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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-10-09 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • /• --- • -,. . . • :1' I • I () rass a s ers TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OctOBEJl 9, 1973 VOL-"'° MO. -J NCT'°'"" • ,.._.. . -. . -- • • • • -I ,. I· . . ' • , •on~·plex ~ in Newport DraWs Chuckles~ .. • • 1 r • • • • • / • • • Gripes I William ·Lund Joins Irvine ·Board Pl.ant ExPf!nsion . • ~-· --. -L·'....:.:::c ~ -.·;. mess~ aaor Backing 'Edison An Orange Comly coalition o f ~ and labor lead<n ls urging MI IAlpport for upansloo of Southern California Edison's Hlllltingtcm Beach power plant. . members how to help the Edison project. In his letter, Remmel suggests that members do the following: , -Appear at the cll\mdl bearing and speak. . . .-..En.<:olqage otber> to do the same. -Make -sure wO'mis WOO live ih Hun- tington Beach show up and speak up. -Encourage cities, cbamOOs and realty boardl to ....,d oil.· -Call and encourage others. --llle Orange Cowity Council for Environment, Employment, Ecooomy and Developnent (CEEED) Is urging its nlembership to fill the Hwitingtoo Beach Cooncu chambers for Mooday oig)lt's pulilic hearing on Edi.son expansion. Peter J. Remmel, president or CEEED and secretary-treasurer of the Orange County c:eotral Labor Council, is.sued a two-pa•e "aJert'' ~ CE EE D Remmel also provides a complete list of the seven-member city council with ·each councilman's home phone number. Capistrano Councilman Raps Plans By JORN VALTERZA Of llM DlllY Plltt lt.rf An oftimes scrappy city councilman from San Juan Cap~BQO angrily sug- gested Monday that Filth District supervisor Ronald Caspers be "grabbed by the nape of the neck and dragged down here" to see the asserted problems with the county uses of a' deadly.highway as the main route to a new dum p. Edward Chermak, who rarely backs away from a battle, made the angry sug· gesUon aa be and fellow lawmakers lamented the lack of coo}>eratlon from the C.ounty Road Department over the selectJon of a suitable road to carry the heavy dally traffic generated by the opeulng of the Prima Desecha Canyon east of san Juan. , To underscore the need for F.dison su~ pon, Remmel writes : "It Js just damned foolishn~ to take down your umbrella in the belief the rain will then stop -and it's just as foolish to deny more power in the belief that people will stop prop- agating and migrating." Remmel also lists four groups of peo- ple be believes are against Edison's pro- posed !300 mllli<lll upansim proj<ct. -"Local folks who are fearful of more local pollution. -"Environmentalists who believe more power means more or everything, including pollution, in Oranile Counl]I. -"Zero growth advocates who believe that if they can .help produce an elec- trical shortage,• people will stop coming to·Orange County and some already here will have to move away. -"Bad guys -there are a few who just want to stop, America and the best way, short ot war, ls to stop its life blood -power-enera ..... He also lists 'f"l'.'ral argwnents to use in favor of EdiJOn h:panslon, including the fact Huniingtoo Beach originally ask- ed Edisoo to locate its first power plant in the beach area. "We appreciate the posiUoo. ol. Hun- tington Beo<b residslts, but no com- mW!lty has' Juot all the esthetically (See EDISON, Pqe I) Councilmea, indudlag Che r m a k , . . . asserted that they ibad <been .. lied to· \' ., • · r • .. • repea~Jy" by the road ·~epartment · ·•Jailed Morlier r• , -whkjl-OLJaleJ>as_appareo~iss"!L!.._ , , . ~ Juan request lhat •n exteruiion of La · - NOvia Roli<I be um lo IUlll]el the dum~· r Y' -lco . r"er Baby traffic. • . ~H 0 , Iiistead, cOOncilmcn haft lcamea that r I the county plans to use lhe ellstlng tw~ lane Ortega Highway as the dump route and traffic there already bU reaclMd a dangerous level. ....i. .... ~ - "1be)''re IJOing to 1ub)eC\ 'San Juin 1111<1 Its reaiden!J to all the dir1, dust, traffic, noise and danger on that roa4i "We've got to get acUOn now down here ..• even if it means going up there (to the cou1\_ty seat) anci dragging him_ (C&spen) doWn by the nape of bl& ne<:k to show him the problem. - "I'm tired of being lied to.'' Chennak said at the height of 1hf,dlSCU>~on. 1'loaL f.tillw fumcilmen •lreed -with (See CASPl>RS, Poe• ll •• ' • -. ) ELMIRA;N.~ CAP) -A !'OOtli woman •ccUsed Of murder has been givtn permissMJn·lo ~.for her ,.,...Wftk-old son In the county Jail. • • , .. Mrs. Kathleen Apgar and 1 com- panion recently Wert indict~ In 'Moga County on charges or robbery and murder in tile death ora man la.rt January. The Chemung County Board . of Supervi30r! voted Monday night to ' negate • previous denial or permission to allow Mts. ;.\pgar to ' bring the•b1b1 In.to ihe Jal!. ·P. EGYPTIAN ARMORED VEHICLE BEGINS TO CROSS PONTOON BRIDGE ON SUEZ CANAL ·Egyptians (foreground) SuperviH Mov.ment of Military Equipment Across the Bridge Newpo!t Man's New 'One-plex' Sp_arks Furor Newport Beach building o t £ i e I II 1 s chuckle and call it "a ane unit dupl-:!x." ·West Newport neighbors call it an outrageous attempt to circumvent i;M..)ldlng regulations. Jn LW.d.m. the builder calls it "an honest attempt'' to stay wloiln lliei:i.w. The object of all this is a house at 7002 \\·. ocean Fron~ that was supposed to be two houses - a duplex -until Lidtlle was turned do'M'\ by the South Coast Regional 1.ooe Consenratlon Commission ~use 'be didq't have cnoogh parking ·~ . ii# ii'd'.lilreadf tlart..i buililing ond wasn't about.lo tear everythln1 down and stu't over agaln. So--1Jddle made a single-family bouse. out or his duplex the simplest way lie CO\l,)d. He knocked a hole In a wall , put in a door betw~ the two units and is no\v calling the house a one-ple:r. P.targo Sk111ing. chairman of a citizens committee studying redevelo)>ment stand- a·rc1a. Ii one homeowner who takes (See PROJECT, Paa• li Israeli Jets Pounding _ Egypt, Syrian Targets TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israeli warplanes struck at targets deep inside Syria and Egypt today, bombin g ~tlan airfields near Cairo and attackilfg-S)rrian military headquarters outside Damascus, a military spokesman said. A radar station in Lebanon also was hit As the 1973 P.1iddle East war went into KUWAIT URGES ARAB Oil CONFERE NCE, Page 14 · U.S. JEWS RAISE MILLIONS FOR WAR, Page 4 U.N. COUNCIL FAILS IN CEASE·FIRE BID, Page 4 its fourth day. tho spokesman reported Syria was using Sovlct·'llUpplied "Frog" surf<i.ce-to-surface missiles capable of carrying a 1,000.poond v.•arhcad 44 miles against vlllage<s deep inside Israel . He described l~cs. in the selllemcnts as light. On the ground, Israeli troops \\'Crc . ' reported fighting Egyptian and Syrian arrnor in what one veteran .,.,·itness said were "some of the fiercest ballles" in the natiOO•s 25-year history. Citizens on the home front v.1crc told to expect hard going ahead in the "at· trttion" phase of the .,.,,ar. "A military spokesman told Israelis in o. nationwide broadcast lhat fi~hling has been "very bitter and bloody.' "The struggle facin5 ta may not be an easy one," he said. "Israel's aim is not only to relurn to the old cease-fire lines v.·here fighting started, but to insure that Israel won't stand before similar problems In the future," he told the nation. "The slopping action Is concluding suc- cessfully," he said. "\Vjth the initiative now in our hands, the attrition phase has begun. I would not be lulled into bellcving this can be an easy and very rapid opera· tion ." "A substa nlial part Or the Egyptian f$ec l\UDEAST, Page %) Real Estate Consultant Appoirited Irvine Company directors today selected a L<>s Angeles real estate in- vestment and research consultant to fill the vacancy on tbc board created by the death of fonner company presiderit William R. Mason. William S. Lund, 42, president of the California Institute of the Arts at Valen· cia and resident of Hancock Park, was elected aL today's board -Ung in Newport Center, Newport Beach. Lund's appointment brings the seven- member board to its full strength for ~he first time since Mason's death in June. Raymond L. Watson who already was a member of the board succeeded Mr. Mason as president of the firm in '"Sep- tember. Board Chairman John V. Newman n.n· noW..ced Lund's appointment, describing him as one of the ''most highly qualilied real estate investment and research men ·in the country." Newman said Umd 1'brings to the-- board extensive experience in corporate management and financing." Among the impressive list of clients fo!i \vhom Lund has had ''primar;y responsibility" are Walt Disney Produc- tions (initiators of the Cal Arts, Valencia campus), the Aga Kahn, Ford Motor Company, Kaiser Aluminum and Olemical C.Ompany, Castle and Cooke and Newhall Land and Farming Com- pany. 1'"rom 1960 to 1972, Lund \\'as executive vice president of Economics Research Associates \\ilh res.ponslbllitie-s f o r (See DIRECI'OR, Page 2) Orange • Weather Coast • It'll be clear and sunny \Vectnes- day. \\•i lh somewhat cooler tem- peratures along the Orange Coast. Highs of 65 at The beaches "'ill rise lo only 70 inland. Overnight lows SS. INSJllt: TODAY Lash LoRue. 11.1/iose 1vh ip and six g'n once punished movie bad guys. is 11oui a Florl(/a £vange. Ust whipping drunks into li11e with the help of n1i3sio11ary Jolin 3: 16 Cook. See story, Page 1 l . L.M. a11tl 1 M1wln t) C1ll...,... .t "WIMI ll'IMMk 14 (l1nlfl..:I IJ.l'I N1ll0ft1/ NIWl 4 c .... rc1 n Or1nn c-tw 1 c .... .,.,, u s,.,,. •n Dllltl Hllll" I 1tec:ll M•r\lh 1-.1J lltllflfi1I ~"' ' Ttlew1NN " It l(Rfll1aiMM!lt ll TllMftrt U ,~Rlll(I H•ll W........ 4 II'• "" ll:~lftl I W"""''l Ht"' 11•11 ...,_KIM 11 llf•lill H-4 Aflll Ll!IMU II /J ' $2 Million Pot Deal 5 F or1ner Countian~ Charged in Conspiracy Dy FREDERICK SCllOEMEl!L Of tM D1Ur ~ll•I 1!111 Five former South Orange County men have been fonnally charged by a federal grand jury with conspiracy to sell more than $l nUllion worth of marijuana in Orange, Los Angeles and San Diego counties. An indictment returned by the grand .... jury alleges that the quintet met between July 19 and July 27, lt7S, ln Dana Point. L&guna Buch, Newport Beac:h. l<>ng Beach and Vista and laid plans to distribute five tons of marljuana. The conspiracy was broken, the in- dictment asserts, when federal agent! and Newport Beach pollee arrested two of tbe five suspect!. ' \Villiam ~1itchell , U. a former Laguna. Beach resldtnt currently Is free on $20,000 bond , while William Ehvood Polich. i,. formerly of Dana Point, ls frte on $3,000 ball. r.UtcMU was arrested b)' agents of the federal Drug Eriforcemen t Administration in San Diego County July 27 aher lhe agents asserte<Uy negotiated to purchase 630 pounds of marijuana. Polich, on parole from federal prilon, was apprehended July 31 by Newport Beach narcot.lcs detective\ who were tracking on a related in\'estlgation. Three other men, Gerald ~ward Pohl , 2:5, Robert William Bray, 21, and Michael William Andersen, 25, also were lndlcted by the grand jury. They are fugitives and V.'arrunts have betn issued for their 'afot resu. Pohl, Bray and Aoderaen, a«ordins lo Detective Leo Konkel of .the Newport Beach Police Departmen~ have mlded in rooent years in Dana Polnl, Laguna Beach and Tustin. According to federal lnvestigaton, the Cive men allegedly stockpiled Mexican grown marijuana ln northern San Diego County with the intent to distribute most ol the drug alOOi the Orange eoa.t. Lesser amounts aasertedly we r e cannarked for Long Beach and San Diego. Agent.s aid the case had beea under investigation for more than a year prior to the l"-'O arrests. Based on current street ~ of mari- juana,• agents said at teast '2 million worth ol the drug was beinc preparo<JJor dlstrlblltlo!l. Study Shows So.me Sex on Sly A spokesman for tbe U.S. attorney's of· fice in Uio Angeles aid today that M'Jtchell and Polich will face ar- raJg:nmerit on the char&" within t\vo weeks before a U.S. magistrate. " >' ClflCAGO (UPI) -The Chicago Tribune reported today Lhat in a RI\· tionwide survey conducted by a team of Gallfornia psychiatrisls at least one out of every 20 doctors responding admitted he engaged in 1UUal intercourse with pa- tients. The Tribune ald the survey, nported ln 1.be current i.sslJe of the American Journal of Psychl1tn'. showed that moot physicians frowned upon the u.se of erotic beiw,vlor in their practic:e as unethlcal or "prof-al suicide." Conducted by Dr. Sheldon H. K>mder, Marielle Fuller. and Dr. Ivan N. 1'1ensh of UCLA, the study il)volved 400 psychiatrist. obstetriciatl3, gynecologists, surgeons, internists and general prac- titiooers. 1be study showed thal S to 13 percent of the group engaged in some kind of erotic behavior with their patients, and five to 7 .2 percent engaged In sexual in- tercourse. f The repon said r7 percent of the physi- cians coodemned erotic behavior with patieoll:. The doct.on said it deltroytd the doc- tof1>atleot relationship, was "lDI· fcrglvable.'' or lndicated the doctor was psy~thlc. But Ll percenl ol the doctors ol<aYed erotic practices for such rtaaons as "1m· proves serual maladjustments," 1'belp:!I patients' recognition of their sexual status," "especially in the depressed, middle-aged female who feels un· dersirable," and "to relieve frustration in a widow or divorcee." The case could then move to trial in U.S. Dlslrlct Court in Uio Angeles. Each suspect faces a maximum sentence of five years in federal prison and a fl5,000 fine. .FroMP .. el MIDEAST .•. army has already been destroyed," be said, "while the full force of the Israe11 army has not been committed." A communique said mumtng pilots reported "good hits" on strikes Into Syria against the army and air force command outside Damascus as well as refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north near Homs. ' ·~ Coast Lawmaker Says .. Oil Firm Probe Halted The objective in Lebanon, the first target there ln the renewed war, was identified as a. radar station serving the Syrian air force at Jebel Barukb on Mt. . Lebanon in the north of the couotey near the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serious damage" was lnfl.icted on Em:Kian air fields at El ~fansura, 70 mile! north of Cairo, and at Kuahttia, 12 miles out ol the Egyptian SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tito chalmwl ,.. of a lq:lslaUve lnvelligaUng committee said today .his probe Into oil company >l'" profits on state-Owned oil fields has "run ' , up against a· stone wall ." ~L· Assemblyman Kenneth Cory ( D • Garden Grove ). said the Jolnt Committee on Public Domain round that "major~oil .i., companies have seen fit not to cooperate with the commit.tee's ln\'eatigation.'' From Page I DIRECTOR ..• organrlng and developing the finn's real est.ate and urban economic program. For ERA l.Alncl also managed corporate merger and acquisition studies. Jn 1972, IAmd said, the trustees ol the catlfomla Institute of the Arts a;iked him to temporarily serve as president of the visual and performing arts institution recently opened in Valencia. He is cbainnan of the board of Ter- ramics, a real estate investment com- pany. A 1956 graduate of Stanlord University, Lund has studied business administration at UCLA and served four years u In· dustrial economl5t for Stanford Research Institute. lAlnd is married to the fonner Sharon Disney and serves as a trustee of the \Vall Disney Foundation as well u the 11-farlborough School Foundation. He ls a director of the following businesses: Callrornla Flnandal C.On:i.: Security Savings and Loan Assoclatlnn; First Lo.s Angeles Bank; K J 0 E television. Fresno: KOGO radio, San Diego: Retlaw Enlerpri~, Inc. and Sterling Mortgage Company. He is active In Big Brothers of Los Angeles , the L<is Angeles Chamber of Commerce and T~'ll Hall. IT DAILY PILOT JM Ct•• CNll DAILY •ILOT, •"" Wlllttl Ill cembl-rto1 Ntwl·-l, II pUfltlsflM '°I !fie °''"'' "'""' , ............. c-,. ""'' ,..., ..i111 ....... "'°'" ..... · ~ """'*' l'r1C11, !<tr Coot1 Mne, N-' llMcl>, tluntlnOIO>'O lltac:llll'...,,Ml!I Y1llef, L..,_ IHtll, t..,!ro./$Md1Wld< 1111 '-" C""-lt/ '-" Jl>lft C1plllrlll0, A tlftllt 1'9111-1 ..ilt""' " """!!11'11111 S.fllr'M'(I ..... "'""yo. ,,,. prll'clrNol ,.,..1.,...,. pl1111 It 11 no Wnt 91y .$1rNI, COllt Mhl, C111forn141, tflM. lob1rt N. '1'11d Prnldtnl •NI P11t111..,.r J••• a. Cw•t•v \"kt ,.,......i ..... "'"'", M.I ....... Tho"''' KM•ll ·-Th tFll A41 A. lril11r,lrii111 MIM•lrlti (di ... Ch1rt11 H. l••• ltlch1N 'P. Mill "Hltlffll MtnlfW. f.11119 .. ...... c;.,•1 M-1 U1 W'ttl B1y S~ N---' tNdl1 W.J "...,,..., ~ ~ BNdl: 1!2 '""' .t.-~"""1 .... -·llldll 1117t t..etl ~· "'" c~ an _,,, •1 c..-... 1 Tll1,·1r1 17141 MJ ... 111 ~ A4..;tlM11 MJ.1611 ,,_ ~ ... "'""' ...... "' ~ 8'"" 4tl ... 411 ,,_ ..... .,.,... e.My '-""" MO-Int ,....,...,., '"" °''"" C.1111 ... llt~ ~,.· ... -•*"'· !!l11tl••' ...... •llWltl -""" ff# ""'',._" """""" "' .. ~ w!"-1 ·-i.• - ... 1 .. 1e11 "' ,..,..""' -· ~ <WIN ,.. ... !NW t i (Olilt ,,.,..., Gtll"""' "*""i.t'-" "' tt,.lf.t n loJ ll'IOl'fi'll'rr '• -•• U.IJ -lfrth'• mlllt1r. *"',,., .... "·" !Nfllllly, capital near the Suez Canal. 1be Garden Grove Democrat said Th e announ~ments did not uy because of the lack of COOj)eralion, he whether Arab planes rose to challenge issued subpoenu requl.ring the com· the ralden ' as . lsrael continued 'to panies to be pre1tnt at a oommlttee b hearmg today wlth information pertinent wi~ld disclosure of Its losses, bot in to the committee's investigation. the air and on the ground. At issue ls whether the state Is getting Heavy fighting raged along the Suez ls--fair~lhare of protJ11..fromJta...dcb..Eut.._ ~. where Iarae1 Hid ....!l' troops Wllm!nilon oil field oil L<>ttg Beach llml~~~tm>tf,. a r mo r whldl Cory tenned "the large11 pro'. brldgebe~ lo an a<fviiice of up to five ducing oU field in the United Slates.' mllea Into the occupied Sinai, and in the ''Iben!! have been allegations ovtr tbe Golan Heights, wbm Syrian troops were years that we are not receiving our falr reported counterattacking after being market price" on the state-owned East thrown back. Wilmington Crude oil, Cory told ·a Cfpltol '!be mllllary command aaid the Egyp- new1 conference. 4 tlans were continuing to reinforce tbelr He aald the field, located 1n the outer advance coluIDM In the Sinai across br<altwater )>eyond the Los AngeleH.ong bridges llnklng them with the w.,t bank Beach Harbor, producu about 1$8,000 of the waterway despite intense aerial barrels of oil a day, and the .. poated bombardmentl. price" for that oil la $3.21 per barrel. Alter 1wn ovemlghl Arab ·l!l!O!Tllla Cory, whole commlltee bu be<n In-ptohes and tru.e guerrlllu shelling at- vestigaUng the matter since 1967, said a tacks against villages from Lebanon, 1965 contract which the state signed with government IOUl'CeS Mid ~ was seven ma)or oil companies d~ warned by lJrael to stay out of the war the state's share~of profits. and keep the guerrillas out, too. The atat.e profit ts figured on U}e baal.1 On_ the aen,_the...command said three of the crude oll's posted llfict, 1'blch ls EgypUan missile boats were sunk by the set by the oil oompanies buying lhe oil. U Israell navy oH the Nile delta in the an lndepend.ent rellner agrees to pay the Mediterranean while two E g y p t I a n oil companies more than the posted mlaile boata \Vere hit In the Ras price, the contract does not allow the Muhammad region of the Red Sea by state to receive a cut of that extra pay-Israeli warplanea. ment, Cory es:plalned. .From Page I PROJECT ... Horror Stories Lengthened War? strong obJectJons t. the bulldl"i. CR05SRO'~ p AP She appeared before the plaMlng com· OOLUMBIA l'Uh"J, a. I \ mission recently to denounce It as a cruel - A former prisoner of war who made attempt to get around the parklng re-anUwar broadcasts in North Vietnam quirements of the coastal commission. says the war might have ended earlier If She angrily asked the city to lovestigate Americans ""ren't so ob861sed with the project. H .-ln!I' ed The city declined however. "The hearing about uR;: tort.w"e 1ct on bullding Is perfecUy l'@al according to POW1. our ordinance," said Richard Hotan, ~ "If the people here "'OOld spend a little commWlity devtlopn1ent . di.rector. "It's time reading Vietnamese history rather ~y the coastal comm1ssK1n ~bat re-than spending time concentrating o:i quires four spaces. \Ve require two hear' ~-sto . ol pl beln spaces for a duplex." mg ....,.,ur nes peo e g And £urther, Hogan noted, "no law Ms beaten with tbeir hands tied behind their been broken. That building Is still under back ... the prisoners never Y."OUld have O'.ll'lstruclion. and unless l"'o families been there " fonner Capt. \V3lter move into it. it u•ill oaly be a slngle·fami· E Wilbur• 5 ·d "onday ly home... ugene . i1 1>1 • • The builder, Uddle, aaya the building Ile ret1r~ la5t. week after JS years ~ v.ilt be used only as a single fan1il y the Navy, including nearly five years in T\.Sidence, at least for lhe £\rst year. a PO\V camp. U.S. Poised Marines on Ships Off Mi.decut WASHINGTON (AP) - A helicopter corrier witll about 2,000 ft1atines aboard is sailing in the eastern !-1eclitemnean Sea, the Pent.>go n said today. The amphibious assau1l ship Guadalcanal joins a task force led by the aircraft CJrrier Independence in lt1edilerTanean waters rough· ly 500 miles off the coast or Imel. . But the Gu•dalcanal, which could be used to evacuate Amen· cans if the new figthing endangered them, ii operating independfril· ly or the Independence. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim declined to give the Guadalcanal's precise location or to .spetulate on the posslbUlty of evacuation of thousands of Americans . The Guadalcanal carries approxJmately 30 helicopters which could be UJed to lift Americans from endangered shore polnL<. '. Human Falling Star This photograph de{>icts a parachuting star, com· posed or 27 jumpers in what is claimed to be a world record. The jump took place over Elsinore last week. The three men on the out.side are not counted. Pre-\ vious record was set at 26 men in Oklahoma last 1 year. Marijuana Dealers Put Pressure on Government .FromP .. e .l CASPERS .•. 11-fayor Roy Byrnes taking a di!ferent point of view. Dr. Byrnes asserted that the we or a brand new road cutting through un- developed hills could be "the most growth-inducing thing d city' could do." GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -A charily-minded f!:l'OUP calling itself the 'Gainesville Marijuana Dea1crs Associa- tion" has made a $100 donation which a~ parently will have to be matched by $900 in federal funds. 1be group achieved nation-wide notoriety in September when the dealers donated $10,000 Jn cash to a televised drive for funds to fight muscular dystrophy. Monday, their philanthropy was a,imed . ..., ' Hugl1es·Rehozo Campaign F·und ljnk Repo~~-. NEW YORK (UP!) -The New York Dally News ropor1ed today Santuel D8'h, ctJef counsel of the Senate Watergate C.onunlttee,. believes the panel bas in· forrnaUon linking President Nb:on'• close friend Oulrlea G. "Bebe" Rebozo wllh secret campaign contribuUons from billionaire Howard Hughes. A NEWS dl!J>ltdl quoled tJie ''"'"'" as aaying tl00,000 of the Hughes money went to the Nlzon campaign via Rebozo In two equal installments, one in 19691url the other in 1970. The newapaper said It haa learned the committee :rubpoenaed the records of four Florida hcttels ln its inve.sUgation, and that It ls believed to be investigating the records of Airwest, a Hughu-owned airline operaling in Wmern states. THE STORY did not idenUfy either its sources or the h>tel1. It said "information lieJUng Hughes money not only to the Nixon campaign but al!O to the campaign$ of several prominent Democrats" Is expected to ap.. pear dwins the third phase of the com· mittee's investigation of the 1972 cam· palgn. at the Gainesville chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. The ACLU's local president, Dr. David Chalmers, said two bearded young men drove up to his car and handed him a $100 bill. They said, "We're fn:m the Gainesville Marijuana Dealers As9ocia· t.ioo and this LI a donation to the ACLU," ' and drove away. Dr. Chalmers said he would tum the money over to tbe University of Florida loan scholarship C\Dld. Under terms or the fund, the gift wUI be matched with · $900 from Washington. Police have never been able to confirm the exislence or an association, such as the marijuana dealers. bul the money has been accepted In both wies. 'F-i..P-S'eJ EDISON ..• pleasing elerqents wil.hln Its c i t y borders,'' writes Remmel. "Each has some of the good and some of the necessary. In most cases, the residents are well aware of each before they move there." Remmel writes that power is also needed .to clean up the envirooment -d he argues "if people keep coming and we keep having babies, we fac.e a wcne en- vironment by followin' present denial demands of extremists. ' The public hearill: Is scheduled during the rouncil's regular 7 p.m. session, Mon· day. Envlronmcntal groups, led by the Sier· ra Club. are also expected to have their supporters ready for Monday's hearing. Despite the massing of speakers on both sldes ol the Issue, Mayor Jerry A1at· ney has already warned that he will limit the debate to one hour for those favoring expansion and one hour for tho.'6 op- posed. F.dlson officials are expected to take up half the ltme allotted for the pro-ex- pansion $ide. He added that the council migh: reevaluate its hard stand against the use of ~ Hjghway: because by extending La Novta It could be welcoming new runaway growth Jn hilly acreage owned by Glendale Federal Savings and Loan . But his Premise wu unpopular on the panel . The remainder agreed that Ortega Highway -the busy state-administered road winding from San Juan to Elsinore -already ls a deadly, subStandard highway. And recent council actions have in· eluded denials of some pennJ ta for new development alc>ng tht roaci bl!caue the impact of cars on the stretch would be tao severe. ~--~bacl.l'\ld'<Ouncllmb thal n.iliO' dW a major effort In win- nlng de<licalions of right-of-way on the nws of the roadway, a rebuilding proj- etc set for late Utis decade could be hur-- ried. -But despite city Clllnplliince with the direetive, state oMciala now give no ~pe of change on Ortega until the late 1970s. 0 We have to realir.e -and the county does too -that every truck, trailer, and car ualng the uisling dump road lo Forster Canyon will be traveling Ortega to get lo the new dump," Oiermak s>Jd. Opening of the unbuildable canyon in the hills bas been termed ertremely criUcal by eowtty olfidals becaltle the Fonter Can.yon •lte overlooking San Juan'• amall alzport ii rapidly fill!ni lo the brim. Wlthoul Prima Desedta, the cowtty would baV<! nowhere lo bury the South Cout's tons of daily traJh output. Commuters Delayed SAN FRANCISCO {API -San Fran· cisco and East Bay COmlll!Jters Ot1• countered delays ranging from 40 minutes to more than an hour while riding this city's Municipal Railway or the Bay Area Rapid Transit system Monday .. ADVANTAGE-ALDEN'S ' One huge 1dvantag1 Alden's has over most c1rpet stores i1 that we have O\lr own installers, providing flexibility ind reli1bir.ty in scheduling installations. Very few dep1rtmenl stores or specialty carpel sfo,.. have their own workrooms, and must rely on 1n outside c on tr act s1rvic1 for installation s. We have had m1ny people buy from us 1ftor b.ing disappointed by 1n ins!1llation company who scheduled a job ,and didn't show up or call. Sometimes, this has h1ppened two or three times before 'ihe customer gives up. Al Alden's, our installation schedule is optr1ted very effociently, and even wh1~ our men are held up on 1 previous job causing 1 late start, our min will stay and finish. -'- Tl Y"" want reliability-c11l us I -ALDEN'S ·CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•ntla AY•. COSTA MESA 646·4838 HOURS: M ... 11n Tlton .. t ro •:10 Rf. t IO t -SAT, t:)O 11 I ' • 1 I \ : I 'll.N. Dai ~tudy Set ln Ir-Vine .. . . " .'IJ'O Irvine. city statt .1aggested today tna1 the dly counclbnen proc~ golf day In lrvlne, bul avoid est.abllsblng Oct. 24 as United Nations Day. Oa the matter of U.N. Day, wbit:b will be maii<ed by communllles throughout the world , Irvine cooncilmtn are advlsed bJ the starr to deny the request ol the U,N. Association. lnsleacl. the staff sug- gests "eacb council melnber· respond to this' request in whatever action be or she may choose." Mayor John Burton said today, "Uhas be<n lhe pooture of the city ilnce day ooe tbat the cooncµ ool be uaed to e-.0 political :causes.+Evldently -oli city oiaff believes the U.N. to be a political cause," BurtOo said. "For me personally," th& IJ¥lyor ad- ded, "U.N. Day l.s no\ a political cause. I'm not sute how other cooncilmen feel, however." Burton suggested any councllman feel- ing strongly about supporting the U.N. might ask for the Item to be removed from the consent calendar. In Irvine, the mayor and city manager meet weekly to set council agendas. DA!lf' f"llet Slllf l"Mt• Ripoff Proon • Tuesday. Ottobtr ~ 1~73 I S DAILY PILOT S They Go ior Broi.e Bankruptcy on Rise in Saddleback Valley By JAN'WORTII ot Ille Dall~ l"lltl IU.lf The story Is so familiar attorneys seni· ing the Saddleback Valley know it by heart . It's the story of bankruptcy, a financia l collapse more and more oom· mon from Lake Forest to San ·Juan Capistrano: John S., 33, a yOWlg executive, gets a promotion and raise. lie· and his wife Judy decide to buy thelr first home - and move from their crowded duplex in Santa Ana to the Sadd.leback Valley. Using all their savings, they make a down payment. On paper the monthly mortgage bill is within their mearls. Not by a wide margin, but they 've always paid their bills and figure they'll manage as they always have. John likes coming home to his new plabe. Bul 'illilb a greater distance to commute he finds his car expenses higher than before. Sum:>unded by other new families in glistening new homes, Judy decides her old furniture looks out or place. She and Jolm buy new living room and bedroom fumlture. Since their savings are gone, they charge It. 11le S's two children, age 7 and 9, are gradually making more demands for new sOOe,, and clothes. Every time Judy goes to the store, prices are hightr. John and Judy begin to feel a lot more broke than when they lived in Santa Ana. "They buy everything on credit. So even though the community looks at- tractive, and everybody has everything, there just isn't any capital behind ii." A stable family can survive a financial crisis. A stable family would have several months' salary in the bank to cover for lost earning power. Bankruptcy wipes the slate clean, Phelps said. That means the family is relieved of all debts but have to gi~·e up "non-exempt assets" including stocks and bonds . ~1any items, such as furniture and some life insur~. are uempt. Typically, this means a bankrupt couple are about where they started as newlyweds. A house bought by the family may not necessarily be I06t in a bankTuptcy case. If an attorney is instructed Ii> file a declaration of homestead, the house can be kept and the family is protected frqm all non-mortgage creditors, Phelps 'ex- plained. What attorneys i;ay they face is severe client misunderstanding of implications of a nearly bankrupt position. "Before they come to us, they are three months behind on their credit card payments -and they don't even realize it costs $500 plus a $100 filing fee just t::> go baflkrupt," said Patricia Dean, a Lagun> Hllls attorney who spoctallzes In bankruptcy. Mrs. Dean'• cause ls lo get lllflh schools to require a two-semtSter cwne in consumerism . The firat tenn, llhe Rid, should include basic OOstneu )w -' types of contracts, kinds ol morlppt. I he meaning of bankuptcy, how to register a car. and bow to buy t hou1t. The second semester would cover "consumer's rights": how to shop for and manage credit, what to do If you get taken. "Without this kind of educaUon, tlds are helpless at 18," t.trs. Dean said. "'lbe way they can get taken reinf<MttS my opinion that they Jost TDOftl than they gained when tbe legal age was changed to 18." Phelps characterizes our econom.lc education as •·grab bag teaming." "Our educational 1ystem has glaring defects. Who ever tells kids how to buy groceries intelligently, or · buy a car'!' That's .just the beginning. From there, being a consumer gets harder." A5 a preventive, he recommend! ex- tensive use of good consumer reports. And there's one failsafe decision. .Phelps highly recomm·ends it "Never buy anything on credit. Jf you have no debts, you will never be bankrupt." , The U.N. Day item leads the agenda as the first item on the consent calendar. '111at repository for routine Items often is approved without comment even though as many as a dozen Items might be listed. A single COWlCil vote often dispatches the entire list and the staff recommendations become the council's fiat. Any bicycle thief would think twice before latching onto this bike, parked on Balboa Island's Marine Avenue. The cyclist removed the front tire and chained both it and the bike to a light post. They find more bills than they ex- pected, like dues to the community associatioo and lawn upkeep' or fence. construction, required by the covenants, codes aDd restrictions (CC&Rs) they signed when buying. U everything stopped there, most families riding the fence oC fmancial survival would never know bow perilous their poeition is. Proposition 1 Opposed By Saddleback Teachers Burton said if DO other councilman speaks out "I may ask that the U.N. Day item be removed from the consent calen- dar." Mayor pro-tem Henry Q u i g 1 e y speculated the agenda item may have been structured to embarass him. The conservative Republican ideologically does not support the United Nations. Councilwoman GabrieUe . P r y o r perceived simllarly that C.Ouncllman Henry Quigley holds the key vote to deny proclamation or U.N. Day. Saddleback College Hikes Employe Mileage .Fees Presumably no one will object to set- ting Nov. 16 as Goll Day unles.! the Jrvine Men's Club which is seeking the resolution dooble bogeys ils low political profile. (" Plant Purloirn:r Returns, Gets An()thei: 'frQph,y -. -,,._...., That · old saw ab!:>Ut Jightniqi never striking twice in the same place doesn't apply to lhe polled plant plllerer. He struck again Mooday at Rcmmoor Leisure World While Orange COmty Sheriff's officers were !tlll dlecldng a weekend theft in which a l50 potted rub- ber plant was taken by the tOliage foot- pad. He moved in Monday night to grab hanging fems vaJued at $50 from the home of Birtha Leora Wahlquist, 72, of 3020 Buena Vista, just a few docn.away from the esrlier weekend theft. "If this goes oo, the folks around here and down ln Laguna are going to have to wire their hanging planls with burglar ~arms," a disgusted invesUgator com- mented. Georgia Loses Bid WASHINGTON (AP) -The st>i. o! Georgia today lost its bid in the U. S. Supreme Court to take the issue of presidential impoundment of con- gressionally appropriated funds directly to the high court. Georgia's plea had the backing of the Nixon administration. -Saddleback Community Co 11 e g e trustees approved a mileage reim- bursement increase from 10 to 15 cents a mile for district employes Monday night. The original proposal by trustee Hans Vogel for 12 cents was amended to 15 by trustee Patrick Backus. ' Backus said continual increases in the price ol gasoline probably would mean the 12 cent figure would have to be re- ccmidered by spring anyway. .. 1be new rate, a 50 percent increase, gives Soddl<l>oclt the higbest mlleoge re- imbursmtent among community college ~ ID Qnnae gounty. Of the other -llfte,lWO piyo!O•ciiu lhd one pays H cents. • -Some $3,668 was ttid out last year by lbe coflege for mileage reported. Dr. Fred BreQ;ier, superintendent, said a survey done at the school last year Analysis Talk Set Wednesday A talk on transactional analysis will be given for parents al 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 'rl at Laguna Beach High School. Mergery MJller, member of the Orange CQunty board of Transact.ion.al Analysis, ' will speak on ways of using the counsel· ing technique to help solve family or personal problems. The presentation if part of a class titl- ed. "How to have Happy, Responsible Children" taught as part or the Laguna Beach Adult Education Prograin by Helen Tracy. Transactional Ana1Ysis has be e n popularized by the book "I'm OK, You're OK." Strict Parking Standards detennined the 10 cent figure was in line with gasoline costs. "Now we feel it's a different ball game,'' he said. Trustee Alyn Brannon was the only disenter to the motion. "li it's okay for other campuses to stay at 12 cents or so it's okay for us," be said. "Maybe it would keep people !rom driving so much." Irvine Bridge,. ' Higliway Cost · Now $1 Million A bridge and tw~iane highway across San Diego Creek to be ·built this year between UC Irvine iand the Irvine Industrial Complex will cost $1 ,021,110. That was ·the low bid or' Griffith Com- pany,.~ conttaetors !lWprd~ the con- tract to oonstru,._ct Campus Drive. Three years ago the total project was estimated to have oost less than $800,000. Environmental eoocems delayed the proj- ect both at the county level and for more than 18 months after the new city o( Irvine wa.S formed. Nine first bid on the joint city of lrvine, county and county Arterial Highway Financing Program projecL The package includes a bridge, a ~ lane highway, a drain to presenre water supply regulation in the UCI marsh study area and a signal light at the intersection of Campus Drive and Jamboree Boulevard. That intersect_ion is on the Newport Beach-Irvine boundary. Irvine counCUmen review the contract tonight. Coast Panel Tough on Cars By CANDACE PEARSON Of Ille DellY l"Hot lllff Commercial parking standards pr~ posed by regional coastal c:onunission planners are stricter than those of four Orange Coast cities 1n aJI but two ln- stances. N'ewport Beach has a tougher restaurant parking fomnda and meets • the roastal code for office parking. In the past, Newport Beach city of· ficlals have clashed with the South OJast Reg ional Zone Conservation Commission over residential parking standards. The comrnission"s rules were more stringent than the city's. Falling below the proposed commercial standards of the coastal commisston are Huntington Beach, San Clemente and Laguna Beach. The standards commission planners have been recommending are taken from a comprehensive parking study done by the city ol Loo Mgeles. In nine pages of detailed formulas, the study r'lllnes lp<d!lc partlilg .... quirements bued on commercial use. "This is the most comerehenstve study done." said Rod Meade, head-ol I.he com· minion'• pennlt divlsiop. Meade said the oominbslon planners who don't have the time, money or staff to "get into generation of new in· fonnation" looked a number of parking studies. The Los Az18elcs planning department v;ork Is "well documented'' and took four yura lo ~velop, he aald. Copies ol the proposal are being senl lo coastal cities, interested citlr.ens and regional conunission members, aome of whom v.we surprised to learn of its ex- istence last week. Commis,,ion Executive Directoi-Melvin Carpenter had been 'including some por- tions ·of the study In permit conditions. 'Mle full study, however, haOO't been di>cussed in public hearing. A few commissioners asked for a detailed report after a 11taff report recommended approval of a '3 mJllion Laguna Beach shopping center If it had t13 parking spaces, not the 262 the develQPer proposed. The 413 figure was computed from a fonnula of 5.5 parking SpactJ per 1,000 squareJeei o[ gross floor area given for neighborhood shOpptng centers in the Los Angeles study, The study also 1ugut1 a standard of 8.8 spaces per l,IX» square feet In large shopping centers. For mtaurants, the standard la one f>atkinl <pace per IO square feet (l:IO) a raHo of about one space per three sea.ta. Newport Beach's code Is l :~ for restaurants. San Clemente requires one space per four .tea~ and Laguna Beam's · stondard I• UO. Sllg!ltly dllleronl u Huntington Beach's formula : one space i)er five fixed seaUI or I :35 In areas without seats. The Los Angeles study used by coastal commission plonners U1ts offices as re- quiring one 1pace per Z50 square feet (1 :2501. aty omco atan<lards vary ' Newport Beach -1:250; San Clemente -1:300; Huntington Beach -1:300; and La1$1183 Beach -1:500, only half as stnngenl Retail businesses must have _one_ space per 200 s(fuare feet (1:200) under the study. Locally, both Newport Beach and Huntington Beach require 1:250 ; San Clemente 's'code is 1:300, and Lagw\a Is again the least compatible at t:SOO. The commission. empowered by Proposition 20, the 1972 coastal zone act, will be able to impose the study 's stand- ards on local developers, if it chooses to follo w them. The 12-member Orange and Los Angeles counties panel has permit jurisdiction within 1,000 yards of the mean high tide. line. A specific public hearing on the st.and· ants hasn't been set, although Meade said he ''suspects" they will oome up for di1CUssion at a commission study 9e15ion Oct. 29. The topic for that meeting at 3 p.m. in ~ Beach Harbor District head- quart<n, 925 llari>or Plaza Dr\ve. is In- terim guidelines. The coOunission bas beM .,. considering 19 geneNl guidelines , which l.ncluded residential but not commercial parking standarrts. to"bel~ pm:w permll.s. The .. Los Angeles parking study also deta.lls requlrt'rncnts for professional of· flces1 ·hotels. hospitals, schools. llbrarles. churches, golf courses, pools. clubs. banks, markets, car lots, stora1e yards, nurseries, j.aboratories and a number of other °"es. ., But all It takes is one medical crisis. one automobile accident, or one employ- me11t layoff for John and Judy's fragile economic bouSe of car<b to tumble. 'Ibeir marriage may aJso break down. If a divorce results, ch.iJ.d suppcrt payments may be added to John's already cnisblng load. Judy struggles to suppport herself. "All in all, the picture can get pretty desperate pretty fast," one Laguna Hills attorney said. What then? For many families, ac- cording to local attorneys, bankruptcy is the only answer. "It's not surppstng to find the number of bankruptcy cases you do in the Sad- dlebaclc Valley.'' said federal bankruptcy judge A. K. Pbelps. "It ls most comIMn among groups that are newcomen. 1be Saddleback Valley is a new community. People haven't found security, they haven't .put down roots. The more stable a ammunity is, the less common..bankruptcy is." ~ Phelps II.id another factor 11 the youth of most Sacldtebadt Valley residents. "They haven't bad time to accumulate capital," he said. • In the belief that Gov. Ronald Reagan 's tax initiative would hurt school funding, the Saddleback Valley E d u c at o :-s · Association has formed STOP (School Teachers Opposing Proposition 1). The task force is directed by I Ann Stwnpf, a teacher at Olivewood School in El Toro. 'Honor' Convicts Flee Racetrack CHARLOTI'E. N.C. (AP) -Three spectators at the National 500 stock car race here made a quick pit stop and then started on a run of their own. The trio were amoog 12 honor inmates from a· Raleigh prisoo attending the race as guests of the speedway. They left for the men's room and never returned, ol- ficials said. Officers said the three were l.o ~villan clothes, making them difficult to find in a crowd of 80.000. Prop. l, designed to put a limit on government spendi:ng by requiring all tu increases to be put to the people for a vote, will be on the Nov. 15 balloL The educators association contends that shifts of present state speod.ing for education and other services would rt· quire increases in local taxes. "More than $620 mtllton would be cul from the state budget nei:t year and ap- proximately $\.3 billion by 1917 il Prop. I is adopted," Miss St~ said. "Though the Goveroor slgned legisla· tioo last yeor wllich made greal pr<llJ'esll toward freeing property t.upayers fram excessive portions of dlJOl SUIJP(lrt." Miss Stumpf said, "tile adoplioo al ~Prop. l would certainly undo this gain aM freeze the ~Ive tu formulas into rigid constiiUtiOrial law." Miss stump( said teachers are 'WOl'Ti~ that children would be the "lo9en" because ensting tcbool programa woold be cut· and DO new ones begun. "We felt that u &elcbers," Miu S.!Ull!J>I' Sl!i<!. "wee l!o.d the respaoslllillly lo want lbe public ol the daa&tta "" herent in this propositim." E $55.00 TELEPHONE • Each day, Pncific Telephone Operators rccci\'C over one million calls for numbers th;it arc nlread)' listed in the telephone book. ln ~ single year, the operator expense {or h::i.ndlin i; all thes"t: calls is fift)'·fivc million dollars. So if you're concerned about the cost of your telephone se rvice. please look up numbers in the phone book whcncv1;r you ran. Of course, whenc,cr yo u Clln 't find the num• bcr, \vc'rc here to help.@) Pacific Telephone 4 DAILV PILOT .Just ~ Coasting i~J ""'" ~ •' ·~ :::~-. "'\~ "-~~ with. . ~.'.;~ ... ,., Tom lain ~ .. e .. .. • Chalk One Up For Moralit y BLACKOIJl'S OF 1m1 Once again the censor of all that is sexy or smutty has struck lo our region in the name of pubUc morals and decency. And whal better Orange County wonderspot to ~ve this happen than in Garden Grove? 'Ille good and regular fol.ks often are puuled when those ol us In the com- munieatiOM business tum red and blow Mel when self-appointed Keepers of·the Public Morals strike against books, magi zines, periodicals or motlon pi e· lures. • --· Newsmen's Plea Turned Down Judge Presses Gr and Jury Inquiry Of -Agnew Chprges:_. . . . BALTIMORE (UPI) -Judge Walter .E. Hoffman, detennlned to resist further del&ys in a CederaJ investigation of Spiro T. Agnew, rejected a request Monday by newsmen &I' poetponement of their replies to newsleak subpoenas, federal court sources said today, · Hoffman wasted no lime turning do't\'Jl a petition by a group of reporters who asked that they tie allowed an extra week, until Oct. 18, to rispond to s»h- poenas to tell the vice pm.ident's lawyers IOUrCeS of neWJ leaks about the lnvesUgatioo . LAWYERS FOR the reporters under subpoena are expected to file a motion Wednesdaf to quash the su~s on groundS ol violaUon ol the1r First Amendment ~-press rights. O>urt ......,.. aid Horlman waa In. ' wid<r oath from Ac-l41rYen about slllenl cm the grand Jury ~·ahead news l.W, but 4-ribed the Ill~ wllh Ill lllqull)' ol _chirps .. Y<llvioC r... new'omoo u "lhlllnr expedillonl." lclektocb. wttb .,ey 17 days rimalDIJlg ., . • before Ille statutory l1mk uplltl OI\ . THE REl!ORTIRS' brlel was. l1led -ol !lie all'l•Uont. · with the federal court clerk .who -1 to , There wy no -.! on· who the grand 11 bJi office lo accept ti .althouP tho jury -1d be hearblf. -11 resumes · -waa closed for Ille Columbus Ila lnvatlptloa. Se<uiitY aaJnued till>I D.JY l>oliday. -: at the federal court house where it Hollman. -..ed 11a,.;, hi: •a motel mw The Justice Department argued 1n AI----·~'""'v'· ··'d 1o ha Frida· ..... , -'--bw.... ,,.. ln-~••, a., wu -· ve Y -~ ·WU au ,... w notified the clerk lie wa tunUg down dktmmt while m «Bee. contrary to l:is • the peUUon and was qll>ted: ••1 am not -of lmmuolty. going lo grant an exla!IJoq oo anything. -~ will be no beannci" ' BESIDES THE .COllllltutlonal iuF -ty clalm, Acnew'1 lawyon IOUCht lo halt the ~tlllll "' grocmils of } udidlOI publidlj due to. -about :::r- ..... ol lbe lllqulry -Ac-dlart-ed came prlmsrily from the Jootice o.partmenl • . . In .addition lo !he n!porlen' requat tor a one-week delay from 'lbursday in replYiDa formally to subpoerias~ the Juitlce-llep<rtmeot_ Monday called the Agnew publicity cl$ls frivolous, and l"ked l{offmM lo ,...,.,.,. .his decision allowing subpoenas lo be ISsued to oewmnen. I ' The department said II was willing lo • alrow top officials lo answer questions Hoffman nonnally Ills In the U.S. . district out for e~m Vlrglnla · at Norfolk. He WU ualgiled aa supervising Judi• for the lfllll! jury lcqulry Into an alleged Jdcld>ack fChem• of · Maryland polldcs after all 1 federal Judges In Maryland disquallfled themselves. -111E JUSTICE Department disclosed Friday In arJUU1i for roject!on ol Apew'a immunity chUm that the statute ol llmltatklno on aom,,.unspeclf1ed aUega· !Ions in the we ~d run out Oct, 26. After Iha~ pioseculors would be unable to seek i,Qdlctmellt on those counts af· fected. - • Injured .(lg•I• Motorcycle daredevil E v e I Knievel was reported in Satis- factory condition a't a Wisconsin hospital after crashing his cycie at conclusion, of a lS..v~hicle jump. He told onlookers, 'I'm too tough to die.' "Why are you getting so upset,'' they will question. "That was awful stuff they confiscated and burned. We're all better off being rid of It" ·Maybe so. But often one person's flower garden looks to anolher Uke a weed patch. And who censors the censor? U.S. Jews Baise Funds " Millio1ts Given for Israel's Mideast War Efforts MORE IMPORTANT, and perhaps more a threat to freedom is the historic pattern of censorship. It is progressjve. lt moves from one phase to the next, each successively more restrictive. The nearby municipality of Garden Grove proved that historic axiom in an almost test tube case. It all started when some shakers·and· movers ol the garden city became upset with the mushrooming lncrease in coin· operated racks on town streets which featured sexy periodicals. UPI Ttl#Mftl NATIONS DIVIDED ON HOW TO END MIDDLE EAST CONFLICT Ch ina Ambassador Huang Hua (left); U.S.'.s John Scali By United Press International Americans Jews gave millioos of dol)ars to Israel in an emergency cam- paign today and others volunteered to go there themselves to do civilian jobs while Israeli workers are in the army. OVER $4. MIWON was collected in New York City alone Monday. Jerome Rosemarin, a director of the United Jewish Appeal, said the nationwide target for the next few days, was $100 million. He said the money would be ~ !or "social welfare and bwnanitarian THESE unLE SHEETS -I'm oot really sure you could caq them newspapers -feature photographs of nude people and other sexy articles. Thus 11 wu !hat the Garden Grove'• top brass E;ght Children decided to clean out all thls smut. " Jn order to purge the dirty stuff, the U.N. Pru1el Fails in Try To End Mideast Conflict · city passed a new law severely restric· fit One Fami·ly. ~ how periodical racks could be ·-displayed to the Garden Grove public. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -occupied in the 1967 war1 LttUe enfoccement, bowever, developed Member> Of the U.N. Se<:urity Cooncll ·§!>"" soui<es said war ~·'l"' "-" p·e· ~oh :n· B'-~e immediately. were miles apart today In their search contraitlctory that some co u n c i I r ..., ., ~ needs" so that tbe Israeli government could use IL! resources to prosecute the war. Robert Copeland, a spokesman for the Uniled Jewish Federation In Norfolk, Va., said hWldreds of volunteers have called the group since the fighdng erupted Saturday. "Donations are pouring In," Oopeland said. "Members of the community stand together in this time of crisis." - IN ML\Mt, leaders of the Jewish com- munity a~cbed their goal of selling 15 million wOrth of Israel bonds today . E:arly today the bond driye had colled..t $4,230,000 in cash and check!. Ttne separate rallies were set for New Jeney tonight, a spokesman said. Other meetings were called in St. Louis, Mo., AUanta, Chicago, Baltimore, Miami, San Francisco, Pitflburgh, and Hartford, Com. r-rr---c==-=c-==~~-~~~~-~'~.,.'-'a""'""""-cto~end..,~the=~M,,id!'ldl"'e"Eas~,,t,.:w:o•~r.'"' members were waiting 1or a clearer plc-.r--===-===='-=-=oo·n,<'''rc mus IT WAS that one Councilman Dip omatie sources said anot er coonc1r-rure-io-emerge"betore tal1ng'1losltfon-n JERR~ CI'n", Ohio (AP)1-~ =.--- Woodrow Wilson ButterfieJd, a fonner meeting was likely late tOf!ay but it was a cease-fire resolutioo. · · Orange COIUlly planning commissioner, not clear what form a compromise cease-U.S. Ambassador John A. Scali tOkl the brothers and sisters, all less .'than · 10, took the law into his own hand!. He fired flre resolution might take. council the "least ~.amaging way" to end years old, died early today in an ex· up his pickup truck and took to the ~ -the fighting was to restore the cease-fire plosion and fire that swept lbeir trailer streets, personally gathering up all the THE UNITED States appeared alone lines that Egypt and Syria crossed Satur-home while their parents were away at racks of those little periodicals to which Monday with its proposal that the rouncil day. Later he said the United States ha::i he took personal offense. call for a return to military positions "ideas which we will be discussing within work, aut~titl said. Ah, it was a grand old grandsland play held before the outbreak o( fighting on the goverrvnent and with o t h e r Frank ~ owner of P a d e n and Garden Grove's Vigilant for Public Saturday. governments." Mortuary tn.,,..th Baltimore, 'identified Morals applauded Butterfield for his Orina called the idea "preposterous" courage and resourcefulness in cleansing and, with the Soviet Union, demanded the city of this awful. blight. Israeli withdrawal from all Arab lands Then a funny thing developed in Garden Grove. SpUITed by Butterfield's solo action, the regular city crew1 got in- to action to purge the street.s O[ periodical vending racks. They were. how eve r, less discriminating than the aforementioned Councilman Butterfield. They ju.st went out and swooped up every street coin rack which they felt offended the new city dictum. Top Brass Pay $1 for Feast SOVIET AMBASSADOR Jacob A. ?.falik said Israel must ~ forced to aban- don the parts of Egypt, Joni.an and Syria its bas occupied with the "suPf>Ort of im· perialist circles'' since 1967. He blamed Israel and its allies foe the outbreak of fighting. Chinese Ambassador Huang H u a demanded that I.srae1 withdraw im-· mediately from the occupied lands. He said the Ol.inese people admire F.gypt and Syria for their "bold and just action and exprreu finn support to them." Israeli Forelgn Minister Abba Eban called oa the Arabs to "embark on the adventure of negotiating peace." • ( ) IN-SHORT ... the parents of the children BS Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Trevinlo ot the Dale Roe Trailer Park. He said the Trevinios were at '\\'Ork Bowling Green State University, 10 miles· north of JOIT)' S:tty, when the fire broke out. e Algeria Aid = CAIRO 0 U. A. R. (EGYPT) The Anti-Defamation Lea~ ol the B'nai B'rith condemned EgyJit and 'Syrla for what it called a "Pearl Hatbor at· tack" and the Culference ol Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations called an "emergency convocation" ·ot aver 500 Jewish leaders for W~on today. . SOME IOO Cornell Uniyersity stulenll staged a pro-Israel rally oo. the Ithaca campus. " . Ha~ the American women's Zloillst group.that sponsors the majcr hospital In Jerusalem, 11ld medical sup- pli"' woold be a~ to o<nd on lo ls,...I il they wUI J>Ot go had. American docttrs have volwiteered their services, Hadassah said, · and atty American students between 18 and 24 years old who want to go would be.~ to :w9fk ai non· military tasks on agriCultural set- tlements. ,. S INA I .. (OCCUPIED ( BY ISRAEL) TllUS BY YESTERDAY, it was dif· ficult to find any kind of a periodical rack on the streets of Garden Grove. Various reports had it that somewhere between 60 and 146 such racks had been hau1ed away into the darkness of the Garden Grove city yard. W ASffiNGTON (AP) -R<p. Les Aspin says he'11 ask the General Accounting Office to investigate elaborate $1 dinners for generals. Pentagon cafeteria prices keep going up for Gls and civilians, but generals "stln ·gorge themselves on a wmptuous: three-<!OlU'Se dinner for only $1," Aspln says. B\lt Egyptian Foreign M i n i s t e r Mohammed H. El·Zayyat denounced the idea of giving up territory Egypt and Syria claim t-0 have won back since Saturday. ALGIERS (UPI) -Soviet Communist party lead« Leonid I. Brezhnev called on Algeria today lo help Egypt and Syria in the fighting against, Israel. 'lbe national news agency Algerie Presse Service (APS) said that ln a message to Algerian leaders Brezhnev said the Soviet Union , "is completely persuaded that the Algerian government, which has an ex- cellent experience in the struggle ... will take ell means and all .oeces:sary meaSUJ'!S in order to aid Syria and Egypt In their difficult fight brought on by the aggressor, Israel." ISRAEL REPORTS IT HAS BOMBED EGYPTIAN -PORT SAID All!A Egypt AmbltN dor Inter rupts U.N. O.bat1 to Glv• N1w1 · • So Garden Grove was cleansed of vend· ing machines for The \Veekly Smutto. But also. you couldn't find your fa vorite copy of the Herald·Examiner. LA Times or Santa Ana Register, either. The progressive censor had struck again. There is probably only one consolation in it all. It happened In Garden Grove, where they probably deserve it. The Wisconsin Democrat says one recent menu for generals had a choice of six entrees, eight ap- petizers and 17 desserts. Ordinary Gls and civilian employes eat in commercially operated cafeterias where inflation has driven prices up substantially, Aspin says. There was no inunediate romment from the Army, "Occupied Egypt is our home," he declared. ZAVYAT ACCUSED lsrael of starting the war by making a naval attack on an Egyptian oil pipeline west of the Suez Canal early Saturday. He said Egyptian troops retaliated and then moved across the caoa.1 to "plant the Egyptian flag on Egyptian soil." Snow Blankets Plateau Fo g and Ha ze Shroud Mississippi Valle y Regions ltA1IOMA\ WfA11111llt¥1(1 10UC-.'11• 111.M 1 11~10~71 "· 1 -IAIM~IMOW ,,.,..,., ~ ... 11.l!J MtOW1 t i , I LOW • Officers Seek Gun-toting Susp-ect -in Four Murders e Kld""P S11spe ct1;' MEXICO CITY (AP) -Poli"' have annOunced lhe arrests of six men for the kidnap-killing ol two 900S of prominent ltfexico City families wbo paid nearly $600,000 lo raoaom for them. Authorities aaJd tbe men were not con- nected with any guerrilla or terrorist group. They said money was 'their only mollve and three million ,pesos - $240,000, -wu recovered wben they were arrestedm e Strip Mining . \VASmNGroN (AP) -A strip mine rtgUlaUon bill, de(ended as a ''state's righU" measure but att.a,cked as "federal dictation," has been broadened by the Senate to ban surface mining for coal on mUUons ol acreS in the wat:- In the only roll call vote during the lint day of debate on the billrtllt~Semte voted 5! to 33 Monday lo prohibit strip mining of privately owned land to whi<h the ledml government bolds the minenll rlghtl. e V iet Drltie . HELMVILLE, Mont. (UPI) -Law en- forcement officers set tiJchway check· polnla along the rugied Continental Divide today lo ~h for • heavily anned let!!ager rujecled ol Jdlllng fow- persons at a dude rllictr. ~. . .. SHERIFF'S deputies said Roger Caryl, 17, wl1o liked lo be called"'!'" McCMI" af~~a fabled 19th Century bandit, was carrying several weapom Including a 7nun rifle which "could blow a man's head oil at IOO yards." ' Montana HJghway Pattoldn, deputies and Fish and Game Deportment wardens -Rere stationed evetIY two mllK along a north-south road between U.S. 12 and Montana 200 In Ille m811hunl. - Sheriff ilovld Collings SBld Caryla is suspected of Jdlllng the lour persons SUn· day, pos~b!y becao,. be was orllered lo bury a dog he had shot to death. Tbrt )'OUtb wu empk>yed at the dude ranCfi where the kllllngs took pl•"'· COWNG8 ··s.uo Caryl lint shol Samuel Aldm, 42, and hll KID, Steven, 18, with whom ht aha..t a cal>ln at the Whltetall -Then, ~ lo"'llii -officer, be Jdlled the manqer, John SAIGON (AP) -Hoavy nins from Mlllor, 13, lllld the cool<, Ruby Judd, 62. Typtioon Opal today .stalled-tilt South Wi-.. who scatttted _when the Vletnamtse government'• drt'lt to retake violence erupted told lnvesttaatora that the Le M.lnh ranger base In tht ctntral Ciryt told hla vletlm1: "I h&l:ve • few hlghllgllts. hellos for yOU" and 11 Hen!'I t' hello for Some 2,000 government troopg wt¥> you,'' then bl.a.led them wUh a Jhot&Un. launched a coonterottack last w"'k to DcpuUeo said Caryl spent the night. retake the ba~ Iott Sept. 22 _were after lhe 1h00Ung 1n an ~cd reported at a standstill near Pleiku. ranchhou.se near thlS' smoll, aouthwest ' • Mootana community. They said he severed telephone llne!!I there. PLANES AND tracking dogs were pressed lnto service in the aearch. Cary~ an ~re Scooth, came 1o Mon- tana in. August after leaving his home tn" Decatur, UI. His father, James, 49, a mechanic at·a farm implemmt manufacturing firm, told reporters at Decatur: "If they have lo shoot him, they'll Just !lave lo. I hope they get him before he hurt1 anyone else. "Every time the phone rinp we hope lhat we'll get word that they've caua;bt him." DAILT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtll'l'tfJ of U1t D1llJ Piiot. II l\llfMlttd F c f h...,....,I II fW • Mt .,..... ,,_ ,..... .., ••• ""'" ull Miii ,.., ...., w111 ............ ,...c:.,.._ ........ , .• ,_ .......,. .... .......,, Nyw•Mt~ ..... ..., " ' ''"'· ............ " ....... ...... ... CtllMlllC...., ..... ~ .. ...... C.. .... "*"' ""'M II 1.111, 0 Ttlephonfs Mftt Ol'tftft (-1~ Al't*t ....... M2.utl ,..,. .. ,, ltWlll\fltf9tll ··"" _, WlltllllllHlltf' •• , ••• "" l*lDf llfl CMlll<Mlh, C•l'lttrlj'! tt•t~. ltfl '"" t...,.r-. 0•"6 "'""' '"'"' ....... .......,. """' •.•• .,,..4lt • I I l I I I I ( .. • DAILY PlLDl $ ' Notel..dt Relatives Embark • _To H11nt MIAs __ 'Pawrnity Suit'. Baby Wltt•llt ci "" ,.... tWre c• be ... frM INldefV, n.t h ..c...tk, Hew· . LOii ANGELE! (AP) Do!Pte admonitions from the U.S. Stale Department, 53 reC.UVfll of American tervlcemen declared mJ.uing in Southeast Asia have en>- barbd on a trip Ibey hoped will focus internallonal at· tenµon on their plight. °"'1edlaJI Red-fltel1cn.-60;-and Lollilln Toland, 3$, a -· pllolocrapher, ...... man1ed Monday in a silJl>le, aingl .. Abandoned at Film Studio ~11\I:~, ~1~1~~:\111\1k -· ""'"' •f _. ....... h "°' .. •!Id i. ltMtf, Mt. --,. .... eMI ef a h-. 50c.Mtty , -Juttice Fel~ Frankfurter ring cereQll>ly at the Finl CULVER CITY (UPI) -A Unitadan €bureh. woman who lost a paternity It was the third marria1e suit against actor C h a d for Skelton and the ftrst for ltll lrftllllll EvereU abandoned the'baby at The group left Monday on a Mias Toland, daughter o1 llllLll'Ullnlll the entrance lo MGM studios Bolywood cinemalographer ·where Even!tt's TV ser1 .. ls ( ) Gregg Tol-:-liht wore a ...----'------. fllmed, police said Monday. lloor length pink' chiffon dress and c&rried a bouquet of whlt.e BRIEFS ""'°'· plane lo llanP<*. Thailand, e p._,.·ai.c._, where they planned lo make SAN JOSE (AP) -EJeo. arrangements for the trip to tr!'clt •--• 1o -~· Vlentlaae, Cll(Jital o1 Leoe. Y was res~ ~t 75,000 persons 45 minutes after Abbut l,250 A m er l c an the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. servicemen ,are listed by the aaid vandals ~ Into a com- Pentagon as mlsaing I n pany ""'8tation here. Southeast Asia. The status ol , A PG&E . spokesman aald moi:e than 100 MtAs has been someone climbed ewer' a fence changed to dead 1 i n c e .at its McKee eubstation Moo. American pri>oners of war daf night and · pulled four held in Vietnam and Cambodia switches that cut Oft power to were released early this year. four 12,000-volt transmission •. "'"'A ..., ,_ lines. Allout 25,000 <OODeCtio1111 ... a ... ampa.,,-in east San Jooe,.... affected POLICE NA B PORNO FILM RIVERSIDE (AP) - Police raided the movie "Deep Throat'' at the -Cinema x Theater, cmfiriting the film and arresting two ~einployes we re relwed on llGO bell eacl> after being booed !or in- vestlgatm ol -g a pomograplllc Jllm r.r..,. day. BURLINGAME (AP) -The by the ~lroul'l>etween 8:51 4'15-......,., policy making .. p.m. and 7•31 p.m. ' ._ __ _;. ____ ---1 council of t6e California Teachers Association says it is planning a cb>f-to-door cam- paign against Gov. Ronald Re>gan'• proposed tax in- iUalive. "ll this measure passes it will wipe out the big gains we have made the past two years lo improve funding of educa- tion while lowering property taxes," C'TA President Bryan Stevens aaid Monday. The council represents some 146,000 teacllers throughout the atate. e Skelton Weds The~ P~t Delayed Due to Brine Problem SAN DIEGO (AP) -An ol· discouraging. ficiaJ says San Diego Gas & "We may have to reject Electric Co. must dflay con-brine and go in the use ol structicn of a $ 3-m i 11 ion steam alone," Engler said Monday. Brine is the mt Ouid geothermal plant in t b e which comes to the surface Imperial Valley because o[ from geothermal w e 11 s . problelllJ with brine. Although tt provides heat for Martin R. Engler Jr.,"'senior turbines, it contains too much vice president of the utility, """'"~' 6r pi·--~ valves, SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -said test -·•-liave been ~,, ~ ~N ~------'----:....::::.:....:.·-==--~=~=· • Engler aald. llollleowners: if there~ •tlling advertised · ii today's s-4rer J08'1 •to own, re•e .. er • GlllJllll:Jll'JluJJI. THE INFANT was left on the ground llW' a guard lbacl< at the IOUth gate of the studio along with· a oote addres8ed lo Everett which reportedly sakl the boby WU bis rosponalblllty and be should take care ol it. Everett, who stars I n "Medical Center,'' was a_c.. cwed by actrosa Sheila Scott of lathering, her ..., Dale, wbo WU born last May 2:5. , AFTER. FIVE days of lestlmony, the judge dlamlla- ed the jury Sept. 19 and ruled that the actor was not the father. . Neither the judge nor the principals In the caae """Id comment, however, on rePorts of a private settlement in- volving a payment of $5,000 and $215 a month by a thin! party. Police aald that Larry Kids · Like To Ask Andy • NA110 NA\ NIW ~PAP!R u<·• WEEK 7·•-" Evans, an associate of juvenile aulhoritles for prob- EvereU, confirmed that the able placement in a foster abendonedbabywasthesu~. ~bo~me~·------___'.~====:===:=:::=::=:;:=::=::=::=::===:=:=:=:=:J ject ol the paternity suit. Thel- infant was turned over to 2 P ersons Found Shot To Death MONTEREY ( A P ) 9M!riff's deputies are in- vestigaling the fatal shoolings cA. a man aDd a woman whose bodies were found by a passerby on a road between Monterey and Salinas. 'Ibe vtctlms' hands were Ued behind their bac~ and both bad been shot several Umea 1tn the ·Chest and back with a large-caliber weapon, the Moni.rey County sheriffs «flee aal.d Monday. CORONER Harvey Hillbw> ' placed the Ume of death at 6 a.m. He identified the man as Murphy Anderaon, ".fl, of Seaside. · 'Ibe ·woman's ·name was withheld J>Ol)dlng notification of relatives.p_tricers said she was tn her ~ and was from Monterey. LongBeach: . flY the unofficial state bird to and from sacramento a times a c1i1Jfo Or take our !;'SA ·Grinningbfrds to San Diego and San Francisco. Call your travel agent or -PSA and fly the coop. PSA gtwes JOii a I~ I r·----- Avai. You may convert the bullt~p equity In your house into C8lh In your hands. Cash to do whatever you want to do, and pay bllCk conv!Jllenlty over a period Of/Mrs. HOMEOWllEll LOANS TO $25.000. ~-ss.oooon 1 comblnlllon ., __ lllCI Pel90ftll l'ropot!J. ""'111WCO FINANCIAL SERVICES l7't6-D N.._ ltw4., C.... ,. ... '" ........... ""'" .A.-!• D lle.hdW St,.A-..• 1711t ........ ,....... ,.,..., 1 ........ Pt.ml 1 JOtl ............ St., G,.,.11 Gfove 174U ..... ltftl.,H••P'-""eaclll 2117 le. M• It., Sen A11t1 11J w. '"' St., ~ ... 6411 ····-·· ...... w ............ I Y..1000 131·2116 776·010 t6J-l601 l lMlOO 147-6171 .. ,.,,,, 547-4411 HJ-IOOI COMING SOON Union Dues Bill Vetoed SACRAMENTO (AP) - A bill that would require sch:>ol districts to collect union dues from teachers haa been vetoed by Gov. Ronald Reagan. The bill by Assemblyman Jim Key30r, ( D -G ran ad a Hllll), _,14 liave !'eflulred dis'lricts to treat the dues the same aa other payroll de.due· lions and oollect !Wlds for teachet organizations. 'lte measure was backed by · ~cber organizations. • Costa Mesa Police Association Second Annual ,,. • BENEFIT SHOW I .... ~ N9vember 25, 1m -7:30 P.M. Anaheim Convention Center .. Whether your account balance is $5.00 or $500,000, Mutual Sallings has a high· earning, insured salllngs plan to fit ybur needs. Your Interesting Neighbor ... In your neaiby Mutual Savings office, welcomes the opportunity to assist you. • NO\.Y nearing a half-century of service to Southern California savers, the Big M-Mulual Savings. is almosl half·a·bil/ion dollars slrong ... and still grOINing with three new offices this year! Now 9 offices: Canoga Park· Chatsworth. Capistrano·San Clemente, Corona del M <'r. Covina, Glendale, Pasadena, Thousand Qaks, Visla, West Arcadia. I MUTUAL SAVINGS C.p1strano-5Bn Clemente: S~ Camino de Eitrellt/493-6651 Open Moo<f,1Y" Thu'l(i"Y. 91\M to 5 PM' Mlday 10 A':1 k> 6 PM Coroaa dd MM: 286'1 Eut C:O..t HIQhway/67>5010 . ' " I I r " I A• DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Basis of Freedom ' t • It seems particularly appropriate thts week -New .. paper Week -to call attent.lon to an ~periment in e~ucational enrichment in which lbf: Dally Pilot has joined with more Lhan 200 community-minded news- papors. '\ The ldea of publishing college course material un( general clrculation ne~spaper where it can be read by the casual reader for information and, at the same Ume, can be studied in depth by those who agr~ to assimi- late it and be tested on it for college credit is what "Courses by Newspaper" ls all abOut. . . It simply structures and formalizes what has been going on since the ~ubllcation of the first newspaper -that is, the reportinJI: of facts and philosophies to in· lonn and enrich readers. The first experimental course is entitled "America and the Future of Man." It contains the works of 20 of Amertca's leading scholars -a. veritable "super univ•rs- tty" lald at the doorway of "students" (newspaper readers), The slogan for National Newspaper Week i!; "News· papers: Your Foundation for Free Choice." Knowledge is lhe lorce for making free choice intelligent choice. "Courses By Newspaper" is a timely effort to fonnalize the workµlg partnership of newspapers, education and freedom. The Whole Truth The effort of Common cause, a citizens' lobby which recently spent 15 montbs and $75,000 to bring about enforcement of a campaign law Is worthy of note. It revealed that, in an obvious. attempt to circum- vent both the spirit and the letter of the law, President Nixon's rHlection committee collected, and failed to report, donations of $11.3 million. And that the money was . rounded up in a crash, four-week drive preceding Apnl 17, 1972 , the date on which a new and strict cam- paign contribution disclosure law went into effect. When the committee listed donations received How About A Lobby For The People? ~YDNEY J.HARR.I~- Dear Gloomy Gus Isn't tt time we st.It off the rivers ri uoilerground money and influ· ence that pollute our polidcs? F.H.B. °'"""' °" _.. ..... MICl!nltt.11 " rlHln MIS .. lllf -.....11y '9ff«I ..... ' 111 de¢ded to form a "lobby" group in • Washington to promote the interes~ of 'tlews ol 1111 -· lfll' JWI' Ht -,. o .... , .... o.o,. ,\W, • the sprocket-arw:l-widget i n d u s t r y • through March 9, 1972 , which it later maintained wu the date on which the old federal Corrupt Practices Act of 1925 expired, Common Cause spotted Lhe convenient four-week gap in the reporting dates. After a year of le~al argumen~ a U.S. District judge ordered the comnuttee to fill in the gap. It. new report revealed that of $19.9 million in campaign cog. tn'butions received from Jan. I, 1971 through April 6, 1972, a startling $11 .3 millon came in during the crucial four-week period. Public disclosure of donors to political campaigns and the amounts donated is a !undament.al need to saf~ guard elections. Common Cause should keep up the good work. Unhappy Voyagers c Floods, earthquakes, crop failures, drugs, organized sm uggling, wage inequiUes: these are some of the fac- tors cited by U.S. Immigration service officers In anal)'2· ing the soaring rate of illegal alien arrests in the Call- fornia-Jrtexico border area. In the San Diego region, the Immigration Service arrested 129,000 illegal aliens In the past 12 months, compared with 94,000 In the preceding 12-month period. Scarcely a week goes by that headlines do not an· nounce new arrests, often numbering into the hundreds, . at the San Onofre immlgr3.tion checkpoint. Some have been accompanied by tragedy as terrified passengers attempting to flee on foot across the freeway were struc~ by speeding cars. Some of the carstops yield large amounts of illegal dru~s. usually marijuana. But most produce just people, Mexicans who have paid professional border smugglers about $250 apiece to get them into California where they hope to find employment at a decent wage. Perhaps there's a message in all these pathetic stories for the grumblers and groaners who happen to enjoy a legal status In the promised land. '' I ' I' SAii>, '8£TTE!l: 6£T THAT MUFFLER • Backers Resent White House Handling -Agnew-Nixon Hostility Could E.rupt WASHINGTON -The lnteosity of anti- Nlz:on feeijng now beating in the col· leetive breast of many backera of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew can best be gauged.by the'"fact that bis brass-knuckle sttaci: oo Assistant A t t y. Gen. Henry Petersen' was really aimed at Richard M. Nixoo. ( EVANS·NOVAK J Agnew's decision oot to resign if lndieted Is "proper," Air. Nixon was responding to Intense heat from Agnew's polltical ,.. supporters in the Republican party. But Ariz., on Sept. t• for secret ~cussioo his public support of the Vice Presideiit. about the Agnew affair with Sen. Barry Other signs crop up almost daily to Goldwater. Goldwater, the most respected ·feed the deepest suspicions in the House Republican party elder, has made no ef· of Agnew against the Hoose ol Nixon. It was presidential oxmselor 1tfe!vin R. fort to dissemble his strong repugnance Laird who first tipped off a Republican for the way Mr. Nixon bas haodled the congressional leader not to get out front Agnew affair and bas stoutly defended defending Agnew. It was the WhJte House Agnew· · that telephoned Senate Republlcaa 1eader So, on Sept. 14, !onowing earlier " H1J8h Scott, ..urging him to call a telephone talks with the Senator in Republlcan conference to warn Senators whatever I spent on this endeavor to in· r r+----nouence--Jegislatioo--wotrld-be-ta1-deduc--one...oLlts affiliates did Jobby_1gainst a tible as a business expeo!e. bill giving Jax b...U to e>pe>rlen, spend- "Agnew," ooe in- formed Republican says, "wasn't hunt- ing-Reh small la.me.:...; u Petersen. Peter- le!l w a s simply lti.s stam!-in fer Nixoo.." ~,. Mr. Ni%on, pethaps intentionally am- r blguous, lei! unclear whether be thought ~--~w'sl!ecilloniJn>omct fir the..- try u wen as "proper" for Agnew. Aud Washington, presidential counselor Bryce against gettiDg oul on a pro-Agnew limb. Harlow and Ulistant White House • &iJDieJ Jf1'id JJ BUiban:lt, Jr., ~AGNEW-backers a e.t u a 11 J But U I formed a "ebari!Bble and Ing ooly 11.200 wlille special Interest educaUooa l" group in Washington to pro-groups spent at' ieast $150 000 promoting m~te the pubUc interest -say, by lo~ the legislation. Natulally, '1t passed, and bymg for more equitable tax laws -I is costing the Treasury more than $150 would lose my tax· million a year. exempt status II It was shown that I ONE OF TIIE BIG reasons for so tried to Influence much disaffection, alienation and cyn- legi11laUon by pollti-icism ln our country is the sense that cal pressure. everybody with influence speaks for his What this means own segment, but nobody speaks for iJ I.hat spectsl in-everybody. In the w~lter of private in· terest groups -terests, the public interest is forgotten whether for busl.ne!ll, and neglected -which is hardly the way labor, agriculture, <>r our Founding Fathers conceived this na- what have yoo. -can and do lion would be run. spend milli<>M in pressuring for We badly need a public advocate stand· Jaws they want pas.wd; bu.l if you ing above factionalism, which ' would work for the general interest, or tbe counter-poise the rich well-connected public interest, t.beo contributions lo your and deeply entrenched lobbies that ove~ cause are not t.a1<1eductible. the years, have turned our tu systfm in- EARLY TWS summer, for instance, the House Wa~ and Means Committee held hearings on tax revision. A group .called Tax Analysts and Advocates filed a suit in the U.S. District Court, com- plaining that It couldn't take part in these hearings for fear i~ t.ax-ezempt status would be lost. In which case, many people would 11top contributing to It, since their contributions couldn't be written off. Two years ago, the group pointed out, to a playground far the influential and a mine-field for the unrepresented. The broad band of middle-class wage-earners has been the hardest hit by these glaring inequities ove r the last 30 years. •ic,r.otn''' ls ltie name of the. game - but the public interest is specifically denied any clout under our present laws. These Jaws need to be rewritten, or rescinded, so that it becomes as easy to lobby for Everyman as it now is lo write off millions to protect the advantaged. Evidence in support of that contention ls considerable, but one fact, lDlpublisbed until now, stands above all others: Agnew had vainly made a private but ex- tremely vigorous appeal to President Nixon himself precisely along the lines of his 1ater public attack on Petersen before the Republican women in Los Angeles.. BUT nIE PRESIDENT flatly rejected the Vice President's private appeal in dealing with highly disabling leaks that Agnew said were coming from Petersen and his aides. When. Agnew repeated virtually the same attack -this Ume with maximum publicity and before a rabidly pro-Agnew partisan audience - tbe real target was not Petersen but the President. Thus. the Vice President -admittedly near the end of the political road - harbors deep-seated hostility toward the President which could erupt dangerousl y. Partly to minimize that danger, Mr. Nix· on tried to make clear in hi.9 unexpected press conference this week that he Is not trying to bound Agnew out of office. That dampened the immediate prospect of open conflict, but scarcely brought true peace. In telling bis press conference that Bleeding Hearts Could Spoil It All \\"ell, there goes Ronald Reagan's hope of ever beC"Oming President. Arter hap- pily signi ng a bill r~toring California's beloved death penalty, tte said tte was against the gas chamber. He suggested there might be a nice way to kill people, perhaps with a lethal injection <>r with tr an q ui\izen. "I think maybe there mould be more !ltudy on thi s 10 nnd out." he said. "Is there a more humane \\-ay? Can we still imP,">ve our humanity ? ' itor,cradish! It'~ bleeding hearts like Governor Reagan wh<> would destroy the death penalty as y,•e have comc~10 knO\V and Jove It. Any fool can sec whcro ,---By Georgf' ---• , Dear Gc>orRc · I wanlt-d lo surprise my boss ,v.lth a sing ing 1elegrnm but un· ~crstand that Isn't done any more. Can you help me? C. T. Desi r C. 'T".: Well , We~em Unfon hnd the old singing lclegrnm down pal but If you really Want to surprlst your bas~. risk about George's rates. t~or a nominal sum r will deliver a dancing telegram. I mertly go 10 the nddress . knoc k, and ~•hen the recipient an.$wcrii I do t h e Charleston ror lhr('e lull minutes. (lnv1rlably. people tire surprised .) ( ART HOPPE J mushy-headed. soft-on-crime like> this win lead . thin king SAN QUENTIN -Vito (Sticky Fingers) Spumoni, convlcted axe murderer of ten, was guest of honor yesterday al a J oyous Passing On to Etemal llappiness Rehabilitation Pro- gram Blessed Event. As Is customary , the Blessed Event was preceded by a Happy Hour Family Get-Together & No-ll08t Cocktail Party in J\1r. Spumonl's penthouse 11uitc high atop the North Cell Block . Mr!. Spumoni served home-made cheese blintzes. A good time v.·as had b)' all . - r.-lr. Spun1oni. looklng tanned and flt fo11owing his tv.•o-v.·eek Fun & Frolic Cet· Av.·ay-From·lt·All Vacation ln Cannes, was the first to leave. "ltate to break It up, gang," he said. rubbing bJs hand.a. "but run hardly wait." Accompanied by four attendants in while ties and tails, ~fr. Spumoni eagerly Jed tbe WI)' to the rosc-covertd Blessed Event Cottage ju.st outside the walls. 111£RE, during • gourmet banqutt catered by the famous La Dourgogne Rr.!ltaurant, !he Warden prHented him with a photograph album entitled ""ntla \\'as Your Lile,'' as trlcnd.s and associates prnPoSed countless toasts to "the best dansed hatchetman this State eve r saw." At last It was lime '°t' ~fr. Spumoni to retire to The Waterbed Room with hU! choice of Loving Companions. They in· eluded two Pan-American stewardesses and a topless go-go dancer. At 2:47 a.m., as his dear ones outside sang. ':So Long, It 's Been Good lo Know You," the perfumed laughing gas was wafted into the chamber -its humanitarian purpose being to render Mr. Spumoni unconscious so be wouldn't feel any paln from the needle. lfis la.st words, emitted between gig· glcs. were: "Man, what a way to go!" The injectton was th en administered with a solid bronze souvenir syringe. Each of ~tr. Spumoni's proud surviV(ll"I was presented with a scroll, suitable for framing and signed by Governor Reagan, attestlng that he "gave his all in the cause of Ju11tice:."'1 HORSERADISH! It's addle-pated, so- called humanitariaM like Mr. Reagan v.·h<> would dtstroy the whole purpose of our wildly popular death penalty: to dete:r would-be crlmlnals. Tl follows as the night the day that the punishment ahould lhtrefore be as public and as painful u possible. The most logical rtform suggested thus far la vtvisection without anesthesia performed on nationwktc ('(llor televlslon. Tbe cu'Jprit's Vital organs could then be sold to medical transplanters like chicken partt in order to help repay hi! debt to society. ln any event, Go\iemor Reagan has comm ilted a tatal political error ln mak· Ing this blatant appeal for the bleeding hea rt vote. Anyone·who wins the bleedlng heart vote in this counlry these day1 hasn 't RM a prayer. ! he certainly did not endorse the Vice President's attacks on Petersen and the Justice Department investigation. Indeed, assuaging emotional Agnew supporters finnly convi.aced that the White House has been trytng to engineer Agnew's resignation may be wholly beyond the President's power, whatever he says. Suspicions grow of nefarious White House dealings against Agnew, even il always denied. Take, for example, the curious, even exotic, trip (financed by tax money) 'of t'WO top White House aides to Phoenix dispatched to Phoenix; ln late afternoon believe the whole case against Agnew with documents purporting to "prove" was collO>Cted by Mr. Nixon as a device that (as Petersen has been quoted as to take the Watergate ~eat olf b.l..Imelf. saying) the prosecutors had the evidence That, of cour.ie, is d e m on s t r a b 1 e "cold" on Agnew nonsense. ' But no longer is there any doubt at the NONE OF THE three principals in !bat\ highest levels of the Agnew camp that extraordinary 00.minute session · t n the Whi~ House -led by Mr. Nixon - Goldwater's hHltop home will talk: about has played dirty pool against th e Vice it. Other informed sources, however, told Presidenl Agnew peponnlly made that us it wa11 perfectly obvious what Harlow clear privately to Califomla friends last aod Bw.hardt wanted, whether or oot weekend . If he ever decides to go public they specifically asked for it: to convince against the President , he ls well aware Goldwater of Agnew's guilt in the ·con· that the \'latergate backdrop would pro- spiracy aod bribery charges and thus end vide a rich stockpile of targets. Behind the Energy Crisis Only Drastic Policy Revisions Can Help WASHINGTON -The socall~ energy crisis ranks far down In the long list of people's concerns today but they may change this winter when houses are cold, schools are closed and breadwlnners are !ell Jobless. Nothing much can be done about tht5 ezcept to spread alann and perhaps exaigerate a bit be- cause the problem will grow worse be- fore it gets better. Much worse ls the out1ook for the long pull. Of course there are things that can be done. Tum down the thenno11t.at. Drive slower. And so on. But none of these home remedies will sufftce. T h e diagnosis call• for radical corrective pro- cedure. nIE ASSIST ANT Secretacy of lbe Interior for Energy and Minerals, Stephen A. Wakefield, made what might as well have been 1 secret speech a few days ago in Miryland which was about as pessimistic as tt Is ' possible to get. Nobody pold any attention. W1thout corrccUon, he warned, there will be real hardship and not mere in- convenience th.I! winter. If It weren't bad pollUcs, it might be just as well to let the hardship develop and !hen maybe there would be more reali!m in the country about ill vital pn>blenu. We are about to have another ~m of patriotic voluntarism. E~ get together and we wUl see this thina: thfough. It sounds a Utt1e. like World War Quotes Joan Majulaa, B..t.ky ="O<ilocli!e- 15 a terrifying example ol man 'a in- humanity to man (and) wt cannot afford to forget the extermination ol the Jews or the killing of the American Indian and the l Armenian nwsacre ... '° that as elvlllzed people we can !tam from the. pest and prevent .such bornn in the future.'' (rucHARD WILSO~ II when everybody locked arms and bore up under Imaginary shortages to show we would all suffer together with the boys at the front. In all too many in- stanoes there weren't any real sOOrtages. We learn now, a quarter of a century later, that even in Germany there wasn't full mobilization. TODAY we lelm t b at bad manage- ~t. pun.iUve policies against the oil and gas barons, exqgerated con- sumer Ism and environmentalism, di..scotlnged or prevented the use of capital for exploratjon and development of very extensive: ~ supplies. Reform.en were 100 1otld In JCOftlng at oil depletion alklwanoes, fretting alioot profit margins and advertising ex· 1 ,pendltures .. demanding Imports and com- plaining about political' favoritism to hear the warnings. The warn.lngs were that the domestic Industry wouldn't develop without price and tax lncentlves, a favorable lm.J>Ort pollcy, and a good outlook for profits. AND THE DO!ol&9TIC Industry did DOI develop. It "topped out;" as the saylng goes ln the business, h\ 1'12 when new refinery coruitruction came to a standstill just at 1 time when It was needed, and for the very sound capltalbtlc reason that bulldlnl tho lmmeruiely e~ive. ftclUUes wasn't too good an Investment. So now the cr!tlcol fDll1lln must be mode up fn>m Import> fn>m Arab and mldeut CCIWllries, lncluding Abu Dhabi, wbldi rmasl be the llnt time th.i intereot-lnc oountry, -.r It ts, has figured In """'1con foreign policy. Maybe_tbere wtU be a warm winttr. We are •botA dµe for otie. Then the banh roollty will be put olf for awblle, but, a the TV commttelal says, It's "~a get'c:ha" eoooer or later. DON'T BLAME It all on the Arabe. It's their otl1 after all, and not limitless and ll!ey conalnly have •'"'7 rtatot to mllze the full value ot an e1baU1tJOte rt90Ul'Ce. If It's an lcy wlnk!r and your houte! Is I cold blame it on Nlxoo, U you wish, but do not forget that he has propc:l9e(l a program to expend domestic supplies. n takes a lot more than action by the Presi· dent. Both lhe executive and Congress must drastically revise national policy oo en- ergy development and that means getting at the Alaskan oU rigbt away, fu!Jer leas- ing of acreage for gas and oil exploration, development of the resources ol. the con. tineatal shelf. Lifting federal coNtrots on the price of newly discovered gas, u proposed by the President, would be a strong stimulus to dl9COYery and develop- ment. HERE'S A QUOO'E from Assistant Seo> retary Wakefield which ts worth pooder- ing: "The issue is not merely our place In the hierarchy oi natlom . or our standard o1. living, or our abil ity to clean up OUT e.'1vironment , or to expand the readl and effectiveness of social justice. It b all these thinp and more. It gties to the basic task of survival itself for our tra- dition of private enterprise within a free and open society." DAILY PILOT ' Rob•rl N. Wud, PMbU.hn Tho""" Ke<11ll, Edtt<w Barbara Kre lblch Editorial P(l.ge Editor The tdllorla1 ·PftP ol 1he 0.11)' Pilot :.ttka to lnlorm and ttlmW,1.te tt9den by prtli1'ntlt11 an thta ~· dtwne·~· an topks ot ~ ltttst by ~td mlumnlst1 and tattoanitts, b)' providlsw a bum ror mdtn' vlnh ind 'a)' pmmtlns this newspaptr's optnlom-and k!tll OD ~ r~ <dllorial opinlooo of the Otjlt Plkll appear~ in iht fdi1orW cOtumn at the tQp ot the ..... ""'"""' .......... by the .... om.niatl a.od car1oonltt1 and: le1.ltt wrltm are (belt ow.. and"°~ mmt of thtir 'V'INll ~ t~ Daib' Pllo< -Id "' - Tuesday, October 9, 1973 • c I I I QUEENIE lly Phil lnterlancl i I TAI(£" I 11Let others fiddle around with 1Think' Signs. We don't fool around here." L.lff. Boyd Lot s of Summits Acro ss Nation Shoes, they're the apparel lbat costs the average model the most money. Maybe she can get by wilh a half a do'Len ' slips, bras, girdles, a· dozen pairs of stockings, si.J: Ill.lits, six cocktail dresses and a couPle of long evening gowns. But she needs about %0 pairs of shoes in perfect condition. Usually she's expected to supply her own. And they've got fu be a wperlor sort. Look, mlss, I'm not going tO ask if you think you've got particularly heavy Utlgbs, certainly not. But the survey taters did indeed ask a lot of women that impudent query. And, two out of five replied yes. The undergarment makers report about one hall of all the grown girls under age 40 you see on the streets these da ys are wearing padded bras. One out of fOlD' grown women n&· · Uoawide abampooo her b8ir •V«Y other day. ~ ____,_Q. ••woo ftrst came ~Lusion that'~ er 7eJ. __ low wu the best attention-attracting color SC'htme for street signs?" . A. Don't know that, but do know, whomever it was, said genius was aJso the soul who inspired John D. Hertz to originate the notion of painting taxicabs yellow. Q. "You said there are more places in Great Britain called 'Cold Harbour' than called anything else. What are the most places on the United States with the same name called?" A. Summit. With at least 70 such spots. Q. "My granddad, still a lively old gent, was born in 1890. What was a man's life expectancy then?" A. Just 43 yean, yoong reuow. Regards to your grand-dad. . ALAN LADD A feminine client, who says 'IV movies have caused her to rall ln love posthumously with that fancy actor Alan Ladd, asks his height. He stood five feet six inches. Ladd was one of numerous Hollywood bearthrobs considerably shorter than heroes are expected to be. Like John Garfield. 'I1le earlier John Gllbert. Audie Murphy, too. Charles Boy- er. And the great James Cagney. Median age o! that man who immigrates to this coun- try now is 26 years. Of that woman, 24.8 years . -;-. Were you aware that 43 percent or ·the money you spend on soft drinks and throwaway bottles goes to pay for the glass? . . . InvestlgaUon reveals 18 percent of all forcible rape reports turn out to be phony, says the FBI. The upcoming year of 1974 will begin on a Tuesday. It will have 53 Tuesdays in all. Every year bas 53 of tbe day It begins oo. Takes .011 of a second !or a shotgun trigger to fire a shell, sir. Address mail to L. 111. BoJl(i, P.O. Boz 1875, New- port Btach, Calif. 92660. Application Forms Ready Apolication fonna for the 1974-75 Callfomla S t a t e Graduate Fellowship Program are now available and may be obtained at the orfices of any state legillator or at college and university graduate of· fices. AppllcatJons must be submitted by Dec. 17. fast, Thorough, Guarantrcd Real Estate Sales and or Broker licf'll\f' TRAINING Phone #or Free Folder I HAa101 c l Nn• ,._ f114) t7t•Zlll Ult M-r C111..,_ 1111 i. .• ,..,..,,nt $1 Cffl• MtN, C.llftn!ll It ._ ....... ,......_ .. ,... .. ,.,. """ ............................ tlytHttth .. lmil..W.-efttle ~, -,. ca.a ,..ny ........ Ii ..... " 111 rtle 9""111lme1Nll • • t . . . • " , " Circle tho dates and plan to ettend one of four speciol T en.nis Clinics. Arthur Ashe will demonstrate the finer points of the game and, immediately following, will volley in open play with you tennis buffs. Plu•! He'll be in the Men's Dept. after each session • to meet _, ___ ~)"5u pers.,moffy-end--to<iutograph,---• special tennis photos. OCT. IO • Century City Moll, 11 :00· 12:30 p.m. Panorama City, in , the parking an!a, 3:00 5:00 p.m. Oct. 11 • Newport; in the Mall, 12:00 2:00 p.m. Carson, in the parking area, 3:00-5:00 p.m. W.hile you 're here, come see the great Catalina Men tennis ge_ar. Classic tennis shirt in red, white or blue. Cool poyesler and cotton, 9.QO. Tennis shorts with adjustable side tabs. White. yellow or blue polyester and cottoo, 12.00. Bonded tennis socks, 1.75. Wrist band, 1.00. Mens' Sportswear, 50 • • I I ·-· - THE PRO'S CHOICE ••. ADI DAS TENNIS SHOES Favored by the best tenn is players , the Haillet by Ad idas. Soft leather uppers conform to the contours of the foot. Multi-<J rip sole offers sure footing on all surfaces. 18.95 Men's Shoes. 57 ANAHl!M NEWP'ORT HUNTINGTON ltACH ORANGt-. MALL OF OAAN&E CEARITOS 444 N. E11eUd I 7141 lll·l 121 41 h1hle" hl•nd I 7141 644· -n 121111 ld!n9•r A~•. ( 71 4 l 1•2·1 Jl I 2100 N. Tw1~ St, I 71 41 ••I· I J 11 500 Loi C•rrito1 M 111 t 21 i I 160·04 11 SHOP ~ A.M. te 9:10 r.M, MONDAY THAOUGti FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.NI. SUNDAY 12 NOON le I P.M. Coa11t11 Fund Bid i\'ix~d_ ·Air Land Panel Thwarted ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIIT MOR'nJAllY U'1 E. 11tb SI., C.ta Mosa -• BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona dd Alar 1734451 ColCa A1tA UWUt • BELL BROADWAY ~IOR'nJAllY • 111 Broedny, Costa rttesa uwm • DILDAY BROTHERS By JACK BROBACK 6f lllt O.it' Piie! 11-" SANT A ANA -The Airport Land Use C.Omntisslon of Orange County again has fail- ed to gel substanlial aid from county government. Commissioners asked Orange County Supervisors to hear them out on thelr budget request of $62,000. Superlsors, during budget hearings last Juhe, granted on1y $$00 to the ORAJIGE COUNTY Fat Topic Of Lecture At Irvine IUORTUARIES 17111 Beach Blvd. Fat How did you acquire it? Hantlogton Be1ch 842-7771 What is ·it doing to you? HO\Y 144 Rtdondo Ave. can you get rid or it - 1Aa1 Beach its--431-1145 permanently? e This is the subject of a lec- PilcCOR~UCK LAGUNA lure to be \Vednesday at 8 . BEACH AfORnJARY p.m. by Dr. Crarit Gwinup, t10I Lquna· Canyon Rd. chief oI endoa'inology at UC UC-NU Irvine and a u t b o r of • "Energetics: Your Key to PACIFIC VIEW Weight Cootrol." ft1EMOR1AL PARK His lecture, "Girth Control: Ceme~ l\fortuary \Vi&cbcraft and W15dom," is • -Chapel the first in a series of five free 3MI PlcUk View Drl~e medical programs to b e Newport Beach. CalUornla presented es a comunity m.noo -e service by the UCI l\ledical PEEK FAP.nLV Faculty Wives Association. COLONIAL FUNERAL All of the lectures will be · H0i\1E heki at I p.m. on Wednesday -1 n-• A evenings in the Science Lec- ·--11 "'e. HI hUC . Wtltmin•ter ~ lure a 1 on t c : Irvine e campus. Free parking Is f-r1 f----f-"ll!lmJ!'S-MOR'l'UAR-Y--_available in lot No. 8, and ~ a7 A-fa.la St. reservations are not required. conlntission. lie added that "!his attitude Thls marked the third year on the part of the supervisors in a row that the supervisors can only coi:it~ue to hamper have rerused to give substan-. ijle commission s duties under tie\ support to the agency. the law and further delay the benerits \vhich should be ac- CHAIR~IAN Donald ~1cln­ nls. Newport Beach mayor. objected to "the continued obstruction of the intent and spirit of the law through tatally unreasonable financial support." cruing to the COWlly as a v.·hole. "\Ve strongly object. to the non-support of this state-man- dated commission,•• he protested. The commiS!ion v.·as (onned Handicapped C~nwr Planned for Irvine · in 1970 following a ~hange in the state law setting up such bod.les. Prevlousl)', both the board of 11upervisors aod the LeajUf of Cities had to agree on the need for such a body. THE NEW LAW read that either agency could_ request the fonnallon of the com- mission and ibe otlier must comply. But It dldn'1 say tfiat the county had to finance the agency. The league ~ to activate the commission although the board had refused Pl""vioosly saying the agency duplicates the functioqs Of ·the coun1y Planning O:unrnlss'ion a n d Airport Commission.- The basic pirpose of the By CANDACE PEARSON ·Schooling or are taught to be agency Is to protect alrporjs in Of "" 0.111 Pl11t ,,.., more self-supporting in the ex-the county from eneroaclunent SANTA ANA -Tentative isling environment .• co'unty of· and protect the I an p1ans are tmder way by the ficials said. swround~ airpor~ fro .. Orange County Departrpent of Special education teachers, airport ncuse and other en- Education to build a center at vlronmental problems. as well as part-time nurses The commiMion is charged UC Irvine for severely )1an· and psycholoJisUI, staff the with prepara~oo of a coftl- dlcapped children. centers. DoctOrs are oo-<:all. prehensive land use plan County officials are still 'Ibe cosf of the program is around, each airpott in the l\'orklng out the details of the "fairly expensive in terms of county . (Its) comparison to general Development Center for Han-edU""ttOO· ," MacNeff s a I d . •a... E ._ THE -TH supervisors dlcapped Minors {DCHM) with "We're taking very involved have appropriated each year UCJ administrators, but hope kids." ' has: not even covered the cost to start the program after the If the children weren't in ·of postage and stationery f9J' first of the year. public school, MacNeff added, the agency for the year. AienJ- •'they'd be in Fairview {State bera use their offices for car· Three centers -in Orange, Hospital) or IOme p I ace rylng out fWlctions of ~ Anaheim and at Cal State similar." Such 24-hour care commiJsion including postage Fullerton -run by the county would be even more costly and clerical work. . now serve 130 physically or than the six-hour a day clwes -Members of the com.mission, mentally h a n d l c a p p e d at the centen, he said. in 1;dditlon to Mclnnis, a.re children. Michael Maccarone, Joseph The addition of the UCI THE NEW CENTER at UCJ McCarthy, Robe.rt Bresnal}an, cenler would serve 40 more is planned f o r modular county airport d I re c tor : children and would be closer construction, which means it RobertConquer.Rode.rick to South Orange County could be up in 90 days once all Frasei-, Laurence Schmit, and residents. necessary approvals a r e Brian Douglass, manager of. received. Fullerton Airport. "LOCAL SCHOOL districts lr,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;:j [ don 't have the facilities to l 1 educate these children," coun- ty school official Dou A1acNeff said. Unitl a year ago, the county depar1ment was the only 8gency in Orange CoWlty to run such a program for mulli- handicapped children. Hantlngto·a Beacb. - Now the Garden Grove Unified School District has a center fo1 JO children and the Fountain Valley Schoo 1 District operates P l a v e n Scbool, wbe<e_mlllli_, handi· capped children attend classes with ~handicapped students. Other topics to be covertd in Other school districts con· k* .. 11 •• 1 .. ·~11(,'P~ the Wednesday Night Com-tinuc to send students to the °'*""'-...., munity Lect\D'e Series in county. laSU. PVBLIC NOTICE elude: -Wednesday. October =.ic:.::.- 17, "The UCI Total Knee-TRAINING IN self • help 1..-i.*"""' ..._1t._,.,, b 11 t.__ Joint Replacement." by Dr. skills, commWllcation, move-. NEWPOIT llACH, 1110 NIWPOIT ILYD. Theodore Waugh, UCl's chief ment and group relations Is HUNTINGTON llACH, ..,791 ADAMS of orthopedic surgery. given at the DCHM. Children fOUNTAIN YALLIY, 1•1ss HAllOI ILYD. -October 24. "Headaches,"1 ~ar~e~a~d~v~an~ced~t~o~o~th~e~rJk~i~nd~s~o~fr'.!'.:=:=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=.=:=::=::=::=::=::=::=.=:=::=::=::=::=:::~ .. .,,. l"vbll''*' o.... (Mii Dally Pilot. StPI~ ll •nd 0t100lf J, t , 16. 1m 7'1)-73 PUBLIC NOTICE by Dr. Stanley van den Noori, dean of UCl's College of Medi· cine. -November 7, "Repair or Replacement of Your Heart - Fact or Fiction," by Dr. John E. Connolly, chairman of UCI's department of surgery. -November 14. "A SUrgkal Safari in East Africa,' 'by Dr. · David Furnas. UCl's chief of plastic surgery. PUBLIC NOTICE .,_ NOTIC• TO C•tDITO•S sure:••o• COU•T 0' TH• ITATS. 01" (,l,\.IFO•NIA l"O• THE COUMTT 0 .. OltAMGI! Ma, A·17•11 Etlllt ol RAMONA a. MARTIN. O.· «•""'· NOTICE IS HEllEaY GIVEN to IM l\.l"·U1 ct~llo<~ ol '"" •boYt n•med deced<!f'll l"l(TITIOUS IUSIMlSS ,,,., •" ~·Mlflll t.-Ylna d•lmf 991ln11 "" M.t.Ma STATIMINT . wld dKed""' 1rt rtQUlrt<t lo Ul t tl!em. T!>e toll-'"9 "''°" ll llol"9 bull~til will> 11>1 M<t•Ja,.., ~·· In Ille oltlc• •S: o1 '"' cltrll of '"' ·~ •~tilled co.,ri, c• •ED CAiltl"ET ll E ... \.TOllS. 59•1 to prtHnl tllef'I\. wlttl Ille l'llCllllfY Edinger ............. HvnlfnglCI'\ a,K,,, v....cr.e<•. IO '"' UNllfliDfted •I the oOiCI C1lllornl1 '2l4 o1 ~ .. !f(lfr>ey, .._ltTHU• O. GUY, JJI .. Maryt..,. \.. loot•n En~rp•liH. • 133 OoWr 0•1~. S11ill I, N-1 8•Kfl. C1lltor"11 corpcrlllO"I, ~•1 !!:d1"9!• Cillfornl• 92660 wMc/I ii t1W .;.l1c1 OI Ave., HvnlltOQI..., !It.ell, C1HIO<nlt '7&-11 bu'in.._~ ol "'• llfl<le''!Qned In •II """"' 1/11$ bu1lnt 11 It cONl\IC1~d DY t corO<><· perlllnifl9 lo Ille 1st1le O! »Id dtclldenl, tlloto, wltllill IO<I• mOI"'"' 8t1tr I 11 t M1..,.1ne \., aooran E11t1•1)flff1, nru 1>Vbllctli011 of tt>f1 110tkt. Mt..,.•nt l . 80011n, l"rfll(lt~! Dfled Sap•trr>Ol'f 10, 19'3. 1 1111 ".,....,,.,,, w11 r11K1 "'''" 1111 ca...,,. Jl .. MONA ""· 11EAt1v ly Cltr~ of Or~t Ccwntv Of\ Stoltmbtf l!~tcY'!rl~ o1 ttw N iii of 1111 ,., U1l. •boYI "'"'*" lk'~I p.2t41J A•TNUJI D. OUY, Jr. "111)111"'90 Orlrtql (Mii Dtllt Plklf. IJJJ ~ °"""' Sltlt I ()(-l , J, 1'-13, lt73 »»-1J Ntw"'1 aNClt, C1Hf. taut PUBLIC NOTICE T"411, {1U) "'1•Klf """"""......, Lualtrl• Pvlllltl>ICI Orln!lt CDllsl Otlly !'11.,t, 11.P'•US MOTICI TO CJt•DtTOJll SUPIJllOll: COUJIT OP lHll ITATll 01" CALl,O•NIA ,011: THI COUNTY OP OllANOt: s~t 75. .:n.roctoWr z. '· u. 191l "'l·ll PUBUC NOTICE HI. A•lftlJ l"ICTJT'IOU'S auso1t:1s E1!1M Ill MAJllLTN C\.OA l" ... \.MElt, •AM• STATIMINT DICHHtl. Tl'MI followlnl ,..._ It dolflf --. ,,;of!Cf" II Hfltll"' GIVfN lo !'Ill "' c•edltclr1 o4 !Ill 1bo>vt ntrMolll dtctdtnl D & G C.MEMlc.A\. • S.ltt, ,_.7 ""' .. , ""'°"' l'ltlvi"t ct11..,, .,.1n1t !Pit Ktnlll\ltoll Or .. .L"""4 H1'Nt', Cl t»n H 'd cite...,., .,. r..,!•t<t 10 1'14! '"'""' P1u4 M. M.mt4 Jr .. tfftl Kmtlnolon .. 1111 "'' 11tc•tH!r -.CM•\. 111 '"' ofllc• °'" l11vnt Nlouel C1 """· ol tM cit~ ot"" •lllw• ..,11t1e<1 '°"''·er 1'1>11 11utlnt11 11 Ull'lduclld n •" fn. IO tlll"fllftl 111tfn. wll11 ti'll ntnt ...... f ll'Nlltl, •OVCl'trl. II f!'tt urdt'fll(lntoll " ~ \.IW f'tvl M.-M.Mllf ,,, omct ol MH111 Oi>t!JL JGt S. /Mil" 51. fllll ""-'wit flted .i111 lllf c- Slt. ll'llO. o...., •. C•llf., .. 111,,, 11 !'Ill IV Clt•t of °''"°' c-"' on aeo1-11•Kt OI lltnl~U of 1111 -er1!gM11 Ill •II f,(, 191), m•ll .. S Jlolf"lllttl,,. II f!'tt tllllt ol H id f'M•tl •ll(IOfnl, w1111111 lovr ""'°"'"' 11ter lllC PlltllltiNd 0r..-™" Delly !'Hot. Nor P11D1l<1lltM't ol 11111 ""'let . krolf<lltitr rs lftll 0c-2. •· 1~ OllH St~! 20. ltn t17l 7'73·1J WUlltm Ollddr P1lmtr f. • Kiiier o4 lftl Wiii ol ll'lt' tlHI..,. 111mH 4tctdenl MILAN DOSTAL .... , ........... '"'"''" .. ll"I°" l111t 1-..rt-l•llt U91 Ml ff. Miiot JI, 0•8'1f'· Ctlll. •HH T .. ! Cn41 tU·1't4 I Al,.,..,. ,.,.I l•ft"tr !'vbll911N Or1~ Cotti Otllf f'!lfl, ' Kids . Like To Ask And)· • October 1, '· It. n. 1tn :nt-n------------ • YOU HAVE REFERRED IN YOUR COLUMN TO THE VETERAN 'S BURIAL ALLOWANCE. IS THIS AMOUNT ALSO AVAILABLE FOR CREMATION? by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON Tlte Yetltl'C11t1 Ach11l1ktr•ti•• •ll•-Mit of $250.00 far tMt ffetll •• ,. ..... of 1 wortl-•otft•. or ·•f • peeceth111t wotero• rec:el.-lnt Mnke co111tec:tecl dlHblllry ce1rtpe!lsetlo1, b ttt. Miiie fer cret11etiOt1 •• fer b11rlol. All el tlle etller M-C•lleod b11rlal ellewo11cn IKll es: t,..111port•tio1 t• th• •loci ef burial wlletl doetll ecc11r1 111 • Yittltl'e11s Hos.Itel. ffe9, a111et1ry •••co, al!d "'°"" apply to creMatltMI u Witll as bvrlel. For l~for-tlo1 co11e.,11h19 ell y...,_M INMfih pie-cell •11r efffcit. W""°"' poulblo, """''•"' will M eMwONd 111 th!s c•l1111111. Balt::-Bergero1a F111ieral Ho1ne COSTA MESA 646°2424 ARE YOU SERIOUS 2 LOCATIONS ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT? CORONA del MAR 673·9450 l indoro's unique program is a safe and proclicol me1hod for the entire family to lose weight and learn how to maintain proper weight ... under the strict supervision of Medical Doctors . -medical weight reduction c.11 for lnlormation Mond•y thru Frld•y 8 A.m. to 4 P.M. COSTA MESA LiNDORA+ MEDICAL CLINlcl A"""'• at Mna Ver.to 557·1193 NEWPORT HACH 404 w ..... 1 ... ., 645·3740 NEWPORT BEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG HACH 645.3740 534.205 I 426.6549 PASADENA 796.2614 '"• ''.i."""'' 1'111• •• "'"'"'"11.t , .. ,~ •• ..,,., ,.,1..._i•1t1t. ll4t ""\ ' ··~~ 1141. ORAllQ 531·239S '""""' ..... -h.I•,.._. •"f. ' WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FULLERTON 347·5647 719·710) 962-3431 170.9501 LAHAUA 694.f029 Wlf"tt•Vllll•y Mt,tcel •~I· G.,-.,...v.,, Dyl ''''""'~ .. lld9 Ml ..... .... COSTA MESA 557.1193 SANTA MONICA 121.451 J POMONA 623-1 655 ........... ,, ........... loiii-... ~ ..... ~11-1, SAii IERllARDINO 186·4718 -- A.11•wh1ed Mtdotel l td9 ,, .......... -.., ~·~"''""''' f. LONG"IEACH 597.0378 lot Alrt1 Mtcl<1ol C1<1tt t ''•'• ce11.,. MH1111aw,. HillortM #tff4el·~· CERRITOS 924-5741 llVERSIDL 717·1250 Mitdlc•I Stiv••• MISSION HILLS 365.1131 M l11lci11 Mtdic•l llJ9 • I ' • This is ' \ ' * CQpitat and reserves oW!r twice t.. le~l requirements. * ASSE IS OVER $4 BIWON STRONG NEW HIGH INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY! ! Call for details! -1 % '·.~· 2 .AND . '". UP • ' . ' ANNUAL RATE J\NNUAL YIE,Lb* . , . 63/ o/c '-6 9a·0A "'YEARS'ORMOflE. 74 p~ ANNUM t:ARNS ;, .... ~ S500ll0R.MORE. 61V: o;. . I 6. 720/c 1 YEAR OR MORE •. 2 p~ ANNUM l:::ARNS • '.•~ $1000 OR MO~. . . . ~ . 53/4°(g. ... uM EARNS S .. 92~ ~~v~NIMUM. 51/4 °{.~ ~NNu• EARNS . 5~399~0 ~:~~~c8:\~'C;,.MuM. •interest compounded d1ily. e1rn1 indicated annu11 yield'w'hen malnt1inetd !or one year. •Wtthdr1wals ire permtlled, howrier Federal ReguJ1tions require parti1! rorfeltur• on funds withdr1wn prior lo m1t1-1ri~. FREE ~~~!~i~~m~i~~~~~;~) SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES • TRAVELERS CHECKS •MONEY ORDERS NOTARY SERVICES • TRUST DEED AND NOTE COLLECTION TAX·SHELTERE.D RETIREMENT PLANS CHECK·A·MONTH PLANS • SAVE·BY·MAIL SERVICE INSURANCE TO $280,000 • Ask for details *FREE transfer of your account from any ban~ or other savings Institution. Just bring in your passbOok and leave the rest to us. AM!RICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Member: Federal Home Loan Bank System Federal Savings and loan Insurance Corporation Afllll1te: First Charter Financial Corporation Garden Grove .. 12141 Garden Grove Blv.p . at Harbor Blvd. 534-8690 Huntington Beach · 7830 Edinger Ave. at Hun1ington Center 842 ·9311 Buena Park -9231 La Palma Ave. acroa.s from Buena Park Center 522-2801 Gosta Mesa 3110 Bristol St. In· Wh ite Front Center 979-9800 OPEN SATURDAYS Convenient offlce1 1erving South~nd N~rthern C1IHornl1, lnCludlng: Al.HAM&RA ·AZUSA • BEVERLY t:.ilU.S • BUENA f>i\RK·· CQST/. MEM_ · GAROEN GROW.. GLEM>ALE , HMiTHOANE · HOl.LYWOOO •HUNTINGTON BUICH • LAl(rwooc) ·°VNCAST£tl~ I.A MNTE LOS ANGELES-WILSHIRE CENTER • MAN!iAJTAN BEACH• MON1CLA\R• MONTROSE. ~K , PAlMO,t,LE PALOS VE.ROES ESTATES• REDONDO BEACH• SANTA ~ICA • SHEAMAN OAKS, SOUTH BAY CENTER ' TEMPl.E CITY· W111nlf.R·LIP10WN • Wt1ITTIEfl·EASt I El CA..l()N.3AN DIEGO ALIO IN: SAN fRANClSCO • 0Al(Ll.N0 • BERKELEY • SAN JOSE· SACAAM£NiO. O~Y C1TY-Wl5TLAK[ SAN MATEO· AEDWOOO CllY ·SAN RAFAEL· MONTER~Y , El CE:ffRltO • AICHMbNO• WALNU( CRf.EK SAN 8RUNO • VA~JO • LOS GATOS• SUNNYVALE · FRE~ONT • HAVWAAO ! SAN LEANORQ• ,.~ - • J J is w ru " w " .. ~ II •• ol Y, p ( " ~ \1 d r' b a n 0 le u I• n ti 0 s n d p b • r ' 2 { ' t ( l I I ' l I I 1 I - 'fliat's a · Spicy Headache By DICK WEST ' ' I~ WASHJNQ"l'ON (UPil .-11 Is part or the ,conve.ntlonal' ~ wisdom that American cars are built to Self-destruct upon expiratioo ,ol the wamnties, whereas forel.gn, alilo makers \. ' . WASHINGTON (UPI) ..:. ·from open~ a live machine. Tbe government has proposed THE FOOD and D r u g new rules to protect the public ' Administration (FDA) sa id from unnecessary exposure to · Monday the rules, ·filed· for 60 commercial X-ray machines, days of public comment, cover .~ lncludlng those used lit X-ray machines enclosed ln alrporll to detecl airplane hi-cabinets and which for years ,. jackers.. _ • have been used to find flaws in 1'l'ht rules would set a limit pnxtucts, authenticate works f)f on th'e emissions ln the lm-art or otherwise explore the mediate vlclnily of t he internal structu~ of items. machines and impose other f\1edical and dental equipment · sat~ to prevent people a~ already covered b y • · · worklng with them rrom step-sepa~ate rules, haVe conie Into 'USe ·in more than 30 major U.S. airports, the FDA said, to ~pect carry-on luggage for guns or other weapons. The A i r Tran~port Asa:oclaUon bas said about 175 or the D).achines have boon installed, at a cost of $4 million. ·~ • Spiral Slle,ed Whole'or Dall , fet> Yot1r Mort ~I Olltt.t , .. Telre .410flt 0 1r DotklCMH, T•ty SAt.iDWICHES Coll Yfff Order ••• If Will le Woltl .. I e lffdy to 5-fft wfth HOMY '• Spk• GI .. e SplNI Sllco4 f,_ Top .. lottoM e We PfKMto oH Slllp fro• Coott to Coat e '"" SoMco htk•t-11 e IMportod Cllonft oM WI.- • Caterh1t-A $~laity 1700 I. CMlt Httttwer. Coro• 4-1 M., -IJJ..ftM 1 alfCll Wnt ., s ere-1t111111r111t 12U S ........ t, et hll ld., ANMI• 111-24'1 are still turning 0u(flnely tool-,..:::::;:===== .,_'" .Jilqc lnto,the ·x..t.ay beam ,or ~ Cabinet X-ray machines TllE SYSTErtfS have open: ings th.rough which the lug· gag'e passes. The passenger himself is generally screened by a non X·ray walk-through metal detector. ed machines. ~ At least that ii' part or the conventional wisdom among motorists who have never owned a foreign car. The rest of us know better. FOR THE PAST couple Qi years, I have had custody of a Pasta Six, a sports convertible made, to th e best of my know ledge and belier, out of leftover pizza dough. You want to know how those dents got in the top of the right front fender? I'll tell you how those dents got there. Those dents were caused by a cat jumping on the fender. IT'S ~ TRUTH, so help me, Hannah. This cat sleeps on top of the car and when she . leaps down the fender buckles under the impact of the four- footed landing. The cat , I hasten to add, is not a cougar, Uke yOu see in the Mer~ ads, or any of the other larger felines. Jt is a • slightly tmdersized house cat. Apparently, the pizzeria that made the fender rolled the. dough a Uttle too thin in that · particular spot. IT IS N OT my intent to burden you with a dreary recital of all that has gone wrong with the car in the first ?D,000 miles. But here are a few of the highlights. -At 5,000' miles, it wouldn't shift into rever54t· 1 took it back to the agency and asked the serv~ rnana~r what was causing Uie troubl' .. ,"Your t"Q£cbov~ bad ~, he replied. -Do you Have any ide{I' ~t It costs to replace the ah· chovies in a Pasta Six? When I regained consciousness after the service manager gave me an estimate, he reminded me that on a fQreign car you have to use imported anchovies. -At 10,000 miles, the car- became unable to develop enough power to as~nd low angled inclines in the road. Another conference with the service manager. "You need new pepperoni ," he told me. "Why in the world do I need new pepperoni when the car is less than a year old?" I wail- ed. The service manager said It was possible that.,_ the original - pepperoni was sliced too thickly. He said that was a fai rly common defeet in the 1971 Pastas.· -I was not greatly surpris- ed when a grinding noise that developed in ~e. front erld at 12,000 miles turned out to be ' some thing wrong with the mushrooms. I just thanked my lucky stars that I didn't get the model with "the onioos, ground • beef and green peppers. -The car is back in the shop this week. The service manager isn't certain what Is causin~ the oil leak b u t be thinks it's the mozzarella. Lagun~ Doctor Sets Hip Talk Laguna Beach physician Richard Riddell will speak on total hip replacei¥nt. toolgbt at a meeting of the Ofangf" · Shores chapter of l h e Ame(ican AS90Ciation o f Medical Assistants. The meeting wi.11 be held at 7:45 p.m. at the Alrporter lnn, Irvine. j 1 •,\J ~1~1:1 !1~ .. , ,. ,,~ '"" ' ""It~ ' • A frM ,..... k tti. ... ...,,.. 111or1ll•1t of ~ otllot rftltt tllot """"" ,r1 .. : It h tti. llltOlt ffRter•n fM of tyre111i.y •• , ltfhtt •f tfrto or.t1111..., clti .... -}Vintton Cburch.iU, .' ,...NO LIMIT 1000·1 ot Yards Super Saving! ' ·eoL VESTER . , DOUBLE . KNITS • Oesig~er lengths : ·1· 5 0 Solid 'Colors. Assorted Stitches ~ · • 1. ·: i ~ .. ·. ,~~: •• Save 1.io a Yard · . NYLON TRICOT .·100Q/gNylon •. 108"Wlde 8 8 • Machine Wash · C For Sheets, Drapes & l ingerie v Reg. 1.98 · d. Save 41C 'A Skein 100°_. Orlon Ac!Y~C 4-0z.·4 Ply Yi'rn • Coats &'Clarks. Assorted Size l:imited Quanllties 4-Big Days FREE! FREE! 10°0 worth of Fabric to the First 1 D Wl'N Ladies in the Store FREE Gilts Hourly FREE DRAWING ZIG-ZAG SEWIN~ MACHINE . . ' i;IRAWING TO BE Sq_t .. Oct. 13th As1orled P1llern1 45" Wide Wa1h1ble Reg. to 1.98 Yd. ASSORTED ZIPPERS vinous Lengths & Col(!r• Reg. to 6oc 3/4" ELASTIC ' Yd 99 Reg,, ~S• , 10 Fa~ . . :,. ~ -ASSORTED NOTIONS Tremendous Buy1 Reg. to :ssc CUTTING BOA s Super Size 4' x 6' Reg. 3.98 5 For ggc: 144 LILY THREAD 4 Spoo••g ·.gc 100'!. Polye1ler All Colors & While Reg. tiOC For SHREDDED FOAM 2 ~~·ggc: Jumbo 1 It Bag Reg. 69C Save 2.61 Yd. WOOL and WOOL BLENDS Plaids. Tweeds & Blends 54" ·Wide Reg. to 5.49 Yd. Save 70c A Bag POLYESTER · STUFFING large 1 If Ba gs Great For Toys and Pillows Reg. 1.69 ·VELVET SQUARE 27" x 27" Size Upholstery Weight, All Colors ggc ••• MACRAME TOMATOE JUTE 4 Ply. Nalu ral Color 250 Ft. 1/1 lb. Ball Reg. 79C Your Choice 49c ••. Save 2.00 GLASS STAINING KITS FLOATIN:~ANDLE KITS35 ~ Reg. 5.50 I I J_ ' • I • , I I , ! I --t ' • • • • l I I J .. Ll4'£1..1' PILOI r......,, °''*' '· 1m TV IDGID1GHTS KTLA 0 5:30 -Laker Basketball. The WUl!ess Lakers lake on lhe Chicago Bulls as the new basket· ball season gets under way. ABC 0 8:30 -"Shirts/Skins." Six businessmen !ind their zest for life rekindled by a zany contest ot their weekly basketball game. Bill Bixby, Doug h1cClure, McLean Stevenson. TV DAILY LOG 'l Tut1day Evening lllD<ll9•-"'" ttfeqli11111 for 111 Tlltonlltr" To111 lo-Bi1nco Ind Don Mtradlth atar It po!let olflcen wha nllblbll 1 re- lationship wHll .. lldorNllt II Of• Mf to tradi; bnl I lllft~ RIMllf, Mlfjot GcwtMr 111111 M'*-1 ~ (~.ft.~ .. ~ tlllf "" his Miii tlfldN ., hit' 7:.JI n.~,. Hunt lllher and Df. Killy, I blind ..._ ~·· """' apd llr1 l'lhms to lllwt 11 .,.,.. Holl)'wocMI S41111m lion tllal c:ou1d rator. Nr ll&ht I Trall • Ctrol LIWlllllct Ind RodMJ #let 1't tKJ Show Ri!'Pl.Juest. """"" ~ omm .... mr• Tell the Tnrttt l3j Wild W1111 Wnt ~Let's MIU I Dul ._•~:~~d Chttt' IO:l01=~Mkt c.td1 .. c.atr 1't CllHI Liq YiUI • Clllftldl LllDla f .. , ....... "' .... lot .... ,_ l:tl •• ()) M .... Ma1de has bin ll:GO .., •-•eral ll'HU for 1 fKt· ' _ lit .,..11an and thl whole 11111 Is 'llllltll1 for lht lirst look 11 tM -llU<ll®l m-''OM"' Vil,~ foJ Me~ Tht members ot tM QM6e unit po5e 11 ltllUt caps .._ IM lake" In 111 attempt lo Clkll ttle top mtn in I coc1int 11:30 8 9 (J) CIS lltl ...... : (C) !llM. "111.flii'l dr•) Ltt J. Cobb, Cltudil .... : (C) (Jltt) ''Thi ltitit Clrdln111 Fru100 Mtro. •(com) '65-Jack Lemmon, O @cti ~m...._, C... TOllS' Clffi ts. N1t1llt Wood, JoeJ Bishop Ts 1uest host. (ft mm Nn Tt•perlhm E Twlllsfrt ZoN '°fht St1ik1" Dr. MtrtY f1tn I ~[]) Ul WW. WWW ti ll- 11 llospi111 ind no st&ff when tert.O...t "Filt It Und« F_.. hit lllf'MS ind ordel1iu IO out on The uarch I« the mllrdtret DI 11'1- drlM. tril JOUftl WOllMll In 1 British town ID ~ $ MMe: (Cl (2111) "1'11 l11ds to its Ubtary wflm thl ..... l1Mr f.,ret Whaf1 'b Nll!'8°' pecb lncllllll tM rtprllMll llbrlf• (OOlll) 'S8 -Orson Wtlla. Ohm l1n, he1 usist1t1t, ht1 ltostilt ._... "'"· 11 1rtd !ht libr1tJ'1 ll'IOll lllllllf I TW 6111 patron. "" 1:111 °"" e JMtt: ct> "Wllllt ., -. .. U 1tncr1 kw11 it Ille Ftut" (mml 'S2-Tom [..a, .... : (C) (Z~r) "TIM ~ m Iii Alfred HltdlCtd: P'rwltl (wtS\ "5!-G11~ory Pett CD ilO.lt: "Plmlrl" (dn) 'W - II r•:tido dt L!llfllrtt I W.1111'1111 1telria11 Shttte1 Winttri..ialTJ' SUlll'A11. CMtdJ U:f.IO 0 Mofit: "'11le CMlf IN Ill hltf li11n11 UdJ'' (WIS) '38 -Gary Caoptr, l:JO • B Cl1 Hiw1ii r"'.o '1h1 Sun· ~1~-.... dtr 10Jth'• A 111culia1 pat1trn ol m lhflt· "TM Litt ~ • lrtllll ttnds M~1r11tt trtd his FM· pity" (dri ) '.47~ontld Co1111111. D t11n 1earch1n1 for clues to !he ldtlltltr Of a '1crcll" who strlku on 1:00 (]) GJ O {I)@ Cil Nm wttktndl. tyle ~Uctr and Miclliel Andtraon Jr. P,Uest. 1:30 D Nn1 0 Dou1 McClure and Bill O HllfrwtJ htnl * Bl1by In a wild comedy 1:45 0 MoYlt: 'Tu ltKltr (dr•J '51 "Shlrt1/Skins" Tuesday -Robert Mitcllum, Lillbeth Scott. Movie of the Y/eek. Z:.JD m All-Nlrtrt Sbtw: "'SIMJ llJ t.m,• "Sllowdlin It ...... ![11 (}} (;'l:J AllC Tutid'f Movie: ltQ) "Slll1t1/S•!r11" (t"Om) '73 111 llll bJ. Dou~ McClure, Mele•~ SIMnlOft, leon11d Fre,, Robert W ednesda y DAYTI ME MOVIES 9:00 '1Ti (}) "DJIKI H•fl" (com) '.4l-~ll Romero, C.ro!1 Landis. !:)Q 0 (C) "The I USJ Body" (ccm) '67 -S!d C.eur, lfobert Ry1n. 10:00 f1l (C) "Miry, Miry" Cone;!. (com) •iJ-:.l)ebb1e Rcyn,lds. e "Ro1dllou11 Nirtib" (dr1) '30 -=l!tltn Moreen, Ch1rlu llu11lts. 12;00 8 "DIU ltacy Meth GruelMf" {m"ll '\7 J'! l ~!rid;, (CJ "Rt- vtlt t f tht B11b1ri1n1" lldl'\ '64 l:IO 6 Mcwit: "Th FtlUle Allall" (dra) 51-.lln• Powel~ Hq U. mur. -lll)luld t.rrr. · U:JO UI "Ct Fw IMI" (coin) 'St- V1n .lohnson. 1:00 D (C) "Tllt Mbsb.dpjlf ......,. (ldw) '53--TJIOlll Power. ''°' m ICJ "I""' ..., _,.. P.rt I (dra ) '66 -Nlllllt ~ Ro!Mlrt Rtdlord. llGI (C) "fi•llfl&tt II AWllM" (wa) 'U---Oon G111ow.,, 5obbr Dlll111. l 'lO @ @ ICI ~ f,.l ... ~•ville Br1M, Douc Mt:Clwrt. 4:00 0 (C) "HMtbNt" (~11'1) 'Sl- C.11 Grant, Sophi• Lortn. •:JO CI! s. .... lMlll ..... !ft ~ •c.1m1o1r 111!)'1) 'S7- Dtnnls O'KHlt. Ju111 l.oekh..-t. INCOME FOB YOU from a Girt ... • You can receive a life income and immedia~ tu benefila by partidpaling in one of Hoag Momorial Hoepital Presbytoria'1 four different Life Incomo Olli Plona. llrlli ..... llNJfilloloiwtltc ,.., .. ,,._, .. s,..._ HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRESBYTERIAN · IOI I N1w'9ft l•~l1•1'4 Ntw,ort k1eh, CA tt•60 " T~111t;14(114 .. lllS M• T • Land Lease OK 'Semi-topless' Juice Bar Closed Down by Judge · Capito! --LOS ANGELES -The boanl al 1n111... al the CllJlomla State Unlwnlty llld Colleges hu approved the l<aJe ol 10 acres ol alricul""" land at cal Sla te Fresno to the U.S. De part men t of Agrlcultur e for tbe cooalructioo of a F o r e s t Servk:e Laboratory. ATLANTIC CITY, N .J. (UPI) -A "aemHopless" juice llld IOda bar that opened near a catholic chureb laal week has been clOlled by a Superior Court Jooge. · Judge Herbert Hom lifted a temporary restraining order which barred city oUiclals Here's som-e reel food for thought. It's a brand new, money-saving book chock full of hints to help you cut the high cost of food buying. from taking any ilction against the "Pussy Cat Au-Oo Go" even though it bad not ob- tained a mercantile license. 'Ibe Io u n a: e served soda, juice and near·beer · a n d featured dancen with flesh- co!ored pruilies. Horace J. Bryant, city com· missionu of revenue and finance, sald befare lbe juice bar could be reopened It would have to. pass inspectlons by the health and Dre department and the electrical bureau. Bryant did not say how long It would take lo complete the neeessary ln!pectlons, b u t noted that 1 awnber. of rlty employ" In the dep'artmen1' involved were on vacation and there could be delaya. Advertilementa f0t t b t establJ<il,ment say the dancers are "aemi-aude," but aome customers have reported they appeared In be toplea. 8111 of all, it's absolutely free.• So just drop by any of our Glendale Find out how to: select the best meat values '• understand governm ent • Federal· offices from now through October 12th and pick up your copy. When you do, we hope you'll take a minute to ask about our new higher interest rotes and to let us show you how Glendale Federal can hel p make you as smart about saving money inci savin gs account as thi s invaluable little book can make NOW THRU OCT. 12, 1973 grademarks which evalua te the qual ity and price of food, •select the freshest fruits and vegeta bles •ma ke the best poultry buys •translate supermarket lan gu age-words like "fancy", "enriched " end "gion t econ omy size" •calculote actual food yield of packaged products. ) . you about saving money in the supermarket. •Supply limiied-one per cu1iomor, plea,., New Higher Certificate Rates New Higher Bonu1 Rate 7~% •"""' IMMt+ ,. .. Mll'll1t1u"" SI00,000- ktwtfort9'll\1 .. ,.. ...... ,ltMef 7.79% 6%% 6~% 1 6~% .5%% MIPtllel lnt..-..1 ro1 .. onn1,10! i1'toro1t ralo. annuol in111111 ra!11. onnual inl1rftt rote. Mlf'llll'IVtn S.S,000-Minimum $5,000-MlnimulT' $1,000-Mir1il'llVl'I'+ .S \,000-90 difYt, 30 Up to 120 Month• 24 Up 10 120 Montht 12Upto23 Monlht Addl!ion1-no~ """ •llMl•l ,"44 ., eor11ta111111ol yi1ld of 111rnt ann~ol yl1ld of eor11t on11wol 11114 t f 6.98% 6.72% 72% 5.92% CiLEWALE FE:ERAL S4VINCiS More offices lo serve you lhan any other Federal Savings and Loon Association in the nolion. And over $1.7 billion in assets. .. Costa Mesa Branch: 2300 Harbor Bouleva rd {H arbo r Center)· 642-4711 Fullerton Branch : 320 North Harbor Boulevard • 526-8331 New Higher Passbook Rate 5%% HtWOl lni..t rcrlt, Mllll"'V"" $5,00-0ay-'r\Hr-out. ,t.4ditlotl1-ony 0""'90Unl Mtllt •n•wol 1NiW If 5.39% • Newport Beach B ro nch ~50 Newpo rt Center Drive (b!ew port Fi"1an cial Center)· 644-5300 Santo Ana Branch: 51 Fashion Squ are (in the Sonia Ano Fashion Squqre } • 541-3314 .. • • .. r i ] t . ' I (~ ,wt I ed l no I dl1 I Lo I ' • Jot th . ag co ' ju .. fie "' 1 ..... . -..• ' t;I -, , llltiday, Ottobtf Cl, 197J ,.,, .... 11 f Las~. LaRue!ls· Ba~k J ST. PETERSBURG1 Flai cow pany that has seen better One project al the mls!ion Chemical Killing Sea Lions Many Ashes GoinP-in Sty~ (AP) -Lash LaRue, whose ''"-' s. which LaRue favors ill the nip and llx-gun 0000 pwllsl> BVT LARUE'S heck in the Hollvwood Wemm Revue for ¥ ed bad 1\1)'1 lD the movies, is saddle again.• helping ttlU:nd · the Lord. The show featUm i now an IYtngelbt whipping up maverick souls at the tricky whfp and gun handling, I c1nmb inlo lint behind the · Mlulon Power Headquar1en Lash Lollue movies and ~ f Lord. ~CU:~: 1:· by amatterlng of o I d -t i m e The,Cheytnne Xld hu pul a -evangelial John 1:11 Coo~, religion. lot o1 miles on hi• boots •Ince work• wtlh c1ere1Jc1s in the tblt day in Miami seven years l city. Cook takes his middle ' ago when he thought he had name from the b I b I le a I come to the end of the trail. pas.sage, "For God io loved. Amolod for v"ITlll<Y with the"""idthelhepveblaooly Just 31 cenls in his Po<ke~ he begotten son, lhal ..-ver said he med the arresting or-believes in mm -not n..,. 1o shoo1 him and put him perilh, but 11ave ·~ QUt of h1a m1Jery like an old life." . • Going through another phaae with your investments? . .. [ GOT sidetracked In the world of competition and I got IO!l," Uld the M-,...Mld former matinee Idol. "I was in a sttuatton where I didn't mates b!!J'R'ain with the Lord, • but I dedicated my. life to mm as His servant. My aense of values changed." LaRu< n ... 1 became Kin~ of the Bull1fhl'l ln l!MI. He won the ~irl J11nd rode off into the sumet dozens of times before leaving HoJlvwood in 1981. Lish L11Rue comic .books soJd 12 million copies in 1952, So he capitalized on his fame for a while bv taking a whip act across the country in one camival after another. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -the survivors have no pla« to the~ be<-ause we don't always Enterprillna tW>eralpiloll and vis1t '' )'now t~ fail., of the people in boat captalnl are seatterlng Last year the ashes of 417 the bou:s. We Just stop the ashes into the Pacific Ocean in San Franciscans and 7.150 motor at Buoy No. 3 and em~ a JucraUve bullnea whose at-other CallfomiaM were scat-ty the boxes one at a Ume. trac:tioo appears lo be flnsn. lered al sea throughout the The boat l• drlf~ and the SAN DIEGO (AP)_ A navy ctal, esthetic or phUoeophical. state. ashes sink quietly.' scientist says DDT and other 11It'1 an abaolutely beluUfu.I A mortuary In San Pedro In eight years, Lone. bas pestlcldes may be partly way to 10," aaid an executive advertiaes an elegant yacht acattered the cremated ashes l'ftPOll!ible for the death of in the uh-ecettering business. that evokes "the nostalgic hu· of 1.100 persons over tbe hundreds of prematurely bom ury of the Vanderbllt·As:lor Pacific from bis rented ~ A PERT WHITE cruiser-era." airplane. California sea lions on tbe Channel Islands west of Santa hearse called Scatter I, and Buck Kampbausen, presi- Barbara and Ventura. assorted rented airplanes, car-dent ot Skyview Memorial FOR $25, HE scatten the ry the boxed and blued uhes Lawn in Vallejo, gukies the a.shes from a paper bag, and William G. G 11 ma r t I n , beyond the lhree-mlle lbnlt to Scatter 1 and sa)'3 he oc-sometimes ca!lts a sinale red research biologist at the Navy be deposited by llceosed em· casiooaDy trolls for salmon on rose or wedding ring after the what Is VELVET FOG Underaea Center, said high balmers. amateun and the retwu voyage. remains. levela ol the chemicals have moonlighten. Lones says scattering cosl.11 been found in the tissues Of 'Jbe cost ranges from about "EIGHTEEN OF us wiually less than a convention.al burial dead ptlps and their mothers. $25 a acatter to SM7 for a go out on the Scatter I -but -am some cemeteries have ''The levels found in lheae funeral that locllldes plc:kl.ng only three of us mme back. started offering a '35 niche for Faeiag S•lt animals are extremely hJgb u up the body , cremating u and·-=="=W=e=do=n='' =bo=ld=a=servi=·=ce=ou=t=a=s=m=a=!I =bo=x=o=f as=b"=·==:; compared to what have betn aeatterlng the ashes on the 1r Sports announcer and found in tem:strlal mam-d noted pundit . Howard mals," GilIJ14l'lln said in an ~l·s the finality of the scat- Cosell is a co-defen-lntervl~w. tering that makes it so ap- dant with ABC in a In an article In Science, pealing," said Samuel H. ,100,000 lawsuit flied jQumal of the Amer I can Lones, a mortlCl.an in San on behalf of Scott Association for the Advan-Francisco who operates West Befare you get ~ased out, take a look at this Shindler, 16, of San cement of Science, Gilmar-tin c:oa.st Special Services _ an 1111NGS um dQWnhUI Diego, who c 1 a 1 m s and two ac:lentista said 1.o:n a I r b 0 r n e a.sh-scattering fro't\ there, and be was Cosell struck him when sea lion pups were found dead business. HAIRSTYLING 8460 INDIANAPOUS AVE. -he asked for an au!& on too ol the cbaJmel Wands r"anagin( a ~urant in b bi.a ---period-"IT'S ALSO nice because HUNTINGTON BEACH, 536-8829 REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CONFERENCE A Hriff 0"4 locture1 Oct, 9, 16, 23 w :10 Reno. Nev., a few vean ast:j;.igra~p;;. -===..i;_,;;iiiiii;;;:~'-iiii;;;iii:ii~===-ii;i;;;;;=;;;;;;;==oi.o;;;i;;~iii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii =iii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, whP.n evangelist Bobl - w:;;-~ :0"::' :O :;,,.,i. ~ COSTA -MESA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE I . ~ent In Chlca•o. I ficnire " ~ · • I ~~.; .:.':: ~!: ~~~ : s ... ,~•~ presents THIRD ANNUAL Tutaclay, Oct. 9, 7:30-9:30 p.m, 1"011101 lftwfl, Ora,.._ Co.it Dii.lly r'/101 E~ltor "WILCOMI TO THI CONFERENCE" ' th" WO"l,.," l..aRue savs, "I - Dr, ,..._ A. •Cety, Dlmkt DINCtor, "OlANGI COAST COMMUNITY EVENING COLLEGE REr'ORT' .led UllCehl. A......,oat-1_, "'PLANNING YOUR ISTATI THaGU•H IU.L nonm INVESTMENT$" §~~::!~E FIESTA de COSTA MESA Newport Harbor High School, 15th & Irvine, Newport Beach Tlclcat lnfonnatlon He .......... Mt tkll ... ore 1eq1!red. TIMy c.. ba pkW ., II .,,_. ot ... o,_,. Coast Col .... oW hldeft Wnt ~ ,..,._ od • tM Dolly P11ot offices l:i Costa M ... , N..,.,, IMcll, Hllf'flavto• a.:::ch, Lavona IMcAi a.d So:i C..._.• ond from the N1wport Horbor.C01t111 MeM hord of Rlolton. " -·· Or'""J• Coost Daffy Pilot Coost C-m .. lty Cotht• Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Rtaltors Are there any good bargains left in the world today? OUR SPECIAL PRE- OPENING OFFER TAKES THE CAKE! ~1 i LARUE' WAS recruited to help out at the mission by Cook because Cook said be and LeRue were about as down and out as anyone could get, so they know lhe prob- lems ol the people they help. "We both were married a 10,t, and women took us both to the cleaner!," said Coolt. whose mod clothes cnntra:!t with L8Rue's black Western suits. "Garbai;!'.e like us; when we get dOwn to the bottom, we realize the onlv way to go is up. And ii'• • real ""°" feeling to know you're helping some- one be better than you were." J o, ;, .. ii Puf Spice back In your Life with a slimmer, trimmer figure for less thao t~e regular prlcel Enroll now duri.ng our final Phase offer. z ~f (1 I Flnal Phase ·c1u.11ow1 979-4800 " IM'oU now .. our COMtruetlon ........... flf eDf'CIM wltll _,,, .... ··- Ille trli .. r end .... during our ,.,._, PMM. Open tin 10 P.M. ~' ,our eoltffnl.nee. Construction slle-&t-co}n."e"-r __ .,_.,_ .. ~• eoet 0" avellabl• progrims. Bl'istol and MaCA71hur -....&.or »nt•·~·--- JACK lA lANN['S t:uu;f1M11 HEALTH SPAS • COSTA MESA/ SANTA ANA 361l SOUTH BRISTOL 'WoALlrl UAOElT AND flM!IT"CHAIN OF HEALTH SPAS ,OA MEN AND WOMEN. Owr 125 localions coast lo ~11. Owned 1nd operaled by Health I u11r~1. Inc . Friday • Saturday • Sunday OCTOBER 12 • 13 • 14 -1973 Costa Mesa Parle • • • West 18th Street and Parle Avenue GIANT 16~RIDE CARNIVAL lndudinCJ 6 Kiclclie Rides ''Miss Costa Mesa Queen Contest'' AUTO DISPJ.4Y •ARTS ,& CRAm SHOW • ' . ' GR•A-'ND--PRIZE WEEK FOR TWO IN HAWAD DAILY PRIZE · Chaice af TY or Bicycle or Steno MEXICAN DINNER BY Coat• Maso High School F-11 Boostaro Club Adult Dinner • $1.75 -ll11eW.. Chaltc.9 " AD "'-1 lctiDd's Pia .. • $1.001 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS 'Friday, October 1~ 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. 5:00 to 10:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. -Mexican Dinner -Carnival, Exhibits, Rides -Entertainment -Dt-awing lo< Prho- TV or Bicycle or S._ (Wlnnor Muat_ Bo P..-t) Saturday, October 13 10:00 •·I"-to 10:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. 12 Noon to 8:00 p.m. 12:15 p.m. 12:30 p.m. l :;IO p.m. 3:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 6:30p.m. 8:00 p.m, 9:30 p.m. -Carnlv1I, Exhibits, Rkln -Royal Court -Mexican Dinner -Est1ncla High School Bind -Opening Ceremonl• -Dorothy Jo Deneen -Music• Amwlcena -Arlff Higbee Da-.a _: Musica American• -Entertainment -DraWlng for Prl._ TV or Bicycle or Stereo (Winner Must Bl Present) Sunday, October 14 12 Noon to 10:30 p.m. 12 N_, to 8:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 2:45 p.m. 3:30 P·'9' 5:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. 9:30 p.m. -Carnlv11l, Exhibits, Rides -Mexican Dinner -Father Coughlin'• Boys Chorus -Muslca Americana -Beeuty Contest to Select "fAiss Costa.Mesa" -Helicopter Rides -Music• Americana ....:. Drawing for Prii.- TV or Bicycle or SteNO (Winner Must Be PrMent) -Grand Pritt Dr1wlnt- WHk for Two In Hawaii !Winner llffd Not Bo Prftent) GAMES • REFRESHllENTS • ENlERTAINMENT , BOOTHS BY: C... M ... Hip Sc'ool FHtMll ....,_. Chit» c..t11 .. y...,_ of,.,.... w .. SJIJ6 _ .. ...._ C.... M-Optllllhtc et• ~ H.._ Db~ #17l7 c ........ .a.,c- Dw.k ef Cotto MMCI N"" S... of tNfy A. r' ... ._.. L .... S21f4 ZMhi Cl1b .t Newport tt.rbM New,on H.._ Y'1 M"' C ... 0......, c.-ty HeJtMw A... L9te1 Swe1•MI ~ c .... M .. M .... S1457 .... Sit-Piii, 11 lh. r'I a.,tw A...tc. A9N s..vtce (html.a. H .. 11 ~I '••'•1• C.. .t Coft M... " o,.... C... Colle91 Sl'ldlat •••ll'l•lat ..l•ll'• Db...,.,. •157 .. y kMt Troop ••1444 loy Scllt TrHp aJJt COiia MeM Hlglll Sclllool W,.....,.. ._..,. c .... M .. CltCl1t1Mr of CollilflefCo GAMES RIDES MEXICAN DINNERS CARNIVAL Week For Two In Hawaii GRAND PRIZE MUSIC.:A AMERICANA Music For Everyone 1930.1970's MISS COSTA MESA QUEEN CONTEST ROYAL COURT CONTEST fll' loys Olld Girt., J, 4; S, nc,I 6 .,._.old to~ •"'9. 9-. l'rlite•. Prl1C"1 .ct ... hkes .... "' Dall11111 HELICOPTER RIDES Sunday, October 14 5:00 p.m. Court!!!_ of California Federal SaYings I-FREE CARNIVAL RIDE I FIESTA de COST A MESA OCTOBER 12, 13, 14, 1973 Casta Mesa Park Park AYenue & 18th Street Casta Mesa, California SHOW OF SHOWS CARNIVAL W'ith the purchase of one Carnival ride ticket, this certificate entitles holder to one free Carnival ride ticket of equal value of ticket purchased. Valid all days of the 1973 Fiesta de Costa Mesa I CUT OUT AND GIVE TO TICKET SEUER -·--____ __...J .... efC....Ml!M .. lb 1..,....11 , .. ..,..1 HO!M C•llflntl• Fttdrll'tll kvlllf' & LH11 Collfonil• U""'"'I• Co., hM • Co1'1 Co"""", l•c. _ ............... ... Holll1tw'1 NorMfY a. A.w.r Skp Hwtkt Air Wflt ·-· -··--·-·~,. -~·===:;;_-1-~ (Mft99 CMlt Dolty Piiot c.. .. ,. ... c......, flf c-IMft.• CW. M ... C.•llfY W.-t9t Dlttric.t COi .. M ... M-W HMJHtot Dmt If.wt 1'"f', Sf"'t I.,,,. .... H,lo.,d Dhoftl•it t~ L,.,,.,...., IH. ..i .... n,. s.mc. ................ lOCM IM11 Metct ........, I • ..,., N..t ,,.,.., 11 ... , ... t... P11tl01 V&w MM1tktl '°" Ii M°""9ry 0.. I lllMn tlecitf .. ...... '""c..t "--a, __ c.... ___ ...,..,_...,,,,,,,. . .......... " ... \ • DAlLV PILOT Politico Moves · 'Mountain Fn>m wn Services A small . town Missouri mayor made pod on a' prom· ise and m o ved a 3i.i-ton reproductk>n of a stone believ- ed moved by a Hawaiian King. Mayor BW Bangert o f Cham~ who billl himself as· "The Strongest Mayor in the World,'' displayed his strength during the first annual Scot· ti.sh-Hawaiian Highland games ( PEOPLE ) In Waimea, Hawaii . He stands lhl and weighs 2'0. Using a harness~ the 52-year- old Bangert exerted pressure on pivotal points and moved the 7,432-pound Waimea Stone several feet. * President Albert Bernard Bongo of Gabon £banged his name to Omar BOngo follow- ing conversion from Roman Catholicism to Islam. The olficlal Ubyan News Agency quoted Bongo as saying that a reading of the Koran led him to believe that "Islam ls more precise, more clear and closer to man than . the Bible." * Fonner prime ministe r Elsaka Soto baa been chosen ' the best dressea man among Japaoeie politicians. . Sato, noted tor colored $h.lrts. _ ~ •and neck· ties, said he .; ..... delight· '-ed with his selection by t h e Men's F"dshion Club · ~of Japan. -'· The 'l?- : year-old Sato IATO step p ed down last year after serving a record four two-year terms as prime minister. * The highest mountain in southern Ari~na will not be renamed after the late Sen. Carl Hayden "because it is not of sufficient stature," the U.S. Forest Service says. Regional Forester Will iam D. Hurst of Albuquerque. N.M. said .the proposal to rename Mt. Graham, 35 miles north of Willcox, was dropped because of public criticism. "There was a general feel· ing that the Graham Motm· tains, which ls a name of lon11: standing and of conskterable historic interest, would mask the recognition appropriate ror Sen. Hayden," he said. * !\.In. Lyndon B. Johnson presented Executive Uirector Roy Willdae: of the NAACP the $25,000 Zale Foundation av.·ard for work in civil rights. l\.trs. Johnson, widow of the late President , is cochairman af the foundali6n . It was an- nounced that the name of the honor has been changed to the Lyndon B. Johnson award. Hitler Car SoJd for $116,000 LANCASTER. Pa. (AP) - Adolpb Hitler's special touring car has been purchased for $176,000 by l1\'0 St. Louis men who .said I.bey plaMed to use it --... to promote Jewish charities llnugtiout the nation. Robert M. Pas.5 , owner of -Passport C l assics and Passport Ltd., and Walter KJein, his Insurance man, bought the car Mondsv for $1.000 more than the auctlon • price of the "Bonnie Pn'.f Clyde" death c11r In .July. I \ ' ' ' -f • ' r .- Fr.ee .Gifts! Ted Bowers Antique Show! Refreshments! , I , • ' ~:·•· l·•• e've been growing with California ever since our first office :"! was .opened In 1887. TOday-we're·over$4~ BillloN-strong. _ , _ And . our. state~de network of ,9~~s js th~ largest i ' ~~e~. savings.and loan ind~. So join our celebration of "Early Great Weiltem Days.I' .And open a savings account while you're here. Find out for your- self what thEJ Gre.at Western feeling is all about It's the feeling that oor:nes • from knowing you've put your savings in ·exactly the right p[ace. . Dally Except Su ndays, Sepl 29 thru Ocl.13-0 ur savings lobby ' . is filled with nostalgia-a special showing of Ted Bowers famous antiques. Our hostesses will be · modeling turn-of-the-,century fashions. And serv- ing refreshment.s, too, With balloons for the kiddies and the fal:)ulous Sunset Barbecue Cook Book. free, for evert family. Come with us into the good old days of yesteryear-an extravaganza of the romantic 1900's. Mr. Arthur P. Moore, Great Western's Newport Center Manager, is ringmaster of our big show. His entire staff looks forward to the pleasure of your company. FREE! The famous Su Met . -. BARBECUE BOOK How to do it! How to flavor it! How to enjoy it! More than 600 specia( ·recipes. All the best from the people 'Wtio knQw barbecuing best-the food editors bf Sunset Magazine. Come early and ask for your free copy. Supply is limited, One to a family, please. . I• -· - .·GREAT WEStE·R-~-SAVINGS -80 Fashion Island, Newport Center• 640:0333 Open Every Saturday 10 to 41 Weekdays 9 to 4,30 /Drive.up feller Window Open 9 to 7 Weekd;tyi;/ ff'e!I Parf!ing .. I ~ " r . ' '. ' . , J------h•ald-lhey-have.. -been---._ -= · =·FllU Wmt.ACCOUNTl·OHIOOl.C>IUIOllE:·Tr.,olora -----1)' .......,,_DtHINOIOCOllicf!Oo, .\JiO l'fH"CllonA-'llooilt 1'1100. ·-trying to obtain the 190-41 -Mercedes-Bcni tourtng car fori 10 years. M:EMBER1 FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION, FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK• A SAVlNGS ASSOCIATION OF GREAT WESTERN FINANCIAL CORPORATION / --·----Earl Clark, owner of the Dul.ch Wonderland Amuse-~ men' park near here, purcha1 I ed thew laat year In l'boeolx 1 · ancl dlspiayed ltat the l!Ork. LL---------.----------------------------------------------------1, I I r ii '1. ' • Sc re 1 bad amt dud glo\ In u Sc Cosl .... last {'"' ion s c I pert six ninl duel "Th lhr< 11 ban ·opp Is o ""' SCl1 me< the min Th• con pro• c """ .... ting 197~ )Jal Bar t!Ut 'j 'j N "Sh abo bla1 ·ma• ... 1 toni JI 'wiU Ro< plaJ mu: ttSI put'\ n tun ;ton! ~u urbj Yoh A cau scr1 tha dUI ·Ovi 'reel 11 a I geti clui cop Ja< VO~ s ste1 ant .,. 1 '.ficket Sales Soar . SCR Boosts Season South Cout ~........ o1m , F...CCI 'wt11 rently roundtna the "Ol.mesatSu." backstretch towArd Its loth ProductkJn dltes for "Vie- annlversary'and Its l~h pro--1 1 ~ 1 tlm" sre Oct. SI, Nov. 2. a and dll(tiQO, It rtfieetln• I h<altbv ft ••m~ Oil S I h It .., '$ 10. 11Dllme1" will nm Nov. 1, 1 ~ow W ere matters moat:-1 and 9 In the OCC auditorium. ~·s:.~· .. 1 ... t the ~M.i . male Admlaaloo la lree. CO.ta'~M... thoater ore qp lead In the .1'1 ~ * ·mer•' than IO -t from drama;·wlib w ·-locll CALLllO.\llD-"Every· last Y.W'· neceaaltatin1 an ex· pe;rformers pa u-1 &dllvan, • ID the Garden" will be {ensloi! of the • SCR '11bscrlp-J<>llint ·Wolcott Joba Phllllpo the Dell producUoo ol the Ir- ion ~ason. 'lbe,·!i"'!: will . 1114 ·Howard 's.1-·•IDd -Oommunlty Tbealer, with · sc he,dule P~ ,(lonal-, 'np)wcomer1· Mau·reeD auditions for the Edward Al· performuces.. cb o1 !bl Sltrubehole and &laan 1'ellou 11ee· drama oehodulod !or next ·"' sOboaipllon plays, begin-· completing the c11t. Monday at 7:!0 al SI. Matthew ·ning ,Mlh the Cllttent pro-Randy Keene. -itqtng Lutbonn Qiurch, c q Iver ~uctitm of GeoJ;,fe M. Cohan's . of ''Middle of tbe_Nigbt'' earn-Drive tod Sandbura Way, Ir· The Tavern, p I a y I n g ed him 1 best director award vine. ,• ,. lhr<lup Oct. 23. al the playbo-fall ,._, Y0\111 truly 11 dirtctina the ~ 1 extension move could ls dlredtng. "Monique" opens Edward Albee dtama aocI \\1ill JJ. d L ' .hardly, have co'!!e at ~ mor~ Nov. 2 for a five-weekend nm be lookinC for a cut ol five oonae OVe ......... , . ' . . ' . . • .. ' 1ursd3)", Octot>rr tt 1~73 Panel Discusses Chile on KCET An ·fn.dtptb tool< into the events leading to t h e overthrow or the Allende government in Chile will be presented on Acclon Chicano Thursday at 7:30 p.m. on American and CbicanQ Studies Departments a t California State Unlvenlty, Los Angeles. The program will bt repeated .on KCET Saturday al 5:30 p.m. , KCET, Channel 23. 1;::::======= 'lbe d11cUulon will focus on bow the overthrow came a~t and what it means U. the re&t of Latin America. Expressing their views will be Audrey Rojaa Kal!ow, wbo bu traveled exte:nitvely In Latin Amtrica and who met with Allende a week before the coup, and Tim Harding and Jorge ruueca o( the Latin ' FAMILY TWIN CINEMA CINEMA I ''1\el..-.tSW .. " ... "H•ny I•,_ rocllet'" INI CIN~A II '"Sc_,. ... Ill ... ··u, !"-S.....I" Ill oppor1Jme time. The Tavern at the playhouse 2110 Main men, flve women and 1 b9Y in . Robert. FOxworth plays a pianl~t whose life is given ls one. of the best productions St. Huntington &acb hi• early teen.a. 'fhe play, like new meaning by bis marriage to a fatally ill girl 1 Surfl"' FAM Fettlnl amona: the 83 mounted on the ' · 111 tcr olferings thl1 season, O'o""'1A•N 1AlllT ,.~'·'· SCR stage by any measure-* ...ui · be an Orange County (Susan 1\.nspach) on Love Story tonight at 10 o'clock Thh: WHll meot fnd ·will doobUea keep ORANGE COAST Collqe P!'tmlere. on NB<;. channel 4· '"SALT WATER WINE" the T!"!d Step Theater brim-will adopt 1 repertory ronnat "Everything In lbe Garden"li"_,_,iii;_,_,_,_,_,_,_, .. _,_,_,_,_,_,.,.~ rningr Jhrou«ho9 .. t the month. for its flnt two productions will run three weekends, Dec. Theater o1 . thlS caliber and wblcb 'lliU run in tan..; 1·15, 11 the Human!Ues H&ll conslltency is:soi:n~~,rt,o '1 t~ the hrst two 'weep Of •• P111fPise on the UC lrvlnt proud, of. . . ) " '.N'ovflllbef. . -• cam1'?.· Further information * · . The ahow1 .,.. "'Il>e FUlh is avi'ilable at 61>7-'l'N/. CASTING flAS been ,an-Vlcthn," a Clrameu"c" account * Mwtced for "M~ue," ·the ot' a ..yoqnc ~way girl who !eCO<ld prodqcilbn of the Hun· W!tneMs a ll1llCder .., a col· BACKSTAGE· -On band !or tingtoa B eD~ .. ~·,11. Playhouse's lege camJ>U.', and "Dames at the opening nlaht of "Ali, 1973-7t sea~ with onetime Sta," the. muaical spool of Wllderneea," at· the Laguna .Dally Pilot award winner. thole Hollywood muslcala of MoUlton Playhouse was Margo Barbara Crooker landing the the 1930s and 40s. Blll Purk1u Goddard, who'• been a ttUe role in the French iJ directing "Victim," w~e member o! 1be Lag1111a Com- !llllllit)' Playen !or ~ e.n· t1rt .50 years and appeared in tbelr rll'St production 1 o lnl .... , the players now boast a membership of 3,000 -or 10 pe~t of the com- bined Populations·· of Laguna Beach 2nd Lei.sure world. The Westminster 'Com- TV Audiences Get T~e '.Shaft' Tonight munllv Theater is putting out In lhe East River. JaeckeI has a call ror directors for the an alibi : he was playing poker .balance ot the 1913-74 seaso11, with solid citizens the night oJ which wUI begin• when the the deaths. theater ls comJ?.leted .... 'y JAY SHARBtrrr NEW YORK (AP) "Shaft'' wu a lively movie abouMl<lbn Shaft,,a hip, toogh blac~ private eye. It's been ,made:into a once-a-month TV series' and is making Us debut tonigbt on CBS, . , : ,J'uuth Coa st Repertory .W TMllU OCTMlll • · MADCAP llVINNte 0, l".UlllLY COMIC NOITALGIA I "THE TAVERN" •v ._...M. C•• 1t17 NllW.-OllT, COSTA "MlllA POii lllSlllVATIONI, CALL -"'-'lMJ '~ •• easiiy the best movie so far this Yea·''' -81•Dri.fll'I~ • • NEW YORK TIMES ":, WtweWiW• !P" "'62? • HARBOR 0.1, STARTS AT DU SK Illa "PUT IT AGAIN SAM " Shaft and· Roeal p rob e· those iJ1ter~ted should mall a deeper and find out the two resume to WC'I' at Box 764, victims are the latest in a Wcstminilter 92683. . series of bodles found ln the 1be Pacific Group Theater East River. It tums out all the iroduction of ' 'T obacco .v1ctlms have bear tried for ltoad," originally acbeduled to crimes and found innocent, open NoV. 2 at UC Irvine's save tbt lawyer, who hu Humanities Hall, has been defended most of them. moved back to Nov. ·ta and . EXCLUSIVE Shaft goes on the trail and switched to the Anaheim It has twq thlnga ln CO"fllDlon 'with the movie. · Richard Roundtree, a rme actor, still plays ·Shaft. And the theme music ·is the same. Any other resemblance lo the original ls pure'IJ coincidental. 'lb{" film 's bite ha! been turneicl' into a JTJJffied bark in JoniRI'& show, which deals ~Ul r a pack of prominent ur · antes who gQ about learns many ol lbe victims Cultural Arts Center 931 N. ORlllGE COIJlllY bad be<n acqtritted o1 alleged J-~~~B~lv~d~·~·~·~·~·~u~·u~r~un~~~~~~~~~EN~G~IC~E~ME~llT~~~~~ .. ~-~·,.~·~·'~ .. ~~1 crimes against the famtlies of 1 ~ three weekends. the solid citizens listed iii slaying al· leged villains the courts h ave set free. The only redeeming element in the show, aside from aou111DT••• Ro u ndtree. is c a s t regular Ed Barth. He play 1 Shaft's Police ooddy, u. AI Rom, with a believably low · key, raspy- volced approach. Alu, he and the others are caught In brisk but \-'try bad script that leaps ~bout faster than .. nute player 's upper lip durinj the William T e 11 :Overiure and with far Jess ef- 'fect. · IT STARTS tn' coµrt, where a prominent criminal l1wyer gets 1-client acquitted of a . charge of killing a ,cop. The cop's partner ( R I c h a rd Jaeckel) confronts the two and vows mortal vengeance. Shaft, the lawy~r'a friend , steps· in whe~ the barrister and his cli ent are found dead Jaeckel's alibi. HE THEN learns that Nid Citizens -a retirtd Jlldgi, a prominent lawyer, an ad- vertlaing executive and so on -have formed their own poue to dQ In the people they feel the courts stupidly set frte. I'm not giving away any last-minute secrets, because the abow tells all from 1tart to flnllh. nie only quesUons viewers might have, should they watch "Shaft" tonight, are how quickly will Shaft discover -the clues, ho.w many shots will be fired thereafter and how 900n will all this be over? Jt'1 a shame the ahow'a a dog, because the series has potential. 1tfaybt on the next go-around a little suspense will be Included. Joins Cast HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ - Matt Clark will be amont the cast in the Warner Broi. ' llclence fiction drama "The Terminal Man" ! tar r Ing George Segal and J o a n ·Hacket t and written by Michael Crichton. TRY OUR RED ORCREEN BURRITO I ~~...,.i' soo NIWPOIT llAC:H SANTA ANA ... _ ... ........ ...,, ' TVmN lo4 HNI •• -........ .HE'SA.GOCOCOP. •. OHA,;.,.-"'ur· : . ' ""'~"OHABAO·ROAD . . A.w.£5 Wl1.JAM Gl.EROO-R.f'ERT tf1ZIG ~ ....a:rAA GI.a: N BUE.".-ma f()9ffil" ll.Al<E · BUY IGfEENI Bl9f 1'!oMld 11'111 ~ ~..w.ES 'MIWM WEACIO • So__, tit ROBERT BCAIS -tit ROOEm 900L5 ""fl.F£RT 1-tlZ(l . t.uto~~JAMESWUJAMOLEIOO U111t1dAf11sls 0,..... MIUo!I ~ ll!.mfti"atlt9" Unllllf Alttsts ltleORfl Ind TIPI' TM111t ..... •-r .. ...,• ... coiun11 ~ oOIPGI CINEMALAND & SDUTH CDAST 2 WEEK DAYS 7 & 9 P.M. SAT. & SUN. 1-3-5:10-7:15-9:20 Hl-WAY-39 !11111 11 DUSI PLUS lol fEllURE GlmNG SllllllHTo m MANN THEATRES .. .. '"STATI OP. SllGF" • J llTT'f' IOOP CARTOONS Cetllpttte ..... 7:10 & t!IO IMll .... , .. "DAY Of THI JACKAL" lrGJ * SUIF:IOAID &IYl·AWAY * DITAIU AT THU.Tiii! • "rm 'H TILLll" IPGI LI Do NEWPORT BEACH !JtfTRANCl ro l lDG ISl( 67JaJ~O -pl111 - Rlclriord le11ioMl11 ., __ "LAST OF SHllU." e ...... Sn. J r .M. ~~.!~·~.\ ~ C~OHA D•L MAil "SEVEN BLOWS OF THE DRAGON'' Ill __ _:_7.::&.:t :!lt r.M.~·c_ __ ,_ 11 AIM "I ESCAPED FROM DEVIL'S ISLAND" "THI STOHi klLLEI" ...... "DILLINGIR" Ill "I •ICA,10 f'llDM DIVIL'S ISi.AHO" !Ill ... "SEV•N ILOWS ef Ille Dll AOOM" tll "' "YOUI THiii MINUTES ARI Ur:" ... 11<' •'WHlll DOIS IT HUIT7" "IAW MEAT'' IRI "CANNllAL GllLS" 111- "NIGHTMAll IN WAX" Ill "HIAVY Tll:AFFIC" IXI . .. "MYIA llECklNRIDGI!" !XI INDI TUIS. 0.......11111 Q. Jedi- • "A TOUCH 0, CLAIS .. 1'1trkl1 N1o1I k.tt JICotl'I' ''1AXTl1t" 1•111 lft Cllffl , .. , "ITATI 0,. SllOli" "IATILE 0~ ALOlllltl" UNr1!111-1"1r•l1I Gvidlll<I 11119. C.lor 8uvlr1Qu ''YDUll THiii• MIH· UTllS AlllE ,. ... ..,.,_ f'•lw •• u .... ''WMEltll OOIS IT NUltT'" (It) M1rl011 lr1MI• "TH• 000,ATMEll" "LDVI! STORY# lolh 111 Cet.rl lltl lltw f1•e . . DAILY PILOT 13 NOW ntlU TVUDAT ly. O'N_, ,.,_ O'th .. "Paper Moon" ,,., .... "Friends of Eddie Coyle" letll 11 Col., 1'91 U..c•A .... _ .... , ·-· 121 .. 010 ............ ·--•1a1•C-.. ssa.1012 -,,_., et •• , ... tot. ,..,.:LliJ C*AU-=-~~ THI STONE KILLllS 111 ""''--NIGHT LEGS i111 -.. ... -1.w.1-.n - EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ...... "' ,., •' '" ..., ·-·~ ~· •rn•- -HUNTIN~TON 111.\C:ff-eOSTA"lilln '1.' 21111 AT llAllOl #1 I--U._TV ..... tC-·WUT 11llRMIE CASEY lH ........ __ GJ~C.SCOTT 'XMttt~y ~~Nee ra•o b•m 1i..1c1 ,. i ' I 1111 .... 9t .. ,"'"' .;,:\)~ ,. .......... Plln -::: ........ __ . ·--- I MUB~E OKLIHOM.1 CRUDE P\ut-l!URf ~ REYf'+OLO\ "WHIR LtOMTNINO" ALSO. WA•RlN OATS AS "DILLINGER" • • l I I' ,J • Cni11en arid Loaen MUTUAL FUNDS • "' '" ... mo TllUdlJ, Octobff 9, 1973 DAJLY PILOT J PSA Casts Eye on Nation's Fri·endl y Sk y SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pac~ic . Sou1hwe11 Airlines, lhe Califom ia commuter lint wllh pretty girls and 193 flights dai· Jy, is eyeing the lucratJve wild blue yonder. Alttt building the n:ition'a m o s I successful lntritstate airline, PSA. 's d a p p e r chairman and chlef execulive officer says he wantl to go na· tional. 0 WE FIND WE are begin· ning to aatw-ate the California markel," aak1 J. F l oyd Andrews. "So our long-range ~oel is to gain cer1ification so that we can Oy to other parts of the United Stale!. California sldt!lin!I falttr.d. An agrttment to buy Air C41Uornla, a small eommuter line, was terminated this year by • Just~ Otpartment threat cllllli tbt Cla)'!On Antttrust Act. And the return on four PSA hotels bas been disappointing. Andrews says the hotels "at present aree. complete flop" although two, the 5an Fran- ciscan and the floating Queen Mary, have Improved their financial picture receoUy. Meanwhile, PSA ls applying to tbt Publk UUllU.1 Com- mlJMn to 1tart a direct route betw«n Long Beacll, San Jose and Sacramento and noo-stop between Ontar i o and Sacramento. Ila planes Oy already between San Jose and S.n Diego and between San Jose and Los Angeles and the Hollywood-Burbank airport. ALTHOUGH calls moll of money-makers. ANDREWS PSA'1 routes be says "We've rrUlled the mart, at lein temporarily, In a few spots.'" 'l1le odfatto.San Fran- cllco route "isn't a loser, but it isn't • mater of JD011ey either," he adds. And Fremo after a year ha! failed to produce revenue, particularly on the Sloe- lllghts. lll<'Oll1e fell short of ... pectatlml 1n the !iJrhllf of 1!1'13 with net return ol 1747.000 or 20 centa a stiare. down from $2.7 million earned In the same period last )'ear. THE LOSS from PSA's httcl and broadcasting operatiOns ftached $1.052 million coin· pattd with a $436,000 loM in the same aiJ: months of 1972. Last month. a 4.9 percent f.are lncrtase went into effect and in May the airline was aut~rired 10 charge '34 cents a pa'"ssenger to recover the ex- penses of ne.w nntihijacklng security ordered by t h e government. Wallichs Adds New "It has to be long-range because it is a difflCult thing to QOme by. You just don't walk into any regulatory agen- cy and say I have,90-and-so to offer and here I am." Call Arab Confab Concession Special to the Daily Pilot llOILYWOOD -Wallich's MuSic & Entertainment Co., Inc. has annoUncN an agree- ment granting K. Salmacia Entertainment Centers, Inc. television-stereo and audio ac· cessory concessions in all Wallichs Music City stores. Andrews was one of the World War 11 veterans who took GI fiigbt training and, along with others In bis group, founded PSA with a single, leased DC2 in 1949. Last year PSA carried more than six million passengers. BUT EFFORTS to expand in KUWAIT (AP) -Oil-rich Kuwait called today for an urgent conference of the Arab oil nations "to debate the role of oil" in the new Arab-Israeli war. The Kuwattl government ASSOCIATE WANTED Leisure time and trevel spending •• SUI& BIWOI *210 BIWOI low TN•Mu INDUIT,_Y ,, .,. .. .. NllWfl'M'f baud firm wllfl Ml Nmlflt ... 1 .... 1111 el ..,,r J:M mflllM l"f )'Mt IWilllhl J. .,. .. , Ptfiflll) ..... 1 ... lltoel- ••• wllll UPlllllity ef f"Wlll-1"' SUt• ,..,_...,. t1jlll1I •I r 11 I I I y 111 utll, Ni.M1t t....,, , .... , .., """ ·~· loo---. c-1111i. .... u, 111"' 11111tI11 I . l'T111Cltol" lllMM, ""' - MR. DAVID SILVER said Oil Minister A b d u 1 Rahman Salem el Atild was C<lmmunlcating the prol)bsa.I to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Libya, Algeria, Qatar and Abu Dhabi. ~fost or the oil ministers are meeting in Vienna for priCe negotiations with the major Western oil companies. T H E ANNOUNCEMENT said Kuwait is prepared to host the conference t o detennine how their oil could be used as a weapon again,,t Israel, . Since the war began Satur-- day, there have been a number of Arab calls for a halt in oil shipments to the United States, Israel's chief backer. But the only action was Iraq's nationalization Sun- day of the small Iraqi holdings: of two Ami!rican oil firms, Ex- (ha-I J. GLOBAL AOVENTURES INCORPORATED 714 -552·7160 l ~mm PDPiDUBSliDPS .\ COMPARE COMPuter Assistance to REsearch Whit ls II? How daas II work? How can I u11 II In my lnv1stm1nt selectlon? How do I flnd out mart l~Oll COMPARE? A techn ical approach tu stoek market timing, devel- oped by Dean Witter,& Co. after three years of research. Using a computer, it mea4 sures momentum of stock .and industrY price trends. By combining !he liming sig· na ls ol COMPARE wllh IUn• damentat research. ATTEND A LECTURE! Thursday, Octoblr 11, 1973 7:30 P.M. • Office of D11n Witter & Co. 298 Broodway L1gun1 Be1ch, CA Speakers: Tom Doherty ind Steve Hardy DEAN WITT E R. « Co. INCORPORATED MfMll!Jt 1r<1rw VOlllC &fOCIC IEJfCl'IAHOf. IHC. 298 BROADWAY LACUNA B!ACll CA 92652 xon and Mobil. And they were considered of no significance in the over-all production pic-ture. Oil company and shipping sources in London ltlday report.ed the first algnificant cutbaw In fuel supplies to Western Europe due to the war. But they blamed geography rather than politics. THE SOURCES said there was no sign the Arabs were cutting oil production. But Aramco. the major pro- ducer of Saudi Arabian oil, said it cut the flow through its pipeline to the Medltemmean by 50 percent because it goes through one of the two bat· Uefroots, the Golan Heights. 'Ibe line, known 83 Tapline, normally carries 475,000 bar· rels a day. Aramoo said it was reducing this "to minimize lo.5s in case of a break" in the line. Ollt~ Plitt Sl9ff Pflolo New Year Opening The Sheraton Newport Hotel, rising seven stories above MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach, is being built by Emkay Development Co., of Newport. The $7 million structure, developed by William Mes4 senger Co., also of Newport Beach, is sc heduled for completion in January. Architect is Edward Durell Stone of Los Angeles. Oyde O. Wallie~. president, said Monday the agreement, scheduled to become effective Oct . 16, will provide the com- pany with working capital to further expand in the Southern California area, long a com· pany goal. K. Samacia Entertainment Centers. Inc. of Los Angeles will operate the concessions under the name Music qty Electronics. Wallichs Music & Enter· tainment Co. operates nine home entertainment stores in Southern California a n d. Arizona and recently opened an organ specialty salon in the Tope.nga canyon s b o_,.p pi n g Mall , the rorerunner·or a num- ber of such salons planhed for shopping centers. Complete Mid-day American Stock List I • \ l l Monday's Cl~siogPrices • • I NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE - ·• Octobft' ' 1CJ7) DAILY PILOT Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday P•I t=1 Hltfl Lt._. 1.6'! ~l"'"""' .. .., __ ,...., __ ..................... 00-- I Stocks Recove1· F1·om W ru· Panic NEW YORK (AP) ~ StA>Ck markel prices con· tioued their upward trend ~1onday after ope.ning sharply lower in what some anaJysti; said was panic selling produced by the sudden outbreak or war in the ltfjddle East. The market was broadly higher in heavy vol· un1e as the average stocks generally continued to outperform the so-called glamour and inst1tution1l issues. • , i ·I • ' • . ' , · .. - I ' Twsday, Octobtr '1, 1'173 ;' .. •'.. ,. . , _..-...;,, •• ·1 • .... .. .., • • . • •· ' WHITE ~TUESDAY & WEDNESD ·AY ONI:._ SHOP lO AM to 9 PM• PLENTY OF FREE PARKING SAVE30% NOW KITCHEN TOWELS ' 70•30" ~UflH site birdseye. Thie~ aoo thirsty !as~itln pr1~I •11cn.i n towt!IS. lint 1ree & I towels. 4 colors combmat1on~. rn1or 1351. I 7 7 C PAK' 99c1 Co111,,1.49 ~:.~1.1• I ~::z·1" sac ~=:·••1 3·3c . ..1'1• .... -- NORGE 2 SPEED WASHER J trcle automatic harxlfes big 18 lb.. loads.. 3 water lemp~selectio11S and infi11- 11e water coatror. Delivtry withiQ area. .... ltfG:1H:t7 $159 '"""' . l .'-·""'7-Ii ·~' ~,;; •• -~--~:: -I 1 ;\ ' OFFICIAL SIZE OLYMPIC SIZE SKITTLE BOWL SAVE $6· • COMP. AT 10.99 Skittle Bowl goes b·ig time' Giant 7" pins, giant 41'/' Skittle bowling ball, giant 41'/' two section steel pole arKI built·in pin locaters. fun for all' FAMOUS HEDSTROM BAG OF 3·1ALLS! 10'' TRICYCLE A lootball, bas~etball and 3 9 9 I B•i&Mly fi~sli<d.'~oo· •• 9 9 ~olleyban ~n are tc~rllO!I· · I lar steel· trike wilt! ad- ity constructed balls rnide I justal»e .saddle, vinyl fGf iugged all sur1ace play. I gnps & [1Ykltt be~i~ a .. -06111 truss U11s sef!Sltional I Wfltels. _By Americl s •9 97 walue! ! filleSt mu·ma~rt . • COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. San Diego Freeway 1t Bristol I • SWING TOP I TRASHC'AN , ·i heavy duty plastic receptacle with s11n•1 too. Rernlrklble onlue! DIAMOND CRYSTAL PATIERN lleal'Y aim Ui pit~enl tippin1. &r sever.it J TRASH CAN . • ' l.INERS , .' · . P•ck of 20 three bushel 9ress \a9s·Or 1pec'r,of JS thirty three gallon tra1h c•n bagl. He•~Y. vinyl. ' . . ·~ 'IP' NOW·. ·Rog. He . - . SAVE 55% NOW LIGHTBULB fAMTASTICYAlUI . 25, 40, 60, 75 and 100 watt bulbs. c ·10 Reg. 22c EA. • I E $ SAY 1.70 ••• TOILET SE •White enameled hardwoo4 seat with till and iRShllation hardware ioclllded. I t~ 3.69 ' RAIN BARREL ' .. WATER SORENER The wash cycle fabric softener that works with your detergent. 48 oz. bottle by Johnson. SAVE 20°/o •119 Reg. $1.49 EMPIRE 81&42 ~UP AUTOMATIC SPECIAL LOW PRICE ~!o~i!s~o~r !m~!" fs:;":A:-!'.V.-'E ,-2..Jll #2042-4 1 NOW ONLY! 7~'! 9,97 PAPERMATE FLAIR PENS ,, . Choose from J2 ~opular colors ; great for schoql, tiome and art projects. .1·•~.y 39c WlltOMOI ·--•llUftl c•l CAii , . ) r •1 ' ~~ • ' .. t ~. • ' • ' ' I • •• . . I . • • . • • I • 1 t I ' • t i •, \ • . . .. • • They'¥e Corrie Long Way h ' • • i r t ., , ' . •'· it Ml-: • .. ' . • • ~ I .. .... ,. • • •• " • . -r No Hang-~ps J i. 1• ' .;..:,......,,."; ~ -The;:'"'ear is I ~5 .t 'S:t;. (;bov • > • ~ ~ • . • Criticism Clicks DEAR ANN LANDERS : Whal is this -• ~ ' " J··· ~ ... " world coming to when a woman can 't ~ i telephone her aging ~m the of· t rice three or four tlnies a day? And i whose busl'ness is it if they lalk about the , price of meat -or even ~~ther or not - the rain will hurt the rhubarb? think all ~m01exuals look alld act U~e My mother is 84 and she lives alone, C Goo.bless her. I'm ·sure my teJephone calls mean a great deal to her. I try to telephone at least four Utnes: a df.y. Th'e world needs more love and coq- t sideration and less criticism or people • , who show it, especially to their aging t parents. That office must be a real zoo. -GLAD I DON'T WORK THERE DEAR GLAD:J'm not I lhlnk perhaps you could tt.ach tbOle d um b b e 11 s 11om ethlng. DEAR ANN LANDERS: There seems " to, be quite a hea~ argument between • t Ann Landers, who says homose1uals are sick, and certain psychiatrists and gays • who say they are NOT sick. Your op- ponents say you are ill·lnformed, stupid or nuts. Anyone who witnessed the Gay Pride Parade from Belmont Harbor to Lincoln Park in Chtcigo has got to go with you, Ann. In my life I never saw anything to top It. Over 1,5;00 gays came out of the closet to march· wllh their "brotllerl and tilsters." Some of the costumeJ were out of this world -sequins, leathers, tight~, black ·1eather coats, whipa and chains. The wigs were gorgeoas and the makeup was fabulous. One feJlow (I think ) bad a live snake wrapped aroun:I his neck . . l'here was much ~ing and singing. •1Two-four-«ix-elght Is your busband- really straight?" ThUe also was gopd news from the flnt gay miniller of ffie United Church of Christ. "Slsty·two gay minl.sten," he announced, "have decided to ·step forward and declare themselves. No more biding. They are· gay and proud Of It." II those people are normal and herllhy, then I wanna be sick. Sign me - FREAKED OUT • DEAR FREAKED: I hope you lton't that. What you describe soaadJ like the lnnatic fringe. Many bomasenals are dJgnified, soft-spoken people, ney do not wear high l eels or wtp. Tbe only real dUference between tbem and us is that Ute~ prefer as sex partners members of tbelr own gender. Thanks for the report. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I visited my sister a few weeks ago. Somet~"ing I saw in her home has been bothering me and I can't get it out of my mlod.;' • My sister's husband is VflrY strict with the children. They are niCOQungsters - brigb( and well-behaved ~ but they are ' ' ten:ified of him. • • The middle child, a boy of seven, seems to have a small appetite. His ' father forces him to eat and every night th•e is a scene a the dinner table. Once the boy excusedr himself and threw up. Anotb'er time be began to cry because his father yelled at him for 15 minutes and shook him, r being "a baby." I didn 't say'anything to~y sister, but I feel no~ that I should wrl\e to her~ Or would she consider it interfering? -ON MY MIND DEAR ON: That father needs counsel- ing. Aocl Ille lddJ will need It, tot, from )'9ur dttcriptkm. Perhaps If you suggest to yoar dater that SHE dllaa1 tbe faml· ly 1ttu:ttoa wttlll the a·chool conselor1 It woaid be a useful fint step. , • Don't get burned by a "line'' that's too bot to handle. Play It cool with Ann Landera's gulde to "Necking and Petting -What Are the Limits?" Send your re- quest to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 3346. Chicago, fll. f0654. enclosing SO cents in coin and a long, stamped, seU-addreaacd envelope. • I . leH) and the styf.' is ' the . look of the 40s . Above:·;, •a dress from the Fall, 1973 · ,ollection. . Below left are separates from ' . the sportswear department. At right, another dress from the 1945 catalogue. " By JO OLSON Ot Ill• o.11~ •u.t ll•ft How does a department store once known for washdresscs and sensible shoes move Into the realm of coulurc ahd clogs? For Sears, it was ·a Z2-ycar proCess, said Charles W. Harper, genera I manager o( the New York office and group national merchandise managl.!r of the women's category for the whole retail Ol)eration. He described the metamorphosis for press representatives durint a Christmas party in September at the store's Alham- bra headquarters. "When Sears decided to seriously challenge the tradi lional departn1cnl store, it became obvious that we \1"ire weak w h e r e they were strong , . . in soft lines and specificaJly in fashions. "Our cusl().lners were 50 percent men and 50 percent women. In traditional department stores the customers were 75 percent women and only 25 percent men. DEFINE CUSTO~tER "We knew we had to attract the woman customer. To attract her, we fll'Bt had to define her. But before we could even do that we had to define ourselves." When the store analyi.ed Its female customers, it found that "middle" was the "operative word." They were middle class, middle in- come, middle of the road, middle America and, as Harper said, "I'm very much afraid, middle aged. BEA ANDERSON, Editor TRMty. OC!ttllr t, 1'71 ..... 17 • "\Ve had women customers \\1ho swore by our ·nu-back' corsets, our children's underwear and our men 's work clothes. But not \'ery many of them would hove advertised the fact thal they were wear· lng a dress from Scars. It was something they did for the economy or the ttllng.'' In 1955. 60 percent of the dresses sold in ihe store \\'ere priced at $5.98 retail. NOT fo~ASHIO~ "They were well styled, carefully made 10 extremely high specifications. But Cod kn~·s they were not fashion . And what "'as true of our dresses was true of all the other departments that catered to our \11oman customer's needs," Harper stated. Whlle struggling to upgradl? the New York buying structure •. executives learn· ed that a leap tO $12.00 from $5.98 was too much at once. The store hired a \\'oman to upgrade its fashion adl'ertising image and then "took to the road. "\Ve began logging hundreds of thousands 'or miles a year to bring to our own people in the field the message that 'your future is in fashion,' " Harper com- mented. ' The buyers discovered Europe and "began making their own way more easi- ly among those Seventh Ave. houses that had originally given us a cool reception." Nei:t oo the list was convincing the Ameri~ woman that "we did indeed cany fashion.." Harper said. PEOPLE CHANGING As the store began succeeding at upgrading the image, the "whole world of fashion began to literally come apart at the Seams. It wasn't jU!I. that fashion wa,s changing, people were chang- ing ..• and women were changing," he continued. The "anti-fashion" era had arrived . "Desi,piers did not make fashion" Harper explained. "Fashion was belnF!'. created in the Woodst~ of the world." He noted sociological changes in customers : a blurring of the sexes, an in· creased interest in female careerism, a return to nature and a rejection of authority, among others. "Authoritarianism is out. CUitism is in ,'' Harper stresseii. 'Iltese cults include casualness, thinness, ':'instantness," ac- tion and the good llfe. , "AU of these trends, cults and sociological changes have been recognized as a real force 'in Sears, the women's store," Harper said. "Yau \VOO't find ex· tremes of fashion, because we are con- vinced our customers don't want it. "On the other hand you will find ex- tremely good fashion, good c 1 a s s i c fashion, because we are eonvinced that our customer wants that. You will ~llld top prices in our better dresses that you probably ne ver dreamed Sears carried." Though Sears has come a long way, Harper stated, the store does not intend to "sit back ·and rest on our laurels. There is literally no rest for those who would remain in the race for the American WOfD.l:lll's favor." l I I .I ' 3 DAil Y PILO T TI!LlrHONf CilOCHT co. ,...... ... ,.<If .,., ... w. rnt a. 4911 .. 1 .. _ -., ... h,.,....t.1 pikes. lll•r IM•,_,1 .. Call 645-356' UFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY wr... '"'' w .. ........ l,12 ".,", 11'111. C.U• ,._ ·-141.oast FOR DRUG PRICES •• Call 642-4104 . ' Shop's Parking Space Off Center II> Erma 1k11nbt,,.1;; Remem~r the Clld do ~·s ~·htn ~'OU ustd to park ,.OW' C"ar Ln 1ht1 suburbi 3.nd take a bus doY.'nlOY.11 lo shop? \\'hat :i haule. Parklnt your car in a tO\faway zone. Run· ning for 3 bu.'i :ind missins, It. \\':iit111g for another in tilt cold ~ra in. heat, \\ind l. '.\\!,·er h.,, .. ing the right change for th(' dri\·er All that has chant:l-d 00\1'. \\"~ ha,., ronveri len! shopping centers that have gT0\\11. \\'I th ll'w! demand_ In f::ic1. \\·e h:i\·c one near us so big tl mi~ Its O~ll fonn <1f g<1\ en1mcnL In an trfor1 10 conserYe gas 1ht ollwr d.1~. foor ol us det:1dtd 10 1:ike one c:ir to tbP :!>hoppin: 1.~n1er 111 b u y gN<'t'rles For laughs. .,...(' cruised around the p.1rkinJc! lano l'IO(l(t~t 10 the stores knoy,·ing full u ·l1il 1hat ln ordl·r ro gel a parking place that close you ha\e to la\ abandon your car oo the site \1'hile the shoppinll center 1s being built (bf M 1here \\"hen one of the owners d1ts :ind l\is car Is ln1pouoderl. The second Jane u·as equally filled as was the th ird. We continued to make laps atKt AT WIT'S END . cruise dangerously close to lit· lie old ladies who \\'trc crav•I-' ing on their knees from r.x· haustioo. ~ ~taxine broke out t h P. sandy,·iches for lunch as WP. \\·ere all getting rather testy. ( ~tildred was making obscel'IP. gestures to each foreign car that was tak1nit up .11 full sp3i..'8.I By mld-aft~i-noon. the stortt ""ere barely vb Ible to the nak· ed eye \\'hen we 1p:1tted It. A iwrking place. The only hitch "'as someone had left a shop- ping cart smack In the middle of IL Wanda volunteered to move the cart. As she did so. a c1ir rrom noWhere zoomed in near· ly knocking her down. Maxine had lD be restrained, but in talking with the occupants. we disco\·ered the poor devils had been cruising 50 long In search ol a parking place their radio batteries had civtlf out. Thay txpreiSed joy at heartnc 1boul the eod of the w1r. shock over Watergate and dilmay at Pha$C IV. I Mlld:red volw1teertd to drive in the. late afternoon as t was suflerlng from hysterical ex- haustion. (At one point they le.II me l stopped the car, assaulted a woman with grocery bags on her back scat and demanded, "You tell me "'here you came fron1 or I'll break your fact!."1 Wt all ... 11.1. ' • • "O '.' • ~ i lnslruejed. ''Lock e dobrt IS you,lenve aod 1Cf'1cone ~k tht ttrfft to see 1~rt w~ ar~rked so -wa.~flhd iL~ " • ' ' ~ ., -~:J!I' ·"That's eas.J·. J said'. •·w~ arc 8Ul;Jck· ip 1t1i'e middle of dovmt<rn'll." -• \Ve ran for a bus to the shopping center and missed it. T\'o one seemed surprised. It was around si,. when '• '·iw"1•lf~j.J~f ;i PRE~TS ':: . A, NEW ,. DIMtNSION IN ADVANCED HAIR DESIGN l\Uldred spotted a parking ---:::;;;;;;;;;;::--:::;;;~II p\at'i? and slid into it easily. ~;>\-:~·-=~ # rr.,r~r ltl P•well'' _ _. l~~~ ~ .1 .. 1 ..... ..,. .... ApMMe ~~~!71 1 Coast Couples Recite Vows l '• j •HP• ..... G""'911 c• ..... \ 3 Full Service · ""'' •ldlf• 4eMt•let NC•· 1 Locations in •killM •• 1.-.c1t1" "•Sr cm. '. Huntinnton Beach 5Ner Onlfll1. M•' Styt. ...i • 511-. C•"· OtNr ..me .. fH. ~1 PRESCRIPTIONS-hlrff •'• .. .,., o.Mt-. Htilr e C••• .. Ac-"' e Otll••rift C• .. rhit.t H•lr StT•lt ....... • l 1l111f"1flHywr1WfllM C•ll'l••.lett llM ef -·· M .... IM1 Prt 9 .. ._kl. t ,le 2 ~ FRANCIS- \.ORR J FINE STATIONEl!Y ,,,_& ...... """""" l.M""'r DUii 4ct•Mritt tlltu a ••<• .. -Seti llU I tllU MilWtf '"-1111 '"''' •u 11f .111n 11111 •••• IRON ON ART (,.Hk..W Ir •,.+IN, t•r ••rl'ftf!RI .,. "'"' Mf9. R•t•il, Wh1I•, Mail Ord•r. Fund Rai1in9 1 OY•r 200 d•1i9n1 & c:ustom re. produc:tion1. Cell or writ• for info: 2,..., W. DCIAN •rtONT NIEW"°ltf llACN, '2Ml--61J-UM ~'"'-<. .. TI1r flf-d Balloon Ltct. Is lookin'1: for a \•try 5\X'CiRI pcr.~on lo Sl'l'\"C vur \"Cry special custuml·rs. A ~11.lcs \l(J~itirtn Tha t lt>1tds lo managt>mrnt. Call '.\lis t.-r J:eyn olds. ~6-001 1 -~,:~· ... ••" •·•P•l•ll, ,....,.., ·~·w..-· ................. ~1 •• ~ Clippings from Steve: Q. I Mt • teenoqer. I'd like to tMI•• toft9 hair but my en4s Gf• splltthUJ. I _.Ofl't wont to cut It, wltot ce" I do? Help! A. A "split •nd trim" i1 th• •n1w1r if you w•nl 1uper long h1 ir to 1t1y in good c:ondi.tion. Milt• 1ure it 11 done with ici11or1 . Q. I am tlrtd of lo•tcJ heir bvt my boyfriend do.u.'t wnt me to cut It. Arly s .. , .. 11 ... 1 A. Your boyfri end will like your heir if it i1 cut c;orrtcfly. Go to e h•ir dre11tr who 1ptti•li1e1 in styled Cltt1. I would 1ug9t1t • 1lylt th•t would be n•tur•l looki n9 for you. Tht .. Londo11 Bob". for •J"emple, is 1h1ptd •round the fe et •nd c•n b• left •1 lon9 '' yow w•nt in tht b•c~ ,., fvfthff lnrormetltr1 C1ll er Writ• to: Steve Hair Wftt Jl05 N•wpOrt llvd. 'ha••: 673-4116 MRS. SCHAUMBURG SCH AUMBURG· HARROD The garden or the Corona de! l\la r home of the Ron Har- rod!! y,·as the se lling for the "'edding I i n king their daughter, Jan Ha rrod and Douglas Schaumburg, also of Corona de! hfar. · Officiant ~'a!l the bride's uncle. Jud ge Sam E. Collins and parents of the bridegroom are hlr. and l\frs. Frank Schaumburi of Tustin. Attendants y,·ere Kit Harrod. Steven Schaumburg an.,~ Patrick Collins IL The newlvv.·eds. vrho will reside in Sieamboat Springs. Colo .. are graduates of Corona clf'I ft.fa r High School. She al· tended Orange Coast College "'here he graduated . The bridegroom also at· tended Denver University and California Stale University. San Diego. McDOWELL-WALKER l\1arcell P.1arie \Va I k e r becan1e the bride of David L. l\lcDowell during double ring ceremonies performed. by the Rev . Ralph Smith in Ca1neo \Vedding'Chapel, Anah eim. They are the daughter and son of l\1rs. R. H. Brennan and l\1rs. Robert DeAnnand, both of Huntington Beach. l\tiss . Donna SwanSon and Bill Peters were honor at- tendants. Others serving the bridal couple were Miss Debra Tracy, Bob Schoelzel, Rick Walker. Pau1a Brennan and Curtis DeA.rmand . The nev.1Jyv.•eds. who y,•ill reside in Huntington. Beach. are graduates of Edison High School. SCHUMACHER- WILLSON A garden \\0edding ceremony y,·as performed in the Green· brier Inn, Garden Grove for ~1arilyn Wi\tson and Carl S. Schumacher, both of Newport Beach. Their parents are !\tr. and hlrs. Richard E. \Viii.son and Mrs. Richard E. Schumacher. all of Newport Beach and the late ~tr. Schumacher. Attendant!! were 1'1 is s-· Solveig Store. nlaid of honor ; 1'!rs. John Vvn. Miss Lori Fouts and ~fiss Christine Dietz. bridesmaids: La n Ol.idester. Oower girl ; Steve Chidester. best man. and Joe Fernandez, John Franklin and P.1ark Hughes. ushers. The bride is a graduate of Corona del Mar 1-llgh School and attended California State University. Long Beach and Harvard University. Her husband is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo where he earned a degree in structural engineer- ing. LESLIE BARNETT Winter Nuptials Planned ... IK•lf'!itM of ,,_,,./llf •Id• .U ,.._ ... '" .~~·~· !!' H111111.,.1.,. Hlrbo!,lr • • 14'• .... &l'Mlrl!unt & Ha mlllen ff:MSn 1 \ :-r--.:;:,.... -+<r:z ,a;::=-: ... ~ ' MAP ~,o'f.-. . \O~UNTINGTON IEAC" DlE,SIES CA PRIS I LOUSES PANTSUITS 01ty tW flae5t C••••• H•lrpl"n. Tiie I~ C•ttt Pllll"rftJ: O•r l11wtM 1.c.na l'fttt 111 , .. dt1lt..fs f,..lie• t• t1prHt their •re•ttve v•ll!M•• 111 tN Mr•ltH th9l' offer. • ., ~ ftf ens-lfairl~f NEWPORT PLACE MacArtt,..jr Square °f oc1ns ff•• Slleretp H•MI I 4255 M•rtlltf• .. Wrt For Ap~lntm1nt Phon• 133-9800 (ill Golden Needle's . . s fla'4L °' a. 'i(/r,d Your Horoscope Tomorrow Or. and Mrs. Clair Ben Barnett of Corona d e I Mar have: announced the engage· ment of their daughter, Leslie Gay Barnett to \V i 11 i am Andrew CieS, MD. of Beverly Ti,o-way (~\~· Gemini: Accent on Friendship Hills. The betrothed arc planning to marr.11 Dec. 2 in Christ Church by the Sea . Newport Stretch Tri cot ' ' P~rfttl for body ihirts Pa,1r1 eolo/t He:;. S5.98 ·~~In. 11lde WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 10 By SYDNEY O~tARR Libra is drawn ' to Aries, t\•en t!Wgh these Sre opposife- signs. Libra often marries Aries, goes J n t o partnership u·itlt Aries. fights 'lnd loves \lith Aries and is puzzlctl. nabbcrgasled and delighted \\'ith Aries. So many startling changes have occurred in the lifestyles of Libra that these natives now feel as if a 1nerry- go-round v.·as whirling and they "'erC' going all the way for a brass ring . Condilions settle favorabl~·. especiall y in a fi nancial sense. for many of these natives. beginning next month. in November. ARIE.5 t~l arch 21-April 191: Lunar cycle high; take ln· itiath·e. 1'1akc neu• start. Highlight independence of thought. ac!ion. Trust your O\\·n judginent. Sense of timing is sharp. Your originality. pioneering spirit surges to forefront. Ignore those who are jealous. TAL'RUS (April 20-~lay 2Q l: Secrets are featured. ft.fake in· quiries: Do some personal in- vestigating. Keep promise to one confined to ho.me, hospital. Cooperate in project aitned at helpirig those who are in· eapacltated. Gemini . Virgo persons could figure prom- inently. GE MINI (hfay 21-June 20\: Acctnt is on friend s. hopes and desires. Protect business interests. Refuse lo give up something for nothing. l1t'hat seems ad \•erse could boomerang in your favor. PbC''5 indh1idual might play key role. Be selective Insist on quality. CANCER (June 21-June 22 ): Empasis is on responsibility, authority. \\illingness to back beliefs with investments of "lime or money, or both . Capricorn miiht play a signifi- cant role. Civic project . business deal -these rate high on your agenda. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22!: Good lunar aspect now coin· cides with writing. advertising and generally ''spreading the n1essage.'' Long-range view is necessary. Tra\·e\ and >1 broadening of h<>rizons - lhese are featured . You get rid <1£ outmoded concepts. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: New deal with finances in- dicated -mate or partner proves valuable ally. Be sure you 1nake your 0\11n dccisioos. titeans rig~t or Y.Tong, it is your style. your play that . counts. Know it and respond acoord.ingly. Tap creative resources. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 221 : Lie low. Pennlt one C'lo.se to you to take initiative. You do best now as a shrewd observer who listens. learns. Family and legal complications result if you pus~ force, insist. Be receptive. t,;Ollect needed data . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1: l\.1aintain even level -Obtain hint from Libra message. Ac· cent is on routine. health. y,·hat you do to relieve tension. Sagittarius, Gemini persons could f I g u re prominently. Reach acoord "'"ith rcl\<1\11 \\1orke:rs. those who share in- terests and goals. SAGITrARitJS (NO\'. 22- Dtc. 21 ): A.cet!nl is on the creative process. You feel. perceive and imprint your in- dividual style:. Young persons. members of opposite sex figure prominently . Aquarius, Leo natives could figure in plans. Be open to change of procedure. CAPRIC~RN 1Dec. ,22·Jan. 19): One in ·oome:' area· is in- quisitive. Find ways o f answering. Don't be upset by verbal onslaught. An a I y z e reasons, motives. Your sense of security will be enhanced if you deal wittt situati<1n rather tttan attempting to ignore it. AQUARI US fJan. 20-Fcb. 18 ): Study Capricorn me~ge. One at home v•ants very mu ch to open line of comn1unication. ti1ake it easier. Bend. Receive. Harmony is a key now to prog- ress and to your health. Taurus. Libra persons may be in picture. Agendas Filled PISCES {Feb. 19-March 20 ): If selective, you gain finan· cially. Insist ()n qua I it y. Esche\\' g e t ~r i c h-"q ui ck maneuver. Accent is on col- lecting what you need. You can put together mis.!ing links. Know it and proceed \11ith con· fidence. Natural abilities arc magnified. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are creative. somewhat of a rebel, musical and independenL You have original touch and opposite sex finds y()U attraeti11c. l\Iany born under Leo are drawn to your sphere. You discover truths about yourself i n December. You currentl y arc in '\>rocess of cha nge. Don'! resist ~ Cl].Jbs Vary Fall Conference The best man for the job ma.v be ·a woman u•ill be the underlying principle of an a.11- day conference, sponsored by Women in Management, a non·pr()fil education8J society . The session 111ill take place Saturday, Oct. 13. in the Newporter Inn . The morning session will be pre!lented by 8 panel of SUC· cessful business women and in the afternoon per son nel representatives will talk. Poster Dis play will be on display in Hun- tington Center until Saturdciy. Oct. 13. On \Vednesday. Oct. Iii. Sn1okcy the Bear u•i l\ present awards to winners. Students competing were second and third graders in Ocean View. Huntington Elementary school districts and St. Bonaventure Catholic School. Ftrst prize is a $25 savings bond. DAR ~trs. John R. \Vlng's S.1n Clemente home wiU be the setting for the m~Hng of I he San Clemente Chapter . \ViMing enlries in a pos,l er contest. sponsored by the Hun· lington Beach Junior \Vomen _ Beach. l\o \f Onlv S4. 77 ~1iss Barnett. a I 9-6 6 " Ne\11port Harbor Children's GL)ltil.?n ~11~1.":d!t: FABRICS Home Society de•iutanlc . .is , ~iiiiiiilii,wji1" eo .. sr •t •l• ·--~"'1tOU••~ ~•Y•L graduate of Corona del ~lar · .iOl'tl< tYllCL~' • •suiw<s High School~ and graduated • cum laude from the University or Southern California where she pledged Pi Beta Phi. 1icr fina nce, son of ~tr. and Mrs. \VHliam Homes Cies of San !\Iarino, is a graduate of San Marino High School and Stanford University where he affiliated \11ith Beta Theta Pi. Dr. Cies attendctl Du ke i\1edical School in North Carolina \\'here he 11.lso co'tn- pleted his inte r nship. Presently he is finishing his residency in opbthalmology at the .Jules Stein Eye Institute. UCLA. Menu Daughters 0£ !he American Revolution. !\!embers \I' ill n1cct at I: 30 p.m. \Vednesdar. Oct. 10. and 1\lrs. Jan1c.c> Darrell Smith, district director \llltl give a 1·csun1c of the DAR organiza- tion since it was founded Oct. 11. 1890. City of Hope /I. t1110-week thrift sale is planned by the S a r a h Schoenfeld Chapter. City of Hope. Hours v.•ill be fron1 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. fron1 \Vednesday. Oct. 10 to Wednesday. Oct. 24, in To\\-n Center, Westminster. ORGANS wh1n ii cem11 lo lfl1 lu11 of m•kin9 yo11r ow11 kind of m111i, -on lfle ltom11 organ 1c•n1 lo· d1y -in ,,,.,,v wty tltat co1mh -IALDWIN l1ad1 tfl1 w•v. llOU•S WOODWO.TH "'"· "',. ,.1 .. 10 "' '"""''' 'lit s P l.O.NO 4N D ORG.O.N S&L-ES ~•lt~r•,,W.1111..i 515 NORTH MAIN, SANTA AHA • 547..5151 . WINOOWS, YOUR GREATEST DECORATING POTENTIAL ! ti y1111r flo,..f-i1 a 819 in~1 r'1 flom1 .. , on • budq,+. 1h1 nic11t th ing •bout it .is lfl• chtU1n91 it P••••nh. Call u• for lr11 dec11ra1l .. 9 id••• -s,.clot Thl1 Wffk. 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THEC\JRTAJN GOES UP AND I COME OUT »I05'NG! __ .. __ ,. by Doug Wiidey rr'S-.E. IGXas.. lM';.-C/1-l'l•l'llii?.\IE c.tlll~ cJlef lll6! ()Uf, by Tom K. Ryan -by . Emie Bush miller PLEASE-·PLEASE ••• .... , l;;ET IT BE THE COD·t.IVER OIL AND NOT THE ORANGE SODA ....... ~---­., .. ---- TODAY'S CIDSSlllD PVZJLI PEANUTS I ACROSS 1.7 Machlnep1n 1 C1rrier 51 Speak 8 "There ought Incoherently lobe--l" 52 Obtained by 10 Entry In en compulsion account 54 --toe 14 Ec cl11i11tlc' sa ln111ne; v111mant Slang 16 P1n1m1 gum 59 Blame trH 61 "Thi --18 Gtrment of P1kl1tan Mutiny"' 17 Merch1ndlae 82 Weight 18 Blowe allowance whillle 63 Pita'• rlv·er 19 Atrielnfaline 64 Preclude 66 Welghtl of India mammal 20 Worked hard 22 Ftlsl ra190n 24 Buy ·-car 2e Proc;teded 1>pldfy 27 Sink 1 thlp 31 Common 1bbrevll1ion 32 ln.trutntnt.1 33 Adorn 35 Young animal 38 Tow•dttt. moutti 39 M1kafrt . 41> Ant.rlor 63 Driving aret1 67 Hurl rocks 1t DOWN t Pufllbye c:haln 2 Tulsa'•-· ., .... Univ. 3·Seari.tt O'Har1'1 ho•' Y11t1rd1'(1 Ponte S1!Y9d: t Ll'Wll E. 36 Spur -...:...:...: Pen '1'1 Melt lrwtntor bever~ 10 Smell \Ind 39 Traitor bodies ..0 Predlcikln ft ·Mike rottll\ 42 Ala:lke 12 Jigged gllchtf t3 Produced 43 Bts:1inMl1 · om 44 lcH I eek• • 21 ···Monte, 46 Th11land Ctllfomte • .temple 23 Con..vatiw: •7 IMllNitlons Informal '*8 Hird..,: vtr. 25 H11on . •9 LltMlntlme 21 Pturnlikll fNlt ~ v.ri8ty 28 T ll'M 53 Desert • ' JUDGE PARKER AeCIJT HOW L~ A TIM.E DtD IT TAKE "IQU TO SPENO THE $7~000 Tm POOLE GAVE YOU, Sl.ADE 1 MISS PEACH ----~ WEL).., LET'S &EE , .. ME GAVE~ TliE MONEY fXACT)..'f TWO MONTHS A60! t>O 'l'O\.I MEAN TO fEU. ME YOU &l.EW , $75,000 IN TWO MONTHS 1 HOW DtO '10ll ~/J./SE THAT, !MY 1 ASK? .. - DOOLErs WORLD ~~AIAT' ·8£11 M< itr l!IJNTJNG ! +-....._ SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS by Harold Le Doux YOU GENllEMEN IT'S ALWAY& eEEN ARE-EITHER MY' PHILOSOPMY THAT COMING TO THE NEXT MEAL MIGtlT DINNER !NOW &! MY LAST, MISS , .. 'OR FORGET &P'ENCER! I DON'T IT! KHO'N .AeouT SAM ••• &IJT I'M RfAOY ! by Men •t Ordinal IOffix 42 Lornblrdo'• '''" 43 Se1ndlnavlan • Lifted 5 FeeU . .... ,., tow1rd • Do .omelhing 7 Tht-: 29 Westtm featur• st1te 55 Matlhll -: ,30-Anfficlel Euro1»91n AL.I.. R'l6H'T', a..A~S., THE 1'&.~ 1-S A&OW 1t> Bf.6#\1 • QIAIS'flON N UM11•1t ONI! ; MJ'f I l'ION•,. W'£ ,.Aile'. 1'MI So 're~T country 44 Ermine 4li Hl11er'1 1ystem:2 WOJdl' • ' • ChiC.go. district 8 Upon the ~· .... w1tet'coune dictator '4 Kitchen M Al one:• •' utipnll 57 Edible funQl.W 31 Meuuttof 60 Slgnlltor).}\~. _. ..... ·,., 1P '.i. l I t SE FOR&.] \ I I I ·.·.~ by ¢bester Gould ___ ... ..,.,_lllT MUNCH pjlt,CIFlllR~ " • Tuts.clay, Cctobtr 9, 1973 DAILY PILOT {$ \ I f ! l J • by Roger Bradfield I l I ! ·I l By Charles Bonottl \!MAT DID tlOU !'ICPECT ? .• APPLAUSE? by Gus Arriola • by Ferd Johnson by Roger Bollen THE GIRLS "Our program cbalnnan sagg:ests lhat beginning: today we 1ta.J1 our meeting• with ten minute. of exercise -are there any objectlom!" DENNIS THE MENACE ----... • ! ' ' ' t . ' l ·1 ' ., .. . . Ul'I T......._ CINCINNATI'S PETE R~ (TOP) GOES AFTER THE ME'TS' BUD HARRELSON Orioles Gain An Advantage, Say Athletics OAKLAND (AP) -Baseball's defen- ding world champion Oakland Athletics feel they were double-crossed by rain in • their own ballPJl,rk. They claim it acteQ. to Baltimore's ad· var.tafl'e In their American League I playoff series v.·hen the third game was postponed Monday. I "We bad 'em on the run. the champs J .,, .. ere cooUng back," outlielder Regt;e 1 Jackson declared. "Now they have Jim t Palmer again." • The Orioles' ace right·hander, 22-8 in J the regular season. blanked Oakland fi.-0 1 On TV Wedne1da11 1 Channe l 4 a t 1:30 ...In the ~ning game Saturday before tbe A's came back to beat Baltimore and Dave Mc Nally s.3 oo Sunday. With rain causing the postponement, manager Earl Weaver gets to use Palmer Wednesday in game No. 4 of this best4·5 league championship series. Both managers, Weaver and Oakland's Dick Williams. were disappointed over the rainout -the A's skipper downright angry the game was called 22 minutes before it was scheduled to starl· League president Joe Cronln's decision to call o£ lbe game brought him into a sharp exchange with the A's explosive owner, Charles 0. Finley. "It's not fair to the8e fans to call It off a half-hour before game time," Finley snorted. A crowd oI about 30,000 -the Oakland Coliseum seats 50,000 -had been ex- pected with most school children having Afonday as a O:>lumbus Day holiday. The third game pitchers today re- mained the sam.:i -left-handers Ken Holtzman for Oakland and Mike CUellar for BalUmore. Williams stuck with his original rota- tion -Vida Blue to pitch the fourth game and Jim "Catfish'' Hunter, the winner Sunday, ready for the fifth game, if necessary. The rain lasted long alter Cronin an- nOUJl('e(I the postponement, ending at least temporarily about 21Ai hours later - but it had some beneficial effects for the A's also. "' .. I didn't get to sleep until 2 a.m. 1.-ton- day after we new home," said Holtz.man. "~·l uvbe now I'll get a better night's rest.:' And Hunter. 21·5 on the season, will get hls nonnal three days' rest between starts. \\'ith Palmer pitching \Vednesday, \Vcavcr moved Doyle Alexander, 12·8, to a 1X>S5ible Thursday starling spot. "From our vie'41>0int. the postpone- ment takes awaY any lhtle edge we had," Williams declared. "~ta)'be we would have lost, but I'd like to have taken the chance." Rain had fallen ~fore the tarpaulin ~·as put on the infield and Cronin ruled the. dirt was too sticky for play. Also, there were puddles in the outfield. But the\ ewealher forecast c:alled for clear and warmer "'eather today and W~es- \Vea\'er observed : "A couple hours of sunshine would have n1:.idc it nice. But v:e didn't get it." The Orioles manag"r didn 't agree that the postp;onemcnt worked to his club's ad\•antage. '"fhe advantage is lhat if it goes five games. 'Catfish' will have his required rest ." Weaver took a verbal swipe at Wiiiiams. saying : "Finley's mad so It's no wonder 'Villlams is mad . I v.•as wondering what \Villiam! was so mad about. \\'e.'re here paying the extra money," referring to his club having to spend thf' extra day in Oakl:ind. And from Finley : "I wa~n't angry. I wa.s just very disappointed." Veteran Tommy D11vis, the Orioles.· dellignattd ltitten wa"I al~ di~ppointed. ••we were road)' to go, and t felt _.,1aUy good," ho "Id. <!' .,.. • • -•. AFTER FIRST SHOVING HIM TO THE GROUND MONDAY. Boy Scouts, School Gain From Nicklaus' Victory KINGS MILLS, Oruo CAP) -Jack Nicklaus unemotionally romped over his rivals in the $125,000 Ohio Kings Island Open. He emotionally turned down a $25,000 payday. "I don't accept the purse," said Nicklaus, "·hose final 72 gave him a four- round total or 271, 13-under-par and six shots ahead or runnerup Lee Trevino. Nicklaus announced he was seiting up a SW,000 Ohio State Universi ty scholarship in the name of his late fa ther, Columbus Ohio, phannacist Charles Nicklaus. ' The other $.1 ,000 ~'ent to the Boy Scouls of America, the charity benefiting from all of the proceeds of hls new tour event at the Nicklaus Golf Cel\ter. "I ha\·en't worked out the details yet,'.' the game's greatest shotmaker said of the scholarship. "but it will go to a goll- ininded boy 1n Southwestern Ohio. He doesn't have to be a goUer." Nicklaus' s u r pr Is e announcement paralleled a 1965 move by Gary Player, Football Ratings T~ TOii T"'9flfV wllfl 11,,,._1~ vo"5 In "''"" l~tel. --fMO"C!t •nd IOUI POlntL wit l"h. •II l"tt. l. Otllo SI. '1 .M-e 1,UO ti. Arl1. St. t.U ?(I t. H.cirt1kt f 4-0-0 I.OJI 12. Mlno1.wl ....... ~IM J. Mtbtft'Mo ' 444 17• !), Tn•1 >-10 1'11; 4. SO. C11Jt •.. 1 :J.0.1 m 1•. Ho\lttotl +(Ml IM J, Mlcfl'-l ...0 6fJ U. VC\.A S.lt lOJ '· OlllahonM t.0.1 m ta. Ml1m1, "''· >-1.e .,.,.. 1. ,_fl, J .0. ''° 11. ColO<"llOO J-14 34 I. llf!"*'ttM l.o.t l lt II. TuJ1n1 )~ " t. N~ o.fllt 3-0.o ~I \t, IC1ntM J·l.O 11 10. LIU 4.0.0 tit :ID. MIMI!, 0. ~ t OIMO r..:,lvlr19 vol11. lfllllfl'lf tl~c•!lv: A.Ir l'ort•. Ariton•, A~•n. 1ot11111 CotteH. lowr11111 Gr...,, O.Of'll•, Mtryt,,ltd, NOrlfl Ctrtll"'• 11111, Okl-J\Ol!lt $1tl1, lovlflf•n Mfltl'lldl1t. T•~•• fldl, w111 vir.inl• one of his closest friends on the tour. The little South African gave $20,000 to the Cancer Fund after Winning the U.S. Open that year. His mother died of cancer. Trevino, who fashioned a final 68 for a 277 total, also has given shares of his purses to charity. "My motivation was fu bring pro golf to Southwestern Ohio," Nick18us ex· plained. "My motive wasn't to make a profit here." I .Rose Bags-a -l(noc~~ut . And N.Y Is Jlea.dy ·To NEW YORK (AP) -Aft<r llOlne belts from Rusty Slaoo aJ!d a couple from Buel Harrelson, too, the Cincinnati Reds are on the brink of a knockout. Staub hit two home runs and Harrelson hit Pete Rose in a brawl-filled game Monday in which the New York Mets beat the Reds ~2 and too~ a 2-l lead in tltis best~f-five-game playoff series to determine baseball's National League representative in the World Series. Staub's homers drove in four runs, but it was Harrel.son's battle with Rose that literally drove the Reds from the field in one of·the most bizarre playoff affairs in history. ' The final score, despite its importance, was a.lm06!. anticlimactic after what hap- pened in the fifth inning. A crowd of. 53,967 was buzzing with an apparent New York victory, loudly cheering their Shea Stadium heroes with each opportwtlty as the Mets forged a 9-2 lead alter !our innings. Then came the flfth. when Rose bar-· reled into Harrelson in an attempt to break up a double play at second base. "He hit me with his elbow," Harrelson sajd after the explosive game. "I'm tired of bein'g used as a punching bag." The Meta' gutty, little ~top said something to the burly Rose. The Cin- cinnati left fielder ,gave Harrelson a shove and the two•ez:cbang~ blows, fell to the ~and tussled in the infield dust . Tilis batUe lri&gem a lloodtide of players from both benches and the bullpens as well. 'Ibey raced on the field and began fighting among themselves while the crowd noise swelled. 1l took five minutes for officials to restore order. There was more, bowever. The beat ol the battle still smOldered in the stands, and some fans got into the act. When Rose walked out to bis left field position in the bottom «. tbe fifth in- ning, be was showered by debris -beer cans, soda bottles, flashlight batteries, a whiskey bottle and other assorted jomk. Manager Sparky Anderson «. the Reds didn't like the scene, so he waved in his CllfCINN.1.TI ND YOttK ...._, •br 11111 1br ~bl A<>$1!, Ir"" 4 0 2 D W.Garretf,:Jb( 0 0 1 Morg111, 1b 4 0 l l Mlll1111, 211 J 2 l 1 T. Pe<•i, lb 1 D a o Staub, rl s 2 2 1 Bencn.c 40IOC.Jonn,lf Jl20 l(ogco, rf I o o · O Miiner. lb • o 1 l Armbntr., ef 1 o 1 O G~t. c J 2 1 o MenQ,Jb 1111Hlhri.'f 412:0 Cf>ll"'l'• 11 3 0 0 0 HMl'el!IOrl. U I 0 0 0 Gti9ll1no. Ph I 0 0 0 1(-rnan, p ( 1 2 I Grlll'lllty, p 0 0 0 0 TO!lll :M t 1J I H1Jl,p 0000 Stahl, ph l l I O Tomlin, P 0 0 0 o Nelson, p 1 O O o IClflll.ph 1010 BO<"bOfl, p 0 0 0 o Tot1l1 35 2 I 2 I Cl11dnn1H Ol'l 'too ~2 New YO<'k 151 200 OOl;-9 E-ICO\eo, W. Garrell. OP-Mew Yoni; 1. l08- Clnclnn1H 6. New York'· 28-C J-. Bencfl,. Hll-Sl.tlltl 2 !3l, Mlf!ke (1), SF-W •. G1rr•tt. I, . a Ill •I so Gt1ms1ev l , 0.1 1¥> s S 5 1 l H•ll ~ 1 I l l TOfTllln l'b 5 3 l I 1 Nel.on 2~~ 0 0 0 I ! BO<'t>on 2000 0 KOO\f!l.&n W, 1~ t I 1 2 0 9 T-2:4. A-il,9111. Lakers, Bulls Clash Tonight In Lid-lifter CHICAGO AP) -The Los Angeles Lakers -minus Wilt 01amberlain, Jim McMillian and Keith Erickson -try to prove tonight that they are still a Na- tional Basketball Association power when they start four veterans and a new center in an NBA opener. 'lbe Laken, Pacific .Divislon cham· pioos last season, will start Gail Goodrich and Jerry West at guanls, Bill Bridges and Happy Hairston at forwards and, hopefully, Elmore Smith at center against the Chicago Bulls. X-rays revealed no fracture after Smith hurt his wrist on a dunk shot in OnTVToda11 Chnnne l 5 a t 5:30 Saturday's exhibition against Phoenix. Whether he starts tonight "depends on how he practices," said coach Bill Sharman. The Lakers will probably start veteran Mel Counts at center if they can't play Smith, acquired in an o(Cseason trade for Mc~Illlian. One Laker who probably won't play is Erickson. the lone team holdout since West dropped his demand to renegotiate his contract and Chamberlain jumped to the San Diego O::mquistadors of the Ameri can Basketball Association. General r.wiager Pete Newell said Erickson "will be put on the suspended list it we start the season without him." Tbe 6-foot..6 Erickson. who has asked for a substantial pay hike, says owner Jack Kent COoke "never came back with a COWlter offer." The Lakep haye given Erickson permission to make a deal with aoother club, but-the eight-year veteran ·says, "I'd rather play here." Rookie guard Nate Hawthorne, a seventh-round draft choice from Southern IUinohJ, took Erlcksoii11 spot on lhe 12-- man 1ravelin1 squad. The Bulls finished ' second In tho Midwest Division with a St-.31 record l11st season, and the Lakers were 60-22 in the Pacific. 1be Laker! ~ defeated the Bulls in a close NBA play~ff serie!. lligl>scoling fQrward !lob Lov• ml•sed the exbibitlon seMGn tn a contract dispute before reJolnln1 IM Bulla, but Howard Porter showed accurate shoo11.1g. in hjs ab&ence. ~ players. "! just "'1lted to calm ihlog8 sbouta ci joy steadily lnoreased with down," ho said. • each Cincinnati OtJl. It didn't have a completely soothing ef-"If what happened out th~re d~'t feet on the vociferous crowd, but the next wake us up now, nothing vnll." srud a thing that happened did. In a dramaUc grim Anderson, who6e defending Na· grandstand play, the Meis sent some tional League champiOM face e:rtinction · today. On TV We d .. e•da11 "We'll be aggressive," said Cincinnati 1 (:ha nnel 4 at I I pl tcller Gary Nolan. "We still reel.,. • .,, representatives out to left field to restore order. Willie Mays, Tom Seaver, Staub and Cleon Jones all pleaded with the disrup- tive fans to quiet down. • lt worked. J "It was very belplul for Sparky to take bis team cif IM fteld ijke tbal -and very good that those Mets went out . there," said National League president Chub Feeney, "because then the fans knew there was a possibility « a forfl'it iI the fans didn't stop throwir.g things " Everything was relatively tame after that, ei:cept for the noisy crowd -whose in it." "We've got a job to do," said Joe Morgan, whose double-play bouncer started the fifth-inning ruckus. "The fight might give some of the 'guys a spark. I don't i.now. We'll just have to see i£ ..te can bounce back." If Staub keeps hitting lri this series like he tlas been, it'll be a tough job for the Reds. Staub smashed a bases-empty homer in the first inning and then a thfee.run shot in the second, when the Mets put it away with five runs. The shots gave the New York right fielder three homers tor the series so far. With In te rception Ex-Fullerton Ace Did It to Dallas WASHINGTON (AP) -"As soon as be lifted his arm I made my move," said Washington's Brig Owens, who in- tercepted a Craig Morton pass late ih the fourth quarter and returned it 2fi yards for a touchdown Monday night to give the Redskins a 14-7 victory over the Dallas Cowboys in a bruising batUe of defenses. "If I thought it had been closer than I expected, I would have tried to tackle him. I just read the quarterback and laid off. It's a great feeling," said Owens, a former Fullerton High standout. · And the Redskins: defense preserved the victpry in the rtatlonally televised Na- tional Football League game by stopping the previously unbeaten Covffloys four times from the four-yard line in the final 33 seconds. ' On fourth down, with 16 seconds left, and the ball still on the WasJilniton foor,'1 Morton tossed a short pass fu Walt Gar- rison. Redskins safety Ken Houston nail- ed Garrisoo inside the one and drove him back, preventing a touchdown and a tie. "l knew I could stop him," said Houston. "We've seen films of Garrison on the same'play." W~shington coach George Allen said be felt "just as happy as New .Year's Eve.1' That was a reference to Wuhington's 26- 3 vict«y last Dec. 31 over the Cowboys fcir the National Football Conference championship. ' "We couldn't play any better than that on defense," said Cowboys coach Tom Landry, "We played well ~ to win •.. but we made some inistai:es and killed ounielves.'' Houston says he figured the Cowboys would be trying to pass to Garrison so the Washington Redsltins ·safety knew it was hls job to stop him. · "I was looking for that play because our rush had been ·so good," said Houston alterwaI'd. "They bad been trying to bit the left :Aare. I saw him (Mortoo) pump once and I stepped up and was going to bit him. "As strong p.s he is, if he had gqt his feet on the ground, he would have-gone on in. I just caught him before he was able J to plant his reet and drove him back:," said Houston. Houstoo. stopped Garrison at the one yanl line. 'Ille Redskins, Shut oot until the last ' lout minutes, scored two q u i c k touchdowns on a one-yard pass from Son- ny Jurgensen to Charley Taylor and Owens' 2&-yard return ci an futercepted pass. Despite the pandemooium that broke out after Owens' loudtdown, which came with 2,33 left, the Cowboys recovered a fumbled punt on the Redskins 31 with less than two minutes remaining. Morton moved the ball tO the four with 38 seconds lert but· was unsuccessful on his first three passes until be completed the fourth down aerial to Garrison on tbe one with 16 seconds remaining. "I knew exactly where they were -on the four," said Houston. "I backed up to the goal line ahd didn 't go any farther. I knew m:y move would have to be forward.. I w,. Jooking for 1ho pesa and in OW' zcne. Garrison was mY man. "It was the biggest ""*10 I ever made and the best ball game I ever played in," he said. Allen, who bad been saying all week the coolest would be the championship game, said: "I don't think we've ever bad a team that showed more character than tonight. l feel jt.1.51 as happy as New Year's Eve. It was vital .•• We had to win it." Washington defeated Dallas last Dec. 31 for the National Ccnference cham- pionship and a berth in the Super Bowl. Landry said, "Washington needed this game bad and was good eoough to get it. We did everything we could on defense. We cool$~ have played better, on defense. "We played well enoogh to win. We were in complete control or the game un- til we made mistakes. We killed ourselves." UP'iT ........ ROUGHING THE ·KICKER PENAL TY KEPT THIS DALLAS DRIVE ALIV!. I I · T • . , .. I I WO wil we a' hut 8JN bit It be a 00 .,, Fe p1' an: en: wa tin 3 ( wa th• Ell ch wb th• Te saJ ca to Im Ell •• at OD ra in1 ·~ ar In si1 ni ., li l ol gi; m to ii SE " or to •• re th d w a e w n " p sl c ' • t , " I l u v ( ,, Start Your Engines! WITH DEKE HOULGATE Wlll lhe real Bobby Ferro please stand up? U he did, you would erpect to see the braah, t'OCky, pqnacious little guy with moods that change as quickly and as often as lndlana weather. • More likely you would be amazed at the new Bobby Ferro, a serious bu.t friendly chap, still talkative and opi.Diooated but humble and reflective, more self.assured than ever but intro- spective and questioning. It's a contrast, partlcularly to the people wbo baYe known him ln off-road racing, where he ls the acknowledged super star. Nobody knows for sure what tnade the change in Bobby, but It probably had some<hing to do with bis bad experience when be got. involved with ~d racing. A year ago Ferro aigned to drive with Roy Woods Racing, a well·~ and heavily-sponsored team that campaigDJ oo the USAC championship trail, the L&M formula 5000 circuit and othec major: series. It appeared to be the biggest break in Ferro's career. · But three months later be w8J out. of a job. Woods com- plained that the ~year-old driver showed a lack of interest in anything but his paycheck. Ferro bitte'rty assailed his former employer for assertedly breaking promises he had made. ' "l suppose I burned my bridges," Ferro said, "and that was a mistake. But I've gotten toe;elher with Roy In the mean· time, and we've settled our differences. I guess I acted badly." Ferro said he waS asked if he would like to drive a formula 3 car for Woods in a few races in Europe oext year. The answer was a predictable yes. Ferro to Drlt>e for Nett> Tean• Ferre 11 also prepartac to drive for a new team eaterbag the L&M formula 5000 clrcalt In 19'14. He wlll race eltber a ttew Eagle, Lola or whatever tW111 out to be tbe car wiill tlae belt chance or winning. Racing journals are filled with rumon about the new Eagle, wbk:b Irvine's Jerry Grant b11 beta te!tl.ng in ~ upectadon that Ii will be far superior lb.an anytblng on the track today. Test renlts ba.ve been less tban spectaclllar, although the car Is said to have gteat poteaUal. .U the stories go, some modlncaUons are being made In the car to elimlllate the problems. It depends on wbat you nad as to what yoa understand tbole clum1es 1o be, either a few Utile improvements, a COP1pltte redesign or someiblag In between. Like mo1t driven, Ferro la ·waiting to see bow the new Eagle Is going 1o turn out. 0Tbe car II golag to coat $30,000," Ferro said, "bat if lt II one or tn seconds a lap quJcker than ~ytlllng else, It's cbe.ap at tbat price. ll you want 1o wtn, yoa can't a!ford not to have one." FerT'O •1ll con.Una.e, of coa.rse, driving In every off.road race that comes alon&. He II oae of the favorites in the upcom- ing BIJa 1111, co-drlvlq wftb Jolullly Jobmon In the slngle- seat Sandmuitt VW dune buggy. Tbe old Fem drove alone. The new Feft'O takes on a co. driver, beca~se between the two of them each knows that the other drtva 1 pertkalar ball of lbe coarse better than the other. To be a lone wolf u Ferro med to prefer is still okay, be figures., but he'd rather doable ap and wbl tbu. 10 alone and Jose, Tnly, a new Bobby Ferro. ,Amerlec1t1s Ha"e Good Chanee You'd be amszed I<> know the lengths In wbicb organiura are going to make sure lb.at competition is going to be fair ln lhe International Race of Champions to be held this month at River· side. In that race three of lbc world's leading drivers are racing nine of this country's best -three each from USAC, NASCAR and SCCA. . ' 'lbat may seem a little one-sided, since world champions like Jackie Stewart, Emerson Fittlpaldl and Dennis Hulme are obviously more likely regarded as road racers than our big guns, six or them being oval track specialists. Nevertheless, Peter Reinhardt, the Porsche factory pro}ect manager, feels lhe Americans have equally as good a chance to win as the Europeans. Reinhardt heads a ZO.man task force made up of tecbnlcal eIJlefU and rat"e mechanics. He is at Riverside this week to begin testing the 15 cars, to make sure they are all set up properly for the 2.5 mile COUl'8e that will be used. Another crew from Goodyear Is in charge of tires for the 12 porche Carrears and three identical backup cars for the series of road races at Riverside and Daytona., Cars Clo•e to Being Identical Davis' Yardage Changed LOS ANGELES -C....tit, belatedly, Anthony Davis with. lµs first 100-yard rushing 1ame or the season. The Sou t h e r n Callfornla tailback actually ran for 106 yards in Saturday's 21·7 vic- tory over Oregon State rather than the !M with which he was orlilnatly =<!lied, the -Jans announced Monday. Films of the game show that a t.z..yard Joss came on a screen pass from Pat Haden to Davis. statisticians at Corvallis had called it . a !Ateral and subtracted from Davis' rushing yardage.· A. D. has rushed for 330 yards In the first four games but is still way ahead of the Pace in which he productd 1,191 last year. e Mrl'Veill Hurt LOS ANGELES -Defensive end Fred McNeil, who sprain- ed an ankle in Saturday night's 6&-16 victory over Utah, seemed the m o s t seriously hurt of UCLA's walking wounded at Monday's practice. The senior's availability for Saturday's game at Stanford wasn't ruled out, although coach P~per Rodgers moved Dale Cufry, a junior from San Mateo, to McNeill's right end spot. Curry has been backing up Cal Peterson at left defensive end. Rodgers also moved safet)'man Herschel Ramsey to right end behind Curry. Also injured but given bc.tlcr chances to recover in time for the Stanford game w e r e reserve noseguard M I k e Martinez, who relnjured an ankle against Utah, a n d reserve saletyman D a v e Cargo, who hurt his shoulder. e Wilt Sorry SAN DIEGO -Wilt Chamberlain says he felt bad- ly after cutting his first players as a coach. "Thing is, two of the guys I had to cut didn't loolt that bad tO me," said the new coach of the San Diego Conquistadors of 1he Ametlcan Baste(l>oll Association. Then w i t h 0 u t specifying which two players he had ln mind, Chamberlain 11 s t e d three who Jeft, David Brent, Em.le Kusnyer and Chris McMurray. e Rare Death DYER, Ind. -Race driver. Whitey Gerken of Villa Park, 111., died Monday from lnturies he suffered in a crash Sunday. lleMis Sheltoo, of Michigan City, Ind., was killed outright when Gerken's car jumped a guard ran at the nuana Speedway l n Schererville, Ind., aDCI struck him. Shelton, 35, was working In the pits. Offisials said the SS.year-Old Gerken apparenUy lost control of his car on the third tum of the half.mile track during a heat. Al everyone kno'lt'I, It Is lmpoalble to produce ldenttcal can, whether on a mass production auembly line or band-built, one at a time. But Reinhardt claims Urey are about as close to idenUcal u man can make them. e Strings Fine We dynoiested tllem, and all of the cars are within 3 to t LOS ANGELES -The Los ltonepower of each other," be said. "We conlidtt that dU· Angeles Strings of the new fert11ce insignificant." World Team TeruU.s League The can were weighed la at betwttn m aod 931 kllos, Jess announced the signing today of than seven pounds difference between the heaviest and llghtetL their top draft c ho i c e , "These 3.11ten are very torq1tey," 'Re!Dhardt said. 111 doabt Australian John Alexander. that uy of the can will be at a disadvantage became of 1be signing of the 22-year· weight." old Alexander, first player The cbauls were all aet accordtng to im:tractktns is1aed by under Strings contract, was a colnpater. Re:lubardt bas pertonally tested all of the race announei!d by Jerry Fine, the can to verily that they woned properly, but at Riverside thla cliib's president. Terms of the week be wtll aee how &ood the computer wllil la. Germany for 1 coatract were not released: race Ill Amerka. . Fine also announced that the Tbue II 1n electrt:'c1I cat.oat when tbe eagine rtv1 reach tbt Strings will play their home red llae mulmum of 7,711 rpm, tbeoredcally makiq It Jm. matches ln the Los Angeles poulb&e ror a drlW:r 1o overn:v the eaginfi eacept by dowa-i Sports Arena. •blltlng. e Pare f'tmeral Gearshift Onlt1 Trlrk11. Thing R<inhardt figum the only tricky thing about driving tbl.. cars will be gelling used to .lhe fiv&speed-[orward geanhlft. You'd think that professional drivers wou1dn't have any trouble with a detail like that, but Reinhardt claims it will take about five laps of practice to get used to I.he unusual shift pattern. The possibility that soroe aggressive driver might )Vant t1f make a deatnlction derby out or the race has been lQought of. Rules are &et up so that officials can penall7.e a driter for de- liberately crashing into another compeUtor by making him run the next race in hls wrecked cu. · That ef!ectively would put iJm out of CllltllnlMlon, while lhe vtc:tlm -Id get rlnt "'1ority In getting hil -ed machl~ fited. II It WH toialiY dutroyed, he would get 0.. of 'the spares t to race nett. Girls Basketball ...... ""' UIJ .... ~ 1urn-ftl• '-l''' LIWl'..a 0 t I. Nolllflll 1111 -!''' ,,,,....... 0 1 t ...,_ • o 1 r ,..._ 1011 ~1rl e 0 I I ,..... 'll lt " ....... ·-·"1, ... ~ ~ I 4 110 (MW I ll 1 "I"'°"" ' I • 11 c... 1 011 ·~ 0) 2 1 JOllM Oltl kfwnol! I t t 4 tlln 101• lot•ls 1• • 10 ,, Goldt!'I Wt~-,. OU~ It t S Ml. Sfl'I Anl0!!11 t t 1 12 ~ CMlt Cel!ett bll """'" ...,.,_ 11t) Alltftl«tl t 0 0 4 \.MIOfll t t I ' ....... , t''' Mtarl tt. l"Pll1M 0 I 0 I ll'olrW 11111 Tottlt 11 10 ll lf --Ulll .... cc ""~~ ~1dt ti SJ AW/l 213t J~ ••• , Ml.!l'P""·'· J t 111 MurDtrt,L 1010 LlllQlf'I"' t 0 J 0 l"Mel'IOtrt J: I ~ I l'llpPinl t 1 1 s 0u1t1t11 to lo lol•I• It 111 45 ___.ic.._11r Ollln"' 0J•1191! (MS! • 1 \I t l<lif" lffdl cc. 1, 10 t 10 NEW ORLEANS -Funeral arrangement! are incomplete klr Emmett Pare, the tennis coach who led TUiane to 20 Southeastern Conference team Utles in 36 years. Pare died in a local hospital Monday at the age or 66. Pickeroo ToMesan ' Craig DtMls of Costa P.tesa is the winner o( Iha 3rd weekly Pigskin Pickeroo football pick· lug oootest, missing only two or the 30 games. However, he had to so 1o the tie-breaker to gain Lh@ vlclory over five other cont~tant.a who alto mlued only two predictions. Gafn1ng IOOOl>d, vi a th< U• breaker, WPS ChaJ1es Otis of HuntUJilOn 8eadl. And thin!, also by Ue- breaker, were Vlckle Patton of Costa Mesa, Oan Brennan of MIAlon Viejo and Trudy Nuium of Santa Ana. The contest Is co-spon~ by Cos1a Mes& Harbor Blvd. Auto Doalm •nd the 0.lly Pilot. 1 -. . . -. Tutidl)', Octobtt if, lt:f73 DAIL V PILOT JI f Qo~y Grooms UGI Duo For Future in Decath.lon /UI Olympic torch and all the trimmings were present for the first annual Anteaten Olympia<l at UC Irvine Saturday and with a large turnout of participants, the event will be continued ln the future according to Roy Englebredlt. It was Roy's brainchild to stage the event as a money-raising project for the Big I Booster aub and even tbough It Is mls·named as an Olympiad, tt will probably be "'1ged every year. Bob Mallnoff, father of UCI baseball star • HOWARD HANDY Jell, is responsible for building the torch that was kept bu.ming throogbout the day and at the awards ceremony in latf': afternoon. In addition to ral.!ing money for the athletic program at UCI, it was also a way Jn which Orange Cbast area residents could meet the school's athletes on a personal basis. Members of the basketball team directed events in qrawtord ball including tree throw shooting and dribbling. The tennis team counted the returns of competitors and tbe baseball squad scored the fair balls hit by conteslanUI. The track team did yeoman duty on the cin- der path and the whole day w .. culminated with a bar·b-que Saturday evening following the final event. * .. UCI tl'a(:k and field coach BW Toomey 11 grooming a pair of future decatblon 1tar1 and looks for at least one of them to make 1 1erloa1 threat to represent the U.S. In the 1178 Ol)'mple Gemes. Bo&h· are fttlbmen ln school al UCI. I George PllUU .. 11 a 1-8 high jumper and a 14-feot pete vaulter wUb good sb:e. .. "He cu team to run and b a good pr. 1pect," Toomey says. Bot the boy with the greater potential 1t tbe preseat tbnc ii Kelly Donal111e from Palot Verdes. Doaaboe dld 1-10 in the high jump In blah sebool1 vults It fett ])lus and long j11mp1 over .a feet. He bas also thrown tbe disc111 over 151 fee( aad put lhe shot more tba11 SI. In addltloo, be bal MID a IU bigh bunlles ""'· "He'• ahead of tbe scbedllle l wa1 on at the 11me age u an athlete," tbt lMI Olympic champ&oa and former world record bOldet uy1. ''He dellnltely could be a seriou contender for tbe '71 Olympic team.· He's a good ln· d.Lvldual and be'• a sound competitor." * * * UCI basketbaii'coach Tim Tift received word this week that Gary Eubanks, a ~tarting guard last season as a sophomore, will not be around for the cage sport this year. Eubanks su!fered a slight knee injury but has decided his academic course Is much toe heavy to devote the time necessary to sport, With Don Killian already sldcl!ned and Eubanks bypassing the coming season, the guard positions will be Wide open with a con· pie ol. freshman candidates vying for the starUng ber1!1s. Tlm Tlvenan from El 11.1odena High and Kevin Davis from Rubidoux High of R;~erside join the chase with Rich Mtaule, a letterman, and probably some of the forward candirtateJ. Tlvenan and Davis \\'ere both All.C lF players last season. With Dave Baker (6-8) back for his third campaign and 0.11 Scott Magnuson retunllng on the front line along with Jerry Maras 16-6), Howard HawkU!s (1>21 and Gary llenJOll (S-5\, plus some outstanding newcomers from ibe freshman squad and junior college ranks, it could be an interesting season ahead. SA Valley Now No. I HB Grid Festival Santa Ana Valley moved to the top spot as Orange Qrunty's No. 1 prep football team while Newport Harbor retained third place a n d EdiJon fourth. Alollg the Orange C o a s t, Newport is No. 1 and Edison bolds second, each with a 3-0 record. ORANGE COIJNTY TOP 10 POI. Team, Rec«d Point. I. SA Valley (3--0) 491> 2. Servile (3-0) 43'ii 3. Newport Harber (3--0) 4% Huntington Beach H I g h School District's an nu a I Sdlolanhip Bow ~ matd>ing freshman football team.! from each of the five district schools, will be s t a g e d Wednes'day night at Westminster lilgb. It begins at 7 o'clock. AClmission to the event is $1 , Grid Scores - and wm go to the "Dollars for Scholars" fund, accOrding to Ferren Christensen, di.strict director of special services. Pre-sale tickets ' are available to students with ASB cards for 50 cents at Hunt- ington Be a ch, Westminstet, Edi.son, Marina and Fountain Valley highs. A series d. round robin games will take place with bands am cheer leade!"!I on hand. Edis0n High ·hosts this )'ffl''s event. Game management will be handled by Harvey Jensen with Gary McJilton conducting the pep band. Wayne Jorgenson will aerve as the game announcer. 4. Edison (3-G) 35 Jllfllot Vtnltr ~ 5. Loara ci-1) 28 totr• ' 0 ,. l-3CI 6 • --Al ··--(• •) 27 Huntll'ltlton 8H(h • o ' o a-' S.. • LAl6 aQll..,.. '"' HI Touchclcr,vft-Jtff 1+9w!tt, run. COSTA MESA DATSUN 7. Villa Park (3--0) 17 """"'" u. .,..,,,. "· . · 8. Fountain Valley (Z-1) 18 G~~;1(kic!~: l it£'-· C«1Ytrr.lon: ,_ 9. Sant.a Ana (l·l·l) 6 Jlll!llor Vuslty Sol .. , ........ & Leeai11t 10. Tustin (3-0) 4 Edlto11 IC4f'I "° OMrt-:;', o 0--f U4S Korbor lhd., C.M. Otb W ~·· • 0 • 1-1 540-6410 ers: estminster, Buena .. ~·~·~·-~·~-~""~"~"~·~~~'·--~~iii:iiii:iiii:iiiiii~iii:iiiiiiiiiiiiii:i~ Part, El Toro. Ii Orange Coast Area Top F1ve I. Newport Harbor (3-0) 25 2. Edison (3--01 20 3. Founlaln Valley (2-1) 13 4.. Westminster (1·2) 11 5. Mater Drei (1-1-1) 61 DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD DNNIS SffOf S!! W• ""'4r •N ~ .. typft ti' MIM$ ..... Treton SMc1. ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE e WllTCLll'I' l"LAZA e LIDO e PAltlfOM Ill.AHO SEEi fttE Hrw DOMESTIC A FOi.EICH CAftS •• , ·FACTORY DtS'l:AYS , , , l'llOYo.T'l'PH , , , tll'[CIAL SHOW CARS , , , 110,,,. HOllH & VACATION V'EHIClEI ALL lJNOER ONE 110 ROOF! • Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Sponsored By DAILY PILOT s100 A WEEK IN PRIZES! For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Fourth and Fihh Place Winners \ Here's how you c•n be a pi9skin prophet for profit. W11kly cash pri1.1s ar• offered to winners of the Pilot Pi91kin Pickeroo game. Top winner each we1k 91ts $50 in cash. Second place winn•r gets $20 in cash and third, fourth and fifth place winners eac:h g•t •10 in ca•h. All "cash" act}Jally is delivered to winn•rs in the form of cheeks to be pic ked up by winners at one of the I 0 participating members of the Harbor Boulevard of Cars association. Checks for this we1k's contest will be prepared by : Costa Mesa Datsun 2845 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ' fh1 10 p,arti~ipating auto dealerships along Costa Mesa's 'Harbor Boulevard of Cars" are: A+l•s Chrysler-Plymouth, Sauer Buick, Connell CheYrol•t , Costa Mesa Datsun, Dave Ross Pontiac, Johnson & Son Lincoln.Mercury, Miracle Mai.de, Nabers Cadillac, Theodore Robins Ford and Univ ersity Oldsmobil1. Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle the teem you think will win in each pairing in the list of 10 gemes and send in the play1r's form entry blank or a reasonable fac· llmile. Thin watch the DAILY PILOT sports pag•s for ••ch w••k's list of five winners. RULES I. """"" Ille """" 111._ ....,.. .,. • --~ f9Ctlmil9 ., 11 h en"' , ""' Clllltl:ll. "'911M-llM f9Climllr" le d9'l!IMI •• •n "~ ll.,ilc•i.." •11trt.. nwtl 119 .,lftnn 1111 slz• .... .,._,. to ftc:llll•I• '"91111 TIMM wMdl ._,, aM9nn wlll M di..,..HflMI. • 1. lft II lio1 l"ILOT f'IOSklfll "ICXl!llOO CONTEST, 5.-h O.,.rt"""t' l",O, ... I.NI, C..I• M ... , CA. nut. . J. Owlf -.. try Jiii' """°" ....,.,ltttod Mell Wffk. CNt.llNll .... M\llMd ' fllei -19t! tfflcl•I• IM)I lllY .. Mlll• fnlllllpl• •nlrlff ,...., • •111119 ....... ., .,..,. _..,.. •nd IN, lll~WU!y •nr "flclUiWI ,,.,,.... .....,,.. """ ._.... Oecltlen ol 1"""9 ... "''' ""'' ITNll ... •t· C ...... •I tlMI lllJ Ml <Nlffl•llh. 4. .,.,..... ll'lftl M llffifMltr.M Ml l•ltr Tll•rt T1>'"'9r A.M. •r ,,_. .. ...... ,... .. !ti. DAU .. Y f'llOT .. lie• !tr' l".M. Ttw.tnNy. t. l"wttc""9H11t JflMH~ ....i llltlr ....,,.., ... •l'HI CIAILY l"llOT ~ ..., tllelt' lmmMliltt f.r•lilln .,.. Ml .iltlMe 19 em.. .. Tl'I lltl.U:Ell llANk MUIT ll!: l"lllf:CI IN 011 IMTllY II VOIO, r---------m ENTRY BLANK I· Circle fNm1 you think will win thl1 wMk'• ptrtM I I (hom• tNm 11 Mcond one ll1tlcf) 1 Dallas vs Rams I Washington State vs USC I I UCLA vs Stanford I LSU vs Auburn I Air Force vs Colorado I Penn vs Dartmouth I Tulane vs Duke I Alabama vs Florida I Mississippi vs Geor9ia I I Purdue vs Illinois I MichiCJGn vs Michi9an State I Nebraska vs Missouri I I lndlona vs Minnesota I Oklahoma vs Texas I Pitt vs West Vin;iinia I Ohio State vs Wisconsin I Saddleback vs Grossmont I I Golden West vs LA South-st I Westminster vs Newport I Costa Mesa vs SA Valley I I Brea vs San Clemente I Villa Park vs Mission Viejo I Mater Dei vs LB Wilson I I Valencia vs La9una Beach I Fountain Valley vs Edison I Santa Ana vs Huntin9ton Beach I Loara vs Marina I University vs Sonora I El Dorado vs Dana Hills I Eston cia vs Corona del Mar I I T!I llllAllllll -My '"" M t11f lotlll nul'ltflit1 If point\ _,... I I ....... -.. ,.. '-'~m~•"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· I '""" I ...... I I 1e1. ., I I Pho-n• S•1 -I ... -----·------ I I J • I I j ' . . . . . . . Z2 DAILi PILOT PUBLIC NOTICJI! l'UBUC NaTICE --.... ,. fll'CTfTIOVS •1111111•11 llllCTJTIOW eUllN•U ft.f..Ml ITATIM•N1' NA.Mt: "ATllMl:n ~ "''""'"' Pl"-- .... Tlw ~ --II dOtfte M L-• _ .. MOTHI.• NATUltl.'S INDOOlt ••: OA"Ol!N P'AltTUil, 1611 111,.,11 Or .. THI! ELIGAMT ..... .,,, 6'1\'t 111" H\IMllllklfl II...:~ C.l!t.lllt ""' SI .. Cati ~N-, CA·ftUI ~Wiit.Ji:•• M Cl9cll. ~I K-,,,..,..... ~ JU ll ~ ~ • H llllWI IMdl, alltlml1 .... ...,... ,CA ,,... Tl'll1 bw.1-. i. c:oMwNlf 1W ffl I,._ DI-OM H1......,, W'I Ketll Of., 111 ......... 1 H11nll119I011 IMCll. C1!1fonll1 f'»lf ......,._ Th!1 llitlt'ftl 11 nnclllcted ... 1 f9111'1'al Hrtntr1N11 Thlt '"'-' Wff fli.I wllll Hit C- Lo.ilMtt. Lorr.io.. CIKll IY C~ of Ot"l!IM C-1¥ Oii S.I""""' Thlt 1111-1 w11 m.c1 wltll ,.._ c-21. lt11 "' ~ltrll of 0••119• '""fllY ... $401...,llet ·-u. tll. P'11tllhMd Orl l!Ot CO..I Diiiy '110!, f•lll OC.IGOF 2, t, 1•, D. lt7" :m7-n l"r.:ll11\fl1 Ort!Mft C"1! 010•· l'llol, lm•mw• 11. 2J. •114 oc.•-· ,, '· PUBLIC NOTICE • . ?lfS.13 ITATIMINT ~ AU.MDCUtMlllT PUBLIC NaTICK _ 01' USI OP l'ICTITIOUJ •1.t11HIS1 NAMI tl lCTITIOVI IUllMISS l l\e followl;T: IM•tont. 111"9 1Ml'llofled tl\1 .... OI Ille lclltlwa blnl'*1 -NA.Ml ITATIMI NT TM tollowlnt .,..,._ ••• "'"' 111111< COL.Lt!CTI OH •uttEAV 01' MM •i· WESTERN OftAHGt! COUITTY, •f 1tt ALLlfO COMMl£•CL"L IHT1!•1o•s. = 20rli Slrftl, COii• Mela, C•ttfornl• 1rn ~ •• s.i11e "• c .. ,. ""-'• '"-flctill but.I ... C1llf. m!1 Olll llftl MIN r "9d .. Ottonlt M. Trtlor. 7NO .vntff'IYll SI., •bGv-1 ••• "IH 111 0rtnlM' '°"""'" 911 c"''""""'· c.111. ,11• J•nw'Y u. itn S. Johll lh"'-. !llllf I[. Tbe<QrY, UMf llff<ll Cl"tltll ANOCll llon, I W•t c ... 1 .... Cetll. tl1'1 C1Fltornl1 Cll<PO'•llon.. '°' ,.clrk WlYl!oe T, ...... 1102 l'llM AllnlOI, A-. ~ 9-Kh, C1lltornle. SM Dhn11, C1lll. t1'1l Tlll1 bull-w11 gind...,;led by 1 TM1 llla!Mu II Ollldllclld b¥ 1 .-11 (Df'pol'1llon. ...,.,..,thl• a. L Glbt>$, SK,..ll'Y ··-WIYIW T. ft•lfl "'" 111 ...... 1 ... ""' "'" "" l'UblllMd Or•-Co.if Dilly Piiot, ,.,,., ,_ • .,,_ c_.1y ~ October '· 11, n •. 1m 111111.n --"· "'' PUBLIC NOMCE .. ,.,,. l'u&llt.llld OrlflOI' (Ml! 01111 Piiot, ,ICTITIOUS •USINl!SS Oclebtr t, li. n. ». '1tn l'tJl-13 NAMI STATIMINT P UBUC NOTICE Thi tollowlng P«IOll II clol"I bu1IMll Ii; ACORN Sl'•!NKLEll CCWl'ANY. llM:TITIO!JS aUSINISS n"' OIAdwood. S.o J111n CJOlltr•no NAMI STATIMINT ""' '"' ....... --· ... .... Norm1n "'""' FtrQVMll. n"' bwUlni M : ~. S.n J11111 C111l1lr1"'°' C11tt. CO LLECT I O N a U•fAV o• nus W•STlllN Oft.I.NOE COUNTY, 1" W, Tllll bu1llM:lf; If .UWlll(!IO Irr I n In- 20tll SI .• c .. 11 Miu, Ctlll. l16U dlvldll1I. Tr.ntcmd S111lna1 SYtl•mt. c1nt .. m Norm1n c . Fwov*°" W, tolfl $1,. CO.II Mftl;, C11!t. ntU. Tft11 l lt1tmtn1 Wit llltd "11?1 l"-'°""" Tl'lh OU1IM111 11 C{lflOu(-lw • COi'• 1Y CIWk of Or.-.cltl C_,ty Oii OclOMr J, "°''''°"· 1t1l Trtt111Ctnd l llllllffl Sy111m1 ,.wn IC•r1 Glbtlf., S«ttllry P11tlll'hld "'""' CCIII! 01lly Pllol, Thl1 t11i-1 .,,..., fl!td w!tll m. c-. October '' 1•. n ». "" _,, tv Citf11; ol Ort"91 C-tv on Ott_, J, PUBLIC NOTICE "" ,., . .,, l'ullUll'led °''"'' (Mii D1Uy Pilat. fl1c1rr1ous •usut•ss OcttiMr '· "· n. JO. H1l ,,,.,, NI.Ml! ST.t.Tl"MENT '"' lollowlll!ll ,__, '" -PUBLIC NOMCE M!llffl 10: VANEL ENTERPRISES, 194 1 ,-l'CTITIO\IS aUSINISS Gl-'9111 c1rc11, wwm1 ... 1.,. C• nm NAM• ITATIMINT "~ ... Ell.td'I, ~" Gltnl19l11 Tiii llllUowl119 ,.,ton II Noilll bullfllH Cir., WHlmln1tef", C.~ '2611 It: ,_ ·-V1ne1, "~ ,.l(lflc •ASAM C()t.o.P.1.NY, 11'12 Otl ,,_ C011t Hwy. No. 1'2, T..-rtnc1, Ce. ~ ·-· ...... c. l •n c1 ....... 11, C.lllornl• Thl1 llul!l\IH 11 conductecl lw I llmli.cl "'" p.1rlntnnlp. . ••tpfl H . ......... 17511 "" ·-Frid D. E11rlch •....i. '°'"' c. si n c1-11, c e111orn11 Thil 111temenl w•• fllld wllft 1111 Covn-n"' ty Cllr11 ol' Or•nv& Coi.r"tv Oii Oc-S. '"' ou.i ..... 11 conducted .. In Ill-"" dltktu.11. ....... tt1lll'lo H. Sc"-1111 · Pvoiilhld ... _ ,_, .... Pllo!, 1 1111 1t1ilmtflt w11 1111<1 wllll -C-· 0c1o11cr t, '" 21.. lD.. nn .,._,, tv Cllrk of Clref\lle COllnly on October S. PUBLIC NOMCE ltll. f'".U.M Publ111'11d .,,_ Co.it D111y l"llg! ,-1CTITIOUS •UllfflSS NANll! STATl!M•NT ~ t, ,,, U, :JO. !Ol -TM ro11ew1no """"" II doing bllllMI • IS: ClllCKETT COIFFV•ES, 1405 Glt n --~===~=~---n1yr1, Lltri 816Cft t'HJI. ,ICTITIOVS IUSINESS (1rrl1 Lorene Turk, 31561 W. Nine PUBLIC NOMCE -. -NAMI ITATI Ml llT Lit..,... N!tllel mll T'"'9 lollowl119 1)9l"IOll II dol"t INllMll T-11 !lul!MU II gind11cllcl llV lft In It' dlvl<IVI L . JOtU!WISIEllT 11 A C t N G EN· C1rr .. L. Turk TEll:NISES, ns Olln\i wrr. c.o.11 Thi• lflltmll'll w11 fllld w1111 tM Coun Mell C1lllonllt tu.27 tv Cllrk •f OrlftOI COWllY on StPlltrl\IM ' " C~ll '-lnler11etlon1I, 1,.ld., 115 14• l'7J °""" Wly, Cosll Miu, Ct llfornll ttW P!Jbftthed Or•noe COlll O.ltv '.?r1o1 (A C1ll'°'11l1 CorP01"1llon) Sei>l•mbott 11, ts. tlld Oclotllr 2. t Thi• Mlnet1 11 concluded tiv 1 cor· 1m 2"3- PGl'l llon. C?Mick J-. lnl1N11llon1I. Ltd. ,, , .... 11. c. JDllll. l'•••kl•ftl Tllll 1t111tnen1 ••1 lllH with 1111 COllll- ly Cl.,.. Df °''""' Cwnrv on Stpltmber .J!UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIO!JS I UllMISS H.t.MI! STATaMIMT . ri •• lt1t . ""' TM following peBOfl\ 1rt dol"9 bu1IMSI I I' l'"t7t.M CREATIVE COM,.OSITES, 21114 Grtnd 'llllllU!td °''"" Cu11 Di lly Pilot. Avt .• $Intl Ant, C.Llfornl• Slpftt11Nf 11, 15, t llll Oct-r 1, t , Oonlld c. Bledftlkepp. 1Nll Slwr1 ltn 21st-n c11u11 •d .. '"""'· ce111om11 .,..... PUBLIC NOTICE Wltllem E. PMrl, 17'14 l.0$ PHOI Cr., FIMl .. 1" Vtlley, Clllfwnhl '21111 Tlli1 llullM$1 II «llldur;llO 1w t t~ll tlOTICI! M SULK TIANJl'llt Plrl...nl'l!p. i'KITICE IS HEll E8V GIVEN TO THE DoNld C. 8~PP CltEDITOll:S OF 11_,-r J. MCNer!llY ".;.;j Tl'll• lll!tll'IC!"ll .,..,, fJllcl "1111 IM Coun- JN l!le L. McNtr,....., Tr1111l1ror, 11111 1 tv Clerk al 0r'"9'1 CIMllY on .l.1191111 )1, bullr; l•-•er II ''*'' lo ... Midi l:l'f 1'7l. Tr•ftllet'lN", ~ bullMll 1Mfdr111 11 '10 ''""' E11I' 11111 S!l"Mt, No. , .. In tM City o1 P11blbhld OrfflP C011t D11Jv l'lklf '"''• Mffl, CounlY of 0r•"9•· Sl•tt Df Sttrtmwr 25 1nc1 Oc!OllC!' 2. f , U, C1llforlll1, Ind 111 o1 -o....,. 1>u1lllft1 lf7i 2"1·73 PUBLIC NOTICE n1m11 ind tddfllMI v ied wltMn ll'lrH ¥ttfl l•JI Piii, .o l•r 11 --" to Tr1ntt_, ... •0Mr•1 0101 Tlmel--------~----8\lftMr S)lop, JIO I!.,,.,, SI., No. II, Coll• FICT ITIOUS eu1il11s MfM, C1IU., lo lt•tld1l1 8 . Tr1~!l, MAMS STATaM•NT Trt nt"""· wl>oH bu•I""'• lddr6' 11 Tiit foUow!ng Pll'ton 11 doing bu1ln111 11112 l'IYI Slr11!, In 1111 City ol G1rclln II' Gr°"'' County or °''""· Stile ol TH E GREENHOUSE, 3aO GlenftlYrt , C.tlforftlt , or tht lolLow!l'IJ dtsc:rlbld L.111-•Mdl. 0 "6>1 ~I prDl'lf"IY Of Tr1"1i.<11r, lo.wot: 0 -•-• ' "' "' AM llock I" lr.ot, fl•l11t11. ,q11lpmtt1I Klllllr M A. Nw, -lln C191, 1nc1 o-w111 Of • cer1tln !luklllr lho!> Dr .• L~ BIKh. Ct. 92'-'1 blnlnt11 known 11 11-rl• o..,._ T1m1 Ti.ti buSIMll 11 c11nchicled !IY •n In· l~klllr Sl>Ofl 1nd loc1tMI ti 110 E. 11111 dl~ld111I S!rfll, No. I•, In 1M City o1 Co.11 Mew, Kalt.HIM A. N111 CIMltv at Or...:0-. S!tlt 01 Cal!fornl1, tl\CI Thl1 •111tmtnl w11 flltd will! ~ Cwn- 11111 1111 torlltoll'IJ bulk tr1n1kr win w IV Clerlt o1' Orlf\Oll CIMlly on Stp.embel' tDf'\I""'"'''"' on or t lltt Frid•¥ IM '"" 2', lt7l. , .... dlY ol Oclotlef", 1'11, ltlroutll EK""" ND. n.n ..• , "'' MC•-,,_,,,,,.... at Ille Plltlllshe<I Orenoe CMll IHllY l'llol. Newport 8HCh &rtncll <>I S.C•1r!ly Pacific S~bl<' li Ind Octolll'r l. 9, 16, NtUOftfl l tnk •I 1'1S Vii LldO Jn Ille City l9n :tft"1) If N..,.pert l t 1tl!, COU111V ol °''""' $1t1t of Ct lllornl1 O•IW Oclollt<' •• nn flANOA LL I . TR.I.VIS Tr1n1flfH SI CV•ITY PA CIJIC N.1.TIONIL IANI( 1'.0 ..... .., N.......,, •-"· c 1 nu1 AH: Cllfil C-ltnC l!Kr9# loll. n -774 Publll /Mcl Or1ng1 Cotlt 0<1-'· 1tn Ot!IY Pilot, ,....,, PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOMCE - -·· •• It/) lOl1 Tl 0.:.1-J, I, ,,, f), \In U •IJ ' 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 1 c L A s s ,. F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 .. . ' • DAIL y PILOT w ANT ·us - [ _,,, .. I~[ ]~[ Gener•I Gener al POTENTIAL PLUS This is a m-a$1. ftt, for Utft'e ls no '>l'°ay to de-.:tibc this fM'Operty. O..•er 18,000 sq. ft. In the UJ>P('r Ncwpol't Bay Area. P1'el!ently Utt>!'\! tu't 3 t.tl'\K.'furt'I on the property. Ottered b' $i)ol,000. Call COL\VEU. ~- REDUCED $1000 Assumabl• FHA Loin Almost new profeWonally landscaped. 3 B e d r o o m honl<'. All electric buiit-in kitL'hen, famUy room and ron1pletely encklsed back· yard. ~·s lo1s of T.L.C . If you· re looking for son1t'- thi11& •~a! !Pt'Cial in a high demand area or ~runlington Bf'ach, yoo'\•e -found it in th ijl; bf-an!)' ..... -~. Ca 11 COL\l,'ELL 64&«i55.. • • IN THE BACK BAY--4 bedrooms single ~tory in a~ excellent family locatio'n. Mar· rners, Ensign & Harbor for schools! City lights· for a view and only $66,500 for a price. A listing of BeI't Ri!edy. • UNIQUE HOMES RHltors, 64$.6500 1649 Wntcllff Drive, Newport Beach .! Cancel high interest rates' wltb this price saving WAS CORONA /DEL MAR DUPLEX NOW 1$127,SOo TRIPLEX General General Balboa, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bed-I ;;;;;;;;;:=;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; I CORONA DEL MAR CORNER ' DUPLEX 01"11! of Olrolll. dM Mar'1 most cliarmlu' ,fropertlfs. New upper wllt haa open beam ceilings~ 2 Bedrooms with overshed master suite. Front house has jU9t been remodeled with new carpets &: wallpaper. P aneled living room, brick fireplace, 3 Bedrooms. On a pleasant tree-lined street & close to everythiJ1a:. $127,500. room and 1 B('droom. Ex-I 1 lerior just repainted. All in· tcrlors repainted within last year. Owner \Viii accept pre- paid inter~. Olfered for ssa·.ooo. Call COL\l/ELL 646--0555. ..f;nJa J6/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONt HO¥ES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Bedrooms, 21> baths, dlnfng room, famUy room, 2300 ft. of gracious living plus de· tached rear apartment or mother·ln·law quarters with 2 bedrooms and 2 baths, sep- arate garages on 1 V.Z lots, 2 bloc ks to beach. The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace CLASSIFIED HOURS AdverUsen may · place their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. ~londay thru.Friday 8 to noon Saturday COSTA MESA .OFFICE 330 w. Bay 642--5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave, 494.·9466 SAN CU:i\IENTE 3m N. El camino Real 4924420 NORnt COUNTY dial tree 540.1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy & klll.11 is 5:30 p.m. the day be· fore publication, except for Sund,ay & ?>1onday Editions y,•hen deadline is Saturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advertisers should check their ads daily &: report errors immediately. THE DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the first In· correct imcrtion only. CANCEU.AnONS: When killing an. ad be sure to make a record of the KILL NUMBER given you by your ad taker as receipt of ycur canc:_ellation. This kill number must be pre- sented 'by the advertile:r: in case of & dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECTION or NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every effort is made to kill or correct a new ad that ho.s been ordettd, but we cannot guaran- tee to di> so until t he ad has ap{l(>ared ln t he paper. Dll\IE-A-LINE ADS: These aru are strictly cash In advance by mall or at any one of our of· fices. NO phone orders. 0ce.411nt: 3 p.m. Friday, Costa Mesa ofric' 12 noon -all branch or. fices. 'MfE DAD..Y PILOT tt-servt>S the right to cJas. sUy. edit, een.sor Or ,,. fuse An)' adverUsenM?nt,. Rnd to chanec Jts rates & r•a11IAtlons without l)rlor notice. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. 0 . Box 1560, Costa l\Tcs& 92626 644-7270 Linda Isle Waterfront .OPEN ALL WEEKEND & DAILY Custom 4-bdrm., 4th bath home on Iagoob. Fullr. ·equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room ... _ . . $245,000 313 HEL IOTROPE (off S.avlowl Chagrined owners rejected $130,000--8 weeks ago. You may save NOW -$100 000 loan For Compl.i.• Information On All Homos & lots, PIH ii Cofl : available. ' BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Hal Pinchin & Associates 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.8 . 675-'161 Send for your fr• Home for Living m19a1lne of Newport Beech area properties with pictures & prlc91. Re11ltqf1 675-lm"!Anytlmo) General OCEAN VIEW Corona del Mar Attractive 3 Br 2 Ba horn{' - designed to takt' full advan- tage of spc:oetacular vi~''· E:..1.ra 11 idc let IOI" ~1 park· ing. $89,500. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 f311.l\ ,\ 111:.U 'll lllo U ,.,. I :\I'. £~· ,,,9 ~s:oJo *OWNER TRAHSFERI PRICE REDUCED! 5 BR. 3 BA &ycre8'1: Special. Swim & B··S..Q next to de- lightful pool, Gr~t for en- tertalnir:ig. Customized for the v.,, Best. 64f>.72'11, Eve!!. 5e8594 173.3 WESTCLJF}, DR., N.B, 9:r21 1*$64,950 Popular 4 Bedroom home "•i'l h formal dining, ramlly room & dm. Over 2600 sq. ft . of l\l"1rious tlving area . Come & see. For appolnt - n1ent . Call M5-84'14 SouthCo, ReaJtor1. General Honeymoon Cottage Reirement VIiia or Singles Dreamhouse \\ibatever your Stage in ure this home could be ideal. 2 roomy bedrooms, sunny bright kilchen and living room, large garden area and t;JUtet, low traffic ll"lreel, \\'aiking dislance to a com- munity private beach. 2821 E. Coast Hiway Coron11 del M11r LOOKS LIKE . NEW MODEL HOME Occupied by a finicky owner \\'ho keeps It shining. Here is pride of ownership at its finest. This do l lhous~ features a big c h e e r y kitchen. Truly e f 11 c i e n t f I o o r p I a n . ProleS&ional Gentr11I General BROADMOOR'S BEST Unexcelled view of the Newport Harbor & Pacific Ocean -expansive redwood decks f~r. lavish entertaining, crystal mirro'red dmmg rm., 5 bdrms. & 3 baths, make this an ideal, family sized home. The home you've always dreamed about et Only $129. 950 • CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 Only $56,500 644-nn manicured la.ncbcaplng. It 'll O.,,er11I go last. Call now • S47~1D. l.~~~!ii~iiii~iiiiiiiim 1 ·-;;;;;;;;;;';;.;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; OPEN r1L 11 • rrs FUN ro BE NtC£1 I ' 1• '.4:aiia ~ i 1!~1111{1 ~~~ ~'~~~~:. $26,500 """' or Job ....,. Thi• can·1 beal this combination 3 YEARS .NEW !! ~~~~ T'~= \\ilh lilrge bl!idrooms, 2 Extra sharp 4 Bedroom O>sta enclosed patio, Existing 1st baths, bullt·in kitchen, dou· Mesa home, newly painted TO is $18,000, pa,yable $164 ble car garage, w/w C9.TJle!S inside & out. "Decorator" mo. P.l.T.I & drapes. Better check this. kitchen & ba'ths Lighted FULL PRICE one out TODAY, 64~77ll, covered patio. °Ready t~ $25 580 open eves. move tn1o?? Hurry on this ' ahnost.·ncw home at only $34,950. Htwp0rt JCa.. co:Ts ~WALLACE BUCCOLA HOME -M54114~~4~RS FOR SALE !Open Evenln1•> II F1lrvlow 646-1111 (onytlmo) 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath & family I '"""~!!!!!!~!"!'~;;.;;!!1!9 1 11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1'!11!!!!1111111!1!!!! ""'"'· ,_.....,. model. "'""· SOUTH 0-F A UTIU-GEM·-1mt location near shopping. Full prioe -$31,500. HIGHWAY In tho ·qty namod ''O'own 540-1151 Open Eve5. of the Sea," Jowly Corona CONDOMINIUM de! Mar. View from 1"e • -~ .... HERITAGE . . REALTORS HARBOR VIEW HOMES LEASE WITH OPTION One of the IO\lo'eS"l priced homes In this most sought arter neighborhood. Florida based owner will lease with an option to purchase ne'Xt year. 2 Bedrooms plus con. wrt.lble den, formal dining area, custom details. Vacant & not lease land. $63,900. C. F. Coleswortfly Realtors 640-0020 TOWNHOUSE Excellent Costa ?.1esa kJca. Big 3 Bedrooms, 2 !!!halt carpet~. near ::'"'";:'-:'.SC:·h:ools & shop-. priced at Open Eves. I Lovely llC\V comer unit • entry Of the lovely garden Plush shag ... g ...... ,; .. .,. • 2 and a peek at CataJinn, ...... t"-"''6 ~ sectuded patio. bedrooms • 2 baths • 2 Built-ins. 3 bedrooms, 2 blocks to beach • ample l:Nl'ths and sharp! 'Priced at ~=~~ec~c :~U~e-i n only $58,soo.oo. Call 673-8550. kltchen &. pantry • only OPEl'ITil l• "'S FUN10B£NICEI ic.·i:.=~ .. ,, IS~·l&I THE BEJIL ESTATEHS 1:•' 1 * 5"x290' LOT * ~ C~l WNE BALBOA PENINSULA POINT $32,500 . E-Z TERMS * Corona del Mar DltPLEX -$68,500 NE\V OJ."'FERING -Just * Eastblulf-4 B e d r o o m stepfl to bay or ~ beach. home, 2~i baths, choice -cor· Private decked patio, pro-ner kice.Uop. $69,500. fessionally landscaped. 4 Bedrooms & 2 Baths. Has an • 4 Bedroom home (huge assurablc 7\(% tnterest rate master BR) + family room k>an! $79,950. Call our Bal-+ den, 3 baths. many ex- b:Je. oHice 6T::.-40i0. tras. Quiet '&Ueet. $59,000. PETE BARRETT * c-• Property _ N.....n -REALTOR'"-stvd. ,;., 30' x 30· building. EXPANSION •.• J)l'Oil'8.m. If you haVf' "'Orked In thlli an?a 2 year5 or more, & earned $12,000 or more per year ·we would like to talk to yrnj. We have the bri't Corona del 1'1or locallon: been herr slncr. 19'8. No D\vncr-broker com-petition. BAl' & BEACH REAL TY 675-3000 10¢ BUYS A HOME The price of, a phone call (and a pa.Int brush) buys ttilii S24,000 home In ~ ceHent neighborhood. NO NO OOWN·TO THE Gl ' Walker&Lee l l AL llt lfl · EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED AND UNDER $34,900 too sq. It. secluded muter 1ulte with 1tudy. Hup step conversation g a t l e r y . Cu.~tomJzed plan. .. fantastic space. Fireplace -built·irui • 80ft water and much more. Don't dt'lay call 963--6767 loday! DON'T BUY THIS HOME U I 642-5200 $36.000 . . :,.:. ~";~~"\i~~ ~~~ ~~ LIVE IN IRYINE • ,. HERITAGE . . REALTORS FormAI dining. Huge par· G I I Roy McC•rdle Realtor $31,250 quet floor family room. I .. ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.., I • • A R 1810 NewJ)Ort Blvd •• C.M. Sunshiny kl lctien. Separate WORK OUT OF Lik~ oow 4 br w/cenrra1 ~ 541-7729 Sharp &: bright • priced laundry room. Quality buill cond. on Atlf>et' ct1l-de-aac ~ .. I "'""'""'"""""'~'""'""'"" I 111chl! 2 BR l l yr Old. 10 ' by S & S. Too good to '"''"' YOUR LIVE IN! w/1% ""uma,,., GI k>i» BEACH GIANT ml...., lrom Univ. ol C.111. $44,900. Better hurry? Call at oo cost to btt)'t!T • Orly at Irvine. M2-253:i. Nice clean home on C-2 ron· $35,9:i0. 646-m.t • Open ~. 5 Bedrooms It pool. Windin!i --- Ol'fN TIL 11. IT'S fUN ro SE N1C£1 lng, o.k. ftr a business. near ll:atn to UPP!!' mue of bed. I ~ 17th Strtei, C»sta Mt?$. Mn suh:et. including a Ll!.rge COmM" lot .•. $33, 750 W lk l h~ muttt with con. ' ••• '"' • •"''" look c.u a er 11 OU ..,.,.!Jon .,... & vanity 646-7ln. 11 ba1h. Big "RANCH" 1tyte Walker &Laa AIAL lt1 A11 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT l•L llt •tl kttcheft,, "h8'J all the )ate!rt 54&--002'l OPEN TtL 8 • ITS FUN 10 SE HICE/ [ LET THE !~,,•~.'!."'~ ..... pl · 3 BDRMS. + DEN ~. j ~] SUNSHINE IN r=n.-:~~·= . down ~~·:! down •" . 'WJtmllmJ VETERANS 143.750. Bkr. 962-$11, ·~ 1 °'"" lmm"'"la" ' btdroom with pa.lM> a plc- NEAR HARBOR HI WELCOME TIME FQR ~~1""'b"~ • .°0 ~~~= OPEN DAI LY I to S If )'f)U'rt w\Uifli to bring landacaplne. Prloed to nU! 4 '=1~~··~~C.~P ~,f°i:e~~~r~ QUICK CASH SflWiEL.l, RNlton p11ln1cd In I out, new ttr· b(x1iooms. Bia" lamll,y room. MESA VERDI ~~·,;f. ~i 'k!:. ~ Prttty locatkln. ~ced vtry THROUGH A 4BJ DROOM $)6,IOO. •VIII "cin fir"'-IC'PW 11t $31,900. Ca'll now to etg lftes evtr)'Where, very • CALL ANYT IME • take.1dvanta~. 847--«n.O. DAILY PILOT spacloui homl!i beautltully L•I.. -Ol'(Nnt. "IT'S f.llN re WMCCI kept lnalde and out. 2 btilM -7.H or Eve •. 545-5117 r: ll bulll·ln kllchcn . value prtc-. ~ IHNlll ~ANT ~D -· ~~-c::;.:~ ~.~~~ WANT AD 642-5678 =~===~'------ Lachenmyer l~c, 1 lt o1 642•5678 A &ood want ad 11 a _.... I• Wam ad -111 . , • 11<1<161~ """"""-•-~-~~9,---~-·~~~---..,.-~ ' • • I • ' ,, ' .. . . • • I . .. lut,day, Octobtr 9, 1973 DAILY PILOT . f ~1u •.... S00 -524 . ( , .: . The Bluest Marketplace on the· Orance· Coast ••.•• : •• ~-990 loab & Manne (qi.iipi1•' tDO . 9W L1~11tti~I • • .•• ~. •, .~-799 'DAlt.Y PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS '9nonok. • • • • • • • • • m . S<f9 ...................... &50 ·199 Rtd £''"'-Genowol •••• , 00 • 199 financial • • • • • • • 200 • 299 Hcuet for Soll • • • • ... 100 -tl4 lost & FOi.i'd ••• I, . ; • '·• •157"' t.\tn.hondde .....•. , IQO • 149 You Can Sell It, Find It, Traete It With a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval it.ital . • • • • • • • • • • JOO -m -' Sthook ond W!n.ithon , , , S7S • S99 Mrvict-t ond ..,_. • • • • 600 • tll'I Tivruportotion. • . , . • , , 9\.S • 949 I • .....,.. -~-------------ERRORS~ .. ~~~ ad1 detly & report errors lmmedl1t1ly. The HouftlforU. DAILY PILOT usumta liability for the flrtt• I '-roct inoortlon only.• ----------------------}. --------=---~~~ G..r1I [ ........... I~ ...,... ...... * '~ -~ ·* * * '·*' '!l'AYl~R ; co~· * .. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE 'I• ll.CRE -VIEW $30,000 • f . ' ' Truly a,. ore-Oi·•·kind th\& • ~ORONA DEL MAR LUXURY DUPLEX littl• chaim<r .its qw•Uy , .Enter ~ru.. a dr~atip ~tor. to mas&ive · ~::' ~~ ~~ fi!e a ~~fi~ . wet baI 'in combmed 'fam. )'m, kitchen din. view pro~. Zoned Rr4 rm which opehs to Spanish court-Yd. The O\vner anxious. J.I a k e entire 2nd floor is the master suite wltb mez.. rt'allOnable · offer. Red zanine study! 2 BR, 2 BA in maill re.sidence, Carpet, Re.altors 645-MSO ' 2 BR, 1 ba in unit. Hurry. $149,500 • · . PRll(ATE "Our 28th YHr" 3 BE DROOM & POOL WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors Pri'"" 10 .. u ,, 13.l,9'0., 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road 1~-o'! a q\llet Easrside "Ov 1··"1 B. C C 1 Cl b" 11treet. pride of ownership. er uut1. ng 19 anyon oun ry u l..ot<i of extras. Hurry Call NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Red """"''· Rt•"•" Gener1f General 64~ SPANISH ABANDONED I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 -J I ' rWO'HOUSESlpN '"'/•ACRE } $39,000 Beautifully kept "i th shag READ THIS lA CUESTA VILLAS $30,490 Close to the ocean in Huntington B•achf Credit rejections at first unit price! ' These have carpet, floor tile, and drapes included. 3 BR .. 2 BA .. HUGE !arm kit· C:hen, detached garage. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Model One Block West of Beach Blvd. off Adams in Huntington Beach AYRES SINCE 1905 536-1445 ESTATE S35,500 Lqng private ,drive to,mag· nlficent Spanish estate on large Pftl"k:like grounds. 4 bed!00111s, 3 batfls. Sunken party room. Mammoth \\-all letWth fireplace. Banquet formal dining. Cantina kit- chen Mth built-ins. Oaken banister staircase. Hide-a· way mas.er suite with sun- deck and balcony. Red tile roof. NEAR, 1lEA5=Jl. Ca1J carpet, fantastic rerital pro-11!!1••••••••11!1•11!!!11•11!•••• perty-or live in one & let General ' General 645o0303: ;, .... ,: IOl/l\I I. Ol\O\ "•' " , T ,1 Q • I I HARBOR VIEW HILLS 900 TILLER WAY. Dellght!ul 3 BR. home. Fam . rm. w/frplc. Swimming pooL Ocean & bay view. Owner w/lease at $650 on lease/opt. $89.500 NEW EMERALD BAY LISTING ,3 Years new ! Spacious Spanish home w/4 BR's., sauna, den & wet bar. Beaut. view of ocean & mountains. A great home for $275,000. BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT Large borne, 2 Jots. Pier & float. Five BR, den, bonus playroom , 5 bo. Sandy beach, Excellent financing. $317,000 RESIDENTIAL LOT Filly feet o! bay frontage with lee title & some subordination. Price $4,000 ifer foot~ HARBOR VIEW HOMES Poltolino Model. 3 Bdnns., family rm., bo- nus rm. & loft. Great for teenagers, mother- ln·law or entertaining. Just bring your pool table. ~ ·ASSUMABLE· 7'11% LOAN 5 Bdrm .. 21,i ba. home in beauliful UN!· VERSITY PARK with a beautiful LARGE, low int. loan & a beautllul greenbelt" 10t;a· Uon. '51,500. SPYGLASS HILL l _This lovely traditional it Br home has cozy family rrq with fireplJ!ce •& wet bar. Bonus rm. Swimming poo~ charming gazebo, view. ~.ooo. 644-17661 , 21'1 Son Joaquin HlHs Rd. N,11. .. the other pa.y. Excellent va.Jue on the Easlside -see it I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; you'll take II. Call Red Carpet, Jte~ltors ~5-8080 MAKE OFFER ALREADY THE BEST VALUE in Mesa Verde, but owner sWl invites offers on.this 1800 sq. ft. 4 Bedroom home. Beaut\ful de- cor, wood paneling, wallpaper & good car- pets. Elegant setting on spacious lot. Room for boat or trailer. · · GOV'T REPO $26,950 -Quality built Costa 1t1esa home with gleaming hardwpod floors, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, shin gle roof & large double garage. Only $1450 down payment. Bids cloSe soon - · call us for fill.I details. " ... , HERITAGE . . REA LTORS General BAYSHORES l.af1r! home in prime comer location 4 Bedrooms plus spacious recrt'alion roon1 Nicely landscRped patio Best buy in Bayshort'S • $83,1511 HARBOR 546-5880 pPon.. E.v~s,_ .1 ' .. Belbo• Island *REDUCED* NOW $119,900 Vacant duplex pha guest room. Super renovated - boat mooring; furnished, xlnt parking. Steps to beach. Owner says "sell" Open daily 1-5 106 Pearl SL Ag!. 675--0144 66-1313 NE\V DUPLEX. for sa.li! by owner. $140,000. 673-6918 or 982-4946 Balboa Panlnsut1 OCEANFRONT DUPLEX Spaeious 4 BR, 3 BA. 3 BR. 2 BA, good financing. PACIFIC PROPERTIES ~712 or 675-1632 MACNAB IRVINE SUPER SHARP BONNIE BAY HIGHLANDS 4BR/FR, lg. master suite opens to charm· Ing center court. Immaculate condition! $74,500. A LOVELY DOMAIN Of hills & ocean viewed from e.ncbanting patio & FR. 4 BR's, DR, oversize game room. rmmacfilate! $129,500 .. Jane Fraze! llrnl235. IN18) TERRIFIC TRINA Bluffs condominium -3BR's, 2'1> baths. Move-In condition. Lovely cpts. & drps. $72,500. Bob Owens 64U235. (N22) ---------.,.- 101 Oonr 0r1 .. '42·1231 --IU·IZOO \Ve can arrange "ft1UlJIC'lng" at 87<, on these four local properties. ';})over Skore:J Area BY APPOINTMENT I. Lovt>ly four bedroom home in Spyglass iwith the, bes! Vil"t' for sale today. $139.500 . Large custom 5 br .. 3 ba. home in quiet area with nice ocean breeze. $98,500: '· Beautiful three b e d r o o m home In the Bluffs, a new listing or ours $84,950. DALE WULLNER i Agent 642-1771 Popular four bedroom hOme in Harbor View • with a lease/option flan. $73,000 . New "·aterfront hornl' "i1ti private boat slip -for 38' po1\-e r boat. f19.000. Call 675-7225 Bea\Jtiful six bedroom home on Spyglass liill -Colonial design • $850 a nlOnth. Sparkling three bedroom home In Shills. Neiv on mar· kel -try $550 a monlh. Llke ne"· lhret" bedroom "'aterlrool home in Ne.,vport -private slip -$525 a month. Call 6'ffi.-1?2.l FOR THE EXECUTIVE LA CUESTA Huge c.<-nt-'-2-~... Mlh Hun•lngton Beach ._ "'' 3 ---~------I 1300 IQ. fl. bonus room. "INSTANT HOME" IN SUBURBIA PARK Upgraded in every detail. Only 8 mos, 11C\1'. O\l"tJer dnpemte. Make otJf!T'. l' lilage Real Esl ote lru'1""1y enjoy ·this 4 l><d-HZ.4471 (:;;:)!14M10J room home. l\foirt desirable nt'igbbortood in Huntl~l,__..,_,,,..._,._!L_,..,._.._.._.,._,,_.._.,._ Beach. Featurt"ll formal cttn-OWNER DESPERATE ~ 'family room and seam-I-Story trt-plex. Assume Gr s~· dream sewing center. loan with normal down. * TWO * Immaculate co n d i l I o n Asking only $48.500. Colorful Cottages throughout. \Ytth manicured SCOTT REAL TY tare ofrering of ocean side landscapi~. Near elemen· e ~7533 e ol the hwy. property of 2 tary sehool, patk .. tcrut.is SURF SiDE CONDO h I ' II I courts, beiich and bike trail. ou...es on one o; ve n S5l.900. Please can 546-l3lJ I-Story, 2 Bedrooms, 2-car one, hli\'e income from the \Valk ho · other. }~int time o[fered at for additionaJ Info. garage. IO s pp1ng & beach. Only $21,900. Tenns S79,500 OP'fHTILll•frSFUN10B£NICEI available. CORBIN·MARTIN !I' SCOTT REAL TY Realtors 644-7662 ~ e 536-1533 • NEAT AS A PIN ''· I REPOSSESSIONS Lovely 3 Br, 2 Ba. homt> north I ';:~~~~~~~~;I of hwy. 'f'rt>shly derorat~. I,; or Information and locaUon new carpets. good location, DREAM HOME .. or these FllA & VA homes, R-2 lf't. O<VT>er f'"XIOL''". eor::3ct - MORGAN REAL TY SHARP • KASADIAN 673-4642 67~59 UPGRADED RHI Ell•I• 962-6644 SUBMIT __ ., Fantastic features. Al l elec-O\\'NER -3 BR, 2 .BA, huge tl'ic. Super s h a g . im-fam. rn1. "'ln1asst\·e frplc., VERY MOTlVATED owner nlaculate in & out. Qv,•ner paneled study. Laund rm., of this fine 4 bedroon1 & niusl sell. Only $25,500. lrg. kit., dlx cpts, walled JXlOl, Lusk J-larbor View l' rear yard. COl"ner lot, nr hon1e 11·ants an offer. lie in-heh. $39.500. 536-4562. dicatcs hi~ asking price is VCIY no..xible. \\le UTg(' you 962-4471 ( r::) 546·810J Irvine to INSPECT & SUBMIT. 1 ..... ~ ... ;,;,;;,;,~~,;,;;1;;:::;;:;~~;;;:;;;;;;;~;; CALL 67S.7225 Harbour View Behold th• Beauty . . of the elegant sta1rv.-ay a9 DUPLEX comer, channnig, by owner. 500 Poln~tl"ia, Open 1-5 daily. 81,2% Int. Cost• Mau Boat action ".lei\' fron1 your you ma11:e your entrance on Uv. rm. & din. nn. deck. ecramic tile and pause to ONLY $33 000 "''" "" ~"'1"1 "'"'m. 4 ' bedroorru!:. z~ baths. beamed Huntin9ton Harbour Realty 17714 COAST H\\'Y. (Iloll 846-13Sl & IZl3) 592-2845 OLD MEXICO \Vlth a modem acet'nt. R.ro ceJJl.ng, decking, \i MI' and land. All this for the price of $69,960. CALL 552·7500 VISION e red hill tile roof. formlll Ji,·ing room R~l.TY REALT'9RS *BUILD INCOME* 11ith floor ro ce iling Uruv. Parle Center, hvnw Older 2 BR. house on fireplace. 4 Bcdroonu, 111 large R·2 lot Bath, Cantina Kitchen, close OPEN FRI. SAT & SUN .. Good Ea.<!~de location lo schools & shopping. Calif. Hon1es at 4 8 9 2 s24,500 BIKE TO BEACH. Act Flagstar, 2 yr. old 3 BR. 2 E today! C1'11, The Real BA, You own lhf' Janel. COLONIAL 4 BR 2 slot')', 4 bedroom in one of Laguna's finest sectlon.<i. Big family room, mlWlivc ri~place. 3 b1uhs. Dining roon1. Over size patio ""ith BBQ. Profe55iona lt y landscaped. l\love in oon- dllion. $59.500 494-8003 TARBELL, Realtors _!_9ro_~· -~~l~:_l.·1!:_ MOVE-IN COND. Completely furnished. 3 BR. plus maid's. 31,S ea·s. Only 50 ft. lot avail. on Nord at till-present time! Nev.·ly dtcar. Pier & lllip. $285,000. ONE OF A KIND Lido'ii last corner lot, street to street 35x88, atto55 beach & tennis ct. $65,000. VIA LIDO NORD 4 Bdrms. le 5 Bath.'!: magnillcent custom home. SllH,rat. . LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Udo, N'pt Beach * 67:1-7300 * Newport IHch GRAND OPENING Newport &.y Towers l A 2 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM HOMES Baylront llomes Boat Slii» Full Sl!curlty Highrise Steel & concrt"te constructioo Private Balconies 2 garage spaces per unit. Roof lop sundeck Unusual Opportunity to Pur- chase Bayfront Property in Newport Beach. 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. 675-1551 TAX SHELTER TAX SHELTER TAX SHELTER Remove the pain from W: time! Ov.'Ii this beach du· plex 11·it.h white water vi~· from balcony. 100% depro. cialion schedule. Ask for our con1puter projretions tor m. creased equity and net spendable. Call 546-2313. OPENTIL 11 • "'S FUN TO BE NICE! :~ ~mJ THE REiil ESTllTERS Harbor "View Homes Cann<'! model "'ilh valley vie11·. 3 Bdrn1s.. dining & !11n1Uy rooms. !\!any extras b11ill into thi~ adul t occupic<l hon1t': it i~ better than ne11"! Call for app). lo \'iC>W. $69,SjQ -• CORBIN·MARTIN Realtors 644-7662 . WATERFRONT ISLAND HOME 3 Bdrm, Family Room , 8o/4% loan •v•il. BROKER 13J.0710 RIVIERA R Al TY Estate Fa.ir, 536-X>Sl. S:W.8.50. Ilas 7 percent loan. 149 Broodwa,.v. C.~f. $Z9,950 Lot 5.j' :< 120'. QUINTARD O\VNER IV i·rr aBR 642-7007 64$..5609 Eves. REALTY, 642-2991. Ask !or 1 ~ • estc 1 • · dt'n, 21 ~ txi, 2 (i·plc, 1le1Y *V.A. REPO_*__ GI BUYERS Laguna S.ach p.Alnl. erpl!!. dishwasher, 3 BK. 2 ba. Newly ll A chlm('(' ol a filertmc. Pay sink C'lc. s.;.9,500. 642--0844 or Hdli'd. n~. $26.950. rlosing msts only. 3 BR, 2 WANT .A,. VIEW? 49-l-9!m principals only, $1,«;0 t)qwn BA, BRAND NE\\1 CRrJ)('tll. 11.'asc opt. JX>Mible. ~·" P M ne\\' paint irr.rirk' &-ou!. Vll,. Ch..'ean ~? Oty '1t..,.,·~ Both WESTCLIFF VILLAS f~...., a n1()f'I., '"1""'· are avairable in this aln\Ost BALBOA BAY PROP. BRASHEAR REAL TY llC\O.., hills:idc home. 2 BR. & By oivner-lu.'<. :octra sp11c Mesa V1 · 11r. 8.J lhu-bor 11 968.1178 * 2 bath.<1. AIOOous fll\'rwr gArdrn oondo. 2 BR, 2 BA. * 556-8800 * 11-ant! fast action. s;,o,roo. S&l.500. 646-1974. --JUST LI STED--ATTN : FHA ~'4 BY Ch\T!E'r. BAyshon'!11, t.tav· E111il!iO<· :1 Br, J Ba + 221 02 BUYERS 0 .,,, ~ fn1t nrl'a. 2'a Bl?. l BA. xlnt J R2Jo N ..,,~ lf'11~. by appl on l y garage . .11rge • I. 1 ear 4 BNlnxim, IL:! IJ.81h Hun ting. REAL EST.'A"JE f'\'f'~f\\'C<'kendii 6 4 5 -4 3 4 2 bus "-shops. 2 drl\ft:'\\"ays. ton Olntin<>nt11l Trrnnhnus-c. I'\ \\'on't Im! f;:, P. S29,jt)(I, $21,(00 Ft..-11. PRrCE 1190 Glenneyre St . S62,;.oo. Nl"lport Hi Dllilricl \\1rn·i:: f'TQq? 4,,, ,,,73 "·"'"~16 Bl.Uf'FS X Plan, $80,000, 3 Cnll CJS H.EAL ESTATJ·: FULLER REAL TY ,r<t·'". ""'J'\h) BR. 21ii Ba. 1 yr old . 301 548-ll&.S or 833~ ;,16-0314 Ai~YTL.\IE F..Z. BUlLOING SITE \'lsta Trueba. 0 w n e ,.,..,..,._..,..,._.,..,.•l'Valldng Di.!itanoe to beach. 640-1090. l\IESA de.I i\lar. AMlumt 6311 • Thi' k>t 111 'limall, but 1~1.1 ;;;;;;-";;;:;:::0o;:-;;;.,--.ol pcl't'etlt loan. 4 Br. covered -00-YOUNE EO~ \VU! have oce&tl view v.·hen NPT Ch:-st. 3 Br, 2~ ~iL~.$37,700. ~ mo. \Ve ~'!r~cRt~~!;~ ~n l)ij!U. $15.9."'~ ft~~l~l~,,!1:,~~ lo'IXER>Uppcr home. 3 BR.. 001~1~ thr Harbour. Olll: Submit Tem u1 LUXUfiY <I br, 2\ii bf\, I . frpl. Lge. yard. $21,000. HU~i'T~GTO~ lf,\RBQUR ?t.llSSION REAl.TI' o$--Oill fan1 rrn. huge m1sttt su.lte Fn11in Co., Rltni. 642-5000 REAL TY FOR Sale By 011,-ner 2 br I ,;."-""'';';:'...,...::::-7.· :::''.:-JO.Ol':::'.::96:0-;:::i mp No. C.l\L locntlon o& Bd, 846-Il."1 12131 ~ ho1ne, rain rm, sepaMltc din 3 BR house ntlll' ocean. 11 Bil , cor. 101. 5*-9512 By IT2l4 Cofigi Ill\)'., 118 1m, yd. \\1llk 10 bch. t br down payment, '-111(' r ASSUME 7y. LOAN rental below. 160 ,000 . Lal'IOfl Realtor. 67W$63. I B\' O\\'TK'r, Primr F.ast~kle $.19,!00 3 BR lo11 f"ur11111.. "-'Rlk 1 ~--~-· -=----TRADE Newport 8 e & c I lor.a1lon 4 t;ir, 211 ba, ftplc, 10 Math. !Tlvlllt (1811,)' •• , .a DAily Pilot O•aified Prop. tor Out-Of-T W/W Cl'Jll, D) .. 'iOO.. SIS-S\17 96A-85.'t!. Ad. &U-6671. Prop.. Bltr. 71~. -------~~ ., , ' ,, ' . ' ' . \ .. • .,. ... Alt.V' PILO f J!MlfJ,tJq,, -· ( -k< .. ~ I~ I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ I [i] I -... -I~ I -.. -I~! -·-l!~lt ---I~ I ~-~ lliJ I;-"'-!~ '':!~!!~~~~---! Commtrcl1l 11Newport Be1Ch Property lst Moufttaln, Dnlrt HOUMI Furniahecl 300 Houlff Unturn. I --------Resort 174 PROIA TE SALE il<woort Be•ch Cost1 -. Hunt!--Huntl"""" )>Mc!I -°":.:n:.:•...;P,,;.;.:.;in;;.1----I 250 Apts. furn..) 305 ;ualt>:e1 tmrurn. 360 BAYCREST C -2 HARBOR CABIN, Big ""'" ...... I ' --:iiE - $85 ,000 rootn. 15x26, + stecpln(.: \VALi< lo \Vater 1 Br. $130. Please Help! 3 BR. :J~ BA. Ownet-"11 1.1nif $200. 2 BR deluxe ape., blck 2BR, tba1• J car vah! BE.At.IT 2 BR, ocean view Cwitoin 3 BR necutlve home loft. Priced S7,000. Term11. Ali;o 11.Jl $135 & CdM, in tourplt'X. 2 ~ bfech. bl,y. &-aut. view, bay A ao..raae dpta, drpll, deck, $215. Apt D, 250810La with llll I~ I" x I.Ir y 77,000 9'1· ft. Of l".Xccllent lh\r· Private Party. 842-Xl15 ah kld&/poll! +~h untl $90 ' WE N E ED Dbl garage. Ftple, Forced Fdhion lal. ,a, no~~ ~·ta Or, owner 445 ak t.eatul'ft. Cati k>r udd'l i.n· bOr Blvd. expc>llW'C. Ne1Lt 6 pm. 1.1111. pd. Agt. fee. 9'1'9-80'.l. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE a.lr heat. O/W. ~aHo. Avall $350 • Lr1 3 Br. 2 Ba Npt .. wpOf'tl..cn '1 :'2'5t~, ~l..aJlWta~~'4','9'-6848"7'=-,--... fonnat:'ion. Appra\Sfi! ut: occaJ.l· 1 blork t:k.'\.>p, Heavy House1 Unturn. 305 with ~ fenced yard tw 2 OCT 14. $295/mo. SlT 16th snore.. F'rplc, dbl pr, E r • · t.1EXICAN tile 2 BR. 2 BA $69 500 trfllJ1c. Zoned c.2. Cfto.·ncr med!um s'!ied dogs (well St. H.B. 91'M2'19. yard, cldld/pet. •pt. ,Neuly w . apt. Vu of Dana Harboi', • =· Iimmce. Hw:T)I on this [ finwllf [f •l G•n•r•l trained & very ~t!), Irvine $400 • Util pd. Owlnelfront, , araae. ·slrli!e adult on1y. pool, jacu.nt, 2 car &at. BEACH DUPLEX ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I $ LANDLORDS $ 2 Ma!ure Worldna Adulta ~t°::.tw•"'"RE. NTA. LS !1915· '4H889. ,$590. m.gn;o. CALL NOW VERY RESPONSIBLE!. BR. 2 Ii> lexea, Huntl ..... on &each Exterior newly Mt.lntcd, 3 BR ~1600 Let US 1'\.'.1, UH. pl"QPmi~ \\.'JU t&loc> extremely good 3 b&tb1 •••• :-.... S215 6'13-4030 or 494--3248 up ... . & 2 BR, units, fi~pl. dbl INVESTMENT Money to Le>1n 240 We se-rvlt-e al! the beaclt C1U"e of home! 3 BR.. 2 bft. tum ....... t300 NEWPORT Back Bay area~l Fum. or,Unfum. 355 LOW WEEKLY RATES ~I 1 ---'--------! t i ties & inland OrM&e C.o. Please call ~. 548-7881 3 BR + bonu1, 2~' ba. $4:5 ,_,,__ h /2 BR , " '"""" 0 comp DIVISION , IU75 max) 28R + den.2ba ....... 14311 ~ . ...:~. P ___ '!"f_ ,!/ ~, Newport S..ch Executive Sult11 r decorating, Best buy N£l>:D CASHf $1 000 or up to i'~E:E F'RP.E .• nv~ Time & $$. • BR 21L betba •M>A '"""""' ........ W I .w .... ,.., :l'fO-=,;.;.;...;;..;.o=---m Yorktown Blvd. on !ht' bl'ach. $3,000, $10,000 'and more. $ ALA RENTALS $ SPACIOUS 3 bedloot11a 2 bath • >W ........ ...-... & rld!nit club w/ new OOC'-!' 2 BR, 2 BA. Ney,1>0J1 $76,500 ~ I Rcnlt'mbcr Avco Thrift fur Ne1-1·porl & Bay, CM. 642-8383 residence lew than 2 years 4 BR, 2\S be. + view • • $496 rals, fenced & other borea. Nu crpt'g. S275/mo, Beach Blvd. at Yorktown a Rt'll.l Estate Loan. Upon l BR $155 In HB -now. has old with w/w carpel.I and facilities. 6 hor8el already -... wintier s.~11__.llM 536-041.1 ' approval l1SC the rnon(•y slv/refer. close in. drapes and privaie petkl. boarded. Protlt ma.kine Pl"> ' · _,., • ...,..,.,..,.. STUDIOS & 1 BR'1. LAGUNA LOT ho\.\'ever'you Jlkt". Al90 ask 2 BR $130 Ct.t: ·avail. tncd, $250 per/mo. 646-7711 open perty. Sl75/mo. 997-5569 Of e Full kitchen ARCH BEACH about our unsecured per-snll JX't & child. eves. 557--0157 fiiil • ffeated pool N EWPORT B EA CH-sonai 1oan~. 3b~,~~1~~11: fmly. 1 NF.!!!'!-"''"'rt..,..,t!!IJ~-h~ll~--) APMtmtnb·forRent ~ : ~~1~litles HEIGHTS Prime Baytront Site AVCO THRIFT 2 Br $175 HD w/pooi, util pd. "SINCE l!M6" * 3 BR, 2 BA, fam ml ';;;;;;;;;;;~~ • F1't'e linens $8,500 for boot repairs & i;11lcs' 620 Newport Center Or. Adults only. Walker & lee 1st Western Bank Bl.t... NEWPORT HEIGHT g. ~ 360 0 T.V. &-mf,id tet'V. avail. 797 {)n\l'lge, C.M. 6<2-1171 NE\VPORT BEACH DPLX BY APPOINTI.1ENT I blk from heh. 3 Br, 2 Ba, open bellm. Like nu ln1ldc & ouL TERMS. $1,650 dwn. Y.P. SiG,500. May be seen at 211' 34th St. DALE WULLNER 556-81Bl Agt 642· 1 rn * BAYC-REST * 3 BR, fazn nn. Beaut. pool In \U$hly lndscpd yard, w/gas BBQ & heater. Owner "''carry 1st ro. rm.ooo. Bill G1i:1ndy Rltr. 675-61U1 Suite 101 3 Br, 2 ba .$235 HB w/pool. •••l ,,,.,, Unlversttv Parlt, lrvi':fe Vacant. Call 673-0013. Apts..Furn. e Bar-B-Que Condominiums N~rt~'h 4 A~r ~T1;:; ~· ffe~.' NQ\\•, Days 552-7000 Nights Newport ShoNI &.I~ l1l1nd : ~ ~ _f_o_r _•_•_l• ____ ....;.160'-' l-==;;:::_;""==-1 b!in<! f<lmilv & pe-:. LEASE BEACH/pool/le nil 3 BR •-DON'T BORROW ALA Rentals 642-8383 Ne\I.· Greenbrook 4 BR, 2 BA, 3 BR., 2* ha ..••.• $400/4SCI den, 2 BA, b. cptJ, mii: LI1TLE lSLAN"D -Near $155-$165 Cra~~~R~. ~1~!iv158~''rpl, 'Tl L YOU CALL US ! dfan1. 13,m95.,..,!~moury cpts & 2 BR, 2 ba, don, AIC •.• $2'1S tplc 13'15 .~,be 60-336S new, very attractive light &: BACHElDR & 1 BR .. patios, Borrow on your home equity l"{>S .... 4 BR ¥•• cheery 2Br, IUOdeck, gar. frplc's priv. garages - fam rn1, 2 car gar. Immed . for any good purpose. Scrv· la'rwin real,Y inc. ., 3 ba. , .......... $425 Santa Ana : washer/dryer avail. Avail Divided bath & loll of Pos~. $32,000. Financing i"" , __ A"g•I•• Counro 1_ 9,. ,.., 124 h J 4 BR., 2 ba1il1 ......... , $495 • lhru June, $235. 673-4394. closets. Rec. hall, pool & llva.il. To 1ns.....,.t ca 11 .... 1..#.m ., J u• ~ . rs 2 BR, 2 baths, ..... , , , •-3 BR, 1" Ba, '· • F.:• I t bl bat"· ....... over 20 years and NOW in E uaJ II 0 5 B ...,,.., n encK11eO Ba:lbol Ptnlnsula poo a es, sauna ''"'• &12-9002. Orange County! q ous1ng ppty. R, 3 "6. N pt Bch .• S575 QarBge, p:>OI, bu l 1 t. n s, See for yourself. 11301 F1tENCll Porter home, 3 Br. SIGNAL MORTGAGE .. CO. * 145·0111 * 3 BDRMS 2 BA bl CALL 552-7500 ctiHdren ~. 54().«189 r ••t WEEK .. UP Keel90n Lnlk. (l bllcSI w.), of 21.,, Ba, pool, shultle board, tn41 !156-lll06 .. • tn stove, or 892--8832. ..,.. Beach, 1 b N. of ater . dub """"'· el<. $01,000. ·~ c·-~·s Drivo N B 4'SW.111hCOSTAMlll di•-1. -· w/w VISION U-·--Furn • • -·Ing Rooml 842-1848 .,. ~3 0, ••s-·~. "WUU .... ,..,.. • • • crpts & drps thruout. trplc, ~ , • r • HQUllekeepina Rooms ~ ~ =• 1 TD L $75 Compl. turn. Util. Bach i.. f ed Unf 310 • BY oceanfront, beach, sundlc D I /u I St Oans apt. Hrrtg.Bch. Nr. bch, '6e enc yd, dbl garage. • d h'll um. Ocean View Apta newer 2 br elegant furn nu up e xes n ts $130 . untum House tncd Kids & pets ok. im. mo. re I , _ _BALBOA INN d lndl')> tio sale 162 ,.. ~ ro~ _,_,........ & ...... Avail .no...... 675-1896 or Gener1I '""' Main s .... t crpt.s, rps, •-: ll!.~o:.· -'"'-'------= UP TO llO% 1.... • uw,u ... n .,,...s. 6 38 ~ gar, nr shops " pier •-· $175 . 2 Br. unfurn hse, gar-7l-25 REALTY REALTORS 675-8740 Marr Adlts, baby ok. Af90 2 7 Units • Pool 2nd TD Loans ~· ., .. ""· C.M. SZl5 • Vacant. 3 BR, 2 BA, Unlv. Pari< Center, Irvine 2 BR 2 ha, --1425 •301 EDGEWATER • Br uni. $1911. SJS-2131. Newport Hel9hts ,_ -~home, garage, big ~rage. Fenced. Kids/pets, 2 BR 2 ba furr\ winter $215 At Coronado Street DELUXE Adult Poolside Yf't"d, children/pets, 'C.M 0.il.Jif•· 1 ·~ Rent"1 ~"'"'' Newport Beach, 3 BR, 2 ba. 3 BR.. 1"-ba la c,::':,". ~~~e Hunei~~.!~~ Lows.est r1ate1MOr1nge Co. Please Help! · Homefinders 547-9641 ~~VedERb~~!'f PARK untum. Yrly. $Dl. dry.• Privat; ~· ~ :en n:i~~wPe~ r 6 "' •n..u "' .,_,,,.. tt er tg. Co. MESA-Verde. Jmmed ~ 3 ..... "' ~ 3 BR view. Winter rate $300 mo. poola; anun&. t ~no i a. $1180 per month. $14.160 per 642-2171 545-4611 WE NEED BR 2 BA bright &. cle~n home, 2% ba. dining, fam NEWSON ROBINSON 846-0259. -~fuX'Sstln Ave., ~~23 t~~·~1f~ptXJI. Mllllt sec. Serving Harlxtr area 24 yrs. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE Sh~g cpts; v.·ater softener: ~~~~ ~ pa.=, REALTOR 615-mO 1 Bdrm. From $145. INVESTMENT Mort,.__ with hu'ge fenced yard for 21 $350 mo. lse, Onr/agt. ... · greer 0 • NICE clean bay front apt, 2 BR, 1•L BA ••-'-"e Home, EASY LIVING _ .... , medium s'IZ!ed (bgs (weU' ~7051 across uie street rom trg /pri be ch 3 ""-( ~ •- -GEM-- Trust Deeds 260 trained & vt"r'Y obedient• J 1 · pool & tl'nnb, etc Member· w • a • ...._west 0 dbl wide, across from tn this newly decorated 2 DIVISION 2 Mature Working Adulis I AVAIL Now-New 3 Br, 1~ shp lndded. c1Se to all ferry landing. Suitable for beach, golf coorse, pool, util be!b'Wm . 2 bath tri-levet VERY RESPONSIBLE! Ba Townhom~. Pool. Yard schools, bicycle to UCJ, $465 ~lboa lslano ·couple, $225 mo., annual incl., adult&, no pets, lmmcd condo. Close 10 H 0 8 g PUT YOUR MONl;Y Will take extrcm€'ly good CR~age. N~ singles. $249 + per mo. Avail Imm e: d . basis. Boat alip avail. occ., see to apprec! MG-42J1 Hospital & available Im· 111 ~ TO WORK FOR YOUI care of homer ~2 kids ok. Ph: (1) 552-7698. LITn.E !•land home. 3 "BR, 6iJ-l983. LGE Bachelor, walk to mediately. Possible lease Earn 10'7/c 01· more on well· Plee.9e call eves. 548-7881 8 or 897-1305 3 ba. It den, lovely patio, PENIN Pt. 1 blk to heh, shops, single:, mature adult opUon. $36.500. To see call _ 9e<.'Ul"M 2nd Trust Deeds on ($11'5.max) SHARP, clean, 3 BR, 1% BA, NEW Frie:nds Await in Univ. furn. yrly. $600 Mo. modlurne, rncol1orB;v, ,,•und:!'kkbe,, yr a~~.· only. Rtf. i&: clnr dep. 646-TI71. . ~ Orange County real estate. LANDLORDS I, perfect oond. Ready for Park w/pools, te n n ts , JjS OPAL. New 2 BR, 2 ba. • ~ v ;m."89==::.· ----~ * l lh LOTS * N rt B h SIGN,\L MORTGAGE CO. move in .. No pets. $2'l5 mo. comm, attain. Chtrming 2 apt. Be:am. cetl's. Garage. adults. $190 mo. MEN, small beach hotel. &wpo eGC (n4) 556--0100 We Speci.allze: 1n Newport MO-ll51, Heri>age Realtors. br, 2 ba, dln rm on l lewl, Untum. $315 Mo. yrl'-COZY 1 Br cloae to ocean, Rooms $ll.50. per wk. Apta ~~.p~.B~~~I~ :~~.· Duplex 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. ~-! CoOurrona del Mar e Realtors ~1 , soarlnggardbeam c:e~u' Winton R.E. 3331 yrly or winter. Jim% $95 per month. ~m. & ._,, .... a. Rimtal Ser-$:130. WVELY 2 Br. Stove, .. .,c, sm. ens, ""'va CondomtnlUml B al boa B lvd . or ~~~~· ~~ •. propertil'll l· Super Terms --vice l! FREE to You! Try ~: fuod tor kids & pet. lmmed. 117~7 Oak Tree ~ Unfuim. 320 213/9e-2928. L!funa Beech BALBOA BAY PROP. How a-bout 90% finandng 'at [~ Nu-View! Ca:hf!i! '·~ Re:l't"' ,,.,...., Tel 499-3815, $325 leue. BALBOA, lBR apt, furn. SPECTACULAR Private s~ On a 3 BR 2 BA down· Holwtorftn: ~ NU-VIEW RENTALS Homafinders 5'7·9641 SPAC. 4 BR, 3 BA, 1ddl!I E1st Blvft yearly, $190. Util paid. Beach! Bachelor apt. avail * 673-7420 * "'81rs and 2 BR 1 BA up. . 673-4030 or 494-3248 1 BR Sl.20 Ad Its -Crpt-)1ark. Poot Pets. $395/mo. 613-1219 or i48-9695. now, newly turnlahed Incl. Newport Crei;t C.ondo-Onty 6 doors to btaeh. An $275 RENT 'TilL YOURS _ range: \\'at~r ~. ·548-"A~: Drtw by 3Q)I Bates, call 3 BR. Condo Eastblutf, SHARP 2 Br. Duplex, king color TV. Also 1 & 2 BR. Plan 5, new, immed. occ. ldeal SUJTlmJ-"t'$:wtnte:r mrtal. Hou11t Fu.rnish-...1 1 300 Giant a story in Newport Bernard. Call btwn 1 & 5, 828-4495 or 897-130). $395/~·..,.c.!!!., fDr_!,r:r"'Octlnt-size: beds. $235/mo. Winter. avail aoon. turn or unturn. Sac..-$6000 dl.!icount. 4 br; 3 Only 84,500 'IN Riviera. 4 Bedrooms. 3 636-4120. UNIVERSITY Park.3 Br. l~ ment. ~-. Av,.... · U4 E. Balboa, 1-819-5991 See at 32161 S. Coast Hwy, ~:..~ .. ~.pool. tennis. CALL 644-7211 Ge neral Baths. Family room. Enter-BRAND New 4 BR Ba, tennis ~courts A pool. 1 15th. BEACH & Pier 1 Br $180. 2 l.aauna:· You'll be pleaaed v ..... ., ........ ,,.,., ::..:::.::c::;. ______ ltBJners patio. Plush Townhouse. "'1'11<:.fMQ. ~1. rr.;~~$395/mo.528-0656or El Toro .,._ .-.. Utllpd Adl 303 '"''==",;dl:::d:.:!·~-~--~1 · clubhouse and pool Agt ~ '""" ~ \ °'• .,....,, • 18• = CH C.M. -$85 Bach. util pd. ~ · · Children ok. 2 c:ar gar. ,c-J . E. F.dgewater. 1-371-2866. BA apt at Ctescenl Bay Newport Heights LAGUNA $85 ocean vu, /lOYI. 645-030... 979-UID Cays -Laguna Beech RENT tree til Oct, 15. Wu LUX furn n-.......... $155. up. $50 •. up wk. O:>lor • i 1 • C.to.f. -1 br $165 ul'il pd, gar. $185 -lfORSES OK. 3 BR, model. 2 Br. 2 bath. pool· • ~ ......... t Bach, TV. 1435 N. Coast. ~25lll. ROOM ·yo , ROAM ~ N.B, l br $150 sml pet ok. fenced com.I. 1 ac. Kids/ 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths $165 -Utll Pd. Small but aide location. Central air. $250. per mo. Priv. beach, ,.:...:;....:;=""'==::..=.:..='! -N.B. 2 br Sl€6 singles ok pets. , T~wnhouse. Heated ay,'im· nice l + den. Yard. Patio. Btt·ins, patio, aarqe:, utU. Slip avail. 673-2162 I :N;;;.w;:;po;rt;;;;;B;•~K~h;;;;;;::, ~~~01:R~~t ~~Ug1; 6 Units • 70/o Island 3 br $235. nice deck Ca:lif's Lriast Remal Ae;cv ming pool. $225/mo. Call So. Laguna. · • room. 2 mi. to S. Dlf.go Fwy, 3 BR. $.150; 2 BR. ~ I• rec~ &: faro. rrn., ut_illly & $ 74 500 _ Bea h N.B. 2 br $250 frpl, _gaJ'.. HomefincMrs 547·9641 64.'l-66lO. $225 • 2 Br, ocean vu apt, $240/mo. TI4/968-11'63. 1-BR. $190. All Yearly 1 BR·. FURN. $215. laundry rms. & oUice or , • C BEA<X>N Bay 2 br $715. B Ibo I HOME wtth View. 3 Br, 1 Ba, nice; <Itek. s:mall pet ok. NEW Spac. 2 BR.' ooddo, 1~ Marshall Realty 615-4600 BA0-CELOR F.VRl'f. $16 de ~ II . LAGUNA 2 br $285, parlo, P'tlr a a 11 and lge family nn. New paint & $275 • 2 BR.Jrplc.home,~ be, heated .....,.,, attd>d -•, 2 BR. l.JNFt1RN:' ~. n. e. vrng rm, Prime beach town location. 6 ALA R 1 I 642 •••• h t -•· ·-~ lull baae ,.... •-C Vt I w/c "'"' trplc. l..ge:. units. Assumable 7,.,. -lit en I I -WATERFRONT s ag crp g, ....., ... mo. p,..,ne ¥ ... u, ment. bltins, upgrded er pt, orona clel Mar Ocean f!W, Ye:lll'ly ease. ·~ ·~ 1 new 3 Br, 841-~~. ~t. ~ -2 alt 2 Heated ~1 A~·"" O~ kitchen w/llil b 11-1 n s. loan. Earns 13% on down · am nn din 2 ,..,,.. .....,...,..,, rvu · .......... • Many, many extras. Asking pa.~nt. O:>mer lot. Green-S.lboa Island fireplaces.' Also 2 ~·apt. LRC. 2 Br tiome:, crpts, stove, U-VIEW RENTALS FURN. &che:tar apt, close LAS BR I SAS APT • $68,fiOO or will lea.se-0ption. belt. Hurry. Ce.1J 546-1600 furn or unfum. Inquire 400 rctrlg, fncd Y!'d. gar. Adults 613-4030 or 4M-3248 Huntington hectt to ocean. $145/mo. ut11 pd. 551S Rtver Ave., NB CALL ·O . '''·l~l• INVESTMENT LITTLE ISLAND -Steps to s. Ba.Ytront No. 5. Sl.85. 6"15-182'1, 6'TU267. OIARMING 2 !SR, white Z30 Se:a vlew.., CdM. CALL 6G-2566 ._, ~ wa.t~. Near n e w, ex· water view, prlv beach, pool, NEW Huntington Landmark 613-6443 • . • "••ll!LCITYC, .DIV1510N ceptionally attracUve for Balboa Penlnsu11 Dana Point & jacuzzi $.550 mo so Exec. Condo&. ComPI rec BEAUT. Hlll'bor &: ocean vu OCEANFRONT, executive family. 4 BR. 3 LAGUNA . ' 4~3r.z3 facll. Incl art• & crafb;, a: i:-1 beleon:y no pet» $155 DELUXE Nt•r NRw po rt P••I Offlci BA. Aviillable now thru June LEASE option 2 BR, 2BA, NEW 3 BR house, nr Dana EMERALD' Bay A guarded e:nlr. Adults only. &: up. utu' pd. 2 50 O I• $475. 6'13-094. lplc, cpl8, "'"'· appllanre,, 1 Marina, trplc, wash/dry, · vail now $280/mo. 968-2549. Sea.view CdM 3 Br, 2 Ba., bltna, trplc. Yrly \VANT 3 or 4 BR Nwpt Hghts houSe, rent or buy, lmmed poss. Desire low interest assumable loan. 642-5449 Newport Shores DUPLEX -Sharp Santa Ana Heights. Principals only. Terms. $37,500. 642-3129 4 BR house avail now for 9 1 block from beach & bay. pool, Refs. $315, 4~ ~ i~ ~S.:0& 3ra 8i}• Lagune Niguel 1 BR, 1 near beach, pool $450. 838-lf!tl; 615-2949. mo. lease. Lots of room. On the Point. 675-4846 n4~1030 c a c · · no lease U70. $35 PER Wk & up. 1 Br, 2 Br $275 per-mo. STUDENTS Capistrano Beach Fountaln Valley LEASE $WMO. incl. goll Mon-Fri l--6 * 644-6000 & Bachelon. C.olor TV, \VELCOME. Call {2131 2 BR, garage, stove, refrig, & tenn1& m e mbers h I p . maid aerv, pool. The 1.1esa, 289-8366. If no answer leave 3 Br 2 Ba, Fam rm, den, LEASE clse to beach, 229 Beverly. Air/cood, crpll, drps, traah Coste Mele " 415 N. Newport Bl., NB. messages (ZllJ 582-5219. view, fenced yro, builtins, 494-6372, $285. masher, 2 car encl garage.-~ 646-9681. EASI' Bayfront. 1rg Exec. 2 beaut. carpet & drapes $29j Immaculate 2 BR, 2 BA, Ocean view home: 3 BR, 2 Water A outside mainl C ..,_ 0 l ·M-O~D~ERN=~2-&-.-2£~-.-.-the-1 & 2, lam rm/den, 2 frplc, 496-1230 or 879-9025 ~am. nn., raised formal d~ Bath, g~-FeDced yard. Lower 2 BR, '2 BA. Nlnth G$G U9' 10 bay, $250 per nfi. Winter 2-Si-y. A-Frame. 3 BR., 2 ba. Du 11 p1 1 e 0 xe1/Unlts 162 dbl gar, glass enclsed patio, C d 1 M '""uedrmln., Tlleburot •"u1t condo 3007J Mari yn Dr. 494-0017. ~~-.?f831El Miauel Goll AIL UTILITIES PAID rental. Prlv patio. 613-~; Newly decor. in & out, incl. 1 --'---------40' dock, avail wlnt~r or oron• • a r ~ per m~ No ~ts. area. 3 BR, 2 ba, AB!f, adul'!ll, u,IU.I.-...:-. -1M6. , Compare before ~u rent 545-2'J41 or 613-4657 $:',&k')~ts & drapes. 12 UNITS 3 YT 8 1YR l9e, 673-4980 or 534--lT69 $150 · l Br. garage apt, larwin realty inc. ~·~es. Lee or Newport a..ct. ~==~b:S~~ *1nc1l -~rln, u~, ~70. )Tl)' BLOCK .ro OCEAN CAYWOOD REAL TY yearly, $300. Carper & stow, refrig, crpts, drps. 968 4405 (24 h") ........... ¥. • direct lighting uu r UIM. .-33rd. * •••1290 * + POOL dnlpes, garage 6'13o854{1, 'm S?l5 • 2 br, frplc:. bfan1 ce-il, Equal H · 0p L1gune Hiiis BRAND new 3 BR,~2% Ba a ~"-te din'• ·-~~o=.~=.,,.--,-~=I ~ Diamond, Corner of Balboa ""'""""· I blk beach•. ou~ing pty. l -~· -·· '" PERFECT central Cost.a ........ ..., deluxe condo. New po r • Hom~like storaae NEW Luxurloul lrg 2BR., ~lesa location. 4 _ 2 i B=•c;lbo;;::•_P:.,:.••:.::i:;;n::•;:UI::•:....._ S300 -2 brs, trpJc, alone on FOR rent Fountain Valley s Leisure World, New 3 BR, 2 Oest, pool, tennis e Private patios ocean w, winter, $285. ml San Cle m ent• JUST compte"tro compact custom home on viC'W lol . By builder. 100 E. San PablQ. oc. 492-5899. Santa Ana TOWNHOUSE, NR SOtmt a:>AST PLAZA, £.droom & 8 _ 1 bfflroom huge lot. Beams & Charm! Bedrooms 2%. Baths Home car closed gar, $650 pri pty. courtyard aettlng • singles e Cloeed /storagt West Ocee.ntront, 646-3114 units. Earns $1555 per LIVE 'A blk from the ocean $315 -Lovely lrg 2 BR, 2 BA, on Cul de Sac:. Fenced yard, n4-830-9181 or family $5()1)/mo. unf. • Marble ~S: ON the beach thru June 31. 3 , _ in a 3' BR house on frplc, dbl gar. 0ce9Jl vu. 1 f I I d b 1 $600/mo Ium. ~721.l. Agt. e vi~-.sz Bdrma 2 Ba pd month. ...,.rge pool. Don't Peninsula Pt. S 3 0 0 / m 0 • blk beach. 1rep ace, arge o u e Lagun.e NlguM 3 BR 2 Ba ~--~ • Poo,-~1 Barbequ Br, . $321/mo. Util . hesi\Rle -less than $12,000 9~3165 v.·eekda)'ll or eves NU.VIEW RENTALS garage, near parlt, $350. • «ll .,..,.;t. .... uuu.t. • es • 51.11'· m-8350 or 548-4757 per 1N V EaSt M EN T 615-0232. 673-4030 or 494-3248 ~Available Nov. 1st. Attra!~E :!O~~ deck. =~e=~~ $350 mo = with pliah land-2 i!;'·i ~ blt·lOa. Near DIVISION LDVELY home on point, J 3 BR, l'h ba, fam rm. dbl 4 Bdrm, easy maintenance. San Juen C1pi1t.r•no Aduttr, No Peta Can 673-<Mn Br, 1 ba, l blk to bay & ONE OF A KIND! gar, crpts, drps, bltlns, Beamed cellina;1. Self-clean LARGE 1 BR, $190 ocean. \Virrrer or yrly lease:. 3 Ikdlooius, washer, dryer, pool, tennis oven. Security gate. Near NEW! 2 Br. Condo, crpt, 365 W. Witaon 642-Um Sen Clemeni"t 4 .BR, dbl gar, poet, $29,500 5 """""' d•n. call 5.11-8'61. • I --I~ THE REAL ESTl!TERS ~ $375. 673--1786. 2 full baths. \Valk to beach crt. Kids ok. no dogs. $275. beach. $400 inch.idea use of drp, lndry, p::ioi. Ooee I bch $30 Wit:Ek &. UP BAYFRONT 5 &tnns, 4 & all shopping. per mo. 842-4421 no Fee, pool, tennis crl.ll, 23682 Sl.d· .l ahop'g. Lee $215. Eves e Studio A l BR Apll. BACHEI.DR overlook! bdi Baths, pier, flo(l.t. Winter 01· $400 to.to. Yearly Leo.8('. agents ne:y Bay, call 493-5169. 830-43Sf. e TV A Ma1d Service Avail. w/tniv stairc:a9e to heh. yrly. 673-2039 · * 644-8567 * 4 Br. 2 Ba. den, patio. frpl, LEASE 4 BR, 2 ba. Lil: vtiew TownhouH Unfum. SSS e Phone Service -Htd. Pool I ~U"ll!" ··m1nc7.'1,,_S165=""-'492-=241=4·~J BA'( View. 5 BR, 3 BA, 2 1""\ bltns. ·x.tras. $340 -atfer. No lot. Incl. gardener. Water • Chifdren & Ptot Seetkln Apt. Unfurn. 365 Mobile Homes For Sale 125 lncom. Pro~rty 166 story house. Frp!c, SPYGLASS HILL --j ft>e. Kids ok. 828-5671 or pd. Rec. facil w/.pool. No Costa Mna 2376 Newport Blvd .. CM ,..-dshwshr_ Yearly, 536-1068. Lusk 4 BR 828-5200. pets! $350/mo. Rers req'd. 548-9755 or~ General 20 NEW UNITS PENINSULA Point $400 mo. prof ~~ lu~:c~~ J.i •1 ntlnqton Beach 644--5155, 645-2956 MONTICEU1J Townhoule, (Ad good for $5 op rent) 1-"---·----- \\UI Consider C·n·,-ct 1ll June 15. 1974. 6 BR. den, oct>a:i, & nice lit~ w. SSi;i Pl Linda Isle :!mt ,~n, 3,.&,d2 Ba, CLOSE to occ .tc Hari>Or NEW TRIPLEX v "' tge yard, view, 615-1410. mo. &W-0'136 aft 3 pm. ease Help! ~ ...... carpe • rapes, shop'g center. aean, attrac. Adult, 2 BR, 2 BA, pallo, Costa to.lesa. us:;-sual depl'I!-W 1 OR 2 Yr. leaM!. Pier A slip J:'· rec fac. $240. Contact 2 Br, walk in cl0tets, spac. gar., laundry, $215. 416 ~.~10001on opp~y .• ~l~~ooo· ioc~; Coron1 del Mar ROOto.1Y one bedroom duple."< E NEED 6 BR, 41.i b,a., air-<:ond. ·Queen 549--2132 rms w/beam cell. No dogs, Hamilton, CM 646-4414 ...,.., . ·ri ce .,.,.,.,, . ..., /(/ unit across from park and 2 BEDROOM HOUSE 1,000 Sq. tt. $3,000 Mo. N.wport 8Hcb $159.50. 53&-Stlt. do\\11. 100'.< rcn1ro t10\\'. COZ)-' 1 BR House w/fl'plc. tl'nnis · conier separate en-with }arge f<'n-.'Cd yard for 2 Bill Grundy, Rltr. 675-4161 REAR Sm. apt. 0 ,, •Ider 81lboa l1l1nd BARGAIN -\\'atertront Park f.-w dclails r:.ill $185/mo. 1st & last + $50. trance -garage $2251n10. • nl'l'd'ium sized dogs (well M BRAND NEW v Lido, dbl \Vlde, 2 Br furn. CJS REAL ESTATE Slngte lady or older cnt1ple &t4-72ll Agt. I trained & wry obedient~) •sa Verde Lease with option to pur-adult only. Furn. UUl pd. BOAT MOORING, plus lBR NEW 2 BR. 1 BA living m1. Adult park w/privat c beach--$16,500 54(}-36'j2 Pool. $5,950. 675-8220. 54.t.JJ68 ot' eve 557~244 only. 646--0!llO. , 3 Bedrooni, 2 Bath, fireplac<, 2 'Mature \Y-orlclng Adu.I.ta 3 Br, 2 Ba. Year L.... chase! Top quality! ro,;2335.Ellnqd · ACptM. 4 in rear. unfurn upper-rear apt, So.' ~~~~~~~~~:I $33,950 DUPLEX CUTE fu~n, l j BR open bee.ms, mast.er suite, ,.VERY RESPONSIBLE! $285/l\10 6424356 • 2 & 3 Bedrooma en, , . Bayfront Ballioa Isle. $225 ~ [ l•J' IOO' DOWN, Tuo ~B' ""'"· $225/nt';:.,1. '6P..,'.;,jj' Pots. "'w kil<hen, new paint, iotJ ~~: ";kho ~om<'ly -N ·I Bee h e 2 Car Gang" I BR apecio"' 6 wiit bl~. mo, Yrly leMo, 644--0439, ~~~.u,t., . dbl. gar., lrg. lot. Income . of panellng. new carpets. cPle"e"~ -:111 e. "-"'" """! ewpor IC $450. I: $475. LUl:Adule,· nN"·o _:, ..... , 2220' J;d . -'~!J.-=5335=~-----._...,, l3r...D per~& rents net>d Laguna Beach _!early, 606 Jasmine Ave. ..., .. r"';::"fe. eves. 1-·~ BAY VIEW ON BLUFF NEWPORT CREST .... ..~ · ""'1 en 2 BDR.AfS., frplc. Private "'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:.miiii: I . II s .,., .. ma."< PHONE ""141 Ave., 646-1512 aft 6· ]-'"-'. All elec. bulll-'"", • r11.i~ni;:. r says sc 'l'YGLASS HTLL · Lease 6 Ne trl-1 I 2 br de 2~ ~ ..,..._. .. ,. Busin•ts P roperty 154 1117\\', Call: Don Bennan. Sl5U : Utll Pd. Sniall' l B_R. '1~r: home, ran~tlc: view. Ir>.lMACULATE 2 Bedroom baw lrg eve t "tt n,r 1 Duplexes Fum. 34$ * *STUNNING 1 & 2 Br, 2 Garage, Broker fm.-6700 Rrkr. R"d Caf1)('1 Realtor:.. sem1·forn. Stovt>, rtfr1g, S6~5/mo. No pets. 64()...1768. hon"l<'. + SCJ'tt'llCd-in family 'tbar n;as i:u su ~ {!' Ba. Garden Apts, Pool. Air. ~a lboa Pen1nau1a 6-l!J.!n!O iOpcn ~l patio. -room, gorgeouB landscaping, we 1 • 1 an U: ~ n, . 8 h rtt rm: $165 le Up. TIO" W. Harbor Blvd , · S1R9. 1 BR. Nr beach. t.ov .... 1y 3 BR, 2 BA, patio, garage, close to shopping.• Adult!i poo • ma nt. f'OJU/mo. -,.. e-r: 18th St. Q,{, LIVE ~ block ._m ,., • j l''OUR~LE.X l~l 2 BR ~unn vil'\\'. Frplc. Pool. pa1io. clean & spacious, $425. mo, only. $285 per mo. including OPEN SAT, SUN, 1-4. 2951 uv u"" $3.15 Sq. ft. Or onij,, Hntg8 Bel 2h. 3 S 4.!1506 szoo . 2 BR. frplc, dbl Yearly lease. 644--0611 gardener. Credit report re· Qu1ed0ada Cblk. W. 1ot V11ta ~d·. AFt~_E;!~ PaJok.d, Ba~ $g:~~· ~.1i!1i!J ~i.· i:~ry~ ruwple3x,BR0e~~ CB~)' f('rtns. -• garage nice yard Child / .. 2 BR 1 Ba fireplace qu\r'f'(\ can V'!Uaee Real de ro & Eastb uU Drl ... ... ....... , ........ • ........ rertect Harbor Blvd. 10<'11· 847-7786 pet .... ~conie. · h\ e ~-trees.' $300/le~ Estate: 8843 Adams at 644-4133 or 640-0800 "'~llf'!I '·~Rent"' A,...... mature adults. ho pets. for family living $l75 to $400 ~~ .. 3 ~~~ ~'.1118u.y74n~ 4 PL~ nr OCC 3 br 2 ha; $:M -Util Pd. Except'! nlc('. ln~ude~ gardener 83.1-41974. Magnolia, 962-2456. 1.tOSI' beaut new 3 .. Homtflndera 547·9641 ~Sea.sons, 2359 Ne'NpOrt, &:°!Hxzl2~!65 w kd Y • • llll 3. One block ~p. Vtey Inc $160 mo ; 7 % percent 3 RR, frplc, beaut. ocenn SPACIOUS 3 br, 2 ba, sha11 3 BR. 2 BA. frplc, fncd yard, outstanding bay view, iplex" U~um. 350 Lge Fully Fum 2 Br'• BACl.I. oN. ,~·-. w/pr. I (II 0 I $3 I ~ lnt. $69.500. f1ex. dn. Owrtl' vu. 1. i-~ ,. .~.,.,. no leMe _,1~ 12001 3 Ba, hutre 1undeclc., ... 111w·u ' "'till'/ tra ... ~1· 1. n Y · C~ ~· ~7~ NU· V IEW RENTALS c5n21> 1Ir~ '';~ ptl1111IO, gar . ......., 0 , 1 "·•1" ·T~ · mo. tereom \\'etbar bltn~ 2 •r ona •·1 .. _r 6'1Jls, w/w,, beam cell. pool. 1. blk to heh. New crpti., t "'nf!T ivu 108fl('('. 11.n 1 · ,~ ,030 .. I"·' ..,.,A., r1s. vu--• JI O T II. n s P ·• ti' .... -.,,,,..:,.... .;u,,..1 --Adl $180 '" -20 tile & pnJ 1165 Y 1 .. be ,,.. 1 llL Call no\\·. ;,.10-T1600 A 1 SSU!\fE 74"~ 11o1r"nr~t. 2 1 Br ,,,_1 ""' ''1't-.Wf" BR, 1 BA. remodeled, 213/621)...3310 S-4 wkdy1. ~boa."646?2Ti'-~ u. no pets · • ou-.N • • r..,,. 1 NYESTMEN ll'f\111(> + un ~. oom or UNUSUAL 3 Brdrni hon1e on redecorated. C.Upe Cod . 2 BR T~use, SlSS. Also 3 WESTCIJFF·-3 B. R '" ba ....-FANTASTIC 3 BR MOTEL Apts., lo monthly 613-5218 an. 5 n1ore. S7.200 Income $6.i.000. <'u l-de-Mr, xlnt vic\v, I~ sn5. 509 C:Oldcnrod 673_1658 e R fi 0 me, SJ 8 5 . • , ,. , . NEAR BEACH ratet, $UO mo. 8t up. 2376 2 BR. 1 Ba, beam ceUln;:, DIVISION 01~1wr 548-4561. lot $3Th/mo. <197-2626 or Cost• Mose kids/pets/sng_lg ok. Agt. den, 2 trpl, MW paint, crpt, view. 2~ Bftth. Hu.ire. dciluxe Newport Blvd. 543.97551 Roman tub, 2 hlC!ll, adullA &2 BR. HOU$t'S C.i\t. Inc. <\91~1235 Al ~ unh1rn. Fee. 919-M30. ~!~f:.' ~~·2~0T.~pt~~ owner's unit in new cuttom Slllr$145 Nicely fum 1 & 2 only $325 mo. 6'.t..-0997 ~"'·==" $950/MO. Good tern111. Lido Isle JBR 2BA •t V ~ II I BDltM ,... .. _ duplex, beam cc 11 l n J. BR TrnJlers. Mature adJts. Corona del Mar YEAG ER REALTY 54.">-862:i 'u csa f!•uC. Ava l"li"'1Y dcrotated. 49i-o900T pnl\ofl~t le, nr shopping, no &IHS30 32 L I ON 0 Oct I.st. $.'VXltmo. Roy A-1 Ca1"°""1 ~~,· ... -· DOVER SHORES ,. . 1 \V. Wilson, Of. 3 B 2" Ba d I bull! industrial Property 168 VE L ID McCardle Realtor. S.$.TiZl .:xu"' O'nrvvv'f pe. · mo D1n1 Potnt r., .,, • upexloil -2 BR, 2 BA. brick frpl~ .. dbl LRG 2 BR, $140. Aliio 3 BR. LEASE w/ option. nr bch, .. ~~: ~i,CO'.>~:~s., '7U900 ~.;;;."'-';;:.:;C....----~~~· J:pe&t\,%134 of 7tF BT.IGX M.3001 *F , gar.. wlhr/dl")oT:........\\1nt~ HB $185 CIO!K! lO wat~r. All· pashatio, a, br, ram, dinraodecord 9,·u.r-~. RIO', -·1-3 BR. BA. Walk to all thop&. LrVE in th" alt new Pana ' . • Comm.rel.' FT rtntal. $350. 673--"41, 213. , ... ....,..___., • ..,. ---....... ...., "'-"' 516 Irla. $325/mo. Lieue. PoLnt fll?bor at the lBR,2BAho\M,So.,,,i 793--0427. . "':r-tl'f.>U· g. mma.c:. l1VO"" • * NEWPORT SllORES _ beauutul MARINA INN Hwy, tple. paUo, $3ll5: P roperty ISi NEWPORT BEACH WINTER lt'ase, bnut. So. 3 BR. 11~ De. Adulta, W 2 & 3 BR. o.dlt. oondo, Community tciMll A pool. 3 c~M... Mort.I . 34902 Del Obl1f10 St. _ Aat:_nt 675-6900 Da!lr l~ M ajor Commercial $45,000 b.ayfi'ont J1omc: 4 BR. 5 Ba. Jl('t~. S2!50 Month. ls, tennill, etc. S2"15 A BR, 2 BA. trplc, blt·lnl dbl 1 f$-23S3J. K 11 ch en. Ef• LRG 2 Br, 1 "'Ba, w/2 yahhi, P ROPERTIES RIVIERA REAL TY a-nndy he:i r.h. rtrr &: noa1 FortJn Co .. Rltr.1. OO-.'IOOO $295. Agent 543-1290 garage. Patio. Cl'pta. dr=Pi. 2 BR. 2 BA d OW ticlenclel A Arnrtmentt. 5295 rno. av&il Oct 1lXh. ~ AJI io 14!1 Rl'Of:l~'ft.''· CM. Sl.650 Month 3 BR, $150, Yard, C111t1. drps, 4 Bdrm, 2 bll, frptc, bl~, $350. 675-4722. car off al~ ~~#P8c-e: lleated pool. d ~ dJ&1 c&n-:;:,,7245;;.:;:;,;°'::...:67.J..9f03==---I \\'e hll'1'41 sm 642-7007 64.S-5609 Ev•s. Blll Grundy Rltr. 6T;M1Rl 1•hUdrrn ok. 2111 r.tonrovi11,. kld11 ok. S.'1.0. No fee. * SHARP 4 BR-. 3 BA. no ptll, adulta, $ 26 5, pJotle::, cl.QV!Jio 1! ""-"""n •3 BR 2 b.< 2 l!U'fl'" ~ppltia ¢M1tt"!I'' & L~ I S I 170 N1wporl "..!.'ch 6t6-l145. 646-6255. ~tor 828--5200. Townhou,. "·ck ..... ~1. 64>-lllH. hlltl):1 1 au n~ r )' lteUltle:t, .. _ '-•: .... ~ itory, ~ f~irtllwttng ~tmercilll -vii or e e ") • g,eo, .., B 1 11 tlc ~· , Bd ~-•-211 •-h _,_ 11 ~1 ""' r~ "'-'~c..-------rl'leennf room, clolt to San • """ "'"• ..,-. mo. ••vau. 1 1 M1.i J)l:!t1l" f I ~ • " r, am rm. ava I lun .. ., nn ....... ""'• °"t , • •vl40, ff. c CM ovt:n, dbl Huntington IMch Cit Nov. l&t. 615--7498. 'tl~:rrm~1J:AA tc:An~ :'"O: PAI..i.\I OtMrt Green11 mobil,.. \vtNTER Rl.!tltal, Baytrnnt. $2.1;) Mo. 1st JI last. Call frple blt..\n1', erpis, drpt, ft.t, 833-8974 or 833-1653. l··c---"...,.'-..;..""---mtnt• • Lquna Btach. ~··'°'w='h"1t•=c,El;.,,,.c._;..::.-.;;"'"'" .... ~-._-. NNN I~. A.it tnr Mr. lot. !'.OX70 tXl\llU' $2000. 4HR. IDA. <tock, nvn.11 Oct. lM6--7G9. $'210}1\-ff). 213r.m.snR. PRF.STJGE rommunlty 2 bt, Sll5 • Slltift• Ok. l BR Tn-=ll!Lhl~~ ~into~; running your house? TUrn Jlall'11.eln or fl1r. Doyle. 58()..8'7'T1, 1"' .. rune l!f, call 7l4'63S-1~ 2 BR Apt in F.ftt.1,lde Oma HOUSE tnr rent-.1 hr1 1'4 }la, ·2 ha, la. tan' nn, all elect plex. ~. Pet ok. re11t"urants. $00 -.,ee:lc t Up. them into "Caah" •• 4 tell Pacific 'fropeny Trmd• The Wt~1 1lr1tw ln the \Vest . ~ lln,.$. 5 dllY5 for $5. Call 1\-f~MI 'Tr\.ple:x, 1 JCYtl. Sl50. Ira yd. " dilld, pet ok. $2';0 klt, w/d, pdv. boh. $390 lw, Calif'• 1-"""' Rent11l 4ltr-v Bring 'thls ad .t: recetve $5 thn\ duv A oal1y Pilb1 1 ~·~•-'n"'i'"'' "'illlS-4611"-'~-•--, , •• a Dftlly PUi'.!t Cla!llrlf1txl ltldny .. l 64~ ~ mo. 6f2..6CXD. .+ mo. ~. ~ OJ' fi48..S521 Honwfl.,.er-s 547·"41 otf or1 tJnt week.'¥''"· cludtled Mll ' I i ! MEN & WOMEN OF All AGES Medical & Dental Assistants INHALATION THERAPY . An Excltlnt & Rewar~l"9 Profe11ion•I C1r"r Awaits You CLASSES STARTING SOON, DAY OR EVENING •.• BUDGET TERMS .•• PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE BLAIR COLLEGE 1801 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CALL 645-2922 FOR A FREE BROCHURE Anna's DAY SCHOOL Kindergarten thru 3rd Grade REGISTER NOW e Full Learning Program e Phonics Str111ed e Arts & Crafts • Mu1ic • Roedlnv Specialty e Sporto ActlvlllH 2110 1Thurln Ave., Costa Mesa Ph: 646-1444 Newport Air nsociates Fli&ht School & Flying Club .. •LEARN TO FLY $550 , ................. , * FAA APPROVED * Coa1rs1 Includes : 35 Hours flight time i 1 Cissna I SO's with 20 hours dual instructiol'I. aub m1mb1rship. l Month's free dues. Individual instruction, tei ilo red to YOUR ability 15 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST R~TES IN ORANGE COUNTY Lurn to fly now - -ind hive fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Special Rates for Comm1rclal or I nstrum..,t Stuct.nts. For Complete D1t1ll1 Call NOW 979-1155 •• c • • I Schools-and ~ variety of fine schools could introcJuce Instructions Are you BORED with a dead-end job? Call ·PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL today to.see if you qualify for an .exciting caree,•ln the AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY. Day or eve· • ning classes can prepare you for a position as : • Reservations Agent • .Ramp Agent • Air-Freight Agent • Ticket Agent •· Travel Agent Tuition financing also available. you to a new tomorrow. lnte_re$ted In A Real Estate Career? IN FOUR WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brollers • Em~oyment Assrstance For-' Graduates Vfrth Leading Brokers. ,, • Day Ami E~ening Classes _ • Broker Referral Program • $110-Full Course / For lnform•tlon-Brochure , Fr• Guest L9Ctur• Newport, 325 No. (Oldl Newport Blvd. 548·1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON . , Pacific Travel School 610 East 17th Street, Santa Ana 543-6655 Approved for Veterans' Training ' Real Estate Education Since 1964 ACADEMY REAL .ESTATE ONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A ONE WEEK FREE SULLIVAN PRErSCHOOL (KinderQarten and elementary proirams also) In CIH you 1l'9n't 1lr11dy f1ml~lar with the Sullivan Pr1·School ind El• mentary School Programs, we would llkt to Introduce you lo our Khool wllh 1 Bpecl1I FREE Gel~AcqU1lnt9d W•k. Wllhout obllgatlon, wt Invite you to COMPARE:· •ALL STAFF FULLY OUALIFIED e SPECIALIZED CREATIVE PROGRAMS TEACHERS IN ART, MUSIC AND MOVEMENT •NATIONALLY-RESPECTED SULLIVAN EXPLORATION ACADEMIC READINESS PROGRAMS o FINEST PRE-SCHOOL FACILITIES ... HELPING OVER 5,000,000 AND EQUIPMENT, WITH NUTRITIOUS CHILDREN HOT MEAfS o INDIVIDUALLY·PLANNED LEARNING •GUARANTEED NO INCREASE IN EXPERIENCE FOR EACH CHILD TUITION FOR YOUR CHILD ENROLLMENT IS LIMITED. CALL TODAY! ........ ~ Director or P1rent Relations: Donna Finnegan or S.1IliWii 96a:i4sh1 M83o-766o PRE-SCHOOL CENTERS Fountain valley Mission Viejo •• ,..,.,._.. "'~"" o• ., • ..,..,, .,.,, ... .,_,_, ' ' YOUR BEST DEFENSE IS Registration ' K-A~'fB Speci•I Rate To Families No Contr1ct JAPAN KARATE SCHOOLS 325 No. Newport Blvd. Suite 5 Newport Buch t!Ovro 6PM-10PM Monday thru Friday (Across From Hoag Hospital) For Further Information Call: D1y1 551-3683 Eves 642..a387 * Accounting * Secretarial Isn't Over October Classes Are Open * Data Processing Mornings * Days * Evenings / MTI Business College 2100 NORTH MAIN STRffi SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA 92706 Phone 541-2673 --' } For further information regarding placement 1 I advertising in the DaUy Pilot Schools and Instruction Directory CALL 642-~67B. E T EBRON IX TUTORING CLINIC READING-MATH SPELLING DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge) Your Child Will Receive Gu1r1nteed 1-to-1 Instruction At EBRONIX-Whoro RHdl"ll Is Enjoyable 2750 Harbor Su"ito 7B C.M. 979-1626 Newport Beach Gymnastics Center 3115 South Main St., Santi An• 557~505 Gymnastics f6r Beginners Ages 3 through Adult Up Tbrou gb Competition Cl1sses Now Open For Registration Year Around Gymn1stics 11Help Your Children to Develop Their Body, Mind & Spirit." . Tom Wiltiams-Director TOM NEWMANN VOICE & PIANO' INSTRUCTION BEGINNER OR ADVANCED All StylH f' b~ More Than 20 Yrs. Experience With Or Without College Credit AUDITIONS FREE BY APPOINTMENT CALL 833-2320 DAILY PJU>T ,. L-... --1~ Apt Unfum. 3'5 Newport hl~h ___ 1 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Bachelor l or 2 a.droonu and TO"A'llhOUae• 1-'r. Sl..!M.50 Open !Mi Daily Spa Pools Ten111~ Across rro1n 1''aahlon lsland ut Jamboree on San J<H1.quu1 Hilla Road. 17141 644-19GO SPACIOUS adult 2 Br. 2 Ba . quiet. priv, nr fU:iion l1land, gas ulil inc. S280. 644-5555 call between 10 & 6:30. NEAR shoP£ & bl>ach. 2 lge :i Br, 2 Ba apts. Yrly rental. $300. Up!ilrl, $350. dMlrs. 6--12-4461 LARGE 3BR, 2BA. firepl , bltlm;, dhswshr. Nr J-loag Hosp. S250/mo. A d u 11 1 . 6<2--4387 OCEANFRONT +. Bay Vu. Nl.'W 2 Br , 2 Ba, frplc. Will tum. w HOO. 2l31mn16, 71 1/673.41.'U. COZ \' 2 br + den. 2 ba. Por..·h over .w:ar. 3 bllm ocean. $285/mo. 67 a -009& or 892-5&12. 2 BR, 2 Bath S:US; Yeal'lyl 3 BR, 2 Balh $27[}: avail nov.· New-1-yl.V; mod decor; ~fr. 3"'Kl6 Balboa Blvd. 644-4340 SIL\RP 2 BR, S'4"e(fl1*t trplc , I shag, open betlm cril, bltlns, wlk to bnch, lea.9e M mo t mo., MB-8379 DlJCE Townhlle, 3 BR, 2 1~ be, fpl, patio, pool, doee lo everything, $310. MS-3993 aft 1 ''CAN°'N=E=R~Y~--- VILLAGE" 1 Br. unf. $165. 613-492:1 NEW CUit. bayfront w/prl\ bch & pier, 3 br/2 ba, trpl.1 BBQ. $475 yrly. 979-0631,\ 644-4510. JCEAN view, yrly, 2 Br, I Ba duplex. S2'15. 64f.6780 daf• or MZ-3639 eves. .:>E:t..UXE 2 br. 2 ba, rreat area, pets ok. $250. Tomi 8J8..3443 or 548-3869 OCEANFRONT • Spacious, unusually nice 1 Br apt.· Yearly., $2Th/mo. 645-0668. DUPLEX 3 Br, 2 Ba. All bit-ins. Blk to beach. Xtni Irg. Year round. 1-827-238'2 1 TWO Huge rooms, fireplace.I a:arage, bachelor. One adult on1y. $175. 64z.6889. )an Clement• ·1 · NEW 2 BR, 1% BA, ocean view, Top area, super de--• luxe, adult&, $%JO. 492-2'l64. \ San Ju•n C1plstrane I $195 ·2 Br, 1 BA, crpta, drps,i atove. rdrlg, in Omdo.I devel. 26444 Paseo Carmel.!" 213/681--4658. 2 BDRM., 1 Ba condo. BHns,l crpts, dbl garage, pool. $200. i mo. 494-2918 aft 3. ! , I Wootcllff I WESTCLIFF area • lrg. l Br. & cJen, 2 ba. Cosed gar .. priv. paUo.. frplc, new cond. Single sty. $235. 1665 hvine Ave., 642-0239. Apt• Fum. or Unfum. 370 Corona de~ Mar 1 BEDRM. furn or unfurn. Apt. F ireplc. Free Jaund. 2 blk:s to beach. 5J6..-071(. Cost• MeN THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. MINlfI'ES 1'0 NPT. BCH.: Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $150~ Ad ults,, No Pet&. ! 1561 Mesa Dr. : (5 blla lrom Newport Blvd.): ~9860 1 PREVIEW OPENING I Award winni"' 1, 2 & 3 br! apls w/family rm•. Nol lease. Sorry, no pct•. From\ just $175. OUR TO\VN Family Apt.s, 1250 Adam~ Ave. (Adams at Fairview1, Costa Mesa. Phone 556-0166. * CASA VICTORIA • t, 2 Ir; 3 BR. Furn I: Unf. Carpets, drapes, D/W, 1V ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria St. At Harbor , CM. 642-8970 Ask fl.boot our special P.tove· In Allowance. 1 & 2 Br. unf. Also Furn Bachelor apt. Pool. Crpts, drps, stove. t-efrig. Adults, no pets. 897 Center, Apt 2. C.M. Huntington Beach 2 BR,' 1~ BA. Tov.'flhousc. F?l'lc, pool. SZ"IO per n10 • Eves or \\'knds 21.3/~5901 or TI4/536-6626 coll. .__"';;;"-"~;;;·"· .. ~I~~~ -"'-!~ 1-"' ... l~l~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'-~i liiiiiiiii Apt U fu 365Ap ~~t!:ju;1v;~::;11 ~~~~~-~~ -.. ... -365 Apt. Unfurn. 1;.o;.:.;•_;;;•=;.;rn;;..___ ~ . n m . 365 A. . Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 HuntlngfCln BHCh A_p:...t_. _u_n_fv_r_n. ____ Hontington Beach 365 Newport Be1ch Coron• del M1Ar C::!o~s~ta~M!!.,.!!_ ____ j;'.:::;:--;:;:::-----Costa Mesa WALK TO BEACH Huntington Beach I 'ii;iiii~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SPACIOUS 3 BR., ' ba., n-. Costa Meu Costa Mew 11 • --------1 & 2 BR. Carpets, dra~. 3 BR 2 BA $l9' '"-N'pl. Hts. Like new .. Cpts, NEW ADULT LIVING!! GRANO OPENING DELUXE bltn!I. 308 16th SI. 5J6.8548 Cpt d ' 1 loseci v drps, bltn R&O, dlsbwahr. BACHELOR Unit• It 1 BR'• N~\Y BREED APTS. APARTMENTS or 847·3957. 0i'nd':'.'r~l·R~I~ F~~: fJ~ ~~~.:•, Nice· &o.qul~. MatUre adlts, w/Lof't.s. Frp.lc'•, ~am BAOIELOR'S It 1 BR. Alt Cond • Frplc·!I . 3 Swim· ">.<-ach & Slater) 84.'ki546. "" no pets. $210. &f&.2"14. cell., patio A pool bl tlns, & $160 to Sl85 mlnr Pools . Health Spa . DOG RUN t'i-7'186. l"l!frig avail. $160 to $225. Utll Paid ~1 .. ·, ..__ Tenn!• Cooru • Gym and 2 BR $159 Pool Goe ------- TOWNHOUSE e ·VALUE·,...,'1"t 2 Br. r-.D, UIU pd. No ~... ' •. ,., .... ' ....,..,., Bllllru-d Room. • . . """"''"" ...... .,... .--ceil ""tio ............. Bltins & ok. S42-.1S46, 847-7786. ~ WALK 1'0 BEACH • stove, retrlg, drp1, dshwahr, 393 Hamilton C.M. ·• ..... • '"""· 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private pool, Mat~ &dull& No ""' ~·11 refrli:::. avail. No peb. 1 BR. From $150 2 Brlrm . '215/mo. 2 BR, crpls. drps. clo.'I(' * l BR, upstairS, $17D. }Tly including util. J<M 33rd. 673-65>1 VILLA YORBA 714/842-9622 1, 2 & 3 Br. Untum . Rtnttll II .&I S123, ll44, SJ.54 a ~lo. Stove, ,- Il'lrlg. util incl. ~fOOente I ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 lncomt' .•Applications \Ve.l-11 conu•. Room1 400 patios, conUncntal break· 11 2295 n... ,.. ......,..... 393 H1mllton, CM 1 BR Ir; Den From SUKI from be:i Crpts, drp~ garage. Pri\•. Pn I i o . ----..---..., fa~. Spaciou• grounds, neat pets. 40· .-.cl.Uc A~.. 645-4411 2 BR from S21D gar•oc. 8~2-5023. S175/mo. SE-THE-FIRST!-ROOMS S:xl \1·k Ufl w/klt U> ~-pne->.line ~a·h. ""'"'.. C.M. 543-6878. 2 BR, 1 Ba A: 3 Br 11,i Ba, 'RR. Twnh--. ~m I""" i-211 Dt1Toll 968 8179 2 k •• Ch'ld & I --~- ...... ...... .u.:: '" ",,.,. bl'---d-·~u pool _, "v ~ * * 2 BR 1 •• -•" drn• · · · """" lu.-..:. unf an.1s. 2 be, \\" up &"':!I. I rt'n pc nlshcd or unfurnished, b'om GARDEN apt, clean 2-BR., 1 cl~b;~"'~c.;j;rt;" .. 2 2 l 2 UPPER 2 BR 2 BA arried MEDITERRANEAN R .t O. Si4.l.'A~k'"r;· ~· BRAND nu 6 un!t blril!:, ? Br fry}"· pool prl. ~Ho. PS ~c1lon. 2.TI6 Nev.'Jl(lrt Blvd., $250, Corona del Mllf', BA, adultl, no pets. $115. Coll~· Avt!., 6 4 6·~ 6 0 3 2 . adults, no ptts. s15o~ Aft 3; VILLAGE 002-4471 ' sludlo, 0C('AI1 \'l('Y.', pa110 ·" blt·n~. I m' fron\ Pier. HB, O t. !"..JS--mi , ~3967. 644-2611. ~~-. 3>lh St., CM. Under new mgment. &12-1131. · . lrg balcoox. ptu.~h oranl!:f' S.\\". 1..umcr England /Lin· LAG UN A: Room, tn1teful & 1 I 2 BR $135 ~ $1;6 Stove -.~,~B~R~,-___ --1~1~~-.-2400 Harbor Blvd., C.P.t. ~EA.1~ llrd, ~lc$·,2:11t~!· .'.TJI'. No 1)t•ts. S2'10 1mo. 116 ~n. $24011250. 213-430-2062. r"fllnfortable, PJiv cntr ,\ 2 BR. Apt So. of H~'Y· W!!ilk * E/skle 3 Br, l\i Ba. , . ' LVW~· -...... 1714) 567-8020 ,,,~11,;4'"''• ..... """' ""'' 7th St. 962·31S9, 536-3534. 1 BR unfum apt StlS. 1 hl k dtoek. Cltl.)'On view. SllO lnl'I. $225 Blln .. retna. Cr Pt /d r P ~;tl crpt/drps, ~ Cpta, drps, bltn.. No petl, OPE.fl{ EVERYDAY . • • ~'E\V NE\V NE\V ** trom park. 979-1070 or aft 6 49.H!Jll. ~-=cl'I. (~ A~dayt): Pool. No pets. S 165 : ts, no pets. . :.35 Maple 540-4434 ~lOl.ll'!: Fri· Tues 10:6 2 & 3 BR. 3 blocks from Deluxe 1 & 2 e n. apts. 646-~. ' ~~~~O~.~S!~,~.~-,-, -, h-,-,-,1 673-39$3 or 673-38S3 eves & 8f6.-0f74. 2 BR API'. NEW. Crpts, 2 BR, J~ BA Deluxe Studio. \Ved. 1: Thurs. t0-7 Beach, -tl~St. F'rplcs, dn"hr. l'IMl to * 3 BR, 2 BA sruoto room. kit privg9. 5 mi uo. ·~ends. ""lUPLEX-DeluXe, 2 BR r'-.,r.:, bl~~·~;· $179 ulil pd. Shag. Pool. 1978 =,...,..=~--==--=:-:! shopping &: beaehe!I. Adults Sl.95/MO Maturt' faniuy' ~ ml OCC. Ou1uru. m-m· '• o-"':PLEASAii'ii="NT".""'oom=to"°rt:::,:::b:::-e, bltns, cpts. drpe, ~frlr. -Maple. 645--5&1l. l BR, crpt.ll. drp.i, bltns, S16..'l. t BR. shag cpt•. fplc, '4 only, no pets. $175 to mo. AvaU no'w. 842~ · &\L r.-rrii~la,. pvt mt + I 2 or 3 tr crJ)t drps frt>lc, ga.t., petk>, adlb, N ~t75-3 Br le n4S-2 br. crpt~. ~ Vtrdc \Ip It a Ir s . benm cell, $140. 1 ~htld ok., bk>c'ks to btach, lfl'JJ ~. 8282 Atlanla Ave. 53&-2647. . tanl rni 1v $.so. mo N.:i ~~. pr. 422 Laikapur'. pet.I. $170. 722 Joann St. 1rpa, adulta, no pe ts. Tm Mature Adulta. No*-t.L 2Br no pets. &46-S1'116, &«M.1760. 415 l51h St. Hunt Bch . OELUXE-extn Irr 2 Br. 2 Huntington Harbour ~n,' 6'1J.4.n9 "eves.' ' gn....3681, * 2 BR. 1 S. Up!tairs, Me-t 1!\allmar, SCl-USS. w/ear. $160 mo. 1155. 2 Br, 2 &th, bi t-ins, $185, 2 BR, l BA, blt·lns, ("f'(Ms, Ba. poolskle apl. S175. Nr. TO\\.'NllOUSE 2BR, 00! 11 ~NICE room privtilt! SEPARATED prtv r m /erde. $155. Adult1 · no .RG 3 BR. 2 8A. F'reh NE\V 2 & 3 BR. 2637 Mesa Verde &refl. 546-1458 drps, l blk to tw;>ach. $175. beach. N~· shag crp1. bllnl, ba ' ' ' hOtnt SlOO mo o).u. l\tt"A. w/balh Prime Jocatk>n. $100 peta. 8J.1.-.89T4. 'l'.1.lit. 1$n~tlo. Nr. OCC. ELDEN. OPEN SUNDAY Evenlnp &: ~·kndi. mo, &4~3003. 536-1 336. rlC'. 112() F1oridll. 5J6.S..1!82. , 'm5 AdtLltJ, 894--il'TU ' ~ month AU. el~. 2 BR. t Ba, 1 child ·-$JBS=. ~~17~~~--~ _~t~='&O-. '-'AGT~._,646-3215==·~~ VERY Nice 2Br apt, priv 2 Blks heh 2 nr. attroc\i\'f' SEA BR.F:T:ZE Ml sa Verde Room & -Board.----~40-~1 ok1 . ~ pet•. $175/mo. 120 l BR. No. E'A!llldt., Utll pd. 2 BR, pool, patk>, bled )It'd, Pftllo. tmlc, no dogit St TO bull! ln1. new enrpel $tr,(). !..-,:: 2 & J Br. 3 hlk' lo •• BRAND new VPPfT 2 BR apt, Aloen NO 7, C.K. ~ Secluded atrtel w/l1'erl, sheJt. No ()'ts. $175/mo. per mo. ~. !";11i--96l~ cnll Aft 6 hl'il<'h . rrom f165 to $26S. DLX 2 &: 3 BR, 2 Ba , mcl ROOM or Board ._room I OJM'!n beem ce.lllnp, $350 ptr l'hll lutnt dniw In the .West. lmed. oooup. Sl.f5. 548-1749. EASTSlOE. 5.1t...a755. The "YelitJw Pa.Rn" ot Nttd a "Pad"! Place 11n ad! C&ll 536-lru. pr. $110 up. Rental Ole. nice home , Oebtltm mo. Realtor, &M-72'l'O. .a Dt,By Ptlot OusU\ed CIAt."lilled Ads . '. 642·56'nl Sell kfll!' l1em1 . , . ~ clU1lncd. _ .51l-5$78. Call ~2-567!. NK'd a "P1vf .. ? f1A"" an ad! ~Mace Ave. ~16-tmt · Meta Verde are«, ~ I .. ) r I I DAILY PILOT I ·-][H]-I~ ._[ w.;; ... ;;-~l~!Sl 1-... -1~· I ,.,.,... l[Il]I'----""':"-"'111 __,l[ffi rn .. ,:u. l[Il]11:-I -"·-··-~l[Il]iiiitJ ~-lost HelpW...W,, •.'!1•'.7.IO ~!'"Want.d,Ml,1'71e Rontols to Sha YO 430 Rontolo Wonted ':!!!_ ____ ~SS!,;S! J :G::•:;•de:=n:;:l'!llL::--7."'.:-l~H~o:!lp:..:W:!!•n:::t::od~,::M::_f.:_::F..:7:;1;:0-:.:H:;•l:i:e..:W:.:•::n!!:tod::::.• :;:M:.;&::..;.F_:7.:;10:,:H::•::i1Pt:_W!:!•:::•ttcl:.::;';:.;M::.:f.:.;F:..7:.;1:::0:_f.i..~~~~~~-J 'I' 1 "'w"'AN=TE:..D.;.;.fo..;:ma=1.;.;:_10_W...__;.:;.: Please Help!! p £Rs I AN K I t ten . ANY and .JI amfn~. . Cl.ERK TYPIST J)~R~°iY ~t~YL ~ I~ ~[ _ ..... _ ""3 BR, 2BA apt, block" WE NEED SU""/"""""y rolor, malo. ~11'lll;.,CoJ;~~ ... ..,,1,.. Attent1'on, lmmed1'ate Open1'ngs . _..,., camen ..... ~ Bea<'h, yearly only, $108. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE 3 1110$, Vic : Bluff~. tur-Sal Departm t ~ quirts the Ult of a lWf• 6'1'3-5!llO • 61!>-4& v.ilh lllfll<' lenced y;irtl lor :l quol6e blue \'l'h°t't collar CG~o~n~•~r~•~l ~S~o~l'Y~~lc;..•;..•:,___ ~ fl.'\ w.p.: ~ Wagon or Van. O>ntact Mr. FEMALF.roomm•"10 •hare m«fo•n oi"" "°"'' <w•11 ;:;i:_~"'-'_""_ .... _ .. _'""_"' __ "'' ATTN. AP A R TME N T Mechanics Openings for ,,,..,.;i... "St~~"''"'""' 3 br Jur. apt. on Balboa 11. tmlned & ''t'l'Y otlf'(benl! l _ _ OWNERS Complete clean. •• 1 E pl :!re~.~~ smoker 2\;t!R1yre~'\~~i' ~:.rota~~ben~n~l,R:: Ing for Apt&. Clean win-and 1'n the Med1'cal IOO~~orte~ion. ~un~::..: ~ SHARE Apt. or House '''iJI t1ll«> extremC'ly iOOd Unusual nUU1'1 wnsh\·atch. dqu.•a, i tovet, strip Ir. wax, Times to N.B. home&. Dally SAVE $S$S <'ltrP ot honie! SublltantW rewsrd, tall lhampoo carpets, painl. All {71~),4M-M01 2;~ $200 per mo + "•m~P""MS:.1~:.··1 1 ••. P 1 '"" ~b~,''8·788! ~rn~~~00~·~~~~~ ~~~;·i:.'."."8";;;;'." Repairmen. San Pedro, ... Personnel. · TEL0N1c l:.'::.t.M~~s,,.: i=. ~irn. IES call~64J..4800. • ANOTIIER girl wanted in \VM'TED; 3 BR hotise, 1nus1 ~ ALL types borne repaJra. YOIH' locol ..,,..,., ••1••v• v"I' L 8 h M.n ond -"'•" DI'• """ to INDUSTR ~··to l>hr II\)' apt $00 mo. be nice & clean and only I ""'""'"" 1,.. Actual time & ruate.rlaL ,, .. d.yov.l!y0<ih0Yeone oftll1 ong eac 011 ... d ....... , ............. 111111.. L a. ch DEUVERY Man, married Ind utU, Respon. ~ S300 or leu. For three _ .• .......-Fut Serv. No job too sm. 1kllt1 /inff t..low, yow to11 1or11 Th• following ••dl<ol 1kiU1 a,. ftfUM a , over'25, part tllne, lUlt own Jo"EMALE room n111.te needM ~f~oyedquie~ttelrn, ~?iii 'miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;::iiiiiii Jo'l:B Home R e p a Ir , OCMMll pay, T°" coft _," !hi1 ••· and 11•11•nlly .ft••d•d •ltht nowf , II Equal Oppor, Empklyer c 1 ar, N~~ll!'f,~ .. ~~ $125. month. 2 Bedrooms, 2 r•~ ,.. I 64Z..1403. Ira "'°"'O'f and k••P your f11ll1i.io yew dcift I ho,,. OftO a lh•M ngs ........... IW'T".Ohiu ui:::t. take anylhlng nice. &f2.!0243 Schools & job, too. 11 you d°"'' ho•• ono 1~1U1 wo'11 trcrin yo11. · pm. -Ba::::il'='.,.::·'5~7.o:,:-81:::_07_~--I "·fo-2 pm weekdaya. • • RAIN Gutters installed, 1 · 1 ~?!1"~~? :,~~illm~n: \;-AN~"rn: Singte « 2 c&r fn1tructlons 575 ~~s~~. s:s.m~· 011"~~;c;~1~1·, .. ~·~,::p;;"'"11;orange County Medical Corpsmen CLERICAL DN~A~~~: 11til pd. Call 846-2663. f=.!d 1: ~~=in 11~: ~~SI;Y ~~~· ~e~r.=~ HANDYMAN. paint le home Mechanics Medical Specialists PERSONNEL ~1:i1~ ~ort%~'. G1r-oes for kent 435 1-" ..... "'-'1"'689"'-. ------•l<'acher, in o .c. area. repairs. Sm jobs a Power Generatio~ EquipmenJ Areas. Operatlnr Room SpecialisU CLERK pref. Age 25-40. 64.2-262&. \\'ANTED unfum small bach· ~1843. specl&lty. ~. 54ti-972l. Mechanics DENTAL Aaatstant. STURAGE 5P8Ct! la)(35, near elor apf. R(>liablf", JK>mlan.. Hauling lotol "'"'Y ••••"'• 11ftlt1 n••d Trained LVNs Chalnide, at least 6 mo. ex-N~~~~4 ent. Rt"a90l'lable! P hone Wheel /Track Vehicle tho 111;1i. 0 1 ,,,0., onlf wo"''" per, H.B. area. 846-3540. l;Off;;;;;'";";;;R:;••;:•;•;:l =;;;;;;;;440;; ~962-~5"l~I~"'~'-~'~-~~~~ [ 5-vicw Md R.-, )~ ~~ERcre&te~~~::~ Me<:hanics :'~ :,.,:~~~ ·~~ .. ;~r~;i~ PROPOSiTION: DENTAL Orthodo.~~ .. ~· ,.wing, bre .. J..i~. 846-7UO EEG Specialists All JOBS ARE NOT CM area. Frnt .,. 1,:1u_..,, ......,.'6 mo"tll twG w"k' a 1um.,,or. esired 546-4183 I lr.l 32 FT. FURNITURE Van !or . . Army R111rv1.11 •o•" l•o"' $1.S6 EKG·BMR Specialists CREATED EQUAL exper. d ' ' PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, Btautl- 1\Jl .... bulldloii. "'°""" ftoor, 3,00J square feet, will divide into amaller offices. 50c per aquare foot, includes carpet&, drapes. all utilltiel, jani- tor ~ce. Call Marll,yn Stovill ln4> 832-5440. . hrlonah . ~ Babysitting local turn hauls & geri'l Air Defense Radar Repa1rme11 10 '4.$0 oft hou• 10 11ort. Pl111 II your present position com· Der Wlenerschnltz.1 hauling. ~!862. 557-2736· Data Processing Repairmen pro ... o•ion °"d. '"1;,,.,."' b•n•-X·Ray Sp~f~lstS· es out on the short end of LUNCll Time Counter Announcements 500 BABYSITTING LOCAL moving & hauling by 1111· 11 '>'011 do" 1 Ila•• 0"" 01 '"• the scale,. maybe tt'1 time Help, S Da,yg A Week. My Home, C. Mes• t de t ~truck Re field Radio Repairmen '"'11' llitod, we'll •~oth Y0" on• You tbought of levtllng out 1---~Ca~l~l~-====-~~·I Xlrt care. Good lunches, ~ 24-1846 or 6'ci..o:wi'' ' · IE · R · oftd poy yo.. whilo yow loorn . S ' )'OU?' career DIETARY Aid -to y,.ork in ORDER now fer Ou1stmas birthday. Raggedy AM & Andy dolls. $6.50 each. 545-6241. fenced play yard. Call any-~-up. Hauling, nght Medica qu 1pment epa1rmen Electronic Parts Specialists . Dental pecialists VARI~ DATA a ttractive eonvaie.cent time, 646.451 4. moving. Rea.a. Dependable. Teletypewriter.Repairmen r Radio Operators Physlcal /Occupational MACHINES ~P~'f~e::~ee e~~ Business Service Fast. 64&-6S34. Topographic Instrument . . Therapists has an immedlate opening in Benefits include paid vaca· Personals 530 TRASH HAUUNG Repairmen Auto Repair Parts Spec1ahsts its btl!y Pe1"59nnel ottiee for t Ion a, I 1 n c om e ---------I ACCOUNTANT, small GARAGE CLEAN-UP Medical Records Specialists a records cleric You must l'(!Jiacement plan. Apply 1445 J.l.JLLY LICENSED bUlllness specialist, does $10 pick-up load, 546--0101 Coll 213-430·6210 or 714·821 · like a variety of duties, type Superior, Newport Beach o bookkeeping through gm. H I I m 9, kd Cryptanalyt ic Spe<:ialists '"on• 213.430.6210 °' 7 14.121. I 50 and-~· call ... :uio • SPIRITUALIST • en.I ledger, em p 1 0 ye rs OUMC Hn ng 6 . 9 AM. /a M w•• oy1. 6990, 9 AM to 9 ,,,.. wnkffy•, at east wpm '=-V":T a vu-. Spiritual readings 10 am-10 1 s· I I 11. O t heavy work 106d. U you are Pm. Adviee on aU matters quacter Y returns. Income C'OMPLETE CT..EANING 1gna nte 1gence pera ors '----------Interested in joining a srow· Wt returns & related mat-WINDOWS FLOORS RUGS • 31.2 N. El Camino Real, San ens' ' ' Put You r Personnel Specialists Women: ing Orange County com-Clemente, 49'l-9136 492-9034. t · 6"-2S79. FREE ESTIMATES 66-3716 puter coi;npany that offen: WOMAN-5:1, attrao. Good 1.C:::•::•,;cP":::"::.10::'-----PART'""' Ho""'k"'""' for Military Experience AiJCraft & Helicopter We'll Treat * Mo-'~-FacDI· job, meet sincere working * All types * N.B. or Balboa area . Maintenance Appr entices ti191"n man. Write, Cluoillod Ad """'' cabinots. Floor .. c6:::73-""2""':::,::alt=L'=~--to Work at Home. Truck Drivers You to a ties DESK SPACE adj. o.c. No. SC, ~!.:,.. ~y MPilot, Ceiling bookcase, etc. HOUSECLEANING ~.e::.fCr. -Career. * •-! d Airport & Airporter Hotel. P.O. Bo)( ........., .....,.,ta esa, 536-1648 girl w/ref's. Any ....,. .. me Joi" your lotol Ar111y lloi•rvo un it IKDIC. Qft $60 Per mo. Full &eet'y. Calif. 92626. CLUB. I --CJJ=~STO=M=='woo,:::.=0=11·~o~RJ<~-hrs. Own trans. 644-1528, 111ncl yo11'll Jlor! or your proviou J Supply Clerks • Maio' r Medic" al ~--OBLEM ~·-· ~-JAPANESE .....,,_ -'---' ronk. Tlle n you 'll Jlort b11ifdln11 Yo11r lotol ,.,,..,. Jo1onoo 111111 of· p111111t:, copy serv., new PR • '"ll!i'......,3· .....,.,. Cabinets -ling patios . '"""""' ... = ... ung ,., "" desk, etC', available ataddltl fident, sympa(het i<: Ouk ........ .:.. ....... , '"""~ experienced • xlnt work, p•o ... oiion ond •••i••""•"t b•ft•-Clerk/Typists fori you "'0 "'1' '•••ft! ,...,. + "fe •·-II 2112 0"~-1· Abo " LJauui-.. "'-'""" """ ~ ··• 3 PM lito. All for ju11 16 llau" o 1110"'" lroining p109ro.,5.• Jobi with a a,11 c ..... ,.e, req. ...-uut, p ...... n"""" counse 1ng. r· Jo•k "·-•n M' ••95 .......-vJ.01 ..:.ter • . l I Cl k I J b · h h '' J b * p cha N 8 I .~ ... --,,. ... ot: ..... ~ ........ and lwo w••k• 0 '""'"'•r. In· ega er s 111ur•. 0 • W!I t 0 ongo. 0 • Stock r ... 0 .. F. F"'rc""E· =SPA.CE ~Mdoptlons ref,642-4436 C1rpet_ Service Landscaping t•r••l•d? Evtn ii yCHlr okill i1n'I with ro1pod. find oc"',,a ,·,·, .. he:• * Profit Suharl- MAKE money euy at home JOHN'S Carpet &-Upholstery LANDSCAPING, sprinklen, 121-6990 9 AM 10 9 Pio\ we•k· 114·121-6990 9 M to 9 PM 6210 or 714·111-6990, 9 AM. to Dlsllwosllors N...., ANCIENT MARINEJl Dt\y le Night • :r.o'1 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beech-l 646-0201 Apply 3 pm-5 pm Moo-Fri OOMESTIC Help George Allen Byland Agency, 106-B E. 16th St., S.A. 547~. DRAPERY operators It tabler. Classic Draperies, 3853 Birch St., N.B. St&-1431 or 640--0133 eves. lio•od, coll 21J.4J0.6210 or 714· lnl•f11ted? Cati 71.t-527·3031 o;lo job 'fOll wont, o ....,.. •• , t ,200 8CI fl !or leaae, all or any age. No exp. Write Box Ori Shampoo free Scotch· waterfalls & fish ponds, doy1, ' we•kciay1. ' 9 PM w••kdoy1. * 12 days G part, near Harbor Newport, 5.15 Tu · ,.._ .-...... n---1 • -· Land stin, ....... "£WV'· gard (Soil Retardantsl nc<U. ra es, JU..., scape Id ~ :~/~ ';' h~ n'~ PREGNANT~ Th 1 n k In g nePasen & all colo~ & Sprinkler Co. Lie. No. •n.. •~od -b•• of iob ·lfairo;;., p•Of•o,... dop1rod1 upon tt..~raqwira .. onn of tho ~al R•1••¥• 1111it. year pa a57-4491 lilS-1501 . aboction! KllOW all the facts brighteners & 10 minute I ~271546==·-"=""'~'°--·---If yo11'v• ~"d na P•••io<n ml1itcry ••porionc• you 1•'.!!f.• l"iliol ac1;...! d11ry "" ..... ,. yaC,ation DRY Wall Hangertraper, DRILL Preu, Automatic T11pper, & Assembly, Some ""'" NEWPORT BEACH first! Call LIFE LINE -24' bleach for white carpets. Masonry .-----------------------'I"""--------, Expd n4-646-709'J days hn, au-0022. Save ~ur money by saving I * 6 clays a year ~1 nitts. ' 45c ft. alrpoct area. Full WOULD like B 1b1 e in-me extra trips. Will clean WTLLlAMS & SON Masonry. THE ARMY RESERVE I "d • k le · wrvire. Suite overlooking struct:ion trom lmowlege· living rm. dining rm .. & Lie. No. 283046. Brick, • I pal SIC QY8 ELEX:I'RONIC TECHNICIAN =·&O~~~· ~~I~ ::!.eJ?'Dl. Lagu na , ~$~Q.~:U,$5.·15S7!: block&stone.~71. ITBIAVSTQ'GOTOMEETINGS. 1 * )QO/o·2ncl s:!~ra~ Irvine, NB. • '-'"="'-· ------exp. i:s what counts, not Painting & :t'\..l · shift differen• ~all ""9 1 . F--~-tl~~~ Slo-0, otn-•••-, ~r • Phone 54Z..7217 or \\'rit e Good ref. 531-(1101 . .--, t;.,I vancement. Salary com· NO\\' LEASING ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. method. I do work rnyseU. Pan.rhanglng ~ -·--u-• '" "~ _.... ttarOOl' p 0 Bo 1223 Co ta •1 Annr Rcs..rvc Opportun1ti•J ,.,. l 1. A "'" al Baker CM. · · )( ' 5 "eSR. Car:pet Cleaning *CUSTOM PAINTl.NG 1..,. AlA111i1<>1 L'~AK. Ccn1<·r mensura e.i24. TLlom PSL INQUffiE BANK OF Soci1I Clubs 535 Floor Care & Windows lntC!r/Exter. Free Color con-Buildin~ 11 You may be the one we att ~-· ' c,e~ ~?:!..ES!. TRADATA * Dutch Fl-taint. Serv. 537·1508 sui ting & est. Won't be un-Lot Alnmims, CA ?07?0 looking for. Please apply in EMPLOYMENT OFFERED ,.~ * IN ckrbid. St. Lie. no. 254931. . d . . r ·"' ... person or contact; Mal mall u·· -·-1 MO. FREE RENT Cement, Concrete Ins. 642-6005. Tell me all rhe r<isons whr it f"')'I 10 ~o to 1n«tm~1, ~11 ~r•t u1c nlflrc •n unrt;;,u<ln nn ''"' 1 ....._ ... _ e. s , .., "U6 co. QUALITY ma~cbes Rc."c uni1 neAr mr cornmu1tur. Personne .,...~ .... ent needs reliable f / t 1 me Ex!Clltive Office Suite. Utll w/PHO'l'O PATIOS lk •~-Sa PROF. wallcovering state ,..,__ & Janitor paid. Air con-carf ., • wa S, ULIYCS. w, employee. vn-· .., II'OW ... .,A....,, r-..~ . X "Largest Jn .t. break., removC! & replace He. No. 279514, insur., all Name•---------------------""~--y DM w/co, Min. exper. req'd. muuucu. ,......,...., patio, erox. {Call NOW for FREE aam-(.'(Jncrete. 548-3&63 lor est. types of paper. 7 l 4 : ·-979-2290, Jim, CI t n e, 91'16 Katella, An ah e Im . pie profile on 1 prospeclive CEMENT Wo11t, pat 10 s, 842-4386. Add,,.._________________________ wetkdays. 1 539-l66I. match. 24 hrs.) driveways, !ldewalks, brick FIRST class pain-Citr·-----------'~1~'"'--------7.ip•----E Co /M-DESK space available iso (7l4) 638-5920 I LA 658-6283 planters. Re&s. 54&-2943. ting/pe,perhanging. E x t . ,_ tcrow • mo. Will .....,ride flll'l\iture Int. Airless spray. Free Est. Curnot V..1.'l1fMtiuu. ___________ 11011· l.omt>-------M chi 1714) 879-38U ,,.v CONCRETE -..."Ork, patios, ...,,,, """' Varl1n Data a Ml at $5 mo. Answering service I l!Sl d . & .. -.... "'---.,,.,..~ '''"-------" ··e• ol h11~reiC''------------2722 M'~-1 ... D• avail.able. 17875 Beach Blvd. •-~ ,~"~""',,,,,~'~Y-"'"'-'~·:::,,~~~""'-"-= _ •~ . Lost Md,_... estimato. Cail 962-IA..... FAINTER highly qualified, . lrYlnt, Colff. ~664 Huntington Beach. 642-4321 ';jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj;j;j;;::jjjjj~ ""' efficient, \W\lld like your I :'>lili1.1rr 8Jekgrot1nd (lf •ny); R,.n1;,-_ -------''~10~;_· ------- 2-NICE 3 room suites. Crpta 1 Contractor business. Re as on ab J e . S l>fO>S". -----------' ·:itc o1 S.:µ..n1tion'-----·----(714) 133-2400 &5 ·1adrpabl ·A~t 1 .. ~P[ak,!Jr-Found (free Mis) 550 -GERWICK & SON 642-3!58. L--------------------------------.J An equal opportunity ~ w e ,_,_ · '""" .. "~ ' Bldg Contr. Addit & Remod PROF. painter, honest work, · · employer rn/f R.E. etc, ft.50 & $165 mo. I I/ I ~-I 1710 ,_,,..,.... CM 642-1272 BLACK male cat. wearing State Lie. Bl-ll4321 reas. n ex ' ucc es · Help W1nted, M&F 710 H I W1 hd M & F 710 v .... ,. ... , ' • Oea rollar, very a.f':tectioo-6n.6041 549-2170 Reis. 518-21.:>9, 642-3913. e P n ' COOK-Fltime emp~nt. ~\\~~1rw:1n~~~11u!t~ ~~·11~m~~·M~~: J~~.T:d~~Lic ~1 P~: ~rJWJ~N~RfM:rrt~~~ I ~'""~ 11 if J ~1~~I~':!J::. ~e~~~~ ~tg~ &8:1~~~. = ~:S~~ai~~P aa1cor' be=~~ cpl. $120. incld util. 51?1 Ph: 548-6583. My Way Co. 547-0036. FREE EST. J im 979-81B6 -· or construction background between 9 AM &: 2PM I.n a_ titutional background ~t'~ Ave.,. Newport. FOUN D small gray1 blade Electrical Patios helpful. Lucrative opportun· BEER TEi'IJDER \vANfEo pret'.d. 642-2410 or '&.awJ.y 1445 poodle mix In San Juan I;:;.;;.:.;;.:.;,.;______ _;.,;,;.;.;_ _______ Job Wanted, Male 700 ily with growing finn. CaU Fema~. Dana Point Suptttor Ave, N. ~·--- SAN Clernente. S1nall office Capistr~no. Call 493-QJ58 ELECTRICIAN-License No. Pla~ter, Pate1'1, Repair 1----------Monday -TI4: 835-4964 * 496.90'l3, Dave * COOK, MATURE :~~55100~~$;:5o. ~:~lk ~!!; alter 6 p.m. Z3..ll~. Small iobs, maint & * MUSICIANS -Duo desires BlLLlNG Mach. Trainee.; Experienced & Dependable. '' C .. '1 Hwy. C1tll 493-8098. J\IALE oouerscotch tahby 6 repairs. 548-5313. * PATCH PLASTERING • club work. Call John or Bill, A/Pay.able Clerk Excel co. benefits, For appt A_Pplr in pert0n, SUrf I Id V. IV Bal~-& All fv.v>S. Free estimates 551-~~. 837 3900 Sirloin ~ W Coast Hwy c·vcs. &.ii pm ••• _~,~~~ mos. 0 · ic. · ,....... G1rdenin9 _ "Can 5'UHl82a ..,........ call -• · • ----F-NB !~and, ,N.B. 673--6266 or , Bookk At N.B. 1617 WESTCLIF l-"''">.J.597"":.:.·-~-~-MOW & EDGE Plumbing Job W1nted, P.emale 702 F/time. To process invoices. Mper~ st COOK 2300, l1.00 & 540 sq. ft . 55c FOUND toy \\'hile male poo-EXPERT & Typing required. Knowledge Great s~ng salary fOf' for Italian Dell. Exp'd. Over Exec Sec'y •to S'100 ~~Oe~~tr) : 1: Gal Friday $650 Tax SecretarY . S650 Sec'y {marketing) $625 Med Front Ofc to $600 Keypunch {)pr. $565 Penonnel Sec'y Tish $500 General OWce $450 PC!rBOnnel Clerk $425 InsuranCe Qerlt $400 De<lgn Engr (m<Ch) to 1111< Call Jeanrtle Si.BCO &. Sid HOffrnan 'NEWPORT P•r-1 Afonc:y 133 Dover Dr., N.B. 64W17' PM' !!CJ. ft. Ampk> prk'g. Ut!I. dle vicinity North Hun-DEPENDABLE L.R. OTIS PLUMBING NEED help at l'IOme? We of computer helpful. 5.h!h bldiv. w/clerleai ?1' 19. IB514 Beach Blvd., Hun· Ba umgardlK'r , 541-5032. li" ... on Beach, B39-Sll7 or Remodels & Repairs. w,ter have aides, nu rs C! s, li te. kkpng exper. Co. will tington Beach EXPERIENCED SaleS&d:y · n furn f ·~· Call For Prompt heaters, disposals, furnaces, ho us ekprs, -('Olllpanions. 549.3041 tra.m,. Avg 1YP1111' &: 10 key ' n-•A" FOR rent, part\I\ y o-l,0894-39M=-'="-· -~~---' H ak U j h helpful. COOK/HOUSEKEEPER """...., exper. necessary, flee w/secrotarinl sen-icc1s SET of keys. 2 for ne"'·er FrH Estimate. dshwashrs. 64H263 M/C & omem en P 0 n • EquRI Oppor. Employer Jason Best Agency wanted lmmed. for small Toy World, 223 E. 17th, avail,$% per nio plus uli , niodel Forcl. Intcrse<:tion of ~==~5~34-~7~1~8~7--,--BIA. Complete Plumbing,1 ~54~7~-6681::=~·~~~---~ 17400 Brookhurst F~ pre-scbool, 675-4022, eve Costa Mesa, 548-M54 a\•all Oct 15/73, 646-21)81. ,\doiru• & Ha-~. "-II lop 'ROFESSIONAL g-~-,,.-, Service. Lie. 272694. COLLEG E Student seeks ,.~ u-C 1 '"1 SuOo 2l3 · · 673-1735. EXPER. COOK OCE"" v· Off ' Spa-d · -.,.·~,· ~ -~ ' PLUMBING REPAffi employment. CN.·n trans. :..---• "'b'· oup e over"" or ....... ~ !('\\' ice ....... i ent1 fy . .....,.... . tree Yl'Ork, p r u n In g. 40 Units, C.OSla h1esa. Call BOOKKEEPER. F-~ -w· DAYTIME attendant. Mon For residential care home. f I I -·• -"poncy 1No JO' b too small Can '"""· Call Cindy, "~"1121 -· •·-, __ or ensf". m,,.._..., "'·" ' FOUND bC!ige fl'mah~ pug sprinkl~rs, cleanup jobs, ** 642-.1128 ** S75-l73.'i~,,~ '""-· Ing Nat'! Sail Boat .1<1Igr. thru .Frl. Good emp ... ,.,., Prefer m1t.ture woman. H.B. & Coa!lt Highway, can mix dog vicinity Costa Mesa 1 and s ca p in g. George, A IJI'O~lOTTVE lubrication hiring for head olflce in cM:. bel"IC!f1ts. ~pply ln per90n. Xln't working conds & D:Hid, 962-rnrl. Park, Ca ll ~. &16-~. Remodel & ~•pair RECEPT/Cashier 23, front s Pe c la 11 s Is. Exper. Must have 2 yrs. exper. u a Newport Villa, 4000 Hilaria benefits. 540-7005 DLX. 2 n n. office. Bt<st deal •·ouND "'I II I *Creative Gardoning offic.-e appearance, W8Ilts ncresc"rv. $700 \:'; mo F/C bookkec?per, Mfgr. e)(-Way, Newport 8ea<'h. FIELD installatiun. ftadio in O.C. Airport aren, 2172 \\'"1 e l\'00 Y cog Honie Repairs & Remodeling full time job 546-6971 ~J II D"Pon' No.' . .,..., ........, Turtle Rock area. \Vin!er Clean up & Pruning. · guaranteed plus nefits.. per nee. For lntor. Ca DELIVERY clean-up man garage door operators. Ex· ~• 83.1-2090 Rye Grass & 1'1alnt. Spmklrs Patio OO~~fenclng Help Wanted, M & F 7~0 Call 830-:Sl aft 3pm for 642--0542 to handle dehwry man per. 60-3490. : ?io::a 1ib.M~~i.~m~* FOIUND: . J\11'"', .. prescriplt~ol~ .::'"='c.I ~&~Sorv:::,;~·~&16-=~'°~"~·--Sewing/Alterations ~ eppnL ~~~~;· ~~~ ~~~~P~ ~251~ FULLatt<nda~ A aervipply·c:~~ * rl< $1 45 6?5-6!0) * g aSS('S, tn ea 11er case . ., ..> EUROPEAN Ga r de n e r. AVON MAKES • ,,..... , • c-t..--Rk Blvd Suite E ....,. P g. mo. ' \Vrstrhff Dr., N.B. al8-9fl:G. h1aint('nance . Lan&caping. I I "2 5845 Art 5 pm By Appointn\cnt CllRJ~'TMAS Tl:IE SEASON general office. For con-.,..,._ • ' Sam-noort. Bill Ra sh S:\IL offitt on Broadway nr .J ··' A ter1t ons-v-t • Sr. r,,1 TudJfD1..-itaJ 114K struction & real estate. Cail11~l~rv~l~"'~·~Co.~=-=-,.,,,,..,.~ Cl>evron Station. 2 t O 81 Newport Blvd, CM:ta i\1esa, Lt!-· blk lo~ hn• rrutle cat T,[""1,, ~~~.1~329"'".~!..ry. reason-Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. J•. ACL'OUJ\tant ~· $700 TO BE JOLl.Y 646-4414. " 1Need a "Pad"? Pl;.ce nn al'!! El Toro, Laguna Hills. Y' ,,, ......... r1t<! • 3rd CdM ;"~~~~~-~~-~··~·,,...·-,...--• Earn ··xt•a --ncy ror gif'A· ~50 mo. or lease. GT.'"J-8761 s~"''-'_"-' ' T I I • R • 0-'y/~nch ~ lo 1100 .... ' "'v "' · F 71 .,. .,~..irl'.li COMPLETE Ga rden In g 1 __ •_•_v_1_1o_n __ •"-P_•_,. ___ 1,(Th:1 Jo!riday "'"''~ 10 S700 as nn AVON RepreS<!ntative BOYS LOR GIRLS j:H~;;•l;p;W;;•;"';Od;;';M;;:&;F;;;7;;1;0;;H;;;•;'P;W;;•;"';;od;;;,;M;;;&;;;;;;;~I 1''ND young fn1l cat· ocange Services. l.al'.'Tl and Garden a>LOR TV Repair, expert, Tech/1'fl'd ~·y to $700 in your spare time. Call: 10·13 years·~old fer-DAILYh Business Rental 445 & \\'hile, Laguna Canyon Care. Reasonable rates. reasonable, most in home. Secre1ark>s to S'lOO a4D·704l. PILOT pa~ l"O!Jles In SOuth STORAG E-SHOP 1260 sq ft Road, 494-40'17. 536-51-39. t'ree estimate, H.B. N.B. & Knittin~ i\1ach Opr $000 BABYSITTER needed for l Santa Ana, bC!t\o.'een Main &: 10' ceil. Nr. NB Pos! Ofc. Lost 555 GR!'.:EN TilEE Gard. Coin/ C.M. B<!rt Ga 11 <!m o r e, Sec'y/Bkkpr Laguna $600 two yr. old boy. Must be Fairview, Warner &: San EXECUTIYES-MAHAGERS n!V. OH doors. 12c ft. -'----------res. lnt/F.xt. Jo'ree t>St. New m.Zi83. Accounting/EDP 10 $600 reliable &. deriendable, for Diego Ji\vy. 15k, 251(. 751( 6-12-95M. GENEROUS La-...'115/t're<! gard, 613-532'1. T'I Payroll Clerk to $550 on·call basis. OccfulK>nal 642:!32\ SALARIES. NIG011AILE "THE Factory" has " 11"Jl: • • • HO~fE. Apt. Coin. Faellllie11. 1 e lnven Contrl Oerk S52{I Evenll\glJ. Own lranspocta-Lynn c>-.otan .<:hop avnil. $18.5/mo. In ~ Free estlm11te1. Ken's Lawn r.1EXICAN TILE· Indoor or Acctng Cl.erk 10 $500 lion. Bristol & Pau1arino, District Manager itire You Unemployed Now--Are You Stekin9 Cannery Village 425 30th St.. e REWARD e & Garden Servi<.'e. 839-6276. out . Beautiful, 'permanent. ReceptioCJ-'-""~;~:S to ~ ~~V~nd7-Sl51. 1 aft 6 pm. Ask F.qual Opportunil:y'Employer A Change -WolTitd About Your A9e - NB. 67l-9600 or 642-SSal. EXP k 1-bl lt'dc 494-9526 a" ''"""' ... -""-~°"""°"-----Tir•d of Brok•n Promi1•s--UJ1declded At To • l'IO'\\' a e gi n-· G. Ofc, Lire type S400 BA BYSITl'ER for o Id e r f BRAND nu sloreti/olfices, For retum or any inforn"a-crs. Tre<', yard seNi<~. Free CERAMtC TILE NE\\' & CALL TRISH HOPKINS children, Ille housekeeping, BOY vi F'l'idayg !Oahipping 50 6 A Prdper Cours• o Ac:ti9~' $125. up. El('v11.lor. 17301 tion leading 1o return of a est. ~2889 or ~99-11 . remodel. Free eat. Sm jobs JERRI WHITTE~10Rt: "7 ~ M rccei ng, : to S: · ARE YOU UNDER PA101 Beach llunti""'"n Bca('h EX~ER J G-~ 1 """ 2426 aft 5 .:r p.m. Mon·.-11, ature, 546-S243 · .. ,.w · KOid four leaf cklver pin, •r · apanese wueneri _w<' come . ...,..... · ™NE DrDC'f"'V..1"'.IB. Corona de! Mar area. Call If YOI C.. ........, Tlie Folow~C4tC.hlMllllrlrl11 842-2R.14 dpprox.2 1nches lndiamt:!lfil', Yard serv. Cleanups. Relia. Top Soil SERVICES' "~ENCY"' 6~wkendsor evcs. BUSBOYS exper luncll, Ap-I --Afft ~ W '"Uk' •-~ LTOO Loe, 400 &J. r1. 1vith jev.·eted horseshoe in & nC?11t. F'lW est. 6'12-438'9. .-1"\\.J DA s~ ed 1,,.. ply at Petite Auberp R 1-rnN1ttVe, e • e PllTW't'lft suitnbl<' snit rrtAil or offitt, Cf'ntcr; also, i:old locket HI.QUALITY, LO\V s~ * QUALITY * I BY •• 'r."' want • "J' Rettaurant: 3800 So. Plaza Witt. YOll lnqnire C()rfee Brnn, 33.\5 £-...·as Of} main\, approx. th(' State Lie. No. 780644 1.ruLOI & TOP son. * 4s"'·Et,, 12271h4 St. (at lrv64'"'2"14"'701 old boy, hourly and or 3 Dr., S.A. IF YOUR ANSWERS AU TRUTHFUL Via Lido or l'aJI, 6T;>-6141. size or a nickel, inscribed ••• 5-12-1701 ••• 586-6930 UI e -dal.vs wt'Ck ~'OUf,~~ or BUSBOY P{TIME "'I c•N HILP YOU J FLA :;;;;=;::===~!;:===:2===;;; ~.___..___.~ m "'" 673-2fl6< or ·~·!:... Cail 6'4-0050 -r ~ 1600 SQ. ft . Irxtustrial shop, n S('ript, . The!!e nre -w-v-•-.. D h , " 0 ti 1 d 1 1 BABYSITIER needed 1~,. l ,..., o you IY ITtOfUJ Y co o"• t Y•• $22.'l/mo. Al!O ~sq. ft. Of. deeply ln>asured family -• • CAFETERIA ---•w1~ l 8 D h t .. , ol · t 111 • ficc $!)~ Ci\1. &16-2L'l(). mementos & the loss \11 lr-toddlt'r, long evet. ,,. ' .....,.... "'" · o vow ..... a • "• '" • 9•ft$•,,. T d ' Pa d• Accounting Clerk Sal, BOme wk nlr: salad. 5 days a wk, no C. Do vo11faal 1wHlclantly motlvot.C t. ochl•••? Industrial Renta1 450 replacelible. p L E A S'E · ra er s ra 1se ~;30 .. 7 pm only !16.~ \vkend11( will train NB. D. Do you ltoYo th• '1brlity to m1ko cloci1lo111? PLEASE hel p if you have For general led~er. Know 199 E d 11 · · ~ I I f ' -.0 ~~ II & I BAB)''. IT TIN(',, &44-. • Aro your11ytoaoto,.•1h&cor1ore 'ootlvo 4001 BIRCH, NB any n ormauon • '"""""""' payro paym rt>ports. CARPET LAYERS F. If you wort convlfteotf th•t holp wot•• ' bf1, waultll 3600 .:.-.. fl . lS.-· 1,.,. •I ft E~. & y,·eekrllCI!!. KoowlMge of c O nl p u ! e r h o u s L •• •' <!ping. 11 • i. ,·,. yow ••capt it without litloy? _, 11• nes sysfen1s helpful. woman, ll1•e In or out, 1\•I EXPERIENCED ONLY! b<k>w "'"°" '"'· "· '"'•· 1100 REWARD return of o"' 549·3041 r-. 64>-1419 __ _,e 642-3200 e YOU SHOULD KNOW 1\1\,I(', strg. B&unn:ardner littlt' black & .,,,.hll(' .,, -:~---II '· fl.11..00.U Japanese Span1('I. PlcllU!. BACK Office Girl required CASHIER • Tho b1ttor Jo.nor• not •tlv1rti1oli 1 ~ SQ, II. m·l ,,.,.,... plc11!1(' call &42-1175, or t1" mes F.qua.I OPllOf\ ~ploycr (of OB/G YN -oftice. Send Jr you ha\.'e had medkat e Thircl party profo11lonol lnflwonco lttomoti11101 ~· r•" 5<8-1••• I p 0 Bo ·-r • I k -M llOCOlfjtV --~ Wl,-n1 of"-. '"" ""~" :::::,c.~=·~~~--~ ADM S-ECRETARY reirume 0 ' . )( ,)u,J" o c exper. ' can 1"-'•ne e G I tl • ht • th ' ht I I '" ""~ .,.. '"" ~ Long Be:ich. 90803. ell.Shi~ dutle. w/f!a!Je, •It 119 mo ri9 •OOfl •P•"• tt • r19 ova tt• dOor. SOO mo. 1793 Whlttit't, LOST, d{'('la~'ed 9mo old fem d 11 For expnnding nrm JocatOO BANKF G Cali Mantyn Ughf, ~. q11irot tochnlqw•l . CM. &at;-.jO,'(l day$; ~I &.ilpolm Siamese. N r 0 ars In Santa F• Springs. Need IN CQQstal PftlOl'mt'I ~ • Exociiti .... po1ltlon1 or• flllod fttrou9h 1uc.utlYo II • f}ve1;. f'11.irviC\'.' •"' P r I n ce ton, well ""°'&niU'd ""l"SOn wl EXP"D NOTE TEU ,J::R .........,. I-Ia-Blvd Cl\! ' torviow1 l300 sq It. M-1 sp&cr. Thuf"i nilr, H. e wa r d , abUlty (;take "''P. in varlt"d PAYINTFG '.l~-r: RECR 'VG ""'" CHEMlcAL • °' Mt u ra1wm• molUft9, It not• tot•I •n1w1r •. ,,...,, OfflCC, l'lf rear "6-<ml. projoc!A • d"''"· s.c........ ~-rvr111mur sr-CES, INC itoor, StM mo. tUO l.llj;i:an RE\\'l\RD -long·haL'1'(1 kll· P.TOBrt.E home"" in Pa!ni '72 JMPAl.A. 4 ctr, 1-JT. AIC, 1"1 .tktlls le accunriey w/f1a:· SECURITY PACIFIC OPERATORS Ll\UIUllll._ • St. CM. ~ dAys, 1rn. Bla<'k & v.hlt~ w/flt"a ~ Gmm8, kw•, on ROif M'.ldio, PS, PB, Value $2850. urea ttq'd. Good Ml & co. Nation~ Bank, 381 Forest, Fm: f:'XP&nding ~a.I ttftnery Mg Hcr¥9 Al lllWlf For Y"I i ..::'<G-OOlll::::::e:~'~""o..::·:.._---=· I collar. Vic. llr !ilth II Nt"P" c"OUnt', lll<'I mbl!hlp, payoff \'Ill! trede up for T.D.'1, ~Ol!fltll, &J1>d l'e$Ume to ~ Beach, CfM.0711. In S.n!A•Fct ~l'lp,--Qien. S•nd Ro•u"'• Or Coll"Tffi'y , Storage 4SS ,'=,.,,.=· c.N=.B.~646-~7278.=---IP.900. Eq. $7,700, !or wry Lot, etc. Qullflf!d ad no. 939 c/o BARTENDER wanted tor lmy background tn 9Chool -For-SA~fSONlTF. 0\'entik' C'tlllt', KIXld 11u10 or ?~ s.IO-IO!Jl. ____ <!4"-'--<825-"'0-----I Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1560, CI u b type 0 per aUon, or ~ cxper. nee. Good co, MO COST DICUTIYI IKT"r'VllW Cbmnte1-e1A.I & StOt'llgt' New hldR:. 8000 ,q, rt. ~ Block from JlArbar & N11:p1 fllV'lh. C.M. 5-t~JfCr.l ( conl.llln• pearl~ lkttPN:kit CARVED Bl.AO< JADE Like 10 irndc? Out Trader's COS!tl fift'lll. Callf. For In-Capistrano Valley, fUll lime. benefits. 2':131921-7464. DICUTIVI SERVfCI:$ INCORPOIATID gilt from p..·u•t•nts). Rc>"'ll.I-d. !IOOM vnl11rtl 111 ~ f'&ch. I>aradlH' rolumn Is for )'OU! te"1cw Appt , •Give resume in lctttr AU CHJl.D care. Bby 10 firl 7, 1 • --1 l('I Mf OHICI -U.NTA ANA 6i1-7141. TU tnidt> for t1t1 6b,Jt<'I•. an· 5 \ines t"at Profit U athuftt!d whc>Tl lnftJ confidential. W r i If 8:!ll AM lo 8::xl AM up lo 4 Socvrlty l1nlr luil~l"t LOSf 911 l11dl~ ROid ft1l'll"Y llqui',, jew~~9'.1...~mifurc or 5 (tay,i )'OU Mil throuah muh-«el· Oaolfled Ad No. 951 Dally wk da,y1 a ¥.it:, In my home, SI.it. 70? watch, C.M. Tflgh School SlJBMrtl b«Mb.'111. for S bue"k~. tine Dall)' Pilot ClautfJed Pi iot. P.O. Box U60, Coslft on Ptn. HOUR v.'Ol'k avail H PHONE: (714) 547·96.25 piltk. Jot. Rowan!. 60-!014. ----------------1 Ad•. 6IM6?8 M.,.,, CalU. !IS!. .!!"'~-~!:..· Gl>'t61~~·!..!·~n!..!•!,!PM'.!!...i. .............. ll!!! ..................... _...,...,...,,J t r ' • ... c -Ho~ - . R Vis I dnil iSSl \\'/I OpO ho~ Dutl , .. prlt "' diti l'iSl ... oul i ""' "''' '"' lxµ Jlig .,. 1111\ "' '"" FUF N ' . B~ I -SF . ,11 . JI• \\'or I 11·i( · "1'u' ' t' """ •1 plo: I I'\• 1 I 0'1 Gui ___. G Cari ind ""' I~ phc. ,• 11'/I •'" Ne1 I flc.;1 1 Ah· !r. ~ ' G " ~ i; , 0 I (~ & I' '' It. ~ bc•r -J li: Sult GEr "'" lin· I 10. ll Pll ~ &11 •1· & • " ' • Dl( Eq11 Gi ~ 1'°l'(' It •II ra1 Po 5"6 plo '" cm ·~ Of .;.:, in~ i • & h<ll '" '" L<x· iO< " t'ff) K• Pc "'" ii 1: r: I • ! I I I l I .. In Sd "" Sa .. fOI 110 ' I " 71 •• • I • ----~--1 • • DAILY PILOT • l[Ill .. ~l rr:..'""'';;;;:;;..:.~~![j]]~it 1-p.io,..... ][JJ .__I _._,_ ..... __,!(jJ] 1 ;.i -· ,_,2 -· ~mJ~1 ~1-"~....:;fill~it1 I ._,,... ![fl]!;;;\ ____ .. ;;;;[§);;;~ [~! ;;;;;;;;"'""""';;;;;;;;'~)[§];;II Help W1nted, M & F'710 fitlp W1nttcf.,M & F 710 Help Wonloel. M & F 710 IH•lp Wint.ct, M &. F 710 Help W1nted, M & F 710 Help'W1nttd M & F 710 A,,tique1 100 Appl h1nce1 80l [ En41M7111•1t Holp Wooled, M&F 710 ' llOPPER LOlOER ,NUl'.<t'll H.-:11 ~~hilt' Sah"t-DOROTHY EMERSON I RENT $5.00 MONTH '$2.U hr 10 stllrl. \Vorlt 1~:!,E~::-~:11~';;~1\r:.-ILJQUU!t C~lli\, Sunday l RN·LVN.AIDE Hunt1'ngfon Harbour SECRETARY H1"11.nd JM"\\ \\111.1IK'lll, iX)'Cl'l l ~\"t•y•o·d ohlll. Will '<"" & Pl K ~ 1-:W~. LAGUNA BEACll, 11-7 & olhi•1· shlflJ.. 'foi• ll\'I •·~ ,,, I /'11."'1"11~ lh1• :r:t1t i, f~t·l n"t'•'l:ll<Jl'l>-('p!ldu tu FUNCTION MOOUl£$, ·1NC. ..... l'hllf! t'()ntar1 '"'l'-IOnl' ~UV· ,., •• ,, \\'e-II~ IV'll\.l"" 01' II llliO \\ • biUot11 "'o•k•·'· No''"· Ii>«• , .. ~:.: I ,,_-.,., 1tu1y flO)', ln1n11~l. 11.1.1• (1tr ''"" :;.,.ua · Oull·a hU\. Ft•.. !li·l11·1•r) .;, I • , "" • ........ --R 1~ notch Sf•cr1•l(lt'} In ll'l1n1 lh" \ t Ul'C. l 111n1~1 . h\rt. !Stan. ~301 Mru ·Ar1bur Rlvd., N .B. 1.IVF. In t:Ofnp;u1h1n, I.hi· lloor lhll.\. l' /l u n t )> II I (I I' ea ty url bi.t Ir ~~>II l 1t k ,. ' II \~U"" ~JI lt't", ;,17 ·i!J~..i. 1i1nii;h\. ICL'-'1367 IXIU!WkL't!'lllg. ~fU!(I (lrtl't•. f11•1·v1v~. i\ton·~·ri ~j :1. i.hortha111I. 1)111' ra .. 1 .t· it\' SHOW & SALE :\l \i: ;-; .. \\h!llpo.I \lll~hf'I ECJIO JOB AGE:NCY [ lti'f. p\£>11~. ti -911rn , Li•S1:'<H.1lil" Nui'IC•·-H••i.clstr,1. eu1·nh•lv ,(.would hk,. 11 .v 1!1~t·r. Cull 11fl1·1· 6 11111 2441 C•mpu• Drive l t:i 31"() St, Sult(' 20:l INSPFX..,-ORS !IH2-72:l7. I :~')1 llrnspil!t! llrl., NII iliihli) Expands Off-Shore c l 111l ll·n~ .. !tt•ply c i11~'llflf'1I ,\ l~"·rlt•:.• f.111 l~Jllt'l'l ion o): !lli2...::ri:1 Irvhl<' !tt~-11:!14 llunll~gt?n .Bc~eh ~1&-l·t:~9 ·1 · GIVE US YOUR ·--lVN !,ark _Li1lo Hld1:1 ti l'.!·~l!l:~·,. r ,1.., n·~~h· i1rtl«r~ llfl('r1 Hl1: /1tJ no. ~"»i i 1·/u llu1ly l'U .. 1. q11al11.1• :u111o111•' ih,11tlll1h~· Building M a1er1als 806 llOUSF.:KEl:.PE!t ·(.nJ!'•IU . ConV<llrsccnt Hurne, ruU .t:. ~l."l_l_. ______ 11••11: lil"uu 111 I tlour 11111•11·1u11 PO. Hi•\ 1:.>1il!. l"•~•.• 1\h•s.• . .''1111 11·• \1,)nii·;i l 1111 · ,\urh1<11·· ---·------ -INVENTORY l '. ~fCSJl honu·. NO li11Wkc f I purl tinie, call 642-0598 NURSES AIDES 11.1 fur :1111hi1iou~ ~al .. .; Jk~J-C11 9'.lt>2li. llu•l. e Surplus Building "ECORDS CLERK I .... D 0 • .. BEST AND WE'LL . I . I I I ,, 0,. ...... ------...... F.Ul -.!11111111:.! .... -.1..il'I \\'o'•L, K ~ nn,; . .i a,y ,v.• .... teRI J.,s ~'•', i\Jl "h n~. ~· 111111•. P '" u1n11•• 1111" 11t 1r lln1,·1· --.. ~1 1\T~.kl.~I. Hfl4.J'., ol Nt:11 .. ,.,1 l'C"''t'tl •Yliler~. '"""''n" (']('(', ''"Uip. lne1J;%"''" MACHINIST "'''"''"I .• , ••• ~., ..... "•111 1 a1·:11t11t11 ... ln1111•'<!1.1t•· l'dfOI SECRETARY t•~-. \l>lh Uuu ,l;,in. Ot·I. l lrh. r I I y "-V "· ....... ..... "" ,.,. ,., " .,.. .,.. "' • r I p S...nla \l,111i1n ('11 h .\udU•ll'· rr1·:.11:-;· ll .. 1r ... Ulll ~r. p 'i daily 1ranS11.ctions & kit 01•en; rte. r1C 1 i;ut" tirtl<' bt•ncflts ln<·ludt• 2 11k l ni..·~ 1 .. 1ss1hh" \\'1• 11:11<' s0l11I i'\•1 • 11111 It ~"u .1k1· 1011'11'1}. 11 1tkl, uhuu io.J11•1·l!•1i.;, 1110111· iSl'UC!I. P.·lust he> r11 n1illn1· l'Ollndings. Own h-..n~fl it I GIVE YOU OURS He~ n§!ble lot• gettl1 u l \'fll', 7 llillfl ho!, ~l'UUjl ln.'1 ... 1'{•ff'r1·:d~ lnll!\ l\o'\I hn1nt• 111·11111.1 & u11h1111i.,1 •1111•11'· l\Ull, .\l;un & Pl('1 J)ai!~ in~. \\IUl~/I\ ... , 1•t«. v.·/stock roon1 & tv~ivit)Jf musr No 1•n1 rrtainlng I n ~\II , varlet 0;ic ~l ~ l s\t·k Jcu\'i'. rurk 1.l<lo lleulth ·""h d111.,i.1n." .. r rh1· ri1r1,.;t1 .1111111) lhi. 1.; 1h1.• J<'lh Jur .1nu. l ().l hi IO:OO 1':11. Suod;•), BUILDERS SURPLUS opoil'lltionll. E.xpl'r. prer'd. flt'l'llOO. lnll"IVYI' & ti.·f~. r;. ns: ' y l'q p Car.~. 4·16 r1101:shi11 Rrl., ~.H a 11:1 ('111111.1111u·· I r .. ntfh fulUll' l•ir ,,Juup 11'''11 1'' ti·OU P\1. ho\\oever, wlll train. \V,1i1e ".lasi;i~ied 11d llO, 9,'gj, \',\RIAN OA'rA ~1ACHl ;..lF:S,1 [ 'i:~~: ~01 fi1b1,1j~l l~i;: snl&ll 6-12-.ll().1.I. (',\l,l. l!ILL ('Ol-1 ... :rtl('\, 1 ttto lh 11 :11·:. 1.111111--: ,\ il!t• GOING OUT OF 1·• 11 O~uly Piku:, P. O. Bdx 1 th(' bf&' ('Ompeny in !onal p.:ir~1~ts.n ~1:11 ~~~. ~J~:t NuRSi::s Aidl'. 7-J 11.111. 11-7 t'i1 4i ~46·1::~1 .\.:· t?l'!t ·~· ~~j~1" ·"11 11"11ihil. ,\l"-1 t't•i· BUSINESS INSPECTOR l:i60, Co11ta :\It-sa. Ca. 92626. f'OmpYlenl, la oUerin~ ii ¥ kl I \\' Ill 1 \ l?F'AI ...... -I'"-'\I rs l-:!i1>1lil1-l1t•ll A11J14u ... {!\"!' ELECTRONICS . _ • 1 0 ""•• ,0 ,,,1,·r;-" ... -,,J ivoi· ti;; c~ !I, a.ni. t 11' "1111 11t'" • · .. 1" '· "'-'·. •1 Jason Best Agency . ..., nl ,.,..,., IK'l'llOllrk'I. Xlnt l11•1M•fll.'I SUl'l '~: ...... C.\Rr:..:r. 1-u;J B k ' f \'l ·'l•l'l'IJ 1i1u1-,: Ill .\1111•1i..u1;1 Dutle8 Include rt"celving, ill· l~OUSEKEE:Pt-.;R . -lo Yl'Ork !WIN'led tor thcie podllions 54 9-3041 II hh·h Joclutlf' I ll ,. \) Ill " N I'\\' (If t•xp<·r1f'fll'O."l.I. Join 111(' ~ ; ''I . t\;\.I •IUI '" ' .. l---~.I""~ lhun: 1u·11~·.1 r... i111- i;peclion ot L'Ollll)OllC'nts .'.t in 11 1 1 r a ~ 1 1 v *' 000-1 INSPECTOR t::tiual Oppor. E:mplo)er 1f'11lacen11•n1 &: '!. 11 k!O va1·a-\\'rirr.r~ la.-. ..... :1t :irn:I f;.o:<l<''<I j· ~·--" -·"··-~ uu,11i.1t• -..11,. ·'""n 1 .. r 11 '" ~~~~ 8C~~~!n~:.~;~lnS!~: ~ll]('S('(';11 ~~~pit11l. J.'lex.ible I* rion 11rlf'r 1 yr. Apply 111 l•M:1 i:ro11 1n:.: 1·1•:-.1Jr orica11lia11on SECRETARY l o, 1 1. :,, I• i. n \:!. 1: d'.0;,.., ..._ ..... ,_,,,.1bl• for ourll or, or part lime 1 {~xi shift 1 t'our yl'iu·JI ,.x· [ •i ID 1,, d 11 Super\111· A1•r .. Ne 11 I! o ~I 11 ilh a 111•111ork o f •lVt•t' ::i:11 F1·1 />"ul. \\v1 I. 111 lk·.u111ful 1 u...,,1,•1 ~ 11 .. h~•oi.· , .1~h ,\ ...,,. .....-.... ,_ • • e1nploy<'!l. Xlr11 ll'Orking . ..· .. "A . vante. -Seacllr Beach.or 1·Rll 61Z-2 110 l ofh1·••s a11d hr(~J11l•' :i f'11 ~:11 .. n1~1anrl111111111~r1 1ni.::1 1·.11'1')1 .\l"flll-''-'.TIQl'E..: visual i n_. p e c I Ion of l'O nd. & "aid vac-atioo. A~ I P.'rll'tll. '(' In .a l'l'C<'. rv11l); .111 r.tottl IGIH s Coo.st Hi~·" ---1 ,1., 1 ,.. ,.. ,,,1 '.,_ • 1 ,._.,.... ''I NU"'SES Akle~ <'""''" 7:1 nu•ni t)l•r" our 111l111n:i 1r1•1 1"1l' 1•11 1:11111• '"'II• l'>ft ''·l'.!ll '.\1'")~111 Bhol t"•~t . 11ssembli4:'a prior to r hf't'k ply 111 1"4.l S1..11ierior Avr.. SJll;'llon ML'tlVlty ltlSPL'<'ln.,,. 1-lli.:unn ocueh 4.9..-t(>J~ "" ~ · 1~ · ' Cl " '' It llllo I rl 1· 11 II • I "' 1 -" ' out. Opporlunit y 10 Ne1\/porl Bctu·h or l'ali res1siors,rompasllorii,trar\s. -------·--:h1ft Muntini:ton 81•:1 1·h1 11,~ · u i·rt1 ,11 '''.·~~ ""' ~·1,1',' 1: ~1 "1•11", ~ .. 1 ~ ------_ P.-,·.,·"·t· & ''"'"Pl '"'Ii><•· 642-2'10. . I iStors. diodrs !Ulttt n1e1u.t MAIDS Con\'. Hosp. 841-.t'i11 nd\~r\1s•n~ pro1na11L f l't I ,\lio.u ~ ." .J -~l~ • ( .1111 , 1110 \'.\'I 1''t'f ' Cl ·~1 ·, ............ ~ .. ~ ' ~ . ------~Uilr.11l:f'('1 I llL'l'JISlnt?; '1'1l<Y'll i I\ IHI>', .... 10 l~L~l l OJ'>I. Pt•! . . "' -~ "'/\._ \, r~pctnl!ibilitir~ roroon1plf'tc ll OU S f~Kl'.:EPf~R for cin::uit boards, C't C'. NURSE!) Aid('~-l)nyl! I ~:1.i·f'l!C'llt <(nl,..11 !ru+nin~.! ..,,n11,,1 ,\~i 'lll'): 17!•l ll:irlioi r··"Ol,-1_1.<;1.:1·;1'.\l ~tl:1•, qu11lltya.~suran<'.eprogr11111. r h I I I h'ld *INSPECTOR I 1\Jn1ure,1nustbeexpcr. LVN11-7A!\I \\'hu1 l,~0111•l1l·Pns1••101·1t1 Hlld.,l.'\! , l.Lt<l\-\\AN !! 1 1 .. ,H ELECTRONIC Ll~~ ~~'. r:;n~ & ,.~a~1 i:. f/l11ne. SN• Personnel Mi''" Cull 349-3061 "' ~·1111 ? l'J1£>~:k u11r nl<lnlhJ.~·l ~F.C!lET.\HV:--~· \ :, Hki.1~-;-: l ,1i.1n11, ;11 ( .1~~i'1 N1•;1p•" I, TECHNICIAN nlOnU1ly wa.11:1<. Lt. hskpg. list shil11 ·rwo ycar:s l'l"l.'{'111 ' Balboa Bay Club 2 OFFICE:. t;IRlS honu.~ p1i.ii.::rn11111~ut·h n1ra n~I S/\I .(· t~pin\;. t:ir! Vndti~ • il:-1-.:-t lNI~ • fli."Q '. Hef's & drivers lie. ('Xperienr(' in lnsprction a!'-1 1Z'!1 \.\'. Coruit Jlwy., N.B. NEEDED SSS In you' I h·a~I' 1·:1111 l•ll' 0111. ~11 ! ,,f1·., ~i;: 111.,,1111 Expe1'. fn 1u1AIOI! ,(._/or _digit11J clrcui1s. Position~ avail in •ho devPlopn1ent &. n1anuf11clurc or stall' of 1ho iir1 m in ialur e 11;ub- assen1blics. FURNITURE MONITRON INDUSTRIES Needs Experienc•d -BURN IN • TOUCll·UP -SPRA \' PAl?\Tl:RS · ~\ILi.i NG tl!ACM I NJ~ • JIGS S: f.l\:TURES i\IAN . I Day or nigh ! 5hif11 1919 S. SuAAll, Ol' tall Vall'l'i" Santa Ana Coll 6·9 pin. 96'2-7237. 1i1,itit'8 wlllJ.. t'0111pulC'r r'.~ MAINTE-NANC-E MAN I l'ladlo lt'lcphon<• disruth'h V 1r~in1a .Jonr s Jl.J:1·4..~l 1. _I .\v,., Lin;uiu• B, 4~11 i.~1.\ !.,\TE \'il·t. nu1 11 h "! ~ lated f'Xperien<'<'. i\lus l J.._-1,1.11 1. ----1---, ------1,11 1·~•·Ht , 11t111fnn n l'•~·krr. I' 0Us·E 1,· '·''·'P I NG ,•. I · , (,.,.,,,.,.,,1 i>laoo< •n>"• 1·111 . 0.0,,,.. \.1us ! IK' 25. 11ble 10 ilril'c • "' • .•·!;;IP s:1 "~· ,, fl<'t' •ll"~.·c·,11"ICI·.· S!:~t1011 1!+·111 ~"ill I I I I "1 c.. L ·" fan1iliar 11·ith all t\~['1('('11111 ~ .. ""-~ I k ,. y :H'lllC HI r. gOI\( ,. •HI• C'hlldcare An honr~I . 2'.l0-140. Lilr ('111'""1111)' &· Appl:-'llll't!rMn t(•S SJJIU'I' IOI' <'\[•L'J'I '"' j!lil1111• !~I I·:, (' .. :1~1 ,., .... _,,,. t'l luinnil'nt. '" YELLOW CAB CO 1·' '" I " I .. " reliuble, mature won1nn fo1· ,. pluinbing. Xlnl wli.i.tl' & bcn. . ''"·~· 1·s •>!' s:. 1• s 111 ,. 11 . II\\'~. 1~r·11'1tou·t l«h ---- 1>;u·1 tinw Tivt> in. call for It you a1'£' lntt'r1•sh.·d in join· I (7141 :'>.1J-.0060 ISG I::. llith. Costa i\1t•sa ~s~•l:o-4211.:l 1 S ~ st M $8SO+ 802 I JJei');(JtHll inlerl'iE.•i\', li7:H)680 ing I\ i::rowtng 0 r a n ~I" I M,\LE -C"lC1:1n ('UI, goorl I Orrlr r oc.~k Tl'll'ty~X.0 e~~;1;11.,~.1 -, ~~~ ,., .,1.1.A __ P_P_i_;_,_n_<_•_• _____ _ II 0 U S t: KEE PER/Child County 1'0mJJQny Iha! otff'l"!t. c!l'i1·ing rf'cord .. n1echanic;ol Brand New Office RECEIVING WESTCLIFF ~·1 :F:l(:ll'f D.\'.\I ACE ...:.\J.E Cur(' for !ll'hool children Mod F II ' . ahUlty., 110rl-~moker, !'hop & ~··:>o.· p,1d 11"11· Ho1110in1 r ,. r r ii.:' I>", 2 '"1 < d · e ern ac 1t1es , ' p,.,.""nn<'I .\i:t110·1 :...... pin, " ays. Vic t1·11~:k 11111. in I e ti a. u cc & Rl'llOli'ned ('Orp. !;('!•ks ali•t1 If' 1 r f" t '\ d1sh11;o11tu·r~ ,II,, r .~ n i.:" .~. Nell'POl'I Heighl~ Sehl, C;\I. •Basic and M•1'or 1lrl1vcry, ;ib1r 10 hit, pa r• intlh'. tor 0,.11. ciua11,,rs. INSPECTOR ~~hi;-k -i~1111~:::;·11;~·; · W<1Shl·r~ & tlry•·•«~. fa1 ·hw.1 &l.1-5690 after 7pm. Medical+ Lie ""'-1.ln1c. st u1~~n1 OK. 'l'u1•s lhru Fahulous henPfilll. l.n1·r l.i -,12 K'O:i ..... a1-r11a1 v, HOUSEKEEPER.mat u r~ eStock Purchase Sa t. Sl.i.> hr s 1 aI'1 · loC". Call Ba1ililra ilia(". --.----· ---I HEAC'll CIT\' \Pl'Ll.\1'<.'t. ii·oman 1:) hrs JX'r wk. Oivn •Profit Sharing lntcrvic11'l! J lo :, P~I. ~2100. Al!IO ,..l'I. Jtlt>S.1 . . ·''l'EHt.O ~a1r~111.1n. fan11~1ar ::fi'l:l \\', \\'ni nr1. SA ~[H)illfl 11'80.'lpoL1ation. ~2 aft e12 d 'd llan.h1·;1re Linli!cd. ::t:l7 J:Nnnis & Dennis Pt·r~onn1·J 1 ltl'C('l\'l'S s, lllSIJ<!'l'L~ \'f'tHkl r l :1nif nr t':"P"l 11/f'(1ui pt I ~'f.(;:,t N. 111~1 111. Oran:;:-1• 6pni ays • year pa1 Birch. Nl'wporl 13,..;1t'h. A<>eilC} of lr'Vill(> 20!l2 n1<1 t1•ri'll, mat'hu'M' f!Rr1 S. i\!us! Lil' Jni:ti pl'l'l>llllJ~ & 99il-:-£.:.6 vacation 1 ill i\LF. or lrmnlr mactllne ;i.dctieL~ Di". · r~(·ct1.~111il' p<1rrs ... 11r:intl'fl j ;:oorl t:IOl'l-'r :-Oi:ituro· 61:>-71:1'.'. I .-. . . ----llOUSl:l<EE:PE:R. i11·c-in .• , d 'd c·u~iut hoards u 1 'I I ~ I ng ------\\ A :-; II ~.fl "'. d I' ,I .. r . llunlhlG:\011 Harbour. Own ·c:~: a year pa• U(l('t'll lor;j4~~~.!n, PAINTER pr i n I s, s p ecificulion~. 1lish11;osh1•1 . f{••l1lt. :.:u•U'. roon1. TI'. i\!usl drh l'. SI ave EXJK'I'. Class .\. r ti nh'. ~11n1pl1•s & p ro c l' s s cs . TELLER rlt•lh1·1~'<t. lt~l-iti~'O n r Ref<'r. Top ~clary. 84.5-0100. e100/-2nd shift MANAGER TRAINEE l s,,,, Peri<onnel !\!Roai•i•r ln!Prpn•! hhw 11rin1 &· EXPEH. SAV l.,l;S & 1.0i\N r1"6-521lt. --Housekeeping -dlff•rential Oulstnnrling opportunity to Balboa Bay Club .~('hrmat1c din1tra ms. I \'r Ca ll -R•nt Washers/Dryers- & Kit h ' advan1·,• to manai.::erial posi· l:?'ll I\-'. Coa~t Ill\''· .. N.J:. f'.\pt'r. as J"f'l'<'il·ing t'11'rk or Fullerton I St .\\·k. t'uJJ 1twiur. C en You niay J ... !ht• onP 11·f' :1l'r ii · "" ,.,. d O r 1n.~1lf'rlor. 5 · & L I 11oi1'el. C•ll .'o'9·'.~ ·1 I looko·o-. r.,:. Pi•••· "Oi•IY ,· l on tn ·lV"<lV a}s. u, av1ngs oan ----* 6::9-l ~>t.12 * • ~ ·""" '"' , • .. n i·urrent ni11.n;igrri1 <'a r n Par1 1in1l' Van 1lrlv<'r :i 10 ,-, S"\ •2,1 1 1 _ _ I P<'l'~on or f'Qlllact: S100tl·Sl :icJO inn. !\lusl h;ive hr i\·lon-Fri 0 1"1ngr ('<1 C.:t!I For Appl. • 1 -. ,. or 11.pp ltEF'll.IGEHATOlt ,1001 .• 10 door l'IHlvas.~ing f''>· arl':i. n e 8 t apJ1t'araiu·•'. lnrluslrilil Rr lRt (ons J•Nih place~1~·nr 11ijl be i11 1 (~·llell l oondllk1ri . s:i1J. B. Kraflca X.t">-:1140 l'1vpo11 octtch. * li46-:i2:"i0 * lll'l'll'nt·e. (714) 494-9401 _ _ ·===- ex- '.l lt_, s.., \!.1111 St., :' ,' •. '111•u Jiu 11 :"al ID 5 1il ·4111.::z F~u~· --~.~l~o: ; 1~1 ~;('~'. i:old '"1'11"/lltl ,.o l:t,JI 1~·1\"t·I ""ll""'l $1 :1:1 1: .. tuM! n1fh·1· 1;ihh'. 11nl111ue '1h11". n111i-•1•· I 11111 S-(1.1 \1111 .,,1~1 '"·"kl" '•)\ s:.'5 .1 '"' 1 .. 11111,.,1 1·h'"'" S'!O 1•11 . l\1111 l\Ulg' !.111ll•t•1.; 111a1"1111'i•, !~'! <1l lo •1 ... !Ii" \/a,.lPt l 'i, ('\I i.'1?.li-i:.O. , ------~ ~-r t.i1 .. wn ;1,, gulrl t'0\1t'h. (~,1t!o•1111.rtn1t',\. ~1 •l1n~. l .. ikl" 1""1 .. ~.'.() •II' 11·11rlt• lot 11 ""1.l'r. ;,,:~J-'.!30~ •·v•·s. • SOf':\ 6: 1.ov~:sf;,\T * tl'i'Vl'I' us•~I. .~1:~,. C•uall.1 llu1 nt• ~M~!C-7!HO < :Ai\f"J.: 1fi1-:-or1:rt seAl.'1 ,!;. n1n t1·h111~ hutl1•1, Nau)!ahyd•• d .1·s. G4G~l~'ll. ------Hovs•hold Goods 814 \\'1,SllF:~:. •h'Yl'1' r ~·tr i:.:, L'Ollchts, r·hn~. rhl.•, !;: 11i1·· Clif f"!, MJI [ll'lt'<'d !or quirk iw.llt , all 1.1a1-'n 011 S.11. 1111 rfa~ I Sun. 4~ 1-.n __ ,_, ____ _ .\USC luro & hou1t•hoolrl il••filil f!'>1 ~I•', 695 npt R] Jo.inn 61[;.?2ti1J 16 16-~. 1 J•welry llS • GENEROUS • • REWARD • J T h Call t\11'. Ne11•n1an 97!)...:1222 1 rRO~l~'HEE \\'t'!C:!inithOU~(' I 714/979-9100 r. ec VDM i\l.\HKETTNG Secretary . PBX Recept . $500 TELONIC THE BROADWAY 2rlrrerrii:.1'1lppt•rro1w, J5 r u ' '. -G-Al-FR.10-AY--SIL•' y JI Ing , aggressiVr FL't! Pai1I INDUSTRIES HUNTINGTON BEACH r1. Sl:lO l>l'~I o!f•'l'. 492-0lHS. Ill t t rager. 642-9470, Dave. Bl' the bell ringer in llil~ ll<)TP'(HNT ri•l rh:1•n1hw, \\'ork ·11·i1h -I men for 11·orld· us ra or ru bulous lll'I\' ofc. of ran1ous Lanuna Beach ;'\'011' lnltl'l'i('ll itlg Fol' n1•oc:·urt11. Good t'l)llrlitl'JIL For n~htrn or 11. n,v tn- forn1:11 io11 lt>riding 10 rr1urn 111 11 gol•I ruur' lt>1Jf 1·lol'l'r r1ln, t•pJnTix, '.? \n{·he' in diiunt•ll·r. 11·irh j ,. 11• e If" d hot'S<'ShOf• in ct•nlcr: 11l!l'l, :culrl !01:krl l\1·11g on l'hain<. appt\11:. tl u! xi:1.e of a nirk~I. ins(·1·ihrd in !4!rlp1. F'LA. TIK'l«' ;,,.,. 1!t<t•pl,\• lrrasured W111ily llU'llll'IUt'IS Ar th(' lot.A i1i1 irr,.plr11't•ahlr. PLEA.SF. . PLF~ASi': ht·lp ii you ha\'C any inforrn<1t io11 -642-l~ E\'t'~. &· 11-f'ekl'nd~. \1·lde co. irvlM Coniplcx. Varian D•ta Machines MASSAGE TECH. 1·0. Allrnt.'tivf' l: ri-irndlv • TEMPORARY s.:o. 646-l:tll7 ~'('f> SpllL $50'.J. Also fet' po· I I 2722 Michelson D r TRAINEE iudiv. S01.1¢lt. C11ll K1n1 sitions. Call Ann Chl'is1ir. WHAT ARE YOU Irvine, Calif. 92664. 1 Cl1•rk. 1133-2700, Al.'ii1 Frc ~uaJ Opper. Employrr STOC ~:XC1·:L Ll•'.1'T~~t~. 556-850.),Conh'lllCarcerEni· 1Ynung lady '18-2SI "'artlctl Jobs. Denni1 & Dt.•nn i~ P1•1·.I'"""""'"""-"'""'"'"'""'"'"'' K HELP \\'hidpool \\'nshr1· s1;.-, I I '" •4 0 01 DOING FOR THE (714) 833-2400 fur legitin1ate full 1in1'.' po!ii [ sonnl'l A"cnty ol Ir1'1111~. f146-'.l1Z:l or 6~2-'.l6?i poy1nC'n ,~ency. " !ion. No e.xp. nel'. \\'e Sl'nd 2082 Ml r h:!Sl'.ln Dr. RECEPTIONIST :111ninnnn i\J.:•' 21 lr1•inc Bl\'d., N.B. REST Of YOUR an equal OIJJAJl'lunil} 10 11chool. earn 'while leam. 1 ~·,.1• 1~aiif. l.ikt• 10 lllN't IX"" ii) Hours l1 ll'rf'k. Like to trade~ Ou1 Trader·.i * GARDENER * J <mplo.ver n11 f Apply In person any afl. or PRE·SCH_OOL t_l' 11. (' h •' r lllL•? lnve.~lnit•nl finn ni·-·«· Par:\tli~e col11n1n~for you! LIFE? , .. , ·' ,. d '' ~-u~ Int.•r1•11• 10 11n1·l:l noon Be your own Boss • r1'('. ?9l0 \\'. Cs1. H11"Y·· 1 ~an n1 imml~•. :..X JI · or .1our .~ln't skills. $.;o(), Also Neii•port Rrach. 1 E.~. rlasSC>ll prf'.0f: Call rt~· Poi;ilions. Cnll Ann . .\pply Personnr·I Ort· t'ulJ or p/111111" in your VARIAN DATA I 67.l-4022, f"l'l' 673-17 .• 1. Clui~fil'. :,:)().~~,(Jj, Conln1J ---3~·11. i'loor G~~~:~t:~~li~u~~~.c~I MACHINES INSURANCE SALES MECHANICS i PRODUCTION \\'orker for Cart'C'I' f:1n 11luyn1r n! :\!!;•'n('Y. Et: ua~1011 F-<~lnE~er. loll.B . I Fork 11 f1. neeri 5 exp;•!'. Fork hall.<~ plant. s.tC'ad)'. E:>..rv>r ~ J1i•inc B!\'d., N.B. 1 1 PP°'· mp yer rn/ No C.sh Do I thr hig L'Olllpa.ny Ill sniaU ' ,., •1 cl . XI t ., ~ 1::::::===~====: wn . 1 1 "e llinicli. 11 wages dC's1rable. Lev.·1~ Bros .. 110 RECEl-10."IST . T\'PIST --I::a iii f'ow, Pav Later ro1nputef!I, has an un-No exp 0('('., earn 1vhilr you \ & ben 1n 41 a,13..{XGI -1 ,, ,, S34-7 fl7 , n1Nllale openin.i:: klr a learn, part tune, C\'e& 1~ ~.l.EOLC.AI. otnr(' ~·rl't'tar" E. 16th St .. C.!\1 . i111n11..-diat(·0~~.~"nl~~~· S4.00-nio. TOOL & ----~=""~ tee~ iliu!Mnt!Ot' ~in OUI' l\'kOds, rutJ tlnle when qua ,... 1' ~ ...,,._,, av Gt:NER~A LOFFICE I '''Ii bllcatlonll De,,3rtment fled. for radiology oftiC<" neC'CIM * R-ENTAL-AG-ENT * DJE MAKER Career Minded, enthusia11t lc, One y~r e X Pc r I l' n l· c · Fanners lnllurancr Group 1111nil'fl. Loea!NI 10 Np! PURCHASING F t · 1 nianUa1 pasti up ncet>ssnry. Ed Ll . *' 54().Il!J4 Bt'it<'h. l"X prr "'/insura11(..'i'5 BUYER as i:1'011 11~ r· .. a r.st;i!t• S 11 l . 1 r . : .. individual, age l:J/35 11•\th 'bl ( ani & 1.ompuli·r hiUin~ pre * * 1'0n1pi1ny in Laguna Br;u·h, .. 111A Pl't!l' .~IOll 100 s. ,xper• good typing ~klll11. Plensanl \\'ill also be responsi c or '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' ferred. Call &12-6464 for ' n!'l'ds ,..._.nlal :1).!ent for ils in· 11~ boals, lihOt1 run slan1 For an ad in Woman's World • phone · voice & manner, !IOn1c sin1pll' line drn11·ings. JANITORIAL ,,.,, ... ,,,.,,, •ppr. YOU'VE HEARD IT c·t·casin1:ly busy i~ntal 1lc11t. pings. & ,.1n·ecisl;\?11 .. P'1" Coll Muy Beth 642·5678, ext. 330 •1 11·ffronl offi('f' appe11rance. Rt'lated M:hooling IM'lpful. ,-" ' i\lusl hal'e s I• I c s n1 ;1 n · i; ~rPs:<11·~ ( u.•s. ur..; n NeRtnrss a n1ust. N1>1v of· \\'c orrc.r; , for full lime day & ni!C' O a.'il lk'f'nllt'. tlc1iendl'ntly & hal''" O"n ' .d S flees In Ne\11>0r1 Beoch nr ; po~itions, over lll, for mort M LD mAKER LF1!.'\11u1 R~·n l·h i<+·.~idrnt -1001.~. Xl111 working "11nd$. I You'll Rate Raves Pla1 -Pretty et :~: ~~·. S42j/S~JO. Phon1• * ~odern Facill· ~'~N~~:;~~~~~~~: Exi)('r. in nlanufaclui-e 01 ALL BEFORE ,., N*olan4:t;~73Est*ate 549 .. 3041 , I ,. ----- --ties ,. 1 .. S40 .. "·· 1 ·•>••II p•-c·i~i"" •nuld•. Ablt· GEN'L OFC TRNE * 'I .. ui·n ...,. ~r 11'l'c" won• ~ ... ~ ----------~quul Oppor. 1.:n111loyrr 1~· No e.xj)('i·. ncccss. Avg typlni: Basic and · lnR' after !K'hool und Sa1ur-lo dL'llil:n own molds & see But ho\(,· oHl'n ha\t' 1111 llKJsi• Retired P•rson , (, & wHJingness 10 Jcani \1;\ll ilo M d• I days selling ne1\' sul>,;t•rip· .klb!! \hrough to L'Omplelion offers tome lhrough, clrx•.!1 Or College Student UN ION llo1 Hooft•rs -. I 7353 't i!, Xln'r ~arling !!II. & t~. Major e ICG rions for lhl' DAILY PILOT. Xlnt ll'Orking t:onditionll. !ht• l'OmJ>llOY Jive Ull 10 J•ltin1.-.. AIH ~ A·l'uyub!, .. f11r1·n1an ·" Si'l~H'lll !llan ::-benefit~. + Lffe 1'his i.o1 not fl pa.prr iuu!r 549 3041 pr-omiscs beyond your 11•il!I· °"li--lffil 111 >1•1 11 !t 11111 & .i 11ll1. 1;:a.rn top 11·a:,:t•11 if }·HU run Jason Best A,ency uni! <io('8 not inclurlP 11<·· ., • est dr{'am,'!'. VARIAN DATA R N~ LVN"°foi· il0t·tiW's 7ir. tn1~11t .. Btti!dl n~ nt.'" 1.·1'(·11~ .. 1.7400 Hrookhunn. r·. Yiy • 1 * Stock Purchase livt>1·ie11 01· collt'clln.11:. OpC'n· Equal Oppor. En1ployer i\IAClllNE1'. 1hc• t11g 1·un1· 11,.,.. \\'i ih· l'~·' ciu ~~:'I f•ir .. :011.L.11,.,t~'•I ,,,,111111ny ., .:>Ultt' 213 9:ll-677J * Profit Shar1·n9 ing11 in Costa J\IC!!a, ~·oun!ain -----!K.~Y in ~n1all i'(l1n pu1 1·i.~. ··i1n· of Oiiil~ Pilot. 1-0 I~•\ i<::.;.~i71 .is~ lur l~li B)nl GENERAL Shop lllventor'-" I Va!lt'y and Sooth ll11ritirt,11:1 on J\IOTEL P.1A ID \VANTED 1sn ! han~1ni: ."'. u 11 11111<. N.oo ... 1.-_J6;1. Co~111 :-Oh·!t.:i, Calif. ~.La1Ty \\..i1'l1f'r. l , * 12 d I Rear.h. Apply llflV.' by t•111linl? 1vil1 1r1tln, Mpply in 111•1',;(lll TI1l' rron11!lt's iul' 1'!'.11 ;irull ~'"""'• UNUSUAL n1ainlen11nce" deli\'{''"", full \ ays a "·1~ 301 3 '~" ., ..,,.,,. · Cost<r. ;'11esa Inn. i tht• olfl•rs oirun a rt·111u1l--------.-- thne, 548-&i31. I year pa' id I Equal Oppor. >.:rnployt>r 1 * i\IUSICIANS Looking: fnr I ing. rhatleno,.,-ini: i·ar•'''" '"" Room Ser v . Waiter ENTERTAINER (S) -G'iJilSOR BOYS KEYPUNCH 5496 or !l6lOI capabl<' man:igcr. Ref~. ,.oo ln our Pureha s111!.! IJc. I' 1l1n". ,..:.o;i11H' ha1:<1u11 11·1Jrk. OPPORTUNITY 10-13 ye11r11 old for DAILY I vacat.ion Pern1 11/limt• nill'~ can John or Bill 5.l7--81j1. Partn\1'01. I Ex B~1b:;; ;~YSVl'C'1"~b\l,..;r. Salary, rilus o)\'t"l I l•I·· PILOTpaper routcs lnSouth l * 6 day' a year ~~~· :' oper exp r~• INC'"SI' PEI , ,.-p .-. I I I Call .\Ir. B11111n. q;:~.i:.~• P! Sallll Ana, bet11·et>n i\10 111 \ ~ :ttG--033! ' ' . c..•Y A ~ ICll'. /111111~ Hequ1r.rn11·nl:< IH'U!<'.Pl'IUI'\ 1~'21 \\', Coa I Jh1,1., :'\B __ 'i\lldi.!!'.'n~t\Uir~~-- ' ,. S:. f'airvi<'ll', \\'al'll('I' &. SAn pa'1"' sick 1 ---------~· -N.8 . 11.rea,. 1"-"· ,,, t'XIJ('l'l{'t~('i• 111 plll'l'!Ht~lfll.' of ----sAt.~'" l'l.'fJ __ _ o · F\~ U J< IT C H EN II 1• I 111• r . ~..,..., ••lrc•1ron1r componrnls 111 lh1• . : ' · I iego 1~2-4l:l1 leave. I Highschool boy to work all NIGHT (;uard: La:.:una. Surf t'On11>1.1ier or 11('1iphf'1~11 I'"\· Tu~e L ife Books Lyiul Coogon school. p/tln1t". Sid'11 Blllf' & Sand hutel, firs: 11 pni 1,, h1t••1l fi r ld. \\'1• oftl't" ~111ntai.t1t· a I 111 u s 11 h L' i· ~. * 100 /0 • 2nd "·-1. s•• ~·o il<'< •1•m.__ 6 ~, I C 0 '1•1'111.-r~•rt or f·l1n11'. :1 00.,1,,.,, ,,,0,,,., f t 1>1.T '~"""" , ·,0•1. . .. "''I' 11·. .ontac od F .1• · · ;• ·· " "' . * M ern ac1 tfies l'usi1 1on~ ;1 vu1J. sl:•rtini! inl· " URGENTLY NEEDED f ' Eq \1al Oppor(unil) En1plorrr S'hift differen• LEADED .i:tnss shop in Santa 1 .1;1rk21· \Vc·:<Tl!1'00k, 111011 ,tin u * 8 . , d M . 1,,,.d, ~:arri a~ nuwli hS vtiu Gii lFriday $700 I i\na need~ peoptf' r o t· _!:_•.::_..!.._.'.11!1 ~ .!._pn1 . .\!l-1:-f·111. as1~ an ~1or i1;u11 , s111r1 1•1 llu~· S'.!.:t5 .P'"'I' ' t-\•r Paid. IJ you like c·haJ . tial .1~st•n1bly. ff'nlflOl'nl'l' 1hru NITE AUDITOR Medical + Life !11". ~·rw .~<·r1ous n11nd<'d. tt·ngr~& IX'OPIL' thlll 111 )1.l111·j . ~~~~127s7 r, jl('I' houi ·!11o!L•I 1.11' t·luli t•:.:p;•1". ri'(jr! !* Stoc 1 k 1 P5uhrc~a•e I fl\)'>1111·1·. run l!J1'1ni: Jll'ooh·.I ~ 50 ASSEMBLY 1•ttr'eer. Plu-11h ofr.11. Also FP•' '011 1uay bf' !hr one 11'1' ri~!'.' Kr~1w1 • ..,11!•· ,,r NCH 4200. * Pro t ar1ng l1l'"'M' ~·il l r;..111 lhu1d, Positions. Cnll Elly J.::llls. I looking ror. PlcaSC" apply rn F lin11<. S!.•t· l't•rso1:n .. 1 !\l;:;:r. * 12 days a year paid ~::~-~!!,~~ __ __ TRAINEES =~n1Con~~~n~~.rN'; ~~~10 ~·~n °~.~::~~ I TIME FOR 1~~~~t~~::1~i~1·~~.1 ~~H. I* ;.d:!~0: year paid l 1.~."A'' L·' E,.rs ,.M .•. ~.:.A,111N1. / 1 • :; Irvine Blvd., N.B. I QUICK CASH k I ' I t GIRt f'drt,,.. Coo·p. ""'" I NDTEI I soc eavo . THE TINDER BOX r n erim I ~ · 1 '" II ti o· VDM r"" * 10"/e-2nd shift p I S • .' .... ~~ ~ir 10 '"' a L <' >11 Real cslale Salesman differential South Coast Pla'la ersonne erv1ce of cverythin~. Typing. f!I · THROUGH A II ,you h:1v1• 11 llt·f't1~eor11•an1 3333 S. Bristol St. 17581 Irvine Blvd ··, ing. corl'<'!IJIOndencr , hkkpg I' Bol' I ~· & J't'cept!onis1. 10 k!'.'y rxp. nnr I('!• '" 1n"rr 0" \'ou nu1y ht.• 1/u· uni· 11" 111!' Co•ta Mesa, 540-8262 #llS Tustin . helpful. Good bl'n('l it11 . DAILY PILOT ('<lllildrnt illl ~n1Cl'l'l('~'. R('(l lookirli ror. P!ra.'M,· ;1pplv ~ -83&-5460 -~· f. Irvin<' lln'M. CMll Anil11 I Verlan Data Machine• Ca1'f11 ·1. 197-1761. in pcr110n nr coiita<'t' ' S,-\1.l·:s;-.1,\N l.: \J!111M~""· 111al,. J f1·111. $~-, &.• lip Eip1:tl (lr1oii.-t:111p1.,v1·r ~Ill. 2722 Michelson Dr, Nui'!lt'~ B. Krafka 111u111hl." :.:uurn 1f ijunlllll'li.I'"'"'"" _____ ,.. __ -GTRll FRIDAY--Irvine, Calif. 92664 WANT AD LVN-Relief ,-.;., ,.,,k·r 11•·1~·~~ i\lr. L•'l!I WAITERS & Local 111Klll'lkilcr dl'Sln'~ (714) llt.2400 All stufl ~. Salaries 1'0111n1rn· VDM I '21.1' Tit)-.•(il:I BUSBOYS A111 :ut udin1rn11on 1111h indil ii·/RQ()d IYJ>llti ~ki l!a 11 64' 2-5678 ~lll':l l<' 11 l'Sf)CI'. P11rk Liolfl ~,\l..1-'.S :.:ul-t•\Jl'-:;:--i1n7l,:;·1 ('h•,ulll!• l: "'111• l"i 9' '9 8-18 llil~ IJl;ud·1u1·ll,i 1"h1111l 11n1I I ,(. 10 key add!...,. n1111il \'i•r)' an f'IJUal o PP or I u n Y 2.1 11 .,., " t•asual ofr. si;rt $500. Citll f'lllpkl)'l'r ni/f IJ;•nllh C11rr. ·161> i'lagsh111 ' 01h«o I' ",·s 011 for 1h·1·<1~1 hu111111o 1-l pa1111"'· ,.111, J Kay \Vinro. S·l().60.'li'i. CoAslol . R1t.. N.n . fitl.Jlo.t~. [ I s 011. •'"" ~:1 ;or·~ ' 1~1n1· ~.~. I'. 1 >11011111·1 .\J""""•·1· ii.I ~'--,·..., -<rrl,. ~-r·,···ati• 1, 1.,1,1. hn.:111 I .. Varian Data Machines 1111 ... ~ion. t'11ll ~·.11· .1pp1u l Balboa Bay Club 1 llli..... 111 "-"1~ l'L.\llJ ,.tf1·,.1 .. 11h?. mlnr<; l'el1i0nnel i\gancy, 1790 !lar-[ I 2722 Michelson O r. :,:,7-llfii 1211 \\'. t\1,1-1 11111 . ,\,I\ '"'"In•! 11n•,l1 1ou11d1111on, bor Blvd .. C;\I, ~~ [l,t,tJ-------·---. 1h1 11 \(,(•:11 1• lhl'll u~C" $rra-o ~ -c..... Irvine, Calif. 92664 -"•jl.1-:...: .~ ........ \,'Ii '•~ ';lt·nrl;nl(t· \\'u i111·"~ ,t· 11.:::.-::-•• --l(.\T~: !:1\VI·:,; !nr lht• \\'H''-ll'<!. 1'11!1 •1'11 7.l:~: 1hl"f'1 · I I 1 I • l l I 1 • l ~ i'-\J {714) 833-2400 r• '"u" 1 '1 •·~" 1~ ~ .\pp y, eBLUE DOLPHIN• , .. t~r•. t1·,.~h 11·111 ynu 11 .. 1<. 1 HELP! 111 P•'l',"~il, ~·~· 1,,.1'1',I, .:1::1 ,,,._I' I I 'I' 01,0, !1•1h l•or 1111111i.;I" ~Ii·"'. T'af /nfr1'gur·ng War-' Gom• wr't' a Chuc "fe llurl~•r. CJ\! ···~ 1·' 1' "· ·' • "'"'11 ·1'111 h 1"'11·•· 111 1r·11:.: .. 1! .·:op. I n a "°" n If. 1111 t'llUUI •1ppu1tun11~ WANl'tO nll1~1un•l 11n; ~hi1·1 1·1111 1111····~· ..:E\'l•:.,..1,.1•1,1 .. f·t:'''"' -------rtli••,. 9y CLA'I' 11. 'Oll~N Pmniu1·('r 111 r SECRETARIES 1•. l'l11M).<(' guh;il'll1111'. <h•uhk '''" ,.a,·h ri.o11i·iii udd z:, Volt Instant Personnel NEEDS e Secretaries e Typists e-«:eypunch e PBX Oprs --------I HELP wanted r x pt r .' secretary 10 work rwr !Im£' In leather jOO(l1 nitg, of.Qce. Som• .sl'°"""1Kl helpful, .nt:· counts payabk' " :1: p r-r . 58,lfuy balft'd on e.~J')tr & ~klll•. Plea11(' r.all ll~l-OOX1 for intl'lvil",l' oppn1. __ _ ITO'STt.SS. t \;J) d 0111)' n1•1•1I 11.11ply. Oenvt'r 1\f\nlna Co .. THI\\'. Hllh ~!. C.lt f\4.'\ •• 1~~:1 , I BEGlll: I' I I I K 0 S E T ' ' I I I I! If o ir pollution gets c ny worie-, sky div11ns will kove to _________ 1 wtor -shoes. l•. OrN'I] ,. ,. .. , WEC SAH I 1-~1-~,-..... ,T • ..,l~,-.,~,-i e COll'OCl!t •• th• chu(~l11 .tlVO!td . • . . • • by f1fh111 lf't lht ll'"Ul"0 WOid ~--~ .... -~_.~_._~ you d1111!Qp rom s!tp No, :'I btlo'"'· A P"INT NUM8(tf() -v (ETT£1:S IN ~U..,RES 0 UNSCtAMllf lEtlEtS I 19 11 •NSWE , . ' ' • J I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCATIQN 818 , I .i :.:111~ 1111 .: , .. ;.,, .. 1.1 1;111 1 ~. 1la1uh·I '''' E--ES A & . 10111 \ 1·11•11· '' '.O ••'Ill • !Pl' ,.;,.·h ,.dlf'rJI R Al T TE SALES " "1 • ' ~ 1'·'1"'1 Prinlt•d l 'a"•"ll ~' /\ii \I.iii ;Hui -.1,,., >.ii !l;1 odl I $ KEYPUNCH OPRS l'""I'., 111 . ..:.1,1111 ,.;,1111.1 \11,0. \Jo.,,r,· .-.11.1•• I( 10. 1:.:. I~.](;, loo"'. '"'"'0'1\l~•' 1lo1>·J.1•l,1~t I 4\I 1•1•1111·• 11 \la Ill .~· l".il I 11'11. ' i o I I' I I ' !.h·1•nsini:: S.·h1111I l1'11n1· ;,111 1[111 I ~ ~ll.l' ~ 1 •ll!il ·•' 1''"~ 1!••l 1,j•1i 11 111 111;•· lhr1•16 \\':0111,•, .~ S·111 li1<'1.:u l·\11 " 1 " I 1-I I I ~u •~l~t 1n rnu 11 yo11 1111:11if~ ! li.Xll:l Ski 1•:11 h i.1 ·.• A:'.'l · · ., 1:11'<' "llH' 1 '' •+.,. , ,.,.1,~ "" 111,,1,· )'.;r11d tn l\!l(t join ,1 T11rl11'll •l!ll•'I' ,,1·:v ~;11 .\ Fl·:i·: ,\T Tl·\] ,t,\'t.S l\ 1•1\r, 1·•:, ... 'Ii .... 1: •••• 1,. ""' !l \11 .V r I ,~ 1111 f '•••\'nn I h 11· 11 •111 · 11 " :i.ter 1111~in~ 11!1• ~talc· T•'1np" Tc•n1p,,r:H) fl )h,ln•l "1.ui;i.,·r "r '""' ·• 1 -·"' -' ... 111rr l•I• '•1-.lli·('r11!1 f'l:tl!ll, \lnny nlall:ti,:1·111P111 _________ i·•nl• f,.1 •.1•'1 1•111•111 1»1 1,..1,1 I ~'" IG'. 1\lo!Clu•!-:1".I ()J)porluni1i,.:i •htf' 1,. lh(• .. ,. 1 Sec'ys G irl Fridays I (l1Jt•w•n11111 1-:,,.1,1·11• 1 1,11· \I 111 :uMI ..:.1 M·<'l11 I 11.111·!1' :::1.,,1,.,, \,.,1 Ynik. ?.: \" 11:111~1011 n( our 111 111·11 •1!-Bkk ' S40"SIOOO ' 1~:1:. 111:\:\.\lt•:'.\'l ,\L 1'11 .l lT, 41:!. l'.•11"1'11 f~·1°1 .. 1•~l\I 1•1,,., ,1,111,., \<l•lr,. .. ~. flt:t•~.(':i11A1Sln·111.~·:1:11111 prs ,... fl :11;-.. EXI ' IA!:\!~\ i••· "'f11·•111••' llnt•l•I.•~" 7.11 •. l'nll "r" '""'IM•r, TARBELL RI \')\..J:''i'I' l o'lll<'ol "Ill l.1kl' J111'1'•' 'l'i'(li.i('f',\"I' • eators .FREE FREE FREE · ""' • 1 1 r b"'; Orrtc•t•-. .'.<. t;1 .. 11 Hh! 1 I.•• l,'o oO•f••o, ,\e>'IOl'I \fll/l \\' \ ,, .... ·rn \\(lf!J\" \\f'1'kll I.II IUUl'r, Sl•rw 1'' I 1'" tu·! kt!11 l'f1, . 1'11.111.111 \1..,1111. tll" 11\ll.Y ,•1,.,1,,,11• ·,n, -A-EAL-ESTATE SALES 11 21 \\1· .. 10·0•• l'I o·. f1f:IVF A ('1\li ~ , .. , 11'1·-.I l"ll• -.:1 ..... ., " ('I I ·-· · lt,.l1P1! 'lu1·r•u•" Hnot. 1:-;uit( 11\ NI: '(,::! .~1:•1 ltllJS. ,1,.ur l~·11r~. 1~11 \, ''tul; II\' ll••l1 l'11u1 1 ,,. r.,,~1 kni•l\, JI.,! E11111hl1 .. ht•tl 1•11.,, l"l' 1"111°'•·tf, 1 ... ~""'' 1n1 11 f\ \\If';, \Ulll:I·.''' <1111• I h ,11 . \i 1_, ' ' ti I I' I h•h~ ~1,•11 "' 11•i111,.1t. C.111 .,,,, .,.,, I «O'\ o 1· • l'll' 0 ...... Ill .. •"Ulla .. -on·i .:.1.:c1:1:r\l!Y 1·1 .. 11. 111•0 ... 1 .• :-; . ' :II~ . , .......... 1 I ''"'hl"I H1i.1k -~I I I j I I 1 11 lw "h>.:hll~ Ii ui.lor".l lllM'•I l'\l '\llJ~:tt • . U'> '" ,,.,•n.:.·1. Ill Il l :-.'1•111•111 t•rv-;1 !t.t11•U" l11•' ,.. I l 1•n1tt l•I IJH1ll1'f':t' P~f d I '"a 1· 1""1 f•fM':oT".1ln"' SFf l\l lll{I Q' I 0· ('\)O!il \.I L',L:!:•'I, 111'11 ""1'" 1·ni.•1n!!. ,.1,..)11;11. 11t••r~· f•u · · ' ·, 1 ,.,. li'f1•< S11lf1 I 'I . , . -.. v1 .. n ·111111. \.:•· !.o '" iu. L· 1, 0,. :tnol 1 · "l"Of\I', • [lfll '1, \:!!'a",<'• llt''h iot'"hlt1' htil•'I'. \Ill•! ~J~ 1" • I' M!I.''!° 111"' ( •"•111l••h• 111-.tnlll tilt! ftnok Cont.ct Do r • Sm.th I Sc111plf'nu·11I \•111r !111•11111• t•'ltll'l'TI tr~ !I'll/II 011\ o • : r 1 '·''"' " n1n .ul!hn~ ni." ti 1 '1 · • 11111n• 111:111 100 i:lfl'J A I " -\'r<1 1· :-, ':i • u· .. nr utor .. ·' IO'/ o-oft•• Soo•1o•o-Co•r ol , \II mer1canHomeRea tor P111 111'"" 11 .. n ~111uk1•r, 1 ...... " •·• ·' n·~ SI 00 _,•II. Aio1>h. !1> l"'l"(ill, ...... 1 0 1>iy .,_ I I ..... '' C I\ I l'I · ,. 10-1 ' • · ,Jll'I;;, l'n1t111 •'1r .\l,h1111 Hoo• .... ., '' II , II \' .. 1i,:unn I I .~ .... ' -\'1•11111 {';11 • t'••, i:<r: ,. ll:lh IN .. rAN'll ~t:\\'INI~ n1w11, S\00. ~ • 1.11.\ 1~1_•_ --j ~t:f'!t't:1 \l:Y fnl' 1 ... ~1111u ~1. f\"1;1 \1t•~1o i.•'I\ hlt!a_1. ll'•'llr to111111'ft111 ' lfl ,IJfl• lt u~ Hnak ... ~,O.· REAL ESTATE X11nll'l l.:111 .. 111t" r:'r"'l'l\\'fl\li\X :~. ''" 01'•'i :-.o ,., Sl 11,.,.i. ·.,, 1·! l'rh.11 Al1;ll•"•· SALESMEN fll•'I flut1<•\111ol.,«1!111'1~1'' l·l'I' 11,.,.,.~, \llnii u..:i•thll 1~~1'1\NT FAS 111 0N •,.i,.. \\h)l11Ut11v1'k!nlh1•h•1!1r .. 1,111t1 hlin..:. 11 '1'1'1"'11 S. ill" l!''l1ri1ni.; ll1>lll RCl(ll{ lf•intlrrtl~ o r Q1tUtl\11nkl -11i 11itllrrn~. iu'fln llunrin,i:i"n Jt,-;,,.1,. 1r:in~rr1hh11!; \1111 1~\11-:1d1•r ,,j11111,11,.,11 1111\!r·,.,~l•in hi lr1•·h\nn la1'f1t. S1 ~Ill·. Fountliln \'1\IJ(·~ l.rl 11~ Jlllll 11111" '\.ll -11"11 r•hn11< hYt!l1 nf1111· jn Nr111;1 ,,,;-;-:;-llt•m('lhl"' )'Oil 11•1111110 I ,,11 .... 11111 1r•ln )'llU. tnll J'hll \11· SECRETARY I R~·h ;'\'" «1•11111'~ ~ .... • hr" trll~ MM~•ifiM 11'11'! f\11 1t ?l(lc. ~lllTt('r,. \'1!41.:\~~~; I! f-\Lj \r\\ l~\11 l • Ill\ 1, ,,111l•11111t1~ .;1,11 I '.: .~IJ'lll i, I fi • 1 ll 7 1 111"11 1•11!1 Nn\V 6l:Z •:'1KU. q11111 .. fur 1'rnhlj '• l .h•ln1 f,!on',\T; .. ~.·lih1 111 ' "' \ll"l"n'l 1"" 1. !;•·11 ., I DAIL V PILOT T11tid-'J, Octobtt CJ, 1973 L[L----· ~!~[§]~! ;;; .. ""';;;''~'~~·. [ ·,,..,.,., I~[-=~,, I~ [ .......... l§J I -.... I.. ' Li .... 1 Tl"'!,?: $2.IO RKN•lloouol Mlsaltlneout1 8llMlscell1n.ous 111 · -Boats, Slfpa/Dodcl 910 Vehlcl" 956 AutM., tm111rtM liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii GR.t'Y • whJte T&bby, mile, SLIP or IUde tie \\'anlcd in 1----------IMW ho4..lle cat, IPl.)'t<d. l yr. old. N'pt. area., fur 32 ft x 6• 3 .. DUNE Buggy wJfull roll SHOWROOM CARPET 'CLEARANCE ~.ire! ""'"° " 0ct. l!I ....... ,. 963-2887 Ev" , .... 1.1001964 vw '"""" -"?.!!!!!!!!! Ready tG run. $399. ~. -O~GE COUNTY'S OLDEST F1nt11tlc Hvings on upgr•.dod SHAG CARPETING! Seeitnow .•••••••••.• through October 10th et tho AUTO SHOW priced lo\v for im1nediate sale Bt.:.AUT., healthy n1ale lhep. I " [i] ~~~nl~l ·~.!,.~~~· ~· '~1.-~'"~·~·7~· """~·~>I liiiiitii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~]~dtiiii~ I ·T_r_uc_k_•'------"' 96 .;;; 1 . FORD truck. '63, % ton, 8' bed. Nu llres. Alr cond. & lr~1 c •-t /Rnt920 p/s, 50,000 nit. Rad\o & Ptil& .wt~ ?"". •mpers, -• t be11.ter xlnt cond.. $l800. '-------'· 173 KING-0.ROAD M8-6744/548-t.m'. Execllent l('iootion 01· pre- • •••••••••I 71 SPTS CUSTOM p11ce l"f-evaluation models. 8' ''(..'orn1w.t.1,, Cab-Over , Cati 852 Can1per, like nt>\\'. car)X'ted. 1/2-TON, MINT COND. S!\LJ=c't~sING MAZDA * Moma '7J Rot•ry * $66 MONTH 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE Will accept trade-lnl 'CALL MR. FRY i42-.fi666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 7)4, 523·1031 0' 213: 723-8311 --------~I 11lceps 4. Thru·hoot tilted f<ir BEST OFFER 192.1132 PERSIAN 8 \\"t?eks, pick of Courier. l.'unain!, ~ove, i("C OVERSEAS DELIVERY J7331 Beach Bl. 842-6636 lll!cr, blue· fcn1alc, Reg. box, 14 gal. water. Asking '73 CHEVY Oleyenoe 1..i T., ROY CARVER, Inc, BOB LONGPRE-$125. 673-3626. $i50. 962·38'2'1. 454 n¥Kor. auto, 2 ps tank!!, -- Machinery Mi~:~:~aou1 820 Dogs 854 •70 V\V Pop Top Caniper, air, l nlO. old. Make oUer. Costa ~E. 17th St.5164444 MAZDA \\,llT:-.;EY 637 A·XC & -===--------------1 New engine, trans. clutch, ~. 6J5.-077S. ., 116 I l§l ~I __ .. _ .. ~I ~ Allfos, ~ 990 '67 TOYOTA 4 door, ~made trinsmls· 11011, tldlo, heater. " au condiUontna. (055.J'DL). $795 IE:J • 2840'1 Marguerite Parkwtly ?iflssk>n Viejo Sll-2040 4$-!M9 fUSE AVERY P\VY. EXIT) VOLKSWAGEN CA MARO '10 CAMARO. air, amJfrn, p/a, p/b, aut.o, $22$0. Call Sat-TueL 49t-a&ll. CHEVROLET '61 QIEV rmp&la, Excellenl cond. $750. P.fake oiler. ,,._ CHRYSLER '70 NPT. 8.Ji:. xlll'l <.-ood., Pis & P/b, new tires &: IShocks 40.000 nll. $1850. 61>6099. ·n CHRISLER 4 dr aedan. Xlnt cond. Below blue book. $2100. 548-4$14. """"' ,._ """"· "PP'"• ORIENTAL RUGS • PUPPY WORLD • '"''" ""'" FM "''''" 1970 EL CAMINO. P/S, CREVIER BMW -SERVICE FIRST-·-Sha'p 960-1503 P/B, air, • .i-·t roof. Under ·-J<AR•••"N Ghia A/ CONTINENTAL atta<'hrnent. punches & Ch.lhuahuas, Tl"Y Poodles, · •"o Sal-• •-"·-• '-·'-EXCLUSIVE u1 llUU• · c, TY NEEDS 69 "\ :10,000 miles, new titts. Xlnt ""' .:xi·v"-'t'! •·•-u115 tires if uffi <lycg. l'!K'CI 250 hni, "''iii PRIVATE PARE GS Amer. Esk !Spitz), Dober-· \ 11 Popup top cam~, cond $2595 673--l65S 208 W. 1st., S.A, 853-3171 MlznAlrllS[ i r & h, nu , n m er, '72 2 DOOR dcinoris1nde. 714-~114. SEVERAL US D RU . man, Pit Bulls, Bull T~rrier, xtra heater, new eng, nunt · · · USED BMW'S JI r nu paint. 645-5595 or - Ml'S'Ceilaneous J18 6+1-5.12li * * * 6Ta-8713 Chow, Cockapao, Keeshond cond. 543-oo90 '.l.J FORD PANEL ,;-~o:::~~---.,-,,.. White on white. White vinyl \\'ANTED: Styrofoani pack-and ~ngliih Bull Dogs. 100 Cycles Bikes ~IPLETELY REB6 .... ~ '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) 0einoodi'atm' Sale '69 v.w. Excel cvnd, orig. ~· .~J.;ather ... ~.· ~: Notice!! Ing material to fill my sag. P,fIXED PUPS!! S tud ' • ~ ...... -..... '71 BAVARIA Now In Progress owner. $1,000 or best olfer. ,. ... uiuw.'& ... vuu Ring bean chair. P,fust be Service ?i106t Breeds. _s_,_00_1_•_" _____ 92_5 ·n% Oiev. Blazer 4x4 Cst '72 Tll ht St. a1 the S.A.·1'"rwy. 497~Z!03. :~ wh~tmn:iFn:g ~f._.fY~,"'°rt's'"p~~. or fn.>e. •~=O,_pe_•~Ev="~' -"'~'-·===-< BICYCLE ePECIALS Air cond. Po81 lraclion. 2 'n 2002 200)_E. 1st St., S.A SSS.1871 1969 VW BUG. xtra. clean, seat. Brand nu Michelin ···~"""·=.,,'=~OC---..--BULL DOG LOVERS ' • • -10'0•~•~$3500=-~=~·---'69 2002 MERCEDES IENZ xlnt nmn'-=· xlnl ""5 -~al' t~. low ml~-. \\••. ,,,,., •-" -mmissiont'd = N·w 10 •P •--159 95 ·~ ~... 1 m.n """ '"-" " .,._,. "" ClllLDREN'S plo,v house I---• horn .... " u""" ····•· · '66 RANCHERO •ih / 11350 ""7 ~0• "~ Pri Prt 6~3312 to hqu1da1c al. . • • ·~ a new e u•at can Used bikes from ...... $15.00 ' ' P 5• 1 ':61:.:2~002::_""""""""""""1--!i:Ou~~--· ""'"'(>J..,U, ro;r.TJ. • y. •->-• PUBLIC AUCTION ..,..anled, please p ho o e, give. nic 101.11 o! Jove &: at-Bike cleaning ........ $4.50 auto trans. New eng trans. I ii V\V Camper, 'Tl, CUsto1n 'Gj CONTINENTAL, r u 11 544-8874. tl'nuon. I am a female w/ Conipl Jub, adjust, clean _____ . _...,.~_91_7_•_11_6_.___ Bob McLar~n, B_ft'W 50 U5fP Adventure intrrior, air, pv.T, aJr, leather. 1 owner. 1 OOO's of y ARDS Mu1ical ln1trum1nl1 822 "'""" & 4 yn old. Mako & remove "'"· 145 val 129.95 Vons 963 1 MERCEDES 19,ooo ml, &14-2548, 7am-6pm. 1535. 67HU6. f CARPET Otfl'J'. 540-0097~ WANTED USED BICYCLES nc. 1969 VW Bus, reblt eng, cam-DODGE 0 BOGEN PA !-lead $50. C.Uh S!Lh.'Y Terrie111;.2 lemales. Bt!1lchBicycles806 E.Balb:ia Sales· Service -Leasing ON DISPLAY per conversion, $1700·, th .IS SUNDAY only. ~rious calls only. No rea.110nable ofter reful!ed. Blvd, BaI-... ,~7282 '72 1''"0RO Van, %T, P/S, 850 North Beach ~lvd., ha ·~ ,_3 1---------• 557 "l'l * 'Aid '"" P/B, V-8 auto, 24,000 miles, La Hab-S rp New Car J.,)U-.lO• • , ~ ,...,., DART iv ... Aulo, o ~1, .... " C1tll 832-M2'2 or 644-6l7S '73 TR.IUMPH 750. brand }!:Int cord. Crpted, paheled, (TI4J 379.f.Wt Tra de-ins 1911 VW Sus Cam~. ~w ~ body work, eng. ~~. October 14th Office Furniture/ SCHNAUZERS, rare black, new, ridden one week, 200 Mu.st see to appreciate. I \'!~"'l:~~~~"":'\!!!!!:"I Coming In Every Day mileage. Excellent coodi· $225. 645-7395 aft 6. at 1 PM Equip. 824 871-81.82 or after 5 pm miles, Sissy bar, crash ~59Z-""'2404""'°"' ,-,,-:=..,-~ 11'l6 BMW V-tl black A·'· Abo O tion ~. Call 83()..2693. FALCON CTION -==.:...----""-522-8366. hf:>lmet, chain lock, 645-7650. '71 GMC RaUy STX Van. Has Classic. Good cond.' $300). ~ U-.-..t ... ~t ..... u_r_ ULnlque 1969 VW Bug, auto, sunrf. MASTERS AU COPY machine-Electrostatic MI NI Doxles. AKC, puppy '69 YAMAHA orm Enduro. \\'lndows & seats. $2400. best offer. 548-3493 lwu meft=-. ffM $975. 1--------- (formerly \\'Indy's) COME BROWSE AROUND 2075% Ne\.\'IJOrt Blvd. ~hind Tony'' Bldg. fl.tail's. fast, continuous f eed. soots, 6 Wf!eks old. E:x:. oond. $400ftrade for fH6·9959 aft 4 pm. l ----C~A~P~R~1~--I Plant Call G73-4656 '64 'FA'LCON 289. Paper/supplies incl. $225, &14--0073 sailboat, Kile (){" larger =·n~CH=E=w=""'10~. -"'°"-~.-w~hl House of Imports '69 vw New eng & brakes. 4 SPEED. BUCKETS. 83.5-3437 dys. AKC Beaglri, male & fml , 548--3660 aft. 5. base, V-8. stick, $2950. 1----------16862 M automatic-t1tick trans. call ~,!,. ~~~S. Costa fl.1esa * 646-86 EXEC swvl ch.rs $15/25 Sec l yr. old. $30 ea. or $50 for '72 HONDA 350 Cl.. 2400 mi ~18 or 548--8618 ~ anchftter, Buena Park n4-499-2788 aft 5. u•....-..- chrs SS/24 Desks $20/90 pair. fi<>.m~. like new, $695. can 557-8989 '71 DODGE Van. Auto. Air. un the ~~Ana Frwy l,i63;.7,VW;;;,;Xlnt;;;=:.=oo':nd7-.Nc:u-;..,=·nt. FORD Piette 861 \V.19. CM 642-~ ARC Pure white German alt 5pm. P/S. P/B. Pifags.. 8 track • eng, clutch & tires. $550 ELECTR IC type .... Titer, Shcphenl female, 2 yrs old. MUST sell 1973 T-500 CC Fri.I$~. 833-7559. 5-10 Pf\f. JIM SLEMONS firm. 613-6120, 5-7 p.m. Royal ti60. Xlnt condition. CaU after 6. 979-7265. Su 2 u k i . Take over '68 Chevy Vnn. litany Extr1s. NOW OWN THE IMPORTS VOLVO ./. RUNS Good • iDoka Bad. 965 Ford, 6, stand. trans., 17 ml. per gal. Ahl'IOllt new engine. $300. 546--5582. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Call 97!>-87',0 COLLIE pu ... 4 mo'" 1 Ui, 1 """"'"'" Call '"'"M24. EXCELLENT CONDITION FABULOUS 1973 MERCEDES IENZ '--------sable, male. Papers, '70 YAMAHA 250cc Endum • 548--3592 • CAPRI i - P i1nos/Org1ns 826 lfousiffirokm. $75. 66-8998. good cond. reblt eng. $475'. ·=51~s=1=E=P~Val), Self_oo_"-,~.,-,,,~~ AUTHORIZED WHILE THEY ---'--''-----SAVE A HOP,fELESS PET 646-2441 $1500 or best offer. Call Sport coupe decor, body side SALES & SERVICE LAST! F 0 L S 1~~==-=~--mouldings, reclining fronc J' SI ree raan esson CORGI, Pug, Doxie & •72 YAMAHA 175. Pipe, ex-123* 25th St., NB. "'""ols -nto"• •• 1 • Im &ftlOftS Giblet -Hoard -Stoke -'6 Baue-11. 534-3228 or 494-4853 tras, 400 miles. $405. Call "" • '"" ... rear .,..as, " '73 VOLVOS C11slte,,• -\\'EfGHTED OLD ~-l'•h ~-p ~. 16 ,..._ "'ulos Wan1--' 961 s!)C('d transniission, power lmnerts • 164's • e t45's • I.Y's f I II · As Lonn As You Like I "'"'<&... ~-= ...,., ~==~~~-~~ su front Oise brakes. style steel r.-1 ar po ulion gels any • ll'lO!I old Oiampionship = -· 1---------wb-1• bucl<et ••• 1, rado'al t\\ ... ..,-e :'>p buvor for 11nv e 142'.s e lSOO's \\"OrSl', sky dlV('t! ll'ill havt' Non·players & playen v.·~I· . • CZ '72 MoN \\!heels, • Reed -.. -... """ er~ -v T 10 .... ·car \\'EIGllTED sllOC's. come lo attend Tuesday breeding, AKC 494--86'13 pipe. AU new plastic'. ready TOP ply !ires. 2000cc' eng. used Merecde11 Benz.) Now 11 ·The Tjme O night at 7:30 PM. We want DOG TRAINING to race. S;,99, 962-6026. DOLLAR (GAECNB42.801). · !301 Quail SAY£1 * AUCTION * everyone to learn to play Obedience & Conformation '69 KAWASAKI 350cc. street OVERSTOCKED! Nt:'WJJOl'~ !\each • F ine furni1urc & nppliances the organ! All materials 979-4636 or 546-9723 scrambler, lo mi, $300 afl 5 PAID IMMEDIATE , .. ...,... ~,ARTHUR CASI-I for la!e n1orlcl furnished. 646-9251 IMMEDIATELY DELIVERY ~,L••.:• appJiancN! ~ furniture, etc. Tom Dieterich . in charge. _F_ls_h ______ a_s_s 'H""oN"DocA~160"°,-,,.-.,., -.,,.,,1o","°'a-,1rt GUSTAFSON ·NOW OPEN WllG Aurtlon~ Fritlay. 7::10 p.m. Phone 642-2151 10 GALLON aquarium with Light "-eight !.· i·li•a n FOR ALL M ission VleJo Imports VOLVO MASTERS AUCTION COAST MUSIC "'""· ""'· All ,.,..,.,ri,,. ruo • 64M110 FOREIGN Lincoln-Mercury '"""'"' 207Sh Ne\1•port, Cfo.1 6·16-8686 Nc..,.·port Blvd. at 'Harbor $30. Call 6'16-4~~. 1969 YAMAHA 115"dirl bike. 168'.XI Beach8T-Wamir MERCEDES BENZ Behind Tony's Bldg. fo.tat'I. Costa Mesa Newly rebuilt. $275/best of-CARS Huntington Beaci1 3 \VOODt.:N horses + \\-'Ork-I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'-iiii-Horses 856 fer. P,1ust sell. 842-l5TI. WE ARE IN 842..a844 * (213) 592~5544 F~T inl:' tuhle. $10. RefriJ:eracor PIANOS -ORGANS 1---------·73 HONDA 750. Very clean "Home of the Viking" $.".O. 3 Couches 15 ea. New & Used. Great selection. REGISTERED Anglo Arab, & dependable. Priced to sell DESPERATE NEED Complete Sale.o; & Servicl' \Vashlnl! n1nchlnc, S!O. Bed Competetive prices. Open dapple gray, 6 yr itelding, quickly. $1445. 646-8515. OF GOOD. CLEAN DATSUN Visit Us Soon At & headboard $5. FireplaCf' Eves. I Sundays. The best good English pleasure. pro-'il YAMAHA 2SO Enduro, FOREIGN CARS ---------28i01 Marguarite Parkway !IC'rt>en + Irons S.1.50. 2322 deals IU't' always at: spective jumper. can Karen z:oo miles TOP DOLLAR-PAID P,fimion Viejo 4~1700 /;ra"lt~" Rd, SA. Hg~. Wallichs Music City "'' 5 pm, 493-9790. ;,,.,.,. FOR OR NOT! WE'RE HERE <USE AVERY PWY. EXIT! .,Mt....,..,. See us at LATE '12 350 SL Coupe, 4Y.i ~ South Coe.st Plaza ,,__ P,tAN & Womans 10 speed Call or come in to ~-us. MacARTHUR A: JAMBOREE litre, full pwr, lo mileage WATER SOFTENER I~!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~'!'!~ I _.,, l[i] Derailen. Xlnt cond. Call BIG SAVINGS ON Royal blu. like nu $10750 Never Been Used I Pf;:P~ !.~gs ~:~Is. E; 1:~~lla~N~ .. ;·;1;1•~·~~~1 aft lO a.m. 642--5004.' '73 Demos 7 14-6 3 7 -9 14 l 0 d a Y s, ~ . 5Ul'1 TI4-99S-0196 eve. Lifclin1e factory guarantee. o°"=:o;"=M:;::;''":::.;~:.:·""'=~-Motor Hornes PJckups Rel':ularly sells tor $695. PLAYER Piano l owner been D--G I 900 Sale/Rent 940 6:10's 280 ~-4.5, leather, sunroof, \VIU sell cheap! 642-0078. in storage for 6 fe81'll. Orig. ~-~~··~·~•!!ne~'!"!.--~~1 ---:--:':-:':-:""::'--new Michelins, met. paint, ~ bench. $900. 892-1832 \\!ANTED Slip for 25' Sloop, •• SALl:S E. • 31('.(' W, =r·, N.B. ~ICl·lf1l~r super cond. 644--0545. EAST'l.1tLING China from 1 ,,~IA"G.C:CN=IF"."-A-us"'trt-.~,-"-,~ho-ny Dana Point or NB. Call SERYIC •Vk'' ~ MG Bavaria, Gennany. 6 piNX" a~tique Baby Grand. ·Xlnt 491-2892 anytime. • RENTALS • TOP CASH D/11. UN . 1--------- sc-I illducle1t1 gr11vy bout, but-cond. Siie. $695. 54!M200. Boats/Mirln• for clean late model can '64 MG MiQ~. Well main- tcr t11~hc>s, l large ond l HAMl\lOND Spinet O""'an Equip. 904 and trucks! 888 Dove tained engine rebuilt-t,500 nicdi11n1 sit.('d n1cat platter, ... H d Ch I · Newport Sch mi, $500. 96l-4328. $100 or hes1 offer. j~\2~938 Oill eves. 6"6-46;;G. 303 ---------Owar 8VFO et 8l3·1300 ., Open Sunday '"· "P". "'"''Rd. N""'port 8'oeh BONZER RADAR MocArth"' a"d Jan''°'" 1973 DATSUNS MGA 1 l\IEOIT. 1~111• st~rrd ,'\:. ht•i.d--P-IANO WANT_E_D_ Sl.49:.i complete. MILLER Newport Beach brd . S)). P<-tl" )>Teen ~ha~ !TI4) 992-0259 .... MARINE SALES 646-4351 8.l.1-0555 ALL MODELS l!"~. ~A, recently ~·r!'~ .~ f011tn fJll.cl. 21 ~q. Sewing Machines 828 * 12 Voll Bait, Bilge & Cam-\VE PAY TOP OOu.AR IN STOCK 494-2354 or 493--0665 vd~. new $73. 1 h:it!1rron1 per Pumps, $14.!k>. Call 1 '·n~LAN~=o=A~U~.~.~-~~""'-~25=· FOR TOP USED CARS n'lrtnr T x :r \\' r!rai\'C'r BARGAIN SHOPPERS 5-18-0353. lilotorhome. Beautifully It your car ls extra clean, BARWICK IMPORTS PORSCHE SID. !162-~ijAA ilfl. ='-"-"--SEE THIS!! equipped. Close out sale. see 111 first. 33375 Camino Capistrano (;ORGEOll~ r.: z· 7 ,.., "'-wt _ .. 1 Boats. Power 906 Reduced over S4000. 'P.lust BAUER BillCK San Junn C&~I ~-'&l hl'OI RSC'HE ~Cabriolet, ORIENTAL SA.ROUK 1 e""' ig ~""' ng maw• l1l' ---------1 sell. See at Johnson & Son 2925 Harbor Blvd. AO'J .,.,_ .... _'::-~"' re t eng, chrome '.11\eels,. in walnul cabinet .•.. 'S79.50 T k Ov p L' 1 ,1 2 6 26 ......-.:>.J1~... ...,,., 1 t J t 007 -1 RuJ.t. \2 'x t9', rich 1vil1£' red Singer TOU<'h 'n Sew •. $89.50 a • er ayment s 1nco n "ercucy. Costa litesa m2SOO con ac erry a .,., ~·:i N>ntcr "''/multi co Io r c d \Vhlte Zig Zag/\\'al cab S29.95 l9Tl Salx>r-Cralt ~:l.J-hrs. in Harbor Blvd., C.Osta P.tesa, \VE HUY '69 DATSUN \Vagon. 4 Spd, weekend&Jdays hnrdl?rs. SIOOO. &W-0087 Hoover Upright Vac .. S.19.95 \.\'aterl. 18.ft. hard!OP., 1401 .540-~~5630~·~~-~--L.\U'ORTEO AIJfOS {][hro;t· $l:t ~r~y l9'.° POROCHE 9ll T, air, reblt ~ --1966 Harbor, C.M. &16-9303 Autos, Used SPECIALS Of, THE WEEK '61 PL Yf,\OUTH {XEW;819) $1299 . - '61 CAMA 0 CXXP·50ll $1899 '61 BUICK RIVIERA (VEJ.641) $1899 990 '71 FORD Galaxie. 2 dr, air & power. Nf!W tires. Make offer. 5S7-2799 '70 FORD Galaxie 500, air con<!., all power, owner. Laguna, 494-4C8. · '66 FORD Wagon. V8 p/., p/b, air cond, good cond In & out. ln ml, $425. 558-1782. '72 COUNTRY Sedan wagon, air, p/1, p/b, $2950. pri pty. SSI-2006 Xln't oond. LINCOLN '67 LINCOLN, full ~er. Call eYe5 64&-4ffi6. 300' King! Rd .• Newport Beach. MAVERICK 1970 MAVERtck Good cond. , lilake offer. 67J.<990 MERCURY '71 MERCURY Colony Parle 2 seats, rack, air, pwr lodca, 36,000 ml. In last year, ne..i brakes, starter, a h o c k a , radiaJs & valve job. $2700. >I0-3278. '72 MERCURY Marquis 4 dr brown. Aii power option. Slereo, air, climate control, radial l(et!l tires. Asking $3800. SeUing becaUBe 3 can &: 2 drivera, 640--045.1. '72 COUGAR XR 7. 12,000 miles, full power w/alr, I more! $3600 or best offer. 846--30.l'1 Private Party. 1967 MERCURY Colony Park 9 pags Wagon, Super sharp, $950. 846--5931 for appt. '"ra. COLONY Parle Wagon, metaJlic blue, like new, lo mi, all power. 642·2917. MUSTANG :.10VING Sale. exl'C. desk & Kirby Vac-........... S49.s:i hp. in & out. Chevy 4-cyl. Balboa Motor Home BEST PRICES PAIDI 673--4132 PM. wheels, • u n roof , low '71 CHEVROLET nia1chin~ bookcase. ~uil rit· Singer Portables ...... $12.50 956-27&1. Call after 5 wkdy. L1s1 than I yr old Dean Lewis Imports ====..-;c=-;:=:::-1 mil~. $6585. 642--9683, STATION WAGON MUSTANG '69 Convertible. iorncy·doctor. &>ct 'y. d"o;k All guar.. no gimmicks! 22' P,tarllner b Y Gran-Low Mileage '72 DATSUN 240Z. immac., 64.S--0315 p/s, p/b, radio. 60,{D) nU, l\lany 10 choose frnn1. Sin-d 1•• 1 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 silver/grey, mags, ai rl"';;RSCHE==c:-===::-c=a '(754-BOK ) white w/blk top blk ltln' S7a, chair $10. lnve sent S.'iO. e .xatt e. Fully ref In. 2 demo units .......... AM/FM st e I" e 0 . PO -. '"' UI4. Met. gol · 2S99 • 1-;asy chair S40. 111isc. C"l're Sc\iinl': l\la<'h & Vat•., mahog New inter reblt V-8 IMPORTS WA!\'TED ~::;';;\, "" -. 17,000 nn. Immac. Fae. $ int, $1,200, call D Crowell "'" . .,100 11f1'8 Harbor. Cl\f. 646-9742. · ' $8300 540-5103 Ornn-Coun .. "s _...... ~ I Pr! 833-8246 . .......,...... eng. A Classic dbl 111anked _ _ _ .. -•;r \\'art, Pt'lU51 RI. . Pt:y, D 0 N , T ni is s 1 hi 5 ,~ Sporting Goods 830 run about/harbor cl'uiser. e FOR RENT e TOP $ BUYER '69 DATSUN 510, 4 dr sedan, 642-5424. OLDSMO LE Rl'('lecort11!ns::! Solid oak T , o:"~4"°'·l,,_700',,-. =----=-~~11973 EL OORADO 1.lotor-BIIJ.. lilAXJ.~Y TOYOTA stock, 3:9,IXO miles, $950 .• -=PO~RSCH==E~9~ll~T~l9~70~1 '64 CHEVROLET rlining t'OOrn 1·1hle · 2 leAvl's, FISHING tAckle store quit· 130' 1'" G Glasspar Sprtlsh1· ho1ne, lS·ft., ta...., rleck, T.V., l88&1 Beach Blv :. Privale party, 675-Jl8G. mileage, Must sell! X1n~ 1L TON PICKUP ting business at this loca-,~ H. Beach Ph. 147.3555 RAT 1~ Sale1,; • ce Sl'< i;ohd oak \add!'r bark lion. Sal'r 20 10 50% & more cuS1 bit, 12' bcan1, FB, TS sclf·contained. s)Cl'ps 4. Call ~ -cond. l44292E) OLDS OBl~E rhnin;. 1\linl rondition~ $2800 everything goes. Nani c 390's, SS, trim tab, reirig, after 5. 956-276t (Anahein1l Autos, Imported 970 * 675-6645 * $1299 GMC 1RUCltS """"'· S9Th. !'il~-47$i. hrands. etc-3625 \V. 51h St., S\\'\m l!~cp, fath., much RECR~ATION Rental & '67 1',IAT 124 Wagon, r/h, gel 1968 POR&ii:E 912, 'or8-iiie. HONDA CARS ITI' l\lobi!e Phone . :1 l'han. Sanlrl Ana 1Dam to 6 pm. 11J,0•'1'. Xlnt cond. $15,000 Scn>ice, i!OSI Garden Grove ALFA ROMEO cond. $625. new tires;33,000 ml, for sale lwl !. Sin1plcx. t run k Turn left o!! of Hnrbor 613-S27l. Blvd. Garden Grov e .1 ----------• 96G-I851 * by owner. 67frlTI4/645-75.'l6 UNIVERSITY OLDS "'"""""· Blk ''" '11" h' Bh•d, •,; blk. HEAUTV . 21 ' "'"' Boy ooh. '9:>-7556 * ALFA ROMEO ---;Jc;A:-:G=u"A"R;;---1-~"""R"E"N:;-A=u"•" .,;--I GROTH 2850 HarhM BlV<l. hr111lscl, $i00, 714--5:J6-L190 ""' crs 160 h 'l I/O l\1crc 10\Y • ,.,__ M <MMM TV, Radio, Hir-i, · ·1 • '• _ e Dale's l\1otor llome Rentals Bl.'st deal always! Berl!nas vnla esa ~ :ill llpnl Stereo 836 hra. Tr!r, gaJ., S/S, bt Ink, ·n 23-:l>' MH & Mini-. fron1 1371!5 (Ser. #N>O"). '12 JAG XKE 27000 . 'REP.I r: ·~~.T ·-OLDS Vista eru1 .. , 'll"K 1 ,_1 _,. 1 head, man.v exlras. Top F-·1 9·"1·9 o~o"""" v«><> ' ' ' mi, CHEVROLET ~" ' -'m ~ u • ., ni::-0 cond. 11'!W'IO. 546-1153. ·~mi £!11 " , o.><>-<"'"" '72's & '73's. Complete se-orig owner $5500. Ttlumph Wgn, 3 seats, air AM/FM !L1\\·aii. \\'011'1 11C'cd my Joni;: I -· t · B •~ _,. I cl< l>!'aut . S!Oll•. Only 3 yr~ old RCA, Zertith, SY van I a: 24. Sea Ray .71 Cutty cabin RECREATIONAL VEHIOE ectlon no\.\'. uy or lease motorcycle $500 . .......-~. _ stereo, ug ra . Ex cortd. II bo $l50 l.nrgest ~l·lrrtion C'Olor, O 23! ' ' RENTAL BUREAU front 069 XKE Coupe, 30M, gd r ~/oft". 673-0057 aft 6:30 .~· lOV<'l.v. n11· ll ut ; black & \\111\L TV & stereo~ I/ ' 5hp OMC .. covers, * TI4· 842-9922 * J im Parkinson's t,"Ond, n1aroon, wire wheels, R·12 , • JR 11211 BEACH BLVD. p.n1. t"l~t $MO. S.12-9514. in So. Calif. Pr ircrl less trailer, CG equip. VHF rnd.1~~--·----= ' 147..6097 ~I 1!':>1\ ROYAL CO)l('llhflg••n than lhe discounlL'I'); \\'/3 YT $fi600. Days 5 8 6 -16 l 0 Tr1ilerl, T{avel 945 Call Ali. 642-0037. Auton1at h 1\~n HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 cusr. Delta 88. p/s, (1 • I I It 0 0 • Eves/wknds ~,44--3574. KARM GHIA. SAL.~ p/b, air concL, vin Ip, lo 1ns m;1~ p ri i• • p1clul"I.' lubr, 1 ~T parts · ===~~~~--1 ANN ~ r\•rl11hlt• TYfll'\"•r1rr r Ro)al scrvii'!'. ~fosl '74 nlOdels in 30' CHRIS Crntt TIS, perfect CAP,tPERS!-6'x6' Tent Trlr $24?!.i. BUl,CK mi's. $900. 673-452.1. ' !:11'1. 4!'1+-R"ll l. si()j•k. ,'73 niOOels ptiC't'\l to condition. Radar, aulo pilot. "''/new Cole~n t e 11 1 • Dick Miiier rs 'frO OLDS 88 4 dr, run JlOW(!r, I LOADc•o•. 1 13.~. G7'7'•l. ~.?.:'~~,.~ a""rt.u511l. lrlr. Oller. '62 Karmann Gh ia. Rebuilt all 'NO-'--........, as ~ a/c YOllll hc••I .. l "11 "l:l!'rr~,. <'lr11r. Cash 90 Pan ortern1~ "" JVU ,..... .....,,....,.,.,.., !j45.6.IOO or &ti'>6406 eng. Afo.f/Fl\1, $400. 120 \V W '69 BtnCK Eleetra, full pwr, '""· _,.,, • · nu·c;h llla~r··.1 1~ 1 .... rr1h ,i; 1 1 hi 36 nlo. ABC Color TV. '11 SEA Hay 26', Jo~tvl, 210 A 1 S p rt 949 You don't need a ....... lo -;;:;;::-,..;545-;:-'::'""i'C=-n:::;:;:::;.l·---"'·55::7"~iib~"",.·_·A.--I )oaded, low ml, very clean! 837 W. Wilson, CM. •)1·1 11 n.·~. n1.1••I•' 1111 1 1 .v !'1021 A1lanta, or 1 9 O I fl \\'«>kend~r. new SL1,£nl. sell u o ervn:•, I s "Draw Fast" whc~ .... you .. n!IOO. Contacl Bill Heart, '62 OLDS F-85 ('i1!11r, h1.:I • • .~1; 1\"2'2 Hr o o khur.:1. llun11ngton ST.100. &15--'~>.'i9.lf91~. 1,1 USED 914 Po-·he pl "Make Hoom FOi" Daddy" SAAB wltdys 7 am to . 5 pm, * $150 • --------1 Briu·h. !W).~-l.'29 or !162-~9 .. ...... ace an ad ln the Daily •.. clean out the garage, __________ 1 639-1'60'.>. S42-27'lO II FT l)rn1111 ,\· i.:nht couch, ---------Bo1ts, Rent/Chart'r 908 wheels, good t'Ondition. $60. Pilot Want Ads! Call no\\' turn that junk Into cash1 ,;:..:,;~==-;=::-:-= ---~O..,O"°"---t-eontrn1po1,11y ~1~ l1ni::-. L1k" RENT $5.00 MONTH or make offer. 673-43.35. -&t2-5678. .~~Ii • call NO\V &12-5678. Orange O:>Unty's Ne"'l\•ett '72 ELECTRA Cu a Io m PINTO flt'\\, S"ill or 1rarl(' for Brand ll<'w Tf'levis1011s CRUISING MEXICO =========.'-z===""=====..!..=;;="======i SAAB Cou~. Immaculate, reduc----------fr("'7rr. 5.'l l-2104 r\·,.~. Opt\<ln lo bu.v f'ree Oell\'l'ry Join us for all or part or :i ed 12695. Call 552--0155. PINTO 'TJ Sq uire, Auto, air, \\·\Ti:::RBrd frn1ll •'"'· Yo ur j & &·r.1re. 5-17-7925. great lr[p. Xlnt rnlrs. ST' ll>R G ,.,..E"l>ir~y) CADILLAC extru.Xlntcond.'Scstolfer t·llo1rl' or 1, ("1<11.L~ ,~ ~1> h·.~. U p R 1 G II T hon1t> l'n-675-8.144. P.O. Box 316, ..c-s.. J;'Jli../U ~ ,... ,..1' 1 'Deaicr ' owr $2300. 66-141D. r 11s1nm buil1 Ill nnh·r. I trrt11inn1rnl ('('nlrr, 8 h·:ick BAiboa lslnnd. ~~(.!..!.'.!.,;:::.~~ByCU..Y:L.l'<lU.1>1----,-;;:;::-'-i CLEARANCE SALE• '69 EL DO MOOO I PONTI c S12-4Siti l'lfll' cJC'l'.'k. <1m/f1n, radio, 10..T LUXUR'" SA.ll.HOAT J:f. ..,_._ .. _,11 'di..u..,.. .. -_,_ J:f. LlllA. 'Tj SAABS STARTING AT -.1... RAI DO. a1' I Cmd, A --l'' I TV ,....,. .....,. "' ,.,,, _,... Sln". lJm ....,.u, tan eather, -a . ~E:Ll. 1 ill••n1l11•1·~1i1p lr\Hll' I sl,;1'{'(). 1 '_P011 l'-lOI' · 5 11'1 sta!eroon1s. Reduced J.ccord/11gJotlr•Slorr. ,-$2995 accessories. Wlll h e lp coa~t Cilt11i1rv Cluh. SrOO .. 4!'l2-5'1;ill. r1111.'s 12131 821-8216 To develop message for Wednesday; .~jQ,.~~2-4' up to 24 miles per gallon finance $2700 w/$700. down. CLEAN EXEC. CARS 1==~'7"~"~2~17:l:1 • I !\RAND nu Panasoni<' 4 Boats, Sail 909 reodwordscorrespi:ndingtorunb!rs 31-60-75 Dick Miller Motors . 6-14-9733. °iRP. V!!hiclcs. Chooae Crom SF \CO \\'111,.r .~1f11•111•1'. (-:.~id •'hr~n11",1 stc>reo ~hy ll I en~· cfygurZodlocbirthsign. 120 W. Warner, S.A. '68 CAD Sedan DeVille. Orig ,',1;,,:71GroE'"'Both·. Pon0 1 1·, wco~ et1111l1 1tnn. S7U. t:~:-!.1261 r\I' 11·/uf•r: · 11 nip, C 11 nRl'1 · 3.'\' SLOOP 1''/G 1970 S&S I (~dolly 31 H.ar1'\ '' ~" 557·2132 78,000 mi. Golc', tan le.nclau uv · •JU., ' ···'" !TIO s JI r 11 k •' r :;: . S200 4611 d~ign. Race t.· crui~r 2 Pcr11nt" 32 E•t>K' el""°""' xtnt rond. 97!J.2'J90 dAyS, " _ _ I SrllShof'C', Np! Rell. l'(IU!p'd. NN'fh SArl.OH. & J Ytl<l JJ f...;111<•!t19 63 04 * SAAB & le•tytr. \;i!' '·elp finance. ~·9801 ~. Tl11/IN F: Cn:i'L C••uriir.\ cluh ZF:'I ITll Zf' Colrrr TV Ht n1001·ing. use 3~ tllnc for ~ ~ g; ~, ~ (~ .J deal nl-•s. "·-pfcl• ~. WIS:. f d Own' '·68""Le~M:;-ans'-.2i-d:-,-,, t"IT"'."°'Cl=c-an~4 1 Jllf'n1hP1"'<h111. $!100 .. · :· ' · & h 1 ,. __ , ,,,,,,,.,.. "'•·-•-F~""'"'3"'1 .. ,~ ~" pd R • E b k I 11 Oo'k ", .,,..,t SIZl 111oon~ ~ llrt' cos ll. """" ........,., ,,,. u.... I s • IJC c M!a'• lr<Jn~rrr r,.,, r,11;..~1".!l l I 1 i.: '.;-1·:·,·-~ * o..,. .... ,.1• frnil'I •'llfVC, ~1o·. 7T<>ke 37 h · tJ7F•fillll ,l!Cuun now,~ or Cfllle ~ CADllJ..AC 5'.'dan de • · "" --~ • '' (-,;i.<;l . •n: VII IThe J'M.Ji!i. IJl ll ..rom ii N'!bU eng, good COnd, $67S. :-<!<!~. KnM~t . ri1r 14l)'l, 11111 • liiiiiiiiiiii.,iiiiiiiii rwiw ~ hind lt'lrkix! in Clnrc-., °""'t J<;r llQ<>d 6, w J' p ~I , V le. kladed w I ex t r •-•---3.T.'=am an I pm f'\I n••\•·r h1.<1•n 11"•d ~lf)'j • n~nl . \l/11.hl, w c.-l' kda >' 1 . to~ ...Oloo 70AOOvr 1m a..-a nson s Make otrer. 968--861'7 after 6 • ~~-%·12 L JI I TI4/59J..7"21 1•xt 34.l 11 &,,,d "' ~ ...... ,,.. 11 ~ pm '67 cro. 1 owner. nm1 -----1.2A.,._ .. 2You 72'rDIA' '13 CAD sov Ilk ·~ great. 1oQks fair, $500 ot Miscellan eous FrM to You LIDO 14 13534 130,,., -llMav 7JAn , . e nu, ._... be<1 offer, 968--8041 Wanted 820 2 sel"-AA1l~. UllmM Schrx-k. 1• T"'• ..._. ~ 7• MoTtttS ml, fully equip. Pvt }lty ·~l PONTIAC STATION' t'>:C'f'lll'n• ronci. )'llrd rlolly, 13Foo "5"" 75lodcrv '6850/0l" otr. 644-T3ll ~ve. l tro'.l ., ~""'"" 1'"'-"6°'1 76~ 6'f3.-1010, l·3-WACON. $2511. P/frPIB . . o.~ dll,YI , 6'15-7800 17S. •Tlrl 71~ 666QJ or 645-6406 CONVER~~~ ~RADO • SfJ-.1629 . we. 1 e c.,...~ ~AR«k* 73NH<l, ,U>.....,.,..,__..,,, CAL 25, xlnt cond. "1lh boal ~~lion ::J:.~" ~~Inf SUBARU 197l. ~ eooditk>n. Mll!ll T·llRD hi.lh. $.),T..D. Call dn)'!'. 21 MW 51 ~ 81 ~.arw 0 _.,_ •' _ wll. 644-?;fl6. .'l.l- 21 3 /68 0-264{i , e1·e~ '2 ~ nr. ll'ot""' ••·~~ TIU£ FO~ l!l'f.! T·BffiD. Loaded. Full :?13/~I. "'cckl'nrl ~ ~~"" ~=,fry :~n<•"-.... -1 SUBARU -'°' SH powe:r (in.ll1wlnd0w,etc.) 7/!itrr'-"~· "'~---~ "'"' .,,__ "'UICK CA AM/FM -l'l'CO. Sc(od-AI ... --..... , 'I' whli. vinyl top, dark-~ -Bo•ts. Sllps/Uocks tto ~j t;:1to1nt1 ~::-1y tt'!~ nt THROUGH A mc:t. t!i<t.1>errPM. s3900. eau '8°' ~Marorf te"t..o-..t D' k Mill Mol 'v * '46'vT * 1 1'°'1 •11• lrom '"""'" ,.T. .,,,_.,., .,,_, " •r ors DAIL·« PILOT ..., 0 ·•~ Pml'er bo.'lt. Perl. N""'lll'rl Jl'J lie ~ Dfti11 90<>..ilool. &ile!t-" SeTvlce -T-iilRD 1969, Lltndnu, tull or Danl'I ~.nt ""'"· t "o!lrrt IO\GQOI! IO\Ad'l'frt 6\NJ9/iJ Visit Us Soon At c.&.ASSIFIED AD ~ p\.\1\ clcc teat., ttc: .. otlnl ~~~;J,~:i·z.-u 11.1k fer D111·t> ~ \SI '1 l:a> w . .;,~i~r, s.A. 642•5678 :~8.\.$1195 & 11~ 111 1 ' • ' I • I v ,.. ' ] at g< la ,<h - I h g u 0 • l• j ' • I • j 1 ~ G • h ·u u J, & " •l b • " It J 1 ] d h " b ~ b e • , ••• • San Cle111en1e' . Today's Flaal I £apistrano' EDITION N.Y.·Stoeks ' VOL. 66, NO. 282, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS ' Drag ·Caspers Down Here-San Juan Official By JOHN VALTEllZA Of Ille o.tlY ..... ,,,,, ' An oftimes scrappy city councilman irQm San Juan Capistrano angrily sug. g01ted Monday that Flllh District Sttpe~1 Ronald'"Caspen be 0 grabbed by the nape of the neck and dragged down here" to see the asserted problems wiui the cOunty uses of a d$Cifly highway as the main route to a new dwnp. F.dward Che~a~. wbo r~ely ba"cts away from a battle, made theangry St.lg· g~Uon as he and felloW laflmakers lamented the lack of cooperation from ,the County Road Department over the selection 'of< a suitable road .to carrY the heavy daily traffic generated by the opening of the Prima Deseclia Canyon east of San Juan. Councilmen, including Chermak , asserted that they bad •been 11lied to repeatedly" by the road ·department which of late has apparenUy-dismissed a 8'.n Juan request that an exten.!ion of La Novia Road be med to funnel the dump traffic. Instead, councilmen have learned that the county p1ans to use the existing two- lane Ortega Highway as the dump route and traffic there already bas reached a Dr. Byrnes asserted that the use of a dangerous level. brand new road cutting through un· '"I'bey're going to subject San Juan and developed hills could be "the most its residents to all the dirt, dust, traffic, growth·inducing thing c1 city could do." noise and danger on that road. He added that the council might "We've gQt to get action now down reevaluate its ht.:1 stand 8gainst the use here. , .even U it means going up there of Ortega Highway because by, extending (to the ~unty seat) and dragging him_..J,a Novia it couJd be welcoming new (Caspers) down by the nape o( ·his\neek nmaway growth in hilly acreage -OWDe4 to show him the problem. by Glendale Federal Saving.Sand Loan. "I'm tired of being lied to," Chermak But his premise was unpopular oo the said at the height of the discussion. panel · Most fellow councilmen agreed -with The remainder agreed that -Ortega Mayor Roy Byrnes taking a different Highway -the busy state-administered point of view. ro:id winding from San Juan to Elsinore -already is a deadly, substandard highway. And recent council actions have in· eluded denJals of some pennits for new development along the road because the impas:t of cars oo the stretch would be too severe. State olliclals had told councilmen that if the city made a major effort in win- ning dedications of right--Of·way on the flanks of the roadway, a rebUilding proj· etc set for late this decade could be bur· ried. - But despite city compliance with the dire<:tive, state-officials now give no bope ol change on Ortega until the late 1970s. "We have to realize -and the county does too -that every truck, trailer, and car using the existing dump road to Forster Canyon will be traveling Ortega to get to the new dump," Chennak said. Opening of lhe unbuildable canyon in • the hills has been termed extremely critical by COWlty officials because the F'onter Canyon 'site overlooking ~ Juan's small airport is rapidly filling to the brim. Without Prima Oesecha, the COWJty would have nowhere to bury the South Coast's tons or daily trash output. • srae om ear '-"""a1ro Pot Sak Plot 5 Ex-countians Fa~e Drug_ Raps By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ""° n.11"1' Piilot Slafl' "' Five former South Orange Cowtty men have been formally charged by a·federal grand jury with conspiracy to sell more than $Z million worth of marijuana in Orange, Los-An(eles and jlan Diego counties. ' "" lndicll!lQ!t returned' by the srand jury111Jeges tlilt thi qulnNf niet between July 11 and' Jiily r/; 1173, !l Daii'a Point, Survey Shows Some Doctors Del~e in Sex CIUQAGO (UPI) -'11lt Chicago Tribune reported today that in a na· tiollwide-,.,,...y-coodllcied-by. a team.of California psychiatrists at least one out of every 20 doctors responding admitted he engaged in sexual intercourse witti pa~ · tients. The Tribune said the survey, reported in l~ CUl'feilt issue Or \be American Journal of .Psychiatry, showed that moot physicians frowned upon the use of. erotic behaviot i.n their practice as unethical or "professional. suicide." Conducted by Dr. Sheldon H. Ka,mder, Marielle Fuller, and Dr. Ivan N. Mensh of UCLA, the study involved 460 psychiatrist, obstetricians,.gynecologists, surgeons, internists and general prac- titioners. _.,.. . The study showed that 5 to 13 percent of the 2roup engaged in 80l1le kiild of erotic benlVlor wttb their patients, and five to ':'; J"frcent engaged in sexual in- tercourse. the report said rt percent of the physt. clans condemned erotic behavior with patients. , I The doctors said ti destroyed the doc- • tof.patlent relationship, was "un~ forgivable," or indicated. the doctor was psychopathlc. U:.guna Beach, Newport Beach, Long Beach and Vista and laid plans to distribute five tons of marijµana. The conspiracy was broken, the in· dictment assert&, when federal agents and Newport Beach police arrested two ol ti. five ,..,.pecta. wlillam.Mltcbell, 2f, a lormer Laguna . Beach ..... t cumolly ia free Oii~ '20,000 bed, ,,tille William ElW'C19d~ l'l>licb, 21, l'llnnerly ol Dana l'l>int, ~ free .. $.1;llllO ball. Mitchell was arrested by agents ol 11\< federal Drug Enforce.men t Admini.itration 'in Sau Diego County July 27 after tht--assertedly negotinted to purcbaJe 630 pounds ol marijuana. l'l>lid>, on parole from federal prl90D, was appreilended July 31 by Newport Beach narcotics detectives WOO.. were tracking on a rellited investigation. Three other men, Gerald Edward Pohl, 25, Robert William Bray, 21, and Michael William Andersen, 25, also were indicted by the grand jury. 'Itey are fugitives and warrants have been issued for their ar· re:tts. Polll, Bray and Andersen, ae«>rding to Detective Leo Konkel of the Newport Beach Police Department, have resided in recent years in Dana Point, Laguna Beach and Tustin. According I» federal investigators, the (See DRUGS, Page %) Fiscal, Future Of Golf Course To Be Studied ' The future Joi tht financially ailing Shorecliffs Go f Course .will become the subject of a joint d!Y counoil-planning Commission study session in San Clemente late lhJs month. . And if the two panels reach unofficial accord! a persisU!nt zoning problem may be setted within a few weeks thereafter. Specifically, the city and golf course owners hope to settle on new zoning for M A d the links in the northerly portion of the . a1ine rreste city, according to new state laws whlch , · require~ city master zoriing map·s to In Beati·~g of parallel the general ptan . Bernard A lien, a local l aw y er representing gq_lf course o'ifiler John Infant·D. augh_ter Sepe, along with ••her expert• hired 10 seek a solution have told commissioners San· Clemente police Monday arrested that a redevelopment plan has been il 1g..year-0ld A1arine •on suspicion of demineCf'fOt the clubhouse art& where felony child beatinf after the rpan's wife apartments, tennis courts, a restaurant found the co u p e ' s three-month-old and perhaps other pub1ic facilities would daughter suffering from severe bruises. be developed as a boost to income. • Gary Wayne Hill of 167 Avenida Del That propqsal Ls not expected to draw i Mar was arrested after a sergeant at much dlssatlslaction from city officials Camp Pendleton phoned police and told at the ·Oct. 31 study session, however, the of!Jcers the man's distraught wife called more ticklish IJSUe ls the question of ;illout_the alleg<;9 _he_ating. ~· • _l'!hat' !001,og sbould be applied -to the llill, it Is alleged, baby sat tile lnf!l1t green& and fairways which streteh along during the eveiling while his wUe et4 canyoO Doon on both sides Of the San tended an evening School class. Diego Freeway. When the class, ended. and Mrs. Hill Planning commissioners have favored returned, she f0W1d the Child's buttocks attachirig a designation of OA (Open· black from a beating, police said. The area) zoning on the links. baby was treated ,at San Clemente_ Along with that has come an offer from-- General Hospital and then returned~ti> Allen that a deed covenant be impoted on her mother's custody. the Unka .Ssurtng that the amage would Pohce said they would seek a eotn· be used as a golf course in perpetuity. plaint from the Di~~~ Attorney 's office Unless the current plans for deveIOJ>" Wednesday in the 1nc1denl. ment are accepted by the city Allen has Hill was reportedly Still in cwtody told commlulontra, the oper~Uon for.es •ariier today. · (st. GOLF, Page 11 Haman Fulling St.ar ·--,-,---·--J.~ ---.-. -· •T!iis,pbotograpb .depicts a pai:acnpti)lg ·star, .ciim- post?d of 27'jUmP,efsm what-is claimed to be,a world record:The juinp took place over EISinore last week. . . "' Tbe,three_men.on tbe.oulslde·are not counted. Pre-vious record was set at 26 men in Oklahoma. last year. f;eorge Paul Hunn, 71 , Of San Juan Succumbs George. Paul Hunn , a colorful resident of S4n Juan Capistrano for all of his 71 years, died Sunday in Orange after a brief illness. Mr. Hunn, a native of San Juan and Jifetime resident of an historic adobe area known as "The Island" at 31866 El Camino Real, has worked as a gardenar most of his life, first applying his skills on the Old Mission grounds at the age of 8. Family spokesmen recalled today that Mr. Hunn first tended the Mission grounds as a small boy and reaped a penny or two a day for his efforts. "And the money went right back into the church donation box," a spokesman said today. Mr. Hunn -whose ancestry was German and Spanish -lived bis life on the family property which in later years amounted to a small cabin at the rear of the "Island " with the ruins of the original fai;nily adobe near, the entrpnce. He leaves four sons, C. M. Sgt. George William Hunn Jr. who serves in the Air Force; Leslie Alfred Hunn of Capistrano Beach: Thomas M. Hunn and Francis Lee Hunn, both of San Juan; two brothers, Joseph and Frank Hunn of San Diego, and two sisters, Juanita Lopez of Dana Poi nt and Pauline Memphis of San Diego. Ten grand children also survive. Rosary will be recited at 7:30 to- night in Father Serra Chapel of the Old Mission with Requi t1n Mass celebrated there Wednesday at 9 a.m. U.S. Poised Marines on Ships Off Mideast WASillNGTON (AP) -A helicopter carrier with about 2,000 Marines aboard is sailing in the eastern :fi.1edite rranean Sea, the Pentagon said today. The amphibious assault ship Guadalcanal joins a ~sk force led by the aircraft, carrier Independence.i n ?w!editerranean waters rough· ly 500 miles-oil the coast of Israel. But the Guadalcanal, which could be used to evac ua te Ameri· cans if the new f~gthinga.endangered them, is operating independent· ly ol the Indepen ence. · Pentagon spokesman Jerry w. Friedbeim declined to give the Guadalcanal's precise location or to speculate on the possibility of evacuation of thousands of Americans. · The Guadalcanal carries apploxlrnateiy 30 helicopters which could ·be used to lift Americans Crom endangered shore points. • • ,. '.I . --~ -----.... -.. -· San Juan Panel Backs Passenger Train Service San Juan Capistrano city councilmen have heartily endorsed Ute growing effort to restore passenger rail service to the city, but gingerly worded thei r action so that a feud would not erupt with San Clemente, where service could be cut back. The San Juan resolution -coming on the first dll'y of a community petition campaign for the rail service restoration -simply urged Am tra k to restore stops to the old Santa Fe line passing by the abandoned Sal\ Juan Station. And councilmen agreed Monday night tha t they never advocated a plan an- nounced by Amtrak last month to cut two stops from !he San Clemente schedule and place them on San Juan's, instead. San Clemente counciln1cn last \Veck we nt through a similar action and despite requests from some citize"ns that San Clemente fight the loss of stops, the panel took a different tack. The San Clemente move simply urged Amtrak to resume the long discontinued commuter train heading north early in the morning and south late in the af- ternoon -and tha t the train serve both communities involved in the current issue. San Juan councilmen lifonday agreed that there should be no alienatlon betwecl\ the two communilies. "All we y,•ant is for the trains to serve us all," said Mayor Ro)"' Byn1es ... Although the campaign has been in· icctcd with exuberance, cooncilmen In , --8an Juan remained somewhat worried about the Idea catching on well. Councilman James Thorpe sugges ted that although the old IT!ission-style 1ta· tlon ls picturesque. it may be too out· dnted to serve rail passengers well. Parking In the •rta CO\ltd pOse a prob. 1s.. mAINS, Paa• !i ' • . . . . ' ' ' ' . 'Fiercest' Battles Rage On Ground ' TEL A VIV (UPI) - Israeli warplanes struck at targets deep inside Syria ·ahd Egypt today, bombing Egyptian airfield3:' near Cairo and attacking Syrian military headquarters outside Damascus, a military spokesman said. A radar station in Lebanon also was hit. As the 1973 Middle East war went into KUWAIT URGES ARAB OIL CONFERENCE, Pago 14 U.S. JEWS RAISE MfLLfONS FOR WAR, Page 4 U.N. COUNCfL FAILS fN CEASE·FfRE BID, Page 4 its fourth day, the spokesman reported Syria was using Soviet·SUpplled "Frog" surface-to-swiace missiles capable of carrying a 1,000-pound warhead 44 miles against villages deep inside · Israel. He described losses in the settlements as nght. On the ground, Israeli troops. were reported fighting Egyptian and Syrian armor in what one veteran witness said were "some of the fiercest battles" in the nation's 25-year hist91'Y. Citizens on the home front were told to expect hard going ahead in the ''at· trition" p~ of the wa r. "A military spokesman told Israelis in a nationwide broadcast that fi ghting has been "very bitter and bloody." "The struggle facing us may not be an easy oae," he said. "Israel's aim is not only to return to the old cease-fire lines where fighting started, but to insure that Israel won't stand before similar problems in the future," he told the nation. "The stopping action is concluding sue· cessfully," he said. "With the initiative now in our hands, the attrition phase has be.gun. I would not be lulled into believing this can be an easy and very .rapid opera. tion." "A su bstantial part of the Egyptian army has already been destroyed," he said, "while the full force of Ole Isr8eli army has not been committed ." A communique said returning pilots reported "good hits" on strikes into Syria {See ft.llDEAST, Page 2) I Orange Coast • • Weather It'll be clea r and sunny \Vednes. day, with somewhat cooler tem- peratures along the Orange Coast Highs of 6.S at the beaches will rise to only 70 inland. Overnight lows 55. INSIDE TODAY ' Lasll LaRue, 1vl1ose whip and six gun Otlce punislled movie bad guys, is now a Florida evange. lfst whipping drunks into line witlt tlie Jie/p of missionary John 3:16 Cook. See-story, Page 11. · • L,M, l •rlf ' ~¥let 1f C.-J.itor1111 , ! M11l11a1 'u'"" 1• Cl•tilflM J~Jt N•0•11•I ....._ a C.iNct U Or1t'" C-1"1' I • c,.._worol 1t S"'1t 2'·11 • Offltl Hollen t 5todt ~rtltb 1+U •dl~I l'••t 6 T•l1vt.i011 It l:11t"11l1111ttftt lJ Tlltlttrf 11 lllN-14-15 Wtlllltr t l'tl' ,,._ Jltttl'll I WO!nt!l't HtWI 17·11 ,..,,.._ If Wllflll Nt'ft • 4 AMI' Ltrtdtr1 11 • ; z UAlL.'r PIL.OT SC Tliad11, Octobtr 9, 1973 Planners Eye Variance . . Crestl~t.e 'Plant, Other Issues Face Uni·i RouUne development matten and a blanket order from dty councilmen to e1pecilte action on a controversial vari~ permit for the Crestllte Ag· gregate Products plant are among the items confronting San C~mente planning commissionen Wednesday. The commission has been ordered by the city coWlCll to scrap a planned one- month delay on the Cre.stllte issue and to detennine immediately whether the variance should endure. _, Councilmen issued the mandate last week after hearing complaints from ~dents in Shorecliffs North and Vista deJ Verde where the ()estlitc hassle bas la!led for years. The citizens have asserted that truck noise, fine, red dust and other problems constitute _ nuisance and have peUtioned lhat the city review the variance which a!Ows the mining operation at the end of Camino de los Ma.res. Planning commissioners, however, had • delayed an action for at least one more nlOOth so that operating problems oould be corrected in an expensive scrubbing device l.nstalled at the exhaust of the Crestllte kiln where shale pellel.!I are ... laked al high temperature and oonverted to a lightweight "rock " for concrete. Besides the persistent Crestlite <Xin· troversy commissionm will deal with these items on the agenda of the 7:30 p.m. session: -A use permit oought by Ben B. Hopkins, Who· proposes two separate commercial buildings oo land addressed 3101 10 31177 S. El C&mino Real. -Another use permit which would allow Jack V. Barnes to erect two buildings containing nine residential units on twl>lhirds of an acre of land at 268 Avenida Montelvo. From Page 1 GOLF ... ,conUnued "financial disaster." Allhough It· has not been openly discussed in city hall, it · has been acknowledged that the city is toying with the Idea of purchasing the golf course itself. H that were ever to come about, "' San Clemente would own a pair of golf , ... faeilitlel"-one at each "end of toe clfy. 1 "" City Manager Kenneth Carr has warned r councilmen recenUy that the crush· of ;.,. play at tbe city's present course - n•· donated In the late 19208 by city founder · Ole Hansorl'-is so severe that little hi-room f<r increase emts. :.. He ooce suggested. that the city try in "1' earnest-to convince state parks officials to allow a lease oC San Maleo Canyon across the county line for development into a partner city golf course. But so far state officials have remained steadfast in 11 tbeti' assertion that the canyon leased to them for parks development would re- main pristine acreage. Since then, the city hu turned Its at· tentioo 10 the no'1b. At recent council sessions it W3l!I sug· gested the city explore the po6Sibillty of securing a mat.dting-ftmd grant from the C'4tmty of. Orange for lhe purchase of the links. The county cash comes from federal revenue-sharing programs and is being parceled out to cities with qualifying regional·p3rks proposals. At least one costly golf course project in the west county area already has qualified under the program. Thus far, however, the city bas not formaHy applied for the cash and, no new negotiations have been reported with the Shorecliffs management. · Sailors Leave Hearts In San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Eight sailo~ -six Greeks and two Turks - \\'ho "fell in love'• with San Francisco during a three-day visit and wanted to stay were hauled back aboard their ship by police. Police Capt. J, William Conroy said Monday the sailors tried \o jump ship shortly before the Vassilis Katskis departed from Pier 90, but were rounded up and put back on board. OlAMal COAIT tc DAILY PILOT TM Ori"" CN1I DAILY ~ILOT, ""1lfl 11'111(11 II comblfted lM Nt'Wl·Pl'tH, lo WOl!lltMO oy ,.,_ °''"" Co.11 Publl"'ilf COm11M¥. S... .... .i1tion. .,, Pll!>lltl>td, Mlfldly lfWOlllll Frl(:l1y, lor Cosll Mftl, N~ lt1ctl, ""·"'l!"lll<M 8•0<.ll/Four1111" V&llty, U.,- IHCl'I, frvlnt/S-it'll«ll; .... S1" C'-"-ltl S.n J\NI~ C.pfl!rtnt. A 1"'91-......... ! Miiiot! fl 11¢!!•~ $1tllr'ffyt. n kMdtya. f1'1 P'~l .. 1 M1itlil"ll pl.nl It. ti JJ11 Wnl •• , Srr HI, c.t• """· Cal!"'""'-· .,.., ~eb1rf N. W1.d ,.,.nie.-.1 -l"ullof!W!lr J•c• R. C~·I•\' vie. l"rnliltr>I •...S ~11 ~ llie11111 IC11•fl ec11""' l"°1n11 A. Murpfilftl ,,.._,"" l'clltw Ch1rl11 H, Lera Ridii1rd '· Nill """""' ,,.. ......... l'dlilff, s.. c-.....omc.. J05 Nerfti_EJ C.1t1;,,, 11111, 92672 °""' °""" to111 ""'°" UCI WHI aty Strt'fl ......._,., ••• ,,.: JU.) "'"""'°"' ""'"''' kU1'11"'°!0n lff(fl: ll11J ·-~"' L.,_ aMc:fl: ttl F1tetl Allftl"' T.i ..... ._ 17141 Mto4JJI Cl•HIH Alli!_.... .. MJ05671 S.. Ci.-.t. Aft D .. 1 #&At.I r...,..._ 492-44tt ClllVrlf!lt, 1'1). °''"'" CM•• l'l*ltlllf'll .. <-; .. -.;'/· ~o -•lwltt, .fwtr.11i...., .... ,,., .. ......,,~ ,..,... "''' "' """'"'""' '"'"*" 9"Clft -rnflll°"' et ~ltlll• -· llCllllf Cltn -!lot ,.11 et C.t• MN c.n"""'. Sulotr.-retlefl "" u'"" ad _,,,,,., "'° "'•II U,U _...,.., 111n1,.;..., fUllOfl...,. Ud ..... Ill,,., -Yet anolher""' pennll for 1 slolt.lor -. Mariners Savtncs and Loan seeks ptrmlaslon 10 build 15 ruldential units on two-thirds of an acrt ovtrlooid!lR the beach at 1501 Aven.lda Buena Vlsta. 1be finn later in the aeuion al80 will ask for a one-lot subdivision to allow the sale ot the units as condomlniwns. · -Setting of a public hearing· lo "!X· amine proposed changes to the oom- rr.erdal-apartment (CA ) and Central- -(C.l·A) IOlllq ~­OJmmllllonen-propoH to ~Wt r densltlel ot the land ""'· • --Seltlng another public bwlng '° proposed amendmenll 10 the mnlll( Jawa to "'!uire two olfst...i paRiq _. per unit ln multlple--re.stdtnUaJ l'Ustricta, h.stead of I.be current rule of I.Iii 1pact1 • per unit Increased problema with cutboido parking sparked the proposed cl-nges. Nixon Drafting Snoopy In Energy Crisis . War WASffiNGTON (AP) -With the MiJI. die East war ca.sting new lhadowa over U.S. fuel imports, the Nixon ad· ministration enlisted the c art o on character Snoopy today as the aymbol for a massive campaign to conserve energy supplies. President Nixon r~ived a ciUzens advisory committee report on ways the public can help ease predicted f1.1,el shortages this winter. In addition, top Administration officials gave Nixon reports on bow the govern· ment and private industry are moving to conserve energy supplies. The national energy conservation cam- paign wiU seek to cut e~rgy . con· sumption by 5 percent this winter. Among the steps outlined were: -Adoption of cartoonist Charles M. Schultz's character, 'Snoopy," has a sym- bol for a "SavE:nergy" campaign with distribution of advertisements ·to the media and energy <Xinservation kits to the naUon's schools. . -Widucale distribution of energy· saving hints to consumers, including a "'"estion that home thermostat& be lowered by four degrees tbi!: winter to save +:x>,000 baJTels of oU a day -. the estimated '""'!""t ol the winter's heating Horror Stories , Lengthened War? CXlLUMBIA CROSSROADS, Pa. (AP\ - A former prisoner of war who made antiwar broadcasts in North VietDam says the war might have ended earlier il Americans weren't so obsealed with hearllW aboot the t«ture lnllicted Oil POWs.1 "U the people here would spend a lllUe time reading Vletnameoe history rather than spending time coocentratlng '° hearing horror stories of people being beaten with their bar.dJ tied behind •heir back ... the prisoners never would have been there," f0rmer Capt. Walter Eugene Wilbur said Monday. Re retired last week after Z5 years in the Navy, including nearly five years in a POW camp. From Page 1 DRUGS ... five men allegedly stockpiled ~1exican grown marijuana in northern San Diego County with the intent to distribute most of the drug aloog the Orange Coast. Lesser amoun ts assertedly w e r e earmarked for Long Beach and San Diego. Agents said the case had been under investigation for more than a year prior to the two arrests. Based on current sU'eet prices of mari· juana, agents said at least $2 million li.'Orth of the drug was being prepared for distribution. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney's of· lice In Los Angeles said today that NJtchell and Polich will face ar· ra.ignmen~-on the charges within lV.'O u•eek.! before a U.S. magistrate. The case could then move to trial in U.S. District Coun in Los Angeles. Each suspect faces a maximum sentence or five years in federal prison and a $15,000 fine. From Page 1 TRAINS ... lem for ran passengers., he said. Thorpe added that the chamber or commerce Is spearheading the local drive for the train stops. "I wonder if they'll contlnue to think it's such a good idea when the lots are filled with cars belonglng to people Who went to Lo& Angeles on the train to shop," he Mid. If the idea were to catch on that strongly, he added, there might be. the need to consider other parts of the vallty for new passenger stations. · Amtrak spokesmen have said the eur• rent plan is for the removal o( a mom.mg and evening stop in San Clemente and their replacement to San JUJn. That proposal could be iniUtutt:d ts soon as next spring i£ the Amtrak brASS Is convinced tt would be bcDcficlal to the Soutll Counly area: oil shortage. -An extensive progr>m to promote energy conservation by the busb>esa communlty, and continued steps by federal, state and local governments to cut energy consumption. Henry L. Diamond, a New York St.ate environmental agency oCficial and head of the citizens' advisory committee which met with Nixon, said citizen action is essential to the success of any program to reduce energy consumption. In an introduction to a booklet titled "Citizen Action Guide to En erg y C.Onservation," Diamond said, "the time has come for Americans to reassess their use of energy." Frot11P .. el MIDEAST ... againsl the anny and air for« command out.side Damascus aa well aa refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north near Homs. Tbe objective in Lebanon, the first target there in the renewed war, was identilied as a radar staUoD serving the Syrian air force at Jebel Barukh on Ml. Lebilnon In the north -of the country neor the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serious damage" was inflicted on EUPtian air fields at El Mamura, 70 miles north of Cairo, and at Kushnia, 62 miles ea.st of I.he EgypUan capital near the Suez Canal The announcements did not say whether Arab planes rose to challenge the raiders · a.s Israel conUnued to witbh>ld disclosure ol Its losoes, both In the air and on lj)e ground. U..vy figbthlg rqed <aloat! •Ille· Suez CsnaJ; where Israel said· 111 · lroopt llmited three Egyptian a r m o r bridgebeids to an advance of up to five mil" ln10 the occupied Sinai, and In the Golan Helgbta, where Syrian troopo were reported counterattacking \~ter being thrown back. The mllltary command said the Egyp- tian.! were conUnulng to reinforce their advance columns in the Sinai across brldg<0 _linklng them with the west bank of . the waterway despite intense aerial bombardments. After two overnight Arab guenilla probes and three guerrUJas shelling at- tacks against villages from Lebaooo, government IOUrces said Lebanon was wamed by ISrael to stay out of the war and keep the guerrillas out, too. On the seas, the command said three Egyptian missile boats were stmk by the Israeli navy off the Nile delta in the Mediterranean while two E g y p ti an missile boats were hit in the Ras Muhammad region of the Red Sea by Israeli warplanes. * * * Coast Mideast Travelers Stage Early Exodus A party of 85 Holy Land · visitors - many from the Orange Coast -were starling an early exod~ fr.om Israel t~ day after being stranded by the latest Mkldle East war. The group lneluding the Rev. Chuck Smith, pastor of popular Calvary Chapel at 3800 S. Fairview Road, Santa Ana, was reported en route from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv by bus today. "They will board j)l&nes there," said a spokesman ror the nondenominational church. Friends and relatives: have been keep- ing the church switchboard Ued up at length with queries about the status of the visitors' stay and also their safety. Church olficials spoke with the putor'• wife, ~frs. Kay SmJth, about 11 p.m. (PDT) Sunday and she assured them no one was in direct danger as a result of the renewed combal belween Arabi and Israelis. The group Is among an esUmated 30,000 to 35,000 !Our~ta In Israel for Yom Klppur, tile ili&hesl boly days ol the Hebrew faith, a period. of increased visitation· to the Holy Land. /. church spokesman said a list of local members or the party would be released U It was cleattd by Calvary Cbaptl 'a ass istant pastor. Hood Gets Sl,200. Tbe lack of new trai ns and coaches. SAN LEANDRO (AP) -A man armtd Amtrak spokesmtn h8ve sakl, is th e with a rtvolver ln his belt escaped with main reason for the ahu(Olng of stol)f • $1.200 from a Bank of America brinch rather than lnstitutina new ones. -Monday. police 11id. Dlltr ,, ... "'" ....... CONGRISSIONAL CANDIDATE l:-11un.1 AttorneY LanphNr Laguna Attorney . Seeks Redrawn Congress Seat By JACK CHAPPELL 01 1111 0.111 ,119t Sf.•ff Laguna Beach attorney Roger Lan· phear bu declared bimseU a candidate for th e rectntly redrawn 40th U.S. Congressional District. . The district covers the !OUthern half or Orange County running along the coast from Htmtington Beach to San <lemente and Inland including the communities -of Irvine, El Toro, Laguna Hils, Mission Vie- jo, and San Juan Capistrano. Lanphear, a Republican, may face an lncwnbent tn the election, or he may nm against an as yet unknown GOP op- ponen~ u a result ol the Slate Supreme Court ordered reapporUonment. Rep. Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach) has the option of running In the redrawn 39th Dlstrlcl which !ncludes Santa Ana, Anaheim, and Orange, or moving to the new toth district. ~1It d~'t rtally...JD8.ke_any._dif(erence lto me. I'm not going to wage a campaign agalnat Andy, but on the issues," Lanphear said in an intervi~ Monday. l..Mpbear, chairman of the Laguna Beach Planning Conupission, aaid be was compelled to nm for the congressional seat because of a crush of "crises" rac· ing the nation. "Tb.is is more than jl&t concern, I really believe that modem civilization depends oo the oolution 10 these p~ems of water pollution, air pollutiqn, lapd and mineral use," he uid. He ailld his experience In local ,..em. menl baJ taqbl hlin that the ilaUon needs strong national policy in allocation Of resourtea. Lanphear, 37, received his bachelors degree and doctor ol jurisprudence at U.C. Berkeley. He practtoed law ·in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach before coming to Laguna about five years ago. He Is unmarried. Lanpliear said that local government doesn't have the capability to deal with oaUonwide "crises" in fuel, transporta- tion, power, and now food. . "I think they are all related. I've been trying 10 rigure out how to make this point," Lanphear said. He has quit his Jaw practice, and for the next several months will be "study· In~," unhampered by job presures. 'l have enough saved to pay for my basic essential for one year. J would ex· pect the campaign would generate enough income to hold its own," be said. "If there's a dJsclOsure law, there's going to be ooe item, and it's a house,'' he quipped . Lanphear said he will study the issues until the 40th district is formally ac- cepted by the Supenne Court. - • College's P~nel Taking Advice? Tnist1 ol Sa~back COiie .. Monday di•cusaed how to ~ better .... or clUz.efl inptJt after ooe trustee proposed that t.he C%lating fS.member citbe:M' ad· visory committee be disbanded. "It's not working," laid Slntl Ana trustee Hans Vogel. ' "I've been told by rny 11P(>l:lintees that rather .than advising, they are being ad- vised (by the admjnist~ationJ. "fnstead ol being asked wlM\I they want for the school, they are bing told wtiat 'a happened after the fact,'' he said. Trustees can appoint up to 10 members each for the committee, vmich bu met an average cl four times a year over din~ ner. ,-• • An allemiUve, Yoecl pro_.i. could be _smaller · committees a p p o J n t e d rqlonally by -trustee 10 pinpoint specific local proble1111 and lludy the 11<'.hool llrst-band. Both Vogel end Dafta . Point trmtee Patrick Backus have announced their in- tent 10 aPPoijtt personal advllory com- mittees regantliel Of whether a general committee is \contlnued. Both said they were disappointed the administration hu not been able to utilize the committee more. "lt is incumbent on the admiDiltration to ameliorate tbli s.ituatioa," Backus Hughes-Rehozo Campaign Fund Jjnk Reported NEW YOR!I (UPI) -The New York Daily News reported today Simuel Dash, clJef coonse1 ot the senate Wateigate <:ommittee, believes the panel baJ In· fo;matiort linking President Nilon's Close friend Charles G. "Bebe" Reboio with secret campaign coatribulions from billionaire Howard Hugbea. A news dJspatdt quo&! the souttes as saying $100,IXM> of the Hughes money went to the Nixon campaign via Rebozo in two equal installments, one in 1989 and the other in 1970. The newspaper said it baa learned the committee subpoenaed the rocords or four Florida h>te:b in its il}vatiption, and that it is believed to bl Investigating the recordJ ot Airwes~ a llugheHwned airline operathlg In Western statel. ' ' ;'t The• story did not ldinlll)'"llther Ill sources or the b:>tela. • It said "lnlormatl<lo llnklog Hoqhes money not only to the Ni10D campaign but also to the cam~ ot 1everal prominent Democrats' II apectecUo ap- pear duriJlg the third ~ ol thO Coll> mlttee'• !nv .. tlgatlon ol the 1117:1 cam- paign. "The timing . ol the alleged - trtbutiOllS would be signlllunt, aoorces nJd, because boch would have been made well after the 1961 pnotdentlll race and well before Nllon's re..eiection cam- paign," the N8W1 said. Name Change Asked WASHINGTON (UPI) -A committee- of the government board respomible for geographic names recommended unanimously today that Cape Kennedy be changed back to the historic name of Cape Canaveral. The ,recommendaUon would apply only 10 the geographic capt in Florida and not change the name of the John F. Kennedy Space Center. said. "We've tritd 11 truatees for alz )'Uf'I. We said wba\ we wanted this 1?1>UP lo be and It ju•t Un't bappeiilng:" At-the suggesllon of Laguna Hills trustee Dr. Jl!"es Marshal~ the trustees voted to willlllold a decision cmtil Sup!. Fred Bremer bu drawn up revised goals for the committee atone with his sug· gestJons on how to reorganize or re· vitalize the group. "Until we do that, I'rh going to appoint anyone to the committee," Backus said. S~ddlehack Unit Seeking ·Service FrQm Buses . A resolution urging bus oervlce 10 Sad· dleback Community College w a 1 authorized by the school's board ot trustees Monday. A , letter to Dr, Gordon Fielding, d.irec· tor of tbe Orange County Transit ~District, will stress ~t a bus stop on ctmpqs should l:le'ineluded in new routes {>lanned to begin next spring. About a quarter or Saddleback's students o:>mmute from tbe Tustin irea, a zo.mne drive one way. In a recent peti· tion drive to get Tustin out of tbe Sad· dleback District, the distance was men· timed as a major ooocem. Ttustees said they wlll ask Fielding 10 consider student rates for the bu5Jme, which chlrgts U cents.,, In other action, the boord: -Approved liiol paymeall (seven per· oent ol total cost) r.r dealgn and devdopmenl .. the proposed $178,300 ouldoor pbyslcal educaUCll facilities, In· eluding an otympl..med ·awtmmlng pool scheduled 10 he done by 1977. -Authorized ""1tlnui1Ji lncromelllal paymenta 10 an:bitects deslgntnc the music arta and teclmology bulldlnp. -Ok~ '36;134 In purchase orders ano·n11,m·1n dlatrtct warrant>. Bandit's Hau ' Hardly Wort . A laakY, ,~.!lail<d bandit ; went thn>lgh"'1rt11e •~•te rllotlobi .. he robbed a San Clemente budget aervice lta~;lal!I;~ DIPL• , BUI-. lit, Probll>IY • _.. . 1oc11y .If the tal<e•sa ~ II all. Police ...,_. via Orange Counly sherilra deputies that the Lemer Station at.621 ElClmloo Real bad been held up by the lone llJlllDID wielding a .Zl-callber pistol Attendant James Howard cotton, 19, of Arcadia, told -he calml)' banded aver eV<ryth!ng In the till. But tbero'Waa little .,... than 110 Jn dollar bills: Burglar Gets Propane From Camper Truck One !ndlvldual baJ apparenlly acted already In COiia Mesa 1o J>1v1ect himself lnlm the threatened fuel and mergy shorta .. predicted for this winter. 11erman Bacdnls or 591 Darrell st compalned 10 Police Ofllc:er Rob Flalhen Monday tbal oomaone burglariz. ed hia camptr truck by twlstilJi oil the doorknob with a pair ol pliers. His $200 I06s Included eliht botUes or Porpane gas and four mummy-type sleeping bags. ADV ANTAGE-AIDEN'S Ono huge advantage Alden's hos over most corpet stor.s is thot we hov1 our own installers, providing flexibility and retiability in scheduling inst1H1tions. Very few deportment sto..s or speciofty carpet stores hevt their own workrooms, ind must rely on 1n outside c o n tr 1 c t wrvice for installations. · We have had mony people buy from us after being disappointed by an instaUation company who 1choduled • job and didn't show up or call. Sometimes, this has happened two or ti.roe times before tile customer gives up. At Aldon's, our instaU.tion schedule is opwotod very ofrtclontfy, and even when our men ore hold up on o pi'ovious job C<1using 1 lot. start, our men win day ind finish. ' " If you wont reliability-cal us I • ALDEN'S CARPm e DRAPES 1663 Placetltla AH. COSTA MISA 64Mlll . HOUIS: MIO. Tin.,..._,' 19 t1JO -..... t 19' -SAT. 'iJO 19 t ' t ' • " • • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' : l ' -· ' • •• ' ' ' ' ' • >~ ' • ' i . I ' Tuesday's Closing Prices - • .. TutMiq, Octobtr 9, 191) Sc DAILY PILOT JJ NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • . ' • Year's High-Lows App ear Eve r y Saturday Cable TV Fight To High Com·t WASHI NGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court Tuesday agreed to seUle a nine.year copyright battle between tfie cable television industry and a national TV network, a case with potential Impact on millions of TV viewers ' • ,. .. • ' II . ., . •• • ·--i MID•W·EEK .-·- ~TUESDA y & WEDNESDAY ONI:·. 'sHOP 10 AM to 9 PM • PLENTY 'OF FREE P~RKING ' I ' WHITE • < SWINGT~P ' TRASHCAN · ig heavy duty p!astk: recejltac!e with swing top. Rema1~ble value! 1 ~5=~~ 111r:;;; o10RDI ON I PtTlR P1P£R MARLBE--1-BAtON~~-\·a11.1sH. MAI. I CIEAni. I . AMI I R"'SSIMG 1 12 01. bottle; COOKIES \ D ,. _ limit a I hm•< 4 Limitlb•l' I 10oL $1 \ II $1 5 $1 I II f 1 .. for , .. or __ for \ RtG.4lt t~--1------~ ----H"'Y -------, --TARBURST I HERS ,. PtPSODtNT 1 IRQl'f I PUU t~OtOLAlt fAMll~ S\lE \ f \K1SSIS TOOTKPASTE 1 CH~~!,\ .. ·"""'"""'- s.ls oz. tubes I l 11>. b:.~1 1. $' 1 2 u•'''$1 3 '''"' $1 I 2 for I for for ' RIG. 79t tA.. 11.tG. b3C tA. 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Giant 7" pins, giant 411'' Skittle bowl in~ ball. giant 411'' two seclion steel pole and buill·in pin locaters. Fun for all! A MUST FOR All THE LITTLE ONES ' . ' -- ' TRASH CAN If . LINERS .~',. . . P~clc of 20 thrH hu,~llel grass. begs or ic~1 qf '15 thirty three gallon.~trash can .bags. HeaY,:vinyl.. . ' Save . ••. • -~-c 11 °/o llP ,Now _1.,. 99•, · SAYE 55% NOW LIGHTBULB FANTASTIC VALUE . 25, 40, 60, 75 and 100 watt bulbs. 1 ... 1.oc 22c • . EA. SAYE '1.70 ••• TOILET SE While enameled hardwood seat with lid aOO installation hardware included. I ~~ 3.69 RAIN BARREL I I • ~,. ~. ' ·. WATER SOFTENER \ The wash cycle fabric s;ftener thet works with your detergent. 48 oz. bottle by Johnson. SAVE 20°/o NOW · ONLTI •119 Ret. $1 .49 PAPERMATE FLAIR PENS .Choose from 12 popular colors: great for school, home and art projects.19. ~. 39c SPECIAL LOW PRICE . ··~-~ ! Gl[!~~:S l .._...;;f}'I;;:;•;;;;• Q-' COSTA MESA • 3088 BRISTOL ST. Sin Diego Frffwly at Bristol USf YOUR CRfDIT CARD . ...... ~· ._. .. •IUtU~lC... _I ,A.., _._ • 11u•-•1e11111nm • . \ 1 ) l I I I I -I : --· I l l ·Laguna Beaeh EDITION • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 282, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE cpuNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOll:R 9, 1973 TEN CENTS Five Ex-countians Face $2 Million Pot Rap . . By FREDERICK SCHOEMElll,, Of 1M CNlty l'lltl SI.ti ' Five fonner Soutll Orange County men have been formally charged by a federal grand jury witb conspiracy to sell moi:e than $Z Million worth or marijuana in , Orange, L<ls Angi:les and San Diego counties. An indictment returned by the grahd jury alleges that the quintet met betw_een July 19 and July 27, 1973, in Dana Point, Ltguna Beach, Newport Belch, Long Beach And Vista and laid plans to distribute five tons of marijuana. The conspiracy was broken, the in~ dictment asserts, when federal agents and Newport Beach police arrested two of the five suspects. · William Mitchell, 24, a fonner Laguna Beach resident cuttenUy is free on $20,000 bond, while William Ehvood Polich, 24, formerly of Dana Point, is free on $3,000 ball. Mitchell ...., arrested by agents of the federal Drug Enfori::emen t Administration ln San Diego Co\UltY July 27 after the. agenta assertedly negotiated to purchase 630 pounds <I. marijuana. Polich, on parole from federal prison, was apprebended July 31 by Newport Beach narcotics detectives who were tracking on a related investigation. Three other men , Gerald Edward Pohl, 25, Robert William Bray, 21, and Michael _om Congress Race 'Fiercest' Laguna Attorney BattlesRage S k N c,-t On Ground ee s ew uea TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israeli warplanes By JACK CHAPPELL 01 IN 0.11'1' l'llet Sl•lf ,Laguna Beach attorney Roger Lan- phear bas declared himself a candidate for tbe l'fCe!ltly redrawn 4-0th U.S. Congressional DistricL 'lbe ·district covers the southern half of Orange County runnJng along the coast frOm Huntington Beach to San Clemente and inland including the communities of _ Irvine, El Toro, Lq\ma ldts, Mission Vie- jo, and San J.,., C.plJlran\>1 Lanphear, a Republican, may face an Incumbent in lhe election, or be may run against an as yet unknown GOP op- ponent, as a result of the State Supreme Court ordered reapportionment. Rep. Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach) has the option of running in the redrawn 39th District which includes Santa Ana, Anaheim, and Orange, or moving to the new 40lh district. "It 'doesn't really make any difference to me, I'm not going to wage a campaign against Andy, but on the issues," Lanphear .said in an Interview Monday. Lanphear, chairman of the Lag\U\8 Beach Planning Commission. said be was compelled to run for the congressiona.1 seat because of a crush of "crises" fac- ing the nation. "'ells i.s more than just concern . J really believe that modem civilization depends on the solution to these problems of water pollution, air poUution, land and mineral use," he said. He said his experience In local govern- ment has "tli.ugbt him that the nation (See RUNNING, Page Z) Patient-Doctor Sex Relations Told in Survey CHICAGO (UPI) -Tbc Chicago Tribune reported today that in a na- tionwide survey conducted by a tea m of California psychiatrists at least one out of every 20 doctors responding ad!flltted be engaged in sexual intercourse Wlth pa· tierits. c.llY Plilf Si.If "-" CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE L~un. Attorney Lanphear Retired Army Colonel Bailey Of Laguna Dies Funeral rites with full military honors will be accorded Col. George W. Bailey (U.S.A.·Ret.) of Laguna Beach during services at the United States Military Academy at West Point Friday. Col, Bailey died Ptlonday at Hoag li1emorial Hospital in Newport Beach following an illness. He was 76. Col. Bailey was founder of the real estate firm now operated as Newell Associates. He is survived by .his wife, Helen of Laguna; and son, George W. Bailey III, a U.S. Army officer. struck et targets deep inside Syria and Egjpt-tOd3y:-1XffiiliingEfgptian airfields near Cairo and attacking Syrian military headquarters outside Damascus:, a military spokesman said. A radar station in Lebanoo. also was hit. As tbe 1973 Middle East wer went into KUWAIT URGES ARAB OIL CONFERENCE, Pago 14 U.S. JIW5 •AAISE MILU~OR WAR, P ... -4 U.N, 'COUNCIL FAILS IN CEASE-FIRE BID, Pago 4 its fourth day, the spokesman reported SYria was uslng Soviet-supplied "Frog" surface-t~surface missiles capable of carrying a l,~pound wai'head 44 miles against villages deep inside Israel. He described losses in the settlements as light. On the ground, Israeli troops were reported fighting Egyptian and Syrian nmor in what one··veteran witness said were "some of the fiercest batUes" in the nation's 25-year history. Citizens on the home froot were told to expect hard going ahead in the "at- trition" ptwe of the war. · "A mililary spokesman told Israelis in a nationwide broadcast that fighting has been "very bitter and bloody." "The struggle facing us may not be an easy one," he said. "Israel's aim is not only to return lo the old cease-fire lines where fighting started, but to insure that Israel won't stand before similar problems in the future," he told the nation. "The stopping action is concluding suc- cessfully," be said. "With the initiative now in our hands, the attrition phase has begun. I would not be lulled into believing this can be an easy and very rapid opera· tion." "A substantial part or the Egyptian army has already been destroyed," he said, "while the full force of the Israeli army has not been committed." A communique said returning pilots reported "good hits" on strikes into Syria against the army and air force command outside Damascus as well as refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north near Homs. · The objective in Lebanon, the first target there in the renewed war, was identified as a radar station serving lhe (See MIDEAST, Page %) ' William Andersen, 25, also were indicted _ by the grand jury. they are fugitives and warrants have been Wued for their ar· rests. Pohl, Bray and Andersen, according to Dete'ctive Leo Konkel of the Newport Beach Police Department, have resided in recent years in Dana Point, Laguna Beach and Tustin. According to rederal invesUgators,,tbe five men allegedly stockpiled Mexican grown marijuana in northern San Diego County with the intent to distribute most of the drug aloog the Orange Coast. Lesser amounts auertedly w e r e earmarked for LOng Beach . and San Diego. • • · . Agents said the case had been under investigation for more lh8.J} a year prior to the two arrests. Based on current street prices of mari- juana, agents said at least $2 million "'Orth of {he drug was being prepared for distribution. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney's of- fice in U>s Angeles said loday that t/Jtchell and Polich will face ar- raignment oo the charges within h\'O "·eeks before a U.S. magistrate. The case could then move IO trial in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. Each suspect faces a mh:imum sentence of fi\•e years in fede ral prison and a $15 ,000 fine . • ear ~a1ro ' Buman. Falling Stai:· This photograph de(>icts a parachuti!\g '.star, com· posed of'27 jumpers m what.is claimed to be a world record. The jump took place over Elsinore last week. The three men· on the outside are not counted. J?re· vious record was set at 26 rneD in Oklahoma last year. Lund Joins Irvine Boar.d Real Estate Consultant Fills Company Vacancy Irvine Company directors to d a y selected a Los Angeles real estate in· vestment and research consultant to fill the vacancy on the board created by the death of fonner company president William R. 1'1ason. William S. Lund, 42. president of the California Insthute of the Arts at Valen- cia at)d resident or Hancock Park, was elected at today's board meeting in Newport Center, Newport Beach. Lund's appointment brings the seven- member board to its full strength for ~he first Ume since Mason 's d~ath in June. Raymond L. Watson who already was a member ol the board succeeded Mr. Mason as president of the firm in Sep- tember. Board Chainnan John V. Newman an· nounced Lund's appointment, describing him as one-of the "most highly qualified' real estate investment and research men in the country." Newman said Lund "brings to -the board extensive experience in corporate management and financing." Among the impressive list of clients for whom Lund bas had ''primar y * * * Ir vine Company responsibility" are Walt Disney Produc- tions (initiators of the Cal Arts, Valencia campus), the Aga Kahn , Ford Motor Company, Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Company, Castle and Cooke and Ne\vhall Land and Farming Com· pany. F'rom 1960 to 1972. Lund "'as exce:uti Ie \'ice president of Economics Research Associates with responsibilities f ~ r organ:Ung and de veloping the firm's real estate and urban economic proi:ram. For (See D,1RECTOR. Page 21 Orange Coast • • 'Ibe Tribune said the survey, reported in L'le current isslle or the American Journal ol Psychiatry, showed that most ·physicians frowned upon the use of erotic behavior in their practice as unethical or "professional suicipe." Copductcd by Dr. Sheldon H. Karndcr, Marilille Fuller, and Dr. Ivan N. Mensh of UCLA, the study involved . 460 psychiatrist, obstetricians, gynecologists, surgeons, Internists ond general prac- titioners. Col. Bailey .received hfs commission from ~esl Poiot In 1920. During World War It, he served on the staff of the War College and as liaison officer between American and British forces In France. He received many military honors in- cluding the Order of the British Empire. Parking Meter Petitions Director Roster Changes Sho1.vn Since June when long-time chairman of the lrvine Company Board of Dfrectors N. Loyall l\1cLaren stepped dovm. a nun1- ber of changes in members hip of the board have occurred. Weather It'll be clear and sunny \Vedncs- day. \\'ilh some"'hAt cooler tem- peratures along the Orange Coast. i1ighs of G5 at the beaches 'ol.'ill rise to only 70 inland. Overnight lows 55. The study showed that s to 13 percent or the group engaged in some kind of erotic behavior with their patients, and five to 7 .2 percent engaged in sexual in- tercourse. The l"PDn said 87 percent ol the ph)'i· clans Condemned erotic behavior with '· peUents. The doctors said It destroyed the doc- tor-petienl relaUonship, was "un- forgivable,'' or _indicated lhe doctor was J>IYChopalhJC. But 13 pe~ol the doctors oka¥ed erotic practic such rusons as 11nn· proves seii:ual m adjustments," "helps patients' r~l ·on or their .... sexual 11tatt1s,'' "~\ally In 1hc depressed, middle-aae~/lliemale who f~l• un· dcr11irablt," and "lo relie ve lrustration ,n 3 widow or divorcee." Following the war, Col. Bailey headed CARE aid program operations in Fran~ He came to Laguna Beach In 1948 anti with hill wife established Bailey's Real Estate. He retired in 1964. He was a member or the Irvine Coast Country Club and an avid golfer. · Laguna Dancers Set Beginners' Classes The Laguna Beach Folk Dancers are sponsoring a class for beginners from ' 7:30 to to p.m. Sundays at the Laguna Beach High School girls' gym. Instruction is given in Grt.'ek, Balkan, Hungarian, and Israeli dances, both In line and coup\!!. Cost ill 50 cents. The folk dancers meet regularly from 7.:30 to 10 p.m. WedneAdays at the glr\s' gym. . Gather Enougl1 Sig11atu1·es Laguoa Beach City Clerk Dorothy 1i1uslelt confirmed today that sufficient signatures were obtained in lbe rclercn- dum petitiOQ against the city's parking meter revenue ordinance to force repeal or a special elecflob~M the measure. lilrs. Musfelt said 1,406 valid signatures were present on lbe 86 petitions. The referendum errort required 987 valid signatures to block the proposed revenue law increaslng--meter fees fro1n 10 to 2o cents an hour and providing ror lr..stallatlon ol 680 new meters. Only signatures or registered city voters were acceptable on the petition!!. Mrs. Musfelt cut 378 signatures from the petitions during a tine-week chtck or , the petitions with the Orange County Registrar ol Voters records. She will present a certificate ol suf- fi ciency at the Oct. 17 meeting Of the Ci- ty Council. The council, may either set an electkln on thl matter, or repeal the law. A committee compo!Cd oC su~ of the revenue measure and referendum organizers has been rormed by the coun- cil to effect a compromise •acceptable to ail . It is llkely the council woo1d repeal the law and enact the agreed to measure. The parking meter law as first written \\.-ould have raised an estimated St68.oon for the city this year and $300,ln> each year thereafter. Opposition e: am e primarily fro1n downtown merchants. Herc is a listing of the current dircc· tors and lhe positions they filled : -John V. Ne~·man, 6.'l·year-old rancher from Ventura ha s been on the Irvine Company board sinct 1967. He succeeds McLaren as chainnan. -Raymoad L.: \\'atson, f7·~·ear-old president of the company. h\'ts 1n Eastblulf. A member ol the board since 197t>, he replaced tho IDie \\'illiam R. Mason a.s president. -Boward P. Allen , 43-)lt'ar-old ex- eculi\'e ol Soothem California Edison Company, was eloof!d to lhr: bo.'\rd in June. filling the ''ae:al'K'y on Ilk' bo.1rd created by l\te:L.aren 's rtsign1tlion . -f\I. Keith Gaede, 37-year-old p.rt.."\$1· dent of San Joaquin Associates nnd n..•1tl· dent or Irvin~ Cove. l~c )oincd lht1 boord in 1966. -~1rw. At1tallt 1Joan 1n'IN'.'~ Snllth, !Set CllANGES, rngc Ii l;\SIDE TODA. Y Lash LaR ur. irhose whip (Jt1d tiz.q&UI Ott('( i1:;1u.<ht'l1 1/IOV/€ bad irry1. 1.-: ~ e rl<'"1da eva nge. lul lt'lli.1p~s.J Jr-.i j,·.s i11to line 1.---i:1' :Ii< ~f·., 1; mi.ssiOT1ory J->'-ii l : : l SL·e 1tonJ, P<l9( l l. CM,_ c..i...... l ci.--'"" '*"""'" 11 ,, ... _.. !• 0...?11 !Wol•tft ' . .......... ""• ' E•9"f'l•-•I U f HH"fll 11•!1 ,-.,..,_..,.~ I "'°""'-11 A11t1 l.•-rt II ,..,!ft ,, ,,... ,....,, 1• !U-·· ,,.,., . Ot•n•t '"""' I ~-,....,, J-"'''-"' 1•11 , ...... hl911 11 - TIM11wl I) Wralfl.. • w-·· "''" n.11 WorMI M1w1 I • .. , • •• % OA!L Y PILOT LI Saddleback Board , Ct.Ilege's Panel Taking Advice? Trusts of Saddlebaek College ?itonday discussed how to make bttter use of citizen in put after one trustee propor.ed 1hn1 !he .. xisting 45-member citir.ens' ad· Yiso ry committee be disbanded. ''It's not \\·orking," said Sanla Ana trus~ee Hans Vogel. "Ive been told by my appointees that rather than advising. they are being ad· \'ised (by the adn1inis tration). "Instead of being asked what they want for the school, they are bing told what's happened after the fact ," he said. Trustees can appoint up kl 10 members eac;h for the committee, \\'hich has met an averag~ of four times a year ov~r din· ner. An aHemative, Vogel proposei could be smaller Committees a p po I n t e d regionally by each trustee to pinpoint specific local problems and study the sr.hool first-hand. Both Vogel and DM• Point trustee l'atrici Backus have announced their In· tent to appoint personal advisory corn· mittees reganllies. of \\'helber a general committee js continued. Both said they .,,.,. cmappolni.d the administration has not been able to utilize the committee more. "It is incumbent on the administration to amellorate this situation," Backus said. "We've tried as trustees for six years. We said what we wanted this group to be and It j: • Isn't happening." At the suggestion of Lagw\.a Hills trustee Dr. James Marshall, lbe trustees voted to ~·itbbold a decision until Supt. Fred Brtmer has drawn up revised goals for the coinmittee along with his sug- gestions on how to reorganize or re- vitalize the group. "Until y,•e do tha t, I'm going to appoint anyone to the cornmjttee," Backus said. • UPI Ttl ....... ' Ff'O!I' P .. e .l RUNNING. • • . need• atroag national policy In allocation of resources. Lanphear, 31, rocelved his bacllelon delnoanacloctorolju~at U.C. Berktley. He practiCed law 1n Newport Beac.b and Huntington Beech before coming to Laguna about five years ago. He is unmarried. Lanphear said that local govemmeot doe.m't have the capability to deal with nationwide "crl!e$" in fuel, trwporta· lion , Power. and now food. "I think they are all related. I've been trying to figure out how to make this point," Lanphear said. He has quit his law practice, and for the next several months will be "study· ing," unhampered by job presures: "[ have enough saved to pay for my basic essential for one year. I would e1- pect the campaign "wld generate enough income to bold its own," he saiJ!. "If there's a disclosure law, there's going to be one item, and it's a house.•• ht quipped. Lanphe~r said he will study the issues until the 40th district is formally ac· cepted by the ~uperme Court. 'Ji~ Library Parking ~ Educational Goals Group Holds First Meet Tonight EGYPTIAN ARMOREO VEHICLE BEGINS TO CROSS PONTOON BRIDGE ON SUEZ CANAL Egyptians (foreground) S~pervlM Movement of Military Equipment Across the Bridge Ci·ackdown Set ii In Laguna Beach , The Orange County Bo.lrd o f Superviaors bas ordered a ,crackdown on per:sons uslng the Laguna Beach Library parking lot while on non-library bwiness. A committee charged with finding y,•ays or getting citizen help in developing education goals for the Laguna Beach Board of Education will hold its first meeting tonight. The Educational Goals Procedure Commlttee as the group is called, receiv- ed school board approval Jut week. It is composed of flve school district person· neJ and 10 community representaUves. Board action directed the group to answer the following questlon: "'Nhat la the best procedure to use to gain wide public a.s.slatance ln establishing the educational goals for the Lagima Beach Unified School District." Earlier this year, the school board reviewed model goah: -aetUng pro- grams used else.where in the_state, but took no action on which one to use. Tonight's meeting will begin at 7:30 in the Education center, S60 Blumont St. It b public. Citizen members of the commlttee in· elude ' William Thomas, 1ormer school board president; Denis McGrelvy, John Anclenoo. Sharon Baumanon, Lylah Almon, Kay Wilson, Lucille Whitaker, Saddlehack Unit Seeking Service From Buses A resolutJon urging bus service lo Sad· dleback Community College w a s authorized by the school's board of trustees Monday. A Jetter to Dr. Gordon Fielding, direc· tor of the Orange County Tran.sit District. will slress that a bus stop on c<..mpus should be included in new routes ylanned to begin next spring. About a quarter of Saddleback's students conunute from the Tustin area, a W-mile drive one Vi'ay. In a recent peti· tion drive to get Tustin out of the Sad- dleback District, the distance was men· tioned as a ma jor concern. Trustees said they will ask Fielding to consider student rates for the. busline, Y:hich charges 25 cents. ln other action. Uie OOard: -Approved first payments (seven per· cent of total cost) for design and developn1ent on the proposed $478,300 outdoor physical educat ion facilities, in· eluding an olympi c·sized swinuning pool scheduled to be done by I9n. -Authorized continuing incremental payments to architects designing the music arts and technology buildings. -Okayed $36.834 in purchase orders and $216,279 in dlstricl warrant!. OUNGI COAIT .. DAILY PILOT 1~· o .. "91 c.,.,11 DA.IL'I' PILOT,""'"' ..... k h 11 <lll"C"nN n.. lfl-P'ftl. It D\ttltlll\H b'/' t!lt Dft"9• C~ll Put>lltllln!il CO<r11Mnr. """'" fi le fdll'-••t" l!Ubll..,,ld. "'-•Y 11\routh FrlcltY, lw Co.ta Mttt . l<lewpo(I IMdl, 1-t~!ln!I~" !ltKl'l/l'"""ttl" Vt l!l"y, LI9unt &loch. l"'!ni!/S_I._• ..,... 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NM !Mftll'llYI Ill' '"f f! U 1J """""'' mlli!'tf"I' •tlN!leN $J,tJ "'lll'llM!o. Robert Miller, William Whittman, and Jack Randall. School districl appointed personnel in- clude Romaine Freisen, Professional Educator Cowicil (teachers) represen-· tative; Jackie Porter, CI ass If I e d Employes Council (secretaries and custo- dians) representative; Al Haven, Top of the World Elementary School principal; Donald Haught, Laguna Beach High School principal, and Francola Dubau, Laguna Beach High Scbool sludenl body president. The committee bu been asked to sub- mit Ill findings to the board of education by NOv. 20. F...,.._l'qge_l DIRECTOR. .• ERA Lund alao managed corporate merger and acquisition studies. ln ·19'1%, Lund said, the trustees cl Ihe Callfomla lmlllute of the Arts uked blm to temporarily serve as president of the v1sua1 IDd performing arb Institution recently opened in Valencia. lie IS cbairman of the bolrd ot Tel' raznJca, a l'fll· estate bivea~ com-pany. A Illa IP'lduate of Slanlord Unlvenlly, Lund has atudied bua:lnea admblla:tr.1tlon at UCLA and served tour 1NJ'S u In· duJtrial eoooomllt for Stanl«d Re..ardl WUtute. ~' Lund Is married to the former Sbiton Dlaney and aerves as a trustee of.: the Walt DIJlley F~tJon as well as the Marlborough School Foundation. He b a director of the followlag busineMe!I: caJifamla Financial Coh>.; Security Savings and Loan AssociatlOn ; First Los Angeles Bank; l< J 0 E television, Fresno; KOGO radio, San Diego; Retlaw Enterprtses, Inc. and Sterling Mortgage Q:impany. He is acUve in Big Brothers of Los Angeles, the Los Angele! Chamber of Commerce and Town Hall. Back to School Nights Slated In Laguna ·Beach Students have been back at school In Laguna Beech. ror nearly a month. Now parent! will get their tum.· Parent "Sack to School Night'' ac- Uvitie3 are planned at Laguna•_, five school campuses, under the following s ·"~ule: -El l\Iorro Elementary School, 8681 N. Coast Highway, 7:30 p.m. Wciinesday. -Aliso Elementary School, 21St2 Wesley Drive, South Laguna, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. -Thw1ilon Intermediate School, 2100 Park Ave., 7:30 p.m, Oct. 18. -Top of the World Elementary School. 21601 Tree Top Lane, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 17. -Laguna Beach High School, 625 Park Ave., 7:30 p.m. Oct. 23. From Pagel MIDEAST ... Syrian air force at Jebel Barukh on ~1t. Lebanon in the north of the country near the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serious damage" was inflicted on Egyptian air fields at El Mansura, 70 mile! north of Cairo, and at Kushnia, 82 miles east of the Egyptian capital near the Suez canal. 'lbe announcements did not say whether Arab planes rose to challenge the raiders as Israel continued to withhold cmclosure of Its losses, both in the air and on the ground. Heavy fighting raged along the Suez Canal, where Israel said it!! troops limited three Egyptian a r m o r -bridgeheads-to -an advance of-up to five mlle.a into the occupied Sinai, and in the Gol&n Heights, where Syrian troops were reported counterattacking after being thrown back. The military command said the Egyp. tlans were continuing to reinforce their advanct colilmn!I in the Sinai across bridges linking them with the west bank of the waterway despite intense aerial bom~menb. . . . . After two ovemlgbt Arab guerrilla c::' IDd three jllerrlllas ahelllng at· • agalnJt vUiales from !l<blnon, government tources said Lebanon was warned by Israel lo stay out of the war and keep the ·guerrillas out, too. Ou the seu, the command said three Egyptian missile boata were sunk by the Israeli navy off the Nlle della In the Mediterranean while two E i y p t I a n missile boats were hit ln lhe Ras Muhammad region of the Red Sea by Jsrae~ warplanes. Ernest W. Toy Succumbs at 7 4 Private services are scheduled this week fo r Ernest W. Toy, 74, of South Laguna, who died Monday. A native of Buffalo, New York, Mr. Toy bad lived In C81ifomla 61 years and in Orange County eight years. He was a teacher in Los Angeles for over 40 years. The family requests that any memorial contributions be made to the Heart Fund. Survivors lnclude his widow, Helen ; son Em est of Santa Ana ; two sisters, Alice C. Toy and Ruth E. Toy of South Laguna: two brothers, Dr. Arthur J. Toy and Albert H. Toy of Altadena: and four grandchildren. Sheffer Laguna Beach ?11orluary is handling arrangements. Sailors Leave Hearts In San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Eight sailors -six Greeks and two Turks - who "fell in Jove'' with San Francisco during a three-day visit and wanted to stay were hauled back aboard their ship by police. Police CapL J. \Villiam Conroy said Monday the sailors tried to jump ' ship ·shortly before the VassiHs Katskis departed from Pier 90, but were rounded up and put back on board. U.S. Poised Marines on Ships Off Mideast WASHINGTON (AP) - A helicopter carrier with about 2,000 Marines aboard is sailing in U1e eastern Ji.1editerranean Sea, the Pen!Jlgon said today. The nmphlblous assault shlp Guadalcanal joins a tJisk force led by the aircraft carrier Independence in Mediterranean waters roua:h· ly ~00 miles oil the cossl of Israel. But the Guadalcanal, which could be used to evacuate Amert· cans if the new ftgthing endangered them, is operating independent. ly ol lhe lndepemfence. Pentagon spoke•man Jerry W. Frledhelm declined to give the Guadalcanal1s precise location or to speculate on the posslbUJty of e\'acuation of thousands of Amerlcans. The Guadalcanal carries approximately 30 hellcopters which could be used to Utt Americans from endangered shore points. I Nixon Drafting· Snoopy The problem, according to Librarian Cliff Cave, is· that downtown employes have been parking cars all day in spaces reserved for the library staff and patrons. In Energy Crisis War . Under terms of a resolution recently adopted by supervisors, the nine parkin.( spaces adjacent to Ramona Street will be. marked for "Library and Chamber ot Commerce staff." WASHINGTON (AP ) -With the Mid· die East war casting new shadows over U.S. fuel imports, the Nixon ad- ministrat..ion enlisted the c a n t o o n character Snoopy today as the symbol for a masaive campaign to conserve energy suppli~s. ~ President Nixon received a citizens advisory committee report on ways the public can help ease predicted fuel shortages this winter. In addition, top Adll'linistration officials gave Nixon reporls on how the govern- ment and private industry are moving to ronserve energy supplies. The national energy conservation cam- paign will seek to cut energy con· sumption by 5 percent this winter: Among the steps outlined. were: -Adoption of cartoonist Charles M. Schultz's characleJ'., 'Snoopy," has a sym- bol for a "8avEnergy" campaign ' with distribution of advertisem~ to the media and energy conservation kits to the nation's schools. · -Widescale distribution of energy- sa.Ving hints to consumers, including a Tickets Ready For Tournament Tickets are now available for the Laguna Beach Boys Club and YMCA golf tournament to be held Oct. 18 at the San Juan Hills Country Club followed by an awards .dinner. The tournament is sponsored by Mission Bank and the Hotel Laguna, and tickets may be picked up at the bank from Manager Jess Mertdew or at the hotel from Borge Neil!letl. Cost Is $25 for the tournament and the diMer at the hotel. Dinner alone for wives or guests is $6 a person. Special prizes donated by local merchants will be awarded to tourna· ment finishers. The event is open to duff- ers and handicap goUer&, Merride\V said. suggestion that home thermostat! be lowered by four degrees thi.J winter to save 400,000 barrel!l.of oil a day -the estimated amount of the winter's heating oil shoitage.- -An extensive program to promote energy conservation by the business community., and continued steps by federal, state and local governments to cut energy consurnptiOn. Henry L. Diamond, a New York State environmental agency official and head of the citizens' advisory conunlttee which met with Ni xon, said citizen action is essential to the success of any program to reduce energy consumption. Marine Arrested In Beating of · Inf ant Daughter San Clemente police Monday arrested a 19-year~ld Marlne on suspicion of felony child beatinf after the man's wife found the co u p e ' s three-month-old daugbtei sufferirig from severe bruises. Gary Wayne Hill of 167 Avenlda Del Mar was arrested after a sergeant at Camp Pendleton phoned police and told officers the man's distraught wife called about the alleged beaUng. Hill, it Is alleged, baby sat the lnlant during the evening while his wife at· tended an evening school class. When the class end~ and Mrs. Hill returned, she found the child's buttocks black from a beating, police !laid. The baby was treated at San Clemente General Hospital and then returned to her mother's custody. Police said they would seek a com- plaint from the District Attorney's office \\lednesday in the incident. Hill was rePortediy still ln custody earlier today. Spaces beneath the new library struc- ture will be opated "Library Use Only" and will carry a two-Mur time limit. City . of Laguna Beach parking control personnel will be authorized to issu• parking ti ckets to overtime parkera and other violalon. Cave said signs regulating the spaces will be posted "as !JOOR a!I possible" by County Department of Tran!!portation personneh- F ...... r .. e1 CHANGES • • • 40-yee.r~ld housewife and equestrienne of Middleburg, Va., and Emerald Bay. The . owqer of 22 percent of lhe company stock has served on the board isince 1957. -Cbarlea S. Wheeler, 58-r.ar-old cor- porate secretary and president of the tom~f, oubai<UarY Flying D Ranch In Mont;\ria hies In Newport Beach. He hu been a mmpany director since 19151. -wtllla:m. S. Lad, 42-_year-old rtal e!ltate investment and r'!search con- sultant of llancock Parle, Loe Angeles. was named today to fill the vac.ancy created by the d .. th ol Willlam R. Maaon. Churchmen Sing As War Explodes FAMAGUSTA, Cypnl.o (UPI ) -Tho 2UI American clergymen and th<Ir parishioners sang poaima u the Middle ,. East war exploded around them. The group, paaaengen: on a Greek cruise ship, returned here Monday alter 60 hours In the Syrian port of Tartus. Their sblp bad been aelzed In the Mediterranean by Syrian gunboats. While warplanes flew overhead and gunboats zipped In and out of the port, passengers aboard the ship Romantlca said they kept calm by singmg f)'"dln1s. ADVANTAGE-ALDEN'S • ' One hug'e, advantage Alden's has over most c1rpet stores is that WI h1v1 our Own in1!1llor1, providing flexibility and reli1bifity in scheduling installatio ns. ' Very few deparlm,ent stores or specialty carpel stor1t hove their own workrooms, and must rely on an outside c o n t r a c t service for lnstolletlons. We ha ve hod many people buy from us ofter being dis1ppolnl1d by an inst1ll1tion company who scheduled • job end didn't show up or call. Somalimes, this has h1pp1n1d two or threo times before tho customer gives up. ~ Al Alden's, our installation schadule is oporoled very officiantly, and even when our men ere held up on a previous iob cau1ing a l1t1 start, our men will stay and finish. If you wont reliability-ceR us I • HOUIS1 Moa. Ttriru Tlturs.1 t to l iJO ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES • 1663 l'lac•ntla An. COSTA MESA I 646-4131 F~l, t ,. t -SAT, t :30 ,. I ~· I \ ' i .: " :1' •' ;\ ·l 'I l I I • ye - J[ ·or D day man evac bass "! was the ' Sb chill at U I r { " •• th de \II ' g el N • . ti • ' r I I I 1 Saddlehaek YOL. 66, NO. 282, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ·Israeli ' JDEIDAH, Syria (AP) -'11le bombing ol Domas= by Israeli Phantom jets to- day "was a ten1ble tragedy that killed many civilians." said Poljsb diplomatic evacuees leaving Syria after their em· bassy was damaged during the raid. "I saw so many dead and wounded it was· terrible," said Mrs. Marta Servic, the wife of a Polish embassy official. She was one or 20 Polish women and . children of embassy families who d.rrived at this border post three bours after the Bombs raid on downtown Damascus. Many were still deeply shocked. ' 1be Polish ambassador to Damascus, Stefan Boihym, was slightly injured by flying glau, said embassy first secretary S. Hodorek, wbo was accompanying the evacuees. lie said all the doors and windows of the embassy building, also used as residential quarters of tbe staff, were blown in by a bomb that hit an adjacent house. I Today's Final N.Y. Stocks I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS I( ill Civilians 'nle embass)' Is ln one of the high-class dlstrlct.s or Damascus and across the street from the Swias Embassy. Hodorek said be Saw many houses damaged, in-. eluding the Soviet cultural center and a building occupied by Soviet military ad· • visers which was damaged by a near miss. • . Hodoret added that Syria's general military headquarten, the nearby air force headquarters and a large school building between.-the two were heavily * • damaged. The school had been .readied as a war hospital,-as have other schools in Damascus, Hodorek said, but no casualties had been moved inside any of them. It was the first reported air raid over the capitals of any of the three countries fighting in the fourth Arab-Israeli war. . Syria immediately lhreatened retaliation . The Israell jets left several bomb craters in the large square in !root of the • Ill Damascus? , Defense Ministry on the ea.stem fringe of the city, Many residents flattened themaelvts to the ground as the raid brought the new Middle East war home to this ancient Syrian capital. Bystanders watched as more than a half a dozen ambulancea evacuated dead and wounded from the heavily damaged rilinistry and the radio statkln on the other side of the street. Three of Israel's U.S.-bullt Phantoms swooped low over the city and cfropped their bomb,,. A3 they veered oft Ind beaded for Israeli lines, a Syrian MIG2l wbeeJed in punuit. It fired no shots within siRht of the d· ty. But Damascus radio salil four Jsraelt Phantoms were shot down by Syrian air c1e1 ..... during the raid. "Israel will have to bear tbe con- sequences." sald the radio in a broadcast apparently made from e m e r g e n c Y facilities. * * * • srae om Ill ear .........a1ro FILLS ~ACAtfr SIAT New 'Director Lund Irvine Company Names Cal Arts Chief to Board Irvine Company diiecton lo d a y telected a IAs . .Angeles real estate in· i-estment and research consultant to fill the Vacancy on the board created by the death of former company president Wllliam R. Mason, ' William S. Uind, 42, president of the • carnornia Institute of the Arts at Valen· eia and residenl of Hanccick Park, was elected at today's ~ meeting in Newport Center. Newport Beach. • Lund's appointment brings the seven- member bOard to its full strength for ~he fli'st time since M8'°n's death in June. Raymond L. Watson who already was a '"""'ber ol the board succeeded Mr. 'Mason as president of the firm in Sep- rtcmber. '' Board Chairman John V. Newman a.n-'J\Oun<ed Luod's appoinbnent, deicribing him as one of the "most highly qualified r .. I estate investment and research men in the country." '~ Newman said Lund "brings to the ti68rd extensive ikperience in COl'p9rate management and financing." . ~ the impressive tist of clients !or wll:>m Lund has had ''primary respoosib!llty" are Walt Disney Produc- tions (initiators of the cal Arts, Valencia (See DIRECI'OR, Page. Z) * * * Joint Meet May Resolve 'Spyglass' A joint meeting with Newport-Mesa Unified School district trustees might clear up mµunderstandings over the Spygl""8 Hiii bOundary dlspute, Irvine school officials said Mooday. Stan Corey, superintendent of the Irvine Unified Sdlool District, said the issue has become mudd1ed and needs clarification. c:crey suggested that Irvine trustees explore the idea of meeting face-to-face with-their Newport.-Mesa counterparts. ' Irvine tru.mes ~-18 made an offer to resolve the boundary q_uestlon in- volving the Si>yglaa mn and Haitor View Homes.Bien tracts in Newport Beach. Portions of those tracts are in the Irvine· district and children living there might have to be' buaed seven miles to attend Irvine schools even though there are Newport-Mesa schools within walking distance. Irvine District trustees said they'd give up the homes in exchange for the North Ford and PhJlco-Ford in- dustrial-commercial property in Newport Beach. Part of that parcel, bounded by Ford Road, Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard, is already in the Irvine District What the difference ls in the assessed valuation of the two 200-acre properties is causing the lreakdown in com- munication between the two school dl~icts. Newport-Mesa school officials say, cur· rently, the Philco-Ford _property is asses.5ed at about $9.3 millioo and the (See SPYGLASS, Page !) Pollution Station Approved by County Lease of 220 square feet of land at the El Toro County Fire Station for a site for a trailer-mounted air pollution monitor- ing station has been approved by the Board of Supervisors. The rental rate ls $120 a year on the one-year lease which can be extended for four additional one-year periods. The lease can be terminated at any time by either party giving 30 days notice in writing. Here's an Updated Lineup . ' 'Of Irvine Company Board , • s~ Jlttle when long-time chairman~ tlle Irvine Cop>pany Board of Directors N. Loyall McLaren stepped down, a num- ber ol changes in membership of the bO&rd have occurred. lfere is a lis~g of the current direc- t~s and the positionstthey filled : -Jobn V. Newm.!!,, 6.1-~ ranaitt from Venfura liii Deen C:n tbe Jfvine Company board since 1967. He succeeds McLaren as chairman. -Raymond r. wauon, 47-rear-old pr_esldent ol the company, lives in Eastbluff. A member of the board since 111'10, he rej)lacod the late WIWam R. Maton aa president. • -Howard P. Alie•, ~year-old e.t· ecutive o( Southttn y llfornia Edlaoo Company, was elected to the bo:erd in l 1111e:• fill ing the vocancy on the board cr~ated by McLaren's realgnatlon. v I ' -~t Keith Goede, 3'1·Ye8Nlld presi· dent of San Joaqui.q Associates and resi- dent of Irvine Cove. He joined the board in 1966. -Mn. Athalie (Joaa Jrvlae) Smith, 40-year~ld housewife and equestrienne of. Middleburg, Va.i and Emerald Bay. The ownerOf 22-ptrcent of the company sk>Ck has served on the board since 1957. -Clllrleo S. Wheeler, 58-r,oal'<>ld "°" porate secretary and pre&dept of the company subsidiary Flying D Ranch in . Mmtana lives in Newport ~ach. He has been a company director g1nce 19$1. -William s. l..aad, 42·yeer-old real ~tate ln vestment and reeiearch ~ suliant of Hancock Park, Loo Angclea, was named today to till the vacancy created by the death ol William R. Mam . '' Ul"IT ....... EGYPTIAN ARMORED VEHICLE BEGINS TO CROSS PONTOON BRIDGE ON SUEZ CANAL Egyptians (foreground) Supervise Movement of Military Equipment Acron the Bridge Laguna Attorney Seeks Redrawn Congress Seat By JACK CHAPPELL Of TIM DIUr 1"11•1 Sl•ff Laguna Beach aUorney Roger Lan· phear has declared himselr a candidate for the recently -redrawn 40th U.S. Congressional District. Tilt district t'Overs the south0rn half of Orange County running along the coast from Huntington Beach to San aemente and inland including the t'Ommunities of Irvine, El Toro, Laguna Hils, !\fission Vie- jo, and San Juan Capistrano. Lanphear. a Republican , may face an Incumbent in the election, or he may run aga inst an as yet unknown GOP op- ponent, as a resul t of the State Supreme Court ordered reapportionment. Rep, Andrew Hinshaw (R·Newport Beach) has the option of running in the redrawn ,39th District which ~includes Santa Ana, Anaheim, and Orange, or moving-to the new 40th dis trict. "lt doesn't really make any dif!erence to me. I'm not going to wage a campaign against Andy, but on the issues," Lanphear said in an interview P.fonday. Lanphear, chairman of the Laguna Beach Planning Commission, said he was compelled to run for the congressional (See RUNNING, Page Z) Jewelry, Guns Taken From El Toro Ho1ne Jewelry a~ guns valu~ at more than $600 were stolen Monday rlight by in- tniders who apparently foreed a locked windo~ to enter an El Toro horn<', Orange i:;ounty Sh<rtU's olflcen said. Deputies said Hoag Memorial Jlospital techni cian Susan E .. NU.sen, 32, reported the theft of a riOe, revolver, jewelry and a ws tch during the brcakin at 24152 Laulhere St. She was on duty at 1ho hospliol at tilt time. Playing Do~tors Study Sliows Some Sex on Sly CHICAGO {UPI) -The Chicago Tribune reported today that in a na- tionwide survey conducted by a team of California psychiatrists at least one out of every 20 doctors respon~ing admitted he engaged in sex ual intercourse with pa- tients. The Tribune said the survey, reported in t~e current issue or the American Journa l of Psychiatry, showed that most physicians frowned upon the use of erotic behavior in their practice as unethical ar "professional suicide." d Conducted by Dr . Sheldon H. Karnder, 11.larielle Fuller, and Dr. Ivan N. Mensh of UCLA , the study involved 460 psychiatrist, ob.sletricians, gynecologists, surgeons, internists and general prac- titioners. The study showed that s to 13 percent or the group engaged in some kind of eroti c behavior with their patients, and five to 7 .2 percent engaged. in sexual in- tercourse. The report said 81 percent of the physi- cians condemned erotic behavior with patients. The doctors said it destroyed the doc- tor-patient relationship, was "un- forgivable,'' or indicated the doctor was psychopathic. But 13 percent of the· doctors okayed erotic practices for such reasons as "tm· proves sexual maladjustments," "helps patients' reoognltion of their seiual status," "especially in the deprused, middle-aged female who feels un- dersirable," and "to relieve frustration in a widow or divorcee." Irvine Industry Park Addition Faces Council A 12l·acre""\.addition to the Irvine Industrial Cornplex !IICJ -which may be \\'Orth $500,000 a year in additional tax revenue to the Irvine Unified School· Distlict -faces city council action tonight. ' Councilmen meet at 7:30 in city hall , 4201 Campus Drive. The rezoning increases the school rlistricl's share of the 3.000-am:e in· duSfrl:tl development which lier in the ci· ty ol Irvine. Only about 600 acret of the present I IC is taxed by the Irvine school district. When the Irvine Unified district was formed, the industrial complex was dl\'lde<I between the new Irvine and Tus.lin Unified districts. Other industrial laud within the cily of Irvine has historically been part of the Newport- ,, f\tesa and Santa Ana Unified School Districts. The taz revenue estimate is included in an environmental impact r e port prepared by \Yilliamson and Schmld Engineers of Santa Ana. The total school IU revenue is based oo current tu rates applied to an esti mated $380,000 per acre value ol. the industrial property once ii Is occupied by manufacturing !Inns. 1be same lax base would produoe city taxes totaUng $423,396 but city serytces of $213,750 a year would mean the in- creued zoning would add ooly $209,640 to city, coffers, the EIR consultanti suggest. Councilmen alc;o will be asked to ap- prove a fast-food strvlce ~ter in An arta of the UC Mov.n as Sky Park Cir- cle. I ' 'Fie1·cest' Battles Rage On Ground 'll!:L A vr.1 (UPI) -Israeli warplanes struck at targets deep inside Syria and Egypt today, bombing Egyptian airfields near Cairo and attacking Syrian military headquarters out.side Damascus, a military spokesman said. A radar stal.km in t:ebanon also was hit As the 1973 Middle East war went into KUWAIT URGES ARAB OIL CONFERENCE, P ... 14 U.S. JEWS RAISE MILLIONS FOR WAR, P ... 4 • U.N. COUNCIL FAILS IN CE4SE·FIRE BID, Pogo 4 its fourth day, the spokesman ?_.red Sytja was using Soviet-supplied "Frog" sw1a~l4>5lµiace mf.uiles capabk ol carrying a 1,000-pound warbtad 4C miles agalmt villages deep inside Israel. He de1crlbed losses in the settlements as light. On the ground, Israeli troops were reported fllhting Egyptian and Syrian moor in wliat one veteran witness aid were "some of. the fiercest batues" irl the nation's 25-year hJstory. Citizen! on the home front were told to expect hard going ahead in the "at· tritlon" phase of the war. "A military spokesman told Israelis In a nationwide broadcast that fighting bas been "very bitter and bloody." "the struggle facing us may not be! an easy one," he said. ·~Israel's aim is not only to rettrn to the old cease-fire lines where figbtlnc started. but to insure that Israel wm 't stand before similar problems· irl· tbe future," he told the nation • "The stopping action Is concluding suc- cessfully," be said ... With the initiative now In our hands, the attrition phase has begwi. I would not be luned into believing this can be an easy and very rapid opera- tion." "A substantial part of the Egyptian army has already been destroyed," he said, "while the full force of the lsraeli army has not been t'Ommitted." A communique said returning pilots reported "good hits" on strikes into Syria agai nst the anny and air force t'Ommand outside Damascus as well as refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north (See &UDEAST, Page %) Orange • Weather • It'll be clear and sunny Wedne.s. day, with somewhat cooler tem. peratures along the Orange Coast. llighs of 65 at the beaehes will rise to only 70 inland. Ovemigbt lows 55. INSIDE TODA\' Lash LaRue, wliose whip and iix guii once p1t1lished movie bad guys. iJ now a ~'lorida evange. list whippit1g dnrnks into lit~ with the help of mi.rsionary Jolin 3: 16 Cook. See StOTtJI Poge1 1. - • \ - • s' ~: DAILY PILDT IS Irvine Fii·m I Join s Effort, Saves Child lly AR'MIVR R. VINSEL ot llM o.ilr ,llft fl•lf Quick work by an lrvinc phannat>eullcal company and the Costa Mesa police helicopter crew has sa\·ed the l~e ol a stricken child half a \lo'Orld away lrom America. ()(ficials of Allergan Pharmareulicals, 2525 Dupont Drive, have announced ihe recovery of the chi.Id in Cape ToYln, South Africa. after checking on its progres,,. The infant , stricken with an extremely rare infectlon about two \\'eeks ago. needed a special drug not Immediately available ln Africa at the time. fdoxurldlne is its name and It Is com· monJy used to treat such a c:ommon and mw1dane Infection M herpes simple:r, or simple cold sores caused by a vin.1.!1. The drug appears to be effective, ho\\'e'•er. in treatment or measles en· ccphalitis, a brain inflammation \\'hlch is extremely infrequent bia often fata1 when it occurs. Allergan Pharmaceutical! spokesman Barry Ackern1un researched the ailment through the World H.ealt.h Organizalion and found it ls very uncommon. ''The numbre of cases would probably be leu than half a dozen in the United States annually," he said, adding that measll"S encephalitis only occurs In one among every 10.crn measles cases. He said the death rate \\'hen it occun il 10 to 50 percent. 'The number of cases y,ooJd probably American heellh authorities do not ac- cept the drug idoxuridlne as a counter agent to fight the affliction. Ackerman said it is classed currently as an invesligaUooal drug, meaning it would require controlled testing before it waa confirmed safe and effective. South African doctors do accept ii. however, and physicians attending the stricken child two weeks ago called the Allergan finn to appeal for a swift ship- ment by direct airline. Company spokesmen raced a plentiful supply of idoxuridine to Oran~';°'"1ty Airport, where it was loaded a d the waiting Q>8ta Mesa Police helicopter. Pilot Jlm Wagner and observer Officer Dick Bersch delivered it direcUy to the United Air Llnes terminal at Los Angeles International Airport with a few mJnutes to spare after getting the drug shipment a hall-hour before the UAL flight takeoff time. Allergan officials said by regular freight shipping procedures it could have been two weekl before the drug reached the critically ill patient. The idoxurldine was nown from Los Angeles to London and then to Cape Town. f'ron1Pagel MIDEAST. • • near Hom1. The objective in Lebanon, the first target there in the renewed war, was identified as a radar station serving the Syrian air force at Jebel Barukh on P..tt. Lebanon in the north of the country near the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serloU! damage" was lnflicted on Egyptian air fields at El ~tansura, 70 1nlles north of Cairo, and at Kushnia, 62 miles east of the Egyptian capital near the Suei Canal. The announcements did not say whether Arab planes rose to chaJlenge 1he raiders as Israel continued. to withhold disclosure of its losses, both in the air and on the ground. lteavy fighting raged along the Suez Canal. where Israel said its troops li1niled three Egyptian armor bridgeheads to an advance of up to five miles into the occupied Si nai, and in the Golan lleights, where Syrian troops were reported counterattacking after being throYl'n back. Th e military con1mand sa\d the Egyp- tians \\'CrtJ co n!lnu1ng to reinforce their ad vance colu mns in the Sinai across bridges linking them \\'i1h the west bank of U1e \\'aler...,·ay despite intense aeri<1J bombardmcn t:s. I OIANGI CO.An 11 DAILY PILOT r~. a •• ,..,.,.,.,, OA ILY P'llOT, wllll WflkJI " c_,...., ""' H•~ ll•e>•, !o Pllbl!YIW ..., "'• Of•"O• c .. ,, Pvl>llo~i.,. C-ny. ~· ••'• ..in:..., "" """'•"'°· ""°""•w ""'""~ F•lol .... •o· ln•• M•M, "-1 •Md!. "'""11"'1'0" l•M:~l~-1.-. Y•lltf. 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Mt .. , (1ll10rl'll<o. Mwop!'o~ Ir/ u ,,ltr tl.O -""'' 11¥ 1111•1 IJ u ,,_~,,., 1111111 ..... ll0,11 ... 1i-"u """'""'•· l'NMP .. el RUNNING • • • "" ,.,t be<:a111t ol , crusli of "criJO" rao- hle lh< ll&lloa. '"nils It mon tlw1 JUll ooncmt, I rtally belle"" !hat DIOdem clvUltallon depends on the solution to these problems of water pollution. tlr polluUon, land and mineral use," be said. Ile said his erperlence In lOCJ! govern• ment has tau.ght him that the nation needs strong national policy in allocaUon ot resourte1. Lanphear, YT, received hls bachelors delT'O and doctor or Jumprudence at U.C.' Berkeley. He practiced 1aw ln Newport Beach 1llld Huntington Beach before cominc to Laguna about five years ago. He b unmarried. Lanphear said that local JOYtf1lment doesn't have tbe capability lo deal \\1th oat.Ion.wide 11crt.ses" In lueJ, transport.a-Uoo. power, and now food. "I think they are all ftlated. I've been trying to figure out how to make this point," Lanphear said. He has quit hl1 law practJce, and for the next. several months: will be "study· .log," wthampered by job presures. "I have enough saved to pay for my basic esse11tial for one year. l l\'Ould ex. pect the campaJp would generate enough income to hOl.d Its own," he said. o.i°1~ l"lltl lllH 'llt" CONGRESSIONAL CANOIDAJE Laiun• Attorney Lanphe1r Rebozo Faces t •• i Ht111ur1a Fallitig Stai• ,, "If there'• a dlsclO&ure lav.·, there's going to beone~lten1, and It's a house," he quipped. Water-gate Furid Quiz This photograph de~icts a parachuting star, com· posed of 27 jumpers 1n what 1s claimed Lo be a world record. The jump took place over Elsinore last week . The three men on the 'Outside are not counted. Pre· vious record was set at 26 men in Oklahoma last year. Lanphear said he ·will study the bsues until . the 40th district is formally aC-: cepted by the Supenne Court. $2 Million Pot Deal Bared f'ron1Page l DIRECTOR .•.. WASHINGTON (UPI\ -A Senate \Vaterg3te committee investigato r has questioned Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo about reports he was a conduit !or $100,000 in cash cootributloos to Presi- dent Nixon from billionaire Howatd Hughes, it was disclosed today. c Five Ex-Countians Charged by Federal Grand Jury campus). the Aga Kahn, Ford li1otor Company, Kaiser Aluminwn and ~cal Company, Cutle and Cooke and Newhall Land and Fanning Com· pany. Sen. Lowell P. Weicker (R-O>nn.), told reporters he would like to have both Rebozo, one of Nls:on's clooert friends. and Hughes, the recluse who bas not bet:n seen in public in two decades, called to testify before the comm!Uee. By FREDERICK SCHOEJllEHL Of Ille DlllY ,!Ml Ii.ff Five fonner South Orange County men have been formally charged by a federal grand Jury with conspiracy to sell more than $2 million worth ot marijuana in Orange, LoS Angeles and San Diego OQ\lllties. An Indictment returned by the grand jury alleges that the quintet met between July 19 and July 27, 1973, in Dana Point, Lcguna Beach, Newport .Beach, Long Beach and Vista and laid plans lO distribute five toiu or marijuana. The conspiracy was broken, the in- dictment asserts, when federal agents and Newport Beach police arrested two of I.be five suspects. William Mitchell, 24, a former Laguna Beach resident cunently Is free on $20,00> bond, ~'hile William E.h\'ood Polich, 24, formerly of Dana Point, is free on $3,00> bai.L 1\-fitchell was arr~ed by a.gents of the fed er a I Drug Enforce m e-n t Admin!Stration in San Diego County July 27 after the as,ents asserted.Jy negotJated lnrine Trustees Delay Action On Fund Request Getting funds lhrougb the sl~tc school building aid progra1n \\'ould help the district . Irvine Unified School District trustees agrec:d l\fonday. But trustees couldn't deeide when to call a state apportionment election and how much borroy,·ing ca pacity to ask \'Oters to approve. l'\o action was taken . The StJbje<:t is ex· peeled lo come up again soon because dis.trict administrators ~ay !hey can't build all the needed schools on bonds alone. The current and proja1ed f!:rowth rate of the district and i!s increasing assessed valuation would only g('nr.rate $1 out of every $3 needed for school construction , Irvine School officials estimate. Stale loans could provide the $2 dif· ference. Trustee 1..ee Sicoli emphasiied the loans \\'ou\dn't increase bond redemption ta x ra!c>s. District projections ca ll for 35 elemen· lary, 10 midd le and five high schools in 1933. Currently, lhe dislricl has one high school. on!! middle school and five element ary schools. Irvine Council " Weigl1s Expenses For Conventio11 Tn•ine rouncil mcn 1onight will be asked to apprO\'e $1.1~ in registration fee~ and l"l:fl('nses fur nuic> 1•ity officials to aU end the San franciSC"O Lr,.guc of Cities con· ference this 1nonth. A $250 city registration ree and $100 expense advances for tb.c nine are In· eluded in bills listed for payrnent at the close of tonlght's councll mecti nJ!:. Tho~ drawing ndvAnces for the trip are ~layor Johtl Bur1on and Coun. c\hYOman Gabrielle f'ryor; pl anning commissioners: Ga ry Da liell , ~farya nne Galdo. Frank Tturd, Lowell Johnson 1nd Chni rman Harry Shuptrine; a~d Com· l)"l unll-y Servlcts commiss~ Gil Challet,and Chairmsn Sally ~!Hier. City policy proh1 hiU rity dele~:tt('!ll 10 SUt."h conferef1ct-S from billing the clly for entertainment expenses lncurrfd whilr attendin11 "tducatk>n1l" progrt1n1s 11uch a~ Is planned for Snn Frn.nclsco. However. travtl, lodglng and meal cost1 arc paid by the city. I to purchase 630 pounds ol. marijuana. Polich, on parole from federal prison, was apprehended July 31 by Newport Beach narcot.lcs detectives who were tracking on a related investigation. Three other men, Gerald Edward Pohl, 25, Robert 'William Bray, 21, and Michael William Andersen, 25, also we.re indicted by the grand jw-y. They are fugiUves: and wan-ants have been issued for their ar· rests. Pohl, Bray and Andersen, according to Detect.Ive Leo Konkel of the NewpOrt Beach Pollce Department, have resided in recent years in Dana Point, Laguna Beach and Tustin. According to federal investigators, the five men allegedly stockpiled Mexican grown marijuana in northern San Diego County with the' intent to distribute most of the drug aloog the Orange Coast. Lesser amounts assertedJy w er e earmarked for Long Beach and San Diego. Agents said the case had been under invesUgaUon for more than a year prior to the two anests. Based "on current street prices of mari· juana, agents said at least '2 million worth of the drug was being prepared for distribution. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney's of· fict in Los Angeles said today that Mitchell and Polich will face ar~ raigrunent on the charges: within t"·o weeks before a U.S. magistrate. The case could then move to b'ial in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. Each su.spect faces a maximum sentence of five years in federal prison and a $15,000 fine. From 1960 to 1972, Lund was execuli 11e viee president ol F.conomlcs Re.search Associates with respons.lblllUes f o r organz.Jng and developing the nnn's real estate and urban economic program. For ERA Lund also managed corporate merger and acquisition studies. In 1972, Lund said, the trustees ol the California Institute of the Arts asked him to temporarily serve as president of the visual and performing arts institution recently opened in Valencia. He is chairman of the board of Ter· ramies, a real estate inveltment com· pany. A 1956 graduate of Stanford Universltv, Lund has studied business admlni!:tratiOn at UCLA and served four years as i!l+ dustrial economist for Stanford Research INtitute. Terry Lenzner, a . commlttee in- vesllgator, interviewed Rebozo in Florida this week, committee sources said. ·under invesUgaUon Is a report by a fonner Hughes aide that Richard Dan· ner, an agent of Hughes, gave Rebo7.o $100,000 in two inslallinent! of $50,000 each -all in $100 bills in 1969 and 1970. Lenmer interviewed Daooer in August in LaS Vegas, commlttee aides said. 7bey said Rebozo's bank records b3d been subpoenaed. He ls head of a bank at Key Bisca.Y!le, Fla. Rebozo Waa characterized as being cooperative when interviewed by l.enmt!r but there v.·ere m details cm what be had to say. There have been un.successful attempts in the past to subpoena Hughea berore coogressiooal panels. Irvine ·District Board Lund is married to the fonner Sharon Disney and 3en'es as a trustee of1 the Walt Disney Foundation as well as the Marlborough School Foundallon. He is a director of the following buslne55e5: California Financial Coro.; Security Sa¥1ngs: and Loan AssoclaUOO ; First Los Angeles Bank; K Jo E television, Fresno; KOGO radio, San Diego; ReUaw Enterprises, Inc. and Sterling Mortgage Qmpany. I'....,. Pagel SPYGLASS. • • Studies Developments homes at $5 million. Superinl.endent Corey told I r vi n e trustees Monday that local developers estimate the assessed valuation or the Spyglas,,-Bren tracta when completed will read) $22 milUoo. Cooperative development of a com- munity park, data processing systerrui: and a lighted football stadium is being explored by Irvine Unified School District officials. Irvine trustees lilonday gave district administrator! the go ahead to worit with officials in the city of Irvine and at UC Irvine on the ideas. The board has a policy encouraging community use of school facilities and more effective use or community resources by the district. He Is acUve in Big Brothen of Los Angeles, the .Los Angelea Chamber CJ[ Conunerce and Town Hall. The discussion! by city, school district and universlly officials locu• on joint use Police Probing Loss or development ol.: . -A community park adjacent to a 40-Of M ' C ti Rin acre North Irvin<! High S<hool at Walnut 8ll S OS Y g and Yale Avenues. The $5.3 million school is scheduled for i;;omplelion in Orange County Sheriff's officers are In· 1975. vestigaling the apparent theft of a $2,500 -Light.Ing of UCl's football-track ring reported stolen during the weekend Using the current figure!, Corey said, doesn't take into ar.'COWlt how quickly the • residential area is growing. He dldn't say how much the North Ford industrlal prop- erty ma)' ultimately be worth. Jrvlne trustees didn't act on Corey's suggesUon of a possible joint aessiu1. They have expressed concern that the problem be solved before the district st.art! bearing the burden of busing children long distances. stadium. University lfigh School, the from a Lu Vegas man who stayed at a Marine Arrested school district'• only present high school, Laguna Hills mo1e1. doesn 't have a lighted athlellc field and A. L. Greenbaum, 50, told deputies the • Robber Gets $1,200 its teams have to play all night games at ring was taken from his 1u.itca!Je wtttJe he I B ti• £ other schools. was absent from his room al the Laguna 11 ea ng 0 -Development or data processing Hills HyaU Lodge, Paseo Valencia and SAN LEANDRO (AP) - A man anned facilities to jointly collect data. The El Toro Road. It is described as a yellow ~11.h a revolver in his belt escaped with Inf ant Da11gl1ter !~~ r:~ct now leases out data proc-~f~~~:i~.wlth a center 5lar ruby and two t~:a~~~l~eBs~:. of America branch San Clemente police Monday arrested 1---.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=; a l9·year--0ld !\larine on suspicion of felony child beating after tbe man's wife founrl the co u p I e ' s three-month-old daughter suffering from severe bruises. Gary Wayne Hill of 167 Avenida Del • Mar was arrested alter a sergeai1t at Camp Pendleton phoned police and told officers the man's distraught vdfe called about the allr.ged beating. Hill. it is alleged, baby sat the Infant during the evening \\'hile his wife at· tended an evening school class. \Vhen the class ended and Mn. Hill returned, she fowid the child's buttocks black from a bealing. police said. The b:iby Y.'as lrealed at San Clemente General Hospitaf and I.hen returned to her mother's custody . Police said they would seek a com- plaint from the District Attorney's office Wednesday in the incident. Hill was reportedly still In custody earlier today. Viejo Woman Named to Post Diane Porter, president of lhe Aux· lll<iry at ~fission Community Hospital , has been selected to serve on the board of !he Orang<' County Council of Volunteers as public re.lotions chal~an. The council is a branch ol the California State Council of Volunteert y,•hlch represents volunteer workers tbrou~ut the state. ~lrt. PortC'.r and her husband C'.wdon have lived ln fl.tWl(!n Viejo with 9'heir three son11 for the. pasl five years . A member of the AuiDlary 11ince It bt."gan two yeun ago. Pttrz. Poner Sf'rved 1u1 vice prt!ldent before being elttled pre3 idt'nt, .. - ADVANTAGE-ALDEN'S Ona huge advanta~• Alden's has over mo5t c~rpet 1tores is that w• have our own installan, providi119 fltxibility and reliability In 1cheduling installations. Very few dep1riment stores or specialty carptt stores have their own workrooms, and must rely on an outtide c on tract service for installations.' We have had many ptoplt buy from us ofter being disappointed by en installetion comptny who scheduled 1 lob end didn 't show up or cell. Sometimel, this has happened two or three times before the cu•tomer 9ives up. -- At Aldtn's, our inst1ll11ion schedule Is optrated very elficlan~y. and even when our men are held up on a previous job causing a late start, our men will stay and finish. If you went reliability-e<1U us I ALDEN'S CARPET.S e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA I 646-4838 HOURS: M ... Thnt Tllo..., 9 ,. 11'0 -fRI .. 9 ,. 9 -SAT,. 91'0 le I -- l 7 11 • , I' '.J I I • 7 • • , ! ' . ·I < Boniingion Bea~h Today's Final Fountain ·Valley N.Y. Stoeks , *' * .VOL 60, NO. 282, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS • C.ounty Coalit.ion Urges Edison Expansion An Orange County coalition o f .businessmen and labor leaders ls urging full 1upport for expansion of Southern California Edison's HunliDgtoo Beach power plant. The Orange County Cooncil for EnWUunell~ Empl0)'1Det1~ Ecooomy and Deve1opment (CEEED) ii.urging its membership to ftU the HunUngton Beaclf Council chambers ror Monday night's public hearing on Edison expansion. Peter J. Remmel, president ol CEEED and secretary·trea~r or the Orange County Central Labor Council, issued a two-page ''alert" teUing CE EE D members how to belp the Edl.son project. In his Jetter, Remmel suggest.s that members do the following: -Appear at the COODCll bearing and speak. . -Encourage others to do the same. -Make sure workers wbo Uve in Hun- tington Beach sbow up a:nd speak up. Encourage cities, chambers and realty boards to sound o!f. -Call and encourage others. Remmel a1Jo provides a complete list of the leftlHDeD'lber city cOuncil with each cwncilman's borne phone num ber. To underscore tbe need for F.disoo sup- port, Remmel wril<S: "It is just damned foolishnea to take down your umbrella in the l)e]Jef lite rain will then stop -and it's just as foolish to deny more pOwer in the belle! that people wW stop prop. agating and migraUng." Remmel also li1ts four groups of peo- ple he belleve,, are against Edison's pre>- posed $300 million eipansion project. -"Local folks wbo are fearful of more local pollution .. -"Enviromnentalists who believe more power means more of everything, including pollutloo, In Orange County. -"zeni growth advocates who believe that If they can help produce an elec- lrical shortage, people will stop coming to Orange C.ounty and some already here will have to move away. -·'Bad guys -there art a few who just want to stop America and the best way, short of war, ls t.o stop its life blood -power-energy." He also lists several arguments to use in favor of Edison expamion, including the fact HWltington Beach originally ask- ed Edison to locate its fint power plant in the beach area. "We appreciate the po11ition of Hun- tington Beach residents, but no com· munity has just all the esthetically pleasing elements within tts c i t y borders.'' writes Remmel. ''Each has some of the good and some of the necessary. Jn most cases. the resideats are well aware of each before they move there." ~ Remmel writes that power iS also •· ' needed to clean up the environment and he argues "if people keep coming and we .keep having babies, we face a worse en- tSee EDISON, Page %) • ' • srae om ear L.J"la1ro Approval Rushed? Valley .Seeking To -Halt Complex By Tmt BARLEY Of flt DallY ~ St.If Fountain Valley moved to halt COll· structlon of an apartment complex on ad- jacent COWlty territory Monday in Orange County Superior Court action that charges county agencies and in- dividuals with rushing through approval of the builders' plans. Two businessmen who join the city in the acUon against the county'• Board of Supervisors and Planning Coloml>sion and oouaty BulMtng. Directer Floyd McI.ellan claim coostructllll cl the plan- ned. "Paclllc Woods Aplrtment Com· munlty" wouJd ring the death Uell for the riding stables and dog kennels they operate. Judge Walter Cba.ranua has set Oct. 29 for a bearing into the dispute and a rut~ ing on the city's demand for an in- junction against the county agencies and McLellan and Tbe· Richarda Group-Multi Housing West, builders of the project. '!be Ricbanb group plans to build its apartment complex on 9.5 acres of a ~ acre county "island" of unincorporated territory which also contains the seven- acre Hillsview Sadd1e rkling stables _..,tnd by William F. llickoclt and dog k..,..ls operatnd by Jolut M. Rollrig. Fountain Valley's action claims that the Local Agency Formation Commission bas Jong recognized that future use of the 60-acre island -west of the Santa Ana River, '"east of Harbor Boulevard and bisected by F.dingtt Avenue -should follow patterns dictated by Fountain Valley. It Is also alleged that an environmental impact statement prepared by the Rldlard.s group did not meet the stand- uds set for such documents and that Medical Office Building Set For Panel Study Proposed construction of a lhreHtory medical office building near the Fountain Valley Community Hospital will come before plaming rommissioners Wednes- day night. Two rival medical groups have ap.. pllcalions before the commissioo to build nearly identical medical buildings. the city was not given sufficient time to respond to it. The lawsuit quotes Air Pollution Con- trol District chief William Fitcben as commenting on the impact statement: "Much of tbe material (io it) is padding. I~ comments on the air pollution impact are meaningless. n '!be city further claim.o that the ~ ect, if built, wou1d violate density \:s In the aurrotmdlng area and that trlfflc coodiUoiis in the ma c;if Harbor Boulevard woakl become baiCdous. It ii alrlJ pointed, out lhllt the dly ii not prepared to provide water for the apart- ment project if the COUD.ty approves the Richards group's plans . Beach Policeman Awaits Decision In Shooting Deputy District Attorney Bruce Pat· terson said today no decision on the rate of a jailed Huntington Beach policeman will be made until S o'clock. Authorities have Wltll then to decide whether to file manslaughter or murder charges or no charges against Ron Palmer, 31, who has been in jail since Friday in connection with the shooting -death of his girllriend, Mary Cleasby, 26. According to Palmer's account, he ac- cidentally shot her Friday morning with his off-duty gun which he was putting in his pocket at the end or a visit to her apartment at 17637 Newla nd St. Until Monday, the investigaUon of the case was being handled by Huntington Beach detectives, but police officials said they turned the case over to the District Attorney. Patterson acknowledged that his in- vestigation would take the case "right down to the wire." The Jaw requires that charges be filed against a suspect in a case within 48 hours of arrest, not counting Saturdays, Sundays or legal holidays. Monday , Columbus Day, was a legal holiday. Patterson said his investigators will be taking the tlrne because "we want to make a total investigation on our own. We want to be sure that everything has been taken into consideration." A TRAGIC PICTURE OF WAR -EGYPTIAN SOLDIER LIES CRUSHED BENEATH HELICOPTER Just One Victim of Intensified Fighting In L1tnt Ar1b-lsr1•1i Conflict in Sinai Desert Polish Embassy Struck As Israel Bombs Syria JDEIDAH, Syria (AP) -The bombing of Damascus by Israeli Phan tom jets to- day ''was a terrible tragedy that killed many civilians," said Polish dipk>nlalic evacuees leaving Syria after their em- bassy was damaged during the raid. "l saw so many dead and wounded it was terrible," said Mrs. Marta Servic, the wife of a Polish embassy official. She was one ol 20 Polish women and children of embassy families who arrived at this border post 'three boars after the raid on downtown Damascus. Many .were still deeply shocked. The Polish ambassador ..,to Damascus, Stefan Bol.hym, was slight.Ty. injured by fiying glass, said embassy flf'St secretary S. Hodorek, who was accompanying the evacuees. He said all the doors and windows of the embassy building, also used as residential quarlers of the stafI, were blown in by a bomb that bit an adjacent house. The embassy is in one ot the high-class districts of Damascus. and across the street from the Swiss Embassy. Hodorek said he saw many houses damaged, in· eluding the Soviet cu1tural center and a building occupied by Soviet military ad· vlsers wh!Ch was damaged by a near miss. Hodoret added that Syria's ,general military headquarters, the nearby air force headquarten: and a large school building between the two were heavily damaged. The sChool had been readied as a war hospital, a.s have other schools in Damascus. Hodorek said, but no casualties had been moved inside any of them. It \\'BS the first reported air raid over (Ste B0~1BING, Page Zl Nixon Steps Up Eff ort:S to End Mideast Fighting By HELEN ntOl\tAS WASmNGTON (UPl ) -President Nixon stepped up diplomatic efforts to- day to halt the Mideast fighting -"now going on at such terrible costs" -and to Jay the groundwork to prevent lhe Aralr Israeli conflict from "breaking out over and over again." Nixon made the observations in welcoming a West Afric,JD leader, Presi· dent Felix Houphoue~Boigny. to the White House for talb. The President sald that be 1'>ped that their discussions "can C<ltltribute to the end of the fighting now going on at such terrible costs in the Middle East." Tbe problem, Nixon said, is not just lo slop the fighting but to lay the groundwork for preventing conflict in the ~fiddle East "from breaking out over and over again" as it has for 25 years. One Is proposed by the same group that built the hospital and the existing t~story medical building on the site at Warner Avenue and Euclid Street. Cmasultant Oka9ed Ending the present fighting is the first order but "building a pennanent struc· lure of peace" Is the ultimate aim, the President said. The other application is from Dr. Max- well Roston ol Garden Grove who watits to put a mndlcal building on ·his prop- eity -to the boopital. Or. Roston also wants the commission to deny the hospital 's plan on the basis that there Is inadequate parking space provided in the group's plan. Commissioners heard nearly four hours or testimony Jn the case at tbelr meeting two week• ago and'1ben conUnued both appllcatloos to pvt the S1afl Ume to rovtew the partlng proposal. At that ttme, Roston said that if the hooplt.l's plan ii approvnd, be will withdraw hls application. Robber Gets· $1,200 SAN LEANDRO (AP) -A man armed with a ttvolver In his bell eaceped with $1.200 from i Bank of America branch Mor.day, police sakl . 't ·School Boundaries Studied By Int.ARY KA YE Of .. o.llY ~lltt lttff Six West Orange County school districts agreed Monday night, arter con- siderable debate, to hire 1 conwltanl to study reorganization of the districts along elisting elementary district boun· dories. Repretentatives of l\\'O elementary school dlslticts. Ocean View a n d • Wesunlnster, voiced oppos!Uon at .Finl, saying the consultant should be given 1111 free hand to study other methods if the five-way split along presmt boutidaries proves infeasible. Spokesmen for the other three elemen- t.ry school districts. llunlinglon Beach City, Seal Beech and Fountain Valley. ~-- , ·- plus tbe high school district, felt only the rive-way split should be studied. The study committee, which is seeking a way to divide the 52-square-mlle Hun- tington Beach Union High School distrtct Into smaller, unified districts, had reach- ed a deadlock MoOOay night before a compromise was ruched. It was decided that the consultant would first study the economic feasibility oC the five-district split, but WO\lld report beck to t.becommlttee immediately If he detennined it was not feasible. At that point, the consultant would f>e given the opportunltt to atudy altemative methods, as requested by Ocean View and Westminster .. District represcntatlvcs declined to .I • choose a specific consulting firm ~tonday night. Instead, they asked Cahrles Palmer, depuy superintendent of the HWltlngtoo Beach City School District. to Invite two finns lo the next meeting, Oct 23 at the 'i\!estminster District. Arthur Young and Associates. and Price. Waterbouse , Inc .. will be eJl)ected to subrnll a proposal tefthe committee. At thal point. represenlaUvts hope to make. l:-dcdsion. Although 1be districts had difficull y retolving "'hat the oonsultant should study. they agreed the finn chosen !JhOuld spend a maximum of 30 workin g days, and be pakt $6.000 by the five elementary district&, \vith each distr1ct paying 11,200. The President was briefed on the ~1ideast by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. A "special acUon group" of U.S. ex- perts on the Mideast also met to assess the situaOon. Nixon's personal diplomacy , in talks with the leader ol a Moslem country that has diplomatic relations with Tsrat!I, followed disclosure that he was set?:klng broad international support -including the Soviet Unkln and mainland Olina - for a t.fiddJe East cease-rlre. The While Jloose said Nixon ~ after the outbreak or fighting ln!Ha1~ an er. change of mMaage1 with Sovie t C.Om· munlst party leader Ltoold I. Brezhnev through dlplomallc chnnnels, aOO that Kissinger conferred during lhe weekend with Huang Chen, ch.le{ of Ptking'! ll&i!!On mf."t!lion here. I 'Fiercest' Battles Rage On Ground TEL AVJV (UPI) -Israeli warplanes struck at targets deep inside Syria and Egypt today, bombing Egyptian airfields near Cairo and attacking Syrian military headquarters outside Damascus, a military spokesman said . A radar station in Lebanon also was hit. As the 1973 Middle East war went into KUWAIT URGES ARAB OIL . CONFERENCE, Pogo 14 U.S. JEWS RAISE MILLtONS FOR WAR, Pogo 4 U.N. COUNCIL FAILS IN CEASE-FIRE BID, Pogo 4 its fourth day, the spokesman reported Syria was using Soviet-supplied "Frog" surface-te>-surface missiles capable of carrying a 1.~pound warhead 44 miles against villages deep inside Israel. lie described lo:s.ses in the settlements as light. On the ground, Israeli troOPs were reported fighting Egyptian and Syrian ~rmor in what one veteran witness said were "some of the fiercest battles" in the nation's ~year history. Citizens on the home front were told to expect hard going ahead in the "at· trition" phase of the war. "A military spokesman told Israelis in a nationwide broadcast that fighting has been "very bitter and bloody." "The struggle facmg us may not be an easy one," he said. "Israel's aim is not only to return to the old cease-fire lines where fighting started, but to insure that Israel won't stand before similar problems in the future." he told the nation. "The stopping action is concluding suc- cessfully,'' be aakl. "With the initiative now in our hands, the attrition phase has be.gun. I would not be luiled into believing this can be an easy and very rapid opera- tion." ''A substantial part of the Egyptian army has already been destroyed," he said, "while the full force or the Israeli army has not been committed." A communique said returning pilots reported "good hits" on strikes into Syria against the army and air force command outside Damascus as well as refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north (See ritmEAST, Page ZI Orange Coast • • Weather lfll be clear and sunny \Vednes- day, \\•ith somewhat cooler tern· peratures along the Orange Coast. Highs of 65 at the beaches will rise to only 70 inland . Overnight lows 55. INSIDE TO~J\Y La.~h I..nRue, whose "''lip and si:I: g11n once puni.s lted movie bad ·auus. it now o Florida evange. list w/1i pµi11g drTtiiJ;s hito line 1Qi!h tlie hrlp of missionary Jali n 3: 16 c:ook. See stor11, Page l J. L.M. kt'• ' M..,I ... " C&!ifor'lli• > Mwfllll '"""' .. Cl.ntlhN ,,.,. N•IMINll Ntw, • c.mic• " 0r•f!M CMftl'( • c .. 1_.. " ·-.... Qfflll Nfll( .. ' ''-' Mfl'ltt. l .. IS ......... , p'" • Tt+Wh lell " ........ """'"' " ,. ... i.n " I'(-• H·1S •u-• .... 11\t •tcerl ' ._ ........ 11·11 ·--" 'Nt<NI Ntw\ • •1111 Ulllffn " y I I 2 DAJLY Pll01 " U.S~ Poised Marin.es on Sliips Off Mideast W ASIDNGTON (AP} -A hellcoptc carrier with 1bout 2,000 Marines abolrd is sailing in the eutern Medltemnean Sea, lhe Pentagon said today . The amphibious assault shi p Guadolcanal Joins 1 task lo,... led by the aircraft carrier Independence in Mediterranean waters rough· Jy 500 miles off the coast of Israel. But the Guadalcanal, which could be used to evacuate Amert· cans if the new figtbing endangered them, ts operating independent- , ly or the Independence. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim declined to give the Guadalcanal's precise location or to 6peculate on the possibility of evacuation of thousands of Americans. The Guadalcanal carries approximately SO heli copters which could be' used to lift Americans from endangered shore points. Nixon Drafting Snoopy In Energy Crisis War • WASHINGTON (AP \ -With the ~tid· die East war casting new shadows over U.S. fuel imports, the Nixon ad- mini.'ltration enlisted the c artoon character Snoopy today as the symbol for a massive campaign to consen 'e energy supplies. President Nixon received a cillz:ens advisory committee report on ways the public can htlp ease predi~ed fuel shortages this winter. In addition, top Administration officials gave Nixon reports on how the g<ivem- ment and private induslry are moving to con!Cf'Ve energy supplies. The natiooaJ energy conservation cam· palgn will seek lo cut energy con- sumption by 5 percent this winter. Among the stepg outlined were : -Adoption of cartoonist Charles M. Front Pagel MID EAST ... near Homs. 1be objective in Lebanon, the first target there ln the renewed war, was identiOed a1 a radar staUon serving the Syrian air force at Jebe:I Barukh on f.tt. Lebanon in the north of the COWltry near the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serious damage" was inflicted on Egyptian air fields at El ~tansura, 70 mile! north of Cairo. and at Kushnia, 62 miles eut of the Egyptian capital near the Suet. Canal. Th1! announcements did not say whether Arab planes 1'08e to challenge the raiders as Israel continued to Withhold dilclosure of ill Jones, both in the air and Oii the ground. Heavy righting raged along the Suez Canal, where Israel said it.s troops limited three Egyptian a r m o r bridgeheads to an advance of up to five miles into the occupied Slnal., and ln the: Golan HeJghla, where Syrian troops were reported counterattacking after belng thrown back. The military command said the Egyp- tians were continuing to reinforce l.beir ' ~dvance columns in the Sinai across ~ridges linking them with the west bank of the waterway despite intense aerial OOmbardments. From Page .I BOMBING ... the capitals of any of the three countries fighting In the fourth Arab-Israeli war. Syrta immediately threatened «-tallation. The Israeli jet! le.ft several bomb craters in the large square in front of the Defense ~tinl!try on tbe east.em fringe of the city. Many residents flattened them5elVC8 to the ground u the raid brought the new f\.liddle East war home to this ancient Syrian capital. erstanders watched as more than a ha! a dozen ambulance1 evacuated dead and wounded from tile heavily damaged mi?Ustry and the radio station on the other side of the street. OIANel COAIT HI DAILY PILOT T~I Ot1 ... 1 CH•t OAIL V l'ILOT ""'"" ""'!(Jo 11 c-1...,r .... H......,_.,,...,, 11 ~ .., Ille 0111'<1' '°"" l'ublllhln!I (O'l'IJ*l'f'. s-•• , • .,.,,...,, ••• PV!Mlt-, _,, tllrovgl! l'rl1Uf. !<Ir Co1!1 Mn1, H-1 ._._, l'lun! "911M B11<hll'..,..llln Vil...,, L..- llN<h, ••~ ..... s-•1t11ei. 1M s. .. c1t ...... re1 Son J.,." (1fll+r-. /I. 1•nt!1 •ttllMt ..,,"''" " _,,._ $1lur0t.,.. ""' l<ilftll•I"· 1119 ,...r"<'"I -l!ill'l"f .,._Ill It 11 lJCI wnr llf Jl•Mt, Clo1tl Ill ... , Ctllfel'llia, t)IK, llolt11t N. W114 ''",...,' •M l'vet~ J 1c• •. c~.1., Viti ,,h_! '""' c;.,..•11 Mll\lftl' T)lo..,11 K11-a l!~ltel lho..,11 A. M ~·•"'~• M•"lt•~~ 1~,,~, ci. •• 1 •• H, Loe1 •• , .... , I'. N1H /l.Hlill~I M-~ln!I '"'Ml& Tt"V C&¥il11 Wto1 °''"" '-'~ [~lter HffM ...... tMP OMce I 1171 l1tch l •wl1w1r4 M1 ll!~t A.fclr1u1 '.0. l•s 7tO. tJ641 °"'"' 0-L .. IOM ·-· m l't•nl ,t.-(,oo!o M.to•. "' Wtt! llY l~ 1<11·•,.,1 l*d'I: mJ "'....,.., ............ ••a('-"-"· JOI N9<'"' 11 (• ....... 11• Ttt.,._ f7141 Ml-4Jl1 Cl-"'9111 "'-ti .. MJ.167' ,,... ...,.. °'Mti'= Ca h;al""' '"""•'· lfl'J. ~ C..t ......... ""' ~·· ,., ~.... ........ lltwlfttllir., llfl'9r~I '"'"... If N •••rU_,. .. ... -~ ... ........... ""'"""' ...... .... '"" ..... ,,,, _...... -· ~ ,~ .. _,.,. .. "' .. Cell• ,,,...., (•11 ....... 1•. .......l.llefl lrolt """" '*·" ,,_lflh-1 lrolt ,,..11 U If -'l\l'li'Jo l!'llllfano dtlliMI ... 11 •I -lfll,. I Schultz's character, 'Snoopy," has a sym- 001 for a ''SavEnergy" campaign with distribution of advertisements to the media and energy conservation ki ts to the nation's schools. -\Videscale distribution of energy· saving hint.s lo consumers, including a suggestion that home thennostats be lowered by four degrees this winter to save 400,COO barrels of oil a day -the · estimated amount of the \!linter's heating oil shortage. -An extenslvt! program to promote energy cooaervaUon by the business community, and oonUnued steps by fedenl, ltlto and loc:al governments to cut entfiY C0111UJDptlon. Henry L. Diamond, a New York State environmental agency of!ldal and bead of the citizens' advilory committee which met w:ltb Nixon, uJd ·ctllzen action b essential to the 11Ueceu of any program to reduce energy consumption. In an Introduction to a booklet UUed "Citizen Action Gulde to E n e r g y CoriiervaUon," Diamond said, "the time has come for Americans to reassess their use of energy." ' * * * Coast Mideast Travelers Stage Early Exodus A JllrV of II Holy Lind vllltors - many rrom the Orange Coast -we.re startiDg an early exodus from Israel ~ day alter being stranded by the latest Mlddle Eul war. The group Including the. Rev. Chuck Smith, pastor of J>Of'llar Calvary Chapel at 3800 S. Fain1ew Road, Santa Ana, was reported en route from Jeruaalem to Tel Aviv by bu> today. "They will board plues there," sald a ~ for the nondenominational Friends and relatlve.s have been keep- ing the chW'ch switchboard tied up at length with queries about the status of the visitors' stay and also their safety. Church officials spoke with the pastor·s wife, Mrs. Kay Smith, 1bout 11 p.m. (POT) SWlday and she assured them no one was in direct danger as a result of the renewed combat between Arab! and Israelis. ~ The group is among an estimated 30,000 to lS,000 tourists in larael for Yom Kippur, the tUghest holy da ys of the Hebrew faith, a period of increased visitaUon to the Holy Land . 1. church spokesman 58.ld a list of local memben: of the party .would be released if It v.·as cleared by Calvary Chapel's • assistant pastor. Charter Voting Speakers Slated The Huntington Beach Public Informa- tion Office has a list of speakers avallable lo give the pros and cons of the Nov. 6 city charter change election. Voters will be asked Nov. 6 to approve a change in the charter which would make the city posts of attorney, clerk and treasurer appointi ve rather than elective. Each post ii listed on the ballot a! a separate Issue, so one migh t fail without affecting the passage of the othenr. Any organization which would like to schedule speaken on the charter laue can phone lhe public lnlonnaUon office· at 5.16-5259. ~ From Pagel EDISO N ... vironment by folloWin~ prt.sent denial demands of n:tremlst.a. ' The public boarinf I• ICbeduled durins the council 's regulJ.r 7 p.m. HMlon, llfon. day. Env\ronmenlll groupl, It'd by the Sier· ra Cub, are aJ90 expected to have their supPOrters ready for Monday'• bearing. J:>es9lte the muatn,. of speeken on both 1ldee of lhe Issue, ~11yor Jerry lltat- ney has •lrtady warned that he will limit the debate to one hour for those favoring expansion and one hour for those op. poaed. FAison otttclal!: art expected to take up half the ltme aUOUtd for the pro-ex- p~nsion side, Did Rehozo Send Funds To Nixon? WASHINGTON (UPI} -A Senate Watergate comm\ttee investlgator tw questioned Charles G. "Bebe" Reboto about reports he was a conduit !or fl00,000 in cash contritxltkms to Pres!· dent Nlson from billionaire Hoftrd ·Hughes, 11 was disclosed today. Seo. l<>well P. Weieker (R<bon.), told rt porters he v."OUld . like to have both Rebo:m, one of Nixon's clO&eR friends, and Hugbts, the reel.,. wbo bu not bet.n seen in public in two decades, called to i.atlly before the commlttoo. Teny Lenmer, a commlttoo tn- vesUiator, interviewed Reboio in Florida this week, committee IOurces said. Under investigation is a report by ;a fonner Hughes aide that Richard Dan· ner, an agent of Hughes, gave Re bozo $100,000 in two lnstallmenta of $50,000 each -all In stoo billl In 19159 and 1910. Lenzner interviewed DaMer in August in Las Vegas, committee aides said. ':'hey sald Rebozo's bank re...'Ol'ds h::id been subpoenaed. He is bead of a bank at Key Biscayne, Fla . Reboio was characterized as being cooperative when interviewed by Lenzncr but there were no details on what he bad to say. There have been unsuccl'Uful attempts in the past to subpoena Hugbea before corigressional panels, Newport Man's New 'One-plex' Sparks Furor Newport Beach building off I c I • 11 chuckle and call It "a one unit duplt.!x." West Newport neighbors ea1I It an outrageous attempt to circumvent bLllding regulaUoas. Art Llddle, the builder, cans it "an honest attempt" to stay within the Jn"'· The object of all thiJ Is a house al 7002 W. Ocean Front, that was supposed to be two house.a - a dup1ez -until Lldd1e was turned down by the South Coast RegiMal 1.one Conservation Oomml!sion because he didn"t have enough parlang spaces. But he'd already started building and "·asn't about to tear everything doM1 and st.rt over again. So Uddle made a single-lamlly house out or his duplex the aimplest way he could. He knocked·• bOle in a wall, put la a door between the two units and Js DOW calling the bouae a one-plex. I. Mario SkillinJ, Cfuilni\oa ol 1 d Uzeot committee studying redeveJopmeat ~ an1s, i5 ooe homeowner who takes Slnxl( objectJona to the building. She appeared before the planning cun- mlsslon recently to deoounee it as a cruel attempt to get around the pmting re- quirements of the coastal commission. She angrily .. k.ed the city to Investigate the project. The city deelioed however. "The building is perfecUy lepl according to our ordinance," said Rlcbard Hopn, community development director. "ll'• only the coastal commission that re- quires four spaces. We require two spaces for a duplex." And fprther, Hogan noted, "no law has been broken. That building is atlll under construction, and unless two families move inlo it, it will only be a single-fa1ni- ly home." The builder, Liddle, aays the building ~ill be used only as a single family n .. sidence, at least for the first year. Printing Office Burgla1ized In Huntington ?\tore than $5,300 worth of office and printing equipment was taken 1n the weekend burglary of a Huntington Beach printina; shop by a burglar who ap- parently brought his small pet along. Police sald they found animal tracks around the rear window o( Harry Robinson Printing, 613 17th St., where the burglar apparently made his entry. The.y speculated lie intruder brought the animal with him . The thief made off with an IBf\-1 com· poser and the type for it, two calculators and some miscellaneous office and print· ing equip ment. Robinson told police. He said he disco\'ered the burglary Sunday afternoon when he went to his business to do some extra cleaning. A sign that declared "Crime Does Not Pay'' which Robinson bad displayed at the frool of hi• shop, w .. found ly1na at the rw of the print !bop area. Edison's Drill Tea1n to Perform Edi'°" High Sdloot's C111r1or drill team , along with the drill itam from Western WRh of Anaheim, wUI praent a' prevl•w Wednc3day and Thunday nlS)lla of the routlntS they plan to use during their upcoming tour of the Soviet uru... The glrb ..rn Vlalt MOI001f and Len- ingrad Nov. :11).28. The 1trb are curoently try1n1 to raise $24.000 for the Rualan tour. Show llme la 7;!-0 p.m., ••cb nleht, In the F.dlaon IY"'· 21400 Magnolia. St. Tickets cost '1 and can be purchased at the gym. t I . ·. Ripoff Proof? .• Any bicycle thief would think twice before latching onto this bike, parked on Balboa Island's 11-farine Avenue. The cyclist removed the front tire and chained both it and tbe bike to a light post. "'--""------- Five Ex-coast Youths Indicted in Pot Case By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL OI Ille D .. l'I 'll•t ltd ~ Five fonner South Orailge County men have been formally charged by a federal grand jury with conspiracy to sell more than· '2 million worth of mari juana in Orange, l<>s Angeles and San Diego coon ties. An lndil:tmenl relumed by !he grand jury alleges that the quintet met between July 19 and July 27, I~ in Dana Point, Ltguna Beach, Newport Beacb. l.<>ng Beacb and Vista and laid pll!ls lo distribute five tom of marijuana. Tbe COOlpiraey was broken, the in- North Finish~ Second in Star World Title Race Lowell North of San Diego made a strong bid for his fourth world cham· piombi p In the IntomaUonal Star Class Monday by flnl!hlng aeoond In the firs! race of the Slst annual ~ "world's" at San Diego. Jlis chances "'ould have been even stronger had he not chosen the wrong side ol the 18-mile course where he got caught tn a radical wtndshlft. Nort h Y.'as leading the pack through five legs of the 'six-leg Olympic course when the shift came. He still finished sec- ood behind Henry Howan of Raneocas, N.J. John Mt'Causland of Cherry Hill, N.C .• finished third. More than 60 entries from all over the world are oompetlng In the 0001 Star Regalia which cooUnut3 throughout the week. dictment asserts, when federal agents and Newport Beach police arrested two of the five suspects. William Mitchell, 24, a ronner Laguna Beach resident currently is free on $20.000 bond, while William Elwood Polich, 14, formerly oC Dana Point, is free on $3,000 ball. Mitchell was arrested by agent.s of the federal Drug Enforcemen l Administration in San Diego County July 27 after the agents assertedly negotiated to purchase 630 pounds of marijuana. Polich, on parole from federal prison. was apprehended July 31 by Newport Beach narcotici detecUves wbo were tracking on a related lnve!tliatioD. Three other men, Gerald Edward Pohl, 25, Robert William Jlroy, i1, and &flcbael William Andersen, is. a1ao wer~ indicted by the grand jury. 111ey are fuc!Uves and warrants have been issued for tbeir ar- rests. Pohl, Bray and Andenen, according to Detective Leo Konkel of the Newport Beach Police Department, !:)ave 'resided In recent years in Dana Point, Laguna Beacb and Tuatln. Swe et Adelines Meet at Farrell's All women who en}oy singing are in- vited to sing with the Garden Grove chapter of the Sweet Alllelines at Far· rell's Jee Cream Parlour, Huntington Beach, tonight at 8 o'clock. . 1be Sweet Adellnes are celebr.ating their 13th birthday at Farrell'•, 16301 Beacll Blvd., and are seeking new memben to join them tooi&bl. The chorus meets eveey '!Ueaday nigh! at 8 p.m. at St. Anlelm'a Episcopal Church, 13091 Galway SL, Garden Grove. Irvine Fi.I·m Joins ~ff ort, Saves Child By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI "'' o.1nr ,..., '''" Quick Y.'Ork by an I r v i n e phami1ceutlcnl company and the Costa Mesa police helicopter crew has saved the life of a stricken child balf a world away from America. Officials of Allergan Pharmaceut1ca\1, 1525 Dupoot Drive, bave announced the recovery of the child in cape To .... n, South Africa, after cltecking on 1Ls progress. The infant, stricken with an extremely rare lnfectim about tv.·o weeks aa:o. neeiled 1 special drug DOC lmm«liately avallable in Africa at the time. Jdoxuridtne is its name and it is com- monly med to treat such a common and mundane lnfec:Uoo as herpes slmplf!I', or simple cold sores caused by a virus. , _ 'Ibe drug appean to be effecti'lf~ ' however, in treatment of m't.asies 'en- cephalltia, a brain inflammation which is extremely infrequent but often lalll when it occurs. Allergan Pharmaceutical! spokes1nan Barry Ackerman researched the ailment through the \Vorld Health Organilatlon and found it is very uncommon. "11te numbre of cases would probably be less than hal f a doo:en in the United States amually," he said, adding that measles encephalitis only occurs in one among every 10,000 measles .case!. He said the death rate when it occurs is 10 to 50 percent. 'The number of cases \•:ould probably American health authorities do not ac- cept the drug idoxuridine as a counter agent to fight the affliction. . Ackerman said it Is classed currently as an mvesugatiooal drug, meaning it would require controlled tesllng before lt was confirmed safe and effective. South Afrlccin doctors do accept It, however, and physicians attending the stricken child two weeks ago called the Allergan firm to appeal for a swift ship- ment by direct airline. Company spokesmen raced a plenUful supply of ldoniridine to Orange Qiunty Airport. where It was loaded al:x>ard tt.e waiting Costa Mesa Police helicopter. Pilot Jim Wagner and observer Officer Dick Bersch delivered it direcUy to the United Air Lines terminal al Lo.! Angeles International Airport with a few minutes to spare after getting the drug shipment a balf·hour be.fore the UAL flight takeoff time. Allergan oUicials said by regular freight shipping procedures It could have been lwo weeks before the drug reached the critically ill patient. The idolUJ'idine was flown from Loe AngeJes to London and then to ·Cape Town. Ex.:Q:nntington Police Officer Parker Succumbs Funeral Ben'iees were held today for retired Huntington Beach police officer Altr.d J. Pirker who died Sunday at the age of as. Mr. Parker, wbo retired from the Hun- tington Beach police force 1n 1953, had lived in the Huntington Beach area for 46 years. During those years he was a member of tbe Huntington Beach Masonic Lodge and the Huntington Beach Elks Lodge. The Rev. Thomas Ray, pastor of the C.ntral Bapll5l Church of Huntington Beach, officiated at the fWleral rites m wblch members of the police department served as pall bearers. Mr. Parker leaves five daughters. Thty are Pauline campbe:ll, Evelyn Claude and Ella May Claude, all ol HunllnSU>n Beach. L<lrralne Ball of Saugus and Mar- jorie Merman of Portland, Ore. ADVANTAGE-ALDEN'S I • One huge advantage Alden's hes over mo st carpet stores is that wo hevo our own installus, providing flexibility and reliability in scheduling instanations. Very few department stores or specialty carpel stores havt their own workrooms, and must rely on en outside c o n t r 1 c t strvict for instaffations. We havt had many people buy from u1 1~er being di11ppoinltd by an installation company who scheduled a job and didn't show up or call. Somtlimos, this hes h1ppenod two or throe limes before tho customer • < 91v1s up. Al Aldon's, our installation schodulo i1 operated very efficion!fy, and even when our men are hekl up on 1 previous job cau1in9 1 lite start, our men wiU stey end finish. If you want reli.bllity-coll us I HOURS: lloo. "'"' 'llltln., 9 to 1:30 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placelltla Ave. COST A MESA 646-4131 ..... 9 to 9 -SAT., t :JO "' I •• , • ; , ' I \ ... " .- :r •• I' ... .'!( .. .,, ., :• ' ·I •• ' . ' 1 "•' .· J ' j l I ~, 1 • > ·' ' P~ael Strief; . " ' ~._.Coastal Parking Stand3rds Tough • By CANDACE PEARSON Of flMI OlllY ...... St•" commcrcfal parking standards pro- f • po~ by regional coastal. commission ' • planners are striCter than those of four Orange Coast cities in all but two in- stances. Newport Be;ich has a to u g be r restaurant parking formula a.nd meets . 1 tbe coastal code fOr office parking. In the past, Newport Beach city of- ficials have clashed with the South C.Oast " Regional Zone Conservation Commission • 1 over residential parking standards. The commission's rul~ere more stringent ' than the ci.ty's. ,,, Falling below tbe proposed commercial it standards of. the coastal commission are Huntington Beach, San Clemente and l Laguna Beach. • The standards commission planners . .. have been recommending are taken from a comprehensive parking study done by .1 the city of Los Angeles. tn nine pages of detailed formulas, the 'ti study ouUines specific parking re- quirements based on commerci~l use. '"This Is the most comprehensive study .. 1 . done," said Rod Meade, head of the com- 'f." mission's pennit division. · Me8de said the cominission planners who don't have the time, money or staff to "get into generation of new in- formation" looked a number of parking studies. The Los Angeles planning department work is "well docwnented" and toOk four years to develop, be said. Coples of tbO proposal are being sent to , • coastal cities, interested citit.ens and ii regional commission members, some. of :: ~ George P. Hunn, ' Adobe Resident, Succumbs at 71 George Paul Hunn. a colorful resident t1f San Juan 'Gapistrano for all of bis 71 years, died Sunday in Orange after a brief illness. Mr. Hunn, a native of San Juan and lifetime resident of an historic adobe area known as •i'I'be Island" at 31866 El Camino Real. has worked as a gardener most of his life, first applying his skins on the Old Mission grounds at Ute age of ... >' e. Family spokesmen recalled today that Mr. Hunn first tended the MlssiDn . . whom were surprised 'to learn or Its e1- latence last week. ·"'IO>mmission Execu.tlve bin!ctor Melvin Carpenttt had beejl lnc)udlnJ some por· Uons of the study In permit' conditions. :l'he full study, boWtvtt, 11adn·t been dlscussed•ln public hearing. • "' few oa:nimlssioners' asked for a &tailed 'report aner a staff report , ~ . recommended approval of a $3 million La~ Beach shoppirig cent.er it it had 413 parking spaces, oot the 262 the ~veloper proposed. . · The 413 fiiure was computed from a fonnula of 5.5 ,parking spaces per 1,000 square feet of gross floor area given for neighbOthood shopping centers in the Los Angeles study. 'lbe study also suggests a standard or a.a· spaces per 1,000 square feet in large snoWin& cin~~rs. For rti\6\urants, the standard is one 'parking_$pa~e-per 50 squall.Jeet (1:50) a ratio Of. about one space pe1t-three seats . NeWport Beach's code~is 1:45 for restaurants. San Clemente requires one space per four seats and Laguna Beach's standard is 1:60. Slightly different is Huntington Beach's formula: one space per five fixed seats or 1:35 in areas without seats. The Im Angeles study used by coastal commission pl81Ulers lists offices as re- quiring one sPace per 250 square feet (1 :250). City office standards vary: Newport Beach -1:250; .San Clemente -1:300; Htmtington Be.a.ch -1:300: and La"1fla Beach -1:500, only baJf as stnngenl Retail businesses must have one space per 200 square feet (1:200) under the study. Locally, both Newport Beach and Huntington Beach require 1:250; San Clemente's code is 1:300, and Laguna is again the least compatible at 1:500. 1be commission, empowered by Proposition 20, the 1972 coastal zone act, will be able to impose the study's stand- ards on local developers, if it chooses to follow them. The 12-member Orange and Los Angeles comties panel has pennit jwisdictkin within 1,000 yards of the mean high tide line. A specffic public hearing on the stand- ards hasn't been set, although Meade said be "suspects" they will come up for discussion at a commis.!ion study session Oct. 29. . Tbe ,topic for that meeting at 3 p.m. in Loog -Harbor Dlslrict bead· grounds as a small boy and reaped a qua-.,. 9'15 Harbor Plaza Drive Is in· pennyortwoadayforbiatfforts •. , .,,.i,.tertm~gaidennec .. , t •I •"'1 ' ' .. And1 the moneY lfent Nbt~k into.c,,,,,,TJ:ili ·eomm1-M .has beeo"eORSidering lhe church donation box," a spokesrnane,.: 1191• general ;,guidelines which indluded said '°l13Y· . _ • ; -' residential ool not c00unercial parking Mr. Hunn -whose·~ "!as; etandards; to help (l"OCeU pennit.s. German and Spanish -tlved his life on The Los Angeles parking study also the family properly which in later years detalls•requirenients for professional of· "' amounted to 11-small cab!Jr_at tbe rear of flees hotels hospitals schools., libraries -th~ . "Island" with lhe ruins of the cburdaes, lolf ~s. pools, clubs: onginal family adobe near the entrance. bankS, markets, car lots, stbrage yards. " He leaves four sons, C. M. Sgt. George nurseries labot'at.ories and a number Of William Hunn Jr. who serves in the Air other us~ ~· Force; Leslie Alfred Hwi.n of Capistrano · Beach; Thomas M. Hunn and Francis 1 , Lee Hunn, both of San Juan; two brothers, Joseph and Frank Hunn of San Diego, and two sisters, Juanita Lopez of Dana Point and Pauline Memphis of San Diego. Ten gr!lJldchildren also survive. Rosary will be recited at 7:30 t~ night in Father Serra Chapel of the Old .. Mission with Requiem Mass celebrated there Wednesday at 9 a.m. Georgia Loses Bid WASfDNGTON (AP) -The state of Georgia today lost its bid in the U. S. Supreme Court to take the issue of presidential impoundme1t of con- gressionally appropriated funds directly to the high court. Georgia's plea bad the backing of the Nixon administration. O.Hr ,lltl S .. tt Pt1Dt1 CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE L1gu~1 Attorney L•np~•r Laguna Attorney Seeks Redrawn ; Congress Seat By JACK CHAPPELL Of fflt ,O.Ur ,119' Sllff • Laguna Beach attorney Roger Lan- phear bas declared himself a candidate for the recently redrawn 40th U.S. Congr~sional District. The district covers the southern half of Orange County running along the coast from Huntington Beach to San Clemente and inland including the commwilties of Irvine, El Toro, Laguna Hils, Mission Vie- jo, and San Juan Gapistrano. Lanphear, a Republican, may face an incumbent in the election, or be may run against an as yet unknown GOP op- ponent, as a result of the State Supreme Court ordered ~pportionrnent. Rep. Andrew Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach) has the option of running in the redrawn 39th District which Includes Santa Ana, Anaheim, 'and Orange, or moving to the new 40tb district. "It doesn't reaUy make any difference fo me. I'm not going to wage a campaign against Andy. but on the tssues," Lanphear said in an interview Mooday. Lanphear,• chairman of the Laguna Beach Planning Commission, said he was compelled to run for the congressional seat because of a crush of "crises" fac- ing the nation. "'l1tis is more than just concern, I really believe that modem ciVilization depends on the l<lluilOo to lhele problems of water "polhdion, 8ir pollution, land llDd mineral use," be said. He taid bis experience in local govern· ment bas taught him that the nation needs strong national policy in allocation of resources. Lanphear, 37, received his bachelors degree ·and doctor of jurisprudence at U.C. Berkeley. He practiced law In NewpOrt Beach an4 Huntington Beach before coming to Laguna abOOt five years ago. He is wimarried. Lanphear said that local government doesn't have the capability to deal with nationwide "crises" in (uel, transporta- tion, power, apd now food. '"I think they are all related. I've been trying to figure out how to make this point," Lanphear said. He has quit hi& law practice, and for the next several months will be "~tudy­ ing," unhampered by job presures. ,_,, °'-9, 1973 H DAILY PILOT 3 , Ni~on A.15.ent 'Fat Jack' Testifie·s W ASlllNGTON (AP) -John Buckley, Identified as Nl.xon cat11pa.lgn agent "Fat Jack," tesWied tOOay that he photographed boxloads of Muskie cam· palgn documents and relayed them to the Pre5ident's re-election headquarters. A> the gray-balred, portly campaign !PY appeared before the Se n a t e Watergate committee, the pane) ln- dlcated that Republlcan efforts to dig up evidence of Democratic dirty tricks in the 1972 presidential election campaign have been a relative failure. One source oo the committee•s Republican minority Side said \be efforts had "fallen flat." Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, GOP vice chairman of the committee, indicated to newsmen that only one witness would be called to testify about Democratic dirty tricks. He apparently refetted to Fred Taugher, wbo was Sen. G e o r g e McGovern's campaign coordinator In the California presidential primary and who allowed planners of an anti-Nixon demonstra\i_on in U>s Angeles to use McGovern telephone$ to help organize their protest. The committee also announced plans to call ?o.1cQQvem campaign strategist Frank Mankiewicz and Sen. F..dmund S. Muskie's campaign manager, Berl J, Bernhard, to testify about wnat effect Nixon campaign sabotage had on their presidential election efforts. Today's witness said he was recruited to investigate f\fuskie 's campaign by Kenneth ReJtt, director of youth ac- tivities for President Nixon's campaign. Buckley, who met Reitz when Reitz was a congressional aide and Buckley was a Republican investigator for the House Labor Committee, said' he was employed at the time as director of in· . spections for the Office or Ecoaoml.e ~ portunity. Buckley said he acceptet!-the campolp job despite being on the government puyroll. The Hatch Act probiblts federal employes from engaging ln campaign ac- tivities. Buckley testified votuntaJilY tm- der a grant of immunity from prosecuUoo on the basis of his Senate testimony. He said that to get Wormation out of Muskie headquarters, he recruited an ae- quaintanct! v.·ho drove a cab, Elmer Wyatt. The cab driver got a job deliver- ing boxloads of documents between Muskie's campaign headquarters and his Senate office, he said. Buckley said he photographed selected documents aod passed them on, first to Reitz. then to a yowig Nixon campaign staffer who was habitually late and sometimes failed to pick up lhe photographs. 'Drag. Caspers Down Here' By JOHN VALTERZA Of tM 0.11'1' ,lltt Sl•tf An oflimes scrappy city councitman from San Juan Capistrano angrily sug- gested Monday that Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Gaspers be "cfabbed by the nape of the neck and dragged down here" to see the asserted problems with the county uses of a deadly highway as the main route to a new dump. Edward Qiermalt, who tarely backs away from a battle, made the angry sug· gestion as he and fellow lawmakers lamented the lack of oooperation from the County Road Department over the selection of a suitable road to carry tbe heavy daily traffic generated. by 'the opening of the Prima Desecha Canyon east of San Juan. Councilmen, including Ch e r m a k , asserted that they had been "lied to repeatedly" by the road department which of late has apparently dismissed a San Juan request that an extension of La Novia Road be used to fUMel the dump traffic. Instead, couricilmen have learned that the county plans to use the existing two-- lane Ortega Highway as the dump route and traffic there already bas reached a dangerous level. "They're going to subject San Juan and its residents to all the dirt, dust, traffic, noille and danger on that road. "We've got to get action now down here .•. even if it means going up there (to the county aeat) and dragging him (Caspers} down by the nape of his neck to show him the problem. "I'm tired of being lied to," Chermak oaid at the height ol the cll!ICUISioo. MO!t fellow councilmen agreed--with Mayor Roy Byrnes taking a different point of view. Dr. By mes asserted that the use of a brand new road cutting through wt· developed hills could -tle "the most growth-inducing thing d city could do." He added that the council might reevaluate its ~r::l stand against the use of Ortega Highway because by extending La Novia it could be welcoming new runaway growth in hilly acreage owned by Glendale Federal Savings and Loan. But his premise was unpopular on the panel. The remainder · agreed that Ortega Highway -the busy state-administered road winding from San Juan to Elsinore -already is a deadly, substandard highway . And recent council actions bave in- cluded denials of some permits for new development along the road becaue the impact of cars on the stretch would be too severe. Playing Doeiors . Study Shows Some Sex on Sly CHICAGO (UPI) -The Chicago Tribune reported today that in a na- tionwide survey conducted by a team of California psychiatrists at least one out of every 20 doctors re!iponding admitted he engaged in sexual intercourse with pa· ti en ts. · The Tribune said the survey, reported in the current issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, showed that most physicians frowned upon the use of erotic behavior in their practiee as unethical or "professional suicide." Conducted by Dr. Sheldon H. Karnder, Marielle Fuller, and Dr. Ivan N. Mensh of UCLA, the study involved 460 psychiatrist, obstetricians, gynecologists, surgeons, int.etnists and general pi:ac- Utioners'. The study showed that 5 to 13 percent of the group engaged In some kiM ~f erotic behavior with their patietils, and five to 7.2 percent engaged in sexual in- tercourse. The report said 87 percent of. the pbysi ... clans condemned erotic behavior with patients. The doctors said it destrgyed the doc- tor-patient relationship, was "un- forgivable,'' or indicated the doctor was psy~thle. ' But 13 pereent of the -~ erotic practices for such reuons •s • un· proves semal maladjustments," "helps patients' recognition of their sexual status,'' "especially In the deprelsed, _mjddle-age4 female who feels un.-dersli'ab1e,~ and "to relieve frultraticll in a widow or divorcee." E $55.00 TELEPHONE Couples Go for Broke • Bankruptcy Rate Climbing in Saddleback Valley l By JAN WORTH • Of "" o.ur ,ntt Stiff J The story is so familiar attorneys serv-• f btg the Saddleback Valley know it by heart. It's the story of bankruptcy, a 1: financial collapse more and more com. ' mon from Lake Forest to San Juan • Capistrano: i John S., 33, a young executive, gets a • promotion and raise. He and his wife • Judy decide to buy their first home -! and move from their crowded duplex in • Santa Ana to the Saddleback Valley. -.i. Using all their savings, they ·-make a down payment. On paper the monthly l' mortgage bill is within their means. Not J by a wide margin , but they've a:Jways » paid their bills and rigure they'll manage t as they always have. \ John likes coming home to his new r place. But with a greater distance to 11 commute he finds his car expenses higher than before. r. ... SulTOUJlded by other new families in glistening new homes, Judy decides her ~ old furniture looks out of place. She and 1 John buy new ll~ room and bedroom 1 furniture. Since their savings are gone, 1 they charge il. .1 The S's two children, age 7 and 9, are ; gradually making more demands for or.w .; shoes and clothes. Every. time Judy ~s­-i to the store, prices are higher. '.t John and Judy begin to feel a lot more .• broke than when they lived in Santa Ana. .• They find more bllls than they ex- -t pe<=ted, liko 'dues to t'he community t associatioo and lawn upkeep or fence • eonstrucl.ion, required by the .coven.ants. 't codes and restrictions (Cc&Rs) they • Signed when buying. 1 lf everything stopped there, mMt ·1 famiU-.. rldlng the fence ol fln>nclal ~ survival would never know how perilous 1 their JX1$lUon ls. . 'i But all It takes Is one medical crWs, \ one automobile accident, or one employ- ment layoff for John and Judy's fragile economic house of cards to tumble. 1beir marriage may ilso break down. U a dl,.rce results,· child support payments may be added to John's already crwihing load. Judy struggles to suppport herself. "All in all, the picture can get pretty desperate preliy fast," on.e Laguna Hills · attorney said. What then? For many families, ac- cording to local attorneys, bankruptcy is the only answer. "lt's not surpMsing to find the number of bankruptcy cases you do in the Sad· dleback Valley," said federal bankruptcy judge A. K. Phelps. "lt is most common among groups that are newromers. 'I'be Saddleback Valley is a new communlty. People haven't found security, they haven't put down roots. I The more stable a communtty Is, the Jess c0mmon bankruptcy Is." Phelps said another factor is the youth ol moot Saddleback Valley residents. "'I'bey haven't ha!1 time to aceumulate capital," he said. "Tbey b<Jy everythi~g on credll So even though the community looks at· tracUve, and everybody has everything, there just isn't any capital behind it." _ ft. stable famlly can ~'!!vive ~ f~anfial crisis. A stable 1amlly would have several months' salary in the bank to cover for lost earning power. Bankruptcy wipes the slate cleAn, ·Phelps said. Th11t means the family Is relieved of all debts but have to give up "no~xempt assets" Including stocks and bonds. Many items, such a! fumitare. and some Ille insurance, aro exempt. Typically, this mtAns a bankrupt eouple are about where they started as newlyweds. ·A house bought by the family may not necessarily be lost in a bankruptcy case. If an attorney is instructed 1" file a declaration of homestead, the house can be kept and the family Is protected from all non-mortgage creditors, Phelps ex- plained. What attorneys say they faee is severe client misunderstanding of implications of a nearly bankrupt position. "Before they come to us, they are three months behind on their credit card payments -and they don't even realize it costs $500 plus a $100 filing fL>e just to go bankrupt," said Patricia Dean, a Laguna Hills attorney~ who speclaliies in bankruptcy. Mrs. Dean's cause is to get high schools to require a tw~semester coorse in consumerism. The first term, she said, should include basic business Jaw - types of contracts, kinds of mortgages, the meaning of bankuptcy, how to register a car, and how to buy a house. The second semester would cover "consumer's rights": how to shop for and manage credit, what to do If you get taken. "Without this kind of education. kids are helpless at 18," Mrs. Dean said. "Tbe way they can get taken reinforces my opinion that they lost more than they gained when the legal age was changed to J8." Phelps characterizes our economic education as ''grab bag learning." ''Our educational system has glaring defects. Who ever tells kids how to buy groceries intelligently. or buy a car? That's just the beginning. From there, being a consumer gets bnrdcr.•• As a preventive, he recommends ex· t~sivc use or good consumer report!. And tOOre's one failsafe decision. Phelps highly recommends It. ''Never buy anythin1 on credit. tr you ha\fe no debts, you '!'rill never be bankrupt." I Each day, Pacific Telephone Operators rccci\'C over one million calls for numbers that are already listed in the telephone book. 1 n a single year, the oPerator expense for handling all these caUs Is fifty-five million dollan:. So If you're concerned about the cost of your telephone service. please look uf' numbers in the phone book \vhcnc\'cr you c:in. Of course. \~·hcncvc r you can't !ind 1hc num- ber, \vc'rc here to help.@ Pacific Telephone \ I • I • 'I .f DAILV PILOT Newsmen's Plea· Turned Down , Judge Presses Grand Jury Inquiry Of :4 gnew Charges ' Chalk One Up For Morality BLACKOUTS OF 1173: Once again the censor .of all that is sexy or smutty has struck in our region in the name or public JIJorals and de-eency. And what better Orimge County wonderspol to bave this happen than in Garden Grove? 1be good and regular folks often are puu.led when those of us in the 'com· muniCJlions busines.s turn red and blow . fuses when self-appointed Keepers of the Public l\foralc; strike against books, magazines, periodicals or motion pic- tures. "Why are you geuing so upset," they will question. ''That was awful stuff they confiscated and burned. \Ve're all better off being rid of it.'' Maybe so. But often one person's flower garden looks to another like a weed patch. And who censors the censor? ltlORE L\WORTANT, and /perhaps more a threat to freedom is the hlstorlc pattern of censorship. It is progressive. It moves from one phue to the next, each successively more restrictive. The nearby municipality of Garden Grove proved that historic axiom in an almost test tube case. It all started when some shakers-and· movers ot the garden city became upset With the mushrooming Increase in coin- operated racks on town streets which featured sexy periodicals. THESE IJTl'LE SHEETS -I'm not really sure you could call them newspapers -feature photographs of nude people and other sexy articles. 111us it was that the Garden Grove's top brass decided · to clean out all this smut. In order to purge the dirty stuff, the city passed a new raw severely restric- ting how periodical racks could be displayed to the Garden Grove public. l.Jttle enforcement, however, developed immediately. TH\JS rr WAS thal one Councilman Woodrow Wllson .,Butterfield. a former Orange County planning commissioner, took the law into his own hands. He fired up his pickup truck and "took to the streets, personally gathering up all the racks of those JiUle periodicals to which he took personal offe nse. Ah, it was a grand old grandstand play and Garden Grove's Vigilant for Public Morals applauded Butterfield for his courage and resourcefulness in cleansing the city of this awful blight. Then a funny thing developed in Garden Grove. Spurred by Butterfield's solo action, the regular city crews got in- to action to purge the streets of periodical vending racks. They were, however, less discriminating than the aforementlooed Councilman Butterfield. They just went out and swooped up every street coin rack: which they felt offended the new city dictum, THUS BY YESTERDAY, it was dif- ficult to find any kind of a periodical rack on the streets of Garden Grove. Various re!Xlrts had it that somewhere between 60 and 146 such racks had been hauled away into the darkness of the Garden Grove city yard. So Garden Grove \vas cleansed oI vend· ing machines for The \Veekly Smutto. But also, you couldn't find your favorite copy of the Herald-Examiner, LA Times or Santa Ana Register. either. The progressive censor had struck again. There is probably only one consolation in it all . It happened 'in Garden Grove, where they probably deserve it. BALrulORE (UPll -Judge Walter E. llolllnln, clo<enniMd to mist further delays in a fiedtral ln\'e$UgaUon ot Sptro T. Apw, ft,itrud a r<qutst Moodly by neW$1Deft foe postponement of lhetr rtplies to oealta.k subpoenas, federal COW1 ~ $&id today. Hofhnan "-.sled no Urne turning down a petition by a l'WP of rtporten who asked that tbey be allowed an extra week, unW Oct. II, to l'ffPOod to sub- poenas <o tell the vice president'• lawyers IOW'CeS ol news ieab about 1he inveltigauon. LA WYERS FOR the reporten under :JUbpoena are expeded to tile a motion Wednesday to quash the a1bpoena.f on grounds of vtolation of their Ftl'll Am<ndment f-.ol-tbe-preaa righta. U,IT~t. NATIONS .DIVIDED ON HOW TO END MIDDLE EAST CONFLICT Chi na Amba sndor Huang Hua (left); U.S.'s John Scali U.N. Panel Fails n1 Try To End Mideas.t Conflict UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - Members of the U.N. Security Council were miles apart today in their search for a way to end the Middle East war. Diplomatic sources said another council meeting was likely late today but it was . not clear what form a compromise cease. fire .resolution might take. 'FHE UNITED States appeared alone 1fonday with Hs-yroposal that the council call for a return to military positions held before the outbreak of fighting on Saturday. Otlna called the idea "preposterous" and, with the Soviet Union, demanded Israeli withdrawal from all Arab lands Top B'rass Pay $1 for -Feast WAS!IlNGTON (AP ) -!Wp. Les Aspin says he'll ask the General Accounting Office to investigate elaborate $1 dinners for generals. Pentagon cafeteria prices keep going up for Gls and civilians, but genera1s "still gorge lhemselvea on a sumptuous three-course dinner for only $1 ," Aspln says. The Wiscoosin Democrat says one recent menu for generals had a choice of six enlrees, eight ap- petizers and 17 desserts. Ordinary Gls and civilian employes e.at In commerdally operated cafeterias where lnnatton has driven prices up substantially, Aspin says. 111ere was no immediate comment from the Army. occupied in the 1967 war. Same sources said war news was so contradictory that some co u n c i I members were waiting for a clearer pie· ture to emerge before taking position on a ceaae-ftre resoluUon.: • ' U.S. Ambassador John A. Scali tokl the council tbe "least damaging way" to end the fighting was to restore the cease-fire lines that Egypt and Syria crossed Satur- day. Later he said the United States haj "Ideas which we will be discussing within the government and with other governments." SOVIET AMBASSADOR Jaoob A. Malit said IsraeJ must be forced to aban· don the parts of Emit, Jordan and Syria its baa oocupled with the 0 support of im· perla!Jst ciJ'cles" since 1967. He blamed Israel and its allies for the outbreak or fighting. Chinese Ambas.udor Huang H u a demanded that Israel withdraw im· meiliately from the occupied lands. He aaid the Chinese people admire Egypt and Syria for their "bold ·and just Jietion and express finn support to them." Israeli Foreign Mlnlster Abba Eban called on ttie Arabs to "embark oo the adventtm!: of negotiating peace." But Egyptian Foreign M i n i s t e r Mohammed H. El·Zayyat denounced the idea of giving up territory Egypt and Syria claim to have won back since Saturday. "Occupied Egypt is our home,'' he declared. ZAYYAT ACCUSED Israel of starting the war by making a naval attack on an Egyptian oil pipeline ~t of the Suez Canal early Saturday. He said Egyptian troops retaliated and then moved across the canal to "plant the Egyptian flag on Egyptian soil ." Snow Blankets Plateau -' Fog and Haze Shroud Mississippi Valle y Regio~ ...... uow ... 1 Wl ... 11!1t "IVl(I 101(("'' '• 7AMl,l l0-/0•1) I Court ........ 1a14. llolflnan .... In- -... the grand jury pmslll( abead with !ta lnqultY of c:hups lnvolvtnc klckllocb, with coJy 17 dlya ...... -. the ststutory limit •llPlrtl Oil .... of the··-· . 11lere ..., DO --i on wllo tho grl!ld jury would be ht.Irina when It ,....,... ii. ln"'1Jption.·S<alilty mM!nuod ttaht at tho federal court house where It meets. The Justice Deplrtment l1'llled Friday thot Acnew -IUl>ject to ln-dlotm"11 while In office, contrary to bis conteetim of Immunity. BESIDES THE .conJtitullonal Im- munity claim, AIMW '.• lawyero eought to hilt tho lnvestlgatton on grounds of pnj- udiciOJ publicity due to hilU about _. ... of the lnqulty whid> Agnew diarg- od came prili>arlly fioJll, tho Justice DeparlmenL In addition to the reporters' request tor a one-week delay from Thursday in replying formally to subpoena!'; the Justice Department Monday called the Agnew publicity claims frivolous, and asked Hofbnan to reverse his decision allowing wbpoe!lal to be itsued to newsmen. The department said it ""' willing to allow top officiall to answer questions under .. th 1"'111 "-l>w)'On about' news leaka, but described the subpoenfis for newamen u ''.Pshl!>S expeditions.'' THE REPORTERS' brief wu filed with tho ledenl. court clerk who -i to hi• am.. ., .aecept It althouolh 1be oou;tbouse was closed !or the Columbus Dey holiday. Hoflmsn, ...,.,nod staying In .a mold In Alexaodrla. Va. wu said 1'> have notlliod the clerk be wu tumlng dpw!t the petition and WU quoted: "f 110 not going to grant an utenlton oo,~. 'l1>ero will be no bearlq," Hoffman normally sits In the U.S. district ooort for eastern Virginia at Norfolk. He was assigned 11 supervi!ing judge for the grand jury inqlahi ln1'> an alleged kiclcback scheme of Maryland politics alter all federal judges In Maryland di!qualified themsell'e!'· 1 THE JUSTICE Department disclosed Friday in arguing !or rejection of Agnew's immunity claim that lhei 1tatute of limitations on some tmSpecifled allega· lions in the case would nm out Oct. :!6. Alter Iha~ prosecutors would be unable to seek Indictment on tbose oounts af-fected. . I, U,1 Ttl ..... Injured AIJ•ill -'. Motorcycle daredevil E V1' I Knievel was reported in satis· factory condition at a Wisconsin hospital after craahing his cycle at conclusiOn of a 13-vehicle jump. He told onlookers. 'I'm too tough .to die.' U.S. Jews Raise Funds Millions Given for Israel's Mideast War Efforts By United Pre11 International AmeriOBns Jews gave millions of dollars· to Israel in an emergency cam· paign today and others volunteered to go there tbemselves to do civilian jobs while Israeli workers are in tbe armj.r. OVER $4 ~tlLLION was collected in New York City atone Monday. Jerome Rosemarin, a director or the United Jewish AppeaJ, said the nationwide target for the next few days was $100 million. He said the money would be used for "social welfare and humanitarian Eight Children In One Family Perish in Blaze ' JERRY CITY, Ohio CAP) -Eight brOtliero ·aru1 sisters, all less than 10 years old,' died early today in in ex- plosion and fire that swept their trailer home whil~ their parents were away at work, authcrities said. .41frank Paden, owner of Pa d en Morttrary in North Baltimore, ldeottlied ( __ I_N_SB_O_R_T •• _. _) the parents of the cltlldren as Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Trevinio or the Dale Roe Trailer Park. He said the Trevlnlos were at work Bowling Green State University, 10 miles north of Jen')' City, when the fjr< broke out. e ·A lgerl• Aid ( ALGIERS (I/Pl) -Soviet Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev called on Algeria today to help Egypt and Syria in the fighting. agabist I~el. The national news agency -Algerie Prease Service <APS) aaid that' In a tiiessage to Algerlan leaden: Brezhnev said the Soviet Union "ts completely persuaded tllat the Algerian government, which bas an ex- cellent experience In the stnJU!e. , .will take all means . and all necessary measures In order to aid Syr<a and Egypt In their difficult (igbM>rooght on by the aggressor, Israel." e Ktdn•p Suspects MEXICO CITY (AP) -Police have announced the arrests ol six men for the kidru!p.killlng of two SOIJ5 of prominent Mexico City lamlll .. _ wl» paid nearly $600,000 In ransom for them. AutOOriUes said the men were not con- nected with any guenilla cc terrorist group. They said money was their only motlve and three million pesos - $24.0,000, -was recovered wben they wero ametedm I needs" so that the Israeli governmes:it could use Its J"'80Ul'oes <o prosecute the war. . , -. Robert COpeland, a spokesman .!or the United Jewish Federation tn Norfolk, Va., ... said hwJdreds of Vohmteers have called the groop since the liglUlng erupted Saturday. "Donatl~ are pouring In," Copeland sal.d. "Memt>ers of the community stand together in this Ume of crisis." IN MIAMI, leaders of the Jewish oom· munity approached their goal al selling $5 million worth of Israel boocb tOOay. Early today the bood drive bad collected $4,230,000 in cash and checks. n.-ee separate rallies were set rOr New Jersey tonight, a spoi<esman aaid. Other meellngs were called In St. i:.ouls, Mo., Atlanta, Chicago, Baltimore, Miami , San Frandsco, Pittsburgh, and Hartford , C<nt. • CAIRO 0 U. A. R. CEGVPT) The AnU·Defamatton League al the B'nal B'rith conltemned Egypt and Syria for what It called a "Pearl Harbor at· tack" and the COOference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Orgruili:atiOl'IS called an "emergency convocation'' of over 500 JewiSh leaderS for WaS~on today. SOME 500 Cornell University students staged a pro-Israel rally on the Ithaca campus. Ha~, ·% American 'WOIDen's Zionist group that sponson the major hospital ln JeruSJ)em, said medical SU!>' piles would be accepted <o "'1<I Gil to Israel U they will not go bad. American doctors have vo?bhteered their services, Hadassah said, and any American stud~ between 18 and 24 year!I old who want to go would be put to work at rm· ltlllltary tasks on agricultural se1: Uementa. • ! -rn -. -' . ..... '4 ,.SINAI {O CCUPIED B Y ISRAEL ) ISRAEL REPORTS IT HAS BOMBED EGYPTIAN PORT SAID AREA Egypt Ambassador Interrupts U.N. O.blte to Give News Officers Seek Gun-toting Suspect in Four Murders HELMVJLl.E, Mont. (I/Pl) -Law en- forcement officers set highway check· points along the rugged con-1 Divide today in the1r aearclt for a beav\IY armed teenager suspected of killing l04U persons at a dude ranch. SHERIFF'S depuUes aaid Roger Caryl , 17, who liked to be called "Tex McCord" after a fabled 19th Century bandit, was carrying several weapons Inctudlne a 7mm rille which "could btow a man's bead oU at 500 yards." Montana l!igbway Patrolmen, deputies and Fish and Game DepeJtment Wlldelis were ltaUooed eV«)' two mUes aloog a -rood belween U.S. 12 and M-lllO in the manlnmt, Sher!II David Colllnci aald Caryls is suspected of killing tho !OW' persons Sun- day, pooatbly 'because be wu orde<ed to bllry 1 dog he had shot to death. The youth wu employed at the dude ran<:h where the kiIIInp took place, COWNGS SAID Caryl first s]1ot samuel Akins, 42, and his JOO, Steven, 18, with wbom he shared 1 cabin at the Whitetail Ranch, Then, acoordi"I to the officer, be killed U>:e manager, John Miller, ill, and the cook, Ruby Judd, 11:1. WltneMes who scaUered when the violence erupted told tnvetdg1tor1 that Caryl told his victims: u1 have • )t:rN hellOI for ~·· aad 11Jiere's a hell6 for you," then bluted'them with i shotgun. De,iuttes .. id Caryl spent the 'night after the lbooltni In an .-oupled ranchhouse near this smen southwest ~ Montana community. They sald he severed telephone lines there. ' PLANES AND tracking dogs were pressed into setvice in the search. Caryi, an Eagle"Scouth, came to Mon- tana in August after leaving his home in Decatur, lll. Hl.s father, James, 4.9, a mechanic at''"a farm implement manufacturing fimi. told reporten at Decatur: "If they ;. to Shoot him , tlley'll just have to. I they get him belore he hurts anyone el . "Every time the phooe rings we ho!le that we'll get word th.at they've caught him." I I DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllvt1'J. ot Ult Oilly Pllol Ii g1.1v1ntttd j ' • ,_....,.,I'll'_,, II l'W .. HI .... ''"" • il'l!W.., 11• t."'-• Celt W I'"'' l"7 Wiii •• ... .,....., .. l""ll• Ct"• t rt .. ,"' ~U , ,, ... "" .. ..,. • ., .. SlllMl••1 " rt" .. "'' ~ I ""' _,,, fry ' '·"'· SHW'll~'' W I '·"'· t lllMt.,, ctl .-IHI t c1,y wOI ... ""1111 " l l'"• Cl!ll '" ._.., !Miii 11 1,111. -T tltpllOlltl M•• °''• c-•r ,,,., ........ ...,...,,, 1 M"111fttt "~ ltK• w wmm1oi.i" .......... ...,,m ltlll ( ......... (.ttlbff-l .. tll, I lat! J••• C•tklr••· 01111 hllll, ' $W!fi' ........ "''-........ • " • ..,....,. • • \ I • ., " ' , y I , ' I • t d ~ c c e I r { I r I t n l r t b [ ' r t ( ( ( ' I ' ' ' ' I I ' 1 l . 7 ' . ' . ' ' • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ,......--~~~·~~~-----.---~~~~~~~-' voe. 66,·NO. 282, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1973 N TEN CENTS " ' N_@wPOrt •one-plex!' Triggers Fu~or -' K . ' • T>!IS IS THE HOUSE THAT ART LIDDLE BUILT In West·New~rt., Does 1 Door Make the Difference? Real Estate Consultant 1 Takes Ir~e .P.9~~r~ ~eat . .. Irvine Q:lmpeny ~db:ectc:rs today oeltcted a Loo Ancelel real estaie ln· vestment and research consultant to fill the vacancy on the board created by the death of former company president William R. Mason. Newport Beach building\o ff j c i !l I s because he didn't have enough parking ards. is one homeowner \Vho takes only the coastal comm1ss1on that re- chuCkle and call it "a one unit dupl'?!(:." spaces. strong objections to the building. quires four spaces. We require two West Newport neighbors call it an But he'd already started buildiDg :'lnd She appeared before tbe planning com-f ' outrageous attempt to cirrumvent v•asn't about to tear everything down and mission recently to deno~ it as a cruel spaces or a duplex .' b..ilding regulations. slf.Jt over again. attempt to get around the parking re-And further. Hogan noted, "no Jaw has Art Liddle, the builder, calls it "an So Liddle made a single-family house quirernents of the coastal commission. been broken. That building is still under honest attempt" to stay within the J:nv. out of his duplex the simplest way he She angrily as~ the city to investigate construction. and unless two families The object of all this is a house at 7002 could. He knocked a bole in a wall, put in the project. move into it, it will-only be a single-fa1ni· v.·. Ocean'Froot, that was suppoSed to be a door between the two units and is now The city declined however. "The ly home." two houses -a duplu -until tiddle calling the house a one-plex. building is perfectly legal according to The builder. Liddle, says the building 'vas turned down by' the South Coast Margo Skilling, chairman of a citizens our ordinance," said Richard Hogan, will be used only as a single family ·Regional Zone Conservation Commission committee studying redevelapment st.and-community development director. ''It's {See PROJECT, Page Z) • Israel Jets 'Rip Arabs Planes Bo1nb Near Capitals as Fi g·hting Rage s TEL AVIV (UPI) - Israeli warplanes struck at targets deep inside Syria and Egypt today, bombing Egyptian airfields near Cairo and attacking Syrian military ~dquarters outside Damascus, a military spokesman said. A radar station in Lebanon al.so was hit. .. As the 1973 Middle East war went into KUWAIT URGES ARAB OIL CONFERENCE, Page 14 U.S. JEWS RAISE MIL LIONS FOR WAR, Page 4 U.N. COUNCIL FAILS IN CEASE'FIRE BID, Page 4 its fourth day, the spokesman reported Syria was using Soviet-supplied "Frog" surface-to-surface missiles capable of carrying a 1 ,~pound warhead 44 miles against villages deep inside Israel. He described losses in the settlements as light. On the ground, Israeli troops were reported fighting Egyptian and Syrian .. rmor in what •' ~teran witnlla said • were ~·some of the fiercest battles" in the nation's 25-year hi.story. Cillzen.s ·on tbe home front were ~d to expect bard goirig ahead in lhe "at- trition" phase of the war. "A military spokesman told Israelis in a nationwide broadcast that fighting bas been "very bitter and bloody." Syrian air force at Jebel Barukh on Mt. Lebanon in the north of the cotmtry near the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serious damage" was inflicted on EJ011)ti.an air fields at El Mansura, 70 miles north of Cairo, and at Kushnia, 62 miles ea.st of the Egyptian capital near the Suez Canal. The announcements did not say whether Arab planes rose to challenge the raiders as Israel continued to withhold disclosure of its losses, OOth in the air and on the ground. Red Embassy Reported Hit NEW YORK (AP) -CBS Radio said today that Israeli planes scored a direct hit on the Russian embassy in Damascus, Syria. i• ~r.r:ytiiq~&~ · · -dliding women ~ children, were llillod. (A -Vnited Press lntema• ttGMl·report: said at least .six were killed.) ' Heavy fighting raged along the Suez Canal, where Israel sai~ its troops limited three Egyptian a r m o r bridgeheads to an advance of up to five mites into the occupied Sinai, and in I.he Golan Heights, where Syrian troops were reported counterattacking after being thrown back. The military command said the Egyp- tians were continuing to reinforce their advance columns in the Sinai across bridges linking them with the west bank of the waterway despite intense aerial OOmbardments. After two overnight Arab guerrilla probes and three guerrillas shelling at· tacks · against villages from Lebanon, government sources said Lebanon was warned by Israel to stay out of the war and keep the guerrillas out, too. On the seas, the command said three Egyptian missile boats were sunk by the Israeli navy off the Nile delta in the Mediterranean while two E g y p t i an missile boats were hit in the Ras Muhammad region of the l{ed Sea by Israeli \i\:arplanes. * * * * * * Polish Embass y Struck As Israel Bombs Syria · JOEIDAll. Syria (AP) -Tbe bombing of Damascus by ... Israeli Phantom jets to- day "was a tetrible tragedy that killed many civilians," said Polish diplomatic evacuees leaving Syria after •heir em- bassy was damaged during the raid. said ht saw many houses damaged, in- cluding the Soviet cultural center and a building occupied by Soviet military ad- visers which Was damaged by a near miss. William S. Lund, 42, president of the Califom1a Institute of the Arts at V,alen- cia and resident or Hancock Park, was elected at today's board meeting in Newport Center, Newport Beach. "11le struggle facm5 us may not be an " easy one," he said. 1be CBS report came from Dean Brelis in Damascus, who said he ~w children's bodies in the rubble. Re said the Israeli aircraft in- flicted tremendous damage. ' "[ saw so many dead and wounded it was terrible," said Mrs. Marta Servic, the wile of a Polish embassy official. Judge Admits IB M Suit Error Lund's appoinbnent brings the seven- member board to its fuJI strength for !he fll'6t time 'since Muon's death in June. Raymond L. Walloo who already was a member ol the board suceeeded Mr. MR!On as president of the f1nn in Sep- IE!nber .. Boord Chairman J°"1 v.' Newman an- I*JDCed Lund's· appointment, describing him as one of tbe "most higlily qualified real estate investment and research men in the country." -Newman said Lund "brings to the• board extensive ~nee in corporate management and financing.'' Among the impressive list of clients for whom Lund bas had ''primary respOll:libility" are Walt Disney Produc- tions (initiators of the Cal Arts, Valencia cimpus), "the Aga Kahn, Ford Motor Company, Ka.iaer Alwninum a n d Olemlcal •Compeny, Castle and Cooke and Newball Land and Farming Com· pany. From 1960 to 1972, Lund was execuU.-e vice president of Economics Reaearcb As>oclal<s with respooslblllties Io r organz!nc and developing the firm's real estate and urban economic program. For ERA Lund '10> -ed oorporate merger and acquisition studies. In 19'12, Lund said, 1be lrustees· ol the Ca!Uornla Institute of the Arts asked him to tempararily serve. as President of the !Ste DmECl'OR, Page I> Or_,e (;oast • Weder ll'll be clear and sunny Wedne£. day, with some~tiat cooler t.em• peratures along the Or~e .Coast. Hight ol 85' at the l>eiclleS will rile to dilly 70 Inland. Overnigllt lows Sli. INSW E TODA l' " Losh LaRue, tMott whip at1d ti% gun onct punta:lM!d movie bdd auu1, i1 no10 a Florida eoon'at· list whtppitiQ dn.mkl into line tofth tht help of minionary Joh.n 3:16 Coo.t:-Stt stofl(. Page 11. • l..M. ..... ' ·-" (tl\Mnilt • MirNM ''"""" 'I ClaMlfltill ,..,, NtllMI! r"-<-· " Ott-.e (-IY • < ........ " ·-... _ ... _ • SMCt Mtfhtl 1•1S -·-• Tele'fl.-" •11ttn•IMMlll " '""'" " ·-, .. ,. w.-' .......... _. • .,__,, ..... ,,.,. -" -·-• AMl......,t " FILLS VACANT SEAT New Director, Lund "Israel's aim is not only to return to the old cease-fire lines where fighting started, but to •insure that Israel won't stand befQre similar problems in the future," he told the nation. "The stopping action is concluding suc- cess!ully," he said. "With the initiative now in our hands, lhe attrition phase has begun. I would not be lulled into believing this can be an easy and very rapid opera- tioq." "A substantial part of the Egyptian army has already been destroyed," he said, "while the full force of the Israeli army....has not been committed." A communique said returning pilots reported "good hit(' on stfikes ~to Syria against the army and air force command outside Damascus as well as refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north near Homs. The objective in Lebanon, the first target there in the renewed war, was identified as · a radar station serving the * * * Presi.dent Stepping Vp Mi.deast Peace Efforts By HELE~ THOMAS WASlilN<;iTON (UPI) -President Nixon stepped up diplomatic efforts to- day to halt the Mideast fighting -"now going on lt such terrible costs" -and to Jay the groundwork to prevent the Arab- Israeli conflict Crom "breaking out over and over again." Nixon· made the observations in welcom.ipg .a.West African leader, Presi- dent Felix Houphouet-Boigny, to the White House tor·talks. The President said that he hoped that their discussions "can contribute to the end ol the fighting now going an at such ttrrible costs In the A.fiddle East" The problem. Nixon said, Is not just to stop the fighting but to lay the 'groundwork for preventing conflict in I.be Middle East ''from breakin~out over and over aglin'' as it has for 25 years. Ending the present fighting is the first ordtr but "building a permanent atruc- ture ol. peace" li the ultimate aim, the President said. The President was briefed on the Mideast by SccrotaTY. of State Henry A. Kissinger . A "special actlM group" or U.S. ex- perts on the P.Udeast also met to assess the situation. Nixon's personal diplomacy, in talks with the leader of a Moslem COllntry that has diplomatic relations with lsrael, followed disclosure that he was seeking broad international support -including the Soviet Union and mainland China - for a Middle East cease-fire. · . The White House said Nixon soon after the outbreak of fighting initiated an ex· change of messages with Soviet Com· munist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev through diplomatic channels, and that Kissinger conferred during tbe weekend with HuM' Oleo, chief of Peking's liaison mission here. Newport Chess Club Will Elect Officers 'Mle Newport Beach Chess Club will bold its regular Wednesday night meeting this week to elect its first ~t of -club offlctrs. Following thC short business session, club members will break down into in· formal tndlvidual matches and internal club competitions. New members are welcome 3t the 7 p.m. meeting in the cafeteria of Ensi&n School, 2000 Cliff Drive, Newport Beech. Irvine Firm Joins in Saving Life of Child By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1111 OtllY f'lllt Jltft Quick work by an Irvine pharmaceutical company and the Costa Mesa police helicopter crew hu saved the life of a stricken child half a world away from America. Officials of Allergan Phannaceuticals, 2525 Dupont Drive, have announced the recovery of the child in cape Town. South Africa, after checking an its progress. The infant, stricken with an extremely rare infection about two weeks ago, needed a special drug not immediately available in Africa at the time. Idoxuridine is its name and it ls com- monly used to treat such a oommon and mundane infection as herpes simplex, or simple cold sores caused by a virus. The drug appears to be effective, however, in treatment of measles en- cephalitis. a brain inflammation which is extremely infrequent but often fa~l when it occurs. Allergan F Pharmaceuticals spokesman Barry Ackerman researched the ailment through the World Health Organization and found it is very uncommon. "The numbre of ca~ would probably be less than hair a 'ifdlen in the United States annually," he said. adding that measles encephalitis only occurs in one among every 10,000 measles cases. He said the death rate when it occurs is 10 to 50 pereent. 'The number of cases would probably American health authorltJes do-not ac. cept the drug idoxuridine as a counter agent to fight the affliction. Ackennan said it Is classed curre11tly as an investigational drug, meaning It "'OUld require controlled testing beCore it was confirmed safe 8.nd effective. South Aliican doctors do accept ft , however, and physicians attending the stricken child two weeks ago called the Allergan firm to appeal for a swift ship- ment by direct airline. Company spokesmen raced a plentlflll !JUpply of idoxuridine to Orange County Airport, Where it was Jo.a:ded aboard the waiting Costa Mesa Police helicopter. Pilot Jim Wagner and observer OfCicer Dick Bersch delivered it directly to the United Air Lln~s tc.nnlnal at Los Angeles lntemallonal Alrport with a few minutes to spare after getting the drug shipment a half·hoor before the UAL flight takeoff time. She was one of 20 Polish women and children of embassy families ""'ho arrived at this border post three hours after the raid on downtown Damascus. Many were· still deeply shocked. 1be Polish ambassador to Damascus, Stefan Bozhym, was slightly injured by flying glass,,said embassy first secretary S. Jlodorek, who was accompanying the evacuees. He said all the doors and windows or the embassy building, also used as residential quarters of the staff, were blown in by a bomb that hit an adjacent house. 1be embassy is in one of the higb-ctass districts of Damascus and across the street from the Swiss Embassy. Hodorek Ri poff Proof? · TULSA, Okla. (AP) -A federal judge said today he made a "subBtantial error" in setting damages in his antitrust ruling against: International Business ~1achines Corp. and would decide on amending his order or granting a new trial next Tues- day. In the ruling last month. U.S. District Court Judge A. Sherman Christensen held that IBM, world's largest computer manufacture r, was 1 monopolizing the computer accessory field. He ordered IBfi.1 to pay the Telex Corp. $352.5 mil- lion . Any bicycle thief would ·lhink twice before lalching onlo this bike, parked on Balboa Island's ~1arine Avenue. The cyclist removed the front Ure and chained both it and the bike ton light po!il · l I • . • N Joint Meet May Resolve 'Spyglass' A joint meeting with Newport-l\1csa Unified School district trus~es might clear up 1nislmdcrstandings over the Spyglass lhll boundary di spute, Irvine school ofricials said ~londay. Slan Corey. superintenden t of the Irvine t:nified School District. said the is5Uc has bccon1e muddled aDQ. needs clarliication. Corey suggested that Irvine trustees <'J)'llore the idea of meeting face-to-face with their Newport-P.1esa counterpam. lr.'ine tn.istees Sept. 18 made ao offtt to resolve the boundary question in- volving the Spyglass Hill and Harbor View Homes-Bren tracts in Newpon Beach. Portions of those tracts are in the Irvine district and children living there might have to be bused seven miles to attend Irvine schools even though there are Ne"'):lOrt-~lcsa schools within v;alking distant-e. Jr~·iue District trustee3 said they'd give up the homes in e:tchange for the North Fo rd a nd Phil co -Ford in· dustrial-commercial property in Newport Beach. Part of that pare.I, bounded by Ford Road, Jamboree Road and A1acArt.hur Boulevard, is already in the Irvine District. What the difference is in the assessed valuation of the two 200-acre properties is causing the breakdown in com- munication between the two school districts. Newport-Mesa school officials say, cut· renUy, the Philco-Ford property is assessed at about $9.3 million and the homes at $5 million. Superintendent Corey told I r v i n e trustees Monday that local developers estimate the assessed valuation of the Spyglass-Bren tracts when completed will reach $22 million. Using the current figures, Corey said, doesn't take into account how qui ckly Ule residential area is growing. He didn't say how much the North Ford industrial prop- erty may ultimately be worth. , Irvine tru steQS didn't act on Corey's suggestion of a possible joint session. They have expressed concern that the problem be solved before the district starts bearing the burden of busing children long distances. Coast Mideast Travelers Stage Early Exodus A party o( 85 lloly Land , visitors - many from the Orange Coa!t -were starting an early exodus from Israel tcr day after being stranded by the latest Middle East war. The group including the Rev. Chuck Smith. pastor of popular Calvary Chapel at 3800 S. Fairview Road. Santa Ana, was reported en route from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv by bus today. "They will board planes there." said a spokesman for the nondenominational church. Friends and relath·es haYe been keep- ing the church switchboard tied up al length \vith queries about the status of the visitors' stay and also their safety. Church officials spoke with the pastor's wi fe, Mrs. Kay Smith, about l l p.m. (PDT) Sundav and she assured them no one was in direct danger as a result or the renewed combat between Arabs and Israelis. The group is among an estimated 30,000 to 35,000 tourists in Israel for Yom Kippur, the highest holy days of the Hebrew faith, a period of increased visitation to the Holy Land. I. church spokesman said a list of local members of the party would be released if it was cleared by CaJvary Chapel's assistant pastor. OU.N~I COAST fll DAILY PILOT Tl!• 0<•"111 Cou! 0,t,llY PllOl, '"ltll .... kll 11 t-1-lne N•WJ·"'"., I• puOll......,. b'f "'-0•1n.,. ,.,.,t Publithll'Q Co"'!Mnr '- ••I• MJlllO'lt ltl -llJ~..i. 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CffYtiogM •-r. ~ ti.u "'"'•" a.141 11 C0\11 M1u, Ct lH>it•11i.. Sllbl<:•!•llon W <"'•ie• n .1t fl*'l!~l'l'I W -II U .IJ -t~l'l'I lllJllt.,., •tlM!-ltlol ,,,,.,.,.,IV, ( Tutsd;1.y, Oc.tobfr 9, 1971 Plant E~pcinsion Busi~ess, Labor Backing Edison An Orange Counly <'J)-1lition o f businesamea and labor leaders Is urging full support for l'xpanslon of Southern Callfomla Edison's lluntington Beach power plant. Nixon w Use Cartoon Mutt In Campaign WASHINGTON (AP ) - With the Mid- dle East war casting new shadows over U.S. fuel imports, the Nixon ad· ministration enlisted the c a r t o o n character Snoopy today as the symbol for a massive campaign to conserve ener&r supplies. President Nixon · reeeived a citizens advisory committee report on ways the public can help ease predicted fuel shortages this winter. In addition, top Administration officials gave Nixo n reports on how the govern· ment and private industry arc moving to c:ooserve energy supplies. 'Mle national energy conservation cam· paign will seek to cut energy con· sumption by 5 percent this winter. Among the steps outlined were: -Adoption of cartoonist Charles M. Sdlultz's character, 'Snoopy," has a sym· bol for a "SavEnergy" campaign with distribution of advertisements to the media and energy conservation kits to the nation's school.!. -Widescale distribution of energy· saving hints to consumers, iocludlng a suggestion that home thermostats be lowered by four degrees this winter to save 400,000 barrels of oil a day -the estimated amotmt of the winter's heating oil shortage. -An extensive program to promble energy conservation by the business conunwllty, and continued steps by federal, state and local governments to cut energy consumption. Henry L. Diamond. a New York State envlroumental agency officia1 and head or the citizens' advisory com mittee which met with Nixon. said citizen action is essential t.o the success of any program to reduce energy consumption. In an introduction to a booklet titled "Citizen Action Guide to E n erg Y Conservation," Diamond said, "the time has oome for Americans to reassess their use of energy." Irvine Council Views Addition To . Tax Revenue A 121-acre addition to the Irvine Industrial Complex {llC) -which may be worth $500.000 a year in additiooal ta x revenue to the Irvine Unified School District -faces city council action t<>nlght . . Councilmen meet at 7:30 m city hall, 4201 Campus Drive. The rezoning increases the sch~\ district's share of the 3,000-acre 1n· dust.rial development which lies in the ci· ty of Irvine. Only about 600 acres of the present IIC is taxed by the Irvine school district When the Jrville Unified district "·as formed, the industrial complex was divided between ttle new Irvine and Tustin Unified districts. Other industrial land within the city of Jrvine has historically been part of the Newport· Mesa and Santa Ana Unified School Districts. The tax revenue estimate is included in an environmental Impact r e p o r t prepared by Williamson and Schmid Engineers of Santa Ana . The total school tax revenue is based on current tax rates applied to an estimated $380,000 per acre value of the Industrial property once it is occupied by manufacturing firms. The same tax base "'ould produce cily taxes totaling $423,396 but city services of $213.750 a YJ?ar would mean the in· creased zoning would add only $209,640 to city coffers, the EIR consultants suggest. Councilmen also will be asked to air prove a fast-food service center. in an area of the llC known as Sky Park Cir· cle. 'l'he Orange County Councl1 for Environment. Employment, Economy and Develapmt"nt (CEE~D) is urging Its membership to fill the llW1Ungton Beach Council chambers for ll'fonday night's public hearing on Edison expansion. Peter J. Remmel, president of CEEED and secretary-treasurer of the Orange County Central Labor Council, i.s.sutd a two-page "alert" telling CE EE D members how to help the £dj900 project. In bis letter, Remmel .suggest,, that members do the following: -Appear at the council bearing' and speal<. -Encourage others to do ~ same. -Make sure workers who live in Hlll'l· .tington Beach show·up and speak up. -Encourage cities,. chambers and real ty boards to sotllld off. -Call and encourage others. Remmel also provides a complete list or the seven-member city council with each councilman's home phone number. To underscore the need for Edi.son sup- port, Remmel writes: "It.is just damned foolishness to take down your umbrella in the belief the rain will then stop -and it's just as foolish to deny JDOre power in the belief that people will stop pro~ agating and migrating." Remmel aJso lists four groups of peo- ple he believes are against Edison's pro- posed l300 million expansion project. -"Local folks who are fearful of more local pollution. -''Environmentalists: who believe more power means more of everything, including pollution , in Orange County. -"Zero growth advocates: wbo believe that if they can help produce an elec- ~cal sbortage, people will stop coming l<i Orange County and some already here will have to move away. -"Bad guys -there are a few woo' just want to slop America and the best way, short of war, is to stop its life blood -power-energy." He also list! several arguments to use in favor oi' Edison expansion, including the fact Huntington Beach originally ask· ed Edison to locate its first power plant in the beach area. "We appreciate the position ol Hun· tington Be.sch residents, but no com· munity has just all tbe esthetically pleasing elements within its c i t y borders." \\'Tiles Remmcl. "Each has some of the gOod and some of the necessary. In 'most cases, tbe reSldents are well aware of each before they move I.here." , Remmel writes that power ts also needed to clean up the environment and he argues "if people keep corning and we keep having babies, we face a worse en· vironment by followin' present denial demands of extremists. ' The public hearing is scheduled during the council's regu)ar 7 p.m. session, Moo. day. Environmental groups, led by the Sier· ra Club, are also expected to have their supporters ready for Mooday's bearing. Despite the massing of speakers on both .sides of the issue, Mayor JerT)' Mat· ney has already warned that be will limit the debate to one hour for those favoring expansion and one hour for those op- posed. Edison officials are expected to take up half the itme allotted for the pro-ex· pansion side. North Finishes Second in Star World Title Race Lowell North of San Diego made a strong bid for his fourth world cbam· pionship in the International Star Class 1'fonday by finishing second in the first race of the 5lst annual Star "world's" at San Diego. His chances would have been even stronger had he not chosen the wrong side of the IS.mile course "'here he got caught In a radical windshift. North "'as leading the pack \hrough five IC'gs of the six-leg Olympic course \vhen the shift crune. He still finished sec· ond behind Henry Howan ()f Rancocas, N.J. John McCausland of Cherry Hill, N.C:, finished third. · ' More than 60 entries from all over the world are competing in the ~d Star Regatta which continues throughout the week. U.S. Poised Marines on Ships Off Mideast WASHINGTON (AP) -A helicopter carrie r with about 2,00() fl1arlnes aboard is sailing in the eastern ft1editerranean Sea, the Pentagon said today. The amphibious assault ship Guadalcanal joins a !>Sk force led by the aircraft carrier Independence in fwledite rranean waters rousih· ly 500 mUes off the coast of Israel. . But the Guadalcanal, which could ho used to evacuate Ameri· cans if the new fighting endangered them, is operating independen~ ly or 111e Independence . Pentagon spoke!iman Jerry \V . Friedheim declined to ·give the Guadalcanal's precise location or to speculate on the possibility or evacuatlon or thousands of Americans. The Guadalcanal carries approximately 30 helicopters which could be used to lift Americans from endangered ohore point" - • Pilings Replaced ~Hy Piiot lttff.Plll'll l Workmen replace pilings next to Coast Highway Bridge over Newport Bay. The pilings support a 24- inch water main that crosses the bay at the bridge. Pilings were sunk in 1952 and have deteriorated, f ") according to city officials. The $4,800 job Is being .! carried out by Submarine Engineering Inc. of New· port Beach and should be finished by the end or . this week, city olfici$ said. i Here's an Updated Lineup PR.;'Ji'[;~: ! l'(.Sidence, at least for the first year. i Of Irvine Company Board "l can't say what is going to happen 10 years from now," he sitid. "Nobody can. But right now, it is our intent to use it as _a single family borne; Since Jtme when Jong-time chairman of the Irvine Company Board of Dtrectnrs N. Loyall McLaren stepped down, a num- ber of changes in membership of the board have occurred. Here Is a listing of the current dlrec· tors and the positions they filled: -John V. Newman, 63-year-old rancher from VentW"a has been on the Irvine Company board since 1967. He succeeds McLaren as chairman. -Raymond L Watsoa, 47-rear-old president of the company, hves in Rebozo Faces Watergate Fund Quiz WASHINGTON (UPll~ -A Senate Watergate committee investigator has questioned Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo about 1 rtportl ,be ·"" a conduit .for $100,000 in cash coiic.rtbutions to Presi· dent Niton from billionaire Howard Hughes, it was disclOled today. (Related story, Page 3.) Sen. U>well P. Weieker (R-Olnn.), !<lid reporters be would like to have both Rebozo, one of Nixon's cl0&est friends. and Hughes, the recluse 'IVbo bas not betn seen in public in two decades, called to testify before the committee. Terry Lenzner, a commiUee in- vestigator, int.erviewed Rebozo in Florida this week. committee sources said. Under 'investigatioo is a report by a former Hughes aide that Richard Dan· ner, an agent of Hughes, gave Reboro $100,000 in two installments of $50,000 each -all in SlOO bills in 1969 and 1970. Lenzner interviewed Danner in August in Las Vegas, committee aides said. ':hey said Rebozo's bank records had been subpoenaed. He is head of a bank <it Key Biscayne, Fla. Rebozo was characterized as being cooperative when Interviewed by Lenmer but tbere were no details on what he had to say. · There have been unsuc~essful attempts ln the past to .subpoena Hughes before congressional panels. Eastbluff. A member d the board since 1970, be replaced tile late 'William R. Mason aa president. -Boward P. Allea, 48-ye&N>ld ex· eculive oi Southern Calllomia Edison Company, WU elected .t<l the board in Jtme, filling the vacancy on the board created by McLaren 's resignation. -M. Keltb Gaede, 37-year-old pres!. dent of San Joaquin Associates and resl4 dent of Irvine Cove. He joined the board in 1966. -Mn. Atballe (Joan Irvine) Smith, 4().year-old housewUe and equestrienne ol Middleburg, Va., and Emerald Bay. The QWner of 22 ~rcent of.the .company stock has served on the board since 1957. -Charles S. Wheeler, SS.year-old COT· porate secretary and president of the company subsidiary Flying D Ranch in Montana lives in Newport Beach. He has been a company director since 1959. -WUllam S. Lund, 4Z.year-old real estate investment and research con- sul tant of Hancock Par~. Los Angeles, was named today to fill the vacancy created by the death of William R. Mason. · Frot1t r_,e 1 DIRECTOR ..• Visual and performing arta Institution recently opened in Valencia. He is chairman of the board of Ter· ramia, a. real estate investment com· pany. A 1956 graduate of Stanford University, Lund has studied bu.sines& adminiatr.ation at UCLA and served four yean as in· dustrial economi.rt for Stanford Research Institute. Lund is married to the fonner Shat.on Disney and serves as a trus~ of the · Walt Disney. Foundation .as well as the Marlborough School Foundation. He is a director of the following businesses: California Financial Con>.; Security Savings and Loan Associat!On ; First Los Angeles Bank; K JOE television, Fresno; KOGO radio, San Diego; ReUaw Enterprise.s, Inc. and Sterling Mortgage C«npany. He is active in Big Brothers of Lo:; Angele3, the Loo Angeles OJamber of Commerce and Town Hall "'Ole one-plex has seven bedrooms, a living room, a dining room, a kitchen, and the largest house bar in West Newport," said Liddle. 'I1le bar was originally Intended 8! a downstairs kitchen. It will have a sink, but no stove or re!rigerator. ' "ObViously, Ibis building coold be con- verted lnto a duplex without too much trouble," said Liddle. "But as long as the coastal commission says we can't do it, we won't do it." · ·However Liddle is angry about the restrictions placed on his building. "I voted for Prop. 20,"· Liddle said, "and J still think it's a good law but it wasn't meant to supersede local zoning in this way. "l am confident that the Supremt. Court will eventually uphold this posi· tion." Jn the meantime, staff of tile coastal commissjon will watch the project close· ly. • "Jn some ways,•·lhis project 'is similar to '1!0thei" project wi:'ttlmed down," aaid Melvin Carpenter, executive director ()f the CG&Stal commission. That other project attracted great local notority in the Malibu area when a builder ptoposed a "single family home" that Included four kitchens and numerous bedrooms. Carpenter said that the West Newport project was approved because the builder seems sincere in his intention to use it as a single family home. But Carpenter said he was aware of the potential problems with the West Newport house and that tb.: staff would be watching it carefully. Newpo1't Burglar Gets Bowling Ball The burglar who decided to strike a Newport Beach woman's car parked near a Costa ~fesa bowling alley Monday afternoon picked up a spare bowling ball . Dolores B. Hillyard, 544 Vista Grande, left the coffee shop at 1700 Placentia Ave .• to !inti her 14 pound bowling ball and 11 stereo tapes missing. She listed the loss at t145. ADVANTAGE-ALDEN'S One hu9e advanta9• Alden's has over most carpet stores is that we have our own iMtallers, providing flexibility end reliobilily in scheduling instollations. Very few department stores or specialty carpet stores have the ir own workrooms, and must rely on en outside c on tr• ct strvice for inst1ll1tions. We have hod mony people buy from us after being disappointed by an inslollotion compony who scheduled • job a_nd didn't show up or coll. Sometimes, this hos heppened lwo or thrH times before the customer gives up. At Alden's, our installation schedule is operoted very efl"iciently, encl even when our men are held up on • previous job causing 1 late st1rt1 our men will stay end finish. If you went reliobility-cell us I ALDEN'S C.ARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•ntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIU1 M.,. 11irw Tloon., t to· l•JO -I'll, t IO t -SAT., t :JO to 5 ' " .,_ I I I I I ' I I , I ., . I I I I / I ,.I ) I l I ! I I • • VOL 66, NO. 282, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES Israeli ' ' • JDEIDAH, Syria (AP) -The bom"bing of Damascus by Israeli Phantom jets tc>- day "was a terrible tragedy that ldlled many civilians/' said Polish diplomatic evacuees leaving Syria after their em-tiassl' was damaged during the raid. "I saw so many dead and wounded It w~ terrible," said 'Mrs. Matta Servic~ the wife·of a Polish.embassy ~fficial. Sbe was ohe of 20 Polish women and children of embassy families who arrived at this border post three hours after the Bombs raid on downtown Oamascua. Many were still deeply lhocked. The Polish ambauador to Damascus, Stefan Bozhym, was sllghUy injured by flying glass, said embassy first secretary S. Hodorek, who was accompanying the eva~. · He said all the doors and windpws of the embassy building, also used as ~mtial .-quarten of the staff, were blo'itn in by a bomb that bit an adjacent house. • Today~s Fiiiai -N.Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1973 c TEN CENTS I( ill Civilians 1be embassy is in one of the high-class districts of Damascus and acnw the street from the Swiss Embassy. Hodorek said be saw many houses damaged, in- cluding lhe Soviet cultural ctnter and a building occupied by Soviet military ad- visers which was damaged by a near miss .. Hodorek added that Syria's generaJ military headquarters, the nearby air force headquarters and a lar11e school building between the, two were heavily * • • damaged. The school bad been readied as a war hosplta1, as have other schools in Damascus, Hodorek said, but n o casualties had been moved inside any or them. . it was the first reported air raid over the capitals of any of the three countries · fighting in the fourth Arab-lsr'ae1i war. Syria immediately threatened retaliation. The Israeli jets left several bomb craters in the large square in front of the in ,Damascus? Defense P.tinislry on the eastern fringe of the city. P.tany residents flattened themse lves to the ground as the raid brought the new t.t.iddle East war home to th is ancient Syrian capital. Bystanders watched as more than a half a dozen ambulances evacuated dead and wounded from the heavily damaged ministry and the radio station on the other side of the street. Three of Israel's U.S.-buUt Phantoms swooped low over 1he city and dropped their bombs. As they veered off and headed for Israeli lines, a Syrian MIG%1 ""'heeled in puriult. It fired no shots ~·ithin sight of the ci· ly. But Damascus radio said four Israeli Phantoms were shot do""'n by Syrian air defenses duriri.g the rai4. "Israel will have to bear !he con- sequences," said the radio in a broadcast apparently made from e m e r g e n c y facilities. • srae om Ill ear ,.__....a1ro Judge Ad111its ~Fiercest' . ·• IBM to Get Neiv Chance After $352 Million Action Battles Rage On Ground TU!SA, Qkla. (UP!) -A federal judge said today he erred in sla pping the International Business Machine Corp. with a $35%.5 million judgment. He said he would either change his decision or grant mM a new trial. In an order fded in Tulsa federal court, U.S. District Judge A. Sb er man <llristensen ol Salt Lake Qty said he would decide at an Oct. 16 hearing bow to alter the judgment against the giant <:'timputer finn. :· The judge said his computaUon of an-! · titrust daniages aSWISed against IBM was in error. Jn bis original decision, Christensen granted the Tulsa-based Telex Corp., a. small peripheral co m pet I t or , ap- proximately ooe-third or the suit 't filed , charging IBM with "predatory" business tactles designed to force com- petitors oot of the market. He also granted JBM $21.9 million in its i11dustrial espionage countersilit against Telex. Today's order bad no effect on that judgment against Telex. · "I ha ve concluded that triy oom- ptitation or antitrust damages 3gainst IBM involved substantial e r r or , ' ' Christensen said. "Accordingly, deren- dant's motion to amend findings. con- clusions and jUdgmeols, or in tbe alternative, for' a new trial oo"the issue of.dlmace ii hereby~.~ '.·j Real . Estate Consultant Takes Irvine Board Seat Irvine Co'mpany directors to d a y selected a Los Angeles real estate in· vestment and research consultant to fill the vacancy on the board created by the death of former company president Wliilam 'R. Mason. William S. LluKI, 42, president of the California Institute of the Arls at Valen- cia and resident of Hancoc.t Park, was elected at today's board meeting in Newport Center, Newport Beach. Lund's appointment brings the seven- member board to its full strength for ~he lirst time since Mason's death in June. Rayroond L. Watson who already was a member of the board succeeded Mr. Mason as president of the firm in Sep- I<mber. Board Chairman John V. Newman an- nounced Lund's appointment, describing him as one of the "most highly qualified real estate investment and research men in the country." Newman said Lund "brings to the board extensive experience in corporate management and fmancing." Among the impressive list of clients for whom Lund has bad ''primar y responsibility" are Walt Disney Produe-' lions (lniUators of the Cal Arts, Valencia campus), the Aga Kahn, Ford Motor O»npany, Kaiser Aluminum a n d Qiemical Company, Casile and Cooke ) ' IS.. DIRECTOR, Page Z) Oraag~ Coast • • Weather It'll be clear and sunny Wednes- day, with somewhat cooler tern· peratures along the Orange Coast. Highs or 65 at the beaches will rise to only 70 inland. Overnight lows 5S. INSWE TODAY Lcuh LaRue, whose whip o:nd 1iz gun once punis lied movte bad · guys, ia now a Fl-Orida euange. lil& whipping drutikl into line with the help of mi1sionary Joh.n 3:16 Cook. Stt noru, Paa• 11. FILLS VACANT SEAT Ntlw Director Lund Housing.Panel Slates Meeting In Costa Mesa Costa Mesa residents concerned with various aspects of local housing may of· fer their views Wednesday night at a public hearing of the Citizens' Housing Committee. The advisory panel will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the multi-purpose room of the Mesa Verde Elementary School, 2990 Mesa Verde Dnve West. Committee Ql8irman Joan Margol said the panel ls particularly Interested in ~ broad cammunity viewpoints On low cost homing, new concepts ln land use and regional planning and redeVclop- ment to combat urbaQ llUght. Speakers are asked to limit lhclr dlstustlon time to five minutes and .urg· ed to submit duplicate copJes of their viewpoints to simplify lhC p...,... of compiling a act of recom~UOM. ~ t.>uslng committee will aubrnlt Ill r.ndlngs to the planning commilllon and aly council for Possible action. ; - "The particular action in this respect will be determined at the bearings ~ presently set for Oct. 16 . • • together with the other matters presently calendared for that date." Attorneys for the two corporations had been told the order would be issued. in Tulsa federal court today, but did 001 know the substance or his statement. He ordered both firms to contact the New York Stock Exchange and have their stocks removed from trade when the market opened today. The attorneys said the order did not anive in the first morning mail, and at that point they called Christensen in Salt Lake City and be read the order to U>em over the telepime, , Mesa Helicopter Joins Effort To Save Child By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of l'llOI Dt11¥ Piiot lttff Quick work by an Irvine pharmaceutical company and the Costa Mesa police helicopter crew has saved the Ufe of a stricken child half a world away·from America. Officials of Allergan Pbannaceuiicals, 1525 Dupont Drive, have announced the recovery ot tbe child in cape Town, South Africa, after checking on its progress. The infant, stricken with an extremely rare infection about two weeks ago, needed a special drug not immediately available in Africa at the time. Idoxuridine is its name and It is com- monly used to treat such a common and mundane infection as herpes simplex, or simple cold sores caused by a virus. The drug appears to be effective, however, in treatment of measles en- cephalitis, a brain inflammation which is extremely infrequent but often fatal when it occurs. Allergan Pharmaceuticals spokesman BaIT)' Ackerman researched the ailment through the World Health Organizatioo and found it is very uncommOIL "The numbre of cases would probably be le" than haU a dozen in the United Slates amually,'' he said, adding that measles encephalitis only occurs in ooe among every 10,000 measles cases. He said tbe death rate when it occurs is 10 to 50 percent. 'The number of cases would probably American health authorities do not ac- cept the drug idoxuridine as a counter agent to fight the aflliction. Ackerman said it is classed currently as an investigational drug, meaning it would require cootrolled testing before it was confirmed safe and effective. South African doctors do aceept it, however, and physicians attending the stricken child two weeks ago called the Allergan f1tm to appeaJ for a swift ship- ment by direct airline. Company spokesmen raced a plentiful supply of idoxutidine to Orange C.OUOty Airport, where it was loaded aboard tte waiting Costa Mesa Police helicopter. Pilot Jim Wagner and observer Officer Dick Bersch delivered It di~y to the Unlted A1r Lines tennlnal at Los Angeles International Airport with a few minutes to spare after getti~ the drug shipmen~ a ball·lilur belOn! the UAL ntghl takeoff time. Allergan officials said by regular • rtelgbt shipping procedures It cciold have betn two weeks befou the dl'l!g reachod th~ crlllcally Ill patient. .. The idoxuridine WtlS novm from Loi Angeles to London and \hen to cape Town. , Ripoff Proof"/ Any bicycle thief would think twice before ·1atching ontp this bike, parked on Balboa Island's ·Marine Avenue. The cyclist removed the front tire and chained both i t and the bike to a light post. President Stepping· Up Mideast Peace Efforts By HELEN THOMAS WASlllNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon stepped uo diplomatic efforts tc>- day to halt the Mideast fighting -"now going on ;.t such terribl.e costs" -and to Jay the groundwork to prevent the Ara~ Israeli conflict from "breaking out over and over· again." Ni.Ion made the observations in welcoming a West African leader, Presi- dent Felix Houphouet·Boigny, to the White House for taJks. The President slid that be hoped that their discussions "can contribute to the Information Set Straig lit Costa Mesa Municipal Com· munications Director 0 r v i 11 e Amburgey Is filling in as Infonna- tlon Operator. For your. information, he says, a new prefix for dialing all city telephones will go into effect Nov. 3, not immediately, as a story In the Daily Pilot lncor~y in- dicated , last Friday. 1 • BegiMing Nov. 3, you must dial 550 lnstl?ad of 834 as a prefix. Rcglllar fou~igit city hall and police department numbers remain the &Ame. The same prerix will be used beginning at lh.it same time for orana:e Coast College numbers. .. - end of the fighting oow going on at such terrible costs in the P.tiddle East." The problem, Nixon said, is not j11St to stop the fighting but to lay lhe groundwork for preventing conflict in the Middle East "from breakin!i out over and over again" as it has for 15 years. Ending the present fighting is the first order but "building a pennanent struc· ture of peace" is the ultimate aim, the President said. The President was briefed on the 1t1ideast by Secretary of Slate Henry A. Kiss inger. A "special action group" of U.S. ex· perts on the Mideast also met to assess the situation. Nixon's personal diplomacy, in talks "'ilh the leader of a Moslem country that has diplomatic relations with Israel, followed disclosure that he was set!king broad international support -including the Soviet Union and mainland Cllina - for a Middle East""\ease-flre. The White House \aid Nixon soon aftt:r the outbr~k of flgh tiifg initiated an ex· change of messages with Soviet Com- munist party ·leader Leonid I. Brezhnev lhrough diplomatic chaMels, and th11t Kissinger conferred durinf the .... -eckend with Huang Chen. chic of Peking's lilllson mission here. The general lines of U.S. policy urgi.1g return of Israeli, Egyptian and Syria n focees to positions they held before the righting began Salurday emerged Mon· day as 11 half-dozen SC11aton. on a nearly empty Senllte Ooor. adopted by voice vote a Middle E~t peaee resolution purporting to s_pcak ror the entire Senal:!. ' • TEL AVIV (UPI) - Israeli warplanes struck at targets deep inside Syria and Egypt today, bombing Egyptian airfields near Cairo and attacking Syrian military headquarters outside Damascus, a military spokesman said. A radar station in Lebanon also was hit. .. As the 1973 Middle East war went Into KUWAIT URGES ARAB OIL CONFERENCE, Pago 14 U.S. JEWS RAISE MILLIONS FOR WAR, P•go 4 U.N. COUNCIL FAILS IN CEASE-FIRE BID, P•go 4 it.s fourth day, the spokesman rewrfed Syria was using Soviet·SUpplied "F~" surfac:e-lc>-surface missiles capable ot carrying a 1,006-pound warhead 44 miles against villages deep inside Israel. He de~ribed losses in the settlements as light. On the groond, Israeli troops were reported lighting Egyptian and Syrian :ormor in what one veteran w~tness said ·,,,.ere "some ol the fiercest battles" in the nation's 25--year history. Citizens on lhe home front were told to expect hard going ahead in lbe "at- trition" phase of the war. "A military spokesman told Israelis lo a nationwide broadcast that fighting bas been .. very bitter and bloody." "The struggle facmg us may not be an easy one." he said. "Israel's aim is not only to return to the old cease-fire lines where fighting started, but to insure that Israel won 't stand before similar problems in the future." he told the nation. "The stopping action is concluding suc- cessfully," he said. "With the initiative now in our hands, the attrition phase has be_gul). J would not be luned 'into believing this can be an easy and very rapid opera· lion." "A substantial part of the Egyptian army has already been destroyed," he said, "while lhe full force of thi!: Israeli army bas not been committed." A commwiique said returning pilots reported "good hits" on strikes into Syria against the army and air force command outside Damascus as well as refineries and power plants 100 miles to the north near Homs. The objective in Lebanon. the first larget there in the renewed war, was identified as a radar station serving the Syrian ai r force at Jebel Barukh on P.lt. Lebanon in the north of the country near the Syrian border. Spokesmen said "serious damage" was inflicted on Egyptian air fields at El ~!ansura, 70 miles north of Cairo. and at Kushnia, 62 miles cast of the Egyptian capital near the Suez Ca nal. The announcements did not say !See l\11DEAST, Page %) Red Ernbassy Reported Hit NE\V YORK (AP) -CBS Radio said today that Israeli planes scored a dirl'<'t hit on !he Russian embassy In Damascus. Syria. The net.,.,·ork quoted a So\1iet di p\01nat as saying 30 Russians. In· eluding .,.,-omen and children. were killed. (A United Press lnlcrna· tional rcpor~ said at' least six were killed. I The CBS report cam(' from Dean Breli s in Damnscus, who said he JaW ehlldren·s bodies in the rubbl~. Lie said the lsraeli aircraft In· Oicted tremendou$ damage. • I ' o..1 DAILY' PILOT t --- TONIGHT REAi, ESTATE INVESTMENTS -Co- i ponsored by Board or llealto rs and Dai· ly Pilot, Newport lfarbor H i g h Auditorium, Tuesdays througb Ck:t. 30, 7:3().9:30 p.m. UCl LECTURE -r~ourth in series on Aging, Origins, Effccts and Control, Room 161 Humanities Hall, 7·9:30 p.m. Admission $5.M. WEDNESDAY, OCI'. It ClTIZENS HOUSING CO~tMl'fTEE - Preliminary public hearing on low-cost hous.ing. etc. ~lultl-purpose room. Mesa \rerde Elementary School, 7:30 p.m. OR. ARIB UR BIETZ -''Are People Who Act Craty Really Qaey?'' OCC Auditorium, 7:30-9:30 p.m. UGI LEC'MJRES -The Classic Cinema serits, Science L.ecture Hall, 7:30-10:30 p.m. Admluion $6. "Education to !llee! the Future" series, Room JOO, Sodal&ience Hall, 7-10 p.m. Admluk>n 15.50. "THE TAVERN" -South Coast Repertory Theater, through Sunday I p.m. ~pygla.ss Dispute Pl.ant EgHSn_ston ... ' -------- Business, .. Labor Backing Edison An Or~ County coalition o r businessmen and labor leaders 111 urging full support for expansion of Southen1 California Edison's Huntington Beach power plant 1be Orange County Council for Environment, Employment, Economy and Development {CEEEO) is urging its membership to fill lhe ilWllington Beach Council chambers for tiloriday nigh t's public hearing on Edison eJ1pansion. Peter J. Remmel, president of C.EEEO and secretary·lreasurer or lhe Orange County Central Labor Council. issued a two-page "alert" 1elllnst CE E ED members how to help the Edison project. ln hls letter, Remmel suggests that members do the followi ng: -Appear et 1he council hearing and • speak. -Encourage others to do the same. -Make sure workers who live In Hun- tington Beach show up and speak up. ,. -Bncoo.rage cities, chambers and really boards to sound off. -Cal\ and encourage others. Jlcm1ntl also provides 1 complete list of the seven-member city council with each counctlman's home phone nwnber. To under1eore the need lot Edi500 su~ port. Remme.I "TiU-S: "It is just damned foolishness to lake down your umbrella In lhe belief the rain will then stop -and it's just as foolish lo deny more power in lhe belief that people will slOp p~ agating end migrating." Remmel also lists four groups of peo- ple he believes are again!t Edison'• pro- posed $JOO million expansion project. -"Local folks who are fearful of more local pollution. -''Environmentalists v.·ho believe more power means more of everything, including pollution, in Orange County. -''Zero growth advocates who believe that if they can help produce an elec- trical shortage, people will stop coming to Orange County and some already here \\'ill have to move away. Irvine School Officials -"Bad guys -there are a few v.•ho just want to stop America and the best . way, short of war. is to stop its life blood -power-energy." Ask Meet .Ove1· Bou11d s lie also lists several arguments to use in favor o[ Edison expansion, includi ng the fact Jiuntington Beach originally ask· cd Edison to locate its first power plant in the beach area. A joint meeUng with Newport-Mesa Unified School distrid trus tees mJght ' clear up ml!understandings over the Spyglass Hill boundary dispute, Irvine school ollidals said Monday. Stan Cori!y, superintendent of the Irvine Unified School District, said the issue has become muddled and needs clarification. Beach Policeman Awaits-Decision In Shooting Deputy District Attorney Bruce Pat· terson said today no declslon on the fate of a jaJled HWltlngton Beach policeman "'ill be made until 5 o'clock. Aulhoritlea have until then to decide "'hether to file manslaughter or murder charges or no char;:es agalrut Ron Palmer, 31, who has been in jall slra Friday In connection wllh the abooting death of hJs girlfriend, Mary Cleasby, 26. Aecon:llng to Palmer's account, be ac- cidentally shot her Friday morning with his off-duty gun which he wa11 putting in his pocket at the end of a visit to her apartment at 17637 Newland St. Until Monday, the investigation of the cue was being hand1ed by Huntington Beach detective.s, but police officials said they turned the case over to the Distrlct AtlO mey. Patte rson acknowledged that his In- vestigation would take the cue "right down to the "'ire." The law requires that charges be filed against a suspect in a case within 48 hours of arrest, not countlng Saturdays, Sundays or legal holidays. Monday, Columbus Day, wss a legal holiday. Patterson said hia inv estigators will be taki ng the time because "we want to make a total Investigation on our own . We want to \Je sure that everything has been taken Into C()OSideraUon." Thief's Got Guts Pauline ~larie J1ess and Gary L. Rogers, employes of Hollywood Sporting Goods, 3333 S. Bristol St.. Costa Mesa. complained to Offictr ri.tike Donovan ~fonday tha t somebody !lipped into the shop and made off Y.ith $600 ""Orth of cat gut , enough to re-string 40 tCM.is rac- quets. ... DAILY PILOT ,,,. O<._ (Hit j)AILV I'll.OT, wt• wfl.ldl lo c-"*I "'--"••t. lo lltllllilllee • 11\e 0<-C.0.11 l' ... l>lollll ~. s.M- , ..... " ......... ~It .... ~ "'"""- l'•ld•Y· fw Cfti. M-, ,._, 9Md1, "'""''""*' 11-11' ...... lft VMloo\', U.- IMdl, lrvliw/$HdltllHll "'41 .. ft C::""-lel l"' J .... ~ C.1>l1tr1M. A 11"1.. , .. _I •llloll !1 ,.,.1~ .. ._ • .,.. ... ._., •. 1~ prlo\<l..-1 ""Oll1hlflt .i•ftl to t i :Jllll WRI 11r lt1 .. 1, Celtt M .... C.llttMl1, tuH.. R1il1rl N, w,,4 Jlrftloltft! """' 1'11111•1\tr J11~ R. C urltt V><• Jlrt10il..,I -G_,tl Ml ...... fho"'•• K11~il ljfl ... Tll0Mt1 A . Murphl111 Ml .... f lf!1 l:toler Ch 11l11 H. l••• Jtich11tl '· Nill "n 1111n1 M1 ... ,1,,. llfllwl (Ml• ..... Of'fk9 ))0 w,,, •• ., s ..... M1 Ul11t Atl.tr111i",.O. 111 11•0. •1•1• ,,_ __ . "'-' ltt<lo: Uh .......,~· L..-•M<~; m '""' A.._. """"""""" IMC~ 11111 ·-......... ,, ltft (~to; lei Jll-II C.."""' ... . , ........ 17141 141-4111 C'-"'" ,u, .. , ..... Ml·llfl e..,....,., 1m. o..... c ...... ,..,....,.,,. C...~1. NI -llW-. ltlwtrtl ..... •l!W1e1 """" ... ..._.._.. ...... _, .. ·~-~ .......... ........... l-llll"'fllfll -· ......... t i.Oii ,....._ .. ,.. at C..lt ..... et.......,... su.....-IMIM " _,.., a.M l'ltlMfll'fl W "'t ll Q U -•11>1 Mll""" """'"'""'" s=." ""*"!"~· Corty auggested that Irvine trustees explore tbe idea of meeting face-t~face with their Newport-Mesa counterparts. Irvine trustees Sept. 18 made an offer to resolve the boundary question ln- volving the Spyglass !DU and Harbor View Homes-Bren tracts in Newport Beach. Portions of those tracts are in the Irvine district and children· uv1ng there might have to be bused seven miles to aUend Jrvine schools even I.bough there are Newport-Mesa schools withln walking distance. Irvine District trustees said they'd give up the homes in exchange for the North Fa.rd and Ph i l c o -F o rd in- dustrial-commercial property in Newpo rt Beach. Part or that parcel, bounded by t'ord Road, Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard, js already in the Irvine District. What· the dif!erence is in the assessed valuation of the two 200-acre properties is causing the breakdown Jn com- munJcation between lhe two school districts. Newport-Mesa school official! say, cur- rtntly, the Philoo-Fon:I .Property ls assessed at about $9.3 million and the homes at $5 million. Superintendent Corey told I r v I n e trustees Mooday that local developers estimate the assessed valuation of the Spyglass-Bren ·tracts when completed' will reach $22 million. Using the current fi gures, Corey said, doesn't take into accoun t bow quickly the resldenUa1 area is growing. He didn't say how much the North Ford tndustrla1 prop- erty may ultimately be y,·orth. Irvine trustees didn't act on Corey's suggestion of a possible joint session. They have e.xpressed conCt>m that the problem be solved before the district starts bearing the burden of busing children long distances. -North Finishes Second in Steir 'World' Contest L.o"·e\I Nort h of Snn Diego made a strong bid for his fourth \\'Or\d chan1· pionship in the lntl'rna !lona l Star Class Monday by finishing ~cond In the first race of the Sis! annual Sta r "world's" at San Diego. His chances \rould ha ve been even stronger had he not chos en the wrong side ot the HJ-mile rou rse \\'here he got caught in a radica l \1·indshi!L Nort h was leading !he pack throup:h five legs of the six·ltg Olympic course v.'hen the shifl'came. He still fin ished sec· ond behind Henry lfO\\'an of Ranoocas, N.J. John ~fcCausland of Cherry Hill. N.C., finished third. ~1ore than 60 entrirs from all over th<' v.·orld are competing in the Go!d Star Reg;itta y.•IJ!ch conhnues rhroughout the v.·eek. "\Ve appreciate the position of Hun- lington Beach residents, but no com· munity has just all the estheUcally pleasing elements within ita c I t y borders," writes Remmel. ''Each has some of lhe good and some 91 the neressary. In most cues, the residents are well aware of each before they move there." Remmel writes that power ls also needed to clean up the environment and he argues "if people keep coming and we keep having babies, we face a worse en- vironment by !ollowing present denial demands of extremists." The public hearing ls schedu1ed during the cowicil's regular 7 p.m. se!!ion, Mon- day. Environmental groups, Jed by the Sier· ra Club, are also expected to have their supporters ready for Monday '!! hearing. Despite the massing of speakers on both sides of the issue, Mayor Jerry ital· ney has already warned that he will limit the debate to one hour for those ravoring expansion and one hour for those op- posed. Edison officials are expected to take up half lhe lime allotted for the pro-ex· pans!on side. Coast Mideast Travele1~s Stage Early Exodus A party 0£ 85 Holy Land visitors - many from the Orange Coast -were starting an early exodus from Israel to- day after being stranded by the latest Midd1e East war. The grou p lncluding the Rev. Chuck Sn1ith, pastor of popular Calvary Chapel al 3800 S. Fairview Road. Sanla Ana, was reported en route from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv by bus today. "They will boartl planes there," said a spokesman for the nondenominational church. Friends and re\alive~ ha\•e been keep-_Tug lhe-·rnutch ~WifCfiW'c:if<l'lied up "af length v•ith queries about the status of the \'L'!ilors' stay and also thei r s::irety. Church officials spoke with the pastor's y.·i fr. r.lrs. Kay Sn1ith, about II p.m. (PfJT) Sunday and she assured them no une wns in direct danger ns a result of lhe renewed combat be twe(!n Arabs and lsraelis. T~e group is among an eslimated 30.000 to 35,000 tourists in Israel for Yom l\ippur, the highest holy days of the llebrew faith, a period of increased visitatiqn to the lloly Land. /_ church spokesman said a list or local members of the party would d if it was cleared by Calvary Chape s assistant pastor. Fit·emau Killed r1mus HEIGHTS (AP) -A fireman was killed ~1onday when a 3~foot ladder he was on toppled during a training St'ssion in thi:i; Sacramento su burb. Name of the 20-y('ar-old victim was ! withheld pending notification of next of kin. U.S. Poised Marines on ShiJJS Off Mideast WASIUNGTON (AP ) -A helicopter ranier wilh about 2,000 ~farines aboard is sailing In the eastern t.1editerranean Sea, the Pentagon said today. The amphibious assault !!hip (iuadalcnnil joins a task force led by the aircraft carrier Independence in ri.·tediterranean waters rough· ly 500 miles off the coa!ll of l~racl. • But lhe Guadalcanal, wh ich could be Ulied to evatuate Amerl· c~ns if the new fighting endnngered them, is operating Independen t· ly or the lndepe!ndence. Pentagon apokeman Jerry \V. Friedhelm dtellntd lo gJve the Guadalcanal'li precise location or to speculate on the po.s&ibillty of evacuation nr thouse nds of r\mcric/l.ns. The Guadalcanal carries approxi1n alely 30 helicoP'ters which could be used to lift 1\merlcans (rom end3ngered shore poinl1. EGYPTIAN ARMORED VEHICLE BEGINS TO CROSS PONTOON BRIDGE ON SUEZ CANAL E9ypti1n1 (foreground) Supervi•t Movement of Miiitary Equlpmtnt Acrou tht Bridgt From Page 1 ' He1·e's an Updated Lineup Of Irvine Company Board MIDEAST ... t Since June when long-time chairmait of the Irvine Company Board of Directors N. Loyall McLaren stepped down, a nwn- ber of changes in mem bership of the board have occurred. Here ls a llsting of the current direc- tors and the positions they filled : -John V. Newman, s:J..year-old rancher from Ventura has been on the lrvine Company board since 1967. lie succeeds McLaren as chninnan. -Raymond L. Watson, 47-year-old president of the company. hves in Eastbluff. A member of the board since 1970, he replaced the late Willialn R. ~1eson as president. -Howard P. Allen, 48-year-old es- ecutive of Southern California Edison Company, was elected to the board in June, filling the vacancy on the board created by McLaren 's resignetion . -l't1. KeUb Gaede, 37.year-old presi· FromP .. el DIRECTOR ... and Newhall Land and Farming Com· pc:ny. From 1960 to 1972, Lund was executi~1e vice president of Economics Research Associates \\i tb responsibilities for organilng and developing tbe firm's real estate end urban economic program . For ERA Lund also managed corpora te merger and acquisition studies. In 1972, Lund &aid, the trustees of the California Institu!e of the Arts asked him to temporarily se rve as president of the visual and performing arts insti tution recently opened in Valencia. He Is chairman of the board ot Ter- ramlcs, a real estate investment com· pany. A 1956 graduate of Stanford University, Lund has studied business admin.istr.uton st UCLA and served four yea~ as in- . du.strtal..economist.foc.Stanlord Research Institute . Lund is married to the fonner She1on Disney and serves as a trustee of the Walt Disney Foundation as \rell as the ~farlborough School FoundaUon. dent of San Joaquin Associates and resi- dent of Irvine Cove. He joined the board In 11166. -· l\tn. AtbaUe (Joan IrvlDe) SmJtb, 43-year-old housewife and equestrienne of Midd1eburg, Va., and Emeia.l.d Bay. The owner of 22 percent of the company stock has served· on the board since 1957. -Charles S. Wheeler, 58-yeaN>ld cor- porate secretary and president of the company subsidiary Flying J;> Ranch in Montana lives in Newport Beach. Jfe has been a company director since 1959. -WOiiam S. Lund, 42-year-old real estat.e investment and research con· sultant of Hancock Park, Los Angeles, was named today to r..u the vac&ncy created by the death of Wllliam R. ldason. whether Arab planes rose to challenge the raiders as Israel continued lo withhold disclosure of its losses, both in the air and on the ground. Heavy fighting raged along the Suez Canal, where Jsrael said its troop.s limited three Egyptian a r m. o r bridgeheads to an advance of up to five miles into the occupied Sinai, and in tho Golan Heiglils, where Syrian troops were reported counterattacking after being thrown back. The military command said the Egyp- -iians were ,continuing to reinforce their advance columns in the Sinai across bridges Jlnking them wlth the west bank of the waterway despite intense aerial bombardments. Arter two overnight Arab guerrilla probes and three guerrillas shelling at- tacks: against villages from Lebanon . government SOUl'Ci!s said Lebanon was warned by Israel to stay out or the war and keep lhe guerrillas out , too. Nixon Drafting Snoopy In Energy, Crisis War WASHINGTON I AP) -With the Mid· die East war caatlng new• shadows over U.S. fuel imports, the Nixon ad- ministration enlisted the c a rt o o n character Snoopy today as the symbol for a massive campaign to conserve energy supplies. President Nixon received a dUzens advisory committee report on ways the public can help ease ~cted fuel ahortagea thia winter. Jn addiUon, top Adminl&tratlon officials gave Nixon rtports on how the JOVern· ment and private lndurtry are movinJ to conserve energy suppliea:. The naUonal energy c:onJervaUon cam- paign will seek to cut energy con- sumption by 5 percent this winter. Among the steps outlined were: ·~··-·-···· .. --·· .. -Adoption of cartoonist Charles. M. Schultz's character, 'Snoopy," has a sym· bol for a "SavEnergy" campaign with distribuUon of advertlse11m1ts to the media and enerey conaervaUon kits to the nation's schools. -Wldescale distribution of energy. saving hints to con:iwne~. including a suggesUon that home thermostats be Jowefesf by four degrees this winter to save 400,000 barrels or oil a day -the estim8ted amount of the winter'• healing oil shortage. -An extensive program to promote energy con.ae.rvation by the buslneas community, and continued steps by !ederal, state and local governments to cut energy consumption. Henry L. Diamond, a New York state ·envlronmental-agency official and head or the citizens' advi!IOry committee which met with Nixon, said ·citizen action is essential to the success of any proaram tq-reduce. energy consumption. ADVANTAGE-ALDEN'S One hu90 advantage Alden's hes over most ct.rpet stores is that wo hove our own installers, providing flexibility ond reli1bmty in ' scheduling installations. Very few department stores or specialty c1rpet stores hove their own workrooms , and must rely on en outside c on tr a ct se rvice for installations. We have had many people buy from us after being disappointed by en installotion company who scheduled a job and didn't show up or coll. Sometimes, this has happened two or throe times before tho customer gives up. At Aid.en's, our inst1lletion schedule is operated very officiontly, •nd ev•n when our men are held up on a previous fob e41usin9 1 l1t1 start. our men will stay and finish. If you want reliability-c1ll us I HOURS : Moo. 111 .. Tlwrs., t to 1:10 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPl!S 1663 'Placentia A••· COSTA MESA' 646-4838 FU, t le t -SAT, t :JO to 5 I 1 ' I •