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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-09-24 - Orange Coast Pilot•. I • • .-, --· I • • ire l ' ·. ) ' .. . ~ . :DAILY PILOT l;_ay~te ~trihes Again: *. * * 1oc * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER· 2'4, 1973 VOL. "" ltO. i6J', I SliCTtofrilS, M l"M•I .. --.. , Dana ·- • • . -. .. ... ·- • • Point ., Weekend Predator ' .Coyote Mauls Clemente Boy, 3 The elusive coyote responsible for a summer-long spree of attacks at San Clemente State Park mauled a 3-year-okl San Clemente boy u the youngster stood on the front lawn of his home Sunday afternoon. The animal, deemed by the victim's mother nearly a "neighborhood pet" in the exclusive ruvlera colony, crept up behind Bartley Edward Ashbaught at about 5 p.m, as the youngster held a garden hose. The eeyote bit the boy on the back and side, then walked away calmly when the hoy's screams brooght his mother. Police said that as a standard precau- ijon the boy would have lo begin the series of injections to immunize blm against rabies. Bartley was given emergency treatment at San Clemente G<rM!ral Hospital arter the attack. park nearby through the summer monJhs. 1be elusive predator has confined his attacks to the weekends and despite all attempts at trapping and stalking, range{S, police and animal oootrol of. ficers have not been able to capture or shoot the coyote. Aller Sunday's attack police said several residents reported sighting the animal· and at one point animal cmtrol officers found the coyote, but in each case a clear shot was,Jmposslble because of hou,,ts and people, officers said. The YotJtlister's 1 mother, Mrs. Sa1ly Ashbaugh!, iold ollicers·that many of her · nelgbbofs had been feeding the animal (See COYOTE, Page Z) :'- • . Boy~ 3~ ·Badly Bitten -. -- . . \.._. ,. , • • • • • , • • • • , Manlltint ·· ~-·-Under Tr~pped :in ·· \Vreekage ~--~ -. -· Way Police ·Seek . Red Renault ;?'_.... . . And2Men · Orange . County Sherif rs officers today stepped up theif:. search for two ac- compli~ of a man who was shot and killed in the act of robbing the Dana Villa Motel in Dana Point. Police throughout California have been given the description of a small red car -believed to be a Renault -in which David Grindeland, 26, of El hfod~a is believed to have died as the auto sped away from the motel Friday n.igbt. Grindeland's body w&s dlOllped on a lawn in the Tustin area about 45 minutes later, Sheriff's officers said he had been shot in the chest, face and hand. Those bullets were fired by motel owner Loois Joseph Haffner, 65, who told officers he heard Grindeland threatening his wile, Mary, 62, and rusbed lo the lolr by to help ber. 'Ibe animal, a small example of the common species of wild dog, Is believed to be the same one which has attacked -~ than a dozen campers at the state Tax Hearing . . On President Haffner sai .. he fll'ed a number of shots at the in truder who simulated possession of a weapon as he leaned over the counter and scooped up the motel -recei pts while 1te tlireatened. Mrs. Haff- ner. . . l\:osygin Confers 11f;LGRADE, Yugoslavia (UPO - SOVlet Premier AJexel N. Kosygin began a week-long orficial visit and talks with Yligoslav government leaders todSJ which will center on trade and economic n:iftiers, pollllcal oources said. It was KO$ygin's first vlslt to Yugoslavia slnce he became premier in 1964. . " .- 1 Lale night and early momlog "clouds but clearing by atternooos. ""'Overnight Iowa !Mt. IIllh 'l'ud<tay '68. ' INSIDE TODA 'l' ' An almott unique 1tonding ovation for the Roms .,.. accord> , ed th• LA ttam bu more than /N,000 Colileum fam Sunday duri!lg the fourth q11Grter. Th• , f!o'171! put It all togtlher to , mother Atlanta, Sl-0. See Pog• /6. . " • I -" ,n I I " 1 .. ,, .. " Turned Down - By JACK BROBACK .. Of ... Dloll¥ ,..., ..... -... -The Orange County Auessment Ap--:i~: ~~!:; r=..~ ~ ~ AlilbOlanoe attell_ll,ant aids a~ident victim Ralph S. the asaesmnent o1 President Nixon' Sa Nlt"n, 287' Anabeun, following crash early Sunday Clemente property. · 1 n momlitg on _Ford. Road ..ne~ Harbor VJ ew Homes in ·A-bearing bad -~-"llY'J"lffl ewp_oi:t~ld lilye!'!I ~ District Supervl90r Robert Bittln 1o1 ·San-. towarji.MacArthhr Boulevard when he lost control traffic island. He was trapped !or nearly three hours and police halted traffic along Ford Road in the wee hours Sunday aS; resCuers struggled to free Myers ·-from-wreckage. He was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital, then transferred to Orange County Medi· cal Center. ? Haffner and Grindeland staggered, clutched his chest and shnnbled to the car containing two men. Officers said customers leaving a nearby restaurant confll'llled the motel owners statement that two men were in the waiting vehicle and that one leaned out and puller! the fatally wounded Grindeland into the car. Sberilts capt. Jamea Broadbelt said today that no charges will be flied against Haffner. "Our investigation of the incident entirely corroborates the ac-- count he gave us," he said. . ta Ana. His 1ppojnlee to the ap~alo-~4"~ anq w"'pped it around a light pole in board, Frank Manzo, tried 1to ge~ 1 ---the agenda today. • ~ ' ...... ,~ .. ~-..; --· -~·_,_-,.;::,:_::;:"7.-;=:-- Broadbelt said this morning he Is satisfied that Grindeland is the man who a short time earlier attem pted to..rob the Kentucky fried chicken restaurant across the stree~ f«im the Dana Villa motel. Board Chairman Otto Chri.stemen' 18.i -..... _'.· ·;·--~ ...... a preliminary hearing to decide whether ow' ..... # ~ .,n u ~. -#.!ngt·nn !~ ;!1::lsi:a~~~tli•: e'~»--. --!:-~,A1t-..LlUllU ., 'V Border Patrol Arrests Aliens, :!:~~~i:s~e:;::::=r~a:i· · ~r--E·· : .. n Bambin· ~--3tklay..JIOlke.prlor..to such ,.., ~ -··"""'~ . "' ., hearings . -· • ' ---. :t>iscovers Pot "It was the same deal, hand ln pocket as ll he had a gun there ," be said. "But the owner was closing for the night, he defied Grindeland and the roan who cbalienged him promptly left." ·-Ballin tried lo make a statement but ., • was rebuffed by Christen.sen who called niret a1te. m!J!ted fire bomblngs oc-The first incident was at 2208 Delaware for a vote on the hearing date. · The board cbatrman lald Battin could curred in downtown -1!111ting\on Beach St., where a can Ille filled ~th flam· not mue a staltlnent ln)wiou4 to the Sunday nigh~ two bomb$. falling to do mable liquid was t\lrown onlo the roor of President wlthoot repreaentaUon being . any damage. The third caused $50 the aJ!Orlment building, at 6:!.I p.m. Fi!· present. · damage to the roof of an apartment ty dollari: ·worth o( damage was reported. Appeals'board member Robert Hostel· building. 'l'he """"1d attempt was at Huntlnglon ter moved !or the Oct-211 hearlni dale and was lilpported by the chairman. The Fire captain Roger Hosmer said today St. •nd Utica Ave., at approximately 8:30 vote wu 2 IQ I with Manzo opposing. that the fire dopartinent all8JIOCIS-th _Jl.m_, where a gl.us bottle conlainlng Battln said--later he would ask the lhree tftddmta are related, atnce. lhey oc-Oammalili1iq~ was ""lii:rOwn a ~veral Board o! Supervisors Tuesday to hire JID curred In ille'h ........ am within oil Storage lank.j, The bomb burned Itself • Independent Investigator to probe 'Ille t ~-=-o1 ch ~-· • out, however, before any damage could • assessment of the San Clemente .JftP" wo •IVUl""D ea o_.,;.. .. oceur. • erty. ~---·!'lo•• d 'lo ~ r ~The las~teml!ElniOIV<a ·-The property hal been asoesoe<I at :--v~;jlld ~ m ...,aefliilte bomb-at 21113 EnglaiiefSt., at 8:4G")f:l11. -11.87 mmlon and BatUn "'"lend' that It · ..,.,,,.._ ~ The bomb was throWn at an aparlment ·should be fZ.4 mlllloil lilcludinc lltt-, "Police ere cllecltlng "'*one SutpCCt, building but acconling to Hosmer it dld pro .. maits conatrucled' by the '°""" lhoogh," be aaid, "and they aro rollowlng· not get close enough tO any l-onbustlblcs ment. . I . · up with an lnvertigaUon." to do any damage. · ·~ ' ' )1 ' . Besides the arrest of 270 aliens over the Weekend, border patrolmen manning the checkpoin t at San Onofre wound up with a fringe benefit -170 p0unds of marijuana in the trunk of a suspicious car. Ex-congressman S.tays· iii Prison The pot bust occurred at about 9 p.m. WASRfNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Sunday as the heavy weekend traffic was Parole Board today denied parole to waning, patrolmen said. former Rep. Cornelius E. Gallagher of Arter stopping a car and conducting a New Jersey and ruled that he ~d routine search, officers opened the trunk serve his .full sentence for attempting to and found. th~ bulging backp°acks. evade $74,000 In lncome taxes . \ Inside, t.n k:llogram-sfzed bricks -of-The board said Gallaher should remain fief.rs fOufid the contr.11b¥and worth about in prison until hls sentence upire1 Jan.I $1?,1100 oo !he street. 24. 1975. He ls In !he fedcriil prUiii C61Dp1 Two residents of the Spokane, Wash., at Allenwood~ Pa. 1 area were arrested in the car and turned -The board, wtitch rMched ltl decflicm over to U.S. CU.Stoms agents for ar-· in ~ closed sessioBo followed CUStorDllJ raignmcnt on smUggling charges. The.. _ pracilce ·and gave no reuon for Its (See BORDER, Page !) decision. , I • ' I • I ' 2 OAJL V PILOl s Monday, Sfptembtr 24, 11173 Hunt Bares Frameup Story -on .Diem Nix on Asks Gas.o line WASHINGTON (U PI) -The White I louse. trying 10 woo lhe Catholic vote rot PNlidcnl Nixoa in 1171, !ritd lo prove fnlscly that the Kennedy ad· ministration arranged to kill South Viet- n1mesc President Diem in 1963, E. J-loward llunt Jr. tcsUfled today .. Uunl, ono ol the ori1ln1l W1teraate bugging COn!plrators Wll 1 e I d 0 ff witness as the nalionahr tetevt&ed Senate hearings on the scanda resumed after a seven-week recess. Gaunt and pale 1from six months in priJon, IIunl testiii~ that he ]hid been "directed" in 1971 by Charles W. CollOD, then a special countel to Nlxon, to fabricate government cables to implicate Bee f Pr ices , Supply Near Normal Level , Kennedy In the deaths of Ngo Dinh Diem and his brothcl"in·law, Ngo Dinh Nbu. "I beUtvt ti Wll d<11rtd by ·Mr. ColBon, or at least some of his ool· league~, to demonstrate that a Catb>llc United States 11dministration had in !act conspired IQ the assassination of a Cathollc chief of state In another: coun· try," Hunt aaid. Hunt, a former CI A agent and prollilc epy novelist, alJO testified that : -He was told by fellow bugging con· splra.tor G. Gordon Liddy in late November 1971 that John N. Mitchell, then tha attorney genoral and later NlxoD camPllln manager, ••required the establishment of a large-scale in· .. tf ,,,....~ .. - telllgence, counter-lnte.lligeoce prografn" , !or the campaign and that prosldcnllal 1nllltnll John w. Dwl W tnd Job Stuart Magruder also 14wtre acUvt In I~ formulation." -He believt1 Colaon, who h a s vigorously denied lnY role in poliUcal ,,. plonqe, 14WU aware of tbe oveNll ln--leiligence plan" as early as January 1172. -After the five-man Watergate bug- ging team was *1 eated June J7, 1972, Hunt wen& Imm iately to the White Houu and stuff a brtefoue Joaded witb electronic gear Into a aa!e in the of· nee he malaloilied .. a !Ilk-day While House COlllUllant. -He, Liddy and Qn aide to billionaire recluse •toward Hugbe1 plotted to steal llunt Vi·as dressed In a tan sult, dark 1e1111itive documents from Las Ve~ blue shirt a.nd dark loafers with tassels. Nev. publilhcr Hank GroellipuD bu~thal Hunt, who pleaded 1UUI;' in January to the raid was never carried out. .. -contDlraey, bul'llarY ~Ina and llunt said he believed he was acting as wlre\ipplu in the W1ter11t1 cue, 11 a secret government agent when he tryln&.'ti:> clian1e his plea lo lrlnoctnt on became involved in the Watergilte plot grouridl he haO been duped by unlden-- and, nine months earlier, the burglary at tilled hl&tl eoVemrnent offlel1Js. He .. ld tho office .or Daniel E 11 s be r g • s he wa1 · recruited by Colton lo do psycblalrilt. clandestine work ror the White House He aald he now feel s "crushed by the arter hll retlremen' ln ll70 from the failure nl my government to protect me CJA. and my family, as In the past il has CollOn ba1 l"fUaed to lelU!y before the always done for cleodt.sUne agents." commlUee oo l1'0W\(ls lbat he lt a tara•& Tho hearings resumed with lhe marble ol lrand jury lnvullpUon into tht walled caucuo Room In the Old Senate Elll&er1 Incident. H• lul weli Invoked Office Bulld.lng fWed to capacity. About the P'lhh Amendmen,t at pr Iv ate 50 penons waited oul.!l.de. meetings with the com'tnittee. I Kissinger: U.S. Seeking 'True P~ce' · Increa ses WASHINGTON (AP)-Pretident Nixon told the Colt o! Uving Council todoy to act thi~.wcek to 1ncrea1e the retail price of 1•1oyne. Actlna 11 some 1ervlce 11tatlon1 ck>Hd ·down tol proleat Pha,. I pricing pollci••· the Prealdent 1ot a11urance1 from COit ol Uvtn1 Council Diroctor John Dunlop ST ATE STATIONS TO REOP EN TU ESDAY, Story P1g1 5 that the panel ¥.'ould try to speed action on the issue. \Vhite House Deputy Prcs" Sccretarr Gerald L. Warren said the t-ounc1I already concluded th:H an increase in retail gaaollne prices is needed and had been following a timetable that wowld have placed the increase into effect Oct. 2. - "The President asked Dr. Dunlop to expedit• thlS matter . • . to review the .. situaUoq as quickly 13 r.issible and get a UNITED NATIONS (UPI)·-Secretory dedilon out this week,' Warren said. of State Hellll A. ltlalnger;. aald today "Dr. Dunlop assured the President thal the t.J_ni led States "s'ee1ts true peace, not he Would,'' Warren said. Warren said he y.•as announcing the si mply an armi stice," and called upon all President's instructions to Dunlop, which members of the United Nations to aban-'\'ere relayed through aides. in an effort don their bickering and join in a to "clear up 'vbatever confusion remains freeze leve ~ lncreasea ~d decreuea on individual Items generally balanced each olfier out. cooperative effort for tmore hannonious in the price of gasoline. '1 -il'Or!<d.~-----------A~"~ked-~wbelhcr-NIXOO-"w ·anted ~wied<L--1---1 staUons to stay open, arren re4t"""" . Klss~er, the first foreign-born U.S. '1'he President would not attez:npt 10 Retailers reported there wis no rush by shoppers lo buy bee!, which had been in short supply during the freeze. Some experts sttid people changed' their eating habits lnd jusl got used lo olh<r roods. Cattle prices at livestock marketl declined from a high or about 60 cents per pound to 45 cents a poUlld or less and the drop was reflected at the meat counter. ''The now of the Rroduct is back to normal ," said Bernie Cross, preaident of cross Brothers Meat Packers Inc. of Philadelphia. "'ffiere is plenty Of beef on the market, more than needed ... " ' Rod Kallungl, a butcher for Joe Wigley Meata of Detroit, sald hilJ store stopped offering horsemeat for sale, a practice the store began this summer for the first lime since World War Il. UPIT ....... Out for the Cmint secretary of State, made hls maiden ad-counsel dealers on bow to operate their dress to the U.N. Gener al Assembly own individual statlo111." almost exactly 48 hours after being There have been scattered closings by sworn Into office at the Whlte llcme. independent gasoline dealers to protest Alase 4 regulations on guoline. About. 75 Kissinger spoke without interruption percent of the stations in Indianapoli s for 25.mlnutes, holdt-: the packed hall's clo.sed today. Some stations also closed in attention. the \Vashinglon, D.C. area today. There was applause for 20 seconds Warren ,vould not say how 111uch the v.•hen he finished. Delegates ·of '-china, \Vhite House expects retail gasoline Cuba and Albania did not join in it. prices to go up. and s.1id today 's Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei statements contained "no implied rebuke Gromyko sat motionJess throughout the · to the Cost of Living Council." speech., listening intenUy through a bead phone. All delegations were well represented except for-the Maldives, whose dlplomats have not yet arrived ftom their Indian Ocean country. " Huntington Tot, 2, Found Safe' In County Mot el "We've got more than enough beef," be said, adding that sales were "running like normal" at prices averaging 30 cents per pound below midsummer levels. !-spokesman for Public Supermarkets in Miaml sai.d1 "Beef prices are just about the same now as they were before the ceiling. Eggs have a>me down." Three Italian Air Force officers stand at attention, Pratica di Mare airport in Rome. Ceremonies mark· Kissinger's speech was a broad philosophical outilne of "the spirit of American foreign Policy'' in which he pledged U.S. efforts and influence in set- tl ing such regk>nal issues as the ?.tiddJe East and Southeast Asia. But he made no specific pledges beyood promJsing that the United States v.1ou.ld not abandon traditional allies in carrying oot its policy ol detente with the Soviet Union and Chin.a. A 2-year-old girl sought by! police and nearly 100 volwiteers in Huntingtan Beach was found Sunday afternoon in an Anaheim motel. ignoring a fourth who collapsed during air show at ed the 50th anniversary of Italy's air force. ·-~~-"-~~~~-~~~~~-~~~---~~~~~ The up-and-down character of prices was reGected at Giant Food stores in the Washington, D.C. area. "Roughly, there has been a JO percent increase in rib sections of beef and 10 percent decrease in chuck," a spokesman said. "There has been some increase in food prices generaly, reflecting the in· creases in wholesale prices.'' Pla1it Pilferer Moves to Vie jo South Orange C.OUnty's potted plant pilferer is branching out. Sheriff's officers investigating the !heft during the weekend of four plants valued at $80 from a Mission Viejo home beJieve the culptit is the sa me person who has swept potted plants in South Lagwi.a and .Laguna Beach into Ills basket. Mrs. Virginia Lee Evans of 2525l Parthenon Ave. said the hanging plants were taken from her front Porch and walkway while the famil y was at home. Sh.eriff's investigators have given the title of "operation geranium" to their n1ounting probe. They said the thief has indicated a preference for the flower. Dies of Injuries LONDON (AP) -A British anny ex- plosives expert died Sunday in a Blrrn· ingltam hospital rrqm injuries suffered a \veek ago when a bomb exploded while be was attempting to defuse it. 01.ANGI COAST IT DAILY PILOT ll\1 Or•"'9tl C1111t OAtLY "LLOT, wllll ""'let! II '9'M!lltd tht Ntwt-Prn1, 11 Pllblllllell ~ ,,,. o ... ,, .. ,e..11 ,.ubllallint """"""· ... ,... rtM .cr,1,.n1 t rt ,Wiii~. ~r !IWeuofl Prlill1y, Mr Colt• MtH, Nnpott a..dl, Huntlngto.. &t.cll/F'GU111 tl11 Vtll11r1 UeuM aM(.h, 1r~lnt1St6dlt>blell; ind i.11 Ci.rr-f1/ l1n Ju1n (lplt!r-. A 1lnll1 rtitloMI 11110011 11 Mill/ltd Sthml•Yt ard Sunu'(L Tiit prlncllMll P1111li1111.-!g floltrrt II ti ua Wnl II'( 11!r .. t, C.01!1 M__., C.Otlfo,.,.11, t:l62'. Rob11rt N, W11d Pr .. ldtnl INI l'ubl"""° J1<li l . C11rl1v Vk• Prftldtnf 11111 a-11 Me......, Tho'"'' Kt1¥il lldlMt Th°"''' A. M u1pt.:i~1 MIMtlf>O i'dlfw' Ct.:1rf1t H. loot ltl<'-•1'11 "p, N•ll .Jilul1!1nl MMttlnt h i ..... - Four UFO Sightings Reported Near Memphis MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -An un!den· lifted flying object blinked Its spotlights twice Sunday night, then disappeared in- to the darkness with a whirring ooise, ac- cording to Shelby County Sheriff's Depu~ ty P. L. Pilalas. "If I was a drinker," the deputy said, shaking Ills head, "I could understand it, but I'm not." At least three other UFO sightings were reported in the Memphis area late Sunday night and early today. In recent weeks, a number of UFO slghtlngs have been reported at other locations in the Southeast. Pilalas said he and his partner, J. 0. Davis, were driving on U.S. 70 just east of Memphis when they saw the craft overing overhead. · . Two bright spotlights were shining beams straight forward from the craft's altitude of 500 to I,000 feet, he said, and two red lights were glowing at the ex· tremities of the craft. "We couldn't see the craft itself, but only its lights," he said. "l flashed my spotlight on the vehide which. appeared to be traveling with us at about 15 m.p.h.," Pilalas said. "I was hanging out the window at this point. I contacted the dispatcher to see if we had any metro helicopters up in the area. His answer was negative; all units were grounded." Federal Aviation Adminisit ratlon of. ficials at Memphis Intematlonal Airport said they could detect no craft In the area on their radar screens and had no record of any flights that were supposed to be in the area. "We let our blue light (on the police car-)-:Bhtne . twice and then stopped," Pilalas said. "The vehicle then flashed its white beams twice and then both the white lights and red li11bls went out "Jt just disappeared. It made a whir-- ring-type noise for about 30 sea:mds, then it was gone." Groom Spends Night in Jail RIVERSIDE (AP ) -An 111-yeaN>ld brldegroom spent bis wedding night In jail, booked for investigation of battery and resisting arrest following a fracas at the reception in which four officers were beaten. Authorities said the officers, who responded to a complaint of a fight at the wedding reception of Frank Casares Saturday night, were knocked tQ the ground and beaten. All ·four suffered minor injuries. Some 40 office.rs who rushed to the scene took more than an hour to restore order-among the estimated 250 guests at the reception. President Returns To White House WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon returned to the White House Sun-- day night after a weekend in the colorful fall foliage of his Western Maryland mountaln retreat. A sPokesman said he reviewed th e $21.9 billion military pro- ·curemenrblll"bl!lng·deblll•d·1n-ihe-Senate- along with a trade bill before the House Ways and Means Committee. .Long Tragedy 102nd Birtli.day in State Home N.::;,• .-::;; =.~..!.:r ::.N COLU?.fBUS, Ohio (UPI) -.Martha Nelso n celebrated her 102nd """""::=·:=.: .'N.,f::::,., ... =.N birthday in the place she has ca11ed home for the last 98 years -a a.n a-,., m N.,"' •1 c.~ 111: .. 1 state home for the mentally retarded. She wu admitted tn 1875. T .. at u 11141 142 ... 121 Dr. A.Z. Soforenko, appointed two months ago u superinten· ClwWIW .U1c# • 1 '4&,Mn dent of the Orient State Institute near here, said today "she never ,_ c..to1 --.... ., u..-.... had a chance." .,. ... ,. She was originally admitted to the Columbus State Institute for - -";;,';if'-'"' the Feeble Minded and later transferred to Orient. Her records were S:'• ,.,., .. _ c..., __ destroyed In a !Ire in 1883 and no one knows why she was admllted. __..."·,,::.., ~ .::,i:.,":trti.::; "She Is quite coheren t for her age," said Sofore-nko. ushe has C:.." -• --"' ... ttorelatives and has baa nn do on!Jlct wilb ~bQdy foc..lhUasl • ftll'(rlfM -· -1e-to so yeats.11 ---- Frot11 Pllfle 1 COYOTE '.1 :·~ .. ~ over the past several mootM , reinforcing official theories that the animal has lost its f..r of man. Officials have theoriled that when the meal Ucket runs out the animal IJ:ecomes aggressive. The coyote invariably attacks smell children rather than larger victims and until Sunday's incident, had confined its attacks to guests at the rugged state park. , Since the outbreak· of the biting in- cidents rangers there have posted s.igns warning campers not to sleep in the open, especially on the ground. • Fl'OtllPllflel BORDER .• • Kissinger acknowledged that the' U.S. people.and gove~nt "have sometimes been disappointed because lhl:s organiza. lion has not been more successful in translating the hopes for universal peace of its architects: ID.to concrete ac· compllshments." While he has in the past generally t>een scornful of t'he ability of the United Na· Uons to deal with major political issues in a troubled world. Ki ssinger said that "despite. our disappointments. my coun· try remains committed to the goal of a "·orld community. We will continue to work in this Parliament of. Man to make it a reality." 'Deep Throat' OK In Jacksonville names of"the two were not released early JACK$0NVILLE, Fla. (UPI)' -The today. · movie "Deep 'Throat" is not dirty, at The marijuana bust capped a busy least not in Jack!Ollville. weekend marked by a larger-than-usual A .. circui1 county jury has decided in volume of arrests of illegal immigrants: favor of .theater owner James Hansell Police were takerr to the Casa Cordo\'a ltfotet , 3360 W. Lincoln Ave .. by the littl e girl's father, Leonard f'it chner, who tol d them he had takrn 'his daughter from the home she shared with his estranged wire, Brenda. Detectives said no charges were riled in the ease d little Lisa Ann was return- ed to her mother. She had been the objecl of an intensiv e search Saturday ni ght ~'hen she disap- peared from the Viewpoint Apts. about 5:30 p.m. Nearly 100 volunteen aided Police ln combing the neighborhood tor the youngster. The search was called orf at 1:30 a.m. Swlday and the case was wm- ed .over to detectives. Police said they rell lhe child had prob- ably, been taken by her father because the couple bad just. recently separated and. Fildtner had allegedly t r i e d previously to take one of his children. He was located by a Huntington Beach patrolman who spotted him driving in the city. Fire Inves tigated \ The pot haul also was the latest in a Thoma's, WOO · ·had beeo Charged with NORFOLK, Vl'!I. (AP) -The Navy said growing amount of sm,uggling cases in--dlstriOuUng ~y. . Sunday it may be several days before In· vovlng the lrnmigraUon officers. The jury:,Of five 'WOmen and one man \'esUgaton determine the caU8e of a fire Through last week officers arrested a deliberated for three hours. The pros-aboard Uie giant ..aircraft carrier hair-dozen ailesed pol _smugglers and. eculor sakl·Jie feaoed their decision -Saratoga-while tl was tn the Norfolk seir.ed more than 700 pounds of the illicit would turn tbil north Florida cominwiity J:Javal shipyard for overhaul. No Injuries weed brought in from Mexico. into an "open pomqg.raphy market." were reported. ~--------------~------, • ...,. ,_..~'.' • r I Nobody Admiral.· Reffit~.atori for·less than I ' Sens -... ~,: . . ' ·, I I 3-Doar Duple.. ' " • I I Ad1nlrol ~ I I The ultimate in Admire! -,'Planned G_on~...i. • I enoe" design. Upper froexer fqr o~ I items: lower freezer for genera[. fiCnen~' I storage. Refrigerator hes adjint'a~\temi*r· I od gleH shelves. Front-of.door ~ ,wottr I I di1 pen .. r is • greet oonvtnt~. :fdture. And the eutomotic ice maker never Ith you I I M~~~ I I ADMIRAL LIST PRICI 699" I I 1 DUNLAP 5 999s ·.· -....... : 1 I PRICE ! I I ·~w · :1 I ew.l i i I Service , ... CHIU.ID • w.. . , •. MITOllo\11C • WAn11 • cOLrh CAN 1 I I ·~~r ,1,-. 1e1 ~1R .Dt•!'lllHll cARoual!L t I 90 DAY CASH i WITH,::~~OVID .... " S.:."'I.= .. -.... .;,"I,! '::':! Sofnrenko said he thinks ·th• woman should be !I n.Jll'lent_ ::.r.~" a'.:''.!:;1.:.,.-· ""'"" .,_ ... ~-. _.ul!..11!-sh• di --~~ ::==:=:::::::::::~ ----11.,---=-=---·-----TilBPOllf-~. lliiifiirii.,Ciiti:MiSa -?'lii1e"::548--J181.-i.--1--1 -------------------~-~ • ••• , . • • . ti , , _::M:.::":.::'::''.:.· :.::s:.::'':.::":::m:.::b•:c•:...2:...4:.., .:.19:...7.:.) ___ .;:s ____ o_Al_LY_PILOT 3 Adobe · Battle • oom1ng Development a Threat to Miguel Parra? ' By JOHN VALTEllZ.\. ot flit Dlll'I' PllM St ... A San Juan Capistrano adobe which has a history dating back to ttie early days of the mission has suddenly erupted as a cause cel~bre in a battle between a 1~ developer\ and the city 's historical ·society. e Migue l Perra adobe which sits hid- amcng dying orange trees along ga Highway lies in the path of a road to a housing tract proposed by Leadership Housing Systems. But planning commissioners as well as history buffs have launched a fight to re- tain the st ructure -housing tract or not. The firs! hints that the structlD'e was in danger came last ·week when the firm 's environmental impaCt statement (EIR) was reviewed by commissioners who felt there was a gap in the data. The adobe was not mentioned in the $lalement. PI a n n Ing commissioners agreed that the EIR would have to be redone. Spokesmen for the developer said the building was not Included In the draft because of a mlslmpresslon by the staff of the true significance of t).le ~tructure which 1J completely shrouded with trees on three sides. They promised to add ~ to the Impact 1tatement for the convnission's next sw100: \ But the promise still ~s nothing to l:1ve tbe fate of the Miguel Parra ~obe -ooe of San Juan's last, intact, estored adobes. Experts ln local· history say the rec- tingular structure was built primarily for use to store crops and equipment by Indians who tilled misalon lands early ln the 19th cenhU'y. 'Through the years local lore placed a "jail" label on !be bull!llng although it never served as one. But through the generations, the struc- ture was rarely left empty. As lt stands today, the tin-roofed struc- ture shows signs of extensive eUorts to preserve it. · Decades ago someone strengthened the ... walls with steel rods bolted at each end to wood blocks so that walls would not collapse outward. The roof is recent, but the interior has the smell and look of an a~ient dwelling. Thick, stucco walls -esumably the or!ginal interior coatings, re evident. Old beds, fa~ equipm t, tools and even a rudimen ry kitchen remain visi- ble through age windows. One of the mos out.spoken lovers of the Parra Adobe is Mrs. Mary Jane Forster, the wife of tormer San Juan Atayor Tony Forster, a descendant of the earliest set- tlers or the vaUey. Mrs. Forster waged the initial battle to save the structure before planning com- missioners, asserting that the structure should be preserved at all costs. On Friday, she said that she and fellow history burrs are convinced that the structure should be saved through a com- promise with the developer, but that_ sav- ing it is only a small part of the problem. Extended Campus Unit,s Still 0 en at College - "The adobe is a prime candidate for restoration and that is the real concern right now.1 - "For its age, it is in remarkable con- dition and I would think that any land developer lucky enough to . h a v e someUtlng that significant on his land . would ttim it into something he and the residents could be proud of," she said. '1be societ , which met last week,. to SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO HISTORY BUFF~ HOPE TO SAVE ANCIENT MIGUEL PARRA ADOBE Structure Dati ng Back to 1800s Stands In Way of Access to Housing Deve lopment .Seats remain available for Saddleback Community College's extended campus courses at three area high schools, and students may enroll throogh Friday, a campus spokesman said. Registration will be conducted in the classroom at Laguna Beach, San Clemente, and Irvine University High Schools, and on lhe Saddleback campus at Mission... Viejo. The classes, an· ofrered in the evening, · began Sept. 17. 'l1le program ls part of a di~lrlctwlde attempt to bring Saddleback to local citiierui Including Tustin and Foolhill High School. Courses offered include : Policy Planning •Team Schedules . Final Meeting The final meeting or the pOlicy Plan- ning Study team for the Saddleback 1 Valley, a group co-spansoerd by the UC · '' Irvine extension office and the Sad- dleback Area .Coordlhaling. Council, is 1411 scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday.· "' The meeling, open to !be public, will be in Room 220 or the Social Science Tower on the UCl campus. Parking in Lot I is available without a permit. A tentative draft of recommeodations on land use and planning policies was drawn up by lhls 31-member group after 1& months' work an4 was presented to · lbe public lhis summer. Now, the reactions and suggestions of various homeowners have been ln· c:orporated lnlo !be proposal and will be presented at Tuesday's meeling. discuss a e o elte";"""feelrso u'GUNA BEACH -Art Appreciation strongly about the ~ssue, s~e ad~ed. ~at (7-10 p.m. Tuesday), Creative Writing (7-a mljor fund·rais1ng pro1ect lS being 10 p.m. Thursday), Cultural Geography considered to raise the cash for a full (6-8 p.m. Monday and Wednesday) and re~t'l'heoratideonv.eloper has offered to take it Introduction to American Government (6-8 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.) apart brick-by-brick and relocate· the SAN CLEMENTE _ Readings in , adobe, 'but ,..e•re opposed to th.at because ·nd ) _.._. -it-takes intricate research by experts.-Jt!s Poetry (7-10 p.m. Mo ay , u . .,. nlstory siRnifi' -t whe •t · because that's to 1876 (8-10 p.m. Monday and Wednes-~ crhe Ind .re 1 t~ed th mission day), Introduction to Psychology (6-8 ·.. ians i e . p.m. Monday &nd We$lesday) and Oral crops, ~rs. Forster sa d. · ' To raise the cash necessary (or Communications (7·10 p.m. Monday).. · to ti he add d the society is · UNIVERSITY -Physical Antropology ~!mu~g 0~~lar Satu~day walking ' tOurs • (5-8 P·".1· 'l_"uesday 8~ Thursday ), of the rest of San Juan's adobes closer to-lntroduclion to Psychology (6-8 p.m. the mission. __ . __ _ _ _ Monday a~ Wednesday), Penonal and Tentative plans call for charging SoclaLAdJustments (1-10 p.m. ~onday patrons-of-the four a nominatsum to ·join and. Wednesday) and Introduction to in the walk and hear guides describe the Sociology (l-10 p.m. Tuesday and Thurs-history of many downtown buildings day.). which "'.ere lucky enough to be sa~ed or reitored. Daria Boosters Meet Tuesday Dana Hill8 High School's Booster Club will show the fin! films or the school's football season at a klckoll meeting Tuesday on the llolphln«ampus. --The 7 p.m. session in the Llttle Theater wlll include a · prefilm presentation to prospective members of the busy group which promotes and assists campus athletics for boy! and girls., M a !tandard offering, Boo.ster spokesman Mark Foster said, football films \YOU)d be shown each Tuesday night during the season fOllowtng weekly con- ference games. Coaches will attend the showing to comment on the action, be ad- ded. Anyone Interested In Joining the club is welcome to the sessions. "There is no way that we're going to allow that adobe to be tom down ," Mr\ Forster stated natly. "We're going to save it." Anti· Erosion Efforts Halted WASHING TON (UPI) -The National Park Sel'vice said toda y it decided to stop trying to keep ocean waves f~m eating away at beaches on barrier islands. These include such well-known areas as the Outer Banks off North Carolina, Fire· Island off New York and Point Reyes off California. Spokesmen for the National Park Service said that studies showed the anti· erosion efforts cost millions of dollars, With little to show for it. Pira1iha River Deatlis Feared QUE DAS DO IGUAZU, Brazi l (AP) -Officials fear that many of ~he persons who died when a riverboat sank near here may have been eaten by-piranha, the voracious freshwater fish. The riverboat reportedly sank due to exces.s weight. At least 120 persons were said to be aboard , and more than 40 were believed to have gone down with the boat. ' Saddlehacl{ Song Leade1·s Win Second Place Ho11ors • The. song squad of Saddleback Com- munity Collete won second place at the annual California Specialty Camp for Colleges in Santa Barbara. The honor was the highest won by a Saddleback pep group in the college's history. Desrosiers, Mission Viejo; Sheri Leib- man, Tustin ; Sandee Leigh, Tustin; Norma Patchen, Tustin; and Jenny Robison , Mission Viejo. Kiddie Kooking Klass Only one body has been found, of- ficials said Sunday. Squad members inc lude Ellen BriiiKof San Clemente, head song leader; Linette Siamese Twins Born Advisor fo. the group is Betty Sherrer. The young women also \\'On 20 superior blue ribbons and \\"ere judged the most spirited team in the camp during tbc five-day event. Saddleback cheerleaders also attended the camp and captured l\VO blue ribbons. ' r • • I I • • ' • • I . I • I ' • I I • • I I j • j • I I • • I ' t . Tiny Chefs Learn by Doing at El Camino Real First tomato sauce , then meat, cheese, bell peppers, onion,. more· cheese, olives, oregano and more tornato-.:sauce, All this on top of aSrnau English mu!fin. To Solomon Isla nder · rt was Tina Tc. . .!hn's first pizza, made as only a 7-year-old could. Hd NlARA, Solomon Islands (AP) Sbe sampled as she created and then Siamese twin girls have been born to a passed ~&olfing ingredlents to her Solomon Islands woman alone in a cave . fellow classmates at El· Camino Real on the island of Malaita, according to \Vataa and the Siamese twins to a Catholic mission hospital, a run day 's "·afk. as they had to c\tt a new path (or the mother and her children. School in Jrvlne. _ In-tbe:-past,-.lbe-60-studenta~team--r!(!OJ'tS reaching here. -The normal path coo.ld not be used taught by Diane Travis and Diana Eilers The girls, weigffiJrg-a total of eight because of tribal tradition that new -have made bundt cakes and cookies in pounds and joined at the obdomen facing mothers must keep "away from the men the twice-montbJy-oJOking sessions. each other, were reported well today, 15 of the village and their haunts for 20 The fun is more than it seems, ac-days after their birth. days. c:ording to the two teachers. The children Their mother, identified only as \Vataa. Mission hospital staff reported that the are learning math and readlng through was alone for two days in the cave afler babies were being fed and nursed by ~Theypes, t .al. I what was believed to have been a dif· missionaries and staff. They said the ge re Y excited," Miss Eilers ficult birth. It is customary in the region said. "A lot of kids don't get a chance to for women to give bir th alone away from mother told them that the babies were coot at home.:· . . . , their village. _ born ~ith one baby's bead tucked under For many, it lS the_ first time they ve Heavy rains prevented other \von1en the chm or the other. cracked an egg, nuxed ba~ter, used from her village of Gwefakatho, in the According to reports reaching here, measurlnl2!P!~r tast~~..UJlll foc?d~· .......mountains f -north--Malait.a-trom \Vataa did not like the fuss her ba..1ies -atlii :J-U!Js'l,'-'_one .. i(t(:Said,...pomUog_~ft.R·~~~::nut=-caused and has returned to her village L _,d diolt tJ •l'fber'°*1 0 18to Adee'"idet\t!fl~WOmeRUOfil~,ciibe cave, they lQ01i-·,vtiiere she hns t\.'10 other children. inu en eac an Melbourne . "And what are these?" Bell Peppers. "What's oregano?" The boy found out about the spice by trying it and then ex- clalming, "We love pizza!'' 'lffentally Tort11red' They include !pis Balliret, S a n Clemente head cheerleader; LY_Jme Brayden, Tustin; Janet Cross, Santa Ana ; Joan Patchen, Tustin; Lori Renkainen, Mission Viejo; and Karen Thompson, Corona de! l\1ar. Ali the young women made tht!ir first public appearance Saturday night when the Saddleback football tl!ant played Cypress at Buena Park ~l.igh School. Russian Roulette To California11 ,. SACRA~IENTO fUPI J -Richard Mark Downs, 24, lost his "game'' of Russian roule tte. Downs picked up a pistol laying on a dresser in his suburban home Saturda)'. placed one cartridge in the cylinder and spun it. After making a remark about Russian roulette to an onlooking friend, he put the gun to his head and pulled the trigger. The .357 magnum weapon dlschargrd, k.lllihg hlm instantly, 1be class ~le! on what lo cook eve._ry ~-h w olbeT w.ek an~ porenls .conlribu.lt sup-~ rt a ' ants plieo. Several mothers came-Fridar 1o-- betp. organize the eHort. The program may have positive e!Iects at home. Children return to school John Back reporting that they now practice their culinary arts there. It was apparent Friday, however, the children haven't learned one ol the real Jobs ol cooking: cleaning up aflcrwards . The leacbers and pareni. did that. Flrst through third graders concentrated on ·eatlng. -- NEW YORK (AP) -Mortho Mllchell hol'C. have S-Ome kind or care. But I'm says she feels menta11y tortured and not. rm not at all." · abandoned -and wants her husband A1rs. Mitchell said the clothing incident back. involvOO throwing a "few ties and a few ''The suggestion ~£ divorce has only shirts'' Into a foyer because "I got mad been t bro ugh the media,'' said like nny wonlan docs'' after no one tile wife of former Atty. Gen .. John N. bo!hcrro to t~JI her about a postpone-~1\tchell in an NBC ·News program 1ncnt of her hui>band's trial. broadcast Sunday night. "\Vould you like hhn to come back?" N• 'SJi • , . Mitchell, und~r indictment on obstruc-l\1rs. ~11tche!I wus asked . , IXOll 2nlng lion ot j ustlc_e and other charges, Sb<! rcp1h,.'<I.: "Of course, or course." -:----=. 1 re l walk o tr-Filll Mrs. ~litchcll said she wanted to PRINCET.ONt .N.J. (uef)-Presldcnl :-.Avenue apar ment--two woolCi-ago. CQUtner "nasty hor'rible sto r ies ' ' absolutely nothJng n•rong with me, ex- cept. t'm mentally tortur~ rrom the tor· ture I'm being put through." Asked \\'hethcr she had been hospitallz.. . 00 £or o nervous nlln1ent , Mrs. rttjtch eil rcpUcd : "I've nc.vcr been committed to anything ... cxccpl the good of m,y COUD· try." _] ' -Nixon's popularity 1liJ>eed by three ·l:ilnts "Well, t guess he's mad nt me for circulntcd uhout hE>r . • = "'!.,., • Dtlltr .PJ!.1111!!_~!'0,=,,;~l"~~l~~l:a~cco~ lo .!~~fft ~~~elh~.:.'.:._~:_t decid1ed ·u ~~! t~e 1for ~o_telnll r 8 • ft C . SJ" mrs.-ll11 tnt:n--Sflru"10 lllt>l"'UU' ernt~ 111e Atllt5tthl p1-mic-'11mt "'11nt-:mltft8 lter hwibruld nnd c x • Co JYl Rl e r c a Secre tary Maurice 11. Starui a.re accused. of obstruction, consplracy and pc(jury !or aUcgcd(y tntorletliJ& wilh a Securities and Exchange Comm alon in• vesti •lion of !inonclcr Ro~ :r;. ye,,,... '--~ -~mtJ.DllO, ..... I t • PIZZA MADI PROM ENGLISH MUFFINS CAN BE WONDIRFUL 55 percent o1 the An\erican public dlsap-"And then I think he Just , .he thinks that my npartmcnt. I'm pcr!cctly capable or Tin. Tobet\n, 7., S.mpln Cooking 1t El C1rnlno Rnl Schoof prove ol his pe.rrorm8ncc in oflicc. .. 1'1n just overly wrought and U1a1 I should doing anything I \vant to do and there 's . , • 'y. I' , trlbutlon to Preslden{ Nixon's tm cam-~ paign. ~ 4 DAILY PILOT MondlJ, Stpttmber 24, 1'173 ~ing(';t Skylahhers ~acking Up for Trip Home I More Type Of Pollution HOLD YOUR BREATII Every day in every way, we keep getting Every day in every way, we keep getting told that things are w_orse and worse. Mainly this is attributed to everything we eat, drink or breathe. Pollution, friends, is everywhere. It lurks about to snuff you out like Jack tbe Ripper. Alas, it is depressing. You can't pick up a newspaper or magazine or tum on the radio or boob tube without learning of some new and novel way in which pollutants are going to do you in. The federals may have just discovered there is afas·gaffus in your favorite in- stant breakfast. Fumes from your underarm spray .--~nu='ght collapse your lungs. MOTOR CARS AND FACTORIES are belchiog forth all kinds of loatbesome gasses. Oceans are filled with terrible li- quids. It goes on and on. And now, into the news right here on our very own Orange Coast, another menace to mankind is being probed. It is the rubber automobile tire. Some shakers.oand-movers In Laguna Beach discovered a blackened banana tree on the rruUn stem of the Art Colony's business district, which is Forest A venue. What turned the lovely green banana tree so dark? 'Ibey pondered this. A study was launched. It was determined that the ebony hue was actually rubber dust ·which lllleie<lly came from auto tires. And this was a banana tree, not a rubber tree. ONE OF 11IE GREATER mysteries, or course, Is bowcome all that rubber got groond off of tires along a street llke Forest Avenue? For those unacquainted with the Art Colony's main business stem, it should be noted for the record that this stretch of pavement wi ll hard1 y qualify for a speed°"''DY. Autos creep down it bumper to bumper. Guys have been known to go to sleep just waiting to move on. Anyway, some of the city brass got to worrying if auto tires Jett so much dust on the banana tree. what in the world Could il be doing to the inside of Laguna lungs? Thus a Laguna study was launched to determine who el9f might be studying the harmful effects of tire dust fallout. SO FAR, IT HAS been determined that some tire dust studies are under way Jn Ann Arbor, Mich. and North Carolina, some distances from our Orange Coast. Further, some laboratory tests have sug· gested that chemicals used Jn making tires do bad things inside the lungs or animals. 1£ was also learned that the <>range County Air Pollution Control District could come to Laguna in a mobile unit and · monitor for dust. But not just tire dust. They can't isolate it. If you think about it, you have to sup- pose that tire rubber goes somewhere. It surely doesn't stay on the tires too long. SO NEXT YOU WONDER if Laguna Beach authorities prove tire dust is bad and is also floating aboUt in the air, y,•hat gets done about JI? Start making tires out of soybeans? Return to the wooden wheel? Build big vacuum cleaners to suck up the rubber rallout? Of course, you can always ban the motor car. Many would favor that. But then you have the problerii ol rubber f<tll· out from bicycle tires. Or the other kind of fallout from horses. That's the trouble with discovering new kinds of pollution. All or a sudden you need a new kind or (,solution. ~ .. HOUSTON CUPll -The Skylab 2 astronau ts stuffed the accumulated booty of two months of orbital research into th e close quarters of their ferry spacecraft today and made flnaJ preparations ror u Tue5day aftemoori splashdown olf the coast of California . Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma also riddled ror the final Another Battle? fime -they hoped -with a space ita. tion systems problem prior to unhooking !he Apollo ferry ship for the short trip home THE TllREE a:;tronauts were ex· fX'Cltd to land at 3:20 p.m. (PDT) Tues· day in the Pacific Ocean 224 miles southwest of San Diego. American pianist Susan Starr (right) has challenged virtuoso Van Cli· burn tq_ a musical battle of the sexes. Following the Riggs-King tennis match, the 30·year-old Miss Starr said she wanted to be pitted against Cliburn and other known keyboard artists. Agnew Putting on &loves For-Battle Over Charges WASffiNGTON (AP) -Vice Presiden t Spiro T. Agnew apparently intends to stay 1n office and fight charges of political corruption, with all signs in- dicating he will open that fight within the next two or three days. Tbe vice presdient's lawyers reportedly were prepared to file motions in Baltimore's £ederal court this week to try to halt ~ investiga tion of Agnew . TODAY A1TY. G<n. E!Uot L , Richardson canceled a speech he was scheduled to give the National Associa- tion of Chiefs of Police , saying he had to stay in Washington because of pressing national business. While his office declined to be more specific, it seemed apparent that developments in the Agnew case \Vere ut least a part or that business. Meanwhile, the \Vashington Star-Ne\\'S reported that .Joel KI in e , a multimillionaire Mayland land investor, has told federal prosecutors in Baltimore that he acted as a conduit for as much as $100,<XIO in cash allegedly funneled to Angew and other f\.1aryland officials. Quoting Unnamed sources, the Star News said Kline told the prosecutors he solicited some of the money personally for the offioials as purported campaign contributio"4 and then manipulated, or DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otliv~ry of tl'I! Daily Pilot is guaranteed M•""•'·Frld1y: II ••u dO 1101 111\le ., .... ''"'Of J:JO ,.m., Clll 111<1 ftur <OIY '"'II " ... II.,,, I• r•u. Cllll •rt ,.~.. llnl•I l:Je ,.m. ltlVnUy •"" SV"Cll YI It r111 do ""' r1ct1w1 r•ur CtllV br t f ,m. S1!11nl1y, •• I 1.•n. S11nd1y, cl!I """ • co11r will H br1119til It Ytll. C1111 1r1 l1tm 1111111 1' 1.m. T rlrphonrs M••I O••~ Co11111r ,1,r11• N•rtllwn! Nwnlln1ron 111ch Ind We1tm1n'1er 1111 Cl1mtnl1, (1p!1lr1no ltlch. 1 .• U l·IJll J.'0-IJJf J•11 J111n C1p .. 1r1N, 01111 ""'"'· South l1111n1. L•1un1 N'flltl ... 0 1-l(N • laundered. some or the money to disguise its donors. THE STAR-NEWS said it could not determine whether Kline gave the money to Agnew and other officials as campaign contributions. In another development, Agn e w disclosed ove r the weekend that he has organized a defense fund to help defray the costs of defending himseU against the allegations made against him. A poll released on Sunday indkates that there is considerable public support for Agn ew to retain his office. The Gallup poll taken for newsweek magazine showed 66 percent of thoSe questioned felt Agnew should not resign. But only 40 percent of the 431 persons \Yho partici pated in the poll thought President Ni :<on was being fair to Agnew. 111irty-five percent said he was not being fair to the vice president and 25 percent had no opinion. TIIE POU.. also showed that 55 percent of Americans disapprove of the way Nix· on is perfonning his job while 35 percent approve and 10 percent have no opinion. Administ ration officials continue to re- main tight -lipped about the Agnew case. Five Escape Plane Crash CARY. Ind. (AP) -A Gary-based Black 1'.'lusti m Constellation plane, used for air freight operations bet\\·een Chicago and California, crashed on land· Ing and burned early today at the Gary Municipal Airport. • The five persons aboard the plane - all believed to he creWmen -escaped serious injury. Dr. Williarn Douglas, presidertt of the flirport's bo.ard of commissioners, said 1hc four-eng ine propeller craft belonged to the Nation of Islam and had been bas- ed in Gary for about 11/J years. • The weathtr cilndllions for the splashdown point were predicted to be satisfactory with 17 mile per hour winds, \\'aves ol five feet. 10-mi\e visibility and scaltered clouds at 1,800 reel. Flight controllers said Hurricane lrah. located several hundreds miles south ol Baja California, should pose no threat to the recovery. The storm had 85 m.p.h. winds and was moving at 11 m.p.h. toward the predicted s~lashdown point. "I WONDER IF there's not a hur· ricane just to the north of our locatioo up here?" asked Garriott as the station pal!&Sed 270 miles above Baja. "It's the best developed hurrlcane that 1 think we've seen with a very cle&r eye." Sunday was packing day and the space fliers crammed 71,600 pictures or the aun and 11 miles or photographs of the eortl> Into the small Apollo craft. It wa.sn 't an easy job. • "I kind of liken thl.s stowage business to If you are going on a six weeks vaca· lion and you're going tn 1 Volkswagen and you )Uld to pack the whole famlly and had to do it by remote control ," flight director Niel Hulchimon and Sun· day. Mll•• ,, ....... d I ' 24,423,122 MP0 •126 .9 APOLLO Argentinians Rejoi~e • Near Landslide Places Juan Pe..ro1i Back i1t Poiver BUENOS AIRES I AP) -Thoosands or Argentinians danced, sang and shouted in the streets Qf Buenos_ Aires early today, celebrating the election of 77·year-old Juan D. Peron to the presidency from which the military ousted him 18 years ago. ' Official returns Crom Sunday's election gave Peron 7,286,034 votes, or 61.68 per- cent in 54 ,m or the nation's 55,475 elec· lion districts. RICHARD BALBIN or the Radical Civic Union ran sec- on WI ~2~887~587, or 24.44 percent ; Francisco Manrique had 1,440,049, or 12.19 percent, and Juan Carlos Coral of the Socialist Workers' party had 187 ,002, or 1.58 percent. The outcome had JUAN •I RON never been in doubt ; the only question was how big the winning margin would be. Running with Peron was his third wife, Isabel Martinez, who when she takes of· fice with her husband on Oct. 12 will become ·the Western Hemisphere's first woman vice president. Because of Peron's age and uncertain health, she could become the hemisphere's first woman president. "I cannot say anything because the people have done it all," said Peron in a brief statement to neWsmen. "Now is not the lime for me to Speak but the time for me to act." HE ADDED that he might soon make "realistic changes in A r g e n t i n a ' s economy, but the first order of business is political. After the political situation is seltied, the economy will arrange itself." Peron's opponents conceded the elec- tion before midnight when it beca me ob- vious that he would pass the 50 percent plus one vote required for e1eclion on the first ballot. Underlining Person's position as the Chilean Troops Search Areas After Explosion , SANTIAGO (U PI ) -Army troops launched a massive, apartment-by.apart· ment search through a half-mile-square section of downtown Santiago Sunday after a powerful bomb exploded near the . U.S. Consulate. The troops reported arresting 50 persons, silencing an underground radio station and burning hWldreds of leftist books and pamphlets in the raid. The army said most of the persons ar- rested were foreigners, mainly Bolivians ( IN SHORT ... ) biggest force in Argentine political life, his win of almost landslide proportions far outdistanced the 49.6 percent of the vole that his standln Hector J. Campora got in the election last March against the same three opponents. The prevl~us mil itary government barred Peron from that election, and Campora resigned July 13 to make way foe his mentor. Only a few incidents of violence were reported during the voting Sunday in con· trast to guerrilla raids and union violence during the campaign. The tranquil poll- ing on a bright spring day erupted into gleeful and peaceful victory celebrations shortly alter the polls cl~. llORN·HONKJNG caravans of buses, trucks and cars began to converge on downtown · Buenos Aires. An estimated 30,000 jubilant Peronisls jammed the Plaza de Mayo through most or the night. South Viet Ranger Base Overrun by Commm1ists From Wire Services SAIGON -North Vietnamese troops, advancing behind a' curtain of artillery fire, apparently overran a government ranger base in the central' highlands or South Vietnam during the weekend, the Saigon command announced tod~y. Lt. Col. Le Trung· Hien, the chief spokesman for the command, reported radio contact with the Le Minh ranger base 23 miles west of Pleiku, \Vas lost Saturday evening after five hours of heavy fighting. HE SAID THE base nine miles from the Cambodian border was defended by a battalion or about 400 rangers, about half or them Montagnard tribesmen. The opening North Vietnameae barrage knocked out a number of inltallations at the base including the radio antenna, Hien reported. He said waves of infantry rushed the wire perimeter in the-Wake ol. the shelling. "We believe the base was overrun," said Hien. But he reported recon- naissance aircraft have spotted surviving rangers still operating in the area around the base. It was the first time a government camp of such size has been overrun since the Jan. 28 cease-fire, and lhe govern. ment indicated its capture could touch off a sharp increase of fighting In the central highlands region . "It is our principle to do the best we can lo retake any territory which has been captured by the Communists since lhe cease-fire," said Hien. vinclal capital 50 miles northeast ot Phnom Penh, the situation Y!'as relatively calm. In the four offensives against rebel troops surrounding the capital, govern· n1ent troo~ successfully abushed Con1- munist-led troops at Kompong Kontuot, about 12 miles south or the capital. At least five rebels were killed and "mmny more" were wounded , the field reporters said. ON ONE OF the front s, a column of' goverMlent troops, backed ' by prop- driven lighter-bombers, battled through heavy guerrilla territory in a drive to reach besieged Cambodlan troops at the village of Vihe8! Suor, 12 miles east of Phnom-Penh. Kung Fu Star's Death Not Due To Marijuana HONG KONG (AP) -The American widow of Kung Fu film star Bruce Lee said today she intends to return to her family home in Seattle "as soon as possi- ble." hoirs. Linda Lee, daughter of ~trs. Vi- vian McCul loug h of Seattle. took her husband's body back to Seattle after he collapsed and died here July 20. then returned to Kong Kong for the inquest in- to his death . '( • I . 4 Killed In Plane Accident ., EL CAJON (A1') -An El Cajon police of fleer was one of four persons killed when their rented Cessna .112 slam· med into Chiquito Peak, 37 miles east of here, while 'on a photo su-rvcy flight~ Authorit ies identified the victims of the crash Sunday as Reese W. Boldrick, 21, a re- (..__BRI_E_F_S _) U~ITt ....... Dlaco.,erer • • Reopen Tuesdag Gas Protest . . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Gasoline waa stUl hard to come 1>y In most parts of NortJ1ern. California today 811 ae'\"Ice 1 tat lo n s·protesUDg PbUe 4 price controls were in the final day of a massive shutdti/"1>; st8UOn o.wners say they will reopen Tuesday, bu~\ only " between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. wrtll Phase 4 price ceilings on gasoline are lifted. San Luis Obispo stalioos, however, announced Sunday they would reopen today to prevent non-protesting stations frorn charging e x c e s s I v e prices. The California S t a t e Automobile ~ s a o c~-a t i o n estimated 5,000 static locked their pumps in the pro est. DAIL V PILOT ,) Final Da.y • Ill BOB ~100R~. spo kesmvn. for the California Service Sta· tion Dealers Association , said more than half of h i s members honored the shut· down . "We figured the response would be good. But this is tremendous," said ?19 o Te ·\ ''We're really sorry to in· cOnvenience the public. But we're caught in a squeez~." Many motorists, apparently t rc:ir rul of runnui g out of gas. cut back on their weekend driving. "\Ve'vc had far, far less \Veckcnd traffic on Highway 101 than usua l." said a Humboldt County Sheriff's officer in Eureka , \vhetrl! only two 1vicc stations were 01icn Sunda .. IN IE San Francisco Bay area, the CSAA reported that 90 pen:cnt of all independent stat ions w"°h'e closed Sunday. Sixty percent ·or the in- Two Men. Soug· ht ;n Theft ' ~i,;~e;\. '.,~~ ~~ ~.~.,,t :~ ... Monterey also \Vere closed. the car club said. Adam Nordwall, San The California 11 i g h way serve policeman; Grant H. Francisco area Indian • Patrol said traffi c U1 Sa n Cunningham, 25, an officer Oil leaderl will fly to Rome Of R k s . ' c· J<'rancisco and Oakland was the foroe ; Stephen H. Stof-today to "discover" OC ing er S . 0 rpse below norm,!. with traffic so fregren, 26, of El Cajon, and ·Italy. He claims if it is light on the Golden Gate James Q. Morgan, 26, of Des· valid that .Columbus Bridge that the usual south- cano. ·'di·scovered' America bound Sunday evening traffic Th 'd JI f st d-LOS ANGELES (AP) 0 ·mardino. mountains, about Angeles International Airport. · · 1· d ey sat e our were u even though Indians uc Jam never matcr1a 1ze . Ym. g c ·minol t G Af In gli f '"" -it es west of Joshua Tree The following • day, San Oil t · n ogy a ross-had been here for thou-ter gett g a mpse o ~ "" 11 company-ow.~ca s a11ons mont Community College. "th 1 ht the tho ht ight be National Monu~ent , Berqardino County sheri 's remained open through the sands of years, en w a Y ug m authorities said. But they lost deputies reported findin g weekend. often rationing gas e (/nfon Legal can be discoverer of the getaway v eh i c I e , track of the car before police Parsons' burned· body and cof-in five to JG-gallon :imounts to FRESNO (AP) -Pledges of ltaly." au t.h or it i es were still ground units Could get to it. flll near the Joshua Tree customers \vho .jammed the support for their fight to -searching today for the two desert monument. stations. Some s t at ion s survive as a union enlivened men believed responsible for PAJJ,SONS, 27, once a Authorities said they were reported minor squabbles and laborious study by United D TL..:.. ' member of the rock group The told by persons at the airpOrt one case or fisticuffs. Farm Workers of America eep m·08t stealing the corpse of rock Byrds. died Wednesday at a that ,Parsons' body was picked delegates on a constitution to "' singer ~ram P~ns. motel in the Joshtia Tree area. up by two men driving a MANY c·nr offices said • t . \ PRESENTING THE Sentimental Sophisticates,. · A new se~ies of 14 ka rat yelloW gold ~ • ar:id diamond rings, sculptured for I today's young woman: sophisticated • of course-and sentimental as well.· , Ours alone : the Sentimental· Sophistlcates.11, A. Abstra"ct design, $75. B. Double oval•tin~, $75. C. Abstract design. $75. D. Oval ring ·with three diamon._dst $1 ~O.t ~ _: E. Two-dia mond marquise-shaped' ring. $110. oO Something BeautifuL, ... Ch,Hql! Accoun ts lnv1t" -Amtrlc•n 811Presl Oa11kAm,ricard and M11ltr Ch1r9t, IM, SI.A.VICK'S Je\velers Since 1917 I B FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 make the union legal. • • • ' , A helicopter unit spotted 8 His family bad planned to hearse. One of the men. they they received numerous in-With tocilllon~ 01: 1orrarct, orant;e, La Cerritos, L• Ha1Jr1 •----.-T~b~ey_.o....v...e.r...wheJmingcy_f'!_..!l Qm•· . bla~k ~earse .Sunday_ on -l"send"'l',.,th'l'e'!bod'!"'j,t,Yc"to""N~ew!lc'Or"cl!!;e>!!ans~-'<''"C.:·d~,,,;·;;w:;;as1;;..!w';;e:2ar';ii;;'n~'hciac.ijac;;;;;k;c:t;-~·t!·".!sC,;;;;C:fl:l:~::Cm";;;;;:OcC:a;iu'it~i,;:0;;0":;;';i-t-------'""'"-• ~''-"_o_•"~'-'-"-'-"-"~''-'·--,-----1:----1 adopted the constitution's 82 bl"VH-a l;---Ca:liform~he San-for burial today, but the corpse bearing the woi'dS 'Sin 'City.' motorists who \.':anted to know sections Sunday after 11 hours was stolen Thursday night Parson had co-authored a song where to buy gas before ven· of debate over three days. The DismIS• sed from a loading dock at JAs with that title tUring on trips, constittitioft recommits the 'Catalina' UFW to non·violence and drops "union" from the title. LOS ANGELES (AP} -The making the name United x~ratedJilm "Deep Throat" is Overflow Farm Workers of America. not a public nuisance but may e Yo11tl1 Booked WALNUT GROVE (AP) - A ZO..year-0ld Sacramenlo youth has been arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of two e 1 d e r l y Stockton residents who were fishing near \Valnut Grove, the Sacramento C.Ounty sherirrs office reported. Officers said they arrested Michael Edward Rowlett of 2916 16th Ave. late Sunday.I They said an informant led them to his car parked near 6800 Woodbine Ave. where he was arrested after visitng relatives. e Killed h11 Rock LOS ANGELES (AP) - be a 'private nuisance, a ' superior Court judge has nil· Probe Erl.d's . ed. Judge David A. Thomas dismissed a civil suit by state Sen. John L. Hanner, (R.Olen- dale), who had sooght to close down "Deep Throat" as a public nuisance. But Thomas allowed a cop11aintiff, Salvatore Maiorioo, to mod.Uy his complaint to contend the film is a pr.ivate nuisance. Harmer previously had falt- ed in an attempt to close down another X·rated film, "The Devil in Miss Jones," on a similar legal theory. • .. LONG BEACH (AP) - A Coest Guard ' inqulfY !Dto whether the S.S. Catalina car- ried an overflow of passengers last month was halted after the defense and prosecution_ came to an "agreement of facts'' in the cue. ' The jllige' said he would make a ruling Oct. 11. Four boys, age 11 to 15. have BuUf;gh•nr been booked for Investigation 11 ~ of mun:ler in the death of a 4-. . A . COAST GUARD , spokeSman said the agreement meant that the prosecution ac· cepted the defense position that Capt. Lloyd S. Fredgren did not willfully allow bJa ablp to carry an excessive D\!lllber or passengers on an Aug. a nm between Avalon on Catalina Island and S~ PedrQ. , year-old • girl killed when , rl•J" · P· struck by a large rock UU\IWn • -r l.ws omo onto the Santa Ana Freeway, ' The ship reportedly carried 2,283 _ .... -43 mort than allowed under Coast Guard regulatlons. authorities reported. F·z S . Police said the oldest boy l. m Ult admitted he had thfown the six·incb rock from a freeway o.!'erpas~ on a dare. e Coed Band BERKELElY ( A P ) Women marched with the University of Cllifornia band Saturday for the first time in the student-run organization's SO-year history. 1 The band, which changed its .. constitution Jast spring to make women eligible, had 24 coeds among the 135 members who took part in the progtam at the Illinois-Cal football game. .... : ••• -· ---....J 'PeanuJs' Dad Gets Married •• SANTA ROSA (AP) - 1 Charles M. Schultz, creator or "'l 1 Chai'lie · Brown -and t h e ,. Ule Peanuts cartoon strip , married Mrs. Jean F. Clyde ... in a private ceremony Satur- •· day. ! .1. The wedding took place a .r Schulz' home· here. The marriage is the second for Schulz, whose comic strip • has made him a millionaire. ' He was divorced from bis first • ·· wife earUer this year. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A bullfighter says that during 911e of his fights he became, unknowingly, an actor in a pornographic rum. But rather than demand a~ A 'Repriev~' To Grandma tor's wages, Eliseo Gome; SAN CARLOS (UPI) -A asked a federal court to forbid grandson said the eviction the showing of the ftlm and notice be served on his • order two .....,..rues, Tobo, _ ytltlMld grandmother was all lina Productions, Inc., and a mistake and she need not Hollywood lniomaliotlal Film leave the home she's lived In eo.,.. o1 America, to pay him for 20 )'llars. $6 million in damages. Mrs. Maria Sullivan, half Gomez said footage of bis blind and partially paralyzed bullllght In Tijuana, MexJco, from a llroke, was >erved the on Aug. 6 was spliced into the notice a .few daya qo by~ her movie. He _I~ ol bJa -arandlOn, Earl Pony, .51, ': ilDWltting acting debut. the "He's changed his notion, torero said, when aficionados ain't he," Mrs. Sullivan said started referring to him as Friday. "I'm glad he's giving "El Pomografo." lri a little.". ·, · 1st ANNIVERSARY_ Than.k ·you for •miking ouf first9 f!"iiiVersary possible. Come in end 9et your free ki11, Wednesd•y, Septem- ber 26th • *'MUSIC *PRIZES J.IDO CllBT COTTltl ..,.HI OLD TYMI C.\NDY STOfl:I"· 3371 VI• o-::,:JACNI• '""' RlchtN'• Mkt.) N., -h-'7M7U .. ' The 450 SE Sedan. !'f'bis is the· car that may· finally prompt you to invest in a Mercedes-Benz. -----· ,. I T'$ (!NLY.,HUMAN. You --•Meri:edes-Benzgo · b1 '.,..i ~ to yourself, . .. _ Qf IHM days .. :• .. f.,NoW •Ciiinel •the'•4$0SE ............. ft so fresh in iti ~·mligbtenedin· · ita O:ai'•••••thip rhat it ex .. · ceeils yoar wildest dreams. , lladwiw~4SOSEolJen; Then lelt drive it. You may ,..;1 no Jonier to buy your lintMen:edes-Benz. " ' were developed to help mini· mize injury if an accidc1tt is unavoidable. Active safety endeavors tQ help keep you out of accidents in lhe fust lace. Responsive handling excellent braking and agil mane erabillry arc all essen ·al ele ents. Take b . gc The 450SE has a fade·resistant disc brake for every wheel-4-wheel disc brakes. ·A feature Mercedes- Benz introduced on all ita models 6 years ago. 1 11fe ASOSE coul~'t have There's more.· Driver en- anivcd at a better time. vironment. A ,subtle and vital Concerns with exhaust " . .. ·driving consideration .. Loca-eniissions, safety and e·nergy· TheMercedes-Bem:450SE: already called clubeic sedan in the world. tion of controls, seating de-- utilization have forceij. changes in ment. Nevertheless, it is true. sign, ventilation,. even the width of the aptomotiye ~gineering.!..:!!_th the The front suspension on the-450SE steering wheel are carefully considered 4SOSE, Mercedes-Benz offers a car tliat is 3CiireCflesson-from our 180..fnph ex--=. in a multi-faceted attack-on-driver fa. has a social conscience-and is fun to perimental G-111 Coupe. Zero steering tigue. Because the-fresher you are, the drive. ' / offset ·gives this latest Mercedes-Benz better use you can make of the conttola The4SOSFs technological advances ·remarkable straight-line stability. And at your disposal. were not lost on the experts. 0 The best this full S·passenger sedan can negoti-No automobile manufacturer any- sedan,Ut-the world;' says Road·& Track-· are~a .. circle-only 37.5 feet in diameter. where in the world is more concerned maalziqe •. Aut~ek considers it "cer-·The fully in.dependent rear suspen· with safety. No one else has been more tainly the most exciting sedan in the sion is exactly like that of the famous active in making it a part of his product world ... so far ahead of its time it leaves 450SL sports car. The system has lost for as long a time. · us stunned ... " nothing in~transferencetothe450SE. In •tati . Say good·blfe to wallowing suspensions Vl on. Smooth, efficient power andmushycontrolswhenyoutakecom-Mercedes-Benz has aJways aimed to The 4SOSE is powered by a 4.S~liter, mandofthiscar. build not ju st successful cars, but sig· overhead cam V·S with elecµ-onic fuel nificant cars. That has been achieved in Experimental Sofery Veltic/6 Z2: p101eni1or of tJu produ.ction4SOSE Sedan. injection. There's nothing like it in any other.sedan. , This unique engine gives you better Strength above and beyond the 450SE. Whal awa·its you now is the The 450SE is the strongest sedan Mer-most remarkable driving experience of cedes·Benz has ever built. your life. Phone us today. We'll be happy It has the most rigid passenger com-to arrange a test drive. pa.rtment of any Mercedes· Benz produc- tion car. The front and rear extremities of the car were designed around this "passenger celJ." They deform on im- pact, absorbing as much force as pos- sible before it reaches the cockpit area. r:;;:--------..-, . Jim Sl•mou llflports. Inc. I 11301 9•all SffMt I P.O. 101 2640 I Newpe.rt hoch, Collf. 92663 I I Plc1.1se send me your full-color brochure 1 of the Mcrcedes-Bcn"z motor cars. .... than 25% more power per·cubic inch This body is treated to a series of baths, coatings and paintings that take the better part of a day to complete. In all, every 4SOSE is layered with more thari 30 pounds of protective coating and more than 40 pounds of paint. I N•m• I " --------------------------------, and better fuel economy than any dcr . --··mnric-lu~The 450SE us~ about four gallons wnerc any top line domestic sedan would use at least five. "" " ti'I' •Ht ·01 '>Ii' '" ,,. "' I t!JJ l . -• ( t Sculptured by the wind There is a good reason why Mercedes· Bern: engineers shape their automobiles differently. · Try a 4SOSE in the rain. You' 11 bC amazed at how clear the glass area re- mains. The window molding catches water and grime as 'they come Oft' the windsbield-~fore they have a chance to foul the side glass. The molding also puts the airstrcam to work. guiding it acro~s the windows to further sweep them-clean. The relfrg!ass is clcarctfby the same princ,iples. Suspension better than ever Comiidcring ihc Mercedes·Benz repu· tation for handling. that is quite a state-• . The safest sedan? Mercedes-Benz would never say that. But the experts at Autoweek had no qualms. They saw the c lose relation· ship that the production 4SOSE bas with our latest ~perimental safety vehicle, ESV 22 . They ca lled the 450SE "the safest car in the world avai lable to the public." Mercedes·Benz has long been an innovator of safety develop- ments. The "safety cone0 locks which secure.our doors rccCiVed their first patent in Gennany in' 1949. The · crushable exuemicy/rigid passenger cell idea was granted its patent in 1952. These arc just a few of the clements which promote passive safety. They Addrtsi. __________ _ I c;., I I St~IC • ip I 1·clcphone•----------L_ ________ :.J. Mercedes-Benz@ ~ . • '"' "Ill! • <U I Jim Slernons Im ports, Inc. 1301 Qua:1, P.o . Box 2640, Newport Beach, c.11f. 92663 P~one: n4-B3J-~Joo ~=-PSAal~~·&.-4j::=t'=======--=--======--===--=--=-=::--..--:_---=======--·---~ --,------ • f I DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ( ~ An Ill appropriate Law Compulsory arbitration can be an effective method of resolving some labor disputes in industry, where prices can be increased to offset wage and benefit boosts. But it's anpther matter when public employes, paid from tax monies, are concerned. This is the argument of the California School Boards Association and others urging gu bernatoriaJ veto or a bill authored by Sen. George Moscone (D·SaD !Fran· cisco), which would permit teachers to bargain~ collec- tively with school clistrict.s. and submit disputes to ab independent arbitration p~nel for a binding ruling. The control of public schools traditionally has re- mained in the hands of the citizens and their elected of· officials, who are responsible for the establishment of tax rates and the expenditure of tax monies. Giving control over school budgets and tax rates to persons in no way accountable to the taxpayers cer- tainly is contrary t-0 good governmental policy. Further, the knowledge that binding arbitration will take over the pr~ess can be a deterrent to realistic, good-faith negotiation. Legislation permitting teachers to bargain collec- tively is one thing. The inclusion of compulsory arbitra- tion is another. This bill should be vetoed. Helped Shape County the department through the moot dWlcult years of COUD· ty growth, frequently ii! tile storm cenler of oppooing views on · plmning to accommodate that growth. His' departure coincide• wlt,b Ille completion of a ~assive -general plan which will SflYe u an overall plan- nmg guide in the next decade. Dickason bu done a good job and his elforta-.hould be reflected in orderly county development for yun to come. The Daily Pilot wishes him well in lils future endeavors. Calendar Shuf fie The many grave matters confr6nling our sute law· makers did not keep them from devoting a little lime to passing -i nd getting the governor to sign -a bill that is almost guaranteed to add to life'• confwion for the average citiZen. Beginning next year, this legislative landmark will return the obseriation of Veterans Day in Califomla to the traditions! Nov. 11 date, Instead of the now nationally accepted fourth Monday in October. Presumably thl• means that federal offices, post offlces and tile like will tilke their holiday in Oclober, while state offi~ and scboola will wall until Novem· ber. Somewhere in the mixup will be banks, stoCk mar· ket representatives and other organizations with nation· al as well as sta~ interests. The change to the October date was In the Interest of moving the holiday further from tile Thanksgiving • 'Orange County Planning Diiector Forest Dickason, who once said he d.idn 't intend to grow old in govern- ment service, proved·that he meant it last week when he announced his impending resignation after 20 years ------~or serviEetolJie county. . weekend and, of co~. providing an extra three-day , weekend1~:;-~-.,,-..,.-,---:-:::-c::-..,.-,.,---,-,----,----l·--_:_ __ :...__._.c\_-~ Since the Nov. 11 date orig!nally honored the IDIJi. versary of the signing of the World War I armlatice itS significance is reduced. The worthy Idea of honoring those who served their country in wars Is not dependent - Dicka.Son, 45, who joined the county Planning De- partment right out of college, will seek to further his career in private industry after he leaves his $29,000 a year post in November. Heading up a stall or 100 employes, he bas guided 'Intuition ' R esponse to Chauvinism ~YDNEY J. HARRI~ A lady in Delware wants to know how J explain "woman's intuition." Is it just a myth, or do women really have It? And, if the latter, is there some basic d.if- ference between the way men's and women's minds operate? I think there ls such a thing. but I dofi't believe it has anything to do with women "1S such. In my apin- ion, it is part of the mental apparatus of all minority groups everywhere at all times. ·women, or course, are not a minority group numericaltY, but they are socially and psychologically. in that men run the institutions and make the rules. Thus, women have been discriminated against in nearly all soci- eties. A l\.flNORITY group, in order to survive, is forced fo make up in sensitivi- ty what it lacks in ,:;trengtb. All the weak er creatures in nature have to employ cunni ng and intelligence to cope with their predators. And womankind is no different In this respecl. Minority groups -starting with slaves -either perish or become cleverer in some ways than the group that dominates them. It is well known that slaves understand their ma sters far bet- ter than the masters understand their slaves. The master controls by force ; he has no need of intelligence ; the slave must survive by developing his wits. TIOS development takes different forms, of course. The black man under •• Dear Gloomy Gus Regarding the comment on ••park· ing slobs'' in your column Aug. 29, it may intere~t J.M. to know tliat a firm in Mount Vernon, N.Y. puts out stickers saying "YOU ARE PARKED HERE ILLEGALLY." They are big -and hard to remove . E.W. -... ' southern slavery liftd by submission - but his submission eotalled a !hrewd understanding of the white man's emo- tional dynamics. The slave thus came to grasp human vanity, gre<d, pre~se, and rationalization far be,tter than his master. Religious minority groups, such as the Jews, developed different antennae over tJle centuries; they learned to cope com- mercially and inteUectually, rather than psychologically. Both the so· ca 11 e d "inteJUgence" and "business sense" of the Jews are simply responses to their cultural and social situation . It is In· teresting that in !!rnel, where ~f are now "native" and dominant for the first time, these alleged "Jewish" tr alts are not conspicuously noticeable. SO WITH woman; her famous ... in- tui tion" is a generic response to male cbauvinsim. Barred from abstract think· Ing, and Crom many fonns of male ac- tivity, she also developed a "slave men- tality" in that she quickly learned the weaknesses and tortuositles of the male personality. She could see more clearly into the man than he cooJd see lnto her; jiJSt as black slaves were under far fewer illusions about their masters than their masters were about them. George Jean Nathan observed tong ago that "women's intuition is merely man's obtuseness." Eventually, all mastery falls by its own obtuseness. Ironic Wate rgate Twist The Watergate developments have taken an ironic twist which has Jert the 1wo ringleaders, G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt. deadly enemi es. Liddy is a fanalic who offered to sub- l'l'tit to being gunned do"'" in the streets, Mafia-style, for his failure at Watergate. When tus startled superiors declined to arrange his execution, he v.'enl lo prison , lips grimly sealed. llunt is a romantic who played the spy role until the plot !urned out not to have a story boot ending. He was one of the first to break and to throw himself upon tbe mercy ol the prosecutors. WHEN HE told the other \V1.1tergate conspirators that he had broken his secrecy oath, according to prison sources, Liddy hollered for a gu11rd. ''Keep me away from him." Liddy growled, referring to J-lunt, "or I'll kill him!" That w11 tbe last time Liddy and Hunt have epokeo to 000-another. 1 Now Hunt appears to be the key government witneu against the Cuban!- he recruited to do hiJ dirty work . His nalr for the dramatic gave hlm e ch.orismaUI! S#A}' over 1he €ubans1 He had been their Cl~ 111perlor during the Bay ill PIA• fa11dan80. and he returned 10 )ears liter to recruit them for the Daniel Ellsber& and Wa1orgate capers. WJTIJ HEROIC words that c00ldliii•e came rrom one or his own llPY novels., f 1 swore them IO secrecy Alter the~ , arrest, he persuaded them to plead guilty rather than risk revealing what they knew in a court trial. Hunt, meanwhile, collected most of the $460,000 hush money that the White HOUie crowd passed out to buy the silence of the Watergate defendants. Less lhan $21,000 flllered down to lhe Cubans, who gave half of it to their first attorney, Henry Rothblatt. Today, lhe Cubans are so broke that they can't pay their new lawyer, Daniel SchuilZ, a struggling young attorney, who has Informed them he may be forced IO give up the cue and tum thW1 over to_a public defender. UP UNTIL recently, the Cubans bod obeyed Hunt's Instructions to keep their mouths •hul particularly about tho burglary or Daniel B Ill be' I ' 1 pyscbiaUist'1 ofOce. HlD1t had waiDed that this was a national security "miss.ton. Now the spttial prosccutora bavt In. dleated to Schultz thal Hunt bot - gravted federal Immunity to teatil)' against the Cubans In the EllsberJ cose. FOOTNOTE: Schultz told us lhi !P<clal ~[lll!eculJl~r-~lth his clients 1rylng to perauiae them 10 plead gullly IO 'rlur&Jarlzlntl t be psychiatrist's office. II on a specific date. GYROS(OPI< t>EVl<E Good Intentions Not Enough · Hazards of Commu.nist Friendships . WASIDNGTON, D.c: -; Warnings any other gimmicky development o1 Nix· which continue to come to this Country On doctrlneJ, the fint order d. bullnesa from the Sooiet intell~ are o1 the for Secretary ol Slate Henry KIJsincer Is gravest poosible .. lure. ni;,; are tellini . m•ll"I compleJ< problems grow1nc out the Nixon admliistratlcln thlat tllli na·! el Iii fiew rtlo--·.wlth Ruaia IDd tion and the c9Ule of -are losl dtina. · , 1 ..-.. • if appeasement ~ol .. ' in.anageable. The immedilte matter is the S o v t e t Unfot Tlll:SE MUCJl.IWLED n e vr In-the .lsoue ol defense. The lull in the .eoolinues. ! ltlallves ar, Javiql unpredictable ...,. llovtet·Amerlcan military · c:onfl1>otation 'lbe message is JS sequenceJ and ~ reactions. · ' has created an atiqospbere of com- clear 11 it can be . !l'be •iJmhineiit · dlnier comes in two ptacmcy Which revives George S. made by men alid paru, '.O.. ill'! !be porfectly obvious ..,. McGovern's general line on a sizeable women who are lbll.&~Jllmdlblp·wllb ·Russl• def...,. l"'ll bock. ~~-that lhty o~: ~ ,~-~ for~-. The 1 .. derihip,in Conirut,seems bell· ~ue· to •Ifie,·~.-_ ;v~ ~Jllillri,t -IL clefd !Mill llent on makl!i& a rtmrd ol cutting nev ~, tbo.._!,<zh.Dit'7 1... , '-'?f~~rol,,li!l!lilleclUa!s. . ten us <!efense a1a111De when.the~ Uilloq ~ 111i-· Is clearly rucblng for Jjllliliiy superlorl· dare them wbie It pursues lls· self· 'Ibo o\ll"r'.flld Ji:Dlare compla. The ty in nuclear arms, and on the sea, as aerving accommoc1•11on with the Welti bealt!IY doubt ~;tr!Oes about Ru9slol! early as possible. By some mtasures it is Rallier lbsn the 'year of Euiwe" or moCI~ •. led .. II!' the Sn v let in-· already there. ' · tellectilals, ....,.,,_ the reassertion ol Q)o&reJs will probably .take no more emotl~ aritl-Ovnim'!'lan as the prime Important action thiJ year lbsn laying motivation o1 ·Amer1C:u pollcy. IJllo lllil down the ltinlls of AIDerlcan military , ~ go Ille •• deal, · skeptlc!Jm power In the fe:w yun obeod when, ..,. ~ -· nucle~. ll'tlfl·,Umltatlcln, the .._.to ---•--,ia•-~ ; ·n..tmmt ot :Amwbn Jews about c.vr.&aUi acme, US'"~• ac::t..,.. C ' M • SOviet lntemal ~ 'ml the --1 •antace of our complocency and desire an t eet I · susjiic;on lbat tlie.,..... .. IDIN are plying for peace by establillbla& jtsdf, not as · ' ~ Us tor ·suckers. Bl. tllete meuura we equal, ~t as first. ,W)aeo that time came , '"""1d· leam Iii a T.W "yean when we detente mli!Jt no . ":"Ker ...m "° Im· S . D -I -m;.: .... ., tllll i<Jday'• • portant to the SOrii\I ....... Pace em • detmte iJ tawll>w'~Jiiiuuslon. NO LEm periii..,.;"ls Iii! DOtlon that · ~ ~ Both · of tb&1.::tartP&1 comequences we ·OUgbi to freeze up wltb the Russians ,,.----------·;.,, ol N-'• -eta"cln ._.,. ..,. because we rUJiY .eaa~ lliut them, and EDITORIAL . ' . . • Med Schools 1 re-create the general climate of fear and suspicion of the previous 25 years. Some r.Jgbt conclude. upon reading the .messages of the Sovij!t intellectuals, that this is the onl'y way to forestall Alex- ander Solzhenitsyn's dire prediction that the Russian .,.,.ay is the ·~tomorrow ol mankind." Solzhenitsyn has more than that to say. lie coodemns "the emotional pmcr- ence ol the comfortable aolutioo Instead of the dlffit"Ult one" and continues that Ibis way i! "fed by the Munk:lt spiri~ by concession and the spirit of ·....._... led by an anxious self-decept.iOIJ ca the part of ..cteties ol good lntenliana and persons who have lost their detenniDA· Uon to make sacrifices and stand f1r1n." NEITHER a freeze up with Russia nor a complacent lowering or guard seems to the Nixon administration to be much good. We are not soon likely to be able to do what the Ru.Wan intellectuals cannot do, reform Soviet society so that the "tomorrow of mankind" will no t materialize. But we can bring preMure for change. Paramount in the ability to do that is military strength, and not only lhat , but a sense ol realily about the kind of pressure we can l>ring because.. of it. Without such stnmgth we oould bring no pressure at all. RESEARCH Doctors, as nearly every patient knows, are a prosperous group. They are U.·s~·~Auto Make:rs Stubborn • • • ' ' :1 . =. ~~r;..:,~~ci !:;;., °:,;,1f.7n~ lnsulht.ed Ftom Ret,rlity , Says Former Executive medical school, particularly at a t.i.Idt·-• w•-... • • .. ... Ylhen so many liberal arts gradualea are · -' r.. ::-;. -, forced to pump gasoll/!e or wallm lobleo WA~GTON -1be other nlaht J,,.Y • ,• ' wanl to buy. He correct ly points out that until the job market <fens up? llodk:ine, Bl1h0p had an unlltely pest-m the vov,-YTl;l;Ff]IXN. . « r our awful balan""'f.trade position ls In after all, oilers its 1>1•ctltiooers,tlle op-Tonilbl Show. A man In hiJ late fOrtiu t~ nv large part owing to llie fact thal even portwllty to help otbet human belnp aadt\ in clotbN • with dollar devaluation imports still hive to earn an average annual salary of sporty ~th young, dyed, long, 15 percent of the domestic car market. $40 000 while dolna: sol ~ full balr, be ll:qr.ed more like a 7" GM particu1arly can't make ~-elf ' Pal111 SprJnp movie lluble than wbat be • · · THE PROBLEM is not that \ ts,1<1>tpwho·JlstAprll'qulta *100,000.. Clu~, IleLorND started eu!Uvallng pro-manufacture a competitive autom le, Amer ..nmn ·-•-••• · w. the GeMral llol«S ate '"9Ional atld .. _ and ~ types. perhaps because, as lleLorean says. icans .,.. un._,..g lo w.,..go -year""' u 0 c:orpr '. Ye~ wtiat•i:"i!tis, .... la that they "There's no forward response at General long, arduoua and upellslve training that v 1 c e presldoni In kept De~ niey )Iii up with him ; Motors to what lhe public wants today. leadsloanM.D.degree. lli,l~mp!y·tliat clJarge of the car· .;liiW tbeypromnted'blnr: _,..Uy, theyl"'t It's gotten to be a Iota! insulallon from the supply ol medical-school _.ings and-truck ....... t• • \ _.........,. ~· C111"'..i':jqidto atoy, 80 ·the realities cif the world. From the does not begin IO m"ch the demand. In Onlinarlly, C---• ihi;-;f",;;;,. .............. ·• tale ol standpoint 91 America it's f-'•"-•··.:• 1973 more than 37,000 per'°"' sent al lfdon ......av.s .,,. ,_,,_, ;'!:,.,______ ''""~'""" 250,000 appltcaliom to the nat1oar1 Ill of Jo11n z. Dotor-Ille <oq>.Orote l'lalrm. ........,,.... IO What ~ lllllleN Is tbat this medical ~ls. But when classes begin ean'a n.nk doD'l -·'t talent. apd, abWty..... • • decline will contlnue even at the sacrifice this th on! 3 c ••"• --" .... ' of profit~ No doubt the GM product Is mon 1 I ,570, or ...,_1,~u ol lo do •--on THE llEAllONB fOll·DelGrlan'1 walk· less and less competitive bere and those who applied , will De enrolled. Many the Canon trb o w. Ing out iii Giii'' i.-.-.._ au11e brood ' of the WJSuccessful appllcants1were fully When tbt,flene. tt'1 are inore worftw. Iba 1 deniantnt :de 1 llO~pe we should again cf>ri· qualified. As the Los Angeles nmes quietly IDd -oft· dlArremJ<llt' ~ bis taste In .,..,,.., r brea g the company •P by use ol 00.erved, "The medical school applicant en i..c-tbeY'v• concluded that Ille •and/or elilbo.·-·ll .,.....,. .. wu anll-trust la,.., not because It ls' • pool has grown '°large that substantial last two llepo up to ..-t 11111 -lleL«eq'i )lallef. 11111· tho -Ion monoeo1y·but bocause ll we don 't It "Wt portions of those rejected are quile chairman ""' not lo be tbetn. called ~ ia ba able cease to fllncUon. capable ol handling the medical cur-In DeLOrun's cue, It'• not II alt e.r. to lel ... llfidtlit· fo ... Joli , rlculum and would make excellent pllysl· taln that he,,-1~ not have '*-,tlio. he~,...._, lll tllli,.111 bllh • clans." top boll el the world'• ,.,.... Wl'ilaol IJH 11111 low; ilr "'1d117. -._ That exceDent pltyslclans are needed Is llirlnl combine. When he lefi Generil ' (..itac I ....,. • pt, bilnl DAILY PILOT beyood diapute. Beh• ... 191111 ml 1973, Moton, lleLorean eaclecl a -of 1ucklonly1ptll GO tha 11111 Illar, waa that the number ol graduates ~ American remarbblo ~ ht '~. now I Wll bein, PN'll!lod ' wltb Jn. medical scboob rooe lrom 5,214 lo t,!!t 1 adminlltrltlon, marlletlni and.:la!Os. · · fonnatlcln tllal bad Omtted altomall-. Robm N, Weed, l'ublllhtl' yoar. But tho population trlple'd In the "llelMeon crtalod ~·of' .. boti..t Tiiis la totally -with any T"°""" Ke..U. Editor !ante period. Moreover, Americans of can to -out of Detralt -World thaullltllll and -11" orlglnolll)>.' You • ·11ar1>ani -Krellridl 1973 are more a>n<m>ed than tbooe ol War U " 11111 tbe cumnt · -of ·• ~=Oli'll!d mOdlly • .pro-"'~·~-liOO about Jbelr achel and paliii and are Fortune' --·lo an~ m Ille P'l"'l.! .YOll 't ba • ......... You . , -~!'!'~QI ~ Editor ·better able to-affprd treatinent"for them.·. man. •11eliidl 1liD oVtr 1 lJiWin&I, ·~were. Mil*'· -al app1..-ill by • rn.t· ""°'1a&..,... o1 the 0.1, ' • and -_.ible for ~ lleaill:I --..-... SE: -Pilot ..... 10 lnfonn ind •Umulll IT..JL411l!LY oeedt •JlnC that IDllD1 ·1nnovaU.:.ADd u 1 lllllililr, 111 1"ll jl!ll llld~~·lt," told -, tiy·-· on fltls more medic:al ICboola are required lo ea..+lalot 'lroln a clowlliiru tflll Por\i11i1f bf blJ, ID qull -............. m ""'" ot I train tl1e dockq ol tomon'01' .. Ai'<!OJnd 4"l ~I a.t.lil •tbat •a job ilia! !ltil ...... _...,....._lo • , ..... by---nlsls t :.~.""e~-:::.~.'I'; .. ~~;~~··· .· "':y"!":..~~-=:~u. 1 =~~'":~ ·11s1rtbuled. IJI the past a.c.a., the IT'S·A ....,-,UJ ..,.,.,ied ,P.11pWl1'1>. floor. Tiie &Parala ......... "'° juJt .....,..,.., -W ldNs !lumber of couritJeo Without i "Jllle resl-that I ~ ean'I ,.. jl In~ ai!I the demanclo al a......... ...,_ iotlb. 1l>e -II dent doc!Or lncrelled from Ill to ..w. hie -•tiCll Ilka OM: ~. , tJaa ~ .. to lilno .,..._ to ~~~-~ ,..,_ °"'' tn • -)'ear M.D. _.,.. ml the -'"'· -.,.......,.. __ -did ·tllO--adlbt~n-lllle --~•·•1 fut "1P ot traJnb>C of pbJl!dan'1 iatotanlo haft make IL Al be •-In nnll' ml llC> lll{l!lilll lli Ille boiler l'OClll0and teDdins a --.. Pi<D«I by tho helped to e.rpand the lllpllly of medkal ~;be ilai1lid to~ln for ~ Ond JClll Wart )Ill WOlcbinl It =.:i-ea::=:i peraoonel. All the aamt, most authortlles marty~younc mea IDd .-. -II ftlldltC ,11." -d --11y .,,, lltff ~t medical scbool! wl!l. have IO Jl!!!l!raL_ -~··!! flad. , "Piiot -,,. -...._ -tbtli'" pruent capacity IJ liijllli • iiiiiiilltJit llJiallili '1111 lWiiilU -Wlldllid AmMc1'1 lulure lleolth oeacls 11no, to be ol lellow coiporalo ~ avtllalill _ 11"'\1~ la ... lltll ~ Mon~, s.plernber 24, 167 aiJequa1t1Y met. 10 him at the Bloonlllold Hilli "O!liiilif ,.. lldliliollllo ~!'"~-.! • · •· • • " -' Hughes lnviwd ---~ By Phil lnterlandi Next Up: I Women .r· ' l_ .. !" * * • ' <7-"" Jiba D. RocKertDer ID wrn -·speak Sept. 28 at th< m. ~: auguraUon of hi! 30n, John D. " . Rockefeller IV, as president of •"West Virginia W et I e y a n :' college. '" * * · '·' Seo. Jolm Tower (R· 111'Tei.) b m9ving into a ninth- :.111 floor t1uite in the federal building at Austin that Lyndon ?l'}J, Jtba1o1 U9l!d while pret11i· ,?!mm and after ret1tement. i'I It over'look, the city through' hfiJwo ino.sUY glass walls, with' 17i'\he state ~apltol a'rid 1t~e ·~ Uriivenity of Texas tower ln ;,9 llie bacJtaround. SACRAMEN'.!'Q (AP) ~·Ir GemwH>uill motorcycle blin-' ned frwn. cauJornla · leglstrF · tkln'has been l"'t back on the acceptatil1' list Of • n·-r • il ... - vehicles because of · exhaint ·~ -'- .. P.HaRMAC.Y,;:· "' .. WE ·.ouoTE :'·PRl'CES ':: . OYER THE Pl:l.ONE • ; •. ANYflN~ .... ,. I -. -C"ICI THDI IUPU IALI INCIALS--"" l i ow •00: ri!M I ,' . "" ..... LISTlRINE A11ffMpH•, )2_01, .•• •·••• ••• • ••• ''"::1.$214t 1 .~t, ; , AMITONEAnl•cldT1 .. l.+tt alOO ................... !.ft) l 'i!''' F•Mrgt "WHEAT &-~ONEY" li•ir Cond. ~6 O'I. ,,,, 2.t. , "'I. · REVLON ttAIASPRAY, ~J 01 •••••...•• , •.•.•• r 1 • .'. '1.25 A • •.Jr. ~ ,.. 1 \ .\ 2]00 L Coa~ HltllWaY. at rmii.at. 'Cnlia 'del';Mar ' . ' +I • ._ $, " ,. ' • • . " ' . ' I : ' -' • •• I . ~ L ' -· Monday, Stpttmber 24, 1973 He!'II . Teaeh on UFOs ' . . ~-'Time 'R.i g1it,' Says College Professor ••• J, J1~1\ ·'· ~'•I· ',11r • 11' •' : l\;-H •· ,j , .. . ·,' ' 11; • ,,.,, V '' ' .. •. ',' • .. • ' " .• • .. " .· theory, he said, ceding that It IS subltaotlate it. while con- dif!icull to a real. solid object as against a light source ," he said. He plans to begin the non- credit course by exploring the hiBtorlcal perspective o f UFOs. "The Bible i's a good source of UFO sightings," he said. "Ezekiel saw a fiery wheel It's been going on as long as ·recorded hi!tory." HarborDENTAL CENTER DENTURES • CREDIT • PENTOTHAL fll.l.INCK • OOIACTIONS • lalDGl WOWK l·lAYS • DINTUllS • lllJAllS -. JACKm , PINTOTHAL • ROOT CANALS CROWNS • WISDO'M TllTH I MINOR ORTHODONTIA v DR. A. FREDERICK SALTZMAN 2706 HARBOR BL,VD-COSTA MESA •t,.....St. :N..t to·l"SW 1 Phone 556-8013 ANNO-UNCING WIDNUDAY,. Sept. 26th, t :OO P.M .• Sher1to11 Be1~h Inn, 21112 P•cilit c ... ,t Hw'(.. HUNTINGTON llACH. "' WIDNIS,DAY, ~'Nr1~~TOl~:O~E:c~:· lll.t N•wm•n. in , LEARN: How to correctly apply positive t~irrki ng, concc ntr .. tion, 1ugg•1tion, im.,ging, etc. The princiPle1 in the cr&Otiu of he1lth, h•ppine11, 1uc- ce1.1, •nd p••t•. Ti> K•ow Yo11~f and how your per1onality function1. GRAND OPENING free ~liiUs* Free Checking Account . -Open a Savings or Checking Account of only $100, or more, and get your gift. • The gifts are to show our appreciation to you fot ba nking with us, buPeven more important. yOu'l l appreciate the super friendly reception and oult1landing service you'll ge t.at our new b&nk. In addition to the gifts we're giving away d•ri ng our Grand OpEining, \Ve' re also offering an opportunity· to get an Irvine National Bank Pioneer Checking Ac·count \Vhich eliminates all service charges for the life of 1he account no matter \vhat balance you maintain. All it takes is a fC\<i niinutes and your$100 deposit. 1£ you live or work in Irvine, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Corona del Mar or Tustin, \ve're here \Vherc you need us with a full·range or bpnking services. Irvine national ~· Bank The surprl•lng-sankt·------ . Mallbtt, Fder1I Dttt0tlt IMlltlnt• Q1pe,..tloa. •1.1m1t 0111 1t1t pir l•1nUy. • ;·,:_".Try S·aturdily'~ NeiVs 'Quiz-- ,, 'I ' I l DAILY PJLM" 7 LOOK MOM At This Off er ADD SOc WRAPPING AND' HANDLING 101AL $1 49 ' • E1eh addlllonal per· eon In porlTelt 99• • L1rge 1el1ctlon of PM•• to ctioo•• frOlll •Mino,. must be with p1r1nts •· Satt1f1ctlon tU1r1nt1ed • Onlyon1sp1clal offer per family or child • Femlly groups ••lcomt· NO ' APPOlllTMlllT NICUIARY Pl.All NOW, TELL YOUR FRIENDS l'tllolOfr•pkr wlll be ot · th. atom IMl•W from 10:30 AM · 6:00 PM • TUES., SEPT. 15 e1~19 SNI lleKll '"°'· 1t Clewll St,. ll•umwr Srton>1111 CMttw, S.I lffdl • THUl5., SE". 2.7 e t1u1 I HCh 11vd. •I Afl•11I• ...... Ill Hlllll""""' a .. cn • THUIS • .fll. • SAT., SIPT. 27, 21, & 2t 92* H1'1Mr ltvf. •I Wit-. St., HI,._. SMJ. C.ni.r, C:..tt MIM • FRI. & SAT •• SE". ZI & Jt esu1 W•f'Mf' ., 1'111...0.11 Wfflf•lr ft~ • Hwttint• -..Cit • SUN. I MON., SI". JO I OCT. 1 hKlt&•~•rt ... H1111fl119Nft llltlrl llllJ, c.t!W, HWltlllllM 9eKll • TUIS., OCT, 2 .... 1 ANIM If 1...-hvnl, 111 "•*""" t11<• • • 8 DAILY PILOT Monday, Scptt111ber 24, 1 q13 -Dead• J\'olfcu Deal/a Notices Political Notes Old-timers 'Rush' PUBLIC NtmCE . ""' .u,•••oa COVllT 011 TNI ITATI O• CAIJ,.MIA POil TMI COVMTY o• OIUH8 "" .. _ MOTICI CM' Na.t.•IMf OI' PIT"ION PCMt TaAMWe• Of' ... 0Pllt'n'1 ,,. Tl• TO WIOCM w.u Ut o•clOINT TONIGHT'S . TV IDGHtlGHTS. .. :• I ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St., Costa r.1esa 64"'4888 90CKHAU$ /Mx A. 8oc~niiu1. ll:t1ldlf'lt 01 el To<o; d,io 01 dtath, Stpttmb<!r 22, 1913. 5uNI~· ed tov wU1, Miltie; $01', Gl!tlllrt, OI El Toro· <l•l'Ollltr. M•I. SPl•Ol Ca!1111. L•• Y.0111; •hltr. Mri. "'arlll• Ptiar1, o! ~,.\ti, Wl1con1ln; !Our ortndchlld•tn, F~n•••I Mrvlca• were l'ltld lod1v. MDI'· d••· 1 lt) r.M, McCormlci.. Ltovna Btt(h CMoel, w 1h Rev. Lolh11r V. Tornow, ot Cllrl!' Lut111.-nn Churcn ot Co1t1 Me11, ollk •lino. ln1trm1nt, EJ Toro Cemetery, McCormick La11un1 ll1.1ch Mortu1•v, Ofr11?'ors. Blasted by •UT MILO IY .NIM l_N TJIUIT 11n.1 ,,...., c•1 HI. nshaw ~~~~e.;~~;;~ ABC 0 fi :OO _ Monday Night f 'o otball. The New Orleans Saints take oo the Dallas Cowl>oys. . : KCET fl!) S:OO _ Two Arctic Talcs. Ray~ond Massey narrates this doc umentary of the di sap- pearance of two Arctic explorers n1ore than 100 years ago. • BAtTZ-BERGERQN FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 61$-9450 Costa !\fesa 646-%424 • BELL BROADWAY MORTIJARY 110 Broadway, Costa !\lesa Lt S.3133 •• DILDAY BROTHERS .:MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 84%.-7771 244 Redondo Ave. Long Beach 213-438-1145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. 191-9111 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive NCwport Beach, C81ifornia 644-2700 • PEEK-FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HO!llE HAZELS Mlle I. lt&HIS. FO•Mirlv ol Balt>Oa; l!81e ol dtla!ll, Seiitmebet 2), 1973. S(lrvl\'tl! bv !WO n!f<e~. Mr$. Frances Gr!!Jer! •nd Mr1. Catnorint Olson. Private lamlly ~rvlctt, T'-"'~•v. ,,3¢ PM, 8t!I 8roal.lw•v C11111e1, ,.,,~ llev. Bruct Kurrie ol!lclallno. Boll BrOldw•V Mor!v1ry, lrKll>f"I. · KRUGMEllER' Carl E. Krvgmel.,, M.O. A~ &O, ol SU "alrl•• O•lve. Cc•ll Met.a. 011M o• de•tll, September 23, 1vn. Survfvtd bv wll1, Ivie; son, c11arltt, ol NewPOrt Be•<h; sister, Mts. c.1c:. cnrlstonien, Mlnnl!SOte; rwo qral\dcnlloren. Prlvare ! 1m11 y Qrtveslde iervlc1s, Tueldey, 2:30 PM. Harbor R••I Memorial Park, with Rav. Broce K<1rrle otflclatlno, Bell Bra<1dw11y MOrtuary, Director~ . MARSHALL J11ck W. Ma1"1tlall. 12! Vie W11ler$ St., Newoo•I Beach. Oate of Oe•lh, SltP!emDer 7¢. 1P73. Sv.-vlved by wife, Eva;· SOflS. Fre11k and PhlllD Mallhe~. Al.a DI NeWJIO'I Beach; oaual'lter, sanv M11r111a11, Nrwporr Blll(ftl ~r. Mf1, Flori Milt1hall, Van Nuvs; brolher, Fr11nk Mar~n1111, Simi Valltv. s.ii.-vice.s, Tu"'ld1v. 10:30 AM, ChaDfl ot ll'le Hiiis, For~t La wn' M'mor l11I Po rk, Hol1vwcod Hiiis. Interment, Fort~• Lllwn. Pacl!lc Yiew Mortuary, Olrectcrs. PARROTT Semvrl R. Parrott. Aoe 71. ol .S6n Edlnqer, Hunlf111t•on 8e11Ch. Date of de111>, Seorember 23. 191J. Survlvtd bv wile, Marv; i,on, Samuel J, Perrot!; bro!her. Willlam E. Parrot1; sister, Grace Howard; tllree 9randChfldren, Rosary, Tuesdar· 9 PM, Pelk Film11v co1on111 F11nere Home. Rt1:1ulem M11s. Wad· nsedav, 10 AM. SI. Be>naven!ura Ca!hcllt Church, HunHnqtcn Beach. Directed by Peek Famlly Cotonlel Fu~etll Homl. 7&o1 Bol&a Ave. · ~.-~.:w:anz;~ Westminster 893-3525 ,., 1--~-1--S~MJTH===.S~M~OR~TIJ~AR-Y~-fl-r~--j'--t-ther l 627 Main St. Hunt':'at~:O•cb ,1 Deatlis '======1 ~ J SANTIAGO IUPll -Pablo Neruda, 69, the Nobel Prize-.PUBLIC NOTICE suPEtuo• 8c~1J:lr oF TH E winning pOel and 1 e f t i st By 0 . C. IJUSTINGS Of ttw 0111r Piiot Stall llOll HortOfl, Jr., tt'ld JOllOl't Kt.trll HortGfl, *1 TniJt ... hlv. fllad lllrt!n a pellJIOfl '°" 111 l)tdtf' lllW-1\I IO Int P'f'll•loft• of SktlOM 151.S. tit Mil W tf llw Proliltl ¢.i. ttan1ftn'lnt 11"41 end po.-•ulon to piooey to rap;d transit proj· affected." * = K':,', ~~11f::'-"M~ ects, hss ·become a maJor * * Horto11. Jr:, u., TrustMs UMtt ttie Tru11 suppo,rter of Sen.ate C.OnsUtu--IVY BAX.ER P R I E ST Aorlfflllflf 8'C.lllM bY .wmt K11rtr 1 ' • TM ,,.._,..., 11 Ml for1h In E•• Uonal Amendment 15 -a treasurer of Callfo.mia, will Nblt "8" of ""' "'""°"' rmr•11et to GRESSMAN Af~Y Hinsha\~ ll)easure that would leave use deliver the keynote address ;:~ctt,i:! ':::! :C. ~ ':rff~~ ~ CR-Newport Beach) thinks the of the funds up to the· voters. Oct. 13 at the 18th annual iwn• 111• i.n "'for Oc:IOMr n, 1m. 11 old-timers in , his business ~id Carpenter: "No gas tax state conventlm ol California:;..:,•:.., ,'"or ~1~11°'100°Ti.Z have too muc h "going hoine" revP.nuea mJlY be used under Women in Chambers of Com-,.,,,., ·onv1 w..1, In tnt c11y or hnt• T ' AM. <:allfonll1 •• 'he · d ,_ t yth' g the measure for mm transit merce. Th• , ... propam 11 dltcrlblcl ••: FRESHMAN CON· on mm ..., ge ·an in , th Iha pl nin The convention will take LOI 1 of Tr.ct No. nm, In •111 citv of done these d ays. purposes 0 er n an g LM Anoa1r1, countv of LM A••••· and research without approval place at the Grand Hotel in 11ai. of cau1orn1e, •• ,,., m1p racort*I Hinshaw has urged fellow by voters in the county or area Anaheim In IDOk a,~,, of Mtos. 1n the Of· rlj~!!!!!!!!!!;!!!!!!~!!~!;!!;!!;!!;!!;!!,!;!!;!!;!!!!!!!;:lj; I !Ice 8f tht COUt'llY Aecotd'1' of wld youngsters . iu the hallowed cCU11ty1 Lot• lS eftCI 14 In tlloclt 1 of Trtcl No. halls to a pproach Ho.use .. --·---· · 1m 1n the c1tv ot Los AtlOll••· coun!Y Speaker Carl Albert w ith the ot Los Anoe!•· 11111 of CaH1«nl1, •• notion that he should, "think . act IC . a:''"ngs to fl, h1clV1lva OI MwPt. ln ·ttw olflca ol l. te m ( hat t • T .a. Illa countr rtcerd•r of said covnty, n r s o w we mus ac· Lot u ct wttllf'JI w111h.lr1 Haith!• 1n NBC O 9:00 -"The Grounds tar Conspirac~." A U.S. security agent (George Peppard) must dJS· cover how a top secret space pro1ect w.as sa bota.g~d in this 1972 movie with Michael Sarraz1n and C hris· tine Belford. • TV DAILY LOG P. • fi 8 • ' iWf t'Nlp rK<ll'dld In llook llt "'911 91 complish rather than when we • • • • • •: • • • 111 tt11 !llK-t&t#I ttta cuv of Los Anoe1 ... countv of Lot can go home." D • Af\Ollll, Stet• of c111tornta, •• Pf' M1p 11, Diani lo 1 fashion show wbett Pays On Te r -eposits recordtd Ill look 10, Piii' d of Mapt In d " I Hinshaw wrote a Jetler to 1111 t111 0111c1 of the c""""" RtC:ord•• 01 Mon ay $he ts to be IJ'e nana or. Hid Cwtrty, m MtN Grillin Show Albert d eclaring he is disturb-for An un<tlvlct«I Ol'le-thlr(t lni.rtst In !he • m Norel• ed b redi . 1ouow1n1: Evening Y P ctions that Con· Lot 14, of Wtst•rn Wllshlra Helght1, 1:45 O In Ult G•m• Post .1arnt show gress will wrap things up and TWO YEARS ~~ti:. ~r:,."~UC!~~~n:: .,~ ,}!: SEPTEMBER 24 hosted by Stu Nahan. go home for the year by Oct. recordtci In BOolr. 111, Pqie •t o1 M•P•• ~-----------,! 9:00 6 fi!, (j) Here's tucy Guests St~\'41 15. ln his letter Hinshaw said In the offlce of the Countv RKor<ter 01 WATOUTEHEARtHCS Lawrence and E1die Go1me, playrnr ..Id C:ountvl the constituencies in the U.S. Or less Lot A of W•ttm Wlt1h1r1 Ha1g1111, All llf0Cfl11111h11 Js IUltjtd le tti.nct themsel~es, have a domesti c squab· t Co t " '(h City of Loi ""'"*"• Covnh ot Lot witllovl llltlct lor cowrai• ot tilt ble and Sieve hl1es Lucy Carte1 10 \Van ngress o get on \'II A~I••· State of C1Htorn1e, •1 Ptr Map p<t1orm the secretarial duties Eydi• business." % recor11«1 In look 10, Peoa -tt 01 ,\\aPI, In Wattrralt He1rin1*. * * * m• offlca of 1111 cwntv RKarcllr ollL.------------'I usually ha~dles. STATE SENATOR Dennis 11i~ C..~ -'"' •••teny 4 '"' _:gommmNnr. @@ George Peppard stars 0 o1Lat11 o1 western wi11111ra H11ot111 In loniw * in Groundstar Conspiracy Car....,nter I R • N e w p o r t "'' crtv 01 Los •-11as. COlltl"' of LOii ,. ..... , 1 u. I'~ ' • _J.n1i1•\:llo .St1ta of1:':tr10rnla, ta~~rM•P Cturtaltlp If u... • •. !__ Beae-htr-long-epposed-to-mass ~id •• aii:lk-10 • .,,... ~ ·11i11rm·w11111"1 Pr1 B~-HIC:-M•1••• diversion of gasoline tax Q In 1111 offlu of 1111 county ltlCOl'der of M New Orteans saints vs. D1l-Movie: (Cl (2hr) "G19iindstar Con. ft sald County, !Of' cOtl'lmunltv drlv1w1v Its Cowbo'fs. 1plr1cy'' (susp) '72 -Gao1ae PeP· Ex-county Data Chief $I 00.000 Accou_..... 1111rpost1 to M vlld In C011l11ntllon wflh -· t ~-· pa rd, Michael Sarr1zin. C~rlstlne Bel· nn ·~ ••..-ne11t -1111 wH1.,-1v ' 1ta1 01 I',.. ~.C:-(J) N ford. A ha1dbltten, ded1c11ed U.S. 111 • I • I t• I Lot A lboVe dtscrlbad. 9 ~ 181 ... h . ····•r. talH ace···· s .. WI Loi 35 of Wasttrfl Wlllhlr• Hal9ht1 In tlii fllDtltette• $eCl,lt'ity Agent must discover ow . C. II ICCl'I I'S lt'mI'lt.. the Cltv o1. Lot~ ... CO\lntv of Lo• . a.Tm top sec1et sp1c1 project wn s•bo· • An~ Still of Cjfflfor1111, u pl!'" M1p ta1•d • rtcOf'o.d In Sook 10. P1oa d ol Map1 In • .,ltlftltlll Mtril · WE PAY ·COMPmTIVE INTER£Sl'RATES '"' """ "',,,. '~'" ·~ ..... • _,tc>(lll•>"•"""' .. r @'"""'"" N~tt,._~:,'r·65 ,.., °' 1111 '°""' 100 '"' (COftl) '66-flay Bolger, Jack Gilford. 0 ROOKIES TRAPPED ON All Omr• ACc••llTs """' 1 """' .. .._,. """"" m _.. ..... * IN PRISON RIOT STATE 0, CALIFORNIA FOii: diplomat, died Sunday night in THE couHtv oF oRANoe a Santiago clinic. Neruda was ' Gets Job No. •·nm Ar..Jia •c .. rit•• l• Crmcnt1 ·o-Ho11ce OF INTENTION TO SELL a member of ,Chile's Com-- lllUl UUfll Clty of LM ...,,. ..... Countv OI Loa fi1\m SIDoft• .... ~le 'A De di FOURTEEN DFFICES.TO SERVE YOU tN AnotM" •t•tt of cauromra, ''Pl' M•P ·O @ Tli• ....... s ' 1 ' NCorWf 111 look a, Pi09 1u ot Map• l:JO Hopn'1 lll1Mt . Cage"RookieTerryWebsterpour a1 In n. "'""" Of "'9 County ltlcordlr of iit (I) Cifl Cl) Newt an inmate to get an 1mderst11"1dlnt ll!d CGUflly, Coflctnlrltltlt Jeck Niil hosts. ol prison li!e and bacomes a hosta1a REAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE .......... ,·,t Party and an am-... GanltM •cnt1 Mesa, L•.A--lZ) .......... E'tate ol ROY G. HAZYME, also~"°""" "u.u.' SANTA ANA Robert ..-• as ROY GUSTAVE HAZYME, oeceast'd. bassador under the late Presi-•t1•.,.Parl DtwMYl!I M111W9YM Wllillilf NOTICE IS HEll:EBY GIVEN Iha! !hi! Farmer, former head of the ' under,lgnlld w111 sell al prlveie sale, to dent Salvador Allende. county's Data Services f iYI M•itl111I DffiCtl 11 MlrtHrl C'11iferM1 !Mi hl!lhest and best nel bidder, s11bjecl to Pltlllll IHI! $11 lrflf the confirmation of 111a abovHnlltllld Department has been hired by s11per1or court, .;., ,..,, i1111 dav o1 MIA~1I. Fla. (AP) {e,11i~St1~ October. 1'173. at 111:00 i.m,, or therealle~ Former Florida gove rnor Computer Sciences Corpora· ftlltr Ct'ly lltl 111 tw w11111n 1111 11mr auowlld t>Y law, et 1111 01-lion to serve as the firm's Ilea cl Plunkett & Plunkett, •12 Ollv• Fuller Warren, rn. died Sun- Avenue, Hunl!ngton Beach, counh of day. He served from 1949 to liaison man to other county *Q~EN Nl.GHT & DA~ orange, Stetr o1·c1111ornle, all Iha right, governments. , _ _ _ • tille, lnterut and u1at1 of t_he decedeM 1953. _ _ _ An '"4mlnt In common with others '"'' lh• ,,,,,-,,, dii~-er his true ~ 1111 north 20 1-IJll 1111 IOUlh 12S Mlf¥ lriffhl Show ""' ...,, ot 11111 1.01 1 of -!ht o. Longpr1 Wy ltffflUt identl!y. .Mock !or 1...,.... and 111r9U. llldl bptriloct (!) Notre D1111e fHtblH Dai. S8clfllmblt' '-lt73. ll'lilll Easy (JlJ (3) Morie: (C) (2hr) "TJrlr •n• ~~~i:t 11 JOHN, TfMI Loi tlte Tuurcar• (coin) '67-Yilloflo lfOW:faN a '00TI IJUll Rnc:all G1ssman. f!eancr Parker. WI.....,. 9l'IL. Ultt lut I R0Ue1 C1met. L-. .......... Cellf. tllM 7:111 l!J m News LI Criada l ien Criad1 = e;-1~:..._.. ltlllll1 ftr Dollars Movie: "Tiie Mnlc Man" . Publlshtd °''""" C:O.it Otlly PUat llltvle: (2111r) ""'adallll llv•rJ'' S'llftmbrr 10, 17. U. 1m *6-7l (dr1) ·~Janniler ·Jones. 9:15 Cii) News/Sports S11 l111 IA tile time of hit death end 811 1119 rlghl, The appointment '1a5 M-. . d s d "'" ·" '""'" '"' .. ,, .......... ". · · -~" .atu r ay· s. <1u1re11 by cciera11on o1 1aw, or ottoerwlie, ROLl..YWOOD {UPI) nounced by Vlncent R. Grillo, _ ~~~~'~t"~to;:.,~nu~:1!~c~r:od!~:~. ~~ ~~ Academy-Award win n j n g corporate vice president for • II (2 3 923 • to au th111 cerlaln real Pf'-•'v sH.,.ted musical director c b a r I es program development. Com-Cl 1 ) 9101 · "sa 1n tne cnv of Huntington e each. cwn1v puter Sciences Corporation :' NOne• TO PllUOMI INT1•1sr10 of oranoe. Stata of C111Uornl11, and more Prtvln, Who wielded tbe baton OI' S8I the white -Ill THI ISTAft 011 par!lcularly drKrlbrd as 1011ows. 10 wll; in George Gershwin's first took over the county's datA -_..,..... •. • J, WILau• 1•1s11, DICIAS•D Loi 20 of Tract No. 61.17, as sllOWn o" · A 3! for your ·-•t off~ Noflca '• liarebY Ol'IM: , I WUd Wortll 11 lnl•lll 9:30 EJ fiY (jJ Tht Ntw Did Yu Dykt I Wlt1fa lllJ LIM? Sbow "One ot the Boys" Dick dt· I I LM L!JCJ cides that he dMsn't have enou1h f Mid Squlll 'manly pursuits' in his lite so ht Esmtraldt Juml)S 1t the chance to become 1 (I) Dra&Mt regular pl11er in a wtekly polier l'ittls, Kll1t, l ca., 1am1. Herb Edelman gYUb. PIJBUC NOTICE a Map recorded In Sook 2ao, pagH •9 Broadway show, "La La services ug. · , ._ , To tll per1«11 lnltrhtMI, wheltwr at :i.ric10~~~ ~~1.11Ce:ii'lor~:~s, rewrds Lu£ille," d ied Saturday, He The firm has a sevep year "ASSDS OVER $375 MILL' IOI ~~~.':Jr~'. =~R fiu~'=-•~~ E~c~tlno !Mre!rom 111" subsurf..:e \Vas 86. contract for $26.6 million. ell, Wflat8 1 .. t .._ Wtl P1 trlcl1 water rlghh, wllhou! tl'le rloht ol entry ~ PMQllll, ,..... York 10SU, rti11 thereto from 1111 surface to 11 ct~th 01 Ronald Preston, a ssociate """'' hltt-'91Y ., fl 9dmfnl•tr1110n sco IHI a• dedlcatltd to 111e C!h ot Hun-GLENDALE ( A P ) liirector of the department "'"' bMll lnuecl to JAMES w. uOsH. 11"oton eeach on the m•P of t.ald trac! ¥' J• .. by SUrt-o(l9Wt c-t, Wa1tcl\elt.,-and ii conw.Ved bV oocume"t record~ Funeral services will be held wtder Farmer, h as been hired COUllfr. 1 *"" cit ""'Pthnt 1ur111d1c11on March 1, 1u1 in Book s193, page '5S or her e today for A. H . Voelker, by CSC to aid Frank Murriiy, of,,.,,,... 111 ,.._York. Ofllcfal RecCfi'ls. £ , Thal tllf == ~ It lfltltbl9d to A150 exceptlno there•rom •II on. ga•, 76, ormer president of tlie local project leader in car· or holdfnt ~ of tna said mineral end nydrocerbcn sv1>1;tano:es California Rea l Est a t e r y ing out the dut' d the cl«ecllfll: 1v1ng Delow , depth of soo feet 1rom lh• Jes un er lmPtrfal hvlnot 6 Loin As.oc: .. 336' )Vrliter or said land 001 wllhol.I! '"' Association. new contract. Via Lido. Na"fllDOrf a.di, c.1. rl91'1t of rntry up0n any p0rl!on cl lite --------------------------'--------~------------------! T ... t the llll!Hnl"*' ci.Mret lo f*:tfV't $urlitee ol t.ald t11nd for th• !l'lri><>Se ol lttt Nfd perlOMI Pl'OPl'rlY ,,, coll1d 1111 explotlng for, boring, extracting, drill· delmftl eftCI to f'll'JIOW "'81 colM(f'ld Of' lng, mining, orcipectlng tor, removing r.cel'lld from nw Slt11 of C.r1fornla to o• markellng said sUbll&oce as con· II• Mid 11819 """'19 tttteB tt:ftemtnltry veved to Keulm11n and &road auHdlng ., of eclm1nl11ratfM ,....,. Min IBUICI, l~~~:~B~keai~~pll~:c~:,~,';j!~\~i~i • •I YOU ARE INVITED TO Al i=END =:~~t-~~~Pi:;m;, Commonly known as 100S1 SJ)'llr Clr· tlW wrttt.n notice of 1uch o1Jl9Cllon to cle, Hun!lnglon Beach. (alllorn!11. tll9 ,.l'ICICI ot ""'°"' llidlitll'ld 10, Olr 5vblect lo: Currin! l•Kes, covenants, llofdtnl ,.,_, ,....rtY of, IN dtcr- c on dltlons, <f:Strlctlons. r1He.-vatlon•. dMI. Slldl nolk• must be glwri to the r111hh, rlgh ls of way, easements, and en-/ ,.,._ holding tf'lr ~I ,roperty ot ~~~e~:;,~~sc~111:ne.',o~~~h!;,~~~~v~11!":. c 0 s TA. M'. :E·S··'A":.:. =~':', ::.'.,"':~':.t~1n~' ti ttw llmltatlon, liens, charges and restrlc!lons -111 ~YS eft9I' ftrtl publkltklll of Ihle s~ tor!h In 111111 carleln Oedaratlon 01 ~......_ notlc.t. Res!rlctloros recorded Oecemb<!r 16. 1%6 DATED: $epf9mbW •• 1J1l. In Sook 8129, page '31 of Otfklal Records S19Md: J•l'fttt W. lrlllfl. Jr. and arnll'ldmrnt recorded J41n11ary Jl. 1967 M Mn!lnl1tretor of m. In BODI< l1U, oage 1~1 of Olllclet Records. Ell"* of J. Wiibur lrl.ti AU bldl or oller5 must bl! In writing 11nd O.C..Md ~::~~o::·::.i:J-:.::~~ .. ;,~::':1.'i:; ME M 0 RIA·L . H.o·, :SP IT.AL .'S .·· :~ ... "O:.".'t f:'1:1. .. ··..;:_)'l above~ntll!ed Cwrt at any time after the flf11 publlcaTlon of this notice, and Delora !hr making of Ille t.alt. PlJBUC NOTICE TERMS ANO CONOI TIONS OF SALE ; C11h In l1wlul moMV of the Unfled States l'ICTmovt M llllU ot Amer!ct1, T1111 Per Cent (1~) ol the JtAM• STATIMIJfT amount bid In !he form ol a cashier's or Thi folklwl119 ~ are dolJIO ;:';"::! i::::,:•.,"~m;,~• '~~ ~::'. Fl FTH ANN IVE RSA RY ""'~~~OINGS'UNLIMITED, 7" !lrmellon o! ~~le by the SuP11rlor Courl . ' , -W. trlfl St., (ooata Nlnt,.C•. '2'21 Said prOPfrly lo De sold ei li, 1xcept tis RoNtt ....,. EvtM. 120'! (, l'•lr,,.....n lo Hne. I tc, Senla. A111, Cl, fV01 The edmlnfstra!rlx herebv rese.-ves th~ ON Mlf'IUerlle IV•na, 1201 E. rlghl lo •elect anv •nO' an b!ds. Felrtllw!I t(. ""'-"•AM, c.. '2701. OATED ; Sep!embrr lJ, 1973. Tlllt bullnth It condVctM by 8 °""''' ::;;.;:; .. ~:::.·: .. ,. ...... . C E LE B-RAT·I 0 N. ..--~,., ··-!he 1Jxive-nemed Decede~t. This 1t11e1'11Mi· wa1 fllld wlltl tfll· Cou11- PLUNKETT & PLUNKETT !Y a.rt of Or'!199 COU!ltY on ""~ ATT01tN£YS AT LAW 7, 1'73: • (12 Olfvr Ave., P.O. 8011 2'' P:llQ1 Huntlnqton Beach, C1!Uornl1 '1441 JlublltMll °''"°' Col•I Ollly Pilot, T.i: 534-3030 or !l6·111111 Slptemblr 111, 11, :u, and Ociober 1, Allorntys for Admlnhlr•lrfr Im lnS-13 Publis~t'd Or~nge Co~~t Dallv PllOI, September 11, 22 18, l?IJ J~90-13 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESi NAME STATEME~T Ttl~ rollowi~g pr•~cns .>re doi~ll bU•h1P~~ a5· FEll:RARO & JOHN § ENltRPi;tlSES, J:J9 Oat>tls Ave., Ccro~a d•I M~r. Cafllornle 1'26:!.5 ROl>erl D. Jolln~. •'.l9 Oetoli~, c~rond Oel Mar, C11lllornl11 9167~ Terry Ferr•ro. '335 Bl11c~loot A~t, Placenlla, Calllcrnl~ 9'2670 This b111lne1~ rs Cond\/Cted by a ·J~neral P11•t1>1r•hip , I l•rr,o Ferttl'I> Ttlll 5latement w•s tiled wllh 1~t Coun· tv c~·~ of Or~"oe Countv o~ S'olcmk)I'-• 14. lfi'J F1111S Publli tled Or1n11a Coe1t Dall~ Pll~r S1mt1mber 11, 14, 11no Ot!oDer L ~. lt1l 186S·1l PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tne lo!towtng Pl'''°" I• doing bu1lnf1~ 8J; COAST PLAST ICS CO., 111? NeW!>Qrt Clrcle. Sulit M, S~nta Ana, Cell! 9VOS Ch.lrles R. Mll!1t, 1'50 Ad&m1 A.~~ No. 10\T, COiia MMa, C1llf. 97626 Thi• bu1tnes1 11 conducted bv '" 1~. dlvtd11al, Cl'll•let R. Miiier ''YOUR HOSPITAL IN ACTION'' SEPTEMBER 24TH THROUGH SEPTEMBER 28TH OUR GIFT TO YOUR CHILDREN • • • IN COOPERATION WITH THE ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER MARCH OF OIMES FOUNDATION '• FREE rMMUNIZATION'CLIN 1c: l>ouo -MEASLES -RUBELLA Tuesday, September 25th Wednesday, September 26th Thu,.day, September 27th 6 :00 p .m .--8 :00 p .m. 10:00 a.m. -12:00 noon 2 :00 p .m. -4 :00 p .m . OUR GIFT TO YOU • • • • • • LUNG FUNCTION TESTING By our Cardiopulmonary Department S e plembcr 2 4th through September 281h. 10:00 a.m. to 4 :00 p .m. PVBIJC NtmCE I ([) lobby Gohlsbott Show I BIKk Du1on Rnldenc.1 (R) iilf PdllCfO Alnor Muchacha lbll1~1 5"" lllClf Variety 7:JO 10:00 O 9 (})Medical Cl!lllr ''Bro•1A 1 8 ''THE WACKY WORLD OF lm11a" William Windom •nc! ~r1in• 1 * JON •~•u WINTERS" Day 1ues! as surt10ns 8r1n~an.d "• """ -'t!ene G1!tet11. whOSI m1r1lal9 IS COMES YOUR WAY lounderinf due lo hiJ, steret 1nd I FROM CHEVROLET obuu1~1 te1r ol 11ina. 1 W Hot1n'• H•rou llWeciJ Wtrld If 1oRdll11 Win· "Ni1NfG1Hery . tm Mike Connon. 'llekl Lawrence Departmtll"t s "I.ts neutt Du ind Lou Rawb 1111st. ,.,. 1 II Ptllct SllftHI When Or. Locke's Mil" The Oflly due lo 1 1 1n1 p ete pll11 to tnip • sliet utortlonlst b1ti· ol money stolen in ' bani!; robbl'J: tim, he flftds Ult .,.. Is Oft the is • p1tka11 to(lhini11 lhr11 _..,~ tiller's skh.. plastit llowett. Ill ~~~ I!~;:.:. .. ·==· IO:JO ftJ Dr•rntl lnrifldltd ti) Twill&ltt ZOftl ·I'll TM Prkt i. tJtW B Govemment Sane MIYor To '(ii .._..Celltdlvl Bradley discl.lues lllpi4 Tral)Sit. ~= Musk I Get Sil•rt · DMt Shw · TV '411Sltal ti; Shflt · ·Y11ietf""ROilr ,,._,..,, ll:DO~OO!EmN... Ill .. B <Iii rll .. _ "M•tfa L"' 0 00 Iii fB 9 CIJ ltm ~ StDlj"MlcliMI 1.Nm1d 1uats IS . {6 Ptny M1JOll l widow Who fills In kMI witb M111hal • Diet Vin Dyte DillOct-1nd 1lve1 the m1n:h1I his T1 Tell tt11 Trulh I tirst scrttn kils-lfttr she saves Dr1111et I llim lrom ne1r d11th. I (3) Tht Wolld Today I Cl fit@ O,j) le !AIM I.lid: Stan Ailfed Hitchcoct Prt1tntl 1 •nd Aithur become str11t11 '*ff•I· {I) Trait. West 1 lows when _Ollvt 1nd Arthur decldt 11:301J Qj (j) CBS Lat• Mowit: (C) I to tint • tnal separation. . "?Ome fir Wilh Me" (com) '63-1.:::: (C) (lllr) "Cast I Gttlll Oolo1es Hart Hugh O'Brian 1 (ldv) '66-Kh'l Oou&11s, (j) Movie: •ionl&bt We Sin(• (mus) t Jolin Wayne. '!ll--£z10 Pinza. I D Mflill $ MtM: <C>,{21r) "The O ~@®J m•••nnf t1rso1 ilirrle Mar*rtr" (lllJS) 7G--Arth111 John Denver is guest host Klnllfltr, Robert W1b1>1r. 0 Tlrili&fll Zont I 1)M lllrMt •Id MrL Muir 0 Morie: ~Blodtdt" (edv) '38 -' 11w ltli.OMs Madeleine Carroll, Henry fond1 I LI...,. Jlwn· O Movlf: "Beuuse 11 lOu11 ~d'ia) J M~: (Cl (Zht) "Wirlotll" '52-Lorel11 Youn1. Jtll Chandler. I 59-Rleillnl Wldmtrl m Alfred Mitdlcock P11&errts Twt Arctic T•lu R1r· cm Mwit: IC) Mfted Su•.,,,,,.t ISSfJ ntrral~ 1111• d~u· (wes) '56-Rory Cilhoun I merlh" bued on th1 1nmtigations • ol e 01rtmoulh En11ish prelessor 12:00 0 MO'lle: "Sllio•" (adv) '48 -1 lntl) It.. db.lppe1r1ne1 ind une1-Alan I.add, Vero~ic.a Laka. 1 pltlntd dtalh of two Arcllc uplorers 00 One Step Beyand 1 111011 tf\111 100 rean llQ, ID Movlt: "Min fJOm Dd:Dtl"' I E ~ (ld'f) '40-WallKt Beery. _ ....... _ l:DOO OO@CII -I ~! j2h" "Ollt M0rt TOll'!Of• l:lO 0 ff!(tlway Pilrol fW' ~·rl} 46--Ann Sherldtn, l:45 I) Movie: "Slle1" (dra) '3S-T)19nel ~ID 0 (I) mil m D11n1 "Shurtlt ~wer, lo1ett1 Yeung. I Oft ,l0111ltfr1To''kdderrl·pront •tu-l:lOIJMcMt: "Onu UPM I Hora:" 4.nt flllOt Howtrd Tolbrook, ofltrs Ill (i;om) 'S8-D1n Row1n, Okk Mtrtl11. I Tuesday OAmME MOVIES 1:00 0 "The D1mlllll Dln't CIJ" (dr4 '50-Joan C11wlord, David Brian. I ID "OperJtlan Atr_.Dtls" (dra) '65.J. .lotln Ericson. Dem• flotl 1 3:00 (]) (t) "'#11 llld "'"" Pirt 11 •ft(])..,. ............ (Idol) (dra) '56 -Henry fond•. Audrf1 ~ WltlMrs. John McCal· Htpburn. I I 1lm. • 0 "Min in Utt ••" (dn) '' 1:11• CC) ...,.. WW' (df•) '59 -Robtrt Mitchum, ftt11C1 "uren.1 ;:llN"'1 htk, Dtbo""""· • 3:IO@CI) (C) '1111 --llitl" 1Mt rfl "'FllM Otef I•" Part I (d11j {SCl•fl) '17-Mery Petell; ~ ·~ur•• kan. Ktnn11t1 Moor1. Ww11~. • 1 • 9 ............ (1111') '33 -•:DO ~Cl ·~• ' .,. •·~ (•~) c;!rJ Gnint. Jld LIRLll. , ""'"'I _, ...,.. l!llt • .._..... (wtS) ,50 _ Robert 5 krry lewis, Marum MUWtlt fl)'lor, Johll HOdllk. .,... flfllllr' 4:30 Cl1 .... n IOMI nrt1111 ........,. (cam) '40--M1rth1 RQt. Qj Ill "0.•lfl• lid" (wei) '57 Ch1r1M •u111n. Rory-Galtioun, Ktlstint Miiler. KOCI, CHANNEL 50 TMI H•le"'en' W&I !llt(t wltn !h~ Cov"· IV Cl1rk of Orange Cou"'V on Seot1moo' 14. W J !":tlll Publl1 hpd O••roqt Cw.ti D811r PUii! s.p1amblr U, 24, t nd OclOO.r 1, 1. IN OUR LOBBY PUBUC "'O'llCB 3:00 Hbtirf If Art (C) t1 OIMI fl.I ~ Ot~not Col\t Colltgt, b, 1 j ,.. Consol'tlllm) lor:itlhtf' 8 Wflllh of knowlldOI.: ,,,, 2.M.2·13 Sunday is F'l1Df>AY • in ~1,Q!tlij l!1ll • • • MEDICAL EXHIBITS PHOTO EXHIBITS FILM PRESENTATIONS REFRESHMENTS 1 0 :00 a .m . to 8:00 p .m . COSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 301 Vittoria Street • Costa M e,., California 92627 • (714) 642-2-734 .T.T·-·-......... MINT 3130 TM S•ttlll (C) lll r,ss1 ''TM l lll)lfllf\CI from Ille flaldt ,ol -· Conwmar Educellon etrao o' us• °" s111,,n A to1k'«ldt °"' , wll'lf "" &tOl'IOl'!llt•. I ,tCTITtot.11 IUlilllSS ft.t.M I lftlt•pflor of • •hip 8"\blt~lno on •:» l'aut Or11111 c-ty (C) ii' Tiie toHewfnt PfrMM "''" lllltldontd II• l'Midlfl wvao•· • .. fKOCll "M•rT'lttt" A ,....,, ... Utl af""' fk:tltJeu• bVllM• Nmti •:00 . .U Mlfl ......... ICI fl (KOCCI ••fTlln/hf Ille l)r~flllOll fOr ... WAUCOVSRINOS UNLIMITED, 711 ''Wtllt I• ,,.. Nlll.lf'I of ManT.. 11• bV • rOVrio COUPie fflcl~ W. 1fttl St., Coll• Mfll, C.. flilt1 ' IMIOll I tftkt lo tntwtr -Whllt ht1p 8Vllllblt In kffPfl'l9 I Tiit 'lctltloin lllllnw• N1mt1 fttlf'r«t II tfll Hetu~ of Mlnf -br rl191 11111e1. • to aboYI W91 ftlld In 0f'"'8 Qunty on Pftvl~"9 U9m•nl• of the other 3S 7:00 TN OfMI Ct11M1mer C:"""1 1 J-27, IJn. • • PfOl"lft'lt In tllll ..,,.,.. Lhtlm I. OtbUf (KAICJ • Robtrt Lff IVttlL 1201 I , hll1lh'lft 41>0 IMCtfff Clfrl""' ICI 21t CTWI COlllll1'\tr'I Identity Cr!tls" fC1 Sant• AN, C., '1101 _ VtrY lhorl book : ll'lf lldvtnM• ol 7;ail OWMtiM '° ICJ iK(M;E)""" JM!ft ldWl!ll Ctohv, JD1t lo. lfhtol "Uttlt lor 11111" In llllt 11.Ctrle CUlllll'•I tnd COfflmunlty tcH..t ti fr, ""'' AM, C1. f't10S COlt!Olllr spool ol lht Cll»le W(lhln Or•• County With ~ 1'~• N111111 wn ctM11c:tw W • ""'...., ttl.. tt'!ll)l!lsll Ol'I mvtlc, art• m1f'llf'I I'll llfl'IUtd ptl'ftlfrlfll,, l :G> ........ Strllf ICJ .fN IClW), Bit l flflln. Ind. 1111 roll cit -R. I.. ,._.,. alrd'• INlllt!lnCI on not *"""" tovtf'nmtl'lt. Tlllt ...-.nt Wll flltd W\111 , (ll!Nllf dolln't help Mltll 111\0w Ul 1100 ~ ,.,_A~. fC) Uf t I) L:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;:;:;::::::::t1 ... ,,.._......., ,......,_., Or __ .... -. .. .,.. .... ~r·.1 .rwmtier is... • Yr:K __,.*"' .lanrly $11•··--..,.';1"."""im · --•~• TM .,.., c-c1'iietl .IC f ltt1tiUfii I VmPllonr 0rche.tr ,,.-:'" P:l•I 11 (KA.IC.I "llll COr'iMltnlr'I I_. f:JO .. MM .... ,_ (C) ', Jl'Wll .... 0..... CO.II 0:.1~ l"llt!, flll Crtmi" U... I •Yr/II,_ ff\ JJr {KOCEJ "Wll.tt 11 ,fhe ... If '"'""-10. 11, ....... ~ 1. but an yow Wll\ llf ""'"'' 811111 "''" ... Set lltlltlt Monell • hr ----------------=---:=,,------"---'tm ,,..,,,, MO 1111 °"""'"' P.J'!"'°" '' llmtllr 1411'1. et• iot.p.m, 1>0 111tn -I\ ~ --, 11: • 7 . L. M. Boy.t Three Delusions Of Most Brides . Not all but most every bride tends to entertain three particular delusiops: 1. He~ marriage WK> doubt will reform the old boy who drank too much and chased. 2. The fellow she rejected is apt to remain heartbroken for life. 3. At least one other woman despises her tor taklng_away this p~pecUve husband. So reports our Lov~ and War man. He says these notions contribute greatly to a bride's happl- , ness. They're partly why she beams triumphantly when she strolls down the aisle. Medicos say they know of no tribe of humans completely free from arthritis ... First of the seagoing oil tankers were Chinese junks .•. Was none other than Norman Douglas who said, "Variety is the one simply and r.I,.. absolutely foolproof aphrodisiac." ... A veterinarian tells me a sick horse will never kick any- body . : . The wife earns more money than her husband _ ln just about three million families nationwide now. GOETHE Q. "Was that great German writer Goethe fonder of men?" A. Never heard that. You know what old Luigi Bar- zini said : "Johann \Yolfgang von Goethe liked pretty girl!! all his life ... In his Italian journey, he left no petUcoat unturned." cutting, that. But no', he was a ~· man, definitely. Am also asked the whereabouts of the first wood cov- ered bridge in this country. That was put over the Hud!OD ----at.--witerrora, N. y ., 1rn804:-The-th1ng""iasted105-yean:-. --11--1--1- ' " ' " .. Dennulrk, Finland end Sweden. In that order. Thooe are the three countries where the most twins are born, proportionately. JUMPING MOUSE Cruel little e•periment, 1hls one. That three-Inch rodent known as the North American jumping mouse can leap to times its own length, ordinarily. The science boys wanted to know what that mouse's tail had to do with this leaping ability, so they cl.it off said tail. Presto! The North Amer- ican jumping mouse without tall can do nothing but short somersaults. The teeth of some Egyptian mummies are badly worn down. By the grit in the old Egyptian bread, it's said. That grit wasn't put into that bread on purpose. Herodotus ex- plained it: "Egyptians kneaded clay with their tiabds, but bread dough with their feet." It's said one out of every 20 citizens fatally. Injured in the traffic is either a suicide or the victim of an attempted suicide. A man's big·toes are not just actually longer but pro- portionately longer than a woman's. Before ancient Greece had a written language, the busiest man in aay town thereabouts was the trained re- memberer. His job was to recall the details of treaties, loans and contracts. It's said no profession in aU history demanded a higher degree of honesty. No ~ubt, no doubt. Add res" mail to L. lt'f. Boyd, P.O. Box: 1875, New- pOrt Bectc11, Calif. 92660. ' Sapphire & Fire Opal at low discount prices .. ! ltA• 01 llAM A UNIOUI IXl'l•tlNCI To 1hote of you who hove never shopped in Orle of Olf' storet, o unique e•perien<e owoitt you. Our store• ore itoc ~ed with un ique ond rore preciou• itonet that ore hord 10 find •lsewhere; Aubi•t. Stor Sopphiret. Sop- ph.r et, Jodet, Emeroldt, Oiomondt, Amethyst, Topoi. ond other semi -preciou• uonet. All of lhese items ore import- ed directly by us lor sol e dire<I to the <oniumer ot pri<l!t much less fh'ori you would e•pect to poy. We feel so s!rongly thot our ·pricl!t ore "the lowest" we oiler the following: Any item of 1ewelry pur<hosed ot th • Stor of Siom it guoronl••d to opproise for ol least so•o more than you< purchase price or your mon•y wil be r•funded! '"'" F•t °"' I _,., Oimtr .... 1 DiH.. . 1155 f1t1y O!lal in sm ol r'lJU•I 1old & ltMt YG ••.••....•• M.,·, Biid. SI• $a(!p!Wt & DiamOncl Ri'lf:, line $21 O ti• in .iwt olhel 111t1. W/4 Unonds. 1411. YG ••••.•••• ..,, ..... "' ""' ....... °""" ..... 1445 · liff-, opal 511Toinicd by illmands. IU Wtiil1 Gold •••••• , • ""'" -Soll*• .... ""' -..... 1240 de$llll holds brM 4nond in l 4K YG • , •••••••••••••• UOt< Lil ! .... Gell I ... lft< °'*' Mth 1159 stntllltir: c<lb'ed stone as f*ldlitl. 'lT lt~OI ..•........ '"" """~--• -... 1349 Slpohit b pe• s1upt. MJrOll!ded by ._,.. WG •••••••• --S.L_t_lo 1315 $ti in vuY ll'IQdeffl ' ldl$IUI 1olcl lull .............. . ~::ow~::s1~~ ~~"~':!~' ........ , ...... '.' ... '4 7 '··~...--...--~~~~---:----:1 " i\ .,' NOW JNRU SAJUJIDAY Ojtl~YI • ' ' 1t "U$T. fllf 0'"l 'ENO"NT ~" , , l•tc TG ' ' Moft)' 11,111 . I ,•. . .. ' $22.99 $29.99 . ' "'L,:!!:;_ ___ c..;; _______ -''---~ -• -Cllsl• -·... 1445 c_,~ter ol UPPl*ts & ~ 1811 While Gold ••••••.••• Petitt Opal & DillllD!ld Olnnff Riie. a line $115 ,...,. .,. wn-" .. Sidi,"~ YG .......... PelHt lladi: Star S.We !inlet 1111. • title -$64 biatk Sta i$ hdd by sold tOld "lllr4' · · · · · · · · · · • · • • " · " Di¥nOlll ~ $t~ Modetll lllCltl df:~n in I S362 111w atltion wn tbnllndl. 1 1ttt11t1 ·ct111er" vc ....... . 5"' Gell ~ ... ,,_ .... dtstc"' 142 Cros1 in pomhed ·lmh YitvtrJ !flt lwl$1 d11in .•.••....• , , .., •• """ ~· -Soll*• ... 1124 St• Is olfstl II mcrll'l!!I dt1illt "'°"'"" IU. 'fC ••.•• ' •• Ladits' Slack St. s.ptlif be, SlOlll ii Ml $85 in lbwtt" •slcn witll 2 &tfln rWls in 1411 YC •.•• , ...••• AuslrU ~t Opi Stud l111incs. INllY stylt1 s39 111 I• Ydow Golt Wlfltrf opis , ••• , ••••••••• • • •• •. • • • l ·--. :. -' ... ""' • • < . ) . ' % own SprHd Colla" I Blue, red or brown solid colors, I 3.00 . Blue, red or brown stripes, I l.50. '. : _ 1 Monday, Septtmt>fr 24, 1973 • DAILY PILOT 9 • Class Button.down: White, blue, pink or maizt solids, 13.00. Blue, red, or browr stripes, 13.50. CLASSICS BY GANT If you were to order r custom-tailored shirt, you 'c. expect to find the some meti culous detailing. Gan offers the finest sbirt-toilorinc in the classic button-down 0 1 the Town spreod collor styl e. Each is ovailoble in so lid color· or neat stripings. Single butter cu ff s. sizes 14'/i-17, 13.00 one 13.50. Whot kind of tie'. T rad itionol red stripes or du~ fig ures on ploids. By Gont, o·: course. Polyester enc silk, 7.50.8.50. Men 's Shirts. Ties. i ,, . ..-.. .. ' ::, ' -----.itl9~ 8!111 ttIJn® IlDIBID~ &»7" ---.--ANAHEIM• -- 444,N, E11clfd l714l $15-1121 •• • -•P 0 T NEWPORT HUt'TIN-TON-l&ACH ORA.NGE,~ MALL OF ORAN~E 47 Ftthlo11 f1l and ( 7141 644-121 'l ~ 7777 Etli111tr /\v•Ru• I 7 I 4) t•1·l ll I 1100 N7 Tu1ti11 Str1•t ( 714 ) ttt.1 l I I CEUllOS 500 Loa c,,,1to1 M•ll l.J!l ) lto·041 I SHOP 10 A.M. to f tlO P.M. MONDAY THOUGH FRIO>:Y. SATUROA"t .. 10 A.M. lo 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON lo S P.M. I t -• • ' . • Jfl DAILY PILOf s Manday, Stplember 24, 1973 Dollar Staging Comeback ' ' At International Meet? By SYLVIA PORTER As the rinancc ministers of 126 nations open the 28lh an- nual meeting of the Interna- tional ~lonetary F'und in Nairobi. Kenya , today, the us. dollar is up rrom its IO\V, our balance of payments is moving rapidly back into 1he black. the \vorld is adn1itting that iLS recent display of con- spicuous contempt for the dollar has been self-defeating -and the ot..tlook is for more of the same . For !he first time since the ecirly 1960s, the finance ministers are holding their annual meeting wi th th e dollar in the ascen- dancy and gaining, not lo sing r~ l"OltTEfl Spect. All this is great good nev.•3 for us. You canr.ot recognize how enormous a switch this is e s you also recognize how brutal a beating our once supreme currency has taken since President Nixon , in mid- August 1971. buried the Bret- ton \Voods monetary system of fixed currency rates and set the stage against which all cu rrencies have been floating up and down in value aga inst each other . .. The rush by speculcilors. in- te r n at ional busin essmen, bankers and ~tidcasl oil· wealthy sheiks to ge t rid or dollars reachL'<i t h c pro- portions of a stampede in ear- ly 1973 -with frightening irn· plications. As our dollars value sank in lcrms of foreign currencies, you felt it directly in lhc skyrocketing costs of imported products and travel abroad. There has been a rebound in the dollar in the past few weeks, but it's still very modest. \Yhilc the attack became monstrously exaggerated, it originally had a sound basis in the recklessness of o u r overspending for so many years. Throughout rhc entire post-\Vorld \Var II period. we llave been spending overall far more abroad than we ha vt! been earning abroad -on loans and on gifts, on forcl gn inveslments and forei gn travel and on war in Vietnam. Our balance of 1iaymcnts \Vent deeply into lhc red in the ea rly 1950s and we begun flooding the world \Yith billions of surplus dollars. ' THEN, IN 1971, for tl1c first time in the 20th century. our trade balance fell into the red too. In 1972 \\'e import ed almost $7 billion more in merchandise than we ex- ported. Huge totals of dollars now hung •·undigested" over the world 's markets. lt ap- peared that the U.S. had lost all control over its ect1nomy, its currency and its destiny. Bul our no\v vastly un- derval1.1Sd dollar ha s again made oill"i'xports so attractive that the whole \\'orld is back buyin g fre1n us -to the ex- tent thal we have goods and services lo sell to them. And. of course. lhe u·orld is bidding for our foodstuffs on a giant scale. And so. our trade balan- ce is swinging back into the black, and the odds are we'll again be running a trade surplus in 1974. • that a crisis or the doUar is a harmfu l and this sort or nalion must be solved on a crisis of all currencies -and system ls not a long.term global basis. that all countries mu st answer. AS EUGENE .(';-,.Birnbaum, cooperate to solve the crisis (J) The \.\'orld rerognizes vice president of the Chase before it destroY,S US all. that the inflations eroding Manbatlan Bank for in- ~2/ The world recognizes pW'chaslng Power in all n.a-temational pionetary affairs, that while floating rates are lions in the 1970s are as pot it in an an3lysis of the acceptable for a temporary disastrous as the deflations Nairobi meeting, ' ' l he period. such violent gyrations creatin.11: armies of jobless negafives add-up to some Verj as ha\'e taken place are were in the 1930s -and in-encouraging positives." ~~~--~~-'-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~-11 NEW OLDSMOBILE SERIES -1974 Cutlass Salon features special interiors and handling package. Available as coupe (shown) and 4 door sedan. ~14 Olds Opti1nis111 Full-size A zito's 'N ot a T1iiri g of _Past' By CARL CARSTENSEN Of lhe 01ur Pllol s111f , Oldsmobile Division has In- troduced its 1974 cars with predictions of c o n t i n u e d record sales and optimism for the future.or the fullsize car. J.Ioward H. Kehr!, divisional general manager and GJ\f vice-president said that "all indicalions point to another banner year in 1974 for Oldsmobile with our sales being at least as good as this year. and y:e think the op- portunity is there to even im- prove on that." OLDSMOBILE'S 32 model lineup is now on sale and one car Kehr! expects to generate excitement is the Cutlass Salon. ln troduced in 1973 as an op- tion on the Cutlass Supreme sedan. the Salon· is available for '74 as a new series In bolh coupe an d four-door sedan. ''This car features in- dividual. high-back reclining front seats with special fabrics. exterior identification and a handl ing package built around the new GM specifica- tion radial tire. Our sales target for the Sa1on is 63,000 units." he said. Kehr! also noted that other new additions to Oldsmobile's lineup include a Regency coupe and two and three-seat Cutlass Supreme Crui ser sta-• lion \vagons. He said the most extensive design changes have been made on the Delta 88· and Delta · 88 Royale hardtop coupes. "TllESE CARS ha ~ new roo( styling ... the result of thin rear pillars ... moveable forward quarter windows and Clii1ia Beer A rrives At LA Port large. rixcd real quarter win- dov.•s," he continued. In discussing the full-size car's future, K e h r I em- phasized that contrary to some of the critics, the full- size car Is alive an,d healthy. "This kind of car didn't come about by coincidence, nor did we dictate car size to the buying public. The full-size cars w& make are for a reason. "It's because there is a de- mand for them by people who \Yant much more than they can get from a Bmall car." He produced statistics sbo.w- ing the average passenger car travels approximately 11 ,000 miles a year With about 6,500 miles driven on city-type roads )VhCJ:t the "small car can perfonn with some degree of adequacy. "HOWEVER, THE other 4,500 miles are traveled under rural or non -urban conditions where the use of the small car usually entails considerable sacrifice in comfort and load carrying capacity." "There will be a continual demand for full-size cars," he stressed,. "because they best meet the need for a single vehicle to cover multiple uses." * Richard Lewis of Dean Lewis Imports In Costa f.fesa has returned from a national Toyota dealer meeting in Hawaii. Lewis joined some 2, 700 other dealers, T Q y o t a employees and their wives at the meeUn~ in Honolulu which was higb-li;h'ted by a preview of the 1974 line of Toyota cars and trucks. "THE NEW LINE o ( Toyotas is the best we've had, and we're looking forward to a very successful sales year," Lewis said. _ The event marlred the first time Toyo.ta dealers -some 900 of them -met in one place. It took fi ve hotels, 24 chartered airliners, and the airlift of 20 new Toyotas from Japan and the U.S. to carry out the intensive meeting. Antitnrst Suit Cl1ink Opened Up In IBM 'Armor' Cllrhtlan kltnc. Monitor Servlc• NEW YORK -T elex Corporalion's legal victory over IBl\.f in a precedent-shat- tering antitrust suit in Tolsa, Okla., promises to reduce the gian t compu ter m a k e r ' s dominance of the $1 2 billion U.S. electronic data-processing industry. dependent c o m p u t e r per· ipheral industry. The in- dustry supplies about 20 per- cent of peripheral devices, such as disc drives and memory units, which are at- tached to IBM computers. IF IBM HAD not eng~ged In anti-compelilive practices, the peripheral equipment makers alleged, their market share would have been considerably greater. l\IEAN\\'1IU.E, TllE search for other currencies to replace the dollar as the key unit of 'vorld commerce und in- ternational finance ha s been a resounding failure. No other currency is big enough lo take LOS ANGELES (AP) -The on the burden -and 00 other first shipment of beer from government wants the ~urden: l\fainland China tQ Southern Thus. as the N 3 1 r 0 b 1 Californ ia in 25 vears has ar- meeting opens. these three .. rived at the Port of Los A federa~ district court's $352 million judgment in fa vor or Telex was widely applauded by many segments of the com- puter industry. If upheld by higher courts, i n du st r y sources say, the decision would curb IBM's "excessive" market power and invigorate the competitive climate. Although the court's ruling relates specifically to prob- lems faced by independent peripheral equipment makers, its implementation will have "a healthy impact on the whole economy," Whee 1 er fund amentals emerge: . An cles. ~I t The Y.'orld recognizes T~e 5.!lOO cases or Tsingtao -TYPING SECRETARIAL SERVICE 6S7 W. 19tfl, Sulhl J COSTA MES=- 64S-6262 l"Ol!TAILI' Ol(To\TO• RENTALS C&SSl!'nl Tll .. NSCIUllNO ANO GENEl!Al llM TYl"INO beer came from a brewery on the Shan Tung peninsula in northern China . It was im- ported by Tsingtao ln1port Co. of Oakland. The brewery originally was built by the Germans before the Boxer Rebellion of 1900. and has changed hands with the political turnovers in China \Vhen lhe Communists gained control of the area 25 yea rs ago, exports of 1'3ingtao CommMllicgtolo11 s.rtlc1tt Co. beer to the United Slates was ':-:=------====''-stopped. A...,t!11wment Tormenting Rectal ltcn Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Prompt ly Relieved TllE DECISION in the Telex-IBM suit, in which Telex accused IBM of monopolistic practices if' the computer in· (. rt~KI 1V C ]. _ STOCK _ duslry. marks the first time IBM has lost an antiturst case. The ruling also is expected to lend fresh impetus to the Justice Department's fi ve- year-old antimonopoly case against IBM. ·The case has been bogged down ln a long series of legal skirmishes in a New Y o r k federal court, centering on the Issue of governmental access to tBM's "confidential" c Or~ Of a IC r.ecords. 1 notes. Jn the future, Wheeler holds, IBM competitors will be In less danger of "going the way of RCA and General Electric." The two electronics glaiits dropped out or the computer manufacturing field In recent years after incurring huge losses in,.. trying to comoete head-on against IBM, which makes two out of every three computers sold in the U.S. Among the key points in the court decision curbing IBM's market power : IBM IS ENJOINED fro") announcing a new product without disclosing the "design or the electronic interface." In the past, IBM has veiled most new P'roducts an- nouncements Jn strict secrecy. This has made It extremely difficult fof" peripheral equip-- men~ makers to tool up for production () f competitive devices until long after t.BM's own product wa~ w e 11 • • ' - ' Wall Street • ••• Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. likely the but We couldn't pro~e it, of course, that the percentage is even greater ange Coast area ... and it's growing it seems here Or-. 1n every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. • 1n Wall Street's computers "talk to"_ c_o mp u te rs DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate more than takes only the of 12 1,000 words per minute. It move th!! entire New York minutes to Exchange and American reports from the canyons Street to the typesetting machines of the right her~ on ' the Orange Coast. of Wall DAILY PILOT Stock And when technology finds a way to beat that speed the _DAILY "PILOT, no doubt, will be among the record, fi rst to When ' use it to bring readers "today's action today." it comes business is the ' to financial news, the one that means DAILY PILOT , I j ' ' I I I I I ' ' l I I I f I I ' I I I I I ! l I I : I I I I l I I l J n nmny Q 1!9e$ Prep:irlltion H .cd V<-'3 pmmpt, t em piornr,v rel icf (r01n i;uch pain and 1t hin ,:i: :1nd :ictually helps shrink J1WCllinK of hc:morrhofdnl fi'l- IUC'S ~used by inflamn111lion. Tosl.S by doctora on hun· dred~ or patients showed thiS to be true in many cnses. Jn fnct, many doctors, them- selves. use Prtparation /-/ or recommend it for their ram. ilics. Prc1>aration 1-1 ojntmcnt or 1>U!)J>OSitori~. R. it Wheeler. chairman of Telex, a medium-size rom- puter equipment maker that has been hard hll by IBM's aggressive marlccling prac. Uces, says the far·rcachlng court ruling "opens a whole new ball game" for the in-established among computerJIL ____ ..:,_-. __________ ;_,,;;..;;...;;;,;!;;.::,;.,;.;;:;:;,;;;;;::::;:;=..::;;:;;;;;~:;;;;.;,;:=;~ users. - t • ) '1 ' ·1 I / I ' • -------~ Why pay extra for· Or~Qie . Coast with ... .- .. 'zones' to cover . ' . ' a Classified Ad? Daily Pilot covers it all with 8 Editions :l • " • -. 1 ~ 'tOU· GET . ALL El .GMT ,. '• ,. , . ' .;........ I -I ~ ·I I I • 5 -i I r , . '.· 1 i > ' I Huntington · Beacli .,.., I { • Daily Pilot Classified 'Want Ads' run in these eight different Daily Pilot editions - Newport Beach ) ·•-....... ·•--O-H-unt-ln-gt-0n-Beach--F-0untaln Yalley ~ -~ 0 C:osta Mesa ~ 0 Newport Beach ·I 1 0 Irvine ~! ~ · 0 Laguna Beach ~ 0 Saddleback J 8 San C:lemente•C:aplstrano i O Street edition (for area aewsracks) ' I l • I • .. . . ·Dial Classified Direct -642-5678 · ·. rou:..Can Even1• Use Your Credit Card I , ._ t' t J I • • ,, -• JUST .~ ONE . RATE • • . . , -. t_ ' ... -' ' Laguna Beach /, r ' ~·./• I I / \ : \·r -------.... . _ . . -.~ ,., / ·•1'i' -.~ ~ / ,. \ , • . . • " . I ( "'' o.~-. --:;:=}· . I ' I . I I San Maleo Pt DAILY PILOT • I 1 I " • J I 2 DAILY PILOT Mooda1, Stptembtt 24, 19?3 , 1 Hobie-14 Skippers Tune Up ·Turnout Fair in Fall Reg-atta 'Level Racing' P.1ore than 125 l·loble Cats in three classes swarmed over Newport Harbor Sunday in the 9th renewa l of the Ancient i\lariners Regatta. BOATING For many of the Hobie·l4 skippers the rega!ta ~·as a last '---------' chance to lune up bc£ore the star! of the national charn· pionship regatta at L a k e Havasu on the Colorado River starting. Oct. 3. <. In addition to three divisions of Hobie 14s and 16s, the regatta also featured the new Hobie-12 monocat. Results: HOBIE-14A -(I) Wayne Schafer, Capistrano Beach; (2) Randy Hartfield, Long Beach; (3) Craig Barto, Newport Beach ; (4 ) Nick Steele, Balboa Island ; (5 ) l\1ike Staudt, Fontana. HOBIE-14-B -(I) Jerry Robinson, HWltington Beach; (2J Susan Henderson, Costa hfesa; (3) Milt Rudge, Cer- . ritos; (4) Mac Wright, Torrance, (5) J erry Katz, •---~Monterey ?ark. HOBIE-14C -(I) Heind Bruggerman, Santa Ana : (2) Keo Toy, Corona Long Beach; (5) .Burton Bates, Costa Mesa. HOBIE-16A -(I) John Ross-Duggan and P a m e 1 a Conover. Newport Beach: (2) Dick and Carol Beauchamp, Corona del A1ar ; (3) Bob Seaman and Jana Haynes, Stanford; (4) Jerry Wetzler and Debbie Wilkinson, Corona del Mar; (5) Jerry and Nancy King, Newport Beach. HOBIE-168 -(I) Tom Eckles and Roy K r o n k , l\1ission Beach; t2 ) Jack and Lili McGraw, Laguna Beach : (3) Greg Simpson and Ed Forke. 1-fermosa Beach; (4) Jim and Gerald Foster . Newport Beach : (5) Russ Brown and Robin RosS-Dug- gan, Newport Beach. HOBIE-16C -(I) Richard Soth and Sam Humphries. Newport Beach; (2) Sam and Sheila PnlmiLier, Corona de! Mar; (3) Brad Lewis and Charles Linden, Corona del Mar; (4) Jim and Henry Brooks. Hunlington Beach ; (5J Dave Peterson and Thumper McCarthy, Balboa. • HOBlE-12 -(1) Jin1 Black, Dana Point; (2) Jim Leonard, Corona del Mar ; (3) Steve !·latch. San Bernardino; (4) Ted Slater, Newport Beach ; (5) Ann Leonard, Newport Beach. Matheny New Sales Chief Passage WinS-4 Straight 1i1ark Johnson's Windward Passage scored a convincing four straight wins over Ken DeMeuse's Blackfin to win the St. Francis Perpetual Trophy in a series sailed out or St. Francis Yacht Club, San Fran· cisco. The two rival yachts sailed on a boat for boat basis in light to moderate airs on San Francisco Bay. Also scoring four straight wins to pick up the Richard Rheem Perpetual was Theo Stephens 5 7 • f o o t Lightning over Al Cassel's SO.foot sloop Warrior-from-Behia-Gor' thian Yacht Club. These races were sailed on a handicap basis with Warrior first to finish In each race but failing ~ to have her time over Ught- ning. In the City of San Francisco Series for Class B yachts, the Tartan-41 Natrat, skippered by Dick Deaver . of Los Angeles Yacht Club. was the winner over 15 contenders. Runner-up was Resolute, W. Westerhoff. St. Francis YC, and third was Leonard Delmar'S' Another Girl, St. FYC_ Sailboard Regatta Draws 23 Twenty-three \Vindsurfers turned out Sunday for the an- nual Newport Beach Regatta. The event also served as the Newport Harbor Fleet 4 cham- pionship. '111e winner . was Mike \Valtze who was run- nerup. in the Class A division of the regatta. National championship for the unique ''s tand -up'' sailboards is scheduled Oct. 13-14 at Mission Bay. Newport regatta results : (I) Nat Schweitzer. Malibu YC; 6~~; (2) P\1ike Waltze, NHYC. 8~~; (3J Bruce· ~1atlack VYC. 20; (4) Pat Love, Santa Monica, 24; (5) Doug Halsey , St. Petersburg, Fla., 25. CLASS B -(I) Anne Day, Pacific Palisades, 71,Z; (2) \Valle r Simmer, Pacific Palisades, 91h; (3) Walter Herbeck, West Los Angeles, 12~:.. ~ Announceinent has be e n PUBLIC NOTlCE made of the appointment of ----.~----1 h B 7J744 Larry 111 . Mat eny as western SUPEIUOR COURT OF THE sales manager for the Luhrs STAT• OF CALIFORNIA FOfl THE COUNTY 011 ORANGE Co. No. A-nm tn·his-neUWV>C:ilion !\.1alheny .. NO_TICE Olt -HEARING 0, PETITION •• ~~~ ' FOR PROIATE-OF WILL-AND f'OR will handle sales. service and LETTE•I Tl!STAMENTAllY Warranty for aJI Western ~~;:~E' rsOITHHEi~=~IE~jy~11=i Luhrs dealers. He will be ROMO P. CORMIER ANO LEONA.RO L. · f L h • CORMIER. JR. hav1 filed ht!rel n a pell-·• W o r k l n g rom U, rs 11on tor Probate 01 wn1 alld fOI" lswenc;e manufacturing fa c i Ii ties ct Let11r1 r1111men11rv tc !ht pell· • li-u, refertftee le Which ts mact. tor located In Costa f\-1.esa. turtntr Pffflc111ars, 1...:1 '"'' ttte time ar>d Luhrs is a major manufac-ptace "' IM"'rlng •t>e same h11 """ w1 . I . bo rd for Oc!Obtr 1, 197l, at 9:00 1.m .• In !he lurer of f1berg ass m a courlrocm ~ Departmen! Ne. J 01 said Cruisers and sport fishing court. "' 700 Civic Cetiter O..IYI! w111, In the Cltv DI Senta Ar.e, C1ll!ornl1. boats from 25 to 41 feet. °'9ted Sept.mi-13, 1'n PUBLIC NOTICE WILLIAM e. Sr JOHN, Counlv CleY"k Of.TZ, AIKENS & MANNING FICTITIOUS aUSINESS .,, J1MPlt E. lltl'"!ill"k h NAME STATEMENT '!'00 Wlllhlre l lV<I., S11ll1 no TIM lollcwl11g plrsotl lt OClll!I b1nlntU Los A1199Mt., Cellf. toO» 11· Te-I• ttU) fJ7..f131 , G W FERGUSON I. ASSOCIATES, AlfOl'MY"t lw ptll!J-., uo· N~wpcrt Cenltr Or., Newporl Publl•Md Ora11ge Coetl Oallv Piie!, BeKl'I, C1Ulomle 92660 s.Pt.mber 17, 11, 24, 197l 2U6"JJ Giibert w. Flf9US«" 2602 Wes! Oceen Front, Hewpor1 Beeeh, C1llfornl1 92660 PUBLIC NOTICE TMt b111ln1n 11 conducted b~ In lrt-·1 --~==-~-~-- d!•ldual. FICTITIOUS IUSINESS Gllberl W. F1rgut«1 NAME STAEMl!NT Thlt 11e11m.nt was flied With fhe Cour" TIMI tcoowlng pi;r.on 11 doing bu~lne1s ty Cieri!; o1 Oral!lil• c-rv on $1plem111< ei: 1, 1973. POMONA Jr,UTO I OOY, 111' Pcmcn• FHOU A~f .. Cotti MHI, Celll. '16l1 • PubU1Md Or111gt Co.it 0•11Y Pllol, Thecctor1t Geritld Miiier, 2MN Pltl'CI Seplemblr 10. 11, 24, Ind Oc.lcbet" I , TKalt, Sen Juen C•plslrenc, Call!ornl1. 1973 2111·73 Thll MllttU Is cor>ducted by an In· dl~l11u1t '-PUBUC NOTICE Theodcrt G. Miiter T~I~ st1lemtnt Wll llled wilh ll>e (OUl'I· FICTITIOUS BUSINESS rv Clerk cl Orange County on S1pl&mblr NA.Mir STATEM•NT 7• ltll. FJIUI .,~ .... followl"'ll ~r-1• Doing ~'11111'' Pllblllhtd Orerqe Coesl O•ltl" F'llol • . 11.ESIOUAL STRESS ll ESE A Ill CH Sel111mbtr 10, U, 14, Ind OC!ober l, .ASSOCIATION, U15 w. Mec.lrltlur, 19n 2711·n Coste MtM. ca. '261' J1rnes J. LeDou~. 215' Rural F>I.. PUBLIC NOTICE COlll MISI, Cl . '1627 1---~=------ TPlll tiutln111 h conducled b'I en 11>-P:ICTITIOUS IUllNESS • ~Hv1dLH11. NA.ME STATEMENT Jem11 L. LtOOU• Thi following lltl'IOll 11 dolnt busl11111s TPlll tltllfMnl Wll fllfd wllh Ille Covn-e1: ty Cieri!. of orenoe Covnty on 5epl ..... bl!r c. ROIERT NATTR ESS REAL ES.. J, lf1J. TATE CO., 7706 Hernor llvd., Costa · Ft:M31 Mtsa, C1llfcml1 926'6 """41s.hed Dr•t'tllt Coe11 oanv Pllct Clltrln Ri»erl N111~u. 21..11 Vitt• sePlimbtr 10, 1,, 24, end OC:toolr !, Or,..dl, NtwPOl"I l each, C1lltornl11 '1660 ltT.I 2'94•7J Thl1 but.Inn• It conducttd by an In- PUBLIC NOTICE dfVlcll,Mll. C'*1el Robltl'"t N11tre11 P:lc:TITIOUS aUSlNl!SS Thlt 1111-9 WH flied wllll Ille CllUll> HAMI STATl"Ml!NT .... Cltrt ol orenge COU!lty Oii kotlmber Tiie followrlng perllOn 11 dOl1111 buSIMU 14' ltn F211M ai: I OllSIE aURNS fNTEltPR liei, 3JO'.I PultHsllfcl ~ Coet.I Otft>, Pllol, Maroor e1...o.. Sui11 e.._ c°'" Mlle, m;tmtltr u, 2" 1nc1 Ottoo.-,:S..~ Ce. nhi lldOtlft-...,ill"tt, '"'8 LI Al.mtH· ir...,m1"1 v111er , C•. Ho. 70 t270I Kid Tl'tlt buSfnHf I• CondUCNCI by llt I~ s· OIYIOllll, • Like To Ask Andy lotdt: IUfnt TPll• •Jiii~· Wit f(U!lf wllll '"' ,_. f'f Clltl'"k of 0r"'91 C-ly on 5'Qttmotf' '· ""· ••• f'l!Qflt!IH Or--. COltl 0•111' ~Hot, Efforts to _promote "1"1•1 racing" in the Harbor Area met with-mediocre succea Jn the Fall Regatta co-spoosored by Balboa and Newport Harbor Yacht Clubs Sa\lrday and Sunday, }!arbor Yacht Club. OtmllDE C1A8Sa \a\'c) Swllfa, frank and Ol,ve INSIDE CLASSES (NHYC) Groene, NH\'C; (I) Bruoe · The regatli a>ao oerved ii ETcilELLS-11 ~(9) --C1l Whlle', 11YC:-(4l Pahl Klua, lJDO.lfA (21) -(I) Dave ~· NHYCJ (4) Dick ;ihe local lleel <llomJlomhi~ 8-!w, Leroy-SU1ber1Mci, Dave -.•~--. SAYC" (i)-uu.., B.YC; 2) B HI Munroe, ]IHYC: 15) Phil for the Soling Class, 'n.o win-~ In Nl!YC ner was Tom Willson of NllYC_ Band!t, Corey Myer, BYC. McCord, BYC: (3) Jim Tyler, Ramm g, • Balboa Yacht Club_ RllODES-33 (7) (t) $0UNG (10) -(I) No. 334, BYC: (l) Pete Jellerson, SAB<Yr A (11) -(1) KeiUt ' ' • ' King'• lla<quet, Lii n,d.a Tom Wlll9011, BYC : (2) Osirl.I MJIYC;' (5) Rolly Lobllllll, . Kllpatdck, BY~: (2) Kathleen Five boats 1tumed out -1' the One Ton class and four 1~ •the Quarter Tom. Winner 'lo ' the One Tons was the Ranger-37 \\'ings, a>skippered by Taylor. Pattison and Symyth o f Cabrilh> Beach Yacht Club. \Vinner in I he Quarter Ton \Vas Cal Preston's new San- tana-2.5, Betelgeuse, Newport -~-·'Cl.MiS ·.., lbe Tay!OI', BYC.· 1 __ , 1.I, SOf>ll TnlesdeU, NHYC. YC: Gerrie, NllYC; (3) Suzanne -Id& .;ouroes · ., .. PH/IF ONE TON (IJ -(I) wmg!'i , 'i7o (I) -(I} Shal)tll>, LllJO.I4B (30) -(I) Argyle Spangler, NHYC. wiUt 2I entries. '!'be >Ii~ Taylor, Pattloon and _..., •-~-y and r ,_, PMYC•, 'l·) Caiii-'-11 BYC· (2) Bob Ket· SAB<Yr B (91-:-(I) Wendy was Dave Stone's Puff, Bahl& _,.... ---=--,,-.. "" ~ . ...,._ • • Mackel,. NHY\..: (1) .ReglDl Corinthian Yacht <?ub. CBYC. Poppy, Ed Kimball and TJm. tenholen, BYC: (!) Rolly Parker,' NHYC(; (3) Mike Eight entries turned out in -QUARTER TQN ,(l)_ ;---De' n>ie,K..medy, ABYC. Pollttskl, BCYC: (I) Bil Fox, Pinckney, BYC,I the relatively new Etcbolls-22 Core, Col Pruton, NHYC.. ~ni:tos (7) -( I ) WYC: (5) Bill Ba Id win, SABOT C (t2) -(l) Class won b~ Leroy PljRF(ll) -' (1) Puff, Dave Theresa, Bob Searles, BYC: KHYC. Chtlstine Homnie, NllYG: (~) SUtherland of Newport ilartlo< Stone, BCYC: (I) Fril>Sea, (2) Prudence, Larry Baum, LASER (191 - (I) Mlifk Karen Faber, BCYC: (3) Wen- Yacbt Club. Mike Byrne,. VYC; J 3) BYC, •. -Gaudio, NHYC: (2) Phi I dy llen19,•lffiYC. - ITH ANl\IOUl\ICll\IG TH(l\IEW1974 - DODGE MOTORCARS Al\ID TRUCKS , We Dodge Dealers would like to welcome you to our 1974 new car year. At Dodge dealerships, "new" really means new. In 1923 it was the first all steel coupe body, later we added Unibody construction, then Electronic Ignition. For '74 see: • DODGE MONACO -three cars, all unmistakably new for l974:-- • DODGE CHARGER-experience "Charger Style." It might be right for you, •DODGE Di\RT -with over a million Darts on the road y9u have to. have a frie.nd who owns a Dart. Ask him.why he likes it. • DODGE TRADESMJ\1\1 VAl\IS -sh6p our wide assortment of models, including Maxivan (the largest compact van built in America). • OODGE CLUB CAB -A Dodge "first" and still a Dodge exclusive. Now also available in a complete line of four-wheel drive Club Cab models. Full size, midsize, and compact Dodges-we've got them all -along with dependable Dodge pickups and vans. See all the great Dodges for '74 todayl Dadge 2!.~ AUTHOR/Zr;D OEAl.ERS " • LOS Al\IGELES/08/\NGE COlMlES QOOGE DEALERS ' ' f ,, I ' ' ,, " " ,,, ,, , .. .. 11 "" '" ,, ,., Ill J "-~ ,., 11, '" •llCI ~ 1, ••n ,,...»•----~------'·----~-----------~~-,~--~-....:!~~---'"-''----.::._~~~,;,_-_:;;_ _ _.::__::::::.~-~-~~~-~~----~-~~-::--~----l!OllJ! .. 1• '1 _) t .. 1 '/ really started to blo$Som, · and I started to _think q woman co11/d be more . :than I ever thought she could.' Deals • 1-ss _u-es Lea~ue . President· Challenges . Biases •• By LAURIE KASPER The only reasoo she cited Ior the begil> cllscusllons amoog ·Its m~berj who, allhoogh women are 50 percent of the ot .. o1nr ,.1 ... tt•n nkig pf her changes six yean ago, she di.hen ':!t' join. :C ~ 1 . ,tfe ~:~ked that she sometimes even Going thfou~ U~i.. _:.:G';bA.:IJ D'& tliid..was because~ .. ~·a ttme 1 really~,.·-·'~~·'~·~;::... .-has to remind her husband, Jack, who is philosophy, i. very dilf<¥1L!rom "'-° 4irted to 'blo&som.ind'reofly·alarle<r t6 POLlw-;'!' • ...T;,,,. : chairman of hoth the county Human Jeannette Turk, president ·of the County Uilnk a woman could be more than I evfr ·~·~~ t?Je·~en. is taki!n and Relations Commission and the Af- League of \Vomen Voters, lho_ught life she could., then tabulated on the cOunty, state or na-firmaUve Action Advisory Boa.rd, that af- was going to be. thought . · • tional level to· establish their policies firmattve action includes minorities and An average student, she went to rol-But ask her if she is 8 feminist and she which serve U a basis for which legisla-1'0IDNl. Jege and chose teaching from the two will reply "I don't know. What ls a tion the ieague supports. Men, she explained, only seem to think careers traditionally considered open to feminist?'' · Policies ~ to span the realm of of the minorities. women , married and planned simply to LEAGUE ~RY governmeot. Planning and mental Uloess She ~ pointed out that ~tbpugh stay at honie as mother to her child.('en, 'lbe 1 e a g u e, Mrs. Turi'•· only are majof · topiCs on the count'y ~·1 tea'11Jar Jaas: alWaff been CMSidered a She did stay home ... "because I was "outsid~ involvement, is older than program. Before the President's 'villt to caleer 1or wcinen, there are nd women brought that ·· nd Chlila, ~ league supported recognition -•-i distri · 1 nd ts · th up way ... a expresses today's women's Movement and Ued to of Red <hina. Members favor equal op-as 1'\:UUU • ct superm e en 10 e no regrets. When telling her interests the Suffragettes. It was fonned after the county and very few Ngh sCbool and (church, cookinP, entertaining, sewing, !9th amendment ....... -.. in 1920 and portunities in housing and employment. even elementary school principals. " ~.. But Mrs. Turk admitted lo what she gardening and jogging) she said her bel~ women learn how to use their said seems like a "very deep hypocrisy. As for berself, she said she is not look· daughters, aged JO and 12, tak e much of newfy acquired right to vote. "I believe in equal opportunity in ing for •anytbing else to be involved in. her and her husband's time. She added, Mrs. Turk said •the organlr.en thought employment but I do not believe men "'lb.ls is my thing. This is the one thing "and I think they should." five years would be all the~ needed should be in the League of Women I can do and I can't do anything more," As a family, they playi games and blcy-for the group's existenee. 'lbe &eague Voters.. n she es:plained. cle three or rour times a week. She said contloued, however, wh;eo member1 There are, she ei:plained, very few A past ·president of the H.untington they also are all avid readers. realized government was so comples:. leadership roles open to women and very Beach chapter, of which she also is a QUESTIONS "I guess it's the most effective few organizations where women are charter member, her two-year term will Yet Mrs. Turk questions why il is women's political group I knoir~" she allowed to develop their potential as they end in March. assumed the woman will always stay at said. are in the league. d d HER GOALS home" with the children . She finds the women Involved ·with the "Men would J>ecome the pres! ents an On f he oal . t tral r . · . league very challenging and counts the vice presidents and women would e 0 r g s is .. o open a cen o · She a l s. o q~estlons t~e .m~?"!age things it works for and . the melhods It become the secretaries 8 n d cof-~ce for the organizatl~ of 800 members- ceremony, m which the bride 1s given as vet')'. meaningful for her feemakers," Mrs. Turk explained. "I jus t 1n .the county .. Money is the problem, she -away" by one man to another man, and-sonalf -___... ftillfQOD't wanriflOliappen." ---l!ll.ld;but-~mg·the;teague·from-a-e~are wh~ the woman always gives up her per One f ~·ts tnn...+h. she es:plalned iJ, Other thinp tell her that men in bedroom JUSt doesn ~lead to azr..effiC!OOl mauten name. She wonders w h y 0 s_ . & .. a;>• ban ~ · Jeadersbip <bl't oPen the doof for operation."' .. employers haven't deve loped a "more tt:aat it deals m lSSUeS rather t can-women. Another goal is to defeat the governor's creative" way or using women as by giv· • didat~. tax limitation initiative, which will be on Ing one job w two women wo;king-part--Parti>an.polilics, W. ~9. ?,n~ is "~ DIStSIMINAUON -the NOVtfJlbeT·ballot; ~the-countyc-- time. much of a ~rsonality thing. People m-"There's blatant discrimination against Although the league bas twid'!: sup- "There are a whole lot of these things volved oo this level, she explained, often women in county government," s~ ported the govermr's proposals relating which, until six'years ago, had never oc-ha ve difficulty finding good people in the charged, citing employment figures and to taxes, this time they are opposing him, curred lo me before," she said explainlng opposite party. noting that supervisors' appointments to Mrs. Turk said. her changing thoughts have been evotu-The iSl!Oel It concerns lt.9elf with and. boarils and commissions usually consist Uooary . the stands the league takes result frcxn of a 5-0 or 4-1 ratio of meo to women (See ~ Page 1~) . , \ n I 6men BEA ANDERSON, Editor Molld•Y· ,_,,mbtr 24, 1'71 l'Ht IJ Jeannette Turk, pr:esident of the County Lea~ue of W9men Voters, discuss es Prop- osition 1 at meeting in Laguna 1lop photos); (at left) she bikes with husband Jack and daughters. Carrie Oeft) and Chris, and unpacks league materials in her new Huntington BMch home (above). She find~ league work meaningful. 1 ' • I • • -. • r I 1_ < • • . . • • • 11 OAILV PILO f From Page 13 Jeannette Turk joins lively discussion of an i11ue at League of Women Vote rs meeting. • I Tempo Picking Up for Coast C.r o ~ps ... ' SC Juniors Women'! Chapter. Garden Grove YMCA , 7 p.m., , plonned by Huntlniton Beach B""kor Will be Cot. Heath The event will be slattd Anaheim High School. Friday, J\Jnlora ror prov1Jlonal1 and Botllft\J)' whd .. bst ust rr· South Coast Juniors wlll Saturday, Sept. at, at Knott't Sept. aa, and at 10 a.n1 . Satur· active memben. tt will besln lurned from three "Yt•r• In board buses at $:30 p.m. Berry Farm. day, Sept. 29. In the Newport 1t 11 :30 a.m. &iturday, Sept, SoutbtaM A1l1 .,D 11' re 11 Y n Thursday, Sept. 27.~ at the Beach headquarters. 29. In the ctubb®se. I MeliDl, voc1!11t, will entertain . Fountain Valley Community YMCA Among projects adopted (Of' Center and then travel· to the Faculty W ives the comlni year wlll be cot·.'. Culture[ Center Let's ri.1akc a Deal TV ahow. Introductory lectures on , tecUng clothlng and d1scounl1 , Mr, and Mr~ William o. weight reduction will be Orange Coast College Faculty coupon• ror the Stanton lndlan f Redfield'• g r d en 1 In NB Juniors presented by the YMCA or Wives wlll lneet tor a luncheon Center. ~nd creating A toy Fullerton wJU , the setting Newporl Beach Jun I or Orunge County which is seek· at noon Sautrday, Sept. 29, In loon library for youngsters. ror a chatq:)l11'fi' reception for Ebells will meet at 10 a.m, Ing locations to present more the Faculty House. Antique .. · members or the advl1orv programs. jewtlry will be the topic or Couple-5 board and char••r mcm•·rs ,·_, Thursday, Sept. 27. In the Elaine ,Schlup. ;.!, IJ'C clubhouse. Lectures will be given at Busineas and Profculonal the Orlnae r!"nty Cu ltural · Speaker wiU be Mrs. Allen 9:30 a.m.. Pounds O t ( HB J . Couple• Clu b will meet for Center, ! Christenson. head of the Permanently headquarters. uniors dinner at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. The event 'wQI bcA"ln 111 8 Orange County Chapter of Aid Newport Beach. 1 :30 p.m.1 A eet·acquairited luncheon is Sept. 29, In the Alrporter Inn. p.m. Saturd•f· $ept. 29. to Baja which is one of the I club's major philanthropic projects for the year. UDC Why Do You Belong to the United Daughters of t h e Confederacy will theme the next meeting of the Emma Sansom Chapter al noon Thursday, Sept. 27, in Santiago Park, Santa Ana. Convenience I . . .! lsn t So Easy St. Anne's ~1onthly cord pa r t y , DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a divon:- ed woman with one child. I mlllTied a divorced man with two children. 1 ~ew this was no mad love affair bul a mar- riage of convenience for both of us. I needed a home and a father for my chi ld and he needed someone to ~eep house for ·hlm and take care of hi!: kids. sponsored by St. Anne's Altar Society will take place in the Parish Hall. Sea l Beach. Fri· day, Sept. 28. \Ve have been married six month.s and although we haven't had any serious dU· Coune . liculties. I'm not sure my husband con· A. series or four weekly sym· siders me anything more than a maid , a ---J""'ums. for nurs~cll®L _ . directors will be offered at rook"""anct--n:hi:tct-atnmdant.. Orange Coast College at 7:30 He had been accustomed to coming and p.1n. Fridays. beglMing Sep!. going as he plea.!led for several years and 28. that included "other \\'Omen." How can I HB Friends John L. King of Huntington Beach who authored "Human Behavior and Wall Street.'' 11•ill be the speaker at the next meeting of Huntington Beach Friends of the Li brary. be sure he is behaving 11•ithout making n1yself look like a suspicious wife? -NO BED OF ROSES HERE DEAR ROSE: By yollf' own admission it v.·as a ''marriage of convenience," and I have a bunch it's going to be a Jot more couvcnient for him than for you. • other end. fl takes only one minute - secands -for the phone to ring 10 times. Please, Ann , tell people to be a little mor!! patient. -TH E GIMP DEAR G.: Here's your letter and a plea from me. Count to 10, folks -lt'a a good habit lo get Into. And you'll com· plete more ca1J1, tao. DEAi! ANN LANDERS : I'm gay but not happy. I function as a straight in my job and in my social contacts outside of \\'Ork. I hate the word gay but I finally adopted it because homo.sexual Is. too do1nn long and other term,, -tag, homo , queer, you na me it -are too demeaning. And I guess that'S why I'm writing - to say It would be great if gays could bf' hired on the busis of their skills Instead of being turned down for jobs because their mannerisms are a little suspect. If gays coUld really come out Grtlie c"Ios_e_L __ ._~, treatrnent could be olfered without shame and It would be a better world for everybody. I don't need to dance with my lover in public. All I want Is a little un· derstandlng and compassion. Sorry to go on so long, bu~ J've had It wit ti the "Gay is Natural" group. It's not natura l and I know 11. But it's the best I can do. P .S. Please edit this letter 110 it will be prin table. DEAR K.: I dldn 'l need lo edit your letter. It was fin e. I uppreciate your honesty and an1 in complete agreement v.·lth everything you sai d . • • • Issues Challenge 'His topic will be Mtlre Infla· lion or Super Recession? Ho1v to Protect What You Own. 1'he meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Sept. 28. In Golde n \Vsct College Forum 1. Lodge You say there have been no 'serious diffi culties" but I'll bet there have been some prablems that need ventilating. Get counseling if you want this marrbtge 10 work. You need some emotional propping "P- DEAR ANN I.A NDERS . l bfoke my toe getling to the phone yesterday and It sti ll hurts like it happened five minutes ago. I know I have myself to blame. but if I 'vcre sure my friends wouldn't hang up after four rings it would not have happened. \Vhy an1 I \vtiting'! Because I am fed up 1vith the "Gay is Natural" advocates 1vho write to you as spakesmen for us all. It's not natural as Car as lam concerned . But it's the only way I can function. I've tried rcpresalng n1y sexual urges bul they break out in other perverted ways, So I go aJong, Jivina: a0\ic. pretending to be straight, until I'm a1\·ny from peopl1• 11.1ho \1·ould be shocked. or hurl. if they kne1v ·the tru th. A no-nonsense approach to ho1v to deal with life '.!I mosl , difficult and most rewarding arrangement. Ann Landers' booklet, "~larriage -\\'h.ai to Expect." 11·ill prepare you for better or for 11·orsc. Send your request to Ann L..anders in <·are of the Daily Pilot enclosi ng SO cents in t'Oin and a loni;:. s1ampcd. self-ad- dressed rn\•clopr. initiative began just about the tiine she and her fan1ily 1\·crc 1no1·ing into a new homr stlll in Hu ntington Beach. ··one of the diSCO\"ercd in answered. "I'll OOrcd. ·· things I've life.'' s h c never be Sons of Norway. Trygve Lie Lodge v.•ill go Hawaiian for their neXt get-together which will be a luau at 7:30 p.m, Fri· day.' Sept . 28, in lialecrest Clubhouse, Costa !\1esa. Freedoms Found. It'll maddening to rush to the phone and hear a click, or find nobody on the Sure, it's too bad I can't y.·aJk down !he street witti a guy I like and hold hands . So what? At least we aren 't kept off thr s1reet.s. She labeled this propo!>ilion "recessive" as opposed to "progressive." Tax es. she ex· plained. should be related to ability lo pay bul with this plan they would hit .lhc low and n1iddlc income people more than the upper income bracket. \Vith all the activity. t\lrs. 'furk said .!lhe felt "all su1n· mer like I've had one foot on the doWn esc<1lator ancf one fool on Ulc, up escalator." Reflecting on her changes. different experiences, outlook on life and attitudes toward people. she explained."{ don "l ~no\v where l'n1 going to be In !he next si x years ... but· I'm not :ifraid of it anymore. I used to be."' A reunion for the youths who.---------------------------------- attended a Jeaderahip aeminar at Freedoms Foundation al v·alley Forge i.!I bein,q planned by the Orange Ca u n t y Aqdl ng !h:.J1 it \\'on't allow 1hc nccchxl flcxlbility. she said. "Things like this jus1 don't go into the constitution ." ·rhc can1paign against th e: Nuptial Pledges Repeated DA VIS-NEWTON The garden! of r-.1rs. Peter I Wilkes' Glendale home was the setting for the nuptial ceremony, linki ng her god· daughter. Cindy Gene Newton and Stephen McCa ll Davi s, san of Mr. and ~1rs. Carland E. Aut \Yt»lt 1vi ll she do v1hen the actlvi1.v dies down and her 1crn1 ends·~ ~BRIC SAVINGS SPORTSWEAR Stripes & Solids Heavy quality for panh, suits and jackeh. Good colo rs lo mix and match. MACHINE WASH • TUMBLE DRY Reg. $1.88 • yard. .Davis of NewporUkac,n.__Jf---1\t; Poly-titer I Cotton . 44745" Wiile Atlcndants were l\1r s. Gerry \Vinklcr. ~1iss P a Ir i c I a Walkey, Craig Davis, H.ussel !·lanson and J ason Scoggins. The bdde Js._ a araduate.. of Palmdale liigh School and 1 Blair College of l\ledical Assistants. She also allcnded Glendale College ~·here her husband studied. He is a graduate of Cresccnta Valley Hi gh School. They will reside in Monlrose . WEN DICK E.HALVORSEN ' In a lraditional German 1 double ring ceremony In Berlin. 1\strld Ruth •lalvorsen beCMlC' I hr bri de o[ ritarion ' Ranko \Vrndlcke. , I The bride. daughter or lhc' Raymond 0. llalvorSens I or ' Costa ?<1 ,,~a. l~ a graduate of l Costa l"1es a lligh School and ucr. Her Ju nior rear was spent on the UCJ rxchange proiram 1 studying at George August U n f ver sit y. Goellingen Gcnnany, and for the past two years she hfl s 1augh1 English at a Berlin high SC'hl)()I. Re'r husband Is th e son or 1 Mrs. Gisella Gru ber of Berlin . He Is a Braduate of Berlin Te<hntcal Schools and boll> wU I continue studies at the I Frod Unlverally in Berlin. I NEUGART-KUYKEN DALL Nalna Kuykendall. daul{hterl of lhe James KuykC'nd:llls of l-lun!lng lon Bench, became !ht' bride of ·rerry Ncugarl of lllvers1!{<' during ct'rt!monie~ t:oriducted in Lhc l·luntingtonl Jlcarh f ollr Squnrr Churcti. Allcnd lng till· l.'OUple WCl'll ,lnt•kic litnman. c:ena fo'or<l . .Lavnc Ncug::irt. Gary Mcier 1 anit Don (;t.>l~lrr · I FANCY KnlT/ Wide, wide ra nge of texturiztd knit designs and color combinations. Smart for dresses, suits and blouses. MACHINE WASH • TUMBLE DRY· Poly••t•r/Nylon 188 52 / 54" Wide yd. MACHINE WASHABLE Woolens Wondtrful r • n 9 e of color •nd design com. blnations in the:5e pres. tigious pleids. 30 combinations 70% Wffl 10% .., ... 14" w'4t M1tch in9 solid color fl .. nn1l1 fo r coordlnet· ed 11.1lt1, dr1111s ind fin e sport1w11r. IS color• 70-4 .... JO% 11yl .. 1-4" wl4-4'~ Ii HOUSE oF ·i::aeA1cs " always first quality fabrics - l••lh Co ott itloz• Ho•r Pl• l1hlol ,t St~ Ol1Qt ~WV'-• .. -.; 1th-1t lrhtol Co••• Mn o -141·11516 $011to AH -l4i·Slll Ore"!efelt M911 -1~110 Pwti CY1t1ttr O''"'tthorp• t 11d Ht,bo• l• Ptlmt •t St•11to11 f1illl•rt•11 -12,·22J4 l11911CI Pot'k -121·6JJJ Gatclen Gro•• -121 1 1 8roo~hurJI !11•kl lo V0'1°1l -1)0·1142 H111ttl119to11 Ce11te• -Edi'lqo• •I Be .. c.h 11 .. J ., Hu11ti119fo11 Bt.•ch -lt7·101J 111t• rWwly"l'd~ will reside ln lOt'Ollli ''L.--------------------------------11 I LIFESTRIDE'S~ GILT-EDGED PATENT Todoy's . foshion mood : cleon , d ossic, elegonl. Lifestrido® says ii 'all . With New Joy. Tailored pump in smart pcStent leother. With the merest hint of a gilt-edged sole. Bled, brown, navy, 22.00. Mail and phone order& invi ted. Fashion Shoos, 8 , '< < . ' • • • . • • • I • • .,.,... _,,..--- • ·\ --------'tt9~. 8Blt ttiln@ norroo._~":':;, at@' , ANAHEI M NEW,ORT HUNTINtiTO.N -IEACH 444 .N. fu1lli 171 4) Sll·l 121 47 Fa 1hle" h lani 17141 644·1 21J 171 1 Edi"''' A•t1111t 171•1 rl f2 ·llll O•ANQ!, MA LL OF OllANQ-1 CI U ITOI 2100 N. Tu1tl~ Stt••I 171 41 •tl ·IJll 100 ~ot Corrlte1 Mall 12111 160·04 11 SHO il 10 A,M, •• •:>O ,_M, MONDAY tH•OU~H FRIDAY. ·s .. ru-.DA'I' 10 A.M. ,, ' ,,,.., \UNDA'I' 11 NOON •• ' '·"'· \ I' MOfld11, Stpttmbtr 24, 197.J DAJLYPILOT , 15 _ Your Horoscope Tomorrow Scorpio: Your Popularity Higher T·han Usual \ TUESDAY SEPTEMBEll 25 By SYDNEY OMARR I enjoy laughing w i l h Ge~. holding h e a t e d dl.acusslons with Aquarius, 4lnlng with C a n c e r , ei:· changlng conridences w i t h Soorplo. It aeem.s difficult, for me, to always make sense with Sagit- tariua, to to too long without bruising the feeling's o f Taurus, w I t b o u t com- numlcaling wllh Capricorn. I never intend to Mly understand Virgo, to always agree with Aries, to be free of envy of. Leo, to have complete oonfldence in Libra. There is much that I have to learn about the zodiacal signs and some vociferous mail from readers never lets me forget. ARIES (March 21-April 19 ): Your ability to e bar m associates comes into play. Some, who considered you overly aggnssive, may now say lhat you merely have pt e n t y of get·up-and·go. Display natural inventiveness. Be an individual to your fingertips. You will have back· Ing.of co-workers. TAURUS (April :ID-May 20): Follow through on hunch. many thlng.s, eiptrimenting, persons are likely to be in lblnking and cbanglnc -and pkture. F0orces tend to be scattcred.1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0iii;;;;;;._ __ .__, ________ _, you will feel ali ve! Saglttariun is in picture. You get news of SAGITTARIUS j Nov. 22· property aud values. You alsg_ Dec. 21 ): Oblain hint fron1 have chance to build. Scorpio message. Chips are down. 'nccision is made - CANCER (June 21.July 22 J: past fades and future beckons. Study Gemlnl message. You Know it and act like you are may feel there is too mucll. aware of it. Stop feeding yourself sledgehanuner words too soon. But there also is 8 like, "It should have been" or way . You discover lhe way by "If only· ... " Jnstead, main- asking. Give full play to in· lain positive attitude. tellectua1 curk>sity. Be what ICAPRIOORN (Dec. ~..Jan. you are - you will receive 19): Your creative resources backing from solid souri:e. will surprise even you -there You lllBY be judgi11g too quick· ly. Key now is to wait for others to state their cases. You do best by listening and learning. Build bridge of goodwill; highlight public rela- tions. IF TODAY IS YOUll BIRTliDA Y you a r c in- trospective, have fine imag- ination but tend to brood. You are drawn to films, il- lusions, to endeavors which permit use of creative capabilities. You are sensitive, prescient. You know when something pf importance is to occur. August was one of your most significant months of this year -in October you make new start. LEO (July z:!..Aug. 22): You is change, dynamic style. You are able to seU, to put ideas perceive, see-ahead,· get finger across, to gain from special on pulse of public. What you efforts, GemlDJ, Virgo persons write, say, advertise meets could figure prominently. Be with healthy response. Travel, prepared for change, variety study and enlarge boril.ons. and possible travel. Restle~s AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fei>. asSociate issues challenge. 18): The occult or.what is llid-Sense of humor is Important. den seems to command your ;=.=========~II vmoo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): interest. You are fascinated For· You get what you want -but now by the wiknown· by lost you may not want what is horizons, by unseen resou:ces. W k d NO CHARGE FOii: TltAVEI. TIME Steam Cleaning your car· pet is safe, effective, ec· onomical and EASY As operating a v a c u u m cleaner, this one man (or woman) ma chine gives professional results and fit s in a car seat making it available to both home owners and businesses. RENTAL RATES -!1)1~s sm•11 t11em1ta1 c11••111 S4.00 per hr. ll hn. m111.I Sl .00 per hr. for 24 hr's. 6 p.11'1. to 8 a.m. ·rote $12.00 S MINUTES OF INSTltUCTIOH ON Dl!.LIVER'I" good for you. Avoid excess. ee en er Your natural capabilities are Keep peace within family. highlighted. '\,'ou teach and Ad • • RUG DOCTOR RENTS Strive lo break new ground. learn. You gel credil for what vertismg . Taurus, Ubra persons could you do. Ph figure prominently. Mol)•Y OnC ( 714) 979.79:,i4 surprise is due. Doo't waste! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): 642-4321 1232 S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA LIBRA (Sept .. 23-0ct. 22 ): ·----------!==========~"""""""""""""""""""""O"PE"N"""B·,,•,,M,,O"N"."·"•"•T,,."""""'"""""""""""""' Aura of mystery sw-rounds some activities. Break through \ clouds of obscurity. Facts are available if you seek them. Key is not to fear truth. \York in oonjunction with organiza- tRiii;C!Wl(Tgroop;-hospital. i-.--~---vrsions of toveli11l!s:·~-------~~"';:; te31~::1Ji:,a'j,:; penons are in picture. You • • • " litmes. Sam Matsuo (left) and Jim wiU be dealing with those who SCORPIO (Oct. 23'.-Nov. 21): Okazaki, president, reflect on the can be just as stubborn as - theme Imagery 73 of the fashion you! Affair of heart may be luncheon to be presented by So-Phis featured. Love is here to stay. at noon Saturday, Sept. 29, in Air· GEMINI (May 21.Juno ~): porter Inn. The Japanese-American Accent versatility, natural social and philanthropic group has abilities. You will be trying desi~nated Services for the Blind to Reward comes your way through business project, pro- fessional endeavor. Accept responsibility. You can deal from position of strength. Popularity is higher than usual. Capricorn, C a 11 c e r receive the proceeds. You're Not Getting Older, Just Better By VIVIAN BROWN That c a t c h y advertising slogan. "You're not getting older. You're getting better!" was born ol its writer's personal frustrations. People of all ages . have latched on to the "emotional advertising message" that im· plies there is something beyond youth. says Lo i !I rreraci ·Ernst, in explaining the slogan. she wrote. "The routine seemed same as for most beauty pro- ducts. They were diJcussing 'You make me feel 80 young/ a campaign for hair color. "Why can't so mebody respect me for "bat I am ••• wlly must I be c:ompattd lo a teenager ••. " she flUggeated to tile group, using berself u ·ah example. "Why can't we tell the 'truth -I'm not getting older, I'm getting better." They loved it. A soon-to-be 40, the livel y, pretty brunette, a senior vice· president and creative direc· tor of Foote. Cone andl---------- Beldlng. recently earned the Triple Threat award given b~ the IntemaUonal Film and TeleviBklin Festival for her talellted c:ontribulioos to lbe advertising industry. BETl'ER APPEAL Intended for w o m e n, the "better" pbarse h a s proved also lo have man-appeal. LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK Th• OdrintX Plan Clft ...., .,. btcom• tfll slkn tr• ,.,.. ..... )'OU wouWllib'9be.Od1tnlxha._.,.. M«Ptulf by thOllslols .n owr tM c:ovntry tor 14 )'llrs. Gitt rid Of •xcas lat •nd li'll lon(1r. OdMa ls I tiflJ WM Md ~ SW1UOWld.Contllftsnoa11CtJOUdl1llL s~ se-c:W ulf'Clln. Odrinu Piln costs f3JSiiirUiiiir1e tconOl!tY lit• $5.25. Yw must lost ulf't flt or YoVt' money will b9 refunded. 1fo quesUons uked, Accept no Mistitlll& Sokl with thla llllf•ntn !'f: COASTLINE HEAL TH FOODS lrlCIALS FOil SIPT 24 to OCT I . . VITAMIN E C•rolt FlaworM CMw•ltl• Wahf'I 100 ·1.u. ~:."t::':'l. SPECIAL 2.25 1nna0WAV GRANOLA MMI• .ce9Nlftl te • nclpe lty AUll9 Dliwla. -,. = 1;.!"'1 SPECIAL 75' ...: .. ~·.~.::0-1 SPECIAL 1.79 VITAMIN C 250 '"I'• .': • .':.~':.:. SPECIAL 1.89 YITAMIN I CREME Hy,.Al....,_k • .. :1.":'t ... SPECIAL 1.39 Coastline Health Foods Cos"' M- H1LL•••• IOUAlll l1t •.17TM ST. ....... Tustill 1fH lltVINI' aLVD. NEAil SAV-Ott M4onM Lat-Hiik :H112 •L TOllO llO. "•All llALPHI ,.._ Within a few. ~y,s recmUy it was quoted by a commentator in reporting the basketball playoffs of the Lakers and Knicks, a baseball coach in explaining the success of a team, a vice president of a silverware company in greet·L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~ ing winners ol a table set· ~ngd~~~-l~ew:~tr: of1~. ~--•••••••••••••'ll"-11··11···11··11· •. ••II ..... -.... -.--llio-•lilllij"' THRIFTY "'"" "'' 01'>(1H.1"'T ~TOfll ~ current movie. --:- The timely phrase renects Lois Ernst's experiences in a yooth-oriented society. She had been caught in the bind "of havinr oo p 1.a c e to_go between tbe ages of 25 and 32." On every front, she and other women in her age group were being !old by youth cult advocates that they w e r e "over the hiD." TIME WASTE "I wasted a lot of my toYely ' 20s because society kept mak· Ing me feel old from 15 on. At 27, facing 30, I feH older and more depressed than ever . I wu being told if t weren't manied by th81l, forget it. I was desperately encou_raging guys who did not even under- !b\nd my vocabulary." Al :til "when the lighl• began dlmnUng" she went Into the advert.Ising business "after kooc:kinM: about in a lot of dif· ferent fields." At 38 she married u ad- vertlslng man and assumed.JI buill·in family o[ fO\R'. Her "early wasted Y'.,.., however """ Imprinted In- delibly In her mind. ONE WEEK FREE SULLIVAN PJmrSCHOOL {Kinderprten and elementary Ptoirams also) In caM you aren't already tamll'8r Wllh the SUlllvin Pre-School and El• mentary School Programa, we would like to Introduce you to our Khool willl • Spoc:lal FREE Got·Acquolntod WMk. ' Wttllout cillllgotlon, wo lnvltoyou.to COMPARE: •ALL STAFF FULLY QUALIFIED e SPECIALIZED CREATIVE PROGRAMS TEACHERS IN ART, MUSIC AND MOVEMENT • NATIONALLY·RESPECTEO SULLIVAN EXPLORATION ACADEMIC READINESS PROGRAMS• FINEST PRE·SCHOOL FACILITIES : .. HELPING OVER 5,000,000 AND EQUIPMENT, WITH NUTRITIOUS CHILDREN HOT MEALS . •IND!VIDUALLY·PLANNED LEARNING eGUARANTE;ED NO INCREASE IN EXPERIENCE FOR EACH CHILD . TUITION FOR YOUR CHILD ENROLLMENT IS LIMITED. CALL TODAY! ....... w::' Director of P1rent Rol1tlolle Donne Finnegan or Si.IIiiiii ;5&:.;45h1 M83o-766o PRE.-SCHOOL CENfERS fountain Valley Mission Viejo .,...._,, .. , ... -... ~ ......... -............. _..._, Guess who's coming to South Coast Plaza?! -.---- ' ·. • ,. I ··. .... 1 2price /(educing ···"' t\•·' • ' <. ' ' . • ., .. " ' • > ·. I " I . 18 DAILY PILOT Monday, 5,pttmbtr 24, 197J Victory Jubilation Short-lived I . ' s l(no,x Readies Rams.for SF 64,528 Stand To Applaud 31-0 Triumph By STEVE BRAND Of t1!t 0.UY ,, ... Sttlt LOS ANGELES -'niere are days in the life of a professional football team when the offense can do no wrong. Then there are the times when the defense gets the ovations. Los Angeles Rams fans had the best or both Sunday afternoon at the Coliseum. They were treated to a near-perfect performance as Los Angeles moved into sole possession of first place in the NFL West with a 31-0 rout of AUanta. !loo 'I bother searching the record books because that's tbe first shut.wt by a Rams team in the Coliseum during a league game since the club moved west in 1946. "They played a damn near pefect game," admitted losing coach Norm Van Brocklln, whose club just eight days ago scored 112 points against New Orleans. G:v:nn H:.. All Chuck Knox didn't celebrate his second ,. "'""'n .,,,. UP'I Ttl_.... straight win as head coach of. ttie Rains very long. ,. Mets catcher Jerry Grote tries to go into the stands after a foul ball " • · " said the Hun-bit by Mike Tyson. The red-hot Mets downed St. Louis 5·2 Supday f--t,,.in_gton,,...~Be"awch~resl"'::'!den~t.°""wl11"e'il.ll-'en~';;YCT.,t--toli0Id a h8lf-game lead over Pittsburgh m tlieffiffiticNattonat1-----111-- for 24 hours becauSe now it's history and .League East title derby. ' UPIT.._... JOHN HADL TAKES A FOUR-YARD LOSS WHEN TACKLED BY ATLANTA'S DON HANSEN. orts in Brief King Nixes Rematch; UCI 2nd in Tourney .;,.,., HOUSTOJ-f-Billie"Jean Kinf -sa-yl:-she 1 ved every minu te of it. but she "'on 't ive Bobby Riggs a rematch in their ten- ·s "Battle or the Sexes." Riggs doesn 't 1 ·nk that's fair. "I didn't \vant to play the match in the rst place," she said Friday after a 6-4. , 6-3 victory over Riggs Thursday ht. "I ooly did it because of what hap- ed to Margaret Court (\Vho was beat- by Riggs last May ). "You can't imagine the pressure day in pnd day out before the match 1 wouldn 't tvant to go through that twice. Well, ~ybe 'if I lost I would have." . A n teate rs SeroHd UC Irvine settled for second place in -be Anteaters Invitational water polo &..,rney ~day at Newport Harbor High, ailllng ID UC Berkeley, 6-5 .. Scoring for UCI in the title game were im Quinn, Chip Rowe, Jim Kruse. ruce Black and ·Nick Baba. ·Um.A 1--!tl~fea!"'ted USC for third place, 9-1,~d Ca_! tate (Long Beach) tripped UC Santa atbara, 12.0. for fifth place. USC's ScoU Newcombe (Formerly of pnio.a del Mar High), UCLA's G·arth ergeson (Cortnerly of Corona de! Mar ~. UCI's Jim Kruse and Guy Antley, UC Santa Barbara's Ron Misiolek fonnerly of Costa Mesa High) earned ·tourney honors. e J\'e"'4!01n be Wi11s COLUMBIA, S.C. -John Newcombe t_mmed past Dick Stockton Sunday to in the singles crown and then teamed ith Owen Davison for the doubles title ·n the $201000 Palmetto TeMis Classic. -Newcombe d~reat~ Stockton 6-4, 6-S, and collected the $5,000 first place check. e Gr een Tri11111phs EtfPICOTT, N.Y. -Hubert Green carded a 72-hole total of 266, 18-under· par, and \o,ron the $100,000 BC Open Golf Championship Sunday to pocket $20,000. Green , winner of $80,801 before this event, finished six strokes ahead of Dwight Nevil, who charged in with a round of 66 for 272. Green shot a 67 in his final round. Bob E. Smith, with a 70 and 276. \Vas alone in third. ~th also won a new automobile for the closest shot to the par three 17th pin, 3 feet , 7:y, inches. Green forged into the lead Saturday, shooting his second consecutive courSe - equalling 65 at the par 71, 6,703-yard EnJoie Golf Club course. His $20,000 first prize put him over the $100,000 mark, the 10th pro to gain that level this year. He now is loth on the money list. e Gridder Dies. ANTHONY. Tex. -'A bigb O<hool. sophomore defensive football player trot· ted off the field Friday night, told his coach he had hurt his bead making a tackle and died en route to an El Paro hospital. An autopsy was ordered on the body of Tomas Sanchez, 16, a middle linebacker for Antony High School. Sanchiez stopped a sweep by a Reserve, N.M .. , High back with a head butt tackle in the fourth quarter of a game won by Reserve 14-2. He \vas still conscious when taken to the home of a doctor who called an ambulance, but died before he reach- ed Providence Hospital in El Paso, 10 miles away. Connors Outguns Okker For $11 ,000 First Prize Ryan KO s 12; 2 Starts Left To Nail Mark The Angels' Nolan Ryan fanned 12 Min+ nesota Twins Sunday. became a 20-~e winner Tor the nrst time in his career .. of six major league seasons and moved within 15 strikeouts of breaking the ma- jor league of 38 weeks in one season by Sandy Koulax in 1965. "The Twins do seem to have people who go up there swinging those bats A ngel.t Slate An O•-... ICMl"C mt> Sep!. 2~ Tex•• at Callfot"n/• S1p1. 25 Te•as 11 Calltorn 1 1:» u,m. J:"p.m. 1:S5 p.m. !leg.I. 26 Texas at Callfomla more than some of the other team.t," Ryan said after Frank Robinson drove in five runs to lead the Angels to a 15-7 vic- tory. Ryan Will get two more starts to bttek the Koufax record. And guess who those t~-o starts will be against? Yep. He'll face the Twins Thursday night and Sunday afternoon, both at Anaheim. In compiling a 6-2 record against the major league batting leaders, the 26- year.old right-hander has struck oot 9'l Twins: Six·times, ·Ryan'·has·fanned ·to « more Minnesota batters in one game. -Ryan was setting -a-major league record by posting his 22nd llHtrikeout, plus game oi the seasoo. Ryan, who has lost 16 games, was rak- ed for 13 hits, four by American League lfatttng leader Rod" care~who raised bis average to .349. "It feels no different winning 20 than 19 . . . especially after I pitched a game like that," said Ryan. "I think rig1-now that winning 20 means more than the strikeouts unless I break Kau£ax• record. If l pitch like I did today I won't break it." . C•HfOnN Oii Mr......11 171 Alvera.cf Scllnbfm, rl FRobl11sot1, dll ROHvtr, 3b MCCr•w, lb Stinton. If 8P8rll9'r. 2b Torborv.c Chtlk, .. NAYll'I, p •ll rl'lrtlll lltrtr"' 6J308rye,cl !220 s210C1rew,21> 5242 J33SOllva.dh $011 tOOOll1,pr tOOO 621\IKinl<k,lb 3010 33:J2Holl,rf $022 •IOIHlsl1,I! SOOO 4 0 I 1 Tttrrtll,11 S I I 0 • 1 • 4 Mortzon,Jb 1 1 I II 0 0 0 0 Borgl'Mllflo c -' ·' 2 1 O.Ck.,., It 0 fl 0 0 ea11t,p 0000 Albllry, p 0 0 D 0 &CmptMll, p O O O o Toltl1 43 15 IS ll Tot•ls 31 113 t C•llfOrnlt 502 004 210 -15 Mlnnnola aoo oot 00$ -P IPMR ·•ll llSCI N. Rv•n (W, 2°'16) ' ll 7 7 5 12 O.Ck1r (l, 10-101 1/3 J J J S 2 B•n• $1/2t••12 Albl,lry 234 431 B. Ctrripbtll 1 0 0 0 e 0 we have to get ready for the 49ers." Jom Hadl, who may have added five years onto his career when be was fortunate enough t.o be traded tq the Rams out of San Diego, completed 12 of 15 for 142 yards, including scoring strikes of seven yards to Harold Jackson and 29 yards to Jack Snow. "I've never had a better day overall." admitted the balding veteran. "This game is getting hm to play again. 1rs natty too early to get very excited but a few more games like this will help." '!be other two touchdowns came on runs fo.r four yards by Jim Bertelsen and two yacds by LalT)' Smith. Another Hun· tlngtoo Beach resident, David Ray, bit all four PATs in addition to a 34-yard field goal But the defense was something to hehold. With 9:03 to _play in the game, the crowd of 64,528 couldn't contain itself any longer and stood to show its appreciation with a long ovation. Atlanta went more · than 39 minutes without a first down. U reached Rams territory only ooee and then violated the spaee by a scant. two yards .. The Falcons gained-just '70 -yards to Rams' 35L _ Art Malone and Dave Hamptm, w~ gained 264 yacds 'ln me game against the Rams last season, collected a total ol 66 in 22 tries. In all, the Falcons bad two first downs, both rushil!ll· Dick Shiner, wOO completed 13 of 15 a week ago, connected on two <:l 13 Sunday. Both of those came too late to make any difference. "When Atlanta scored 62 points, it helped us," said Merlin Olsen, the lone veteran on the defensive line. "We tnew we couldn't take that team lightly. 'lbrow fear into a team and it'll haVe its adrenalin flowing for a game. We're not as good as we sh>wed today but we have that potential." , ~!~c:" i 1~ ~ .~~ INDIVIDUAL Ll.t.Dl•S RUSHING -At18nta, Mlrkwtl *36. tt.lftptO!I IWO; l Dll APICMln. Meeutd'leofl 1M5. &err.IMll'I 1"52. L. Smllh t..Q, &•k.,. ~­RECEIVING -AN ... lt, eurrow I·'· M•IOfte , .. l l1;15 MOttft McCvt~ s.33, JKkton 3-;M, Snow 2· ••pA$$1NG -At11n11. Shiner 2 ... 1. 11 r•rds; los Niotln, Hid! 12-15-(1, 142. Says C:incy Chief Reds Say They Pref er Pittsburgh for Playoffs Cincinnati Reds officials say they'd rather face Pittsburgh in the forthcoming National League pennant playoff series. They say New York and Montreal are the teams they'd least rather meet because those two clubs have the tough pitching staffs. They offered .no preference regarding the other two contenders (St. Louis and Chicago) in that unreal Eastern Division title chase. . Reflecting on Cincy's unrelenting drive to the divisional crown, these key and contrasting mOments are the big ones : I. When the Reds blew a 5-l lead and eventually lost 8-7 in 13 innings to Lhe Dodger.; June 30, they bad fallen lt 11ames behind".U an<r-bad-reached·thelf tOwest ebb._Their record was 39-37. 2. It all tarried around the nexl day. however. Cincy swept tbe Dodgers in a double header, Winning each game by a run, each with a rally in the bottom of the ninth inning. 3. Then Sept. 34-5 The Dodgers lost three games al San Francisco $iJe the Reds were rallying ;o llfiee· beat Houston in extra innings and wlttnlnc the od>er game from tile Astros, H . 4. But perhaps the biggest single blow for the OOgers came on Labor Day (Sept. 3) wben they led San Francisco 8-1 In the top ol the seventh Inning. The Giants stormed back foe 10 runs to win it and at the time I felt the psycliokJ8icol damqe from that might be too great for LA to recover. * Weekend leftovers: Some Orange Coast College fans are still sinunering over this cohunn's in· ference that OCC's defense was.to blame for the 21-27 football loss to Golden West. They allege that faulty perfonnance by the offense and a penalty were responsi· ble for most of Golden West's points being set up. And that is true. However, the de!ense is responsible for stopping the opposition wherever it has the ball, not just to keep the other guy from marching 100 yards. Defenders are like firemen -they WHITE WASH OLINN WHIT• · show their talents when caUed to put out a bfaze, not when conditions are oonnal. lmaglne U Judge Roy Bean had been .-. bueball pitcher. 'Ibey tb<y coa1d have accused Wm of tbroiwin& beanbells. Don't ask Santa Ana High track coach Earl Engman how he enjoyed his 63-day excursion to Europe. While dining with his wife Mary Lou at the Royal Dublin Hotel someone spirited off with her purse. All il bad in it was over $3,000 in cash, traveler's checks and jewelry, plus an expensive camera, their passports and other documents. Won't Let It Get ·Away UCLA must have the least attractive major colle1e fooUKill bome schedule of Ute year. Having osed one bf those Collleum. datea already agalnat Big -Ten Dunkle Iowa, the Bruins come back lpll!l!_t!lob-1U!!U..&!U ... llle jllhJ), W-gtoa (gup;) ud Oregon Stal<! tciiob!). 11tGoe foes carrently combille ~ for a record of. one Win, Jdne, debts. ~ I . • LOS ANGELES (AP) Willie efawfonl announced In the Los Angeles clubhouse before Sunday's game with the Cincinnati Reds, "We don't want them popping any champagne at our park." The Reds didn't sip the bubbly, losing to the Dodgers 6-4 and now return home to Riverfront Stadium tonight where they hope to cllnch their third Western Division title in four years. 1be defen-- dlng Nalional League champions have already clinched at least a tle for the ti· tie. "We're not letting it get away," prom- ised Cincinnati manager Sp a r k,y Anderson .after the ~ers ended a ,.,,.,,,..pine losing streak against Cin- cinnati. ' ). "Sure, I'd have like to have had it over but nothing'• going to happen. Believe n1e, it won't. This bas been " 11tWying year, probably my most sallsfyinS yet because of all our injuries and our bed start. So nothing's going to happen now.',' WOM;l.N ·suRVlf_ES 250-MPH CRASH Steve GarveYAridTOOi Paciorek slug· ged two-run homers and Tommy John earned his 15th victory, the 'most he's ever won in the big leagues. "Maybe .-Omeone will hijack their "SEARS POINT, C;jli!. CAP) -A plane," joked John , explaining about the rocket-poWered dragster crashed at more only avenue remaining for the Dodgers. thah 250 miles per hour during an e1- C111c1.e11 14, '"" -'llffl• C4> hibition run here but Its female drivfr •• r tr rt111 •• ' tr r'tl walked away wilh· only mllor injuries, ROH.II •110ll:wsell.•• 3001 • -MDrgan, 111 4 2 3 1 PIClorlk, Cf .. 2 2 2 OUlctalS 5ald. ,• : < ~~;~~·c1., ~ : : i ~~ . .,11 ~ : : : ~aula Murphy, holder of several litid F11tt1r, ct " o o o Jos11ue, 11 o o o o speed records, was taken to a ne~ ~:n~,~ rf ! g : : ~~;.~ord.11 S.: ~ : hOlpital for observaUon Sunday after . e Mlnl!•.3tl ' o 1 o YM0tr.c 3 1 • o j"'-!Aent which one Si*Clator descri CNnt\1,.. 2. o O O l acy,21> 3 1 l 0 ,_,.... .' that h d I · · G1011ano, sill 1 o o o Jo1111. P 2 1 1 1 aa "a Jet plane a 06t its w s CrDll:ty, 11 0 0 0 0 Brtwtlr, P 0 0 0 0 1..0ol.. •~ tak ff" ~O:.:·r ··}·:·::: ·· · ............... ··· .. trl~-M~~Y0w~~·tz1i;g·k,"·~·~·ia;··· · ·· -· Slthl.ph 1 0 D 0 r! ll ....... rd o/ ... Kosco, rf 1 1 i 1 O"O' quatter m e s~ reco ~ Total• l5 • • ' 'Tott!i tt ' 1 ' _;.a. al Seilts P&fnt lntema"-1 ClncW!atl aot lot NII -4 '~'t"'' ·~ l• • ......., 1,. m" ': .t"-' Raceway when a fuel valve apperently Norrnen IL.. 12-l)l c 1 6 s •i• ': hllled, keeping the hydrogen peroi:ille N•I• ~ : : : g : pqwer dragster. undet'. power pa11t Qie ~:~hit. 1~11 111s 1 ,. 4 o 4 sliutoff point. Unable to stop, she wellt 8~":.e~ uo).1T~:01.1 ....lo.tJ. 0 ' off the end of the raceway ,and crashed.i LOS ANGELES (AP) -Leflhander lmmy Connors outlasted veteran Tom kker by winning a dramatic tiebreaker n the second-set Sunday to capture the acific Soulhwest ~Tennis Championship befOl'e a partisan crowd. Connors, a 21-year-old fonner UCLA student. woo the match by scores of 7-5, 1.S to earn the $11,000 first prize. Connors had been seeded sixth and Okkcr, the~ yMN>ld Crom the Netherlands, No. 7. match went into overtime for the 12·polnt tiebreaker. 'lbe first man to ·win seven points and lead by two would win the set. . . ' Connors scored three service breaks and Okker two and they were sUU tied at 9-9 with CoMors serving twice. The youngster's first serve was an ace, for a JO-& lead, and then Connors gained a -slight position advantage with his next serve. Raiders Deflate Super Bowl Clta1i1p 1be 90-mlnute match under sunny skies, wjth temperatures in the high 70s, . ,.,bi·~·!d bi t unusual as neither player 1 t the net. pteferrlng to stand back nd fire Jong.range shots at each other. scored two service breaks to tn.te the first set 7·5. Okker fought back In the. seoorid but 1-1 .... 1dfl'f galn an advantage and lhe two tied six games api ece when the ,_ Okker raced alter a well-placed shot oo the sldo of the court and Connors then used a vicious two-handed forehand shot down the middle that Okker never got the racquet on. Connors had defeated top.seeded SlM Smllh :J.6, M, 7"' In quarterfinal play and theo stopped Raul Ramirez IH. 6-2 In the semifinals. Okker had beaten Ille Nastase 2·6, 7·5. &-2 in sc1nlfinal action. BERKELEY (AP) -The Miami Dolphina looked like SUper Bwl cham· pions only brieOy against the Oaltland Raiders, who plan oo being the ~ext Super Bowl winners. · 111'be score doesn't indicate how~ one-- •ided the game really WOJ," Dolpllins fullback Larry Csonka admitled alter the Raiders scored• U-7"Vlctory Sunday to ' stop Miami's National Football "'8eue winning streak at 18 games. • "To hell with the streak. We juat want to get to the Super Bowl again,'' said 7 star ~ In his 30llth regular season~~ ·~oi>lball. ga~, kicked a t2 yartlcillid .-i tl!ne plays laler. He bad field pis 1ro111 46, II and 10 yards ID Ille nexl *"" ~ :)" 1ceo1111t for all the ~J~. di be .o..u...:'ltliout wfl1 Ii aiilllll'I it»re."i ~ bul Jel'I .... _for~.::_ .. Id Raiders cooeti ,,...Midden. """" lel 118 ilvor thia vlCIQey I« llJihile.'1 . • . ~ Oakland threw only 10 ~ Sunday ·- and quarterback Daryl~ Lamool"' ~. 1'Their defense dictated what I ratt • went in knowing we. wtren't goinc throw much." 'The Raiders tolaled 187 yards Oil lrowid, led by fullback Marv Hu ., Lamoril"' had "'l•en completlona 8! illr yanla. "Their runn,ing game was outat' '11iey lll!ve -a great olfenstvc llnc; jljlt ale us up," sald. jgflng COiiet\ Shula. ' I • •• N amatli Sidelined Injuries, Upsets Mark Pro Action 11\juries and upsets marked the second weekend or professional football Sunday with New York Jets quarterback Joe Na.m.alh racked up In the 1ets' 34-10 vie· tory over Baltimore and the W8shington Redskins succUmbing to the lowly St, Louis Ca rdinals. Namath, dumped by blitzing Baltimore 1lnebacker Stan White, suffered a right shoolder separatlcio. Namath apparently will have to under- go w.rgery kDocklng him out ol action !OT the balance OI the ·- Sub QB Al Woodall led the Jets to the victory with the help or eight ib- ter~ptioos -one short of the NFL five tackles had ejght aqlats' and sacked ' . Phipps lhree'Umes. Frank Lewts scored twice for the Steelers on pass receptions of eight yards and 43 yards from Bradshaw and backup QB Terry H~atty. MINNESOrA AT ClllCAGO -The Minnesota Vikings rallied to a 22.-13 triwDpb over the Chicago Bears SUnday with the help. ol rookie rumlni back Chljclc "-and live field goals by Fred C.Ox. .. The Vikings erased an early lCMI deficit and turned the game around by S<Oring their ooli t9<1chdo~ and a field. goal late in Uie first hJ?l for a 13-10 ad- record. vantage. • I SPORTS Chargers Laud O.J.; But Unitas Sparks Victory "lt wa::\'1 anytlling we hadn't done 'pped oil 116 ds 16 Foreman r1 yar on SAN DIEGO (AP) -It's a measure of before, i·us our nickel defense -five ~ · the s D' carrJes. • o.J. Simpson's ta lent that an 1ego defensive backs,'' explained Jets coach Perhaps the turning point of the game ' Chargers congratulated themselves for Weeb Ewbank. came· late in the aeCond quarter when holding.him to 103,yards. - Ser-Vite F i1"st Newp ort Harbor No. 3. in Ratings 'Newport Harbor H i g h ' s Sailors have moved up one notch to th1td place in the of- !lclal Or-• Coun1y prep roolball rankings as selected by the Daily Pilot. The Sailors of Newport mov- ed · up on the basis of a 31·3 ro.ut of Ceron.a del Mar Friday evening. Other changes from last week's rankings round Loara slipping to fourth after a 19-16 victory over Warren. Westminster Cell to eighth after a 35-20 loss to non-county Coe Lakewood. Mater Dei stayed in the lop 10 at ninth CoJlowing its 7-7 tie with Santa Ana and Los Alamitos gained a spot ~at loth after shelling Katella. Newport Harbor remains the top team in the Orange Coast area, a unanimous choice for the honor. . ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10 Pos. Team, record points 1. Servile (1-0) 56 2. SA Valley (1-0l 54 3. Newport Harbor (1--0) 471 4, Loara (1--0) 44 5. Kennedy ( 1--0) 34 6. Edison {1-0) 23 7. Fountain Valley (1--0) 21 8. Westminster (~I ) 16 9. Mater Del (0-0-1) lt J(). Los Alamilos (1-0) 8 ORANGE COAST AREA TOP 5 1. Newport Harbor (l--0) 2. Edi.son (1-0) 3. Fountain VaUe})(l-0) 4. Westminster (f1!t) 5. Mater Dei (0-0-1) Football Standings ~t. Louis, the NFL's worst in fumbles Bears player Jim Osborne fumbled a "We had a great back to contain and and interceptions for 1972, disdained both kickoff that led the Vikin~ to a ~yard -we contained him." Chargers coach }00th Wm' habits during a siege in the second half Harland Svare said with satisfaction Sun-lhat wiped out a 10-7 deficit. field goal 13 seconds \ater. day after his team trounced Simpson's N•llon11 Foolbllt L11<1u1 New Y«• Jet• Ml1ml Buff1lo W L T Pcl. Ph. OP ll 0 .50D•t ll 110 .500 21 ?5 110 .500 31 •7 0 ? 0 .ooo 2D •1 020 .0002•51 New Encil1ncl Balli~• c.ardinals quarterback Jlm Hart hit 13 SAN FRANCllCO AT DENVER Buffalo Bills, 34-7. F La d ct-11tr11 Dl'fl•I"' of his last 17 passes and wound up with &uce Goueti11 ftfth Held goal of. the "We just kept after him, we didn't get 011 ll r }" a:::=~ l ~ & 1 ~': ~ ~ ___ _JJl7JJotlfl281UJ!oxrC:2&iUIO.~yaardsals~. -----:--,-~--!g~ai:miee:;w~i~th~ll:_:~se<Oll~~ds~le~ft-.ga.ve...Uie-San-out-<lf--position-~--he-d.idn!&-find-any~--'-------~'----l~'!!='~.., A-~~ ·= ~ ll Don Shy returned a kickoff 97 yards for Franci.ICo 49ers a 36-34 victory over gaping holes.'' Coming Up?. Denver w"'•"' ,01~11,on·"° 62 '6 • ' a TD and Washington's Herb Mulkey' Denver Sunday. Simpson's yardage on 22 carries would ---oatianc1 1 1 o .D ,. 31 returned the favor, going '11 yards {Of a Go.ssett's laat effort was a 39-yarder have been exceptional for most backs but f.1~"'Di~tv J l g :.= ~ ~ score on the ensuing kickoff. ' before 50,966. Denver had jumped out to it appears skimpy compared with his "DALLAS (AP) -The Dallas 11111111111 Cll'lflf'llK• El••where In lhe N"FL: a ls.-0 lelld Mld appeared totally ln con-record 250 yards against New England a Cowboys try lo give coech e 11 ,.,... 01¥11fon ..... trol. week ago. Wilh their star held in check, Tom Landry a mil estone looth b'.;11;:u1s i g g l:= ~ ~ DETROIT AT GREEN BAY -The Green Bay Packers salvaged a 13-13 standoff with the Detroit Lions on Chester Marcol's 24-yard fi eld goal with 19 seconds Jert to cap a last-ditch drive led by reserve QB Jim Del Gaizo. MarL'Ol's second field goal climaxed a 56-yard march after Detroit, hampered by turnovers most of the way 1 had taken " JJ-10 lead with 4:22 left on 1.tbree-yard TD run by Al tie Taylor. The Packers took a~ltH-halftlme-lead on a 30-yard field goal by M&rcol uid a five-yard scoring run by MacArthur Lane. Errol MaM brought Detroit within slriking distanee by kicking a 38-yard field goal. HOUSTON AT CINCINNATI Houston suffered its 13th straight Na- tional Football League loss Sunday !'-8 CincinnaU powered its.way to a 24-10 v1c- tory. 1!>e losers got a 103-yard opening kickoff return tor a touchdown by Bob Gresham, but Cincinnati_ ca_~e _ _!lack _ beliiOO the running and rece1Ymg or-- Essex John.son. . . anciMatl snapped a l~all situation with two fourth quarter TDs, one a ~ yard pass frOm Ken Anderson to Bob Trumpy and the other on a three-yard run by Bobby Clark. Johnson ran ror 131 yards, scored on a t~yard run and caught five passes for 49 yards. CLEVELAND AT PITISBURGH - ·Four field goals by Roy Gerela and the timely passing of Terry Bradshaw . Jed the Pittsburgh Steelers to a methodical 33-& rout of Cf eve land Sunday. It was lhe Browns' fourth loss in as many games at hostile 'Ibtee Rivers Stadium, where Cleveland bas Y~ to score so much as a touchdown. Defensively, Pittsburgh beld Cleveland lo 84 yanls rushing and barassed quarterback Mike Phipps into three interceptions. Steelers tackle Ernie Holmes made , •. 1• DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA YOLVO 1 BACK TO ; SCHOOL SPECIALS! ·--· But Denver quarterback Charley the inexperienced Bills were no match National Football League vie-~~-:~1~[!, Gl•n11 : f ~ ~ :I ~ Johnson was intercepted five times in the for the Chargers. tory tonight in a nationally PhH1de11>11i1 o 1 1 .250 '6 57 game and that ultimately made the dif-"Buffalo is going to be a very fme televised m.U:tcb with lhe Jowly ference. team but they're going with young people New Orleans saints who limp Mtnilt10l1 Grten BIY Detroll Chteaao CMfral 0 1\'ltlon "l'bree cl those steals were converted and you should be able to beat. a team into Texas Stadium after into 17 poilltS, and 49ers quarterback like that .. Svare said. · absorbing the worst .defeat in ' I D 1.000 '6 79 1 1 .750 J6 20 011 .2501Jl1 '020 .00030•2 John Brodie used big plays to set up The ail.ts, .l-l, fell behind quickly when their brief history. another touchdown and field goal.. the ctwgers' Ron Smith fielded a nrst-Landry has a ~7-6 record WHfmt Dl'llilon Lot A11<1tt11 2 0 0 1.000 54 ll All1nt1 I 1 0 ,SOO 61 31 Denver put tog~ther scoring drives of uarter punt, cut to the left sideline and in his 13-years as the only 64 and 65 y1rds m the fourth period to icimped ·n yards for a touchdown. coach Dallas has ever had. Sin Fr11'1dsco 1 1 D .SOO 49 S5 N1w OtltatiJ o l 0 .000 7 62 $11111111.,.. Scorwt 1..41 Angtln ll.t: Att1nt1 0 take a 34-33 lead. . "That seemed to-set the tone for the -llNSir CITY AT NEW YORK whole day," said Buffalo coach Lou On-TV-Tonight GIAN'IS -'l'be New Yock GtuCI lllvag--Saban. "Dllr·ootside man got eaught m-Channel 7 at 6 S.n Diego :W, Duffllo 1 Pittsburgh 13. C~Yllllld 6 -- 0.ll'Olt 13, Graen Ba~ 13, tie Clncl11111tl 2.A, Howton 10 ed a 23-ZI tie with 1 tbe IUl'prUmg side and you can't cover punts doing Philadelphia Eagles Slinday cu Pete thal" Gogol.ak's t4-yard field kool with no lime Siltljl<Oll tied. the game brielly In the remauung ·~ tbe finaJ. NFL game at second quarter with a s Ix:· yard Y<mk:ee Sta~um. . . touchdown run, but the passing or 41>- Philadelphia toolc control in the ~hird year~ld John Unitas quickly moved the period. cutting the New York margm to Chargers in PoSition for the first ol. oae point oo Tom Dempsey's third field Robert Holmes' two touchdown plunges goal , then vaulting into a 1~10 l~d man and San Diego controlled the rest of. the eight.yard TB run by Tom Sullivan, who game ... · rushed !or 100 yards. . Uniias In bis 17th National ~ootball Again Philadelphia regamed ~ ad-League ;..-...,,.aimpteted 10 ollf passes vantage Wllh J:~ left oo Roman for J7S yards and two toucbdoWns 26 Gabriel's Ii-yard TD pass to Harold yanls to Oary Gani.son and 12 · yar.h to Carmichael rookie tight end James 'lbarton. Norm Snead then Jed an 8.l-yard soor· The veteran's performance left him ing_ ~ch that culminated w l t h two yards short of be<omlng the fJTSt Gogolak s placement. NFL quarterback to paJ. !or 40,000 KANSAS CITY VS NEW ENGLAND yards, but Unltas belitued the figure. AT FOXBORO -Lm DawlOO end OOs "It's just another number, something for Taykr combined for a couple of long you guys to write about ," he told passes to set up a leCOnd period reporters. Jouchdown aad field goal in leading While former Southern Cal Heisman Kansas City's Ollefs to a 11).7 Win over Trophy winner Simpson was having a error-plagued New ·En~ Sunday. pld day , another USC Hetsman recip- 1'he Patriots, suffering' their second lent, San Diego running back Mike Gar- straight loss, averted a sJ;pltout~whea Jim rett, was on the bench. Plwtkett hit Reggie Rl!Cker with a 5Q. ·yard pass and rookie Slim Qmolngbam plunged one yard !or a touchdown wtth 59 • ' 1 0 0-1 1 14 '--3( Landry and the C.Owboys stumbled through a O-ll-1 season in 1960. However , since 1966, Dallas bas 75 victories - more than any other NFL team during that periOO. Nine other coaches have posted JOO or more victories in the NFL. Landry bas · one distinction no other coach owns -be bas taken Dallas to seven consecutive N F L pla)rofis. Dallas has won six division titles, two NFC con- ference crowns, and one NFL title in Super Bowl VJ. New Orleans . was bombed 62-7 last week by Atlanta and K1nu1 City 10, Naw England 1 01kl1nd 12. Miami 7 Mlnnesot1 22, Cl'lfclQO 13 New York Jets 3-4, B11tlmort 10 New York Giants 23, Pl'lflldell>hl1 23 (11•) 'S.n Fr•nclKo 36. 0en...,. :M St. L31Jll 3', W1N!lnoton 21 Tonight's G•rrw New Of'lt•ns 11 011111 Slpf. JI ChlClllO 11 Dftly1r Clnclnn1t1 11 sin 0111110 GreM 11 • .., •I Mlnnesola New El'IQrllnd at Ml1ml N-Otltan• 11 Baltlmort Los Anpeles II San F• .. ICIKO New YOl'k Gl1nt1 •I ci..,.11nd New Yotk J ets 11 Buff1lo 0.kl•nd II K•ns1u City Plttsburah •I Howton SI, Louis 11 001!11 W1shl11QIOl'I 11 Phll1d1ll!hl• <kt. I Altlnll 11 Dtllroll Cross Country should be in a fighting mood u ov1n11 JV 21, El Toro u alte . b th I 1. o.V. FurtlM (El ll:AT.0; 2. r a roastmg . Y e ans C•meron tLJ n .111.01 JotlY tL 12:1s.01 and new coach John North, A. Dtlffl'nd1U CLl 12..21.01 s. w1nram1 Who sal.d "When you play th.15 <L> 11:n.o: '· Fuie11 (El 12::111.01 1. Gutl«lel (l) 12:«1.0. Othff1: I. Fon-bad the Little Sisters or the Ian• (E), 10. Miiier (E), 11. Or(lpeUI fE), ll. Kr1nt1 (E), 11. &ltn (El; If. Poor couJd beat you.:• Marker t31. "The game wasn't as tight11,.-;;ii;;;i;;;i;i;; ____ ;m;;;;;-ill as the score indicated," said NEWPORT LEASES Saints publicisl Larry Liddell. '74 AUTOS. Tl.UCKS, YAHS "We could have been beaten COMmlTIYE PllCES seconds remaining. · Kansas Cily coach Hank Stram called it a ' "great win." ActuaUy tbe CllleCs showed litUe despite the return or Dawson, '!ho missed bis mates' :IS-13 loos 83-7 but . Atlanta bad two 2400 wn t Coast HhJltwoy llllOIVIDUAL LEAOliltS hdo Ued ba k d RUSHING -Bllff1lo, SI~ l'J·lllJ, Wilkins. 11-touc Wru!I ca c an 645 2202 1S1 s.n Oifeo, c. Jona 1~ Hotmn INt. Tllofm• fumbled another time in our • · ,.11. , . ..'.•~n~d~zo~n~e:_:.~"------~~~~~""'!~~~~~~ 11.ECEIVlNO -Buff1lo. Hin 1·111, Sl_rmour ,._,.: Sin DIHQ, WlllllfM S-31, ~rrl-UT, Tbuton J-4. ~J~2,.-.r:;ufft.~ br=sou·n1~~.l'o-~M~·m: Clark ·..s-1, • ·to Los Angeles. · -Basebalf-Stamlings " ~CAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dlvl------,Eall.DMsloo w L Pct. GB w I, Pct. GB N~-,.Yort 79 Tl .006 Baltimore 93 62 .600 Pittsburgh 77 78, .503 II Booton 83 72 .535 10 st Loui3 76 ID .487 3 Detroit 83 72 .535 10 Chicago 75 ID .484 311 New York '11 79 .'94 16\\ Montreal 75 ID 484 311 Milwaukee 72 83 .465 2t Philadelphia 69 ,,, .442 10 Cleveland · tl8 ' tl8 .436 25~i Wesl Dlvlllo. W•I Dlrilloa Cuicinnati 96 IO .81$ Oakland 92 M .590 Los Angeles 9t tl8 .SID 511 Kansaa Cit,. '1715 ;: ·~J 1! 11 ~ Francisco 86 7li .551 18\1 Minnesota · Houston 78 ~n .49'1 t81h Chi~go. 75 81 .481 17 Atlanta 75 12 .!78 21 \1 Calilornia 74 Bl .477 17\1 1"4 VOLVO l ~CH, ··4 ·~·:.·-...;·~;-.~'fO'(Mf' 111 .. ,.., """ 111.tdl lllfltllt, · Sen Diego 58 119 .m 31 Texas 54 lO'l .346 38 .... ,. ..... ~.~·· ......... ~~·~···· ............. , .. '... . ... ····~··GaN:i .................. . $877 1f61 TOYOTA $1199 IM7 VOLVO 4 DI: 144 $1177 1'71 TOYOTA CORONA 4 Dl ~ '=9...::--· ... ,...,.,,, ... :: .... Phll.O.IPlll1 ,, Clll(IOO 7 N'1f YOMI: t -2. Cll~llncl 1·1 Pltttburotl 6"7, MontrNI i.• Ottroll 3, aotton 0 Nrw YOl"k J~ Louf• 1 OHMllCf 10. Clllcapo s :~~~f.:·11• s.~tt:.nci~, e111rmor1,, Muw111ttt 1 Loa AMtlel "° Clnc:IMAotl • K•nui C,,., 1, T1tt1t • CeltfonlM IJ, Ml...wMt• 1 ,....., .. ._ PlttJl:IUl'9tl IMoeM Jl·t:r•lld lrllff l).lJ) 11 Mon-T.-W'I 6-.. lrNI '"'"l\o 1•11 Ind •llv 7·1) Solton !Ptttln ).!SJ II Dttnllt IHoldsworttl 0.01 hll Ditto TroeclrlM r 4 ) 11 ClndMl!I tGrll'M11't' Ml"""9tt tfffrt f.tl .e o.klancl (Odom S-121 ·~~ "~~1lal"tlnt U.1\J •I ~ton llllWll ,,_ T .... ''"°°'"' ...,, •t Cllllo!'lll• {Wl"\1111 1'·1f) or Sltlolr lf.111 ,..., ~IV a•mH tchtdulef CJnry .-ldlldu-..... ~··••!Mt Mll'llMIOll at 0.ltnd Ttx .. 11 C1Ufo(Nll K.tnMt City If Cftk:tg0 Hitw Yortl 11 Ml'-'*" to.ton tt Clhti-t Detroit •t hnlmcn • ' I J41 RARE SCOTCH The Plta111re Principte How many things in life, these days, can you go to again and again with the same expectancy of pleas- urt and never be disappointed? J&B, we're happy to say, is one of 1hosc things. And, in that sense, a rare pleasure. But J&B is also one of the most popul ar sco1ch~ in the world: And, in th at sense, a very frequent pleasure. Which just g~s to prove once again that life is full of beaulifuJ contradic1ions. • , ' ,. . " • MMdl)', Stpttmbf'r 24. 1973 DAILY PILDT Pilot· Pigskin PICKEROO Sponsor9CI By DAILY PILOT For Weekly Second Place Winner .. 17 StJLEach for Third, Fourth and-fifth Place-Winnen..---1---1 Hei-e's how you can be a pigskin prophet for.profit. Weekly cash prizes are offered to winners of the Pilot· Pig skin Pickeroo game. Top ~inner ••ch we~k gefs $50 in c19sh. Second place winner gets $20 1n cash and third, fourth and fifth place winners ••c.h get $10 in ca$h. All "cash" a ctually is delivered to winners in the form of chBcks to be picked UP, by " winners at one of the I 0 participating members of the Harbor Boul evard of Cars a1sociation. Checks for this week's contest will be prepared by: Bauer Buick 2925 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa The 10 participafing auto dealerships 1long Costa Mesa 's "Harbor Boulevard of Cars" are: Atlas Chiysler-Plymouth, Bauer Buick, Connell Chevrol et, Costa Mesa Datsun, DavB Ross Pontiac, Johnson & Son Lincoln-Mercury, Miracle M•zda, Nabers Cadillac, Theodore Robins Ford and University Oldsmobile. Watch for this player's form eech week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle the team you think will win in each pairing in the list of 30 games end s•nd in the playBr's form entry blank or • reasona bl• fac. simile. Then watch the DAILY PI LOT sports pages for each week's list of five winners. RULES J. Sul>""'' Ille t11tl')' Dl•11k llefow or 1 r...,..Di. f1nhnll1 •f II fo "'*" lht c1nles1. "lt1uo111bf1 flc-'mll1" t1 d.,lntd •• 111 "Qlcl dW1Jcat1." Enll'IH -•t bl ""'"...,,.. i.. 1111 •l!d .,,..,. fo 11c1n,.,. /IHftlng, r~ whk~ Hrl't conform lrrill INI dillqVIUlled, '· Selld ii to: PILOT PIGSKIN PtCKl!ROO CONTEST, s111m o.p.rtmtnf. P.O. Box TUO, COSl1 MHI, CA, '2'26. I. Only -tnlry Ptr PltlOll Plrtnl!llCI Hcil -'r. C11tfod11tll 1re l dYllff "'II nllllHf .,fkilll ml)' ll'IYllhJllll ll!Ufllpfl 111"111 from I 11rt9!1 IOdr9'1 I r liftt'* en.,..loPI •1111 m1y dt.,.....,111)1 111y "lk1lllou1 ,,..,,.... antrlt• "*' diKOYtrtd. Otc:lslon Of , ......... lhl• """' _,, INI IQ> C"IPllld 11 Hiii/ /1)1 •II conlul111b. 4. £11!r'" rn.st bl pHlm1r11td "'' Iller m111 Thvrsclly AM. •r mu1t llt dtUYlt'tll fo t1>t DAILY PILOT .,llc1 11)1' ,,M. Th!Mday, S. P•rtkipati119 SPOnso" •1111 llltlr tmpfo)'ffl •IMI OAIL Y PILOT tmpioyHs •lld lltllr lml'Mdl111 f1mllin ••• nor .,1,11111 i. tnt1r. 4. TIE BREAKER ILANK MUST Bl! f'ILLEO IM OR l!MTRY IS VOIO. .---------... , I I I I I I ENTRY BLANK Circle tnms you think wlll win this w•k'• t amn (horn1 tum is Heond one Hated) Rams vs San Francisco Cincinnati vs San Die90 Green Bay vs Minnesota NY Giants vs Cleveland Oklahoma VS use "UCLA vsMiclilgan-State Auburn vs Tennessee Notre Dame vs Purdue Pitt vs Northwestern Penn vs Lafayette I · I I I .~ .I I I I I I I Cal vs Army Wisconsin vs Nebraska VMI vs Tulane I I I I· I I 1. •• Navy vs Michigan Idaho vs Washington State West Vir9inia vs Illinois VMI vs Tulane Golden West vs Palomar Saddleback vs Citrus · I····· LonlJ'··Beach .. vs Oran911 ··Coast ·· ·I·· I Chaffey vs Mater Del I Santo Ana vs Corona del Mar I Oran9e vs Edison I I Fountain Vallily vs Huntington I Uni vs Mi5sion Viejo I Westm inster vs LB Wilson I Estancia vs Marina , I Costa Mesa vs Newport I I Rim of World vs Dana Hills 1 .. SGn Cle mente vs Laguna leach I , I Tll lltbl(IR. -Mr .,._, 111 111t .. Ill ........, •I lltl• .. tctr .. 1111 111 >t .. ma Nst• 11M1.,. h , N•rne I ~ I ~-------,. A•drus ,I Cl; ZI :t ' I =------~-•. ~ ... --------I ' ., . .. Lii DAILY "LOT AMILIR TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF JEFF, "!'HIS IS ·NJrnONAL. 'DOG YIEEK!-DON'TRU!l-JU5TGTAND .a.ND LOOK +!IM I~ °™E EYE AND l3E FRIE 'I• FIGMENTS Monday, Sepltmbtr 24, 1973 Cl.ti>ll ,.Y ROOM? IM<AT'S WROH6 WITH IT, DAD? WHA1 A KffNO WEA! FOR, M!OM COUl-D E'E MORE WORTHY, MORE PESERVING1 MORe MERl'TtP?! - by Dou9 Wildey by Tom K. Ryan MORI!. 1 INPl!JTeP! ) J ~!f by Al Smith by Dale Hale NANCY by Emie Bushmlller I'M LOST TDDAT'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 48 lllurtrlted .. 1 Moving •Ir 50 "·-· bltnl" a Hoct•y or 51 Bl1clr.thom l1croue 52 lndl1n VIP 10 New YOfk 56 Woven f\Jll 1trtet width 14 PulittM 59 "--- Prile _Qpeu" winnlf 61 Shed droPt 15 Ext.nded 62 Romen god OY8f 63 Rub out 18 Jal---64 Fllrtetlou• 17 Horn color 1tere _ 18 Utility 86 Cronkite'• 20 Proud forte weNter -M Acted 22 Noteltrll'\'le furlou1ly~ 23 Smell SJIOll 67 Humor ,24 Mr. Garrowey 2fi Vend agein 21 Revere '32 Lo0ger'11ool 33 fltelinqui•h en office 35 Rnitt euthorJty 38 Loud no1H1 31 English tffport 40 Thorough• ' fer• 41 Knocked for 1~1·· .•... t G' Flttttirff < 46 Pertalte of .tf Sent• different wey ' . • DOWN 1 Armed conlllct1 2 "--- Rhythm" 3 ln1im1te 4 Str ip 5 Senk e 1hip pu1p09ety 6 Propounds 7 In 1u1ptus B Ump 8 U.S. · Preeklent· 10 Nomad 11 A"'eyfrom the "'Jnd S1turd1y'1 Puzzle Solved: 12 Colleen 13 Titt 19 SwHlheart 21 Naneted 24 Hinder 25 Electronic device 28 BeniVlment 27 Spenl1h titi. of respect 28 Very lntenff 29 Appro~. 30 Playfully mock 31 Golfer Lee 34 Ari:rat Gr1ndme ···- 37 Molllflert 39 Showed again 42 Menu item «Condemn 47 Ou1bur1t of rage 49 Rarely 51 P1rctiv• 52 Mikita or Mualel 53 Al111: 2 words 54 Roos11r'1 round 55 Barrier 56 Hence .. 67 ·AQrieultur1I • building ll8 Htttened 60 Mhe11one Pl.EASE CLOSE YOUR MOUTJ.I SOI CAN TELL. WJ.10 YOU ARE PEANUTS J'ior SATl5Flfl) W ITH SLADE ROBERT&' EXPLANATIOH ~BOUT THE T'NO MEN, SAM DRIVER PRESSES. HIM FOR I J I l • THE TRUTH! MISS PEACH DICK TRACY , ' --...-. • • 1 DOOLEY'S WORLD HIV Mc»\ $AYS 1'MA'f ~'N SM!i WAS~, 9"' Wl>S AN IDEALIST. .. SALLY BANANAS 01<,fell'l,le.T's I.JIN T~I S Ne~T oN8 FoR OOR ee1Pvee> FloYo! GORDO MOON MULLINS r c,ANIT PUT OFF BUYING NfW st{OES·" IH COi u:6f, SU• ~O'll>OW-* 1JI' WOlll.O ... --... --- ' ANIMAL CRACKERS 1..IK'E I 5AIC>, SAM WITH WHAT? .,,I JUST WORKfO THE.Y HAVE HO M>AAS Of< THfM ... ANO THff/IE OUT COLO/ • • Ii n If , by Mel by ll09er lradfleld • I Charles Barsotti o"'f,'y"O() KNOW OLO rt.o'rt>, atCJIY'S 8(.0IJING. by Gus Anlola by Ferd Johnson by R09er lohn ' r.> IT ti\Q Flol.Jl:r' l: u»,t> .:> ~Ii.I A llRl>llOUS& Y I\ /1! I ~1111i H4 11Wtll, I en nite tel tltrem Ute 111M lllockll1 reveladoa It -Ml ti llioM lleortop, oo lor -I've galoed ... .,._. ntcMq: &Mm." DINNIS THE MENACE ~ ... ., .. .,,. I I 1 I .. ··Comedies· Fall Flat Ry JAY SHARBUTJ' Big Apple to seek employ-should join his clAss. They've Grand Funk's "~rican Ai CA NEW \'OHK !AP 1 men!. wasll'<i :he tin1e or some good Band" ha b ped l ··Need!~ and Pin!I" i!t 8 t.'Oitr f 1 1 d thespians. one of whom s um "1arvin 4. LOVES ME LIKE 'A Iler athcr is a r en of -descrl~s a colleague as one Gaye out of !he top sµot In ROCK p 1 0 • C 1 edy series about ~·tanh:Htan's J•'ell, to whom she im-might de--rlbe the r•·st show Biiiboard's weekly 11·stlngs b1a -au .;iup.on. o un1-~ u ladies garment industry. "The m do'at t g for adv1· ·to br · nd 90 while the Allman 8"4)thers: e e Y oos ce . -· percent ains a "Bcothcr.ii and Sislci·s" con· 5. ALL I KNOW Brian Keith Show" is l:I eoLn· And immedia tely she is percent polyester.'~ tlnucs to pace 1he LPs. The , Garrunkp:!, Colum bia / edy stries about a pcdlatrfcian 01istaken for a model by al,__..;;.;;;;,..;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;11 complete lineup ; • 6. IN THE -MlDN tGHT in Hawaii. They ho ve two lecherous salesman for the FAMILY TWIN CINEMA TOP SINGLES l!OUR -Cross Country, atco things in common. firm (lJcrnic Kopel!). Jic com· 1. \VE 'RE AN Al\1ERICAN 7. ASHe5 TO ASllES -The Both made their scasol\ · J F·rth D' · Belt mences operating. Fwnl•lrl v.11...--''J·lltl Nu t Tt OotfM;o S!Or• AtrllH From Llnbnloll H•nlwlln BAND -Grand Funk, Capitol '1 1n1ension, premiere on NBC ,. .. riday nlghl 2. LET'S GET IT ON -8. LET ,.1.E IN -Osmonds, and .both need to go back and "'ELL. FR IENDS and CINEM A, I Marvi n Gaye, ~1otown MO l\{ practice comedy until they get neighbors, the next 20 minutes ''Bl LL y JACK'' 3. HALF-BREED _ Cher 9. K N.O CK I NG ON it ri~ht. , NOW -l NDS TUESDAY -.Also - ~lCA ',... J.tEAVEN 'S DOOR -Bobby , "The Brian Keith Show" is 3 are spent trying to prove that "GJ•" The Beost1. t LOVES NE LIKE A D.vlan. Colu rnbia revamped ve rslOn or last the ladies garment business is And Chil d'•"" tPGJ ... .._. C01.•••111.11111 ROCK -Pau l Simon, Colum-10. RHAPSODY IN BLUE -year's "Little pc op I c.'' frantic, rast-pa ccd and full of 1 1 1c.Arsof'Doyan ~~7; M011day, Septtmber 24, iq-73 ·I ottLVPtlOT flt - DAii:. \' ·11 1 l"'OT Cl"'ASSl•"'t t :D The Blggesl Single 1Harketpln<"e on Tlte 0.-.nge-Coa•t-· ,.,,,,,.., 642~'>878 •; a ~qv General FIRST TIME OFFERED I I~ Gener e l MOVING FROM AREA 1 O\\'ftC'r is anxiou~ w1d \VIII bia Deodato. C'.l.'1 Revamp here means to reduce olo"rfu t cl11r t s d i· I CINEMA 11 ' 5. DELTA DAwN -lielcn COUNTRY s rNG LES the kid stuff and toss 3 sluffy c < acer an an-"40 CARATS'' I Rc'<ldy, Cn pu'ol l. BLOOD RED & GOIN' allerg'1st '1n the cast to catch gling tclcphooes. ' **-*******-** 6. l·llGH~R GROUND _ 00\VN -Tanya Tucker, By the tin1c it all ends, we 11i,..-·.·•.'.".'·rl~lle~·~·-··~·~·ee~"~~!I' ~ the adult hay fever trade. THE MUCH SO UG l-1 T A1'.,.ER SINGLE LEVEL. I LINl)A 3 BDR.i\1.. wrt'l-1 LOV F:LY SI'.":CL U DE D , P ATIO, ON Rt-:i\UT.I C;RF.ENBELT. \\'F:'LL RF: HAPPY 1'0 SHO\V TJ!IS 'lb I 11!i..~ist lhl' nc•1\ h u y (' r 11ssume IHS 6'1i' ~ !uan hy rarryini::-:i. 2nd Trust D<>crl. Char111 ing NE-wport lll'ights !hunc'. l..iu·ge anti versatile. :! Hi"llroorns, Family Roon1, l>ini11g Roon1, 2 Baths. Of· f•'I't'tl for $4·1,;;.IXJ. Cull COL\\'ELL 646--0555. Stevie \Vonder. l\-tntown Columbia know that the pattern·makcr - 7. SAY . HAS · ANYBODY 2. YOU 'RE . THE BEST "NEEDLES ANO Pins." on grumbles at the cutter. that f'!~~~~~~~ SEEN !\1Y SWEET GYPSY 'n~b'JG THAT'S llAPPENED the other hand . is an original. the brother-in-l:nv is dense and H.OSE _ Dawn , Bell TO ME -Ray Price, Colun1· It also is awful. despite 3 that ~1iss Lenihan is en1ploycd 8. 1l!AT LADY -Isley bia talented cast that includes by Fell and embarking on a Brothers. Columbia 3. KIO STUFF -Barbara Norman Fell as a dress c<:1rcer he'll trach ~r "from F · h'ld C I b' d the ground up " 9. MY !\!AR IA _ n. w. a1rc 1 • o um 1a manufacturer an Louis Nye Stevenson, RCA 4. YOU'VE NEVER BEEN as his weird brother-in-Jaw. The wr1tcrs_or th1s_op_u~ 10. RA~iBLIN' !\iAN ·r1-1ts F'AR -Con..,,·ay Twitt y, The primary virtue of the l fi~~~~···9.WR Allman Brothers Band , MCA show is thal H: introduces an 11 \\Tarner Bros. 5. R10tN' MY THUMB TO excellent ncwconicr. Deirdre TOP LPs M E X I C 0 Jo h n n Y Lenihan. a blue-eyed, red- 1. ALLMAN BROTHERS Rodri guez, l\lcrcury haired pixie of an actress \'t'ho I BAND -8110tbcrs & Sisters 6. YOU REALLY !·IA VEN'T reminds one strongly of a lo\Y- ( \Varner Bros.l CliANGED -Johrmy Carver.' key Shirley !\1acLaine. 1 2. GRAND FUNK -\Ve'rc ABC She plays a fresh-out-of-col· I An American Band (Capitol) 7. REDNECKS. WH I TE legc dress de signer fro~ 3 ROB~RTA FLACK SOCKS & BLUE RIBBON · ~ -BEER _ J h Russ 1 RCA , Nebraska \Vho comes lo the tl----Killing-.Me.Softl y (Allruu.~icCLI_-=.;;:: o nny e. ~I '-----_ ----- 4. CHEECH & CHONG -8. CANtiLEEHN--YOU ~-r:a.1111 MIQlfWJOf~7 • Los (;O('hinos, (A&~'i l ARMS -Jeannie Seely. MCA .• ~!:'..": 5. STEVIE WONDER -In-9. JU ST ll'lAT I HAD IN , . · · nervisions. (Motown) ll-1LN D -Faron Young , , ' • I s. MARVIN GA YE -Lers Mercury * Surf1"ng Fest1·val * ; Get it On. (Mot own ) 7. WAR -Deli\'er the \Vord . '· ·' · · · This Week (United Artists) 8. !·!El.EN REDDY -Long !lard Climb. (Capito l! 9. C1iICAGO -VI, tCol um- bia l 10. PINK FLOYD -The Dark Side of the Moon, (Capitol I EASY LISTENING l. l'M COMING HOME OIOUNlAIN VAlllY ,,.~.t:e~l ......... 00~\,i,i'l"D,;c,,. .. THE NEW CENTURIONS" ~ fl) ~"FlYE liASY PIECES'' IRI "P.acific Vibrations" Ph11 2 BETTY BOOP CARTOONS FREE DYNO SURFBOA'RDS Details At TheQtre COMPLETE PERFORMANCES 7:30 & 9:30 Eoc:h E•eninii! ffi FREE REFRESHMENTS WED. MAT. 1 P.M. Conlin. 2 p.m. Sett. & Sun. Wit DAYS 7 & f 11S SAT-SUN 2:1S ... :3S 7 HCl9:1S (X) /JIK, Johnny ~tathis, ColUinbia ''DfLLIN(;IR" IAI 2. My MA R I A -B.W. • 11L_i:-~~~~~~~~;i;~~~~~~~~~I Stevenson. RCA "LADY KUNG FU" CAI lji ---- ~h 'J>Bi1s I • I I 3. HALF·BREEP -Ch~er'.:_·~~~~~~~~~~11 M-USIC! IEGULAl PAICES -.... -,-Jn""'-.. STADIUM •3 ;::; ..-..UW~i.t·;;-:.. ''THE STONE l':ILLl!R" .... .. DOLLARS" I A I "SOUND Of MUSIC" -"CHAALom·s WEI" "LADY kUNc#o fU" ... . 'THE CHINESE cqt4NECTION' "THI: Nl:W CE NT\IRION5" And • "FIVE EA5Y PIECES" IRI "PAP ER MOON .. IPGI ... ' "HAAOLD & .MAUDE" "HAll.11.Y IN YOUR l"OC KET" (PG) .... . "l 'lllll.YTHIHO YOU EYEI WAHTEO TO KHOW ABOUT SEX" f lt) '~ •• easily the best movie so far this Yearff -S 1•Ph.,..Fl•M'f • NEW YORK TIMES .A"'~ -'J(;;; iOUTH COAST PLA A I Wldayw::io.7:lO.t:io S..l/Slll>-1 : )o.3: Jl>-5:*0 f:Jt.t1l0 EXCL-IJSIVE ORANG£ COUNTY ENGAGEMENI r111.rra I ... IQlh ..... ~..... I l '"~"" .. •·~·~' II - 1---.-----1 ~G~~:v I . . Ora11 ge NEWS County , MUSIC ! YOUR 108 ON l(A PX- FM DIAL stereo ,----- r7f\'t• ,,, .. ,. . ., W"-~.~!~ .... ~ COll.OH.t. OIH. MAil HELD OYER! Jomn Cobu1:. "HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" (PG) 7:00 PM & 10:16 PM Al10 Woody Alleit "EVERYTHING YOU'VE '-=~~~~~~~-~~-~--~~~~!ALWAYS WANTED TO t: KNOW ABOUT SEX" (R) U. ii. CITY AN OSOUl'.H COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAYS SOC (LAOIES AHO GOLDENAGERS)-OPEN TIL 2:00 P.M. J•m11 Coburn "HAll:AY" IN VOUll: P.OCKET" a. lt"1no$dl/R. Wakh "fUll" Color !POI Geft1 H11ckmen • "SCAAl!'Cll:OW" "IRl!'W5TEll. McCLOUD., 80111 In Colet' I II. I 8:48 PM MATINEE SUNOAY Coll Theotre fo r ~undoy Schfllule 3459 Via Lido N••port S.1d• Pho ... : 673·83~ EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COAST A DINO CE 1.AU1HNTllS l'fod~tUOll r1otl'L COlUMBIA ,ICTURES Al.SC' "DOLLARS'1 Fr••W•Y 91 •tL•monSl. ~:?S.3S26 llni;nl~ A•~. "'~ ol Knon 121·(070 5an Ooeoc F"Y c:~111•1f&<1!'.I Otl.ramp -r-- IUllT tlYNotDi WHITE LIGHTNING,!Hll 'UIS I THlllli & CHtllS! LEGEND Of HELL HOUSE!JIG S.•clt 81-CI, , So. ol Gardtn G10.., Fr••w•v 53(-5212 lllr\l lUHG-fU AglONI (I.) U.OY KUNG-FU !Ill (2.) CHINESE CONNECTION I•) (l,) flST5 Of fU="="==O::~ u.....OW9L!Dl \l('f Sanla An• frll"•Y l\elf Chapman A•t. 'J~"'2 ' I t I I , JOHNMILLS 1~~C PALANCE OK HOMA CR\JOE ·~1$* I • Allo ~ 0 Nell In "WllO 10\1.lllH ' .. --.. ~~·- • '\ YOU. $69,900. OCEAN VIEW POTENTIAL PLUS CORONA DEL MAR I This is a n1ust sL'<'. ror th('re (",!{EA.i' ~ LOOR l'LA1'1 TO ls no \\'ay to dcscr1bto thts' l!TILIZF: °\(!AX I ;\1 {j i\I ' JJl'Qf>{'!'!y, Ovf'r 18.000 sq. fl . VIE\\'. N Y.~\\'LY PAINTt::11 111 the U1>1X'r Newpo1·1 li;.1y IN ,>:., OUT. ;{ BDRMS., 2 Ar('11 . Presently there nrt' .:~ l~1\T!I S. OPF.N Bf:: A i\1 s11·uctures on the properl y. CC:IL"S. O\\'NER \\llLL <Jfrt•r1'<I for $54,000. Call I· INANCF.:. S,<>q,GO:J COL\VELL 646--05.'l,"J PLEASE CALL 675-3000 ~----= m11A\' & HEAi.ii · llE.U:t'l' INC.: l EST 1.! 19 _6!5._1000 J -KISS--Y:OUR,--1-__,,..~E..__.,A..,R..._E __ LANDLORD BUILDING YOUR GOODBYE DUPLEX And bcrome one! 2 bedroon1 Not finished as yet. Terrtfic home plus an income unit duplex, prime location in ahove the Jarge double gar-Coron3 del ~far. Walk to 11!.;C'. t block from Nl'\\'port park and beach. Ideal time Bo•ach Yachting L an(' s. lo buy and choose your own • Grca1 buy -just rldUcl'd to df'cor. 9-lx..'<iroom owncni Slit500. 6'16-7171. unit plus 2 bedroom rental . OPEN TIL 9 . fT'S fl.JN ro (;Jf NICE! Call 6T3-8550 (t" ,_ '1HUN ro ~ NCEI ! THE REAL ESTATERS C· 1 PROPERTY Five iten1s of income, good Rrca Costa Mesa I on Pluccntial. So. of 19th. ()y,•ner y,•ill carry 1st TD \V/10% down. $85,000. e CALl ANYTIME e 646-3928 or Eve. 646-4543 Lachenmyer : Re.:iltor SElL~ WANTS OUT! f','IOVE in fast and snvf'! Conveniently located. 4 big bedrooms. Upgraded ea!'· pets. Ready 10 move in. As- sun1e exi!lting loan or !ry 10111 $32,950. Taki' ad vanfag('. 842-2535 OPEN11l SI . rrs FUN TO 8E NICE} ~ • I I ! $76,500 Truly one-of-a-kind super cuslomized Harbor View home. Spacious 4 bdrm. 2 story executive home. For the bcsl In schools, reerea- tion and family Jiving. 64~7711 eves. 2043 \Ycstcliff D,. Walker &Lee afA~ l t T•Tf Assume 7°/o Loin ExceJlent loan as.<!umplion! 4 bdnns1 dining nn Lovely den. Swimming pool & covered patio. Buill ins. Boat a.cce:;s. $30.950. brk 540-172) TARBELL _S_P_A_C-IOUS-MA.7N~S~IO~N~ $45,000 You will enjoy the splcl"l(lor of this huge 4 bc<lroom country estate. 4 bli.ths offct• large fa1nily convenienee. Q\1•ncr is cxtren1ely anxious to sell . Sub1nit on your· terms. B.ed Carp o:l, Roollors, 64!)-.8(}80. -HarbOrView H~o-m-.-,- 2 Bcdroonu & convl•rt lblc den, already oil(' or the lowest prlood homes in this llOUght after neighborhood. Custom details th.ruoul to give a warm, hontey at· ruosphere. Garden patio off brlghtj sunny kitchen . Not lea&e and. $62,950. C. F. Colesworthy Realtors 640-0020 MESA VE-ROE SPECTACU~AR This h0111c has bclen com· plctely redcrorated, located on quiet cul-Oe-511c lot, enjoy 3 v~ry roomy bedrootru1. -2 brick fireplaces, large tn>eli and prestige urea. Priced lo aell now. See It, cnll Red Cttrpct, Realtors, 54&-8640. NO CASH 00\VN VA -truly \O\'l'IY hon1e. $27,500. Call M&-OO:rl HUGE WEEPING WILLOWS - EASTSIDE ·LOCATION Spucious park-1\kc grounds \\'ith . towering t r ees, beautiful 3 bedroom home ··••i<h near new carpets, just 1\·aitiug for ii new OY.'ller to e njoy the cozy fireplace and ha1-dwood floors. All this for only $32,500. BACK BAY MINI VIEW $57,BS-O Secluded cul-de-sac property in prestige esta te a.r'en of fine r homes. D ra n1a I I c cathedra l ceilings in living roon1 with crackling \\Io od -burning fireplace, open plan fitn1ily room, spacious gartlen vi e w . formal dining room, 4 large bro.rooms, and gourmet kitchen witl1 breakfast bar. Pe ck-a -boo view of Ncw.POJ:! Bay. Call today 546-2313 OPEN TIL g • rrs FUN ro BE MC£1 [I_ li~~11·11 4 BDRM. • $26,500 Can't bl•ut I.his combination, "·II h l~e bedrooms, 2 b:itl111, built...tn kitchen,. dou .. ble C'lr gar age, '4' / w carpets & drapes. Better check this one out TODAY. &'6-TI'll. open eves. Walker &Lee ll l "L ltl•l l' EVER-STOLEN_A_ O_UPLEX? Try this: t\\·o 2 bedroom units -double garage in· come of S3i50 per year. Ask· Ing $35,9:-.ll try your O\vn price O\'t'ner &iys sell! Cull Red Carpel , R ealto r s 645-8080 (open ovrningsl TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A WaJh~.t~.Lee DAILY PILOT MORE-ROOM THAN YOU NEED. ror $'15.CMXl Yoll wUI trljoy WANT AD 11118 l!Ul:f' 4 bedI'OC>ro, '1 !){Ith "' MnH'. 2 donn!'l!Ory 111n! l)('drooms UP11tairs o. n d o\\·t.~ ls cxtrc.mt'lY !'O."<lous 642_5678 1n sell. Call Red Carpet, Re1'11ton. ~. llavc so1nahl~ you want lo 1ell? Clns.,Uicd arl11 do II \\"ell • call "'lO\V 6U-5871~ ' I Monday, SePttml>tr 24, 1973 Annoul'l(cn\Cl'(S • , , , • , SOO • 524 The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange Coast Avloo~lh . . . . • • , • 9SO • 990 Booh & Monno EQvil)nlt'nt 900 • 91.t c.n,,1ov1 m'f1t • • • • • • • • 100 • m DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ' ADS Mobile Homtt for Sole • • • l'l.S • 149 P..-IOl"IClll. • • • • , • • • ;' S2S • 549 Pm ond Svpplift • • • • • • ISO • 899 RllOI fi;101• General. • , •• I.SO • 199 R_Mlol , • • • , • • • • • • JOO · 499 Schools and/lnst1tJCtion • • • 575 • 599 ' Str~ic.•s ond Rtpoir1 • • • • 600 • 699 Transportation. '. • , , . • . 915 • 949 f141(lll(.iul • • • • ••••• 200 -299 HoiM:s f0t Sole . • • • , • 100 -124 L~t & found . , • • •• , .S.SO • 574 M\,ichandiw ... , •• , , 800 • 84'1 You Can Sell If, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ERRORS. Advertisers st\OUTd check their ~ ~ ]~ ads daily & repc!"t errors immedietely, The HouseslorSal• 11~1 [ HousesforSale I~ [ HMet.fGrSale J[teJ[ HousesforS1le 11~1 I HoulelforW. ttousesforS1i. J ~ [ tto111eslorSale fl! DAILY PILOT assumes liablllty for the first . . · . --· :· --~---;.;;;1~;;;;;;;;;;;;~·:;;;;;.~· mmmmmm;-~;;1 1 incorrect insertion only. ! veneral Generat Gener1I General General Qenerat _ Genera l ------ Gene ral General ** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.* ASSUME 6'4% LOAN! TURTLEROCK Near new,_ most popular model home. Large lna~ter suite. Beaut. -panelled family room, choice decor, lovely patios, feature this 4 BR, 21f.t ba. home. New on market Won 't last, with great financing & value~' $57,000 A Ui"oll()Uf tl()Mf IN CORONA DEL MAR -Secluded south of the highway location. Rustic charm yet com- pletely modern. Beautifully appointed and tastefully decorated. A choice of three out- door living areas on a tre~·shaded R-2 lot. Offered at $87,500. A listing of Bert Reedy ~~:---1 ;;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 CORONA DEL MAR 18.'ll EA~T COAST •t1GHWAV 644·7270 BE ON THE WATER CONDOMINIUM This lovely 2-story end unit has everything -even a IN MESA VERDE-Newer lislin g-4 hed- roo1n, 2 story with pool, lar ge Jivin g room , downstairs master bedroo1n. 1'ree lined street. $56,500. A listing of Ned McCreary. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 546-5990 2850 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa WESLEY N:'°T'A~~01;•~0., Realtors 1\J,...~rt ~~a_ IN SHORECLIFFS -~ique Home in this 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road J. ~W' yv ~ l,, JllOVe.· Unique area! 3 · bedrooms. shake shingles ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" hi Im 1 fo.r.your ~Jvw.ol over ·board and batfen exterior,~used brick BOAT SLIP. Ultra modern /"'!!"'"'"~"'""'""'"'""""~"""-:""'""'"'""'""'"""[ kitchen \Vilh all n e·w General GeMeral built ins. AttractivC stone I -;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,I ·fire place. 2 Bedrooms, 21,~1· Bath,. SUNDECK overlook-OWNER IN FLORIDA J_ __ jjNi;;E;;;W;;;::P;,O=R=T=C=E=N=T=E=R=,=rN.,.B;o.crnif===,,,;,64,,;4,,;4,:,91,,;0_!--,.,.,..,,..,•~ ~":"'"'=~ • :Y:;:.,.""..,'1=' ':,_.,.=='""-=¥, ~= • fireplace. Walk the tree·lined streets to a -Genera General a .gone in hal a year an the rest wil not ------private beacli:-Charmffigr$99';500:-A-11Sting ing the \Valer. All this can SHARP 3 BEDROOM home \lo'ith new carpets be yours for $86,500. . 64...._.7'117 and thruout. Ass umable FHA loan, no ual1· if•j I. fying or new loan c arges. acan . 8,950. OWNER ANXIOUS LOVELY 4 BEDROOM & FAMILY - with large attractive pool. Sharp landscaping, boat access & front kitchen. Price.only $38,950. or offer. Excellent terms. OLD FARM HOUSE IN COSTA MESA YET;-Unusual property, · 141 ' frontage x 107' depth wi th 3 car garage 1\vo detached multi-purpose buildings and old fashioned farm style 3 bedroom, 1700 sq. ft. home. Don't miss the wine cellar! A steal at $35,000-may be only 10 % down. ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS General CASA GRANDE 546-58ll0 Open Eves. General --------·- "IF YOU'RE Authcrlt i~ Spanish . charin. BLESSED'' \Vallcd-i n for pri va c y. . . , \Va 11-Ien g t h Spanlsh 1 1ov1th a larg~ family, heres 1\rcplace. lo.1assive l amily \ the home with enough clbov.• roon1 wilh \\'Ct bar. Inside room for c v e ry body . ga rden atriun1. 4 large Located on :i-::ast side_ t;>f bedroon1!>. Extra big lo! !or Costa J\1C'sa: 3 quecn-~1zed pool und pli-ty. Ma ke a date bcdroon1s \V lt!l d :t :i: z _l 1 n g and St'e v.·hat $,18,900 will hnlh. Country Style kitchen buy. 842-2S..'l5. overlooking t!1is huge back yard. Submit your own tcrn1s. Seller is flexible. Priced at $29,900. HAPPY FAMILY HOME $30,500 Walker &lee lllA~ llTATI 545-9491 Open eves.:~-­--RT PE-FOR A QUICK SALE! O\vner t'C'duced lhe price on this lovely <I bedroon1 hon1c, in excellent lflliel loi.:a rion. Large znaster b e cl r o o 1n , \\'alkin closet + atrlum. Don't bC' lt1!e Only $44,500. last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport of Jerry Lumbert. Beach. development of condominium homes, UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 675-6000 built-in clusters around handsome courtyards. 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, corivenience and quality General - construction. Sundecks, fireplace1 wet-bar, --------- elegant Master Suite, Sun·Liteo kitchen, ISLAN.1> private enclosed double garage. Recreational PARADISE facilities include heated swimming pool, . + Pool $42,500 lighted tennis .courts, sauna, therapy. pool. AU exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! Two, Three, and Fout Bedroom Condominium Hornes from $62,995 ~~ - Financing Available at 73/4 °/o * From Pacific Coast Highway and Sope.rior Ave nue {Balboa Blvd.). dr ive up Superi or to Ticonderoga. and directly to Netvport Crest Information Center. Telephone (714) 64S.6141 Sales. OifiQ! open dally 10',oJn. 10 sunset ... * Typical conv('ntiona l financing of 30 year loan: Cnsh pr ice of Plan 1 562,995 ; do\vn payment Sl:?,695; 360 n1onthly payments of $361.00 (prin- cipal & in terest ) at 8 ~~~ ANNUAL PERCENT- AGE RATE. South Sea Island paradlse. Walk to Newport Beach. Sweeping corner groul}ds and S\Vaying trees embrace rambling island home , Spacious interior. 2 4' ~de-a-v.'ay master suire wilt\ private sitting room, Separate children's \ving. GUEST FACILITY. Elegant living room. Formal dining. Gourmet kitchen 'overlook- ing magnificent r e a r grounds reaturing patio, deck, dressing rooms and spatlding pool. O w n e r bought ocean view. Must sell fast. Call 645-0303 I OKI\ I L 01 ~O\ H,/. "rJ"-'~ LOVE IS: to buy your family this gorgeous 4 bdrm biggie on a corner lot with open country spaces. Also includes 2 lux· urious baths. All this in Costa Mesa \\'hei-e Jiving is 1ree and easy. F1lA and VA tenns available also 5r;0 down program. \Von 't last long for $27.000. Call Walker &lee RlAl llfATI 54~9491 Open eves. General LEASE OPTION QSTSIDE COSTA MESA Cozy Uu·ee bedroon1 hon1e on a large lot \\'1th mature trees, patio nnd doi run. Knotty pine den and good cul de sac location. $303 __ n1q_nth,___ HELP! HELP! Fixer upper in Harbor View. Spacious 4 bedroom home with great fa1nity room, kitchen and p a t i o ar- range1nen!. Close to schools and con1n1unitf recreational facllities. $460 month. 38' BOAT SLIP Waterfront 3 bedroom home, like ne\Y, !;lip fOl' 38' boat. Spacious Uoor plan -good Newport Location. $ 5 2 5 month. BEAUTIFUL TWO. STORY Spyglass I.fill -Magnifi cent 6 bedroom colonial home -4 ba ths, loads of extras. Great viev.· SS50 n1011th CALL 675-7225 RUSTIC CHARM IN 1 EAST SIDE CHARMER CdM DUPLEX J ust remodeled front unlt with that RUSTIC FEEL- ING. P aneled liVliig room, brick fireplace. 3 Bedrooms, upgraded carpets & '¥\'allpaper. New rea r upper unit w/tree-top view. open be-am_ ceilings 2 bedrooms including O\'ersizcd master suite. One o[ Corona del SHARP . 3 BEDROOM and detached garage. Extra nice location on Tltagnolia Street \Vith alley access for boat or trailer. 6V• 9'(1 VA loan can be assumed by anyone, ·or ne\v financing available. Full price $29,950. ~,k,,,_ HERITAGE . • REALTORS' 540.1151 Open Eves.. r-.Iar's most charming prop.[~"'""'""'""'""'"""'"""'"~""""""'"'""'""'"""'""[ ertil'S located next to the General General city park. $1Z7,500. 1---------1--------- 644-7270 Bl~R~~CALE NE;;o B~!cH Send for your frn Home for Living magazine of Newport Beach ai'ea properties with picture~~ p11lces. 2828 E. Coost Hlwoy around this ad, because you won't want lo...,Jniss seeing this sharp 3 bclhn home in Costa l\1esa for just $24.500. Clo$C to schools, u.lso fenced back yard, nev.· Gov't pro- gram_ that ev er y one qualifies for -\1•ith $1200 dO\\'n payn1C'n!. Cj.ll for ap- pointment'. ~ Walker &Lee •t •~ 111•11 $15-9491 Open Evos. ~ F.Jcautifully n1n11icunxl hOme. ldc11 I floor plan. Living roon1 opens to (:(!Vered patio and IO\'cly yard. AU ap· plianccs built-In. Pr ide of 0\111Crship assurn<"cl \\'ilb !he Joan. Don '! deluy. Call today ! Undl'r 1i 3 O, O O O. ~i67. OPEN TIL 9 • fr'S FUN TO 8£•N/CEI THE REAL ESTATERS -DUPLEX ~ corona de! Mor SIX UNITS 90 1 °/0 0 FINANCING Assume 7o/o Loan 8 I " INTEREST -~~~~c:-:=--1 Two ''°"' four-plox •'"' two , 2 tO SMA.SHING ~tory duplex. A_rnple ii1u·k· An ideal sumn1t'r '1\·intcr VALUE ;rig. pf'l.vare ~t.1os, convc~-j 1~nta! only 6 doors to <I 1ent to shoppi~g and main · super bcal'h. Q\1·n for proti! Exceltf'nt vnlue ln Corona de! streets. Eastside C 0 s l •~ 1 or occupy fllr ·pleasure. l\1ar. 'I bedroom custom 1\-fesa. $lZ9,500. Only SS4 ;oo home. for a large family on PETE BARRETT C111r f:u1t:isllc ;"~~s· n1ay not fee land with a view. REALTOR last Inn-::. so rall e1uick. \Vorkshop, study, hu ge --CALL 644-7211 fanuly room, yard and near 642 .. 5200 n beach. well·pricc<J 673-8550. ~,......,. JI ~W'J OPEN T!lQ • fTS FUNTOBE NICEI • p~tT~lt~E "!!!¢.HK La l'ge arldcd ra mily roo n1 and haih, h<"autirul btif'k cour tyard. 3 s p a c· i o u s ix'rlzwn1s loca1C'd in e x- <'elient rl'sldential area. This onc \\'On't last. Call Red Carpet, Rea l t o r s, G47~0,~0. f' i a "Pad"? P1ao.:e an ad! Call Red Carpet. Realtors, Ne.p.1C-i.•Pf'Giut.rP9cllkN.~lae. 546-8640. c:i:t.--lloMrclt.GrontCorpor--,"---'c.m.c:t• -..=ct End-Of-Summer f ~ "'"' or decking. ""' •''"'Y -WO-R:U OUT OF ~ of privacy. Be t1t1iful 3 ! 'J\ :;c:-.,.,.--;-------1 General "'"" ....... ""'•""""" .i.. .. 1on '""° b-"'""""'""""'o1 .... h-'"""~h "'"b• .d ..... ..., .,u,_, """-lo. '°' ...-""" w ...-1 ,,_ " .....,,d "" &..,... Tho Soll«. P><•!O N t. ll'>c., Pool Sale G.I. NO-NO Largt! heated and filtered NO DOWN General bOOroom home wilo huge f YOUR LIVE INl -~==~=-·--family room. I.a rge . • SKINNY DIPPIN fireplal'e. Only $35.950 Call NH:e clean home on C-2 zon-_..,.,,... .. _,.,.....,~------... --pool. Surrounded by "' . ' G maintenance decking. Big NO COSTS . eneraf G!!neral entertainer's home t n Here is a beauU!u! 3 berl· ANYONE? Red Carpet R e a 1 to rs ing. o.k. for a busin1'ss, near 546-86<10. ' ' 17th Street, Co~ta i\1C'Sa. 11;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;, j move-In condlllon. Lovely Opportunity of a IUetime for room home \\>Ith sparkllgg'-N=EW~~T~R~l-P_L_EX __ E~S-l~•llil'lfli!llllrfllifl ... ljj Huntington Beac h location. vets. Stop paying rent. pool -quie t Eastsl!le locn· /) I n /) . Steal it now for $38,500. Move inlo this deluxe home. lion \\'ith privacy. Lots of and DUPLEXES I / oLlitda J~{e Won't last. Call 847-6010. 4 large bedrooms. Lovely decking nicely landscaped, Large corner lot ... S~.750 . . . for a quick look cnll ~n71 ELEGANT -ECONOMICAL Just right for senior couple in your' family. 2 & Den cond o Y.'ith fine vie\v & greenbelt in Bluffs. Priced to selJ. ~69.500, Jim Mull.;. • TURTLE ROCK HILLS JUST REDUCED! .. President" home. Out. standi ng vie\v; 4 BR .. family roo1n. Fee land. $89,950. Call for app't. Paul Quick 11~' OF BAYFRONT -$72,500 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Lind a Isle Waterfront J.,ovely 4 bdrm., 41h ba. home with swim· ming pool , pier & slip , panoramic view. of rnain channel. Lge. family rm:-w/space for billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal dining & living rm. $290,000. · For Complete lntormation On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR OPENnL g , fT'S_.FUNTO BE NIC'rlt location. Thi s value can't be comfy brick ti.replace all for in COSTA MESA · ~ beat. Full price is S31.900 an unbelievable $35.!QO. Call OPEN DAILY Take advantage -call to-Red Carpet. R e" I to r s Placentia at Wilson , day. 847-6010. 646-8640 Orange County Apartment OPENTIL 9 , fT'S ruf.J 10 BE NICE! * BEACH DUPLEX* Exclusive A.gent 547-6791 ~~=====~-J·a 11 Tax shelter -3 BR 2 BA ea. TWO.ON-A-LOT STUNNING -~ lt~~lall1J ~~l~1ff.,'.~t.~: v.~,~~il S~Ront ll70 0u1::f!cl~~!!i~~ I I 968-4405, Eve: 968.£767. located in best residential 3BEDROOM-DINING RM, FAMILY RM AND POOL 2 BEDROOMS-area, reatures 2 brick W lk (! l fireplaces, large open buil!· 2 BATHS 3 Or II 88 in kitchen, spacious family $21,000 •••L ••T•r• room many-many extras-. A super-prime corner location, near main channel on Hu mbold t Island, 1-Iunt. Harbour. 0\Vners bought home, \Vant quick sale. Call George Grupe 34 1 Bayside Dr., Su ite I, N.B. 675-6161 Located in " quiet Easl$ide Luxury fO\\'nhouse, dcl11~:el_:=======:::'.'. You can..aave,on this one· C.Osla Mesa, Jots of trees, stlag ca rpet, built·ln kit-N rl .. ~ d'"' ?I· rl' Call R~ Carpet, Realto!'Pi brick fireplace 14x28 pool chen, wasiler·dl'yer +·-~·fl · .. .ccnn a 1 ,_64>-S080==··----~"7 I and to top it off • a 20x20 refrigerator includl'd. Low !;eneral General .. INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY 4-PJex in \Vest Newport Beach, steps to ocean & channel. C o m pa re , then bu y! $122,500. Call Dean Krin g. OCEANFRONT LOT Only 40 ft. lot available. Spectacular corner locatjon. Penin. Ft. Tri-level plans available. $160.000 . Bill Bents OC EANFRONT VIEW CON DOMIN IUM On a private Laguna beac:h with tennis. 2 pools, bea ut iful grounds: 2 bdrms., 2 baths. Lots of parking. Spotless cond. Hurry! ,58,950. MILLION $ BAY VIEW Pier & float, beach & trees. on gold, coast near N.H.Y.C. Formal L.R , gourmet kitchen; 4 BR., 3 baths. $200 ,000. Bents CORNER LOT WITH PIZZAZZ S BR. with large, cozy den. Manv extras. Lovely landscaping. On fee land. Near best ectiool , tennis & churches. $72.500. <.,'all H811'lett Davies _...... Coldwell.Banker · ~ . l»-0700 Mt.2430 551 !"EWPORT CENTER DR., N . .B. The fastest draw in the West. separate work shop -Don't down payn1ent e:>cellent ~~i.~;iiiiiiii~ii~~iiiiiiiiiii~ • , .a Daily Pilot CJusified I n1i.-,s seeing it. Call Red lf'rms -Hurry Ca ll Red 1.:...;.;;;,....;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;::;; =A=d=·=M=2=-567==8=."""'"°'====C:...=Ca='IX'=='=·~""~"~"=or='=·6='=~=80ll0-"'.=.!~-c-'='=""='·=R=•='='ro=n=·=>J6..'l64===='=·~i 1Gener.al General LIVE IN iRVINE $32,500 Why Not Sharp 1 yr. old home & pr~c-' a ''New'' Home? crl 1'ii.:ht ! The kids go tu · 1·ur!lerock Grani mal' & I N_E\V range & oven . NEW Runr.:ho Jr ~fi anrl the ne1v l ho! water heater • NEW ti n i \'er s i { y f.f i. n car t•arpefln¥, NE\V clean paint .. 1Jnh·•·r·sity of Cn lifornin ;it NEW dishwasher, 3 NEW lrvinl'. Call fl4G--Oli~2. bedrnoms. family room, llv· ing 1w r:1 and 2 baths, With $©~~1!-2'"£.tfS " That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle ------Mltrul .,. CLAY l. tollAN 0 Reorrong• lett.ft of th• four 1trambled WOfds b&- kiw to fonn four slmpl• words. j t"I NE\V dt>tached 2 ~a.r gar- age, NE\V landscaping and WaJ.~,ex.~.Lee ~,''f.~"-"· NEW''""'' and ID 01 T t EllM 11 I ,__H __ U~N=T--IN=G"'-T'-0-N_, I $30,490· I . . . . . " I flEACH You own homo ond l•nd .. _..r_v.._x ,,_1_s......,1 Jf PROVINCIAL I Seo lo Cues!• VIiia J Ji I J . Sink into C'loud-fl)lt shag Model l block wesf of B""each , c r iwting througJIOut. Relax · on Adan111 in Huntington I ) •-E-~~~T~~~ .. 1. '• by floo r to (,'eiijng white acuch. . h1it·k. l.lr-Oplact>. Entertain Quick occupancy i>ecause ot I I' I I A kind word, please, for In privacy with patio JfllS ci'C<llt rcJ<.'Ctionsl ! . . _ . our heavy drinkers. After 0111 BBQ. 1,•11tcr rau and fish Conventional F1n•ncing 1heY pay Q big port of our-; pond. 4 bedrooms, up. • .----~'---~ t·lt ~~~~.c~aW'~~7~ailer 'ac· * 536-1445 * ,'' -1· If El E IL II DI' 1,ft Compl•I• the thuckl• q11ot.d OPEN rit II • "'$ "f!fJfl 70 8E NICE/ 1 ........... ~!!!"~~'!.!'.... -. . . . -. v by fll llng In th• t11lMlng word ~e-· ' , ~ -B-E~;~Au~f tt:.~ ---1 '-n-"p-1n..L.n-, ...... -"-'--' Y°" d"olcp ''°"' •IOP No. 3 bol~, BIG CANYON LOT on golf c..'OUrsc. Bttathlaking view. Prom.lnent locallon. Q\mer; $70,lnl -l!lll. -! EkauUrul 4 bedroom home In. 1 ~ R r-.T NVM8ER£0 LETTERS IN best COsta MtM 1u-na, ;:::~'";t;se:· :;soo:;1:•:•:•s:::::::::==~=!=:!::::;~;::~ ~~:~c Y:~ck wi~ire~~~Y 8 u~~~~N~~~E lfTTERS j I I I f J r.:':u.~f!l:.,!!m'g~,~~ SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN ClASSlFICATION1 BOO Carpel., Rtaltora, 64:HIOSO. •· ' I ' '\ MACNAB IR\llN~ _______ .... ______ _ AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER Charmin~ 5BR family home. 3 FP. Air conditionmg. Completely fenced large cor- ner lot. Newly decorated .. tbru·out. $145,000. Joel Smith 1142-8235. (K24) ·SECLUDED UPPER BAY Exclusive area. Professionally landscap- ed. iBR, FR, formal DR. Breakfast area. $59,950. Jack Custer 642-8235'. (K25) THE FAMIL y RETREAT Immaculate 4 F , nestle<! in Huntington Beach's imP,r•ssive Fashion Shores. New- ly listed. Will seil fast at $51,·000. Lois Mill· er 642-8285. (K28) --------."'·-------[ lrvlne.J Moon•b·frvfn. Re11treomp••r J 901 Dover.Ortv. MZ•l235 • 1'4' MlcArthur ... , .. 8200 ' N9Wpott a..ch, Clllfornla 12113 r I I G T ,. ' ' ' I I s I LI N s • .. • ' Monday, Srplt~Mr 2'\ 1973 OAll v PILOT 2 I 1~,1p -~,..-~]~;;;;~, Newport Beach J~I I~ ~[ · -.. · ....... ~]~~ I· -·.. I~ I I~ I ]~ [ l~I [ ffOUlll fOt' Sale _ ..... Genera~ The RHI E1ta le Fair . -EXHIBITS - G_o_no_r1_1 __ ._ ___ 1,c.;;°";;";;;;;;MIN;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IHuntington -L _11...;..u_n_a_a.. __ <h ____ 1 .~..;•._w_,~~---•_h ___ 11u11.,.., p .._,ty 154 1 ..... t~t Park Huntington $19SO DOWN T~ERRAMOS··-Ea~INO·-EASY • • • • . BEACH DUPLEX ~fCfi~"&MCMT Opportunity , ..• 10 finance the best In Exterior ncwl)' palnted, 3 BR · '171t-T652 ' ·rAX Sl-IEL 1'ER--T01> lN· -P-ool · -~ £4st1ld1 Location 4 .~ s)J)a:J.Uog 4 bedroom, (amUy livina. Thi» 4 bdrm. &: ~ 2 BR, units , lirepl, db! ~--...:.:;==----1 COME Magnificent poot. Tailortd 4 BR, 2,BA. UIOO !Ill· ft. Cpl!, 1% bath, formal dining, home, wftb ocean vi~w. ia gar. I.n proce!IS of comp tn-Commercia l -Unusuat oppty gas ·ou unit 220 yard and deck. M 0 1 t drp$, fence. lnDdicaped, family room, wilb1 ~ 511 close to tiC'hools &: teMIJ terior decorating. Best buy Prctp*rty 1 S8 Proven tlelt}-no r I s k , Space Maker One popular plan and e. super 11.p[inklers1 a 11 Included. ft a.nd ;a huge {X¥)1. Owner courts. Over 2.000 sq, fl. or pi the beach. S:Z,000-tax shelte~cess of WIN1.J-"!J~ rent~l. N1:1Aopor1 Pc11inttul11, 1 ~ blk fro111 00) 2 BR, Liv rm. 11·g k1t1·ht•11, frplc, nicr patio; & gul',:t huuse w/bl;di·111, -4.i I~. Servit-c roon1 \\•/\vashcr & dryer. 548-0671 ext :*-11 or 213/645-2963. ?.lost POPUiar model in ·•-e lot at cul •-.. , end. $44,950 Al\Yl)ne qua!Uies! very anxlous; is installing mode in J..aauna 11 v I n g , $7 b 500 '250,000 earnings -22o/o C1't.--cnbrook. 4 Bedrn1 In· Enjoy every co~7ience in 645-6177 and 54~1444 new carpets Ultuout:-This f'.1any, manY~t.raa. $64,IK.X> ' * W.:~ .. OT * depiction u.llow. Must !UlC \VAU< to "'alcr Bach, $00. l'llldlng SPIJCk:ius n\3,stcr, peace end quiet. Excellent home will be in move-in.c..>Qn· ~ 1797 Orange, C.M. 642--1771 c.ia.. tONE $50,000 tull price. Pvt ownr. Also 1 Br hsc, C.M. util pd . .:ourmct kite.hen, formal tc'tma. Including posftble FREEDOM HOME -Jf\Jge dlt1ori. l'ountaln Valley area. '() I--Ontu $.12~. E-Z TERMS1..::213:::.:1556-30::::::=.ol::O._____ & 1-lntg Sch $"115. Vacant 11lnlng room, huge family !ICCOl'ldary financing. Call lot O'vner may consider $45,995. CALL 846-3377. e"-'r~ ~ ..,:_ M noy to Loin 240 > .::Al<=t...:Fc:':o"'.:.· .::97\l-8.1::...:=:~o'-=--1 1110n1, Jilus BONUS ROOM 67}-6767. V.A. or F.H.A. sale. Vacant, REA&. ESTA':TE . , 21 ., 4 BEDROOM; 2 baths, 0 1 OcEANFRONT \\linter. 1~r!c·cd fo1· 1111lck sa. I e OPENTILO • rrs FUN10BE NICEI ki(lg of the Westside;, Quin· 2500 !lq n of living area. Two ll90 Glenneyre St. tenns $29 500 Cltai·nilng ~· · · ' 1 ' 1or do--1t-your11eu Ii t y I e. Upgraded, ·etc. i;:>hone the LIVE IT UP '" ~ dpuble gar&ge. Best of DON'T BORROW 2 B 2 Bl\ $27 $~11,500. Call nO\V Tlw Real I ~ tal'd Realty, 642-2991. We story plus extra large pll)l. 494-Mn ~6 . ~ ... * 2 BR, ·,~ story older 'TIL YOU CALL u s.1 ~~21~6e~r ~~~JI~. J>h: ~~stale Fnlr 839-6133 or wi.11 ~ll yours too. 4';\i com· 5 Bedrooms. 3 oo·:1s: farillly BLUFFS home, corner 101. $24,500. Borrow t>n your Imme equity .i:(t)-T;>.'ll m1ss1on. room, fonnaJ. dinlng and all $60,000, 3 BR, tam rm, trees, di R I fur any good purpose. SeN· * OCEANFRONT * F rench ci th~ ~eclric bl,!iltim. Pro~· seclusion. Also adj. while FEE. "E'' Roy McCar • e a tor ing Los Angeles County for 2 Bdrms. -$290 Count ry Cha rme r -~~;s,;o,~sulf'f':::..· I ;F;o;u;;n;ta;;i;;n;V;;;;a;fl;;oy;;;;;;;;;;;,I slonally landscaped front & water vu lots. Ownr 494-7284 181-0 Newport 6lvd., C.M. over 20 yeat!'! ttnd NO\V In Property I-louse 642-3850 7 1:~ :t..SSUMABLF. CUSTOM-BUILT rcnr wilb .sprinkler systein. Laguna Hiiis Elei:ance in lhe·pluUs! ! The 541-7729 Orange County~ South Laguna ~tnlur.it, birdbaths and han~· Selec\ from a sple~id varie. Prestige area. $47,500. CALL ~:!:::!:::~:!!:;:..,.____ professional toucb-is ob-..,..,,;.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,! SIGNAL ~JORTGAGE CO. iug pl:inL<i create 11 French ·ty ot 3-4· or 5 bedroom mini ORCHARD !!63·5621. SPACIOUS 3-br, 2. ba. condo. vious. A spacious~ sq. ft. 8746 SUN~. L.A.. Street to • (Il4) 556--0106 2 BEDROOJ\t & Den. OcettH (~iunll'Y gnrden 10 the mtrk models, some with Back Fruit salad • in your own Crpt'd, patio, d sh w hr , 4 _,. bedroom, family roo_m s5treew.tab''te$p~hl-J~:X280. 123•1JGO,ooo',.14500 1 CaTmpOus D1Live 0 . N 8 .s 0 . S Vic,v. Large deck. 1 b\o('k 1<1 1\kt• c:t'Ounds o( this 3 Bay or Ocean view, and back yard plus.great family SPANISH VILLA disposa], range, washer, home on fee land ft... iLM: bl.'uch. All retnodelcd and i«Jroom home. Graclo\IS poo1; One to tit yaur liking home, ·featuring 4 hoge Five year old home jn beuuli· dryer. drps, 2 car RtU". Only $87,500 Sell or tri\(Je for income. S rcdccorat~·d. Delu:<e. SlJO tiv\n~ room ,v!th hrlck in pocketbook. Make an ap-bedrooms, 2 baths, large fu1 beach area \\'1th a Span· $27,900. FHA, assume 7%. CALL 644--7211 1213) 376-~4 .or write 308 per month Sept. 15th thru fli'Cf)lH('C, lalh shC'ltercd 12' pointment with a depcn· fainily t'OOm. c 0 n c re t e ish Dair. 4 Bedrooms, l X ·By Owner. 586-1607 Strand, MSnhattan Beach. UP TO 90% I June 15th. South Laguna . .,. 4·1• patio for en!ertAinin~. dable agent who wlll seive boat/trailer access. $38,000. beth, \vith family area oU Lido ls•e 90266 ' 2nd TO L 213: 46-1-4686 eves. zi:,: Concrete pod ror trailer or you. CALL 645-7221. Call today. the kitchen. Lovely neighbor· ;:;;o.;;...;.;.;;;... ______ 1 NEWPOR,T BEACH 08ns 1 721-5115 days. llo~•t. A m!l!lt tO ~ce. Call to-Ontu larwln r ealty inc. hood, cul·de-sac .street with · MOVE-IN COND. Prinle bay{ront sile ilav 'fhc Real Esl3te Fair equo.l boUlil)g oppty. an excellent assumable Joan. Completely furnished. 3 BR. ~-_ fo r boat teP:Sirs & sales• Lowest r ates Orange C o. Houses Unfurn. 305 ~J\'Hil3::1 . ~ ,968 4405 {24 hrs} 6% VA, $195 per mo, PITI. 1 ••• 3" o.• Only' --rill ~•u Gru...1 .. Rltr, 67s.616l Sattler Mtg. Co, General -847.3584. 50 It. lot avail. on Nord at Condomhllum1 ., • 642·2171 545-0611 ;;,.;._.:.'-"'------5% Down-21 [ 1 l\~ove in cond. $36,995. CALL · Pus mru s. >JI ...-s. <I' ISLAND ·PA1tA1'15E~· v.. '"'-" S.a ch E state ~ the """'sent lime! Newly For fabl:tlous family living, lo l60 •-· If bo · 24 ~ .. -. IMMED. POSSESS. ··-Lux · 6 Bed 5 r 11i. , ~rving ar r area )'1'$. Unt}l'lievRblc' flug:e lot·room decor. ·Pi~r & slip. $285..000. · ur1ous rooms, fllr pool and tennis cO\lrl .. Ba ck Bey 3 BR, 2 ba. Comp. redecor., ONE OF A 'KIND Baths, 4,000 sq. ft. of qu'lli· e ~ SQ FT • 2ND T D d T\vo story, 'I spacious =-==-=-=-----ne-.v carpets. Fireplace. Lido's last corner lot, street t;y. Lush tropK:a.l center .. "· with·W.annificent •"lew of r_ust ee 5 brrlrooms, gracious living Horse Property! Shady .yard tostreet 35··"",across ·beach coLJrtYatd. Priced to.sell at ··--& PRlVATF. FUNDS AVAIL I ·t1 • · k 1· P! S35.7=. ·,,,, DOl\IN ~ ,s·•M500 • the San•·&uis' Rey Downs · · roon1 \VI 1 1·1·1(' 1re .ace. "" · & tennis ct. $6.'i,000. .,.., · 'fhorobred T\'B.ining Center. Any Amount fi)nnal -ii ninl(. 2 large side 3 BR. fixer house on 1h acre BALBOA BAY PROP. VIA LIDO NORD GRUBB &'ELLIS rtas 3 bedrms, 3 baths, * Call 6754494 BKR. vards, tiont i::atc. A family R·4 161 unit site. Assumable I .,...;!;...5~56;8:8:0:..~!;..,..1 4 Bdrm· s. & s. Ba"-·. Realtors f•·repla-Is •·s•·gned with a 1.,;;,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,. Si1.e horn ('. Take advantage 6',;, loan. 01vner wiU •carry I• =:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~I magnificent custom ho~. 2863 E. Cst. Hwy .. CdM sCparal;; private g u es ti" 'i~.'.~~';;1 " s.1r.~~· 5~~~1 Re:: ~~~8400T.D. $41,900. Ca 11 ASSUME 7'f.i% Joan $2900 7 ROOM $164,500. 675-7080 bedrm suite. contact : Mortgages, ~ down, 4 BR, +21/2 BA +din J ,.• • , LIDO REAL TY PREFERRED PRO. Trust Deeds 839-(il:\3 rm ~0 ~3 Bk SPANISH I CARMEL MODEL PERTIES (TI4) 75"0 ~~ 260 CUTE I Br cotlage $120. Funt. Ideal for single. E/side. i\TTP..,\C Bacbelor, $125, con1 pl furn. Sml pet ok. • Assumable 63/4o/0 VIS19H HoWanl & Co. ' ~· eves. r. _ 3377 Via. Lido, N'pt Beac 1 · ~ Nt>>.11N1 anion~ ~in.nt lrees """,_....,. G~~·r=d~o~n~G~ro~Y~o'.:;·;;;;;;;;:-;i __ _:~~!~I~~~'.__-~ --*"---6"7..;3-_7_300'---'*~-VIEW $390 DOWN WELL SECURED 1--1--honrt · -~~-··-·' i Outstanding H.V. H.omes; 3 •vy "'~""'"" .. rvuc-... s-s u TIMO~t. --Newpott----84Ne H]li> farn1 s1yle hon~t", 8 1~ B 33,9 spacious Jivin~ 1Wn1 \Vlth Balboa Island r, ,.. a, new crpt &_ gold ~arpetin£-, d~rator drapes. Valley view. First time offered. $72.500. Fee (you O\vn the Jandl. ed1 111., llh Bath;-ne'IY-efll' ~l Deed 9" pets & paint. $21,000. Fail'· interest due 3 Yrs. \VU! dis· Jane Gardl?ns, an adt1lt com. count $840. to yield 13%. 2 Bil, SliiO. Children ok. bring-pet:-E-nd-pttt;·,,.---\-----.-!J L.ARGB 3 Br $240. Garage. '"11.v countrv r \ r (' p \ace, paint. $22,750. Owner (213) lntegr\ty of style, setting and GRAND OPENING lin'A'l' eot-ln kitchen \v\th NE\V DUPLEX, for sale by 431-3500 design greet you here! Newport Bay Towers munily. Agent 836-4200. SIGNAL.MORTGAGE CO. ""'""'""'""'"""""'""'""1 1114) 55&-0106 Child ok. FREE RENTAL BOOK DROP IN & BROWSE f"or C'xan1ple: 3 bdrn1 home, 2 baths, Costa M e s a , College Prk .. garage, fenced yard, bu i I t-ins . $275 per/mo. \Valker & Lee, 2790 }(arbor Blvd., at Adan1s REAL ESTATE i'l1t11"r cuplx:J11rds, fcne«l owner. $140,000. Huntington Beach . Spaciousness is the keynote! 1 & 2 BEDROOM gro\lnds \vith outrloor llghts 673·6918 or 982-4946 370 sq. fl. family room. 400 CONOOMINIUM HOMES CORBIN·MARTIN Ouplexes/Unlfl 4500 ·Cam~us Dr. N.B. and fruit trees. Son\e lhin~ 1 Corona del Mar sq•. ft. masttr bedroom suite Bayfront Homes sr>eeial at $35.,!')()(l. Tbe Real GREAT LOAN boasts parent retreat. Let Boat Slips \"stall' Fair 536-Zl.11 TWO ASSUMPTION ~~ )'.OU the rest! Call Full Security Higbrise PRIME OCEAN VIEW NEWPORT BEACH * * OPENTIL ~ •'ITl Ft.iN 70 9E NICE! .Sl~I & concre!e C?nstrUctlon PROPERTIES FOR SALE Realtors 644--7662 Sale -·-~ 162 _;::.:;;:... _____ . _,;.:; lST TD well-secured sea90n- ed; bal. $63.785; pays $640. mo. incl. 10%; all due 1978: for $44,649. Box 3, Apple Valley, Calif. 92307 (714) 242-3144. DUPLEX ... Sharp Santa' Ana Heights. Principals only. Terms. $37,SOO. 642-3729 OcearTfrOnt · · Colorful Co_tt91 $7,900. Do\vn & $315. a mo. ~ ~ Private Balconies By State of California Snanish slyle 2 bedroom Rare olfcriug -of ocean side will make you the proud 2 garage spaces per unit. Watch for our big ad in hl'::ich cottage \\'ilh sluinp of the hwy. property •Of .2 o"·ner of this gorgeous 3 Roof top sundeck SUNDAY'S PAPER stone fireplace .. 7.oncd R-2. houses on .one 1!:>t; live 1n BR, fam rm, form! din rm Unusual Opportunity to Pur· (Class 100 Oenerdl) SIZ9.500. Call today for one, ha"".C income from the & h~e bonus rm home, sur· . _ chase Bayll'ont Pror.l'rty in (213J 64»-3708 Bread & Butter We Specialize in Ne,vport details The Real Estate other. First time ottered al roundl'd by 21 acres of • Newport Beach. Ask for r-.1r. \VC!St I [~ l Beilch • CoronU del ~1ar • ~Income Property 166 LANDLORl>S! Falr 536-2551or839-6133 $79,500 greenbelt & 3 comm. pools. Huntington Harbour 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. Income Units Hol.llesforRent -& Laguna. Our Rental Scr- 1 ... ""!"l"'l~!!:!"""'~""'"J_*·-NEW '1.IS.T.ING *-"----• 96~'2§.56_! ~ ~-_ --=--_ 675-8551 l'i•.wP<>..l'Ltt•ights I_ _ ~~"vl~wfREE to Your Try 4000 Sq. ·Ft. cgarming 3 bdrni. 1 bath If Hearty PRIVATE ISLAND ROOM TO ROAM * FIVE..UNITS* -Furnl-sh·• NU-VIEW RENTALS I Corona del Mar home wilh bachelor a~t · t • NEWPORT BEACH . on large R-4 lot, so· x 305'. Houses W'gl 300 673-4030 or 49:1:'3:Ms I . 1 Best of _area. Owner \\'Ill 8843 Adants, HB Expands Off Shore BY OWNER Large custom butlt home, 12 Consistant income $860. per CUTE H"" $US nr bch, furn. For lhose \\'ho apprec1a e help on financing. Best buy at Magnolia) • rooms: 4 BR, 2 ba: huge mo. ONE 3--BR, FOUR 2·BR General Matu-""guy •r gal. r!nc cuslom 1,.'0nstruction and at· S-73,500. Two ·~oftlces opening Leaving area, immediate oc. rec. & fam .. rm., utilfty & -Units near: Harbor Shoppln.,. --'" "" l'Xcel!cnt tcrins. 5 bedrooms, 1 CORBIN·MARTIN ~WE BUY HO~ME.S now! Ground floor oppcrtun· cupancy, 4 BR, 5 BA lu.-rury laundry rms, & 91nce or Center "' $155 . Util pd~ Oceanfront ON Channer---i-ur $175 yrly. fainily roon1, formal dining: R Ito ,..7662 , . ., !or •unb•·n·ous sales ......... 2 year old h.omi. Many de· den Lge nv·mg rm . .579 500 Bach Beaut V1e\v' Laguna Appli, sngls, pct ok. ea rs _.... J n--• l · " ,.. 1 f h · · · · · ' 3 BR only $195, 3·NO\V! ft1•·•l roont. Jargt> t,."llnte room . ......,.., or your equity pie. lnimedlate noor time uxe, cuS'lom eatures ave w/channing frplc. Lge. 1 • $175 ·I Bl'. Channelfront, Ir.; . . ... and a glorious panornn1ic WALK TO A 2. WIJJ pick up ba('k pa.yn1ts available. Tminedia~e earn· beeij built into this outstand· kitchen w/.all b I l'1; t n s , _ deck, New~rt. · w/gru:. Bring fa1n1ly ()('('an viN\'. · RIYATE B 3. No charge for appr. ini!:S possible. \\le have solid ing \\'aterfn:int home • CUS· · Many, many extras. Asking * ELEVEN UNITS * $225 • 3 Br.-:--Gar-, deek, -ALA Rentals 642-8383 PLUS p EACH CA.LL US referrals from new home ton1 lumitut·e & 1967 Cruiser ;68.500 or will lease--0ption. 5129 500 Balboa Isl. Winier. Ba lboa Peninsu la fil'mnval of ont" oon-structur. * 556 500 * FOR AN ESTlf\1/\TE sub-divisions of the Christi· included, ExceHent terms. CALL '-!\. ,4,·l4 t• , • NU-VIEW RENTALS !)! partili0t-1 expands the 1 NO WAJ1'1NG ana Companies. S279.,000. Also av.ailable Un· ~~,,I. Price just reduced $15,000 for G'ii-4o30 or 494-3248 PENINSULA Point Exec rumpus roont, roon1s, a roomy kitohen, a 842-93n (TI4) 846-1361 & (213) 592-1361 673 7782· a EAL TY real opporturuty to make Pier frplc dsbwshr \Vintcr bay, 2 BR &-den or 3 BR. game ioom lo a full 24x26 Two-genaoos 5iz.ed bed· CASH NOW CALLlllLL COMSTOCK 1w:1ish~. Fot info • ~1 _ -'9111& · ·a.sh-01.jt s~e. This is-a BA~NT--5 BR, pri beach., home, 1 block to beach 01· AND living room all done In Le)n. OCEANf.RONT N1ar Ne•porl Po•~· Off It• .th.(j bes{ income p1:u•chase S500.' G-ra:.00451673-~. ' indoor/outdoor patio in-~v·; finant'.ing eur1't'ntly on Yellows und LimP Greens • 701 YA l DUfil.E · t:htis: year. current income tercom, frplC, all bltns incid Hvall<tblc al npprox. 8\::r~I.. that's ~so-liclrt' and sunny • 10 • Brand ~w. ·boge 4_ Bdrm. ,Newport Heights $1405. ~·mo. Balboa Island retrigtlreezcr, 'no pets. $475 Top voll11~ at S155.000. that it look111ille Part ot tti.e Ctttl 4 BR.J UiiJ?tiero, a up. 3 Bdnrf. 'down. Xlnt fi. cusToM BLT 3 BR 2* <BA 4 BR house avail now for 9 mo. lse. 675-1337, 962-8449. CALL 644-7211 ptlrk~':. RL~!n°""i'ikle. f:~w~~~..!.rCe~ nancing. 1st user tax ad-Formal entry to sunken L-R. N-rt mo. lease. Lots ol room. Baycre.st ~ , ..,.... .. <v ..,.~., .. "' vantage. $164.500. Huge Family Room with •-r· STUDENTS \VELCOME. 1-~--------ter, .w /w ,<;l"Pts, custm HOR y drps: full·wall brick fire-~ VATH REAL'f beam ceilbtg, Den, 3 fire--If Call (213) 289-8366. If no CORNER lof, Jrg 2 BR, r.Jn NIGEL r · ElAILEY & A55ll£1ATE5 pl, bllins inc. new dsh· 494--0615 Dave 6T:rl972 places, electric kitcht!-n with answer leave messages frplc, patio, cpts, appJ.. Don't Mi ~ Th• Boat wsbr. l\farina H.S. Dist. NB DUPLEX luminous ceiling & 'cabinets Fairview (213) ~. ~~~ $385 yrly Js;.-. or you'll be u, p the river Take over VA 7?'v loan 0 H.-Fri., Sat. & Sun. I galore. Large garage, sep-646-1111 2 BR, winter, new I y I $28 300 Paymt&. 1 218 • 34th St. arale boat or camper entry, decorated, '4 houses to 4 BR, 2 BA, forn1 din rn1, *SHARP'* Without A ''Tiburon'' ~ ' · · 0 3 Br,&2,Br.,openbeamceil· Pool size yard with outdoor (1nytlme) beach. $230 incl. u itls. lam rm dbl gar. $350 !}.12 Lowly, sharp.. d tip I c x ; Buy a brand new 2 bedroom Just $2-11. per mo. lhcludes ings, freshly pa1nterl inside ga ; BBQ. ~ ' ~UIS mo. Ise. 646-1454 eves. spacious :.; BR. 2 ba. horue 2 bath condo. Outstanding all. & out. Nu crpt & drps. 445 Redlands 642-1447 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!li-~~~~;;:;:i;;;-:;;:;;-;;;;;;;; plus brand new, ptustr2 clubhouse fa cihties, prime IJ $76,SOOt $15,000 dwn. Bal. on Va<ont-Ocean_Vi'ew. COSTA MESA 2 :~~::seye, "::;.i:!;• 1I'g pati~ Cor ona (el M ar bdrm. -unit. r.tany extras. location. ~'N--dn ~ 814-%, agreement-by ownr. EASf-SIDE--·. v· , ' [)('{·au.'ll" this lovl'ly home<:' Nr. public park & tennis 1~/r dn -8~r/~. s-y., dn-9%. 531·5101 l:t:I 5ll·5IOO DALE WULLNER. AGT Great 2 BR, 2 BA, 2 fplcs, DUPLEX $25,000 iii (213) 761-TI96 * -~ -2"'Br, frplc7"beim ceil. just hten fin i.'lhcd. It 's aU courts. Owner a nxtus! $500. borne unprovement S56-8l8l or &U-1J71 huge ran1 .rm, splil·level --CHARMING 2 sty w/lge liv 'carport, 1 blk beach!. ne1\• & sparkling. Ne"' gt('en MORGAN REAL TY bonus. Choice of Carpet. home. Dble garage. Owner \VEST SIDE rm, frpl, 4 Br, 2 ~. Good $175 • Attract 2 br front DON'T S'i'EP IN THE PAINT BUCKET i::hai;: "arpc!ing in Xl rooms. 67).6642 675-6459 Barg-oJr>, at S29,~. Call:, Irvine $17;000 EQUITY will repaint & carpet to suit FOURPL.p{ $54,000 Joe. Winter or yrly, 673-73~. )\ouse, blt'ns, gar. yrd, palio. 3 hug-e bedroom" \Vith la rwin realty inc. lh plufh 58 ft. catamaran. buyer. Chvnet' !llBY carry 1st JOE FORTI ER RL TY 4 BR, 2 Ba,-ft'pl, patio, 9 mo. $~ · New. exceptionally matching h<iths, 1\'hite brick H OME & INCOME equal ho.using onl'lty, Will trade fqr_ !~al real TD at n.2 % Wllh 251{,·down. · h10-lll3 lse at $350/mo. Yrly lse at nice 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc. dbl ~~~~l~~('c:a~!'f~1~~c~hl~11.~ 2 ~~~1~~e~~: =m. 968 4405 • (24 hfs) MAfTREE~JITE =t~~l outright. Are can Brier fur appt. 66-6649. 11 UNITS. Room for 3 more. $400/mo. Util pd, 675--0797. 1N°U-VIEW RENTALS lflon \\'ilh total payment of 2 Bath rental a~nt with do )lble close1s, GEM ~~oinLe~¢~g~~i,3~~ =e c5lM81S. /!io~ ~aB[i 2be~!: ~~!~e'ren\!~k$l~ 67~ or 494-3248 S2:;() pcr/n10. Sl:'Ul'r \\•ill "-'ilh large sundeclt. Quiet TROUT,STREAMI, fireplace, baioony and vie\\'. •<vr.F NB only lmmE'd poss 675-7953 t ·1 547 ....... 1 Br tri $200 I w/-. .. hdp finance. Priced at 1 h d d ·~t In Old .... ..,. Tustin Ave., . . · · · · owner, 642-8520. Mo. pus ut1, -..>C)'M. • • yr.y too"", $~.50(). Cnll 54s-9t91 rre s a e su .. --.: Ever.ytl;ung but m thei6-pop-3 _additional bdnns. 2% REALTORS 6424623 N rt Sh move in, newly pa.ml. I Loco~iv .. ~r. i:aft~r !~·~s I ular "Balboas," located in baths. family ·room and an SALES & RENTALS ewpo ore• SALES-EXCHANGES.MGMT B•Jboa· Peninsula Cottage $235 yrly, hedge )'nl, .,. _........,. Tiburon's choicest park·Iike exceptional back,yard on 2 Bachelors ........ $52,soo WALK TO BEACH' K.V.J>J_.~ CO. COZY 3 ~m cottage, nr ~~nsuclalper~ Br $275 yrly, (7:::-"~---__ , l Estate Sale ! ! ! ! sunwndings. Both "apple ! g reen be I t . . . lhe 2 I Bed sn 500 l·Story 3 BR .. 2 ba. Frplc. -"""" .,.,...., t 6 / 1 W lk & L . pie·• condition & both Jea· pleasure's yours, the el· + -room · · ·.. • Industrial Prorwor ry 161 ua.r -mo. o · tncd, nice ynl. Crdnr. a er ee HURRY be .I CdM ~... f ' T 2 I B V lot $97 500 Atrium. In spotless cond. r-M t I f'd N l -s .,...,., ture 3BR.21;4 8A,pt'ivate orts nol. r eme n dous + r+ ac. ·· , Cl & aurecppre . opes. Unique4br,2ba$395yrly, t11&L ,,,.,, I super sharp 2 BR home on patio, total exterior mllln· family home for on I y 4 1·Bedroom · · S125.000 ose to ~~~250 tennis. * ll ACRES * 613-:-1162. encl patio & gar. Grdhr ~;o;;=~~E~;:;:~-· R-2 lot -priced f()l" quick tenan~. electric builtins and $55,000. · BALBOA BAY PROP. CAYWOOD REALTY Newport Heinhts CHARMING Peninsula Point ALA Rentals 642.&383 ii sale $56.500. Call 645---8400 air cond. Both low 7% as-CALL 552-7500 * 61•74· .. * • ho Y I tat 3 Bdrm I ~ "' ' * ••• 1290 * Bluff Area me. r Y· ren · " CHARMING home rompL I N B h I I sumable , loans. No yard-· --~ ( 1 bath $375 month 6734786/ red '' ewport eac YllleH Howtinl & Co. "~'"· ~ fishing inslead. VISION JD% fNSTANT APPREC Bott Buy In 673-66i4 . ecorated, 3 br, 3 ba, frpl. S ION C LL 0 r on p~~ of ocean view Sa nta Ana Heights Costa Mesa) · patio, gar, 2-blks Cron1 rAA'EEAA;V,~~~GE OF w i.-...... • ~'l ar~in realty lr,c. :~o ~~1~:.·s~~~~ ~i1~. :: G .I. RESALE ~lVIERA REAL TY Corona d el Mar .. ~~· $J~. :C~~-store$. I COUtvt:-R:i----ATMOSl?HERE •• CORON~\..HlGHL.AND ~ lo'"s_houslng.1?,nnf2_•y.hr1)-•• .,.e.d.__hjll By owner. 10%.-under. esl 3 !k!rn1 ho~e:lg. 1ot: Coun-... __ J,49 Broadway, C.M. OII'NA CoVe; 3 BR., 2 Ba . • . . 11 !!h this largl' tree 8\' O\VNER 3 BEDROOMS, 9 ( • ~ market for quick sale. try atmosphe1re. Taite, over. """;J'807 6JS;4747 CYii. newly redeco,r. All neW ap--3cp~/~, 2nr:a!'bis '& sh1;:~:1 !!lied lot. 4 Drlrnl, family Sl'ONE !''!REPLACE, POOL_ REALTY REAL'f.ORS ~.500. 552-7098 existing G. . Loan. Full L Is lo •· l70 pliances. 30 Paces to beach. $425. Bef. lOAk~ or btwn 2 & nn horn<", (~oublc gar., and SJZE:D YARD. PRINClPALS ' Univ. Park ·eenter, lrvine BY Owner, West~U/Dover Price $32,500. VOgel ·eo., O .. " -'• -$600 ~to., rent, I ease , 5 PM S75-403.1'~ 1'00111 for 3 n1ore. 566.500. ONLY. 673·5970 • WESTMONT • ' Realtors 548-9346 lease/option lntmed Oc-=~~~~-----O area, luxurious a t condo, OCEANFRONT R·l, ,$J2),000. ' ' 3BR, 3BJ,,, I blk [n)n1 beach. ''1nt>r may entry oaoor. OCEAN View Corona de! WITH BE 'UTIFUL Lagun• Beech overlooking pool, & Grecian Approx. 78'X444'v"l''on An. cui.mncy, frpl 400 E.17• , FOR All Mar, 3 BR, din,·ng rm, fam "' Wostmln1tot ~ • Irw• Co !Utr 644-filll '· patio, less then ly•· BONUS ROOM M If' VI Gardens, 3BR;-· 2 lrg BA, r.:1x .20 degree slope. Have n . . old, all blUns, $400 per tno. c.M. OW rm 2% ba $69 500 By · egn 1cent ew xtra 1-master BR. 2 .:nd· •-", cle-..:...1..-for ·2 2 BR deluxe cottage, firepl. 6=7481 • • • ow'n••, "" -1. ' ' PLUS 4 BR, Oh extra large W • n de r f u I u-bs·-·~ed ... 6 \UI '14 o.i-...... ~ ,..,.. ""' vn-4'1<.I ~ ....... ""'. frplcs, Marble imported WOULD V.OU lrtOry from coastal com· 1'til June 15th. $285/010. 3210 '°'""~~~~-~~-1 DUPLEX comer, c,harntlng. , 1r''.,t!·lerRoo •• ':!sumfoer boat or view! Richly appointed 3 doors, expensive crpting BE"IEV'E Mission. 213/376-2814 or Seaview, CdM. &i2--2222. IIARBOR View 1-1 l I ls . 500 Poin "" 51A% ·and bdrm with family rm & thru t $84 500 Ca 11 '-Writ 308 Strand M h ttan Spacious 5 Br/d('n/fatn by owner. settia, $176 pays ell ' fireplace. Dining rm, chef's ~A" ~2..· , . . a 99'x136' lot ln this ~i ? e . , an a . Huntington Beach rn1, pool, spectacular view. Open 1-5 daily. · -• ".-iu1 .Bea=""=.:9112'i6='------l ·-'-'===-,,;.;;,=-- TA KE OVER-7\2%~ vA cozy, rustic $'51 BQOOr J (tpl(), I' yk~;.enN::aupati~. Ti~ s:re Nearly l/3rd acre. ul iioRR~GO SPRlNGS lot, NEW 3 er,'home for rent. nr $850/Mo. 544 ·23.59. ••• 00 PAYS ALL ,. R 2 Jot nn·nc' NEWPORT ISLAND for storage of trucks, boats. 90dl0. . Must s e 11 tm-bc:h $315. mo. never oc· 2 BR, 1 BA. frplc, rc£rig. "'"-· mo P8 '°• · · 1. • ,..-"' .. " ditioning. Luxurious decor. and· campers, ·etc. 'Plus 3 414 FERNLEAF 'rake ovl'r subjer;t 10 c:<lsting onty. Ownr 6734169. 96 ... 4471 ·( ..... J 546-1101 Priced to sell at $59,500, brk WATER, FRONT bedrooms, 2 bath custom mediately! $1500. ~ cupled 642-3216 Call 644-0030 'VA lonn nnnual percentage Costa M"' • ' . . 494-8003 home with 2 huge family eves. L•guna Beach , tate 711.irt,.. This home looks TAR8E-LL· LEASE/OPTION rooms, fire p1 ace & RM I Estate Wanted 184 OCEANFRONT tWV\ mo. 4 3 B~. 2 ba, ~n, spacious. Ukc a mo<l•l bome, beautiM HEAR 'THE , DUTCH CLEAN . IRVIN-E-COVE ASSUMABLE 7% LOAN. -!"'"0 • ~ 0.u . mo, Yrly Jhrou<houl, 3 or 4 bed1wm, SCOTCH.PRICE . BROKER 833-0780 Bargain at 142.!'00. Call -* Cl,IENT * -BR., 4 ba., fumuhed. case. • · ~panded master suite + SCHOOL BELi C: MoveJn condition 3 bedroom 4 BR., .4 baULS: h brary: l1 rwin realty inc. wishes to purchase dlstl't'!ssed OCEANFRONT furn. $350 2 BR \\'/gar. No child. 01· U1, &Orgeous -ush shag ~ ( 2 d ) h' Ex ocean view home. Garden NPl' Crest Lu do 3 CQnal housing onot". prope:rties, homes or income mo. )·BR. & loft & deck. pets. 612 Poinscllia. $275. ~rpet, brick t~pll!lce, (Jou· They're tust a block ·~ or + l'.n ome. tra entry w/slldhig skyl!~ht; -xury oon ' · ffl.4405 (24 "hrs) unitS for the purpose of Agt. 494-9704 <194-9729 1fi\fy 644-86l6 646-0555 ~ garage, hel\V)' shake Irom lhil, super ah.arp 4 upgr~ing, :r;e lqt, ~ formol dlnlng rm.: architec-Br, 2)'e ,ba. lofted ceil~, 1 • renovating & re-selling. For UNUSUAL 3 Bedrm home on 1 6-'1=o=LA"-'R'..'..K'-s:'.:p"u"R::..::,..;B::;R;:::.&~l->1d-.1 r. tiled breakfast bar, 1;Khm home with lots 'qf ;~J::· icboO s, shopping. lUNll~v de~l .. ncd,., ~1T.i.OOO . ntutcr suite w/sun dee · infor call 545-8424 SouU1Co cul-de-sac. xlnt View, lgc pool. Lease $350 Mo. 1 ncrctc drl\le-.t-a.,y, spacloul l'QOm for the •kids. Hug_c. larwin r ealty inc. .TURNER ASSOC. ~.1~~,d~~~rk~tillprl~ Investment Co .. Realtors. lot. $400. mo 497-2626 01' BOYD Realtors 675-5930 ~flt·1n kilchen. Value Pric-~~ ~,Je9f.e ~mdr~~ equal housing oppty. .UOS N. Coa!!t H\vy,, Laguna Xlnt tlnanClng for sale. or ~ OLDER 2 BR house in S. 494-1235 Al.so unfum, 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, patio. 1:!!!,1$.1~:io~l~d thnta. ouCt. Dbl. ga.ni.g 1 he detac~· 968-4405 (24 hrs) ~ 494-1177 ~547--9673. MhHomll 1--~t1a~esa. Private buyer, 0 ~~ONTla ' ~!~2• C<lal4IF;!;1J~~ u::::.~-""'"'oiiiiiiiii'iiii.~iiiii c reat k tc en area BEAUTIFUL· 1oott1on .. PORTAFINO . a..N"' o...,, Bi-will new, g ss, W\llA.I, ..,....-\1\-U\1 1° OCIA RONT Mom! Priced to sell in ','1 .. ,>O· .. "' . .._i,; • .,f;TJ'l\'o-s -sount-t;AGUNA. I -block Fe-aturect ln Home Tour bdnn, 2 bath. Winter. ' NF CO_!la Mella for $26,500 -'c "' _.., wtVn to_beach. Newl" remodeled 4 BR 3'1 BA ~ '" ~1 494--0615, rn:ol972.C -::.0'::.:'.o•..cM=•;,;,.;_ ___ _ DUPLEX ~ r. ---m11y" ' ' ' ""'X w ruv Mohllo Ho,,... I · -tmns. \,,ill ·lt' lnfu1•t1r1t.'ll" tine.I !?Cation 2 Bdrm, ta rm, large Profess\OnaJly Decoratea · ""------=---•-• SMALL attra<!Uv&_,,110use for Bf 2 rrms. ~.unit: 2 Baths. 4 lli t:'.rse 1'11.A ~ ·1A homef. deck lV/Octan vjew. Cncst MANY EXTRAS For Sa,le 125 r..-... salaried bachelor. $165. No ~1!..?ooni:. ~·L pa rBkt~ r parldng. Newl1 painted ~: •et· apt. $62.000 firm. By owrl('r. $89,950 . 644-4440 10 • ·60 FLEE'rwoonA-• pets. 494-817-0 eves. Garage. Yard. Low n1aint. · re<lecor. Priced at & ' K "SA"IAN . Call 2l3·721-5U5 ~a YI, Prl -• o ... " ~ ~ 15,000. Walker Lea r' D 213-4~ eves. Summer oc1.,....s nlJ' ..cond. $481X). Meuiy Extl'fl S -B 1 Lido Isl• Avail now. $265 (1) 82S4495 I: t'B-3663 642"6963 Evts. Rial Estate 962-6644 rentals considered. BLUFFS X .e1an, $60,000, 3 PopOOt LR. Sl'lng carpet, us n HI ~'o,'"89,:70--7'I:Jtl5_.,.,,·..,.-:;--.~,--, •••~ ••r ••• 1-BR, 21,i "Ba, 1 yr old. 301 refi'lg. shed. etc. Must be Opeyrtunlty 200 LIVE ON LIDO :IBR 2BA. Mesa Verde. Ave.ii 545-M91 -()pen eve& t O~ER • 3 BR, 2 BA, huge OcHn Vlew-$53,SOO Vl$ta Trueba. Owner moved for trce-wD.f. 54M879 . , . Z BR, 2 BA, brick trplc. dbl Oct lsl. $300/mo. Roy MESA d 1 Mar AUu tam. nn. w/massiw frplc., Spanish sl)lle 2 Br It den 64Cf-1090 'eVM. i ' • Parkmg Lot Mtunl.<'nnnc:e gar., w11br/dcyr. \Vlnter ML'Cntdlc Realtor. 543-7'lZl 6"'% l~n. 4 Bf, cove; ~~el:it.,'~t1:~" ~it~W!ired = ~Cw ~lvst\I~; ~g_O. 3BR· ~c near ocean, IO\Y NEWPORT BAY : ~~5'. ~;~~\~~I ~le ~ $350. 67$-2227, 213: 2 BEDROOMS, 2 balhll, ~$.l'?,700. Owner, refll' ye.rd comtr lot, nr C tral kit wibitris;' D'Jtl· dow_!'l pa)ment, Miios New 2 BR, l l)A livi ng nn. e t~.f;. Salesman nec.'(!cd · lietltf'dswimndngpool,$250/ -. bch. $39.sob. ~562. ~ todln ·a.re-ft: Loe .til,cb :r:! ,Lar\on Realtor. 673-8563. Adult park \v/private beach {No loon \VOtriclll WINT,¥:R lease, bt-aut. so. mo. CO.ll 64&66JO. "i N 'PT HEIGHTS *-4 BR. 1-% BA. Firept&ee 3 BR Tt)Wnhoae. ltetrig, ~ .. ·.• rtlvterft coastline. 1'RADE Newport Be a c h $16,500 540-3672 Holland But lnt11 .~~J1ri>i 4 BR.fi!a':"· 2 BR. gn.r. lrg yard, cati>tls, n. .. lovely litr. \Iv rm. Double garage. Wa1:\C to 3 pooJ, childttn ok. As&urne MISSION REALTY 494-0731 Prop. for Out-Of-Town JBR;> 2BA. Bolse General 64$.4170 SALES 540·0608 Y $1,G;:) M:fithA drupes. $love. 1 child Clk L.--j~ /din. area. Olin. kltch. -'!:!1001S 645-4449 By Owner. ~ FltA, low down . * $42 500 • . Prop. Bkr. TI4/673-2058. Cu1tom 2-l.'61. Nr Leisure ' · ' Bill Grundy Ritt. 675-Gtm $165 per mo. 54G-7sa>. r , ckyard. Dbt 1ar UUMES.okLV~ 968-1486. Sharp 2 BR,° So. Laauna NPT CJ!$1 3~ ~ 2~ Ba.1,-1 World. Contcmpc:i Lag\lna, ~pi'.J'NER .~lklned, · ac~lve "&.la.ltt-Rooni 4!1>"" $275 niG. 4 BR, 2 Bu homt.•, M,!ol·'N tlf\..~m! l47.~. ori 3 ~. 2.Ba ho.me. s:n.~ 1..0.JNT. &.,down, 3 BR-, huge home. Wa1k lV bea $3,<i5a' beWw ~ct. -view. 837-1001 Pt'Cfiffi!i:'I .. or silent for ••• clean out I.he gar'age e.e. . t1Cd ycl/11t3r -- 1 ALBOA BAY PROP. l.p. OWorlA§!,_~m9. I "" l800 Ill n. 129,(lfK!, Ph. * 15! 950 * 714% Int. Owner,-· 1958 10' x 53' ~<pando multi-million doll•.• well , •• 111m t~t junk l~to .,..h ...,Lwknd, . I * 642·7491 * BEA\)TlFUt <Mesa Woods 962·'ry71, 968-1805, Role El· 4 an. Mme, 1-forth Lalf\\M HARBOR VIEW ROMES bedroom, $4:)00. Ad\tlt~ no ~lbl~hed ~c cl~~~ u t with '-.Da.lly P~k>l Classlf\ed 2 BR1 off·str, uulet, patio, 1 hori\e 3 BR, 2 ba, atriurp, ltn.-a.gt. Pt.ACE REALTY . Mon!~ fee land. Upgrllded. pet pat::}I:. C"ll R.w-52\i6 tiriresfi.nie of{el'<'d ~i ad. Call 64.2J.i678. gar, actl.ilt epl only no t>C(JJ. dt1.y la UlC B~ DAY to fountain. 979-8380 "ves. , 4 Br, 2 ba bon1e 494-e704 494-9729 $59.:JW. Prlnclpfi.\s onlf. SACRtJ'ICE $.?,950, L..ldo. have $ 3 o. o o o "~Ccure<t" Don't g1ve up the 1hipl $l'15. ~l. S4&-14(XI. t\A&'Il A1Jf AILOoYn tpdf'-l&y~ ~ • A roo@ Wbt ad 11 a_ pod ln-$25,000. J.Dl.U 'MAUii& Ln. wllh a OaJl.Y 2uot ClUi:Wed 644-{).IOS, I Water Front Park, Furn. GrOund Door opportunlt)(. "lbt" it tn clo.Uitlt'd, Ship "Ll!!I" Ii b) olau:Uled, ShJp D 1:L<YI' vestment. 54W163 ad. Call &t2.-5678. • Classified Ads •.. 642-567ti Dbt W~de, $W/pool. 675-8220 6'?>6291 ~tr. Camp. to Shore RcsultJI:! 642--5678. _ 1.:, Shm"tl ltC'lult.3! 642-n-· I \ I \ I I • I Ii I~ l!tl I -"'"-1~ 1----lltl I ~····-~ ll!l I Hou-F u rn. or A F iiiilliiii U u ~-- 22 OAI LV Pll-OT R.,_tllt 430 Unfum. 310 Apts. Furl\. 360 pis. ""!'-;... __ ..;;360.;,;; Apt. nfum. 'Ml Apt. ""'"" 3'S Apt. Unlvrn. Sin Ctemenh 365 Rental• to Sh•,.. Houses Unturn. 305 HoUMI Unfum. Cost1 M9M Legun• BHc:h.., -0..;•~n~ .. ~.~1 !!:...---~~l:B:"1::',boo.:.:"':1":,1:'.'an-d-;---"-"' Hunllnvton -.h I ;C~o~""';i;ijj•~de~l~MAliii'.i~rii'iiiiiii, Hun tl!'!'!" llNcll Sl-lARE Apt. or I~~ SAVE ms l·Ion1c-Ptu1nt'.r, 8 3 G -1194. 54Jl.l479 S155 • Util Pd .. nice l Br. 1:::;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;~\;~;i~~;,:j;.;::--; VERY CLEAN ~iove, retrig, c r PI Id r p , WATERFRONT lBR. pri BAatE $'156-$166 -l.Jmlted Income! *NOW AVAi' ••LE * ANO SHARP carport. 2 BR 2 ba, oceanh'ont J.w> patio. Ne~ 2 BR, ru.m ar LOR & 1 BR .. patlos, ~ Stcurity? 1.o1u. l BR. hont" v.·ith •~vely '"'' S16S . I Br. near lic'ach. Big 2 BR '2 ba Jum, winter $275 unfum, 1nqu!re 400 So ~~~ IJ.::Vth. 'ara:'u 0-1 ~~ Adults Only-No Peh BrandSanNow0 Gardetn Apt11 G 1 R 1 ,35 Pt"IS, bea~i. pand'cd v.•itlls, yard. Child/pet welcome. Newport Beach. 3 BR, 2 ha. Bllylront, no. ;J 'losets. RZ:. ~I, pool & ""~ COiie to Slloppln& &. bus Xlnt2 BR, 2 ~nsi95area ara9e1 or en ,. <.-OV1'1't"d patio, tl'Cl'11 and a $225 • Util Pd., l br, frplc. Unf\lrn. Yriy. $.125. NE\V 2 Br, dee. furn apt, yr-pool tables, sauna bath1. lines. Unturn. stove, refri& 3 BR. 2 BA, ·'th d•hwr STOllAGE Garages Jor !tent 1 patio, steps to oc<'un. ly $325. \\Tinter $265. Avail t!>--1 tncld. wi iuge. ff>l'IC~ yard. Families $250 • Lrg 2 Br, ocean view Semi. 8. 675-J.412 or 673-0110. ~ or )'Ourself. 17301 TOWNHOUSE All Utll'a Paid & fireplace, $250 1959 Mttpl~ ,\Vt'., No. 5. only, $250.lmo. Call Coats apt, bltns, huge deck. Keelson Ln. Cl blk W. o( 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private 2 Br, 2 ba A den, around All apt.I. have prlvate patioll, Costa Mesa. & \l.'al!ace, Realtors 546-414.1. $300 ~ Small, but ni(.'e 2 J~r. B1lboa Penlni u la Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). patios, continental break· &or $1G4. n""8U·96ZZ, Mon-ma.ny other teaturea. See a1:1W_::::AN'J'::.::;_;,"n"',",0'-,-ga-,..-0-,-p-t'°ki~ng L.R(i !!CH & l Br $120-$125, fn1Jc house, So. Laguna. 142--7848 fast. Spadous groundl, near Sat. 686 Clunino De Los Mares, space \V . Nt)l lk-!1 or C.l\1. . •. ' •( :, ...: ' ,, • c;,-<JOk, i•iit, ~lfi, util. S:i50 • lmniac 4 Br, tr plc, $35 WEEK & UP 2,BR, $150. built lna. Inquire shopping ·& rtne beach. Fur-1.:=::c_..=s=P~A~C~l~OU=s~--~! .. ' "'ralut?'r_~f _San Oemento1.:l'l.::•::.·'_;""=·.::==------ 2 BR $190 v1/frplc. kids/pct· btns, hear Niguel Gou Co ndominrumi • Sleeping R()oma att 6 PM nisb~ or unturnilhed, from """' nuz;p fncd & gar, Course. Unfurn. l20 e Jtousekeeping Rooms * 900-1J2G * $250. Corona del Mar, 3 Br; 2 Ba, c::tPtt, drps, newly Use Estrella OU-ramp Office R1nt1I 440 .;i :\ Bit Jo'/H, 2 lm $325, bbq, $-JOO • Country Estate 3 113 _....;;.c.;.:.;;c;:.. ___ ~ e Ocean View Apts La g uni1 S:.i1ch 644-2611. dee. Pool. ChUd ok. $189. Phone 492-1021, 49'J-8700 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====; frpl. patio, gnr, bl'irlg fam. ac. 2 B1·, 2 Ba, big stone East Bluff BALBOA INN 17421 Keebon Ln, nr Beach NEW 2 BR, 1% BA., ocean\• ALA Rentals 642·8383 trplc. 10'5 Main Street 2 BR lower Dupld, tum FA Spect.culir View Aft, &.7 ~tet. M2-J546 or view, Top aree. super de· PRESTIG E LA{tGE 2-BR. 1 BA duplex, $450 - 3 Br. 2 Ba, trplc, 3 BR Condo Erultbluff, S•l2S. 6Th-8740 heat, prlv paUo, enclosed ON OCEAN BLVD • 2 8R 2 84 -luxe, adults, $250. 4!fl.2'264. OFF ICES C"pts, fh"'l'. OW, ideal loc. charming oceanside on Vlc· Call for a p P 0 int m en l, PENINSULA POINT: One gar. Near beach, Vacant, BA ,_1 ba1 • bl • NEY/ ,apts, Half bJk from the r ountain V(l.lley, Beauli· E ·• "" 1 1 toria Beach. 64" -A il o 1cc 494-9601 • ... .,o.;Jc cony, bl.I. 6 uni 1 •·b uJ b Ud'·~ d :.asts1 e, gar o I a ti>y, prkg NU-VIE W R E N TA LS ,,...,,,,MJ. va ct . ...,th. block to beach, beaut ~="';;.:,~..,...,.......,...,,..,,,,..., Ad"~ y ••~'mo Incl ocean. ts, Br. $175. 2 -...-'• f new u "'b• gi'Oun tor trlr/camr,·r. adults on· Foun toln Volley niodrrn 1 BR/S175 mo .. OCEAN beach front, 2 BR, 2 '""" · .,......,,. · Br,·$220. Adults, no pets. 116 Furn. or Unfurn . 370 flpor, 3,000 square feet, I ""~ 673-4030 . 494-J'US $350 741 0 util. 675-55S?. 7th St. 118 ~· ·-or _...;..=.:.;...;.;..=;.o,.;.c...;._ I d ··'~. all y, no pets . .:uJ. n10 . .lllt & 01 ..., ...;.;.;.;;.;.;.c:,..:..:.:.;;;:_ ___ 2BR/$250 mo; Furn, gar, Ba, mo. cean· ..vr~ wU iY!m:'·mto sm er last + S75 clng. 329 ~Lagun. N lguet BRAND new, ne ver lived in, ~undi>ck, yr\y, adult s, front, 494-4601, 494-1279. Costa Men ,~~=~~-~---Balboa l'enln1ul1 olllccs. 50c per square Rochester, 6-12-12&1 . w/w crptg, drps, 4 BR, 2~2 673-9169 673-1194 BACH apt at a-escent Bay DELUXE SPANKING new·No. S1r>rft ----------foot, includes carpets, SINOLES/Fan1ilies _ Va· NIGUEL Shores, 33681 \Vind· BA, fan1 rm, patio, 2 car P!:.'NlNSULA P.Jlnt 1 BR $155. up. $50. up wk. C.Olor APARTMENTS now renttni. Deluxe 2 br, 2 FURN. 1 BR $165':'" 2 BR. 2 drapes, all utillties, jani· cant 2 Br. $130. Also 3 BR, jnmmer, 2400. sq, ft .. 4 BR, gar., rec facil ., $ 3 5 O. partially tum., utll . pd.: TV. 1435 N. Coast, 494-~. ha, Ii 3' br, 2 bl.. Many ex· ba. $225. Unturn. 3 BR. 2 tor service. call 1.iatilyn $180, kids/pets. Agl. Fee. pri gate, beach, po o I . 644--2862 yearly $200 m".I. 673-7l19 OCEAN beach front apt, S350 Air Cond • Frplc'a • 3 Swim· traa... 420 Cypreu Or. Ba. $350. Cali: 673-9591. Stovall (n4) 832.5440, 979-8430 $430/mo. 8.'ll-1453· .H;:u::n::t;:in:!gt!'.:'.o::n_:::B::••~c:::h:.._ __ 1, 0 °v7e;;:•·ITT-;;R.i;;;;;;;--::-i'"<iii mo. Ml!.gniticent view. Ph. ~en"!'a~-~11 H_eablhymS~_; .fEW9'-1488I or 830-4237 _C::o=r..:on::e=cle=l=Ma~=-r==--~~~~~~~~~~ LEASE -3 BR., 2 ha. with -e cozy 2 BR h"om'1 + 1 BR 497.2370 or 494-4601 Buli:rd 'R::iom. cr.uu N Br, water pd. Crpt, 1.D;...:.•n;;.•;:..;P_o;.;i:.;n;_t ____ pool tacil. $330 Month •TENNIS crts & pool + Apt. C!ose to oo::enn. Immed. Lido Isle 1 BR -m $l50 drps, stove, p.rb. dlapl, prlv VIEW, ocean, palms. I" -494.9704 4!»-9729 Agt. total security In new 2 BR 2 Come to 36Cl9 Balboa Bl\•d., · .... v pat, gar, wsh/dry hookup, 1 trplc, shag, blt-1ns. Beams. BA 1 sty w/prlv pa''" & N B 1 BR & Den From $190 child. no -~--~ 6, -,,. ·-uu . . FURN 1 BR. lncld util, gar., 2 BR •-$210 ,...._ .. .....,. """~ .,........ V"M" .... ,., gar. Adults. \Valk lo beach. OCEAlNFRONT·Sl 2 B 1 d··•t ~· $200 '"""m 962--7295, SG-1002 ;;:.:;.:::;-,::;:::...----1 OR 2 y $280 mo + ls! & last & 1arp r, a w , no .,...... mo., 2 BR. Twnhses From $250 Very plush 2 Bl' 2 Ba, full Cost• Mesa .. 1-inda Isle CLOSE TO DANA POINT MARINA New 3 Br, 2 Ba. Ideal for adults or w/1 child. Lease. $275 PM' mo. Eves TI4/ 544-7678. 6 BR '·,!~a.seba. Pier. & slndip. security fee 536--2376 completely furn. $215 mo. yearly, 673--0837 MEOITCRRANEAN appll, club L .....:.. Adult llv-THE EXCITING •• 7a ., alt'·CO . VERY l h '2 2 B Call 6'12-6277 aft 7 pin. I NewQOrt Boc't\ '"' • ......>• iJif1G~~· Mi~ ~~161 appll, ~1~b & r!i. Ad:it {~ BAYfR~~T bal Brt'· a .pt OCEAN View-4 bed 00 2 VILLAGE ~ Xl~t~. 1 ~ac:r J:J:sM~S~~~i-1. ., Newport Beach ~~ xir;::=: 1 ~~ac:;~ ~~iirid ~,~·. ~~· bath, only steps 1 tom'the 2400 ~~55~~ C.M. 53.f-3896 Bach, 1 & 2 BR. fl'om $150 OI•TICE s~ce -top n001· I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;; 534-3S96. YEARLY Lge 2 BR, adlls, ocean. Dishwasher, built-OPEN EVERYDAY DELUXE· Extra Lrg 2 Br, 2 Adults, No Peta. w/occan Vlt>\V. ~ sq, f1 . Fount1in Vafley HUGE 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car VIEW be h & bay $235 inS, shag carpet, 2 porches, Hours: Fri-Tues 10-6 Ba. Poolside apt. $180. Nr. 1561 Mesa Dr. 444 Ne.,.,,port B)vd. 3 blks N. I gar., all bltns, swim pool, :N:'e::w'"cpo:'::rt'-:'lloc:.;;.;'.;.h ____ 1 ,"_'_"'_~•=c~5,,_~20~19~· =~·~ lots of closet space. Parking Wed. & Thurs. l()..7 beach. New llwg crpt, (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) ot Coast Hwy. Close to J-to;,~ kids OK, like new, only $265 Dduxe Condo~ 2 Bedrooms tor 2 cars. Winter or Year-bltins, etc. m> Florida. 546-9860 hospital. B!t-in ni o du I e mo. No fee. Agent. 842-4421. plus den EXQUISITE brand new con-•• * OCEANFRONr· 3 BR, Jy. Call Eric Mueller, PRIMA CASA APTS 536-G582. desks. 3 production rn1 , p Huntington Beach Fireplace, wet bar, formal do near beach with view, $325 Incl util. \Vmter rental. 213/724-5880 or 714/615-5491 1838 Pracentia Ave. CM NICE 2 BR, 2 BA, nr. Ap~~VwlnnilEW 01P~N&IN3Gb rf't-Cpt. & eonfl.'rencc r1ns. 11 '-----l---'--------l_:D;;i•;;;',"~",.::""~;•· Pool, tennis adjacent to pool, tennisi[,c;;;r-.;*;;=Call~t67'4:(;\iij724;:=*==:l"-'~v"iia;o~•;::w~rek~end~s;. ;at;;t=.[ Open House 1-5 Daily schools, limit 2 children, no · Wcuu ng , 4> r UHl pd. 33c sq. ft. 548-5300 c 1· , etmi;-double---Muna, · euuh-r-2-Bdtm,,.2. Co-on.-d 1 Ma __._ ~~ PAID --1' apt, w/Jamily rms. No all 5 pm. $ OWNERS OF $ 1 garage, Im1nedlate bath, sunken master bed. & r 1 harp=R9V9corated Family Units _ OU n 11 • ~-pets.F'romF9~iiii"i'irc'Trii'C==.J.~---ll!' $ REAL PROPERTY$ OCCUi>W!Y . liv.li;ig rm., din rm., beamed :1 BR, newly reium, 1 blk to 4 BR, 2 BA. Frplc. front Welcome. La.rge 2 BR, 1 $145. just . $175.' OUR .TOWN W--OFFTCE We're here to serve you! ·Brand new -$500 Month ~1hngs, fpl, \\'e t bar, G.E. bch . garnndry. o Pen porch & lrg rebar terrbeace. Nr BA. Refrig, dshwhrs, bltns, WALK TO BEACH Family Apts, 1250 Adams N 1 AIR.PdOR1T11 . p l;'Jlm; OF CHARGE' HARBO• }t1tch w/traslunasher, 2 sll!' 'Sat/Sun 310 Marguerite, ocean & ay, aches. patios, walk-in closets, iar, Brand new 1 & 2 BR, Ave. {Adams at Fabview) o ease req • u serviee, P Try Us! cau prior 10 vacancy n decks, dbl elec g!f'· Avail Apt B. 492-5372, collect. Adults only. Rent $350/rf'lo. crpts, drps &. po o L , carpets, drapes &. bulltins Costa Mesa Phone 55G-()Ifi6' drps, cpts, n1usic, air cone! .. Don't lose $$. Save Time. Oct 5th. Lease. (i44!2ll7. Winter. Annually $ 3 8 0 $2204230/)40. 221 • 16th St. 847.395? * CASA VICTORIA * · all util. Single offitts fron1 $ ALA RENTALS $ BRAND NEW Bi~~·~::.!~~$~ 646-821! or 646-8409. Call C.J.S.~aeat Estate WALK TO BEACH 1, 2 &: 3 BR, Furn & Unf. S~AL'r~ADES CENTER " 9 Newport & Bay, CM 642-8383 Lease -.1::ith option to pur-& up. Util pd. 2500 Seaview, $35 per wk. & UP. 1 BR., 2 548-llGS or 833-0084 1 & 2 Bft. Carpets, drapes, Carpets, drape!', D/\'f, TV 2!182 S. E. Bristol ./ BRAND NEW 2 BR. chase! Top quality! CdM. BR .fc Bachelors. Color TV, TIRED OF NOISE? bltns. 3<WJ 16th St. 536-8548 ant. Pool, etc. 121 Victoria Nrwport Beach 557-7010 CONOO. Crpts. d r p s, • 2 & 3 Bedrooms 80 H maid seiv, pool, The Mesa, Wilson Garden A....t•. 2 Br, or 847·3:!1>7. SI. at Harbor, CM. 642-8970 {Ca mpus.'Jrvine Intersection) • 2 C G . of wy. Lovely 2 BR.. 4.15 N N-~rt Bl NB •-range/oven, dshwhr & ar arages tpl, 2 patios. $275 Mo. .,,..,968·1 ..... ,... " . . l 'h Ba, crp~, drps. Pool. NEW bldg • BR At• D/W Dana Point * COSTA M E SA * disposal. Beaut. pool. All for ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"''""'""'""'! I S450 & $475 '""' · Mature adults, no ......... · .. " ' N • · only $225/mo with year =. NEWPORT CREST 675-6491 or 673-409J NE\V Luxurious O c e an ONLY $162.soiMO. crpt/drps, frplc. 1 lk from BRAND neo.V deluxe Bachelor ev.• o!Ji~ buil~ing -Three lease. 16687 Viewpoint Lane. $235 . 2 Br, 2 Ba, garage, 2 PHONE 645-6141 &\CHµDR apt. avail now, Front/View 3 & 4 Br, from 2283 Fount$ Way East beh. $235/mo. 536-fi613. Apt. in 4-plex. Encl. gar., roon1 suite ava1ruhlt·. 700 sq. 2 blks N. of Warner, 1 blk blks beach. Child/pet. N. · ' near ocean, privacy. $150. $300 visit 2004 \V. Ocean (W of Har-L.-. · W"-) 1 BR nr· beach, shag crpt. ....-1 loc 675-1849 ft. ALSO 2.000 sq. fl, -all w Shores. PARK Lido Twnhse, Exec. mo. 644-4899 • uw. on .....,n -.lc, gas & water pd. $1165, &........ • • or part. All ulltini>s, janl· . of Beach. 847-9914, S300 -Near new 3 Br, 2 ba, type, 3BR, 2lh_ba, {rplc, C f Me ~~:.t daily or call 64&-3114 Call 64&-2848 s;._1661 or 5.16-683L Huntington Beach tor &.·n •ice. 2706 HarOOrl 675-l505. bltns, ga., 1 blk ocean! pool, 4215 ·Patrice 646-1231 _0.!. ~--·-" EJ Pue--M-• Blvd R-h.,,., Nat11~00 ru11 VERY plush 2 Br, 2 Ba, full $325 _ 2 Br, trplc, bltns, 645--0930 ' --OCEANFRONT Upper 3 br, -• •v •-2 BR. 1% Ba. nr freeway. DELUXE Adult Poolside . '979--657l """• . appll, club & pool.' Adult liv-patio, Rar. Balboa Island. BLUFFS * * * 2 ba, $350. per mo. Ocean-1 & 2 BR Aptt., Unfurn. ailldren welcome. $185 mo. Garden Bwlgalow. N r . . . ing. Xlnt loc. 1 mil to beach. NU~VIEW RENTALS f~ !v~~· $490. Some SPARKLING N£W front.lower, 3 br, 1 ba. $300, $130 & Up.__ 16100. Me.lap, ~7339. ocean. Frplc lrg patio 6 BUSIEST Ulll'rs£oellon in . S225 lease. 536-0092 or 213/59&-1709 or 596-Tm All Utilities Paid 2 BR apt .avail, 1 blk to pools, aawu'i., t en n ts . NeY."J>Or! Harbor. Sc.•t'Ond! S34-389G. 673-4030 or 494-3248 644-ll50 Chvner·agt. 2 be b. Sl90 Call afte r:. 846--0'1S9 story in Unique }(0111('s.! LRG-Bach w/kitch-$150, util .Townhou1e. Unfum. 335 1 DOOR to beach, lge BR, PooGI~A R1'°""or renatlot n Tu~ lbru SUn. ""'" nJ,, pm 1 Bd~. From $135. B~i1ding. MO sq. ft. at ~ NEAT 2 Br. Crpts, drps, pd pl f BAY SHADOWS new cP.t!! .. redecorated, furn ;ogir $350/ino; · 600 sq , fl. at. yard + guest room. Walk to VJ.Ewcor Br Ufri· balcony, a,,. Costa Men or Wlfum, yeany -or -1959 Mijt e Ave,-C;M. 2BR apt; crpts, drl>s,-.tove, L .. UIY .S..ch $.100/mo. Bolh with vie.,.,'s.f ~~h & d=wn. No pets. pli, gar, kids/pet. Apartment$ mo/mo. Parking. 673-fi640. NEW ADULT UVING!! refrlg, lawxl tac. $160, 1 ~675~5-0000"":;.· ~-=~~=r mo. 7. Look! 4 Br, 2 Ba $300, patio, CONOO 3 Br., 2 Ba adult Spacious, Li ght & O\eery! OCEANFRONT, winter ren-BACHELOR Units & 1 BR's mile to beach. 962--7549 1 BR. 1~~ BA condo, ocean SUB·l.£T N('\\1 ll~ £,q. Ft. SE'ITING on acreage -ptv. gar', sngls ok. Now. S«'lion Built-ins, cal'pehng, 1 & 2 BR. AVAIL ta! lower 2 br furn, closed w/Lofts. Frplc's, beam LRG 2 BR, l~ BA. sruDIO. side, pool, crpts, drps, Office Suite, tenan1 ini· home, dbl gar, $150. Also 3 A'-A Rentals 642-8383 drapes, rec rm fac & pool Avail Oct 1 I garage. $300/mo. 642-3229 ceil., patio le pool bltins, &t. encl gar, infant ok, no pets. balcony. $225 mo. 494-4062 pro-.·cn1en1s. Koll Busini>ss BR, $180 C.M. Agt. Fee. Eeatbluff, 5 BR, lBA Contact ?wtr. Q ueen · · · or collect 629-2546. rcfrig avail. $160 to $225. $157.50/mo. 842--0350. Spacious ~diet. crpts, drps, Con1pli>x, Bi rl'h SL \\'alk to 979-8430 54~2132. ' Beautiful appointments in· BEACH Rental_ 2 BR 2 Ba Util pd. No pets. * 3 BR, 2 BA STIJDlO. 1 blk main betlch, $175. Ph airp:il1:1,-A4 11'8C!ive I l' as•' NEW 2 &. 3 BR. adlt._.condo, Executive home. New paint 1-luntington bei1ch elude Decorat~r Firepl:;i.ces. frplc, sWldeck wioceati 393 Hamilton C.Y.L $195/MO. Mature family. 6*M478 or 494-4191 arrangen1cnt:;: $675t~1o, Call pools, tennis, etc. $275 & In & out. Walk to CdM Hlgh, ~;....-':....;.;._;;,..;.,;;;:;,;.... __ ' Sh~ Carpeung. Pr1"'.ate view. Yearly. $400 per mo. G45-44ll or 642-8520 Avail now 842-0350 ~N~~~~~S.~oc~~~;;;t:833~-ll~TI~~· ~~~~~f.J $300. Agt. 5-18--1290 Elem schl & shppng. Yr lse 3 BR 2 BA $230 mo Vcr.1 Pauos. Pool • Jacuzzi . 644-15l7 NEW 3 Br 2 Ba 1-1 l . . IW N EWPORT BEAC w/opt, to renew. $575 mo. ' ' · ·~ Volleyball · court • Gas , • ...... c H 4 BR. 2 Ba. frplc, patio, Incl water & gardener. clean~ Pool/rec center. 213: BBQ's. Closed Garages. WINTER Rental. Duplex J $240. New 1 Br, 1 Ba. La1une Niguel <15c ft. airport art'a. F'ull 17751 WrightYo·ood, $310 Call 644-1060 436-1 14 Adults .. No Pets. Unf. avail Br, Upper $275 + util. 2 Br. Creh1g) $17Q •. All bl.~.·, 1 l BR. FURN. $215. .,,,,...,.,,,.. " ·1-~ 1 k. to ~,.,.. llA"'-""""' • Du I '-$250 liJ N la"~..:~ BACHELOR FURN $195 .,.., .... ~ . .;>(II~;, v.'C'l'OO lflg , ~ crw-.wvu p exet Furn, 345 . o..Al'ft'er + u . o pets. car gar8.l"e ...,,,....~ n;n. f If M ! NEW 4 BR/fam rm, near •BAY & MOUNTAIN VIEW 409 W. BAY St. Adults. 847-6880. 2276 Paroeia . Ln. {near' SEA TmACE 2 BR. UNFURN '$235.' utur<' go t'l.l\lrsc. u\lant South Coast Plaza. $400 mo. ~?°~ ~~ lrgco~~v3l ~~:.· Ball)o1 Peninsula Coste Mesa $29.50 per wk & up. Color tv, Placentia It W 11 son) , , Oeean Vltw. Yea.riy lease. r~~1Z· NB5'10-2960, 3 4 O O I No pets. 642-6618 Man.ger Bldg. E-103 maid sei'v & kitchens. The GU-36.93 or 646-9358 AJ.IAITllE(fl'S Heated Pool. Adults Only, ' · l 1 1 ;crvf'7!n"•"'-"==---1 ~· =~.:1: "f,:;;.%'~: OCEANFRONT Upper 2 B•. * 646-3387 * Baycliff Mole!, 455 No. WANT TRANQUILITY? locallllnla'a-LAS BRISAS APTS. OCEAN VIEW •• Le ·-•~/'!O .... ,, •• or (}y,'Jler's Unit, Fum. Winter. Newport Blvd. NB. 646-3265. H • the pt ln 2 BR --5515 Rtver Ave., NB Unique chance to share e.x· ...,.., -" ~ $250/mo. Call 6T:r5366. --·· ere s a · r you. • CALL 642~~r1.1. ecu. suite & reccpl /~CY in · 641)--0Si)) ,Eo:;,:;;;'""~~'.CO~~~ $30 WE Ek & UP DELUXE Lower D p I x , encl. gar. w/storage & laun-~ YES, WE HAVE RENTALS :NEEWPO=c.:""R"r'""s"°ho-...,--4,...,B'°,~. 2 DELUXE FURN 3 BR, 2 e Studio & l BR Apts. Bayfrnt, bch, 2 Br, 2 Ba. dry facilities. Adlts only. No llpM ....... 1ldlll-gni~n B~nk B!gg.,f~t"'POrl May Vr'e be or service Ba, family rm, pool room BA, $275/mo. \VINTER. e TV&: Maid Service Avail. $350 yrly. 227 19th St. lnq. pets. $166 mo. 646-0077 or lot& ... bMdlwttll % BLK to beach, 3 Br, 2 Bo., McnFeri d 0~4-~ s. f\lr. : in solving w/pool tbl, patio, w/gos 675-53ii6 O< .646-1040 • Phone Seovice -Htd. Pool 23.1 191h SI .. 67>-0'236. 646-1809. -=ei::. Corpet, omtdeck, bh·lns, shag, c """' · · : Your housing needs? bbq. Across st. from beach. 1 _N_•..;w..:po_r_t _B:..•:..•:..ch,.;c. ___ 1 • Children & Pet Section OCEMTRONT Bachelor & SPACIOUS 3 BR.·, 2 ba., nr. bl9 -llwlnl gara&"e. $300. 127 44th ·st., DESK A"f'Uce availn.blc • ' From $315-$450 $425~ly lse. 64.S--0836 or 2376 Ne-.vport Bl.vd., CM lBR it.pi., y•arly, $175-$225 N'PI Hu L1k racns. pet1a GE N.B. 61:>-0m. mo. \VII} provide fur11itu1 "i: \VINTER R 1 548-9755 or 645-3967 · · e new, cpts., ~~ _.. --· • S at S5 mo. Answering M:rvi~ ;• 54 . cnta, secluded Furn & util, 673-1531 Mrs drpl, bltn R & 0, dlabwahr. ,,., __ , i1nt1 An• available. 17875 Ben ch Blvd. ("I 1 I '·11 111 I I' I It I • ----1 Ll'u !iur "SINCE 1946" lst \Vestcrn Bank Bldg. University Park, IIVine D1y1 552-7000 Nights THE BLUFFS Newport Jslaricl . Clean. 2 (Ad good for $5 on rent) Wood Nice & qulet. Mature adltl, .. t 1aMir,IK. Ilda.. oool. 14 Newport Beach smart new, 3 BR, furn. Garage. $2.'JO per $145-LGE. 1 BR. FOR rent or sublease, 2 Br, 2 no petl. $225. ~2414 Jlc:uzd, ftrtlldl kulp. IMMACULATE 2 br $145 . .:i:untingto~ ~ach. 6-l~UI BR, pool & maint. Cust mo. Drive by first! 503-38th B be t f in p k 1 BR Ocean 2 l>ikl, Shq,' Ctolot112 ..... l,1~ Air, fenced pool, 1 child ok. 1617 WESTCLIF F-NB crpts & drps. $52S mo. lat & St., N.B. then call colle~t FULLY FURNISHED. NEAR N:Wpon.au ~ver:!iong to~· nu apptt Adults, l'I> pea. 2 111tlilLFfml$2G6ta$3Z5 N. Santa Ana. 83S-5177 2300, t:ro, 756 & 540 Sq. F'l. last $200 dep. 8.13-8635 or i~~-4640or "Mike'' at ~~~I~iT~~·L.NO lain. Call 645-5000 ext. 334. Yrly $175. 675-2124. ==~L 1 Ample parking, Util. Bnun1· 557-7883. BAY VIEW CAL L BKR. 675--5800 OCEANFRONT upper, 2 BR, UPPER 2 Br in 4-plex. W/ lllf..-tlltfc):;'-• gardner. 5-11·5032. 5 BR, 3 bath, 3 car gar, 1 Ba, pri patio, plus gar. sundeck. lzg. nns, E-side ""7 llr.tncc..tHwy _. ll a:ti) NE\VPORT Bcat'h, np1>•'0X. delux e ~ r p't g , n ear 4 BR, 2 BA, uppt>r, romp!. BACHa.oR apt -Duplex, Yrly $375 mo.-Winter $275. C.M._6§:.7485. .. · • ,,... 340 sq ft a.r .. \\'ell clProrale!l clubhouse and pool. 1360 furn .. redecorated. 2 blJa; to immac. cond. pri lncd yd. Util incld. 673-1247. t....-fllael• · office. Rent $175 nio. No ~t~low, N.B. $575/mo. ~ase ~·il.44:;~. Y~~~ ~~~. occup. $155 pe~ n10. ~: lsf:' steps to Bay & ~~.2 ~~: ~~50.di;: tbecllolcecommaaltJ Rooms . 400 •1:c'.,..~o''°'E--=L"=''=''-' ~---: 3 BR .. 2 ba ............ $400 .LAR-~'°c"E"l'"ux_u_ry~h~o-m-,---n-ew 6i;Xj969, eves, 832-9478 1 BR. bltns, recently redec. 673-0072 Fry &: lhop'g, 1 child,ok. no 4 UXE olfices 18c 3 BR., 2~ ba ........... $450 3 2 0C ,.,,;,E;;,ANFRO"'C~:cN:::T'--'::.:=c_ N petJI. 641J..3'186, 56-0'160. LAGUNA, room, Tasteful & PLUS 400' \V arehousc space. 2 BR, 2 ba, den, A/C •• , $275 cf~ilyt, mcmB,r, -Ice. •A. d':.'"ts tal 1 2 ...: 1winter 1 "-~ 0° ki1ds Eor pets., $1.30. ·Av! SM ASHING New Bayfront 3 NEW 2 br, 2 ha, $715. inclds Mell Verde cornfurtable. Priv entr & 1370 D Logan Costa f\lcsa 2 BR. 2 baths, fam rm. $350 ...... ...., ... ower ur urn, cos~ ct. . ves at 5:30 or Br, 2 Ba, lease tll June 15. gas & water. Mature adults, DLX 2 • 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl deck, canyon view. $110 mo. &14-2228 &16-lX'-12 . 4 BR 3 ha 1425 only $475. 642-6889 avail. garage. $.'JOO/mo. 642--6229 wknds, 646-25.'M. 1395. Beach. 675-1566. E ~ '"'7270 APPROX '' ._, · " . · .. ·· ··•·.. Im or collect 6~2546 HU no pets, 114 . 20th St. ..,70 Re tal O! ...,..... . ; . x ,,;, 111 shopping 4 RR. :! baths ......... , '475 m. · · . ~E. 1 Br, fresh J¥ilirt, OCEAN FRONT lrg clean 54&-0137/64&-4095 Pf'· .,... up. n c., ROOMS $20 wk up w/kit $30 center Qn Harbor Blvd, 3 BR. 2 ba., air cond .•. $275 SHARP, open beams, 2 Br, 2 3 BR duplex, Jrg. sundectc., 2· built ins, & dsh/y,•sh, adults, furn. apt, l -2-l Bedrooms New 2BR apt, util pd, 3(ll6 Mac:e Ave.. 546-1034. wk up apts. Ol.Udren & pcl C.Osta f\.tcsa, ~421 O[ ~ BR. 2~ ba ........... $475 Ba, guest room, bl!ns, pvt c~ garage. Yearly. Uhls. no pets, 642-4044 aft 6 pm, (n4.J 675-4688 or 82'7-8000 children we}Come, "-'•, N-rt ... cft section. 2376 Ne'"'"'""' Blvd.,' ~54&-7~91773~·~~~---•I CALL 552·7500 beach, security g uar d . paid. 213: 944-4890. or wk.ends. .... • ...., ~!"-.. ' " W/D. $450. Lse. 111 524-3473 2 BR 2 '°'=°=""==~----1 ROOM apt, furn, pri en-dArpspt .1, ~!~:.....1960 Wa11ace, PARK NEWPORT CM. 548-9755, 64.')...3967. • Bayfront oflice space ~o Vlslo , Ba, nu carpets, AT'TRAC. Furn. 2 Br. $180. trance & bath, pr1. gar, call .,,_-u.o;:r LIVE at the beach, $25 week share Bay Lido Bldg. $150 N 3 BR. 2 Ba., f:rpJc. 2 Patios. garage Newport shores. Bltns, w/W pool. Adults, no Mr. Gates 640-1460, 645-5953 Attr · 1 & 2 BR APARTMENTS Pine Knot M t I """" ' c":;:tt>:;:·,.;6';;7::.>-::1::220°"'~~~~..J Yrly. $375 Mo. $275. mon, yearly. 5-18-4802 pets. 642-9520. active new , o e !NU" West ;:: d h Ask For Mike. Lrg. Immac. 2 Br dplx. _Dix w/wcarpeting, drpB, bltiNI Bachelor 1 at 2 Bedrooms Cout Hwy, 673--0MO. DLX. 2 r111. otljce. Best deal e re i 11 JONES REALTY 673-6710 St -* 3 BR., 2 Ba. * • ..s:rµNNING l ..BR garden kit & be., frpl. 1 blk bch/bay A~;· nO pets. $1.35 mo. -.. "~SOTownbouo-n· s;~ Dallf-RQOM _for~ilrl .student, kiJ inDuPoo.cnt' NAolrpo8 ~~ .. 8£~· 21ri ' eps to Beach. $300 Yrly. apt.' pool, rec. a rea, $165. .,,.,., """"3570 ~" 1•~ up. 1970 wanace. 646--0176 r '"· •.w-s. ~ u-v prlv,, ~--•·lb 17 o-. · 1 ~ .. ~ • DOVER SHORES Property House 642-3850 710 W. 18th St., Costa Mesa. ""''"'· ., .. ,.. t i>J'I· ._,, Spa. Poola Tenni Laguna "'WLI"' 116 M · Beaut., view home. 4 Bdrms. ~11.,lewes 11ntur n . 350 SUS CASITAS DELUXE OCEANFRONT 2beBR. a-pil "n'An mr· .. 11~ltmk., Acroa from Fuhlon ta1and '49H784, evell. : ~~~a gJb ~j sr;:rple~ 4 ha. $1.100 Mo., lease 3 Br, 2 Ba, l:lltfis, f.rpic. Yrly am ce , .... _.L_C•~~a at Jamborff.on San Joe.cm.II! !_uelf' Home 415 * prkg., $145 :no. 61r'.>-SOOO * i Bill Grundy, Rltr 675-£161 8 1 lbo1 Ponln:ioul1 Fwi1 1 br & bachelors. 2110 $4.50. ~14.91; GT:>--2949. No pets. 646-3118, 5CM)760, Hills Roe.d UNIVERSITY Park • 3 BR -;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;l~Ni"i'ti'"°~n"i'B~lv~d~.,~C~M~.C"'j;;;;;:: BEACHFRONT 40• Jiv rm. 3 2 BO, 1 Bth. Prlv. ear. Adlt (714) 644-1900 PRIV. & Semi, Ava near Bu1i ne11 Rent1l 445 l \.\'/lltr.iumd, :"'ery clean, nc\Y-TWO STORY • CLEAN 2 BR APT. furn., lrg. BR, 2 BA, thru June no pet. Nr trwy & shp. park, !Jbral')' If Shpgn n..C' NEWPO ' Y pa1ntc inside & out. Nr. 4 BR;-2~~ ba, wet bar, court OCEANF RONT adults, 00 pets inquire 179% 548-4757/833-8350. 846412"l, 846-4.181. LUXURY BAYFRONT Con-&. Balance diets. ~2562, · RT SHORE S ' ~edl~nocnic~u' paon"cy"'. ·~,":m"",· l"y=;ard=,=_;Sec;=u::,n.:.:·1yc.:c=g::.a_t_c ' Lu.xury 3 Br, 2 Ba, patio, Rochester. PENINSULA POINT. l Br. l MESA. Verde-2 BR condo, do. 1th floor. Spect. view of V1C1tion Rentals 425 700 Sq, ft., $175; 1500 sq. C~ ,,,, Gardner $500. 644-5569. tire lace buill · l\fOTEL A D/W Id ......... · bRy I: ocean. 2 BR, 2 BA, $400; spnccs avail, Oct. Jst. aft. 3:30 PM (2) 5 BR Harbor View P ' ·Ins. i pts.. lo monthly Ba. Pets ok $275 645--0280 or ' go --· patio, all el~. w/pool. For rent NEW HOME-INDIAN WELLS Gist St. & Pacific Const Hwl" UN I VERS I T Y Pa r k ONLY $425. rates, $1.10 mo. & up. Z176 645-2016 garage, pool. $210. 546-0281 or leue. ~ New -.ooo cust. 3 br, I ,,,, I townhouse. 3 BR. l'i Ba, ~~~n7~:erea~ !~!:tt. P1\Clf1C PROPERTIES Newport Blvd. 548-9755. F URNISHED 2 BR apt, HUGE 2 Br, 2 ba ~· OCEAN Front upper duplex oonvt~ den, stereo Inter-675·6050 I db~,'.· poat';'!.· A'c'!!:,· 1'ro"'m'· _64~4-514~~1 ~~=~~~ 675-6712 or 675-l632 Di na Point . &~~~le September13729th. frplc758, garW d18thlahwaSt1her. • 3 Br, 3 -Ba,_ Den • com, wah/dry, etc. Swim IW IWUlllElt II lllC '' : ' ·• -·-BRAND o •.rww or -1078 mo._ · • -OlahWaaber, 'llpoiil, •-•c, -1, •-uL tnrn, auto '' ' '.t * SHARP 4 BR, 3 BA, . new ce8:11 or Bay LIVE in the all new Dana .,. ' ... 1" ,..... ..-. tennis courts & pool. l yr. Townhouse Back Bay. Pool. view 2 Br. Yr lease. $350. 3 Polnl Harbor at the DELUXE 2 Bi·, Super area, LARGE 2 BR, bltns, D/W, 2 porches, 673-5729. · llPl'Uidn, every convmience. 601 Dover Dr., Sult!! 3 ' 1 lse. $.195 mo. 528-9626. Frplc, &>.If clean oven, dbl Br winter rental $350. <1; beautiful MARINA INN pots ok. Yrly $275. CaU new crptg. Adults, no pets. YEARLY 3 Br 2 bl. cnrp«t' Iklow mrkt at $1500/mo. NEWPOnT BEACH BEST location -Lo\'ely 3 BR, gar. 833-897·1 or 833·165,1. 626-8023 afl 5. Or 673--446)or Motel. 34902 Del Obispo St Mike 548-3869 or 979--1070. $1fi(). 707 Shalimar. 60-5!68. deck. no pet1: Cp\ 0 $250/mo'. ~ply 2l3/566-3010. BEAUTY Salon for lease 3 REALTY REALTORS Univ. Park Cente1:, Irvine ' 2 BA Condo. \V/\V crp1 'g, BEACON Bay ivinler-pvt 675-1455. (49&-2353J. Kl 1 c h en, Ef: 2 BR, 2 BA, aII bit-ins. Near 1 &. 2 BR $135 • $155.i. Stove, Ref'1. Avl lD/1. 1132 W. CABIN. Big Bear. North t.tyllng 11latlon11, 5 dryers'. 2 dtps,-a.ir/cond.,~ d11hw:1hr. b!!llch & tennb 2 Br 2 81:1 ..i\'EW.....LBR...2...BA. out&~!Jfk. flclencies & Apartments. bay & Beach. $275.. Call ref., crpt/drpl, hUl pool. . Balboa Bl., Apt C. F.ltatea, 1;-1 blk from lake. shflmpoo unlls NI a e Many extras! Garage. Pool rrPlc, blln.~. Patio.' Avali ing view of bay, ).r!y, $600 lfeilei:l ji)Ol, . ~li'eCtOlfil -6i3-0473......_.:_-.... ~dulta, no ~ 64.\-3965. _ 1 BR,_nuly decorated, trplc, $45. wknd. 84~87. neighbo1'bnod 1oc'. In Etl8t'. privl. No pets. $275/mo. now. $350. 541·9534. mo. 548-6761 or 548-2103. ~ phones, telcvu;ion, .sa~a Apt . Unfurn. 365 ,2 BR, patio, crpll, drps, Bit· stove &: rifilt , c·arpetr a: lttnteft-to SM 430 Co~ta ~sa. 644-1333 OIJ,1 __ ..,,1 552-9549 alt 3. BRAND NEW 3 story Bav Coron• del Mir bath., 1 au n d r fi facilities, In range. Avail Oct. 2nd. drapes, patio, $195 on Jee.ec, · ""&«Fl52G. _.,, 1 Laguna Beach View on Peninsula. 2 ca"r meeting room, c ose to San Balboa Isla nd $1'1S. 641).882l. NO pell. ref., 642-2994. WORKING rlrl t1eed3 female STORAGE-SHOP 1260 sq ft 11 garage. $550. '* * * * * * &~cente pta-~ Be:~ht UNFURN deluxe 2 BR apt, Eithkl• lrt 2 IR'1 LIDO JJle, 1 Br, atttlnrr rm roommite in ~·· fOT huge. 10' cell . Nr. NB Post ate. 1 OCEAN View. Beltut 2 Br, 2 ~2725. VIEW sportflshing ' ho In & boot dock on Grand Canal, Bltns, w/w refrlg, patio, w/frplc, gar. to very quiet beaut. 2 bdrm. apt. In Costa 220V .• Oi-1 dooN:. 12c 1l~ I Ba, den (Arch B t' a c n BIG Canyon Condo Ile\\' 3 Br. * NEAR B E ACH * restaurants: soJ W:k ~ IJp. no pets or mlmrs. yrly $300 $165. ~dlt/"6-~. ~ tenant only. Yrly I.e. $195 Mesa. :"lshed except for 642-~. •c =ts!,_ffl::. ~· ~ 2800 sq. ft. Choice ol crpts & l'·lu" 3 BR. 2\\ BA. "Hugo Urlng Utl• ad A, receive 15 "'" mo. call 673-0207 BACK BAY VIEW mo. ~48. ::S..;!'.' Wrtt!'."1Cl~.!1A:'1 j SPACE available lo• lcMe4n I • child OT dog ok. AVRii im· drps. $900/mo. Occupancy dow"", r'it u,ntt In new ~m oU on ·fint weE"'c a rent. 2 BDRMS., frp· le· . ~vate 2 BR HEATED...POOL S200 2 BR, 1 ba. BUc. to ocean No 9:13 Daily Pilot p o Boa~,!':~~~Dopping Center. I med. 1310 unfum. '~""' f•"'n . approx. 10/10. 963-ZUG up ex, W!l\m c e I l 1 n g, ••• · ,._., 1 C ~·i-' Yearly n:» Mcmth eox' •"-,,.~ .. 1 • • · at H .... ~ ..... ..,n JlarbOur. Cull """"" ... pnlios. fplc, nr Shoflping, no Huntington. Be1eh 1anai. All clec. built-Ins. -.... rv~, .M. oro<r •'611 Ask' for Mike . 92626 .ww, ........, a Mesa. Ca. 846-136L ·I ~!~~~ 6 &o~kl~~· w y , 41:~·~·'"'~,b~~.~~ pel<, $1Zi mo. LOW WEE KL y RATES Garage. Bntlter ~ ll•na Nlnt " JONES REALTY 6'1>6210 . CUTE ADOBE HOUSE. 1~ I w/tcnnis, ......... 1 . 1 6 0 0 . 673-0960 E ti S 1 alboi1 Peninsula . t.\RGE SBR 2BA r-1 WANTED wortdne girl age .sq. h .. adj. bugy conM?r, ror I unusual 3 BR. lovely view, ...,., * * • * * * XICU ve u tel 2 BR, ooeu w, $~ Water bltlm, dhlwihr N Ji'v' 23 to 21 to lh&re a Br duplex business or ottlce use c M older home, great erivacy, ~~SS:buge rma •-pl '·th 3 + Dcii. S4:5 lease, new & n7 Yorktown Blvd. CHARMING duri!c1', 2 Br. It gu turntahed. Adults, llOIJI. $250/mo .• .\. J' u I~ ~ orwl?!'~· C&ll 64>2020/64~. , ~ .. • .. cbanning extnt.sl>kl d le gar, u ...... . So. of liv.ry, 1700 sg. ft. of Beach S'vd. at Yorktown Newly dee., adultJ onl)•, 483-«139. &f.2..m v•...---~... "THE Fnclory" hM I\ l't'K , !:'~.~· 497·1 M 4 & ~~~ $175 available, elegance. 6T."~'160 ~ve1t. or ST UD'l50536o04&111 BR' 3~~oor ~~~~y/shop1. Huntlntton SMch 2 BDRM apt w Ip at lo• ~~Ji: 0:.:1 t Apt ( &hop avaJI. $1~/mo. ,Ip • ' FOR Lea•<. lovely 3 BR. 2 Harbor View Homes see 01 >IQ" Avocado. •· Coron• del Mar 2 BR It I BR · Stl5 •, 1165. 2 prage, 1 blk to octan. Winier rento.L 811 Pe~ NB: cannery Vlllage ~30th llt'.1 1 ba. fully cpt'd &. drps. Beaut. Decor. 4 BR, Fam ~N l'lf'W 2 BR, 2 BA, • Fun. kitchen blka frOm beach. Cpts drp1, Winter or )Tty $%!0. mo. ().It 640-a&3 aak tor Bill. NB. 673-!!600 or ~ Ocean vie_!t. $«)0, AvaJI Ocl. Rm, & f'Ornt Din. 6*4-0396. ~:::_aterrrds;""garag!:. CJ!.~51 ': ~~acilitics Pru, qulcrt lBR, w/sml & gar. ~. 1 67)..2!45. ' MALE 2 Br 2 Ba tum 8.~ nuElatoret •10~. 1 lit. 497-1~ BAYF'RONT 4 &tin., 2 bath '""'' u 1 5• """mo. ~ e Free utittttea ' 11undcck, Yffl'.lY. No. of SPACIOUS 2 Br. $14 9 . 170I WISTCLll', Dllt. haule. Penln.' Quiet 1l $125. s;Q'Cb upitunt~ or.&",,.! OCEANFRONT gr a c Io u 11 $550 Yrty patio, 30' dock Costa Mesa e Free linens Hwy, $190 per mo. Avail fm-CPRTS, · drp3, pool. Odld 2 ~ 1 lt· 2 BA. Bibi. tppU· Pref. dqree, 8 3 3 .. 3 OS O ; 8~28.i4 on "~ w/fabuloul views. decb, Balboa Cove11 -644-4340 NEAi? new 3 BH 2 88 • T.VJ' a maid !lerv. avail. med, &1+.4064 OK. 842-3548 or 847-mlf. •• ancer. Pool. 642-6214. 8'13-4184L 1600 sq rt INDUS!' sh.ti din rm • lrplc. $450/mo. SEVERAL 2 • 3 BR tteach blln.' sundeck pr;' l!O $2Gl e ,&r.B-Que BLUf'.FS cust. luttury 2 Br, 2 CLEAN, quiet 2 Br, nearly OCEANFRONT, •i SJlt.clouS. WA!fl'ED, tll&l• In oh' 4 BR 122'1 Aliio $00 oq ii otnc. Ydy. 4*-0615, 615-1972. home•, yrly. lease: from mtJ. Next to Oav1S Sc!hoot. • .PhDPlb·~ --· CftBRrencl.1p_r. $325 Mo. ·-new hldg. Wtr, cu~. Chfld unusually nlce Br apt. boult, plu1 utlJ, HuntlnrtQn $9-S. • C.M. 64~n3o. EMERALD BAY, Avall -1715 MO• AJO'lll MS-I~. 5'<!" 399'fl l!lh Sl c M • 1 Mlle to...... 2 'poo . QIM dtarm ,,_ • no pet1.".$Ulfl.-le&Z-. -Yearljl •. px!/mo. --~ llw!h llO por..mo. -· ' "11 '""' )W>e. $8:ill. -3 BR .S. J C I '"" ,~u ·sii.Moo for •PPL., ·~ omall' betlch J191q~' ·oran,e °""'It.£. 644-48411 1165. I BR, .h..r cpu, tolc,4 * WATER17IONT ttpec l br, LlltERAh female llfflled to Industrial Rentol '""' \'/'~~~·""'" to !adls. · n uan •P llr•no Dona Point ROOmS ·1~ wk. Apfi ~ BR, 2 BA or 2 BR. ~aUo, bl9Ck• to _beac6. iu -~ boat .Up ~-.JSM Joe• ...,.. lri housl. $81.50 plut ..001 BI RCH, NI -'-3 BR, 2 aly, frplc. crpt~, $95 per nx1nth. ~7006 garage. 422 Larlulpur, ask 4lS 15th St., Hunt Behl ,.._or .,~,. ·"-utU • .Jeanle,_~. 3600 ..&q fl I.Sc Pl'"!' ~ rt S3'"JO MO. 3 BR. .Pill! den, drps, 2 CU RU', pOOI prlvl, 2 BR, 'J Ba. frplc., fenced 2·BR, $169. Pool, bltlr13, crpt, next door. Eves, 673-368'1. 28R APT. OCEAN VIEW YEARLY -2 + ~. 2 tia, 3 DAY 'NOrir. Gen'I cletJlini, below 'aulriR l'{ll(', IL 1n fq. ,_aly. ~w home Av11.l1 10/10. ~ mo. alt &. yd,! gar, ''° pftt.1.-Adulls, dl'p8, ttc. 842...15-i& 0 r * 1 SR ~PT 'if on South (.out. Hwy. , blkl 19 oonn. l300. IM1 d ldnda~ Rtlable tnua. 1A1\lle, sll'jit. Btu.imi;:irdhl'.1' -· 4~-9129 Art-,675--1592. 121;•. 49S-43.16; 847-7786. all utll p:>ld. 1200.6~1684 1161-2392 •' l9MICll97Mllflll Mt9330 .. !11$-1512' IHH.032,-, I , ... p 3 F r DAIL v PILOT I ll 11;:..rtd_•_•1_r1_11_R_o_m_a1 __ 4SO_ Loot SSS 0. ..... 1.., Plu...... Hol, w ...... , M & p no Help W.o!W, M & P 71 Help Wonteol, M & p no Help Woohd, MI I' 7IO Holp Wontlll, M I I' Jll MISSION VIEJO •IJfEIDIJS• MOW I I DGE 11o:;;!.f:T~~wr a.ERICAL OJCl('l'AIL walU. put EXPERIENCED Ml 11..,. 1800 • i<oo SQ. rr. EXPERT & ""•-diaJ>oaaJl...iu.-. A FUN PLACE 11me. Buabo>L Dill...,,. ELECTRONICS """"' -.....,. c!.Vt1~~ =· •REWAlll• c'!~p .. ":~~:.. ~A.~~:~ TO WORK '1HINK'' l::i'i>Oa,.,, E. BaJhoa Blvd.. PLATl!R A Cont.:.~...,..::, !n4) m9'J Camloo Caplatrano ,,.. 11.atlmete. Service. Uc. :Dll9f. COOK Tralnee -kttthe:n Dana Labor at a r it•, • ~-:.:::,;:390ll::,:...;;N;:;.B:,;·.;,.,_~:;..,.==I • 831-1600 '"" relum or any lnrom-.. "4-7117 .TIM'S PLUiiBil{G :Ji ~ H•IP"' Apply bttwo laJn A manutactuttr o I tom· &XPER. L.ANDSCAPllt5 --~11"4"'M"'2:,30"'"S"'Q..-. "'F"T"'.-· Uo1d l;d~ to ~ of a 'EXP="'rn"-. J"'a-.,...--,.-Ganl~-,-.. -r . SfR.VtCE AND REPAIR r/ I ~~ ~eA Vude Oonv. mtttLal electronlc t e 1 t • m.3019 * New M.1 :,1'0¥. 2__1n=. ~~r;: Yard 1erv. Oeanupa. Relf&. LOWEST RATES 67HS1S h e eube11. $ ~ ee1 Center st. CM ~~~:nt 0~~,. ·~" 1r~Fld ==d1e~ ... -°'m="''=11o __ .,...-.,....1n" 1 3 Ph.11..'le WirUW with jeweled ho~ In • neat. Fret est. 642!4389. PWl4BJNG REPAIR AAME IVVI printed circuit boil'd raclllty Li&&'.um& Jlill.a Mall now 182: \V. 20th, c. Mtsa ctnter: mo, &Old locket No job too t.maU G. r:lu . c~ I XPllt. for a qualttied plater. Ap-hlttM: J.B. S..ul'Kttnon (waa on chain), approx. tbe O •..;'c.."°.;; .. ro;,;l_S:;.•;.;rv..;:;.ICH::.: __ l --*'--"*--'ec.,rus.=..:=c....:*:.-*:.... Mature, de,endeble, nnt. pUcanta mwt have some WAITRI SSIS, COOKS, 64",,-0212. Ews. 546-2'177 """ o1 a nickel, !nl<ribtd . Apply Immedtal<IY! SW1 l e ra1 1n p c B BUSBOYS, tOP & ofc apace tor Ise in in ICl'ipt. FLA. The1e are AU. type• home repatn. S.wi"!!Alt•r.•t1'1ftt I 91Qoln, !'i030 W. o..t HW)'., :.a':,,g &tx:.fit know .~ HOSTESSES choice Mlulon l\'lejo aulO deeply tree.lured taml.Jy Actuat time le material. Now HI~ Bureau ot EmPioYmtnt .;NB;:;:,·~------J>ltr, tln/lead, nickel/iold & DISHWASHERS plaza. Good Fwy pU ramp. memento1 A the lou ii Ir.. Fut Serv. No job too 11m. EXPERIENCED lleltyllfw Aatncll ~. wont&n ear nurairli proceuta. Full or p/tlme. Apply tn Avery Parkway. Call owner, replacee.ble. . PLEASE, f.~81_ ". ome Re Pa Ir, ii: Alte;~UOba. 1>1o: Day & Mite borne', buc:h altt WW con. Please Apply penon. Next to Sean, in. Paul Brazeau, 8.11-1400 PLEASE help U )'Otl have -~ skier tralnlnl. <iii tor appt. side mall. I I W t-· ·~ any lnlonnallon -6j2.3Sl9 A'l"I'' Senior Citizen.: chaul· Alteratlen ....... 24".. Busllays A., ·~1t1o-nHM-8075. DANA en a I in -~ Eves. & weekends. te Ir: ....., "" rva n• coo-"'"K",::::;u~,y::._e_. -Will----... 2401 Campus Dr. Irvine r U R N l T U R E Uf companion, from Neat, accura~. 20 years exp. nm Ualll D RI v ER/WAREHOUSE· DESPERATEI SHEPHERD nux, grey Ir. Drs app't to a day at the CUSTOM Dreum&Jdn&: Convalescent Hotplta!. Call ~e~r2:c~:~~e~l m/f MAN Exp. Spanish speak· ~tudent 25 YtL old ~ ~to!tem., 9-10 mo. old. :ece:· c!W.. ~day or Jlave own tndtpendent & l00% 1.:64i.«1==98::::..· ------Ing. Penn 547-1183, l\lr. bachelor or t BR apt tn ~ a Mesa St. bet. • • · wardrobe. Call 979-4172. CUSTODIAN, for COft. ELJOCTRONlC ~tiller. eo111a .Mesa, preferably nr. CM. \!. ~~~~ ~ ~:_~9.·~:itt~~~~· T-'··• I R I oi.i......i.81'$ 0 vHBal~nt ~~ full time. ASSEMBLEaS * GARDENER * occ. $100.$115. per mo + WA'RD! 642-5299~ Free eaitlmatei. 968-220&. • ....-11 on epa r J~'ll'Gll area. --......... $2.50 hr. ~lust have good Bt yovr own e..1 utiL Please Call 96J...3700 or I ;c==...C.C"-"=~--DENTAL AICEPT. eyefi&ht 1: manual dexterity 002-'1268. LOST black cat. Vic of CdM H1ulln1 COLOR TV Repair, expert, FREE Oetirable Couta1 Loeatlon, to ·work with small com· }"ull or p/thn& in.your 0 FF IC£.. w Ip u bJ I c ~~ ~· ~~ .. ~b':: a .. -:R ·""UBB-"l'-'SH=--,-,a-ullng--·. -y----·. ~~~.B~ N~~ All 9llfts ~ ~-;toi:-lharp, ovpo~m'", w.ov'.~1 d,•,Y~ulO hA~ o=,=.~·-~l&c• ... in~~-,. 1tenogr8.,.. .... 9" pe.rt ume "-._......~ ai:u CM. Bert Gallemore, Appl ~ d .. a.. · l"'ee.sant ... , "mm. 2 YI'.9 "'' ou , J-w .... ,. 99IAI ,_,.,.. secretary ava11. \\'Ul shan! eye « ea. ear. Pleue call garage, wattt!du.ae I:: con· 968--2'113. • Y -v ""Pl!'!'· !Wlpom:ibllitiet in. It. !\lore pay for exp. No Cash Down sml. suite NB area. Write ~7776. structlon cleanup. Remove 151 E. CMlt Hwy. dude:-SUpervbtnr ofc pet· ,,.,'Ol'kers. Rat1e1, benefit•, Earn Now, Pay Later aassUled a.d No. 948 Dally MATURE ·cat, bla c k tree&, shnlbl, u n ' Ir ht 1 Y Tiie New-rt 8Mch UA.--Job H11ntfnl)I aonnel, familiarity w/ com-no lay-offs. Very lge. corp. 534-7117 Piiot P.O. Box 1560, C...ta w/whlle at throat, 5 .... .-.t trash le debris of all types. 1 ·r-• nnwn ..... _ ..._.,Unr • I•• A-Int ECHO JOB AGENCY fem, notch mtal.og -:J;. days a week. Fast. Reliable. CmAMIC TJi.E NEW Equal Oppor. Employer .,... .... uu • '"'' .. r-• 315 31'$! St., SUlte 203 GARDENER~ Need staff J\.tesa, Calif. 926211• ~;J:,ea collar, H.B. atta.. Reaaonable. South C.out remodel. Free est. Sm. Joi! 1 .. .,;, .................. _IThlnk Costa MftCI r~~~~r:itl ~:!: Huntington Beach 53&-1439 :r:e~t::e:ordU~-~~ Hauling, &n-9036. welcome 5311--53&-3589 AUTO SUPPLY Think Anaheim 640<656. ELECTRONTCS call Beverly Manor Oonv. LOST: White Poodle, 3 yn LOCAL~ Ir baulina: by . • COUNTERMAN DENTAL OWnide Aaats.-DRAFI'SMP AN Hospital, Laguna Hi 11 a, ~ old, 20'' tall, Namr Co-student. ~ t:Nck. Reu. Top Soll $160. wk. O>. Jooldng·fOr exp. t11J1t, tor Ptdodontic prac-Must have . C. Layout 837-8000 .., ""quette, or Coca. Vic ~wn Ba!Ty. 534-lMll or 613-{)641. QUALITY person. BUI)' co. No time to tice in Newport Center. exper. mlD. of 1 year: Call ~===~===~' l~m;;;mmiiii~m;~ 83va7~ Pr, kwy. Rew a rd, SKIPLOADER A dump truck * ~ l:'TOP ~IL* train. Step rtaht bl A •tart Think Meney $IOO Must have exp. bl·llngual for apPt. at C.M. Plant GENERAL OFFICE -v•o• work. Concrete, asphalt. 516 6830 work at once. Loll of A.i.t Pl"OlftS&lve controller pret 6f0,.0003.. 540-Q982 Fee Nego. Spark1e plenty In •rton1l1 530 REWARD. Lost long haired sawing, breaking. 846-nIO ~~-~-.~•.-A-.1.. ~~~~~ ~ DENTAL Recept·Alliltant. EXCLUSIVE Men Shop In I/tis jewelers ottlce. Never a all black fem cat Vlc 32 IT. FURNITURE Van for t:unua. .n.aae .._. Vl'Y _... o..ut•~-uin1 exp Mode -·'w l girl S. Orange O:lunty seeks ex-dull moment. Your day will OVER WEIGHT . Brookhurst & Hamltt0n HB:, early fOl' thi1 Job. • "' ~.,,,.. ... _.~. per. Natural s hout d e r be varied doln& genera.I of. ~·anted 50 women &: so men 213-796-6101 Tif...968-4812, local furn baula A aen'l ml ECHO JOB AGENCY' • ofc. Expel' reqd. ' Tr• d It 1 on a I Oriented fice duties &: Ute selllnr. at least 20 lbs, but not over' 213--5~2839 hauling. 548-18&2, S51-7736. I c' z ~ f 1 31S 3rd St., SWte 3>3 Think Aclwancement DENT A L Aas is tan t. salesmen. Fa bu I o us op-A\-g typing & ability to han- 100 l~. over weight to Male ""'-, mixed brd. _ .. , Hotneclet:nlfll . f Hunttncton Beach 53fl.l'39 $650 Chalnlde, at leut S mot Portunlty. Send complete di e figures. X Int ad· part~cipate In a week1y brwn ~hair w/whit;~ DON'T tak chancel with AVON MAKES Crowin&: co. in peop le exper, H.B. area. H'r3540. resume. Write Classified ad. v~~ment1 ~en1.}81~ :;eat med1ca.ll)'. 1upervl~ 40 day chest. Flea. collar Vic H8 e Job w....-"·le -CHRISI"MAS THE SEASON c:dented buaineu need a DIEl'ARY Aide, f/time. 6:30 No. 944 Da.lly PHol, PO Box 5 ng san._ ee a ao. crash weight reductt0n pro-894-6301 • • re:rtonai.arpe:~ ~ Zt ::;;.::s: ,.. 1vu TO BE JOU.Y miart NC'Y w/Ute lh. a .m.·2 pm. pUf bol. eood 1560. Costa ~tesa, Calif J•IOl'I u.st rlelftCY ; - gram w i th d aily _ll!e)' __ 1 are c1oi .... help .....,., BARTENDER. -.·Mablre, EaJTI mra money for aifta benefits. Park Lldo Health ~ 11400 Brookhurst. F. Vly 1--l"iupervisiorr.-Mu:sHJe--able-to-·~;r~=·,.~='-'•=--+,""',..-~iea<1y-=;tt,;;;lym•t;-u.-an-AVON-Repretentattve C.:' 466 . Flaphie Rd., ENGINEERING Suite 2l3 963-€115 pay tor medications Ir: I '··"..i-J~ HOEXPERIENUSE OF CLECEDAN Home owner thla area. U in YoUI' spare time. Call: Thlftk 0pportun1ty$a ""N .. 61~. position open n you ng ·GENER"~Oftlce, mu1 t physical exam. Prledlcal In-MmCW yn. Wrtte Clau lfted Ad No. 541J.-1lM1. Owa to advance w/ex-DINNER O>ok w/heavy ex· fa.It growing Cl:i. involved in type. VersaUle .eU starter JUranee wek:ome. 646-1633 !rM:i, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box BABYSITI'ER wanted for 3 pudinc lnte:restin& firm. per, in aaute' foods in ftne Industrial Electronics. Need needed. Call M0-4.Sll ;s:J~~~: J~~;;~ween H:u~: ='. C:!~:'~ta=~ ~i~:;r'pmU.J!f tb~~ ~ ~~':,1~8u';: ~ ~1:£i?oo. <»ntact :iJf_:,n: ~ 1:w~: GIRL AllDAY Babysitting Chet. Goins to Mexico? Own trans. wmtnc "to pay DIRECTOR of p r o gr am ln •a team. Prefer college Secretary · l:)'pinc, lhrthnd, * SPIRITUALIST * HOUSE OF CLEAN Need a Rott. Che!, ht good Salary !or mature, al· Think Presti.... o.uft Glrla Club ol Santa Ana. s:i;:;:c.n '°" appt. al position requires llOOd olllce plrltual readings 10 am-10 8ABYSI1TINC, my home. • DOES EVERYTHING • Cook? Pleue call aw, fectionate penon wtth .eme ..-~ aome exper. w/ibi• S..13 iun ""°., skills, xlnt salary, frinle pru. Advice on all matters Xlnt cond. Loving care. Homes, Ottices. 642-6824 60-6130. of humor, Pleue write Gal who llkn responslblUty nee., yo u t b t u l type ~ benefits Ir: working condt· 312 N. El Camlno Ree.I, San Newport Beach, 645-«Q. HOUS!XLF..ANING * MUSICIANS _ Duo desittl sta.tin& quallftcationa 4': Ir. can tupel'Ybe otben. W11l prtfe~. Mall rewme PO IXICUTIVES Uons. Send resume I: lalary Clemente. 492-9136 492-9034 BABYSITI'ING. My home. Day Work. Ex.per. Reta. club wort. Call John or BUI. ~lledrequlremAd No ~ n..~~ be In c:harp Of ofc. Box ~ ~Ana. $12,000 to $75,000 ~~myO:~t~~ed ~ ROBLEM Prqnancy. Con-Day or nJght. CM, nr. Baker ...,.,,=:=-*:54l,::,·1f!IG=";,*,,,_...,..._ 5e'f..al5L .,,.::..• p O _ ·.=:• ~ D IS H•W AS H E R-KitcMn Send l'Hllme or call TODAY 1560, °'9ta Mesa, caill. '9~ tident, s y mp ll t bet I c Ir. Fairview, ~1946. -HOUSE WORK. ~a day. Job W--~•, .. _ .. 702 .. ._ ·" · ai.u. ~· ~ .. nlnk Rel... 11:.&&n . Helper. Full A p/time. A~ for confidential NO t'OST pregnancy counsellnf, Abor-Own tr&nlportation .,.,... Mesa 92ltl6 ,..._ ply betwn 9 am A 3 pm, executive. Interview. GIRL Friday -20-30, aood' lion &: adoptions ref. Carpenter * 5'1--0467 or 5'1-2518 * OCC student needs put-time 'BABYsmER fm' 2 anall inm:...:-~ ~~ Mtsa Verde Canv. fbp., EXEX:lrl'IVE SERVICES, typist. Some d I ct at Ion . PCARE 642--4436 WANI' to dean pc:s. bouaes job to help mHt upemes. boys. Alk for Deanna, belilws rew&rdina · an Center St., C . M . INC. Salary to sult~ Day1. ,'!"w"°"t'Jngoalet&•&lwone,1<>to w~~D1wo~~1~n ~-~...: tratkft.'fhe¢!1~reliab&e.to'. Available aftemoons, even-=· 6 15-C0 91 or ~Type l::llte lh~ 54M585. 888Ntn~iah_!'....~Ana Pboneforappt, -----·-- .N! an a e. an ..---• .~ ... .._., UUM: cal ref's. 548-1621 inp or weetmdl: for wort DOMESTIC He]p Georp " "'1--· Ji:~t ma.rrled? Many people D& a. MS-1588, lt&--8495 -~~~~~---In stores, ~ rettaarantl BABYSITI'ER. Cotta Mesa. Allen Byland Apnc:y, 1(16.B &xecutfve Secretary this age tn'OOP· Free info. ALL type• work. New, L1ndtcaplng or oftice1-in Colt& Mem-or Our-Town Apts.-Adams I:: Think Security $600 E. 16th St.. S.A. st7--0395. We -need a lharp mature ln- Box ll48, Carden Grove. remod, add, alter, frame, LANDSCAPING prinlderl South Cout Plaza areu. Fairview. M:on-Frt. :pm. Lut pl on thll job wu dlyidual, good o~anlzer, PREGNANT? Th Ink l n g flnllb, repain:. Llc. 962-1961 wllterlalll I: 'ti!h ponds'. 54.S--4240. 7pm. Call n~ there fer 11 yf!UI. So, tf you 1 • accurate typist and apeUer. abortion! Kno .... · all the facts WOODWOR.K;"" c a·ti l net 1, Ba.I. rates, ~"1.andscape NEED -~ at home? We BABYSl ttER wanted ni&htl don't UU to DllCIW: around, Dr I Asllstant A Girl Frkiay to uslst a first! ~~F'E LINE -2.t paneling, cen repatts.. Duke-& Sprlnk:1er Co. Uc. No. have . es, n u. r a e 1 , \ tor 9 )T old girt, Hun~ check th1s one out. Youna lady (18-28) to auilt very busy :=tive. ~ hn, . 646-:-Ta.98. J ack848 M95 2'11546, 642-9180. ' bo u 1ekpn, companions. Beach area. Call dl)'I, to health spa. Will train, no company ts, ary AIL"OHOLJCS Anonymoul. CARPENTRY Ma Homemaken U p Jo h n , 536--28:29. exp. nee. Apply in penon open. NaUonal S y s t e m s ""°"" 542-1211 or write P.O. Ge""&! Ropalr Hftry 511~. BABYS!TJ'ER.Mawre, u ... Think CrMll.. $550 . any alt or ""'· 2930 W. Corp., 4361 Birch SI .• HELP! Yott Instant · Pe111111181 Box 12'l3, Costa Aleu.. e 6'7S-62l1 e ---------IBABYSil"IER. Rel Mature In, 1 baby, f;T mos. Must Busy ad q-ency need 1 Cout Hwy., N.B. Newport Beach. SLUMPSTONE, block walls. lhdent. Xlnt w/cb.Ud:ren. have car, Local ttter. re-cttative thinldna; gal DRAFTING Tramee tor map NEEDS Social Clubs 535 Ca.,... Servloo planter. ~ lnata!B b'd. Wlmd 4 -.. Bea<h .,.., quired. 54HIMO w/....,.. A llOOd command "'" APERY draltlng firm. Mun have ,,..., Spectally ~---· o ' ~. BABY srtTER WANTED ol_,.._.,...... .,_ ....... w/lnlt. Full or • $ec:retarieS * INTRADATA * JOHN'SCupetl<U~lstecy 6'S-4ll30. PVT. duty nurae exp . loraom.nl(h.,,~.,.. u _.y. MANUF. t'~t.!"1llO't.iThorne . I QUAUTY matches Ort ShampoD tree Scotch· Palntt~~ I ettfatrte cues in hOme or LAGUNA 491-Zl4 Neea exper or trainees cut ' ' -.Typ Its .. , _.!'!.,"."1nOTOc-•ii." ganl. (Soll Retardant•/· Papo,~nt nt ""-'• da>s· --BARTEN D E·R -Think Varloly $435 •-• mad.<.. .,... Good EXEC./Typut, MCST exper. • Ke-•-"' ~5".. .. Degrea.ers fc all colOr ---.......... aa• u .. -.. N ...... • A: 1trc n g Enc l i1h JP-'_.. !Call NOW for FREE sam· brighteners " '1o minute PAINI'ING-W. I:: ext ., Help w .... .._ ,,.., 710 ._. ... JI ftJKft Beacta. Trainff tar pn1 ofc poll· pay. Hol I:: ,vac. Be..:h b&ckground req'd. We will • PIX Opn pie profile on 1 prospective bleadl for white CallJt'ls. Ha u l n r, m a t n t, 6 _......__ C 25.XI W. Cat HW)', ~U77 don. Eapr 4 wil1ini to Drapery Seivlce, 900 W. pay for quality. 644-Sm. mfttch. 24 hn.) . Sa~.:,our mooe.y,,.b)' savlna what-haw-you. No job too ...__ .... .,. lerb * BEAUTICIAN -Xlnt op-learn ii b y requirement. 11th St, CM EXP couple to taanage ~ Temporary Service ITl -11 63IJ.69'J> I LA 658-621n me ema tripa.. WOI clean ble or-too smt 2>yn exper. Typlns and lO Key adding portuntty in "tmall Ilion. DRIVIR unit apt In Costa ·Mesa for JM8 Cam Dr sutte 1D8 living rm. d1n1rg nn., &: Reas. rates. 6 C5-038 3 , mach.lne, aood company San Juan Ca p t1 tra n o.Thlnltf 11:150 F/Ume tor local deUverles. details call Bert or Helen N rt=ch ., 54&-4741 hall $15.. Any nn. $7.50, &G-5079 aft 5. benefit.I. salary based on 493-0040. un ~ Must bave xlnt drivin&: Mott CJS Real Estate Z Op E pl ....... _ !al couch $10. Clair $5. 15 yn:. PROF. wallcwertng 1tate :!r, er 1 :,,!!! e ·2 atloB,'.?'h BIG CQyon Comrtry Oub Aailt pres. tee'Y· Run er-record. 548--ll.68, eves 551.Q.U. ' por. m oyer 8P-Is what counts. not lie. no. 279514, tmur., an "'J" ems .__.,., -... ~ needs help, st or ace rands. antwtt phonel, make SWITCHBOARD --. -----method. I do work !IQ'9ClL types of paper. 714 : St .. Newp:wt Beach. Room/Malntenance, • Rn. • 1erve coUee at V.I.P. F/tbne w/othu ofc dutlea. Any day Is the BESt DAY to Good ref. 531-ol.01. 80-4386. Accountlnc aen: per wk, p hr, call Pl shop, meetinl'L Alie tor e.n, west. <n4> run an ad! Don't delay, • It'• a Irene .•• .-n ·your 550 ~~C"'a~'l:~"°t ""'C'°leo~..,~-.fill,.--No Wllltt!!l_ Lite ~· 60-9f10 &M-18111 557-t'll2, New p o r t Sta· .call today~ Itema wltb eue, me OaDy Found (free od1) rND: Biie !ml puodle w/p,,.. Floor are I Wm.looti * WALLPAP•R * '-" I BOAT MECHANIC Think luy ' $400 llallen, N.B. . --------Pllol Ctautlled. 642$18. pie eellar l oea collar lone Dulch Ml.Int, Serv. 5.17·1'08 Wheo yau ooll "llo<'' ADVERTISING experienced only. permanent Trainee Ille derk for brand :;Ho~lp~W~o~n~lod,~~M~&~F~7;IO;;;H~ol~p~W;;;a;n;tlll~, M;;;l;;;F;7;10;;;H;o;l~p;W;11;n;llll;;;•;M;l;;F;7~1~01 tail Vic. Heil • Gothard 548-14'4 eves. \\"Ork. 6'6--0$1.. new ofcl at the beach. WllJ cement, Concrete LOOKIN""' FOR H.a 847-L'i25 PATIOS, waJU, drtvea. Saw, P~~ "=: 35 TW. • BOAT CARPENTER train. f'OUND approx 1 month aao breU, remove A ~ advanta.ae ol my exp, A CHAN""'E Do flnishlnc work on 31' CHOICE female °""'"" wblw daisy ooncrel•. 54Hll68 ror .. t. =5J6.""'6~=,,· =-~-·.....,.-::-· · • Trawler type Yoch'.j;, ~:' 1ype dog, b&ck bay atta. CEMENT Work. pet 1o1 . PAIN=I'ING: int. ext. IWI; l1m While Yeu LNm have ~neoce to • !:1:'~ call • identity drlvew&)'I, lidewallcs, brick O:mun.u ._ ~ ~ ~~. Rer1.,,! enp,:~t_~~· 1 Gal Ofc ~-.........,.. Reas. ~'1913. c. • -~~. ,_, ~• NO EXPER. NECESS -• rND: yciWC male db& wttan -59'J..257B-Suuet.Jkb.. WE -Wll.L TR.AIN 541-6908 face a:: new blade hair&. V1c Contractor INT. Palntinc • Carpet Bookkeeper-Sec'y S.Cretiry ::U.:ootr.'& 'tract in FV. INOOME Lot? We can ~Freebt.MS-35?.fi $114 MO~ NeW)y formed New p ort ftmodel fer more tnoome. ,;:;,..;,::'-":::..,-,..-_,-..,.. Be a c h Con tr a c tor· LMllntl Sec'y f ND white kitten w/grey Llc No. 281M8. Call Sean ~· ~I~ m.;: ~ TO START I>ewioper. Full ch a r c e lall, face, spot on bad<. Vic. 45'-STil -. ~.. Book keeper, Sttretartal Slater A: Ward. F • V . """"'G-i:E=R"'WI"'CK=-::A~SON=-Refs. 541-2759, 642-S913. We tmv. 10 p o a I t ton I aJdlls a must • Slxlrthand Gal llrklay 968-7239. Bldg Contr. Add.It I: Remod * PAINTING I:: STAINING available to thole who optional. Please se n d g;\fAU., black unct1pped Slate Lie. Bl·ll43%1 INT/EXT,-TRDI,. Aa'.XlUS quali!y. Must be manied, resume. Salary hlltory Ir. Poo<Be wired collar. Vic 673-Q'.Kl ~2110 FREE ESI'. Jlm, f1Nl811 ::::.=. 4': be neat ~ ·~ n-feftncft. P .O. Box 1B. A/Pay•ble Puente &: Pell$0 S.C., JACK Taulane, rep a Ir• Cl1STOM pe.~ 21 Newport Beach, 9'Jll60. 492--0161. remod, add: Uc JI.I 8012. yn. tn ~~-State CALL MR. EDGE BOOKKEEPER WIE x ~:.· Recoptlonlll f N D. ·Pre a c r i pt to n My Way O:i. 547-0036. Lie. No. £.iW,Mll, ,,............,, needed in re . sun~s or tinted ~ucs. -"''--'""-=.:.:.'-"=--INTER/EXWI',. aocout. oell-MON ~IPM Under 30. Refer. required. Ne. Biiach Blvd. l-Adanu, _E_1oc1_r1_..,_,_··-----·lftls~ -htcotna.-klc. ~IM 1152 -so.ms · St- 1-f.B. 5.36-0381. ELECI'RICIAN·Uce:mt No. refs. .FrH est. 645-0800. BUSBOY $2 hr, p/time Tun >'ND: White Do\~ • ~ .;.o 233lill. Small Jobt. malnt 1. cP.;.•;.;lloo"'----..... --Equal ()ppor. Employtr ~ ~ ioam.2pm. Payroll Identity. Vlc 6 . C.M . ., .. o: _, ... , repa1n~5'8-5203. • 646--0251 alt pm, ~'°~o ;"a"n111n7"'=1nt~~---PATIO Cown, Spaced .... ADVERTISING Co. Need• CABLE TIWNEE rttARMADUKE, 1mart, com-.;;..:;:..;;==-----Uce •. Unlctue well planned. male or female ales people $2 hr to start. U you are Meet ft.Kept pan.ionable! orange Ir: white, PROFESSIONAi;; gardener, Block walJs, retaining wall1, for Oranae Co. wl«ln't op-brtaht Ir have a clean cut male cat, wla. 545-1017 tree work, pr u n l n 1 , concrete etc. Quality only. por. for" adn.ncemenL Ex· ~. thil marvelous $650 $550 $550 FOUND TUrtl •-•· ••·-" sprlnld...,, cle•mm jobo, Res. SG-1710, Ken. per. hell!fU].•WUI Min will~ co. "111 tn.lD )QI all the lnsur1nce G.I : e .n.l.IU'i, uu.;a -·-r =--~--..,,..-.,-tng ptn0n. Call 538-2100 for w93, Raise liven &tm-=~ ~~~l)i>e, i..:L,;;a6-6893:..;n:::d;;;1c,·c~•~p~l"'n"r"··,.,~--· Pl1•ttr, P...,, ltepelr !:!""4'•~•;";:' ;"'•tervlnr~;;·;,ij~;; I tralnN !Jw. Veryy:~ ~ K _ _.1....._ $525 FOUND 'c2) Pektnroose dogs MJl~:t.~UPSDGE • PATCH PLASTERJNG. ·~ " • .,,.... wi~~ co. Don't·p;D .,,... ............ ".. - vttlnlty SumRc La n e , ~· AU types. Free estimates After 5 PM By Appointment tbls one up. Anaheim. 530-1184. -;=;::·;-::;;;;;';•;:;=:.!.:==c.n;;;;:;54tHll25;;;;;;;;;~ !Civil !lrcinftr $UK . ECHO JOB AGENCY K.,,.....h/lloyl $SOO GREAT DANE -~ Sr. 7-Tecblt>flilal $1.UC R~ ~te S:.1439 H~a =-~°'S.c'> ~ = CAR WASH JOBS Koytopo SIBERIAN Hual<Y ma I •. Trader's Parad1'se -· to 1100 ALL KINDS * FUU. TJJl(E Nat Stmmon11 Sc h o o I • S&lel Sec'y/M.anul 'kl $850 29l50 Harbor, eo.ta Mesa file Clerk Garden. Gl'OVI· 530-1184 Kn!ttlne Mach 0pr lil06 .CHEMICAL RING -· Balboa Jlvd., lines ~Ill t•= OPERATORS -EvtL ph. 615-5124 Ml<trC Se<:./no "" ro !550 F,.. expandfnr m<tal rellntl')I TrolftM ~!Wt . ~5 1 Gh1 olc, no lh to $515 in Slnta Fe Sprtnp. Otem· $435 c -. ti mes Clerk Typist 1414 lstey background in -Lost, W'ht. puppy wlbrwn Ir G.O., ltte typing $400 or put exper. nee. Good co. b1c 1POt9 wi ne& collar. V1c CALL 'nUSH HOPKINS bene:fl.ts. 21319Z1·74&1, "'""''' St., WI-Sci 9/l6 ~dollars JERRI WHrrrEMORE CLERICAL All Peoltlons Llsllll At a.ii. Offlas tftmrd· -· ~ PER.500NEL PAIT TIE ~ULs1'..=!""l;m~~ ~~ Over 21-•pandlnr .._..,. I COSTA M£SA !~~Fadden I: ~le VIDEO Tape ~for NTt new 2 hr, 'a.tr, 100 x 115' 411!: t. 11th St. (at Irvine) CM tza:Hon hu ... in Lcml ·-· H.B. 893-20 . .,,. TV-~_.. in Buflbettd City, ANooL Sutt. 214 '42-1410 Beach on Be-Blvd., Z7'"· H IU:WARD, Mole ......., ItyAWa-.ttC.l3000 n.deequltyb-alr-.n -.,. ., " No. ol San Diego l'rwJ: ---llYd. at,tr strhJitd 5 mo cat VIL tn.dt tor lot t or silver litftU. $1,000 ¥'4"• w• T'-Anabt'lm: Cl:illa Mna; WU· wjplnk eollar, Loot Balboa m.s38'l • vatua only.-· AiiiiriiOiii people wanted ml-: 5 IO 6 boun dall7. call 551-111 , r~ •• 644-6351 '63 CHEV I -car !or 10' TRIPLEX, C.lf. Beout. to oam $100. lo !lOllO. P"' ~ exJl(<i~,,. ~ MINIATURE Poodle, Sat .. tat bed to put• on 1 too oWner's Uhh, lam. nn.: for mo. part time, OUl Or )'0\0' I ~· ·~ white wtartna flea co111T, QttY trilck. s.n Gabdel Valley lDcome homt. m-tU:S. ve. • • I I I " •. L I I • • I •· • • • • • • • ----"' ELECTRONICS JOIN THE EXPANSION YARWI DATA_MACHINES Immediate needs for outstanding personnel to lW pos!Uons for: * COMPUTER TEST TECHNICIANS Systems test positions exists for complete test of the v 73" Computer Systems. ReqUired is a minimum of two years test and trouble sbooUnJ experience on central processors, memories, (semi-conductor and core) and IO controllers. An understanding of logic de- s ign Is 8!so desirable. * QUALITY ASSURANCE TECHNICIANS 'then second shift pos!Uons require an AA degree or trade school training in electronics plus 2 to 3 years digital experience includ- ing some systems check out and trouble- shooting . * ELECTRo.MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS Positions exist o~ first and second shifts for a .. emblers with at least 6 months exper- ience in one of the following : soldering. cablelng, wire wrap, mechanical assembly or component preparation. Wa Offor: * COMPl!TITIVE SALARIES *-12 DAYS-,A--YIAR VACATION * ONE WEEK CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY * PROFIT SHARING, STOCK PURCHASE, AND EXCEL- LENT RETIREMENT PROO RAM Pleau Hncl 1 resume, h1nclwrltt.n apply In porson or coll : O.K., (7141 m.2400 J. l'ullor Ll!T'S DI SCUSS YOUR PUTUR E ,v1c. Orai1!o and ea-Ila Call -· ,,_Co., APPRENTICE -l:'Ev ~RAr A~: ,ca .. CM. Reward. ·i:.:. M'"9231 • Realtor -I0-5000 -L .,,, .... to •am the HEIM, 1015 W..t.BUI Raad. • •• ,1 • .-t11hhli•r• l•DM· v1rl1n data machines 1 C.M. Santa C13ra Co. dol Pan.dl'9 column 11 for )WI tnact ln Lu \r...._ Nevada fl> er mane n t ~lion. at 1 PM.' AJtk. l1f Ruth lnw 2722 michelson d rive 1 llc!: Call !'J5'1·1BU. 5 11"'° lor «IUllY In S 1oadniom McNuh Roallz, IC-1,834. Onntby. NO PHONE CALU I'd lrvlno/ca\llornio/92664 • l.o!lr mo!• n.Ilhlt ·-· UM to fDillol Our Tndor'• WIUitrade -:Ill ..... ftnml -lleld. Wednesday -btr :Ill 600 N L :rd llLUEpototS1am ... 1m1ld\-ad.,. r.o.n. ......... 1n1<owpon Wi'Mar.o..io-401or PLEASE .... ...nto.P.o.Bax -TIMt'JI , l!on·, Red nee cobar. Reward tor 5 bucks. 8eadl ans. ID-19k _, UDlts. OJela ..... Call m_.~ Beach, Callf.1 .......... "~.1--~~!!!!!A~o~t~, .. ~1 ~°'~'~'!!"""!!;o,~t~..,!!! .... !!'!!M/~I ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~ 'Al:'l!G ·-------------·I ..:;-;::...;::nn.=-----902!1 II • I - • ... ------~ " ' t • l ' ,, 1.,;. I . . . Holp Wonlod, M & F 710 Holp Wantod, M & F 710 JIO~f01Ak.1';tt., n.111 Hrnl' hou~ ke<'lllllfi{ -+ l).l\l•r k'IKlnl cal"e' ot 2 M11PY ct'lildl"t'n. A.prim.I( 1-6. S•IO \\'k, 5.'>2-7(}1;i 1-IOMl:-:\\'ORh.'ERS ea rn $%'J0 Wfekly lpt-ti1nt>f ''Tl' 11 \Vt1111 \'<iu 1'h1nk n r Prrxtuct5" Orlnlls. 2 5 c • P:r.L. Box 491 llii:hlunri, Ca. 9?W6. liOTEL~Fmnl 0.-~k Clrrk. l'X!'>''f. prel'd, but nol UN·. Apply in person, R.od1•w11)• Inn, 1400 S.J::. Bristol, Cosla ?aff'sa .:Si7--8700 HO USE KEEPF:n !or le11t•hcr, 1 !!Choo\ nt::"r rhllrl. l..ivt' In, roon1, 1-1<1nl & n1onfhly \\";o,•. lll'QOin-· ntenls: Refl'r,..1u~~s. in u NI driw. Call 6 P~1-9 P;\1, 962-ir.i. H 0 U S EK~EPE;R/l>abysil · Irr, live tn, 1'1"11· N(!Wl!Ort BraC'h fam ily. Salary good, &l&-5961. * * * KEYPUNCll BECOME A PART OF THE EXCITING COMPUTER INDUSTRY Varian Data P.111ichincs, a leader In lhe mlni-mn1puter indui;try has un In1mOO l&.tc op._•ninl( for a keypunch opera.Tot on M."C'Ond shift. You will be responsible for a variety ol duties including Mme dnta control, soflware preparntion antl keypunch. It You are borOO with ,;tralght keypunch a n d des ire a challenge "Ai th a growing Orange Co u n t y computtt con1pany that oI· fers. HOUSEKEEPER . live-i n. 2 c hildren . f\tust ha.\·c e references. Spanish speak-Modem Facilities Basic and ing OK, 6'1()---0R51. HOUSEKEEPERS/SITI.ERS • Orange Co. Oomeslic Agt·y 1046 N. Tu11tin. Org. 997--0500 HOUSEh.'l:EPF.:R / Con1pan· ion, must drive. no sn1ok- ing. H.B. 962-5224. lfYBRID micro c ircuit t'ngincers. Luy out, Pl'll- cessing, & packagi~. Thick ,t, thin filn1. Posi!ions offer xlnt growth opportunities, 1op salaril'.!8 & f r l n ~ e benefits. Reply in ron· fidence lo Classified Ad No. 009, Daily P ilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. ~'26. Major Medical + Ufe • Stock Purchase • Profit Sharing • 12 days a year paid vacation • 6 days a year paid sick leave, ' . -. Indus. Engineer t--~~~-i--STZ:-$T6~ • 10°/o. 2nd shi~ differen- tial .. ' I • C h t> m i ca I or mctilanica.I background. join prog- , grcssive Orange Co. tirn1, Expcr. in construction or mnnut. environment. \VIII tnlin in proc es~ in- stn.in1entallon & controls field. Please Apply In Person Or Contact B. Kra!ka VDM 100°/o FREE AA MES Bureau or Employment Agency 2706 Harbor, Suite 207 2722 Michelson Dr. I rvlne, California 833.2400, ut. 336 Equal Oppor. Employ.er C.Osta Mesa 5,')6-1100 Or Anaheim OUiee 716-ll1'0 INSURANCE ADMINISTRATOR Career Opportunity Super sharp girl to n1n in- suran<'e dept. for nat'l in!<.. ronsulting firm. ri1u!lt havl' ron1n1'l l?f'OP & casun\Ty ex- pel'. \V/(•an·icr to handle !hi$ challl'"Tiging position. CPCU helpful. Salary flex· ihlf'. COURTESY PF.RSONNEL Bank of America To11·rr .. The City.. 8rrM61 INSURANCE SALES No exp nee., earn \Vhile you le1un , part time, eves & wknd!!I, full lime \Vhcn quali· fied. Farmers Insurance Group Ed Lani * SID-1834 INSURANCE Secrelary, r ire & Casuality Agent..-y. Exp nee. pleasant o ti ice . 673-3850 Janitorial Prefer Ag• 20.25 6 Days A Week Apply Jn person FAR WEST SERVICES 1672 Reynolds Ave Santa Ana Equul Oppor. Employc1· J,\NJ1UR p/lime. S" m I retired. No exper. 1ieccss. Mr. Scanr or Mr. \\'illiams. Si111eN uods. 4.i f'<1shion Island. Nev.·pl . Center. JUNIOR SALESMAN: Ea1n $20-$40 per v.·t'ek \vork· ini; alter school and Sa1ur- days !!elling: new sub~t'rip. lions for the DATLY Pn.m. TI1is is no! a paper route and does not includ(' de· Uvrrit'S or C'Ollecting. Open. ings in Costa ri·fesa, i'~ountain Valley and Soull1 llunlinl::lon &ach. Apply oow by callir1g 54S-301:1. Equal Opvor. E111plo.vrr -Lite Industrial -Trainees -Assemblers -Packagers -Exper. Sold•rers -Apply In Person 1401 Dove St •. Newport Buch 833-1441 Bank of C•llf. Bldg. 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD LAB TECH-1 RAINEES \Viii f>('rform variety of oper-dtion.~ on very small con1po1tent s under n1icroscope. Exacling work. Appllcants musl have i-,>ood eye sighl & manual dex- lerity. Related exp e r. helpful but not mandatory. Day shift. 40 hr week. Pe nnane111 employment. Xlnt benefits & oppo11unity for advanccmrnt. Work in our SO. SANTA AN A FACILITY. Apply at MARCO.OAK, INC. 207 S. Helena St., Anahci1n lnler>ie"' hours 9-11 am & l· 3 pm t qunl Opportunity Employ<'r LADIES \Ve 1\<!Cd help at all hours on rush jobs when we have 1hcn1, in our busy PrintfBindery Shop. I::asy !o le11m, y,•r v.ill lrnin. Hours can be <irra11ged, call 540-9172. LVN Conval~nt Homl.'. full & part ti!nc, call &12-o.r.JS f6l MArnTNE OPERATOR ffiAINEES to $15. lu·. Coni· pany 1viltin~ lo train begin. nl'r . l\1ust be 5' tall or over. This opcnin~ rit prcS('nt is NCR OPERA TOR Newport Beach finn needs experienced NCR 3 9 5 operator ror AIR & AfP. ri·nn. typing requiremenJ 50 1\·11n1. Some fo r m a I educntion i n accounting \\'Ould be desirable. Xln't benefit s. Receptioni1t lor i;ra11cyard shirt. Other Please Calf shills may be avail. \Vould Mrs. Field•r Personnel Agency be put lo v.·ork same day ~'-E Ed s Fee PnidfAlso Fee Jobs PBX & Ille tyning WESTCLIFF I 9·'"am 12 noon ...al ~. inger, .A. you app Y· • .N • !;\lark II Center> FREE FREE FREE EOIO JOB AGENCY 644-3~ ~ 315 :!rd St., Suitt' 203 Liz: Reinders Agency """';n,1on Beach >1&-1439 THE IRVINE CO. RECEPTIONIST 4121 Westerly Pl•ce MACHINIST Suite 115, NB 833..sl.90 Logai1 Turret Lathe l'.l;irh. Equal Oppel?'. Employer Day or night, no exp. nee., EBtabli!hed 1965 ,\lso 1'.larh. Shop 'f'ralnre · 'EEDLE 1 . F 11 easy, fun job. \'Vil! train, no SECRE.7ARY & Steno posl-LOl<-FAST, INC. N Pont painter . u lyping or shorthand, etc. lions open, Personal &. job !'&I \\". 16th St., N.B. or part time. Exper. pref. Apply in person any aft or refs req'd. Must type 60 l\t E Call 644-92'12 btw. 9-6 pm evt'. at 2930 \Vest Cst I-hvy.,. 1~'.p.m., sh 80. Sal open. AOHNE OP ltATORS N.B. Irvine lndust Complex. Call Exp·d pref, but will train. NEVER A FEE 540-7639 for appt. e M d Xlnt fringe fx>neJ its. RECEPTIONIST _ Legal ·Equal ()ppor. Employtt 0 em La'&1.l"'.J'.C \Vire ,(:-Cab!(' facil' I :Wl E . Stl'11cns, Santa Ann 1 trainee, $3:iO mo. If es MAIDS -No ,_,,,,,,, ""· Ap. Are you look;"g loc a good 642-2330 SECRET ARY • Basic . and ply in person, The Rodc\vay po!lition & want to work RECEPTIONIST, part tlnie. \Ve are looking for a top M j M_.,. I Inn. 1•100 S. E. Bristol, ,,·Uh nn agency !hat really !\fature, &Ion-Thurs, 2-9 pm notch secretary to learn the G Or .ulCG cal'e&? 642-ffi98 d b. If t k Cost.a 1\1esa. 5.'"17-8700 a iz. you a e + Ufe C:ill REC/Sec. RcaJ Estatt' Otfice, shorthand, type !alt &: &e-1\f;\fDS for molel, \\'kdays Exec. typev..rlter. CaJI Mon. curately &: wouJd like a e Stock Purch-• only, La~1na Shores, 419 N. DARTNELL day. * f>16.2055 • challenge, send Ill your - Co1t:;it llwy, Ln gun n. tod Po Box e Profit Sharlnn ·t91-"l!".i21. RELIABLE steady w/exper. ~mJ~Be cl,· Cal'f -=ii Mail'~D~e-p-•• ~,-m-.-n7I-500 Newport Center Dr. in lead acid batteries. Apply ~. a • I .• 12 days a year Newport Beach 640-8470 nt Le,v\s Bros, 110 E. l6th l ~~~~~~~~!!:!'"'I \~:i~11c·;~~;·.;ciC<~~:i!~~~~c!; l.!!"'.!~~~~~~~"'l.~s~·=··~c='.M~. ~-----SEC'Y-EXECUTIVE pait!_ vacation school, \\·ill I rain. Nntion!LI NO EXPERIENCE RETIRED clean Up & han-1\tirrlmum 2 years expcrien~. • 6 ...... a year 8yst"m-' Corp., 4361 Birch dyman for medical office. highly akilled in al 1 -J• . Si., N••wport Bc&eh-NECESSARY Hoon fiexible. p h."' ...,.,,1.,;at duLi•• & public paid sick leave, . MAINTENANCE MAN JI MECHANIC $658-$800 Per Mo 8 Hours Oa ily Hrquircn1ru1 ~: J{nowlcd~e & 1'x~1·. hi n1cchanlcat rrpnlr of ~c hool buses, au!ornobllc11, lite truck$ & p:asolinc t•ngifl('jl. Apply in person, Fountain V111Jcy School District, No. l Llghthou.~ 1.111){', f ounlnln Valloy. !Corner of Talbert & Nc~·landJ \Ve ON' ttn l'qllf'll opportunity e1nployer. Fil· ln,I( drac.llinc ThUNda)' Sept. 27th, l!li.1. W11.nt ad rt'f!Ul!4 • , ••• Gt2-.r,s'78 TRAINEE POSITION :-"'",.,.,,25"'28=-,,--,--,~--relations. F I nan c I a I ex· NOW OPEN SALESMAN &. Manager p er I enc c back ground You may be t{lc one we a.re . . male· & fem. $82.> &: uP hclprul. Call for a~ looking for. GB ll'ldustr1elt of So. Cahf. monthJY4\1am . if qualified. po!ntment. hns Immediate opcnlng1 for No exper. neeeS!. Mr. Le<!, PCM INC. Leisure World Plelll@ App1y Jn Pers:>n trainee~ In d .is p I a Y, (2UJ 770454J. Laguna. HID• 837.3550 X231 . Or ())nt.acl B. Kratka 1norkcl1ng <JislnbuUon & ..:=::;:,,""c,;;:""'~~-- crt'dlt mcrchandisina. 6 new~. Wild West Stores. a SECRETARIES IO<"Ettionll to oJ)('n In im-famD;•clothing' irtOre la now mediate tu ru"". l\lnny poRi· hiring for tun l:fme saJL'I & tiooa now ope:n for full time poAitiom. lilrtng is lor our KEYPUNCH OPRS permanent people. new 11.QJlt l~Mluion ,VieJo, Irville 540-4<150 * XLNT TRAINING PJtO. to be cori'lttl.:::1.ed "°°"· Tern-17802 Sky Park CRAM pOrlJ')' work ~aUon will be N~~ A~ A.T ~-IPO * SUM~tER & PmME At the Orange atort, 'r.J9 So. r...-.r:..i~ .-c.i:. •r..1> \\'CJll K Al.SO AV ALL FOR Tu.sUn Ave. Elft' 11 welcon1e J~T'!!em!'!!po!'!'T!!!e~m!!po!!~rary!!!!H!!e!!l~p"' I VDM 2121 Mk:hol-Dr. 1rvm., CallfornJ. IH-2400, ut. 336 JI I G 11 -SC 11 0 0 L le but not N.'Qulred. For In· COU.~"CE STUDENTS terview contact Barry Al * COMPANY BENEFrrS , ::~::c.:;1191.=-,----­ SECRETARY f o r Ac- countant, AccounUnq ofllCC! Equal Oppot. Employer In ltv1ne to handle rt":neral * SOME· PART TIM E 1-P 0S ITI0 NS ALSO AV AILABl,F: DAILY. PILOT CLASSIRED ADS 642-5678 office &. aome bookkeeping. STUDENTS Typing requJred. C 11 11 Yttr around Sat operrlnp for 833-t.m aates alrla at o .c . lnl'I SECRETARY, general of· RaCCl""Q· 0vt.r IT, no t.X• flee, ntJn. 3 yn. rxper. per. nee. $2 hr. S.Uiin pu Y•cht-Bl'okrrqe on bf.y; wk.-Af?P'¥ a.lncewa.Y. FOR PERSON,AL INTERVIEW CALL: 536-2Sfl Monday Only 9.5 646-0Ss.l. Want ad rrsultl ••••• GC-M78 ~~~~~~~-'·-'-'~~~~~~--- • ; -( --. URGENTLY NEEDED 50 TRAINEE I . I ~ 11 ASSEMBLERS VOLT ~...... 9421 ln1t•nt Personnel 8-18 Temporary Service 1-.1JfAll· ,...11f4'f't 3848 Campus Dr., Sulte 100 v7 . ' - Newport Beach 546-4741 Equal Oppor. Employer \Vow! What a figure you · have In this body-cuntlng WAlTRES.S food &: coc:kt&JI pantsuit or the equally Oat· aper. 21 '10 216. See Paul, tertng dreN. Dramatic yoke Mon & Tue11. 24 P!\t The lightly "C8pe9" 1houl.<k!n. White Horse 3295 Newport Printed Pattern 9 4 2 1 : Blvd NB ' Mis&e1' Sizes 8, 10, 12, lot, 16, W~·. Mother' hel 18. Size 12 (bust 34). panl.!lult 2, 3 or 4 day,, ho~ ne:ibfe 3" YN'ds 45-tneh fabric. a week. HOU8ekeepinr, laun· a&VEPfft·t •t ~ CIEHT8 dry, baby1lttlrw. ~ t::r ftlCh pattern -add 25 nxu1ested. 491-9330 · 1 cent• COi' each pattern kir \VANTED: Male, apply aft l Air Mat1 And Special Handl· pm, Kentudcy ~.t t e d l~tber'wftlt thitd-clua Chicken, 29'l9 E. Cout Hwy, ~ks or~~~~ CdM. Morlan Mortin, the DAILY WHO WANTS..l'O WORK? ... PILOT, '42. Pattern Dept., DRIVE A CARI 232 Wnt 18th St., N"ew CHOOSE your hours, w.>rk York, N.Y. 10011. Print tor yourae.lf, be YoW' own lCAMll, AOO&al with bou. Men or \\'OftltJ\._ Can ZIP t 1111!: and 8TYLll be &UahU,. handicapped. IWMllEL N c a t<lean Appearance. SEE MORE Q u I Q k Vl1, retired. Ate 25 to 70. J'uh.~ and chc>ollfl one Supplement '°"' income. ~~ ~ mm our Drive a cab 6 hn or more a i~,.--8umrne' Catalo1. All &~ ~t\yeo.,'w li:~:'ti JNsi-~ ~G BOOK Sc., C.olta MCA. RW lodly, wear tom01row. WOMAN 35 or over. No ex· $2.JNSTANT FA s ff lo N per. neceu. Min. ware dur· BOOK _ Hundred• 0 f Ing tratntns . OeaJ 1-11 11 w/m<dlcal proles•lon by eb. • phone from oU1~ ln Newpt The f.a1te1t dnw lh the West. i!:kh· No 11e.Ulng. 6-8 hn. • •. a Dally .PtJol Clallitled Start 3,30pm. 64-6-4071 'Ad. -betwn 9 am A 4pm . -· 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD : ... "."' '.··. '· . ',. . " , . ~ ::· -· ' ~·;;;. <=--.. .... ~ :i-~ :::::-~ ·' ··'" .. ~ ' .. ~ .. . ·- t,A<k~ TraVt"I first clus In fui1 •s 1tew<'st, crochet topper! llas everything -wi~ revers, rlouble·b'reatcd, but· lon11. smart sash, b le pockets. Crochet of knltUns;:: ~'Or11t~ in tv.'O eolot'S In shell atltch. P&ltem 'ra.10: «lze1 IJ 4~ incl. Fr~ K£VZNTr. Jl'I \I g Cl!NT8 for each pattern -add-~ cent.I for each pattemi tor Air Mall and Special llandl· ing; otherwlte lhlrd-d&lll delivery will lake ttU'M Wttks or more. Send to Allee lln>okw, the DAILY P!Wr, 105, N...it.w.ff Der>t.. Box 163, Old Chet• St&Uon, New York, W..Y. 100.ll. Print !"fame, ....... Zip, ....... N ... bor. N EE D L ECRAFT '121 Crochet, knit, ttc. l"r'l\!I d~·:!;,.me BW. Basic, fancy knota, P*t-tt:n11. $1.00. lntu& Croaet .. ,,. I.am by plcturfst bfll terno. 11.00. Qimpl ... 1-.1 Gift _""* • more thf.n 100 ~1. 11.00. Complete Af1ban 8°'~ t L. 11.00. II Jlfl7 a,. llooh • SOc, -"""""'-50c. ,~, ::"t -I • 16 "'""""' MDMUtll Qant ~ ,. :IOc, 1, 'I QolJto ,.. ~· lhltJil'. " ~ ., ,.j/ d' le 0 h, 4 • ~ •· • •• ta nt & e If. r. - • • ~oodl!, So~ttmber 24. iqn DAILY 'tLDT IJli '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!~1 ----1 ~~~~~ !!!!!!!lli!!!!!'l ____ liij . ........ Ao<""'"'" \[ ~1 .. ::-.~_·· ~ , . '"" ....... l§l I ···~'1" '' 1 ' ]§1 : I '""' 1" ''" 1 [ ~I iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;.~ l!'!J ~;;;;;;;.;;;1 ~~1 G1r!l! 511• ' '!~ Pl1nu/O..... 126 Boats, Po " 906 RtcrHllonll 970 I Aul••· lmporrtd 970 Autos, lmpo<ltd 970 Auto1, fmpo rttd 998 I 990 '• WANTID USID ~. " 1 ., VthlelH 95' VOLVO IAulos, UMd ,. aRitKs -cALL Free Organ Lessons " 'ENTu11v M•1"""" ,. AUS'l"IN HEALEY DATSUN PORSCHE 1 DODGE I 17 11...••.t.• Pt11nk Bont w/V·R ~'llJl. STfo:J:> Van. ~1ovr. hot \Vttt!'l'. _ , 7:\ Vf)LVf). !&I, 1111 .• 11111 • --..... A Ntlt-tl!i \l,'(ll•k S'lOO or offer nvf.!1011111111·, h\'llll~I'. ™'''' 1 • .. , , , , , • 173 TARGA · · "· I HOusehold '-l--.. , -•Loni At You Lik•I lK' CEN'l'Uliv 'c1u11~k Nlt'>I· 1i11h1r, roof r1M•k. Ju111 built. '3!l All.t;l!N lllo;11l•y .IOOO ln l 71 :JM~ t.;olrl, .15,00'J n1 ~Je10, ~ A~t/l-6:1 1111:"1;1., t,01111 ('"' ·we l>Utx.a·: l)u1·1 i·on'" Nftw , ~ -114 Nlll1•fJltt"erg &-.. 1 • .,.,, ..,._ G-M I 1·1,... niut1t lirll' u .. i.l' offi'f' L xlnl ~'<111<.llU011 J\11'1 hn111d 1 l\~f/1-"°I , ulr, Hiii!;~. l\onl ·73 l'f)Jl SCllF 'Hl'J' 1., ... , • l>°!n) nlllf'•. 38G-4.!1l1 IJ1'kll, tr•, idwx·i.:~ i·ri·. \VIII ~ .,....., .....-... )' fi r 11" (Ins,:,, '•JV U!' ' ;•J.W' • smi Jf he r olt1•r !'l.i7 ~1!H I hnt k)I 1\1 . II fW'~llC7 ' • ' .u .. ' J ~ PATIO ch•I"' Ir l*d 1~. 24 .. con1t to .auond TutuidB)I Off1Ji'. £1~:t'ill 111· ~57-'.H 1 7 ~ • 1 ,. • .:__·_ -~ !_..'.. ·-~·-·___:_,. __ . llP"t•d, h1t-to1•y hlloy 1111li'f'l•, 1 .... 111011' Blu1· Bk. G7j..fi29-f. tound plntc I;huoi; ill.blc lop 114.'111 nt 7:30 Pr-.L \Ve 1\l(Ull 18' •rttAtLF:lt ~11 ... ·I Jrg • .... --""""'.---~ BMW A~\l·FJ\·I 11h·r111, 111,11·1·lu1 i;old I Autos. Used 990 ) j $12. 673-1171. I overyOll(' to lliarn to J>lay Y.'hl"'(']~. sz:i0 •JI' uJf1•1· ~l)Ort1, Raco, iCods 959 FIAT llll'lfllll1· riul rll, WANTED USED FALCON JIW1lry 115 ¥.::.,~;'3."' All '""'<>·ial' "'"""'" "'' 61:<-!li<!i7 AMPHICAT ORANGE COUNTY'S • "" rl.\T • THEODFORE ROBINS BRICKS -CALL I ~ T Ill I I * ll' O\\'"..:N~ S.,.1r;i1111, -irn· _ ORD 87 5,. I 1}1 t'AJ...("lJN S11t·k shifl , 2 0111 l' ''I' ci1 l U1 cl1a1~·('. I OLDEST l~u11s Xl11L ~1usl .~·I I. 0""4 O"I ... N \ 'eal Ph 64 "• "' 11111c .. I Vl• ahuri_nl. c.:al~1•y, tdl 1e1'1'a1n vchi•·ll• ~1th 1111 ~sriO * f>.!9-t:,65 :i!IOO lhtrWi· BIYll . "1" t"W 1 r,.!11, t>cnmml · • GENEROUS • ont 2~"51 ~.alon, h1•11rt W/t>hOY.'{'I' Sl11s lnUJ('1', JU•I ''""'''"'\''' '''" G "' 1~~.-1'1 (JI' 11(',;I uff1·1·. 646-5107 COAST Music I I r -----cu~lli ~h·it.a 1>-lt·Ol!l!I BUICK ---- :· , .t1t11 o fll uh o i.: lo n Y 1•d 111ul s1•rv1c1•(I. S."1~ij) val111• JAGUAR Nrw1J0rl Blvtl. nt llarhvr 841.l-IUtl i;~·ll or tratl(' fnr good tin~ 1 !Gtf1iC>nS<lli:~~ll I. ;--001 1~111. FOft.D °'I • REWARD • I Costa M~·!ill iY r R6Ti\N--:'i1.11.1rl" F~r boft(, Call a:1:t~'iO·l6 af!ft' i d1tion, lll'\V til'j'I(. lli'•'t!~ '!),) t:lli\N !';purl ('uU/K.'. all'.~ I w/f'lyhl{;: brlil~c, ni•t><ll-1 el"IK p.ni. A'!'TE!'\TICJN COLLl~C 'TC)HS 1•n::h1,• \i>01'k, h1•:<! 01rf1•r, llOV.'<'t, nit>('hllnii· l>ll"'l'lul .1 ·:,s l~i\NCll/~RO. c: h •.r I') . 'f or rulurn or a tiy tn· PIANOS -: ORGANS 1 .~ paint, $1700 til2"'9RGT or E>.t·l'!ll•111 lil'lr1'\ion uf pn», ·n:i .la;tu~r , ~f~rk . , .X · lj.l~,_.:n7~. H1u'111il~. S27~1 1a1;..111:r1 1 •'01111. <itlOfl •·ng:, lfrttt l· , f\)r niation leudlnt:: 10 return I Nfw & U11t-...:l. Gre~I !K'le<'tlQn. 1r1:,.-1754 Trucks 962 prlr·r• n "l'Vnlu1111on rnod<•l!i. "'t1~1nuhll" _Coll !17:~·1~1fi. ·U.~ P<lRSCll E !11:!, 1u•i1 11ain• --· I ron~. Nu\\' r1·111 •htlCkJ!. hi· (lf II gold lour ll·ul Ch)Vf'I'' c.ornpctC't\vt• fll'IC(I~. OJ>C'n Bo tR /Ch i'908 DEMO $ALE * '68 XKE * .~· l'tJ:.tilll'. $4 1{)1!, ('[I l·l CADILLAC . 1.i·~·k. :-;_t•t• Ill 11 pprtf', S600. pill, tipprox. 2 inchci; in t ves. & Sundu.ys, Th11 bt>icl a $; ent ar r '.)(! c11r_:v S1l'IJ\lan, t11n1111 lu· s,\L~:s.st:ltV I Cl:>Ll·:,\SJ/\'Ll c·011,,Tti tilf' StJ(J(). 67~Hi:lfl'I , :tliw«il2. .,7.,..iSJto. •liu111c lc1', l\'ilh j l' IY c I (' JI ·tll•al!l :1!'l' all\'llYS I!!: • LUXURY 10:-1' S<1il!~ Yuchl 1:·1· (•arJ.,'O. l'ltrn1M·r (~)I\· ov1::1{SJ:,:AS D~~LIVL/tY MAZDA 1!1f~.;pQ1t::;t:1U:: Ul :l, l)l'lHl:,:(', -I 'ti.II 1-'A IRl.AN Jo: :i00. VII. IMU'IWibJl.i in oenler: llilkl, Wallichs Music City full)' 1equlppt'(J . winier r~tc11'. ~';r11lo~'1' S!WXl/r1•1111· offi•r. ROY CARVER , Inc, 111·111 ti 1•ji~. ::::.1xxi fn 1, f()1· i-al1• 1 EL DORA DOS , i\ulo, 11·u1111. A11 , Vinyl 1'0Qf, &,,'Old lock<'! (\VII~ on l'hi1ln 1, &lulh Coa.~t P!;lz a40·2830 213: 4'1':\..64rui. .~2M--07~J. ___ ~ ___ ..-r----h~' 01\fll'I" 1;1;r-J Tl l/&l:i-i ~1~i1; 14 TO CHOOSE I ~u·~11 tl~t-11, Xln! "!1n1I. S750 . tlpprox. lhc sUe or a ni ck<'I, tt -&--ts, Sall 909 l.Jo:ASJo..: -" NJ•:\V THUCh: :(,I I ~:. 171h SL *Mazda '73 Rot.try * CfJ lt PJ<S·CO<\V C:r.T IHl.~:s, .,,111µ011. _.. __ _ \ II I . -,11 k l'ui;1u 1\h•i;1.1 ~Mll-4-14·1 $66 o••TH -11s1.:1· >et 1n scrip1. Fl.A, ~ _ . " 011.1 1~s · 1y1x.·s. s1~ ... s M ,. RENAULT e ·n~I CO rt TIN A Jt.utu, Thel!IO nre dt.>eply U't'asur<?tl WURLITZF.R, 120 ('l1•clr1c • *· _14, y _r u ".It L: 1, A S s.· Pureh/optloti 6·rr-10:1n_. . CREVIER-BMW-::ti f\'10NT\Lt.; OPEN Ll':ASl·'. DE VILLES onon1i'-•al <JependabJr SN-1 I f'''''lly ''l''mcn'• ... · ,"· 11, .• 10., pin.no, $WO. or_' lx'sr offer. •t ... t'L' .• · .. · · . , ' ., l-pla .. ·••bl:'.". ·•PL''ASE'., _MO..:U9~~~cr _ ·• ""'· snUhoal. COOfl l'Onc\ltion. 't~ c:l-tEVY 1¥ Ton Tn11·k. \Vl\l 1u'l'~·vr tr.a <Jr,\1111 RENAULT 1 ... ~l!J~rec1a1r ... 1.600 or•t::1 .... .. " i;.. ~ -,. \V/lraller. $27:1. ltl:H120'l C~tn Shell S· Ci'1binr ts, 1:0011 S1tll'li • St.·rv lt•,, • Lf'asiiii,: ('Al.L ?lilt. FltY !Wi.{i661i 38 TO CHOOSE 1n1. :1::G-&116. [ PLEASE help if ,you hlt\'I" HAN!f\1(1ND Or11an LIOO, l!vening~. i·ontl. $1100. 67:41~17 . ZQ.\l \V, l:>I., S.i\. 1i:i.l::i 7i U t B h ~OUP I·:;-;: '7'2 t;1{1\N---;rorin-;-;-S11.'\ii•1;11. I' Bn)' Jnfor-malion --G4~3i>8!l -INl'li•t'l ll(llld .. C~l'l')'-Wllod; l?liODES :1::-ct~-;-.:u.-ln" ;;;....--oo-ocF.. •,c_, Tn1;··-,,.,.,11,·! USED JIMW'S -nun ... eac -NEWc Sl·~LIA1'1S l..1Ju· n_.\I{, Air. ~··', \1'iJ1 • l~ves. 4 Wt.'<:k(ll\lll'I. -* G4~Sll5 * chan1plo11 "llANAJIULI.:': ~111)1•Jl , V--8, 4 spd. $~. '73 BAVARIA COE MO)\ • C.:0NV'Ert1'/IJLl·:S-dow~. t!le. S:tJOO 494-4179 Machinery 116 1970 Ya1naht1. Cranct Pluno, To11 condition. SG:.00. J>h: ~ '71 BAVAR IA MAZDA R·lt 4 DOOR I .\huiy C!\c•~llrn! ('•-.1"1'-" -JE-EP' i110<kll C·l. X·lnl , i'Ofltl. f)h . ~ 673-J232. --:-7-1 ,;I•>"'"'· •u•<• ... ,,.. •7• T 11 .\u1 1111u11!S,.ATL•·•E•1111n1is~ iu11 ! Choic1· or in1criurs 1\'JARQUETTE cn11. & ~.,,. !\~2·HO or 5~l·0952 "" '"' " .. ~ 1Clu1h .t.· l"allil'l'l ~~~~~ i:~~t!ltPJ'e~~~;rln~~~~~~ \VURLfTZER. ijj ch~ctrlc I .D;~~O~~~r~~:. Xi,OOO n~ GT.rli:EJ~~·~:· 1 :~~ ~~~~ 1 73~1 U!!a(•h BL t!·l2·G6'i0 $2499 l i:~rt;;;\.~:~·.c2-~~l~!·~~1/?: ·i~ 11.J l':~!:~w~bl~h"~~n~l·i~01!1;l N~ur new . Valur $261X!, Still ~!~~, .. ~~tl',.·o~ Ul•ll! offt•r, S:!·IOO._~ __ !IG:l-:1'40'l 1 ,68 lOO? Dick Miller Motors 3t1·r··•i .\l\l1J<';>.J r.od lu Lii· No. VJZ: ~170 $1 89:) I $1\{J(I. 116.~·0IJ.'i. '"iii'"'•"" "....!r.21!~11, ~ Ll[)(1 14 . Vint 963 _ -B-08-l ONGPRE--t'lU \\', "'1u'n\•J', s.,\. C1·tih;1· 1io11n·ul S:1tlfll('bi\ck Va\l('y 11nport~ Miicellanooui ·al 'a PIANO WANTED II w1~,1vl•t· & 1rai lor sooo. Call \ MAZDA ~ .. :11.z1:;1 Trunk up.cnt·r & 111tlr•· :oi:n-awu 01· <t!l;).....-1949 [ 'l7l4) !)\!2-0Z>,q S14--182:~ '!iii fORl) ~uper Van w/'7~l Bob McLaren, BMW !\ll In in11naeuh1il! ,·undh1 .. u • f~Mc-:ITrnniy,IB\i:Wr"i -~ cATALu•r/\ i-pQ t'nb:. Under wu1·ru111y. Nu 1' Inc . SAAB l.;1rg,·~1 M•h·(·li(111 in , * AUCTION * Spartin9 Good• 83~, hrd, 1 yr uj~ t•lir~?!:· 1~.j11.: _P~.in1, i:oo<l_li ri•il. !ll~S:{7_ Snl'.:s . ~t·i·\~t'<' • LPnsin~ -SERVICE FIRST-(Jra 11;.:(.' ('(•UU1y ~~.:~·.~iatlt· 4 wht"l"I drtv~. F ini• Fu .. niturt· IUECKEH. lk' boo s· 91 t:xl·<'I l'ond. R~1-28:lO. fiK 0 1<'vy Va n 10ll , n1n1:~. . KJ!l Nor1h J.l!i•ch Blvd.. EXCL.USIVE l)r1111~·· Coun1 y·• Ne1\'1·111 Nabers Cadillac ~>49-34il:l &. Anpliant·i•s • -I Ii;, ~ ... · .-·,~ • -.-.-eLLo;lom p1\lnt & l11tr1·lot'. ! 1.11 lh.1hra MAZOALEASE [ AU'l'!IOlllZE',h IJl•',,\l.l•'.I·. -"'----;\u~·l ionA J'r ido.v. i :;\O 11.n1. 1-ur lined, brand l'\('11·. S:~. 36 TRI. ~ulls .;;; 1;Jln11s. Sl~:'>I!· $1750 it 846-91127 iil·ll 8'19-51ll4 SAAB •• LINCOLN ...... MASTERS AUCTION MH--:11911ntt6 pn1. Al.o 19 Outr~cr, ~nl ---_ ·-:.!tiOO 11AnHU1t 1u .. 1 11.\VltY $1fl0. 673-8().13 '00 (.11EV Y VAN '73 BMW B I ••10 .. 0 I lx•n1<J11~1 1·11111r Su lc I COSTA ~lt:.~A , R . t(orntc:rly \\11ndy'!l) R ,. H 'F -------l~ood cng-i!Jt'. Nl'v.' T i1·1·~ avar a~ ·~o ~IOU · 1 'i:t 1\1A K IV. Ut nil, vinyl l=t-1---1"1 ... ~ ,1a1a,1 i, . 500 , SAii BOAT Xlnl •·ontl ~ft;")I} ~l'i~l:-!lllt l4.;.-7~-::;11...Cµ~lll'i \n,v Jn l 'rog!'•·~~ Dt-a~l'I' : :· -· -· 1 /11.·~~l_!l.ltlay tcip, niinl cond &14-.'\H67 alt "h. 1 T • • 8 I SttrH. 836 Bu1ll ln 1971. Hrnud new ----------li'l t s..--rrr-1ffL'""S:?.--:-T1·11). t1:£',mXNO:-s}'IL~~ t : .~~l"-)J\ t1~vtttrl'in-mTII ~_.,....._._---'-4.:. ·~"'-' ___ __, U(' uu on)' a ldi.r. P.fRl'I, _;:,;.;:.;.;;::. ____ _;::;:I s.-'lll!;. 2 l'UddClt'M. GT.'l--01 39. '&I F'O HD. Xln i C..'(ll•d .. rl'hh ~) I·:_. ls! St., S.A ~\~-7S7 1 '7:t SAAR$ STAl{'l'ING AT i,:ol!L vinyl lop, l1•u!hf>r "I'"'"' ... ,.,.., '"'11""'~nHn•" .. .. ,, .. ~ r: ~ ~: I 11-11 !I' I ~ ' ,, WANTED-FR E C-RCA, Zenith, ~)'I v a n i 8 : 2 6; NAVY wHALE_R __ ('~· N11. lll't'S & h~k!i. Nrl s. CAPRI ·1:1 l\1AZl)A H.X·2, Auto, /iii', $2995 11/)llQI, rull ll\l'r, th'Wll' luck;:, ~~~ ~Uo.nc~!~a ~~=~~.pc~: BROK&N UP Lur~ci;t i;election c 0 1 0 I' I F "I ' ~ ~ 'I 1111\nl. $fi75. >!fl6-344.1. Anr:<'I Blu1', 2'lOO n1i, s:l.'l()(l. up h) ~ n1il1.-'S 1,,,~,. i:allon ··te. tj(j()r) 1nlh•11 , 01·i1:. 0\\'llt'1', 92026 SIDEWALKS hlu.c & white TV & !1t'reo11 ~1_.;,__~~-·;_i.4__ _ _!~ -. -~ Oi·lg 011•nl'1" 494-4892. Dick Miiier Motor.1 j ~~· ~4-:£~4::__ __ -~--~Lo-.-,-u.-,. WILL HAUL AWAY :~m~~he ~~!~u~;~~~,je;; Bo1ts, Slip1 /Ll'ocks 910 Auto Leasing 964 'J2MAZDA RX3, xlnt \:.Ill\\'. \Varner, S.A. 1 ·73 CAD. ~l 0ol'ado. Privu1'-" 1~~::1yt1~~~ mli~i (!(lntf. C•TI CaU S31·51Xl:'I llft 6 IJOI ' \1•k· plctut<' f\1bc. 1 yr p11rts &. PQV.1ER -'j'o :bl' $1)(1/~10. Month"' Car .Rentals II . $2600. 6Th-267K 1).57-21:!2 1)8.l'f)'. Whhl' w/v\nyl top, 6'10-R073 all day C'11ds. lit'lrvicc, ~1081 '74 1nodels 1n ALllJ :1 Ult APT AVA IL. IJ · ---· ------&lflN!O, lufit'. All i•xtr:is. MALIBU --=~ .iock. ''r.I model'"''"" \0 .,...,:191. NOW 0 N THE MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA I c"''1·1h•!.'~o~"··"· l.i.f.X> "''· -----~-1 I · W-AT-IR-SOFTE-NER clc1tr, Ca1h 90 pion or tcrmli • ·~-·----·-$5 PER DAY FABULOUS 1973 11. K.'>-·- 11 " 111 1--· t11 36 nlo. ABC Col-01'. TV, Boats, Speed & Ski 911 • . CAPRI JIM SLEMONS' 1~7:i-cAr> S1:d11;1 tit· Villr, lik~· '66 l\'l&Jibu . t;ood cond. in N1vtr Bten Ustdl 9021 Atln.ntR, or 19046NEW 13. E 1 !"! lfXXI n1 lll-s no t•htll'A<' $202195 11u, 4:KXI 1ni, lull~ 1·1ruii>. 1nl1ii;,1i:~·. 1nu111 .wll. 642.5003 l 11 I I · .. ni:: l ~h [)lu'Y;-'Mt hti I I I I · h Sporl ••oup(' dt'ror. huJy sid,•, IM 0 ' [ u-•1•1 • rt n1e 11etory guarant1•r. B r o o kh11n;1, HuntiflW-011 F.vhu'Udl', nev.· trlr. s.i:uio. ..11 '' n1oc 1~ s \Vt! a n-. P RTS • Pv1. p1 y, Sli!l"10, i;~,1-i:LI 1 1•v1·, wi' •.rJ ·' H.evuta1•l.v stlls for $69a. \\'ill Bcattt. 968-3.129 nr 962-55.59. 642-6001: 642-3.'124 1'\'i'tj. Soul h Coa* C1t1· l..L•ru1ini:: ~1~~•1l1~c.li~~~ioui;:(;.~:::~~11~1~n~ MERCEDES BENZ I plui; lax .ti Iii•. 67~10101....l-~1 _ ---MERCURY -- sen t'hl'flJl! 642-091.'t. ---::o(X) \\l~f CsL !l'ol•y .. N.B. ' . th c I ~~~~~~~~~~ I CHRIS-CH.Af'T P.L'NABOU'I' ti4~·211!2. aft f1 673-1!2ii9 ~[Jl'!•cl 11·ansn1issi041, po1vcr AUTHORIZED IS e "i:? AD Ut: Vi\11', lo111lt'(t. ----------~ r \l'/trl r Xln1 <..~iud $11'>)0 A. 1 W 1 d 9 .ln fl'ont (JiSC' hl'akcs, sryl" sterl SALES & SERVICE Delivered Price J<:!d~i·udo lrini, lik1• .11•·w. j ·11 f\lf;H.(' Colony Park, s111 DISll\llASHER. K (' n ITI 0 t I' [ l('' Call B. Muclle1·. 6iH l2\J u OS an • -Wll(<I,, bU<·kct 'C""· rnoh•I J" s for a .16\9.>. b<l IO a m, "' .lpm .• Wnl(<ln. ""' '"""· Rack. :~~1':~~1•1~00~·n~~1be~r2 . Fret to You , , _TOP i~fAF~~~i~~280~~c t•ng. 1~mpole~ons '73 TOYOTA 51;4;~0upe c1e-V111e-- 1 ~1drf~·,·· 1'~~i~~~· ~>:.2a0~~~;. l nite tublt'sl-. I l'llbinl't. 1 Iv, 3 3 LI 211 00 I [ii) DOLLAR OVERSTOCKED! "' j Xlnl t•onJ, 14U=>lor111r. ltl!.dlals, !'>16-:::.!7S. 11n1ps, avnlory. S o m ~ ~I, •. n'l•t,IJ. 1• j..V.:. IMMEDIATE t\Vc1'n• lop huyor for any CQROL ----.. ----ni lse. 557-~10. JiSO N('w.1 'TtlMportatiM ml u111•d Mer('(!(k't acni.1 LA l ~~I' tl4«·1'Jilll MUSTANG IJOl'I Bl ., c.~1. .~ . PAID DELIVERY ' UOl Quail l '71 CAO. C:l>V. h•itlhCI', BRAND new Altna 10 'Speed AUl'I' .. !hep. mftte. 1.1nvf'r IMMEDIATEL y · 1 GUSTAFSON Newport JJeach at I li tL•r!'t) AJ\1t~·M, !Al.I Xlf8il, ~US'l'AN~ 'li9 COl\\lf'l'tiblP. tbicyclt'. C~I $130, Sacrltl~ and 'bhick, Yf iifi6t"'ire!il C.rrtDers, Sale/Reftt 920 LI I s.u .9;i0() iiJl!U:P. !;,,1!0!) 111 1• t.t19~ p/s. Plb. ratlio, 60.000 mi. $90, Also Oat.sun Pickup 1vatq) •do{:. \Y&n1~ '!&,;,.. ~ FOR ALL nc.o n-Mercury ENTER l-~R0~1 MaeARTl-IUR t\,,,. .. l•11.:.1 673-1187:: OJ' K3:1·1:116. ---~1·hile ~\'lhlk 1nr1. blk lthJ' •rooneau CO\•C'r New $35, ~. . l\IOV~G . 111usi ,, .. u "ii• FOREIGN JGSOO l:::cacl: «t \Vat'tll'I' I SQ USED -«.UI\. U.UUJ '7:~ Cf>V . fil'l' r11 isl llluc. I 101, Sl,100, cull D Cn:nvell Coco n1ats $10. :"i.32-0129. 1 PLA Yf-"UL \\'iii hi ki!tl'n, lots : \\re~;£tid.f'r 11 1 ~· rul!~ · l luntinuton Bc1u ·i1 l TOYOTA iv/sun roof, ~ 1n i. loacli:tt I o'II::.-8246. BEAlrT1FU14 I 01P 0 r 1 (' d or i·harar tct·, hidl Sitttll<~SI', r ~C'IC-cont~inl"'! 1·11n11X'1" 111e CARS · 842-8144 * (213) 592-5544 MERCEDES ' 1\·/1•s1rus. S6SOO f\7::-:~iGH 1 'ii:i MU~'TA NC 6 1·yl. Auto. ladies hand hags, casual 10 ff-'nl 1i•ishort ha ii·. :r.12-242'1 ' J<l«ks, diP ~0~1'ns 1'1«. ln1· WE' .,RE IN I "Home of the Viking" -~---P/S. Nt'11· brakei;lvalves. fo11nu.1 al lcolors \\'hOlcsalc I flllU'. $1700. :i'IJ-15-17 D' ESPERATE NEED ;71 CAPRI 4 llllf~·<L r/h. nu I ON DISPLAY 1!166 H1tt'ho1·. ('.J\1. li'lti-Y:ru:: 1 CAMARO l:('ar and door damagPd tiriC('{! thru sCpi . only., [ s·-cAMPER,-\\'<tll'r-. -1ji;, •. , Sharp New Car {Jrtlcr Yout· Coloi· 'l'oday~ 1 \ s:i25. 6i}-17S4 . OF GOOD CLEAN. I 1>11ln1. <'U1tlon1 \\'hCl'I~. vinyl -__ _ , 64~1960 ____ 1 [B stovl'. ~take 'ofll'r. ~IU • 1011, Lii'. No. M4BMZ St~l5 i Trade--lns '6'1'. TOYOTA 4 1\00.1·, auto, ·10 H.ALLYE S1Jf. Llkl! n"'\'~ 1 '65 Mu!oltang : 1 l\10VING ?.'lust :-ell -nu i•uto. ,....., ....... I"-' J:.'m Broad St., N.B. FORllGN CARS SKddlcback Valley _lmJKlrl!:! Coming In Every Day 1tU':. r/h; Lie. No. o;,5 JDL, o\11ne1', all XlrJS, air , stel'l"O, \selling 101· p.;J.rl:<:, Rea~nablf', \V1ttcr ~ofln e r , A.1"'1 ~ Cycles Bikes TOP DOLLAR-PAID k31-2<MO or 49~9-cl!l A k Abov Ov . $79;_i. cop1~r\\'1 viny1, 64·1·1::76 ~f il4/6M-8765 .I l)ii;tlller. lg. -~tllnd>-tll> ·"*-"'· .. -•• ' · 'OR 0 · 1 -'' • • I t r Un•tt"• ~ddleba1:k Vl\ll<'.v_ l1npor1.'\ I 10 a.rn. .,,7 •t"ST"NC -,.-,-.. ---,.-21 1 1nocle1. ~~18-7.W:t C.iM 1 "" • SCo0ter$ ~ 925 Call or c<in\e RinN1?":!C' us.: DATSUN l U~ed Mercedes Lease -. -;XJl-200>_ oi· •lfl:r49.J!l 1 ·io CA-~1ARO. l{S, :t'Xl, air, / "" 2. r'a/1·:· 11u10 :i.n.s,""Pt,, I BLUE trundle bed set, 1·hcsl ~··~ • .i 852.1 tc BICYCLE Sl-'r.:C IALS * I J Plans Tl rovarA. 2 ~I' (.'OU/Jt'. II nu Mich. l'Sdial.s. Like l'K'l\I p/b, $.99;,, 552-8155. 'q 111irror. n1nttrC's5("S & . Nt'\\•lO spfroin ....... $59.95 WE'R House of Imports l'~h. 4 spct'd, llnled gliJSS :l6,000 n1i, I owne1 . $2.j;"J(), ·-oL-DSMOBILE sprC'ad. $11~1. Pini:;: pong Siamese Sfflpoint Used 10 sp fron1 •..••.• s2;,.oo E HERE Lie. No. l42 CE.I $199:'1 ~1u!ll ·sell. 64.1--4.ili.1 aft 5 p111 . iable $3."J. ;)4()...ll~. Ki n~·ns 2 ~ ca.. 1 Bike cleuning , .. , .....• $•1.:,0 6862 Manchester, Buena Park S1tddleback V1tl1('~ Jtnpor!ll' ;68 -cA~iARO 7.21>! · I -. •.=•<>~to ', Beacli BicyCIC' SOil E. Balboa Soo U!I 111 vn the Santa Ana Frwy -831-~ or 495--4949 . . ·-' 0 11 &I.If"!! & SPr'Vice JolJl.LY equip t:: u r " k a ....,..'-N<' i\1a(•AnTHU ll. & JAMJJ<)ltE ~; 523-"'250 n1Ueagc, stick, nt'ed.~ so1111• OLDSMOB E Vac"uuni \v/nlagic i1·a11d I Blvd., Balboa. 615-7'lS2 ll lt; SAVINGS <>N • '6!l TOYOTA C o u P ('. .,..·ork. $7;')(). 64 -OO:i'.: IL heater bar. u .. -.. ] mo. n.,, &a. I ' r er.JI BLUE uno UarJey 0 ')V i1isu11 31()(\ \V. c64~S! Hv.')'.., N.R. 't.1 Ol•nlOll NOW OPEN I AM/~'M, stereo, air. NdlS GMC TJtUCKS "Ir.'. o.:."> oi1J1n ..... 1 "-' l1"> -,--.· £, .'; '~ ...... :7 .x1..11 '.sporuter c1e'an, ·no ,.940s !110'11 l'ng. ivork·. &.11--0t1:w CHEVROLET HONDA CARS .,_...¥2P Missin Viejo Imports ·.·' • ••w bla, ~ me•-•• ~o·-• PUPPY WORLD • rake, "? mod;fico tiu"' '.'1 TOP CASH "6'"'"1~ fe•1u•······ VOLKSWAGEN j UN'uERSJ. ""' OLDS• -~'·_, " '"' ""' ~ "' .... Q Jhu· hu•• Ti ~1~ an~1nd. ;ax) ~ 111 1. ,.. lO'c " . ., 'li9 Cl-IEVROJ4 fCT lm""'la ".·" ·I-I--'•-" flci:k. chair. (ifu cabiflCI. 1 a. ""• _ ny .•~. 1•· • ,.1 I fot• t·lcan lat• ••od•I ,.,,., MERCEDES 0 ENZ -••••II bo Bl d · A '"·! Is 1 1 -"' • .. ., L. 11 ""' t:u1to1n 350, .... -...,~· 11,..,,.Mr•". . .:l'a1 -a.r t· v . · also % HP ~-~ palnt mcr1can ,..s,.. 1no p \% , • 1 and tJ·uckst ~ & '71 \f\V Bu~ 4 1111N!M, l'/h, 10 ""~ ... I 1 'f °'" -•• iprayt"r. 540-121.2; Pit Bulls, Bull 'l'ctTi~t'. 26" "ROLLFAS1"' st11nl.l11rd H d .. C I ~J('Of(f nii. Extra l.'lcan. Lie· No. 66.'i factory ah'. tlntt'd glas~. t~~~~t ,,,...,. ......... li Chow, eoc:i. .. ~. KecAhnnd hhJt' womant hlcycl.:~ rarl'ly OWGr heYrO et FIAT E'AI S"'9.·, (.'Omplete, ttutomatit· trans. 1!'171 0 1 .. DS Vii;t;1 Cruiscl' OVING : Everythin" "~· ~ ... \I ~ . I B k , .. ., an.ti Engllah Bl.Ill Doi:s. 100 UlM.'u ClXCtl en1 t:0ndi 1ion. 1'tacArthur and Jaml.lori~ OATS Co111p!i•1l' Sales & &rvi1·e &tddlebttck YaJli:y lnipui·t• in (.'OIUIO e, •tr1110 uc cl \Vgn. 3 seals, 11ir AM/FM ; • . lo\"C~l. reoords .. piano ML'CED ,PVPSI .! stud c~JI artcr 6 pn1, li-l&--:'\4•11 . NL'\\'port Bcach ,.. UN 1 Visit Us Soon At s:il-20-Kl or 49.')-49.!9 M~ll11, Vlnyl roof, r1ulial lif(' slt>ri~. Jui: rack. Ex (.'Ond, *· more. Low Pr IC e'f . Servlcr Mps! Br('(>t. l_•. •72 •• 'WASAI<l .,~ ,~ .• ·,,.,1, 833 n::;.;;;; 111111 ,.,,1vc 1S70l l\1ar m•ari!i• Park\\' a)'· --------· ,~ i;svel' tlr1•11, radio, hc1Ul't', tli50 /ofr. 67~11 aft 6: :10 HL 1141 .. IV\ -'I .,, 1><-""~ '"" "-'Iii V\V Coinnlclt'ly l'l'hll J ·•11·•-.-. .. \ f• ,.,---Open Evc11: !'t:l,1·502'7 • .su1r holnwt., many f'Xtr~s., N1•\Ylx>l'l li1·h :\lission Vit'jn 49:'i-li00 ,. l;.'t¥X L1lhu ... 11. °"!! 0 .._•r, p.r11. 'IN loogboy man.; \\'Jo; P AY TOP DOLLAR ~·111,:., U milc11. '.I Mo" ~uar. !)hone ti44-4G87 ------------1 . f lo TV: cd SJLKYTCJTiM'll·5 temntes. No ~ nll.,, $7'"..iO\ Mint con-~UR TOP USED CARS lttl-1:1()() 0 1)1•11 .-iunduy I 1US1·: AV l'.:RY P\\'Y. EXIT! Nn dl•nh•. 5115. 6l'j..lff8:1 · '7'J DELTA ~. t dr hrdtop. :~ , d !~~1e:,di-aw':r chc~ i. tefl.•. ofter refllle(t. Call _d~~on~~1-· ---If your cllr h1 nictr1t clean, 240 z -f----ltOA0STJo:Jt h1·1wn ~ & fi !I.ii ti, :.K>-5295. 'Tl KINCSWOOD F: ~ta 1 e tt/c, 1>0~e1· jdisc-1 btk~. ' mp 847 .. 2084 • ' 1132·H2i oc 644·611~. t:ZI BICYCLES. Tt'll Spct'ft $CC us flttl. • 1 9 G :I t\1f.:nc~1) ~: s vw-5,;n;;-T,Uuv"":""i.nni:-tixty, ~:~",~ ~t~~°x1~:1'~'()~'~37'~'. umlfm, slnt L'Olld, f'Vf'S & ·. · , · ~oped J·YEAR .[>lit trmalc A.KC girl's, man'•, good t11n-BAUER· BUICK I HOADSTEP. 11111. n1fo~ii. lndy11, Set• 1u 1tf1-• be t ft 97i-125'..! 11'kends, MG-3i.5!!2:::_ ____ I ' ~MPfON 2-i ." !96.1! E1~· lJlaA APtlQ. l.oJt• kid• -dllk\11. Citll &fll!r 10 :l n1 . 2!125 Harllor Blvd. ;!~ S.I.. Pu\\'cr s1ce1'i11i;, ,__µroe. t.1uwr .wll . Sat. lilt • 01 "..2. t!!:_.4 _ -·b1 OLDS Sta.Mire. New tire!! . mpeti' SM. '11 I $100. Call; &l~TJ j 64~. Cosla Mesa ·~ 979·2.'MJO 4 llfK!\'d, /\M/F'M 1·11dlu, nlr hrak1'~. au10 lr:.ins. $-l!rll. $950. 961>:-9.1ll1 '68 Et. ~llnHM SS. A/C. j' c lf'an, b'OOd cond. SJOO: non 673-910!I, Priv. P1)1, !BEAU'flf UL female 9prlru;: '11 YAMAHA 90, only 800 mi. \VE HUY 1'011ditlo11Jn~. n1flJlK, pip1•11 Si'I' at 17th .I:: 1'us1i11 SL, .71 V\\i"f.iU11. ~ $l.~. -64&-4925. ~ • E~IBERSHlP: NC\e-: PC0• ~\ Pr Spanil'I. 18 nionth old. Like new. C•ll Ken. 494-ro52 1i11POHTEO AU1'0S 11ld1 • 1nnuldlr111 ,l 11lripci11,1 1 C.l\!. 6-1."r:i!l-IO or· &ll"i-7,127. g:clOll L'Ond. ~1 11;:;.c~t·r.~ '7~ F;L ,Camino SS. i:11 ., ~~s---,61 T~O~R~O=N~A=D~O~-i a~~ Tennis u · '1 Pnpcrs. 642-4007. ..~..c!!· ~-1132. ___ BEST PRICES PAIOI ll24t'UU). Oii'lli'I', IJ . Sh:o111"., -hritk••ll, Mu~I 11t•IL 64&-:169.1 hall, $.1.950· Ph; G~:i-1.,l i ~lakt' off!'r f>51·Z'.i.'l7 . GERMAN S'he~hcrd , inflh!. 1.969 JtiO 1-tUSKY l\1X Ru n11 0.in LtWfl Imports $4495 LATE '1'l :r,os1.. 4 1 ~ litre. Don ' ~ El. CA?.f!NO. VII, 11U1~l .:::::..._.I .COIN Opp. l?OOL TABLE: u -· 1 < lk Sbo & St.....,.., & rrollable. Only $<1j{), 1~o 11,,,•-•r CM k Mill M l fu ll pwr, lo 111i l1•age, Royal ;::0 V\I'-» -1 \runs, p/s, p/h, SG95. PINTO :il2ii slate, ~ cover & o.x;lge ru1 ' . ts 400:i°42'l '!UV ...,, ' , , Die •r otor1 hl uf' like new Sil 300. ' . 1.i1M11 >U~. n1•w 962·493-4, , S22S .,.7-693:\ lice nse'. $50. 84'1 .. 1029. -· G.f6.9JO;\ 120 \\'. \\'iu·n•·i-. S.A. ·-11 •1 _ d ' fla 1t11 , n1·w lll't'lli, /\MffM. . ----.-. ----·-· , . •' l)('V.' finish. =t;' :i:i • , . SAJ\.10YED pups AKC i i )QSgA$1·1LLETu:;-1;1 :1.i7-21:l:.! 7 l 4 I . 9 1 4 1 a y s . Xl111 nu'('hanit·al j' u u d 69 Ol!!.VV VAN P INTO i:l S<1u1rc. Au lo air : ' t2x l5' AREA Ml&· Shag, ltghl \Vhitc with bJ&Ck poitit•. 1Mir~t COlltlillon. $:1..1\5, Ph: li'.1POR'I'S WANTED i14-Uflll..-0100 cvti --• i;.i:,...11so. . • ' .. (:ood engine-New Tirt·s .. lui,.rg r:.ic:k. l1nma1·. th~1: '! oranJ,.'t'. Good I r.ond. s11a. 714 54f .. o .. A 546-132., Ort.lll(le Counly',. ll 1973 DATSUNS I '67 nrE~1':;J.. ~1 ), ~-1\t'/air, -(· ' ---1$81;(1 • 979-9611 J ~2670. Mrs. And I' e-s on Call 968--0602 ~ : ;..._,.. • • 'l'OP $ BUYE n n1•1v 111otot1, Xlnt <.'Ond, 19,71 1 . V\\-Sutll!I' . lkK•fle, --COUGAR--1 64.)...6;,oo or 64fl-1410 ~vei;. ' t • BEAGLE, AKC, femal~. I yr 1973 '250~ Monte&.~. $1000 YIU. MAXJ.;Y TOY0 1'A ALL MODELS * R~G7 • ae au·. 1unffm radM} bc11t --------• 21 " ZENITU f /w Qinscle old, All ·~hols, pert1JCI or bi1&.Affer: •• f(lnt cond to.II J iMl Dc4lch BJv :. _______ ___:_.:. ofrt•r ovt•r $1U!\O. ~~l-321311 • ·~2 P INTO. s~ck. leRvlng '[V. $35. works. 646-239:!. aft p\ayniatc, G·l:>--;i9J6. a.1>7216 H. Br·ul'h Pb. 841'.·S55:J 'IN STOCK MGI -· '71 Vw BU S $1800 ~·rh'I cour:A·H XR7. Xlnt I .siall':. 23·0:.:~9'{f-Slil00- ' pni. Horses 856 -·70 YAMAHA :IOO Enduro AUi01, Imported 970 BARWICK IMPORTS (.'all tit\.71&1 a rt~ P ?-t . I i·ond, 10 milt'<lgt'. ail', I PLYMO. UTH CKILDl'tENS play ho u ~ e ~lany t>xlras. Xlnt cont!. $.\'\O. :i:137a Canilno Cupllltrana 1 • ·~ MGU, xl111 11.1nni11g .c'Ull· ,70 VW CAMPER l1•11th1·r. landau, ster1•0. til t l\lnntcd, pli'asr p hon t' , OLDER GenUt O·~ 1dln 11 t 't 1~30 ALFA ROMEO San Juun Cllpiitrano ~!lion. $8011 ~1U:.lri f .v1•11, , \\'hl, Sl~ll. 4U.j~~i:l71 ufl i 1-------·---~14-8874. Morgan/Clydesdale in· ; ·nYAMr 17i• 493·3.l75ort'll·1375 ':1~~Y~· 1 ~ll~L si:ioo. ~!l~·IOiM,,.. ~~·~t~U.Y$~ ____ '71 . GTX 440, radio, air Exercyclc, xlnt L-Ond. , lercsted in good homP-ii\ N6~~ :,~· xlnt condition, Cull ALFA ROMEO ll A1-S'UN--2~0 .-z-;-in11.li, I PORSCHE 'll!l llU1' • /\~l~tl•I>: fllJl:f11~·J I • • ·10 t"OUl:Alt hardto p, cond.. .hu cket ~Rls, xln1 "· :;lightly uSC'd, $250 c11sh coun1ry call 84&-3569. .,._, .., nl llt'll~'"· w;ootl 1,01111.. s:~ilOO , In uJI r1•11Jlf'('I.~. t1.tu11t si.><•I all 1-'.\tfUM. ~ p n 1· k I <' s ! t't]nd. $~. 8~7--oo.4:: nrt 1~ checks. 494-7r.s4 BACK Bay hotSC's, stabled, '70 11bNOA ct.4!'JO, SAAB or l)('~l of11·r. 114Z-1Cll2 urt :'i, ~Ult ~ult! 1fl60 iPorM·hi· J!:.~uftcr._G l;r-.:_cM.0!1._ __ , ~ri"-lnttl 1)\\'tJt'I" ~~1~tir1J lit·l'S. 1!171 R~nnr-,- 1 '* BEAUTY Salon cqui1~ boarded.. Ext'tcisc 11nia. Xlnl mnd. $550. 11rlv11h• 1~r ly. Ne\V yellow rnlnl jnh, '70 VAN, lo1v n1ilcuic1· I urtucl. SJ9.)() O'l.~-2207 S1tcrilit't' ~lftlt'nl. :o.:ln1 !;Jnd .• 11rlv purly, 2«!01 S.\\'. Bir('h, S.A. l·Ii::1s. • OOZ.-:'1827 ~ s.1!~X .. ,"v'1.-~·. ~!~,1.... '7:1 i>ATSUNli° u:-;i11;:ill·uf;;j~ I 4112--101:\, 400.064~ 11ft ~ Nt'\V tirt>S, smi I --CHRYSLER--:>1:r1so2 1 '.111'1 · 923-14:ii :isG-7199 ~·.. 01' "' ~ .... 5:17-~!0:-l!J arh•r h pill -. · · ---------Motor Homes Rimtnl• t•r, 11111/hn. 11111.r::~. 1111111.v 1•1<· '71 !l\4 • I-PONTIAC l . \VANT TO BU Y 10 SPEED .OlESTNUJ' Coll, l ~i: yr old, Sal•/Rtnt 940 tt1111. C1tJI o(lr r 1 11.111, Pd, It/I) till' l111l<I. Xlnl s:l.'"i()tl Ii~ V\V Sunroor. ttmlfn1 , II '6' Ch ,.. 1 tnCYCLES Rl'g .. ·~ Arabian. Trained. Pl'ty, IJ41«l07l onh'll<lfi:1 ... good hody, 1uns l:rr.11, ;'®'l. r'f ewport * 962-70C17 * ~sl olCcr. 96.."-2137 e SAL Se ---. -·-536-431'~ I t •h', nu ti1·1•is, .sJO·ffl ::li t:. '71 24-0Z. SllVl'l'·,il'MY. SR,000 '70 91lT Pors1'hf'. \\l hJs, :iii",-.-.:_'-.---.. CONTI-NENTAL 1 '68 CA.l';\LINA \Vai.:-on, pis. I p/b, $1 400, 0('1\ helled radinli;, :~·1,(ll}(J in i l P ~ , it~2-:-:tl711 -· --~ 1Misc1llaneou1 I e SERVICE e ,,,1, 4 ~pl!. )j ln1 rofl<lillon. Sullt'OOI. ~o niih~11~,., Sf'i5!l:i. 67 ~11N1 111nd , tll'I\' 1h·i•11, - t 'Wanttd 820 Cull ('~1 1-l:IOll 1142·!1&CI or 64j...{):l1!'i. b "a k l' s 11 o I n1 r t> b I t ' I -. I -· __ , J0 • RENTALS • ,,,_ -.. ---= -~ . .. . '"'"'"""':...!'"!. 411241.17 '73 I rwANTE ~·FREE .,,.. 1 ·1;!! PONTl,\C C.cuul Prb .. .i ~ .... (quipment ~ V\V Bu.~ 'ti!l Xlnt cnnct. t11u~1 s.i•JI . &.,-ti nff<'I" takl',, I! ! BROKEN UP . a,,·, s TAR GA: ... E-u"~. ~.M ;\ ~lt'l'(l<"'I' al $1'.\fl:l. ('all 64·1-i9:~l :isk f(lJ' Vio· <lt' t-.r~ SIDEWALKS .).:\) .~ ~l'.\'T'"~ * 6i~r-1G::t • MARK IV 1)(111 ';.WILL HAUL AWAY Boats, Gen9ral 900 .t.1111 llrCLAYll.~'?t.l.AN uiu • '1:'. sur;r.B BEF:TLi'-: • ·1o1 PONT --:..,-u,-\\lg~.-.-,-·1n1 fli 837·5003 a.ft 6 pin &< 1\•k· ,,.., WA•.u J:i.. Yeur Do.lly.4ri1w1lyC111i • ~ Sfll.,IJ rh oi r, Al\11t 'l'1 ~ lraC"k stt•r{'(), S1lve1· i\f1)(111·1lu~I n11•1aJJi(' ru1utillj.'l~1t1ef., IX'l'fhody, re· 'fiifli:i. 12' G /\ M E F' I s }I En ' 4 , h 1o,A. 19 Acrord111 g lo th• S111rr. ocT. fl ~l:leri "'1!111~· 1·~t r11:<: S'..lfj.'10. li7.'i-201f1 ' II ilh 'inyl 1~10f 11111! r-cril ('!'Ill rt.•pttir~. S2;)()/off('r, m1 WANTED USED ho1'1'Cpowcr Johnsoti, crirtop ,. .. 9-1+.2). io de..,elop mes1oge for Tuesday, 11•17.is,.33 .,)) V \V n us, ni:uiy -~·xLl':is~ I l«athi'r Jnti·rnii·. ~·uu '1(1\\'\'l' :..:r:-:t:!l:!. BRICKS CAL 11 l'UCk, xlra!C 1tsking $35(), GMC 80-8> ttood words c0trf:1~fng to rnA'!'lbtrs l 70. I ('llf'a p. Bloivn l'nghu_'. $R?ll. I 1~l<'ludin$:, 1t11· 1i111cllllonlng, ·;o (;'1<_A_N_l-,-1-,1.1,, loaded ~l -a.. Lo\vranct' 1' .. \J!h L ll·k'·l Of of your ZOIJioe btrthsfgn. • ' ~.12-1213 nr !t.171-1':"1:;(;, ldt Slt'(•n 1111 \\'h1·1•t, /\1\l t'1'1 , ~1100 or lit·~1 uUrr. CAi i <1 87MS64 11'/Wtllld $1'20. r. s 7-3 11 2 9 Motorhomes ~ t:':""' 5~ ~tl..idly • ~~~:".!...... ---·G.llV\v slu11'Qr.JI --! ~$('1'(~) 01uhi·Pl1•X l'llllitl "\v11l1 I fj 1:~111•. ~,;;Ai;;:;:;;:n"::'e;;;;f'i;:;;;;;:ir,;;;\JE~''~~~'~· ,.·:,...~------23' &-21)' J A 3J M>itg1M 6JNoi~; .. , ~iooo. t!l' "li\ktl lllf('I' :,,1 1)\_' l)l:IYl'I', :1uton1:1111· "P'"'•! -~~~~Dlxm!~t trai ler for 80.tti/M•rln• \ U.t~IEDLATE OELIVF:H'I'. ""'omo"'ric J•P~ e4T;, ~ ~1.t...;'.'i:t·is 1 ··1111!r(ll , r~~·liuin1: settl, :u11l RAMBLER ;J;\ E , . 904 . ,. O~JU!O CO.'l!l ~l•c1t•f'IQ J~A O~Nat ~ll\/Pr lu,'l:Ul'Y grou/i. 1 .. .,~~ 1 * Ca ll iri8·13~1'> • quip. f~~t;lullfv.. l>eAJ,Cfi ~t::;' • ..,' ~~e:!. :~~:::,rn VOLV O 11~111 G.OfXJ n1lici'l ttn<t l1111ili·rl l!li:! i\'IAl'l\DQ H "'ll}.'On A/C, :\1MtlTED ...--Bcmt 11riler •,lor BONIER RADAR SUI Barry POntlac f A :i1,a.clt10lli\O OIF11>t '\'1lh 11u1<'h n1or1·~ Aslo.: hir \l\1 t'll !ill't~. ll•'•C l'ac:k, -di (oot b<>nf. GMC H F:~. CF:N1"Efl ' \9Ll1•!\' J•Con t!'IOt WHILE THEY ,\Ir. \\'ulsh at K42-GGG!i. .:r•l )!j/111 , P/S, PJR, P/\V, • Cnll 5-IS·l3'';1 + Sl .~!r1, c:o1nplclt'. t.tlLLER or.,..,,wi"°" ,.0Cur•1oroml!.fJIO !loc.Jol A ~~.N\ ·1. XI t I •·1 u; ~l RJJifE $Al I:::~ tMG ~I 2000 E. 1111 SI., Santa Ann l l 'Vou ,., 1-1,,1111"" 11 BtNll" LAST! •'-""' 1111 t'l>. • n l'l)nt · ~ l qfic•l •n••ruments a12 /\ , . • f,jg.1000 i211 .. 2 wu"' _,~ c.i..1 Sacr•1f•1ce \Uitlt'I' BhT"'.'a"~1R,:D1i11..;).u.1. i Sfl1ALl:. 4 cyl Gl'll)I Mt\rtnt HOUS~ on w~ilt, ('Ot1v'T.'i'1t~t 13 Alll'!O'Dl1•r• .tJ 'l'llHr '1l fluiq1f{t •73 VOL VOS IJtf:.i N'.OLDS flute 1yilh 1:ttst Inboard rrui:inc. Creal for '\Ill Chevy $<,:tlool Bus._ 1.11ll {;~i.oh~hil ~;~~ ;;~;111rn • 16r, 1 _ $75 hoy or 11u.i $Sii i. \'48-3.161. R1...'<I, ?>tout tquiplX'f-I. sir s s. l•w.111 .. 6 ... t11• 7~A · ti! aa1~1 3l1 , ouOA 4 ey1~;!"n;.-s1Th _SIMOO. 642--,00.14 art 6. 11MOV .. 1At111 ·110 1 : ~~~:: ' llftll'RlNG Martin harti en~ Or.IC 6-71 BIQCkll & P<ltl' '7~ ri10B1t.T:: Travtlt'r. 1 ·r, ~:}~ ~:~:'° i:r.:!1'4'' e 142''( DcArnond pick·UP s 3 7 5 . bflt'l(Aln!!, MS-2592 , ...... ,.... I I lilO '""'II.... !!(I Drll!!\Ot\r:9 80 t<lf' •Qll••••• • !".~ - rm. __ 67~7444~--. Sm-1ll -Bo1t Tr•1'l-er ...... ,,,..c, P\\'T, ti r. xirall. s fill ~ '"' :SI AMI.of a1 ,.,ffld1f .. ,.,,,.., ~ _ G. A ~1/FM OOXI n1i. $&.'XX'!. Mdy ~, 1i.. 87 ~~"'IJO•lw!i< JA", 10 ~ Now Is The Time To :. !J,RIENTA~ ~l,JGS $03. ~·0 103 Yl3*'-0467~ tr'-' ~l l1 8l )'IOlll ,,,·II ". SAYE' ' p -I I • I ""L ,._ ~!wt ~•¥111.1 ll~~lt. · ' ' At S8250 1•0007' , I r1v11 c 1>ar )' !ltJC'v• scv~rn Boits Power • .,.vv e 011.le'& Mo19r llumr Hl'nl<.ll.~ R~.. 6~<'"'1W e~ !.ut,.lit!<lt 1·7'!',..,. '\.: " :. J ... rugs. &1~·5.126, or,,.S'17~1. ' '73 2:\..26'.J\LJ 1. & i\1l111i; 16 o.w ~Doy "'"" , __ rll' 1\1;\J-IOGANV 1H:<:(lli11't'o Frl'il n1lle. 9 !ii fl, Si'~ . Vl•GO JT_ConhMd ~7 l,,.ji(o!td ·•7 '··~' ,ISClS n l I 8"°4. n1rn1 ttull6'1J,l.14.!r.i;,sx"1. A 5 949 ~-, AUG.)l 1'111fl'fl/Pld , )flri'.• 811 o'\t1 t'U!IP '''·" ,.,... --, .,..;, ,, uto erv1co. P1rts f. · """' """" "'""""'' • 1•->., OLYUllOlll I --''"-'--------();. :l""''(l r. JI ;'(l&iMo•• cgitf' ~•ol•liql\I .90 ~!jOfl,!oOn :_-':,. !: .:,_,.' I 71 (-oN1'iN ~:~·1r. 111.: ..;r1•1•n, hlk ''illyl I f\ p \ i\fl\IFi\1 l!t~f'l'(I, Tlh v.•hl, ' r1lr. 11t1no~1 llt'\\' :•IL'••I b1.•ltt.'d \ 11·~. 1 ... ·111ltf•f int. ;\lus1 ~II quick nt s:noo. /\11r1'1)~ 4::t1.1 1111. 1\1;9 rinun<'<' JIURJl.Y! ;111 Nn, .l~nyhXJ11I R:d. h1. nn-~nr.r. EXEC i;wvl «:hr~ $15/2.>,ScC-21' CJ.tRIS Crafl . 16' l001 1'"ALCON trnn"1nlsition, 0\36•S·'4M Good. d JN ·~5 t ---~~ I chr~ ~124 t>eskt $20/9Q ltunfll)ou l 14' Runa ll(lilt. 3 ~peed stick $2::), IOOl 1;J6i12.1e I'•' t\ vcr*C ' ~otu, \.6 .. 73 I Pil"l~'f' ~ \V JA CM 64i-~ \l/hoh·1't•I". ir12-7'°9. Yn.lcon Md~ ST •• 008-t!'.171 J~J;i; llru·hu~· ~I, -11 ltl ~·:~\". '6S T·BIR D. t:xc-. eond, l.{"ntht•r hit. l.(ludL'd . $WJO, -·19-t!:tl l'VCll/~IJ-1 dll,)'l. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642·5678 ~ ·) ' I • ) ' • I I r ,_ ;?6 DAILY PILOT Monday, Stpttmber 24, i-q73 • . f'an11l11 Clr~11s 1>11 B il Keq_i1e -----: Chance to See l(ol1 ·outek 'Comet Nears Short Season 0 SACIWIENTO (AP) -The ClOllllll<fda1 crab ....... oil m1terlll -from when lllo llllar Norlllem Cllllornla wlD be 1y1tom wu lormed, 1ben we two montltl -befll••lna have a dlance IO ..e a piece next year, under a l>IJl tlgned ol original matter," said lnlO ~w by Gov. Ronald Wlllla-. ''II could help us Jleopn, The ......... wu by unravel the mysleriel about AJseimlyman emy-Keene, \ ,.__ j- t>IN(s. I ) "The little bell means go bock ond start over again." Runaway Phone Center • Goes Begging in Texas H 0 UST 0 N (AP) them runaways, a 11 e g e d I y Operators of a nationwide were slain by a homosexual telephone center set up here to torture ring. give runaway youths a place B r i s c o e dubbed the to contact parents say. initial telephone program "Operation . fesulls fiave be e .n disap.t Peace of Mind." pointing. There arc both stale and na- ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Astronomers at F e r n b o n k Science Center are looking forward to studylng the Comet Kohoutek, which wiU be visible to the naked eye from late November until mid-February but may, not reappear for 50,000 years. I The Kohootek Comet, which will be studied by scientists at observatories around the world, is expected to far outshine th e famou s l-lalley's Comet or 1910. It may even he bright enough to be seen in daylight. TIIE KOHOl.M'EK Comet. named for the \Vest German astronomer v.• h o discovered it last March , Yl'iU appear in the prcdawn sky !ale in November. Fcmbank astronomer Bob Hayward says that at the point of best visibility, the Kohoutek Comet could be 100 times more brilliant than the briJ!htest star. He said its tail could extend in an arc as far as 60 degrees froin the horizon. l·layward said the comet's long, cliptical orbit around the sun indicates that it is p;irt of the solar system. even though astronomer.s predict it will not reappear for 50,000 years If tt remains \.Vithin the sun's gravitational pull. IT wr1.1. PAS5-\yllhin 13.2 millioh miles of the sun Dec. 28, and then be nung toward the far reaches of its orbit. 1-----~'l-tmught-the goven1or--tionwide-1oll.free-nun1bers fOt" would give us much wider runaways to call. In turn, the publicity and b e t t e r ad-center telephones parents and verlising," said the Rev. lets them· know their children Travis Key, head of the are all right. After Dec. 28, the comet will appear after sunset and in- ABOUT 180 volunteers have crease in brilliance until it far manned the telephones 24 exceeds the brightest slars. center. "We're having' to call up volunteers and say, 'We don't need you.' " hours a day but they said the Hayward's co 11 ea g u e THE SERVICE was an-center bas-received only 20 ruchard Wil liamson says one nounced by Texas Gov. Dolph I e git i mate calls from theory con<:i!rning the origin of Briscoe after the murders of runaways. Of that number, on-such phenomena is that a 27 youths \.9ere discovered in ly eight wanted their parents swarm of . comets surrounds Houston. The youths, tnany of notified. our solar sYsrem, several • • I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' ¥ou can get all these services: Checking Account Deposits Check Cashing Mas ter Charge Cash Advance Consumer Loan Applica tions Savings Bonds (Cashing & Issuance) Money Maker Deposits Money Maker Withdrawals Master Charge Payments Federal Tax Deposits New Savings Accounts New ·Checking Accounts ·Loan Payments Utility Bills Money Orders Traveler's Checks Savings Deposi ts •. Sa ... ings Withdrawals Cashier's Checks Xmas Club Payments I trillion miles from earth. orbit back lnio view In 1916. ONi.,Y A FEW of the bun· dreds of <.'01ncts known to nlen have been bright enough to be perceived by the naked eye. J-lalley's Comet, which made a brilliant display over the earth In l!P...0, is expected to Williamson said comets are believed to be frozen gases and other matt.er. Tbe tails are formed as they vap:rize on approach to the sun and the solar wind forces the VIJlOI" to stream out behind them. the origin '"' the· earth and1. ~<;D-San;;;;;ta,,;-;;~).==~=::;::;:=======;; fonnatlan ol the 1 o I a rlr ..._ "ll coml!:ts are leftover system." ' * * * Asironomy l1series . ' . .. '. ,,, ·' . {· Co met Classes at Cotist 1 • DR. JAMES H. AUBURN OP'TOM ETAIST An11ounc •1 tt.'. •l'•n;nt of hl1 office for ti.• pf1cHc1 •f 6•n1r1I Opto111•try 111~ Cont1ct L11u•• •• 2517J LA PAZ ROAD LA PAZ ,ROFESStONAl BUILDING LAGUNA HILLS, CALIF. Ol'l"IC.I! HOuttl IV Al'il'OINTMENT TELEl'HONI! """" Orange Coast residents will have the rare opportunity of obsrving a comet by this December and J anuary. planetariumprojcctor, a comet that is currently approaching the SWl and will soon be vlsl-e ble to the earth. is the title of the Oct. 5 ..... 1oo. Levine will dllCtllll'=============================== The comet, along with a mu l titude of other "ASTRONOMICAL LORE," astronomical phenomena, will ~--------~ be discussed and examined in four-part lecture series at Orange Coast College. Entitled, ''Astronomy," the series meets Friday evenings, beginning Sept. 28. from 6:30· 8:30 o'clock in the OCC Planetariun1. There is no tui- tion and persons may register at the lecture. l 1idia Head Hits 'Evil' NEW DELHI (AP) - President V. V. Girl has recomffiended that those who discriminate against the 'leamd! and atorje> sur-nlWltllnc 01be majK coo- s teHatlom. He. 1'111 llso u- amlne the sprlnf and summer skies. -()![ Oct: lrLevlne will look at the p~. Eili>halls will be placed on ,1r ecent discoveries matt.' by the Mariner mlsslm IO Man and • the upcoming ·~ of the ~ 1pacecraft lj! Jupiter. The Ona! 1esa~iJ.s UUed. ... "New Diacoverles>'ll" It will look at the blrlb,~e and death of 1 atar · · l!ad · will diacws the ltJttn or'liie ..;·,,,·-.-J .. 1~~1r.:,.:~~ TIJE SERIES ,vill he il-so-called untouchables be lustrated by OCC's ne'v Apollo executed. · ~~~I . •• .' • • \ Planetarium Projector. The The presidCnt called un-Eco.impact o~· "I~ . ·•wta--'*'•· Pf'01~tnnms--thc capability o -----touchability. whieh--i-s-+------"-------4--\....,1 1Mt=::,.:~;:,.__••_•_• ___ ~~++~---J-- placing more than 1,050 s tar forbidden by la\\' but wide-SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .-. . ., ·. ·• CDMPLlfl .PAIMT; STAIN, ·AfitD FIMIJff' images on the 2 4 -foot ly practiced, the count;ry's The, Board ol. Supervbon bas · , . . . .1t&40VAL SIAYICI·: · ... planetarium dome. worst social evil and ua 1y , • ·' . Lecturer is Joel Levine, an sin against humanity." unanimous approved an en-' . · W.E PR;e;Ai.1 YOua TR!ASUR(S POR ·· instructor inphysics a nd The caste system as virorunentaJ impact report for · · · IASY.· R!FINISHIHG ; · ·' • c:;;~ physical science at Ha\vthorne outlined in ancient Hindu the $385 million Yerba Buena • .. .. . . · High School, and a former lee-practice denies an un-Center here. The vote·wu 'to. . WltHoul,.LYl~.A'cloS .. oi itMMtruL turer at the Cleveland Natural touchable the right ; to O. The center will mbiude · ~T-RlALS · Science Museum. enter a Hindu. temole, facilities for conven~·ud , · . ·1 ·, ••. •. ·~ / •• The opening lecture is titled, alt~.ugh he belongs to!tbe. sporting evenll and a houSing . · . . ~"4-4•t.i"' · __.~, "Comets Jn the Heavens." lt rel1g1on. project south of M'i r t·e1 ·.:. °':-:Ii;=;~ v.·ill explore, via t h e Street. ,r • • •• Nationil . .. ... ·-• I ' '- • of ~!W~. :l!~ ~!11.-'~~~ ~ -' /· '·~ { • .~ ' ,. ' v ., '.I • i ~,~ ,.., I,..,\' (If the ~tsti!1aW>~al.,offii:t,jvher~ you ha~'y6iir.aci;~ d.<>je~n·~ s.tay open late ,-just use any of tile offices listed below. Because if you have an accoun~·with us, you have an account ' ' . ' with al! Fitst ·National offices.) *··~· "'~. Orang~ County~ . <;:):P,re~s ' .. ,Huntington Beat h i -., ,/ ! ' . • · ., ·Ad~s Av,enue .. ' Be~ch Boulevard , ?aifdieback . • -s unny.liills . '-. ... :·~~ j tW~s!cliff', . · · ;,·:: Los Angeles County ., 1 Bellflpw.e r ~ , ' ,. " · l..4e~ood · .:.: ·· .. ,, I ' . ' •.• 1. I ""l l , .. . • • ., !' ' " I~ 11 It •I • ' .. . t' ,• . _,t.. I \. ' ·~ ' ' . •If ~, .. \;, ''"" '.· ""111 ' -· . I -•t 'f,1,~·.f • ~ . ··~ ~~ ... ' ,. ' t .... '• ... ... ... \ ., ~-. ,, . ' • . I .. . . ,_'J. '--· -• ,, .. l" • ' -r i / (' .. ~)•·:.' ,,, •Jl • ~ . ' '· ~f)' . ._. .. •I ~ ,1 ~ • ft., .. ;. •t . iJ -.:( t \L I'•. "':!~ f • )!'·;.,.) ~ t .. 'f:~, ~-· .. ~ •••. ' . " ,. • J \ • .l.j .J.lr :...! ... lo, ....... . , . ..~ • t .. ~ .. • \ l.:J ; ,.~u ',;.. ~ ,., 111(. .. I . ... '• , .. ~·4 . .,,,4 ,, • iJlo • ..l (:,..I,, I'" • #. " •. :, ~l ' l ~· . '! • .. . • • ' • . . r •• . - •' • ' I I I I (. I \ 1 ( I \ • • ' Teday's. Final San Clemente Cap~sirano EDITION N.Y. Steeks • - ' * I VO[ 66, NO. 267 ' 2 S~CTIONS, 26 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1973 TEN CENTS . . Love Aninaals T~ibe Hits ~9'd pay Late By JACK aiAPPELL 01 tfle Diiiy f'llet St•ft The Love Animals, Don't Eat Them travellng menagerie and vegetarian sideshow packed aboard an incredible converted school bus and lumbered out of IAguna Beach pas( the canyon city llmlts early this morni!lg. "We-jUSt baPl>lDe<t to hl!ve ·an officer out in the canyon at that time, and he definitely reported that tlll!Y passed the dty limits," Police Capt. David Brown · said today. · Alert Citizen . Foils Train · W reek Plans Vandal! apparenUy Intent on derailing a passing train on San Clemente's beachfront tracks stacked eight large trash cans tilled with sand on the rails SWtday. But before a train came through, a resident noticW the stack of heavy cans and phoned police. The lncldent was noticed shortly after 3 a.m. Sunday aod a resident first tried to remove the cans himself. But they were too heavy to be moved by one man. Pllllce said they were then called • ~ patro!m<n alened dili!!tlchers for the Santa Fe RaIIJl"'!ll_ so that all trainl could be ll<Jliped!"' • After Iba~ ollicen -t "' the • beac!> and lugecl Ille ~ .a the tracb. '!be cans ,..... then emptied and tll:m to the city yards. Border Patrol Arrests Aliens, Discovers Pot "They pa""'I the city limits at 1:15 a.m.," Brown added. The departure came somewhat after the autumnal 8'"1oo• that occurred at 8:21 a.m. Satufday. But, it came before the minions of the law acted on a multitude of minor law viol~UOns banging over the Love Animals trll>e. · The cliltrict altomey's office agreedc:t<nltsmls! a ·bosl'Of-lnfraetions li- the Love Anll!'ats pe0ple would leave. They left twice, once &mday afternoon as a '<:aravan of about seven vehicles departed Love Animals headquarters, Dead Man's 2 Cohorts, Car Hunted Orauge County Sherilrs olficers today stepped up their search for two ac- complicef: Ol a man who was sMt and killed In the act of robbing the Dana Villa Motel in Dana Point. Police ~t Calilornia have been given the descrlptlm ol a ·sman red car -believed to be • ileuaJt -In whieh ~·· ·"*"·· lladma:lrl bellowl!~to have died as the .auto sped ·--the -~ 111&11!, Grindelmwl'1 body was dumped on a lawn In the Tllstin area about 4S minutes later. Sberilf'1 officers said he had been shot in the cheat, ra.:e and band. ,,_ bullets were fired by mole! owner Louts Jooeph Haffner, liS, who told officers be heard Giindeland threatening his 4; ~ ... a, and rushed to the lob-by to lpliii'. -- Haffner sal. he fired a number of shots at the litruiler WliOslmuliti!il po!tOissian of a weapon as be leaned over the COdnter and scooped up the motel receipts while be threatened Mrs. Half. ner. . · Besides the arrest of 2'10 allma over Haffner Ud Grindeland staggered, the weeRnd, border patrolmen manning clutched hia chest and stumbled to the the checltpoint at San Onofre woond up car containing hro men. , with a fringe henellt -170 ~ of Pfjj.,...· aaid cuatamm;. Jeaving a I maiiju8nl · 1n the trunk of .a atisplciout nearby restautant -ed the motel car. owners statement 'that two men were in , The pot bust ·occurred at aboul 9 p.m. tbe wal~ vehicle and ~t one leaned Sunday aa the l>eavy weekend traffic waa out and pullert the fatally wounded wantog, patrolmen said. Grlnde'-1d into the car. Alter stopping a car and conducting a Sherill's Capt. Jamea Broadbelt said routine ... rch, ofllcers opened the trunk today that no chal'les will be IJled am found three bu!ginJ backpocks. against Hallner. "Our inveatlgatlon of Inside, In l:ilogram·sized bricltl -of. the incident entirely cprroborates the ao- ficers found the contraband worth about count be gave us .. " be said. fl7 000 on the streel Broadbelt said !his morning be ls Two residents of the Spokane, Wash., satisfied tb_at Grindeland ts the man who area-were arr<sted In the1'llr and tumed-a.sborUlme.earliei:.attempted.to n>b..tho over to U.S. customs qents for ar· Kentucky fried chicken reslalll'llll - ralgnment on smuggling charrea. The the 1ttte; from the Dina Villa mole!. names of uie two were not released early 11lt Was the same deal, band in pocket today uJf be had a IUD there," be 181d. "But nie' marijuana bust cam>ed a buay the ..,... waa closlng for the night, l>e . weekend marked by a larger-than·uiual defied Grindeland and the man who volume of arrests of Wegaltmnllgrants. cilll!eageJ. him promptly ielt." The pot haul also waa the latest In a growing amount of smuggling caaes In· vovlng the imrnJcraUon olftcers. . '111rough last week officers arrested a i)alf-doun alleged pot smualera and 1tlzed more than 700 pouhda or the illicit weed brought in from Mexico. , Gunshot Victim ' Oemeq te Seeks To Fill Vacancy On Parks Board 'Ibo city ol San Clemente today launch- Dies in County A man 9hot at a union ball dauee1 In Santa Ana Sotunlly nlabt died Stmday at Sanja Ana _Cllmmtmfty _ Hoopltal and police are locitlDc'fw a murder suspect. , ed a quest for applicants for a parks and recnaUon commission ,seat left 'vacant because . the member declined a second tenn. J<>e s. Sanchez. 41 , of Santa Marta. was In the perklla lot of the union hall at 1132 E. Cbesinut St., wllh others lnvestliaUng temple and ~!while vegetarian cale at if>!>le came after nearly a ye~r and a The group was inVolved in a co+iul call~ to the te01ple by report.. of 782 ~-c.oast Hi(bway. hi.I~ of residence and v e g e t a r i a n trial lut ....1fJll!' after a camel napted di sturbance of p.e peace, as the tri~ They broke down on Laguna banyon evangelism in Laguna Beach. BoneyJJaiiln.U, a chicken named 'col. danJd, chanted and turkey-trotted m Road near lhe kennels-o1 tt. Society for '!be group first planned to make it up Sande" and several dogs IUnched with front of their brightly pali1led ltotelront. the 'Pnwmtlm of .Cruelty to Animals the coast to Sen Francisco then head the Love Animals people in their Today. all that remained was a black ' ~ shortly ..rtenrifd.. ·· out to other cities and "let it flow." vegetarian cafe, a violation of health painted facade, a fallen "Love Anlma~ One ~ Jndicated that the briehtJY "We're all gypsies again" said James laws. . sign and the words Matthew 10:4.73. paJat.ed -dec:l:er bus sported pink D. Robert, group founder. ' • '!be trial. ended with a guilty verdict Capt. Brown said thai as far aa the city londllp!t 111'.l·blue taillights. ·In addltloo -Tbe..rag-tsg tribe..espou.ed a belief In for James .Dooglaa_~ Is_ concerned, the !>'>Ok bas been closed oo to the ~O ·penona supposedly holding the "oneness of an1mab and human the eatery. lilve Animals Don't Eat niem. ..... • fortla Iii the vebicle, there also were a belngs," and maintained that eating Soon afferward, the cafe became--a . But, he acknowledged . . . . .gt!OI, iillclrens, and a dog or two. anlmats polluted the minds and bodies of "temple" but myriad city balldlng ia"' "ll they come back, we'P have to start mM.. lq JilOve for the Love Animals the eaters. bad been ·violated, and the police were from scratch again.'' ;:..,,-• Fr9lit Lawn Site; Victim Local Tot The elusive coyote respoMible for a summer·long spree of attacks at san Clemente State Park mauled a 3-yea:Mld San Clemente boy as the youngster stood on the fron i lawn of his h0tne -SW1day - - afternoon. The animal, deemed by the ·victim's mother nearly a .'~neighborhood pet" in the exclusive Riviera colooy, crept up behind BarUey Edward Ashbaugh! at aboat 5 p.m. aa lhe ,........ held a garden bole. '!be CO)'Ole bit the !lo)' ma the back imd side, then walked away cal mly when the boy's screams broogbt hia mother. Police said that aa a standard precau· lion th~ boy would have to begin the series of injectiom to immunize him against rabies. Bartley was given emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hospital after the attack. The ·animal, a SJDall example of fhe common· species of:.-wild dog, is-believed to be the same one which has attacked • J more-thaa a'-dozen camperi-at-lbe-1ta1te----I park nearby through the summer ' • . . . W.Gitig .tor Help ""' . . . . . . . Ambulan""1 attendant aids accident victim Ralph S. lt!yef.s, .2~, ,Arlabeim, foll.,.ing crash early Sunday 'DlorDJng on Ford Road near Harbor View Homes in -N8*pe{t; Beach. Police · sai~: Myers was· •headed tow!'d, MacArthur Boulevara when he lost control tiaffic Island .. He was '!rapped for nearly three hours and police halted traffic.ifo11g Ford Roatloin the wee hou1'8 Sunday. as rescue"' struggled to free Myers from wrecltage. ·He was· trellted at Hoa('llemorial Hospital, then transferred to Onnga~fy Medi· . o~ lils µi and wrapped it. around a liglit pole in cal Center. -: . ' Nixon Fund Use Cited • CampaignMone~~Not Used for San Clemente Estat,e . ' NEW YORlf (UPI) -The. New York Timeo aaid Sunday·tbe manner in which a secret poliJlcal fund and President Nix-. ' on's private finanCes were handled led to the stories be was using campaign money · to buy his Florida and Calilonila homes. ~ :t'lmell Aid· Jts.U.V..ttgation of Nix· on's penmal.llnueesfmd. his, property dealings baa turned up evidence that $803,213 In Wldlsclosed funds Nixon u!ed to fiitatice. bi1 Ke)'" ,_iscayM: and San Clemente properties probably came rrom J>;aying littie or no inCQme taxes, and not from campaign money, Jn its investigation of. Nixon's finances, the nmes said it hired a "supervising accountant for an lnteroa.Uonal ac- counting finn," who, after be bad~­ ' ed over available data, ooncluded that Nixon, with an annual salary·of IZ00,000, either paid "virtually no tues, or be 'got a lot of cash from ""lf"here. I think he peld P>obl'bly. aln¥>ol no-taus." The nmea : ... t d "knowledgeable sources" re)>orted three penons, in- cluding _Ntxon's. penonal lawyer Herbert W. Kalmbach and the brother·ln·law of fonner White House chief aide H.R. Haldeman, had control ot a secret Political fund or $1,098,000 in cash and $570,000 in ~ng accounts. The article said the secret fund, Long Tragedr 102Rd Birtlufuy· in State Home "surplus of the l.lltl3 preaidentlal cam- paign," wu reportedly contrOlled from 'January, 1969, to · February, 1972, by Kabnbach, who negoUated ~ purchase ol ~ San Clemepte l>ome; France M. Raine Jr., a reoI estate operator wbooe .sister ts Hal!leu:ian'~ wile, and "1omas (See ESTATES',~ I) .. ·* ·* * - ·Board Rejects Nixon Property Tax Hearing 'tfy JACK BROBACK ot ,... c.ly '"'"' St.ft '!be Orange County Assessment Ap. peals Board ·today refused to set astde its rulet and hold an -immediate !>earing on the ....,.,oent of President NiJ:on'a San Clemente property. months. 1be elusive predator bas confined ms attacks to the W1!ekends and despite all attempts at trapping and slalklng, rangers,.. police and 81\imal cm.trot of- ficers have not been able to capture or shoot the coyote. After Sunday's attack police said several residents reported slgbt1ng the animal and at ooe point'anlftlal CCllltrol officers found the coyote, but in each case a clear shot was impossible because ol houses and people, olficen said. The youngster's mother. Mn. Sally Ashltaught, told olficers that maey of l>er. neighbors had been feeding the animal o~~r the past several months, reinforcing otJlcial theoriee that the antmal bas loot its fear of man. Officials have. theorized that when the meal-ticket-rune out-the animal-becomes aggressive. '!be coyote Invariably attacks amall . children rather then larrer victinls and until Sunday's incident, had confined its attacks to guel1.s at.. the rugged state park. . . Since the Outbreak ~. the biting in- cidents rangers there have posted signs warning ca_ill:perl not to sleep in the open, espedally oo the ground . Oraage • Weadaer Coast • Late night and early morning clouds but clearing by alternoons. Overnight lows 5H2. High Tuesday 83. INSmE TODA 'l' -Ille IOUtce.olJwnea. • InvesUgatora aaid an .Utiktentlfled ,.,_ In a car drivinl througb the lot shot Sanchei. c111 ... a Interested 1n being Considered for the poat have been asked to ....i .....,,.. to. city hall wtlll pertinent bacl<ground data and a u~t on tbo -'wllJ tbo app11a111 bopeo lo ..,.. 00 the liMiary panel. ' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Martha Nelson celebrated her 102nd birthday in the place she has called boll!• for the last 98 years - a state borne for t'be mentally retarded. Sbe waa admitted Jn.1875. A hearing had been requested by First IliJtrlct Sui>ervtsor Robert Batun of San- ta Ana. His appointee to the appeal! board, Frank Manzo, tried to set It on the ogenda today. An alm°'~ unique &tanding ovation for the Ratnl wcs accord- ed the LA team b., more thmi 64,000 CoU.<11m !.,.., Sunday durina . thl fourth quarter. The Ram& put it alL toQl!'thtr to .,,..ther Atlonlo, Sl-0. Sec Page 16. Kosygin C~nfers BELGRADE, Y\Jgoslavla •(UPI) -' Soviet Premier Alexei N. Ko&ygtn began a weck·long olllclal visit and talks with YUfOSlav government leaders today whlcb will cenfer on lradil' and econoMlc matters, political sources •Id. It · waa Kosygin'• Orst vitlt lo Yugoalavia llnce 'he became premier In 1181. • . . l A r .. ,.... .. t Dllnc period wtn go Into tlfect llld once all ~ appllcatlona are Ip, city councilmm will l<t a study se• lo personally Jnlerview the aspirants. Appolntrqeat 1'"'!!11 come at a re111lar .seasion Iller. · '!be tw.o-year term on the -ls for the post hcld until recently by mn Roblnopn, who told councilmen he could no lonlerservt -Ill recanUy wa selected as puhlic lalety director and assistant city manager for the city ol Garden Grove. • Dr. A.Z. Soforenko, apJ>oin\ed two months ago as superlnten· dent of the Orient·State Institute near bere, said today "she never had a chance." .. , , She was origiuµy admitted to the Columbus State Institute for the Feeble )!lnded and later tranaferred to Orient. Her records were dl!tlroyed in· a fire In 1883 and no one knows why alie was admitted. "She is quite coherent for ber age/' said Soforenko. 11She bas no relatives and. bas had no ct-contact with anybody for the last 1a to 80 years." . SOfl>renko . said he thinks the woman sllould ·be kept at Orient uDIJI she dies. . '' . . ·~ ~ .. " ) " ) Board Chairman Otto airtstenaen said a preliminary hearing lo decide whether the •P!><ats board bad the legal authority to review; the assessment has been set for Oct. :ZS. He said the President was not rep-!· eel at the hearing today and had the right to the normal 3tklay notice prior to sllch hearings. Ballin !Fled to make a stalCrn<Dt but " was rebuffed by Christensen who calfed (See ASSESS, Pase I) •) •• " • • i.n M .. • • " 1 .. 11 " .. '. • DAILY PILOI SC Monday , Stpltmbtt' 24, lct73 Nixon Asks. • Gas oline Increases WAS!llNGTON (AP)-Presldenl Nl1on t told the Cost of Uving Council today to t..act this week to increase the retail price ( gasoline. ActJng as some service stations closed o~TI to protest Phase f pricln~ policies, ,. the President got assurances ~~m Co6t c.or Uving Council Director Jo? Dunlqp • > STAT E STATIONS REOPEN TUESDA Y, Story P•go 5 that the panel would try to speed action M the ~e. White House Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said the council already concluded · that an increase in retail gasoline prices is needed and had -J>een following a timetable that would have placed the increase into effect Oct. 2 I ·"The President asked Dr. Dunfop to expedite this matter ... to review the !Situation as quickly as possible and get a ~ecision out this week," Warren said. '11. "Dr. Dwtlop assured the President that '\-he would,'' Warren said. - To SF on B ike Bicyclists Does ·It the Har·d Way · By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tll• D.ity PU• tl1ff Herb Kandel iook an eight-day vacation to San Francisco and spent flO. The formula for hls cutrat.e vacation: a "hot rod" 10-speed ~Ike, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, a good companion. stamina and guts. Why guts~ Because California's road system is designed to accommodate ~he automobile and they 1Still don't have bike lanes on the expressways, according to the 17-year-old high school senior from Costa Mesa. . "I learned to hate cars," says Kandel, wbo pumps gas for a local service Sta· tion. llls hatred was formed through 450 miles of dodging diesel trucks and station wagons and picking himself out cl. ditdr es and they ran ·him oil the road. Besides, there is no direct route to San Francisco tf you're riding a bicycle, ac· cording to Kandel, 1889 Tahill Drive. "Getting around the. rreeways· is a big problem," he explains. "When we got to Ventura we discovered there was no way for us to get out or Hie city without tak- ing the freeway." 1nechanica\ difficulties lncludlng flat tires, broken spokes, and broken gear change mechanisms. · "I didn't prepare the bike as much as I should have," says Kand~, who tried. to prevent some of those p hlems by out· fitting his bike "'ith he vy-duty com· poncnts before he left. His $70 budget. however, was suffici enl lo cover all of the repairs. end he h~<l enough lcrt over to make the return tr111 by plane. Kandel inlended to ret~rn by plane all along in order l.O make II back in time for school. "I enjoyed the trip a lot , but it's such a hassle getting arouftd the freeways that it takes the fun out of it," ho admits. . -, .. • . ··~ . t Visitors .Upset : , i ' . l ' San Cle1nente · ' i • Hospital Aides Kandel and his riding pnrtner almost Aides at San Clemente General Ir. • K:t-•. d Off entered the freeW(ly despite the bi.cycle HoSpital'-l emergency room found that '-RlllpRlfffl ·n:Ke __ prohlblUon sign, but the oheriff's deputy Sunday night and this nioming proved ,. . Ch . who observed them as they pondered '--much more hectic than U5Ual, but l1 Tickets are available for the third annual United Lo the event are from left to right Campaign air-h 'bll'ty · ted lh · th rop-~ 'Growth AdVISO' ry h h c I 'II man Bill 'Valker, San Clemente Mayor Clifton Mey-I at J>OSSI I pom em 111 e p wasn 't a probltm with patients. ' Fund kickoff breakfast in t e Sout ounty. t w1 er direction. Instead. a persistent group or drop-in l:---Jf--~;".'.;;~m;n;IJ;';;n;;;;tt;nn~-c-::~be~g~in~a~t~7~:3~0~a~.m~.~~Th~ur~s~d~ay~a~t=t~h~e~E~l~A~d~ob~e~R§e~s-~=·=rs=a=n=d=b=re=a=k=l=as=t=C=h=·•::ir=m=a=n=F=e=r=n=D=i=ck=s=o=n=. =====--~~"JTh~e!ro~~ad~to~Sa~n£F~ra~n~c~isco~g~oe~s Joorr~th:·-ivmton-crcated-some-anitiowrnlOffiertts,.----1 G F • t-alll'8flt-in-San Ju-an-€apistrano:-Shown-wittrticke but we had to take a 30-mile detour to the The first visit came late Sunday v.•hcn .,-roup orm1ng west to get to the end of the freeway." he three men walked into the emergency says. "We round that the highways would area and were caught trying 10 steal , th eo lin R I 0 c r c suddenly tum to freeways and we would clean linens from the hospital. ~ Sou . ast -B·remer. Dec . es ep y emente : o =.!? figure out a way to get around They fled •fter nurses noticed them. " On one particular otretclt the riders did Then at about 6:30 this morning the Volunlem are being sought this month Sets Sto £ t enter the freeway but abandoned the three men came hock. rto serve as memben of a freshly t l re ron thought of continuing after nearly being This time one carried an air rifle .and . organbed Growth Planning Advisory 0 G . d J ""' er· . . blown off the road. another an empty can. A third man ;z:.\':iis.=..,1° Di:!~ ~~:~:~~ . n ran ury 1tic1sm Specialist Talk "Those trucks were going~ us •t eo w;i.:;::., tow': ~.i:t p: :~~-:;..1 the ibtilld1'ng boom along the South Orange miles per hour so we decided to hitchhike men had left, but were noticed alona 1M ._ and got a ride to the next stretch or .,Coast. A specialist ln the field of storefront highway with a guy who had a U-baul freeway near the hospital where two cam r; Trustees recently approved a set of saddleback Community College Supt. reporters since the Grand JurY letter remodelinf as a spur to business will trailer,'' he recalls. had become disabled. ·~guidelines for the advisory body and set Fred H. Bremer said Friday he has John Lund, president of the board of share his tips with members of the San Pedaling as much as 80 or 90 mil~ per After inv~tigatlon at the r,oad.!ide. or- kup a nominating C<>mmittee to interview nothing more to say to criticism from the trustees and a Laguna Beach l'e!ident, Clemente Chamber of Commerce at a day, the rklers encotllltered :several flcers an-ested three men on sw:plclon of ,,_interested applicants and oome up with explained at the Sept. 11 meeting that he quarterly meeting Thursday at the San receiving stolen property. ;:nomlhees to the nine positions. Orange County Grand Jury leveled last owned land in Capistrano Beach and ask-Clemente Inn. ~ The names o( the three were not im· ~ 1be board bas charged the commission week. ed Bremer to write the letter. . James K. Brahe, the manager cf Santa Anans Hi' t mediately available. L ~to seek solutions: to short-term and . Bremer was criticized by the Grand The rest of the board members were od 1 I 1 'al fi ~looger-tenn pupil housing needs. rem e sa es or a commert1 1m1, .. The commission also would review Jury for writing a letter to the Citizens' not irifOrmed bf Lund\s request or will discuM the concept at the 7:30 p.rh . ... ....... ....i ..... changes and develop priorities Direction Finding Committee urging Bremer's letter until the Environmental session open to all interested citizens of College Distri' ct • ............... ,. · ls decid development of coastal land in Coalition of Orange County saw Bremer's San Clemente. . in fad.lites to help district officta e letter and wrote a "shocked" reply. (])amber spokesmen sa1d' the a~ ii'whJch schools would be, built firsl Capi.strauo Beach. I pearance will reinforce the premise tbat T £ A • ~ SUpl Trmnan Benedict speculaled that He said dev•""""enl of the area in · boos sa1 rans er CtiOil -the ---'-·100· would m""t twice a :3"""" a merchant interested m ting es ---" mu!Uple-unit umaomilliwns could in· F-P-e l should t · --... ad~·••• f an at month and work closely with government • ---u no 1_ ... ~ ._.....-.e o . • planners, developers and others involved crease his dis:lrict's tax base without tractive fnt Impression te r~ in growth in the 158-square-mile district adYet'Sely affecting the enviroomenL ASSESS • • • Brahe also will outline methods wberebf covering all of the South Coast. "I feel Mr. IAmd ·told the whole story groope of businessmen p11 laitncb cam- Indivtduals wishing to be considered to at the "board meeting 'Sept. 11," Bremer for a vote on the hearing date. paigns for .. remodeJ.41L lo~i\ me a -t on the panel c an -tact the "-""' 11 k H d "· Id areas of downtown business diatric:ts. ..-........ said ""'""'6"' a co ege spo esman. e The board chairman sai Batl.Ul cou Prior t.o the. talk a eociaJ.. hour ·wlll be district's di.rector of administrative has been unavailable personally to not make a statement injurious: to the held, starting at 6:30 p.m. services, Joseph Wlmer, any weekday President without representation being during businw hours at CUSD bead-present. quarters, t!l&-1215. President Rehtrns Appeals board member llobcrt Hostet- Oemente Plans Bike Trail I.ink With Dana Point ' . A new bicycle path linking the Shorecllffs area of San Clemente with the "Y" intersection at Doheny Beach State Park is being planned for completion early next year, county officials said this week. ter moved for the Oct. 26 hearing date To Whl. le House and was support<d by the chairman. The vote was 2 W 1 with Manzo opposing. W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon returned to the White House Sun- day night-after a weekend in the colorful fall foliage of his Western Maryland mountain retreat. A spokesman said he reviewed the $21.9 billion military p~ cllrement bill being debated in the Senate along with a trade bill before the House \Va~s and Means Qmmittee. · Battin said later he wouJd ask the Board Or Superviscirs Tuesday to hire an independent investigator to probe the assesmnent of the San eJ.emente prop- erty. The property has been assessed at $1.37 million and Battin contends that it should be $2.4 million inclydi!'!g im- pfovements constructed by the '\overn- menl 1.illian French ' Services Tuesday Mrs. Lillian Burr Ffi!ttc:h, _ a $an Clemente resident for 1be past 11 years, was found dead at her home at 173 Calle Redondel Jate last w~k. She was 73. ll-frs. French leaves a grandniece, Mary Van Zandt of South Lake Tahoe, as well as "many devoted neighborhood friends," said SJ'>kesmen .for Lesneski Mortuary. Services will be conducted at the Sfn Clemente mortuary chapel at 3 p.m. Tuesday with the Rev. JoSeph Stephens, pastor of San Clemente U n l t e d Presbyterian Church, officiating. Burial will follow at El Toro Cemetery. A groo1> of :Ill .....ic1eots of Sm!ta Ana hti•e prntested "an effort to withdraw 'IU<tin from the Saddlehock COmmunlty COiiege· district lllld aMexing If •to the Rancho Sontlago · Community · College district. 1be 38, property owners adjacent to Santa Ana College, expressed ooneern in a leUer to Saddlehack Supt. Fred H. Bremer that such a district transfer would adven;ely affect their pioperty. The Jetter said additional Students will overcrowd Santa Ana COiiege and create an extreme parking problem ·in nearby streets. "We who cherish our homes and main- tain them in a neighborhood tObe proud of are kept in a condition of uncertainty and anxiety due to college expansloo and loss of our homes," t!Je letter stated. A groop in Tustin calleil ''Tbe 'College Commlttet" headed by S k e p a r d Kanarek , has beep ciratlating peUtioal to get their area oot of the Saddiebeck district. • If the project becomes reality it would allow cyclists a safe route from San Clemente to DBna Point along establish- ed pathways along the edges of Pacific Coast Highway. San Clemente completed Its trails along the old highway early this year as part of a major refurbishing of El Camino Real from North Beach to Shoreeli[fs. They claim ~xcesslve drj.ving1dis~es (20 miles one waf from downtown Tustin), inadequate facilities, unsatisfac- tory course organization, and the school's policy on inter-d1strtct permits: as reasons !.or their transfer attempt. Dl·e of Inj' uries Bremer· has challenged most or the 8 committee's objections, Pointing "out U..t The cOunty paid half the costs for the road projects. The target date for completion of the new segment of the trail Is early 1974, a spokesman for the County Road Depart- ment said. OU.Mel COAST DAILY PILOT Rel'erse Prognosticator Scores With Weather LONDON (AP) -A British army ex-"The same association that accred!t1 the plosives expert died Sunday in a Binn· other col1ll1lllillty college1 in our areas 1ngham hospital from injuries suffered a accredits Sadd.leback -and If our ~ week ago when a bomb exploded while he gram is lacking, we certainly Would not was attempting to defuse" it. -receive accreditaUon." Front Pagel ESTATES • • • W. Evans, managing partner of Mudge, Rose, Guthrie & Alexander, ~·· fonner 1-w firm, • "Two of diem acting tocether are said to have bad access to the cash at any Ume," the nmes said. " , The 'Jlmes. said .aouroes lndlcated some of the funds were in Newport Beach banks with Kalmblch Usted u trustee. At the :mme Ume there wu anoCher ac- coun~ with Kalmbach u trustee, bolding Nixon's personal funds. 'the Times' source indlcaled the $400,100 check for the down payment on the Nixon house ~·as drawn from I.his trust account. "Superficially, the account looks much like those in which Mr. ·Kalmbach, as trustee, had held campaign funds ," The Times said. · "However, competent llOUl'ces have said this account was established with a $100,000 check from Mr. Nixon's personal fundl, and then enlarged wilh a $450,000 checl< from Mr. Abplanalp. Mr. and Mrs. N"lDlll lignod an unsecured promi&sory note for the money." White House accounts of the real estate lransacUoos show that Nixon spent $392,521 of his personal fund.s for his Key Biscayne property and fl,200,692 for his San Clemente home. t'Of this total of ll,593,213 spen! )ty the Pre!:ldent, It Js possible to Joc;ate the source of only ~.ooo, which ltff. Nixon borrowed, including le,000.from Robert H. Abplanalp, the m 1111 on a i r e in- dustrialist," the Times &aid. A part of thts loan wu.eveotually lllllmed h7 C.G. Rebozo, another -·•t1enua1 friend, the WhltnJOiiifliii_,..~ '" • lll9 °'"'" CN1t DAILY ltllOT, ...i111 wl\kfl Al ~ 1119 N...,..,.rttt, II flUtlU"""' bY h Of' ..... Ccae1t ltubUllllng C011>1»ny, S.,.. ,. .. .,,,.... ••• PllblhlMd, Mond•r "'""'vh ,.......,, lw C111l1 ...,_, NNllOl'f lllld'I, Hull!"-"" llffdll lt-ltln V1U1y, ~~ a.ct!. lrvfM/S-lebKJc ltld s.n C~r11 1M JIMll C•oll'-. A 11"111• '""""'' •lfflll i. •l"""if a.twit.ya -korld•YI. Tlle .,-.111c-.1 iJYbllfl'lil-. ltlant It •I UO Wul .., lir.t, C.U• #MM, 01"'""-...... ~- 1~: "•. r " Rob.rt N. W1M '"'*"" .... ~'*""' J t c .. II. C11rley V...,~ .... 0-W•I ~ TJiom•• Ku -ril ..... n.. •• A. ..... ,.,11. -.. .... 0 ..t. H. t... lid.•N P. N•ll .............. Ul .... ._o ,, OMr. .. ~ • c...1 ... ···'· t 2412· --Olll ~ -.,.., ..., ,,,.... ......,. ... ,_.......,....._,. -=· lllPJe-a ....... " ......... ,....II_ Td ,e m•t '411 ... 111 G '1u4 Al:c st I s '42·M71 .. = ......... ilf'I.: 1'¢111 .........,. = ..,.. ... c... "'*""""' tli -........ 1""-tr1fleftt. w .................. '*'-"" .., ·-·== .... _.., -.............. n-.. -iir:s ---.!=: '-.:t =••'•"' ........ ...-y "'"1fWy -.. _. .. , ' . 4 I ! l 0 DAILY PILOT SC l MO\ldl1, S101tm)tr 24, 1973 Dollar ··staging Coµiehack At International Meet? y • By SYL~IA PORTER As the rinanoe mlnlsters of 126 notions open the 28th an- nual meeting of the Interna- tional Monetary Fund In ... Nairobi. Kcmya , today, the U.S. dollar is up from its low, our balance of payments Is moving rapidly back into the black , the world is admitting that its recent display of con- spicuous contem pt for the dollar has been sell-defeating -and the ot.tlook i.J for more of the same. For the rust time since the R early 1960s, -the finance miDlstera are _ holc!lni their amua1 meeting with the dollar in the ascen- dancy and gaining, .no t lo sing fl)- 1"CH1T111 ~pect. All this is great good nev.·s for us. You canr.ot recognize how enormous a switch this ls: unless you al50 recognize how brut al a beating our once supreme currency has taken l-----~•inwc~e~l'res~:!!id~en'l't~Ni!"ix~oo~,,,_.in"-!!IDlw·d-c__N=c:EW;;.,"O='~DSMOBILE SERIES -1974 CuUus ~OJI features s August 1971, buried the Bre~ and hiDdl!Dg package. Xvillable as coupe (SbOWij).ani!Tc oor se I l ton Woods monetary system of · • .. fixed ClllftDCY rates and set the stage agalnsl which all rorrenciea: have been floating up and down in value against each other. The rush by speailaton, In- t e r n a t iona I businessmen, bankers and Mideast oil· wealthy s~hciks to get -rid of ~ol\ars reached t h e pro- -,portions of a slampede.,in ear· ly 1973 -with frightening i1n· pllcations. As our dollars valu e sank in terms of fore~n currencies, you felt it dJrectly in the skyrocketing costs of irrlported products and travel abroad. There has been a rebound in the dollar in the pest few weeks, OOt it's still very modesL While the attack became momtrously exaggerated, it . originally had a SOUDd basis in the recklessness of o u r overspending for so many yean. Throughout the entire post.world War 11 period, we ·have been spending overall far more abroad than we bav~ been earning abroad -on Joans and on gifts, on foreign investments and foreign travel and on war in Vietnam. Our balance of pa yments went deeply into the red in the early 1950s and Vt·e begltD ~g the world \\'ith billions of surplus dollars. mEN, JN tt71, for the £in t time in the 20th century, our trade balance fell Into the red too: In 1972 we imported almost $7 billion more in merchandise than we ez .. ported. Huge totals of dollars now hung "undigested"'over the '\vorld's markets. It a~ peared that the U.S. had lost all control over its economy, its currency and its destiny. But. our now vastly un- dervalued dolla r has again made our exports so attractive that the whole world is back buying from us -to the ex- tent that we have goods and services to sell to them. And , of course, the world is bidding for our foodstuffs on a giant scale. And so, our trade balan- ce is swln/ilhg back Into the blaek, and the odds !II'• we11 again be rwmlng a trade surplus In 1971. MEANWJlll.E, THE search for other currencies to replace the doUar as the key unit of world commeree and in· temallonal finance has been a resounding failure . No other currency is big enough to take on the burden -and no other government wants the burden. nius. as the Na iro h I meeting opcns 1 these three fundamentals emerge: (1) The world recognizes I . -TYPING SIC:IDAllAL SllYlc:t 617 W, 1M, htte J• COST,{ MlllA MM2'2 P'OlTAILI DtcTATCMl ••NTALS CASSl1TI TfllAMSCllttllNe AMD OIMllltAL ltM TYl'lflle c ............. Senket c.. By CARL CARSTENSEN Of Ille D1lty ..i11t lllH Oldsmobile Division has in· lroduced Its 1974 cars with predictions of c o n t i n u e d record sales and optimism for the future of the fullsiu car. Howard H. Kehrl, divisional general manager and GM vice-president said that "all Indications point to another banner· year in 1974_ for Oldsmobile with our sales being at least u good as this year1 and we think the o~ portunlty ts there to even Im· prove an that." .. OLDSMOBILE'S 3Z model lineup i$ now on &ale and ·cme car Kehrl expects to generate excitement is the CUUass Salon. Introduced in 1973 ;:iis an op- tion on the CuUass SUpreme sedan, the Salon is available for '74 as a new series in both coupe and four-door sedan. · "This car features fn. dividual, hig!Fbaclc reclining fraot oeats w: I th ~al labrics, uterior id<DU!ieatlon and a handling package built around the new GM speclllca- tlon radial tin!. Our sales target 10< the Solon ts 83,000 units," be said. Kehr! also noted that other new additions to OldsmobUe~s lineup Include a RegenCy coupe and twQ and three-seat Cutlass Supreme Cruiser sla· tion wagons. He said the· most extensive deslgn changes have been made on lhe Delta 88 and Delta 88 Royale hardtop coupes. .. THESE CARS have new roof sty!lng ••• the result of thin rear pillars ... moveable lorwanl quarter windows and China Beer Arrives At LA Port LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The first shipment of beer from Mainland China to. Southern Californta In 15 years has ar- rived at the Port . of Los An~eles. ' The 5,000 cases of Tsingtao beer came from.a brewery on the Tung-penlnsuJa-tn northern China. It was Im· ported by Tainglao Import Co. of OOland. The brewery origin.Uy was bollt by tj1e Germans before the .Boxer Rebellion of HOO, and bas chlllpd bands wftli the poll~cal tumavers In China. When the Communl&ta gained contNI of tlio ar.ea 15 yean ogo, export& of Tllngtao beer to the Untted Stat• waa stopped. MftrllMfMftf • Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved d""'9 of patiellta showed thll to be true in m1ny C8lel. In f1ct, many doctors, them-oe1-... ,.,.,,.,.,,.,,, ,,. ... te0011111n•d it for their t•m- Uiel, J'reporoli<ln H llintmetJt or suppolitorie&. , • Chink Opened ' ,• • ' wmplete New York Stock List I --J ' • ·. • • • • L. M.BOfd Tin~ee Delusions Of Most Brides Not all but most every bride tends to entertain three parllcular delusions : !. lter marriage no doubt will refonn the old boy y,•bo drank too much and chased. 2. The fcllo\V she rejected is apt to ttmnln heartbroken for llfe. 3. At least one other ".,.oman despises her for taking away this prospective husband. So repor~ our Love and War man. J{e says these notions contribul 11reatly to a bride's hapPl· · ness. The 're partly wby she beams "" triumphantly when she strolls down the aisle. Medicos say they know of no c.-1 tribe of humans completely free from ' !');; JI •rthritis ... First of the seagoing oil \ ..::;t.. 'i JI!' tankers were Chinese junks ••. Wa s ., ~ ~ none other than Nonnan Douglas who · said. "Variety is the one simply and ~ , absolut ely foolproof aphrodisiac." ..• A veterinarian tt!lls me a sick horse ~ill never kick any- body ... The wife earns more money than her husband in just about three million families natioowide now. · GOETHE Q. •·,\'as that great German writer Goethe fonder of men?'' A. Never heard that. You know \Vhat old Luigi Bar- zini said: "Joharui \Volfgang von Goethe liked pretty girls all his life ... In his Italian joum,ey, he left no petticoat unturned ." Cutting, that. But no, he was a ladies' man, definitel y. Am also asked the whereabouts of the first v."OOd ~v­ ered bridge in this country. That was put over the Hudson at Waterford, N.Y., in 1804. The thing lasted 105 years. Denmark, Finland and Sweden. In that order. Those are tbe three countries where the most twins are born, proportionately. JUMPING MOUSE Cruel little experiment, this one. That three-inch rodent known as the North American jumping mause can Jeap 40 times its own length , ordinarily. The science boys wanted to know what that mouse's. tail had to do with this leaping ability, so they cut off said tail . Presto! The North Amer· ican jumping mouse without tail can do nothing but short somersaults. ' The teeth of some Egyptian mqmmies are badly worn down. By the grit in the old EgyptiBn bread, it's said. That grit wasn't put into that bread on purpose. Herodotus ex· plained it: "Egyptians kneaded clay with their hands, but bread dough with tbeir feet." It's said one out of every 20 citizens fatally injured in the traffic is either a suicide or the victim of an attempted suicide. A man's big toes are not just actually longer but pro- port.lonately looger than a woman's. Before ancient Greece bad a written language, the busiest man in any town thereabouts was the trained re- memberer. ffis job wis to recall the details of treaties, loans and contract&. It's said no profession in all history demanded a higher degree of honesty. No doubt, no doubt. .4.ddrtss mail to L. i\1. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Btach,,Calif. 92860. Sapphire & Fire Opal at low discount prices .. ! srA• Of SIAM A UNIQUE IXl'llllNCI To 1ho'e of you who hove never ,hopped in one of oyr ,1ore1, o uniqu111 e11perience owoit' yo11. Our 1tore' ore 11ocked with unique and rore ·preciou' stone' l~I ore hord to find el\ewhere; Aubie 1, Star Sopphire1, Sop· ph1re1, Jodes. Emerold1, Diamonds, Amethy,1 , Topaz and other 1emi-preciou1 11one1. All of 1he1e 1tem1 ore import· ed dir ectly by us !or ,ale direct to lhe con,umer ot prices much less l'h'on you would eitpect to pay. We feet so 1tron91y 1ho1 our prices or e "the lo .... est" we offer !he follow1n9: OU• GUAIANFll Any item of jewelry purchosed ot th~ Stor of Siom is guaranteed to opprois e for ot leosl .S0°/o more lhon your purcho1e price or your money will be_ refunded! ,,,.,· r .. °"'....., _ '"•' "'~ 1155 fieft Cpl ii nri1 of roc~t 10ld & ieMs YG •••••• · ••••• MMS ... Sl•-t& .......... I.. 1210 st• ii fllUel ottstl mt1. WI' iMtnDnlb. 141( YG ••••••••• Australian Fire Opll & lliMIOllCI Oiwr Rile. $44 5 · fierf oc>ll mocnded by liamond~ 141l Whitt Cold •••••••• Man's Oiamolld Solitaire Rile. Open square qtt $240 dtsicn hOlds brUll Unond in I 4K YG .............. .. """ Ill< Yolow Gold 1 .. t !><""" ~lh 1159 sJftthelic tolofK stont 1s Ptnclanl. 21" ltn(lll •. , .•..•... """ ... SI• S..0-t I ....., .... 1349 SWW"t is Pl!• Welt W!'Mdtd ~y lbnonds, WC •.•••... ....., ....,. s.c ..... , ....., " 1315 Sl'I in ¥tfJ modtrft ' llllSUil lotd tr.fl( I · · • • • • • • • • • • • • ...... lliOJSljle·[-...... f . 147 yelO'lf 1old dtsi(n, 'lerJ Int Qlllb. . . . •.....•......•... ' -·' -c.u. "''"'.... 1445 dints of Wl!IN« & ~ IBK Wlltt Gold ..... , •••• -..... --....... 1115 ,..-opal WIZ Unond5 Oii ont lide, 14K. YG ......... . Ptf11 aac:ll Sta 5*tir• fift&er rina: • .1 lint S64 Wed: st• b held bJ .old 1old ~ .••••••••.•..•••... Di..-1Bridll Stt.Modern 111ue1 dll!ln in 1 '362 nrw ttlltion W/2 clMnondJ. I IC«llh ·centtt" YG •. , •. , .• ~ ~ ~ '=w~,:~ chll\ ..•......... '42 ,.., Bid sur -s.tot,.. "'· 1124 ~-is offMI Ill tflPMd dtsi&n lllMIJC. l'K YG ..•.•... lJdits' llO $ta' s.t-'I ~'SI.OM 6 Stl $8 5 Ill *""' dnilfl lllB l ,.. nlifs 11 l'K YG .......... . ~~C:: :J ~-:: -~·s·~' ...... -·· ..... s39 STAgf SIAM 6;u14Pc•.,.. J ... tlllDll "-'• • lAT·A•WAf IMMllfll(Ut • MAlnl tMAlll •I 11(6(!0, •ltl ·-,, .. • • -•.jOlj N,- • '""""""· t .. u-.. "" .: -""'· ""' .... ...,.,,.... "· • /lllWOl UA(N, .... 11 ,_ !"-' • 1on.....c:r.1.1o1 • ... ,•--· • "DOoelC llto(ll, -..... c ..... • ()tMo(';al, , .. -""°'- .... Ill tOOl'I &.•-.-eLll • ......... I • . --........ " .. ' -...... ' - .... ..-c ,.......r·.., ,.. . . :;;;-, Town Sprud Collu: _ Blut, red or brown solid <:olor1, I l .00. Blu e, r•d or brown strip••, ll.50. ' _. DAILY PILnT 9 Class Button-down: White, blue, pink or m•i.J• solids, 1 l .00. Blut, red, or brown 1~ripes, 13.50. CLASSICS BY GANT If you were to order o custom-toilored shirt, you 'd expect to find the some meti culous detoil ing. Gonl offers the finest shirt-toiloring in the clossic button-down or the Town spreod collor style. Eoch is ovoiloble in solid colors or neot slripings. Singlo button cuffs, sizes 14'/i· I 7, 13.00 ond 13.50. Whot kind oftie? T roditionol red stripes or club figures on ploids. By Gont, of course. Polyes ter ond silk, 7.50-8.50. Men's Shirts, Ties. 7 l ~ _____ t19~ cnll Uiln® IlDrraoUA.J'· """"'k-\T"t"aDW CEAAITOS - • ANAHEIM 444 N. Ewcll4 1714) 5)1.1121 NEWPORT HUNTIN .. TON llACH .ORANWE, MAU OF 0'-AN$! , "' F•ahlo" l.te11d l7 14J 644·12 12 7777 Wl1111rAv1ft11~ (11 4) t•2·llJI 2100 N. T111fh1 Str1tl 171 4) ttl·lll I SHOP 10 A.M. lo f :JO P • .M. MONDAY THOU&H FRIDAY.SATURDAY 10 A.M. t• 6 P.M. SUNDAY 11 NOON to 1 P.M. 100 u,, Ctrrlt•• M•ll 121JJ IM>.cMI I • \ I I I ,( \ I ,C I• ' • I .. . ' ~pn~ay's Cl~ing Pri~~plete New York: Stock Exchange List < Stocks , Contillue To Score. Gains I • • SC • ' DAil V PllDT j J I I I ~ • IZ DAILY PILOT Monday, Stpttmbtr-2..4. 1971 '· • • • Hohie-14 Skippers Tune Up Turnout-Fair in Fall·Regatta:'Level Racing' • ' • • • ·' • • .. , • For many f the Hobie-14' BOATING • More than 125 Hobie Cats in three classts swarnt'ed over Newport HarbOr Sunday In the 9th renewal or ihe Ancient Mariners Re~' tta . sk!~pers the r atta was a last "-------..,..-' chance 1o tun up before the stal\t of the, national cha,m- pi oh\ship regatta at L a k e l·Iavasu on the Colorado River starting Oct. 3. • Jn addition to three divisioni of Hobie 14s and 16s, the regatta at~ featured the new Hoble-12 monocat. ResuJt.s : Passage Wins 4 Straight Mark Johnson's \Vindward HOBIE-14A -(1) Wayne Passage scored a convincitlg Schafer, Capistrano Beach· four straight wiils over Ken , · (2)-Randy Hartfield; L008 DeMeuse's-Blackfln to win th< I Beach (3) Cr lg B St. Francis Perpetual Trophy ; 8 8 r t 0 • in a series sailed out of ~st.. Newport Beach; (4) Nick .. Francis Yacht Club, San Frart- Steele, Balboa Island; (5) cisco. r-1ike Staudt, Fontana. 'lbe two rival yachts sailed HOBIE-H-11 -(1) Jerry Robinson, Huntington Beach; (2) Susan Henderson, Costa Mesa; (3) Milt Rudge, Cer- ritos; (4) Mac Wright, Torra.nee, (5) Jerrry , K at z. Moo.terey Park. on a boat for boat basis in light to moderate airs on San Francisco Bay. Also scoring four straight wins to pick up !he Richard Rheem Perpetual was Theo Stephens 5 7 -f o o t Lightning over. Al Cassel's SG-foot sloop Warrior £rom Bahia Corin· lhian Yacht Club. These·race,s HOBIE-I~ -(1) Heind were sail on a an cap Bruggerman, Santa Ana; (2) basis with Warrior first to Ken Toy, Corona Long Beach· finish in each !ace but fa~ling (S) Burton Bates, Costa Mesa: . ::~ve her time over Light- . · In the City of San Francisco , _ H_OBIE-!6A ~ (I) John ~ea !9r qass B yachts, the Ross-Duggan m:I "P a m el a Tartan-41 Natrat, skippered by · t Conover, Newport Beach; (2) Dick Deaver of Los Angeles 1 Dick and Carol Beauchamp, Yacht Club, waa the Winner Corona del Mar; (3) ·Bob over 15 contenden. Runner-up Seaman and Jana Haynes, was Resolute, W. 1 Westerhoff, Stanford; (4) Jeny Wetzler St. Francis YC, and third waa and Debbie Wilkinson, Corona Leonard Delmar's Another de! Mar; (5) Jerry and Nancy Girl, St FYC. King, Newport Beach. HOB!E-168 -(1) Tom Eckles and Roy K r o n k , Mission Beach ; (2) Jack and Lili McGraw, Laguna Beach; (3) Greg Simpson and Ed Forke, Hermosa Beach; (4 ) Jim and Gerald Foster , Newport ~ach; (5) Russ Brown and Robin Ross-Dug- gan, Newport Beach. HOBIE-16C -(1) Richard So<h and Sam Humphries, · NJ!Wport Beach; (2) Sam and Sheila Palmitier, Cororif del Mar: (3) _Brad Lewis and Charles Linden, Corona del Mar; (I) Jim and Henry Brooks, Huntington Beacb; ,(Si Dave Peterson and Thumper McCarthy, Balboa. HOBIE-12 -(ll Jim Black, Dana Point; (2) Jim Le.onard , Corona del Mar; (3) -Steve Hatch, San Bernardino; (4) Ted Slater, Newport Beach; (S I Ann Leonard, Newport Beach. Matheny New Sales Chief Sailboard Regatta Draws 23 Twenty-three Windsurfers turned out Sunday for the an- nual Newport Beach Regatta. The event also1served as the New~ Harbor Fleet 4 c~m­ pionshlp. The winner was Mike Wa1Ue· who was run- nerup in the Class ~ division or the regatta. National championship for the unique ''stand-up '' sailboards is scheduled Oct. 13-14 at Mission Bay. Newport regatta ...,ults: ( 1) Nat Schweitzer, ~falibu YC ; !\l;-(2) Mike Waltze, NHYC, 81>; (3) Bruce MaUack VYC, 70; (4) Pat Love, Santa Monica, 24; (5) Doug Halsey, St. Petersburg, Fla., 2S. CLASS B -(II Anne Day, Pacific Palisades, 7~; (2) Walter Simmer, Pacific Palisades, 9Vz ; (3) \Valter Herbe<:k, \Vest Los Angeles, 12¥4. Announcement has be e. n • ___ P_UB_Ll_C_N_OTl_C_E __ made of the appointment of ----~,-'-m=~~----1 Larry M. Matheny as western SUPEltlO• COUtT 0, THE sales manager for the Luhrs lfATI! o .. CALl,oRNIA FOR THE COUNTY OR ORANGli Co. No. A-m71 In his new ~ition l\1atbeny NOTICE OF HEARING o .. PETITION r-~ • . ro• PllO•ATE OP WILL ANO 1"011 will handle sales. service and LSTTEllS TESTAMl!NTAltY warranty for all western Eti.ie ot EDITH coRM1E11, 1>ece1m . NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN lhll Luhrs dealers. He will be ltOMO P. CORMIER ANO LEONARD L. k Ing from Luhrs' CORMIER, JR. hive llled l!trlin I Pltl· W.O r llon tor ProtMlf of Wiii incl lor luuaocr manufacturing l a c i I i t i e s of Lttten Tnt1ment1rv lo the pell· · Cos ti-rt. r11-r to whlctl 11 madll ror located 1n ta Mesa. lurthrr ,,artkvlflrr., 1nc1 '"'' the 11m1 end LWiri is a major manufac-ptec• o1 111111rt119 1111 Nine 1111 llNn set [ fiber I . board for Ottobrt' t. 1m II f :OO '·'"·· In the lurer o 1 g ass m ~room of ~· No. 3 o1 ~10 · --• sport fi1Shm· g covrt. 11 100 c1v1c Cllnlirr Drlvt wrs1, Jn cru15ers GlfU 1111 City o1 Sar'll• AM. r~u1orn11. boats from 25 to 41 feet. · o.11C11 s.ptemllll" 1J, 1m WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, PUBUC NOTICE County c11r11 ----------JGl!Tl, AllC•NS Iii MANNINO l'tcTfTlotlS •USINl:SS Sri J ....... a. hl'tlll1ctl NAMIE STATEMENT $tlO Wllllll" .,¥d., 111111 m T,_ ffillciwlng ~ It dol119 b\llll!Hf L• ......... C.Ht. M3' 11• Teh 1211> m..o11 . G. W. l'EROOSON It ASSOCIATES. AMnlen fer pel~ 620 Newport Ct!tllf' Or., N..,..port Pvtlllthed Qr9llgl Coelt D.ity l"llot, e 11c.t1, Celltornle '2661 SfPllfl'lbrr 17, 11, ''' ·tm 2116-Jf GUllll"t W. l'tr~lll«I, 2601 W.S! OcNn l'rOl'll, Newport Br.ell. C1llloml1 P2660 PUBUC NOTICE TJlll tMnlllft1 Is cClllducted trJ' en lfl<·J----------- dlvld111I. l'ICTITIOUS IUSlffliSS Giibert W. l'rrguson NAME STAEM•MT . This tl1tlmrnt was llled wlll'I lt>r Coun· TM follawln; lllfJOn It doing bu~r-u ty Clerk of OrlttQ<t C\'11/nlv on Sepltmbrf' 11; • 7, lt13. • POMONA AUTO llOOY, 171t ~I l'!IOJS Avt .. CCKli Mt$11. C•llf. nm Pllbllthed Or111gt Coesl D•llv Piiot, Theodore G«1k1 Mllllr, U6U PIWO r Stopt..,,blr ID. 17. 2l, 8nd Oc•ober I. Tec.111, San Ju.en C11pl1lr•no. C•lllorr>I•. 197:1 2711·13 Thl1 buslr>r11 Is conducted by 1n In· dlvld1111. PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMI! STATEMENT Throdort G. Mltllr Thll 1111emenl WIS !fled .,..l!h tl>t Covfl< tv Clerk cl Or1nge County on Stpt..,,bllr 1, 1973. . Tiii fol'lowlllfl person Is cioil'!ll t1v1IM11 f'flQol 11. P11bUtl'lrd Or1191 Co.1! DlllY Pllol, 0 Rf.SIOUAL STfl:ESS RE S £ AR C H Stlllt mblr 10, 11, 24, •llCI Oc:!Ober 1, AUOCtATIOH, (51$ W, Mlc.Arll'lllr, 1913 2771-7:1 PUBLIC NOTICE COIN MIN. C.. 92llfi JatnK J. Ll'Dovll. 215' ll1H1t Pl.. c•• ,..., C•. "'27 I---==,..-==---· I Tiiis Mil'*' 11 ~IMI bY en In-l"ICTITfOUI IUtlfllllS .. .,..,_. NAM• STATllMa .. T J.,.,. L. L.OOW Tiit followlng penon b dOlng bUsl""' Tl111 .,..,.,,._, wes fli.d wlltl !tit Court-11: , ~ °""' ., or .... c~ Ofl Slpt9mt1tr c. ROllERT NATTRESS Rl!AL ES· 7, WQ.. TATE CO., :r1N Hlt"hor atw., Col"t1 .... Mew, Clllfornl• fHll ~u•l•1• °'91111 C:-1 Delly Piiot Cllart.1 JIObert N1ttrnt, HSl V11!1 l#fl II lt. 11, 2A. ~ Clc.IClllW 1. Orned1, N'-1 8r1CI!, Clllfoml1 9'2'60 1tn 2794-7:1 Thlt ~ It cond11tled b'/' lfl k>-dlvklv1I. PIJllUC NOTICE Clllrln Rabert N1ttrr1s -""Jic'm-IUllNn S--Tf\11 $ll ltfl'left! WH n11t1 '4'11111111 c-. , .... ITAT9MllJfT IV Clerk of Orlfltt Cwr!ly Ofl S.,ttm• Tiit ~ ~ .. dOl119 bvslntlt u . lt7l • FJllM ........ IUtfflll •NTaJl~ltlSU. DJ Pllbllihtcl Or•llOI COHt 0.ltv Piiot, "---I~ Witt .... C-11 Mew 5eoltfllblt 17, 24. I ncl Oc:tober 1, 1, c.. ,_ • 1tn 2U4-7l .... hrN. ,,. Le Al•meci1. l:T-~::"k c:.~ ':' ~ lit-Kids Like To --Tiiis -Jlllll 1114tll the c-. "'"'""'--·-m... A k Aul 1, lf1J. ,.._ • s 1 y -·--_. -Pllo!. Efforts to promote ;•level racing" 1n the Harbor Area met wi.th mediocre success in the Fall Regatta ai<ponsored by Balboa and' .NJ: w p o r t Harbor YaOht Clubs Saturday and Sunday. Five boatl :turned· oUt ln the One Too class and "four in the Quarter Tons. Winner1 ln the One Tons was the Rapger-37 Wings , co-sJcjppered by fay tor. Pattison and SymYt~ o f Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Winner in the Quar1er Ton was Cal Preston's new San.- taoa-25, Betelgeuse, Newport Harbor Yacht Club. The regatta also sen·ed as the local fleet champiomhip for the Seiling Class. The win· ner was Tom Wil~ or .Balboa Yacht Club. LARGEST CLASS on the outside courses was PHRF with 21 entries. 'U't winner was Dave Stone 's Puff, Bahia Corinlhian Yacht Club, Eight entries turned out in the relatively new Etchells-22 Class woo bf Le o 'I Suther and ol Newport ·Ha r Yacht lub. ' Ol!l'SIDE Cl.AISil (BVC) Suorbe, Frank and Dave . ETCllELLs.2l (t) -(I) Wlllte, BYC: (I) Pllbl Kaua, Bananas, Leroy Sulb,erlahd, l'llW Amwtrong, SAVC: (I) NHYC. . .Baudit, CoreY, Myer, BYC. -ruiODES-U m--• (!)--:-SOLING 0(1~) -(1) No. 331, Kmg's Racquet, L ID d a Tom Wu!oon..BYC; (I) Oolri5 Taylor, BYC. n, Scott TtuesdeJj. NHYC. ONE 'J'ON (S) _; (!) vuias. no (8). -(I) stiantih, Taylor, Pattison and Smyth,, Zarkef and Lord, PMYC; (2) CBYC. · '.Poppy. Ed Kimball and ·Tim- QUARTER TON (j) -De mje Keaoedx ABYC •. , Core, Cal Preston, NHYC. ; SHIELDS •' (71 - ( l j PHRF(21 1 -(1) Puff, Dave Theresl, Bob Searles, BYC; Stone, BCVC: (2) Fran-Sea; , (2) l'Jiid"'!Cl', Larry Bawn, Mike Byrne, VYC; ( 3 I BYC. • INSIDE CLASSES (NHVC) Greene, NHYC; (3) Bruce L!l)().HA (21 ) -(I) Dave Ayr.., NHYC; (I) D l c k tmmao, BYC; (%) B 11 I Mwuw, NHYC; (l ) Phil. McCord, BYC; (3) Jim Tyler. !lamming, NHYC. BYC; (4) Pete JeC!eraon, • ·SABOT A (11) -·(I) Keith ~mYC; (l) Rolly Lohman, KJ!patrlck;BYC; (I) l<a\hleen !IYC. Gerrie, NHYC: (8) Suzanne . L1IJ0.14B (30) -(!)Argyle ' sis= :tfe,C:_ (I) Wendy Csmpbell, BYC; (2) Bob Ket· Mackel, NHYC: (2 ) !Iopa tenho!el), BYC; (l) 'Rolly Porker, NHYC;· (l) Mike )'olit!Ski,·llCYC; (I) Bil Fox, P)nclmey, SYC. WYC· (6) Bill Baldwin, SABOT ,C \(12) T (II KHYC dir!stine Homriie NljYC: (2) · IJASER ( 191 --0 1 Mark Kar<!! Faber, ~t:YC,; (!\' Wi;n· Gaudio, NHYC; 121 phi I' dy Bents, NHYC. ~ . '. 1\11\11\IERSAR\' . . I ITH Al\ll\IOUl\ICING_ THE l\IEW 1974 , 0oDGE MOTORCARS Al\ID TRUCKS We Dodge Dealers would like to welcome you to our 1974 new car yea r. At Dodge dealerships, "new" really means new. In 1923 it was the first all steel · coupe body, later we added Unibody construction, then Electron ic Ignition. for '74 see; •DODGE MOl\l.i\CO -three cars, all unmista kably new for 1974 . •DODGE CHJ\RGER-experience "Charger Style." It might be right for you. • DODGE DART -with-over a million Darts on the road you have to have a friend who owns a Dart. Ask him why he likes it. • DODGE TR.i\DESMJ\1\1 V.i\l\IS-shop our wide assortmeni of models, including Maxivan (the largest compact van built in America) • •DODGE CLUB CJ\B-A Dodge "first" and sti ll a Dodge exclusive. Now also available in a complete line of four:wheel drive Club Cab models. Full size, midsize, an.d compact Dodges -we've got them all -along with dependable Dodge pickups and vans, See all the great Dodges for '74 today! Dodge-~ · AUTHORIZED DEALERS s. LOS Al\IGELES/ORAMJE COl.Jl\ITIES DODGE DEALalS . ' . ' .. • • CLUB CAB ' • ....,,,..., ... ''· .... lflll OdMef '· ••n :t7"·1)1-----------"--------------,-----------:---.,---..:..-'-.:::.'--,-":~7'-:-----_.---:-----,:---':-::::....-:-.....:.....:;,...,::.,..::_;":'c,,:,::;o..,:;,.:._-:--1 . ' • • ' ' I ' .. ' I • I ., 1 . ! 1 \ ' I I Lag11 ••a Beaell ' "EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stooks .. VOL 66, NO. 267, 2 SE~ONS, 26 PAGES • MONDAY, SEPTEMBER' 24, 19n TEN ·CENTS I . . • \, I ' • Love ~nilnals T-,ibe Hits Boad Day La~ ·. . . . By JACK CHAPPELL ~. Of ... DlllY Jlfllt ...,. The Love ..,.mmatB, 'Don't Eat Them travelln1 menagerie l!ICI "'8elarlan sldelbow packed aboard an incredible converted aehool bus and lumbered out ol Laguna Beach past the...,.,., city limits eat11 thJa morning. - . - "We just happened to have an officer out In the c8nyon at that Ume, and be deflnittly noported that they paued the c.ity limits.'' Police Capt. David Brown said today. "They puaed the city limits at 1:1& a.m.;'' Brown added. The departure came somewhat after the autumnal equinox that occurred at 1:21 a.m. Saturday. But, It camo Wore the lllinJool of the law acted m a multitude of minor law .. vlolailoos lmgl£C over the Love Anlmab tribe. 'l'he_dillrid altonley's , olfke agreed lo dlamlss a boll of infractions If the Love Apimala ~ would leave. They left twice, once SUnday altemoon as a caravan ol about seven vehicles departed Love Animals headquarters, an PIP!lef!!fl Cutkck Laguna's Budget Cut $150,000 The Laguna Beach City Council bas· agreed to cut $150,000 from the current fiscal budget in the face of lost parking meter 1'$enues. Iochxled in the cut was $35,000 allocated for the Laguna Beach Parking . . . Authority 1lDd e8nn&rked for costs in· volved in. the construction of the Glenn- eyre Street parting structure. The council's aeHons came Saturday evening in a special seukln called to deal wjth anticii;.ted revenue J6ues due to the PBrkin& meter relerendqm. '1br, c:oomcil'1 ~ left aearly •1t,llllO L . ~v ..... In <if "·-----· .... the -asuna aw. '7" i:..:=. ol ~m:· lo ·- • IUnda IGr dud dilldt' }l'Mhif • report W I k G •,... 1-ancmt171onned~meter -Or OJ. 1 ,,g revenue commtttl!t, but the COW1cll agreed that the needed mooey woold not be ,taken 1rom-u..-e1ty•s •tao,ooo To Newport reserve, but ~d would be madA! up Crom revenue sharing ftmds. It Is anticipated that any plan worked Newport Btaeh ts going to i\rovlde data out by the parking eommittee would · -~-f the ci·ty of raise at leut_ the_ missing 119,llllO. _ --~·-or -Laguna Beach. Included In the council adopted That appean to be a pretty neat trick, package of cuts is an upan.sion of since Newport Beach doean't have a service in the police department computer. Newport Beach mits time on 'l1le force will reorpniJe the star! the ·co.ta M.,. computtr. . (support !unciloo.s) and line (patrol.and And what ts going to happen, according detective) ahd hire two addltlOnal to an · agreeinent lo be llnallsed b~ ~ ::!!d of policemen personal, ly Newport Beach eouncilmen tonight, IS •• ...., ·that Newport , Beach wlll sui>leUe Ila writln& the bulk o1 the department's time for Lquna Beach wWt. crime and aJTe!I ·reports. lhe· officers Newport Beach will charge LaiUft8 $25 will didatt reporla and the c:lerb will per 1-on the computtr-tbe -lee transcribe them. · It pays to Coota Mesa ·-but will charge Thia ts projected lo lncreue the $5 an hour fer keypunch operators and number of boW'I officers are on patrol $5.50 an hour for computer operators, and cut down oo overtime. The reports which figurel out 'to be coat ptu,, 20 per· can be·dietated whlle officers are in their vehicles. ~~wport Beach Finance Director The reorganization eliminates several George Pappas says the arrangement vacant positions which had b e e n _,•t last too long, since his dty la sup-budgeted. posed to take delivery of ila own com-Reorpniutlons were also made In the puter in April planning department with additional When that ·happens, Pappu figures maopower allocated from. other city Lafllll Beach-will be buJ1n8 abliut -<leJ!O<\meDIS,_ralher lbanJlired .. new 113,llllO worth ol servlca a year, emugh penonnel. . • to olbet about to percent ol the P!,llllO 'l1le top five priority I~ apecll1caDy amual cool ol the new computtr. cut. lrvm the budpt were. hi~ o1 an Pappu said be's·not iuri wllY Lquna asaialanl planner (!"1,911); reeodilieatlon Beach -the sub-I~ apmeat ol city Ian (fl ,!GO.); additional parks ln!ttad of r.ntmc dliictlJ from co.ta malnttnance l)Wl (15,lllO); a street Mesa sweeper ('4,llJll); and furniture repair . (13 "") ' . tos: ~~~~~~ neJchbcr r niarin. ......... boat (t~s:>> and the "We are ·providing them with a lot of '3,51111 grant lo the par aulborlly programming, too," Pappu s a Id, were also allced. "iocludlnS police 1tatiatics and business license systems. "I don't know whether Coota Mesa bas jhese or not , but 4111'!'8 was lmpreued with ours 8Dd we; got their bu1ineu," tie 1aid. · ~- "When we get our own cofn"Puter we'll bring them in llere and rtnes!>Uatt what they should pay for Ume. "( don't know what It ..m be, but. It (Ilea DATA, Pip I) -. - Pl.ant Pilferer Moves to Viejo South Oranae County'• poUed plant pilferer II branddnJ out · Shertlf'I oll1cera lnvea!IJ1tinfl the theft during Ille weoUod ol lour planta valll&d at po from a -Ylejo home believe lhe culprit is Ille ...,. -Who has •wept potted pl111t1 In South Laguitl and _Laguna Bet\C& Into hi• baatel. Mrs. Virllnla Lee Evans of ZSZSI Partheoon Ave. aaid the banging plants .were taken from her front porch and walkwa7 whlle the family wu at borne. Sllertll's lnveotlfalora have given the UUe of "operation geranium" to their mountlna probe. The)' uld the thief bas incllc1tooJ.a preletence for the lloftr. , Burglars Take . - Priceless CIOck In Laguna Beach A •1r1ce1ess" ~ clock was ,1tn- vohod In one ol three · major thefts In Laguna Beach over the weekend. 'l'ho anllquo docl: WU llolen li,;m Annie R. G1'1Dd7, ta Ha-RoOd. The mlbOclllY timepiece bad - gean and lntemal -0, and' - •lwJut -feel hlal>. Tiie doelt·- bod -appnilec[ 'Ille tbeft WU ,. ported -y ....,,.,., Stereo equipment valll&d at l!,325 wu llolen lmn the ...tclenco of J.,a\Jttl A. Rlmpou, 539' !lroota ~ 'r&. equipment Included an amplifier, tape deck, 1urnlable, speakers and ncordl. Police reoorted Ille thief entered tbroqah a sliding glau window In the crime reparted Friday. · A llign -valll&d at •JM was nported stolen Saturday from the Sound Spoc- trllm, 12&1 S. Coaot HJabway. The hind- carved, banclf*inted m,.. ,.W "-" OR ooe aide llld .. _ .. on~ other, police reperted. • • > . temp!t ~ entwhlle vegetarian cafe at people ·came after nearly a year and a 712 S. c.oast Highway. .hilt _of residence and vegetarian They broke down on Laguna Can1"it evangeliS!ll In Laguna Beach. Road near the keJule1s ol 11"• Society for The group firat planned to make it up the Ptewsltion of Cruelty to Anlma1a the coast -lo San FrahciS<O, then head s1wJrt1y afterward. out lo other cities and "let it 0o., ... One repert Indicated that the briglllly "We're all m>sies again," aaid James pOlnlOd -decller bull tpOrled pink D. Robert, group founder. heaclligbls an:! bjU& taillights. In addition . The rag.tag tribe espouaod a belief In to the 10 pel'9CIOI llllppOled1y boldlog , the "ooeneu of animals .and luunan forth in the mitCle, there al9o were a beings,:• and maintained . that eating lfOlll,c:llickem, and a dotior two~ animals polluted the mlnda and bodies of ~ .. more for. the. Love _Anlmals the eaters. • The group was involVed in a colorfuJ trial last year after a camel named Boney Bananas; a chicken named Col. Sanden and oeveral doSS hmcbed with the Love Animals people in their v~ cafe, a vlolaUon ol health laws. The tdal ended with a guilty verdict for James Douglas Roberta, operator of the eaiely. Soon aftmrud, the cafe became a "temple" but myriad city building laws had been violated, and the police were called to the temple by reports of disturban.-;e of the peace, as the tribe danced, chanted and turkey-trotted in front of their brighUy painted storefront. Toda y, all Lhat remained was a black I painted facade, a fallen .. Love Animals" sign and the \\'Ords Matthew 10:4..23 . Capt. Brown said that as far as the city is concerned, the book has been .closed on Love Animals Don't Eat Them. But, he acknowledged ••. • "If they come back, we'll have to start from scratch again." - I ea ena • B~e11ngAIOng Andrea Verdugd,' 14, Laguna Beach, plans· ahead as she guides her mount, Silver Cqarger, lhi:<>\lil:l barrel race event ,5undiy-d\lring wes!e.rn ' horse sho.,V..;ondu~ted at 'Irvi,n• Eq11estrian Center. . . ... . G~· S41tion Shutdowm .. Not Spreadi1ig to euasi- By L. n:J'EI\ KRIEG Of *' IMl6fF ll"llM St.ff The ma!Sive shutdown of gasoline sta- tions in Northern· Cali£omia still shows no ligllY-<>t~-to . Siiuthern Caliloniia or the Orange Coast, a Daily Plkll lj)ot-;survey ,Indicated today. (Re- lated story, Page 5). Servk:O lllotllil. _..tors" lnlerVfewed In lluntlnpn Beach, Lat!una Beach, Coota M ... and Newport Beach all say I hey lnlerid ·lo stay open -as long as they have gasoline lo sell. "We're a neighborhood gas station and we have J'elll)ar CUlkJmers who depend ori 111. Tiu. '!flole lllilll' lan't their rsult," says Mts. Wayne Anderson who helps ber husband operate Anderson's Mesa Verde Union station, 1645 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. • 'Ibe Northern Cslifomia protest in its third day has cut available gasoline sup- plies to motorists there ln half. . "We W<Mlld •only be liurtlng ourselves ;r we tried that, l doa't see what they're 1 trying to accomplish," says Klmo ,Jarrett who operates a Mobil station .at Beach Boulevard and Slater Avenue ,in Hun- tlngloo l!taeh. -.. , was pretty surprUed lo ... thoie dealers are dotng that:' he· said. ••Tbat'a not the way to baodle Jt," .. There's no way· to t.ell haw much mooey they're lOling," Jarrett said. "I can't afford to close down and ·allow my regwar·customers lo go iilmewllere elae. "They're liable to ljllll sOmeo,ie tliey like better than ' Kimo," he · aaid. "Although ~doubt it." George Perlin, who bas been pumping gas in Balboa almost since they invented the stuff, agrees with Jarrett. "I have no plans what90ever "to close dowll'," he said. "There •has been some talk of it but the responsible dealers will stay open." Peril• pointed out that the federal 00..1 of lJvlng Council -whose price freeze ' .(See GASOLINE, Pqe Z) .Long Tragedy 102™;i J!irthdaf.;~1",.$f:!l~· Ho~.e . COLUKllUS, Ohl1> (UJ;'I) ,-Minh&· Ntlto0>c.itbrated•lier 102nd birthday In' Ille place ab• bas ·~ for Ibo Jut 98 Y"&ra -a state home~ (U•inllitllly retarck!d. Sbe 1'H1;admltte•l'ln 1875. · Dr. A.Z. Soforenl<o, appointed two montha ago as superinten- dent of the Orl•nt State Institute· near here, said today "1he •never had a chance." • · She wu ori&lnally admltted· to tbe Colu111bus State lnsUtute for the Feeble lllndid and liter transfe!'l'Ocl to Orient. Her .records were .destroyed In a fire in 1881-and no o~e laloWt 'l'by sbe was admitted. , "~he 11 quite ~ for her are," 'aal~ li\llorenko. "She has no .relaUves llld bas had.JIO close con!act'wilh anybody for the last 78 to 80 yean. • • . Soforenlto said he thinks Che woman sbould be kept at Orieni un.til ebe dies. , _ ' , ' Coyote Strikes , Agi:rln, Attacks Cleme~t~ l,loy, 3 The elwllve eoyoie res}J!l1181ble ior a summer--long spree ot attacks at , San Clemente State Park matiled a .:1-year<ild San Clem!'l!I< boy as ·the youngsttr stood on the-froot --1a....-ot;bJa. home Sunday alttmoon. . • ')'be animal, deemed by the · victim's I ' • ' ' IQOther nearly a "nei(hborhood pet" in the exclusive Rlviera· colc:my, crept Up behind Bartley Edward Ashbaugh! at about S p.m. as tll6. 1'iunister held a garden hose. . . 1be coyoti bil lhe· boy on the baCk atld side, then walked away calmly when the boy's screams brought his mother. PolJce said that as a standard precau- tion the boy would have to begin the series of injections to immunize him against rabies. Bartley was given emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hbspital after the attack. The animal, a small example of the comJJl@. _species of wilJi dog, .is beUeved to be the same one which bas attacked more than a dozen campers at the state park nearby throuib the summer moot.bfl. I 'l1le elusive predator liu confined his . attacks lo the weekends and despltt all atttmJ)ls at trapping and slalkitjg, rinJ<rs, pojlce' and animal control of. ficers bave not been able to capture or abool the coyote. Alter Sunday'! attack police aaid several realdentl reported slihtlnt the animal and at one point animal cuitrol offkers found the coyote, but in each case a clear shot wu Impossible because ol house> llld people, olricera .aaid. The younsster'a mother, Mrs. Sally A8hbaught, told ol!lcen that many of her · nelghboit hed..bffri feeding the animal over the put several months, reinforcing ollldal theories that the animal bas lost lta fear ol man. · Ollldaia have U-lted that wben the . (See COY~ Pqe I) .. New Law In Force Next Year LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The death penalty was restored in California today, ....-effeeti~ next year, when Gov, Rod.Id Reagan signed a IJlll ~ execution mandatory in 11· categorels <A.. murder. The new law will be applied . only to murders comQUtted after Jan. 1, 1974. ·•i•m sure we all regretff'tbe necessity of .bavinII to sip such .a mu.·' Reagan told ft!llOfjen at the bilkir. ctremama. "But I do have the .feeling ol .. Ulla.,. tton_that cornea from doing somellllng that you know ts rljbl. n,re la .., way. ol knowing ho_w many Uves ol lnnoceat law-abiding citizens this legialation will save." Atty. Gen . Eville · Yomiger was at Reagan's side for the ceremonies. The Jan. 1, 1'71 date In the blll will be U'k months slnee C8lifotnla's last death penalty Jaw was nullified by the state Supreme Court and six years and 8Y.r: • montM-afteHhe last-life-was-snuffed out in the apple green San Quentin gas chamber. But the new law will have 1no effect oil the 10-year backlog of Death Row in- mates in California including Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted assassin of Sen. Robert Kennedy, and five members of the Charles Manson family. The backlog - 105 men and five women -have recelv .. ed changes in sentence from death to life in prison. The new law may face a court batUe berore being used. The American Civil Liberties Union lw charged it Is 11legally defectlV'e and unconstitutional. n Other opponents say that it will result in "hundreds" of executions every year because of its mandatory provisions. This would be far in excess of anything in California's capital punishment history. There have been only 50'l executions ln C&lifomia since March 3, 1893, when the state took over that respomlbillty from county Sherll!s. These-Jnclude·30ll hang· ings before the gas chamber was put lnto operation in 1938, and 194. deaths by cyanide gaslns in the chamber. Because of an unottlclal .moratorium , there have been only two e1:ecutiorul tn the last 10 years, thoae 1n 1983 and 1967. California's previous death· penalty wu banned by a 1-1 declslon ol tile California Supreme Coust Feb. 11,}'12 on grounds it was "cruel or lll'.lmU8l punishment" outlawed b7 the -OomtiluUon. • Oraaf e • \lt'Ntlaer (;out • Late night and early morning clouds but clearing by altemooos. Clwnlght lows 5H%. fish Tuesday 68. INSIDE TODAY , An almost unique standing ovation for the. Rams waa accorfi.. ed the LA team by more thml 64,000 Colil••m folll Sundov during the fouri~ quarter. The , Ramr put it aU tooether to .rmocher Atlanta, 31-0. See Paa• 16. •• " • I '"21 11 11 • • .. "" " .. I , ' a :· DAILY llLOT LB MandlJ, Septtmbtr 24. 1973 Reverse Prognosticator -Scores With Weathe:r By JORN ZALLER Of .. .,...., ........... Ir any of you attributed SUnday•s beautiful weather - the firs t swmy day fn a month -to the fact that Sunday was the first da yof autumn, you we~ mistaken. The lint day of fall bad nothlog to do with iL What caused the good weather yesterday was me. the guy who wrote the weather forecast in the newspaper predicting clouds, overcast, and drizzles. Conslderlng bow genuinely beaulilul W85 the day and how dismal was my forecast, you may wonder why l 'm ad- mitting my faJlure. There are two reaaom. First, all I did W85 to WlilAI clown wtlal the National Weather Servi<e !old """ I can't. be blamed for lbat, • Btrr SECOND, I think my lo-pOrformed eomethlng of a public service. You see, I've gottat to be the moot 1loloriouslY poor ) weather forecaster In Journalism. Whatever I say, the op. po&te is sure to happen. · Take, for exampJe, the last time I wrote a weekend weather forecast, which was in August It bad been cloqdy all week, but the weathennan told me il would be sunny. Accordingly, I predicted sun. And thinking I had some jnside informatim about how nice the beaches would be. I invited some friends from the Riverside area down to Newport to share the good w~ther with me. • • Hills Plan Hearing Set Tonight A second publlc hearing and pooalble , action 'on a COUrK or development for Sycamore Hills comes before the Laguna Bead! Planning Commission loolght. Commissioners already have received and reviewed three d i f fer e n t development proposals for the 52J..acre : "'edge ot land between El Toro 'and ~ Laguna Canyon Road. ll appears that a fourth pl8J\. prepared by proponenta of the Laguna Greenbelt, will be presented to commissioners at the 7:30 p.m. metting at city· hall. The Greenbe1t group wants the land main- tained as permanent, undeveloped open space. ' J2etolll of the Greenbelt propoeal were not available today. Two of the pnoviomly submitted pla.;s, prepared by Newport Investments Inc., differ ooly slightly and call !or 2,016 homing units on the property. Under the proposals, about 72 percent of the land area would be left as open space. .Jr~ ,..- OMIY l'llOI l"llolO llW •ldllrll 1( ........ A third proposal backed by the city planning staff, would allow 1,181 wtits-. The figure was determined by a set of hllblde density guidelines under con- THE FRIENDS arrived, but tbe good weather didn't. sideration by the commission. Waiting for Help Ambulance attendant aia; a~cidenl vic.tim Ralph S. traffic island. l{e was trapped "for nearly three hours Bearing all tbiJ in mind last Saturday night when I sat down to write the Newport In vestment officials repeated- weather story, I toyed with a µict to bring good weather. 1 considered that ly have bl~ted ~e ~.1_81 Wlit pro~ 1----lJ--f--,a-forecast of snow might-be-helpfur.-&metbing-lik~n-an~effoA..to...fOWJtall _ _.!!_ econom1ca1ly 1nreas1ble .and contmue a more nondescript, overcast days, snow has been predicted Sunday for the to 106b70rl1ie~rz;01611ru! · , . Myers, 28, Anaheim, foll.owing crash early Sunday' and police halted traffic along Ford Road in the wee moming.on-For.d-Road...nea.r.Jlatbot...Yjew...Homeiln__~h-o_urs Sunday as rescuers struggled to free Myers I I \ ;;: Orange Coast. It ls predicted that snow will begin falling in the morning and At the conclusion of tonight s pubhc 4 continue until nightfall" hearing, the commission t,»U}d act on any ~ If anything could precipitate a heat wave, J knew that would do IL developmentl proposal or oontinue the '!I entire matter for study. : Btrr MY cooaclenoe W®l.dp,_ ~t . [De 11!11 that 1orecu1 In the newspaper. U action Is taken by the a>mmission, lii !nltead, I stuck to the !acts of wbat I wu Iola bf the.National Weather Service the matler would move on to the City , and pnodlcted that !or the 32nd day in • row; suboormal temperature& ...... eo;.:u :..in: •. r~· -Is a . ~ Hpected on the Orange C:O..t aloog with the usual ov.....i and fog. ~ " " <i I "" t And einCe I take my reportin« oeriOUlly, I worded that prediction careflllly.· Laguna Canyoo land andO-..tiiio near I wanted "to convey to our readers as accurate an lmlftllioo of the weather Big Bend, a 31 lot subdivision on 21 acres-a.s 1 could. I ,Should have known better. SomeoOe up there noticed my efforts, of land on upper Park Avenae and a six lot subdivislon on 1.7 acres of land near and with a little last minute stirring of the air muses, my forecaat wu.µndone. Temple ·Hills Drive and upper San Remo Drive. ......................................................................................... -.A ~ ' i.Family Burned at Knott'~ "' ! Wins $1.2 Million Award : .. . From ~ Semc.s • William aDd Jo AJine Schuts and their 'two ilaugbtm;Olriatlna, t, and Cynthia; II, orlglnalJy iSbd •t.'15 million in generol damagM and '1 million for men- tal sullerh!g. 'lbe family suffered bums, ~. oertnaneoth~abtllties and emo-~tPt !~: *1dr •r-e"quired psydllatric care. Beef Prices, Supply Near Normal Level LOS ANGELES -~ A family of lour ~ p. ...... bas acCeplecl •·'1:2 mllikln •et· tlem<nt l!lerruning from a nightmarish acddenl In wbich they were ~and scan'td four years ago, when 1917 • Stanlol' Jlteamer auto~ed an Old Timers' parade at tKnot s Berry Farm In Buena Park. The elderly couple aboard the steam- powered car wblch had been ..-.cl by a commercial firm died of their own burns following the ac'Cidenl From Pqe 1 DATA ... won't be $25,., be said, pointing out that Newport Beach Is buying Its c:Omputer, while Costa Mesa leases the one it has. Pappas said Newport Beach will have its computer paid for after seven years -for a total cost of 1231,000, plus $38,000 for expansion of his offlces. ''The hourly price to Laguna Beach ~ will probably go down, we don't want to make a chunk of dough on them, we just want to subsidize our costs," Pappas said. "It certainly Is a lot cheaper for them to go with us than to rent or buy their own computer," he said. On the other haod, he insisted it's cheaper !or Newport Beach lo buy a computer. He said his city ts using '1 hours of lime on the Cost.a .Mesa com· puter now each month -costing $24 ,000 a year. Laguna Beach Finance Director Tom Meade says he can't estimate how many hours per month he'll rM!ed on whatever compiler Newport Beach happens to be using at this time. OIANM COAST u DAILY PILOT ;: ,,. I ,. ·~ ·t I• • • r< ., J ~· ( , • The Scltutzes were spOctaton at a .. parade featuring anUque cani on Aprtl 26, 1969, when the old Stanley Steamer exploded, killing the two occupants, Wayne and EllUbeth Nutting. The settlement Includes 1105,000 to be •paid from the eatai.a of the Nuttl!!gs. 'Ibe bulk of the setUement -$833,000 -Is to be paid by Manchesler Welding and Fabricating Co., which bad' done ma- jor re5toration on the car. The settlement authorized by Superior Com1 Judge Joseph A. Wagner providea $515,000 for Chr~tlna; 1(70,000 !or Cynthia; 1165,000 !or Mrs. Schutz; and $50,000 !or Mr. Schutz. Santa Anans Hit College District Transfer Action A group of 38 residents of Santa Ana have protested an effort to withdraw 'l'llltln .from the Saddle back Community College district and annexing it to tlie Rancho Santiago Community O>Uege district. The 38, property owners adjacent to Santa Ana College, expressed concem in a letter to Saddleback Supt. Fred H. Bremer that such a district transfer would adversely affect !heir propmty. The letter said additional studentl will overcrowd Santa Ana College and create an extreme parking problem in nearby streets. "We who cherish oor homes and main- tain them in a neighborhood 1o be proud of ano kept In a condition of uncertainty and anxiety due to college expansion and loss of our homes," the letter stated. A group In Tu>tl n called ''The College Committee" headed by S hepar d Kanarek. bas been circulating petitions to get their area out of the Saddlebeck district. They claim elCelli,·e driving diatagcn (20 miles ..,. "'Y from -Tustin), inadequal< lacibtia, _..... ... _ I«)' course orpntmion. ml tbe tdloOl'1 poilC)' 00 ilter-dlJtrict paillila u .....,.. (« 1heir -"""""" Bremer baa ~ -ol !ht ...-..... objoo-llOilllil& ... Qial ''The amt ... ......; dllt axidl tbt other OH4i1Ai'.t) °"'"" ........ aocreclil.& &M:et·et -.S if ,_. pre,. ,,.,. ii lact:q. .. ...-, -... rttdYt~- Albert Answers ' . By !lie Alll!l<illN ,Prell It's two -U sln<e the bet! ceiling was lifted and supermarket shoppers • .-,,_ _......, ..,,.., IOlllld that ~ ~:'4i~ tOnonnal. No one wanled to predict wl)at would happen next. 'however.· · ~ An Assol:iated Presa survey sbow"1 most beef f.rices were at or below their freeze !eve . Increases an<! de<reaaes oo individual itma generally balanced each other out. Retailers reported there was no rush by sboppen to buy beef, wblch bad betn In short irupply during the freeze. Some experts said people changed their eating habits and just got wed lo other foods. Cattle prices at live!tock markets declined from a high of about 60 cents per pound to 45 cents a powld or Jess and the drop waa reflected at the meat CO\lllter. "The now of the pn>dllct Is back to nonnal," said Bernie Cross, president of cross Brothen Meat Packers Inc. of Philadelphia. "There Is plenty of beef on the mat{(et, more than needed. .. " Rod Kallungi, a butcher for Joe Wigley fl.t eats of Detroit, said bis store stopped offering horsemeat for sale, a practice the store began this summer for the first time since World War II. "We've got more than enough beef," he said, adding ·that sales were "running like nonnal" at pri ces averaging 30 cents per pound below midsummer levels. A spokesman for Public SUpennarl<ets in MJami said, "Beef ·prices are ju.st about tDe same now as they were before the celling. Eggs have a:me down." The ui>>nd-down charader of prices waa reOected at Giant Food storea in the Wuhlngtoo, D.C. area. "Roogbly, there bas been a 10 percent increase in rib aectloos of bet! and 10 percent dea<&se in dJuck," a spokesman said. ''There bas been some lncrea&e in food prices geoeraly, reO«tinJ the In- creases .in wholesale prices." Trustees Slate Study Session CurricuJum, ltudtnt testing, com- munity involvement and laclllty planning will be dilalwd Tueaday night at a IWdy ......., d tbe Laguna Beach Board <A Ediadon. The 7:• p.m. meetln( will be beld in the l:Oocatlon c.nter, 1141 Blumont SL -memben ~ .,....i to the ,...._,_.. -at the auggestloo d ... llmald WoodlllPll. He aald It ... t.. 12.. finl of ..-al meetings to """,.,a.. --· future . Crown Valley Park Review Set Tonight A rmow ol Diani lot er...,. Valley ~t7 Park will be oo the a&enda ol the ..._ Nlcutl' Homeowncra and c.mmanlt7 Aloodatlon tonl&h t. The -.!lo!> mMtl at I p.m. 11 tbe La-lil&Utl Community c.nter. Toalsbt'o .-... will be Ille fint led bJ new Pl-Pat Mancini. Fonner Jntldetlt Jim ~ realfllled at the l.ut board meet1111. , Newport Beach. Poli ce said Myers was headed from wreckage. He was treatea at Hoag Alemor1a l toward MacArthur Boulevard when he lost control Hospital, then transferred to Orange County :M-edi- of his car and wrapped it around a light pole in cal Center. DownWwn Huntingtnn Hit by Fire Bo1nbings 'Ibri!e attempted fire bombings oc· curred in downtown Huntington Beach Sunday night, two bombs faillng to do any ~mage. The third caused $50 damage to the roof of an apartment building. Fire Ca'ptain Roger Hosmer said today that the fire department suspects the three incidents are related, since they oc- curred In \tJe same general area within two hoan of qdl other., i < 'r 1 There are no clues: as tO ihotives, 'HQ.Vner said,·~ tb~e ~ ~x:te .. ·~ . • l•·r.~·· ' •iiollce m 'diecklni hor dn.I ' tboµgb,'' be said, "~:\beY,art f9.lloWing up wtth'>D investigation... ~ The first incident was at 2288 Delaware St.; where a can file fq.ted with nam- mable liquid wis thrown cmto the roof of the apartment building, at 6:4S:p.m. Fii· ty dollars worth of damage was reported. The sec0nd attempt waillt Huntington St. and Utica Ave., at approximately 8:30 Fro111 Pllfle 1 GASOLINE ..• p.m. where a glass botUe coo.taining flammable liquid was thrown at several oi l storage tank.s. The bomb burned itself out, however, before any damage could occur. The last attempt involved a smoke bomb at 2613 England St., at 8:40 p.m. Th'e bomb was thrown at an aputment building but• ae<ording to Holmer it did not get el&. enough lo any coobtlstiblea to do any da!l>age. Nader . SCe~g ' 'Crash Program' ' On Power Plants J. L. Connell, Retired Aut9 Executive, Dies J.L. "Ted" ConneD, retired General Motors executive and father of Costa ?i.fesa Chevrolet dealer John Connell , died today after a short illness. lie was 79. Atr. Connell, of 1415 Sant ane lla Terrace in Coroaa dcl l\1ar. rose to the position or assis~nt general sales manager of the Chevrolet l\1otors Division in Detroit before retiring in 1956 and moving to the Orange Coast. He is survived by ttis widow. Aiary, hl.s son, two daugh ters, Mrs. Richard MiDer ol Newpqrt Beach and Mrs. William Ford o( JllinbLi, 22 .1~randcbildren arid seven greal-grandchiM!ren. ~itn for 1'lr. Connell will ta'ke place Weonead>~ i t IO' a.m. at Our Lady Queen of A!>ie!s ChW'<h in Corona del Mar. A rosafy will be r'ecited at the chUreb at 8 p.m. Tuesday. · From Pqe 1 meal ticket runs out tbe animal become• aggressive. The coyote invariably attacks small children · rather than larger victims and until Sunday's incident , had confined its attacks to guests at the rugged state park. Since the <lUtbreak of the blUng In- cidents ranger.s there have posted s.lgrw warning campers not to sleep in tbe open, especially on the ground. Rockefeller Visil8 .. ' • . -. . Sadlllehae·k ' EDITION .. VpL. 66, NO. 267, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES By JACK CHAPPELL , or -. oaitr ,..,.. ,,.,. "!'he Love Animals, Don't Eat Them tz:avellnf'\ menagerie and vegetarian s~ packed aboard ao Incredible cooverted school bps aJ!d l\Jll1bered out of Laguna Beach put tbe caoyon city limits early this morning. . . " "We justiiappened to-have ·an-offtcer out In llle 'canyon at that lime, and be definitely reported that Ibey pasaed tbe dty limits,'?.' Police· Capt. Da•id Brown said today. "They pused the city limJts ·at 1: 15 temple aDd entwbile vegetarian ca!e at a.m.,'1 Brown added. ~ s. Coast Highway. The deperture came somewhat after They broke down on Laguna Canyon tbe autumnal equinox that occtDTed at Road near tbe kennels ol ti"• Society for . I 'll I.at. Satunlay. But, It camo Wore the mln1ons of tbe tbe Prewnt1on of Crueity to Animall law act.d on a mu!Utude of mioor law shortly al!erw&"!: vlolaUoas hllni!t& over tbe Love Animal! one report lndtcaled that the brigbtly trjbe. Tbe district · attorney's office palaled double decker bus spor1ed Rink ..,_. to dlamla·a--ol lnlraclioos if-heacfHlbta mr!·blue taillights. In addltlol! tbe Love An1ma1J people would leave. to the 10 pe...,,,s supposedly 'holding 111ey Jeft twice, once &u1day afternoon forth, ln the vehicle , there also were a as a caravan of about seven vehicles goat, ddckeps, and a dog or two. deparled J,ove Animals headquanen, Tbe big ~ve for tbe Love Animall "'. ., . people came arter nearly a year and a half of residence and v e g e t a r i a n evangelism in Laguna Beach. The group first planned to make it up the coast to San Fraocisco, then head out to other cities and "let it flow." "We're all gypsies again," said James D. Robert, group foonder. Tbe 1'88-lag trill& espousod a belief In the . "oneness of animals and hwnan belhgs," ind maintained that eating ani,nats polluted the minds and bodies of the eaters. The group was involved in a colorful trial last year a~r a camel namect Boney Bananas, a chicken named Col · Sanders and several dogs IW'IChed with the Love Animals people In their vegetarian cafe, a violation of health laws. • ,(('be .trial ended with a. guilty verdict for James l)ouglas Roberts, operator. of the eatery. Soon afterward, the cafe became a "temple" but myriad city buikllRg laws had , been violated, and the police were Tod.ay's ·Final N.Y .. Stocks TEN CENTS called to the temple by reports of disturbance of the ,.peace, as the tribe danced, chanted and _ turkey·trotted in front of their brightly painted starefron t. Today, all that rematned was a black painted facade. a Callen ''Love Animals'' sign and the words Matthew 10:4.23. Capt. Bro\vn said that as far as the .city I~ conce.med , the book bas been closed on Love Animals Don't Eat Them. Bu~, he acknowledged ... "If they come back, we'll have to start from scratch again.". . ea ena . Real Adventure • Bicyclist Goes to SF Hard Way By RUDI NIEDZIEL8KI Besid.es, ~re ta no dtrect route to 'San or ,.. "Dlillr "" IWI Francisco if you're riding a bicycle, &e· Herb Kandel took an eight-day vacation cording to Kandel, 1889 Tahiti Drive. to San Francisco and spent $'70. "Getting around the freeways is a big The formula.for his cutrate. vacation~ a proble1g,," he ~plains. ''When we got to "hot rod" !()..speed bike, peanut butter Ventura we discovered there was no way and jelly sandwiches, a good companion, for us to get out af the city without tak· stamina and guts. tng the freeway." WHy tuts? Because California's road Kandel and his riding partner almost system is designed to accommodate the entered the freeway despile . the bicycle automobile and they still don't have blk'e prohibitian sign, but the sheriff's deputy 18.{les on the expressways, according to who observ'ed them as they pondered the 17-)'0&Mld high school senior from that poosiblllty pointed them in the prop. Costa Mesa. ...,:: · •'* er direction. ~ .. I learned to hate cars," says~ 11'The road to San Francisco goes north, who pumP.. gas for a local service lta· but we had to take a 36-nlile detour to the lion. His hatred waS formeif fliOiijb 450 Welt IA>getlo-tbe end ol. tbe freeway," he milet o1 dadPli diesel tructa,and "8liOO saya.."WalllUllll u.tl!!o~ays would wagllll! 1nd ptctlng -out Ol dltcb-s\Jlldeoly runt to freewlys ind we would .. and tbey ran blm olf tho read. -(See BICYCLIST, Pase I) . ~ ' Ckmente Boy Mau"led 1·n "front Yard by Co.y.ote The elusive coyote responolble for a auiiunel'-long spree . of attacks at San Clemente Stale Part mauled a S.yelNlld Sao Clemente boy as tbe youngster stood oo tbe -lawn .ol his home &mday ·afternoon. The animal, deeme.d by the victim's mother· nearly a "neighborhood pet" in the exclusive Riviera colony, crept up behind Bartley Edward A>bbaugbt at about 5 p.m. as the younpter held a garden hoae .. The coyote bit tbe boy on the back and side, then walked away calmly when the boy's acieams brought his mother. Police sa1d that as a standard precau· tioo tbe' boy would have to begin tbe series of lnjectloos to immunize hirD agalnll rabies .. Bartley wu gjven emergency trulmenl at Sao Clemente ~·I.Jloopltal. aftet..tho 1tllck. Tbe animal, a small example ol the ........ llpecles of wild doll, Is beUeved to be the tame -wbich 'bas attacked more tblll a._ campers at'tbe atate part nearby tbrouCh the summer moothl. • The elusive predattr has cooflnect his attacks to the weekends and despite all attempll at ' trapping and •tal.IWut, rangerr, pollCe and 8J'llmal control Of. ficers have not been able ·to caph.n'e or shoot tbe co)'Ote. Aller Sunday's attad< 111>llce 11td several re1Jdents reported lilbtln& the 'animal ancf.•t one point animal control officers fo.ncf. the coyote, but In each case a clear shot was impoaslbJi! beciuse or houses and pe!>ple; 6fllceri said. The Younaster's ·lDOIJier, Mrs. Sally Aabbaugbt, told clllcert !bat IDlll1 or her neighbors bad -feeillnt tho animal over the pUt Mveral mQnlhS, relnforcln,g " ' ·Plant f.ilf erer ... Moves ro Viejo South OrlDp County'• polled plant pilferer II branchlntr out. SherlU'1 olllcero iiivest1c1t1111 Ille• theft dUrlni'lhe -.nd of four Dlantl-vatued at '80 !n>m 1 Mlalon Viejo home believe the cµlprit Is the asme -who ha• .wOpt potted plants In South l.quna and Laguna Beach Into bis battet. Mn. Vlrglnla Lee Ev1111 of 2ml Partbenon Ave. asld the hangln( plants were takeh from her front porch and walkway whlln the lamlly wu a~home. Shenff'i tnyeauaaton have 11ven the tiUe of 11operaUop aeranlum" to their mounting pl.Obe. 'Ibey aid the thief ha• Indicated 1 preference lot the flower, ~- official theories that the animal has Josi its fear al man. Officials have theorized that when the •meal ticlret runs out the animal becomes aggressive. The coyote Invariably attacks small children rather than larger victims and 'until Sunday's lncljlent, bad confined lts attacis to guests at the rugged state park. ~ Since the outbreak of the biting iIJ.. cldehts rangers there have Posted sigrrs wartling campers not to sleep in the open, especially on tbe ground. Stations Intend To Rema,i!.1 Open In <Aast Citie8 -87 L PEIER KRlEG Of IM DMr t'tW ,..., The ma'8ive shutdown ol gasoline sta· UCllll in Northern California aWI shows no~flgns of spreading to Southern Call!Omla or the Orange Coast, a Dally PlloC opot survey· Indicated today. (R .. lated .story, Page 5). • 1 Service station, operators interviewed in J:!untington .Beach, Laguna Beach. Co8tl Mesa and Newport Beach all say they intend ta stay open -as long as they have gasoline to sell. "Wt're a neighborbood gas staUon and we have regular customers who depend Oti us. This whole thing Isn't their fault," says Mn. Wayne Al)dersoo who helps her husband operate Anderaoo's Mesa Verde Unltm llatlon, 1615 Adams· Ave., Coola M,... Tbe Northern ·C&Jifomla protest In its third. day bu cut available 1alOline sup- plies to motorists there In half. "We would ooly be burtlng ouraelves II we &rled that. I doa't tee wbat tbeylre trytne to 1ocompllab," aays Klmo Jomtt who operates a Mobil llaUoa at Beach 'Boulevard and Slater A venue In HW>-llncton Beach. . "J W81 pretty IUrprbed to see thoio dealen are dolnc tha&/' he saJd. "That's not tbe way to handJe It." 1'Tbere'a no way to tell how much 111oney they're lolln&." JarTett said. "t can't afford to clooe down and 1llow my tt1gular cu.stomers to 1a somewhere else. "They're Itabie to 11nc1 .. ,,.,... they like better than KiJno," he said. .. Aithou1h 1 doubt lt.,, Gtorae Perllll, who has been pul)lping au In lialboa al-11nc0 thty .._led (!loo G.uot!NE, Pac• II ' • _'""'-"".!:-_ .. ": .,.,..-" • • .... ' 1, • • . Waiting · for Help' ' I ,\mbulance :;ittendant aids a~qent victim Ralph S. °¥yers; 28, Anjheim, following crash early Sunday morning. on F:ord Road near Harbor View Homes in Ne~ Beach. Police said Myers was headed toward MacArthur Boulevard when he lost control or bis car and wrapped it around a light pole in traffic island. He was trapped for nearly three hours and police Halted tramc· along Ford Road-in the wee hours Sunday as ·rescuer8 struggled lo ~ Myers from· wreckage. He was treated at Hoag. Memorial Hospital, then transferred to Orange County Medi· cal Center. · City Government Costs . Up • ~Re1itals for City Space Boosted-in . l..Vin:e -.. .·.. . .. ' . ~ . • • • • Tbe oosi. op1ousing city gov~nt in Irvine Ql8Y .rue to $445,six( In the com· ing year. or the new space, 2,421 square feet ' . and it wqn't )e.~4nUa'bfe;wben tlJe. city formerly were tbe offices o( lite Irvine might need It for.expanJioit 1be pity ~can World News. Anothet,'IJO. square feet subJel ·lhe ·~·said. were the Ofllces ol Mayor Jolm Barton's City plllllllng1 p\dili,C ,_··'!'<ts and Agreements facing CitY Council ap- proval Tuesday nlght would boost city or Irvine rentil"' II'-Center office space by """"' 1,m..qua,. teet. firm1 Burton-SOUthwestem marketing clerical staff. already•have-oceu~ied the cdnsultahts. · • · . former Irvlrie Wor.ld Newsr o_ff}(:es. , ·City administrative -services director Another 210 square feet of space for a The city of Irvine began in an 844- square fpot1.room qn the second rloor of Town Center, growing in. its first year in- to 3,802 moce square feet af space. Jim Harrington suuesta the city lease (See RENTAL, Pqe Z) the former .Burton space, even \hough it ·, ' The city has an agreement with the Irvine Company giving the city first chance at renting any space freed by departing tenants. does not presently need it. Burton already bas vacated the office in favor of a Jocatian in the Don Koll Center in Newport Beach. .Harrington !Uggesta ii tbe city doeso 't lease the space the 1rVine Company will . Long ·Tragedy • • • • 102nd Birthdµy in State Home COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Martha Nekon celebrated her l,02nd birthday in the place she has called borne for the last 98 years -a state borne fol\ the mentally retarded. She was admitted In 1875. Dr. A.Z. Sotorenko, appointed two months ago as superinlen· dent of the Orient Sta(e Institute near here, said today "she never had a chance." ~ , , She wu .originally ad milted to ihe Columbus State Institute for the Feeble Minded and later transferred to Orient. Her recor;dS were destroyed In a llre in 1883 and no one knows why she was admitted. "She ls 'quite CjOherent for her, age," said Soforenko. "She has no relaU"" -has had no close contact ivlth anybody for the la!! 78 to 8Q,yeatt. . Solonako aid· he thinks"the -man should be kept a! Orttnt u~Uleh~~· · ' Business Penllit Ordinance Seen For Irvine City Enactment of ' a tiusiness petmit . ordinance· will cost, the city of Irvine ,15,Zlt hot a •ts pemlt fee Is· erpecled ~ tmde<write ltii lnlarmillooalPTOgriln. City councilmen clUe to Issue permit! to city -rilher than levy a business lioense tu such u neighboring cities employ as a meaos' ol collectlng extra tax reveoue.-- The Irvine buliness permltJYstem will help the city keep up 'll'itb locations and types or businesses operating In the city. said Administrative Services Director James Harrln,ton. The lnlormllUon collected by· the permit system will help the city collect Its sales taxes collected by the state and wiO ease communicatloos from the city to area business flnns1 be said. The 116,119 cost will pay for hirlns of a~ •C<:OW1t clert and an enfotci!ment or. ncer who wtll pn>duce expected· revenues of $1818(11) or more. New Law ... In Force Next Year .LOS ANGELES .. (API -The death ~alty was restored in-California today, effective next year, when GOv. Ronald Reagan signed a bill making execution mandatory in 11 categoreis of murder. The new law will be applied only to murders committed after Jan. 1, 1974. "I'm Jure we all regret the n~ty of having to sign such a bill," ~gan told rePorterS' at the bill-signing ·~monies. -"But I do have the feeliog of 11tisfflc-- tion that comes from doing someiblng that you know ii right. There ii no way of knowing bow many lives of Innocent law-abiding citlson.> this Jegi.s!atlon will save." Atty. Gen. Eville Younger was at Reagan's side for the ceremonies. The Jan. 1, 1974 date in the bill will be 2214 months since California's last death penalty law was nullified by the~ate Supreme Court and six years and 8% months after the last life was snuffed out in the -apple gre:en San Quentin gas chamber. 1 •• But the new law will have no effect on tbe Ill-year CiliiiOflJei Row in- mates in Catlfomla including Sirhan B. .Sirhan, convicted assassin of Sen. Robert Kennedy, and five members of the Charles Mamon family~ The backlog - 105 men aod five women -have receiv- ed cll.anges in seqtence from death to life in prison. The new law may face a court battle ~fore being used. The American Qvil Liberties Union has charged it is "legally defective and UDCODStitutional." Other opponents say that it wilt result in "hundreds" af executions every year because of its mandatory provisions. This -.would be far in excess af C!DYthing in California's capital punishment history. There have been only 502 executions in California since March 3, 1893, when the state took aver that responsibility from co_unty sheriffs. Tbese jnclud~ 308 hang· ings befare the Biili chamber was put into . operation in 1938, and l!M deaths by cyaolde gasing In the chamber. Because of an unofficial [ll()ratorium, there have. _l>een only· two executians in the last 10 years, those in 1963 and 1967. , California's previous death penalty was r banned by a 6-1 decision of the California Supreme Court Feb. 18, 1972 on grounds it was "cruel or unusual punishment" outlawed by the olate Constitution. Coast • Welli.tlter Late night and early morning clouds but clearing by alternoons. Overnight lows 58<12. JIJgh Tuesday 68. INSIDE TOD,\ Y An almost unique standing ovotion for the Rams was accONf... ed the LA team 6~ more than 64,000 Coli.!eum /aru Sunday during t11e fourth quarter. 1he· Rams put it all togetheT to smother ACtanta, 31-0. See Page 16. I • - DAILY PILOT IS Mondl:J, Stptcmbtr 24, Jq11 Dead Man's . • ~ Al.ert Citizen Foils Train -Wreck Plans -• -~ Vandab apparenUy Intent on donJllng a passing train on .San Clement.e's beachfront track s1 1tacked eight large trash cans filled with sand on the rails Sunday. But before a train came through, a resident noUced the stack of bel9y cans and phoned police. The Incident was notlcod shortly l.ftu 3 a.m. Sunday and a resident first tried to remove the cans himself. But they y,·ere too heavy to be movt'd by one man. Police said they were then called and patrolmen aim.ct diJpald>en !or the Santa Fe Rail Road ao that all train! could be slopped. Att.r Iba~ ollicen went to the beach and lugged the cans oil the tracks. The cant were then empUed and takeo to the city yants. Tax Hearing On President y Turned Down By JACK BROBACK 1----"----~'~ ...... ''tff ., I 1 .,,_ 'lbe Orange County Assessment Ap.- peals Boan! today refused to set aside its , rules and bold an Immediate bearing on -t the ._...,,.,,t of l'rel!dent Nlwt'1 San •l Clemente property. · ~ A hearing had been requested by Finl ~ Diltrict &Jpervlsor Robert Battin ol Sa!>-1 ta Ana. His appoiiltee to the appeals • board, Frank Manzo, tried to get tt on • the agenda today. ~ Board Chairman Otto Christensen said •'-a prelimin.ary hearing to decide whether • the appeals board· had the legal authority ,., *"> review the assessment haJ been set .f. fbr Oct. JS. . .t He said the President was not reprsent-a ed al tbe bearing .today and had the right ,o to the oonnaJ .-y notice prior to SUCh . beartogs. : BatUn. tried to make a statement but ;;; wu r<bulled by Cbrislensen who called t for• vote on the hearing date. t . The board chairman said Ballln could ff not. make a statement injUrious to th& Preadent without representation being ··-t: . !.· Appeals board member Robert l!Me~ ter moved !or the Oct. 26 hearing dale """ .... ·supported by the chairman. The vote WU 2 w 1 with Manz.o opposing. ' . '· ' • r· • .. ,i ' ,. '. I· BatUn said later lie would ask the Board of Superyi!llrs Tuesday to hire an independent investigator~·Jo probe 'the assessment of the San Cemente prop- ertf. The property has been assessed at $1.37 million and Battin contends that it should be $2.4 million including im· provements constructed by the govern- ment. Irvine Pays Bill For Police Aid Irvine city olfidals this week will pay their fin! bill !or expanded police services provided by the city of Costa Mesa. The tab for added patrolmen and aMlher patrol car comes to $140,526 for thnoe momhs, beginning Sept. ·t. · ln June, Irvine councilmen voted to in· crease thie service provided by Costa Mesa PoUce Department from the $340.000 rental figure originally agreed on for the first-year's service. . ... Thls year, more than $562,000 is to be spent patrolling the new city. Dies of Injuries LONOON (AP) -A British army ex· plosives expert died Sunday in a Birm- ingham hospital from injuries suffered a, week ago when a bomb exploded while he was attempting to defuse It. J 0111:.&N61 COAST II DAILY PILOT ,... 0.....,. CO.al DAILY l'ILOT, -'"' """lefl }I ~.,..t It .. New.-Pr .. t. It Jl\lblhhtd bY fllt Or.,.._ C.._11 l'lltl!lJll"'t C-11r. Se- , ... tllflllDnt ••• P\lblltl'l9d, Moncl•I' "'r'OUllll ,.....,., for CM!f M•.-. k-1 ~ ......... 8N<ll/F-1t;n V•lley, l.191oN .....-t"IMfs..Nlttild: MO $•11 C~tl ~ ~ Cl!llllf-. A 1l11gi. rttlorloll tdiHlrl II _...,_. Safllrller1 Miii &l.lftd•l'l- """ "1M:•t fllblltlllftl lllel!I II fl UO Wftl ..... ""'°""• Oii• ~. CIU!wr>ll, nlN. .... tt N. W•.4 ~...-.......... J"• It C•rl•v ~ ............ 0...1~ -~KMwil .... ,.._. A. Mwr,lllti• _ ..... ~ H. U.. lll:ich•"' P. N,lf ................. 1:.,.... -c-i. .IH9ef 1:11 W.I..., '"'"' ......,.~1 UH.......,..~ l ...... __,.; m "-'A-HWHllk ........ dill c htdl MIN\I••• a-c;-..: • It C...,.,,. •ttt '" st fn•• W-4t.11 Cl• ... M+afW I "42-1&71 ... c ...... .u ····'~•·: • .. f ,.., ••• 4fJ.+42t ' . ' . ' ,. .; .: . ' ,.,...,.. 1'71. °"""" C-.1 ~lt111"" ~. ... ....... .......... '""'"""""· ....... __. .,, """""""""'" ....... _... ................. -.1e1 .,.. . ...... ~ ...... . =~""' .. "="::;; ;:,si.., ~ ..... llMlllltlf'l'I lflllWY ................. ........, .. • • Nixon Asks . . .. Gasoline~ !lave lo llcart oul a Wl'J lo get around ........ ... Increases --"a: .... portkulat ili0rii!Oi'1 did ·enter tbe lree•lf but ablndoned the ,t':'f!'llt' of -tlnulnc afler _,, belltll blliftjllf tbe ....,, . 2 Colwrt,s, -car Hunted ' WASllINGTON . (AP)-Presklent Nl1<111 iolci the Cost ol Living Council today to act UU1 ~ to Increase the retail price ..olg•~. 'Acting &1 some service 11illons clootd d°""1 to Protest Phase 4 pricing poUcles, the President got assurances from Cost of .Living Council Director John Dunlop STATE STATIONS REOPIN TUESDAY, Story Pogo 5 that the paile1 -1d try to speed acUoa "'the llouo. While House Deputy Prest Secretar! ~-lr'W"""' ll!d the council already COl!Cluded that an lncresse In retail gaaoline pricea I! neecled and bad been following a Umetable that would have placed the lnCrease lnto effect Oct. 2. "The Presideflt asked Dr. Dunlop to expedite this matter . . . to review the situation as quickly as possible and get a decision out this week," Warren said. "Dr. Dunlop assured the President that he would," Warren said. Northern ant;I Central California ga. line 5tatioa oper.at.on..happily. claimed a victory today in their weekend shut.claw following the announcement. . _"Beautiful, beauUful, 11 Bob ltfoore, executive aecretary of the California Service StaUon Dealers AosodaUon, said In San Fnncllco. '"ll>ls II the guy we were ·tt:Ytnc &o n:ecb.,, W &mll aald be WU llllllOUlldnc the President'• -... lo Dl!nlop. ,Wbld! _. rtlayed tlnuch aldel, In an d!<rl to "clear up whatever conlualon ?1'mainl in the price of g.uollne." • ··Asked wbotber Nixon wanted. 1ervice stallons to stay open, Warren ~ed. "Tbe . President would not attempt to coll!lle! dtalert on how to operate their own individual 1tationa:" · There ba\re been scattered closings by independeot ga90Jine dealers to protest l'llase f r<gu]atlona oir guollne. About 75 percent of the 1tation5 ln Indianapolis clooed today. Some stations also clooed in the Washington. D.C. area today. . Warren would not say bow much the Wliite lloule ezpects , retail guoline prices to fO up, and llld lodaJr'• statemenli Cll!lalnod "no lmpll<d rebUb to tho .Coot of Living Cotmcil ... Weinberger, • • ). 1 n·aker Top UCI Speakers Seu. Howard Baker (J>.Tenn.). of the Senate Watergate Committee and Caspar Weinberger. U.S. Secretary ol Health. Edu<aUoo and Welfare top tbe ll!t of speakers to appear at UC Irvine dur1ng the upcoming school year. Announcement or the speakers wu made in Orientation Week materials ltDl to UCI's 7 ,000 students. "0" Week nms through Friday. Senator Baker, vice chairman of the Senate committee, is scheduled to appear in mdi-February about two weeks before the release of the committee'• report on 1972 Presidential election campajgn prac· Uces. 4 No date has been established for \Veinberger's address , according to 1"1arie Vanes, assistant dean of student affairs. Others who will address studenta dur· ing tfie schocit "year incltide U.S. Sefiillor John V. Tunney CD-Calif.), •tat e Assembly Speaker Robert Moretti (IJ.Los Angeles) Assemblyman Willie Brown (D-San Francisco), chairman of lhe Ways and Means Committee and Alleen Hernandei, former president of the Na- tional Organizatioa ol Women (NOW). Names of other speakers will be an- nouncod later in tbe school year after arrangements are firmed up, said Mrs. Vance. The speakers program 11 one of several new projects undertaken by the student affairs office 1.mder the directk>n ol Jack Hoy, vice chancellor. Eighth Graders· Will Se!l_ C~ndy Eighth grade studeota at Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School In Irvine will begin a candy .. 1e Friday to raise money !or a trip to Dlmeyland 00<t June. Top prizes in the sale Include a I~ speed bike, ca.uette rocorder and radiot. '!be 511 dgbllt (lt8den will be aelllnf llelen Grace Peanut CUllerS at $1 per box. 5(learbeadin& the effort are th1I year's student body officmi: Darla Forney, p,...ident; Jerry Packer, vice president; Ann Vogt, secretory, and Paula Hemenover, treasurer. Paul Mills Is ad· viser to the 1tudent council. Rockefeller Visits CAIRO (UPI) -David Rockeleller, head of the Chase Manhattan llanl<, bold a weekend meelinJ wlth Egyptian Preal· -.lent Anwar 5adat, olflcial llOU1t'tl aatd . RockeleUer mlved in Ctlro·FridaJr nllltt !or a short vlllt on the invtlitlon ol Halez lsmall, 5adat'1 adviser on nallonal securi!Y· - ,.,_ trucU .,... fOlnl put U1 Jt lltl mlla per hour .... d<cldtd lo hltchhllt• and aot a ride to the next · stretdl of higtnny with a •IVY who had a ,U·haul tralltr','' he recaus. Pedaling as much as 80 or 90 mlles per day, the riders encolmtered aeveral mechanical difficulties in<luding flal tires., broken spokes, and broken gear chang'e mec.hanisms. "I didn't prepare the bike as m~h as I should have ," says Kandel, who lried to prevent 90me of those problema by oui.. fltUng his bib with heavy-duty com- ponenta beforo. be Jell llL1 f10 budget, however, waa IUl!ldent to cover ·a11 of the repaln, and be had enough left over to make the retuni trip by 1Jlane. Kandel Jnteilded to retum by plane all along in 0<1'er lo make It back intln!OlorldlooL - 111 enjoyed the trip a Jot, but tt'a IUCh a hassle getUng around the lreewaya that It lakes the fun out of It," be admits. From Pqe I GASOLINE ... the stuff, agrees with Jarrett. "J hav.e no plans_wbJJsoev~ to cl0$e down " he said. "There has been some talk .;i it bu\ tbo responsible dealers w!U stay open." Per-lia-point.ed out that tbe .feder.aLC.ost of Living Council -who&e price freeze on gasoline has the dealers so upset - bas promised to allow a price boost of "ooe or two cents" by OCL 2. "It ~ be foolish to mab an - of ...nethlng that'• llread,J In tbe worts," Ptrlin said - Keith Jolmson who .,....Emonfd Bay T....,. In Lquna Beach al'Jl,be cloan1 . know what lo do. . . For the Ume be11t11 be'a ataylnc open. "We don't know what lo do. It'll de-. pend on everybodfelle," be Aid. . "If they stay open, we11 sliy open but If everybody else cl-~ It looks Uke we'll get tore up lf we try to stay open w.'11 close down too," Johnaon llld. • • Santa Anans Hit College District Trans£ er Action A grtJUP al !la m!denli al Santa Ana have ·~ an effort lo withdraw '!Imm trom the Saddfebact· OlmmUDllY CoJleJ• district and anne:ting It to the JlaDd>o SanU.go Community Colleg• ~-. \ Tbo 38 'property owntrS adjiloent lo Santa AM College, expr~ cmcun ln a letter to 5addleback Supt. Fred H. Bremer that such a district transfer -1d adveroely affect their property. · Tbe letter said additional studenll will overaowd Santa Ana C.Ollege and create an eztreme parking problem in neaiby streets. "We wbcl ·cbertsh our_bQ!nes and '!'Aln- lain them In a neighborlx>od to be proud of are kept it) ·a condition of uncertainty and -ety due to collqe ...,...ion and loss of our homes," the letter stated. A group in Tustin called "Tbe College Committee" beaded by S h e p a r d Kanarek, has been cir<u!aUng peUtlons to get their area out of the saddleback district. They claim excessive driving dJstances (20 miles one way from downtown Tustin ), inadequate facilltlet, unsatisfac- tory course organization, and the school's policy on inter-district permits as reasons for their transfer attempt. Bremer-has~ challenged . most of the committee's object.ions, pointing out that "'Ibe &ame association that accredits the other community colleges in our areu accredits 5addleback -and if our pro- gram is lacking, we certainly would not receive accreditation." Sub Overhaul Stalls Search INVERNESS, SCOUand (AP) .1 Japanese hopes ol filming the Loch Ness monster from a submarine have run lnto delay, erpedition leader Sh a n s i k u Yoshida disclosed tnday. . The Tokyo busine&m1an said a Frenoh- build midget submarine that was to speuhead ihe liit'a-11!<!"111!1>tbs-<>f the m)'llerlol.; ScotUlh lake was held up "somewhere in Europe" for a la1t· minute overhaul 1be $550,000 .earch '-aimed at cap- turing SCOtland'1 blJ lolaiat asset on Japanese camera film -waa originally planned to start Sept. 15. ...... midget suhmarinec and a men ... to take part. Colorado Queen Siicks to Guns Dllty l"llet Sltff ,...., Orange County Sherif!'• offlctn today stepped up their search for tw'e ac· complices ol a man who wa1 shot and killed in the act of robbing the Dana Villa 1"fotel in Dana Point. ..., Police throughout CAllfomia have been given the description of a small rtd "car -believed to be a Renault -In which David Grindeland, 21, of El Modena Is believed to !lave died as the auto 1ped away from the motel Friday night. GrtndeJind•1 body was duniped on a lawn in the Tustin area·about '5 minutes later. Sberilf'• olllctn llld be had been shot In the chest, lace and band. Tboo< bull•ta ~ !Ired ,by mot.I owner Louis JOHph llalfner, es, who told officers be beard Grindeland threitentn.g his wife, Mary, 62, and rushed to the lob- by to help her. Haffner sai •. he fired a numbtr of shot!'! at the intruder who simulated posst:ision of a weapan as he leaned over the counter and scooped up !he motel receipts while he threatened Mts-Haff· ner. CYCLIST KANDEL FOUND IT TOUGH TO GET THERE FROM HERE A GOOCI Bike, Pu nut &Utter and Jilly •nd GUtstOFigtirlrod<s . . Haffner and-Grindeland staggered. clutched his chest and stumbled to tht car containini ty.·.01.lllen.-----L----I; Officers. said customers leaving 1 nearby restaurant coofirmed the motel owners stateruent that two men were in Ibo waiting vebicl<. and that ooe leaned out and p.Jlert th• lai.U, woonded Advisory Council To Be Weighed In Mission Viejo A proposal · for a Mission Viejo municipal advisory council (MAC) will be made at a town ball meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at La Paz lntennediatc School, Mission Viejo. Richard Ke11y, Orange 0>Wlty ooor· dinator for the Mission Viejo sel"Vice area; and Robert Nelson, executive assistant to Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. state the cotmty's posi· tion on MACs and answer questions. The meeting is s_..i by the Mission Viejo Homeownef! Association. A amunittee within the homeowners has been lludying MAC possibilities !or Several months., -_ _ ,._...._ .. ...--_ The preR<ltatton wiD ' 'attenlpl to answer the following questions: Why do we need a MAC and what will ~ ctest? ls lncorporOtlm, the next sf<il? ;'i\'.llt il"'t a Saddlebact Valley-wide council? 'Ibe concept of·~ ad~ eouncil was lint br0acbod by the Saddleback Area Coonlinating Cotmcil. lo which the Mission, Viejo Homeowners belOJlg. . Tbe MAC •ould be a legally recognized advisory channel on locaj issues to lhe county board of superviaonl. Acoonflng to guidelines _,-ecentJy ap- proved by the board of superviaonl, the MAC would come into beilii through a homl -iuttoo alter 10 pea:ent..ol-the popu1"1on had signed pOulions. favoring IL . '!be members of the council, from five to 12, would be elected by the residents. Water District Land Exchange Appr-0ved The Local Agency Formation Com· mission bas approved the exchange of 41.5 acres between the El Toro Water District and , the Moulton-Niguel \Y.ater , District. The acreage is located east of Paseo de Valencia at the east extemi.on of Ave- nida Sevilla 1 in the Laguna Hills area. Both agencies ~uested the transfer to the Mowtoo-NigUel ~district. Front Pqe I RENTAL ••• city recepUon an!a Is being created in the hallway outside the former UC Irvine Faculty Club rooms which now house the City Council chambers and offices of city department heads. \Vith the hallway, Burton's old oUice, nnd all other previously occupied space, the city wouJd be leasing 7,405 squart fe<!t or the building at 4201 Campus Drive. It is located acro.ss the street rrOm UCI, a location long pinpointed as the eventual seat. of city govemment on land USC plans o[ the Irvine Company. Rentals on tbe various leases the city has signed to date average $S per square foot, Hanington said. The city's mon~!Y rent would be $37,025, or $445,300 a year. City of lNlne offices occupy about half of Ibo second floor of Town Center. Other tenants are the UCI Interfaith Foun- dation and the Irvine R3llCh Water District. • New commerc1al &'pace !or boob, shops. a gasoline station and a supermarket will be made avlWble in the nearby Can\ptis Vallty Sbopping Center at Camws Drive and 1.ee Street . 1,oning for that ·project is pendihg final city approval Develop~nt of other office or com~ mercial.i!'ipace awaits city plaMing com4 mission approval of the Town Ceotet Village plan due to be filed -with the citi next mootb.. Irvine Planning Prof Announced Grindeland into the car. Shertfl's Ctpt. James BroadbeM said today that no charges wlll be llled against Haffner. "Our lnvestlgaUon of the inddent enUrely ~ta tile ac· count he gave us," he 11.Jd. ... Broadbolt said this morning be is s!lllsfied that Orindelapd Is the man who u short time earlier attempted to rob the Kentucky fried chicken restaurant across the atree~ from the Dana Villa motel. "l_t was the same deal, hand in pocket as If he had a aun there," he said. "But !he owner was closing for the nl&ht, he defied Grindeland and the man who challenged him prompUy.lefl." '· i Bremer Declines · · To Commeni on Jurr Criti~ .......... ' 5addlel>ack Cammunily C•ll•Je Supt .. ' Fred II. B.remer said Friday, be has nothing more lo say to crtUclsm from th• Orange County Grand Jury lmled last week. Bremer was criticized by Oie Grand Jwy !or writing a letter to the Cltlnnl' DirectJon Finding Commtttee ur&lnl development of coastat land i n Capistrano Beach. He said de'felopment of the aru in mu!Upl&<mtt condominiums could 1 .. crease his district'• las hue without adveraely aUectlng ·the eovtroamenL USC President Join II. Hubbard today "I feel Mr. !.Allld·told the whole llory announced the appointment of the 1ir&t at the board meeting Sept. 11," Bnmer James Irvine proressor of graduate said through a college spokesman. Ha studies in urban and region.al planning. has been unavailable peraon.ally to Dr. Joll>. W. Dyckman, 'formerly pl<J. reporters since the Grand Jwy letter fessor of city planning for UC Berkeley' John Lund, president of the boa.rd of is first to occupy the James Irvine Chair trustees and 8 Laguna Bead!: ft:tktent, establish.ed at USC by 8 $500,000 ~-.. erplalned at the Sept. 11 meeting that he dowment grant from the James lrvtne owned land In Capla:trano Be.acb and ·ask· Foundation of NelVpoq. ~~h ,,.d San ed ·Bremer to write-the letter:· , Francisco~ 1 Dyckman baS served oo the facullle! of The rest ol the bosrd members wero the University of PeMsylvania, StanfOrd not informed of Lufld's request or Universlty and Johns Hopkins University. Bremer'a letter · t11tU the Envirmmenta1 Dr. Dycknum earned his doctorate at Coal!Uon ol Oranp County saw Bremer'• lhe Uni versify of Clilcag".:o.~------I•_tte_r..;~c.....-_-.--•.,."_olllck __ ed_"_·re_P_lf._._-_ ~-------------~------~, 1 NebodJ Admiral. Refrigiraton fo f less t~iil -" I ISels . I I 3-0-Dt!plex9 I I Adntlrol ~"T.:..11or I I The ultimate in Admirol "Planned Conveni· I ence'' design. Upper freezer for often~d I ~~~b~~~ I I stor•ge. Refriger•tor hos Jdjusl•blo temper· I ed glass shelves. Front-of-door chilled w•jer I dispensor is • greot convenience feriuro. I And tho autom•lic ice m•kor never I.ls you I run out of ice, I I 699" I ADMIRAL UST PllCI • I . '.-~·· I I D=P 59995 I I • W• I bolin~ An.ANTIC CITY, N.J . (UPI)_,.-Mi.. I • Wt I America, Rebecca Ann Kln& of U>!orado, SoNlct CHUID saya she would stick to her lland o I AllTOlllATIC WATll't COLIMWI I legalizing martjUana and a wom • • w1-~.11 ' ·1c1 MAKER DISPINlll't Cl\llOUIL right to an abortion. I ~· I "I !eel all tndlvlduala lboUld be able to TH "'"OVID malce moral dedltono." abe said.-•1 · 90-DAY CASH ~1 cuDIT ,,;:-~t::»~~.blA~~ I . . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. llDwntuWll Costa. Mesa -Pllanl 548-7711 I not neceaarily my moral choice nor ts l • ..... - - - - - - --.I mul)ma.''lhe.tded. .. - . -----~-~--.---. -. ' l I I. . . -• (· I j Huntington Beaeh Foqniain ·Valley_· . EDITION . . . . • Today's Final N~Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 267, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, 1CAU MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1973 TEN CENTS HuntingtOn Planners to Get Bike Trail Costs Detailed plans and cost estimates for ~ miles of bicycle lanes and trails will go before HunUnaton Beach planning commlasloners Tuesday nllJht for their approval. If the comm!Ylon accepts the plans, the bicycle traila will be shown lo city counclhnen Oct. 1 for-their fillal ap- proval. "If all goes well, we hope to start buildlng them in January and finish about 45 days from then," Ed Selich, a city planner, said today. The eetimated cost of the bicycle trails and laneo ls $129,000. The city will pay half. The other half will cOme from a grant ffom the federal Land ancr Water Conservation Fund. Commissioners will Inspect the plans during their 7 p.m.1&ludy session .In city council @ambers. About six rnlles of the 22 proposed will be trails, eight-feet wide, paved with aspbalt and separate from, though parellell to, city streets. The other 15 mll<1 wll! be, bicycle lanes. part of the · street but oeparated by a green and wlille stripe. 1llmo "\rill be an eight-foot bicycle lane on eidl llide-ol the street; appropriately markt;.d for bicycles only. A normal car l .... li !O lo--12-feet -wlde. 'lbe propaaed trails would cover: -Bulbard Street, from AUanta Avenue lo Gl!rfield .\venue. -Garfield, from the santa Ana River lo FAward Stre<t. -FAwards, from Garfield lo McFad· de.a. A venue. . -Heil Avenue, from Galden West Street lo Algulquln Street. ~ -"'AJ~to Warner-Avenue and. Warner to Pacific c.oast Highway. ....._._--Late Street, from-Mansk>n Avenue to · 1'1cillC Coul !Ughway. -Ml!tt Street, f(om Garfield lo (See BlKE_ TRAIL, Pqe I) Signs Death Bill UlS-ANGELES (AP) -Tho death peoalty 'was reotored io California today, effecttvo nm year, when Gov, Rool!id Reagan signed a bill .maklng execution mandatory in 11 categoreis of murder. 1be new law w1D be applied only to murders committed after Jan. 1, 1974. --!Tm sure we all rqret the necessity of --Diving tn sign such a bill," Reagan lold reporters at the blll-tlgn!ng ceremonies. · '1But I cW have the · feelln& of sati.sfac-- tlon that comes from doing something that you know Is rlgbt. There I! no way of knowing bow many lives of Innocent, law-abiding cillr.ens thla legblation will save." Atty. Gen. Eville Younger was at Reagan's side for the ceremonies. The Jan. I, 1971 date In the bill will be 221! months since caJifornia's last death penalty law was nulllffed 'by the slate Supreme Coort and sll:: years and a~ months after the last life was snuffed out in the 1pple green San Quentin gas chamber. But the new law will have no effect on the 10-year backlog of Death Row in· ' _Apartinent .Dainaged Tax Hearin g On Presitknt Turned Down Downtown Huntington ' Hit by Fire Bombings By JACK llROBACK • 09 ........ "" .... 'lbree attempted fire bombinp oc- curred In downtown HuntioCloo Beach SundaJ llPt. two .... flllllii .. do any ciamoge. Tho third ,cauoed ISO damqt lo the ,..i ol u aputmmt buildlni-. ' Fir< Captain Ropr H4o-.... ~y that the fire departmi!nt lllllpedl the three lncldenll are related, slnee they oc- curred in the same general orea within two hours of each Gt.her. There are no clues as to motives, Hoaner said, and there are: DO definlte ._,._ "Pollet are checking out one IUlpeCI, though," be said, "and they are following up wilh an investigaUoo." The first incident wu at %2tll Delawore Sl, where a can file flDed with 011!1· Tbe Orange County Assessmen.t Ap- ble ,,_.... • ........ ....-. 'tho-' -· peali.~-IOdaj-to oet.uide llS ll)a .... _ ......... ...,_..... '""'... MO ... ,~ ~te ._... the lljiftifi&ifblllfdliil, :15 p.m. Plf. -::; un~· Pmldt'ot ~a: 17 dollan ~of damage .-reported. ctemem.~-(~led rt«y. Page ,,,._. -. -at -tingliin .t;;-. • -' ll afl llllco A.t. 11 approximl~ !:30 A bod boon requested by ii'lriit p.m. where a ilass botUe oonlitning Dlstrlet &qiervlaor Robert Battin ol San- Oammoble liquid was thrown at several ta Ana. His appointee lo the appeals oU lllorage tanb, Tbe bomb burned Itself board, Frank Manzo, tried lo get it on out bowever before ••v dam••e could th• agenda today. > • • ~ -Board Cbalrm111 Otto Christensen said occur. a ,preliminary hearing lo decide wbether Tho last attempt Involved a smoke ' the apt>Ws board bad the legal authority bomb_at 2613 Enilll!Jl! Sl,_ at !:Ill P.Jll-to rev111w-lhe .a-.ment has been set The bomb was thrown at an apartment for Oct 21 , buildiol but acoordiog lo Hosmer 11 did He 11ici th. President was not reprsent- not 1<1 close moulJh fo any conbustibles ed at the hearing today and bad the right lo do any damage. lo the normal :JO.day ooti<:e prior lo sucb hearings. Battin tried fo make a statement but V.S. Wants True Peace, ~~·.r::i~:~1.::':f.."hocalled Tbe boanl chairman said Battin could Kissinger Sa ys in U.N. __ _,not make a statement injurious to the Pttstdenrwithout -representation being present. , Appeals board member Robert Hostel· ter ~ved far the Oct. ~ hearing date and was sµpported by the chainnan. The . . . . vote was 2 W 1 with Manzo opposing. UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Secretary Soviet Foreign Ministe~ Andre 1 Battin siJd Jater he would ask the ol State Henry A. Kissinger said today Gromyko sat motionless throughout the Board of Supervisors Tuesday to hire an tl!tf llnlted States-"~k!-true-peace;-not ~speec1r,_ Ustenlng intenUy-througb a-·1n<1ependent-investiga1or-1o P"!be the simply an arnustice, and called upon all headphone. assessment ot the San Clemente prop- members of the United Nations to aban-AU delegatiJ>nS were well represented erty. don their bickering and join ,In a except for the Maldlves, whooe dlplomat• The property has been assessed at cooperative effort for a more hannOnlous have not yet arrived from their Indian $1.37 million and Battin contends that it -world. 0cean-country. --'-.:-should' ba $2.1 million lnclwliog..Jm- Klsslnger. the first · forelgn-t>om U.S. Kissing&•1 , speech was a b(oad provements constructed by the govern- oeciellfl) ol State, made his maldell Id-pbllOoophlcaJ oulilne o1 "the !OPlrit of ment · dma lo thi U.N. Gmenl Asaembly American lorelgn policy" In which he a1mo11.. ... c11y 11 lioun 'anet • be!lll pledced u.s. efforts and lnflulnc:e 1n .. ~ Sinkin gs Probed sworn hllo olfl<e II the Diie Hoose, ll!ng sucb regionil Issues as tho Middle Kissinger spoke wttboot Interruption East and Southeast Asia. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The U.S. for Z5 mlbutes, boldl:': the pacw.d ball'• But he made no specific pledges Coast Guard is inv .. ttgaUng the so-far attentioal beymd promising that tbe United Slates un<xplalned sinking Saturday night of 'lbere was applause for 20 lltCODds· would hot abandon traditional allies in two tugboats an hour apart in the Port of when he finished. Delesstes ol China, coming out Its policy ol detente with the Sacramento. One ol the six crewmen of CUba and Albania did not join In 11. (See KISSINGER, Pqe I) the two boats was miss.Ing. mates In caJifoi-nia Including Sirhan 1!. Sirhan, convicted assassin of Sen. Robert Ke,nnedy, and five members . of the Charles Manson farnlly. Tbe backlog - 105 men and five women -have receiv- ed changes in sentence from death to lile in prison. . The Dew law may fac.e a court battle before · being used. The American Civil I.Jberties Union has charged it is "legally defective and unconstitutional" Other opponents say that it will result in "hundreds" of executions every year because of its mandatory provisions. This would_ _be far. in excess of anything in Califomia's ·capital punishment history. There have been only 502 executions in California-Since March 3,. 1893, when the state "took:'over that ressxmslbility from county sherifis. These include 308 hang- ings before the gas chamber was put into operation in 1938, and 194 deaths by cyanide gs.sing in the chamber. Because of an unofficial moratOrtum • there bave-)leen only two ...culians, in the last 10 years . ._ In 1113 and 1917. ~~"11~ Supreme C«irt Jl'eb. 18, im m ~ ~~·._1111 er anuat ~•iioiliii ...... rmilii" oqUawed '-1 the stale Coaslitutim. Hunting ton Tot, 2, Found Sale In County Motel A 2-year-old girl soogbt by police and ~ly 100 yolun~eers· in Huntington Beach ·was found Sunday afternoon in an Anaheim motel. ~oUCe were taken to -'b~ Casa Cordo_ya Motel,-3380-W..Liru:o~ .• ~e little girl's father, Leonard Fitchner, wOOlO!a them be had taken bis daughter from the home she !hared with his estrangl'd wife, Brenda. Detectives said no charges were filed in the case of little Llsa Ann was return~ ed to her mother. She had-been the object-of an intensive search Saturday niiibt when she disap- peared from the Viewpoint Apts. about $:30 p.m. Nearly 100 volunteers aided police in combing_tbe_ ne.ighbJ>rhood ... for Jbe youngster. 1be search was called off at 1:30 a.m. Sunday and the case was turn- ed over to detectives. Pollce said they felt the.child bad prob- ably been taken by her father because the couple had just recenUy separated and Fitchner had allegedly t r l e d previoµsly to take ooe of bis children. He was located by ca HunUngton Beach patrolman who spottl'd him driving in tbe city. Hunt Tells of False Accusations WASHTNGTON (UPI) -The White House, trying lo woo the C.thollc 'iOte for Preoldeot Nixon In Im, tried I lo -· falsely th•t tho Kennody ..i. m~ llTlll8ed lo kill South Viet- namese Pl-Diem In 1111, E, llowanl Hunt Jr. t¢1lled IOday. Hunt, one ol the origh1aJ W1terpte buuintl (.'C)Mplrolors, wao I e a d o f f witness u the natlonallr televllod Senate hearlnp on the ocaika .....-oll>r a eeven-week receaa. · Gaunt and pale from six montha In prtaon, Hun! testified that" he had been "d~ected" In 111'11 by Charles W. Colson, then a special counsel IO Nixon, to fabri cate government cables to lmpUcate Kennedy In the·tteath! or NCO Dinh Diem and his brother-ln·IRW, Ngo Dhill Nhu. "I beiJevo It was ,deslnd by Mr. Colson, or at least 90me. of his ool~ leagues,. to demonstrole Iha\ a C.thollc JJnlted Slates admlnlstr1t!Qp had In lact coniP!red in the 1SS1sslnatlon of a Catliollc-chltf ol--.t1te In 1nolhor coun- try,'" Hunt aald. I Hunt, a former ClA agent and prolific sensitive doeltments £rom Las Vegas, spy novelist, also testllled that: Nev. publilber Hank Greenspun but that -lie was lold by fallow buglpg con-tbe r•ld was never carried, out. aplralor .G. Gordon Liddy In !ale Hunt said he believed he wu acUng as Nevember It'll that Jolm N. Mitchell, a -• ,......meot agent When be Ihm the attorney general Md latsr Nixon became Involved In the Watergate plot campaign manager, ••requlrlcl ·t be . and, nine months earlier, the burglary at eslabllshn10Dt ol 1 larpecaJo In--tl)e office ol Doiilel E 11 s b er g ' s telllgenco, eocmter-lntell1--l!ID" peychlatrillt. for Iha campaign and tliol ~ Ho oa1d be now ~ "crushed by tho' llllslants Joint W. Dean Ill and Jeb !allure of my, JOVernment lo pnitect me Stuort Magruder· al11> "were adiv1 In tts and my fcunily, as In the past It bas tonnulation ." always done for clendeltine agl!nta.'' -He believes Collon, who h a 1 The hearings resumed with the marble v~lly denJed any role In political e,. walled caucus Room In the Old Senate plonage, "was aware of the over-all in-omce Building fllled lo capacity. About telllg...., plan" os early aa January 1m. SO perao111 walltcl IMltllide. -After the flve-man Watergate bl.lg-Hunt wu di aaed in 1 Jll'I sult.i dark 11DC team was arrested June 17, tm, blue shirt and dlrt;1loam1 with tassels. Hunt Wer>l immediately .1o the White Hunt, who rJomM pil~ in J.,...ry to Houtle and stuffed 1 briefcase loadtd conspiracy, llutallrY. '>ucPll a1td with electronic gear lnlo 1 oafe In the <t· wlroloPllhte lo die Waterpte eue,• Is neo be matn1alnacl 11 a $110-1-day llltAe trylns lo ~ liTI plea. 'to IBnotent on ~ouse consultant. gr-bO bad -duped by unlden· -He, Liddy oncl on aide IB billion.lire ilfied hlch .....,.men1 ollklals. He said rtcl\Joe Howard Hughes plotted lo lteal (!let RUNT, Pop I) . . '. Ull'IT ...... • • WATERGATE WITNESS eon1plr1to• Hunt, ' • [Nlty l"ftot Staff ..... \· CYCLIST KANDEL-FOUND IT TOUGH TO GET n!ERE f ROM HERE f, A ~ Bike, Peanut Butter and Jell y and Guts to Fight Trucks · .. ~ Real-·Adventore. . . " .... Bicyclist Coes to SF Ha rd Way ' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tlM DlllY 'U•t' Staff Herb Kandel rook an eigbkiay vacation lo San Francisco and spent $70. The formula for his cutrate vacation: a Hh(it rod" 10-speed bike, pea.nut butter and jelly sandwich.es, a good 'COmpanion, sfamlha and gut.. Whi guts? Because California's road system is designed to ac~mmodate the auk>mobile. and lhey still don't have bike lanes on the. expressways, ac:cording to the 17·year:Old high school senior from Costa M~. ''.I learned to hate cars," says Kandel, who ,pumJ>S gas for .a local service sta- tion:>ffis-hatred was-formed througb-450 miles of dodging dJesel trucks and station wagons and picking himself oot of ditch- es and they ran him off the road. Besides, there is no direct route to San Francisco if you 're riding a bicycle, ac- cording to Kandel, 1889 Tahiti Drive. "Getting ar_o_undJhe..1.~_ways i.$. a big problem," he explains. "When we got to Ventura we discovered there was no wa y for us tO get out of the city without tak· ing .the freeway." Kandel and his riding partner almost entered-the-freeway-despite the bicycle prohibition •ign,• but the fi!erii!'s deputy who observed tbeD}-as they pondered that possibility pointed theni io the prop- ei-.. dlrectioft.' • ''The·road to San Francisco goes oorth, but we had to take' a 30-mlle detour to the west to get to the end of the freeway," he says. "We' found that the highways would suddenly turn to freeways and we would have to figlire out a way to get around them ." On one particular stretch the riders did , enter the freeway but abandoned the thought of continuing after nearly being blown off the road. "Those trucks were going past us at 60 miles per hour so we decided to hitchhike and got a ride to the next stretch or highway wJlh a guy who had a U-haul trailer," he recalls. Pedalink as much as 80 or 90 miles per day, the riders encountered several mcohanical dlfficu!Ues including flat tlres, broken r spokel, ·and broken gear · cbange-s. New· Members Sought For Huntington Band The Huntington Beach Community Band is seeking new members for its sec- ond concert season. Director · John Mason is looking for adult musiclaQs with prior concert band experience. All in- struments are need~ exce~t trumpets. The band rehearses Tuesdays lrom 7:30 lo 9:30 p,m. ~ Marina High School band .room. tntc st,ed new mtmbers •hould cooie at 7 .m. on any Tutsday, according lo M...,,. The <oncer\ sea'°" beg•ln• Oct. 21 In the Golden West College . Th<oler. · "I didn't prepare the bike as much as I should have," says Kandel, who tried to prevent some of lhose problems by out· fitting his bike with heavy-duty com- ponents before he left. His $70 budget, however, was sufficient to cover ajl of the repairs, and he had enough left over to make the return trip by pfane. Kandel intended to return by plape all aJong in ord~ to make it back in tiri:le for school: · · "I enjoyed the trip a lot, but it's such a hassle getting around the freeways that it takes the fun out of it," he admits. Huntington Has Board Vacancies Huntington Beach's £ity administrator ts accepung-applications~-from Hun• tington · Beach residents interested in becoming members of either the Orange ~=ry H~!~~ Authority, or its citiZen FOriifS are 8 vaila0le&r City llfill, 520 Pecan. Ave ., or ~Y. phoning 536-5201. Ap- plications· are due by <>ct. 1. There is one positiori available on each of the two boai'ds, a'ffirboth positions-are voluntary without pay. • In addition, there is one position open on the city· Library Board. Applications for this position are also due Oct. 1. , Applications may be sent to P.O. Box 190, Huntington Beach, 92648. Orange Coast • • . Weadlier Late night and early morning clouds but clearing by afternoon s. Ovemlght lows 58-62. !Ugh Tuesday 68. rNSIDE TOD" Y An· ,almost unique standiiig ovation for the Roms was accord- ed the .LA team by more than 64,000 Coliseuni Jans Sunday during the fourth quarttr. The Rams put i& all togcether to smother Atlanra 31 ·0. Set Page 16, IMtlflt ..... ...,. C•Hfln1I• t'lat-.IM .. CMftltl c ..... ...,.. Dt8'11 MtUIH ••ton•• ..... ... ..,-'-• ~-· --. _..._ ' It ""-"... . 1f ' ... ~...... 4 S Or811M CWtltt I t,.U S'l'h'M ,.,._ It II t-M 1"17 II Sltft Me1'11!8'9 1 .. 11 t T...,_l.U.. I 6 TllMM It 1t •w...., • i.11 ....... ., .... ,,.,, 11 ..... .... 4 " . I J j \ • ' ' ,. JI D~LV .'!JLDT Four lIBO . . ~ " . Sightings .. In Ittemphis "29 Huntington -" ~ Children Win ,. ~·Fine Arts Kudos , . Twenty-nine children in the North Hun- tingtOn Beach area were . awarded rib- ·•· -IDd prizes In the 1971 Floe Arts "' Conte>t held at Jbe lhmtlngtoo . Beach :. Library's Graham Annex. Another-thir-Prom Page 1 ;· ~children.won honorable menti~. · · RAIL :i. According .i.. oooteA °'!Ian;,.,.; tom· ·-1DIK£· ·'I' · petition ... fi¥ :heal')' ·~ &be, :live ·~~ ... -· ,>.... · • • • · categories, Including stories, poo.try, . · drawings oil paintin~-P,Rd crc+t;i. Mrs. 1, ~~.s1~~-{ . '.( JSJjet ~Hav"1', 'mim,·uie Hi\i'>gton .,',-!1jh st?~~;troll\ the cl')~ ~~nter to Bead! ·Aft teligue;, an~ Mrs. ftlini,na . Pacilil'-Coast Highway. :-,,, war:ren, alocal ~ut~or, were th~ judges. · ..:.:BaMiflg ·Avenue from Bushard to Winners In pcielry were Tern Bangoy . ' . and Barbara Richardson first; Ed f\-1agnolia Street, then Magnolia to Deloge. second; Janice Ripl~y. honorable Pacific Coast Highway when Magnolia is mention. Among younger childreo, Pam extended. Penkoff, first,; Jill Ann Knoppel, second; Selich said planning commissioners and Susan Gross, thin!. will -• 1--• t th ~• ~'I Tu Stori . Id children -Shell Ota ULUY ~ a e ""'",, ..... e ~• i:u s es-- first; 'E;;.. 0 ~th, secood; and Sheri d~y night, but city councilmen will be Smith, hooorable mention. Younger given the 22 miles of bike paths as well children -Maureen McGlynn, first; as five Qllles o! a proposed $2,000 jogging Wendy ~kl, second; and Ouistine trails system. ~fu~J~cr children _ Jeanmarie Staff planners will also ask councllmen Zimmerman, first; Moses Rosales, sec-to authonze a 91'.kl.ay study of the future ond; Bryan Blair, third ; and Sbeli Ota of OOrseS in Huntington Beach before set· ~ and Bryan . Blair, honorable menti,ons. ting aside $7,000 for equestrian traisl. Younger children -Pam ~~off. first; "The staff feels there nttds to be more •r Susan Gross, second: Christine Psaros. .,· third; and Pam Penkoff aDd Patti ?.fullins, OOnorable mentions. YoWlgest children -Cynthia Psaros, rirst ; Ann K. · 1.!ilkovich, second; Mary F. Milkovich, r third ; and Sharon Esaki and Samantha ·r Kine, honorable mentions. Drawings: older children -Jeanmarie Zimmerman, first ; Terrie Bangoy, sec- " ond ; Ed Deloge, third; and Dan Deloge "' and Susan Gl'OS!I, honorable mentions. Yeutger cltiJdren -Wendy E~ki, first; , .. Sharon Esaki, second; Eliz abet h .. Knowles, third; and Ton\m.y McNarriara, honorable mention. evaluation about the future of horses here before we make any defmitive trails recommendations," Selich said. In June, 1972, the city council gave general approval to the concept of b1-1ilding 132 miles of recreational trails, to include 60 miles for bicycles, 60 miles for walkers and joggers and 12 miles for equestrian use. So far, the beach city has built five miles of those trails, all for bicycles. From Page 1 : Oil Painting" Lilll Brehn, first; Patti ~ .Mullin<, seoood ; Madeline Villacres, KJSSINGER • third; and Lynn Stover and Mike Vowels,. • • J' .honorable mentions . • i ' , ' • • ~ \ \ • . DAILY PILOT "' SOviet Union and China . Kissinger acknowledged that the U.S. people and government "have someUmes been disappointed because this organiza- tion has not been more succeaslul in lranslating the hopes for universal peace of its architects Into concrete ac- complishments." _ ~,· • Tf1.t Or11•11• c:oeu DAILY PILOT w!l!I Wfli(J'I h CllfY'Obll\e(I "'9 Htw1.Pr1u .. 11 P\IOli-"" INI 0r•"9"' Coe•! P~bllsl'tln; Compeny. s.pe. rile fdll~ '" pt,lblllMO, MON11y llotO\IVh ,_rtdl'I', tw (Olli MIU, Nrwpor! at~ ~l#'lllllflon l11tll/1'-T10! \llllty, l.ll0- 1....,., 1r .. 1n1/s.cklltbld1 11'id kn Clsm•"''' kn Jwn CtplllttllO. A 1"'9!1 'fV'-1 tllJlt"" lo. ,ulllllolwd S.l\ney• .tfld ~Yt. Tlw ,nnc1p11 ""*1!dll"9 1111"1 It ti UI Wot ..,. ltnie .. ~It M .. , C.11'-mlt, '2111'. While he has in the past generally been scornful of the ability or the United Na- tions to deal with major political issues in a troubled world, Kissinger said that "despite our disappointments, my coun- try remains committed to the goal of a world community. We will conUnue to work in this Parliament of Man to make it ~reality." , .f · ,, • . r !. " ·' t • Jlo~trf H. W1M ~.,.. .. llbl ...... J1c~ R. C11rl1y ~ ,,,.....,. .,.,, ~ti MM\91W "'-•• tt: ... a .. ... ~ n. ..... , A.. "4lill'plii111 M ...... i"tbl* (i.,IH H. Lo.1 • l lc.ti1r4 "· Nill A.NltlU!t Mtili.ltifW Elll!Wrl T1trv Colllfllt ... °''"" c:.w.ry lllltor .............. OMcie 17t11 h•c.•<1o111 .... ,,.. •MtiftAi .udr1111 ,.0 . 111 1f0. t2MI ---L...-a.Mt!f·#t ll«nl ,._ (.Mii r.:-c:=·· W..t .. , 'tr'Mt ,....,.,. : IS» ,...,.._e..,i~,,,, .... ,..._...: JOI ffOt1tl f l Cam"" It~ . ,,. .... , ,,,,, '4J-4Jl1 .a ·••• 'c ;:•ts••• MJ.,,,. ..,.. ... ., ... c.-t ~-~ .... ·~ .. ~ ~ '""" °""""' c.MJ ~, ... ' ~' ... _. ...,..,, .,.._, ..•. ................. ., .. "* ...... _fltf'tlfl _. ......... "" .......... ""' .... ., ~ .,,,.,. ..... --.:---::..r~~ = ~ =QM~-,.... •..• .......,,......., -.... ,,......,,., . . ' . The .ecretary o! State expressed con· · tir.uing saUsfactloo over the llUCCffSe5 o! AmericaD diplomacy iii deallni with Moscow and Peking, and also spoke with gratification of the tension-easing effort ot the two Gennanles and North and South Kor<a. From Page 1 HUNT ... . be , was -recruited by CollOn to do clandestine work for tho White House ~ftCr ~bla retirement in 1970 from the CJA. Colloq has relused M> testify befo,.. the -committee on &rounds that he Is 1 target ot grand jury Investigation lnM> the 'Ellsberg tncldtl!t. He last week tnvokod the Fifth Amendment at p r t v a t e meetings wJth the rommittee. ' I Weinberger, Baker Top UCl Spea'k~rs Sen. 1-loward Baker (D.Tenn.), of the Senate Watergate Committee and Caspar \Veinberger, U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare top the list of speakers to appear at UC Irvine during the upcoming school year. Announcement of the speakers was made in Orienta~on Week materials sent to UCl's 7 ,000 students. "O" Week nms lhroogb Friday. I Senator Baker, vice chairman of the Senate committee, is scheduled to appear in mdi·February about two weeks before th~ release of the committee's report on 1972 Presidential election campaign prac- tices. No date bas been established for We.lnberger's address, according to Marie Vanes, assistant dean of student affairs. Others who will address students dur- ing the school year include U.S. Senator John V. Twtney (D-Callf.), state Assembly "Speaker Robert Mcrettl (D-Lcs Angeles) Assemblyman Willie Brown (0-San. Franc:ilco), chairman o! the Ways and Means Committee and Aileen Hernandez, former president o! the Na- tional OrganJzation o! Women (NOW). Names of. other !pe&kers will be an- nounced later in the school year after arrangements are firmed up, said Mrs. Vance. The speakers program is one of several new projects undertaken by the student affairs office under the direction of Jack Hoy, vice chancellor. Alert Citize1i Foils Train W reek Plans Vandals apparenUy lnlent on clerailtng a palling train en San Clemente'• beachfront tr 1ck1 stacked eight large trash cana filled with sand ca the ~ SUnday. But before a train came tbroUgb, a resident nollcod the otack cl heavy cana and pbonod police . The lnddent~u noUcod shOrtlY efter 3 a.m. S and a resJdtnt first tried to e the cans himself. . But they we,.. too heavy to be moved by one man. Police said they ·were tbell calkd and patrolm•n aletted dlloatchera !or the Santa Fe Rall Rdi~ ao that all tra~ could be alcpped. Alter Iha~ of!loert -t lo llJe beach and lugg«VU.e caril of! the tracks . The cans ...,.. then emptied and talctn to the ell,)' yaids. ' I Boane• F.inaneecl • • Did · IXOll Use · ' ' I . " Income Tax~s?· Hanna Taloos County's Bid To Conwe:ss, Rep. JUcbanl Hanna ([).Wes-er) 'hll tau..,, er-.: GolrltJ'td blct." !or federal eourtlaclllU<l'-<Olllcie In the rorm o! lqlslatloa: ·' "· Hanna's bill, which -provldel .for •· decentralizaUon -o! !tdonl l •d 1 es · throughout the qatlon, mak,. a provlllon for a branch o! the Dlalrlct Court In Los Angeles to alt ID Santa Ana. "The time bu come for !OCUl!ng at- tention on the -!or a !ede!il court !adllty In Orange County," -llald. "I'm hopeful that the bW I've cbl»ell to bring tl\ls nuitter. to the att"11lan cl Congress will bring about ~tloo during thil session." Previous attempt&. tO route federal judgeo inM> Orange Counlf have llJ!o11; Gunshot Victim ~~m~ fo~•P:,in:t ~ judges -one of whom could be ba.sed in D• • Co f the eounty. leS Ill UD y Hanna saya the j111tlficatlon !or ID Orange County federal bench llea tn tile \ the down payment on the Nixon hoost . \vas drawn from this trust 1ccount. ''Superficially. the account look8 much lik'e those ln "•hich f\-1r. K!llmbach, a~ oustee. bad held campaign funds .'' ~ 11mes said, "However, competent sources havP said thjs account was establi shed with a SI00,000 check from f\-1r . Nixon's personal funds, and then enfarged with a $450,000 check from M1 . Abplanalp . Mr. and Mrs. Nixon l.igned an unsecured promissory note fer the mooey." White House accounts of the reaJ est.ale transaC1J.oos abow that Nixon speilt $392,S:Z:L of bis personal funds for tus K~y Biscayne property and $1 ,200,69'2 for his San Clemente heme. "Or this total cl lt,593.213 spent by Ihe President, It Is possible to locate . the source of only f790 ,000, which Mr. Nixon borrowed. lncludJng $625 .000 Crom Roh<'.rt Ji. Abplanalp. th e millionQirc 1n· dustrialist," lhe Ti1nes said. A part or this loan was eventually assumed by C.<.~. Rebozo: anot~r presidential friend. t ha \\'.hlle House bas said . Beef Prices, Supply Near ·~i ' . Normal Level By Ille A11ocl11ed PT<11 It'• lwc weeks since the beef ceiling was lifted atf4 '"supermarket shoppers across the....Guntry today ICUftd that prices and supplies were back to normal. No one wanted to predict \\'hat would happen next, however. An Auociatcd Press survey sho\\'cd .mo.st beef prices were at or below their freeze level. Increases and ~ea.ses on individual items generally balanced each other out. Retailers repdrled there w1s no rush by shoppe,. to bOy beef, which had·been in short supply during the freeie. Some expen. oaid people dlanged their eating habits Ind just sot Wied M> other foods. Cattle prices at livestock markets dedtned from a high er abcul eo ceol! per pound to 45 cents a pound or less and the dtop was reflected at the meat couottt. "The ,Ocw of the product ts back to ntma1r 111• lienii'tbs, ~dint of aou Brothen h-feat Packers Inc. of Phis;'"""" ts= o! ~ on th< 9 """' ~ · n' 1 urigl, a butcher for )oe Wigley ldf.lta of Delnllt, said bis store stopped offetUt(: bbnemeat far sate, a practlce Ille at«e liefan tlt1I ownmer !or the firs< tln\e since W0rld War II. · "We've tot more than enouah beef," he llld, a~ that sales were "running like normal' at prices averaging 30 cents per pol!lld below mldaummer levell. At""" for Public Supermarkets In aaJd, "Beel prtcea are just about the aame now as \bey were before the ceiling, Eggs have come dovm." The up-and-down character of prices w11 refleded at Giant Food st«es in the Wllll!ncton, D.C. o.rea. Hun~ ·Careline C®riftlititor Set A man e:OOt at a union ball danct In fact that the population In the gxmty ii Santa Ana Saturday night died Sunday at greater than 75 percent of othef districta Mrs. Betty Phillips Is the neW Santa Ana Community Hospital and in the nation now served by U.S. Judges. voltmtetr coordinator for the Huntlna;ton police are loc>king ror a murder auspect. Tbough Hanna atreaoea hl& bill doel not Beach GareJloe Service. Mrs. Phillipa Joe. S. Sanchez, 41, of Santa Maria, was go so far 11 qrglng creiUori 61 Miolhir wUL-· haridle requests for help, train in the parklng lot of the union haU at 1532 judicial district In Oranee COUntY:; be volunteers, and organize a community E. Chestnut St., with others investigating says It may be a first atep. J'elOUrCle nteml file. the source o! fumes . Hanna said federal court lacUlUes The · ~line ii co-spoosorod by the Invealigatora said an un(denUfied could be located In the new. !;ilero) Hunlinl\Oll Beach Community Services person In a car driving through the Jot bullding due !or complellaa.nat-SprlD& --Colmdf Ind the HtmtllJllcn Bead> Public shot Sancbez_. _________ _::ln.:..::the::....:co:::un::::ty d•lc centet. · Library. Adntlrol 3-0-Dupln• ' No-Dellaellng F-/llftlgerlW The ulti,,,.te in Admir•I "Pt.nned Conveni· once" dosign . Upper freellt' for offfn-used items; lower freo,.r for g•nerel froztn food storage. Refrigerator has odju.+oble temper· ed gl•ss shelves. Front-of-d-chilled water dispenw is o greet convenience feoture. And the 1utom1tlc ice moker -·lets you rvn out of ice, .,. ADMIRAL UST PllCI 699 DUNLAP P,RICI 59995 . • • • • w. Dtllftr COLD-CAii ·CAllOUI& .1 I f Nixon IDrders Ueltl.p s1a11tlfi .. . 'Hunt Stepped Up . , For Accomplices Orange County Sherill's olflcen today stepped up thm search for two ac-- compll~ ol. a man who was shot and killed In the act of robbing the Dana Villa Motel In Dana Point. Police 'throogbout California have been glven the description of a small red car -believed to be a Renault _: In which ,.....,,.,. $1.2 Million Awarded 4 In Accident Dovld GriDdeland, 21, of El Modena is • believed to have died n the auto oped away from the motel Frid>y night. Grindeland'• body was dumped oo a · lawn in the TusUn area about 45 minutes later. Sheriff's officers saJd be had been shot in the chest, face and hand. · Those bullets were fired by motel owner 'Louis Joseph Haffner, 6S, who told officers be heard Grindeland threatening his wife, Mary, 62, and rushed to the lob- by to help her. - H3f!ner sai .. he fired a number of shots at the intruder who simuJated possession of a weapon u he l~ned over the coud'ter and scooped up. the motel receipta while he threatened Mrs. Haff- ner. 1 Haffner and Grindeland staggered, clutched his chest and stumbled to the car containlag two men. I . . Action .on • Gas Cost Panel Gets Word To Expedite WASIDNGTON (AP)-Pr<lidenl Nixon told the Cost ol Living COUncl1 today to act tbts' week to lncttase the retail price of ifuollne . Aeling as 101110 _.ice stalloos c1-d down to protest Phue 4 prldng policios, the President got assurances from Cost ol Living Coundl Dlr<ctor Jolm Dunlop STATE STATIONS REOPEN- TUESOAY, Story PIPS that the panel would try to speed action on the Issue. White House Deputy· Press Secret1ry Gerald L. 'Warren said the councll already concluded that an increase in retail gasoline prices ts needed and bad been loilowtng 1 ttmetabie that would D111ty-,..., stiff .....,.. have placed the increase into effect Oct. Flom Wire Senlces LOS-ANG!lLES-A-lamily-of-loor penons bas accepted a •u million set· Oflioerl iald cwitomer• leaving a nearby restaurant confirmed the motel owners ltltement thiit two-men-were-in the waiting vehicle and that ooe leaned rut and . poiM the la tally wounded Grindeland Into the car. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO HISTORY BUFFS HOPE TO SAVE ANCfENT MIGUEL PARRA ADOBE 2· lr11<IUff-D11ing·Blck-to-llOOHtlf1Clo.l-n-Wiy of Acclll to-Hou.lng-0.volopmenl~-----"The President asked Dr. Dunlop lo --• expodil.-thi.-mau.r~- aituatlon as quickly as possible and get a decision out tbb week," Warren Aki. •· Uement stemming from a nightmarish accident in which they were acalded and aearred four years ago , when a 1917 Stanley Steamer auto exploded during an Old Timers' parade at KnoU'• Berry Farm in Buena Park. The elderly couple aboard the steam- pawered car which had ~ restored by a commercial firm died of their own burns following the accident. Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt said today that no charges will he filed against Hallller. "Our investigation of the incident enUreJy corroborates the· ac· count he gave us," he said. Miguel rarra Threatened? "Dr. Dunlop assured the Pmldeot that be would," Wureo aald. Northern mcf C.Otrol Caluomi1 go» line slatioo opera-happily daimed I Victory today -1n their -1<end shutmwn lollowini the .-mcemenl Broadbelt said this morning he is satiafied that Grindeland ls the man \Vho a short time earlier attempted to rob the Kentucky fried chicken restaurapt across the au.e: from the Dana Villa moteL Developers, Historical Society Battle Erupting "BeautlfUI, beautiful," Bob Moott, executive secretary of the California Service Slattoo Deolers As>octattoo, said · William and Jo Anne Schutz and their two d>ugbtera, Christina, 8, and Cynthia, 11, origlnally asked $1.75 million in general dainages and $1 million for men· ta! suffering. The family sullered bums. scars, permanent disabU.ities and emo- tional problems which r e q u l r e d psychiatric care. The Schulzes we.re spectators at a parade fealurlng .anUque cars on April J&. 1959, when the old Stanley Steamer exploded, killing the two occupants, Wayne and Elizabeth Nutting. The settlement includes •105,0CIO to he paid lrom the estates ol the Nuttings. : Two Die as Car • By JOHN VALTERZA Of !tie D•ilY Pllet St•ff J h G • } A San Juan Capistrano adobe which . osep CIS er, bas a history dating baet to the early days of "the missim has suddenly erupted AnahelID• City , as a cause ceiebre In a hatUe-hetween a land -developer and tbe-city!s~bistorical society; · Attorney' Dies The Miguel Parra adobe which sits hid- den among dying orange trees along Ortega Highway lies in the path of a road Jooepb B. Geisler. a decorated war to a housing tract proposed by hero lllid <ity 11torney for the city ol Leadership Housing Systems: Anaheim since 1953, died Sunday after a· • But planning commissiooen as well as long liPl.~ C8llC<f. He was 53. -history bulls have launched a fight to re- Mr. G.!iiOr. 1 ljivf !lrlew nativ1 woo lain-the structure·-housing tract"' not. moved to Califomta1 ln 19&5, was a Navy . The first hints that the structure was · Smashes ';Pillar,1 ·pilot during World· War ll .. His exploits ln d~er caIJ)e last week when the :'t won! blnl" . ._ ,...,,,,!:,...... and1the flm>-.; ¢j1Vb:Dtlmental .llnpaet statement n Dlltllllulsbed~ crou.·one of the 1EiRl~'Wflj'fru'e\v!a liY cotntllissiobers ., -ii . ,i_,' Two men were kllle~f Saturday . :«hen~ their car went oul of control on the Riverside Freeway in Orange COUnty and " highest boors for a inllliary pUot. who lelt there was a gap In tbe data. ,Aft.er the war, Mr. Geisler l\lent to law The a4obe was not mentioned in the . IChool, earning his degree at the statement. P 1 a n n 1 n g commissioners University ol ·Wuhlnilon In 1950. agreed that· the Em would have ta be Bu~ through the generations, the struc-~e!8"°~nu:':ct::~s is the CUY we redone . ture was rarely left empty. Warren sa.M be was announcing the Spokesmen for the developer said the As it stands today, the Un-roo(ed struc-President's imtructions to Dunlop, wbiah building was not included in the draft ture shows signs of extensive efforts to were relayed through aldes, ln an effort because of a misimpression· by the staff presetve It. to "clear up whatever confualon. remains of the true signific.ance of the structure Decades ago someone strengthened the in the price GI (uoline.11 , which.. is completely shrouded with trees walls with steel rods · bolted at each end Asked whetbe( Nixon wanted 1e1'Yice on three sides. to woocl blocks so that walla would-not statlona to-ltly open, Wamn respondod, They promised to add it to the Impact coiia-outward. "The _P!OJldeat would not attempt to statement for the commission's next ...... counsel dealers on 6i:rw to operate tbeit session. 1be roof .is recent, but the interior has own individual atatiODI." But the promise still does nothing to the smell and look of an ancient dwelllng. There hive been acattend clootnp by resolve the late of the Miguel · Parra Tbiek, 'stucco waU. -piesumabiy the independent ptollne ~ lo proldt Adobe -one of San Juan's lasl, intact, original Interior -·"•• v1~-· Pbue 4 ~ • -'ine· ~'IS WU"e~ adobes. ~--·· ""'." ~-percent o( the lllUom 111· IJltllonopoli1 Experts in local htsWry llY the re<> .. ~~dl~-~.;:t~ -today.Same .. -· .. ..,.... .. tanguiar stnicture was built prilliarily bl u.:.,,,.. . ' the· W..,.,,...., 1>.C. .,... lodly. for use to store ·crops and equipment by e .,. aged windows. _ , w.,..... would' not MY how mDcll the Indians who ttlled misli<IQ lalldLeuiy ID .. p~ ~.arellemostts •• ~Jlqj~,~~ ~ ~ ,~,, nlall o-lillt the 19th"""t""· -; 1 1 A~ Mri: MMY • ..., .. ~.,,, price I!> '° up. lllil ... Nld ]odlJi* Through the years local lore = 1 · the wife ol former San Juan Mayor Tony stateinenll conllinod "no Implied ie1Juke "jail" label on the building al it Forster, a descelldant of the earilest set-to the Colt of Llvlnc Councll." never served as ooe. tlera of the valley. Mrs. Fonter waged the initial battle to· * * * save the structure before planning com. • hit a concrete p(Jl1r.,. •·•· Jolm D. Schober, 18, ol San Dimas and Arden Klioe, 42, ol Rowianc! Heights. were· lillled when the car Jn :Which they· were riding westbound On the freeway went out of control and struck a p:irtioo of the 'l'llatin Avenue overpass. A tblrd man, Fred J. Slrona, 13, of San Dimas, was critically lnJurtd. Mr. Geisler worked for several year. as a oorportte 1a..,.,. in Beverly HUis and joinod the Anabelm legal atall in 11157. He was.mmed-clty attorney als yean later. He was a mmiber ol the California and 0raace County bar auociatiool. the Na· tional Institute qt Municipal Law Officers and the Ietal division of the American Public Power Assoet.tion. Clemente Boy Mauled In Front .Yard by Coyot,e missioners, a.....ung that the .tr-.. Stations Intend should be preoervecl at all oosts. On Friday, she said that ai>e and Iellow history bulla are cmv9-I that -the •truclun! should be saved lllrouC)1 a cem- promise with the develop<r, but-that .... 1ng·1t ts only a small part of the pnibiem. "The adobe is I prime Clodidlle for mtoratioo and that .. the ,... """"'" right now. 'To Remain Open In Coast Cities , • Reverse Pxognosticato1· Scores With_lV eather ~ . .__ ___ _ ' • • I • • 1 J By JORN ZALLER -Of .. Dlffr .......... •If Any of you attributed SUnday's beautiful -!her -tho first aunny <t>y in a month -to the lacj that SUnday was the first d>y of autumn, you ...re mistaken. The first day of laU had notbJni to do witb il What caused the good weather yesterday was me, the. guy wh6 wtote the weather forecast In the newspaper predicting ck>Uds, overcast. and drizzle5. Considering how geoulllely beautiful ·wos tbe day and how dismal wu my forecast, you may wpnder why I'm ad· · milting my fallure . The~ are two reasons. Firs~ all I did• was to write clown what the National Weather ~ce told' me. I can't be blamed !or that. Bur SECOND, I think my forecasts Performed aomethlng or a public service. You "!'f., rve gotten io be the mo11·00torrouily poor weather l~ter ID ~ Wbalever I say, the op. posite is sure to happen. rALua Till, ror example, the last time t wrote a --· wuther ·roreeast, which wu In August II had been cioucb'' au week, but the weatherman told me lt woWd be 1111111,Y. AecordiDrlY. I piodleted oun. And tblnldng I had aome inside lnlormatloa about how ni<e the tioadiet would he, I lnvtled """" friends from tlie Rivenide areo mwn to-Newport to lbare the pod -ther with me. THE FRIENDS arrived, but tbl! 1ood weather didn'L Bearlnl au tbi1 in mind Jut Saturday night when I sat clown to write the weather story, I toyed with a trick to bring {IOod wutber. 1 OOlllldered that a forecut ol snow mi«bt be help!UI. Somelbioa tin: "Ill on ellort lo tOl'tlsta\i more nonde!Cript. overust days, "'°" bu been )X'Odlctod Sunday !or the Orange Coast. It is predicted that 6110W wtU becln falllnl In the momtng lllid eoritinu until nl1hU1ll." If anytbi"I could preciplt.te a heat waw, I knew that would do it. • . ' BUT MY C0111Cience ;..,.ldn't let me .,iii that foreclst In the newspaper. Instead, I "uck to the factl ol .what I wu told by l~!f'I WNtber Serv1co and predicted that for the l2nd day Jn 1 -, au ~tur,. wore ex peeled on tho 0r..,. Gout alone with tba "'111 ovorout ""' foJ. And llnc:e.I tak• my reportinl oer!OU1ly, I -that predlction.~ny. I wanted to copvey to our readers as IOCllllte ,a ~ or the -llioo 11 I could. I shotlid' have tnown better . .......,. up tMrt llOlle.d my effart1, and with I little loll mloule illrrlnl of tba air d•H, flJf1 hroeut WU undone. -' -- " ' The elusive coyote responsible for a .summer-long spree of attacks at San C1emente State Park mauled a :J..year-old San a emente boy as the youngster st<>® on the front lawn of his home S1mday afterooOn. • • Tbe animal , deemed by the victim's mother· nearly a "neighborhood pet" in the exclusive Riviera colony, cr~t up behind Bartley Edward Ashbau t at about 5 p.m. as the -youngster ld a garden hose. .3lle.j)O)'Ole bit the hoy on the ba<k and aide, then walked away calmly when the boy's screams brought bis mother. Police said that as a standard precau- tion the boy would have to begin the seriet: of injections to. imtbunile· him ag~t r!ibies. Barj.ley was given emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hoap(tai al!er the attacl:. The animal, a small example of the common species of wild dog, is believed to be the same one which has attacked more than a dozen campers at the state park nearby through the summer months. The e.lusive predator has cOnfiood ,his attacks to the weekends aDd despite all attempts at ~apping and stalking, rangers, police anQ animal control of· ricers have not been able to capture Or shoot the coyote. After Sunday's altacK police said several residents reported sighting tho animal and at ooe point animal controf officers found"1fil: coyote, but in each case a clear shot w~ impossible because of houses and people, officers said. The youngster's mother, Mrs. Sally Ashbaugh~ told officers that many of her neighbors had been feeding the animal over the past several moatbs, reinforcing official theories that the animal bas Jost its fear of man. Piranha River ' Deaths-Feared QUEDAS DO IGUAZIJ, Brazil (AP) -OU!ctals !ear that miny of the persons who died when .a riverboat sank near here may have been eaten by piranha, the· voracious freshwater fish . The riverboat reportedly sank due to excess weight. At iea.st 120 penona ~ere said to be aboard, and more than 40 were believed to have gone dowil with the boat. Only one body his been lound, of. ficiala .said-&mday. uFor its age, ft is in remarkable con- ditioo and I would 'think that 111Y land developer . lucky enough to h 1 v e something that signifielnt on his land would tum it into aomethinf be and the residents could he proud ol,' ai>e said. The aoclety. wbicb met last W<eit to discuss the fate of the relic, feels 50 strongly about the lBsue, she added, that a major fund--ralsing project is being considered to raise the cash for a Ml restoration. "The developer his offend lo take it apart brict-by-brlclt and relocate the adobe, but we're opposed to that because It takea Intricate .-.rd> by experts. ll's slgniticant when! it ts because' that'• wllere -tbe -lndlans tmded the -crops," Mrs. "Forster said. To raise· the cash necessary for restoraUoo, she added, the aoc:iety ts planning regular Satunfly nJldni tours of the ~t of San Juan'1 adobes closer to the mission. Tentative plans eaJI for charging patrons of the tour a nominal sum ta join in the walk and hear guides describe the history of many downtown buildlnp which were lucky enough to be ·11.ved or restored. "There Is no way that we're IOfng to allow that adobe to be torn down," Mrs. Forster stated flatly. "We're going to save It." 'ltlentaU11 Tortured' ' Martha Wants Johll-Baek NEW YORK (AP) -Martha Mitchell uys she feels mentally tortured and abandoned -and wanls her husband hack. ·''The suggestion of divorce has only been t h r o u a: h the media," said the wile d former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell in an NBC News program broadcast Sunday night. • , , Mitchel~ ~ indictment on obstruc- tion 'o! J1f!1""' aod otbu charges. reportedly walked out of their Filllt ·'Avenue apartmtnl l!IO -u 1110. "Well, I gum be'1 lllad at me !or 'lhrolrinll !iii clotMI 6ut !or '*'" thing," Mra. Mitchell aal4 Id tbl! NBC !Dtervlow, "M<rlllell l llibl(lll! JUst, he thlnU that I'm just overly """'ihl and that I ahouid ··- hive, have oome kind ol w.. But I'm lboolutely notf1inr -with me, ex· not, I'm not at all." copt I'm mentally tortured ln>m the toi- Mra. Mitchell said the.clothing lncldent lure I'm being put tluwch." Involved tbroWlng a "lew Uos and a lew Asked whether she had -holpltaliz. shtrls"' Into a loyer became "I got mad ed lor a nervous allmelil, Mrs. Mi·~-11 like any woman does11 after no one w;u111: bothered to tell her about a postponc-replied : "I've never -committed to ment of ber huaband'1 trial. anything ... except the IOOd of my coun- "Would you like him to come hack!" try." Mrt1. MitebeU wu uked. Her hll!band and ex-Commerce She r~Ued : "OI course, of course.'' Secretary Maurice It Stans.,. ICC1lled Mn. Mitchell said she wanted to ol obstruction, conapinlcy and perjll:y counler 4'ne:StY horrible ,1 t o rt e s ' ' for aUeged1y lnterfertna with a circulated about her. Se'c:ur!Ues and El""-Oommlaaion 1no "I decldetl it was ·ume !or me to tell vest111Uoa of llnlndef llollert L. Veoco the American public that I am sitting In : alter, Veoco 1111de I -.! Slll0,000 .,... l1IY aportmenf, rm perfectly copable of trlbutlon to Prelldenl -·· 1172 c:am-doln& anything I want to do and tbl!n! 'a palgn. By L. PEI Ek 1C111EG .... 0., ....... The masalve lhiiido.m o1 poo1ine .... I lloos In Nortbem CalJl<rnil •till ·-no lilJll of spreadJni . to Souti.rn Calilemia or the Orqe Cout, .to.D, i'Dot spot auney lndlceted today. Service stattoo opera-Interviewed In Huntingtoa Beach, Laguna Beach, Colla Mesa lllid Newport Beach all 11Y they Intend to stay open -u \ona IS they have 1uollne to .. u. · "We're a. rielahborbOod 111 stat.kn l6d we have rquia1' cwitomera wbo dopOild oil us •• Thll wboie lhiDI ... 't their !nit," says-. w.,.. _who 1111po lltl- hulbond,..,....Alller'..,•1 -v.,;ie U--· llil Mimi AY'-, "cootio --. ' · The Norlbenf ~ proleot In 1111 third cla1 ""' cal· 1Vlliable ............ pU..-to -tbett ID haU. "We would anly be bllr11ng ouraelfto JI ,.. tried Iha~' I don't oee whit u.n- lryloc "'.-nplllb,'' says KJDio Jamtt who operatel a Mobil station 1t Beach Boulevard 11111 Sliter A veouo In fflm. llnltGtl BeadL I •''I iru pfttty lllr)lrised to sea those dellen are clo&ac that," be aa.J.d. "1bat's DOl the way to handle it." "There'• no w1y to tell how much ~ they're Joalnc," Jamtt aaid. "I can1 afi,rd to clooe clowD and llJow my l!l1llir Cllllomen to .10 IODllwbeni else. • ..,,.,,.,., lllble lo find -they llb better -KbDo,.. ha 1114. "f Altbcluab I 'doubt lt. H Geom Perlln, wbo bas __ lltlllllllns Pl In lllllloo -since they liMtilM the 111!11. -with Jamil . ' "!. have .., plonl will1*Ver to· - ..... .. he said. '""-bas been - -it but the ~ble -will ...,_.. ' hrtln pointed out lhat the federal coat of LMnc Coundi -·-price -onpoollnehaathedellenlO~-· bu pnonJied to allow I price -of Hone .. two ef:Dtl'I by Ocl 1. "I\ ~ ha !Golilll ................ ol aometblna that'• llnltlJ In the WOIU," ~IIO aakt. Keith J-who owm ~hf Tulco lllltaiuno Buell -... ·-'t know wlllt to do. ' For the time bolls llo'1 ..,... -. I ··w1 don't •mo.. wltat to dO. ll'U c1a- ponc1 on~olaa,'' ba """-' "U tbe1 ""1 ..... 'ft'l lllJ -bat If evt11boc1J ollO .... 1D11 11 ._ 1tb ft'lr iel -1p 11 ..., 11J to 11111' -we"ll doae down IDo," Jt' im 11111. I • • , , I 1. " • ~ 4 DAllY l'llOT Mond&Y, Septtmbtt 24, 1'97'' Skylahhers P-acking Up for ~rip Home with Tom '"'phine ., ·.:•::· .. .. ·-1 More Type Of Pollution HOUSTON <UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts stuUed the accumulated booty of two months of orbital research into the close quarters of their fel'Ty spacecraft today and made tinal preparations for a Tue,sday afternoon splashdown off the coast of Callfoml•. Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lotisma also ·fiddled ror tbe final tlme -they hopt.'<i -with 11: space sta· lion 5ystrou problem prior to unhoOking the Apollo ferry ship for the short trip home TUE THR·EE aStronaut.s were ex- pocted to land at 3:20 p.m. (PDT) Tues· day in the Pacific Ocean 22.f miles sou thwest of San Diego. The weather conditions for the splashdOWJl pglnl were ~~cted to be satisfactory with 17 1nlle per hour winds, waves of five feet, 10.mlle visibility and &cattered clouds at 1,800 feet. Flight controllers saJd H\ll'ricane Jrah, located several hundreds miles &0uth ot Baja caJJfomla, should pose no threat to the recovery. The storm had 8$ m.p.h .. winds and was moving at l t m.p.h. toward the pi-edicted splashdown point •11 WONDER IF there's not a hur- ricane ju.st \o the north of our location up here?" asked Garriott as the 1tatJon . passed 270 miles above Baja. "It'.1 the best developed hurricane that 1 think we've seen with a very clear eye." Sunday was packing day and the space fliers cran1med 77 ,600 pictures of the sun and 18 miles of photographs of the earth into the smaJJ Apollo Craft. It wasn't an easy job. "l kind or Uken this stowage business to if you are going on a six weeks vaca· lion Md you 're going in a Volkswagen and -you had to pack the whole family and had to do it by re1note control," flight director Niel~ Hµtchlnson and Sun· day . Mil•s Troveled : 2•,4 l 3,122 MP011 26.9 APOLLO HOLD YOUR BREATH -Eve>¥ day in every v.•ay, we keep getting Every day in every V!'ay, v.·e keep getting told that things are V.'Orse and worse. t-.lainly this is attributed to everything we eat, drink or breathe. Pollution, friends, is everywhere. It lurks about to snuff you out like Jack the Ripper. .Argentinians Bejoi~e Near Landslide Places Jua1i Peron Back iii Power Alas, it is depressing. You can't pick up a newspa per or magazine or tum on lhe radio or boob tube without learning of some new and novel way in which pollutants are going to do you in. The federals may have just discovered there is afa s-gaffus in your favorite in- stant breakfast. Fumes from you r underarm spray might CQlJapse your lungs. MOTOR CARS AND F ACTOR!ES are belching forth all kinds or oa some gasses. Oceans~are filled wlth t~rrible li- quids. It goes on and on. And now , into the news right here on our very own Orange Coast, another menace to mankind is being probed. It is the rubber automobile tire. Some shakerwnd·movers in Lagwia Beach discovered a blackened banana tree on the main stem of the Art Colony's buslness district. which is Fores t Avenue. \Vhat turned the -lovely green banana tree so dark? They pondered this. A study was lawiched. It was determined that the ebo11)'. hue was actually rubber dust ~·hich allegedly ca me from auto tires. And this was a banana tree, not a rubber tree. ONE OF THE GREATER mysteries, of course, is howcome all that rubber get ground off of tireS along a street like l"orest Avenue? For those unacquainted wtth lhe Art Colony's main business stem. it should be noted for the record that this stretch of p8vement will hard1y qualify for a speedv.•ay. Autos creep down it bumper to bumpcr.-rruys have been known to go to sleep just waiting to move on. Anr\\'ay. some of the city brass got to \\·orrying 1r auto tires left so much dust on the banana tree. what in the ·world could if be doing to the, inside or Lagwia lungs? Thus a Laguna study \\'Rs launched to determine Yi ho else n1ight be studying the harm ful effects of tire dust fallout. . . SO FAR, IT HAS been determined that some tire dust studies are under way in Ann Arbor, 1'1ich . and North Carolina, some distances from our Orange Coast. Further. some laboratory tests have sug· gested that chemicals used in makipg tires i;io bad things inside the lungs of animals. It \\·as also learned that the Orange County Air Pollution Control District could come to Laguna in a mobile lUlit and monitor for dust. But not just ti re dust. They can 't isolate it. - ff you th ink about it. you have to ~up­ pose that tire rubber goes somewhere. It !'lurely doesn 't stay on the tires too loog . SO NEXT \'OU WONDER if Laguna Beach authorities prove lire dust is bad and is also-floating about in the air, \\'hat gets done ~bout it ? ~ Start maliing tirciS out of soybeans? Return to the wooden v.·heel? Build big \•acuum cleaners to suck up the rubber fallout? Of course, you can always ban the -motor car. -Many ~·ould favor that. But then you have the problem or rubber fall· out from bicycle tires. Or the other kind or fallout from horses. That's the trouble with discovering new kinds of pollution. All or a sudden rou need a new kind or solu tion. A:1iotlie1• Battle? Am,erican pianist Susan Starr . _ ha s challenged virtuoso Van Cli- burn to a musical battle of the sexes. Following the Riggs-King tennis match, the 30-year-old Miss Starr said she wanted to be pitted against Cli burn and other known keyboard artists. Agnew Pt1tting on Gloves For Battle Over Charges WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew .apparenUy intends to stay in office and fight charges of Political .corruption, ~·ith all signs in- dicating he \\-'ill open that fight within the next two or three days. The vice presdient's lawyers reportedly \rerc prepared to file motions in Baltimore's -fede ral court this week' to try to halJ;.lbe ilfveip~Uon of. Agne'v. TODAY A'ITV. Gen. Elliot L . Richardson canceled a speech he;:was scheduled to giVe the t(ational' KssoCia': lion or Cbl'efs o( Police. saying he hid tO stay in Washington because of pressing na tional business. - \Vhile his office declined to be more specific, it seemed apparent that developments ln the Agnew case were at lrast a part of that business. Meanwhile. the Washington Star-Ne\\TS reported that Joel KI in e, a multimillionaire May land land investor. has told federal prosecutors in Baltimore that he acted as a conduit !Or as mucn as $100,000 in cash allegedly funneled to Angew and other Maryland officials. Quoting Unnamed sourt'es. the Star News said ·Kline told the prosecutors he solicited some of the money personally for the officials as purported campaign contributions and th en manipulated . or DAI LY PilOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otlivl.'ry of thl.' 0.1i!y Pl!ot is 9uar <1nlt l.'d MoMll"l'·~rit11y : If rou Ge lie! lllff '"'' ··~· .., S:JO P·'"" t l l! 1ntt ,.._,, l ... W Wilt M ..,.Utlll It ritu. C11i1 •re 1i••n WMll 1:JI p,m. Sal!,trfay l ..C hm<UJ: II yeu "" net "t•I""• ywr lf•Y ty ' t.m. St1U ... ty. er I a.rn. Swntly, ct H t r.f I c....,. will bt 11 .. 119'11 It yev. C•/11 lrw U"un ullf11 H 1.m. Ttlt phOl'll.'S , Mt ll O•t_n1t Covnly .l•••1 ....... '41·ut1 ,. ......... , M11RUntlln 111(11 '"" Wt1lrnln1!" ..••.• s1•111t Ifft (M,..tMt, C1,hlrf11t lt•c~. S111 Ju1n Ct•lt1r1,... 01n1 1'el111. leu!ll L19w11f, ~•tun• Nit u•I .... fH44Jt laundered , some of the money to disguise its donors. THE STAft..NEWS said it could not determine whether Kline gave the money to Agnew and other offi'c.ials as campaign conlribulioos. In another development, A g n e w disclosed over the v.'eekenCI that_he bas 'organized a defense fund :tP.. help defray the costs of defending himself against the allegations.made agaiost him . •' A ''f>Oll ttleue<P on· Stl\day indicates that there i~ cons!~er~ble public SUP.port (or-Agnew to retain hrs office. ·The Gallup pell taken for newsweek magazine showed 66 percent of those questioned felt Agne\v shoulinot resign. But only 40 percent of the 431 persons \vho participated. in the poll thought President NiXO!I was being fair to Agnew. Thirty-five perceot said he was not being fai r to the vice president and 25 p&c.ent had no opinion . THE POLL also showed that 55 percent of Americans disapprove of the way Nix- on is performing his job while 35 percent approve and 10 percent have ·no opinion. Administration officials continue to re- main tight-lipped about the Agnew case. Five Escape Plane Crash GARY. Ind. \AP) -A Gary-based Black Muslim Constellation plane, used for air freight operi!tions between Ollcago and California, crashed on land- ing and burned early today at the Gary Murticipal Airport. TJie five personf aboarQ the plane - all believed to be crewmen -escaped serious injury. Dr. William Douglas, president of the airport's board of commissioners, said the four-engine propeller craft belonged to the Nation of Islam and had been bas- ed in Gary for about 11,2 years. BUENOS AIBES (AP) -Thousands of Argentinians danced, sang and shouted in the , streets of Buenos Aires early today. celebrating the election of 77-year-old Juan D. Peron to the . presjdency from which the military Oustec:i him 18 years ago. - Official returns from Swiday's election gave Peron 7,286,034 votes, or 61.68 per- cent in 54,m of the nation's 55,475 elec- tion districts. RICHARD BALBIN of the • JUAN Plil ON never been in doubt ; the only question was how big the wiruling margin v.·oulil be. . Running "'ith Peron was his third \\'ife, Isabel Martinez, who \\'hen she takes of- fice \vitb her husband on Oct. 12 'Nill become !he Western Hemisphere's first woman vice president. Because of Peron's age and uncertain bealth, she could become the hemisphere's first woman president . "t cannot say anything because the people have done it all ," said Peron in a brief statement lo newsmen. "Now is not the time for me to speak but the lime !or me ,to act." HE ADDED that he might soon make ·•realistic changes_ in A r gent in a ' s economy, but the first order or business is political. After lhe polilical situation is setUed. the economy will arrange itself." Peron's opponents conceded the elec- tion before midnight when it became ob- vious that-he would pass the 50 percent plus ooe vote required for election on the first ballot. . linderlining Person's position as the Chilea1i Troops Searcli Areas A fter Ex plosio1i SANTIAGO IUPII -Army troops laun ched a massive, apartment-by-apart· ment search through a half-mile-square section of downtown Santiago Sunday alter a po\\·erful bomb exploded nea r the U.S. Consulate. The troops reported arresting 50 persons. silencing an underground radio station and burning hundreds of leftist books and pamphlets in the raid. The anny said most of lhe persons ar- rested were foreigners, mainly Bolivians ( __ I_N_S_H_OR_T._ •• _. _..) and Dominicans. scattered rtne shots were heard in the city center Sunday night as anny tanks clanked into position in the curfew--c:leared downtown area. e Sextuplets Thunderstorms Soak U.S. DENVER <A P) -The five surviving Stanek sextuplets, their health Improving steadily. began their second week of life todny. Three of the tiny six-week-prematur_e infan ts -John, Jeffrey and Catherine - are listed in good condition, with first- born John already wearing diapers. I "- N ew S torm Forms for March, on Paci fi c Coastline d«$1loweri I~~"'° 0111 of r•x11 Info Arlc1nus. N11mero11~ lllllflder1llowt'• oarnr>e~ Florid• 11\d 01.,.r1 Un1M'9CI alon<l tl>e New E~lfndocotrtl. " 1~rm In !~e P1clflc Nortf\wett 1c1neree1 rain ln!o ldll'IO 1""' _..,.,n C•lllorn!1 •1 a new 11or-m IOl'm.ci !Cf' • n'lll"Cl'I on Ille c0&1t, s"ow w11 ••otcitd llOwn ~ thf t,000. 1~ ••~I in !lie riott"9f'n C1Jlfoirif1 movn111fts tot111111. R11nt wtrt Ofl'ttr•llY 1!11111, mtt1u.-. f"'I 1e11 than • half 111(11 In mott oltceJ. Skin we,.. clear In IM Grfll L1kt1 reoT~n "rtrl !~ Snut"-'•1. Torn•does we•• 1lgllltd nt•r L1rn1r, Colo.. and vall!'llllnt, Nell.. $1/11d~Y nloh!. Ont·lncll hlll Pflltd SCo tllbluff, Ntb., 11\d Goodltlld. K1n. No l11l11r!11 "''l:,;~~::S:;., bf.~ .,.." ........ ..., from U 11 El'f', Ntv .. to to 1t Kty The other two. Steven and Nalhan, are listed as satisfactory . e l\'eon Blackout GLENEDEN BEACH, Ore. (UPI) - The threat of an electric power shortage in the Pacific Northwest Is so strong that Oregon Gov. Tom McCall Sunday ordered all outdoor lighting not needed for security purposes 10 be tu'1"'d oH starting tooigbl. Western gevernors were also told at · their annual conference that plans for mandatory cuts in electric usage of up to 25 percent should be ready by Nov. 1. e ltlo11e11 ltl eet wC.;~tal Weatl'Mll' NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -'!be United ,.,1, tod••· w 1 vil'l•tl• wfllh States and other Western nations today 1110111 11\d '"°"'11111 116vf'• bfCOmfno fiave the twin crlaes 0£ hunger 11:nd in· wtttHtv 10 to u lcnot• In 111.,._,, al1·0 prior'! Id tod•r 111d Tllffdtt. "'"' toc1•v 111 ,,., n 1 Y over wor monetary ros. refonn at the first meeting of their flve- co.1111 ""'""'''Vf'tt t1"f• frO!ll st da I · 10 n. 1111~ ttmPffttur1t '"~ •rom Y aMua session. S1 1o Ts. w1'-f' ttmPll"I"'" u. The meeUng brought together 3,SOO S11n, M-. Tlflf!I delegates from 126 l n tern a 11on1 l MOttoAv Monetary Fund (IMF) member naUons s1e01111 """ , .. ... • . 1:» 11.m. s.1 -:-the biggest finandal tesalon· ln hi•tory. s.cw • Tiiliiii;.Y t :» p.rn. 0·1 It opened tO the beat Of Afrlcan druml, 1<1n1 No11 -• •1ot 1.m. s.• the cry of Kenyan dancers """'a w.....i.- ""'"' low ••••••••.• 2:S1 1.m. 0.0 f K -.. ••-. hcoN 111011 ···-·~·· . t:it .,.'"' s.• rom eoyan President Jolbo Kenyatta S«'Ond •ow ··•· -Jiu P·""· o. 1 that "the world ca••ot contl•n•• on its $u11 llMt 6:.0 t.m. ftfl •:'7 p.m, '"' ·~ MOIWI ., .. , J;JJ ,,..,_ "''' •:oJ P·"" present course" without di.Sister. biggest force In Argentine· i)olitiC.81 ure, his win of almost landslide proportions far outdistanced the 49.6 percent of the vote that' his standln Hector J. campora got in the el~lion last March against !he same three opPonents. The previous military government barred Peron from that election, and Campora resigned July 13 to make way for his mentor. Only a few incldenJ.s. of violence were reported during t~e yt>ting Sunday in con· Battalion Lost? SoutllV1et trast to guerrilla raids aild union violence during the campaign. The tranquil poll· -ing on a bright spring day erupted. into gleeful and peaceful victory ce lebrations skortly after the polls closed. HORN-HONKING caravans of buses, trucks and cars began to converge on downtown Buenos Aires. An estimated 30,000 jubilant Peronists jammed the Plaza de f\fayo through most of the night. anger ase Overrun by Communists _ F rom Wire Services SA!coi-r --North Vietnam.,. troops, advancing behind a curtain of artillery fire, apparently overran a government . ranger base iR the central highlands of Soulh Vietnam during the weekend, the Saigon conunand announced today. Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, the chief spokesm an for the command, reported radio contact Witll the Le Minh ranger base 23 miles west of Pleiku, was lost Saturday evening after rive hours of heavy fighting . HE SAID TIIE base nine miles fro1n the .Cambodian border was defended by a battalion of about 400 rangers, about half of them Montagnard tribesmen. The opening~N~rth Vietnilmeae barrige knocked out a nwnber of installations at !he base including the radio antenna. Hie'n reported. He said waves of infantrv rushed the wire perimetef ih the wtlte Of the shelling. "\Ve believe the base was ovemm."• sai d Hien. But he l'ep9rted recon- naissance aircraft have spotted surviving rangers still operating in the area around the base. lt was the first time a government camp of such size has been overrun since tbe Jan. 21 cease-fire, and the govern- ment indicated its ca pture could touch off a sharp· incr:ease of fig hting in the central highlands region. "It is our principle lo do the ~e can to retake any territory which has been captured by the Communists since the cease-fire," said Hien. "THE BASE IS located on an in- filtration corridor and we believe they wanted to get rid of it to make their in- tiltration of war materials and troops in· lo Pleiqu and Kontum easier." Meanwhile, Can1bodtan troops went on the offrnsive on all four sides or Phnom Penh today. The sµpply situatio n in Phnom Penh brightened as a river convoy wu reported steamJng toward the capital up tt?e Mekong River. Trouble hit and con- voy, however, about halfway to Phnom Penh, port authorities said, when In- surgents succeeded in setting one of the three freighters· ·afire. The rest of the convoy, consisting of five tankers and a barge, were able to escape damage. THERE ALSO was increased govem- nment actiVity in the notthwestem pro. vince of Battarnbang, cut olf from the rest of the cowtry earlier this month Although details were scare~ Col. An1 ~ng, High Command s)'>Okesman, con· . firmed that there was i~creased fighting Jn Battambang, a province which su~ plies Cambodia with much or Its rice.· In Kompong Cham, the besieged prcr Lady Jane's Not So Sure LONDON (AP) -The Duh ol Wellington's only dAllChter, Lady Jane Wellesley, satd tooiy tb1l 1 ne:wspaper report she ~111 marry Prince Charles was • • u tr t e r nonsense. •t Buckingham Palace said It waa "pure newspaper speculation." "There Is no trutb In the llOI)', and l don'I know where the 'nunor1 came from," 1ald lhe 22-y.,r-old gr<al-grtal-rnnd<lluctiter of tbe hero of Waterloo. "I tlo know Prince Cbarlea, but 80 do a lot of oilier Younr !Prle." , The Hen o1 the World, Whldl " baa Bl1lllo'1 blu .. 1 S,u n d 1 y . ctrculAUoa and aJlo IJ .... ol lls -..... tlonal papers, reported thal t~ belr to !lit -ud ,,, tat1,y~aae ...n iOh!J to p1 ....,. ed. • I vincial capital 50 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. the situation wu rtlaUveJy cabn. In the rour offensives against rebel troops surrowiding the capital, govern- ment troops successfully abushed Com· munist·led troops at Kompong Kontuot, about 12 miles south of the capital. At least fi ve rebels were killed and "many more" were \\'Oun_9cd, the field reporters said. ON O~E OF the fronts, a column or go\•emment troops, backed by prop. driven fighter-bombers , battled through heavy guerrilla territory in a drive to reach besieged Cambodian lroops at the ,·illage of Vihear Suor. 12 mil es east or Phnom Penh. ·Ktmg .Fn Star'!! Death Not Due To Marijuana HONG KONG (AP ) -The American Widow of KW18 Fu film llir Bruce Leo said today she Intends to return to her family ho~ Seattle 11as 9000 a.S flOISi· ble." · 1'-lrs. Linda Lee, daughter of Mrs. v~ vian McCulloogh of Seattle,. too!< hot husband's body back to Seattle •lier he coUapsed and died here July 20, Ihm returned to Kong Kong for the inquest in- to his death. THE INQUEST, which began Sept. 3, ended today When a three-man co~r·s jury returned a verdict of "deat h by misadventure ," a verdict which left still undetermin ed wf1at caused the brain edema (swelling) -that caused Lee 's death. Coroner C. K. E. Tung at the start ol tbe inquest told lite jury !hat an autopoy revealed traces of marijuana ruidue in Lee~s stomach anCi intestines. But after.a string or medical and scientific witnesses testified that the amount v.•as not even enough to make anybody sick and that medical history had no record of a death from marijuana, _ Tung instructed the jwy to nile out marijuana as a possible cau!e of death. The Lees were married in the United States in 1964. They met ~·hile Lee was attending the University of Wa,shlngton . They lived In \he United States tlnlll 1972. when the American-born Chinese actor came to Rong Kong for lhe first or lhe ..11 .. of Kung Fu Chinese flgbtlng lllms that made him famous in Asi a and at· tr8cted. large . audJences in the United Sta tes Ind Europe. BEFOllE' collilrw to Hone Kong, Lee bad tough! kw\g IU In Loo Angeleo, num:bering HollyWQG4 rum a~ors Steve lllcQue<p and •James CObum •mong bis stuilerits. Lee also had f.,tured roles In two televlllon .. 11 .. , •• Kato In "'Ibc Green Hornet" ana as e kung tu ' speetallot In "Lon..,rtet." · Tbt:lr two children, Brandon, 8, and Shlnnolt, 6, have ' been staying "1th relaUves In the Unu.d Slates since they acwmoanied tbelr mother and their fatber'a body .back to Seattle. . - ' Convention Ended COLUMBIA, S.C. (Al') -A group ol Anierlcan Iildtpeodent Parly dilegate. loyal to Gov; !Jtorr• Wall.c. ended • r0or11D111Uoo conYtntlen Sonday wtth ,1 ..-.Uon prllalnr ti, Al•bama ro•""l!lf and Jftn1Ia1n1 to ru~ candldales In lip> ._., -~lecUons. 'l1le lhreHay .,.._ whllou., m called by party membelw wh0-111d Ibey.wore dlU1tlsfied "11h Ille 1eadcralllp of Thomas J. Anderson of Pigeon Eorae. Tenn . I ? • . --, .. -. -• • ' Today's Final . ' N.Y. Stocks / vo~ .. 66, NO. 267, 2 SECTIONS,,26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA , MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1m N TEN CENTS 2 Newj)Ort-MeS8: Graduates -Indict ~ducation, Only five percent ol the 1172 graduates of Coola M-'ind Newport Beach blch ocbools 'believe 111e1r education helped them 11a ereat deal''.ln preparing for ••• U-supporting, productive life."" And in ._... to-the ..,... question, ~ler IO -t ol the Clala ol 1172 -id they re<!'eived '411~ or ., help" at U In preparing for life in the outalde Id. · 1bese ltatisU'cs are contained In a low-up survey of last year's graduates eased by ·tlie NeWjiofl'Mesa:1Jnllted hool District. -· Two-thirds or Newport,Mesa..graduates ---· Prope1·t1 Tax plan Id ciootinue their education at least througb !oar yean ol college. And 81 per· cent al -atudenla said they were able to atteod the oollege of their choice Immediately after ·sraduation, Roapooaea to the IJ<tueation survey were mlled, wllh gra,.11tes.alteroately pralolng the dlelrlct llli' offering many positive ~~. but tndlcting It for (ailing to provide enough relevant educa· tJon. '!be district got Its highest marks for its physical education program, as 56 percent of graduates said it prepared Board Rejects __ / Battin Hearing - By JACK BROBACK Of .. DllllY .......... A hearing had been requested by First District S.pervlsor Robert Battin of San- ta Ana. His appointee to the appeal! board, Frank Manzo,. tried to get it on the aceoda today. · Board Chairman Otto Cbrlstensen "said them for, a life as physically fit In· dividulls. . ' 'lJte district. got its most specific in~ dictment in the area of vocaUonal educa· lion. . or ·the 311 percent of students who are -king raJber than going to school, Ollly seven. percent said the district's voca· tionaI .educ:allon program helped' - tlel their JOba• A narrative conunentary on these stat.iM.lcs :!L.tes: These data indicated the district may not prepare students for the wort world, and raises qliestions whether the district schools are fulfilling • 'their respoaalblllty lo the woational timo to a Oomlllunlty college. education· ftnetlon." The district repart asks : "Do the in- Dne ol the llndinp of the survey Ii that illnlcllGo pro8fams •t the schoOis dll!er 62 peroeot of lut year's graduatea from . IJ\ ways that tupporl these trends? For CoraJa de! Mar High Sdlool are • at-esampie1 do the. programs at Co~ de! tending four.year coUeaea, wl1lle Only Mar """ ztewport Harbor give stronger elghl percent ol Costa M-High and empbasla to c:ollege preparatory work? seven percent of Eatancili HI g b Do <ounoe1inf priorities differ from gr~ are attenmng to-a-r-y ear -sdmol to ,scbooll u --- school&.. -.. Tbe.Jllstrlct received generally high Coovenely, .M perg>nt ol Colla Mesa maru from 'Its graduates for its science, High and 68 percent ol Estaada ffigh safety. education, physical education and grads are going full"time to a l~)'~r Engllah progrims. . community eollege,' while only 15 percent It got its lowest marks In language, of Corona del Mar grads are going full-_ sociaJ studies, and art. _ .. ' Tbe Orange County Assessment Ap- peala'Board today relUsed to set aside its rules IDd hold an immediate bearing on the a_...u ol Preaident Nlmn's San ~ .. qport,. * *' * Nixon Homes ·~ .. --·~­the ajipea1s lioiia'liiiiflMlOPI Outlllrftt .. .to roview the -has be<n set Buy Linked To{".Lx Ploy for Oct. ·a . -- lie said the Presldetit "flll not repnent. ed at the bearing today l!ld had the right to the normal !lklay notice prior to such hearings. Battin tried to make • statement but was rebuffed by CbrlaU!D!en who called for a vote on the beartng date. Tbe board chairman said Battin could not mate a statement injurious to the President without repreoentation being pr .... t. Appeals hcatd member Robert Hostet- ter moved for the Oct. Ill bearing date and was supported by the chairman. The vote was 2 W 1 with Mamo opposing. . NEW YORK (UPI) -The New York Times said 5unday the manner in which a recnt polltlcal llmd and President lfa· on'1 private finances were handled led to ·the atoliea he waa llllng campilgn·money to buy bis Florida l!ld California homes. '!be Times said Its investiption of Nix- on 's personal finances and hls moper!)' dealings bas turned up evidence that $803,113 in undiscloled fUnds Nixon used to linonce his Key .Biscayne l!ld San Clemente properties probably came from paytng UtUe or no income taxes, and not Battin said later he ·.....td ask the Boa!d of llupervlsors Tueoday to hire an Independent investigator to probe the =~y. ent of the San a~te ~ __ ...,-, '1'tir. • .i r-: · •"'•11 -fm-. '.llelp. The property has been ISSe!aed at •. --u . , ... $1.37 million and Battin ~ that it ,AmbUlanoe altendant aids ~ccident victim Ralph S. should be ~.4 million mctuding Im-Myers, 28, Anaheim, folio.wing crash early Sunday traffic Island. IW•as trapped for nearly three hours and pj)lice, baited traffic along Ford l!oad in the wee hours Sunday as 'resciler& struggled to fret! Myets from wreckage. He 'Was· treated at HOag MemOrial Hospital, then transferred to Orange County Medi· cal Center. provements con~ructed by the govern-, ~orning on· Fotd Road near-Harbor-Vte\rHomes in ment. • Newport 'Beach. Police said Myers was headed from campaign money.· . In tta investiga'tion-ol-Nixon!s-finances, the Tunes said It hired a "auperviling acc:ountant for an international ac- counting firm," who, after he had check- ed ..., avlilable data, concluded that N'-o wtth an .....W aaiary ol!ID0.000, eltbor-pald.''vlrtually,Jli> '"-·or be got a lot ol call from .............. rthlnltne paid prnbal>ly aimoot no tu..." ' tow.rd MacArthur' Bqulevard when be Jost· control o( his 'car and wrapyed it around a light pole in Ne wport Council To Decide Fate TJf Gas Station The T1mel 1 a Id "knowledgeable ......,. .. .._tell' throe peiwm, In-'l'be fate . ol an abandooed West cludlll« -·· par-1 !Jwye: Herl>ert Newport gas station and the name of the W. Kalmbacll "and the brother-In-law of naiure park near Big canyon Reservoir • fonner White HoUle cblel alda H.R. -Haldeman, bacf cootrol o! a· aecre1 will be decided by Newport Beach coun• pollUcal tuiid of fl,tlltl;OOO In cash and · cilmen in what ii expected to be a brief '570,000 in checking occounts. meeting tonight. The article said ~ secret fund, councltnien will also name a new "surplus or the 1911 presidential cam-member ol the Environmental Quality paign," was reportedly cootrolled from January, 1969, to February, 1972, by COntrol Committee, probably Mrs. Alan Kalmbach, who nejotiated the purchase Tracy, and will fonila1ly receive a long- of the San Clemente home; France M. awaited study from the Development -Raine Jr.; a real estate operator whose __ Standards Committee. sister is Haldeman's wilt, and ntomas A decision on ptaO:s to revoke the use w. Evans, m•na&ina partner of MUdge, . . Role GU.Uuie ' Aleunder Nixon's penrut of abandoned Ellon sernce sta- 1...m:.r low iin\L ' Uon;6400 W. Coast Highway, was delayed "Two ol lllam acllac lA>lether are said lft -ago -Ille ~ owner to have had -to Iha cull al any complained the action woWd allow the oil lime," the 'l'lmea said. campany to get ool of Ill lease l!ld would The 'l'lmea aalll ........ llldkalld...... -him •lot ol -· o1 the !Undo wera ID Newport Beacb 'l'be -.aature part will prnbab\y be banka wtlh Kalmbach Dlle4 M -namedJfarbo< Vl111 Hllla Nature i'lltl:. At the ..,... time lbore ,... eDolher ..,. Coundlmen were llCbedulod to review (l!ee ruND8, Pap I) the cleftlopment -llndy at their llliclJ -thla -·-ind will Uke- Newpor t Barbecue .Reservations Urged . The Newporf llorhor Cham be~ or Com· merce said. todiy il is still aooeptlna rese<vatlona · for Its annual &et-ac- quainted bali>ecue Tl1uroday night. Ot>en .to evel')'Olt<, the barbecue wUI begln at I p.m. at llommor ea_. on lhc trvlne Ranch. Richard Dickson, chalrman.oUhe event, said the party will !ealm'O a DWeiand bl!ld l!ld danclnc. Tlckell ore fl.SO per person. ly ..i.r It lo the pl-1111 MllllDI-for public bwina loolgl>L Tbt nport racommends, among other thlw, requlrtng at ·Iea11 three olf·•t""t parldnc •pacts foe duplexes In all olaer aectlClftl of Newport Beach, except Ballioe Island. t Councilmen taill!it an a1ao ex~ · to lli:bedule pubDc heMnp 1"r Oct. I on two controversial ordinances, one whtch would require commercJaJ photovaphm to get a opecial permit before laldll pic- turea or llUblle places. The ot6or glYOs the city manag'll' ex· ~--·in time ol -.1 dl.suter. J ' . ~~e!gate Panel .Toi_!{ Of ;False Diem .Scheme UCI Speakers Will Include . Baker, Tunne y WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White House, tryini to· woo the Catholic vote for Presidenl Nixeio in 1972, tried to prove Ta&tJ• Uiat -the .. Kennedy ad- ministration arranged to kill South Viet- namese President Diem in 1963, E. ~ Howard RUnt-Jr. testified today. Hunt, one or the original Watergate bugging ·conspirators, was 1 e a d o r f wilnels as the nationally televised ~nate hearings on lhe scandal resumed after a ·- seven-week recess. ·Gaunt and· pale frorD six months in prjlun, HIDlt' teotlfied. that he had -,.,dlrected,. ln 1971 by Charles W. Colaon, • then a .special · counaeJ, to Nllol\ to fabricate eov'nunent calilea to Implicate Kennedy In the deatbs of Ngo Dlnb Diem l!ld bis brother-In-law, Ngo Dlnb Nbu. 0 1 believe It wu desired by .Mr~ COlloa, or at 1east 90Dl4t of. Ids col· leagues, to dnnoidbate that a caimuc Uhlted Stalea admiDtstratlon had in fact conspired In tbe assassination of. a C.tbolic chief of stale in another coon- try,'' Hunt· Ukl. ' Hunt, a former CIA agent and prnlmc spy no•eltsl, at., testllled !hat: UPI T ....... ' WATERGATE WITNESS Con'fllralor Hunt • Sen. Howard Baker. (~Tenn.}, of the Sen.ate Watergate Committee and.Caspar Wein6erg~r. U.S. Secreiaty of Health, Educatiori and Welfare · top the Iist of speakers to appear at UC Irvine during the upcoming school ·year. Announcement of the speakers was made in Orientation Week materials sent to UCl's 7 ,000 students. "O" Week runs throll8h Friday. Senator Baker, vice chairman of the Senate committee, iJ scheduled to appear in mdi-February about two weeks before lh• release of the committee's report on 1972 •PresldenUal electloo campaign prac- Uces. -..... No date · has been established for Weinberger's address, according to Marie Vanes, assistant dean of student allalrw. Others who wm addrtsa 1tudenl3 dur- ing the school ·year Include u.s: Senator John V. Tunney (l>(:allf.), • state Assembly Speaker Robert MoretU (0.Los Angeles) Assemblyman Wlltle Brown rormulatinn." (!J.San Francisco), chairman ol the · -Hi 1'u told bJ' fellow bugging con- ._... '0. Oordoa ~ 14 !ale -He believes Col&0n, who . ha 5 Ways and Means Committee and Aileen ·vigorously denied any l'tlle !rt political es--Hernandez, fonner president or the Na· ~·· "was aware.Jlf the ovtr-lil in-~al Organization of Women (NOW ). Nonmbar ll'll that .IOliD . i111011e11 , then1he itloruaf paeral I-Nixon .carnpalp illilllat, ·~ th e Mllblllltinlll of I llrst Rfle in· telllf-~ ........ "' .. for the c:e...-. ..i illat presitldltlal Hslstantt .-. W. Dtan Ill ant Jeb Stuart ~ -1lo ;·~ ~ • i1• • tell'· lY Names or other speakers will be an-•"""' plan'',as ~ u January 1972. 1101moed later in U.. ICMCJI year alter -After Lhe live-man Watergate: bug· arrangements are'firmed up, said ~its. glng team was 1rrestec1 June 17; lf12, Vance. Hunt went-lmrnedlately to the White The speakers program 11 one of several ! lfo""' .and stllj!e<I a .t>rteftue load!<! new projects undertaken by the sludcnl wllh .tlectronic gear Into a sole In the of·. a.flairs oUice under U.. cllrecllon of Jack (See 'RUNT, Pqe !) Hoy, "Yicc chancellor. --. --. • • When asked what part of their hlgh school experience was most valuable to them, so percent of the graduates said they profited most either from tbe classroom situation itself or from con- versatiom wilh teacben. Another 17 percent said they profited most from the district athletic program and another 15 -percent-liated;-extra-cir· ril'Ular activities. On the whole, only 32 percent of students said their school courses were relevant to their lives, although another 30 pircent gave the~ district credit for ·trying to improve. • '.l 'j New Law . In Force Next Year LOS ANGELES ~AP) -The death penalty was restored in California today, effective-next year. when-Gor.Rooald Reagan ·signed a biJI making execution mandatory in 11 categories ol. murder. The new law will be applied only to murders committed after Ja. ·1, 197t. .. I'm-sure we-all regret·tbe necessltyllf having In sign sfJcb a bill," Jlta(an told re~rters at the bill~ cerelDonies. "But f doliiive tbe feelliljr of utts!a<- tioo that come.s from doing mmetldng that you know-is rlgbt. Tbere ts no way of knowing bow ~Uvaa o( Innocent, Iaw..,biding citizens this legblitlon will save." , Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger waa at Reagan's side for the ceremonies. The Jan. 1, 1974 date in the bill will be 22 \0 months since Calilornia's last death penalty law was nullified by the state Supreme Court and six . years and 8;) months after the.last life was snuffed out in the apple green Sa-n QUenttrrgas chamber. . ... But the new law will have oo effect on ·the 11).year backJog of Death Row m. mates in California including Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted assa:ain of Sen. Robert Kennedy, and five members of the Charles Manson family. Tile backlog - 105 men and five women -have recel:v .. ed cban~s in sent~ from death to' life in prison. ---· --· The ~ew law may face a court battle before being used. Tbe American Civil Llbeities Union has charged it is "legally derective and tiilConstitutional." othtt opponents say that it wm result in '.'hundreds" of executioos every year beca~of its mandaJ_orz_e_rovlsions. This would be farmei:cess of anYthfng-m California's capital punishment history. There have been onJy 502 executions in California since March 3, 1893, when the state took ov~ that responsibility from county sheriffs. These include 308 hang· ings berore the gas Cliiii:ifief'"Wis put intO operation in 1931, and 194 deaths by C)'ll!llde gaaing In the chamber. Because of an unofficial moratorium, there have been only two uecutlona In the last 10 years, those in 1963 and 1967. CaJiforJJ!a's ipre.vious d~th penaky wa.S banned by a tH declolon of the Calilornia Suprem~ Court Feb. 11, t972 on grounds it was 0 cruel or unusual punishment'~ outlawed by the state Constitution. ' Oraage Coast -• We~er Lale night l!ld early morning clouds but clearing by arlernoons. Overnight lows ~ High Tuesday 18. , INSmE TODAY ' An olmosl unfquo 1larnling ovatkm fm-the Rama wat accord- ed the LA team by more than U .000 Coliltum faM Sundoy during th• fo~nh quarter. Th• Ram3 put Jt all togttlltT to •motlier Atlanta, 31-0. SH POj/• 16. i ( • r , -' ·l \ " l i ( ·- • • 2 · DAILY PILOl ,. Kissinger: U.S. Seeks True Peace r l J. L. Connell, ... .;;,. 11·.i.11 iti,....PageJ .. 1 · r1 · ,FUNDS •.. Retired Auto Executive, Dies coun~ with Kalmbach as trustee, holding Nim>'s pmona1 hmds. The Times' source illdlcated the $400,100 check for J.L. "Ted" Connell, retired General the down payment oo the Naoa house Motors executive and father of Carta was drawn from this trust account. Mesa Chevrolet dealer John Connell, died "SUperfldally, the acoount looka much today after a short illness. He was 79. like ~ In which Mr. Kalmbach, as Mr. Connell, of 1415 Santanella Terrace trustee, bad held campaign funds," The ·In Corona de! Mat;ro'se to the poalttoo ol Tunes said. • assistant general sales manager of the "However, competent sources have : I Chevrolet Motors ~vis.ion ln Detroit said this account was established with a I.. before retiring in 1956 and moving to the $100,000 check from Mr. Nixon's personal · Irvine Planning Prof Announced USC President John R. Hubbard today announced the appointment or the first James Irvine professor of graduate studies in urban and iegiooal plannlng. Orange Coast. funds, and then enlarged with a $450,000 l... He is survived by his widow, Mary, his ct.eek from Ml . Abplanalp, Mr. an·d Mrs. son two daughters, Mra. Richard MiDer Nixon signed an unsecured promissory t 1 of Newport Beach and Mrs. William_ Ford note for the money." of Dlinoil'I, 22 grandchildren and seven White House accounts of the real estat~ , gfeat-grandchildren. . transactions &how that Nixon spent .1 Servieea for Mr. Conne}l will take place $392,521 of his personal funds.for his Key f Wednesday at 10 a.m. al Our Lady Queen • Biscayne property and $1 200 692 for his ' ol Angels Church in Corona de! Mar. A San Ct.....,,te home. ' ' -. rosary will be recited at the church at 8 "Of this tota1 of $1.593,213 spent by the "· p.m. Tuesday. President, it is possible to locate the •. souree of only $790,000, which Mr. Nixon .~'.Dies of Injuries '· LONDON CAP) -A Briiisb arµiy ex· plosives expert died SUnday In a Blrm· . ingham boopitai from Injuries IJllll~ a ~ week ago when a bomb exploded while he • ' .,as attempting to defuse It. "" OIAN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT Tiit.Oii"'• C0&1! OAll.V PILOT, wllfrl wllldl 11 tofl'lltlllld !tie New1.Pru1, II ll!llbll.n-1 "' ltlt Or1nge CIMl1! P~O!l1hlnt (OlftP9f!Y, Stl>9· r1tt NH1on1 l rt ttul>ll'1>td, Mond1y lllr-~ .. ~1y, I~ Cost1 Mt11, N'""""" -..ctl. Hunlll'l!llOll ••KlllFovM•ln Vtll•v. l..olt- tM<fl, lrvlM/s.dicll.-~ ..cl Stn Cltmenl-.1 Mft Ju.n C:.,lllrtno. A t!Ml!t rt01o!11t ' --It Mii~ St~ys Mid """"""' fN ...... "*""'"' °""' b ., ,. Wat -_.....,, CMlt M .... C.IKorrtr., t2'2'. borrowed, including $62S,OOO from Robert H. -AbplilnaJp, the m i 11 i on a·i·r--e-in- dusb'iallst," lhe Tunes said. A part of this loan was eventually assumed b;· C.G. Rebow, another presidenUal friend, the White u...,. has said. President Returns 1 To White House WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presidenl Nixon retum·ed to the \Vhite House Sun- day night alter a weekend in the colorful fall foliage of his Western Maryland mountain retrea t. A spokesman said he reviewed the $21.9 billion military pro- curement bill being debated in the Senate along with a trade bW before the House Ways and MeBDll Commilteo. Dr. John W. Dyckman, fonnerly pro- fessor of city planning for UC Berkeley, is first to occupy the James Irvine ChaJr · estabUshed at use by a $500,000 en· dowment grant from the James Irvine Foundation of Newport Beach and San Francisco. Dyckman has served on the faculties of the University of Pennsylvania, stanford University and Johns Hopkins Univeni'ty. -Dr. Dyckman eamed his doctorate at the University of Chicago. Gunshot Victim Dies in County A man shot at a union hall dance in Santa Ana Salurday night died SUnday al Santa Ana Corrununity Hospital and poJlce, ll'e looking for a murder suspect. Joe S. Sanchez, 41, of Santa Marla, was in the parking lot of the unlon hall at 1532 E. Chestnut St .. with others investigating the source of fumes . , lhVeitigators said an tmideotified person In a car driving through the Jot shot Sanchez. .. "' Rob1rt N .. Wt.d Praldlrll •...i ,._,..., J•tlt R. ~rl.y Long T~agedy """ t ..... ..... .. ' •,, I ' ........ ...... • '1 ... • "" .,....,., ... 0.-.1 IMMilW Thom•• K•tvll ..... 11.0fl'l•t A, Murphi11• .-....ltlfhltlr L , • .._. JCri•o ~ 9ffCll ,,,.,. ldllOl -' ...... 111; ..... OM. JJJI N....,.,+ loulov•rd lltalll .. AMr•1,,0.1011 1111, tJ66J ....... Ofllea C-. --.1 ·NI W.. .. , StrHI .._ -,· ·m ,.., .. , "*"' ~ ....... ,,.,, llltdl ........ rd JM ~: •s Notltl l!I C:.mW. ... , , ....... (1141 , .. , .. ~ Q n.11 .WC01tltln1 Ma.1'71 ~ .... Ol'MI" c:tMI" i"llMW>lftl . ... ..... ...... llhltlrtlio..... . .... ., ..-.t .... 11 """'" ,,.,, .... ,, 0 ............. .. ............... -. --..... ,. •• Clltt ..... L tbl ""'fl W _.,.., _..~ ., .. $1.11 ~' .......... .... -. 102nd Birthday in Stat,e Home COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UPI) -Martha Nelson ~lebraled her 102nd bi;thday In the place she has called home for the last 98 Y,ears - a state home for the mentally retarded. She was admitted In 1875 . Dr. A.Z. Soforenko, appointed two months ago as superlnten- dent_of the Orient Stale Institute near here, said today "she never had a chance." _ .She was. orlglnal)y admitted to the Columbus Stale Institute for the Feeble Minded and later transferred to Orient Her records were destroyed In a fire In 1883 and no one knows why she was admitted. "She is qulle coherent for her age," said Soforenko. "She has no relatives and has bad no close con!tct with anybod,y tor the last 78 to 80 years." Soforenko said he thiab the woman lhould be kepi at Orient until she dies. 1 ' I ' Newport • • • ' . ' To Provide LagunaData · • •• • • Jack MarShall, Author, .. Composer, Dies .... at· Home Funeral serVices will be held Tuesday for Jack r.tarshatl, a composer, recording artist and author who died last week in his Lido Isle home. He was 52. ?-.1arshall worked with such musjcal I ceiebrtUea aa Benny Goodman, Peggy Lee aod Billy Vaughn". He wrote many musical scores. in· eluding those for the television sho'A'S "Have Gun Will Travel" and "The Munsters ." ~ ( His speciiilty lnstnnnent was the guitar. He recorded several albums for Capitol Records and served as staff guitarist for Metro Goldwyn Mayer movie production!. He also wrote two books , on guitar playing. · The c1uae of death wu listed as a heart attack .. Servicoa will be held at 10:30 a.m. In Chorch of the Hlll$,. Forest . L&Wtt Meriior;ll Park, HQJly1<dod J!llis. ~al will follow. Marst\il;U js survived by his wife. Eva: four.chillltar. !rank. Pltl1ip,.Maill<'o and Sally: Ills motlier. Mrs. Flnlli Marshall of Van Nuys, and a brother, Frank ~1arshall of Simi Valley. The family bas suggested memorial contributions to the Jack Manball Scholarship Fund, School of Music, University ol Southern callfomia • .-:.. •• ; • , ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 66, NO. 267, 2 SECTIONS. 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALn;()RNIA MONDA,Y,, SEPTEMBER 24, 1973 ~ c TEN CENTS - '72 Newp<_?rt-Mesa Graduates Indict Education .. Only five percent of the 1972 graduates ol. Costa Mesa and Newport; Beach high • schools believe their education helpect. ·them "a great deaJ" in preparing for '1a aelf-supportlng, productive ure." 'And in .response to the same question, another llO percenl ol tbe Class of 1972 iitd they recetved-"lltUe or no help" at in preP,aring for life in the outside Id. 'l1lele alaUstlcs are conlained in a low-up survey of last year's graduates eased by. tbe Newport,Meaa Unified District. . -Two-thirdS of Newport·Mi;sa graduates . . plan to C911tinlie their education at least through fOur years ol college. And 89 pel'.- cent of these students said they wei:e able to attend the college of their choice lmmedlalely after graduation. Responses to the 86-question Btll'Vey were ·i!ilxejl, with lJiidUlitµ alttrnately praising tbe diltrict for offering many P91lilve uperlences, bul indiclillg ii for failing to provide eoougb relevanl .educa- tloo. 11le district got Its highest marks for its physical education program, as sf percent of gradyates said it pieparei t~ for_,. life u physically fil in· their ·,..poosibility .IO lbe vocational dlvtduals. education function." TIJC disbict got its most specific in-. One of the findings of the survey is that dictment in the area of vocational educa-62 percent of last year'a graduates from Uon. ·Corona del Mar High School are at- -Of the 3t percent of students who are tending four-year colleges, while ooly ""'ki!!c rather than going to school, only elshl percenl ol Coola Mesa lliib and · seven percen~ said the dislrlct's voca-_ seven =I qf Eslan!'IJ_JI !JI h tiouJ educaUoa program helped them • gtaduales are attending Io u r • y ea r get their "jobs. ad>ools. . ' A narrative cotftm~tary on these COnversely, M percent of Costa Mesa stallallcs. slates! 'i'bese"dala indlcaled-lllstrmnia-perceJit ol Eslanda lflgh ~ district may not prepare students for gra4a ·are going full-time to a tw~year the. wol't world, and ral~ questions ~fy college,. while only I> percent whether tbe district 5cbools. are fulfilling _, ol Corona cle! Mar grads are going full· ·~~ {~ - time Jo a community college. The district report asks: "Do the in- struction programa at the schools differ in ways that support these trends? For exampJe, do the programs at Corona de! Mar and Newport Harbor give stronger emphasis to college preparatory work? Do ~selfng_ pri~Ues differ from school to school?" · • The district received generally high marks from Its graduates for its science, safety educatl~. ·physical education and English programs. · It got its JoweSt marks in language, social studies, and art. When asked what part' ·of their high school experience was most vaJuable ~o them, 50 percent of-the graduates said they profited most either from ·the classroom situation Itself or from cori• vers8tions with teachers. Ailolher 17 percenl said Ibey profited Dl06t from the district athletic program 8.nd ruiotber 15 percent 'listed-extra-cir· ricular activities. On lhe whole, only 112 percenl ol students said their school courses were relevant to their lives, aJthougb another 30 percent gave the district credit for trying to improve. e·na.- ' ~ Nixon Probe De•ied Count y Panel Spurns -Battin's Bid on Estqte By JACK BROBACK or ..... -D91tY 1'111t-st1H The Orillge CounTy-AiSessmen! Ap- peals Board today refused to set uide its rule1 and hold an immediate hearing on the auessmeo& oC President Nixon's San Clemente property. A hearing bad been requested by First District Supervisor Robert Battin of San- ta Ana. His appointee to the appeals board, Frank Mamo, tried to get it on lhe agenda today. Board Chairman Otto Christensen said • preliminary bearin( to decide whetb!or 1\'a tergate Bltl the appeals board bad lbe legal aulbority Appeals board member Robert l!ostel- to review the assessment-has been set ter· moved for the Oct.-26 hearing-date for Oct. 26. aoCI was suppc>rfedcy-tbe Clia"lfmifi:-Th"f:! He said the President was not reprsent-vote was 2 W 1 with Mania opposing. ed a< lbe bearing today and-had the-right llallill-said-latu-be-would ask--lhe to tbe normal 30-day notice prior to such Board of Supervisors Tuesday to hire an hearings. · independent investigator to probe the Battin · tried to · make a statement but assessment or the San Clemente ptop- was rebuffed by Christensen who called erty. for a vote On the hearing date . The property has been assessed at The board cliairman said Batun could $1.37 mi,llion and Battin contends· that it not make a stater;ent injurious to the should be $2.4 million including im~ Presfdent without repreaentation being provements constructed lfy the gov~ . present. . menf:. ... . ..,,, ~ ,...,. . s~ ~equested . . On €os.ta Mesa's West Side Story Nixon Lawyers Cite Impeachin g, Not 1apes Uieeo:::n i:'aRa::: ~::: ------=--------=---------~=-----..:•estlga remed blems Oil the WASllJNGTON (AP) -President Nix-process of deciding lhe question. wesl side of Coola Mesa. Oil's lawyers Qrged a federal court Ibis In brlngi(lg their "'"· SenaU! com-· Tile Wes! Side•Task Force envialoned afternoon to reject the Senate Watergate mittee lawyers said the purpose was, as by· Raciti would consmt of three business- commlttee's effort to oblain tbe White lhe WhiU! House brief noled, "to diacover men and three homeowners and W<J!l}d evidence from lhe Presideel's records, · House Watergate !apes, contending the indeed from his own-ptlvale ..,.. be . appoiql!od by lhe maYQr from. names President "is amwerable in only one con--versations that might establish presiden-submitted by aD five cit:Y council stitutional proceeding" -an· im-tlal complicity In the, commission of members. peachmeut action. serious crimes." Mayor Jack Hammett bas not yet In a 71-page brief filed with U.S. acted on Raciti's request for the blue-rib- District Court Judge Joli\ J . SU tea, I • p Bill bon panel but the issue is likeJy to be White House attorneys sow*9d again rvme 8 ys raised when the council convenes next ,-. tJleir argwnent that the court lacks MOnday. . jurisdiction to foi:ce Nixon to release tape For police Aid The task force would, concentrate its r:econllDp of meellnp' ag4 telepbooe activity on an area south of the <Asta convenaUons related to 'the. Watergate Irvine city officials this week. wDl pay Mesa Golf and Country Club, west of scandal. .. , their firlll· bill for espanded police Harbor Boulevard and west of Newport aeparaU! from ooe broughl by ·al Mesa. · 11adll bas idenlified 21 !asks he would 'The· Senale commillee'• ~is~.erv1M]il'Ovliled by tlie-011y-or· eo.1a-Boul~varct --" Watergate prosecutor AtcbibaJd Cox.-The tab for added patrolmen and like tbe citizens committee to place on it.s s,Jric:. ruled in tbe Col cue tbal lmn anoibl!r p0trol car comes 10 ltto 526 for filllda, llllOlli tbopn tbe feaalbtlity of must 1111'11 tbe lal1"' •I"' to lhe Juilie !or im. monllls, bqinninJ Sept. I. ' e•leiidlni · 19111 •" sir.et· to .H1Jlllillgloll private tnspectioa -a decilion me \Vblte ·JI. June Irvine councilmen voted to in-Beach by means of a bridge over the koll!<! baa carried to lhe j.1.S. Court of creaae" the service provided by Cosia Sjinta" Ana River. r A-11· ' Mesa Police Depertmenl from lhe Urban bllghl, c on s l r u c 11 o n of A compromise suggested by lhe ap-!340,000 renlal figure oris!DallY agreed on sidewalks, pilbllc lransporlaUoo, slreet ~Is court ~twas designed to keep the for the first year's service.. Iighµitg, crime reduction are some of the While Hou.O.COX <ILlpute oul of . C9Url · This year. more lhan 1662,000 Is 10 be other ......-wblcb --be the concern f311ed last week and. the couit Is m the spent patrolling the new city. of the task force , acconµng to Raciti, * tW atergate Panel Resumed- . . WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White , House, trying to woo the Catholic vote 'for President Nixon In 1972, tried to J!l"OV• lalse\y tbal . tbe Kennedy Id' · "inlnistra!Jm arranpd 10 kill SOuth Viel· iiamese Pl-Diem In UIS, ·E. Howard Hunt Jr. lesllflell laday. Hunl, one ol lhe orlllnal Wal<rpte builinr CODlplralon, was I ea do ff •llnt11 as lhe nallooally televiaed s.n.u. bearlop on lhe scandal resumed Iller a .aeveo-wllk nceas. Gaunt ud pole from alt monlhs In orison, Hunt tntlfled that he bad been • li(itrectedn ln 1'11 by Charles W. Colaon, !hen a ;p..111 COUnJel to NI ... , lo fabricate government cables to implicate Kennedy In lhe deaths of Ngo Dinh )Jlem and hla brotlleNNaw, Ngo 1llnll Nllu. "I believe }I was desired by Mr. , Colaon, or at.: leJst some of his col- leagues, to demonslrlU! tbal • catholic Unlled Slates admlnlstrauolt hid In !acj con1Plred In the assaabulUOn o! fa Cat!lolic c~ef of slate In anolber coan- Hunt, a former CJA agent and prolific "spy novelist. alao te.sUfied that : -He was lold by fellow bugging con- spirator G. Gordon Liddy In laU! November 1971 thal John N. Mitchell, then lhe attoraey general-and laler Nixon campaign manager, Hrequired . t b t'! establishment of a Jarge-acaJe in- telllgence. oounter-intelliaenca program" 1 for the campaign ud ilia! preoldential a11iat1nla John W. Deon W ud Jeb StU'art Magruder allo "were active In its (ormuJalk>n. II -He believes Cobon, who h a 1 vlgwoully denied any role In pollllcal eJo pkmqe, "w.as a.ware of the over-all iJl.. lelllpnee plan" as early a Janaary 1912. -AIU!r the fiV011Wl Waierple b!ll-w team was arrested June 17, •• lluiil wenl 'Immediately to tbe W)lile House 100 stulled r brtmll wllb eleclronic cur Into I safe in the of. Ii!' ht malnlalnod 11 a lllll+doy Wb11e llollSt consulllnl. - -Ho, Liddy lllld on lllde to bllllonoire .... _ New Law In Force Next Year LOS ANGELES (AP) · -The death penalty ?ras restored-in California-today, effective next year, when Gov. Ronald Reagan signed a bill making execution mandatory in 11 categories ol. murder. The new Jaw will be applied only to murders committed after JanJ 1, 1974. "I'm sure we all regret the necessjcy of having lo sign such a bill," Reagan'1.ld repOtiers at the biU-signing ceremonles. "But I do have the feeling of satfsfac:o··· tion that comes from doing something that you know is right. There ii no way o1 lcnowlng hoW llWl1 lives of innocenl, law .. biding cilizem this legislalion will slve." Atty. Gen. Evelle Yoonger was at Reagan's side for the ceremonies. The Jan. 1, 197• date in the bill will be 2211 monlhs since California's las! deslh penalty Jaw waa: nullified by the state Supreme Court and ..six years and ain monUB after the last life was snuffed out in the apple ·green San Quentin gas _chamber. - But the new law will have no effect on the l~year backlog of Death Row in· mates in California inclu'dlng Sirhan B. ,.. Sirhan, convicted ~in of Sen. Robert Kennedy, and five inembers of the Charles Manoon family. The backlog - 105 men and five women -have receiv· ed changes in sentence from death, to We in prison. • Ol9Y 1'1111 '"" ,..... CYCLl$T KANDEL FOUND IT TOUGH TO·GET TH ERE FROMIHERE A ~ Bike, Poo nut Butt.r and Jelly and. Guts to Fight Trucks Real Adventure -Bicyclis t-6oes-to ·SF. Hard-.-W-ay _ By .. RUDl .NJEDZIELSKI · • . • Of .... DmlW l"llet Sflfl Herb-K;liidel toot'Bn eighl-<ll!Y vacallon to Sari Frileciaco and spent $70. · Tile forrmillli tot hts'""cutrate vacatloit:' a "bot rod" ·10-speed bike, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, a good companion, stamina and guls. Why guts? Because caJilcmii's road system I~ 'designed to accommodate the automobile and they still don't have bike lanes on the expressways, accordilfg to the 17-year~ld high school senior from Costa Mesa. · "1 learned-,to hate cars,'"' says Kandel, who pumps gas for'""a-1o:e·at service sta- tion. His hatred was formed through 450 miles of dodging diesel "trucks and .talion -and pldr;jng him>eli out of dllch-es and they ran hlm·off the road. ~ldes"'there Is no direct route to San Francisco if'yoil're riding a bicycle, ac- cordini to Kaodel, lB89 Tahiti Drive. Readin g, 'Belly' O asses at Y ' "<:;etting around the freeways-ls a· big , ~.:··he explaim. .. When We got to Vep"fura: we dlacoveted there was no way for uiillJ set oul di llie city wlthoul lak- ing the freeway . 1• · Kandel and his riding partner almosl enlered the freeway -despite tbe bicycle probibiUoo lliin, bul lhe·oheriff'a deputy who observed" them as they Pondered that possibility pointed lhem in the prop- er direction. ".The road lo San Francisco goes north, but we had to take'a JO.rpile detour to the west to get to the end of the freeway," he says. "We found that tbeJUgbways_would suddenly turn to freeways and we would have to figure out a way to get around them." On one particular stretch the riders did enter the. freeway .but; abandoned the !bought ·or continuing afler nearly being blown off tbe road. "Those trucks were goins pasl us al 60 miles per l!Obr so we decided lo hilchhike and got a nde to ·the -sirelch of highway with a guy who had a U·baul trailer," he ~!Is. Pedaling as uch as ao or 90 miles per day, the r' en encountered several mechanical difficulties ln<ludJni Oal The Orange Coast Young P..ten's Chr~ tires, broken spokes and broken gear !Ian 'Asioclal!on (YMCA) announ<ed lo-· change mechani.ms.' .. ~,,.-- day It Will sponsor classes in both speed u1 didn't prepare the bike as much -as 1 reading and belly dancing thl11 fall. should have," 11y1 Kandel, who tried to A fi"ee demonstration of ''How to DGu. prevent 90me of. those problems by out~ ble Your Re9ding Speed In Two Hours" fitting his bike wllh heavf-duty com-- will be ~ucted Tuesday at 7 p.m. al _ ponenla before he Jell. . the-YMC;4, 2:MJ nlversity--Dfive,--m.il70Dij(lget, hOwcver, was ~sufficleilt Newport Beach. to cover all of the repairs, and ha had A coeducational course wlD begin in enough left over to make the return trip ly ~anclng will be !aught In a cla5' plane all 11on1 in order lo make lt<back The new Jaw may face a court batUe before· being used. The American Civil Liberties Union has charged it is "legally defective and unconstitutJonal." Other opponents say that it will result in "hundreds" of ~ecutions every year because of its mandatory provisions. This would be far in excess of anything in California's capital punishment historY. There have been only 502 executions in California since March 3, 1893, when the ~tate took over th!l re~nsl~il!~Y f~ .. county sherills.Tbese lnClude 308 l!l!iig- ings before the gas chamber was put into operation in 1938, and l!K deaths by cyanide gasing· in ·tbe·cbamber: ····· · · Because of an unofficial moratorium, there have been only two executions in lhe last 10 years, !hose In 1963 and 1967. California's previous' death penalty was banD«l by a 6-1 declsloo ol the California Supreme c:ow:t Feb. 11, I.972 on grounds it \}'ks .. cruel or unusual punishment" (See NEW LAW, Pase I) Oruge "' • Weatlter Late night and early morning c1ouds but clearing bz. afternoons. Ovemighl lows liMI. lli8h Tuesday 68. INSW E TOD~Y An almosi unique &tarutino ovation for the Rams Wat accord- ed the LA team bu niore than 64,000 Colu'"'m /oru Su!ldav durina the fourth quarter. The Rams put it all together to smother A&lottto, 31·0. See Page '"' 16. 11 ...... " , .............. 4 ....... ,..., . 1f.21 .,.. '""" ,. _,, ---...... ~ ... ,, . ,.......... . . .,_..,. . " 1t ....., 4 •tt _., ... 1)>.U u ---• .. try," Hunl ,.Id. (See HUNT, !!op II ' WATRCMYI wiTN!SS COftlllfrator Hunt · ' ' ~ fulure. . by plane. Kandel inleoded to return by . ning at to a.m. Oct. 4, in time for school. r , • ~ • • • • I .. I ( ' t , Jl QAJL.Y PJLOT c MOfld11, Scptembtr 24, 1973 After B reakdown Laguna's Temple Dweller~ Depart By JACK CHAPPELL Of ~ .,...., l'llot St•ft The Love Anim~. rEat Them traveling menagerie vegetarian lidabow packed a an in<re!tible ccmverted school b and lumbered out of ~guna Beach past the canyon city llmil3 early this morning. "We just happened to have an officer out in I.he canyon at tbal time, and he clefmitaly reported that they passed the city limits," Police Capt. David Brown said today. OU.Met.COAST ... Free polio --.,., iidne of. ler..i at Colla -Meoa Memorl1I llolpital this week lo respot11e to I """"'! polio epidemic Wlrlling from·the state Depart· ment of Health. The cllniai are scheduled between 8 p.m. and a p.m. Tuesday, between 10 a.m. and noon Wednesday, and between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. 'lbul'day. 1be hoopital is located at 301 Victoria St Phystcians say that old-fashioned nee- dle Injections will not be used. Vaecines will be given through a sugar·C'Ube or a p;.inless high pressure jet Injector. According lo Les Stapleton, the U.S. Public Health Service advisor assigned to Cllifomia, the immunity level in California children between· the ages of one and four ha3 dropped to 76 pereent. To stop a major polio epidemic in Calllomla the percentage ol Immunity mu.t he raised to 90 perctnt. Me8sles and rubella vacctnatlclll will 11Jo he ottered witbollt cbarge during the three-day clinic. Dr. Krugmeier Services Tuesday ' Private family funeral s!J'Vices are scheduled Tuesday for retired Costa Ptfesa physician Dr. Carl E. Krugmeier, 80, who died Sunday . Rites for Or. Krugmeier will be graveside at 2:30 p.m .. in Harbor Rest h-1emorial Park with Rev. Bruce Kurrie Officiating and Bell Broadway Mortuary directing. Survivon include hls wife Ivie, of the -home at. S25 Fairfax .Drive, Costa Pt1esa, · plus a son, Olarle.s, of Ne'OrpOrt Beach, t""'O granddilldren and his sister, Mrs. C. K. Christoasen of Mllllle80ta; A 53-year caJifomla resident who bad spent 11 years in Orange C.Oimty, Dr. .Krugmeier was a World War I U.S. Army veteron·wbo oerved lo the Medical Corps as a second lieutenant DAILY PILOT . TM Or .... C.0.tl DAILY PILOT, 1111ltl •ldl i. CMllllMll !tie ........ ,Bf. " """4hNll ,,,, W.. Ora,... u.tt Pltlbli.tl~ ~,,.,. ~ rt'-Mltlon1 .,. ~ff!IW, """"'" ....... 'rldey, !Or Coti. MtM, H"'°"' ._,,., .Hlll'!lh•ton lffdl/,oii'ii.111 Vali.ty, l'9- lwdi, ln1Mlt-.ltl:l9dl n "°" C~f ftfl J11911 ~tr-A tlllO.. rttlo!oll •111111'1 .. IM!llMll .. ........,. .,.. ~ f"9 ptlM~I l'llblilhlfll "'"' '-tt W W.f lay S!rMI, C•I• ~ (111,.,.,.11, "-»»• Jack MarsJiall, Author, ., ••"rt N. W'eM ,,_IHl!t ltN PWIW. Jecli I . Curle! Vkle~W0..-1 ........... Tltofllt t K•e•il .. , .. Tlle!Nt 4. M"""911• --Clierl•• H. L.M l ldlanl ,.; Nt R ~~"""' ,,_ __ JJO W•tt 1-, Stf..t Composer, Dies at Home Funeral services will be held Tuelday for Jack fi.1arshall, a composer, recording artist and author who died last week in his Lido Isle home. He was SI. Marshall wori<ed with 1uch musical celebriUea .. Benny Goodmln, Peggy M•\11111 A44r.111''.o. lo• 1 SIO, •z•t• recluse How11rd Hu.ghn ploned to 1teal ".....,, ..!:';.,= ....._~ sensitive documents from Las Vegas, ~= :=i ,:,:::::,. ,.~ . Nev. publisher Hank Gi:eenspun but that ""t""*"": •,....... a1 c:.mw. a..it the raid was~bevtr carried ou t. , .. '' 11 17141 W-4111 Hun't said he believed he was acting as Qa • 1 .U1•ttill1 ..,...n a secret govemment ag ent "'hen he -..,. .,._ -.::::t:t become lhvolved In the Watergate plot ':=•·,,.:.-;-.:;~ ..,. and1 nlne montht earlier, the burglary at ~ ..,. • ....-.,c.• ...,.. ...,_.,._ -·the -Ofilce .of.-..Dan!el E 11 1 be r I ' s ....... ., """""'· ....... ptychlalrilt. --~~ r-:: .. -.., •c: ~ ke aid he now fttls ''crushed bf-u; .....,.., .., _. •1• """"*'' M1i.ry failure n( my 1ovunmenl io prottct me 0 1 •M•• .._. ~· and my family, as In the put it bu always done for clandestine •am&a." ' MEMPHIS. Tonn. (UPI) -An unid,.. • tified flying object blinked tts spotlights twice Sunday night, then disappeared in- to 'the darkness with a whirring noise, ac- cording to Shelby County Sheriff's Depu- ty P. L. Pilala~ "U I was a drinker," the deputy said, shaking bis head, "I could understand it, but I'm not." • \ r Ki.s sing er: · U.S . Seeks 1 . ' ...... .; Tr ue Peace 1 ' J. L. C.Onnell, Retired Auto Executive, Dies-·.