ 'H nd Off Lai d ' A/IQ p I" • llO 1ti 1~ ,,, ""Cln 8"11 ,.,, t 4 lt'h 1 ..... lm,_··· FlutrCPCll' J • .) 7• lfffo 1su+1~ l'.CPL ilf 4\t 110 :5tV. "Ill ~1 tan Bank in New York , third fJ .. ' r Alllo!IG"';• ·511 ' s 11 oJ ,, -"" lft G•• ~ t I u ??: ~ 11 ~t Fl'(Tlor .lOt II 111 a~• 271h 21~+ ~\ ICC So Ind 2 • 12 2"" ,,,. in.-. a A.11111 Cll 1..12 12 S3I 311,'i lS4-3'\'o+ "" c n G e 'I'.~ . i ~ $1 -... FMC.~ .u • "' 1194\ 11llo Uh+ "" K•n GE I.St • , I I~~ lt\lt 1tio')..-~ biggest commercial ·bank in Alld~" M 20 31 "'" ll\• ,.,.._ ~ ClnfolU• . .o t2 1 1111. !m ~., "MC,r,.· 2111 •. ' a1v. 31 . 31 +\'I l'.1nN1& 1.11 10 , u "" 1s +'61 the natl.on. announced 1·t would ~sldential counselor Melvin R. Lat.rd (r1'ght) re-AJIOProd Mi 6 1• 1~ 1..,.. in .. +\\ ~liF1n 1 2;?! 11 11'111~ 11i't. nM'i2w. F-r .20D 1 .. 1 "" .,,,. •·• K"41PLt 1·., 10 t 21~ ~ 22"" ••• TIC A.UltdSI IM 6 111' 2J\. .. 2J'4 tl'O-"'Cit! c:;p t .20 ll UI 45\0 4fi!i .:S~+I~' Foot.Cl .lfl 12 11 IJ llfo 12 ... 1'.tlY lndtr..1 1 I S $~ ,L ... ~ take no action at this time on ceived a pair of white gloves today as a joking gift ~~ l'!=~ If tl j ~ :· t ~ c111llo112.21b 12 21 l"" u Sol\)-" ~:;:Mr,:~ :: ,i ~ ~ ~·"' :::Jt~, 1:~ 11 12~ ~ ~ ~ ~ FtRsr NATIONA.L City to-i.ts. key lendin. g rate. Chase in-from Secretary of Treasury George Shultz, (left) AIU1 0: .16b 11 to 11r. 1114 1n.+ ~:~ 11;~ w: 1 ~I 1r: 1f~ 1lt+ "FordM ,.,.,,. s 31• """ ~. 3s111+ "" 1C-.i1&pf 1i~ s Ul" i:i 2l -~ d f 11 ed the I d f Well f •11•111'1tl\ .SO 7 6 • f>) •~-'\Cl!Ylnv"" 2 ·· »~UV. 'lM+ ~Ffl'Mck ... ' SJ lJ 121ii ll ,. IC•WKk 20 II I I"' '~ ...+ 116o ay o ow ea o s 1liated the mcrease rom 91h: who advised hi' in lo 'k p h. tto · k • h d A~ P1 ·'° 1 4 1.P.~ l•" 1w.--111 ,,~, '• •• ,·,· ,,, .... ,, •• "''+iv. FrMof 1.t0 . • n111o :an~ u\4 IC•VH•R .t.0 s ~ t •I') 1111t 111-t ·u Farrio which boosted the , · ee is co 0 pie m an s Ale:~ 1.t• 1s '" 11"' ~ 110.+ 1~ ci.r;, 011 ·.; • 35 m; 1w: 1~+ ""FortO• nb . . :n 11"' 1•~ ''""--. ~~ .10 • • 11v. • 11 -ft , i:o to 9~4 percent m Aug. 27· off economic policy.' Shultz' warning was made after Aml!K .)0 • 1• 1~ 1~ 10t9-"' CLc o1 ""' s ,, 5"' w sr. F11t1~ .3511 21 .st m• 22" n'~ h ...._,.,...,, ·10 4 1• J,,. 3111i ""'-v. prime rate from 9-o/, percent Amcor .1so • 3 .u •"" ..,.. ... °'" cutti 2 12 4 n ~ 73'.4 13Vi % FClll.f..rW .to 11 1~ ~ o•.i. 4 \\-14 Ken.,. 1n ·'° s 15 100{,, 1~~ 1ov.-r: •1• Th sd Laird news conference on refundable income taxes. :=:-:.c: .~ 1r 20t ~: !;t: ~ti'+..._,!~~.~ 2, ... ,. ,. ·~" ,"., ,".,' ,nv.=, .. ~i::nkl~ 1 r, 'U n~ i'J? tt~t 1Vi :~~ "~ 1: rs ~~~ ~!i ~s~+"" t:1 • tolOperccntlate ur ay. ~----------~---------------------·---I Al-hl1>fll'> 101s 11v.15 '" ..... ,... . ....-p:,totMn . n Slffl:V"'tn.r.-i.IC~mu 110 1 1121 25'112't 1 · The rate boo. st by Wi lls AA'IAlrFI ."2 21 26 :u" 22"' m'i + "' CICltv & Pin ID,V. 101.'i 1ov. F•llfilut 1. 1 .., ~ 25 -14 ICtMKOI 2 t J.36 »Vo ,,_ " I•,; M "mlltlr. .20 I 1 1'1t 1'-Vo C10to•Co .J1 14 2'1 II I~ .. 11V.-l'• FUQWlncl 41 ' IJ r. l:N 12~-I• Ky Ullt 1.14 t U ""' ~ lit Fara went Into efrcct today emorex A!r•nd 2.ll I n 36 ~ m..-'·' Clutll P 50 7 10 l\'9 n' • --0 .._ Kerr MK:. ·'° 31 102 1DVt .. ~ ~ l" ·•·' 'n ,·"tso 300 branches and was Am11rc11u12 !11'4 :iout 29V. m'+4'CCM•w1•1•¢,• ,,· 2! ~~':i !!~ ll.~+•"j•blt 111C111 1 • 1~ 1•;~ l6Yi ... 1C .... rMP1 •• ,~. lllJ 139:w,14 ,. ' T d Am8ld0 ~ I 1 11\IJ 11\14 1114-1:. nv ~ ..,. ..... -~,.,. AC CM: 21 ~~ 3 3 , KeYtln '™» 1 1 14fll 1,~ 1~ ..._ ,. the si"teenth hike so far this ra e A~~ord :mt·~·~.2i~ t 'l1~· ~~..:.i~~!:i111 1.10 5 ~ ll~ l~~ ~:i~t\' !~.9>1:20 .~ 1?{ lr.i !iv. 1~+.'1'1~1:.::ww111~' 2: = ~~ =:::~ .;~ Year In lnlercsl rates charged T ll L . A f1M I t•b 10 • 16'/t l~'i 16~ •,;, Coc1Col 1.90 a "lO'lll 141'111 143\14 •m r. .:it> • 20 2t"-:ll:' ~v. klm Cl I 20 1' '2• lJ ., ~ ·2~+"' ~1·. e S Oss A II.tin 1.20 7 l~ 2S•Jt ,~. 25 + "• Coc18otl .J8 21 :m: 2M\ ZI :r.w. " ·~rt .l6 21 41 ~'!ill v. 1C1nv10S lD I 31 114 I • top COrporate borrowers. A !ll" 1.40 10 l3l 24'\i 2• 24'1•-•:. COldwlllr. .21 6 6 11'4 1N 12~---I'• •1 0"11 .70 ,, l:W 23"-%111) "'+ KlrKl\C •12 O •I I•' I•<' ,,, .. ••• ••' Am 111111 1 15 U lfl.'lo 11 11 -Vo COlt,.oln .Cl' 15 24 I~ IOV. llmf V. •"r k 14 7 I IS¥6 1.W. l~ '4 n • " ••• o • t hlk AOl1 •I .4 24 21 4 (£. •1 41¥o + \~ C21.0111 .54 21 261 33\lo 32 33'Ai ~~I \IC 1.12 t 24 I• 13:\!t. l~4-\> K< ~~> NAl.rl • 4 3'\.'i :16\.'• l6V.+ >.O , • In announcing the ra e c AmOu•I 'lit • 6\'. •V• 1~ w c "" 1'11 • 1 :izl4 :n :r.i'4 .,, ~-•v 1n s 1• ,.. •'4 •I"~•. n~~· 1r 1.i J~ li ~+,.. ,, Thursday. Wells Fargo ex-SANTA CLARA (AP J _ ArnElt:C 1.to 9 m ,,v. 2s1'1 2• ~•Cot&Alk .s. • 11 11% 11~ """ +1' CA c11r 1112 '' •'!It tv. ''"' . , ICM •nv .60 • u 1s'h 1s11o: 1~+ v. ,, ~1cmorex Corp. has Tar:ff Gro"und Rules Told !~ ei:r'~t :. 12~~ 1~1' 13;\! 1511' 1~ z~::~·::i: l~ it~ ::sor: ~i~+ ~-~l~i~·r .. l~ l!~ B~ l,!~;:: ~: ~~~ :·" I~ 1!: ~ ... ~ !.~+ :z J' ecutive vice president James ., "'FlnSv i,10 1a 11 ltb lN.i 11,,.. h co1 P..,n 20 47 101 u 62v9 .,. +1~ •n.•m1 '""' .,, :n ~•L 13~~ al.,.,t "IC••'ll• .20 l6 m Jl.!1 lllw •~+ * ~ K. Dobey said "The prime reported a net loss of A Ff"/'' v. .. '"° J114 2111o 1114 .. co1~ 1.iu 1 11 1~ 1w. 1514-~\ n ~ ·~ ~ ~"! 33,. .ct "' kroe1111r .ao 6 12 11~ 1• I• " . A $t01 3 ·11· AGnB 1\'Jb .. S3. 2~ 19!1 Coll Ind .79 1 21 IS I~ IS +·.~~~·~':h., 14 4 :r~· ~~ 61 f~ICrOQet l.'.IO 17 127 ,.,, IY>< 161.4o+·v; ~\ rate has not moved since ug. . mt ton on revenues TOKYO (AP) _The world's declarallon dopt d b t"" ~ ~51 1.~ ., ~ i= J~: l~~r+ ~ co11~A 1.60 . 2 1tv. 1t\'t 1tVJ ""ll•nc " 1 5 1v,.. 13~ IJ.911 ""' K~iOr 1 .60• ' t .,,, 12v. 12'4-""' •• , 27 and continues to be out o( of $85.2 million (or the a e Y '"" "'Gflil 1:so . .n 2~~ 2s1~ JS\'+•,\ coi~ ~pf 1~ ,-,J ::J; #,,. =+ ~ "~bl• 1~ : tl 1~ 11~ 1~~t \It L..clto• iv. 1-t2L-,.-,,,, 19~ lf\lf + ~\ ~., Phase with other money first six months of this large and: small trading na-conference. He said he would ~~ :fl J: ns ~lt !l"' 12t.::;: ~ e s orai 1 51 21 29'4 20'4-I ~ ~ 7 1, 1.t, I iv. "Llm$11 sn 1 1 1 l:to. 12v. 12~+ \,;, ·• I 2 l 1M1'1 IM~ I~' V. COi G.• l.tO I 7" 27\lo 2t'~ !Fi \\ .., Dynem 7 ::J6 21\\ 2 21"'-Vo Ltnellry .n 11 IJ ~1 ;w,1 ~ Yo market rales." year. tions agreed today to start two call at least two meetings of ~.=11 21 41 n 43"' di!'\ 4Ji:+ "-eo1so11 i.'2 t 11 :zw. 2n., J "' nlllK 1AO 20 11t...., 51 .Ml...,+,~ \..lr.o,o 2mo • n 211. 2,,.., 21 111-~ .... The I b hl b tmlnv" ·.so 6 1l I~ llilo ~ OIWM 2.271) • 12 2t 2m " Food I .0 n 127 2S'-'& U\'f 2S*-\\ L•lro;>be SU IJ I 1 7 7 • oss, roug on Y years of wide-ranging trade the group bclore Qctober to A.Medic:! :12 , ,, '\' .,.., T¥a-"" b E 1.n 20 110 TN 1"4 11..:.+ ._ Gf'o .l6tl n • l~ 11 u -~ Ll•rs1~ 21 1 101 '"" ~ ~+ ~ , THE HUGE Chase Manhat· funds already has increased to 11 percent, he said, and certificate of deposit rates are approaching 11 percent. He said government officials "indic::ite th a t restrictive monetary policy will be con- Volvo Plans First Plant In Virginia NEW YORK (AP) Sweden's V o I v o confirmed Thursday that it v.•ill become the first major· foreign car manufacturer to e5tablish an auto assembly plant in the United States-. The company's plans, fi~I reported in press accounts last week. call for a factory cost- ing more thiln $100 million to the U.S. market. said ground Chesapeake. Va. Volvo. which describes itself as the ninlh or 10th larges t producer of in1ported cars in the U.S. maret. said ground is to be broken for the facility early next year and production will be under way by late 1976. Plans call for production o( 100,000 cars a year at the facility by the late 1970s, tbe company said. IJ.•-•"""""-°"""'Mf -u"*-"'"'"".,.,,...,..._._ 71W "*" .. _.."' ti,..,,..,..,~. OWN APART OF WEST LOS ANGELES Mo.1 & Cpm11"11Y. lh• flrM .. ·i1h tn tnvi•t>k 12.yr•T h1,1ury o/ lnlrgrlry, "•billly & l(H01oJ m•n.194'r<>tnl, Pf'...,"'•= N .. 1 ....... eal Op ......... . B1and N~ Apal1menf BulJdlng In Growth-Oriented Wat LA. O~lllfts: I . Cuh flow from ope1alion1 2. APJl reclatlon J . Certain Tax advantagu LD01ED PAlmlEllSHIP WllH$4.750 -VN INVESTMENT @ 1110 .. &Comp•nv __ _....... __ 1850 WtJl'WDQd Blvd. Lot An9tk1. C•ltf. 90025 1213) 474-SS27 1213) 879-0626 Ctll Or Wrftt Today FM lnform111on Cell 1714) 557-7124 --""''""""""'"'' ... "'"'' .. ""'• .,, ~ """' ,., c .. lrfumlo .mo ....... """'"" ,,,,_"""i/l<t>ll""L $93 million in anticipated A tMdl~ • ,. ~ 4"" ..,,.+ ,,. coniSotv .60 11 21 11~ ll'Mo 17'!~" n t c11 1 4 I~ 1049 '~:t "'l.ffrs 111 214 1 :uv. ~ :W\4+ _,, u. . negotiation s in Geneva on Oct. hammer out s,....,.;fi1c an-"l!Wte~ 1 n l03 36 "'"' :u ! ""' mwed 2.:io t 112 av. 21~ ~ . n i1111r 2'k ii m 'A 20>io 22J: 1~ i..1K11 c ·"'° .; J12 in~ i 1v. 1~•+ ~ •·· writeoffs, compares with ,,..._, ' r-AMtC iit s 3 92'>'1 1 92y, ~. corn Ed or 2 . . 2 2s.u ~ 1MI+ ,,. tn•,:r J • J ~ ~~ 35,-_ • LH&epl 1 '° 71 2111 ~. 21"'! ~ ,; net income or $334,000 on 2~. proaches that the developing =GtMf.:i :· ~ JI ~ l1 ~ ~=~ l:~ . 1: ~Mt Jt ~r"'-..... m11 1~ \~ .Sl s:: lm+,~ ~::.scpl 2:20 .;s ~ ~.· ~~ u..,.~ •,w ·::· A S.tt l6l'I 11 l ll~ 1"-1\4+ "COMWOll 2k 22 15 n\ ,... N+ \' II pt 1~ · l '6 ff -"LMd":lN ~ ;• 1, revenues of $69.5 million natio.ns '¥.'ill take. A~ 511111 · ·" 1 1J 1t~ """ 1t'h-~ c....o11o1 1.n 4 21y, 21y, tll'I ... 2-M • ''i I:~ 1.,., ff~"" L".!,11 '° 2: 2~ l!~ \~~ l~ ··· , ... ro the fir t hall f 1972 TllE MINISTERIAL con . . A s-11 1.1t1 • 11 1•~ 1""' 1A1o .. Cotns11 ·" 11 211 51 JO seiu+ :.r fo 10v--~ ~ v11 nd 2 ·· .. " r s 0 • -The trade negotiations will Am s11111 ·'° • " l•'"" 1• I• + 11o corn1111tt Sci 1s 2v. 211i 21\ ·., :.....'• ,·'° t 2: l~ 1~ 1~,. ~11 Llfllrwl 1v.t1 " ., ,•,~ ,:~. ,,1~++ ,", ,•1\ the fl.rm sao'd Thursday f f th G I A AmStclllf 4.\li 11 57.\li 57 SA:.+~ ConAcrr JOO 7 s 1~ 13v. 11~+ "' ·" '" .. L , •• · erence o e enera gree-be th fi 1 It 1 t al 1 bal Amsi.ru 21 l• 101 11.,.. 11 ll\li-v. _,,.,, 1.m • 211 ''""' 16 1,"" lfr9Ct 1 1t t \\ y1o; ·-tnn•r cp • n 1 1 1 _"' ~ 1 Memorex now has u e rrs mu 1 a er go ""'!tT 2:t0 10 51• • •m ., + v. CMMt 1..nt1 12 SJ 21"' 20\'I 1t1'h-1~ sian.1 .•s 20 31 •7ft 41'1' 4r.l= t"' LtnoJi in eo lt 1 J6.>\ J6q ~"' ,..,1 ment on Tariffs Trade ended . . . . . h nd f h ""' T 111 • 12 s1~ ~ 51~ ·~ conrtcC 60 1 1 lS\.'J 1..,. lSVt+ :\lo \sfttl Ind s 3\'• l~ 2t'h+ ,l Ltv Fd C1p . 2 ''~ 9\1 •v.+ v. -''' ncgutive net worth. The 1n1hahves since t e e o t e ATTotA J.u ·. l ~ lOt'o SO'\\+.;. coned t.90 10 11s 21t1 21~ 211w-v. TE~ 12~ 10 291 ~}~ ~ 3714t 1~ t•~1 1""' .1st .. 6 121~ n 12 -v. • ' d'd I its three-day meeting in Tokyo . AmT&T w1 • 31 sv. s s -\• c-Ed pf s 2 "i,i, 11111o •1""+ 1111 jfl 1 .,, .. .100 16\, 16v. 16., ,, 1~ strs ·" 11 31 24 1'.J 2tv. 24!h+ w. company 1 not revea Kennedy Round 1n 1967. That AmW•'' " ' J 10 10 10 • conE 111 ._15 •· JJJO i..Yi .56!h 56111-v. 1~r:1 1.JO ·· rloo 17v." 1~ uU.-Vi t;v~ti cFurn ' 11, •~· 6~. ,,.,._ .,.. •• the fl·gure but the for· m wo'th the adopto·on of ground Amir°" .a5 6 ' 1, 1• u .. -Fd 1.31 11 241 ,... 2t n -"',.._ 1,, , ,, ·, ,, 1,-,, ... 1,.,.__ "°' 1 lll'Pn u :w ,i, ·~ .v.+ "' • brought tariffs in the Am.•51 .11111 i 14 5\<I s s1'o • c011FdOf 4V. . 1 IOllo '"' IO'l9i Vi ~c: '..lch 111 '"' ·;~, 114 '4 tJ>"ro 2.2\l 1 $<C 32;:. :n~ ..-. " ... had a net worth of $32 2 rules for the Nixon Round of . "'""'"" ·10 1 103 111• 13 IJ -~ on F~t . .s. io m i111o 1•"" 11 l'i G11111•r .19 1 •• 41 1v11 1s1,1o 151.:.-"' " 111 ~\lo • 3 6111\t .. ._ '--"" • · developed nations down an l<MF 1" 1.ot t 1t1 2fl 2~ 2n1+ .~ C-NG 2A3 1 u 2w. 2~ rni ""GttnulnP •• w 50 431'1 ,1 ~...,+2.,, Llbt1v MeN1 .u ,, ~.. 5~ ~ ... "' million at the end of last talk 1 cd t ·rr d Amttc: ·"' 1 20 1~ l• 14\'o-.,. c:onim Pw 1 t 71 2w. 1514 ~ ~, 0 P •aa 1, 41 J1v. 3'~ 3w1+ ~ ur...1Y1..n ·'° 1 32 1ov. 10 10 _ "' Year. s o r ucc ar1 s an average 35 percent ~~~ '1l '! '1 4~ ~ ·~ v. conP111 •.1• . uo S2 n 52 -n'T o:~ 7.12 . uo tJ>M trn tN.-1•1.1 t i::MMv 1'111 51 :JNt 38~' •~-.,, PR Seminar Scheduled "t.faking Public Relations \\'ork " is the theme of the ninth annu<tl worksh o p sponsored by the Orange County chapter of the Public Relations Society or America Oct . 30, a.t the Royal Inn of Anaheim. 1'1ore than 40 experts in public relation$ and news \ media fields will ~ on band to cover such topics as selting up a PR program, handling publicity and workinJ with the press. The workshop is especially designed for vo l untee r organizations and s m a· J I businesses. The all day ~ gram will begin at 8:30 ·a.m. afl4 run until 4:00 p.m. Other restrictions 0 n m· _ • Amoeio: c11 11 ,7 .,. •llJ 41 .. , ... :~ con P 111 ••11 . 1100 56 S6 i.. -""'G•rHr '·" n 21 11\11 1114 11•:.-'llo Lui ~11P ·~ · I2ll IOJ 100 103 •. Whether the coming talks A cw11 • 32 w. sv. SlAI ' con11 "'" Ln IJ m m ~ ru.-"'Gtttv 121b 2• 31 1:iw. 1uV> 126V.+<2 v ..... l6 445 n!4 1~~ n -.,,. ternatl·cnal trade. For the firs t ,.::!~f:r 1 10 1 17 u 23~ .2A +-~ Cn C•n 1.M ' '' 2•V. 2si,; uv.+ 411 Gr. ei.n · .32 16 J •11o • •I'+ v. '-ulnc:NNn l.OI 11 91111 3' l..,.. :u""""' ,1, time, the emphasis will be on reducing the 800 or so non- tariff obstacles many nations have raised. 1be TT developing countries, a poJite lerm for those strug- ghng to achieve the prosperity enjoyed by the industrialized naoons, bavc been singled out to receiVt' preferences which it 1s hoped will give their lagging economies a shot in lhe ann. The 25 desperately poor na- tions among them are listed for more s~ial treatment. WllETHER THEY get all this will depend largely on how united they are in Geneva . Pakista n i Ambassador Niaz Ah m ad Nai k, cha irman of the Tl-na- tion group, said he was "geoeraUy satisfied" with the guidelines laid down in the ceed d nds A" .. trDf '" J "' \lo Con CCIPW 1• ,, ""' 1 71/o-\'o~PC to • 1 1~ 12'tll 1m nc !I pf 3 .. I 14VI ,, 74 sue epe on a vast ar-A::t~ 2.·60 1 , ltV. i:,,.. :i::z-'°'contic11 2.'11 7 41 3Wt 21 3m.+ YI GlbrF1"1 ·~ 5 .. 14~ 15 16'111+1" -;one1 1.orp 10 1 ~• ll4 lv.-·v;. of red bl f Amt 11" .JO 10 ll • st. 6 ... Cn!ICp pf21!J 11 •I V. 4M\ •l~+ '10 GldO ~hi \( 7\li 1~ 7'/tT V. L llnln 21\k , 2a ~ ~... ~+ ._ ,, ray unp 1cta e actors, A~ .l1& , 1.., 22 ... 21'h 22 ·~ c c~• 2v. · 2 •1v. .o ~ fi-1 Clii.tt. 1.50 12 213 62 •1'-' 1,2 L:tm cv 111 J .. 1 ll\lt Jll'.i )ll'J , including restoring stability to ~~~~1 1·: : ~i ::v. U~ ::t ~ ~riUli0 11~ 11l N !:: 1':: ,s:::t ~ g1:on11..:: J; ~ ~:~ lfil 1: . .r.::1~ ,t1f!~% "'Dfl ·. 2J :~"' 1:.. lt111i+·~ 4 AllO"ll(t '10 14 I lOV. 10\~ JGl'Jt \lo Contlnvsl 21 6 17 .f\11 •l't 4\lo • CIOO. M•r 1• 116 17\\ U'lto I~+ .. Odlhffd ' 71 ~ •:W. •lo+ \.t '0 the money that the trading Ansul co '411. 1 1 15 111., 13 \'I onMt11. .11i. lo 60 H"" 1~. lH• GlobolU .ea. 1 ' 11.\lo 1~ 11~._ ~ t:::::ILOl!w1):11.1• • 13t ~ :uv. 234~,.. Al!llC'he »g 7 2t 13 \2'111 l~ v.CllllllOl11\'f t 307 32.\li :12 37:\lo+~GtkJ\t(tl Fcl t 41 14~ Ill\ l.P\-1' lll'Ml .36 10 I 11¥1 IHt 11¥. :~i countries use to pay for tbeir Apco Olt · 411; 1 • 1," 1,~ i4'tl.-v. Cont r11 .'2 12 " '°"' 20'h 20'!0+ " GooClrkh i • ll 21 ~ 0:0:1 . London 2.l.Sb 12 1Q •1 v. •1 41 'h+ • ~ Ap.co C21h 17 Q ) .... J\lo 3'\ 1•Con1tl 0•1• t 21t 3ru lS. :t1111+2 GetdyrT lr I • 214 :z:ll\ ,,~ 2l L Mh:I s 12 rn, 11"" 11 \li-... goods. The 600 delegates to the A,. L cor11 s 2• "" Mt. N.tv, coriwoo11 2 t 1 w~ ""' u111 . 0oraor..t .:r. t 1 lll\ 12•.• 1:n~+.,~~ ::'5t.'lld1 .l 1 21 IK 11'/J IMt.+ ~ • l\PL 1119 .50 I llo It• lfll+ Cool!. Un .Sl 6 4' l'Jo 1" I\'+ 1io Gould Inc l I 'H 131/:i 22'lloo 'T.lh "t •'"" ·-' 21 21\.\ 21\~ 25'4-\• trade conference dceided that l\ppnect Mu n 1 s ~· 4r.-i• c-1nd .10 13 " is•i11 »YI U>A+1~ Gr•c:•w 1v. 10 102 2t 11o n:11o ui~ ,,. LlT°iiJ 11r", 10 .... ta 20~ 1t 201.Co ••• ., ARA Sw 1.lll 'll 111119 111 1JIV:i+ 'llo COOl>tr Lib 11 Sl Wo 1 1"' +.,. Gr111d U IO ' 20 11"'0 111• 11 ~ " Loro0a ., " -100 100 100 -I ;.. th ti ti nd efforts to Arctt•N u 41 23 1 ~ •~ ...,cOOPTr .tlb 7 ' 14~ 1""' 14'111 Gr1nlv 1.20 5 ' 21'h 21'4 1114-\~ .-"' 2 11Mio 1f-. 1** .. •. e nego a ons a Arctwro :SO 17 u :l'l\.'J lll4 lt'l:i+li,r,. COPetnd A 14 121 22 22 22 -111 Grtnt w 1 !h 1 514 11\\o i1 1~' i:.-1.1 eor11 13 n JV. J\O 1v.+ "" ~ . . AHie ·Enlp 2( 21 5" 5'11 114 ~OPP R.•na• J9 40 t"4 17 17'1.1+ ~ GttYDnr "° 10 I '" ·~ ·~ -\.. ...ndEx 1 20 no ~ :MV. ~t .. put the international monetary Arllt•r .n • 1 1, .. 10 10 ··· C-1c1 1.60 s 1t ~ 2J 23 -.. GtAM1 1.7'.lb n " ™'" :Mv. 3414-~ t::G~~c:1 : 1,2, ... , ~ 41 14 431'1 2i. ' Arlt PS 11• I lt lt\'9 11"-" It •·· C«dUr• Cp 4 '1 ~ 4 •V.+ ~ llLllD J.20e 2 lt'i ""° tmt '"L · ~ :rJ\.'J 21~ Iii' system on a sound basis Arlr. 11~1 :., 1 14 m r\. t'h---"' C«TIGl• 1.12 31 114 113~ 11~ 1131A+2v. GtM Ir 1.lOd 11 4 11 11 11• ~ L fV-'c ·'° f ''!' ,...,. I~ '' .,, " lr.rkln RIHN I 3' 4~' t\.'J ~\.', 1n 2.l2b 1t U Ulh 2!~ 26\~ ·· ~··~ 1.M lJ 2S 52 JI~ 51 ,,... LTV C Cll'll I~ t~ ~ +.,.. ShoUJd follow paralJef COUrses. Ami.cit ,cp 12 2 SV. 5\lo S\4-~ ~owir,.. Cls l~ : if: i1\; 25~1·\lo JI. In I:: 7 sJ nr.~ ~~ n~t1ll LTV en.: .. ~ ~ ~ »ft+~ A~ .:Ill t 131 lMll lt It"' , Clot It lO $6 MO "°"' tl\6 \Iii \II l\11 no Lufltlzol ..0 Ji -4f .QJt 41Mi+i .. t'"ms"~k 2: Ii 1,,.4 I"' II:~"" b-";~ 1i S » 1'411 ,,,. IMll tt :mn u,: ·· ,; J lW. 11w; :· LI.Idly SI ii 1J I~ 111'1 1Ni+ °" SUCCESS IN la.wering bar-::~:.~ ~ lJ ~.,., ~~ f~tfr;~"='•~lM 'I J ff:,~~ fi+'" ~"M.~ ~ ; ~ 11:: 1f~ 1f?=:tW1t1.-1; 2~ ~ ~ J.2:+'~ Tiers to trade would open Up ArvlnLI~ .S2 12 lt 1•\.\ 1' 16V..+ ¥, ~=~ 1t 1: u ! n 22 ... + lO ~ 1:: t ~ lf' ~~ i,: +\\ L~• Yt~: 11 J: st; 1~ f(t+ \II AM •u .50 . Ill 4714 •I,.._ 41:V.-~ Corti IS t0 t-UH+¥.! .. ""' LYk9 of )liic 'I ... 'I"' 20 ....... ·;,: the prospect Of higher living ::~a 1~ I~ ~ = = ~+ ~ !::="ZI 1.20 10 41' "'° ~ ,..._ \\ n.tl 1 :? ,r: 1r~ 11~+ ~ LYncl!Sy A I• •Vt \oO 1\o--r.~ . . s I""--~ .... TS Co M , 241 11~ l"' i' .. ~ft In IJ 17 It,.. 19'!1 1,.._ 14 .-MM-standards mternatJOOally the A• 11r r ··-1 1 :Ml'> u"' Ul.':I ullkl•n .2' 'j 1 1 3 . ,_1311 1 121 ~ 3'"' '7 _ ~MKAnF ·'° 1 t 1:n1. 1m 1m+ ~ • • ' A.Jtoe r•f'll · I ffl WI 5'11+ 'II Uf!lfit9 M• I J1 ~ ~ • , W. 1 1 31 SA9 )ol 3' -lt,\ M.c:Donld II 14 .) . 3 :t financial leaders told the con-:r~~I! 1·,1; : 1; ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ 1°W-;., 'I 'l!t . 2rn; ;~1tt DI 1v. • 1m 22v. 7l'h 22u+ ~ =11 .i~ ~ 2.4~ ~ t~ $!.!! · · ~I Rk:hltd 1 12 IU It* • ~+ '\\ CuJI• NH I I'. 33Ya + .. Gu I• 11: ... 0I t 17 ''"' f\lo. I M•CY 110 I Jl 2s>M ~ "" ference. They said fail ure A111:c ri 2.to . 51 '° StV-H _ v. c~~·~ "'1 • • I: 22;a r. o~~·1~ .. ~ l~ {~~ tfi'C.1t M.o Fd .Mb ,. ~ t !lt 2,._ . 'Al ... could turn the clock back to~:::: °C'M: 4 J 1~r. 15l'ilo 15n'I -~ Cvllnl• • 1 .!...o ~YI .,.._'A ~G.fswll'U l;E t,1 •.,•, '',~t 1,~., ;~'\%t ~ ~:fc~··~ 11 1i ~ :: ~ ~ A.TO ll'IC .16 6 161 ~ ,_._ 71.'at \\Dimon • C• :IO 23t •l llO U + "" • -" -~\.I Malln•v . .a 15 422 1111. 10 -1~ ~ , ~ the grim 1930s, when trade :!'lorn, ~:J• "t 121 61V. '''" ~~ ~ c1nft111 r .so • 33 ,:,. •-.,m-~ g~~ ~ ·· 7~ 1cJ,,.. 1~ IOJ'll--y, :•!!.•!_YHCo 1 10 10 20\'I: toll\ io ,,. '"°"' 1 "3 4V. ~ •\.\ 'lo 0.~.Cll 1.)6 1 2.6 ~ ~ ~ GltW pt )t\; ' 1 S2\.i. ""' S2Vo '"""" .36 20 IJ a6 2.MO at I slagnation impoverished near· ~=Cl>c:;~ .~ ~ Ti\ f!: m-1u 8:~1~,, .~ r, 2N ~ ijg1\lt. llldat ,, M ~ R1 ~+ ~'~== ~ J I~ lf" 11'"" ::~:: ly everyone. Avco of l.20 .. 2 w,, ~~ 3S.\li v. g•vc:o 1.1• • ' 1m 114\ ~ " w , ~ ,-t!. ~ """ ~+ 14 Man Hn 1 i.. 12 119 lll'lt JI~ 31~., , . Av•ry'Pr .U '1 17 46't .m·, ""'" 1\lo 1v1lnl n .24 4 !t ~ .. M:lr. .-"' ........ + MAPCO .54 19 4l Jl:W. ll 31~ ll't ~ The atmosp~er: in w.b1~b ::.r'.:: .:: ,11 ml5 ~ .12'' ttt"7 8:""Porr 1:12 ,f ff Ji"" ~lv. ~m+ ~ ~=~ i~ .J ~/1/t: 1!214 1~t':.+2"" ~:~·mr1.: 11 1;: I~ 10 10lli 14 the trade negotiations begin JS AvOllPr 1..-., :m 1i 11j\1:. 11<1·~fN oe!nw1t "' ' :n .~ 1 ! «. ~•Mf'•P :ll 1s ~ 1:: 1i""' 1~+ ""MarcGr .tO t JI• ~ .... ~ ~ :,: ~ 8tlr.t1' In I• 21 JI Jn. ~ U!J.+1 §5 lntn ' 11 ra ni. H.-1.u U 14 ~ ss:tt "'7'•+ l'i -...rltn l.:J! 21 .aiv. • •11.o V. in marked cootrast tQ that of "''"" e1, • "' "-1r ......... 1 Vt ""T 111 8:f~1l 1;,, 1~ ~ ~ f:: I t+ ~ !:1~ :!: : ~ 111a 11 .. 1R;: ·~ ~~ °'~ ,4 1~ ~ ~~ : tt only three years ago. ft~WI .i!! l1 1# 1.1~ 2m 21tt.:!: ~ 8:11~1'1~ l:JZ I~ 11: :~ ~iv. l'mtt+l4t ~= ·.a ~ ~ '~ I~ !~+ :\'o ::~rnn't 1.: ti 11111'7 = Sill ~il+-1 )! ltk..011 .JJ JI :5t ~ lJ ~ -1oM (_t j n ~ ~ Ii ... H•n:owll I I 1J 1 .... I~ lfft Mtt'ltr 20 2 43llo .0\fo .OV. .... '' I~:, ~ti:.'~ if' =tt H~~ ~l::i~"': ~ 1 : ~ff" s1~ t:::::t: 1:U 1~ ~ ~~ ~!~ ~i~=~" ~~ J; 1Jl ~ ~ 1t; Z 0 I w f F" H d •1 1·34· t • 2M 22"'-i!tn-" ~-M 11 m 1 Ira! ~ """.,.. .22 1s • 1m 19itlo 15" MtntiF 1.14 , ll 22111 22\ii _ 41 t nclttl Inc 4' 53 ll 3' ~ \"1 DentSlllY M lS ft l'i 2 '9 HtfTI• I 1.12 12 71 11Y'I JO 3114+111. MtrtlMI 40 17 I 9~ till 9\11-\.\ , ·• elll 1 arns 0 Ire azar llOOf' n 4 XI ,RI 1'41 1>.i.+ tt Ot$ololn .to 9 li ~ lf<t:: \0 Htnc:O lg ' 7 1• 1$411 1sr.+ Y. Mtr!Mr l.U 1 3' ITVo 17 11 o,r, ... ~~ ..: ,; .g .. ~ ii "n= ~ gmi:im-::i i.11 " .1'1.m: .m: •ill!• :: :::ii:.."".•= : : i::: ::~ :~.i: :::~. :l! ,; -.: ID! ;"tt fi"=+ ~ · WASffiNGTON [UPI) -A possible fire hazard has been dlscovered in 12,000 Zenith col· or television sets, th e Consumer Products Safety Commission said t o d a y . Owners were advised t o unplug the sels until they are fixed. THE COMMISSION said it was ad,·ised by Zenith Radio tnk'frvsl l IO I~ !;111 56!'\ 1\.'0 r~p .2t l~jf" it~ Htowtl!l I.St 10 34 2S\lo 25 li04-11&'MSOflll• JO 'l in~ 'Jo ~ 19-inch table-model sets, made last summer, were volved. · e:~eY .t' 3' 11 2' ru? :f: e1:m:1~11·~ 11 u ~ u :\lo Y:t -~"" "'"' 1 1~ i 1~ 1i: 1~ ,_ ~,:v 1i% . "' u I ,.~t:~ 8~11.M ' 30,. 2.M 2514-ill'ISlvn 1 ' 21 2'ti IV. 3~ H~ l:t JI m'.11 --2214+1 MS'iniv .Slb ,, •I I~ J"'?*' \ill all or the sets within two weeb. f:tt;·1:t .j , 21.~ 1 :~ 11=: it = "1'j · · ; mt ~st:, m;_ · ;i:ri: ?£ 3: '; l'~ '"" lr-t ~ =..~ 1.S l I ~~ ~ ~V:+ lz in-The c om pan y voluntarily l:~t :u H fo: f! 1JE ~l· If 13 Ar-a"' $4+ ~ Hlfni H 1.01 1s • a +r.., ~~'?l_.:1.Z ? " ,,,._ ~ ~~ ~ It said Zenilh be1ieved most of the 12,000 sels made are in homes and sald the company was contacting dist,ributors, dealers and set owners to warn them of the fire hazard, resulting from an improperly located high-voltage capacita- tor. Zenit h gave the commission notice or the hazard after a lire broke out in one of the sets in Milwaukee \Vednesday, the commission said. There agreed to make rep a Ir s err~! :! ii n ~ ~ JOV.i ~ EJ ~ ~ :" ,m ~1~ ~i:.n~l ~ f.16: 1m: 1L~·~ s~W' 1'.B :• J 2#! ,\0 2;i.::·ii :; without e,xpense to owners. EFll l>f ' • ., 1ff"' 11J 1H )Vi Dllllnoll llf.., 12 ~ J.. m _@ .it. HelmtPr ·'° It 12 1• lS lilo 16 + \l;t MCI\ Inc: .M l • i~ ~ ~.,.,.:!: ~ :· Kkmn ·Jl 21 54 J4'lll 3' ~ \11 llOllC l i4 10 2' =~~Iii Helm&-P .20 11 113 J2~ 31'.lo 3N\+ ;oMcC«d .'2 1 2 11 17 ll Zenith said the sets involved .e1onc · 21 110 " ,..,., " ~ gi.....,: .1, 51 ,.., 13 ™" a I Htn'l lso C•11 . ' 214 21.i. 2v. +"" MCCrQ\I 120 4 u 1114 ''"' 11t~+·1;. ·~ .7Qa I ZJ 13\'J 111' '!YI l't Oll$IDll l2b 11 1t11 1W. 1"'°' lt\O \.-\ Htt'h In ..SOC. •• J ~ 6* l'!t 1. M~~ I J.1 37 ~ 12~~ 83'!1+ ~. carry model numbers D-e coP•I 111i ' .o u~ 1 "' I v. "'DldUs.• 10 ti 14 42'-' •t'I' .ct :\lo H«cllln .111 It 111 » 31111 311 + "' M~~ C1> si tt2 .-~ '6 '6~2 B H .i: 141 .. 2, 2~ 'no ·: PIWrsltd '•n .. • 2 1'' I .. H=~ ~I: ll 1n ~~ ~ 1~ ~ ~IBrE~ 1~ : 1: nl~ ?:::: '~ ... 4032W5, D-4030W5, D-4030W6, ~"'° "'o 10 'I 30• l'"-+Ht. D~I 2.u,.b J l!'l ~ L R~t1~ tl...,bteln .'2 25 214 " »;1 55 :t, Mc r Ml -"' t 111 M1 t~ '"'+ ~\ Ws '""'te:o .•o 1 \to I' ' • c • .-tllOI' -17 i1\Z.: 1:. l'.iew1n p 20 u 1st to 19 IO +1 Mc 1i1v,. ,. rao S.t S3 53 -2 D-4032 • 0-4034. P6 and T-~~JI \·~ti 56;A~~3m 3-fu+~~~.olo'1t n ·~ 1'Ao ~ ~!~Voll i:ntt .. 114 7YI 114+"1~C~te .JS!> 11 lt ,,...., 21 21'Ai-'~ :: 2838W6, and aJi sets also have ::CJ: t~ lo ~ ~~ ~j}~±'~ ~1~! :~ lj l: 2.17: ~~ ~+:~ Mj 101~ \~ ~ im r ll~+ ~ ~rtf11 1:! :6 Ji ffV• ffi =_:t ~ f dd'(' aJ ~ 8• I Pl'lo t w '• ~ ll + 411 Doric'& 32 I 1 13'!0 i3\.'ll 1~ . ttM l...W. 1• 10 )\'t 3"' 3IO Mttdof 2to I l1 ffi_ 11 + ~ one o two a 11on num~,.,: 8,11157 1..o. 7 1 27"' Porr (pnVer t t t 11o11 i! Mc Motr"flr 1.12 10 '"' iw. :ss¥J >511>+ "'MH11111 i10 1 ~t? ~U I I: ... _,~ -c . Bla) Ind 52 11 il~ 4 ., i "'o.rsev't 10 7 "' ~ mo Hoff EIK!n 1 1• 1'4 1 1111+ \lo MfdUH , '° 7 35 llfto ~ ·;1 • UQV or -· . e1:r;k D I.DI ... 1t '7'.. 111 120 21'1 t>OWCO 1·" 10 17 ~ """' 'II I !1!! ,,.,.. .:Ml 13 ICll "~ 191(,, 19'1>-\\ME I cOr11 ' 3 ~ 2f:: j!+ n • The company indicated not 1'\:C'k#'11t :.S. 1l if 12,,.. 1f" I~ U ~g P ~~ ~ 21{ ~ ~ "' ~ H.:!~.~st; 1~ lt. ~~ 10~ ,hT+ ~ =.= ·~ 115 29/7 22,'t, 2i 2i,.+1;t ~ 111119111 .u ' ., 'm 12~ ' -~ , • ..,, 1111 10 IS ~ 32 :D lt HOllYWI IA 22 lM lotYI 11'1 ... ,. •• Mire Sir .IO n 24 ,, .. ¥.,lh--1 .. all the sets are fau lty but said lotiO~ CB~s II ill Into If"' 1J: ·:· OrffMI' I.: 1$ l~l .ti~ !m ~flit:::;:::. It: ~ n 2:: 2;,.\ Ura+~ =..r::ith I::: ' 23: I:: r l3 ... alt OWDerS Should ha Ve their tr" C1i: 226 I~ 1m 13 .. + \\ g~ j. 2 '. !I a.,., C: = llfo lioSlllltl ,i/; I 12 IN I0\11 l'*-Ill Mtorr1rl.r .56 ,i l» I~ \~ !f + · .. ~ndll> · · I f~ lt° .r--\Iii Ortnl f.'s.6tt ' t lt Ml 1~ m.-\\~II .12& ll )4 ISV. 1.,_ U +to Mu.Pt 10 •J 10 n« sets chec:ked by lhe dealer. llorclel! :.: : s1: ~I~ l1 21:.i, ' D t fl' f~ 1f : 11U' 1:r: *~ + \.\ =~r~I ;# li ; ~it: ::: :r:.t ~ ~~~ ·f~ 17 1 I 1'1" 1°"1141 1!?t-t: II~ W 1.lS t 15 :Ji 23 2''14+ ._ 1."" JJCD106 lQS I -14' HoWlof 2~ 2 ~ f1'i'I fflo'-\Ii ~ro .JOG 4 U I '-1Ht: ¥t lfl'fnln• IJ\ It .'.It ' 3YJ 31'1-\\ • .. »1m 102 \ f YI HOl.lfflM ... ' 11 lM 12'WI 12•~ +\~ 'G!C In .l~ 32 n• 53\lo 51141 ,...... • "OWNERS ARE advised to ·1°'IEE; 2(t. 11 tl lOI~ l~V. l~~t t; ~ 'A .. ZI 1 .. t6 .. I "°"" F1fltl 20 260 12~ lllli 12 +"'Mier-Gs l.OC ' s 1• 1-,.._2..,. were no reported the blaze. :..n1 1nc t . 1 1••• 14¥! ,." •• •rM ·t: ~ lt ,..9.fo ~ ·~ ~ t=:"; ~ 10 1h ~ ~ 21.1;? ";'l~~!i!r~.! ~ ~ lr.t \flt ~ ·~ unplug the sets and not to use lre!!_~lr JI 10 1" 1ou. '"' 1m+ ""~::i':, ,~: 11 ,,. 1..,..1"'1fo 1~1 HOUIF~ 1.,., , ,.. .s14 .., + Vf Mlc:•-•v• 10 • 'm ,,~ 11tt 14 injuries in' them until they are inspected ~ii"M¥ 1 » ~ 1t im =z i.t: it ~"' ~ .. i ~ "~ " 111 =~Gs 1·: 1~4 1: ~ ~ :\~+: ~i:cs:ctT11.~ ~: ~ ~ .. MIA lm ... and repaired il net:essary" m,.:v~ 21, .. ,7 mi""i4 ~ 1.n i• u Y 111. 1 .. ._,.,dJ ··?: 11 " 1.-1•V1 It"'+ •.11 :~~' l.lj3110 J6 l.Mto 11H ii-+ 111 " Zenith' · ' 'dent f 1 =~,..., 11 1~ fJ~·U"' ff.C t) ln1111 • 1 1i· l2J01J' 1J"' .,.._ ... ~lsAb \; f; ~ l~~ ~~+U ·M11~1.n 1f 2~ ~ = ~~ ZENml SAJ'.D it hoped to . 8 Vice presi or ""nG i'n ·1 152 ~ lMt !i!F. \; 1!"1. Pl :" ~' ·~ uv. iM-14 Ut::~l ~i:, ',!, ~111 ~:_ ~""' 'it~t,t; ~':'Jr 1.# ll n2t :~ ..,~ :...t ~ 1 : consumer affairs, Nathan w. l~n • ~ 11 '' "" 1111; l'r'~ \.\ = it. " \l im ~ 1m:; = H"'"' c11 .11 u u 20'1o 20\\ 211-f'i+ "':1'h."P,t1 1:: ~ 1 lt'\ im l'~"' Aram, said. =~~~o l~ 1& 1J ~~ ~:; ~ "'I"~~: lt Jl't ii .. 1~ 1~ •. n~='J -: ,: ~ ~ »TI'i S1m -~ M ~ .. ,, '.24 ,, ,; ~~ ~ ~~ ~ get notification to all owners ~ .... i. :J3 lj lH" 11~ +·u :~~'1' ft llt'h"??1!m\ 11~ii" HYdroml :1• '-•'...!!! ,., ,..,... ~ ~~··,~>IA.'11: ': ~~ ~11'1 lJ\'i :·: !------------------------.! ~'I'll ·~ Jm JU f,t+ 141 m ... ,}~ ICN Pll1r,,, 11 JO lOV. t"" 101\+ ~I ~PC,'T. '·'° 1 • 2'~ 2>1• Iii ~ '{' I. ·1A i wt lit .. ,... li i ~ 10.~ p 1.16 10 11 11~ 2~ 2110-~\ .. ~ .. ,-•. ,.u '• 12 1J:r. 13" , CO 4 » ltu }1 .. dt a • .,..1""19• ,ta t 1 S\4 15 lS"-+ '.1o ........,tt • 34 11, Jm Jlo B . I G • ' Co 1nc1 : : IIOO 'J" ,\Ii v. -,... 0 :la r.' 1 '~ \:~! ~ dH~1or . .: If ~ 2~ ti~ 2~~ ~l ~:':~ r~= : 2n ~~ r m l' '-----------oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ age ripe a~--·' . l ! 6\~ 6!'1+ \Ii l!1 Attot H ... ,.'ll ,l!l,+ ~ ftnln 130 • •9 11\11 1"' II '-+ \II::::::".,•: ' lat • s.. M \: 11Uf~1.20 i 10\ll 20'\~~EOSH H ~ .. " IUC'"pli'lt , 43 '3 .Q '15'\ lS~ 1$ "" &Mfdl'fof.'2b I O 111 30 XI -\lo ~t'f!. i\11 • 41.\ •• 111 '°""" 120·11 u 21 U41o 2•'111 MolYb cor11 IQ U ,...., 'j"' , " Auel ION 19.31 ACRES •utov.w .Jo s ~\~ It\\ 1,.,._"' ~ M"' .. l iu ! . 1 1~"' 2'.1s 1110 ,,,_. 21~ ,,"-~ ~:::OC" ·'° >: ,i' '™' 1 "' 1 " * ' :=.,: 1~1; 6 13'1"'""1~:· 1fJ+ 111 .. ,.~."' *" :,: ,.• '"'••1"' 11-'~·i·" ·1~1~ ~ 21 ,J ~: '~ 2~tt+' ::~.~.' ... "'..., •,1 11~ t,\• t1v. ,;~1~: * ' ·n • f~ lfl l..O 0 111 1M :H~ 2m+ Vi Elbe 1 ~ 1'\ .,, 'ii !1d Ott J.14 7 J 24\41 24\.0 ''\~ ~ .... n.v /U4 -S7v.· $t'llr+ 14 Beautiful Producing Orange GROVE IN RIVER-NY s' Fa. VO. rite, on ue &:ii°pr~~ ' 1(: 'Jt 'm ~f\;.! ~~It. ~ t 1tt 11 i ~:v. i: l~~~:s 2:= .~ 11: = ~ ~..:: ~ ~=S'.1r.2, fO : ~.,, tt~ n~: · p SE !llmfYC ,14~ 1'fu U'hJ!..:,t,'h ~nw 1:!4 1 '11~ ........ 1 ... -f~·74b .. lo f" ~ ~~Z:l:l .~1:11 64 y~mzfl ... t_, SIDE. CAL.. WED .. SEPT. 19th, I :00 M. · · ::r"".r.,fw !-cl:!"!.. "'+ • i=•.:lj '1 !! ¥ ,m 'fl: ~ !'.'!~ ji 'l •l J.'lt ll" lll::~ =::' ~ '~ '\ \:"it il~ i~e Cor. Celif. & Spring Sts. in Riverside tl-iighgrove WASlUNGTON (AP)-.., The Pdce Of bagels ls HLT I.Nb 11 • "'"' ~ M . ~::J.lr at l". ~ lt~ 1U. 16 \0 r.:., 8ii n ,:: 1~ 10\0 '°"' .: .: 1~ 111~ ~ t'~ ~· ~ • I gO!ng Up . • • -C. ·" ' '~ "'> "" 31•+1~ Emo 'i!•'li j '~ i •• !" ~ '/;' :J'/j/ ' "' Iii~ lj" n~: ~ "°"" e; P• • '1 iii/ •ill ;\ii+.~ area. Write or call for fac t sheet of prod. records, ThJS si ngle eC9ponii~ fact\ Of eailqg bu been :: : ~ ;... ~ ;~1 "e,;11-. 8!t 1J . t mt 1 ~ l~C"'* 1A ~I J GU .,"' ~ "=rrSti1.J: • J 11, a 1....+ ii terms, etc. brought to the attention of the Jlquse by Rep. Ber· l~u~,~~ J , 1;4: 1ni 1~+ = Iii .. ~ .• 1 1~ I~ = :"~ ii r ~ ~it!N 5 ~~ .1:.! ·' 9 ~ ~ ~ft+:: tram ~•e11 "'-Ny) He '-•• the ~rice 1·um\has c.11•11• 'ik 22 '' "' "l' "" ..... ,,...,roe.ct1 " .1 ..,,.. "' " -to. ,..11c:~v·f ; '! 1m ,m 1 " Mo1,,,o1 •. 10 ,, )GS if:' "" ~+,,; WU 'bl\ hard Im bagel·lov1,iig "booati!uen In New . ork S!~'; ·1.11 " ' '"' n• .,.._ ........... 1 .. " It ii-.. = .... ' ' "" "" ""-.. MlS>T• 1.U " " .. "~ " PHIL HANSON Au·~·neers CUU I \....-1 • • ,llllUU C•m a LIOll t 11 M ~ 1At-\I EQll111'n M 1 :i ~ft 1f4to I~ (i ,,_. It li •llo'lo '1\~ 41~+ V. Ml FWI l,fl 1$ 111 ~ ""» ft + _. ssa.1929, 902 E. 17th St., S•nt• Ane Citv. ' •. C::l1'11e ia ;t :i tr r~~ f'Jt± ~ f~\'9 'f"'l 'I J ~ M\.'I :·. nltmo 1·U 1: ~ '" tv. J.c \~ ~::::~ ~ • 1". ~ /"' I + " c:c111 .. c 11 13 "" ~ uv.+"' EIJMr • • ~ ..... Ut.4t1~ 'nitM"t• :ad 1• ift:t 'l3 -sil Mun1ng I.QI I m ll:io\ ,. ,: -·t~ Broker co-operation lnvlt.d ''THE MOST RE~eNT --·ually of Pha-4 •-. 1 Ti..: 3: fl r~ :!\I) ~: ~:::.,~ . I 11 1 1~Vi 1~ ~ ~~~ ~ 'I 'l'I'?! ~ ~ut24'i ~~~ ~ 11 .~ = lffill\l t'" ~ ...._. ;:iv Ui C.. I.Ill t U 4n'I 41 a -\'i Etltl'Un 1' 15 .,. '" f I" I" HMY ~illli JJ ff\.'J 'l\11 . Murr 0 ·m; I 1• ~~ 1l•..f. , consumer i tem that is'V~ popular in• my dlst'.ricr ~ :i f ~ J~ ~'~ 1:r11 ~l~'°'tJ -~ a l~ rm ~I ~ " d 11T'J :: :.: 'i?'I 11-. 11~-~ =~ ("' .. Ii 1: 1f"' , lt n:: ~ -·-A111501111 !llm•HI ' HlbJllJ - . - -the blgel, 11 Podell told the Home. t. li' ",n: ,t: 1tf-+·:~JB ! n 11: 1~ I ii '-! tt isfJ tilJ ~U~1" ~=~K0~~2:JO ~-N~N[\ ·1~ !l"''"i ., A bagel ls" a glued, hard dOUJlµlut-shaped W 11 1: ~ ~ :J: \ en:on '& 1r '" ..-.. " +1iwi "\': • ,. Jb '' tre•rc• . 11 4 1 "II n. :: U d. Or flour Dd -ater It can' be eaten b j• • Ob . . t 1•V. 1414 I•~ ' _. ,_ n I " 1 #flt. g: 32_\4 .. H•sllU . 'l " m fi " J'O ma I .,. • Y V' ~·«II 10 17J ~ ' t~ F""119 ,40 ' .M 1\ti "' 1111+ 1' I ~ lJ I « t4Vf 641'11 H1IA.lr1 IU m 4\.\ II• self or, as often ts the case, with cream cheese and :1e ·!1 i 1l :~': :~ :;:: · ~~ ·\; ft '2fl ·~,... 'a ,~, n i#h.,4 •: , l~ ~ ~~t ~ ~::1~n1 . s 1; , ltz 40 smoked salmon or lox. .e I~ 11 Sit "h .1i; "~~ Vt ~:~;r . 'fr • n ll ,: ,~! l:: • 'T .,~ • .,, ' ·" • ,, ff I~ ~~~:r: ~~ J~ \\Ill ~~ U" :t ~ "Forthepast!ewyears,theprlet9.fmefl.bad_ '~t'i~=' ~Iii r4_1tt-.:=-.,"ll: l , ' 'm ~ • ·' 'j' ,,', ll~-,-=l~o\'r:.:,ij 1 ti~ !Ju~ fl~ stabilized at eight lo ten cents,' he sald. "CO ~JI r . ' ,." ,m 14~ I' e•W!'":,, Mi 1 .ll f. H!.'1 ~ ~~ 11 YI 'h 1111 ~~ ~~'rot~u'·. 10 ~· 'i·~ .. I 10! ~ 3311 llh Ir ICll l tt ~i\ \l f'H 1 14 3t 1111 POll'lvti I. ? ii 4-\1 '°''j lr.;;U..ii"+~FrMO ii . .,.,,, l.\Nt!IOttl S -+.t "THE PRESIDENT removed all price controls tntt' 'ht 1 l1 "l r· ll~ t~ t! FON!IMI ·'° ' 1* R~ • . ~ 4~ 14(t ~ Ntt= 1, I '~ ,,. J on wheat. As a result, my constituents are now pay· ~:;'1Mt, \-,tf 1i illt ~ ri~+ ·~ ::J\(t~ 3• ~ * l:l\ m=· .. j r:~ ~ ~ ~l' =il1~:o; ~ ~ JVt I\~, .. Ing 12. to 15 cents for a bagel, an increase or be--~::it:l 1t 1, 1,, 31, 1t111 1~\\..1~ + :~ ~::DS1"1.: ,: nl ..,~ '"" oi • U • 1 16 1ta 11:: 1~ t. Si~!t~ ~ ~ ,{" t 11..-"' tween 20 lo 50 ~~nt," Podell said. ~""'f;I .H I 11 1~ i.1r int'+ ., ~ .. o '"' ·" n 13 lj!i r.\• , 5 •1• t , -11 Htt !E"1 '! Ir.! 817 14 r-•'-" llllS .0. I 112 ""' 10\t '20~ \• ,.llll'blrd .IO • '' I 6V, 1 .. ... • '•" ~'+l'I H-t • 1-ni •lit 11----------....:.---------'1 .,_.. • 1 II 119 ~ ,., ... "" . l'lld ll'tndCo ( • S ~~ ·~ '\ . I t \"'-~ + l~1 lol1t " !!\t .. tt 11 111 mt nu m.-t\ ,.,'""" t.m • • •~ 21 M\.-" ... M 1 » ,, fl, ,,._ o Ht s • .,.. 1 1"I + • I • . • : I i l • • l • Sttiffle Satnple Inspector Roger Perrier inspects portion of 1, 705 pounds of hashish intercepted by law enforcement officials at Montreal International Airport. The drug cache. estimated worth $2.5 million when sold on the street, is the biggest hashish seizure ever made in Canada. His Persistence Moved Moun t ah1 J\1T. LAGUNA (AP ) -Jn his 20lh year in lhis nation, Pal McEvoy. a jolly ex-Cana- dian. is proving perseverance can move a mount::iintop or at least spruce up his wooded niche. After pushing governn1cnt agencies and San Di ego mortgage houses doggedly for three years. J\1cEvoy i s watching his Laguna rylountain lodge be faccliftcd in 90 days. THE IMPROVE~IENTS cost· ing $300,000 are being financ- ed by San Diego Fcdernl Sav- ings & Loan Association with what is described as the first Lag11111i illo1111fui11 lodge I<> be f11•·e· lifted. title insurance policy ever ap- proved for private work on U.S. Forest Service land. Sonny Vigil. chief title officer of First American Title & Trust Co., a Santa Ana·bas· ed firm. said ~lcEvoy himsel f drafted the necessary documents and satisfied San Diego Federal enough to make the loan. A spokesman at San Diego Federal said the process was ''so involved that it took us about o year to put it all together." McEVOY IS replacing \\'ilh 22 hauled-in 1nodular units eight old wood cobins which he bought on five acres of leased land in 1!>62. In t\\'O big buildings Aquarius Co. of Santee tied together four sec· tions making up a total of 12 units. Ten separate cabins were set up amo ng the 50·foot pine trees that cover the land in Cle\leland National Forest in San Diego County's cen tral highlands. The \\'oocl-like c.:ibins. com· plete with plumbing, were placed on ready foundations and wiring hooked up. There is a doubl e bed, a pullout couch, a kitchen, bathroom and a fireplace in each of th e pecan· paneled untls. ,_fcEVOV FIGURES he sav· ed $40,000 by having the cabins installed in sections delivered by truck, compared with the bids to build them on the site. At least one other such title policy on forest land has been written in Catifronia since, Vigil says, but it's difficult. "11cEvoy was persistent eno ugh to satisfy the lender," Vigll said. IS NOVEMBER, a meeting is scheduled in San Diego by lessees of U.S. forest land ln 12 western states to discuss problems such as the difficulty of obtaining the required title policies. 1tcEvoy moved his family to Detroit from Port Lambton, Ont. in 1953 and in 1958 became a wholesale food salesman in San Diego. He became a U.S. citizen in 1962 and the rest or the fami ly, In· eludi ng live children now, followed suit. THE GENERAL store on his property is tended b y J\.1cEvoy's \\'ile. A son and daughter 11 re married. The 6.000-foot a It it u de. brought 12 inches of snow last year, and the McEvoys' cabins in an area popular for cross- country skiing and tobog· ganing already are booll:ed solid for Christmas and New Year·s day. Nearby is an Air Force radar station "'ith 225 persons living in barracks and 750 others in dependen t housing. ~ EVBBYTBll&'S Mexicans Flooding State. FRESNO (AP) -Lured by hl&her waaes than they can make at home, Mexicans are pouring into California to work tile fields and are bting Ir· rested Jn record number!l. The U.S. Border Patrol rt"ports a jump or 24 percent between Kern County and the Oregon border where 33,000 were arrested during the flrat six months this year. 9:9" ..... -. I -- DAILY '!LDT fl OVER THE . COUNT ER ICASOUlll ... tWThurtday,lotlf. IJ. lm T~ 4U01tlltm "'lllWI le lj" ll"' ~H C•r IO't lj<\ l'M .. r s: 1!~ 1f~ Eo.lltll bY IM Ht• l'rlKft Ill 1 I.lo 1 ~In Cg ..... lit If , r "'*••tf11<1 o• 11ro1 fdl: ft. t'9 ~' o ,,~ ,..., ::!i'o.~"'11,t_",O:.,: ur111..i. °'"""'' l'i,t111r H 1~ n ..-•r to ..,~ lllo ,,, bid• •lld '"'' ,.1111• '4• 1'" ,. " o 11-. 11~ "n1'' • •"" •,. '""''' ov. ,.,.,.,"" •'tltftlo 21..a 11~ ,,,., c. ,..., ""lr,•c1111 '" ~ COUl'Jltf .._,, .. rftllll 1J .. tf,,. llltyc"' lll'f' ••<Pl ''"'' •• §!" LtJ ,,. '" ,,, JJI 'I-oc ':'.! 1~~ !10$9 11.,w let Co ,,..,. U'4 lllttlNI 1•"" ,,,. TI"' 1-..... 1m1.1 Th• _..,,. ,. •utm uvi. ,."" 11111• P,K '•'·· '',~ iow'&c: 1::: ~f.: IOM ft l'Ol hlChldt 011 A11IO.. It 11) lll1c'l 4 ·• ._ '11 I' l\lo '"" r11t11 ~·•1111. ,.,,,. §; er...-.: 11 i1"" 11110 1.c ''"" ,,..., ''"°"c n ._, ,.,. low11 ., commit 1Jld Mtd t.'11 ! 111n univ ll""' '!" u1111 tllt ,, ,,..., tlflll; trtd do tflm Ma It,. 1 11111 "" S,,. \Jfl ~ \'..: , r•PI'"'"' 1ctiu.1 G••llll 1oc I"" '"" 1111,,. a.111 es • ..., uu""'L N~ ~~ : "'"'t.CllOM Ortv Ad¥ 14 101.\ 1111'111 Mf ,~ JI-l ' L ,,~ ''"' ~:r'U:.~\~~l. ~=~ ~s, l'" ·1iv. =:~ &~ n~ l!~ ~"'" r;d, 1011 1111 Tllllrsdey Hill 1'1111. 1l It" lll011111t 9 11\t 1 1111 ltnv Mobl S i i/I leflt""*' 1S. 1•JJ H•rnll 9r Hit )fl.to JllOVM CO tJ\.\ IJ..., VHM r t~ :~ Bid "" H•flfn '" S\41 Slolo 110111• 'lit '"' ,._ V•~·.,.' ~• ., AC""°"lll 10 ti"" H•fMI • ..... ll!io llulllt IOll It .... 16 VIII · Alt• Aht )~ tt . H•wll'I .. j flllo Jllla •1111 SI.,., 20"9 11"'i VIII SM:• J Jlili Alie.• l.nd tt IS Htllll Mt tliil Jiii S.tt Adt '"' , VlllOt l tt l•\to 11'1• All119 BIV , .... t H••ctl c ,,l .. lt!.4. s.r1 .... C• , ........ v1, ... ,... ··-·.~ Allltd l'tl 1M 19'111 Ho"""d '" 1111 tl'ltrtr JI ).( V JIN S.C .. ' AllWI lh ~..., 1 Hoover 11\lo ti"' l'IOll In t...,, 1t\lo Vol """' 1)\lo 11\(o Arn Aor11 IV, ,,. Hunt MIO 11\.\ 1j"" 1111 lno1 1 11111 w1111 MG 1t11o tJW. ... Arter ' 2"1 ' Hv•tt c n..., ' 11111L u .... '"' Wtllt NII " 'l Atnfl Lb 1'111 , Mvil•• c tt"' nil! r PP' H 1111. It w •• ,.,.,,_ I '"" Y.i: Arn frpr 11 1-1 llldt Wit 1IV. It rlt>la I 1"' 1 Wtbb Rt ,,,._ '"" All! ,lllCI ll"'r !1 llld\ NIKI 1J"4o 21V. • Wr1d tJV. 14111 Wffdilll ...... ·~ ~111 ''"" ..... ' 111lort11 JI.lo Jliio y Mtrth 11 II Wtl1! wt Iii!\ 1Joll A"t OrH ft\lo 11 111t9I Cr1t ...... JI vm11tr 1114. 111.t. Well~ M 1t"i 11 AMlr~ S't ltJoll ji lnttrc En !.1'. I~ VIII Ult Jlyt 12\li Wlltli "1 1\t '> Arn Ttltv 14\f S 11111111 61 I "" ''"" Ur Cp II.\-t Wit•ult n 1•"'1 1 IN THE SAN J 0 a q U I • n Am Wtld 1011\ II lrtl Alum 1"'1 ..... t• l\t 7'-' WtHr Fd 11Joli 1t'-'o Aftl'ltlllt ~ 41 1 .. 911W A 1'-' '"" Silllos.Dlt 10"° 1114 WUrtmt I 11\t 11,. I :1 At1•911 111 1\io • tntr11 c. 111"' 10't Stltp Tots s1:o,;, !IV. Wll\fl H J 16V, 11'~ Valley, center o Calllomia's •1>9•co 109' u ""•nd • • ..., 1..., Slnd P•P 1•1111111o wv.1 PltT 1st.\ is"' ""'' IMP •1 11 JtlMS!I 11"" •I'll filclrl 2!'.lo l• Wll( •Lt 1• 1t\t farm labor force, the increase "'<I" Myl 1\6 1 Jtl AlrFr !"" • 11n•t:1r 1 IS\6 U"'1 WO&d Liii H'I. 1S'AI Arroot Ht It 16 J&Sl,n M 1 "-16V. I• lt etl1 IS'" H"I WOf!d SY IS''-16 was 61 percent. More than UPI T.._.tt ••vld• • .., t K•l1tr s1 11 11\\ 1• N Alt 12"' ,, .... wrltht w 1>1o '''° P II ' F ' h t Al\O Coll JI 11 IC•lvtr C >"" 11'1 lkN Ir• 1'11 1111 lt0tn1 Cc> t"i t•o t0,000 illegal aliens were ar· 0 ••t .....,. g .,.... •u G1 Lt 11.\\ •J K•••n Tit 11'1 '" 11•1t M s 1-.. ,.,. .,,110 "" f'"" ••"'.> .. V•• ~• Auto l'•n lO"t 11 K1ll•od 11 1'..., 1•ro• TK ''"" 11 .... fltqir Co ,.., 1'' rested, almost one-third of the e11td Ato 1 1 1C1fl Cofln ''"' 11 11111r E1 ~ •'• 11ns u111 ,, 2 Vi entire region's six-month total. Bob Stemper, special assistant to General lfotors president Edward Cole, holds ::~,". ~~ ~~u ~t~ ~:~,pa;: 1~,,, 1f~ De .1 th Ing arrA ... A up the 260-Cubic·inch catalytic converter along with the platinum pellets which :::r,"Mh 1::: ~ ::~,,cr~11 1'~ 1~~ spi e e soar e3~, will enable GM to meet the 1975 pollution standards. General Motors will install 1111~ •100 u¥to 1s tCMS 1.wt '"" •v. N1w vo,k 1u,11 -Tiii 1.11o•1111 U\t Uni.led Fann Workers lea..1A. e1rik R11 ,, ,, 1(11•D1 v1 1311, .,..., '"'o•i 1111 110<'• thtt ,.,,,, ,,1,,, tfl• ~ the converter on most of their 1975 model cars. B••"•' H ,,,,, 11• ... 1Coo•' Pr 11•" 1J\) mo11 tn0 lllll""' -1 "'""on"''<'"' Ce,8 ' Chavez Charge. that ----------------------------------------/ 8111111 F 10,., 11 l(rufQtr I e-.. ti cl'l•llO• OJA !ht QVlf·lllt·Count1• 81fltH ... 101/t l(ulllh El t~\ 1''4 mtrll1t "quOltO bV the MASO. Bttllnt I'" ''" ' LtdO Pet ,.,. 10'~ Net •nd p1rttfll•tt cn1no11 trt 011 many more Illegal aliens re-Btkln Cp '"' • Ltnc111 10l0o "'" dlt11r111<• btt,,..tfl TM pr1vlCM 1111 eio Btt1lly L1 21''1' '''"'Lance lt 1t pr Ill •nd 1n1 cufrtnl ltd ~Id pr/tt main in the fields because the I'" Pro 1•'" » '-••U• c Jsv. '' 0A1tr111111 P • Pl s f ll tll L1b )'II) •O..., l-•1v Boy 21VJ 2•"'1 1 Quolron sv11n '" .. Vt U• 11.s Border Patrol doesn't have lbb co 1111 1 '-'"'' Pl u'-'I 1s l '"'1"'.'' Mto , ... ~• up 21.1 ens.on an a e IQ Orl'll 11'/o II Llb911v H l'°' 1'1o MltrtllltU Cp SI>\ .. 11t Uit 21.1 h men to arrest all Of lrd Sons 11•1, lS"i Lil Cnmo t vt t ' Opttl CotPrtn 10 + '"" Up 11.4 enoug BOD l!.vn1 ,,..., 21V. Linc BOii 6'-' t vt s Mtrlnt ~rOltl\ 1:U.+ !\It; Up 11.0 them. 800111 HP 1',,. 10 Llon C!Sa l\t tV. 6 Gll:1 CM111Utr '"" .. l~ Up 16,7 . Br1nco I 11'111 12\lo Locll11 SJ St 1 Cohtnnl 11:10 14V.• 1 Up 11.S ill I Brlflkl 1fl 11'4 n LDt•I Ca SS St\'I I Vfoorit Cl'ltrnl t .. 1'4 UP 16.1 "\Ve know there are ega 1•0•" Ar s s~ M1<1 G11 11 u v, • us ,..,01c11 '~"· .., uo u.• R • R 3 B ' F ndat• IKkk 11"' 11~ '-'•/ ll:llf "' s 10 Clnsmtllon !fl 2 + \\ UP 11., aliens in the· area because we et•rement ests on ·g OU w ns Utkty • • ..... Ml ltkl ~ t1 11 Atlltd Ltllll!'t •1o1o+ ,, Up 1).1 .., .., lurnp SI JIJoli tlllo Mtrll l'"•I 11 11V. 12 AIJloTrt!n Cp 10tlo .. 1'4 Up 1J.O apprehend 300 to 350 a week," su111r M 1• •s "'''' Kw )1'4 Jill. u Atfr1,11 M1c11 , + '-Up 11.• C1m T-o 2'0''o 21 MC C:rnc.11 IO 11 U lntt"ll lntorp 1H't .. IV. Up 11.J replies Herbert Wals!1-deputy By SYLVIA PORTER It is possible too that at least which guarantees you a ~!~1 v~ 1l':Z iti.. =~~u,:iv :; .... :i~ ll ~~T::; ~:,1: ~~: ~ ~: :::: chief Border Patrol agent ('~·tin a SerUs) ula specified income for !1'fe w~·-CtimP '"' 11"' 11'• M•011•11 "''" '''" u MC1 c--iunl '\'• ~ v. 11.1 ......,, part of your accum ted ll!:U Clltflct A 1111\ 1•'4 Mt<IO In 6"' 1\lo 11 It S 11: Ctrt> 1 + \' Ult 11.1 here. "We· agree that "·e could Your financial independence you are ready to retire. C11•n• co '"' 6.,.. ,,..1'' fr 11\.\ 11\t 1t suortrne f:•I 11 + 11Ji V• 11,1 ,. will pension coverage is , ... ,,, c. 31,,. 1114 Mii r'°'' u11o 'I"' 111 s,.c1r1 """ Ji14• ZIJ!o u11 11.0 use more manpower. in your retirement yelfS c111 er 1. '' " MP•• Gt• ,, .... 1"' ,, •t•OClfO<n w1 tilt• ._ up 10• ••-dA • """""""b}e" to another )0. b Cflrl9 Sole Minn Fi fi •'41 6'°1 22 llt<ll&S,,, Brd 1~+ 1 U1t 10,i rest on Uree fowuuations : A""-TIUS TYPE of program !SJ "' Mogul Cp 20VJ 11"'1 1i s.11sv11111 .1no 31"" .. , u11 10.s AN UNOFFICIAL survey estimates that 40,000 to 50,000 illegal aliens worked in the San Joaquin Valley this season and sent at least $1 million a week back to Mexico. Patrolmen say it's a revolv· ing door situation. Many of those arrested are returned to Mexico voluntarily , but then head right bacll:. An estimated 2,000 persons slip across the border each night i n t o California, Arizona, Texas and New P.Iexlco, they say. "It's Uke a yo-yo," one patrolman said . "We ship them south and they come right back up the string." TREY KEEP coming in hopes of escaping poverty. Aliens say jobs in rural Mex· ico, when available, pay 10 to 25 pesos a day -about 80 cents to $2 in American cur-- rency. Aliens claim that by working long and rapidly in American fields they can save $60 to $100 to send home every week or so. A small grocery store operator near here said she sells a steady stream of money orders to aliens. "I guess 11m sending $3,000 back to Mexico tor them each month," she said. But there are costs, too. Some aliens sell livestock and oUler possessions in ~texico to raise up to $300 needed for transportation to U.S. fanning centers. Others buy coun. terfeit visas called "chuecas" for 1100 to $200. THE FEDERAL and state governments have t r I e d • unsuccessfully so far, to make farmers responsible if they hire ''wetbacks.'' And Congress is considering sanc- tions against employers wOO knowingly hire illegal aliens. Many growers admit privately they don't check closely the papers of crew members brought to their ranches by labor contractors. "You know damn good and well we have locals here on welfare that are not going to work ," a peach and plum 2f'O\\'et said. "So \\'e just as \\'ell support them and let the illegals come in.' ~ur Social Security benefltl, under certain conditions. ould 1 f the cn11 u .., ,, Js-Mor •• in •1 •2 u ... t,,.., Ctmc> 1''"'+ '"" UP 10.1 J-w ree you rom c11v1pt 11v, n VJ MoOr• SI 3\Vt 16VI 11 l'unllSHd .~ ,,,,.,,. 1~ U• 10.1 vnur individual savings and m. But the fact is that millions Clo• Cl'o '°"" 11 Ma,,11n 1•"' 101.1. LOS111:s ' -edl · respoDsibilities of mo n e y coc1c Lt 11 ... 11 Motor c1 t it. '" 1 us• 1n.,.., 11111 :o,;,-~ O!'I 1s,o vestments in all m urns, or you are drifting along under com1 Sllr tt>1o :IOJoll MSt D••• 1 iv, t e1oJMc11c11 Sc .,.,,_n on '' s 11 management or investment Cm•TI P 1l"• 111.to Htl CflvSt 1v. • 1 v111 D-,t A1e11 ,.,,,_ 1"" °" 11.s your private pension, u. any. the dangerous ilium.on that Con11111 .. u u-.. i.111 LIDtv •""' ''" • carnllUI•• svc • _ 104 ott 11., Of a)! three, only the Social decisions, would guaran'-Cou1l111 11 211,;, NI M61Cr 12 11 S liltdk1n L11t1 10 -J ~ 11.0 round ti . lid your pe-"'on ts '81e and will ed th! 'c•os1. '•' ','.c •,•~ "' "11tnt 101t, ',',"' •Mt• tr1111 11111 "'o-v. 11.s Security a on 1s 90 . •J.:>1 you a fix mon y payment •111tn .,. ~. "''""'"' ' t Bullo L11C1 Tee sllo-~ 11.s I lo uJd be Substantial. For many Cwrl Non u n N1wll Co IJoll ti.. t Cm111 Tllttr .1G I -lo't II 11.1 Your i--vate peM n <XI and would assure VNI that you o01n1 1n11 J1•• M0:! Nt:no G0E 1ri '•'' , Gffl °'"cm , _ u. atf 11.1 t be efit pl 1--tfl!J M ·•NJ Nil H'"' • 11 LVO C1bltlnc 1 -"° 011 11,1 turn out an emp Y n · reasons, your an may not would never ouUlve your 01r1 Orq 1•.11 1•., Nlco•e1 lfl 1•-. 1\\ 11 Tr0c>!•TOQ1 st . 1(~-•1t 0t1 10.s poy oil at .II. •· for size, . I 0111 O•• 1'"' l'" N111"'n A uu 11•4 n HousntSvi G• iv.-~ Off 10.0 IT WELL MAY be that your fringe benefits include a relatively generous retirement pension plan p-omising to pro. vide you and your spouse wiUt a decent Uvlng standard when added to your Social Security, private savings and ins\lrance, Long Beach Facility To Continue ~ C&pita • <l1t1 Gt11 ''°" •l'• Hltiun a l1 J1'1J n E1tulfln llld 11io-\lo Oii I.> today's average m o D t b J Y It should not, however, be g:~~1, ~~ 1!~ 1\"° ~::i1N1G ~·~ ~1 l: &:-~~.= f,1t:: :! 8ff ::: benefit ls only about your entire retimnent ~ [)<eklD Alt 11 ,, N1111ll (p ., ............ u Pl-100 Min J'll-\11 Oii 1.• I '"", and even A .. A. r•• OtU•I 11111 ,.,, ' Mutlr ltt , ... 2·~ 11 CllnlCtl sci.n ,,,,_ °"' 011 J,] u..J G.UC.l gram in an age ol lnflation. Othut c ,.,,. l• •111• H • • 11 C•• Ctflbtlttll 11.t-"' Oii J.1 '-• I I lirln Al"""gh 011111 Cr• 11''o 11i.. ftll Or Stl!. 60.., 1' Gold ""'°"11\fl ll'I..-"' OH 71 -.. serv ce, new y re g l.lalU an annuity can Olt<fl Hd 10 .... 11 Cltn E• 1'14 '"" 10 M!Oltnd c.ou It\!. "' Ori 1:1· _...yes are getting only g-ate a good monthly oict • B 161.o 11'• ou•o• Mt ,.,, ' ,. soo•1eoac:t1 co ''~-,. °'' '·' e ... .-. "'""' Oivr l S.C.I Ul 111 lhh LQ9 U"o 1)'"' 11 Bt\I PTodlKll 31''-l'' Oii 6,1 $2()0.$250 return -far ffiOre than bank Oocultl ?1•:, lt'lt llvy M 20 .... JI"" 11 &ndr\n Jt<oll 3,,,_ 11.t Oil • 1 • Ool!• Gtn 1-., 1-. n ferro I '"" 21 A<el>Ofl p ltdlt 1'41-1' Oii 1 r Take this u a warning to savings -you may be able to 0&n11n, ''" 21... 1 c1111 ,, 11 is F1sco 111< .n ' -"' °'' , , I I Oow Jon\ 1ti.. lt'lt rmo"t IV, 1 ' check up at once oo the v ta do much better by investing at ooyot oe ll'" 111.4. vrmv• ''"' '"' details of YOW" perWon plan a yoong age in real estate or ~~~1 ~.~ .!~ .~~ ~tt~' c~! :~ :~~ and to •et n .... facts strai"ht stocks ie.1 P1\o n ... u• .. P1b•I er ~ •Oit a UK: 5"' • • E1 Hutti •'~ l\lo P•tttr 17 )I ~EW VOll:IC IUl"ll-lllt 10 IPIOll •UI ... You ~annot pl.an lntelligehtly if Even if you can manage a Efl.trq., c '" '" P1t G•"' n 11\.\ "oo:kt "'°'" on "'* orc ""'11..i T1tvr1· deluding H and Equ SAL 11°" 11 ... P1c Lvm J1"'t 1114 O.v 1t .._i110 tw MAJO. you are yourseu retirement income equal to E1111n • nlt. 1l"' P•So erd 1'"" """ '™' v.i-•u ••-" V:.· ~ .. family. your a~""' eam;••s today, It E•«11 in 1>.l. lt\P111 CkOI 11~ 1•'4 Fun• s.,o, ••·* ''" u + 1.:. --... ~ ~... fl l"t ifll '"' 1 Pl\lf ll:tv u~ 11\11 ••f'lll OrtnAOlt 11.JOCI 11~~ 11"'-...... Your life insurance is prob-will ..... you way, way down il'tir Liit I"' ·~ Ptwl•• p l\'t )111 (tfltronlc OH• 61.100 l2 )1"4o+ 1!:. t-• ,,,;Oft fl ll\'I ll'lt llyl\t Cff 11 .... 111.t. Arn l!.•P St.600 !I MV.-:i.. ably designed primarily to the living scale Of 1,0 Or 30 l"tr"' !Ir 11 11\lo P1y N Sw I"" 1, ... t.dv Mltr&O.v ll,lllO 1~ :to''°I+ •1 t Instant tale I 1'1¥1 Ort •·~ 1'* P1Gt& ._, """ 11'• PtM 01111'1 tS.100 1"" I~• t' crea e an es or years from now. •1,,ar111 nv. u 11>11 H&.H 11v. ts,,., •m Micro 1,11 •S.too 11111o ,,,.,. 1;-~ .. lamlly in the event of ~.'" 1·p ol stocks,.. volves "" Bottn 11 11i.. '"-1'• L111 '"' 1'4 Hoo~e• c... •>.ooo 1114 11\lo + \I .... -vwu1:::11•11 111 l'•Flfl 2\>lo n"' •tcM S.v 1 • Anl'llUI l<n (I\ 11,100 IO'lt II • "' ww1r death. inbtrent risks. 1•t w11I' '"' t Pln•nn 11 •,. ''"' '"'"" •••• Jt.tOO 10-.. •o~+-" •--l"ltce inc 1 1'1o Plontr w ·n U''I 10 Mo11 AC"tire Ownenh1p of bonds involves Despite this fact and despite flt TtltO , ... 10 Pl~r lfld 12 12"" NASO V•llllTlt l&d11. 1.111,JOCI Special to tbe DaOy PUot W18VOldable rlsb too. the mtserable performance of ~~::~r 01 ~~~ ~\ ~"n' ~: 1l 'i~ ~~:' .:!, the vast majority ol stoc•· In '••n• 11 !'" • ~' Go11 · 1•11 1" Ut1<1t1•0 10ts LONG BEACH -St. Mary ..., l'r111111 1 ,,_, ''°'''' uVi 11 t o111 1tt1 Medical Center will continue BUT AGAIN. despite this recent years, the long-tenn •••••mm•.;.o.o.---•••m••• t 0 d e v e 10 p s 0 u t h e r n and the fact that bonds are trend of stock prices Is up. lf California's fll"St ma)or multt· fixed Income investments, you invest In stocks of sound, MUTUAL FUNDS pie-injury trauma c en t " r today's historically high in-growing companle.!, y o u '·I------------------'--- despite the fl!IUI"e of the terest rates also stroo«\y sug· dividends plus your capital Nt• vor• -fol· IATOJ4 a JHlll tlfl 1.'1 I.IS i•c l!f 1.11 !·" I gest that you place another· gains should provide you wtth 10 .. 1no 11 • uu •' "4>W111to: JHtn si, 1.n . •.CM 1"'' 1.21 .11 emergency medlca servicel ol tt funds blo •fld t•••• 1r1. B1111 "" •.VI 10.:11 JOM\111 11.1111.21 "" •·• 1.21 bill to -·-•Ive ~sldent N'-· l':ll your re rement an average annual return of. c•• °" M;.itu.i 0•111 " u.u 1s.•s icivsTC.I : ,..,, 511 1 .• 1 '·" •-• <>< ~ hJ-'c ...... corporate r tu und 8 to I t Fundt 1t ql>Otld lty 111<11111 S.tll 6.~ C111I 81 lt.111' •• UO Dl lt OS: on's veto, Sister M ..... Wilfred, a•..-a·-o • aro . percen . 1111 N•s.o 111c. !°''11 " 1.12 1.11 Cll'lt I' 1,,,111:,. tflt• 11w l1.M lS.M ..... exempt bonds:. --ltk "" "·tt 1).N C1nt I 1.11 t·" ~llMK U.Ol 16,CI) medical center president, has Don't buy Io w. grade s.a1e"m1r1tr 11. "'' l~t1Jt..V·~11':·,11 l:l ~; 11:~ tH S:11 ~:~ :l::: announced. .,_, .. 1·11·es which ml""t default T , ,_, ~~ ~~~ e111, Gr 111 • •• C>Kt !l "'! '':,1 llAto 011•: ly ---.. , e ting ,.. wr · ·"' E•tv Pr 101 1.)0 ~ult 11.t 11.U Ad Gw t.lt I.to The House narrow 11us-d · out ~u can g 1 S Aunt "" 1.0 •.t• Ffld ""' '·" 1.1• .,,1 " ,,,1 '·'' ,.0 inc: 1.17 '·°' Id t• t an Wipe you ; --e .... , .... In 1).ll 11.61 Eortt Gt ll.Jt IJ.41 Ull 51 ,,,. '·'· .... t"' '·'° .... tained the Pres en • ve o oo aan percent a year tn Interest :~t""'',d '~-~it·~ 1n"" Tn 11.11 ... •110110 1.10 1.1s c111 c~ 1.n ~·" the bill which would have 00 8 •-grade AA rated --'",, ,,.,,,,·,, '""'' 164 1.tt Pot1r1 ,,11 ,.os 111< Foe '·" •. ,. -or '"' Schedul d '• • · · EIMl'9W' tl.64 11.64 Knick• • U t 11 S earmarked 1185 million for bond and that' I' e AIOl'I• l'(I rr1 111 F•lrfld 1.11 •.•• l(fl_, G!ll '·'' IJO fCVltlt'f l'Ot: poraUon Sa IV· Arn<fll F '·ff t.JO Fm Burt t.SI t.SI LnOmrk .. u 1·11 1111111( J.it J,l't development of the nation's ,.· g wage. ""' Chor' •. 10.01 F•o 11:R1 t.11 ... Lm• "" s.21 S.:n 1..,,.. .. ,, 1·1• Am Eorty _ Ii 1.tt l'IOILIT1' LllC OIM>l.I•· u1tr• " l.Ol '·'' emergency medical service! 1bert!! is 00 magic fonnula AM IXN• i •ov•: cp Ltd, 11.te 1t.ii 'fLICTI• tM; EducaUonal, vocational and •uMos: 111e1 dell .. ,. '·'' G....,11 ,.11 .... m .,... 1.11·1.1s program. whJch dictates the precise guidance tesUn• will be....,__ C•P'•' 1,1, 1.12 C1p1t1 n.:ttn.11 11,.,.,~ 1>.•>1•.u o.. •• •·"-'·" "Failure of the bill me~ I funds th • ......,. inc...., i.11 t.11 C&<W•• •.M ... u111, •d s.JO , ,. Sef tflrt 11,•111.•1 pereentage o your at ducted at Orang C t '""'""' '·" 1.u Cv ss.c 1 u 1,11 Lit• '"'" 141 t 17 r.:11ne1 '°'°' 10.•1 we wtll have to rely more you should place in each ......... e 0 a 1 ~~ 1·" 1·111 oe~ t'.11 ... Ll_n~ C.P 1:111 1)• 1111'l.:L.,.v3~~~ lundln lro .,,.. College on Sept. 17 and 19 and ........ '·11 t.u E'"" 10.11 ... LOOMIS ~· " ,,. heavily upon g m of investment to provide a m .,,, s.ia •.tl E,,.r,t 11,. nu IAYL11· s. · private "'u-s," said Sister tre 1 lnoom Nov. 8 and 8 at 8:45 p.m. 11>rn 111'1fl '·" s.11 Fvnf 1s:u 1a:11 C•o e>V n.u n 17 "".,.,, 1.t! .. N,. ~ .... ~ maximwn ret men e. -.. ... ,.._.n are !or •~e with ""' i~v" '·" '·" Pvrnfl t.1• 10.01 Mui,,.1 u.o u:1s • ., ... '· 1 Willred " ch fro lo " fi ancial J.1tt= M:111.o ""'° Am ¥111 ! n •" Stltm " 111 •so LOltO •••· ".,., .n 1. , su as m un.. U you diversuy your m -"' •rnMI Gr 11 2 Jt t••nd 23'.11 11:•, Allll•t i.11 1.,1 $' L '·ll .. dations, public donations and .....wnoam _ i .. -~1 es!ate (a educational or vocational prvu-•NcHoa "n'"·'"'"" ""' B.n 111 11 , '" '· 1.11 r~ "' •-I Th U ud ••OU"': ltJllOOJll.AMI · end Otb •t910.IO " lttoM PtKt from local organizations like ho-') stoc•· , __ ,_ cash ems. ey cover ap t e, c101111 1.n '·" •1n o.,n i.21 t.i• tu'"''" 10:so u:U •we 1t.li to.,. urc' ""'• LIUllU.:i, bill! In t and ll l'nd '"" 1,tl 1.21 "'" lfllt 110 t)ll llff\11 lfl •)1102 lllC-1':.,'!·" the St. Mary's Guild, which savings, life insurance and a y, teres persona • Grwt11 1.t1 1.tt l"lfl inc s:i.o s:.a "''""'n ,:.0 1'1 '";/j' •.•11 .n has pledged -,ooo toward edl will ty and will be followed with an 1.11co"' i.07 1.11 v~~' 111 111 MAIS co· · I" '" 1i.14 11.11 ._., similar m urns -you vtfltur 1.10 •.n 111Fo Vt 11.'0t n:12 l'rttm · 1,,. , ,1 If! d -t·•' 1.11 development Of the center." have done your best to add interview and counseling. ..v:i~:.111 1~:~ 'l:'r.l r~~l~TOltS: =IF I' 1~:!: itri 1C1~~ .. ~V''•.2• Almost a year In planning solidity to the other two follll· Interested per90ns may Auo.• " 1.n •· s 01.c '"" s 11 "'" MAU l'NCL· '"" 10.n 11.11 I I !be t th .... Grtll I'd iU 111 M L'!' 11.111114 1•tt I.ti I.JI and development, the center datlons ol your flnlndal in-reg ster or esta at e ..ovoMJOM1 Stec• • 1'10 t'11 ,,..10 ii u·oe v1n111r I.ID 1.11 f S M Ur E nlng Coll g Offi I led funf .& •.11 s.a1 hi Multl 1i1 cl1 MIO 11· 1 ,.·11 ~1r11 B 10.2110.Jl will be part 0 t. ary dependence in re ement. ve e e ice oca ""nd e '·" 1 . .0 POltUM OltOllP· ,,..,.0 u 'u u'ss • 1&.Gf 10.111G.tr Medi.cal Center's Io .story But let's say you have an 1 .. the OCC ... _,_,..._allon StOKll. '·" .. ,, 100 'nd 10:1> 1G11 MCO 1iN 16ot G•"" 11.tt 11.2• .. , AUUllUlllW-·~·Sci •.11 •. n 101 FM ,. .. , ... Mti.i ,,, 1'01 t'os ""' dnv '·'' I.I} Bauer Hospital due for com· endowment type ol policy BuUdlng. 'Ihere is a materials BLC °"" 11.n 11.22 Coh,irn •:11 t'.u iut11tr 11:• 11'• 111" o S.M •.•• It'"°" 11.IS 11.ii is Flll'lll .. °' .. °' Mid Arn 'l' ,.,. 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'·'' '·'° "'' 1"dtJ ... ., t:•> :,"':. .. 11, ln ~·n • • .Gwth f.1J 1.14 Mll llC POS: -· · 'd t1.1J fl.II ,, t11Crn 1M !·°' B• Inc, 1 . .0 t 62 lrwtll 1.11 t.J7 "' I·'° a. uiov s t.711 .M 8Plld s.r 1;19 s't1 ITlltrll AH 'DS: N•twd .. iO IQ,IO UllllUe S.01 S.SI Olwtdll l fl flt !$1tn< 10.}I ?0.tl NT Vtn 1!.1t 1,l.ll lttl c• 1.11 S.1• IOrtl Siii 6'." ''' II 10.lt 10,,. •·~ t.tl •. 1 111 l lltv •.:n 1.n inc"" 1.62 fos te11. "·'' 11.1, lo .. 10.1111.01 "'' LIE" 11.•r 11.M: SIOCll Sr • !' f 11 llS OltOUP: •• rlf! \'·"'t.73 "iw· \fl'·'' Orwtll .: 1 1:16 Grwlll •. 10 I·" ffll Ills I.ti 14. , N Ht(r NIW lltt Lii • lnt&IPI t.10 .M •••••.. o ' .,,..,, 'j·MJ'·l! 1-" 1·~ ui IEW ·AT .~ NEWPORT IA!SDI UNOI: CO!l'lm I.ft t" Grw41'! 1 t1 I fUlnl ,30 t.'!O fg1ncot 10.• 11.i. iii' , ,. 11,,. '''' u'u T ' 10.n 11,,. . lld l'lf t.02 t, Ir !It I' 10: 1 : I NIA Mt t:JI t'.11 ync:rt I' •.ti l,SJ ern Stk 1.21 I. 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WE'VE GIVEN OUR EXPERIE NCE A NEW PLACE TO LIV E New service department facilities New cars, t ruck s, Zs and station wagons N ew and uni que locat i on New an d longer guar antee for all Da tsuns • • 'except our guaranteed pre--owned Datsuns Whera Mlt:Arthur ind Jembor• meet 818 Do" St., Nowport l•h • Phont 133-1300 B•'ld-New Arelalttttu.-e.--~ ~RIJlng at Soqlb Coast Plua over the past few montbe la Ulla $9 mUJlon BUlloek'• store, which la scheduled to open Sept. 26. The th,...level' .tore 'futures aloplng walla of a special llffl wb.lch It designed to rust n1Qlrall1, ll'flng the pynmltl- like bl1lldlng a deep bniwn colo.r. ln!ertor attracUons lilCludf awooel ailil llClllPo lured briclc escalator well and an antique airplane Uiat II tUJ*lded I-llie ctlllng. • I Orwtll •.• 1.ti ()p '"° ,,1J f ,'1 " ,tt · r t ... ~.H lllCMI I.SI 6. 00 TIM 1 ~ Ln .!l!..,~ t.01 ,,tS l.lf 1l·U =::iwt!.,· 10:" 1t .. ~!f,,,,~ ( 10: Jit1Tl. '~::'~1·1~ °"''" !·" I'.,. Htdlltt I.ff •·• ll•ul llltv 1 ! 4 Acc..-n JM f.1, 'ffllom ... 1 .SI Ktdele s.IJ ... PQ11111 , 1· · .. Int '' t.n '·'' . .JO J.tl fftril.. I, l 1 ... PW1111 Ml 1:ll . '. .. (Cllll .. t ... ID.ti .Ol 12.03 Kotte' ,,,., If.JI iatrin IQ. •• I •.• , CClnt (Fl( '·'•lo .• , '"' ll'lllltl c.. '·'° 10 ...... It ,d •. ,,, lllCOftl 1).1011.41 US llTlll ~ 1 i I.ti klftlt I.ft I.ti A68 t,11 I. 111( ... fll 1; IA.01 'll.411111Ma•; . Vtfled t.tJ 1.tt C 1.11 I, llMll "Am · I I.XI CM•I 1.JI tu ~A" Cl 10.N 10.M " "l' 1, I '"'"°"' . l .11 IMOl'll 1·a ,t ~O'tlt '11 10.02 .d .. I •. 111 '""'' 1, ,,. to 11'11...... • . I(,.. UNI ·rn· Fd 1,11 1.01 tn"111 o , '·'j "1111 S\ , . v tlll s.n ,.. '·" l· ""' ce ... . ''·I ~ .,,. ti.!J ... ,. .. ... 1 ,,..., = 'tn_ 1 1: :: .~ ,: ': .... ,". ~~ f:J ' tu i:: 111 t.n , »M u,ij Jf "··I'" .. atl Ji/ f,}1 t II t1t . J !;f t.' !· . '·" "~· 'l. ' . ,;# f:ll ~'ii • · J::l tC .. u.il tit ,:ft .. • I • ti \.~'I' ~~ I. l,lt • I • .. • lO: I '.U vifi.iJ ~-t.3 . ': .J:i J'.li : itl t1· ;i i"~ lu:;a ~.. i: ' .... ' uD: I It ig: I , 111 .:::S i ll: I '. 1:11. 'I ... ~ ' , ... "1.1 .!: .. : .t. ... =' . . , - "' ... ••• "" "" "" ~r~ N < ·~ "" "" NV~ NV. Nl•J "" 1llt "" NL1 "" ""' ""I ri: 1 •• KCf! '"' "~ N.C NOii NII( Noll "" .... ... ... ~:t "" ~~ "" ••• "" "" "" "" "" ••• ·-·~ "" Nr1! "~ "" o .. 0« °'" 0« 0« gr ~1 00" 0" ""' ()loll 8t:1J o"' Om o" "'" 0" Oil• 8:::1 ov: o .. .... g::; <l•f1 NO •K 'K ,., ,., " " •K ... ~ ;:,t "' '" ... •u '" ~:~ '" Pu '" •N ·~ ·~ •w ·~ ·~ ,, ,, •L .. ,,, •w :: Pw '" ·•w ... •• ,., '" '" '" •II: ... , .. "' PN ·~ "' ~~ ,,, ... •m '" '" '" '" '" '" •• •• •• •• •• •• •• "' ,. ,, Pn ~1 ~I :1 , . p ;1 .. ., I I I l I " II " II .. lt * !I ll ~ • • Stocks Discount Hike in Interest NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices moved hlibtr alter a dull morning tod1y u the market shook off the news ol a ~ percentaa:e point rise tn the prime. lending rate lo a new, historic high ol 10 percenl The boost In the prime lending rate, lnllloled by Wells Fargo Bank late Thursday, was followed <1ulckly today by other major banks Analysts said that many traders moved to the sidelines amid the news of rising Interest rates, light money and the talk ol a possible tax boost. But the market stabllzed around midday and then began a climb which continued throughout the afternoon. • SC DAIL V PILOT l1J Complete Closing Prices-America11 Stock Exchange List ., Finance . ~ Briefs '~. • 8ee f S11ppl11 IYASHmGTON (AP) - More beef soon may be head:" ed toward consumer dumer tables. act'Ord 1ng to a new. feedlot inventory of catUe by lhe Agriculture Department. As of Sept. I. the depart. ment said Thursday, cattli bcln1 fattened for slaughter In seven important beef 3tates totaled more than 9 t mllUon head . up six percent from a year earller. e Rollr ltid. CHULA VISTA (AP) 'i- Rohr Industr1e1, toe., repcrttct 1'hur~day that Its 1 sales re- bounded from a sJump last year to stt 1 company record 1n the fiscal year ending July JI. and earnings alao ln- creASed J 7he company. which designs and manuracture1 aeroapace.- ond jndustnal r>rodu<b an& masa transtt vtbfclet. U*d' sales or more than $373 mllllon. up lrom $28$ million In fiscal 1972. e Gold Sngs LONDON !UPI) -The price or gold '1181"\. ll<low $100 an ounce for the first time ID a lricloth -Y but closed blaher at day11' end The dollar wu atellly •catnsi most Europe.a cur:renan tn Vienna the cloJlar ~ ;:::.::.~~ opened 1J101::l tltO. sank to ~. bJ 1 ""' •11ln to ..... : bte~ • ' • ' ' . I I i • I j ' . ' • • ' • • ' • !' ' ! . ! • I • , 2 f DAILY PILOT friday, Stpttmbtr 14, 1q73 i • • l • • • • • State F o ssil 'Saber Tooth Gets Nod Douglas Helps To .Save Records ' • • • SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The Smilodon Califomicus -bet- ! tcr kno1vn as the saber-toothed ca.t -would be designated a.; ~ Cahfornia·s official state fossil under legislation sent to Gov. ST. LOUIS IAPJ -Space· age technology is helping lo salvage some of the millions or records damaged in a four· da y fire at the MUitary Personnel Records Center in Suburban Overland last July, A SPOKESMAN .. id that the records, loosely paCked in open cases. are seated in the chamber and put through a freeze-Orying process. material la qain heaied, with warm dry air and a ·Vacuum pumpiQB 1y1tem eliminates the water from the chamber. Services Administration, said that "about one-third of the sixth floor bas been' cleaned up and as many records as possl· ble have been salvaged." The water-soaked an d Honald l<eagan's desk . Thi• stale Senate gave final leg islati ve approval to 3 biil tin s 11cck on a 27-1 vote . Th!-' long-extinct creature's remains are <.'Omm Gn in !he l' la111rd La Brea Tar Pits of Southern California. Officials of the McDonnell Douglas LOrp . said Thursday that a space chamber. previously used to simulate temperatures and pressures encountered in the ~1erc:ury and Gemini manned-space missions. is being used to reclaim the records. scorched records are initally heated to 140 degrees and then frozen while the pressure in the cha1nber Is gradually lowered to a fraction of the nor1nal 15 pounds per square inch. "The records come through the process legible and ready to go back into use," a com- pany official said. ?-.fore than ?Al million records of former servicemen and women were damaged or destroyed in a fire primarily confined to the sixth floor or the on e-block-by·two--block federal comple:r. Officer ~ante(l LOS ANGJlLES !AP) - T.E. Durkee has been ap.. pointed chief administrative officer of Santa Cruz County. l Asse mblyman Alan Sieroty ( 0-Bcverly Hill s) ;1uthored the m~asurc. AB !MO.· If"'. . ... -· ... ··-·· WllEI PWT BAims 97' Tbey don't say "macrame." bl1 t I think that ia what they look like. Me, who couldn't pick up a stitch without dropping it. ·----'~ (( ID'AL lW ' .. .' . I Some jollyrci.kes in this croWd. If the-WOrk it light (or all you care fof rl1ht now is . lighl work) this will tit th• bill. c BUCI 01 BUSS BARlillli BIACIETS 24 TllfE DELm BEllFOB'-CED Did you notice how smoothly we moved into this item so nece~sary ii you want to hang the pot. But. here's the qood part. ttt. price is less than re1ular. BAIDlll POnDlli son. 99c You wouldn't pu t plain old adobe or sand in that planter pot. We think of everythinq (except how lo make sure you waler them), BOW SAWS 21" 1.99 24" 2.49 30" .. . . . 2.99 This year really prune that Ire::. Don'\ baby it. Fruit or flower. pruning provides new wood and keeps limbs Jrom breaking oil. m ELECTBIC " CHAii SAW 4400 Well, l 'didn't mean you had to cul the tlUrtg down, but wo :.:e.1 a lot of these. Maybe $ome ol ynu people are lumbering on the side. Hope your mill prices are good. , . WES .97 Buy otte, you ahouldn't h~ve lo buy another. Reinforced doe~n't mean (l you can moYe rocks with it and tbe only thin;S that lru:t a lifetime are tQ)Ces and politician's promises. \ mtY WBEtLBADOW "·" \ .. 597 Gettinq paranoiac again. No funny jokes about the Kelly's. With my luck the guy is eight feel tall with no sen5e of humor and a big list. .. . _.._.)~·.-. .-: -. . . . . . .. WATEB BUBBLER .. ·.::t:,·.-.· 77' For deep but qentla watering, this egg shaped thing will do iL a cylinder, so what). (and ours is probably shaped like ( DAISY POICB -.n After all that pruning you should b• careful not to track the leaves in or the Mrs. (or Ms.) will prune you a littl•. The drop in pressure squeezes the· water Crom the paper and the cold tem· pcrature freezes it. The Jeffery P. Hillel.son , regional administrator or the General Durkee, 50, bas been Los Angeles County's assistant chief administrative officer since ?-.1ay 1969. DID YOU JUST HEAR A LEAF . •.;.• I I I FALL?· . I @_'>~~I " Getting atron1er now, so take all your vitamins tbi& morning or the leaves will 9nd up lau J~ at you, instead of viCe·vencr. •', . ·IQllJS rum AID mas 37' Bring a little growing thing into the house (I got a coupl• already and they both think the TV ia their father). 'erba are nice too. .IU1JICULUS Biii.BS 2t. You plant this when you akould, mulch !ham nice, and come spring you11 thank me for the adrice, These ore beautiful. The rich color like a tulip • but less work t~ ge_I going. IEWMiliS ll'filBDIUS ~ ..-~ 139 \- 2 cu. FT. E•ery time I read thla I tlUnlrol the brealdaat cer•aL Showa I have a whaclco ••na• of humor (and why ii ii ao ma:n.Y ptopJe pronounce it "you-more"), , Don't put it on your 1trawbtrrie1. (exc•pt on the plantl}. ~~ 32 .w. TBASBCU 2•1 Thay b eat the metal kind and are eclaier to k••P from 11mellin1 like an old qym ahoe. ld•a: buy ~om3 ol our lancy bath d•cala and dre35 one U!J a bit. Might win you an arl sch=l:i:rthip. un AID LEAP 8AliS 44~K. An.d kow niciny in a pack, y::iu ::s1:. And I r•ply, plenty for the mon•Y· And you accuse me of beinq evasive w:1e::i 1'.·1 ::iot sure what that really means. ,\ PISIY BllOMS 12" .. " ".. 97• 14" ........ 1.47 1s" ........ Z.77 24" ..... , .. 3.87 30" ........ 5.97 Got one for the Daddy, the Momrnmy, th• kiddies. (And if I could train thal big dumb dog J'd make sure he got the Jint one.) llSS UOT tf.EUEI 7'' Thal aettln it, Thia y•ar I'm buying one. You wat•r and l••d the tr•• and the qrau •t•a'-it all Put the nutri•nl and moilture where the roota ar•. I" What a dumh finilh lo a si-ctacular ad. (I write thia both at 3 AM and ypu know how weird it it that time of the moming. E.:pec:idlly il there i. a lull moon, Dr. lekyll). l T• L ev1a10N • .-~~L IANC:•• Since 1941 COLOR SONY.TV Craftsmanship In lhls age ol mass pro. ductlon with Its emphasis on quantity rather 1han ·quality, Sony retains an Intense pridoolcrahsman- shi p, Exarninc any Sony producl and you'll see why the close anent1on lo even the ~mallest detaJI has eamdd tor Sony an envi· able worldwide reputalion tor fine craflsmanshlp ln elecrronic!l Here's ano!her example of Sony cra'1s· n1onship. KV·5000 TRIN!TRONil PORTABLE COLOR 1\1 • 5 inch scrcon rneasured dJ11gonally • Trin1:ron one{lunltmo lonl syslcm Tor sharp, t.r1ghl htu·l•k.e c::olor •Operates on Ar, 01 DC w1!h oohonat ai:crs3or,es • Au1oma11c 11ne tuninlJ, •nd huo 1n one push control • Sohd slate relisbih!y • Instant picture and sound SONY.TV Reliability K'v'-9000U TRIN11RON9 COLOR TV • B·!nch screen measured dlagonslty • T1ln11ron one gun/orie tens r;v5tem for sharp, brignl, lile-hke color •Lightweight (19 lbs. 13 oz.) ·• Sot•d sta:e 1ol•ab11•ry • tns1an1 p c1ure end souf'f SONY.TV Craftsma nship KV-1212 TAINITRON& COLOH TV • 12-inch screen rnaa&t.rrod diagonally • T rimtron one ~n/onc lens 6)"$!en1 for !lharp. bnght, l<ta-hke color • Pusn bullon au10111atic lin11 1unino. color ano hue conlrol • Solid state reliabi1i1y • Instant p.cture and sound • Hlumlnaled 1un1ng Olal1 • Walnul grain'Hood cabin al, t1 1mmed in chro~ SONY.TV · QJality KV-1510 TRINITRON;t COLOR TV • 15·inch screen measwed· d1agonslly • Trin•tron one gu11/one 1ena ~·1s1am lor snaip, bright, l!le·hke i::olor • Pusn bunon aulom:11:i:: 11110 !un•ng_ color ano hue l:"Jl'ltrol • Solid ~late reliebol !y • 11'\1.lanl P•c tu1e and &ound • Walr>ut g1ain wood cabinet 1rimmad in chrorn• SONY.TV Precision KV-1722T~1NIIBON9 COLOR TV ;. 11-lncf'l screen menu1td diagonally • N.w.a!lm-Une l)lcture hlbe. • Space-s1v1ng upright 1tyllr"19 • Trinltron one gun/011e Jena •r,1em fof 1h1rp, bright, II e-11ke Color • Pu;h bul!on·nu!omat!o !Ina tuning, co!g1 and hue conttol • • Sotld SIB1& rallabll!IV • ln11an1 PICIUllt •nd IOUnd • Walnut grain wood cablna1, trlmmtcl inehrotM TILl::VI • 10 N•A .... L.:IAN Cla COSTA ~~SA 4l1 E. 17th It, Colly 9·9 ....... ~L rowo ET Toro Rd. •t 'WV· (Nt•t to S1'1"'°") D•ll f ·f Stt. t-4 J I I I \ ' I •• • v - ... 3Lag1111a Beaeh :.,··· EDITION Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks • • · . VOL 66, NO. 257, 4 SECTIONS. 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1973 TEN CENTS . Bads Told How to •Beat~ Wonien~s Lib · • By JOHN ZALLER Of "" D1LtY l"li.t Sii" A woman Thursday challenged members o[ th e all-male Exchange Club of NeWpon Beach to put Women's Lib out of busbtess -if they dare. "You can do it," said Joan Brick, a mother of tl\ree. professional publicist, and wife or the superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. "You can do it by spending enough time with your little daughters to keep them from growing up as querulous. nag- ging and frustrated," Mrs. Brick declared. ?i.1rs. Brick said she was basing her ad- vice on one observation: "Most women have poor self-images, lack self-confidenc_e, and are generally frustrated," she said. "If they tr.y to raise their daughters alone, their daughters will grow up to oe like they are -frustrated and in.secure. "Men make much better models for daug hte1 s lo learn from. Men go out in the world and produce, they have self· confidence, and they have an internal stabllity that most women do not. "A good father is the most important think in .,a little girl's healthy develop- ment," Mrs. Brick maintained. The 40 members of the Exchange Club listened quietly while Mrs. Brick spoke, and when she finp;hed , they gave her an ovation. One member said privately ar- terwards: "In all the years I've been coming here, I've never seen the guys give so much attention lo any of their speakers." . Through her speech, Mrs. Brick repeatedly W'ged the men to spend as mu ch time as possible with their daugh ters. "Try taking that little kid on a busi ness trip some ti~,'' she s11ggested. ''I bet you never thought of that , but your little girl would love it. "Or go over to her high school some day al noon and tell the principal that you want lo take your daughter to lunch. I ca n guarantee you, she'll be th rilled. ''No woman can do this for you. They lack the internal stability, and besides. your daughters are probably jealous of the time their mothers have with you. Don't forget, your daughters worship you and need you. "Even I -who am a super person - can't give my daughter what she needs," rue ams una -' Operators 'Ope11' Station Protest Runs Out of Gas By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1'lle 0.11'' P'llot Stitt A movement among Orange County service station dealers to protest "un· fair" J>hase IV price controls with an organized shutdown has run out ot gas. Dealer plans to lock up their pumps for a three-day period beginning Monday conked. out Thursday night when leaders of a gasoline retailers association con-1 vlnced ~ that I.hey Would only be hurting themselves and "the guy who has. supported you all these years." Instud, they deClded to wait !or th< outcome or a lawsuit now pending before a !edual coort. 'l1>e suit alleges that service stati9n owners are being treated unfairly because they h a v e to absorb price increases passed on by the oil com- panies under Phase IV. After the suit is heard in early December, "there is no way we will not be out from under those rldlculous price controls," John Devine, president of the lntemaUonaJ Service Station Deam Association (ISSDA) predicted en- thusiastically. Independent dealers across the nation are fuming over .the Phase JV controls because their retail prices are frozen, but the wholesale or tankwagon prices of the oil companies are not. Seve ral of the ma- jor oil companies have increased their tankwagon prices as mu ch as one or two 5 Seek Festival B'fard Positions Five persons have declared candidacy for three Festival of Arts Board or Direc- tors seats up for election by the membership this fall . Incumbents Paul Griem, Hal Akins and David Young are being challenged by artist Anne Chase. and Joseph R. Sweany, general manager of the Laguna Beach Comty Water District. Ballots will be ·mailed to the 2,400 Festival of Arts members by the end of ltptember and rssults of the election will be announced at the Nov. 12 general rutmbershp n'leetlng at the F'orum Theater. 'Orpge • Weatlaer C.ast It'll be a cool, drizzly Saturday -at least In the morning hours along lhe Orange O>ast. Beach highs will be in th!? 60s rising to tbe m.ld-70s inland. INSUJE TOIJA \' Tll, Irvine Conim1''1lity The· ater is offering local ptaygoer1 'IOmeth~ng new · thil 11ear -a tta1on of Orange County pre· 'fPl.fner. Set lnterm1.ttfon colvmn In !odav'1 Weeken<ter. Al Y...-hrvlct J ...... ..,, ,, t:::.. 'l c......... 1»-M '-"-. ,, -" DMllil Nltlca n DI.WU. • 11 •••tnat '•". • ,~ ti•'' Pw l!M RKOnl 7, 11 --.. ,. .. .......,.. ,, -. cents a gallon, which, in lhe opinion of many dealers, drives their profits so low that they may go out of business. Scattered closings of service stations began this week in several parts of the country, including San Diego where about (See GASOUNE, Page ~) Parking Fees Fpe Turns In Signatures rucha.rd Willetts1 organizer or the Laguna Beach parking revenue referen- dum , sald today be planned on turning in petitions bearing ~me 1,800 signatures at Laguna ~ City Hall this af. temoon. Alter receiving the l'!.!ition, City Clerk Il!)rotby Musfelt has ·JO days to chect signatures for validity. U 987 valid signatures are found, the city council must either repeal the reyenue measure, or order a special elec- tion and put the matter to the voters . "That's almost twice as many as we need ," Willetts said. "It's out of my hands once 1 hand them to the city clerk. Then it's up to the ~ pie." he said. The law being opposed established an increase of 10 cents in the hourly parking meter rate, provided for installation of new parking meters in commercial areas on Coast Highway and in summer on portlool ol LagWlB Canyon Road adjacent to the festivals. It was enacted by a unanimous vote of the city council ifi mid-August. This fiscal year's budget included $168,000 in ad- ditional revenue from the parking meter ordinance, and projections placed ad· ditlonaJ yearly income at about $300,000. The referendum drive was led by downtown rnerchaat!, who bellfcally op- posed the fee increaae, not the in- stallation or additional meters. , 0ppooS1t! to tbe0 relereodum bave eaid that II lees are -not lncreued, the ooo- slluction of additional parldnJ laoilltles may not be poa..ible. , o.Hr ,.,.., ,.... • .., .a.c11 °"""'" LAGUNA BEACH FIREMEN EXAMINE TRACTOR THAT LEFT SEMI TRUCK, TRAILER THURSDAY The Accident at Sharp Curve in Temple Hills Drive Did $40,c;w>O DarNige to Home Willetts, ,owner of the Hairem_ 282 Forest Ave., dented he wQUld use the parking referendum as a political opring • board, I "I'm not running for city eoancll if t,hat's what yOu mean. My wUe said she would divoree me if I did,11 he said. ' VllW DOWN TEMPLE HILLS DRIVE IN LAGUNA BEACH SHOWS TROUBLE CURVE IN ROAD "I ThouQht It Was An Airplane C~lng Down,'• S.Jd Mrs. Chari•• Strong Who EKaped lniury 4 County Elks Drop Color Barrier By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of lllf Deity Plltl lttff Ol!iclals of !Ojlf 0range County lodaet ol {~ Benevolent and Protectiff Orier .of Elks said toda~ th<j have voled lo do away · with the ''whites only" restrlcUCll that has been in el!ect nationallY !or loo yem. ' ... .... S......-at lour oilier c:oan1J Elb' lodgea oootacled todar by tbe llellJ PllDl refuted to comment on their votes, which. will -help detennlne the l>i t >o n !1,1 membenhlp policy of the charitable organbatiool. • ' • The more than 1,200 lodlea and i.& mu. lion Elu tn the United Slates must voi. whether or not they support an amend- in July that would strike th e word 1'white" from the organitation's application fonns. Since ~ lodge org-, its con- stttutlon hu .restricted membe.rsblp to, "white Americaq_ citizens." Recent U.S. SUpreme Court rulings Jave permitted courts IA> yank liquor llcenseJ lroro dlscrimlnafory Jrlvatc dabl lllilea the rules aro cbang -an actlan llnDad' L "deatll llnat" by one Elks apoklsmao. ~ t~ · , ' Tho Santa Ana ~-.IJ -Lue, largul ln·th< county WI!~ ~.500iol!mbCts, ·v\ilrf """"h<lt\Ungly to do away 'l!lth tbe discriminatory wording, according to lodt6.JJ11n&ger OJivcr Clark. tain Valley, also voted to strike the rule. Art Kroening, exalted ruler or 11he Exalted Ruler Larry Schley said today Newport Harbor Lodge 1767 in Newport his lodge voted Sept. 4 to rati fy the Beach, s11id his only comment on the vote amtndmeot, "deleting the word white is, "no comment." from membership qll8llflcaUons.'' Exalted Ruler John McDQ.wel! of the S<:hley 1tresoed the !act that hls lodge's nedgllng, 400-member Ml.,lon Viejo Elks deci sion Is only one vote. 'nle national Club said he won't say how his chapter convenUOn, however, voted to kl.II the voted untll the national results are quallrlcatlon by a 3 to I margin. known. Two other cbapWs, both ol wblch have l.<Xlge Secretary W. E. Pennington of mcmbert rrom the Orange Coast area, the Anaheim Elks said he also has Hno ai>o voled to ·resclnd tlje qualificaUon. · commenr• a11out his chapter's · vote O<I Spokesmen for Garden Grove Lodge-l?ie rule; as aia-a spokesman fcir the lodge 1952 and the Westminster Lodge .&aid to-ln Buen8 Park. day Lhclr membership also voted by wide The statemen ts .by Orange County marglnl to do away with lhe rule. lodges follows reports from the San It was a dilferent story with several Francisco. Say Area and lodges in the L,.. __ _:_ _____ .:::...;:t-ment pessed by the national convention 'l1>e membml!IJ> ol Hunllllgtoo Odeh Loclae :1444, at lOllO ll'alberr ,Ave., Foun- ' other c_ounJy lod11ts coollcted today. (Ste El;llS, Pqe lJ ' • • ........... • I i\trs. Brick quipped. •·\Vomen just doo't have it." ~1rs. Brick continued : "How many of you have wives \Yho expect you to make them happy, so you give them children .. or give them a silver Rolls Royce, and. they're still not happy? "The reason they're not satisfied is that happine ss is an internal thing that nobody can give you. "You 've got to grow up \Yilh it. Yo1.1've (See EXCllANGE, Page 21 ome No Injuries Reported · In Accident By JACK CHAPPELL Of t111 DlllV P'llot Shfl A hu ge semi truck and flatbed trailer rig hauling a Caterpillar tractor and roller went out of control while descen- ding a steep Laguna Beach residential street and crashed through an exclutive hillside residence. : ... : : The driver repo'rtcdly suffered only a bruised hip and althoitg h the cab of his big rig was crushed. Residents or the home, Dr. and Mrs. Char Jes Strong, Were not Injured. The 'huge combination truck, crawler tractor and spiked "sheepsfoot" earth co mpactor narrowly missed a butane tank for emergency power supply'for 'Dr. Strong's bomb shelter, pollce·uld. 'Mle incident occurred on ~e tnns Drive in the 1000 bloek at a tftacherous hairpin curve. Fire department officials estimated damage to be $40,000 tolal. The hillside home at 1179 Temple Hills Drive was stnick at the northerly comer after the swiftly moving truck and load smashed through a center barricade, across an opposing traffic Jane, and dow"n t:i small incline jarring an entrance col- umn from its foundations. "I thought it was an airplane coming down,., Mrs. Strong said as she surveyed the destruction wrought in her front yard. The Caterpillar tractor toppled from the flatbed trailer and landed upside down, stopping just short of a home. The big r.oller also jarred off the trailer. No figures of the rig's weight were available rrom the Pico Rivera hauling firm of CTS Contractor Transport. "I don't have any estimates on (Ste ACCIDENT, Page %) State Welfare, Health Secretary .. To Speak Tonight Dr. Earl Brian, C8li fornia secretary of health and welfare, wUI meet informally with members of the public and medical profession at the Santa Ana Country Club tonight at 5 p.m. "Brian is coming to Orange County for the purpose of baWig an opportunilJ to discuss the subject of health ·care. in Califorpia," said Dr. Vincent P. Carroll or LagUna Beach. Carroll said Brian will be prepared to discuss the role of his office in state government and will be open to questions on Medi-Gal, teaching hospitals and other health matters. 'I1le meeting ls open to anyone in- terested in health services, not only physicians, denti sts or others in the field of medicine, Carroll said. The only charge will be for the no host bar. Laguria Counts 1,846 Students A count Ol noses attending Laguna Be~h schools found 1,Mtl noses in the district's three elemt• tary schools and Thu rs LO n Intermediate Scbool Tburoda.y - Orst day of clU.... They counted noces at the hllh school too, but, hadn't pilten thenl. all added up by thi s morning. A school·by-schbol breakdoWn shows $52 .. student! al Top ol the World, 430 ot El. Mtrto. 1111 1-t Alho·, and 467 at "l'buratOe. ·- • ' ' . .. . ·-~ • _;t OAILY PILOT LB ~ Re·tired to Pastaire ; ikrth mover tractor tire worn out by horsepowe r . !:&: apo~er variety now serves as feeder in Irvine ; ~uestnan Center lot, down coast of Corona del Mar. Up to 12 horses can chomp oats from this concrete and rubber, stationary nag bag. '•. : •• A~raig nrne nt For Kidnap Stispect Set By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille 0.llY .. llet Sl•ff A mystery man was scheduled for ar· raigpment today in the aftermath of a k'idnap-shootout ranging through Newport Bc~ch. Irvine and Santa Ana Heigh ts. as authorities tried to determ·ine whether he or police wounded two of his hostages. <;Ti'!llinal complaints expected to chaige the defendant with multiple c~irqes were being processed this morn- ing" bY the Orange County District At· orn'eY.'s Office. "The man variously identified with two ~-mes and two addresses was scheduled to ·~ transfe rred from Orange County Jail tb Harbor Judicial District Cour t for tbe proceedings. The big black-and-while Sheriff's Depai:;tment bus was to carry him - bel¥nd wire mesh-covered windows - aloilg part of the route the original police chase followed at 90 miles per hour. Jnvestigators said today they are slill som~what baffled by just who their man is and what motivated the entire bizarre chain.of incidents. ·. He ,was initially identified as Victor Grov.er Heidlage, 26, an unemployed San Oicgo' resident. Ne,Wport Beach Police Detective Capt. Dori A Oyaa s said Thursday afternoon, however, that his men had developed in· toiftiS'tion also identifying their suspect f S Roland Gray. : He said investigators determined that lhe suspect has been living with a couple lie has known for two years at 752 Main St., Huntington Beach, since July but disclosed little else. ; The suspect captred at 7 p.m. Wed· -oesctay as he emerged from a home at ;:nz Orchid Hills Drive, Santa Ana \fights, was subsequently booked on .!Uspicion of assault with intent to com- ilit murder. : He escaped injury during a fu sillade or (v•o volleys of shots fired after a male tK>stage grabbed for his .357 Magnum cevolvcr. The young man and his teenag- ed girl companion were wounded. • Both vistims underwent surgery Thurs-- day afternoon at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. : Denine Baeseman, 17, of Pasadena. Was hit three times. in the arm. abdomen area and lung and is listed in critical but $table condition. : l\1arco A. Desilva , 20. of 3505 Balboa lllvd.. Newport Beach, \Yas shot in the lorearm and stomach and is listed in ~ri91Js condition following his operation. . About two dozen shots were fired at the OOight of the confrontation when the gun· man -holding h-1.iss Baeseman in front ~·ith the pistol at her head and Desilva behind him -continued his advance toward police in a futile effort to nee. • OIAN•I COAST u DAILY PILOT ltw-Or1nge C:O.t DAILY f'ILOT, .. Ill Wlllcfo 11 COrrlbl~ lt'le N.-..s-.-rftlo i., PllDll.ii..i tlY the Ortno;i<1 CO.JI "llbllW.1119 ~ny. S.p,1. •11t IOlllonl 1r1 pytllltfMrd. Mondly lfVOllQ~ ll'rldtV, ~ C.t.11 Mnt, Hft'llOrl INch. Hlll'lrll'IQ!Gn . 8UClllF-!tohl V•llr/, L9vuM lttdl. l"'IM/$11ddltbacli end SM ci.n-111 Stn Jua" C•f'lsl•-· A •Jnvr. "!lio!Mll IOl!Jon 11 Pllbli.ri.d llt~1 111111 5'nM". fl'll prlnclpiot llUOlltlllnf ~ It •I J» Wut· .. ., '''"'· Coll• "'""· C.1lflrri.s., n.N. RoO.rt N. W,M p,.,,...,, •nd Pwbli.Mt J•cli R. C11rl1y vie. f'rftldMI Ind Gt<llr11 M-....,. Tho'"'' K11"il '""' lho1J1•1 A. Mwrphin1 M1...,11111 l!'dllw Chtrl•1 H. leo1 Rich•rtl r. N1U A.allt1nt Ml...Olrlf EdiW\ ...,_.._..Otfk• Z22 F•,." A•1n11• M,111"' AJJ,.111 r.o. lo••••· •2•12 ..... -.. co.te "'-' m w..t .. ,..s""' • •...,..-1' a.dtr am __.. 9'111tWN : lf\lflli!lfNlll '-OI• 17111 hltfrl lllllw11'111 -·~: -,..,. lfl eanw.. .... M 1,t 111 CT14f MJ"'4 J21 ~tftM lW111d ' I Ml-1671 ......... ..... Al.:::::: 1•1 .. -, ... , .... .. ~·. 1m. ~.· ... Nl!Wi.;. ~':'·""~~~In~":: ~ .. ,... ................... ......... "' .,,.,,,"'" -· ~ Clfft !IMI ... fiHI " c:o.f•• Mt5', °"""'"""-killlcr~ll!I .., ' cwrttl'" OM *"'"'' "' ll'lltll U.11 ,,...,,, f!lllllWY ..... ,..,._ UM .-lllY. ' ' Bay to Wate rgate Sunday F eatu1·es Letters 011 Hearings, Ecology Here's a rundown of stories appearing in this week's Sunday Daily Pilot : UPPER BAY -A multiplicity of government agencies is working 10 preserve the ecological vitality of Upper Newport Bay and most officials are op- timistic that results of their work will soon become evident. The main problem they have is coordinating all their ef. ( Sunday's Best) forts. Slaff writer John Zaller reports in a YOU section feature. ART FOR TABLE -High food prices not only are keeping some meals off din· ner tables, they also are keeping art oll gallery walls. For a profile of a Costa ~1esa artist who works with organic materials read this week's Sunday Special by Jacqueline Combs Land. ELKS • • • San Diego area that have voted on the ban. The 1,200-member San Rafael lodge voted 3 to l to drop the ban as did the 2,300 member San Mateo lodge. Spokes1nen (or the 20 Bay Area lodges said the vote appea rs to be going about 2 to I in favor Of dropping the con- troversial requirement that has kept out minority members. One lodge in Southern California, the Oceanside branch, has voted in favor of continuing the ban while two others - those in Encinitas and San Diego -voted to drop the nile . The votes are expected to be tallied by the national headquarters of the Elks in Chicago next month. F rom Page J EXCHANGE. • • got to develop it as a child. "So if you want your daughters to grow up with internal stability, you've go( to give it to them. You 've got to spend time talking to them and listening to them. "When they're young, it can be boring. When they're older, it can be annoying. "But you're all your kid has got." ~frs. Brick ended her talk thusly: "If you men don't ca r e c.bout your daughters. maybe I can impress you by putting it this way. "Your sons are some day going to have to live with these women. And if they're going to have decent women to live with, you're goi.ng to have to raise them. "This is your chance to put Women's Liberation right out of business, if you'll just lake the time with your daughters that they n~d." Gertrude Bird Rites Conducted /liemorial services were held at 2 p.m. today al Geneva Presbyterian Church in Laguna Hills f<>r Gertrude R. Bird of Laguna J~ills , who died Wednesday. She was 71. Dr. John E. Simpson. associate pastor of the church. officiated. Burial wiU be at El Toro Cemetery. f\lrs. Bird, a native of New Orleans, had lived in Orange County sit yep,rs. She is survived by her wklower , Lee Bird: two daughters. A1rs. John Jamison of Dallas Tex., and f\.1rs. Clifford L. Bun· dy of Costa Mesa, and three grandchildren. She was active In Circle 14 of Geneva Presbyterian Church. Drug Lists Nearing SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Legislation to require pharmaclcs to post prices on the 100 mos t common prescription drugs was one step awa:y from Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk todoy. TALENT SCOUT....,. JeaMe Haliburton watches for potential "Stars" of stage and screen in sessions every Saturday in a Newport Beach ballet school. Mrs. Haliburton, veteran agent and former ac- tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo Olson in a women's page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mail response, the Watergate hearings may be the most closely· listened-to series on television. From hate mail to near love letters, it pours in at rate that is too high to keep track of. For samples, see the SUnday ed.'ltorial section. AMERICANS IN DEBT -The average citizen's ideas on borrowing may not be as liberal as is assumed. A University of Michigan study shows middle-income fami lies borrowed at an average of 12 percent of their yearly income. and most don't want to borrow any more. Tili.s feature appears in the YOU !eCtion. Memorial Rites Held Today For Mrs. Klin g Memorial services were held at 1 p.m. today at Sheffer Laguna Beach Chapel for Viola Madeline K1ing of South Laguna. who died Tuesday. She was 77. A native of Boston, Mass .• Mrs. Kling had lived in California 10 years. She was a realtor in Laguna Beach with the Place Realty Company. She was also a member of Eastern Star and Amaranth in Laguna and White Shrine in Covina. Survivors include her d au g h t e r , ~1adeline Dykes <>f South Laguna; a son, Norbert Kling of Laguna Hill!, two sisters, two brothers, and Io u r grandchildren. Rev. Bradford Kare1ius of St. Mary's . Episcopal Church and Rev. Albert 0. Hjerpe of Community Presbyterian Church officiated at the service. Burial will be at El Toro Cemetery. Emery Searing Services H eld Funeral services were held at ll a.m. today at Sheller Chapel !or Emery Sear· ing of Laguna Beach, who died Sunday. He was 9'l. A 21-year resident of Laguna Beach, Mr. Searing is survived by his son Lyall of Washington, a sister Nonna Skinner of lndiana. six grandchildren, six great· grandchildren, 1 and several nieces and nephews. ... Mr. Searing was a consulting engineer for 38 years for Portland General Elec· tric Co. He was a member of the l..aguna Beach Masonic Lodge, Shriners, and the First Church ol Christ Scientist both of Boston, Mass., and Laguna Beach . Paull Aikin , a Otristian Science prac- titioner, officiated at lhe service. Burial will be in Rose City Cemetery, Portland, Ore. Wel fare Grant Hikes Opposed SACRAMENTo (AP! -Republican• stiffened opposition today to proposals to hike weUare grants for 500,000 aged, blind and disabled Colllomtans as the 1973 legialattve ......, eotenld Ill final hours . Senate Democratic .floor leader G<orge Mooeone said he needed just two more Republican votes to tend to Gov. Ronald Reagan a meuure that would hike the 500,000 welfare arants an average of $23 a mon\h . · The Reagan admini~tralion contintKd to demand a more modest plan allowinll hikes Jan. I averaging Just 19 . --/ .. • f'l••P .. eJ GASOLINE .... ~ percent of the ll(atioQI wen rtj>OrUd cioled Thureday. Orange County'• moderate approach was underscored bJ fell!' of pol!nllal anU-trwt ac:Uon, 'l«ordinc to Devine, who wll'llOd the dealets that they could be "open t.o charges of rmtraint of trade and conspiracy to disrupt business." The only suggestion ol ~ shutdown was made by Costa Mesa Standard dealer Bill Canning who grabbed the microphone from the speaker and said, "I dare all you guys to shut down for three days." Canning angrily left the meeting wben his call for a sales boycott failed to rouse the 300 dealers who attended the strategy session. Most appeared to go along with the recommendalion of ti.1issioo Viejo dealer William H. Bay and County Supervisor Ralph Clark to use their political power and to convince the registered \/Olers driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, himself an ARCO dealer and fonner ISSDA president, urged the angered dealers to remain united, be gentlemen, and to "just hang tight, because I think we're going to whip it." The fourth district s u p e r v i s o r , however,, lashed out at the architects of the Phase IV gas price control plan which allows dealers a maximum seven cents gross profit per gallon. "These idiots in Washington have no idea what the problem is," be said. "They don't know that our people woUld be lick.led pink .with a seven cents net." Cla rk added that he thought the Cost of Llving Council needs to understand that anytime an oil company raises the tankwagon price by one or two cents a gallon, the dealer's profit takes a dive because he must absorb the increase. "They're as.king us to -operate in the post-World War JI days of profit," be charged. ., ......... ., J ACCIDENT ... anything," said Earl llodsoo, firm owner. He said he did not know where the rtg had been working, and tersely referred all other questions to the insurance com- pany. Police identified . the driver as Larry Cox, 22, of Covina. Cox told officers he was coming down Temple Hills Drive with the truck in low gear, when the r:lg suddenly started to pick up speed jw;t before it entered the sharp curve. "He observed he couldn 't make the curve and all he could do is hang on," Sgt. Norm Babcock said today. Crews from a special towing fmn 'vorked unW midnight to remove the rig from the Temple Hills residence. Traffic on Temple Billt Drive was heavier than normal I.because Park Avenue,, tbq 1 only other access road to Top of the World, was closed due to street construction. With the1traffie restricted to1'one lane on Temple Hills, the city was forced to open Park Avenue, and officers·reported today the fresh asphalt on Park Avenue was damaged by the heavy traffic. No charges are being oonsidered against the driver at this time, Sgt. Bab- cock said. Smoke Ban Requested At Meetings Long-time Orange County School Board member A. E. "Pat" Arnold of Cypress wants to do away with "smoke-rilled roozm" at the board's meetings. So 11\ursday he Uked bis four fellow board members to pass a rule bannirig smoldn(! In the board room during meetings. "J don't like it personally and I know a lot of others who don't,'' Arnold said. "I've gotten some romplaints about the smoke hurting people's eyes and it's a proven fact you can be harmed just by breathing somebody else's smoke." 1 Trustee David Brandt of Santa Ana, a smoker,. said he would go along with the wishes of the board to stop smoking by board members but wou1d strenuously object to imposing a ban on people who attend the meetings . "As for myself, 1 can just slip out into the hall. But the philosophy of govem· ment telling people what they can or can't do when they enter a public building they paid for is n-01 right," he said. Arnold backed off on h i s proposal saying, "It's up to you and I know a lot of people like smoking. But a lot don 't, too." Other trustees avoided the discussion and it faded back onto regular agenda items when Arnold grumbled, "We'll just forget about it for now." Festival Awards Me mbersliips To 12 Voluntee rs The Laguna Beach Festival of Arts Board of Directors has awarded 1973-74 memberships to 12 volunteer perfonners and backstage workers with more than 10 years service to Pageant of the Masters productions. Board President 0. E. "Bud" Schroed- er. commended the volunteers for their aid over the years and thanked th em for their work . Volunteers are: Frank and Harriette r.fcMullen or Laguna Beach, Helen ~1. Carpenter of Laguna Beach, Charlotte Sizemore of South Laguna. Dorothy Nelson of South Laguna, Howard F. LaVelle of Laguna Beach, Eleanor Christensen of Laguna Beach. Also. Ann Melzleur of Laguna Beach, Kay Nichols of South Laguna, Larry Bl.ink.hem of Costa Mesa, Edna McHugb of Laguna Beach, and Helen Sims of Laguna Beach. More than 400 volunteers participated in the 1973 production of the Pageant of the Masters. - Nixon Trip flinted WASHINGTON !AP) -White House sources indicated Thursday ii was "quite likely" that President NiJ:on would at· lend the dedication ceremonies of the huge new Dallas-Fort Worth Airport in Texas Se'pt. 22. o.ur f'li.t '''" ......,. GETS SEAT ON BUS BOARD Fount1ln V1lley'1 Holllnd1n Va lley Mayor Wins Tra1isit Board Elec tio1i Mayor AJ Holllnden of Fountain Valley was selected to a seat on the Orange County Transit District board Thursday night in a close vote by the CiUes Selec- tion Committee of the County League of Cities. l-lollinden won out over La Habra councilwoman Rob in Young by 13 votes to 12. It took three ballots to make the scl~lion. The Fountain Valley mayor will take the seat vacated by Derek McWhioney CJf 'Vestminster. Two other appointive posts were filled by committee votes. Robert Nevil, a La Habra councilman, was named to the Local Agency Formation Commission and Mayor Donald Mcinnis or NeWport Beach was named as alternate. Nevil has held the alternate's post on the commission sin ce Aprll 1972. The seat was recently vacated by Tustin's Clirton ~·tiller. Both Nevil and A1clnnis were elected by big votes on the first ballot. Cypress Councilman Robert Han-ey was elected president or the League or Cities by a 13 to 11 vote over Fourtain Valley Councilman George Scott. In a contest for vice president of the league, Orange Mayor Jess Perez wa1 elected by a 13 to 12 vote over Tustin Mayor Donald Salterelli. f'lacentia City Councilman Robert Fin· nell retires artcr two ye~rs as president. Fullerton Councilman Duane Wlnten was elected to a fourth term as state director with no opposition. A discussion on the proposed Chino Hills airport was postpooed until next month's league meeting . SLEEP SOFAS , • Every Ho me Sh oul i! Ha ve On e ~~ Excollont Selection Now On Displ.y. Al Reasonable Prices. Stop In Today. DREXEl.--l-iERITA6~ENREDO,.._WOODMARK-MRAS)AN INTEllO.,I S . . WlllDATS .. SATURDAYS tlOO te l 1IO l'Kll!AY 'TIL t :OO NEWPORT IEACH e tn1 WESTCLIFF Oil.. M2·2QI O to,.l'I S11ncl•y 12-l iJOI 1.AGUNA BEACH e J45 NORTH COAST HWY . IOptl'I Suncl,y 12·11JOI 4t4-6111 . TORRANCE e 2JMt HAWTHORNE ILVD. J7t0 127• l , ) I I I I ·. I . ' ---~ • Saddlebaek Today's Final N.Y. Sto eks VOL. 66, NO. 257, 4 SECTI ONS, 50 PAGES • ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA . ~, ' . FltlDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1973 TEN CENTS I Dads Told How ·to "•Beftt~ .Wonaen~s Lib By JOHN ZALLER Of !tie c..ltt Pllet Sten A Y.'Oman Thursday challenged members of the ell-male Exchange Club of Newport Beach to put Women's Lib out of business -If they dare. "You can do it," said Joan Brick. a mother of three, professional publicist, and wife of the superintendent or the Fountain Valley School District. "You can do it by spending enough time with-your little daughters to keep --' tfiem from growing up as querulous, nag. daughte1 s to learn from . Men go oul in ging and lrustrated," ~1rs. Brick tbe world and produce, they have self· d~lared. confidence, and they have an inl.ehlill ~'41's. Brick said she was basing her ad· stability Ui:at most women do not. vic;e-on one observation : "A good father Is the most Important '"Moat women have poor self-images, think in a little girl's healthy develop. lack self-confidence, and are generally ment," Mrs. Brick maintained.. _ fru strated," she said. -'Ibe 40 members of the Exchange Club "if they try to raise their .daughters Jistened quietly while Mn. Brick spoke, alone, the ir daughters will grow up to oe and when she fini shed, they gave her an like they are -frustrated and in.secure. -. ovation. "Men make much better models fqr One member said privately ar- terwards : "in all the years I've been 1 "Or go over to her high school some comihg here, I've never seen the guys day at noon and tell the principal that give so much attention to any of their you want to take your daughter to lunch. speakers." I can guarantee you, she'll be thrilled. Through her spfiech. Mrs. Brick "No woman can do this for you. 'Ibey repeatedly, urged the men to spend as lack the Internal stability. and besides, much tjme as possible with their your daug hters are probably jealous of daughters~. -_ •the time their mothers have with ;you. ''Try taking that little kid on a business,· Oon'.t forget, your daughters worship you trip, some Ume," she suggested. "l bet and need you. you never thought ol that, but your little "Even I -who am a super person - girl would love it. can't give my daughter what she needs," uns ' Irvine Complex More Industrial A-1rs. Brick quipped . "\Vomcn just don't have it." Mrs. Brick continued : ··~IO\Y many of you have \\•ives \Yho expect you to make !hem happy. so you give them children , or give th e1n a silver Roll s Royce, and they~re still not happy? "The reason they're no l satisfied is that happine ss is an internal thing that nobody can give you. "You 've got to grow up with it You've (See EXCHANGE, Page %) Station Attendants Property Sought . Reconsider There will be an additional 121 acres of industrially zoned property in lhc Irvine 'Industrial Complex if Irvine city coun- Irvine City May Go lnt.o Ho~e Sigris ~· Irvine plaMing commtsslonef'I voted Thursday to urge city co~Umen to ap- prove a new homes stgning program. The law would establish the city as a mooopoly in the temporary Identification sign business. Pluming Commissioo Chairman Harry Shuptrine said today staff study of the commission idea indicated it is both le~al and practical to put the city into the sign buainesa. ~ "What the city actually will own is two stakes in the ground at various Iocalioos in the city," Shuptrine explained. Developers seeking ways to direct poten- tial bomebuyers to new tracts would rent from the city customized directional sigM which will be attached to the stakes. Each panel has a five-year life ex· pectancy before it needs resurfacing. Molt tracts Shuptrine noted. will sell out in less ~n five years. Thirty days after,the last home ls sold lhe directional signs .must come_ down, if the proposed ordinance is adopted. . . The costs for repainting the signs, pladng them and maintaining them are covered by fees to be charged to developers, Shuptrine said .. . The proposal gives the city maximum control over the esthetics of directional slgna. For some time, it has been lllegal. for new home tracts to put out cardboard sign,·along roadside, as is customary in other· areas. '!be lligning program suggested for city use foUows closely the signing syst~m uaed 'by the !Milne Company to Identify its Dew homes and villages. $hliptrlne oboerved the propoaed law COV"'9 only the dlrecUonal, temporary slpi. City plannJnc staff are working on o""1' ways of porinfl!oUy identilr~g and/or pointing the way to the city s comftleted villages. ·-;_i; ' State Welfare, H>ealth Secretarv ' . To Speak Toni ght Dr'7l:arl Brian, Cillllomla secretary of bo'allb and ... uare, will m~ ~Uy wtlh)D"lllben ol the pul>llc and lhedlcal ,...,..., at the Santa Ana Cjlwltry Club toallht at 5 p.m. • , , ''8rlan 11 coming to·Oral>P Coumy (or lhe purpose of having an opporpmrty to dla<llA the aubject of health care Iii" Cllllornia," said Dr. Vincent P. Carroll of tasuna Buch. Cirroll nld Brian will be prepar.d to dlteuu...Jhe. role of hls office 1n atate ~mment and will be open to questions oi\ Medl'Cal, teaching hospitals and other llealth malters. The me.Una Is open lo anyone ln- tlll'lllled In litalth aervi<et, not only ~. clentlsla or others Jn the field of medicine, carro11 nid. '!be ooly cbofl'I will be for the no host bar. cilmen approve an 11th revision of the zone plan as recommended Thursday by city planning commissioners. 1be extra acreage is located northeast uf Barranca Road and Jamboree Boulevard adjacent to the Marine Corps Air Station, Santa Ana. The addition brings to 3,000 the number of acres of industrial property within the d~r charigei mtide fn ··the iiib revision include provision for develo~ ment or a seven-acre, "farmers' mark.et" commercial area at the intersection of MiCArU:iur Boulevard .and lttllln Street. The ard-. formerly wu JOned for meillum Industry. ' ' -Tretfflfle•tired to Patti~ Commissioners already have seen a precise development plan for the seven- acr' commercial venture. Chairman Harry Shuptrine said today. It will con- tain shops and restaurants much like those at the Farmers• A-1arket in Los Angeles, he observed. Earth mover tractor tire worn out by horsepower of another variety now serves as feeder in Irvine Equestrian Center Jot, downcoast of Corona del Mar. Up lo 12 horses can chomp oats from this concrete and rubber, stationary nag bag. Presently, development in the IIC is governed by the Ninth Revised DeveloP.- ment Plan approved by the county priol to incorporalioo. Truck Slam·s· Residence A Joth revision which took more than a year to complete. has yet to receive final approval or the City Council. The planning sta(f, Shuptrine said, will now take the provisions of the lOth revision and blend them with the substance or the 11 the revised and bring for th."aring on Oct. 4 a 12th revised version of the industrial zone plan. Big Rig Lo se s Control on Laguna Hillside "We're essl!!ntially skJpping the 10th revised," Shuptrine said. That zoning package never was enacted as law, even though it was the city's first major in· nuence on the rules governing industrial developm ent. The 10th revi.sion was undertaken to sort out the commercial areas near (See PROPERTY, Page %) • By JACK CHAPPELL Of tlHi O.ilr Piiot Stan A huge semi truck and flatbed trailer rig hauling a Caterpillar tra~tor and roller went out of control while descen- ding a steep Laguna Beach residential street and crashed through an exclusive hillside residence. The driver reportedly suffered only a bruised hip and although the cab of his big rig was .crushed. Residents of the home, Dr. and Mrs. Charl es Strong, were not injured. C0tintu Lodges 1' ote The huge combination truck, crawler tractor and splked "sheepsf'oot" earth compactor narrowly missed a butane tank for emergency power supply for Dr. Strong 's bomb abeller, police said. The incident occurred On Temple Hills Drive Jn the JOOo block iBt "a .treacherous halfpin cw:ve• F.ir,e 'dep8.rt~t officials estimated damage to be· $40,000 total. The hillside home at 1179 Temple Hills Drive was !truck at the uortbmiy corner after 'the 5"i!tly' moving truck and load smashed through a center barricade, 4 Elks OpJP.OSe _Color Bar By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of t1tt Dfl!i,. .._ Stefl - Officials of four \)range County lodges of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Ellis said today they have voted to do away with' lhe "Whltes only" restrictlop that has been in effect nationally for 105 years. Spokesmen at four other counly Elles' lodges contacted today by the Daily Pilot t .... refused to comment on their votes, which will help detennine the n a t i o n a I membersblp policy of the charitable organlz.ations. The _more lh;an 2,200 lodges al)d 1.5 mil· lion Elk! ln the. United States must vote whether or,.not they support an 11111end· ment passed by the national convention in July that would strike the word "white" rrom the organization''s application forms . Spa~e Hardware? Georgia's UFO Called Meteorite Gll!FFIN, Ga. (UPl}-The 'uniden tified fiyl~g.objl!ct that liurned a hole In the ground )1ear here this week ana vilililbed In a cloud of steam was probably ' something in the nature of a small meteorite or •~ a piece of space hardware," a Georgia soil chemist said to<Uy. Dr. o. E. Anderson, bead o(•the Agronomy ~partmenl at the Georgia Experiment Station, 'said lther Item would have Impacted at very high temperature. • _ • _ • Anderson analyzed soil at the crash site tJ!e: !Wss Clanton re- ported seeing a small mctal·like ol!Ject descend to earth and burn a hole in the ground. Clanton a local resident, said be thought the UFO was "britn· stone from Heaven" to show people God can bum the earth. The golden, egg-shaped o ject was , destroyed upon impact. • I Since the lodge organitt(j, ~ts con- stitution bas restricted membefship to, "white American citizens." Recent U.S. Supreme Court ru1lngs have permitted courts to yank liquor licenses from discriminatory private clubs unless the rules are changed -an action termed a "death threat" by one Elks spokesman. The Santa Ana Lodge at 21Z Elk.! Lane, larges t in the .county with 3.500 members, voted overwhelmingly to do away with the discriminalOry wording. according to lodge manager Oliver Clark. The membership of Huntington Beach i Lodge 2444, at 11>480 Talbert Ave., Foun- tain Valley, a1so voted to strike the rule. Exalted Ruler Larry Schley nid today his lod(e. voted Sept. 4 to ratify the e.mendmeitt, "deleUng the word white from membership qualifications." Schley stttued Ille fact that hi• lodge's decision Is only oue vote. Tho na tional convention, baVievtr, voted "to klll the qualilicatloa by 1 J to t mar«fn. Two other chapters, both of which bave mcmberS lrOm the Orange Coast area, • also voted to reactnd the quallncauon. SpokcS!1len for ·Garden Crovo Lodge 1952 and the Weitmlnster Lodge· nld to- day their membership also vot~ by wide margins ,to do away with the rult. It was a different story with aeveral other county lodges contacte<I today. Art Kroening, exalted ·ruler of the Ne""°" Harbor Lodge !\''7 Jn, Newport ) (See ELKS, he• 11 . ' • across an opposing traffic lane, and down a small incline j;lrring an entrance col· umn from its fouhdations. "I tltouiht it was an airplane coming down,., Mrs. Strong said as she surveyed the destruction wrought in her front yard. 1be Caterpillar tractor toppled frcm the flatbed trailer and landed ups~· doWQ. stopping just short of a home. big-roller also J~ed off the trailer. No figures of the rig's weight .were available from the Pico Rivera haullng finn of CTS Contractor Tramport. "I don't have any estimates on any'thJng," said Earl Hodson, finn owner. He said he did not know where the rig had been working, and tersely referred all ~~ questions to the insurance com- pany. Police identified the driver as Larry (See ACCIDENT, Page I) Irvine's Junior Footb all Squads To Open, Seaso1is Irvine's three ne\v Jtlnior All-American Football teams open their'fint season of play in the Orange County Conference this weekend . Two of the contests will' be played at home, on the University High School football field . '!be Irvine Vaqueros, the Clinic Division team of eight and nble-yeaM1ld boys, 11'111 host the Mlsaioo Viejo Dlablos at 11 a.m. . Tho Junior Pee Wtie Dlvlllion team, boys I to ft years old. the Irvine Trojans, play Fountai~ Valley at 1 p.m. The Pee w .. l>iv!sioo squad, llloo call- ed the Trojans, plays the .._ .. only Sunday game, an a w a y cmtest at 11 - a.m. against the Ntwpon·Mesa Coronu at Costa Mesa Hlgh School. Boys on the Pee Wee team are to to 12 years old. Junior All-American Football Is ft -man tackla football Ployed on a "'gulation- size football field. Playlng Ume Is 40 minutes, compared with 41 minutes for high school football and tJO minutes for college and ,profff>lonal bell. • By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ttw Dally 1'11•1 Slaff A movement among Oraoge County service station dealers to protest "mt- fai r" Phase IV price controls with an organized shutdown has run out of gas, Dealer plans to lock up their pumps for. a three-day period begiMing MondaY conked out Thursday night when leaders of a gasoline retailers as.sociation con- vin~ed them that they w9uld only be burtlng themselves and "the guy who has supported you all_these years." Instead, they decided to wait for the outcome of a lawsuit now pending before a federal court. The suJt alleges lbat service station owners are being treated unfairly because they h a v e to absorb price Increases passed on by the oil com· ~les under Phase IV. Alter the suit is heard in early Deeember, "there is no way we will not be out from under those ridiculous price controls," John Devine, president of the International Service Station Dealers Auoclation (IS.SDA) pre d i ct e d en· thwsiastically. Independent dealers across the nation are fuming over the Phase IV controls because their retail prices are frozen, but the whol~e or tankwag_on prices of the oil compahles are not. Several of the ma- jor otl companies baVe increased their tank.wagon prloea as much as one or two centa a gallon, 'fhicb, in the opinion of many dealers, dHves their profits so low that they may go out of business. Scattered c;Iosinp of service stations began this weet· in several parts of the COWltry, Including San Diego where about 25 percent of the stations were reported closed Tbutaday. • _Orange Cowty's moderate approach was underscored by fear of potential 8nti·trust action, according to Devine, who warned the dealers that they could ~"open to charges of restraint of trade aM conspiracy to disrupt business." The only suggestion of 'l shutdown was made by Costa Mesa Standard dealer Bill canning who grabbed the microphone from the speaker and said, "('dare all you guys to shut down for three days." CaMing angrily left the meeting "-"hen his call !or a sales boycott failed to rouse the ~ dealers who attended the strategy ""8IOll. Most appeared to go along with the ·reco:mmendation of Mission Viejo dealer Wl!Uam H. Bay and County Supervisor (See GASOIJNE, Page I) Orange • • Weatlter It'll he a cool, drfzzly Saturday -at least in the morning hours along the Orange Coast Beach highs will be 1n the 60s rising to the mld-7Qs Inland. INSIDE T ODA V The l rvltie Commtmitu The· ote-r fs offering local plot1Qoer1 1omethJng new tlii.s year -a seasou of Orange Count11 f)re· mitres, See lnkrmi&.tion cohnnn fn £oda11'1 \Veeke1uttr. .:.! OAJLY PILOI IS . ___ :__Fr~;1y,_S_tPl~mbfr 14, 1973 Shootout Case ··Mystery Suspect :. ;'.To Be Arrai·gned. .. .. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 !tit t>all'f '11of Sl•ll ~. A mystery man was scheduled for ar- 1-aigrunent today in. the aftermath of a ~dnap-shootout ranging through Newport Beach. Irvine and Santa Ana Heights, as io.ithorities tried lo determine whether he 9i' police wounded two of his hostages. : ·Criminal compl aints expected to ijwge the defendant with multiplt ;ti~ were being processed this morn· "'g by the Orange County District At· 6fney'• Office. Blvd., Newport Beach, was shot in the forearm and stomach and is listed in serious condition following hi s operation. About two dozen shots were fired at the height of the confrontation "'hen the gun- man -holding ~Iiss Baescrnan in front with the pistol at her head and DcSitva behind hint -continued his advance toward police in a futile effort to flee. Technicians at the Orange County Sheriff's Department crime laboratory tOOay "'ere ru shing to comple te bnllistics tests on the guns involved in the shootoot. Investigators so far have declined 10 say how many shots were fired allogether \Vedoesday night. • • • r .~ ' • O.lty 1'11•1 1""°'91 M' Ja(ll ClttllHI f't'091P.,,eJ ACCIDENT ..• ... Cox, 22, of Covina. CoX told officers he was comina: down Temple Hills Orlv1;1 with \he truck in low gear, when the rig suddenly started to pick up speed just be!ore it entered the sharp curve . "He observed he couldn't make the curve and all he could do is hang on," Sgt. Norm Babcock said today. Crews from a special towing finn worked until midnlglit to ,. ..... the rig from the Temple HlllJ residen-.. . Traffic OD Temple· Hilla Drive· was heavier than normal because Park Avenue, the ooly other acceu road to Top of the World, was closed due 10 street construction. With the trafllc restricted to one lane on Temple Hills, the city was forced to open Park Avenue, and officers reported today the fresh aspha1t on Park Avenue was damaged by the heavy traffic. No charges are being considered against the driver at this time, Sgt. Bab- cock said. From Pagel ':'lbe man varjously identified with two Qll.mes and two addresses was scheduled 0. be transferred from Orange ·County Jii'I to Harbor Judicial District Court ror .be proceedings. :.The big black·a 0 nd·White Sh;rirf's Department bus was to carry him -~ wire mesh-covered windows - i long part or the roule lhe origi nal police Chase followed at 90 miles per hour. DeSilva told one newsman he believed he was hi! by police bullets after the ab- ductor's gu n fired during the sudden struggle, which divertt"CI its barrel fro1n l\1iss Baeseman·s head. LAGUNA BEACH FIREMEN EXAMINE TRACTOR THAT LEFT SEMI TRUCK, TRAILER THURSDAY The Accident at Sharp Curve in Temple Hills Drive Did $40,000 Damage to Home PROPERTY. •• Investigators said today they are still somewhat baffled by just who their man is and what motivated the entire bizarre chain of incidents. He was initially identified as Victor Crover Hii,dlage, 26, :.in unemployed San Diego resident. Newport Beach Police Detect ive Capt. Don Oyaas said Thursday afternoon, however, that his men had developed in· formation also iden tifying their :suspect as Roland Cray. He said investigators determined that the suspect has been living with a couple he has known for two years at 752 Main St., Huntington Beach, since July but disclosed little else. The suspect captred at 7 p.m. Wed· nesday as he emerged from a home at 2322 Orchid liills Drive, Santa Ana Heights. was subsequently booked on suspicion o[ assault wilh intent to com- mit murder. He escaped in jury during a fusillade of two volleys of shots fired after a male hostage grabbed for his .357 Magnum revolver. The young man and his teenag· ed girl companion were "·ounded. · Both victims underwent surgery Thurs· day afternoon at Costa h>fesa Memofial Hospital. Derune BaesemM, 17, or Pasadena, was hi t three times, in the arm, abdomen area and Jung and is listed in critical but stable condition. P.1arco A. DeSHva, 20. of 3505 Balboa Ba11 to Watergate Su11day F eatu1·es Letters On Hearh1gs, Ecology Here's a rundown of stories appearing in this week 's Sunday Daily Pilot: UPPER BA V -A multiplicity Clf government agencies is working to preserve the ecological vitality of Upper Newport Bay and most officials are op- timistic that results of their work will soon become eyident. The m:iin problem ·they have is coordinating all their ef. (Sunday's Best) forts. Staff writer John Zaller reports in a YOU section feature. ,ART FOR TABLE -High food prices not only are keeping some meals off din- ner tables, they also are keeping art off gallery wall s. For a profile of a Costa Mesa artist who works with organic materials read this week's Sunday Special by J acqueline Comb:s Land. TA LENT SCOUT -Jeanne Haliburton watches for potential "Stars" of stage and screen in sessions every Saturday in a Newport Beach ballet school. Mrs. Halib urton. veteran agent and~forrner ac· tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo Olson in a women's page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mail response, U~e Watergate hearings may be the most closely· · listened·to series on television. From hate mail to near love letters. it pours in at rate that 'is too high to keep track of. For sample~ see the Sunday editorial section . Ai\1ERICANS IN DEBT -The average citizen's ideas oo borrowing may not be as liberal as is assumed. A University of 1\-tichigan study shows middle-income families borrowed at an average or 12 percent o( their yearly income. and most don't want to borrow anY more. Th.is feature appears in the YOU section. • • . • • • 0.llY l'Hot 11•11 l'MI• NEW LAGUNA HILLS MALL GIVEN PREVIEW THURSDAY BY CIVIC LEADERS, PRESS The Million·square-foot Complex Includes 47 Stores; It Will Open to Public Oc.t. 4 OlANGI COAST II DAILY PILOT Tr.. Or-Coa1! DAILY PILOT, wllft wtlkfl h <;:Ombl~ !ht ,..fW\·PrK>, h pUbll\llfd b'f Ill• O••"Clt Co111 P11b!l1lllnt1 CotnNny. ,!,...,_ • .... edltlor>s ••• PllOlllMll, 111°"6•1' ""'0111111 Frk11Y. tor Coit• 111 .... N•WPOrt '"~ H1111!11191iln l t..,hl FOlll'lllin V1ll1y, LIOUM 8...:11, lr<l"*/$addlHoK~ '""' Sin (ltlmcn!e/ S.11 J...,, C•Pi1tr1..... 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I • iiAM~ • Officials Get Preview Of Laguna Hills Mall Some 150 civic leaders and members or the press had a "sneak preview" of the new Laguna llills Mall Thursday night. The one-mi llion-squarc·foot complex, incltxl.ing 47 st ores. will open to the public at ID a.m. Oct. 4. It is located off El Toro Road at the San Diego Freeway. Strolling mariachi bands, Sangria, and champagne accented the preview of the mall, which was built as a joint venture of the Rossmoor Corporation and builders Ernest \Y. Hahn , Inc. Hours for the new complex will be JO a.m. to 9:30 p.m. P.londay through Fri- day; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Stllurday; and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. The mall Itself, climate-controlled at 70 degrees, will open an hour before the :;tores for window lihopping. the opening months of the mall will ru1ure~ pt_ippet shows and n1 a g I c demonstratfons beginning Oct. 1 1 and conilnulng dally through Oct. 14 . An art show wUJ open Wednesday Oct. 24 featuring several Sadd leback Valley anists. Nov. 5 iJM:w car show will open . brlngrnch>iome'46 1114 models. • Santa Claus will arrive :.it !he ~1all Nov. 23. General manager for the center is Ri chard McCarran Hay, a two-year employe of Ernest W. Hahn. Jack W. Singer is assistant general manager and promotion director. B-7, I-12, N-21 -It's Illegal! SACliAm:NTO !AP) -T~ bingo games at the lodge and cbUrch hall will continue to be 'illegal in Cal.l romla, at least for a while longer. The state Assembly, on a 34·21 vote Thul}day rejected a measure to legallze bingo game9 conducted for charitable purposes. Assemblyman L.f'roy Greene ( D • Sacramento ), said his consUtuUonnl amendment ~I made 1 e n s e because many Californians already..Q!ay bingo while Jaw enforcement tookl'tbe other way . • From PfJfleJ GASOLINE ... Ralph ,Clark to use their ~litical power and to convince the registered voters driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, himself an ARCO deak!r and former ISSDA president, urged the angered dealers to remain united, be gentlemen, and to "just bang tight, because I think we're going to whip it." The fourth district s u p e r v i s o r , however, lashed out at the architects of the Phase IV gas price cootrol plan which allows dealers a ma.timum seven cents gross profit per gallon. • "These idiots in Washington have DO idea whet the problem is," he said. "They don't know that our people would be tickled pink with a seven cents net." Clark added that he thooght the Cost of Living Council needs to understand that anytime ah oil company raises the tan kwagon price by one or two cents a gallon, the dealer's profit takes a dive because be must absorb the increase. "They're asking us to operate in the post-World War U days Of profit," be charged. Justice's Notes Reported Stolen WASfUNGTON (AP) -lrrepfaceable papers of the late Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter have been stolen from the Library of Congress, columnist Jack Anderson reported. Anderson said five years o f Frankfurter's personal diaries, numerous notes on conversations, memos. letters and personal jottings y,·ere among the stolen items. FromPageJ EXCHANGE .. • got to develop it as a child. "So if you want your daughters to grow up with internal stability, you've go~ to give it to them. You've got to spend lime talking to them and listening to them. "When they're young , it can be boring. \Vhen they're older, it can be annoying. "But you're all your kid has got." l\1rs. Brick ended her talk th usly : "If you men don't care t.bout your daughters, maybe I can impress you by putting it this way. "Your sons are some day going to have lo live with. these women. And if they're going to have dece nt women to live with , you're going to have to raise them. ''This is your chance lo put Women's Liberation right out of business. if you'll just take the lime with your daughters !hat they need." Welfare Grant Hikes Opposed ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Republicans stiffened opposition today to proposals to hike welfare grants fpr 500,000 aged, blind and disabled. Californians as the 1973 legislative session entered it.1 final hours. Senate Democratic Ooor leader Ceofle Moscone said he neelied just two lnbrf! Republ ican votes to send to GOv. ·Rohald Reagan a measure that would hike the 500.000 welfare grants an average of $23 a month. The Reagan administration continued to demand a mor e modest pl an allowing hikes Jan. I averaging just $9. Orange County Airport and equalize ~ rules governing land owned by the Irvine Company to rules affecting Douglas- Crow, lrvlne. Douglas.crow is expecting to develop a 51).acre parcel at MacArthur Bou1evard and Ca mpus Drive. Offices and hotels are planned for the site originally purchased for aerospace reµarch by the parent McDoMcll·Douglas Corporati on of St. Louis. The parcel is zoned commercial, ~t subject to city approval of a use pe~t for each phase of development. Douglas objected to the requirement and the 10th revised would eliminate the need for a use permit. Instead, the city would ~e­ quire site plan review for all commere1al development within the · IIC -on the Douglas property as well as commerc.ial areas being developed by the JrvlllC Company. IIC President Thomas Wolfe, on the night the council was lo adopt it, opposed the 10th revision after it had passed nearly a dozen city bearings. Shuptrine said the city staff has been unable to schedule meetings with the llC officials to iron out differences. .., From Pagel ELKS • • • Beach, said his only conunent on the vote is, "no comment." Exalled Rultt John Mcllowel! ol Ille fledgling, 400-member Mission Viejo Elks Club said he won't say how his chapter voted lDltil the national results are known. Lodge,lieorelary W. E. Pennington or the~A.nabtim Elles said he also has "no commem" .about his chapter's vote on the rule, as did a spokesman for the lodge in Buena Park, The statements by Orange County lodges follows reports from the San Francisco Bay Area and lodges in the San Diego area that have voted OD the ban. SLEEP SOFAS Every Home Should Have One lifi/e~ 1r t .. l; ~ J .... , ,.,... '·*·~-.!. ~;.-~ ... ., .. r» ~~,;;t: . .._, 1'i' •}"~"'';(t . ~~:;i' &.~!1.( • ' ' . Excollenf Soloclion Now On Display. At Rea•onable Prices. Sl)lp In Today. ., • • DREXElr-HEJllTA66-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS1AN '" INTERIORS WlllllA YS l SA TUlDA TS t :OO to l1JO NIDA T' 'TIL t :OO ' NEWPORT BEACH e 1121 Wt STCLIFf DI.. 642-2010 10,.11 S1111d•y 12·1ilDI LAGUNA BEACH • J4'$ NOllTH COAST HWY, IOp•11 Surttl•y 12·1110 494-.111 TORRANCE e 2JMt HAWlHOkNI ILVD. I Jfl•IJTf . __/°' I , I I I • 6 DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • The ·True College Role • -" • The extended campus program beginning at Sad· dleback Community College this !all is a signJ!lcant and well-timed response to needs of the area. along Moulton Parkway will protect the Jots from sheet flooding . ... In the program, faculty members will teach eve· ning courses at five high schools in the district -so not all Saddleback students will have to commute to the h1ission Viejo campus. For starters, the &chool is offering no more thao five courses at each school. The selection is limited for the trial term and the hope is that the choice will be ex- panded for future terms. Dean of Instruction R. L. Platt said the program conceivably could offer up to 100 courses -depending on what students need and ask for . This program· is one step toward realizing the true role or the community college. The strength of a community college lies not in how many expensive buildings an ambitious administration can wring from taxpayers, but in how well quality edu- cation can be made available to more people. More New Homes Irvine planning commissioners acted with commend- able dispatch last week to approve the tentative tract map providing homes and apartments for 3,861 new resi· dents. While such flooding would be expected to occur . rarely, the same wall reduces the road nolse withJn the traet. The solution displays the Innovations wblcb are pas· sible when government and private interest work co- operatively. Jigsaw Puzzle The County of Orange has opened another stretch of Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo -a key link in the badly overburdened traffic network of the Saddleback Valley. But a half-mile chunk of pavement is only a small piece of the mighty jigsaw puzzle confronting county road officials. The Lake Forest, Mission Viejo, El Toro area is a snakepit of traffic headaches caused for the most part by inadequate land planning and piecemeal commercial and residential development. . Bottlenecks are tbe rule, not the exception. Commut- ers jam onto tiny farm roads because key arterials haven't been cut through far enough to be useful. · Cars pour onto El Toro and La Paz Roads causing monumental traffic jams at the San Diego Freeway in- terchanges. With the Villa ge of Valley View "moderate income housing" controversy behind them, commissioners looked favorably on Irvine Company plans to rename the 212· acre parcel. They approved lhe Deerfield homes pro- posal, which no longer is expected to meet needs of moderate income families, but still will widen the range of housing opportunities in the growing new city. Those homes will be built at the fringes of the cen- tral Irvine flood plain. An attractive earth berm and wall Admittedly, some of those problems will be solved with the completion of new interchanges at canada Road and Alicia Parkway. But the real problem of moving cars from homes to destinations as painlessly as possible will be far from over. -The county must come to grips with its land plan- ning inadequacies and slow development enough to let other essential needs catch up. 'Beat it; kid! This is no penny-ante game we've got going here!' Nuclear 'Parity' Called Irrelevant AmtTica has far more nuclear weapons than it cou ld cu11ceivabl11 u.se to protect it..s 1ecurlty. And tt's build- in(l more at the rate of almost four a day. This is not the assessment of a pacifist or a nuclear di.sanner. lt is rotller tlle view of retired Rea r Adm. Gene La.Rocque who today lieads tlle respected Ce nter for De- fen.se Jnformation. lie is inter- V'ie wed by edi tors of The Wa.Thing- toil Monthl y. Q: Wbtn it comes to nuclear weapons, how Important today Is partty -or equality -"'itb the R.111s1ans? A: Parity is a ridiculou s. outmoded 19th century idea . It Is no longer re1e·vant in an age v.•hen v.'e can destroy the Soviet Union so many limes over that you can't even count them. And they can do the same to us. As a r~sult of last yea r's SALT agreements. v.•e need Jess and less forces to defend the United States from att ack. By signing the SALT lr<'aly. 'A'e said in effect that the United Slates will make no attempt to defend itself -an almost unbelievable thing to tell the public - against a Soviet missile att ack. And the Soviets have also agreed not to defend themselv es against a U.S. missile attack. It could be called "security through mutual vulnerability.'' Q: ( take It you are rererrtog to the clause that strictly limits the deployment of ABP.ts, or defensive missiles. A; That's right. Q: If equallly 11 not an Important measuring rod, then what are the mlnl- mal force levels we need to protect our security? A: Back in November Hl71 the United States had 4,700 nuclear weapons and the Soviets had 2,100. Now we have 7,100 nuclear weapons. That 's a 50 per cent in- crease in 18 months. Q: Tbls Is totally lodtpendent ol any prodacUoa on tbe part of the RuuJans? A: Yes. The Russians had 2,100 nuclear ~'eapons in 1971. Today they have 2.300. These are all figures provided by the SL"Cretary or Defense. Q: Allboo1b we bave Ille leod ID Ille number of nuclear wel'9U1 ~e Ra1,S..s have a superiority wbep tt come• to ICHMI. Why are total nuclnr weapons 1 _ more Important Index than the number of ICBl'tt s? A: All this means la that the Soviot1 depend largely on land·basod m1 .. u .. \vhilo we place our primary emphasis on (,___WH_~-~-THEY _ ____.J missile-carryin g nuclear subn:iarines . For example, our fleet of 20 Poseidon sub- marines carries 1 6 0 independently targeted nuclear weapons which can destro7 llO Soviet cities. Q: That's more than 3,0CMI Soviet cities with the ZO aubll. A: And there are only 220 Soviet cities with over 100,000 populalion. One thousand nuclear weapons, one-seventh or what we have today, ;Would be more than '"°ugh lo dO the:" job. 'lllls ls especially tn.ie' because, u Henry Kis- singer said after the SALT a,ree.ment, "they'll all get a free rldt." There won't be any ABMs to ahoot them dawn . Q: But lsn~ tbe reuoa we lttve 10 many nuclear weapou becaate • cert.la percentage of tbem woa~ reaclli tbetr targets In a a11clear exebaap? A: This is an old idea d1Un1 from the time when bombers were used to penet,pite an enemy's defemes. In those days you had to remember that bombera could be shot down wlth guns, with missiles or interceptor aircraft. The limitation or ABMI means thls Is no longer the case. Americam are •till hung up on this outmoded mental attitude. Q: Since the SALT qreemeat made lt easier for ml11lle1 to reaclli tbett tar1ell, shouldn't tbJs bave led to 1 vohmtary reduction In offeaslve wt1pon1? A: That's what we all expected to hi~ pen. lhstead the military bu unveiled a host of new progratn1 lhiJ year. The Alr Force wants $500 million for a new 'B-1 bomber which eventually will COit $11 billion; the Navy wantl a new Trident submarine at a eoet of •t.3 bWion a1 part of a whole nt1' program which will even- tually cost Ill bllllcm. And u-pre> grams are just the tlp of the iceberg. Q: Wbat accoult for tMa momentum toward entirely new weapo111 1ystem1? A: Partly bureaucraUc inertia. The military has been plannln&" these weapons syttemt for yem. Lut year Sen. Symlnaton asked Adm. Zumwllt, chief of naval operaUons, "AdmtraJ, when did you start plannin1 the Trident submarine?'' . Adm. Zumwalt smlled and said: "We started plaMln1 It the day the United Sta.tea Senate approved the Polaris sub- marine." The Decline of a Giant Mark TwalD: God'• Fool. By Hamlln Hill. Harper & Row. 308 Pagea. 110. The tw ilight of any mortal. partlcularly ·if he or she LI a ge:n!U1, can be both ln· rormatlve and dlstrtalng. 11le 1tory .or the last 10 years of Mark Twain'• life, which Hamlin Hill delCrtbel In th1a latest study baaed on comlderabl6 private material hitherto little usod, ls more than typical. AL THOUGH he l'OllUnued almost lo the end as a VtrJ successful writer, Twaln was past his creative peak. The mask of lhe chronlcler or mlcl-19111-century lron- Uer fife In Amerlca's 1uperb lnnocence -when he paraded na a buffoon It was as a grand buffoon -was allpplng o[f, Revealed at last was the true coun· tenance of one of our mott complex lltenry artlats, Samuel L. Cle.mens hlmseU: otlll brilliant but declining In heallh or body and mind, yet determined lo the end lo fulfill bJ1 reputation II a prodlalous writer. (THE BOO~ J For yeara pel'IOnll tr19edy had 1talked the man: hJs only toh had died ln ln- foncy; bll eldOlt daushter, Suun, alao had died YOWll· Mn. Clemtnl, the be- loved !Jvy, who despite her Victorian censorship or her h111baod'• writlnl really had helpod tl\llde him, died before him. Their younaeot daulhtor. Jean, drowned during an opllepUc oe!Jure. A CHIEF source of Hill'• account bl the journal of Clcmen1' 1ecret~1 I1abtl Lyon, adoring and adored unlifih•-Jolned the company of assocfates h e neuroUcall) conceived&.! enemies. HUI is hardly an !Mplr«l writer. But he hi> done a Ult!ul atucly or the declJne or a giant. RoaaldC. Hood, Auodated PmJ Dear Gloomy Gus While Watergate conspirators Mc- Cord an~ Magruder have been barred by court order from the lecture circuJt, crime seems to be paying for their coUeague E. Haw- ard Hunt. Re-prints or his spy nov- els, with big by-tines, are selling like hotcakes in the supermarkets. A:Y. Free Transit Experiments Cost Plenty There's little to be said for driving a car into the city. Parking is scarce and expensive, traffic congestion is nerve- wracking and air pollution caused by automobile fumes is becoming in- 1ufferable. Yet Americans continue to re- ly on private transportation . The Urban M111 Transit Administration estimates that 88 per cent or the nation's com- muten go to work in automobiles while only 10 percent rely on b~s and 4 per· cent use subway trains. DRIVERS complain that pub 11 c tran1portation is slow, unreliable, in- convenient aod costly. A number of cities have moved to counter these criticisms by selling up express bus lanes during ;EDITORIAL BESEARCH rush hours, raising parking rates to a level that would discourage motortata, reducing traMlt fares , and allowing senior cltiurul and those travellq at cer- tain hours to ride free of charge. Some urban planners are demanding more -· they want cilles 10 offer rree public transportation to all. Thl5 month, ~attle will become the first major Anferican city to offer free mass transit. During the one-year ex- periment. riders will be able to board buses In the outer city and the suburbs. Commerce, caur., provide• the nation's only long-tenn free transit experbmnt. Advocates of the no-coat service argue that Co mmerce's experl!!:nce, whert only about 7 percent of all resktentl use the buses, Is not applicable to large cities. When Rome tried free tran1lt in 1972, they argue, ridership I n c re as t d enormoU1ly. ROME dblcontlnuld the Hrvlce, which had coot th• dab~rldden city '2.~ mllllon, after two months .. Seattle'• very limited ' experiment wUl coot 191,000 while Com- merce, with a populaUon or only ll,000, paya ll'°,000 a year !or 111 rree buses. tt 11 quutlooable whether taspoyers in !art• c1u .. , partloularly those who do not UH publlc tranaportotlon, wlll ho wl!Ung lo subaldize a fiO.f8-repJin. If the federal govcn1ment pays lhe bill , the cost of free transit, coupled with lmproverntnll Deed· ed to attract molorlsta, cctild run to ftO billion a year. UnUJ the publ!c decldes that the benea11 are w..-th the pr!co, free mass tranalt ls likely to remafn the e1ception rather than lht-ruJe. SB School Report Watered Down FTC · Yields to Pressure WASHINGTON -The Federal Trade Commission produced a dramatlc booklet warning agelnst unscrupulous practices by vocational schools, then secretly detp- slxed almost 100,000 of the books when the schools protested.. Thls buckling to the industry he ls sup- posed to regulate was one of the flr!t tests for FiC Chairman Lewis Engman, who was recen tly appointed by President Nix- on to protect consumers from voracious business practices. The 24-page booklet had t,... painstak- ingly pyt together by FTC staffers and was handsomely printed for distribution to the public. But the vocational acbool industry got wind of it and beefed mlghll· ly to the FTC. WHEN THEY complalntd, Engman called a special meeting of the com- missioners, who were on vacation . Not all showed up. Those present qtilckly voted to put up the money for a revised booklet, which looks Identical but ac- tually leaves Out some or tbe most sting- ing criticism or the profit-making schools. Although most or t h e ortglnal 93,000- copy edition is oow moldering ln the FTC's basement, we managed to obtain one copy and found it is substantially stronger than the second version, which is being released to the ptiblic with the blessing of Engman and the vocational schools. FOR INSTANCE, ill 1'11'1llnl about phony degrees granlecl bY _,. achools, the original pamptilet stated: "The value of a degree or dJplorila graDted by a junior college, college or univenlty is reUable. The worth of a degree or diploma glven·by a prlva~prafit-mak· ing vocational school Is soineUmes more questionable.'' That passage Is deleted ln the second booklet and its absence is noteworthy. Many states, following a model program 1.natltuted by North Clrollna, bave eatabliahed community cr:illeces and vocational schools that are often superior to. and competing for the yme students as conunerelal school!. Another caveat expurga"'1 by the FTC says. •·vocational schools often have names which are very similar ln sound or spelling to famous organizations just so you may contuse tie two." The com- plaint Is nonetheless valid: Firms like IBM are continually plagued by educa~ lion hucksters trading on their easily recognized initials. THE ORIGINAL texl contains till! warning : "If a course has a very 1~ drop-out rate, it may be too euy and tli school may be a. 'diploma mlll.' Some courses are designed to be .asy 90 students will complete them and. ICboo2I will get all the money." 'lllls wu delete<! entirely rrom .the revised brochure. FTC Commlssioner Paul Rand Dixon, who was not at the ruah meettna on the booklet. said, "I've gol kind of a loft •pol ln m)r heart for correspondence achools. Not everyone has a rich daddy (but) some of these places are just out and out diploma mlll1." Joan Z. Bernstein. acting director of FTC's Butf:au of Consumer Protection, said the commission had "planned a Se& ond edition anywa y." She iDILlted there were no pressures to alter. the text, ~t admitted there w e r e obJectiON from representatives of the vocational schoolA. An Obsession with Records WASHINGTON -When we're not thinking about how to find food and then how to pay for it, this year's preoccu- pation seems to be the exhumation of bodies, political and literal. The most spectacular dig laid bare b)': the criminal archeologists is still, or 'co u r 1.1 e 1 Watergate. However , the Agnew find i.! the equivalent of tbe discovery of the un- touched tomb of a late dynasty pharaoh, and then there are minor but. pronUalng excavations like the unearthing of a fortune in unused Alr Force inventory at Charleston, S.C. In addition to the "Waterhole Scan- dal," as the anlisted men on the baae re- fer to it, deep aea divert oU the cout cl Mlllachusetts were attempUng to recover treasure from the long sunk- en lrans -Atlantic liner, And~a Dorla. A party or diggers from the Hou1lon pollce cleparbne11t must be given credit for the moat horrifying of the summer's exhumaUona, tbe bodies or 'l1 boys, most terribly murdered. ln reporting the news the media have made it a tasteless point to tell us that the Houston dig represent• a new record. In due course, we can eX~ pt.ct to open our Guinness Book of RecordJ, page ttu"ough to '1Murdcrs1 Mw, 11 and then on to "murders, multi- ple, non·polltlcal," where It will ~ad something llk1, "Houston, Texas, U.S.A 1973, 21-modem record." In baseball, homicide and track we divide our records Into the c1tegories of ancient and modem, perhap.'> because anyone who nourished before 1900 partakes or the leJendary, ~s though we believed that prier centuries were peo- pled by deml·rodl and devils, er.slur.. sufficiently different from ourselves to make comparl90n a rorm of decepUon. KEEPING RECORDS o[ athletic reats or such accomplishments as the most standardized ltkruncc mugs o( stOul con- sumed In one hour's sitting it a form of celebrating e1ceptional achi evement. That Ja one way we make feats famous. juot ao record-keeping supplies us with a 110ndard lo ltrlve for, but why then '"'at the bloodlelt crimes In the samo way? A talte for the mec1bre1 dr pt:rhaps an ( VON HOFFMAN J ab1truse pas1lon for the measurement of the lara:est and smallest of anything. We are a bookkeeptng dvllliaUon. The moat marvelOU1 of all our machines, the com- puter, Is prlmarUy uae<t for our records which are so volumlnouJ tblt ewn when ahrunk lo mlcrolllm 11u they overtax the capaclty of tbouaands of wart!bousea and cavea. M'1Ch of our dlalnl ii explained by our IOve ol recordJ. The "record of the put/' the recordl of other peoples, other socletlet are. 18 tmportant as our own. We go so far as to construct reeords for vanished. nations whole populations didn't have our taste for writing down and •tortns thelr aetl and atatlrtlcs. Records also comfort us. We need an explanation for everythlna, but there ls DO utable one for w b a t happened in Houston so we consult our records and they tell us that such savageries have been committed before and, If that doesn't explain anythlne. It makes us f~l better. No crime la quite so bad lf It's been committed before. MANY HAVE reacted to Watergate in the same mode. Polltlclan1 pull that kind or 1tulf all the time, ergo Watergate isn't so bad . If they concede that Watergate ls what it is - a Uniquely foul series of in· terconnected crimes -lhey leave themselvea open to disturbing specula· tlons. Could It be then that we, as a peo- ple, have changed for the wor1e , that such things as llouaton and Watergate could have taken piece for tho first tlme? Christians, consmatlvts and othe rs whole philosophy teachet them the rea li· ty of aln, or ot least the lnllnltely im· perfttt nature of human beings. don't have that problmi. They c1n accept a Houston or a Watergate, not as a sign that our warp is comlng apart from our woof, but as evll done by specific in· di vldualiWlio mu.at take the ~uill ror II . The doctrine of Individual· guilt absolves social guilt and the nct-d to dig around for laraer el'pla.na tlona. Mo!il of u1 ere too much the children of modern liberal culture to accept evil 11 a con· sequence of our humanity. and therefore be content muely lo punl&b il and &bWJ It. We must...el'plain it and thut, as we flrst dug up the crime, we try to dig up an explanation for it, If not in our record book.9 then in our social sciences . IS WATERGATE, we ask, a sign of a defect In "the system"? Shortly we shall be asking t h e same question.I about tfouslon. We did It with Charlie Man.son, whom we explained away by callin1 him the Hipple Killer. f..1aybe v."e'll call the Houston culprltl th e Hard-Hat Klllers, or IOrtle other nonsense name. More likely, we'll have rerour1e to psychiatry. The plea or not guilty by reason of Insanity probably should not be alloYN!d Jn our criminal justice, but in a society that feels guilty about &uill and yet must hove some plauaible ez-.. planation of guilty acta, pqchlatry ts a mot1t serviceable device. Tho he ad-stu"lnkers excavating the skulls of the wicked for the. causes of their crimes, however aalilfying to tbt Imagination, Is about as sclenUfic ea ex- orcism . Others will prefer to continue digging for harder facts and better U:· planations with the ·attendant risk th1t their shovels will not unearth better knowledge -but worse crimes. .. OIA.N .. C9AIJ DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, ~U..htr Thomai Ktwil, Editor Barbara Krttblch Ecjjlorlol Pag• Ecjjlor The ulltorlal ,pqe ol thf' Dt.llT Pilot 1ttk1 to lnlonn Md ldrmilate' rttdtts by ptt'R'nt1na on tttll .,. dllft rse •commtntary'on tOPiet Ot U... ttrtat by l)'ndlcattd cohwNtt. and cartoon.~t•, by provtdlfw a. forum fOr ratltD' views and by Pl'fttfttlfll' th• ncwapepn-'s oplrdoas and idlu on <."U~nt IDJl'ICt. Tht-tdltoriaJ °""klm of lht Dtllly P110t •wnr on17 tn the edltorW c.'Olumn •t tftt too eC a. Pll&t1 Oplnlonl e-:cpretlt'd by the col.. \lmnt1tt a.nd ~ and '-tier "Titers .n their own aid no~ mtnt or thtlr vtfJWI by the OIJl1 Piiot -Id .. - Friday, September 14, 1971 • • • Cash Not His Thing -Moretti SACRAMENTO (AP) - Assembly Speaker Bob Moret- ti says he probably is lhe 'least-wealthy p~bable can- didate for govemor--next year, but 0 money's not'mY thing." The Van Nuys Democrat disclosed net personal wealth totaling $39,747 to newsmen in his Capito! office Thursday, including tWtrthirds or an acre of land in Jamaica valued at $21,800. A reporter asked Moretti if ( BR1EFS ) money wasn't "his thing," what is -power? "You could say that -in- fJuencing what goes on," be said. "I believe 1 can do some good things. I want to be in a position to do those things," e SoftW•ter SAN DIEGO !AP) -The San Diego County Water Authority has voted to pipe soft water from Northern California into homes here in 1975, despite warnings by some member agencies ' that filtration plants won't be ready by then. The authority, composed of 22 agencies which distribute water to the county's 1.5 million residents, voted Thurs· day night to order Feather River water from the state in 1975. two years ahead or its previous schedule. e Capitol SACRAMENTO (AP) - Alternative proposals to build a.. new state Capitol or rebuild the existing building were on Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk to-- day. A bill by Assemblyman Wlllie Brown (D-San Fran- cisco), contains the two rival plans. His measure calls for construction of a brand new structure to house th e Jegi.s1ature in d ow n to w n Sacramento, unless a feasibili· ty study shows it would be more practical to reconstruct the e x is t i n g 103-year-old Capitol. e Open Jtleets SACRAMENTO (AP) Rules for open meetings by legislative committees would be placed into state law under a bill that has gone to the governor's desk. The Assembly and the Senate both gave final ap- proval Thursday to the legisla- tion by Sen. Donald Grunsky (R·Watsonville.) eDrugLaw SACRAMENTO !AP) California would give life in prison to dope peddlers if a newly-introduced New York· type measure becomes law. 'The bin, by Assemblyman Raymond Gonzales ( D · Bakersfield), was introduced Thursday. · Gonzales said, "New York bas had a lot of positive reac· tion to it. The reaction is that they have scared the pushers off the street." Give the Gift that "Keeps on Giving" Back to YOU! • We don't ...... thll &hfllc Should bl 1 one-w., street. If you eomribute to 111. we tl?ink we should do 1somt1PlflW In rdum thll wlll 1M )'Oii back more thtn 1 n. l..rbll 1nd I tax lllleductloll. • Now, Wt hM fvlNI lftOSt retnlrbble WIJ to ..... JOU for your 1eilerosity. YOll stfn cnjor the pleas111e af htfptni your ftllow·m1n, plus tht benefits of 1 t1x-deductible lift. lat ••• )'OU don't fi'I! up .-'the future fluntlal seeurit)' you could h1V'I 1njored by kteplnt: your rift. • As lone 1s )'OU liv1-bqlnnln1 lmmedi1tety-we'll pay JOU 1 1enerous Income out ct Ille urnints of your eoMrlbutiolt. Th11i,. it becomes '" Im ttbMld to protect yotrr Mun. Md tilt futur1 of )'Ollt ....,. At ttlt 11m1 time, JOd wllf lit .._ 01t future estlle ta..., ...,. easts. • Mlt ....,.., can JOI ust ,_, in I 1 llt funds tnd 11 ltlli ti.• mutlll for ,..,.. __ ......... u.i llllE 111 cau 1or r .. 11 ..... llllflaol lllfaltlll 1i I jl Al' (714)145M F.lf1r2'11 JOI··· --~K.8!4for Ho., M1fllllrl1/ HupitM PTl#yt1t/11 30 II Nowport loul .. •rd Nowpori IHcli, CA 91660 --------------'I-:-riii·:.]-;;-, :::;-:-;--;-.--::,~l -;i1r-·11 ,, -L!"'j c j ,,_ ·~ ', '' J ~~ -• •• CALIFORNIA Police Seek 'S taslr, Pad' For Heroi11 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Police were searching for a so-called "stash pad" where a couple arrested on narcotics violations here may have kept a fortune in heroin. Leon Cooper, 29, and his wire Cynthia, 26, allegedly sent teenaged girls to the stash pad each morning to bring back up to $3,000 worth of heroin, police said. The Coopers allegedly used the older of their five children, ranging • ln age from eight months to J 1 years, to sell the drug in their Potrero Hill neighborhood, officers said. The couple was to be ar· raigned in Municipal Court to-- day on charges of possessing heroin for sale, keeping a house where heroin is used and furnishing heroin to minors. Charge Filed • ·-i .. ,. ;o.. .. Sexuality Text • Just Not Selling SACRAMENTO (AP) - A sex education textbook that triggered arguments across California this year probably v.·on't be used after all because not enough orders for it have been received, educa- tion officials say. OnJy about 2,300 orders for the text "Human Sexuality .. have been received, deputy state school superintendent Ed Harper said Thursday. THE AMERICAN Book Co .. -publisher of the text, has said it needs at least 25,000 orders before it wil1 proceed with revisions specified by the California State Board of Education. The revisions were ordered to tone down sections that board members con- sidered too explicit for lhe eighth graders who were to use the book. Asked if there 'vas a chance a sufficient number of orders would come in by an Oct. 1 deadline, Harper said. "It Cer- tainly doesn't look like it at this stage. "The indication I got was that districts were ordering it out of curiosity, more than anything else," he added in an interview at a State Board of Education, meeting. A PATCH E D·togeth<r duplicated edlUon of the revlit- ed book had been exbibiled in 60 textbook display centers across the state for public evaluation and reaction. For several months in a row last spring and summer, board members wrangled o v e r whether parts of the 164-page ten were too explicit for eighth graders. Board member Eugene Ragle of Roseville called the text a ••oow-to-do-it" sex book. A resolution urging Gov. Ronald Reagan to "speak out strongly" against the book was presented Wednesday at a San Francisco convention of the Federation of Republican v."Omen. EVEN THE watered-down version "has the effect of en- dorsing premarital in- tercourse, abortion on demand and illegal drugs,"· said the resolution from the Lafayette Republican Women. A rewritten verskln of the text was finally approved by the board for classroom use in September, 1974, if extensive changes Were made. But American Book said because or the costs of the revisions ordered by the board, it need· ed at least 25,000 orders to break even. Packers, Teamsters . Official Indicted Ul"t T .... te SUSPECT IN RAPE Eddie Bohnuck Trio Nabbecl In Kidnap, Rape Case VALENCIA (AP) -A 21- year-old Mason City, lo\\'a, man and tv.·o Las Vegas, Nev., ~agers were booked Thurs- day f« investigation of kidnap ancfra~ in the abduction of a 20-year-old Las Vegas woman and her 18-month-old nephew, authorities said. EDDIE ROGER Bohnsack, and the teenagers, said to be 14 and 17. were arrested jn Castaic, Ca 1 if. authorities said. Mary Arm Jaramillo and her sister's son Danny Landers, were walking toward their car in a Las Vegas market \Vednesday v.·hen the three males allegedly climbed into Miss Jaraniillo's car and com-SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Martin is accused of paying mandeered it. They reportedly Friday, September 14, 1973 OAILY PILOT $ Hoort Transplant Ra~ing Legal Queries in Murder STANFORD IUPll - A 52- year-old man who received a murder victim's transplanted heart was described i n satisfactory condition ThW'S· day. The unidentified man, a heart disease vi~im from out of state, received the heart in a four-hour operation Thurs· day by transplant pioneer Dr. Norman Shum',Vay at the Stan· ford Medical Cknter. SHUMWAY HOURS earlier &-~~ "' YEAR PAID MONTHLY " $5000 c11n11u ns 5% INTtREST. PER YEAR + 1.75% CURRENT BONUS = i.15% INTEREST PER Y£ll had temoved ·the heart, kept beating by '* machine, from the body of samuel Moore, 29, of Oakland, shot ii\ the brain Monday. Moore's heart was Down by helicopter from Oakland to Stanford for an im- mediate transplant. Meanwhile, in Palo Alto, at- torneys are girding for a legal battle over the definition of death in the case or a living heart transplanted from the victim, whose brain showed no sign of life. PAID.MONTHLY • $2J,OOO-CllTillUTIS 615% !NT!t<EST PER YEAR + IJS'l CURRENT BONUS = I.DD% INTCIESl PEI YW The victim's transplanted kidney's were keeping a 32· and a ff.year-old woman allye In San Frahclsco~s Presbyterian Hospital as part of the unprecedented three- organ, three hospital transplant swap. THE TRANSPLANT opera- tions have raised legal ques· tion.s because ~foore's kidneys and heart were removed before doctors disconnect¢ the heart-lung machinery that kept him alive. · FUJIOI AVAii.ABLE amlMEI MO LHl-tEIM lltUIRIMEltT1. Whe11 Mid .... thf!I Ii lllOl'ltlls, prlncJpal rtd!IC•d by lnter11t chec~s Pf~~to1111)' P•ld. AllhOUlh bonu1 r.tes 11111 be -lncr•ae11 or dKr .. 5tcl on prlot 11<1tlec, sin'' ·toundlnr FIRESIDE Tlwltl 11n "'"" rtHcH a r111 J.11• 51'1••· !J •CERTIFICATE FUNDS m thru 25th ANY MONTH EARN from I sl of THAT MONTH! t! HIGHEST RATE ANYWHERE! on PASSBOOKS plus DAILY INTERESTI e~ :Y~m':t. Funds earn D from date of receipt la date ol withdrawal. In- terest PAID IUAITEILY. Tiilsisatlust2D"MOREHIMMOST'WKS,.yt $29.11 CHECK MONTHLY! on $5000-CERTIFICATES SEIYUtG SAVEIS f• a COllltATIOlll EYEIYWl111DUWM. IEQIUT 11n .._PAID llMlDlltnY ... DE1W1D. ~ ro' Ol'l'ICArS \!US~! RESOURCES over $100,000,000.00 ..,,......... SIDE Thrift In Crowding Tbe bitter rivalry between the the alleged bribe. told Miss Jaramillo they Tea!llllters and the Uniled wanted to go to Mexico. 2328 Harbor Blvd., COSTA MESA • 645-1000 Farm Workers un'·-· ,-0 the C 0 NV IC TI 0 N on the Miss Jaramillo and her~ so1m1t11t CAL.,OllUA DfflCES: Altiafl'lbr1/ANll1ln1/B1•1ts11111111en11owar/8rmt)' Hl1ts1t111111 Vistt/Colf• Mew/ On Steamer -isd ·I I' f th phe el ed I Covln1 /Downe1 /EI Cajon /El Centro/Escondlclo /GlrOtR Ct-/Clendfl1/Hll~llllctoll kacll /lfl&l.-o<l /t..nt.1lltf/ Salinas Valley led to the in-m emeanor VJO a ions O e ne w were r eas ear: Y Loni 8l'1ch/Onurio/Oin;ird/Pasade111/PomoM/Reffda/Rin1$llle/San aem~Oino/Sln Diep/SIRt.t An•/S.~11 Barbltl/ SAN PEDRO (AP) -The C.oast Guard says it has filed charges accusing the captain and chief purser of the S.S. Catalina of violating maritime regulations by carrying too many passengers Aug. 5. Tait Hartley Act COuld br'·ng a Thur"'"Y morn>'ng at a gas s.nt• Marl•/Torranee/Van f'lu1s1v1ctorvu11tv1 ... n1/Wll111111 dictment Thursday of two,.~~·~~~~~~~~_J~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ vegetable packers and an maximum one year sentence station in Newhall, authorities ousted Teamsters official on and $1,000 fine on each count. said. federal conspiracy and bribery The incident occurred on a Sunday return run of the Great White Steamer, which plies the waters between the Los Angeles Harbor and Catalina Island, The C'.oast Guard set a bearing for next TltJrsday. The Coos! Guard sall the ship carried 2,283 persons, 43 more than authorized. The steamship company said only that problems ,exist when too many passengers try to catch the return voyage. from the island. charges. THE FEDERAL grand jury charges resulted from an in· vestigation Jawicbed in 1972 with cooperation from the Teamsters. It led to a charge against Theodore J. Gonsalv<s, 52. former secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Cannery Workers Union Local 748 at Modesto, with taking a $10,000 bribe to impede UFW organizational activitiesJn the Salinas area in the fa!\ of 1970. James Robert Martin, 50, and Thomas Hitchcock, 46, both of Salinas, are accused or conspiring with Gonsalves. A WATCH FOR ALL TIME Oi1tin9ui1hed Rolex watches. A. Day-date, self-windin9 chronometer with "President'1'' ' bracelet. $1850. 8. Oyster-date, self-winding chronometer in 1tainles1 1teel with m1tchin9 bracelet. $111 .50. C. 01te-just, self-win~ing. Hand.om• 14 lter1t fluted bezel with steel and• 14 k•r•I gold b•nd. •51 O. Do Something Beeutilul . .,. C:ll•l'M Ac:~ '"""" -•-rlcal'I •• .,.. 1411kAMll'IC•~ ..... M•lltr t!Wlrtt, I .. SLAVICK'S Jewelen Since 1917 II FASHION ISLAND NEWPOltT IEACH .!-. 644-1 llO • . ., $106.93. I • acts about Gas Econ Haw much CXJt11lort and safety ant you wilr.ng to giYe up for $106.93? Here's the real lloryon gas eoonomytning t.o hypothetical can on regular fuel. PLE FOR 10,000 Mll£S-GAS AT 40.2¢ PER GALLON• Car "A" Car "8'' 15 m. . 25 m .• g. Cost r 10, mi. $267.73 $160.60 DIFFERENCE IN W PER 10 Ml.-$106.93 And It could be _, '-if you dl'Mt conset'«Jliyef. Of coune, a little -can giwt you betler mileage. It c:an oho be_., aOMled. And """""!he pbcf ..m.ty? c.on.kler the *Urily"' more-withmore-'J oolid piutodion for you and your family. Costa Mnrsa Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard Consi~ chiysl ... It's built to last ••• today and ~. Chrysl., olfen solid engi...,;ng eiicellence. "°" .,.,mp1e, you get unibody c:onsfNdion, tonlon' bar suspension, exlra·piof9Clion bumper system, fuel-lank Impact prolection, energy absotbing steering column and more, Right now, the full-<ized Plymoutli Fury m. affet-spec:ial ICIY!ngn. 1he exdusM> elec:ITonic ignition system is designed to nMIUC9 mai-.C.nce co& And despite Fury's toi:Jlicl Chrysler engl,_,;ng, big -and comfait ... 1t·run1 .., 1911ular fuel. a.t cf all, ,_..the time to buy~ 0-..0p tima. ---C:0-1 'J ,....,_. ............. u ...... ~Plymouth a •• , Up w. S..wforreal~ Huntlngtan Bnracll • .Huntlnc)ton Beach Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., __ ]6661 Beach Boulevard I I ' I • • -- Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley * VOL. bl>, N0. 257, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES By JOUN ZALLER Of .. Dalh' rLi.t 11.tf A woman Thursday challenged members of the aJl.maJe Exchange Club of Newport Beach to put Women's Lib oot of business -if they dare. "You can do it," said Joan 'Brick, a mother of three, professional publicist, and wife of the superintendent of \be Fountain Valley School l)istrict. "You can do it by spending enough time with your ' little daughters to keep Shortage Threat them from growing up as qu erulous, rui.g- ging and rrustrated,'1 Ptirs. Brick declared. Mrs. Brick said sbe was basing her ad- vice on one observaUon: "Most women have poor sel!·lmages, lack self-conlidence, and are generally frustrated," she said. ..!'If they try to raise their daughters alone, their daughters will grow up to be ~like they are -frustrated and insecure. "Men make · much be.tter models for Plant Expansion 'Not Affected' By TERRY COVILLE OI Ill• Dally ~ll11t Sltft A threatened shortage of low sulphur fuel will not affect the proposed ex- pansion oI the Huntington Beach power plant, Southern California Edison ot- flclals said today. units assuming our finn commitments \Vilh local suppliers hold up," he said. . daughteti 10 learn Crom. Pt1en go qut in the -Id and produce. they have sell· confi(ltnce, 'JJJd t,bey' have an internal stabiUfy i,hal most women do not. ''.4.>IOW lather is 'tbe most important think"ln ca utile girl'& ))ealthy develop- mint,''.Mrs. 'Brick malDtai~. The 40 J¥m~s ~°' the .Esd"iange Cl!Jb listened ·~Uy wliife MrS. J)i'lck •Pl!l<e, and "~ 1i)e fuiished, they gave h!t' an ovatigo... ·. . ' - 0oe -.... me111:berll' .Jakl. private!Y ~.Af, ' . . - · FRIDAY, SEPTEMB ER 14, 1973 terwarda: "In all the yeara I've been coming'bere, I've never seen the guys give so much attention to any of 'their speakers." Through her speech, Mrs. Brick repeatedly urged lbe men to spend as much time as po~ible with their daughters. 11Try taking that little kid on a busine~ trip some time," she suggested. "I bet you never thought of that, but YoUt little girl _yrould love it. "Or go over to her high school some day at noon and tell the principal lhat you want to take your daughter to lunch. I can guarantee you, she'll be thrilled. "No woman can do this for you. They lac k the internal stability, and besides, your daughters are probably jealous of the time their molhers have with you. Don't forget, your daughters Worship you and need"you . "Even I -who am a super person - can't give my daughter what she needs." Pro.test Dropped Today's Final I N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS 1'1rs. Brick quipped. "\Vo1nen JUSt don't have it." 1'trs. Brick continued: "llo1v many or you ha\•e 1\·n·cs "·ho expect you lo make them happy . so you give them children. or give the1n a silve r Rolls Royce, and they're still not happy ? "The reason they're no t satisfied is that happiness is an internal thing that nobody can give you; ''You've got to grow up with it. You've lSee EXCllANGE, Pag e 21 Gas Threat Fades By RUDI NIEDZIEUiKJ Of .. CN;ty f'llM , .... A movement among Orange County s'ervlce station dealers to protest "un· fair" Phase IV price controls with an org'anized shutdown has run out of gas. Dealer: plans to lock up their pumps for a three-day period beginning Monday conked out Thursday night when leaders of a gasollne retailers association con· that they may go out of business. Scattered closings of service stations began this week in several parts of the country, including San Diego where about 25 percent or the stations were reported closed Thursday. ' The only suggestion of a shutdown \vas made by Costa Mesa Standard dealer Bill Canning who grabbed the microphone from the speaker and said. '·! dare all you guys to shut dovm for th ree days." Canning angrily left the meeting when his call for a sales boycott railed to rouse lhe 300 dealers who allended the st rategy session. Paul RJchardson, district manager for Edison, said his firm has a 20-year com- mitment for a Jow sulphur distillate fuel from local suppliers starting in 1978. A lack of low sulphur fuel -required by state law beca~ it creates less air pollution -could, however, affect the operatian of the .current steam power plant in Huntington Beach which is not included in lt. 2().year fuel contract for the expanded portion of the plant. 1-vinced them that they would o01y be Orange County's moderate approach was underscored by fear of potential anU·trust action, according to Devine, who warned the dealers that they could be "open to charges of restraint or trade and conspiracy to disrup' business." Most appeared to go along with th e recommendaiion of Mission Viejo dealer (See GASOLINE, Page %) "The low sulphur shortige will have no effect on our proposed combined cycle Action Set On Hors e, Cat Licenses A propooed voluntary IS cat ncenso and a mandatory $10 horse license go before the Huntington Beach Clly Cowicil Moo- day nlibL The cat Uoense would be otrlctly VOl\lli· "J •· tary, though some benefits would be of- fered owners who buf city tags for their felines. One portion of lhe proposed ordinance Ba)'I a, stray cal with a city lie~. if picked up by animal control, will be kept five days and all efforts will be made to contact the owner. A stray cat with no klentificaUon can be destroyed within 24 hours. Councilmen once attempted to pass a mandatory cat license, but, after heated public hearings on the issue , not enough council votes could be mustered to ap- prove It. Another section of the proposed cat law establishes a $20 city breeding permit. My kitten sold from a litter for a profit above the cost of advertising Ute sale will be consklered evidence of cat breeding. The mandalory horse license is a separate issue. The proposed. horse col· lar, costing $10 each year, would apply to all eq~es, Including donkeysl mules, burros and ponle.s. All of the money acquired rom the horse license is to be put into an equestrian trust fund for the construction of riding trails in the city. 11'e city administration originally p~ poled to use hall of the license fee for equeatrjan trails, but · during a study -ion las! week, cooncjlmen ordered all ol tb• mooey put Into the equestrian trust fund. Anolber portion of the proposed bors• law also llmltli !be rtdlng ol horses on public streeta. It says hot"t' may be rkl· den oo the street.a only for access lo riding anas and equeitrtan trailt. Both proposed Ucenslng laWll will be dilclmed during the council'• 7 p.m. sea.Ion ln city councn chamberi."Neltber item ls· scheduled as a public bearing ao the amount of public comment allowed wW be determined by Mayor Jerry M1tney. Deadline Near In Auto Tal ks DETROIT (UPI ) -Chrysler Corp. and Unlled Auto -Workers negotiatora sought to iron out the major iSIUeS of wages and volun- tery overtime .today and reach agreement on a contract berore a lllrike deadline lonlghl. ti AmOllJ the oroblem1 facing the ~l1tors, which befan. July t8, wu ..,not onlyL a wag~,lncrease but aloo tallorl,. It to meel the , guldelloea pf the Coat of Uvlng Oiunctl. 1 A Jengthf6aigilnlng ,.,.ton thRI began Thuraday morning •ndid 1hortly before midnight with no In· dJcaUon how the negotiations were prop'081in1. . ~ , The steam geserating station uses 111 mixture of imported very low sulphur fuel and California crude oil, Richardson explained. The mixture meets the state requirement because it does not exceed hall of ooe percent of sulphur content. A letter sent to major Edison customrs details the fuel shortage problem , and plans lo meet it. Jack Horton , chairman of the board for Edison, warns custoniers that they still face a crisis in the potential shortage of electricity because of the lack of plants. but adds, "Now, however, we are also faced with a Jtew llftlblem - a 1horta1e in the avaUaJlility ol low sulphur fuel oil -wbidl could Impair our 1btlity to m..i the anticipated demand for electricity as early as next year." Horton says Edison is appealing to the state aiid federal ,....,,_ for some tyjle ol alloeation system to give the available low suJphur fuel to power plants. He also says that to avoid power lailures Edison may also seek temporary varianoes "in air quality regulations to permit the use of any available con· JSee EXPANSION, Pqe ZI Sketch Results In Capture of Molest Susp ect Police in Fountain Valley today credited newspaper stories with leading to · the apprehension of a Huntington Beach man in connection with a rash of chHd molestations. Booked.into Orange County Jail Thurs· day evening was Michael Jeffrey Spear, 22, of 9541 Tarpon Drive. Police allege he is responsible IOI' at least eight cases of child molestatioo in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley over the past six montl}s. When 'detectives from the two ciUes were un.succes.!ful in locafuur: the s\ispect in the cases, they compiled a sketch or the suspcet 1 based on the victims' descriptions and gave it to local newspapers. Tbe-sketchn and stories appeared Thuraday. Del. Bob Remlllwl of Foun· taln V.U.y said he aubsequently received IWO telephone Up. that lead to Spear's arrest. Dally l'llot l llff ""°" GETS SEAT ON BUS BOARD Fountain Valley'' Hollinden Valley Ma yor Wins Post On District Mayor Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley was selected to a seat on the Orange County Transit District board Thursday night in a close vote by the Cities Selec. bon Committee of the County League of Cities. Hollinden won out over La Habra council woman Robin Young by 13 votes to 12. It took three ballots to make the selection . The Fountain Valley mayor will take the seat vacated by Derek McWhinney of Westminster. 1 Two other appointive J>OSts were filled by committee votes. Robert Nevil, a La Habra councilman. was named to the Local Agency Formation Commission and Mayor Donald Mcinnis of Newport Beach was named as alternate. Nevil has held the alternate's post 9n the commission since April 1972. The seat was recently vacated by Tustin's Clifton Miller. Both Nevil and Mcinnis were elected by big votes on the first ballot. Cypress Councilman Robert Harvey was elected president of the League or Cities by a 13 to 11 vote over Fountain Valley C.Ouncilman ~rge Scott. In a contest for vice president of the league, Orange l\1ayor Jess Perez was elected by a 13 to 12 vote over Tustin Mayor Donald Salterelli. Placentia City Councilman Robert Fin· nell retires after two years as president. Fullertoo councilman Duane \Vinters was elecited to a rourth term as state cUrector with no opposition. A discussion on the proposed Chloo Hills airport was postponed until next month 's league meeting. hurting themselves and "the guy who has supported you all these years." Instead, they decided to wait for the outcome of a lawsuit now pending before a federal court. The suit alleges that service station GWners are being treated unfairly because they h a v e to absorb price ipci;eases passed on.,by the oil com· panies wKler Phase IV. After the suit is heard in early December, "Lbere is no way we will not be out from IUlder those ridicWous price controls," John Devine, president of the International Service Station· Dealers ~!'.,~j!DA) predi~ted en· u1\ISIUQQ.h7,. • IndepOndeal lers """* the nation are fl.uning Over the Phase IV controls because their retal( prtres are frozen, but the wholesale' or tantwagon prices of the oil companies are not. Several of the ma· jor oll coml1"niel have Jncreued their tankwagon ~ as much 8' one or two cent.a a gallon, which, in the opinion of many dealers, drives their profits so low County to Fund Fountain Valley Se1·vice Projects ' Orange County Supervisors b a v e agreed to fund for tbe final year two projects set up under the Fouiit.ain Valley Community Services Project. Superviaors allocated fl!,841 to fund the Community· Schools Program and Teen Help. The Community Schools Program is a joint effort'involving the schools and U)e Community services Project in which classes in a variety of subjects such as arts, crafta, sports and current topics are !'tiered to Fountain Valley (amilies. Teen Help is a counseling and recrea· lion center locajed In the city's ipdustrial area for use by local teenagers. The Community Services Project is a pilot federal project that Is administered through the county. It Js in the last of its three years ot operation in Fountain Valley. In addition to the Community Sc:bools Program and Teen Help, CSP has also funded the Fountain Valley Community Theater and the Colfimunity Services Of. fleer Jn the Fountain Valley Police Department. ' Showdown Seen on Project .. Judge:s Actio1i R erieivs Battle 011 Green Valley By JOANNE REYNOLDS average Jot size or 5.500 square reet. Of ..,.. D.ifY l't11t 11tH When he brought his plans to the coun· Tut'!sday night'• councll metting In ell last spring councilmen noted th8t PD Fountain Va11ey could tum Into a zonings call for dedication of park land In showdown in the running fight ovtr the return for the smaller lol size aod development of Green Valley. because there were no such provisions in The . batlJe wu renewed this week Holstein 's plan, Utey assessed him $39.000 when an Orang. County Superior Court In sp&dal f ... :· Jud9e ordered the city to approve Holstein contended that the fees wrre developmenl plans for the tract. ~ '"' i1legal and pointed out ,tllat the resldenls Meanwblle, mcmben of the clly'• of the last development would have ac. plaMJns lornmi.ton Initiated plsns to cm to the 21-acre park that already ,.. ttpeol'!l>e IOOlai of the prope11Y al Ward. lstl In Green Vall•y. Street Ind Slater Aveoue. He took his.case to COllrl and In Au1USI Both 1ctlom are conllnuatfonl ol the Suiierfor Court Jui!&o Re y mo n d running .l>lttle bt!ween dl!Yoioper George_Th_OUJP!Pn o_rdered_the_clty_lli •~P'2Ye M. Holstein and city official• over the I~ the final tract <nop without the special acre parcel. fees. Holstein bas betn seeking city approval .But councilmen, on the advice of city of his plans to build 49 h6met on tho site attorney Tom Woodruff, tabled appl'OVal under a retldeatlal zoning known u a , of the map at their last nieetin& pending planbM d•velopmenl (PD) with on outcome of an appeal they filed on Judge Thompson's ruling. But Thursday, the Judge upheld Hol· stein's argument that the stay ot ex· eculion of h1s order would cause ir· reparable damage to lb& development company and ordered the city to act on the map. The Item Is slated for action at Tuesday '• i;ouncll m..tlng. So Is the plaMtng commisslon'I recommendation to change the city's zoning ordinances to eliminate the PD ,....., Woodruff ll8id that a po91Jble line ol ac- tion for councilmen In the face of Judge Thompson'• la~t ord<;r would be to ap- Pll>V• the 'l"P and then enact the zoning ordinance Change on an emergency basis. The effect ol that actio!r, he uld, would be to 1Jv. llolsteln ·an ob!Olete tracl map. Another action Woodru!I said he 11 COii· (See SHOWDOWN, Piao l ) " • 'Whites Only'. 4 County Elks Lodges Back Color Bar End By ~1uili1 SCHREIBER Of ... o.11J """ ..... Officials of· four Orange County lodges ol the Bepevolent and Protective Order of E1kJ ~d today il\ey have voted to do away Wilb the "w'riltes Only,. reatrlction that bu been In •lfect nationally for 105 years. Spokesmen at four other county Elks' lodges contacted today by the Dally Pilot refused to comment on their votes, which will help determine the n a t i o it a I membership policy of the charitable organizations. The more than %,200 lodges and 1.5 mil· lion Elks in the United States must vote whether or not they support an amend- ment passed by the national convention in July that would strike tbe word "white" from the organization's applic.ation forms . Since the lodge organized, its con- stitution has restricted membership to, "white American cJUzens." Recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings have permitted court! to yank liquor licenses from discriminatory private clubs unless the rules are changed -an action termed a 41dea th threat" by one Elks spokesman. The Santa Ana Lodge at 212 Elks Lane, largest in the county with 3,500 members, voted overwhelmingly to do away with the discriminatory wording, according to lodge manager Oliver Clark. The membership of Huntington Beach Lodge 2444 , at 10400 Talbert Ave., Foun- tain Valley , also voted to strike the rule. Exalted Ru1 er Larry Schley saJd today his lodge voted Sept. 4 to ratify the amendment, "deleting the word white from membership qualifications." Schley stressed the fact that his lodge's decision is only one vote. The national convention, however, voted lo kill the quaWlcatlon by a 3 to 1 margin. Two other chapters, both of which have members from the Orange COast area, also voted to rescind the qualification. Spokesmen for Garden Grove Lodge 1952 and the Weslmlnster Lodge said to- day their membership also voted by wide margins to do away with the rule. It was a different story with several other county lodges contacted today, Art Kroening, exalted ruler of the School Dis trict Seeks Applican ts Trustees of the Ocean View School District. are teeking applicants tor the post of personnel commissione.r for thelr district. Applications, which are available at district ofJlces, will be accepted until Sept. 21. Appointment to the three-man com· mission ls open to district residents who are over 21 and registered voters. Com· missioners serve without pay and are responsible for the O!tablilbmenl of pro- cedures and policies for the nol)oteacbing eniployes of the district. 1l!t commission meets the third Thurs.- day of each month. The term ls for thret years, beginning llcc. I, 1973. Newport Harbor Lodge 1767 in Newport Beach, said his only comment on ~ vote is, "oo comment." Eialted Ruler John McDowell ol the fledgling, 400-member Mission Viejo Elks Club said he won't say how his chapter voted until the national results are known. Lodge Secretary W. E. Pennington of the Anaheim Elks said he also has "no comment" about his chapter's vote on the rule, as did a spokesman for the lodge in Buena Park. The statements by Orange County lodges follows report s from the Sao (See ELKS, Page Z) Guidance Center Bid Accepted B y School Board A Jow bid of $725,300 for construction or a guidance center was accepted. ThW'S· day night by the tluntington Beach tJnion High School District Board of Trustees. The bid was submitted by the W. J. Shirley Company . the firm that bu ilt Edison High School. Shirley also has the cootract to remodel Hlllltington Beach High School. The distr ict had set aside $660,000 for construction of the center. Officials pointed out that the difference between the budgeted amoun t and !he bid is less than 10 percent or the total price so trustees voted to proceed. The center is lo be built at the \\'in· "tersburg sife on Golden West Street and \Varner Avenue. It will hou.se all or the district's special education students. Oruge Coast • Weathe r It'll be a cool, drizzly Saturday -at least In the morning hours along the Orange Coast. Beach highs will be in the 60s rising to the mid·70s inland. I NSI DE TO DA\' Tiie lrvi11e Comm1tnitu Th~· ater i11 offering local plaugoe r! some thing new this year -a season of Orange County pre· n1ieres. See Intermission coh,mu i1t todav's Weekender. Al Y-s.rvta J Movl" tf.JI L.M. hYlll 11 Mllhl•I "ulldt n l .. lhW 20 N•ll...i ..._ 4 C•llfwlll• J ~1191 c-tw 11 C"'Nlfl• :l>.Jf lt .. 1Mr•lll1. 27.,, tM!lct It IWM<I ,.,..... 11 (......,.,. II '"'" , 1J.lt 0..111 '"*-n ~Don DI.....--II TitM>¥1tlM tt 1'11""'114 ..... I Tll .... n Jfo.U ,,...,.,, ft•tJ ....... , • ,., ttle ltK'tff r. II W-·~ ,..... ll-14 "~'" 14 Wwfll flli"' 4 AM lt!ttttt IJ Wtet....,. ~ ~IMll ' • Fl'OlllPageJ SHOWDOWN ••• licnplaling i.s to ... k o supmeedlag ord- .. !rom the Fourfli DilltOct Court ot Ap-~b which -.Id stay Judge 'lb<imp-~11 latest order. l•.!lol•leln'1 -ttorney, Tom Tho'llJllOll Oid today his client will continue hb court battle WltiJ the city approves his dans for development. ~Thompson pointed out that there is already one suit on file over the city's [allure to approve an earlier plan for oluster housing on the same site, plus a dltnage suit to recover losses allegedly sidlered by the !irrn durillg the battle o.ver the latest set of plans. :;oomP9011 said Holstein will also be m. ~ a suit seeking ttpeal of the nearly qo,ooo in regular park fees which are b!Mg assessed on the 49-lot development. Pvk fees are charged an developers· in tie city to raise funds ror park ae- qUlsition and development :The attorney said be believes his client has certain 1'vested righta" in the prop. etty and that, based on precedent coun· ctfmen will be per:;onally Uabie for ~~ges if they eleet·to rezone the prop. elf!.)'. • ,Jcity Planning Director Clinton She1Tod eiplained today that the rezoning ricom· ~dation was made because com· ntssioners believe the Rl, 7,200-squar~ fcbt Jot size "was more consistent with C\Sl'rent standards and their zoning pllilosopbles. !'There appears to be no potential ruture application of the PD zoning as it is now structured," Sherrod said. In addition to the Green Valley parcel, there is an application for a PD zone pending from Presley Development Corp. on a 12 acre site at Edinger Avenue and Euclid Street. There are about 500 acres remaining in the city that are potential residential sites that have not Been bulll on, She rrod noted. The PD zoning was established a few years ago, the planning director said, to encourage developers to come up with in- novative design concepts. Woodruff noted that the smaller lot sizes have been allowed in cases where the developer has come up with "amenities such as park land or ad- dition s. " e cl co cil has made it clear from the sta that they were unhappy with these small lots Holstein proposed that had none of these amenities with them," he added. Motorist Killed By Auto Fleeing Pursuin,g Police WEST COVINA (AP) -A 30-year-old · man was killed when his car was ram- med early today by another motorist fleeing pursuing police cars on the San Beoiardlno Freeway. the driver of the fleeing car suffered only minor injuries, police said. California Highway Patrol Officer John WJggbner identified the victim as Mer· r itt D. Finch o( \Vest Covina. ~ ,Vaggoner said the chase began when 1 Mpntclair police attempted to stop two C'VS for speeding. One car entered the frreway in a bid to escape and sped off rt!!lching speeds at times of 110 miles an hour, Waggoner added. lie said a West Covina patrol car, wlich joined the chase, attempted to stop ~ fleeing vehicle with a rolling block, w•icPi involves slowing down in front of ~wanted car to force it to a stop. However, the speeding car collided wtth the police car and then careened in- tO:the victim 's car, Waggoner said. j~e said the driver of the pursued vehi· elf. Thomas James Stogden, 26, of West (.qvina. "'·as booked for investigation· of in~nslaughter and drunk driving. BANDITS MAKE . ' UNWANTED HAUL jlOME {UPI ) -Four bandits held up t~o bank clerks 11t gunpoint Thursday a11d took the bags they were loading on ail 11rmored car. polite said. :J'he bag~ contained bad checks and contested promissory notes. OllANGI COAST Kl DAILY PILOT T~t 0••"11• COdll DAILY PILOT Wllll w~icft II rombined !l>e NtWl·Prns. II Pllbllll'lto by 7 tilt O••llG't Coast Publlslolnt (-ftY, $otpe.. ~"· ""'''°"" ~·· ~i1Md. -·1 tlof'Ol/Oll ~ Frki.y, IOI" (011~ Mn•, "'"""'"" It~. ' HUl'lflnglOn llt&<1'll'0\11"111i11 V•tley, UciVM ' 9Mcl'I, lr¥i"•'$~ddl•l)l(k al'ld s." c...,,.,,1,1 t l•n Jv•M C:•l"l"•t>O. A 11no1• r'9ioNll f 9111tlo" 11 pwl;•i..d ~tvrdtYI '"' Sllll(lar-. l TM prlnc:19iil l)U(l!ill'olng pi.int II 11 lJO Wfll ! .. , SlrHI, co.11 M•••· CflifOrlol•. '21H. { • 1 Rob•rt N. W11d Prn'id•nl 11111 Pvblll~tt J1ck It. Cu1l1y Via Prn~I f f!CI c;..,.,,1 Mt"~" Tliofl'l11 K•1¥il Edhor • • ' .. . . " ·-.... ., . ~ Dlllf Piiot PIM!fl. bY J1<ll Cll-11 LAGUNA BEACH FIREMEN EXAMINE TRACTOR THAT LEFT SEMI TRUCK, TRAILER THURSDAY The Accident at Sharp Curve in Temple Hills Drive Did $40,000 Damage to Home ' Truck Slams Residence Big Rig Loses Control 01i Lagu1ia Hillside By JACK CllAPPELL Of It!• D•!IY Pilot 51•11 A huge semi truck and flatbed trailer rig hauling a Caterpillar tractor and roller went out of control while descen- ding a steep Laguna Beach residential street and crashed through an exclusive hillside residence. The driver reportedly suffered only a bruised hip and although the cab of his big rig wa:s crushed. Residents of the home, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Strong, were not injured. The huge combination truck, crawler tractor and spiked "sheepsfoot" earth 0111, Piiot s11u Photo ' compactor narrowly missed a butane tank for emergency po"'·er supply for Dr. Strong's bomb shelter, police said. 1'he incident occurred on Temple Hills Drive in the 1000 block at a treacherous hai rpin curve. Fire department officials estimated damage to be .. J40,000 total . The hillside hcune at 1179 Temple Hill s Drive v.·as struck at the northerly corner after the swiftly moving truck and load smashed through a center· barricade, ;icross an .opposing traffic lane, and down a small incline jarring an entrance col· umn from its foundations. "I thought it was an airplane coming down,'' Mrs. Strong said as she surveyed From Pqe J GASOLINE ... \Villiam H. Bay and Count y Supervisor Ralph Clark to use their political power and to convince the registered voters driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, himself an ARCO dealer and fo rmer JSSDA president, urged the angered de11lers to remain united, be gentlemen, and to "just hang tight, because I Qi!nk we're going to whip it." The fourth district s u p e r v i s o r . however, lashed out al the architects of the Phase IV gas price control plan which allows dealers a maximum seven cents gross profi t per gallon. "These idiots in Washington have no idea what the problem is," he said. "They don't know that our people would be tickled pink with a seven cents net." Clark added that he thought the Cost of the (lestruction wrought in her front yard. Tbe Caterpillar tractor toppled from the flatbed trailer and landed upside down, stopping· just short of a home. The big roller also jarred off the trailer. No figures of the rig's weight were avaJlable from the Pico Rivera hauling firm or crs Contractor Transport. "I don't have any esUmates on anything," said Earl Hodson, firm owner. He said be did not know where the rig had been working, and tersely referred all other questions to the insurance com· pany. · • · 11 Police identified the driver as Larry Coi:, 22, of Covina. Cox told ·officers he was coming down Temple Hills Drive with the truck in lov.' gear, when the rig suddenly started to pick up speed just before it entered the sharp curve. "He observed he couldn't make the curve and all he could do is hang on," Sgt. Norm Babcock said today. Crews from a special towing finn \vorked until midnight to remove the rig from the Temple Hills residence. Traffic on 'l'empl~-Hills Drive wss heavier than normal because Park Avenue. the only other access road to Top of the World, . was clesed due to street construction .. '· 1 i With the traffic restricted to one lane on Temple Hills, the city was forced tq open· :rark Avenue, :etid :offiCef,. repc)rted· today the fresh asphalt on Park Avenue was damaged by the heavy traffic. No charges are being considered against the driver at this time, Sgt. BaJ>. cock said. ShoOtout Case Mystery Suspect • To Be Arraigned By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL Of fllf D•lll' Plfft •l•ff A mystery man was scheduled for llfr raignment today in the aftermath of a kidna~sbootout ranging through Newport Beach, Irvine and Saflta Ana Heights, as authorities· tried to determine whether he' or police wounded two of his hostages. Criminal oomptaints expected to charge the defendant with multiple crimes were being processed lhis morn- ing by the Orange CoWJty District At- orney's Office. The man variously identified with two names and two addresses was scheduled to be transferred from Orange County JaJI to Harbor Judicial District c.ourt for the proceedings. The big black-and-white Sheriff's Department bus was to carry him - behind wire mesh-covered windows - along part of the route the original police chase followed at 00 l'{liles per hour. Investigators said tOOay they are still somewhat baffled by just who their man is and what motivated the entire bizarre chain of incidents. He was initially identi£ied as Victor Grover Heidlage, 26, an unemployed San Diego resident. Newport Beach Police Detective Capt. Don Oyaas said 'Ibursday afternoon , however, that his men had developed in- fomiation also identifying their suspect as Roland Gray. He said investigators determined that the suspect has been living with a couple he has known for two years at 752 Main St., Huntington Beach, since Ju.ly but disclosed lit11e else. The suspect captred at 7 p.m. Wed- nesday as he emerged from a home at 2322 Orchid Hills Drive. Santa Ana Heights, was subsequently booked on suspicion of assault with intent to com- mit murder. He escaped injury during a fusillade or two volleys or shots fired after a male FromPqeJ ELKS • • • Francisco Bay Area and lodges in the San Diego area that have voted on the ban. The J ,200-member San Rafael lod ge voted J to 1 to drop the ban as did the 2,800 member San Ma"° lodge. Spokesmen for the 20 Bay Area lodges said the vote 11~ars to be going about 2 to I in favor of dropping the ~ troversial requirement that has kept out minority members. One lodge in Southern Cali£ornia, the Oceanside branch, has, voted in ff!Yor of continuing the ban wHlle two o\bers - those in Encinitas and S11n Diego -voted to drop the rule.· • The votes are expected to be taOied by the national headquarters of the Elks in Chicago next month. hostage grabbed for his ,.357 Magnum revolver. The young man and hls teenag· ed girl companion were wounded. Both victims underweot ~igg~ Thurs· day afternoon at ~~ .. Jd:ela ~M:emorial Hospital ~ · ' _ 1 Derrlne Baeseman. 17, Of Pasadena. was hH three times, in the arm, abdomen area and lung and is listed ia critical but stable condition. Marco A. ~Silva, 20, of 3505 Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach, was shot in the • forearm and stomach and is listed in serious conditi.oo following his operation. 1 About two dozen shots were fired at the height of the confrontaJion when the gun- man -holding Miss lJaeseman in front with the pistol at ber head and DeSilva behind him -continued his advance toward police in a futile effort to flee. ' " From.Pqel ' .. EXPANSION ' l • • • 1 · ' ventional fuel oil." Richardson repeated that the fuel shortage w-0uld not cause Edison to seek any variance in air quality standards for its proposed combined cycle units. He admitted, however, that a variance could be requested for the existing steam plant, w1lich will still operate even if the $310 million expansioo project is ap- proved. "A variance will be the absolute, last resort." Richardson emphasized. ''Only if we are faced with blackouts. And any variance would have to be approved by the Orange County Air Pollution C.Ontrol District." Edison officials will go before the Hun· tington Beach City Council Oct. 1 to seek: approval for expansion of the local power plant. If the council approves, Edison must still obtain permits from several other agencies Including the coastal con- serva ti-On commission and the Public Utilities Commission. Last week, the city planning com- mission deadJocked 3 to 3 over the Edison issue, then switched the vote to I to 0 against approval as a method to move the Item before the City Council. Justice's Notes Reported Stole1i WASHINGTON (AP) -Jmplllceeble Jl6pers of the late Supreme Court Justice Felli: Frankfurter have been stolen from the Library of Congress, columnist Jack Anderson reported. Anderson said five years o f Frankfurter's personal diaries, numerous notes on conversations, memos, letters and personal jottings were among tbt stolen items. 'WOMEN DON'T HAVE IT' Wife and Mother Brick From Page 1 Liv ing Council needs to understand that anytime an oil company raises the tankwagon price by one or two cents a gallon, the dealer's profit takes a dive because he must absorb the increase. SLEEP SOFAS EXCHANGE. • ''They're a~king us to operate in the I t post-Yloi'td War If days of profit," he • charged . got to develop it as a child. • "So if you want your daughters to grow up with internal stability, you 've got lo give it to them. You've got to spend litne talking to them and listening lo them. "When they 're young, it can be boring. When they're older, it can be annoying . "But you 're all your kid has got." Mrs. Brick ended her talk thusly : "If you men don't ca re <.bout your daughters, maybe I can impress you bj putting it this way . "Your sons arc some day going to have to live with these women. And if they're going to have decent women to live vo'ith. you're going to have to raise them. "This is your chance to put Wo1nen 's Liberation right out of business. if you'll just take the lime with your daughters that Lhey need.·· Welfare Grant Hikes Pondered SACRAMENTO (AP) -Republicans sliffened opposition today to proposals to hike welfare grants for 500,000 aged. blind and disabled Californians as the 1973 legislative session entered its final ho11rs. Senate Democratic Door leader ~orge i\·loscone said he needed just two more l{epublican votes to send to (;{)v. Ronald Reagan a measure that \YOU!d hike the 500,000 welfare grants an average of $23 a month. Ba11 to Watergate S1111day F eatu1·es Letters · 011 Heari11gs, Ecology Here's~ rundown of stories appearing in I.his week's St.lnday Daily Pilot: UPPER BAY -A multiplicity of government agencies is working to jlreserve the ecological vitality -0f Upper Ncv.'POrt Bay and most officials are op. fimistic !hat results of their work will soon become evident. The maln problem they have is coordinating all th eir ef· (Sunday's Best J fO(IS . SW!! writer John Zaller rcport.5 In a YOU section fea ture. ·ART FOR TA8i,E -High lood prices not only are kJeptng some meals off din· ner tables, they ·also are kffplng art off gallery lll'tllls. For o profile 0£ a Cost:i ~ldesa artist who works with organic mate.ti ala read this week's Sunday Special by Jacqueline Combs I.and. • TA LENT SCOUT -Jeanne flaliburton 1~·atches for potential "Stars" ol stage and screen in sessions every Saturday in a Newport Beach ballet school. Mrs. llaliburton. veteran agent and former ac- tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo Olson in a women's page feature. "'ATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mail response, the Watergate hearings 1nay be t.he most closely· listened-to series on television. From hate mail to near love letters. it pours in At rl!te that. is too high to keep track of. for samples, see the Sunday editorial secti-0n. AM~;RfCANS IN DEBT -The average citi1.en's ldca1 on borrowing may not be as liberal as is assumed. A Unlver11lty of l\.1ichigan study shows middle-Income families borrowed al an average of 12 J>t~rccnt of their yearly income. and most <Ion 't wnnt 10 borrow Any more. Thia rr:iturc appear~ in the YOU section. • Every Home Should Have One '~ -- Excellent Selection Now On Oi1pl1y, At ~111on1bl•. Prices. Stop In Tod1y, ' . ' OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOO~WOODMARK-KAllASlAN;-~ •· ' •• -- I I-'~· 1 --' I ) ' I At Your Service Union Suit 1t'onte d DEAR PAT: This request~probably is unusual. but l am desperate to learn "''here I might buy some one-piece, all wool uni on suits. I am 68 years old and have arthritis in my spine. l 've tried every place I know, but can't find an~· one-piece suits, I can't wear the t\\'~ piece suits due to former stomach and back operations. I'd also like to find oul ff there is a branch or salesroom for Ni agara CycJo-Massage units in Orange Count y because I can ·1 drive to Los An· gcles. r.G .. COSTA MESA You'll fi nd one-piece 100 percent Australian "'OOI unifln suits advertised on pa~e 643 of the Stars Fall & Winter Catalog. Olher selections of "Weather Rated Union Suits" also are 1isted. A Los Angeles Niagara Cyc l o-Massage representative is co ntacting you and will visit you at your home. if you wish. 't'lont Cnu I Clnlm? DEAR PAT: Since our t\VO children are in their teens. I have decided to join my husband in the working world and take a full·limc job. ls it true that if I hire a maid to clean the house and watch the children when they're home. I can claim a tax deduction for her sal- ary? D.f\1., LAGUNA BEACH Repor( t}rdered 5 €oast Cities Eye TV System F ive Orange Coast cities may establish five towns ln the PCTA. their own cable television system Boteman's plans involve such re- because private companies apparently quirements as mobUe studios io serve can't do the job. each community, a central studio with Directors of the Public C a b 1 e one station available for use . by the Television Authority (PCTA) represen· public, several open channels for use by ting Huntington Beach. Newport Beach, police, fire andotber public service agen-- Cota Mesa, Fountain Valley and ciea. \Vestminster, Thursday ordered a report The flaw in what has been labeled one on the possibility of the PCTA building of the "potenUaUy. finest cable systems its own system. in the country" apparently is that no John Bateman, consultant to the private firm is willing to risk the money PCT A, will report to directors Oct. 4 on J. on it. the feasibility of a municipally owned V Bateman: put the specifications out for cable television network. bidding tQis summer, but only one firm, Bateman has spent the past two years Teleprompter Inc., showed any interest. writ_in_g a 200-page set o~ specifications The bid Jlate. was extended through Sept. ouU1n1ng exactly what kind of a cable 4 to see if any more firms could be at- television system the local communities tracted. want a private firm to build. Thursday Bateman told chagrined ~n. return for building tbe proposed $11 directors that not only had oo rriore bidS m11l1on network, tbe company would been received but Teleprompter had receive the exclusive rights to serve the backed out, le~vlng the PCTA with no bidders. Court Backs Marine Corps Hair Rules TALLAHASSEE . Fla. (UPI) -A federal judge has upheld the right of the Marine Corps to require short haircuts, but agreed to hear arguments from 10 reservists that th ey are being punished for challenging the regulation. U.S. District Judge David L. Mid· dlebrooks made the wiexpected ruling Thursday at the outset of arguments on Pl'Ctrial motions in the reservists' case. "Let me hurry to tell you that these regulations are not unconstitu tional -let n1e tell y<>u that right now," Mid· dlebrooks told defense attorney Kent Spriggs. "The commandant has authority to set regulations that are reasonable -and I consider these reasonable." Spriggs said the corps is "punishing them for speaking out against the hair regulations and for coming to this court with their complaint." ' The men. all members of "C" Com- ·pany. 8th Tank Battalion, USMCR, head· quartered in Tallahassee, are suing Gen. Robert Cushn1an , commandant of the !\1arine Corps. Two plaintiffs. Ben Sellers of Jackson· ville and David McMullen of Talabassee, have been threatened with recall to the regular Marine Corps because of unsatisfactory drills. He told directors that a fruitful cable television market has turned somewhat sour because of increasing interest rates and stronger controls by the Federal Communications Commission. Teleprompter, Inc., for instance, can· not currently trade its stock because of a temporary ban on it imposed by the Securities and Exchange Commission . 1'he company has also suspended $15 million worth of constructioo during 1973 until its own future is more clear. City Administrator David Rowlands of Huntington Beach said today the five cities could set up a non-profit cor~ poration which would not rely on city money to build the proposed network. The cities could then sign a contract with a management firm to run the system. Frank Hawkins, head of a Washington. D.C., investment firm, has also been in· vited to lalk with PCTA directors about the financial aspect of forming their own cable program. While directors expressed an interest in a municipal system, they also asked Bateman to consider two possible alternatives. The PCTA consultant will write letters to the private cable television companies asking them to submit proposals on just what type of a system they would be willing to build for the area. The last possibility is to simply forget the whole project for five months to five years until the financial climate changes and the five-city system can be establish· ed on its own terms. If your dependent children ore under 15, you may be eulitled lo a deduclion for a111ou nts paid to a person for houioehold service. but there arc a number or limitations involved. You and your hu!I· band mu11t nol have o•orl'., lban $18,000 combined incnmc for a full deduction. For e \'cry dollar your income exceeds $18,000, your dedoction ls reduced by '51 eents. This means th at U your income reaches $27 ,000, your deduction will com- pletely disappear. Request a copy of IRS Publication 503, ··ChUd care and Disabl- ed Dependent Cnre." from any IRS offlcr for complete information. IH11rols for A1nnle11rs DEAR PAT: I have a 1965 catalog from ~1ura1 Arts Com pan.v in Tarzaua. I've wrill.en tw ice recently for new catalogs. and price lists and although the letter:; are not relW'ncd undeliverable. I haven 't received any acknowledgement. Could you rind out the status of this company. or refer us to another source where \\'t' could purchase large paint-by-number murals for amateur pai nters? We have retired to a new home and prefer this challenge. rather than purchasing a y.•allpaper mural. Scl1ool Board Member Seeking . Smoking Ban El Centro Quake Hits Without Causi1ig Damag<! E1. CENTRO (AP)-A rolling earth- quake h i t without apparent damage Thursday. Californians felt it as far as Huntington Beach, about 150 miles away, but at the estimated epicenter Edie Signs said: A.C., SAN JUAN CAP ISTRANO i\1ural Arts Company has no telephone listiu·g and is out of business, according to several other Los An~eles area mural art ntms I contacted. MUralmaskr. Inc., 18101 Mount~ Washington, .,~ o ant a I n Valley, bas paint-by-number morals available. They measure from lhree to 1% feet In length and all are three feet high. Feeding Fruit Trees DEAR PAT: I have three fruit trees (plums and nectarinel in my yard and they bear fn1it -more or less -each summer. I'd li ke to know the best method possible to feed the trees this fall and •winter £or growth and a gOod harvest. but most of all. what do I feed the trees to make the fruit sweeter? R.R., ffiVINE Long-lime Orange County School Board membq' A. E. "Pat" Arnold of Cypress wants :to .do'~awey with .. "srhoke-filled rooms·~~at the' board's m~ings. ' , So Thursday. be asked his four fellow board members to pass a rule banning smoking in the board room during . ' 1neetJngs. .. I don't like it personally and I know a lo! of others ,who don't," Arnold said. "I've gotten sonie complaints about the smoke hurting people's eyes and it's a proven fact you can be harmed just by breathing somebody else's smoke." Trustee David Brandt of Santa Ana, a smoker, said he would go along with the vliahes of the board to stop smoking by board members but would strenuously object to imposing a ban on people who attend the meetings. ''As for myself, I can just slip out into U~e hall. But-the philOsophy' of ,gove~ ment telling people what they can or can't do when they enter a public building they paid for is not right,'' he 53id. ... · Arnold backed oil on h i .s prwosilJ saying, ''It's up to you and. I knOW a lot of people like smoking. But a lot' doa't, too." Information on care, fertilizing and pruning fruit trees is being malled to. yo1;1 from the Univenlty ot ~omla Agrlculturol Extension Service. Fllnn'ad- viser Kenneth E. Mueller said the rela- tionship between the environment and the variety of fruit tree plays a large ' • part In detcr1ninl11g the fruit 's sweetness, with cool summer~ fending to produce ~ur fruit. It looks like you'd better prepare for a tart crop of plums and neclari.nes from this. year's "summer." · Other trustees avoided the discussion and it raded back onto ltgular, agenda ilems when Amol~.jrum51~ "We'll just ' forget about 1t IOr now." -~ . ' Baby Girl Found In Garbage Bao . " NEW ORLEANS, La. (APl -A ne*born gi rl rescued Crom an ant-in· fested garbage bag was Jn satisfactory condition at Charity Hospital. She was spotied Thw"Sday in a dcbris- filled garage by Odessa Weber, who was attracted by what firSt sOunded .. llke a trapiped cat. Mr. Weber said she peered through an opening in the garage and saw the child's arm waving from the pafl(!r •.ack. "Some felt it. and some didn't. It was just an earthquake." The operator of an Ocotillo Wells Cafe, Mrs. Signs said no damage was reported. None was noticed by residents of nearby communities along the San Diego and lmperial County line. Its magnitude was moderate on t h e Richter scale at seismographs in California Institute of Technology in Pasadena and the University o f California at San Diego. In El Centro, the county jail matron said, "I felt my chair shaking -it just shoot." Unette Martin. added "it felt like yoU're dunk." James Shaw. a farmer who.lives west of El Centro. said several pictures fell from a wall in his house. A sheriff's deputy in the Laguna l\1oun- tains said a rDeeting was disrupted by the rumble. A resident of Lakeside said water sloshed out of his pool. A cup of coffee spilled in an office in the San Diego County courthouse. Fae· tory workers in Huntington Beach telephoned authorities. In 1940 an earthquake centered a few miles east of El Centro killed 40 persons _ and caused an estimated $5-million pro-- petty damage. Another quake centered ln nl!arby Calexico killed six persons in 1915. Attorney Bailey Seeks Treasure At Missile Site .. SANTA FE. N.M. (UPI) -Attorney F . Lee Bailey has asked the governor or New Mexico to help him gain ticcess to the White Sands Missile Range to loo"k for an old Spanish treasure his clients believe is there. A spokesman for Gov: Bruce King said Thursday •ithe governor said he would do what he could." • • Bailey represents abOut 50 clients claiming ownership of 1 alleged cac~. • which pjcy say contain& 100 tons of gold. King's press sscretary Pete Pence said the goveroor is "rather doubtful'.' that a • MRS. KATINKA PARKER, 52, SAYS SHE'S NOT READY TO GIVE UP TO THE GHOST Malevolent Spirit Pushed Her Downstairs Twice Since She Bought The Home in Denver ' Ghost Plagues Housewife Neiglibors Blame Evil Spirits on Faulty Plumbing· :. i DENVER !UPI l -Katinka Parker says the thing th at goes bump in the night in her home is a ghost. Skeptical neighbors say it's bad plumbing. "I can't explain a wa y my personal feeling that there is some thing evil in this house . ., said Mrs. Parker. "I ca n feel it. I can sense it. I'm very skeptical by nature. I'm not the type of person who sits aroWld and dreams up these sorts of things." The ghost has pushed ~1rs. Parker down the stairs twice, she says, once because it was angered at the new red wallpaper in the master bedroom. Both times, Mrs. Parker wrenched her back. The malevolent spirit, she said, mumbles to itself as it glides through the eight-room house built in 1908 and oc- casionally knocks on waHs in the dead of night. ··one ni ght. I was awakened by a man's voice calling from the foot of the stairs. The vojce said 'Mother" or 'Brother.' I rouJdn't understand which it was. When I looked there was no one there." . Mrs.· Parkef. 52, blames the ghost for causing the couple that sold her and her ·ONION SETS husband the house to break up after 22 years of marriage. She says It alsi> almost ended her marriage. Teacher Strikes Delaying School 1 111 Five States By The Associated Press Hundreds of thousands of public school pupils continued to get extended vaca- tions today as teachers stayed out on s trike in Michigan, Ohio, Rhode lsl{Uld, ~ennsylvania and ·Wisconsin. State officials in Michigan reported Thursday that walkouts were under way in Detroit and 23 school districts serving aboµt 544,000 pupils. A beating was to cootinu_e today in Mahoning County Common Pleas Court on a request by the school board in Youngsto\llTI , Ohio, for an injunction against 1,750 strlking teachers and other schoOI employes. ··1 couldn ~t wait to move in after ~-· * bought the house," she said. "But as soo.n. as we did, 1 became very depressed. y,. began to hate the house and hate my hus~ band. I told hi1n I hated him. The spirit'• just didn 't want anyone to be hapRY7, here." . ·, Mrs. Parker said she and her husband:. · saved their marriage by ta1king about'; i the sense or evil in the house but she came to despise the home so much tbe~ znoved away for two years. Tbe couPI~·. returned in May after Mrs. Parker decid· ed, "I was going to.fight the ghost. It waP. n1y house.'' .. ...# The house, gabled and surrounded by a shaded veranda. was built on the site b~ an old farmhouse. ,. The first owner of the house walked on· to the front lawn in 1912 and put a bullet in his head in an unsuccessful atte~pt at.-, s uicide. · -. . ,,' I Mrs. Parker said she dit!.n't know w'!_q ~. I the ghost migti.t be but tlylt it could bave' l been someone "who lived in the old~ i farmhouse. I've heard spirits often re.. 1 main with the land. Maybe it was upse~lf' that the old farmhouse was"tom down.'". • , .. •. .;: I , , Ranunculus ,. ' • ,. For refreshing Spring Color ENJQY FRESH ONIONS GROW YOUR OWN 2~ 100 FOR 69¢ , I • , --------Weekend Specials---------. ' ' Stock or TERRIAN1uM BOTTLES WICKER BASKETS. NAME BRAND Petunias Po11y pac •II calor1 R99. 79c Plo10 your ow" 12 ,01. lilt' .... 995 17.95 10'"110" 11oturol colo,, IMel for plo11ter1, waltt' IMisket, etc. .... J.95 149 Patio Furniture REDWOOD FURNITURE l' 119 TAILI w/benclrl 16 sott left) J Rot. $44. 9S yo.in •Illy <t' UMIR ILLA TAILE w/J boM!ln ll att 0111lyl 1199. SS9.9S Now I ND TAILES -COCKTAIL TAILIS. ASST. STOOLS·llNCH. Re9. Volllft te S29.t5 Now 529.95 539.95 511.00 CLUI CHAIR (<t MlyJ LOYI SIA CJ o11lyJ PADDID CHAIR .l CHA.l it CUSHIONS .... SJt.tS 524.00 .... SlttS 532.00 .... 53.00 • BARSTOdLS IWro .. h Ira• Swlfft 1-t "'•• 519.95 BARSTOOLS W•/looow /•p•.bo<• $49 95 It'""· R99. $69.95. • TROPITONE HI 9UALITY OUTDOOR PATIO fURNITURt TAILIS, Aut. Sbn & Sllo;.t CHAIRS, SOMO Rockers • ASSOITI D LO UNGIS IAR STOOLS whir! ·•u•m IAR 40 ,. 50°/o OPf .... SJ•t 5190 ' ; I . • . l ' . . , . ' f An e1nergency unit took the chl1d to the hospital. where officials said her race was covered with ant bites and she had a small cut oo her che1t. but "she seems to be In satisfactory condition." treasure exists on the range, but said 2123 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa that "as far a8 he'! concerned, tt might ICofMf of Podo 642·410l The garege was owned by' m.-o who told police he knew nothing of the baby • • • T·REASUR I HUNTER L1wyor F. LH Balley . . be worth a c~k." ~••port It Yktorlo N11rMfl' 646-JfJS Military olliclals have resisted at· OPfN -1 DA YI SU.NOA'( • TO S:JO -DAILY 7tJO TO ' tempts by civilians to go onto the land to s.1, h•mi ll'"ll•d fo Stock 011 H .... d scateh for any trcosurc. I L.----...;.;.,.;.,,;...;...;...;...;,;_...; ______ ...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;.;;.;.;..;;;;;;;;;._...;;;;;;;;;;;;...1 • ' . .... . ••••• ''""l -·-· .... ' . . ; OAILV PILOT Frid..,, Stpltrnb«f 14, lq73 Chile Junta Reports Calm Restored John Sc~tz In Comeback? fOLITICAL TRAIL5 DEPI'. - ~erybody from politicians to ~ewives have been beefing about the ~ situation in this Year of. Our Lord :PJ· l.Jttle wonder. When It comes to trying to get a round on the family table, you seem to ce one of two situations. Either you can ord the steak but can't find it, or you firid plenty of it but can't afford it. it has gone. E of our orange Coast's better pollticians &ummed up the beef on this way In'~ recent newsletter: In l !NiS, WlllLE out of office. Presi· t Nixon himself stated, all too truly: lesson that government price-fixing n't work is never learned.' But if vie d even learn that lesson -and surely me or us can -the extraordinary story or beef prices and supply in 1973 ould prove it." Death of Sgrian Jet Now the newsletter writer who "-'as king a little jab at Mr. Nixon and the ent governmenlal efforts to curb in- tion wasn't a current officeholder of Middle East skies were quiet again today after Thursday's biggest air battle since 1967 six--d.ay war. Israel says 13 Syrian MIG2ls were shot down. Syria said it shot down five Israel planes and lost eight of its own. · loyal opposition or somesuch. -.Re was John G. Schmitz, former state ~tor, former congressman from our ~gion, and former presidential candidate !fji the American Independent Party. ... !lrlli SCllMlT'l TS NOW out of office, by ue of his defeat for re--election to ess by former Orange County sessor . Andi:ew J. Hinshaw and the ~ure of his AJP presidential bid, which dn't have come as an enormous rise. 'Anyway, because he is currenUy out of atfice and ba:clt to teaching at Santa Ana cllege, it may come as a surprise to some political observers that John Schmitz is still circulating a Political newsl etter. He happened to drop by the office the other da y and questioned on this poin t, Schmitz indicated that indeed, he still circulates many thousands of the newsletters on a regular basis all over the country. TALK NATIJRALLY turned to poli tics and what his plans might be for the future. Well, yes, John said be bad taken out -some papers for a state office there awhile back, but he never turned them back in; never officially filed. Yes. he said quietly. he would consider running for public office again ... some surveys had been taken on pu blic name identification and the like ... he kind or trailed off. JOltN SCICMITZ seemed rather sub- dued that day when compared to the wit· ty, quick, confi dent and perhaps even cocky congressmen who used to charm audiences from the political podiums of Orange County. Political opponents might attri bute his current low profile to the fact that Schmitz has lost his last two elections . I don't trunk so. t think it is far more attributable to the personal tragedy of la st August when Schmitz lost hi s young son, Ph ilip, in a svli.mming pool accident at his Newport Beach home. And Seh TTJilz is accepting this tragic loss as a man of deep religious conviction. AS FOR THE political front , time may bl un t the sting of personal tragedy. And J suspect \Ve will see John G. Schmitz' name on a ballot again. Russ Launch <.:osmos MOSCO}¥ (APJ -The Sovie t Union launched today the 586th earth satellite in its top-secret Cosmos series. the of- ficial oews agency Tass reported. "Cosmos" has been used as a cover name for a wide range of Soviet space missions from collccUon of weather data. to tests of fracUonal"orbilal bo mbs. Laos Agreement Signed; Phouma To Take Charge VIENTIANE , Laos (AP ) -The Vi en· tiane government and the Communist Patiiet Lao signed a political peace agreement today making them partners in another coalition government for divided Laos. Premier Souvanna Phouma , who will hea d the coalition, said he hoped the new governm ent would meet before Oct. 10. The 26-page agreement, hanimered out in negotiations since • cease-fire on Feb. 21, was signed at Souvanna Phowna 's residence beside the A1ekoog River. The diplomatic c o r p s attended, the usual champagne toasts "'ere drunk, and t\\"O air force helicopters circled overhead. BUT ONLY A small detachment of guards was on duty around the house, and the only onlookers outside were newsmen. After nearly 20 years ol sporadic warfare and political upheaval, the public showed .no interest. In Cambodia, meanwhile, bard fighting broke out in VIDear Suor, 13 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. Only light ac· lion was reported in KC111pong Cham. Col. Arn Rong, the Cambodian military spokesman, said the garrison in Vlliear Suor was surrounded and an infantry col· wnn had been sent to relieve it. 'lbe lltUe market town is part of Phnom Penh's eastern defense line, and shelling and lighting has been reported there for a We€k . A communique said the government's force s in K001pong Cham, 47 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, were con- tinuing to enlarge their perimeter and Y:ere encountering only light harassment. DAILY PILOT DELI VE RY SE RVICE Deli~rry of the Oa!ly Piiot Is 9uaranterd MtN•r·FrMl•r: II 1•u ft ,... ~ ... v...,. ,,.II'"" •Y J:)I '-""• c•ll 1H reur c..,. wm be breytlll N fall. C11!1 I r• ti~tR 1111111 1:>0 p.m. $1hor~., IN 51111t11y: II l'ff .. ,.., rKt l¥1 YfUt <IPY ,, t 1,Jn. iH11'111y, er I 1-"'• S ..... ay, <Ill 11\d I cepy will k .......... N y11t. (1 lt. 1rt l•k1tt1 ll"UI 11 •.m. Trlrphon r\ MtJI O•l"ft Ce11•ty Art•t •••.... tofJ-tnl Nento,.,.11 "11nll"lt•• 111cll ••• w111 ... 1111t1r , .•.. 1•1n• Si" Cllf"IRlt, C••ltlrllll It•<~. St• 'u•• C••lllr1 .. , O•,.. l"allll, lt•r.11 U911111, 1.•tltll8 ltlf... . ... .r:a.w:it Received Food Gifts BALTIMORE (UPI) - A rich and po)itically influential super-~ market executive here has regularly supplied Vice President Spiro 1 Agnew and his family with gifts of food, The New York Times said today. l The Times attributed the reports to a Maryland political figure , wilh contacts on Agnew'.s staff. The vice president's \Vashington office did not deny the story, and neither did Joseph H. Rash, the reported donor of the food. Rash .... • is a vice president of Food Fair Stores lnc., third biggest supermarket • chain in the country. · RASH, IN AN interview at his corporate office in the suburb of Towson, warmly defended his donations on the grounds of a 12-ye?} friendship with the Agnews. He told a reporter that he never souglit favors from the vice president and that he never made any money f with him. He emphasized that the food donations were exchange '1 gifts among friends. •1 The Times reported that Agnew's press secretary,. J. Marsh ,~ Thomson, when reached in Washington, said after consulting with the vice president that Agnew would have no comment on the gifts. '-Efforts were unavailing to determine the specifics of tht;. food •• gifts sent by Rash to Agnew. Rash refused to specify details about the . presents which he said he had received from the vice president. 1 Rash, a Democrat, has close connections with Maryland Gov. M~i:vin Mandel, for whom he has done considerable car:qpai~ fund· raising. ,,,, _____ """ -.... ...J""""''"'''C ....... ,, .................. . Sen. Ervin Would Listen ' To Tapes With President NEWARK, Del. (UPI) -Senate Watergate committee chairman Sam J . Ervin, Jr. says he would be willing "to compromise" with President Nixon in order to end the ensnarled-coort battle over the White House tapes. Ervin said Thursday night he is willing lo renew his offer that he and three members of his committee listen to the ta~s privately with Nixon, to determine if "Jolm Dean was telling the truth," and if the President was involved in the scan· dal. The North Carolina senator, speaking at a lecture series at the University of Delawa.Jl', said the Watergate afiair can't be ended until the tapes are beard and said "f'm willing to hear the tapes with the President as a compromise." ERVIN SAID, however, that he expects the battle of the tapes will probably end in the Supreme Court. He said "I'm CODw fident the court will rule against the President. And J'm confident the Pl'W- dent will obey the oourt.'' Uoder questioning, Ervin said that il Nixon reru.ses to obey the high court,. Congress may have no other choice but to move towards impeachment. He said however, "the court would first have to indict him fee obmucting justice and then it would go to the House, where ilJl.. j,eachment would begin." Cold Comes to the Plains Meanwhile, former Attorney General John N. Mitchell bi<d to subpoena sea'et presidential tape recordings Thuraday to use in his forthcoming perju,,._. spiracy trtal. The White House promptly asked government 'a"ttorneys to fight the subpoena, Mitchell's defense attorney, Peter F1emlng Jr., aBl<id !or' aoy tapOs of. - versatlons that mi~ · have ~ regarding his client .a case between Nov. I and Jan. 31. '11>e request WU unlike olher requests, which have ci t e d particular single dates. Temperatures in 50s Extend to Panltar~dle S. CaUtor11io Hltft Lew ,r, " ~ " ,,, .1 II II s ll '::? ~ " ... u ti " ,, ... .. ,, ,; i .fl . " .. ... ""'*""hllllt0K>Ui1• E lt t1 ., _,, °""""'-• II ""11"''plll• Ml " " Phqinl• =~~I, f"WI ,~Ha, tf ,llllburVll ~""" Yor• ,, 1.n :f!!I~ o.... Oki ....... Cir, M St~(;;;' • V .S. S11m,,..ry ICocutol IDfolll<r su"" '""'II will b• found todaN °"Pogo 20.) Thomu J. Edwanla, chief of the U.S. attorney's crlmioal dJvision in New York, called the subpoena a "broad ranging blunderbuss fishing e>peditloa", and filed a countennoUon to have It thrown out. .We ndy Wends HerWay W~t ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPI) - Wendy Berlowltz, 25, who l{led lo auction oil her blldnl top ~ lhe University ol New Meidco '*"1"'1· .... Oneel ~ Thlll'ldoy .,. - d11<tlng a Ille In •-public pork without a lleenee. Magistrate Judp Jerry Robins lined botli Wehdy and her IOOI· writing husband ~. but wapended the llJie and "1ahed tllem well ab their trtp to Hollywood. Radio Says Resistance Breaks Up SANl'IAGO, Ollle (AP) -Ufe In Olile is returning to normal and reslstan.ct bas stopped, the oew military j1111ta an- nounced today over Its radio network. The broadcast uld commerce and transport in Concepcion is operating at 100 percent and port activities are back to normal. "Industries bave resumed and the peo- ple are absolutely calm," It iald. 'iActiviUes in all ol the country are nonnalliing and m0pplng up operations are going on without any type of resistance," the broadcast said. THE RADIO DENIED claims of SU!>' porters of the late President Salvador Allende who fled to Buenos Aires 0th1t retired Geo. Carlos Prall was leading army lllits in a counterrevollltion. It said such reports aimed at dividing the armed forces. 'Ibe exiles said Prats and bi5 force were moving north from Coocepcion, 250 miles south ol Santiago, to attack the capital, and that the anny In Punta Arenas, the eouthernmost province I, IOO miles from Santiago, wu still loyal lo the leftist coalition. But nothing waa heard in Santiago of Prats, and • Qlllean newsman in Punta Arenas reported that the situation there was nonnal and lihat stores aod schools reopened despite a heavy snowstorm. IN SAN'l1AGO, a few sidewalk fruit stands ftl't opened on Alameda Avenue. Tbe vendors charged tw!ee ·the nonnal price for their apples and •vocados and still sold a day's supply in an hour or less. Ooe delicatessen owner opened his doon and a long line ol sboppen formed. "What does he have to sell?" ooe woman asked another. , "I doo't koow," the oecood one replied. The fint Olle dle<ked out the sti1111tion, returned, and said, "He has DO bread." "Ob, I mew that," WIS the reply. The military cblefs, led by Geo. Augusto Pinodtet. who o v e r t b r e w Allende 'l'lleoday, pined • strong but temporary political base Thursday nlCht. 'Ibe moderate Christian Democratic party and the rigbt·wtng Natiooal party, which together won nearly 64 percent-of the votes when Allende was elected In 1970, expressed approval d. the Tuesday coup. 11.e Olrlstlan Democrats, .Qille'1 largest party, said the jUnta's goal ''to restore peace between Chileanl , .• re- quires lair and unifted actlon by everyone." But the stai.ment lligned by party presiden\ Patricio Aylwin made clear that tile ,eridonemeot of military rule WllS temporary. It said the trad!tioM of the armed '""'"" "Inspire c:onfideoce U..t u &OClll .. they llnlsb Ille tall they uoderloot ••• ..,_ will mum to the people." Sergio Onolr• J.,,,., president of the National party, uld Allende's tlfte.year rule bad proYOied ·~ ¢QI," luil he called oo all Clllleana ''to support wltllout reservatiooa thi Q!llTeC(lve ,1ctjoa J:i the junta.'' Ruckelshaus Backed W ASllINGTON (AP) ~ William D. Ruckelshaus lw been wWuinou8ly •I>' proved b)' the Senai. Judlc:larr Con> mittee lo bo deputy attorney gaieral. The voto Thunday aent Rudcelsllam' nomlnatloll to the Selllli. flo or . Rucl<elllwn, a fonner llldlana leglllator, baa BerVed In the Nix.., admiillitntion lioce early 1188 when be was -lni.d an. aaslatant atlomoy general. . NEW CHILE CHIEF Gen. Augusto Pinochet Pilot Raises Hijack Fears For Selassie , BONN, West Germany (UPI) -The pilot of an Ethiopian airliner carrying' Emperor Haille Selassie home from a three-day visit to West Germany today apparently hit an automatic hijacker alert buttoa accident· ally toocliing olf a scare that Sela~ie's plane was hijacked. The alarm proved false. The ollk:YI Ethiopian news agea· cy said "the emper· ••u.s 1• or's aircraft toutbed down exactly on schedule at 3:20 p.m." Cologne airport officials coollnned that the emperor, his wife and two uniden- tified companions were aboard the special fiight. e RumboughDiscovered EAST HAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) -Tho body of 25-year--0td David Rumbougb, son of actress DiDa Merrill and industriali!t Stanley Rllll'.lbough. has been recovered from the Atlantic Ocean. Police said two flshennen found Rum· bough's body Thursday about three- fourtM of a mile from where he disap- peared Saturday. e s.,._....,.. 1'fe... B•j• HOUSTON (UPl) -In excellent health after 48 days in weig'htlessness, the Skylab 2 astronauts trained their space cameras today on natural re90Urces from Baja California to the north central Atlantic Ocean. Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma were collecting m- formition from their orbiting space home on stonns for weather scientists, urban growth changes in Dallas for the U.S. Geologicol Survey and ecological cbanges aroond highways for the stai. ol Maine. e Deffclelacles Cited PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J, Shapp 'Thursday said a nursing home where 11 old people died in a fire had "many aafe-- ty deficiencies" when Inspected last month. e French H•lt Test• PARIS (AP) -The French govein- ment announced today that its 1973 nuclear weapon tests In tho South Pacilic have ended. Tie announcement came in the form of a notice In the officlll journal caoc:elling the warning to maritime traffic to sU!er clear of ao area eo miles around the Mururoa Atoll. Hatti~ .Joined New Cereal .. t:alled 'Junk F-ood' j,n,; .. I: -• W A8lllKltl\'.IIr(llPI) -A. -<i Ingredient, sinco· neltber sriln abne Is nutrltlmlata llld ..-iaer ~-present In a lar1er quantity than the t4du -• -eereo), bobll test ..toted b)' otneraI ~ u 1 -sugar, Molitor ,.1d. ftUed 'ij1D'at 1ooc11u and "1qed the com-He .said the amOW'lt ol 1ugnr in • one- PID1 .. _ .... proc1uc1·-..1t -b OtlllCe oervillg o6the ceml was the .. m. ill way tatD tJte Amerlcon di<!. as that tn Olle teaspoon iJl jelly, apd that 'l1le produCt, called "Mr. Wmdetflill'1 the lat. cadtent In one ounce .11 four SUllJriR," la bllDI iOld IO far only lq grams, <oo1JJll'ed lo 11J: grams I!i ooe Buffalo, N.Y .. lt -• aC •bout Jt per-egg or nine grams In two sllctS aC bu~ enl oupr and H ....-f aatqnled lat, tered ~L ~ 1o tllo cm1er 1or Sclmee In the Puiiue In-, a 1'rinlel1 llnanced - IUlllll' -wlilcll .._ .. 11111 the "'°' duct !Jelen It p11 out ot Balfan ,,,. ........... ., hollow "pulla" wWI ~-. iJMI i:tpoitedly tallilo DOI unllb a lllldwlcb cootie. I l>R. MICHAEL JACOBSON, CO<lirec- IOI' ol the center, said a letter urging General llJ!lls lo' ocnp the product ,,.. sllJ1ed by ulln than ,125 bulrlllonllta, dentiitaf dlett.llails and dtllenl sn>upo. Among :'them were Dr. lean Mayer or Harv~ the Col1JU!ller Federallon ol Amerlcli and th'! !'l•tlcinol Wtltate lllgbtl OIJ,IJ!llidon. ' ' ' ~ an yn~lthy-0. Wllll~ product 11 m1ru1ecl'n1-lly, It la vtr1ullly i.... -1ble for. ,comumer pups to ef. t.dlvely inform the pllbUc about the --.. of the product and dllcoaroge purchaat/' JMollel1111 l&ld. ''We bOPe to do ''Ille monulaolun•'i a favar by burtiq lales belO<!e Ille """"'"1 ln9atl too much money In a bad product." - "'' to .'711 a a 1S Ac he , .. vj, tO' c ho· eq1 • 191 in Uq e\O sat I ag: 10 By eff M un ag, So· UM It m1 • cb of • c m• ma ... l SI< So· nu' cro ' pn , we Th Seo I nu ba· I Ci me of I deJ \\"h , ~ Hil , if I for the wh stu ma typ ~ en< .. ., the tieo as Re• ten Ute hirl he• to pro " DAU.Y PROT 'E DITORIAL PAGE Expert Advice Ne ed e d I! the mammoth Huntington Beacfi Union High School District is ever going to be unified into smaller, more responsive districts it's going lo take a lot of com· promise from school officials. They haven't displayed such tendencies in the past., But things are lookh1g up. Trustees and administra- tors of the five feeder e1e1nentary districts and the high school district have managed to swallow their pride and differences long enough to form a unification commiLtee to work jointly on the task of breaking up the larger district. It's encouraging that these people have come togeth- er, but the committee still is held together by a delicate balance that could be thrown off if even one member district becomes too involved jn its own concerns to co1npromise for the good of the whole. One way around this will be for the committee to hire an independent consultant. This would divorce the planning of unificat ion from the parochialism that has caused the downfall of similar efforts ln the past. lf these school districts are really interested in uni· lying, then they should be willing to let an expert do the planning -a step that will 11elp insure the success of their venture. Licensing Fever Huntington Beach City Councilmen still are hoping to throw an official collar around cats and horses. They are considering separate proposals for a voluntary $5 cat license and a mandatory $10 horse license. cots picked up without a license or any identification will be destroyed within 24 hours, but a feline with a lice nse will be given five days. In the case of horses, the proposed license is manda· tory. The money from the license will go into an eques· trian trust fund for the construction of horse trails. A voluntary cat license may work, but we have to wonder what is the purpose of the horse collar? Joggers aren't licensed to finance hilting trails and the money from bicycle licenses is not used for bike trails. rn a community with such vast area as Huntington Beach, there ought to be room to retain horses as a pleasan~ welcome aspect of the lifestyle. Teens Meet the Law The Huntington Beach Pol1ce Department, along with half a dozen others in the county, has begun to move onto local high school campuses in an effort to human- ize the law enforcement process. In classes taught by police officers, students are given a good, realistic look at the criminal justice system in this state and at the policemen and court officials who make it work. Last spring was the first time the classes were of· fered and they have been scheduled again at the four high school campuses in Huntington Beach. The classes are offered at Westminster and plans are under way to start similar classes at Fountain Valley High School through the Fountain Valley Police Department. A previous try at establishing a mandatory cat li· cense wilted under heavy public pressure. Perhaps the voluntary system will work, though there is an implied force behind it which doesn't seem quite fair. Stray It's an important effort that these police depart· ments are making in recognizing the need to educate teenagers about law enforcement. The departments and the school officials are to be congratulated for starting such a good program. 'Beat it, kid! This is no penny-ante game we've got going here!' Nuclear 'Parity' Called Irrelevant .. Amtrico has far more nuclear weapons than it could co1&ceivably U!C to protect its security. A11d it's build. fng mort at tM rate of almost four a day. Thi! is flOt the assessment of a pacifist or a nucltar disarmer. It iS rather tl1e view of retired Rtar Adm. Gent LaRocque wllo. today liead.s tl1e respected Ce1tter for De· ff!nse !11/ormation. lie is i11ter· viewed by editors of The \Vashin9. ton ltfollthllf. Q: Wbtn It comes to nuclew.r weapons, bow Import.ant today is parity -or equality -\.\'lib tbe Russians? A: Parity is a ridiculous, outmoded J9th century idea. It is no longer relevant in an age when v.·e can destroy the Soviet Union so many times over that you can't even cotDll them. And they can do the same to us. As a result of last year's SALT agreements, we need less and less forces to defend the United States from attack. By signing the SALT treaty, v.·e said in effect that the United Stale! y,·111 make fl.O attempt to defend itself -an almost unbelievable thing to tell the public - against a Soviet missile attack. And the Soviets have also agreed not lo defend them.selves against a U.S. missile attack. It could be called "security through mutual w.Jnerability." Q: I lake It you are rererrlng to the clause tbat strlctly limits the deployment of AB~ts. or defensive mlssUes. . A: That's right . Q: If equaUty Is oot an lmpor1ant measuring rod, then what are the min~ mal force levels we need to protect our security? A: Back In November 1971 the United Stales had 4,700 nuclear y,•eapons and the Soviets had 2.100. Now \\'C have 7.100 nuclear weapons. That's a 50 per cent in· crease in 18 months. Q: ThJs 11 totally independent or any production on lhe part of lbe RuJ1slan19? A: Ye.3 . The Russians bad ·2,100 nuclcar "'"eapons in 1971. Today tht:!y have 2,300. These arc all figures provided by the Secretary of Defense. Q: AllboaP we h•vt the lead In the number of naclear we•pons, tbe Russians b1ve a 1vputorlty whea tl comes to ICBA1s. Why are total ouclt:ar \.\·eapons a more Important Index lhrut the number of ICBl\11? 1 A: All this means is that the Soviets depend largely on land-based miss iles v.·hile \.\'e place our primary emphasis on ( WHERE THEY STAND J missile-carrying nuclear submarines. For example, our fleet of 20 Poseidon sub- marines carries l 6 0 independently targeted nuclear weapons which ~ destroy 160 Soviet cities. Q: Tbat'1 more I.bu 3,900 Soviet cities ~·ith the ZO sub&. A: And there are only 220 Soviet cities with over 100,000 population. One thou.sand nuclear weaJ>OllS, one.aeventh of what we have today, would be more than enough to do the job. This Is especially true because, as Heozy Kia- singer said after the SALT ~l, "they'll 'all get a free ride." 11iere won't be any ABMs to shoot them dowri. Q: But Isn't tbe rtalOll we ban 10 many nuclear weapons becaaae a certala percentage of tbem won't reacb u.etr targets in a nuclear ucbuge? A: This is an old Idea dating from the time when bombers were used to penetrate an enemy's defemes. ID thole days you had to remember lhat bombers could be shot down with guns, wttb missiles or interceptor aircraft. The limitation or ABMs meana this Is no longer the case. Americans are stlll lumg up on this outmoded mental attitude. Q: Since the SALT agnemeat made It easier for missiles to reach thelr tar&ttl, shouldn't tbJs have led to a voluntary reduction Jn offensive weapon•? A: That's what we all expected to hip- pen. Instead the military has unvelled a host of new programs this year. The Air Force wants $500 million for a new B-1 bomber which eventually wlll cost $11 billion; the Navy wants a new Tr:ldcnt submarine at a cost of $1.3 billion as part of a whole new program which will even- tually COii 118 billion. And the3e pro- grams are just the Up of the lceberi- Q: What accomis for this momeatam toward enUrely new weapons ustem1? A: ParUy bureaucratic inertia. The military has been planning these weapons systems for ycan:. La.rt year Sen. Symington asked Adm. 7.umwalt, cbief of naval operations, "Admiral, when did you start planning the Trident submarine?" Adm. Zumwalt smiled and said: "We started platming it the day the United Slates Senate approved the Polaris sub- marine." The Decline of a Giant ft.lark Twain: God'• Fool. Dy Jfamlln Hlll . Harper & Row. 308 Pages. 110. The twilight of any mortnl, particularly it he or she Is a genius, can be both in- formative nnd dlatreulng, The story or the last 10 yeare of Mark Twain's life, which ltamlln Hill dem:rlbes In this lat est study based on considerable private material hitherto lltUe used, is more than typical. ALTllOUGD he continued almost to the end as a very succesatul writer, Twain wa1 past hi. !'TeaUve peak. Tbt._• or the chronicler of mld-19th-<dlhirj> lrim- Uer life in America's superb inrioctoce -when he pai;adcd as a buffoon It was as n grand buffoon -was slipping off. Revealed Ill last was the true COWl· ttinance of one of our most'• c:Omplex literary art.iata, SaMueJ L.1 Clemens himself: •till brilliant but d~ilnlng in health of body and mind, yet determined to the end to fulfill hi. rtputation •• n predlslous writer. (THE BOOKMAN J For years personal tragedy bad stalked the man: his only son had died ln In· fancy; hls eldest daughter, Susan, also had died young. Mn. Clemens, the be- loved Livy, wbo despite her Victorian censorship of her husband's writing really had helpecf guide blm, died before him. Their youngest daughter, Jean, drowned during an cpllepllc seizure. A CHIEF source of Hlll'• account l! tbe journal of Clemens' secretary,J11bel Lyon, ndorlng and adored unUl she Joined the company of associates h e neurotlcall} conceived as enemica. Hill ts hardly an Inspired writer. But ho bu done a useful study of lhe decline · of a giant. Dear Gloomy Gus While Watergate conspirators Mc- Cord and Magruder have been barred by court order from the lecture circuit, crime seems to be paying foe their colleague E. How· ard Ht.ml R,e.prints' of his spy nov· els, with big by-lines, are selling like hotcakes in the supermarkets. A.V. Free Transit Exp~riments Cost Plenty There's llttle to be said for driving a c.ar into the city. Parking is scarce and expensive, traffic congestion is nerve.- wracking and air pollution caused by automobile fumes is becoming in· aufferable. Yet Americans continue to re~ Jy on private transportation. The Urban Mus Transit Administration estimates that 86 per cent of the nation's com· muters go to work in automobiles while only 10 percent rely on buses and 4 per· cent use subway trains. DRIVERS complain that p u b l i c transportation is slow, unreliable, in· convenient and costly. A number of cities have moved to counter these criticisms by setting up express bus lanes during EDITORIAL RESEARCH rush hours, raising parking rates to a level that would discourage motorists, reducing transit fares , and allowing senior clUr.ena and thoce traveling at cet· lain hours to ride free of charge. Some urban planners are demanding more -· they want cities to offer frte public transportation to all. This month, Seattle will become the first major American city to offer free mass transit. During the one-year cx- perimenl, riders will be able to board buses In the outer city and the suburbs. Commerce, Calif., provides the nation's only long·term free transit experiment. Advocates of the no-cost service argue that Commerce's experience, where only about 7 percent of all residents use the buses , is not applicable to large cities. When Rome tried free transit in 1'12, they argue, ridership ·j n c re as c d enormously. ROME discontinued' lbe service, which had cost the deh~ridden city $2.5 million, aftu two months. Seattle's very limited experiment wtll cost 164,000 while Com- merce, with a population of only 11 ,000 pays 1130,000 a year for Its free buses. 1( ls queitionable whether taxpayers in large clUts, particularly those who do not UIC public tranaportatlon. will bo willing to subsldlte a no-fare plan. If the federal government pays the bill, the ~t of free transit, cOupled with improvementa need· ed to attract motorists, could ron to •10 billion a year. UntlFtht public decld., that tho bentfita are worth tho price, free mass transit ia likely to remafn lhe ezccpUon rather than the rule. H School Report Watered Dowta j ! FTC Yields to Pressure WASHINGTON -The Federal Trade Commission produced a dramatic booklet warning against unscrupulous practices by vocational schools, then !Jecretly dee~ slxed almost 100,000 of the books when the schools proteated. This buckling to the Industry he is sup. posed to regulate was one of the first tests for FTC Chainnan Lewis Engman, who was recently appointed by President Nix· on to protect consumers from voracioW!l business practices. The 24-page booklet had been painstak- ingly put together by FTC staffers and was handsomely printed for distribution to the public. But lbe vocatiooal ochool industry got wind of it and beefed mlgbti· Jy to the FTC. WHEN THEY complained, Engman called a special meeting of the com- missioners, who w e re on vacation. Not all showed up. Those present qWcldy voted to put up the mooey far a revised booklet, which looks identical but ac- tually leaves out some of the most sting· ing criticism of the profit<naldng schools. Although most of t he original 93,000- copy edition Is now moldering in the FTC's basement, we managed to obtain ooe copy and found it is substantially stronger than the second version, which is being released to the public with the blessing of Engman and the vocational schools. FOR INSTANCE, In warning about phony degrees granted by some scllools, the original pamphlet atated: ·~Thie value of a degree or dipklina gran'ted by a junJor College, coUege or Wllversily is reliable. The worth of a degree or dtpl1;>1na given by • private, profit·mak·· ing vocational school is sometimes more questionable." That passage ls deleted in the second booklet and its absence Is noteworthy. Many states, following a model program inatltuted by North Carolina, have estabUahed community colleges and vocational schools that are often superior to, and competing for the same students as commercial schooll. Another caveat ezpurgated by tbe FTC says, "Vocational schools often have names which are very similar in sound or spelling to famous organiza tions Ju$t so you may confuse the two." The com-- plaint is nonetheless valid : Finns like IBM are continually plagued by educa· lion hucksters tradlng on their easily recognized initials. TIIE ORIGINAL text contains this warning: "If a course has a very low drop-out rate. it may be too easy and the school may be a 'diploma mill.' Some courses are designed to be euy so students will complete them and schools '#ill get all the money." This was deleted entirely from the revised brochure. FTC Commissioner Paul Rand Dixon,· who was not at the rush meeting on the booklet, said, "l've got kind of a 90ft spot in my heart for correspondence achools. Not everyone has a rich daddy (but) some or these places are jtl!t out and out diploma mills." Joan Z. Bern!tein, acting director ot FT,C's Bureau of Consumer ProtecUoo, said the commission had "planned a aec- ond edition anyway.'' She insisted there. were no pressures to alter the text, but} admitted there w e re objections from representatives of the vocational ldmb. An Obsession with Records \\!ASHINGTON -When v.·e're not thinking about how to flnd food and then bow to pay for it, this year's preoccu· pation seems to be the exhumation of bodies, political and literal. The most spectacular dig laid bare by the criminal archeologists ls still, of co u rse , Watergate. However, the Agnew find ii the equivalent of the discovery of the un· touched tomb of a late dynasty pharaoh, and then there are minor but promlslng excavations like the unearthing of a fortune in unused Air Force inventory at Charleston, s.c. ln addition to the "Waterhole Scan· dal," as the enlisted men on the base re-. fer to it, deep sea divers off the coast ol Maasachuletta were attempting to recover treasure from the long inmk· en trans· Atlantic llner, Andrea Dorla. A party of diggers from the Houston police department must be given credit for the mOAt horTitylng of the summer's exhumntloos, !he bodies of 'II boys, mOAt terribly murdered. ln reporting the news the media have made It a tasteless point to tell us that the Houston dig represents a new record. In due oourse, we can eJ· pect to open our Guinness Book of Records, page through to "Murders, Maas," and then on to "murders. multi· pie, non-poliUcaJ,11 where It will read .!Omethlng like, "Houston . Texas, U.S.A 1973, 21 -modem record ." ln baseball, homldde and track we divide our records into the categories of ancient and modern, perh.ips because anyone who nourished before 1900 partakes of the legendary, as though we believed that prier ctnturies were pro- pl!d by demi-gods and devils, creatures !iufficltmtly different rrom ounelvcs to make compnrison a fonn of deception. KEEPING RECORDS or athletic feats or such accomplishments as the most standardized IQ.ounce mugs of stout con- sumed In ooe hour's slt~lng Is a form of celebri{rng exceptional achievement. 'J'!hat Is one way we make feats famous, just as record-keeping supplies us with a standard to 1trive ror. but why lhen treat the bloodiest crimet In the same way? A taste for the mncabre, or perhaps an ( VON HOFFMAN ) abstruse passion for the measurement of the largest and smallest of anything. We are a bookkeeping civilization, The most marvelOWI of all our machinea, the com· puter, is primarily used for our records which are so voluminous that even when shrunk to microfilm alze they overtu the capacity of thousands of warehouses and caves. Much of our digging b explained by our love of records. The "record of the past," the records ol other peoples, other socieUes are as important as our own. We go so far as to construct records for vanished naUons whose populatioos didn't have our laste for writing down and storing their acts and statistics. Records aJso comfort us. We need an explanation for everything, but there is no usable one for w h a t happened in Houston so we ronsult our records and they tell us that such savageries have been committed before and, if that doesn't explain anything, it makes us feel better. No crime Is quite so bad if it's been conunitted. before. ~!ANY HAVE reacted to Watergate in the same mode. Politicians pull that kind of stuff all the time, ergo Watergate Isn't so bad. If they concede that Waterg ate is what lt Is -a uniquely foul series or ln- terconnocted crimes -they leave themselves open to disturbing specula· Uons. Could It be then that we, as a peo- ple, have changed for the worse, that such thlngs 11s ilouston and Watergate could have taken place for the first time ? Chrisllans, conscrvatlves and others whose philosophy teaches them 1he rcali· ly of' sln, or ot least the lnfinllely in1· perfe<:t na ture of human beings. don·t h;ave that problem. They can accept a Houston or a Watergate, not as a sign that our warp Is coming apart from our wool, but aa evil done by spocHlc In· dJviduals who must take the guilt for it. The doctrine of .Individual guilt absolves social guilt and the need to dig around for larger e:ii:planations. Most of WI &re too much the children of modem liberal c:ulture to accept evil as a con· aequcmce of our humanity, and th,rcfore be content mertly to punish It and shun it. We must explain it and thus, aa we first dug up the crlme, we try to dig up an explanation for it, if not in our record books then in our social sciences. IS WATERGATE, we ask, a sign of a detect in "the system"? Shortly we shall be asking the same questions about Hotl!ton. We did lt with Charlie Manson, whom we explained away by calling him the Hipple Killer. Maybe we'll call the Houston culprits the Hard-Hat Killers, or some other nonsense name. More likely, we'll have recourse to psychiatry. The plea or not guilty by reason of insanity probably should not be allowed in our criminal justice, but ln a society that feels guilty about guilt and yet must have some plausible e:1· planation of guilty acts, pi)'cbiatry is a most serviceable device. The head-shrinkers excavating the 11kulls of the wicked for the causes ol their crimes, however satisfying to the Imagination, is about as scientific as e:1· orcism , Others will prefer to continue digging for harder facts and better ex· planations with the attendant risk that their shovels will not unearth better knowledge -but worse crimes. OlANM COAIT DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Wetd, Pulilhh<r Tliomas Ktevil, Editor Barbara Kreiblcl't .Edilorial Pagt Editor The t-dltor1al -~ ot thco O.\ly Pilot ~ks to lnlonn and sUrnul&lt- readl'rs by prt'k'ftttna on this pqe dlVt'IV•t"OmMl'ntary• on topics Ot tn- letnf by syndicated colwnnl.sts and cartoonists, by pn:MdU. a forum 1or readtta' views and by prrlft'lllnc tblt nl!w~paptr'• opinion9 and ide&s on current topi cL The edttorll.l opinions ot thf' Dally PUot •Piar only tn <he edltorl&l column 1t the top o( 1h'9 page. Opinions: expres.d by the a.f. umnlsts and cartoonl:N and llttf!" wrltf'l'I ~ their own and no 'lfldot'M.. mcnt or 1ht!lr yja'Q by 1tle ~ Piiot -Id be 'lnl<nod. Friday, Soptember 14, 1973 .- • Cash Not His.Thing -Moretti SACRAMENTO (AP\ - Assembly Speaker Bob Mort!· U says he probably Is the least-weattliy probable ca.n+ didate for governor pe1t year, but ... money's not my thing." The Van Nuys Democrat disclosed net personal wealth totaling $39,747 to newsmen in his Capitol office Thursday. --.. \. . . ~ .. •• • CALIFORNIA ' . . . • • • • ., f -. Sexuality Text Just Not Selling SACRAMENTO (AP) -A sex edUcation textbook that triggered arguments across Ca!Komla this ,)'ear probably won1t be used after all because not enough orders for jt have been received, educa· lion officials say. duplicated edition ol the revi5- ed hook had been elhibited in 60 textbook display centers across the state for publlc eval11ation and reaction. r Friday , Stptembtf 14, 1973 DAIL V PILOT 5 Heart Trans plant Raising Legal Que ries in Murde r STANFORD (UPI) -A 52· year-old man who received a murder victim's transplanted _heart was described , i n :satisfactory condition Thurs- day. had removed the heart, kept beating by a machine, from the body of samuel Moore. 29, of O.kland, 1hot in the brain Monday. Moore's heart was flown by helicopter from Oakland to Stanford for an im· mediate tranaplant. The victim's transplanted kidney's were keeping a '2· pnd a 62--year-old woman ll1~e In San Francisco.s Pr<shyterlan Hoopltal as ~ of the unprecedented three- organ, three hospitil transplant swap. · including two-thirds of an acre p l' S k or land ill Jamaica valued at 0 ice ee •21,eoo. Only about 2,300 orders for the text '1Human Sexuality" have been received, deputy state school superintendent Ed Harper said Thursday. For severaJ months in a row last spring and summer, board members wrang]ed o v e r whether parts of the 164-page text were too expUclt for eighth graders. Board member E u g e n e R"llle of Roseville called the text a "bow·t<H'.fo.it" sex book. U,1 T".,eiol• SUSPECT IN RAPE Eddi• Bohn .. ck The unidentified man, a heart disease victim from out ot state, received the heart in a lour-hour operation Thurs· day by transplant pioneer Dr. Norman Shumway at the Stan· ford MedicaJ Center. SRUMW AY HOURS earlier . Meanwhile, in Palo Alto, at- torneys ·are girding for a lega,J battle over the defmition of death in the case of a living heart transplanted from the victim, whose brain showed oo sign of"life. TIIE TRANSPLANT opera· tions have raised legal ques· lions because Moore's kidneys and heart were remo~ before doctors disconnected the heart-lung machinery that k~pt him alive. ~ A reporter asked Moretti if ( Bl,UEFS ) money wasn't "his thing," what is -power? "You could say that -in- fluencing what goes on," he " said. "f believe I can do some good things . l want to be in a position to do those things." . e Soft Water SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego CoWlty \Valer Authority, bas voted to pipe soft water from Northern California into homes here in 1975, despite Warnings by some member agencies that filtration plants won't be ready by then. The authority. composed of 22 agencies which distribute water to the county's 1.5 mi llion residents, voted Thurs- day night to order Feather River water from the state in 1975, two years ahead of its previous schedule. e Capi tol SACRAMENTO (AP) - Alternative proposals to build a new state Capitol or rebuild the existing building were on Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk to- day. A bill by Assemblyman Willie Brown (D-San Fran- cisco), contains the two rival plans. His measure calls for construction of a brand new structure to house t h e legislature in dow n town Sacramento, un1eSs a feasibili- ty study shows it would be more practical to reconstruct the e x is t i n g 103-year~ld capitol. e Open Meets SACRAMENTO (AP) Rules for open meetings by legislative committees would be placed into state law under a bill that has gone to the governor's desk. The Assembly and the Senate both gave final ap- proval Thursday to the legisla· tion by Sen. Donald Grunsky (R·Watsonville.) e Drug La w SACRAMENTO (AP\ California would give life in prison to dope peddlers if a newly-introduced New York· type measure becomes law. The bill, by Assemblyman Raymond Gonzales ( D - Bakersfield), was introduced Thursday. Gonzales said, "New York has had a lot of positive reac- tion to it. 'The reaction is that they have scared the pushers off the street." Give the Gift that "Keeps on Giving" Back to YOU! • We don1 beftm thot """ stiould be • one-wq stttet. If you conttibut1 to us. we think we should do $0tllelhlnc In retum thll: •ill 1ive you b•ck more than • Wat'l'lll fMllllC •nd • t•x deduction. • Now, we have found 1 most rem1rkible way to nwd you for your generoslly. You still enj<IJ the ple1sur1 of helpifw J'OUf' fe!low·m1n, plus the benefits of 1 tq-drductibl1 lift. lut.,, JOU don't 1iwe up tl11 Muri 11111ncl1t $!CUritJ JOU could have enjoyed by ktePlni your rift. • As Iona IS JOU Uwe- bqlnni111 Jmmedlal1ly-we'JI PIY you 1 1enerous income out or !ht eamilllS of your c:ontrlbvtJon. Thus, it bttomes •• kwtstMent to proltct your fututt, Ind tt11 future of your flflWI)'. At lhe um1 time, you .in h smnc on future est1t1 tots and problte costs. • Whit olfl« WI)' tan )'Oii PSI JOf1f IMStment funds tnd HCUtftia to Clo so much fOC' )OU i1t to ••llY WIJS for • Joar • tiftlt7 WIRE OI CALL far Fne .. lliNiloli llHltotlt OMiptioa Tol•l 110: (7IA) 145-11111 FI .•••••• --l'hwtK.SteGllfll' H1111 M1mor/1/ H#piUI PmflY11ri111 JO II Nowpo<t Boule .. rd N ... port INch, CA 92660 'i ~,J'(l!/'f'JJ rl;";JJ EJJ ~~ §! §) i!ll c 'Stasli Pad' Fo r Heroi1i SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Police were searching !or a so-called "stash pad" where a couple arrested on narcotics violations here may have kept a fortune in heroin. Leon Cooper, 29, and bis wife Cynthia, 26, allegedly sent teenaged girls to the stash pad each morning to bring back up to $3,000 worth of heroin, police said. The Coopers allegedly used the older of their five children, ranging in age from eight months to 11 years, to sell the drug in their Potrero Hill neighborhood, officers said. 'The couple was to be ar- raigned in Municipal Court to- day on charges of possessing heroin !or sale, keeping a house where heroin is used and furnishing heroin t o minors. Charge Filed In Crowding On Steamer THE AMERICAN Book Co .• -publisher of the text, bas said ' it needs at least 25,000 orders before it will proceed with revisions specified by the California State Board of Education. The revisions were ordered to tone down sections that board members con- sidered too explici t for the eighth graders who were to use the book. Asked if there was a chance a sufficient number of orders wouki come in by an Oct. 1 deadline, Harper said, "It cer- tainly 'doesn't look like it at this stage. "The indication I got was that districts were ordering it out of curiosity, more than anything else," he added in an interview at a State Board of Education meeting. A PATCHED ·together A resolution urging Gov. Ronald Reagan to "speak out strongly" against the book was presented Wednesday at a San Francisco convention of the Federation of Republican women. EVEN TBE watered-down version "has the effeet of en- dorsing premarital in- tercourse, abortion on demand and illegal drugs," said the resolution from the Lafayette Republican Women. A rewt'itten version of the text was finally approved by the board for classrooni use in September, 1974, if extensive changes were made. But American Book said because of the costs of the revisions ordered by the board, It need· ed at least 25,000 orders to break even. Packers, Teamsters Official Indicted T rio Nabbed In Kidnap, Rape Case VALENCIA (AP ) -A 21· year-old Mason City, JO'Na, man and two Las Vegas, Nev., teenagers were .booked Thurs- day for investigation of kidnap and rape in the abduction of a 2().year-0ld Las Vegas woman and her 18-month-old nephew, authorities said. ' EDDIE ROGER Bohnsack, and the teenagers, said to be 14 and 17, were arrested in Castaic, C a 1 i r . autlierities E MOSf with GREATER AVAILABILITY! &~~l '" YEAR PAID MONTHLY ,. $SOOO CIRTlllCA 115 5% INTEREST PER VEAR + I.75% CIJRRENT BONIJS = 1.15% INTEREST PER YEAR $ 667 MONTHLY 1NTEREST 16 [~(CK SfNl ~0\J PAID MONTHLY " $25,l!Ot CllTillCAllS 6.25% INTEREST PER VEAR + 1.15%· CURRENT BONIJS :::::: I.DI% lllTEIEST PEI YUi OOMONTHLV $,.,~ INT•R•ST ~(J CHECKSlHT YOUl f11HDS AVAIUI U AN'l'TIM£1 NO l '*'-TfltM Htulll MQITI. Whtll tleld len tlta11 6 MOl'lths, prl11elpet rtd11ttd bJ Interest d1ec~1 prevl01151)' p1ld. Altlloo1b bonu• 11!•1 ""' ~ lncreued OI detfUHd on prior notice, 1lnee ·tcundlnt FllfSIOl Tlll'ift Ills Hiii '91111U• •rate'"''*"'"' ~ •CERTIFICATE FUNDS in thru 25th ANY MONTH EARN from I sl ol THAT MONTH! ~ sa~ry Ann Jaramillo and her a~ :r=nt. Funds earn ,,,~ ':.'° .. ~•r Tffm Ctr. sistei•s son Danny Landers, 0 from datt of rtctipt to ~-:,:"'a.n',~in c!'::l~ date of wittldr1wal. In· w1tt.:1r•w•I ptn•lly pro. v.·ere walking toward their car terestPAlD DUUlEILY. wtlloll. in a Las Vegas market nkls1t5utt2t"llOIE U...llOST,..S,.,t -cu110••1A 1H1U•n-~f HIGHEST RATE ANYWHERE! an PASSBOOKS plus DAILY INTERESTI $29.11 CHECK MONTHLY! on $5000 CERTIFICATES Wednesday when lhe three S01¥1tCSAVDS t.raCCIOAD:MnlYUYWITllllUWAl.llQUUTtm.,._PllD ...... m.Y .. ..._ males allegedly climbed into S'l ((i"\ O . RESOURCES over $100,000,ooo:oo SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Martin is accused of paying ~~~r:1~0~C:rr!=rt~7; {] JUs~:!~ IRESJDE'Thrift. The bitter riva1ry between the the alleged bribe. told Miss Jaramillo they Teamsters and the United wanted to go to Mexico. 2328 Harbor Blvd., COSTA MESA • 645·1000 Farm Workers ·-•ons m' the C 0 NV I C TI 0 N on the Miss Jaramillo and her sot1T11r1t11 e1ufo1t10A o•ftccs: 111""*'' ANMlftl/Bakrra11c1dJ Btnt1oiqr/h.,.r11 HtUs/thu11 vrsia /totu MtM/ -" isd . I ti f th phe I ed early'" Covln1 /Down,r/E! Cl,lon/[I centro /Eseondido /Glrdtot Grove /GltndlJt/llurilln11on h1t~/l"lllWOod/Lar1C11IU/ Salinas Valley led to the in-m emeanor VIO a ons o e ne w were re eas Lon1 ee1cn1on11rio/O•llllrd/P~en111'omorui/Re1td1/Rlverild1/S.n eernatdlno/san 01ero/5.aftt1 An.I/Santi BlrWI/ SAN PEDRO (AP ) -The Coast Guard says it has filed charges accusing the captain and chief purser of the S.S. Catalina of violating maritime regulations by carrying too many passengers Aug. 5. d. Th rsd f Taft-Hartley Act could bring a Thursday morning at a gas Slnta M1rlt1Torr1nce/Y111 Nu11/Victor'o'ill1/VIMlll/Whlttlrr 1ctment u ay o two 0.~~·~~;~;~~t;~Js~a~tto~:·~::·::·~-~·1~~:t:ho:r~it:ie~s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: vegetable packers and an maximum one year sen ence WII<ll ousted Teamsters official on and $1,000 fine on each coun~. said. fed eral conspiracy and bribery The incident occurred on a Sunday return run of the Great White Steamer, which plies the waters_ between the Los Angeles Harbor and Catalina Island. The Coast Guard set a hearing for next Thursday. . The Coast Guard said the sh.ip carried 2,1.83 persons, 43 more than authorized . The steamship company said only that problems exi st when too many passengers try to catch the return voyage from the island. charges. TIIE FEDERAL grand jury charges resulted from an in· vestigation launched in 1972 with cooperation from the Teamsters. It led to a charge against Theodore J. Gonsalves, 52, former secretary-treasurer of TeamsteJ;s Cannery Workers Union Local 748 at Modesto, wilh taking a $10,000 bribe to impede UFW organizational activities in the Salinas area in the ran of 1970. J ames Robert Martin, SO, and Thomas Hitchcock, 46, both of Salinas, are accused or conspiring with Gonsalves. A WATCH FOR ALL TIME Distinguished Rolex watches. A. D•y-date, self-winding chronometer with "Pr'esident's" bracelet. $1850. B. Oyster-date, self-winding chronometer in st•inJe,s steel with matching bracelet. $111 .50. C. Oita.just, self.winding. Handsome 14 kerat flutDd betel with steel and ' 14 k•lll 9old bind. $51 0 • Do Somelhlng B-utul ... tlllrtt A~l'I l11¥llM' -AIMMUn ••P"M ··~ll'lfflCIN •M M .. ltr C.lltrfl, ... SLAVICK'S .J ewelers Srnct "1917 II FASHION ISLAND NEWP9RT IEACH -64"·1)10 WUfl le<lllont .,, T•rr111U, Orlllfl, L• CttTltw. LI M11trt Alt11 JM Di.it •M L.H V ..... ' l " \ l . ~ $106.93. The Facts about Gas Econ I ·• Haw much comfort and tafely are you willing to g(wt up for $106.93? Hent\ the -1 *"Y Oft got ec:onccny'Uling two hypolloetical an on regular fuel Alf EXAMPlE FOR 10, Ml -GAS AT 402 PE A S~-es.lltCGmpid tar "A" Miles I. 15 m •• Cost r 10,000 m 267.73 $160. DIFfEREHC IN GA.S PER 10.000 M .-$106.93 And it could be-. lea if you driw ..,._.,...l,.fy. Of caune, a lltt1e car can gMI you benw mileage. It can aloa be_., CRMded. And what's the prim cl Klf9ly? Consider the .anlly cl men car wi1h-. tdeel, tolid pnJilidion for you and Y'"ll' family. . Costa eta' Atlas Chrysle....,Plymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard • Consider Chry.ler. It's built to lost.,. today and -· ·Chrysler offen tolid ensi.-m9 eJall-. For 8*1111ple, you get unibody c:onstruction; toniooi bar~. -.pioMctlott bumper system, fue~rank impact pn>leetion, energy ablotbing steering column and more. Riglit ,_, the fulHiad ~ My does offer speclal tavings. The -1UIM eledo""ic ignition systwrn is 'detlgn«I to reduce maint.nara ..,._ And despite Fury\ .olid Chrysler engineering, big """" and comfort ••• it Nra on rwgular fuel. Best of all, ~ the lime to buy ~ Clean Up time. ..._.....,_ a..,... Plymouth a ••• Up Scile SM w for rwal _,, .... Huntinl)ton hciCh .. Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.;, 16661 Beach Boulevard : ... , • • • • • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 257, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1973 N TEN CENTS Dads .Told How to •Beat~ Wonaen~s-Lib By J OHN ZALLER Of ""' DaJIY P'll .. Stiff A woman Thursday challenged members of the, all-male Exchange Club of Newport Beach to put Women's Lib out of business -If they dare. "You can do it." said Joan Brick, a mother of three, professional publictst, and wife of the superintendent of the Fountain VaUey School District. "You can do it by spending enough time wllh your little daughters to keep ' Gulf Coast Threatened By Cyanide 1\'EW ORLEANS (AP) -The COast Guard warned the entire Gulf Coast to. day or potentially deadly barrels of l!JOdium and potassium cyanide flo ating in the GuU of Mexico. The barrels were dumped Into the water after a ship collision Aug. 5 about 480 milet: south of Pensacola, Fla. Kowever, a clle~ical expert said the two diom!cal1 would have to be ealto to bf r1ta1 unless they released cyanide in a Pl80UI llate. And he said this would DOt occur UDleu the cbemical.1 encountered u odd coMillon la the waler. 'Ille Coast Guanl said it received word of the threat today and did not know why Mexican authorities failed to notify them urller. · · A spokesman emphasized that one or more of the barrels could be anywhere in the Gulf of Mexico. He noted that the puu.ge of Tropical Storm Delia through gull 10 days oiler the ooUision enbanoed the poalbility that the barrels couJd be wklely scattered. Coast Guard units along the entire 1,eoo.mile coast of the Gulf of Mexico from Brownsville, Tex. to Key West, Fla. were alerted. . The barrels, some containing 100 pounds of sodium cyanide and others 100 p:iunds of potassium cyanide, are blue Jrith white lettering on them warning: .. Daneerous Class 6 !.taterial." The Class 6 designation is for "highly toxle" material. tbe Coast Guard said. All per90ns along coastal areas were warned against trying to touch or recover one of the barrels If found . The Aug. S collision between the Per9eu.! and the Puebla occurred in in· temational waters. It was not known which of the two ships carried the poten· Ually deadly chemicals. A Coast Guard spokesman said a chemical antidote was being Down from EDIJlnd to Melioo and the United States one! military chemical disposal teams ....... pla<ed Oil alert. 11 A. major concern to the Olast Guard II ihat -le along the oout -swim- mers and boaters -might spot one ol the barrels, think It Is something valuable and drag it ashore," said a spokesman. Coast Weather It'll be a cool. drizzly S.turday -at least in the morning hours along the Orange Coast. Beach lqhs will be In the 60s rising to die mid·71ls Inland. INSmE TOD-'\' , The lrvfne Commllllll1f The· ac.r u off•n•o l<><al playows 1omething nftD this fltar -a tfd.lon of Orongt Countu pre· Mitres. See Inttrmiuion colum·n fn todat1'1 \Veektndtr. ~ Af Y-lfntct I MM!" Jf~l l..M. anti 12 Mlltllll hMI 11 ..... "' " Mtt!Mlf ........ f Celllwlll• J ONftlt '-" 11 (ltt,1111911 J:l•M llHltlf,_h 17•'9 ·C-4<1 It Sr1¥11 ,.,.,.,. 11 (,__. li ..SMrtl 11-lt T'":"DMlll -*'" n It.di Mlftttl ,.,,, DI-11 TtltVI~ >t e.itert1I ''" ' Ttlttll-!t-11 ~ )1-tl WHtlltr 4 ,..,_ ..... ..,,. 1, II W"'*"• frtftl 1,_lt ..... lt .,.,.. ..... • -~ ,, .... ...., ... -. them from growing up as querulous . n<1g- ging and frustrated," Mrs. Brick declared. Mrs. Brick said she was basing her ad- vice on one observation: "Most women have poor self-images, lack sell-confidence, and are generally frustrated," she said. "If they try to raise their daughters alone, their daughters will grow up to be like they are -frustrated and insecure. "Men make much better ·models for daughte1s to learn from . P..1en go out In the world and produce, they have sell· confidence, and they have an internal stabiUty that most women do not. "A good father is the most important think in a little girl's healthy develop- ment,'' Mrs. Brick maintained. The 40 members of the Exchange Club listened qUietly while Mrs. Brick spok~. and when she finished, they gave her an ovation. One member aaid privately af. terwards: "In all the years I've been coming here . J've never seen the guys give so much attention to any of their speakers.'' Through her speech, Mrs. Brick repeatedly urged the men to spend as much time as possible with their daughters. "Try taking that little kid on a business trip some lime ," she suggested. "I bet you never thought of that, but your little girl wouldJove It. • I POLICE PREPARED TEAR GAS, BUT WEREN'T ABLE TO USE IT IN CONFRONTATION Detectives Reconstruct Wednesday's Shootout at Santa An1 Heights Home Maryland Charges Successor to Agnew Files Innocent Plea BALTIMORE. Md. (AP) -Dale Anderson, the man who succeedaj vice president Spiro T. Agnew as chief ex· . ecutive of Baltimore County, pleaded in· nocent in U.S. Dist rict Court today to charges of conspiracy, extortion and bfibery. ' Anderson, one of Maryland's most powerful Democrats, was released on his own recogniwlce by Judge Joseph Young on the coodiUon that be not leave lhe oonilnental ,United Stales. ~UWJ trial date was set for Jan. 7. NOt'IDllD P. llamsey, A.ndenoa's attorney, told lhe judge~bat he wanted "a prompt FOOD GIFTS TO AGNEW REPORTED. Story, P•ge 4 the investigation, said the security measures were absolutely necessary. "By tradition and statute, grand jury proceedings are secret," Beall told newsmen. t.1eanwhile, (he question of whether the Agnew phase of the probe will be brought before the jury still is undecided. Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson has said be will detennine whether any evidence relating to the vice president is presented, and whether such evidence warrants an indictment. A spokes man ~:.chardson has not reached · a OnJy one person was koown to have gone before the jury Thursday -James Pecunes, a part·time assistant to Anderson. P11hlic Meeting Set on Zoning Newport Residents United will hold a public discussion Tue.sday on the ctty council proposal to eliminate au apart- ment density 20ning in Newport Beach. Elaine Llnhoff, chairman of the citizens group, sWd Councilmen Carl Kymla , who proposed the idea, and Paul Ryckoff would be present to explain the idea. She said Vice Mayor Howard Rogers migbt also attend the meeting. Mrs. Linboff said the presidents of all Newport Beach homeowners associations have been invited to participate. The meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the multi·purpose room of the Mariners Branch of the Newport Beach Library, ZOOS Dover Drive. Teachers Win Boost SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -The teachers association here bas voted 747· '1:1 to approve an 8.5 perci!nt salary boost ending several months' negotiations, of· ficials reported Thursday. trial in thi s matter." The hearing lasted seven minutes. County Lodges l' ote · "Or go over to her high school some day at noon and tell the principal that you want lo take your daughter to lunch. I can guarantee you, she'll be thrilled. "No woman can do this for you . They Jack the internal stability , and besides. your daughters are probably jealous of the time their mothers have with you. Don!t forget, your daughters worship you and need you. "Even I -who am a super person - can't give. my daughter what she needs," Faulty Gun Saved Trio In Newport By ARTHUR It. VI NSEL A misliring gun which clicked repeated· ly at one hostage and t"·o policemen saved them from death dW"ing a night· marish kidnap confrontation in a Sa'nta Ana Heights home Wednesday night, it was disclosed today. Details of the siege y,•hich left ty,·o per· sons wounded -apparently by police bullets -were given toduy in a noon press conference by Newport Beach pOlice. ... rlool'.l!ltlng bullet.II!.-P'!inl hil' ~ light !witch plunging the hllUse inlO dark- ness as the abductor tried to fire at law· z:qen. The suspect in the kidnap hostage case laced Wrajgnment Jate today. Hil true idenUty is unknown to autborltles. He bu been ~ ldeolllied as Vic- tor Grover Heidlage, 26, and Roland Gray. He wu believed to be an unenr ployed San Diego resident but Newport investigators detennined he has been living with a couple at 753 Main St., Hun· tlngton Beach, since July. Male hostage Marco deSilva, 2Q, told poliee from bis hospital bed that the kidnaper had clicked bis .375 magnum pistol directly al him. It !ailed to lire. Investigators discklsed that DeSilva himseU daringly Initiated the oonfronta- tion by convincing his captor that be was a helioopter pilot and could fiy hint out of the trap to safety. ~. "The suspect told DeSUva In the bath- room that if be was lying he would kill him on the spot," explained detective Sgt. Keoneth Thompsoo . "He had made the statement several times that he was going to kill them." Detective Capt. Don Oyaas emphasized th e lnforination released today is based on reconstruction or th"! c.;me through inlerviey,·ing DeSilva and officers who were at the scene and not en interroga· lion of the suspect. "According to DeSilva, we knew that once they were outside the suspect wcruld see that there was no helicopter," ex· plained Capt. Oyaas. Outside, police cars barricaded every possible escape route while the police helicopter circled overhead. Officers outside cried out that the chopper was there to assist in hi! escape. "DeSllva knew he had to make his move," Capt. Oyaas continued. "He grabbed the suspect 's weapon and pulled ft away from the temple of Denine Baeseman of Pasadena, the female 00$. (See SHOOTING, Pqe %) Agnew is under investigation by federal prosecutors on similar charges - all involving allegations of illegal payoffs by architects and engineers for non·bid contracts awarded to them . But no 4 · Elks Oppose Color Bar evidence Involving the vice president has By WIUJA!t1 SCHREIBER gone berore a special grand jury probing ot "'-o.11y '"'"' stat1 pollUcal corrupUon In Maryland. Officials of four Orange County lodges The 56-year-<>ld Anderson. In a ilk'ount Indictment returned Aug. 23, was ae--of the Benevolent and Protective Order cuaed ol extorting '46,420 from elgbt ol Elks said today they have voted to do flrms dolng buslneu with the county. He away with lhe "whites only" restriction has denounced the charges as a "frame--that has been in efrect nationally for 105 upu ... ....i ............... .. fW\I .,.-., yeara. Agnew aloo baa denied all charges ol Spokesmen at lour otber oounty Elks' wrongdoing. , lodges contacted today by the Dally Pilot Anderson Is the only person indicted so refused to comment on lheJr votes, whlch far ln the Investigation, but courthouse will hclp determine lbe n at I on a 1 sources aald others would be named. membership policy of the charltalllc The grand Jury met for about three organizations. hours Thur114aY. seale_d o[( lnim public The more than 2,:00 lodges and 1.5 mil· contact by unprecedented s e c u r I t y lion Elks in the United States must vote re!trlctlona. . _ _ _ _?!tether or:.,_ not they support an amend» The corridor leading to its fi(tll noor mcnrpassei:t tiy lie naffonal-convention room ln the courthouse was guarded by in July that would 1trlkethe word "white" Cederal marshals who blocked efforts of from the orgnniulk>n'a appllc&llon forms . reporters to 1ee who was coming and Since the Jodae orga.ru,.oo, ill COD- golnjJ. 1Ututlon bu ,..u;ct~ mOmtimhip. to. U.S. Allomey G<IOt'lle BeaU, Who head• "wblto American clUun•."" • • -- Recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings have permitted coons to yank liquor licenses from discriminatory private clubl unless the rut ... are changed -an actioo termed a "death threat" by one Elks spok .. man. The Santa Ana Lodie 1t 21% Ella Lane, largest In the cowtty with 3,500 members. voted overwbelmlngJy to do away with the discriminatory wording, accordtns to lodge manager Oliver Clark. The membership of HWltington Beach Lodge 244f, at 104JJ Talbert Ave., Foun- tain Valley, abo voted to strike the rule. Exnlled Ruler Larry ScbJey said today his lodie. voted Sept. 4 to ratify lhe amendment, "deleting the word white -from 1nembetshlp qualifications.'' Schley strened the lact that his lodge'• decl!lon 11 only one vote. 'Ille naUonal convenlion. however, voted to kill the qualification by a s to 1 margin. Two other chapter•. bolb ol which ha•• members from the Orange Coast area, also voted to rescind the qualification. Spokesmen for Garden Grove Lodge 1952 and the Westminster Lodge said to- day their membenhlp allO voted by wide margins to do away wtth the rule. Jt was a different story with several othtr county lodges contacted today. Art Kroening, exalted ruler of the Ncwpon Harbor Lodge 1767 In Newport Beach, said bis only comment on the vote 1$, "no comment." Exalted Ruler Jolin McDowell of the nOOgllng, 400-me.mber Mission Viejo Elks Club said he won't say how hlS chapter voted until the national results are known. 1.odge Secretary W. E. Pennington of the Anaheim Elks said he also has "no comment" about his chapter's vote on the rule. 81 did a opokeaman for the lodge ln Buena Park. The 1tatemeots by 01'8ngc County (Set ELKS, Pli• II l\lrs. Bri ck quipped. "Women just don·t have it." l\1rs. Brick continued : ''How many of you. have wives who expect you to make them happy, so you give them children , or give them a silver Rolls Royce, and they're ·still not happy ? "The reason they're not satisfied Is that happiness is an internal thing that nobody can give you. "You've got lo grow up with it. You 've (See EXCHANGE, Page Z) ·' NEWPOR KIDNAP SUSPICT Holdl•ge Or Gr•y? Coun.ty St.ation Protest Pla1is Ru1t Out of Gas By RUDI NIEDZIEU>KI Of IM o.llr ltlltt SI_., A movement among Orange County service station dealers to protest "un· ' fair" Phase IV price controls witb an organized shutdown has run out of gas. Dealer plans to lock up their pwnps for a three-day period beginning Monday conked out Thursday riigbt when leaders of a gasoline retailers association c::on. vinced them that they would only be hurting themselves and "the guy who ha! supported·you all these years." Instead, they decided to wait for the outcome of a lawsuit now pending before a federal court. The suit alleges that service station owners are being treated unrairly because they hav e to absorb price increases passed on by the oil com· panies under Phase IV. Alter the sujt is heard in early December, "there is no way we will not be out from Wlder lhose ridicuJous price controls," John Devine, president of the International Service Station Dealers Association (J~DA) predicted en- thusiastically. Independent dealers across the nation are fuming over the PM.se N controls because their retail prices are.frozen, but the wholesale or tankwag911 prices or the oil companies are not. Several of the ma· jor oil companies have increased their tankwagon r.rices as much as one or two cents a gal on, which. in the opinion of many dealers, drives their profits so low that lhey may go out of business. Scattered closings of service stations began this week in several parts of the country, including San Diego where aboul 25 percent of the statiom·were reported closed Thursday. Orange County's moderate approach was underscored by fear of potential antl·trust action, alX'Of'ding to Devine, who warned the dealers that they could be ~·open 10 charges of restraint of trade and conspiracy to disrupt business.'' 'lbe only suggestion of -,. shutdown was made by Costa Mesa Standard dealer Bill Canning who grabbed the microphone {Set GASOIJNE, Pase I) BANDITS MAKE UNWANTED HAUL ROME {UPI\ -Four bandit• held up two bank clerks at IW'l:PGiot 'l'hUnday and took the bag• they were loading ol1 an armored car, police said. Tho bags cont•ined bad checks .. 4 contested promluory notes. / ~ ..... Z DAILY PILOT H Slwrtages 'No Threat ·I To Edison' By TERRY COVILLE Of lfl1I DtllJ' 1"11.t St1tf A threatened shortage of low sulphur fuel will oot affect the proposed ex- J)3Jasioo of the Huntington Beach power plant, Southern California Edison of· fiC'fals said today. 'aul Richardson, district manager for Edison, said his firm has a 20-year com- mllment for a low sulphur distillate fuel froin local suppliers starting in 1978. "'The low sulphur shortage will have no effect on our proposed rombined cycle units assuming our firm comntitrnents with local suppliers hold up," he said. A Jack of low sulphur fuel -required by state law because it creates less air pollution -could, however, affect the ope;r.8.tion of Jhe current steam power plant in Huntington ~ach whlch is not included in the 20-year fuel contract for the expanded portion of the plant. ~ steam geserating station uses a mixture of imported very low sulphur fuel and California crude oil, Richardson exj>lalned. The mixture meets the state requirement because it does oot exceed half of one percent of sulphur content. A letter sent to major Edison customrs details the fuel shortage problem, and plans to meet it. Jack Horton, chairman of the board for Edison, warns customers that they still face a crisis in the potential shortage or .electricity because of the Jack of plants, 'but adds, "Now, however, we are also ,"faced with a new problem - a shortage ~in the availability of low sulphur fuel oil :-which could impair our ability to meet ~the anticipated demand for electricity as !early as next year." • Horton says Edison is appealing to the ~te and federal government for some • type of allocation system to give the -&vailable Jow sulphur fuel to power plants. He also says that to~oid power ',failures Edison may also temporary variances "in air quality re lations to fpemllt the use of any aVaiJable con- iventlooal fuel oil." Richardson repeated that the fuel shortage would not cause Edison lo seek rl any variance in air quality standards for tits proposed combined cycle units. He admitted, however, that a variance : could be requested for the existing ~team plant, which will sun operate even 1f the •$310 million expansion project is ap- proved. · "A variance will be the absolute, Jast ,resort/' Richardson emphasized. "Only if • we-are faced with blackouts. And any :variance would. have to be approved by ! the Orange County Air Pollution ControJ ~District." : Edison officials will go before the Hun· ·tin@'ton Beach City Council Oct. 1 to seek :approval for expansion of the local pov.·er planL If the council approves, Edisop must still obtain permits from several other .agencies including the coastal co~· servation commission and the Public Ut.Hities C.Ommission. i.ast week, the city planning com· mission deadlocked 3 to 3 over the Edison issue, then switched the vote to 6 to O against approval as a method to move : the item before the City Council. FromPqe I ·ELKS • • • '.Judges follows reports from th~ San Frlncisco Bay Area and lodges m the ·Sail Diego area that have voted on the ban. The 1,200-member San Rafael . lodge voied 3 to t to drop the ban as did the 2 800 member San Mateo lodge. 'Spokesmen for the 20 Bay Area lodges said the vote appears to be going about 2 to l in favor of dropping the con· tr0versial requirement that has kept out minority members. . Pne lodge in Southern Califorrua, the Oc;eanside branch, has voted in favor of C011tinuing the ban while two others -tbOse in Encinitas and San Diego -voted t.o:drop the rule. l'be votes are expected to be tallied by t .. national headquarters or the Elks in Cllicago next mcmth. ! . ! • • OIANGol COAST M DAILY PILOT • "'-.Or•nee Co•sl OA!l y PILOT, with Wflith : Iii c«NIMll tti. N-..Prau. 11 ~bllllflell &V • tr11> Or"'lt Co.ti! Pllll!l0Mt19 C~nv. SIP• ~ nte ..i1t• ''' pVD!l1'*1, MondlV tll""'lfl : ,.,..,., .... CO.II M•M. 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Cl, ........... .... ·l·y· .. -'C : -. ··~-. ' ·-· . .. ... ~·· . . . . -I --- Dl llY l"llol Slllf l"htle 'WOMEN DON 'T HAVE IT' Wife and Mother Brick From Pagel EXCHANGE. • • got to develop it as a child. "So if you v.1ant your daughters to gro\Y up with internal stability, you've got to give it to them. You·ve got to spend time talking to them and listening to them. "When they're young. it can be boring. When they're older, it can be annoying. "But you're all your kid has got." Mrs. Brick ended her talk thusly: "If you men don't care :.bout your daughters, maybe 1 can impress you by putting it this way. "Your sons are some day going to have to live with these women. And if they're going to have decent women to live with, you're going to have to raise them. "This is your chaoce to put Women's Liberation right out of business, if you'll just take the time with your daughters that they need." Valley Mayor Wins Tra1isit Board Election Mayor Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley was selected to a seat on the Orange County Transit Distric~ board Thursday night in a close vote by the Cities Selec. tion Committee of the County League of Cities. Hollinden won out Over La Habra councilwoman Robin Young by 13 votes to 12. It took three ballots to make the . selection. The Fountain Valley mayor will take the seat vacated by Derek McWhinney of Westminster. Two other appointive posts were filled by committee votes. Robert Nevil, a La lfabra councilman, was named to the Local Agency Formation Commiss.ion ..-'and Mayor Donald Mclnnis of Newport Beach was named as alternate. Nevil has held the alternate's post on the commission since Ap'ril im. The seat was r~entlY vacated by Tustin's Cllftcn Miller. Both Nevil and Mcinnis were elected by big votes on the first 1:5.allot. Cypress Councilman Robert Harvey was elected president of the League of Cities by a 13 to 11 vote over Fountain Valley Councilman George Scott . In a contest for vice president of the league, Orange Mayor Jess Perez was elect~ by a 13 t.o 12 vote over Tustin Mayor Donald Saltere!Li. Placentia City Councilman Robert Fin~ nell retires after two years as president. Fullerton rouncilman Duane Winters was elected to a fourth term as state director with no opposition. A discussion on the proposed Chino Hills airport was postponed until next month 's league meeting. Reagan Against Hike SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan said Thursday the 10 percent tax increase President Nixon reportedly may ask of Congress would give the govem- ment more spending mooey, but won't cure inflation. "The great problem in just raising taxes to reduce purchasing pov.·er and inflation is that Congress doesn't look at it that way," he said here. Irvine Eyes Added· Land ' . For Industry There will be an add!tlonal 121 acres of industrially zoned property in the Irvine Industrial Complex jf Irvine city coun- cilmen approve an 11th revisioo of the zone plan as recommended Thursday by city planning commissioners. The extra acreage is located northea st of Barranca Road and Jamboree Boulevard adjacent to the Marine C.Orps Air Station, Santa Ana . The addition brings to 3,000 the number of acres of industrial property within the city. Other changes made in the 11th revision include provision for develop- ment of a seven-acre, "farmers' market" commercial area at the intersection of MacArthur Boulevard and Main Street. The area formerly was zoned for medium industry. Commissioners already have seen a precise development plan for the seve~ acre commercial venture, _Chairman Harry Shuptrine·said today. It will con· fa in shops and restaurants much like those at the Farmers• Market in Los Angeles, he observed. Presently, development in the IIC is governed by the Ninth Revised DeveloR- ment Plan approved by the county prior to incorporation. A 10th revision which took more than a year to complete, has yet to receive final approval of the City Council. The planning staff, Shuptrine said, will now take the provisions of the loth revision and blend them with the substance of the 11 the revised and bring for hearing on Oct. 4 a 12th revised version of the industrial zone plan. "We're essentially . skipping the 10th revised,'' Shuptrine said. That zoning package never was ·enacted as law, even though it was the city's first major in· nueoce on the rules governing industrial development. The 1oth revision was undertaken to sort out the commercial areas near Orange Coonty Airport and equalize the rules governing land owned by the Irvine Company to rules affecting Dougla&- Crow, Irvine. Douglas-crow is expecting to develop a SO.acre parcel at MacArthur Boulevard and Campus Drive. Offices and hotels are planned for the site ·originally purchased for aerospace research by the parent McDonneQ-Douglas Corporation of St. Loois. F.....tPflfle I GASOLINE ... from the speaker and said, "I dare all you guys to shut down for thr~ days." Canning angrily left the meeting when his call for a saJes boycott failed to rouse the 300 dealers who attended the strategy session. Most appeared to go along with the recommendation of Mission Viejo dealer William H. Bay and County Supervisor Ralph Clark to use their political power and to convince the registered voters driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, himself an ARCO dealer and former ISSDA president, urged the angered dealers to remain united, be gentlemen, and to "just hang tight, because I think we're going to whip it." The fourth district s u p e r v i s or , however, lashed out at the architects of the Phase IV gas price control plan which allows dealers a maximum seven cents gross profit per gallon. "These idiots in Washington have no idea what the problem is," he said. °'They don't know that our people would be tickled pink with a seven cents net." Clark added that he thought the Cost of Living C.Ouncil needs to understand that anytime an oil company raises the tankwagon price by one or two cents a gallon , the dealer's profit takes a dive because he must absorb the increase. "They're asking us to operate in the post-World War fl days of profit," he charged. Bay to Watergate Sunday Featu1·es Letters On Heari11gs, Ecology Here's a rundown of stories appearing in lhis week's Sunday Daily Pilot : UPPER BAY - A mul~tiplicity or government agencies is working to preserve the ecological vitality of Upper Newport Bay and most officials are op- timistic that results or their work will soon become evident. The main problem ~Y have is coordinating all their c.f .. (Sunday's Best J forts . Staff writer John Zall er reports in a YOU section feature. ,AR'LE'.011 TABLE -High food prices not onJy are keeping some meals off din- ner .tables, tbe)' al8o are keeping art oU aalloty willls. For a profile of a Costa Mesi artist · wOO works with organic D111uiol1 rnd Ibis week's Sunday lftlecial by JICqlldlne Combs Land. .. • TALENT SCOUT -JeaMe Haliburton watches for potential "Stars" or stage and screen Jn sessions every Saturday in a Newport Beach ballet school. Mrs. Haliburton, veteran agent and former ac-- tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo Olson in a women's page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mall response, the Watergate hearings may be the most closely· listened-to series on televisJon. From hate mail to near love letters. It pours In nt rate that is too high to keep track of. For samples, see the SUnday editorial seCtlon . AMERICANS IN DEBT -The average citizen'• Ideas on_borrowlna Ml\Y oot bt: ~s Jlberal as is assumed. A University of Michigan study shows middl .. lncome ramille1 bonowed at an average of 12 percent of their yearly Income. and, ~ don 't want to borrow any more. Thia feat~ appean In the YOU aectlon. \_ , DlllV f'Jlol Sl1lf f'lloll BURN VICTIM JACK BOLING AND DAUGHTER, LISA To Sava His Daughter, He Did the Natural Thing •uandful of Hell!} Father Bur1ied But Saves Girl, 7 ' One day not long ago, Jack Boling radiator centered between the driver and Cate1· Role By.Smlo1·s Under Fire WASffiNGTON (UPI) -Sen. William Proxmire said today Navy stewards art. catering food and serving drinlc; a t private parties while assigned to the White House to provide personal services for President Nixon. The Wisconsin Democrat asked the Generp.l Accounting Office to investigate the legality of the Navy's assignment of 53 stewards to the President and two to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. According to information provided ProDnire's office, a civilian employe or the White House directs the stewards lo work weekends and nights at parties in private homes and the Executive Office Building at the request of the presiden· tial staff. Proxmire's office has been told the catering services are in addition to the stewards' normal duties and that they are seldom paid extra compensation for their bartender and c I e an · u p assignments. But White House spokesman Gerald . Warren said tbe stewards do from time to time volunteer services to individuals ror private pa rties, but that they are al- ways paid for their work. In addition, food for the parties is p~ vided at cut·rate commissary prices. Ho\vever, the government is reimbursed for the food . Proxmire said he intends to introduce legislation to prohibit ~ assignment of stewards to the personal use of the Presi· dent and vice president. He asked the GAO, congressional watchdog on _ government spending, to detennine the· Stewards' activities "and whether they work in San Clemente, Key Biscayne or other presidential retreats." grabbed a handful of Hell. passenger seats. From Page 1 The former U.S. Marine who served in The van always overheated but the World War II and the Korean conflict temperature gauge -perhaps affected didn't think much of it, but a friend was by a faulty thermostat -failt'd to show SHOOTING ... deeply impressed. searing steam pressure already built up. tage." He told Mrs. Beverly Boling. of 3247 Boling, who moonlights as an ac· One unidentified patrolman crouched New York Ave .. Costa Mesa, the other countant. twisted the radiator cap to behind an overstuffed chair took aim h k ·1 bef h d' h and tn'ed to shoot the gunman in the head day that what her husband did seemed c ec t ore ea mg ome. 1 A led as his nistol. was jerked from the temp e almost heroic. geyser erup · r· 1 •-· He clamped his hand -luckily he had of the 17-year-Old gir uv:HOge. Jack Boling would say that what any \Vom a glove for the trash-moving _ He.missed by inches. man might do doesn't necessarily make down on the scalding spray and ordered By this time, a pair of officers hiding I lO feet away sprang into the open, their him a celebrity. his little girl out, thfough c enched teeth ed d I. own guns drawn. '.'My husband really only sav our an 1ps. DeSilva and the two lawmen say the own daughter," explains .Mrs. Boling, Lisa wrestled with the difficult door kidnaper clicked bis pistol as though try. who for two and half weeks bas .driven handle, while her Dad covered the spew-ing to fire the weapon, but it did not him daily to Orange County Medical ing radiator in excruciating pain unable scha Center, where be is an outpatient in the to .bait tp.e scalding spray that pl~yed di "The rg~n waS pOinted at me. I thought burn center. oveih.is arm, stomach and thighs. he was going to shoot me," said one ot "I have flinched. -.and cried ... and He Is big and burly. the officers involved inside the house. bawled ... just looking at my man," says "Lisa Was just wearing shorts anti siin· They both opened fire at tha t point. Mrs. Boling. "Wednesday, he was dab-dais and a sleeveless blouse," sayS the Inv~igetors said seven 1sbof11 were bing at the bl~ spqtf . .wJth Neene:ii;, ·: ~ t child's mother. "She cotlld have dlea:" fired wtthin ·a t'>''o to tttree 9eCOl1d period. Four days a,.erlli~'U. bifbday, \tadc:~ He made sure Lisa '>''as all right, then five. of them bracketeO in a three-foot Boling was rresh out of a job in the drove home. square at mid-body level on the wall be- personnel d~partment of McDonnell Jack Boling never got the old God· hind the suspect and victims. The sus- DouglflS Astronautics Company. On that Knows-How--Oose-We--Camc shaJtas Until pect was not hit . howeVt!r. day, he took a load of tras,h to the dump. he got home and n1et his wife. Subsequent investigation oC the sus- He took along his daughter, Lisa, 7, for .. I had to peel his clothes off.". she pect's gun disclosed that the four bullets company in their 1963 van. said~ "And 1 peeled his skin o(f with remaining in it bad been struck by the The boxy little utility t::'".:'::k:_:h::•::•__:a _ _:•h::_e::_m::_·_" ____ _o __ , ______ f __ inn_· _,g,_ham __ m_er_but_:._ha_d_oo1 __ diSl_· __ ...,_a..:' g:..ed._ . . SLEEP SOFAS ' Every Home Should Have One ~""""' \ Excellent Selection Now On Display. Al RH sonable Prices. Stop In Today. OREXEL-HERITAGE-liENR EDON-WOOOMARK-KARASl Af!I ··------- NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 W~STCI !FF OR. 642-2050 IOp111 S1111d1y 12-$:)0) LAGUNA BEACH .e • l•'\ N(')RTM CO.t.$'f HWY IOpt11 S1111d1v 12-lilQ) 494-6551 INTERIORS . TORR-ANC!-e WDKDAYS A SATURDAn t :OO lo .1110 NIDAY 'TIL t~ ·· .. .. t• . ,. 21649 HAWTHORNE ILVD. • J71-127'f I • • ' ' • • • DAD.Y PU.OT EDITORIAL PAGE Hope for the Bay ' Newport Beach gave speedy endorsement this week to a proposal to restore the vitality or Upper Newport Bay by dredging accumulated silts and using them as fill dirt on lhe Corona del Mar Freeway project. The proposal JI\Ues good sense. There now seems to be slrong support for the idea from environmentalists ramlllar with lhe Upper Bay. And a plan to do the dredg· ing in conjunction with a freeway project which requi(es thousands of tons of rm should save taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars. The biggest problem al Ibis point is time. The IJe. partment of Transportation wants to open bids on the freeway construction project in December, and it has to know quickly wh ether or not to include a requirement !or bay dredging. • The Board of Supervisors, which must next review the proposal, should keep this in mind and give the idea the prompt consideration it deserves. The proposal of· fers an excellent opportunity for the supervisors to show that they are really serious about preserving the Back Bay for future generations of Orange Countians. Communication Gap That rock concert that shook up much of the ne.igb· borhood· around Newport Harbor High School late last month still is reverberating around the halls in both the Newport-Mesa Unified School District offices and New· port Beach City Hall . New~rt Beach police are making no secret of the fact they re not .happy recipients of the more than 200 calls from residents complaining about. the event. They also are, a little more quietly, letting people know it was the school district that approved the con· cert, a privately-sponsored and operated event. School district officials confide they'd really love to forget tbe whole thing. Police, In a report to the dty administration that Nuclear 'Parity' . Called Irrelevant America has far more nuclear weapons than it could ccmceivably use to pr.otect its .1tcuti_t11. And it's build. ing mor1· at the rote of almost four a day. Thb U not the assessment of a pacifist or a 11uclear disanner. It is rail1er the view of retired Rear Adn1. Gene LaRocque wllo today head.! the respected Center for De· /true Information. He is fnter· viewed b~ editors of Tiie \Va.shtng. ton JtmiOU'y. - Q: When It comes to nuclear weapons, how Important today Is parity -or equalily -wilb lbe Ra11lans? A: Parity is a ridiculous, outmoch!d 191.h century Idea. 11 ls no longer tttevant in an age when we can destroy the SOvtet Union so many times over that you caii't even count them. And they can do the same to us. As a result of last year"s SALT agreements. "'e need less and less forces to defend the United States from attack. By signing the SALT treaty, we said in effect that the United States will make no attempt to defend itself -an almost unbelievable thing to tell 1he public - against a Soviet missile attack. And the Soviets have also agrttd not to defend themselves against a U.S. missile attack. It could be ca lled "securit y through mutual wlnerability." Q: I take It you are rererrlng to the clause tbat 1trlctly UmUs the deployment of ABMs, or defensive mlsaUes. A: That's right. Q: Jf equality h not an Important memarlng rod, then what are the mia1- m1 I forte levels we nerd to protect our security? A: Back in Nove mber 1971 the United States had 4,700 nuclear weapons and the Soviets had 2,100. Now we have· 7,100 nuclear weapons. That's a 50 per cent in- crease in 18 months. Q: Tbll Is totally independent of any prod11eUon on the part of the Russians? A: Yes. The Russians had 2,100 nuc lear weapons ln J97L Today they have 2,300. These ~ all flgures provided by the Secretary of Defense. Q: AJ!mqb WI uve the lad la the number or naclur weapom, lbe Rudin• have a AperiorJty wbea ft comtt to ICBMs. Wiry are total noclear weapo119 a more Important Index than tbe number- of ICB!\.ts? A: All this means ls that the Soviets depend lara:ely on land·based missiles whlle we place our primary emphasis on ( WHERE THEY STAND J n)issile-<:arrying nuclear submarines. For example, our fleet of 20 Poseidon sub- marines carries 1 6 0 independently targeted nuclear weapons which can destroy 160 Soviet cities. Q: 'lllal'! 8*e UllD 3,000 Soviet cllles wilb the it ...._. ' A: And there are only 220 Soviet cilies with over 100,000 population. One thousand nuclear weapons, one-seventh of what we have. .~Y, would be mm::e than enoligll ~·'«> the job.-;nus u especially ~ -beCause, • '**1 ·JOI. singer said after the SALT I~ "they'll all get 1~fniie ride." 'Jbere won't be any ABMs to 'boo! them down. Q: But Isn't tbe reUOD we liaft IO many nuclear weapons beeaue 1 certain per«ntage of tbem won't reacb tbetr tar-gels to a nuclear acbaqe? Ao This is an old Idea dallni from the time when bombers were used to penetrate an enemy'• defemet. ID tbol8 days you had to remember that bombers coold be sbot down with guns, with missiles or interceptor alrcra.ft. The limitation of ABMs means this LI no longer the case. Americans are still bun.a: up on this outmoded mental attitude. Q: Since lbe SALT 1sneinmt Wiide It easier for missiles to re11da Ulelr tirpll, shouJdn't tills have led to • votaatary reduction in offensive wupom? A: That's what we all expected to hap- pen . Instead the ntilltary bu unveiled • host cf new programs this )'tlf.. The Air Force wants $500 million for a new B-1 bomber which eventually will cost fll billion; ~ Navy wants a new Trident submarine at a COit of Sl.S blllioo as part of a .whole new ,progn.m WhJcb will e'Ve:D- tually COii •11· bUllon. And these pro- grams are JllSI the Up of the Iceberg. Q: WUt ·-for tide ......-toward entirely aew weapOe1 1ytit:ma? A: ·Partly bureaucratic inertia. The military has been plannlng these weapons systems for yean. Last year Sen. Symington asked Adm. Zumwall, 'chief of naval operatlom, "Admiral, when did you start pla nning the Trident submarine?" • Adm. Zumwalt smiled and said: "We started planning it the day the United States Senate approved the Polaris su~ marine.'' The Decline of a Giant Mark Twain : God's Fool. By Hamlin Hill. Harper & Row . 908 Pages. 110. The twilight of 1ny mortal, particularly iI he or she is a genius, can be both in- formative and dlstrwing. The story of the last 10 years of Mark Twain's 1ife, which Hamlin HUI describes In this lat,.l study l>Med on conskterable private material hitherto llttle used, is more than Jyplcal. ALTHOUGH he continued almost to the end as a very successful wriler, Twain was pa$l his crcatlve peak. The mask of lhc chronicler of mld·19lb-callury lroD- tler Ufe in America's superb Innocence -when he paraded as a buffoon It was as a grand buffoon -was allpptng off. Revealed ot las t was the true t.'Oun· tenance or one of our most complex Utcrary artists, Samuel' L. • p!emens l1imsell: atilt brUllont bul decllolag In he•lth of body and mind, yel detennlnod to the end to fulfill his reputaUoh as a prodigioua wrller. (THE BOO~) FQr ycan personal tragedy had stalked the man: his only IOll had died In In· fancy ;' hi.I eld,.t daughter, Suaan, a1lo had died .Y"Ullll· Mrs. Clemeoa, lhe be- loved Livy, who despite her Victorian censorsbtp of her h09band'1 wrttlng really had' helped plde him, died btfore him. Their younge1 t daughter, J .... drowned durlna: an epUeptJc telzure. A CIDEF .source of Hill's aceotmt II the journal of Clemens' secretary, Isabel I.yon, adoring and ador<d until she joined the company of usoclateJ h e neuroUcall) conei!lved es enemies. 1WI js bardly an Inspired wrller. But h• has done a useful, 1tudy or the decline of a giant. • Ronald C. Hood, Aulclltel Prell h11 been forwarded to school ollicials, say In the future they should be given more authority to oversee events on school properly before they take place. They suggest "better lines of communication" be opened. It's tough not to agree. While the schools would want lo retain the ril?ht to an ultimate decision, it wouldn't hurt to get aavlce from the police on any po- tentially problem-creating event on campuses. To borrow a phrase often used by educators, it should add up to a "learning experience11 for the district. New Decision·m~kers • Supt. John Nicoll welcomed employes back to the Newport-Mesa Unified School District last week with the promise that from now on they will have a greater voice in deci sion-making. SoCiety is changing, Nicoll said, and decisions are now being made increasingly close to the level on which the decisions will be put into effect. Hence, he said, everyone in the Newport-Mesa dis- trict -whether he be janitor or classroom teacher - should now have an opportunity for formal participa· tioD. in decisio n-making. These are refreshing &entiments coming from the chief of one of the biggest organizations in the Harbor Area. But putting them into ellect will be a different mat· ter. We all would like our society to be as democratic as possible, but it is often difficult for the administra· tors who hold power to be persuaded to share that pow- er. '~n~ ~t1;/lil~ Perhaps recognizing this, Nicoll says this will be "1be year of the non-administrative staff." We wish him well in his effort to translate these lofty concepts into pracUce. 'Beat it, kid! This is no penny-ante gB.Il.e we've got going here!' Dear Gloo1ny Gus While Watergate conspirators Mi;,. Cord and Magruder have been barred by cowt order from the lecture circuit, criine seems: to be paying for their colleague E. How· ard Hunt. Re-prints of his spy nov- els, with big by-lines, are selling like hotcakes in the supermarkets. A.V. Free Transit Experiments Cost Pwnty There'• little to be said for driving a car into the city. Parking is scarce and apemlve, traffic-congestion is nerve- wracifng and air pollution caused by 1Utomobile fwnes is becoming in- sufferable. Yet Americans continue to re- ly on private transportation. The Urban A-l&a Transit Administration estimates tbl.t 815 per 001t of the nation's com- muters go to work in autcmobiles while only 10 percent rely on buses and 4 per- cent use subway trains. DRIVERS complain that p u b I i c transportation is slow, unreliable, in· convenient and costly. A number of cities have moved to counter these criticisms by setting up express bus lanes during EDITORIAL RESEARCH rush hours, \raising parking rates to a level that would discourage motorists, reducing tranait fares, and allowing senior citizens and those traveling at cer- tain holll'I to ride free of charge. Some urban planners are demanding more -· they want cities to offer free public transportation to all. This mooth, SeatUe wilJ become the first major American city to offer free mass transit. During the one-year ex- periment, riders will be able to board buses in the outer city and the suburbs. Commerce, Calif., provides the nation's only long-term free transit experiment. Advocptes of the no-cost service argue that Commerce's experience, where only about 7 percent of all residents use the bUses, ts not applicable to large cities. When Rome tried free transit in 1m, they argue, ridership i n c r e a s e d enormousI1. ROME discontinued the service, which bad cosl the debt-ridden city 12.5 mUllon, alter two IDOlltbs. Seattle's very limited experil))eot will cost l64,000 while Com· men:e, with\. -lation of only 11,000, poys $130,000 a ·y .. i for its !ree buses. It 1s questionable Whether taxpayers In llrt• cltiea, portlcularly thOle )ibo do not uoe public tronsportaUon, wlU be willing to subsidize a no-fare plan. If the fcdr:ral government pays the blll, the cost of free Lranslt, coupled with lmpr.,ements need· ed to atlract motorists, --COUid tw1 to 110 billion a year. Until the puhUc dectdea that the benefila are -th the price, free mass lranoit ii likely to ,..,,,.In the e1ception rather than the rule. N ., School Report Watered Down · FTC Yields to Pressure WASHING TON -The Federal Trade Commission produced a dramaUc booklet warning against ll!l!CrUpuloua practlcea JACK by vocational schools, then secrotly deep- sixed almost 100,000 of the books when the schools protested. n'C's basement, we anaged to obtain This buckling to the Industry be is sup-ooe copy and found it is substantially posed to regu~te was oni.: of the first tests stronger than lbe d version, which !or FTC Chairman Lewis Engman, wbo is being released to tbe~c #th the was recently appcmted by President Nix· blessing of Eqman arid" ihe ~tional on to protect consumers from voracious schools business practtces. · ... The 24-page book!ef4iad "":~ak· FOR INSTANCE, In w_.inlQg about ingly pul together by FTC .._,and,, phony degrees v.ant..i ..,, ..... ~ls, was handsomely prinled for dlstrilicitlGd·. the original J>IUflPhlel~....= value to lhe pubµc. But tbe vocational school or. a cfesree or dljiliDDa by a industry got wind ol il and t ed JDl&bU· Junior oollece, college or unlversily is Iv to the FTC. rellableil-The 1 worth of a delt"' or r , diploma gfveni)y 1 priva,lt,.(li'.olll·mak· WHEN THEY compla~ !nsrmn, Ing \IOC8tional lc'hool is som~timel more called a special meeUnc: of the eo1m ; questionable." • ... missioners. who we re OQ vacation. That paaeage is deleted In the second Not all showed up. Thooe pruent quickly booklet and Ill aboence Is noteworthy. voted to put up the money for a reVised Many slates, foUowing a model program booklet, which looks Jdentical but ao-Instituted by Nortl:a Carolina;• have tually leaves out some ol the most sting· established community collfges and ing criticism of the proflwnatlng vocational 1chools that are often superior schools. to, and compeUng for the same students Although most of l h e original 93,000. as commercial ocbools. copy edition is now moldering in the Another caveat ez:purgated by qae FTC says, "Vocatio~ schools often have names which arevery similar in IOUnd or spelling to IX>Us organizations just so you may nfu~ the two." The com- plaint is non lu valid: Finns like IBM are cont plagued by educa· tion hu~ tr g on their eully r~IZed Utitials. THE ORIGINAL lex! conlainl this warning: "If a cone bas 1 my low drop.out rate, it ma: be too euy .nd the school may be a ~ploma mill.' Some courses are desigftd to be euy so students will compl+ them and lldlools wUt get all the mOM;" Thl1•WM cllleted entirely from the re\led brochure. FTC Commissionei Paul Rand Di.ion, who wai not at the ush meetlna on the booklet.,sald, "I've gt kind of o IOll apot.• in my tieart fcr cortspontierice icbools. · • Not everyone has a•rlch daddy (but) some of the se places re just out and out diploma mills." ' Joan Z. Bem~eln, ·ctlng director of FTC's Bureau of Conamer ProtecUon, said the commission hll "plaMed 11aeo- ond edition anyway." Se Wisted .there were no pressures to akr the text, bot admitted there w e re· lbjections from , representatives of the vu.tlonal sd!oolB. An Obsession with Re.cords WASHINGTON -When ,we're not thinking about how to rind food And then how to pay for it, this year's .preoccu- pation seems to be the exhumation of bodies, political and literal. The most spectacular dig laid bare by the criminal archeologists is still , or co u r • e, Watergate. However, the Agnew find l! the equivalent of the discovery (j the un- touched tomb of a late dynasty pharaoh, and then there .are minor but promiling excavations~ like the unearthing of a fortune in unused Air Force inventory at Charleston, s.c. In addltiui to the "Waterhole Scan· dal," as lbe enlisted men on the baae re- fer to it, deep sea diver• off the coast ol M.....i-t1a were aUemptina to rec ov er treasure from the long sunk- en lrans -~tlantic liner, Andrea Doria. A party of diggers from the Houston Police department must be given ttedit ror the most horrifying of the .summer's exhumations, the bodies of rr boys, most terribly murdered. In reporting the news the media have made: Jt a tasteleas point to tell us that the: Houston dig represents a new record. Ill due course, we can ex- pect to open our Guinness Book of Records. page through to "Murders, Mass," and then on to "murders. multi- ple, noo·pollUca.l,'' where it will read something like, "Houtton, Texas, U.S.A 1973, 27 -modem record." ln baseball, homicide and lrack we divide our records into the categortes or ancient and modern, perhaps because anyone who nourished before 1900 partalcea of the lecendary, •s though we believed that prior centuries wtre peo- pled by deml-aocb and devils, creatures sufficiently dllferent from ourselves to make comparison a Conn of deception. KEEPING RECORDS of athlqtic !eats or such accompUshmcnts as the most standardized' IG-ounce mugs of stout con· sumed In one hour'• sitting is a form of celebrating exceptional achievement. Thal 11 one way \Vimakefe•LS-fsrtfous, jusl as record-beplng supplies us wi th a standard to slrlve f!>r, bul why then treat the bloodJ111t crimes in the same way? A'taale f" the macabre, or perheps an ( VO~ HOFFMAN ) abltruse paulon for the measurement of the largeot and 11111allest ol anything. We are a bookkeePllig civillzatlon. The most marveloua ot all our m1chlnet, the com- puter, 11 primarily ..,.i !or our records which are so volumlnciua that even when obrunk to J!llcrolllm •lfe they overtax the capocity ol 1-pds of waroboules and .coves. Much ol -diqlng la explained by our lovo of·reconla. Tile "record of the put," the 1000l'<ll of other peoples, other sodeUes are u Important as our own. We go so far as to construct records for vanished nations whole popuJatlons didn't bave our tsste for writing down and ltming thelr acts and 1tatistics. Records also comfon us. We need an explanation for everything, but there is no usable one for w h a t happened in HOUiton so we consult our records and they tell us that such savaierles have been commltted befor e and, If that doesn't e:q>laln anything, it makes us feel better. No crime Is quite '° bad if It's been committed before. MANY HAVE reacted to Watergate In the 111me mode. Politicians pull thal kind of stuff all the time , ergo Watergate Isn 't so bad. If they concede that Watergate is what it 1s -a uniquely foul series of in- terconnected crimes -they leave themselves open to disturbing specula- tlona. Could It be then that we, •• a peo- ple, have changed for the worse, that such lh1n&s as Houston and Watergate could have taken place for the flrst time? Cbrlstlans, C011Hrv1t1ves and others whose philosophy teacbet them the reali- ty or sin, or at least the infinitely im· perfect nature of human beln&s. don't have that problem. They can acctpt a Holl!ton or a Watergate, not as a sign lhal our warp 11 comln1 apart from our woof, but u evil done by specific in· dividuals who must take the guJlt for it. The doctrine of Individual guilt absolves social guUt and lhe need to dig ai.un~ fOl'llrger fi!Slililillons. Most of us are too much the children of modern libet'al culture to accept evil as a con- sequence of ~r humanity, and therefore be content merely to punish it and· shun it. We must explain it andthus, as we . first dug up the crime, we ry to dig up an explanation for It, if not l our record books then in our social scieces. IS WATERGATE, we ask,t sign or a ' defect In "the system"? Shor1y we shall be asking t h e same queslons about Houston. We did it with Char2 Man!on. whorn we explained away by ailing him the l!ippie Killer. Maybe we! call the Houston culprits the Hard·llatK.illers, or some other nonsense name. .More likely, we'll have reourse to psycblatry. The plea of not iuUty by reason of insanity probably sbotd not be allowed in our criminal justlce,but in a society that feels gullty aboul ;ullt and yet must have some plau!tlle ex· planation of guilty acts, psychltry is a most serviceable device. The head·shrinkers excavatng the skulls of the wicked for the cuses of their crimes, however satisfyinl to the imagination, Is about as sclentlft as ex· orcism. Others will prefer to ontinue digging for harder facts and beter ex· planations with the attendant rlt that their shovels will not unearth better knowledge -but worse crimes. • OIAN•I COAST - ' DAILY PILOT J!ob<rt N. We<d, PubU.htr Thoma& Ketvil, Editor Barbara Krelbich. .Editorial Pagt Editor The «'rlitorfiU ·~ of the n.., Pilo t ';;corks to infonn and stimulQ' retdt>., by p~l('flting on this pqt divtr.e•commcntary· on roplcs cl 1'- terrst hy syndicattd col11mnts1A Ull cAttoon1-n, by providing a rorum f<r ~den' view• and by P"'Rl'ltltw ~ newspaprr'11 oplnlont and fdeu di cumnt topics. T~ cdllorial oPlnlaD ot th& Dally Pilot •PPt"ar onb' tn Ott t<lltorlal column· at the top a( ... pqe. ()pinfons expreued by the Olf umnlsts and eartoontst• .,.._..._ ~n1era a«i their own •nd ro «Idol• ment ot 'ltil'ir vt"'••• by tht ~ Piiot thou)d be infffnd. , Friday, September 14, 1973 l -.- • " ' • ' • • f' - ~ _ DAILV PILOT -~lwrtages N 'N o Threat •I -. To .Edison' By TERRY COVILLE Of #le DallY 11"11.t SI•" A threatened shortage of low sulphur ruel will not affect the proposed ex· pcim100 of the Huntington Beach power p18nt, Southern .California Edison of· fiCtals said today. 'aul Ri~hardson, district manager for E&tson, said his firm has a 20-year com· mtiment for a low sulphur distillate fuel rroio local suppliers starting in 1976. '!The low sulphur shortage will have no effect on oor proposed combined cycle wills assuming our finn commitments with loc.al suppliers hold up," he said. A lack of low sulphur fuel -required by: state law because it creates Jess air pollution -could, however, affect Ule oper&Uon of the current steam power plaDt in Huntington Beach which is not included in the 20-year fuel contract for the expanded portion of the plant. ~ steam geserating station uses a mi1ture or imPorted very low sulphur fuel and California crude oil, Richardson e:ti>lained. The mixture meets the state requirement because it does not exceed balf of one percent of sulphur content. A Jetter sent to major Edison customrs details the fuel shortage problem, and plans to meet it. Jack Horton, chairman of the board for Edison, warns customers that they still face a crisis in the potential shortage of ~electricity because of the lack of plants, but adds, "Now, however, we are also {faced with a new problem - a shortage ~in the availability of ·low sulphur fuel oil :-which could impair our ability to meet ~the anticipated demand for electricity as !early as next year." ; · Hortm says Edison is appealing to the ;:state and federal government for some ; lYP!' of allocation system to give the •vailable low sulphur fuel to power plants. · He also says that to avoid Power '.failures Edison may also seek temporary variances "in air quality regu lations to lpehnit the use of any aVailable con· 1ventlooal fuel oil." Richardson repeated that the fuel ,'shortage would not cause Edison to seek any variance in air quality standards for ;its proposed combined cycle units. He admitted, however, that a variance ·could be requested for the existing steam plant, which will still operate even if the •$310 million expansioo project is a~ proved. · "A variance will be the absolute, last ,resort," Richardson emphasized. "Only if : we-are faced with blackou1s. And any :variance would'·have to be approved by ; the Orange CoWlty Air Pollution Control !District." • Edison oCficials will go berore the Hun· :tlngton Beach City Council OCt. 1 to seek •approval (or expansion of the local power plant. If the council approves, Edisofl must ·still obtain permits from several Of.her .agencies including the coastal co~· servation commission and the Public Utilities Commission. ' Last week, the city planning com· , mission deadlocked 3 to 3 over the Edison issue, then switched the vote to 8 to O against approval as a method to move 'the item before the City Council. ' From Pagel ·ELKS • • • '1od,es follows reports from the San 'Frilncisco Bay Area and lodges in the 'Safi Diego area that have voted on the ban. The I 200.member San Rafael lodge voied 3 lo 1 to drop the ban as did the 2 800 member San Mateo lodge. 'Spokesmen fo r the 20 Bay Area lodges , said the vote appears to be going about 2 to. 1 in favor of dropping the con· trOVersial requ.irement that has kept out mlnority members. . . pne lodge in Southern Cahforrua, the ac;eanside branch, has voted in favor or c:cmtinuing the ban while t~o others -tbO&e in Encinitas and San Diego -voted io; drop the rule. ibe votes are expected to be tallied ~y U. national headquarters of the Elks in Clicago next month. • . I OIANGl COAST • r • Friday, Septtmbfr 14, 1973 Dill!' PU1I 11•1f Phot• WOMEN DON'T HAVE IT' Wife and Mother Brick From Pagel EXCHANGE. • • got to develop it as a child. "So if you want your dau ghters to grO\V up with internal stability, you've got to give it to them . You've got to spend time talking to them and listening to them . ''When they're young. it can be boring . When they're older, it can be annoying. "But you're all your kid has got." Mrs. Brick ended lier talk thusly: "If you men don't c a re <.bout your daughters, maybe I can impress you by putting it this way. "Your sons are some day going to have lo live with these women. And if they 're going to have decent women to live with, you're going to have to raise them. "This is your chance to put Women's Liberation right out of business, if you'll just take the ti me with your daughters that they need" Valley Mayor Wins Transit Board Electio11 Mayor Al Hollinden of Fountiiin Valley \Vas selected to a seat on the Orange County Transit District board Thursday night in a close vote by the Cities Se.lee· lion Committee of the County League of Cities. Hollinden won out over La Habra councilwoman Robin Young by 13 votes to 12. It took three ballots to make the selection. The FoWltain Valley mayor will take the seat vacated by Derek McWhiMey of Westminster. Two ether appointive posts were filled by committee votes. Robert Nevil, a La Habra coUDcilman, was named tc the Local Agency Fonnation Olmmission and Mayor Donald Mclnnis of Newport Beach was named as alternate. Nevil bas held the alternate's post on the commission Since April 1972. The seat was recently vacated by Tustin's Clifton Miller. Both Nevil and Mclnnis were elected by big votes on the first ballot. Cypress Councilman Robert Harvey was elected president of the League of Cities by a 13 to 11 vote over Fountain Valley Councilman George Scott In a contest for vlce president or the league, Orange Ma)'Ol" Jess Perez was elected by a 13 ~o 12 vote over Tustin Mayor Donald Salierelli. Placentia City Councilman Robert Fin-- nell retires after two years as president. Fullerton councilman Duane Winters was elected to a fourth term as state director with no opposition. A discussion on the proposed Chino Hills airport was postponed until next month's league meeting. Rea gan Against Hike SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan said Thursday the 10 percent tax increase President Nixon reportedly may ask of Congress would give the govern- ment more spending money, but won't cure inflation. "The great problem in just raising taxes to reduce purchasing power and inOation is that Congress doesn't look at it that way." he said here. ~eEyes Added Land -For Industry There wilJ be an additional 121 acres or industrially zoned property in the Irvine Industrial Comple:s: if Irvine city ~ cllmen approve an 11th revision of the zone plan as recommended Thursday by city planning commissiooers. The extra acreage is locat.ed northeast or Barranca Road and Jamboree Boulevard adjacent to the Marine Corps Air Station, Santa Ana. The addition brings to 3,000 the number of acres or industrial property within the city. Other changes made in the 11th revision include provision for develo~ ment of a seven-acre, "farmers' market" commercial area at the intersection or MacArthut Bouleva rd and Main Street. The area formerly was zoned for medium industry, Commissioners already have seen a precise development plan for the seven- acre commercial venture, Chainnan Harry Shuptrine said today. It will con· tain shops and restaurants much like those at the Fanners• Market in Los Angeles, he observed , Presently, development in the IIC is governed by the Ninth Revised DeveloR- ment Plan approved by the county prior to incorporation. A 10th revision which toot more than a year to complete, has yet to receive final approval of the City Council. The pl anning slaff, Shuptrine said, will now take the provisions of the lotb revision and blend them with the substance or the 11 the revised and bring for hearing on Oct. 4· a 12th revised version of the industrial zone plan. "We're essentially skipping the 10th revised," Shuptrine said. That zoning package never was enacted as law, even though it was tile city's first major in- nuence on the rules governing industrial development. The 10th revision was undertaken to sort out tile commercial areas near Orange County Airport and equalize the rules governing land owned by the Irvine Company to rules af(ecting Douglas. Crow, Irvine. Douglas-Crow is expectjng to develop a ~acre parcel at MacArthur Boulevard and Campus Drive. Offices and hotels are planned for the site originally purchased for aerospace research by the parent McDomeij-Douglas Corporation of St. Louis. From PGfle 1 GASOLINE ... from the speaker and said, "I dare all you guys to shut down for thr~ days." Canning angrily left the meeting when his call for a sales boycott failed to rouse the 300 dealers who attended the strategy session. Mos t appeared to go along with the recommendation ef Mission Viejo dealer William H. Bay and County Supervisor Ralph Clark to use their political poY.'er and to convince the registered voters driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, himself an ARCO dealer and former· ISSDA president, urged the angered dealers to remain united, be gentlemen, and to "just hang tight, because I think we're going to whip it." The fourt h district s u p e r v i s or • however, lashed out at the architects of the Phase IV gas price control plan which allows dealers a maximum seven cents gross profit per gallon. ''These idiots in 'Vashington have no idea what the problem Is," he said. "They don't know that our people would be tickled pink with a seven cents net." Clark added that he thought the Cost of Living Council needs to understand lhat anytime an oil company raises the tankwagon price by one or two cents a gallon, the dealer's profit takes a dive because he must absorb the increase. "They're asking us to operate in the post-World War fl days of proCit," he charged. · • 0•111' ~Jlol Sl11f PlltT• BURN VICTIM JACK BOLING AND DAUGHTER, LISA To Save His Daughter, He Did the Natural Thing •nandful of Hell!' Father Bur11ed But Saves Girl, 7, One day not long ago, Jack Boling grabbed a handful of Hell. The former U.S. Marine who serVed in World War II and the Korean conflict didn't think much of it, but a ·friend was deeply impressed. .He told Mrs. Beverly Boling, of 3247 New York Ave., Costa Mesa, the other day that what her husband did seemed almost heroic. Jack Boling would say that what any man might do doesn't necessarily make him a celebrity. "My husband really on1y saved our own daUghter," explains Mrs. Boling, who for two and half weeks has driven him daily to Orange County Medical Center, where be is an outpatient in the bum center. "I have flinched ... and cried ... and bawled ... just looking at my man," says Mrs. Boling. "Wednesday, he was dab- bing at the bl~ Sp<l'f }'jlh JQeenei:' ~ \ Four days after-lti~~th b.ii-fhday, \Jact • Boling was fresh out ot a job in the personnel department of McDonnell Dougl~S Astronautics Company. On that day' he took a load or tras,h to the dump. He took along his daughter, Lisa, 7, tor company in their 196.1 van. The boxy little utility truck has a radiator 'centered between the driver and passenger seats. The van always overheated but lhe temperature gauge -perha'ps affected by a faulty thermostat -failed to show searing steam pressure already built up. Boling, who moonJights as an ac- countant, twisted ihe radiator cap to cbeck it before heading home. A geyser erupted. He clamped his hand -luckily he bad 'vorn a glove for the trash-moving - down on the scalding spray and ordered his little girl out, Uifougb clenched teeth and lips. Lisa wrestled with the difficult door handle, while lier Dad covered the spew· ing radiator in excruciating pain unable to ,halt ttie scalding spray, that played over' his arm, stomach and thighs. He is big and burly. _ "Lisa was just wearing shorts anc'.t san. dais and a sleeveless blouse," sayS the child's mother. "She cotlld have dleif:" He made sure Lisa was all right, lhen drove home. Jack Bohng never got the old God· Knows-How-C1ose-We-came shal<es Until he got home and met his wife . "I had to peel his clothes off.". she said. "And I peeled his skin off with them." Cater Rol e By Sailo rs Under Fire WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Sen. William Proxmire said today Navy steward!!! art catering food and serving drinks al private parties while assigned to the White House to provide personal services for President Nixon. The Wisconsin OemQ.Crat asked the GenerDI Accounting Office to investigate the legality of tbe Navy's assignment <lf 53 stewards to the President and two to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. According to information provided Proxmire's orrice, a civilian employe of the White House dire(tS the stewards IG work weekends and nights at parties in private homes and the Executive Office Building at the request of the presiden- tial staff. Proxmire's office has been told the catering services are in addition to the stewards' nonnal duties and that they are seldom paid extra compensation for their bartender and c l e a n · u p assignments.1 But White Hoose spokesman Gerald Warren said the stewards do from time 10 time volunteer services to individuals tor private parties, but that they are al- ways paid fOf" their work. In addition, food ror the parties is pro- vided at cut-rate commissary prices. Ho\vever. the government is reimbursed for the food. Proxmire said he intends to introduce legislation to prohibit the assignment or stewards to the personal use of the Presi· dent and vice president. He asked the GAO, congressional watchdog on government spending, to determine the stewards' activities "and whether they work in San Clemente, Key Biscayne or other presidential retreats." From Pagel SHOOTING. • • tage." One unidentified patrolman crouched behind an overstuffed chai r took. aim and tried to shoot the gunman in the head as his pistol was jerked from the temple of the 17-year-old gitl hostage. He.missed by inches. . .. By this time. a pair of officers hiding 10 feet away sprang into the open, their own guns drawn. Desilva and tbe two lawmen say the kidnaper clicked his pistol as tbouah try· ing to fire lhe weapon, but it did not disdlarge. , · "The gun was pOinted at me. I thought he was going to shoot me." said one of the officers involved inside the house. They both opened fi re at that p:>int. Jnvestlgators said seven ·shots wert fired within a two to ttttee second period, five of them bracketed in a three-foot square at mid-body level on the wall ~ hind the suspect and victims. The sus· pect 'vas not hit. however. Subsequent investigation of the sus- pect's gun disclosed that the four bullets remaining in it had been struck by the firing hamme< but had not discbarged. SLEEP SOFAS - Every Home Sho uld H<1ve O ne ,;;;;;!!""--""-""' ~· . ;j \ DAILY PILOT ' . ! n.. .or.,.. eo." o ... IL y PILOT~ wlfll .. ~•cl• It ~lfMd fll• N""'·Prtn, I• Jlllbllllled br Bay to Watergate • 91111 Or...-toftt P11bll.iilfl9 C°""""'I'. S.PI· : "' .. ldltion. .... pUltll1Mc1, "'°""" """"" • Fr ... )', fol-CO.II M-, H9'flllllort 8ff(I\, : Hvtltll'lll* l..ef'll FOlllll•ln VA!lty, 1.19WM ~ .-c;11, lrvlf!eliMdJKaCk And Sin CltnMnte/ • s,,. J\ltlll Glpllllr-A lf"lfll not-I t ellll!IOn It ll!fllHIJMd S.turPv-•lld 5'lncr•YI· • T1lil prlnc .. I p11t11!Jllit19 l)ltnl II 11 UI Wtft : .. , It ..... , C.I• /NM, C.ll!Ornl1, "'"" Sunday F eatu1~es Letters t ltob1rt N,. w.,J ~ ~ifffll _,,,, PvblW!er On Heari11gs, Ecology f 'J•elr R. Curl1y t Vb l"f'Wkl"'I Ind G-11 MIMQtt • 11iom•1 K••vil ! llclltor n.0111 11 A. M11tphi111 t ~lfllEdllor • • L l'•tlf' Kri•t * N.wpott 8Mefl City l:dltor j • New,_ IMdl Offke l J l ll N1wporl le11l••1rd ; M•lll119 Addr•••1 r.o. ••• 111s. ,,,,, . .,...... ........ COii• M•N: U0 Wftl a 1y ittHI l.lltlll'll 8ffC~I 222 ,.,.., A"9nv. """'"""""' .. tch: 1nrs hl<ll 111o11ev•..-"" CIWMl'lllt lOJ Norn1 11 C.mlllf R .. I tti111••• (714t '4J..4JJI Here's a rundown of stories appearing in this week's Sunday Daily Pilot: UPPER BAY - A multiplicity of government agencies is working. to preserve the ecological vitali ty of Upper Newport Bay and most officials are o~ timislic that results or their work wi ll soon become evident. The main problem they have Is coordinating all their cf· ( Sunday's Best) ' a.....-.u..tt 111 Ml-1•11 forts. SUtff writer John Zaller reports In • a YOU section feature. • C.O.Vrltht, If,~ Or•lltl C0.U P\lllUllllrll l ~J. ttt ,_ ••• 111wtr= AR% fX)R TABLE -High food prices : ::'':; ~·~ ~~ .-. not only arelteepliig some meals off din· 1 .. ...._ • ....,... -· ner J:abl.es, they also are keeping art off 1 '-D'li1 ·:...=r":.:! Mesa· artlit. whO works with oi-ganlc TALENT SCOUT -JeaMe llaliburton watcbes for potential "Stars" of stage and screen in sessions every Saturday In a Newport Beach ballet school. Mra. Haliburton, veteran agent and former ac- tress. is profiled by staft writer Jo Olson in a women'a page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mail response, the Watergate hearings may be the most closely· Hstened·to series on television. From hate mall to near love letters, It pours In et rate that Is too high to keep track or. For samples, see the Sunday editorial section. AMERICANS IN DEBT ;-The average ctUzcn's ideas on borrowlrig may ngt ~ as Ul>eral asls assurliOO. A tTniverslty of Michigan study .. shows middle-income families borrowed at an average of lZ • Excellent Selection Now On Di1pl1y. At Reuon ab le Prices. Stop In Today. DR EXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-~RASlAN -1-N-T-E-R-I 0 -R S . • · WIEKDAYS A SA TURllA TS t :OO to a iJO . . FllDA T 'TIL f<OO '::_. " " • J ' . " NEWPORT BEACH e 1721 YJESTC:t IFJ DR. 642-2050 1 IOp1n $11nd1y 12·5:)01 LAGUNA BEACH e )4~ NOr.TH COAST HWY IOptn S11nil•y 12°S:JOI 494·6551 TORR,l\NCE e 23649 HAWlHOltNE ILVD. l7t-IJ79 percent of their ~early income. and most I _~~~~~:~~~:'.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:'.'.~ don't want to ho ·any more. This __ _ feature appears !he YOU te<tlon. ...._. : ~-·~,....••._..aw-,. gallery walls. Ver a proflle of a Costa ! _"-!:~ · , materials , md 1hls week's Sunday t__.i;•p..i.....;·;.,;;:::.;~..,.-·-...,.,.,....1....;·S(leclAI by Jll<qllOllne Combs Lond, ·1. -; ..; \ I I • • • •• • I .. , l ' , • -• DAD ,Y P ILOT EDITORIAL P AGE • ~ Hope . fo r t he Bay Newport Beach gave speedy endorsement this week to a proposal to restore the vitaUty of Upper Newport Bay by dredging accumulated silts and using them as fill dirt on the Corona de! Mar Freeway project. The proposal IJ\8kes good sense. There now seems to be •trong support for the idea from environmentalists familiar with the Upl'"r Bay. And~ p1!m to do the dredg· ing in conjunction wJth a freeway p,roJect which requites thousands of tons of fill should save taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars. The biggest problem at Ibis point is time. The De- partment of Transportation wants to open bids on the freeway construction project in December, and it has · to know quickly whether or not to include a requirement for bay dredging. • The Board of Supervisors, which must next review the proposal, should keep this in mind and give the idea the prompt consideration it deserves. The proposal of· fers an excellent opportunity for the supervisors to show that they are really serious about prese+ving the Back Bay for future generations of Orange Countians. Coillillunica tion Gap That rock concert that shook up much of the neigh- borhood. around Newport Harbor High School late last month still is reverberating around the halls in both the NeWPort-Mesa Unified School District offices and New- port Beach City Hall. New~rt Beach police are making no secret of the fact they re not happy recipients of the more than 200 calls from r:esidents complaining about. the event. They also are, a little more quietly, letting people know it was the school district that approved the con- cert, a privately-spori'sored and operated event. School district officials confide they'd really love to forget the whole thing. Police, ln a report to the city adminiBtration that Nuclear 'Parity' • Called Irrelevant America 11as far more nuclear weoponi than it could conceivably use to protect its securfftl. And it's build. ing mor•· at tM rate of almost four a day. Thi! i.! not the assessm£nt of a pacifist or a flUClear disarmer. It is rather the view of retired Rear Adm. Gene LaRocque wllo today lleads the .respected Center for De· fe-nse 111formatio11. He is inte,·· viewed by editors of Tii e Washing. ton Monthly. · ' Q: When It come!! lo nuclear wf~m. how Important today is parity -or equality -•·it b tbc Rnslans? ' A: Parity is a ridiculou s. outmoded 19th centw-y idea. It is no longer·tetevant in an age when we can destroy the SOvtet Uniori so many Umes over that you cail't even cowt them. And they can do the same to us. As a result or last yea r's SALT agreements, we need Jess and less forces to defend the United States from attack . By signing the SALT treaty, we said in e£fect that the United States will make no attempt to defend itself -an almo,,t unbelievabl e thing to tell 1he public - against a Soviet missile attack. And the Soviets have also agreed not to defend themselves against a U.S. miss ile attack. It could be called "security through mutual vulnerability." r ...... _WH_~_r:_'.AND_THEY __ ..... J missile-carrying nuclear submarines. For example, our fleet of 20 Poseidon sub- marines carries l 6 0 independently targeted nuclear weapons which can destroy 160 Soviet cities. q, Thal~ -llln 3,0oo Soviet clti" whb the li''liJie~,._ -' A: And there are only 220 Soviet cities with over 100,000 population. ~e thousand nuclear weapons, one-seventh of what we have ~. woUld be more 1han .,,.« J!·;tl' tbellljob.-:nus is especially ~ ~.... • """'1. ·Kl>- singer said t:fter the SALT ·•~ '"lhey'il all get a tree ride." ni... won11 he any ABMs IA> dlC!ot tbem down. Q: But Isn't lite reuoa we .. ,. 11 many nuclear weapou becuH a certalD percentage of tbtm won't reada tbetr targets In a nuclear excbaap? A : This is an old Idea dllttnc from the time when bombers were used to penetrate an enemy's defentet. In thole days you had to remember that bombers could be shol ctowo wiih g11111, with missiles or interceptor aircraft. The I.imitation of ABMs means this la no longer the case. Americans are atUI bung Q: I take It you are rererring to the up on this outmoded mental attitude. clause that strlcUy Umlts the deployment Q: Since the SALT agreeinnt ~It or ABMI, or defensive missiles. easier for missiles to readt Ulelr t.Usett, A: That's right. shouldn't this bave led to a volaa&ary Q: If equa.Uty ls not an Important reduction in offensive weapon! meuarlDg rod, then what are the mlaf.. A: That ·5 what we all expected to ha~ mal forte levels we need to protect our pen. Instead lhe military baa unveiled a security? host of new programs this yeur. Tbe Air A: Back in November 1971 the United Force wants $500 million for a new B-1 States bad 4,700 nuclear weapons and the bomber which eventually will coet $11 • Soviets had 2,IOJl. Now we have 7,100 Dillion; the Navy wants a new Trident nuclear weapons. That's a 50 per cent in· submarine at a COit of fl.3 billion as part crease in 18 months. of a whQle new 1prograrn wbJch will e'Vt!D:- Q, Tbil Is totally tndependenl of any lually COii $11· billion. And these pro- prodoctlon oa the part of tbe Russians? grams are just the Up ot the iceber1. A: Yes. 1be Russian,, had 2,100 nuclear Q: Malt aceomdl for tbla mute.tam weapons in 1971. Today the~ have 2,300. toward entirely new weap0a1 a)"lteml? These ~~ alt figures provided by the A: ·Pilrtly bureaucratic inert!•. The_ Secretary of Defense. •. military has been planning these Q' Atllioap we llove Ille tad tn lbe weapons systems for years. Lest year numbtr of nuclear weapou, the Rulttan• Sen. Symington aaked Adm. Zumwalt, bave a aupertorJty Wbea ft eome1 to ·chief of, naval ~atlona, 11Admtral , JCBMJ. Why are total nuclear we1poDt a when did you start plannlng the Trident more Important index than tbe number submarine?" of ICBMs? Adm. Zumwalt smiled and said : "We A: All this means ls that the Soviets started pl,Jmnlng it the day the United depend largely on land-based misslles States Senate approved the Polarls su~ while we place our primary emphasis on marine.'' The Decline of a Giant • Mark Twalno God's Fool. By )lnmiin Hill. Harper & Row. 308 Pages. 110. The twilight of any mortal, parU®larly if he or fhe is a genius. can be both ln- rormative and distressing. The ·story of the last 10 years of Ma'rk Twain's life, which Hamlin Hiil describes in this latest study based pn considerable private material hitherto little used, Is more than lyplcal. ALTHOUqJI he conllnued almost to the end as a very successful writer, Twain was past his creative peak. Thb, mask of lhe chroolcler of mid-l~)ury fron- (!BE BOOKMAN) FQr years personal· tragedy had sWked the man : his only soh had died in in· fancy ~ his eid,.I da~ter, SWlan, allo had died young. Mrs. Clemens, the be- loved Livy, who despite her Victorian censorship of her husband's writing really had· helped guide htm, died before him. Their youngest daughter, Jean, drowned during an epileptic seizure. tier tlfe in America's superb Innocence A CIDEF source of Hill's acco\Ult ts -When he paraded as a buffoon it was _tbe journal: of Clement' secretary, Isabel as a grand buffoon -Was slipping oft Lyon, adoring and adored untD ahe joined Revealed at last was • the true coun-tho company of lllOClates b e tenance of one of our most CO.!!!J>lex neuroticall~ conceived as enemies. mu Js Uterary ariisll, S3mue!" l: l:lem.ns-tiaro!Yin wriierJ l!uCHe hii hlmaelf: 1Uil brlDiant but decllnln' in , done a useful study of the decline of a health of body and mjnd, yet deternuned giant. ' 10 th~ end IA> fuUill his reputation u a RonalcJ c., Hood, prodigious wriler. "'-lalof Pras • • ha s been forwarded to school officials, say ln the future. they should be given more authority to oversee events on school property before they take place. They suggest "better lines of communication" be opened. It's tough not to agree. While the schools would want to rethln the right to an u!Umate decision, it wouldn't hurt to get advice from the police on any po- tentially problem-creating event on campuses. To borrow a phrase often used by educators, it should add up to a "learning experience"' for the district. New Decision-makers Supt. John Nicoll welcomed employes back to the Newport-Mesa Unified School District last week with the promise that from now on they will have a greater voice in decision-making. Society is changing, Nicoll said, and decisions are now being made increasingly ~ose to the level on which the decisions will be put into effect. Hence, he ·Jaid, everyone in the Newport-Mesa dis·· trict -whether he be janitor or classroom teacher - should now have an opportunity for formal participa· tion in decision-making. These are refreshing 5entiments coming from the chief of one of the biggest organizations in the Harbor Area. . But putting them into effect will be a different mat- ter. We all would like our society to be as democratic as possible, but it is often difficult for the administra- tors who hold power to be persuaded to share that pow-er. Perhaps recognizing this, Nicoll says this will be "the year of the non-administrative stalf." We wish him well ~ his effort to translate these lolly concepts into practice. 'Beat it; kid! This is no penny-ante game we've go t going here!' Dear Gloomy Gus While Watergate conspirators Mc- Cord and Magruder have been ban'ed by court order from the lecture circuit, critne seems to be paying for their colleague E. How- ard Hunt. Re-prints of his spy nov- els, with big by-lines, are selling like hotcakes in the supermarkets, A.V. Gloomr Gus CMI"""" .,. 11111111""' IW ,....... _, ,. ., ..-..n1y rtff9ct ""' Yl"'11 of tM ----· $encl nur "' -" le ....... ., .... Delly Plr.t. Free Transit Experiments Cost Plenty There's tlttle to be said for driving a car into the city. Parking Is scarce and ezpenl(ve, traffic i:ongestion is nerv~ wracilng and air Pollution caused by automobile fwnes is becoming in- sufferable.· Yet Americans continue to re- ly on private transportation. The Urban Mua: Transit Administ ration estimates that 81 per cent or the nation's com· muten go to work in automobiles while only 10 percent rely on buses and 4 per- cent use subway trains. DRIVERS complain that p u b· I i c transportation is slow, unreliable, . in- oonvenfent and costly. A number of cities have moved to counter th ese criticisms by setting up express bus lanes during EDITORIAL RESEARCH rush hours, 'raising parking rates to a level that would dis~urage motorists, reducing traruiit fare.a, and allowing senJor cltizen1 and those traveJing at cer- tain hoW'I to ride free of charge. SOme urban planners are demanding more -· they want cities to offer free public transportation to all. This month, Seallie wiU become the first major American city to offer free mass tranSit. During the one.year ex· periment1 riders will be able to board buses in the outer city and the suburbs. Commerce, Calif., provides the nation's only long-term free transit experiment. Advoc,ates of the no-cost service argue that Commerce's experience, where only about 7 percent of all residents use the buses, is not applicable to large cities. When Rome tried free transil irt 1972, they argue, ridership i n c r e a s e d enormously. .,, ROME discoolinued the service, which had coal the deb~rldden city IU million, after two months. SeatUe's very limited experimenl wUi oost 164,llOO while Com- merce, with a population of only 11,llOO, pa)'S 1130,llOO a year for its free buses. II is que1Uonable whether taxpayers Jn large cllies. particularly those who do not use pubilc transporiaUon, will be willing to subsidize a no-fara plan. If lhe federal government pays the bill, the cost of free transit, coupled with Improvements need· -ioo ttroctmotorisli;'OOwa iilli fiill bililon a year. Until the public cl.eel~ that the benefits are worth the price, free ma"' traMil is llk'ely to remam the exception rather than the rule. ' • N School Report Watered . Down FTC Yields to Pressure WASffiNGTON -The Federal Trade ~---------...... Commission produced a dramatic booklet ( J warning against unscrupulo ... praellces JACK ANDERSON by vocational scbool5, then eecretly deep- sixed almost 100,llOO of the books when the scboois protested. FTC'• basemen~ we managed to obtain ntls buckling to the industry he is sup-one copy ·and found it ls substantially posed to regulate was one of the first tests stronger than tbe second .version, which for FTC Chairman Lewis Engman, who is being · released to the pgbUc with the was recently apPointed by President Nix-blessing of Eagman and ttie ·~ocatiortal on !o protect consumers from voracious schools. business practh:es. The 24-page booklet\41ad ~.painstak-FOR INSTANCE, in !Jaililnl about ingly put together by FTC staffers.,~ ·phony_ degrees gran~ :bJii".'18' acho9ls, was handsomely; printed for dislribullon'" lbe original pamphJi~~"ne value to the pub~c. Btit the vocational scbool of. a degree or dlj)librlli ~il!'ct by a indllStry got wind ol it and· beefed mipti-junior college, college or unJversitf is Jy to the FTC. reUable1 The worth of a ~eatet· or · , diploma g(ven. y a prlva~.,J)i'<illl-giak- WHEN THEY complain ~ ~.. ing vocational aCbool is ~ more called a special meettn&: or the COIDi : questionable," · · .. missioners, who we re on vacation. That passage is deleted in the second Nol aU showed up. Thooe prnserrt quietly booklet and · its absence is noteworthy. voted to put up the money for a revised Many states, following a model PfOll'aJn booklet, which looks identical but ac-instituted by Nortb Clrolina,· have tually leaves out some ol the most sting-established community colltgee: and lng criticism of the proftWDaking vocational schools that are ofte.n superior schools. to, and competing for the same students Although most of t he original 93,000.. as commercial schools. copy edition is now moldering in the Another caveat expurgated by ~ FTC says, "Vocational schools often have names which are very similar in IKIUDd or spelling 'to famous organizations just so you may confuse the two." The com· plaint is nonetheless valid: Firms like IBM are continually plagued by educa- tion hucksters trading on their euUy recognized initials. mE ORIGINAL text contains this warping: "lf a course has a very low drop.out rate, it may be too easy and the school may be a '.diploma mill.' Some courses are designed to be easy so students will complete them and schools wlu get11ll the mor.ey.11 Thls·wn deleted ' entfrely from the revised brochure. FTC 90mmissioner Paul Rand Dizon, who wal\ not at the rush meeting On the booklet ,said, "I've got kind oi a IOft spot ' in .my heart for corlespOrut.ence ·seboOis. Nol everyone has a rich daddy (bul) some 'Of thtse places &re just out and out dip!oma· mills." . Joan z. Bemll\ein, ·acting di...tor or FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, saJd the commission had "planned a aeo- ond edition anyway.'' She insisted there were no pressures to a1,ter the text, but admitted there w e r e objections from . representatives of the vocaUonal schools. An Obsession with ·Records WASHINGTON -When ~e're not thinking about how to find food and then how to pay for it, this year's .preoccu· pation seems to be the exhumation of. bodies, political and literal. The most spectacular dig laid bare. by the criminal archeologists is still, of co u r s e , Watergate. However, the Agnew find ii the equivalent of the discovery '4 the un· touched tomb of a late dynasty pharaoh, and then there .are minor but promising excavations like the unearthing of a fortune in WlUsed Air Force inventory at Charleston, S.C. In addition to the "Waterhole Scan- dal," as the enlisted men on the bue re- fer IA> II, deep sea divers off the coast ol Muaacbuaelts were attempting to recove r treasure from the long sunk- en trans • Atlanti c liner, Andrea Doria. A party of digger• from the Houston poiiceAlepartment must he given O'edit for the most ho1Tifylng of the ,summer'a exhwnatlons, the bodies of 21 boys, mott terribly murdered. In reporting lhe news the media have made it a tasteleu point lo tell us thal the Houston dig re-ts a new record. In due course, we can ez . · peel to open our Guinness Book of Records, page through to "Murders, Maas," and then on to "murder!, multi- ple, non-political,'' where it will read something like, 0 1fouston, Texas, U.S.A l&"IS, 27 -modem record." .In baseball, homicldo and track we divide our records lnto the cateaortes of ancient and modem, perhaps because anyone who flourished before 1900 partakes of the legendary, as though we believed that prior centuries were peo- pled by demi11ods and devils, crulure• sufficiently different from ourselves to make comparison a form of decepUon. KEEPING RECORDS of athletic feats or such accomplishments as the most stMdardized to.ounce mugs of stout con- sumed in ooc hour's sitting is a form of celebt,aUng exceptional achievement. That iJ one way we make feats famou~, just u roord-keeplng suppliea us wilh • standard to strive for, but why then treat the bloodleat crimes in the same way? A taate for the macabre, or perhaps an : ' ( VO~ HOFFMAN ) .. abstruse passion for the measurement of the largeal llld,1maUest ol anything. We are a boollkeePJill clviUzation. The most marvelous ol all Ql1' machines, the com- puter, ts primarily u.,.i lot °"" reoorda wilidl are "' vohuDtn<ils that evon when llhnmk to ll)icri>flliii •Ile Ibey overtax the capacity ol ~iJ'pds of wardlousee and .caves. Mucb .,,,... dlutng is explained by our love ol',r.ecordl. The "record of the put," 1be teCOrda: of other peoples, other socletlea are aa Important as our own. We go so far as to const~t records for vanllhed nations whose populations didn't have our taste for writing down and atO!'ini lheir acts and stalistics. Records also comfort us. We need an explanaUoo for everything, but there is no Ullble one for w h a t happened in Houston so we consult our records and they tell us that such savageries have been committed before and, if that doesn't explain anything, it makes us feel better. No crime is quite so bad if it's been committed before. MANY DAVE reacted to Watergate in the aame mode. Politicians pull that kind of stuff all the time. ergo Watergate isn 't so bid. If they concede that Watergate is what it Js -a uniquely foul series of in· terconntcted crimes -they leave themae1ves opeJ1 to disturbing specula· tlons. Could It be then that we, as a peo- ple, have changed for the worse. that such things as J1ouston and Watergate could have taken place for the first lime '! Oiristlans, conservatives and others whose philosophy teaches them the renli· ty of sin, or at least the infinitely im· perfect nature of human l>elngs, don't have that problem. Tiiey can accept a Houston or a Watergate, not as a sign that our warp 111 coming apart rrom our woof, bul as evil done by specific in· dlviduals who must take the guilt for it. The doctrine or individual guilt absolves social gull\ and the n~ to dlg around for larger explanations. Most of us are too much the children of modern liberal culture to accept evil as a con- sequence of our humanity. and therefore be con1en1 merely to punish It and shun it. We must explain it and thus, as we first ~ug up the crime, we try to dig up an explanation for it, if not in our record books then in our social sciences. IS WATERGATE, we ask, a sign of a defect in "the system"? Shortly we shall be asklng t h e same questions about Houston. We did it with Charlie Maneon . w~ we explained away by calling him the Hippie Killer. Maybe we'll call the Houston culprits the Hard·Hat Killers, or some other nonsense name. More likely. we'll have recourse to psychiairy. The plea o[ nol guUty by reason of insanity probably shOuld not be allowed in our criminal justice, but in a society that feels gu.Uty about guilt and yet must have some plauslble ex- planation or guilty acl.s, psychiatry is a mo.st serviceable device. The head-shrinkers excavating the skulls of the wicked for the CIUleS of their crlmes, however satisfyin& to the imagination, is about as scientific aa ez. · orcism. Others will prefer to CXltinUe digging for harder facts and better ex· planations with the attendant rbk that their shovels \Viii not unearth better knowledge -but worse crimes. ' O•AM.. COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Pul>U.MI' Thoma1 Keevil, Editor Barbara Krtlbich .Edltoriol Page Edttor '1'he ~torlal 1-paae ot 1he Dalbr Pilot ."seeki;; 10 infonn and stlmut&ie' readtrs , by pre~nting on this J111t diverte •commenta.r')1 on topics Ol &. tcnost by t)rnd!cated ('Olwnnills Md cartoonists, by provldlnc a forum for ttadenf view1 and by present .. tM. 11cwtl)Aprtr't opinions and ldrtaa • cumnt topicA. Th..-c<lllorhll opbtlolil ol the Dall,y Pilot appear Oflly ht Che tdllorlal column· at the top o( a.. Pill"· Opink!nli e,tprt'Wd by the • umnista l.nd canoon~1 and lftello wriltft·~ tM>lr own tlnd no~ ment of their vlt!Y-11 by 't~ DUlj Piiot lhelJ)d ~ Wttrfd. -i Friday, S~ptember 14, 1973 .. t -" • - Cash Not His Thing -Moretti SACRAMENTO (APl - Assembly Speaker Bob fiioret · ti says he probably Is the least-wealthy probable ca,n. di date for governor next year, but "money's not my thing." The Van Nuys Democrat disclosed net personal v;·eallh totaling $39,747 to newsmen in his Capitol oUice Thursday, including two-thirds of an acre of land in Jamaica valued at $21,eoo. A reporter asked fiioretti if BRIEFS money wasn't "his thing ' what is -power? "You coukl say that -In· nuencing what goes on," 'fie said. "I believe I can do some good things. I want to be in a position to do those things." e Soft Water 1 SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego CoWlty Water Authority bu voted tq pipe soft water from Nor.them California into homes here in 1975, d~pite waminO by some member agenclqa that filtration plants worl't be ready by then. The authority, composed of 22 agencies which distribute water to the county~s 1.S million residents, voted Thurs- day night to order Feather River water from t,he staJe in !975, two years ahead.' Of its previous schedule. 1 e Capitol j SACRAMENTO !AP)· Alternative proposalij' to. build a new state Capito~ rebuild the .existing buildin were on Gov. Ronald Reag s desk to-- day. A bill by Assemblyman Willie Brown . (D-San Fran- cisco), contains the two rival plans. His measure calls_ for construction of a ibrand new structure to house t he legislature in do wntown Sacramento, unless a reaslbili· ty study shows it would be more practical to reconstruct the e x is t in g 103-year.old Capitol eo..-Meeu SACRAMENTO (AP) RuJes for open J meetings by legislative committees would be placed into state law Under a bru that bal gone to ·the governor's desk. Tbe Assembly and the Senate both gave final ap- proval Thursday to the legisla· UOn. by Sen. Donald Grunsky (R-Watsonville.) e Drug Law SACRAMENTO (AP ) California would give life in prison to dope peddlers if a newly-introduced New York· type measure becomes law. Tbe bill, by Assemblym an Raymond Gonzales ( D · Bakersfield), was introduced Thursday. Gonzales said, "New York bas bad a lot of positive reac- tion to it. The reaction is that they have scared the pushers off the street." Give the Gift that "Kaaps on Giving" Back to YOU/ ........ -tllll .... slloald .. I OftHIJ sffllt. ff ,. COlltrlbutt to us, wt ·~ "' .... ,. do tcmttMlll "'~UMttrlllfivt)'Olll bKk lllOf'I than a ••nit ftlbl 1n4· I tax dedUdloft. •·Now,• hmi found 1 fllott: tlllllrklble W•J' lo l'l'Q~ afor rour pntrosity. You enjoy tbt plea.sure af helplllf fellaw-mtn, plus the fltJ of I tfX·dedllci:iblt rli. M ••• you don't 1!vt up inf futurt fl111ncl1I security )'Cf could htvt •t\iored bt keesiint JOll' 1J1t As lo!ir ••JOU llYI- """"' ifnmedlttely-wt'U '°" 1 fln'l'OllS lllCOll'lt out o the wnfnrs of your ~==~Thus. It beeoma ~ il1I: I* L t to protect your _, tM future of your ....,, II thl 11nt1 time. you •• • .-. on flltu11 estalt .. ,..blto<ostl. Wlllt other WIJ' can )'Ol 1111 lwwnlnlent funds and to do IO mlltb fot ... _ . .,. IO 5oaca tfMl1 LfiiiutOli.iiCALL far fnt ,., lllW OMlptlol A 1' 11: (714) '45M " • • ••• • I CAUFORllA Police Seek 'Stash Pad' fFor Heroin SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Police were searching for a »Called "stash pad" where a couple arrested on narcotics violations here may have kept ·a fortune in heroin. Leon Cooper, 29, and his \\'ile Cynthia, 26, allegedly soot teenaged girls to the stash pad each morning to bring back up to $3,000 worth of heroin, police said. The Coopers allegedly used the older or their five children, ranging ln age from eight months to 11 years, to sell the drug in their Potrero Hill neighborhood, officers said. The couple was to be er· raigned in Municipal Court to- day oo charges of possessing heroin for sale, keeping a lx>use where heroin is used and furnishing heroin· t o minors. Sexuality. Text , I Just Not Selling ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -A sex education textbook that triggered arguments across California thJs r .. r probably won't be used alter all because not enough orders for it have been received, educa- tion olflCiaJs sity. Only about 2,300 orders for the ten "Human Sexuality'' have been received, deputy state school superinte~nt Ed Harper said Thunday. '111E AMERICAN Book Co., Publisher of the ten, has said · it needs at least 25,000 orders. before it will proceed with revisions specified by the c.aJUomia State Board of Education. The revisions were ordered to tone down sections that board members atn- si dered too explicit for the eighth graders who were to use the book. Asked if there was a chance a sufficient number of orders would come in by ao Oct. 1 deadline, Harper said, ''It cer- tainly doesn't look like it at this stage. "The indication r got was that ~striots were ordering it out of curiosity, more than anything else," he added in an interview at a State Board of Education meeting. A PATCHED-together duplicated edllion or tbe revr.. ed book had been ezbiblled In 60 textbook display centers "across the 1tate for public evaluation and reaction. For several months in a row last spring and summer, board m~s wrangled o v er whether parts or the 164-page text were too explicit for eighth graders. Board member E u g e n e Ragle or Roseville called the text a "how·tcMb-it" sex book. A resolution urging Gov. Ronald Reagan to "speak: out strongly" against the book was presented Wednesday at a San Franolsco convention of ti>t.Federation of RePublican women. EVEN THE watered-dowl\ version "h8s the effect or en·- dorsing p rem,arital m. ,tercourte, abortian on demID\d and Ulegal ·drugs," said the resolution from the Lafayette Republican · Women. A rewritten versim ol the, text was finally approved ·Ito/ the board for classroom use in September, 1974, il extensive changes were made. But American Book said because of the costs of the revisions ordered by the board, it need· ed at least 25,000 orders to break even. Packers, Teamsters Official Indicted U'ITtl.-... SUSPECT IN RAPE Eddie BohnHck In Kidnap, Rape Case VALEN CIA (AP) -A 21'. year-001 Mason City, Iowa, man and two Las Vegas, Nev., teenagers were booked Thurs. day for Hlvestigaiicirn of kidnap and rape in the abduction of a 20-year-old Las yegas woman and her 18-montlH>ld nephew, auQK>rities said. ~ EDDIE ROGER Bohnsack, and the teenagers, said to be 14 and 17, were arrested in Castaic, Ca 1 if . authorities said. Mary Ann Jaramillo and her sister's son Danny Landers, were walking toward their car in a Las Vegas market Wednesday when the three males allegedly climbed into Miss Jaran1illo's car and coin· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Martin is accused of paying mandeered it. They reportedly F1lday, September 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT Heart Transplant Raising Legal Q~rws in Murder STANFORD (UPI) - A 52- year-old man who received a murder victim's traMplanted heart was described t n satisfactory condition Thurs· day, The unidentified man, a heart disease victim from out of state, received the heart in a four·hour operation ThW's- day by transplant ploneor Dr. Norman Shun1way at the Stan- ford Medical Center. SIWMW AV HOURS earlier had· t,emoved. tbe heart, kept beating by a machlhe, from the body of ~uel Moore, 29, of ~' shot tn the brain Monday. Moore's heart was fiown by helicopter from Oakland to Stanford for an im-, mediate tnnsplant. Meanwhile, in Palo Alto, at· torneys are ·girding for a legal battle over the definition of death in the case of a living heart . transplanted from the victtm, whose brain showed no sign of life. 'Ille victim's transplanled kidney 's were keeptog .a >Z- and a 62-year-old woman 11iv1 1n San Francisco 'I. Presbyterian Hospttal as part or the unprecedented three' organ, three hospital transplant swap. TllE TRANSPLANT opera· tlOM have raised legal ques,· tions because Moore's kidney• and heart were removed• before doctors discoMected the heart·lung machinery Iha~ kept him alive. I MOSr with GREATER AVAILABILITY! 5% INTEREST PER YEAR + · l'.75% CURRENT BONUS = t.15% INTEREST PER YEAR $ 66 67 "'0NTHLV INT EREST Ii f"(, K <,[NT YO\J' PAID MONTHLY • $25,1111 CllTIFICARS 625'l INTEREST PER YEAR + L75i CUl!RE>T BONUS = 1:111% IMJtlEST PEI YW OOMONTHLV $':}75 tNT•1t•ST ,;/, CH£CK SENT YOUI !t 'CERTIFICATE FUNDS m lhr. 15th ANY MONTH EARN front Isl of THAT MONTH! .. HIGHEST RATE ANYWHERE! on PASSBOOKS plus DAILY INTERESTI &~ ,:y''~.:nt f11nd'S earn D from date of receipt to dal! of withdraw•!. ln- lere$t PAID O.IUTERLY. $29.11 CHECK MONTHLY! on $5!)00 CERTIFICATES 11"5ii1tltutzt'5 llOllE tlMll MCIST IAllKSlllJI c••• ro•••• 1ru.c•n •••• S[IVltG SAftlStw I COff:RAllONI EYt:IYWllJIDUWALIEQUUT ....... PlllllMEllllllY• ...,.., RESOURCES orer $100.000.000.00 SIDEThrift Charge Filed In Crowding On Steamer The bitter rivalry between the the alleged bribe: told Miss Jaramillo lhey Teamsters and the United wanted to go-to Mexico. 2328 Harbor Blvd., COSTA MESA• 645-1000 Farm Workers unions in the C 0 NV IC TI 0 N on the Miss Jaramillo and her., sotTit1111 tAL1Fot1t1& 0FJ1c11: Atllldlr1/Ana11e11111aauru111,111n11-111e"'".'"u111c111111 vi1t11eo1t1 thvt 'sd . l " f th n pbe were eleased early Covlna/Oo""tJ/El Cajon /El Centro/EscondlOo/Ganlen Grow /G!tndalt/HuntlflflOll lltat~/tfl(lewoocl /Lll~•I•/ Salinas Valley Jed to lhe in· m1 emeanor VJO a .. oos O e e w r L0111 ll11eh/Ontario/DinanVP~1111/Pt!llOM/Rneo.a.tRiftr$1de/s.n Bemardino/S.n Dl•ro!S.•ta AM/Slllbo Blrbtrl/ dictrnent Thursday or two ,.JT;a~lt~-Hfart;le~y~A~c~t~coul;d~br;in~g~a~j'lll~ursda::y~m:o~nun:·~g~a~t :•:g•:·~~~~~~~~~~"~"'~' ~··~·"~n~~~·~"'~''~'M~'"~"~"~;'~""'~'"~"~"'~'"~""'~"~'"~' ~~~~-~~~~~ SAN PEDRO (AP) -The Coast Guard says it has filed charges accusing the ca~in and chief purser of the S.S. Catalina of violating maritime regulations by carrying too many passengers Aug. s. vegetable packers and an maximum one year sentence station in Newhall, authorities ousted Teamsters official on and $1,000 fine on each count. said. The incident occurred on a Sunday return run , ol the ""Great White Steamer, whieh plies the waters between the Los Angeles Ha-llJld Catallna Islan!l. The Coast Guaro set a bearing for next Thursday. . '!be Coast Guard said the ship carried 2,283 penons, 43 more than authorized. The steamship C1'lmpany said only that problems exist when too many pa~gers try to catch the return voyage from the island. federal conspiracy and bribery charges. TllE FEDERAL grand jury charges resulted from an in- vestigation launched in 1972 with cooperation from the . Teamsters. , It led to a charge against Theodore J. Gonsalves, 52, former secrelaey·treasurer of Tea~ Cannery Workers U.nion, Local 748 at ModestO, with laking a f!0,000 bribe to impede ,UFW organizatiOnal activities in the Salinas area in the fall of 1970. James Robert Martin, 50, and Thomas Hitchcock, 46. both of Salinas, are accused of conspiring with Gonsalves. A WATCH FOR ALL TIME Distinguished Rolex w•tches. A. D•y-dete, self.winding chronometfr with "Presidant's" bracelet. $1850. B. Oyster·deti, self-winding chronometer in stainless steel with m1tchln9 brecelet. •ll 1.50. C. Oete-just, 11Jf.windih9. Handsome 14 kar1t fluted bezel with steel and I~ hr•I gold band. $51 O. Do Something a..utlful .... Ch•l'9t A(ctuntt lllYl!tll -Amtrlctll ~ •111_11,Arn1rl(tf11 Mlf M1111r Cht..,., t9t SLAVICK'S Jt"wele1'3 Since 1917 re f"ASHlON ISLAND NEWPORT tEACH -644.fllO WIHI IK.llieftt tf1 ,...,_, Ol'.tfllt, LI' Clfl'I .... U Mt•re ...... , .. ,. oi.e. .,.. ..... v .... -. I '·; ' - >.. $ 06.93? The Facts about Gas Eco . • I • How tl'UCh eomfctt and safely ore you willing lo gMI ~p- for $106.93? Hem the ntal s!Olyon gas econon\y using two hypclheticxJI cat1 on regular fwl And it -Id .be _, les if you drive cono1rvatlwly. qf'coum, a little car can gMI you"betlor mileage. 11-also be v.yawded. And what\ the price al oafely? eo.llldor the -.lty al __ with_..., oolid poledion for roa and your family. Colta Mesa Consider Clirysler. h's bulll lo last •• , today and ..,_, Chrysler offe11 solid englrleering exrellence. lbr .,....np1e, roa get unibody conslrudion, lanicin bar suspension,-..,..-- bumper syilem, fue~tank Impact p*<.1ion, energy aboor!>lng steering column and --. • Right ,_, the full-tiacl Plymouth Fwy do. .,,,.,. lpldahavingo. The 8*1.W.. eltdiiinlc Ignition syollln lo doolgned to reduoe 111Glilflll-- , And detpit9 Fury's .olld Chrysler ~big-and 'conlfo.t ••• It MW~ regu~ • . fuel. a.t al all, ,_,.,the tn. to buy cluilng Clean Up flns. Atlas Chrysler-Piymouth, Inc. 2929 . Harbor 116ulevarcl . Hlllltfngtat1 8"ch • .. Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.. I ·• 16661 Beach Boulevcirel -. • ,. ( ' • VOL 66, NO. 257, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ' • . ..... ; ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1973 Today's Flaal N.Y. Stocks c TEN CENTS Dads Told How to •Beat~ Wonien ~s Lib By JOllN ZALLER Of 111.-DallY Pll•I St1tl A woman Thursday challenged members of the all-male Exchange Club ot Newport Beach to put Women's Lib out of business -If they dare. "You can do it," said Joan Brick, a mother or three, professional publicist, and wile of the superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. "You can do it by spending enough time with your litUe daughters to keep Operators 'Open' them from growing up as queruJous, nag- ging and frustrated," Mrs. Brick declared. Mrs. Brick said she was bhsing her ad- vice on one observation : "Most women have poor self-images, lack self-confidence, and are generally frustrated," she said. "If they try to raise their daughters alone, their daughters will grow up to De like they are -frustrated and insecure. "Men make much better models for Station Protest Runs Out of Gas By RUDI NIEDZIEI.SKI Of .... o..u,. l"lltl 51•ff A movement among Orange County service station dealers to protest "un· fair" Phase IV price controls with an organized shutdown has run out or ga:s. Dealer plans to lock up their pumps for 1 tbree-<iay period beginning Monday conked out Thursday night when leaders of a IUOline retailers U&OCiaUon cxin· vinced them tl!at they """1d only be hurting themselves and "the guy who has supported you all these years." Instead, they decided to wait for tbe outcome of o la•••lt -peodiq before a lederll court. The IUlt aDecea tllat service station owners are being treated. unfairly because they h a v e to absorb price increases passed on by the oil com· panies under Phase 1 V. After the suit is heard in early December, "there Is no way we will not be out from under those ridlculous price controls," Jolm Devine, president of the International Service Station Dealers AsJoclation (ISSDA) pred i cted en· thusiastically. Independent dealers across the nation are fuming over the Phase IV controls because their retail prices are froren, but Traffic Cut On Paularii~o As of Monday morning motorists trom the north Costa Mesa area may be late for work. unless they know which road to take . Pularlno Avenue, long a favorite with drivers who wanted tc avoid trafnc on Baker, Street, will no longer be a through street. Ron Lachef-of the Costa Mesa Ci· ty Engineer's office says Paularlno will be closed near Babb Street to take tnlfic of! the resldenttal street. Paularino was never meant to be a through street and the closure Is in keeping with the desire of residents who have petitioned the city to reduce traffic, Lacher said. County Elks the wholesale or tankwagon prices of the oil companies are not. Several of the ma· jor oil companies have increased their tapkwagon prices as much as one or tv•o cents a gallon, whlcb, in the opinion or many dealers, drives their profits so low !See GASOLINE, Page li Suspect .Fl.ees M.esa St0re Witli $105 Pill Haul A nototrious woman s bop Ii ft er , recognized from commercial security bulletins circulated from San Diego to SeatUe, was chased from a Costa Mesa store 'Mlursday. escaping wtth 2,51D vitamin pills. Securlt.Y Officer Micki Spellmeyer told poUce she was unable to capture the suspec t who Ded from the May Company at South Coast Plaza with the $105 bauJ of food supplements. DetecUve Am.old Appleman said the shoplifter did drop one bottle cootaining 360 of the vitamin and mlnera1 tablets in the pirking lot at 33.13 S. Bristol St., as she ran to her car. Miss Spellmeyer said she recognized tile S&-year~ld Caucasian woman from a retail security guard publication and watched as the suspect hid the vitamins in a May Company bag she had brought into the store. The security system employe con- fronted the suspect -who wouJd have been cldl:rged. with burglary -but the woman broke and ran. She provided police with a brochure describing the woman ·aa Mary V. Carr, five feet, eight inches tall and regularly working with a black woman accomplice who acts as a fence or dealer for shoplifted Items. Detective Appleman said the woman nonnally operates by wearing a variety or disguises and generally travela by bus, rarely using a penonal car. Tbe '"'peel II known up and do"1l the West Coast for her activities, accordlng to pollce. daughte1s. to learn from . Men go out in the world and produce, they have self· confidence, and they have an internal stabllity~hat ost women do not. "A g ather is the most important thlnk in a little girl's healthy develop- ment," Mrs. Brick. maintained. The 40 members of the Exchange Club listened qu\etly "".hile Mrs. Brick spoke, and when she fmished , they gave her .ui ovation. One member said privately al· terw11rds: "ln all lhe years I've ~n coming here, I've never seen the guys give so much attention to any of their speakers." Through her speech, Mrs. Brick repeatedly urged tfMl men to spend as much time as possible ~ith their daughters. "Try taking µiat little kid on a business trip some time," she suggested. "I bet you never thought of that, but your little girl would love it. • I r-. D9ily ,.,., IWf ....... BURN VICTIM JACK BOLING AND. DAUGHTER, LISA To SO•• His Doughtor, Ho Did tho Naturo l Thl119 'Handful of Dell" Father Burited But Saves Girl , 7 One day not long ago. Jack Boling grabbed a handful of Hell . The former U.S. Marine who served in World War II and the Korean connict didn't Utink much of it, but a friend was who for two and half weeks has driven him daily to Orange County Medical Center, where he is an outpatient in the bum center. "I have flinched ... and cried ... and deeply impressed. He told Mrs. Beverly Boling, of 3247 bawled ... just looking at my man," says New York Ave., Costa Mesa, the other Mrs. Boling. "Wednesday, he was dab- day that what ber husband did seemed bing at the blood spots With lOeenex." almost heroic. 'Four days after his 46th birthday, Jack Jack Boling would say· that what any Bollng wu fresh out of a job in the man might do doesn 't necessarily make personnel department of McDonnell birn a celebrity. Douglas Astronautics Company. On that "My husband really only saved our day, be took a load of trash to lhe dump. own daughter.'' ex.plains Mrs. Boling, He took along his daughter, Lisa, 7, for mpany in their 1963 van. The boxy little utility truck has a diator centered between the driver and senger seats. Lodges Back Lifting Bias The van always overheated but the temperature gauge -perhaps affected by a faulty thermostat -failed to sho\v searing steam pressure already built up. Boling, who moonlights as an ac- countant, twisted the radiator cap to check it before heading bOrhe. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 fll• D .. ty l"lltl $!1H off'lda1s or four Orange County lodges tl \lie Benevolent and Protective Ord~ , tl Elks said today they have voted to do away with the "whJtes only" restriction that ba1 been in effect nationally for 105 ,.. .... Spokesmen at four other county Elks' Jodi•• contacted today by the Datly Pilot nfUled to comment on their votes, whlch will help deterinlne the n at Ion a I membership polJcy (!f lhe charitable organizations. 1be more than 2,200 lodges and I.I mil· ~ Elka In the United State.! must vote \\'betber or not they support an amend· mtnr pnsseOti he tlMal-conventlon In July that would slrlko !Mwor<l "while" from lheorga.U..Uon'1 application forms. Since the lodge organized, Ito con- atltutlorr has restricted membership 101 "white American cltlsolll." ' Recent U.S. Supreme Court ruJlngs have permitted courts to yank liquor licenses Crom discriminatory private clubs unless the rules are~ed -an action termed a "death by one Ellis spokesman. · The Santa Ana Lodge at'Ztl Elks Lane, largest In the COW'lty with 3,50iJ members, voted overwhelmingly to do away with the 411Cr1mlnatory ~ •• ICO)rdlng fA> lodge manager Oliver Oark. The memberahlp or HwillnlllOn Beach Lodge 2444, at·l0480 Talbert Ave., Foun- tain ValleyJ 1190 voled to strike the rule. ExlllOd Rulor Larry SChley said today his lodg• voted Sept. ' fA> • rotl!Y the amtndment, ''deleting the word wbJte from membership quttlificattons." Schley stressed !Joe lacl that his lodae 's decision Is only -vote. The natlool! convenUon. however, voted tc> kill the qualification by a S to I margin. Two O!hf t>llapters, both of which have members from the Orange Coast area, also voted to rescind the qualificaUon. Spokesmen for Garden Grove Lodge 1952 and the Westminster Lodge said to- day their membel'$hip also voled by wide margins to do away with the rule. It was a different story with several other county lodges contacted today. Art Kroening, exalted ruler o! the Newport Harbor Lodge 1787 in Newport S.och, laid bis on17 comment on the vote · ls, "no comment.' - E1alt.ed Ruler John McDowell or the Oedgllng, 400.member Mfsslon Viejo Elk• Club 11ld he '!On't say bow his chapter voted Wltil tbe naliooal resuJt• are known. Lodge Secretary W. E. Pennlngtoo of the Anaheim Elka saf<I he arso has "no comment." al>out hi s chapter's vote on the rule, as d1d a spokesman for lhe lodge In Buena 'Park. The 1talemenl1 bf Onmge Cqunty (See ~s. Page !) •• • A geyser erupted. He clamped bill band -luckily he had worn a glove for the trash·movtng - down on the scalding spray and or<lered bis UtUe girl out, through clenched teeth and Ups. Lisa wresUed with the difficult door handle , while her D8d covered the spew· lng radiator ln excruciating pain UM.hie )o halt the scalding spray that played over his arm, stomach and thighs. He Is big and burly. ".Lisa was Just wearing aborts and san·' dais and a sleeveless blouse,'' says the chi id's mother. "She couJd have died." lie made sure Lisa was all right, then drove home. Jack Boling never got tbe old God· Knows·How-C\ose-WM:ame shake.a until he got home and met-his w\fe. "I bad to peel his clothes oU," she (S.0 BURNS, P ... 11 • •10r go over to her high school so1ne day at noon and tell the principal thal you want to take your daughter lo lunch. I can guarantee you, she'll be thrilled. "No woman can do this for you. They lack the internal stability, and besides, your daughters .are probably jealous of the time their mothers have with you. Don't forget, your daughters worship you and need you. "Even I -who am a super person - can't give my daughter \vbat :she needs," Faulty Gu11 Saved Trio In Newport • By ARTHUR R. VINSEL A misfiring gun which clicked repeat~· ly at one hostage and two policemen saved them from death during a night· marish kidnap confrontation in a Santa Ana Heights home Wednesday night, it was disclosed today. Details of the siege which left two per· sons wounded -apparently by police bullets -were given today In a noon press conference by Newport Beach pplice. ' K ilco&eting bullit,it -·poliltllll a light switch plunging the house lntO dark· ness as the abductor tried to .fire at law· men. 1lle suspect in the kidnap hostage case faced maignment late today. His true identity I! unknown to authorities. . He has been variously idenUfled as Vic- tor Grover Heidlage, 26, and Roland Gray. He was believed to be an unem- ployed San Diego resident but Newport investigators determined be bas been living with a couple at 752 Main St., Hun. tington Beach, since July. Male hostage Man:x> deSilva, 20, told police from his hospital bed that the kidnaper had clicked his .375 magnum pistol directly at him. It failed to fire. Investigators disclosed that DeSilva himself daringly initiated the Cot'lfronta· tion by convincing his captor that he was a helicopter pilot and c:oold fly him out of the trap to safety. "The suspect told Desilva In the bath- room that if he wu lying be would kill him on the spot," explained detective Sgt. Kenneth Thompson. "He had made the statement several times that he was going to kill them ." Detective Capt. Don Oyaas emphasized the infonnation released today is based on reconstruction oC th'! crjme through inlerviewlng DeSl1va and officers who were at the scene and not on interroga· tion of the suspect . "According to DeSilva, we knew that once they were ootside the suspect would SeE; that there was no helicopter," ex· plained Capt. Oyaas. Outskle, police cars barricaded every possible escape route while the police helicopter circled overhead. Officers outside cried out that the chopper was there to assist· in his escape. "DeSilvo knew he had fA>. make b~ move," Capt. Oyaas continued. "He grabbed the suspect's Weapon and pulled it away from the temple of Denine Baeseman of Pasadena, the' female hos· tage." One unidentified patrolman crouched !See SHOOTING,' Page 2) A11 tique Thefts At; Costa Mesa Shop Reported A Costa Mesa antique shop owner com· plained fA> police Thureday about the theft of~ltemJJ including a Majolica jar shaped like the head of • cow smoking a pipe, an df·wtdte English china plate with a coronatloo portrait of king Edwlrd VID, a Navajo Indian squash blossom necklace, two va.se3 and one wooden duck used as a hunting decoy. Bessie Delilah McNelll, 84 , owner of McNelll's Anliqu(s. 126 E. 19th St., eJtlmated a $354 lo.'15 In the grand theft caper, which she suspects occurred over a period of time. The \rtctim told Officer Roscoe Broad t"'O suspicious.looking women whom she described as ~roungy and looking about ~ years old have come In to browse every other day for two weeks. She added that they haven't bought a Jhing yet. :\lrs. Bric k quipped ... \\'omen just don 't ha\'e it." ~trs. Bric k cont inued: "•low many of you have \\'ives \\'ho expect you to make · them happy. so you give them children .; or give them a silver Rolls Royce, and· they're s1ill not happy? "The reason th ey're not satisfied ls· that happiness is an internal thing that : nobody can give you. · "You've got lo grow up 'vith it. You've tSee EXCHANGE, Page%) NEWPORT KIDNAP SUSPECT Hold lo .. Or· Groy? lnnocen t, Say Four Con,victed lit Watergate WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Asserting tllat high government officials falsely led them' to believe they were protecting "natlonal security interests," four of the original Watergate break·in conspirators asked this afternoon to change their gullty pleas to innocent. The four, all from the Miami area, said in papers flied with Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica that they were the victfms of a "cruel fraud initially perpetrated on them to obtain their participation in the Watergate ac· tivities." They said the entire judicial pro- ceedings in the Watergate case ·•weN' tainted by a massive fraud whose in· tended victims were the public, the pros- ecutors and this court ." TI-.e four are Bernard L. Barker, frank A. Sturgis, Virgilio R. Gonzalez and Eugenio R. Mart inez. Teach ers Win Boost SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -1be teacbers associalion here has voted 747· 27 to approve an 8.5 percent salary boost ending several months' negotiations, of- ficials r~ported Thursday. Coast • Weatller It'll be a cool, drizzly Saturday - at least in lhe morning hours along the Orange Coast. Beach highs will be in the 60s rising to the mid·70s inland. INSIDE T ODAY The Irvine Community Tlit· ater i$ offering local playgoer& something new thi& year -o $ell.!on of Orange County pre- miere$. Ste lnten-ni•tion column in today'1 \Vttktndtr. •1 VMr km(• 1 ilrM'f'I" a..n 1..M. •tJ'• It M•tltlel ,..... tt IHllM 2t ........ ........ t C1lllffAI• J Oo'-.. C..., 11 CllMIKM Jl.M ltff1--., tJ.it. CMMn II S'f'M• ""'*" " c, .. ,_., 11 SMrtt 1~11• DHlll Mttlc• II 1~11 Mt"*lt JWJ Olft,..;" 11 ~ • l:tlil'lorl•I ..... ' ,....,.. •ll lfltl•ll(t ll•Jt ~ • ,., "" lttc.,.i ,, 11 ............ ,,. .. H--It ...... ..... 4 .t.11111 l.Mfifn IJ ........ ~ M•llMll 4 • '· I ' ;! DAILY PILOT c f'ro111 Pag~ 1 BURNS ... said. "And I peeled hlS skin off wilh tpem." 1be Boling family ls happy today over tll1t act that others might call heroic, but bothered by the fact Jack is not only In his third week of disability. but his ninth Wetk of unemployment because of the lay-oil at ~1c0oMell Douglas. '.His wile says Jack Soling's teg looks Uke raw steak. The scalded flesh must be plucked by medical specialis ts with tWeezers as it dies. :"I'm the one who does the crying," s~ys Mrs. Boling. To some people, life t~ d~ might not seem that bad for Boling, ~ sustained first and second degree ~ over 30 percent of his body. :Jack enjoys a new treatn1cnt -seve ral beers per day, which replenish fl uid, .vftamtns, minerals and yeast, lost t~rough burns. :Still, life is no daily beer bust for Jack It>ling. : He is out of work, with four kids and a Wife to support in his ninth week of tmemployment. Doctors say it will be two Vleeks before he can look for work. From Pqe l EXCHANGE. • • OIUy ~ilol SllH Photot llY llliU.11'111 l(oehl1r Irvine Conaplex More Industrial Property Sought There will be an additional 121 acres of industria11y zoned property in the Irvine Industrial Complex if Irvine city coun- cilmen approve an llth revision of tbe From Pqe 1 GASOLINE ... that they may go out of business. ' Scattered closings of service stati-0ns began this week in several parts of the country, including San Diego where about 2.5 percent of the stations were rep-0rted closed Thursday. zo11e p!an as recommended Thursday by city planning commissioners. The extra acreage is located oorlbeasl of Barranca Road and Jamboree Boulevard adjacent to the Marine Corps Air Station. Santa Ana. The additiorN>rings to 3,000 the number of acres of indu strial property within the city. Other changes made in the llth revision include provision ror develop- ment of a seven-acre , "farmers' market" commercial area at the intersection of MacArthur Boulevard and Main Street. · The area formerly was zoned for 1 medium induslry. ( g9(·to develop it as a child. "So if you want your daughters to grow up with internal stability, you've got to give it to them . You've g-0t to spend time talking to them and listening to them. POLICE PREPARED TEAR GAS, BUT WEREN'T ABLE TO USE IT IN CONFRONTATION Detectives Reconstruct Wednesday's Shootout at Santa Ana Heights Home Orange County's moderate approach was underscored by fear of potential anti-trust action, according to Devine, who warned the dealers that they cou1d be "-0pen to charges of restraint of trade and c-0nspiracy to disrupt business." The onJy suggestion of il shutdown was made by COsta Mesa Standard dealer Bill Canning wbo grabbea the microphone from the speaker ,and said, "1 dare all you guys to shut down for three days." Commissioners already have seen a ! precise development' plan for, the seven--t acre commercial venture, Chairman Harry Shuptrine said today. It will con- tain shops and restaurants much like . those at the Farmers' Market in Los Angeles, he observed . "When they 're y-0ung, it can be boring. When they're older, it can be annoying. "But you're all your kid has got." fl.1rs. Brick ended her talk thusly: "If you men don't care <.bout your daughters, maybe I can impress you by putting it this way. "Your sons are some day going to bave i to live with .these women. And if they're going to have decent women to live with, you're going to have to raise them. "This Is your chance to put Women's llberaUon right.out of business,jf you'll just take the time with your daughters that they need." , Motorist Killed By Auto Fleeing Pursuing Police WEs:I' COVINA (AP) - A 30-year-old man was killed when his car was ram- med early today by another motorist fleeing pursuing police cars on the San Bernardino Freeway. The driver of thet fleeing car suffered only minor injuries, police said. i California Highway Patrol Officer John • Waggoner identified the victim as f\.fer· ritt D. Finch of West Covina. Waggoner said the chase began when 1 Montclair police attempt¢ to stop two cars for speeding. One car entered th e freewe.y in a bid to escaPe and sped off reaching speeds at times of 110 miles an hour, Waggoner added. He said a West Covina patrol car, which joined the chase, attempted to stop the fleeing vehicle with a rolling block, Which involves slowing down in front o( the wanted car to force it to a stop. ELKS • • • 1Cldges follows repcrts from the San Francisco Bay Area and lodges in the San Diego area that have voted -0n the ·ban. ; The l ,200-member San Ra!ael lodge toted 3 to 1 to drop the ban as did the 2_,800 member San Mateo Jodge . ~~--~~~~~~~ Sunday's Top Daily Pilot Fare Listed Here's a rundown of stories appearing in this week's Sunda y Daily Pilot : UPPER BAY -A multiplicity or government age ncies is w-0rk ing to preserve the ecological vitality of Upper Newport Bay and most -Officials are op- timistic !hat results of their work will soon become evident. The main problem tJ;ey have is coordinating all their ef- (Sunday's Best) forts. Staff writer John Zaller reports in a YOU section feature. ART FOR TABLE -High food prices not only are keeping some meals -0ff din- ner tables. they also are keeping art off gallery walls. F-0r a profile of a Costa Mesa artist who works with -Organic materials read this week's Sunday Special by Jacqueline Combs Land. • TALENT SCOUT~ J eafllle J1aliburton watches for potential ''Stars" o{ stage <ind screen in sessions every Saturday in a Newport Beach ballet school. Mrs. Haliburton, veteran agent and former ac- tress, is profiled by staff writer Jo OJS-On in a women·~ page feature. WATERGATE RATINGS -Judging from the mail response, the \Vatergate hearings may be the m-0 st closely- listened·lo series on television. From hate mail to near love letters, it pours in at rate that is too high to keep track -0!. F'or samples, see the Sunday editor ial section. Ai\fERICANS IN DEBT -The average ci tizen's ideas on borrowing may not be as liberal as is assumed. A University of Michigan study· shows middle·inc-0me families borroWed at an average of 12 percent of their yearly income. and most don 't wan t to borrow any more. This feature appears in the YOU section. From Pagf" l SHOOTOUT AFTERMATH • • • behind an overstuffed chai r took ai m and tried lo shoot the gunman in the head <IS his pist-0! wa s jerked fr-0m the temple of the 17-year-old girl hostage. He missed by inches. By this time, '8 pair of ()fficers hiding 10 feet away sprang into the open, their own guns drawn. DeSilva and the two lawmen say the kidnaper clicked his pistol as though try· ing to fire the weapon, but it did not discharge. "The gun was pointed at me. I thought lie vtas going to shoot me," said one of the officers involved inside the house. They both opened fire at that point. Inves tiga tors said seven shots were f!red within a tw-0 to three second period. fi ve of them bracketed in a three-foot square at mid-body level on the wall be- hind the suspect and: victims. The su s· pect was not hit, however. Subsequent investigation of tbe sus- pect's gun disclosed that the four bullets ~i:naining in it had been struck by the f1nng hamm.er but had not discharged. But a police bullet fired during the mel~e apparently hit the young gi rl, Den1ne Baeseman. tearing through her arm and into her chest. The slug was removed in surgery Thursday. Two bullets struck Desilva, one ripping through his forearm and the second hit- ting him in the lower abd-0men. DeSilva also underwent surg~ry for removal -0f a slug that remained Thursday. The suspect identified as Vic tor Grover Heidlage, Ron Gra y and Rolly Gray - according to questioning o f ac· quaintances -had dropped to the floor. "It wasn 't his day," remarked Detec- tive Sam Amburgey regarding the fa ct that the officers' bullets did not hit the suspect. suspect probably ~·ould have been hit in the chest had he not dropped, adding that powder burns on the door\vay indicated the gunman braced his weapon for better aim. He had also fired one sh~t through the bathroom ceiling in an apparenUy as-yet· unexplained ruse designed to make police believe he had shot DeSilva. Investigators said Miss Baeseman was ordered to scream that he had shot her acquaintance, which she did. Desilva , likewise, remained silent as he was ordered. ''The officers tried to make contact \\'it h DeSilva," Sgt. Th-0mpson· explained . "and !hey couldn't. The girl just kept crying." Shortly thereafter. the suspect emerg- ed into the dark hallway shielded sandwich-st yle, by the two youths, one in front and one behind him with their arms intertwined at the elbow by his sides. DeSilva however, went for the kid- naper's gun in the doorway, triggering two volleys of gunfire from police hidden in the house. "You're talking about a very closely- timed period," Capt Oyaas Said -0f the few seconds in which police .were con- fronted with trying to take the suspect before he could fire at them or ki11 his hostages. Investigators who are still attempt.ine to eslablish lbe .sUlpecl'slfue i<l'\Jilt said he surreh8iffii f lbei1 wit~ouf In· cident. They decUned comment when asked if it appears that he has prior CTiminal record . "As of now, we're not even convinced we kn~w who the guy really is," said Detective Amburgey. Canning angrily left the meeting when his caU for a sales boycott failed to rouse the 300 dealers who attended the strategy session. Most appeared lo go along with the recommendation of Mission Viejo dealer William H. Bay and County Supervisor Ralph Clark to use their political power and to convince the registered voters driving through their stations that they have a problem. Clark, himseli an Arco dealer and former lSSDA president, urged the angered dealers to remain united, be gentlemen, and to "just hang tight, because I think we're going to whlp it." The fourth district s u p e r v i s o r . however, lashed out at the architects of the Phase IV gas price control plan which allows dealers a maximum seven cents gross profit per gall-0n. "These idiots in Washington have no idea what the problem is," he said. "They don't know that our people w-0uld be tickled pink with a seven cents net." Clark added that he thought the Cost of Living Council needs to understand that anytime an oil company raises the lankwagon price by one or two cents a gallon, the dealer's profit takes a dive because he must absorb the increase. "The y're asking w to -Operate in the post-World War JI days of profit," he cha rged. Reagan Against I-like .... SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Gov. Ronald Hcagan said Thursday the 10 percent tax increase President Nixon reportedly may ask of Congress would give the; gdvem· ment more spending money, but won 't cure inflation. "The great problem in just raising taxes to reduce purchasing power and inflation is that Congress doesn't look at it that way," he said here. Presently, development in the llC is governed by the Ninth Revised Develop· ment Plan approved by !he county prior to incorporatiOn. A loth revision \Vhich took more than a year to complete, has yet to receive final approval of the City Council. The planning staff, Shuptrine said, wilt now take the provisions of the 10th revision and blend them with the substance of the 11 the revised and bring for ~aring en Oct. 4 a 12th revised version of the industrial zone plan. "We're essehtially skipping the 10th revised," Shuptrine said. That zoning package never was enJtcted as law, even though it \\'as th@ dtY's first major in- fluence on the rules governing industrial development. The 10th revision was Wldertaken to sort oi.tt lhe commercial areas near Orange County Airport and equalize the rules governing land owned by the Irvine Company to rules affecting Douglas. Crow, Irvine. Douglas-crow is expecting to develop a 50-acre parcel at MacArthur Boulevard and Campus Drive. Offices and hotels are planned for the site originally purchased for aerospace research by the parent McDoMell·Douglas Corporati-0n o( St. Louis. Councilman Wilson To Speak on Radio Robert M. Wilson, city councilman or Costa Me5a, will talk about his town at 10:30 a.m. Sunday over radio station KGBS -1020 AM. The half Hour interview w I t h nev»scaster Clark Alexander ranges over a variety of topics . among them legalized prostitution. gun control. city taxes and Costa Mesa's relationship with other Orange Coast cities. Detective Sgt. Thompson said evidence indicates the gunman aimed and fired carefully earlier when he wounded -0f· fic er Jon Coste low. The patrolman had crept .toward a rear sll din g glass door with a view into the bathroom area where the suspect had herded his hostages. SLEEP SOFAS One shot was fi red chest high through the window. hit ting officer Costelow in th e fa ce with glass and bullet fragments. Detective Sgt. Tho1npson said the I Every Home Should Have One ..... ..... ._ . -···- • Spokesmen for the 20 Bay Area lodge s Said the vote appears to be going ab-Out 2 tD 1 in favor of dropping the con- li'oversiaJ requirement that has kept out minority members. Old-time Ci·in1i11al S11eal\:s : One Jodge in Southern California, th e Oceanside branch, has voted in favor -0£ .;ontinuing the ban while tv.•o others - those in Encinitas and San Diego -voted tO drop the rule. To Costa Mesa Lions Club I : The votes are expected to be tallied by the nationai headquarters of the Elks in ~hicago next month. OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT Meet Mo_rris "Red" Rudensky. He ran ·away from Imme at L2, escaped Crom reform school at 14, stole over 50 grand before he turned 15. and financed a Chicago whorehouse whil e he was a " teenager. Rudensky killed before he was 21. T~• 0r.,.. c.u1 OAJLY PILOT, w11tt ~1e1i He escaped fr-0m th e Illin ois State Pen rs ~ ,,,. ..... ~,..... 11 pU11111Jlled w and Fort Houston and becaine an Army ft>9 o.-.,.._ t:o.tt P\llllillllnl C..._,.. S<tJtlo· d ,,,e .,1,._ •r• • .,...,. IMndty ........ eserter at 22. lie engineered two fa 1nous Fr1c11y, ior eost• Mn., N""'°" Snell. robberies during the T1vcnlies. including HU111111910r1 1.-clll,,_llln V•IMY, l.avUM BIWI. 1rvineis-.iltttldc .,... s." ci.m. .. ,..1 a 23--man caper nett ing $2 n1illion and a s"' Ju•" tlPlttr•-A •lftt" r91119ntt $300,000 mail robbery . .alt)orl Is MlltMll ""'""P """ S41NS1y,. r"' pr1nc1p.11 JUlllltllh'll .-111 ",1 n1 wni Rudensky escaped tlv k·e f ro m "'' '""'· coa11 M-. C.llfot<Tllf • .,.,._ Leavenwo.rth ancl spent 35 years -0r his .. ,!:=::.~,:ii:., l,iFc in prison, once as a celltnate -0{ Al Jecli ll. Curl1y Capone. v1e1 ~rnlffrlt en111 GIM•••.M•,,.... Morris "Red" Rudensky ~·ill be Tt101111• K ... n lid1tw honored by the C-0sta Mesa Lions Clu b Thom•• A. Mwrph;,., next Tuesday when he appears at 6:45 MtM9lnl e•1w Chtrle• H. Leo• •1ch1nl '· Hill p.m. In the Mesa Verde Counlry Club. 1<111IUlflt ~Int u 1ton Rudensky doesn't expect a key to the C.... .._ Offkoe city. He plans to bring hls own. llO Wert 1•Y Stt.et Jn safecracker's and burglar's parlance M1lll119 "'4IN111·P.O. 101 1160, t2626 "keys lo lhe city" ;ire tools or the trade --N~:.,.....,..,, "'""',,. -picks. hammer, crowbar, aod punches. '-": m ,... .. , ,,,,.,..,. rru. 7 4 I d I Mvfltlt•-llMdli 11111 aMd'I ~11¥••• ni e · Y e a r • o cx-<.'On \Vil ..,. c*-'il1 • Htttll •• c.1'111111t•• demonstrate the use or lhese tools and T.ra1t 1nr 1714t '41..,.IJI techniques used by ·burglars in the hope C121UW M•"1l a MJ-1671 of keeping olher pros from becc rning as r -1-1--'-cone..gltalghl,.Ruden~ky now serves -:ts ~·.£.••~a::~'l!'il'Me i UCce.ss!ul as he was. •• ;·:. ........ .-111 a COnsultant to the security systems • ~ """• ..... dl I ...;.,,~-;'.~,iw",,ii: vsi0hol llie3-M Company. ~ .... -Membcrt·of the public Int erested in al· ~ ~ · -..._ 1 _ tending the Li~• Club program should ' • _; , cell· Paul Brecb!, 548-231 4. There. is no 1dmiss!on chorg•. ·-' I :. -- I ' 1. AN EXPERT WITH TOOLS Ex·-c:on Rudtnsky \ • Excellent Selection Now On Display, Al Reasonable Prlcts, Stop In Today, DREXE'--ERITA6f-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS1AN I N TE R, I o,['.s -, ~ . WllKDAYS & SATURDAft:f:OO!N'SiJO FRIDAY 'TIL ,lioO ;:: ' '· . .. • NEWPORT IEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFf DR., 6'42·2010 IOp111 S11"4•Y 12·5110) LAGUNA BEACH e 345 NORTM·CO.A.51 MWY. IOp1f!......S11ml1 12-11JOI '4t'4•6!!_1 . .. _ _ TORRANCE e ····-· ' 2J64t H.AVllHOllHI ILVD. .i-_ .. j&.: .. ;..;_· 37i.121t .. _ . .. ' I • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE " Vo,te .for the Future • Costa Mesa voters convinclngly demonstrated to everyone last Tuesday that they mean buslness about open space, even ii il means a slightly higher tax bill. It was almost a foregone conclusion that the 13.91 million issue would fall because, in the view of many, a lax increase was tbe last thing Costa Meaans would shoulder ln these ti111es of skyrocketlng living coets. That conclusion was wrong because Costa Mesa has a real need for open space and the need outweighed tho comideration ot increased taxes. It was proved wrong by 71 percent of the voters, significantly more than the two-thirds majority required to pass the bond measure. In fact, the bond proposal won more than 50 percent of the votes ln 4ll but five ol the 40 election precincts, indicating that it was a popular proposal despite the low voter turnout. Even those areas which did not stand to gain a neighborhood park through the bond issue voted over· whelmlngly for it. They were primarily newer neigh- borhoods which already had some open space and knew how to value it, The improvement ln the lllestyle the new parks will bring to Costa Mesa and_}.he improvement In property values ·are certain to off1_"t the $8-$10 hike in property taxes. · Communication Gap • That rock concert that shook up much of the neigh· borhood around Newport Harbor High School late last month still is reverberating around the.balls in both the Newport.Mesa Unified School District ofllces and New·· port Beach City Hall. . Ne~rt Beach police are making no secret of the fact they re not happy recipients of the more than 200 calls from residents complalnlng about the event. They also are, a little more quietly, letUng people Nuclear 'Parity' Called Irrelevant Amtrica has far more nuclear weapom than it could conceivably use to prqtect its Jtcurity. And it'! build- • ing niore at the f"ate of almost four a dat1. Thi! is not the assessn1ent of a pacifist or a nu.clear disarmer. It iJ rather tile view of r et ired Rear Adm. Gene LaRocque wlio today lieads tile respected Center for De- fe-nse TnfonMtion. He is inter- viet.Dftj by editors of The Waihing- ton Monthly. · Q: Whta It comes to nuclear weapons. bow Important today la parity -or equality -"·Ub the Ru11tans? A: Parity is a ridiculous. outmoded 19th centw'y idea. It is no longer relevant in an age when we can destroy tl).e Soviet Union so many times over that you can't even count them. And they can do'the same to us. As a result or last year's SALT agreements', 'Yl'e need less and less rorces tG defend the United States from attack. By signing the SALT treaty, we said .in effect that the United States will make no attempt to defend itself -an almost 'Unbelievable thing to tell the public - again.st a Soviet missile attack. And the Soviets have also agreed not to defend themselves against a U.S . missile attack. It could be called "security through mutual vulnerability." ( WHERE THEY STAND ) missile-carrying nuclear submarines. For example, Our fleet of 20 Poseidon sub- marines carries 1 6 0 independently targeted nuclear weapons which can destroy 160 soviet cities. . , Q: 1'11'.---3,llGI Soviet dlles wllh the 20 tubs. A: And there are only 220 Soviet ci1ies with over 100,00J population. One thousand nuclear weapons, ooweventh 'of what Wf.! bav .... &oday, Wilu,ld be more than enough lo -do the Job. .This ii especially true because, u HearJ JCia· singer said ~ tbe SALT agreement "they'll all get a free ride." 'lbere woo•i be any ABMs to ahoot them doWJ;l. Q: But Isn't tbe reuot. we have so many nuclear wupou bifcaue a certain percentage of tbept won't rucll tbelr targets In a nllCkar adaup? A: This is an old Idea elating from the time ·when bombers were used to penetrate an enemy' a defemes. In .those days you had to remember that bombers could be shot down with guns, with missiles or interceptor aircraft. Tbe limitation of ABMs means this is no longer the case. Americana are ltlll bung Q: [ tlke It you are referring lo the up on this outmoded mental attitude. clause that 1bictly llmllJ Ille deployment Q: Si.nee the SALT qreemeat made tt or ABMI, ?" de(endve mJnUes. easier for mlssllet to reacb tbeJr tarset11 A: Thats right. ahoulda't thJs have Jed to a velat.ary Q: U equltty Is not an lmpOrta.n.t reduction in orfenslve weapom'l' meuarlq.rod, lben wbat ere the mini-A: That's what we all expected to bap- mal forC: le~els we need to protect Olll' pen. Instead the military 6as 1llfft!6ed a 1ecurtty · . . ~ ~t or new programs this year. 'lbe Alr A: Back in November 1971 the United F rce wants $500 million for a~ B-1 Sta~es bad 4,700 nuclear weapons and the ber which eventually will cost $11 ' Soviets had 2,100. N~w we have 7,~00 billion; the Navy war\ts a new 'I'rldent nuclear. weapons. Thats a SO per cent m· submarlne at a oc»t of $1.S billion as part crease m 18 months. of a ~new program whicb will even- Q: '1'1111 11 totally -pendent of aay tual!y coot fll biWcn And -pro. procloclloa on lbe pan el tile Raulans? grams are Jul! the Up Of the k:ebers. A: Yes. The RuS!lau bid 2,100 nuclear Q: 1{tlot -for tlU ......,..m · weapoos ln 1971 .. Toda)I Ibey have 2,300. toward-eatlrely pew weapons lydeml? These are all figures provided by the A: Partly bureaucratic inertia. The Secretary ol Defense. military has been planning theae Q: ~·we hive Ute Ind In tbe weapons systems for years. Last year number If ndear wdpou, Ute Rauta1 Sen. Symington uked Adm. Zumwalt, bave a · 1aperlorqy w~a It comes to chief of naval operations, 0 Admiral, JCBMI. Why are Ultal nllclear weapons a whelt did you start planning the Trident more lmportaltt Index lban the n11mber submarine?" of ICBM&? Adm. Zumwalt smiled and said: "We A: All this means ls that the Soviets started planning It the day the United depend largely on land-hued mileiles States Senate apptoved the Polaris sub- while we place our primary emphasis on marine." · The Decline of a Giant "-k TWalo1 God's Fool. By Hamlin HJU. Hari>er & ROw, 309 Pages. 110. Tho twilight of any mortal, particulsrly If he .,. the b a 1en1ua, can he both In· formallve and c11a1r ... 1ag. The story of the last 10 yeara of lllark Twain's lile, which Hamil• llll l deocrlbes ln this latest study baoed cm CClllldenble private material hllherto little used, Is more than typical. ALTHOUGH h• continued ahnDst to the tnd u a very auccessful wrller, Twain was past hls creative peak. The mask of the chnlolder '!I ihid:IJlb.Cen1111'1 lroo- ( T~ BOOKMAN J For years peroonal tragedy had stalked the men: his only son had died in in· fancy; hi! eldest daughter, SUsan, also bad clled young. Mrs. Clemen1, the be- lov.d IJvy, who detplte her Vlctcrlan censorship of her husband'• writing really had helped guide him, clled before him. Their youngest daughter, J ... , drowned durlag an epllepUc aelzure. Uer life In America's superb tnnocence A CJUEF aource of Hill's account Js -when he paraded as a bufloon It wu lhe journal of Olemena' aecretary, Iaabel as 1 grand buUooo -was allpplng off. Lyon, adoring and adored until she Joined ruwealed it last war th true coun--the-company of woclates b e Jenan(» of one of our most complez neurotlcall) conceJved as enemlet, Hlll ls lltm artllll, samuel L. Clemens hardly an lnaplred writer. But he baa hbiiiet!: aUll brilliant but declinllll In (lone a uaelul 1ludy of the decllne of a health of body and mind, yet determined lianL to the end lo.lulflll hi! reputation u • • prodigious writer. Rould C. Hood, __ ...... know It was the' school district that approved the con· cert, a privately·sponso~d and operal<ld event. School district officials confide they'd really love to forget the whole thing. Police, in a report to tho city administration that bas been forwarded to school officiala, say ln the future they should be given more authoritr. to oversee events on school property before they take p ace. They suggest "better lines of communication" be' opened. It's tough not to agree. While the schools would want to retain the right to an ultimate decision, it wouldn't hurt to get advice from the police on any po- tentially problem-creating event on campwes. To borrow a r,hrase often used by educators, it should ad~~: a ~::~~·~~~the district. The Orange Coast sky ls getting crowded In this technolo~cal age of complex and relatively simple fly. tng machines. One Of the simple Qnes hit one of the complex ones recently, happily without disaster. Costa Mesa1s police helicopter was smacked by a $20 toy rocket capable of attaining 1,000 feet altitude while the chopper cruised on patrol at 600 feet. Observer Officer Dick Bersch got a bit of a jolt when he saw the flaming UFO approaching on the port side. Pilot Officer Frank Upham felt the same jolt a second later when it hit. And so did the errant boy who hit the helicopter purely by unlikely acciden~ as the crew set down swift· ly to investigate who put a dent In the craft below the cOckpit bubble. He escaped with only a warning, although launch· Ing any projecWe higher than 100 feet is Illegal. 'Beat it; kid! This is no penny-ante game we'v& got going here!' • . The incident should be a lesson to everyone to ex· ercise care in cluttering up the crowded skies. c • l• Dear Gloomy Gus While Watergate conspirators fltc- Cord and Magruder have been barred by court order from the lecture circuit, crime seems to be paying for their colleague E. How- ard Hunt. Re-prints of hJs spy nov· els, with b.ig by-lines, are selling like hotcakes in the supermarkets. A.V. 01-r Gill ~ti IN ....,,,.... lllY rMdefl and M "" -rfly 1'9'1kt IN \#WI .. "" --' Stlllll ,...... .et ...... to o-.., Gn. Dell'f f'llet, Free Transit Experiments Cost P"lenty There'• little to be said for driving a car Into the city. Parking is scarce and upensive, traffic congestion is nerve- wracklng and air pollution caused by automobile fumes is becoming in· suf{erable. Yet Americans continue to re- ly on private lransportation. The Urban Maa Transit Administration estimates that 86 per cent of the nation's com· muters go to work in automobiles while only 10 percent rely .on buses and 4 per· cent use subway trains . DRIVERS complain that p u b I i c transportation is slow, unreliable, m.. Convenient and costly. A number of cities have moved to counter these criticisms by setting up express bus lanes during ED ITO RI.A! ·RESEARCH rush hours, raising parking rates to a level that would discourage motorists, reducing transit fares, and allowing senior citizens and those traveling at cer· lain hours to ride free of charge. Some urban planners are demandi1g more -· they want cities to offer free public transportation to all. This month, Seattle will become the first major American city to offef free mass transit. During the one-year ex· periment, riders will be able to board buses In the outer city and the suburbs. Commerce, Cnlif., provides the nation's only long-term free transit experlmenl Advocates of the no-cost service argue that Commerce's experience, where only about 7 percent of all residents use the: buses, Is not applicable to large cities. When Rome tried f,... transl! In 1m, they argue, ridership i n c r e a s e d enonnously. ROME dlscontinued the !ervlcc, which had cost lhe debt-ridden dty '15 mllllon, after two months. &e1ttle'1 very limited e1perlment will cost 164,000 while Com· merte, wllh '8 population of only 11,000. pays 1130,ooo a year for 111 free bu!cs. It Is quesUonable whether taxpayers In lar1e c!Ues, particularly those whe do not use public transportation, wlll be wllltn5 ~~:::~~ ~;f~: :~.nu!' :t ~1~;! transit, coup1ed with lmprovementa need· ed to attract motorists, could run to $10 bllllon a year. Unlll the public decldu that the benefits are _.th the price, free mau traMlt ls likely to rematn the .exoeption rather than the ruJe. ' School Report Watered Dowta FTC Yields to Pressure WASHING TON -The Federal Trade Commission produced a dramatic booklet warning against unscrupulous practices by vocaUooal schoola, then oeerelly detp- sixed almost 100,000 ol the books when the schools protested. This bucldJng to the Industry he lJ sup- posed to regulate was one of the fll'lt tests for FTC Chalrman Lewis Enginan, who was recently appointed by President Nb:· on to protect consumers from voracious business practices. The 24-page booklet had been painstak- ingly put together by FTC staf!tr1.flld was handsomely printed for diltribuUoo to the public. Bui the vo.;;otional scboo! industry got wind ol it an~ed mf&bti· ly to the FTC. • -,-- t;~• : WREN THEY complain~ Encman° called a special meeting of the corn· missioners, who w ere on vacation. Not all showed up. n-present quickly voted to put up the money for a revised booklet, which looks identical but ac- tually leaves out some of. the most stlng- '1ng criticism of the profit~aklng schools. Although most of t he original 93,000- copy edition is now moldering in the FTC's basement, we managed to obtain one copy, and found it is substantially stronger, than the second version.. which is being releaaed lh the pub)lc wllh the blessing of Engman and the vucatlorial schools. FOR INSTAN~E, In warokig about · phony degrees grant.a bJ·-·schools, the originBI pamphlefiia~:,_ vilue of a degree or diploma granted by a junJcr college, college or unJversltJ is reliable. 'lbe worth of a ~-or diploma gtVen by a private, .. pNtlttmak· lng vocaUonal school la lomeUmes more questionable." -· 'lbat paasage is deleted in the eecond booklet and its absence Is noteworthy. Many states, following a model program ln!tltuted by North Carolina, have established commwlity oollea:es and vocational schools that are ortea. superior to, and competing for the same .students as commercial schools. Another caveat expurgated b1 lhe FTC says. ;'Vocational schools often have naines which are very similar in aound or spelling to famous organiz&Uoo.s just so you may confuse the two." n,e com- plaint ls nonetheless valid: Firms Ute IBM are continually plagued by educa· Uon hucksters trading on lheir eully · recognl2ed initials. THE ORIGINAL lext contalna this warning: "lf a course has a yery low 1 drop.out rate, it may be too easy aod tb&v school may be a 'diploma mm.• Bomt'' COUl'leS are designed to be euy, IO students wUI complete them and adloals·, wlll 'get all the money." This wu cllleted" entirely from tbe revised brochure. FT<; Conunlssloner Paul Rand Dlml, who wu not at the n11h· meeting oa Ille ~ said, 11}1fll!! got kind of. aoft tpOt' in 'lii;'heart /or correspondence ICboola:;.i Nol e~one has a rich daddy "(but) some of'lhese places are just out and out diploma mill!.,. '' Joen Z. Bernstein, acting director ol' FTC's Bureau of c.onsumer Protedlon,·· said the commission had "planned a aec- ond edition anyway." She insisted there were no pressures to alter the text, but admitted there we r e objections from. representatives of the vocatioaal achoob. An Obsession with Records WASHINGTON -When we're not thinking about hew to find food and then how to pay for it, this year's preocc:u- pation seems to be the exhumation of bodies, political and literal. The most spectacular dig Jajd bare by the criminal archeologisls is still, of course, Watergate. However, the Agnew find ia the equivaJent of the discovery of the un- touched tomb of a late dynasty pharaoh, and ll)en there are minor but promlalng excavations like the unearthing of a forttine in unused Air Force Inventory at Oiarlestoo, S.C. In adclltion lo the "Waterhole Scan- daJ/' as the enlisted -men on the beae re- fer to it, deep 59 divers off the coast of Massachuaetts were attempting to recover treasure from the long sunk· en lrans • Atlantic liner, Andrea Doria. • A party of dlgers !rom the Houston Police department must be given credit for the most horrifying of the summer's exhumations, the bodies of 27 boys, most terribly murdered. In reporting the newa the media have made It a tasteless point to tell us tbfJ 'tbe Houston dig r5esents a new record. In due course, Wll!! ex· pect to open our Guinness Boo Records, page through to "Murders, ttfus," and then on to "murders. mulU· ple, non·polltlcal," where it will read something !Ute, '1K01J.ston, Texas, U.S.A 1973, 27 -modem rtCOrd." In baseball, homicide and track we divide our records Into the categories of ancient and modem, perhsps because anyone who nourished before 1900 partakes of the leaendary, as though we believed lhar prior centuries were peo- pled by deml11octs and devils, <=!lures sufficiently dJf(erent f.rom ourselves to make compariJOD a form of deception. KEEPING RECORDS of athletic feat! or such accomplishments es the most 11tandardlztd IG-ounce mugs of atout con- sumed In one hour's :iltting la a fonn· of celebrating 'exceptional achlevem@nt. That 11 one way wt make feat1 famous , just as record-keeping supplies us with a slan<Wd to 1trlve f'!I', butovh)' then treat the bloodiest crlmd In the oame way! A taste for the macabre, or pemapo an ( VON HOFFMAN J abstruse passion for the measurement of the largest and 11DBllest of anything. We are a bookkeeping civilllaUon. The most marvelous of all oUt machlne1, the com· puter, Is prlmarlly uaed far our records wlllch are IO volumlnou.t tbit even when abrunk to mkrOflJril 111ze Ibey overtax the capacity Of lbouland1 of warebouoes and caves. Much Of <iur dlggtng Is explained by our love of records. The '1recorrl of ~ put," the recordl of other peoples, other societies are as Important as our own. We go ~ far as to coruitruct records for van11hed nations whose populations didn't have our taste for writing down and atortnc their acu and statlsUcs. RetOl'dl also comfort us. We need an ezplaaatlon for everything, but there is no usable one for w h a t happened in HOU!tcn so we ccnsult our records and they iell us lha.L such uvager1es bave been committed before and, 11 that doean't expJaln-anythlng. It makes us feel better. No crime 11 quite "° bad 11 It's been cornmltted before. MANY HAVE reacttd to Watergate in the oame mode. l'llllUdan• pull that kind of stuff all the time, ergo Watergate i:.11 't so bad. lf they concede that Watergate Is what It ls -a uniquely foul series of in· le!l'Connttted crlmea -they leave themselves ppen to disturbing specula· Uona. Could rt.-be then that we, as a peo- ple, have changed for the worse, thnl such things as Houston and Watergate could have taken place for the llrst time ? Ouistians, conacrvauves and oth@rs whoee philosophy teaches them the reali· ty of aln, or at least the lnflnltely Im· perrect naturt of human beings, don 'l have that problem. 'niey can accept a Houston or a Walel'iate, not as a sign that our warp Is coming apart from our woor, but as evil done by specific in~ dlvlduals who must take the guilt for it. The doctrine· of Individual guill absolves socli.1 guilt and the need lo dig around for larger explanations. htost of us are too much lhe children of n1od em liberal culture to accept evU as a con-sequenct of our hum1nlty, and therefore be cootent ..-Jy lo punish It and shoo . . I it. We must explain it and thua, as we first di.lg up the crime, we try to dig up an explanation for it, if not In our record boots then in our social sciences. JS WATERGATE, we ask, a sign of a defect in "the system"? Shortly we shall be asking t h e same ques:Uons about Houston. We clld It with Charlie Maa.on, whom we..explalned away by calling him the Hipple Killer. Maybe we'll call the Houston culpr1ts the Hard-Hat Killers, or some other nonsenae name. More likely, we'll have recourse to poydliatry. The plea of not gu!lty by reuon ol insanity probably should not be allowed in our ttirnlnal justice, but In a society that feels guilty about J.Ullt ancl yet must have some plaua1ble ex- planation of guilty acts, psychiatry ts a most serviceable device. The head-shrinkers excavaUnc: the skulls of the wicked for the causes ot thelr crimes, however satisfying to tM imagination, Is about as sclentWc as ex- orcism. Others will prefer to coounue digging for harder facts and better ex- planations wllh the attendant ris.k that their shovels will not unearth · better knowledge -but worse crimes. OUN .. COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wted, Publhhtr Thomas KeevU, Edttor Barbara Krtibich. .Edlcorlat Page Editor The «litor1al ;Jl8it' of t~ Diiiy PUot Reks to Inform Md tUmulate rMdttt. by prt5Cntinit on tt1ia pqt dtvffto.c:ommentary' on IOplot or in- 1.f't'tlt by llf'dkated columnilll and cartoonists. by prwfdlna • twum for ,. ttt.dtts' vlew1 and by pt'fl'MnU,. ttlil MWIPl.Ptt'• oplniom and klMs on C\ll'h'nt topka. The tdttorla.1· opWofd ol the OaHy Piiot appear ~ In the editorial coJumn· at ~ top « the pqe, ()p{nJont txPrtteed by the COi· umnt.b liid c~-ud""11tttr - wrlttra are thtlr own and no endone-- mtnt ot their vtl'ft by •he D&ilJ pt)Ot 1hcl'J)d be Wemd.. Frid(y, September 14, 1973 • . . ' . • ' . . • ~= -: .. ,. . • t I ' I Casli Not His Thing -Moretti SACRAMENTO IAP\ Assembly Speaker Bob l\loret· ti say!!I he probably is the least-wealthy proba ble caJJ· dld ate for gove rnor ncxl year, but "money's not my thing." The Van Nuys Democrat disclosed net personal wealth totaling $39,747 to newsmen in his Capitol office Thursday, including ll''D-lhlrds or an acre or land in Jamaica valued at $21,!00. A reporter asked ?i.foretti lf ( BRIEFS ) money wam't "his thing," ¥.'hat is -power? "You could say that -in· fluencing what goes on," he said. "I believe I can do some good thin gs. 1 y.·ant to be in a position to do those things." e Soft Water ' SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The San Diego County Water Authority has voted to pipe soft water from Northern California. into homes here in 1975, despite warnings by some member agencies that filtration plants won't be ready by then. The authority, composed of 22 agencies which distribute water to the county's 1.5 million residents, voted Thurs· day night to order Feather River water from the state in 1975. two years ahead of its previous: schedule. e Capitol SACRAMENTO (AP) - Alternative proposals to build a new state Capitol or rebuHd the existing building were on Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk to- day. -A blll by Assemblyman Willie Brown (D-San Fran· cisco ), contains the two rival plaru!I. His measure calls for construction of a brand new structure to house t h e legislature in d o w n t o w n Sacramento, unless a feaslbili· ty study shows it would be more practical to reconstruct the e x i 1 t in g 1()3..year-old Capitol. e Open Meets SAC&4.MENTO (AP ) Rules for open meetings by legislative committees would be placed into state law under a bill that has gone to the governor's desk. The A&sembly and the Senate both gave final ap- proval Thursday to the legisla· tk>n by Sen. Donald Grunsky (R-Wa13ooville.) eDrugLaw SACRAMENTO IAP I California would give life in prison to dope peddlers if a newly-Introduced New York· type measure becomes law. The biD, by Assemblyman Raymond Gonzales ( D • Bakersfield), was introduced Thursday. Gonzales said, "New York has had a lot of positive reac- tion to it. The reaction ls that they have scared the pushers off the street." Gin the Gift that "Keeps on Giving" Back to YOU! •w•*-'t """"'""• should bt • OM-WIY lbWlt. U JOU colrtribut1 to us, "" ttllM: .. should do sontltlllll9 II mum that lil!U rtw JOO htk lllOT1 thin • RIM """- •lld • tu deduction. • Now, w1 h1w1foun4 1 most rem1rklb t1 wty to ,.... )'Oii for )'Ollr 1tne10$ilJ. You ttlll 1nJoy the pleasure of llefpf111 your f1llow·m1n, plus Ille btlM!fils of I ta t·deducllblt 11ilt. Bit .•. JOU don't 1iw up th• future fir11ncial w:u1Jty you could hive enJoyad by keeping )'OUr l ift. •As lon1 as you ti wt - bqlnnln1 immedlatety-w.'U pay you a 1enerous lr1eom1 out or th• 1amt11p of your contribution. Thus, It becomes 1n Uitattntnt lo protect 10ur Mure. and tflt futur1 of JUU1 flmlly. M tllt llfllt llmt, JDU win bt IM'lll on futur1 tst1t1 taxes ... probllt costs. • Whit OCllll' ft/ can you m J'OUf Mwiesb9111t funds Ind MCOr1ties to llo .. '9udl for r:::,,, '":"I.!?' llWlll: Oii CALL far f,. .. ,.. .. Iloi llitllolt DWlptloti ltl111t tr • .(714) '45-11111 htMtioo JOii ••• __ , ThoiMt I(. Sladlltl"' Haig M1mori1/ H111pit1/ Pr116Y11!l111 JOii N•wport Boulev•rd Newporl 811ch, CA 92660 -----------------.,., lri' I"'' f' ~~,,;--.Ir;-• r·"ll 11,-, • t<:J1 'I ~, J, ' JI ·• 1f<'1 r,.;J C'""',' .. • Friday, Stpt.tmber 14, 1913 DAILY PILOT § 1 Sexuality Text Just Not Selling Heart Transplant Raising Legal Queries· in Murder CALIFORNIA Police Seek 'Stash Pad' For Heroin SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Police were searching for a so-called "stash pad" where a couple arrested on narcotics violations here may have kept a fortune in heroin . Leon Cooper, 29, and his wife Cynthia, 26, allegedly sent teenaged girls to the stash pad each morning to bring back up to $3,000 worth of heroin, Police sai"<J. The Coopers allegedly used the older of their five children, ranging in age from eight months to 11 years, tO sell the · drug in their Potrero Hill neighborhood, officers said. The couple was to be ar· raigned in Municipal Court to- day oo charges of possessing heroin for sale, keeping a house when! heroin ia used and furnishing heroin t o minors. SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A sex education textbook that trlggered arguments acros5 CalUornia this rear probably _,, be used al!A!r all because not enough orders lor It have been received, educa- tion officials say. Only about 2,300 orders for the telf. "Human Sezu:ility" have been received, deputy state school superintendent Ed Harper said Thursday. -THE AMERICAN Book CO., -publisher of the text, haa sild ' it needs at least 25,000 orders before it will proceed with revisions specified by the CalifonUa State Board of Education. 1be revis.ions were ordered to tone down sectiorui that board members con. sidered too explicit for the eighth graders who were to use the book. Asked if there was a chance a sufficient number of Orders would come In by an Oct. 1 deadline, Harper said, .. It cer· tainly doesn't look like Jt at th.is stage. "The indicaUon I got was that districts were ordering it out of curiosity, more than anything else," he added in an interview at a State Board of Education meeting. A PATCH E D·logelher duplicated edition ol the reviJ- ed book had been exhibited In 60 textbook dJsplay centers across the state for public evaJuation end reaction. For several months in a row last spring and summer, board members wrangled o v e r whelher parts of the 1114-page text were too e:zpliclt for eighth graders. Board member E u g e n e Ragle of Roseville called the text a "how-to-do.it" sex book. A resolution urging Gov. Ronald Reagan to "speak out strongly" against the book · was presented Wednesday at a San Francisco convention of the Federation of Republican women. EVEN , THE watere<f..down version "has the effect of en· dorsing premarita l in· tert0urse, abortion on demand and illegal drugs," said the resolutio n from the Lafaye~ "Republican Women. A rewritten version ol. the text was finally approved by the board for ltlassroom use in September, 1974,. if extensive changes \Vere made. But American Book said because of the costs of the revision! ordered by the board, It need· ed at least 25,000 orders to break even. Packers, Teamsters Official Indicted Ull'IT ......... SUSPECT IN RAPE Eddie Bohnsock Trio Nabbed In Kidnap, Rape Case VALENCIA (AP) -A 21- yeaN>ld Mason City, Jowa, man and two Las Vegas, Nev., teenagen were booked Thurs- day for ln.,..;gatloo of kldnap and rape ·in the abduction of a 20-yeer-<1ld Las Vegas woman and her 18-rnooth-old nephew, authorities said. EDDIE ROGER Bobnsack, and the teenagers, said to be ' STANFORD (UPI) -A 52· year-old man who received a murder victim's transplanted heart was described I n satisfactory condition Thurs- day. The unidentified man, a heat1 disease victim from out of state, received the heart In a fouNiour operation Thurs· day by transplant pioneer Dr. Nennan Shumway at the Stan· ford Medical Center. SHmtw AY HOURS earlier a .a INT. P£11 '"" PAID MONTHLY • S-CllllflCAru 5'1 INTEREST PER YEAR + 1.75'1 CURRENT BONUS= 1.15~ llCTEIEST PEI YlAI had removed the heart, kept beating by a machine, from the body of Samuel Moore, 29, ol Oakland, &bot In the brain Monday. Moore's heart wu fiown by helicopter from Oakland to Stanford for an Im- mediato transplant. Meanwhile, in Palo Alto, at- torneys are girding for a legal batUe over the defmlUon of death in the case of a living heart transplanled from the victim, whose brain showed no sign of life. 667 MONTHLV $ INTEREST 16 1 Ht'-"-SENT 10U PAID MONTHLY • SZl,111 CllllllCAru &JS\ INTERISl-P£R YEAR + 1.75% CURREIJT BONUS ::::; I.•~ llflUm PEI YUi The victim's trampfanted kldney's were keeping 1 * and a 82-year-old woman all•e in San F'ranclaco'·s Preabyterlan Hospital .. part of the unprecedented. tru-ee.. organ, three bospitil transplant swap. TUE TRANSPLANT opera- tions have raised legal ques- tions because Moore's kidneys and heart were removed before doctors dlsconnect<d the heart-Jung machloery th.Pt kept him alive. nus lVAlUIU AMTTllllll • l .... T!hl llltllntOTI. Wlleii held ltu thfll 6 -1111, prlnclo•I rtlluctd " l~l1r11t chec:k• prt'l'loutly p.1ld. Altllou1h bo11.u1 f1t1t IN)" k l11tt1a$td ot dfl:retMcl Oii pilot IOllct, &111c:1 folllldll'll FlllUllll "hrlft ........ nMM Ir•,.....,.._ ... "CERTIFICATE FUNDS m lhru 25th ANY MONTH EARN fr om 1st ol IHAI MONIH 1 4ii II and 17' were arres!A!d in HIGHEST RATE ANYWHERE! Castaic, ca 1 i I. authorities en PASSBOOKS plus DAILY INTERESn $29.11 CJJECI MONTHLY! on SSOOO CERTIFICATES said. Bo Mary Ann Jaramillo and her ~ ,:Y=.._ F11116s em sister's son Danny Landers, D from data of receipt to date ol wlthdr1wa1. 111-¥.'el"e walking toward their car t11est PAii HUTlllY. in a Las Vegas market TWslsll:ut:l'M'.._U..MOSTllllU...,S '-'u•o•u•1111t1•n•" Wednesday when the three SDVMYVEISr..•COOA~DDYWITllDUWM.•QUUT--.PllOIMIDllTRY•--Charge Filed In Crowding On Steamer ~~esJ;~~~7:~~ ~!~.!: ::. f S7 rr1's,o!:-;.~,~11' .... IRERESOU.s1/CE;IS ·1·1;:~ ~LL SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -l\tartin is accused or paying mandeered it. They reportedly l l1 \...!U "'""-R-C" .a: iia.L"~ 'The bitter rivalry between the the alleged bribe. told Mi ss Jaramillo they Teamsters and the United wanted to go to Mexico. 2328 Harbor Blvd., COSTA MESA • 645-1000 F'arm Workers unions in the C 0 NV IC TI 0 N on the Miss Jaramillo and her.. swrMf.111 taur011111a emct11 &11ia•u•/AllMll111a.tem1tldt .. uno-1.._., Mfl1•/Clllll• v1111/Cott• .... , SAN PEDRO (AP) -The Coast Guard says it bas filed charges accusing the captain and chief purser of the S.S. Catalina of violating maritime regulations by carrying too many passengers Aug. 5. misdem · Iati· of th n phe we e released arly eo~;,,;11 0a • .,.,,[1 t.JonJ[l c.111rot c1Candlde t t11dta "°"'''•lllWl1/M11111111"°" e.ac11 1111111WOOd J U11e111w1 Salinas Valley led to the in· eanor VIO ons e e w r e Lon111ac:111on11r1a101111td/ll'Hld1111/h-•t11Hda/J1h111r110t1s. e.n11rdi11otsan Dl•rofS.1•11 Anl/Slftl• .,, • ..,. dictment Thursday of two 1_jT~a~lt~-H~a~rt[le~y;A~c~t~ coul~dtb~nng~· ~a~~Th~ursdE~a=y~mo~nung~· ~:·'::•~gas~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"~··~·~"'~i'1~"'~·~~~"~-~....,.,~~"~""'~1•~"~"'~"~·,..~1·~·~·~~~~~~~~~ vegetable packers and an maximum one year sentence station in Newhall, authorities ousted Teamsters official on and $1 ,000 fine on each count. said. federal conspiracy and bribery The incident occurred on a Sunday return nm ot the Great White Steamer, which plies the waters between the Los Ange~ J larl>or and Catallna J:slan4.. The • Coast Guard set a ~ for next Thursday. . 1be Coast GUard !aid ttie ship canied 2,233 persons, 43 more than authorized . The steamship company s8td only that problems exist when too many passengers try to catch the return voyage from the island. charges. TIIE FEDERAL grand jury charges resulted from an in· vestigation Jaunched in 1972 with cooperation from the Teamsters. .. It led to a charge against Theodore J. Gonsalves, 62, former stcret.ary-treasurer of Teamsteri ca,nnery Workers trnfun Local 743 at Mpdesta, Witl\ taklng a $10,000 bribe to impede UFW organizat.ional activities In the Salinas area in the fall of 1g10. · James Robert Martin, 50, and Thomas Hitchcock, 4&, both of Salinas , are accused of conspiring with Gonsalves. Distinguished Rol•x wetches. A. Day-dat•, self.winding chronom•t•r with ''President's" br•celet. $1850. B. ·'Oyster-d•te, self-winding chronomet•r in st•inltss steel with matching br•celet. •331 .50. C. De te-just, se/f.windin9. Handsome 1'4 k1 r1t fluted bezel with steel a"nd I~ koret 9old b'"d. $510 . Do Something lleoutlfuL .. C'Jlttte Acct1111h lft'l'llH -A_,..ka ••~ ·~•A""4'Klrt lllO Mtlltt a..,..., l"I SLAVICK'S Jc\\•clc~ Si ne~ tft7 11 FASHION ·lfLAND NEWPORT IEACH -644-IJIO y_;t ' . )". - .... ,., I • , ' $106.93?- The Facts cibout Gas Ee How much eomfart and mfety""' you willtng lo giw up for $106.93? Here\ 1he nial *1ty on gca ~using two ~ioal CCIII on regular fuel. And itCDUld be w '-If,..,.. dri-.. aw•wali,.fy. Of.....,., a ll!lle --g;..,..,.. bellor mileage. ·-allO be\!Wy_,w, And .......... the pD ol ralst(I Conildw the -.fly ol --wlfh-...... IOlid pldeclion for,..,.. and '10'tr family. Costa Mesa Atlas Chrysler·Plymoa.th, In~. 2929 ·Harbor Boulevard • Consider Chiysler. It's built lo last ••• today and lol-. Chrysler offeB solid eng"-insJ ...U-.. for _,,,,i., Y"" get unlbody conslnlcllon, tonlon bar......,.,, "mdra-ptolildlOll bumper system, fuel-tank Impact po19clion, en«gy aboorbing steering column and more. Right ,_, 1he full..md l'lyrnolilh Ny ..... ...,., apoc1a1· ...... · 1he........,. elodoonlc Ignition sy119111 ls d11lg;ied lo...._ maln•ia-..-. And d11pllt Fury'I oOlld Clwyolor ~blg-roomand awnfurt •• -It ..,.. on 191111lcr Ml .... of an, ,_.. .... - ttl liuycluilng 0-. Op._ . ---Co;cw . I ,..._ '--• ............... ...,,~ .... Huntington leach Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.. 1 16661 Beach Boulevard ·. • . t I I ~